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3-11-1976

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1976). Winona Daily News. 1425. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1425

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]. TfiISS Ex-GIA f-^iireday^:*#i-i fimii ' Limit ' bate bill • ST.'PAUL s re ' PanelMinn. (AP) -There wasn OK' X , 't* receive a rebate of 10 per cent of income level, the maximum rebate would {« $100 menibers ra| y. X. . ^ whisper of¦ dissent Wednesday when the taxes paid on last year's income, plus »12 plus $12 for each dependent. Senate 7 Tax Committee ¦ ¦ ,. per depefjdeiit Assuming a typical family of four with ¦ approved a bill to send rebate checks ' 'xX:; , Wilson faces crisis itemized deductions, the rebates would be: security Jack Prime Minister Harold ' totaling |100 million to Minnesota tax- S, An estimated$214.9 mlUlon surplus is Wilsra s government faced a major political and $10,000-income, $96 rebate; $15,000, $138; By JAMES GERSTENZANG X ecopomic crisis today m payers. 77 expectedIn the state treasury by mid-1977, after its amtrtyersialplan to slash public spending by »6 ' $20,000. $181 ; $25,000, $186; $30,000, $14». MWon was defeated Senate leaders said irf urging the ' . in the House of Commons. The measure tost by 28 votes But tho measure approved almost WASHINGTON (AP) - A nuniber «* weanesday night committee to send some of that money Calculations would be made man unprecedented defeat ona riajor policy Issue in modem casually on a voice vote is expectedto be a ' ¦ ' ¦ "¦ ' ' former CIA employes say the Fort fid- parliamentary bac* to taxpayers. , • / automatically by the state Revenue history. The defeat *as also likely to send the battered pound, major point of obhtention between j)FL ministration has not acted effectively * to wBica has Department, based on returns now being nosedived to record lows tin currency markets in the last week, factions in the Senateand House. '¦ Dr. Frtd Post, an economist for the state protect undercover agents overseas ; ' • . plunging - ' . .'" .. ¦' . ' Died for 1975 income. : . further. 7 XX - . Finpnce Department, was the source for despite its outrage over the murder of one House DFL leaders and Gov. .Wendell Other examples of rebates: CIA man and the public identification'of the projection of a new massive surplus. ' ¦ ¦¦ Charged In brother'6 death Anderson have indicated coolness, if not He said his prediction was based largely —A single person, using a standard others. 7 ' - downright hostility to the plan since it was Cindy Brisco, l5. of Si, PetenWg, on a guess that revenues will run ahead of deduction, with a $15,000 income, $112; at But in a series of interviews the former Fla, announced by Senate DFL leaders several earlier forecasts. $25,000, $158; and at $30,000, $112. employes, from a street-level undercover , has been charged with second- ¦ ' ' ' • ' ' ' ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ • ¦ . . . ¦;. ¦ ¦ /¦-¦: . weeksago, - . . degree murdea In the stabbing death . * . —A family of four with two wage ear- "case worker" to senior officials once tf . In a memo to senators. Post said the the, agency's highest echelon applauded : of her brother, Billy. Police claim Independent-Republicans generally ners, itemizing deductions, with $10,000 , . estimate could vary by $120 million, Ford's proposal to make unauthorized the twb, were- attempting to rob a have endorsed the idea although they income, $75; $15,000, $106; $20,000, $139; , making the surplus as low as $122 million disclosure of secret information man when the stabbing took ptade. contend they thought as $25,000, $161 ; $30,000, $1«. a federal ofit first. dras hig^ $362 million. , crime.' No one is suggesting that Cindy The proposal has had no hearings in the 1 The bill probably will be debated on the More than a year of public discussion cf stabbed hei brother; but under •; ¦ ' The 10 per cent formula would apply to House but members of the Independent- SenatorflqOr next week, Senate DFL intelligence issues' without resolution has Florida lawjlf prosecutorsprwe the ; all incomes up to |2O,0OO, Tor Incomes Republican minority are expected to try to two wereatteihptinga robbery, they Leader Nicholas Coleman said . 1 brought CIA moralafto a low.point, left . between $20,000 and $30,000, it would be offer it as an amendment to some DFL- potential sources^jrfcludingthose from can claim she is responsible for the ¦ ¦ tbe - wmw—iiu iwp v*>?vm. Under the plan, Mta^sotans would reduced progressively until, at the $30,000 sponsored tax bill. Soviet Unionyf fearful of offering m- deathiinder a felony murder Tule, 7 ¦ Cindy JSrlscoe Billy Briscoe formation xur the Central Intelligence Agency anff may have damaged agency Base closings • Ex-Nazi nominated recruitinjL-rornew officers , these men say. . They also reported some current and The Pentagon Is preparing to Rotary International has nominated former CIA employes are bitter and upset announce the first in a series of ^ as its next president an Austrian by what they see' as Ford's failure;to politically seiBitive. militaiy bise ex-Nazi, Dr. Wolfgang Wick, despite defend the agency; others by the use to cutbacks. The Air '. '" Force reportedly * protests against the move from which past presidents put the agency, and has tapped " three baste for closing — Dutch Israeli Rotarians. Wick most by what they see as lack of support Kincheloe in 7 Michigan; Craig 'in became a Nazi member in 1933 and from Congress and the public. /ilabama and Webb in Texas. Two in 1945-was called into Uie Waffen SS , On Feb. 18, more than one year after others -^. Mng. in Mainexand the Nazi ¦ ¦ - elitearmy corps because he initial news reports of CIA abuses, Ford Richard - Gebaiir in Missouri — are held an imjportant economic post in issued , an executive order , setting in line to be reduced significantly. "¦ Austria. . ¦ ¦¦ ' • * - ' . ¦ ' . V . * • ' . .' .' • • . guidelines lor covert operations and establishing executive review boards. He. also proposed that Congress enact Duke 's daughter debuts legislation making illegal the unauthorized John Wayne watches the prepara- release of secret information by a curreiit tions of Ws youngest child, Marisa, or former federalemplpye. , i , 10, as she gets her hair fixed for her • The" issues of leaks and "cover," er motion picture debut with Wayne in disguises for CIA meii abroad, were "TheShoo'tist," in which he portrays . sharpened with the murder last December a legendary gurifighter - dying of of Richard C. Welch, CIA station chief 5n | Athens, after he and others were publicl cancer - Warisa jjas a bit part y I ' ' " ' ' " ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' " ' ¦ * * ¦ identified ¦ ¦ - over several years . as agency ¦ ¦ . - . ! . : . employes. " • Ford's attack on "leaks" was hailed as ' ¦' ¦' "T ' ;;'V7. \. ' ' T vital, ' . * ~7 ' v 7y ' :7. . ' ;Ma6 backscampaiQn *- .: "If you're going to have an intelligence Chairman Mao Tse-tung has thrown his7 full weight ' behind the widening service, the bedrock has to Se campaign in Chini tounseatfirstVlcePremierTeagHsiao-plhg. In an editorial criminalization of disclosure of sources in the People's Daily on Wednesday, he also turned thumbs down on a hew and methods, " Mike Ackerman, a former violent Red Guard style Cultural Revolution and held out the, promise of agent, said. - 7 • ¦ " ¦ ' . - .' ' forgiveness to unspecified party. leadere sUU hewirg to the Teng line. ' . ,; Nixon swears he didn't know Nominated to FTC " Calvin Collier of Virginia appeared before the about Chile plot Senate, Commerce Committee in Washington WASHINGTON (AP) - Former Wednesday to testify on his nomination to be a Rep. Carr Albert, Speaker of the House, attends -graveside services in President Richard M. Nixon swears he dtd - member of the Federal Trade Commission. If not know about CIA efforts to foment-a confirmed, Collierwouldserve as FTC chairman. Jexarkana, Tex., Wednesday for Rep. Wright Patman, who died Sunday military coup in Chile and that he ap- Mourns ffiehd morning. Also attending the service was Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson. (AP proved "possible illegal" intelligence Photofax) ' . " . '. ' ' * ,- .V' 7 gathering techniques in the because they had been used by previous administrations. Calvin Collier Part of. Nixon's stetement, made in i notarized written responses to/questions Vaccine decision delayed posed by the Senate intelligence FBI's of aide'i role iri Committee, differed from the panel's ' piitoe Lack of recent outbreaks of an unusual \Swine-type influenza has delayed by previously published fiifling that the several weeks a decision on whether to produce a \acclne* to fight the disease, former ftesident personally ordered the says Dr. David Sencer, director of the national for Disease Control. CIA to organize a coup against Chilean Sencer -said officials have been unable to trace the swine-type flu in humans Marxist Salvador Allende in 1970. 'beyond five cases reported among soldiers at Ft. Dlx, N.J., last month One of Soviitapy c&s i revealed • The stateipent was delivered to. the the five, a 19-year-old recruit, died. By MARGARETGENTRV prosecuted Both sources are familiar With with this and other evidence, "but I heard committeetoday and at the same time was the case; one is a former FBI intelligence he denied everything, and claimed the madepublic by Nixon's attorneys. WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI in- official. , phone call was innocent, " the source said On the subject of Chile, Nixon acknowledged he directed the CIA to at vestigated espionage charges in 1968 The FBI also investigated two of its own The agent's spying activities were tempt to block Allende' ' against one of Sen. James O. Eastland's agents suspected of passing secret in- "nipped in the bud" and he subsequently . s rise to power but •The inside index: , | 8**^ % >^/ W> Said "I do not recall receiving information Q aides wbo subsequently admitted • formation to hostile foreign spies in the resignedfroni theFBI, thesoiircesaid. , ' • Television !... 4a &«*«&* 1950s, the former of ficialsald. while President, concerning plans for a ¦ \W$%/> furnishing information to Soviet agents The other Investigation, also in the 1950s, ' Sa9* and was fi red The "hush-hush" probes produced military coup in Chile," • Opinions/Ideas 6a '' Q&X . W , according to two "was a very hush-hush case in New York," knowledgeablesources. circumstantial evidence against the two Instead, Nixon said he discussed with • Family/Living . -. Ta " the source said. "As I recall iit was never then-CIA director StOITTIS \$f? * The FBI tried to use the man as a double agents but neither was ever prosecuted, . Richard M. Helms "the. resolved one way or the other," despite direct expenditure • Daily record ' 11aB ^^ agent who would maintain his contacts the source said. of funds to assist Mi. ' ' Wlntar storm watch tonight and years of investigation. ' Friday with a good cHance o( snow with the Soviets In order to gather In- Ini,the Eastland case, the suspected Allende s opponents, and termination of • Agriculture 12a--1 3a The former official declined to elaborate m o_~.i«_ 4 ,*„ bKomlng heivy late tonight ind formation for the FBI Soviet spy was described as a "staff aide" U.S. financial aid • UOmlCS . . I 43 Friday, possibly mlxsd with rain , the sources said axtrwue south tonight Lows tonight Wednesday. to the powerful Mississippi Democrat He • Cnnrfel-S Oh KM. OROI '" 3" •J5toMwlthtilghsFrlday25to30..pa But that plan was.abandoned.because worked for Eastland from May 1966 to May w»itMr i»at»ns, aoii.i. , when the senator fired him. • Markets .. 5b * J FBI agents concluded the man was 1968 ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ' ; ' " ' '¦ ^¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' - - " ' " ' ' *' - ' ' : " • ' . " . ¦ -^d unreliable, said (he sources. He was never Eastland was in Mississippi and could not be reached for comment. The FBI had ¦ ' ¦ no immediate -comment, ' ,. . The conservative Southerner is the dean of tlie Senate and for years has been one of its most influential members, particularly in matters concerning the J ustice Dinrtios stalklllino Department and the FBI. By MIKE ROBINSON Reagan's Illinois campaign manager* state Rep. Donald Associated Press Writer Totten, said he believes Reagan is gaining momentum in His JKtsition as chairman of the Illinois, "so I don't know how fatal Florida was. " Hfe said a 40 Judiciary Committee and its internal President Ford's campaign prepared to roll into Illinois today per cent or better vote tally next week still is projected for t(ie security subcommittee gWes him and his ¦ ¦ while his opponent, forma California Gov. Ronald Reagan, . .. formfer California governor, despite the possible effects' of the fstaff access to law enforcement Infor- stalkedvote-rich Republican counties downstate , . Florida finish. mation which the Soviets might consider Reagan — who lost to Ford in Florida's GOP primary this Still, Reagan dropped plans for a weekend trip io California in valuable. week — declared Wednesday that his has "no illusions" about favor of a final push to roll up a big percentage in Illinois. One of the sources said the FBI learned winning the election next Tuesday ii) Illinois, his native state. Meanwhile, R, Sargent Shriver, without cash for television ill about March 1968 that the Eastland aide But he said he ia uninterestedin the vice presidency and will after weak showings in New England primaries, found new Me had been feeding information to Soviet stay in the presidential race until the nationalconvention. when powerful Chicago ward leaders swung tb him. He seemed agents. The sources could not provide the Democrats, too,' shifted their attention to Illinois. Former to pin his hopes on a big vote from the city while Wallace and aide's name or a description of the in- Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter, who won the Democratic primary Carter worked the suburbs ahd downstate counties. formation he allegedly provided the Soviets. in Florida, and Alabama Gov.-George Wallace, who finished Former Oklahoma Sen. Fred .Harris; the only other Democrat second, were downstate courting the farm vote. Carter on the ballot, said he and his backers are "idling our motors" Eastland learned of the man's activities proclaimed the Illinois primary "my meet important in the until they can raise money to mount a major effort in Penn- and fired him in May 1968. FBI agents sylvania in f lye weeks. > interviewed the man the following month, nation." " . Ford geared for a campaign swing into Rockford at the nor- Reagan, at one point Wednesday in Aurora, referred to Ford one source said. * there edge of the state today and on teChlcago Friday. He is due as a Communist — then quickly corrected himself to say he The sources said Investigators had no in North Carolina, slteof a March 23 primary, on Saturday. meant congressman. .. . . conclusive proof the man was eljher guilty or innocent oi espionage activities he hod ¦ confessed. -" The cases against the FBI agents suspected of espionage ended with a similar lack of solid evidence that would cut court. ' ' Military Gmditsal|s seen hold up in ; WASHINGTON (AP) - The State confirmation of a report in the Boston Thus, the aid cutback is viewed here But investigators gathered "fairly ' Departmentia planning a sharp cutback Jn Globe today that President . Ford gave a more as n gesture designed to keep the strong circumstantial evidence" that an U.S.-financed military credit sales to secret pledge to Chinese leaders to cut the normalizing process moving rather than agent in the FBI's Washington field office Taiwan lp a move toward further U.S. military forcO on Taiwan from about as a significant step toward thatgoal. was Selling information to the Soviets in normalization of relations with mainland 2,200 to 1,100 In the next year. This would The goal of normal diplomatic relations the middle to late 1950s* tha former official be in lire with receht trehds which havo ' ¦ China, sources say. was set ddwn in the Shanghai Com- said.. ' i ' seen U.S. forces there cut The administrationIs asking Congressto from 8,600 four ni , signed at (he time of former > At one point, the FBI received an years ago, ¦ .' : mu que approve 133 million in credit sales for * President Richard M. Nixon's visit to anonymous letter "in obviously disguised in fiscal 1W7, down from $80 Tho Globe said Ford made the pledge to Taiwan ' China in 1072, Secretary of Stato Henry A. handwriting" alleging that "somebody millioti/or the current fiscal year. Vice Premier Teng HsJ-ao-Ping (jurlng the Kissinger said two weeks ago that "there ' from the FBI was furnishing'information In justifyingthe reduction, officials said Presidents visitto Chin*last TDecember. Is no policy to which we attach greater > to the foreign embassy," the official said, only that Taiwan's economy U becoming Taiwan has beep a major stumbling significance than the normalization of The letter said the agent would talk with to take care of the Island's - , block in U.S, Efforts to move clqwr to •trwifl enough relations withChirtai" , his. Soviet contact . at a telephone booth own Srfense needs and that a plant under Peking. The American aid program for near a bowling alley in suburban ' • He said relations , construction for awerobltag combat ; Taiwan l» not the onlyproblem. 7 * with the Peoples Maryland in late afternoon on a' specific wmpletkra. TO establish full diplomatic relations Republic arc.devoloplng at about the pace planeaon Taiwan U nearlnA date, tho source recalled. T 1 MIIUM «55- with Peking,the United States also would that was foreseen in 1973, but he noted that . . Haul othei qualified sources - ( • ¦« i.i.i. •¦—..^ domestic c FBI agents staked out tbe phone booth at .7—j" ' , ' ^ : - milUon aid cutback to tied in with t|* long- have' ta, jwrtove all U.S. forces and ircumstanceshave impeded the ¦ • " the . time given and " g , this Oeorge Wallace waves to a U.S. strategy of normalising mWUry Installations from Taiwan, . process.ThUwas anapparentref-fcrehceto sure enou h crowd of range ¦ fellow from the Washington field office did ' . relations the People's flepubllc d abrogate the bilateral defense treaty and : a -recent House resolution calling on the : supporters as aides carry him aboard his v0 suspend- diplomatic relations with the administrator to i possibility of pulling its 230,000 District of Columbia found that Where Personal Service Is Still Important' fcajjfi Growing numbers of local five years can pul] out by giving employes out of Social Security by pulling out of Social Security ^ KOLTER'S SJ? governments are pulling out of the federal government two to save the city about $200 and spending the same amount MLESItnVICE the Social Security program at years- advance written notice, millionannhally. * . .. of money on a private plan, it WMwkaio.Aw ' - «wf»452*5M5 a time when the big federal They can't join again, About 81 per cent of state and could: benefits system Is being buf- Since 1959, a total of 322 local local government 7; employes -Allow workers to retire at feted by inflation and unem- governments with , 44,667 covered by Social Security also age 60 With 25 years of service ployment. employes have dropped out of have some type of supplemental as opposed to age 65 with 30 While alarmed that the Social Security, most of them in retirement plan. Under Social years service¦¦ newspapers defections may snowball, California, Louisiana* and Security; •¦ '. federal officials say there is no Texas. And 207 other gover- -Pay retirement benefits at indicationnow of any noticeable nments with 53,187 employes QOP preciilct 80 per cent of the highest impact on the solvency of the have given the required two consecutive five years salary rWe Wantedwill buy. your bundled Social Security trust funds. years' advance notice of workers tp rather than 55 per cent under Wwspapers for 1* per pound. They point out that, despite intention of terminate. Social Security; 7 - . " 8 to 5 . Mon. . through ThursV the dropouts, the over-all Alaska, with 12,649 state —-Reduce payments from its 8 to 12. ' meet tohiqht Fri. & Sat number of state, county and city workers, Is the first state to file Meetings for Independent- 166 employes by a total of :. .-^'Wililia employes covered by Social notice of Intent to pull out,' but Republican precinct workers $20,0*0 annually with art "ad- . Security and . paying con- Social Security officials believe ana for those interested in ditional $22,000 agency saving, Ligtrtmg Studio tributions.is steadily increasing that notice was merely form ing special-interest and maintain survivor benefits. 376QW4TH ST and has been since they became protective while the state working groups will beheld this Social Security officials said eligible in 1950. weighs a decision evening in Sambo's restaurant, in interviews' that local ¦ <¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ -¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ —¦ ¦ " ' r - ' " - "" -—¦ — -¦— • - Mrs Max (Jean) DeBolt, 215 governments sometimes Washington St.t will be in consider defecting when they charge of the precinct workers' get. into money trouble, training'session set for 8 f to- especially if a hard sell is made rn Ihe restaurant, at .the junc- by a profit-motivated insurance %IIQCIYG S^^^ ^ J tion of Highways 14 and 61. company hoping to write a 'Where Personal Service Is Still Important /^W^ Persons interested in forming private retirementplan. ^ special-Interest working groups , "Some of these plans are no wllh an Independent- sounder than Social Security Republican orientation are to and some are worse, " a ' Nf w A meet ate p m. with Steve tund, spokesman said. ll 'i-ii \i\ thc party's 1st District field For example, federal sources

W\ M$- ^ man College, high school or said, a local government's new _W/ H^_ ^*&^^*'*^'*& ^^^HHES-B£V-JKSH«3 \\\^^^^^Sm ^______\__ ^t^____W ¦ senior-citizens' ' _ groups were private pensionplan may offer ¦ given as examples of potential higher retirement payments but combinations. smaller or even no payments in i'i • f^^ The pieetings today are 'ta lieu of some benefits found in f h \ > ¦ * preparation for tbe Winona Social Security, such as County Independent-Repub- coverage ' of a deceased lican convention' at. 7 p.m. worker's widow 'and children, Saturday in the Wiriona AJrea disability payments if the Voca tional-Technical Institute. worker is unable to earn an * Income, Medicare health ¦Mf^' ¦ benefits' and payments to >& XS.1P. WSU library students up to 7 the age of 22 t years. Some private plans also gets Bunnell have less desirable provisions for vesting and portability—or By "Gossard-Arternis " Here are three of the most beautiful bpoks as gilt carrying a private pension plan gowns you'll ever see! Sizes S-M-L in paprika or ivory bisque. A gift of more than 200 books to a new job. from the professional library of the late7 Dr. Harris Fillmore Irish impact 7 Bunnell was being installed *12 and $ Wednesday in the Winona State .to be topic at: 13 University library,' ' t)r. Grace Deldughery, head; historical rrieet LINGERIE-MAIN FLOOR of IheWSU nursing departaent, St, Patrick's Day will be T said the books include many -, celebrated at the Winona medical texts and the' I com- County • Historical Society 'j plete, original editions of the meeting 'Wednesday at' 7:30 works of Dr. Slgmund Freud, a' p.m. at the society's museum, ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ founder of scientific psychiatry. ' I ' ' >• 'x . y • . -, : ' * ' ' .' . ' 7 *: ' :. ¦ . x . ' ' . ' . ''-.. ' ': ' . 180 Johnson St,7T . ' Dr. Bunnell was medical' , Dr. William Crozier, head of y director of the Hiawatha Valley the History department of St. Choate s Where Personal Service Is Still Important' f to Mental Health Center until Ills 'Mary's College, will discuss (he ^r\p «flk /| death in 1974, Dr. Deloughery Irish people in Winona and their said. "He was well respected by contributions during the 19th ¦ ¦ $ 9S $ : medical colleagues in the city," century. : ' * ffK^L»\iI J 5-« 89 [.;¦. -. 11 *ts. +*r \& "\ \f * mm TOASTMASTER BROILERS:..: -:' - 25 to 27" -X and ' former patients still The public is Invited. Refresh* ^ communicate with his widow, • ~ MUNSEY BROILERS.7 '.'Vv .,. ' .;,;;. 75 $ 9$ , menlswill be servcd. *7 ta 14 she* said. Mrs. Bunnell . is Trains — full : Size parts, $ 9 making the gift. ; models,- pictures/ artifacts and :r TOASTMASTER TABLETOP OVEN BROILER 7. ; ,7 .-! . 46 * Dr. BunneD was a member of all other , . railroading 5 $ 95 the family that first settled memorabilia will be featured ; C3E OVEN BROILERS. . .V ....:... '. ^S- to 49 77 Winona County, atHemer in the this year in the Winona County ^ 1850s. . ¦ ". ". Historica l Society. Rail-O- ; - ' ¦ ¦ ' 99 $ : ' ' ¦' ' ! ' SLO-GOOKERS;.. ; /.; .:.. v.v;. ;:M7 to; 27^ , ; . ; Rama, April 24-25 at the Arcadia chamber ; Armory Museum. :; ' ' " ' " ¦' ¦ Exhibit space j 7, - HOUSEWARES-LOWER LEVEL * . " : ' 7. ' ' 7., .:- .> will be free. * 7 to present awards Persons wishing to buy, sell or AECADIA, Wis. ( Special) - swap items may purchase table Four community members will space. Prizes will be given be honored , at ' the Arcadia owners of the biest scratchbuilt Chamber Of Commerce annual train, bes t scratchbuilt meeting Sunday night, Awards '-structure, .. . best ' antique train -JmAV JWm^L\^^^^S *MX^^m\^m^m^mWtW I ^^H^^^^^^^^^^Kl a " Choate ?& will be gine in the categories of and most unusual railroad Service Is Still Important's su^saf Where Personal &* business, community service, artifact. - agriculture and special con- Categories of exhibits in- clude ' . railroad - artifacts , j^^H^Hi^^^fflB v9HHH^^^^V / tribution to Arcadia. , Duane Moore„ former railroad pictures, live steam, r ^MAnrf nfiimi i* ______m__ \\^_\ W______\ wn H T ' - 71 * .,. ; r~7 ' television and radio personality model, railroads,, toy trains and ^^^^^^ ^^^^^ who currently heads an ad- traction railways. x vertising agency in La Crosse, Tor additional information or ' Hw m^i will address the group. la We reservations call or stop In I -VY 'W^ President Ryan Sheehy will at the Winona County Historical ^ recap the chamber's past year. Society, 160 Johnson St. Other newly, elected officers are -Mrs. Waynfe (Kathy) Bisek, McCauley raps treasurer, and Mrs. Jeanne Miller; secretary. Cocktail hour at ihe Arcadia Country Club DFL for stifling begins at 7, with dinner at 8. full-time issue ¦ ' , « H4^? W^ , . • \ V 1 ^ • ST..PAIIL, Minn - Rep. M, |[ | wnona oaly News | J. t McCauUfy, IR-Wlnoha , • Thursday, Mircil ll , Vflt AVwlnesday accused the DFl) Vol. 120, No. 94 legislative majority of fitlfllng these Published dally except , Saturda y his effort to put. the full-time and certain holidays by Republican legislature issue on the ballot. and Herald Publishing Company, ' McCaulcy had proposed a comfort pajamas 601 Franklin St., Winona,. Minn. '' ¦ ¦ ¦ constitutional amendment JS9B7 . ' ¦ • ' , ' " ' BK^^^ T^mB' in the of ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES limiting tho legislature lo ! ¦¦ * Sinole copy, 1$ cents dally, 35 meetings every other year.Thls on the -"* I ^flfet ¦KSf^PlV'' ^ *\ " r*s >Hfj cents, Sunday. would . have ended what . . slip matching robe for >- _ \^_K \!^JPiSll ' Dollvcrod by carrier — pfcr woek, McCauley allied "the drill, /MbJKgMS^SM' 65% 1 • ¦¦ ^^*;¦ Hnk^lL. * ' 85 cents; 13 weeks, J11,05; 26 weeks, 'fHjjj ^QHSHf leisure. Polyester 35% ¦ ; '<- * ' ^^ ¦ ¦ >^K l»MMrar, v w?w* $& ' /7. ,,'[¦¦;¦ , &•¦/;} ¦ proposal, McCauley noted, I O. : '^^6 '«if. ' 'l' ¦ ¦ ¦ : / 8 months M'.OO '. i - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦: ' 4 month's- ., S14.50 ;«» ##¦- El&twhere- in United Starts and Canada . ^uCfMlWjmmmmmmmmmmmWk . I year,.. * .. ..' ..;. *-».0O : ..s...... M5.25 8 months ¦ j^HH . WWB^k 4 mpnth& ... '...:.. ,. - ,,.. JI9.50 ^3mm! f Sunday News only, T year 118.00 Single dally copies malted, ti ; f' ¦* # rl MISSES' SET OF BLOUSES cents each. Single Sunday copies anywhere ' ¦ •: ' j : ¦;•: " • : . mailed, 75cootseach. , , Subscriptions (or less than one X USA? month, i\2$ per Week, Other, rates With hundridi of officii In North a\^^^Bsm\ '' ^^^ |B. on request, Am«rlc», IK« Oilliiy ol Homii of. hr» tha Unlit In *lor.«r Send change ol tiirm, notices, tnd na- tional homt'idllu, tiomi-buylni ¦ ~ ' ' 1 yJT / undelivered copies, subscription ' ^^^^B i '^^^^^ft' ' g ••rylcei it no additional cpit, Call orders and other nail Items to (or tomWali l»|ormatlon about Winona Daily Nw» . P.O. Bo»70, homi p-lcoi md ayillabllltrot In Sm tyxMttty S

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' ' URANT ' ¦ ' ' ' RESTA ' ' ' ' ¦ ' ' .. . ., v - . • . . H AH { NOW OPEN I and stay open 24 hours daily ¦ tv\.~lf-u\rys-\r\<~iririrrr-~L\-- ''~'~~~m' m ' m ~*~ M *' tm ** m * m ***** mm ' kmm *'*~~ Herwln-Wllllems You rwlly don't n«*d to be Irish I | ^ »| r—REGISTER FOR—, i FREE . ecoratlno Canttor. . to have a good time at Dave'a i?>£lV MI8FACTIOM on March 171 _}_____ 2 Schwlnn. 10Spend CdffBB & ClniHltlOnRolls JARANTEID ¦ SERVED: ¦ xix:x.°y,i,-x Bi{ St. Pat's Day t-*aJM WVI ^r w" - tmaSJ^'m^im BICYCLES™ ' DurlngOur.,. ¦ XXTXX;- ¦ & Numerous Free Meal Passes Ii; WAI I Pttlni ' QRAND OPENING I i¦¦¦ ¦ , ¦ i l I i ¦ ¦ , i, i i i 11 riW ; SMORGASBORD ; • ¦fHLL 9 J i; H IVf '.ii'< '-'» porthe uw ^ssr" of this product Featuring Soma Irish Foods H ^¦. Vt * / your purohiM ntc« '¦ ¦ . if . will be founded, Starts at P.M. B « ¦— T—S/teetek-—i ' —I ' ^KS^ ' ij| ' 5 -— Swlrig td tOPM JL JL . ' ¦ rK ' 2 EGGS, lM'SIM ^^'^^Sammmm mls ^^ 8fl 9 J **^. Wl . * HaaanttonaA ^mltt*) * * ^*W^W * ' ( CHOPPEDBEEF H "^ \ mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm m.mmimmmmm4mmmmmmly ',^B '. ' DINNER ' STUKDINHK HASH BROWNS WIW YDM Your Favorite Irish twosbme TAACT W/CIKIC* 6f ponto, ' lSS ^ s & •VfWi 8ntad or6oup40lnn«r Roll MJIMB FEgL ' IUQHT ¦ SiltdorBoupaointwHod AT ^^ m m \ A w m.^. yun^^ntshmin. 1 Mtma&ammKbatixaaiilTf :$ f9 Mai-mCon-Mi-iy ¦ •.»•!* "« 76* |. . » l - BB& Mon. thru Thurs. 8 to 6, Frl. 8 to 9, Sat. 9 to 6 MBB^^ I AII 8p$claU QoodMateft¦ 11, 12 1487 Service ¦ ¦ , ... -, , ,, „ , . i m) B H Drtve-Wettpate ShoppingCenter-Winona ' i . 7 =sd «¦§.«-; . - , PHONE 452-5025 A lovely tettlng and the flnett In food & am ' ¦ ¦ i ' . ' . v ' . 7 ' ¦ ' "' ' . Farm safety 1 &"\ ~.~. , ' . classes set '.". _ ^_^t^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_t_j_ ' - - .. ' • '^^^^^^BB^BI^^P^H8^^^pHBHHH^HH^pHi^pi^^pi^^^H^H8^H^^^^^^^^H* A farm family safety seminar ^^ T for Winona County residents ~ ¦ ¦ ' A will -be presented at three ______^.^^^^^^^^.r. x '' ' . x '"'A-liHwtfyifftnWiibc*' . '. ', " \ ^^^^^^ ^^^~-; ' ¦Tf^^^^^^ H* ft-i I iJ\\W% ^Bi i ' li^niFilBf^^BI I . IH ill¦ I ¦ 1 ^^^^^^ B'l ¦- ^^^^^^^ B locations Tuesday, Wednesday and next Thursday by the Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Co , ; y 0mt CH The first session will be at 8 • Mim\^m » .- - - _ M WW^Lvi i iii I III I IIIIM i p m. Tuesday at Rushford High ^^^^^^^ iTi^Ti H^C^I *^^l * ¦ ¦ . School, the second at l pm. '¦^^^^^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_w^^^^^^^^^ ^ H' \^^^ k^^|^A^JJ^A^j lJ^|^Lj^LAAX^L'^A^^^^^--'^^ML^^^^^H' . Wednesday at Lewiston High School and tbe final meeting at 8 This ad effective thru Twsday, Wfarch 23 STORE HpURS: Mon , Sat 9 6, Sun 12 5 p m. Thursday at Preston High .-Fri. 9-9 . - . - School , Vour Friend*are¦ Even Cfoww¦ Mini «km kii ,- The seminar was developed ;/ X ¦; '¦ ' • Fully WiPPed for 23 : ' X ^ X. : ¦ fVll ULAN D ' • ^^mM4^, for presentation to families to j&tt£>. ' - .' I IIHII ¦ ¦ Channel Operation J9^_____ W' alert members to the possibility : - ¦" • W '¦ . m£k_\ \ '" ' ' " • ' ¦' • '¦ ' Economical'"V"" • ¦* • ¦ • • Largei-^^^w S/RFO meter ^rg ____^ of accidents ln agriculture. Wm"k - -^ ¦¦ ¦ - ' **WtI__s^_i. . Topics will include federal *w» ' $' M r^y^^S^p " , - . _3.m ' • variablesqueich' \ mZ_B/_^ t::: = := -4yV«anfl*BI_ \hann**l . . . - . ., -rx , • ^. ^ and state regulations governing . . Frontinctlcatof lighf . >4^^ B|I Tr ^^ ^ !3J mounted speaker . farmers in relation to their " ^*w R/ * ' /*^r^V-5M ' B 'll Cf ¦ • • |fc T'1^%^1 • ^P^B^^ >' ' ' ' ' • Walnut sides with brushed ' " "' ' I SMOKED I I PICKLED) employes, safe tractor Ul^^^ i^v ' :'/ /^^ P^ PR Jt J W-lm I I^JlM v . . . operation; fuel storage and handling, chemicals; gram ¦^ FISH handling and storage; the use of FISH protective equipment, and Sts^^-::: ¦ ¦ : : ¦ ( 1 1 1 1 ! ' ¦ >•' • '^• • " " i . B3 '"T ' • ' ''" - .. ' I MflM~.ji#% M m JI nm 'M- safety planning. ' ¦ - - ^ rl^ks^m 'fe" '" ' ¦ " - J Arm -Wm irSv - " - JPU N^Hi-^^ - — - |-T 1 rf#l ¦f¦: :^^ Pesticide meeting if Xr ^^^^ id^MBB ^V 'P1' . . | H^Hi ' REG - ¦' Model13-879B ; 'M '¦' $159 9? ¦ KING CRAB & LOBSTER TAILS ! set in Plainview V^MJ WVS^ W-m\ *W-M_W I^^T x ' . - ). - ¦¦ . . I PLAINVIEW, Minn - A ¦ '¦ ' : ' lii ' 59A /W ^JK \ X *L." • • Full leaal 4-watt RF cutout * * j':* public meeting sponsored by the . '¦ ^'Ty AAII%I A^lfeV power transmitter with high* . * * JYf/ /i V 1 ' fVl l T j H ^ ^ Wabasha County Extension ^^^'^^T' ^* ¦ Ut#*llNm '¦ level modulation ,. SHR,MP T^jr-/ ''-iH ¦ ¦ ' j ,, - ^^ i . ' Service will be held at I p m, ' ^ *y ¦ » *^^^^^ HE1; HADDOCK OYSTERS ! ' lS1 niOn"POW©r ©C I Dual conversion super- _ 0'____W __ 1 < Wednesday at Plainview *^V* i ' iE' ¦ ¦ ¦ ' : 1 MOST SIZES X \y ^__ ^l ' " a-k j-w ¦ ' ' ' a -mm ' '-i «i heterodyne receiver has . '^KM W - -B ^^9^ ¦ ¦ Community School to explain ¦¦' '¦ i m* ' " • • T^fS'^^ ' ' " - "23"C nCill il© | . 'WlObll© ,une*-M>f i7-- «-- >»«« -- >*-l I Top performances will '^^Pr______fl__^^. participate in a final per- formance in Wabashji April l • Positive/Negative .- . and all -will be held in city high ^^^^^ \ school auditoriums • Ali transistorized . , The public is invited to all performances and there is no charge. , TUSHNER'S MARKET I Hot to ¦i----)-iL <* W ' Super Special get ' ki ^ . HIGH QUALITY - LOW PRICED MEATS I f l ,P^\PEPT*C II ^ J^SxF : VDEIl l .-9 ' . you interested in CB's! 70t #W % 7>vi ^ 1 m^Awm *w*a • ' ' . ' . ' Top features such as: lZe nS C/t»ine(., ^^T'^^ l^. - , ' //ytf—^ffffl -^ M^ i RCB 70 Clt . 2*3 Synthesizer. X Jt;t _^_W _Z ' * 1W6 yJ^^^yl \\j_____W\{[• ¦ ' squelchcontrol.deltatuning, ^^_\______\^____± 501 E. 3RD ST. Since TEL. 452-4845 I BOnd ¦* ¦* *' 7 |T^==^p==rp2>|^ B^ a : 7; RaCIIO PA jacks,y mike volume . ' . .j Bflk J | STORE HOURS: 8 A.M. TO 6 P.M. MON THRU SAT. CLOSED SUNDAY* \ HOLIDAYS | ?ontr° xyy . ; ' ^^ Q^^ B ynHHHj^ y: \ :;^^^x " NEW »}|f FAWItY FRKM VAtUES J f¦KS^rtAirc LOW PRICE 7 LEL31*. | 7 ; ; ¦ MB MtARj DUBUQ\JECHplCEF.b.L. 2g0 3bo | B -QC BEEF RIBS BOIL OR SRA.SE >OC| BEEF SIDES AVG /TIB I «BS- - , - ' ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ , S ¦ ¦ :-T * -W MQtEB!^ V 7^^T " . l CHOICE 45 LB, AVG. tiOO I " ' ' " /05? ' £U|^39>W^^^^BW / AAA ^'.^. -zs^~ ¦T¦¦¦¦ *i^^:- tfc SS.T \\\WA• : ' '^U w^3JL . '° V $1T776- ¦ ¦ M^. * -.. REGx-^. w ^ }^^- S157.97 * x y : x /, . _ ¦¦ ¦ ;:&• j ^^-^PLk ^-- Model DS1021 i | Jf FRESH CMS OF YEAt AMD . * 1 ' . B .« I VEAt llVER AVAILABLE TH.S WEEK WHOLE PORK LOINS *jJ? I ¦ . STEAKS—ROA-STS^CHOPS-MEAT LOAF ..,, L WRAPPING AND FREEZING^ EXTRA ¦ j mmmtm m m HY-GAIN |MMH ^HHHHaN> javHMaH pMMM ^Ba ^i a^aMHM ^^ mmi *'^*'^'^ *—^mwmm ^mmmm ^^^^^mmmam *mmmt ^m ^m *^a^r ___\ ^^^ ^^rf ^^^^ J . : &*8«. LOBSTER HEN_, _, _J_^ _x '— ,»...„:._ .,. '¦ ' ¦ y^ - ' ' OHOIPP H ^ i?iiN.nwzw;^Fiu^.7- :. ]s£?^^ TURKEYS SY , B 70c| ; \ SCANNER 7-HB. 6ROILER TYPE SIZE ^-f ¦ %3 UfAIICYC DIVE $OW¦ ¦ ^ T " ;f" ^^" " ' ¦ ¦ ' f ' WAIiLCI t rtmmt 8-120Z. ' HUBBARD HOUSE _ ^^^^^ ' ' " Model 618LHV . ' ' X *-^WQ£\,' Jfc-U|* HEN GRADJE A PERFECT warM ^^^^^^ ^ ^ ^^ - ^ " " ?V "^7 ¦ Wl^gg^ Jlf3lfr\\m i-gj *^»-'* * x ' v* ...Jill. ' Monitors 10 channels. Hand flip case: .SHOPPERS SPECIAL TURKEYSCR^^QS ^ L.E.D. Indicator lights. 12 UOC 1 __WUI\\*~*t '$$ _!& _' ______Ml______m COLA AND DIET RITE MP ¦ FRESH I CE PACKED ¦¦ m 7f£ FRYER BREASTS AAr I HE). l^Ti *^9BHI^^^BH' -K-MAW ^. J flDlX ^^^^ ^^^k . . . . . ¦ ¦ . . . LB . | ^ ^--«M L^I * . 89* . * _.*B tWi LB BULK PACK'"^^ '%= 8 e - >^0*^^HY-SCAN«^^ BHB! ^B^H^ I^F # PEG' ¦SAUERKRAUT IS 4*> ButcH SAYs - ' - x£s*, M ' X ,/ ^ ^_^_^_^_^_^SI_ W-m\\\\\\\\\ ^mHoH Jr $159.97 ._ .... _ x X ,_ v ADDED SAVINGS Take Advantage of .TOT I I , . - FRES*i, - ^- ¦' I BRA I RRnTVIfUlfST H $1 3¥ our quantity purchases.of Fresh Hick- . TM- ¦ P" ¦ V" ' HOMEMADE ' | ory* Smoked Homemade Sausage. HY-GAIN Citizen M9 | P H H ^ ^TO 19 CITIZEN I f. ' IB. ; fffiw !'\m l n ^- 1t0 I 11 t0 r "to Z6,D I 41 m3. I VarlattrVqriqTy PTof ^quWlBgSdusaae I 10lbs. 17 lbs. 2Slbs. 40lb». or Wore ¦ RING BOLOGNA • $1.19 $1.17 $1.13 $1.Q9 99^ I ¦ WIENERS • $1.49 $1.47 $1,37 %*M »i>19 1 SAUSAGE ' $1.39 $1.33 $1,29 $1.19 : . ISH wmmm ^mtmmmmmmmmmm - ^411 ^ POLmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ^mmmmmmmmmmwmmmmm• $1.37 mmmmmmttmmmwmmmmmmmm aiM#> 1l m^m^ . J ^^^^MIDtAND :- THURINGER • $1.39 $1.37 $1.29 $1.25 $1.19 1 7 Stardoster OLD STYLE SAUSAGE V $1.59 $1.57 $1.46 $1.41 $1.39 1 fl BASE ANTENNA MI 79< ^JJLS IS IJ BRAUNSCHWEIGER • 89* 87^ 83* 75< I *' ;7 ' v ^^^^i mw_ ^_W_w_f_ ^/_W____w!^_\W I \ \ JV^I ^^^^^^^^^^^^I^^K'^H^ I 83V BV / j \ any piovlous omnl-dlrocllonal CB base an- | y^m ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ftfl ^H I LIVER SAUSAGE 89* 87* 79* I ** **** RING • / l7 _A lennafi ODB gain over gr'ourld plpne. I H ( HB BII BB I^* -- * *-***-^^ !^^ ^^ . I " ¦' -rr /^'rTV' ¦' SIMPLE TO INSTALL I H *_^k_* ^ ' 0- - - ^- *^-- J . BRATWURST >:,» $1.39 $1.37 $1.33 M>29 $1.19 /' 1 V SEETHI30NEI ~ -~ TX . ^— . 7 X | ^ ^— Model $1,15 I - \ ^HP ^HP 13-858 BULK PORK SAUSAGE • %%j%$1.17 $lwl3 M>09 1 ' Not E«o..,..Pictur.d A • i Model $0 0 76 Agy mf]* , NI-400 ' X PORK LINK SAUSAGE • $1.39 $1.37 $1.33 $1.31 $1,29| ;, ^J5#7 REQ. $172.97 |fl# ¦/¦¦¦ •/¦^ ¦MM aMHMMMMHMBMMMHHMI MMIMMHMMMMHM aHH^BMMMn MINCED HAM • Wjt^ ¦« ¦« ¦¦ "« ¦¦ • MonitorCerti Crystal We Heve The Largest Selection Of NOW AT DISCOUNT PRICES WHEN PURCHASED IN QilANTIH I ficate [ I ^^ S mm ¦ ' Discounts b«gfn with 11-167 units. 41-lb. errors bring the" largest discounts. Threo t/nlts of <^B I ¦ ** _*~*™~ ' Now joucun goi oyiiita iii'woiii in yirtgiiiy iwury CBy0mt¥ msm,& palmarCB EOUIPMFNTma^tf aaaf §Wa^a*m ~l I _\ _\.. *** ihij * ' three varieties to total 41 lbs. or more will qualify lor maximum discount. All varieties __\^ * *B ^w.,!. ' .., * .. typo ol monitor r«c«ivw You can ordew — ' amM | . |g .. ^. , j W'jL can be r^k. I B ._.w« J<-wxr>M-anu- Corhlicolowhlch youitndloiiu miinutiioluror IM ^\ ¦ 1^ur TltMSk WHin ^tHfl A MAM 7 8^*^^ T - frozen , 6uy In large units and divide It , up yourself among your friends. MUH or phpne largt ' '^Slr^* I : ; , ' ,' , ¦ ; ' ' ^J_' f9 onl«rii WMk'In id\i*MM. * ^• ' * T ' - v ' lP7k^"'B |"r :""T " Prepaid ?O • .. And YouCan Use Your ^ NON^- OF OUR SAUSAGE PRODUCTS ARE TO BE RESOLD- 4% ^-rr^r ¦ "JR f V | Wgg ,,.....,;.,: . V'/ V MASTERCHARQE at Qlb$on's} y ..i . ¦ : A ; . Winona 'Daily News ' *. x ^ More on a messy ^

¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ * ' * • ¦ * . ¦ > ¦ ;:¦ * * * . . * Qplriiorisllcleas* ¦ , ' .; . , , . * flfWlfc^Thursday.lyiarchil, 1976 7 .. . -¦ 6a VVhsit' mm ? s in be his best > JacMoa'a monicker may ¦WASHINGTON - This presidential hopfe, outside his lovely wife. He ia the campaign may not be di?tlnguished mostsolemn yearner in the pack, mad for Its brains, but It is a vintage year *i^es:/i^/p/7 .j Meany; " I ' 'i ' ii r - at evejybotfer except George Sewage in river for names. VVehave.a Jimmy Carter, IT^ M^ M - MMMMMMMVIM . ,¦ '. - and the Pentagon, sore at the • *>. The Twin Otiea metropolitan area, as you Bill a Mo Udall, a Scoop Jackson, aSarge been iulbwa: In Arkansas t as Jim Russians, Kissinger; . and his old. > >; "' know, wants to dump up to 13'billion gallons of M^ S&river, and of course, a TJerry Pord, i, William Fulbright 1 ^ B»iy3ateid of buddies in the press, but somehow lha t ¦ii-^m wwage inlo the River early all of whom think there are votes in have its Mississippi next the Rhodes.Scholar, he¦ might hame"Sc7oop" humanliea his anger ¦ ' 'month. It wants tb make a walking Inspection bf these affectionate nicknames; hada/Aahce.".; :$' .;x ¦ ':¦ yxx for * ' ' and remindspeople thaihe battled ^^'Mnjiles of largest sewers, vvo Particularly ^'Wee-^lmmy.V He. Is : :',' President v Thimsh'a given -: narte, the New Deal as well as for the old serious about his political frivolities. Harry.sQundedlikeafUgfWlnglnthe ' ' '¦¦ ' • ' ' ¦¦ Co)dWar7; r. *; . . .: 7: .; . . '" '"' , You .know lidw much 1.5 billion gallons of ^ He was not lbted on the official breeze, ahd'aomehew fitted his feisty , Governor Reagan obyiotisly has a ¦ ' presidential priimary bkllot in Florida personality. You can't imagine To be >;<;sewage Is7. ¦ in terms of the little cities problem lit theRepublican race. ' ¦ ¦ ¦ '¦¦¦' ¦ ' conie horne aa James Earl Carter Jr., which has Frahklin Roosevelt - being called a "Rdnald,"; Older thanTdnl. a for- , y„-if :.downrlv.er?*¦ • " .• :¦ :¦ • the upstairs snifllsh ring of an English " 'V Roosevielt; ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ¦ ' ' ¦ ' ' weeks later she sued Time for libel. A "FWhkle, bul^'Teddy mer Democrat, an actor — no matter •it' - , .. *. - . .. . . * Jury awarded her $100,000. barrister, but; Insists on flain Jimmy the 6Id7"Rough Rider"; was just right running i,y ' sewage how good on televisiqh ^ Winona s annual volume through its Mames J, Kilpatrim As it became clear, later, though it Carter, without quotatioffmarks. 7 for the rtaiij and "Jack' * didn't hurt against the President of his. own treatment plant is about 1.1 billion gallons. was by nomea.ns clear from the court . This Irritates many: people who Preajdwit Kennedy, though "Bobby "' minority party, named Jerry, Is more order, Mrs. Firestone had not been detest the grinning informality of andTr^ddy "; #n't help hit \than any mortal man is WASHINGTON - The Supreme imagine , XyXxyy-y a burden o!;vJj. If we were to shut down our plant and Court, which long ago made a mess ol found guilty of adultery. Under modern politics and cannot .brothers;* . likely to overcome. And if Ford could >a discharge our sewage into Ol' Man River, it Florida law at that time,; alimony presidents named Tomhiy Jefferson •The nicknames of the present cast get a vice-presidential running-mate to the law on obscenity, now promises to or Woody Wilson"; but it is natural to characters, however, •-ti-iwould t^kea year and about four months equal make a worse m'ess of the law on libel, could not be awarded to an adulterous of preslttentiai named "Tom," end put together a » •' wife, and Mrs. Firestone plainly had Carter, common usage. In the South, may have , some raarglua) Jerry" ticket, Reagan, * -what the Twin Cities plan to do to the river in 10 Last week's decision in the Firestone and It conveys preciselj 7the significance. For oiie thing, they fit In "Tom and ** '' ¦ ' . ;¦¦ case was ai bummer. been awarded 'alimony «f $3,000 a even If' you- called him . "Roniile," daysor so.' ' ' ' ¦ • > - * * , ¦ ¦ • ' * • awshucks, . down-home jes me , next to ' ' ¦ month. Time erred. , liewspaher headline; which " •>. . . . In one sense, these observations would probablybe finished. 7. ' List week the ' Supreme Court, peanut-farmer trnpresstoh he wants. :. . televiitow performances,* 'intewst figure ' Lake City; the shores of Lake Pepin amount tb shop (alk, for the court's .: ' ' " Carter is the moat Interesting f 7r- \ nestled on to speaking through Justice Rehnguist, Politicians live by : trademarkjs. candldatesr more than almost In this campaign; maybe because he Is ,'* , ' —which has been referred to as the settling basin opinion is of. primary Interest refused to overturn thellbel judgment "How can a man called Adlai beat a anythlngielse.; ' reporters and editors Who deal-with 1 * .7 7 the newest and freshest and youngest XX. for the Mississippi — has an annual volume of court news. In a larger sense, it may outright. The court instead remanded soldier named Ike?' * Governor . For example, you qaTn '.imagine a* character at the top of the race.^ut : 'tniU3dn gaUons. the' case to the Florida courts for a Stevenson' ask«d during the 1952 President Udall in an inevitable, fight > .^iabbiit'4.2 be suggested that a* free press is : maybe more important, though he ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ '' ¦ determination of Time's ''fault" in presidential campaign. And when With Congress, vetoing the things he ¦u- ^r*. ' * . .. . *. *. - . * ' . * ' everyone's concern ; and to the extent probably wonTtnake It except as a You know how long it would take Lake City to , everyone preparing its brief account. But In the Cfcalrman . Fulbright of t|ie Senate supported in the campalgri, The candidate, because * that a free press is inhibited , : ' Says No," vice-presidential equal the Twin Cities discharge if it were to close suffers. The Firestone decision course of its inept opinion the court Foreign. Relations Cbmmlttee: was headline wrltes Itself:"Mo he is sort of a throwback to the past, a • ; • produced * uncertainties almost as defeated lor reelection by< Dale and on the bails of this alone, the have r* down Us plant? -.threatens fo inhibit us sorely, ) symbol of¦ the simpler world¦ we ¦¦¦ This is what'happened, In 1961, gross as the Uncertainties¦ in the B»impers, a plalivand unforgettable (New York Dally News would almost lost; * ¦ ' ' : " . ¦ - . ' ' ': ¦ Russell Firestone, Jr., then 35. took as original divorce decree. name, One .of hfs friends said, have ta overtook his liberal ten- The sophisticated world of our noisy . *; ' 7 35? year$, * ¦; * v7 The court split 4-2-2. Rehnquist, "Fulbright was too formal. If he had dehcieSfand support him, ' ¦¦ ' " : ;;; his third wife a beautiful Palm Beach • materialistic society is uneasy with ;*-> ¦ : * ." " . ' '7" . . school teacher, 26-year-0ld Mary Burger, White and Blaickinun were Carter's quiet; smiling, Chautauqua { .££ The Twin Cities want to put more raw sewage Alice Sullivan. It proved a stormy ready t© nail Time to the wall. rhetoric, but it would be easy.to un- " in 10 days than all of the river Justices Powell and Stevvart didn't { t-into the river , to marriage. In 1965, she sued for . derestimate his modest small-town . ^communities from the Twin Cities . Winona separate maintenance. He filed a ' know what to think! Justices Brennan VJimmy" approach to the' dtetrac- ! >would do were they to shut down their plants for ajid Marshall , to their credit, countersult for divorce. dissented furiously. Newsmen Who tlons ind blunders . of the big world. chalfa year. ' ,The trial In the circuit court of Palm Eveii . Leonard Woodcock,, the * ¦:« ¦ ' ' coyer the court whistled 7:-a ' discon- {¦. . . " • . " . * .: * . . . Beach . County was a 17-month sen- solate tuae: Bill Douglas, Won't Vou powerful head of . the , United . Auto I' , * ". The Twin Cities proposal, of course, is much satlon. The wealthy Firestones were Please Come Home. |t was a terrible Workers, who will hsive great- in- .1 more devastating in its potential impact , for the hot copy in the jet set. In time the decision. fluence at theDemocratlc nominating Florida Supreme Court wojftkfc convention in Madison Square Gar- I dischargeis would not be over10 a long time when " until last week , . ."public (figures" dliution more days compared describe the case. as. "A veritable den, praised Carter's moral approach tr^ effective , to cause celebre." had a reasonably well understood v* -187 years. For 10 days the Mississippi would be a identification In the law of libel. Until to.the campaign in Florida the other t v In December .1967 Circuit Judge last' week, honest* error Tin the day; Carter is a longshot, but he has ylong sewer. The temporary results are obvious ; James Knott delivered his opinion and* come a long way because he is, for ' ' the long range, unknown but probably predic- reporting of a court, proceeding — ; entered a final order. He alluded to especially, error arising from an more people than the political pros ;" table. certain testimony indicating that Mrs. ambiguous court opinion - was not realize, a symbol of our regret -^ for- , Firestone had engaged in i "bi«irre" ' enough, in itself, to justify a libel the values we regret We forgot, ., I The downriver uproar over the proposal is extramarital escapades "of en judgment In the absence of malice. This presidential campaign is quite i exacerbated by the arrogance of the Metropoli- amatory nature which would have Until last week, court proceedings — different after Vietnam, Watergate, } ' tan Waste Control Commission. In February it made Dr. Freud's hair curl, " Other any court proceedings, civil or the New7 Deal, aiid the FalrDeal. The i announced that it wanted to testimony indicated that her husband criminal -.:. were understood 'to be programs of the extreme right and dump the 1.5 billion '.'was guilty of branding from one bed ' . •' /gallons in April so. that It can inspect the sewers matters of real public concern. left do not seem to be persuading ihe partner to another with the erotic zest Now God and Bill Rehnquist alone voters In the primary elections. I 7 — not April J977, but April 1976. Right now . The of a satyr." The trial-judge was in-, I need, the commission says, may (tnow^What the law onlbe! is. In They are looking for moderation, a is urgent. Some of clined to discount much of % this this case, the trial judge noted that fcause In the violent controversies of •I the sewers have not been Inspected for 25 years. testimony as unreliable, but in any Firestone's counterclaim was based the last generation, and forsomething .1 (f a break occurred in mid-summer, when the ey«nt, he found, the equities were with ' thehusband. "on grounds of extreme cruelty and steady, for character and somebody . -river ,is low,, the impact on the river would be adultery." The trial, judge gra.nted they can believe In, even if he doesn't : greater. It says constructing bypasses to inspect Firestone . had based Ws coun- "the same,." Tjme ^magazine truth- know all.the answers. smiall portions at a time Is both dangerous and terclaim for divorce on grounds of fully reported a bunded decree ln; As Meg Greenfield observed, the J ' extreme cruelty and adultery , The ; . ' ; expensive.¦ vol ving prominent public figures. And other day in Newsweek , almost; ¦ ¦¦ y -X ¦: ' ¦ ¦ ¦ Palm Beach judge ordered "that Time got hit. for $100 ¦ >y¦ , y- - ..;; . . ' . Xx.X ' X defendant's counterclaim for divorce, ,000. ^This- may everybody called the secretary of ¦:.. ' ; Two questions: pass for.: justice In ' the Florida state "Henry " hot so long ago, almost . be and the sam'e Is hereby granted." , Time magailnei working on a tight Supreme Court which hates a 'free In an affectionate way, because they deadline, reported the item in its press, but ,it is a sorry and ominous believed in him, but now almost iv '}. . If the sewage is to be diverted into the river development to see the U.S. Supreme everybody, this reporter , ,'directjy. isn't construction of a bypass required? "Milestones" column, noting briefly excluded that Mrs. Firestone had been divorced Court rule as it ruled last week. ' calls him "Kissinger," as. if ha had' lost his way ,and let , the/Republic, X 2, by her husband "on grounds of ex- \; If some of the sewers havep't been in-*. treme cruelty and adultery." Three V/ashing ton Sta r Syndicate down. What's in a name? The political jspected for 25 years, others were. Right? How answer : to Shakespeare's . question }were those inspected? Were bypasses con- seems to be: quite a lot — in the structed? election probably a lot of votes. 7 ' :' ¦;' . A N;:D : ¦ ' '7 7 But the arrogance and disdain of- the Twin . . X' "CONTRACT .ME FOR RHODESIA^ SOUTH-WESf .; * .. * New yorfe .7"jmes'News Seryice Democrats l in '¦' ¦ ' ead ' - Cities shows.in another and Important way, ; -7 7; .,T .. AFRICA/ AND RL THROW IN ZAHB1A FOR -PREE! , .; ' .' . :¦¦ >Ve have yet to hear of anyone in the Twin r Cities proposing that the area make an effort l aridlirtg issues during the inspection period ¦r~. if it wins state i choose neither party on this issUe. approval — to reduce the volume of sewage. A ,"—A 52-14 percent majority believes 7 large — but unknown quantity to" us--*— is in- Harris Survey the Democrats . ire better at ; dustrial waste. j Adrift in Erigland ¦ ¦ • representing ¦ ' ¦ * * ' ' ¦' ¦ *•- ' -* "middle-income 1 :* * . , ': • : LONDON — Denis Healey, who is government-backed closed shop Wil— Mthough party loyalties have badly people." This. is ai windfall for the Might this not be a good time for plants with Democrats, since traditionally they chancellor of the exchequer in the and, the. coincidental death of a ¦\ faded ih recent y«ars, the Democrats socialist .'cabinet bf Mr. Vyilsort, is beloved father, he called a rather large ¦ discharges to take a plantwide vacation? ¦ have been Identified as caring more hp ^ . ; F: .; * - . -c/ :' . ' " ¦ ' hold a wide'lead over the. Republicans plagued by the awful seductions of* :^c/fte^ boozy press conference at which, ! * . . * of which party can about the poor. ' the on the question —A 48-16 percent plurality feels the common sense; which are fatal to the however, he spoke of the ideals that • If such a program got under ^ay, com- better handle the issues facing the engaged tn formulating policy, he is ! mission might find that' Democrats are more ab|e touring the fantasies of Ideology. 7 7 '7 many years ago had brought him to the disturbed downriver country over the next four years, As a faithful advocate of socialism, required to yield , to the vector of Socialism: the questfor liberty. . " I citizens would be more agreeable to un- tested by the country out # the recession than the ¦ ¦ * Out of 2t key issues Republicans are, although 38 percent he manages a fine performance when forces; England is going broke, her > These ideals, - he said, were np derstanding Us problem. Harris Survey among a national cross on dutyi -and you cjm 'sit back and inflation Is wild, the morale of the longer being served by the Uabor section of 1,394 adults recently, the make no* cholfce on a party basis. . ' ¦ These resulta, along with those con*- relax In professional admiration, merchant class is shot, the taaiation Party, from which he said, ju^tbefore ; We are assured by our friends at the Min- Republicans could not finish ahead of as yoif might in hearing schedule Is sadistic and unprofitable. falling on his face, he now ene. cernlng the unemploy ment Issue* are much Lee chose to ! neapolis Tribune that ''tlie sewage discharge.,. the Democrats on a single a very strong plus for the Democrats Bailey make the case for the Boston In a recent seisure of exasperation dissociate himself. Paradoxically, he However, on 13 of the 21 issues, a Strangler, But when Mr. Healoy is. against Ideologues on his left who has at least earned that financial ; should be permitted only if the river is running choose thlayear. . j hjgh enough and should be stopped the moment plurality either could rpt -A 48-11 percent plurality believes clamored for more taxation of the security thesoclalists have wantedfor between the two parties or saw no ' "rich" Mr. Healey pointed out that if everyone, Mr. .Wilson stuck him in the I that a serious impact on the river and on the ' ; the Democrats are more likely to difference between themv provide the country with [slight thought he were to confiscate lOO percent of House of Lords where, charac- ; health of the communities along its bainks ap- On eight key issues the Democrats adequate . the income of every Englishman teristically, " medical Insurance, with 43 percent I am an old man, Instead of choosing to call ; pears likely, , hold a clear advantage and will be In a already past the earning mere than 12,000 pounds himself something like Lord CeOrgo of some old- unable to make a choice on a party * allotted thre-? score and ten and, as strong position to Invoke basis. ($24.0001. it would not raise money Wtck Hampshire, he renamed him- If 1.5 billion gallons of sewage has no serious tlme appeals on a straight-out party the old do, I quite often wake up In the sufficient to pay one percent of , the self, simply, Lord ' ' ¦ +On the question pf handling labor carcass. I shall soon bo leaving for Goerge-Brown. impact on the river * -and on . tho health of basis ;. , unions., the Democrats emerge with a national budget. , . Though, come to' think of it, he la not downriver communities — why did wev -A . 58-12 perccmt majority orders good, apd In the distance 0 glow in the More and morfe Mr. .Healey sounds entirely safe. The left wing of in Winona strong, 45-17. percent advantage oyer sky, the lights of Augustine's City of the spend 3.8 million dollars to build a new sewage the Democrats oh their . ability to the Republicans. This could be an like the man who justifies the socialist party continues In 7 ' its handle relations with Congress, (with God. Let me. In conclusion, pass on to necessity for setting fire to the house ravenous search for disposal plant?—A.B. Important issue as the year wears oii. you two, extraordinarily sharp impres- neglected :I2 percent who see no difference or ¦ -A 4&-19 percent plurality ' prefers while doing everything he can, liberties ahd traditions to obliterate. cannot make a cftolce. President Ford sions which accompany this condition. discreetly, to put it out, It Is a Anthony Yledgwood Bonn, who will has scored some points in the Democrats on the issue of han- The first ia of the incredible beauty Juggler's act,' hia vetos of dling v/elfare'i with 36 percent unable from which the poor not be hapoy until he has nationalized spending measures passed by the of our earth, Its colors and shapes and British can take only the consolation th-0 swans In Windsor Park, proposed to choose between either party. The smells and creatures; of , (he en- Democratic Congress, But the risk he result of. the Harris Survey suggests that nowadays most of the rhetoric Is yet another assault on the House of Is taking Is that one day theT voters chantment of human love and com- left-orlented while the deeds are Lords, and incidentally on the (hat die GOP Is vulnerable on 'the panionship, of the fjulfilimont of ¦ coud become fed up with the lack of Welfare issue because it did hot do . conservative-minded. The trades tnoharchy, decision in the federal government human work ahdhuriionprocreatlon, unions have been forced to ask (or The Young Socialists, in their much about It in almost eight years In The second, a certainty surpassing and decide to let thc Democrats rule office. As the "out" • party , thc . only moderate (ay Increases, there Is newest resolution, haVe come up with both the executive and legislative ¦ all wortis and thought, that as an talk of diminished taxation/and there a Democrats benefit, ' ' . , * ' "' 7 , marvelous Idea for limiting branches. Infinitesimal partldfe of God's are high' hopes that by letting the criticism of themselves and other On H other Issues; the Democrats creation I- ,am i pertlolpant In Hie pound , +A 53*41 percent majority believes also have a lead, but not convincing suffer the discipline of the float socialists. Simply ai nationally the lhat the Democrats, rather than the purposes, which are,*!) loving hot the trade deficit will reverse, newspaper, mi b) Igatruef printers , enougli to make it an issue working for meflgn,, ,-oreatlve not deatructive, Healey, the Republicans really care about the them on a party basis. ' * By contrast with to remove editorial copy oltensive to unemployed, although 36 percent orderly not chaotic •— and In >hai singular emotional event of the week them, Why didn't we ' " think of that ? certainty , a great peace and 0 great was Lord George-Brown's statement Perhaps;l can persuade tho sainted joy. rr M»Uolm Muggerldg* in that he had had It with Ihe Labor Junior senator from New York to pass Alternative ihagailne Party, A proximate cause d Brown's a bill nationallting book reviewers. defection was a single broadcast by School role questioned Solihenilsyn, aald to have been bythe V/dsMngtoh star Syndlcat a UsQilMm most stlr^ng f orwtslc experience a receives some train! IIR in IORIQ and iW^^mS ' . foreigner sliiee Garibaldi mobilized I Dr. Max Rafferty philosophical thinking? " - A.R,?„ England on the side of Italian J Falrch«d. Ohlo, ,, agglornatnento, - George-Brown * Ijas A— ISot unless he's enrolled In an always been an Interesting man, In <)— "Ran across a shocking quote academic major, and even there he's part pecause of the jurlty of ^oth hl» «" MY TOP TO ea)u> HAVE ." cum eesti from Walter Mpjjmann dated IWO: exposed to darned little. ' .With many virtues and hu vioee, it waq In the { WCH MOIta^«(?C«5FUU,.. I BUME 'During tho past 40 or ab.yean, those honorable exceptions, the students of tradition of Ernest Bevln, a -child of ' ' the ; THE pMAUfolES... " • who are responsible for education 1970 are dhprepared •when they wtfer. tabor movement whose rtrea were have progressively removed Irom the the university as freshmen to conU trained on eoclfelluna§ UteInstrument curriculum of studies the Western emplale anything much moro com- for the liberationof the Individual. Brown win made foreign minister vvinona Daily News culture which produced the modern plicated than " 'S«e me Jump,' said ¦ ¦ 1 gT democratic state. The schools and Dick," And very, very few college by Harold Wilson on two separate " ' .' ; Services lor ' :. : y occasions, but lost hie post becaoiehe J An Independent Newspaper - Established /-S55 colleges have therefore been sending 8rofessors know ye*y pmch' about ( out into the world men who longer IwUm culture, history, languages could not, after a while, manage to Hwrnan Burfeind 7 .' . . AA»nnbw o( ll!eA<40Ci«toaPrim no Funwil Held , ,. .Publisher of and philosophy. ' win oven the wfert wt, Thie WM In Today _ Wlll^tn f Whlw ¦ understand the creative principle , J (. g. LJndon . . . ; ... ., Bus. Myr., Adv, Director thesoclety InwWch thoy live.' Uppmumt was right when he part owing to his unabashed devotion . Adolph Br^moi' - , , ,, Editor-lA'Ctil*! "My question Is -. you agree lhie 36 to the mape, which he Is frank hi .JOaryyil . ¦ ¦ ' Mcio^lnq Editor Do warned year*ago, He would be 'lvWI • considering to be, even ahoad of the FuriSSSS' iiStiinft¦ J William H. SngHhh ., , .. * ,,. .controller . with Mr. Lippmann 's thesis given. In at times at right If he were around lo . fa mttr.;" or dog, man's very best friend. Accor- r A, J, klekbuich , .,CirculationM\fM- "W«' j^l*,l», , -"i»Wsdi-)D»ieh». * ' tht university where the Undent ' \*mm**mmmmmim *mammafamaaamaim *mmmmWmm}wW* ''' . ^

¦ ¦ ¦ * r . , ; > ' ~^ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ^H|H || ^ k ' -Xx Winona Daily News : . 1 'our ¦ horoscope— .- •',:' Jeane.bixon V I llibriry is 'w The variety of multimedia Alcohol , he said, is a For FRIDAY, Mt-rch 12 *, resources available at the depressant and anyone can wm T YOUR BIRTHDAY TODAY; sMiSS^||S|jK^Thursday, , , 7 / March 11 1976 : 7a become a. slave to it. It can ^fcUtm * 7 7 imagination bursts into . action. Winona Public Library was the ' cause psychological, physical Change* In tha kind of work you do topic for the recent meeting Of Olub news roundup) are , featlbla fttl» : yaar, ptrttapi ttieChautauqua Club held at the and chemical dependency and it Buggies 100th Inevitable. The twitch It toward self home of Mrs. C. R. Kollofeki, Wedding .ceremony would in- players were reminded to gradually killsbrain cells. - employment. Give extra attention ' He outlined treatment to thrift. Relationships rely on what 4(»W. SanboniSt. clude the vow, "I will love you submit their final scores by birthday noted -you Invest and what -you accept from TMrs. Terry Juneau, librarian, as long as 1 can help you grow in March 27. Awards night will be facilities available saying that others. Today s, natives are. Im- Minnesota has the best treat- Carl Ruggles^ painter; ' presented a discussion of the love.' April 8 at 7 p.m. at the First pulsive Idealists, often ahead ot their Services offered by the library "Some never, learn to love at Congregational Church parlor. ment facilities for alcoholics in composer arid one-time resident times, and. are positive thinkers the world. Alcoholism has been of Winona regardlessoftheclrcumstances.. including: sources on bicen- all. They think love is only , was born 10O*years legally recognizedin Minnesota ago today, Marchu, 1876. ARIES (March 21 - April If)i tennial information and sexual attraction, a need, Mental oymnastlcs 1M4 you Into en microfilms security, Winona BPWC as a treatable disease—tbe fast * ,•; lUiggles arrived, in 'Winona ia celebrations,^ of romance or at- unwise or Impractical experiment. newspapers, art for loan, large tention," she said. "They miss "Alcohol is a dangerous drug state to recognize it as such. 1907 and remained here iilitil Oettlng things back to normil ' l< He outlined the assistance expensive. Romance Is there for print books, copying machine, a tbO limitless potential of love -Hie worst of all. it does more 71917 during ; which time, he • • ¦ •> ¦ available at the—alcohol taught violin at the Mar d' Mar pursuit- film program in the children's within each person, a potential physical damage than any other TAURUS (April 20 - Miy 20) : The department, paper back books eager to be recognized, waiting drug, causing cirrhosis of the education center at WSU, the School of Music, then located oii simplest moves ere best, If sincere. and tbe resources available to be developed and yearning to liver, heart disease, kidney Mental Health Center and the fourth floor of the Choate Commercial dealings progress Alcoholics Anonymous, building, gave violin recitals despite a minor surprise. Family through the Southeastern grow. We cannot admit what we damage and brain damage," and founded the Wihona matters are: sensitive but will Im- Library Cooperative and the do not yield to and to yield to said Dr. Richard Rebuke, head Mrs. Marie Fjelstad reported prove. love, we must be vulxerable to of the alcoholism education Symphony Orchestra. He later GEMINI (May 21 • June 20): on the recent mid-winter state minitex program. love." - State returned to the East Coast You're uprooted trom en old position center at Winona board meeting which she and where he lived Until his death in or bad habit. Overdoing pleasure One of the community's University. Mrs. William Markle attended. ¦ ¦ brings dismal aftereffects. Spare needs, Mrs: Juneau said, is for a Catholic Daughters , guest speaker at 19717 : •: ¦ .' . : .. -.;: ' .7.7:*: Dr. Behnke Members were invited toattend loved ones¦ concern about business homebound service which Catholic Daughters of meeting of the Ruggles' fame prospects. ' . - the dinner the spring conference of the as a composer would provide library materials America, Winona Court, and resjs on a small number of CANCER (June Jl - July 22): made Winona Business district to be held March 21 in Speculation Is suddenly exorbitant: to shutins to the city, in much plans at their recent meeting 's Club, works: "Angels"' ( 1921, for Professional Women Rochester and were reminded Pro|ects must ; bi thoroughly tbe same way the bookmobile for the annual St. Patrick's Day the muted brass); "Toys" (1919, for checked If anything Is to come of presented statistics on that the Winona club will host provides materials to persons party for the guests at St. Anne problem saying that 75 percent the district conference in the voice and orchestra or piano).; them. A small cash outlay makes outside tbe city. Hospice. The party will be held "Portals" (1926, for strings);'¦ boniehappler. of all persons over the age of 15 fall. Mrs. Marjorie Haugen was LEO (July 23 - Aug,22) : Personal Mrs Juneau also noted that March 20 beginning at 2 p.m. "Evocations" (193443, :. for . drink , some moderately, but in charge of the evening's plans go much better if you arenl although the honor -system in and members are asked to more are becoming alcoholics, piano solo) ; arid four orcbestraUr too aggressive In splteofcolleagues ' program and Mrs. Sonia Son- use at the library imposes no con (apt Mrs. Robert Northam if unable to control their drinking. nefeld read the devotions. scores, "Men and Mountains contrariness. Don't change domestic fines for delinquent books, there they wish to assist with the (1926); "Sun Treader" arrangements. . <1932), VIRGO (Aug. 23 ¦ Sept. 22): New were, in 1974 $1,800 worth of event. "Organum" (1945) and friends bring further opportunities. books taken ^from the. library A day of recollection will be "Affirmations" (1957); ; Close out your . Workweek early. which have not been returned. held Saturday at the/ Tau Ruggles' art ahd his music Others will pay their fair share of social expenses If it Iscustomary. Members of the Chautauqua Center, College of Saint Teresa, have been featured here in ANCE LIBRA (Sept, 2] • Oct. 22): Don't Club will elect officers at the with registration beginning at 9 LAST CH recent years.' Ruggles' scholar waste money on extras. Let other next meeting and plans will be a.m: 7 ' . * . " .'¦' John Kirkpatrick performed paofhe tinker with the current situation: Your Idealism soars, discussed for the club's con- Members are asked to bring "Evocations", ¦ for piano in 1973- puzzling your friends. , * . * . tribution to the bicentennial donations for ditty bags to be 74 and a special exhibit' . .. . ' and SCORPIO (Oct. 21 - NOV. 21): celebration. 7 sent to Kentucky. Plans were series of programs was Today you view the world and future also begun for a card party to be presented in 1974 by the Winona through rose-coloi^d,d)asses. Look Winona OES held May 11. Mtes Sylvia Art Center in salute of the for a bargain, but not bizarre or untried Items. ¦Work gets off the Mrs. Ervin Laufenburger was Hassinger and Miss Mary Ann composer and his art. Marilyn track. . :. • ¦ . elected president of Winona Stalka are co-chairmen. *=feM-ar Ziffrin, a musicologist, also SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. Miss Margaret Jeffrey, vice T ; 21): Chapter 141, Order of the lMtfHMHV spent some time in Winona that Success In big enterprises T depends on attention to short - term Eastern Star, at its Monday regent, was elected a delegate summer doing further study off details. Romantic Impulses distract evening meeting. Roger Church to, the state , convention which Ruggles; and are more interesting than usual. will be held in April in Marshall, . was elected worthy patron. What remains to be done, CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan. It) : Miss Carlis Anderson will Minn. GIRLS' WINTER COATS according to a local Reconsider how you handle others' musician) is money and resources. Adjustments serve as associate matron with Students from Cotter - Jiigh the publication of . a student suggest themselves. They're ra- 'Robert Steffes, . associate School, coached by MrsT Madeo Your Last Chance To Buy paper, "Carl Ruggles in tional , but ta ke salesmanship (or Molinari , presented the • patron; Mrs; Arthur Jackman, j Winona." The work, more than acceptance. \ 1 speeches they will give at the . "* AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 - Feb. HI: Secretary ; • Mrs. Robert A Good Winter Coat at 300 pages in length, was written Today Is a quiet personal triumph If Tremain, treasurer ; Mrs. Arne district contest to be held by jan Saecker and completed you fulfill yoiir normal quota ot Odegaard, conductress, and at Dover - Eyeta High A Ridiculous Low Price in 1967. The paper is based on a work. Life Improves as you take Miss Margaret Ferguson,) School. Students participating study of the Winona ¦ A .. .mmJm Candy stripers at Commun- home a symbolic g Ift to express yew. were: Brenda Baechler feelings. associate conductress. CJecrjge , Lori newspapers, "The Republican AWarOS ity Memorial Hospital were Feiten, Tony Walsh, Jean ' $ PISCES (Feb. If - March 20) : Elliott was elected ¦trustee for a 6—COatS.. . Reg. to $25 .... .:..,.:... ..only 10 Herald" and "The Indepen- ~ honored Wednesday. Receiv- Your earning rapidly Is higher; be three-year term. - .' ' ¦ Weilarjd, Maureen Welland and alertl It's a matter of contacts as dent." Additional information ing awards, are-, front row, from left: Betsy Cl-telUy Members were invited to Casey Fleming, 5—COatS...Reg. to MO...... only *15 caine from interviews with well as ability. The persona l touch Is and Jarie Mahlke ;. second row, Karen Schneider and great ; lust don't overdo It. attend installations at: Winona residents who had been7 Teresa Harier and, row, Rochester, Saturday at 8 Portia Club $ members of the orchestra under back Laurie Halllday and 1 0—COatS...Reg.to$40 ...... 7. only 20 . Joan Nelson. (Dally News photo) p.m.; Stewartville, March 20 at Mrs. Ronnie Schneider hosted Ruggles' direction. 8 p.m., ahd Chatfield, March 26, the Monday meeting of the Collectors Club to For lack rf funds — about 8p.m./ ; Portia Club. Mrs. L. L. .Korda 3—^COatS...Reg. S45 ...... ,only*25 $1,400, for 500 copies — the Members of ;a newly introduced her daughter. Janet, paper still awaits publication. organized club for ' persons Ruskin Study Club who has recently returned from Ate Candy stripers interested in antiques and ;Mrs . Richard Callender " Australia where she taught art S^ ^ViAieK. /kCSnU^'pvozCJ Lutheran vows collecting decided at the presented a program on "Love" in a girls' high school. Wednesday evening meeting.to at' the meeting of the Ruskin Miss Korda showed slides of unite couple name the club the Collectors Study Club held Monday at the homes and •buildings in I y«i«.•«.«• i ¦ Bs^« : HOKAH, Minn. (Special) — receive awards Cluh/ home of Mrs. Norman Decker, Melbourne, Australia, and • Miss Nancy Lorayne Olson and , The next meeting of the club assisted by Mrs. Lester explained their architectural |H CHICKIRBOARD SHOP §§_ Thomas Nell Groeschner ex- Community Memorial Marilyn Reinhard, Vickie will be April 14 at 7:30 p.m. at Stevens. stTructure. * x W»% XF&t>f cftznfoand, ChiA4BL ^e*v§N|""V in a Hospital's candy stripers . were Romine ahd Marita Wolf and 25- the Winona County "To give Club members voted to changed nuptial vows Historical love , " Mrs; i ON IDE HAM 'W)OW 454-»J» ¦' : February Ceremony at. First honored at an awards night hour certificates were awarded Society Museum. A discussion Callender said, "you must sponsor a campersbip to Camp ¦bj fej l Lutheran Church, Hayward, Wednesday evening at the home to:" Patsy Brihk, Gail on poet cards will be presented. possess love. Would that every Winnebago. Bridge marathon ' ^ t»J.lti .i7i. :i«-i,im«.¦¦¦'¦J Wis. ' * of Mrs. J. J. Carroll,' auxiliary Breitenfeldt,; Holly Bourne, The bride is the daughter of president. - . , ' Jennifer Carroll, Jane Carroll, Karen Schneider and Lori ¦ ¦ Mr. and Mrs. Glynn Olson, Patty Chase, Cynthia Grothem, ©s^Awy¦ ' ' '^ A ||' yan¦ Buren . Hayward, and the bridegroom Pfreromer received special JiJJ Johnson, April Johnstone, ( D ^^ ^ ' j is the son of Mr. and Mrs. honors f Or haying completed 193 Marilyn, Peplinski, Jane Rciinshapes keep you Francis Groeschner, Hokah. and 146 hours of volunteer work, Sawyer, Julie Stiever, Ann and respectively. Walker, and Jeanne Weisbrod. Miss JoAnn DeGeorge ' or Jerry Welk attended the couple Receiving .100-hcur awards ¦; Mrs. Jack Cornwell, past She wants her baby " The bride is a graduate of were: Laurie HaKiday, , Jane chairman, presented the DEAR ABBY: Our daughter, a 21-year-old working girl; is looking good, v^ef dry Hayward High School. Tbe Mahlke, Joan Nelson, Lynn awards. Mrs. David Mahlke is pregnant. She isn't going with anyone steady and doesn't want to Classic as this trench. Hooded and tucked or done in bridegroom is a graduate of Nelson and Betsy O'Reilly; current chairman of the candy get married right now. But she is thrilled because she really wants Caledonia High School and ^Fifty-hour awards; went to: stripers with Mrs. Keith Sch- a baby. My husband and I are also thrilled because this will be our shiny chintz. Cropped short. With fine.detailing. Western Wisconsin Technical Diane Alampi, Cathy Haner, wab, co-chairman. first grandchild A , - • So man/ rainshapes for Misses and Juniors. Come see how Institute. The couple will live in Teresa Haner, Carrie Jandt, Candy stripers who served as We will do everything we can for her and the baby. We'll even Hokah. Sheila king, Rosann Otto; models for tbe evening's style adopt it if she wants us to. ' good you look. Wet or dry. $25 to $70. show were: Marilyn Reinhard, She wants to keep tbe baby and take care of it herself. She doesn't Sheila, King, Jennifer Carroll, want to tell the baby's father about her conditionbecause although Jill Johnson, Brenda Baechler he's single, he isn't ready to settle down yet. She doesn't see him anymore. and Renee Waldorf: stevensons71 Plaza West—Downtown m^aaa^^^^^^^aj*—'V) What should she tell people who ask who the father is? If he T^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H doesn't pay anything toward the delivery and support, he doesn't Mrs. Jaycees get any visiting rights, does he? Our daughter will be getting help from welfare. Does that mean set date for she has to tell them who the father is? She would rather not. Also, does she have to put¦ the father's name on the baby's birth cer- breakfast tificate? /. . ' . The Winona Area Mrs. GRANNY-TO-BE Jaycees have announced April PEAR GRANNY: Since the laws differ from stat-e to state, have 10 as the date for the annual your daughter ask her case worker to answer her questions. And Breakfast in Winoni. tell her to ignore the people who ash who the baby's father is. That's Theme for the-breakfast will her business. And her secret, be "200 Years and Still DEAR ABBY; As a steady reader of your cplumn, I have noticed Growing, " and a patriotic, that you often say, "Mother Nature decides at what age a woman bicentennial motif will be used should stop bearing children," In the decor, Master, of That undoubtedly gives comfort to women wbo for one reason or ceremonies will be Allan Lot- another bear children in their later years. But I think you should sberg, host of "Comedy and point out that the older a woman, the older her eggs are, and as an Classics" and seen as-. Willie egg ages, it deteriorates, increasing the chances of having a Ketchem , on / the children's def ectlve child—as with mongolism. television show, "Clancy apd Perhaps many people are not aware of this rather unhappy fact Willie." ' , of llfe. Tickets for the breakfast, HUMANITARIAN which will be held in the Winona DEAR HUMANITARIAN; You make an Important point I was Senior High School concourse, remiss In falling to mention It, and I thank you for doing so. . are available at Ted Maier Drug and Snyder Dnig and from nil Mrs. Jaycees. liie Mrs. Jaycees invite all past Mrs. Jaycees to a dinner DAR to honor meeting Tuesday at the Holiday Inn. WilliamGernes , director of the Winona County Historical award winners 1E GOIOW' Society, will present the The Wenonah Chapter of , the COMFORT... program following , dinner. Daughters of the American ALL DM Reservations must he made by Revolution will honor local and NIGHT REGRETS Saturday with Mrs. Ron Sch- area good citizen award win- NO ALL midt. . ners and their mothers at the Wednesday meeting Qt Kryzsko Card party Commons, Winona State University, FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. - The 2 p.m. program and tea The Eagle Valley Homemakers ¦W , bvlfODIOM , will feature the Change of Pace will sponsor a card party Singers (rom WSU and a talk on Kathryn Sunday a( 8 p.m. at the Foun- Elisabeth Laura Ingalls Wilder by Mrs. Oolti Henderson "Soft, Glove Legther" for the Professional tain City Auditorium. Sheep- Paul Boyd, Alma, Wis, ., White ehead and JOO will be played. Local award winners are: Thomas J. Henderson, Pleasant ih White and popular colors for all! the other; Prices will be awarded and Kothryn Goltz, Cotter High Valley Road. She is a member lunch will be served. Proceeds School,, and .Elizabeth Hen- of the WSHS speech team and Professionals where color Is a choice. from the event will be donated derson, Winona Senior , Hlgh tho tennis team and is serving to the Fountain City Park. ; . School, . as student council president. ' Miss Goltz is the daughter of She was a delegate to the Faith ALCW Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Goltz. Presidential (^lassrooms for SPRING GROVE. Minn. 468 Lake St., and is a member cf Young Americans and par- (Special) -The ALCW of Faith l)ie Cottor drill team and speech ticipated Ln the Youth in Lutheran Church of Black team and the Thespian Society, government program and the Bakert Shoes Hammer will meet Thursday at model legislature, She plans to MON, & FBI, 9 TO 9 123E 3RDST. Miss Henderson Is the OPEN ipm. 'daughter of Mr. and Mr*. attend coUegeand law school. jfl Winona Dally News - Thursday, March 11, 1976 8a | ¦^H ^^^^^ HHT T for bail s-eleeliont. Al theje Sober '^ZL # m mm • ' ' 1 Come early selection [f^mgl Friday, Saturday only. | aaMBS^. - ~ is required i / , . By DAVE RILEV WASHINGTON (AP) - There are going to be some changes on the shelves ot your friendly neighborhood liquor storesnd they may fae enough to drlveyouto drink. But you'd better be cold sober when you stock up on your favorite spirits because beginning In October there will be 16 different Sizes of liquor botUes to choosefrom. It's all part ot the gover- nment's plan for converting the Dap, country to the metric system Dollarany more throughout the store! Shop Wards now for these exciting buys. M The Treasury Department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Issued regulations Wednesday to allow distillers to M : '' begin In October a three-year ^ ~^ f - program changing their bottles y ^tht^\ tM \ I II I ' ^^ ^k * -v to metric measures ^ But the changeover will be gradual and until 1980 distillers will be able to dispense their products in the 10 conventional bottles familiar to the liquor ^ stare patron as well as in the six JLE $« Reg. 1.49 " $ designated metric size bottles. U^J 2 J%f 1«. Jj1.69-1-79** $] $# ^^ Limit^^^^6 37V'*6' I i run.ft. * By 1980 all bgttles will be In the l ea3T Special buy. ^ metric sizes *\ 15W fluOrweat tabet. WarA bicycle tube». ¦ That mean; Ihe drinker willi Children*.' shirts. 22x42" bath towels. Vinyl window shade. Vinyl runner, color*. have to make a choice dunpg the transition period from 16 basic bottle sires. The dif- ference between some bottle sizes wil be practically indistinguishable. Hex D. Davis, director of the alcohol bureau, said the new container sizes "should result in positive benefits for consumers as well as for industry and 1 ¦ government , " " * n The changeover to metric ^df ufi for ^^^ ' »n.» measures, he said, should help, z 3?- 2 n n n / \ ^ consumers make size and price Girls' 3-6X panties. Assorted 2lA " plants. Fifteen 5-bn. bagt. 3-pc. bruth act Handy coping tavr. 6-oz. tub caulk. ¦ »W iM«M««WWWWW ^W«WWW^ comparisons, ai)d stan- W "*—^"^ ilWWWWWWBi ¦W*--- ^l ^^ WW ^"^*^ l^>W< ^^WW ^*«P** ^WW^Wi ^**"W^WWWW^<* dardization should deter any .consumer deception. Under the rules Issued by the agency, the current miniature, wJiich contains 1,8 ounces, will become the new SO" milliliter sue containing l .7 ounces ¦ The eight-ounce half pint will become obsolete and will be ^jy replaced by. the ' .smaller 200 Wf milliliter bottle containing 68 Nt^l o.n ounces. A pint, containing* IB ounces, will become a 500 $xr\/ w - #|j ' H milliliter bottle containing 16,8 • _ •11 Socket with 3 outleU. ounces. Kids' bra-highi . I * — ______I ^^_}W ___ - —m I I The "fifth," which is really four-fifths of a quart, contains 25 6 ounces It will be succeeded r - by the 750 milliliter bottle ¦ ' f iZr- containing 95,4 ounces. lS^:LOOK Wmml The 32-funce quart will be replaced ty tlie 33.8-ounce liter. ' And the 64-ource half-gallon AW m M ^H ' 1 ®J&frW : will become the 1.7s liter bottle ^ - Mm ®^ *l" containing 89.3 ounces. (xf ^k « _v m\Wmm _. # ^ \^_m Ww^skM WW W 2 for Although the bottles will be different , ifs generally expected that reaching the * 2 1 *%> Hea^duty bottom of one wiU have the ^ W 1 IC ll Mmm\\\\\mUU ?• same effect. Misses' knee-highs. tW ^WP- ^ W light switch. ¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦ IIWI**—PI—«W——WW—!!¦¦ l| I » ' ¦ ¦ ! M^mfcMM ^«n>*M ^M« ^M^^Mmff»MW ^ Anoka man indicted WN^MVMWwHP ^pf^PMWV ^**** ~* " Mi " WI I ! ¦ W »l iWlWHI|iM»lll —PWH ^^ W"*' W HfWH1 ^M ^WW W*»HW * —W^W^^^ ANOKA. Minn. (AP) - An Anoka County grand jury Wednesday Indicted Gary Fossen, 28, Anoka, on three counts, of firat-degroe murder In the shooting deaths of. his parents and sister Fossen Is accused in the deaths of LeRoy Fossen, his -wife, Muriel, and daughter, ~Unda Helm, whose bodies were found in the family's Ramsey home Feb. 25. Each had been Yard rake killed by shotgun blasts, Boys' CTCW socks. 10W4O motor oil, gt. Steel trowel. Steel cultivator ,, Steel fork, r*"* "** WBT ^*^^ ^^ ^w—«^ -wMMMMMw^w^MvMMvwMvnMn nw^. ^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm mmmmmmmmm~mm- *mmm*mm~mmm *mm~**m. i i immmmmmmmmmm.mmmmmm —m .. ^- ^MwM pwwwm. ¦ ¦ ¦¦ : ' ¦ ' . . ' ' '. xy . iq* . Reiulwly . . ¦ ¦ : ' ' ' PKJV^ O $i ' fS - J? - fcb**—^^ ; : ' Jf you're hiding :y s&ff y . -3..n ; your money in a 2iIl5SSi/®^i T^'. ^^^'W^;3 ^ v :7*7 cookie inr. it 's not Canvas work glo-vci. Men's handkerchiefs. 12x12' minor tile. 180' x 4'masking tape. !0'/2-OE. latex caulk. 5-qt. paint pail. ' m m m working for you. And mmmmmmmmmmmmimmmmmMmm-mmmammm*** ^ ~^--m^*~-mm" *mmmr *mimmmmmmmmmm *mmm *mi^mm^mmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmJmmmmmmmmmlmm .^*m*m^mmmmm~*~~-*mmmmmmm ^mmm .. that doesn 't pay. rmmmmm—~mm ^mmmmm ^*mmm *mmmm-m-- ~~~—*—mmm—^mmmmmmmmmm' ammm^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm„ i i i i - p~a Bn.MB« >> M,wv ~-aMw «ns v_> One way to get u nice payoff from your money is to buy United Stales Savings Bonds through the ,: < Payroll Savings Plait . /%VMSM_// . . MABOYS' 4-7 . T \m^Jv '^y .. 9iwuuinflM nfVTH Jrinri>v»SHAPINC. ' ¦Il * '' fflf* -*48^» '7 !^laife»wi^ : ' ' ' ., BSEJ«'^Mr / iDAM ' ieiMc v ¦ ¦ ,. 'IIJI*J;\I .O(LJBP*E«C5^^V^~T Wiien you do thill, " Jammom' ^y NO-IRON JEANS . . XI, V, .. cnPT mNTROI W^ai«Sff ^5^^>= ^r^^ . u little is s«( aside from each paycheck to buy Bonds. And that little -will grow into substantial Doubl savings for you. knees; rivets ' ' ' ¦ ' '¦ ' 'T' * So buy United ^^^ A e : . /V 'L-.' . //' . ' Low-cut bra of poly- 7 ^(j %f| and bar "¦ ' ¦ I ' ¦ ¦) < ¦ '' ¦ ¦ * States Savings Bonds. m_W:- ^_\W\x ¦ lacks Mnohino. '- ¦ / '/T* ^ ¦ ester tricot e softly > ¦ x - - : , B • MULTl-COl And put your MM wash iSoiSf/ - //( Pi ¦ :p^.:A 1 fcuJ»V: ¦ jOR MUSUN TWIN SHEET -SweateUrti ' ¦ - - ' ¦ ' money where it pays. . ^ ¦ ^H 7 Aciylifl/ * • ' * /• V ' V ¦ ¦ gw tawlw»/*andwc- . Floral pattern in ^tton/ t#> , ' // ' ; ¦ p, L, XL. ' ' ^B ^^m cotton. Special . buy, 1.88 , ' ' . ' . * " , T^ ¦ * ' xA v . Sizes M, . .polyoater. Machine wayh, ' , * ¦'€¦ ' ' (Y" /./ ' Series l\ Uui»rl*|*Hy 0 intt-rehl ( ' - ! ' . d ry, : no ironing needed, u)j<

' ¦ ¦ ..-¦ II ¦»¦*¦¦¦ w>n .—¦¦. ¦¦¦^..¦i s mm ¦ .W W.I-I. I-. *mm-lmmmmmmm., m y 1 ' mi.—1 [ m rantwm ** ".., ^ W W > m* w>*m9m>ta *,-»!"t THtWWW>W»l»Uwi*«'-'l-i¦> 'Wl|*|li''lt M'-lW '1^ W^ff i 'i l ' ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ _ ^^^^^^ TflwrlBF '-' -^ | X ' ^? ' . stock™ ^^^^^^^^^^^ rti ^pienca. x MIRACLE MALL-WINONA »P'rlt ' 206 y aariV (l« MIWC location. : ¦ PfWr?^ ofiK fl» 1 ! : MR . C'ib "C S, "a><'M"-(Coj "(il ^'"•^ X : - : :*f 7-BSlKil 11 value *!1 ' '! 7 , I I -l _K ...... I ,., .¦ I I . 'I ' - » ¦ Ml |J Winona Daily News —- Thursday, March 11, 1076 0a

• • ^ ^ * nowPut stretch into your dollars with great values like ' something atW&rds!these. There s for everyone. ^ Limited Quantities

^Y J' MC K. uhno 1 ' ¦ " M - - >JfK $4} $0 Special buy. -4 * Reg. 2.49 Rog. 2.9*- \J/ Re8 2 99 . ^^ j * - ^ l '/z-bu.laundry basket Glass ceiling fixture. 6" x 25' lawn edging. , Core broom, Sponge mop. *¦ Look Jh* will %&^^zf§ ' 1 X j i^ mm > _ w x*^ Rcg. 85' ca. «. $ vE* $ TirnsiT ' .---^r rM iir !p.c,*.l b», 2 for r Sp.eul hl>.2f., l . "fllal "" j* ¥ Grounded outlet.. Durt pjn, Paper-towel holder. ( ^^^M^^^M . Steel lire pump.

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' **7*.» ,„ 150W floodlight bulb. I ™-* ¦ ' Clear glass wall light. wiyw . ^ | 4 cefling socket. | ' | 1 6-in. long-nose pliers. 9x12' drop cloth \ Long-handle shovel. \bur dollar goes further at Wards. Big trash can. < Wastebasket ^^^m ^^3 \ mSS^^h

$ 1 *' ' ^^^ ^2.49 2 $ ¦ ¦ l «" BlilPI ^^ *P| ^ Reg. 9.95 7 • ¦ ' . ' ' ¦ • ' -- •T '^^^ H «c->»- ¦ -* . ¦ gil^ 1 ' ¦ ' ¦ Teflon Mined skillet. • • sturdy oift. -' - XT- Inca I / V-M'^ ,ct ¦ k c - ¦ Z-brick TN . wili nofrust. ' - R«jg. 25 ea. floor tile. , T \J m *. */jL/ . ^jlj| l |p .j * . ' ¦ ' * ' ¦ ^^ ^ : : ¦ ¦ ¦¦ : ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' ' asbestos. . . ' ' ; "" " ¦ ¦ : ' ¦ ' ' " : \x ^ x y x- - r . ' \ ' . - ' irt vinyl . . j^*/ - . ^ ; ' '" " ;. ¦ ' " . ' ' ¦ 4i

' " j ' " ' ¦ ' km. l^m ¦ \ \V\ , \ i. tm ^^kaam. ' -tf^h r ' ' ^^^^a_____\l L\\IInmf \\\\\\\\mm\m ^———*t—sT—— \\\mm\^M " t*P ' ^ fc \ * » ¦ !! %. " ¦ ""$a : ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ • . • .^B - . ¦M'$/> \;X ' \"I ' " m\' ' ¦** ' ' c. ' J * J ' _!„ BasB=s» ^ X ^ ¦BReg. 8.98 -O ' \\v\\ V ^ V V ¦ ¦ J w (f ¦ ¦ Standard-freer v * . .* A J|— •;, \J- . - A^N^^ Reg. 2.99 pr. ® Oil filters V \' '\ \ Ni ^/ tp ^^ DacBon pillows. V # | Garage creeper. ^ ^ N«s3 • Polywn.r r.ll. . , ; help extend Handy for; the** do- . Misses' nylon knee- Canvas sport fhoei for ¦ ¦ ¦ ?J cot ¦ - . engine life. £* — .t-you ^M »,«.«, , ' , children : ;«, : ¦ .: ujtlcking. T | \. highs or ankle-highs. women *^ ¦ IIIM HI|I . l | ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦>¦ »¦—¦¦WM^w ¦¦)••• ¦ i^ mn" I * ' »MMMWWW Ip^W^^ ¦ i in. ¦¦....- ¦ II ¦ III II I I .m.tmwmm< '•"•mm I - I » m -i -i •» «HMM «« WI' III I mp ( •MMWM ^^www—wwi < w» >w ^>|PWi ^^"W ¦.¦i n ii-p-p, i mn, — ——1^— >' Vf V nigged¦ *' | ''"" w - " '' . ' " ' ' ' * ^WW ¦ ' ; " , , v ' 'V' :' ' Wards ¦ , ' ,!=5B=8!B^ " V if*T|IC3iiS3t ^ 1i .. 'Vi . . if ^^^^ ' "Prn" KajtWfKall ^ ^E ^^ * ' '

^^' * * • "Jr. SUmmer" • ' ¦ ' j** *"l /\ Jkv - ^SwSS ^^r» r . ^ ^^ r ^^^ ^ r • 42-inch awningawninff. ' w^^ ** '^¦ *** ¦ " mmmW ~ ¦ " ^ *^^ ^1^ Jl * ^^ , 1 '^B \\\mmH^%tm\' ' • '^B ^1 ' —WttKWssr- ' . I _ i , ' ^^^UtiJ^Ml lliwMP'^ ^V ' ^Aiiwi r*, B<: ^'^i 'nfll, - .JF'¦ ¦ I ¦ ¦ ¦ ^fe|P^2for * ' • . • ' * '** f lF " ' . " - . ¦* Idcdl for tH'Ki Q.nc 'r«. auincliircj piswa • d» M| Aluminum pans, iQY . T ' W ^ ¦ "¦ i>,v., (W« nwl d» Mf w,,i,c *U HA *n \ Amma. \lsl»*m ' - ". ' Wood frame; vlpyl - . 7 7 formoBt biko^ tbC • r rtfftui 1^' 2hC- fini sh . >«J^ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ itiy-neat pMywler/cotian . W»s¦—¦iiffT'T -i — ' ^i V-^i Y'ii — -* ¦-,, , II —i i '— tri r — " ' ' "" ¦————^— ,^——— ^— ^ , ^ ^ tumJwi . fr . ENJOV WHAT YOU IIEED NOW, WITHOUT DEUY^\DD IT TO YOUR WARDS CHARG-ALL ACCOUNT : MMM^ . ; :; ,," :! g^^ ; v:'' * i''fc:'r- - •^ !, ' . ::7' 7l1/, '. ; " -v ':" ^^HHlliiHHH l ' ' X^/#l "

' lm\\\mm\mm «H^ 1 is«¦] our¦ . ^^ M^L^| ^LtfflHM Value tradition. ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ [W- ¦ ¦¦ > ' • ; ¦; - • ¦ • ¦^¦:^y - ' - . . ., • , - . .7. ¦;. ., . . . . . 7 .. ' '' *: ¦ , * • ' !' •; * . - :;- . . . . .r i . . . . . ; . aH'^O,* . - .. . :; ;* , :; * * , Impact of violence Many Ways To Bk Elegantly Seated... studiedBy JAVSHARBUTT

/ NEW YORK (AP) - Two violence-on-TV Studies com- missioned by ABC are out now At VerySpecialPrices! alter five years of work by two i, research teams. And they sort of. differ on how and if violence in TV shows; affect young To -viewers. ' Many- More Styles Choose Chairs By: Flexsteel, Lewlttes. , '/- ' ' T"7 i One study, by Di-;¦ Melvin S. iFV ,. V/ b I //' ^ Fromi , l Wried RniShe? fleller, a child psychiatrist, and Ayers, Bassett, Broyhill , Paoli, II #£ ,f r . ' Dr. Samuel J. Poisky of Temple * I I P A M University, found that "ex- posure to aggressive television content did not lead to heightened assaultive behavior." In other words, TV violence didn't prompt kids to whup up .00 , bystanders or objects any $1 more than was 'their usual Reg $192 00 CQOO E^^L^ ' r^^^SHl P ]£""" ^ftf^ custom. ^^^ ; The other study, by Lier- berman Researph, Inc., says "under certain conditions and depending, on the types of violence portrayed, exposure to teleyised violence is capable of producing increased inclination towards aggression in -children" 77 i . , , But the words 'is capable of' apd "increased . inclination towards aggression" are a bit waffling. They don't actually say if TV violence does or doesn't increase aggression among young viewers. '.., The Liebermanstudy covered nearly 10,000 kids, aged 7 to 14, who lived in New "York, New Jersey and Connecticut. TheHeller-Polsky study of TV Violence and kids — the study also covered adolescents and young adults — involved a much smaller sample of children, 50 in all, ranging in age from 10 to is. •' All were what this, study called "emotionally vulnerable children," meaning that in theory they're^ the most susceptible of kids to the varied forms of violence seen in television programs. , Thirty were in a school for ','emotionally troubled • and learnihg-disorded youngsters," the rest in "an institution for dependent and neglected homeless boys." 7 Ah ABC-prepared summary of key findings in the Liebermanreport says shows in which persons are tilled and w^ffifffl wounded "produce the greatest $flQ00 increase in inclination towards I ^^^P^^wfe aggression" by young viewers, ; while "chase scenes and verbal $149.00 ogoo || ' l violence generate the smallest ^. $ " ' increase." ^ES|B^|f'jgBJLjf _iiIB " • ¦ : But the other study found "no • demonstrable relationship . between the intensity of ¦ and ^ television aggression the ;. .¦ intensity of aggressive behavior -' . ¦ :in children following ; their viewing of television i , programs."

- '... :. After wading through these ¦'X two studies and almost nodding !.. off in the process, I noticed the i . Lierberman trows used a nifty .* 1 * device that should be modified i . and given parents concerned - about TV violence. . It's an EPP, an Electronic '•!. Pounding Platform.' The kid <: under study hits it before and * 'i .'-¦ sifter watching a violent show. Each hit is recorded and used by the Lierberman staff to measure "pre-p-ost changes In i " ¦ ¦ inclination toward aggression .! . ' What they should do is put an ¦ ' . Electronic Pounding Platform „ in eveiy homo containing young ni viewers. It should be hookedup • to the TV set and put in an area . away from the reach of tbe kids. i And if a parent catches the kids watching excess violence on TV, the parent could give the EPP a brisk whack. The device • * , would then switch off the set for a week and set off a rude noise at network headquarters. if' " That might accomplish much ;j more than two more studies on ;*-. the effect of television violence ii on young viewers.

¦ ¦ *„ , . , . ;, . | l-R to name | delegates to 1 IS Reg. $99.00 $JLQ95 | \| &m B AAA ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ' r conventions ' . ' ' " ¦' ' ¦ '' ¦ ¦ ' ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦¦ | • v . ' - Y . ., "' , . / * ' • ' ' ' ' '¦' '"' ¦ " ' " ¦ ' : " . ' ^Ty **'".. ' ' . :¦ ¦ ' * ' V Wlnoan County Independent- ; * * | | Republicans will name >i delegates to district and state !': conventions and discuss !* resblutions at their county Many More StylesTake To Choose From! 'v convention Saturday night. i , The delegates will not be It designated as supporters of Trade-ins i .. !* either President Gerald Ford or -^^^~~~We - > - r -^-'v , '. challenger Ronald Reagan, a ;- party spokesman said earlier i) this week. A party commit- T * tee drew slates of delegates i and alternates Monday for (he | | county convention's consider- Of J-9^ JBHT IBBI ! ¦ ! ¦ ! iBfe IM IM1 IB1 BBB1 BgBB IJBfc-, IBH au J atlon. ' Mm, a AtT ' ^lir llni 'nlmlr nlnll "ll W HI VI -il!-™ '¦ ¦ ra ... \ The county delegates, ¦ ^ j selected at precinct caucuses it II I - ¦ : : i last month, will also dlscusa • f iigifMmt '¦ la ¦ iri: ; '- HMF¦¦- ¦"¦H' '^W; m: Wt' ' ! resolutions dealing with gun W' TZBEL^ m .*¦ IS "' . .|'' . Ipft IH . ' - ' I T l m'I lln ' '^**IS.7 ftrifcg'*** | control, inheritance taxes, l' * | abortion and local govern- ments, the spokesman said. ¦a.aa 1U1 State Rep. M, J. "Mac" |^gNOJ!A . j McCauley, 1-R -Winona, wilt f U I " ^ ll ll; apeak at the convention which "* starts at 7 pm. Saturday at SEft Winona Area Vocational- "JS5 ^ "SMITHES MEANS WC£" v Technical Institute on Homer PHONE452.3145 FREE LAYAWAY J- UBERAI TERMS 1B8 MAIN •iM. ¦ . ,. . . . *. . . i

— ¦ ~^—~n ¦¦ ¦ . —^—: 7 ; f. -j - ^ ' §ii^5piili~ Police . m report tft^ British incompetency ^int^ltortrl da^ cited in war lecture ' ' ¦ ' ' v / ' CITV. : ¦ - : "XX [ Wihoria Deaths ^Two-State Deaths . Superior technology may But it was the incompetence From JohnEtten , Eau Clflire, j AiCommunlty j have helped the American of the British officer corps, . v\irninQ issued colonists win * their made up largely of rich men's „ Twenty years after Na heaviest snowstorm Wts cutl«y sample kitf'and Memorial Hospital it history;. ^^^^ Mlsi Rita Spangitd : Archie Richardson Revolutionary War, but British younger sons who had bought racquet ' Wnona today was taKler a winter, stortti watch as a taken betweans:4V7:20 V' v- ¦ x y J p,m. Wednesday 1-jcked Private funeral services for - ARKANSAW, Wis. - Archie corruption helped, loo, ac- their commissions, wtych l&Tto. developing storm continued to move eastward out of the: from ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦: ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ¦¦¦ car. Mips Rita -Spangard, 72, 228 W. WEDNESDAY Richardson, 80, Arkansaw, died cording to Henry Hull, assistant such bloody British "victories" ¦Oakotasf.' - .. " • v: x-x :yx , -y ' . . * ¦;.; parked near West 4th and 4th St., who died at 9:45 a.m. Wednesday morning 7 in the history professor, 7Winona State as that at Breed's Hill (kiidwn Occasional light snow, possibly Winona streets; $444 value, • Admissions mixed with rain, was to Wednesday at Community Clayton Bryson, 1642. W, King Chippewa Valley Area Hospital , University .7 erroneously as the battle of have.* begun' fatting this afternoon, Car stolen In Wabasha, Miwb, ¦ becoming l/eavy late ¦ Memorial Hospital, t 2 St. . ¦¦x yx ¦ ' ' ¦ Durand. Hull outlined the outbreak Bunker Hill) , Hull said. ; >'. tohlgplandFrkiay; '7' ' ' '• . ^7';¦ * . Tuesday from Joseph will be a * p.m, Btlday . at Watkowski Mrs. Ma*y Chuchel, 518 E. 3rd Richardson had been a milk and first year of the war . The British war minister^as It was 'March It, 1956, that a late winter storm swept' Hftlversph, tecovered by ¦ out of the . oo ' Funeral Home, st. -. * " • . * . ': hauler and janitor at Arkansaw Wednesday in the second of his a. m^n thrown ariny throughthe Winona area, leaving a record accumulation of Winona police parked about .The Rev. G* H. Huggenvik, • Mrs; schools. He was born Aug. 6, series ' of five bicentennial for cowaraice In the face of the 14 Inchesofsnow in its wake. S:30 * p.m. .Wednesday in 800 Mary O'Meara. 134? W. Central Lutheran Church, will Broadway. 1895, in. the town of Waterville, lectures. "The War of the enemy, Hull noted, while 1 ihe . ' Temperatureswhich have held to about seasonal norms for block onEast Mark Street; ho report • officiate and burial will be in Jay Harvey Vang, 5S5-37th Pepin . County, to Frank and American Revolution." American leader. 7 George the past several days villi drop slightly for the remainder of of * * damage, keys In - W<»dla*n Cemeteiy. Ave , Goodview. Josephine (Martin I Richard-' Hull showed,slides before his Washington,- was a man ' of the week before a warming trendiieginis ' • ¦ ignition. ,7 Monday/ MissSpangard.whoretiredlO son, He was a World War I lecture illustrating conditions of superb abilities and character. Wednesday's temperature From Plggly Wlggly i^tore, Thomas HlppM603W.MhSt . high was 38, a low of 9 was years ago as manager of Bon , ve teran and married the former life in the American colonies in Hull also told of; the failed . recorded this morning and tonight' 128 E. 5th St.. food valued at 35 Discharges ¦ s low should be an un- Ton Dress Shop, was born in : .JessieCoburri.inl920. * , the late 18th century. He also American attempt to end 'ihe seasonably mfldzS toSO: cents-,- taken at lOiSS a.m. Georgene Hegard, HI W. Mill Waupaca, Wis., July l, 1903, the st. * -: ;:. Survivors include : five sons, showed; a of' the war In its first year by invading The normal temperature range for this date fr Winona is Wednesday; Winona woman * daughter of Lars and Carrie Mrs. Arnold Lanz, Lewiston, William; St. Martin, Calif. ; inaccurate colonial-type Canada. . from 38 to 20, the record high of 61 has held since 1878 and the apprehended and charged with ' ¦ ''¦ ' ¦ ¦ theft.. . ' Jorgeiison Spangard, She had Minn. ¦ - . Leslie and Archie Jr., Arkan- musket. . The third lecture in the series, record low bf 17 below was set In t«48. 7 ¦ *', " lived in Winona 47 years. She Mrs. Alice Wilson, St. saw ; Lyle, Maquoketa, Iowa, This musket was replaced — set for 7 p.m. next Wednesday, Temperatures are expected to remain rather stable tonight was a member ol Central Charles, Minn, and Richard , Pepin; four in enough cases to be a decisive is to be on the year 1776 '— and Friday, with a high Friday forecast In'the 25 toSO range. x C;; Accidents \ LutheranChurch.T Mrs, Charles Shepard and daughters, Mrs, Emil (Lillian) factor, he said — by an second year of war and 'the Lows Saturday and Sunday will be about 10, i Mrs; ris ng to the ' Survivors are 7 ono sister, baby. 700 WashingtonSL WMe, Cleveland, Ohio; American-modified German period of the decisive break lower teens on Monday. . ' ¦; ' ' ' ' ' : ) * *7 7 - ' . : 7* . City "*,• ¦. '. • .> ' . Mrs. Myia Freeberg, 7Winona, Bernard Mertes, Fountain George (Marlys Baskin, Eau rifle during the course of the with Britain. - Highs should hold iri the low 30s Saturday and Sunday but 3;12 p.m. — Wesr Sth and Hu« • ¦ ' and* two nephews, Wayne E. City, Wis. • ¦ . . :. . Galle, Wis.; Mrs,. Darrell war. • reach the low 40s MOndav. ' • , . X " '. . ;¦ ". . street*,"twb-iar. tollliloo;o th«ee • who mitted guilt at a Feb. 19 ad- A Srado toachor, and Wins not be eligible for fuel grants. parwt*, and « per cent pf boy, appeared v/ltlwut MtervliUon of wirt services. , f (he CQUMcl, Judloatom' hearing to a ourfew further hearing on iho matter lollssa Hayden, third and Wisconsin rcce' THE INCOVIE TAX PEOPLE' mM«U»4 (IM p«r«nt» to buy Nd $W>,0(X> ¦•'f 1 ¦+ ' . + + ¦; violatlwWa placed milor the will be held wWn the stwlal fourth grade Instructor. At- last October In a similar grant, ¦ ' of tended a conference entitled ¦ Sheikh Mid that study Wlnop attorney Michael J, supervUltm cc^rt services history report ordered for the and releaatd to his "Discipline Without Tears." ' Stern retfon&t first conf irmed that children are Price was jippointed as counsel mother. The boy Is completedi Tin boy, who 225 E. 3RD ST. mt will |wrevlew J J- 1 ^ ~ I poultry and rabbit workshop, 8 Nationwide, acreage under office intends to conduct ex- with IncreasedwVeaity, such as years late, says state Sen. John ^ p.m., First National Bank Agriculture Editor minimum and no-Ullage periments this summer on corn blight organisms in Bernhagen, Dt-Hutchinson. meeting room. programs has reached a record several^ WMtewater Valley remaining stubbie.' , State Agriculture Com- *: Tuesday :. * ' American fanners earned 35.8 million acres. .farms to determine * what "We needsome tyi» of-tillage missioner Jon Wefald, Natural DURAND, Wis. -r Forage their reputations as Basically, farmers who follow concepts are best under ex- operation : that < will insure Resources Commissioner f l clinic, 7:45 p.m., Durand High revolutionaries 20C years ago, ihe practices leave crop residue tabllshedcircumstances, prevention of soil, and water Robert Herbst and Pollution ^^ra^^ra^^^^^ w yJBI^KB^^^^^piyB ^^^ajiK^^mH School. . and there's still an opportunity on their fields or just below the "There are . advantages — loss, but It may require as many Control Agency DirectorPeter ¦ WASECA, Minn. -- Dairy to carry on the (radition. ground's surface , keeping, soil basically, through leaving operations on the field as the Gove have proposed a $6 million Day, 11 :30 a.m., Technical Not as spectacularas rifling in place and conserving debris and 'trash' on the conventional moldboard program to provide financial College. redcoats at Concord bridge, the moisture. ground, you prevent runoff and plowing system¦ ," Burcalow incentives to farmers who ¦ ' . *:• ",¦¦; : practice should nevertheless SCS spokesmen say tillage erosion, Burcalow said. said. * * . T ; ;:.: ' ;. - practice soil and ' water / )rf % CALEDONIA. Minn.- Farm . *¦ ( y 4^PH| ^^^^^^ |^Hffi ^^^3 family safety seminar, 8 p;m,, have effectsonU.S. agriculture practices reduce wind erosion "But some people who have "We want to experiment this conservation. CaledoniaHigh School. 7 . as sweeping as the ¦winning of a problems . on participating tried it lave said yields! were summer with a group in the "It's a great *idea," said ' ;¦ ' . ¦ • ' ' . .; Wednesday war. * *. . farms.* " ' reduced .and-theremay be other Whitewater that has requested Bernhagen, noting that a Great lor kitchen table planning sessions' "This free 32-pafle RUSHFORD, Mirin.7— Farm It's the conservation tillage But despite the obvious ad- disadvantages," headded. assistance from the extension similar plan he proposed on the booklet brings you full details on the most complete line o family safely seminar, l p.m., concept and it's turned into the vantages ' of conservation "If";your herbicides don't service and SCS. Because of the Senate floor in 1973 was rejected harrows and related equipment In tho world. All types, AH fastest - growing conservation tillage, drawbacks exist, and work, you will have a .much terrain it's ah excellent area In RushfordHigh School. by DFLers on a 37-27¦ party-line Sl-jos All ureclsion-built WHITEHALL, !ff is. - practice in the United States, the concepts have been slow in more severe weed problem and which to start a conservation vote, -« » Lindsay Harrows feature extra-strong, high-carbon tube , Western Wisconsin Beekeepers according to the U.S. Soil catchingonin thisarea. because of the debris It's im- program," he said. steel tooth bars; extra-heavy formed steel clamps; sure- ¦ Association meeting, 8 p.m., Conservation Service (SCS). While Fillmore and Wabasha possible to cultivate for weeds." "We also need to develop FFA sponsor trailing draw-hooks, and quick, easy adlustment of toughest Trempealeau County cour- The St. Paul (SCS) office says counties are, heavier par- "The debris might also some kind of system that will be ETTRICK, WIS. (Special) - teeth made to provide long life and dependable service. thouse/ minimum tillage — one portion ticipators in the programs, protect insect eggs and larvae compatible with large-scale The Trempealeau County Farm PLAIJNVtEW , Minn - of the whole Conservation Wiiiona County is a relative that will survive the winter ahd farming and equipment — but Bureau headquarters in Pesticide ' applicator in- tillage idea — is currently being newcomer,, according' ; to cause an Increased problem if some of the conservation tillage Ettrick, sponsored David formational meeting, 1 p.m., practiced on about 1M> million Extension Director Harry the same. crop, is planted in a operations don't lend them- Evenson, son of Mr. and Mrs. acres in Minnesota, with Burcalow. field for.the second year." selves that easily at this point," Plainview Community¦ School. Bennett Evenson, French LEWISTON, Minn.:¦"— Farm another quarter million coming Burcalow says that while the In addition, Burcalow said, be said. Creek, at the annual Future L,ND8 v BH 8 No under the program every year. practices are good in theory, his plant diseases may carry over Burcalow added that the , Implement j family safety seminar, 8 p.m., Farmers Association forum, Milwaukee.Ps WisconsinBo °5eV 63801 Lewiston High School proper measures will have to be StevensPoint. HOUBtOn , Miffll ^ J Thursday determined on the basis of in- dividual producers and that 7 PRESTQN, Minn. — Farm Winona Daily News family safety senWnar, 8 p.m., some situations might require Preston High School. "unique " management March 23 programs. WINONA. Minn. — Artificial "For instance, with con- insemination seminar (three Agriculturie servation tillage you usually days) beginning9 a.m., Winona Thursday, March 11> 1976 : . 12a have to plant later because tbe Area Vocational-Technical B ground is colder and wetter , Institute. longer," he said. "We recommend planting as i lglfii* WABASHA , Minn: — - - MINNESOTA 56082 230 HWY. 60 N.E MADEUA, Wabasha County Beef early as you can get out, Improvement Association possibly the last week In April. - QUALITY IS OUR CONCERN - meeting, 8 p.m., Velvet April, May favorite nfionths But with conservation tillage Rooster, the delay might be a week or ALMA. Wis. — . Forage pore." production meeting, i:is p.m;, Burcalow stressed that HOG CONFINEMENT Buffalo County courOiouse. for Soviet graitr shopping research during the past eight By DON KENDALL million tons of U.S. wheat and tons axe wanted, Russia will years at the Waseca, Minn. Marchzr corn mostly the latter since have to talk further. ELGIN; Minn. -T: Elgin , , Southern Experiment Station -WASHINGTON (AP ) - last July 1 . for delivery this Bell said he thought the has Indicated that yield BUILDINGS Cooperative Creamery want, Association 7 meeting, Substantial new sales of U-S. season. According to an un- Soviets will to buy more reduction can be seen 1 p.m., wheat and corn probably will be derstanding last- fall Russia than eight million tons in the We plan Elgin-Millville High School. , proportionately with delays in P. E. Custom builds your hog building to suit your needs — made to the Soviet Union in the was given clearance to buy a first year of the agreement but planting. Marcba next few months, ' with you, your needs, & build to those specifications. DURAND, but American grand total of around 17 million declined to speculate how much Of the two major area crops WE — Pepin consumers should not fear that tcn-i of the two grains from 1975 more. The agreement covers write: County. 4-H speaking contest, — corn and soybeans — .heaps Call Collect: Ben Camp, 507-642-3632 or this will drive up food prices, crops without further only corn and wheat. - are hurt more by a late start, he 7:30 p.m., Pepin County according to a seni or consultation with U.S. officials. courthouse. • Bell said that despite drought said. Agriculture Department of- Bell said it was likely Russia losses to winter wheat in parts ' "Early planting can mean as , INC. . ficial; \. *. . ' . . * might buy two million to .three of the Great Plains he | PRAIRIE ENTERPRISES | . , agreed much as two to three bushels Hwy. 60 N.E., Madelia, Minn. 56062 Farm Bureau But assistant secretary million tons of 1976-c.rop wheat with some private estimates per acre if beans are planted by I 230 | banquet set Richard E. Bell said he had no and a similar amount : or that the total 1976 U.S-. wheat May 10 as opposed to the 15th or I I am interested In: i evidence that new grain sales possibly larger quantity of corn crop might range between 1.8 20tli,"Burcalowsaid. • Niiray Bam Finishing Parn I ETTRICK, Wis,: CSpecial) — ' Farrowing House to Russia were imminent. He from last year s harvest iii the billion and 1.9 billion bushels. "It's something we need taore Full Pit & Partial Slats A Farm Bureau new member told reporters Wednesday that comfrig months. Last-year's record harvest was | Full Slats Partial Slats J. ' data on. We can't stressenough J banquet for Trempealeau arid April and . May , however, The administration halted 2.1 billion bushels.The second the need for more conservation, ¦ , I NAME _ • Jackson counties will be held at traditionally are among the further sales to Russia last largest wheat crop was less but I don't think we have enough I 8 p.m.. March 23 at the Green Russians' favorite months for summer . after the Soviets than I.S billion bushelsin 1974. I answers for what will work on I ADDRESS_ : | • Meadow Supper Club: east of grain shopping. bought about 10 million tons of New grain sales to Russia every farm, and that's why wc Blair. Bon Armitage, Madison, "I think that we still have a U.S. wheat and corn Sales were should not alarm consumers, CITY State Tel. ! want to work and compare on J J will be the speaker and James good possibility of selling them resumed when a new long-term Bell said -Current reserves of area farms," headded. Wernes will present color between five and six million agreement was announced by wheat and* corn are the largest ¦ i HiM'M ai aa aiMMa> ai » 'Bi aa -a -ai ai aiMMaaa a> BiMat Bi ai ai aii a.aaB«al slides, /"Welcome to Farm (metric) tons for delivery President Ford last Oct 20 in Some years and prospects St. Charles FFA " Bureau. before Sept 30," Bell said, raising the 1975-76 total so far to now point to enough 1976 grain ST. CHARLES, Minn. - The Jim Vrieze, Eyoia, now has one of P.E.'s Nursys & Finishing Houses A Town and Country banquet referring to a total of both 13.3 million tons. to take bare of demand, he said. annual banquet of the St. under construction. will be held by the Trempealeau wheat and corn. A metric ton is Bell said . he doubted. Russia The drought will reduce Charles chapter of the Future County Farm Bureau at the 2,205 pounds and is equal to 36.7 would buy the full 17 million wheat output in parts of the Farmers of America will be Green Meadow Supper Club bushels of wheat or 39.4 bushels tons -specified last fall ' as Great Plains, Bell said, but the held at 8 p.m. Saturday at the ¦¦ ' ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ May 4. Urban cooples are to be of corn. * , " . . • available from 1975 U.S. crops. new crop looks good toexcellent high school here. guests- of Farm Bureau couples. ' Bell said he and other officials But he said Moscow also might in other parts of the country. Guest speaker, 'will be Rod Kenneth Cheatham, American were ''rather skeptical" that begin buying grain in the near "So, really, there Isno reason t,b Hebrink, Renville, Minnesota Farm Bureau informational the Soviets would buy more future against the long-term get ih any kind of panic with FFA president; Tickets are division, Chicago, will speak. wheat from existing U.S. agreement, which will take respect to the supply of wheat," available from chapter Tne Wisconsin Farm Bureau supplies and probably would effect with deliveries Oct. 1. BeU sald. members. women's conference will be wait until : the new -harvest The agreement commits held March 30-Aprtl i at Fond begins in June to take delivery* Russia to buy at least six du Lac. Reservations are to be "If therfe are any new million tons of wheat and corn made by Monday with Mrs. purchases of wheat by the combined each year. If Russia Four cancer deaths Roger Dahl, Blair. Rides are Russians, it will likely be from chooses, it can buy up to eight being pooled by Jackson, the new crop for shipment some million tons a year without Buffalo arid Trempealeau time afterJune ," Bell said, further talks with U.S. officials. linked to pesticide? counties. Russia has bought about 13.3 But if more than eight million WASHINGTON (APV— The Clinic. And Obey said the deaths of four Marshfield, Wis., diagnoses were later confirmed area men from a rare form of by scientists at the National cancer are being investigated Cancer Institute. for a possible link with use of Dr. Henry Anderson of Mount arsenic-based pesticides, Rep. Sinai'Hospital in New .York David Obey , D-W|s,, said City, one of thc scientists who Wednesday. ¦ r lias been attempting to The congressman said the determine the causes of deaths were an example of the angiosarcoma, said only about hazards of allowing untested 150 deaths have been reported and unregulated chemicals to worldwide from that form of be used, cancer. The 7 four cases were Angiosarcoma had previously diagnosed as a . form of liver been linked to exposure to vinyl ¦ : ' ' ¦ ' cancer known as angiosarcoma chorlide used in the hini « '/'/ ' ¦ l ' i' - "lr t*" ' • ' • » i . • at St. Joseph's Hospital In manufacture of plastics, but W eVW, ,f *C " ,';ji ' : \y ^x "^^ . ^tr Marslifleld and the Marshfield Anderson said none of the four nutsedge and _ ***** JJ ¦ ¦ B^*** --.*^^^ ** ^^ . ^^^^^^^^ , ^^^^^^ J—TV , -^^^m MJ.AL fl^tt ^ ^^ * ^^^^^ J Marshfield aria men had been exposedto thai chemical. STRAIGHlTwAU BUILDINGS Milk production The New York doctor said all four worked on farms from the 1920s through the 1940s quackgrass up 5.3 percent , and were exposed to arsenic-based WASHINGTON (AP) - Milk pesticides during that tlmo. production in February totaled Dr. Cesar Reyes, a nearly 9.25 billion pounds, up 5.3 pathologist at ¦ the Marshfield ' ' ¦ ¦ per cent from a year earlier and with EradicaneV ' * * ; , 7;W«Ct*V« H«- |*ld« , . . . Clinic, said one of. the four In ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ' " ' ' ¦ ' " • ¦ '¦ ' ' .* , * ' ¦ ' ' , . : : 5.8 per cent from February 1974, later years was still.a farmdr, 7 * • ' 7 - . . . ; .*. , ¦ according to tho Agriculture hut one of the others worked iMB^tetOx. . * *y!™£^^ Department. Two of the most stubborn weeds, nut&edge and quackgrau, ' with crushed rock another was ' I POLE BUILDINGS • , "TtiLs gain in production is a plant worker and the fourth have finally met tfeeir master. It's Ef adicane herbicide. Here's due te increased output per cow, was a postal clerk. ' which more than of (set the how to control them. Plow the infested ground early and i e hove The men wore 46, 57, 65 and 66 Use our experience. w c^tom decline In milk cow numbers," at the time of their deaths s^r^/^/yydeigned hu,ndred» of buildings...all typoi disc several times to cut up the nutsedge and quackgrass /rjjJr., J/ 'ii' \ tho department said Wed- between February of"1974 and ' " * ' ¦ farm operation. We kno-w nesday. -^rt^i^/ s'^ *-V-r^:^^:-?TS^^?^lll " i lJRl|||ii| ^ ' ,..for every lypo of November of 1975. rhizomee. Then incorporate Eradicane herbicide in the soil as ^. Officials said there were /yMmSjti§^ . How 'to hold down costs, without holding back Anderson said there was no you due before planting. Disc 11,072,000 milk cows on farms explanation now for tho high twice to mix Eradicane lout month, down 11 per cent incidence of angiosarcoma In thoroughly in the soil. Plant infested fields last when the soil is et om ( w« ; from 11.195,000 a year earlier. ™ ^ a ^ ete ^ building: co* tlie Marshfield area. IWli lrMT P' including construction But average milk production "This may be tho first group warm and seed corn sprouts fast, grows fast. U " ™P!?I^^^O j§? .ordinate all »ervlces, BBBBli wl I ir responsible climbed to 835 pounds per cow, that has been looked at, or It t jJBiMt^J^fcitB^^BlWorrangemenli. One firm for your This season grow corn, not nutsedge or quackgrass. U«j ' | up 51 pounds from February of may Just be a chance last year and 57 pounds more association," he said. Eradicane. Always follow label directions carefully. See your i % '/ ! , IF V ' than Iwo years ago. ; Aridersdn Is studying the "^ fy ^f'^P^ F ^ DOfl t WOlt. i**' "» now for your fprlno StauflFer supplier for Eradicane. 7 CRO P STORAGE cancer with Dr. Irving Sellkoff naasia . . . batata out construction crews are all -Mount ' ' Dairy Day banquet of Sinai and scientists 4_ ^L__W^_ - Last year the world's farmers harvested 1.15 problem. . A manpower - training program should be part of perience the vo-ag teacher acquiressuch a broad Irrigation engineers, water-and-soil conservation specialists, billion metric an expanded research investment in food production capacity,'' understandingof agriculture he "can fit into any number of slots people to develop new cultivation techniques . . . th$ list of' _ towns of grain - a record In corn, Wheat, oats, rice, and other ; inaari-business." much needed cereals. Even so, that bumper total harvest In- . the study recommends. 77 7 , . needed.talents is almost endless, Dr.- Herr points out. Trucking A farm background still is an obvious advantage to anyone 7 is yet another specialized need of agriculture as are banking and * * eluded shortfalls in manyto regions: the Sovietllnionfor instance. seekinga career in agriculture. But it is not necessary,says Dr. ' insurance;* ' ; y' '¦ ¦¦ . . '¦ ' '< ¦ ' : • ' It was barely attequ^te meet general world needs; and each . ' . - 7• year Herr. Indeed it had better ¦not¦ be or agriculture would be in Meanwhile more and more school systems are getting into ahead that harvest must increase by 2 percent (to an an- "deep bauble" he adds. ¦ ¦- . agriculture, says Dr. Crawford. So are two-year community " ¦¦ nual fetal of 1.88 billion tons by tbe turn of the century) just to Kurtz Holstein tops Between I959and,l974f-a.mi familiesin the U.S. declined by1.3 colleges. And correspondence courses from the recognized four- '- stay * ahead of demand on a planet' where the population million to a current total of around 2.8 million. Recent reports year schools of agriculture have proliferated in recent years so currently jumps by about 98 million pebple (about 2 percent) a 'year ;:-X ' ' ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ suggest the trend has leveled off and may even reverse itself that anyone wishing this kind of training should be able togetit , ' XX' x -x.X Xy . y * - N.. . "• . , - . ' I 'XX 1975 testing slightly. But that still leaves a rather slim reserve for says Dr. Crawford. . 7 x-;. ^lt-another way, this year the world's farmers must produce DHi agriculture on which to draw. 23 million more tons Of cereals than they did in the past 12 ALTURA, Minn. —A Registered Holsteln owned by theKurtz Brothers, Altura, led a' list, of Winona'County cows toppiig the When Dr. Herr introduced vocational agriculture' into the months (dust storms in the U.S. and other vagaries of nature Lancaster County school system it wasaimed primarily at those notwithstanding), If the world is not* 800-poundmark for average butterfat productionin 1975. • ' to grow a little hungrier in lflfa. ' , * . -¦' . .. : . The Kurtz animal produced 1,098 pounds of fat and 23,850 of There must be similar, increases in production of vegetables, milk in testing¦ by¦ the¦ Dairy ¦ Herd Improvement Association (DHIA); .; . * ¦ '. 7 '. ' ' * ¦ . . ." ; ¦'¦ ' ¦x J - -yX: ¦,. x ^x. fruits and meat, even as growing urbanization snatches more , ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦: ' ¦: : ¦ • ¦ ¦ \x- "" . . .Cow'i. * * - Lb». tb»; land from the plow and mechanization eats up still greater Owner . AddraJj. ¦¦ ¦¦ - . '. -Name Br*«d Milk Fat Grasses quantities of the very fuels that have made possible . ... r...... SQll American Kurlz Brother*. Altura ..Mickey. . -iRH 23850 10M /A/vater ¦ 'and Europeanagriculture 's past impressive gains. Alfred Helm; Lewiston;...:-.., „.¦, .* -...;•»!> GH .:¦ 23340 1010 Allen Aarsvold, Peterson' ¦ :., ... v ..Comet • RH 24920 W4 Elgin creamery $ets Kurt; Brothers, Altura ...... Meliia ' RH 22920 9*8 Steven R. Nahrgang, Lewiston...... Caryln ' GH; 20620 934 aiid ; ¦ ' ¦ ¦ annual meeting ; y Raymond L'. Schell & Son,Minneiska ' . ..:'..- , 77 " ". GH 16720, 922 Raymond L. Schell S Son, Minneiska ; . 180 GH W430 ¦ 9J6 plan unveiled t&lvmm T : ¦ 7- ELGIN, .M|hn. - The Elgin ketchum Farms, Utica ...... ,,.. .'.... ;.../.,19 RH 21120 . 910 ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -: million tons in 1974 and the loss Cooperative 'Creamery KUrtl Brothers, Altura....,,,...... ;,.' .Gleam. ; . RH , 27800 900 ¦DAIRY EQUIPMENT Kurtz Brothers, Altura ...... Fanny-; -J?H 21800 we Three state Officials today is expected to be greater in 1975, broadleaves * / ¦ ¦ * haoclatiotiwill hold its annual * • ' : " . '• ¦ ' ' Also ': ' ¦ ¦' ' ' ¦ ' Harold Herber A Sons, Rolllngstone...,..:. .40 ' KH 24950/. -j 896 proposed a $6 million state although figures are not . meeting March 27 at Elgin - Alfred 8. Paul Mueller,Lewiston . '. * .. . ' . *:* . Bloom RH 18340 892 program to help promote soil available. ' USED EQUIPMENT Millville School here. Allen Aldlnger, Wlnon*...... Archer GH 22970 891 and i water conservation The agriculture com- '' ' Kurtz Brothers, Altura'.. -. ...::. ' .' .;,...... Stella RH 21090 888 'sOtec> With . Us Before; You Buy! A l p.m. business meetingwill ' practices by Minnesota far- missioner . said the state in Kendall Fuller 8. Son, St. Charles.... 39 GH corn? ' 19230 . 887 follow a noonmeal. mers. progra m would not create a new Control many of them with no carryover .| ARCADIA CO-OP ASS'N Edward Slettom, executive John StOck «.Son, St. Charles.:,...... ,: Lisa GH 22640 884 Russell Persons, St. Charles ...... Belle RH 22430 '' 884 The plan, to be presented to. bureaucracy and would - be Use a Lasso plus Biadex tank mix LEWISTON CO OP ASS'N director of the Minnesota Russell Wirt St Family, Lewiston Linda . «G 15510 877 the 1977 : legislature, was administered by existing soil | TOCdUMTY CO OP OIL, Association of ' Cooperatives, Melvin Hershey,St;Charles .....Martha RH' 20380 87V unveiled by state Agriculture and Water conservation •i will be guest speaker. 7 Ralph Herbert Family, Rolllngstone .73 RH 19730 870 . • ';• Rushford, Minn. . ' Alfred & Patrt Mueller, Lewiston . Geneva RH 19090 ' 870 Commissioner: Jon :\Vefald , districts. Details of the proposal - . \?g>*i ' Kurtz Brothers, Altura ,...' .....-;... '....'Sheba .¦ .< RH.'- . * 20770 869 Natural Resources Com- are expected to be Worked out F/ank Kreidermacher, Minneiska ...... R-38 RH 17510 * ' BS9 missioner Robert Herbst and by tlie state Soil and Water Willis Hoppe, St. Charles ...... 57 ' .GH 19220 7, 848 Alfred & Paul Mueller, Lewiston ...... Sandel RH 20080 866 Director Peter Gove of the .C0ns«rva tion Board. Kurtz Brothers, Altura :....' ...... Model RH 19280 864 Pollution Control Agency Herbst and Gove said they MaVnard Millard, Dover ...... ;...; 29-G' RH 19040 858 (PCA). supportedthe proposal. Ijfe Ship Your ' David * Robert Christie, Utica...... :. 55 GH 21730 857 Wefald told a ; news con- Herbst said he was concerned MelvlpA.HersheW St.Charles ...... Susie , *GH 21070 • 855 because 800,000 acres of forest, Riissellj;wirt&Famlly, Lewlstoh...-Lolpop RG " 16930 855 ference that topsoil loss through 1?y Kurtz Brothers, Altura,....,,,. ....;.... Cecel RH : 19330 846 wind erosion had dramatically grazing land and wetlands was Cattle & Hogs To StevenR,Nahrgang, LewlstOn ...... Clancy GH 21720 845 increased , ; in southern converted to cropland in ' the *¦& StephanShady Elm Farm, Altura...... 81 GK 17510 . 844 state last year *»'-*¦¦-'*> -.— lV.~ ^^^^Cf. Frank Kreidermacher, Minneiska ...... v.. 227 GH 18170 843 Minnesota over the past three Ketchum Farms, Utica ...... 4 RH 18600 842 years because of the economic Bolh Wefald and Herbst Marvin Mussell, Utica,...:..:....:;.;...' .Elsie GH 20>20 . 840 incentive for farmers to .plant called on the federal govern- Rogers—United—Miller DavidO. Colbenson, Lewiston ...... Jancte RH 20880 839 from "fencepost tp fencepost."' ment to continue funding the ' INCORPORATED Hllbert-Rupprecbt & Son,Lewiston.....:Piney RH I9B20 836 federal program. They v. , Rushford.. ... He said that shelterbelts, LK-sO H rp. *- $ :-* STOCK YARDS— SO. ST. PAUL • Schreiber Brothers *. Cindy RH 13960 835 expressed concern that l,issosJreqi5"r«,fl:M3=iT'3ri oi .'crjiu-con-ojr , Schreiber Brother, Rushford,.. ..;' :,.,. ',.. Jan RH 19230 832 windbreaks' and ' .' • grass ' Congress would reduce the BildttJ'i.ireg ^efPCJInoimrii C'f "" Hu l --nr / Kurtz Brothers, Altura...... ::...... Holly RH 23940 831 waterways set up with the help Alwiysrt ia aWloi;i. ii!>)a CL- -v " Ask Pour Loco/ Trucker Rudie Spitzer, St, Charles...... June GH 22890 . 830 Of federal funds ih the late 1930s federal funding or even Kurtz Brothers, Altura ..I., ... Effie . RH 211M 830 and 1940s have been converted eliminate the nationalprogram. ¦ RobertWess^l. Wlpona, .;...; ...... 45 . : ' GH* 19900 829 '•' 'jggjjg .w ,~ . , -. GOve said the PCA-^upports * * ^ MaynardMlllard. Dover ...,...::'...,...,.2H * GH 16510 * 828 to, cropland. The result is StephanShady Elm Farm, AltUra...... 'll • GH 18290: B14 increased- soil aiid water the : proposal because topsoil Roger, Eggert, St. Charles.....;:.,...... verla ; GH . 19880 ' , "loaded with pesticides and HI^BWi^Bi . 822 erosion. BBWBMBBBBWBWWBBI^BI^^BBB '; r ' Marvin Musseil, utica... '..:...... Sarah . * ' .. •' GH 19780 : ' 817 : "Too many farmers and herbicides finds its way into the . i^HB 1 tl ' **l .. -ji.yu /7* Lwiu*'. * **%»^. Ridge View Farm, Winona...... ,.::. . Lucky : GH 20500 815 ¦HHBHMMHMB |- v t,.*>u* .. v *~ *>. ^*j waters of the state, * ' creating a ^^H^kfti l fi ^**%*~ David s, Robert Christie, Utica...... ;.. .61 GH 19520 ' 815 ranchers have forgotten the ^^^^^^^^m ^^^^^^^mm ^^^m ^^^^^^^m* - ->. ^^^^. ¦ ¦ pollution problem. ¦ f . T ; Ralph Herber & Family, Rollingstone ... v..' . 83 , RH -18990 814 lessons of the 1930s," Wefald : - ! x ' "'' s ¦;. ^^IJHHH^Irillil^!^L3 j '"'! -M* Ketchum Farms, Ullca,..; ;*. *...' , '.,..67 . ' * . RH 16890, 814 said.. * .* '; .7 Art Johnson i Son's, Minn. City i.tllly GBS 16040 . 814 RussellT. Church,Minn.City...... : 191 .- . . GH 21220 813 He said there is a "critical Wabasha County ; Melvin A. Hersliey, St. Charles Mona GH 20910 B13 lack of subsoil' moisture in ' David & Robert Christie, Utica. . '..'..: 4 .105 GH 19970 810 southwest and southern DHIA sets meetina Maurlce Shea, St.Charles ..•...>....:.>. ;....52 GH 16360 810 Minnesota."' , LAKE CITY, Minn. - The Clemens Schreiber Brothers, Rushford... ;.. .bay ' RH 20230 809 "We're, setting ourselves ,up annual meeting of the Wabasha David Clark, Rolllnflstone ..,. ;.15C GH 19250 809 ^ kurt? Brothers, Altura :...Karla .? RH 22690 80S for a possible dust bowl era this County Dairy Herd John Stock 8. Son, St. Charles... :.,Jenny GH 19880 805 spring," said Wefald. "It is not Improvement Association will soybeans. Stejrtian Shady Elm Ffirm, Allura J2 GH 19150 804 impossible." ' > , ¦ be held at 8 p.m. Monday at the Kurtz Brothers, Altura . .Joleen - .. RH 2016Q 803 r Maynard Millard, Dover . . 42-D - , GH 18620 803 He said the U.S. Department Anchor Inn herei 4 Allen Aldjnger, Winona :...... ,.,.....: • ... ..Jo GH 19150 802 of Agriculture estimated topsoil The business meeting will be Schreiber Brothers, Rushford... . '.,.... Prince , RH 18910 802 loss in the state at'33 to 35 held following a dinner. Quality you wmmmmmmmmmmmmm ^^^mmm ^m^mmm ^m^^^^^^^mmm ^^m^^m ^^^^^^^^^^^—^^ ^^^^

¦ ¦ * * . . ¦ * * ...... , , Nerval & William Deeran , Galesvllle, ) ^ can see. Wisconsin are shown ready to go to ¦ ' ' work with their Hesston StakMover. , When you open a bag of Clemens ' », soybeans, you'll see the quality in the. clean , uniform , distinctively- » . colored seed. KOCHENDERFER & SONS Clemetis soybeans are precisely ' . 1} 7 FOUNTAIN CITY, WIS. 7 ' X screened ., .uniformly sized.. . and j. • pre-inoculated. And then the seed ;J is tagged and sealed in specially , ' \t ^^mmmmmmmmammmmS ^dammmmmm^mmmSmm\muamL- ^ designed 50-pound bags, NOTICE In processing, Clemens soybeans ¦ • Is Hereby Given That The.;. ¦ go through' 8 separate cleaning, screening and purification processes. ANNUAL MEETING Protect ybur Let Us Help Make It a That 's to give you the finest , cleanest. , Of The Stockholders Of v.. farm investment TT soybean seed available. , •Kit r Ar i ,; Form Buroau'B Country T\ 3T3t ) V IViOVG tOP X Oil ! See us today about Clemens TRI-COUNTY COOPERATIVE Squlro policy can bo Igllorod '^ , JT* / . soybeans. You can't buy finer exactly to you. whnthor , , ' ' ¦ ¦ soybeans anywhere. ' OIL ASSOCIATION you're nn ownor. ' an opnralor ¦' '. Rushford, Minn, • 1 Available in Pureline, blended and pr both. You o«t only tho ; ' tiovernco you nood, and no _ . ' :,M „,, . _;¦" .,. . • • - H-^, public varieties. , more. Call\m for dotulls. • AT. MOVING TIME, this newspaper can / ^-- . ^~~~ , be more helpful to you than ever — with its I iv '• ^1 FBtni BUf Btmf U ' hotne^muking pagen, news, -'..waiit / °'' y f ' ^^^L ^^HT H I IJ | 11 Lj 11,\ . shopplntr o ! 'it,i l^^aiii;^! IRSUr&nCB mh and it.s many other .services. Aa well m I Jt.,/ °"<" »/., / c ¦ M p^hn Bureau Life & with , all it« exciting news stories, pictures ./„ *°l day I | | Bureau . j s Products of Pfizer Genetics Inc, 7 JKR^Farm Mutual and speciul if eat tires that you want to see , / "^'""cc, / at the Rushford High SMI U ¦ 0a e ¦' " ' - ¦ * ,. • ' ' V * * . ¦ ¦ ¦ * " EVERY day . .. * . : . I ^ ^ . . / v ' ¦¦ ¦ : ,. ' mk;, [MJK^ MAKE SURE that you won't miss a ,«in- ¦ A r / . . _ ' ;' " ' A pie isaiie ' while you're moving, by letting ', vs ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦ Orville Agrimson xA Noon Lunch Will Be Served f^'I Ml ' y^ j*B ' " Al ||*§K\ - * " ^ ': '¦ ¦'¦ • ¦ ' know 'before you go! Just'phone our office ( ' Utica—T*l. 607-032-4079 X Starting at 11:45 a.m. ¦tcZ^mJ' ^mm ¦ ' • * M.1P^^'''> ! *,»' ' X - K?XM___:' V.^m' . . 7 or tell your carrier, u few days in advance, Ji ^ j ^j ^-^^y'- • alld delivery vyill be changed to your tiew ^ Cyril Kronebusch Convene At.1 p.m. MnPHIi ^MfSBb ' ¦ ¦ ¦ . SB ^JT ^^^^V • MlnnelBtta—fel. 507-689-2807 Business Mepting to ' • BL,'iT«f)Ewm "' . ' . «^w*«» . * , . •' . .' ' • '. address as . soon* as you move in. ' -^^BWBl^^^*^^* ' ' ' ¦ '- ' ' TOE .; ' AND IF yo,i.are moving away from your Wt\3S m0f X Edmund Luehmann r^FOH roafllll^^ ^- ^fflBU v * : flent , please be sure to _ Lewl8tbn-Tel. 507-523-2034 Manafwjr . V Pr^ Order's route « ¦ nLSHEj t^I ', • To Receive Ilia Reports Of T^e Offlcera ' • Lloyd^ndbuite' •. pay. him, in full befbre you leave. He is in .* _ ^_\%M >qiMKv ^7 ¦ of Dlfeo- ¦ ', •; To Elect 3 Members Tp The Board ' BUSHPOBD '' ' ' . , .bgsinoss for hlrtiself and the cost , of your %¦ ItlS SW^J Robert Pltteiko ¦ ¦ ' ¦ -¦: ' ¦ ' ¦ ¦¦ 864-9788 i " - • '."' . tors x ,y ' 'xx 'X - ' ,' , . ;;X" .*. ; . * • . . . ; * * . ' ''' • Steve Redalen newspapers. coineB out of hia own pocket, JKM w\^»fi$mjijJ ; '¦. ' Wlnona-Til. 607-454-1303 May Properly • ¦ • • To Transact My Business That' WESTON yes-«20 ' • * ." /unless ho can. collect from you. ,. 'v ¦ ' • r ¦ ^.' ¦/, , ¦ ' , ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ . . ¦ , JJ m\vT^^3^r^'' ;7 v : iCo^.^fpr^THo i^etinrf ,^::: • UstflrJonsoMfd ' , - ' ' ' ; ' . . . wwi,llwiATM?T?« V> Ambrose Simon ^ • . Randall Wltllle/ • " ' ¦ ' ' gS u, *mmym m, ivult . Kloik«r I Wv ' |P JEK&| &v Altura-Tel. 607-534-2294 I . -: 9ALEDONIA7?4,3337 , |g WltTOna Dal/ NeWS. | 1 /^4^ ' ;^J |M<^3 LS ' '' ' S<^ : ' ' ¦ ' ' • " ¦ ¦ ' $ - ¦ " ' ' ¦ BC ¦ " . * -———— : ' i : ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ *m Winona Daily News WARTW^ J . y x >-;\ " .x: ::y- "-x ;x: ;' MARK TRAIL - by Ed o«)d ' - ' -/ : ' . ' :* ' * . - ' -¦ - . " * '- , ' i _n ' - " ^ I^^ \ .. lf-|Thursday,7,7 4Ax ^ ^March lli 1976148 4-H j ^^ ;ratjl3lt proiect meeting set - ; 7M0NI>lTO7Wfe r A; 4-H poultry; and;,;. rabbit ' prqjecl leaders and members meeting willbe held at 8 p.m. Monday at Ihe First:; National' B6hk of Mbniovt. "]i ;\; ' '" -x ' Al Lunde, Trempealeau i County *-H and vouth : -agent, will conduct the session, designed to increase project , SftWV^-br SyW ' ' ' ¦ ' ' ' ' T ; : ' ¦ ¦ '¦ ' ' .JftK *'/7 .'/* 7 y y -; . . . ^REX'WORGA^M.DJ-b^wcurtft 7* -x . - ' . knowledge and provide, an Aima forage (neeting r ALMA, Wis. — Dwdyne Roh- weder, University of Wisconsin agronomist, will discuss; thei production and har : 7, cl . forage crops at 1:15 p.m. March 23 in the Buffalo County Courthouse here. Topics 7 will include leprae varied, selectliig - seedling mixtures, storage and effectsof weather. . ,' ' *7; .v* ThepubUc is invited. Hearst attorney naps testimony by psychiatrist CAP) -A Hearst four more times. 7 psychiatrist whom Patricia Kozol, who had been sitting in Hearst once accusedof bullying the courtroom nearly every day her to tears says she "quivered for several weeks, was the and half-sobbed" when he second psychiatric expert bluntly inquired into her calledby the government iii its fe^^^*^____^^^^^^^I^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^B motives for joining terrorists in rebuttal case against three ;^______\ : . a bank holdup. defense experts who had ' ^^^^^^ ^ * < described Miss Hearst as a Dr. . Harry Kozol, who was 1 embroiled in a dispute with terrified pawn 6( her kidnapers, Miss Hearst in January, began liie defense testimony that his testimony for the she was & hostageof fearduring prosecution Wednesday at her her .entire 19 months in the trialfor bank robbery. underground was stoutly U.S. Atty. James L. Browning contested by Dr. Joel Fort, who Jr. said Kozol, who interviewed spent four days on the witness Me -defendant five times, will stand and deflected attempts by ' challenge her contention that Bailey to shake him'from his she was still a frightenedkidnap conclusion that the newspaper Victim when she joined her heiress freelyjoined the SLA Symbionese Liberation Army captors in crime. co-op Chief defense counsel F- Lee Arcadia Bailey said he would vigorously -protest Kozol's testimony and annual meeting probably would refer to the previous dispute between the set Saturday doctor and the defendant: . ARCADIA, wis. (Specify- Tbe diminutive, gray-haired The annual meeting of A-G expert appearing for ' the Cooperative Creamery is government said Wednesday scheduled for 1 p.m. On that he first mentioned theSLA , Saturday in the ArcadiaHigh the tiny terrorist tribe that School gym preceded by a kidnaped Miss Hearst on Feb. 4, dinner, in the cafeteria at 11:30 a-m. ¦ liiTij 1974, by asking her to describe 11 | slain SLA chieftain Donald The forms of fourmembers of "4Ti ^ lii^H "Cinqtie"DeFreeze. the board of directors expire. ¦ ¦ "He was always giving They are Allen Kreher, Frank ¦ wk Peplinski, Jr., Vilas Steine and \ orders;" he quoted- her as 11 I 1 I k I _ \\ Ray Klink. Kreher m saying. it vice- "A m, Kozol, 69, depicted Miss president and Klink is w_ . Hearst as ill but cooperativeat treasurer; Holdover directors l^m^^^_^^^^^^j^_^_^^_^_x ^_^j^x^^^_^_^_ their first meeting oil Jan. 7. are Henry ErnstJr , president; But he said he was disturbedby Ed Pientok, secretary; Leslie "her smoking constantly." Winsand, John Glenzlnskl, He said he got tbe impression Clarence Wolfe, Harold Stevens "this was a girl who talks and Gerald Mahlum, directors. Nominees are: Clarence directly and likes to be directly ¦ spbken to." Finher and Jerome Klink, In that vein, he said,' he District 2; EugeneZabinski and referred to the bank robbery Harold Severson, District 4; '¦ . . , Ya^va^HniMi^^Bi^iiTS^BS^^TA^^^^ii^s^^ ^ i : and "I asked bluntly, 'Why did LeRoy Fernholz , and Dale ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^7* ^^^^^^^^^^^IPSV^^HHI ^^^^^^^^^^^F x ^^^^^^^^l * youdoif" Semis, District 6, and Vernon ^^^^^^^ Bue and Floyd Bad, District He said she replied, "They ' told me to," and he quoted this 10. exchangewith the defendant at . Ihe financial report win be her jailcell: made by Art Schultz, general .(J. Who were they? manager; 7 Eji*A. Cinque and the others. {; Q. What did they do? WWBA sets *,' «A They told me I would go in , H |KiH|JiKaajB|B|SlUi3 2^HlliSH K Uje bank . and get my picture March events ¦ ¦; ^^^^^H ^^^^H < ' ______i , ; . ^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^HHHBlBHVH ^H^HIJISPIIHIVISIT^HiVVMVV ^s^s^s^—s^—s^—sm ^^^^^^^ m- ' P taken and I did it..,, they told WHITEHALL, Wis. ¦- ' The vVBRI^^^^^^^^^^w nie that if I didn't do it, I would ^^^^^^^^^^^ IJ Western Wisconsin Beekeepers « b$killed. Association will bold its regular K JM that point, Kozol tald, Miss monthly business ipeetlng and Jj Hfearst r"quivered and half- program at 8 p.m. Wednesday 1> sobbed" and he suggested that at the Trempealeau County Vsfie take a sip of coffee. Courthouse here. *J .During a pretrial hearing In . The program will include a ij January, Miss Hearst testified discussion of the advantagesof 5- in* court that Kozol had various methods of beekeeping. M y ^ ^^^______naifi^_Wnnl^mm I- "ordered" her to drink the On March 20, an association ^_ ^_ HMa& % coffee and had driven her to honey bake sale will begin at fi •C hysteria with accusing a.m. at Our Own. Hardware 5 questions.Her attorneys asked ; Uit be store In Strum.Proceeds will go Kozol prevented from th the association's ex- ^j.examining her again. perimental beeyard near K Xozoldenied that he had been Ettrick. 3,'h«fsh, and U.S. District Court On March 30, the group has J7; JtjdgeOliver J. Carter refused been Invited to a jointmeeting J-toiremovethe psychiatrist as a with Sparti, Wis.,' beekeepers £ gdjrernment consultant Kozol at 8 p.m, in 'the courthouse .^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ B^BBPi^^^^^^^r^^A^^^^^^WBj ^^^^B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ B , S subsequently examined Miss annex in Sparta. BHHHHHHH^^^^^^^^ii^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^-^^^^^^S^^^'^^^^^^^^^^BHHHHHH^^^^^H. * ^^^ "' ' mmmmm\ ^^^^^^mmmm\\WESTGATE VA_W *_^ ______^H^ll \\\ ^H ^ 0PEN6AM-' ^^^H H w^^ r^^^^n^n I ^K^B ^H ^1 CENTER m^^Bl\fN J^M^^i^V ^| • : " ^^ | ' 1 Phone'45 4-W3 ^¦¦¦MlHii^^^fe^^^9Hlil^V^^^2i^^^^H|H^Hili^^^l^ ^^^^^ A^il^£^P^^^______^^H H ; ' HMlMlBMa ^MH^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^i I ¦ , ¦ ¦ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ fl y t * ' ' ' .!' * ^^\ ^ ^^-7 , ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^mX^^^^^^^^^^^^^^m. lvT9 ¦^^rfi if dl (¦ ,1^^^^ 111 n h^^ mi J rd I i T i VCJ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ M ^^^^^^^^^^J^^P^wn^^WTWWPP^^^^^^^^^^^HM^^^K^^^m i^^^JBa ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Hi x^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_ ' mm\WmmmWmWltl/^ \ Jftifa ' A Hlflhway 81 Wwt the ti' . * *m»*§My¦ '¦I?¦ :¦;¦;464-3105 Ads yxyx ^f''- ' : -:. '-, ' ' xx y ; :,x: x ': yx tfe^ ¦¦ First ¦M *iB *i'' ^''' ^ M ^ ''' ^ ' >' ^^ - 'MMMMI ?Sh^p ¦ "¦ ¦ . .: "¦ , , • ¦ . ¦ ' * ' .: ' . I * 2•, | '. X , X '»*v/if6H hal Pot penalty to Dnving case >~ w*$ VV^ite l sqhbol Opon^rits rail branch being studied^ ¦ discussion bill sigried Testimony in the trial o£a 22- STK PAUL, Minn. (AP) - year-old Winona man changed j lannihigrbupset Minnesota Gov. Wendell with careless driving was taken irks WHITEHALL, Wis, (Special) Fred BerM and;Mr». TIHH*- abarrdonmeht testify under advisement in Winona GOP - Tlie WhitehallSchool Board Anderson today signed a bill (AP) SI. PAUL, ( , man Fremstad wil represent WlNDOM^Mlnn.; - The BinghamLake. costs in getting the track into County Court Wednesdajp by Mhrt.' AP) * - in special session Wednesday the board. 'Names cf other which decriminalizes the first- Independent-Republicansin the offense possession of a small federal hearingon the question Andrew S-etebeer, state first-class condition, and Judge Dennis A. Challeen. V night, approved plans for sin committee members will be of abandoning a branch line of Highway Department main- $125,000 a year to maintain the Raymond L. Paelzel | ,' 64 Minnesota Housewere enraged advisory long-range . planning submitted for amountof marijuana. Wednesday when ' approval at the The bill takes effect one the Chicago and North Western tenance engineer for the area, track. Johnson estimated initial Michigan Lane, was arretted DFL committee..!* * '. 'Y . - . :v * * ''u:: 7: ' Marchsajneeang. . . Railroad wound up with a long said no Improvement plans expense of a Utile over $200,000, Feb. 18 by Winopa Patrolman methbers of the House Tax ¦* , The committee will month from today. It reduces Committee held study The' board decided tint until the penalty for the first line, of opponents testifying were on the books for the main with $60,000 a year for main- William Tenseth, who testified an - unan- needs and problems in the Wednesday. tenance. nounced meeting > to discuss contract'negotiations are set- conviction of possessing up to highway Mute for the, area, Paetzel's vehicle "skiMfed" schooldistrict based on a report tled, There was no immediate Minnesota 30, In the next five Ray Johnson told the ICC around a corner when it ttfrped amendmentsto 4 major tax bill presented to the board at its the 1976-77 .contract would IS ounces of marijuana from a ¦ " ' In advance,(if a formal be based on this yeaf ssalaty misdemeanor to a petty word on when the Interstate years.: * . . * : . bearinig a study done by the west onto West 4th S6jet, ¦¦ ¦ ] meeting: Feb. 16 meeting by Supt J. K. . Commerce Commission (ICC) Among other witnesses was Countryside Council which he coming within Vk feet of'stri- today. * • * . ' . ' '". - . X: X' " ; ' ¦;. plus Inofements Contractswill misdemeanor. •Hoyer. :y be updated after^ negotiations bearing judge, PhillipBrowning former state Agriculture represented showed an average king a parked car. Patrolman GOP lawmakai later calted Hover's report lists as Under state law, a petty Jr, of Washington,' D.C, would of 5.75 million bushels of grain It "dictatorship" by the have been completed, ac- misdemeanor carries . a Commissioner Russel Sch- Tenseth also testified Paetzel possibilitiesthe building of a cordingtp Hoyer. . make his findings. wandt, president of the Agri- were shipped . out of area told him at the time of the arrest DFL majority and & yiolationbf new high school and adding an maximumpenalty of a $100 fine to Wednesday's testimony, elevators in 1972 and 1973, and DFX promises for " and no jail term. It does not Growth Council, and a major that the accelerator pedal ifa his opennessin audio-visualdejiartmerit. Schedidingproblems for. next one witness said that if a 38.3 fertilizer dealer in southwestern that 88 per cent had to be moved car bad been sticking, and that government." . SuggestedIn thereport as pos- year werealso discussed. leave the offcinder with a criminalrecord : ' ' mile stretch of the Chicago and Minnesota. by truck. was the reason for skidding "If they are going to riin this sible ways to save money were Sid Otterson, ' guidance ¦ , , .North X Western's line were Laurence Johnson, railway The 7 council /- represents'¦ ¦ 19 pWe like a totalitarianstate , ¦;' Under the new law, a first around the corner. H* closing two country grade counselor, suggested teachers abandoned in southwestern consultant to thd Minnesota southwestern counties and Joseph DeVoer, a studea{ at they might just as well declare schools, changing kindergarten of the same subject have their offender still would be required Minnesota, it would mean7 a Public Service Commission seeks to promote rural a dictatorship," said House to participate in a drug the Winona Area Vocatifial- to lull days for half a school free tim?; together so they Can "tremendous need" : for (PSC) ,; and former adviser lo development. Technical School ano^j a Minority Leader Henry year education program unless tbe y. ¦ ' y ¦ , and eliminating many do auricularstudy. upgrading county roads in the President Dwight Eisenhower Its study showed more than passenger 'in Paetzel's cajrt at Savelkoul* . . . 7 \ 1 athletic activities that involve Otterson also suggested court decided it would not be area to meet grain shipping on railroad natters, said he 30,000 tons' of farming-related "It's a violation of the public appropriate. the time of' the incident, busing. . . . freeing teachers from study ball requirements via truck. found the Chicago ami North material move into tbe area testified Paetzel jammedtjhe trust inr thein to talk about ' In the past, possession of , ¦' ' The committee will include duty and hiring interns to help marijuana carried a fine of up Lynn Emerson Cottonwood Western figures 7 * ., on each year by truck and rail, and accelerator pedal twice ii$an opennessin government and yet ten lay people and two each of with curriculum. County highway engineer, gave rehabilitation costs to be the organization estimated a have a double standard for the to $360, a jail term of up to 90 attempt to make it glop students, . teachers, ' ad- The board accepted the that vievv on the railroad's exaggerated. loss of $2.5 million in buying sticking. most powerful committee in the days and a criminal record. proposal to eliminate a branch ministrators, and board resignation of Misa June Foth, Until 1971, possessionof even a 7 The railroad hgd estimated it power if the rail * line is ter- Assistant City Attorney legislature,!'Savelkoul added. '< members. junior highEnglish teacher. line between Currie and would take $397,000 for initial minated. When word of the meeting small amount of marijuanawas Richard F. Blahnik represented ' ¦ ; the state. Paetzel appeared leaked out and newsmen a felony for which a person —X. : ——-,. ' • x ——-— — . :. . — ;—-~ i filtered in, there were a few could be sentenced to a term of without counsel. moments of awkward silence Eight area teachers up to20 years. but CommitteeChairman Rep William Kelley then declared Study to aid ; Winona Daily News ' ' 1b the meeting open and welcomed B^TU TOursday,;JVIarchil, i976 . * . .. thevlsitbrs. ¦ ndrnihated for honors identification Kelley, DFL-East Grand Eight Winona -area public teachers/ students, * business Forks, school teachers have * been and industry, school boards and said he scheduled the nominated In this year's 13th thepiiblic. of breast cancer Interstate Power "briefing" because of the annual'search for the Min- The Immediate past Min- MNNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) number7 of ^proposed amend: ments, more than two dozen. nesota Teacher of the Year; nesota Teacher of the year, — University of Minnesota ' This year's program spon- Robert. G. Heyer, ninth grade researchers said Wednesday He said GOP lawmakers sored' by . the Minnesota physical science teacher at they are beginning to study why income up sharply yraiild have been welcome, had Congress of Parent^Teachers Mounds View Johanna Junior Vthe rate of breast cancer is Interstate Power Co. has The utility bad an increase of they shown up, In responseto a and Students i fPTSA), the High School, is the reigning more than five times higher in reported an increase of 22.3 percent in operating question, Kelley said the news Minnesota Educational national Teacherof the Year; American women than among $1,611,255 in net income for 1975 revenue. Operating expenses, media would be given advance Association (MEA) arid Min- Area nominees are Alice L. Japanese women. as compared to 1974. however, rose faster, in- notice of any similar meetings nesota State Fair- attracted a Mitchell, chairman of the . Dr. Lee Anne Wallach of the creasing 24.4 percent over 1974; in tbefuture. ' . '.:¦ ( A substantial increase was record 182 nominationsfrom a English department at Chosen university's medical center said necessary to provide a Taxes took nearly 13 cents of record numberbf communities, Valley High School, Chatfield; the researchers will compare reasonable return on the' ad- each dollar of revenue earned in 150, " Donald H. Kuschel, social biorhythms, pr periodic 1975. . The 1975 accruals for Ouieajspiointsviranriah ditional $26,642,708 invested by slate, county, : Teachers of Excellence are studies aind driver education * changes; in the hormone levels, shareholders in 1975, the federal, / to military academy being selected from the list of instructor at Elgin-Millville blood pressure and temperature company said. municipal and other "WASHINGTON - First nominees and from these will be Community School; Margaret of Minnesota volunteers miscellaneous taxes took District Rep. Albert Quie said selected the Honor Roll of Rhefngans , second grade seiectedlforthe study with a interstate Power Co., $13,462,159. Taxes were equal to Wednesday he is appointing the Teachers. teacher at Bluffvlew School, control group of women in headquartered in Dubuque, $2.88 per share ^"^ MMM ~HBft~i ¦¦!> ¦ aim first woman from Minnesota to The Teacher ^of the Year, Lake City; Hazel Throne, Fukuoka, Japan. Iowa, serves as the link between The - earnings per share of ^TOf^Tliu S be a cadet at theU. S. Military selected from the Honor Roll, developmental reading and Dri Wallach said :hormonal transmission' line networks common stock increased 8 cents 1% Academy, WestPolnt, N. Y. will be introduced at a public Title 1 mathematics instructor factors have, been implicated in . which criss-cross Iowa and per share ahd amounted to $1.75 Sdnya E. Nikituk, 17, luncheon in St. Paul Aug. 29 on at Preston-Fountain the development of breast Minnesota, serving farms and compared to $1.67 in 1974. SfotU '¦ ¦ "%¦ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry the first Sunday of the State Elementary School ; Lois cancer, ' but - that some ' *of , the residents of 252 communities During 1975 IPC has seen a ^Mtm ^^i^^U Nikituk, South Sl Paul, is to Fair. Julsrud, English and speech evidence has been conflicting. includinig: resumption of the upward trend panel are 11 instructor at Rushford High She said this study is designed in the rate of growth in the use $ $ 50 begin cadet life this July as a On the judging ¦Elgin, Plainview, Eyota, Dov- X¦ Reg.¦ $9.50tQ¦ .$14 $to 7 .7 member' of the class of 1980. men and four ,women School; Margaret Ploetz, first to provide added insight to of electricity by its customers. ¦• . . .;¦.. ;: " ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ ' ' • ' er, St. Charles, Utica, lewiston, . The electric peak load was 6.9 . 7 * . • . - . . . .« . : X Miss Nikituk is an honor student representing' large and small grade teacher at St. Charles hormonal changes'in the body Stockton, Rushford, Chatfield, ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦' ¦¦ ' ¦ ' institutions that prepare Elementary School; Deloris that may be involved. percent over the previous high . '" ' ' • * . - . 7.7. 7 ' - ' ;• . • ' n ' and yearbook editor at Breck Fillmore, Wykoff¦ and ¦ Spring 7 * School, Minneapolis. teachers, news . media , Friske, home economics In- The key hope is that this will Valley, x . ;¦ r . -. : . . peak set ih 1973. m^m structor at Spring Grove High lead to better ways to "Help us The report stated all (fate SfadU gf m ^tUEL m«2k *™*k .^1^ School, and Laura Collett, sec- identify women at high risk" of Interstate spent $58,724,042 requirements for electric Sftnin^ ^ ond grade" teacher, at Wykoff developing breast cancer," Dr. ; during the year for construction energy during the year were ^ Elementary School, Wallach said. of-new plantsand equipment. - met and Interstate Power had Reg. ' ' ' :¦ 0 $12.50¦ ¦to $13.7. .. ¦. . . adequate reserves, in 1976, the ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦' ¦ ' ' ' ¦ '!" ' ¦ • ' ' ^ ' 3 tyiew 7hci*HJmU<, *7tvo- r : company points out, it con- ' :¦ -x . ' .* * . . . . .7, . • ' . . . u tinues to expect to have a suf- Area votes ficient supply of coal available ¦ # : ¦ :; : legislators'¦ so no shortage of electricity in ; . '%KK - Here are tbe votes of area exempt from garnishment PASSED •' A bill appropriating MOO.OOO for / the service area is expected. V. , v ^i^^. -^6^'. ;-^ . - legislators on matters of in- the House, 74 to 51. Voting YESi famlly:plannlng activities In local < McCauley and Wieser ; Voting NOi ¦communities PASSED.' U to Si. Due to curtailment procedures $ " # terestlast week; Haugerud, Lemke-and Schulz. Voting YES: Haugerud. Voting NO: by IPC pipeline suppliers, the Reg: $7 to$10.50 V 97 $ 57 ^ FEfiMS-FERMSSORI1 ' ' 3 to 5 ?= ^^^ s 9 A blllfor emeraency bonding and A motion tocalloutof committee a* Lemke,- McCauley,¦ Schulz and company has not been fl ble to ^tmmm FERNS tfSu tax-levy authority for the St. Paul Mil that would require rotation of Wieser.* .;... ' '. . - . ^L school district PASSED the Senate, candidates' names on the ballot was A motion to call oiit of committee a purchase as* much natural gas O to 10. voting. YES: DFL Sens. DEFEATED, 31 to*«. Voting YES: fell! prohibiting the use of union dues. as lieeded by its' customers, LIMITED QUANTITIES ;,* Roger Laufenburger, Lewiston, and McCauley. and Wieser. Voting NO: for campaign contributions was L however. ' ' t ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ' " ' SPECIAL— ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' . -T . -SUPER - ' . - . George Conzemius, Cannon Falls. Haugerud, Lemfcand Schuli. DEFEATED, 3J to 86. Voting NO: Work is progressing as . - '- v Not * voting ; Sen. Lew Larson, 1R- A motion to call out of comm Ittej a Haugerud, Lemke, - McCauley and scheduled oil the coal-fired 2-FOOT STAKED Mabel. . . . bill ftiaf would base Income-tax Schulz. Not vof/ng: Water. * « j . 7 VISIT THE TWUNK 7 , MON. THFtU SAT. . • M A metropolitan lard-use bill rates on the consumer price Index A bill amended In a.House-Senate generating unit addition at the $Q49^ PASSED the Senate,35 10 26. Voting was DEFEATED, 29 to 98. Voting/ conference committee.that would company's Lansing station and 12N06N TIL 5 P.M- 9 XESt Laufenburger Voting NO: YESt McCauley. Voting NO.- ' allow lending Institutions to charge - on a coal-fired generating plant THIRD FLOOR... RIGHT OFF ¦- 1 Philodendron Q Conzemius,Larson. Haugerud, Lemke and Schult. Not up to 5 percent more interest than , of which 0 A bill providing medical treat- voting: Wieser. the federal discount rate on business near Sioux City, Iowa :¦ ' *v ' ment and educational programs for A bill to raise the drinking age to and agricultural loans PASSED, 84 Interstate Power's share Will be " ;- " THEELEVATOR. '" ¦ mi GORGEOUS-COLORFUL ONLY X those .convicted of meriluano 19 PASSED, » to 30. Voting YES: to 42; Voting YES: Haugerud, 100,000 kilowatts. Installation of ¦ ¦ ' < * possession PASSED the Senate 34 to Haugerud, Lemke, McCauley, Lemke, McCauley, Schulz and precipitators on 30. Voting VCSt Conzernius and Schulz and Wieser. Wieser. electrostatic 1 Rex Begonias $Q50 p Laufenburger. Voting NO: Larson. A motion for preliminary approval seven boilers at IPC's Lansing, *« Of Unusual Coloring M A bill amended In a House-Senate of a bill setting a minimum wage lor Dubuque and Clinton \j conference committee: to increase sugar-beet • workers Was generating stations were ^ the tax.'deducflon for dependents' Determinate DEFEATED, 9 to 58. Voting NO: completed in mid-1975 at a cost and many more items. j | school expenses RAISE 0 the House, Haugerud, Lemke, McCauley, Choate s ¦ Where Personal Service Is Still Important' ;d ¦ ¦ ' : lM to lt. Voting YES: DFL Rep*- Schulz and Wieser. ofttmillion. • ? Stop in and Browse. Nell Haugerud, Preston; Richard sentencing ^ Lemke, rural Lake City,' and Al t Wieser Jr., La Crescent, and Rep. ' Mon. - Frl. 10-6:30 SoL M. J. McCauley, IR-Wlnone. Voting bill passed . t~BB . ADE N* Sat. 10-6 -4SP* NOi Rep. Victor Schulz, DFL rural i SJ". PAUL. Minn. (Special) Vrt" ¦Bun.'U-S P4HKINO "Ifo Ooodhue. The determinate sentencing bill THIS WEEK! AT EXPRESSWAY T* An Hnir EaHIer ' A bl|l that would requ Ire creditors T^n SAVE OK POU1TRY *" ! € J*? , to give debtors seven days notice of was passed by the Senate this Intent to garnishee wag«s and to In- morning on a 54-11 vote. The form' debtors of Income that Is measure provides for specific, u rather than indeterminate, j-™- GROUND sentencing for felonies, Judges mr 4tiSM: ! would be able to increase or ftoc decrease sentencing by 15 Oi l percent. FRYERS ^^BEEF B i Choate s ta| They also would still be able )FREECUn,NQ ¦ 13. yW49 W 7 \- ' tm DC ) Where Personal Service Is Still Important' to suspend or defer sentences [ X^jj f^ ^^NM^^ft except for firet and second degree murder, aggravated 68 rape, and the third conviction I™ " I ROAsflJ T WYER WINGS Aflc \ fer the same crime. Those ^ crimes would have mandatory 74e 7h0w mm ¦ Wmi ^^ M ' The bill now goes to the House ( exciting Spring ' solids ' ' where hearings will be held lite 1AO I in M [ JMm ' - rw f ^H^^B' Monday after an earlier at- , 1 1 ^ PT. . , «-- rl '¦ l and plaids. Sizes 29 to • ' ^^^^ I > j? * § jl MM * ^H^H tempt to bury the subject in a I -*M-*Mlft While They J (V \ ^ \ *£J- Hi subcommittee until next year. l *?^* LAST j ^^\JJPTW ^ IB Insemination CANADIAN STYLE 0 HORMEi'S SLAB COUMTRY t\^lV ^ ^ J^ ^^ ^ L I school scheduled ' R- ¦ ¦ A three-day school to train WH^WIl BACON mm9Wmn0 niPT.RITCIU8PEPQSIT«^I • ; , '. - /j PwKoK. h^ Waftrtown, Wis . and wUI In- * * * *' • * L 7 ^^ | clude training In nutrition, physiology, disease control, OPEN 7 DAYS W-K^ldBI^^II^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ '' ^^^ H '^' breeding programs and the AW^EK ^fl^T/KW r7f \KT7mmmsW^W\ ^.W TO MIDNITE j technique of artificial breeding. ¦ ¦ ' ' ' l % , I ' ' . ' m_^_^^_^_^L^^_^_^_i^_^^_Mr^r _A *_A_ \_Z_^_\ J ' " Interested persons should PH. 462-3086 HUFF contact Geno Melsch, Altura, ¦ MH HHHUH HHH * SARNIA Minn. iMrtHMHVHH ^WiMMHMn ^ gets first sectional berth in 13 years Mondovi has really done the job for us underneath," praised "Gary jBy MlKfe HERZBERG The Bulldogs, who haven't bad a slate tournament bid since lamented Madsen, "but for awhile we were sick. (Greg) Berger's but he put on 25 pounds' knee went out and (Gary) Glanzman and a few others were out Madsen. "He used to get muscled around, [ Sports Writer 1942, had been conference champions four years In a row until this and gained an inch and I think the 'Hamburger Drill' ka« really year and also had a 15-game winning streak this season until it with the flu." ¦ by eventual conference titlist Ladysinith. ^oth Berger andGlanzman, the hubs of the Mondovi attack, are helped." _ } MTbNDOVl, Wis. — For some people, the number 13 is unlucky. was snapped The "Hamburger Drill" is an everytbJng-goes-no-holds-barred 'But Lady Luck has been smiling on Mondovi High School's Ladysinith (20-1), rankedsecond'ln thfe AssociatedPress ',, final healthy now and ready to take on the Bulldogs. Berger, a 5-11 senior guard, was the leading scorer In the Dally rebounding exercise that leaves many a player dazed. tesketball team the last coupleweeks. statewide middle school poll, Is also in the Spooner Sectional. The Dazed the Mondovi ball club may be when it steps into the i Led by first-yearcoach Larry Madsen, the Buffaloes vill be Lumberjacks will play last year's state Class B semiflnalist, News area during tbe regular season and currently sports a 24.S (16-5) in the6:30p.m. opening game Friday. scoring average with 515 points ln 21 games. Glanzman, who has spacious Spooner Gymnasium Friday night, Taking their first sectional tournament appearance in 13 years— Amery " "Boy, am I glad we vent up there Tuesday night," stated and they're just two victories away from their first state tour- Fridays winners will meet for the sectional crown — and a scored 93 points In tbe last lour games; did ¦a Spartan job for the hi: Buffaloesunder thejwards. , ,;[' '" ;' Madsen. "The boys were a little awed by theplace, but aftera few nament berth since 1932 — when they meet Chetek at. 8 p.m. berth in the Class B state tournament — Saturday at 8 p ' v minutes the bigness of the place wore off. Vfe willinrotkabty have Friday in Spooner. 7 Friday's losers will meet for consolation honors at 6:30 p.m. .: Ihe 5-6 junior center has hauled in 260 caroms for the year arid ' ¦ ¦ :¦ ¦ ' (ISO thesmallestcontingency there, becauseweareso far away. But I • Lady Luck hasn't always smiled on the Buffaloes thisseason. It Saturday. ' ' ,, ' . * * ¦ : ' * ' * . ' • "V7* '7' - '7" ' . . teamed with 6-0 forward Jeff Olson rebounds) for 410 of the and hate to make any excuses about the regular season," team's 800 rebounds. i: ' don't think this will bother us, or the fact that both Chetek. wen appeared that the 1975-76 Buffaloes would be about as suc- "Gee. I Ladysirilthplay there rwieeduring tHe refjitar seasqn." : 7 cessful as the previous 13: Madsen, a University of Wlsconsin- The Buffaloes will go.into the game avieraglng 64.6 points per 4iy$r Falls graduate, and his boys muddled througha 9-9 regular '¦' ¦ ' ¦ ' ' ¦ ' '¦¦'¦ : game onoffense. whlleglviiigup64.8per game. qpason. * . . . . • • "Although I have coached all these kids, with the exception of • But the Buffaloes grabbed a spot in the sectionals by posting Bergerfor the past threeyears, I never expected to have such a (tree straight tournament wins — 71-64 over Black River Falls, disciplinedclub as I hav& now, " continued Madsen, "But they $-56 over Arcadia and 7^-64 over Stanley-Boyd, which had ' highly regarded now stand with have really stressed defensethe last few years. ^iminated Neillsville—and a 12- * "We like to set up in a 2-1-2 zone on defense so'we can run out of qjrecord. it: We will go into a 1-3-1 offense if we have to, but we just like to • It will be no easy task for Mondovi to increase, its current .winning streak to five games, as Heart O'North Conference . " • (Continued on next page) Member Chetek comes into sectional play with an impressive 19-2 ¦ , : Mondbvl-Cftetek ' ijecord. Madsen Berger Glaniman - Olson McCauley Cole 1 Williamson Nelson - - Harmony ousted by Pacelli ©&-S6 Elston's squad suffered its coldest shooting night out of any oi. ; By BR UCEJ CLOSWAY Dally News - * Sports Writer 7 Winona its four post-season tournament games, sinking only 21 of 64 field ' : goal attempts for a frigid.32.8 percent Clyde Scheevel, Crajg's * ROCHESTER, Minn, — Playing catch-up basketball without ' normally ?narpshoottng twin brother, made only six of 20 shots, $our tallest player can be a frustrating experience. @7 and guardBob Evenson sank Just three of44. J At least that's what Harmony discoveredin its Region One "I couldn't go to thebenchand get a 6-5 kid like Pacelli's coach Glass A Basketball Tournament encounter with Austin Pacelli ipdrts could, but I thought (Mike) Austin did a fine job in place of Thursday, r ' Ije/ore some 2,650 fans in MayoCivic Auditorium here Wednesday March U, 1976 2b Scheevel," explained Elston. "He started four games after Craig injured his knee and we're looking forward to having him back • I Trailing 38-32 midway through the third quarter, Harmony lost Before two minutes bad elapsed, Scheevel made contact with next year (along witli the Scheevdl Brothers and Evenson)." 7 thkservices of Its tallest player when 6-5 Craig Scheevel drew Pacelli's Jack Hovland as the latter was sinking a layup, and the Headingtoh, a 6-5 senior, tbok advantage of Craig's absenceby , fiis'f if th foul with 3:17 to go in thie period. The Cardinals battled Cards' fate was all but sealed. , grabbing eight rebounds in thfe third quarter. Doitig most 6f his 7QaCk repeatedly in the time that remained, but they just couldn't "You don't save people this time of year," replied Elston when damage right under the. basket, Headington finished as the game's leading scorer with 21 points and leading rebounder with $ajch up with theShamrocks inside, asked why he decided not to pull Scheevel biit of the lineup tem- ¦¦¦ ' ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦ • ¦;. ¦ ' • fiacelli staved off one final rally by Harmony with just over porarily after he pickedup his fourth foul. "We had to stay with . .. 15:7.- ' ' . • . 7 V . :.; ' •: •* 7 -7 . * ' ; ' .. X.; X; \ : ' :* .. -'. * ' victory. ripped even several uncontested baskets from close range, and Elston was • Bvd minutes left and went on to post a 68-56 our best as long¦¦ as we could, or we might¦; ¦have¦ been J * • '¦ .' .. . 7^ * ' . 77' >77. Pacelli wound up spread In column in the first half, appeared to be operating at almost tofull by PeteRockersandJmi Headington. 7 7 . with a #-36 rebounding.with Ar^ngth although his left leg was still heavily wrapped due a The District One champions fought back tb within four points Hovland accounting fof 12 of them,.and the winners made goodon Knee injury suffered Feb. 13. But the aggriessive junior picked up at 58-54 OnDon Schroeder's jump shot witb2:31 logo, butPacelli's 26 of 59 shots, 44, 1 pwcent. Harmony Was guilty of 16 turnovers th :41 to go in the compared with 15T for thsShamrocks. ; 17, ;; his^foUr personal with 4 third perigd, and¦ Har- deadeye Tony Wagner swished a 20-frioter from the corner.and . JSiony Coach DelJBlston decided to leave him in the game.• ¦ ' . Rockere followed with two clutch free throws. ' Hovland chipped in with 14 points for the Shamrocks. 'XX Pacelli's Jack Hovland wins scramble tor a loose ball. Stars fall to Atlanta 5th in row W^^^^Mmi , Minn. (AP) ¦ J BLOOMINGTON ¦4 . The hot-shooting Atlanta iijt fiames, iresh off a convincing bullakes liiii ' ¦ 9jo victory over Boston, slipped BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) last season, he could have his let these guys see what they Tony Oliva will remain with a{ little Wednesday night but — 1salary reduced to$96,00O, : couldbeplayingfor." tame back io beat the lowly the Minnesota Twins baseball Other top* unsigned Twins' Major league * club owners Minnesota North Stars 4-17 . * ". '. teani a? a pihch hitter and players include Bert Blyleven, Were required . to notify j Atlanta Coach Fred Creighton coach, but he has agreed to a who earned $65,000 last year; . unsigned players Wednesday of yas worried about how bis team large cut in salary. Larry Hisle, $41,000, and Steve their option status or the would react after beating ' Twice an American League Braun, $36,000, players would became freif Boston so badly the night before batting champion, Oliva has .'¦Carew and Blyleven are the agents. * 7 in the National Hockey League. been unable to play in the field only-rones who would im- Technically,some 200players He saw the Flames finish two and has had difficulty running mediately benefit," said who haven't signed for 1976 the bases in recent years, due to Griffith, "In a year or two, we periods deadlocked 1-1 with ' began playing out their option Minnesota. a fright knee , injury, that has should havie manyjplayers. who year at midnight Wednesday required seven operations. " •could move to other teams ; | "After(in we took the one-goal when the clubs, under baseball .^ead the first period) we He was . league batting , easily. Many of bur players are law, automatically invoked the started fo go downhill, " said champion ih 1984, his . Topkie about to reach the peaks of their one-year renewal clause in last freighton. "But the boys came season, and also In 1971. Late in careers and they'd be valuable year's contracts; back aiid took a hold of the third the 1971 season he fell while to o&ier teams then." The' rehewfil elausie may be period," 7 chasing an outfield fly, and 'Griffith Indicated he would invoked at the same salary as ] Bearded Bill Flett triggered a suffered the injury that has hot cut someof the team's loWer the 'previous year,, a higher three-goal Atlanta flurry in the plagued him in recent years. 7 paid perforjners by the . salary or a cut of up to 20 per- Oliva, 34, played for the ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ third period with, his 20th goal at maximumamount.J cent, ;* '* :.;' * ¦ 7* ". * ' ¦ '.' .' .' " ' 4:20, breaking the 1-1 tie. American League in the AliStar >'I don't, believe it's fair to Thei Milwaukee Brewers I The Flames proceeded to Game nine consecutive years some of these players to cut ' slashed their seven unsigned Vrap it up from there on . a from 1964 through 1971. 7 them that much," said Griffith. . players the maximum 20 per- tower play goal by Larry The native of Cuba received "On the other hand, it's good to cent ' . * •* . :. ' ¦ '; •" jlomanchycli at 6:56 and a score an estimated' $75,000 last year fey Eric Vail at 14:46. ;¦' • " as he served, as the Twins' ! Claude St. Sauver opened the designated hitter. He signed a ^coring for the Flames at 12:42 two-year contract with Twins' $f the first period. President Calvin Griffith BrevvefB Gut Wednesday at Orlando, pla., - £ The North Stars broke goalie Dan , Bquchard's bid for a agreeing to take a salaty cut Shutout 34 seconds before the greater than20,per cent, , )X of £nd of the second period when If he bad not agreed to terms ookie Steve Jensen intercepted with a cut greater than' 20*. per " cent, he could have become a . ^iarilsMftWAUKEE . *50. . ; ' of Austin Paced! apd Mitch Harstad otXarwony * ,* . ' k ruled a free igent by arbitrator Shot* on. goat, Atlanta l&rij-jl. each make a valu swipe at a rebouHd In Wednesday night'8 Region One $129,000 last year and, despite xx x. Pitchers J|m . Statin,; Bill Minnt»otasn-lt)-->» , Out NeWs : winning hia fourth straight PeterSeitB. * ; 7. ^ Goalies. Atlanta, Bouchard. Minnesota, of reach semifinal game Jri Rochester. Pacelli 68-5^; ( D-^lly Tra vers and Tomj Hausman and won Sporis 5 ¦ . U>PrM!I.A*«,aiO. : American League batting title "Messersmith'' ¦ ¦[¦ ¦ ¦¦ s contract¦ waj¦ catcher photos by Jim Galewski) l , 1 x • . . Darrtll Porter .algned. Giel has noMrd MINNEAPOLIS , Minn. (AP ) - University of Minnesota than it first seemed, The ban expires March 4* 197B, so the team school's image has.been tarnished," , ," you doing everything above board?' " Olel recounited7'The thina actually will be precludedfrom playoff competition only in 1977. ' Athletic Director Paul Giel has onceagaln bounded back from¦ the Glbl, a former All-American football player at Minnesota, had I baiS?"Lar9Wa«? «>!«hTwithBUl was my constant wn^rn for^S latest blow ttftheschool'alntercolleglateathletlcprogram. However, a new penalty disclosedWedneiday wouldkeep eight been the school's athletic director tot hatidllBg of Wple, r .young people and the news 1 ¦ ¦>¦ ID days when the OhloState '¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ media¦ • ¦;in pai¦ - * "I'm happy in mv job 80 per cmtol tlie time «nd nave to think current players *- including all the starters from the current MinnesotaIwkelball riot took place, • ticular.V -., , *, * . ..; . *, .7 ' . . '• ' . " ' ii. ' ;;; • , •, *. ' . . that's a pretty good hatting average," said Oiel Wednesday. "I've team — from any post-season competition for their duration of i Since then, he has been hit with two discrimination suits; both Giel aald he fpund out, /or the first j time, tt»m the NCAA been able to do my lob and I have no hard feelings in tbe af- their collegiate careers at Minnesota. University Vice President still pending. One'euitcharglng lex dlscrlmlnatlonin allocation of charges that Muwclmah tookattondahceat jirtseosonWbrkoUls '¦ Stanley B. Kegler said the school will ask the NCAA to drop that termath of the NCAA inyiasUgalion-" : .; • . * • " '¦ " • , athletic scholarships was filed mat spring by university woman thus making the sessions mandatory - a flagrant violation; I. Minnesota was hit earlier this week wilh a three-yearprobation ban so the players could compete if the teato qualifies for post- golfer Ingrid Qallo, The other Contended that racial bias was a "lh my last talk with B|ll; I (old dm that th« bottom line read, by the National Collegiate Athletic Associationfor 127 recruiting season play In 1978 or 1979; factor in;ibe jelecUoii of Jim Dutcher as the echool's basketball 'Nobody to h*ving IUn/ ^ad*d Giel; ^vftthwght abohtlie committed iii the basketball protfrSm from 1971-75 In aadltion, the school must sever ties with several athletic c^ch oyerBIU qpfWd, a Mack who wlthDutcherwai , entire matterlongand hard and maybe nomewlierellong ' violations ¦ booalersandforfeltltathird-placetlnlshIn the 1972NCAA regional oiiebf three the line ' iinderforaw Coacb fllll Muiielnuin. , ' / * ! firtallsts for the vacancy left by Musselman. * < NCAA are a reduction of ntw tournament, Along with that forfeit goes returning $3l,*489 the "Despite all thesq things Oiel also said he coU'ldn't believe that the ' The main penalties from the ' , I refilly feel we're oh tho threshold of , thedla hasn't asked basketball scholarships from six to three for each of the next two i school received(rom proceedsbf the tournament, • having tho finest All-around program ln thc Big Ton," saldClol , at him directly abwt MB InvolVcment , activities by AssistantCoach .'., "in iny heart, 1 dotft feel I have egg on my lace, " saw UICI , A the adinltling . "I'm not naive and <.wtalnly a lot' years and a ban on all recruiting 't lost any, sarae^imo . th»l Ms misplaced faith In Musselmdn of people had to wonder JimcWy Williams for two > who has been athletic director % four years, "1 haven Was a major element In theachool's problemswith 'What do , you suppose Giel khew,* " said the rtocky," year* , but of tourae I'm deeply sorry that the the NCAA. grayliut 7 A two-year ban on po«t-MM»on tournamentpJay wai W»wvere ilees about my image, Vi talised with Bill inany tlihei and asked, 'Arcyou cleaii.. .Are athletic director, ' . . ¦ ' ' , ' ¦ . . ' ' ' ' ' iHtff.waH./.iwI^krt^d^lay-i^ ¦MMN ^-WHMWIMa MlMWHMlM ^NWW^^ y -* i. .ii.a, M ..*.l w.iii..-^M»i ^ .»*^.<.fi—.^ .i" ¦H» y'*—«!.. ' -mmMAaMu.M ^ ai. ^^^ .i ,^^^ . ¦*.>» ¦ MflW* 7 «.—. V-Wwfra; . ' ' - • | March 11, 1976 (Bcoreboard) ]D Winona Daily News - Thursday, ^b

Boys' basketball ad i das! t- WEDNESDAY'! RESULTS M1HSL HBO. Yaike tal I*— l lies • Ausllr Pifcelll 68, Harmony 56¦ • MSHSI. IISO . JA— ' , * * , Blue Earlh 67, Edgerlon SW Chrisllsn 6] . ^ , M^^S' m. ^iiiiiligiia^iS:NEW YOR K (AP) . MSHSL RS0. 7A— '¦ r - Carolina , center jtobert Parish supreme intimldator under the Etko W, Pine City S5 . txff r " - • Indiana's Scott May and Notre Orr 51,Chisholm 46 ^X : , ef Centenary and guards Phil' basket, the 235-pouhder ¦ ¦—j^fit- - Dame's Adrian Dantley, TODAY'S OAMES . y$& ^ two of Ford of North Carolina and Ron collected nine, rebounds and 17 MSHSL REO. IA— a i qame Wlnono Colter vs.* Kenyon, 8 p;m. lZ the ;, ' country's ^old-plated Lee oi Oregon.; points a game. He had a high of Jlenry Yackel earned himself Winczewski Sr. came in with a forwards, were named to the On the third ; team were, 38 points against Michigan this, ¦ College basketball an ABC Century Patch Wed- 584, George Kottschade had an ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ' ¦ ¦ 1976 Associated Press. 7A11- forwards, of season and came up with a nesday night by rolling a high errorless 502 and O'Laughlin . - . ROM- * COMETV/Wiwit. i - ,- America basketball team Tennessee, Terry Furlow . of basketful of game-saving plays WEDNESDAY'S RBSULTS ", ' game of 277 for Smith's Winona Plumbingrecorded 999—2,752. An Adidas Best Seller • . ' ' ' . .' ' ¦ • ¦'' ¦ NAIATOORNBY- A Low Priced Adidas , • today., . .. • Michigan State, of for the Indiana team, Alabflma Huntsvllle7i),DoaneS9 Furniture in tbe Retail League Westgate Mixers —. . Hope For Competition and Joining the frontcourt stars , Copplo SI. M, UWP6rk8l.de 6/ Track Shoe on North Carolina State;; Center HenacrMn SI. 60, Illinois at Mapleleaf Lanes, ' Dennis turned in scores of 219 Training - FIKST TEAM Wesleyan 66 ¦ ¦ the first team are May's Tbeoh Douglas of Alabama aiid Adrian Dantlay* «¦ Lake Supjrlor- St. 76, Edinboro St. 73 But Yackel, who started the ahd 536, Ann; Lilla toppled a . 5, lunlor, Notre :.' tlncolnM«norlal t07, ' ' teammate at Indiana; center guard-forward Earl Tatum of Dame,* Scott Ma/, tr. seniof, Indiana,* - calll. -Baplifi ;i night with a 175 average, failed 581, Mary Lou Hazelton came in Kent Berison, 6-11 Indiana; John . Marymounr83, Central Washington 72 . lunlor, Newberry 65, Grand Canyon 58 . ¦ ' ¦' ; Phil Sellers, tha Marquette. Lucas, A A, senior, Maryland; Phil Sellers,* to reach the 600 mark.* with a 543 and Winona Liquor brilliant Rutgers swingman, May and Dantley* areV 6*5,sentor;Ruts«rs, . Toxas Souttwrn82, Felririont st..7S * . the ¦ ¦ '•¦. SECOND TEAM . NCAACIV. II PLAYOPPS— ' Dave Ruppert finished with teamed up for 925^-2,629, and Maryland guard .John. premier 7 players from this . Richard Washington, 1 9, lunlor UCLA; Cheynoy St. 73. Hartwich 7! (ot). . 's ¦ , . Philadelphia Textiles?, Buffalo St. 69 an errorless 635, AT;Smith * ., Westgate Men ; — Mary ¦' ¦/.' Mitch ' ¦• Kupchak, ' .«•» ,• senior; . North Lucas, * ' year's 7college crop, according Carolina; Robert Parish, .71 , senior, Eastern Illinois 65/SI. Joseph's, Ind. 56 managed a 609 and Smith's Rupprecht rolled a 232, Jim ,, Evansville 85, ¦' . ' - ,W . WrloM St: 75 . . ' May* a 6-foot-? senior, anii to pro observers. Centenary ; Pttif Ford, * . -J2, sophomore, ' Winona FTumiture teamed up Holubar managed a 582, . ^ 77 Nortti ¦Oakola 86, Nebraska North * . Carolina,- Ron ' Lee, 6-4, - senior, ¦ ¦ Omaha.7< DanUey, a ' 6:5 :; Junior;':Werfe , Scouts descHbe the slick loll .. . *, Wunderlich Insurance, hit 1,013 . Oregon.. . UW Orton Bay 73, Mankalo ' for 1,095-3,037. ' selected for the second straight Indiana*, forward as ' "the ¦ . */ '• THIRD TEAM . 61.67 (2ot) and Bfess Camp wound up with : Bernard King, 8-7 , iophomore. Ten- BarkcrsllcldSt. 87, Calif. Davis65 * .MAPLELEAF : Commercial .Lucas .;; pugelSoundBO, Cal Poly -Pomon-l 65 year- The , 6-47 . wc(s a complete player a .clutch nessee; . Earl '.Tatum, *, 6-6, senior, — Stan Doebbert's 237 was the 2,788. . second-team selection .last shooter ... ajiarti worker ^t both Marquette; Leon Douglas, 610, . senior, high in the loop, Bruce Sunsetters — Betty Schultz Alabama,- * Kenny Carr, 6 7 , sophomore, g$me season, while the 6-5 Sellers was ends of the court.". May scored North Carolina state; Terry Furlow, 6-5.. Pro basketball carded a 213 en route to a 548 s ¦ ¦ Krings came in with a 622, Rich , HAILLET senior, MlchloariState. * .WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS¦ VIENNA on the third team and 6-ii close to 24 points a game while HONORABLE MENTION . NBA-v ¦ ' ¦ Thurley had a 601, the Winonq Joyce Langowski was next with ¦ - \ S ' A Popular Light Train- The Most Popular Ten- Benson made honorable leading the Hoosiers to the Big Lonnle Shelton, Oregon state; .Armond - . Boston 92, Los Anoeles 89 ' • * . . Jaycees worked for 1 036 and a 538, followed by: Marlene : lllll,V Princeton; . Ten- * .-, Philadelphia 125, Phoenl* 108 , ¦ ing Stioe. nis Shoe in the World. mention. 7 Ten championship and an un- nessee;. Tom Lockhart, Manhattan; Ed Houston 113, Portland 110 ' Mississippi Welders totaled Flanagan with a 533, Mary Jordan,, Rutgers; Mike Dabnev, RutgerS; . . . Buffalo 120, lilow Orleans . With : 5(80 votes . from the defeatedregular season. - 105 2,912. Hengel with a 528, Bonnie Scott 1 George Johnson, St John's; Eddie Owens, - Seattle 110.Atllwaukoo 105 ' ' " * 7 nation's .'/sports : . writers and Dantley, who applied as a Nevada-La) V«as;' Chuckle Williams, ABA— . * Semor Citizens — Gen Knopp with a 516 and ElsieDorsch with ta^**Ai*wiA*WMfi**iti0miv *it*vvwiMyv*v***0i Kansas State; Aurques Johnson, UCLA,* Indiana 129, Denver 119 ' ¦ ' broadcasters, May was the tygh hardship case for the pros but Jell -Fosnev Vanderbilt; Lloyd Walton, Kentucky 128, San Anton lo \7A lot i and Mabel Glaunert led the a 502. Boland's Manufacturing —SPOT-BILT- scorer on this year's team withdrew at the last minute last Marquette; ' •twchey ** Green, Michigan; . SI. Louis 99, New Ybrk 95 women with -179 and 463 swept team . scoring With V -^ Bobby Wllkerpn, Indiana.* Marshall , nosing out Dantley by four. year, scored close to 29 points a Rogers, Pah /rttertcan; .Mike, fhllllps, respectively, and Ralph Har- 934-2.C77. 7 Behind Daritley's ?37B were game for the Irish "Dantley Kentucky,-' MIW Thompson, Minnesota ; Pro hockey dtke paced the men with Coffee—Joe Johnson tippeda Wayne Rollins, Clemsoni Wally Walker, '- ' • ¦ Lucas.with 288, Sellers with 272 cab. score from inside or out- Virginia';. James .Edwards, Washington; WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS . 224^-529. : . . • • ' 192 and finished witli a 527, • . -¦ . SHOES Sonny Parker, Texas AIM; Tony Roberts NHL— * BALL and Bfcnsw with 236. -; side;" said a pro scout. "He's , . Lucky Ladies — Sue Barb Weinberger came in with BASE Oral Roberts; Qulnnn Btjckner,, Indiana; Buffalo?, Pittsburgh 6 Top Quality . Leather — in . ¦ ¦ ' The first team was a clearcut another .:. an Otls Birdsbng.. Houston; Willie Smith, St. Louis 2, Toronto! (lie) Palubicki carded a 193, Marilyn a 543 and the Scatter TPins %Lf% OO . TT Missouri; Alex Enp)J«v South Carolina; Morclreal 5. Chicago I* . . combined for 763—2,232. T White and Black. Reg. $27.00 . T M I 7 . choice above the AP's second . excellent of fensive rebounder, '' Freeman Williams, * Portland State;.Todd Atlanta 4, Minnesota 1 Nogosek managed a 518 and the : team which included: forwards' Trlpucka, Lafayette; Matt , Ultks, Nor- California i , Detroit 3, Schultz Transit foursome Alley Cats — . Judy Rompa . —TSpecial...... ;. ., *:.. 7 Am U * Benson was described as a Therri . Louisiana) Mike ¦ . McConathy, Vancouver 3, Kansas City 1 * Richard 'Washington of UCLA ' 'self-Sacrificing, tremendously Louisiana . Tech; Lee Dixon, Hardin- WHA—. ' .. * . * . compiled 712—2,094. rolled a 198, Delorls Francois Simmons,- Sam Pellom. Bulfalo, Phoenix 3, New England 2 managed a 459, the Ravens and Mitch Kupchak of North hard-working player." . A - Cleveland 5, Cinclnnatl.2 Classic Junior High Girls — HUSH PUPPY-LEATHER . Winnipeg.10, Quebec 3 ** » Lisa Kuhlman tipped a 218, Kay reached 709 and the Sandpipers Zaborowski. finished with a 347 wound up with 1,937, $ y WCHA Playoffs for twtf games and the Twinkle ATHLETIC CLUB: Ace - 3?^' ¦ ¦ ^ :yii^ai^'y.y^¦ ;^.; -' x IfaiiKic j ilr i'^% Toes took team honors with Steve Loshek . had a 219, Don GOlf SHOES S " ' wm "xx- i ' -i-Xx i'' -:_j , \.- ,: . . oA* -- liaW-aS-aKI i WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS 24^ ' Michigan 8, Notre Dame3 . 944—1 800 * - * Troke turned in a 529 and Coca . . MlcWgan Tech 5, Denver 4 . * WESTGATE: Mike . Deut- Cola compiled 1,033-2,834. : . Mlctilgan St. 6, Wisconsin 4 ; Wfnnesota?, Coforado College'4 ' schman leveled ,a 244, Tony 7 CONVERSE * f/#^^^ ].* ¦¦ '_ ¦¦ ' ' ALL 7; 1975 KAWA$AIC|S I - :Wk^W^^ Ji ^ ^ . Bucks ' box score STARS : SEATTLE (110) i^ lfc ' '; ' ' : In Boys' size 3 to Men's size '[. .Gary 5 1-2 11, Seals 10 3-6 23, Burleson Mondovi-Chetek ' ^O^ '**i*^yv^* 18, ' ¦ -13. In while or blue. 6 00 12, Gilliam 2 00 4. Watfs 9 00 | '¦ ^\V^. '' .*^ ' ^ Brown 12 23'26,. Banton 5 0-1 10, Derilne (Continued from page 2B) ' s^i^ 0 Ot) 0, Skinner 1 O-O 2, Tiorwood 2 00 4, AbdulAllzOOO O. TololS.:52 6 12. ' grab the rebound and run and get the shot off as fast as possible. EG MILWAUKEE 11051 It's more fun to score points." • C5Sa Dandridge 10 2 2 12, /Weyorj 2 66 10, « . $1A503 Smlth4 67 14, Price6 5 5 . 17.Winters5 0 ^ * ,;. 0 10. fox 3 2 2 8, BrokawS 2-4 12; Restanl The match-up of talent will be fairly even. Berger and his back- ;.- . sia^^lU " 3 01 t. Brldoeman 3 0*2 6. Totals: 4) 13 ' , X ' " ¦, court companion, 5-9 Tom McCauley, : will go against a senior ^/ Six-speea transmission . W^//JxX^i^Xyx' ^ ' '' ' 29. ^^^^^ ^i/ ¦ x^^tm ¦ SEATTLE...... 24 21 34 39-110 combination of two-year starters, 5-llDick' Langhough and 6-2 gets you anywhere: '7 : ' : ¦ ;7\ T :¦ ¦¦¦¦.»' ' ¦ 7: JwM_ ^i/¦ . N :- - f*\ MILWAUKEE.. ' 25 35 16-105 MariusHall. ... •' . ' * iOV/ *\ * Fouled out: None. Tota f fouls: Soattlc!5. *< . • Powerful 124cc engine*. ' '. ; Milwauket¦¦ 25. , Technical:. winters. A: In the front court, the Buffaloes will start Britt Cole, 5-4 junior, WE ALSO HAW y/ ra' • |0£fth ip* 9,587 , • . along with Glanzman and Olson, while the Bulldogs will counter with a trio of seniors in three-year starter Chuck Schaaf and Rod .. V.Lightweight sturdy; frame ^ffS ^ ¦ OF PUMASIN STOCK ; J p X^^ WHILE VwPlY ' Pacelli box score . Crase and Chuck Harrimen. PACELLI (68) HARMONY (56) ¦ ¦ ¦ Crase is 6-5 and averages 17 points and 12 rebounds per game, - ' Sup&b performance..: V PiusFrolaht ¦ LASTS! ' . '9 « tp • ,- . ' I» It IP ( J Hovland 4 69 14 while Schaaf, who nets 15 points per game, and Harrimen are 6-0 Ihe rqad and iiails " ¦:¦¦ " -X N^ndset-up-/ . ' . . ' • Harsta* 2 ll | on . . * Auer * 2 14 5 Cl.Schvl 6 23 14 and 6-3, respectively. 7 ; Heodnt(in 8 5B 21 Auslln 1 5-6 7 ;: ¦ P.Rocfcrs . s 4-5 lO .Cr .Schvl 5 00 ID "If we win it will be a team effort. I think the boys realized that " " Wagrw * * .. 5 OOlO.Johnson 1 0 0 2 ' , .^ D.Rockfs 3 0 0 6 Evenson 3 6 6 12 when Greg fouled out with seven minutes left in the game against •••• ^ •••••• ^^ •^ •t^*^'' King , 0 UrO O D.Schdr: ' ¦ ¦ " ' ; ' ' ' 2 00 4 Black River Falls. But Steve Williamson stepped in and really ¦' ¦ ¦ F ' 7 ¦ ¦ ¦ '^¦ ¦ " ' ' " X -X . X "'. PlMFfetBht- * J.Fcllen .. 0* . 00 0 Easier. • , 1 00 2 ' ' - ' ' *.y - - ¦ ¦ SfiQOOO Chrlslsn B . 0 0 0 Harms 0 OO O sparked the team. This is no one-map team." 175 S969 NOW . .. "¦. . '.:. . .. . '. '...... 05J-3 sndSet-Up ' ' ¦ ...... R,Felton I 00 2 Berse 0 oo 0 Williamson is Mondovi's' top reserve, but Dale Nelson also ' C Wagner 0 O0 0 C.Harstd O (H> 0 1B3E. 3RDStoreST. ; .Ml List - O . Plus Fteight Outdor . &'70nncy . ¦yG.ScHrdr ' 0 . 00 0 t comes of f the bench with relief help. - 7. 250 y. S1199 NOW ...... ;.; . ; fpU 7and§el-Up . ¦* *-*-- HKB'''''H -'''''' ^HaaaaBaMiaMiaB iH' ^ ¦' ...... TotailL it 16-26 61 Totals . 21 14.1716 ' : ...... : . . .. — . ,¦ xx ¦ . - , ¦ ¦ '' - ;¦ ¦ ¦ • . ':i H-1.* * T '- ROTO U3t *7 ' . - ' .; . '* . - . Score By QuaHeri , , - . ,. : V . 7 . _ / . . . . : . . . . ;. ;, - . ( *f i x ' T = ¦ ¦. ¦ ¦ . ^ . . ..* . SH QQOO PlusFrelflht * . | . . .xx: -X .-. . ./ ¦:¦ ' fc - * ¦ Pacelli ..., .....\ . . .ift u- 13 M_4| .' . 500 * ' .;; Bike.* ,. $1699; NOW . .;. ; . . ,. ,. . . II W and Set-Up . ' ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ...... Hitmeny . . -.,,;¦ u *ii io _*-tt Fouled Out: . Ct: ' Scheovel rota l Fouls: Pacelli 15,-fHarmony 19.

Wiscons in cage Wi^ J m ALL 1976 BIKES sectional pairings "O^^Auirrt -' Inivii' cw SAveYbi) CoW CA$k ! AT BELOIT— * Beloit /Womoriat' M9 0 vs Mukwonago ^ (IS-S) ' .Kenosha Bradlbrd * (119) vs. ¦ ; ; ;; Save You Money Oconomowoc (10.1II v^»;\. Well AT OREEN SAY-t- ; _ ; ^^: ; ; ^ ^ Anlloo (1J7) vs. Greon Bay Southwest -: :* v«b^^ : ^V ; : ___ — * ^ ^ ^ ^ 191 Jl , jV vs, ^ Kaukauna (13^8) .^^ Green Bay Preble ^ ¦ ^^ ^ ^ ' ' • ' : * * . : ^ (M- -ll . .. ;-^; ;^^fe ^^^^ ^ ^^ ^ ^ AT AIADISON— V. T ^* ;x: toyy-y * ^^^ ^ Baraboo (137) vs. MaOison West 1114) :*4B f ^ms . ^ C-a Crosse Logan (13-6) vs. Sun Prlaric ^ ^ 119 »*, ¦ . , . Available ' V, AT MARSIJFIELO- 274 Uird 5t, - Winona J E.C.* Memorial (IB 2)' vs. Wausau East (17*3) y ¦ Superior ( 19 I) vs. Wisconsin Rapids (9 '^^rj HI i TERMS IN EXCESS OF (, v ' '¦ ' ** AT «SHKOSH— ^___ / \ _ A * ^r-60 Beaver Dam (18?) vs Sheboygan South ' MONTHS TO PURCHASE / y ' (14-4) • 36 .^_ W/ ^ f_\ ^K__\ . Noenah (16-4) vs, Wesl Bona East (W 3) THAT NEW AUTOMOBILE raclncB y \(^^^TJf . ZJ ^t^ WMIW. Hamilton (|3 n vs. Racine ¦' '' A ~ ^ HorllcklU-t) WITH PAYMENTS LOW EMOUQH \ -^^\ ) j km>- Mllw. Lincoln* I1S4) vs. :South ; MilwaukeeISOOI * . TO FIT ANY BUDGET ' ¦ AT WBST ALLIS- (t ( "''-' ' B'rookflelt) East 113 !) vs. New Berlin Elsenhower (173) Mllw..Washington (16'.4> vs. .West Allis T'60* Central (14 6) y y ^: AT WHITEFISH BAV— A» i ¦ y CedarOurg. (1191 vs. Milw. Madison (IS f *gk 5) Sussex Hamilton (Jl?) vs. Whitefish Bay (M.S) . CLASSB ATCUBACITY- BrodhoOtl (17 4) vs. Prairie Ou Chien (20 11 • ___ Mauston ! 13 7) vvviroqua (16 4) ' f AT OREBN BAT- i Cllnlonvlllo (17 41 vs. Winneconne MB 3) m^M^M^M^M^M^M^^r¦ ¦ ^ ' . : V W; Slurgoon Bay (BID vs. Wittenberg.Blr JilsmmSsmmmmmmJ X ' !¥' : « ~~? P^^^ HM ' m'lM* i narnwood (20*1) • i\f % AT fPOONER- bP ' / ^JSyy0 - ' Amcry (16 5)vs.Laa ,smlih (JO I) .Chelek (19*2) vs.Monaovl (1291 ATWHITEWATES- AAIIIon(19 2)*vs.SI.Francls(l5«l ' t/ LA* * , jiiiuirtii'^'Lim^'iJ-jmituni'.¦ " —^fcw T Q 1 / Ripon (14 6) vs. Sheboygan Falls (io 10) ^^ ^"^V imAl ^w^^L> V LOANS ± Marathon (Jl 0)«. Shiocton 11371 IA I y Kilchon romodfllinfl • , * ^^S]§ 0 ^^SFyx ^^^X^i^^MSK/^^^j^^S ^W>^^B ArwesTiiNo- , Cambridge (IS 6) vs.Oaklieldl 19 ll M»M«-()!•- » va.Rlo (21,11. ,

Remodeling, UWGB nips * Nome your projecr . ; ^^^ IHH ^^^^ S Li^rSSS' ^ ^^ B Mankato St. ^l^^^^ j ^^^Blffjr fe ^pP r UBC does it alt. . ' ', ¦ GRAND FORKS, N.D. /AP) modernizing, maintenance. —Freshman center Ron Ripley W/ltKB t *W_^_^_^_Wmi / tt^ ^^ scored 24 points, Including two ¦ ¦ baskets to start a second ' ' ' ¦• .. . x r.X tnl fMtl,l --] • All services through oneto responsible firm. ' overtime, , to hqad Wisconsin- Experienced* answers your -questions. Green Bay over Mankato, * H [ M|H J Hlii ^ " | * Minn., State 72-67 Wednesday in , ' • Monthly payment plan. Free the first round of a National Hj ^^^^ H^ HHHHHk Collegiate Athletic Association Division II regional basketball ' , , MMonthi 4«Momm lOMwilit \y l yV*»S »«"^^^ ^^^ tournament. , jl^—.mm*^*^^ '9 ' 'T^^ UWGB scored 14 points In the SO... . Amoiml * Monltily Tolal ol Monlhi) Tslnlot " Monlhlj lolilol " „, ' ._„_„* , ... .,,, 1U„ ,.; second period , NEW AUTO, VISIT- US Oil CALL «54-«20 AND*, ¦ extfa Fln.ne.0 P.ym.m P.,m.»l. P.»m.nl P.-jm.nt, p.ym.iil pivmml. . BEFORE VOU SHOP FOR A ¦ ' ' DON'TP« M0BE FOR A ¦ consistentlyConnecting on free ( 4I.N .»,« I1>«.M l 3.,M |.a„.00 , ¦ ¦IM IIN1JI ™ ^ UBC ' «»60-MON1H CAR LOANS.., EASIEST LOANS IN THE WORI.D TO GET- ,. , • ' I throws to pad its margin. !000 MM 2K3 3. • M,lt W54.U 42.4l sii4.20 ¦ SEE us. IH^^^i Mankato outshot the Phoenix V: Z M; S - .45 ' aS»,S '^ S1S'.2 . ' •¦•»»»* WANS «* THE WORLD TOUVE WITH ... , :, ¦ ' ' • 1000 0e,«( J4M.M • «.0I 3«at,«4 • «J,t) 3121.00 y : ,, 1, i' i frorh tbe floor , 2ft-28, but UWGB ^,,clM n ¦*1- ¦ UNITED ' 1800 I12.M 4093.M 8a.» ^JiSO.OO 74.)! 4Vl»,M *""' ? . sank 22 of 28 freethrows to nine ' X' BUILDING 1000 130 01 4C4438 . , 10MI -4t«!.t4 04.1) SOJt.W ai ^^»J orflSforthe ". UIIUAir ^ IVIlill 11 lpsws. 4500 148*14 8229.04 . 11411 34rl.2t . OS I) * 3JJJ.0O . WlllvMA HATIvMAL CENTERS The 6-fopt-9> Ripley ' also woo tei.M 80O1.H m.n cou.o] ioi.li oro.to . sT , ' ~ ;grabbed 12 rebounds, although ' m m\_J(C(/wlC ^fV\w ~\\' I »nn«iill>«««nUt»ll4H l,k» i* ».I8>I ».»» *II 'i * • S»^^ H x 1 ' Mankato controlled the boards ' ' , - The fight, step for All building services - ' ' I MtM0t«tS0lB4LIHI OSII IHSUII«NClC0tlP0H»llON | \\)_f03Smw*m^ * ' 50-38. Brian Boettcher added IS ( , f ' ' West of Penney's points for the Phoenix, 21-7 on Phono 464-4320 ,/ ' , phone 452-3384 3560 N. Service Drive, YOURDEPaSIT6 *<0WIHSUnEQT 0S4D.0DO«V f.D.I.C. ' ' - - ' 1 ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦¦- - Uie season. " ' * ' " Baseball players have 'ultimate weapon,' says Seaver or June, we would have a general idea of how many thereare , KTAMPA ( AP) - As usual at this time of the baseball year, the The latest court ruling left the owners witli an araal to the U.S. counsel for the players association. "They just tried Jodlsguise it May -pitchers are ahead of tlie hitters Supreme Court as their last recourse abit." and who they are. ", Only this time the players arc the pitchers and the owners are "Do they want to try going to the Supreme Court and meanwhile The major schism ls still whether Ihe rights won by the players Technically, some 200 players who haven 't signed for im th^ hitters not play ball or pay salaries for two years?" Seaver wondered. In the landmark Messersmlth-McNally arbitration decision last began playing out their option year at midnight Wednesday when one-year Ttie two sides meet again today for the 26th time in a series of ' 'The Supreme Court wouldn't even hear the case—they don't get December — i.e., that a player is bound to a club for only one tbe dubs, under baseball law, automatically In-voked the , contract negotiations that has produced little progress. Whether involved in arbitration matters, anyway " option year beyond contractual commitments—canbe stripped renewal clause In last year's contracts „ 'eitherside ts ready to reduce its demands at today's brief session What the owners want — at least m their latest proposal away retroactively In collective bargaining. \n fact, Mike Mar- The list of unsigned players includes Seaver, Fred Lynn, Rod .cy a longer one scheduled for Friday m St. Petersburg is Wednesday — is an agreement in which a player with six years of shall of the Los Angeles Dodgers has announced his intention to Carew, John Maybcrry, Ted Simmons, Thurraan Munson, Al - , debatable. major league service could play out his option in his seventh year sue tbe players' union If such is the case. Hrabosky, Graig Nettles, Carlton Fisk and Bert Blyleven. . ' ." "There' and becomea freeagent thefollowingseason. /'The owners seen to think that there will be hundreds of un- ., ; s no w ay to go now but to settle," said Tom Seaver of the The Minnesota Twins invoked the renewal clause for 23 players , _ lS'ey V ork Mets as the players savored a pair of court decisions The catch in the proposal is that the club could retain the signed players wbo will play out their option this year," says wilh 2Z. The renewal " ' two more years simply by offering him Marvin Miller, executive director of the players' association. "I while the Atlanta Braves were close behind tliat upheld an arbitrator's ruling granting free agent status to player s services for up to at the same salary as tbe previous year, a a contract for that length of time. The players' associationsays predict that there will be less than two dozen who will do it. My clause may be invoked .pitchers Andy Messersmith andDave McNally cut of up to 20 percent. ' "The owners iold us - that's just another way of wording the owners' previous proposal proposal is that we ppt the reserve-clause issue aside and find out higher salary or a , they had only a 30 per cent chance of theirisever unsigned players in the appeals court They were which would have given eight-year veterans the chance to become just how many players will play out their option The Milwaukee Brewers slashed *injnng right They lost, and now although negotiations can continue aJI , the players have what you might call the ultimate weapon," free agents in their 10th season after one option year. "None of the players can be a free agent until October anyway. , the maximum 3D per cent, Seaver said "It's still 8-and-l no matter how you sljce it." said Dicfc Moss, That gives the teams more than six months to sign ttiem. But by season.

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added warrantiesPlagainst us road hazards, Beltedk#Vl ivv l tii-PQIII vvi and tread wear up to 44 months. 4 for $88 plusWhltewalls 1.82 fed. tax each tlre Re $2§ each. Size B78-13. Aramid! _____m - 9-Reliant Belted. TL A 1{ MA 4m\W*±V MK ^^^^^ KBBH Feature* 2+2 constructionof fiber I I l lCr UltrIIDGr ^^^^^^^^^ H " 9lass D6lt8 and Polyester cdrds. In the wide 78 series _ """ ~ ---w> profile. only. No ~ _, T ^^^^^^^^^ H trade-in required. j tt )9fC Sale prices eKecti-mthru Monday. StrOHCI6r * ^^^^^^^^^^ H

eaC£ OuV new radial lire is BO rugged, we 've given it ^^^^^^^^ H JS t* "9' M- <378:15 plus 2.65 fed. tax each tire Reg. 37.C0 ea. ^iJ K !^ MC ^b 3?*!?? our first fufi t^vo year warranty, lis belted with 9 ¦ H78-1S plus 2.87 fed. tax each tire Beg. 39-C0 ^^^^^^^^^ B G78M4rw: i^h.. plua oSf(ed. l!^ o* « - , :¦ ea. an ni^zmgncwIibcrcalledAromldlhat pound ^^^^^^^ Hl 2^ lax each^ ^tire Reg. 36.00^ ea. :, ;.- , . - '* -: . ( ¦ ¦ for pound is actually stronger than steel. Other ^^^^^^^^^^^^ H^H ; . ,-;¦. , '. ,' . *. . . . - -...... ¦; .: . . * ' ' ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ outstanding features: 2 polyester radial plies, [— i^ :— . . . . ' , ' . .' . ' . ' . —r-**-—; '.' :y ' X \ ' IJf—-^"^!. ' ,;¦/?»• . • • I '> -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H ' ¦ :¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' ' ¦¦ special sfdewaH sfaMIizers, ? rib tread design . ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H is* . ' x . . ' -[Xr . ' - .y ' i ' '. ". I .' , y ' ' . XI • . :¦ • ' • '¦;¦ ' * ¦ 1

¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦¦ _ ; . . ,^. ¦¦ ¦ The new JCPenney Aramld Belled Radlal. lt jjaj regfej; ,, ' ¦ X Jx " ; '¦ ' . /¦' ' . . ' ¦:. : '¦ "' :x*bj-v C AJ| A D QQ^ r-—¦—-i— I n * w^^m____Mmm\ " ' i^^^^^ (j )&«ri ^fesJHi vClWr0BOO TirO size Price f fed: tax : IIIS BB ¦¦ FR78-14 63.00 2.63 V ' ' ; - ' ' ______^V ;7^A/ ^^^ 21< ^ " N^V:^^W ll*nt Wh*d j ^lic *. . GR78-14 69.00 2,80 ' ______W_m Xlr K^S(S^JM( y^__^_^_\\ ^ft ™*' " ¦ ^/ HR78-14 75.00¦ 2.99 ______%¦' • ' $^' 'r^ JSFT^ t ^y , .„ „ ,, « ¦ ' o«« " ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H ' ( /^y^tafitri P'yf ^vaMA ' . \^_____ :''-tMlanc*'6l 2 . front wMett _^?L*.« _i^___ - ¦ ¦ ¦ : : ^?Z!il!_ ,^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^______\______\ H i ' <' 'HS ' ^x\ v v :i'' ^^•^^•p;,' «dd S3. . UQ70 -AC 77 g\n 1 (17 . \ \utlTKSI Ir 1 *v^ irVKli^lmmmmr ^^/m ' P* *SplnIffPOCtlOII. HB78-15 77.O0 3.07 bafano. 7 ______¦ V ' ¦% (&*&¦' ^T^ ' 1 X/O/ / 1R78-15 86.-00 3.34 ' ' r ' y ' i2 ,or "ca s with' eir - _^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^M'A^—i^hSL-A / ' _\$iC ^!zai - "'"^ * *

~ " ¦ JCIMlir*!*/«B*MUB DELTED ' HADlAlWAHRAHTY ,* , ¦ '* . : X. '. * .^. . ' , ; I ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H . ¦ ¦' ' ' '^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H ' . .Qauo An l-PDannou ¦ 7^____Xm ' Uy , wdVC Ull *JVr Clin©y , SSffli M ___ fttiiitiilajartli ': '^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_m K .'* . ' - , * X -r* ' ' . ^^___ mms*^sm**m*mm^ ^v m JI^SES K^K ^^ f0^^ ^^ ^ ?4 Morrlfi3ofUli.dnc)Lml ! J2lncl>clTr.0[jnemalnln(l ¦ «M»I>.> ^H^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ l " wfcMI¦ ¦ WIIIIU OBM I ICB > fufffflH "*~ ' 9m . ' ¦ ' ' ¦ ; : . ' - x , ~ ¦ * | ' - . ;- ! * ' ^I^'^^mm r* "^ sS^H' l» ¦W^______^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^______m__^_\__\ ' _a m " m m± .^m flB'r *fll :, ' __^_^_^_^_^_^_^_m_^_\\-" ^ M#%tAf #IO* QQ R«fi-'54-95ws rrxm ., x.. -:- ,, x .:, , , ,.,,,, ,.. .^..i.,,,^,,;,.,,.;,,,,. ' _^m l lv If fv UQ mpscl ijgf m .,-) .:.Y , l,.. . m^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^B ¦ u j u tl ' \' , 'Un\,„n<, '.,:, r 'l.r .-.l^ , ______^KK^_W^______- ' ¦: T . »' «?!| ¦* jrB, L W_j^______\______\____\_m^_^__\____^_^____m We will tpray-f lll " * .Provide*' tlmlnfl llflht. •" "'""'"-.""'.' "' ".-"" .""". ';' ' ' ";' ' ''t/''' '¦''.' BiW ^ ™ W•ppowWiMt. T pf car Pre-fpc«5e«l, ,.;r,.;7l, ,7 ,'.., , . ' ,, ,,.';,;„,. .,, ;', ' . V'^^ Mlffliftl H Sidans \"'T,r,7^7.7. , j.: :I * ^ ¦ ^^ H HHHHHK ^ R Reo 64 SB Now 49 Be lubrtcotJon, Helps keep brilliant Xenon lamp, w, ««wii p-f,,i-* IJ «,» i,f«. f nV9in, ir..: ih,,,, l,,1 ,,-r,. . waHnraBBW| ' . >n(|tfw ekwan, h«lp» trigger opwalfd. 0-150Q . v*«» (>r!n-.ii.- «. m« w*nir.<) *.i**i*,iw.t . »i.rii...u . VHBH ^^^ H .. * , . WW»Hat«t»en Ji/ajOlM!i»«nfl«, , H«fl.c|»>, 69.85AO OR, ««.-..io a"« . : . ii** ' * . Nflw49.8( nr«l«M in. 'i».i «iw.««» HPMDDU . nignuinh im ^ A... •nwu .inpnuDif> . "^^^ ¦¦ ^^^ ¦ ' , . " prowpl again*t oxNMtioii, imp»ct cut. wifr^i/P.^MWoniM Aiiowam*. 3t>- ^ ^^ ^iall'4B4-5120.sxt. 73. rust tml wear, 1 qt ciifi. Cqnneclp to car twllfry V^^I^^^^^^H '' n- . -, wvd 'i. .|; ^>ril»- 'i> ,-jnl, r.^t.r.-» .in ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ~~ ' 8 " v ^^ T^HHH¦ fj ^^^^ H ' ' ' ' ' * • * ' ., , . . ' SlU CHC4» (ffeotlv* V * "d *P*f* plUfl. 12 VOll* ' ' l 1 . ¦ ' ¦ ' ' ' ' : • ' "^^^^^ . ' | ,* 7 ; : —* through Non. -" ".P,n,V'" . ;- . '. - '. T .- >:'I ' * . . ' ^ . '

' ¦ ' JCPemey' ' ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' ' ¦ " ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ : ' ' : ' ¦ " ' ' ' ¦ ' ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' " " ' ' ' ' ' , ' ' ( days.' ., • " * i' . ,:.,: .. . * . /. * * . , . ¦* .* . . * . ' ...... v - m Winona Daily News _ |rC| Thursday, u MalniN0.1seicl Sports in Brief skaters win; PTQ March tl , 1976 OP EDINBORO, Pa. - Dan Qopher tournament.* is one of six Malm, Winona State's -wrestlers who will be defending heavyweight, was seeded No. 1 a widght- ^ss ,' - , : Ray Scott, former coach of the .NBA's Detroit Pistons, was- Fillmore ; arbwa: f in his weight class list. Ibis Tin additidn to Payldson, the nanied head basketballcoach at pastern Michigan University. year's ! NAIA Wrestling 177^ound"jUUtet,' olher retur- championships which, get un- ning winn«iare Bud Ftchllng, Michael Griffin; a former assistant coach, was named head 4-Hwirrn0i5 derway here today at Edinboro basketball coach at Colgate University; By The Associated Press overcoming scrappy Denver, 5- from Daryl Rice to overcome ¦'¦:¦¦¦ 145, Peru^Sjatti Neb ; Rlck j^ilmliiliM^ ' StateCoUege. X Demaris, ' 158, Wiacensln- Thetopfourteams won initial 4. WCHA runnerup MicWgan Wisconsin, 6-4. The Badgers anhduncei Matai a two-time Northern A suit by 26 high school coaches, athletes and parents of games Wednesday night fn the State beat Wisconsin M but the were dead last in (he WCHA on (Jshko^-XldrryAMcCbSri 167, msfxi.' - Intercollegiate Conference students filed inU.S. District Court seeks to overturn MSHSL first , round of the Western Badgers are capable of an the final weekend of the season PRESTON, . ^fer lndiana,iPa.; and praig Kelso, Bernard, memlwr of^the champion, who owns a 22-2 190,'ftdams State, Colo., rules restricting pupils fivjm participation to noirtcjiool teams: At Collegiate Hockey, Association upset ln the other playoff but split with Notre Dame for a record this' season, finished issue are league rules that pupils who participate on their high playoffs, but only one of them game, third-place Minnesota berth. ; Fillinore Do-Mores 4-H '<$&, In all, 500 wrestlersIrom too was winner of the ageS .9-13 sixth in last year's NAIA colleges across the.nation are school teams in swimming.ana other individual sports may hot appears to have its two-game bounced Colorado College 7-4. Minnesota, a team plagued by tournament " . compete on teams during the non-school year. The stilt contends series clinched. . pan Hoeneand Angle Moretto injuries al) season, battled class in the recent Fillmore entered in the three-day eyertt. County Public Sp«alu?igC(|nt£st He was the. only Warrior — Adams State has' taken the the league, rules violate the students' constitutional .rights to .Michigan, which finished each scf red goals for Michigan Colorado College until three ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ here. . . ' ' • . >. X;:;. there are five others entered in team title four times in the last freedom of association, . *;;;: : *7. • 7- ' * * * fourth in the regular, season In its 8-3Vomj> over the Ftghfing freshmen scored goals in the the threeTday tourney *—seeded. standing, demolished Notre Irish, who got tallies from Alex final seven minutes for the Second place went toH&rry .eight years, including last year Kingsley, Fillmore Fire ^lies, Lai^ Davidson,of Eastern when the tourney was held at . A lawsuit claiming $2 million in damages overin demiseey of the Dame 8^3 totakracommanding Pirus, Brian" Walsh and Cterk Gopher victory. Freshman Phil ' Washington, voted Che «jt- ' ' VHA MinnesotaFl^iting Saints has been filed Rams District lead in the twof-ganie, most-- Hamilton. Verchota scored in the first with an honorable mentton, . to Morningside.lowa. - ;:X' ;. * ; ' Jody Hanson. Boot River standing wrestler in last year's Court, and the City of St. Paul is demanding $72,000 hack' rent for goalsseriM. . Suprfsing Denver , which period ahd added the last goal of theSt. Paiil Civic Centra-. The lawsuit was brought by BJM, inc., . The playoffs actually are six- finished eighth on the last day of the game in his first two-goal RabbitsT : /f, ¦which claimsagr«nrprfinvestorswho offered tobuy thefranchise period hockey games, with tte the season lo clinch a playoff output of. the year. Ib the senior division, agfetfl-4- and pay back salaries owed to the players in early February was winner determined by the most spot, jumped out to a 2-0 lead at First-round winners advance 19, first went to Carotyn misled about how deeply the team was indebt. goals in two games. Michigan Tech. But the Huskies to NCAA quarterfinals Anderson of the Cirimona Blues iiplara scored . . Cruisers, and second to Mary Second half action is tonight! roared bade to score four Saturday and Sunday, with two It took two overtimes; but the off the Blues two nights before, The House Local and Urban Affairs Committee approved, by a straight goals and held on for teams going from there to the Grabau of the same club. Third Winona Blues finally ¦ Regular-season champion ¦went to Cindy Bernard tbe conquered nearly pulled -out 'iriother 15-9 vote, a bill calling for a 65,(MO-seat stadium in the Industry Michigan Tech, the defending their &4 victory. NCAA tournament at Denver. of ' ' Randall's 93^0 Wednesday * 1 Fillmore Do-Mores, while . victory; hut , Bob.' Borfcowski's Square section near downtown Minneapolis.The fcill was sent to NCAA titlist, had trouble Michigan State got a hat trick night at Winona -State, to claim ' '¦< fourth was taken by Sue Major, ¦¦¦ ¦ shot at the end* erf regulation the Tax Committee. . :. , * . :.. * 7 . ; ¦ '¦ the Class ''A City League time rolled around the rim Carimona Crusiers. • and w basketball playoff title. fell off. That left the score Johnny Harp, a 32-year-old professional boxer, died of a heart Judges were Mrs. Irerie The Blues, now 31-1S overall, deadlocked at 8343, and it was attack after he collapsed at the pud of a sparring match in Kiehne and Dennis Stone, b^th will represent-the city in the ' ¦¦ ¦ Seattle's 1S-point def icit of Preston. ; me at the end. of'toe first . Syracuse N. V.., 'X\ Xi Minnesota! State Recreation & overtime. ^ fa the county share-the-fun Parks Class AA Amateur The Blues, who . held a 51-40 Jphimy Mckenzie, a 15-year pro hockey veteranwho was one of contest, the winning club was Basketball Tournament this lead at halftime, got 22 points the first NHL stars to jump tb (he WHA four years ago, has been the Carimona Cruisers, weekend at 7 St. John's acquired by the Cincinnati Stingers. He was a member of the turned into win over Bucks followed by the Preston ' from Mike Knies, 26 irom Roger ¦ ' University; In Colfegevflle. The Vossand lefromDicklrisb; MinnKota Fighting Saints beftfe Ihe' franchise folded. MILWAUKEE.

" ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ii . ' ' 1 ' ' ' ' »'¦" " , V / ' .— . • [ 1 1976 Sfaj 0 Winona Daily News — Thursday, March 11,

¦ ' ' ' ¦ ' ¦ k. . - . .»¦ ' . - ¦ ' . ¦ • ' ' . •' Civil, Criminal Olwiion , * Anne P. Kronebusch, College of .y "J*tfr«y W. Clausen, 371 Grand St;, Saint Teresa, S24, speeding $7 in a 55- pleaded guilty In -Alnona County mile zone, Feb. 11, Highway 248. C6urt to a cliarga. of failure, to . Jeffrey M. Erdmann, Dakota, * display current vehicle registration Minn., $32, speeding 44 in a 30 mile and was fined « by Judge Dennis A. zone, Feb. 15, CSAH 12 In Ridgeway, Challpen. Clausen was arrested Feb. ¦Minn. * ' .fl by city policed ¦ .',' ¦ Karln M. Andrlns, St. Charles, Raymond A. Cole, 1025 W. Minn., $24, speeding 67 In a 55 m lie -Wabasha St., pleaded guilty lo a lone, Feb. 17, Highway 14. i—Radio/ha«k . charge of reckless driving and was Larry A. Vogen, St. Charles, fined $100: Cole, 19, was arrested Minn., $25, Improper and unsafe Feb. 19 by city police after his turn, Feb. 8, Highway 74; , vehicle was Involved In an accident Lewis Sdiwoger, St; Charles, *t West Broadwayand Lee Street. Minn., $5, parked in no parking zone, ' P. ^Anthony Leila, Dakota, Minn., * Feb. 5. * .' . .*¦' pleaded guilty to a ctiarge of driving ' STATE PATROL ARRESTS: ' tvlt fiout a Minnewta * driver 's Speeding: license, and was lined 110. Lello was Paul C.Simpson, Tacoma,Wash., arrested Jan. 23 by the state high- HOME, 6FFICE, CAR? surrendered driver's license in lieu PLUS SENSATIONAL BARGAINS ON POPULAR REGULAR STOCK ITEMS FOR ! way'patrol on Highway 14-4). SALE * Of paying tine for speeding 74 In a 55- CB & ELECTRONICS l ttoiryJ. McGorman. 61? Main St., mlle zone, Jan. 30, Highway 61. pleaded guilty In Winona County Roger H, Herzog, Rochester, s . Court to a charge of stiopllftlng and Minn., $46,78 In a 55-mllezone, Feb. 100,000 IN CASH PRIZES was referred to court services by 11, 1-90. %__4% _n__m_mm mwm W *n%** I VOUCouldWir »81,OOO...S3,t»0. ..88,000... >13,000 ¦Judge Dennis A. Challeen for a pre . _\\\m S^Tl B 0r t*18 of .. Vlckl L. Strohtnaler, LaSalle, III., L m tSmKkW ranti friz* Total 818,000 In : sentence investigation. Miss $32, 71 in a 55-mlle zpne, Feb. 11, mW_ TmW^m Ell ° McC.ormah, 20, was arrested Feb. 20 HlgHWay 14. ¦ . . - '• • ,by„clfy police for allegedly taking _ . Prlscllla L. Finley, Lake Clfy, suier and flour valued at $1.28trom AAlnn., $24, 67 In a 55-mlle zone, Jan. ' LOWEST 2SiFuNCT.oN THE 1976 REALISTIC CB SONG SEARCH Expressway Foods, ils Huff St. 16,Hlghway6l. XmmmssmN .„.„ Virginia R. Strand, 1720 W. Donald L. Joyce, Beloit, Wis., $24, *— SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR The Sponsored000 by Radio Wabasha St., pleaded guilty to a 67 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. 17, H Igh- y WHAT 1976 $100 Shock ' ' Realistic Song Search open ctiHrge ot shoplifting and was wa"y61, _P^0\Km\ IT IS CB is arvonginal songwrlting contest to ' referred to court services for ia pre- » M I * \>i li. \ Dan ^_\\ US or John W. Rapaos, Palatine,. III., « » \ ney- ^ .Mm. W^m^% any Canadian resident except employees of Radio Shack. Tandy Corporation their affiliated sentence investigation. Mrs. Strand, $26, 66 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. 15, ' ft \> . \» t \' Vi- \ companies suppliers or their immediate families -The contest is a search for thq best original music 45,"was arrested by city police Feb. Hlghwav61. 59*»*»¦»»#95 m^fc^W^c^Ti 23 W u vl 6S634 and lyrics centered on the theme of Citizens Band radio.: A flrand total of $100,000 in cash prizes will ,for allegedly taking five packs of . Gerald B. Frahm, 70 stone St., S32, V-i sii - . > ^|^^^ liljarettes valued at $2.40 from 71 In a Simile zone, Feb. 15, Hlgh- be awarded to 50 winning entrants.- .'HOW TO ErnEB: feet full'detalls 'on cont-OTf rules'.ancJ your U ii K > \ " &* \ ¦ Randall's Discount Foods, Westgate Way61. H ^ ' \ 1 of,lcial entry blank ,rom anV R8d|0 Shack' store or participating dealer. , Shopping Center. t ; Big price cut on Radio Shock s EC-475 : James D, Townsend, Louisville, Vk t_i^ U-»^ \ ^ -Lester L. Lano, Fountain City, Ky.,$42,76 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb, 10, Fully addressable memory system floating ^^IHMHIMHaB ^HBHHaHBdHBaaBailMHHBHMHHaMBHHHHHHHHHHHHHBHHl ^ 1 ' .Vflsr, pleaded guilty to a charge of 1-90. c'ec"T-a- bright 8-digil display Setting for " ' " '¦ ' ' " ¦ "¦ ¦ " ¦ ¦ ¦ 11 / - .. . - . ' L i^—4. ' ' oiiTj'naoiiioiinDooo'oeoiioooSQOooS^^ • . speeding 74 In a Simile zone, and Sammy B. Bowman, Winona Rt. 1, VJ J trig and engineering applications Includes HZZ?l$M%$£j<$iij ^^ Was lined S38. He was arrested by $20, 65 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. 9, 1 battery carry case tftestate patrol Feb. Son Interstate- Highway 61. ARCHER " CB ANTENNAS - " RADIO SHACK S ^ DBlll * THIS11110 MIIAAH 'XS 90. '* Louie V. Gaumlth, Mahtomedl, The BY tor BRING COUPuM ^ " Debra J. Arnold, Caledonia, Minn., $22,(6 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. -^-—^ v ea W m Minn., pleaded guilty to a charge of 6, Highway.61. worid ,oader in CB 1^y 8 RBdio speeding 74 In a 55-mile zone and \ _ W_ k7mm MWm «^#% f \ I ' r > II - Tb your nearest participating I Steven W. Hadoff, Whalan, Minn., ^^ Stwck makes its own line of famous low-cost ad. Was fined S38. She was arrested Feb. $50, 70 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. 6, m: il f C 5>jCf l V L—A for i Radio Shack store for §2.00one off I 4^ ^-'/I> ^^ M^antenna^ coupon. . ^A .charge of disorderly conduct, was • Harley N. Doerlng, Caledonia, o eT A ^-.7M U»MI ccc \ flet-acqualnt^d There's only one place jgj ' fined $50 and given a 10-day (all Minn;, $30,70 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. - yo" can find tt ¦¦ ¦ Radio Shack, yxxy, gg sentence, stayed for six months on 1O, l-90. •SfbiSSI. cSYSTEMvcTC" ^Ls%___m J iTaMfetiiiii ^^^yu^, , n i ; .Ms good behavior. Pomeroy, 27 , was Edward F. Christensen, 253'/*! INTERCOM m__Wk_\W^* s \ B ^ ¦arrested Oct. 18 following a scuffle McBride St., S30, 70 in,a 55-mlle )__ ^^ ' with police at East 3rd and Walnut zone, Feb.6, Highway 14-a]. 22B . ^streets. James P. Kiekbusch, 425 39th ' ¦" ' FORFEITURES! Ave., $36, 73 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. • ¦ - . 1 CITY POLICE ARRESTS ll,Hlghway61. 69.95 43 ;' 'K ' ' J BJQS3 i X Joel James, 577 W: Sanborn St., tlo Eugene F, White, 13 Michigan ^J5^ '3 ' HjMH j llfWIiHl iHiH yine imposed, ordered to make Lane, $38, 74 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. --restitution for a* worthless check 3, 1-90. * . - ' • . written Jan. 3. : ... • Jane E. Gibfc, Madison; Wis.. $28, ' station IS a master for calling, monitoring -Catherine M, Mlscmke /^MHBBBBI / MPM MPPPI |\ , BW!?Ti?*lPPil BBBHIi ^^^^ »| B^il Sfil ^ , Wabashs, 69 In a 55-mlle zone, Jan. *30, High- replying Instant plug-in installation Use on | i^^^W*^^ / |yj mii j ^ | tUMa}aaamUmlS , ^fl> U^ zi-oz? !!^LL -±£ _ -jf eresa, Feb. 10. . ' *. '..¦' . ". ' ¦ ¦-' . Dale G. Fisk, West Bend, Wis., ¦ $24, 67 line in 1960 and '- James N. Andring, Winona Rt. 1, : |na55-mllezone,¦ Feb. 12,1-90. Ran ¦V / %OR ECONOMY -4495 L Radio Shack Introduced Its famous low-cost Realistic CB >Dec.11. Richard • M. Thorson, Alden, n°y- has boon a world leader In Citizens Band tor 16 years. While some ol ¦-; David A. Kleist, 1630 W. 5th St., Minn., $30,70 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. #U 9 w' FLUSH OT.D HTTfllTinil ¦ . ' ".. .' ' • fealist lc s 18 radios may be In short supply et times, Itll be worth your * ;-Feb.,12: ' - , .* ,,. 6,190. 109.95 M ^ n .- MOUHIMOUNT 12-1843« V«3i ill I rM I lllll ' I-V «- P 7 while to WAIT FOR REALISTIC 0t you have to) and avoid the hassle and X Edward J.. Fetschow, Minnesota Larry R. Hackbarth, Dakota, : nil Lll l lllll :-Clty,MIHn., Jan. 17. Mlhn., $30,70 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. ——— — problems of dealing with Store X and Brand X We also nuke our own ¦ ' ' ¦ musical pleasure al 27%—7 ^.Thomas Tindal, . Sawyer, Mich., 13,1-90. • - - • • " - ., Drive-time nci iivr *»TaS All lllllfmfll Archer Una of CB antennas, crystals, coa» cables end accessories. These an *-^ec;27 . * ' . *» . Kathle S. Wilhelm, Waukesha, Cassette inserts sideways for . * '^". * savings! *£„" * !; , . Of IK Kllfft "llSI In talrly Bood supply today Realistic CB Is sold and serviced ONLY by Mrs. Evelyn Bora,162 High Forest Wis., $30, 70 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. instant "on"; elect button for oft. SUKI-A-Ut pAIB 4000 shops in the USA and Canada. Buy St.;jan. 21, .' ;¦.-, 15, 1-90. UU UU I LI IU s Radio Shack through our over , balance, tone slide controls. William R. Wicks, PIsgah, Leonard M. Brlst, 210 6. Mark St., Volume MOUNT 12-1847 J from a really qualified specialist -your friendly neighborhood Radio Shack! Built-in AFC, stereo light. Alabama, Feb. 5. $46, 78 In a 55-mlle zone, Jan. 25, S^=—______^m^-> I \ * George Ferrata; 66VS w. 4tl) St., Hlghwayil. 1 1 1 HO, violations June 7 and 28. James A. Franklin, Rochester, ¦ ^^ ¦¦ ^^ F " "" ^ ' ^ ^ ™^ " ™ Raymond Benedict, 407 Chatfield Minn., $24, 67 |ri a 55-mlle zone, Feb. ™^ ^ REALISTIC^ AIWI-FM _m± MM MB BI 0- ^M^a\__tM_ • St., *30;,slx violations. 10, Highway 14. , John A. SAVE STEREO RECEIVER WITH G E Marilyn ¦ M. Foss, 526 Lake St., Green, 843 Hickory Lane, : ^^H^ffl 8 TRACK Alf $400 Feb.23. ' ¦ $26, 68 in a -55-mlle zone, Feb. 17, ^.w^ • §sW -m^^^r^mm w AUTO-MAGIC® WVE- ;. ymm j , ^ «li' ^ . ¦ ^^ . ^ *¦ <^Vft fl HH ______\______^A ^e^eetianSK . . q rAmlVnmBU—^—^—^—^^m—^—-^- ^^^V^^B^Vi ^^HtL ^s^sW M .; :M:> ¦ stg^^Ji - August N. Jilk Jr., Winona Rt..l, Highway lf«1. ^^^^^^ ft ' ^^b . i cSmJ W^ ^ftl ^% flJEE IvU Feb.23. Gregory R. Ku|ak, ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ' • • ¦ ¦ ¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ dtw ^ _sVs*_WK_ "Arpold H. Fort, Houston, Minn., $50, over axle weight, Feb, 3, High- SUPERTAPE <" • . . ' . ' - " "- * - - . ¦ -:¦ - - . -. ¦ .:.¦ -:¦ ' ¦ way*!. Wa ^^ * ¦^______1 WaW ¥0, 45 In a 55-mllo zone, Feb. 12, ¦» \*^ . Lo*, Noise, mdm Rangel ' ' ¦ CSAH 12. 8-TRACK F= ^~ CAVF -. * 'M ** * ' * • . . - " . . . CAI/FAVC 90%U% l ' ' DM" ¦ 71% M * .Brian J- Rldmels/ Rosemount, Photographersfly Save Up To 20%t . RECORDING nammai ' ' - ¦•¦ ' ^ NOV/W»RO jfllrifl.,$28,69 in a 55-mile zone, Feb, 98 *PACE TRANSISTOR* W(ue c2., BUILDING SPEAKER DmaDIW STEREO HEADSET 14,.Hlghway61. • The .first: aerial CARTRIDGES J 44-1872 5 REEL; 9O0 R , Reg 2.69 . . 2.19 V PROJECTS, VOL. Ill ' ENCLOSURES BOOK _WS__\ WITH DUAL CONTROLS Jyile E. Friesen, 1702 Edgewood photographers were Samuel . J_%- Re Rd.r $30, 70 In a 55-mlle zone, Feb. 6, " ¦¦ ¦ Archer King aod William Black, 44-1878 7" REEL, 1200 FT., Rea- 3.99 ,... 3.29 Rog ' ¦ Hlghway61. . ' ' 4)99 OQf . tW ^i «' 'TKfc ^ MEaTA Rafl. AAQC Merrill F. Wolk, La Crescent , who made two photos of Bostor 44-1877 7" REEL, 1800 FT., Reo. 479 3.79 3,59 : "*1.25 «1 950 f , . HRM |r '' ¦ ^ from ' _%_ 44^43 «*' P*-\%,1 *•# 84.96 ¦¦¦ __\**?*X ' Mlnn,;$32,71 In a 55-mllezorte, Feb. > a balloon in i860. The 44-1879 7" REEL, 24O0 FT., Reg. 6.49 , ,... BB9 62-2082 : l ' ?J 82-20B6 * , . ." . ' ¦« , t W 33-1014J ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ * ¦ M/Highway«i. pictures still exist. V *• • X/ —— ¦—:— — —^ ;—.—•— 7 ,' ' ¦' 7 ¦ ' "' , —~"—r-' - ^ ' 7 „ ' ¦ . . ' ' . ' ' Patrick J, Brown, Lewlslon, . . .. . ' ' Minn '., $26,68 In a 55-mllo zone, Feb. 12) Highway 14. " ' SWE¦ • SWE¦ ?5% SWE '10 1 'J*£ ¦ 0 , '8 , . fm Qgmm' ¦ i WIPER S?'L x^SS^Jywn wvATE LI8TENINO | . WlSS'X'* ** i ¦ ' ^ ___ ^______WWt GOOD NEWS FOR... ' W^Bm *^mi ' f XamsmWSfm HHF- 'I THH 1130 ^HRP^^' 1 O0L»A AA6 I "-BALISTICFAIL SAFE ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ^ ; ¦ ' ' ¦.^¦ - . ¦ ¦ ' ^^'^^- ¦¦ ' ' ' ' ' : ¦ • : ' ¦ ~^pSfy 99 I ywniMT' - i. J : jg g. "1 Beer Can l^mr ' S ^ i ^^B^^ l ' * W^ W® ^ Collectors! ; ¦" ' ¦ 25% 100-IN-1 ' T- DELUXE SAVE g SS ' tf_m____\'! fal COUPON ON | NEW AnRIVAL81 Our Collector' SA\f ANY (t s > TUBE ftVkwxr Comer haa grown, SCIENCE FAIR AM RADIO STROBE LIGHT EW ... ,.~«. .. .»» ^ H WR | lr li' We've AddoJ^ T-lit §j_U§ stock' unusual boor cons JECTS K.T BROADCAST K.T K.T / ^^6 ' ^-mmmmm- , HB l-j ¦ S. Bmt&l ^^ ^^ ^^^ ^ selection Reg. 29.95 Reg . 7,95 Reo, 29.95 30 FT. TELEPHONE ^^^^ H VUV PER CUSTOMER ^^ Ben*" 29' 95 . ' - ' . . " " I y_4_W^\. from across the (tountry, '^¦mmrnmm' -^Af- M ** . *%*! EXTENSION CORO , ¦¦ ^l ¦ 'W¦ ' " " . ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ' »« -• , * ' ' , . ' Stop In soonl You're aura lo find- 2195 ¦ ¦ ¦ 5^5 ¦ ¦ 1995 osd OA95 WM i ¦^&^sfta?:.! ^¦28-220 . [ - , WW ;¦ -lyawaip 3-99 ^5.1261 . £r¥hw*} WStW ' . ^"¦i-^ JIT ^J . ;

' * / ' , * ' ¦ l . l i' l I il I * • ' » I l , . . RADIO SHACK PRICES ON AVERAGE HAVE INCREASED LESS THAM1% SINCE JULY, 1974! 1 ' i "M .• Drive up Parking—Right at the Door! ,Open Sunday afternoon except* ¦¦/ . ¦\ _^ ^ _\''

¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ LA CROSSE. * . . ,' WIS. .. ¦ ¦••' ¦" " •;[ ¦: MOM itwra .*t*o »va«MM . ' "227 Main 81. («08)tf82-4210~Brldgwlwi Plaza Shopplnfl Center W^^ 482.28OO-Hwy.61 M , Warehouse Liquors We8taal0 ShopplnoCantBr-(5d7) ??t lSJM S!r,%!r!,n ¦ OPEN 0to|9 Mon. thru Frl.—9to6Sat.-Open Sunday Afternoon OPEN9 to 9 Mon,thru Frl.-9W68at.¦ -1-to 6 Sun. . - ' ,'" T . - T T ^::; : ' '< , PH, 462-1821 SFID.a MApKET ST, )W ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦ • •• ' ¦ ¦ A TANW CO<^ATK COMWNY ' . , ' , . • . .. : , - , , .- . ' ,;: , . ' " : ., ' , :; . , . : y 'yy. irmio^ ' ¦ H : ^^WA;Y AT ' j v ——— * -—- ^jy — mmmmm ^^^^^^m *^^^^^^^^^^^ mm ^mm *mmm—m0aamMmamamamm iam»mmm— ^ , i , ¦ i mm»mMmmAmmmmma mmaag0r