Winona State University OpenRiver
Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers
2-16-1965 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News
Follow this and additional works at: https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews
Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1965). Winona Daily News. 600. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/600
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]. Mighty Saturn Orbits New Winged Satellite CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) came from tracking stations dy. Space agency officials said and 2 communications balloons coating controls spacecraft tem- — A Saturn 1 super rocket, per- that the satellite had unfolded a camera mounted on the rock- are larger, with diameters cf perature. forming flawlessly, hurled a its broad wings as planned, set- et's second stage provided clear 100 and 135 feet respectively. "space bird" satellite into orbit ting up a target to take and pictures of the deployment. Some experts have theorized today to measure meteoroids. record the blows. With its broad wings, wider It was the eighth success ln a from past studies that on a 13- The space traveler's assign- Personnel at the station on than those of a four-engine air- row for the big booster on which day round-trip to the moon, tha ment was to measure and count Antigua Island watched on a liner — Pegasus is the third the United States counts for ma- three-man Apollo spaceship the impacts with space debris closed circuit space television largest satellite ever launched. jor manned space ventures. could expect to be hit by at least and report back with electronic network as that took place high The space agency said it would The huge rocket blasted off at one raeteoroid which could "squawks." above the Atlantic some 2,000 be visible at night in areas over 9:37 a.m. with the satellite fold- puncture the pressurized cabin Soon after the launching word miles southeast of Cape Kenne- which it passed. Only the Echo! ed in its nose. or harm some other life support Eleven minutes later, the Na- ______system. The particles would be M____K»_*W^^ tional Aeronautics and Space of greater hazard to manned Administration reported that space stations expected to stay the rocket had done everything aloft for months or years. Party Bill expected of it and had drilled over weekend, creating many scenes like this into orbit. An announcement SERENITY ...An unexpected snow said a shroud covering the pay- covered Lynchburg, Va., witib four .inches one of beauty and calmness. (AP Photofax) load had been jettisoned. Tabled in About 15 seconds after launch- ing the 19-story tall booster Senate OKs gradually turned into a south- load had been jettisoned. Police Brutality Cited Legislature The radio report on the count, Amendment on ST. PAUL (AP) -The Sen- direction and force of the im- ate Elections Committee voted pacts is to help determine the 12-6 today to table a bill pro- threat these fast-moving bits of viding for party designation for space debris pose to lengthy Redisricting legislators. manned space missions. In Mississippi Study ST. PAUL CAP) - The state A majority vote is needed to The giant two-stage Saturn 1, JACKSON, Hiss. (AP) - The the racial situation in Missis- mony from officials of Green- take the bill from the table for Senate overwhelmingly ap- believed to be the most powerful proved a resolution Monday ask- state advisory committee to the sippi. ville and Gulfport before the further consideration. rocket in the world, blazed U.S. Civil Rights Commission committee and statements from Conservatives in the Legisla- ing Congress to place the mat- The report, presented by Dr. away from Cape Kennedy at ter of reapportionment befora said today that police brutality, various business and civic ture have long opposed party 9:37 a.m. on the 1.5 million economic pressures and night A. B. Britton Jr., a Jackson Ne- groups urging compliance with designation, saying it threatens the people of the nation. gro physician and committee pounds of thrust generated by riders have forced Mississippi the Civil Rights Act. the Legislature with bossism. its first-stage powerplant , a The Senate approved, 47-16. a Negroes to accept an inferior chairman, noted what it termed Liberal supporters of the propo- resolution that requested Cott- progress in recent months. Most of the 19-page report cluster of eight engines. station.or live in terror. sal argue that it would make About 15 seconds after launch- gress submit the matter to the The bir a cial committee's This included frfce registration reviewed complaints and testi- mony received by the 10-mem- for more responsible govern- ing the 39-story tall booster electorate as a constitutional charges were presented in a of Negroes as voters in some ment. amendment. , which counties, desegregation of many ber committee over the past gradually turned into a south- report to the commission Sen. Nicholas Coleman, St. east heading, spewing a tail of began public hearings today on public accommodations, testi- year. The U.S. Supreme Court has The group — which includes Paui Liberal and chief sponsor fire more than 300 feet long ruled that the sole basis for ap* three Negroes—reported many of the bill, served notice he across a clear sky. Three portionment of any house of leg- were reluctant to testify for would try to take it from the minutes after launching, the islature must be the population fear of reprisal. table for further consideration flight contrjl^ center reported of a. given district. The amend- In one instance, the report at the committee's meeting next that the second stage had sepa- ment would accept apportion- New Baby said, the home of a former Mc- Tuesday. Sen. Franklin Kroehler rated sura ignited as planned. ment of one house of a two- Comfa policeman was bombed Henderson Conservative who house legislature on factors hours after he testified. Foned in the nose of the rock- heads the committee, indicated et was its unique payload, offi- other than population. he would entertain the motion. Tbe report said committee cially named Pegasus after the Conservatives mostly ap- members themselves had been However, the size of today's flying horse of Greek mytholo- vote appeared to give_ little gy. proved the resolution, and lib- Star Found victims of both economic and erals opposed It. WASHINGTON .AP) - Dis- pipsqueak as stars go — having social pressures, and , in at least ground for hope that the motion Once in orbit, the nose covery of what may be the first roughly one-thousandth the di- one instance, a member had would succeed. shroud was to fall away and Sponsors are Sens. J. A. Josef- real baby star — one apparently ameter of the sun — the new- been forced to leave the state. The Larson motion came after Pegasus was to extend two son of Minneota and Stanley much smaller than the moon — found dwarf shapes up as a The committee reported "law a hearing in which leaders of wing-like panels to a span of 96 Holmquist of Grove City, Con- was described today by the Na- heavenly heavyweight champ of enforcement officials," as well both Republican and Democrat- feet. Each wing is 14 feet wide servatives, and C. J. Benson of tional Science Foundation. sorts. as private citizens, have active- ic-Farmer-Labor parties spoke and about an inch thick. The Ortonville, Liberal. in support of the bill. PERFORMS FLAWLESSLY ... This giant Saturn 1 Although seemingly a real ly thwarted efforts of individ- space rocket begins its drive in putting a Pegasus satellite burned-out second stage was to A similar resolution is befora It apparently packs 300 tons of uals and groups to register to Sen. Gordon Rosenmeier, Lit- remain attached, giving the material per cubic inch of vol- into orbit to measure meteroids. (AP Photofax) the House Reapportionment vote in a number of counties. tle Falls Conservative and a craft the appearance of a huge- Committee. ume, more than 100 million leading opponent of the meas- bird swooping through space. times the density of water. ure, questioned .-each witness Liberals called the resolution The NSF told about it in its Viet War Scare Subsides The satellite was a secondary vague indefinite. They said South Viet Nam closely. goal of the launching. Its main and annual report to the White George Thiss, GOP vice chair- it would hold out a false hop* House and Congress. It credited Kosygin Asks purpose was to further evaluate of helping rural areas. man, read a statement from the Saturn 1, forerunner of the the find to Dr. Willem J. Luy- Robert Forsythe, GOP state "Until we find a formula that Minnesota Saturn 5 rocket which is to take Will Try Out ten, a University of chairman urging passage of the provides a better measure," said astronomer doing research aid- White House American astronauts to the Americans to bill. moon, All tests of the Saturn Sen. Paul Thuet of South St ed by an NSF grant. The Forsythe statement said Paul, the minority leader, "Peo- There s no question about the were successful. The rocket to- ' party designation would benefit day was the first to carry an ple are the best measure of rep- New Cabinet discovery of the star, the report the people of the state. He call- resentation." said. The only possible question Normal Again operating payload. SAIGON, South Viet Nam Leave Viet Nam ed it incongruous to place so is whether the distance to it has MOSCOW (AP) much emphasis on political part- WASHINGTON" (AP) — The Out of doors , the President Mont meteoroids are believed Sen. John Zwach of Walnut (AP) — Bickering over the because - Premier been figured accurately Alexei N. Kosygin demanded a ies and then divorce the Legis- White House is back to a worka- normally wears a felt hat — to be pulverized remnants of Grove, the majority leader, re- makeup of a new Cabinet was that would have a bearing on plied that this question has not reported overcome today and full .American retreat from lature from party politics. day routine though President something he only occasionally comets. They come in all sizes, computing its actual size. been resolved. Dr. Phan Huy Quat was named South Viet Nam in his first pub- DFL State Chairman George Johnson and his staff remain in did before the cold bug bit. If from great tnultiton chunks South Viet Nam's new premier. lic statement since returning Farr said party labels for leg- close touch with developments there is a chill in the air he down to tiny particles, detected Sen. Karl Grittner, St. Paul As things stand, estimates are in Viet Nam wears a topcoat, The official Viet Nam Press that the star, in the constella- from Communist North Viet islators would make for a higher only under a microscope. Liberal, said the Minnesota Leg- islature has soiled hands reported selection of Quat to tion Cetus, is some 288 trillion Nam and Red China. level of responsibility, an argu- Johnson has seemed relaxed Johnson's announced - In - ad- The large ones are so rare " " be- head the country 's eighth gov- miles from the earth, and the Kosygin returned Monday ment, also used by Mrs. O. J. and untroubled in his recent vance schedule today is routine. that their threat to space flight cause of its failure for so long ernment in 16 light seen from it on any given f: om an 11-day trip to the Far Janski, first vice president of appearances, though he still is Democratic leaders of the is almost nil. Pieces ranging to reapportion the state on a months. night started coming to the East which included a visit to the League of Women Voters. bothered a bit by remnants of a House have been called to dis- from the size of a grain of sand population basis as required by The announce- earth about 48 years previously. Hanoi , capital of North Viet Sen. Paul Thuet of South St. heavy cold that put him in a cuss legislative questions. A to a marble are more plentiful. the state Constitution. in ent said Light from a star travels at 186,- Nam. He went immediately into Paul, a co-sponsor of the bill , hospital last month. progress report is being sought So Pegasus was to concen- Sen. Gordon Rosenmeier of strongman Lt. 000 miles a second. a meeting with Soviet Commu- told the committee the present Ills pace seems to have from members of the Presi- trate on the microscopic parti- Little Falls replied that the res- Gen. Nguyen However, it is relatively nist party leader Leonid I. Bre- system of calling legislators dent's Council on Aging. cles, which are very plentiful , olution is simply a request to K h a n h also slowed somewhat and he is chummy with the earth, as star zhnev. Liberals . and Conservatives doing less out-of-town traveling. This evening Johnson Is host sometimes moving through the federal government "to re- asked Phan The message contained the store to the states an aspect of Khac Suu to distances go. It also is by far amouftts to a subterfuge. He tries to take a nap every aft- at a long-scheduled reception space like large dustclouds. continue as the smallest among about 12,000 same strong anti-American re- Rosenmeier called it a myth ernoon and, for exercise, usual- for about 50 members of Con- Traveling at up to 136,000 miles sovereignty recently taken away chief of state, relatively small and "nearby" marks Kosygin used in North that the Legislature became ly finds time for a half-hour gress. an hour, these "hot rods"' could from us." Khanh also stars that Dr. Luyten has un- Korea during his Asian tour. It nonpartisan by accident as a walk around the back yard. The President this year has have a sandblast effect and , If Congress does submit the was expected to covered in special studies using indicated there had been no im- side effect of a wet - dry fight. As Johnson has said on two altered the pattern of his weekly ultimately erode the protective proposal and enough states ap- announce for- Dr- "ua* the 48-inch Schmidt telescope on mediate change in the' Soviet He said the action was a deliber- occasions, he still doesn't feel meetings with congressional coating of a spaceship. The prove to ratify it , Minnesota matlon of a 20-man council of Mt . Palomar, Calif, , the NSF policy line on Viet Nam since ate one by a Legislature which quite as bouncy as he felt before leaders. He used to have top would still have to vote to civilians and military officers said. Kosygin's return. resented partisan control. his illness. Democrats from the Senate and change its own Constitution to to act as a legislative advisory ¦ House in for breakfast every take advantage of the provision. body. Tuesday. Now he sees Senate Urban Renewal Selection of Quat, 55, a former Airmen Parachute lenders one week, House chiefs In some small towns foreign minister, was delayed the next and both groups jointly ) when Saigon's military men Safely Over Japan every third week. The meetings (says Tom Eiierts " urban renewal" balked at plans to appoint Iran TOKYO (AP) — Two Ameri- are later in the morning and simply means 4 Arrested in South Viet Nam straightening up the bent Van Tuyen as Interior minister, Set without breakfast. can airmen parachuted to safety reportedl y because he was orig- t.day after their F105F jet fight- parking meters . . . Pros - inally from North Viet Nam and er developed engine trouble perity is a period when peo- Plot to Blow up niight have dififculty dealing about 30 miles northwest of To- ple owe money on lots of things , not just a few . . . with the touchy religious groups kyo. China Planning ol Soulh Viet Nam. To Step Up Attacks A Broadway restaurant ad- The Air Force said the fliers vertises: U. S. Monuments Political sources said Nfiuyen Rodney B. Beckman , ) "N. Y. Yankee were Capt . WASHINGTON (AP — U S. The sources said the reprisal tional support for the U.S.-Viet- Cheesecake — Made With WASHINGTON (AP) — FBI Hoa Hiep, a southerner, would 30, of Wendell , Minn., and Capt. and Tuyen authorities said today they ex- raids were no substitute for the namese effort . Some 2,000 South New Nuclear the Richest Batters" . . . agents seized four persons to- be Interior minister Cecil W. Powell, 29, of Groves, Important effort of winning the would be a deputy premier and pect the government of South Korean combat engineers are The cynic describes a star- day on charges of conspiring to Tex. war in the south. let: "A girl with a limited blow up the Washington Monu- minister of planning. Viet Nam to step up its cam- U.S. officials have followed headed for South Vict Nam to In central Viet Nam, where supplement thc Korean medical Test, U.S. Says vocabulary and an unlimit- ment , thc Statue of Liberty and paign against Viet Cong Com- closely reports from Saigon on the Liberty Bell. soldiers killed 15 civilians Mon- WEATHER munist forces , particularly in unit nnd a team of karate ex- (AP) ed neckline" . . . Thc nice anti- the formation of a new civilian WASHINGTON - A day in putting down two the Mekong River delta region government headed by Dr. perts already there. State Department spokesman thing about spring is that Agents *rrested three Negro demonstrations , a FEDERAL FORECAST it comes after all that snow fovernraent WINONA AND VICINITY - south of Saigon. Phan Huy Quat, former foreign U.S. authorities regard thc said today the United States men and a white woman from Iring squad execution was Informants described the In- minister. Korean contingent ns a signifi- and ice, when it's needed Canada In New York City. thc demon- Mostly fair and warmer tonight "hns reason to believe that scheduled for one of and Wednesday. Low tonight 10- tensified campaign as an out- The new government is ex- cant experiment. It will bring Communist China is preparing most. strators. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoo- 18, high Wednesday 30-35. growth of the talks presidential pected to represent all political the number of foreign person- for another nuclear test." LOCAL WEATHER adviser McGeorge Bundy held elements in the country dedicat- nel, not including those from the Press officer Robert J. Mc- ver said agents cooperating Brig. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Till with New York City police said two of the dead were Official observations for the in Saigon with U.S. nnd South ed to defeating the Viet Cong United States , to more than 3,- Closkey said it was assumed known Viet Cong agitators, and 24 hours ending at 12 m. today : Vietnamese officials just before and seems likely to have full 000. An international liaison that the second explosion would seized a quantity of dynamite the prisoner scheduled for exe- Maximum, 26; minimum , the two nations launched repris- U.S. backing. headquarters is being set up in make use of information which and blasting caps buried in a cution Wednesday was a Viet —-15; noon, 13; precipitation , al raids against North Viet Nam Meanwhile, efforts are contin- Saigon to coordinate* Uie inter- the Reds gained in their first ( For more laughs see Earl lot in the Bronx . He said tho Cong section leader. none. last week. uing to gain additional interna- national effort. test last Oct. 16. Wilson on Page 4.) cache was a portion of the ex- Thi sulci the Viet Con« had plosives being accumulated by planned to carry out a major the conspirators as part of their series of attacks after tho just- plot. ended lunar New Year holiday Those arrested were Robert but changed their tactics to S. Collier , 28; Walter A. Bowe, mounting big demonstrations in Shop Wednesday for Dollar Day Bargains 32; Khaleel S. Sayyed, 22, and towns. Michelle Duclos, 28. ! ; ¦""" _nTrirr_irTTr_n—im—i- ; nrrmnrrm—H_-nnrn i Hiiii M _MM i iwswiiwwwBBa ^^ '_!_^!1!^_ ^._^l^Ll___. "~TB iTrTi_n-^r^Tniiir_Ti I KjIL ¦ _^__^^^i^^___f^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^l__^______1' M* ~ SSKKII I - 1 '1 wpsi^ ' JI I ## i: ^ wtt«\^WS0%M0 jl Wzf&jS~y!sSl\ -5 /¦ ^MMm | | l _U I IiiI wM 1 ^_____^^^_^ V J * *x__T______I .^^t ^Ul t - ii HH ilHl I 1
_____ sEa^_BiB_^_^g__a^^ 11 >r ¦ooNOMvlSox.cm I __ '§ nvvJCnvUV
ti I f /£\ 1 E» * jEH^ I ^f^SSSlSal I I H H M A PllAlllA* f^ffi&B&XS&t S Sturdy pbitic QQ %w ¦ 1 nrene f^W^iM UVW^V^ n^%^^^^# EOTH FOR . . t | | W^^Mm. t |
$U> U» ^ ^ ¦ $1.00 Royal Dr.rs. $2.50 Lilt ( | | ^ ^ ^^ ^ M 1 $100 I J SHAMPOO J p | ySMU™ " ^ lMMWcfl—fEW -j™—™ CHAPTER SWEETHEART . . . Barbara Swell, Dakota, 00 I r tKMAIN tm PERMANENTT I 75. wiidroot receives her chapter aweetheart jacket from the I O o $1 | imSSm__ ^__^m^m_ ^W^_W_M 1 I Minn., R ¦ ^^^B_iff_^n_rlfflM^BttH^^^^^H rs Winona Future Fanner of America president, Mike Thill, i ~* i1 $1c*ti.^u Hfit- *\. 1 _1 s\r\ %h ______i & _1 1_ _III^___H______H______I JI HAIRriMi | P during a ceremony at Lake Park Lodge Monday evening. r--,.._ :. :^^. ^ , |: I.UU >*"« Barbara, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jtoy Swett was named f ^* «E*^ ?SK ^^^ \^_WM_ \W-w3^MSKBBB^_m\ *"DREEING"^ 1i chapter sweetheart by the members of the Winona FFA I ' IS! § ff^ ... In tf>. handy unbr;k,blt fub* ^ ^ i a a ^____. _ __¦ chapter. She is a senior at Winona High School and a mem- B -^N tftt***' * &* _ *$ " ___ » __, ' I ^J «P ¦ UU B Homemakers of America. The Home- ^^^ Tub ber of the Future I I I ¦ _/»_#» _Smt%M S rt--$/_\_m 6 R«guW»r $1.3i Family $1 00 X " I I makers named Allen McNally as their chapter beau. Al- II I She Prell Concentrate, Tube | f ^_sgs^^iam_MB(BSS_ len is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert McNally, Dakota. ^^J^O^CJw ^ i / 3^^^9 i ^^ 89C Gillette He is a senior at Winona High School and a member of the '/ -^\ 1 ^^^ |Tfi|||||, ^ \S &^J I £, j FFA. Judy Brand, FHA president, presented Allen with the beau jacket. (Dally News photo) H i&nA l __K88B ____Bjl Regular or Super \\ | ^ ^E m S s ^^ m ^kI STEEL ^ BLAD ES I No Prof it in I | | FFA Unit to Hear lBlUUL ^ _ F 1v ^5/ | V-KCAJVlfRFAKA , I speciBiiy^^jIy «-rUU.Q ' I This Robbery ' 1 48 s H Selected ^f^LM^mMMMMMM ^^^^^I % J ° * | I $1.45 Ntw liquid 1 hCAHAD A k|*T I % Bristles ^C ^ ^^^ ^ ^ J_ST R DENVER, Colo. (AP) - " WWWVW\n I I State President Head I Shculd.r, 1 | j- irmenou hto Re°' ? - ^^^^ aS!^^ s^ I David Hartle, Minnesota Fu- Three men dropped in at the OO I ? f 8 ^^v ______T I ^ ture Farmers of America pres- Mayan Theater to catch the late 1 ident, will be one of the two show Monday night. k^k ^k ^^kW A ::x ¦ _m^L tx mOWM ft I v ^ ^^ i A ^ I ' 'if_^^^£^BB^______^______B P3 Each paid tbe one-dollar ad- ^^ ^| ^ featured speakers at the FFA 5 | l 1 M * trimmed to the preferred, parent • son banquet at 7:15 mission fee. fil $4 95 I x^K^Hr @ ^^9«_B__S_^______I 1 p.m. Wednesday at Cathedral Shortly after they were inside ef the Sacred Heart. the theatre , reported manager mspsRss^_nmss^_3g«^^ 1 _x_____ SvJPr-rlOjE I MI Ki 9 Slz# i ______l___v b__P^^^__l Hartle, of Owatonna, has Bill Marx, 28, two of them ll^\i ^^^ ^^^^^^ " ^v 1 served as president and vice pulled out pistols. Then the men president of his local chapter, forced their way into the office was sentinel for District 14 and and robbed Marx. HtKbriKt _\m_% s % i l%J>^H_____^f5S?"^i^______^lI ^______H_^^_ received the state fanner de- They escaped with three one- IE i^mi^^ ^ | ^^^K^i^^sss^^a^^ SS 1 gree in 1964. dollar bills. LJEAWII XS iv Y^^C^v^' fj m%i rn ^~ ^^^ 9 ^M I ______RlS^_» 1 Appearing with Hartle on Wed- AdvtrtlMmtflt nesday's program will be Ken- neth Kennedy, national FFA president from Cadiz, Ky. ¦«* TW»W W>FFY ' for R ANEFR ,N Throaf ¦ _PEI -^7 I TOOTH PASTE I 8 1 t.j i Two Refinery ^ Vi ^Sn ^ 'J I si 75 Box c«i^ P 2^^s? ^;s^ss^^..:^^ 1 I A7FKI^F^ I ^ ^ ' ^/I*3 I ? 1-vr ^- t.i^vj a J V JfoZk I «*"« i«"S« s«" tf xor * I¦ . . 98c IJ 1 1 Buildings Burn I v «J5^^^v I i M 1^1 PPKITY ^ See-Thru Play» boy ; ' KLEENEX | _ I In New Orleans ^ i /SftS l f nfl 1 Choice of English Laven- I iJ* ^ $^ der, Red RoSes A pril LIGHTER rf ££' ^ (AP) l- A ^BtJ ^ I 2S 1 P p TISSUES * 88° ! TWW ORLEANS. La. - * | Violet pr Bond Street. I . . I 12 ** Only scorched shells of two re- &I rflMSBflSyAflHSfflPsSkl^^^eik ;! 1 ?. r %:- ;| Is . ModernM m Designn ?.*¦; & finery buildings remain today 1 /lW^r __-es|^^^_ 1 EK^!ssma_^^ss^3m_s^^esK.k^ y:l /| » Ci nn | fe ssse_53_^^H^3K3smaE__a^ I^ after an explosion and fire. One AA worker was killed and at least MlKr\ _ffl^BM - 4 I I c ¦^^STM ISMI S3 others injured. ^ lei v W W 111 W«# m >
* i| II Ihwne Ml Ten-O-Six Lotion doesn 't do exactl y Cold*' Congestion KCI.SINOTO *mmf Each i |^B6 5 _S______J P | N | H__|_ l^^8»__S-_i_N_ _l 25' i s w/iac ic siiou/.i /or your /jc- | .-„ i l_ H6 Main Phon* 3145 • --M, Wllh caee 1 in $ 88 "Where Vint Qualify Furniture find f'urpr . i .ig ¦^ the hst af ! ' ¦ ¦¦ $ morning thing»' night 3 HERE" -«..r11-w. «pr«y. $pj~boMery »11 49 fl Not KxjiensiveX ' fr*r° """""° ftm „(rf|°tA,ffl( ( j - 77^ I ---Mount. Moor. 3^ ^ * * | | ¦¦ ¦¦ . . __._ L»__Si23i_rii..ia lS£0&2®smiWMSZ^^^ STATE OFFICIAL SAYS Jury Considers Big Eastward Extension County Planning Aims Evidence in Clergy Group Ot Dike Not Justified Extensive changes in plans about 416 acres of protected estimates of th* project ex- Says Statue King Gas Trial for east-side flood control works land, it was later determined. pense. Stage II, according to To Keep , , Jordahl fold aldermen Mon- "very preliminary" estimates, Values Save Two different interpretations ara not- justified by potential day night that such extensions may cost about $1 million as The aims of county-wide plan- said. They are inventory and is left in the hands of local gov- of testimony in the Bohr-King benefits, the City Council was ' ning are to keep property would add greatly to the cost originally proposed. 'Not Fitting values analysis, goal formulation, plan ernment. The federal govern- Gas; trial came out in the op- told Monday night. of the project. Subsoil conditions This portion of the project, up and to effect tax savings, a preparation and plan imple- ment's part, he said, is primar- posing attorneys' arguments to A proposed statue of Christ An additional 25 to 30 acres were unfavorable to construc- designated Stage II, will prob- on Sugar Loaf vas opposed ia state planner said here Monday mentation. ily to provide financial assist- an 11-man jury this morning in of old city dump land can be tion in the swampy area, he ably not be built until next year, night. ance, realizing, as it does, that District Court. a letter from a group of clergy- The purpose of the inventory added with little extra cost, ald- said. The enlarged area also Jordahl said. . Stage I contracts Speaking at the Winona Coun- the cost of professional planning William E. Cfowder, attorney ermen were told , by Melvin would require construction of were let last year for a total men read to the City Council and analysis phase, he explain- Monday night. ty planning and zoning com- ed, is to obtain an understand- is high. for King Gas & Fertilizer Co., Jordahl, assistant chief of plan- another pumping station for of 5835,443. The area involved mittee meeting in the county ing of the community's current Ko one would give up bis Lewiston, defendant in the case, ning and reports branch of the disposal of collected runoff is that from the Minnesota City The Winona Area Minister- highway building was Ronald situation and probable future rights, he emphasized, but de- alleged that King Gas had re- Army Engineers Corps St. Paul from within the diked area, he Boat Harbor to Huff Street. ium's letter said members un- E. Kaliszewski, a representa- trends. terioration of property values turned leased fertilizer equip- district. said. Estimated cost of this portion animously feel that such a sta- tive of the division of communi- through haphazard land use ment to V. A. Bohr, Scottsdale, had been $1 million. tue is not "a fitting memorial Goal formulation is the phase would be avoided. Moreover, he THE ORIGINAL, plan called THE LAND value potential Jordahl said the project was to the living Christ," ty planning, Minnesota Depart- in which the planning commit- Ariz., jn better condition than for a dike roughly parallel to would have to rise by several ment of Business Development; declared, proper planning Bolr originally turned it over. ^ broken into two parts because E x pressing tee must commit itself to ob- makes recommendations about and about thousand dollars an acre in design details were not finished jectives for the future. Plan 1,000 feet east ma.J order for the extension to make a different *¦»•¦ RAUSZEWSKI's agency ad- development of a communities CROWDER pointed ont that at the eastern side cf the city. viewpoint was preparation comes after goals Bohr had testified the paint on of Mankato Lily good economic sense, Jordahl Rather than hold the entire tlTV ministers the federal govern- resources- v Avenue. Its - said. In appraisals ordered late a letter from ment's urban planning assis- have been developed. In this This area, for example , has his equipment was good and /¦ project for this completion, he phase, objectives are applied southern end —..—— *,| last year by the council, in- divided into two the Rev. A. U. f« , ;| tance program, commonly not developed its potential as a the tires were new when the V-OUncIl said, it was Deye, St. Mar- j lOUnCll to specific instances in the com- would be the creases in value of -about $250 parts, to be built separately. known as the 701 program. The tourist attraction, he said . The equipment was turned over Highway 61-14 an acre were forecast if the tin's Lutheran county committee has complet- munity, while the overall wel- possibilities are many, he as- Jan. 1, 1960. Yet the defendant's Work on Stage 1 will begin in grade and the northern end area were taken into the flood earnest this spring. Church, who said he wrote as ed its first application for aid fare of the community must serted. witnesses had shown that King approximately at the Present value still be considered. would be control system. an individual and not as a rep- under this program. Gas repainted much of the southern terminus o^ Steuben of the land was put at $372,000. ALTHOUGH the large erten- resentative of any group. Implementation of the p AT KALISZEWSKI'S request, equipment in 1960 and that the Under the 701 program, Kal- lan is Street. Last \ fall the council Future value of the same land, sion was impractical , Jordahl In such a continuous process. Units oi Gordon W. Fay, county high- tires were old, proposals as this, iszewski explained, the federal asked the corps to consider if protected, was estimated at said, the northern end of the which lie outside normal government are continually way engineer and planning com- Bohr produced no business pushing the dike eastward to $473,000. ' be moved east government would pay two- mittee secretary, reviewed the dike might well spheres of activity, judgments thirds, and the county would making decisions that may or records to show the value of the the old Chicago Great Western Costs of enlarging the system to the end of Louisa Street. work done by the county group grade. Tbis would add would add $1 million to corps provide additional are likely to be hastily made, pay the remaining third of the may not conform to recommen- equipment he leased, Crowder Railroad This would the letter stated. The situation dations made in the plan. The during the last two years. protected land for eventual de- cost of work leading directly told the jury. f!he claim for should be studied carefully so planning committee's job is to Some data about the -county damages is speculative, Crow- velopment as industrial area, to a comprehensive plan. The have been gathered, he said, that the community will not be plan would include all unincor see that they do. Another of der said. For instance, Bohr Council Supports he said. The council bad pro- and an interim zoning ordinance posed the 40-acre expansion sorry for its decision later, the porated areas of the county, its tasks is to revise the plan had testified that valves; might minister advised. He suggested when necessary to fit changing has been prepared, but not yet he destroyed by corrosion. Woman, Child because it felt such possibili- unless a municipality would re- adopted. State DST Change ties existed there. The area Garvin Heights as an alternate quest that the plan include land conditions. Bohr hadn't proved that lift- site. Kalizewski pointed out that an A resolution asking for also was tested as a possible within its limits. KALISZEWSKI differentiated interim zoning ordinance is per1 jacks or applicator parts not site for a new high school but This generation will be judged Kaliszewtski suggested that returned by King Gas were ever daylight saving time keyed between a planning consultant , mitted under state law. It would to that employed in Wiscon- Dead in Fire was foun d to be unsuitable, by succeeding ones, Bev. Deye's the county keep township offi- such as would be hired under a be valid for a year, then could delivered, Crowder maintained. _ City Attorney George M. Rob- letter observed, so the com- cials informed of the progress And the testimony of defen- sin was adopted' Monday AMERY , Wis. < ">—A rural De- 701 program, and a resident be renewed for another year. Its night by the City Council. one of ertson Jr. said. munity should ask whether the of planning work , and that it dant's •witnesses showed that, ronda woman died and former dump planner, who would be here dur- chief purpose, he pointed out, The resolution will be for- her five children was missing If the additional statue, as proposed, would do give small villages the oppor- ing formulation of a plan and should give the county a means In fact, they never were deliv- acreage is brought in, Jordahl ered by Bohr. warded to ¦ ... ., in a fire that destroyed their any harm or, contrarify, wheth- tunity to participate in the pro- —more important — afterward, of reviewing new developments said, the extra cost will be er it would do any good. ject. local leg- r\±\ i home early today. Pour children about $150,000. Of this the city to help with its implementa- until a comprehensive zoning ATTORNEY FOR Bolr, Wil- islators in \-liy The reason for the latter sug- ordinance can be prepared un- escaped and were hospitalized. is required to furnish .8 per- Council President Harold tion . liam A. Lindquist, began by St. Paul. Briesath said he believes the gestion, be explained, is that He said that tbe ideal situa- der the- plan. The body of Mrs. Harold War- cent, or $1,200. saying, "we believe this equip- wick, about 45, was recovered The northern dike terminus statue should be placed on Gar- the cost of professional plan- tion would be one in -which a State law requires that a ment is in atrocious condition. Council ning would be beyond the reach county would hire a planner county board pass two resolu- dr.7tSd 1 from the ruins about 9 a.m. would be just west of the new vin Heights and that it would It is unbelievable that they after the Gorman Foundry Co. building, benefit the community and of small villages. No matter when it is at the stage at which tions in order to make a county suggestion was advanced Sheriffs deputies continued a eligible for the 701 program. would return it in this shape search for her daughter, Bren- to be built this spring along Christianity. how small the community, such Winona County now finds itself. and expect Mr. Bohr to assume , that the city again go on work usually costs a minimum Unfortunately , he pointed out, The first is a statement of in- day, 9. Milwaukee Railroad trackage in No formal action has been the burden of repairing it." ' the same standard of day- area The of about $5,000 he said. no federal funds would lie avail- tent to proceed under the state's ot Wis- the former dump . taken by the council on the pro- light time as that Hospitalized in Amery were foundry floor would be at the able to pay this planner's sal- planning statutes. This was done King Gas has not tried to consin . Sharon, 19; Linda, 7; Jan, 6, posal of Will Kohner, Chicago, IF THE connty decides to go ary, since f ederal law requires here Oct. 2, 1962. Tbe second is show that the equipment is design flood level , however, to erect the 100-foot figure on Mayor R. K. Ellings, who and Mrs. Warwick's son, Gera- which means that there is little through with the 701 program, that the money be used for the a resolution establishing a plan- now in good condition, as called 3. All suffered frostbite, a high point above the city. for testified a week ago at Sen- lyn, likelihood of its being inundat- It must complete the applica- specific purpose of formulating ning committee. This was done . by the lease agreement, hearings in from 20 below cold, (so Lindquist maintained. Rather , ate committee apd smoke ed. Design level is for floods tion procedures far, it has a plan. here Oct. 8, 1963. favor of extended daylight inhalation. The boy also suffer- not committed itself to any- tbe defense has been built which occur statistically once A resident planner, however, saving time, proposed the ed burns None was reported in well above thing) and must hire a plan- THE COUNTY thus ls eligi- around the idea that the equip- . every 500 years, or could work with a consultant— action as a possible influ- serious condition. the level of high water in the Lewiston Schools ning consultant, Kaliszewski who could be paid in part with ble, he said, and would probably ment was turned over in poor have no trouble having a proj- ence on the legislature. It Mrs. Warwick's husband was 1952 flood. said. federal funds — and -would be condition, Lindquist said. is not known what sort of The role ot his agency, the in a position to implement the ect approved if funds are away. He is employed at a tac- THE DIKE, under the amend- available. In all probability, he And yet, no complaint was law will emerge from state Open Wednesday planner went on, Ls to super- plan as soon as the consultant ever made about the allegedly lawmaking bodies,' be point- onite plant at Silver Bay, Minn. ed plan, would extend north has prepared it. pointed out, the federal govern- along an abandoned ditch east vise planning done under this ment has not appropriated missing articles called for by ed out, but if no changes program and to administer Kaliszewski noted that some the lease or about the allegedly are made in the state's of Mankato Avenue, employing counties have hired a planner enough funds to last the cur- , the city can part of that diking. At Shive On Limited Basis funds. Both the federal govern- rent fiscal year , which ends "junk " state of Bohr's equip- present law ment and the local unit pay in cooperation with one of their ment when turned over to King still enact its own resolu- 2 Suits Removed Road, it would turn east along LEWISTON, Minn. (Special) large cities. Mower. County and June 30. tion This independent ac- the south shoulder of the road , their shares to the state com Approval of an application for Gas, Lindquist pointed out. . — The ice which coated roads munity planning division, and the city of Austin, for instance, tion was taken last year by turning north across the Lake in the entire Southeastern Min- plan to hire a planner together. a grant takes anywhere front THE OTHER defense pot np the council, as it was in Winona outlet ditch at a point the agency pays the planning 60 to 90 days, however, so by nesota area and parts of West- his by King Gas is that the equip- Duluth and some other From Calendar approximately even with Lou- em Wisconsin last Tuesday and consultant and checks on HE NOTED that tbe city of the time a program for Winona isa Street, the entrance to the work. ment was not used after the cities on the Wisconsin Reconciliation in a divorce Wednesday still was keeping Winona has placed advertise- County would be approved, the 1963 fertilizer season and that border. former dump area. The agency ls always avail- ments for a planner in profes- new fiscal year would be under suit and settlement of a civil one school closed today. able for help and consultation, some "obsolete" equipment suit begun two years ago was A council resolution of agree- Parents in the ice-coated sional journals. way, Kaliszewski said. used pre-1961 applicators in his ment to this change wnl be Kaliszewski said, and a re- The planning group took no was abandoned even before announced Monday by Clerk of areas around Lewiston won't let Kaliszewski said that the to- , fertilizer business.) drawn when land descriptions presentati-ve of it would be as- tal cost , of a 701 program de- action at Monday night's meet- then Lindquist said. He main- District Court Joseph C. Page. their children ride buses, hence tained that this did not free have been compiled. Upon pas- Lewiston, Fremont and Altura signed to work with county of- pends on a county's size and ing, hut members indicated in- ROLAND Schommer, Osseo, The suit for divorce of There- sage, probably at the next reg- ficials. population, as well as how de- terest in the 701 program once King Gas of the obligation to sa Glomski, 53, 1018 E. King schools were closed for the fifth properly service the equipment. Minn., president of King Gas, ular meeting, the resolution will day today. Tbe county is free to choose tailed a plan is desired. A rule again. Its next step will prob- testified that he thought the for- St., against her husband, Teo- be forwarded to the corps. any firm of planning consult- of thumb used by his depart- ably be to interview planning Judge Arnold Hatfield instruc- fil, 57, -was stricken from the Under the general flood con- They will open Wednesday, ted the 11-man jury in the law mer president of his company however, ants, as long as the firm em- ment, however, is about $1 for consultants. had acted carelessly in signing District Court calendar for a re- trol agreement, the city must on a limited basis. lanner that meets each county resident. Using this MEMBERS of the planning governing the disputed issues conciliation, according to Page. ST. CHARLES school was ploys a p the lease agreement with Bohr . furnish all temporary and oer- state standards. rough formula, Winona County's comniittee are : Allan Moore , in this case, and the jurors are Attorneys William A. Lind- manent easements at its own opened today after a four - day program would cost about $40,- Dresbach, chairman; Ben Roll- expected to begin deliberations He said King Gas had not re- quist and Martin A. Beatty rep- expense. In Stage II, much of ice and snow vacation. Children THE PLANNING program O00. The county , of course, ing, "Wilson ; Ed Yarolimek, Rol- after lunch. One juror was ex- ceived some of the equipment resented Mrs. and Mr. Glomski , the land involved is city-owned , living off the main roads may Ittseli can generally be divided would pay only a third of this. lingstone ; Alton Bergh, St. cused because of illness during called for in the lease and that respectively. a fact that will make progress have to walk a distance to into four phases, Kaliszewski other leased equipment had Rice County's plan, he said, Charles, and Leo _Borkowski, the trial. The suit of Mr. and Mrs. Ros- considerably smoother than that catch the buses. They are asked cost about $20,000, but the coun- Goodview , representing the Defendant rested, plantiff of- been in poor repair. He admit- coe H. Kraning, 966 Gilmore experienced on Stage I, where to call their drivers. ty's population is slightly less county board. In addition ; Fay, fered a brief rebuttal and testi- ted that no complaint had ever Ave., against the Royal Yellow large amounts of privately own- The continued slippery condi- than Winona County 's , and the Oliver Strand, county agent, mony ended Monday afternoon been made about these condi- Cab Co. was stricken from the ed land were involved. tion was laid to breakdown of Youth Pays .30 plan prepared was not detail- and William Sillman, soil con- in the eight-day trial which be- tions. calendar for settlement, Page county equipment and shortage ed. Otter Tail Counly, with a servation agent, are ex offic io gan Feb. 1. Bohr returned to the stand said. of treated sand. It affects black- population similar to Winona members. top as well as gravel roads. Tha The defendant' s expert for a brief rebuttal to the defen- Kraning asked , through his at- County's but with a larger area , Also present at Monday dant's case. He produced pur- Rev. Senwen ke blacktop from Lewiston to Fre- For Bottle Theft got a plan that cost about $50,- night's meeting were coun ty witness, R u s s e 1L Slack , Le torney, Roger P. Brosnahan , mont still was reported to be Sheriff George Fort today an- Sueur fertilizer distributor, con- chase orders for lift-jacks, $25,000 in compensation for in- 000. Blue Earth County's plan commissioners Adolph Spitzer, mostly dating from 1955. Part a sheet of ice. The Altura area , nounced the apprehension of a cost about $30,000. St. Charles ; James Papenfuss, tinued afternoon testimony juries, damage to his car and the "Whitewater area to the St. Charles youth who admitted along general lines laid out in of his claim is that lift-jacks loss of his services to his wife In Top Young 10 , Kaliszewski emphasized that Dakota , and Carl 0\ Peterson, leased to King Gas were not north and Oak Ridge reported- stealing 12 cases of empty soft most responsibility for the plan Fremont. the morning. Slack maintained resulting from an auto accident PLAINVIEW , Minn.—A Plain- ly are very slippery. drink bottles from a Stockton that the fertilizer equipment returned. at Huff Street and Broadway view minister was named one The Lewiston basketball team store Jan. 1. used by King Gas had been ex- King Gas said it never re- March 8 , 1961. of Minnesota's 10 outstanding plans to travel to Chatfield for Kenneth Freese, 19, St. Char- FILED WITH COUNCIL cellently maintained. ceived lift-jacks from Bohr and Attorney Richard H, Darby young men Saturday night at a game tonight on trunk higli- les, pleaded guilty to a charge produced witnesses who testi- represented the cab company. the state Junior Chamber of ways. of petty larceny Monday in EQUIPMENT he described fied that farmers ordinarily Suit was brought by the Kran- Commerce annual distinguished Cars, buses and trucks were Goodview justice court. He paid as obsolete had received no supply their own lift-jacks in ings March 23 , 1963. Terms of service awards meeting at traveling with chains Ln rural a $25 fine and $5 costs levied by maintenance at all — and he the fertilizer business. settlement were not announced. Moorhead. areas ' around PRESTON this Justice Lewis E. Albert as the recommended none — Slack The Rev. Charles Schwenke, morning as the temperatures alternative to 10 days in county Petition Signed testified. The Le Sueur man pastor of the Presbyterian remained cold following early jail. simply noted missing parts on Church here, was selected from subzero readings. School buses Freese, and a companion who the "obsolete" equipment. He among 71 nominees. He receiv- were traveling only to areas Is being ought , stole the empties said that King Gas; had replac- ed the Plainview award Jan. 21. they could reach with safety. early in the morning of New ed most of these. He is presiden t of the Plainview Lewiston school drfinitely will Year's Day. They traded four By About hlOO Rust on some of the equip- Area Improvement Association have classes on George Wash- cases in for gasoline at another With relatively little discus- letter from former Mayor l_oyde ment is what would normally^ and ia active in many commun- ington's birthday as one of its ity affairs. Stockton store the next day. sion , the City Council received Pfeiffer was read. Pfeiffer's let- be expected since It has stood ¦ makeup days . According to the sheriff , they and filed petitions Monday night ter charged that petitions are idle from the summer of 1 953, Gordon M. Fay, county high- He cashed the rest in at 50 cents asking for referendums on three relatively meaningless for m any Slack told the co^irt. said Merchants to Hold way engineer , said late Monday a case in Winon a the same day , civic issues. re asons. that the rust could be blown that delivery of a shipment of Jan. 2- Don Ehmann, 9B0 W. Sth St., Some signers are njt acquaint- off with an air hose and scrub- Dollar Day Wednesday calcium chloride was expected Freese was released upon , said ed with the issues, Pfeiffer bed off with a brush. today. It is in short supply who authored the petitions Winona merchants will pavment of his fine. they were circulated entirely by wrote, others are not eligible Such maintenance is normal throughout the Upper Midwest. observe Dollar Day Wed- ¦ volunteer solicitors. The copies voters , and some are high-pres- between-seasons practice in the average new home con- nesday. Special prices were It takes 16.8 man hours to con- The submitted, he said, were signed sured into signing. The letter fertilizer business , Slack said. tains about 2,70fl square feet of by an estimated 1 ,200 city resi- charged that petitions some- detailed In the green sec- vert 1000 board feet of timber He noted that valves "frozen" tion In Momday's edition. into plywood . plywood. dents. They ask for citywide times are used as a means of last fall had been made usable popular votes political advancement by circu- with a simple greasing job in on the ques- _. lators. December. tions of feder- City Ehmann said all petition WINONA ally - assisted blanks contained columns where ON CROSS-exam I n a t i o n, signers could indicate excep- 1 urban renewal /"—...— -'A Slack said that he had been Notice to Winona Voters < and the high j ^OUnCH tions taken to any of the three hired by King Gas to note ev- , center, receives ( ACTIVITY OBOUP propositions. Signers also were ELK OF YEAR . .. John C. Bambenek school bond erything on the equipment leas- congratulations as Elk of the Year at a dinner of Lodge A Ev«ry day ii a registration day from now until » p.m. - Reguljr Muting to indicate whether they were issue and request that the city ed from Bohr that he thought 7 March l$th, 1945, to register, change name er change ed- . to provide voters or taxpayers, ho said , 327, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. At left is charter be converted should be done to put lt back \ drest to yov can vote In the City General E lection to be held / WED., FEB. 17 for home rule. and high pressure tactics were in shape, allowing for normal Karl P. Grabner, exalted ruler, and at right , S. S. Sadow- | Speaking briefly to the coun- not used to secure signatures. wear and ageing, ski, past district deputy and last year's Elk of the Year. t .OO P.M. No set patterns of coverage treasurer cil as he handed in the docu- 't A year ago Bambenek , a former Winona County , Monday, April 5, 1965 ( were laid out , but a cross-sec- Slack said that he hadn ¦was ments, Ehmann asked aldermen started any engines to see if given an honorary life memb«rship. | not to file them without dis- tion of the population was gain- He was initiated May 1, 1918, -was exalted ruler In 19.17 ATHLETIC CLUB ed because sollcHors worked in they would run. It is normal .( If you move, you muit change addret*. cussion. that they wouldn 't run until and 1940, has been a district depnty, is now secretary of The discussion came after a most parts of the- city, Ehmann I) Office op«n B to It and . to S daily except I ¦ ¦ ———'"—'—* the past exalted rulers club and is; a former director. Irrin —»—¦—aaammmm maintained. given their spring maintenance. A Saturday i to 12. , Slack said, and lie hadn't con- TeasrfaJe was in charge of the program and Pred Heyer VALIDITY OF (he signature* cerned himself jwrsonully with was master of ceremonies, Sadowski discussed Elkdom. A If you will become 21 ymart of age on or before tho dato Is questionable, charged R. J. the fact that the equipment was Eighty attended. (Dally News photo) '/ of the election regirNr before the deadline) date. I Ititter, fllO W. Mark St., a mem- to be turned over to Bohr Jan. |\ The Reslatretlon Office I* in the CHy Recorder's Office i AGENTS ber of the audience, because he 1. ' INSURANCE MlrtM* Birnclt. N«, INI .[ Room KM, City Hall. had seen petitions unattended on » • ¦ m To participate in the Casualty Insurance Slack said that t'.ie Botir ap- store counters. plicators he described as ob- ) JOHN S. CARTER, I program of the Winona Public Schools, you Ehmann disputed the charge Veterans of solete became so in 1961. He y\ Commiationer of Registration i March 1 1965. Applica- laced In ^0^, must apply before , and said none were p admitted that people still buy are available at the Board of business places; or taverns. ,h tion forms When Bitter asked the council and use 1961 model autos, but WSM Worldvvl WarV.F.W I in the Senior High School . he aaid he didn't know ol any- ^QfcSflyfF ""•* •* . Hall, OFFICE OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M. ' Education office how the authenticity of signa- THURSDAY" , February* 11, «;W P.M. one in Minnesot a using pre-1961 NJByBB^ Mrs. Alt. tures would be determined, ^HK ^r Auxiliary twill mt*1->t T»»m«»«r« Hall, PAUL W. SANDERS applicators. Ml H»lvtrw«, Mayor It. K. Ellings said they ^^^ Pr*iM»n . . MARCH 11th, 12th & 15th Business Manager (A U V | Clerk & would be ciieck«d against lists plaintiff's witness from VM « X?*Z.,X H ARO LO MINROW , C«mm.nd«r of registered voters. Preston had testified that he They'll Do It Every Time By Jimrme Hatlo RILLMERRILL'S QfHapf mwL <£cibt yiufihL 5 Make Cotter A' Honor Roll Comedians Give km Three sophomores and two Seitz, Bonnie Sevallius, Thomas. Here I am tvith time on my freshmen are on the A honor Stoffel, Robert Suchomel, Ste- roll at Cotter High School re- phen Thrune and Sandra Wicka. hands. And tbe problem is, SOPHOMORES how to handle it. Give me a leased today by the Rev. James Johnson a Rest little of your time, and I'll tell McCauley, principal. B HONOR ROLL - Karen Kohner Ellen Kulas, Fat Mc- By EARL WILSON you what I found to be the Sophomores with A averages , are Richard Nett, Mary Anne James, Jane Meier, Jerome NEW YORK - Are the comedians going to give President answer to my problem. Gallas, Suzanne Rumstfck, ... and Speck and Vicky Speck and Johnson and Lady Bird a rest in their gag-spouting My wife said something Elizabeth Losinski Tom Angst, Jeanne Bilder, Viet Nam situation? freshmen, Is it t)«cause of tbe tense about the fact that she was and Joanne Shargey. Stephen Dick, Joan Erdm._n- That's the conclusionreached by a lot of conclusion-jumpers going to have the day off , as The -B and B average honor czys, Pat McElmury, Joanne here after Bob Hope came to town for a Catholic Youth Organi- she couldn't get her work done rolls for each class: Rozek. Linda Bork, Violet Ci- zation dinner, when he received a Champions medal, and anyway as long as the trash SENIORS sewski, Jill Jeresek, Stephen didn't use one joke about LBJ, the ranch, the President's was still in the kitchen and B HONOR ROLL - Mary A. Speltz, Mary Ann WardweU, dancing,tbe President's cold, nor even the President's penchant she wouldn't be able to get Jeresek, Charles Nixon, Rebec- Judy Bilder, Linda Brom, Mau- for turning the lights out ox around lt. It was her nice way ca Reinarts, Theora Gilliam, reen Burns, Susan Mitchel, holding beagles by the ears. of letting me know that the Sharon Grupa, Elaine Heaser, Mary Paskiewicz, James Ker- Classical Lecture Scintillating, as always, Hope wastebasket hadn't been empt- Sandra Hermes, Susan Kulas, kenbush, Michael Schultz. dealt more with the religious ied, without asking me outright Jolean Orzechowski, Dm Pelow- B AVERAGE HONOR ROLL aspect. Acknowledging Cardinal ski, Paul Tushner, Kathy Walsh, — Diane Grandl, Michael Two- Series to Begin to take the time front my full Mary Jo Spellman's presence, he said, schedule for such a menial, Jean Weimerskirch, mey, Diane Bambenek, Betti Susan Bernat7, Bill Sylvia Daugherty. Ann "The Cardinal has visited aU though important task. Wood, Biesanz, At Sa int Teresa spots — Korea, Browne, Jean Laska, Gaylen DeZell, Janine Kujak, Robert the trouble Ber* It was an exaggeration — the lte, the World's Fair." He add- Meier, Kathy Quinlan, Mary Kleinschmidt, Gerald Gunder- First lecturer under the Mary bit about not .being able to get Sue Van Hoof , Anne Losinski, son, Paula Hegenbart, Joan E. McCahill Foundation grant ed, "The Fair's really In trouble ... the only one who can save around It to get her work done, Marcia Ward and Linda Wright. Hittner, J ames Schneider and for classical lectures at the Col- but it did bring home a point. B AVERAGE HONOR ROLL Kathleen Vaughan. the them is the real Moses." lege of Saint Teresa will be I had been so involved in get- — Phil Kohner, Tberese Burns, FRESHMEN Rev. Raymond V. Schoder, S.J. James A. Farley, who was there, he called "Coca-Cola's ting to the office , calling on Susie Cleminaki, Jean Chupita, B HONOR ROLL - Dawn Father Schoder will speak at answer to Joan Crawford." people, writing scripts, and Mary Beth Krage, Peggy Mc- Brandes, Jaclyn Loer, Judith two convocations Feb. 25 on wife Dolores, making recordings, that I was Guire, John Nett, Candy Olson, Pellowski, Mary Jean Raciti , Religious Art and speaking of his Taylor Co-op "Ravenna, Hope said, "George Murphy in- becoming like an executive even Rosemary Pulchinski, Bill Put- Paul SchoUmeier, Mary Lou Political Implications." but I vot- to my dear wife, who was hesi- nam, LeRoy Richer. Becky Shargey, Karen Glubka, Joan troduced me to her — Weimers- Katherine Bork Currently professor of classi- ed for him, anyway." tant to suggest that I empty Stanton and John Anglewitz, , cal literature and archeology at Sidney Peltier the trash, as it would take time. kirch. Mary Daugherty. Sharon Ehm- Oscar Winner Boosts Butter JUNIORS Sylvia Erpelding, Margaret Loyola University, Chicago, and beautiful singing actress cke, Father Schoder earned his doc- will marry I WAS quick to admit that B HONOR ROLL - Tatianna Lanik, Robert Schulz, Pqt Wilt- Diahann Carroll gen, Donald Haack, Geraldine torate in Greek, Latin and ling- next fall. Korpela Paintings she had a right to expect me Gajecky, Cherie Harkenrlder, uistics at SL Louis University Output in '64 to do such things, but — but Mary Lou Landman, Mary Hengei, Robert Hughes, Janet DIAHANN CONFIRMED thit so often I didn't have time. My Nett, Mary Schultz, Laurie McCauley . Kathleen Mueller, and his licentiate at West Baden TA\TLOR, Wis. (Special)-But- College. to me personally after her bril- first reaction was — I am Sneltz, Carol Braatz, Larry Edward Saehier, Renee Stolpa, ter production at Taylor Coop- Janice Thompson, Robert Grub- The lecturer was Fulbright liant and spectacular opening at working too hard — putting in Glubka, Michael Hauser, Pat- Room. Pol- 'Going on Road' erative Creamery increased 85,- ricia King, Peter Meier, James er, Rosann Janikowski , Steve professor of Greek art and ar- the Plaza Persian 068 pounds during 1964, it was too many hours. I really didn't tier, now divorcing, didn't at- have enough time. Then I gave Miller, Anne Mrachek, Barbara Kuiala. Nancy Schwanke and cheology at the University of revealed at the firm's annual Jeff Smith. Nijmegen, The Netherlands, in tend her opening, because she it a second thought, which prov- Semling, Donna Whetstone, Jeff meeting Saturday. , 1956 and 57, and was visiting felt his presence would have ed to be the best thought of the Cilley, Louise Cunningham B AVERAGE HONOR ROLL her nervous, Poitier'll be one Milk purchases increased 2 two, by far. I wondered how Nancy Newman, Cathv Pellow- — Torn Orzechowski, Timothy professor of the American million pounds during the same School of Classical Studies in of the Oscar presenters April 5 many hours did I have to put in ski, Carol Riska, Bill Schuh, McAndrew, Bernita Bork, Mike in 1961 and 62. and Diahann, appearing at the period. Net profit for distribu- to a good job and still have Bob Allaire, Richard Beck , Bob Hess, Victor Morse , Diana Athens, Greece, tion JNBS $18,753. Los Angeles Cocoanut Grove time to study and relax. Must Knopick, Stephen Loshek, Rich- Palubicki , Susan Paskiewicz, He has been director oi sum- ard Losinski, Mary Prondzinski John Reinarts, Ann Spelti, Pat- for American simultaneously, will be his date, Leonard Peterson was re- I always be in a hurry? mer courses making it all sort of officiaL elected secretary-treasurer and and Guenther Sagan. ricia Thilmany, Phyllis Wernz, teachers, given by the Vergilian Victor Melby, , I took some index cards, B AVERAGE HONOR ROLL Mary Whorton and Mary , Cumae It- Poitier'll be popping into the Blair was re- Society of America , Persian Room now to catch her elected director. Harley Simon- wrote out a schedule, allowing — Cathy Drazkowski, Ted Bem- Williams. aly, during she summers since adequate time to get the job benek, Charles Kulas, Mar- act. We recommend to hbn a son, a director whose term also Enough plywood was produced 1963. number in which she says, expired, asked his name be done. As I work in the field of garet Roemer, David Brom, In the last six years Father public relations, my activities Becky Pelowski, Steve Henry, last year to roof New York City "Producers are asking what I'd withdrawn. He was replaced by and still have enough left over Schoder has taken eight trips like to do next, and I say, Clayton Hammond. . vary, and I had planned ny George Hoeppner, Sheelah study and Mayzek , Maria Posada, Keta for a stack IBS miles high. abroad for first-hand 'Well, I'd like to do "My Fair Holdover officers include Gay- days to include using a half photography of archeological Lady" — the movie, of course. hour here, and an hour there, the lord Strande, president; Verdal sites and museum art. He is Maybe Professor 'Iggins could Hansen, manager; Richard that could slip by without no- author of a number of books be played by Cab Calloway.' " Gearing, Bert Skaar and How- tice. You know — I found that and articles and critical re- ard Ripp, Hixton, directors. if I stopped up the leaks of views. DRAMA CRITIC John Mc- time, Carl Matson, representative of I could have time — time Clain's friends says he's marry- to study, time to relax, and best GR EAT FOOD... ing an international society fig- Land O'Lakes Creameries, ex- plained the revolving earnings of all, time to fulfill my labors Caucus Ma rch 13 without undue pressure. You TODAY'S WORST PUN: A of Land 0' Lakes support pro- gram — price spread between see, I did have time on my At Trempealeau cannibal chief says his tribe no hands, but by mismanagement, QUICK SERVICE . . longer eats missionaries: oleo and butter. , or just plain carelessness, I TREMPEALEAU, Wis. (Spe- "We're on a non-prophet basis." Earl Hanson representative had lost it. dil)—The Trempealeau Village WISH I'D SAID THAT: of ADA, discussed the impor- Board has set March 13 at 8 There's a Miami hotel being RECENT WORKS PREVIEWED -.. "Canadian Silence," tance of advertising to meet STRANGE THLNG about REASONABLE PRICES! p.m. for nominating candidates planned so swanky it'll have an painted last year by Edward Korpela, head of the Winona competition. Lloyd Melby, rep- time. Some have time on their for village officers. Election all-tile beach. Senior High School art department, is one of a group of his resentative ot the butter divis- hands, meaning they have wiH be April 6. REMEMBERED QUOTE: recent works to be shown in two Southern cities this spring. ion of the Land 0' Lakes plant more time than they know what Terms of Edward James, "The average woman's vocabu- Tbe paintings were shown to invited guests Sunday at the at "Whitehall, welcomed visitors to do with. Others have time, president; Ervin Brommerick, lary is about 500 words. That's Korpela home. (Daily News photo) to the plant at Whitehall. John more properly phrased, in their Morton Simerson and Clarence a small inventory — but think Taylor, Whitehall, state inspec- hands, to be molded wisely or Wiersgalla, trustees, and Dav- of the turnover." — Aaon. By GEORGE McCORMICK most avowed foe of non-repre- tor , and Eugene Savage, Black lost forever. id Brunkow, supervisor on the EARL'S PEARLS: A young- River Falls, Jackson County Dally News Staff Writer sentational art finding anything It occurred to rae that some county board, expire. The clerk- ster paid his first visit to an at which to carp. The works farm agent also spoke. treasurer and assessor-building art museum and described the Two Southern cities will get strip the nonessentials away, of my readers night have a inspector will he appointed. paintings to a friend: "It's like the first public exhibits of a but they convey the essence of similar problem, or their mate The board has voted to pay . . . well, like color TV." large group of thoroughly pro- a subject even more than the in life is all wrapped up in do- the Boy Scouts $100 for raking A fellow wondered why he fessional recent paintings by most literal picture would do. Co-op ing until there's hardly time tbe village park again this year. Winona's Edward Korpela. Elgin for life itself. You too may ¦ didn't do as well at bowling as he did at poker. "Because, " a Tbe works — mostly in acry- have felt your only hope was a friend explained, "you can't lic paint or water color — will Arkansaw Man drastic change in activity. Top Current Events shuffle an alley." . .. That's be shown in March at the Gulf Shows Slight May I suggest that you evalu- Scorers Announced earl, brother. Coast Art Center, Clearwater, Found Guilty of ate your time. You may discov- Fla., and in May at Witte Mem- er that life can be relaxed even EUTH'S In Test at Cotter NAMED AT LAKE CITY orial Museum, San Antonio, Drunken Drivina Operating Loss for you — ff you deny procras- Tex. They were shown to in- ELGIN, Minn. (Special) — tination and mismanagement ESTAURANT Top scorers ln current events LAKE CITY, Minn. — Mar- vited guests Sunday afternoon DURAND, Wis. (SpeciaD- tests, given recently at Cotter Elgin Cooperative Creamery the right of stealing your time. 126 last Third Street vin Wagner has been named at the Korpela home, 203 W. Before Pepin County Judge John had a net operating loss of $1,- Remember, "spare moments High School were announced to- field manager of Gould Nation- Mill St. Bartholomew Monday, Thomas day. 931 during 1964 , according to its are the gold dust of time. Of al Engine Parts Division here. Black, Arkansaw, was found financial report distributed at all the portions of our Conueniently located in downtown Winonn. Joanne Shargsy received a THEY ARE Indicative of guilty| of drunken driving and life, He began working for the for- the annual meeting here Sat- the spare moments are the certificate oi excellence for mer Gillette & Eaton firm Korpela's mastery of his me- sentenced< to pay a $100 fine urday. most fruitful In good or evil." a answering 86 of the 100 ques- after graduating from Lincoln dia — a level of skill that en- p] lus costs or serve 20 days in t^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ K^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ K^^^^^^^^^ tions correctly. Bernard Kokott High School here in 1941. He ables him to use the character- jail. Milk and cream sales drop- and Michael Schneider each served in the U.S. Navy 3H istics of each medium and to On failure to pay, he was ped nearly 700,000 pounds dur- received certificates of merit years and returned to G & E, make these characteristics work Jet/Missile I CORTLAND'S _ WHILE 100 LAST Il |fl Flee to Cuba I llKl lllAim J4* PP ^^T B By Mistake HAVANA (AP) — "We are tired with the way things are in I DIAMOND ¦ PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — A the United States," said a A r iKECE ¦ crate delivered accidentally to spokesman ior three American f# vntcjc ' Portland State College caused shrimp fishermen — all ex-con- I t\n vc _B^ several minor traffic tie-ups victs — who have asked for po- I VAY> §T Monday in efforts to get it to the litical asylum in Cuba. ci ircDc I right campus. The spokesman was Ernest CIW I Wed.-Thurs.- ' Family jr A crated Convair F102 jet Welch Bishop, 52, of Biloxt, ¦ _ . m. Wfl______*••.^wi . J' ¦ FIVE FOR THE GUAM) . . . Five young in the Armory, damaged by a fire a year fighter interceptor and an air- Miss. He appeared at a news ¦ Cri C_if V______r *heu,d, hout b* L. C I men are sworn into Company B , 4th Bat- ago, until a new one is built. to-air Falcon missile, carried by conference Monday with the rn.-oaL / B^7 O MMMWMA talion, 135th Infantry Regiment, at the Na- Left to right, ilichael Prondzinski, Trem- two truck-trailers, arrived at other two defectors, Dale Allen tional Guard Armory here Monday evening Portland State Monday after- West, 28, and John Perry Clark, pealeau, Wis.; Charles Mathison, Spring Val- 20, both of "Washington State. by Lt. John Erickson, executive officer. ley; Richard Peplinski, 506 Johnson St. ; Rog- noon. The delivery was sup- posed to be at the University of Standing is Lt. Col. Fredric R. Steinhauser, er Evenson, 865 E. Broadway, and Wayne the Portland Air Base for the Minneapolis, battalion commander Portland on the other side of the , who was Ward, Winona Rt. 3. They enlisted for six city. night. here for a command inspection preparatory years and will go on active duty for six After the traffic tie-ups the The display, from Norton Air to the general inspection in April. Assisting < months shortly. Guard strength now is 137 trucks arrived at the Portland Force Base in San Bernardino, was. Maj. Lucian Grupa, Winona, battalion men and 5 officers. (Daily News photo) campus, too late in the day to Calif., will be set up today — at executive officer. The guard is "making do" set up the display. So it went to the right address. THE ~JiwIS NOW! 5 ¦ ¦ * Y°ur _k I I MJB^FT • SOLITAIRESch°ic" DIAMONDl/lrtlf IWlll# ^^419 HH 'flI I9___t • FANCY DINflC .Ji ll RCA VICTOR RHF#^ PATTERNED l%lllVt# J§^kWWm l l l TBMJ TL ^- ^ifr;TnH l______Bn______^^-^G-m-mmV**^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^* *** **^Bmmmm^^mmmmmm^ l_^^^^9SBfl^flBBfl^^^^BBBfl9BlBB_^^^^^^^^^r fl 6 Only - fl ¦ ¦ ___¦ Gleaming METAL Only 1 Ltft! fl BBBV^___I ruiNni ^^^^BBB^^BBBBBBBJBB^______.^ Tk* KQ ^^M ^^^ >—t__5 ^______^VBBBB^____E______i______r BB _W iw vnArmLfcw _ M__m ______T ¦ WASTE BASKETS Badminton Set Sps, 1.98 I Va,ue> ¦ ¦ I To $2 77rfit Reg. «.!» Seller I¦ I I Assorted Sizes - AlaiUl Cl0Cl (S Spec 1-97 I fl Odds 'n Ends ,« H ¦ ¦ PLASTIC DISHES ^""STJI"--:* I ¦ ¦ Your rn ,, Bar-B-Q TraysEa 33C ¦ / jj -The Time to see Color! \ \ fl Choice ta. H_ C fl il jf The Time to enjoy Color! j 1 ^ SU nBEAM I | L V The Time to Buy Color!// a 9 JjIS-m 3-Pfece Sei JlKj | 1^ LUGGAGE mfn I _B_____ariy __*» ______Q94%_M j lH ¦I MF^¦E: c,05eou, $TF <__ #%£& | ^|»9Set'->^ * §M Jm*«^B $V<*o I¦ _»pta ^^m/__. (h»^l §Tl ^U|j_l^l_ ii__ii Iwi UX*m~ * 11. MAVlCIORThan iWllli ¦B___Kwy___f IU.A VICTOR Than il I fl^B«3vfin______H ™ B. B B Iff nH iilB ll a r\ llll Iwii Slllj! !l ___ ii ii I II II CPtiE0MTAN AW^ MEN S OR LADIES *^A I LU" " I k Swiss WATCHES j M b 1n O I WSr Fully Jeweled. Witir and Shock Re- ^flflfl fl f 3HE' jW IT TO BELIEVE ITS Sf -~i?-» ^1 RH Bfe&-» sittant.,c These are the w»tche» built ^I ffi HH fi J ' * * " J $^88 Mllfr f*k* 8 bating) __f__Wmm H cold" p.t- ¦# ^______?l *¦. flPr Va,uo,$39.95 d^^ftftTO i «•«-. ^www^ mLWg| To *1| # wl¦ I I J^ -J P paSl Howie Says: R . - nAcff |f ^^T | |\ Wh,n u ,h,nk of Co,or TV ou AnT th(rT lam^Lm^ma' toV° be ot V ff] ° «I»'»ri_ion... i H have thinking RCA VICTOR , S M WK^Ly DP A IflfTAD IS! D1,Mk »"<» Whit- 'SBI I TpSRj) ,urbecame It U an RCA creation ex- If l/ A VIV I Ulf lfl or Color i ffl l Faam Mcsh cloiivelyl RCA product! the pic- Hi BB_ I pMur IMffllfer^ — ^ 1 1 d-m^r tH^l *' *"nd' ,h* * and ,h<"' All ChdlMGl IKp^^^^^^^^_S^ip| CERAMIC ^^k I ,,,rou!,h ,h ll I i l l B^ BB v °ur hom* *ir •»"u*''ui Soortdbout i I K " n • i Tir| P,anlerS color »eti. Color TV can be yourt "^ I ASH TRAYS ( Mllli I I a I mi Floral Pa arn Docora ¦ ¦ -¦ - — '- — '•' - ¦ * " ¦ TODAY IN NATIONAL AFFAIRS To Your Good Health Postal Savings Has REPORT FROM VIET NAM BY BILL MAULDIN Letters to The Outlived Its Usefulness Editor Adu lts, Too, Labor-Cap itol (Editor'* Note? Let- POSTMASTER GENERAL Gronou-ki ters mutt be temperate , is justified in calling for an end to the 54- cf reasonable length and. In Need of year-old postal savings system, which signed by the writer. served so well in its day. Crisis Growing Bona fide names of all Vaccination By DAVID LAWRENCE letter-writers will bet Congress established the system as an publUhed. No religious, By JOSEPH G. MOLNER, M.D. aftermath of the 1907 financial panic and WASHINGTON — A major crisis in labor- medical or personal con- management relations in Arherlca is building troveritei are accept- What vaccinations are its .attendant bank failures. Among the necessary for adults? waves of immigrants then coming to up under the very eyes of the President and able.; yet virtually nothing is being For a long time older peo- , hoarding and export of savings Congress — and America done about it. Here are some of the develop- More Meaningful Caption ple held to the incorrect were widespread. But the newcomers were ments: Could Have Been Used idea that since they had familiar with postal savings in their home- been vaccinated as children, 1. A devastating strike, shutting down mar- To the Editor: lands and quickly accepted the system they didn't need any addi- itime transportation at Atlantic and Gulf coast No doubt you received the upder which almost every post office be- tional vaccinations. ports, cost $2 billion and caused untold damage picture of Mr. Lincoln and Polio vaccine has came a "bank" and savings were safe, served to business operations due to shipping delays. Mr. Churchill, published on a double purpose. It has all even though the interest rate was — and Yet Congress did not even take up the sub- your editorial page Feb. ll, but shut off the periodic still is — oniy 2 percent. ject, much less consider any legislation to pre- through your syndicate epidemics of that disease. It vent a recurrence. membership and cannot but modest patronage, has also pointed up the fact The system had and the companies signed accept the entire picture, that vaccination Isn y $135 mil- 2. Labor unions 't just though. Deposits averaged onl contracts in all but two por ts, but the workers caption and all, for publi- for children. Adults need it, lion until the 1932-33 banking crisis. Then nevertheless continued to stay on strike. The cation. But there is some- too. they rapidly increased to $1.2 billion. They union members in cities where agreements thing concerning the cap- In general, adults should continued to grow through the war years, with management were signed refused to return tion : "There Were Giants In have boosters every five reaching a peak of $3.4 billion in 1947, when to work until settlements were reached in all The Earth In Those Days years. For maximum pro- more than 8,000 post offices -were re- the other ports. It's an example of a far-reach- — Genesis VT, 4" about tection, some could be given comment. ceiving deposits. ing monopoly. which I would oftener, but the five-year these rule of thumb makes sense. 3. Walter Reuther, head of the United Auto I heartily agree that TODAV DEPOSITS have shrunk to . 4 U two men have been giants What vaccinations? For Workers Union, confers with President Johnson , and , million and post offices receiving deposits , an- in our generations most adults these: and then, on the steps of the White House there are not many giants to fewer than 4,250. Bank deposit insur- nounces that his union is seeking to merge with in any given generation! POLIO : I'm often asked ance, higher bank interest rates and expan- the International Union of Electrical Workers, Their leadership and states- about the relative merits 000 members to an organiza- sion of the banking system account for the thus adding 300, At least one chopper hle manship mark the courage- of the Salk vaccine, which tion already composed of nearly 1,200,000 auto w up jrom the inside, suggesting hand-placed charges as well is injected, difference. as mortars at this end of the strip. The Caribous to the southwest were dejinitely damaged ous chapters in world his- and the Sabin workers. No intimation comes from the Pres- by demolition men who got through. tory. I would readily call vaccine, which is taken by The argument that the system provides ident as to whether he,approves such a merger. them "grants" but with the mouth. a saving service for bankless towns hasn't As for the Department of Justice, it, too, is si- connotation in my words Personally, I prefer the been valid for years. A 1954 study showed lent. above rather than with the Salk. This type has been that 80 percent of the postal savings of- THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND connotation seemingly im- used longer, so we know election in tbe Steel- fices were in larger communities served by 4. A HOTLY contested plied by the Bible verse. If more about it. It has been workers' Union, -with 976,000 members, has highly eifective. In my area first and second class post offices. In 1952, we look at Genesis VI we just emphasized the strong undercurrents of find it speaks much on in 1958 there were 600 cases post offices in 12,000 bankless towns were friction which exercise a tremendous influence of polio and 22 deaths. Five , but in God's reasons for destroy- selling government savings bonds on collective-bargaining negotiations, as each See .Amer.cci F irst,' ing the earth with the flood years later there were only fewer than 1,200 were they accepting pos- candidate vies with the other in promising to rather than finding reason eight cases and no deaths. tal savings. win bigger and bigger benefits from the em- for preserving it. The indis- A vigorous campaign of us- ployers under threat of a strike. putable description of the ing Salk vaccine made the Gronouski is by no means the first per- 5. The Department of Labor has become an way mankind had gone truly difference. 'the post office out of the LBJ' son to urge getting , and the secretary of s Advice to U.S. is found in verse 5 and fol- The effective schedule is adjunct of the AFL-CIO By DREW PEARSON savings business. The comptroller general labor is told what to do by the union chief- Palm Springs ; a little over- with the gay - nineties when lowing of Genesis VI. Verse two shots a month apart, a questioned the need in 1952. The second , labor-relations special- LOS ANGELES - Presi- luxuriant, it is true, a little the house was built . 5 says, "God saw the wick- booster one year alter that, trains. John A. Grimes The filling stations Hoover commission on reorganization of ist for the Wall Street Journal, writes as fol- dent Johnson was talking to blatant in boasting that its , the edness of man was great in and then a booster every swimming - pools are heat- snack bars, the snackora- the executive agencies recommended in lows: some friends at a social the earth." But verses 1 five years. (Some minor de- gathering. ed, but beautiful just tbe mas, the hot dog stands, the through 4, in which the pic- viation from the exact 1955 that the system be phased out over "W. Willard Wirtz is discovering that being He had just sent same, garages littered with cars a message to Congress on a gem in the middle ture caption appears, is a schedule isn't going to do five years. Postmaster General Summer- secretary of labor often also requires being la- of the desert. maimed in action, all of part, surely, and is given any harm, so long as the field in 1957 called for liquidation. bor's secretary. Put another way, Mr. "Wirtz beauty and had a long ses- And to me there is some- which feature the outskirts sion with his as a prelude to the vivid general pattern is follow- is getting some practical lessons in how his financial ex- thing beautiful in the sight of Los Angeles, are pro- ed.) perts over the drain of the reasons given in verse 5 and From experience we THE CHANCES look bright*, this year freedom of action can be sharply curbed by of a Southern Pacific train bably what President John- following as to why God in- now know that .such a sched- that a public service that has outlived the wants of the AFL-CIO. dollar. He talked about as it glides through the de- son referred to when he both. tends to destroy the earth. ule provides and maintains its usefulness will be ended. "The federaion feels such a strong pro- sert, a long snake of man- said: "We must salvage the The "giants" in the earth protection. prietary interest in the Johnson administration's "I v/ish the American made aluminum gliding past beauty of our cities." But in those days were also rea- As for doctors who prefer activities that it claims a veto power over Mr. people would see more of cactus plants and through great care has been taken sons in God's catalog of rea- the Sabin vaccine, I will not Wirtz. Three times in recent weeks the sec- America isstead -of Eur- canyons , the one mark of by the operators of some sons why God was going to quarrel. The big point is to GOP Moves Toward retary has started out to do something and has ope," he said. "Every year man in miles and miles of filling stations and snack destroy the earth. The gi- see that everyone gets one found the considerable bulk of federation Pres- thousands o f Americans sand. bars to make their places ants were men of fame, yes, kind or the other. ident George Meany blocking the way." save up their money and go There was beauty, orderly attractive. And in Californ- but not the kind of fame More Broad Support off to Europe to drink beauty also in the broad ia you can always look up that pleased God. What TETANUS: This should IT IS REPORTED that the secretary of la- French wine and see Ital- sweep of the central valley to the rim of jagged hills. then should we make of have a booster every five ian ruins when they could with its checkerboard of That, just right down to years. In case of a wound of THE REPUBLICA N party is taking a bor has to consult with union officials about those "giants"? , and that he have spent part ol that mon- green and brown acres, tbe beaches of the Pacific some sort, a booster at that calculated to get it well appointments in his department I am not able to clearly succession of steps 't remove one man and replace ey here. some cultivated, some fal- on one side, and to the time will assure safety. But toward far more recently couldn distinguish the a r t i s t's started along the road him with another just because the labor un- "We are losing around low, as neat from the air snow - crested Sierras on if your protection has lapsed $1,700,000, ^. name; furthermore, I have because of not having had broadly based support than the GOP en- ions objected. 000 a year. You as a checkered tablecloth. the other side of the valley, joyed last November. The new leaders are can't blame them for -want- Bakersfield, where Chief stretching on up and up to no grudge because of the boosters, you may, instead, It has been customary for several years way he understands Genesis -well aware that the party must travel this ing to go abroad , but P just Justice Earl Warren spent Arizona and Nevada. In then require an anti-toxin now, under both Republican and Democratic wish they VI, <1. The misuse of Bible road. 'd see some of his boyhood , might not be a few other parts of the world injection. This, unfortunate- administrations, to have a secretary of labor their own country . beautiful city to some, but can you find such rugged verses is common and is ly, can cause an unpleas- The latest promising sign is the election who not only is friendly to labor but acts vir- "You've been wagi ng a there is a quiet charm about majesty lining both sides probably one of the chief ant reaction in some people. unions. Nobody reasons why (here is so , a former Minnesota tually as an agent of the labor lot of crusades," he contin- its old Spanish architecture, of the state. So (he booster every five of Elmer L. Andersen in the Cabinet has any corresponding position much difference and unrest governor now in vigorous and forward- ued, turning to me. "You its orderly streets lined with I SUPPOSE the connois- years i.s best—and besides, in behalf of management. It is often assumed started a train that you seurs would not find Marine- among the religions today. you 'll be protected in case looking middle age, as chairman o£ the palm trees. So also with that the secretary of commerce performs this sent over to Europe. You Fresno, the raisin capital land beautiful. But to me By nature we stop our of being injured far from Republican Citizens' Committee. Former task — but he doesn't. Theoretically, an assist- got sore at me ten years of the world; and Sacra- there is nothing more grace- study of the Bible too early medical aid. President Eisenhower will continue as hon- ant secretary in the Department of Labor is ago when you were build- mento , settled during the ful than the antics of the and are too quick to speak orary chairman. Dr. Milton Eisenhower supposed to express the business viewpoint. ing up that school in Tenn- firs t rnad rush for Califor- porpoises which cavort in rather than study it thor- SMALLPOX: This should will remain as chairman of the committee's His is a small voice, however, in a depart- esse. Why don 't you start nia 's gold over a century Marineland , or the baby oughly and let God speak to be repeated every five years. I' arm, the Critical Issues Council. ment that is committed to take labor's side and another crusade to see Am- ago. whale which once became us. As a result we miss the ve had people tell research real truth of a section of the me, quite seriously, that actively espouse it. erica. BACK IN the garish days sick when it swallowed an REPUBLICANS NOT wholly immured "Of course you're never inner tube and required the Bible, nevertheless we go on they "still had the scar" The only remedy lies in giving management after the gold rush when the , from vaccination In tlie past must welcome this. Even the equal in stature to the secre- happy unless people are expert attention of Gov. to erect the structure be- in child- a representative USA went in for ornate ga- liefs, and practice of our in- hood. The scar doesn't most partisan Democrats can see it as a tary of labor, or in lodging more power in cussin' you out. But it won't bles and a sort of penitenti- Warren and all the Marine the hurt to have 'em say some veterinarians he could find dividual church using our mean anything. Small pox desirable move toward strengthening the federal mediation and conciliation service ary - type architecture, the missed truth . God's revela- immunization subsides grad- two-parly system. The only way for the and separating it completely from Department nice things about you. You state of California built its to save her — which they could use a little popular- finally did. tion to mankind (some Bible ually. The n u m b e r of GOP to move is up, and happily that is of Labor influence . This independent agency governor's mansion. From scholars meaningfully call "takes" ity. And they 'd like it if , There is also Disneyland. - resulting from vac- what it is doing. could deal , officially and unofficially, with la- tbe outside it is beautiful. the Bible "God's letter of cinating adults shows how bor-management relations for the purpose of you said some nice things But Mrs. Earl "Warren , who I can understand why Khru- about America and urged shchev was bitterly disap- love to man") certainly is many have lost their im- preventing strikes. A partisan of labor cannot lived there longer than any not at fault in the religious munity. solve thorny questions in labor-mangernent re- 'em to see their own coun- governor's wife, and Mrs. pointed when he did not try. Tell 'ern how beauti- see it; and I can under- confusion in our world; it is The U. S. government, lations for the purpose of preventing strikes . Pat Brown , who has lived the way we read the Holy remember , will not let any- solve thorny ques- ful it is — and how beauti- there next longest , have stand why young Teddy A partisan of labor cannot ful *we can make it. " Bible. I am personally hap- one enter the country, even tions in labor-management relations. It has to made the inside beautiful. Blumberg of Philadelphia py whenever thorough and a citizen w.-is willing to have his.teeth returning from a Try and Stop Me be done by a team representing all sides. THIS WAS advice from Its high , old - fashioned sound Bible scholarship is trip, without proof of hav- ceilings have a cathedral- drilled on the promise that By BENNETT CERF the Presiden t of the United seen in the lives of men. ing had a smallpox booster States. And it was good ad- like coolness, and much of if he was good he could within THREE years. the furniture is in keeping come to Disneyland. This letter is not given to Not unlike many other college athletic vice, so I an. acting on it. , ascertain whether Mr. Lin- departments, ihe University of New Mex- IN YEARS GONE BY First I read the Presi- coln and Mr. Churchill were dent's message to Congress DO ico 's was worried by the disappearance of and it is a beautiful mes- godless or godly ; it comes INSURANCE 1955 hiL j bdjL to your office to say that a sundry supplies, notably sweat shirts willi Ten Years Ago . . . sage — one which everyone J * PREMIUMS Ihe University 's name emblazoned there- The general foreman of the North Western far more meaningful cap- of us should have on his tion could have been given on. Dean Sherman Smith may have been ltaihvay shops in Winona — K . .1. Fitzgerald — desk or living room table in EVER GET YOU has been named master mechanic of the Da- the picture than the Genesis responsible for the stratagem that effect- order to remind ourselves VI , 4 caption. -Thank you. ively dissuaded would be athletes in searc h kota division. of what a great country we of t hese status symbols. The manufactur- Miss lone Highum , (laughter of Mr. and h.-ive and how we ha ve spoil- Robert A. KW, Pastor ' ¦ , ( .St. John 's Evangelical Hr*JLfi ' 'ijH-l- er was inst ructed to mark all new shirts , Mrs . Arthur Highum , Rushford reigned as ed part of it. You can get ¦ queen of llx* Winter Sports Festival at Con- ii copy hy writing the White *? ' •'** 1| "V. of N. M. Athletic Department : THIRD Lutheran Church ¦>>-& ¦ xXXJm cordia College. House direct. ) Caledonia , Minn. STRING ." Mate* if easy T^J— Wv "The harty or the Tiger " wns the subject Second , I came out here on yourself) * * * ol a talk given hy Mrs. A. I,. Kril/.l.e at the to California , a state which WINONA DAILY NEWS ^miWr _^__ In Hollywood , a starlet was presented meeting of the Winona To.'is I mistress Club. has preserved a lot of il .. Now your insurance! payments wilh a handsome set of bronze hook ends. beauly. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1«, !» _ S c;m he mode ns a regular , A gentleman caller came upon her fond- Twenty-Five Years Ago . . . 1940 "Beaut y,'' said President VOLUME 10», NO. 73 l)ii dueled item—by the month . Johnson in his message, to I*y (he. "Have you Publlihtd dally excopf Saturday and quarter or whatever ling one of them and inquired , William Laak wa.s named president of t lie Congress, "i.s not on easy- Moll- a particular interest in book ends' "In- Winona Trade^ and Labor Council fer the third dtya by Republican and Herald PubM- ti- is easiest for you! Don 't let .'" thing to measure." Ino Comp»ny. «0) Franklin SI , Winona, your insurance year, Minn. premiums be deed 1 have," she purred. "They 're the straight As I traveled through n "Hudfjet wrecker." Pay for part I alwavs read first. " A review of the history of Ihe DAty scholar- California I agreed with SUBSCRIPTION RATES your insurance as you use it. ship was given hy Miss Louise Sutherland , him. Single Copy — 10c Dolly, 15c Sundiy Simply put it on our budget chairman, of the scholarship committee, at the Thou shall remember tlir Lord thy <«o_: For There i.s beauty in the Delivered by Cnrrlar-Per week 50 cenls plan! Call today for auto, meeting of tbe Wenonah chapter , Daughters of 16 -weaka 11!. .5 53 week , IJJ.SO home, life it I H He tlmt (jiveth thee power to Ret wealth, sands of thc southern de- or business insur- the American Revolution. serts, a sort of harsh , By mall Hrlclly In advancai p«p»r «toj_ - ance. that He may es.uMi_.li lilt covenant -wlilch He pad on expiration data. hvvnre unto thy fi.tliers , BI it Is this day. Dent. cruel beauty, miles of rip- 8: 18. Fifty Years Ago . . . 1915 pling sands, ruffled into In Fillmore, Houaton, Olmatad, Winona, DUANE RINGLER Wabasha, Buffalo, Jack ion, Pipln and P.O. Box Arthur Gereeke went to the Twin Cities lo waves by the winds thut Trempealeau cmir.tln: *6S tolnor.« attend the convention of the Minnesota Editori- come whipping across the 1 year . 113.00 3 monllia ... tl 50 Dial 726 1 i monlhi . M.50 1 month ... al Association. desert sometimes nt 00 . »1.35 SENTRY INSURANCE The bill now before the state legislature to miles an hour. All olher subicr Ipllonn i WINONA DAILY NEWS I vaar J15.00 3 monlhi ... tl.2S depreciate the quality of milk by reducing the AM) rilEItK IK man - t monlhi . . MOO i- month ... sl.60 I»WW«VVVWWW«VW>V_ J \n Independent Neiespnp fr — Extahtithed Ifi.r>5 legal percentage of t.utterfat from . 'i'i to 3 per- made beauty in thc oasis lend changa of addroM, notlcti, undeliv- ered copies, tubscrlpllon START YOUR DAY W F W HITE (J. R. C I .OKWAY C. L. Linor-N cent i.s not favored in Winona and it i.s hoped of hotels , homes, avenues "I don 't feel a bit. guilty about lying around any ordara artd olhar | ] he-come mall llama to Winona Oally Ntwt. t>. o. Fi_ .il .slier I-.'jrc. Director Ilu.iiric.s.i Mgr. here it will not law . of palm trees , and azure more now that 1 know the President prefers to do ! with Second cl«m txntnao paid it VVinona ! ond Editor A /_ ... > , Director swimming - pools Ihey cal) everything for us." Seventy-Five Years Ago . .. 1890 Box w. Winona, Minn. Coi.r, DOLPH RKMI R W. J. A H : A. J. K IKKBUSC II The four sets of plans nnd specifications for THE \N IZARD OF ID By Parkvr and Hart Bill Merrill's MtintiQinrj Editor City Etlttcr Circulation r—' • 1 I ¦- ¦« ¦¦ ¦ Mgr. the government biilMin^ were received and also TT ' — ' I - I I—: , . — | R , H. H ABECK F H. K LAGGE I,. V. Ats-rot* notice that bids will be opened ut Washington Cor».poei..|7 Sup t . Press Supt, Engraving S apt, on March 15. Mayor Milo Jacks of Hochester was In the j "Something to Wi i iAM H. ENGLISH (lo. .i. ._r. Hot. .* city talking with Southwestern officials in re- Comptroller Sunday Kdilor gard to having that road mn through St. Chai- | MfcMIl.I Of Tilt A5SOClATt.il HH.SH les to Rochester. | Live By" Mrs. A. N. Ravin left for the Must where she will visit in Newa rk , N .J. i (4:50 Each Mornlnp ! The Associated Pre*_ Is entitled exclusively One Hundred Years A to Ihe use for republication of all the local go . . . 1 865 on _ i news printed in thib newspaper an wfill as P \) Elder I'lly will give a lecture on the early A. 1*. news dispatches. settlement, of Wlnonn nnd Minnesota City at Die court_ »ou_t_ . Tho subject is of special inter - U Tuesday, February 16, 1865 cut to the people off this vicinity. ! KWNO | DEA^»-M-w-a-aR *-a-MM-«M_«MABBY: «M - . v, Wife Knew End singer's fans to pay their last follow at Forest Lawn Memorial respects. Park in nearby ' ¦ Glendale. ¦ ! ¦ Private funeral services will. . Was Near for be held at the church at ll a.m. Many hydroplanes are built A Barber Thursday. . Entombment will. with plywood. Nat Kino Cole Is Barber SANTA MONICA, Calif. CAP) — Doctors told Nat King Cole's wM has a diet drink By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: So you say that a barber is not per- wife last Friday that the SO-mil- lion-record singer was dying, NERVE DEAFNESS mitted or qualified to remove blackheads? Well, please go to the library and read THE PRACTICE AND SCIENCE but she kept it a secret from the OF STANDARD BARBERING, and I believe that you will world — and from him. change your mind after reading the chapter entitled, DIS- Sunday, as the sun shone EASES OF THE SKIN, SCALP AND HAIR. I am a student brightly Ln Santa Monica, Maria If you htar «ounrfs, H you ^e«r ' / ^^^ H j / \ f%yB8^_flB at a barber college in Covington, Kentucky, and I have per- Cole took her husband for an peopl* talk — but you h»v» ilttl- vV^^W_^_L\ \ \xi*M$mnSm cully un<*r»tandln9 1t>« words. If J automobile ride. t> **_r ^_ ____^~- v \&J irTlMH| sonally removed two warts from the face of a customer by you ha_e head nolsts—ringing In ^TX ^l ^X^iaaaa.\V/i^______i tha aar - your troublti may ba r r high frequency treatments. I have also removed countless Half a day later, at 5:30 a.m. '^J 2 ' X^^Wa^.W HHBWI rtrva dctfneu. Tha most Impor- \y ^^^^^ L ll______5fi____ blackheads from the faces of many others. Monday, he was dead of cancer. t«nt thing you can do today Is to _^______BH___HB A barber is trained and qualified to treat any skin find out how Miracle Ear can help y^^'^'^ ' ^ i^ BSWB H disease of the scalp, skin or hair if the disease is not con- Doctors laid an autopsy you now. Every hearing loss Is . Ifferent. We hava a hearing aid Coma In — Phon* or Writ* tagious. Sincerely Yours, A FUTURE BARBER showed cancer in all major or* to help every corrective loss. See gans and glands of Cole's body. ff the Miracle Bar WIH help >rou. >" •< DEAR FUTURE BARBER: A barber is neither quali- He was 45. • •«••••••• ; Johnsrud, La Cro«st/Winor»§ ; fied nor licensed to treat diseases of the skin, whether The singer had been MODEL OF NEW I Hearing Aid Centers j contagious or otherwise. It is possible that when you . under treatment for lung cancer for MINIATURE HEARING i Box 912 - La Crosse < removed two "warts" from the face of your customer AID GIVEN in Main St. — Winona one of them may have been a cancer, months. He took a turn for the i \ worse last week, and doctors at k most unique free offer of spe- ! . and the high frequency treatment that St. John' cial Interest to those who hoar hot ,' ! you used could have spread malignant s Hospital learned do not understand words, has lust • NAME ! through tests that cancer had been announced by Motorola Dahl- > ! cells into the bloodstream. It is also pos- berg. A true life non-operating ,' ', sible that when you remove blackheads, reached his liver . model, actual size replica of the J ______; smallest Dahlberg ever made, will > ADDRESS¦ • you are unaware that your customer Cole's body will lie In a closed ba given away free to an-yone , . . may be a diabetic or suffer from hemo- answering 'his advertisement. ', \ casket at St. James Episcopal Wear-fast It In tha privacy ot your • —— . _.__:— ; i^—~ "^— ^~«-• «i™«i«IBMlBM»«li» CITY STATE , -lime (a flavor is lemon disease). Highly quali- own home without cost or oblige- > Its philia bleeding Church, on Wilsiire Boulevard Copyright 1964 by The Seven-Op Company fied dermatologists require special lab- in Los Angeles, tion of any kind. • j-t- .< ' from S to 10 "iri youRS FREK TO KEEP" !... _ ! oratory techniques before they know p.m. Wednesday to permit the ^ whether a scaling of the scalp is ring- worm or ordinary dandruff. So mv advice to vou is to uerfect your skill as a barber, and do not trust ABBY >4_siti_l__i____^.'ii§g^_ even the best-trained surgeon you know to cut your ¦, hair. He might get carried away and scalp you! kWW^WMW^-'?0_l___ A- 'W^I_ 1 ^^^^^^^^^ 1 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ J ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ M DEAR ABBY: If your husband, who had always been very conservative, suddenly and for no apparent reason or occasion, gave you an expensive monogramraed vanity case, would you he suspicious? BROWN EYES DEAR BROWN EYES: Not if they were MY initials. DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have been happily mar- L'^f"^^ ried for ten years. We have four lovely children. When I first started dating my husband, I told him I was five years younger than I really was, because he was five years young- ______l^ _^____r *" J^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^J J^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ L Bl^^^^^^^K^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ m er than I, and I was afraid he wouldn't continue to date me if he knew it. When we did get married, I still couldn't bring myself to tell him the truth, so I gave my age as the same as his for the marriage records. To this day he believes we are «s__s«______i_____i ___sM____is*______^_B____N_ sa_H^ p_H_ sW_Mn_|____i__H___i___M_MMe_aMn__ sM___s ^^ the same age. This has bothered me, Abby, because I feel that one day he might find out. Should 1 let him go on thinking I am five years younger than I really am? Kiwi Boo! Polish * AGE PROBLEM Brown & Block Superior Latex Wall Paint *KJ; DEAR PROBLEM: Tell him the truth. Deceiving m^K^r?- "^ him in the first place was wrong, of course. But any wom- * an who can knock five years off her age and get away with it deserves a little credit for having preserved ® Reg. 3.98 Gal. L herself so well. I $^i ___^ ^_E | H ^^^ S3H -__ .__-__ SC. V«$. .0O DEAR ABBY: I was very pleased with the way you •___—---__---_----__ ^F J_W ^_ M f ^MMM^^WjZlltliMMMMMMJ answered the young man who insisted that his widowed mother wear her wedding ring so people wouldn't think he was "illegitimate." Glue Special 1 ^' "~ I have been married for four years and have one child -Hi and another on the way, but I do not wear jewelry of any 'H kind. Not even a wedding ring. The reason being that 1 simply cannot stand to hare anything on my fingers. It makes Reg . $1.00 Q J_\C fSB* ^^ ^ ^WW Wk '"*¦"*"* me nervous. ' ^SH child. The baby s ^ ^ ^'^ I know an unmarried girl who has a father can't marry her because he already has a wife and two children, but SHE wears a wedding and engagement ring. So tell the widow's son that a ring doesn't mean a thing. NO RINGS ON MY FINGERS Troubled? Write to ABBY, Box 69700, Los Angeles, Calif. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-ad- dressed envelope. i k E r* *JKjui^2^^^^^^^^|f ' ^H1^^*> __^y ^ tx^*, y__\ authorities his 60-year-old fa- ther , Jesse, needed medical \ 's attention. Tbe older man Xm ELMERS GLUE — 8 Ot. SIZE ^fif 1" D~.S_.i- D __.a__ !•__.__ Indian Held ' body was found in his home at Parat Brushes a rural Indian mission. • «*¦»¦¦ Paint Pan with Dr. John Noble, the county « WHITE TUB CAULK &S*m\¥%m l!" . ' ,' lj N^ . START coroner, said the elder Stacy • EPOXEY GIUE 7" Roller & Cover AT Without Bond had been killed by an ax blow PLASTIC RUBBER Nr^SSSM ^ to the head, probably Saturday • ^OS^_Sl_^^_9_S> PLASTIC ALUMINUM _ . __ ^ 13c morning. The son lived with his • C vS^BB***^) ,y * *% father. , °n io- In Ax Slaying H I I T 92c * BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis . ^^ _P> — A 28-year-old Indian has Man Drops Dead ALL CHROME j_J been ordered held without bond Trying, to Push Car •^aJ H*fesi * "' HEAVY RUBBER for a preliminary hearing next . *~ Tuesday on first degree mur- POPLAR, Wis. 1*1 - War- Slep-on-Can yW Unfinished Wood Counter -ma. der charge brought in the ax Little, 21, of Poplar col- With Plastic Linsr Pail _ *- | S Extension Cord ren J. II I rf_t slaving of his father. lapsed and died Saturday while Reg. *J Walter "Waldo" Stacy was trying to push his stalled car $7.98 & Bar StOOlS I _f%_f\ aa£ arraigned Monday before Jack- out of a snowbank on a town // son County Court Judge Rich- road. Dollar Day Special! c — _. — ___ ^ Fr""* ^W ^^F _A_. ___fl__H___P^^ - EITHER SI2E ^ ard Lawton. M J £fl afj '/ I * * J^ jftiGSHBlF The largest plywood roof cov Cd . " 11 Reg. $3.37 & $3.22 M 1 Stacy was taken Into custody ers a 19-acre reservoir in Oak 44 ^ t m W JaW I HnNr&SkW ^ Saturday night when he told land, California. **^ „? £_9_ J 3-Piece Mixing Bowl Set ¦ JftlMBm rf Rubber Maid MM Reg. $1.79 buibt lor ?wy}ij>.» ^ ^^LW £4 AH >^a / ' Rftftt-TfflV S in., pu.po.e **VM» IIOJ pecial! apJLiVV I* <<| J3M _ ^, tSc Komt. r lft_\»l^^^___ n rn/jL w/r fl SAVE $2 ^» K Sp*, \IBP^2W J Clfl AA " * f jfe_' °" a >WM 4-Piece CANNISTER Sets I JJ^ c<% ftfi Im WITH THIS I Yallow, Whl1t «.rT«r«,uoi_. SUck ty T$4*y OfCier Of Reg . 3.98 3*^ 1" © ««Mi«.i,«.,e , __L V Front End I «^- $1.88 Ass t |ight Bu|bs *-« mJ Thurs., fri., Serf., Men. mj | 11 P__/ M 1 ^ \ M \ k 1 711 ^ ^ February 10, 20 , 22 ^¦¦ ^ ¦ • ' ^ ¦¦¦¦ r I MWVNWM^ ^kWrWKKKKttr Grants-own I'sis BUY A COMPLETE SUPPLY OF SOCKS | | I | H f glasa SEAMLESS NYLONS FOR EVERY MEMIER 01 THE FAMILY H ^^ Fiberglaa* IN MESH OR PLAIN MIN >S « STUDINTS- ctswwcw WM^_MlHRHII I I fiberEasy , °^_°0!^:laL0° cotton, 10-is a pr. r r weave< oth . A I p*a. lSfllA_aflll«r mmaW&&mm0wtures , decorator? ? "^ colors.^ . . A f»< BOY'S./,»Ie STRIPED-TOP«..»m TM «iuiCRIW SOCKSeA«« ^_ _ ffl______EB__^______l i CBM...M \__IO # ppr.' \| ^^^IH___H__IA«^_^i ¦MMM -c< »n» nA awning.i, *.™** Odl6 L ^1 ~ Cotton, -7-10V4 3 pr. p.k9. *§A j Reg. 67* ~ msn. RIBBED.CUFF ANKLn$ # i|C ?T "' '' RI°" 4 " '" Cotton, 9-11 3 pr. pkg. ¦ nllSI ' DOUIIE WIDTH Leg-flattering nylons in 3 or 4 pr &. fd__l____^fiil_ra. run-resistant mesh or CHItDREN'* WB-CUff AMKIITS . ^^^^ i|| ^HFf t f «3* long, REO. 9.»9 ..„ 8.97 plain. Exciting sprins Cotton, 6-8V4 ..; 4 pr. pkg. REG. $I ^P ^S p ^yj ' 7rl 90" UEG.n.99, 9.f7 Rattlesnake Round-Up part of a restoration program ing party to shoot a deer for Pels? ORAMT Sweatwater, Texas, last week- for the other pheasant coun- another member. Legislators Groats WHITE ® end conducted another success- ties. said it merely legalizes a com- Nom... NO Awt...No iun . ^NH ^B^plP WOMEH BRIEFS COTTOMMAID ful rattlesnake round-up. Thou- mon practice. lMi^K^^^5 It is opposed by the 0 S sands ot hunters gathered there The House gave final pass- '^ISnS ^^Ifr^ ' valuable Game and Fish Director, for a day of thrills, who pre- age to a bill closing the sea- WHPRO0,! PERCALE SHEETS ^^^^^^ prizes and a celebration. The James T. Shields IS^%]_ fli 0' >^^i^^te dicted "terrific" posting of son on ruffed and sbarptail _ _ above picture shows some of grouse for 1965 and 1966. ACETATE TRICOT the rat- farms against hunting if Jt\ . MfflMBtf # B J>J^^ the snakes and part of are open * tlesnake crowd eating fried rat- only 20 counties Fishing Closes to all hunters. Shields said T*he lid went on inland water a,e u 0 tlesnake. aver- & V^KBBwm m m n $¦ * *' ^mm®®*^ the pheasant harvest fishing in Minnesota last night, ME *' ¦ TaxlOS- arTwIn Rlt-d \ S£ ages 950,000 birds a year. y ^S^f SOlC ** We wonder why some ac- Feb. 15. The season is now clos- Y m. /atXm ^ ^ tive club in this area like "There's not a doubt in tbe ed until May 15 on northerns, ^^ the Buffalo County chapter world that habitat is the pri- walleyes, sauger, muskie, large- of the Crotalus Horridus mary factor," he said. mouth and smallmouth bass. M ?A|«^r^ Ene&ait,full catWove_i gq. incE Lftb te8tei (rattlesnake) Hunters The season is open the year WBBL* P^^M " Z^^5^^teZ^| doesn't put on a similiar Since 1940, he said, small around on crappies sunfish, hunt in the early summer. grain fields ha-ve declined white bass, catfish, bullheads -^r It could be run much like by half and row crops have and all rough fish. 8to l0...$ol. 3 for ^5 p^h e-^ a fishing contest with priz- doubled, thus reducing nest- I^ BSKHIT LS H? J j | ^^ S ^ | es for the biggest snake, ing areas. Shields said small Locally only Lake Winona the most snakes, and so grain fields produce 40 to 50 and other waters in Minne- 2-PC. SLACK SETS ___.*„.. --- .—-—------— >m~-- ~~ , ¦ . MI sota outside the river are forth, tatken alive and de- per cent of each year's phea- FOR LITTLE GIRLS , livered to the club's pit at sant hatch. affected by this closing. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^FW______i _C.t ' *^ Crcmtt-otmr Summit Minnesota - Wisconsin boun- ^______P_P^WV^W9__P9^9__ '4t JSK J ^- Fountain City. Any sports- Shields said hunters har- SPRINC COHONS IN men's dub could use it as a dary waters still are open Sale 2 97 ^BliMill j Li^flJ^^ni^ MMW^^^C-- vest atrout two-thirds of the ' another 15 days or until ^. _^^^i^ ____^ ^ fund raiser. There is a good pheasant roosters each f all. I 3!, M^. ^^i^ "^_KA"r PWNTS AND SOUDS market ior live snakes. March 1. These waters then Because the birds are poly- You'll Misses' Proportioned Capri Panfc t remain closed until May 1. love tie shape-re- c > iAM¦» <*. aSSSmSka ^-m^&fe ' iCnln 3 vd_. ^1 Pheasant Zone Proposed gamous, he said, this does tainixg, washable cotton! Orion* acrylic. 8 to 18 MO. S.W 3016 4iP» f ^ * not affeciTrepFoduction the ^mS fP^ no.,Z 99tZJXXya. The Minnesota House game Wisconsin inland waters also She'll love "the fun de- %T ^ .jS next year. closed Feb. 15 for bass, north- and fish committee has approv- signs, gay colors! 3-6X. ,. erns, walleye and sauger -until G,^ ,,,• Mylon P.fH Slips -. I CT ^ ' ^&& S 5 ed a bill By a 13 to 10 vote, limit- The game and fish commit ^®H_¦ram ^p & ^ May 8, the opening day of the /t-ff - Many color*, trims. S-M-L....MO.T.W 9016 ¦•«# # ing pheasant hunting to 20 coun- tee approved another bill per ^,^ ties for the next two years, mitting one member of a hunt 1965 fishing season on Wiscon- sin inland waters . /J Stretch Slocks, Cingham Shirt Set . l«y _ —»_ . OI5M BftAHDY DIS . ILUJS CO.. WW YORK . 11.1. (IGHTT PROOF Wr^-\ - *% unwi nmnn ITT ^^ - a a - a a a a a a a a a a a a. Three-Year Teal Test a • a •••a a a •••••••••» a a a a a t maaaaaaa • •• •••» • _^^^tfM_____l______• • * a ***** •••••*_. * _.* _, *. WASHINGTON UB - A • ______B_r ^______J _ . . special hunting season on • * • • *______k_M ____^______.______* £ ' *_.* *_.* .' _. .* • • ______™ . ™^______L . . . teal, such as the experimen- • * #* *______-—->_B______^______. . • ______. tal one already announced So,e i^ft ¦ ^ ^ ^ ^ ;S sssftessssi,safe 3.33 IPICIAl PURCHASI »-4i * •] sk __fe: for this year, will likely be I { ^HiiiM ' s<^£?& l ^yfmf- : I I :^> r ~r«l J I conducted annually for three \ \tM$!mk I SAV_ I ma i *¦ ai i . ___ _a ¦ _¦___¦ Hainpe», waite baslceta, ^^S^_C«^__a>5_Sl •j ^pLJ ^U^Ji years Men's Crew Neck Sweat* Shirt mh caM aal WM ^^HHlllU ^W . \WSmm . 02»- C«.IA I AT t P" J IW ^I l^_^S___ >M____I I '- Washable. * ¦ ¦ * ¦ • ¦»# diaper pall, with tight KI| f \tLiUmHI ' S-M-^XI* R««-.a , „ * The Interior Department an- BBrWM • •'" cov«n. Latett colon. lMl 6^ W\\ Ivm ¦^^^^JSmWtM&RKmWtEKMmVMBmTWnounced ^^K* recently that it would :: provide for a nine-day experi- ' f tf n Hji |ffl Mm llm Wen s Knit Shirt-Joes... Save m ^A^ %^. Grant Moid \_4^ / • • «^______MV^__P V PO__PO^H lOflHOTOiWOOTfl ______P^ • mental teal hunting season dur- ^ xa a^^MMMMWram2aJ * ___ ^m ' fi|l I > Grantogs* Cotton. 100% acryUc. S, M, L.«0. 1.W SOlC <_#•«#^ -., «,.» >__u__ UIUMI _^Ht___. :: • mEm3MI3EkmW11 _____ ^ t M • • • • *^______/*__¦ I L™__L* rto _L_f __l^^^Fr^______. ^* ing September in the Central TO P I • • • • >7VUWMAik *^MaP'> • • • STOROY lOMO'HANDU a a a m a a ^- ^^______P^* • and Mississippi Flyways but *MSi_t»rw« j uiiivn_ 3B19«T« J ^JS^^ T^JL , » "^______B_,^»^aaP__(___pa^ * CLIANI lift SUPPLIES ______W_^i__<*l____y/V //jfiBEiO ••••••• ••«•••• • • »^P I ^^^*a a a • •• • • • • • • • i • • •• »••••»•••«• •- .. «• a a t a a • • said nothing about future years. • • • • » « ? * » » . *» - . - - - * * ^ -.***m~ ~ * a a m a a ¦ & AT a a < ¦- " ' ' '- « • • WITH WOVEN SHIRTS PRICE ^ "S^ Sde L67 EXTRA-LOW HOKAH GIVES $92.97 ft^^K-?^ ^ r ^ « ^ HOKAH , Minn. (Special) Sa,e 2 97 - '^ SainJ«re 97cW#* r^ i^ Mfl^r Mrs. Ralph Leitzau , chairman RE0. 3*99 Grant Cr«t 4-ot. Knitting Worsted C-.U ftA*.JL1 V SlW* rS—TT *«*JB of the March of Dimes, reports . „ „ 10054 wool. Tavorite color* M». *l 9010 O ** IIO, Mt \ _maA «. AW You get all these quality «,_„ __ _,„«_ $92.97 collected. rooma: C0In plMtla ^>mZZ& \ m£W details: top quality cot- ? or ' tt fl ^^ l_2&f<>s ton ; self belts; 'jac' or t " Bath Towel, 24x«" i"6*2* **** °P* * * KELLOGG PATIENTS 'Rose Clus er CMU 77, ^ &Bmlr S^®!$1 tuak-in shirts. Sizes 3-7. Hand T.wai, tu Waih cioih, J9e M0.$l JOIC # # * ™ZSi$r ^ ^ * KELLOGG, Mind. (Special) w\ — Mrs. Paul Sehouweiler had SAVE major surgery at St. Eliza- M beth's Hospital , Wabasha , Fri- sW^ Fresh, Tasty COOKIES day. Mrs. Francis Drake is a ___t^ ' surgical patient at Olmsted 1 ^'^ Community Hospital , Rochester, ^ •CUSHID anon and Mrs. Joseph Hager is at I Special 4 Lbs.-$1 ¦ ¦ St, Mary 's there for medical i H^^B*^ •••"• ' '" '' ^^»l_ _j| lr * ^-If ¦• ••' ••• care. LEASE A MvlL!^_k. Ji:* $$F*>'_M^%>__w _ '•!•'• • • * *r ' h * is. IM.• * . * • ^^^^^ ' ¦ BRAND NEW CAR ••v lB * // I CORONET -1jj JB_ MIv.*! «8>59-UU Month ••••••••¦II ' W^i ^"'"S M - MHviv ; *" Sel l Us Your Present Car •X\-lB _¦ \\ ip mv" ADVANTAGES REG. 59c AUTHENTIC 'COLONIAL' STYLED /' ^ y^ \WmBlO TO "$ mtoiM-' ' \K ^ iTI >/ a- No Investment rip or ARM ¦ Ch.apir Than Buying CRICKET ROCKER CHAIR ' • ^T»l. .!»w ^ 1 • No Tax Problem It a M^V Builntji car Wash Cloth ,.-....only ^20c Arm Chair Rag. 17.W Your T^^ Cholc* _^^^_M_l__ MvSH l^^__^_H_J^_H__ l • Trouble Pr«e, New Car • Immediate Delivery a a m a a\ ^^^^tB _ W—wMMMMMr _J__T* * * * * Compact* SJ. M per month f i * * sca,R Hardwood frames. He- I _ _0 #« 1AVI •¦• ;:, _ ' ^^______B_ a • • llandatd III* 173.00 per month ' - SX^aWk - BoHi'M C1VIIWI T»l_a Hjl '^BSa»—«^ l«ui mat. »•<¦•• _,™n » '.,, A. ^^^^^^^ B _!«*•••* * ' ' vcrsibl c cushions. ¦ •!Pf ""^ 32C • * • • 'Maii ______[ *"_EEE* * • • * • Luxury Cara . M.00 per month M^___M_M_W_\ ^ ' f""1 •^fc x MWMMWMM ' L * *• *•• > PRICES INCLUDE New Car Warranty MUtet Insurance and Llc . n .i Exlra BSZQISQI , Women 's Granis Joyce Laru m J§Smk ^^m^\ \\ i£S * " * "> ,, ' ' _,m *i ' a ' a ' * m m pmnwi»ioioo • a • a • a • a • a • a • a •a ^-a ..mrr»rja£r: ^-a , ^. „. ,,*„ f m*~r ^ * a a INDIVIDUALS OR FLEETS WASUABU ^ r m a a-jaaamaaa \ M_ '\ [ mmmi ACETATE CLASSIC SHIRTS _ • _ • _ ••"• •• _ _ __ » 1 mw • • • . **5lfc<* il d. J** *» Wrlle or Call a a aaaaa aama t a ** ll ll <3___. 1W.!PJ I '^^tfj ll **? f »l«i«aw «?ni, 8tMiu E f?#K § l l |ll3 §P 1W' lH ¥-^»ri_Vi^__i^—T—*1wW® ?^ %l\ Fancy car: Buick Special V-6 1 M^____1HS^^3/ K-5 Cf v ______¦& I ->3aw5a-- WkTi *cy * jb M _w% m %_w m ¦ w*l# M ft H ^_JV r * ll W ui 1*1 il ii W ~ ¦ ¦ styles. Elastic 7/1 ¦ Big 3 Day Salt) on Vstfit! Special Purchase! Modem ^^^^A _J(^3|k. w Framed Pictures - ""' ' ! Kitchen Gadgets _ *^Ti_____5_S______m 3 Doyt-Reg. 7.99.'3- .x: ¦ ,, . _ . M*t*t AAA i ^^^ B_Br _!_____ - #% #!• ¦¦¦¦¦¦ ; X X.X 188 288 W lk sTBtrcH CiPRis | ltr*t ¦ ¦ _t__ infO^B .______B^H^0^^2*^^¦ ¦ WIL'- : '- ' ' _ - li ^BiifcN. ' ¦ '¦ ¦ ®w*:; ¦ '¦ ^" ¦ ¦ J^^B ^^______W______B. ' iS_)k 5$? ' .?. ' " x ^'¦iEfc- w \ 2f ,88 * ; : - -- V/^J^L J^_g______P__S* ____ ^5p^. ' '^^^^- - - ' >\ ^^o^v Iff Tomatosl k^^ g| Kp ^^^ m_ T vfr s*- ^limmmmmWT my.w^mitii i - jj ijhljjjilraMMBWBjBBBjMfcifc i AM sues from 5x7" to 22 ^. «* ^W ,Vj_ ^_^_^_tL o stretch fabric^ 5 icer, scoop, food - _\\_ ^ x39". Pmels, oilettes, sea. . " , egg ti mer ^^^^mmmmmmW^^> m^^^'- ^^^B^V^jB ______H ^ Red, blue, black. I fc saw , iteam iron ______^______Hk 1 V aK>»7^A___B______>Si ^^^fflfl ' ^P^* _^______ra_K__9_^ ^______.l____«\ ^?£_iu___M______B______icap«)scenes ,floralj more. ¦ , ¦¦ 1 , , ¦ test, salt 'n peppers, more. > ! ¦¦ ^L i|M| MM L at^ttm ^L M^HM iA_ MMM 1 HBBM jf Jr_____l» __^ ^ ^ * ^ * ' ______!____?3r_ ' s^n___o^______J______^^^^»/-jjj^i7^_\^m\\^m\\^m\\^m\\^m\\^m _ \^m\\^n ^^SKSf 1B ^__H^______B ^MMMMMMVWJ^^^A ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^!^SKt9 ^^m ^^SSi ^^950______KI ^9 ^^^^ L_fl_ ^^^^^^P»*T^3^^ir ^ K Y ^ ^^^______Dollar (tfjjfff^fTi oB^^r Day '^ $ $ Bargains gy ^^^______^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H_f^l kMnl^^" TSMMMMM^^^^^^S ^MMMMMMMMM ^MMW ^I ^^ (x JEWELRY ;sr"D Table ¦g Lamps ^^^ I Kwik ______L , Wrap j r ^MMMMMM^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^t^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Ks3t£z3i^MSi^^^_J<__$__ T mfc. et&P^^^^ ) oDoS.ndENDS ^ ¦^ Boudoir Lamps „ , j m & ^%_ AA New food... & Freezer TWrap „„, s AI PI m_t &<;l1 J /7c v«i».. io $i .5» — .. mmam ^m^^^mmMa7«^ Mat '"«¦ 3 Each ammammmaama ^^t " Rcg qr l 7f E<,ch IAD.ES FULLY I.NED ------______- Ladies Jumpers "' ^ i^______i^ i ^__iW______i Fancy. But not too fancy. Just enough to make your friends think you've found Ml I AI ¦ WEAREVER , , oil in the basement, lou may think so, too, when you get acquainted with Buick's Wool Slacks ------Winter Caps V-6-the best thing that ever happened to 6 cylinders. Its 225 cu. in. delivers 155 h.p., Aluminum Foll S delivering you to the gas station all the * without time. As to the plain, homely price: 10 4 44 M „ „ M CC Tc 3.98 I Men' s and Boys' -Jfl 5 T Rol « #1_h|| m broken «ii.i val- ? I you'll find it looks restful in the family budget. We design the Buick Special so you *$ Dayn Onl1 i y M M ^ I ~ J^ J^ J | can drive a Buick and still enjoy the other good things in life. See your Buick dealer. ' ¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ H Reg 33,* u n0|j ¦¦ _¦¦_____¦______¦¦_¦¦ Remember; a Buick for only $2343.00 *. That's the plain, honest (inspiring) truth. BALIERIMA ______B______-_1B______1I11___^ GIRLS' ASS'TD SIZES . _. ¦___¦_ _¦__¦____¦¦___¦_¦__¦_¦ Brits„ . Chroma Plain price: $2343.00 Lamp Shades ~™ Sweaters Elec. Cooker •Manufacture'* luUMMd ratall prlc* for Special V-i- 2-dr. coup*. Frio* Include* Padarnl Iidw Tai miwl auf4«_t«d daalw dell.err and h*n<_llnt ct__r£« (tratupoctatlon cJiattea, »c»aaori*a, oth«r optional equipment , ata ta and local additional). taa** W R I «..,,,* «*m%\99 1& 2 s!^H$C88 VWujJdn't you really rather go first class? Up 2M R«0. 1.19 Each—Sav» 94. ~ ""' ¦ Valu«» to $4.99 ¦MMHMHHMMMMH gl ^— ^ - - _^^__u^___ ^_ ¦UCN MOTM MVMMMI} g^^^^^^g^^^^^^^^^^^-^R^^^^^^^^ ^^—^ ^^^^j^^ See your local authorized Buick dealer '¦ « SHOP AND SAVE EACH WEEK AT SI WEST THIRD STREET IN DOWNTOWN WINONA TUNE IN "LOWELL THOMAS AND THE NEWS"-CB$ RADIO'. Area Women Invited To Movie Showing. Speech Winners 'Down Melody Lane' Title of OSSEO, Wis. (Special) - Os- seo Evangelical Lutheran at WSC Church Women will meet in the Named WSHS's 1965 Benefit-Show Fellowship Hall at 2 p.m. Wed- Waterloo, Iowa, and Minneis- nesday. ka students topped the after- Winona Senior High School including the Amercian Field The program, which will be dinner speech contests at "Wino- students will present their four- Service. presented by the Dorcas Cir- na State College Monday night. The annual show was started men's and th annual benefit production, cle, will include the showing of Winners in the four years ago for the purpose women's divisions were: Jerry "Down Melody Lane," in the the movie, "No Time to Wait" of raising money to finance ¦which is a highly recommend- Wilharm, Waterloo, Iowa , and school auditorium April 1-3. foreign students in WSHS and ed film. The group is inviting Joan Timm, Minneiska. Four- This year the students have to send representative Winona all women of the area to at- teen were enttyed in the com- pledged themselves to accom- students overseas for a summer tend this meeting and see the petition in Pasteur Hall auditor- plish two things. They hope to of study. movie. The refreshments will be ium. A large crowd attended , develop a new and better show Tbe production has captured served by the Rebekah Circle. according to Dr. Lyman Judson, without eliminating any of the the theater interest of the peo- ¦ of the department of speech. entertainment of the past. Also ple of Winona. To the students The oral interpretation of will be at 3:30 they pledge to expand the bene- of the high school and the di- Supper at Caledonia prose contest fit feature of the production, so rectors of the show, the public and 4:30 p.m. Thursday ; ora l CALEDONIA., Minn. ( Special) interpretation cf poetry just one that the money received will response has been amazing. —Men of the Caledonia Metho- be distributed by the students Over 2.500 people enjoyed the week later. dist Church are sponsoring a Monday night to worthwhile welfare and ed- entertaining program presented Other placings pancake supper Wednesday in (in order): Men—Stanley Riha, ucational activities in Winona, by the students last year. the church parlors, with serving Winona; Frederick Hauck , West- from 5 to 8 p.m. ¦ bury, N/Y., and Nicholas Ttranz, Hastings; women—Dolores Star- Nancy Ann Auer WEAVER SCHOOL PARTY ling, Cleveland, Ohio; Sandra WEAVER, Minn. (Special) - Ken-ins, Grand Meadow, and Becomes Bride Following classes Monday pu- Dianne Thaldorf , Winona. pils of the Weaver School bad Warren Magnuson, Winona Of Mr. Smick their valentine party. was judge. ~ Senior High School , ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - ST. DOLORES C1RCLE Miss Nancy Ann Auer, daugh- LANESBORO, Minn. (Special) ter of Mr. and Mrs. LaVern —Mrs. Raymond Majerus and Rushford Co-op Auer, Arcadia, carried a floral Mrs. John Brose will entertain arrangement of orange-tinted members of St. Dolores' Unit To Meet Saturday roses and white chrysanthe- of St. Patrick's Altar Society at RUSHFORD, Minn. — Rush- mums, when sbe became the 8:30 p.m. Thursday at the rec- ford Cooperative Creamery will bride of Mark A. Smick, Eau tory. hold its annuel meeting at 1 " Claire, Saturday morning at Our WORLD DAY 0F PRAYER p.m. Saturday at the high Lady of Perpetual Help Catho- WEAVER, Minn. (Special)— school. The meeting, originally lic Church. WSCS of Weaver Methodist scheduled for Feb. 13, was post- THE BRIDE, whose father Church will observe the World poned because of bad weather. gave her in marriage, was at- ' GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY CAKE ...The 50th anniver- Magin, secretary, and Dr. E. O. Thompson, president. Mr. Day of Prayer when the group A lunch will be served at the high school starting at 11:30 tired in a floor-length gown of sary of the founding of Central Elementary School PTA was Dopke talked on "The Importance of a Happy Home for Our meets at 2 p.m. Thursday at fashioned with a a.m. A business meeting will peau de soie, observed Monday night at the school with the serving of this Children" and also discussed the relationship of education the church ball. The public is fitted bodice, scoop neckline, invited to attend. Hostesses will start at 1 p.m. beautiful anniversary cake by the first grade mothers. Ad- and income. The School Bellies entertained with several songs ___ MISS MARGARET HEL- long sleeves and a straight be the Mmes. Ronald Ratz, Nels miring the confection , from left, are Walter P. Grunwald, from "The Music Man." Attendance prizes were awarded to Staudacher and Charles Stau- EN POSTL'S engagement skirt. Lace motifs, threaded Goodview Cub Scout with seed pearls, were appliqued vice president ; Mrs. John Breitlow, treasurer; Walter Dopke, Mrs. W. E. Green's first grade class and to Miss Arvilla Lud- dacher will be hostesses. to Marvin Dworschak, son on the bodice and skirt. A train, past president and speaker ol the evening; Mrs, Richard witzke's sixth grade class. (Daily News photo) Pick Meeting Tonight ... _ BIRTHDAY PARTY of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur attached at the shoulders, was Dworschak, Route 1, In- WEAVER, Minn. (Special) — Goodview Lions will hold its fastened up into a bustle at the second parents meeting at 7:30 dependence, Wis., is an- Relatives and friends assisted reception. tonight to organize a Cub Scout nounced by her parents, Mr. Mrs. Andrew Peterson in cele* Her silk net veil was attached Native of Cuba Explains Ba/ of brating her birthday Saturday pack. and Mrs.-Jacob Postl, Chip- to a double peaked tiara of The meeting, for parents and ' afternoon and evening at her . pewa Falls, Wis. The en- pearls. home in Indian Creek. Mrs. Pe- their sons, 8 through 10 years ; gagement was solemnized The groom is the son of Mr. terson received gifts and cards of age, will be at the village ; at St Boniface parish, Wau- and Mrs. Ralph Smick, Inde- Pigs Setback for Chautauqua Club were played. Supper and a mid- hall. Charles Smith, Lions pres- mandee, Wis., by the Rev. pendence, Wis . night lunch were served. ident, will preside, assisted by ; "The Bay ot Pigs Disaster " Smeed presided at the tea table. Galvez. Mrs. Galvez, a native of The Rev. Charles C. Leisle of- , Ray Arnoldy and Ferris Booth, James Coke. The wedding Mrs. Howard Munson, Chau- Cuba, has several brothers and ficiated at the wedding. Miss was the subject discussed by I RUMMAGE-BAKE SALE members of Sugar Loaf District ; will be June 26 at St. Char- jtauqua president , conducted the her parents still living in Cuba. ' Barbara Creeley was organist Mrs. Luis Galvez, at the meet- LANESBORO, Minn. (Special) Boy Scout committee. les Borromeo Church. j business meeting and announc- Her husband, Dr. Luis Galvez, —Because of inclement weather, ¦ and accompanied the adult ing of the Chautauqua Club choir, which was directed by ed the program committee for is an instructor at the College the rummage and bake sale, ETTRICK PATIENTS Gerald Gleason. Monday afternoon at the home the coming year — Mrs. Earl of Saint Teresa. Mrs. Galvez sponsored by the American Le- ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) — Laufenburger, chairman, Mrs. referred to the article, "Deci- Auxiliary, was Mrs. Peterson BRIDAL ATTENDANTS were of Mrs. George Engstrom. gion re-schedul- Mrs. C. A. Brye entered Luth- Carl Heise, and Mrs. Norman sion For Disaster" in the Read- ed for next Friday at 2 p.m. at Mrs. Shyler Lea , Alma Center, Twenty-one members and two eran Hospital. La Crosse. Sun- Indall. ers Digest when she explained the Legion Hall. Articles for the Honored on Wis.; Miss Pauline Roskos, Mil- guests were entertained at a day for treatment. Harold Pe- the signficance of "The Bay of sale may be left at the hall derson, South Branch, entered waukee; Mrs. Donald Smick, dessert luncheon preceding MRS. GLENN Fishbaugher Pigs Disaster." each day after 5 p.m. until Fri- a La Crosse hospital Monday for 9] Chatfield and Mrs. Wayne the program. Mrs. William introduced her guest, Mrs. st Birthday , Mrs. Galvez indicated that in dav. surgery. Auer. her opinion the invasion was They wore floor-length gowns planned by the United States of brown velveteen, styled with Business Men, Wives Meet government as a military and fitted bodices, scoop necklines political action. Her reaction MISS JUDITH ANN and three - quarter - length was that the invasion appeared sleeves. The straight skirts had Cosmetologists at Coffee necessary because the Cuban THORSON'S engagement to THIS IS ANOTHER ONE! inverted pleats front and back. situation was deteriorating rap- Robert Vagts Jr., son of Their headpieces were poinset- The highlight of National j Cosmetologists Association host- idly. Both President Eisenhower Mr. and Mrs. Robert Vagts, tia-shaped flowers and shoulder- Beauty Salon Week in Winona ed the invitational party. Miss and President Kennedy seemed Harmony, Minn., is an- A Money-Saving Fabric Sale length brown veils. Each car- was a coffee party and showing Diana Timmsen was chairman. to feel that drastic action was nounced by her parents, Mr. of spring and summer hair ried a long - stemmed white j Guests were members of the necessary to restore the-Amer- and Mrs. Gerald Thorson , styles Monday morning in the Chamber of Commerce and their chrysanthemum. ican position in Cuba, she said. Harmony. A September at tbe Calico Cat Fabric Shop Attending the groom were Flamingo Room, Hotel Winona. wives. Mrs. Galvez indicated that the wedding is planned. Miss Shyler Lea, James and Wayne It was called "Meet Your Pro- James Goetz explained the military action was handicap- Thorson is a licensed prac- Auer, brothers of the bride, and fessional Cosmetologist." meaning of National Beauty Sa- ped by ineffective intelligence tical nurse and works at Donald Smick, brother of the The professional cosmetolo- lon Week to the 30 persons pres- furnished by Ajnerican observ- groom. Ushers were Dennis gists of the Winona Affiliate of ent and Richard Barness was ers. Thus the plan failed and led the Mayo Clinic, Roches- ^ Auer, Buffalo City, Wis., and the National Hairdressers and i master of ceremonies for the to the capture of hundreds of ter. Her fiance is attend- SEERSUCKERS Kenneth Sosalla, Milwaukee. show. Miss Timmsen was fash- troops . In her report , Mrs. Gal- ing the University of Minne- X ion coordinator and presented f * FOR HER daughter's wed- vez explained the process sota. Strum Lutheran seven models with their hair ding, Mrs. Auer wore a rose- whereby medicines and trac- I LAMINATED FABRICS Circles to Meet styled in the new "Swingheart" tors were exchanged for the \ colored lace frock and a cor- manner. * sage of white roses. The prisoners. St. hAahin s Circle airs, reierson STRUM, Wis. (Special) - Models were Miss Sharon Ol- ' three- WASH AND WEAR &. groom s mother wore a Strum Lutheran Church circles son, Miss Snowflake of the Wi- THE POSITION of the Cuban Sets Annual Meeting % * HOUSTON, Minn. (SpeciaD- piece costume of turquoise will meet Wednesday as fol- nona Winter Carnival, Mrs. Wil- exiles in respect to Castro and The Sewing Circle of St. Mar- ^ Mrs. Emma Peterson, blue with metalic threads arid liam Heise, Mrs. Marlene who was lows: Cuba is in conflict as the exiles tin 's Lutheran Church will hold /^ 100 COTTONS j had a corsage of red roses. Thiele , Mrs. James Goetz, Mrs. % 3 91 years old Feb. 10 is the eld- Charity at the church parlors, are divided in their stand, said its annual meeting at 7:30 p.m, * A dinner for 30 guests was Fiorita Kragon, Miss Sandy Ek- est member of the Arnet-Shel- Mrs. Gordon Thronson , host- Mrs. Galvez. The speaker can- Wednesday in the church served at Club 93, near Arcad- ess; Faith ern and Mrs. Carol Annis. They social , with Mrs. Guilford not reconcile the professed com- rooms. % DENIM don American Legion Auxiliary, ia, where a reception for 6O0 wore red satin banners across Hanson ; Friendship, with Mrs. munism of Castro and his per- The Rev. Merlera Wegener will * was presented with a birthday persons was held later. Frank Heath ; Grace, with Lor- the fronts of their dresses , en- sonality. She said Castro ap- Mrs. Connie Rohn was in conduct the devotions. Memhers ^/ scribed with "NBSW" for Na- cake by the unit on her birth- enza Nysven ; Hope, with Mrs. pears too strong willed to com- are asked to bring their mite | 2-PLY COTTONS £ J^A charge, assisted by the Mmes. tional Beauty Salon Week. day. Many friends and neigh- Joe Rindal, and Trust, with pletel y follow tbe dictates of boxes. * Albert Klonecki , Aloysius Slaby Because of the success of the bors called to wish her well. Marie Klavestad, all at 2 p.m. communism. She felt that he Hostesses will be Mrs Sr., Peter Sonsalla. Michael party , the Winona Affiliate plans . Lena H ^ Women of the neighborhood Dorcas, with Mrs. Omer En- might be using communism to Feine and Mrs. Minnie Hoff- REMNANTS £\ Howard and the Misses There- to repeat it each year. had a party for her on Friday , gen; Esther , with Mrs. Leon gain his own ends. She conclud- mann. * sa Roskos Ruth Kania, Judy Mitchell; Hannah, with Mrs. ed, " continued! strong action by and brought another birthday . GOLDEN VEARS CANCELED Wiemer Judith Lorch Betty Invgald Myhers; Rebecca the United States is necessary cake. , , , with The Golden Years group of if GOLD STAR MOTHERS Jane, Virginia, Susan and Cyn- Mrs. Arthur Olson and Sarah , we are to maintain our posi tion Mrs. Peterson is active and the Senior Citizens will not meet Winona Chapter , National thia Slaby, Denise Bibeay, Ann with Mrs. Robert Halohcr , all at in the Western Hemisphere." alert. She lives alone and does this Friday, but will join with Gold Star Mothers, will meet at Smick, and Janice Sosalla. 8 p.m. her own housework. She makes the Friendshi p Four group on Questions and answers follow- 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Legion fy-i __ W t-< Chester Rossa and his orches- One circle, Joy , will meet with several trips up town each day Feb. 26 -at Lake Park Lodge at ing her talk clarified many Memorial Club. A social hour AM tra played for dancing. Mrs. Roy Anderson Thursday at points that were in doubt. /¦- H EL j in any kind of weather. 2 p.m. to hear a talk of his- will follow the m eeting. INCH The couple left for a honey- 2 p.m. 3 ^M I torical interest by Dr Lewis j£ ~ moon in Washington , 1). C. . HOMEMAKERS I. Younger. When they return they will C1UB New from Kodak.. . and here right now! 4S make their home in Eau Clai re. FOUNTAIN CITY , Wis. - INFANT IN HOSPITAL _\ The groom's parents were The Help - Each - Other Home- LA CRESCENT, Minn. - ?5 hosts at a rehearsal luncheon makers Club, Fountain City, Kathy Lynn Thompson , three- RECOR D YOUR (2?J IB the evening before the wedding. will meet at I p.m. Thursday months old daughter of Mr. and ___rfl______¥__R______M The bride is a graduate of Ar- at the borne of Miss Louise Mrs. Orlin Thompson , La Cres- WINTER VACATION \SL * Haney. There will be cadia High School and St. Fran- a valen- cent , Minn., is a patient at St. \ Values to $1.59 a Yardi JxP cis School of Nursing, La tine part y and each member i.s Francis Hospital , La Crosse, IN PICTURES WITH f^^th ^_____ i¦ ' *_____. ; - .______9_ - < to bring _. lO-cent prize ^____K ^___v^ ' ______V____ ^ Crosse. She is employed at St. and suffering from pneumonia and Joseph's Hospital , Arcadia. Thc food for n hit nnd miss lunch. bronchitis. A NEW... \ ffw\ groom is a graduate of Inde- ¦ IT ii , pendence High School, attended * " . w*«*» ^^NMi fpf v Wisconsin State University, Ertu I / i mWW ml \ VALUES TO $4,981 1 Croup Claire, nnd i.s employed ln the yV \ -' Sheriff's Department in the c ff1 * Eau Claire County Traffic Di- WE DDING Winter Wools - „',°o °r; vision, Eau Claire. \-f ^SfflTX - " Swing Into Spring \ f STATI0NIRY ):¦' ABOVE SPECIALS SOLD ONLY AT isfw THE CALICO FABRIC SHOP with a new hair style I fBnWi^^^_____»i ^^^^^^^^ i —iT^HftT^Bffil i 1 SWING CUTS • 1V 1 • BlUNT CUTS , . j ." yfu$$...^- -¦^'-^^^^i,«¦-<^^.-»^ ^ __ Just Arrived! FEATHER CUTS \S- ' • 1 fo A Large , New Shipment of * '' ^ H BPM^^ ^^^k^a-am**—* Oustandlng $1.50 ^y . ' i VJrfO) .jUdt —by- ^ i ___sm l^'/V^XX - -* y jam * Accompany ing Permanent! WZ T XJ. GET SOME ' TJvtwity y€inm&t KODAK I wAta*YlAc30O Outfit SAILCLOTH • Prints • Plaint • Coordinate. 4>/-DU ,nd up \ft**<\ AT YOUR i 4. 7 E. Jfh Phon* Wt Instant loading . . . electric eye . . . biulget price! ALL THE MOST WANTED STYLES FOR THE loaded | | • Drop in a Kadapak film cartridge, and fhe camera ii Com* In and brows* around, look over tha beautiful Jefferson Vanity T0MV ! ; t BRIDE-TO-BE. in. lanlly . . . automatically! Electric eye automatically glvei Uj_8___ i you the proper lent setting for the film you've chotenl Shoot SPRING FABRICS! Beauty Shop ' .( Announcements & Invitations color »lid«i, color snap*, or black-and-white pictures —Ihere '* 261 Jnckion Phone 7172 never a d ial fo jet. Electric «ye even fel/« you when iff time to I From $8.00 Per 100 use the built-in flash holder. A great camera ,,. a greabvaluel ! .. NATIONAL, W&MB ^^ SOLO recipe tmf Jf, • Wedding Napkins #Thank You Notes £HM9 CALICOFABRIC CAT book ^""^w • All-Occasion Napkins • Imprinted Matches M^AlP SHOP iW^^H__8H^HMB^^^ BF ¦^^-^£W^ *-% % WEEK OTHER SOLO FLAVORS ARC: • Imprinted Coasters • Playing Cards - _r«| 66 W. Third {Below Slabrecht's) POW • NUT . DATE ' fr"" l ^ Phon. 4297 FEB 14-20 APRICOT • PINEAPPLE • 24- Hour Service — Free Bride s Book VJ* = ' • MAIL. ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY • rBUNE • AlMONt. • PEACH *__.« J^WA* ALI -M» ^am * >_v_ /_u_f_u ^_ »i/ -m. ^^Vk- ^V_. __t~» . ^^. . ^>h- . rf*. A — — Speech Winners four Traffic CD Radio Unit made but driving da&fttoot. Goodview Mayor Fire Destroys Selected at Three-Day Recess Classes ware du&kMcl la*I week fondly tt i:lM p.m. Trempealeau High Responds Quickly Ended at Taylor Roadi already woe ley tt that Workshops time, ttuktagdriving hasurdoot. ChatfieldHome TREMPEALEAU, Wis. (Spe- TAYLOR, Wis. (Special) - The but trips took longer M Appoints Five CHATFIELD, Minn. — The cial) — Fourteen Trempealeau Classes resumed at Taylor Mon- students arrivedhome later aa# home of u Winona State College ID Test Exercise Appointments to village posts • Permission to buy a first High School students will Com-, day following a three-day recess it Was a strata on the bus driv- ' Tonight were announced by Mayor Rex aid kit was given Kulas. Student, Miss DoriK Shaw, was pete in Members of the Winona Civil because of ice and snow which ers. Set destroyed by fire Saturday aft- the district forensics Defense emergency .communica- The traffic safety workshop A. Johnson at one of the short- contest at Bangor Feb. 27 as est Goodview Village Council EHMCKE told the council that ernoon. tions group were called into ac- to be held at Central Junior regular meetings in recent village financial statements are Miss Shaw had returned to the result of winning A's in the tion Monday evening in an unre- High school tonight features a months. ready to be distributed to resi- the f amily's Xhroom concrete local contest Monday night. hearsed exercise by George Mc- dents. Along with them, he said, block, hone for the weekend, Winners were : Guire, civil defense director. MORE WHITER AHEAD! wealth of local talent in addi- Named chairman of the vil- stickers giving village police and left her suitcase full of clothes The group was assigned to set tion to the services of High- lage park-recreation board was fire department numbers and in the house, and had gone to a Interpretative reading of up communications from seven way Commissioner James Mar- William Wissman Jr., 4430 Sth explaining village burning ordin- dentist. Her parents, Mr. and poetry, Bonnie Cooper and Sher- different fallout shelters in the It's Time to Order St. Other members of the board ri Lowe, with Mary Welch, al- ... shall. ances are to be distributed. Mrs. Milton Shaw, were in Chat- city. Locations assigned were are Arnold Smith, 830 41st Ave.; field. ternate; extemporaneous speak- , Gen. Marshall will be main E. R. Boiler Jr., 1135 44th Ave., He said also that he has re- St. Mary's School St. Stanislaus ceived a reply from the state Marvin ' Eke f it Wykoff, a ing, Irvln Nehring and Mary School, Winona Public Library, speaker at a supper program and Raymond H. Bonine, 5645 Robinson; declamations, Faye 6th St. to a question brought up at tbe neighbor, discovered the fire at Owl Motor Co., Watkins Me- to be held preceding the work- council's December meeting. 4:15 p.m. The Wykoff and Chat- Burt and Kathy Raymond, with morial Home, Bay State Milling shop at the Senior High cafete- Steve Kwosek, 845 40th Ave., field fire departments were call- Linda Laun, alternate; four- Co. and Community Memorial was appointed village civil de- The group wanted to know then g^-M'i : ria. Those at the supper, and why the village had not receiv- ed. The fire, apparentlystarting minute speeches, Sue Sonsalla Hospital. those who come at 7 p.m. for fense director. He replaces Har- ed any state aid for the fire in a wood and coal furnace, con- and Richard Grulkowski, with Roy Evett, chief of communi- tbe workshop alone, have the old Englund, 4325 6th St., who sumed the bouse and all its con- Carmain Dutton, alternate; cations, said one group was op- ¦ resigned. department in 1962. choice of four workshops re- The state contended that it tents. non-original oratory, Linda Van erating within 10 minutes after ______m lating to four areas of traffic A number of matters were dis- had sent the village a check, Loss, estimated at about 425,- VIeet, Uie only contestant; play receiving its assignment. All safety. cussed at Monday night's meet- Ehmcke told the council, but DOO, included Shaw's basement reading, Janet Raymond, Bill groups were operating within ing without definite action be- Coyle and Ronald Sacia, with 20 minutes. says that it was . never cleared. workshop od power tools. It was 1 A YOUTH workshop will be ing taken. A duplicate check will be pro- partly covered by insurance. only one play entered, and in- Evett said the groups used conducted by Gerald Timm portable equipment and had to THE FIRST among them was vided upon filing of an affidav- The Shaws said they plan to terpretative reading of prose, with the Winona Senior High it by himself, the clerk said. stay with their other child, a Gaye Christenson end Carol set up antennas.One group used student council. A special par- a request from musical group two coat hangers for antennas. composed of three* minors, ask- Ehmcke reported that 1&5 wa- married son, Donald, while a Pelowski, with Christine Swen- ticipant will be Municipal Judge newly built garage on the farm son, alternate. At the hospital a communka- George Murray, ing that it be permittedto per- ter customers have been hilled tions operator took over the Preston. form in the Music Bar, at the for the quarter ending Feb. 8, five miles southwest of Chat- Judges were Miss Sarah Paul, ¦ Police Chief James W. Mc- field is remodeled into living Mrs. Kathy Russian and Miss communications at the hospi- entrance to Max Conrad Field and that the city of Winona tal. Evett said 19 participated IT COSTS LESS TO BURN THE BEST! * cabe will head up the work- on 6th Street. Spokesman for health department found village quarters. Marilyn Schwanke, students at shop for emergency drivers — Winona State College. Miss in the exercise. A larger exer- Cash orders receive a 50< per ton discount up to 3-ton the group was Robert Kuhl- water samples safe in the last cise is planned for the future. ambulance, police, fire and the mann, 174 E. Sth St., who said test conducted. The tests are Betsy Nussioch and Allen lots. $1.00 per ton discount on 3-ton lota or more. like. Phil Hodapp, Albert Lea If you don't have cash — ask about our popular the three would be chaperon- conducted monthly. Goetzman of the faculty were BUDGET CIRCLE PLAN ... 8 months to pay. Highway Patrolman, "is to pre- ed. Johnson set a special meet- Space Bird' coaches. Forty students par- sent a program at this work- The council deferred making ing to discuss liquor store fur- ticipated. it Petroleum + Pocahontas shop. a decision until Duane Peterson, nishings and financing for 8 Winners at Bangor go to a 3 Plead Guilty Briquets Furnace Size A combined workshop for village attorney, could be con- p.m. today in the village clerk's sectional contest at La Crosse m * m ** community and women is to be sulted as to the legality of mi- office. He set another special later. • Zenith Cok. **g directed by Municipal Judge Built in State nors working in the bar, which meeting—this one to discuss new In Fillmore Co East Kentucky John D. McGill. Miss Dolores has a beer license. NORTHFIELD, Mian. CAP)- * Southern Illinois wage scales for village employes PRESTON, Minn. - District Stoker Coal ^ Stoker Schiller of Community Memori- Another matter on which no —for 7:30 p.m. Feb. 24. The "space bird" satellite rock- Judge Warren F. Plunkett Non- al Hospital's emergency unit action was taken was the prob- eted into orbit from Cane Ken- Kellogg Pack day ordered pre-sentence in- •k East Kentucky Block or Furnace She will participate. lem of drainage of village nedy today probably will be the vestigations for three men who An unspecified host will pre- sheets, discussed by council- most visible of satellites to the had pleaded guilty to criminal Prompt , Efficientj Clean Delivery Service side at a driver instructor work- men at tbe meeting. Seepage naked eye, G. T. SchjeldaM Co. Receives Charier offenses. shop which rounds out the four pits were installed at some Two Caught officials said. James Benson and Merlin J. phases of the Winona traffic points in the village last year, the Northfield firm supplied KELLOGG, Minn. (Special) - Frank, both 19, Cresco, Iowa, mmmmWJL JTmmVJSWMm%W_ Wmmm\MWL MmmW safety night. A representative but there are many places left the thin-film meteoroid detec- A charter was presented to the pleaded guilty to burglary and from the secretary of state's where water still stands on tors comprising "¦wings" for the new Kellogg Cub Scout pack Ronald Gene Larson, Yellow driver's license supervision de- streets after a rainfall or. when In Burglary satellite manufactured by Fair- Friday in celebration ol Boy Medicine County, to unauthor- partment also will attend. snow melts. child Hill Corp., Eladessburg, Scout Week. ized use of a motor vehicle. XiUj mJ^ej r Registration for tlie workshop Also discussed was the need Md. Tony Kuntz, Red Wing, Can- The Iowa youths were arrest- Call 3373 in Winona begins today at 5 p.m., the sup- for an annual report from the The satellite, named Pegasus, non River district executive, ed Jan. 23 by Howard County, per at 6 p.m., supper program village volunteer fire depart- At Kimball is primarily comprised of detec- presented it to Donald Sehou- Iowa, officials while attempting ment. The council concluded tor panels on accordion-folded weiler, institutional representa- to flee from Mabel, where they about 6:30 and workshop at 7 in KIMBALL, Minn. (.API - Two had taken $107 from Mabel p.m. Tickets for the supper will that information contained wings opening to 96 efet. tive for Kellogg American Le- such a report would he useful men were seized and two oth- The flat reflective surface of gion. Post 546. Pure Oil station. Sheriff Kell JHM^HgHHBMflHHHBi jMHk be available at the door. Admis- for purposes of buying insur- ers escaped on foot from the Haugerud found they also had sion to the workshops is free. its wings and the spacecraft's Ceremonies were at Ameri- ance. scene of a burglary in Kimball characteristics tumbling motion can Legion hall. "Wayne Schmitz, participated in 11 breakuis at Sgt. George McGuire urged Monday. One man halted when Harmony Sept. 21. action was as it collects meteoroids from Cub leader, extended tbe wel- all those interested in their own THE FOLLOWING a shot was fired. all directions probably will come. Den 1 gave the flag cere- Benson was represented by safety to attend. He heads a taken by the council: David Joerg and Frank by Cle- no parking at Police were called to the Aqua cause a distinctive flickering mony, sang a welcome number committee In charge of arrange- • Erection of " Lanes Bowling center about 4 and presented a skit directed by ments Synder, Preston attor- ments which includes: Timm, any time" signs on Airport appearance to earth observers, neys. Road between 6th Street and a.m. when an employe of said Dr. John W. Anderson, den mothers Mrs. Robert Dunn the Rev. Armin Deye and Vic- neighboring business saw four Schjeld-ahl and Mrs. Victor Klein. Larson was represented by tor Gislason. the Chicago & North Western vice president. James Perkins, Chatfield, as of way was au- men go into the place . Pegasus is rivalled in overall Den 2 presented a song, di- Railway right rected by Mrs. Donald Heaser, his court-appointed attorney. Oregon produces more soft- thorized atter Village Marshal Kimball police and a Stearns size only by the Echo I and Echo He was charged with talcing a wood plywood than any other Raymond Kulas told council- II satelloons which were manu- den mother; a recitation by Jo- vehicle which Dick Wold, em- County deputy seized one man factured by Schjeldah. seph Giem; honored Abraham state. men that cars were parking they found sitting in a car. ploye of Gunderson garage here, Lincoln and George Washington was demonstrating to him there. Three men fled from the build- with skit and display, and gave . • TrusteeHerbert Kleyla, op- ing. Next special term date is erator of Shangri-La Motel on the closing ceremony. A new March 15. The regular spring Service Drive, was given per- Jim Hinz, 21, son of the bowl- St. Charles I00F member joined Den 2, Andrew term will open April 12. Mt ing alley proprietor who had Sehouweiler. Other members ^H «•! ¦¦¦ A — frrTr ^fl ^___H_____R£-^?B '^______H mission to move a number of JB •^__%_ < ¦ ¦¦¦ mt Mbsdnajd VH^flSu ______l_____H been notified of the breakin, are Rodney Coates, Patrick ¦_¦ r\Bfe- ¦' wUSmSm •_ K ¦¦. _ \__m house trailers from a lot just Hi ¦ 1 B^P-i~— ^^^__H ^^^ "^i^-~U--r^ *B _t'B_^^H inside of the east village limits looked from his window and saw Cites 2 Members Blee, William and Michael Dem- 22 Buffalo-Decorah ^^ to his own property for a per- the men running through the res- ing, Bruce and Dale Baker and District Eag les iod of six months. He had kept idential area. ST. CHARLES, Minn. (Spe- Joseph Giem. the trailers, which he sold, on Hinz ran outside and fired a cial) — Two members of the Members of Den. 1 are Steph- Honored at Banquet land he rented from the vil- shot in the air. One man halted St. Charles IOOF were present- en Arens, Willard Drysdale, WHITEHALL, Wis. -r Twenty- and hid behind a snowbank. ed with 60-year membership Robin Dunn, David Klein, Dan- mt* lage, but the village is re-sell- two Buffalo-Decorah District / ing the property to Broth Ma- Dick Coplen. Kimball policeman, pins following joint installation iel Schmitz and Scott Timm. Boy Scouts who have won the f itim / TT chine 4 Foundry Co., its orig- joined Hinz and took the man with -the Rebekah lodge Satur- Cubs received bobcat pins from Eagle badge were honored at A new Wollensak recorder inal owner. in custody. day night. their parents. the Eagle Scout banquet at La • Authorization was given to Herman A. Kempe and Otto Eugene Deming is chairman Crosse State "University union In St. Cloud, Sheriff Darrell Holm received the pins from of the pack committee. Peter Henry C. Ehmcke, village Hurd identified the men held as Saturday night. packed with features clerk and assessor, to attend an Ralph Iverson, Minneapolis, Drysdale and Lloyd Baker are They were: Rodney Even- Jerome Riarich, 23, who gave grand secretary, and Albert committee members. Lunch assessors' school March 2 a Duluth address, and Larry son, Roger Melby and Bruce and only $129 through 5 in Minneapolis, and Closner, Pine Island, grand was served. Nordhagen, Whitehall; Gary Higgins, 23, Minneapolis, No treasurer. Qotttion. to Elmer Obitz, village employe, charges have been filed. Steuernagel, Lanny Moen, Orlin to attend a water and sewer Odd Fellow officers : Paul Knutson and Steven K. Nelson, NEW W011E!1SAK"1220" « VERTICU AND Police, following tracks in the Baer, operators' school April 5 through noble grand; Erford Ham, Arcadian Winner Blair; Mike VanderplOg, Steven HORIZONTAL OPERATION • OUTSTANDING TAPE FIOEUTV "The increasing rate of trav- 9 at the University of Minneso- snow, believe the two who es- vice grand; Oscar Hemming, Zarte, Donald Janke, Steven el accidents by airplane and ta. caped made their way to High- recording secretary : Otto Kem- Of Trempealeau , • TAG-CONTROL CONVENIENCE way IS where the trail was lost. Speltz and Brooke Silvernail auto are frightening. Does the pe, treasurer; Fred and Lloyd Black River Falls; William Who else, but Wolle nsak could hava developed such a top (agency) have that combina- About $150 was taken from the Millard, right and left supporter Legion Contest Docken , Bradley Stellrecht, Tha new Wollen- tion Travel Accident and Bag- bowling alley cash register. The noble grand respectively; Frank quality tape recorder at such a low price! DUST STOP Thomas F. Twesme, Roger Ba- sak "1220" lets you play and record with tha convenience gage Policy which covers sick- alleys are owned by Laverne Hllke, warden; Murray Jessen. ETTRICK, Wis. (Special )-The renthln and Thomas Rohde , ness, injury or death of the Hinz. conductor; Harold Crow and annual oratorical contest spon- and versatility of a "pro." Automatic tape cut-off... pro- travelers and theft or damage FURNACE Galesville; Gary Arnold, Peter fessions? VU meter.. . automatic tape lifters ... many Frank Hinckley, inside and out- sored by the Trempealeau Coun- J. Fernholz, Gile S. Herrick of personal belongings?" side guard, respectively; Stew- ty American legion was won by more quality featu res. It's the ideal tape recorder for tha ' and William R. Feltes, Arcadia , the amateur who wants ta FILTERS Play "The Deputy art Garkson, chaplain, and Barbara Creeley, Arcadia, in and Lincoln Duncanson, Mon- businessman, the student, Fer Wit »n_wer fo your Iruurtnct Cha_mer Perry and Herman Community Mall here Monday play and record tik« a pro. See for yourself today! quittlon, Inl (rei M call ui. A/tp. ««h<»» (s Banned in Rome dovi. TIV carton lo.i Kempe, right and left supporter, night. Dr. Harry Bangsberg, presi- ROME (AP) — A group of lice grand, respectively. Barbara, junior at Arcadia dent of Bemidji State College, Clark & Clark, Inc. DADD BR0S Italian actors bowed to a city Rebekah officers: Mrs. Min- High School, was coached by Bemidji, Minn., former Eagle In nvDD STORE government ban on "The Depu- nie Crow, noble grand: Mrs. Richard Randell. She will com- the Gateway area, was speaker. Hardt's Music Store 117 Can. tr St. VAS HARDWARE ty" today after giving one per- Lester Todd, vice grand; Mrs. pete in the 10th District con- Each of the Eagles received Stewart Clarkson, secretary; test at Colfax next Tuesday 116-118 East 3rd St. Phone 2712 Phon* 2904 S7« E. 4th St. Phoni 4007 formance of the controversial an Eagle badge. Mothers re- » play behind the locked door* of Mrs, Frank Hinckley, treasur- night. ceived a rose. a Rome bookstore. er; Mrs. Herbert Millard, war- The three other contestants den; Miss Meta Drysdale, con- were Luann Ekern, Gale-Ettrick The Rome prefecture banned ductor; Mrs. Ernest Millard and High School, coached by Mrs. the play by West German writer Mrs. Harold Liskow, inside and Elaine Nelson; Katherine Rolf Hochhuth after the Vatican outside guardian, respectively; Thompson, Osseo High School, radio and newspaper attacked Miss Anna Neeb, chaplain ; Mrs. coached by 3_. Irene Myers, and ONLY efforts by Gian Maria Volonte James Stevens and Mrs. Lester Kim Sather , Blair, coached by - - stage GLASSES and a group of actors to _)s Gehert, right and left supporter Mrs. J. O. Beadle. the ,play. It quest_o whether noble grand; Mrs. Clara Ander- Judges were Mrs. Donald February Pope Pius XII did all he could son and Mrs. Selma Braithwalt , Ronning, Ettrick, and Mrs. Shir- to save the Jews from the Na- right supporter ]R. zis. and left vice ley Nelson, Blair. James SO" grand, and Mrs. Cella Bohks, Davis, Blair, was contest chair- ¦ Tjp' I ®v#rLOOK! 10 to ch«os« I A W musician. man. Hf-.Vy^'^frj | ° «**'¦« f ' *ronri low price. Lake Townshi p Phns 1 < . £i*%?$ ¦* *Ws A^kW is Yes Month fMl >H3i W.9S INCLUDES: ? ^ MMItY PLAN! To Nominate March 9 ^v XJ{ • FRAMES 10% '"V ____?7 UNSES DISCOUN T ON 2 Ok MOM at the LAKE CITY, IVTinn.-Nomina- i \\7 • OF OUS5IS tions of candidates to fill va- \ j :\ ^6 ° I CA* >»* M,,*, Cllp r S,Jd C cancies in Lake Township will ELECTRIC SHAVER M ' *f#^ * * " '* BHocaU H D..lr.d Yes Bank ! be made at the township meet- ^>2-* ' ' «.M Additional ing March fl , according to Rus- (Kryp, Curvt, Flattop, Ulttx Help us celebrate! Come in. Ask an/ question! sell W. Breuer, clerk. Instead • Choose from 1000s of Styles — Your C holc«) involving money or banking convenience. Soo of filings this township has n S frame les also available at nominal cost. caucus. REPAIR • pecialty sty if we don't say... Incumbent officers whose • Your thole* of white, row, or sunglass green tint. "Y#iJ" terms expire are John D. Breu- No chorg* on Noralcos if in warranty • You need never worry again about broken eyewear. One-yacr Warranty P.S. Actually, every month is Yes Month. Just er, supervisor; John J. Beck , avallablei on tingle vision or bifocals, frames ant) lenses, $2.00. try us. treasurer ; Ted Marking, justice Authorhmd factory Service. All shaver* of the peace, and Ralph Breuer, AFFILIATE OF . tr « «i»i_ n« «»»t hi, irrir* httt toheipyougttwhat jmimutt constable. repaired, parts and accessor!** in stack. * wrvlci. -^(^-•¦•¦¦¦¦¦JJJJJJJ ^ •* ¦t womy. Tho township hired John Bre- Electric clippers repaired and blades ^^ u, mer, Lake City , as assessor. ^0^f ^^^^^__t t_W_m^^K _WWm_ ^^S Tk^^__^ ~* °** r- ^f^^^_^ t_W_ ^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_W_^_ ^^______H______^_ ^__ B____ *V *•» — ¦*• h**a ground, ¦ ______H^_____T 0k ^______e^_^______H ______k I ¦# >4-hM_ r MTVIC* 4BHHiPHHHHHH_HHk IHnHHHnlH x_=_v ¦¦W fiP^^ •* T m\ ¦ _L^ ¦ ! •«*«•«*• . e FIRST tm*ik JuT*1i _i3iH//n^l -M Turn I c««_ « »-•«»•».- 1 B: ^u ______^______H' I iXm 1 , I By / * KflTTx cufiJns i1, BThNational Bank ?SM£I_L _ * Taverna Barber } WK ^SS!^, ^ffURNACI ^^SKt/MMMMMMMmT^^^^^mZ^^0^0^^ T^i^iA \ JOMlt OPTICIANS of Winona Oil »^^ K €r Beauty Supply GROUND FLOOR - 71 WEST THIRD STRE ET - PHONE »M_ t « KB M«mb«r fctrfartil Deposit f A.M. TO S P._VL INCLUDING SATURDAY - ? A..M. TO f PM FRIDAY ^ " Burmeister Co. 472 High Telephone 3|» W*|t UfTtm !»••_ All Eyeglass.) M«d# In Minnesota by Minnaaota TecMchms t -y-v -i^pr tntoranc* Corporation PHONI 3)44 Fomtt Street 8-1712 «______¦_____¦______¦» "Safe Eyes S^ve Lives" *** \ ¦• ¦ ^ M ^ aiMHHMMmiMaiaaaaaHiaiiikaaaatMaiilM t'^BgPBWIWWWBWIIIilMIIUKB!^ j^ta^iR»aa^!__^viMiim;_tm^^ I* Stir Up Compliments i America's Number One Sugar-Free Cola Is With Our fine I WINP I ^^ ^ivT PRE0 I Less Than One Calorie fxiftUOBS II ^i____P3^ w' NAA* j j |SK |A dlEWltfi COlS J | | \ ID* \ _i/_Vv______H______^______l______l E STOCK |i |i H. W. CLARK I MOST COMPLET I IN THIS AREA! I I ABOUT THIS QUESTION: f| A firs !n eur «p«rtm«nl building cojf *1J.M« In rtpaln— I —— Phone 4970 tJ unottier S3,000 tor damapt to our tenants' belongings—and {S S.,200 In lost rentals during regain . Would the new Menu- s' : owner Policy for J snd 4 tamlly dwelllngi have covered || || all si>ch tosses? I CALLAHAN'S j LIQUOR STORE CLARK & CLARK, INC. L -J AT YOUR FAVORITE STORE |§ Leonard J. Tschumper 117 p il <^ I PAINTING UNVEILED ...Dr. Lewis I. % Younger, president of the Winona County His- p torical Society displays a painting recently do- % nated to the society by Mrs. G. J. Tweedy. The ff painting "Sunday Afternoon at the Levy," was |i |i painted in 1895 by a patient of Dr. G. J. Tweedy. [| It shows Dr. Tweedy and Chauncey Pittman, a ff Winona pharmacist, being swamped in the row- p boat after they went out on the rivei to "wave to || || the young ladies on the passing steamboat Pitts- burgh," according to a story. The two had to | | | | swim to shore. The painting shows the old high i wagon bridge built in 1892 which extended from t Main Street, across the river to the old stone i house on the Wisconsin shore. The bridge was de- I molished in 1943. The painting was unveiled at p the Historical Society Sunday. (Daily News photo) „ . ... ajau FAREWELL . . . Tho gu ided missile destroyer Riekett .., manned by of- HUGE PAINTING OF WASHINGTON REDISCOVERED versity of California at Berkeley. The painting went into stor- ficers and men of six nations , sails from Norfolk , Va.. for dut y with Ihe 1". . . . This 23- by 13-foot painting titled "Washington Rallying age in the basement around the turn of the century . Emanuel in | S. Bth Meet in thr Mediterranean. Waving fnre\ . rll on the pier is Hel^ a the Troops at Monmouth , N. J.," — a companion piece of the l^utze did painting 1854. Mounted jtigur e at le ft is Gen. Hagen of Alexandria , Vn., a friend of several liennan crewmen on the celebrated "Washington Crossing the Delaware" — was re- Charles Lee ard behind Washington are Alexander Hamilton j , ship. (AP Photofax) discovered recently in basement of girls' gymnas ium at the Uni- and the Marquis Lafayette. (AP Photofax) i ¦ ¦ . : . . ' "".*¦ * ** * ""' ;" " ' ' ,' ' ' ' " ¦ : ' ' . . 77. . . . , .' . _*" ' '", ' """~TT""" l'yv.: .y- vSffgBs^ms ^ ^SSS^ ^wS ^^ i\ li ii RESTAURANT SHEAVES Q. tf l | ^^^ \J ft D & LOUNGE TAKING A TRIP ^^ IV let us help you jSa Do You Have k IOUIE SCHUTH ORCHESTRA .1 ^^^^ ^^^ ^^ V-BELTS 1 $ _^_M^km_M__^^_M_MMMMMa. EVERY SATURDAY NITE BUYorBMD X^- Mj NEXT SUMMER? HEATING PROBLEMS? jI ______9__JH__HH^___iSPROCKETS DINE - DANCE a BETTERHOUSE^ X^ ; NSrAU A X MMW kj ¦ illF__J "^B MOTORS Lobster ' J [ Clioica ^M___k Tail* lunray' Oil Burner Xtf MsklriX p^i vi 1 1 f fi _^H BroiUd KJ^^^k Thtrmidor -^S^^tmtii yJ)/^ Ifl^^^^^^^^^^^ HBEARINGS m m ^^J ^ * ^^^^^^^^^ *»iw>a_>tL4iL_jai II " ii " ^^^ ^ Wilh SHELL HEAD 6\*SuHllfi 1_ |i^ H vTl'l Y l iS ^ H ROLLER Bar-B-Q Rlbi i xrW§ Frl ii DICK TRACY *Y Chastar Gould BEETLE BAILEY By Wo rt Walkf'r THE FLINTSTONES By Hanna-Barbera ¦ ._ r » — . — — DAN FLAGG By Don Sherwood ¦ I , BLONDIE By Chic Young LI'L ABNER By Al Capp STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kotzky We're OPEN Again! Come See Our Newly if Remodeled (plush-plush!) ^r § Cocktail Lounge. •*«W|^ ^ ^^^^^^U_\\\_M_M-M-\-\\\\^^f^^SSSStKt^^^^^^^^-mmmmmmmW ^^^^r REX MORGAN, M. D. By Dal Curtis | i ^k\ WL 4 ^ ^^^l _^r ^^^^_m^^^^^^^^^^^^_ _ ^^^ ^______^^^_____^^al______a ^______^_F l\^mUr^^^TAMADDAU/ 11111 Every W EDNESDAY, BAKED . . . . • ¦WRTWl l l l || r I UlflVllIlWfW SHORT RIBS DINNER. A won$f 50 M l lf \\ t W _\§ derfiil Dinner lhat includes Soup or Juice, Bread Basket, I H___ l___ »* IWlf assorted Relishes, choice of Potatoes , Salad , Dessert, and I IIIIH ¦ ¦ VJV W Beverage. All You Can Eat KB V ¦ ^___ ¦ I A II TUI IDCflAV and Ever* THURSDAY , 'VENETI- Hll || Unl l i nUllWM I AN" NIGHT. Oniline Italian MeatSfl 50 11 nil | HUH | Balls and Spaghetti — a tremendous recipe furnished us hy ~ | | ll | | Jin Italian Chef — include. . <_ i . t__ ej .tir Italian Garlic Bread. | llllI11H1l | III | Italian Salad and all the trimmings. All You Can Eat lllll HI I I and Evef V FR'DAY , GENUINE WALLEYE -, .. ¦¦ ¦ CDII>AV¦ * — ¦I I | ¦11 | | illl/M I PIKE AND SCALLOPS, Complete Dinner in-Sl /J 1 | || l NANCY By Ernie Buihmfiler II I I | eludes Juice or Soup — Relish Tray — Iii end Basket — Choice | |l ||| Hill of Potatoes ~ Salad — Dessert — Beverage. All You Can Eat | wm ||| ¦ ¦ ¦ ^_L I I ^BA ____MI and Everv SATURDAY u $• CHOICE PRIME IV1 1 l l || l I QATIIR_n&n I Vll__VJn___Yl - - | || U1 | I RIBS. The tender red meat melts in your mouth HI __L Wl || ofand is sure to make you want to return to the Golden Frog soon for more I ( tlle same! Um-nvm great! 111 I H ¦ ¦ W^ll , lwW\ Ri ll R AST CHICKEN HAM D|NNERS, Sarved SUNDAY ° * / fW w\ « I I I llUk Saryad _ to 7 p.m.... Com* ona, coma all, bring your family. M M _f^_f\ \i ' MARY WORTH By Saunders and Erntt ^^ tk^^^ ^^ ^ "i- '. ( *^mi \J <$xrtfte_rt Wr$ixi_m = SUPPER CLUB *0OM Fountai n City, Wis. W^T vJLlT