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10-27-1969

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1969). Winona Daily News. 947. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/947

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]. Nixpn;^ By FRANK CORMIER Nixon, taking the offensive would remain a rather placid the Nixon presidency—to the for maneuver on a far more im- verses, the Nixon White House getting. One aide said of the Associated Press Writer nine months to the day after and passive chief executive. - point where more than one fel- portant issue, the Vietnam war. . could only feel grateful for suth President: WASHINGTON (AP) - Rich- taking office, called in newsmen low Republican wished Nixon Senate Democratic Leader courtesies and hope they pres- "He expects criticism. He un- ard Nixon is demonstrating he one week ago to defend his Just a week earlier the muted would not only speak softly but, Mike Mansfield of Montana, a aged brighter days to come. derstands criticism. But he hasn't forgotten the arts that choice of Clement F|. Hayns- Nixon approach of the first nine in the tradition of Theodore persistent critic of Vietnam poli- Since Labor Day, the march doesn't permit it to throw him "ipft made him worth Jr., his" nominee to " the months was evident in a special Roosevelt, carry a big stick. cy, told newsmen Nixon had sig- of events has not been especial- off balance." message he sent Congress. l kind to the President. More- Others in the White House, A AB a bare - knuckle Supreme Court. Haynsworth, The stick surfaced last week. nificantly altered past policy y An AP champ ion the President said, was a victim Wrote Nixon: "Neither the and, in effect, had ordered a over, Indian summer saw its and Nixon shares their view to M among Ameri- of "vicious character assassina^ Democratic Congress nor the Only time will tell whether the standstill cease-fire. share of fumbling on tbe part of some extent, react to criticism ews ' can politicians. tion." Republican administration is; week marled a turning point in Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D- the administration. It became by reacting against the new» # without fault for the delay of vi- Anal/SIS Th<2 President Although he spoke softly and Nixon's fortunes, which have . Ark., of the Senate Foreign Re- fashionable to observe that Nix- media. tal legislation." ebb since lations Committee announced on was in deep trouble. [ took off the smiled often, Nixon's words had : been at their lowest Signs of public; disaffection gloves last week a sharper edge than any he had On Inauguration Day, Nixon January; Of itself , the surprise that "as a matter of courtesy" This week, however, a top and indications presidential assistant insisted?" with the new administration be- are he may used in public since becoming had urged that all citizens lower counterattack against critics of he was postponing puplic hear- came measurable" keep swinging ¦ appear to ings on the war until after a "There's no autumn of discon- by autumn's — at least President. : ' " their voices 'and discuss national Haynsworth did not first chill and marked in part through next Monday when he in history. Nov. 3 Nixofci address to the na- tent around here." , , a ; This came at a time when issues in a quiet, rational man- be a decisive event delivers his promised Vietnam many Republicans as well as ner. For nine months, the low- But it came in a week that saw tion on the subject. Of course, Nixon is well (Continued on Page 3) war message. Democrats had concluded Nixon ered voice was a hallmark of Nixon gain unexpected latitude After weeks of cumulative re- aware of the criticism he's been TAKES OFF GLOVES

Cloudy Mink Cages And Cold For Sale Tonight Classified Section

Main Cities

¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Await ¦ ¦ Word ¦ ' on Of Lebanon•¦• .. -v . . . . 7 / Are 'Relaxed' BEIRUT) .(AP) — Most of Le- banon's main cities relaxed to- Prisoners Freed day as Arab leaders pressed ef- SAIGON (AP) - The U.S. 3rd Battalion, 196th Light Infan- about 200 are missing an South forts to ease the crisis between Command today awaited fur- try Brigade. The company 19 Vietnam, and the U.S. Defense the Lebanese army and the Pal- ther word from the Vieft Cong on months later temporarily re- Department believes many of estinian guerrillas. its plans for the release of three fused an order to advance after the rest are prisoners in the Only the northern trouble spot American soldi ers. five days of being thrown back. North. In a broadcast by its Libera- of Tripoli remained under 24- The Viet Cong's announce- U.S. military officials de- hour curfew. Early reports to- tion Radio Sunday night, the Viet Cong said it would free the ment was repeated several clined comment on the Viet day indicated there were no new times today but did not say Cong's statement that during incidents there three GIs as a demonstration of , although the where or when the three men their detention Watkins, Strick- guerrillas and local leftists still its "lenient and humane" poli- cies. would be released. There was land and Tinsley "proved hold a quarter known as the Old speculation it might involve an- progressive, were aware that City. ' ' . , On the basis of Army serial other battlefield meeting be- the U.S. imperialists' war of Beirut -was under partial cur- numbers given in the broadcast, tween American and Viet Cong aggression in South Vietnam few but many people ignored it. the U.S. Command identified officers, like the meeting last would certainly fail, and showed Tyre, Baalbek and Nabatiyeh the men as Spec. 4 Willie A. New Year's Day near the 'Cam- their repentance of the crimes were free of curfew for the first Watkins, of Sumter, S.C.; Pfc. bodian bordier when three other they had committed against the time in five days, and life was James H. Strickland. Jr., of GIs were handed over. Vietnamese people." returning to normal. Dunn, "N.C ; and Pfc . Coy R. The U.S. Command says the Such statements are usually Egypt, Syria and Libya Tinsley, 22, of Cleveland, Tenn. Viet Cong and the North Viet- made by the communists about All were members of t!he Ameri- threatened actios against tiie namese have released a total of every prisoner they release. Beirut government unless it cal Division. The broadcast also said 18 American military personnel the supports the guerrillas and their Tinsley is one of 14 children of V.S. command must "create raids on Israel, but Cairo said a Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Tinsley of since February, 1967. The ene- conditions for these three POWs cease-fire and negotiations may Cleveland, Tenn., and the sev- my also has freed two American to return soon to their families be. in the offing. JORDANIAN HOME HIT IN ISRAELI AIR RAID ... A said was hit during a raid by Israeli fighter planes. (AP enth son to serve in the armed civilians and one German nurse. and country." This statement The official Egyptian Middle civilian examines a damaged house in the area of Aljubaiha, Photofax) forces. He disappeared Last A number of other Americans heightened speculation that tb» March 9 during an action near East * News Agency reported Jordan, she miles northwest of Amman, which the Jordanians have escaped from the Viet Viet Cong might seek a meeting; that Lebanon has agreed to send Quang Ngai City, in the north- Cong. with American officers to "ne- e delegation to Cairo for a meet- ern part, of the country. In its latest weekly casualty gotiate" the release but a U.S. ing with leaders of the Palestini- Watkins and Strickland were summary last Thursday, the Command spokesman said tha an guerrillas, Arabs who claim GE Will Try reported missing in action Jan. U.S. Comimand said 1,319 Amer- statement c 'might simply be aft- they are refugees from Pales- 8 and Jan. 9, 1968, in the Que ican military personnel were other communist complaint that tine and are demanding an end Mississippi Congressman Son valley. The Viet Cong listed as missing or cap tured. we interrogate freed prisoners to Lebanese restrictions on their To Keep broadcast indicated -that both Of these, 4tt are known to be and delay their return to their raids into Israel. Plants Open were members of A Company, prisoners in North Vietnam, families." llie general trend: is toward gh In New York, an attorney for "freezing " the Lebanese situa- Stalls Voting Ri ts Bill NEW YORK (AP) - Pickets two vAmerican pacifists wh» tion in order to provide a (AP) In opposing its extension, are up today at General Elec- have had dealings with the breathing spell in which the WASHINGTON - A Negro voters have been regis- North Mississippi congressman has tered. It was approved July 17 Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell told tric Co. plants around the na- Scoff Predicts , Vietnamese concerning feuding parties can work out a succeeded in stalling a' bill to by the House Judiciary Commit- Congress he could not support it tion, as unions representing POW releases said his clients compromise, the semiofficial protect Negro;, voting rights in tee. ' ' . because it was regional legisla- 147,000 workers strikd for higher will soon release "extremely Egyptian newspaper Al Ahram the South so-, long that Congress President Nixon opposes the tion. Civil rights groups have wages and cost-of-living protec- important" information frona said. . will be unable to complete ac- bill and Colmer has had the sup- charged that the administration tion; Troop Reduction Hanoi that will "relieve the anx- The paper indicated it based began at midnight, iety" of relatives of American tion on It tins year. port of four of the five Republi- position is an effort by Presi- The strike B THE ASSOCIATED Its prediction of negotiations on a political hours after GE rejected the y PRESS and they'll negotiate," Javits prisoners of war. , Using his power as chairman cans on his committee in de- dent Nixon to pay said the outcome of a mission by Dr. of the House Rules Committee, fying House leadership efforts debt to his Southern supporters. unions' proposal for binding ar- Senate Republican Leader . The attorney, William Kun- Hassan Sabri El Kholi, the per- Democratic Rep. William M bitration. Hugh Scott h_as predicted U.S. In Waslington, meanwhile stler, said this had nothing to do . to move it. : present former Secretary of State Dean sonal envoy of President Gamal Colmer has spurned repeated Key provisions of the armed forces will be cut by with the Viet Cong announce- Abdel Nasser. EI Kholi The administration is propos- act, due to expire next Aug. 5, It was unclear whether GE's Acheson said he thinks Niaon is went to requests by the leadership to one-third before President Nix- ment, that it was "something Jordan Sunday to see King Hus- clear the bill so the House can ing a new voting law which include the power to send feder- defense and aerospace produc- trying hard to end the war. But more momentous than the re- sein, then met in Damascus vote on it. would impose a nationwide ban al observers into the affected tion, which make up 20 per cent on comes up for re-election in he added: lease of two or three prisoners." with Syrian President Noured- on literacy tests and provide a states to oversee elections, and of its $8 billion annual sales, 1972. "The President would greatly Kunstler had just returned He now has promised to open against any new din Atassi, guerrilla chief Yas- uniform residency requirement a prohibition would be affected, The Pennsylvaniai senator strengthen his position if he from a visit io the Nerth Viet- hearings on the bill NovJ 18,. so for voting' in presidential elec- election regulations going into GE, the nation's fourth larg- could carry to the people the ser Arafat and Libyan Interior also said he expects an Ameri- namese delegation in Paris. He Minister Moussa Ahmed. late there is no chance It cquld tions. effect without federal review. est industrial corporation, has conviction that he is trying to do said the Nortlj Vietnamese Prospects for El Kholi to get through both the House and The present law, by virtue of Although the administration 280 plants in 133 cities in 33 can withdrawal of 3CO 00O men what everybody wants to do— bill would provide substitute wanted to see his clients, David mediate appeared doubtful after Senate before the session ends a formula based on past voting states. A spokesman said the from Vietnam. He put no time which is to reduce this thing in Dellinger and Rennard C. Daw- in December. However, House records, is in effect only in Ala- fjrovisions for the expiring ones, the meeting in Damascus pro- company would try to keep its reference on the latter. a sensible and wise way." is, but they are among the de- passage by then is likely. bama, Georgia, Mississippi, t is given no chance of being plants open. duced a statement that Egypt , South Carolina Vir- Acheson was interview ed on fendants in the conspiracy trial Syria and Libya The bill would, continue for Louisiana, , passed. Some of the plants are non- Scott's predictions came wWle "would not and parts of North Caro- On the other hand, passage of ABC's radlio and television pro- of the Chicago Eight, and tho tolerate antiguerrilla action by five years the 1965 Voting ijinia union, the spokesman said, but Nixon isolated himself at Camp Rights Act under Which 800,000 ina. the measure to continue the 1965 gram "Issues and Answers." court would not let them leave any Arab country." most will be affected by the David reportedly to work on his the countrv. act appears certain once it strike. , Damascus Radio said the reaches the House floor.. GE employs 310,000 workers promised Nov. 3 public review conference agreed on the need Extension of the 1965 act faces of the Vietnam situation. guarantee complete free- in the United States and 90,000 to " more difficulty in the Senate, overseas. A majority of these dom for Palestinian guerrilla The President returned to where a filibuster by its South- are in nonunion, white-collar action against Israel from all US. May Try to ern foes is a possibility. Washington Sunday from the Arab countries without excep- jobs. But 90 per cent of the pro- presidential retreat in the Ca- That is why Colmer's success duction force — all but about tion. in putting Senate action ever un- toctim Mountains of Maryland. While Arab leaders tried to til next year has supporters of 16,000 workers — have joined "At the moment, (here is a the walkout. cool off the conflict, guerrilla Curb Warheads the legislation worried. chance, it seems to ime, to try a leaders in Lebanon sent mes- (AP) - The ing power on both sides. A coalition of 13 unions has gradual progressive disarma- WASHINGTON radio in- sages to thousands of Palestini- United States may try for a A basic objectiv e is to keep been negotiating with GE. Some ment," Scott said in a an refugees telling them the dis- curb on the warhead-carrying the nuclear balance relatively of their contracts expired at terview taped for weekend pute had to be solved peace- capacity of powerful Soviet mis- the same on both sides, and thus Ladies in Blue midnight. Other unions still broadcast by Pennsylvania sta- fully. siles in negotiating any joint diminish sharply any tempta- have contracts but are support- tions. Palestinian sources said thc ing the strike. U.S.-Russian agreement on sus- tion by either side to launch "The President is going to command leaders also proposed pending development of the atomic war. The labor coalition is led by a set of terms to Lebanese polit- the . International Union of make more than a 30 per cent multiheaded weapons. Worry Over cut , in my opinion , im American ical and military leaders and or- This is because lop defense of- Secretary of State William P. Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO, dered their troops not to take Rogers told a news conference representing 88,500 GE workers, armed forces during this first ficials feel Russia is in a much term. any notion that might worsen better position than thc United that a halt in multiple warhead and the independent United the inter-Arab conflict. development is one of the topics Electrica l Workers, represent- "I would favor also, I would States to mount heavily destruc- Club Image think' what tlie President seems Despite those efforts toward tive multiple warheads on their to be considered ,by negotiators ing 16,000 men. settlement, Ihere were reports from the two couhtries. WASHINGTON W - The to be headed for," he added , missiles. Army s Ladies in Blue celebrate Some units of the United Auto of fresh clashes Sunday between Defense sources say the Rus- ' Workers and the International ".. . to bring back a"bout 300,000 the Lebanese army and guerril- Tlie Soviet SS9 rocket is re- sians have now pulled slightly their golden anniversary this of our troops over a period. The week, worried that 50 years of Brotherhood of Teamsters, the las in Tripoli and several vil- ported to be capable of hurling ahead in the ICfiM ,raco . nation 's largest independent sooner we can remove all com- However providing homc-away-from- bat troops from Vietnam, thc lages, 25 times as much nuclear mega- , the Soviets, :,who cot liome at Army service Clubs for unions, are involved in tho The death toll, after five days tonnnge across intercontinental a rather late start in developing strike. better." millions of GIs may be clouded But on what degree of "Viet- of battle was at least 47 dead distances than the U.S. land- Polaris-type missiles, are still by allegations of graft in the and scores wounded. Seventeen based Minuteman ICBM, far behind the United States , in The largest GE plants with namization" of the war should distinctly separate NCO clubs. union workers are in Lynn and precede an American pullout, persons died in clashes Sunday. Secretary of Defense Melvin their fleet of submarines capa- And the ladies stress the dis- R. Laird Indicated U.S. concern ble of firing deep .striking rock- Pittsfield , Mass.; Schenectady, Scott put himself at odds with a tinction : Army Service Clubs, Elmira and Syracuse, N.Y.; in this connection recently when ets from deep in thc ocean. instituted in 1919 to boost mo- fellow Republican senator , New Great Advice he snid it gives tho Soviet Union Bridgeport , -Conn.; Philadel- York's Jacob Javits. Bnth the United States and rale of lonely soldiers by provid- phia Erie and Allcntown, Pa.; The most appreciated ad- a "tremendous advantage on ing at least some of thc. com- , says the cynic, is that Russia have been attempting Louisville, Ky.; Cleveland , Javits, In a New Vork radio vice, tho United States" in "the forts of home, have no connec- which you've already made amount of destruction thnt can Multiple Independently Target- Ohio; and Fort Wayne, Ind. interview, said the United able Warheads—MJIRV—that is, tion whatever with the run-for- States must end its combat op- up your mind lo take . . . bo delivered*' by multiple war- n-profit officers and noncom- Negotiations bogged down There 's a brow-beaten hus- heads. systems which will permit a when the unions rejected GE's erations in Vietnam by the end missioned officers clubs thnt dot of 1971 "even if it may mean band -who just had an apron "1 believe that this is a, mat- single missile to carry a num- first and only offer , for a 20- ber of warheads which can he many Army bases. that South Vietnam will go down named after him ... Re- ter wliich should be a very im- But revelations by Senate in- cent-an-lioui* pay increase tlio member when "juvenile de- portant part of any negotiations aimed at separate targets. first year , with wage rc-openers the drain." vcstlgators of alleged graft by States linquent" meant a youngster which wo have," Laird said. Defense officials have told the Army sergeants in the two subsequent years of a Scott said the Umitcd vho ran cannot leave the South Viet- with an overdue library congressmen they have as yet NCO clubs in Germany, Viet- tlirce-ycnr pact. GE also offered card ? . . , There's a legen- The United States nnd Russia been unnbl-c to devise a fool- up to 25 cents, hourly for special namese "unprepared to carry announced Saturday thoy will nam and the United Stales has dary B'way tightwad who, proof method of verifying caused some confusion in the skills. on their part of the war." POW NEWS ... William Kunstler, an attorney for Ameri- during n total eclipse, tried open preliminary discussions in adherence to n moratorium on mind of the public, says Miss The current average wage Cor Javits said Nixon's war policy can pa cifists, steps off his plane from Paris Sunday night Helsinki, Finland to to send a telegram as a , Nov. 17, MIRV tests . Pat Aberthcny, the Army Serv- GE employes is $3.25 'nn hour. so far lias been unp rofitable. at New* York 's Kennedy International Airport after meeting; These Helsink i talks, officials night letter. This may turn out to be thc ice Club chief of operations. Tho unions hnd demanded a "Everything he's been saying with tl»c North Vietnamese peace delegation over the week- said, will attempt to work out stickiest negotiating problem up to now would indicate that ho , That confusion "is tho terrible :iO-month contract with raises of end . Tho civil rights lawyer said the North Vietnamese have procedural details lending to since thc Russians are tradition- , the first , still wants to pursue what 1 con- OA (JOUAJWL morale blow to cur girls," ex- '15 cents an hour year agreed to release "octrcmciy important" information about L whnt promises to be long ally opposed to njiy foreign in- plains Miss Abeiilicny, ;i0 cents tho second and 25 llie fi- skier to he tlie essentially dis- £ a 2H- American prisoners of wnr that will "relieve tho anxiety of (For more loughs see drawn-out bargaining on tho spectors moving about in their year veteran of working with nal six moiulis, with a cost-of- credited Johnson strategy " Enrl Wilson on Pngc 4A.) question of limidng atomic kill- territory. the cluh system. living escalator clniise. which Is " put the h eat on them the* prisoners' relatives . (AP Photofax) MONDAY Winona Funerals OCTOBER 27, 1969 Former Peerless Mrs. A/I. R. Raymond Record Funeral services for Mrs. M. Weather i. The The Daily Dr., R. Raymond, 515 Glenview Executive Dies were today at Fawcett Funeral Advertisement" Two-State Deaths At Community Home, Dr. E. S. Martin, Central Two-State Funerals I Church, offi- on Page 14 I Memoria l Hosp United Methodist Norman A. Greenwald ital Burial was in Woodlawn -(Special) ~ Nor- ciating. BLAIR, Wis. L Maternity p«tl«nt»i 2 to g:M and 1. to Cemetery. Do 8:30 p.m. (Adults only.) Why man Angus Greenwald, 52, were Dr. Melvin rural Ettrick, died at his home Visitors to • ps'i.nr mitt) t» fw. Pallbearers several years ago. She was a at one Uma Doner, Dr. J. Hugh Capron, at 11:30 a.m. Saturday. He lived Our Saviour's Lu- Visiting nourai Medical and aurglcai member of ptlltntt: 2 to 4 and 7 to 1:30 p.m. Un John Kane, Milton Davenport, Read his entire lifetime on the home theran Church here and the children under 13.) and Edward You farm. Joseph P. Emanuel Whitehall chapter of the East- Jacobsen. The son of Korwald and ern Star. SATURDAY Amanda Moen Greenwald, he ADMISSIONS SuryivVrs are: Her husband; Karl Konda So Slowly? was born Dec. 15, 1916. He mar- Mrs. Mar t h a Rasmussen, services for Karl ried Joyce Johnson, April 25, two daughters, Mrs. Carroll Funeral K Janice) Schroeder, Decatur, Lanesboro, Minn. Kunda, 317 Chatfield St., were 1944. He was a retired milk ) DISCHARGES Stanislaus A noted publisher in Chicago hauler. Ind., and Mrs. Harold (Adeline this morning at St. reports there is a simple tech- Richter, Watertown, Wis.; 12 Joseph Steinbauer, Lewiston, Catholic Church, the Rev. Eon- Survivors include his wife; Minn. •; nique of rapid , reading which Wis.; grandchildren; one brother, aid Grubisch officiating. Burial should enable you to. increase one son, Perry, Madison, Mrs. George Laumb, Rush- three brothers, Henry, Arcadia, Clarence, Osseo, and two. sis- was in St. Mary's Cemetery. your reading speed - and yet re- ters, Mrs. Ida Schultz, Eau ford, Minn. James WEATHER FORECAST ...It will rain tonight in Allen, Ettrick, and Norval, with Pallbearers were tain much more. Most people Claire, and Mrs. Rudolph Matt- Mrs. Lester Baechler and William Wolfe, Roger do not realize how much they scutherrn Florida and in parts of New Mexico, Texas Okla- the Army in Vietnam; and two Stueve, , (Conine) son, Racine, Wis. baby, 4525 6th St., Goodview. Prohdzinsld, Phillip Pomeroy, could increase their pleasure, homa, Louisiana and Arkansas. Rain also is forecast for an sisters, Mrs. Harvey Affeldt, Blair, and Mrs. Joseph Funeral services will be Wed- BIRTHS Dick Berry and Edward Harris. success and income by reading area extending from the Pacific Northwest ' to central Cali- ( Clara) Bakken, Ettrick. nesday at 2 p.m. at Our Savi- Mr. and Mrs. Linton Krause, faster and more accurately. fornia and Nevada. There will be snow mixed with rain for Funeral services will be 2 our's Lutheran Church; the Rev. 67 Fairf ax St., a daughter. Mrs, Lillian Ambrose According tor this publisher, ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦JJ. .'WPlPa XI WWrV.YAWJV .- ¦ ¦ .•. .- - U .w... .-^ .nk.v,v. -.W.>KWA-rs?7>Wtif* ' ¦ a belt extending from the central Great Lakes region through p.m. Thursday at First Luther- Clifford Ritland officiating. Bur- Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dzwom- ' . * Funeral services for Mrs. Lil- many people, Regardless of their N0w England. (AP Photofax) an Church, Blairy the Rev. K. ial will be in St Paul's Ceme- kowskd, 1134 Marian. St., a D. C. Bambenek lian Ambrose, St. .Anne Hosjice, present reading skill, can use this M. Urberg officiating. Burial tery, German Valley. daughter. were held this morning at St. simple technique to improve D. C. Bambenek, 266 W. 5th reading ability will be in the Rest Haven Ceme- Friends may call at the John- SUNDAY 1 Mary's Catholic Church, the Rt. theii to S.rproark- Local Readings tery. . son Funeral ChapeT, Whitehall, St., died this morning at Wino- Rev. Msgr. Edward Klein offici- able degree. Whether fading Readings for the 24 hours ending at noon today: Friends may call at the Tuesday from 2 to 5 p.m. and at ADMISSIONS na Community Hospital. He ating. Burial was in St. Mary's stories, books, technical matter, the church from noon Wednes- Steven Baures, Fountain City, was retired as general manager it becomes possible to read, sen- High temperatune 52, low 26, noon 38, precipitation none, Frederixon-Jack Funeral Home Cemetery. glance: A year ago today: after 2 p.m. Wednesday, and at day. Wis. of the Peerless Chain Co. Pallbearers were Joseph Mal- tences at a and entire Mrs . Noah Wiedeman, 1052 E. pages in seconds with . -:t-hto' High 62, low 36, noon 43, precipitation .09. the church Thursday from 12:30 Funeral arrangements are be- iszewskl, John J. Lewinski, Ro- method. . ' • - . - p.m. until services. Franklin J. Fisher King St. , ing made by the Watkowski Fu- Clarence Malis- \ Normal range for this date 57 to 35. Record high , 85 (Special) man Zolondek, in 1927 DURAND, Wis. - Mrs . Verna Brommer, Wau- neral Home, 201 Mankato Ave. Brom and Vinftent To acquaint the readers of , record low 20 in 1942. Franklin J. Fisher, 57, Durand, zewski, Carl Sun rises tomorrow at 6:37, sets at 5:03. Mrs. Stanley Benson mandee, Wis. Glomski. this newspaper with the . easy, LANESBORO, Minn. (Special) died at St. Benedict's Commu- DISCHARGED tb-ftllow rules for developing Mrs. Stanley (Luella) Ben- nity Hospital here - Sunday fol- 457 S. Baker St., a daughter. rapid reading skill, the com- — Mrs. Frank Xrzoska and BIRTHS ELSEWHERE son, 56, Lanesboro, died sudden- lowing a heart attack. Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson, BLOOMINGTON, Minn -Mr. pany has -printed full -details of baby, Fountain City, Wis. interesting selMicalMhg ly at her home here Saturday The son of Mr. and Mrs. 65 Lenox St., a son. and Mrs. Kent Stever, Bloom- its ; ame/th- afternoon. Joseph F. B'isher, he was born Miss Adrienne Blocb, 211 "W ington, a son, born Monday. od in a, new boo!fj #; y'Tfaw to at Durand Sept. 19, 1912 Except Broadway. Mrs. Ladice Miller, Red Top Read Faster and ^fcetain More," The former Luella Bakke, she . Trailer Court, was discharged Mrs. Stever is the former Janet 4 for 38 months spent with the Mrs. Junior Malenke and Winona. mailed free. No obligation^ Send was born at Lanesboro, Nov. , ¦Friday. Naas/ your name, address, . fiira ' zip Army' 9th Division during ¦ ' ¦ . 1912, the daughter of Helmer s baby, Lamoille, Minn. ¦ ' . TREMPEALEAU, Wis. — Mr Worrd War II, lie lived his en- code to: Reading, SS5 Diyersey, and Otillia Bakke. She was a Bernard Meyer, Dakota, Minn. The Port of Rotterdam is a and Mrs. Gayle Hess, Trempea- Dept. 471-910, Chicago, 60W4. A 1st Qtr. FULL Last Qtr. New 1930 graduate of Lanesboro> High tire life at Durand. He married BIRTHS busy one; a ship arrives there leau i a son Saturday at St. * ¦' ¦ Jean Weishapple April 16, postcard will do. Nov. 16 NOV 23 Nov. Z Nov. »' School, attended Winona State , Rev. and Mrs. Roger Parks, evexy 18 minutes. Francis Hospital, La Crosse. and was a school teach- 1941. During tlie war he saw College, 60 days of combat duty near ¦ Elsewhere er for three years. She - mar- " ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' x x 1 1 —' ¦'«» ' » ¦¦¦ Forecasts St. Lo, France, and received . . ,/ : ¦ • . YA - ' ^' -• ' " . - : ' " "^" '*' ried Stanley Benson, Dec. 22, ¦ 61H ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦• ¦ ¦ High Low Pr. the Purpte Heart with two oafe ' &T*t ' ST jtfc-ff ' , ' 1935. She was a member of the * 1 >u »—~~— ' u —\ ® ' Minnesota Albany, rain ...... 61 47 T leaf clusters! He was a mem- ' I >¦ ¦ IH /* i " ¦ i f % ¦\"'" —*A v°¦ !¦i '"i\**""¦ iiri " tT-rTT Bethlehem Lutheran Church, ber of the Durand VFW. He \ ' : '¦*• - '* "«* I BOBKOWSKI A \ : .» ¦ . V j ' s^lERf lA Albuquerque, cloudy 59 43 .01 where she was Sunday School ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ;\ ¦¦V - * N Decreasing c 1 o n d i ness Atlanta, clear ...... 75 52 .. owned and operated a well drill- A K» T- 2 -¦ • ' • "I—J f' teacher a member of the choir A"* i 3 «* °!* \- \ . A- — *-- northeast tonight, mostly BLsmarck, clear ;.. - . - . 30 23 .' . , , ing business. and of the American Lutheran OUTDOOR. x> * *' '* *' Boise, cloudy ...... 59 38 Survivors include his wife ; L-^V-" *' W&mm a^&am , \ X^ A ^ ' ' ' '' fair south and vest. Fair to . Church Women for many years. Boston, cloudy . 62 50 one son, Joseph, a graduate : ¦ partly cloudy Tuesday. Con- ' ' , ' - MM Survivors include her hus- student at Winona State College ; -—_____AA' % . THEATER V * V« • . t\ t * . . , - 7TH *" tinued coJd tonight. A little Buffalo, cloudy ..... 55 40 .21 Chicago, clear ..... 54 32 .. band; one son Roger, Lanes- his mother, Mrs. Rose Fisher, . Mrs. Lyle x warmer Tuesday. Lows to- Cincinnati, cloudy ..63 45 - . ..- boro; one daughter, Durand;- two brothers, Fred, i'TI o \. \ \ HL« V^" */ * night 14-22. Highs Tuesday Cleveland, cloudy .. 57 41 .10 (Eloise) Johnson, Rushford, Los Angeles, Calif.; and Ed- Minn.; four grandchildren; her mund C„ : : 3M8 Denver, cloudy 41 36 Durand; one sister, I ' & .Al • «r mother, Mrs. Otillia Bakke, Mrs. Andrew (Luetta) Hill, Ar- I 11\ \ \ A Des Moines, clear . .48 25 .. " I i AC. 877 AC. \~^~Z^ Hl Detroit, cloudy 58 38 .. Lanesboro; one brother, Alvin, kansaw, and one aunt, Miss \3.50 f ...J^V Wisconsin Lucille Crist, Durand. ¦ ^ Fairbanks, clear ... 29 7 .. Lanesboro; and two sisters, * I" l^te —^w 1—— ¦— ' -J—i<_—— «— ¦— IT —¦ !> ¦ , ¦. iii)' |" i«' IKT'I m I in ' j l HI I lUI (Agnes) Olson ^ Generally fair and cold to- Helena, cloudy ...... 30 26 .. Mrs. Turnie , Funeral services will be 9:30 ¦ Lanesboro, and Mrs. Alioe a.m. Wednesday at St. Mary's '¦ " 4 ¦ night. Tne«sday fair, a little Indianapolis, cloudy 66 34 .. -12-65)1¦ 1 I A _l_I^______l_l>_±_ _t-l¦ ' * .:¦ ' ¦ "¦ Brenengen, Rochester. : Catholic Church, the Rt. Rev. • ;¦ • • - ¦ . << ¦ e »• " i ¦¦ » • . » BOl LEfe warmer northwest half. Lows Kansas City, clear . 58 32 . .. ^-|J 1 I V ¦ f Funeral services will be Tues- ¦¦ Los Angeles; cloudy 67 55 Msgr. Stenhen Anderl officiat- ' II ' • ¦ . - . • ' : ¦ '¦ i ' ¦ ' 7 ' , * T » • T . rz*x* i tonight mostly b 20s. Highs day at 2 p.m. at Bethlehem Lu- ing. Burial will be in the chureh 'I I *3 ;' ' Memphis, cloudy ... 73 50 .03 I Ol » . io " s i io ' » . . t iiy; i • i Tuesday 35-45. ' theran Church, the Rev. Leon cemetery. AL ^ :R Milwaukee, clear .. 49 28 ... Holtan officiating. Burial will G.70AC. t£^. B0 1 S~Ti ia_ - ffjIfR >_ir» -St.P,, Friends may call at the Rhiel X\ \\ _ ^>j . ^- Mpls. cloudy . 41 29 .. be in the Lanesboro Cemetery. M n »^ "At D.P ' ¦ S.E. Minnesota New Orleans, clear . 81 59 . . . Funeral Home, Durand, after 111 1 I \ '** '» ' • '•. '« ' Friends may call at the John- 2 p.m. Tuesday. Rosary will be ' " ,t I tf-€k _? ' .L_J__!'* New York, haze .... 67 51 .. son Funeral Home from 1- to 9 said at 8:30. I 1 \f ' ..... ' \ ..., . A> l!F ' :1^^»ll^-r Decreasing cloudiness and Okla. City, cloudy .. -' .- 60 40 3 ¦ ¦¦ s cold tonight; fair to partly p.m. this evening and Tuesday Military services will be con- \ \- ...„ ¦ V.,' .JI.. , ^ ! . , ... , , Omaha, clear ...... 42 22 morning, and at tneschurch from J\\ ^ cloudy and a little warmer Philadelphia, fog ... 67 51 . - . ducted at- the graveside. Tnesday; ' Ugh-today 30-38; low 1 p.m. until services. Phoenix, clear ...... 86 55 .. Mrs. Roy Ryan tonight 15-22. Outlook Wednes- Pittsburgh, rain ..., 57 40 .15 Mrs. Josephine Conway day: Wanner with no precipi- ARCADIA,.. Wis. (Special) — Ptlnd, Me., cloudy .. 52 44 ., LEWISTON, Mon. — Mrs. Mrs. Roy (Erna) Ryan, 57, Ar- , tation. Ptlnd, Ore., •¦ cloudy... 55 38 .. Josephine G. Conway, 87, Oak ¦ ¦¦¦ ; - cadia, died at 4:50 a.m. today ufAsi- ' .- sEr OEPT- 1 '" ' °""" \ : y ' ' " yy y •;: , ¦ . A;.' ." Rapid City, clear . .. 38 14 Park, 111. , died Saturday at a at St. Joseph's Hospital where . \V -4 / ' . . ¦ Long-Range Richmond cloudy .. 60 51 .09 Rockford, 111., hospital where SO N ; , , ¦ she had been admitted a few NE1 14.2.3 AC. ' - - St. Louis, clear .... 67 32 -.' . she was a patient for 10 days. AT 1 y \ x ' ' ' hours earlfer. Death was due to Minnesota Salt Lk. City, cloudy 65 40. • - .. The former Josephine Mad- a coronary. Temperatures vM average San Diego, cloudy .. 68 54 .. land, she was born Aug. 19, The former Erna Herbert, she near normal T n .e'. s day Seattle, rain ...... 64 50 .19 1882, at Rushford to Mr. and Mrs. George Madland She liv- was born in the town of Gle-n- through Saturday. Normal Tampa,. fog ...... 82 72 .02 . coe, Jan. 4, 1912, the daughter Winnipeg, cloudy .... 30 ¦ 22 '.:. . ed at Lewiston for several years high 43-49 north, 46-52 south. and was married in 1906 to Wil- of Ernest and Martha Faulds Normal low 25-29 north, 28- DAILY RIVER BULLETIN liam F. Conway, Lewiston. The Herbert. She married Roy Ryan Sept. 27, 1943, at Arcadia. They 34 south. Temperatures be- Flood Stage 24-hr, couple lived in .Aberdeen, S.D., : Stage Today Chg, for 30 years and then returned farmed in the Town of Glencoe. ¦ ¦ ; ¦ ' ; !J ,: ' ¦ : ' ¦ ¦ - ¦¦ " ^« ' low normal Tuesday will in- Red Wing 14 2.2 to Lewiston. For the past nine She was a member of Mary . . / : 7, y y /:] crease dally to above nor- Lake City 5.9 years she had lived in . Oak Circle, American Lutheran mal by Saturday. Precipita- Wabasha ...... 12 6.8 Park. Her husband died Dec. 8, Church. tion witt total .1- .2 inch in Alma Dam, T.W. .. 4.L 1958. She was a member of the Survivors include her hus- WINONA SAND & GRAVEL CO. Norwegian Slooper Society of ihowers late' Thursday and Whitman Dam .. .. 2.6 band; one son, Keith, Arcadia; Winona D., T.W. .. 3.L America. two brothers, Clarence Rich- again Friday. , WINONA ...... 13 5.3 Survivors are: Two sons, Wil- land Center, Wis., and Ralph, Wisconsiui Trempealeau P. .. 10.O liam, Loveland, Colo., and Ron- Kenosha, Wis.; and one sister, Trempealeau D. .. 4.1 ald, Caledonia; five daughters, Mrs. Leland (June) Zastrow, Temperatures Tuesday Dresbach Pool ... 9.5 Mrs. Edwin (Elizabeth ) Sigler, Alma. Her parents, one son and through Saturday will average Dresbach Dam ... 1.7 Rock Island, 111.; Mrs. Agnes (iwo brothers have died. near normal in the north and La Cross** 12 4.6 Ebersold, La Crosse; Mrs. Don- ald (Lenore) Godderz Funeral services will le LAND Minne- LIQUIDATION , west and four to six degrees be- Tributary Streams 2 p.m. "Wednesday at the Ameri- low normal In the southeast. apolis; Mrs. Robert (Helen) Zumbro at Theilrnan 28.6 Phillips, Rockford , and Mrs. can Lutheran Church, the Rev. Notmal highs range from 44 Trempealeau at D. 2,4 (Hazel) Wayne Radke officiating, with extreme north to William McGuire, Oak 55 extreme Black at Galesville 1.4 Park; seven grandchildren ; one burial in the Glehcoe Lutheran south. Normal lows from 28 La Crosse at W. S. 4,2 great-grandchild Cemetery. north to 34 south, , and one sis- Warmer about Root at Houston 5,4 ter, Mrs. Emma Swenside, Pine- Friends may call midweek and then turning cold- after 4 p.rn. RTVER FORECAST vood. Minn. One son has died. Tuesday at the Killian Funeral SALE er the latter part of the week. ( From Hastings to Gnttenbcrg ) Funeral services will be Tues- Home, and at the church Wed- Precipitation will total one-half Tues. Wed. Thurs. day at 10 a.m at St. Rose of to one Inch in . nesday from 1 p.m. until ser- rain or snow Red Wing ,.2,2 2.1 2.1 Lima Catholic Church, the Rt. vices. A devotional will * during the latter part of be con- 4 TRACTS (SHOWN ABOVE) TOTALING 33.2 the Winona ,...5 ,3 5,3 5.3 Rev. Msgr. Max Satory officiat- ducted by Rev Radke at the fu- week. 4,6 . La Crosse 4.6 4.5 ing. Burial will be in the church neral home at 7:30 p.m. Tues- cemetery. day. ACRES MUST BE SOLD TO COMPLETE LIQUIDATION Friends may calf at Jacobs Funeral Home, Lewiston, from Mrs. Be rtha Wahl 5 p.m. today until time of serv- RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) ices Tuesday. Rosary will be — Mrs. Bertha Wahl In Years Gone By said at 7:30. , Rushford, These Tracts Located in Center of Fastest Minn., died at 7 a.m. today at her home. Ten Yea rs , Mrs. Emma Larson Ago . . 1959 DURAND, Wis. (Special) - The former Bertha Iverson , she waa born June 20 18G0 Growth Area — Near Red Owl Family Center Anti-American Mrs. Emma Larson 74 Durand, , , the feeling mounted in Havana today as Fidel , , daughter of Mr and Mrs " Castro's supporters died at St. Benedict's Hospital . . Iver beat ihe drums to marshal a million Iverson. She married Theodore Cubans for a rally protesting here Saturday. "foreign aggression" against Wahl ln 1925. She was a mem- the revolutionary regime . She was born at Modena, Sept. ber of the Rushford Lutheran The snow which began as sleet early this morning came 25, 1895. She married Carl Lar- Church and of the Ladies Aid down heaviest around 6 a.m. when about an inch fell In son May 2, 1014. The couple Society, half aa hour, lived in Modena until his death Sho is survived by one broth- Tllis Property Ideal for i Tbe La Crosse Near!/ 600 1 - Winon a chapter of the National Office in 194fl , when she moved to Du- er, Ingual Lanesboro { Management , , Minn. ; J Association will hold a dinner meeting with a rand. one foster sister panef discussion 1 , Mrs. Julia An- on the education and training of office Survivors include one brother, derson , Rushford . Developers, Investors to employes. , and several I J i I J Melvin , La Crosse, and one sis- nieces and nephews. Her hus- * ter, Mrs. Martin Blager , Mon- band, two brothers and three AcreS Already Share In Potential Twenty-Five Years Ago . . . 1944 dovi . sisters have died. j j J j Funeral services will be 2 Fro m an American Funeral services will be Army motor repair depot In China Tuesday, 2 p.m., at Lystor p.m. Thursday at the Rushford Growth came a request to the Winona Tool Manufacturing Co., for a Lutheran Church, the Rev spring for a crankshaft grinder Lutheran Church, Church Val- . Sold! manufactured by the local Owen Gaasedelen firm. ley, Dr. J. C. Thompson offi- officiating. [ j j ciating. Burial will be in the Burial will br in the Rushford J Lutheran Cemetery, Fifty church cemetery. Years Ago ... 1919 Friends may call at the Good- Friends may call nt tho J-en- sen Funeral A streetcar rich Fundrnl Homo today and Homo from 7 to 0 jumped the track this morning In going onto p.m. Wednesday and Offers are invited on separa.e tracts or the entire 33, the East Sanborn street after 12:30 p.m. Tuesday Thursday • 2 acres. Although this is switch and lt took about 15 minutes at thc until noon , to get it back on, church. and nt the cliurch from 1 p.m. until services. not a bid sale, the owners are asking a 1.0 % deposit with your offer. The The Federal Bakery Co., which hms been maintaining a board shop in Winona since wist spring, is this week opening an- Mrs. Henry Senator has not set a pre- determined price on this property so other branch bakery ut Mankato. WHITEHALL , Wis. (Special) Ihe first successful gasoline- the first reasonable offer on —Mrs. Henry Schnfer, 70, died powered automobile was built separate tracts or the entire acreage may be accepted. Submit offers Seventy-Five Years Ago . . . 1 Sunday morning at Tri-County by Karl Henz of Germany in in writing to 894 Memorial Nursing Home here 1BB5. The Iron beams for John Kcenan 's new building arrived aft er a long illness, Trust Department , Merchant s National Bank, Winona, Minn, Uiis morning. She was born May 4. 1B99 in H. S. Youmans has been drawn ns :i juror ut the Novem- the Town of Hole to William nnd ber term of the United States court to he hold ot Mnnknto. Paulina Sielaff Seller. Sho at- 1RREGULARO DUET TO LACK OF FOOD " S. N. KOHNER, Pres.; C. W. "BILL" BIESANZ tended the Ploasantville school. ¦ , Soc'y. One-Hundred Years Ago . . . 1869 She was married Juno 23, 1921, BULK IN VOUR DIET nt St. Paul's Lutheran Church WINONA SAND & GRAVEL CO. Boys have been skating around the edges of Lake Winona . in German Vnlloy. She and her A total of 173 cars of wheat nnd 15 emu of freight were husband lived near Plenannt- 4&Mopf4SBUDS" ¦ receive*! hero from tho West yesterday. vllle until moving to Whitehall : 288 FINISH 30-MILE COURSE I New Service Announced Nearly $14 000 Pledged Check Charge North Central To End Brings 30-Day Winona Flights Dec. 1 fo^ North Central Airlines will jperations is authorized under reservations can be made in Walk end direct service to Winona a Civil Aeronautics Board ruling through Winona Travel Service. A total of $13,900was pledged walker walked for S4.4 cents per lish a scholarship fund for local huin, Chris Bauer, Jane Benson, Jail Sentence Rhonda Berekvam, Arne Berg- Dec. 1, company officials said issued today in Washington, Morning flights offered by Saturday in Winona's Walk for mile and the average walker youths entering fields directly A Winona man was sentenced today, D.C. The CAB order requires Mississippi Valley will take off Development, according to the earned $21.99 and walked 23.28 involved in alleviating hunger land, Jon Bergland, Ron Ber- to 30 days in the Winona County Roger Bier- Direct service to Chicago and North Central to maintain at 7:05 for Twin Cities and at latest computation. miles. and poverty at either Winona tel, Karen Beyers, Jail on a bad check charge and the Twin Cities will be provided standby capacity and to resume 8:40 for Chicago Elsy said The State College or the Winona , Dave Boiler, Mary Boil- , . Number of miles walked by all According to Jon Bergland, baum a Red Wing girl was fined $50 by Mississippi Valley Airways service at Winona 's station in Chicago flight makes a stop en participants -was 14,714. coordinating chairman, 42%.per- Area Vocational Technical er, Tim Bertel, Sherrie Brabbit, John D. Inc., newfy incorporated as a the event its successor is unable ••oute to La Crosse. School) on a charge of theft by First boy to finish the full £rip cent , of the net profits from the and 15 percent, to the Jim Bradford, Dawn Braith- McGill in Municipal Court this Winona-based firm. Mississippi to continue. Afternoon flights leave for " American Freedom from Lora Braithwaite Cindy - was Steve, Rose, rural Winona, walk: . will be sent to India, - to Hun- waite, , morning. Valley will begin making two Elsy said his firm will fly an Twin Cities at 12:55 and for the Trivandruni : District Devel- ger Foundation, headquartered Brand, Mike Brand, Julia cf the. Winona State College W. daily flights each way Nov. 30, 18-passenger jet-prop aircraft. Chicago at 4:25. cross-country team whose total opment program ; 42V4 percent in Washington, D.C!. Brown , Cindy Bublits, Robby Linden Wilbright,. 21, 1215 Elsy said the , to the according to C. Norman Elsy, The airline will open its station schedule will running time was 4 hours, 40 will be directed locally oi re- Those finishing the entire 30- Bublitz, Erwin Burke, Heidi Mark St., pleaded guilty at Max Conrad Field Wednesday furnish advantageous connec- issuing an insufficent Chicago, president. minutes. Rosi Colbenson , Rush- gionally ($300 to Winona Teen mile course were: , Burmeister, Paul Burtness, charge of Suspension of North Central morning, Elsy said. Meanwhile, tions with flights between the ford Minn., was the first girl Core, which sends interested and Mark Abraham, Sandy Al- Helen Buscovick, Joni Bus- check for $10 to the Capitol Twin Cities and wetst coast , . ori to finish , completing the course dedicated youth to various de- brecht, David Allen (Elliot the dicker, Robert Buege, Bait Shop, 175 E. 3rd St., cities. in 7% hours . pressed areas such as ghetto or Beagle), Lynn Anderson, Don Jfike Campbell, Shelly Camp- Sept. -10. Wilbright requested 24 Chief Attends North Central's request to A Total of. 682 individuals, Indian reservations to work for Arnold, Jon Arnold, Kris Aune, bell, Andrea Carlson, Rick hours in which to arrange fam- Hall suspend service was filed last Maria Bambenek, Becky Christenson, ily matters before beginning his Village February with the CAB. City mostly youths, began the walk a period of six weeks witl the Kim Christensen* Fire Convention and 288 finished . The average youth of the area, and tb estab- Barth, Bobby Barth, Chris Baud- Judy Cieminski, Greg Clements, jail term but Judge McGill de- officials opposed the requests at Jeff Collett, Victoria : Cripps, nied the request saying that Winona Fire Chief Ervin Lau- that time but later agreed to John Grozier, Bill Crozier, Keith "the court is familiar with your Remodeling Bond fenburger attended sessions last withdraw objections on condi- Czaplewski, name and has heard a lot about week of the International As- tion that North Central provide Selah Dahlen, Carol Danuser, you from merchants and is not sociation of Fire Chiefs con- service guarantees. Donna Danuser, Sue Datta, Den- going to stand for your slipshod Vote Nov. 4 vention in Chicago. More than North Central inaugurated ny Drazkowski ways of issuing checks." 1,800 fire chiefs from various daily service to Winona in May, , Carolyn Duane, LA CRESCENT, Minn. (Spe- 1952. Elizabeth Eckles, Wilbright was arrested at cial) — La Crescent will vote parts of the world attended, in- Janika Eckert, Jolie Ehlers, 4:58 p.m. Oct. lo at police head- Nov. 4 on whether to issue $30,- cluding a 14-man delegation Wendy Ehlers, Bebbie Eichman quarters. 000 in general obligation bonds from Japan. , Council, School , A principal speaker at the Carla Eskelson, Paul_ Evanson, Maurine K. Nelson, 19, - Rfid to construct and furnish an addi- and remodel, the village convention , held in Chicago's Board to Karen Finkelnburg/ Sharon Wing, pleaded guilty to taking tion to, Amphitheater, was Harry Klop- Meet Fix, Gayle Fort, Carol Friese, three rings valued At $67.95 hall. The work would provide Members of the Winona City who with per , chief of the London, Eng- Council and the Board of Edu- Annette Fuglestad, from Edwin's Jewelers, 50 E. room for the police, land, firefighting department. The com- several other officers, now op- cation, Independent District 861, Mary Gerlach, Nicholas Guy, 3rd St., Thursday. Klopper also is editor of a pro ¦will by a store erate from their homes. hold a joint informational Melody Giles, Steven (Gilseth, plaint, signed sional journal, Fire Interna- meeting tonight at City Half. states that the em- . The addition also would pro- Sharon Goede, Susan Goetzman, employe, fessional journal, Fire Interna- The meeting begins at 7:30. Lauri Gottschalk, Richard ploye saw Miss Nelson take the vide a council meeting room tional Magazine. and space for files and mater- Participants will explore mat- Green, Mabel Grettman, Greg rings from a counter, carry Workshops on all phases of ters of mutual interest. It will Grover, Chris Gunderson, them to another part of the ials. Two new offices construct- firefighting were conducted and present be the first such meeting and Laurie Hackbarth, Trudi Hall store, and that the employe ed at the front of the delegates saw displays of all is expected to lead the way to , building would provide a new Jeanne Hein, Jean Haeussinger, apprehended her with the rings sorts of modern equipment, Lau- establishment of a joint continu- Howard Hellickson, Jill Hengel after she had left the store. entrance of brick and stone. fenburger reported. ing group. , A new heating plant is plan- Ann Hermann, Joseph Higgins, Miss Nelson was arrested at Lee Hinds, Phyllis Hines, the store at 2:35 p.m. Thursday ned. Now the building is too Amy for Hitt, Denny Hodkinson, Rod afternoon. cold to be used comfortably Hoesley, Bruce Hoff , Joel Hoff- winter meetings. New restropms man, Jayne Hogue, Debbie Hol- and kitchenette facilities would Takes Off Gloves may, Mark Hooper, Mary Beth be added. (Continued From Page 1) difficulty with the Democratic- Hoppe, Brian Humphries The council room also would controlled Congress. The legis- , Dixie s pleasant fiunze, Holly Hughes, Stacy Three Killed be used for firemen's meetings reaction to summer' lators outpaced the administra- No major cities burned. Hughes, Mary Hunn, John and by other community organ- lull. tion repeatedly, on repeal of the Hurd, Terry Hurlburt, izations. After four years of steady esca- 7 per cent investment credit and Jerald the flow of troops Harrison, On . the village officers elec- lation , tax reform, on spending authori- LABOR MANT OF THE YEAR...Howard executive vice president of the Minnesota Catherine Ingvalson In Weekend through the Vietnam pipeline zations that Nixon did not want , tion ballot there will be a va- natural , Hoveland, 68 W. Wabasha St., new Labor AFL-CIO. The presentation was made Satur- Jon Jackels Hick Jacobson cancy for mayor, calling for a was reversed. Save for on voting.rights and expansion , , Gulf coast Nan o£ the Year receives; a plaque* from Mrs, day night as highlight of the Central Labor Don Jackels, Eddie Jenkinson, write-in vote. Mayor Martin disasters along the of the food stamp program, on and in "Virginia , August was Lillian Sula, Labor Woman of the Year iri Union's annual banquet at the Winona Ath- Heidi Johnson, Phillip Johnson, Miller is rot running. suggestions for winding down Karen Kane Larry Kaufman Accidents particularly restful. Congress the Vietnam war. 1968. At right is Leonard La Shombe, St. Paul, letic Club. (Daily News photo) , , Incumbent Russell Senn and and so did Jim Kearin, Stephen Keim By THE ASSOCIATED PBESS Kenneth Burmeister have filed took a long vacation, , Nixon. In mid-September, a Republi- Steve Kerrigan, Chuck Keifer, The deaths of two teen-agers for the three-year council post can senator, Charles E< Goodell Julie Kilpatrick, Luanr Kim* and a suburban Minneapolis now held by Senn. But September brought re- of New York introduced legisla- ball, Wayne Kimber, Judy man in separate weekend acci- Three are seeking the" justice newed awareness not a single tion putting a time limit on in- City Go unci I man Named Krugsbury, Jamie Kinzie, Kevin dents have raised Minnesota's of the peace office left vacant national problem had vanished volvement of U.S. troops in Kinzie, Pam Kinzie, KSren Kle- 1969 highway toll to 787, com- by the resignation of Wayne during the pleasant summer. Vietnam. pared with 850 a year ago. Students returned to campuses mesrud, Paul Klemesrud, Lau- Lottes. They are A. L. Immen- . Nixon responded: "... if tha rie Kohner, Sue Korda, Patty A Minnesota truck driver died schuh, Charles Leske and Earl as rebellious as ever, crimes of _ ' administration were to impos Labor Man of the Year Kowalewski, Mike Kowalczyk, in an accident in western North Tikal. violence did not abate, living aa arbitrary cutoff time, say the Knopick, Cori Krage, Dakota. Polls will be" open in the vil- costs rose ever higher, and in end of 1970, or the middle of Howard E. Hoveland, 68 W. 3rd Ward councilman. He is a Prior to the banquet, a cock- Mary LaBonte, Jana Larson, Edward D. Weill, 67, Hopkins, lage hall and public elementary Paris peace talks remained in a member of the bricklayer's un- tail hour was held. Guests later 1971, forr the complete withdraw- Wabasha St., was named Wi- Kande Larson, Pam Larson, was fatally injured' apout 6:30 school from noon to 7 p.rn. stalemate. al of American forces from ion and is past president of the moved to the second floor ban- p.m. Sunday when the car in nona's Labor Mas of the Year Honda Lee, David Lebakken, Attempting to operate as a Vietnam, that inevitably leads Winona Federation of Teachers. quet room for dinner. J. Peder Judy Lindquist, Les Lofquist, which he was riding: left the by Winona Central Labor Union Hoveland was born in Crooks- Boyson, Radio Station KAGE, low-key, io w-profife chief execu- to perpetuating and continuing Pat Lofquist, Lynette Luinstra, road at the intersection of High- the war until that time and de- X CLU) Saturday night. The an- ton, Minn., and attend«d col- was master of cererdonies. The road tive, Nixon abruptly discovered gjilight Janet McCauley, Pam Ma- way 65 and Anoka County Sheriff Probes stroys any chance to reach tha nouncement was the hi leges at Maywood, N.D., St. Rev. G. H. Huggenvik, pastor 22 and crashed into a ditch. The his mini-silhouette still offered a of the CTLU's annual banquet Cloud, Minn,, and the Univer- at Central Lutheran Church, chutti Patty Machutt. Jerry Ma- target. objective that L am trying to Athletic gin, James Mary. Monica Ma- driver, Doris Erickson, 56, Rich- achieve of ending the war be- held at the Winona sity of Minnesota. He taught gave the invocation. was hospitalized in fair Civil rights forces were Club. v six years before coming to Wi- son, Patricia McGill, Jeanne field, Weekend Thefts fore the end of 1970 or before Galbus spoke of measures be- Melius, Linda Mf-ttelle, Eliza- condition. among the first to be heard Approximately 200 persons nona in 1957. He is a member from. The Civil Rights Commis- the middle of 1OT1." during -which ing taken by the Office of Eco- beth Miller, Peggy Wilier, Twig Thomas A. Langguth, 17, Dul- The Winona County Sheriffs attended the affair of Central United Methodist office is investigating several sion accused the administration Warren C. Galbus, chairman of Church y Elks and Masons. He nomic Opportunity to eliminate Mills, Pattie Mitcbek, Beth uth, was fatally injured early Nixon at this point continued poverty in He.mention- thefts. of making a major retreat on the economics department at and his wife .Angela, formerly America. Munson, Bruce Myers, Judy Sunday when his car struck a to enjoy the general approval of s College spoke on ed efforts being made on the , Michele MoKeen, David tree in a residential area of Du- James Grant, 1134 W. 4th St., school desegregation in the most Americans, according to St. Mary' , of Winger, Minn., are the par- Mvhre South. A group of Justice De- "Poverty and Labor's Concern ents of two daughters. local level by the Southeastern Milne, Linda Morse, John Muel- luth about three blocks from his told deputies three amplifier the pollsters, but he had a nega- for It. In accepting the awarrd Minnesota Citizen's Action Robbin Mc- home. speakers valued . at $1,500 were partmeat staff attorneys re- tive popularity rating on Viet- " from Rush- ler, Bob Murtaugh, belled p-ublicly against ihe civil ¦ ¦'¦ Hoveland , 55, is a -public last year's winner, Mr Lilliam Council, operating out of Betsy Monty, The youth, son of Mr. and taken from his station wagon nam. ' ' . ford. He mentioned preschool Vey, rights policies. Then Mrs. Mar- school speech correction teach- Sula, Hoveland said: "We all Gigi Nelson, Ervin Neumann, Mrs. rphomas W. Langguth, was while parked on Highway 61-14 Having withdrawn 25,000 er. He. is a veteran of World have a contribution to make to Head Start programs being alone in the car. He was a two miles north of Lamoille tin Luther King Jr. predicted troops from the war zone during held at Cotter High School, rural Mary Lee Nichols, Sue Nichols, trouble if the administration did War II, having served 15 this community. We are all ba- Susan Niedfelst, Lee Nagel senior at Duluth East High early Sunday morning while he the summer, Nixon had ex- Older Adult Centers, Big Broth- , was hunting, Sheriff George not alter its approach to Negro months with the 90th Infantry sically looking for th« same Colleen O'Conner Scott 01- School. pressed hope of pulling out Division in 1942 and 1943. He ers, Neighborhood Youth Corps, . Fort said entry had been gain- problemi. thing — to make Winona the dre, Chris Olin. Matthew Olson, 100,000 or more by the end of has served for about one year best community we can possi- local food stamp programs and A one-car accident Saturday ed by breaking a vent window. local family planning efforts, Sue Olson. Scott Onstad. Karen In September, tod, the Hayns- the year. But in September he on the Winona City Council as bly have." night on Highway 28 just west Theodore Thompson, rural announced a second-stage with- He said that labor has helped Opsahl, Vicki Orlikowski, Tim of Browns Valley killed Elvin worth nomination blew sky Utica, told deputies that various high. Having sought a nominee drawal of 35,000 men, well shy eliminate poverty in the past Ozmun, Goodwalt, 18, Wheaton, Minn. Panen- tools were taken from his farm who would not arouse controver- of earlier expectations. The but that there are still "plenty Sandv Pankratz, Iliand The driver, Mary Pullis, 16, Friday night. Value of the tools Motorbike Rider of problem areas'" locally, fuss Linda Papenfuss. Gary sy, Nixon came up with one who President aimed his next move Says Fears Arise . Graceville, Mann., and two pas- was about $60. directly at disaffected youth: where help is needed. "The Parker, LuAnn Parpart, Col- sengers escaped injury. Two found himself wrestling with Gets Concussion Cyril Kronebusch, Minneiska conflict of interest charges be- November and December draft solution is in participation," he leen Perry, Dale Peterson, Wal- other passengers, Thomas Pull- concluded. Et. 1, reported Sunday that a fore the Senate Judiciary Com- calls were canceled. And a few ELEVA, Wis. (Special) - Ro- lace Peterson. is, 18, Graceville, and Steven 9'A horsepower outboard motor Because People The Rev. Thomas J. Harge- Pat Randall , Jeanne Redig, mittee. Several Senate Republi- weeks later, just ahead of the bert Rud, 17, son of Mr. and Coch, 18, Dumont, suffered leg was taken from his boat at Bass Oct. 15 Vietnam Moratorium/ he sheimer, associate pastor at St. Marilyn Red if*;, Sue Reif , Mary injuries. cans urged Nixon to withdraw Mrs. Orville Rude, Eleva, Rt. 2, Stanislaus Catholic Church Camp during the past six weeks. the nomination. The President disclosed he would relieve Gen. , Reinarts. Diane Rcistroffcr, Robert G. McCoy, 34, Minne- No value of the motor was giv- 't is in Buffalo Memorial Hospital, gave the benediction. Rhoades, Steve Richard- gave his answer last Monday: Lewis B. Hershey as director of Don Know God Penny apolis, was fatally injured early en. Selective! Service. son, David Rompa. Bill Ris- ¦ "If he now asks that his name "Today people fear because Mondovi, with a concussion re- Sunday when struck by a semi- The Oct. 15 demonstrations love, Tony Root, Kathy Rose, be withdrawn I would not do so they don't K now God," said the ceived early Friday evening trailer truck on Interstate 94 reflected autumn's frustrations Pat Rose. Peggy Rose, Linda AMBULANCE BIDS ... I have examined fhe Eev. Carlton Spatzek Sunday when his motorcycle went out ol one mile west of Glen Ullin, MABEL, Minn ( Special) — and owed at least some of its joint Reformation Rossi, Hebehka Routhe, Jack ISF.D. . charges. I find that Judge evening at a control on Eau Claire County Bids will be opened by the Haynsworth steam to hapless administration service at St, Martin's Lutheran Mink Coat RosfvoM. Dave Rowan, Brad Officers said McCoy parked is an honest man. " Trunk WW and he was thrown ivlabel Village Council Tuesday handling of Vietnam policy in Church. Ruff , Kris Ruff . * his rig on the shoulder and was The Haynsworth nomination against a bank. Pegpy Sahdstad, at 8 p.rn. for furnishing a fully the wake of Ho Chi Minh's About 300 attended the annual Joan Salzer, outside working on it when he equipped 1969 ambulance. was not Nixon's only source of death. event spensored by the Lutheran Robert had a helmet but had Valued at Jim Sawyer. Allan Sathtfr. Britt was struck by another west- layman' s League. loaned it to his friend, Frank Sather, Debbie Satka , Debby bound semi driven by Howard Best Deb- Pastor Spatzek , pastor of , who stays at . the Rude Scattiim , Leann Scharmer, O. Ulrich, 32, Menomonie, Wis. Bethany Lutncran Church, Lake home. He was going east bie Schoener. Julie Schoener, Both men were driving for City, Minn., said wealth won't around a curve when the acci- $3,500 Men Brian Schroeder. "George Schu- Midwest Coast Transport, Inc., of men. Nor will dent occurred. Frank was driv- minsk i , Jerry Schweitzer, Shar- of Newport, a St. Paul- suburb, solve the fears Police are rules and ordinances gi-ve men ing a motorcycle on a different investigating the on" Schweitzer , Jim Scovil, Chris officers said . freedom from fear, he added. road and the boys had planned theft of a mink coat, vandal- Searcy, Karen Seeling, Sue Seel- A River Palls, Wis,, State Uni- ist to meet. ism and report the recovery of ing, Tim Shaw, Tom Sheenan, versity coed, Sandra L. Green- "The troubles of mam nr a stolen car. find their final answer In God Monica Sands was taking her Robert Sheenan, Mary Sheenan, lee, 19, died in a St. Paul hospi- Mr* Ts Restaurant who has redeemed men. The brother, Clyde, to Eleva to A. M. Kramer, 1615 Gilmore Joe Shetfnan, Dr. Curtis Siem- tal Saturday of injuries received WESTGATE SHOPPING CENTER „ T'JTI"^?? behind us is greater catch a bus to the football Ave., told police today that his ers, Laurie Sikorski, Beckie In a one-car accident near River Kentucky^^^^ Frlad Chicken God who is than any power we face, What game. Rud passed her car and home was broken into between Smith, Barb Smith, Moira Falls. Shorty's Bar-Caf* we need are not just , grrat mem Monica saw the accid-ent. They 2:30 and 6:30 p.m. Sunday and Sheets, Todd Smith , Vicki Smith, of scien ce and politics but also were on a sandy road. The a mink coa t valued at $3,500 Gayle Smith, Liz Spear, Rita of faith. Tlio task of Christians ground had frozen the nighl be- plus $15 in half dollars was Sobeck, Dean Sorem , Steve Sor- Pre-school Clinic is to lead men to God. Here fore and it is believed Bob hit stolen. The coat was taken crn, Dale Stai'ick a , Carol Stan- a bump. At Rushford Gym wo stan**tS*^^-*+-i<*JK******,m* ¦ ¦¦... structed, wholly or partially, * so i MCOEtKIWr.KuMcrt _MHKjl_K_f Oberon is guesting in the Henry making them ; when young furnace heat; we can travel •BeinnoouCKMSpn'iw fluids from the sinuses cannot _B^__9__u? Ford penthouse at the Carlyle readily drain out. Then pres- people went sparking in- to Europe in eight hours in- ______¦_# ® _K_9GS1_ . . . Shelley Morrison urged sure builds up inside.and this stead of necking; when the stead of eight weeks; we "Kindness" buttons — and can be either a nuisance or highlight bf entertainment can talk to anyone in the ¦:- Clairol immediately printed up Eainful — or both. There can was the basket social and world who has . a telephone. fritter SMt bushels of thern. If you want e aching in the region of the the principal amusement, We can see and hear in our Treat him to a FREE Halloweenmask. ' ' ¦ ' ""• to wear one, write to Kindness upper cheekbones or in the area the game of post office. own homes the world's best PETER J DENNIS Pin, Clairol, 345 Park Av., N.V. of the eyes •— or above them. It was the age when music, drama, opera, paint- F0NDA I HOPPER MIA FARROW, in loose-fit- The obstruction of the ducts horses were afraid of bicy- ings and fine arts. ¦ ling maxi-dress, ringsided witi may be from germs (cold cles and cigarettes were We can hear and see JACK NICHOLSON called, "coffin nails" and no church services of our own COLOR ' Reluud by COLUMBIA PICTURES Andre Previn at Phyllis New- germs or others), from polyps man's crowded Persian Rm, or other growths, from swelling one took a bath in the win- choice right in our own din- show. When Phyllis sang "Make resulting from allergy, which is ter time, but would in the ing room. Because of fine " ¦' ¦ communit OS W." »h ». ¦. Someone Happy once anything but an unusual source swimming hole in summer, y libraries, we " (". . . have you've found Mm,/build youa* of trouble, or from other causes. and no gentleman would access to the world's think of marrying until he greatest literature. To ride put on world around Iim '. . .") Mia I think that shows adequate- could afford to support a an automobile , a bicycle, or 0 reached over and held Andre' s ly enough why no single pill, salve, spray , or what have you wife. When It was consid- to attend a baseball game mm hand . . . Pearl Bailey, carry- on. Sunday is no longer crit- NITES ONCE AT 7:45 ing a rhinestone-studded cane, is going to be the correct treat- ered a sin to belong to se- ADM. $2.00 - NO PASSES ment for "sinus trouble" in gen- cret societies; to play the icized by the preachers. was on hand to see the Mets' violin in church ; to Coffin nails are no longer Donn Clendenon get his Most eral. predict That also is why it is essen- the weather ; to have life feared but are paranteed HELD OVER Valuable Player prize . . . Tony by the manufacturers not ' tial to understand what and insurance, and for the con- Perkins excited Hal Prince s gregation to carry fire and to have a cough in a car- forthcoming B'way musical, where the sinuses are. Proper drainage, control of tornado insurance on God's oy "Company ; he prefers to a " hap own church building was direct. infections, desensitization or Winona Daily News ACADEMY AWARD other means of subduing aller- considered terrible. The Rolling Stones'll appear "" at Madison Sq. Garden Nov. gic reactions, sometimes surg- IN THOSE DAYS, the MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 196* BEST ery (rather simple surgery in # 27-28, and could earn $250,000 preacher orated hell-fire VOLUME 113, NO. 287' . .. Tab Hunter's date was sexy- some cases, as removal of sermons and all the wom- ACTRESS! Solyps) — any of these will Published daily except Saturday and Hol- J looking authoress Jeanne Re- en listeners wept and sob- idays by Republican and Herald Publish- jaunier ("The Beauty Trap") elp the right cases but be of bed. There were not even Ino Company, «0l Franklin St., Winona. | no use in the wrong ones. Minn. 55987 ^^p«l»tf ^ ' " \ C01*JME"» PlCIURf SJ»d Rt . !» PR00UCIOKB . . . Clint Eastwood is returning any professional undertak- P'dtril IMEVclll lUWi UB . The most valid help I can ~ * % ¦ to Yugoslavia to finish filming ers and no sad looking fu- SUBSCRIPTION RATES ¦.(¦ ' ti'SWii PwiijuiO'i Single Cooy — 10c Dally, 20c Sunday ! '¦" give sinus sufferers is to con- race ' 'L^ft neral directors. Yes, those "The Warriors " (carrying vince them that they MUST r along a box of Stage Deli food were the days when the Sun- Delivered 6y Carrter-Per Week 50 ccnM c t?!_ I«W# identify the type of trouble be- day services lasted at least 56 weeks S12.75 52 weeks 425.50 for Don Rickles) ... Georgia fore they are likely to find re- Brown, who has a nude scene three hours (at least it By mall «1rlctly In advancei paper Hop lief. p«d on expiration date: *•> el' g, tsam. seemed that long to young 'X'/' liwuaiim'tuinrm in "Lock Up Vour Daughters," But once the nature of the In Fillmore, Houston, Olmsted, Wabasha, is up for a role in "The Love boys). Also, men wore cel- and Winona counties In Minnesota) Buf- trou ble Ls known, there is every luloid collars and cuffs and falo, Jackson, Pepin, and Trempealeau Machine." She says, "Same likelihood of easing, and often counties (n Wisconsin) and 1o mltltarv costume, higher salary." entirely ending, the misery, high leather boots. Long personnel with military addresses In the skirts, high shoes and a continental United States and overseas The Spanish gov't reported ly with APO or FPO addresses . has a list of H'wood people it'll Dear Dr. Thosteson: I have bustle were top require- I year 116.00 3 month» «J.oo question about income tax eva- hammer toes and of late years ments for a properly attir- 6 months S9.00 1 month $2.00 BEST! sion, if they ever go back corns. I rub the corns with cas- ed lady, and they were not Elsewhere - A ' tor oil with excellent results. permitted to vote on elec- In United 5tate« and Canada / *& V ^£w_Hw^wH______MS______w> L £_F ^ fnfw______l^_8rt *__Ka______l_H_njit '^______^______r»BI7 there . , . Designer Jeffrey I year S22.00 3 monthi J7.O0 Martin '11 create the wedding My question is: Can this bo tion day. There were no 6 months S13 .00 1 month $2.50 PICTURE Sunday News only, 1 year J7.50 f outfits for the Oiny Tim nuptials harmful in any way? I've read beauty shops in those days, . . . Shelley Winters will pro- that the castor bean plant is tut all the women were Second class postaoe paid at Wlnon*. duce poisonous. — P.A. beautiful. Minn I I OF THE "The Ballad of Baby Send ch«ng» ot address, notlcei, undcllw. Doe" starring herself (with True, the castor bean is poi- It was in the gay nineties e-red copies, subscription orders and ottiar sonous if swallowed but there when baby carriages were mail Items to Winona Dnlly News, P.D Viva). , Box 70, winona, Minn 559B7 fi MB! TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: A i.s no harm in using the castor banned on the ground that WINNER 6 panhandler, refused a handout oil as you do, they would take the moth- ¦¦iSfsp^* by a banker, answered, "Tn ACADEMY AWARDS! that case, may I borrow a dime, COLUMHI*, muktt v num ROMI WC, at your usual rates?" namm.LIONEL BART 'S WISH I'D SAID THAT: A D,NE T THt showgirl described her former ) 0U S WEEK! I hoy friend: "lie had the kisid / *Q~z> o( TUESDAY-"F|S |,.AII" 4:30-9 p.m $1.35 ) map they give away free \ [(C^^^^l**7 »- at pas stations, " ^L^ > ^V J/J\ CHICKEN-ALL (with cn "Professor " Irwin Corey I jifcnilCCnAV " " of \ 's ) " tUWt* *"*'"" Dumplings!) for |ust «M -OU > WWI I»_M l»_w>_.i^wJL-M«M-____ ^^ , 1 ,— SuNDAY- $2.26 J ™^^_M_MW_1-BW >fc>3/ A i t '-Gourinet Buffet" REGULAR MENU SERVED EACH NIGHT 'TIL MIDNIGHT \ YOU'VE NEVER MET A PAIR LIKE BUTCH AND THE KID. ( Vyy " r EVERYTHING THEY'RE GOOD AT IS ILLEGAL!

Not that It matters, bui most of It Is troc rmi tm'mm frk-\ TOBERT BEDFORD (^ntu^kii C^chn : KMIMRME ROSS« f BUTCH CASSIDVAND / SATURDAY V%/ff^Ctl lE { \ To the Music L S T^MINN , / THE SUNDANCE KID of ^ ^ : .?^ J "THE JOHNNY ''"^" TAKE HOME STORE ( )/ \ \ 1558 Sorvica Drivo, Winona V HOWARD „,. , \. , , , ,, ) ) TRIO"___ At the4 Sign of the N.imePl / • • SUDDEN SERVICE ... NO NEED TO CALL ^¦OT^^a^H^MM^aM^MMMI ^^MM^aM

• ¦ IEW TELEVISION' ' REV' !¦¦ !¦¦ II i, , i T ,

¦ Automation Warnings Fly as v Special Qua lify in Regional Center For Retardates The Shouting Fades Away LiveTelevmoh By KAY BARTLETT But in December 1963 the Re- began to think it was a direct during the next recession, the ' The narration was highly an- A P Newsfeatures Writer search Institute of America reflection of the new automatic influence of a new force capable By CYNTHIA LOWRY warned : "The moment of truth machines coming in. By 1963, it of overturning almost every as- NEW YORK (AP) — There is thropomorphic—we were con- In Planning Stage Just yesterday, it seems, the we _ on automation is coming—a lot was cl^ar were wrong," says pect of our modern way of life. I 3 stantly told what the ostriches ROCHESTER, Minn. The some special quality about live word automation exploded onto sooner than most people real- Dr. Eli Ginzberg, chairman of am referring to automation." ar television—as opposed to film, were thinking about in highly initial program planning com- the American scene; bringing ize." the National Manpower Advi- Nor are the echoes quieted in tape and "live on tape" pro- human terms. But after an hour , mittee report relative to the both terror and dreams of glory. and Hepburn the -Viewer—young or old—had Donald N. Michael,, a sociolo- sory Committee academic circles. In April of grams—that makes ther audi; recently opened Southeastern Tb the doomsday prophets au- Professor^ of Economics at Co- 1967, psychologist Irving E. ence an involved spectator. learned painlessly a lot about gist-physicist, added: ^Cyberna- Minnesota Regional Mental Re- tomation meant factories run by tion means 'an end to full em- lumbia University. Kaplan wrote that by 1972 ,a So it was Sunday when CBS that strange-looking, fast-run- robots; mass unemployment; large majorit Sv ning and fearless bird, tardation Center on the grounds ployment." "It was a very bad indictment y of the nation's Q and a couple of unobtrusive the extinction of blue collar of sloppy thinking." job s would become obsolete. By sponsors graciously permitted of the Rochester State Hospital, jobs; overproduction of goods, Perhaps the niost pessimistic of all was The Ad Hoc Commit- Generally, the fear about au- 1980, he said, "the present eco- 9 IE the nation to attend ceremonies Tlie funniest joke on NBC's was presented by Charles V. and the loss of dignity of work. nomic system will have changed —as they o.ccurr ed—t h a t To the glory dreamers it was tee on the Triple Revolution, a tomation has subsided among new daytime "Letters to Turnbull, acting program direc- group most concerned about au- economists and labor leaders. so radically as to be unrecogniz- marked the completion of New Laugh-In" from its premiere tor, at a meeting in the hospi- just the opposite : .A new and un- able." York's Lincoln Center with tjbie paralleled opportunity fpr lei- tomation but also involved in Economists now talk about solu- Sept. 29 to Oct. 17, according to tal's religious activity center. civil frights and military weap- tions in terms of guaranteed an- In an analysis of 500 randomly addition of the famed Juilliard the show s jury, follows: sure and the pursuit of the ' : " ' chosen occupations, Kaplan's School of Music. ' ' The program was initiated in good life; " the mundane jobs ons. r - .'• zy '- " * 'A. nual wages, retraining and relo- I ". " research indicated that 406 '"What do you get when you December of 1968 with 13 resi- of the world relegated to - the Going even farther than Mi- cation. Labor leaders talk about oc- < cupations are readily "displace- The move of the school into cross a hippo with a jar of pea- dents and 10 staff members be- machines. chael, the Ad Hoc Committee four-day work weeks, job secu- A P9 the complex makes Lincoln Cen; nut butter?" ing assigned. Plans now are be- warned that cybernation meant rity clauses and more training able by automation and new ter "a university of the per? "A 5,000-pound sandwich that ing made tb increase the num- The -warnings and Utopian an end to almost all employ- for their members. technology. Another 71 will have Q forming arts," as Leonard sticks to the roof of your ber of residents from 13 to IOO predictions came not only from work requirements reduced and © ment. In March of 1964, the Although no longer a flag- only 23, Bernstein phrased it. It is al- mouth." by next ' July. podiums 'at seminars and in committee told President Lyn- waving issue among the union, ranging from astrono- , mer to tree grafter, would be "" ready the home of the Metropol- Iff that grabs yon, joke-lovers, Attending this initial meetihg scholarly papers. don B. Johnson that the nation the echoes of the early '60s are X itan Opera, the New York Phil- were representatives from coun- From the White House, Presi- would be thrown into unprece- resistant to displacement by au- it should be added that the con- still heard. tomation and new technology. harmonic Orchestra, other mu- tributor of this gem has already ty welfare departments, mental dent John F. Kennedy called au- dented economic and social dis- As recently as this Septem- sical groups, a ballet and sever- health centers and Association tomation the greatest domestic order unless some radical new ber, in proposing a four-day Advertisement won a washer-dryer and a trip for Retarded Children the challenge of the al theater and film organiza- to Hawaii for it. from '60s and from strategies were employed. work week for all labor- the tions. 13 counties comprising the re- the Kremlin, Russian Premier Part of the predictions of the president of the steel workers Now Many Wear The home viewer felt like a ception area of the Rochester Nikita Khrushchev proclaimed: '60s arose out of a coincidence. union, I.W. Abel warned that -Recommended tonight: "Des State Hospital. "Automation is good. It is the member of the audience during tiny of a Spy," IOC, 840 CST Unemployment was up to 6.7 automation would soon threaten FALSE TEETH the entire 90-minute program, Residents in the new center means we will use to lick you per cent in 1961 and at the same the jobs of millions of Ameri- Lome Green in "World Pre will be taken from Faribault capitalises." With Little Worry from the arrival of distin- miere" spy story shot in Lon time the new machines and cans. Do your false teeth annoy and em- guished guests including the State Hospital at the beginning. Today, the hue and cry about their capabilities were grabbing barrass you by coming loose ajvd don, with Rachel Roberts. Ihey will be both ambulatory automation has died down in a "The next downturn in our dropping whenever you. eat, laugh first lady—to the ovations at the the headlines (in September or talk? Then sprinfcle PASTEETH fl> y.fW end. and pre-ambulatory, and will nation where computers can 1969 the jobless rate was 4 per economy will have a far greater on your pla.tes. FASTEETH holds be 16 years of age and under. captain and crew a sailboat, impact on those we represent dentures firmer longer—holds them The fine 80-mem^er orchestra cent). v more comfortably, too. Makes eating Students OK A comprehensive program is pinpoint structural defects in than ever before in history," easier. FASTEETH Is alkaline. Won't composed of serious young Juil- currently in: the planning stage sour. No pimmy. gooey, pasty taste. JT airplanes in flight and sift out "We simply misconceived the Abel told the AFL-CIO conven- Dentures that fit are essential to © liard students was conducted by Groom ina Code in which a full range of rehabil- income tax returns when busi- situation. We misinterpreted the tion in Atlantic City, N.J. "This health. See your dentist regularly. Leopold Stowkowski-r-youth and itative services -will be offered ness expenses look too heavy. causes of unemployment. We is because we will experience, Get FASTEETH at all drug counters. age in perfect harmony. They MILWAUKEE W - High to the residents. were followed by solo appear- school officials in suburban Shtorewood have enacted a dress A 100-bed unit will be develop- ances of three of Juilliard's dis- ed in a vacated area of the hos- 7S¦ : and grooming code that, believe mmm - . ' JPHT ' tinguished young alumni-Israe- pital. Remodeling will be exten- ¦ ¦ . • * . it or. not, meets the approval . . .. li violinist Itzhak Perlman; 'Metr of most students^ sive to accommodate the new ropolitan Opera soprano Shirley The code's main provisions residents and to develop as 2! an ' ' ''' ' ' " " ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦ functional living ¦ " ¦ ¦ ¦ Verret ¦ ¦ , arrangements ¦ - and pianist Van Cliburn. ¦ ¦ ¦;¦ . . /. .. state that boys and girls must ...... It was excellent coverage of a be fully clothed at all times, as possible. . 3 _P% happy event—the kind critics of- slacks and shorts are permitted In making the new program ten accuse television of ignor- for girls, along with seerthrough responsive to community needs, ing- fashions that include proper un- Turnbull said it will be neces- dergarments. sary for community agencies " , mirade ingredient" Boys too, are permitted to (ARCs new , welfare departments A , "The Wonderful World of Dis- wear snorts and must keep side- mental health . , centers) to ney" on NBC also is a happy burns, mustaches and beards assess the needs in their com- 8 program and has been for so trimmed. S munities. Needs which are hot, many years that it is now a Sun- or cannot be satisfied within to prevent cold miseries. day evening institution, particu- Lake City O pen House the communities are the kinds larly in homes with young chil- of needs which the specialized dren . LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) capabilities of the Regional Cen- Sometimes the hour is filled — Washington and Jefferson ter might satisfy, he added. New PERMA-FLO TM is our unique, multi- We'll come out and add a can of concen- with nature studies: sometimes Elementary schools will hold comedy; sometimes cartoon open house Tuesday. At Wash- y purpose additive for AMERICAN® Brand trated PERMA-FLO to your tank. No matter and . fantasy; but it is always » ington school, open house will a Parent-Teacher family-oriented. be from 7. to 8 p.m. to be fol- Furnace Oil. It helps keep your fuel filter -what brand of heating oil you're now using, This week's episode was a lowed by an 8:15 meeting in the Conferences Set combination western-comedy Washington building basement clog-fiee, and acts as a DEJcERr«...it helps We're making this offer with, tiie hope about three ostriches. The plot with Pr. G. Feigal as speaker. ¦ At St. Charles v ? W was rudimentary—life on an old '. At Jefferson school the meet,- keep your furnace oil flowing free in below- that you'll get so used to pipblem-ftee heat, West "feather farm." The dia- ingywill be held at 8:15 p.m. to ST. CHARLES, Minn. (Spe- a CO logue was early Roy Rogers. be followed by open hoiise. cial) . — Parent-Teacher confer- zero weather when others could be stopped you won't want to do without it And then, ences will be held Nov. 3, 4 and l^^^^ r 5 at St. Charles schools. cold. PERMA-FLO means flow-free. And it's we'll get to spoil you with our StoFul School will be dismissed at ; TfT 1:10 p.m. Conferences will be- even cost-fiee. You pay no more for heating Automatic Delivery Service. Convenient ¦ 2P ' - ¦¦ ¦ ¦ gin at 7 p.m. Nov. 3 and 4 and oil with ERMA-FLO. But, just because your budget terms. Fast, friendly service. And at -1:30 p.m. Nov. 5. Two eve- P m m nings have been set aside for present brand of heating oil doesri't have low prices. conferences, Walter E. Gilseth, elementary¦ ¦ principal¦ announc- it, you don't have to do without it Not Call today. Say hello to PERMA-FLO. . ed. ^ - . . , -' man More than 315 families are while we're making this special ' .^ And good-bye toxoid miseries forever. Your involve*! at the elementary hotline service listed school, therefore conferences offer. Call your Standard Oil /W®y^^ 'You moreis from in tiie are limited to 15 minutes with hotline service man - 'V^/ 'lSKr ', - ' Yellow Pag^ under Oils—Fuel. a three-minute interval between before^- ^T , *X Frun h Frie$ expect 11 y Mppy ewe each. Tiie bell will ring to sig- November 30, 1969. Standard BYrk sRolls ' |T^ nal the beginning and the end v^^-*_^xf\ 1 ALL YOU CAN EAT I RESTAURANT; of each conference. No obligation, of course. and you get it." ¦ Teachers will be prepared to /_^li ?\PN ) ™ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ' discuss with parents their stu- /¦ . ' dents' ability, work habits, \ $115 ""i classroom performance and aca- I PANCAKE HOUSE demic achievement. Parents -i© \ 7 should come prepared to share > Mr Junction Highways 14 with the teacher any informa- ^^ and ™ \ 61, Winona, Minn. tion that would contribute to z ^ ^F^lS^fv^^i . OPen Daily 4 8.m.-2 a.m. their growth and development. Paretats with students in high 75 P school should go there on the same day as the elementary conferences and meet the high school teachers in the gym. EVERY 5: y^SPE««l$\. A WED SERVED ' Holy Rosary Has " wJfi.Q? \#f & (7y4 ALL /M Temporary Pastor FRI. ; LIMA, Wis. (Special) _ The \T pAY / m "Rev. Eugene F. Berthiaume is temporarily serving as pastor at Holy Rqsary Catholic Church f/j jy ^ yjT^yj m here. ftf*f 4P*^r * ' \i ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1 ^^^* ^ He will lead the congregation until the Rev. Raymond Schulz ' recovers from a broken hip. a.t 9.34-23 _7 SpiiiiB Valloy .MiM/M Arrndlo .... XJ'l-XMS Inclorxmilonco , 9n.*i-3S4<4 Clinlll.a-i*ri1if..™.t~r~*^ » '. M.ttfiii sions. ice. who appointed them. The test of Winona, Minnesota, Monday, October 27, IW . , giv- there was the steel 6a Winona Daily News, excellent job of tripping up a col- relationship is .almost inevitable Wore recently, It has done an ed: "Can anything be precipitous in seizure case of 1952. In the majority public enemies who otherwise might not en the fundamental policy questions lection of we put to the court under our consti- this field now?" that found President Truman's seiz- been brought to justice. For this it deserves the have tution. If history is a guide, the fact that ure of the nation's steel mills uncon- of a nation whose enforcement agencies gratitude Warren Burger was so early and stitutional was Justice Tom C. Clark often seem helpless to deal with such miscreants, The new chief justice of the Uni- ted States, Warren E. Burger, seems prominent a Nixon appointee will — Truman's appointee, his former mystery The actual spadework in such coups is mostly the likely to face -the test earlier in his have precisely nothing to do with how attorney general and his friend. Anatomical he will judge this Nixon policy, For province of the IRS intelligence ' division. But this career than most of his predecessors 3n Jefferson's resentment at what ~"~ "stout-core dissident." In any case, President after President has been ' rr &wj&ii: -75^ special force — celebrating its 50th anniversary this did. For it lurks in the Mississippi he considered a betrayal, he laid the ^ as he remains with us in spirit only, _ disappointed, , year is aided by the 23,000 trained men of audit, school segregation case argued be- even outraged by the behavior of his appointees to witch- l Af W-iStZf jerriCsJf i the question is somewhat academic collection ahd international divisions. fore the Court Oct. 23. way his nominees to the Supreme ery by John Marshall. The great ~ Among dissidents, cores come in Court have disagreed with him. chief justice was a persuasive man, h..xlhl ^y ? - -^ ^-- & their tracks three major categories. There is Bigtime crooks can cover a lot of THE MIXOM administration's last. Que of the most colorful cases in- but the essential explanation is less is hardest of all to conceal WASHINGTON - . Spiro Agnew, the infamous hard core alluded to but the financial trail minute call for a delay in the deseg- volved, those two powerful personali- occult. It is the extra-ordinary inde- virtually dead pigeons if they the administration's' man in. charge by the Vice President. The^ rarely successfully. They are regation of 33 Mississippi school dis- ties, Theodore Roosevelt and Justice pendence given to Supreme Court error of failing to file in- of colorful talking, was unleashed in mentioned spongy core, and the all commit the fundamental tricts, scheduled for Sept. 1, has been Holmes. Before appointing Holmes justices, their appointment for life, , notorious Los An- Hew Orleans the other night and too familiar, but harmless, soft come tax returns. Mickey Cohen One of its most controversial actions in 1902, T. R. wrote to Sen Henry that makes them strip off past ¦con- 1951 that this sort , took the opportunity to identify the core. geles crime figure, discovered in in the racial area. Many saw it as Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts to nections of person or politics and say swing open for him. groups that are ruining America. Biological science is still divided of oversight caused doors to a frankly political gesture, designed make' surfe Holmes was "in entire what they really think about basic prisons and he -will These, according to the Vice Presi- on the question whether core con- The doors were those of federal to please the South. sympathy with our views." He want- issues. has-been when his 15-year sentence dent; are the young, certain "im- sistency is an inherited or acquired be a 62-year-old Whatever the motivation, nothing ed a man who was "absolutely sane pudent snobs *who characterize them- fact, ts finished. . could conceal the result: In the most and sound on the great national poli- "IN THIS JOB," a member of the characteristic. In there is no court once mused, "a man is reduced selves as intellectuals," "professional agreement among anatomists on targets for law enforcement resistant southern state, 15 years af- cies for which we stand." Equally difficult to the irreducible minimum." That anarchists" and "hard-core dissi- where the -core is located, and this and John-Dioguardi ter Brown v. Board of Education, a Roosevelt cared especially about ¦ agencies such as Frank Costello is to say, the justice has to peel off dents . '' Well, we can all spot the compounds the difficulty of identify- Others con- court order finally requiring an end trust-busting. Yet . within two years were winged by the IRS sharpshooters. all those layers of convention , of young, and, if only there weren't for that matter judge, a to the dual school system by a spe- Holmes had dissented from a great ing dissidents — or , victed in recent years were a former Texas views expressed to go along, with so many of them, it should be an any other kind of persons — who are York bank- cific date was indefinitely postponed. government antitrust victory, the onetime mayor of Miami Beach, a New some faction or friend, and find, out easy job to keep an eye on that Oklahoma Arid that course could hardly have Northern Securities case. T. R. re- hard-cored. er, a professional basketball star, two who he is inside. To state that , in- crowd. Supreme Court justices and one of crime's outstand- been undertaken without considera- portedly told a friend: "I could carve At present, for example, Washing- cidentally, is to remind us how im- pre- ing , figures, the late Al Capone . tion and approval at the highest lev- out of a banana a judge with more IMPUDENT SNOBS should ton is debating the question whether els of government. backbone than that." portant it is to have as judges pass- sent no great surveillance problem Agnew is a hard-core, a spongy-core, ing on ultimate issues men of the Although the division has only 1,900 special agents But that policy runs into an un- either. The average impudent snob or a soft-core Vice President. There deepest wisdom and character — for tl.2 entire 50 states, it has run up some impres- concealed impatience, on the Su- THERE ARE other remarkable cannot hide his identity for more are even some people who say it examples, As'chief justice in 1870 men with something inside. sive scores. In one fiscal year the division looked into preme Court, with the progress of , than five minutes across the dinner doesn't matter arid the question is Salmon P. Chase wrote the Chief Justice Burger's situation in 10,000 cases; ran full investigations on 3,800, recom- desegregation. The court has made opinion table, and if he is going about in silly, but it illustrates the problem holding unconstitutional the paper the Mississippi case is the more in- ^ mended 2,500 for prosecution, obtained 1,500 indict- amply clear that the time for "de- public playing the intellectual (leath- we are up against in trying to iden- money statute that he had supported teresting because he must feel the ments £«id 1,300 convictions. liberate speed" has passed Ln end- er patches on his jacket elbows, fre- tify those hard-core dissidents of as Lincoln 's secretary of the desire to have a unanimous court ing the separate school systems so Treas- quent references to Camus, pro- whom Agnew wants us to beware. This sort of success story ought not to be ignored. ury. By way of on this one. He may indeed- want to long maintained by law in the South. explanation in the nounced taste for cheap vines), A pleasant 50th to the IHS intelligence division and opinion , he remarked that during the write the opinion himself: That is to IN THE ABSENCE of any guide- many happy — excuse the expression — returns. — even the Boy; Scouts should find it THE COURT'S mood was convey. Civil War "the time was not favor- forecast, which with the Supreme an-easy chore to track him down. lines from the Vice President here F.R.U. able to considerate reflection Court is a mistake but at least this are some hints for distinguishing ed Oct . 23.by Justice Black. The Nix- upon , Anarchists . are not hard to iden- on administration's assistant attor- the constitutional limits of legislative case must be an important clue to tify, even when they are mexe am- hard-core dissidents that have fre- or executive authority." the new chief justice. quently been useful to one man ney general for civil rights, Jerris ateurs, and professional ; anarchists , and Youths merit chance Leonard, was urging the court not to Jefferson was violently critical of tend to stand out like camels on probably to Agnew too. First of all, be "precipitous." In his misleadingly Chief Justice Marshall and his deci- New York Times News Service Fifth Avenue, due to their passion cultivate a fixed policy about some to be of service soft southern voice Justice Black ask- sions expanding national as against for getting photographed while as- controversial subject. Persuade your- saulting policemen. self 6f your absolute Tightness. The young men of iNorth Dakota are first and The problem characters- on Ag- Nov?, approach the subject to be •the young men of Minnesota are eighth, percent- new's list are those "hard-core dis- tested for core consistency and agewise, in passing mental and physical examina- sidents." Most persons probably your policy. Perhaps, you have de- tions for selective service. Spiro Agnew on complex mission haven't the least idea of what a cided that it is essential for man- hard-core dissident is • and Agnew's kind that he have his hair cut. Say, It isn't so much that they're. healthier and tive interests of this nation — has TWO, though violent and wound- speech, so descriptive in its other "Boy, I don't want to see you with smarter. A doctor at the Minneapolis examination a full right to that view. It is, how- ing words on the Agnew side are passages, sheds no light at all on that full suit of hair down on your station said many urban young men go to great ^^M^MmMW^^.j_Qj_ C^Dfl^^^0 ever, about as naive as are breath- indeed unwise and unseemly, it does MA €Ssi how to recognize this paxticylar scapula when I get home from work lengths to think of anything which might keep less "inside" reports that Agnew has after all ask a good deal oE the mLWmmBmHmmmUm troublemaker. tomorrow." them out of the service. On the other hand the importance unaccountably rushed out on his own hawks to demand that they talce it WASHINGTON - The A dissident, of course, is a per- If the subject says, "Hair is good country boy "has a feeling that it's his country is not that here with speeches quite unknown to and take it for year upon year — of being Spiro Agnew son who disagrees or dissents. (The for mankind and how I wear it is and he wants to do it." he is evoking such furious screams the White House until they are read murderer, fascist, deliberate child- Random House dictionary.) Justice my business," the core is ready for from the Vietnam doves for turning there, with great astonishment and burner, witless stooge of the mili- Two thoughts: Oliver Wendell Holmes, for example, testing. Counter with, "What I say at last to the intemperate language displeasure, after they appear in the tarists — without finally replying in disagreed so articulately with many goes arGund here - " and wait until 1. All youths should be given an opportunity to which has for five years been their papers. kind. The law that action must i>ring majority opinions -of the .Supreme next evening to check results. get put of surroundings that breed a lack of re- own exclusive intellectual stock in reaction is as immutable in public OBJECTIVE NO. 2 is simply this: Court in his day that he came tb be sponsibility to society. If they have legitimate res- trade. life as in physics. : If you -arrive home to find the ervations about military service, which many are Agnew has nowhere to go but up, and THREE, at all events the sins of called "The Great Dissenter." hair cut, you are dealing with a Superficially, to be sure, he is sim- the circumstances '!form one of those expressing through feigned mental and physical ill- ply proving that two can play at Spiro Agnew have been much over- SOMEONE MAY ask if Justice soft-core dissident. If the hair has nesses and deficiencies, then require them to per- rare occasions when an opportunity advertised. Indeed, there has been been cut slightly and subject re- that game; btit this is only a cliche to ventilate long bottled-up convic- Holmes, therefore, f?lls in Agnew's form other public service in NOMJRBAN settings. interpretation of what is going on. more than a bit of language-crop- category of "hard-core dissidents" minds you at dinner that one of tions is also an opportunity, just pos- ping, as once the Joe McCarthyites these days you're going to be in 2. The federal government has complicated for- sibly to improve his own situation. who are ruining the country . The an- THE REAL meaning of what the went in for photo-cropping to suggest swer is no. Justice Holmes had a the old-folks' home and hard-press- mulas for determining who and what receive a Vice President is doing is far more In a word, Agnew is day by day . that honest men had communist pals. sturdy, muscular core — he had ed for bingo money, the core is thousand fornts of aid. Increasingly the formula is complex. Briefly, he is embarked becoming Mr. Conservative ; and if For one important illustration, Ag- fought vigorously, in the Civil War spongy. No haircut ,at all and a being reduced to this: The cities get it; the rural upon two missions, one in behalf of the country should in fact turn right- new never said that all or even most and even during his advancing years challenging policy statement ("It is areas don't. That's where the problems are, say his chief, President yNixon, and . one ward by 1972, his understandable de- of the Oct. 15 "peace demonstrators" kept in good physical condition — irrelevant to mankind whether hair the federal planners. True. But the environment iii behalf of himself. Objective No. 1 sire to remain on the ticiet for a were "imprudent snobs," though one was such that he is cut or not"), and you haye a hard- of the city is a factor in creating the problems is to provide to Mr. Nixon a sanc- second term will have been immeas- but his character could never know this form from tolerated hard- core dissident in the house. and many of the federal programs for youth, con- tuary and breathing space while he urably strengthened. would never have ¦ some of the antiwar commentators ness of core . ¦ ¦ • Report him at once to Vice Presi- centrated as they are in the cities, only lure more ponders the major, and perhaps fate- If not, he has lost nothing in any and politicians. He said this of the On the recently compiled U.S. dent Agnew. He may lwed material "country" boys and girls to the urban areas, thus ful , address cn Vietnam that is set case. For no one can doubt that leaders .— or rather, if the -whole Scale of tensile core standards, for his next speech. creating more problems. A cycle that must liave down for Nov. 3. up to now Spiro Agnew has been context is examined , of some of which Agnew obviously consulted been devised by a madman. — A.B. This Agnew operation has the ef- trailing others for the 1972 vice pres- them. while drafting his speech, Justice fects, first, of giving the more hawk- idential nomination and notably Rob- New Vorlr Timet News Service , Holmes would be classified as a ish opinion of the country something ert Finch, the present Secretary of United Feature Syndicate Riverfront planning to be going on with ; and , second, to Health, Education and Welfare. put Mr. Nixon in defilade — that is, Now, as to the rights and wrongs Assurance by the Corps of Engineers that it outside the line of fire — from the of all this affair, the facts are these : will emphasize preservation of Levee Park in flood more angry doves. It is a classic ONE, vehement rhetoric on so com- protection planning made last week worthwhile. good guy-bad guy tableau, with Ag- plex and so divisive an issue as new the scowling heavy and the Questions for The Chicago division office has directed that Vietnam is, of course, wrong. It is, President in the antithetical all possible steps be taken to enhance the river role of parenthetically, rather less mis- a calm and dispassionate rational front appearance. chievious, however, than the business leader saying no hard word aboqt of mounting "demonstrations" de- Milwaukee Road We hope that the Engineers really mean this. any rnan as patiently he seeks a signed to put the high foreign policy From an editorial In Previous attempts by local citi2ens to persuade the commonly bearable solution in Viet- of a nation into the hands of a kind The dangers of guilt Engineers to consider anything other than a huge nam. of head-count in the public streets, Red Wing Republican-Eag!» earths wall between the river and the park have Anybody who supposes that all this however decent in motive, in which We had occasion the other day to An editorial in the World' Bank and onetime Presi- been summarily dismissed. is not useful to Mr. Nixon — and in some of the decision-makers are in ride from Chicago to I£ed Wing on Thc National Observer dential adviser on Asian matters, a sense also to the ultimate objec- their early teens. writes in a new book, " Alternative Now a landscape architect is to confer with tlie afternoon Hiawatha — the train It has been the fashion in recent in Southeast Asia" : "The Vietnam Winona plannin g personnel. Since a number of citi- the Milwaukee Road is now applying years for politicians and others of War has engendered grave doubts zens have previously spent more time and money to drop from its daily schedule. reknown to exhort the nation to mass among Americans about their for- than anyone else to accomplish park preservation There were only 66 paying passen- breast-beating. eign policy. If we succumb it would be an insult not to include them in these gers coming out of Milwaukee, and H this theme of collective guilt to these doubts, to a sort of national guilt discussions. — A.B. there should be 100 to make it a wer* simply tiresome, no harm feeling, we will, I fear convert our paying proposition , the conductor wdkld be done. In fact, a moderate , unhappy experience in Vietnam into ¦ told us. But dropping this Hiawatha dose of guil t now and again can be "The American people want more .*' "¦' is not at all to his liking. a catastrophe," more government service each year and they good for a country. As Daniel P. Mr. Black have thc idea thc government can do every- The conductor, the trainman, Moynlhan , a top Presidential assist- proposes a long-range program of thing from brightening up slum areas to feed- and the federal inspector on this Hia- ant, said in a speech the other day: regional cooperation in Southeast ing the starving people in other countries, As watha were unanimous in their con- "America has become a self-accusa- Asia as an alternative to "our present Americans we seem to think thai Uncle Sam is viction that the Milwaukee is doing tory, even a self-flagellating, society. policy of overlnvolve- ment. some Individual thnt has unlimited funds which everything possible to discourage all There is nothing the matter with " Just how well that alterna- tive wou ld work come from some unknown source. Most of us passenger service. It doesn't have a this . We have enough and more to is hardly certain. single passenger train But Mr. Black' seem to forget the only place Uncle Sam can left west of apologize for ... The danger we s: point — and Mr. Woynlhan get funds is right from us. We seem to forget thc Twin Cities, they noted, and It face has nothing to do with the peni- 's - Is that self-flagella- tion may the more we demand tho more we are requir- seems bent on removi ng all Uie re- tential spirit. That is, and ever has cause the nation to shun any ed to pay, Rather than complaining about the maining passenger runs it can. been, a source of renewal to men promising alternatives to present had amount we pay perhaps it would he wise, to These men cited considerable evi- and nations," policy, foreign or do- mestic. take stock of what we are doing and cut clown dence. Recently, they said, a Twin Within limits, lhat is. Mr. Moynl- Cities in many areas. Our governing bodies nre Riiilty travel organizer wanted to han , who sees "nothing the matter " of listening too much to the demands of- the take a .O0-person group to Wiscon- with sclf-fla-gellation , then goes on to 'hnve. nots' and (hose that 'have ' , are getting sin Dells, and he was limited to 200. find something the matter, a "dan- n little tired of fooling the bill. '" Litchfield , We ourselves have hnd the sum- ger . . . that the spirit of penance Minn., Independent Review. mer time experience of riding will degenerate into a mood of¦ de- through the Dells to Portage and spair." ¦• i then taking the next train ba ck be- He continues: "The danger is that WINONA DAILY cause the Hiawatha wouldn't stop. in our intense nnd penitential con- NEWS We have never been adamant hero centration on what is bad/about WrtLiAM F. W HITE Publisher about opposing all reductions in pas- America we should forget" what is C. E. LINDEN tins, Mgr., Adv. Director senger service. But this negative good about it. More to the point, Anoint BREMEB „ . . Editor-in-Chief management attitude toward passen- in our anguished preoccupation with GARY W. EVANS jyoius Editor gers is C. GonnON Hoi/re discouraging nnd tho Mil- the problems we have created for Sunday Editor waukee owes FRANK R. Vima it fo the area public to ourselves we should fall to bo clear chief Edit . Writer explain Its WIU,I,IM H. ENO-nTi Controller overall nppi'onch to se-rv- on just hoiv wo did so. Which is io A. J. K IEKIUJSCB Circulation Mgr. lnf! the traveling public In this say, that confronted by tho wrong- L. S. BHOHK , „ Composing Sup t. area, doing of the age we should become Thomas A. Martin, L, V. ALSTON Enprauinn Supt. What is Ihe Milwaukee doing to preoccupied , with the questiori of Director Ho. Lonn Preux Superintendent promote passenger service? Are how tiuch problems could have come MEMBER Or TIIK AflSOCIATKD I'ltEfiS the two Hluwathns, which reae-li Min- to pass, rather thnn energized with Breitlow-Martin Tho Associated Press Is entitled exclusively fo neapolis from Chicago- only an hour the Issue of how llicy can be solved." tho uso for republication of all tho loca l news printed apart , properl y tiniod to Jittnict Precisely. And excessive national Funera l Home in tills newspaper as well ns all A.P. news dispatches. business? guilt can pose comparable dangers 374 BAST SARNIA .. J'M5UB§ I LOVE IT; HOWEVER OH The ICC and Milwaukee do have to American interests abroad. Eu- WINONA, MINN. An Independent JVewanaper — Established 1 1)55 TH£ OTHER UANtC public obligations. Phon* Day or Nigh) 8-1528 gene Ft. M ack , former president of ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ Mi THE PRICE REBELLION CONT- INUES TO GROW IN THE

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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1969 ^ ^ ^ ^ ' ¦ ¦ BB ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ "QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED— NO SALES TO DEALERS" THE WILD ONES . . . Here's the cast of the "Wild ing. In the background is the Buddy Frank Orchestra which World of Sports," who entertained the crowd at the final din- played tot the show and dancing. (Daily News photo) ner of the season at the Winona Country Club Saturday even-

HONOR NONAGENARIAN . . . Mrs. Charles (Maude) rad, Prescott, Ariz.; and sons, Peter, 660 W, Wabasha St., Biesanz, seated, Sauer Memorial Home, was honored by C. W. CBill), 116 W. Wabasha St., and John, Detroit, Mich. about SO relatives and friends at a birthday party Saturday Several grandchildren and great-grandchildren also were Evening. She will be 90 years old Tuesday. present. (Daily News photo) ' • ' . ' BABY Standing, from left, a daughter, Mrs. Max (Betty ) Con- THE IDE Al NEED FOR si-^M^ -mmmW City, were among the 8,000 dele- Action program calls for indi- Buttered Green Beans ( —m^L gates and visitors attending the vidual and council efforts at Carrot Coins Lq ^^__.1 38th national convention of the making people more aware of Bread & Butter ^^^ ^ "C/ * J/SOxr~ . BH Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. in Seat- prejudice and working for bet- Milk tle, Wash., Oct. 19-22. Mr. Fox ter understanding among peo- Frosted Cake H___r MM I/JNHI ^ (Fritz -^^Ak~^B- v* * * JK\ I %\ \ \ rr JfC\i H and Mrs. , members of the ple. Nearly 3400 of those attend- Extra Butter Sandwich mmW JZ2yZi\j*JZ\\iJf •/ < \ Vi'K/lr 'jv 4 HSH River Trails Girl Scout Council ing, including 11 River Trails FrMay were part of an ll-member del- Council members, signed per- Hamburger Gravy egation from our area. sonal commitment cards HS ^p c ^^% j _^ for the Mashed Potatoes . ^^I ^^^^^^ ^^ / \ M0^^^l__B Representing the almost four program. Cabbage Salad million Girl Scouts and adults The next national convention Bread & Butter o #"iW girdle HMBIi______^______fl^^HIP in Girl Scoutimg, the delegates will be held in Dallas, Tex in Milk •* ' came from some 400 scout 1972. Coconut Pudding One Lowof to councils in all 5. states, Puerto Extra Peanut Butter Sandwich Now: Hundreds Toys m YOUR MONEY ___ fl^H Rico and the Canal Zone. Dele- COCHRANE AID Junior & Senior High 1 Choose Price! ¦ JflBMK I§ ^—^m At gates elected national officers COCHRANE , Wis. (Special) - School Only ? BACK JJI F and members of the board of The Ladles Aid of Hope United Hamburger & French Fries ^^ directors and set guidelines for Church of Christ here has 10c Extra Girl Scouting throughout tho changed Its meeting date .to m if you don 't U.S, for the mext three years. Thursday at 1:30 p,m, Serving J Xw^r 1 Tho theme of the convention, will be the Mmes. Dewey Gest, Caledonia Pianists love the bra J I "Awareness-Action," was high- Ed Schmidt and Luella Staak. To Play at Luther j |>#^r lighted by a presentation of the Dessert and coffee will be serv- Action 70 program. Among those ed before the business meeting. CALEDONIA, Minn. -(Special) S or girdle . .. . hi j appearing throughout the four- There will be Bible studies, — Three Caledonia gins will J^f ^ ' day session were: Patrici a Hilt, play piano solos at the Dorian I Come In now and buy a PLAYTEX Bra or » *^^^ HALLOWEEN PARTY / (| 1?V I ^^^^^M For girls, for boys, lor mH assistant secretary, Department musical festival to be held at I Girdle. You'll get a free * $1.29 value I (S. 1 fun-things of Health, Education and Wel- DAKOTA , Minn. ->- A Hallo- Luther College, Decorah, Iowa , ^llw fw K » H^^^^ B every age! The i shower cap from PLAYTEX. And, It you 1 *$* | » $ Uj fare; Debbie Reynolds, honor- ween party will be sponsored Saturday. * /f\\ * ^ \ ^^^^^B they'll l ove ... Hj ary membership Piper; Art Friday at 7:30 p.m. by the The pianist, Beth Wheaton , I don't love your new PLAYTEX Bra or f h \\ . ' >t lW_{» ^ 1 |- Helen Waldron and Carmen Glrdle \ ^^^^^^A come take your pick tod ay! Linklettcr , master of ceremon- P.T.C. at the Dakota school for p . return It to PLAYTEX lor a full 1 B \ ^^wF isi I ^B ies at thc opening sessions ; Dr. all elementary children in thc Schulze, are pup ils of Mrs. I refund. Full details are on a coupon f' ? ¦ V^ y^/" \gi iS \ | Matthew Durnont, chief of the Dak ota District. John Bates. you find on PLAYTEX packages ' " ' Stuffe ¦ fl 'll J f \ V?' • \" >J I Center for Metropolitan Prob- Prizes will be awarded to § rind displays. i I K ^ lems, National! Institute of Men- those judged as wea ring the best STOCKTON WSCS j ^/ <\^-^''^J | Animals will be free STOCKTON , Minn. - The tal Health *, nnd Miss Louise A. costumes, and there 1 *250„charge for postage and handling, ^ K X--yS^X^^*#**f ^ I Wood, national executive, direc- treats. Women's Society of Christian ('" _ *m\f W^ ^ *^T T .*^ J ** ™*l kjl+m\. ^^ **t^*^» f'- 'i ¦ Service of the Stockton UnlUd ^^^^^ H Our d Methodist Church will meet I • PLAYTEX "Cross-Your-Heart"*' \ & ' Thursday at 8 p.m. in the f jl» M\ , \ 1 THE LOCKHORNS church social rooms. Mrs. Ar- I and "Living"® stretch bras. White. |$ « fft ,Wf ilrV-jV * | I Choose nowand $3,0O. thur Ziebell will be hostess and il 32A-40C. From ("D" alzea $ ssM?%\ U*%o*^a^ 1 usual Mrs. Jerome Dnnicl will have $1,O0 niore,) i: s

now \wWr See tbate an^ mor Choose whila U t€^^ * ' mm tfocki ora complete and price* loweitl A I iC^ i ^M\vl W OPEN MON. & FRI. Jt ^s I I N ITES TILl 9;00 P.M. TRIM-GYM -^^g^^ H OF LA CROSS! , ^ ¦' •& ¦ Phona La Croiw 781M4M, or Winona *t-lHt 7M GU\D TO GET A SECONP OPINION, & FOR HOME 7 HY rnum IM I70CTOR. (LEROY 6AIP IT WAG- ALL IM MY MINP. " 7 C i,.« munMMioiiAi. rl^vnx conrciiAtloN n U . I . A. A lmammaaamaaammammamm ***m**ammmmmn *mmmmmmmmmmm mmammmm *mmmmmmmjDEMONSTRATION I!-riR&? ^^£?: ^i!'j:-*:*'r'!'^i i -^^ GRIN AND BEAR IT I DENNIS THE MENACE ' 1 7'

"If wa can hold out for a yea r or $0 maybe .Kings will pick -- * fiv^ ^J

APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kohky

SHRINE AUXILIARY . . . looking at one of the table Mark St., luncheon co-chairmen; Mrs. Earl J. Holcomb, wife decorations at a Saturday luncheon at the Winona Country of the potentate of Osman. Temple, St. Paul, and Mrs. T. Club are*, from left, Mrs. Carl Frank, Glen Maiy, president Charles Green, wife of the president of the Winona Area ol the Winona Area Shrine Club Auxiliary; Mrs. Jack An- Shrine Club. Ninety-six Shrine Auxiliaiy members were dresen, Pleasant "Valley, and Mrs. Dwight Marston, 1775 W. served. (Daily News photo)

St. Charles PTA Mabel Legion Post To Entertain Youth Prog ram to Show At Halloween Party Fol ly of Crimes MABEfe, Minn. (Special) — Galesville Crowns REX MORGAN, M.D. By Dal Curiti ST. CHAKLES, Minn. (Spe- Tie Joseph B. Lund Post of the cial) — Several persons who AJnerican Legion and its Auxil- 'i New Festival Queen formerly were offenders of so- iary will sponsor a Haloween at tbe ciety will be featured pearty for all students of the GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) "Focus" program at the Wed- nesday evening Parents Teach- district on Friday evening at i- A new royal lineage had? its ers Association meeting at the the Mabel school. Ages will In- beginnings at Galesville Satur- St. Charles Elementary School. clude pre-schoolers i.'jough the day with the crowning of the They will relate the folly ol 12th grade. community's first Harvest Festi- crimes by telling their stories Activities Ior the pre-school- val Queen. in ways that will be helpful to with Miss Julie Grant received her young people; will encourage ers will begin at_6:30 p.a., the general public to cooperate, other groups following io . order, crown from Joseph Hunter, and will help create understand- ¦There will be Six catfi prizes in Trempealeau, Saturday evening ing between cne-tinie offenders each group in the following cat- at ceremonies performed daring and those who could, but didn't. egories; Best costume, best the talent show. She is the Heme, originality and humor- duaghter of Mr. and Mrs. Bus- Wabasha Legion ous. sell Grant, -Galesville, and was A film will be showa ip^ihe sponsored by the Gale r IGA Schedules Events ; smal}; gym, • iollowi|(f' reiresii- Store. • By Ernie Bufhmiller WABASHA Minn. (Special) - NANCY ,, . pnents. £ dance ita students in Her attendants are Anita Car- Americari ' Legion Post; No. SO daughter of Mr. and Mrs. grades 7-12 will be sponsored by hart, and its Auxiliary have" announc- Miles Carhart, Trempealeau, the senior class irom 8:30 to 11 ed various upcoming- events ' ¦ " ¦ ' ¦ and Vickie Buchholz, daughter ... , - , .. " .. ;¦ being sponsored by them. p,m. . . . ,, of Mr. and Mrs. LaVerne Buch- There , will be a ftee movie 1 ¦ holz, also of Trempealeau. ''- JutieyGraiii"' ind treats for neighborhood chil- z ^ The girls were among the 16 dren at the Pern Theatre on ^S^iiedi is queen contestants vying for the Halloween night, Friday. Cos- royal title. Judging was done tumes will be judged and prizes At Hamline Oct. 22. given. (AP) Hamline Kathy Smith, daughter ot Mr, ST. PAUL - and Mrs. Brookes Smith, Gales- Auxiliary President, Mrs. Wil- University, a small liberal arts liam Beaty, and "Cookie Barrel villd, was named Miss Charity. school, lias two Homecoming Day" chairman, Miss Elizabeth queens this year. She was sponsored hy the Gales- Baker, announce that cookies The dual coronation of Sue ville Republican. Voting was by for veterans in Rochester State Johnson, RIvervFalls, ,y7is., and dropping contributions for char- Hospital must bet brought to St. Paul, resulted in ity In ballot boxes under candi- fiee Truajc, ' the Legion Annex before Nov. 12, a tle vote by the student body. dates pictures at sponsoring which is the delivery date of 'team places of business- The Hamline football Vickie Aait* re the goodies. responded with a 28-12 Home- Ron Sacia, Trempealeau, By Saunders and Ernst The American Legion Com- ^ ceived first place in the talent MARY WORTH ' coming wictory over the Univer- mander, William Zenner and sity of Minnesota Duluth branch contest with his musical panto- Auxiliary President, Mrs. Beaty, Saturday. 2 Cars Collide mime, "King of the Road." will present each teacher at There were seven entries. the schools with a red apple, At Trempealeau Second place went to a quar- in observance of National Ed- tette, Sue Erickson, Barbara ucation Week. After school Youth Shot in TREMPEALEAU, Wis. (Spe- Thompson, Julie Grant and An- hours, a social hour will be cial)—There was vehicle dam- gle Cantlon, singing "Aquarles", age In a collision af Trempea- held ln the Legion Annex.. Irvin Minneapolis third to Tom Hunter, who play- Burkhardt leau Saturday morning. ed the banjo. and Mrs. Tony! foissp, MINNEAPOLIS < AP) - Po- teachers, are Americanism Mrs . Adeline Davis, 38, driv- lice are Investigating the shoot- 4th chairmen this year, and will ing a 1965 car east on ing death of a 16-year-old south Street , collided with a small se- makd plans for the activities. Minneapolis youth. On County Day, Nov. 17th, dan driven by James Eichman, Police said Gregory P. Rimar- 19, going south on Jay Street. No 1969 Dividend representatives from the Wa- elk, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul basha schools and surrounding The accident occurred one J. Rlmarcik, was fatally wound- block west of the high school. communities will have an oppor- ed about 1:05 a JIJ. Sunday while tunity to observe the , inside . There's a yield sign on 4th For Lanesboro walking home frton a party With at the Intersection, .and Mrs. workings of the county, includ- three other teen-aged youths. He ing sitting in on a court case. Davis was given a ticket by was shot about four blocks from the village police for not yield- Lunch will be served following his home. Federal Land Bank the ing. Damage to the left fend- LANESBORO, Minn. Divi- tour by members of the The youth died of a bullet er of the Da-vls car was esti- - THE WIZARD OF ID By Parker and Hart auxiliary at thd Loglon Annex, wound in the left side of his dends for the fiscal year ending mated at $25 and to the right June 1969 will not be issued by chest. Police said the bullet side of Eichman's vehicle at came from a .22-calibcr auto- the Lanesboro Federal Land $500. Bank Association. The an- Top U of M Awards matic pistol. Mi nouncement was made by the MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The The youth was a junior at Roosevelt High School. His fa- Tillage Demonstration board of directors at the an- University of Minnesota has nual meeting Thursday. awarded ils top honor, tho out- ther is campaign secretory for Cha nged to Nov. 7 "Money is real tight now and the United Fund of Hennepin standing achievement award, to LEWISTON, Minn. - The wo cannot predict the future," four Graduates ot the university County. ¦ mulch-tillage demonstration sot said John Truwe, Lanesboro, school of engineering. for Tuesday at the II, P. Tully manager of the association. Becei-ving the honor Friday and Louis Campion farms has "Right now wc are paying 8.45 were J. Leonard Frame, found- Incumbents oh been postponed, until INov. 7, ac- percent interest on bonds and er and president of Flui-Dyne Plainview Ballot cording to William Sillman, dis- getting only 11,50 percent on Engineering Corp.; Golden Vtil- trict conservationist. loans." lfcy, Minn., John Jamieson, di- PLAIJTVTEW, Minn. - Only The corn crop is too wet to be "However," Tr uwe said, "I rector of transit development the incumbents will be on the taken from lho field at this hope dividends can for be pqld at ,the Metropolita n Transit Plainview village election ballot time. a later time, perhaps even be- Commission, St. Paul; William Nov. 4 fore the fiscal year ends. W. Hagerty, president Glenn Haase is seeking his '* of tlio TOWN fc COUNTRY Edward Hale, Stewartville, Drexel Institute of Technology, sixth term as mayor and Donald NELSON, Wis. (Special) ~ and Oscar Sanness. Spring Philadelphia, Pa. , and Elden IL Norton his 10th term as trustee. The Town & Country Home- Grove, were re-el«ctea to TIGER By Bud Blake* Holdson Basse, manager of Plainview ihree- , vice president and gen- makers will meet Thursday ycar terms on the board of di- eral manager of the aeronauti- Milk Products, was on the coun- night at 8 p.m, in the Nelson cil one year before being elect- rectors. cal division at Honeywell , Inc., Community Building. Members Holdover directors are Glen Minneapolis. ed mayor. are reminded to bring a gift Norton is employed at Lake- Elde, Lanesboro, Vernon Gatz- side Packing Co, for "'Revealing of the Secret ke, Preston. Hlldus Wold, Ma- Pal" and signed cards. Plans bel, and Herman Forsyth, Hous- Advancement for tho Christmas paarty will bd ton. CARPET dlsciusfld' Hostesses aro Mrs, Lena Krueger and Mrs. John LIONS PLAN PAUTY Reinhard t Sr. STEAM BACKACHE& INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- TEMt inM SttONOARY TO cial)—Independen ltN>IUN KIDNIY IRRITATION ce Lions Club CLEANING Common KMn*>» oi BU«*a«r lrrlt»- will entertain children nt' the tloni ftiiUe many men and women annual Halloween party Friday (thi beslll!) Ita) ten** tni neivotu iron irenutnt. CONSTIPATED O¦ burning or Itchlncr urination night DUE TO UCK OF FOOD nt 7:30 p.m. at the high school ' and dny, Secondarily, you inny lose BULK IN YOUR DIET ¦ nleep n rjft liiive JlenriaolK- , Hftdmrhr- gym. First , second nnd third nnd te.el oldor, tlmt, dfcprensfd , in prizes will bo offered for best PROTASIL* of audi eaten, CY.SM'IOX usually bring! BRAN «iixlne comfort by curbing Irrllfll- "V*? . costumes In eight age groups. ,, lng Kcrma In acid urlno and quickly Wmipft BUDS" Movies will be shown and WINONA «„) casing pun.GtiCYSTKXMdrunKlBU. there will be treats for all. bleach the -wood first and I I I >l I I II I < < to " J!: ;!^^AA-Ay^yMii::iUM^iMUUiXX thtrn to recoat it. Be sure to follow every detail of the in- structions on the container of HOUSE OF THE WEEK ¦¦¦ the bleach. " . ' ' Q. — I'll be putting dowel Here s the Answer Sj^ asphalt tiles soot. What kind oi use? ^By ANDY LANG lac, which now is much darker cement should-3 than its original color. Is there A. — Buy the proper cement Two-Story With Split Level Variations AP fyewsfeatures the tiles. any way to lighten the wall -where you purchase Q. — Our small son's bedroom the cemeat By ANDY LANG color? . - ., ., ,; For asphalt tiles, is covered with vinyl, the sheet, . consistency. Af- The two-story house is still a mater- lias a tar-like kind, not the tile. We tried to A. - All clear finishing being spread, it must b« tavonitetor those who desire a bit darker ter get out some crayon marks by ials tend to get allowed to dry to the touch be- extra space at proportionately rubbing the area with lacquer after a period of time. It may the files. fore applying ' are merely ¦ ¦ ¦ lower costs. This one offers qual- thinner, which someqpe had be that your walls . . . , though, there appears ity and elegance uncommon in recommended. To-. our dismay, dirty* evdn EASY MAINTENANCE the thinner completely rained to be ii© loose surf ace dust. Test many traditional two-story de- the vinyl, so that instead cf a inconspicuous section *with a Frefinished hardboaid wall , an easiest signs. few small marks, there now is a commercial cleaner. If convinc- paneling is one of the to maintain, The crisp and contemporary scarred section roughly atiout ed ' that the walls need more building materials most instances, stains can exterior is composed of brick 10 inches by 15 inches, with ir- than a cleaning, your only solu- In regular edges. The rest of thd tion is to remove all thd shellac be removed with a damp and wood siding and a large ex- or with water and a panse of glass. Two story col- vinyl is in good condition and Rub with denatured alcohol and sponge, we'd hate to have to replace follow with a thorough sanding. mild detergent. The panels re- the entire flooring. Would it You can then decide whether sist dents, mars and scuffs, and or other will not split, crack or splint- IDesign S-16 has a living be a good idea to try and match to apply nw shellac ¦' room, dining room, kitchen, the pattern with a couple of finishing material — or whether er. ; family room, lavatory, laun- vinyl tiles, cutting but the bad dry-mod room, and en- section and replacing it with the trance foyer, totaling 1,159 tiles? square feet. There are fom* A.— That's a possibility, but bedrooms and two baths on you might run into difficulty in the second floor, adding 893 making a perfect match, Also, sqaare feet. The two-car ga- you'd have to be certain that tbe rage, which has separate thickness of the tiles was,ideh- storage areas, has a foil tical with that of the present de-cft above it. There is an- flooring. A more certain way to other deck and a patio at make an inconspicuous patch, the rear. Over-all dimen- FRONT CHIMNEY and vertical columns extending from ance and a pleasant portico in front of the entrance door and is to cut out the damaged sec- sions, which include the the ground to the roof balance the generally horizontal dxterior family room. tion in a single piece — pre- garage, are 69 ft. by 25 ft. lines of this two-story house, which has a clean, crisp appear- ferably using a blade cutter 8 to. with a handle, although a slaip second floor overlooking the liv- knife will do. Place the piece of umns at the front of the bouse vinyl over a part of the floor- provide a pleasant motif which ing room. ing that can't be seen, prlaps enhances tiie regal-looking en- The fe*w steps from the living under the bed or bureau. Cut trance. By contrasting strong room to the midplatforrn afford around the edges, working horizontal lines with the verti- a shorter climb from the living slowly and carefully. You then f - A*'' A% ' ' cal columns, architect Samuel will have a replacement patch . < ;;j room to the bedlrooms, in addi- ' — -u-v*""—"< Paul has given the structure a of the right size, down to- the - V A. " ' subtle balance. tion to serving as a most at- tiniest fraction of an inch. If - Give yourself a handsome new driveway J « * tractive entry when entertain- the pattern requires an exact ^ A CERTAIN glamour -which ing. %Ttedwood paneling is effec- match, be sure you select the Ready-mixed concrete results, from multi-level inter- tive on this entilre wall. A true proper spot for cutting the du- iors, and which is unusual ,in brick planter is nestled along- plicate piece. Before cementing makes it so easy two - story homes has been side this stair, bathed in an the vinyl, scrape off an old achieved here by raising the liv- abundance of daylight. Large adhesive. When the patch is in today. An attractive concrete driveway can give your home¦«.; ing room four steps above expanses of glass at both the place, weight it down, using a whole new personality. And it's so simple to have with, ready.: ground level, front and rear permit the en- stack of heavy books or some- mixed concrete. No clutter, no big clean-upjob. Ready-mix makes The spacious cathedral-ceil- trance of daylight, with - wide thing similar. " the job neat, quick—and of top quality. The concrete ingredients lnged living room is 22 8 by 13 roof overhangs offering shade »¦> enjoys both front and rear views EMBRACING the front wall ago they were coated with shel- vide a driveway of lifelong durability. Call your in addition to overlooking the for- of the living room is a brick concrete contractor. Hel| show you distinctive mal dining room. Embracing fireplace with a. wide hearth in new ideas for modern driveway designs. . the same side of the living room addition to a wide stone fore- as the dining room is the highly hearth. attractive double-run stair to tbe ¦ The roomy entrance foyer has WT ' J AA ' M? Weal .. For a free Estimate Gall . • . second-floor bedrooms. Balcon- been well placed so that every ^JE^ ^^ ^^ m Belle»lew ies at both the midplatforrn and room on the first floor, includ- ^HB ing the kitchen, is separately en- mmW'- 1A ¦ Winona Daily News ^ phone 83136 • . ¦ " Winona, Minnesota terable. The kitchen offers one full wall for an informal dining MONDAY, OCTOBER tfu&j bm. ttiuilL 27. 1969 arrangement. Two pairs of slid- \i A (iAi^ff^^^fipfaB ing windows over the double §ink • Kitchen ciblnett • h'ortnlc* Topt bowl create a light and airy • Wardrobes • Vappan Appllancti • Store FJxturei • De.kt • VanlHn room. FREE Adjoining the kitchen is a high- ESTIAAATES HAGER ly compact service area com- posed of a laundry, double clos- ets, a pantry closet, mud foyer CABINETS and lavatory, as well as entran- ces to the garage, rear patio • 18 Door Style* and family room. . ' ¦ ' *• 6 Finishes or Unfinished UPSTAIKS, th«re are four bed- « Oak or Birch Wood rooms and two full baths. There is lots of closet space, including • Special Cabinet Built 18 lineal feet off hanging space "bedroom SECOND FLOOR PLAN « Vanity Cabinets in the master closet. Over the entire garage is a pri- FLOOR PLANS: Plenty of space for out- and the garage; a deck reached through slid- 0 Countertop* vate deck, accessible from the door relaxation here, with large rear patio, ac- ing glass doors from the living room; and master bedroom and ideal for cessible from the dining room, laundry area an even larger deck off the master bedroom. FOR A FREE sunbathing and relaxing. ESTIMATE ON YOUR There is a partial cellar un- der the bouse fcelow the living Shopping Center KITCHEN CALL room. Its windows are above More Detailed Plans grade for full l£ght and ventila- Full study plan information on this architect-designed For A tion. The space is more than House of The Week is obtainable in a 50-cent baby blueprint pple Valley GAIL'S adequate for tbe heater room which you can order with this coupon, MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The and storage. The laundry and an Also we have available two helpful booklets at 51 Rev. F. J. largen, mayor of the APPLIANCE abundance of additional storage each : "Your Home — How to Build, Buy or Sell It" and south Twin Cities suburb of Ap- 215 E. 3rd St. space have been more conven- "Ranch Homes," including 24 of the most popular homes ple Valley, said Friday that a iently located on the first floor that have appeared in the feature. major shopping center and 4210 other Phon* adjoining the kitchen, garage The House of the Week facilities are expected to be con- and outdoor patio. Winona Daily News ¦ structed on what is now the Winona , Minn., 55987 ¦ ,. "" Southpon airport. ' Enclosed is 50 cents each for baby blueprints Largen said no timetable has of Design No. S-16 be«n established for the center Enclosed is $1 for Ranch Homes booklet *. but it is hoped the project will Enclosed is $1 for Your Home booklet include a civic center, library, theaters and office buildings. . Name •• The airport site contains 160 .... acres. Street ..,. •-

City State Zip 1 / DIAl structure win be $19,000, m 8-5147 City Issues OTHER PERMITS: need North American Insurance Co., Minneapolis, Minn., $7 ,000 F0R F r V cosrcreta M -U^ I MLT H&3t%fly%^W ^^JHBl ° * " j construct canopy in front ot TOP I ¦^t^MW *. <"" u*- Wo / a HfF Phillips 65 Service Station, 1656 I § QUALITY m Permit for W. Service Dr., contractor, * r' ' and on tho doK Madison , Inc., Tulsa , Okla. If ELECTRICAl m \ ^ ^ J/h / m Bernard Sheridan, 422 S. Baker St., $1,350, apply siding VJJ REPAIRS $ 40fh House to t22 S. Baker St., Horner Now ! year-end savings. Save 100 or mo re A building permit for the con- Home Improvement Co. fc4j'\ and on struction of one new house domi- Marvin Witt , 200 E. King St„ new cabinets for any average-size kitchen ,000, construct carport ,NSTAllATI K MODERN nated the Winona building scene $1 , Gene Ut^O °N P Maroushek . last week, v A\ WORK according to building Mrs. Hazel Knopi ck, 570 W. • Oak or birch - your choic. permit applications on file at Broa dway, $800, enclose porch, the oity engineer's office. Earl Lnufenberger. • 12 different styles-your choice I I CONCRETE CO. Royce - Sather Construction Formerly Carpenter Ready-Mix j_Ri Elmer Tarras, 613 E. Belle- ¦gill ^H Co., 703% E. Broadway, drew view St., $10O, remodel Lake, • 7 different finishes-your choice ¦ttl PHONE 6716 ¦ HO a permit for construction of a FREE ESTIMATES view Drive-in , R10 E. Sarnia St. J2 L1 F°R BL^* split foyer home at 1787 Edge- See our displays. Choose from woocl Rd. The home will be TOTAL valuation for permits our entire line of top-quality Dura-Suprem e cabinets. Save heated by a gas-fired forced nir drawn so far this year is $fi ,- style or finish on anvy furnace and will have an at- 4!)!),r>8», compared with $7,204 ,717 you choose. tached garage. Cost of tho for the same period in 1068, BAUER Forty permits for new houses ELECTRIC, INC. ^^fc^^^ Complete kitchen remodel! ng...a\ services have been drawn this year com- ^_ k,tchen1r m Star, m East Third St. ______. l\l remodeling.dard Lumber. We 're experienced in pared with 30 on this eiamo ^ B9MMPIM £ We guarantee date one yenr ago. ^MtBffiiSi lffl ^^ satisfaction. S MsMmkWmMi• i j ^mmmmwwWL^Wn55?MJ>MBH^rBHBMHHMi i'mwrn B0ILER REPAIRS m, A ] ^jkjrim J^^^^^ Our 75th year of dependable service • • • I H0M IMPROVEMENTS Zir SIART* with a Freo Estimate by BEDROOM "' STANDARD 0 Your service center forLUMBER buflding ITCHEN . . BRUCE McNALLY SET H QME BU|lD|NG CONTRACTOR A NEW ENTRY ... J 304 lalc. Si Phon

**** ^ mmmmmmmw—*w^—*w__—i——r—MIMWW ——^—— .. . ¦ I . HARMONY HIGH I (First Pub., Monday, Oct. », 1949) HERE'S HOW Railroad Merger , (Spe- State of Minnesota ) ss. ¦ Minnesota ' « HARMONY ) In Probate Court . County of Winona LeVander to cial) — This is class ring week No. 17,038 Awaits Decision In Re Estate Of for the junior* class. Ring selec- William Theodore Pehler, a/Va Meet With ST. PAUL (AP) spokes- lay and Friday WlUlam T. Pettier, Decedent. — A tions aie oh disp Order for Hearing on Pellllon far Good Roofing man for one of the applicant students wilf be measured for Probate of will, Limiting Time to Flla tbe rings. Today, seniors will Claims and for Hearing Thereon. AEC Officials lines in the northern lines rail- Mkhaet G. Pehler having filed a peti- Planning order announcements and name -the probate of the Will ef said Hints tion for road merger said Saturday he ST. PAUL (AP) Gov. Haiv decedent and for the appointment of — doubts that the U.S. Suprenie cards. Gives Wind, old LeVander will include a Michael G. Pehler as Executor, The Court will hand down a decision Provisions of which Will are «n ¦flla meeting with Dr. Glenn Sea- (Pub. Date Monday, Oct. 27, IW) In this Court and open to Inspection) on the merger before late De- IT IS ORDERED, that the hearing Minutes of 1h» SpKlal Mtclin. ol tht borg, chairman of the Atomic cember. thereof be had on November 14, 1969» Fire Protection reasonably have a School Board of Independent at 10:45 o'clock A.M., before thla Court For Energy Commission, on a three- 'We could ¦ in the probate court room In the court Home Building School District No. $61 be nostalgic about the By VIVIAN BROWN area wants to know whether luddy puddle, and that prob- Don't- day stay in Washington, D.C, decision any time after laU De- house Irs Winona, Minnesota, and that you Wlnon*, Minnesota oblecllons to the allowance of said will, AP Newsfeatnres Writer they should build a little house ably they wouldn't be happy in old homestead when 're this week. cember and it could go as late shopping for a new one. You'll October 13, IW if any, be filed before said tlmt ol Fall is a good time to plan a in. the neighborhood or sell the their little home. Architects us- , as next June," he said; hearing; that the time within which soon discover that today's LeVander will meet with* tjie The special meeting ot the Scliool Board creditors of said decedent may file their that you plan to build In land and move to another area. The Supreme Court took the ol Independent School District No. 861, house ually suggest building a house homes are better than ever. AEC director Wednesday, the claims be limited to four months from spring. There is opportunity to The family will not be in a po- that will complement the site. case under advisement after Winona, Minnesota, was held Monday the date hereof, and that the claims so What a new hduse may lack day after be is due to meet with afternoon, October 13. 1969. size up the site and to make un- sition to maintain the large There is no reason, of course, hearing oral arguments last filed be heard on February 24, 1970, at is that warm, settled-in feeling the Minnesota congressional Chairman Allen called the meeting to 11 o'clock A.M., before this Court In the decisions. The goody- Tuesday and Wednesday from order at 5:10 p.m. hurried acreage in appropriate style, why the house can't be small you got used to in your old delegation. probate court room In the court house goody part of it enables you to even if they do build on the site. But it should be an aesthetic interests favoring and opposing The roll was called and the following In Winona, Minnesota, and that notlca home. But that's something The governor is scheduled to members were present: Chairman Franfc hereof be given by publication of thU change the plans all winter long, Two well-landscaped louses addition to the community, and the merger. . J. Allen, Cleric Kenneth p. Nelson, Treas- only you can provide. begin his Washington stay to- order In the Winona Dally News and by if you like. What prospective that adjoin their properly are one really has an obligation to Involvement of the high court urer Dr. C. R. Kollofskl, and Charles W. mailed notice as provided by law. day. This afternoon he will tour Rogers. Vice-chairman Dr. L. L. Korda Dated October 16, 1969. owner doesn't enjoy do- three times the size o! the one maintain the land in proper NEW HOMES offer the bene- came on an appeal by the and Daniel S. Sadowskl were absent. Al- home the Rehabilitation Center far Al- S. A. Sawyer, ing that? And if you do not they would plan, and they would style. fits of modem qualify materials Justice Department on a three- so present were A. L. Nelson, Superinten- Probate Judge, coholism at Occuquan, ya. The dent of Schools, Paul W. Sanders, Busi- (Probate Court Seal) have the epportmrity, it might be sandwiches in the middle. Another family s house prob- that are better-looftuig, longer- judge federal panel ruling which ness Manager, Gordon Holte, reporter for ' center1 Is one of the most ad- Hull arvd Hull. be frustrating. This family is aware that lem is a traditional vs modern lasting and easier to maintain backed a 1967 decision of the the Winona Dally News, and John Gary, Attorneys for Petitioner. A family with land in a posh they would be little fish in a one. They have land in a Co- than the products used when vanced treatment centers for al- Interstate Commerce Commis- reporter for radio station KWNO. coholics in the nation. Purpose of Special Meeting (First Pub., Monday, Oct. 50, 1969) lonial area, but their hearts are your old home was built. 'This sion. The ICC approved the uni- Chairman Allen announced the special means greater comfort and con- Tuesday, LeVander is slated to fication. meeting and had been called to approve STATE OF MINNESOTA set on a modern house. the payrolls and bills lor the month of COUNTY OF WINONA Property venience — and fewer upkeep attend a meeting of the Educa- DISTRCT COURT Transfers A stark modern house would The proposed merger of the October. problems .—. through all your tion Commission of the States. Great Northern, Northern Pa- Payrolls Approved THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT Hardboard May In Winona County rattle the timbers in the neigh- years, of new -home ownership. LeVander also plans to meet Mr. Nelson moved that payrolls be State o* Minnesota, by Douglas M. borhood, no doubt, but it must cific, Burlington and the Spo- approved as follows: Head, Efi Attorney General, WARRANTY DEED Tbe emphasis on quality in with Vice President Spiro Ag- Petitioner, be judged in relation to the oth- kane, Portland & Seattle rail- HomeSound Instructor! I2.4M.57 . Jos J. Kornmeyer et ux to Lasler today's homes is due primarily new concerning Voyageurs Na- Substitute Teachen 1,417.50 vs. LaPluer. et .ux-Part roads would create a line with Both bf sVt ot NW'A er houses in the area. It might to tecbnoloiycal advances and Miscellaneous . 1,657.45 Edward J. Schossow, School Used of Sec. - Be 11-105-5, •• ;•• tional Park. No precise time District- 2544, formerly School High School Credit ' be screened from view and not 26,500 miles of trackage in 17 Emil George, to Edward R. Pnyfar- new manufacturing techniques for the'meeting has been set instructors 73S.O0 District 3, School District 33, : skt et ux—Lots 1 end 2. Block 9, Laird's be a shocker. states and two Canadian prov- RHIa Thomas, Amanzo Thom- ¦ that make use of tie best prod- The governor is seeking Workstudy Program 56.88 Add. to winona, legis- inces. Noon Hour Supervisors J92.O0 as, County of Winona, ef al, Frances F; Miller to Aloysius L. Jan- The solution might lid in some ucts of American industry feasi- Inside and Out lation to authorize the national Overtime Payrolls 1,169.60 Respondents. ice et ux—Lot 'iS/ Block 11, Plumei"a Add. of the pewer contejnporary de- ble even in moderately-priced park for the Kabetogoma Penin- Cafeteria Student Workers .. 336.70 m THE MATTER OF THE New moddl cars unveiled each to Winona. l and that payrolls be ratified In the CONDEMNATION OF CERTAIN . signs that blend in with Colonial homes. One example is modem year usually feature innova- Roy J. How» el - ux to Charles F. sula in northern Minnesota. | amount of tl^U.06. LA NDS FOR TRUNK HIGHWAY Schafer et Ux-Lot 9,. Block 117, OP Wi- architecture. asphalt shingfe roofing, which Dr. Kollofskl seconded; motion car- PURPOSES high style and low care. nona. ' ' Order for Hearing on Petition for tions in It is a fabulous look, and it is used on four out of five resi- ! ricd. . .. " The same is true of homes. 0. S. Odegaarden to Harold H. Kreu- SEX APPEAL SALES [ : Bills Approved Pa-yment of Award as to Parcel rer-N, ISO ft. of EVi of Lot 4 of is so perfectly integrated into its dences. The new shingles offer Mr. Nelson moved that bills represent- IS7B S. P. £580 (90=391) 904 Lakeside Outlols to Winona. IEHH I 090-3 (23) 247 s bomebuyers will be greater durability, minimal Sex appeal continues to be a 3» ed by check and vouchers No. 567 Today' site that it seems to belong, no model houses that offer Lester LaFlutr et ux to Jack A. Ma- maintenance, effective wind ?nd significant sales asset in mod- through 1025, both numbers Inclusive, seeing loney-Part of SVi of NW'A of Sec. matter what the architecture In the amount of (120,752.36 be ap- Common School District No. 2544, luxury touches, more* space, a tl-05-3. fire protection, and a wide ern homes. A national builders' proved. Dr. Kollofskl seconded; motion Winona County, Minnesota, having filed John H. of the area. wider choice of color, new pat- Tesch eJt- ux to Beat* C. tews ran?e of colors. magazine notes that model carried. . a petition with this court asking for —SH of Lots 9 and 70, Block 2, Turn- To a great extent, country ar- Hearing on Extension ef payment of fhe award as to Parcel er's Add. to Village of Lewiston homes — already softly-lit and lEMKt and designs aiiid mini- . 37B; and terns , chitecture is changing to accom- ROOFING benefits such as PHONE 7466 Cummings Slreet mal maintenance materials in- James A. Schultl et ux to Clenn W. lusbly furnished—have added Superintendent Nelson stated that me WHEREAS, the following named per- Schultz et ux-E>/_ of WA and NW14 modate special interests; It isn't these increase horn**beauty and City Planning Commission, was planning son Is with the petllloner named In the Sf=y« ' two new sensual lures: roman- side and but. Some of these of and SW'A of NEW Of S«c. 35- all Colonial. In many instances, value and decrease upkeep a hearing on the proposed extension of aforementioned award determined by the materials, such as hardboard 10S-*. tic background music and sub- Cummings Slreet from Gilmore Avenue to Commissioners In the above entitled Glenls Anderson «t al to Glenn W. contemporary exterior designs costs For instance: Highway 61. Since this street will pass matter, to-wlt: RHIa Thomas ; paneling, will be old "friends" Schultz et tle wiffs of perfume (the latter GEO. KARSTEN ux-EVi of WW and NW'4 of resemble architecture of old he- • ffeawweight asnhalt shin- General Contractor through the high school property, it was NOW, THEREFORE, IT fS ORDERED in new, up-dated guise". SE'A and SWYt of NEVi Of Ste. 3J-1M-A. sprayed through the house just suggested that soma memlers of fhe that a. hearing on said petition be held Florence cause there . are solidifying as- gles, whicb weigh 290 or more Mauer to Bernard B. Dorman before opening hours). ¦" ' School Board be present at the hearing at 10 o'clock AJJi. on the 10th day of et ux-W. 50 ft. of Lot TB, of pounds per 100 square feet of . HARDBOARDS have been de- Villas* pects — heavy shingles and roof fo voice their , opinion on whether or November, 1969, af the Courthouse In Elba. lines that are not strictly mod- roof area, last longer than not an oblection would ba made to tha Winona, Minnesota and that a copy of veloped into an elegantly deco- Leslie Hilke «t al to Altura Com- shingles. extension. this order be sent by certified mall munity Retirement Homes, Inc.—Lots 3, ern. Yet, there are wide ex- standard weight Thev AdjoummMt to saki RHIa Thomas at her last known rative building material that -4, 5, 6 ahd N. 9.* ft. of Lot 7, Block are designed to give from 20 Dr. Kollofskl moved tha meeting be address If such Is known to the petition- 2, Hllke panses of glass, sliding doors combines new glamour finishes 's 4th Add. to Village of AI- to 25 vears of service. adjourned. Dr. Rogers seconded, /.lo- er, and. In addition thereto, that a copy 1ura. and other features that are tion carried. of this order be published In a legal with unique hard-wear, low-care Clarence E. Fletcher et ux io James truly modern. • Top-of-the-Iine shingles, if The meeting was ad|ourned at 5:22 p.m. newspaper within tha County of Winona qualities. Recent surveys show Y. Sweaiey et ux — Part ot Lot 21 properly installed, require lit- [ KENNETH P. NELSON, once, a week for three successive week* of Subd May . of Sec. 20-107-7. Occasionally, one sees a stark We that virtually every builder* us- tle or no care. Periodic roof JBk i Clerk. prior to said hearing. ' Clarence J. Duellman et ux to Mer- modern house that seems per- Dated this 9tti day of October; 1969. es some type of hardboard in chants National Bank— E'ly 4t ft. of maintennnce, on tfte other hand, (First Pub. Monday, Oct. 27, 1969) 1*1 Glenn E. Kelley, new home construction. Statis- Lot 7, Block 14, OP Winona. fectly attuned to its 'Colonial is troublesome- and exoensive. Judge of District Courl. Royce Construction, Inc., to Thomas J. surroundings. These houses often Stale of Minnesota ) ss. tics also indicate a growing pre- Slaggie el ux-Lot i, Block 3, Royce. • Attractive roof colors can Serve You? County of Winona ) in Probate Court (First Pub., Monday, Oct. 20, 1969) I No. 16 Sather Subd. No. 2. are built into the natural rock ,950 ference among builders arid enhance the appearance of the \yy State of Minnesota ) ss. G. L. Welshorn et ux to Aid's Lee- In Re Estate ol setting. There is one drawback. - ¦ County ef Winona ) In Probate . Court homeowners for hardboard ex- Part of SWVi of SWA and SEV< of entire house exterior. The wide Minnie Zesslit, Decedent. . . For the average person, such No, 17,029 terior sidings. SW'/J of Sec. 8-104-5. choice available in asphalt shin- Order lor Hearing on Final Account Millie Denzer houses are high priced and Petition for Distribution. In Re Estate Cf to Betty Haedtke—Pert . gles (white Jelma Kratch, Decedent. Of .SlrYW. Of NW'A Of Sec. 2-107-8. , brack, pastels, The representative of the . above named Reasons for hardboard's popu- , O rter ler Hearing on Petition la Ivls Fulford et al to Ervan A. Abts et In choosing a house for your blends and earth" and 'forest'> estate having filed his fina l account and larity arg its durability and ver- " Determine Descent ux-Lot 4, Block 4, E. R. Boiler petition for settlement and allowance ' s 3rd site, you may be limited archi- shades) also aUo*ws easy* color Michael G. Pehler having filed In this satility. A wood product en- Add. to Village of Goodvlew. thereof and for distribution to tha per- tecturally by the site Court a petition representing, among .Royce & Sather Construction Co lo . coordination of the roof with sons thereunto entitled; gineered for uniform density . other things, thaf said decedent died Royca Construction, Inc.—Lot 6, Block IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing If it is a good-sized corner lot, other house features and with Intestate more than five years prior to and extra strength, hardboard 2, Royce-Sflther Subd. No. 2. thereof be had on November 19, 1969, at the home site. the fflling thereof, leaving certain pro- Merchants National Bank to Clarence you may do pretty much what 10:45 o'clock A.M., before this Court in can take heavy abuse without perty In Winona County, Minnesota, and J. .Duellman tt ux—E. 38 tt. of Lot 3, you like. '" the probate court room in the court house • Fire-resistant roofing pro- that no will of said decedent has been splitting, splintering, denting or Block-23, OP Winona. In Winona, Minnesota, and that notice vides extra protection for your POLAGHEK I proved, nor administration of her estate Evelyn A long slender piece of prop- I hereof be given by publication of this Bpllman | et mar to Alvln Uthke marring. It requires virtually J granted, In this State and praying that et ux-Part home and family. order In the Winona Dally News and of NW/i' ¦ of¦ NW/< of sec. can be a miserable site to . The "Under- no care. An occasional damp- 28-107-7. -...: ¦» . ' ' erty by mailed notice as provided by law. the keeps wall panels, look- Walter J. Atldter et ux to Ceclt Ells- ELECTRIC I j persons entitled thereto; ried by asphalt I S..A. SAWYER, worth *et ux-NW'A phihglfs shows of Sec. 19-106-9. a ranch-style hous& You are lim- H , That the hearing IT IS ORDERED ing new; exterior siding is easy QUIT CLAIM DEED they have passed 875 W. Howard j Probate Judge. ited more or less to a two- tests for re- | • j |fl j thereof be had on November 14, 1969, Margaret McCready to Wilma Lede- fProbate Court Seal) to install and maintain. sistance to flame spread af 10:45 o'-tock A.M., before this Court, buhr-Lot 11, Block 13, story house. , ffame Plynn 4 Schulte, Cummlnsa, | Phone 9275 \ \ In the Probate Court Room, hi the Court A variety of heautiful finish- Vila 8. Gould' spread, flame exposure and the • fM By: Thomas A. Flynn s 2nd Add. to Winona. Another nightmare is the land House, In Winona, Minnesota, and that Wllma Ledobuhr et al to Margaret Mc- es makes hardboard suitable for danger of burning brands. Thomas A: Flynn, notice hereof be given by the publication Cready-Lot 11, Block 13, Cummings, parcel with an odd shape, par- Attorney* for Petitioner, of tfils order In the Winona Dally New* every room in the house. Wall Vila & Gould's 2nd Add. to Winona. • Self-sealing shingles, which ticularly one that, is narrow in 111 East Cedar Street, and by mailed notice as provided by law. J. R. Keller et al to Village." panels come in handsome wood- of Stodi- bear the UL label for wind- Houston Dated October 2, 1969. ton-Lot 8, Block front and wider at the rear. , Minnesota. ¦ 77». Vilftje of Stock- S. A. Sawyer, grains, decorator colors, inter- ton. . , resistance, have a factory- A good house designer might Probate Judge. Abts (First Pub, Monday, Oct. 27, 1969) esting patterns and textures, . Agency, Inc, . to Evarlst 6. S^ applied adhesive that effective- (Probate Court Seal) bolta et pull off something spectacular ux—Lo* 8, Block 5, Hamil- ly bonds each shingle to the STATE OF MNNESOTA Hull and Hull, even exotic marble surfaces. ton's Add in meeting this challenge. You one . to Winona. below In high wind COUNTY OF WINONA Attorneys lor Petitioner. Delicate filigree panels are* pop- la E; GuWlnger to Raymond J. might have a house built on two . areas, self- DISTRICT COURT .. M , connecting Mullen et ux-Part of Lot 33, Plat of sealers can be a home-saver. THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT (First Pub., Monday, Oct. 20, 1969) ular for screens Village oL Rollingstone or three levels that would be and Subd. of SUMMONS ' " doors and accents. Plastic-sur- SWW of Sec S-lOT-D. smashing. People often get State of Minnesota ) is. :. APARTMENT SCHOOLS County of Winona ) In Probata Court Standard Lumber Co. 1o. Royce-Sether Leo E. Hareltoit, faced panels which resist hu- their .greatest inspirations from No. 1T.02J Construction C6.-Lot 6. Block 2, Plaintiff, Royce- Large apartment complexes In Re Estate Of midity and moisture are often Sather Subd. No. 2. - coping with such problems, and -VI.- Ben G. Pehler, Decedent. Gladys Elden to Olaf Gierke et are beginning to feature nur- Dorle R. Haielton, used in feitcbens, laundry rooms al- the house mght prove to be Order for Hearing en Petition tt SVz at NW fractional Quarter; NV4 of Defendant. sery schools for children bf Determine Descent and baths. SEy«,- NEW of SW fractional Quarter more of a conversation piece THE STATE OF MINNESOTA TO THE working mothers Michael G. Pehler having filed In and N. 30, acres of Wli of SW fractional than any other house they . It's a sales ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT: could this Court a petition representing, amona EXTEBTDR panels are espe- Quarter, all in Sec. 18-107* attraction for Will Polathek You are hereby summoned and required and S. 28 build. tenants who J other things, that said decedent died R. of W. 14 R. 7 ft. of SW14 of NE14 of \ to answer the complaint ot the plaintiff cially designed for weather-re- Sec, 18-107-8. would otherwise spend time which Is on file In the office of the Intestate more than five years prior ta Residential Commercial Industrial < the tiling thereof, leaving certain pro- sistance. They will not rot or Olaf B|erke to .Gladys EWen-$>, _ DIVIDERS AND CONQUERS driving youngsters to and from | • • clerk of the above-named Court and to ef perty In Winona County, Minnesota, and) NW fractlqnal quarter; N^S ol serve a copy of your answer upon the rust, and can withstand dam- SPVi; A large room can do double off-site schools. that no will of said decedent has been NEW of SW fratrtlonal Quarter and N. Subscriber at his office In the City of proved, nor administration of his estita age from surface impacts. Sid- 30 acres of WW of SW fractional Quarter, duty as two smaller ones if it' Winona, County of Winona, and the State s granted, In this State and praying that aff In Sec. Tff-tOT-a and S. ef Minnesota, within thirty (30) days ing styles are available to blend 28 R. of W. divided with a fold-away wall fhe descent of said property be deter- 14 R. 7 ft. of SW/4 of HEM. Sec. 18- alfer the service ot this Summons »jpon with Colonial, traditional and 107-8. of wood louver doors. Here's you, exclusive of the day of service, and mined and that It be assigned te tha FINAL DECREE If you fall to so answer the complaint ai persons entitled thereto; temporary home decor. how tb do it: Hang a series of ir IS ORDERED, Thaf fhe hearing Julia Sather, decedent, to Glenls herein required, the plaintiff will apply An- thereof be had on November 14, 1949, Hardboard siding is consider- derson et al—EVi of WA and folding wood louver doors on to the Court for the relief demanded NWV« of at 10:45 o'clock A.M., before this Court, SEVi and SW/i if NE14 ef Set. 3MOJ-6. therein. ed a good thermal insulator — an overhead ceiling track In tfte Probata Court Room, In the Court Otto D. Kempe, decedent, to Ernest Dafed el Winona, Minnesota, House, In Winona, Minnesota, and that which can save heating and P. Kempe—Pari ot Lots 13 and U, Blr- midway across the room. Open- this 22nd dey of October , 1969. notice hereof be given by the publication cooling costs —¦ and an excel- fle's 2nd Add. to City of St. Charles. ed to their full length, the PLYWOOD Peterson & Challeen, Ltd. of this order In the Winona Dally John Mueller, decedent, to Mela New* against Vera- doors form a handsome wall" and by mailed notice as provided by law. lent sound barrier gulh et al—W'ly 3« ft. of E'ly 70 ft. of " By: Dennis A. Challeen Dated October ' 2,. 1969. street noises. Sound control Lota 2 and 3 and W'ly 3« ff. of N'ly 30 that effectively divides the ¦ Attorney for Plaintiff. S. A. Sawyer, ft. of E'ly 70 ft. of Lot 6. Block 137, 203 First National Bank Bldg,, tests of interior paneling show room in two. When you want «i3s^s^s^ Winona, Minnesota 55987 Probate Judge. OP Winona. - SPECIALS (Probale Courl Seal) to be equal to or PROBATE DEED to open up the room, just fold hardboard , Hull and Hull, Nellie A. Lees, dec, by admin., to (First Pub. Monday, Oct. 27, 19S9) better than other wall panels. the doors back against each Attorneys for Petitioner. Lester Wiskow et ux—Lot 3, Block 4, Slate of Minnesota ) ss , Birge's 1st Add; to St.' Charles. other. The doors, available in County ol Winona ) In Probate Court (Tint Pub., Monday, Oct. 20, 1949) ¦ stock sizes of pondeYosa pine No. 17*44 Building in Winona at local lumber dealers, take In R* tha Estate of State of Minnesota ) ss. STAY-DOWN SHINGLES Paul Knopp, Decedent. County ol Winona ) In Probate Court up practically no floor space, Order for Hearing lor Probate ef Will No. 13.108 19(19 Dollar Volume ...58,498,589 In Re Estate Of Almost one out of every two and can be stained or painted and fo Determine Descent. Commercial 4,716,042 Agnes Knopp, having tiled In this Court Lillian Larson a/k/a to blend with room decor Lillian Larsen, Decedent. Residential 1,118,148 ne*w asphalt shingle roofs is the . a petition representing that said dece- self-sealing variety, according dent died testate mtre than five years Order for Hearing on Petition ta Public (non- ONE BUILDER KNOWS prior to the filing 'hereof, leaving certain Determine Descent taxable ) 2,657,449 to U.S. Department of Com- Interior designers have come properly In Winona Counly, Minnesota, Michael G. Pehler having filed In thla. merce figures. Self-scaling 10 or More and -that no Will of said decedent has Court a petition representing, amonw New houses 40 up with a new decorating ap- been proved nor administration of his other things, that said decedent die* shingles are those which to 10 Sheets Intestate more than five Volume same con* proach geared to the lady of ALl 4'x8' SHEETS 1 Sheets estate granted. In this State, and pray- years prior tot date 1WS 57,201,717 tain a factory-applied adhesive ing that the last Wilt of said decedent the tiling thereof, leaving certain pro- , when activated by the the house. They advise build- presented and filed with said petition be pe rty in Winona Counly, Minnesota, and which ers to offer optional color admitted to probale and that the descent that no will of said decedent has been sun's heat, bonds each shingle of said property be determined and as- proved, nor administration of her estate to the one below. The shingles schemes to suit the housewife's V4" AD Interior $3.73 Ea $3,07 E, signed fo Ihe persons entitled thnrelo; granted, In this State and praying that complexion. For example: IT IS ORDERED, That seld petition tho descant ol said property ba deter- carry an Underwriters' Labora- cream, avacado and pink for be heard on November 23, 1969, at 10:45 mined and that It ba assigned to th* FOR tories label for proven resist- o'clock A.M., beiore this Court In the persons entitled thereto; 32^3 blonds ; lime, yellow and gold A" AC Exterior $4.11 E $3.47 Probate Court R oom In the Court House IT IS ORDERED, That tha hearing ance to high winds. V ». >. In Winona, Minnesota, and that objections thereof be had on November 14, 19691, for brunettes; and violet blue lo the allowance of said Will, If any, bo at 10 o'clock A.M., before this Court, FLEX-O-GLASS ELEVATOR CLOSETS and olive shades of redheads. filed before said time ol hearing, and In the Prolate Court Room, tn the Court %" AC Exterior $4.99 Eo. $4.39 Efc lhat notice hereof be olven by publication House, In Wlnono, Minnesota, and thet And All "Space age" homes may put ol this order In Ihe Winona Dally News notice hereof ba given by the publication and by mulled notice as provided by of this order In fhe Winona Dally Newi Weatherstripping commercial laundries out of M +mm^jm law . and by mailed notice as provided by law. Needs ... business. Home features al- | COMPLETE 3/4" AD Interior $7.24 Ea. $6.49 E.. Dated October 24 , 19W . Doled Oclober, 16, 1969. ready1 on the drawing board in- S, A. SAWYER, S. A. Sawyer, ^m Probate Judgt. Probata Judge, KV fProbate Court Seal) (Probate J& ^m clude : elevator closets that Court Seal) clean last season' clothes -and William A, Lindquist, Hull and Hull, s Vi " CD Exterior $4.79 Ea. $4.19 Ea, Atlorney for Petitioner. Atlorney for Petitioner. store them in the attic, dry cleaning equipment In bed- (First Pub. Monday. Oct, 13, 1969) (First Pub. Monday, Oct. 11, 1969) Ek( o/i&$ State of Minnesota ) ss. State of Minnesota > ai. and son- Wm specialize in all typot: E E rooms and bathrooms, %" CD Plugged Exterior $6.94 _ $6.19 .. County ol Winona ) |n Counly ol Winona RESIDENTIAL Probate Court > In Probata Court . ? ic cleaners*in entrance hulls to • No. 17,037 No. 17,035 I1™^F remove dust and dirt from cut- • COMMERCIAL In Re Cstatt ef In R« Estate of ACE HARDWARE BONDED Frederick J. vollmer, also known it Louisa Mueller, Decedent. er garments. • F. J. Vollmer/ Decedent. O rdcr for Hearing on Petition for Probata QUALITY SHEET order for Hearing on Petition far Probate ef Will, Limiting Time to File Clalmi CEILING TILE mm ol Will end Codicil, Limiting Tim* lo and for Hearing Thereon, METAL WORKS, Ine. File claims and tor Hearing Thereon. Winona National and Savings Bank IISI B. BroiUwiy - Prior,* «-4«H ¦H- Joan M. Hansen having filed a petition having filed a petition for tha probate I I 12"xl2" Plain Whito 1 Ar ea- rtiMffilSffifeX for the probata of lha Will and Codicil cf the Will of said decedent and for • AUI# F&SV ol said decedent and for the appointment the appointment ot Winona National and B>-^^\: A of The First National Bonk of Winona ai Savings Bank as Excculor, which Will It STOP@@Q® WINTER DRAFTS Administrator wllh fhe Will Annexed, on file In this Court and open to In- -i— 7tU!d& ~-~ —ifc* Transparent Plaatic . .«.,r am.** which Will and Codicil Is on flla In this spection; - Court and open lo Inspection; ftlfo J Kf™ IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing SS STORM KITS Jll IT IS ORDERED, The' tha hearing thereof be had on November 5, 1969, 4) frtMiy thereof be had on November 5, 1969, at 10:4J o'clock A.M.. before this Court 10I3O o'clock A.M., before Ihls Court In In the pro _at« court room In the cou rt Ihe probale court room In the court house house In Wlnonn, Minnesota, ond th-a| , GARAGE DOORS, In Winona, Minnesota, and lhat oblecllons oblecllons to lh« allowance ol said Will, See Us for SUSPENDED CEILINGS to the allowance ot snld Will, nnd Codicil, IS any, t>o (lied before said lime of It any, b« filed before said time of hear- htarlnoi thnt the lime within which WEATHERSTRIPPING, B LOWING INSULATION ing; thai the lime within which creditors creditors al sold dccdint may fllo their KIT BROS of said decedent may (lie their clnlms bo clninu he limited to lour months fn>m dSfib^to f STORWl WINDOW 3 9£. DADD . limited to four months from Ihe data t ils date horrol, nnrl that tho claims Kit consists of 36* x 72* tough plastic llUDD STORE hereof, and that the claims so filed tia so filed he heard on February 17, 1970, «. PCi!xV''A>zl ||no1 nfl||s heard en February 17, 1970, at 10:30 al 10:30 o 'clock A.M.. ticlore this Court shBOt 18ft flbra m )uW,n8 - 574 E. 4th St. Phon* 4007 o'clock A.M.. b«fore Ihls Court In the In Iho probnle court room in the court -JvnJv *r/ rl r " * probata court rmm In lha court S^ ' ' ' fiousa houii In Winona, Mlnneiota , and lhat - !C ^Y^&1 STORM DOOR KIT 49f. YOU ALSO GET . . . In Wlnonn, Minnesota, and that notice notice heraol ba given hy publication Kit consists of 38' X 84* tough plaatic hereof (30 glvrn hy publication of this of Ihls Order In Iho Winonn Dally Ne*w» V X V f««-XJ? r order In the Wlnono Dfllly News / * shoot, 21 ft. of fibre moulding and nails. • More Widths end by and by mailed notice as provided by -I y7j lpn W« «r mailed nnllcn a> provided by l«w. D AW, outiid. Mora Thlcknossea BRIEN Dated October 10, 1969. ' Dated October 9, 1969 , Hardware & Lumber Denleri Evorywhora KENDELL-0 \\ _ vl At • r^ "Here to Serve" S. A, SAWYER , S. A SAWYfiR, ^SSdA—Jsi"-'*- -i- i.c-J... I W»rpllnn. nflmW* Pl"n«»r«ln PUitica • Easy Parking r: :;: c *>k*«0 6

ANDERSON SCORES ...Green Bay Packers' Donny Anderson is tackled by Atlanta Falcons' John Mallory, but North Stars 's first touchdown Sunday at too late to prevent Green Bay game in Green Bay. Anderson, who* has seen little action this season, started in place of injured Travis Williams. He eclipsed the 100-yard rushing mark in leading Green Bay to Go Through a 28-10 win. (AP Photofax) Long Practice Simpson Runs MINNEAPOLIS WV- Pittsburgh's goals. Jean Prono- Coach Wren Blair, obvious- vost and Ron Schock also hit the ly displeased with his Min- nets for the Penguins. nesota North Stars, liad his Na- Schock opened the scoring on tional Hockey League club skat- a power play and Prentice took ing through a lengthy practice Schock's centering pass as the Less for Bills Sunday. Penguins took a 2-0 first period PRESS passes of 41 yards to Larry SeU ' By THE ASSOCIATED The unusaal workout was or- edge. . . - .:• O.J. Simpson is running less. . pie and 53 to Jim Kiick to nail dered alter the North Stars fell Prentice, a 37-year-old veteran . and enjoying it more. down the Dolphins' first victor 4-1 to the hard-checking Pitts- who now has 299 goals in 17 of tbe season after five losses NHL seasons/took another cen- Buffalo's foot-loose yearling burgh Penguins Saturday night role of pass and a tie. fifth largest Minneso- tering pass at 13:35 of the sec- says he prefers the before the catcher to runner because "it Daryle Lamonica, having his ta crowd ever, 14,877. ond period and Pronovost com- finest season, threw three touch- pleted the Penguin scoring 12 springs me into the open and Blair waats the North Stars, gives me a chance to operate." down passes and Dave Grayson 3-4 for the season, to get the minutes into the third period. picked off three aerials to help kinks out before Wednesday Grant had received tne Calder Simpson saw enough daylight Oakland down San Diego. It was night's game at tbe Metropoli- Trophy as last season's rookie Sunday to grab four passes for the Raiders3 15th regular season of the year from NHL President 60 yards, but the Bills dropped a triumph without a loss over two tan Sports Center against the Clarence Campbell in pregame defending Stanley Cup champi- 24-6 American Football League¦ seasons, tying an AFL record ceremonies. game to Miami anyway. ' ' on Montreal Canadiens. It was Minnesota's second set by San Diego in 1960-61. The Penguins, who were, win- straight loss and left the North "We get behind so fast and of- Lamonica, completing IS of 28 less at 0-3-3 going into the game, Stars two points behind first ten that we have to throw and passes for 236 yards, boosted his were leading 4-0 \?ben North place St. Louis and one behind never get to establish a ground lea gue leading touchdown -pass Star left winger Danny Grant second place Oakland in the attack," said Simpson, who col- wtal to 20. Grayson's three in- took a pass from Claude Larose West Division. The Blues have lected a mere 12 yards rushing terceptions gave the Oakland and spoiled rookie Al Smith's nine points, Oakland seven and in 10 tries Sunday. "You've got safety six for tbe season and 45 bid for a shutout Minnesota six. to run a lot to get your timing. . in his nine-year career, tying Minnesota, rookie goaltender After playing Montreal, the . and I'm a little shaky in hit- the AFL record for lifetime Ken Broderick was impressive North Stars leave for a three- ting the holes." thefts. in spots, lut couldn't stand game road trip starting Satur- Elsewhere tn the AFL Sun- Kansas City halted Cincin- Pittsburgh's 35-shot barrage. day night at Pittsburgh. They day, Oakland dropped San. Die- nati's comeback bid and pulled Broderick had won the previous also play Sunday at Philadel- go, 24-12, to stay acop the tight off a pair of late lightning two games in which he appear- phia and Nov. 5 at Montreal be- Western Division scramble; scores to bounce the Bengals. ed. fore returning to meet St. louis NEW NFL RUNBACK RECORD . . . Green. Bay Packers' game at Green Bay. Adderley's toachdown sets new NFL Kansas Cit kept close behind Dean Prentice scored two y Warren MeVea romped 80 yards Nov. 8. Herb Adderley (26) dashes for goal line after intercepting pass record for interceptions run bade for touchdowns. He now has Oakland by "bombing Cincinnati, to a touchdown with 1:45 to go Intended for Atlanta Falcons' Gail CogdiH, right, Sunday at seven. Green Bay won 28-10. (AP Photofax) 42 22; New York kept its lead in and Goldk Sellers picked Dp the Eastern Division, whipping a fumble and rambled for an- Boston, 23-13, and Houston other score eight seconds later. Gopher Field Goal Stirs tripped Denver, 24-21. Emerson Boozer knifed Simpson, a player of greil ex- through Boston for a touchdown Wolverines To Come Back pectationsafter a gaudy college and Jkn Turner kicked a field Coatta My stifled by B ackj ers, career; now has picked tip 292 goal to cap fourth-period drives MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - While Moorhead, with a 21-yard run. yards rushing in 82 attempts— that gave f lewYork its victory the Michigan Wolverines belted The Wolverines completed the the credentials of a mere anor- ovner th. fired-up Patriots. out a postgame chorus of "Hail rout on . Lance Scheffler 's 10- tal. . ' Houston scored 10 points in to the Victors" in the toc&er- yard run and retreated to their "I've got a long-term contract the final li minutes to corns room, the Minnesota Gophers dressing room to sing. Hirsch Denies Graham Rumor .'.. and maybe that's a good from behind and nip Denver. tried to figure out what went "We always sing after a vic- was the difference. one point to Indiana. The Badg- Badgers' Ltoproving ground thing tbe way I'm coming wrong in the tory at Michigan MADISON, Wis. & — The second half Satur- ," said Michi- Wisconsin football squad which "We gave the ball away five ers missed sis field goals in force, added 100 yards rushing. along," he says, tongue in day. gan Coach Bo Schembechler. cheek. .. r was humiliated a week earlier times," he said, counting up the that game. Roger Jaeger made Indiana's Harry Gonso also Michigan knew. They got all 'That's the tradition.'' , The victory gave Michigan a by Northwestern just wasn't the pass interceptions and Wiscon- good Saturday on three of his threw four touchdown passes But the heralded runner has fired Up when Minnesota sopho- same club that unexpectedly sin's lone lost fumble. "They six field goal efforts. and receiver Jade Butcher tied more Mel Andersoo booted a 37- 4-2 season record and 2-1 Big also gained 197 yards on 16 Ten mark. clipped Indiana's Rose Bowl am- gave it back sis times." "Wisconsin has a lot of Cue a Big Ten record by catching catches. yard field goal with one second bitions Saturday. Pont said he didn't -want to football players on offense ," three of them. showing on the first half clock Bob Griese's quarterbacking as lhat Northwestern game detract from the Badgers, ef- Pont said. "We knew that be- finally got Miami's stuttering the Gophers took a 9-7 lead but insisted team fore we came here. Th* Hoosiers went out fn at intermission of the Little "will always remain a mystery fort, his " offense on the track in the last Lake City Boy -'played miserable football." Joe Dawkins, a senior who front for the only time in the Brown Jug football rivalry. to me," Coach John Coatta said third quarter when Gonso pass- half. He unleashed touchdown after his Badgers displayed ex- Noting his Hoosiers had put hadn't even been expected to go "It got us all steamed up," First Again in 34 points on the scoreboard , out for the team this year, was ed to Butcher for a 23-23 ad- said Michigan quarterback Don cellent control and upset Indi- bantage. ana 35-34. Pont said his "offense must the game's top rusher, accum- Moorhead. "The field goal Punt, Pass, Kick Mel Reddick then caught a Those Ihe victory that thrilled a lave done all Tight." ulating 129 yards on 20 carries shouldn't have come at all. The LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) Pont said the team had brac- for Wisconsin. TD aerial from Graff for 30 Five-Year Vet clock should have run out." —Brent Wohlers, nine-year-old homecoming crowd of 58,636 yards, and Dawkins caught a lovely It was Anderson was accompanied b ajiother ed for the Badgers, recalling Alan "A-Traln" Thompson, a 's second field son of Mr. and Mrs. William y Wisconsin lost last year by only sophomore member of the nine-yarder to help build to the goal in two minutes, the first Wohlers and a participant in the round of denial from UW athlet- 36-point level. Nips Rodriguez one from 12 yards out setting a ic director EIroy Hirsch that monthly Punt, Pass and Kick contest, Indiana attempted Minnesota record. Jeff Nygren's has won his way to area com- he is seeking a replacement for to run for a 35-yard field goal had given the petition by placing first at the Coatta , whose teams hare v?on two-point conversion after the checks Gophers a 3-0 first period edge. district level. only two games ( Iowa and In- Hoosiers scored the game's fi- In Frisco Open But the fired-up Wolverines Metropolitan Stadium was the diana) in more than two sea- nal touchdown. But it failed, SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - Get basic lite Inturanc* made short work of the game in site of Brent's latest victory on sons. preserving Wisconsin's victory Carol Spra y 's eyes were misty protection today — when margin. the third period with Bill Tay- Saturday. and there was a quiver in her you n eed It most — then The latest report was that lor 's one and three-yard touch- Brent's father and brother Junior Bill Yarborough's pass voice moments after her bus- montJily checks from Hirsch had contacted former down runs . Taylor had caught Craig, eight years old , accom- interception with 29 seconds left band, Steve, had dropped in a Metropolitan Life leter on, an eight-y ard tou chdown pass panied him to tbe Met last Sat- Washington Redskins' coach in the game cut down Indiana's birdie putt on the 72nd hole from . But Hirsch said supplementing other re- Moorhead in the second urday. Craig won the local ver- last chance. that brought him his first tour tirement Income. period . sion of the PP&K contest for his he had not "seen him since victory in the San Francisco Taylor set up a fourth period age group, but was beaten at 1966." "E just did my best lo catch C^i I me for details. it Open Golf Tournament. touchdown, a six-yard run by the next meeting. Indiana coach John Pom, com- , and it felt great," Yar- 't borough said. "I just couldn watch the i . "* 1 plaining that his Hoosiers hadn't putt ," said the pretty blonde * ' performed as well as they Wisconsin had indicated from who was carrying their daugh- ^_____S______" should have, complimented the the start it wanted to win. The ter, Stephanie. Coatta staff . Badgers even attempted a two- "It's been a long, hard time. H M25KU2_____I______^^|^^^^ ^ M "We just didn't have it and point running conversion while Sometimes we got very dis- Wisconsin did/' Pont said. leading L2-0. couraged. Sometimes we won- "You've got io credit their B-y V^______the time they led 20-14 dered if we were doing the ^H^H^^M^^^^HI^^^^H^^^^^^VP?!^^B^_S__^ J^^^^^^^^^^^^HI coaching staff for getting them at halftime, the Badgers had right thing in gambling the best ______¦ ^*#¦<*iBSS&i^__H_[^^^^^^^Hu^^0^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^__E_S______Mi^EB9^HC______vi^^ u Pfl^ *& ] ^mm^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^wmprepared." picked up 32 first downs to In- years of our lives. IB* ^^^^^^E *~ ^^tmmmmmmmmmm^^m ^^^f^mmmm i^tr r^^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^mWQuarterback Neil Graff mmwjxx*&* ^^L ^T ' - ?i______, a diana's nine, and had a healthy "But now , at last, Steve has ^HK&*s«J _' fl X ' -^______H Badger sophomore, broke a advantage In yardage w i t h made it. It took him longer rt ^ school record with four touch- * Thompson having gained 85 in than most , maybe , but now he's vf'W^#***! _____ ¦ iSv ______H______fc_» '"_r_^______down passes — the last output 10 carries. ^^rili#Mi - ' made it and that's what ____B> ____ ^ of three TD tosses having been \^t "^ r< HTi' ^^ mmmmmBS______M_i_i______4^ri______mMm^'. ^^^/ *immmmmmmmWfl^______p^___j Tie fired-up Badgers' next counts." ^^^ in: 1962 when Wisconsin went to test is Saturday at Ann Arbor Spray, 273 and a five-year vet- the Rose Bowl. against Michigan. eran on Uie tour, rolled in a "It's the best game I've had , pressure packed five-footer on ____¦ Jl ami Jill ______i_^!______and it was about time," Graff the final hole Sunday, his only said. birdie of the day, to beat color- He completed lj of 20 tosses, Warrior Runners ful Puerto Rican veteran Chi and had three intercepted. But Chi Rodriguez by a single his accuracy guided the Badg- stroke. ers to the highest point Spray, who had a final round ' tho u ncommon man who total Trip Bethel 19-36 Grand Prix look* differarvt , lt » for since they tallied 41 against 70, one under par on the 6,- Richard Brown tlio coiirnfje to different. Gra nd Winona State College cross wants the bett-nnd brn b* Purdue in 1963. 677-yard Harding Park Golf Phone 9053 ffoaiuroa -nt no extra cost: Electric country runners copped the first Prix hai uncommon The game dropped Indiana out Course , finished with a 269 and ir Randy Eddy J-M8» Parting, spec-domotor, odomotor , tncltometor, gas gauge, four placings in tripping Bethel of the Big Ten lead and a $20,000 cheek. Rodriguc-z, who ¦k reserve gaa » upply, and fre« portu replacement warranty. into a College, 1&-JG in a dual meet at Kermit Selke W8 second-place tie with Purdue, vvas tied for th-c No. 1 spot Bethel Friday. • l.eRoy ClemimV! .... 957J Grnn-d Prix 440 (434M JI.O) »1 ,B9B Michigan , until Spray ran in the winner , Northwestern and ¦k Dave Mormon ... 8-321* Grand Prix 700 (744cn JLO) »1,B60 Wisconsin, each 2-1. Dave Oland was first for the had a 06 for 270. While Indiana furablwi away Warriors in 21:44. Howard Cook • Dan Sullivsrt 4490 laying bis secon;' was next with 21 :W> , Bob Hernpy •k Ral ph Donahue .... D-197. DEALEK INQUIRIES INVITED crucial scoring chances, Wis- BACK ON TRAIL . . . Arnold Palmes, p cumin, each 2-1. tournament after a two month absence, made a mild charge third in 22:31 and .Steve Rose • Jamei Sokol tk, fAgr. 497a While Indiana fumbled away in the San Francis-co Invitational Open Sunday at Harding finished fourth in 22:146. Mark IRREGULAR? Hume had a ZiAAlclocking to DUE TO LACK OF FOOD* * c rucial scoring chance.., Wiscon- Pari going out with a two-under 34. Here Palmer w alks up ¦ TRAVEL CRAFT SUPPLY place ninth . BULK IH YOUR DIET sin seemed in perfect control. to his ball on the sc-cond green to s:ie up a 15-foot shot yes- 539 Mortli CUvtl»il«l Av«„ St. Pau\ , Minn. 5S1H The Warriors entertained TRY "We tad the hall 94 Umts." terday. He missed his putt for tht bird and took a par Lu 'hcr College here today and Metropolitan Life VUn* 415 *14-94)1 1 Coatra said alter reviewing sta- four for the 387-yard hole. In background marches Arnie's meet La Crosse State College on t.t~ Yv - , M Y. tistics. '-They had it 72. That Army. (AP IPhotofax ) Wc-dnesdav , Two-State Funerals Business Services %A QUALITY POURED concrete hous* foun- Alphonse J. Pogreba Want Ads dations, walls and basement Noprs. Anderson Bid Gains Holding Free estimates . John Burt. Fountain &87-7133. INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- Clly. Tel. Start Here Custom Digging. Met Nose-Dive cial) Funeral services for Al- MANN «, PETERSON* — Pole barns, fences, sign poles. Contact phonse J. Pogreba, 47, Janes- John Mann, Houston or Bill Peterson, Peggy Jacobson ¦ For Governor ville, were held at St, Mary's Narrow Margin NOTl. « i Rushford. Catholic Church, Janesville, Oct. This newspaper will b* . responsible TREES, TREES, TREES - trlminina, 11, with burial at Oak Hill Cem- for only one Incorrect Insertion of .tump removal, spraying, etc. Free Is Predicted any classified advertisement publish- estimates. Blong's Tree Service, - Wi- Smashes 235-582 ¦ ¦ etery there. He died at Mercy ed In the Want Ad section. Check nona. Tel. 8-5311. NEW YORK m — "I'll bet Dodger days. Is Announced Hospital, Janesville, oi a heart Over Declines your ed end cell J321 If • correction you right now the Mets .take . a "They played with a dash and must be made. STARK EXCA.VATING & By GERRY NELSON attac-t. NEW YOEK (A?) - The BASEMENT DIGGING " Bill Talbert, " Jackie said. "And ' Witoka 7532 Weekend nose-dive in 1970, a daring, MINNEAPOLIS (AP ) - State He was born Aug. 21, 1922, at stock market was mixed in " Rt. J, Winona Tel. Over • the ex-tennis ace, said to Jackie Hodges, I think, built up a fami- BLIND ADS UNCALLED FOR- . Bakcr-McGee substitute Peg- Sen. Wendell R. Anderson, St. Independence to Frank and moderate trading early this aft- D-2, 3, 11, H 20, 24, 24, 28, • ¦ Robinson, the ex-laseball Dodg- ly spirit on the team just like Plumbing, Roofing 21 gy Jacobson fired 235—582 while Paul, formally announced his Anna Roskos Pogreba. He mar- ernoon, with gains holding a Lyle Jacobson (also er. the old Dodgers had." bid for the Democratic-Farmer- ried Helen F. Foster at Edger- narrowing margin over declines Card of Thanks teammate ~ ELECTRIC ROTO ROOTER "They're going to get fat and Jackie also sounded off on ton Sept. 20 ¦¦' substitute) ripped 593 in week- Labor nomination for governor , 1958. He was em- among individual issues traded NELDNER - . . ' • For clogged sewers and drains. a s failure to open the end activity of the Jacks and contented from all the favors baseball' today and said the major cam- ployed at the Janesville Cotton on the New York Stock Ex- I wish to express my sincere thanks lo SYL KUKOWSK1 my friends, relatives and neighbors for CALL and benefits being lavished on front office and managerial paign issue will be a "critical Mills . Tel. 9509 or 6434 1-year guarantee Jills circuit at Westgate Bowl. change. Ihe flowers, gills, cards and visits I . Ronnie Dietrich slammed a 216 them as a result of their fantas- door to black men. lack of leadership' * by Gov. Survivors are: His wife ; two Advances outnumbered de- received while In the hospital and since game .. for Dietrich-Luhman. tic World Series victory. En- "What do you need to be a Harold LeVander. sons, Jack and Philip, and two clines by 6L1 to 533. In earlier my return home. A special thanks lo Septic Tank & Cesspool daughters Pastor Fischer for his visits and pray- Baker-McGee swept with 843— dorsements, contracts, trips to manager, anyhow?" he asked. Anderson, 36, tossed his hat , Christine and Pa- trading they held about a 6 to 4 ers and to Dr. FensJse and the nurses Cleaning Service In Intensive care 2,471. Las Vegas, new business enter- "A manager doesn't win the into the ring at a Minneapolis tricia, all at home; three step- ratio over declines. and on Second /Medi- Special Truck , Sanitary & Odorlesi prises. games. All he has to do is relate news conference and followed sons, Yeoman William Mehaffy, cal at Community Memorial Hospital, G. S. Woxland Co. Red McElhose forged 231- The Dow Jones average of 30 Mrs. Wm. O. Neldner Rushford, Minn. Tel. J44-9243 558 to lead the men of Hal-Rod The graying Robinson rubbed io the players. Casey Stengel with five more appearances Norfolk, Va., and Gail and industrials at noon was off 4.62 a stubbly chin and dissented. "I the best living manager?— throughout the state to kick off Jamie Mehaffy at home; three BEEMAN - KENWAY Lanes' Lamp liters loop. Marie at 857.64. We wish to extend our heartfelt thanks Sewer Cleaning Service brothers Clarence and appreciation for Tamke hit 181-463. McElhose- don't think so," Jackie said. that's a lot of bull. All he ever his campaign. , , La Crosse, Before the market opened, fhe acts of kind- Residential Commercial Industrial Dominic, Poynette, and Aloisius, 'ness, messaaes ' of sympathy, beautiful Licensed & Bonded Operators Sebesta totaled 830-2,403. "They're a young bunch, all ex- related to is himself." some analysts said it would like- floral and splrtual offerings received * Tel. 9394 In the next eight months, he Madison; and three'sisters Mrs. «7 E. 4th ROD LANES: Bonnie cept Donn Clendenon, who is 34. , ly continue gains garnered in from our many friends, neighbors and HAL ' and other bidders for the DFL Ray (Dorothy Sokolosky and relatives Ira our sad bereavement, the IT'S HARD TO keep cool when the hot and Winnie I think they'll still have a lot of the rally of the past two weeks. loss of our belov&d Wife and Molner. and Clyde — Ed endorsement -will seek to influ- Mrs. Jay (Marion) Wiltsey, both water 's not hot) Let our experienced Drwall of Deuces Wld tossed drive." They cited continuing peace We especially thank Dr. Martin for his staff advise you as to the correct size ence delegates who will make of Independence, and Mrs. Rob- words of comfort, the- praxel Ambulance water heater for your family's needs. 's high single games hopes by investors *who believed Service, those who contributed the use the league "But qnick success for an ath- the party's choice at the state ert (Betty) Hunter, East St. As your family grows so does the work which were 224 and ^. respec- DFL convention next June. the U.S. economy would be sub- ol their cars and the pallbearers, load of this vital-unit. For all of your Don Cierzan of the Jet lete can be a spoiler," Talbert Louis, 111. Mr. Leslie Beeman plumbing and heating needs, call . tively. insisted. "'Look at Arthur Ashe. Football Anderson said his major com- stantially strengthened by a de- Mr. & Mrs. James Beernait Sets slammed 526 and team- William H. Wiebusch creased involvement in the Viet- & Family Frank O'Laughlin In 1968, he was a terrific player, petition will come from a fellow Mr. i, Mrs. Harold Happel PLUMBING « HEATING mate Cookie Hayfield pitched nam war and the market's - winner of the first U.S. Open St. Paulite, Sen. Nicholas D. LAXE CITY, Minn. (Special) A Family 7*1 - E. ; 6th Tel. 2371 411. The Good Guys marked Coleman. — Funeral services for William bounce back in each of its re- 738—2,141. Tennis Championship. Then he In Memoriam Female — Jobs of Int. got tied tip in a lot of business Scores Coleman, although considered H. Wiebusch, Lake City, were cent downward dips in profit 2*8 High School B«ys — The EAST taking. IN MEMORY of enterprises. This past year he Army 38, Boston College 7. a candidate, has not formally today at the Peterson-Sheehan Jacob Schmidt, who BEAUTICIAN-must be good In hair styl- Eight Balls' Rod Hansen shelv- passed away Oct. 277 I960. Boston Univ. 19, Maine 7. the Rev. Ralph Analyses later said they were ing, and Interested In advancement. didn't win a thing. announced his own campaign. Funeral Home, Dear one, you are not forgotten, ed 194-536 iri leading his team Bucknell 21, La'ayelle 20. Write D-29 Daily News. A. Goede, associate pastor of encouraged by the glow trading Though on earth you are no more; to 728. The Losers totaled 2,127. The debate on the fat-cat Mets Colgate 20, Brown i Already in the race are Henne- of- pace as the Dow industrial Mon- Still In memory you are with us. WAITRESS for morning shift. Apply In •WESTGATE BOWL*. Guys Dartmouth 14. Harvard 10. pin County Atty. George Scott St. John's Lutheran Church , As you always were before. took place Friday at a cham- Delaware 31, Temalt I. person, Snack Shop ficiating. Burial was in the day started downward j adding it Sadly missed by the Children s Bob Hogenson of Massachusetts :<, Connecticut 7. and Russel G. Schwandt, San- and Doll — pagne breakfast given by All- GO GO DANCERS and exotic dancers, Morgan State S4, Deli. Stale H. , former state commission- Frontenac Cemetery. Pallbear- indicated a firm foundation and Hogenson-Peplinski downed 216 born will teach. Write P.O. Box 941, Winona. Star Enterprises , Inc., to an- Navy 10, Virg'iia O. that prices might easily resume Lost and Pound A and Gary Baab, Douglas-Neitz- er of agriculture. ers were Maurice Dose, Victor nounce plans for a sports clinic New Hampshire U- NorPieaslern I. an upward climb. BABYSITTER WANTED - Tel. Rolling- Penn State <2, Ohio 3. Dose, Raymond Wiebusch, Al- FREE FOUND ADS ke, bruised 604, Ellen Evans stens 8689-2612. next summer at Adelphi Univer- Princeton 41, Pennsylvania C. Anderson served as Minnesota Among the 20 most-active AS A PUBLIC SERVICE to our readers, and Mary Lou Kazelton, both bert Kohrs, Charles Augustine free found sds vjlll be published whtn sity in Garden City, N.Y. Rhcde Island 13 Cortland Slate I. campaign chairman last year WANTED: Girls to learn beauty culture, stocks on the New York Stock a person finding an article calls Ihe rolling for Hazelton-Kosidowski Rutgers 21, Columbia 11. and Rodney Wiebusch. Harding Beauty School, 76 W. 3rd. Robinson and Talbert are on Slippery Rock •>¦>, tiidiana U. (Pa.) ll for Hubert H. Humphrey's pres- Exchange, 5 advanced, g de- Winona Dally & Sunday News Classified slammed 185 and 514, respec- Dept., 3321. 18-word notice will be Virginia Tech J-., Buffalo 7. idential bid. But Anderson' said An DO YOU LIKE to sew? Would you like the faculty as are Oscar Robert- Nerval Sesvold clined and 6 were unchanged. published free for 2 days in an efforl tively. Wesleyan 28, Am lent IJ. to help us make custom-made drap- son of basketball's Cincinnati he wonld not seek support on General Electric , undergoing to bring finder and loser together. Kings and Queens—The Pud- Wilkes college •?, Vermont 7. NORTHFIELD, Wis. - Fu- eries? We have a full-time iob open in Yala 17, Cor.isll o. that basis and would attempt to our Custom Drapery Department. You tripped 179— Royals; YA Tittle, assistant neral services were held today a nationwide strike, was off 1% FOUND—key, Cole National, on red plas- filers' Ua Hooper will work 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. with a SOUTH avoid all factionalism in the tic coin purse, at Cathedra l Bazaar 481 while Arwin Cverby ielled coach of the football San Fran- for Nerval Sesvold, 49, at the at 85%. half hour for lunch. No Sats. You will Alabama 32, Clem son 13. DFL party. Sunday. Tel. 3138, 193-573 for the Sil-ver Taps. The cisco 49ers, and Dick Weber , Alcorn A&M 27, Souther,! U. 7, Upper Pigeon Creek Lutheran Steels, mail order-retail, and work in large, convenient anil well . . but you must Citadel 34 Da/idson Col. 28. Anderson charged that Minne- FOUND—what appears to be a pet rabbit. equipped work area . . Silver Taps bounced 781—2,210 professional bowler. Church, the Rev. Robert Bipes electronics were lower. Motors, like to sew and be capable of . doing it Duke 25, No. Carolina state r.3. Tel. 8-3484 and Identify. and Bonnie Overby floored the Tittle, once the quarterback East Tenn. State 10, Murray Stale 10. sotans have lost confidence in officiating. Burial was in the aircrafts, metals, chemicals, well. If interested see Al Krieger at 4-10 split. for the New York Giants en- Florida 41, vanderillt H. the Republican administration church cemetery. and oils were mixed. ^ Personals ¦ CHOATE'S, Florida Stale 20, Mississippi 17. in the State Capitol. ry 7 tered the discussion obliquely. Georgia 30, Kmlu^ky 0 A truck driver for Briggs Prices on the American ex- BARGAIN! HARVARD CREWS WIN Grambling Col. «, Jackson State 13. "It seems to me that people Transfer over 30 years, ho died change advanced narrowly. MTENTION ELKS MEMBERS — There EVERY DAY a "sale" day when you CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - "It Is quite a problem," he Louisiana Slatt 21r Auburn 20. Hospital Eau are still some tickets left for the Deer offer neighbors AVON'S line of cos- Louisiana Tech 55, Ch»ttanoo:» 7. have so little confidence in cur Friday at Luther , Hunter's Stag, Thurs., Oct. 30th. Just metics and gifts. Turn spare time Into said, referring to the tendency like - the Duck Stag, the steaks and cash. Apply now. Contact Helen Scott, Harvard crews won three Miami (Fla.) 14, Texas christian *. present administration that they Claire, after a 4-month illness. events in dominating the fifth of sports heroes to become one- N. Carolina 23, Wake Forest 3. are losing faith in government He was born Sept. 22, 1920, to 1 P.M. New York prizes will be greatl Don't wait, Tel. . Box 764, Rocheste r. No. Carolina col. 14, Maryland Slate 10 fhe club now, «U. ONCE I Full-time or part- annual Head of the Charles Re- man business conglomerates. "I Noire Dam» 37, Tulane 9. itself." Anderson said. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sesvold . NEEDED AT Stock P rices maid. Social Securl' y gatta Sunday on the Charles think it's up to the organization South Carolina 17, Maryland 0. He married Marvel Samuelson SEE RUTH1E at the WILLIAMS HOTEL time housekeeping If you ere interested In a full-time . lob recipient accepted . Apply In person, Tenn; Tech 31, Moreheed Stet* (. are losing faith in the Allied Ch 30 Honeywl 154 to control these things." "They of MorthfieTd and resided here. helping in the kitchen of one of Ihe Watkins Methodist Home, 175 E. Wa- River. W. Va. 49, Pittsburgh 1!. willingness of government to Allis Chal 24V4 Inland Stl 29% finest restaurants In downtown Winona. basha. The Crimson won the senior Robinson admitted he was West Carolina 41, Lenoir Rtiyne 25. Survivors are: His wife; one Your genial employer Is Ray Meyer, MIDWEST listen and respond. They are Whitehall; one Amerada 37V4 I B Mach 36is/i eights, senior fours with cox- high on the Mets and their son, James, 3 Innkeeper . Macalester 44, Augsburg 7. losing iaith in the ability of gov- Am Brrid 37 /4 Intl Harv 28% Male—Jobs of Interest— 27 swain arid lightweight eights ti- phlegmatic pilot, Gil Hodges, Gjst_vu; li. daughter. Mrs. Leislie (Char- a Concordia 2i, REPLACING a zipper Is low In cost, and ernment to innovate, and to Am Can 48% Intl Paper 40% work. Apply In tles. teammate in the old Brooklyn Hamline 32, Duluth 12. lotte) Olson, Janesville; two the value of a garment will not be MAN FOR GENERAL St. John's 33, St. Thomas '1. lead. They are losing faith in Am Mtr 11V. Jns & L -22% person, Rush Arbor Farm, Rushford, grandchildren: two brothers, lost. W. Betslnger, 227 E. 4tt\. : Bemidji if, VJinona 0. the duty of government to edu- Gustav, West Salem, and Alfred , AT&T 52V. Jostens 35 Minn. Tel, 864-9122. Michigan Tech 27, Motchead t. REDUCE safe and fast with GoBest tab- Anconda 31% Kencott 45V CLASS A lourneyman electrician, excel, Millon (Wis.) 35, Southwest 33. cate the public rather than to Whitehall, and three sisters, . lets and E-Vap "wafer pills." Ted ¦ lent pay with outstanding benefits, Tel, Mankato 40, St. Cloud 28. mollify it. They are losing faith Mrs. Ernest (LauraV Johnson, Arch Dn 55V8 Kraft Co 41 Maier Drugs. - . ' .- ¦^^^^H^^^^^MM^H^^______l______-____l_l Elmhursf (III.) 18, Lea 7. ) ArmcoSl 29% Loew's 37% 612-436-7J89 collect. Northwestern (lowi) 33, Bethel ll in a government that is devoted Taylor; Mrs. Gilbert "(Melva LADIES: If you want to drink that's Carleton 33, Cornell (Iowa ) 31. more to phrasing excuses than Paulson, Holmen, and Mrs. Mel- Armour Wk Marcor 51% YOUR business; If you' ¦DON'T win) to CAN YOU WORK 8 a.m.-12 noon, Mon. Lawrence (Wis.) 22, St. Olaf I. in insuring progress. vin ( Agnes) Tranberg, Ettrick. Avco Cp 28% Minn MM 112% drink, that's OUR BUSINESS. Contact through Frl.? We have an opening in Akron 14, Dayton 10. , Women's AA for private, confidential our Home Furnishings Department. The Beth Stl 29*/4 Minn J L 21% the Installation of drapery ilis__^____^l______^______r^^^y:fl^__^___-______i Iowa If, Michigan State 11. "In short, the people , know help wllh your drinking problem. Call lob entails Iowa State 44, Kansas 20. that something is wrong.'' Larry Christ Boeing 32V_ Mobil Oil IVk 8-4410 evenings 7-10. hardwares and draperies, shade repair, Kansas Stat* 59, Oklahom 21. Venetian blind repair, assembly of cus- H_^______r* Anderson said LeVander Mrs. Rudy Christ Boise Cas 75% Mn Clim turning a pumpkin Into a tom-made drapery rods and hardwa re ' < ik* "^^Hi»_SHil Michigan 35, MINNSOTA 1. 's — INSTEAD OF Nebraska 13, Oklahoma State ). leadership—or lack of it—will be ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - Brunswk 20% Mort Dak — coach ala Cinderella, we turn It Into ... and some dell-very. Must have drlv. North Dakota 33, Augustana (S.D.) 13 Catpillar 43% N Am R 28% a delicious pie ala Mom's kitchen. For er's license. Do not apply If you are not N.D. State 35, Mornlngslde 0. the issue on which the first-term Fun eral services for Mrs. Hudy a snack that will bring you back, try capable of using basic tools. See Al No. Illinois 17, Ball State 13. Republican governor is the most Christ and her son Larry, both Ch MSPP -NN Gas 47% pie and colfee at RUTH'S RESTAU- Krieger at CHOATE'S, No. Iowa 14, South Dakota 2, 7 RANT, 126 E. 3rd, downtown. Open vulnerable. of rural Independence, killed in Ch RIRR — Nor Pac 43 /8 except Won. Ohio Slate 41, Illinois 0. 7 24 hours every day Parsons (Col.) 46, Ky. Slate 7. a car-train collision Friday Chrysler 40 /s No St Pw 26% life, too, can be beautiful Purdue 45, Northwestern 20. In addition, he said , the threat CARPETS and PLASTIC night, will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. Cities S*vc 49% Nw Air 33% Lustre. Renl electrlr Wisconsin 16. Indiana 34. of expanding the state sales if you use Blue ¦ tax Com Ed 42% Nw Banc 37 R. D. Cone Co. ' SOUTHWEST will be a major issue in the 1970 at United Methodist Church, shampooer $1. -.. TRADING CO. f__S____E______» Arkansas 51, Wichita State 14. ComSat 52% Penney 55% -xosmr *-j m^^^^^^^^m*W^^mmmi legislature. Town of Montana, the Rev. Gary WHEELS SHAKE, need alignment . Com- Arkansas Sla te 34. Abilene 22. Clarke officiating, with burial in Con Ed 28% Pepsi 52% plete suspension repair. See Don at has Brigham Young 30. Texas El Paso T. "The real test in 1971 will be Service, Jet. 43 i> Hwy. Alignment¦ Cont Can 75% PJps Dge - Houston U. 25, Mississippi 11. 50% ¦ whether the Republican'party is the church cemetery. _!. immediate factory flH^____R__E______H_3 ______9__ii Tex»s 31, Rice O. Friends may call at the Kil- Cont Oil 27% Phillips 32 Texas A»M 14, Baylor 0. allowed to expand the sales Crtl Data £43% Polaroid 138% NEW CLUB HOURS openings. Texas Tech 27, SMU 24. tax," Anderson said. lian Funeral Horiie, Arcadia, aft- Starting W|eel , McMahon , running for ihe lo Arnold Ledebuhr, having filed herein a full range of employee bene- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS market administration staling if we don't start doing what God has asked of us Boston Amateur Athletic Asso- butchers 2«.50-?7.O0j 1-3 200-JSO lbs 26.0&. pellllon for oonTal fits. Interview by appoint- Stock car race driver Lee Roy Winnns.' _; Kf» Market. 2«.50; 2-3 230-V60 lbs 25.J0-26.O0) sows that said decedent died Intestale and ciation , and Dr. Moore, of the Ledebuhr be appoint- ment only. Salary open. for heaven only knows how long. "Yarbrough broke the $200,000 (Winona Product. Zlebell produce) s.leadyj 1-3 350-40O lbs 23,50-2-4 ,00) 2-3 preying lhat Arnold Toronto Olympic Club , were fol- These quotations apply aj of 500-iiOO lbs J2.0O-23.0O, ed administrator; barrier and hearing lowed across the finish line by New . Zcalander IO:30 •A.m. today. Cattla 10,500; calves nonoi slauuhter IT IS ORDERED, That the Denis Hulme took another &rade A lumbo (white) 43 sleers stead y to 25 cents lower; cows Ihereot be had on November 19, Wl, at MACK TRUCKS giant Court In Bruce Kidd of the East Yoxk Grade A large IwhlleJ 42 slMd y »o ie cents lotvor; prime 1,200- nils o'clock A.M., before this step toward the Canadian-Amer- Grade A medium (while) 30 the probate courl room In Iho courl house Published as a public service In track club . 1,400 Ib slaughter steers ylftld nrod<- 3 and coope ration with „;Jii£, B^ l lhat the time OF LA CROSSE ¦ ican Challenge Cup road racing Grado B (-white) 30 4 30,00-30.75; hloh choice and prime 1,- In Winona, Minnesota) Tha Advertising Council, Rellclon In American " Life, and rVV fed Alabama 's crass-country run- championship during the week- Grade c ,.,, ,16 ZM-1,350 lbs 29,50.30,731 choice 950-I.35O wllhln which creditors of snld dectdent 205 Causeway Blvd . Ttie lnternaUornl Newspa pe r Advertising Execullvet. * mm^imt lbs yield nrnda 2 lo A 2a.SO-29.75; flood mey tile their claims be limited lo four ^jf- * and that ners ran 15 miles a day in pre- end. prime 900-1,075 Ib slaughter heifers yield monlhs from Iho date hereof, La Cross*, Wis. 540(11 on March paring for the hill and dale cam- Yarbroiigh, a 31-ycar-old Ford and choice 2A75-58.50 ; high choice and the claims so filed bo heard * 3, 19)0 , at 11 o'clock A.M., beiore Ihls Tel. AC (JOB 785-OflOO team driver from LIVESTOCK grade 3 and 4 27.75-128.25 Iwo loads and paign. Columbia , part load 1,000- 1,100 lbs 2B.50; cholco Courl In the probata court room In the SOOTH ST. PAUL , Mlnnesoln, and S.C., won the American 500 mile BJ5-1.075 Ib Vleld nrflde 2 to 4 27.00-27.75 ; courl house In Winona SOUTH ST. hereof be given by publico, PAUL, AMnn. Wl- (USDA) a°od and ch oleo 24.25-27.00. that nolle* stock car race nt Ilockingham, ) — Callle 5,000; calvea 700 trading on Sheep 200 i MauflMer l«n\bs slendy 1o lion of Ihls order In the Winona Dally N.M., Sunday to register his slaughter sleers and heifers mcxterately slrono; shipment cholct 95 Ib shorn with News nnd by mailed notice AS provided active TRUCK seventh big speedway victo ry of , fully steady; cows slow; prices No. a polls 29.00 ) short doc* choice by law. steady lo 50 cenls lower: bulla 20 cents 80 Ib wooledl slaughter lambs 28 .00. Dated October 24, 19119. The Winona Dai|y the season. lower/ vealers and slaughter calves S. A. SAWYER, News sloadyi mostly Judge. The $17,(500.00 first-place mon- high cholo 1,000-1,150 Ib (Pub. Daile Monday, Oct , 27, 19*9 ) Probale slaughter steers 27,75; most choice 950- (Probolo Court Seal) SALESMAN ey carried his take from thc 1,250 lbs 24,75-27,50| mixed high pood ond Clly of Wlnono, Minnesota Roger W. Poole,, cs -fhe a rea Nascar Grand choice 25.50-27.00: mostly high choice BOARO OF ZONING APPEALS Allorney for Petitioner, ' s only advertising medium National circuit Career opportunity selling this year to more than 900-1,020 Ib slaijohler heifers 26,73; most ttollct of Hearing choice 850-1.050 lbs 25.75-24,50; mixed PLEASE TAKt NOTICE: (First Pub. Monday, Oct. 37, IW) the finest truck manufactur- $185,000.00. He also picked up hlfj h good and choic e 25.JO-26 .00 ; ullllly That nn application has been that people mode Stale of Minnesota I ss. ed. Distributor needs a pay for about $21,000.00 in other races and commercial slauuhter cowa IMO- by Spellr Brnlhers lo permit erection Counly of Winona ) In Probate Court this season. 18.50; canner and cutler 16,50-18,00; ullllly ol a oround sign Willi In A torsi ot lha No. 15,014 salesman who has « thor- and commercial slaughter bulls 22.50- aoulh and east tot lines Instead ol tho In Re Estate of ough knowledge of trucks, because 25.00; culler 20,50-22 ,50; choice vealers required HB-toot setback at Iho lollowlnrj Oratlan A. Pehler, also known » they want i t 41.00-43 ,00; good 3fl 0O-41 .00: cholea (mny he on ex-truck driver) 'k Learn to it a . described properly. Glen Pehler, Decedent. , Slaughter ca lves IS.OO-SO.ffli ooixl 77.00- Lol 10, a inck 2.1, OP /Wrflflon, or at Order for Hearlno on Amended Final and in willing to travel the 211.OO. 177 Wnlnul Street. Account and Pellllon for Distribution. Hon* 6,000; berrows and gills trading Motlce Is sent to thn applicant and to Tho representative of the nbove named Tri-State Area. This is a per- only moderately active ; early sales weak the owners ol properly effected by Ihe estate hoving filed his nmendod final manent posi tion with (ho full PRINTER In 25 cents lower; 1-3 1W-250 lbs 35 .75- nppllcalloi), account nnd petition for noltlement and range of employee benefits. mmS> Approved Fo; Training All J6 .O0; 2-3 1M-250 lbs 2r.?3-23,50; 2-4 250- A hearlnn on Ihls pollllon will bo olven allowance thereof nnd lor distribution to J70 lbs 24 ,7S-2-5.J'>; 3-4 270- 300 lbs 24 .09. tn Ihe Court Room of the Clly Hall, Interviews hy nppoin'ment f CUs'-es oi Veterans, the porsorN ihereunln cnlllled j J5 .O0; sows steady; \-H 300 400 lbs 23 .00- Winona, Minnesota, »1 7:30 p.m, on No- IT IS ORDERED, Tint the hearlno only, Course In Printing Includes: Hand 2.1.7.1; 2-3 400-500 lbs 22.00-23,25; J-3 500- vember l, I969, at wlrlcli Mine, Snloreslrd tin-rent be hnd on November 19, 19*9 , il /OO lbs ?I,.50-22,I5; fe edfff plQs jleady; persons may appoor -either In person, Composition. Unccajlinq MachJnM, In 10:41 o'clock A.M., before tills Courl 1-3 120140 lbs mostly 24.00; boars ' strong wlllnfi, or by agent, or by attorney, Letterpress, Layout and Plioio-Olfset. In tho probata court room In Ihe courl to 50 cents higher. and present any reasons which they may house In Wlnonn, Minnesota , nnd HM I MACK TRUCKS Slmep 3,500; all daises oenerally tinvn In the nriwllnn or donyln n -I Ihls nolle" hereof be given hy publication ol GRAPHIC ARTS steady; rnnrsl chnlra 65-110 Ib wooled petition, this order In Ihe Wlnonn Dally Newt nnd OF LA CROSSE slaughter lombs 2B.OO-28 .50; good and They are requested lo prendre llielr by ninlltd nollco ns provided by law , choice 27.SO-7a.O0: utlllly 0l Fi CHICAGO Rojpaclfully, Minneapolis Minn. 5540 3 (Prnbrtln Court Seal) L ._ ._ , CHICAGO un r-(USOA)- Hofl j 4,S00j t. O , Hoeppner, Chairman, John McGill, Tel, AC BOB 7115-01100 — butchers steady fo weak; 1-2 2O5-2J0 Ib Board of Zlonlno Appeals, Allorney for Pelllloner. of Interesh— Male—Jobs 27 Hor$a», CafflB, $fock 43 Articles for SaU 57 Apartments, Furn ished 91 Wanted—Real Estate 102 Used Cars 109 Auction Sales Winona Daily Ne-wt IE ¦Winona WANTED-day Work, 7-3:30. SIX CROSSBRED , Minnow»ta l«* rUSTODIAN brood sows due to far- ABOUT SO mink cage* and boxes, cheap. TWO-ROOM furnished apartment wllh FA.RM WAKFED — within e reasonable MUSTANG—1«5, V-! engine, automatic, apd other benefits. Please r w OCT. 30—Thurs. 1 p.m. to miles E. of tlnlforms rt P" 1"' of Nov.9m Weight about 8x14' pressure treated truck plaHorm, private bath and separate entrance. (Slstence Irom Winona, size make* no under 50,000 miles, original owner, ex- MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, IW giving as'> brief history to D-26 .,i ._ *» Chatfield on Hv*y. 30 to Pilot Mound wr lt« wltti V high sides, A-l shape. Box 757, Also 1 room. 452 Main . Tel. 4036. alter difference. Write D-30 Dally N ews, cellent condition. 13M Parkview. Tel , News. . - W- RU3h- ¦ Slore, then 1 mile N.W. Russel Thoii-p. Dally '7mTml^t y ' .. . . ' p. Houston, Minn. . . 4. 8-4920. ion, owner; Re«hed roc*. DONALD TODAY'S SELECTION VALENTINE, Mlnneiota City, Minn. Tel. »33-MM. MONOGRAM OIL HEATERS, (all sizes, Tal. Rollln MW-2*5«. . mn* one-room to seven rooms. Liberal HOLSTEIN 9, to itart freshening OF FINE LOCALLY OWNED COWS—1 tinms and trade allowances. GAIL $ Se&tfci middle of Dec, to be told etl together. Hay, Grain, Feed 50 APPLIANCE. 31J E. Ird. Tel. <210. Cell for an appointment, Fountain City t ?87-45M. REALTO R / STOP IN AND GOOD STANDI NG CORN — 34y, acre*. OIL OR GAS heaters. Sales, service. /^ \ \ (RANGE OIL BURNER CO., K3 E. 5th Con-tact Mile* Thill, Lawllton or Tel. . R0cuntR-Ttu2349 fOLLED HEREFORD bull, II month!, Tel. 747». Adolpfi MJcfialcwskL real goodt 1} llffht faeder cattle; eight -I3«. tmmmmmmmwmMmwmmmTI BROWS E AROUND/ 2nd call cows, ttoliteln; A fresh Hoi- ELECTRIC STOVE-apertment size / \ / IHELLED CORN-Everelt Row>*amp, . t2A CADILLACS ileln heifers; 10 Holstein heifers, VI. (Ih, second floor twit apartment. Lewlilon, Minn. Tel. 3379. springing, KWO dayi. Waltcer Gueltiow, DON'T MAKE Rollingstone, Minn. Tel. U9-3W, LOOK OVER OUR ALL ARE AIR CONDITIONED CORN - Lloyd VanVleet, Trempe-al-eu, Typewriters 77 ( ^kmWm S^P ) Wis . Tet. Centervllle 5W-3102. A MOVE TWO-YEAR-OLD registered Hereford \ NEW AND USED A new selection recently traded for ItfEW 70 hulls. Elmer Schueler, Rnahford, AAlnn. TYPEWRITERS and adding rnaaijnei tor s%r^^ W\ ( Tel. 8M-9I23. Arttclei for Sale 57 sale or rent. Reasonable rates. Ut* Until you see Winona's beau- Cadillacs. Every one carefully prepared to give ¦delivery. See us tor au ycur o*llce sup- tiful new, mainlenanc-u-free CARS plies, desks, files or office- chairs. excellent service. REGISTERED HAMPSHIRE boars bred PIANO— peulbl-e entlque. Beit often. Tel. ( - • \&\2T ,f/ ) LUND TYPEWRITER CO* T-el. On. Town Houses! A new con- like cor shew winners, First place c«o Fountain City 487-40M. cess Hayfield Borrow Show, first placa cept in living, they combine Hampshire carc-eis Minn, State Fair, Oil In on the FABRIC SAVINGS. Utm Wanted to Buy 81 the newest and best of build- 1969 SEDAN de VILLE filth over all breeds. First and third all Hew Pol/tiler Double Knlti, up to ing features. DEAL ^ pcii Tri-County Show, Champion 4-H U" wide. SPECIAL — U.li a yard. OLO BUFFET, preferibty oak, must be / r v y%> \ Shall mar Gold exterior set off with a black burrow and glle al count-- fair, Milo CINDERELLA SHOPPE, M on the Pla . / No Pressure , ^JL=====J^ \ Utlca, Minn. Tel , le/ilston till. SIX OR EIGHT marching oak chairs/ ership. READY TO MOVE KEEP YOUR KIDS at home wflh an pedestal type ftrn table. Tel. S-17C4. INTO 310 W! 1968 SEDA N de VILLE CHOICE BRED Wyoming Hereford cows, American Family Trampollna. I nquire \ No Obligation ^^j 1 / 120, 3-7 yean olron, me-tali. ragi- nkJe* I Cp*.r Satin Latex Paint. Ih« INCORPO RATED all Interior latex palnli. Coven moil «0 Vr . 3/a Tel. uo |»20 . \> , m;i«i cn Cajnf'/ M, wri ' e aodrri T-.urt«lotf , \ 1- -FORD Torino 2-door hardtop / ir EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN 6.* 3O-7:30-8:.'J4)-0;30 A .M. ^^^ Apartmanti, Flats 90 Cc

DICK TRACY By Chester ( Gould

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker

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LI'L ABNER ' By Al Capp ¦ 1- 1 i_w -i_.i__ j-._i.— ¦ ¦ ¦-.¦¦¦ ¦¦ ¦- *.,:„ ., ¦> _. . ______¦ , . -m I' ' ' ' —mr- - i ^^ — — f j REDEYE By Gordon Bes»

BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Laswell STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff

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