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Winona State University OpenRiver

Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

6-20-1974

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1974). Winona Daily News. 1407. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1407

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]. Talk to Thpusaiids "ip Partly dowdy ¦¦ " ¦S^/ s ¦:; - ^^H^-^N^^ ' '' ; ; with chalice of ¦;v -^-iv i;* - :^*rt; *?Ai ^ :f y . ; ; thuniderstarms ;' y ; ' y;y ; ' TfL-y452^ of n^h Vwr Publication 1 Sectidri-v 18 ?PagM, 15?Cantt Q/i M#^ Nixon briefs oolitical leaders WASHINGTON CAP) - Pres- land where 'he was met by friendship ," he said. to that region's problems. substance of each of the dis- ident Nixon told congressional daughters Tricia Cox and Julie White House spokesmen esti- Halg said, "We achieved all cussions. Exchanges 'With all leaders today the United States Eisenhower and Mrs. Eisen- mated that 7 million persons the objectives set forth," and the leaders were very detailed "will give no encouragement to hower's husband, David. turned but for Nixon on the 14,- listed them as: A -/ ' , and very complete." any: country /in; acquiring,': nu- Vice President Gerald R; 775-mile journey. "-Strengthening new relation- ¦ clear .; Weapons,'.* Senate Repub- Ford, arid ; several Cabinet Nixon on Tuesday held a ships with Arab. states ; A Press Secretary Ronald L. lican leader Hugh Scott ; re- members were among several nearly two-hour talk with Por- —Establislung a new relation- Ziegler.said the European trip ported '" hundred persons greeting him tugal's new president, Gen. An- ship and assuring all .parties probably would last 10 days, ^ The ? Pennsylvania . senator as his helicopter landed on the tonio de Spinpla. in the Azores, that this would not be at the with the Brussels, talks planned also said Nixon defended the south lawn of the White House where he spent . the night before expense of long-standing rela- for June 26? arid the Moscow U.S. action? iii supplying nuclear from Andrewsi ;. departing for Washington tionships, and,. ? . ': sessions beginning June 27. reactors to Egypt arid Israel Wednesday. —Demonstrating a "willing- He said the President , was , ' noting that both the Soviet Un- In a 15-m I h u (•? «ereinony Alexander M. Haig Jr., Nix- ness to assist in the search for ."riot overly tired, but be feels Nixon/said ion aiid other :T3urbpean coun- Va- profound and on's chief of staff , said : the a long-term solution" to ,past the miles and the hours" of the lasting change has taken ? tries were prepared . to do so President was encouraged by divisions. . Middle East venture. placed iii the Midddle ' with fewer safeguards tlian .the East. his personal diplomacy. Haig, asked if any .- secret During the ?.: Spinola-Nixon Unified States is requiring. . ". . "Where there was. no .. hope He said the five Middle Past commitments were made,, re- talk, the Portuguese leader.who for peace, there now is hope. leaders with whom Nixon/met plied: "No, I don't think so. took power in . a military coup Nlxdh reported on his Middle Where there was ? hostility for promised to make concerted ef- Let's leave it there. There was eight weeks ago? won a promise East /mission to a bipartisan President Nixon the President returned the United:States , there now is forts :to negotiate ? a settlement fairly ? explicit reporting on the of United States economic aid. ALL'S WELL - . ^ gives*; • to a White House aide delegation of two dozen ' con- en OK to members of the White House staff from the trip encouraged by iris personal gressional leaders. Wednesday after the. Chief Executivereturned diplomacy. (AP Photofax)? ? Besides restoring diplomatic ¦ ¦ relations with Egypt and from a visit to the Middle East* -AcMHrding - . ' • ' " ' ¦: ¦' ¦ " ' ' :¦ ' ' ' •' ¦ ¦ Syria, . . i Scott .said, the President "hints that .we'll restore relations.with Algeria" as part oi the? effort for better relations¦ Awith the s btrf fiiicfedr Middle East. ¦?. '" ' Isrti^ C rule The W. bipartisan group of con- ^ gressional leaders gave the President a warm burst of ap- plause as he entered, the Cabi- weapons net Room : for thijir morning WASHINGTON (AP); - Fed- Wednesday to bar any transfer ant secretary of state for East meeting. The President joked By United Press International called an Israeli "scorched nation Middle East tour and the less tSan one hour after th» ^ Asian arid Pacific affairs, said quietly as photographers were / Israel launched its biggest air earth" policy against guerrilla, Israeli attacks. eral officials are assuring Con- of U.S. nuclear,facilities to an- faldy? Ushered in for a few moments. Hrst : gress that President Nixon's of- other country unless both the International Atomic Ener- . strikes into Lebanon in more bases.;,, "' Defense Min- . . The President planned : —In Jerusalem, Israeli rockets fended near fer of nuclear aid to Egypt and houses Congress approve. gy Agency would administer ses- than a month today, bombing Israel of ¦ sions today with the bipartisan The Palestinian news agency ister Shimon Peres said the government hospital , at safeguards, . " including periodic and; strafing at least four will oppose any military aid the Israel could not lead to nuclear The amendment would be ret- leadership of the: Senate WAFA said the Israeli raids Sidon, where the wounded fromi. East. inspections. and Palestinian encampments United. States may offer to the weapons in the Middle roactive to June I and thus House to fill them struck guerrilla! and refugee Ain El Helwah Were taken, they " "We also , in. on his a r o u h d. the Mediterranean ' Arabs and will maintain control ¦ The . statements came from would cover the proposed In addition; he said, meetings? iu Egypt camps alike, but the ? Israeli said. •;¦;'• ¦.¦ ' '' ¦. ';¦ " ' ¦ special bilateral ?: , SaUdia coastal towns , of Sidon and of Sharril-el-Sheikh ? ; at the ? : • ' : . State Department and Atomic agreements with ¦¦Egypt arid Is- have in mind Arabia Syria Israel arid military command said it , y . , , .Jor- Tyre, the guerrillas?: said they southern tip of the Sinai Israel said the attacks struck Energy Commission officials rael, - ./ ¦ provisions." dan arid on the aimed only at military . : , specifics of the safeguard upcoming shot down , two Israeli planes peninsula. Israel captured the command posts and encamp- Wednesday as Nixon prepared Proxmire won immediate The . NATO* talks in Brussels and the The Lebanese Dieferise Ministry ments of Al Fatah Popular to report to congressional lead- support; from Sens. Philip A. provisions . have not been but the Israelis' denied this. town overlooking the Strait of , ' Soviet . summit' .y said Americari-bui}t ,Phantoms Liberation Aririy, and Popular ers ' today on ? his , Middle , East Hart, D-Mich.', Mike Gravel, D- worked put., It .was the! third, consecutive and ySkyhawks carried put the Tirari .in the 1967 Six ?_Day War. ' ' ¦ . .. He also was meetingpvriihthe Democratic Front . -. for - the trip* ' ¦P' : '4: ' pPpr : PiP Alaska, and Sam J. Ervii Jr., Ah Atomic Energy Commis- day of' reprisal attacks for the raids. ' ¦: ' 4 ' rp Cabinet and the National Secur- guerrilla . attack which . . Th» Israelis said the fighter- Liberation o& Palestine-General Nixon has -proposed providing D-N.C. ' PP.. - - : sion spokesman said the United ity about . killed "All the objectives ' were ; ; . Council . the Moscow three women at the bordier . bombers hit guerrilla targets; in Command. nuclear fuel -. and facilities to Meanwhile, a State Depart- States said that before the trip y before leaving for. his definitely identified as military five areas in a ZO^miriute Egypt and Israel for power ^pro- ment official told a Senate Ap- United States signs any agree*- village of Shamir ori. June 13. bases . of terrorist organiza- Camp David, Md.,. retreat for There : was no . immediate attack. : .Witnesses .:in Lebanon duction. But some : congressmen propriations subcommittee that ment; A ?. the weekend, A tions, " the command said ."All said - .: the aircraft hit four have expressed fears the two transfer of nuclear power ., ' - .. .;•../We will very carefully retaliation because President possible measures were taken Nixoii leaves ?Tuesday for Nixon was visiting tie Middle Palestinian refugee camps and countries cotildiuse U.S. mate- plants and fuels to Egypt:, and consider any necessary controls Brussels arid Moscow. to prevent any damage to returned for a second raid on East at the time. ' ' rials to develop¦ nuclear .weap- Israel will be accompanied by on such things as the storage of Nixon, returned : from the civilians." ,.. one camp near Sidoh. ? ' ¦:¦/:. ons.' - rigid safeguards against diver- materials, the reprocessing of Middle East . Wednesday after- First reports 1 In other Mideast develop-*. Newsmen in Sidoh said the , sion to weapons. ' ¦/. ' usediuel,: and the fabrication of sala "some ' '¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦'¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦' ' ¦ " Sen. William Proxmire D- . . . noon, landing' at Andrews Air persons; were killed and about merits': '• -../. . .•.y- ' . - . ' ?' ' .. . .' '.; . ,;?¦';'; , raiders . struck Airi El Helwah? Wis.,. introduced an amendment Sidney; Sober, deputy assist- fuel elements." Force- Base in suburban Mary: 50 wounded. Two Beirut news- —¦ Egyptian government camp near Sidon and. three papejrs said as many as 50 sources in Cairo said President camps near Tyre —areas badly pis^f/ypttef*4 y jfe p^ guerrillas were : believed killed Anwar . Sadat and Syrian battered by.? previous - Israeli Deductions probed arid 60 wounded in the Israeli President Hafaz Assad were strikes last month. They said ?*)ai/j>y.- :.y y ty Infemalional attacks Tuesday and Wednes- meeting today in Alexandria to the planes returned for, a "The big thing about au- ? day in what the newspapers discuss Nixon's recerit five- second strikei. on Aiii El Helweh tompbiles is still .acces- sories.' You price a car nowadays, and he gives you meet focuses ix tha figure. It sounds pret- oii reasonable. Then you N . ty say 'That includes every- i^^it^^^^ ¦ thing?^ - on seas toe "Well , no, if you want that will come CARACAS (UPI) - A land- gel wheels ori it, extra; yoii can get either mark international conference By JOHN BECKLER sonal finances, to. see if any close friend C. G. "Bebe" Re- wheels or runners, most convened: \ todsiy with 3,000 WASHINGTON (AP) -^ Pres- government or election cam- bozo. The committee goes out people prefer wheels. But delegates attempting to trans- ident Nixon's tax returns are paign funds: were converted to of existence on June 28, on account of us not know- form sea traditions handed coming before the House im- his personal use. —A federal appeals court ing what i they might like, down from the 17th Century peachment inquiry, with inves- Chairman Peter W. Rodino agreed to, review an order that why, we make them extra. into a.set of modern laws to tigators especially interested in Jr., D-N.J., pushing to com- a White House?. * tape section Then the bumpers, front, govern the enormous wealth of a $576,000 deduction he claimed plete the presentation of all im- dealing with political use of the rear, and side — and the the oceans. for vice presirjential papers giv- peachment evidence this week, Internal Revenue Service must lights. Of course you will lQJweek-long en to the government. has allotted only one day for be turned over to a Watergate want lights, in case you The conference, might want to use the car the tax and finances presenta- grand jury. Nixon had . appealed the 3rd United Nations Con- The Judiciary Committee, to- at ndght. And the mirrors tion. He hopes to wind up. the U.S. District Judge John J. Si- ference on the Law of the Sea, day begins trying to determine are extra, in case you want Statgs? Friday with a study.,of rica's .order...:?.. ._ . . ,.. — , will ..align the . United . and whether there was any fraud in inquiry to see 'what's going oh ia the Soviet Union against China the secret bombing of Cam- ? the preparation of a deed for The House Judiciary Com- the back seat. in an unusual battle over the the gift, which was not signed bodia in 1969-70. mittee finished with Watergate "Well , just what does go future of the seas. and delivered until after a law There were these related de- Wednesday, including the latest with the car at the original velopments on Wednesday: The Americans, Soviets and authorizing such deductions had developments in special prose- price you quoted ine? other major maritime powers been repealed. —Asst. Atty. Gen. Henry E. cutor Leon Jaworski's running "Well , the name and the seek to block from developing Tlie deductions, spread over Petersen defended the original battle with the White House good will." countries supported by* China the years 1969-72 , since have Watergate investigation in testi- over presidential; tapes. January 20, 1929 broader control of their coast- been disallowed by the Internal mony before the Senate The Watergate presentation, al waters. Revenue Service, which as- Judiciary Committee. Petersen lasting almost six weeks, left The sea-faring states contend sessed Nixoii $432,787 in back accused Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. some committee members con- the developing countries threat- taxes. A similar conclusion was of being unfair in implying that vinced a coverup still is contin- tfas- f a "*- reached by the Joint Com- political considerations in- uing. lor Wm »««• en to poso obstacles to free m rlBhU r.*.rv.d T mittee on Internal Revenue fluenced the original investiga- Rep. Hamilton Fish Jr., R- Memorial CommlHlon $<•«" " na vigation and international Sterllna fis hing. Taxation, but neither investiga- tion, N.Y., said a consistent pattern DAVAN IN CONFERENCE . . . Moshe chats Wednesday in Jerusalem with Sheik Bryan of opposition to Wa tergate in- a^^nmaaaa ¦ ***t*amaaa**a***wna00ae ¦ *aa*B The conference's 25-point tion dealt with the question of —The Senate Watergate Com- Dayan, right, former Israeli defense minister, Hamad Abu Rahiyah, (AP Photofax) - - . - 1' agenda centers on ownership of fraud. mittee announced it would vestigations on the part of the the sea and its vast biological The Judiciary Committee make no further efforts to ques, White House has been estahh and mineral resources. also is examining Nixon's per- tion Nixon's two brothers or lished. . ' ¦ ' - . . ' Chances good for underg round nuclear test limits: Jackson WASHINGTON £ 1 Kennedy administration , the PIIISI'-HAND IOOK . . . Gov. Robert Ray takes a first- night when a tornado swept through the central Iowa com- with a view to an eventual total I VflllUj William Calloy's plea that he remain iroo pond- two countries agreed to ban hand look at,what remains of the Wallace White home in An- munity of 10,000. See story page lffa. (AP Photofax) 1 ing appeal of his My Lal conviction — story, page 8b, ^ ban, "clearly Implies that some ^ tests in tho atmosphere, in keny. Mr. and Mrs, White, both 55, were killed Tuesday kind of agreement has been Sik^^sxj SB^saa&i^ space and under water, ¦ ¦ Winona Dally News • , ' ¦' ¦ . .. ;' ¦?. . . ' ¦ - ...... - - 9- ' . ™3 Winona, Minnesota THURSDAY. JUNE 20. 1974 THURSDAY y^: i<# riport ?:; ^ mm^mmm The ddfly JUNE 20/ 1974 P^] J record '¦ ' ' "" »« "» ^ « "«i ^~ i "«i -— ^ a^MMM_-___>M-- Rt. 3, gas tank and connections / Burglaries Bob' Ma- Brothers accused ¦:? :' ? ¦ ' ;;¦? taken from boat at * ?' OTT" . . ;?; ?; rine, foot of Laird Street , since At Gomriiunity Winon? Deaths Two-State Deaths 265 W ; 3rd : Peoples X Change, Monday;, ^M.loss. A ins in shotgun killings Meniorial Hospital Mrs. Kerineth Hansen ; Mrs. Grace Porcelius St., entry byy removing p Motorcycle taken from Rod Mrs . Kenneth (Loraine) Han- ARCADIA,vWis. (Special) - from door, hinges Wednesday Hoesley,; 377 Wasttngtcn . St. - .' ¦WEDNESDAY . . .-? . sen, BO, 1280 W. 'Broadway died Mrs. Grace Porcelius, 48, for- evening; nc apparent loss. * June 3 recovered byyBuifalo Admissions A/authorities; four held in Wyoming ' early today at St. Marys Hospi- mer Arcadia resident, died at a Coiinty, Wis :. Vincent Datta,- 706 E. King , 111. hospital today fol- John Reinhard residence, 856 Buffalo? County males referred . . . . tal, Eochester, :Minn. ' GILLETTE, Wyo. CAP) --. A St. . She? was born April 21, 1924; lowing ah illness of ofte year. E. 5th St./ entry through un- tb juvenile authorities. day of freedom for two South Mrs. Arnold . Ellinghuysen, the daughter of Ja- The foriner Grace Steven« locked rear door between.' 'lrSfr Lewiston, . Minn. in-Winona, i v ...... WINONA' COUNTT?./ . P Dakota;brothers ja iled on mur- cob . and Stella Podjoiskl Hoff- she was born in Fountain City, 4:30 pm.. Wednesday; Browning a Diane Kowalewski, Discharges man. She married Kenneth Han- Wis., July 25, 1925, the daughter B rbra der charges has ended in the ¦?¦' Mrs. Roy Lunn, Gilmore Val- 380 caliber semi-automatie pis- 3870 Service Dr., GfocdvieW, yy - sen May 1, 1944, - at Dyersbufg of Earl and Lena Krause¦ Stev- f rom northeast Wyoming" towii of Gil^ ley Road, . ens. .-¦; /" ..-¦?•' • ', ' ;¦ ¦: *. -. tol, holster, three clips aauaaai- canoe taien top of car ¦ ¦ Air Force Base, Tennessee. The . . Wednesday night ; 17-foot, serial lette.; - . ' - ' ;?' ' . - ' - - Mrs. Charles Ehler and baby, couple resided in Winona, Survivors arte: «ne Mixy Roiv tl

SH0P OPEN - ¦ m W^f C 1 1 l/" CI' ! AIR CONDITIONED %/ M0N WED FRL | ^ * L L f <' ¦*" ' " " COMFORT! ^ , . ' : 9 A,M. TO 9 P.M, In Westgatew Shopping Center I MILES NORTH OP FOUNTAIN CITY, WIS., ON HWY. 35 ' ' ' ' • ' "' ¦ 'mwLWLmwwmmmmwRwwwm __-__- , . : : S^^^Hjs* Impeach? Gr^^in| cas6 explanations fbr irrswerihCj -hc»j io thaf are required By HOWARD FIELDS ment told a reporter Who .asked for ' TO BE SURE, the committee Mobil (Ml buys a quarter-page ad to iriale a WASHINGTON, (UPI) - Despite a secret memo that He didn't hawe it, May lack the evidence it heeds be- -revelations and various , court "fuller explanation" of a statement in a TV com- new ; wouldn't divulge it If h(> did and cause Nixon has refused to give it mercial i.that "only l in .60 wells actually pays off." actions, the impeachment question hoped the reporter wouldh't:print it some .. .of the niiaterials; it has de- remains sirnply: "Will President if he got it from someone else..;. manded. - ;: ?- - Fuller explanation is a euphemism for, "We didn't ' ' mean to deceive you." ? ?? Nixon be impeached?" A good case . . -..The fear he and others have?ia . -' , The committee aiid later the House, ig growing for answering "No." that the furor over "n«ws leaks'' s could vote impeachment on the ba- Political, pundits written or To understand that?success ?percentage you ini.gt, have from the committee will damage It* sis of his refusal to honor commit- spoken thousands of words predict- integrity and credibility on Impeach' / tee siibpoenis or they could infer first of alij know what a well is. There are sev- : " eral types? of exploratory or wildcat" wells, like ing Nixon's impeachment and some ment. Vifould they be so frightened y that his refusal to surrender tha /' have even . '. predicted his removal if the. case against :Nixpn . wais : material means1 it's tooydamaging; the ? "outpost" or ''extension" or one seeking ? new ¦ ¦ from office, by the Senate. irrefutable?. . to 'hlrii;' •":'. •' • -PP.P' :- or additional production or .the "new-field wildcat." ADMITTEDLY, IT is that «f a The latter, Mobil explains, is on a geologic prospect Attitudes , expressed by the mem- If that's the only case? against distinct minority, but there is a bers after each ; of the closed ses- Nixdn when it comes time to vote, where natural gas or oil has. never been found. growing; case for the other side.. adamant im- . sions indicated. they hadn't heard ¦• however, even .the most ¦¦ Vice President ;Gerald ft Tord '• peachment supporters . may ' have . And, oh yes, enough to make them comfortable. there : are also -development and said last week the full House won't about voting for iriipeachmeht., second thoughts, about their vote. ?- .' .service wells.: ? PP -P4 ' '. ' vote impeachinent because there HELPING TO tog public thinking The weight of the responsibility ''just isn't any evidence" to?justify they ateP charged with is not lost on Otice you know what kind of well you're talk- it. - ' •> . : "P 4\.Pp yyy on impeachment are several ancil- you also need to lary happenings, such as a grand other Housed members. Judiciary ing about? — those; "60":?-^? add James T. St. Clair, Nixon's attor- Chairman Peter? W. Rodino Jr. him- an adjective, -whiqh is "significant." ney who has been sitting . In on the jury naming Nixon an unindicted co**. conspirator in the Watergate ? cover- ' self has noted that impeachment of closed impeiachment - hearings oi the the President could alter; the course ffi the Well doesn't produce , or discover House Judiciary Committee, predict- up and court maheuverings involv- a sig- . ing defendants , with sometimes only or history/ nificant amount of oil or gas, then it . doesn't -count. ed that even the committee of 21 Suddenly faced with that awe- One ;million barrels of oil ' or less than 6 billion Democrats and 17 Repiublicans ?— remote . connections with impeach- ment allegations against Nixon? . ' some responsibility, will enough of cubic feet of gas is not "significant.'' Anything more air lawyers. — won't recommend im- 247;House Temocrats? . and?1&7 peaichment. But the comrnittee!8 . purpose is the ? than that is, ninless the well .is abandoned within or Republicans vote: to impeach based one year; then , it isn't: . : Both those statements can be dis- myopic and singular — Is Nixon is he not guilty of impeachable of- on political and other instincts even ' missed as self-serving grandstand- evidence to ; :.; y,K:y v BACK HOW liberal Bepublicaii con- fenses alleged? though they /lack the So .: —' . we are digesting Mobil's "fuller explana- ing. But one prove guilt beyond a reasonable " gressman: says Rep. William S. Coh- Even the allegations? have been tion" --. what you need to know when it says ¦¦ doubt??, - . that " en of ?Maihe. the '¦Judiciary Republi- pared down from an original list of ¦ ' only ! in. 60 wells actually pays off" is that , than 20, and amount : "to IF tHE evidence U n<>+ there, it T^ttNA . it is talking about ''significant new-field wildcat dis- can . .believed most . likely to vote 56 to less D^^ ' to impeach, told him the evidence serious consideration in. only two becomes more of a political deci- covery wells.'* Not all the other kinds. Just those. moods of . the ? mo- isn't there , for. impeachment. Cohen categories — Watergate and using sion. Events or A pago pf ppiniohi denied making the remark. the IR?S to.harass White House ene- ment— a month away for the com- and i^Jeas And all of the foregoing is our devious way LIBERAL Democrat in the mies. And it will have .. taken . the mittee apd two months for the full of pointing, out that drilling ior oil is a very A . ballot. . n°t forefront of the push for impeach- committee 10 months , to do that, House — could dictate their complicated business, but that television is not a Page 6a. Winona Daily News, Winona. Minnesota, Thursday, June 20, 1974 good medium - for explaining complicated things; - A.B. ' < ¦ ' •- . ' Th^ Boston arrarigepent The spirit of for pornograpliy^ etc, that, for in- news having dis- Mm^*^m^m^amm^m^^m~—mmm *mmmmim^mmm^^ammlis generally agreed . . Boston is \n the Ln Harlem the law vs. covered not ya . solution? to . the. ob- stance in certain areas , scenity problem, but an accommo- peaceful bookmakers are not going ' William f. fuckley fo be disturbed by the police,' though si^lij lffi i^ dation to it. . to .IONDGN - Lenin liked Beethov- flie letter It' is the hallowed (if We can bor- they - would be if they started j ¦¦y practice their wares openly on Mad- en piano music, (especially the Ap- We . .welcomeyMayor Norman Indall's ? torn- row the word for this purpose).Red sonably be called "sex-oriented" dp passionata Sonata , He told Maxitm toents about , the strengthened Open meeting law in Light District Perhps not exactly a critical 50 percent of the business. ison Avenue. Apthony Lewis '¦ ?¦ ' ¦ The current civil libertarian mood Gorky that it made him think "what Minnesota. \ \. . -. '.' ' . that/ Boston has not -gonfe . so .far Since they are only 10 percent of the marvelous things human beings as to say that it will license bordel- In America ; argues ?against. such ' : ,;¦' ' ;¦ Some of the great names, in ? Brit- titles, one can? see how important Evenyas ? the can? .do,''-. - ,.' ... . . - ". . los. But practically everything else. economic matter. pragmatic solutions. ish theater , and music arid danc< .y He noted at the city council meeting the other they are as an ? secularists argued that :to . recite a : But then he added: "I ain't listen night thai; not only should meetings be Open to thi There are t° he X-rated movie ¦/•'.What', will the booksellers outside : wrote to. The Times of London about ,/ "adult" common prayer in New "Vork City's to music too often. If affects your public, they should be announced in -. adv&uce - houses, strip-tease bars Siii Stop in Boston? now do? Will nerves, makes you want- to the Panovs just .before the fiolshol bookstores, which ' is; to . say book- public schools whose formulation . say ' the time and place. 'y 'P -r they not; come?up with the identical to: priests, minis- stupid nice things and stroke the opening.. ? ' ? ly. ' - . . : stores that specialise - .in post- arguments to insist oh their right to" •was satisfactory and massage par- ters arid rabbis, was a violation of heads of people who could create It is an absurdly anachronistic . The fact is that a public body can : pubescent fare;. continue . to pander to the taste? of such beauty while living in this hold an lors and so on. : ', ."' the First Amendment; someone in vile idea, that the expression of free- open, meeting and be fairly confident that no ;ohe ¦ their customers? . ! ;would not want insist that pornog- hell. And i npw : you mustn't' stroke dom's ideals can hel THERE • ' ARE-'' .;-' counterparts ' . .. all to be at the other end : of a lawsuit Boston is sure to p.the victims from the public will be present if it holds the meet- raphy being a general right; it is a anyone's head.?— you might get ytnir of tyranny? : For individuals, : over the , world, notoriously -in arguing the point. ? that ing at an unusual place. — " such as a home - , violation- of the Constitution to insist hand , bitten off.? You have to hit seems. to be-an easy question. The and doesn't announce it Frankfurt, in Amsterdam and : in ? : In advance.? Copenhagen. It appears, to be the ob-* AND? WHAT ABOUT the movie that people take the sub-way to Sin them ? on the . head - without any relatively few of us . who:,live in house say ?50 city blocks from Sin in order to exercise that right. mercy. :" ." ? : freedom, and it is few, have vipus solution, if one accepts the con- ¦' ' Stop no HERE IS fhe significant portion of strength- Stop? Will it not make &. case:for the Supreme Court choice but.to try to help fhe cept that that which used to happen . A year? ago THOS E WORDS are brought to — eaah in ened open meeting ,? relieving the lame: and the blind, his: o\yn lav^: ? . only under the table should raove to . wrote a decision that appeared ; to life ? in a remarkable jplay by ."Tom way, however feeble it may an entire area in the city. the senior citizens and ?the unescort- inconvenience,? once again, the .pin , appear. Opinion just could- matter: , of the risk and tedium of ' Stoppard, "Travesties " that has a letter : . Except as otherwise expressly provided by It makes sense both, for the city* ed children scenity : peddlers.. As a - matter of just opened in London. It is a play ,; a raised vOicey a polit- traveling;all the:way to Sin Stop on appears not , to ical gesture. . . statute,. all meetings, including executive sessions; which wishes to contain that part fact, the decisi about, among many other things, at- ¦ . of any state agency, board, co?mn_|ission or de- of itself that specializes in ? appeal- to see an X-rated : mbvie? What, will .have done anything of . the sort, ' .:Por .v governments the ? question is ' ,mechanics' - titudes toward art . In the charac- partment when recfuired or permitted by law to ing to prurient instincts; and for the be the . municipal V-by though at one theater in the south, ter of Lenin, using his actual words, harder : they simply must treat with transact public , business in a?:?meeting, and the gov- customer who,. in search.of that kind which the corner movie : house will "Carnal Knowledge," a dismal pic- regimes of which they disapprove. show- Stoppard traces how: the : idea of ernment body of any ? school district however - or- of thing, need waste little time get- actually be prevented from ture? about the travails of satyriasis, artistic and intellectual freedoni be- President Nixon was. plainly right, ganized, unorganized"'. territory,.?-'county, city, village, ting there. Presumably Boston will ing that which is permitted to be was.suspended, frightening the avatit at Annapolis the other /week, when ¦ Will zoning laws comes corrupted in the totalitarian town, borough or other public body, and of any provide express subway service to shown elsewhere? garde in ?New York and Hollywood mind to that of art as the servant he said that detente will have its committee, subcommittee, : board, department or Sin Stop, a gesture of municipal prevail / over direct appeals to the half to death. The best way to deal of the of artists value , if it lessens the chance )f Amendment? state — and as ex- commission thereof ,? shall be open to the-public,?, ex- courtesy that becomes that old, civ- First with odd ball Supreme ? Court de- pendable "snivelers" - and "winn- war between nations vvithotit affect- cept meetings of the board of pardons, the adult ilized city. The success of the old Red Light cislons one disapproves of is to ig- ers." '4 'P '-4¦ ing ideologies. - nore them, and hope nobody will no- The corrections commission and the youth commission. There are of course complica- District rested, really, on pre-con- Soviet attitudes toward art and danger is that in seeking po- tions. There is the book shop at the stitutionalist dispositions, effected tice. This is what they are now try- litical arrangements with authorl- "The votes of the: agency, ' ' freedom are a subject much on the members of such state other end of town which will want by the flat of the ruler, unavailable ing- . ' Iterian powers, democratic govern- board, commission or department or of such govern- The Boston experiment should be mind of London just now. The Bol- to make available to its customers for appeal on generic grounds. The shoi Ballet, here on ia visit, opened ments will seem to condone their ing body, committee, subcommittee, board, depart- at least a good sampling of the sea- conventional idea was to outlaw vice, Indulged. The anti-obscenity people cruelties. That is no abstraction ment or commission on any action taken iri a ignore It within cer- should keep quiet about it and their with a lifeless production of "Swan when it comes to son's pornography. In part because but to agree to . Lake," a reminder of what 50 years the Soviet : Union. meeting herein required to be open to the public that book shop desires to give its tain bounds in the city. So that those counterparts should accept a little Those in the USSR who suffer for shall be recorded jn a journal kept for that pur- of Leninism have? done to Russian clients anything they might desire; who sought . to practice . it •, outside self-restraint and see how it works. ' ' ¦¦- their beliefs or their religion deeply pose, which journal shall be open ? to the public These things are better left tihpub- artistic- creativity, • - - in part because there is very brisk those bounds were not only violating The Bolshoi visit is the occasion fear that the Nixon-Brezhnev variety during/all normal business hours where such rec- trade in the sex books. Indeed , a re- the law, but were inviting penalties, licized, so I promise I shall not cite of detente will add legitimacy to the ords are kept. The vote of each member shall ba Stmf t the Boston solution again. for.debate here about what we In cent figure reveals that in middling IN THE UNITED we era the West can do to help the vic- tyranny. recorded on each appproprlatlon of? money, ex- size book stores, books that can rea- given to pragmatic solutions, and it Washington Star Synd icate Professor Zfeign.ew Brzezinskl, cept for payments of judgments, claims and amounts tims of Soviet repression. Outside the theater, demonstrators protest the of Columbia University has said fixed by statute, this section shall not apply to any that we used to think of detente as state agency, board or commission' when exercis- treatment of Soviet Jews. Many in official and artistic circles sympa- bringing "an increasing sense of ing quasl-judlclal functions involving disciplinary shared ideals, with many ln the proceedings." Death by disenchantment - thize with the protests. Others think It is wrong to annoy the Bolshoi communist countries looking to us for inspiration. Detente THE LAW is subject to a great deal ef Inter- troupe and argue that private rep- today, In- resentations work better than public stead, is a conservative balance-of- pretation . What is a meeting? What are the excep- national la nd use bill power arrangement, devoid of any tions to the law? Etc. The Interpretive issues are the protest. of —-' ¦ ' ' establishment provides a shocking WASHINGTON — The House . .- ¦ moral content." certain to surface. . . Representatves last week kil led the exhibition of cost overruns. Tho IN THIS instance th«rt if convinc- Ideals; Yes, but we can only , long pending land use bill The ac- James J. Kilpatrkk Postal Service cannot deliver the ing evidence for the first view, for press them on others if we live them For that reason we prefer to place ow hope tion triggered an explosion of an- public pressure on behalf of the op- ourselves. VTe can hardly expect and confidence in public officials themselves. For and recriminations , but mail. Amtrak cannot run its trains gry charges on time. The 'District of Columbia pressed, For it would have been Brezhnev to listen very seriously to if tliey do not have the willingness to share wilh the vote was a pretty fair mani- have already cost so much in litig- very difficult to go on with the Bol- talk about the rule of law from an (he public the decision-making process, then thoy festation of representative govern- tlon, uncertainty and ugliness." offers a beautiful example, does it not , of federal authority In action: shoi season at all if the Soviet au- American government that commits will find avenues to evade the letter of the law. ment in action. We can lenrn some- The editorial offers a textbook thorities had nol, just before the burglaries and wiretaps its own of- of contemporary liberalism. It dirty air, polluted rivers, and crime- What we arc concerned about Is the spirit of thing from it. ridden streets. opening, relented In their two- ficials. The answer to Lenin is that, The bill would have authorized tip does not occur to the Post that the year torment of Valery and Galina in art and life, we are for the hit- the law and the attitude of public officials toward House members who voted against The people, it occurs to me, are that spirit. to .$1.00 million over an eiRht-ycnr Panov and let those two dancers go man spirit , not the state. period In federal grants , to the the bill might have been moti- justifiably skeptical of further fed- to Israel. states. The grants would have been vated by honest convictions and eral guidelines, They have had a It is always hard to know exact- New York Times News Service The spirit b( the law , as we see It, is that well-founded doubts. The only ex- bellyful of such guidelines. Under the public should have a right to be present when used by participating states to de- ly what moved the USSR off some velop land use plans according to planation that occurs to the Post federal guidance, racial tensions in course. There is reason to think that government is in the process of discussing and is that profiteers and , primitives the public schools have not been making changes. federal guidelines. The Idea wns to the intensity of the public campaign water- were irresponsibl y determined to diminished but increased. Because on their behalf hnd become a real promote the conservation of of federal sheds, wetlands, scenic and histori- pursue their policies of exploitation. guidelines! the Environ- embarrassment — especially In this The proper attitude of public officials , as we The underly ing assumption of the mental Protection Agency rapidly is see it , is Ihat they accept public service on cal areas , and arens of particular country, threaten disruption of the environmental Importance. editorial is that federal regulation losing public stippoort. The people Bolshoi, a Soviet prestige symbol. the basis thnt tliey conduct this service in public is bound to be better than, state and have sound reason to believe that view. BY ITS refaction of the bill , In local regulation. Without federal a little federal control soon is follow- the view of the Washington Post, grants and federal guidelines, the ed by larger federal control. It is WINONA DAILY NEWS That means open meetings announced in ad- Hie House denlt a "low blow to Iho states and localities will have to true that last week's land use bill An Indep endent Newspaper — vance, land. " The newspaper said Iho get going "as best they can," had been striped of the punitive Established 185$ House had voted for exploitation TO WHICH tha concsrvatlv* re- sanctions once proposed, but expert-? MEM HER Or THE ASSOCIATED MESS SERVICES POR and destruction. It was an I rrespon- WIM.IAM P. WHITB . . . . Publisher NO ONE DISPUTES that lt It many times plies: What is so wrong about that? ence has taught the people to be- CHARLES W. SCHMITT more comfortable for public officials to discuss pub- sible performance , both dishearten- Where Is the evidence to prove that ware of entering wedges. Once a C. E. LINDEN , BU*. Mgr., Adv. Dir. lic business In private, And experience shows that ing nnd discourag ing, the work of a federal uniformity . Is inherently bet- program of land use grants had be- Anoi.ni BKEMEU . . Editor-lti-Chle/ Funeral Htld Today an uncomfort ably large percentage of the public coalition of "Ihe profiteers , tho ter than stnle diversity? The bill come entrenched, the sanctions GARY W. EVANS . . Mng, Editor Isn 't Interested in whnt really ls Hi business. But primitives , and the President. " that died last week wasn't killed by might have been added. M, SUB ROETMEU., Asst. Newa Editor , Mr. & Mrs, HERMAN when a public body holds a private meeting it Is "Without any national program " some wicked coalition, That bill LEFT TO get along ' 'at best they C, GonooN HOLTE . . Surtdoy Editor the Post , "the various stntca telling the public thnt the matter is non e of Its said died of disenchantment . can, " the states and localities doubt- W IM IAM H. E NGLISH . . . LUTTERMAH nnd localities will be loft to deal - Controller business, What has the federal government less will make some errors In -reg- A. J. K IKKDUSCU ., Circulation Mgr, 10:30 a.m., Friday with growth , speculation and sub- done lately to Inspire confidence in ulating the use of land. They also St Matthew's Bv. Lulhera urban sprawl as best thoy can . . , L. S. BHONK .... Compostoflr Supt. n What we would prefer Is public officials look- Its superior wisdom? When one will have some successes. This is The absence of coherent land uso looks nt those areas of unchalleng- how federalism is supposed to work L. V. ALSTON ... Engraving Supt. ' mf UKTin Ing for ways to Inclu de the public, not looking for planning policies does no[ mean the ItOBKItT VOOELSAWO . , . Protn Sttp U ^ ways to avoid the public. ed national responsibility, the rec- in a freo country : within reason , FunEAAi. Home. absence of regulation ; instead , lt ord Is not Impressive. The White Congress ought to leave the people Tho Associated Press is entitled Formerl y means continuing the present tan- exclusively to the nse tor republica- JJ .i.tlow-MMt .i. f uneral tlm* House is stained by corruption . The alone. In time , they will find their tion of all the local news printed in So we depend not so much on the law as we gle of fragmented , often conflicting Congress cannot pass even a modest own way. 376 But S.tnl. • Winona do on the people In gov«rnmwit. A.B, this newspaper as well as all A.P. HAM Dty at NlflHt AW)# > — federal, state and local law*, which Budget Reform Act. The defense Washington Star Syndicate , news dispatches. AAo>te piolifeiaris 'l%^j(^j^:lSd^fipip: Nixon s ritihg thai* statesman (DmnJjp f iX f We are Mng in the era Of the n«ws commentator (in- at alltime low terpreter). Wouldn dcC£M£f^^^m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^*^^^^m U&A,^m^^^^^m j ^^r ^mY/M\ *m iM*W m *P_L \^k 4s?^^ "^ _¦e 't it be rice of them to let the people do Just before he took off for April -,. JI 47 I their own interpreting^ or Irthe American March 24 71 I public too irtwpld? his travels abroad, President Fab ...29 U I It seems to me that the news media should give tig facts PMrJogf e Jan 30 48 2 rather than opinions M Nixon's overall standing with Nov., -73 -.~.. 17 41 1 and wliat has actiially happened,In- Oet 12 44 4 stead of prognostications. the American people had once July 42 54 4 JUJM 41 49 S As. long as it's the style,- let me do some ioterpiettart again dipped to its all-time low Mirth ...... 99 29 2 forecasting: .? Fab ....40 29 1 ¦and- ,??? P-P r of 26 percent positive and 71 ', Politically, it appears to me that?the Democratic party closingWeMrol percent negative. OF COURSE, this survey does would bonefit by keeping the issue of impeachment of the This marked a sharp drop in not reflect public reaction to his President ''hanging fixe" until all naid-tena elections are the President's rating from the trip to tbe Middle East. Trips oyer. And that seems to It was not my intention to "campaign" through the news- abroad have usually been a be what they're doing. Elementary 32 percent positive he had tem- I wonder also, If they are using Hifler'a"iiein Kaimpt!' paper medium against the closing of Central porarily achieved in May. sure-fire way for Presidents to for their Bible, , School. However, the remarks made by Dr. Rogers ii) th* build backing at home. But a 'If you tell a big enough lie and tell it often and hopefully The reason for this relapse in enough people will begin to believe It." Are you aware -of last school board meeting were uncalled for , Mr. Nixon's standing with the majority of the public, as re- the:continuing radio, TV, magazine and newspaper reporting did not represent the views of the outgoing nor the, incoming public is not hard to find . On ported last Monday by the Har- which keeps up a constant staccato of recriminationsagaiiist members of the Board, to response to a statement maide by all Watergate-related matters, ris {Survey, has expressed a be- high-ranking Hepublicaiis?: ? Mrs, flyman opposing the closing of Central and poanting but without exception, the Presi- lief that this Is no time for On the other side, the Republicans would profit from that previous recornmendattioiis by the university study group dent in this survey hit new President Nbcon to be traveling having President Nixon Impeached and driven out of office had been implemented in the. pastj.Dr . Rogers allegedly said: lows in public confidence: abroad. "This one will be too. In my estimation, Dr. Rogers outstep- or from getting hint to resign. You isee, Wstorlcallyi the pub- " • On "his cooperation with lic usually votes in an ihcumbent for a second term. With ped his bounds for he, as in outgoing member of the board, the House Judiciary Commit- Gerald Ford , finishing Nixon's second . term, lie would likely could not- speak yvlth authority -about the future actioiis of tee," President Nixon, in a the board, nOr can anyone else for that matter. sur- Transient gets be reelected in the next presidential election in 1976. That ¦ vey among 1,413 households would give the .Republicans another four year* "in the sad- '. - As.' for the closing of Central, it:is a nutter that should conducted from June 1 through rude awakening be opposed by all, parents in Winona, and hot just those who June 4, stood at 78-14 percent I think we now have more politicians than statesmen in live in the central district, y negative, a deterioration from STOCKTON, Calif. (UPI) - Congress. They seem riot , to be so concerned with what's -The import, which the experts from the university have the 72-18 percent negative in A 52-year-old transient got a good, for? .the country as with what's , good for the party . and " " May. rude awakening Wednesday y y submitted is quite voluminous and - seems to have' required themselves, long hours to prepare for typing and ; duplication. . When it • On his "handling of the after he bedded down in a trash MBS. WESLEIY C. HAPPEL comes to the recommendations regarding Central school, it Waterga te case" he stood at bin to escape the rain. Houston, Minn. has to go a long way before it can be called superficial. The 84-11 percent negative, a change The sleeping tramp. Joe findings of the report are quite contrary to the recommenda- from 80-15 percent negative a Rogers, got dumped along with A fun collection of earrings and rings month before. the garbage into a scavenger tions. Following is a sunuiiary¦ and some reflections on some Minneapolis man d/eis of gun wound of the findings of the report:'• - . Mainly as a result of the con- truck. to match your whims or wa rdrobe. tinuing slide in the public's as- The truck's driver, Roy . MINNEAPOLIS, ? Minn, (AP) after , tlje shpotingfy 1. Despite the continuous complaint in the report about sessment of his behavior in the Framicch, sad he dumped two Pierced or clip style earrings. Rings — A Minneapolis man has died Lowe apparently was getting the size of the rooms in the school district in general and Watergate and impeachment other bins hn the truck and had of a gunshot wound in the abdo- in Central hi particular, it admits that Central is one of matters stopped at the Stockton Police "Pinkie" to "Costume" styles. ;¦ ready to leave on a flshuig trip only four out of 12, now 11 with the clpsjng of the Pickwick , no more than 21 per- from men that police said apparently and wanted his wife to be able cent of the people — a new Department for more trash was suffered .while the man school, which: have 300 or more students. D Ctentral were, to low — found themselves able to he saw a hand reaching .- to- protect heriself in his ab- close dowri, the children would have to be transferred to at when was showing his wife how to sence, authorities said. give Mr. Nixon high marks on out from the scraps. s $ ' " with '" least two of the , remaining three schools large enroll- '¦ ^ operate a revolver. ¦ ¦ : ' - . . ¦ ¦ "inspiring confidence personal- He pulled Rogers unharmed to Police said ments. These two schools . are MadisOn and .Washington- ly Ln the White House. from the garbage and said the 2 10 Ezra H. Lowe, 60, The National Bank of Paris Kosciusko, which would add to the problems of congestion in " The died at. Hehnepin County Gener- plans open, Harris Survey regularly has tramp was a lucky man. to a branch in these schools. The other logical school where, the children , he al Hospital Wednesday, shortly Chicago this year. , dose asked cross sections of the pub- Normally, said Franucchi would be transferred Is Lincoln. But that too is very lic this question: would ha-ve used the track/s r ^__*^7 ffJ JEWELRY.— to the . maximum of it? capacity. NIXON RATING ON equipment to crush \m *«^ ff f£S MAIN FLOOR INSPIRING CONFIDENCE compacting 2. Projected enrollmenit figures for the school district ex- Good- Only Fair- Hot the load. tend to.1934 (?) The figures for tie period after 1979-80 is Excellent Poor Sure tOSE 20 POUNbS purely conjectural. These children are to? be born Based - "i *% % St. Louis University, founded ? . June, '74... 11 »¦¦' . 5 ate «¦¦ , on these f igures, rand it one is to extend the projections to May .:. is * in 1818 and chartered io -1832 is ^*/f [[ « Whore P«r*w»ol Servta IN TWO WEEKS! ' ' for Apr" 13 80 7 university west of the urr Sta the 1998-99 academic year; the kindergarten enrollment the oldest J u n«portant fairioui U,S. March ...... is 78. 7 > \^ P Women SJt/ Team Diet the whole district should be zeroy ; Feb 15 77 • Mississippi. . Nov. ? During the : 'IS¦¦;- 18 76 4 ? . non-snow off season the U.S. Women's 3. Assuming that , all of the figures and calculations? are March :.:...... 38 50 12 - Alpine Ski team members go on the "Ski Team ydiet , what social Impact should the recommendations Fab 48 41 11 ¦ " to correct The number who rate the lose 20 pounds in two weeks. That's right.' — 20 .pounds in have on the central district of the city? Population studies President positively (good-to- 14 days! The basis of the diet is chemical food action ahd and studies of: urbanization show that the people in? their excellent) on inspiring confi- was devised by a residential patterns follow the schools, and particularly the ? famous Colorado physician especially good schools: If these studies apply to Winona, one should dence has plummeted from 48 ' ' to 11 percent over tbe past year !¦>> for the U.S. Ski Team, Normal.'iMe^y - fs ' iaaintaiiied- - (very' expectPa massive migration from the center of the cityycSome «QnJUwiL*+. J # _f - £ _** Important!) while reducing.yYoU k and a half since possible presi- people have already threatened to do that if this recommen- dential involvement . in Water- (DsdiqhiJL... - because: the diet is designed that wiay. It's a diet that iis dation should be. implemented.) There is no telling what effect gate first surfaced. ffrf% easy, tp follb*w whether you work, travel or stay at that would have on property ? values, tax base, total taxes home.. collected, the costOf the educational bill, and the general and A similar downtrend can be ? (Not the grapefruit diet!). ; " found in public belief in Mr. unique characteristics of the city. Nixon's basic integrity. Period- This is, honestly, a? fantastically successful diet. If it 4. The report singles out Central as being One of five ically, the Harris Survey has weren't, the U.S./Women's Ski Team woldcin't permitted schools in District 861 with a? linguistic prograim;..one of five asked cross sections of the pub< ^ schools having science centers; one of three schiwls with in- to use it! Right? So, give? yourself the same hreak the/U.S. - lie this question: from "Baby Bliss" and novative subject matter programs;.one Of five schools apply- NIXON A MAN OF j^^fy%SL Ski.Team gets. Lose? weight the scientific, proven way. Even ing innovative methodologies; .one of six schools with innova- HIGH INTEGRITY? . DIs- Not 'Tiny Tots", "Home from ^j ^ If you've tried all the other diets, you : Agree agree owe It to yourself to tive classroom organization ; and one of five schools having sur« F^O^^ try the tl.S. WomeinY programs for the educable mentally retarded. If one looks % 1 ¦ % . Ski Team Diet. That . Is, if yoii reailyy " June, '74 S4 : 5S ' . n the Hospital" Sets, Bubbles, do want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. Order today.: Tear ; at the data provided by the report, one is likely bo reach a May 40 so io 0 ^ ^^ ¥ ^^ \ single conclusion: . CENTRAL IS ONE OF? THE BEST April 37 , 49 14- and ? this out as a reminder.:. March ...... 39 ¦ 48 IJ 1$ X^- Rompers Sunsuits. \j ^^ SCHOOLS IN THE DISTRICT. F«b...... 39 -. 48 « /t^ Jan. 37 4» 14 Send only . $3.00 ($3.25 for Rush Service) —. cash iis ? ? 5. How many of the leaders and other residents of Wi- June, '7J ...... 43 : M 21 One and two-piece sets in May ...:..:,.:.... i3 24 w ^^f f^ O.K. ?-i-fp.* Associated Ski Services PiO, Box 3582, Chico> nona attended: Central or had their children attend Central? F«o. 48 ::¦ 20 n Oil; '71 ...... 48 1» • IJ Would aiiy of you like to see li closed? ¦ ¦ ¦ baby delicate colors. ^>Jf i CA 95926; Doit't?order unle-ss you" want to lose 20 pounds in? Sept. . ;. '. ,.- .i.. '¦.. '.1.-76- 13 11 6. Since when does, the quality of; education figure in For the first time, ?two weeks! because that's what the Ski Team Diet will do. terms of dollars and cenb? If the most expensive schools a major- ?: ;? '- " . : '? ;.y /C ' 1972' ; ity flatly disagree that Richard are the ?lowest in quality, and thus must close their doors, Nixon is "a man of high integ- 75 then we should consider passing a legislation to close down rity." Faith in the President's s 25 the doors of schools as Harvard, Columbia, Vassar,! Yale, honesty has fallen from a high to the University of Michigan, the University of California sys- Jl | 3 V ' '" ' of 76 percent in September tem . . . etc. ' 1972, at the height of the pres- Many more points could be brought up, but I prefer to idential campaign, to its cur- save my ammunition for use in the appropriate places and rent low of 34 percent. at the appropriate times. My hope is that the new board By the same token , public will carefully study th*3 recommendations of the report. I am doubts about the President's confident that their conclusions will be similar to 'mine. I credibility have risen to new hope, once again, that Dr, Rogers was not speaking for the highs: board. I further hope that members of the board will make HARD TO ACCEPT MIM- , Central AS PRESIDENT? public commitments to reject the recommendation on . DIs- Nol Elementary School. The citizens of Winona should be aware of Agrn ag,** Sura c/o % % all the ramifications and implications of the recommenda- June, '74 80 14 4 tions of the "experts" and what it will mean to the city. I May ; 73 20 7 April 75 18 . 7 would suggest that a local study group be formed to present March ...... 72 21 7 counter -proposals for the board's considerations. -1 ani furth- Fall...... _ 75 . 17 . 1 Jan. Ti 19 s er confident in the collective wisdom of the board and that MOV., '73 73 21 t they will make the logical decision. Oct. 60 . 29 11 DR. AHMED EL-AFANDI It Is evident that a massive majority of the American peo- ple see this President as ? hob- bled by questions concerning both his integrity and credi- A special Kmited time offer bility raised by the .disclosures and his own behavior concern- SjOJfAJ aSf Wrf-L to introduce the great ing the Watergate matter. is a result, the overall rat- Long ond short sleeve styles. Sizes 6-8. Guerlain fragrances/ ing of President Nixon in June sank back to the all-time low gj 75 for his tenure in the White *f* $ 25 House reached last March. /~3Jn£V^ **. INFANTS — . 2 to >2 OVERALL NIXON JOB RATING I fjflmJC"bW& SECOND FLOOR 15 offering - Oood- Only Fair- Not ¦xcellent , Poor Sura If HO Where J»«r«maJ $9tvto* its classic fragrances % % % t» St^ Sizes — 8 to 16 Jum, '74 ...... S6 71 1 wt^ V-/ tnvpoftant SGuerlain May 32 44 t $ 3°° to M00 Get cool room comfort that Includes dtadkA diatdu in a new introductory a breath of fresh air, from frigidaire. Now, Frigidaire fielpsyou be more _ ' . , ¦ ' ¦ " .Quilted Sun Hats I n Ass't. Colors cologne spray. For a $050

74mjbA&IIaA. $09?

VISIT THE TRUNK ... MON . THRU SAT, 12 NOON 'TIL 5 P.M. THIRD FLOOR... RIGHT OFF THE ELEVATOR ^^ymij^- 19,000BTWhr.* Enwrmmerri: Cjfpa te Makers Mr whveperma sertfanon95^^yy from ( . rt SHtt - rmjwrtont , N ^ ' Frigidaire- te (L **r V-/ Gppo ,,..,,. , . . , i . i ., . Cfrpate ^ Pertonol 5«rt)fa» , Af I . Where Personal Service j/f If « V/htr»*» «W» i» Still XV htyotumt APPLIANCES—LOWER LEVEL q^^r \j Important a*^ Silver ann iversary LAKE CITY, Mltih. (fecial) —Mr. and ? Mrs. Walter B«ck, ^©tMe^ sil- ¦ Lake City, celebrated their DEAR ABBY: My 62-year-old mother who was recently years You are not "disgraced." A person can disgrace , ver wedding anniversary •with widowed, has taken to running around with men. She joined •only himself. . Mother is probably ImoccW of an|y wrong- , an open house Sunday ai p &e some kind of "Senior Swingers Club;" Her men friends have doing, but some neighbors love to talk. ? * Civb. been seen by her neighbors and they have beguni to talk; Lake City StHirtsman * DEAR ABBY: I work days, so about six months' ago I two children and I just can't understand what's come over my mother. She to conie The couple'* Mred a rrice: middle-aged woman I'll;call ''Bkruna'' spouses hosted tt» event picks up men at the grocery store, at bingo, and at other in? and look after my children. their WKM weht8.i- y 4 y/ :/yy.y with --Bir. and MM. C^lflM . : the other ? day I noticed a long-distance call on my phone The She used to be a devoted Christian wife and mother, and bill which neither my husband nor I had made, so I phoned Babe, host and hostess. my children adore their "Nana," but now; she's disgracing couple have three gxandchile ' Bnaha and asked her if she ?liad made it. I stressed that I ' '• «ur family. I spoke to her, about this, amd she said .;8he/.- .ffgT wanted if there was a dren. ,. * ¦ didn't nund if she had, 1 only to know */¦ ¦ ¦ -:¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦-• ¦ - / ¦ ¦- . : iired . -s h. - ' - ' - • ' -- - - ' ¦ - ": ' - /' ¦ . .: ' ' ' :-..: , . • ; ¦ ¦ ¦ mistake on my bffl (It was less than $*.) ; ? may not be ' «^- ;^' '- ¦'A :*/- .* /. ' ¦: a round Early the* next morning,Emma's: husband called to tell Lehriertz open Fious* ¦ Dea r Abby: ¦ me that Emma was so upset oyer my "insulting accusation" * ¦¦ too - -many - ' . that she coulda't work for me anymore! ROIJJNGSrONE, : Minn. -_ more years, no trauma Francis Lehnerti, ¦¦ ¦ By:¦ ¦Abigail ¦¦ ¦ ¦ 9 Von¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ Buf«ny ¦ ¦ '¦ ¦ - - :- Fortunately, I was able to replace her with Mr. and Mrs. and th e \ ¦ . . . ' . . - . . . • : . - - . - to my children, and very Httle inconvenience ta myself, but I Hollingstone, will -oelebrat* wants to en- ¦;¦' . - want to know If I did the wrong¦ thing in* questioning Emma. -their 25th wedding anniversary joy what's left of her Die. Isn't this type bf activity bad , for . :;- ; ?;¦ ; ,: : / yy] CONCERNED •with" an open house Sunday a woman her age? frOm 2 to? 5 p.m. at their fahn I need some advice on how to handle this. DEAR CONCERNED: H you're teliingMt like it was, home. A dance wilt be held? in DESPERATE IN FORT PEBRCE, FLA. you had every right to ask hei*, and she should not have the evening. The event will be regarded your question as..'an iitSulting accusation." ; DE^LR DESPERATE: A Woman who has?lieen/a deh hosted by the coupled eight chil- voted Christian wife and mother doesn't beCoine less of ?- . CONTroOENTiAL TO DIXIE: The way to get a boy is dren/ Friends and relatives are a Christian because she makes hew friends and enjoys to make him a little jealous. The way to lose him is to invited io attend. No invitation* socialising. It could keep her young and healthy for many make him a little more jealoui. have been sent.

OLD-FASHIONED LADIES AID ... An skit presented are from left: Mrs. Lynn Iver- old-fashioned Ladies Aid meeting was held son, Mrs. Virgil Bothun, Mrs. Ernie Borgen, recently at the Bethlehem ALCW meeting. Mrs. Walter Ode and Mrs Maynard Ask and The -women, attired in the costumes of the Mrs. Ode's granddaughters, Margaret and first Ladies Aid meeting held in 1880, gath- Rachel Roddy. Norwegian hymns were sung ered in a setting typical of the homes in and the Lord's Prayer was recited in Nor- llr r |\L" which the first Ladies Aid meetings were wegian. The skit was held in con-junction with lll'j Am\\\\W,Am\mmmm ^mW *.AmmWmmW ______I held. The first meeting called "Kvinde Foren- the centennial celebration of the Bethlehem ing" was held at the home of Mr. and Mn. Lutheran Church which will be observed June Ole Langley Jan. 23, 1880. Participating in the 29 and 30. (Mrs. Laird Adams photo) ¦¦ *_¦¦ ¦¦ - i .. -_-¦.-. ._¦ -¦ ¦¦._,.,¦.-_ _„ —

YWCA swim S&^&^k^y, ^ w» - $?'»< »ti fla Winona Dai|v NeWB schedule told fM *»« Winona, Minnesota ffi$^ The YWCA has announced the schedule for summer swims at the YWCA. STARTS T°«RI!OW! A girls plunge is held daily 9i% frft li^^f^^SJ^Lm I THIS IS OUR BIG SALE I from Monday through Friday at 1^ !#Y s ECTION" >* m i<(R^| S p.m. at the YWCA. The ll THURSDAY, JUNE 211, 1974 UM swims will continue through im Aug. 16. A fee is charged and plunge cards arc available. P8 W' 0F THE Family swim is held eacli tlll ^&i ^ Fn Tuesday and Thursday evening June 2l at 7 p.m. Members and their IT ' families are invited to attend . E Mussell open house I Come See... 9 —THRU- SIS free of charge. Children must Eleva couple / — H't. V ^if|Iwi ^V/ L fnmta ^auo,l ii§*l _____• _ ^Bfa' PyAyy/PPmSMik be accompanied by aa adult. wM s, '^R rW> \mQtwiv j avci s?a r ¦ ¦ ^______F^______*Ki PLAINVIEW, Minn. - Mr. 'MM m -'.siLiS _? Myt m. ¦ ¦ ^^B ^^^»W^SE^smai^^^wJlKI~wt__KH___P__K Recreational swims axe held and Mrs. Norman Mussell, exchange vows each day at noon for "Y" mem- Plainview, will celebrate their ¦ bers. silver wedding anniversary Sun- ELEVA, Wis. — Miss Janet I lw4. I j in Jimp 7Q Further information ori recre- day with an open house from Christenson, daughter of Mrs. J^mm ational *ffims may be obtained 2 to 5 p.m. at their home. Chil- Marian Christenson, and Danny by contacting the "Y" office. ¦ dren of the couple will host the Barneson, son of Mr. and Mrs. ¦ HUGE SAV,NGS- 0N THESE event. Friends and relatives are Erwin Barneson, Eleva, ex- invited to attend. No invitations J^k^^k m> ^w^m.m changed nuptial vows In a June NAME Graduation have been sent. Nj^ BRAND ,TEM$ FR0M ¦ 1 ceremony at Norden Trinity ¦^^S^^ ^fl^ S. j fm ^ ? ill Miss Patricia Brandon, daugh- Lutheran Church. UR REGUUR rocw ter of Mr. and Mrs, David 25th anniversary Miss Carol Christianson and H Brandon, 677 E. Belleview St., Greg Yarrington attended the Bf«r ^li^3 / ° -was f^^^^ * recently graduated from AECADIA, Wis. - Mr. and couple. , ^ Faribault Area Vocational - Mrs. Severin Waldera Arcadia ^b X *XT*S3u_?%t''#' mi/ w ______¦______tmm *m __e% ¦__¦ mm WMiliMi&r ^^^^Bm&, , , The bridegroom is employed W& \_ ^USmmmmm f ^^^ ^t K ^ w ^ ^^ _T^ WbSsSr ^^^y Technical Insitute, having com- ware honored with a surprise by Gunderson Food Service, ^^ pleted the medical laboratory party on their 25th wedding an- Mondovi, Wis. The couple will ES w < assistant program. niversary Thursday. The party, live in Eleva. DRESS CI^IDTC She la employed by Commu- held at the Arcadia Country 1: W& V^KP~W/ m *A M «"" I'j mtj r GOOD WM ^J I I ¦ % ¦ ^J *^rSL___K i *L SELECTION STYLES ^ H^ nity Memorial Hospital and ii Club, was hosted by the cou- \m tm^W4 n A ATOF B m attending Winona State College. ple's children. ¦ M^yA^^ SIZES- BUY N0W JUST- Jmr ' 1/* I vULUIItb^III^TTCC 1H 1 /m-^% ¦ noirci 1 JUST IN TIME FOR A SUMMER H I H& *^*V&% / M* l^l^^ * eie M I f ' * 011 0F TYLE! ,T0CK up NOW— M ll I « £"" »*tf' ¦-----—--—--—---—-----———-—OF B I* * m I li *•?y3p ",i:"*uSi44 FASHION VARIETY I _^i fm Something old. l \\Zy4 -*"^\ ^ I ,4 # ¦« ie_k¦» ¦ ¦ ¦ i m PImM i 1 *^** _. » - i^ " ^ T M *^ I ___r ^ W^ I reg Something new. I SPORTSWEAR 8 Vi PRICE! 1 « mm LMm • SLACKS • KNIT TOPS If W$ ^'^^ ^^' And a diamond 11 W I • SHORTS • JACKETS M HANDBAGS||A&|f\llA _^C M wedding ring;too. _.,_^jxi_vi_,. , .y . M,. ? 1j . Mky~i Vu/.>l PRICE' :: .: m:I : ' .. : :4..y . : : I Stephanie Haglund ^^^., Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Haglund Sr., Lake dty, ' Minn., announce the engage- ? . JEANS:, - ; ;|^ ment of their daughter, 1 f/t BROKEN SIZES ... OUT THEY ttp! | || I ¦ CA8TIUAN Stephanie Joy, to William B Xf 'i V\ C C jf'JBJZ^W B SS l^fSSiHtflr^^ilV Sexton, son of ?Mr. and Mrs. . John Sexton Sr., Millville, Minn. 1 IM M 1/ DDI^CI I " B Miss Haglund is a gradu- ^^^^ ate of Lincoln High School, Lake City, and is employed by Riedell Slioe Factory, Red Wing. Her fiairce is a graduate of Lincoln High School and is engaged in /arming. S An Oct. S wedding la planned. PANT0OOD *mmmmmmmmmmm *mmmmmmmmmmmmmmaemm *m VBVP^ SUnS SELECTION ^^^H JV^I I , \ A OF, PATTERNS OR { I YES- \ ^i * ^pSf^|3S^Eil EEE KJ HS

otyJuijL ¦/ ¦ '¦ m 1 ^^ ' SiiiJ^i^i^V^r^^^^ 'O ¦wJ WW I \ " TftmwJl'J mm c* ^ ¦Vl V^I-i e Wfea 11 \ '*' ¦' . »' u ti U mUti^f ^^ WNWNA . ! has GRASS \ o» ^°' K^^^^PH FOR " "" I SHOP EARLY BEST SELECTION '^P^tl ' When you say "I do," say It with style. With y%f\0 r^v ^ Mt*|VlK^3 ^_ \ matching diamond wedding rings by ArtCarvad. Carpeting! Preetoue diamonds and M-Warat gold, You'll find a style that expreeacN yow feelings and your No Cutting — fashion sense—^forjuet what you want to spend. No Raking See our complete collection soon. — No Trimming!

c/4rt Carved — GREEN WINTER Iwm tht mtlmr *sf Una* Chirm * eiyilnl * SUMMER •— 30-60-90 DAY CHARGE ACCOUNTS mmtVllTl^^^SLV fM* iii ik m\ NO CARRYING CHARGE W^^^^^^ ^*^^BB______}_^ (sffis^mifriiwttiti jtrUNCI IM <£yl/& 0^ 77 PLAZA BAST • LADIES* SHOP e CENTER ST. • MRS. GRINDLAND, MOR. Highway 61 ¦ ¦ '¦ ----:— 1— ———— ; <3irls Stater / T OUT norqscppe—jeanc vi^sy » named to off ice

For FR IDAY, Junt Jl Scorpio (Oct. . lXNoy. 21): ConaUttt- A1CADIA, Wis. (Special) - Your birthday , loiayi summer »rrlvn Hont with exper*i in your ewn arid oth- at 1:M p.m. CCXT when -the Sun enters Miss Jane Kostner, Arcadia, pay Vfl. : An extra word may Cancer. Both Gemini and Cancer natives er fields was -elected district attorney born today - fact a coittplax, adventurous spc.il an Illusion, but nonverbal commu- year vtlth much excitement: lively atillta nications speak louder. V . . of Babcock County ? at Bidger ol relallonshlpi. Today's Gemini natives Sagittarius (Nay. 22-Dec. 21)1 Rollins art natural philosophers. The Cancerlans Girls State held June 11-14 at art ? Uirewd obsarvtrs of cause arid ef- readluitments become part ot your mods the University of Wisconsih.-Mad' led, have to learn to distinguish between of operation for some weeks to come. ¦ ' ¦ their oyvn and athers' Interests. ? Whatever happens .opens a new Una ol ison. ' Arias (March 21-Aprll If) : Renova- probability, mora to . bt done. More than 300 officials ar« tions, remodeling of property are fav- Capricorn (De<. 12-Jan. It): Time out ored. Whatever^ their , relationship, -those to mend fences. You miss some of your elected in the week-bhg con- around you oblect about tht smallest usual "luck" In. commercial natters, te ference in State government details, Flnincl.il moves work better you may as well feature fM free, "good than expected. things" of dally- living. elections for the five mythical ¦ - Taurus . (April IMAay 10): Carper Aquarius (Jan. -20-Feb. 18) i Avoiding counties and 10 cities set up. projects advance, although a restless sudden changes Is hard now, worth a ;; Miss Kostner is the daughter mood and .hitting circumstances force try. Yoii can -tal k . practically anybody some revisions. Romance thrives Inter- Into agreement -for at least a short time. of Mrs. John Kostner, Arcadia, mittently, happily, for th* very young. . Make a special elfort to be moderate! arid the late Mr. Kostner. Gemini (May ll-Jima Mj. Fliianelal Places (Feb. It-March 101; Vow you're plans .thrive. If you proceed cautiously, the mediator, the center of several cross- one. step at a time. General conditions ing pressures; with something important perk up. An original idea It worthy ol to accomplish. On the personal side, immediate alteration, early application, check up on your cash and outlays. Twilite leaguie Cancer (June 21-July 22): Those, who know you well . Ignore what you say; distant contacts are -. helpful. Romance

¦ ¦ smm&. ^^ssL-.- ¦ ^ ' PK1NG AND QUEEN . ; i.i l^P and Mrs. Robert Heins,, Eyota, Minn,, were crowned king and queen of the Eyota Seii- .. ? ior citizens at a recent meeting. Mrs. Ernest Lichte, Eyota, . leader, performs the crowning cerernoiiies. The couple will be featured guests, in the Viola, Minn., Gopher Count parade : today. Mr. and Mrs. Heins are retired farmers and now : v: : livje in Eyota, They haVe three children : Russell and Joe, »\^^^' -: -v b^^B______v^n__HH______H^HBB ;/ 'p . ''*wWKwwwwwwWmWww: ' '' Eyota, and Mrs. Edward (Katherine) ?Fick,y'Zumbro Falls. ^^ They have 11 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' . - '. - : ,/ A J J.' - A. - A. - M. _ ^ • -*¦ ' ' j' ' _4 , i AV . • ; Heins is 74 and his wife'is '68.-They are niembers of St. Paul's . ^ * -*- 4- ^ i, ^i' i A * e, * A A A 4*A * A a ^ * . United Church of Christ, Eyota. (Evelyn Schumacher photo) ' 'II ¦ , ' I. ' ' . ,. ' ' " ' ' • '¦¦¦¦' '' '' *»**aj—» - ;. - ' . i — - _ ; . .. *_J . ' . . , . ' ¦. "" '

y ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ - yr- :¦ ' ¦ ¦ ' ; ¦¦ • ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ |?*¦¦:: ¦ - ?"-. ' .' ." ' " -: XAST3BAYSl- ' ¦/. .:;: - - -: . ¦?. . ' - . . ' ' : ' . ' ; ' - - - . ' . " . " . ' .,. . ,' . " . .:. . ' • . ;/. , . ' . . , . - ...... • ...... ¦¦ ,T ¦ ' ' y 'T .. T ? . . . V ' '? . : V T - . y T T - 'T T ? T T T '^T ? ^ T T T t T *-? . T T T ? T T ¥ T * »' . - - ^ Bridge ^ the Gap ^^ between your floorsand your pocket. ^^^¦ Save 20% to 40% FRI.''S MT.-Sim Arik 44 : r . p "LA GRANDE" OR "PARKWAY" ^g Giant Savings ^^ fe^ _ lg© ON X" , '^^faP^

Now ^^ ^^ ' ^^am\______r I ^^^^^^^^Vt.' ^ iV ** Many More Items^^^^^m mmW^^^Av gpT ^fc^(^N « On Sale! q t° av n s aB thrl» the store! 5^ to ^ t£% ^^k ^ ' S *^ i ^KJP %\ / AmmmvlBB^i CMI — 7-PC. EARLY AMERICAN Mg ^yy 4 DINING SOFA & uW^m^mW ImV ^mWA L^KwktmB^' R00M SET CHAIR SET ^0-W^L\ AmmmmWBS ^^^^ "' 00 "TWISTETTE"MINI- VINYL FOAM CORE IN/OUTDOOR CARPET : » SHAG IS TWEEDY LEAVES WAXING BEHIND - COLORFUL ADDITION lllf* *3i9 *269 : All-nylon pile re- /T <)<) Damp mop, shine (y <) <> , Colors resist fa TrTTTT f ,,, y f r sista dirt and wear. \J SQ, YD. returns. InstalJa *U SQ, YD. ing, create eaay- J_ SQ. YD. Hurry! Sale Ends lU- Jute backing. REG. 8.99 on grade. REG . 3.99 ^ ¦ any care brightness. REG. 2.9* ¦¦' I ¦ I I I I ' III ' ' ' ll II , —___ ».—( — REFURNISHING? USE WARDS CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN — BHHHHHH H BREMER S^ Wehold up to yourtraffic. [^f£ ^|l Budget Furniture , """ , , . MIRACLE MALL-WIHOHA 9—TUES., WED. & THURS. 9 TO 6 — SAT. 9 TO 5 — SUN. 1 TO 5 t ot/4^SjL^-vv t^^A^t^ OPEN MON. & FRI. 9 TO j <\yXA.lfloytm/ V /J\M\M^Ky ' Sdf HIGHWAY 43 & OLD HOMER ROAD—SUGAR LOAF | 9 |o S30 TuM a I u(>wt/ Onxo^J^^j liyjcltA PHONE 454-4922 | 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.^ Sunday -It courts, it maintains the right to documents arid over Ihe testi- entitled to the .sanie discretion ' or aides just keep getting closer opek primary among all . candi- was a bit of: Senate - roiitlnej: a witWiold ' material ;wlien it mony of senators over White House documenta about legislative business: By GORDON HANSON The community was sealed 1966 damage. ? But now, "every- dates for governor on the GOP minor resolution handled Mth- chooises. y y: aid tapes, on grounds of execu- side, but the party has shown? ' ¦ ¦ '. ' ' -or '';. .By the privileges of the ?. ANKENY, Iowa (AP) — Her- off to sightseers Wednesday as thing ixom the floor up is com- - . -.. . .- j out debate tive : privilege. T%at: it a key " little warrnth for the sugges- dissent but That Is the congressional {senate of the ; United States, ao ? man 'Nagel has survived three cleanup work and efforts to re- ' An AP — his arguinent againrt store utilities continued. pletely, gone except the cook- tion. " "' -:". - the issue be- equivalent , of: the executive evidence ; under the control and part; .of tornadoes without a scratch. It was the second time Na- ware." ? ¦Whether Republicans admit it . News Wnd that for- privilege Nixoii Pis invoking in iri the possession of the , Senate subpoenas from the federal Does he believe someone is gel's* $25,000 brick , home was He said Tuesday's tornado publicly, the Watergate issue mallty is one his battle to withhold -White of the United States can, by the courts arid the House Judiciary AnalysisAnalvsis ings the or- watching over him? struck. A twister .tore off; the Was much worse. : "And it hit will be hanging over the con- ftf thft C€n. House tape ^ record and mandate of process of Committee, ; "Hell no!" he said Wednes?- roof in October 1966 as Nagel, vention. '/ ' . - - . ' ' y- ' - 'l tral contro- documents sought by the. courts dinary courts of justice, be tak- almost • identically to "the first ¦ -control or posses- There are differences. Execu- day night. "I think somebody's his wife, Joy, and their three "It hangs as a cloud over all versies in the. Watergate case. and House¦ inipeachment inves: en from such got it in for me. It's getting pne.>'- P . . endeavor maybe a The issue is the "-privilege ;"df tigators., -. - - . sion but by its peririissioii." tive?? privilege is an implied ' children huddled in tiie baser, political . ,, closer every time." "P- ' ./ i . ment. • ' . ?? ¦ ¦ '? ' . "This is the; third one I went little darker over Republicans/' brie hianch of the government The resolution before, the Sen- The requirement that the power based on precedent, not P Nagel's three-bedroom home ; The house was left broken, through. The first -was iii Far- says Erdahl. . to withhold something sought ate the other day. authorized a Senate decide whether to yield on law. Congress hai something was? hit by one of two twisters scattered and '. riddled again go, N.D., about 1956," he said. Erdahl acknowledges : that by. anothei* bTaiich. President Senate Judicial^ Comniittee materials to outsiders ii writ- in writing, y that Shattered a hundred homes Tuesday.- . ; .'; ¦':¦ , ¦ ? " ' ' ¦ Nagel said the sky "kind of Nixon, alone in asserting; aide to give a federal court ten into its rules, and covers The? : Cbristitutiori iays . its ' - . . Watergate has "discouraged" is not ei* and businesses in , this. Des ? "It's . a well-built home, rath- put me on my guard. It was Republicans especially party that prerogative, y dence aboiit the panel's rules of employes as well as senators. members "shall not: be ques- , "¦ , Moities suburb of 10.000 Tues- er, it was well built," Nagel real pale green. That happened activists and fund-raisers.. Congress reserves that privi- proceclure. The House reserves similar tioned in any other place" for day night, killing two and in- said. . '? . '¦-/ the first time too." Another potential trouble for lege for itself, and while it nor- lh doing so. it restated tiie prerogatives. speech; or debate on the floor. juring 10. '• '' It cost $8,000 to repair the Gov. Robert D. Ray on Wednesday toured: Ankehy and other Central Iowa commu- In San Francisco nities that were hit by the tor- nadoes, high winds and rain. He declared three counties disaster areas and said he Striking nurses would ask President Nixon for federal assistance. Ankeny Mayor O. J. Weigel asked for help to move water- soaked items in three schools increase pressure he said received ah estimated By JOHN M. LEIGHTY $3 million damage. to talks hy restoring emergency Because of Nagel's ex- SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - staffing to the levels agreed tt perience with funnel clouds, he Striking nurses increased their before the strike began 14 dayt, says he knows when one is SAVE S ago. 31* m pressure on 41 private hospitals about to strike. "Most of the today by pulling their emergen- patients aren't "My ears pop. Evidently it's in intensive care units unless the vacuum created by the tor- cy room and intensive car* they're fighting for their lives," nado. It's kind of a warning volunteers back to the picket he said. system. But I hope we don't lines. Nurses began walking out of have to rely on that, because ?' ; Hospital administrators saii emergency and coronary inten- you don't have much time after this created a "genuine health sive care units in hospitals they pop. The tornado is right care crisis" and doctors were from Sacramento to San Jose there." put on overtime to help care for early "Wednesday. By nightfall, The Nagels now have four acutely ill patients. staffing of acute care centers children, ages 7 to 11, all asleep was withdrawn from 28 hos- The 4,400-member California when his ears popped. pitals. "That meant head for cover. Nurses Association said the I don't know if I threw the kids decision to reverse a prestrike A CNA spokeswoman em- phasized downstairs or pushed them. But agreement to staff the acute , however, that regis- luck was with us." care centers was in protest of tered nurses would be provided continuing elective services. in any case where it was "Something went through the "They're using us to free determined that nonstrike per- picture window in the living other people to help with stuff sonnel were unable to care for room moments after we passed like silicone injections," said an acutely ill person. it. It made a hole in the oppo- Burton White, chief negotiator "We no longer will routinely site wall . and spokesman for the CNA staff hospital areas while We made it downstairs in v :: "Well, not any more." supervisory and other nonstrike time, thank God." There the -:' ;;.'l: ':r -" He said the ONA would personnel are free to undertake family waited out the storm, Ctf%Q"f decide today whether to accept nonacute or nonemergency frightened, soaking wet, pray- J WaiW^W I if l^BeQ& an offer by the hospital care," a CNA. statement said. ing.. ^ ^ associations to resume negotia- Negotiations broke off last Nagel, an employe of the tions on a "face-to-face basis." weekend with one of the key John Deere Des Moines Works, ^ Curtis Roberts, spokesman issues being whether nurses said, "It's like a bad dream. It •mk '^i k ¦ ¦ ^m %%r ORIGINAL LP HITSS ^ ^ for nine San Francisco hos- 'would have a say in the staffing can't happfin twice, but it did." wm^mwk - ^^ YOUR CHOICE pitals , said the CNA . should requirements at hospitals, espe* But he's thankful. "Homes V Ozark Mountain Daredevtls . V & ™t&3 *%4 \ ^J ^X fT ™^ ' 4* _M_#* -« demonstrate "good ,faith" prior daily in specialized care units. you can always rebuild." * . A«ne Murray/Love Song ' Si gL J I S ^ V * ISSi^HZtL!° M mYi . . Sord« L.ghtfoot/Sundown „,„ ^fy

will be quizzed at iriaI LP ANOKA, Minn, (AP) - Dan- took the fifth amendment on build in Burnsville. iJM SREMHTS " -^™|# || STEREO iel Caliendo was scheduled to ¦ ffW: - RECORD P*J ll , ,,, Sl»l . the advice of his attorney, rath- He said that he got so desper- ¦ rol, u GES! THE WUSIWSOUNl) RIOT! I y™. I | l ' 'IWW?WWami: ' ¦ * -* J ? r v ¦ f take the stand today to be ques- er than answer a question ate for such financing that he IP4'™*^^^^ fm mww\iii im ^^w Ju_d./nR i ARPI ct /< 7i^^n r ^T*t i^Mi|.L i * * * Hundrwl* ol _—*--^ 1 J tioned by the prosecution in the asked by defense attorney Ron- ran •»¦ advertisement in a Anoka County Court kidnapi*!? ¦¦¦'l ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ mmmnmmm w f . m fil» , ,,, ald Meshhesher. newspaper, but it got no re- u ^''' '' '''^-"' '-J';V / ' '' "'*> ' ' *" '^K *» *¦* ^9 ft'flBS? _I!H' S______Pr * * / JL « * a ^ i I \m i? J < 'V Wk \^H ^^^^^^^I^BBl trial of James W. Johnson, 35, Meshbesher had asked YOUR Ca- sults. About two weeks later Lakeville. liendo if he had come to the , Caliendo, 20, Chicago, is al- Twin Cities area in May. Johnson said, a man who iden- * CHOICE leged to have broken into the The primary witness Wednes- tified himself as "Mike" called Sr home of Mr. and Mrs. Gunnar day was Johnson, who told an and told Johnson he might be :X Ite l ^ ^ ^ \ ^^(m ^l Kronholm May 8, He was shot Anoka County jury that he was able to help obtain financing. and captured by FBI agents in Johnson said he didn't hear AMD UAN r Monm 1 , y ,;W 5: forced into kidnaping Mrs. Eu- «MM«B^ \ yWmlS'/ W M l^S^^fe, r iyf/ a field near the Rronholm resi- nice Kronholm on March 15. from the man until two weeks Brigiml vilHs to S5.28 S t^Tii, WW* ' \ mWP / ¦¦ - ^ ^5/ later sometime early in De- IBB* dence after escaping from Lino Johnson said his life was , A__-_^- ^^2 - \ SOUND-ALIKE Lakes police officers he alleg- threatened by a man he knew cember of 1973. He said he V^m ..l o9 \ 8-TRACK TAPES edly disarmed in the basement only as "Mike." agreed to meet "Mike" at a yinf$107 mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm^ COUNTRY ANO WESTERN of the Kronholm residence. Minneapolis bar to discuss .fi- ¦ 101 STRINGS SELECTION Johnson and two others are ¦ I COUNTRYrni lMTDV WESTERNU/CCTCDM LP'l D.S. I nancing arrangements, ¦ EA I 0«C "| I Not by original artlat Caliendo, who has recovered charged with the March 15 kid- Johnson said he met the E*' I YOUR FAVORITE STARSI Your $ I •from his wounds, was expecting naping. Mrs. Kronholm walked I ORIGINAL RECORU HITS! I?"' - 157WWA I *>Mi%t away from one of her abduc- strange man at a bar ard CH°»C« | I $197 to submit to limited questioning "Mike" agreed to provide the I ORIGINAL VALUES TO $5.98 | by the prosecution, tors after her husband paid ¦ MOO 000 ransom, financing, but told Johnson*. He made a brief appearance . "There's a little thing I want on the stand Wednesday, but Johnson told the y Jury his you to take care of first," trouble started in 1973 when he The defense has claimed that Ifla W'nona Dal'y New* « U»« Winona, Minnesota was attempting to get financing Johnson was coerced iato ab- THURSDAY , JUNE 20, 1974 for a supper club he planned to ducting Mrs. Kronholm,

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MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK (E2S3E23S2i CHARGE IT «* »i. w 1 OF WINONA l *®£&is?« M S- iTIMIDI IlHVLk An T ITIMLIMAM L Ull MON A i flll lURH Op8n 9 10 9 Mon. Thru Frl., 9 to 6 Saturday, Nwsn H 6 Sunday : King, queen crowned y, y - y. '.- .^ /h- lVi?diif?:(Si>p^ PP-ty .';' ' .Py P/ ' ry '<»f the Viola Gopher Count.? ? two-fold;' 100 years ago the first ey, and. now have grown Into '" MRSyiEVilLYN SOHIJMACHER- j Cloudy skies and the. threat of gopher' '-.count?' was ? combined two-day affairs, yy ; Dally News Correspondent ? rair. did not deter , some 1,500 with a picnic for . residents In 19L1, the street parade in- ' people from¦ enjoying the day!s cluded? decorated go-carts hold- . .:VIOLA, Minn;—Mr. - and lilrs. '] activities." ,'' y of Viola Township. The celebra- and pushed Bill: Brenneri donned crowns ; tions have always included the ing ^rdttngsters or .Wednesdaiy as king and oueen THIS TEAR'S celebration Is gopher, count and bounty morir pulled l>y older brothers and . sisters, ? In 1940, 10 little girls participated in a doll buggy parade, separate from the grand parade. The doll buggy parade, for ; pre-school -children, has grown and now includes three categories — doll buggies, pets arid co-aster wagons. Winners ia this year's parade,, immediately following the .coro- nation cesremony: ":¦' ¦ ' ¦; ¦ : ..: :' pijll •: - - . -buggy.,'?' ''-.. :iirst , >• 'itiirougb: third place respectively.* Dan- ielle Ri-chardson, Rochester; Jill Jliller, Eyota, arid "Kelly ? J» Shelihammer. St. Charles, with ari ?aritLque buggy. PETS, FIRST through third, place: Derek Daniels; son of Mr. arid Mrs* Gary Daniels, Chatfield;.Jimmy McFarland. son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mc- Farland, : . Elgin; Terri, love- joy; Burnsville, Minn. Coaster wagons, first througb third: . -Brian-?. Deanna and Jo Anna Shones, children of Sgt. and . Mrs. Danny Shones, Mc- ¦ ¦ Guire Air Force Base, N.J., .ROYALTY _ ., Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brcnriari,? 1974 king and at right,. Jerome Shea , general chairman, of this year's cele* presently visiting relatives in queen of .the lOOth annual Viola Gopher Count, greet subjects'. Oration. The celebration began . Wednesday, and . will continue the area; - Karen and Kristen At left , Mr. and Mrs' Mike Hofshulte.last ? year's royalty, and through today. (Evelyn Schumacher photos) ?? ?; Shea,. Willmar, Minn.;. Marvin ' Sawyer , son. of Mr. and Mrs. TRABITIOW¦ .' ;. , This: is one of the en- Governor Wendell Anderson.- Other activities Larry . Sawyer, Elgin, . tries in the pre-schobl childreir"s parade, a today included the beard judging and pie eat- Judges were Mrs. Francis tradition on opening day of the; Viola Gopher P ing contests. A dance, with'music by Guy De- Whitcomb, Eyota, Mrs,- William Count. In lionor of the 100th anniversary of..: Leo, will begin at 9 p.iri. . Woodword, Dover, and Mrs;. MAIDENFORA/V ? the event, the . grand parade today,was led' by William Harnack, Elgin. Mrs. Clair ? Mgori, Eyota was narrator ¦': at an afternoon fash- ion . show,: featuring styles of SUMMER SPECIALS former , years and including gowns more than 100 years old. OTHER activities included PRESENTS THE SOFTEE! a talk by Harley Flatheris, Ro- jfSsjft maiden/hrm * chester radio and television per- sonality ; a potluck; noon dinner 'TRICOT-CONFECTION'®..FOR .THE SMOOTH SHAPUR and? program for all senior citi- [Ofl| ^Bk zens in the area, local talent show, foot races arid a? teen ^^JHHn L CLINGWEAR dance. - ' . ? ? Governor 'Wendell Anderson led tlie. 10 a.m. grand .parade which opened today's activities. Events , will include a profes- sional talent. show at 7 p.m.,.a concert by the Chatfield Brass ' Crepe tricot cups shaped with Band at 8:30, and a dance from ^^Wm. m wBr f \. 9 to 1 a.m.: with music by Guy ' fiberfill. Stretch strap and back. DeLe», New Ulm, Minn. 0 ^§WWiWy h W L The L, C; Stillmari shows pro- zes 32 to 36 in white only. vide rides for all ages and food ^^^^fwB^\ ' Kwv / %% ^' stands offer a variety aimed to please any appetite.

j£xly SSS^S H______B5?j _vCT___y? M ^K WJt&$y3y&&j?^K!t$t&.T A. Wabasha Co. ^^BJ SL Jr T ^ £4^^^^ K^T 16 hold Vote .y??- WINKING ENTRY V. .- Marvin Sawyer, ? , of the kiddieypairado. Wednesday at the Viola son of Mr. and ;Mrs. Larry Sawyer, Elgin, ' , Gopher Count celebration, - . . - . won third place in the coaster wagon division on zoning law WABASHA, Minn. — County It technology advances commissioners here voted Tues- day to extend the proposed county zoning ordinance to Dec. 31, and to hold an advisory ballot on the ordinance at the Tar sand deposits may primary or general electiens this year. '® The. ballot will affect only New 'Dreamliner Contour wth ^y^W ^I| that part of the ordinance over ^ PHP Kelp solve energy pinch which the county has control; state and federal laws control adjustable straps that stretch! By TOW JONES Sun Oil keeps the plant open Oil expects to have a plant in sections dealing with flood- ^^^^^^ S^S^^H Dally News Staff Writer because further advances are operation by the early 1980s. plains, shorelands, sanitation The separation of high-grade constantly being made. Hostetter estimated that , Fiberfill contour bra. Shapes naturally with gentle fiberfill crude-petroleum from tar sand standards and subdivisions MMSB ilOSTEITEIl SAID various about;' 300 billion barrels of oil . Commissioners also rejected ^^^P^^^S^^^^^ deposits was discussed Wednes- J^^ methods can be used in separa- are in the Athabaska deposits, ari amended salary proposal padding, Lace tricot flowers on cups and center band for F!P _ day night by David Hostetter o£ but v said with present tech- y^^^^^^^^mWM the Sun Oil Co. at a lecture tion , but most Involve heating from county sheriff's deputies, ¦ the sand to decrease the viscos- nology most is not easily ex- but said they were not opposed at Winona State College. ' - . . . ploitable. He said that only Hostetter spoke as part of , the ity of the oil. Another method , to further negotiations. the emulsion process, involves about 15 percent of the deposits Under the amended proposal, energy symposium , series being can be stripmined and that sponsored by the college. - pumping water into the sand to ,. there would be seven schedules increase the oil mobility . the remaining reserves must or steps based on one year in- be separated in place. HOSTETTER SAID tar sands Hostetter said the Alberta tervals of service up to seven — .which he described as bi- plant, operated by Sun subsidi- HE SAID that oil prices will years; salary figures range tuminous sands permeated with ary Great Canadian Oil Sands have to be higher for a longer from $720 to $938 per month. thick crude petroleum — are be- Ltd., is more than a technologi- time to make the process profit- The proposal also includes ing seriously considered by ma- cal breakthrough, explaining the able, but noted that for now monthly salaries for four sepa- jar oil companies ns a possible economic impact is demonstrat- the operation could be consider- rate positions: sheriff ($1,250), future fuel source. Such depos- ed by the city of Fort Mc- ed a "short-term answer" to the chief deputy ($1,049.50), captain " "" its exist in Russia , South Amer- Murray, located near the facil- energy problem. ($949.50) and lieutenant ($949. - " ica , the western United States ity. He said the town had in- The final lecture in the four- 50). /vvvuf^/^M \ awl some Ara b nations, Hostet- creased in size more than 10 part series will bo Tuesday eve- Chief among commissioners' ¦ ter said , but the largest nnd times and that many area res- ning at 7:30 rather than Friday objections to the proposal was only deposit being developed is idents have found employment as previously announced. A. B. that the schedule would be top ///immKi ¦ in the Lake Athnbaska area in there. Iverson , district manager bf heavy. Six of nine deputies have ' " ¦ northern Alberta , Canada, Other oil companies are begin- Amoco Oil, will discuss the oil six years or more on the force, 4 TRY .: . - . Sun Oil operates a $230 mil- s view of the energy lion facility ning to take ari interest in the industry ' The deputies will take the Is- UliW^M near tho lake which process, Hostetter said. Shell crisis. sue to court, with action ex- M is capable, of producing 45,- 'TRlC-0-PKK" W maMmf orm* pected In late July. In filed 1 '^f O00 barrels of synthetic crude N/Y /V IV/h r "** * ' m oil per day, villi 300 tons of depositions, deputies stated sulfa r iis a by-product. their responsibilities are higher I \l Ps "* * m Hostetter said sand deposits than those of police in compar- are strlpmlned and moved to able forces. They also emp na- \ <L Winona Dally Newt *W Winona, Minnttota For sorghum grain crop ¦ ' ¦ ¦ JUNE 20 197A y ' aim . ¦ ' ¦ ¦ * _ ' ' Houston Co THURSDAY, . ^ Cpurrfry side Nip : ¦ youths get ' : ' ' -y G-t-T student ;;; . By -DON jEkNTOALL?p^ • '"' fect for the 1974 sorghum gram al and export markets, the sup- el, meaning that as of now hp ' 'P' P4.^.iaviXM vx^'P>4y'PP y P ' p . i:y ports will be adjusted to reflect payments appear y WASHINGTON (iAP) -? The crop, called milo or maize bjr government ?, Dally Newi Farm . Editor y y? most fftriners who produce it. a naUonal rate of $l. tJj per 100 likely or that fanners will Fox hunt Agriculture Department ?. is jUlhougfi the local loan rites ppuhdi. y. y swarm into county offices to certificates . Tally HP !, " "PPyP - ' -py ' :/- - is elated fo sending to state and county of- will vary geographicaUy : a:c- ¦ seek price support Joans, y; CAjLEDONIA _ The J974 average; set last , , lltan; Af ter " There's n-fox hiint in progress .aroundfo thai country,ed But fices this week! new price-sup^ c or din g to transportation But; -' Baity' , often called the nd your tim looking for ur-legg port rates"which Will be in ef- charges and distance to termin- year by Congress in -writing 20 hotirs? of instoictlon and driv- .don't, sp^ e a creature. new farm legislation, repre- corn of the Great Plains is ing experience,. 32 Houston Coun- This Is .a liunt. for a metal fox"; . ... priced Generally lower in rela-^ Machinery FFA offices sents an Increase from tie 1973 ty youngsters ? have received The hunt is beinc conducted bv the Fox Co.. and . milo price support of $1.79 per tion to corhi Thus, as farmers its national dealers-rthey'ie looking for the GALESVILLE; Wis.-A mem- Oklahoma and; Kan- tractor, safety certificates,? indi- i^i^ip hundredweight.: in Texas, oldest Fox forage harvester still being:wsed in ber pf the Gale-EttrickrTrenob ak^^gssi sas wind up planting ? nillo this cating completion of the county- this coiintry.- When the hunt is over aind the pealeau High School chapter of Farmers who have signed up prices they will get . for s 1974 feed month, .wide safety program. oldest Fox has been found, the owner .will the' . 'Future. in the government' the crop at .harvest next fall: de?-* ; The program was recentl receive a? brand new one. : Farmers of Aim-f grain program will be eligible greatly on how the 1974 y ¦¦ for price supports and also the pehd ¦¦ completed: under the direction ...- ' v. - Even If you don't have the old«st, hav- er lea (FTA)I corn crop behaves. ?' ' ' ;- of vocational ?- agriculture in- ing one of the old timeirs could be worth your was elected! target-price feature Introduced If the i com cbdp turns out tp ductors jack Maier and Carlyn while because the people. owning the oldest? vice president! in the new. farm law. The tar- record of 6.7 billion get for milo this is $2.34 fee the Kraabel' Caledonia, and Steve machines in each region of the cdtintry will of Section i Pat?. year hushels- predicted by ¦ USDA, Rischette, Houston, a»d county get a fishing trip in Wisconsin.; /yy the annual Wis-|> p*r? hundredweight. . look for milo prices next fall tp agent lluss Krech; In this area Kochenderfer k Sons Im- consiii FP?A cbri**! p ^ The target-price mechanism 1» lower •- along with corn .•—: plement Co., Fountain City, Wis,, is conduct- ? , : - '?: Ty ^r^pdmry-' also applies to wheat, corn, Participants were required to ventioni | ^Uler the experts say.. ? ? ?complete the 120 hours which in- ing the yhuhty and ? can provide .more ¦ . Richard ? .Tist-| barley and cotton with each of ^ inforiJiation , ?:' Horn- . • : mllo, as with other cluded both * driving and a . hammer, Gales-g those crops having different Prices of written test ?pn tractor handling ville, will repre-l levels of price supports and tar- major grains, ? have . dropped Anotner snonager months. The and safety. , ?? - First fuel, then baling twine, then fence posts and now sent the . state ^^P0Recent records of the ^MWnoha Cbunty Dairy ^y Herd Im?- get guarantees.: sharply in recent Completing the course from ' • ¦ ¦ '- ¦ ' ¦ ¦ at various func- Tistnammer For milo the target price mid-month farm price average . barbed? wire?- ?• .. - . ryi provementt Association show 17 area daity animals produc- , ' Caledonia were: Bandy Aagum, Farmers have been plagued with shortages of plenty tions during the coming year ing more than 650 pounds of butterfat in a recent 305-day lac- coines into play If the average in May was $3.59 per 100 Nancy Balehtlne; Darnel Beck- to after being elected at? last y ¦ , ' ;/ ¦ market price during the first pounds, down ffbni a peak last of things in the last year, and they all seem/to be vital " ¦ tation.. , ??• ¦¦ ' ' ' er, Gerard and Patrick Cody, ¦' ¦ top production — where would you be without fuel for the week's gathering. :¦¦ ' -/ / ¦' A regiijtered ?Holstein owned fay the . Kurtz brothers Al- five months of the marketing February. . of $4.38 ;. per hun- . ^ Scott . Dibley, .. Ronald Ehlers, . tractors, fertilizers and fences tokeep the cattle from, the Several . other G-E-T .chapter tura, topped the list with a productioniecord of .785 pounds .of year beginning next Oct . i falls dredweight. Peter and Susan Erickson, Paul 'corn?/ ""'" y 'P-y- members were also honored and fat and 17,140 pounds ?pf milk. .?. below the $2.34 target?ievel. If Although USDA will not make Gavin Dennis Hauser " Mark . P , ¦ , . the chapter ? received two . .Py "fwo -animals from the herds of Homer Mote, Harold that happens, government pay- further milo projections for an-; Heaney, Greta '¦ Hendel, James Barbed wire appears be?the latent item , was cited ^ wards. The chapter Herber & Sons aid Jacob Kreidermacher and Sons also made ments will be¦ made to make up other month, the niost recent and Lyle Houdek* Mark Kniitr yin short supply, y for superior performance ih the ?the.gap.: '? ? ' ,? . •".' information y-ibased .on March son, Steve Lapham, Allan and the list. national . PTA . 'chapter safety The price-support loati rate -*- planting intentions — points to -Rosanne McCormick,?T>oug Mey- According to reports Ironi both Wisconsin'], program arid tlie national chap- WINONA COUNTY DHIA MAY REPORT a crop of around : 900 million, er, Dale, Randy aiid ¦ Wayne to $1,88 per hundredweight : — andyMinnesota, shipments of barbed wirei ter award program. . y The followng cows completed 305 day ? lactations , over 650 serves as a further floor but bushels . this year, down 4 per Myhre, Danny and Dennis dealers average about 50 percent faehind last was named founds, of fat during May. : y Michael JTohiison "' ¦¦ can be /obtained by participat- cent from the record in 1978 of C'Heron, Martin Schiltz and ¦ ¦¦ Cow'i Nami-? ¦ —^Lbi. . ' year and prices have about doubled. runnerup in the ..Section 3 con- ¦ ' . or NumbM* Brttd ,. • Milk . -—. BF : ing farmers for all of their 1974 937 million bushels. . Gloria Schuldt. ¦ ¦ • ".... . lv.rn.io ,RH . 17,140 V- ' 7»5 servation award balloting, aiid Kuril Brother*, Altera ...... / ' ¦¦ production , while the target ?Also completing tie, course Why a shortage of barbed wire? . Euoene fVKyer, VVInona ;...... 58 GH ' 15,930 .' . ; 7ii . four chapter riiembere ?— Tist- ' were Lance Olson and Peter Economists have several reasons One is that thousands Sleveh R. Nahrijsris ', Lewlslon .,:.; Widow .. . GH/ ' ¦ 17,420 - .748. : guarantee only will be for grain . hammer, Daniel Evenson and Ralph Herber & Family, Rolllnjsloni ...... 101 - . :; RH' ' • ' 15,740 ' . 742 VariCundy, Houston, and Vance being put into : firsh time this, . ¦ produced from allotted-acres. of acres afe . production for the? Loren andl 'WendeU Klein, re- Dartlel Swlggum, Ull« -'. '. -...:. :';.i...... 13- ?. GH 18,820 • ' 737 ' . Bartell, Terry . ErLcksn and year and these require, new. fences. Wire companies weren't Harold Htrber & , Sons, . RolllnBSlon§ '....i... llO . .'RH ,. 16,040 . ¦" 701) ceived Wisconsin farm degrees. ' , : ' Feed grain allbtmen-ti —- a Daryl Melbostad, Spring Grove. prepared to meet the increased demands their inventories Gerald Ruhofl, ¦'Rollliigsto nt ...... 23 GH 19,390 : . - *>S , "Wayne Craig and David Even- Norbert Speltz, Mmelsk * . 43 . GH . " U.7A0 «8 misnomer since they do sot re- were low and production was not geared to pick up the slack. . y 18,860 son were official delegates to . Eldor . Matthees, Rolllnsatona ...... V Gti . <» stricti plantings this year — are Dairy Equipment ¦ Alfr«d Hejm, Lewlslon .:...... 25 GH . 14I060 419. convention. The¦: G-E-T ¦¦ Jacob Kreidermacher Sons, Alliira .... 10 GH ' 12,400 : 419 the acreages determined neces- ' ' Another problem is the lack of imported the ¦ PPp:.4. Py p-j ^SOPP' y P. Are boys wind .is under^ the direction Jacob Kreidermacher Sons, Altura ,...... ?.. 112" -GH 13,150 / .416 sary to produce enough corn , ^ wire because of monetary problems, and, also, chapter Art R«IIB, Winona ' . ",.....,...'...... ; Whltey GH t»,0O ' - . ' *13, of adviser . Donald P, Hendrick- Homer Mole, Utica ...... A ..;.. 16 GH . 16,870 641 . sorghum and barley -for U.S. Used Equipment one major wire production plant was closed ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ up factor course ¦ Homer Mote. Utica ...... i ..;...,....,... 6 : GH - 16,050 . '•-653 domestic and export demand; • Chsek With Us Before son. Ketchum ' Farms, Uilca .... .:,...... 85 RH . 19,360' within the; last year. . . / 652 As in the case .v . - . You Buyl : DURAM),. Wis. - — Fourteen ; Harold Herber & . Sons, Rolllnortone ,...... , ? GH :16,J50 652 of wheat and •Take: heart though. This is expected , to be a tedious de-. corn, cash market prices of Arcsdia Co-op Ass'rt. area bb?ys have completed a 10- The following herds averaged ; over ' 50.0 pounds ' ¦ hour tractor training course un- lay, but not , a permanent situation. Scriap iron, which once . of milk milo have been much higher Lewiston Co-op Ass'n. - - . . . ,.. . per cow during the month of May. than either ' der the direction of ihe Pepin sold for about $40 a ton, is now selling for about $170 a ten incumbents '' the 1974 price sup- ' .' . Tri-County Co-op Oil, . ? . Nine • " - . . :' No; ef lb«. Pet. Uta. port Ioai) County Vo-Ag instrutors and and this prite is bringing more scrap iron? into use. Which .of Cowl Milk Fit "rat - rate or the target lev- ?? ~ Rushford, Minn. ? the scrap is destined to bring the. wire industry in line with Hllbert . Rupprecht, Lewiston ....;.,;....,...... ?43 M.3 ' 3.7 ' i.\. . county agent George Oncken. . Kenneth. Rupprecht-,. si, Charles ...... ;., 41 54,6 - 3.8 3.1 . ; fann ?:demands. ; ' .'. The boys are now eligible for reelected to ' .Lawrence Eide, Winona ",...... ,..,...,..„...; 47 ' . 54.5 - 3.6 J.O employment; on farms, other Pp- First the steel fence posts were hard to find, now you Marvin-Mussell, Utica. .:...:..::..:...... -...:. , .?' 41 , Sl'.r. .- '-4 ,0: ".- . . " : -J.O ' •¦ can't get wire to. put on thein if you had 'eni. If It isn't one Allen Aarsvold, Peterson , ...... ;..... 32 51.1 3.6 ' ! 1?9 BOY^RITE ftEALTY, INC. than those owned by their par-' '' Robert Plttelko, VVInona I...... ,...... ;.. - ..' . 46- " 51.0. 3.9 : J.O : thing, it's another^ . .:.? ; ' ' .. ¦ ents, .where they can operate Robert Luehmann, Lewiston ...... ;;...... 43 ' . so.7 3.6 1.8 ¦;" .. ROCHESTER, MINNESOTA farming boards ¦ ¦ George Burns Jr., Lewiston ...... 33 50.3 3.J 1.7 : : machinery. . ¦ '-. Kurtz- Brotheri,' .'Altura ...... :„:..:.....,.. ¦ ' ' ¦• . State law requires completion ST. PAUp, Minn.; -^ Nine m- 70? JO.'tf 3,1 - -).» . Of such a course, ? : cumbents were reelected to full The coursey conducted tiy the two were un- Trempealeau " three-year terms, Co. girh area vo-Ag instructoTS, Oncken Monitoring prdgrams require and representatives of ? Harmon seated and one . tie will Tractor evenis to attend sessions Implement, y a : coin , fl3p. to. determine the ¦ /Arkansaw, Wis. , ' ETTRICK, '.. VVis. (Special) - >yas. completed by: Ricky Rus- winner, in the official results tad and Jim set on insect pests Two Trempealeau Gduntjr girls Fitzg;eTaId, Mon- of June ? il. elections oai ex- gain popularity dovi; Jeff?Eb?ehsperger, Plum Tractorpulling contests are will he attending the annual .?. ST. -; PAUL, Minh.: — . Estab- ye. to.shade trees and forests. piied positions on the Minne- ; City; : Scotty King, Ehnwood ; . Farm Bureau Girls Week at . The lishmeHt of special statewide Both monitoring programs are sota Egg, Beef and ? Soybean growing in popularity across Jody Olsoii and Gary Bradshaw, aearihg, Ellison? Bay, Wis;.*- on Arkansaw; Dave Bauer, Eau cooperative monitoring pro- le result pt "close walls" that Research a n d Promotion Minnesota, .as witnessed by this ¦ tinnesota's . agriculture- and the Poor County peninsula, Galle ; : Terry TrinkO, Doug grams ifor early detection and Boards. year's scheduled events. Begin- Smith . control of two of world' ?restry industries havie exper- June 30 throtigh July 6. , Ron Kempf , Brian Hub- the? s Egg producers reelected all ning this month there will be 26 bard, Charles Bauer and Steve most destructive insect pests iiiced with the two pests that Representing local Karm Bu- three incumibehts whose terms contests sanctioned by the Min- Danzinger,. Durand, and Jesse was reported by the Minnesspta ave the potential for causing nesota Tractor Pulling .Associa- reau members Will be Jfancy Hanson, Nelson. Department of Agriculture. lillipns of dollars in damage were up on ;Uie nine-member ¦ ' .' ' '? :¦ - ' , John Prendergast ; ) tion. ; / "/- /- • 'ri ..-/ y -y:y:- Schank, daughter of-, Mr. and ? . . The pests are' the cereal leaf a single year. Cereal leaf marketing bpard: Beryl Morton fTwo of thfe events will be held eetles were. found .in Wiscon- Mrs. Leo Schanlt, Arcadia, and beetle, which can devastate . of 'Westbropk, 0. H;ySandeh of locally. The .first is slated for tFA officers Installed ? in . last year. Minnesota in 1972, Diane Smikrud, daughter of Mr. "Large Selection of Farms small grain crops, aind the gyp- Redwood Tails and Dean Myhro July. 14 in Kellogg and the sec- sy moth, rated equally destruc- i *Cass . County, confirmed its ond July 21 in St. Charles. and Mrs. Arnold . Smikrud,. SPRING GROVE; Minn. (Spe- of Moorhead. . Southeaste rn lAinnesota" cial) irst interception of a hitch- The Kellogg contest w|U begin Galesville. .;: Throughout — The Spring -Grove High Uuhg gypsy moth. ?No infesta- will be used at School chapter of the Future A coin flip at 12 . 30 p.m. and the St; Char- Fanners of America (FFA) ioh was found in extensive 1973 the next meeting of tlie 13-mem- les event at 1. Rattlesnake killed ; re- Area ASCS offices •apping aiter the interception 1 Offices in: y ' ¦ ' cently installed officers for the ^ ber . Minnesota Soybean ? Re- the "pulling season" will end ->^^BBBfiBfc l.i __.__...... ••unriinlrlll'i »tor« w/1 (ition«n ¦ Owner's Name ¦ • Permltt earlier harv«»1|ng without expend vo drying Ria£GW8\ hou,|on ••< "I]/ ^ Minimizes field lostfrt Hat automatic bottom-unloadtr • • Wlnom m utt I Address _ ¦ P^y ll /C 3rd Maln w,non MADISON SILO CO. Harmony "•"«;""" I - . i . |: r Work Shos Phone 454*3040—If no answer or alter call (.89-2958 * *' vf^ * Headquarters' * , hour*, I Bring this In right away and pick up your free gift. I "* Box 5 — Wlnon!., M(r»n. Canton '"Ta.?JO Jl.i " ¦ •i- — —*— . ———_ — —-.—.—.-."" -.""" „-i'i"——,__.». J n(.2i Winona Dally Now* 4L Winona, Mtanesefa ™ THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1W4 PSC asked; pG^ertrrn^ to j® ^^i^J^t|K| give ficJ tilcatf (eiri lrt Rrop 12 percent ratp h : By BERNARD BRENM3R .. ago- -'. when- U.S. ; beef supplies poultry and dairy producers. reelection ST> fAUL, Minn. (AP) - ing an interim 12 per cent in- providing for refunds if the finances;, problem ' should be WASHnST-GTON f Wade M. Meintzer; fi- imports .of foreign beef. . Agriculture; Secretary Earl L. operators could get ./guarantees seek reelection as 94th District counsel for* Atty. Cfen. Warren crease would produce addition- not made. nancial statistician for North- : Assistant Agriculture : Secre- Butz was expected to?face the covering up to $1 million in Spannaus, asked for the dis- al gross revenues of $56.7 an- The Bell attorney cited sev- western Bell in Minnesota. ? tary Clayton Yeutter said in an demand for/ formal controls Assemblyman, the ? legislator ' ' ' credit. .; ' missal Wednesday after Bell at- nually. . • eral past cases to show that ¦Meintzer was asked - many interview he believed beef today ..in an appearance before .announced today, / torney Mehin R. Quinlan made Oral : arguments were to be imports Yeutter said that as. far as . Minnesota law calls . for utility questions about complex finan- would be held substan- the House Agriculture Comniit The candidate is seeking?:MS long plea for the immediate given today on Sullivatfs mo- rates thiat provide ; the tially /¦ " ' ' ' ' reducing beef imports .. "was a com- cial calculations used by* Bell to below the earlier-predict- -tee. -/ -: . -., : " . ypy thirdyiegislative term and his increase. tion that the request for ah im . panies with a re- ed level of 1.575,billion concerned , the important thing "fair rate of support its : contention that ita pounds In addition to import restric- second in the 94th . Assembly Quinlan aaid Northwestern mediate 12 per cent increase be turn" on investment, as well as by using informal persuasion tionsy members of the House to farmers, .was "the ultimate . iicome, is not sufficient to at- rather than the machi- District. The district includes Bell would suffer ' 'irreparable dismissed/ y^ enough income to pay fixed tract investment capital with Australia' and other beef panel also , are advocating resiilt". it. Quinlan, in his plea for the for exporters. ner^usedto-get : ; harm" if the increaise were not posts . and operating expenses; heeded expansion of Pits plant He also said export- emergency credit aid for part of Jackson aind Trempea- granted. , y ? temporary Increase, said the ers Should be reluctant to ship livestock producers who have "Ef the yultimateI result : (pf leau . counties . and : all of La and services. beef p at; current can be achieved The phone company is seek- public could be? protected by •Quintan said the firm felt the Meintzer: reiterated Bell's po- low prices. been losing money for the past lower imports) Crosse County,; except the town Cattle industry spokesman few' mbnths. the Senate without iisixg ? quotas, why ; sition that the utility has a and a growing the disadvantages of of Shelby; and part? of the city serious cash flovy problem number of .farm Agriculture Committee over- accept ¦ " " , belt , lawmakers have been rode Butz's objections Wednes- quotas," he asked. Using Of La Crosse. • Refuses to give up tape saying the firm's Minnesota op- pressing the administration to day and approved a bill formal control action would By returning to Madison, Rob- eration would haVe trouble reinstate formally the import authorizing up. to $3 billion in hamper U.S; efforts to reduce erts feels he can help control meeting its share ' of the full controls, suspended , by Presi- gqvetnment credit : guarantees trade barriers in; other coun- state agencies that "go .to ex- company's . interest payment* dent Nixon . neirly • two - .. '.years for .: "bona : fide" cattle, hog, tries, he said. : tremes until they are checked. on .debt, unless revenues were " Radio ¦¦¦' A member of the Health and 0^ increased; Social Services Committee, Rob- However, iMcintzer, Jn reply erts? has ,.coi- to a; question 'by Sullivan, said cluded - that p^ 4$ the utility has enough money to generous wel- j aiteiM$i 4-H nofes ? pay its cash bills. f a re benefits LOS ANGELES (TIP!) — Th? avoid jail. 0^^^^up to a year. Sulhvaa also asked Meiiitzei don't get recip- general manager of ; radio But Lewls did not change Ms The key- issue in the. dispute to read off Bell's rate of return ¦•' Forty 4H' ients oif welfare ? e« frpnT Pepin station KPFK was jailed for mind,? citing constitutional gua- is. ' whether newsmen can on the value of plant and equip- County, Wis.,,will - liead for rolls or encour- contempt of court Wednesday rantees of freedom of the press protect, news sources if no ment for the years 195S through age reconcilia- camp this month; Tlie. club because he refused to give the for his stand. He was found in promise of confidentiality . was 1970.; The rates of return IOI tion ;of broken those years ranged, from 6.2 tc members will spend time at FBI the original of a tape contempt for refusing to coop- made to obtain inforrhation. families. "This erate with a federal grand 'jury 6.5 per cent,? while the company Trails? End Camp- near Bruce, recorded ? message from Pa- . The last communication from Wis., with the can and will be ¦ investigation of the SLA . and was authorized a. 6 per cent senior group leav- corrected, he tricia Hearst and ;' . two other other underground terrorists. Miss Hearsti and Emily and rate of return. . ing Friday for a week's stay, " . said. Roberts Roberts Syxnbioneise . Liberation Army ? Lewis, who .refused either to William Harris, was a? taped Bruce G: Schwartz, Bell'i While the junior girls' camn will fugitives. ' - begin Monday: also serves ?on the' Legislative turn ? oyer evidence or answer message left tinder a mattress vice-president and chief execu- and the Council Committee, the com- "Will Lewis, 4?; was led from questions before the grand jury, tive officer for Minnesota oper* boys' ' U.S. District Court in handcuffs behind the? radio station June 7. ?camp Thursday. mittee en state affairs, the could remain behind bars until An anonymous telephone caller ations,. had testified Tuesday Camping committee on natural resources at the end of a 55-minute the grand jury's term expires; that a rate reduction would be ad- hearing called? 'old station personnel it was ventures will iri-. and the Minnesota-Wisconsin to give him a which is scheduled for Septem- there.: : justified if the rate of return elude nature Boundary Area Commission. chance to? change bis? mind and ber but could be extended by e xcee ded the authorized study, ¦/ swim- - Raised on a farm near Min- "There's ? n o confidentiality amount.by 1 or 2 per cent. ming and other doro;. Wis!, he:,attended Winona here, ? none ? whatsoever," said Attorneys for Northwestern ojitdoor sports State College ahd Western :Wis- On economy ILS. District Court Judge A. Bell pointed out that the rate 61 and a canoe trip consin Technical Institute. Tor Andrew : Hauk in sending Lewis return :. fell to 4.98 percent i?n or*the Chippewa 26 yeiafs he has been a train to jail. "There's beien no 1971,. rose to 6.39 percent , in River. dispatcher for the Milwaukee promise; no agreement by 1972 and was 6 per cent in 1973. ' .. ;¦: anyone at Pacifica to keep Cindy Thomp1 Roady . . " . ' : ¦ ¦¦ The utility has; been authorized son, daughter of J. Wiebusch Roberts and his wife, the for* Itcify pgoyerhrnehtinformation eonfidentiaL'* to make a 7.5 per . cent rate of Mr. and Mrs. Cliff ord Thomp- meir ; Alice Evenson of Gales- (The nonprofit Pacifica Foun- return since February 1972. ; son, Utica, Minn., and a mem- ville, Wis., have four children. datibn runs KPFK : and its sister ? ber of the Utica Victory 4-H Station ? in San Francisco, club, represented Winona Coun- KPFA, which is. frequently ty at the :40th annual 4-H Con- plansWmprxifnise chosien . by underground or servation Leaders Camp, Itasca radical groups¦ ?with messages H ¦¦;¦ EQME (UPI) — Premier saying it would mean bankrupt- tb deliver.) . ^^TOJP State Parle, last week; ' .. Alma lodge Mariano Rumor's shaky coali- cy for thousands of small COSTLY DAMME! Dan Rabe, son of Mr. and . Lewis argued there was an tion government avoided col- businesses and unemployment imphed promise of confiden- Mrs. Carroll Rabe, and Jane lapse W ednes-d ay night, for possibly two million -work- Wiebusch- daughter of Mr. and : tiality, even to ' sin unknown overcoming bitter internal dif- ers. ' ' - source, and that if the station Mrs. Ervin Wiebusch , both of burns mortgage ferences and approving a The dispute camp TINY SODBUSTER ..'.'. ' . In tie spring a young man's over the economy surrendered the materials, it Lake City, attended the Wis; (Special)—Alma compromise package of. meas- had threatened last week to as Wabasha County 4-H repre- fancy turns, well, in the case of.Alan Pils, t»?helping his par- ALMA, ? "•would then have the reputa- Lodge ?No. 184, F. ,&. AM., re- ures to fight inflation ahd topple the government. tion; in the community as a sentatives. Both are members ents work the soil for their?garden plot. Alai, 2, is the son of unemployment. Golden Gophers cently celebrated the retire- h e tax station that automatically coop- >f the¦ Gilford Mr. and ?Mrs,.Charles Pils, Madison, Wis. ment of the debt on the Ma- Francesco De Martino, leader "T levy ahA the club'.- ¦ ' ¦ '"' increase in electricity rates erates with the FBI." v : sonic Lodge with a dinner arid of the Socialist party, said the The conservation camp ; was cabinet coalition reached agree- represent a considerable sacri- The station has provided the sponsored by the Federal Cart- program. fice foi* those Order ment ''both in the economic with fixed FBI with copies of the tape, ridge "Co., Minnesota Pheasants The Alma Lodge 146, incomes, that is, the majority of Eastern . Star, prepared: the field and in that of a new which had . been broadcast in its Unlimited and the state Agricul- AAUch commitment to the anti-Fascist of Italians," Social Democratic entirety anyway. It balked at tural Extension Service. d^ dinner. The invocation was by parliamentary leader Antonio ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ " ¦ '¦ Rev. Clarence Guthrie, Eau struggle.'' ? . ,y handing over the original , tape ?-y ?;' .--/, ,•- . . • - . Cariglia said after the meeting. itself, together with wrappers Susan Kjome and Lode Ge- Claire * Government leaders a i d "The governxneht food sold in siuitis FOLLOWING THE dinner • certainly or any . other "paraphernalia" rard, representing the Wilming- Rumor's Christian Democrats, realizes this, but in my opinion found with it, The FBI wants to ton Gophers 4-H club, Spring Alvin Accote,; master of the the Socialists and. other coali- this sacrifice introduced ;- . the will be acceptable examine the originals for clues, Grove, Minn;, have been named by hum Alma lodge, tion members agreed in princi- if citizens feel they are better such as fingerprints or techni- to participate in) a 4-H camping consumed evening's speak e r, Buffalo ple oh higher taxes and governed," Cariglia said. Judge Gary B. cal indicators bf where and program at the Whitewater By CRAIG A. PALMER Interest, the report said. County Court electricity rates to drain some Budget Minister ' Antonio Gi- when the tapes were made or State Park this month. PtNOItUKES I providing moro cash to spend members were Mrs, Andrew , failed the physical edu- THCOOVM.NM1NTOF cation course because she re- CATEOOHIES(A) CAPITAL on food. Jost, chairman; Mrs. Robert M^j ^CE |q , HOtlE-R TQHHSHIP ceived a 45 on the badminton Jenks and Mrs. Alvin Accola. 1 rUBUCMflTV ANTICIPATINaAQENERALREVENlJESHARINCS PAY- test and a zero for not taking £ $ T < B the tennis exam. 1 [NVIBONMiNTAL ' MENT OF \ *\' ° Jackson County But Sharon her mother CROIECIION $ $ F0nTMEFIFTH ENTIUEW_.NrPERI0O.JULV1.UI74 Gundersen Clinic sets , , ;, U.,|C ' THROUGH JUNE 30,1878. FLANS TO SPEND THESE many spectators at tho ceremo- inAt-BPOHTMION $ , $ FU NDSFOR.TWE PURPOSES SHOWN. _ 1 yf _ job center to viewing of addition ny and the girl's legal adviser ACCOUNT NO.24 J i395 M6 4 MIALTH $ * * -> ^^^WWIAWiAmmmmmmmmmjW^^ LA CROSSE, Wis. - A three- were quick to make the point 5 * HOM^R TOWNSHIP be dedicated that the tests were adminis- % BICHEATIOM ' *" ' ' story addition to the Gundersen £ $ TOWNSHIP Cl£$ti . •: . P y4 BLACK BIVER FALLS, Wis, Clinic hero will be dedicated in tered only to girls. MlNONft COUNTV * • ii.RA.VH $ __ j. (Special) — Open house and private cermonles Sunday aft- Boys were graded only on _ * S. (cFDJ Ronald & Richard Flury, Alma, Wisconsin are participation and attitude, ac- » SOCIALBtlWICM . „ ' . ___ dedication of the newly remod- ernoon. An open house from fonAOEPon poow $ S WrNONfl WNN 559S? eled Training nnd Employment 2:30 to 4 p.m. is also sched- cording to Joseph Buckley, a shown taking delivery of their Farmhand third-year law student serving AOMir .istnA.ION $ S (0|T.i«n«wf medlehl«t>«i'. fifwWilMt«cow o . ¦¦ ¦ -¦ - ,,n t*MI»li«l In loci) n»wip»|i«r ol j«n«nt Center here will be Sunday, uled. " ' gSSKW WMSSgSSKg-SI "*'• '•!«"< •"¦ " • as Sharon 's legal adviser. I MULT I. IMPOSE AND S^K_&3«»3S:s3:K» emulation, | have neoidi documinllna tt» nnMntai ol iltli Auger Unloading Box. with tlie open houso from Mechanical contractor for the G - H _ nM..IOVl. 5 :,J_^_fa^s^_S___^ Buckley , who works for the ¦"""————————— ———————— ji-gSSsSJSSSSS^SSftSj ~f™f.nAll,.Y.,.nf,.nln,j,Mlavm,llnym> , 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., nnd tho brief $1.8 million project was Winona ,0 ,PUCATI0N dedication service at 2 p.in, Plumbing Co., Winona. Rutgers Legal Aid Clinic In « ^^^ g -tiMne To ut tt y* f- <~ -. Newark , said a complaint on ^. tiaiutory Tlie facility, formerly known " n?5tmi>Mrur S W AS>UHAN«8Hl_ firlolnit;utiini,»)ol .P,, 1"™"" ** jSgroSSSsfiS^^^^^^^^ ^gSw oituia lha Sacialiiy tliaTruiuty that tha non Jlitrlmlm. & Sons tho matter has been presented . " ... Imliuctloni| n»j»(t Kochenderfer accompinylno ns the Jackson County Day Caro II MOUSINQ &C0M- *® ^^^^^^ 1^1 "i"1 other i.q. lnmtnti llitad In Pan e ol tho to local education authorities. MUMIIVOEVttOPMINT $ gj ^^^^^^^^ nclplinl tNe raport will ba complliil wllh Fountain City, Wii. Center, is located on the site ened to Include all disadvan- fiovtinmant Ue said the college alleges ~.- , „„.,„,,,„ ' ^^^®^S»3 S^»M t,f thlt wllh t» tho •ntliUmant of the former Ranger Station taged, disabled and handicap- 13 tconomiL •, 5SsS8s^8™«c5^Sffl .luniHiuMiilxltxiaon. / '/ the tests wore discriminatory ————- j J on Eleventh street, ped persons In Jackson County 14la' oTMCitlSoiniOIIUII tapaniyi.) S K$?$S®PagfiS5 ™ lLssffHVri.fy— #>KCif.JlL.X*. — since thoy wore given only to » eWnaiuiaolCMil E>ic_maO|li .m Will , director , the name wns training, The program Is financ- timtt ms**- > Mi?mmm ^, dents. S * NamiMnli-PI«lia Pnnl Data */<&/ ^sjh/wmm changed to bolter reflect the ed jointly by county, siato and H 10TAI $ $ ^^' program which has been broad- federal funding, Pearl Plnkhnm, Shi'oil's Scott ruins Busby s perfect evening By TVE ASSOCIATED ?RESS Hansen hit a hard ground ball Philadelphia stopped Houston White Sox IB, Indians 4 had had luck, -would have had « George. .Scott ruined a per headed toward right field, but 5-4; and Pittsburgh ripped Los ':': A seven-run seventh inning, nohitter against the Cubs. - fectly good evening for Steve Rojas intercepted it with a di-v- Angeles- 7-3. ¦ triggered by Dick Allen's two- Hick Monday's • third-inning ¦Busby Wednesdays night. ing, wiirl-and-throw play. .. Tigers 4, Rangers 2 ?. . run homer, powejred Chicago line drive ricocheted off Spill- The Milwaukee first baseman "That was the ? play .tltat Ed Brinkman knocked in the over Cleveland. ner, and he made it to first. • ' :- 2\¦ .walked on a 3-2 county Busby's made the whole game," said tie-breaking run with ah 11th- Yankees 2, Angels 1 • Expos . 4, Reds . rare , moment of imperfection , Busby."That -was super. I can't innung .double, pushing Detroit George Medich shackled Cali- Bon Hunt's bases-loaded tie- ' - " breaking single and Tim Foli's and . :thus. ^spoiled a perfect recall him doing that since I've over Teias.? . yy fornia o» seven hits and Chris by the Kansas City pitch- been here with this club, diving ChambUss doubled to drive iii sacrifice fly gave the Expos a *jame two-rim edge in the fourth in- jer_ . ' : . foi* a ball hit that far from him the winning run in New York's -was . the baseruh- and coming up with it;" :• victory over the Angels. ning-r-'ffhich rookie relief pitch- 4 Scott only er John Montague made stand. xer Busby allowed during, a 2-0 Busby, ; whb pitched a no-hit- Red Sox 2, A's 1? ter against Detroit as a rookie Braves 5, Mets 0 -no-hitter, first of the 1974 base- Bob Montgomery's i^bases- Tom " House relieved Buzz ball' seasoS and the second of last year, thought Wednesday loaded sacrifice Ry: in the 11th night's' game, wag better. Capra for the Braves In the iis brief career.? innlmg gave Boston; its victory sbtth inning, ' In?¦'•',¦ with lead- "I didn't make a whole lot bf the . . other America* over; Oakland. : ing 2-0, and preserved the win. ; ibad pitches and made them hit League games, the Texas v Pirates 7, Dodgen 3 ?? '? Phils 5, Astros 4?.' y .y the ball,'' said Busby, who re- Rangers beat the Detroit Tigers The Pirates overcame the ceived excellent fielding sup- .4-2:in 11 innings; the Baltimore ¦ Mike Schmidt had three sin- ¦ Dodgers! 3-1 lead to win, hand- port en route to his beaiiity. ' ..¦ ' Orioles nipped the? Minnesota ing the Dodgers their seventh gles and drove home two runs Two catches by right fielder Twins 6-5; the Chicago White loss ih their last ; nine outings aind Jim Lonborg pitched, his . Al Gowens and . a sparkling play Sox pounded the Cleveland : In- and their third straight defeat. fifth straight victory in the New. Phillies victory over Houston. by second baseman Cookie dians 15-4; the York Yan- (Slants" .5, Cardinals 4 ? KaruJu Clly ill Mllwaukn (0). . ¦¦ Rojas preserved the no-hitter. kees trimmed the California Bobby Bonds of the Giants . ' ¦brh-.l abrhbl With one out in the second in- Angels 21 and the Boston Red and Jose Cruz of the Cardinals Patek,ss 4 0 2 0 A/loney,3b X0O0 Ro|«s,2l> 4 . 0 1 0 VounUs 3 0 00 ning, ; Darrell . Porter hit a lonig Sox nipped the Oakland A's 2-1 traded three-run homers and Otli,ef 4 o l tt ' May.lf . *0 0o drive to right center which in .11 innings, y Tito Fuentes broke a 4-4 tie. with Maybtry.lb 3 1O0 . 'Scoff,! b 20 00 McRae.dh 401 0 Brlggs.lf 3 110 0 SAFE BY A FOOT MontreaTs Hal . took the late throw fram rightifielder Tteri7 -Cowens snared on the run: With In the National League, San a seventh-inning single to: give Wohifofd.lf 4110 Porf«r,c . 3000 .?. . ' two 'outcih the; fourth, Cowens Diego blanked Chicago 1-0 on San Francisco the victory-. Coyyensiif ; > 0 0 0 Hahseriidh 30 0 0 Breeden slides safely into hoine hi the first Crowley, who fielded Ken Singleton' ! single. ¦; ' ¦ ' Padres; 1, Cubs 0 RmWb . 3 0 1 J Colucclo/C. 3 0 00 ' ' . raced into the same territory to Dan Spillner's one-hitter; Mon- . H«aly,c . 3 0 0 0 Johmon.Jb 3 0 0 0 inning and CincinnaCi catcher Johnny Bench v ) — V»eteran career by leading the Rangers Wings where he spent another fy Wright (C.. J.9) ... 9 7 2 1 1 J Mtiyberw three years; and then -went T-J:03. A-9,019, Bruce MacGregor became the in. playoff scoring with six goals to . MILWAUKEE (AP) - A jok- defensive pi ays,? especially . George? Brett singled home [ game. . . - . -' third National Hockey League and earning raves for his de- Mpritreftl ;. ih l97i.:. / : the second inning "But this, was my biggest fensive -work. ''. ytast season he was the Cana- ing John - Mayberry predicted Rojas- pickup which robbed Mayberry in ; reguliar to join tie Edmonton ''Steve "' Busby's no-hit : master- Brewer rookie Bob Hansen of a for the only run Busby needed. .thrill : - of all, bigger than last . In the first round of the Stan- diens'. leading point-getter with -while Jim Wohlford scored oh a ! time, because this was my type WINONA Oilers of the World Hockey As- ley Cup» the Rangers defeated 31 goals and 49¦ assists¦ for 80 piece, a desperate Cookie single with . two out ..'in the ¦ ' ,¦¦ . ¦ ¦ ' ' ;¦ ? Eo jas preserved it with a , div- eighth inning, Bushy faced 28 throwing error in the fourth as ! of game," he ? sadd. "I didn't sedation since last season, and the Montreal Canadieiis, who pointsy .. . - . ' • . . . . . lot of bad pitches DAILY general manager Bill Hunter suffered. another loss Wednes- ?: MacG-regor finished ? with IT • Ing. defensive gem, batters, one oyer the minimum. the 24-year-old. fireballer; won a make a whole mm ¦ . ¦ Mixing blazing fast balls with: He lost.a perfect game when he pitchers' duel with Clyde and made them hit the ball. immediately said MacGregor day. . ¦y ' ',yy joals last season despife miss- -'- Bixs- threw two . strikes to George Wright.; yy:. That's : what I have to do to was the club's most important Left 'wing Frank Mahovlich, ing 12 games with a kniee ih- . . a newly developed curve, I '¦¦¦ ' Iby pitched the ? first no-hitter of Scott and then walked him on Busby,.who had a?no-hitter at help this ball club." acquisition. left unprotected in: last week's. jury, .?: ¦ ? - yrir/. P the major league 'baseball sea- four inore . pitches . leading off Detroit in his 10th big league • Hansen's hardy ground ball . "Bruce has a proven record NHL -expansion draft, an- MacG-regor, who joins de- spo as a . clutch goal-scorer, said fensemen Barry? Long of ; the ? 8on and second of his brief ca- the second. start on April 27, 1973, said , he appeared headed for right field irts " nounced Wednesday he had reer Wednesday night as the "1 told Busby on the way to realized in the seventh inning i but Rojas, after* aboiit three AU Winona Daily. Nam Hunter "Wednesday of the 33- signed a long-term contract Los Angeles Kings ; and Ray ; ! quick steps to his left, cut it off ¦TM Winona, Minnesota year-old ? wing; ytnrho spent 10 with the WHA|s Toronto Toros. McKay of the California Seals . Kansas City Royals blanked the the ball park that he was going that he was¦ working ¦ oh anoth- ? but that " ' ¦'¦ ' , :'¦ ' ¦ '¦:: ' P' " ¦ ' ! with a diving stah. The veteran THURSDAY, ? years with ? the Detroit Red Maho-vlichj a native oi' as the newest NHLjdefectors in skidding Milwaukee Brewers 2- to pitch a no-hitter, er. . ¦/:/:• . -P. ..: . - ; . :©. ' .? :¦ was just . baloney, man. We *T wasn't nervous as much as second baseman, sprang to his JUNE 20, 1974 Wings and four with the New Schumacher, Ont., spent li sea- the Oiler camp, said money fighting? myself to keep pay con- :. feet and threw , out Hansen in York Rangers of. the NHL. sons with the Leafs, was traded, was not a major factor, in his I Profiting . - from several fine were.jiist jivih' .around " Nay- ' berry said. ; centration," he said after the i plenty of time.'' JUacGregor ended his NHL ia 1968 to the Detroit Red!. 'decision.. ': "'P - plborn returns ta work Monday WMoverfim$ ^2 wpsefs : MILWAUKEE (UP!) - Jim Radio Jha*K .; Colborn will.return to mound duty for the Milwaukee Brew- ^ ers Monday night against the Boston Red Sox following suc- as Qtiolmft INVENTORY CLEARANCE ful surgery ; Wednesday on his BALT3MORE (AP)-Nan- consecutive batters after a to end the game, y ? left knee.' ager ilarl Weaver of Baltimore finst-inning hit, was working oi Brooks Robinson drove In Colborn underwent the minor recorded two upisets in the a four-hitter when ? the ninth tliree runs and Earl Williams " opened with Baltimore in; front iurgery to have fluid flushed ninti inning as the Orioles post- two as the Orioles won for the and bone chips removed from ed a ^5 decision over the Min- 6-1. - ' -ry- yP . - . : eight ?his knee. He was . discharged nesota Twins Wednesday night. Eric Soderholm's third hit, seventh time in their last from Mount Sinai hospital here A percentage, manager,, he another single by Craig .Kusick games. Robinson's third lit, an In the afternoon. went against cold statistics in and a walk loaded the bases. eighth-inning double, drove in Colborn had been scheduled lifting staiter Dave McNally After Raiady Hundley fanned what proved to he the winning to start tonight against the Bal- with? the bases loaded and the for the second ? out- Danny timore Orioles, but . Manager Orioles ahead 6-2.:Then; just tlionipson singled to drive in run. ? Del Crandall decided to rest his before the final out, Weaver ac- Scderholm. and the bases : re- Weaver's winning argument righthander until Monday! Ed tually won an argument with mained loaded. came after pitching coach -Spraguei will replace Colborn the umpires; With riglithanded batter Lar - •George Bamberger was stopped ¦Hiursday. • McNally, who had retired 17 ry. Hisle due, Weaver lifted as he tried to visit Garland at McNally and brought in right- handed Bob Reynolds although the mound before the reliever POWERFUL REALISTIC* STA-75AM-FM STER E0 HI.FI Hisle was 6-for-7 against the made his first pitch.. left-handed McNally this sea- Bamberger returned to the RECEIVER WITH BUILT-IN 4--CHANNEL SYNTHESIZER son. ¦:. - ¦ - . . : bench, but canw back on the "I thought Hisle just might field after Garlaad threw a ball hit one out of the park and tie to Braun. Have the score," Weaver said. "If 1 MlnrtMoti (j) aaltlmon (() \ ! you dot a l l ¦brhbl tbrhbl had left McNally but there Hlsle.lf 4 0 0 0 Btalr.cf 4 00 0 while they scored five runs in Ollvsiph 1013 Grlch,2b , 4000 Radiato r Problem? tlie ninth, there would have C»rew,2b 4 0 20 Davls.dh 1120 ^\ J/ Darwln,r( 4 0 0 0 Fuller.r. 4 110 been some screaming." Brsun.ph 10 00 B«ylor,l( 4 12 0 Despite Hisle s lack of suc- Klllebrw.dh 1 O 0 0 Roblm6n,3b 4 0 3 1 ' Sodrhlm,3b 4 2 30 Wllllams.lb 312 2 cess against McNally, lie en- Kuslck.lb 4 1 10 Elchebrrn, 4000 Don' . . * t get all tered the game with eight hits Brye.cl 3111 Belong.r,sa 4 0 1 1 ( | Hundley.e 4 0 00 McN«|ly,p 0 0 0 0 ^ in his last 15 at bats and is tied Gom»,Ss 30 0 0 Reynolds.p 0 0 0 0 ^ -J with Bob Darwin ? ' as Min- Thompiniu""! "1 1 1 ". " Ja'ckspnjp 000 0 frt Steamed /^ Butltr.p 0 0 0 0 G-nrleni.p 0 000 nesota's top home-run hitter at Hahd»,p 0 0 00 *^\ nine. ' Totals . . 14 t.lU ¦ Minnesota Manager Frank Totals KITS ¦{( MINNESOTA 000 OOO 104-5 Up' Quilici countered Weaver's BALTIMORE Ml 2-01 01X-4 1^41 —Fuller. LOB-Mlnnesbtfl 7, Baltlnwra move, however, with left-hand- 6. 2B-Bryt, Oliva, Robinson 3, vvilllami, ed swinging Tony Oliva who Fullor. ' ' , ^•Vj'WMHWP^* m J\ ^^ WTCHINO SUMMARY ^.^^ ^|^J^5^ /.AW ^^ sliced an opposite-field double IP H R BR SB 10 to drive in three runs. Butler (L, 1-2) ... 3V4 4 3 3 2 0 Grant Jackson then relieved Handi , 4'A 7 3 i » 4 McNally (W, 4-J) 8M 7 5 5 3 4 Reynolds and gave up an in- Reynolds 0 . 1 0 0 • 0 REG field hit to Rod Carew before Jackson , 0 10 0 0 0 Garland I^SVEl tMiife.. TK ^^£___B*s_*lBii_raW^______i Place can find.it.,. "-'•* __HV^^ ' l*T l? \l !? ^ ^ L Wmr ' '"-,'•' '• mSltWntlWTmlmSmW ^^^^^^M Radio' Shack, 31-2045 y J __v P* ^MHBKSWMSMH^KHls^a^^^^^^^^^H^^^MR____H@______3______N____. J_^__^_____9I______I , ¦"; ' ¦'" • ' as r ^*v^tttt__.^. ^ < *QQH^H?^______B*3_ _aS______^______^______l ' py.* ,"' """. 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Probate Division¦ ' ¦ ¦'¦' .Nft JZ«8 . ¦ fails f0 choos© III Re Estate of .. ' . B tarry Konoplu Decedent. uddies rally in 9ffi NIA . Order: for Hearing «o Petition to Determine Descent. Nlcephore F. Grutkovyjkl bavins filed Scoreboard In this Court a petition represenfliiB. among other things, that said decedent Keri y s died testate more than itetl successor' five years prior NEW YORK (AP) - Walter Los Angelei law- to the filing thereof, leaving certain pro- totop Pr6 Roaebdll The executive session ihclud-- dates—both perty In -Winona County, Minnesota) VVj ¦ and m4-3 NATIONAL liSA»U« ; Kenned^,? National Red ¦ Basketball «d only the 18 owners and ex- yers—did attend and / were that no will of said decedent, ¦ has been Hie Winona VFW Buddies ' „. ' ' ¦ , oh a ground ball to open the the second out of the,- inning, *AST¦ . Association commissioner for cluded Kennedy for most of the ^questioned for about one hour. proved, nor administration of his estate raffled for thrte riiris in Iovrerynlnth, after IN. X. . PCt. •! granted. In this State • and preying that the but that he Rollie Tust hit a bounder to Philadelphia ...... W . JP •»< ¦--/. . the past 11: years, has made it time—at his request. W/hen the Kennedy has seen the league the descent of said .n7ym property fee deter- bottom of the ninth inning ~ suffered a disastrous loss of third that Joe Barry couldn't Montreal . ...,...,,. M:JJ. clear to the: league's" owners owners recessed until today, grow from nine to 18 teams and mined and : that It be assigned 'to tha St. Louis ..;,...>.. 31 31 SOt; 2, persons . entitled thereto! control. He walked Joe Nett, handle, and Kohner raced home 77 34-.443 «y that he will not continue in the they scurried ; outywitfcout is- prosper from a current mil- without the benefit of a base Pittsbumh ...... 1 $9 ; IT IS ORDERED, Thitf tha hearing Scott Ender;? Jim Kohner arid with the deciding run. Chlcaoo ... IS 3S . JV '7* .. position beyond his current suing, a statement, lion television contract during thereof be had on July 15th, 1974, at hit — and pulled out » 4-3 vic- New York...... :. •»» -3ar 10 10:00 o Paul Thompon; in succession? to ' .-¦¦; five-year contract, which ex- Kennedy appeared stunned his reigh,:- . - . 'clock A.M.,. before this Court, . In tory oyer ?Red : Wing Both teams scored? ii mnpin/ WBST ¦ the County Court Socin. ' In the Court 's: VFW force in one : run and was Los Ahjeles .... .ry44 n AST ' • ' pires June lj 1975. - that y not "Maybe they (the owners) House, in .lie sixth . inning. Red : Wing ¦ ' ? a /decision was . Wihona, - Minnesota, and that Wednesday night at charged ?with Atlanta ...... ,..'..' . 38 77 J«. J notice hereof be given ty the publica- team . Wi- ?a balk to bring broke Schwarz' string of 10 co«h „...... 34 27 ' « , ' "U?nder no circumstances will reaiched.. ;. :y. were acting iwder the appre- High. in the tying run. Clnclnnall • ^71 tion of this: order In the Winona Daily nona secutive . shutout innings when Houston ...... 33 :34 .4*3 11 ? I remain as commissioner be- He said that each time the. hension that I might change in^ News end by mailed notice as provided The victory preserved 1 the After Chuck Mueller made San Frtnclsco 3? W. _47« . 12- yond the termination of my owners called Wm in, be asked mind. But I told them no. I by. lew. : Jerry Thygeson was hit by .san Di*nc:<, ...... n 42 .«» 17 . .Dated JUne 4, 1W4.; BUddi4) June t»74) scored two runs ? in the top (Koosman t-4) at Phlle- or lienry Steinman as his sii-?- whether Rothenberg, 35, or Rothenberg, legal counsel for of bimt by Tust.y . ':¦" ' .. New York . ¦¦ MINUTES OF THE SPECIAL MEETIN* the ninth inning to go in front delphle (Ruthwen 5-4). night . cessbr. ': '? ¦ '" Stejnman, 41, or both attended Jack Kent Cooke, owner' - .ot the OP THE SCHOOL BOARD OF FRIDAY'S OAMES . INDEPENDENT: Only one of .Red Wing's runs ¦: '' ?"I made that pbmt yery. the meeting. Angeles Lakers SCHOOL DISTRICT : 3-1 against their First District Pittsburgh at etlcago ." clear - L . - . - hander ; Hod . ? Schwarz. Jerry during the span while striking . * replacement. , Schools- Superintendent for Bementery. : including 14 Wednesday W. L. Pet. ' : OB. " Education, 'Clerk Treasurer/ reporters Diercks reached on an error by out 34, Boston .;.- ...... 37 V J7S ly p.m. New York for hews media and observers were also third baseman Dan Boynton; W>ty Baltimore ...... 3] 30 .324 2V, present. Detrolf ...... ,..; 33: 30 .524 J'A' It VMI announced : the! the : special the . runners were ' sfock prices y moved along Ender was :3-fpr-4- at the Cleveland ...... 35 31 JM 4V4 -.- Winona markets meeting was called for the purpose . of by Dan. StrUsz, sacrifice bunt plate, and he and Mueller, lead New York ...;.. .,34 33 .J07: 4'/, AlliedC S8% InlPap 4J8% canvassing election? returns and to dis- Atllwaukee ,.....:. 29 31. .. .483 : Bay State Milling Co. ? cuss tea?her. negotiations.. - and then Lonnie . Bohmbach the team in hatting so far?with ¦ ' ¦:.¦ ' WEST ? . * •Allis'Chyy ,8%' Jns&L. . . 19% ' : ¦¦' No. 1 N. Spring Wheat ...... 4.4? Chairman Allen- . stated he had met drove them both in with a two- five hits in nine at bats,, Oakland ...... 34 31 .523 ¦ AiriAirli 9 - Jostens iP- 14% :Wheat . 4.47 Kansas City ...... 32 30 ' No. 2 N. Spring ...... with the-exclusive, representative' to be- out single; .'" , '. - Kohner is 5-for-iq after three .3H . ft Alcoa 42% Kencott 33 No. 3 N. Spring Wheat ...... 4.43 gin negotiations on the new contract. Texos ...... ;....; 33 32 .SW 1 ' ' No. 4 N. Spring Wheat ...... 4.M Only a partial proposal had: been pre- Thomforde retired ¦vr y. ¦: Chlcege ...i...... » so .m I : Afie'sS , 19 Kraft 40% Boynton "P' . Rod Schwarx "I Kames. No. 1 Hard Winter Wheat ....;. -4.T9 sented to the board's negotiating team California ;...... 28 3t .424 «V4 AmBmd - 37% Kresge 36% 4M Minnesota ...... 25 .34 ;410 No. 2 Hard Winter Wheat .....; by the teachers organization. Because of 7 ¦ No. 3. Hard Winter Wheat ...... 4.13 WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS AmCan /' 28% Kroger , 19% the natiw-j of , heootlatlons, If Is nece* Chicago 15, Cleveland 4 ACyan -20T8 toew's 16% No. 4 Hard Winter Wheat ...... 4M sary 'that both sides be working from a Baltimore 6, Minnesota 5 . No. 1 Rye .. _.,...;...... 2.39 complete proposal. He recommended . the Sports in brief AmMtr 6 Marcor 27% No. 2 Rye ...... ;. 2.37 , of a deadline for submis- ' ' ' establishment Kansas City 2, Milwaukee 0 ' ' ¦ -¦ Pgrk-Rec Detroit. 4, Texas a, ¦ : ¦•: .. *:. . ¦ sion of the complete proposer by the 11 Innings AT&T . .46% MeDonD 13V4 met . Boston 2, Oakland 1, II- Innings ' AMF : : 18% Merck . ;,:83y4 teachers. If that deadline was not New York 2, CelHornla 1 : ' ¦ ¦ ' ¦¦ ;' ¦ theh mediation would, be . requested. It TODAY'S GAMES Ahconda , . 21% MMMC . ' - ' 75IJ6 : ? ¦ ; was moved by: Rosers, seconded by Deck- :;y:Eggs:y : ?;; to request the services softball one Chicago (Woo* 11-7) et Minnesota ArchDn 15% MinnPL 14% : :V' er and carried AAcxses of the State Department of Mediation AAll (Corbln 4-u), night ' NEW YORK IOO MARKET At-mcSl 21% MobOil . 43=4 the exclusive representative Baltimore; (Pelmer 34) at Milwaukee . Medium v^hltft ...;..,,...... V.30-.33 services If Class A, Slow-Pitch (Sleton t-7 V , has not submitted -complete negotiating ' ' or Colborn 3-3), night AvcoCp 4% MnChjn ? 66% Large whila ...... ,...... |1- * S-.OJ . piir L . - .. . - ? W. L 'California (Lange 2-2) at Texas (Ciyde .^ packaae. Including money Items; by Bee Jay Const. 71 Mankato Bar 3 5 3-3),' rloht OeadFds ? 18% MontDk 27% P.M. Tiiesday, lAay 28,. 1974.. 1 . : election was held Alma Red Rem 7 1 Fiberite . . -is with W^ryfand Kansas City (Fltzmorrls 6-2) at . Oak-' BethStt . !^9% MonP 21% The annual school East Side Bar A I Sunshine Bar 3 3 . land (Hunter 8-8), night ¦ . - . ' : May 21, 1974, In accordance with state Cathedral. «l Dally News . .. "15 Boeing . 17% NorfkWn 60% Livestock law. Returns showed that In the aMerge ¦ • ' ¦ Compiled from Daily News wire services FRIDAY'S OAMES . " ¦ K. of . c . -4 . 4 . Steve's 3 t California at Texas, 2, night : BoiseCs " .? 15% NNGas 45!4 ' ' • ' ; " ' ¦ "¦ contest William J. Ferguson received MOSES MALONE, the 6-il att-Americajj from Peters- : ' SOUTH '. IT. >AUL- . Johnson received Lantern.Tavern 3 4 Auto 6leo . u t Clevelend at Boston, night : Brunswk 14% NoStEw 19& PAUL, Minn. (API — 180 voles. Curtis «. his ser- SOUTH ST. 1,094 votes. In the First District contest- biirg (Va.) Hijjh School,; ended the all-out war for Detroit at New York, night (USDAl — Cattle ind . calves: 3,300; Terry Stolpa belted a pair Baltimore at Mllweukee. nl ght BrlNor 35% NwAir 25% - very Norman J- Decker received 199 votest of vices by signing a grant-in-aid to attend the University of slauohter ateers and helters un- received 222 votes. In ¦ ¦ .Chicago at Minnesota, night Joe Fleischman CampSp 28% NwBanc 40% lovver, extremes J.OO Roderick . Henry ' ' ¦¦•? ¦ v ; even; steers SO-1.50 contest Elaine Bar- homers ?to lead Bee Jay Cod Maryland . . . ? _. Kansas Clfy at Oakland, night lower; cows and the Secortd District announced that CatPlr 63% Penney 76% off) Heifers mostly I.M on received 154 votes; Mary Trautner i(ruction to an 18-7 triump WORLD FOOTBALL LEAGUE officials : bulls steady; vealers moderately active, Allen ap- h Chryslr : l6y4 Pepsi «2% sleushter received -ill. votes. Chairman the World Bowl, the league's first championship game, will VFW Baseball steady; choice 1000-1200 lb pointed himself and Dr. Charles W. Rog- over the Lantern Tavern Wed ¦ CitSrv 38 PhlpsDg 32% steers 37.50-38.5_.; tew 120O-1300 lbs 37.00- with the be held at Jacksonville, ?F2a-i Nov. 29 ;.: . WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS M.0O- ers as a committee tojelher ComEd 25% Phillips 33.501 mixed hloti tod anti choice and a city employee to nesday : night, and . yAlma Red former Kentucky?Colonels' Winons 4,: Red Wing 3 (9 Innings) SMC names 52% two loads average fo high ctiolce Clerk-Treasurer JAMES (BABE) McCARTHY, 37.50) Inspect the votlno machines the mornlna after three hours of ComSat SOVt Polaioid : 39% 800 & 950 lbs 3».00; eftolte 900-1100 . Ibs - R$m kept pace by crushing the basketball cbach, was ih .fair condition : high good arid choice of May 22,. 1974- ' . Amateur Baseball tionEd . 6% RCA — 15% 37.00-38.25; mixed Mr. Decker rnoved; the adoption of ttw surgery for-cancer of the colon . . . 36.50-37.50; utility and commercial slaugh- Knights of Columbus 19-3. TODAY'S OAME ContCan 24% RepStI followlna"resolution; BOXER KEN NORTON has filed a $5 It. Peul Merchants at . 22 ter cows 28.0O-_t9.50, tew. 30.00; eulter ' School '. - The - Johnny' HEAVYWEIGHT Chleifi, I p.m. ' canner BE IT- RESOLVED by the . s East Side Bar- FRIDAY'S OAME a new A D. ConOiL 3a% Reylnd 45% 26.50-28.00, ' hlgtwlresslng 28.50) Boafd of Independent School District N». million suit against promoters of the March 26 title fight he 25.0O-2&5O) No. 1 1700-2000 lb slaughter Winona Chiefs et Red Wing, 7:30 p.m. : CntUDat :.] " Ml, State of Minnesota, that It li he.re- DaOy News tilt will be replay- charging fcreach of contract . . . Joseph ? P. Fleischman : today ; 27% Rbckwl 27% "35.0O-36.0O, Individual high.' lost to George Foreman, , bulls' te* by" found determined and declared thai ed at a? later date. JACK BICE oi New Mexico, Phil Hancock of Florida and was' named St/Mary's College's | Dartlnd. 19% Safewy 37% dressing 3J.50-37.O0; 1-2 1450-1650 lbi the regular election of the voters of this Legion Baseball Deere 40%?SFeln 30% 33.W-35.50t prime vealers up to 55.00; district held on May 21, 1974, was In all Beau Baugh of Long Beach State led the NCAA .-golf champ- . choice 4S.O0-50.O0; good 36.00-46.00. . Iri other Class A games,: Ca- ¦ FRIDAY'S GAMES Director of Athletics and Direc- I DorwCm 67% SchrPl respects duly . and legally- called and ionships with four-uadavpar 68s?;. . . . •/¦' Ryshford at Wlnone . (2), 6;15 p.m. . 68% held and at said election a total of 127J thedral trimmed Steve's Lounge tor of the?College Center, school ; Thursd«y. Junt t, im) WEDNESDAY'S WORL& CUP SOCCER results found Prep Baseball duPont 168% Sears 86% (First Pub. electors cast ballots, for election of school 5-1, Sunshine edged Mankato president Brother George Pali EastKod 109% ShellOU 47% ilate of fAlnn«sot» ) director at Israel William J. Fergusor Poland whipping Haiti 7-fl, Argentuia drawing with Italy 1-1, WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS Countv: ol Winona ) u. received 189i Curtis M. Johnson receive* Bar;7-6 and Fiberite outslugged Sweden and Holland battling to a scoreless draw and Urtir Alma: 16/ Independence 11 announced, Esniairk 27% Singer. ' 30% In. Countv Court 1,0M. Therefore. Curtis M. Johnson hav ¦ vote: ¦' ' ' Fleischman, who was Director Eicxon 7iV4 SouPac 31% Probate Division¦ ? ¦ Ing received tha highest number of Auto Electric ? 18-11 with the aid guay and Bulgaria drawing.1-1 . • . . :- Buddies Ho, i7,9sr • . - . ¦ "¦: cast for school director at-large Is herii Riva Ridge, won. the led Wliig (I) Buddies (4) of Residence Programs at Firestn 17% SpRind 38% Eitale Of 421 elect of Bill Wiefenbach's round-trip- COUP 1UNDING, a halWirothet to • ¦ ¦ ' In R* by declared ele •. : . - . , - TOM HEIN^OflM, coach of the champion Boston 300 " . WL s coaches association . : . :'. . (olm.rf 3 0 I y-Hansen,pr 0 l 0 coach; -March 14. . y. GenM 51 Telex 2% In ¦ this Court a petition representing. Roderick . Henry having, received th Oasis Cal* 7 0 Rustic Bar 3 4 was elected president of the NBA' hmforde.tf^ .4 1 1 w.Thornas,pr OOO ¦ emo.19 other Ihlngs, that laid decedent highest number of votes cast for scho< Oasi s Bar 4 1 First Baptist • 2 1 HANK AARON WOULD love to meet Japan's Sadjabaru )lereks,lb 31 0. Eiider.tr ¦' .. 4 13 Pat Costello was named the GenMtr 50% Texaco * 25% died Intestate more than live year* prior director District 1 Is hereby -declare Central Meth.¦ ¦ S ! Central tilth. - 26 Jarry,3b .. 3.0 0 , Kohner.rt 121 Eedmen's basketball coach GenTel p21Vi to th« flllris thereof, leaving certain pro- elected. A total of; 372 electors of th Wlnsox • • - 4 1 Merfln-F. H. 1« Oh, Who has hit 600 homers in 16 seasons, in a home run ¦ ¦ Texaisln 94% ;trusi,lf -4 0 .1 Thompsons 30 1 April 8. . ; ' ¦ Gillette 34% Untiil perty* In Winona County, .Minnesota* '.' and second election district cast ballots t f-lrtt Cong: - 4.1 SU Atatfhew's 16 bitting 'contest, but the Atlanta firaves' star said he woulid .8ombch,p.cf 3- 0 2' Mueller.lb 40 2 " ' • 36% that no will of sa id decedent ..h'» '..been elect a school director , frorn that dl! Kato Liquor 4 4 ' ¦ ¦ Brother George pointed out Goodrich 19% UnCarb ¦- proved, nor administration of her estate Elaine Baron received 154 an not be able to participate in such , an event until sometime r TusUb 4 O 1 . 40% In trie*. . ' Totals 11 i 5 Schwan,p ? 3 0 0 that the joining Of these two Goodyj? 16% UnPac granted^ this State and praying that Mary A., Trautner received 218. Mar The Oasis' Cafe; clung '-to in November . . . . . "-. ' 73 h(0(i its x-Johnson,ph l?O 0 the ciescent of said property be deter-: A. trautner having received fhe THE NEW YORK JETS signed fqnr defensive -veterans : positions is eminently logical at Greyhnd 14% USSU 42 mined and that It be assigned to the est number of .Votes cast for schoc lead in? Class B by edging Kato ' ¦ ' ¦ ?Rich Sowells, Jota Ebersole and Rx* • . totals¦ 'ii '*4'»' St; Mary's since co-ordination of GulfOil ? 20 WnAirL 12"% peftons entitled thereto; director District, II Is hereby declare Liquor 11-10, and the Oasis Bar Chris Farasopoulos, v-Ran for J. Nett In. »th. - • ¦ ' ¦ ' , IT IS ORDERED, That the hearlno elected. As oppears by the returns ID ' ' ¦ . the two facilities moved a step closer to Its July Spicer. ; ? . . ¦W-Ran for Ender In-7lh. ' . I . (Student Homestk 41 . WesgEI 15% thereof be had on July 15th, - mt, at said annual election In the several elec 3rd showdown with the loop x-Grovnded out for SchWari In.4th. '.' center and fieldhouse) is essen- Honeywl 57% Weyrhsr 39% |0:0I> :o'clock A.A.., before? this Court, Hon districts and precincts Irj said schpo :ED WINO :.:..:..:..:: ooo 001 002-j tial in providing a comprehen- fnlSti 32% WinnDx 42 in ttia County Court Room,. In the Court district, duly returned to, fHed am leaders by trimming Central Lu- UDDIES OOO Ml 00S-4 •: ¦ House, In Wtpona, Minnesota,, and that opened and canvassed and now remain theran 9-7. E—Thomlorde 2, Barry, Boynton. DBI sive activity program for the I13M .: -. 217V* Wlworth 15% notice hereof be given by the publica- Ing on file In the office of the Clerk. - Dlerks, L. Bohmbach .2, Thompson, college community. IntlHrv . 25% Xerox' tion of this order In fhe VWnona Dally The irrotfort tor the adoption of tl Central Methodist got by the ust. 2B-Kohner. . ' 118% foregoing resolution was duly - second* records 550 SB-Thyaeson !, Holm, A native of ? Oswego N.Y., News and by mailed notice as provided Hemmelman •nder, , Kohner,. Thompson, Tust 2. S— by law. by Dr. Rogers. The following voted Wlnsox 6-4, but the other two larry, L. The Colt .45 sixshooter xised Rogers, Rhoden. - Wlodeskl .. : ...,.. 5 . If Bohmbach, Tust. DP — Red Fleischman w a s graduated Dated June 4, 1(71. favor thereof: Decker, Hu scores were not reported. Emmy Hemmelman may not LAMPLIGHTERS l/lno CBarry-DIerks)..¦ LOB—Red Wlna 7, by Wyatt Earp in the shootout . S. A. Sawyer Kronebusch and Alien; Sadowski was a ' ¦ ¦ .. from Le Moyne College, Syra- have had the high single game (Final) luddles U ' . Judge of the County Court . sent; whereupon said resolution was d Class C PITCHINO SUMMARY cuse, N. Y.j and received his at the OK corral was bought (Court Seal) . dared duly passed and adopted. wi. WL during the final night of the Mapleleaf V.. L. ¦ ¦ ¦ i Trallblaiers 17 4 IP H R ER BB SO 's degree in history from recently for $20,000 by the head M.: J. qalvln, It was moved by Rogers, seconded I P. V. Free . 6 0 Gorman Found?. 2 4 . Bohmbacti 7 master Attorney for? Petitioner ' Kronebusch end carried to adjourn tl Lemmings : 5 ) St. Mary' Lamplighters League at the Ma- Wishful Thlnkeri ...... 14 7 "l 1 1 3 0 of , a firm that makes gnn i JS homforde (L*>) ;, 1% ]: J j 4 0 Creighton University. . PM Minnesota Blda. meatlno at 9:02 PM. Horn* Beverage 5 2 J .I. . K -15 pleleaf Lanes Wednesday , but Susie Slppen , .....15 9 holsters. Pin Heads ...;..,...... 10 11 chwa n (W, 3-0) 9 s 31 3 u Fleischman taught history al •St. Paul, Minn. J5101 Paul W. Sanders, Clerk Lake Center ' 4 2 Tempo 0 Balks — L. Bohmbach, * she wound up with a 550 se- Knuckles 5 ...... » 12 ¦Thomforde. Fafth Lutheran 4 2 '?' . _ ' . . + ¦'¦.' SMC from 1964-67 aiid served ries for the Trailblazers. Strlkln' Streakers » 12 Roger's Dodger* ...... , 8 )3 as Dean of Students from 1967- Pleasant Valley Free took Helen Grothem rolled a 219 Bowling Bags. ;.. J 1< ' ¦ ¦ 70 before leaving for doctoral over sole possession of first for Roger's Dodgers and fin- ' ¦ '. studies at Michigan State. place in Class C. by? durpping ished . with.a. 532, Sharon , :Po- Youth HARDT MUSIC STORE'S Lemmings 10*7, Home Beverage zanc carded a 530 that included Alma avenges stayed in contention by nipping a 213 game and Mary Emmons leagues St. Mary's 7-6, Faith Lutheran managed a 515. lone setback ' Stock market battered Jones & Kroeger 20-6 The league champion Trail- .BANTAM . ; and Gorman Foundry disposed WL W L blazers combined for. 976—2 ,707. INDEPENDENCE, Wis. - Elks Club 4 0 Wlngold 11 of Tempo 7-4. & Hers League at Alma's baseball team avenged Tousley Ford 4 0 Central Meth. 1 2 In the His ASCO 2 2 Martin PRE-INVENTORY its only loss so far this season Tire 1 J the Westgate Bowl, Marv Rup- Qualify Chev 2 2 Happy Chef 0 3 trading light, precht ? had an even 200, Jerry when it knocked off Independ- Fire. Dept 12 ence 16-11 in a Dairyland Con- Wednesday's Results 'Wilma toppled a 554, June Poll- Quality Chev 1, Centre! Methodlit 0 BIKE achik tipped a 1987 and Sue ference tilt here Wednesday Elks Club 1, ASCO D Thompson came in with a 478. night. Tousley Ford 10, Merlin Tire • p Wlngold 4, rices lower Fire Dept. 0 Team honors went to the The Rivermen, now 5-1 with CLEARANCE TRAILERS - Dascher foursome five straight wins, outhit the In- WAIST HIGH NEW YORK;(UPI) - Prices For Camping A Trav«..n« Thompson ¦ with 819-2 ,253. dees 16-5. Ted Green led Alma's WL . 1 wt moved narrowly lower in light attack with hits including JETCO 3 0 Checkerboard 1 2 trading on the New HIS • HERS three K. of C. J 1 York Stock Our New Yea r Starts July 1 So We Want- 95& $ 95 Westgate W. L. a pair of doubles and Jerry At W 0 2 Exchange today aa investors . 20 4 Smllh's Furn, 2 1 Nash's 0 4 $39 49 Thompson - Dasdiir .... . KWNO Radio 2 1 Pack 17 7 Hoch also had three lilts, continued to show concern over PollachlK - Wednesday's Results - Smith - Benedict ,., li a John Hoch picked up the vic- Checkerboa rd rising interest rates. To Reduce Our Inventory Before That Date! Dow - Wilma U lit Shop 17, Nash's 11 KOLTER'S *S; 12 12 tory on the mound for Coach JETCO 22, K. ol C, 13 The Dow Jones industrial Stofterehn - Perllnoton .... KWNO Radio 24 , A SALES a SERVICB Nelfon ¦ Protltlnskl ....:.... 11 13 ' Lance Carroll's squad. I, W 11 average was off 0,70 at 825,41 "Since IMS" Rockwell ¦ Oopltwikl .... 10 14 Alma will be at Blair for an shortly before noon. The index •101 Mankelo Ave. Phont 4J2 S«S Nonlo • Smith ? 15 GIRLS PEE WEE NATIONAL Erdmann - Rupprecht > 16 8 p.m. conference game Friday. Wednesday's Results of 30 blue-chip stocks has lost Kramer Plumbing 22, St, Casimir ' s 12 nearly 26 points in the past four YOU'LL FIND THAT ARE (Pub, Date Thursday, June M, 1974) Wnona RTnlffrng 25, Rocco's Plite » SAVINGS Weaver t, Sons 31, A & W 11 sessions. HIGH SCHOOL OmUi Declines led advances, 592 to WL 40fi among the 1 WL , ,419 issues REALLY APPR PLANNED USS REPORT Wlnone Print, 3 0 Westgafe Bowl 1 1 crossing the tape. The two-hour ECIABLE ON (Si Cheer's 2 I Thurley Perk O 2 QEHERAL REVENUE SHARING KS/ £•!!*"._ •" ¦** w 02 turnover amounted to around General Revenue Sharing provides federal lands' diroctl/-to focal and ttate government*. The law r*_-qulieJ each governmem to Outdor Store 11 4,340,000 shares, compared with publish a report of its plans for the use qf these funds to Inform Ils cljl.efis and to encourage their pmrtlclpttlon in deciding how 4,830,000 traded during the BRAND NEW MERCHANDISE purposes listed, your oovernment may change this ependlng pi an. Make-up game from June tho money ought to ba spent, Within ihe 12 corresponding period Wednes- ' ' PLANNED EXPENDITURES ' ¦ _ , I THB OOVMNM INT 178 concern investors have over • Pianos • Stereos • Components N,M- ¦ ¦ at 7 p.m. * PflOrrcTiON ' S t fORTHE FIFTH ENTITLEMENT PERIOD. JULY 1,1974 interest rates. Hopes had S_J THROUGH JUNE30.187B, PIANST08PENDTHESE ^ surfaced recently that they had 1(5.178 S rUNDS F0F.THE PURPOSES SHOWN, * * ¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ iKontATIoHAN5P0 aS ¦¦¦ -¦ " -' -— * * » ^° 2 $ ACCOUNT NO. 2 All peaked, but now there are 4 HtAUH ' 24 665 CLIP end Is AVE predictions the prime rate—that • B/W & Color Television ;L S WINONA CITY banks charge key corporate ¦ ¦ - n«CFHATio» k * ClTf CI-ERK , REOPENING OF customers—would rise again. ' T *— That rate generall .B LIBHABIE9„.,, ' WHom n iNNesoTft 55997 y is at c " $ S record high of WA per cent, • Wurlitzer Organs ' t BociAi seiwicts -, fc '* docutnendng El Did fonAOEPon poow 5 a Massage circulation, — Featuring — " tojn»)*wem»illebeenhival»»n »ilvli«dl3i»t«copyof .ADMlNISTBAtlOHAnpStliiaVnAiinM 3|£ $ «** >*t»rl tit* publietwd local newtpeper • New /ytatstufiat ^ . 1 SMMIIilillllll gjJ^^ In a ol otnert) B MUL1IPURP05BAND I h«v» teoenla Die eentmu el idle • Early Bird Special COME IN TOMORROW FOR REAL BUYS aovr- ^ ^^^^^^^^^ ,., LAWN BOY . otN'"*l* ' 5— —~n*.r^__m...m Room. 208 WITH THIS AD M ~* -**± • * 10 tDumi oH $ ^^^^^^III B M City Halt . Wi nona , HW « Olf On Our POWER MOWERS ' ; Vi Hr. « 1 Hour • Flnoer-TIp Startlngl " S?,^L„«.,r « ^^^fi ^^^ K |e) AB8UnANCI»mefettolrntnictlonhereon. » otmarmm a j^^^^^^^^byjhttI UMII the 8wmury of (he Treasury shit the non dlieHmlrw- . Manages • Quiet en th* Gol ,1J IIOUSINOfcCOM- C^i^i^S^f^^^™ tion and other statutory lewliemints lined In Pan I ol th* 10 a,m,-5 p,nr». Dally MUNIlVOEVIuoPMlfH S tffi88mimiSgMM& /pWUrtedUnwctlmtnolplent tcoompsmma B«»emnnnt °» wmplM trtlli , DAIIII BROTHERS - '¦ i, ' B^^^^^8S?88»S« with jwnt to the entitlement nVDD STORE, INC. 11 ECONOMIC ' , S? $ ^^^^^^ M ^ Q *] EL CID MASSAGE OTIIEniSpecltf) reolChltltMMuilte 107 LafoytHt 4SM320 IJ6 1* $ / Slamtu Ollliier *°^ w HardtLEVEE PLAZAs EASTMusic Store ^^^ E^^^ B Open: DOWNTOWN , Norman ' — WINONA ^^^ ^™ E. I nda 11. H«vor 6/ 19/7*f Mon, fliro Sat, 10 a,m.-3 *,m. ^ ^ 1M0TAI8 «»m. TUI»-Me.iePrint Otto M.EB DBUVBRY $ W,I78 $ i»00 , 000 * u ., ' 171 I. 4th II, Phone 4U-4M? SPECIAL SATURDAY HOURS TO LABOR DAY — ? A.M. TO NOON Illllllllllll ¦ ¦ ¦ f»L Winona Dally Newa Card of Thank* Dogi/ Pelt, Supplies 42 Farm Implement* . - - ,, • - '. ¦48 Articles for Sale 87 ArHdts for Salr 5T Apartimnts, Flats ' 90 Ap«rtm«frt», Furnished 91 wH Winoiia,? Minnesota ~~" ' ' kitchen, KRONEBUSCH — \ . .? : . ' - •" :• ' REGISTERED 2 year old female Black THREE POINT scraper blade, 3 point REVERB UNIT Gibson , amplifier with RUM/AAGE SAL^—Frl. 21st and Sat. AVAILABLE NOW; — dtlux* .1-bedrOo|tl LARGE ROO/A - hlde-a-bed, ' ^ dinette. Employed adults, THURSPAy, JUNE 20, 1974 We wish to express our thanks to Dr. Labrador, Very well trained, excellent rotary cutter, Massey Ferguson 2 bot- 2 lacks, $20; Coronado turntable AM-F.M 22nd. 0-5; toys, clotttes, mlscellanwua. apartment, marrltd couplt. Leaie. ¦ snack bar, ' ¦ ' field tom plow, on ateel. Tel, 45a-"«23.. radio console, SS4. Tel. *5H<61. . 421 Sarnia. - ¦* ' - Lokevlew Manor Apartments, Tal. 454- '- . ho ' pets. 321 Washington. St., Apt. 4. . Edln arid - the entire hospital staff for • ihunter . end, - good prospect for - . . vr, . . ?>:.. . -? * ' ¦ ¦ ¦ S2S9 /: . - ¦ . - '¦: ¦: ¦' ?¦ ,/¦ :¦ /, ;• ¦ the good care-given Jacob Kronebusch, trial. : J*n Marsolek, TH. 452-33*0. ' :. .;- . . ? . Also our • sincere thanks to ell our EXTENSION SIDES for 11! John Deere TWO . SWIVEL club chair*; need uphoi- LIKE NEW-30" gas stove combination . ' Business Placet for Rant 92 friends, . heigh bors and , relatives for BEAGLE—11-rrionth-old doo, free for a chuck' wagon; Badger sil» distributor. . sterlriB, $10 each. Tel. ; 454-524J after freerer-refflgeratoiy Tel. 45217M. TWO-BEDROOM upp«r apartment, corptt- . Earlyn Knutson, Caledonia, Minn. .3 .p.itii . electric heat, . but Una,: stove and thei r various acts of kindness end mes- good home. Tel. 489-2068 after.Jt. - ; ' 4 ' - ' ' ' - ed, W,«>o ; ¦ - OPFICE SPACE for rent or iaasa, - ' i - ' -ft. - ; sages of sympathy shown us during . 55921. , Tel, 724-Z1JS. , '/., . AMAMA—20 cu.: . freeier, ttto,. maple . : t-efrloerator furnlshtd; Tel. 452-3151 E. location. . Inquire Met*. .. . .; nt Ads HARLtY DAVIDSON see (joll cart for - -:iq. ft. Prime Wa our recent bereavement MALE LHASA APSO piippy, Ypet type) bedroom sat with twin bed, dresser, durlna *lt« day, 452-W12 attar .(.- . ,. the loss of bur . chants Bank, Trust Department..¦ Tet. beloved Husband and Father; We espe- $1-10, white female Persian kitten $12, JUST RECEIVED good assortment of sale. TH. 452-7«8J 8-5 p.m. .or 454-4O30 night stand 5140) chest of drawers S50; ' ' ' '-¦¦ ¦-¦;- ¦ ¦ - ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ' v 454-5140. . .: . / - -.; cially thank Rev. Emmett Tighe for his also .male and female Persian breeding pew and used Bobcats for sale. Dakota after . 5. . J h.p. Montgomery Wards snowbloWer DOWNTOWN l-bedroom apartment, com- Heavy Equipment, Dakota, >. Minn. Tel. . used : 3 times,'- $32i. fet. ' pletely ramodeled ahd carpelad: Stove words ; of sympathy and Rev. Joseph . pair, (color cameo) reasonable, papers . 452r10M. . OFFICES FOR RENT—Approximately 4S0 :;¦ 507-643-6290. ' ' ' ,. '' RUMAAAGB SALE—10 Otla Street, Frl. end refrigerator, kitchen set furnished. Here Mountain end . Rey. . Leland Smith and available. Tel. 507-643-4390,' Dakota, . . sq. ft;, around floor. •:¦ Heat, -air condi- Start 9-9, -Safc-M.- - the pallbearers for their services. 'Minn...... 8ARDEM "TRACTOR with cultivator. No students. N6¦ pats. USVi E. 3rd. Tal. end some furniture. Private ' , ' . ' •• tioning, Thanks, too, to the ladies who served OLIVER hay. conditioner, »10O; 1961 Buick Tel. 452-136*. / 452-J31?.? . ,. , restroom. Available immediately. Tel.. UNCALLED FOR-: : the lunch ana. for all those who sent AKC IRISH Setters, 12 weeks old, hunt- Crescent, Minn. ' Tel. BE SURE to take advantage of OE's " : ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ ILIND AD5 . Electra, siOO. La .' 454-4812...... ¦; ' .. ".- . ; . ' food, cards, memorials and Mass offer- ing background with excellent dlspoil- '895-4466. : ¦ - ¦ ... .» big TRAINLOAD SALE. Buy that G.E. GARAGE SALE^Im Beam trophy dog A-J, U; 20, 21, 30, 44. S2, My ings to us'. ' tions. Tel. . 454-2221, ?, maior appliance now and sever BSB 195?, collector Items, dishes, girls' Looking For Better . : . : The Jacob Kronebusch Family . . BOU MATIC MILKERS . '. ELECTRIC, 155 . E. 3rd; .? dottilng, size .12, Meerschaum pipe, Farms, L«nd for Rent 83 FREE for a good home, black and white ng ptrlor. antiques) chairs, , miscellaneous. Thurs, Than Ordinary? Bucket, pipeline or mllkt ' Lorf and Found mixed breed Collie. Tel. 452-?57». Ed's Refrigeration & Dairy Suppllea FORi SALE—furnace coal, wood, con- J. Frl. 9-7. 41« 7th Street. ?y YOU CAN find It at?« good price, too. FOR REMT — 75 to 100 acre* pasture, Card of Thanks 4 1127 .Monkato TeU 452-5532 " verted to oil with fuel tank. . Tel. Quiet, air conditioned, l-bedroom apart- . Corey Volley ¦''• ¦• Tal. 454-3270 efter*. . PUPPIES AVAILABLE , for toed home. 452-/MU after :rf. y NEW AND USED Rummage Sale. New ments witfi a dellgtitful decdr: of shag AS A. PUBLIC SERVICE to: our readers, ' carpeting, drapes, panelling, . matching ; ¦ Tel, 452-9643 alter I,, . WD 45 iractor, Wide end used shoes and clothing. Thurs. iUSSE—. ' • '• free found ads will be published When ALLIS CHALMERS TWO S ETS of bucket aeatst for Ch?*^ 9-5; 4 Ontario stove and refrigerator. Above ell, for Houses for Risnt ? ; 95 neigh- : front, has excellent rubber. Paulson ma- i and. Frl., ban*. Lake Heartfelt thanks to rriy relatives, a. person finding en article calls the FREE-KITTENS homes, also 4 rolet, - 1 set ot white, 1. sat ef black. • ." ' . - y " ' - great picnic bulls, ther* ere gas grills/ flowers, for good . nure loader. 20" grain elevator. : Ed | Village. . ,. . .: / . r , furnished, bors and friends lor the gifts, Winona 'Dally.- 8.- Sundey News' 'Classi- grown cats, good mousers, need good Tel; Rushford JA4-7807. pallo wllh picnic tables, yoiir own bal- FOUR BEDROOMS, 2 baths patient Scheffner, Rt. 3, Mondovi. - Tel.-Oilman- 1 ' Central cards -while I was a surgical fied Dept. 452-3321. An 18-Word notice country homes.' Tel. 689-2014. . TERRIFIC, the way we cony and' tola of lush green - gran. 1732 gas heat, air coqdliloner. ¦ . . ton 944-3267. IT'S 're selling " 1-AAay 30.- ' ef Rochester A/lethodlst Hospital. will be published tree for 2 days In : TWO FAMILY OARAGE—Moving . Sale. Blue Lustre to clean s rugs end uphol- W. Broadway. Tel. 4544909. location.; Available Aug. . ¦ Mrs;, Wllllem (Bette) ' Busse ¦ Tel. 454-424 .. ' . en eflort ¦¦ to bring, finder and loser PEKINGESE PUPPIES-^3 msles, 1 fe- Women's . elothlna, size? 12-M; sewing stery. Rent shempooee n, $2 and -$3i . together. FOUR/ STEEL farrowing crates, like y Key Apartments . . male, 5 weeks old, Little Valley Ken- machine; portable * track tape player; Robb Bros. Store. ¦•' new; 45-bu. hog feeder; two 7.00x20 10- hair setter; lamtM; portable TV cart; FIVE BEDROOM home, 1H baths, water nels, Tel. 452-8653. . Tel, Cele- FOUND—expensive lock.; Identify' with ply truck tires, S30, like new- . housewares; miscellaneous. Frl,, Sat., $PACIOUS UPSTAIRS apartment Ire front, S310? month. Available : Aug.. V dbnie 724:2382.: Furn., Rugs, Linoleum ¦ serial end lock number. Tel; 452-6357. Sun.- 12 a.m.-* p.m. 1402 . D. McNally 64 . older home; Owner. I* allergic to cats, Teh 454-5873 mornings. dogs and smoking.? Prefer working Drive, (Behind : Vo-TKh School). . - ¦'¦' HELR LOST—4 month old Afghan, apricot color ' FITZGERALD:SUFeGB KINS . SIZE bed,' complete with head- couple. Tel. 452-2998 for details FOR RENT—5-bedroom home In Wlsedip dog, Latsch Beach vicinity. Reward. / Sales j. Service board end matching mJple drseaer, mir- Valley, 2. baths, larga yard, beautiful ¦• ¦ - ¦ " GARAGE SALE—735-4711.., Frl, I-J, Tel. 452-6339. PET PRODUCTS . Tel, Lewiston 523-2525 ar Sat/ 9-4; Gas stove; dryer; meti's, ror end chest. Single twin bed. Tel.- IN LEWISTON - 2-bedroom apartrrierit setting; responsible family- only. Tel. . St. Charles 932-32-55 - - ¦ . worrien'i, ehlldrien's clothing; toys; 454-3664, available how. Stove, refrigerator, car- 454-3270 aftir 4. —.—: .— •' • — ? I, f, ¦ ¦ FOUND-artlde- . of . .clothing," Pelzer You can depend on our hugs books;' . miscellaneous. '-. '. . . ' . port. TeU Lewiston S33-377» or 4S4-47it- Street. Tel. 454-20O3. . miOti BRAIDED reversible rug, AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY—new 3-bed- assortment of Pet Products, : VvANTED RIDING A/IOWER, air compressor, gar- J'/ucxIS'/i, three shedes of green. Just DOWNTOWN—l-bedroom complerlely re room Townhouse, attached oareS* ana ¦ FOUND—Two Volkswagen keys. Tel. coupled with our years of ; den tiller, . 40" electric range, saw. like ntw. Asking $50. Tel, 608-626-225) modeled and < redecorated apartment. patio, 1,706 sq. ft. of living irea. Te). P^ ¦ ¦ - '¦ ¦ - ' ¦ • ¦ . 452-2250. , knowledgeable experience ' • . Ta!.. 454-3523. -? . . after 5, Stove, refrlgeratir ,. air : condltlonlna '454-1059. . . . - . TWO WAITRESSES wanted at. Utile ' unit; heat and water furnlalted. J170. :" Nashville, SOI W. 4lti. Tel. 452-W3S. RING. FOUND—In W, Howard arid Lincoln make?? us the. best in the -i^p: FOR SALE—Sears wesher and dryers 1 SAVE $39 on a 6-plece bedroom: jrouD; Inquire HARDT'S MUSIC STORE, 116 MODERN 3-bedroom unfurnished home In St. area. Tel. 452-6346 and Identify. . y^'-^r years old, very good condition, Tel. Includes doubla dresser, mirror, chest ' . Levee Plaia E. the country. Married couple only..Tel. ¦'• ¦ ' / business. For service and ^ ¦ . . A.TTENT10N 452-4040, , and bookcase bed with a firm foam : <89-3189. . GIFT . PARTY PLAN ! , mattress and matching foundation. Only TOY *> . products you can depend on SPACIOUS Earn.commissions up to 305S- No ex- Personal* 7 • see.ns.. ]- . - ' I hn med i ate Del i very- TWO: WHEEL utility and. luggage trailer. 522? wt, BURKE'S FURNITURE MART, Wanted to Rent 96 perience ' needed. FREE sample: kit, . accessories Included for . snowmobile 3rd V Ffanklln. Open Frl . evenings, AI»ARTMENTS ? OR' earn Free Gilts . .for having a BEAUTIFUL AftUSIC-llsten to II or make trailer. Tel. • 844-9262 efter 5. Park, behind the store. .. , ? write SANTA'S Par- your own at the -WILLIAM ANNEX 2 Bedrooms TWO MEN want to rent house within 2e ? Party. Call or "Department Store For Pets" One Ton Foot • •. 1 Bedroom miles of Winona. Contact Kevin Thode, ties, Avon Conn. 060O1, Tel.: 1-203-473- ¦ BAR this, weekend. Charlie Merkel on FJECONDITIONED IB" black and white FIVE-PIECE bedroom set/ includes mat- ¦ 1 Bedroom Efficiencies Rt. l, Minneiska or Tel. 45*2584 after f.. . 3455- • • '... ' .. . ' piano, and vocals both Frl. end . Sat. Zenith portable TV. T;et. 4J2-5B90. . tress and box spring, Excellent con- • ' evenings. Special .Fri, Is chicken arid dlflen. Tel. 454-2314 alter 5, Furnished or Unfurnishetl P\ovj. ' OARAGE—central or W. location. ' Tel. GIRL OR LADY to help care for bed- barbecue , ribs : combination and: Sat., v Chisel EVERYTHING MUST gol. Gibson .waslteif ¦ • . LAKE, PARK & '• 454-5B90. ' ' ¦ . .. ' . ridden lady.' :" Must live . In. ' Frank prime rib. O.C., THE ANNEX. . . ' and dryer, Zenith color TV, matching "' VALLI Caledonia, Mlnrs. Tel. 507-724- dresser with mirror, Good Things to;Eat 65 Morey,. living room chairs, VIEW APARTMENTS EFFICIENCY APARTMENT-tinder Slltt. • ' ¦ '?' ¦ 1587. ¦ KOCHENppi^R & SONS 4-man raft, miscellaneous. Stop and . 4: y STRAWBERRIES—pick "your own or oh ? Tel. 452-9490. .¦Tot. :454-1597.:? . NUDIST CLUB make us an offer! 577 Winona St, after ' ? MIGH SCHOOL boy sr. .-'irhan • for farm ."How . about.' .that all-over tan? Openings ¦' City, Wis. . ; " shares. Also . pickers wanted, homer • ;. ' .""' • . - OrWNON**. ' . .Fountain t p;m. •- - "?¦ work, very little chores. No milking. : for couples and families. Write Sol-Vlste, .; ? .Mote, Tel. Lewiston: 523-3432. : , STUDENT APARTMENT for rant, epprov- Bui. Property for Sil» 97 Lewiston 5771, Write Box 239, Box 162, Galesville, Wis. 54630. . •d for: 4 people. Loiicks Aulo Supply, Tel. ' ' P^^^P GARAGE SALE—all week, after 4:30. ' y STRAWBERRIES—pick" your own, be- - ; Lewnton. •¦ . • '' ' : " ? Pet & Hobby Center* . Weekend at 9 a.m. 722 Gilmore Awe. Tel, 452-2M4.. .. ,y BAR-CAFE — Ail fixtures; real ' .' estate: . . . . . ? ginning 8 aim. Wed., June 19. 2 miles : DANCE: SATURDAY, June 22, to tha al- • Near Wlnona, J'32,50d'terms. MLS-1174. WANTED-boys or- girls for strawberry . ways . fine, music of the '. ..TRIO CON WALNUT DINING room teble, 3 leaves, E. of. Marshland |ust oft 35. Fred TWO CENTRALLY located 158 E. 3rd — Downtown Krlcsel; 1-bedroorrl Tel. Rod Hansen 454-4812 Gerrard Real- plcklno. Tel. 452-4B13. BRIO-, playing your favorites from- 9 bulfet, 7 chairs; 578 , W.' Klrig. apartments with heat, ty 452-1344. ; ' ; stove and refrla ^ . ; to ; I' at the LEGION CLUB, John Deere Farm eralor furnished. No POTATOES,. 6,Ibs. ¦ 99c; Wlnesap apples, unmarried »tu- HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES: Get up to BABY FURNITURE — ttiuslcal swing, dents. Tel. 452-9287. for,appointment; . $2500 cash bonus -.11 you qualify:- To- THE : V.F.W. department , convention Horses, Cattle, Stock 43 walker, Jolly -lumper, teeter babe end 3 lbs., 89c;melons, berry boxes,: Bock ¦ beer, , . pop, Wlnone Potato Market. . FOR SALE day's Army hat some challenging tech- starts In; Moorhead today. Their voice Equipment crib, reasonably priced. 1022 E. Jth . . MODERN l-bedroom apartment. Stove, Downtown Commercial , jobs end a special cosh bonus for will be herd In Washington with legis- ' nical NOW IS THE tlme to get your fast-grow- .after i. refrigerator, air conditioner, 'garbage Property 116, 118, 120 those high school graduates, who can lation , for the veteran. V.F.W. POST . ing and easy calving Slthmenfal cross Machinery and Tools 69 disposal Included. SIM per montti. -Walnut Street. ' - quality. You earn . 'full'Army pay while ;1287. '?? ' ¦? :?, : co-t!ee . . y ;. . bulls. Good selection. Reasonable. Har- BEAUTIFUL INTERNATIONAL . Available July 1st. Tel, 454-4812 after . . By.Owner " • Voir -' learn .-and receive Irom tlSOO to : " " ' " " set, silver;: set of 12 Royal Danish ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' ' lan Kronebusch, Altura, Minn; Tel. ' 796- ' ' - " CASE 800 crawler dozer with power , for appotnlmeni ' . .- ' $2500 In cash when you complete your REOPENING EL CID ' . Message.- New. • / : ; . : - silverware. Many other Items, electric ¦ ¦ ' '6528.. .'' . '. .' - . . :^Sr; -^ ensile. Tel. -fountain City . 6B7r7191. : : • Tel. 452-4067' . ' training. For - full , details ., Tel. 454-2.57 Masseuses. Try the. very best, ,107 La- . ? 70 h p., deep fryer, y/atfle' Iron, coffee maker. : ¦ ' . " 2630 TRACTOfti -collect. ..:, . y . fayette. Tel. 452-4320, Open Mon: -filly ¦ • Items for woodworker, sucrt. as .clamps, SUGAR LOAF through Sat,; .10 a.m. to 3 p.m. WILL TRADJE registered Appaloosa ' ' ' ' Musical Merchandise Farms, Land for Sale 98 or colt for aged mare, well broke end . ' / diesel.. ;. ; " . etc. i()6 Main. St.? 70 ¦ ¦ ¦ PART-TIME HELP . gentle for children. Tel. 864. 9M4. . . conditioner, 9 ft. : " APARTMENTS¦ CARRIAGE HOUSE Cleaners tor altera- 1209 Mower STEEL POSTS and wire netting,' culvert ZILDJIAN CY/MBALS, drum sets, gui- ' ¦ ' . 358 E. Sarnia SOMEWHAT SECLU DED, yet on a good tions, -repairs, . sewing; . pocket zippers,, - tars, : amplifiers microphones, accord- NEEDED IMMEDIATELY TEN IfEREFORD cowi, ?« registered, ! pipe and angle iron, , else some oak J-Bedrodm Apartmenti • road, this 250-acre farm has about 120 : ¦ lining, general sewing, Gilmore Ave. 1207.Mower conditioner, 7 ft. lans, violins, stands. Bargains! All ¦ i:30 - 16:30 p.m.. . Some Saturdays . 10-2. McNamer, and? maple flooring, Write P.O. Box fealurlngi .- acres . tillable, with the balance woodland 1 grade, 6 wllh calves. Herb ¦ - ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' . $3.SO salary per hour, .a minimum ot at. Vila St.. Miracle Wall entrance. ¦431, Wjnone. guaranteed A. Welsch, ' Fountain City. . ¦ . a Air conditioning and . open pasture' .. with spring. 'Ney/ -? Tel. Houston 894:3153 or 896-3977. 65 Forage . blower. ¦ ¦W|s. ' ; -; ' 1 ' ¦ 20 hours per week. Must now be em-, . a Laundry facllltlet pole.' sh ed, .barn, other-buildings. Very NSTITuftFlNC HlBh ' ployed: Newly opened branch . of Na- HYPNOTISM I sue- 35 Forage blower. GIANT RUMMAGE Sale> Thurs. and • a Reserved parking ¦mall- 'but liveable.house. ? . cess ratios In weight control, smoking FOUR GOOD well broke . Welsh ponies, EPIPHONE^JSOTD, eleclric guitar; ¦ ¦¦ ' ¦ ¦ tional appliance , company. Tel. . 452- single or Fri., f-5. Clothing, sires children to and a . Patio .- . - . " .. elimination- and Image adjustment real gentle, 2 broke to drive, ' hard shell case, must sell. Rick Rian, 60 highly J72I between 5 and ?. double, Welsh pony cart and harness 5400 self propelled forage adult; toys; miscellaneous; hlghchalri, a Shag carpeting 93' ACRES-^abouf productive areas at a: low cost. Call for appoint- 405 Lafayette. Tel. 452-6339 between 6 and 7 o'clock. tillable acres. 9-roorh house, new pole ¦: or Information. end other saddle horses. Will sell or Harvester. ¦ ' " ELECTRICIAN—Class A or B Journey- ment Free brochure ..(Money ehed,. other buildings, , mailed upon request. Newburg Building, trade. Beri . Frickson, Houston ? TEL. 45^4839 'Py ¦ . men, full-time, S5 per hour;- also elec- '?Creek). -. 140 Loaders. BASEMENT SALE-cn Garvin Heights] ¦ trician s helper. Contact- Patzner Elec- 42V Main, LB Crosse. Tel: 7B4-.10tO. 2nd house bn left, 9-5. Thurs. and Frl. CENTRALLY LOCATED - l-bedroom BOYUM AGENCY ' : ' ¦ ¦ trie, St, Charlai,: Minn. Tel . 507:932-4922, USf-D SAODLE-rrtatchlnB breast collar Kitchen cupboards wllh stainless steel Hal Leonard Music apartment and 1. efficiency apartment, Rushford, Minn. 55971- . * GOT A PROBLEM? Need Information or end bridle. Lyle Kopp, Tel,; Centerville sink, antique :radio, camper Ice box, stove, refrigerator, heat, hot water, fur- Te|. J07-M*93«I or 86*9*51. : log cirtter end log lust want, to "rep"? Call YES evenings ' USED range. hood, curtain rods; folding deora nished. 305 Winona St. ;• .EXPERIENCED "¦ ' - -' 539-3273. . • ' TRACTORS . • Musical Instruments, .; truck driver. Valley Hardwood Lumber 452-5590. . , y : end . 'much clothing and . miscellaneous. ¦' ' LAKE CITY AR EA. 118-acre fa rm. Ideal Company, Stockton, Minn. Tel. «89-27W TWO REGISTERED quarter horse meres ^ • Electronics. • Supplies '; for brood turkeys. 74 open acres. Ex- ' DOES ONE of your loved ones have a IHC 656, diesel. ? dryers, excel- ONE-BEDROOM efficiency apartment, air cellent buildings Including ' modern 3- or contact Dick Stelne, Lewlrton, AAlrin.; bred to . Wimpy—bred stud end -also-1 TWO USED Westinghouse '' conditioned, carpeted, electric stove . ¦ '. . drinking problem? If so contact the ' lent condition: Many other , used appli- ?'• Instruiiieiit Repairs ; and bedroohn honie, rnachlrie sheds, fully . - Tel. 523-35W, ' registered quarter horse foals."- TW.' - ; John Deere 520. refrigerator,: $135 per month. Tel. 454- . ..'Winona . Alanion Family Oroup. Write ' - ' ances. Cone's Ace Hardware. Tel. 452- ¦ ¦: Insulated brooding house, Great devel- . . :- .Mabel, Minn., 493-527? after 6. • . . ¦ ' ¦¦ ' 3192. . :¦ MARRIED .WAN wanted on dairy end *oeef -t91i W. 3rd. . ' John Deere 2010. , 2304. . ¦ 64 E. 2nd ./ Tel 454-2920,; . . opmehf potential. MLS 1184. Contact . ' Richter - Realty, . 4th S, Center, Home farm. Separate house with extras. War- : POLLED HEREFORD bulls,- 2 years old,, ,,: 44 ' ¦ ¦¦ ' low Behnken, Rt. 4, Rochester, Minn. Transportation -P -SPIDEL & GOLD ASTER breeding. ;; John Deere ''MT. ] . - CAR AGE, SAtE—Garvin Heights Hirst Apartments, Furnished 931 Federal Bldg., Tel. 452-1151 or 452-1550. '.'Tel; 282-4716, ~ yP 8 / house, right hand side of road) Thurs, John Klnneberg, Rushlord, Minn. Tel. 50 507-864-7128. - - . - '.; " ?¦ : 94, Frl„ 9-5. Much .miscellaneous. Refrigerator* \ ]' i72 BI^ACRE farm, tillflble. Barn; silo and , . . .• - AVAILABLE MID JULY—3 rooms plus ' -; . INSURANCE ADJUSTER 4-DAY ESCORTED Loke Superior/Can-, . new well. All modern home wfth double USED bath; carpeted ; living room, bath and ARE.VOU' a Staff adiustetr for an Insur- adlan Circle Tour, July 8th thru 13th HAYING HOTPOINT refrigerator-freezer, 21 or. ft, WARDS upright . freezer, 16 eu. ttP, 3 garage. MLS 1I90, For more details HALF ARAB-Palomlnd mare, well broke, ' hallway, 2 large closets, recently redec- ance company? Would you rather be $159.50. 7-DAY ESCORTED ToUr of $350. Harlan Hunter Oalesvllle. Tal. ^ (side by. side). Good condition. Tel. years old. . $150. Tel. 454-4427. Tel,. CORNFORTH REALTY 452-6474. ¦ , breted, heat ahd water furnished, We st paid for .' the extra work you do, than the- Ozarks, July 27th thru Aug. 2 608-582-2307. : ¦• '. ¦ ¦ EQUIPMENT . Lewlslon 423-3508. salaried? Our firm of Independent 8-D/e location. No students, children or pets. LAND LISTING SELLING — Farms, !*e $188.80. .Y ESCORTED Denver/ Seeing Machine* 73 Tel: .454-3344 or 452-6101. * .^adiuslers Is planning to open an . otli ce Colorado Rockies, Aug. 17lh thru Aug. REGISTERED POLLED Hereford bulls, John Deere 24T: Balers, Witfc TOWVATO PLANT stakes, flower boxes, Hobby Farms, Small Acreage Our ¦}n Shelving materials. Kendell - O'Brien Specialty. Free Appraisals. SUGAR ttie La Crosse area, and needs an , 241h . $242.55. Rates are per-person lor 4 yearlings, Lewis K. Schoening & - . " CLEAN USED sewing machines, straight ¦ ' or without throwers.: . - . Lumber Co. "Here to Serve . 115 ¦ ¦ LOAF. . Tel. 454-2367 or 454-3361 -experienced adjuster, to handle a ohe- twin accommodations from -Winona, .: Jfohs, Tel, 452-6380. . " stitch and ilg Jan, S25 and up. WINt> ' : , leading to manager. Good ' ¦ Franklin. Tel. 454-3120. . ", "/ .. - : ' '•Reldx' .v.y..yyyy .-' evenings. ' . . ' 'eriari. office, MAInn. - and Include ell .transportation, : John Deere 14T Baler with NA SEWIN& CO., 915 W. 5th. . . ^potential for. an aggressive, capable , MIDWEST BREEDERS — for the most IN THE cool comfort of a tastefully fur- motels and sightseeing? For free bro- ' nished efficiency apartment. En|oy col- '.men, heavy background desired In chure, wrlta cornpleta "Artificial Insemination Serv- ttoower; USED MELROE Bobcat*. Tal. 523-3564. IF YOU ARE In the market for a farm HIAWATHA COACHES, orful Shag carpeting and drapes. Meke .'casualty lines. All replies confidential. 528 Cass St., La Crosse, WL 54601 or ices of all. Tel. toll free V-800-J52-7255. Typewriters 77 .. or. home or- are . planning to sell real : New Holland 68 .Baler. ' good use of laundry, storage and new •Write to A 54? Dally News. ' your local agent. . - GARDEN TILLER RENTAL—also lawn estate of any type contact NORTHERN FOR SALE—severe! close Holstein cow John Deere 38 Forage thatchers and vaccums. WINONA FIRE TYPEWRITERS and adding machines gas firllls. All this and electricity In- INVESTMENT COMPANY, Real Estate MAR Rl ED MAN for grain. end livestock ahd heifers, top quality. Al's Deiry J. POWER EQUIPMENT CO.. 54 E. for. rent or sale. Low rates. Try us cluded. 1253 Randall St. Tel. 452-7760, Brokers, ' Independence, Wis., or Eldon • : ' ' ¦ "feriTi to operate machinery, drive truck, Business Service* 14 Cattle, Lewlstom Minn. Tel.' 523-2338. , Harvester. -.? 2nd. ;Tel.\452-5065. : - for all your . office supplies, : desks, /. Key Apartments ; W. : Berg, Real Estate Salesman, "farrow pigs and do repair , work. House flies of otfleo chairs LUND OFFICE : . Arcadia, Wis. Tel; 328-7350. ¦ Good eatery plus Overtime, riding mowers now In ; ^ .furnished. ANY OLD Charolais bull Is: more profit- John Deere 34 Forage SNAPPER COMET SUPPLY CO. 128; E. 3rd. Tal. 452 522Z AnENTION VO-TECH Lewiston. Tel. 523-3515. TV SERVICE—professional fast and de- ¦ stock for Imniecllefe delivery. Reserve Students: 1 VJack De Young, able than Angus or Hereford; A Moby ' ' apartments available now and for fall. pendable, low. summer rates oh house Harvester. . -. how l WINONA FIRE & POWER Houses for Sale? 99- Dick Charolais bull ft more profitable yours . Wanted to Buy ? y East location. Clean,? quiet, certified RETIRED or-seml-retlred man for part- calls. TeL .-454-2625:. then any old Charolais bull. Breeding ¦ " EQUIPMENT CO., 54 E.. 2nd. Tel. 452- 81 . Fox Forage Harvesters, hay . for 3 and 4. respectively. Please Tel. DUPLEX—live In half, rent other for SI40 * time bartender. Apply at V.F.W. CLUB, stock for sale. We deliver. Tel. 608-687- SOts: "The business that tervlce built," ¦¦ 45«-5870, 452-4007, 454-44W or 452-5035. 117 Market St. ' ". ¦ YOU CAN . AFFORD this electrician. For ¦ ' ¦ and corn. FURNITURE, wood lea box, - Edison month or convert Into single dwelling. ; ? y. . 4994. ] ¦//¦ ¦/ . JIMM ROBB REALTV. prompt service Tel, 452-2160. House WANTED — -steel pert bends,, Tel. 452- Items, dishes, old baskets. Call me If 1 and 2 bedrooms. Full basement, J have eny old Items. Tel, 452-45.5. porches, double garage.: 520,000. Tel. .. DRIVER AND ports work, part-time or power Is our specialty. Bonded, .li- ENROLL IN our riding classes. English- Gehl Forage Harvesters, hay 2497. . you censed , and Insured electrical contrac- ¦ ¦ ¦ AVAILABLE JULY 1-two rooms and ?45_ -574_5, If no answer Tal. 452-5254. full-time. Apply In person, Winona Western, -. edults-chlldren. ' Troll .riding - and corn; ' ' . ¦ tor. ; ' ¦ - ' - -?. . ;compart- bath,, everything new and all utilities Auto Parts Company, Inc, IM E. 2nd . every dey, reservations required. Tel. SPRAY TEXTURING of ceilings or?wiili. NEEDED Immediately,- used 3 ' ment s|nk, NSF approved. Tel, River furnished, $165 rhonthjy. Tel. 454-1059. DECIDE YESI - Thi Is the time f» buy • Street. . ., . Oayle, 452-3305. Big Valley Ranch, Inc., New and old. Painting and Inferior CUSTOM ROTO tilling with a troy-belt, ¦ remodeling, Brooks & Associates. Tel. Bend Cate 452-10*6. a home. Brand new 3-bedroom ranch. any size garden, reasonable , Riding Academy. . . . .; ¦ SEVERAL 1, 2 end 3-bedrbom 'apart- Offers huje TAKE DOWN enclosed poritt. Tel. rate. Tel. ¦ '454-S382.? . , ' ' ' " . '; - ' . master bedroom suite, full 452-4990. FEITEN IMPL CO. .? ?. . ? ?? ments available at various locations, . 454-3580. ' . . : . .] WNL, MILLER iSCRAP IRON & METAL : basement, convenient location In a PUREBRED YORKSHIRE and Chester CO. pays hlghset prices tor scrap Iron, nicely furnished and carpeted. Tel, 452- quiet neighborhood, !lT23 . Contact WE HAVE |u»t the right cap for your ' ¦ ¦* ' MLS ERV'S FIX IT. Service, home:& house- white boars, 40-300 lbs., gilts 40-150 metal and raw fur. 2778. Richter Realty, . 4lh and:Center, Home PRY COOK—II p.m.tf a.m.. 5 nights;per lbs. Merlin Johnson, Durand, Tel. 715- pickup box. STOCKTO N CAMPER To epply stop out end see Mr. hold repairs, sales end Installation of Closed Saturdays . Federal Building. Tel. 452-1151 or 452- . 'wele. : 672-5711. Downtovyn :SALES. Stockton, Minn. . Tal. 507-669- THREE-BEDROOM, spacious well kept ' ¦' ¦ ¦ ¦ ' Country Kitchen! Restaurant, 1611 MON-RAY-DEVAC aluminum com- ' ¦ 1252 Trempealeau Drive Tel. 452-2057 1550. , j Jenks, • ¦ . 2670. apartrhent for 3 persons for summer, ! Service Drive, ¦ - ' bination end replacement v/lridows, . PUREBRED YORK^HTRE and Hamp- one block from WSC, $«) each. . Tel. '• aluminum , accessories and- U.S. steel RIDING MOWERS HIGHEST PRICES PAID BY OWNER—3 bedroom home. Larqa ihire boars, lest and scan-o-gram rec- Wihona HOMELITE 454-nil, days, 454:4745, evenings, .{Pub. Date?Thursday, June 20, 1974) siding. Tel. W4-40I6. ' , Service for scrap Iron, metals, rags, hides, fenced yard., S10.90O, Tel. 454-5B71 . ords. Roger Owen, Durand, Wis. Tel. B Sales — Parts - SUPPLT raw fur and wool. ; mornings, ' . ' The Winona Day Care Center Board of 672-5717 ' POWER MAINTENANCE S, CO. GIRL WANTED to thare large, comfort- , SNOWBLOWER, tiller, power mower and 113 Washington Tel. 452-4832 207 E. 3rd Tel. 452-2571 Directors announces the sponsorship of other small engine repairs, sates end Som Weisrnan & Sons able 3-bedroom apartment, all utilities NEWLY REMODLED *bedroom home In .. lha special foods services program for ' TRIMMING DONE by a graduate farrier. pild. US. Tel. ' -45*4812 after 3 p.m. . service. Howard Larson, Old Minnesota BULK ECONOMY dry cleaning, 8 lbs. INCORPORATED Rollingstone. Nice large lot, quiet ' Free and reduced price meals Stephen Olson, Tel. 689-2874 weekdays. children. : Clly Road. . Tel. 454-1.482. S2.50, -elso try bur new perma-press 450 W. 3rd Tel 452-5847 . street. Priced at only S2L500, MLS 1157. Will be made available to children meet- Sod 49 STUDENT APARTMENTS now avalF- TOWM & COUNTRY REAL ESTATE, REGISTERED quarter horse, profession- Fertilizer, washers. Norge Village, 601 Hull. ing ttie approved eligibility criteria- and able for summer and fall. Please Tel. Tel. ; 454-3741: allly trained and ready for show ring. Rooms Without Meals 86 will be provided without regerd to race, Painting, Decorating 20 CULTURED SOD-^-dellvered or laid. Tel. 454-5870) If no answer 452-4007 or TeL Wendy Woodworth 454-1085 or 852- MLC CO. trailer hitches Installed. AH 454-4469 or 452-9035, Leave color or. nat ion el . origin 4S4.1494. - ¦ - " ' ¦ domestic auto- your , name FINANCING AVAILABLE - must be 1731. . - custom work foreign and CLEAN, SHARED room for young: m»n, and requirements and your call will ' "Meals will bo provided at the' Winona EXTERIOR House Painting, expert work ? mobiles. Cell for prices end appoi nt- seen, expertly constructed .t. and . !*¦ done by experienced painter for Separate entrance. TV and cooking : be' ' returned.' - Day Care Center, Maria Hall, College rea- MLC CO.—landscepe eontroctlns, dirt ment, Tel. 507-452-7114. . bedroom Townhouses, Attached garages. sonable rates. For a free estimate cell HAMPSHIRE-YORKSHIRE crossbred gills dirt, fill, re- area provided. Tel. 452-7700. Open dally. Tel. 454-1059. e) Saint Teresa. ol serviceable age. Production tested work, sod, trees, black: Kelly Belanger at 452-6924 between 5 , driveways, eet work and ONE BEDROOM—H30 month. No pets . Hamphslre boars. William Schomberg, taining wells, FURNISHED sleeping room for senile- 8. 7 p.m. , 507-452-711-4, No students. , Acorn Motel, Minnesota COMFORTABLE W centra l home, by .(First Pub. Thursday, June ii 1974) Rt. 1, La Crosse, Wis. Tel. 608-786-1771. trucking. Tal NEEDLES man. Tel. , 454-2349. ¦ . ¦ _ C|.ty, Tel. «8f-2.150.. ; ...... ?- .;...; owners walking distance to,schools. 4-S ' ' rT^ For All Makes Sjat e of Minnesota ) HOUSE PAINTING _ IntcrTo exterlor. BLACK DIRT, all top soil. Archie Hah bedrooms, 2 baths, 60x150' lot, Tel. . ) MATCHED PAIR grey Dunne more, 8 of Record Players. County ol Winona , ss. Roof coating. 15 years experience. Fully veraon, Tel. 452-4573. ?. Apartments, Flats 90 452-29.79. ' • In County Court ; Insured. Tel. 454-3)33. years, broke; grey Dunne gelding, 4 Key to Happiness 1 ¦ years, greenbroke. Make reasonable of- Hardt's Music Store . Probale Division CULTURED SOD CENTER STREET-3 rooms and balh, YOU'LL DISCOVER this Is not a myth, BY OWtNER—nearly new 3-bodroom, com- fer. Tel. Howie 454-5181 or Hap 687-8157, 116-1111 Plaza E, , No, 17,956. Plumbing. Roofing 21 1 roll or a LO00, may be .picked opi carpeting, drapes, stove, refrigeralor once you've entered , our spacious, pletely carpeted, ceramic bath, full I In Re Estate 01 Also-black dirt. WOOD SPACE HEATERS, |ust received, furnished, air conditioning, adults only, sound-prool l-bedroom apirlments. basement , 1334 Crocus Circle. Tcl, 452- , B. Konopka, Decedent, REGISTERED HOLSTEIN calves and After 5.30 Inquire r24 6. Ttl"*. Each cheerlully decorated with 4144. HARD WAT E R Is hard on clothes, hard on seven wood heaters with automallc S115. Tel. 452-W90. co-ordin- Order for Hearing on yearlings, 8 weeks to IVi years old. Tel. 454-5983 or 454-4132, ated drapes, plush shag carpeting hands, hard on soap, leaves dishes and Otto & Carlus Dlngtelder, Rolllngslone, blowers, GAIL'S APPLIANCE, 215 E. and ' Petition to Determine Descent. [jlasswaro dull and unappctlilng. ' 3rd. ' MALL APARTMENTS-deluxe first floor contemporary furplture, En|oy summer RANCH TYPE living room, dining room, Let. us Tel. 689-2206. , kllchen 'Nlcephore F. Grulkowski having tiled make lite a Utile softer lor you by in- BLACK DIRT, fill dirt, flH send, crushed 2-bedroom In new 4-plex. Appliances, weather outdoors on your balcony or , three bedrooms. GW-lOl. Tel. rock, gravel, excavating, landscaping, extra storage, large yard. Tel. 454-2023 patio or simply relax In Al Schroeder 452-6022 Gerrard Really Ij this Court a petition ' representing, stalling, a water softener In your home. , 3D--tO-50 lbs., sort- AXLE WHEELS, hllches, below factory tho coolness WIS. FEEDER pigs cat end front , loader work. "Serving the ., of your air conditioned apartment, 452-1344. among other things, Ihat said , decedent ed oven, delivered , Anything. In dairy, cost. Tel. 454-334B or ilop In at afler 4i . Plen- Winona area for ever 25 years", ty of storagit and laundry,.facilities. died Intestate more than live years prior Frank O'Laughlin open, bred and springing hellers. Hol- TOWN S. COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, le tho flllno thereof, leaving certain PLUMBING {, HEATING VALENTINE TRUCKING ask lor Joe. FOR RENT—2 bedroom apartment , heat Close to shops—on bus Una, 1752 W. ONE STORY-Llvlro . room, kitchen, util- pro- stein or Guernseys. C. Acker, Mlddle- ity room, one bedroom, porch. MLS- perty In Winona County, Minnesota, and 761 E. 6th ' Tel. 452-63W Minnesota Clly, Tel. 454-1782, and water furnished. Tel, 454-2264 aller Broadway. Tcl. 454 4909. . . ton, Wis. Tol. 608-836-8764. 1086. Tel. Harold Eralh Ger- , t[)nt no will of said decedent has been If no answer, Tel. 454-5254. ZENITH color TV at SU saving deals. 4 p.m, 454-5646, Key Apartments rard Realty 452-1344 (yoved, nor administration of his estate BEPORE YOU remodel the kllchen or PUREBRED CHAROLAIS bull, sire FRANK LILLA 8. SONS, 761 E. 8th. distance to Walklm granted, In this Slate and praying that tho balh, SEE US,Wo have the best MGM HILARIO DANTE, coming , 2 Ha/, Grain, Feed 50 Easy terms. Open Frl. evening. WITHIN WALKING tho descent ot said properly be selection:of plumbing fixtures In the years old. Tel, 507-545-2193. J-P-T-D and downtown. 2 bedroom lower apart- dctcr- bed room upper apartment, mlnixl end that It be assigned to the area. Tho Plumbing Barn, service and Charolais, Eyota, Minn, STOCKTON ROLLER MILLS wants ROLLAWAY BED, dehumldlfler, hose ment and 1 ' ¦ • ¦ ¦ elecrtic heater, or pett. Prefer married ' persons enlilled thereto; repair division. Tcl, 454-4246, farmers to orow buckwheat. We pro- racks, fireplace screen, No students AFTER HOURS CALL: electric lawn mower, storm windows couple In each with references. Pay ^— ,IT IS ORDERED, That TAKE A Vacation. Loavo your children vide seed, Tel 689-2943. tha hearing , and screens. 609 Market St. own utilities. Reasonable. Tel, 608-7B5- thereof bo hod on July wllh us during our August horseman- Laura Fisk ..,,,. 452-2118 15th, 1974, at Situations Wanted—F»m. 29 0271. &OB 10:00 o'clock AM., belore this Court, In ship comp, Register now et Big Valley WANTED-balcd hay trorn field or bam. Ranch, Ask for free brochure, Tel. 454- Tel, 454-3305 or 452-974.. FROM WALL to wall, no soil at all on Nora Heinlen ..!. 4^3175 the County Court Room, In the Courl WILL BADYSir In my home, Infants to 3305. carpels cleaned wllh Blue Lustre. Rent APARTMENT—unfurnished . 3 rooms anc O 0 ti I Hou»o, In Winona, Minnesota, and thnt a years old. Relerenccs II necessary. $1, 32 and (3, Tel. 452 WET BREWERS grains, excellent live- electric shampooer H. balh, no unmarried students. My3es Peter en 452-4 notice hereof bo given by the publication Tol. 452-5323 or contact Eva, 560 E. 4th, Clioale 8. Co. 4703,

effunl to 5r. of Ihe gross amount of the and Hi miles N, of Allura on Stale Road No GARAGE SALE. --sorry, but duo to a mis- bid aa a guarantee Ihat the bidder will Dogs , 2 .8), Spon- SobSsdoffoh., dkafiCL enter Inlo the contract , Pots, Supplies 42 sored by Mueller Farm Servlte, Ullca, take In directions many pcopla couldn't according lo tile Minn, bid, The school board find Iho sale Inst week, Along with many reserves Ihe right COCK-O-PO0S, blnck and Wend; Terri- anllque dishes and chairs, wIcKor Items, to- wolvo Inlormolllles ; I IJ For Full-Time Alert—Courteous !; and to reject any poos nnd ll eeuloi, Don Lnkoy, Trent- BOBCATS now nvallnhlo (or rent by Ihe largo closet and a cistern pump, new erjd all bids nr perls ol bids, peelenu, Wis, hour or day. Dakoln (lenvy Equipment, Items hnvo been added, New directions Independent 120 Center St. Tcl. 452-5351 School District Dnkola, Winn, Tol, J87-443-62W, are: go up Garvin Heights, turn right U^« Service—Call Any Time rn|J j No. II6| GERMAN 'SHRPIinRD Diipples, 7 weeks at lop and continue on Hwy. lor 3 or ! !H Wlnono, f . REAUOR Minnesota J nld, ((.male, black find silver, 125, Tel, KOSC|t MOWER-llls an M tractor, Rus- 4 miles, snlo nl remodeled school liouse, * Paul W. Senders, Clark I 454-5737, sell Persons, St, Charlei. Tel. 932- .S6., A sign will ba polled, Frl. 9-tl Sat. 9-5, -_-i_rs-aA__-i_>_fn«-m_i__i__>-i-__,^«*^ —*-*.^^ — ^~~~~-~. ^^—^ — —^ — — ~ Mc Mourn for Sal» ag ¦ ' Houm for Salt - ./ 99 Boih, Motors, Etc. 106 UMd Cars 109 MoblU Homti, Trtllm U1 Wlrwiw Dally N«wi "IL BRAND NEW Mxirbom home on » acres BY ^ Winons, Mlnneiota D ¦ ¦In . OWNER—«reat river vleW, trom *p«- SEA KINS—35 h.p..outboard meter, M) VOLKSWAGEN - 19«» Son Sedan, rwr BUDDY, -r 14*70, very good condition. ' of rand • Pleasant Valley, over 2«oo cltjua redwood dtde, . 2-4 bedroomi, IK. W. Howard, Tel. 4S2-4t)ii. . . llrn end battery. Tel. 434-M36, - Please, see. Tel, lewiston 'SB-Site . .. THURSDAy, JUNE tit, )97f . »q. tt..o*:ilvlng space, Walk-out bait- pathi, heated . meht Ivtth parage- drlva-undir garage. Near ; Family : room on Luttierliaven lotg* . first lloor.. Compare «n Hwy. di. Wooded RUNABOUT^li' fiberglass, with tilt-back PONTIAC^-l»(5«. Tel.?4S4-I95t. ? ? ? - -/] : ' at $45,000 but ¦¦¦' c 0 ' i Auction S«[«» y. ' . " . prleM now at S39,?0O. MLS E* !. ! ' :l*i» '»••»• OWNER-.Twb-b«KlrMm, new alumU YOU,Invest In ' a Itotnt evary day*, your* ; lien at . 512 Collegewlew. Tel. 454-1701. 2 !?? ¦.. *" Montflwwv. iuetlone«rM hum : lldlno, combination storm wtn- «r:" ¦your WantBd—Automobile* 110 ; =;;: Fltiet HtVI dowi, two oaragej, ¦ landlords .FIRST FIDELITV YPUR HO/SAE Bank, Ruthtori, clerk. : ¦ ¦ near Minnesota Citv Savlnga .a,, toan halpa you - ' on lartta -lot, , «,50O . son outboard, 10 h.p. Johnson outboard, W P 1181, Contact Richter Realty, 4th. and For-best, results Tel. pftimc 4 ^? Tel. 452-13«. Center, Home Federal Building, - Tel. ; 452;I151 or 452-1550 betwe