Winona State University OpenRiver

Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

11-4-1963 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News

Follow this and additional works at: https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews

Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1963). Winona Daily News. 414. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/414

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Tra ffic Box Score Occasiona l Cloudiness, City —To Date— Tonight, Tuesday; 1963 1862 Deaths ..... 4 ¦ ¦ 1 Warmer Tonight | Accidents .. 331 317 Injuries ...... 100 97 Damages .. $65,510 $77,820

SIXTEEN PAGES

Thompson ¦ ¦ Arranged ¦ . Slaying' ¦ to . Collect • • 7 ' . Her• "'

¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Insurance¦ ,. . . -•» Marry Another* , State Charges Wisconsin Prosecution Russ Stop U.S. Legislators Outlines Back at Work (Case to Jury MADISON, Wis. WV-The open- MINNEAPOLIS un - Attor- Berlin Convoy ney T. Eugene Thompson was ing today of the fall session of accused today of arranging (AP) the BERLIN - The Rus- many. The Army said 20 of the the Legislature promised con- slaying of his wife so that he sians stopped another U.S. 44 men were passengers. ^1 tinued strife between Democra- could collect more than $1 mil- Army convoy today on the auto- GERMANY ?.,, . "According to Allied proce- tic Gov. John-W. Reynolds and lion in insurance on her and bahn between West Berlin and marry another woman. West Germany , dures, communicated to Soviet the Republican majority. U.S. Army offi- \ IcoN'Orl ^vV Prosecutor William Randall, military authorities on Oct. The renewal of the legislative cials said. ^^ ¦ n a : said in his opening statement to ' V mr ^ ^ ' i^ ^ZJ^—*^ 29," the spokesman said , "this The Americans said the con- ^A W *^^*^ s1 session recessed in August Thompson's first degrea murder ' ^r ¦ ¦ > convoy does not contain suffi- voy was stopped ¦«*«¦ «y. at Marienborn, ' ' ' ' ^ ^ i> 1 found the- governor firmly de- trial jury that "we will show the checkpoint on the western . . . —_j*.i,i.»».» " »" " " cient passengers in the vehicles termined to press for passage the man married to Carol end of the superhighway. tAST for them to dismount for pur- ( poses of verification." of a 12-point program on which Thompson advised another wo- ) GEKMANy man back in early 1962 'just The Russians once more de- Allied officers permit passen- his administration could seek re- »1 i..H«. give me 11 months' " to arrange manded that the Americans get Mi.,S . B. gers ifi large convoys to dis- election. out of their vehicles and be mount and be counted but re- affairs so that he could marry her. counted, and the Americans re- Where Convoy Stopped fuse to do this with small con- But Republicans , also keenly fused,. The same dispute result- voys. aware of the political signifi- Randall did not name the wet- ed in delays of American con- ing exercise in West Germany. The Army said the Soviet of- cance of the session, were just man, but told the jury she was voys Oct. 10-12 and a British An Army spokesman said 12 ve- ficer in charge of the check- as determined that Reynolds the mother of three children. convoy Oct. 16. hicles carrying 44 men were points, a Lt. Col. Spiridonov, would not have, his way. They The slight/crew - cut defend- ant stared at the floor when The convoy today was return- held up at the checkpoint just demanded that 15 passengers ol aimed for a short houseclean- ing to West Berlin from a train- inside Communist East Ger- the vehicles .dismount. Randall read the indictment. As "Furthermore," the spokes- ing session that would send the prosecutor talked about Mrs. man continued, "he has stated them home in tidy shape to Thompson's murder and about that it is the Soviet and not the start the campaign for the elec- Thompson's alleged girl-friend, Allied authorities who deter- tion of a Republican governor Thompson placed a hand on his mine convoy processing proce- in 1964. forehead , almost completely dures." shading his eyes. The spokesman said Ma). The political name-calling cer- The prosecutor named Nor- Gen. James H. Pol*, the U.S. tain to mark the autumnal de man Mastrian, 39, ex-boxer, as commandant in Berlir/, ordered liberations started Saturday the man who received $2,500 in the American liaison officer at when Sen. Jerris Leonard, R- $100 bills and charged Mastrian Marienborn to tell the Soviet of- Milwaukee, c a 11 e d the gover- hired the killer after three oth- ficer that it Is the Allies who nor's Project 66 accelerated ers had turned down the job. determine- under what circum- highway building program "a Mastrian and Dick W.C7 An- stances the troop passengers rehash pf pork barrel and boon- derson , 35, of Minneapolis, will dismount to be counted. doggle ... a program to get BUDDHISTS LEAVE U. S. EMBASSY - since he was given asylum ihere in Septem- named earlier by police as the votes, not roads.'7' ... Thich Tri Quang, left, a Buddhist monk ber. Emerging with him are two other Bud- actual killer, both are held in the Project 66 proposal is one and leader of Buddhist opposition to regime dhist monks in saffron robes who also had lieu of $100,000 bail on first de- of the key measures Reynolds of President Ngo Dinh Diem, walks out of been given asylum in the gree murder charges. intends to press. Others embassy. (AP includ- U. S. Embassy in Saigon today for first time photofax via cable from Saigon) Minnesota ed a fair housing bill, conserva- tion land purchases and consti- tutional changes to lengthen state officials' terms of office. Bay City Man Accidents Reynolds is expected to ad- dress a joint legislative session Viet Nam Resumes Tuesday. He takes the position Killed by Car that public appeal will force Fatal to 9 passage at least of the road ELLSWORTH, Wis. WV-Chris By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS building program. He feels the Lynner, 77, of Bay City, Wis., was injured fatally Sunday A Hutchinson, Minn., man compromise budget-tax pack- War Against Reds night when he stopped his car and a woman believed to be his age is his biggest success to date but needs to bolster his By PETER ARJVETT southern Mekong Delta, there Catholic Diem's dispute with on County Trunk D near Ells- wife were killed today when worth to push aside several record by passage of further SAIGON, Viet Nam (AP) - was no noticeable increase in Buddhist opponents. their car was struck by a Viet Cong activity during the rolls of snow fence apparently freight train on a Litchfield vital legislation. South Vietnamese forces re- The bodies of Diem and his sumed U.S.-supported military 18-hour battle Friday and Satur- brother were reported put on the road as a juvenile crossing. The deaths along with r Republicans would like to set under prank. He was struck operations against Communist day in which Vietnamese insur- guard awaiting secret burial. by anoth- SPACE FAMILY . . . Soviet cosmonauts Valentina seven others over the weekend',' their house in order for cam- gents closed in on er car as he returned to his paign purposes by repealing the guerrillas today after the Reds Diem and his Tereshkova , 26, and Adrian Nikolayev , 34, are a smiling raised Minnesota's traffic death brother , Ngo Dinh Nhu , in the The official story that they own. $2 income tax filing fee and re- apparently failed to capitalize committed suicide after couple Sunday in Moscow following their wedding. The bride toll for the year to 682, up 100 presidential palace in Saigon. their from a year ago. storing $10.5 million in school on confusion resulting from the arrest Saturday was widely have orbited the earth. Soviet is the only woman known to Killed at Litchfield was Ed- aids cut from the compromise overthrow of President Ngo doubted. More credence was giv- Premier Nikita Khrushchev and members of the Soviet Dinh Diem. The Viet Cong command ward Fitzloff , 64, and a woman budget bill. Whether this will be broadcast urgent appeals to its en to reports they were killed team attended the wedding. (AP photofax via cable George Corning space about 60. Their car was struck possible depends upon new rev- U.S. military sources said the units over the countryside to by soldiers after leaving a from Moscow ) by a west bound Great Northern enue estimates. Tax collections Communist Viet Cong appeared begin all-out attacks, but the re- small Catholic church in Saigori freight on a crossing near the are expected to exceed antici- to have been caught off guard sponse was minor, the U.S. where they sought sanctuary fol- depot about 8:15 a.m. pated levels but this will not by the swift coup. sources said. lowing a letup in bombardment Named Wisconsin be known definitely until a re- Except for some attacks on of the presidential palace. Great Northern officials said port is presented this week. hamlets and outposts in the While an atmosphere of gaie- HARRIS SURVEY flasher signals warning of the ty continued in Saigon , the rul- Unofficial photographs of the approaching train were in op- ing military junta headed by bodies of the brothers showed Tax Commissioner eration. One freight car derailed MILDER WINTER SEEN Maj. Gen. Doung Van Minh Diem riddled by bullets, includ- MADISON, Wis. W - George as engineer Leonard Adams of worked to form a Buddhist-led ing evidence of a head wound , W. Corning, 40, was named Personal Appeal Willmar attempted to stop the caretakeX government. while Nhu had bruises indicat- state tax commissioner today by Gov. John W. Reynolds. train. However, ing a beating. Informed sourc- He the junta which en- succeeds John Gronouski, who Fitzloff and his wife ran a gineered the coup was expected es said Nhu, Diem's close ad- coin-operated dry cleaning es- viser, was stabbed to death. resigned in September to be- Polar Bear to retain the real power. come postmaster general. Wins for Barry tablishment in Litchfield and In Hue, 400 miles north of Corning has been apparently were on their way to Slated to become premier was Saigon , another brother of a Tax De- work , Hutchinson is about 20 partment employe since 1955. » Nguyen Ngoc Tho , 55, a Bud- Diem , Ngo Dinh Can , was re- He was named of their character , miles from Litchfield. Bodies of dhist who was Diem's figure- ported under house arrest, chief of the By LOUIS HARRIS ers—in terms He agency's intelligence personality and records. the victims were hurled from Fur Lighter head vice president and who had been virtual ruler of cen- division Despite sharp differences on reception of Sen- the wreckage. * when Gronouski reorganized the the issues, the Goldwater-Rocke- The over-all By RAYMOND .1. CROWLEY Ordinarily the squirrels would tried to mediate the Roman tral Viet Nam. department in 1961. feller contest for the Republi- ator Goldwater is much more Weekend victims included a Associated Press Staff Writer bury this provender in no time. that for Governor can Presidential nomination to- positive that couple killed in the collision of WASHINGTON W - A sur- But Monday morning Norris not- As commissioner, he will re- When all of the day is being settled almost whol- j Rockefeller. their car and a milk truck. vey—in depth—of poldr bears' ed many peanuts still lying ceive $18 ,500 a year. The ap- ly on character and personality spontaneous comments about .John L. Sievert Sr. , 44 , St. fur , the autumnal activities oi around. Which shows that squir- pointment is subject to State added up, here grounds. j the two men are Paul, was killed Sunday night squirrels and the movements of rels are unworried about the 11 More Alive Senate confirmation. On personal appeal alone, ! is the division : when the car in which he was hairy caterpillars pointed today winter. Corning was named to fill out among GOP- voters, Senator GOP voters' reactions: riding left a road near suburban to an inescapable prediction: Private advices from Win- Gronouski's unexpired term, Goldwater is winning over Gov- G-W R-K Afton and struck a tree. Robert We Americans face a much chester, Va., say squirrels there and thus would serve until July ernor Rockefeller hands down. —Percent- , , St, , , milder winter than the one that are acting differently. They are In German Mine 1, 1955. 54 43 A. Capnul 28 Paul driver If the record and stands of the ; Favorable was hospitalized at Stillwater. nearly froze our marrow the really scrabbling for acorns. By JOHN FIEIIN contain five or six miners there. A native of Portage, Corning 11 33 two men were the basis for i Unfavorable Mr. and Mrs. William lled- last time around . But political considerations may BROISTEDT , Germany (AP) Rudolf Stein, the mine man- attended schools in Pardeeville, Not familiar enough enter Into -this case. ager, said chances were ex- where he still makes his choice , Rockefeller would not j strom , in their fiOs and from The U.S. Weather Bureau , a —A huge drill bit its way today home. bettor showing but ; with him 35 24 tremely slim that any miners only make a Dalho , in Isanti County, died conservative organization which Winchester Is the domain of toward 11 more German miners He was a fighter pilot In the would in all likelihood be ahead Rockefeller is still better is unfortunately wedded to sci- there would he alive. Saturday in a collision at an Sen. Harry F. Byrd , an econo- found alive in a flooded iron Air Corps during World War among rank-and-file Republi- ' known among Republicans. But ence , refuses to confirm or they know intersection near Princeton. The my^ who expects all hands- mine a week after they had After the 11 men were found, II and flew 50 missions in the cans. among those who feel truck driver , David Stnuffneck- deny this. comments about him are human and animal—to be dili- been give up for dead. a microphone was lowered to European Theater. in the voters' eyes , Senator him , er , 22 . Foley, Minn., suffered But listen to Ralph Norris , v only 5 .-43' «' positive , compared gent and frugal. Officials hoped to rencb the them along with food , clothing, Corning holds degrees in bus- Goldwater 's strength lies in his bruises , cuts and shock. veteran headkeeper of tho Na- ajp , with !i:!-17' o favorable reaction men by Wednesday. electric cable and a light iness administration and law appeal as an outspoken , sincere August Khnnert , 56, Moorhead tional Zoo: fixture. from the conservative to Goldwater. The 11 were nmong 40 miners University of Wiscon- pleasant man. His died in an accident near Dent , "Why, my gracious, I just The men reported they sin. He became , and he Both men are being judged , missing since a nearby dam were a certified pub- views are controversial in Otter Tail County, late Sat- inspected Snowstar a polar in generally good condition. But lic accountant in 1959. is thought to be too radical to primarily on their personality urday. His car left Highway ha 'ar , and that ba 'ar doesn 't broke Oct. 24 and flooded the and character rather than their mine. Eighty - six miners es- they had been subsisting on wa- Corning i£ married and the many Republicans. Governor 108. apparently after a tire have any coat to speak of. Real ter and reported their legs were father of four sons. Rockefeller 's appeal to Republi- records and stands: blew. thin-like. If cold weather sets in caped , and three more were PERSONALITY VS. RECORD rescued Friday through a shaft, swollen from too much liquid. can voters centers on his re- that ha 'ar will have to borrow an The men said their compart- of New G-W R-K Two pedestrian, died Satur- overcoat. " bored by the same rig that went Weather cord as chief executive ment is 15 feet long, 6 feet wide York and an amiable , forth- —Percent- day of injuries suffered when This, to Norris , is evidence into operation again - today. FEDERAL FORECAST Personality and they were struck by cars in the and Vh. feet high. right manner. The negative fac- that Sno\vstar looks for a clem- Acting on leads from other WINONA AND VICINITY — tor that dominates all discus- character 65 70 Twin Cities. They were Mrs. ent winter. Occasional cloudiness 35 30 miners, the mine management tonight sion of him these days , how- Record nnd stands Olgii M. Quimby, 55, St . Paul , To be sure Norris notes that and Tuesday. Warmer tonight about Rocke- early Sunday bad a narrow test ever , is a single issue: his di- The judgments and Joseph Thorburn , 70, Min- the reindeer have developed with low of 32-36, high Tues- feller arc being made by Re- neapol is. shaft bored near the main pit- DON'T MISS vorce and remarriage. real plush coals. But you have head. day 55-60 , publican voters even more on Charles Swcnson , 19 , died in a to consider the over-all picture, LOCAL WEATHER T II E S K CONCLUSIONS character and personality than St. Paul hospital Saturday. He in which squirrels are impor- Miraculously the drilling hit a Dan Flagg Official observations (nan for the emerged from a special in-depth on his record and stands was injured the day before tant. tiny air pocket 106 feet down 24 hours ending at 12 where the 11 men were en- a now comic strip m, today : study conducted among a nation- is the case with Goldwater. But when his car left a road nenr Maximum , 50; minimum , up to Squirrels usually stash away tombed. 43; wide cross-section of Republi- it is abundantly clear, Chisago City. Beginning Tonight noon , 49; precipitation , none. cans. GOP voters were asked now at least , that the GOP Victims late Friday were Ole nuts against the winter. On a re- Fired by this stroke of luck , Official observations for the pre convention sweepstakes has Dale , to Mate in their own words , HO Kasson , Minn., and cent Sunday, 40 ,000 people visit- lest borings were begun about 24 hours ending nt 12 m. today: what (hoy liked and didn 't liko been dorninnntl y a personality Oren IJ. .Jacobsen , fifi , New ed the zoo and dropped a lot of two miles away. Mining experts On Page 16 Maximum , 64; minimum, contest. Brighton , 32; about the two leading contend- Minn. peanuts around. believed n huge air pocket may noon, 47; precipitation, none. Where School Shoes Pinch 3HF i 3ZVjQiLB_E I co WEST I ^L^^^A^HT^n!^^...!^^^^_HjuLaiijUlu^^L_^v ¦ aHS» J K SECOND ¦ ¦] \ 11 j ______By LESLIE J. NASON, ED. D. cut back from five to ^^ B ? I ^" I^HB^^^^^^^H J \^Hflr r four years. _F ? n ^^_ B111 mV/ ^ vw___L______^ ^______l L^^ ^_7 Professor of Education. That's where the professors 1SH k T I f W ?'' ^^^_^B9BHBOTW ^ -_^^^_^_^_V University of Southern California come out fighting. I agree heartily that four The widely publicized report years by James P. Conant ' training, instead of five, , former is enough president of Harvard; that teach- for secondary school teachers, and that they er training should place more shoujd concentrate on subject matter emphasis on the study of the rather than methods. „ subjects to be taught and less on the methods of teaching, is For one thing, an expensive not as revolutionary as lay- fifth year in college discourages men may think. capable students from choosing His recommendations provide teaching as a profession. Thus • a rallying point for previously eliminating the fift h year would scattered groups already con- bring an extra year7s crop of vinced , for example, that more teachers into the field at once, science courses and fewer meth- while increasing the number of ods courses are needed to pre- students overall. pare science teachers. Also, the successful comple- It's quite likely that Dr. Con- tion of a long sequence of ant 7s report , will now swing , the courses in a single field would ______^ _____ b i______^ ^______K_n» ¦ l___ ^__K_r _r Tn__ 1 „__i Vr*"* ' ' _LI m Bl hT ^l_Tll *w iff ^H ^ i aSm/ 7£$&3Mt am\ pendulum away from the trend give aspirant teachers better ^^ ^ ^ _____P_____fl______3_n__r ^M ______*__rE_F __* _¦^ _^_H _¦ _K _¦ - *mam: flflH_ J_f9*K_MHL_n^_-_r'w^_BV '> skv I v_ iJCfc _^ 4___r^____ _H ""Towards lengthening teacher organizational ability and better training by the addition of more scholarship, and prepare them and more courses in education. better for graduate work if de- There is disagreement with sired. Dr. .Conant' s views, of course, BY BY ELIMINATING many un- LICENSES _ MA A as well as praise. The vast WBS^^ - — ,,, - I _X 90% Wool. 10% Nylon majority of educators probably dergraduate courses in teaching, ^r N^ >g say "Yes , but .. ." the education schools wouldn't THERMAL rjfci be crippled ; on the contrary INSULATED¦t-itMi A-K ^l**^^ PA If If A BLANKETS THE SHOE pinches on the they would be freed for offering * A^lwll TRIi llll UNDERW EAR¦ mj ¦ ¦ question of what courses are graduate courses. f DRAWERS ' '¦ '¦ ¦ '¦' - ' to be eliminated if education Dr. Conant's idea that the VESTS ,f f i" * \ I j mmt , V # ¦ Jg\( fif^^^ V BIg 1. \ \ f /¦' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ or SHIRTS __ _ training programs are to be entire faculty of a college be V\l \\in|' - ;V&* Hi ¦ I T^ i _ aA -~**fi&4»_._\WT^SS§(«_V ___Z^^^*^^---______I K .9"xV°2Q9" A**S*&**.F ^ *> fs*l OR ^..w _dt W M '_P_#.J I Jr *^ made responsible for a teacher's |Y^KyN Rev.nibl. • 1 _ _ L | | I BAP *Z2 GL4j £Aj 6rA F« gu_ r.nt._d ^^ammamMmmmmk ______¦ l _^W*W»l training is something for which | # ^ 1 R«* , ' I * warmth. D. Z ^^ B ¦_ ^_ ^_V Color ¦ ¦ ¦ \ li ^/l " r ,l HH the colleges themselves have 1< ^^ 0 ?• _ \V W \%$$\, I I Sn.d for ^^ W^^KaWM >T been striving against consider- gM ' ' ' ' ' ¦' ' WOm 0Vflr re U ar C 0,hW Th. original / . ^ Judge Rocky 4»8_l88 _ ¦ ¦¦¦« ¦ \W" M lS»'!' '.- -i* 8 ' ' l ^ ^ 1 ^ _____¦ 7 . able odds. It's something that s5^l|p^^C^^ , 1! /: / | I • - . . circular ______will be difficult to attain but | ^^ : tf. mtk.'iStO J?\ ^J. ' -m..™. » . *\¦*&•{ro «fe"^_^^_^S_S ¦ R«g- tC ______that will give a tremendous im- "Klffi^ 9VOO . r }, j j V I \ j -ir Snap front- coat stylo ^mBf I QO petus towards turning out more bo On Program and better teachers. Draws,rlns of hqod/ wai^ ,to,n Not only professors of educa- ——— '4*j i\ ¦s-insi ^^'^^^^ . ^—Genuine Thermal %^' \t § *ic 3/4 coverage—36 inches long yam_. .Famo .. w-^^^^Vj i Prism tion but academic professors r W^T>ffi circular knit. ^ l^^fii^^ ' 6x30 _ ~^M'\J$f Catholics Told are in complete agreement that W _*^.'%_r ^/ / f if ocket silt wrists k ?"^HW___(| BI i *. practice teaching, emphasized SOX V • ¦ 2 p openings-elastic cu( NOC ULARS NEW YORK (AP)-The Com- by Dr. Conant , is extremely im- W^^LJJ- 1/ be ^ ^ ['jflA monweal, a magazine published portant if well conducted. The Navy R«5chel Fabric U|. ^^^ 1 | Bottom COfl tl#d an«nd legs Irr.fl.of $2 95 ' Complete by Catholic laymen , said Satur- struggle for this has been there '' ^ | 4fVK «A^ day Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller for some time. The Conant re: should be judged as a possible port has just Brought it out into ¦ F r ' " mm ¦ ' ° "¦ \f ^ I ^Svl/'i/ ' ' Re9' .______. 4* *mm\ m Wi %M- WftKk carrying presidential contender on his en- the open. i — \1&K*^T4^^ *.«, &^ 4mmmm\ OO S *a* \ *A *\A \hrm Wmi IT Il ^l tire program and stance rather than his divorce and remar- ^_H-HH_ili_H--^-H-ilHHiilsB ¦ riage. ( ; !/\ 7 B; VI The Commonweal took Issue JHIRTS \ 1 \W -PRICEr AWmWmA I——_ _ _.—.—SIM" ^ jg^gj. I VV with the Sign, a Catholic maga- J^$^ «"d $1788 ^Black , ni_HH_H_H_HB_HHiH_l_HHHH_l_H_MHHSa_aH_HHg^^ ** ¦ ¦ . plus zine published by the "I'll Take All .Sill $ |i | , Passionist ^^_ ^^^ P9|%4 ¦ Green and I tax fathers, that said Rockefeller : ' : MEN S K REAN STnE _ ^*?5*N^ ~~~~~ should withdraw as a possible :HB' " ' ' ' ° , BRIGHT RED . candidate for the Republican Challengers! --» "flM H I ifB ^ ¦ R S,95 ¦ ' ¦ ¦ nomination because of his mari- : .. fW^ . ; ¦ : ' tal record | ^ ( Mg^ INSULATED I .- HOODED A Sr-S J "As f ar as the execution of his Girls— public duties goes, it is largely ¦¦B^ Ifl OB Nj 5WLM I pr4 A . irrevelant whether the presi- . - ^ ^ ^^¦Wf \ BOOTS l ^iP!^ -^/ dency is filled by a divorced ^ : 99 man , That Is!" ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ A CUIDTC S^I " said the Commonweal. _I-_l_; • . ' • • mmWWMi Ful1 12 inch hi»h • . ^->n«-h AFV XHx -j ^ 31111113 I * - *S5,95S $2^" "Clearly the fact of a divorce, \\mm\mmWm% * ' . /jy p * "> <X- —¦ | Pocket Sixe heavy ^ . - ^i i : I by itself , gives no indication of &BB.Ej thick wool insole- •.Extra i^T^. }}. ^ a president's ability or inability foxing Full cushion insoleW ' . . T | V' Made of 100% cotton. Small Site I to fulfil] his. duties." HAND WARMERS ||| 9K f • /V Referring to the ' Steel shank Heavy cleateo«/ " " " ^ ^ Sign s with- fflB i : . • • . ;y ' ' " 1/ j l ' KEROSENE drawal suggestion , the Com- OH Tb^bett monweal said: ¦; ^ SSiy wUl^' LANTER NS "The assumption W^^^^^ WS^^H here seems ^^^M^^XML ^S^mmmmmmmm • l^^l Sf^jS- SH^ to be that a divorced man and IJ^l^ -\ J^i woman who remarry cannot t______Slvtt^?^T _,»__. ^^^^P^______H 5 ' «P: #E BTlght possibly be people of integrity i^2^ f!#P" -^ lilffiWW. ^' $Ht sPiC DO I '< - " > 4 A ^6^ and character. ^ $^ ^44 "There is no room here for ____r__HH_^_K_!r^^^^_SB_«_SI^_^_^_^_B_^_^_^H 00 c^______l I _____&SHS&r^ JwH___Hr . ^^ ' ^^|pP6|> p> qualifications; no awareness f™^2\ ' --^ | ^ BJ^w that perhaps not all the facts are in; no willingness, even , to MEN'S judge the man's moral stance in terms of public and private acts performed over the length 100o/ NYLON of an adult life. The ^ ^^^ N 0 RED * $ 19 candidate He 's obviously feeling great. 5-OZ. -2-P4EGE . £ is simp ly dismissed in a few 1 lines as. unworthy of real con- It is important to keep fit c ^ sideration. " with Vitamins and health sup- s "99 - - - INSULATED JL ¦ ¦ _ PORTABLE wfsHING WELL plies. Make GOLTZ your head- U.S. Ar«y Styl. PARKAS*^^^ m ^ ^^m %T "^^^BRITISH 7 SANTE FE, N. M. tfi _ A quarters for family needs. CIIITC I^H^M ITm student at St. Michael's College Lensatic Compass 3>UII5 * 3"6 wilh U'ke" 5-GaL GAS CANS has a simple formula for get- <^^HS water ting a class ring. Warmth wm,«.t weisht . Completely wash- Sj SHHP no ' Carry a piggy $«|88 • Drlp^ry - prcsring. $g „ bank. Qovrz i ¦ able in lukewarm wator. Jacket zippor closes. CT_^8lnffii_nil-ra« * J)C ^_¦OO## Robert Balint says people ¦ ' 100% nylon shell r • (No, M ' 1 ,, , . n. _, , , • , _ S«_IOTKM»1I • . ¦ ¦ ¦ Valuel _# Just can 't resist dropping coins ______sas fly front: Taped bound jacket as- ^^_3^_^g • - ' Al j e Lining 100% cotton flannel. j $$ ; in a piggy bank . He made the _. 4J „ c , sines added strwicth and neatness. Pants nKBlm ^p Bif Adult Slie * mmmWM *& 50% ¦"'' ''-• ' " discovery while carrying one , *4*a Filling orlnn acrylic, : ritCDIlir Dire reinforced bound extra wide , elastic waist g^«|i\ | • 7 y 7 Bfl J I. across the campus to his room SLt-NNG BAGS , 50 unknown fibcrs Jersey several weeks ago. band Rcinforccd crotch and S( at . sizcs S- OT|H '° - ,,;l|„ - ' yr ;; ' ¦ /I' / ' ::- "' Reg ¦ ¦ ¦ - Mom! ^8 AMA + m rn^Tm IM M ' ^-C fift (a . . J^VWLW* o $12.88 B-9 ED N A /:^ HOODED I aoo« , u., , • [ S T ! ^ ^ ", Tir-.r^ 'l rHiinHU ; REVERSIBLE SHIRTS 4-Buckle - - . -;^li&fSfete, PARKASwonl I A%_WV ^^s' . I Overshoes Qui,,rd in ,f>r ^:#^SSH " Amm^lLmff^J^S. rAKRAo j HERE'S HOW to buy your tenure £« imin K " Assoi (n| 1onr oi lnn acr ylic pile llnin a a lux K K y M presents the . easy way — $^44 i^^:tf^^8H ' ""¦ _^I^^H_i!ii^iS " ' * ~ 1 ^ I FOR THE FOLLOWING DATES IN ' ' Mtn ii AworU-d ¦KC'; v^'-S' aiul AnBeau,ifu en0,. . ___^ t".; .v ¦'. 'f vA'»MiVHwi^HaHBfiSwfflH ruiuenm.i linr -l iiuili.,.! 'i.li , v.u.iil,ii n __l______m\mmWmmWL\Wwff ByBn__-WU_WFWv l "y ^ UiiMrAfrla __f»w A_rl_J ™ ™ :| ? ^ B P wnhout | | ^ i ^ H wear, and wears. HUHtCrS KCa I WILL GIVE YOU A 88C ^;^ fuM nn, ' ¦ Wat(>r BEAUTIFUL GIFTS VALUED j'j 'i i "^t\¦ )vji% ^^&W^ l______Hffl__n___l^li repellent purrcure is easily M ITT_!fe TO $25.00 FOR ONLY U

¦ ¦ __¦* %¦ _.__¦_ 1857 to im SWEATERS : $1 * 1885-1886 S :;3§^W ^88 ***¦ HHHE

Religious Issue After Weekendi By RUSSELL GREENLEY RED WING, Minn. (AP) - For Next Five Days The electrical engineer who Crashes Here I drafted a Good news from, the weather- and Tuesday is the immediate more than .10 of an inch , ac- document slicing re- man. Juveniles involved in two two- ligion out of Red forecast with a low of 32-36- to- cording the extended forecast. Wing 's public Temperatures through Satur- night and a high of 55-60 Tues- car accidents Sunday were schools said today he realizes A year ago today the Winona the action riled day will average 4 to 8 degrees day. high was 43 and the low 29 with charged with traffic violations. a lot of adults above seasonal normals. Above normal temperatures The accidents were among four In this Mississippi River city. .03 of an inch of rain. All-time with little or no precipitation high for Nov. 4 was 68 in 1895 which occurred during the But teen-agers showed very AFTER a mild Saturday and is the outlook for Wednesday. weekend. little concern a pleasant Sunday, and the low 7 in 1951. Mean for , Gordon Lee said. temperatur- For the rest of the week day- Michael Nelson , 17, Whitehall, He added it's the es today were on the upside the past 24 hours was 48 as con- youngsters time highs will be in the 46 to trasted with a normal of 42. Wis., was cited for failure to "that the schools are all again with a noon reading of 47. 56 bracket and nighttime lows Lowest reading in the state stop for a stop sign following an about." Saturday afternoon the high 30 to 38. accident at East 3rd and Wal- was 50 and on Sunday the mer- today was 23 at Bemidji and 25 At a meeting last Tuesday at International Falls. Rochest- nut streets at 5:05 p.m. Sun- cury shot up to 64. Low Sunday SOME scattered showers are day . night, the school board voted morning was 43 and this morn- indicated for Tuesday and again er had a low of 34 after a Sun- 6-1 to adopt a statement of pol- ing 32. on Thursday but the total for day high of 58 and'' La Crosse His car and a car driven by icy designed to guide teachers Occasional cloudiness tonight the two days will amount to no posted figures of 33 and 62 for Edwin Kotlarz , 34, Arcadia , in compliance with the United the same times. No rain appear- Wis., collided in the intersec- States Supreme Court's ruling ed on the state weather report. tion . Police said Nelson was on the matter of religion in pub- Street Department traveling north on Walnut lic schools. WISCONSIN'S unseasonably Street and Kotlarz west on 3rd. Work Schedule Set Begin Ballot mild , weather continued today, : The statement forbids Bible Kotlarz was . slightly injured. OPEN BIBLE . . . The Rev. Walter A. to right , the Rev.' Armin Deye, St. Martin 's; with a chance that showers Damage to the cars was more reading in the schools, bars pro- Street department leaf would dampen the southern half '• Maier Jr., second from right , guest speaker Martin 'R'ehse , Stockton ; the Rev. Clarence grams built on religious themes than $200 each. collection units are making Count in Badger of the state tonight and .Tues- at a joint Reformation service at St Martin 's Witte, Silo Lutheran Church; Rev. Maier, and — including the traditional day. Lutheran Church Christmas concert their final pass of the sea- SIXTEEN-year-old Susan Ste- , refers to the open Bible the Rev. O. TH. Dorn , Elgin, Minn. (Daily , and ends ber , 1171 W. 5th St., was charg- 6chool - sponsored baccalau- son, Arthur Brom, street . Temperatures were generally after his sermon at the church Sunday. Left News photo) , 10 degrees above normal Sun- ed with a starting and turning reate services or distribution of commissioner, said today. Rabinovitz Poll violation after her car struck a Bibles by the Gideons. day. Pewaukee set the high of The units now are working MADISON, Wis. UP)—Tabula- 66. car driven by Mrs. Erwin A.' The board's action startled tion of ballots began today i_> on east-west streets. Early morning minimums Gaulke, 4630 6th St., Goodview , this peaceful southeastern Min- Scheduled for cleanup to- the State Bar's membership on East Broadway about 150 Open Bibl e Colled nesota city of 10,000 residents. poll on the qualifications of Da- varied widely, with Rhinelander Storage Set at day were Wabasha, San- hitting the low of 21. feet west of Liberty Street at By today most folks had calmed vid Rabinovitz of Sheboygan to 8:55 a.m. Sunday, according to down, although the statement born and ,King streets. Tues- serve on the federal bench. No rain was reported in Wis- police. remained a prime topic of con- day the crews will cover The Bar's Board of Governors, consin in the 24 - hour period ' ending at daybreak today. Police said Mrs. Gaulke was County Garage Reformation Core versation at coffee breaks and east-west streets from How- meeting Saturday, voted 17 to driving west on Broadway and on street corners. Hibbing, Minn., was the na- A new investment firm has "The heart and core of our the League of Lutheran Church- ard to Lake, Brom said. 12 to count the ballots in the as her car came alongside Miss men churches of the two-part questionnaire sent to tion's coldest spot early today been incorporated in Winona Reformation heritage is the Missouri The statement was drafted by Residents should avoid Steber's car it was leaving the and will have offices in the old Synod at Winona, Stockton/Silo, members. Approximately 3,500 with 19 degrees and Presidio, curb from a parked position. open Bible. " the Rev. Walter Lee, 46, school board president parking cars in the streets Tex., was the hottest Sunday county garage building at 263 Hart , Rushford , St. Charles , El- ballots have been returned and Damage was more than $50 to A.. Maier Jr. told about 600 at gin and Plainview. and holder of a doctor 's degree indicated while the work is will be counted, by a Madison with 84. W . 3rd St. in electrical engineering. Lee is the Steber car and more than the joint Reformation service Rev. Maier said, "On thil progressing, Brom said. certified public accountant. $200 to Mrs! Gaulke's. Members of the first board of superintendent of the Presbyter- N directors of K and S. Co., are at St. Martin 's Lutheran Church 446th anniversary of the Refor- Ian Church Sunday school and If a majority of members dis- Cars driven by -Raymond George R, Schibye, Fountain Sunday afternoon. mation Prptestanism joins Lu- teaches a class there of junior approve the referendum in their Friese, 19, Minnesota^^ City, and City Rt. 2, Wis., and Christian theranism in praise to God for boys and TB Test Slated Roger Gabryck , 916 E. Waba- "We should use every oppor- high^age girls. ' answers to the first part of the P. Keller , Minnesota City Rt. tunity to study this Word , share the blessings God "wrought He feels some people were Mother s Action questionnaire, the ballots will sha St., collided at East 3rd and 1, who bought the garage prop- .hrough Luther. These bless- St. Charles streets at 1:45 a.m. it with others, beginning with worked up by the school board's be destroyed, the Board of Gov- erty on a joint bid at public our children." he pointed out. ings we do not attribute to Lu- action because they really didn't ernors decided, and the results For Lake City Sunday. auction last month , and Mrs. ther, but rather to our Lord of the qualificaion question will Police said Friese was trav- who used Luther as His ser- understand what the board said. May Have Saved LAKE CITY , Minn. (Special) Keller. Schibye, Mrs. Keller and REV. MAIER. son of Dr. ' The bulk of the furor , Lee said, not be made public. —Mantoux or tuberculosis tests eling west on 3rd Street 'and C. Stanley McMahon , Winona , Walter A. Maier . founder and vant . ." apparently was stirred by the The second part ol the ques- will be administered at Lincoln, Gabryck south on St. Charles were the incorporators. for 20 years main speaker of Pastor Maier listed some of part of the statement concern- Life of Infant tionnaire deals with the fitness Washington and Jefferson Street. Damage to Friese's car Schibye said the investment the International Lutheran Hour the results of the Reformation ing musical programs, particu- of Rabinovitz to serve as judge schools next Monday. was more than $50. There was firm was incorporated to buy, was guest speaker at the Re- including the system of Christ- ROLLINGSTONE, Minn. ian education which gives larly and traditional Christmas - of the U.S. court for the western Kindergarten children , first , no damage report for Ga- sell, hold and lease various formation service sponsored by God programs. Artificial respiration given a district of Wisconsin, to which bryck's car. types of properties. It also is his rightful place in 'the uni- third , fifth , seventh , 11th and verse Lee said the board had no ob- lVi-year-old Rollingstone child he has been appointed by Presi- 12th graders are urged to par- A HIT-AND-RUN accident in- legally empowered, the notice ^ jection to using religious music dent Kennedy. The appointment of incorporation states, to con- 'J/fe established and paved about noon today in a car be- ticipate in the testing program. volving a parked car owned by way for the Lutheran on its merits in a concert. What must be confirmed by the Sen- Any student , , struct , develop and improve th* and tween Rollingstone and Minne- however may re- Donald Trainor , New Brighton. Blacksmith Protestant parsonage," Rev. the statement opposed was stag- ate and is now in the hands of ceive the test, which is given occurred at 10 p.m. Sat- business, residential and indus- sota City may have saved her Minn., Maier said. "The Bible doctrine ing such a program as a religi- . a committee. . free by local doctors. urday on East Wabasha Street trial properties. I of the universal priesthood of ous presentation. Lee quoted the life. Request blanks will be given about 100 feet west of Stueben - Schibye said today that the Notes 65th statement : A two-hour debate on the pro- i all believers was put into ac- Wendy Sue Maschka, daugh- priety of the Bar's membership to children in school and should Street. garage: building this winter will tion. Congregational participa- "It Is recognized that sacred ter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger poll preceded action by the be signed and returned to Police said Trainor 's ca r , be used , in addition to office Anniversary tion in the worship service in- large and im- Maschka, was being rushed by Board of Governors. A motion school. which was parked facing west , purposes, for storage on a rent- cluded congregation singing. music forms a OSSEO , Wis. portant part of choral literature car to Community Memorial by Edward Meldman of Mil- A positive test reaction may had about $200 damage. The al basis of boats and vehicles. — A Town of The cup was again given to the of such material in Hospital because she had been waukee to abandon the poll and indicate a person has tuberculo- unknown vehicle apparently Hale blacksmith will observe laity in Communion. and the use his 65th year on the job Tues- the teaching of music is per- having a convulsion, according destroy the ballots was tabled sis. In that case he will be ask- was traveling west and struck "But the greatest blessing of " The to her father. and the action of the executive ed to have a chest X-ray. the rear of Trainor 's car. dav . all was the open Bible and mitted and encouraged. vC, W._ (Willie ) Anderson; statement continued : committee in ordering the ref- . E. clarifying the central doctrine Maschka, who said his daugh- Dipthena, tetanus and whoop- Canton Damage 8l a native-of -Gilmanton , ' got "Every endeavor shall be ter might possibly have a slight erendum was upheld. ing cough immunizations and of salvation .-by. grace through Woman Injured in his first job in the unincorporat- f&ith .- in Jesus Christ, the Son made to select and use such case of pneumonia, had come smallpox vaccinations will be ed village of Hale in 1898. Aft- given Nov. 25. Fall on Church Steps of God. Luther translated tha music on the basis of music and home from work about noon and Galesville Council Children in kin- Case Started er a year on the job he and his artistic merit alone ," and : found that Lambert Bronk , a dergarten, third , sixth , ninth i , Bible into the German language A 71-year-old Winona woman PRESTON,. Mmn. — A jury brother Andrew Edward An- which is a specimen of literary "When such music is presented neighbor, was taking his wife Sells Park Building and 12th grades should be im- was drawn this morning in erson, Gilmanton , went to Chili , ln public concert (in the munized for diptheria , tetanus received possible fractured ribs excellence." and child to the hospital. He For High Bid of $315 in a fall on the front steps of i District Court for Fillmore Wis., where they worked nearly schools) , every effort shall be accompanied them. and whooping cough. Smallpox ! County to hear the case brought a year in a lumber camp. Willie THE REV. O. H. Dorn, Elgin. made to avoid the atmosphere vaccination is especially for stu- St. Stanislaus Catholic Church The sheriff's office was noti- GALESVILLE , Wis. (Special) about noon Sunday. ;by Emma Wahl , Preston, shod horses. was liturgist. A joint area choir of a specifically religious or sa- —Four bids were opened by the dents in kindergarten , sixth and against the village of Canton When he returned , he first fied to provide an escort and 12th Mrs. Anna Krall , 528 Wall St., under the direction of Floyd cred concert." Galesville Common Council in grades. However, any stu- and five individuals there. worked 22 months in a shop in Broker, who also was organist, the group departed. En route dent may receive either shot. fell shortly before noon while the child stopped breathing special session last week for re- apparently leaving the church. Mrs. Wahl is suing for in- Osseo, then in 1902 purchased and a joint children's choir un- and started to turn blue. moval of the building in Recep- Other persons at the church juries to a hip and arm she the Hale shop. He's been black- der the direction of Robert Lewiston Youth tion Park on the lower table. allegedly received in a fall on smithing here ever since. His Wolf , sang. David Broker and Maschka said that they stop- Osseo Clothina Drive said she had fallen from the lop The 40- by 80-foot pavilion was of the steps to the bottom. i ice at Canton. She's suing the work record hasn't been mar- Charles Koeth were trumpet- ped midway between the two ' Pays $10 Fine sold to the highest bidder , Clar- OSSEO, Wis. (Special) - The Mrs. Krall , who was rushed ; village because she claims it red by a day s illness. In the ers. villages while his wife gave the , , ence Brown & Son Lumber Co. , Osseo schools will participate in from the church to Community ' was its duty to take care of winter of 1916 he says he shod child artificial respiration. horses the day he was breaking For Starting Fire for $315. the world clothing drive next Memorial Hospital by ambu- the streets; Vane A., Cyril F., Carrol Moger, 19, Lewiston , A sheriff's patrol car met the Other bidders were Theodore lance at 12:07 p.m., is listed in Clement H. and Leo B. Snyder out with smallpox , but continu- First District week to help more than 50,000 ed working. Minn., was sentenced in muni- emergency car at Minnesota Mathison , Galesville, $28 ; Les- children go to good condition and is being because she says she fell on school. Clothing , About 10 years ago plow cipal court today to pay a fine City and escorted it to the hos- ter Anderson , Ettrick , $37.50, from here will be held for observation. land they own and Byron Will- Legion Hears sent to the ¦ i ford , motel owner, because she share points came out on the of $10 or to serve three days pital shortly after noon . and Eugene Strong, Winona, mountains of Georgia Wendy Sue has been admitted $41. , Tennes- fell in front of his place. market. Previously he had after he pleaded guilty to a see and Kentucky. : ' ' National Head charge of unlawfully setting a to the hospital and reportedly The Browns will move the ¦ La Crosse Students The ease ^"expected to run made the points. His principal fire near the school at Lewis- is in good condition. The child frame building to their lumber info Tuesdav. work has been shoeing horses WABASHA. Minn. CSpeciall— yard three blocks distant on the Ask Tougher Tests and sharpening plow shares , First District American Legion ton Oct. 3. has had a convulsion previously. Rod, Gun Club to Meet ' Moger, who had been at Com- lower table and use it for stor- LA CROSSE , Wis. ifft-The llis record in one day is 25 and Legion Auxiliary members munity Memorial Hospital here age. The Winona Rod and Gun United Council of Wisconsin Woman Injured shares. heard a telephone message was one of three It's an old structure where Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. State College Student Govern- Being one of only a few from National Commander Dan until recently, State Highway , arrested in connection with the young people roller skated and Tuesday at the Winona Athletic ments Saturday asked for tough- By Father's Car smithys left he attracts busi- Foley of Wabasha at their mem- bonfire. The two other youths danced many years ago. After Club. Project plans will be dis- er test in the Wisconsin state ness from a 50-mile area. He bership rally here Saturday Department Aids abandonment as an entertain- plans to continue working as night. involved pleaded guilty to the J cussed and two films on con- college system. Ninety students Is Transferred same charge Oct. 10. ment center, it was used to servation will be shown. Re- amended the session here over long as he can. Since his wi>e His telephone message was Archaeologists died in 1958 he has done his Moger , who paid the fine , was store municipal machinery. freshments will be served. the weekend. LAKE CITY , Minn. (Special) sent over the loudspeaker at St. s dep- ST. PAUL, Minn. - Field — Mrs. Harold Sommerfield , own housework. Felix dining room , where 135 arrested by a sheriff' He has four children: Clar- uty at his home Sunday after- personnel of the Minnesota injured Saturday in a car ac- had gathered. ence, Hale storekeeper; Ervin , noon , according to Sheriff Highway Department have been cident, was transferred Satur- Child welfare and rehabilita- RIVER POLLUTION, Rock Island, III.; Mrs. Selma George Fort. instructed to inform and coop- >. day night from Lake City Mu- ion meetings were held in tha erate in archaeological or his- nicipal Hospital to St. Mary 's Passo, St. Paul , and Curtis , Pi- Legion annex in the afternoon. torical finds which may be of Hospital , Rochester. She was to geon Falls. Mrs. Maurine Patterson and La ke City School scientific importance. undergo surgery for head in- Sig Quale, Austin; O.D. Krogen , Two examples of such coop- juries. Two Forfeit Deposits Fountain , and Eugene Lind- Expected eration recently were called to State Starting Survey She was hurt when her car quist , Clarissa , national execu- Levy the attention of Elden Johnson , st ruck loose crushed rock, On Charge of Fighting tive committeeman , were on state archaeologist. swerved in front of a car she the program. To Be Changed One such study was conduct- was passing and was struck Kenneth J. Moore , 2(> , G07 W. Wabasha County was first broadside. Iler car was knock* - .Ird SI., and Douglas W. Train- over the top iff membership. Its LAKE CITY , Minn. (Special) ed on the Frank Voight proper- r — Taxpayers within the Lake ty near the Dresbach dam. Ex- Of Storage Facilities ed into a roadside ditch and or; 2.> , 903 W. 2nd St., forfeited quota was <) !_ ; its posts have wrecked. Her son , James , 2 , $2fi bail each in municipal 654 members. City Consolidated School Dis- istence of skeletal material here The first step in imp lement- hibits "tlie storage of any li- land than steel or concrete , but had been known since 1938. was not seriously hurt . court today on charges of dis- Speakers at the banquet were trict R1.1 can expect to pay the ing authority given the Minne- quid in a manner which does are generally much less costly. same in school taxes next year Sale of the property near Driver of the car which struck orderly conduct by fighting. Howard Lohman , Moorhead , , sota Water Pollution Control not reasonably assure proper When land costs are high and her vehicle was Mrs. Sommer- They were arrested hy police state commander, and Mrs. Wil- as they did in I9f>:i. Highway 61 which was to be retention against entry into any earth diking impractical , con- The board of education voted in the right of way of the new Commission by the 1963 Legis- ficld's father , I.emli art Miller , at Center and Belleview streets liam Mitchell , Tracy, state Le- waters of the state that would crete or steel bulkheads Can be rurnl Lake City. at 1:3f> a.m. todnv. gion Auxiliar y president . nt the October meeting to hold Interstate 94, was called to the lature to help clear recreation- be likely to pollute any waters the University of used between tanks to achieve the line at the Wesent millage attention by al waters or water supplies will of the state. " the same effect . — 139.75 for ynonagricultural Minnesota by a highway rep- opportunity be a survey of current facili- . During the past decade there Even with diking there may property and 144.75 for agricul- resentative and an has been a rapid increase in afforded. ties used for storage of oils , he a water pollution hazard if tural . Apnpoximntely $450,000 to studv wns the chemical , oil ;md petroleum there are pipelines which could Excavations revealed the wns raised by taxation against chemicals or other liquids in industries in the state. Most of break and carry the liquids be- presence of numerous skeletons , ATTENTION ® MEMBERS district property in lflfil all parts of the state. the industries use large tanks yond the dike. This happened Amerinds ( Amer- With some increase in the believed to be Came wardens and other field for bulk storage of li quid raw last winter on the Minnesota assessed valuation of the dis- ican Indians) , and miscellaneous personnel of the state Depart- material and finished product. "* Don bones and artifacts River. 't Miss the Travel Party trict . Superintendent D. D. Ka- non-human , ment of Conservation , field per- The location of many of them row said " he anticipates the such as shells and other objects sonnel of the state Fire Mar- is such that structural THE I'KOIM.KM is big in n have been used as failure For You and Your Guests!!! same rate will raise enough believed to shal , district engineers nnd oth- of tank or piping could cause state like Minnesot a because of utensils. money to meet the added costs er field personnel of the state gross pollution of waters and the abundance of surface water It will be this Tuesday, November ."> , al 8:00 P.M. in Die Winona llifib School Auditoriu m. in the budget. The tax levy to The objects were photograph- and the extent, to which rivers , Department of Health have been disastrous effects on fish and Meet your friends and neighbors at an inlonnnl gel-togethe r, See a color slide preview he sent to the county auditor ed , classified and removed to asked to cooperate. wild life adjacent lo streams. are used for barge transporta- will be approved shortly. the university for further study. tion. Large population center of (lie New York World Fair , j luo to open in April of 1% ., Also a colorful movie on The general public also is in- Hawaii , ' vited to send information. WHEN TANK installations are adjacent to the rivers and de- and a special feature for the ladies will be a Style Show featuring tho latest MmmmWkWkmmmmWMkm mTkmmm WmmWAmmmmAmmWmmm. located along n water course, pendent on them for water sup- in travel wardrobes. WINONA LODGE NO. 18 A.F. A A.M. ALL KNOWN above - ground diking is one way to provide plies compound the problem. A £k facilities used for storage ol a second barrier in case of The great number of barges • FREE ADMISSION ¦ {JsL sTATED COMMUNICATION substantial quantities of oils or leaks , explosions or other me- that ply the Mississippi in the ' chemicals will be included in chanical failures. summer are themselves a po- • FREE COFFEE AND COOKIES ¦ ¦ Tuesday, v 5/ 7;30 o clock the survey, especially those in Earth dikes three to four feet tential water pollution ¦ ¦ iwCV N° - hazard. # * ARN0LD STENEHJEM, W.M. locations that the contents could in diameter around the storage The many storage tanks built • DOOR PRIZES escape under certnin conditions tanks is one effective method. around the barge termina ls For reservation* nnd net into or pollute either Most tanks used for storage of create a year-mound problem. , please contact your AAA office at 6S W. 4th StrMt, Winona. Th« surface or underground waters, large quantitie s of flammable Wintertime storage subjects phone number ii 8-1579. Hop* you can make It. WINONA LODGE NO. 18, A.F. A A.M. Passage of the net by Ihe materials are diked. In this tanks to low temperatures , and DINNER CLUB Legislature is the result of last way fiie can be contained in changes' of temperature can A MASONIC winter 's cases of accidental es- one area , provi ding some pro- cause trouble unless the struc- WINONA DIVISION $SGV Fall Dinner Series cape of large quantities of in- tection lo nearby buildings or tures are .specifically designed >^ 5 — 6j00 p.m. dustrial oils into Ihe Minnesota other lank installations. to meet changing, severe clima- Minnesota State Auto Assoc. ( Tuesday, Nov. and Mississippi rivers, lt pro- Earth dikes require more tic conditions. They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo DEAR ABBY: Bars Asked at N.Y. Playhouses JJOAL Vti hL NEW YORK (AP) - If the 9L diappsmsd. q League of New York Theateri Time to Bluff has its way, Broadway playgo- ers will be able to sip a drink _ between acts without leaving tha G lea son Jealous Him, Lady theater. The league, composed of pro- By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN ducers and theater owners, will DEAR AF5V: I am the mother of six children. My urge a state survejLcommission Of His Fracture husband and I are both in our forties. For some time now Thursday to recommend giving By EARL WILSON my husband has been getting up and leaving for work TWO the city's legitimate playhouses NEW YORK—I've covered everything—now that I've covered hours before he is supposed to be there, and it only takes permission to open bars. a fractured wrist. him 15 minutes to get to work. I have asked him several The commission is studying There were some humorous angles—despite the . seriousness times why he leaves so early, and he tells me he can't the state's alcoholic beverage —when Jack Gleason fractured his left wrist riding a bicycle sleep! But when he gets up he hurries to get dressed and control laws. while taping his TV show It was a very, very he rushes through his breakfast like he is going to be late for through a wall something. These actions are making me suspicious. I Would funny fracture. like to get the truth out of him. Should I Dr Seymour Zucker arrived in the dressing room an hour follow him? SUSPICIOUS WIFE afterward. He saw Jackie'd been easing the pain drinking Scotch. Looking at the highball glass as he ran his finger over DEAR WIFE : No. Just say you did. the puffed-up wrist, the doctor DEAR ABBY: I am a second semester said, "How can I tell if you're BOYLE'S COLUMN hurt if you've already anaes- freshman in college and I am married. We thetized yourself?" ... Jackie have told no one other than our parents. Mine groaned something about "Fun- are furious with me and have refused to What Mail ny doctor.'" claim me any longer or pay for the rest of "Jackie's got a fractured frac- my education, although they can well afford Can Tell ture," commented &ji agent. it. My husband is a sophomore and he can't Toots Shof ,. Jackie's buddy Abby afford to pay for my schooling. His parents and rival, got the news at home would like to help out, but they cannot afford where he was suffering a brok- to send their own son to college. (He is there on a scholar- A Reader ship.) On top of everything, I am pregnant. With By HAL BOYLE en right arm received when I think Frank Sinatra playfully pushed our limited funds we have had to move into a run-down, one- , but can NEW YORK (AP)-Things a him off a barstool. "Guess Glea- room apartment. I know there is no easy solution know if you give me any advice at all? DEPRESSED columnist might never son was jealous of me, so he ^^^2^Y2_£__!______i__i______a^ he didn't open his mail: had to break his arm," Toots DEAR DEPRESSED : Are you two living together? A.British psychologist claims said. "He's been in a lot, kid- If so, and you've "told no one" you are married , what that happy people swear more ding me 'Lefty.' Which wrist , ' do your friends think? If you are living apart and your than unhappy ones. did he break?" . . . "The left," condition becomes apparent — what then? Also, if you Is The over-all cost of living has I told him . . . "The left ! Not are registered in college under separate names, you are increased by 25.3 per cent in the the right?" exclaimed Toots. violating the college's regulations — and will be booted America last decade — but medical care "Why, the lucky bum!" out, dough or no dough, You had better start ?11 over costs are up more than 50 per Beautiful Marilyn Hanold's again — at another college'. If you can 't get a student aid selling cent. done much TV with George Go- grant or a scholarship, or help from home, or are unable Housewives tend to get mad bel, Jan Murray, "Candid Cam- to work because of pregnancy, you had better forget out If told their life is getting era ," etc,, but says she most about higher education for now, if not forever. easier, but it is estimated that enjoys her part on Sid Caesar's DEAR ABBY: In reference to your "CONFIDENTIAL by using an automatic washer ABC TV show where she's nev- TO MARK: Milk is not that cheap any more. You'd be and dryer the average woman er allowed to say one word. ahead to buy a. cow." I beg to differ with you. Milk is still America WILL...If it doesn't saves each week the energy it Each time she's handed her your cheapest food. It has not increased more than two or develop enough future lead- would take to climb a ladder "silent" script, Sid asks her three cents per quart in the past ten year§. Everything else 6& miles high. "Will you need cue cards f or has gone up almost double. Have you ever raised a cow? ers now. They are needed to this?" . . . Angie Dickenson was Over 90,000 tons, of paper are A dairyman has at least $1500 invested in every cow, so hold our position in science , ¦ at El Morocco dancing with her " used in turning out some five I don't understand how you can recommend buvine a cow. jn business and jobs, in liv- favorite Ambassador . . . Mrs. Milk is still cheaper. A DAIRYMAN IN WISCONSIN billion greeting cards each year. Irving Mansfield (Jacqueline ing standards. About half are sent at Christ- Susann ) is happy. Looking in a What's on your mind? For a personal reply , send a self- mas, and more than two million bookshop window, she saw her addressed , stamped envelope to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly Where do we get leaders? go astray because they have the own new book about hier eat Hills Calif. . . wrong address. just published, titled "Every Higher education trainsmost 'd have to wear an eight- You Night, Josephine." Excellent U.S. Ambassador of them. But colleges ara power telescope to see as well reading! Nelson Sardelli, Jayne CITED ...Mrs. Roger Schneider, new kee, Wis. Two College of Saint Teresa faculty Thief ' . Returns facing higher costs. Many at a distance as f alcons do. Mansfield's fleeting romance, is president of the Teresan Alumnae Associa- members also were cited. They are Sister To Philippines 111 prey are need classrooms, laborato- Those swift birds of back from Europe to pursue his tion , hands a citation for outstanding achieve- M. Bede. second from left, and Sister M. Car and Child among the keenest-sighted of ( career rather tnan Jayne. ment to Miss Rose Marie Cauley, Milwau- Helen, right. (Daily News Photos) MANILA , Philippines AP) - ries andcompetentteachers. all earth's creatures. ROME CD — A thief stole William Stevenson, U.S. am- I - HEY, BARRY At least 20 countries have bor- GOLDWATER, Antonio Porro's parked car and bassador to the Philippines, is To hold our lead we must "God Save the baby, did you know about this? rowed the song shortly after telephoned police in the hospital at Clark Air King" for their national an- The Sunday Times fea- back our colleges. Either w« to corhe get it7He had discov- Force Base and may undergo thems. tured a story about Gov. Nel- intestinal surgery, an embassy help them meet costs or wa son Rockefeller' ered Porro's 2-month-old daugh- s Museum of spokesman said today. He did "Companionship Is a matter Primitive Art , written by ter, Rosalia, sleeping peacefully ... sell out. 7 the not disclose the nature of the of mutual weaknesses. We like man Rocky picked as director of on the back seat. woman best who ¦ ambassador's ailment. that man or the museum, Robert Goldwater. HELP THE COLLEGE has the same faults that we There's a pub near Ohio State FLORENCE FARM BUREAU have"—George Jean Nathan. University called "The Library" LAKE CITY, Minn. ( Special) Don't Neglect Slipping OF YOUR CHOICE NOW . The next time your wife starts and — according to Laurence —Jesse Geisler was elected To. find out how the college crisit to bawl you out , tell her she Ruggieri of Carmel, N.Y. — president of the Florence Farm affects you , write to HIGHER may be ruining her own com- "When a co-ed stumbles into Bureau at its annual meeting FALSE TEETH EDUCATION Box 36 , cause of Do falae teeth drop, slip or wobble , Timat plexion. Tension is one •her dorm a little smeary-eyed, here. Re elected were: Claude when you tnlk, eat, lnugh or sneeze? Square Station, New York 36. . skin eruptions. she can say to the housemother Harrison , vice president; Eu- Don't be annoyed and embarrassed Only 36 per cent of the na- bjr 8ucU l)andlc»p». FASTEETH, »D Published as a public service with perfect honesty and great gene Brusehaver, secretary, alkaline (non-acid) powder to sprin- tions families expect to occupy In cooperation wrth The Advertit't nfl dignity, 'I've merely been to the and Louis Yotter, treasurer. kle on your plates, keeps talis teeth ' their present homes for the rest more firmly tat. Gives confluent feel- i Council and the Newspaper Library.' " .Mrs. Geisler was named chair- ing of security and added comfort. Advertising Executivea A-iocialion. of their lives. Nearly two-thirds Dean Martin was man of the women' No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feel- driving s commit- ing. Get FASTEETH today at any expect to move. from Palm Springs to Beverly tee. drujr counter. Each soldier in the American Hills — cold sober — and a of the cop Revolution, by decree stopped him, after which it went Continental Congress, was sup- like this: " "You Dean Martin?" /r posed to receive a ration of a . . . "Yessir" ... "Get outa the quart of beer a day—but he oft- car" . . . "OK " . . . "Now- en didn't get it. George Wash- let's see you walk at his that white ington had a brewhouse line" ... "Without a net?" Mount Vernon home and his own recipe for making beer, al- TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: PRESTO though his personal preference Margaret Whiting now believes was a small glass of Madeira the talk about how long "Cleo- wine. patra" is: "The ticket seller asked if I wanted the seat by NEW OFFICERS . . . Newly elected of- the Sisters of St, Francis, who operate the History's first public pawn- the day, week or season." ficers of the College of Saint Teresa Alum- college ; Miss Veronica O'Hearn , Chicago, shop was founded by.a Francis- WISH I'D SAID THAT: nae Association talk with college officials. vice president ; Sister M. Camille,. college AIR Appar- . HUMIDIFIER can friar—Bernardino de Fel- ently the only thing a six-year- From left are Mrs. Roger Schneider , 4215 president , and Miss ,Elaine Graf , Rochester, ADDS NEEDED MOISTURE TO DRY, HEATED AIR ' ¦ ¦ tre of Perugia , Italy—in 1462. It old will share willingly is a com- 9th St., Goodview , new president; Mother incoming treasurer. . .-*- gained approval by the Church municable disease. M. Callista , Rochester , general superior of ?"Relieves annoying because its purpose was chari- REMEMBERED QUOTE: dryness in nose and throat that often leads to colds. ]| P i3 _l ^ table—to help the needy. "The only thing some people Promotes wintertime health and comfort-even house plants "We make a living by what learn from experience is that * /^^^^m% we get , but we make a life by they just made another mis- ' the Farmers' what we give" — take." — Argonla (Kans.) Ar- m Prolongs furniture life; lowers winter heating costs Almanac. gosy. 3 Receive Citations , too. Jm ^^^ M^^%$ m It was the Marquis of Halifax EARL'S PEARLS: The kitch- " Education is Presto's new Humidifier supplies moisture for largest, driest who observed, en credo of the new bride seems t^^^ m^i ^SWlJ^^ what remains when we have to be, 'If it doesn 't move homes—quietly, easily. Humidistat Control maintains your have been , wrap j0^ST[l^ V _f__!i_f1 forgotten all that we it in aluminum foil. " — Gone *S taught." ' From Teresan Alumnae humidity setting—automatfcaffy, while Air Bath Purifier ^mmm ^^^m Brown , Danhury, Conn. fj ^4 Chuck McCnnn described a Three College of Saint Teresa Class Society?" I ber of the executive committee washes away dust and smoke, reduces bacterial j Pi-J^r { /Z> owwiSj local showgirl : "Her IQ seldom alumnae were cited for their The alumnae citations were of the Minnesota Classical Con- count by 99%. Rustproof tank, . ¦ ! ference. In addition , Sisler cabinet . . ¦~W j<7 % '^ rises above room temperature." achievements Saturday night at presented by Mrs. Roger ' ki /^^r^V That's early, brother. the college's annual homecom- Schneider, 4213 8th St, Good- Bedo has been active in the BtZSjOi ing alumnae banquet. view , president of the alumnae ' alumnae association. ENDS TUES • • The three are Sister M. Hel- association. | Miss Cauley, victim of a crip- Maiiii»t - J:ll ' .5;5 c- 5c Robert Brom Ordained en and Sister M. Redo , both Sister Helen, the college s pling disease , has led an nc- Nil ¦¦:.00-9:05 members of the college faculty , director of admissions and j live life despite confinement 5ci3c «5c To Diaconate in Rome placement director for and Miss Rose Mnrie Cauley, more j to a wheelchair. She helped The Rev. Mr. Robert Milwaukee , Wis. than 25 years, has taken nn act- ' develop rehabilitative programs Brom , ive interest in bringing students son of Mr. and Mrs. \ for. patients in Milwaukee 's WOODWARD Henry MORE THAN .175 'alumnae from other countries to Saint && Brom , 021 W. Broadway, nnd a j Wood Hospital. Operator of a gpT^j___^ KAfH nnd faculty members attended Teresa. She helped develop the | gift shop, she takes nn active $ __M___ m__i vif I Z.„ i ifia J_i VI fourth theologian for the Dio- the banquet held in Ihe Lourdes ^** !^^ - cese of Winona , was ordained foreign languugo program at | part in Tcvesnn chapter acti- Dining Hall. They were wel- the college, and hns been direc- vities and her parish's affairs. to the diaconate In Rome on comed by Sl.ster M. Camille , Oct. 27, the Keast of Christ the tor of its National Defense Ed- college prcsiilcnl , who also dis- ucation Act language institutes TOASTMISTRESS nt the bnn- King. He will be ordained a pensed the growth of the rol- j quet wns Mrs. .lames Kroner , priest Dec. 18. the past three years. ¦ lc«e. Sister Bede, a member of 'La Crosse, Wis. Officers of the Speaker of the. evening was the college 's classical depart- | Franciscan order which oper- GALESVILLE CHURCH Prof, Herbert Slusser , a mem- ment faculty, has served ns a ! ates the college attended the Galesville. Wis. ( Special) - ber of the English depart ment national and state officer in the I affair. They wore Mother M. The senior high group of the faculty at the College of St, Classical Association of tha Cnllistn , gener.il superior; Sis- MlTZI GAYMOR-GIG YOUNGi Galesville Presbyterian Church Thomas, St. Paul , Minn. He Middle West and South. She has tor M. Edith , general vicar; will participate in a retreat Fri- un,cd ..rrtV-andience to strive to presented papers to the group, Sister Mary, general secretary ; day, Saturday and Sunday nt enjoy, preserve and develop and helped in the development Sister M, Adole , genornl trea- STARTS WED. Camp Wnllanda on Lake Men- their heritage of a liberal arts of modern methods of teaching surer, nnd Sister M. Edmund. clota at Madison , Wis. education. classics. ! All are from the ordor 's moth- SHOW|N "Only the hobo, the million- She served as a member of l erliou.se In Rochester. aire, and a liberal arts gradu- both national nnd state commit- I Tho evening closed with an NOW ate can enjoy today 's world," tees for rcrrultment of Latin [ informal reception in Lourdes ^•V•py'w ' J I _, xLp*J'^ I. rnr^ At 7:15 and 9:Ts m\ f l l ° Mussel' asswier. in a speed, on tenrhers and also wns a mem- i lounges. %JyUj LwUUdLU _W Prices: JSt-SOt-Mt "What Happens to Our Liberal Arts Education in n Middle ITHAK SHOP SPECIALS-I TO • P.M. DAILY A LITTLE DEA TH EACH DAY... \ .©^\ Advert lunirnl A LOT OF LOVE EVER Y MMTI rJ s j 1z*Jgm PRIED IPRINO SPECIAL CHAR-BROILED '" ACKACHE TENDERLOIN " "" ""^^ ham v ,.* " ' ^ B & N __^i^M^-m^Wv tim^mam^ *J^______HP rliii__^J£______w B___w 3lV^BcM___^V^k^^^ >^ ^W^mp"I»p^^ A ERVE ENSION CHICKEN $1-09 STEAK $1.29 ^ SECONDARYN TO TKIDNEY IRRITATION ' ' " ¦ ; After _ 1> common Kidney nr llltddrr It . mmm%lmmWW\ ' mWkWr I «u«MHMH| ||M ritntlonn nffcot twlrn nn mnnir women MI : ______l ' ¦ men nnd may mnkr you trine nnd nervnuA INCLUDES SOUP, POTATOES , .SALAD, COFFER —^ _M_H_i_fl_K_flii^A. < > ' • ' ^^*mmMm ^mm trom too friMnieiit , liuimn. or Uctiln* f ranch Tries, American tries, steamed or mnihert pnlnlon. mmmmmm ^^K ^mammmm ^^WmmmmtlliltM^^^'^^^^aa^&m^^mmmttrll>»(Inn lioIhilny nnd nliilil Heninilnillv , • rOU innv Inhr r.lerii uml Miller limn llrnrt - • Mixed sated bowl with Princtv Roquafort, 1,000 tilnnd Drg.ilno. »rhiv. , Hnrli m-he HU s3B_mSK3S-al^ffll_BM^E6M-H-___ A 7-year-old girl and a 10- Thrifty Savings Certificates year-old boy were among the seven persons killed in traffic accidents in Wisconsin during the weekend. The deaths raised By GRETCHEN L. LAMBERTON the state's highway toll for the is it that opera year to 745 compared with 797 WHY singers on concert tours of the coun- a year ago. try, or at least the Middle West, so often underesti- P^^il "I can spend them in any store I Cindy mate the intelligence of the audience and sing DOWN to Johnson , 7; daughter of them? It has in Mrs. Ruth Johnson of Kaukau- happened so discouragingly often here in na , Winona that it was no surprise when the same thing happen- V Winona!" I was killed Sunday when she ed at the '^ M was struck by a car as she Theodore Uppman community concert last week. I- played in a-pile of leaves in the Metropolitan Opera star Theodore Uppman has a glor- street in front of her home. ious voice and has sung great operas like "La Traviata", ' ¦ " ¦> "Salome . , ¦ ¦ " "Carmen . " "LaBoheme". "Pagliacci". "Madame . . . Jesse Blanco, 10, one of 13 Butterfly", ''Don Giovanni" and many more. Most middle- children of Mrs. Helen Blanco, westerners are starved for opera and would welcome joy- Milwaukee, was killed Saturday fully a few of the ' great opera arias by a Metropolitan night when hit by a car that Opera star. swerved to avoid two of his So what does this famous tional content. I "It's good for the town! Money brothers. operatic star dish out for us? I don't think it's the opera 7 l |K |^|Bi A two-car collision early Sun- Twenty-three separate little star's fault. More likely it's day on Kenosha 's West Side selections, many of them the fault of the concert I saved here is money spent claimed the life of Steven Per- twiddly little songs like "The bureau program-maker^ who | ^ | ^ ion, 46, of Kenosha. Greatest Man I Know", "The seem to think they must Jerome T. Madden. 26, of ru- Albatross" and the Mtterly never go any deeper than th'e ral Elkhorn, a Navy lieutenant silly little ditty *T.d You light and frothy offering lest home on leave, was killed Sat- Ever Cross Over to Sne- they offend or bore some urday when his car struck a doh's?" And to cap it all the ticket holder. But—and many tree north of that city. And a grand finale encore was a concert goers feel the same similar accident early Saturday tuneless, and stupid cowboy west of Beloit resulted in the viay—it's like a hungry per- song. One had the feeling _^_^_^_R& ^______H ____¦ ______! death of Harlan K. Mitchell , 32, son wanting to sit down to , that about 21 of these nice a meal of good roast beef of Rockton 111. little songs were just light and vegetables, and instead, ' '"' can buy whateve r I want I Lewellyn C. Robbins, 57. of vocal exercises, and I felt served an entire table- nip>mWSk dl rural Waupaca , was killed Fri- that only once—in the all- Jigof marshmallows, pick- with them. day night in a collision involv- ^too-short aria from Mozart's . and crumbly cookies. A. *J | I'm not limited to j ing His pickup truck and a car "Marriage of Figaro"—did few cookies and marshmal- the star let his beautiful lows, fine. But a whole meal ¦ any southeast of Waupaca. W> ^Kls ^9amj0Fr * ^BM certain item." AmmWI ¦ Martin F. Johnson, 19, of Ra- voice out in a song with emo- of them—well , no. cine, was killed Sunday night when his motorcycle struck a After seeing the St. Mary 's College presentation of bridge on Highway 31 about "Taming Of the Shrew" - last week one had the thought "In- seven miles northwest of Ken- genuity thy name is Sullivan!" For several years audiences osha. at the St. Mary's plays have marveled at how a director can put on a 3-dimensional play on so cramped a stage, and this^ Shakespearean play staged by Gerald Sullivan was even Explorer Post more adroitly handled in the manipulation of characters and crowds. In fact , how 4he tumblers managed to perform ef- Trapshooting Set fortlessly on a jam-packed little stage was a mystification. If St. Mary's ever gets a building with a decent-sized 0 16 At Holmen Nov. 16 stage—which the entire community is rooting for—they 'll very: llW&to^^^*^ PATRON* sj , ± +^ IMJ J likely start putting on vast spectaculars with limitless vistas HOLMEN, Wis. — Explorer of desert and mountain like "Lawrence of Arabia " or "Win- Post 491, Holmen, has issued an ning of the West", complete with songs, ballet and battles. ^ totTfir invitation to all posts in the Anyway, "Taming of the Shrew", the first in their year of ;L Gateway Area Council , Boy \i Shakespearean Festival, was great fun arid excellent theater. wT #^ ^ Scouts, to its annual trapshoot. We're looking forward to their next Shakespearean produc- > ______, It will be Nov. _16 on the Hol- tion, "Hamlet", next February, as well as the two Shakes- I I j iijnsV i it 3__TiH" mZ*i *i* >f8-Tti i iftS% i litMVnfittti Vii____ fi*t^-3--ta&t "M"i if . men Rod & Gun Club range on peare films they are bringing to town. County Trunk T, just off High- W: PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS way 53, south of Camp Decor- lfi ( \ ah. Trapshooting is set up in teams of five. Awards willl ' be Dr. C. W. Griiler given for singles and team com- ^ petition.. Units will bring their 331 Cheat* Building Phone .417 ¦ own lunch , the Holmen post . Presented By¦ l will provide the beverage. Cost 1Vdffl ffl]fl\V Modern Chiropractic - I for 15 rounds of ammunition *» *fT. and targets will be $2 a per- and Electrotherapy THE«* MERCHANTS NATIONAL ^^BAM son. \flH - ' V«v9 Winona, Minnesota ^v&nBif *V Registration , instruction and Monday thru Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. practice will begin at 10 a.m. *'THE BANK THAT SERVICE BUILT" ' Open Friday Evenings 7-9 by Appointment (^ ^ \ In the tournament, at 1 p.m , Closed Saturday w\ 10 rounds will be shot . Recrea- Good for $1.00 in Trade at any Winona Merchant, when vali- tional shooting on the range will fm& fpmi l ii . be available after the tourna- vlrcS dated by authorized signature and presented for payment at WW ment, for which boys should SHOP THE EASY WAY — READ THE ADS FIRST bring their own ammunition . ((fSH The Merchants National Bank of Winona, Minnesota. gm))

~ fffflfi NOT NEGOTIABLE Authorized Signature | | $ ( fi Void After Feb. 15/ 1964 W \ \ \tf Q^A'i'l'k&AWLmiU'k'emrFf iBemmiAil > I : «_§F^**_3?^*.^^.!_£-^.2H

And, Here's How You Can Get Yours! n Sept 21, We SGt 0Ut t0 tCSt ,flC stam na af]

P.S. Mr. Merchant, bring your Thrifty Sav- ings Certificates in for redemption.

These Comets d rove day and night for 100,000 During this challenging event, these Comets re- miles. Average speed of the lead car—over 105 wrote the record bpok, set over 100 world records* , mph—includes time for refueling and maintenance. Many were once held by famous foreign ca rs. SAVE.... Where Saving DOES Make a Difference! ' ^A ^A ^ATA ^A ^A ^^^m ^L ^^A ^A ^A ^A^^^^A AJmmmmmmmmsa^Bf ^fci^^^ ______j

,u, ..,... -;. ._£--....- ..^. ' f|-}|_j- . fi*if IWTII y-' r - " "*iiin__l_____lii_l Ii iilili.hil nil ¦ 7 nan iiiiiiii iii)_y_dii_l_il_ili_ l CI IANTS y ^aj&ttf^ BIN/ IER - WHAT THIS MEANS TO THE NEW-CAR BUYER. This around-the-clock Durability Run was the most rugged test ever faced by a new car. Those Comets proved their stamina and durability beyond question. And the same skills and engineering excellence that made Comet's performance possible are yours In every '64 Comot. For this Is a hot and hefty new kind of Comct-ncwly styled, newly designed, newly engineered. It's bigger, bolder looking... with a solid, big-car ride . Try one-*fct your Mercury dealer's. LINCOLN Ml IU.UUY DIVISION KbKrciMU1GIJ COMPANY ^ > o(Z^rt Anc I ^omLmm* #lf* OWL MOTOR COMPANY Tkmmmmkma^ Winona 4th & Main , Minn. AflTRA J&j fc. CAL INDEPENDENT BANK •World Unlimited and Cl>n r iut>|«ct In TIA ovj l, \^ f MEMBER FEDERAl DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION iprn j^y rfff^T- ' ' .. . ___ HOW DO YOU STAND, SIR? ANY SIGN OF AN SOS? TODAY IN NATIONAL AFFAIRS Will ^_™«_^»»«»^»»*e»»e«»»a^»»» Cut ' ______(» ______«a^a»B_ I ' Tax < as-*eB_»^-»^_M_ What - Mean to You Forei gn Policy March (Editor'i NoU:—ConftiJ.d ot>er the new Another tax bill ? Thi* i$ the firit in a teries of edi- torials which will explain in easy-to-under- Held Costly , how . you'll be a//ected if the stand detail By SEX. BARRY GOLDWATER n House bill becomes law. Today 's editorial On Washingto deals with.ihe low-income f amily man.) I suggest that our government today is fol- By DAVID LAWRENCE lowing the most dangerous foreign policy in ^ WASHINGTON — Maybe there will have to be another WHEN JOHN Adams, a $5,0O0-a-year its history. \ "March on Washington," and this time the demonstration factory worker with a . wife and two chil- We might well ask ourselves what it has may have to be directed to President Kennedy himself. dren, gets his first 1964 weekly paycheck achieved. For the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King jr.- hero of the last next January, he'll find it $1.30 bigger. It has split the greatest alliance in free "march" and perhaps the most prominent of the Negro inte- world history. NATO , into factions and inac- gration leaders, feels that Mr. Kennedy has "retreated" on That is, he will if Congress enacts the tion. The policy stands wall-eyed in Berlin and civil rights" legislation. Dr. King has just said the proposed " ¦" ¦ 11-billion-dollar tax cut in time. cross-eyed in Paris and blind in Cuba. in a public speech that "no ——.: : ;¦¦ . "7 In Africa , policies of confusion and com- president can be great or of an extreme nature, some Instead of withholding $8.20 a week to promise have plunged the Congo back 50 years even fit for office if he at- Congress ' of the members of meet John's federal income tax . the com- in its development. These policies have sub- tempts to accommodate poli- who do not want to see any pany which employs him will withhold on- sidized and supported the Socialist and aggres- tical expediency with human legislation at all passed sive Nasser government in ly $6.90. rights." seized the opportunity to Egypt. They have subsidized This criticism came as a help get the "strong" bill and supported tyranny in Gha- This small increase may disappoint result of the efforts of the out of the House commit- na. They have spread across President and the attorney tee and oh to the floor, John after all the stories he has read about the entire continent a smoke- the big tax cut. • genera l to obtain a "civil where it might readily be screen behind which economic rights" bill which would get defeated and no substitute and social chaos has been able But things will improve a little more through both houses of Con- enacted at this session of to run rampant in the name of gress. Dr. King accused the Congress. starting 1965 when the company will hold progress. ' . administration of using "bad out BEING PRACTICAL pol- only $6.40 a week, a further increase In-Southeast Asia, the pres- tactics" and said that, "if iticians, the President and of 50 cents in John's take-home pay. ent foreign policy lunged for you start with a weak bill, the attorney general are neutrality in Laos and came and then get it watered anxious to get some "civil THAT'S WHAT i« meant, as far as John up with a creeping communist down," it could become "a " legislation passed Goldwater take over. In Viet-Nam we fare rights is concerned , when they speak of a two- ' nothing bill." right away. They would like step tax reduction. no better. India , shocked for a time by Chi- The President , however, invasion, to avoid a lengthy contro- nese has drifted again toward com- is mw / more familiar with versy in Congress during placency encouraged by official U.S. vacilla- . It's not as piddling as it sounds since it what goes on behind the 1964 as the presidential adds up to a yearly paycheck increase of tion. Pakistan, once a great ally of the West , scenes in Congress than is has been frustrated and finally repelled by our campaign approaches. If $67.60 in 1964, and grows to $93.60 by the Dr. King. Having been a they could succeed in hav- indecision. member of the House as end of 1965. Yet it's hardly enough in it- I suggest that our present attitudes and ing enacted the first com- well as the Senate, Mr. prehensive "civil rights" policies in the field of foreign affairs have Kennedy is acquainted with yielded nothing but losses to the cause of free- legislation passed by Con- the maw difficult barriers gress in more than 100 dom and general confusion throughout the that arise through ordinary world. years, they would be satis- parliamentary procedures, fied. The administration, of ; < »- - ' and. these course, is following a nor- | , . 7^; - ft c: law1 I *IT — Mayor John Collins, Dem- the polls, while another set But — if the House bill arisen under the Soviet Communist banner dal, will do their best to Klan hoods to prevent their the new tax rates will begin showing ef- knock the Democrats for a identification. ocrat, will be re-elected in of congressmen see ways of were proven correct. And we began a long mobilizing votes of resent- Answers John Adams' first paycheck after loop. It's anybody's race in Boston . . . Mayor J. Brac- fect in buildup of our strength all over again. ment. For a good deal of the first of the year. The rate of withhold- Today I am afraid that we are sliding back Traditionally the signs Philadelphia, but whoever ken Lee, ultra „ right-wing wins, the 331, Republican, will be re-elect- opposition has been creat- ing will drop from 18 percent to 15 percent to the point where we face again the slow of defeat or victory can be 000 margin by To Your detected in mid-term elec- which Kennedy won . last ed in Salt Lake City ... ed among businesses to be the first year, and to 14 percent the sec- erosion of purpose, alertness and preparedness affected by the proposed that so nearly proved ruinous in the tions one year in advance, time will evaporate. Democrat Mayor Richard ond. past. C. Lee will win again in law. How do you stand , sir? sometimes two years in ad- San Francisco. . — This is Question s another test case of Demo- New Haven . . .Mayor Lew- THERE ARE fundamen- 10 SHOW offects of the proposed new vance. That By JOSEPH cratic strength in a state is W. Cutrer , a Democrat , tal differences between what G. MOLNER, M.D. law on typical Americans, this series will was why t h e Pres- which Kennedy has to win will be re-elected for a is* being called a "strong" Dear Dr Molner: deal with case histories based on actual to get re-elected. Here Jack fourth term as mayor of bill and a "weak" bill. What is the cause of , fac- IN YEARS GONE BY ident work- returns. They involve John Adams ed so hard Shelly, a popular Dem- Houston . . . Thus, the President would psoriasis?—MRS. J. L. tory worker , his sister Mary, office secre- In Akron, Ohio, Mayor be content with a bill which in 1 a s t ocratic congressman and It is not tary; his father Henry, who is about to re- Ten Years Ago . . . 1 953 former head O. • Erickson, Democrat, is provided safeguards for the known. There year's con- of the team- are several treatments, tire: Frank Brown, the ,000 a year de- Editorial staff members of the Embers, Cot- sters, had gone home ex- expected to win over Even right to \ote, the speed-up and $20 g r e s- if the doctor guesses right , signer of Alpha Co. products; Thomas ter High School's annual , are Dorothy Bittner , sional elec- pecting a walk-away vic- J. Ward , Republican . . . of public-school desegrega- , the psoriasis is hel ped. Oth- Clark , $100,O0O-a-year president; and the editor; Shirley Molock Ceil Lelwica and Bar- tions and tory. Just the opposite has The race in Indianapolis is tion, and the banning of bara Walter , associate editors. close between Republican discrimination in public er times he may try all Alpha Co . itself. came out been the case . " the known "Variations of 1953," will be the annual all- Harold Dobbs, Clarence T. Drayer and accommodations" and in treatments and a m a z- Republi- the psoriasis continues The John has a wife and two children and school production of Winona High School. Two ingly well, can , serving as acting Democrat John J. Barton , programs which the federal one-act pl ays will be given. In the cast of "The one consolation is that while a $7 ,000 mortgage on his $10,500 house. He B U t next Pearson mayor under George Chris- the former chief of state government itself operates. Potboiler ' are Thomas Schoonover , Gilbert police ... psoriasis is unsightly, it finds it to his advantage to itemize his de- week it may be a different topher, has made surprising Extremists, on the other Bcrgs'rud. Willard Adank . Nancy Kukowski , Pa-, headway, In Columbus, Ohio, May- hand , take the position that doesn't harm health. ductions, and his lax bill (or 1963 amounts story. Here is the roll call and the race tricia Dnvnll , Robert Bcrgsrud and Thomas could go either way tomor- nard Sensenbrenner , Demo- the bill 011 "public accom- to only $300. So this will give him a $126.40 of key election battles and Dear Dr. Molner: Is Chandler. Presenting "Box and Cox " will be how they are row. cratic mayor for two previ- modations" should be aim- it serious if return from the $426.40 wages withheld likely to run there is a William Boughton , Thomas Jensen and Nancy out: ¦MISSISSIPPI — For the ous terms, is expected to ed not merely at hotels and little blood present in during this year. Gorrnan. Kentucky — Republicans , first time since Reconstruc- stage a comeback over the motels, restaurants, lunch phlegm? - N. G. who recently elected a Lou- tion days , the Republicans Republican incumbent , Ral- counters, retail stores, gas- When he files his return under the pro- Twenty-Five Yea r A.go . . . 1 938 ston Westlake. oline stations and places of Yes. It may be some- posed new plan in 1965 (for 1964) he will isville mayor for the first are seriously pushing a can- Harold HLshop recently visited his parents time in .10 years, are cam- didate: Rubcl Phillips, entertainment, but also at thing very serious, or it , and receive a $107.80 rebate a UNUSU\L MATERIALS owe $251 Mr. and Mrs. V . \., Bishop . He has returned paigning all-out to elect G o 1 d w a t e r conservative any business operating un- may be of moderate im- from the $358.80 wages . withheld. The year to Minneapolis. Louis B. Nunn as governor with plenty of Texas oil PONCO CITY , Okla. ifl- der state or city "authoriza- portance , or it may even he following, with the tax cut fully in eff ect , W. W. Tolleson was elected president of the in this normall y Democratic money behind him. A local woman produces tion , permission or license. " trivial — but you MUST he will pay $223 tax and get a rebate of Kiwnnis v 'lub fur w:,1.) .succeeding Dr . C, A. state. They are encouraged Mississippi elections don't mosaics with beans and It was this sweeping pro- find out. See your doctor. $109.80 from the $332.80 wages withheld. Rohrer. by the Democratic split be- usually mean much. The popcorn. vision which members of Waiting can be disastrous. tween Gov. Bert Combs battle is between Democrat- Mrs. Delphine Rhodd util- the House committee of the AFTER THE transition year John will Fifty Years Ago . . . 1913 and the ebullient ex-Gover- ic factions in the primary. izes them to create color- judiciary were ready to find that he had saved $77 a year , or 2fi nor Happy Chandler. Iiut this time Democrats ful fowl. champion . It caused dis- , II. W. Liliby has been nuule the first dis- She uses pinto beans, na- may in the ranks of the ad- percent from his present tax bill. This triet member of the executive committee of the However , Happy 's bitter are snapping out of their would be more than three fourths of a attack on three of his old November lethargy to vote vy beans, lima beans and ministration because of a MEN Minnesota Modern Woodmen of America. week's paycheck. friends , Joe Leary, Henry for Lt. Gov, Paul Johnson , lentils to make the wings, fear that such a clause • A White Way Association has been formed backs and breasts, Then ( Lee Waterfield , nnd Mac an unreconstructed segre- would arouse nationwide op- with .corgi' Iliisch as president ; A. R . Pntton popcorn, tinted with food position since it could be In itemizing his deductions , John will vice pres ident ,' !'. . A. ( .ernes , .secretary, and Walters, (or supporting the gationist , svho won head- Democratic lines in coloring, takes care of the applied to private schools, PAST 40 finiHhal he could not deduct some of the candidate , Ned the "Olc Miss" dis- (I. I'7 Wnick , treasurer. other areas. And the eyes Troubled with GETTING UP NIGHTS local taxes that he can now . These would Breathitt , has soured a lot pute . He will undoubtedly social clubs, law firms , in- of Chandlcrites , and t lie win — which will be no vic- arc blackeyed peas. s u r a n c e companies and Pains in BACK, HIPS, LEGS be the taxes lie pays on gasoline, auto li- Seventy-Five Years Ago . . . 1 888 Mrs. Rhodd says she does apartment houses. Tindntss, LOSS OF VIGOR , chances are strong that the tory for Kennedy. cense plate Tees cigarel and tobacco tax- The foundation has been completed for the it "strictly for fun. " Democratic ticket will win. ln__the,-Uvf> congressional THE SO-called "strong" If you lire a victim of these symp- es , drivers license lees , and .some amuse- (' ' toms then Winona old Storage Company s building nt Philadel phia - This will races , the Republicans will bill also included an author- your troubles m»y l>« ment taxes. Main and Front streets. traced to Glandular Inflammation, he the most important JFK win with Albert W. Johnson _Winona DAILY Ne*^ ization for the attorney gen- (ilanrlular Inflammation ia a con- Mrs. .J ohn Slellwagen and daughter Rose re- " barometer in the .nation. For in the 23rd district of Penn- MONDAY. NOVEMBER i.JM eral to intervene by means Hlitiltional disease , nnd . medicines Under the present rules John can de- turned from a tri p to the Kast. that 11 years Philadelp hia his sylvania; VOLUMU 107, NO. 294 give temponyy relief will not duct about $1, 100 a year , which is $600 while the Demo- of an injunction suit where- remove the ratines of your troubles. 'been under Democratic crats will capture the seat Published daily except Saturday and hoiI- more than the "standard deduction of over there was any claim of N»Rl«rt of Glandular Inflammn- One Hundfcd Years Ago'. 1863 mayors, after some 75 years of liberal Democrat Homer days by Republican and Herald Puhll'ih- $500. . . Ing Company, 401 firanklln SI., Winona, denial of rights, privileges tion often lends to proitinturc senil- The two recruiting part ies , Issac Bonham of Republican rule. Two of Thornbcrry of Austin, Tex. Minn, _____ or immunities secured by ity, and ineurabla conditions. " ~ the Democrats, SUBSCRiPTION RATEs HIS DEDUCTIONS arc. nnd Messrs Stevens , Bancroft and Pettis, have Sen. Joe The interesting phase of the constitution or laws of Th« past yaar wen from 1.000 consolidated to organize nno company for the Clark and Richardson Dil- this race will be how much Slngl* Copy — 10c Dally, 15c Sunday the United States, communitiea have been successfully Delivered by Carrier—Par week 50 centi It has treated. Tliey have found soothing ' worth , injected new vitality support Is $340 paid as interest , $100 contributions new calvary regiment anil county commission- rolled up by H weeks H..75 SI week.J2..50 been felt by critics of this relief and improved health, ers are oficring a bounty lo all enlisting from into the elderly and some- Frank B. NeGehce , an or- to church , charit y, and organizations; $200 B y mall strictly In advanct ; paper slop, particular provision that ¦.. _._-.__. Th« Kxcelsior Winona ( " nunlx . what decrepit city. ganizer of the National ped on explrallon date. .».. I medical expenses , and $(10 "other " expen- ' In- such a law would open the RECTAL-COLON Medical Clinir: HUT MAYOR .lames II. dignation In Fillmore, Houston, Olmsted, Winona, ses.' Convention and way to legal controversies Art iflan auaclitad Ims a New The $400 he deducts for state and local J. Tate , one of the Wabasha, Buffalo. JacKson, Pepin and with filindulsr Is- J."It ISE BOOK who inherited the recent hecklers Trempealeau counties: on freedom of the press and flaamutl.n. tax payments would he reduced to $300 in job when Dilworth retired to of Adlai Stevenson in Dal- tllRt to | lg h()W 1964 under the new bill, 1 ytar . . , S12.00 3 monthsT". tt.50 freedom of worship and a WINONA DAILY NEWS run for governor, has been las. Mcflchce is now run- *_rnonths . , J4.50 l month . . . 11.3] H,;n,a host of other questions ;«tt'b::fc , l , ^sSSa a hard-luck executive a n A ning for Congress. So is All other mall subscriptions: &M MM. i!,, | 1'VMWVEN NON- In 1964 Joh n's itemized deductions still An Independent Ncvspmm — tistubiishrd IR55 _ where Congress hitherto has fe. the big Ml , 000 majority Jim Dobbs , former 1 year . . , 115 00 months . . 1t.7J will be more than the " "life < months . . . Jl.00 l month , . . II.60 not delegated any such TREATMfNTS. $500 standard" de- W K Wiiire <; It C I OSWA V C E INBKN . I . which swung the tide lo line " employe of right-wing Send chanoe ol addrmn notices, wWalli/. broad power to the Depart- An. «f lha.i if/ior- Thin book m»v duction of $50O, 10 percent of adjusted 1' iililishci F. ri 'r . /in crlfir /.i/.sm .' .vs llpr, Kennedy 'iu lilfiu tired conies, subscription orders and other U<\ m»( bt tmu. prov<, ot utmost has . dwin- oilman, It. L. Hunt. ment of Justice. •t th» lami tlmi gross income in John 's case or $1 , 000 , mid Kil'fm A Adv . Director mall Items lo Winona Dally News. Box 15, Im, mnP 0„»»rt.,,n r>« inl dled until it' s now any- However , the two top Winona, Minn. As soon as it became res are r«cel«lni ™ " whichever is lower. body 's nice. Cl.n.ular mlnm *. yourhfe. U»« W .1 Col.r. Alml l'll HliK MKlt H . G.IlYMM Texas candidates will prob- Second class postaqp paid al Winona. evident that the bill was ties trestmtnti. coupon below. 1_ No oblijation. ¦ ¦ AfI I <'; I I II > II ol all the \avi\]y ABIWESJ .. ___ . j news printed 111 this newspa per as well as all J But avoid foolish questions, and i i genealof ili 'H. A.I' , news dispatches I TOWN • and contentions, and strivings about the law; tor they ar* unprofitable and vain. Titus 3:9. Mondiiy, November t , 1 H6J iUtT£_i___ . i MONDAY Man Found Dead In Brush Fire - The Daily Record NOVEMBER 4, 1963 ^ ^ Scattered U.S. RACINE, Wis. un -- The char- red body of 62-year-old Ervin At Community Winona Deaths Two-State Deaths Froth of Milwaukee was found Sunday by Water-ford firemen [Elections on Memorial Hospital Leon S. Poroda Albert Gstrien called to extinguish a runaway Vliltlng hour»: Medical ana jurglcal Leon S. Poroda, 70, Thomas- PEPIN , Wis. (Special) - brush fire near Michigan Cor- patients: J to 4 end ? to 8:30 p.m. (No ville, Ga., a native of ners. children under 12.1 Winona , Funeral services for Albert ¦ Slate Tuesday Maternity patients: . to 3:30 and 7 to died Sunday at 4:30 a.m. at Gstrien, 81, Stockholm, who j 1:30 p.m. (Adults only.) Veterans Hospital, Lake City, died Oct. 26 at Menomonie By LARRY OSIUS Fla., after a long illness. Memorial Hospital were held SATURDAY , WASHINGTON (AP ) - Lead- A retired musician, he was Wednesday at St. Mary's Cath- Admissions Debris Cleared ers of both political parties will Mrs. Addie Nowlan born here Dec. 27, 1892, to Mr. olic church, Durand. , Watkins keep close tabs on the scattered Memorial Home. and Mrs. John Poroda. He left The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Stephen Anderl officiated. Burial was in Miss Virginia Mueller, Foun- here 52 years ago and was an Away at Scene straws in the wind stirred up in tain City, Wis. overseas Army veteran of Oakwood Cemetery, Pepin. Tuesday's elections. He was born in Tiro, Austria. Belrey L. Lorenz, Galesville, World War I. Of major interest to Demo- Wis. Survivors are: A sister, Mrs. Since World War 1 he had crats: What, if any, is the extent Dorothy Meier, Winona; two resided in Stockholm where he Of Ice Show of the so-called "backlash" of SUNDAY was engaged in commercial Admissions nephews, Donald Poroda , Ann INDIANAPOLIS CAP) - A white resentment to Negro civil fishing and truck gardening. Miss Sandra Arbor, Mich., and James Meier, team of 30 state troopers began rights demands and activities in A. Brophy, 574 For the last two winters he W. 4th St. Winona, and one niece, Mrs. sifting debris, piece by piece, major Northern cities? had lived at Hanson Rest Mrs. James Dale Heikes, Worth, 111. His today for clues to the cause of Republican leaders will be Konkel, 517 La- Pepin. In June he went fayette St. wife, four brothers and a sis- Home, an explosion at the Indiana scanning the slim results to see to the Graf Nursing Home, Me- Mrs. Wilford ter have died. Fairgrounds Coliseum. what, if any, improvement the Wilson/ 68 W. nomonie, where he broke his Howard St. The squad will go 'over every- party has made in Dixie and Watkowski Funeral Home, hip in October and was moved Jack Nelson thing in the Coliseum, officers the big cities. , 80l Gilmore Winona, is completing funeral to the hospital. Ave.' said, to find leads to the origin WEATHER FORECAST 7 . . Rain and ers. Central Plains can expect thunder- arrangements. He is survived by several At stake are the governor- Nick Braun of a Halloween night blast that showers will fall along Pacific coast states showers. It , 1027 W. Mark St. nieces and nephews in Ger- ships of Kentucky and Missis- will be cooler in western third Mrs, Vivian John L. Starke killed 68 ice show spectators. Boyce, . Roches- many and Austria. His wife, sippi ; the mayor's office in and central and southern Rockies with snow of nation and warmer from Plains to Atlantic ter, Winn. John L. Stanke, 65, 71 John- Rose, and one sister are dead. After three days of probing ! such cities as Philadelphia , flurries over higher areas tonight. Lower seaboard except for upper Great Lakes. (AP Mrs. Anna Krali son St., died early Sunday , 528 Wall St. Pallbearers were Bernard the wreckage and listening to Boston , San Francisco, Memphis Great Lakes regions to Ohio valley and parts photofax Map) - ¦ Kurt S. Peterson morning at Methodist Hospital, ¦ , 619 W. 3rd Setterlund, Glen Haglund, Aug- eye witness accounts, authori- and Salt Lake City ; hundreds of of middle Mississippi valley can expect show- St. Rochester, following surgery. ust Sheldon, Fredolph Alm- ties have derived no cause for other municipal and state offic- Births He was employed as a clerk quist , Vaughn Bjles and Mil- the explosion. However, some es; and the state legislatures of Mr. and at the Hurry Back for 30 years. Mrs. Roger D. Glen- :on Lindgren. offificals believe leaking gas na New Jersey, Virginia, Kentucky , 766 W. Sanborn St., a He was born Oct. 29, 1898, in may have produced the concrete daughter. and Mississippi. Money Creek to Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Carl A. Dahl shattering explosioirthat ripped i Much of the attention will be Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sand- Louis J , Stanke and had • RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) a grandstand section shortly be- focused on Philadelphia where ers, Utica New , Tuberculosis Minn., a son. been a lifetime resident of this Test —Mrs. Carl A. Dahl, 80, life fore the end of a Holiday on Ice Democratic Mayor James H. J. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Votruba , area. He was a veteran of serv- long area resident, died of a show. | Tate seeks election to a full 264V2 Walnut St., a daughter. ice with the U.S. Army in World heart attack at 9:15 p.m. Satur- The death toll reached 68 with ; four-year terms against Repub- Mr. and War II. He had never married. Mrs. Robert Phillips, day at the home of her daughter four deaths over the weekend. ! lican attorney James T. McDer- S40 Pelzer St., ¦ ¦ ' ¦ a daughter. Survivors are: Three broth- and son-in law, Mr. and Mrs. mott. • ' ¦ ' , Planned in Houston Co Mr. and Fire, concussion and rocket- Mrs. Eugene W. Mc- ers, Frank Sobehart and Harry Kermit Holger. South Rushford. HOUSTON, Minn. ( Special) culin solution would be paid for large testing program and Ardle, 347 Elm St., ed debris also injured 385 per- been the a son. Stanke, St. Paul, and Theodore She had been ill 3% years. The city h^s scene by the state Tuberculosis and would not be paid for by Christ- Mr. and sons, and 15 remained in criti- — Arrangements are being Mrs. Jay D. Ganz, Stanke, Winona, and two sis- The former Mary Mathilde of violence and unrest this year Health Association. He said the mas seal funds. Alma Wis., cal condition today at Indiana- made for a school tuberculin . a son. ters , Mrs. Knute (Elsie ) Erick- Stensgaard, she was born Jan. stemming from efforts of Ne- PPD (purified protein deriva-. polis hospitals. testing program in Houston He said the state association Discharges son and Mrs. Gabriel (Nina) 10, 1883, in the Highland Prairie groes to win better jobs , hous- tive V used for the tine test, dis- Mrs. ; A teen-age concessi on worker will reimburse Dr. Douglass Marvin Baker and baby, Wagner, St. Paul. area to Ludwig and Caroline ing and schools. County. posable needles and Syringes Rushford, Minn. Stensgaard. She was married to reported seeing a blue haze en- Both candidates picture them - for testing and reading services Funeral -services will be Wed- The initial meeting was held are prohibitive in cost on a Mrs. Vince M. Zientkowski, Carl Dahl April 15,. 1915, at veloping an overturned cylinder selves as liberal m racial is- at a rate not exceeding S10 nesday at 1:30 p.m. at Watkow- recently at the courthouse in ' "' ' 662 Wilson St, Highland Prairie Lutheran beneath the destroyed grand- • ¦ : " ¦ per hour and mileage to and ski Funeral Home, the Rev. sues. ¦• ..:*- Mrs. John J. Murphy and Church. They farmed in the stand just before the blast. President Kennedy carried Caledonia. Present were Rich- * from the testing site. Testing Harold P. Rekstad, First Con- baby, 126 W. Wabasha St. Highland Prairie area until re- Edward O. Carter , 15, said he ' a whopping ard S. Darbo, Rochester, health services of registered nurses gregational Church, officiating. Philadelphia by Mrs. Michael Waletzke and tiring five years ago. She was was filling paper cups with soft 000 in 1960. Most Republican are reimbursed at $2 per hour, Burial will be in Woodlawn 331, representative of the state Tl_ baby, Lewiston, Minn. a member of American Luther- drinks when he heard someone show- Accuracy plus mileage. Cemetery, with military honors leaders believe it was his and Health Association , who Mrs. Mary Rydman, 1224 W. an Church Women, Highland yell. "The gas is leaking. Ev- ing in the large Northern cities by the Neville-Lien Post , Veter- will make arrangements for Dr. 4th St. | Prairie Lutheran Church and its erybody get out. Get out!" that cost them the White House Jesse Douglass of Mineral DR. DAVIDSON said the ans of Foreign Wars. May Be testing program would be in Mrs. Gerald L. Anderson and Rachel Circle. The youth said he ran and that year. They have made de- Springs. Sanatorium, Cannon Friends may call Tuesday vain if a followup were not or- baby, 1076 Gilmore Ave. Survivors are: ,Her husband; was only three steps out the termined efforts since to beef Falls, to bring his team to the Mrs. Leo from 7 to 9 p.m. ganized and completed Dr. H. Watkowski, 318 one daughter, Mrs. Kermit door when he heard a big up big city Republican organi- county during the first part of Improved Onsgard said the"*program^ was High Forest St. (Cora) Holger,.South Rushford; boom. zations. December or J anuary. Public health authorities assured of the services of a re- Mrs. Arland Olness and baby, Winona Funerals four grandchildren ; one brother, Memorial services for the The racial issue also hovers Peterson OTHERS attending were Dr. . here said the tine test is tired registered nurse, Mrs. K. , Minn. Carl Stensgaard, Rushford, and dead were presented in many in- . the background of the Ken- John W. Plate L. K. Onsgard , Houston, presi- an alternative method of C. Douglas. Houston, whose two sisters, Miss Laura Stens- Indianapolis churches Sunday. tucky election. Republican Louie Funeral services for John W. dent of the county Health and administering a Mantoux temporary services would be OTHER BIRTHS gaard, Rushford, and Mrs. An- Many of the victims were B. Nurin has been attacking an Plate, 422 E. 5th St., were held TB Association ; Dr. L. A. Knut- test for tuberculosis. paid for by Christmas seal ROLLINGSTONE, Minn. - drew (Cora) Halvorson, La buried today. executive order issued by Dem- at 2 p.m. today at Grace Pres- son, Spring Grove ; Dr. A. D. Because the injected sub- funds. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lisowski Crescent. Her parents, two ocratic Gov. Bert Combs ban- , byterian Church, the Rev. Wil- Davidson , Caledonia;. Miss stance (PPD) is more cost- Zumbrota, Minn.; a son Oct. 26. brothers and two sisters have ning racial discrimination in . Four areas of testing were lian T. King officiating. Burial Gladys Lampham, Caledonia , ly than the old tuberculin Mrs. Lisowski is the former died. businesses licensed by the state. chosen , - with outlaying smaller was in Woodlawn Cemetery. WEATHER c o u n t y superintendent of solution normally nsed, the Sandra Gensmer, daughter of Funeral services The order has been held up by schools to be brought to the cen- Y will . be at schools , and these school super- s ta t e Tuberculosis and ^ Mr . and Mrs. Herold Gensmer Pallbearers were William EXTENDED FORECAST litigation. ters. Of the approximately 4,700 , 2 p.m. Wednesday at Highland intendents: Dr. V. E. Homuth Health Association does not Rollingstone. . Kaehler, Albert Peterman, Paul MINNESOTA — Tempera-; Edward T, Breathitt Jr., the , students to be tested, the work Prairie Lutheran Church, the Spring Grove ; Arden Hyldahl allocate Christmas seal - - Trbska, Robert Nelson Sr., Syl- tures will average 4 to 8 de- ; Democratic nominee, at first . will be done at these centers: Rev. M. Eugene . Foehringer, La Crescent; the Rev. Michael funds for its use. The tine vester Berkins and Ronald Von- gress above seasonal normals. ' embraced the order. Now he Caledonia, 1,500 students; Hous- TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS Rushford Lutheran Church, offi- J. Kuisle, Hokah; L. A. Kulas test also uses disposable drashek. Frequent but relatively minor ! says he would turn the matter , ton, including Hokah, 1 200; La ciating. Burial will be in the Houston/arid Victor Rupp, Cal- syringes, which add to the , Mary Joy Risser, 1021 E. 5th Graveside services were con- day to day temperature}over to the next legislature. Crescent 1 200, and Spring church cemetery. edonia. cost of this form of test- , , St., 4. ducted by the Red Wen. changes. Normal minimums 19 j Race appears to be the main Grove, 800. Friends may call at Jensen The tine test was preferred. ing. Joel Richard Kiekbusch, 412 extreme northwest to 30 ex-j issue in Mississippi. Funeral Home from 7 to 9 p.m. treme southeast. Precipitation ! Darbo said necessary mater- Some medical men pre- One volunteer, preferably a Laird St., 3. MARRIAGE LICENSES Tuesday and at the church after will average one-tenth inch or I In past years, the Democrats ials including parent signature fer the tine test because registered nurse, should assist 1 p.m. Wednesday. permission cards, cotton balls, they consider its resnlt. the superintendent with ad- " George J. Schneider, 1013 W. less in scattered light rains} closed up their political shop FREE TB X-RAYS J alcohol, syringes, platinum and vance details and during tha ¦ ¦ Broadway, and Sylvia S. Guen- about Tuesday and about: after the party primary, be- 1 more nearly accurate than (Mon. • Wed. Fn., 1-5 p.m. Miss Leah Aupperle |,Thursday. cause the winner rarely was i /or steel needles and old tuber- the old tuberculin test. testing and reading days. City Hall) ther, 265 Sebo St. Minn. - Miss j Room 8, ST. CHARLES, WISCONSIN — Temperatures challenged. Winona Co. residents jree Wallace A. Larson, Decorah , , 93. Bejou. | ; j , Leah Aupperle will average about 7 degrees ] But this year Republican others, $1 each. Iowa, and Elaine L. Severtson , former longtime resident j Minn., above the normal highs of 39 to ' nominee Rubell Phillip has Taken last week ... 84 655 44th Ave. of St. Charles died Saturday at i , 49 and normal lows of 24 to 31. j been waging a vigorous cam- Since March 9, 1953 49,864 a Mahnomen, Minn., hospital. Only minor day to day changes i paign and there are GOP offi- \ Ap ACH WINTER WINONA DAM LOCKAGE She was born Aug. 5, 1870, in I PR0 in temperatures indicated Tues-I cials in Washington who believe Jackson County to Mr. and Mrs. t*$WZ J IMPOUNDED DOGS day through Saturday. Precipi-j he has a good chance. X § Flow — 11,700 cubic feet per Joseph Aupperle and moved r\ \ Wj tation will total near one-tenth j The campaign message of I W|TH A NEW L00K No. 1921—Male brown boxer , second at 8 a.m. today. here with her family at an ear- x inch in a few showers south ; both Phillips and the Demo- ¦ no license, second day. Saturday ly age. She resided here until C LOTHING ._. _»..,..... __, . _!. - portion tonight or Tuesday and '; cratic nominee, Lt. Gov . Paul No. 1922—Female black cock- Small craft—1. 1949 when she moved to Bejou IN OUTERWEAR! over all of state about Wednes_7 B. Johnson has been simple: yi er, no license, third day. to live with her niece, Mrs. Jo- , i Sunday day and again about Friday or ' Each claims to be the strongest No. 1923—Male black cocker seph Wibbels, the former Ruth I M 3:20 a.m. — Eleanor Gordon. Saturday. foe of integi&tion in Mississippi puppy, no license, third day. Sasse. 14 barges, downstream. OTHER TEMPERATURES and the Kennedy administration No. 1924 — Male black cock- She was the last member of 11:05 p.m. — Captain Buck- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS er puppy, no license, third day. her family.Survivors are : One in Washington. leyhe, 4 barges, downstream. High Low Pr. No. 1925 — Female brown hew and five nieces. Her . Small craft—9. nep Albany, cloudy .. 44 27 ..; cocker puppy, no license, third parents, one brother and four i Albuquerque, clear 57 38 .. i day. sisters have died. -|. , clear 60 35 • ..] No. 1926—Female black cock - FIRE RUNS Funeral services were today j Bismarck, clear ... 56 28 Auto Plunges er puppy, no license, third day. at Mahnomen. Graveside serv- ! Saturday Roise, rain 61 49 T Available for good homes: ices will be at 2:30 p.m. Tues- Boston , cloudy 49 37 .. Two, one part cocker and one 9:44 p.m. — Motor of car own- day at Hillside Cemetery here. . Chicago, cloudy ... 59 49 .. male brown, black and white- ed by Ralph Nichols , 1774 Krae- Cincinnati, cloudy . 52 31 Into Harlem good farm dog. mer Dr., burning at 514 Man- Donald Olson kato Ave., carbon dioxide used. LAKE CITY , Minn. (Special ) Detroit , cloudy ... 54 45 Sunday —Donald Olson , about 42, Lake Fairbranks, snow ... 15 10 .02 Fort Worth , cloudy . 67 65 .. 11:40 a.m.—Rubbish and pil- City, died early today at Lake Helena , cloudy 50 28 .7 River, 11 Die ings burning near Chicago & City Municipal Hospital , where Honolulu , clear .. 83 72 North Western Railway tracks he had been an overnight pa- NEW YORK (AP)-An auto- Jacksonville, clear . 66 52 at West Front and Wilson tient. mobile jammed with 12 adults Juneau , clear .- . .. 42 33 .29 streets, booster line and later a Arrangements are being com- and children went past warning Kansas City, cloudy 70 51 .04 tank car used. pleted by Tolzmann Funeral lights blacked out by vandals Home. Los Angeles, clear .. 70 59 .. j and plunged into the Harlem ¦ Louisville, cloudy .. 57 32 .. I River in the early morning dark Miami , cloudy .. 75 73 .. j Sunday. Only one person sur- Municipal Court Milwaukee, cloudy . 60 44 .. j vived. Mpls.-St.P., clear . 59 27 .7 deaths all but wiped Ronald L. Wheeler , 23 464 The 11 GET . New Orleans, clear 70 46 .. ' Brooklyn families. Sioux St., pleaded not guilty to out three New York , cloudv . 50 39 . car had just left a a charge of driving a car with Those in the Okla. City, clear ... 62 54 .03 party. exhaust not properly muffled. christening Omaha , fog . 63 .38 .. deaths equaled the. He was arrested by police at The U Senate Debates Lake City 5.9 - .1 IN EXCITING NEW STYLING -J^f, jL^- Jr DON'T PAMPER river . He swam to shore nn^ /V^ Wabasha 12 7.0 made his way lo a bar, from Alma Dam 4.1 ... which police were called. YOUR WIFE Whitman Dam ... 2 2 - .1 Among the dead were four s Foreign Aid ' COATS JACKETS V - ll Winona Dam .. .. 3.1 .. . . children , aged one , three , four \\ Let Her Winterproof WASHINGTON (AP) - The Winon a . 13 5.4 and/nine. AT Senate plunged into a second Tremp'eau Pool .. 10.1 1.1 : 95 95 \ the Porch with week of debate on the foreign Tremp'eau Dam ,. 4 .2 -¦¦ .1 The christening party was at \|/f the Bronx home of Rabindran- Up d aid authorization bill today, Dakot a 7.7 -i .1 . 19 12 p FLEX-O-GLASS This Year with ax-wielding opponents vow- Dresbach Pool ,, 9.6 .. ..! att Bcrrios , a barber , who said one man refused to get into the Any little lady fan enclose a ing that the battle has just be- Dresbach Dam 1.7 ., .. ROBB ' j car because, il was so crowded. Let it snow , lot if blow — lot the temperature drop to a new low. You 'll bo |>orrli or |>rw/.cwiiy Willi Wurr> » gun. La Crosse ,12 4.7 .. .. . week' "I beggedMhem- -there wen; KI.KX-O-W.ASS. It's so onny\ Last s fireworks were Tributary Streams warm as toast in these Brawny Coats and Jackets. New interlining* of deep, s .ind t.ick temporarily stilled Friday when too many people—to go in a Just cut with shrJi . Chippewa at Durnnd 1.0 — .2 soft pile or thick quilt linings. Shop Aronz Clothing today and got tho jump Mnkes a wiirin , Ihe Democratic and Republican second ear I could get for BROS. over H. -roens. Zumbro at Theilnrun. 28.3 — . I room , II OO <1« M 1 with leaders mussed enough votes to them , " lie said. "They insisted on old man winter, Sixes 36 »o 46. Boyi' tizei 12 to 20. min.it Tramp, at Dodge -0.3 | Ultrav iolet rayn , 4(i 2(i .1] they could manage it. " ¦ : ¦ lio.iltl.fiil reject , to , a move to send ¦ ¦ . . : :-: ¦ ;:¦ -7 :. - . - . :. . . - \::; . : '. , .vit'-V ^^i ' ^ where the children can play all the $4.2-billion measure back to Black nt Galesville 1.6 .... I Police said the Harlem River winter lonj;--or uh>>as nn extra La Crosse nt W. Sal. 18 .... warning lights apparently had STORE Ihe Foreign Relations Commit- CHOOSE NOW FROM A NEW ASSORTMENT OF X $0^9 Store-rodjn. (Icniiine, rr .VHl'il- tee for major surgery . River Forecast been ri pped out of the Ifl-fool- QQc 576 Enst Fourth Street Inst* for ( (.uUenberg ) ckar FI.KX-0.<.1.AS$ But Sen. Wayne Morse , D- From Hastinbegs to high stanchion some time ago. MEN'S CAP CREATIONS IN RICH, WARM FABRICS "*" %1U m0 years al a fruction tho. cost of ^Theve will little change in had received no Phono 4O07 O.c. a leader of the foreign aid They said they ¦ n MC _ d. nt your ¦ ' ¦ ¦ '¦ ¦ %V-vV. fN-;\v p lii.M .sOnly 87< . y revolt, said : "The fight is just river stages in this district in complaint that the lights were . " . • • . ' -&t?;&^.i ^ .MA loca l lidwrc. or lrabr. dealer. " next .several dnys. out. ' : ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ : v.. getting started. J.U:..w:-:-:'. , ;,,;¦, ,..; .. ' . ; . . . ; ... .- .. :. . - .. .. ' . ^. ^S& ^^s^Ma ^^ Alma Area Pi A to Bird V/atching Sponsor Contest Talk to Be Heard ALMA, Wis. (Special) — All students, grades one through Bv Hiawatha Club eight, are participating in the "Bird Watching" will be the "Be a Good Citizen" poster con- the theme of a talk to be given test. Mrs. Theone Kees, art by Sanford S. Tyler at the Wi- teacher of the Alma Area nona Flower and Garden Club Schools, is supervising the proj- when it meets at Lake Park ect which is sponsored by the Lodge on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. PTA. Mr. Tyler is a member of the Awards of $2, $1.50 and $1 will Hiawatha Bird Club. be given Nov. 18, when three Included with his talk will be judges complete their tabula- a film, showing the right kind tions. of bird feeders to be used. An- Winning posters will be used other feature of the evening to project art as an important program will be a Belgian' part of the school curriculum Be- publicity. gonia sound film , entitled and for PTA "Fairyland of Flowers.'' Judges are Tom Brown and Mrs. R. M. Stephan will give Mrs. Oscar Guenzler V the a brief report on what'a being Cochrane - Fountain City School done in the forest playground system and Mrs. Charlotte program in Southeastern Minne- Brown, Gilmanton Grade School. sota. ¦ Members of the club " are ask- ST. MARTIN'S AID ed to bring whatever they have 's Lutheran Church in the line of surplus St. Martin potted Ladies Aid will meet at 2:30 plants, bulbs, vegetables, etc, for the sale table. p.m. Wednesday in the church basement. Hostesses will be Mines. Leo Theis, Ernest Tade- wald, Richard Janikowski and ' Wayside Mothers Albert. Tushner. Club Gives Party IBSEN'S "GHOSTS" - The cast for the first three per- Engstrand ; Calvin' Ellestad, seen as Pastor Manders ; and MILL CREEK CLUB formances of "Ghosts" is seen in a scene from the play, Tom Leuchtenberg, who plays Regina 's father, Jakob. A ETTRICK, Wis: (Special) - ETTRICK , ) MR- .AND MESS. WERNER SEMLING SR.. Wis. (Special - which opened last night in Winona State College's Somsen different cast, with the exception of Miss Evelyn, will be seen Mill Creek Homemakers will Fountain City, Wis., announce the engagement Wayside Mothers Club served in Winona Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights, and on meet Nov. 20 at the home of at a Halloween party and pro- Arena. From left are Robert Carr, who plays Osvald ; and approaching marriage of their daughter, Miss Broadway actress Judith Evelyn, Mrs. Alving, Osvald's Saturday night at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis. Mrs. Irvin Stetzer. Project lead- Duella Marie Semling, Winona, to Robert F. Mur- gram at Wayside School, taught ers will be Mrs. Forrest Good- by Mrs. Haakon Erickson. mother; Mary Stocker , who plays the servant girl Regina Mr. and Mrs .Francis enough and Mrs. William Ste- phy, Whitehall, Wis., son of Deborah Lease was program Murphy. The wedding will be Jan. 4 iri the Im- vens. Each member will bring announcer and Mrs. Paul Link, they become the first college of $5 has been maculate Conception Catholic Church , Fountain tion. The sum elementary school music in- First Night of Wenonah Players Ghosts group to play in the nation's given to the Edward Soukup City. Miss Semling is a graduate of Cochrane- structor , was accompanist. important new theater. fund by the club. Fountain City High School and works for Winona Prizes were awarded for best most Industries. Her fiance is a graduate of Humboldt costumes in each of the six Is Exciting Experience in College Theater High School, St. Paul, and is employed by White- grades of the school, with hall Packing Company. Mmes. Mabel Anderson, A. M. By GEORGE MCCORMICK Miss Evelyn's presencej Guthrie Theater stage, "Ghosts" Hogden and C. A. Brye as Daily News Staff Writer brings out the best in the stu- ' had an impact in the semi- judges. Wenonah Players' production dent actors. Her mastery of her area production that it would Officers chose recently by the craft and subsequent command not have had in any staging in MOVED Louise Slaughter of "Ghosts" has turned out to WE HAVE " Mothers Club were Mrs. Arthur one of the most exciting of and ease in her role perhaps which there was greater dis- ' ' ¦ ¦ ' Ofsdahl Jr., president, and Mrs. be gives the students^ ¦ — f°— ' - things ever to happen to col- something to tance between audience and ac- • Engaged to Wed Bennett Evenson, treasurer, aim for , or perhaps it gives ¦ ' lege theater in Winona. I tor. PEPIN, Wis. (Special)—Mr. What makes it that is the them confidence. Whatever it is, ( Carl Fratzke's crew came up something happens and Mrs. Harold Slaughter* presence in the cast of a pro- when she j with a set tliat is realistic with- Bloomington, Minn., announce Lake City Youths fessional actress — an experi- comes on stage, and it's some- ! out being fussy. The same 250 Mankato Ave. the engagement of their daugh- enced craftsman — Judith Eve- thing almost electric in its im- I could be said of the costumes ter, Miss Louise Slaughter, to Given Parties lyn. pact. I arranged by a group headed by Robert O'Reilly, son of Mr. and to see- All of this, of course, gives ; Karen' Lentz. LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) We have grown used Mrs. Leonard O'Reilly, Rich- first-rate theater from Dor- an audience a more exciting, —Junior Teens of St. John' ing | The cast for the first three field, Minn. s othy Magnus' Winona State Col- more nearly completely profes- " Lutheran Church, Lake City , j nights includes, in addition to r^- Hugh - Orphan Miss Slaughter is a senior at lege group. Year after year she sional play. Moreover , the edu- [ Miss Evelyn, Robert Carr as -^ the University ol Minnesota, were entertained at a hay ride able to take a rnore- cational value of the experience has been 1I Osvald, the unfortunate son ; where she is majoring in ele- Friday evening at the Harold or-less ordinary , collection of for the students taking part is Calvin Ellestad as Pastor Man- and Willard Bremer farms. obvious and great. mentary education. Her fiance students and somehow . mold \ ders ; Mary Stocker as Regina; attended the St. Cloud State Lunch was served at the latter them into a team that often has The result as Ibsen's power- and Tom Leuchtenberg as her College and is currently enrolled farm. given us plays approaching pro- ful drama opened in Somsen ! father, Jakob. . Upholstery Shop in business administration at Pupils of St. John's Lutheran fessional competence. Arena Sunday night was a com-jj Miss Evelyn will play through the Minnesota School of Busi- School and their brothers and The current production , how- pelling performance of a diffi- : the week, but a different cast ) ) sisters were entertained at a Phone 4104 ness. A summer, wedding is be-~ ever, is something special , both cult play. If it is difficult, how- |j will be with her Wednesday, ing planned. Halloween party Thursday eve- for audiences and — more im- ever, "Ghosts" is also among ., Thursday and Friday nights in The Slaughters were former ning at the school. for the students tak- ' ¦ portant .— the Ibsen works that have best!i Winona and Saturday night in MR. AND MRS. Stanley ' -¦ . Pepin residents. ing part. withstood the test of time, and !' Bishop, South Beaver Creek , the Guthrie Theater in Minne- CUSTOM UPHOLSTERING • CHOICE FABRICS the players made the most of • Wis., announce the engage- Miss Patsy Coder apolis. it. Winona will be well represent- • FAST SERVICE • FREE ESTIMATES Oswald Huseboes ment and approaching mar- Is Bride of Mr. Wicks Arcadia Rosary Played on a replica of the ii ed by Wenonah Players, as Honored at Shower riage of their daughter Miss Judith Marie Bishop, to MABEL, Minn. ( Special)—St. Society to Meet TAYLOR, Wis. (Special)-A Thomas Scherr, son of Mr. James Methodist church in Ce- post-nuptial shower honoring and Mrs. Albert Scherr, dar Rapids , Iowa, was the ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) — Mr. and Mrs. Oswald Huseboe scene of the marriage of Miss When the Rosary Society of the Trempealeau , Wis. Mr. __ __T______;ffllS i was held recently at the Taylor Patsy Coder, daughter of Mr. St. Stanislaus Catholic Church V mUeaV #_MlE-_5 ..w ^ .-_£.-*_ ^k l^ ^_Bl_llH_». Scherr is employed by Lutheran Church. Hostesses and Mrs. John . Coder, Tipton , meet Sunday at 2 p.m. in the were Mmes. George Huseboe, American Motors at Ken- Iowa , and Keith Wicks, .son of church recreational rooms, a Enoch Anderson, Verdal Han- xisha! Mrs. Olive . Wicks, Mabel, and movie will be shown on social sen, Arthur Haralsrud and Deyo ¦ the late Roscoe Wicks. The cer- srevice works of the La Crosse Relyea. A program consisting of emony was performed by the Diocese. readings by Mrs. Bessie Smith, Former Winona Man Rev. Mr. Barron Oct. 6. The Holy Name Society of the vocal solos by Mrs. Haralsrud Weds Nancy Bear Mrs. James Coder was ma- parish has been invited to at- and games played under direc- tron of honor and- Jerry Coder tend. tion of Mrs. Gaylord Strande Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Evan- was best man. Groups 3 and 4, headed by was presented. A reception was held in the Mmes. Joseph Klink and Harold ¦ son are now at home in Downey, Calif., following their marriage church parlors following the B. Giemza , will serve lunch. REBEKAH CIRCLE Aug. 17 at St. Raymond's Calh- ceremony. Recently four members of the PEPIN , Wis. (Special) - Re- ! olic Church , Mount Prospect , The bride is a graduate of society attended the 29th an- bekah Circle of the Woman 's III. The Rev. Joseph Doyles of- St. Luke's School of Practical nual convention of the La Crosse Society of the Lutheran Church ficiated. Nursing , Cedar Rapids. The Diocesan Council of Catholic will meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday Mrs. Evanson ' is the former bridegroom is a machine tech- Women. They were Mrs". Adrian at the parisli hall. Hostessci Miss Nancy Bear , daughter of nician for Friden , Inc., Cedar Lisowski , presided ; Mrs. Apol- are Mmes. Lyle Kessler and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bear , Rapids, inary Suchla , secretary, Mrs. Mrs. Irwin Mattson. Mount Prospect. She is a teach- The couple is now at home in Aurelius Pehler and Miss er in the public Cedar Ratpids, following a wed- Elaine Sobotta. CHURCH EVENTS schools at Downey. Mr. Evanson is em- ding tri p to the Ozarks. New officers will be installed ¦¦¦ : ETTRICK , Wis. (Special ) - at the November meeting. : • v _ >r ____ ¦A ployed by U. S. Motors in Los MRS. CORDES HONORED m^i V '/ " m~|*M . P'7 . Y)___^_/ x%^^^W " - • Rebecca Circle of French Creek Angeies. w^ v* LCW will meet Thursday at fl LAKE CITY , Minn. (Special) HOMER WSCS —Mrs. John Cordes , p.m. at the home of Mrs. Lewis CHURCH HAM DINNER rural Lake Homer Methodist "Church «w^ Thompson. A mission festival WHITEHALL , Wis. '(Special) City, was the honored guest at WSCS will meet at 2 p.m. Wed- iW^n o %,-K) 7 will be conducted at the French -The Altar Society of St. John 's a party at her home Oct, 28 ' nesday in the church basement. Creek Church Sunday at 10:45 Catholic Church. Whitehall , is in observance of her 82nd birth- Mrs. C. F. Drewes , a , Winona i" .m. A fellowship dinner will be sponsoring a ham dinner to be day. A potluck lunch was serv- will be hostess. r PLAYTEX $2.50 BRAS \ served at noon , and a mission held at the church , Sunday. ed. A group of 20 women at- / JM meeting will be held at 8 p.m. Serving will begin at 11:30 a.m. tended. GIVE HOME PARTY LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) —A group of members of St. Peter 's Lutheran Ladies Aid , Belvidere , Minn., went to Red Introduces Wing recently and held a devo- n Al*^tt'? tional and song service for the Save *l * \\ *~4 IJ elderly people living at the Bar- ringer Nursing ome. Following \v 7 *j-K Save $l .01 on these famous bras! ^"•f'v \ the devotions , : This sale lasts only a short time so { there was a so- \_ 7 '^j_c \ " , j cial hour. got soon. All ' your Playtcx these.bras > j j H u H 11111 J... The shoe that s at home l/J^ \ ¦ | '/ \ ? ' \ | have the extra feature of double clastic |j in the back for double wear. \X>:Lvw Ill/,/ I f styles; \ £) in town or country-by REAP THE \ Jv. Choice of 4 y A. ! EKCITtNGANP i^ fe»™k\ Cotton & Lace—nylon lace cups I I ^ ' '/ r / f ull y lined with soft cool cotton. - EVENTFUL /41li_i_H_H_t ^ .J^-^ \ Cotton-Dacron Bras—coolness """ &j^V&*R^Ek\B. of _/ - \ / ' ^^ft \ / ¦ T^al i \\ V W 41 , ,, _ /. f r**ft i "WW^^^^^^ f . - ______¦ ¦ . C. _ft _P-ff._* Jtaw fi_r T^k- *___, V^H v i ' * ioCIing Bras—non-sli p panels ff / I' , . ,; ' j^\ Mnfi M0^J} \ \ ^ ^ ~ ^^ ' S _ ' anrl elastic in the straps stop ride-up, I . y *^ y > T " 1S > W V. ^ /^^^ \ mY \ H___K '^SI______L ^v ' " ' " ' Lg^k -r k-"^ l^^^ D. Fflshion-Mng ic Bras—underlift V W % -^f> V ' ^- \ for 1 ';' ,1 ' -^tmaT panels fashion 's younger look. Xl / ,) 4 \ X ^Sn ' - \ All /J\^> \ \ bras ' , ' white ¦/ ¦ / \ X. . r^l'^SK. \ 32 A to 40C, 2 for $3.99 V^. i&l \ :, sizes V' \^V.,*^#»\ \ D Fashion-magic, 2 for J5.99 ,.^. J / |.j AMP THE U.S. MARINES ^l9i^______fi___k__ *^_9^______l__>___ EVERY PAY/ STARTING TONIGHT 75 WINONA LARGEST /% Weit ON THE 'S <4+ '¦¦ '^ ¦ JTUBW" mP^ ~~~~ e. I i% ' *$'&$'&% dKm^i T ^W >'Jt\kM %"' - i^lrtfcV .5*- ''* ' * ^j te^ j &'^vuila' \ Jee' ^^ jt.a ttuJ^k. < " a SHOE STORE 3rd WINONA DAILY NEWS •W /W I ¦ WW *k *'' © it«B«y >nreawrr)' onn i*Tf«*co»Fo«»T ion MIINTID IH U I,». **** ¦»*.. . . u t * • | m NT-OI) l»CI, C«KT1K . ¦«<« «N>Cur LIMINd fOtlSM, COMIC PAGE ( Lord's Pattern 23 University Wabasha Driver Changed, Says Pilots Visit Here I Playing host Sunday to 23 members of the University of Injured in Crash Pastor Shearer Minnesota Flying Club were WABASHA , Minn. (Special )- "We .obviously are not follow- members of the Chamber of A 30-year-old Wabasha man , ing the pattern the Lord gave Commerce aviation committee, Richard Schultz , received head since there are so many dif- headed by William Galewski , ferent religious groups today," chairman. injuries , cuts and bruises in a said Bertram C Shearer, Wa- The fliers landed nine planes one-car accident Saturday at 8 dena* Minn;, when he spoke at at Max Conrad Field at 10:30 p.m. on Highway 60 a mile Church of Christ, Kraemer a.m. Following breakfast at Ho- west of town. He was taken to Drive, Sunday evening in the tel Winona , they visited the Jul- St. Elizabeth's Hospital , and first of four Biblical sermons. ius C. Wilkie museum, Gar- "The Lord designed a simple vin Heights and campuses of was released Sunday. church and a simple plan of the city's three colleges. Take- Schultz said he fell asleep. salvation so all men could un- off time for the group was 1:30 His car went across the road , hit the guard rail , turned derstand his will," he said. RECEIVES INDUSTRIAL AWARD , . . S. J. Pettersen , p.m. "Each man must hear ¦ ' around and clipped off two , believe, left, accepts a citation for " in industrial repent, confess and be baptized "notable activity guard posts.: He was pinned in development from Gov. Karl EQUITABLE RESERVE in order to be saved. The or- Rolvaag. Petterson, president Equitable Reserve Association the car by the right door, which ganizational setup of the church of the Winona Industrial Development Association , accepted will meet at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday was jammed against the cable. of the first century was shown the award on behalf of the organization. at the John Bergler home, Gil- He was found by David Har- AT MILITARY BALL -An evening of manding officer of the Air Force Reserve to be understandable. more Ave. ; ney, who reported the accident unit ¦ ¦ good fellowship and fun , including dancing in Winona; Mrs. Norman Indall , Winona , "The changes that have crept ¦ i to Sheriff Ed Lager. He and into Ever cook brussels sprouts in ¦ Harney got Schultz out of to music of the Henry Burton Orchestra, was Commander - Indall, who is in charge of the church worship and or- Kennedy Back th£\ ganization today have brought beef broth instead of water? I'CaJTi enjoyed by a crowd of more than 150 persons Naval Reserve Security Group in La Crosse; WIDA Gets less and less rights and priv- Saturday night at the sixth annual Military Mrs. Stanley - Wehrenberg, Wabasha, Minn , ileges to common people." In Washington Ball at Winona Country Club. Among the ' and Major Wehrenberg, commander of the Concerning the Reformation WASHINGTON (AP) . — Pres- military personnel of the Army, Navy, Air 419th. Couples attended from Winona, St. Shearer said, "The Reforma- State Award ident Kennedy returned to the Force, Marines and National Guard and an Charles, Red Wing, Lewiston, Plainview, Kel- tion broke out all over Europe A governor's award for in- White House by helicopter to- CLEANING equal number of nonrmilitary persons, with logg, Wabasha , Anoka, Hopkins, Altura, Min- at the same time, but was not day after a weekend rest at his LtAr J their wives and dates were this group. From neapolis, Rushford, Minn., La Crosse, Foun- fully successful because, when dustrial climate improvement new Virginia hunt country tlie reformers left are Lloyd Snell, Winona , unit aide for the tain City, Wis., and Cresco, Iowa. Lt. William had reformed one activity was presented Friday home near Middlebiirg. practice, another took its place. to the Winona Industrial De- 419th Civil Affairs Company, Mrs. Snell, Mrs. A. King, Winona , was general chairman. "We need to go gack Accompanying the President ) to God's velopment Association were the Kennedy children , Syrus Johnson , Lt. Col. Johnson, who is com- (Daily News Photo word," Shearer stressed. He at a SPECIA LS statewide industrial clinic in John Jr., 2V2 , and Caroline, said the beginning of the res- 5V_ toration movement Minneapolis. . Mrs. Kennedy remained at Mrs. Kathryn Boy les had as its Atoka. guiding principle that the New ' ' '¦¦' ¦ S. J. Pettersen , WIDA pres- . To Talk at Lake City Testament was the only rule ident , received the plaque from 94 WSC Students of faith and practice. PATIENTS FROM ETTRICK ONE Sweaters In Lecture Series Gov. Karl Rolvaag . at a ban- "The attitude of the restorers quet at the Radisson Hotel. The ETTRICK , Wis. (Special) - was, 'if our thinking (Special ) convicts dinner concluded the two-day Martin Erickson is recovering WEEK LAKE CITY, Minn. with the Bible, we can change — Mrs. Kathryn Boyles, St. Practice Teaching clinic sponsored by the Minne- from major surgery at the Vet- 00c our minds, but not the Bible' . " sota Department of Business erans Hospital ,. Minneapolis. Paul , well-known throughout the Ninety-four Winona State Col- students. Last year an increase Shearer concluded. ONLY Midwest for her Biblical schol- lege students are practice of over 25 percent broke all pre- Development. Mrs. Elvin Rogness, North Bea- «JO He will speak at 7:30 tonight ver Creek ,, is recuperating from arship and vivid presentation teaching this fall quarter. vious records. Although the in- on "Saved by Grace or Works?" Fifty of the state's 600 com- . . . . '-¦ Cleaned and in lectures about the Bible, will They're in 20 different com- crease is not as great this year, munities received the awards. major surgery at her home, His topic Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. having returned from Commun- mmmmmmmmmp Hand Blocked present a program on the Gos- munities including Winona. For- the trend , which is an indica- will be "Judgment Scenes." Gov. Rolvaag said the state's pel of St. Mark in a series of ty-five are assigned to other tion of the supply of future progress depends largely on ef- ity Memorial Hospital , White- His concluding topic at 7:30 hall. three lectures communities in Minnesota, and teachers, continues to climb up- p.m. Wednesday will be "Are fectiveness of local industrial here. the remainder are practice ward. development efforts. You Sure?" The public is in- Take No The first will teaching at . Phelps Laboratory Curiously, the number of stu- vited. Winona 's award was given on SAVE 50f ON AN be held at St. School and in the Winona Pub- dents doing work in the elemen- the basis of energies expended 8-LB. LOAD Chances. Mark's Episco- lic Schools. tary and secondary divisions is WABASHA CO. RED CROSS to seek new industry and to pal C h u r c h, According to G. E. Fish- identical this quarter: 43. Eight LAKE CITY. Minn. (Special) help expansion and relocation - """JB. J ^SP H Your Lake City, baugher of the college educa- students are teaching in both — The possibility of lengthening of local industries, according to ^ Clean Only Thursday at 2 tional staff , who makes the as- divisions. the time of the Red Cross swim- , W. E. Morse, WIDA manager . . - i rRothes p.m. Succeed- signments, this is another rec- Students either teach on a full Winonans attending sessions ming program was discussed at Cleaned b ing lectures will ord year for practice teaching or half-day basis. a Wabasha County chapter were: Pettersen , Morse , Arnold 8 Pounds y be Nov. 14 and Communities in the program meeting at Beyer's Cafe in Stoa and William P; Theurer , 21 at the same this qu arte r are : Galesville, Hammond last Monday. This is WIDA directors, and Donald place and time. Grace Presbyterian Stone, Chamber of Commerce 4 practice teachers ; Cochrane- being contemplated because of T I ^%| I Professional All women of Miss Boyles . Fountain City Consolidated t manager. Women Hold Retreat , the large attendance from area ¦ Lake City and the area are in- School, 1, and Madison , 1, Wis. ; towns and the crowded beach. Morse said a lighted display 9 ^__F mT Cleaner. vited to attend by the women Elect New Officers j La Crescent , 3; Stewartville 1; The bloodrnobile and home ser- unit illustrating effects of in- of St. Mark's, who are sponsor- Rushford , 3; Austin, 3; Har- vice programs also were dis- dustrial expansion will be ing her appearance. The women of Grace Pres- j byterian Church held their an- 1 mony , 1; Rochester , 8; Hous- cussed. I brought to Winona for two Mrs. Boyles recently made a , ¦ 1 America'. Largest Selling nual Personal Christian Com- i ton l; St. Charles, 2; Hayfield , • weeks. The exhibit , prepared DIAL 2222- LEAF'S trip to the Holy Land , the Med- 1; Spring Valley , 1; Lake City, Stick half a dozen whole by the Department of Business TOILET TANK BALL iterannean countries and to mitment Retreat recently at the j LAUNDRY & CLEANING church and elected officers. 4; Red Wing, 3; Blooming Prai- cloves into an onion and add it Development , will be set up al- The efficient Water Master imtantly ttop! Oberarnmergau to see the Pas- the flow of water after each flushing. Second and Main Mrs. Fae Griffith led the wor- rie, 3; Chatfield , 1; Spring to the water in which you are ternately . in the lobbies of sion Play, through contributions ship service, in which members Grove, 1, and Winona. simmering a smoked tongue. banks here. 75c AT HARDWARE STORES from women of many denomi- participated in Bible study, nations , who had heard her lec- prayers and singing. ' tures. Mrs. Walter Gilbertson gave , Mrs. Boyles by popular de- the meditation. Miss Sandra j mand, has become an almost Wehrenberg, a student at Wi- ' permanent member of the teach- nona State College, was guest 1 1 II 5S) Meet Every Occasion... Match Any ing .staff for the Episcopal Sum- j soloist with Jonelle Millam as J i|f"^* mer conference for women and organist accompanist. ' youth held each year _aLCarle- Mrs. 0. E. Olson gave the ton College, Northfield. Recent- benediction. Ushers were Mrs. j ly, the United Churchwomen of Cletus Moore and Mrs. Paul ! Rochester sponsored lectures Johns. i Il~ _____ r£7_ft I / AS \ ¦ ¦ \ ^^^____!!^^^^^^ r held at the Methodist Church 1 ' ~ *" — *"?* ~\ " m\J 7 \ r A brief business meeting pre- '' /\- /7l I ¦ ^^^^mmmmmkw in that city. ceded the retreat. Election of B_7 J-[ f-^-M w. I V^P1 "Biblical persons become as officers for the coming year filive and up to date as their was held. The new . officers are modem counterparts, with the Mrs. Elmo Anderson, president ; same joys, sorrows, hopes and Mrs. William King, vice pres- M/ii it JL\< V __^% _X Hf ^TSmmmmmr ^Skw^^ammmmmmmWkm ^ ______9? J mf \ mm\M fears in her dramatic presenta- ident ; Mrs. Walter Gilbertson , tions, " is the consensus of secretary, Mrs. Paul Griesel churchwomen who have heard Sr., treasurer , and Mrs. Philip her. Hicks, new nominating commit- tee member SPEAKER AT PEPIN . PEPIN , Wis. (Special)-Miss Greta Wiseman , Frederic, Husband Receives Wis., will speak at Pepin Meth- odist Church Tuesday evening. Suspended Sentence \ Miss Wiseman , a Methodist mis- Paul J. Rosinski , 50, 1007 E. sionary nurse, is home on fur- Sanborn St., received a suspend- lough from Stutntzbad health ed sentence in municipal court center in Pakistan. today after pleading guilty to a charge of assault. Judge John D. McGill sen- ^ . > / tenced him to pay a fine of _-^^S^v_ \sx >^^^^;:;;j;*^_l'J_li; H i l______H mm $25 or to serve eight days, then suspended the sentence on con- NEW! dition that Rosinski is not guil- \§Jyj \(7] ^^^w) ^WmmWsWm^^^^ 2 I I t*_ I 5% I l^______i ty of a similar violation during * ^ ^H EASY TO SHOP the next six months. He was "arrested by police at his home at 11:32 p.m. Satur- ART day on a complaint by his wife. CIRCLE ONE SUPP LY Circle One of Grace Presby- terian Church will meet Wed- ; CENTER nesday at 2 p.m. at the home of i Mrs. Elmer Wachs , 226 Market St. i ill u? f. yl . rJOWHK , ?»/V//* i '(I *% UUIfO ,1 ,itM^_iii.i«"--i _>ii _ *e , _^ IIAASE ANNIVERSARY j. i|_ ii ..' ) « __Btt£f*?; &\ LAKE CITY , Minn. - Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Zill and fam- ily and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph llaase and family will honor their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Haase, on their golden wedding anniversary Sunday with open house at the Arnold ^J — _H______r ^______il Zill home , 002 So. Prairie St., J/ J Y tf&b. 4 ______1 _____ /_____ RL___h C_i_h-«» ______r kmmWmmWsm >1______-_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_ 1_\ ¦ 11 Y MSR 1I mm___¦ amm I HI __S9_B KSMB ¦ ¦ MmmmmwkammwmmmmWmmmwMmmmmk ^m _^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_k\ Lake City. Hours arc 2 to 4 and If J P^g I i f ^*U ^ *J T| ii kmmmmW^T^ mmmmWn ____.______i__Hk^ 7 to 9 p.m. No cards will be \\/ rn_Sn earn wmmaE_wl asm vto _tt3_a _«. S__! tbKEn kmmmmr fe**'''' ^______Br-l m^^mw^mmmm^^^*^^^,tie^lfmiTeiiaTmi sent. v..-.. . , i. , ) ^ ¦ • AmmWLam'~ AmmmmmkT *^Wmmw5S%ffi5emm\^ lmmmmmmm VISIT OUR NEW SELF-SERVICE Want a "different" stuffing Mash the egg ART SUPPLY CENTER. SELECT for deviled eggs. yolks (removed from the halved BRUSHES, PAINTS, PADS AND hard-cooked eggs) with butter OTHER ART MATERIALS. and Roquefort cheese. Season to taste and pile the stuffing back into the cavities of the egg _^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^F__ l^^^^^^^^^^^&flll^^^ sM^mwmwmMAm ^m^m^m^kw R. Q. QonA. whites. Ruffle with n fork and sprinkle with paprika. - : —... — ...— I ¦¦¦ ¦¦ ¦ " ¦ - - — __fl______f K"%' _u__B^______r l Dr. K. D. Barcel Chiropracto r 75 m\ WEST AT 268 LAFAYETTE ^^ffl ^^^^^^^^^^ ff jmm\ fa\\ A *\mWmm\J AmmmWmmmW tin offices of Dr. Drier) ^ " the lonner ^^Hj ^^^^HHm^PR P SHOE STORE / \w C r^ 3rd AmmmmmmmWAmmmTmw f

to p 0#ity Monday-Friday. UflllDCa * «-m- 5 rn- II VUlftOa Pji.m. to 1? Noon Saturdays. PHONE 3117 then feed the tree to restore strength. This Is Girdle Trees more likely to girdle in this fashion are Norway and House of the Week swamp maples, elm , oak and Nobody Wants pine. Autumn is the time to deter- Marinating stewing beef in mine whether your tree is suf- red wine helps to tenderize the fering from girdling roots—de- meat and also helps to give Expand able Ranch for Leisurely Livin flavor. g scribed as suicidal tendencies An unusual floor plan , and an] by one tree expert. extremely sensible one in these] H-l Statistics It means that one or two days of leisurely living, charac- ' big fleshy roots grow in wind- terizes this attractive home. ! A one-story vfcouse with stem and Basically the house is a one- ; attic expansion containing ing fashion arounfl the story model with three bed- ; up to five bedrooms and 3V strangle'the tree. STOP rooms. But it contains an open j baths. Basic area is 1,980 Become suspicious if the low- attic over the main wing which square feet; screened porch er half of a tree turns color in can be finished off when need- ; adds 250 square feet; ga- the fall before the rest does or ed. adding two more huge bed- some j rage 434 square feet; expan- if leaves at the end of RUST rooms, a bath, and a large "sit- ! branches yellow before general WITH ting area" which can serve as! sion attic 843 square feet. coloration sets in. a sewing room, den , or what j Overall dimensions are 72 The girdling restricts sap have you. i feet 9 Inches wide by 57 flow. It may be caused by gar- RETARDO AN EQUALLY outstanding | feet deep. Contains full deners Who stuff roots ma hole feature is the informal area , a: basement. TRADITIONAL GLAMOUR : This expandable ranch con- boards with a touch of stone for accent give the exterior a that is too small in planting. PRIME AND FINISH nicely arranged combination of tains up to five bedrooms and 31 -. baths when the attic space traditional flavor. ^ Sometimes girdling roots may ONE PAINT family room and screened porch over the main wine is comDleted. Wood shingles and vertical be seen at the soil line. Often WITH catcher in the living room. A incheaKbelow which offer more than 500 nice feature in the dining room it may be a few square feet for relaxing in any the trunk. is the shuttered pass-through to roots ¦ ' " jCi^if . kind of weather. the kitchen. ' Cut away the choking ¦ fo*oirf The house- was designed by, with a chisel, paint the cut ' * K _, Architect Herman H. York. It is j THE BEDROOM wing is iso- areas with a wound dressing, u^AROOv design H-l in the House of the ; lated from any of the noise Week series. ; areas. It contains generous York says the trend in today s closet space ( even the linen housing is toward greater atten- closet is more than five feet tion to informal areas. - The long ) and there is an extra family room (or "leisure closet for the vacuum and oth- room," as he calls it) is larger er housecleaning paraphernalia. ; • Protects oil metal surfoeei than the living room. It has The attic offers the most eco- exterior and Interior wood panelled walls and a mas- nomical type of expansion area. sive fireplace and wood box in! It already is roofed, walled and • Perfect for ornamental Iron one exposed brick wall. I insulated, and all that's required Benjamin A is the sort of finish work a ^ BEYONDTT&ongh s 1 id ing; handy husband can do himself . ^Hr JUST^B Moore glass doors, is a modern ver- The H-l study- plan also S sion of an old fashioned screen- ! shows how the attic could be ITO PUSH ^ ed porch — complete with built- ; converted into an apartment in-barbecue. The porch has a I /^ BUTTON complete with kitchen and TO Rademacher's beamed ceiling, exposure on. sitting room. ,; CLEAN two sides, and leads to an op- ; MOORE'S tional outdoor terrace which BASIC LIVING area of the J ^ PAINT PRODUCTS house totals 1,980 square feet. can be added at a later time. ; 59 West 2nd St. The house offers excellent cir- j The expansion attic would pro- EXPANSION ATTIC; If j Kramer & Toye J Phon« 6151 culation around the kitchen ; vide an additional 843 square desired, the front bedroom j | Plumbing A Hearing area with its adjoining lavatory \ feet of bonus space. The screen- could be converted into a I 312 E. 3rd St. — Phone: 5388 We Deliver and mud closet. Nearby, in a | ed porch is 250 square feet living room and a and the attached garage 434 small j separate alcove behind space j kitchen located in the walk- saving bl-fold doors, are the square feet. : clothes washer and dryer. I Architect York suggests a in closet area, making the The formal living and dining ! combination of wood shingles attic a private apartment. area are clearly removed from j and vertical boards for the ma- HOME — COMMERCIAL — INDUSTRIAL 1 1 the daily living zone, giving ! jor portion of the side walls, them an air of exclusivity. AI and a touch of stone tor accent large bay window is the eye- ' in front of the family r»om win- FLOOR PLANS: Main foyer, with slate formal and sleeping. Note the alternate loca- WIRING y floor and wood panelled walls, funnels traf- tion for the garage doors, City Issues fie to three clearly zoned areas: formal , in- - BOILER dow and across the garage en- Only $2 875 WE'RE MIGHTY ^Pf Pf B REPAIRS try. jj The covered loggia and a How to Build , Buy ^ cupola atop the garage give the &S. PROUD OF OUR I house a traditional flavor that In Permits < will assure its popularity for ^ years to come. Or Sell Your Home Last week was a slow week lMM\ .R ECORD' .... . M ¦ ; . Full study plan information on this architect-designed House for building permits at the city lof the. Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in engineer's office here. Only Property Transfers I hand you can obtain a contractor's estimate. four permits were issued and WINONA BOILER & STEEL CO. , their valuation 163-167 West Front Street Phono 5W5 In Winona County I You can order also, for $1 a booklet called "YOUR HOME— was only $2,875. | | How to Build , Buy or Sell it." Included in it are small repro- Tlie 1963 dollar volume now WARRANTY DEBD ductions of 16 of the most popular House of the Week issues. stands at $4,727,370, while last George J. Has. to Robert R. Has. et ux—SE'.*, Sec. 5; NEVi of NEVi, Sec. 8; Send this coupon to the Daily News or you may purchase year at this time the volume part of SW/j of SWW , Sec. 4-105-6. ^ ! the plans or the booklet at the information counter at the Daily was $2,579,595. Permits for 50 Paul R. McManimon et 'ux to Walter S. : News. new houses have been issued Kutcher—Lot 7, Block 18, Lakeview Add, to Winona. Enclosed Is 50 cents for baby blueprints on design H-l. n this year, compared with only i We have a lengthy record of successful electrical installa- . Ella Gaustad to Thomas R. Hunter et Enclosed is SI for "YOUR HOME" booklet Q 22 last year at this time. j ux—Lot 36, Lakeside Outlots to Winona. tions down through the many years we've been in business Permits issued last week: j in Winona. Our reputation is based Lloyd A. Helm et el to Gene Dond- [ NAME . on a wonderful record llnger—W. 26 It. of S. 130 tt. of Lot 13, Gerald Meier, 1129 W. Mark ! established by Licensed Bonded Electrician s — your guar- ¦ ¦ Block 1, O.P. to Lewiston. STREET St., $2 ,500 for remodeling of his I antee of quality workmanship every .time. COMMERCIAL • INDUSTRIAL • RESIDENTIAL Elmer B. Stedman to George J. Schleck \ et ux-NW.i of SW' .i and SW' . i of NWU, house. Orval Hjlke is the con- ' Sec . 32-108-10. CITY STATE tractor. ' ' Andrew Janlkowskl et ux to Bruce E. McNally—Lot 11, Westmoreland Add. to Theodore Suchomel, 164 E. .j EL Winona. »kl-Part ol SW' .i of NE'. i, Sec. 31-105-10. Scholt—Part of NW'4 of SWU of Sec. Rita Zbylickl to Dorothy Cisewskl— John Gensmer et ux to James Pasche 13-106-9. 3rd St., $200 for remodeling his ; et ux—NE'. i of Sec. 33-107-9. S'ly 30 ft. of Lof 6, Block A7. Hubbard's FINAL DECREE garage. ,; BAUER Add. to Winona. Henry C. Jeiewskl to Mark E. Cad'a 225 East Third P Street Telephone 4578 BEST Emll D. Prondzlnskl et al to Clifford et ux—E'.2 of Lot 3, Block 5. Hamilton' s George Meier, decedent, to Angelina Vincent Weaver , 1101 E. Wa- i Electrical S?Sl^7^ Contracting Co. Meier el al—Lot 12, Block 5, Park A fl J. Klelsf et ux—Lots 3 and A, Block C; Add. to Winona. basha St., $150 for installation part of Block A, Arcfies Waltonla; part Wendell Fish et ux to John J, Pleln Add. to Winona. I 628 Main St- Phone 8-1002 Oscar c Tillman, decedent, to Jmt m IL v of NW'i. Sec. 8-106-8. et ux—E' _ of Lot 23, Drew' s, Meads & . Ger- of a new window in his house. | W^" "L.ICENSEb~BQIiDED ELECTRICIANS" Owl Realty Improvement Co. to Dale Simpson's lands to Winona. trude M. Tillman—Lot 3 and N'ly '. . of %ra___ K . Strotmsh et ux—Lot 3, Block 7 , Win- Edwin N. Lennder et ux to Richard L. Lot 6, Block 20, Lakeview Add. to Mrs. Lorena Gierok , 457 E.) cre.t First Add. to Winona. Ozment et ux—Lot 5, Block 27, Hamil- Winona. Wabasha St., $25 for remodeling i Edward L. Hostettler et ux to Richard ton' s Add. to Winona. Julia C. Kowalewskl, decedent, to L. Williamson et ux-E'ly 27 ft. ot Lot Herman Richler et ux to Alfred W . Mafy B. Kowalewskl-W'ly ' _ ot Lot 6, a shed. 33 of Drew, Meads & Simpson' s lands Nation et ox—Lot 2, Block 12, Bolcom's Block 2, E. C. Hamilton's Add. 4 E. C. ; and easement over Wly 6 ft . ad|olnlng Add. to Winona. Hamilton's Add. No. 2 to Winona. GAS-FIRED(iAS-MKED Installations: said 37 ft. Elmyra V . Draaten et al to Robert Emily C. Zastrow , decedent, to Carl ¦ ; Scholt-Part "of NW-. ot Zastrow et al—Part of SW'/4 of SW' «, Adolph Michalowski , for Paul __^_^_^_^_^^ ^s v______H 2^- :| ' "MOR-riTE" I Charles P. Blesanr et ux to Andrew SW' « of Sec. 7^^v. -• ®^ v x\^ SM^ffg T . Buggs—Part of Sec. 13-107-8. 13 106-9. Sec. 5- 107- 10. iprazkowski, 106 High Forest (Weatherstrip Putty) I Edward f. Griesel to Ben Grupa et ux George H. Ferguson et ux to John PATENT . of Lot 11 and Swoninyson et ux -N. 70 It ol the E. St,, 'and August Dorawa , 616 E. i *ij i r - En it F _K _» ' -E' W' j of Lot 12, Block United Stales lo David Jacobs-E'i of \WW>rW 1. E. C. Hamilton's First Add. and E . C. 153 It. of Ihe 5. 237 ft . of Ihe 5E>'< of SW' <, Sec. 31-108-10. Howard St.; Paul Meier Plumb- v rouna-the-clock ^^H Hamilton ; the NE' . ol Sec. 14-106-9 's Add. Na. 2 to Winona. 1 . United States .to Robert Pike Jr.--SW' < ^^^VW \^B "DAP" . I Richard H. Scholt . et al to Gordon F ing & Heating, for Ray Kulasie- H ' feti Joseph Klllian et ux to L . A . Sleggle . of NWU, Sec . 4 106 6. I (Glaring Putty ) I -E'ly < i of Lot U, Block 9, Chute's Henry et al -Part ol NW"« ol SW'i ol United Slates to Thomas J. Hough- wicz, 457 Junction St., and Wi- ^'^1? ¦ 1 JL ^V ^ JK X' Add to yvinona. Sec 13106 9. E j of SWU and NW'i of SW' .i and SEU nona Plumbing Co., Josephine S. Wise to Gaylord W. Unu- Edward Bronk *t ux to Missionary of NWU, Sec. 4-106-6. 1126 E. mann el ux - Part of Lots 6 and 7, Block Servants ol the Most Holy Trinity— ¦ Broadway, for themselves. Part Dt _ of Sec. 19-107 7 • ¦ 36, O P. Winona, and Plumer 's Add. Ic W' . Always use cornstarch , rather (Window Glass)orm I Winona. Henry M. Slebennler et ux to Paul H . ^ -.fl t/. f__!l 1*1! repa James 5 Pelowskl lo Peter E. Pelow- Sicbcruiler 5E' » ol $W' < of Sec. 14 and than flour , to thicken the gravy Chocolate and orange are ex- _T^ e us r ur *»sb. H W 1 . ol NE' » al Sec. 23-108 9 . of a Chinese dish. Cornstarch tremely compatible flavors. So i* l?l Ir A V^J I ' *" ' ' V° ** , King Gas 8. Fertilizer Co. to Skelly Oil Co. -Part . of NWU ol SW' -«, Sec. 13- gives the smooth , glossy and to flavor change a batch of ; 106-9. | clear finish that such a sauce brownies , QUIT CLAIM DEED frost them with an ' ' or grav y needs. : Ralph W. Winder et ux to Julius Jo- orange butter icing. j seph Wise -Let 5 and E'ly 25 tt. ot Lot ! 6, Block l, Greden & Spelti' s Add. to "^ | Village ot Rollingstone. (Glass tops In any size or j ». J^^a\ |--US _i I Julius Joseph Wise et ux 1o RMph W . ¦ I Winder et ux -Lot 5 and E'ly .5 11. of shape. Mado to measurements \ ^j - _, j ~J$M2mmm j Lot 6, Block 1, Greden Spelfz 's Add. ^ round-the-house ^ or special patterns.) ! w* ' to Village ol Rollingstone. Mk \^t^^ & *~ ^SmmmTf &^ml Lloyd Martinson et ux to John H. ^^ Neumann N' _ of SW' «, SW'4 of SW'i M # ry jv _^v#/e J I _|^_ ^ and N. 241 ft . of E. 361 ft . of SEU of SW' « of Sec 16-106-10. MIRRORS • Building? John II. Neumann to Lloyd Martinson " " i #^ "J"JJ et ux-N' a of SW' < SW' i ol SW' < and P • Repairing? N. 241 fl . of E . 361 ft . ot SE' < ot SW' < FAULTY WIRING ol Sec. 16106 10. • Remodeling? Anna Kukllnskl to Qulrine Kukllnskl - Lot 1, Block 4 , of Ea-f l amulll* . - ( Doors, walls , shelves. Over ; "VALSPAR" I PROBATE DEED SPELLS F-l-R-E! firep,flC"- ) GEO. KARSTEN Harriet M. Morrison, by representa- ' j (SASH A TRIM General Contractor tive, to George W Hlnton ct ux lots 7 PAINT and 8. niork 80, Village of StncMon. IN YOUR HOME OR BUSINESS > Prion* 7464 i ASSIGNMENT OF CONTRACT ALSO j Elmyra V. Rranten et al to Robcrl ! In white nnd gloss colors for _ , , . __—_ i ' «?"'»"»•• "Pole Mirrors" [ WITH LENNOX ( Brass rods — adjustable to ! AWY l ilHHilllH is only as GOOD room height.) We Have a Furnace ^''' ^/flto?^. ^ ~ as its FOUNDATION . l^rrfl t .-TV *™fy | umn <> For Any Heating Need . . . f * WuMher you 're ImiUtn. R a house , n {KB/ '(\ *vi C u a 1)arn ,n 0, II^Sj l J y_Bc~ R' 'a fi<' . or ' .v b«'r typo OIL GAS ELECTRIC COAL / r bii ildii./. . . . Hie most' iinporl.iiit * * * * %A^-f Ij ^i, of is (;001) __rX______J^!/?P P|lns<' I'""''"''*? n l',f)liN- There is ct difference in the quiet NATION. You can be sure of the *lr *ry %{ , operation of all Lennox Equipment . . . \mJ/ 1(>s w n voiir found alion is ni. ^PxT/ m^KSs ' l"' 'ule so quiet you hardly know its running! ' f 'MATZKK ('"NCItF.TK BLOCKS. Makeshift extension wiring is an invitation V V l aY' yvi' ° to Tire. End this situation b installing '4^ " PUTTY KNIVES y ade- w n '• quate wiring. Let us give your home a wiring W» Do All Typos of f l|l \i\ GLAZIER POINTS ^>'X5*?__SSi__i___ | \ check-up, and get our free wire-on-time esti- RAZ0R BLADE SCRAPERS All Types of [|fl)|i| P»'oducts (%Jr1 i • Hl]fl mate. ^•MT|I J j "FLEX O-TITE" DOOR ) \ AND W,ND0W • Wnylite Block* • Soptic Tanks jind Dry Woll» ^r--rVsf I Chimney Blocks Steel Sash Reinforcing :i; • • m WEATHER <|M — 7,4^ STRIPPING R ! .•'willed by vibration under hydraulic pressure and .strain (35W ¦ il. sfi"mmrSK_rx£k\A;. i GLASS CUTTERS I-r cured. _ ylj t 1 DOWNSPOUTS GUTTERS ; • KLINE ^ ROOFING KI IT lllft SOUTHERN STYLE FACING BRICKS and jjfc^fel-4 I • • raCfVa SOLAR SCREEN BLOCKS. ^ WINONA PAINT & GLASS CO. gimmerI WIRING^S\ I "Si'iruiQ Wnuma For Over NTSURVEY/ "Your Ctilcr Carousel Store " Hull a dfiUury " ^*^« ^ Quality Sheet Meta l 1 ^- —^ Works 55-57 West Second St. 122 West Second Street Phono 5512 HAROLD OFENLOCH Phono 3652 We Doliver "Sir "Liconiod Bonded Electricians" 761 East Broadway p norio wSS69 Wett*¥* Sixth St. - FREE ESTIMATES - Phon. 9207 5792 I Congress Airs Prankster Gives State Building Horse a Gar Contracts Jump Housing for FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) - jfi;Lets Get Gmioq Wallace Bramwell, somewhat In September of a prankster, has added a new \ By A. F. SHIRA ^ \ twist to the old motorists's ex- F. W. Dodge Corp. reported Elderly Plans Winter Protection Of Climbing Ros«s pression of "get a horse." that September contracts for future construction By AP NEWSFEATURES How to cover climbing roses for the winter is a question He gave his horse a car. in Minne- sota totaled 477,798,000 up 50 Housing for the elderly con- that bothers some gardeners. A climbing rose with many and The transfer from Kenneth , heavy canes can be quite a problem when it comes to winter Schneider, Lyndon , to Sonny percent compared with Septem- tinues to occupy the attention of ber 1962. a sizeable segment of protection. In such a case, a gardener may be tempted to leave Boy, the horse, was duly re- Congress. corded Saturday in the Frank- I The cumulative total of con- Entirely aside from the gen- it on the trellis unprotected to take its chances against rigors of winter. lin County clerk 's office. struction contracts for the first uine concern for the welfare of ¦ ¦ '' ¦ . . nine months of those who are getting Before going into the subject of protection , let us consider 1963 amounted along in to $615,456,000, a 20 percent years Is the knowledge what a climbing rose is. This term is given to practically all in* that the varieties of roses that have i -; "' r ~ — crease compared with the cor- number of voters in the "sen- friest Approves long canes and must have .' done at that time, they should responding 1962 period, accord- ior citizens" category keeps in- some kind of^ support to keep ing to the Dodge report. creasing every year. be cut out before the winter Petition Asking them from falling to the j covering is applied. A breakdown of the nine- -~ONE PROPOSAL that keeps ground. They can be fastened Warren's Ouster ' month total : popping up in the House Ways to trellises, pillars, or fences. IF IT IS not desired to lay a 1 Nonresidential, $201,931,000, and Means Committee would ex- Since they have no means of climber down and cover it, the BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP)- j up 25 percent; residential, $246,- empt persons over 65 years of attaching themselves, as do canes can be loosened from the A Roman Catholic priest says | 402,000, up 8 percent, and pub- age from paying capital gains the true climbing plants, the trellis, tied together and wrap- he urged his parishioners to ! net works and utilities, $167,- taxes on the selling of their term is a misnomer. ped spirally with strips of build- sign a petition calling for the j. 123,000, up 35 percent. homes. The first of the climbers was ing paper, or burlap. Then they impeachment of Chief Justice Certain conditions would be the old Crimson Rambler which can be fastened to the trel.is Earl Warren of the United E. Fenton, pastor of Blessed attached , but the large majority is still grown, along with white again and a mound of soil heap- States. . . '¦' , . , Pfifi-CAST FLOORING ...Suspended : . Sacrament Church, in an inter- poured on top of the sections to produce a of home owners in that age arjpa and pink varieties. These roses ed over the base. This is risky. Members of the John Birch view Sunday. in mid-air and ready to be put in place at level floor. They also act as the ceiling would be affected. which have small flowers in As with other roses, the Society collected more than 600 "They had my approval to the new junior ate at College of Saint Teresa for each floor of the building. Among those supporting the dense clusters bloom only once climbers should be soaked thor- signatures as the parishioners seek signatures." Is this lO-ton piece of pre-cast and pre-stress- The pre-cast flooring, manufactured by program are certain builders, a year, in June or early July, oughly so they will go into the left Mass a week ago. ¦ ¦ ed concrete flooring. Another one is on the an Eau Claire, Wis., firm, is reinforced by who have been saying for years and on canes that were produc- winter with plenty of moisture "I am a member of the John A three-hour stay in the re- trailer at the left. Each section, 75 feet long wire and steel cast inside' under tension, The that the capital gains tax keeps ed during the preceding year, in the ground and the mulch Birch Society — this is well frigerator , is plenty for a bottle and four to six feet wide, is laid from beam process is relatively new in the building in- many older persons from selling in other words on one-year-old wetted*down as 'well. known," said the Rev. Frencis of champagne. their homes and moving to re- canes. A word of caution should he to beam. Two inches of concrete photo) Advert Isemenl then is dustry. (Daily News tirement apartments. THEN , there are the large- given in regard to the handling This type of retirement hous- of air rose bushes. A paii o( ing has been popular with some flowered climbers such as Blaze which are more or less ever- leather gloves should be worn Science Shrink^Piles old folks who want to be re- at all times. And with climbers lieved of the responsibility of blooming. Next are the climb- ing hybrid teas such as Crim- a heavy jacket , or coat is de- New Way Without Surgery ' owning their own homes and sirable as well. What s New on Market? like the idea of taking it easy son Glory, Peace and others, By ANDY LANG THE PRODUCT — A do-it crack or warp; that they are They have been developed from ¦ ¦ ¦ and letting ¦'' " . -—i' AP Newsfeatures yourself riveting tool for the fas- dent-resistant; and that they someone else do the Stops Itch—Relieves Pain chores The large seedlings, or have originated as Nw York , N. Y. .('Special) — For the jo thorough that sufferers made " fabric, rubber , can be easily attached to brick . numbers of What's new on the market? tening of metal, , persons who keep purchasing sports, or mutations , from the first time science has found a new astonishing statements like "Piles plastic and other matenah. aluminum, wood, plaster or one-family homes in their re- bush types. These roses are not healing substance with the aston- have ceased to be a problem!" other surface with nailing strips hemor- The secret i> a new healing sub- THE PRODUCT - Plastic T H E MANUFACTURER'Sis tirement years make it apparent as hardy in this area as the ishing ability to shrink . CLAJ^l — That the rivet set and aluminum nails, which are ramblers. rh' oids, stop itching, and relieve stance (Bio-D>-ne®)—discovery of thumb tacks, designed for use that there is a strong opposite pain — without surgery. a world-famous research institute. with perforated hardboard. from one side by placing the furnished. / viewpoint. Also, to be mentioned are the «^ ' stem in the nosepiece of the * . * » Here s S In case after case, -while gently This substance is now available THE MANUFACTURER'S climbing floribundas which have reduction in suppository or ointment form , THE PRODUCT - A light- A COMPARATIVE newcomer relieving pain , actual CLAIM — That these plastic pliers-like tool inserting the originated as seedlings and (shrinkage) took place. under the name Preparation 7f®. in the retirement housing field tacks slip into board perfora- rivet in the hole of the work weight 3-inch belt sander de- sports from the bush kinds. Most amazing of all-results were At all drug counters. and squeezing the handle; and signed for' the home craftsman is the cooperative" apartment, They are usually more hardy the j tions under thumb pressure which has had considerable suc- only ; that they will hold secure- that the rivet pulls up the two and the service tradesman. than the climbing hybrid teas, pieces of the assembly and fast- THE MANUFACTURER'S cess in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., but less so than the gamblers. ly but snap out easily; that and several other cities. One of 't rust ens them tightly and perman- CLAIM — That this sander has And, now, in regard to win- Answer I:li they won , bend or break ; "burnout - protected" the selling points is that the and that they will not mar the ently. a motor ter protection. The canes of a • • which will withstand heavy participant in a cooperative large-flowered climber such as surface of the board. * apartment By ANDY LANG loads and high temperatures; house gets most of Blaze, or one of the hybrid tea AP Newsfeatures THE PRODUCT - A new the tax advantages of a belt dressing to prevent slip- ;hat it has a self-tensioning home climbers, should be laid on the mechanism for fast and easy owner. ground, covered with soil to a QUESTION : I have been page, stops squeaks and in- The tax advantages also thinking of building a glass crease power on all rubber and belt changing; and that ' it are depth of several inches and then ^rLmm^/S available to the owner of what block divider between our living leather belts. comes in two models, one with - mulched with leaves, marsh m • Horn* Building W a dust pickup and a flat-faced is called a condominium apart- hay, or straw. Also, soil should room and dining room, but have ^ THE MANUFACTURER'S ment. _ | • Cabinet Work | ___ design for flush sanding against This setup is similar to be well mounded over the base hesitated because I've never had ¦ CLAIM — That this dressing a cooperative, I I • Remodeling 1 , walls and in corners, the other, with the notable of the plant. too much luck with mortar. will soften gummed dirt, re- difference that the condomin- I seem to recall reading some- move surface glaze and pro- with the dust pickup but even IF A PLANT has a number LHMBMMMJ lighter and more compact. ium occupant owns his unit in- where about glass blocks which For Complete Personalized vide greater driving efficiency dependently rather than being of large heavy canes, this may can be bolted together instead Building Service Contract for automotive and household part ol a corporation. become quite a job. To make of using mortar. Is my memory flat and V belts ; and that it the task easier, all of the heavy correct and, if so, will you tell will riot shrink or stiffen the ONE BUILDER in Lakewood, old canes can be cut off at the BRUCE McNALLY N.J., is putting up condominium me something about it? BUILDING CONTRACTOR belts. District Building ground level leaving only a few garden patio homes for persons of the younger and more flex- ANSWER: Yes, there is a Phone 8-1059 55 years 304 Lake Street THE PRODUCT - New alu- and older. With only ible ones to be laid down and method of bolting glass- blocks minum panels with colored Valuation Gains 10 per cent of the available land covered. Although this may re- together without mortar. It is for ribs and redwood framework set aside for housing, there is duce the number of blooms for inside use, which you plan, and for making backyard, lawn and An increase of more than $34 plenty of room for the planned next year, it will tend to re- i not for outdoors. _ & million in total valuation of scenic atod recreational areas. it In planning the divider, be Datio fences. juvenate the plant and make | There was once a shoemaker who worked very hard THE MANUFACTURER'S building permits during the first __This and similar villages more vigorous. sure your measurements are CLAIM — That these panels nine months of this year over around the country, plus the We bind the canes of each of ; such that you can fit a certain and was very honest; but stillt ho could not earn are easy to cut-with tins snips the same period one year ago continuing concern of legislators our climbers together and lay I number of either 8- or 12-inch enough to live on. was shown for the 235 cities on all levels of government, add blocks within the wooden frame- or saw; that all of the six" col- them on the ground . The canes J ( of the Minneapolis Federal Re- up to more and better housing are held down with crossed ! work. The framework should be from "The Elves and the Shoemaker" — Our Children 's ors, which are baked on, are ¦ ¦ ' longlasting; and that the pan- serve Bank's^ix-state district. for the middle-aged and the stakes in two or three places j on e-by-6 inch stock, with quar- Heritage — Volume !.)• The valuation during the Jan- elderly. els are available with colors on before the covering of soil and ter-round molding nailed into one side, white on the other. uary to September period this mulch is applied. If several of ; position seven-eighths of an inch year is $461,362,787, compared THE PRODUCT — Shutters the canes are quite long, we j from the edge of one side of Your Children Will Love to with $427,148,172 during the Some Fireplaces cut them back ta about six feet. the frame. The rest of the mold- molded from plastic. same period one year ago. The THE MANUFACTURER'S Some of the canes may reach !ing is nailed on after the glass September total of valuation for Hang From Ceilina a length of 8 or 10 feet. blocks are in place, CLAIM — That thtfee shutters, the district was $58,987,555. NEW YORK LISTEN AND READ , , W-New steel The rambler, roses such as j The blocks are set in, placing of colonial design will not rot Building permit valuation in fireplaces can be installed with the Crimson Rambler are more I the specially made bolt assem- With Storybook Winona during the period shows the ease and flexibility of light hardy than the large-flowered blv into the comers of the joints. Records an increase of more than $2,- fixtures. climbers and may go through a TtnVztssernbly consists of small 300,000 over the same period They can be hung on a wall, winter without any more protec- aluminum rods and threaded in 1962. This year's $4 ,353,207 suspended from the ceiling, or tion than a mound of soil at the plastic rosettes. All that can compares with last year's $2,- stand free , reports Steel Facts, base especially, if protected by be seen are the decorative ros- jj «n«i HEATING ; 013,567. published by American Iron and a building. However, it is safer ettes. In purchasing the blocks Valuation totals for 10 Min- Steel Institute. , POLACHEK to lay them on the ground and and the bolt assembly have the ______W1N^______I• nesota and Wisconsin cities: Available in a variety of col- cover-them as sugg«sted above. dealer show you how they work. * Jin..Jep1, ors and 19<3 1»« finishes, some fire- Since these ramblers bloom on- There is a cheaper way of ^^^^RK(9j Rn____^_^_V Now you can bring to ELECTRIC-; WINONA K.-3.207 H,01_.5:i dollar volume $1,727,370 Residential ...... 764, 151 • (k .9275 : & INSTALLATIONS 1 U OUJ (IM J l\! ^^ Thew .ji ro stories that 1 Commercial ..... 447,235 m^L^L^L^L^K&SSImm T th* Public (non- §^^ 5 ^§ M keep, children fascinated taxable) 3,515,984 ^^ i Ghas. J. Olsen !j New houses - 50 for hours. Presented in this Volume snme & SONS 1 date 1962 $2,579,595 way, they make reading ¦ PLUMBING & HEATING j | Dipping fish fillets in lemon easy to leornl | 1M Ctnter St. Phone 701(1 1 juice before broiling adds fla- 7 vor.

• •

^^^mmmWWm9^^^ OUR CHILDREN'S NEW GARAGES Your quantity purchase earns quantity prices _ ... Two ways to buy Standard i • IliE com- Lumber garages ... 1. Purchase Records Over- .he-Counter plete, ready to drive in, or j • i ' .. .2. materials paekaRC only. I At Daily News Office and Save 25c . ¦ ., , . Package includes nil lumber | FAMILY ROOM I >«MM* »,,_ ... , Build an attractive : OR : MOW IN STOCK AND ON DISPLAY IN FULL PANELS . . . USE THIS HANDY ORDER FORM ¦ to havt records mailed DIRECTLY to your home. ; 7 SpeclesjOruce Pre-finished Paneling , I • WINONA DAILY NEWS • ' I I HUH : S2 for 12x22-ft. paraga j iOl Franklin Street ; J ^^ ^ ^ ; ' CEILING TILE IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY j Winona , Minn. ; 18 . « -^r Armstrong — Patterns ^r Insulite — 4 Patterns • Please send me the .oliimcs of "Our Children's Heritage" j series / have checked nt $2 c.ich. Kudosed $ ¦jc Gold Bond — 2 Patterns ir Celotex—1 Pattern j ; j VOLUME 1 | | VOLUME 2 | ] VOLUME 3 | ] i "^iSSi %' THICK PRE-FINISHED OAK FLOORING i (Please Print) i values. 0//jer models... equal •* . * I qstall It and It's Donel • NAME j ¦ ¦ • ADDRESS ! gSSSBfly PHONE 3373 WINONA I I j „, -«. ! i CITY ZONE STATE \ quality . . . helplut service.* STANDARD FOR THRIFT . . . reliable KENDELL-0 BRIEN = I - J 115 Franklin St. "Tubby" Jackals , Mgr. Phone 8-3667 check or money order) | | | , 'Send Just Like Old Times for Vikings TAYLOR. KRAMER HAVE FIELD DAY Tarkenton on Lombardi Speaks Only of Facts Target Rams MILWAUKEE tfv-Green . ?ay why he was lecturing an offi- the ankles." i the Giants in the title game a , " Coach Vince Lombardi. whose cial. .; I Moore who missed one game year ago but I never kicked because of rib injuries, carried four in one game until today." Tumble 21-13 defending National Football Lombard i also said the Green . 16 times for 88 yards before re- ; Willie "Wood , who snatched MINNEAPOLIS!^ - League champions have their Bay defense was "spotty ," but tiring when the injury began to the ball away from Theron Sapp It was like old times for way with victories, speaks on that issue there was debate bother ' "because of ail that run- to bring about a fumble recov- the Minnesota Vikings Sunday only of facts. by members of the defensive ing." Moore, who said he ex- ery that blunted one Steeler as they bounced the Los After the Packers had strug- unit. pects to play next week, credit- drive, said he thinks the de- Angeles Rams 21-13 to snap a gled a bit before whipping the The Packers rolled up 248 ed his success to "great holes" fense "has been good, playing four-game losing streak in the 33-14 Sun- yards on the. ground, and Tay- opened by the Packer offensive up to par , in the last four or be- day, Lombardi

~ ~ —— . Chester Gould DICK TRACY . ^

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker

THE FLINTSTONES By Hanna-Barbera

¦ -»¦-¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ..,.,.. . . !¦ ¦ III! ¦ ¦ — ' f | 1^ ,^^ ,, ^,^^ ,^^^^^^ — ^ ,J . ___¦ 1 M. H !--> ¦¦¦«_ ..1,^ *->*MM_MaM___-»___«--^---OTN I

DAN FLAGG By Don Sherwood ¦ ¦ ¦ *^ • • V* —— * ' . * BLONDIE By Chic Young ¦¦ "¦ ¦ ; ;—. —- -——¦ ——nr—.———--—1> i . ' - •" ' , ,, ,i i i mrffmnTT: ' fr~ : rr.TW*. .._. , _ jnm

¦ — , : L J L——- ^— : I ^ J I —— :—. ' — =—-—— ' : ~ LI'L ABNER By Al Capp STEVE CANYON By Milton CanniH

milt_^ITREl>#% ' GL0WING / FIRE M I C UM# Li _A L" *^^^l» ^ \IN rC5 " A Night Out ?RT [ Brilliant Orange SAFETY CAPS! with Dinner and Drinks at %

t| »i,^»i>_^^^^^ For safety' s sake! Cap shows up wonderfully in brush, woods ^ ^ * *¦¦•* ¦ or corn fields. Has water-resistant viny X »« PheSSdftt l shell with warm ear ¦• ¦ ¦ • ¦- ¦ A 1"'' ; . the i " i flaps. These caps are so terrific, we believe there should be a low f%AA|' nUnterSi requiring hunters to wear them for protection! Yours " m for low ^nn et*»¦s* *"*e *^ "^ as as *~^ym ~ . i _S*_I 50 ^th FLAME ORANGE t | QC ) * ¦ "*W water-repellent y Hunting Pants (Mtet *4 | ^^^ JL ^^^ J l^ 1to$ Flame Orange SUPPER CLUB ! j , ^^^^ 3 ^^^^ $L95 ¦ J Fountain City, Wis. ' ¦ $ FLAME ORANGE C QK ) HlUlt-Ilg VeStS < f REPEILENT tfO^A ¦¦ ¦¦ WATER, - sz.bu PARKA i - ,, s ,%, > WITH DETACHABLE HOOD \^ I '" * ''"' -''' *' ^^ lakes a pretty nifty j iced rarkas Fron . $*j-*>u c \ KNIVES ^^^ ^-^ Indian $2 $195 Buck Lure v J Fom ^&« E Package for Mom! G-66 "Apple" Lure - $1-69 ~~Z^— ^^^ M "**\ > . ' - - - -"*' .' I " ¦ ¦ ¦' I I Vm \J1 t < t \v i * *" _ ' • _ __ - ^—._«*,_ -*_ _. Brennek * Slugs 12-16-20 ( "Ull ./fy, '^WsSKmrnW ^Lmm ^i y sp l_. mm IN STOCK6-""Plastic ond R""i" Super *°"X. . ( ^**-W W *J ) GLOVESA_f\ ^misj ntfMkmmmWakwff i'" .. ^ a ^ ><< >^ >^|^^>i|^^^ ) ^-^^ ^^^ _^ ( J /% ^ *-f !lfflflmmmWw Get Your TAG Here! j 4™ 3 OT l/m* start ' ^0 ^ ^ * » •» * . « . n nne IS __¦ V "^: uWkiJSMa^ 1-1 earn. __,*______. fl ') T lO§^\ Roast (WwjilT Pm 1 UftABAM &lff if)

:::::j i Sunday " . __ ^======:= \\ for/ Triple ^-===^ ^ Come AH ^ ^ U ^ \ n for ,,la ACK \\ Come " ^ Wotch J HARMON ; \\____^ DINNER — Coming Monday, Doc. 2nd L ~ ¦ ,^., ^ _ —- — ' .::.;,,,,•¦.. ^,r ..^..,. , :¦;¦¦>¦¦¦ : - j.::;. • ¦¦-> ¦.• r v ,., . . - ^, , ¦ . ¦ f-^t_^ ' , ^ r^- 'y : . j; ..^, ^. ..^ypvp,- . ' .. . . , • ..s.., ~izA ^^^ . ,™- T* k ^ ^ M *0 '' tt-fci.- .V-V.. ! ..vV.^::.;:.sCU^.^i&H:&ui^^ . . ' ' ^ . 7j7;7j^&I|__