Winona State University OpenRiver

Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

2-11-1969

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" (1969). Winona Daily News. 832. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/832

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]. Colder; Low Want Ad Toni ght 2-to-8, Sell-E-Phone 12-to~20 Wednesday Number Is 3321!

Substantial' Reorganization' ' ' ' ' ¦ .:' ¦ - . . . . \ Enemy Steps U p To Be Asked by LeVander ST. PAUL (AP) - Gov. Har- might endanger the whole re- tle Falls, has said in the past LeVander has said frequently old LeVander will recommend organization effort. that the citizens group did not that state government is so "substantial" reorganization of Secretary of State Joseph L. make a deep enough study of sprawling that he simply lacfes state government this week but Donovan, State Auditor Stafford government to back up its the time to keep in touch with will not go as far as recom- King and State Treasurer Val sweeping proposals. the many department chieftains Raids in South; mended by a citizens commis- Bjornson are all dead-set Rosenmeier also has been under Jus command. sion, thie governor's aides said against taking their offices off critical of proposals which The basic principle of re- today. the ballot. merely shuffle state agencies organization would be to regroup The LeVander message on re- The governor has named Lt. around without affecting their existing agencies into larger organization 5s tentatively Gov. James B. Goetz as "quar- powers or functions. Rosenmei- blocs. At the head of each bloc TO MAKE CONTACT scheduled to be laid on legisla- terback'' of the effort to get the er has long been interested in would be a commissioner, a . .. . Arthur Andrew is Cana- tors' -desks Thursday afternoon. reorganization plan through the the reorganization process-and member of the governor's cab- dian ambassador to Sweden. It will contain a host of rec- legislature. holds key committee posts af- inet. The Canadian embassy in 3 Capitals ommendations on how to re- Hit Former State Rep. Paul Over- fecting such plans. In theory, LeVander could "* Stockholm has been instruct- align existing state agencies into gaard, Albert Lea, also will lob- LeVander aides say the gov- keep in touch with 10 or 12 cab- ed to contact tlie communist SAIGON (AP) - "The battle- 56,000-ton battlewagon hurled least five enemy soldiers, a a more streamlined format. ship New Jersey returned to the 1 900-pound shells at North Viet- by for the plan. ernor considers the reorganiza- inet members rather than t?he Chinese miss ion in Sweden , spokesman reported. But the governor will not ask Current feeling, say the gov- tion effort one of the top priority Vietnam war after a month off namese fortifications which an The battleship had been in Ja- 100 or so leaders now under his for talks on the exchange of for a sweeping reorganization ernor's aides, is that the rough- items in hig program. At the aegis. the firing line arid smashed 64 air spotter said "have been im- diplomatic missions between pan for routine maintenance into only nine mainline depart- est sledding will come in the same time, aides say, it is a Some opposition to reorganiza- enemy bunkers south of Da pervious to previous strikes." and replenishment of her sup- Canada and China. (AP ments, each with a commission- Senate. hard program to describe in tion plans is certain to arise Nang, military spokesmen re- The New Jersey's bombard- plies. er reporting to the governor. Sen. Gordon Rosenmeier, Lit- terms of voter appeal. from within state government. Photofax) ported today. ment was in support of South The U.S. Command also' an- That proposal, calling for a For four hours Monday, the Korean marines and killed at cabinet form of government, nounced another American heli- was proposed earlier by a 52- copter was shot down and de- member citizens commission IN SPRING stroyed near Pleiku, in the Cen- named by the governor to study Lock Between tral Highlands, but there were Hostage %¦ r ¦ . the executive branch. Sprints no casualties. It was the 2,356th Robert Hinkley, the gover- U.S. helicopter lost during the nor's news secretary, also con- ¦ war. firmed that LeVander will make Italy, Vatican Viet Cong and North Viet- no recommendations on abolish- To Safety as US., Allies to namese forces stepped up their ing three constitutional offices. ground war during the night The citizens group had recom- provincial mended abolishing the offices of with attacks on three FacesTest capitals, two allied bases, a pac- secretary of state, state treas- (AP) urer and state auditor. Captor Killed ROME — The Concordat ification team and a govern- MeetinBangkok ment infantry battalion. Tho LeVander also will not en- - DALLAS, Tex. (AP ) - A that binds the Italian state to daughter as they stood in line on dorse making the attorney gen- blonde schoolgirl cheerleader , awaiting food service - the Roman Catholic Church is WASHINGTON UR - The of substantial A m e ncan North Vietnamese also fired . lana eral an appointed official, as held under threat of death for first high-1 e v e 1 meetiing trdop reductions in the rela- a small U.S. observation p The long vigil followed. Lim- 40 years old today and on the over the southern half of the De- suggested by the commission. 10% hours, darted to safety Mul- among the United States tively near future as the mer and others talked to anniversary is facing a major Saigon forces increase their militarized Zone but missed it. ?LeVander will, however, re- Monday night as police gunfire lins time and again trying to and its allies in the Vietnam new his proposal to have the challenge. war since the advent of the ability to take over more of wertj killed her pistol-waving captor. persuade him to release his South Vietnamese troops governor and lieutenant gover- Janie Lewis, 17, escaped The Concordat is one of the Nixon administration is ex- the fighting. hard hit in two of the attacks, nor elected as a team. This hostage. Officers said he never The spring meeting will harm as the tense drarna ended three treaties that freed the pected to take place this suffering 24 dead and 53 wound- idea has been kicked around for gave a motive for holding her or spring in Bangkok. involve the foreign minis- in a cafeteria where a long- voiced any conditions for Popes from self-imprisonment ed while accounting for only 14 years but has never won legis- haired parolee had confined her U.S. officials saul the sesr ters of the involved coun- lative approval. freeing her. in the Vatican and ended 60 tries with the United States known enemy dead. The rest of in a? booth, rejecting repeated sion probably will follow Hinkley said the governor's "We felt he wouldn't let her years of feuding following Ita- immediately after the min- to be represented by Sec- the attacks caused only a hand- reasoning is this: Any plan to pleas to free the young woman. annexation of the Papal ful of American and -South Viet- slain go without hurting her," said ly's isterial meeting of the retary of State William P. do away with offices established Officers identified the mmmmm&mBBBmgmmmmmMzim Mussolini and represent- .' namese -wounded and light dam- man as Freddie Robert Mullins, the police chief , who said he of- States. Southeast Asia Treaty Or- Rogers. . ¦ ¦ by the Constitution would result fered to trade places with Miss IVORS. LEWIS ativ es of Pope Pius XI signed ganization. No date has Besides the more than age.- . • in so much controversy that it 21, of Dallas. They said he had , - 1929. Lewis. The Wait Continned the pacts¦ on Feb. 11 been announced for the half - million Americans served a term for armed rob- . ' . - ¦?! fighting in Vietnam, South In the Mekong Delta, 102 bery in Minnesota. The Concordat regulates ,the SEATO meeting, But ;jp^he. miles southwest of Saigon, Viet past such sessions were Korea' has 50,000 . troops, As many as 500 persons as- condition of religion and ot the , Australia Cong seldiers ripped into a Vatican held in April. Thailand 12,000 r sembled at times to watch what Church in Italy, and the 8,000, the Philippines a South Vietnamese infantry bat- Steelworkers was taking place at the Big has always defended it tooth Such a meeting would combat engineer battalion talion with withering machine- Town shopping in subur- and nail. Po-pe Paul "VI de- precede any summit session and New Zealand less than gun and small arms fire. After ban Mesquite, just outside the scribed it a year ago as " an evi- that President Nixon would 1,000. the action, 12 South Vietnamese East Dallas city limits. Heavily dent necessity for the true good hold with the Vietnam al- Ministerial meetings soldiers were dead, 35 were Could Affect armed police kept the crowd at of the Italian people and for its lies—the heads of govern- among the allies have been wounded, and only seven enemy a safe distance. future." But Italy's church par- ment of Thailand, South held every year since the bodies "were counted. The South Korea, .Australia , .New. Zea- Mesquite "Police Chief L. H. ty, the 7?ChrLstian Democrats, ; foreign troops were sent in- Vietnamese soldiers may have Limmer, 33,. said he motioned can no longer govern without land, tbe FWlippines and to South Vietnam. And been ambushed in the canal- Labor World with his eyes for Miss Lewis to the support of the Socialists; to South Vietnam. there -was one summit meet- laced delta, but no other details PITTSBURGH (AP) _ Mem- run behind a retaining wall in satisfy the Socialists the govern- One of the prime subjects ing involving P r es ident were available. bers of the United Steelworkers the cafeteria when Mullins final- ment has named a commission expected to be discussed at Johnson and the other allied Another heavy assault ? came Union vote for a president today ly diverted attention from her to of jurists to draw up a thorough the allied meeting would heads of state. before dawn when enemy forces in an election that could affect unscrew a light bulb in a low- revision of the Concordat and be the sequence of troop That session at Manila im pumped 50 to 100 mortar rounds the entire labor movement. hanging chandelier. has won parliamentary support withdrawal if and when the 1966 resulted in a formula into Pha Bon, a provincial capi- The steelworkers cast their Three bullets pierced Mullins' for the project. peace talks show positive for withdrawal from South tal in the Central Highlands, ballots at mill gates and union chest and he died as he fell. The major controversy be- results. Vietnam calling for all for- and then , stormed the town's halls in 3,700 locals throughout Limmer estimated a dozen stems The United States and eign troops to leave the military headquarters, firing the United States, Canada and ,, tween Church and State shots were fired, including three from a bill to legalize divorce in South Vietnam have been country within six months bazooka rockets and small Puerto Rico. discussing the possibility of a settlement. arms. They choose between the un- from his own pistol as the police Italy. The Concordat established ion's current .president, I.W. chief ducked behind a table only Roman Catholicism as Italy's Abel, 60, a soft-spoken former 10 feet from Mullins. official religion, and the "Vatican TRIP MAY BE KEY mill worker, and Emil Narick, Other officers reported Mul- says this implies recognition of WEATHER lins got off a single shot from mar- 52, a crewcut union lawyer and the Church's stand that a FEDERAL FORECAST former football player who his .22-caliber weapon. riage cannot be dissolved. hopes to follow Abel in becom- Police Sgt. L. C. Tidwell said Hence it says that the divorce WINONA AND VICINITY — ing the second man in union his- it was about 11 a.m. when he bill violates the Concordat. Becoming fair to p artly cloudy stopped Mullins and a compan- Progress Made tory to unseat an incumbent. tonight and Wednesday. Winds If Narick should win, he has ion, Richard Laundexville, tb Among the provisions of the promised to "re-examine and check their driver's licenses. treaty which the government slowly diminishing tonight. Low re-evaluate" the union's tie with As the licenses were handed commission is reported consid- tonight 2-8 above; high Wed- the AFL-CIO. Since Walter back, Jidwell related , Mullins ering for revision are those nesday 12-20. Outlook Thursday: At Peace Talks? Reuther pulled his United Auto pulled a gun and both youths which make the teaching of reli- Temperature a little below nor- PARIS WI — Le Due Tho's Tho left Monday with their car and ran gion mandatory in all schools; Workers from the AFL-CIO, the jumped from . mal with no important precipi- two previous trips home stops en route scheduled in 1.2 million member Steelwork- Two warning shots from Tidwell give Rome a special status as a from the Paris peace talks Moscow and Peking, the ers union has been the largest halted Launderville but Mullins sacred city, provide special tation likely. coincided with a delicate principal c o n t ri butors to federation and Abel is consid- nuns , dashed into the cafeteria near- - is escorted by two un- treatment for clergy and LOCAL WEATHER phase in negotiations be- North Vietnam's war effort. ered the No. 2 man behind hv FREED . . . Janie Lewis, 16, arrested for common crimes, identified men from a cafeteria where she was held as Official observations for the tween North Vietnam and U. S. delegation sources George Meany. Janie's mother, Mrs. C. S. gives full civil validity to all re- the United States. Now the feel Tho might have been There have been repeated re- Lewis from the neighboring hostage by a young gunman for nearly 11 hours. Moments ligious weddings, exempts cler- 24 hours ending at 12 m. to- chief adviser to Hanoi's called for a policy review. ports that Narick who calls him- town of Forney, told officers after the girl was freed police officers shot and killed the gymen from military service day: peace conference delega- They are discouraging spe- self the underdog, is a Reuther that the tall youth in a black gunman, identified by police as Freddie Mullins, of Dallas, and prohibits naming ex-prel Maximum , 41; minimum, 15; tion is on his way home culation that he is taking man. Throughout his campaign, leather jacket grabbed her a parolee from prison. (AP Ph otofax) ates to public office. noon, 24; precipitation , trace; again. back a new U.S. proposal Narick has praised Reuther's for top-level consideration. leadership, contending the auto- workers have shown superior On the surface there are bargaining power to the steel- 57 DEATHS ATTRIBUTED TO STORM no symptoms of progress workers. in the peace talks. But the If Narick were to throw the circumstances of Tho's last support of tlie steelworkers to two (trips home give sup- Reuther, Meany's AFL-CIO port to speculation that his could face a challenge from a Northeast Continues Digging Out Process trip imay be due to some powerful alliance. hidden , significant develop- Narick has also claimed that NEW YORK (AP) — With commerce, at New Vork 's Kennedy Airport . Both the American and New As the cleanup operation got Most of the 1,000 cars that ments. Abe], if re-elected , will resign snowplows working around the At least 57 deaths were attrib- Air, rail, bus and auto traffic York Stock Exchanges closed into high gear, the Massachu- stalled on the three-mile-long After arriving in Paris from and take over control of clock, the ?Northeast is digging uted to the storm which blanket- began to move sporadically late Monday and the city 's Com- setts Department of Public Tappan Zee Bridge at Tarry- Inst June 3 to supervise tho the AFL-CIO when the 74-year- out from the big weekend storm ed an area from New Jersey to Monday. But a return to normal merce and Industry Association "Works asked the assistance of town, N.Y., were removed dur- North Vietnamese delega- old Meany retires. that paralyzed transportation, Maine. They included three per- schedules appeared some time reported that absenteeism at the National Guard to remo*ve ing the day but the six-lane span tion , Tho returned to Hanoi Abel's lieutenants denied it, cut off food supplies in some sons apparently asphyxiated off as gusty winds continued to commercial establishments ran an estimated 2, 500 abandoned remained closed to traffic be- on June 29. This was at the saying Abel would win and areas and throttled the flow of while trapped in a stalled auto pile drifts after the storm at 73 per cent. cars on state highways. cause of clogged access roads. start of a summer-Ion*; lull serve his term. moved out to sea. .' i I r K in major Viet Cong and Helicopters proved invaluable North Vietnamese ground in supplying food to 6,000 pas- action in South Vietnam sengers stranded at Kennedy and of a period of intensive Venezuelan Plane Airport Monday. They also secre t diplomacy in Pa ris. made a number of ambulance During Tiro's absence , a runs, carrying several heart at- ranking North Vietnamese With 73 Aboard tack victims who otherwise official confided lo the could not have been aided. French Foreign Ministry An estimated 4,000 persons re- that the lull was Hanoi' s ro- to Cuba spouse to the American dt- - Flown mained marooned at the airport innndl for reciprocity in nc- MIAMI Ifl — A Venezuelan overnight , They bedded dow n on gotintioiis for n total halt jetliner DC9 government-owned floors , benches, chairs and in in the bombing of North with 73 people aboard was hi- Vietnam. jacked to Cuba today, reported- some cases in planes. When one by n band of five armed indi- lino ran out of diapers for in- Throughout July, Wash- ly ington rlobnlrd whether the viduals. fants mothers made do with pil- Federal Aviation Ad- lull tn fighting; was really The U.S. low cases. ministration sflld in Miami the initia ted by Hanoi and whe- Flight operations at Keancdy plane, Acropostnl Flight 305, ther it was sufficient reason landed nt Santiago in extreme were expected to resume this lo halt all ImriiNn.i* above eastern Cuba at 7:211 a.m., CST. morning and at I>nGunrdia this the 17th Parallel. Hut the The FAA snid the plane took evening. Newark Airport re- Johnson administration de- off from Mflracalbo at 5:33 a.m. EASY DOEES IT . .. A would-be passenger stretches opened Mondky afternoon and cided! against halting the wi'h 68 passengers nnd a crew out in a Kennedy International Airport waiting room in New Logan I nternational Airport in bombing then , and Tho of five bound for Caracas. Pilot York Monday with nothing better to do. He was among Boston Monday night. THK LONG, LON-G WAIT caiiK * hack to Paris Aug. i:i. Fernande reported Throughout tlie snowbound . . . Some sleep, winds continue to keep planes grounded. Food Vladimlro thousands stranded Sunday when a snowstorm blocked the some sit some talk but nil wait endlessly His next departure on to the cortrol tower at Caracas section , the failure of delivery , .supplies became exhausted by the more tlisui runways nnd cut off surface transportation to thc big tcrni< ior roads i nto Oct. M wns in Hie m '-Jsl of a sliort time later that a hijack- v trucks to get through drifts of John F. Kennedy airport to he 6,0*00 perso ns trapped nt tin: airport. (AP terminal barguining ovor a Inal complex A little girl In background reopened er Iind ordered the plane to Ha- . watches workman up to 10 feet led to a shortage of after savage snowstorm which JPhotofux ) bombing halt , when propos- vana. around an ice-covered jetliner outside. (AP Photofax) milk, bread nnd other staples. closed tlio terminal Sunday morning. High nLs were beliii * esclmnjjoil. Staff Changes, Additions Made At Lake Center I ' Several staff additions and r^S^ffl&^S^* job reassignments have been made at Lake Center Industries (formerly Lake Center Switch l^^m&aMy ^ Co.) WW£ 7100 I H. Gene Rygmyr, director IwiOMe7000 of purchases, hag announced ^Sgjjg SgiF changes, including the addition I f^^w^m?^^ I of Ronald T. Mehlunt and E. J. " ¦ ' ¦ ' "Jim" Woolums and promotion t'»- ' - — '?>|. , QNCE-A-YEAR SPECIAL of Jon E. Christensen. Mehlum j has become manager of pro- curements systems. He former- ly was purchasing manager with Colognes Nortroncs Co., Inc., Minneapo- Mist [ lis. Woolums, who has joined HYPNOTIQUE — PRIMITIF— GOLDEN WOODS the purchasing staff as a buy- I | er, came to Lake Center Indus- P lSpray tries from the purchasing de- tMiiaertfl 'MomunmmB^mmmm ^^mmtm^mmmmmi ^^^^^^^m.., i^m ¦ ¦ . ¦ ¦ partment at Honeywell, Inc., Minneapolis SERVICE . . . 'Mrs. colle ge president, and Brother Charles , where he was a FOR FAITHFUL buyer. John £. Christensen mov- PSiillip Kaczorowski, 255 E. Wabasha St., Henry. In addition Brother Henry, superior jW9^^ ed up from the position of buy- |lM» ^r 1 right, andMrs. William W. Laak, 1853 Gil- , general of the Christian Brothers, sent let- er to senior buyer in the de- m ore Ave., receive plaques commemoraiing ters of benefaction to the women as an ex- partment. th«ir 25 years of service to St. Mary's Col- pression of gratitude from the entire order. John C. W. Clemens control- % _ ¦ ¦ I I ¦ I * y<_^a ______¦» I# AM * lege from Brother Gregory Robertson, ri£ht, (DaOy News photo) ler, announced that Robert G. T ^ LJ. « I -a-*aa*±.mf* ¥ Schulte has been named cost Lotion accounting manager. Schulte iv-orn nuskers j came to Lake Center from Con- trol Data Corp., Minneapolis. • £L. A&- c S upreme Co urt AffirmsWabasha Co. In the engineering group, Jack Andresen, works manager, announced the assignment of John R. Seelhammer as the fa- Guardian at WHiteh all Board Lets cilities , engineer. He previously WHITEHALL, Wis. '(Special) physical condition. Mr. Coni- FREE SKIN FRESHENER was assigned as project engi- fi varied assortment of: traditional, modem, I —The Wisconsin Supreme Court ton's attitude was one ot 'I'm neer. John S. Streater ^ j ¦ joined has affirmed an order by Judge fine, nothing is wrong.' . '. ' . I Road Contracts the engineering group as a de- || humorous, children's and Studio Cards. | | With Purchase of Helena Rubinstein f Gary B. Schlosstein , Alma, would judge his behavior and tail draftsman. He previously denying the petition of Edward judgment are still abnormal WABASHA, Minn. (Special)- had been employed by Fiberite Corp. of Winona as 1? J. Colliton, 63, Whitehall, to even if not organic and still Bridge and culvert material and a draftsman. '™—^ terminate his guardianship. petroleum products contracts ^ La Vera would affect his judgment in YOU lOVEHER Xr ~%^^^^ " Tbe decision reached were let by the Wabasha Coun- I ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ I tf* «% gm i% 1 G. Kostner, Arcadia, Friday. business et cetera." &¦". ' SHE LOVESYOU . : .,v- .- Y/igfe', W 1 $5.50 $7 All I He is attorney for his wife, The Supreme Court said of ty Commissioners last week. 2nd Cochrane I YOOU BOTH tOVE. \{Wm lm : I Value «J . Zj\J 7 I Mrs. Harriet Colliton, who filed Dr. Kenneth W. Halgrimson of Northern Culvert and Man- the petition for guardianship in the Northwest Psychiatric ufacturing Co., S h a k o p ee, I //J mmm ^Wfm^m^mm^M^^m^^^^^^m^^^M^ma. | Trempealeau County court at i*^ w^vlt y^^^^AK ^^ s!?/ f| Whiienall Dec. 15, 1966, for ap- Clinic, Eau Claire, "lfi. was his Minn., received the contract to Meeting Set for pointment of a guardian. conclusion that Mr. Colliton furnish and deliver corrugated Burr Tarran t, Whitehall, was was suffering from a progres- metal pipe and corrugated me- sive disease of the muscles, ¦ attorney for 'Mr. Coniton. Wil- tal pipe arch culverts anywhere Senior Citizens ¦ liam Mattka, attorney in Tar- similar to the Lou Gehrig or UH Right Guard . specified in the county. COCHRANE, Wis. (SpeciaD- % J: j aWm. rant's office, argued the case Jacobi - Kirschfeldt disease. 1ii ?y ^-SSL.'f j ^^^^^^vSsvjr^F.\ te li^^^^'sM 1 I^^ . m _^am_' i-^i^. tom____ jm %K ¦ ¦¦¦ * £' Dr. Halgrimson believed that Another meeting to plan a Sen- ^^^^^^^^^ for Colliton before the high H. V. Johnston Culvert Co. ior Citizens of Cochrane and court at Madison Jan. 2. this situation would continue to worsen and he would require and Araco Steel Corp., Metal Buffalo City organization will pjI RUSSELL STOVER, ^S^^A 1I PSfflB DEODORANT^ — NO APPEAL was taken from ye-irs of hospital care." Products Division, both of Min- be held ?Friday at 2 p.m. at ^^^^ the judgment of the court Jan. Cochrane village hall. I WHITMAN 4 GOGGIN'S I 3- >^#. 1 IN AFFIRMING the lower neapolis, received the contracts P" ¦ ¦ 12, 1967, when Dr. William J. All senior citizens of the 1 . . From 95c 7 1 ' IH , :- : KQ« | court order, the Supreme Court to furnish structural plate pipe area have been invited. Mrs. Ailis f Reichenbach, Whitehall vete- , rinarian, was appointed guard- said . ."The burden of proof and arch culverts; Wheeler Elenore Riphenburg, Strum, di- ¦ was on Colliton to show his I -CANDY ioiB ian over the person and estate Lumber Bridge & Supply Co., rector of senior citizens for the -^ ^ Colliton. competenc e justifying discon- of Mr. tinuation of the guardianship St Louis Park, timber bridge Western Dairyland Council of $1.75 RICHARD HUDNUT However, Colliton petitioned materials and hardware the Office of Economic Oppor- 7« CU«IIY - $1.49 the court Aug, 28 1967, for an over the person. He failed to , and J , meet this burden and accord- Elk River Concrete Products re- tunity, will be present, as she J J order terminating the guardian- ceived the contracts for rein- was at the first meeting Thurs- ship . Buffalo County Judge ingly the trial court was entire- ly correct in continuing the forced concrete pipe culverts day afternoon. BUFFERIN j Creme Rinse Schlosstein was called in tq and pre-cast concrete bridge I CottonBalls 1 hear the petition Nov. 13, 1967, guardianship both over the per- JOHN K. BOLLINGER, for- I son and im the management of deck channels. merly chairman of the Buffalo and denied it. . bis estate. On Dec. 12, 1967, the court " American Oil Co., Kansas County Council of the OEO, pre- c ¦¦ appointed Lowell Trewartha, Colliton is a licensed master City, Mo:, received the con- sided and explained the various ¦ ¦ c plumber and has been engaged I ? : ¦: ' Egg Shampoo ; then director of the Trempea- tract to furnish diesel fuel at programs available through the 48 vl¦ . r¦ ' j leau: County public welfare de- in the plumbing business at j the Plainview highway shop at 89 Whitehall since 1945, His estate, Western Dairyland group which partment at Whitehall, to suc- 12.60 cents per gallon ; regular has been in operation about ceed Dr. Reichenbach as valued at approximately $70,- gas at 15.5 cents per gallon, die^ 000, reflects an 80 percent three years and serves Buffalo, guardian. On Jan. 4, 1968, the sel fuel and furnace oil at 12.95 Eau Claire, Jackson and Trem- court appointed Tarrant as interest in the Colliton Plumb- cents at Millville; gas at 14.5, 2 pealeau counties . ing & Heating Co., a number , with offices at '^V^ 1-1 guardian ad litem to prosecute diesel fuel and furnace oil at -^l S5W Whitehall. 1%^- of rental properties and a resi- the appeal from the order 12.65 cents at Mazeppa; gas at New programs are added ac- ing the termination of dence. He has five children 15 cents and diesel fuel and ;: $2^OMTHY deny ranging in age from 13 to 25. fur- cording to the wishes of the coun- THE GMr guardianship. nace oil at 12.85 at Wabasha; cil, available federal funds and ' V : | The Supreme Court found diesel fuel and furnace oil at A- MeUTH I local _ interest, he said. The sen- l that at his termination hearing Lake City at 12.65 cents, and fur- ior citizens was one Colliton offered his own testi- of two pro- ' nace oil at the courthouse at grams added in 1968. j MB MMR mony and that of C. Andrew Masons Installed 12.85 cents. flHI WMH Kuhn, a former Whitehall bank- If the group here organizes it will be the third in the county er, and his guardian. "Kuhn MIDLAND Co-op, Inc., Min- — JOBBERY had not seen Colliton tn 1967 Af Fountain City neapolis, bid only on the prod- there are senior citizen centers Ml I Moistuu*;--rizing so," the court said, "his judg- ucts at Plainview and received at Mondovi and Alma. Mrs. " " " | FOUNTAIN CITY |" ' . OHB| ments could not be probative , Wis. - the contract for furnishing gas Riphenburg said the purpose is 1 WSK I^Q^C" OA J ¦ on ihe question of Colliton's These officers of Fountain Citv at 14.19 cents per gallon. to give older people an oppor- 1 t^^^^^^^^^^m^^m^^^^^^^m^^^^m^. _ _ 1 * ¦¦ Lodge 283, F&AM, $ , ¦ 'jWlmmmml 1 competence at the time of the were install- Farmers Elevator Co., Lake tunity to get together for an af- v-l Nil A Bk I P»^ c?s • SxSK^mmnSi proceedings Dr. Reichenbach ed by Lloyd Bond and Charles ternoon a week for games, ¦ . Prussing: City, bidding only on the Lake did not testify as to Colliton's City highway shop, received the crafts or visiting. HAND j mental capacities." Wallace Haeussinger, wor- 8 ffl || l I shipful master; Walton Haeus- contract for furnishing gasoline KERMIT SPIETH, a director - FOR THE plaintiff , at 14.7 cents per gallon. Dr. Rob- singer, senior warden; Joey on the four-county council, en- i Ben Gay Lotion I /. " Brec3 St OH HE-NRY 1 C" "Tc Franklin , St. Paul Park , a field more County Association for Re- It&iVEV service and health service di- tarded Children will meet to- TUKKcT rector of the Minnesota Farm night at 8 at the courthouse in Ivory Sdap iCandy Bars l ^ #TD ¦ m Preston. Carl ' JM|* JKI¦*¦*! m m^axm m w»M Bureau Federation, His sub- Kohlmeyer will Guout yoiBr ject will be "The Importance talk and show slides. % $149 WHITE RA,N of Farm Bureau." February is membership i o c 3 - month. Groal is a 50 percent in- B o 7c 1 nWR l . I HARMONY FTA TEA crease over last year. All in- |I U^^ ¦Vr 4 - JL/ HAIRI *J>QDDAV 1 HARMONY, Minn. (Special) terested persons were invited at | m^ag^^is^g^i'^as^^ 1 II^^ IV r ^ f — Harmony Future Teachers lhe meeting. ¦ | 9W L1QUIPRCN „„„„,„. „ gave their annual tea for both | high school and elementary GALESVILLE WINNER INCOMETaxes gobbling up your TAX teachers recently to allow high GALESVILLE, Wis. ( Special) AenJKlnl ¦" Vy Income? Maybe you'ro i I innirJ Ra hv '"" BOTH • nmnm school students interested in — Arthur Giore, Galesville oc- not claiming all tho tenPDA ! teaching to meet with teachers togenarian attorney and numis- r ™ U aflb HflH I I $M9 YOUNG PCOPIE legal deductions you're r " Tfc ^^ " on an equal basis and discuss matist, returned from ihe win- allowed. vill AND the teaching profession. Up M m. Steve ter carnival in the Twin Cities C see fo it you get att STATE Hffa Kingsley FTA president, gave with a first trophy for his coin Medicated Moist you're entitled to . . . ^^^(H the welcoming address and collection exhibited at tho Hoi- j 03 saves you time , won// RSQBBB "M Bg Mrs. Audell Matson the thanks lday Inn- He also received a on behalf of the teachers. medal from COUPON IHBHBI and money, tool Come lllj l d S^eflP¦¦¦ . tho carnival queen. j^HIMlHI IT i- H | g TOWELETTES tntodayl ^aWW " ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦- - ;¦ r ¦*' . auAKkurtt— ==** :5l W« gucuantM Otturot* prtporollon af «v»ry Ion rttuin. K PLAIN & TREATED^ ' •we M*k» any «rror« that coil y«u «oy penalty «i inlKrtl. |1 Kleenex Towels *w will poy tha p«nolty f toataral. I SB¦ "" W^SS' ARTHRITIS? v «i«*S3«awsoga3siTOTO^^ ¦¦'• v-*-v-s..' i v!3 BH WtM " ..,^w.v**^*v4fKJ:-.fr-.;?i If you. are suffering from SAND ^^^ ^^^ pain, soreness or stlffnens IS C CHRISTIAN DIOR caused by Arthritis, Neuritis For Slippery Walks £»k\ 00 S3 co. or Rheumatism, I think I can ROlls yy America"•" LBEl's largest T«x Service ^C^CI' with Over 3000 Offices help. er Auto Ballast :jCologne with Write me for free information. S ° Atomizer O-ftDD BROS. B WITH COUPON- EXPIRE fEB. 18 . g M,„ flnd 161 EAST THIRD ST. IfUDD STORE j | ^ ^^^ iii ¦mn -.'iiiliii IM Hi ¦! ¦ ¦ ¦ u n n —i i iM . i TED MAIER DRUGS .—¦^I^—I— * |wn KAY SMITH S jjl 2301 Terry Road BN VAS HARDWARE jj Wtekday* t a.m. to t p.m. — Sit. S Sun. t a.m. to i p.m. Ttl. «-*w $ Jockion, Mississippi 39204 576 E. 4th St. Phone 400/ SPECIAL 1 Mi mi mniiiiiinun >«>. NECESSARY >,->. ^.u. v n_LUu. »._*.... t.ia.xliMlU-vfViUlMVAlvMllWlkUVl '.VtVW J V «.>K'f-KV( ! ' t *-V.;f < y"1'**--t f»,Ji.-^tr.ti,ff. V>I )»VWIW »*P*«*1¦*¦*¦¦¦¦< .•'^*Vt.^»I^VWy^. »J8AAft>>t^^^rTWJ)J-J J^.t.^J . ¦MMMM KO APPOINTMENT ¦OMBMBm '^t^«**'#«. **lltif***t 3 ^^ l * 50 Council Backs

¦¦ ¦ Bill for More Better Air Service Family Returns Schoo„_ ' i. l Construction Liquor Licenses Sought by Council Home to Find Plan Gets Approval City Council members voted -City Council members voted points to longer runways at La Central. Councilman Gaylord A five- public school nona architectural firm of W- burning units and excessive Monday night to support pas- Monday night to take all feasi- Crosse which permit jet plane Fox asked -whether a third building and .grounds improve- Smith Architectural and Engin- costs required for maintenance sage of two pieces of municipal ble steps toward improved air operations and to weather con- level carrier would compete Home Burned ment program estimated to cost eering Services to prepare final and repair. legislation by the state service for the city. ditions and existence of radio directly with existing service ' legisla- SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- about $184,000 drew approval plans and spe- . .,. Advice will be sought on de- ture. Council action followed re- towers which are blamed for and knock it out. Mayor Nor- of the Winona School Board at cifications for tails of the projected tennis cial) — A Spring Grove family c i I In backing a statewide bill ceipt of notice that North Cen- the inability of 10 percent of man E. Indall pointed out that its meeting Monday night. ' the junior OCnOOl court and baseball diamond that would set up new standard's tral Airlines filed a request scheduled flights to land at Wi- third-level carriers can use the drove to the rural home where To be financed by the dis- high school re- construction and attorneys al- for liquor li- Friday with the Civil Aeronau- nona. Since the new 1-90 bridge Winona airport any time they they lived Monday night to find trict's school ibuilding fund, the modeling job. D^.^» ready are engaged Sn negotia- censing in 2nd was built, according to North are permitted to do so. Such JL t tics Board (CAB) for permis- the residence they were renting program anticipates: work in- Board tions for purchase of the pro- class cities, sion to consolidate its Winona Central, many Winona area carriers are not regulated by ~— "HS-h* and all its contents destroyed • Acquisition of property im- eludes jnstal- perty adjacent to the high school the council 'V' 7 station with that at La Crosse passengers have been using the the CAB as are trunk and re- mediately west of the main en- Iation of new lockers, lighting, entrance. The board wishes to gional airlines. abandoned an *+ .. airport. The North Central re- La Crosse station and Winona fey fire. trance to the Senior High floor covering and ceiling in the acquire the property so that boardings have remained static earlier plan to CoUHCll quest is for issuance of an FOX WON approval for his Mr. and Mrs. Glen Erbe and School from Gilmore Avenue corridors of the former Senior buildings may be cleared for —~—"—-J while those at La Crosse have * seek special order by the CAB that inter- suggestion that Winona Area two chidlren met Spring Grove estimated to cost around $20,- High building and is timetabled the elimination of a traffic legislation granting ested parties show cause why increased. two addition- Jfelson Industrial Development Associ- tney were leav- 000; for this summer with comple- safety hazard posed at the main al on-sale licenses for direct service to ?Wmona should Councilman Barry firemen just as Conversion of the heating tion by the beginning of the Winona. moved to direct the city man- ation and Chamber of Com- ;45 p.m. • entrance. not be discontinued. merce representatives be invit- ing about 10 plant at Washington-Kosciusko fall term. ager to approach various com- The-xchildren of Jerome El- / ,92? Onager Carrol J. Fry ed to sit in on presentations School to gas-fired operation Planning also will be started THE BOARD'S business man- told the council that special bills NORTH Central's request muter (third level) air services lingson had discovered the ager, Paul W. Sanders, report- probably cites the accessibility of the about possibilities of serving by commuter carriers- at an estimated cost of $15,- on the heating plant conver- will get scant atten- blaze. Ellingson called firemen 000; sion at Washington-Kosciusko ed that the balance in the tion in this La Crosse airport to Winona, Winona, in addition to whatever Councilman Earl Laufenburg- p.m. Meanwhile session and have about 7:45 Construction of tennis which will provide gas-fired building fund Feb. 1 was $204,- small chance of surviving. via the new 1-90 bridge. It also service is furnished by North er got general agreement for Donald Elfetad, another neigh- • 950. After bills due on construc- The proposed his proposal that the city try went to the scene and courts on the Senior High operation with oil standby fa- state-wide bill bor, grounds at an estimated ex- cilities and the removal of two tion and equipping of the new would authorize to delay CAJ3 action on the found all the doors locked. By High School and Winona issuance of one North Central request in .order penditure of $25,000; coal-burning stoker units- -which Senior on-sale retail license for every that time the west side of the Area Vocational - Technical 1,500 population to get commitments for ade- two-story frame residence was • A baseball diamond at the now/heat the school. . This -would al- hi 000.; , t)ne-6f School buildings have been paid low Winona to quate service at the local air- in flames. gh school costing $4, the stekers will toe re- issue two more Port' . Authority port The council had been » A $120 00)0 corridor remod- tained as a supplemental unit. and estimated levies for the licenses . Firemen and neighbors could , , since its population is warned by City Attorney building fund are received an 26,771 according not save a thing from the build- eling project at Winona Junior to a special fed- George M; Robertson Jr. that High School. THE DECISION to convert available balance of $194,450 eral census taken in 1965. ing-because of the locked doors the heating plant was made on should be in the building fund it likely would have only a intensity of the fire. Winona also will support a bill limited time in which to as- and the THE MOST immediate result the recommendation of the ad- next July 1 to allow for the that would set up Powers Defined Also, volunteers had to walk projects now under considera- state aid funcjs said the council-approved bill semble data on which to base of Monday night's action will ministration on grounds of ob- for sewage system A revised version of legisla- ' the approximately half - mile be the authorization for the Wi- solescence of the existing coal- tion. improve- had been written with the as- any protest it might file. X ments. Under this plan, federal lation that would give the Fort driveway to the house from aids to sistance of Dorsey, Owen, Mar- Some of the council's attitude the municipalities can be Authority of Winona additional of apparent fatalism arose County Road 27 because of raised from their quart, Windhorst & West, a condition o: the road and fire- present level powers was adopted Monday from the acknowledgement by of 30 percent of costs tb 55 par- Minneapolis law firm recogmzed men didn't want it blocked. by the City Council. as an authority bn municipal several memhers that the Min- cent, provided the-state contrib- night nesota Department of Aeronau- Cause of the fire isn't known. $750 Stolen Courthouse Needs utes from 25 to 30 percent The new draft supersedes bonding. As a result, he said, The place is three miles south . the desired council restraints tics offered Bttle hope that the that approved last month by North Central petition can be of Spring Grove. Carlton Nel- THE COUNCIL also voted to narrow 4-3 were added without impairing join in the the council by a sidetracked. son, Mankato, owns tlie farm, Study Authorized anti-trust suit filed re- margin. Local legislators had potential salability of bond is- cultivated by Eldred cently by Minnesota An agreement similar to that which is From Home "We have to offer the voters chaired by Commissioner Leo Attorney hesitated to introduce the bill sues the authority might propose Gerard. The Erbes had rented General Douglas Head agains in the future. : worked out for Mankato could an entirely new program," Borkowski and including the en- t which had only partial support s objectives; the house about two years. publishers and wholesalers of be one of the city' Commissioner Paul Baer, Utica, of the council and which at The new hill adds sections suggested City Manager Car- Mr. Erbe is employed at Con- tire board, this week will bes- children's library books. The threat- told other members of the Wino- city least one councilman had empowering the authority to roll J. Fry. He said a third trol Data in Spring Grove. He At Wabasha gin contacting local architects 's maximum expense would in committee na County Board, in discussing be $300 in ened to oppose exercise eminent domain, set level carrier there provides the and his family took temporary WABASHA, Minn. (Special) — and possibly a building consul- the event of no recov- up industrial development dis- the proposed courthouse refer- ery, the council hearings. same fares and takes the same refuge with friends. A total of $750 in cash and Mon- study and was told. tricts, develop marginal lands endum at a board meeting tant on a needs* The ihatter adcls pro- responsibilities as North Cen- ' L previously had THE NEW version and issue either general obli- four or five bottles of liquor day. plans for a new building. been laid over tral formerly assumed and for a week at the visions for council review and gation or revenue bonds for in- agreesvjs certain flight fre- were taken from the Ralph He said that a new study of request of Mayor various port authority No Banquet Set BAER SAID he would Norman E control of dustrial development purposes. quencies. Fisher residence on Sand Prair- needs and / Indall who wanted to see wheth- actions that ? plans should f— "7"~H. in planning but would not par- er the These powers, available to Twin ie south of Wabasha ?Monday. Winona school district were not in- | . . At MANKATO, reported For District be made. Oth- CoUBlty ^ ticipate in promoting the pro- planned to Cities and Duluth port authori- " participate. He told eluded in the City ties, were left off the legislative Gene Meeker, Chamber of The day-time break-in was er commis- posed new building. Commis- councilmen the district Commerce manager, Fleet Afo Legion Meeting sioners agreed had de- original hill. It act of 1967 under which Wino- discovered by Fisher at 5 p.m. poarqRn*»rs4 sioner James Papenfuss, Dako- termined that its investment will be turned lines provides four daily round that "things y '\" was V»OUnCIICouncil na's port authority was creat- Cities. In ST. CHARLES, Minn. (Spe- when he returned from his work ta, also said he would assist too small to justify such over to the Wi- ] ed. trips to the Twin have chang- action. addition it provides two daily cial ) — No banquet will be held at Hartert's Hardware, Kellogg. the promotion. Both commis- nona County in connection with the 1st Dis- ed" since the study two years ¦A list , of books purchased by delegation immediately for COUNCIL objections to the round trip freight flights and It occurred sometime after 11 ago. The building committee, sioners abstained from voting service to trict American Legion and Aux- the Winona Public Library from introduction. -bill in its previous ^onm «en- enough additional a.m. on the proposal to present a re- the defendant tered on what Councilmen Dan assure that no shipment is held iliary Conference at St. Charles agencies has been City Manager Carroll J. Fry Mrs. Fisher, who operates 'erendum to the voters at the compiled by the city librarian Trainor Jr., Barry Nelson and over for an extra day. Saturday, contrary to an an- , on the first January session of the board. Miss Alberta Seiz? Howard Hoveland considered to Under contract with North nouncement in this newspaper Betty's Beauty Shop levee Plaza The question of relocating the be a lack of control by the Central, Fleet guarantees rates Monday. floor Wednesdays and Satur- :ourthouse was discussed, with After 41, council over authority proced- and other services and soon Speakers at the conference, days, was in. Byron, -where she the main concern being a loca- ures. will fly 4-engine planes on the opening at 1:30 p.m. in the Le- also has a shop. The Fishers Hearing Set tion with enough space for tho route Meeker said. If , at the In the new bill, the council , gion clubrooms, will be the Rev. live on the second floor. building and parking. Commis- Police end of two years, the city is William Curtis, Albert Lea, can- Sheriff Ed Lager said entry Public hearings on downtown Check It Cools Off must approve any authority dissatisfied with the commuter sioners agreed the present area proposal to condemn land didate for national chaplain; was made by breaking the glass sidewalk improvements in the including razing of the present The sun broke through the , service, it can petition for re- were set for Monday afternoon to create industrial districts, de- Mrs. Donald Kienholz,, Bird Is- in the back door and reaching Levee Plaza area building and the jail, would ne» overcast instatement of North Central and March , 3 by the City Council push temperatures to the high- velop marginal lands for pub- land, department president, in and releasing the lock. The the best. Locating the building service, he said. Charles Gavin, La Crescent, type safe Monday night. Two Accidents est reading recorded here in lic use or issue revenue bonds. In view of this, commented cash was in a cabinet near the highway office and Two accidents were checked nearly two months. General obligation bonding was department commander. and in a closet. There were According to an estimate 'by sn8p in Goodview was ruled out, Fox, it "doesn't make much Charles Robert J. Rel- by city police Monday resulting The afternoon high of 41 gave not included since it is subject sense to keep North Central Women of the St. car tracks about one-fourth way City Engineer because? this would require a in $670 property damage. No Winona its warmest day since to standard municipal proced- Auxiliary will serve at a cof- into the driveway, but no foot iant, the cost of these improve- when we get such lousy service ' " ¦ vote on relocating the county personal injuries ¦ were report- Dee. 12 when a record high ures under other state law. as we do." Fry urged the coun- fee break at 3 ^m . tracks. ments will to- r : seat in Goodview. ed. ' o of 61 for that date was estab- The City Council also would cil to use the leverage it has Mrs. Berna Schwartzhoff , who tal a b o ut j —., A cost study on renovation of At 12 :50 p.m., a vehicle driv- lished. provide any or all port authority to get a compromise agree- lives next door, left the house $19,200. T he V-lty the present building also was en by Charlotte M. Dondlinger, By today, however, the mer- staff workers at its own dis- ment with North Central to as- Rustler Dresses about noon. im pro v e- . rejected. Rochester, struck a parked car cury had returned to more cretion and may budget such sure better service by some Officers believe the burglar ments will be Council owned by Stanley H. Jessop, seasonal ranges and colder funds to the authority as it con- means. was familiar with the premises. assess e d I—;— > THE BOARD also discussed expected at Steet on Farm 376 E. Broadway, while mak- weather can be siders appropriate, under the Laufenburger moved that the against the another county balding, a struc- ing a left turn into a parking least through Thursday. new bill. City Manager Carroll manager and attorney be em- ELEVA, Wis. "(Special) — properties benefited. ;ure for housing and servicing stall in the Winona State Col- A sprinkling of snow fell here powered to take necessary Sometime Saturday night, Sidewalks on the block bound- jounty equipment in the west- night and this morn- J. Fry said the city's charter 7 25 Harmony lege staff parking lot. during the affords the council considerable steps to improve service here after the Palmer Sterrys ed by 2nd, Srd, Center and jrn part of the county. The Io- Damage was estimated at $30 ing but no mention of addi- and the motion passed unani- had fed and watered their Main streets are excluded from :ation has not been selected, tional precipitation is made in latitude in such funding and that mously. stock and heifers on a Citizen s Hear the project since these to the right front of the Dond- there are no arbitrary limits on beef are with- rat county highway officials are linger vehicle, a 1959 model se- the forecast for the next two small place adjacent to in boundaries of the forthcom- this funding under the new bill. Teacher Demands :onsidering three sites in the dan, and $100 to the left side of days. their farm, someone killed ing urban renewal project. Jtica area. The new structure Jessop's 1962 model sedan. This morning's low tempera- The authority would be re- a 2-year-old Black Angus strained from selling any rev- HARMONY , Minn. - Some Plans and specifications will vill house units now in rented Earlier, at 9:45 a.m., cars ture was 15, at noon it was 24 steer belonging to 17-year- 125 members of the Har- 2 to 8 is predicted enue bond issue for more than include the replacement of side- ;pace in Lewiston and St. Char- driven by Bemadine H. Gappa , and a low of Mondovi Area old Duane Sterry , dressed mony school district attended walks where needed in the building in for tonight. 7 percent interest by the new leaving , es and in a county 1203 W. Broadway, and Robert out the quarters, a board meeting Monday night judgment of the engineer, on Jethany. Tentative plans call L. Boehmke, Rushford, collided Wednesday's high will be be- bill, y the hide and head, and re- Thursday at which teachers presented 3rd Street, from midw ay be- or a steel building. at Sugar Loaf Road and East tween 12 and 20 and moved the meat to a car their requests for salary raises. should be continued cold with AN ADDITIONAL provision parked in the tween Main and Center, easterly Also being considered in this Burns Valley Road. The Gappa Barn Burns which was They asked for an increase to Walnut Street and on half no precipitation likely. in the new draft empowers the road. , >roposal is the source of funds car was going west on Sugar authority to acquire land for MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) - from this year's bachelor de- blocks of Center Street extend- 'or the construction. Should it Loaf Road and Boehmke was The Sterry farm is about recreational development pur- A fire of undetermined origin five miles southwest of gree starting salaries of $6,C00 ing northerly and southerly ;ome from highway funds or the driving north and making a poses as prescribed in state destroyed a barn on the Martin to $7,500 for the 1969-70 term. from Srd Street. right turn off East Burns Val- Probation Given Eleva on County Trunk Y. :ounty building fund? statutes. Fry said this would W. Wulff farm, Mondovi Rt. 1, Palmer S'erry found the They asked for an increase of The building fund will have ley Road. Sunday. master's degree starting salar- Police estimated damage at In Burglary Ca se give the authority additional remains of the carcass BLOODMOBILE AT OSSEO about $485.00 by the end of the development latitudes it would The farm is in the Town of Sunday morning when he ies from $6,500 this year to $9,- OSSEO, Wis. (Special) - The year and has been unofficially $420 to the left front of thc Naples Ga***pa vehicle Stanley Smoluch, 22, 871 E. not have had under the previous , seven miles southeast went to the farmyard to 0O0 next year. Red Cross bjoodmobile will be 'labeled" as the courthouse , a 1962 model, of Mondovi and $120 to the right front of Sanborn St., was placed on six bill proposal. , on a town road off feed his livestock. Elmo Dahl, area farmer, was at the Osseo City Hall Friday fund. The county board will Boehmke's 1958 model station. months probation by District The new bill also authorizes County Trunk BB. Milo Johnson of Strum, spokesman for the citizens, ask- from 11 a?m. to 3:45 p.rn . Reg- have to decide where the money Judge Donald T. Franke in Wi- the authority to operate be- Wulff was cleaning the barn county investigator, was ing questions &bout the proposed ular and new donors were urg- will come from. It is possible nona District Court Monday aft- yond city limits in limited cas- when he heard a crackling called. increases. ed to give. :o use either fund_ Two Minnesotans ernoon. es relating to industrial or re- sound. He went up into the hay He had pleaded guilty to a creational development. mow and saw flames. He tried Dead in Vietnam charge of breaking and enter- The council vote for the new unsuccessfully to pid; it out , Speltz Meat Market, version was unanimous. Coun- called the firemen ac iO;50 a.m. (AP)- ing the WASHINGTON Rollingstone, last Feb. 26. cilman Daniel Bambenek , also and returned to the barn and let Administrators A Minnesota Marine and Army If Smoluch satisfactorily a member of the port authority, out the stock. High School Evaluators man were reported dead in Viet- was absent from the meeting. Besides the 20 x 60 foot barn , Defense Department completes the probationary per- nam by the charge will be reduced a wood silo containing 50 tons Monday. They are: iod the Cite Excellence by the court to a misdemeanor. SPRING GROVE PARTY of corn silage, 40 tons of hay Marine Lance Cpl. Robert A. and milking equipment were de- Bye husband of Mrs. Robert A, William A. Llndquist was SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- , court-appointed at- Lodge stroyed. Find Areas for Praise Bye of Euclid rnd Army Spec, Smoluch's , cial) — Sons of Norway rep- party The barn was remodeled last A summary of the generally nursing program which , at the As a result of a St. Paul Park , 4 Darrcl T. Swanson, husband torney and tho state was will have a valentine Of New School laudatory findings by Paul Brewer as- Thursday at 8 p.nt,._ at thc fall. The loss is partially cov- of a commit- time of the visitation , had no klinn., visitation , he said , he wns of Mrs. Jennifer M. Swanson of resented , A special citation for excel- tee of the North Central Associ- county attorney. school. ered by insurance, nursing personnel . A public nvited to address the senior Minneapolis. sistant lence of facilities has been ation of Colleges and Secondary nurse since has been employed. :lass and teachers on thc Wi- awarded the Winona Senior High Schools which visited Winona In several instances the com- School building by the American Senior High School in December mittee recommended employ- lon a high school program . Association of School Adminis- was presented Monday night to ment of additional (AASA). personnel to "I WAS very interested In trators the Winona School Board- by carry out specific programs in The new high school is one of Dr. Carroll Hopf, Senior High the school. inding that, as a result of the Heights Road Plans Asked several from throughout the na- principal. -isit here, announcement of my tion selected by the AASA for An l)4-pago report of findings AFTER heaiing the summary Waldow estimated thc struction of CSAH 3.1 at Utica, cepted. ippcarance included the slate- The Winona Counly Board inclusion in the 1969 Exhibition was submitted by the committee report board members asked ' cost of the project itself at about a block and a half , so nen . thnt Winona 's is 'one of tho Monday ordered plans and a of School Architecture at this which spent three days in- lhat a resolution be drafted com- lowest and most beautiful high for rebuilding of about $172,000, about the same that when the village installs THE HOARD granted an ad- year's association convention to cost study ditional $60Q for part-time cleric specting a n d mending the staff and adminis- schools in Minnesot a ... It Gnrvin Heights Road . as the proposed work on Coun- its sewer system, the road will be held this month in Atlantic evaluating all tration of the high school for ty Road 109. The plans for the not have to be torn up. hire in tho county extension City, c , , ncorporntcs function and beauty Tho board will consider tlie N.J. high school bCnOOl performance that merited the o establish an excellent ntrno- section of 109 scheduled forM-c- Utica has applied for a fed- office. Counly Agent Harry Bur- The Winona firm of Eckert &. proposal by County Highway calow had asked for $1,000. The physical facili- praise of the committee. ¦phcre for study and incorpor- re- construction this year have been eral grant for sanitary sewers. Carlson , architects for tho Engineer Myron Waldow to new grant is in addition to the ties, staff , cur- RnarrJ After commenting on the re- ites many new methods wilh build the hill section, about one completed. Waldow suggested that thc school, has received notice that rlciilum, s tu- | POdta port Dr. Hopf noted thnt sewers be installed at county $600 put in the extension bud- a screening jury for this year "fre- hose of the traditional high mile from Two alternative plans for the 's dent activities quently wc who are so close to ;chool. it's good for us expense and be sold to> the vil- get. At the time the budget waa exhibition had selected the Wi- ' I think Luke Boule- V^"' .. _, heights were presented to thc and all other aspects of the high the school tend to underestimate Mice in a while to hear what m Monday, but the commis- lage when funds aro received. prepared, commissioners nnd nona school f»r a special citation vnrd up thc •LOUnt/ board extension com- school operation. It- 3ther people think about us." sioners agreed that the present The village had requested this members of thc nnd this citation will bo attached hill , rather mittee cut tho $1,000 requested He pointed out thnt the new He snid that Fridny n fourth route with , realignment is the action by the county, to the display while It's on ex- THE com iulltc« report Is used of than the 4 Board for extra clerk hire back to of school has attracted attention ^roup Austin educators -will Conn- «— desirable location. The county's share of Ihe cur- hibit at Atlantic City. as a basis for accreditation through out miles of ' $G00, thinking thnt the secretary association. of educators^ the «*lsit the school . A delegation 109, Petitions in tho interest of rent street project is about $40,- The architects were told that institutions by the " ty Rond in the superintendent of school's the screening jury found Ihnl in gen- state nnd thnt almost every wool* rom Edinn , Minn., is expected of Lewiston in Fremont both sections of road were 0O0. , among Dr. Hopf reported educators from south office and counly probation of- other things, that Senior commended Minnesota and ?cb. 2fl and numerous ot her Township. placed on file. In action by thc board, Dr. High eral the school wns Wisconsin visit the school to schools have made appointment s Ed WhiUock , Lamoille, a Wi- fice could do some of the cxlra School had an "inviting, cam- Cor Ihe qualit y of its staff , thc r Tho 309 project — four miles , study Its facilities and programs. or tours of the school. WAI.HOIV said *!>«* ph»n» nona dentist, was appointed to work. This has not worked out pus-like atmosphere created for physical facilities and Instruc- of reconstruction for County Burcalow said . shou ld bo completed in May. State Aid Highway 6 south- tlie Winonn County public health a medium-size high school in a tional programs. He said thnt the county crew nursing committee to replace A copy of the petition of an- rigorous climate. Thc concourse- Comments in the report rang- is In the current 5-yenr high- library forms an effective could do the survey work or way construction plan for this Dr. George Joyce, who has re- nexation of? all but five lots of quad- ed from statements like "the Eagles Regular Meeting 3, rangular center. A pleasing, of ^HJj P 1 it could bo done from topo- year. presented the dental association. Pleasant Valley Terrace No. foreign language department graphy maps derived from aer- The committee's constitution to tho city of Winona , was plac- open solution to a difficult cli- ftho Winona high school ranks CJHj^ra Wed.—8 p.m. in the Aerie Koo/n ; obtained after the WALDOW asked the board to and by-laws ond tho public ed on file. Tho pint for this sub- mate problem that too often sis ono of (he strongest in the ial pictures %w *% Ceroid Cook , W.P. 1 snow melts. The cost would be consider installation of a sani- health nursing service policy division was approved at an leads to cramped unimagina- stpte'' to citing of certain weak- ^ about tho same-?l ,5C0, ho said. tary sewer in the current con- and philosophy of fees were ac- earlier meeting. tive school buildings. nesses like a substandard school MARK TRAIL By Ed Dodd UNEMPLOYMENT! UP REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) Teachers Named —Iceland is experiencing its highest unemployment rata dhppameL XOAL TUgM- since the early 1930s, according M to government report. As of Af Eleva-Strum Jan. 31, unemployment was 6.6 ELEVA-STRUM, Wis. (Spe- per cent of the available work cial) — Two new teachers have force, it said. Adding to th« Men Kissing been hired by the Eleva-Strum problem is a fishermen's strike school board. that began Jan. 20. Iceland's been damaged by Miss Jennifer Starr, Eau economy has falling fish prices oa world mar- Claire, is teaching elementary kets and by poor catches in th» Men? Sure vocal music succeeding Mrs. past two years. By EA.RL WILSON Susan Kiepert, Strum. John NEW YORK — Kirk Douglas recently upheld the right of a Weinbender, Mitchell, S.D., Winona Daily News man to Idss a man — he puts his lips to those of Alex Cord teaches German and communi- in "The Brotherhood'*" — and now James Stacy, star of 20th's cations in grades 7 and 8 suc- TUESDAY, FEBRUARY IMM9 "Lancer" TV series, reminds me that the late George M. Cohan ' ceeding Mrs. Susai Oatlin, who VOLUME 113, NO. » kissed his 7father every morning of his life. , . The late Gene Fowler kissed his sons, including Will Fowler, now a Hollywood has moved to Milwaukee. Published daily except Saturday end Hol- publicist. /.Not quite the same way Laurence Harvey Miss Starr has a bachelor de- kjsyi by Republican and Herald Publish. has Infl- Compeny, 601 Franklin St..¦ Wtnont, . always bad a lot of fun kissing fellow actors he meets at gree in music education from Winn. 55987. ¦ . , C*.M4I '«< «.«..! Aitnn Iri p.iul ir**\_ » ———————^———————^——^.^—^ utu ui o CUJU cvcu aioacu iw Voice of the Outdoors Eau Claire State University. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' Copy — 10c Dally, 20c Sunday cent Sard! Jr. Another great . . . Duke Ellington got a letter She is a graduate of Hudson Single kisser of male friends is hand- from the President thanking High School. During the first Delivered by Carrier— Per Week 50 cenls some, muscular singer Steve him for his music at the Inaug- 26 weeks S12. '5 52 weekj J25JO semester this year she was an Rossi. ural ball (and signed "Dick By mail strictly In advance; paper ttop. ' ped on expiration date . About Gary Grant's possible Nixon") . . . When a hijacked intern in vocal music at Park retirement because he's not plane was allowed to leave Ha- Senior High Pchool, St. Paul In Fillmore, Houston, Olmsted, Wlnon», Wabasha, Buffalo, Jackson, Pepin and sure that at 65 he's young vana this week, the Cubans kept Park, Minn. Trempealeau counties end armed torees enough to get the girl, reader several movie films that were A graduate of the University personnel In the continental United States, or overseas with APO or FPO addresses: Carol Robinson, 25, says, "I aboard (including "Otley") . . . of Rochester, N.Y., with a mas- 1 year SI 4.00 3 months $4.00 -would Uk\j to see him go on Columbia Pictures'll take a ferls degree from Northern 6 morfhs S7J0 I month tlJO making films until he's 164. "He, look at Barbra Streisand's half- State College, Aberdeen, S. D., All other subscriptions: sister , Roslyn Kind ... Ron plus some work at the Univer- 1 year sis.00 3 months ti.Ot gets more attractive as he gets $10.00 1 month S2.2S elder (most men do)" — Isn't Moody (of "Oliver!") is phon- sity of South Dakota, Weinben- 6 months that the truth? I've noticed ing Hillary Beckett from Lon- der has fceen general secretary Send change at address, notices, undeliv- don ; they met here on a blind ered copies, subscription orders and other it — "and what's the matter of the YMCA at Mitchell the mall items to Winona Dally News. P.O. -with him romancing Katharine date. last 10 years. He, his wife and Box 70, Winona. Minn. 55W . 7 Harry Belafonte starts filming Hepburn, Deborah Kerr and two daughters, Susan, 11, and Second class postage paid at Winona, ' -40? "The Angel Levine" here Feb. Joan, 12, will live in Strum. Minn . ; other women stars over 17 . . . Faye Dunaway Paul Newman might as well insist- ed at the Ginger Man there's m* mm Ends Totiite worry ahout how he'd look ro- ~am m m mm» **mmmmt • • no romance with Marcello ^ ^ mancing a 6-year-old." MJ Lil Ll l i V "Night They Raided Mastroianhi, says the important Mlnskys guy is still photographer Jerry ^rWr^f V " MICKEY Wayland, the beau- ll A ITT ¦ -J' 7:T5-9:2ft-35<.90».-;i.25 tiful girl singer from Knoxville, Schatzberg . . . Dustin Hoff- has one of the hardest jobs in man, who got $17,000 foiC^The Graduate," now has an ksMng REX HARRISON e Hew York. Appearing from 5 • 1 p.m. to midnight in ihe New price of 400Gs. V 1""^BffiSW ^^ffl^"^ \w» . "^"5K^^^S^"' York Hilton at both the Kisrnet At Barney Google's: Anita Ekberg and husband DIRECT V ™ room and the Roman Pub, she Rick Nut- Wrd& *^__ 7^ sings about- 50 songs a night. ter . . . Dorothy Stickney , who FR0M I7S FjmJBF *^aoyousenre^T^Wj J^ She has a brother, also a sing-, appeared on B'way in "The Front Page" 40 years ago er, named Herman after his fa- , was ¦ V asked to appear in Robert Ry- RESERVED * Jorlhe whole family! 7* . . . , . ther, except that instead of call- an's revival. She declined: they named tiim "It ing him Junior, would be too painful." .. .. . RIDI ACROSSTHSSIAINSIDSTHX Join the MJp^|H|3BBBBPal Ditto. ¦ ¦ . ; ^v:v - - - ; \* ^W«r ;7:... \.v.x- -.: . .-y. - - y>WX-sa»-¦ .; v ¦¦• ¦:- :- - -w:":v:- *-;-*-.* - ¦ ¦:¦ AG N Giw Pu«SMS»iut! Valerie French, who went TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: "' ' - . .TflBB»:- .- * IWflWa ENG EME T FiBULDUS i ^fflaj r^J naked on the B'way stage in Rodney Dangerfield complains LITTER AWARD RECEIVED , . . . The focal staff of behalf of the staff . James B. Monnie, Minneapolis, made the "The Mother Lorer," attracted that he gets no respect any- presentation . Left to right are Duncan Green, W. W. Shaw, where: "I dialed to get the cor- the tipper Mississippi Wild Life and Fish Refuge gathered considerable attention to her- rect time in (he office here Monday when a citation from the Keep Dr. W. E, Green, Jay Hamernick, Donald Gray, receiving self even though the show last- — and the recording hung up on me." America Beautiful organization was presented to refuge per- citation , Mrs. Hilary Joswick, Ken Krumm, Bart Foster anoV ed only one night and she was sonnel. It was received by Manager Donald V.? Gray in Monnie. (Daily N"ews Photo) m seen nude only from the back. WISH I'D SA"3 THAT: A doc- WW ImgrW®F ff i' Valerie, playing ,a Christine tor can bury his mistakes; an ^Wi Keeler type, yanked off her architect can only advise his and white can be found who ledge and desire to supervise dress and walked naked into a client to plant -vines. — Frank have the background and gen- and correlate the efforts to bedroom. The B'way audience Lloyd Wright. NASON ON EDUCATION eral education and the know- make up for lost time. . -gasped a little — because thea- REMEMBERED QUOTE: ter audiences aren't yet accus- "Golf is what men do when tomed to nudity. they're too tired to mow the "One night before the open- lawn." — Vesta Kelly. ing," Valerie told me, "As I EARL'S PEARLS: Bobby Black Studies was taking my da-ess off , I saw Goldsboro recalls that it took him two hours to CARRY-OUTS? a man's head and he was p-eer- cast his vote ihg at me through a little in Las Vegas : The woman On ahead of me kept -utting In Need Direction You Bet.. . Anything window backstage. I yelled > Ends Tonlte •Who quarters." By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed. D. throughout the program, thus f u!S.*mmmm « • • is that?' He dodged — Our Menu "Tho Swimmer" and then I saw two men, stage- Jerry Guralsky thinks medi- U niversity of S. California the course material can be al- I IIEC M k cations are too expensive: "I tered as the response of the re- PIUS THESE SPECIALTY ITEMS! 7:15-9:20 - 35$.;0#-$1.25 hands, scuttling off to the base- had to make a deal with my It is easy for professors to cipients is analyzed. VlElklVlM ment. I had visions of the whole druggist to buy aspirin one at fall into ruts and try to learn membership of Local 1 coming more and more about the same THE OPPORTUNITIES are BATTER FRIED SHRIMP STEAK pr^fj ^'<<;'«^ sawtfy iwy;^^yrqwr.rrr' -'¦yfPi ^ryyp^^^jL a time." . . . That's earl, broth- ¦ $f in to look at me in shifts and er. - lines of study. It's a natural exciting. What sort of kinder- SANDWICH on Vienna Bread . . . . I I came out of there ranting that trap because it is pleasant to garten training does the black I wouldn't do the show opening think about things with which child need, and in what ways, night if it continued." you are most familiar. if any, does it differ from the BATTER FRIED FISH SANDWICH $| Producer Leland Haywood Investigator for present kindergarten proced- ¦ ¦ ¦ But as the needs of society On Vienna Bread . . . • . I 'j,M $<^.fatxAXtfy j - nAyxyy. iXxo&.^i.„^x:,hM^,t^.....^.., -m-ruiy^y^MX;4i and Playwright Jerome Weid- Minnesota Crime change educators should offer ures? * man calmed her. Miss French appropriate new courses. What are the special needs of hired for pictures by the late the pre-school child based on ~ Bureau Charged The most important criterion the background and culture of Harry Cohn as a threat to Kim should F GR0^ ( Novak, would probably be the in selecting a new course the home life ? DULUTH, Minn. (AP) - An be "How weir does this course ) first actress to move about the In fact, every segment of the With French ftp I investigator for the Minnesota lend itself to the training of the school system needs similar stu- B'way stage naked if it weren't Crime Bureau has been named students who will take it?" for those fids in "Hair." dy as do child training, hous- AMERICAN MOVIE in a warrant charging him with Minority segments — Indian, ing, transportation , home own- ^i^ "This is National Thrift Week drunk driving and leaving the m^^P^^^ Mexican-Americans and Negro ership and business opportuni- _ 1 n fJftX/u ** ' —• don't take anybody to Vo rJt l"//*rtA*k ^ 4H^H»^\ * a^f^JJ^^^MfMttCTrrTTKlj scene of an accident which in- — need more attention and spe- ties. BATTER-FRIED % CHICKEN lunch." (Danny Xlayman) .. . volved injury. largo seg- "My psychiatrist is a good busi- cial education. These The fact is that black stu- Judge Thomas B. Bujold of ments of our population should dents often respond directly and In lhe famous Hot Fish Shop gt^a aa *na ness man: He charges schizo- Duluth Municipal Court issued , plus cole slaw aftd ' ((Charles be fairly treated. It should not positively to a black instructor. Batter «p j|J&m __ SHAHERING FILM! A phrenics twice." Xai- the warrant for Lawrence Hed- protests to French Fries H "^ ^^^^^ HH ken) . . . Jim Backus says an take violence and It is unreasonable to demand ™*ffl nJff in, 40, of Duluth. bring the matter to the atten- that instructors, either black or INTIMATE actress married an archaeolo- A pedestrian identified as faculties. . MOVIEl "^ n|« gist but never will again: "He's tion of college white, qualify for positions in always digging up my past." Roger A. Maynard, 16, of Duluth this area by demonstrating their was struck by a: car Friday ORGANIZED bodies of know- knowledge and proficiency in to develop. It HOT FISH SHOP HEDY LANARK'S turned nighc in the city's West End. He ledg e take time the courses involved. No such futile, however, to spend PHONE 5002 A FINE ACHIEVEMENT! photographer; her picture of is reportedly in satisfactory con- is knowledge has been accumulat- HH Qj ^^ H Andy Warhol willi be in Esquire dition in a Duluth hospital. much time dwelling on the past. ed, but instructors, both black For example, the history of the INDELIBLE SCARS Afro-American cannot be chang- ,IBHBff ^ lM | ed but the future can. San Francisco State College has established a Department "LIKE A KICK IN THE HIV ^^ ^ iHi of Black Studies and Vale has STOMACH- 1 URGE EVERY i H r :WBmi announced a new Afro-Ameri- ADULT TO SEE ITI can Studies Program to begin __ " gBftfe < ^|f |^H 5> CLOSED <5 next fall. Faculty and students § g in these programs certainly will FOR not be able to> spend several VACATION. « hours a week for a period of ^ ¦ WSkW -^ - four years pouring over the iE^BB mA W 'W ir c^^^ F S^^fea\ X- am: WE'LL REOPEN W meager publications in this " field. ' "1" Hit Wilier Ritdt 0t*iniiilJo*)pieitnli W^ <4E!K '/ JSML " f -f ^*^ I propose that students and I0UN CJUSAreiU' ACES" ilirilng John Mir It** » . ,, > /^mm^^.^JMm TUESDAY, FEB. 18 1 Rtnt RoHlindt • Lynn Carlin < Seymour Caiiil H faculty work directly in the ^M^'^.il^?.7... j Mi^':ytM#'* frtd Draper *Vil Artry black community, alternating -Produced by Mjurlct Mcfndfd |MBH*BPlBiK ™mSlMm this with study in college class- Associitt Producer Al Rubin • Written tnd directed by H ^ Hra |||| HHB |Q fi j KHH | loh) C«J»yelM«ltelii3( , liM have gained. University classes k ck nA" : CHICKEN , golden bat- NO ONE UNDBR 16 ADMITTED .?K M ^ n ¦ n A TIE It - FRIED UNLESS WITH AN ADULT will continue periodically men viravj^ vegeinn e- i : ¦* '¦ ¦ ££¦• ™™ SS GSVT VSSSS. ra?/»*der-baked HAM—served . • %£=.„,„ , FriM _ C_\P- sinw HjHHkg-j-2MyH|VJHHHH|HHnH Cole Slaw. Dinner EMs Family Style from 4:30^ NEWA-ND USBD ? g m C0 Join : n £ RoHs ?nd S m-- TE ANSA?N A ! -now dining d6- : SaTSS "YOU CAN l : ri- ^, r ? EA$ . . . tMfctf&ttt YOU CAN EAT Try |M I [j ^ JH S*flTE jflH Exchange j $1,50 j [ $1,95 j j $135 JQKL $4.95 r |K» SUPPER CLUB ^"•qjfES) SKATBS Dance Saturday to the Music of "Lee Hair' <^ ^¦^Sj SHARPBNED Fountqln ^ S _f± Cl»y, WU. . " s 2 KOLTER'S -S6 "Gourmet Buffet" SUNDAY ",r^o ;T $2.25 lALIt -A SBRVICB Start Wilh Your Favorite C&xklall ^^^^ Wi Minktle *v«. "•" HU ""I* ,, >, ,> I,,,~M* ',,,*, "**, ,™* **W , , <^//» -V^I '^* * *"* ** ***"***-***-~-*——^—-——— . Two-State Funerals TUESDAY Mrs. Thora Johnson Math Lectures FEBRUARY 11, 196? STRUM, Wis. — Funeral serv- Birds Continue TELEVISION REVIEW The Daily Record ices for Mrs. Thora Johnson, 83, who died Sunday afternoon in Slated Thursday At Community Two-Sta te Deaths Winona Deaths Luther Hospital, Eau Claire, where she had been a patient 10 To Die From Memorial Hospital Marvin Paulson Mrs. Harry Cada , Mrs. Harry Cada, 00, Milwau- days, will be Wednesday at 2:80 At St. Teresa 'Today Tonight Vlitlng hours; Medical and surgical OSSEO, Wis. (Special) —Mar- p.m. at Strum Lutheran Church, patients: 3 to 4 and 7 to 8:30 p.m. I J vin Paulson, 68, Osseo Rt. 4, kee, Wis., a resident of .Winona Prof. j . Marshall Osborn, de- children under 12.) until 1943, die^ * Monday at her the Rev. "Luther Monson offici- Oil Soaking Maternity Dallenli: *2 1o 3:80 and * to died suddenly at his home early ating. Burial will be in St. Paul partment of mathematics, Uni- 1:30 p.m. (Adults ) home. only. Monday. Lutheran Cemetery. SANTA fSftBARA , Calif . versity of Wisconsin, will lec- Have Most Trouble VI»ltors to a pallenl limited to two He was born Sept. 9, 1900, The former Sara Kolter, she (AP ) - Most of the oil slick off By CYNTHIA LOWRY smoothly. Joe Garagiola and il one time. * Friends may call at the ture Thursday at the College in Town of Garfield, Jackson was born here Dec. 21, 1908, to the California coast has broken NEW YORK (AP) The well Barbara Walters were both Jacob and Rb.se Kolter. She was church chapel after 5 p.m. today of Saint Teresa. His appearance - MONDAY County, to Mr. and Mrs. John and until 11 a.m. Wednesday up but it will he a long time be- ordered world of television away from the show, too, and Paulson. He married Setaa Nel- married to Harry Cada, Sept. 4, fore the bird crisis is over. is sponsored by the college de- ADMISSIONS - ' .. , and at the churcli after noon. none of the Tonight regulars Elmer Hanson Sr., 1754 Krae- son Dec. 19, 1931. She died in 1929. Cormorants,, ducks, gulls, partment of mathematics. where almost everything is made it. " She was a member of Holy Kjentvet 4 Sons Funeral Home ' mer Dr. 1964. has charge of arrangements. sandpipers and loons still are "Fermat's Last Theorem" taped or filmed in advance, suf- Odin Sogla Rushford Rt, He farmed all of his life and Redeemer Church, Milwaukee. dying from oil poisoning despite fered little disarray after the Arthur Godfrey, who usually , 2, Surviving are: Her husband; a The former Thora Jonson, she willbe the subject of the 10:15 flies back to Manhattan from Minn. had been a salesman for a seed was born Feb. 1, 1886, in Toten, volunteer and professional ef- a.m. lecture in the Roger Bacon massive snow storm that on James Ives 810 E. 2nd St. company the past few years. son, Ronald, Milwaukee; three v forts to save them. his Virginia farm on Sundays , grandchildren ; three brothers, Norway, to Jon and Teoline lecture hall. This is prohably Sunday and Monday practically and tapes a few of his CBS-radio Jeffrey Oelkers, 1761 W. Wa- Survivors are: Two sons, Stan- Haugom Jonson and came to the Three bird-rescue stations re- the most famous unsolved prob- paralyzed the eastern seaboard basha St. ley and Richard, Osseo; a Frank, Winona; Harry, La ,053 birds shows, was also snowed out. In Crosse, and James, Henderson, United States in 1908. She was ported Monday 1 lem in mathematics, according from Virginia to New England. the emergency he filled bis half Mrs. Amelia Hoksch, Alma, daughter, Mrs. Robert (Mary married to Harold Johnson in brought in since a well on the to the professor. Ann) Gilbertson, Arcadia; two and three sisters. ?^rs. Ralph Just about the only really no- hour with a rambling mono- Wis. (Florence) April 1913 and was a member ocean floor started leaking two ticeable changes were on NTBC's sisters, Mrs. Mel Peterson, Os- Gamroth, Mrs. Har- 197 Title of the second lecture at logue which he telephoned from DISCHARGES rison (Grace) Duffy and Mrs. of Strum Lutheran' Church and weeks ago. Of this number, 1:15 p.m. is "Filling the Plane "Today" and "To nigh t's his southern home. seo, and Mrs. Orrin Granlund, its organizations. have died. Mrs. Ronald Drazkowski and Rainier; Ore.; three brothers, Harry (Evelyn ) Hewitt, Milwau- with Rectangles." This lecture shows. Today's Frank Blair was But any emergency—the baby, Fountain City Rt. 2, kee. * Survivors are: One son, Mel- will consider mainly the prob- the only regular in sight. Hugh East's crippling snow, the Oscar, Paul and Henry, all of vin, Havre, Mont.; one daugh- Uncounted hundreds more Wis. Osseo, and two grandchildren. Funeral services will be Fri- have been found dead on the lem of how densely one can Downs, weekending in Arizona, Wesc's destructive rains, the Mrs. Norris Danuser and day at 8:30 a.m. at Watkowski ter, Mrs. Mdke (Borghild ) Scal- cover the plane with rectangles couldn't make it back to New power blackout of several years Funeral services will be at zo, Spooner; two grandchildren; beaches, their feathers black- baby, 1076 Gilmore Ave. 2 p.m. Wednesday at South Beef Funeral Home and at 9 at St. ened with crude oil, their eyes of the same size subject to the York since the city's airports ago—serve to demonstrate the Ray H. Brown, 525 Vila St. John's Church, • the Rt. ? -Rev. four great-grandchildren; one condition that the center of were closed. Ed Newman, usefulness of TV's less glamor- River Lutheran Church. The brother, Morris, Norway, and inflamed, their i n t e s t i nes Brian Ressie, Minnesota City. Rev. Robert Arneson will offici- Msgr. James Habiger officiat- burned with a purgative far each rectangle cannot lie inside NBC's competent man oi all ous sister, radio. ing. Burial will be in St. Mary's one sister, Jenny, Norway. Her any other rectangle. Thus is work, toolc over on short1 notice TV may have sent bulletins BIRTHS ate and burial will be in the ' ¦¦¦ husband died in March 1963. more toxic than castor oil. church cemetery. Cemetery. - , The runaway well spewed one class of problems known and handled his assignment about the storm crawling across Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lisow- Frieiids may call at the funer- ski, Alma Wis., a son. Friends may call at Oftedahl Mrs. Clarence Lietha more than 200,000 gallons of oil to mathematicians as packing its screen during scheduled pro- * Funeral Home from Tuesday al home Thursday after 7 p.m. (Spe- into Santa Barbara Channel ancj problems. grams but it was radio that was Mr. and Mrs. Fraijk. Markus, The Rosary-will be said at 8. BUFFALO CITY, Wis. 1420 Heights Blvd., a daughter. noon until noon Wednesday and cial) — Funeral services for along about 30 miles of Pacific The final lecture will be giv- the citizen's friend. While the then at the church until time Mrs. Clarence Lietha, who died Ocean beaches before it was en at 3:30 p.m. on "Pytha- School Snow falling snow on Sunday was still Karen Rae Bambenek, Foun- of services. Winona Funerals at hef home Sunday at 12:30 plugged Saturday. The slick gorean Triples." These triples, just a nuisance, the local sta- tain City, Wis., was discharg- p.m., be Wednesday at 2 once extended over 800 square said the professor, were of great tions of New York's metropoli- Orrin N. Peterson Mrs. George Fakler will interest to the ancient Greek tan area—and presumably all ed Friday. p.m. at Dr. ? Martin Luther miles. Removal Cost MABEL, Minn. (Special) — Funeral services for Mrs. mathematicians because of their through the afflicted area—were George Fakler, Church, the Rev. Theodore The main body of the slick BIETHS ELSEWHERE Orrin N. Peterson, 67, died sud- Winona Rt. 1, Kuske officiating. Burial Will was broken up by winds, waves connection with the Pythagorean on the job. They reported the in- denly of a heart attack at his will be Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. theOrem in geometry. creasing driving hazards. They SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- at Burke be in Buffalo City Public Ceme- and chemical dispersants, but About $1700 cial) — At Tweeten Memorial home Monday at 3:45 p.m. 's Funeral Home and at The professor received his told of specific conditions and 10:30 a.m. at Immaculate Con- tery. great patches also soaked Into Costs ' of snow removal for constantly predicted—too opti- Hospital: He was born Nov.-4, 1901, on Pallbearers will be Gene the sandy beaches, said Paul De bachelor of arts degree from a farm in Highland Township, ception Church, Wilson, the Rev. Princeton University, and his schools of Independent District mistically it turned out—the du- Mr. and Mrs. Alan Nieuw Lietha, Donald Stoot, Car! Her- Falco, regional director of the 861 this winter now have mount- boer, a daughter Feb. 3 Winneshiek County, Iowa, to Martin G. Olsen officiating. Bu- master of science and doctorate ration and size of the storm. . rial will be in the church ceme- mann, Oliver Lietha, Keith 0st- U.S. Air and Water Pollution ed near the total amount budget- As conditions worsened, Mr. and Mrs. D. Wayne Ole and Maria Larson Peter- 'off and Norman Hanaemann. degrees from the University of radio sop. He attended Hesper Pub- tery. h Control Administration. Chicago. During 1956-1957 he ed for this pur- became our primary source of Pfremmer, Harmony, a son, " Friends may call at Colby "Tlie oil still at sea should pose for the Feb. 4. lic School, Valders College, De- Friends may call at the funer- attended a special year-long ses- r—"——-— information through Monday. al home today from 2 to 4 p.m. Funeral Home, Cochrane, after come ashore in the next week or 1S68-69 year , Radio told us what school/ were Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Omoth, corah, Iowa, and Wisconsin p sion on non-associative algebra v",*-r*', Business University, La Crosse. and 7 to 9 p.m. Rosaries will be 2 .m. today and until li a.m. so," De Falco said. at Yale and taught part-time fflemb ers . *'School closed, what roads were impass- s son Thursday. Wednesday and then at the Round-the-clock efforts con- He married Margit Havneros of recited by Father Olsen at 8:30 at the University ? of Connecti- of the Winona ¦n -.- -.-J- able, what trains were—or were Mabel Dec; 30, 1925; she died and by St. Anne's Society at church after noon. .\ tinued to suck up the remaining cut. In 1957 he joined the depart- School Board DOara not—-running. It also gave us TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS 8:45. Three grandchildren, are oil with pump boats or to soak it were told Mon- ~~~ ~ numbers to call in emergencies. 62 July 12, 1943. On Dec. 13, 1947, ment of mathematics at the Uni- Debra Kay Papenfuss, he married Jeanette Hover of St. Anne's Society will pro- among the survivors. up with tons of straw or similar versity of Wisconsin. day night. Since there is always a Lenox St., 11. Mabels vide an honor guard at the materials. -The board business manager, chance that electric power may church. John Knecht Dr. Osborn has served as vice He was a member of Hes- (SpeciaD- chairman and as chairman of Paul W. Sanders, said that bills be Knocked out in a storm, a FIRE CALLS COCHRANE, Wis. Until the ocean and beaches good 1969 be per Lutheran congregation, of Miss Elaine Funeral services for John can be cleared of this slime—a l the Wisconsin section of the received thus far amount to ap- resolution is to Today which he was treasurer at the E. Erickson Mathematical Association of proximately $4,700. sure there is a transistor radio Funeral services for Knecht, who died Monday at task that may take weeks—the 9:34 a.m. - 1113 E. King St. time of his death. He served Miss fol- America. A $5,000 snow removal budget in good working order around 14-foot trailer house owned by Elaine E. Erickson, 450 Manka- the Cochrane Rest Home slicks remain a trap for wide- the house as well as the usual on the . building committee lowing an illness of two years, winged birds that dive for fish had been set at the beginning Frank Plait, fire and smoke when tlie new church was to Ave., were held today at the of the fiscal year. flashlights and candles. Borzyskowski Mortuary, will be Friday at 2 p.m. at or the long-legged ones that damage to interior from - tin** erected in 1961. He farmed in the , Principal expenditures have known origin. Rev. ¦G. H. Huggenvik, Central Hope United Church of Christ, scour the surf for crabs and Big Brothers Take After hearing warnings all Hesper Township all his life the Rev. Gene Krueger offi- clams. been for removal at Winona and had lived in Mabel 21 Lutheran Church, oltieiating. Game Senior High School and at the day about over-exertion from years. Burial was in Woodlawn Ceme- ciating. Burial will be in An- The rescue stations are bird Sons to snow shoveling, ABC's excellent tery. chorage Cemetery, near Wau- Winona Area Vocational-Techni- special, "Heart Attack" was Municipal Court Survivors are: His wife; two laundries where the feathered cal School for which two con- daughters (Cozette) Pallbearers were: Herbert and mandee. unfortunates are washed in oil- In Bloomington especially timely. WINONA , Mrs. L. H. John Albrecht Friends may call at Colby tractors have been retained for The program interestingly Griffin, Sumter, N.C, and Mrs. , Donald Bellman, dissolving agents, hand-dried Members of the Winona Big the season. Michael Lee Larson, 25, La George Karsten, Donald Bicker Funeral Home here Thursday and kept in warm pens. sho*wed the most elaborate Crosse, Wis., pleaded guilty to John (Joyce) Kildahl, Scars and afternoon and until 11 a.m Brother organization, along dale, N.Y.; 10 grandchildren, David Schreiber. . One problem: Laundered with their Little Brothers, at- treatment for heart patients, charges of drunken driving Friday and after that at the birds can't be put back in tbe and its point was to demon- and driving after revocation and two sisters, Mrs. Myrtle Bernard tended a Minnesota Pipers' Hagen, Harmony, and Mrs, Schultz church. sea right away, says a Fish and basketball game Sunday at the strate the work of coronary care and was sentenced to pay fines Funeral services for Bernard He was born May ? SO, 1881, Game man,, because "they'd Metropolitan Sports Center in Three Escape units -in hospitals. These units of $100 or serve 30 days in the Palma Dykman, Hesper. Schultz, in Eagle Valley to Henry and are still not installed in 70 per Funeral arrangements, in 119 Chatfield St., were sink like a rock. They have no Minneapolis. county jail on each charge. He held this morning at St. Stanis- Ursina Janett Knecht. He natural oil on their feathers." The trip was made possible cent of the nation's 7,000 hospi- was arrested by the Highway charge of Mengis Funeral laus many tals. And the heart patient Home, Mabel, are incomplete, Church, the Rev. Donald farmed near Waumandee Experts aren't sure how long it through the cooperation of the Injury When taken Patrol at 8 p.m. Monday at Grubisch officiating. Burial was years and then retired and will take this oil to return, but Winona Jaycees and the South- to a hospital without such a Highway 61 and Highway 43. but services will be held at the in Hesper Lutheran Church, the St. Mary's Cemetery. moved into Cochrane in 1940. think it might be months until eastern Minnesota Citizens' Ac- unit, said the program's narra- Jerome J. Schmitz, 22, Hast- Pallbearers were his sons, He married Dorothy Staak Bol- the next moult. tion Council, Inc., Rushford. tor, E. G. Marshall, is "not bet- ings, ?Minn., was fined $25 by Rev. Virtus Stoffregen officia- Plane Crashes ter off than he was if he had had ting. Burial Will be in the Bernard, Roy A. and Robert linger in October 1947 and was At Carpinteria, Allen Percy, Tickets for the game - were do- DENVER, Colo. (AP)—Three Judge John D. McGill after Schultz and sons-in-law, Stanley a member of Hope- United an automotive engineer for the nated by Winona Jaycees. the attack 30 years ago." pleading guilty to a stop sign church cemetery. Minneapolis residents who left The program, filmed in the Kubisiak, Richard Holmay and Church of Christ here and the oil firm, has found it takes two Mast of the volunteer Big Flying Cloud Airport for Denver violation. The charge arose James Lyngen Fred Weeman. Harmonia Society at Wauman- men about 20 minutes to clean a Brothers have meetings with coronary care unit of Los An- from a two-car accident on Jan. Monday morning, crash-landed geles, Good Samaritan Hospital TREMPEALEAU, Wis. - Military services were con- dee. small seabird such as a grebe. their Little Brothers ra their their twin-engine Piper Aztec , 26 at East 5th and Franklin James Lyngen, 68, rural Trem- ducted by the Veterans Survivors are: One stepson, own social and recreational ac- followed four patients with var- streets. of For- Says coworker J. G. Huffman , near an Army installation when pealeau, died Monday morning eign Wars. Sylvester Verkins Donald BoUinger, Lakeville, normally an electrical engineer: tivities, according to Phillip they ran out of gas five miles ious heart diseases through di- Wayne N. Luhmans, Lamoille, at a La Crosse hospital. was bugler: Martin Boe, Ralph Minn.; two stepdaughters, Mrs. Shaw, director. This provides agnosis and treatment. Shown, paid a $20 fine after a guilty "I'm beginning to smell like a the basic one-to-one relationship short of the nty. No one was too, was open heart surgery as A laborer, he was born Palbicki, Elmer Lande and Ed- Perley (Ophelia) Anderson, fish and think like a bird." hurt. . plei to a charge of driving March 6, 1900, in Laijesboro to ward Paskiewicz, color detail, Hager City, Wis., and Mrs. Carl that epitomizes the Big Brother The pilot, Elgin Morley, his it was performed on one of the with unsafe equipment, He was Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Lyngen. and Carl Hargesheimer, Fred (Beverly ) Heitman, Fountain Donald M. Robinson, superin- program and allows for the mother Mrs. Morley and a busi- men. arrested by the Highway Pa- He married Caroline Westby in Tarras, Edwin Prosser City, and 10 stepgrandchildren , tendent of tie Channel Islands growth of a relationship be- Especially impressive were , Robert ~ ness associate, Mrs. Patricia trol at 8 p.m. Wednesday at 1951. Nelson Sr., Melvin Plate, Leo His wife died in November National Monument offshore, tween a man and boy. O'Connor, were on a business scenes showing the doctors, and Highway 61 and Gilmore Ave- Survivors are: His wife; one Heinz, George Walsh, Rudden 1959. said that unless winds change He added that group activi- trip in Morley's private plane. specially trained nurses of the nue. son, Marvin, Trempealeau ; one Sparrow, Clarence Zaborowski rare seals on the channel is- ties are beneficial to the group The craft was extensively dam- unit working like a well re. Trial on a nonsupport charge daughter) Mrs. Freddie (Myrt- and Milton Knutson. lands are expected to escape in that they provide a chance aged in the cra sh. hearsed team a moment after against Thomas Hicks, Minne- le) Steyer, Trempealeau; three weather for the Big and Little Brothers the nurse noticed a change in harm. He said the only present to participate in some common Morley radioed the tower at sota City, was rescheduled for grandchildren; one brother, Mrs. Marie E. Rounds danger to sea life was to abalo- Denver's Stapleton International the beat of a patient's heart, 9:30 a.m. Feb. 21. Trial had Kermit, Lutherville, Md., and Funeral services •OTHER TEMPERATURES . activity and still insure a one- seen on a monitor. for Mrs. Ma- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ne, lobsters, sea urchins and un- to-one relationship. Airport that he did not have originally been scheduled for one sister, Mrs. Otto (Benita) rie E. Rounds, 707 W. Broad- dersea plant life in tide pools hit time to lower his landing\gear It was an extremely well con« Jan. 13 on the charge and de- Prestesater, Glendora, Calif. way, were held High Low Pr. ^"" ceived and executed program this morning at Albany, cloudy ... .. 28 9 .. by oil. The seals apparently before his fuel ran out. ' ^ fendant had been free -on his Funeral services will be Mount Horeb, Wis. Burial was realized the danger, he said, that accomplished its purpose. personal recognizance. He fail- Thursday at 1:30 p.m. at the in German Valley Cemetery, Albuquerque, clear 60 30 .. Assembly of God Church, Wi- Atlanta, clear 56 M "and didn't go near the oily wa- ed to appear for trial , howev- Mount Horeb. .. ter." Marigold Wins Lea College to Get er, and was brought back into nona, the Rev. W. W. Shaw of- Breitlow - Martin Funeral Bismarck, clear .... 33 8 MahvSentenced court on a bench warrant. ficiating. Burial will be iri the Home has charge of local Boise, cloudy ...... 48 35 .01 Basketball Court ar- Boston, clear 33 27 .35 Judge McGill set bail in thc Lanesboro (Minn.) Cemetery. rangements. ALBERT LEA, Minn (AP)- For Trying to Friends may call at the Buffalo, cloudy ..... 26 18 .. $4 Million Needed National Awa rd . matter at $200. Chicago, dear 36 27 .. Marigold Foods has won the Lea, a new liberal arts college FORFEITURES: church Thursday after noon. Jacob Z. Wicka here, is getting its own basket- Outrun Patrol There will be no visitation at Funeral Cincinnati, cloudy .. 40 28 .. For Salary Hikes coveted Harley F. Zimmerman Mrs. Richard E. Gernes, 1077 services for Jacob .. , ball court. , parking in a Smith Mortuary here. Z. Wicka, 202 Mankato Ave., Cleveland, cloudy .. 31 29 national award for excellence CLOQUET, Minn. (AP)-A 22- W. King St., $10 will Denver, cloudy 53 25 in promoting and merchandis- A 68 by 112-foot maple floor- year-old Deer River Minn, snow removal zone, 12:50 a.m. be Wednesday at 9:30 at the Mitau Testifies once used for National Basket- , man Watkowski Funeral Des Moines, clear .. 37 26 ing of dairy products through received a six-month jail sen- Jan. 3, West King and Cum- Home and Detroit, cloudy 36 30 .. ST. PAUL, ffl — About $4 the Quality Chek'd Dairy Prod- ball Association games-is being tence Monday from Cloquet mings streets. at 10 at St. Stanislaus Church , cloudy 2 purchased froiri the Chicago the £ev Fairbanks, ... -5 .. million is needed for state col- ucts Association of Hinsdale. Municipal Court Judge Hugo Carl S. Daly, 851 W. Sth St., Dismiss Suit . Donald Grubisch offi- Fort Worth, clear .. 72 42 .. lege teacher salary increases 111. Stadium Corp. The floor will be Laine on charges stemming $10, parking in a snow removal ciating. Burial will be In Ft. installed in the Lea College field Snelling Helena, cjoudy 34 18 .. over the next two years, the Irvln Blumentritt, 1672 Gil- from a 50-mile chase by high- zone, 4:41 a.m. Jan. 28, 850 W. National Cemetery. Honolulu, M M M .. House Appropriations Educa- more Ave., is local manager. house. way patrolmen. 5th St. Aaa isi Heileman Friends may call at the fu- Indianapolis, clear .40 SO tion subcommittee -was told Marigold Dairies placed high- Lea has been using the high According to Minnesota High- Patrick Faurot, 202 E. 4th neral home after 2 today. school floor for its home games. MADISON, Wis. W - A $1.8 Jacksonville, cloudy 59 43 .. Monday night by Dr. G. Theo- est in three out of four mer- ¦H way patrolmen, Martin P. Shaw St., $10, fire hydrant violation, million suit against the G. Heile- The VFW will conduct mili- Juneau, rain 40 32 T dore Mitau , chancellor of tbe chandising promotlont during was drunk and operating his car 10:44 a.m. Jan. 18, East 4th tary services at St. Mary's Kansas City, clear . 50 31 .. State College Board. 1988. These included winning while his license was revoked. man Brewing Co. of La Crosse Cemetery. and Market streets. has been dismissed in federal Los Angeles, cloudy 68 54 ., Mitau said the increases are plaques for top performance in Defense in Ray Tho report said Martin hit Richard M. Ford , 19, 274% E. court. Louisville, cloudy ,. 45 29 .. needed to meet economic and the summer dairy monLh cam- speeds up to 100 miles per hour 3rd St., $15, driving without a The suit, charging restraint of Memphis, clear .... 52 35 academic competition. paign, the fall Win-A-Check pro- Case Refuses —often on the wrong siae of the valid license, 2:45 a.m. Thurs- trade, was filed by Levi Chap- Miami, cloudy 69 60 .. Rep. Rodney Searle, Waseca motion and the Christmas or highway—and finally crashed day, East 3rd and Kansas iewsky, Bangor; Leonard Kil- Doyle Wants lo Milwaukee, cloudy . 35 28 ., Conservative and subcommittee winter promotion of ice cream Picture Taking into a Highway Patrol car in streets. Mpls.-St.P., cloudy . "¦> 15 .01 chairman, said that if the sal- and novelty items. Itasca County. lian , Black River Falls, and ', MEMPHIS , Tenn. (AP ) Marvin C. Lord, 450»A E, 4th Mllnor Homstad, Viroquq, each New Orleans, cloudy 64 53 . ary Increases are approved he The award was prese nted to - St., $15, violation of restricted New York, clear ... 36 22 .. wculd like to see at least SO Holland Duff , Mlnnfeapolis , gen- The defense in the James Earl a beer wholesaler. Ask Udall About Ray case Monday refused driver license, 5 p.m. Monday, Tha three contended the com- Okla. City, clear ... 65 32 percent on merit. eral manager of Marigold Dair- an of- Highway 14 at Gilmore Avenue, Omaha , clear 39 23 .. The 1967 legislature, In ap- ies, by Zimmerman, managing fer by the sheriff that an official ^WfSoOmjp pany exercised "unreasonable photographer take PLUMBING arrest by the Highway Patrol. restraint of tratie" and claimed Philadelphia , clear . 35 20 ., proving 18 percent pay fa- director of tho Quality Chek'd pictures of Jf ^taj leases on Oil Phoenix, clear . , :.. 72 39 creases at Mankato, St. Cloud, Association, at the annual Ray for distribution to all news PROBLEMS? y\ DOLAN DIES they were dropped from the Pittsburgh, cloudy . 33 19 ., spring meeting of the group media \ firm 's list of wholesalers last WASHINGTON fAP) - Sen. Moorhead, Winona and Bemidji last . ^ MILWAUKEE m - John J. Robert J., Doyle says former Pi Ind , Me., -loudy . M 23 state colleges, stipulated that at week in Chicago. Percy Foreman of Houston, Dolan , former vice president of summer. Ptlnd , Ore,, rain ... 43 40 .50 Judge James E. Doyle said secretary of tho interior Stewart least 25 percent oe mode bn a the lawyer defending Ray Wisconsin Gas Co., died Mon- L. Udall should be called Rapid Citv, cloudy .42 M merit basis . against a murder charge stem- ital of complica- today the dismissal was stlpu: before Refuse to Tighten X ^«r ^\ PHONB day in a hosp a Senate subcommittee to ex- Richmond , clear . .. 44 18 .. ming from the death of Dr. 68?-2237 tions stemming from a Dec. 31 lated to by the wholesalers and St. Louis, clear 50 32 Maryland State Law I Y \V rrs ^ the brewery. plain why oil leases were grant- .. Martin Luther King Jr., said hip fracture. He was 73. ed off the California coast. Salt Lk. City, cloudy 40 18 .. Suspend Order On Cock Fighrirag since a judge has denied the de- llRV \ftv3j! " No A""*" mmm___mmmmmmmM San Diego, cloudy .. 64 47 « ^- ^ Tlie ., fense permission to tnke exclu- 4&»-2«1 Kansas Republican said San Fran,, rain ,.,.64 54 .03 Students Must ANNAPOLIS, Md. MP) "Ml ^ "an effort appears to be under - sive photos for sale to a national Seattle, rain 51 45 .35 The Maryland House of Dele- magazine, none will bo LET US HELP YOU WITH In Respect to way, by inference and innuendo, Tampa , cloudy 64 52 Live on Carrmus gates taken at refused Monday night to all. Plumbing B, Haallng to place tho blame for granting Washington , clear ., 40 22 PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - tighten stale Jaws against coc|* • the leases "I'll tel| my client of the sher- • WaUr Una Trenching The Memory of on thc current secre- Winnipeg, clear . ... 27 5 .05 A Providence College ordor re- flgrjtlpo after hearing protest Duplex Pump Jockj paru tory of a iff' s offer hut I'll oppose it as • & the interior, Walter (M-Missing) ( T-Trace) quiring -residential students to against "this great masp of con- Jubnunlblo Pump, Hickel. long as my client will ," * said • " live on campus was suspended foririlty sweeping over us." • Pracast Septic Tonki Foreman. Dry Initaltall-ma Fakler Doyle mode his indefinitely Monday and thc Republican C. A. Porter Hop- ant) Woll Mrs. George recommenda- Ray, Ga» &. Elect. Water Hoateri tion in a fetter to Sen. Dogs Save Family school njoved to consider de? kins of Baltimore County, lead- scheduled to go to trial • Edmund ;i • Hoi Walar Bollen S. mapds for changes (IJ ing the successful fight against March , hns only been photo- OFFICE WILL BE Muskie, D-Malne, chairman From Fire, Lose Lives curricu- Pr«caj» ci»lem» OUH of the Senate lum ond social nil??. tho bl|J, lamented thnt the Gen- graphed once since his extradi- • subcommittee on ' • Water Soltenori Air and tyANKATO, Minn. (AP)-One The order had set off student eral Assembly has already leg- tion to the Un i ted States from Kltchensldo DlJhwasheri CLOSED ALL DAY wat*** pollution . The London last summer. • panel, investigating the oil leak of two clogs owned by the Earl demonstrati ons. islated awny jstot machines. • Oa> It Oil Purnacoi The Very "Wo Kitchen (. Bathroom Fixtures tjiut caused extensive pollution St. Peters here died Sunday Reverend William can 't play numbers any- HANDY HOBRY • , FEB. 12 Haas, president, more—we can • Stock Watcreri WEDNESDAY of the Panta Barbara coasta when lhe pair saved the family sold thnt the 't do anything," HELENA (AP) l from fire injuries. administration had not been he told the House. , Mont. - Wa- • Eovo Trough Work urea haa hej>rfngs acheduled In ler pipes in tho Alex Cunning- the California^ Tho St. Peters were sleeping aware of tho extent of -student Del. Alexander B. Bell, D- c|ty Feb. 24 and when tho dogs, apparentl y hav- discontent . Montgoniery, joined Elopkins' ham homo froze and burst , Farm Insurance 25. , started to He said administrative offi- campaign with a warning that If flooding the basement, So Dan H&M f State ing smellcd smoke PLUMBING & HEATING* JERRY FAKIER Doylo, a member of the sub- bark. Fire damage was heavy to cials "lea rned some things Iho General Assembly prohibit- Ca rpenter , 19, tho scuba-diving • committee, noted Ud iill was sec- tho basement and kitchen , but about student life, we cither ed game birds from fighting, son of n plumber , went Into the Rollings ' *- -*'*' J Eighth Street k ROB M«scnk« — Tom l*»rUrt Jk 67 Wost retary of Ulterior at the time tho lino St. Peters escaped un- didn't fully realize or had' for- "then they're golnc to bo frua- icy water and shut oft Uio main ^ oil leases were approved. harmed. gotten." tratcd." vnlvc. The Lincoln) A WORD EDGEWISE 'SORRY, WALLY. LET'S SAY IT WAS EXPLOITATION WILLIAM S. WHITE FOR EXPLOITATION'S SAKE/ In Us All What About THE ENDURING narm of Abraham Nixon Ta king Lincoln rests on a standard by which he Op tional ROTC? himself said he would be judged: "If the end brings me out all right, what is said By JOHN P. ROCHE against me won't amount to anything. If I was greatly cheered recently to read that Calculated Risk the end brings me out wrong, 10 angels Yale and Harvard university faculties had rec- S. WHITE for By WILLIAM swearing I was right would make no dif- ommended the abolition of academic status The Nixon Administration s acceptance Corps program, WAS?HINGTON - ference." the Reserve Officers Training of We French proposal for a Big Four conference oa the chrome following a precedent set a bit earlier by the calculated risk of considerable dimen- years Middle East crisis is a He lived four years in a cave of the University of Pennsylvania. Twenty-two While it conceivably could result in some genuine pro- abolish sions. winds where immense passions swirled ago at Cornell I led a campaign both to gress on this torturous and tortured business, it could as well around his head. The tide of events and compulsory ROTC and to eliminate the para- building up the already immense ego of Presi- " It result only in ¦ the vast movements of men on battlefields academic "department of Military Science. dent Charles de Gaulle of France. ' . . - weie almost beyond the power of one man is ironic, but the one dutstanding precedent Since the American-Russian-French conversations are to free from to control. To Sen. Morrall of Maine Lin- for "black studies" departments take place within the frame- current demand of Ne- coln remarked: university control — the work of the United Nations, Health gro militants — is the ROTC! Universities have the Washington government To Your Good "I Co not know but that God has creat- had no control over the "faculty " of "Military is stressing — and meaning which became, in fact , ed some one man great enough to compre- Science" departments — that there is no thought hend the whole of this stupendous crisis rest homes for tired colonels. of some mere concert amon g Burning from beginning to end, and endowed him My attitude towards the ROTC back in 1947 the four big fellows to force During with sufficient wisdom to manage and di- was, I confess, largely emotional. an Israeli - Arab settlement misfortune of serv- confess I do not fully understand World War Two I had the upon Israel. rect it. I commanding officers who had Feet Keep and foresee it all. But I am placed where ing under several Nevertheless, the Israelis, won their spurs in ROTC, and I emerged from I sua obliged to the best of my poor ability who have consistently argued the war with the fixation that there had been that the only way to genuine to deal witli it. And that being the case, I Nazi money behind the whole enterprise. When Her Awake can only go just as fast as I can see how peace -would be head-to-head I went to Cornell in February 1946, I saw an By G. C. THOSTESON, M.D. to go." negotiations between Israel actual ROTC program in action for the first and Nasser Egypt and the oth- time (my undergraduate college had none ) and Dear Dr. Thosteson: My Out of the crash and clamor of war er hostile Arab states, are who is past 70, has within a year I was convinced that the So- publicly far from pleased and mother, there finally came silence. Stillness de^ viets were now sponsoring it. a problem with hot feet scended on the battlefields—the Peach Or- privately most worried and They burn so bad they keep TWO YEARS was then mandatory, but concerned. " ch ard and the Wheat Field at Gettysburg; since about 80 percent of the student population her awake at night, so she Stones River, Shiloh , Malvern Hill, the This is not because they is up and down all night was composed of exempt veterans only a small Presi- , the Sunken Road and all ¦ of have any question of putting them in cold water Wilde^ess , number of youngsters were actually enrolled. dent Nixon's intentions. Rath- the thousand and one places where men On lovely spring days we used to amuse our- (which doesn't help much). er, it is because they regard Could you suggest a reme- had died. selves by watching the ROTC in action — there France as actually a mere was a "Keystone Cops" quality about it. They dy?— D. S. EVEN AMID crack of groat gum Soviet satellite on this issue th* stiH did bayonet drill on dummies ! (Hell, any- I could help more if I had " the and neither able nor willing daring the years of war there was one knew that bayonets were for opening ra- to take any truly objective some further clue as to which promise of a final silence, so that a wom- tion cans!) And they still taught them to throw line. The ' Israeli view, in of the different causes of an at Vicksburg could muse in her diary grenades with that curious overarm pitch short, is that this is not to be burning feet is bothering her. in the spring, "In the midst of all this which had been standard drill until the Marines a really four-sided confer- But you may have and not carnage and commotion .. . birds are in the Solomons began doing what came na- ence but in actuality only a realize it. singing ... flowers are in perfection . . . turally — throwing them like baseballs — with three-sided one, with the This is a rather commit' and the garden bright and gay ... all save results the Japanese never could bring them- French indistinguishable from ' , complaint as folks get on in the spirit of man seems divine." selves to believe. . the Russians for all practical years, and one cause is im- I won't go into details on the " military purposes. paired circulation. Or, quite And in April of 1865, when the lilacs science" courses which were taken for aca- THE ISRAELIS strongly a.different situation, it may be bloomed in the Washington dooryards, Lin- demic credit except to note that the first gov- a form of neuritis suspect, and pretty soundly so , particular- co ln passed into silence. The guard at the ernment class I taught, back in 1947, had 49 ly that which ' sometimes ac- door veterans and one 18-year-old. The veterans in- on the record to date, that was careless and the assassin had his de Gaulle will offer nothing companies diabetes. Or the chance. cluded men who had been in every major cam- tiny blood vessels may have paign of the war, some as officers but most THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND much beyond an echo of the Soviet position. That position, been damaged iu some way Ever since people have been trying to as non-coms, and on slow days we would ask ( frost bite is one possibility). fill the void of silence and fathom the our mascot, the 18-year-old, to read a few pages of course, is wholly partial to those Arab nations such as Frankly, it isn't always easy strange, contradictory, great man who had aloud from his "military science" textbook, and , to relieve this trouble. Again Egypt, that are communist- , been placed in the eye of the hurricane. give him some suggestions on how to unsettle rather simple remedies some- his instructor. It was a farce. oriented in world affairs and Some found only poetry in his life. Some Soviet-backed in the hard mili- times are graiifyingly suc- Now I am a broadminded, tolerant man. I ABM Systems touJxL cessful. said the poetry was contrived, that Lincoln tary sense. created himself as a poetic have ho particular objection to farces — Ill aim my roply primarily figure and that whether military or civilian — but I have a The Israelis think, more- people accepted the epic that he directed and with good reason, at cases caused by slowed cir- vigorous conviction that a college or univer- over, culation. (If n-euritis is the and lived and wrote. sity should not knowingly sponsor farces, ex- the Nasserite Arabs intend to use Big Four leverage in one cause, you'll have to look for cept in a theater. My private view that ROTC Cities medical care; that includes Biographers as diverse as Beveridge, Endanger (at way or another to try to des- the senator, and Herndon , the lawyer, were is a bad military joke the taxpayers' ex- By JACK ANDERSON tem has been tested only un- whether Nixon will change military se- diabetic cases. While some pense) would therefore, other factors aside, troy the degree of struck by the artful ability of the man as WASHINGTON — Unmen- der clinical conditions. Pri- his mind. curity on the frontiers that Is- elderly diabetics think "it lead me to call for its abolition. . ' rr doesn't matter if I don't stick a practical politician. "'That man who tioned in all the clamor over vately, some scientists doubt * * * rael has so hardly won in bat- BUT BEYOND THAT — assuming for pur- , after to my diet the risk of dia- thinks Lincoln calmly gathered his robes the anti-ballistic missile sys- that all the vital electronic AT LONfr LAST 24= tle action. ," poses of argument that I am mistaken in my tem is the danger, admitted- components wilf function un- years of erroneous incarcera- President Nixon* for his betic neuritis is one very about him, -waiting for the peopl e to call evaluation of the military effectivenss of prisons it good r e a-s ' o n why they ly remote, that a missile in- der the stress of a nuclear tion in New York , part, has plainly acted in the . him, has a very erroneous knowledge of ROTC — I still feel that even a useful, effi- attack. Example: The com- looks as if Isidore Zimmer- SHOULD. Lincoln," Herndon wrote $He stallation could accidentally spirit of a man who must . was always cient program should not be part of the regular blow up and demolish a large plex computer, -which will be man might get justice. as he Massaging the feet and legs calculating and planning make do with the world ahead. His am- curriculum of a university, if the military want area of the city it is supposed the ABM brain, depends upon New York Assemblyman finds it. His new Administra- before retiring should be bition was a little engine that inew no to offer it as an option, I would not object: water cooling, which some Charles D. Henderson has in- tried. - to protect. tion is under great pressure ?rest." '7 Students, on their own time, can go off some- Already 14 sites have been experts don't consider de- troduced a bill in the New initiatives" Buerger's exercise is an emergency. York legislature to permit to provide "fresh where and engage in close-order drill, spear selected and others are pendable in an and new prescriptions for a even more effective means of EVERY MAN hai seen him in a dif- Zimmerman to bring action helping circulation in dummies with bayonets, and (hopefully) learn sought in the suburbs around NO ONE CAN be sure cure of the Middle East can- the legs. ferent ligbt, has read into Lincoln the that the best thing to do with a .45 automatic Chi- against New York State to This is done lying on the such cities as Boston, whether the ABM system wii recover damages for his cer ; and something looks bet- mysteries and contradictions of his own in combat is throw it at the enemy's head. cago, Detroit, Los Angeles, , until the ter in this context than noth- back and alternately raising - work, of course long, illegal imprisonment. mind and soul, so that the composite char- Someday, if they get their commissions, and San Francisco, Seattle and 20 country actually is hit by a ing new at all. Moreover, the each leg for a minute or so, acter of the War President has both the are sent into combat, they will have to be re- others. Zimmerman 7 was sentenced then lowering it. With an old- hailstorm of nuclear missiles. for the alleged murder of a President is beginning an ef- firmness of accepted legend and the fluid- trained, but the Gross National Product can Should a missile installa- If the system fails it will be fort both to strengthen the er person, a box or some oth- , New York policeman back in ity of a moving stream. Lincoln contribut- probably take that strain. tion ever blow up, according too late to collect rebates Western alliance and to bring er simple support is . helpful Under no circumstances, however, - should to Pentagon experts, it would from the contractors. Tom Dewey's crime-busting and often even necessary so ed to the instability Of the portrait. day After sweating it out on the United States closer to it an administration and faculty permit or main- cause total destruction for a . all — including France. each leg can b« kept in a up- Congress has authorized death row, he narrowly es- right position long It was a time when a man with a pol- tain a department of "military science" which radius of at least five miles only a "thin" or partial ABM Since a prominent port of enough to icy would is an independent campus and would spread radioac- caped the electric chair and do some good. have been fatal to the country," barony controlled by defense that is supposed to finally was reprieved by Gov. call in his forthcoming Euro- he said. "I never the Department of Defense. I havs no objection tive ' fallout for hundreds of pean journey is to be Paris, Quinine; 3 to 5 grains on re- had a policy. I have sim- cost $5 billion to $6 billion. Herbert Lehman. The state tiring, ply tried to to various services recruiting on campus, I miles. Some experts predict this it is a fair assumption, and is often helpful. And do what seemed best each day, oE New York apologized but there are oth ers drugs de- as each day came." have no objection to their considering certain THE SAME experts have wifl soar . to $10 billion. Oth- offered no other amends. one widely held in the foreign college work as a necessary signed to help circulation precondition for assured this column, of ers believe it will be merely Zimmerman, how an old diplomatic community here, Now theJfe ambiguiti es a commission (engineering comes to mind) the down payment on a full is to which your p hysician could and uncertain- , but course, that the chance of an man, has had difficulty get- that one of his motives try. ti es have gone into the ^substantialities of they must have absolutely no right to dictate the accidental explosion is ex- $50 billion system. ting employment. However, offer some deference to de history. specific content of the university that some- But if there is a high de- As Mary Todd once wrote, at a 's curriculum , tremely small. It is a chance, Even the $5 billion cost, kindly Assemblyman Hender- Gaulle in the hope gree of or to name the instructors. which experts consider mon- how he can mute the long hos- hardening of the ar- time when she thought Lincoln was gone however, that some cities son has come to his rescue teries, such remedies I see no reason why the military services may not want to take. ey down the drain, is more tility of de Gaulle France to may from her, "this is past and more than by proposing restitution to not work. There just isn't this." But the mind cannot (except where specialties such as med- Meanwhile, this column than Americans spend in a make up, im small measure, almost every American for- keeps turning to the year on all poEce, prisons enough space to carry enough paradoxes of this strange icine, engineering, etc., are concerned ) promote has been warn ing since 1966, for the state's injustice to eign policy design. blood. and unforgettable from the ranks instead even before the ABM system and prosecution. For the Zimmerman . man, and the universality of handing out bars as AND THIS Is where the ele- of Lincoln lies a bonus to college graduates was approved that it looked same price, we could double Dear Dr. precisely in the ability . But, as I said, ment of danger enters this Thosteson : Is it of each of us to my war experience may have left me perma- like a multi - billion - dollar our attack upon crime in the true that from read into him New Ship Line complicated affair. If the Is- a health something of ourselves. nently twisted on this particular subject — we boondoggle. It was sought by streets, or elleviate the con- point of view it is ditions that cause crime For LISBON (AP ) - A new raelis are right and de Gaulle unwise to * all have our kinks . the corporate carnivores who . leave liquids such as milk And if Ihou wilt walk in my devour defense dollars and instance, $5 billion would Portuguese navigation line acts in the Big Four talks as wavs, to keep force to the or orange juice in the paper .my statutes and my commandments, as thy by the brass hats who seem build more than 25,000 schools for cargo and passengers be- a mere seconding cartons in for 50 Soviet Union , it will inevitably which they come father Dayid did walk, then 1 will lengthen willing to lavish staggering or subsidize housing tween Portuguese East Africa for more than tliy days. million low-income families. and northern Europe will be amount to a first setback to a few hours? —I Kings 3:14, IN YEARS GONE BY amounts on their pet theories I have been told they should and hunches art of created in the near future, the Nixon Administration's di- . NOTE: The fine be poured Into glass or The secret technical re- gaining contracts depends as the president of the Com- plomacy, if not, indeed, also Ten Years Ago ... 1959 s specific aim china containers promptly ports raise grave doubts much on political influence panhia Nacional de Navega- to the President' but am A meeting to organize the Women 's Auxili- of improving relationships not sure this is whether the ABM system will as professional competence. cao, Jose Rodrigues dos based on fact. ary to the Sauer Memorial Home was held . ever work . The scientific evi- Bell Telephone Laboratories, Santos, has announced. with France. For the ultimate — M. W K Try and Stop Temporary officers arc Mrs. Donald Schaefer , Me dence indicates, for example, the prime contractor, has One ship to be used for it reality is that the United There's no reason related president ; Mrs. Emil GeLstfeld, secretary, and that the system would break forbidd en overt lobbying for States is simply not going to to health why they By BENNETT CERF Mrs. David Sauer, treasurer. is the "Nacala," a cargo built can't be down under a massive mis- the ABM system. But the in 1966 and allow any fundamental break left in the original paper Darlene Kertzman , daughter of Mr. and in Osaka , Japan, con- Jim Davis stopped a would-be big-shot, sile bombardment. Yet mili- company's man on Capitol formerly named the "Hun- with Israel or Israel's basic tainers. Main complain t is Mrs. Alber . Kertzman , Lamoille, will give her tary strategists agree that Hill, Ed Zilfian, is available cannot do at a soiree recently. "You know , I have an an" of the China Navigation security interest ; it that occasionally the paper senior harp recital at the First Congregational an enemy would have to to answer inquiries. so. unlisted phone number, " boasted the pre- Co. Ltd. of London. containers leak, and cleaning Church. She started the study of music at the mount a saturation attack The subcontractors have This is not because of a so- out a t ender. Davis asked witheringly, "Why?"' The 16,755-ton "Nacala" is refrigerator is hard on College of Saint Teresa 'when five. upon this country in order to been more active in button- the called "Jewish vote" in the the temper, * *» * destroy our ability to retali- holing generals and con- the first oi three ships Portuguese company intends United States; cynics who QUICKIES: Twenty-Five Years Ago . . . 1944 ate. gressmen. Among the busiest push this interpretation are Home from a The Spartan and Spring have been Martin Marietta , to buy for the new service. nature of his problems with weekend with what she Maj. James W. Kahl , son of Mr. and announcement indicat- like the juvenile skeptic who France. fondly called "her Mrs. missiles that are supposed to McDonnell Douglas, General The It is best friend ," a catty Van H. Kahl , has been awarded the Distin- Rhodesia and South has read only one book, Moreover Vassarite reported knock , down enemy warheads Electric, Spcrry Rand and ed that in rock- , the Big Four con- , "A flash fire destroy - fiuishel Flying Cross. He was a squad lender allies of Portugal in because Israel is versations ed her will be nuclear - tipped. Yet Raytheon. Most of these com- Africa, bottom actuality a pro-West- will give a major whole library. Both books. And she on the raid lo thc Ploesti oil refineries and Africa , would benefit from clue to Soviet hadn't tests indicate that nuclear panies employ lobbyists with ern and non-communist re- Mentions in the even finished coloring the second on several major raids over the mainland to explosions could foul up the exccflont pipelines into the the new line, whole area oE the cold ¦one." ¦ doubt in the Middle East. war Germany. electronic gear. The first in- Pentagon and close contacts They will plainly show wheth- Now that his wife has taken Mr. and Mrs. Albert Holmay Thus, if de Gaulle is to be er the Russians up driving, returned home terception of an incoming on Capitol Hill. Overenthwsiashc elevated only to parrot Soviet really want -Mr. Wimpfheimer after spending two warhead would produce a The Nixon Administration accommodatio has named his garage months in Tacoma and Seat- South Africa <-fl rhetoric and to serve Soviet ns with the Uni- The Half Way Inn. tle, Wash., and Portland Ore. nuclear explosion lhat could is now Holding up construc- PRETORIA, ted States. Nobody —An enthusiastic rugby fan ends, everybody on the West- doubts disrupt the radar guiding the tion work on Ihe ABM system they can help promote a apparently cheered too vigor- en side — Including the true Mid- Fifty Years Ago . . . 1919 other anti-missile missiles. A pending a thorough review. dle East solution if they wish number of explosions could It's worth recalling that in ously at Loftus Versveld sta- interests of France itself — to do so. WINONA DAILY Announcement was made of plans to remod- throw the entire ABM sys- 1967 Richard Nixon sharply dium here. A classified ad will be safely let down, Still, NEWS el the Hotel Winona this spring, operating the tem out of whack. in the Pretoria News said: if lie Is going to do it, per- An Independent Newspaper - Established 1S55 criticized then - President hotel on the European plan and installing a cof- For that matter, the soph- Johnson for not rushing "Found, ono denture plate at haps it is just as well that he Presi- W. F. W H ITE G. R. CLOSWAY C. E. LIN-PEN fee shop and quick serv ice restaurant on the isticated electronic gadgetry ahead with the ABM system. Loftus, northern side. Phone does it now, so that the Publisher Ezec. Director husiness Mgr . cafeteria plan. developed for the ABM sys- It will be interesting to sec Mrs. Mindly at 8-2150." dent can know for sure the full «nd Editor & Adv. Director Winona took first place in the poultry branch of boys and girls club achievement in DOLPH REMER THE WIZARD OF ID BV Park«r and Harf A B GORDON HOLTH A. J. K IEKBUSCH the state, receiving a 144-egg incubator. Irwin £ managing Editor Sunday ¦ . -i ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦¦ -¦- i »^ ..._ ¦ - - " T0 Editor Circulation Mgr. Clausen ana Edwin Neeb, young Winonn stu- - I taia . dents , won individual prizes on their poultry, §T1 L. S. BHONH L. V. ALSTON W. H. ENGLISH Ifc IB •Composing Supt. Engraving Supt. SERVE ?jf | Comptroller Seventy-Five Years Ago ... 1894 MKMDER OF THE ASSOCIATED FRKS8 Landon & Roberts have inaugurated the f THE -v| «*^^» wheeling season by placing an order for 50 Sterling wheels, the first installment of which LIVING ' jpSZ^a* The Associated Press is entitled will arrive soon , will meet with the e u o use for Adjutant E. A. Lcmay fjf (k rwfe xc' s*ve'y t we repub- boys of the high school to make arrangements Breitlow-Martin 1* ^cation of local ncws fliSStrt /! a" *** for the introduction of military drills. \£^vl v'3r printed In this newspaper as well Funeral Home ^STfifc^ M all A.P. news dispatches. OP« HunHred Yea rs Aqo . . . 1869 17-S EAST SARNIA Conrad Bohn, Sen. Shcardown and Reps WINONA, MINN. (A Tuesday, February 11, 19(39 Hyde and Vale returned from the state capital AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR ALPHA KAPPA PSI FRATERNITY OF ST. MARY S COLLEGE E-X-T-R-A WINONA DAILY NEWS | E-X-T-R-A

' l ¦ .. i . . ,—, • ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦— ¦— : ' . 1 ¦ ' * ' . , ¦ — i . - . . : ; ,i— The Sights and Sounds of

¦¦ 1 : : ¦ ¦¦ ¦ . ¦¦¦¦¦ wiH w '^awW' AW. ??* ' ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^I^^IH^^^^^HF^^^^^^l^Hral- *^??:?^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦ Bfn^4. Wt\\\\\\\\\\\\\\w*%______[ ¦ ' ¦ " ¦ ' ' ' ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦¦ • ¦ ' ¦ Hit' • ' ' ¦ " ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' y : ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦: ¦ ¦ • ' •• Winona- ' - : 7 - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦ '69. ¦ ¦ H1MHI ¦ ¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ - ¦ - . ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^¦^^^^^^^^^^ ¦RPl ^^^^ Ktflii^^^ H ^^^^^ H K/l f ^MmmmmmVf timmmmaii lmmm ^mm' ^mmm^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m\^K'' 'yi^^m^m^m^m' rry ^m^m^mwBsmw^^^^^sfflw/iH^^^B wW^m^ml^m^m^m^m^m^m^mmr' i':Wr£m^m^mw~ :' m^m^mmm

^^^^' ' mmltt *am^^^^mo^^^^^^^^^^^mfy $'w^y' '%^^Bf ^m^mwf ^ ^ma\\\\\\\\\\\\\\w^^m^m^m^m\¦

¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ } ¦ ^^^^^^^^^^^^m^^^mmmmW Bift< *I^^^^^^^^ M^^^^^^^M ^^^^^B^^^^liai^aK^t: ¦'•^aW_laaaaaaaaaaaaWii :1mS:ryy.- *¦:¦*. 3&.AimjfJL : ¦ ¦ yMaaaWT «¦'.- .iV&X: ¦ -.it .x ai ^M/X'¦ . 'Mllli ^^^^^ l ^^^ B ^^^^ M H HV.-^S^^^^^^^^^ B^^^^^^^^^^ H ^¦^^^^^ Ht W K -:- - '¦^'^¦v '-: :-3J£Sa3K>lfc**'' ' . '- "-.i-a ^^B ¦» ¦r^<-'**»(£'-a: d¦'^Stmin^i 'X.y.m^' -¦-Wam__ \\\\\\\\\\\ __ \\\\\\ _ \\\\\_ \\\\\\\\\\W - Wm^m ^m ^m ^m\\ mmmmm^^ ^^^^^^^^^ ^mmmmmWm ^KLmmmmmm^^mmmm\^'^^r^im^^^0l^^x^ ' %y ^^y ^^^^^4p_ ^KK0B^^K^^^B^^^^^^^K^^K^-

¦ ': mmmm ^^^^^^^^m'^'^ff lS&^JJiP*• ^^^^^^^^^M^-SS^^MJ^^^HBK^J^r '*- ' ' ¦$$^'- ^^^Elnfl^^BA^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^H-

¦ ^^^^^^^^^^^ H ^?j^^^V<>:7i&^:^^ ^^^H ^^K^^K^^lM ^#ll |Ht':'';B

: ^- *^*-^5 I?/ ¦ " B^^^BBI^r•^' - ¦' : - : ^^ ' ' i ¦% i Jt ^fe J%% # V^ 1% - ( - 'IH^^H

_ _, ¦ y presents in conjuncnon 1 w i^^Lk T^YiC Gl " ¦/ * ALPHA KAPPA PSI Fraternity proudl t£* "—' ¦¦ ' ¦ ¦ J /^ Wll I y .O '7' ' ) with London Product I I J tertainers:— j -¥¦ Futuristic Look At loth STORY WINDOW " They come on the scene with not only hit sound , but also with strong S \_\I m a*±*+. n *m #*¦» £^ JU -TTU arm. J\ jr» JI jnf Blfl _ma $ / 1 ( WV llnOfidS B BOPOSQO JVI CU t \ visual appeal. This is the "10th Story Window"—new, exciting, and C C vibrant. Unlimited talent radiates from this group of ten wherever they ¦ perform. Their_^udiences have been ignited by C -^L i "Sweet Blindness", cap- " ^ C »k ' v ( tivated by "Lovin' Feeling", thrilled by "Sunny and soothed by "Sum- ^ILA j^ V iK^ ", r mertime". Variety is the major component of this group, as shown by ¦ ¦ ^Ifek w ^! /A- r)s VH W^V^ v^ ^T" * i ^ ^ ^ ~^ ^ ~~~~ " the hits they perform and the style they display. The "10th Story Window" B ^ Spl^W L^rv-^ \ \'/& A"" 1 \ s not restricted to the stage, their performance carries itself right into i ^«s^^Vv \ /^r' /T > ' 1 l * ^« (/• ^^/ i 1§L * C the audience. "Before You Go", their new single just released , was I^SSvlfe s ^s^/ Jfi^ililp^ ' " ' ~" -H^ written and composed by members of the group. And , to no surprise, they l ^ ^$i ^SkTAi ) i>Y \^f ^^^^^ ^ ^^^ - > 1 i I] 1& ?P \Vc \ ff (X/"*—SPw lP ££ I Jr^y&3- ¦ are presently under agreement with Warner Brothers ... " THIS IS THE

' Friday, ^b. 14 at 8:00 p.m. ! i 1 i ^t&l^^X l ( ^1 1 N Saturday, Feb. 15 at 7:30 & 10:00 p.m. 1 jf L l ^^ V

/§W \—A K^j " [ P RE-SALE $1.75 AT DOOR $2.00 I ^ / - I JP^x XT ^\ \ \ f Wffif \^^^^ \ _^.. \ A Light M enu Will Be Available \M -^^ ^M ^ / \ ^ For ) *^ x ^ ) Your Enjoyment vlmi/ I \ \ \ \ ^ " \ ' •> ^ ^^ ( W I \ \ \ ^ C THE ENTIRE PRODUCTION EXCEPT "10TH STORY WINDOW " 15 ( y ( OPEN TO THE PUBLIC AT NO ADMISSION CHARGE.

ADVANCK TICKETS /or 10th Story Window available at: Quality Chev rolet | First of all , we cordially invite you to take a stroll through our conception of Winona's Cf) ( choate's, Nash's, A & D Bootery, Northern States Power, Winona *j p roposed Moll. Secondly, we dare you d reamers to enter our showroom end examine National & Savings Bank , Buck's Camera Shop, Nelson Tire Service, Tempo , | s some of Genera l Motors' 1 969 creations. Finall y, we tempt you to enter our "Terrace Chamber of Commerce, Bob's Marine h Toys, Tod Maier Drugs (Mall and | Room" and enjoy thc sounds of '69—THE 10TH STORY WINDOW ! ! ! Downtown). $ " ¦¦ -- ______& «IM,J » M»l.* *|-«^^ ¦¦ J / *f X^Av > «^?^ * ¦¦¦ ¦' ^PHi ]*b^\X /r^^ ^^^^^X O / s* 'ZJ~ ^^ *°^\ ¦ j ijuIJija LJTJTX Fi i- M f *** - „ ,f , „V l> ll , , „, r .,^.f , ^», ... . , M«».-)^. ***^r'»--*^-**-* **^^ s^ j JteMiMM .,yw j * <;.,j ;.ii «iw:« i^-ii.s'J'.AA.r.Hi*r»,>.* ) * «.M. w ,^,HH»T »Mi ^. < Mij>»Nnm ,t,^.v;tc^/!r.ia *<.'/tiA>ra.t I ' *¦*¦*, m ii a^i i iam\>m ¦ ** *"«' i Mi" n *\ \<-»*v> .*^u' ±u.i ,**vm?m\ ^ ^w ^ r -M *t, y^ ri*'r'*. *i i^. ^fWiW^^ 7 STARTING TOMORROW X

STUDY AID . . . Members of Portia il Rights; Frederick Boeder, director of the Club have been clipping -newspaper and Minneapolis New Careers program and Mrs. magazine articles in connection with a study Jack Miller , president. Miss Anthony and of civil rights. Looking over the clippings Boeder conducted a program for the club and are, from left, Miss Lillian Anthony, di- ; guests Monday afternoon. (Daily News photo) rector of the Minneapolis Department of Civ- St. Stanislaus look at Self' Theme To Hold 4-Day Book Fair For Portia Program "Wherever we are we must Anthony took the group of St. Stanislaus School will look at ourselves, . then at our- more than 40 women on a step- TO NOTE 50 YEARS . . . Mr. and Mrs. John R. Larson, sponsor a Book Fair on Thurs- selves in relation to others — by-step exploration of their Lamoille, Minn., will celebrate their golden wedding anni- day, Friday, Saturday and Sun- and then be willing to make a open house Sunday from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. ¦ ¦ ¦ commitment for change in our own attitudes and reactions. versary at an day. ;. • • ' .-?; No invitations have been sent. own lives and community ," Acting alternately as sounding at Pickwick School. Parents, students and visitors Hosting the event will be the couple's four sons and Miss Lillian Anthony, ? black, board and reactor, she both may browse and purchase books director of the Minneapolis De- their families: Everett , Lamoille; Ivan , Winona; Roy, Lewis- generated reactions and re- in the library and main lobby partment , of Civil Rights, tald ton, and Barrel, Dakota. The Larsons were married Feb. Portia Club members and sponded, to them. 19, 1919, im Winona. (Bob's Portraits) of the school. guests Monday afternoon at tlie In the course of the program The book fair will be open home of Mrs. Frank Allen. Miss Anthony focused attention RIDGEWAY CARD PARTY during the following hours'- "Learning to know ourselves on such diverse areas as dic- Hospice Slates RIDGEWAY, Minn. (Special) Thursday — 7 to 10 p.m.; Fri- is painful but eventually re- tionary definitions of color and , day—9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Satur- warding. When we strip away j — Another card party1- will be the distortion or omission of Quarterly Meet day — .1 to 5 p.m., and Sun- the ghosts and phantoms we' re sponsored Saturday night at the bound to feel better." . — Fred- black? history in our schools. (Jnarteriy meeting oi St. j day — 9 a .m. to 1 p.m. On dis- The !Ridgeway school by the Parent- erick Boeder, white, director Her theme throughout was Anne Hospice Auxiliary will be play will be new books from I Teacher Association. There many publishers, all popular of the New Careers program that white America must start held Thursday at 8 p.m. at the for the city of Minneapolis, 7 Win- price ranges, and many reading with itself its own attitudes ?hospice. ! will be lunch and prizes. said in an interview following and preconceptions. The meeting, which is open ners Feb. 8 were Albert Rott, areas. the Monday program. ¦ Black America is turning its to the puilic with special in- Gerdes , Purpose of the fair is to help *** i men's high; Gordon ' interest in read- attention to itself , the speaker vitation to the guests at the Malcomb Hobbs, spur students AS PAItT of the Portia Club said. It is now up to white .' second; Mrs. ing also improve the lib- "Watkins Memorial Home and 's high and Mrs. Herb and program of study of civil rights America to deal with its own women rary. The school earns 30 per- the Sauer Memorial Home, will McNamer, second. Miss Anthony was in .Winona anxieties by learning how it be highlighted by the guest cent of all sales. Profits will to conduct ? a "sensitivity train- feels, why, and what the reali- speaker, Dr. Forrest . Wester- CORRECTION be used, to purchase books for ing" session assisted by Boed- ties of black and white history ing, director of physical edu- The Winona Auxiliary to Bar- the library. er. She has conducted more have been, Miss Anthony said. cation and athletics and head racks 1082, Veterans of World St. Stan's is workfiSg with Ed- than 10O such sessions for football coach at Lea CoUege, War I, will meet Feb. 20 at ucational Reading Service, a groups across the country rang- ASKED whether they thought they had "reached" the audi- Albert Lea. |7:30 p.m. at the Teamsters professional book fair company, ing from grade schoolers to The date was incorrect to furnish an individual selec- industrial executives. ence, both Miss Anthony and A social hour will follow the j Club. for the ¦ I irw Sunday 's edition ;. .. tion^! books fair. Using a variety of tools Miss Boeder indicated they felt they meeting. *»* ^, had. Each pointed out that this type of program is planned as a beginning to further attempts at self-exploration and under- standing. Further such sessions are be- SAVE NQW! V ing conducted by a group of M^^ Tbh^ white persons as "White Talks ^ ^ ^^^^^ to White," Miss Anthony said. She also suggested several ^vm hnal Very Deep books for additional study of nf y/^ * your SlenderYears t minority races, ^HI A number of materials were made available to the group on ? ...follGwthe and can be obtained through r \|£^ Mjlllr the Minneapolis or state civil RofOeBi^dPIan y ^J ^^y - y - rights offices. W^ Winter Coats & ; Some women seem to get younger all the time. _S_§ wSi$0M M-enurfUiiiKiTi» \\i SYMPHONY CONCERT , 1 , _t_r__yCiBW't_J____m_m9&a\mr^*M-^_m\ svPfrf?-^BR3i ^v4.1^^vKrVV ^wi . Jerome Paulson, Winona , will participate in a concert Sun- day by the Rochester Sym Look for the new Jy .- .AJJ_ ^$3_ %_&_ WJW J^^^mmmmmmmmmm ^k-w9*£^YmmJ^d4K-M&& ^$k Profile Dirt Menu Planner phony Orchestra to be present- - ^rWl ^m ^mMt^^immmmmwSmi%Of % wW mwK^^^\\ FUR-TRIMMED COATS ^^^ ed at'7:30 p.m. in Mayo Civic Auditorium. Admission is free. reg. Paulson, a member of the 136 $110-$160 NOW trumpet section , teaches music at Dover-Eyota High School. 54.99-79.99 Guest artist will be Sergui Lu- ca , Israeli violinist. 15 JUNIOR COATS 1 reg. $40-$60 NOW 1 M ^XI ^f ^S ^SSSM ^U^-r \ TINY TOT 19.99-29.99 i StftS*!^-mmmmmVtJ^M& *Z^ ^BBfcAHB by Anne ^V'Wmt v^^^^mmmmmmmml^^iL^aaK^aaa^a^aaaTtBrW^^Safj^WHMJP j i T*i»mi DIAPER 69 MISSES COATS 9 SERVICE reg. $50-$80 NOW 1 Let us take a big household duty off your hands, at a 24.99-39.99 i time when you need nil the rest you can get! f^iBmrS^Mb^^^/^-vBRTBIfci \?w ^s^^lQn^S^^H^^^^ ^X \ ' New babies average 19 diapers 51 CAR COATS 9 per day (70 per week). T , DJ^BBBBB^ A*** ~______w ?vfcll'pS^^B5T^llJ¥^mlt^<''^^^Bl^^^^BP^fl^» I reg. $30-$40 NOW 1 I Only $2.95 I I 14.99-19.99 1 FOR 70 DIAPERS

0 We Furnish Diapers and Diapor Pail GIFT CERTIFICATES I The Great Majority of our Remaining | ~ i *gro* AVAILABLE i n» i^^ ^i.i* ji*i7^Cfcfc X 'W i For information call long dis- I Winte r CoaJs Now Half-P rice or less. 1 tance operator from Winonn. Ask lor Zenith S774 (no charge on Zenith calls) . To call from I All Winte r Coats Fu rther Reduced. 1 other than Winona Phone Fari- B af/ ^^r \ YOU ARE INVITED TO CHARGE IT S ^ ^^^^^^^T ^ ^^^^^^^^ ^lii* •¦^^••itwiiviA 4aiki*aWWWmtm/mjm]mjmjmjmm^ ^_^_^_^_W^_w^^^J/ ^_WamKr a___\_____wtKHa-^ ^m-rsawm^^^KLi-a^mw^^^^^ ^ TBW^ 4ESQ '* bault 332-0774. fcllBliSPS&KSfe TMMMwnnwaii^ im MU UIIII ^aW SPUING GROVE WMS tions will be led by Mrs. Alfred Red Gross Unit SPRING 9J2DVjfr Minn. (Spe- Byom. Hostesses will be the Sets Valentine cial)—The Women's Missionary Mmes. Lawrence Fillner, Al- camp. The snowball started LANESBORO BAKE SALE 300 Attend Preview Showing Society of the Calvary Free fred Byom and Alfred Ravnum. Feb. 1 and will continue through LANESBORO. Minn. (Sue- Church will meet Wednesday April 1. cial) C & R Party BRIDGE, WHIST PARTIES — The American Legion at 7:30 p.m. at the church with Auxiliary will hold a bake sale Mary Earp as hostess. SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- NEWLYWEDS HOME Plans for assisting at a Val- Friday starting at 2:30 p.m. By Area Hig h School Artists entine party Friday the con- cial)—A bridge, whist snowball ALTURA, Minn. . - . Mr. and HARDIES CREik WOMEN is under way at the clubrooms. Lunch will be An estimated 30O persons ' valescent and rehabilitation unit In the Spring Mrs. Gene L. Turner are home at- Cha.ries Olson, Rochester ed variety with each piece judg- ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - Grove area with proceeds go- in Altura following their mar- served. tended a preview showing off the of Community Memorial Hospi- '¦ ' ¦ Mayo, dark gray covered ce- ed on its own merit. Hardies Creek Lutheran Church ing to Camp Winnebago, a riage Jan. 24 at Waukegan, 111. • • -first area high school juried art Judge for the show was. Wil- tal were completed at a meet- women will meet Thursday at camp ramic pot; Kathy Walsh, Wino- ing of the Red Cross Youth for the mentally retard- The bride is the former Emma The price Americans pay to show Monday evening at Wi- liam Peck, art instructor at the 1:30 p.m. at the church. The ed. Persons invited to card Clark and the bridegroom nona State College Union. na, "Lonely One" silk screen; High School Council Sunday. is give their food a foreign accent college. The show , Peck said Bille study will be given by parties will be asked for a do- the son of Mr. and Mrs. May- amounts to about $23 per person Pam Hoseck, Winona, "John was conceived to provide art Katie Murphy, Cotter High Ten winners were selected " MTS. Rodney Stage and devo- nation which will be sent to the nard Turner, Altura. a ^ear. from among 171 entries from 3:16,s lettering; Keith Christen- departments of area high and Karl Fihkelnburg, Winona 35 schools. Their works, along sen, Rochester John Marshall, schools some common ground High, are in charge of the pro- with 87 of the entries, are on "Entrepreneur & Co." oil paint- upon which to judge their gram. Beverly Shaw will fur- exhibition now through Feb. 27. ing; Mary Miller, Austin, "Fam- programs." nish organ music, a group of Play Our Ticket Taker Sweepstakes!— Win Hours are 10 a.m. ily" wood sculpture; Vicki Diss- Cotter girk will stage a can- Each Week -to noon and FOR the entering student art- 1 to 3 p.m., Monday through more, La Crescent, "Rest" etch- can, thereVwill be a singing Friday. ing; Carolyn Bott, La Crescent, ists, Peck said, the show group and the Tfradewinds will "TaEulah" construqtion and Ter- offers "probably their first offer musical selections. Stu- WINNERS ARE Jackie JI HK. ry Miller Rochester John Mar- chance in learning the mechan, dents from both high schools er, La Crosse Central, "Farm shall, "Gatsby^ ' * acrylic painting. ics, the joys and the heartaches will escort patients to the party. in Autumn" oil painting; Sue Each winner received -a $10 that go with a juried show. It The annual Red Cross youth Philpot, La Crosse Central, prize. There were no categories is more than this, of course, be- dance is scheduled for early "Snow Owl" ink drawing; for the exhibition, which stress- cause everyone benefits differ- spring. Receipts will support an ently." appeal for funds for Biafra and Commenting on the exhibi- vwli also help provide high tion, Peck said that visitors will school students to attend the - " ¦¦ ¦ ? ¦ " be pleasantly surprised" - ? : ? ^ ^ " at the Red Cross youth training center j ? ? v ^^ ?- j F: ' V variety and quality of student at Lake Minnetonka in August.' work. He expressed disappoint- Preparations for assisting in a I UST WBEK'S 1 FREE¦ • GOLD¦ ¦ ¦ BOND STAMPS- FUN, EASY¦ ; ment that there were few en- possible flood were discussed. WINNING NUMBERS: ' " " " - ' ' ' - " * * tries in the area of crafts. A youth committee will be ap- MRS. GERHARD HAEDTKE "The great strength of the pointed to register high school E S show," Peck said, "lies in its volunteers. paintings and other two dimen- '"" RING BOLOGNA ROUND STEAK The need for friendship boxes S00184 "100929 ' mm^ sional works such as lettering for Vietnam as well as holiday ^ and drawing. The students in place sets for veterans hospitals . 00293 O1C07 jSLaf^C ¦ ^W " T iriany cases are identifying with will be stressed when the high ¦ 00319 . . 01112 mmm,m. M C - ' ^wJ*^l^^^^^ ^j ^S ^^^^ : M U«1^^ ' 'their' world, which is good, but sqhool council visits the elemen- 00470 01236 . ¦¦ ^Mf lh ? &ZA'^JWBMBt W ^ffw \\a many others, however good ^ 00538 01276 . MW . . j_ w tary scHoflls for enrollment. ' . ^mw Jmm^mSkt^mMKr^ *" 7 technically, seem to lack a real A student from St. Mary's identification with the artist. College is being considered as ¦ ¦ S\ ' ¦¦ *¦¦¦ aa.aum mm MM -a. ^^i^M^&ii^ '^ ^ ' ' ' "OVERALL, the artists se- an applicant for the summer ¦ lected can be justifiably proud project, ITriendship C en tr a 1 ¦ 8 11 of representing their schools in America. W ™ STEWING CHICKENS this first venture." R SlOPS - ¦ BLACK HAMMER ALCW PO I ;¦ ' ¦;¦ Lb ¦ "¦ ' ¦ ¦ Schools participating in the SPRING GEOVE, Minn. (Spe- - :: ' , '- ¦* . VL-JIL 39C * #S-^, :: ' - ' : . I exhibit are Winona Senior High cial) - The ALCW of the Faith and Cotter High, Winona ; John Lutheran Church, Black Ham- Marshall and Mayo, Rochester; mer, will meet Thursday at 1:30 i^t EJBC"-^^fil^^^ r ' - ir il BirEV I FAti*- %c-£A&&SBfak mS m^mtt I La Crosse Central ; Mondovi p.m. at the church. Tlie Ruth URK .EY LE0S L' and Durand (Wis.), and Har- circle will present the program flL TT it ^H^^t ^^^^^ kV* w \ \ mony, La Crescent, Lake City, on American missions and tbe St. Charles, Houston, Randolph Sarah circle will be hostess. and Austin (?Minn.) high schools. BEEF SALE! Mock Chicken Legs . 10c Rib Steaks ...... 89c lb, j »¦ ¦ ¦**k\\WW..V.V --. -.%¦ . .», \* ,*»^^ . Polish Sausage ...... 69c lb, SlrBoin ...... 89c Ib. 1 WINONA WINNERS .. . Among 10 winders at the area Hinds I Fronts Sides juried high school art exhibition now in progress at the Wi* AO-i* -AQr Winced Ham . ..; .„.... 49c lb. Beef Stew 69c lb. I Winona State College Union were'these two senior girls from - Braunschwelger ...... 69c lb. T-Bones .. 99c lb. Winona Senior High Scliool. At left , Pam Hoseck, daughter - -3 ...... I ^rJJSinCUT, WRAPPED FREE ¦*» . - m* ' ' ___ «... •! »- .. I of Mr. and Mrs. Loyel Hoseck, 355 Oak St., -with her winning GUARANTEED TENDER Pork Sausage ...... 49c lb. Sirloin Tip ...... 99c lb. I lettering, "John 3:16." Kathy Walsh, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Walsh, 552 E. Broadway, stands next to her silk screen winner, "Lonely One." (Daily News photo} I SWEET, JUICY FULL OF VITA/AIN C '\ SOU D HEAD j

«K*W™U.U^..UAU..™™UI^W^*.W.M™AVMWV../.-.^V.V.VA.™ sssssg^sMSBssssmms ^^ ORANGES GRAPEFRUIT LETTUCE 49 10559* 1 19« ART SHOW WINNERS . . . Charles Olson, left, senior from Rochester Mayo High School, and Terry Miller, senior >A 7^Jmf< OUR VALENTINES -^ lege Union. Olson holds his winning ceramics entry; Miller's ^ ^ ^ acrylic painting is entitled "Gatsby." The exhibition will ¦-^ OU CHO TO YOU! ^ CE ¦¦ continue through Feb. 27 at the college. (Daily News photo) . . SALEI ¦ - .^- In I vj briefs 1 ' _^_w±_fffi*^.__^^*^______' **"fcfc* ,. Rhythm A La Mode ... Joe Dilley \ Cherry - Public School So What's New? John Plsano Blueberry or ^W^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^. VA y Sir* ^ Featuring the Flute Section Ssmbs For Flutes E ric Oslerllng PIE MIX SAVE 30c l\ Pears - - 3/51.00 Band Concert Combined Junior Hlflh School Bands - : . n x «.'.-»» r-«j«o»> . i SwM ¦ FO LGER'S Wh\ Director: Jackson Herr. Quart Gedney s f#« .. . fy\ 1 VA SIi» Wednesday Music To Watch Girls By i.. Sid Ramin Balladalr ..' Frank Erickson ' COFFEE . Six of the public school bands Impressions pr An Irish PICKLES H . J Peaches 4/51.00 will be featured in a "Band Fes- Air ... James 0. Ployhar Treat For Trumpet .... Bert Kaemp lb tival" concert, Wednesday at Junior High School Wind Ensemble — >'-*>'• All (tiTO wi «-o.. 7:30 p.m. in the gymnasium oi Director: Jackson Herr, Parade Etpanola, Concert POTATO CHIPS the senior high school. Morel" Cacavas 3 . /Y fi Tomato Juice 4/S1.00 Following short concerts by Finale, from Symphony ^| 1, No. S Beethoven-Isaac ^ Can each of the six bands, the pro- The Unslnkabla Molly Brown, _ ^_^B___ \ J H r '*^ gram will be concluded with Wshllflhts Meredlt h-Wlllson-Reed 1. "I Ain't Down Yet" Oysters - numbers by a combined band 2. "II I Knew" ¦ 3 | C A m 3/51.D0 of 450 musicians playing a "Sa- 3. "Dolce Far Nitrite*- " ^Jr / "Belly Up ^ < 4. " ^^^mmmJ & ,y tf%~ 303 SlEO lute to the Armed Forces." _mmMmmwm_m_w W ^^-"^^ * 0<^yV7 v¦^ ___W\^^.^^ ^ ^IB-t. V Hiflh School Concert Band — Dlreclor: ?^^_ ^^^_^__ J ^R_T ^*r * There is no admission charge Robert Andrus. AW -V^fe^ ^^ A Salute To The Armed 3 m m for the concert, and all parents Forces Jack tee Com 7/$tMf of the students participating in 1. "Fanfare" the program were particularly 2. "Caisson Sonrj" 3. "Marino Hymn" urged to be in attendance. A. "America The Beautiful" Chairs will be set up for per- Mass Band — All Directors. POPCORN ' -^^ ^^ ^^^ ^kPoas - - T/C1.0B; sons not able to ascend the bleacher seats in the gymna- ST. MATTHEW'S CLUB Reg . 290 ft% SAVE 20c i\ 303 Sla; sium. The Woman 's Cl ub of St. s , The bands will appear and Matthew's Lutheran Church will SALTINES f ICE CREAM Potatoes - 10/$1.00 play according to grade level meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. ; 11 and level of development, start- in the church social rooms. ing with tbe fourth grade band John Mitt elstaedt, vicar, will tljrough the high school level. conduct devotions and Miss Alutftmum Foil m Gal ^m M Tomatoes - 0/51.00 Tho program : Susan Haar will present the |^ A, V/alU Song Hal Leonard topic, "The Beginning of Span- D, C. Morcli H«l Leonard Beolnrwi Bond — Dlreclor: Mn, ish Mission Work." Mrs. Lam- Gledyi Delano, bert Reglin and Mrs. Fred GrsnKll-ither'i ClocK Work Spitler will show a film on In- Green Beans io/sij Folk Song Morll«y Dacre-English ¦ Cruiadara Ootid — Director: Dovlrt terior decorating. H6.sles.S'-.< SDi Q H f .Deck. will be the Mmes. Willard ^ ^ frCl 303 Si:i8 Beams ° Step Along March ;,. J. Ollvadotl H Amf ^m^^_W^m^^7^j_ ^ I Cotnencha, Indian Dance and Critchfield , Jacob Pielmeior, » 4W Lumen* , ,.. L. Seymour William Stevens and Elmer ^f ^ S^fy^t^JWax 10/51.00 Cftdet Bend — Director! David Lueck. QiJ (P ^f Holiday March ., Beroalm and Skornlcka Stuhr. UBMBBH JKBflg aoo si z. ! * dCjf^ ^ ^ S ^ - ^ BI H ¦ ¦ « 1. °.°L 3 ^ f ?! ^ ^ ^^ Por k & Beans 10/51 ¦ ¦ Ro AH -V/ Valentine Specials! (j r BaW Itt WM g^-r; ; 1 D. 2.Lb. ' Sheer Nylon Tricot j 20c ¦ • - 39c j 5 $1.89 : m SflVE L i, 1 Pra"«s ^WJfh This Coupon Ei W; 'r, 2lb BflS Briefs in rainbow j Jjj PFPS l|M ' | ¦¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ I M$im 59c colors galore. All in £ pj mm " " " 20% OFF mkC $J Iart Comp j FREE Gold Bond Stamps \\ # 0 ft /Ci «n unadorned tailored On Gowns, Peignors, Baby ! Tuna V** 1™ 50 - with 5.00 order * fl ^ i " " Dolls and Pajamas f\4 J 2ndA B^rOK wr styles. Sizes: 4 thru 7 100 — with 10.00 order \Z m W IGA IO-O«. Values to $17.99 150 - with 20.00 order ^^^ WTt ^m ^r ^ • Catsup - - 3/51.00 ^wmm ^^k^y^rxriiyj^mk/ By Famous Maker! GOOD THRU SATURDAY { ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ a i ? ^<^^^^h^ 8 COUPON SHOP ON EAST BR0A.DWAY AT SAVE NOW AT ¦ "J j Special Purchase! ¦ SATURDAT ONLY £ _ ^_ HOMEMA.DE ¦ ^fl k ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ W \\\_\MW49 1 ' ¦¦¦ mmmJmW I • $100 FRIED CAKES wm ^m mmwr j O Pairn tor-f ^| mode o'day SH 19c Dox' in QIJIL^"w ^"^ LIN S jj J^ MIRACLE MAIL SniflMIIHIHBn-fl-fi SUPER SAVER IGA | ii LM \ , t mm ' ¦-•¦^mt»iimT**nr*MMm*MiTM ii y i iwiiii iim-ma*llBMM«S • . - . ,...... w.. -t*n-f/*-:-*;'.M ft-'-n** VTJK.J-*'" ^<^r 't'r<>^-.f^-^'^Ti ' 'Tr^'^y^.^ ' ' er ," said Steward Vincent Doc- colo. "But I stepped in front of DEMOCRAT MAHON them, told them the man was armed and there were too many g people aboard to risk their Castro Changin lives." ' Doccoio said the men, who he Work on Sentinel Wil l Res urne said identified themselves only WASHINGTON (AP) — The Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- the American people support This was the position taken thing rgbt now," Starbird said as "Abdullah the Butcher" and chairman of tlie House Appro- Mass., and John Sherman Coop- antimissile work. last month by the Sentinel sys- in answer to a question. Policy on Flights? "The American people won't tem Tmanager, Army Lt. Gen. A. Gen. Starbird's appearance Matt Gilmore, returned to their priations Committee says em- er, R-Ky;—as representing a closed committee MIAMI (AP) The 110 pas- and retrieved by smaller prop- stand still to see the Soviet Un- D. Starbird, in testimony before before the - seats. phatically "I know" work will minority. And he said that de- was primarily to brief the panel sengers hijacked to Cuba Mon- driven planes. ion perfect an antimissile de- the Appropriations Committee. Miss O'Connor, a 23-year-old resume on the controversial spite opposition in areas where fense while the United States He added, however, in secret on progress of the system and day were allowed to fly to Mi- The Cubans said this was nec- Sentinel antiballistic missile plans, with particular , said the hijacker told sites are planned, he believes males no move in this area," testimony made public today, its future ami five hours later aboard the essary because Jose Marti Air- blonde system. he said. emphasis on the method of se- her he was Peter Alverez of San that the Sentinel also "would re- pirated plane—touching off port outside Havana -was too Democrat G-eorge H. Mahon Congress authorized funds for duce somewhat the number of lecting sites. today s airliners. Juan and that he was divorced of Texas, whose committee speculation that Fidel Castro short for ' the Sentinel last year. When the casualties" from a Russian at- Starbird said McNamara , in a However, U.S. pilots have from his wife who lives in Mi- holds the purse-strings for the 18, 1967, "indicated has changed his policy toward La Crosse Will project was first unveiled in tack. speech Sept. unanimously agreed the 10,000- ami with their two children. $5.5-billion system*, made the 1967 by then Secretary of De- Starbird told the committee that he believed that no perfect the unscheduled Havana hops. foot runway is ample. "He said he hadn't been to prediction in aji interview Mon- against the Soviet Un- the passengers fense Robert S. McNamara, it Jan. 15 that Russia's interconti- defense Return of The crew of the Eastern Air- Cuba for six years but that his day aJthough he said he had no Face Baltic on was portrayed as an effort to nental ballistic missile capabili- ion was possible. He pointed out marked the first time in 27 hi- lines stretchjet hijacked Mon- father was very ill and that he direct assurances from Secre- guard Soviet Union could in- back to last July tary of Defense Melvin R. against a potential low- ty is "many hundred" times that the jacks—dating day—the 14th plane diverted to was going back this way be- scale atomic attack by Red Chi- greater than that of China. crease its offensiv e power to —that all the passengers were Cuba this year—said the sky- cause there was no other way to Laird. na in the 1970s. any- compensate." allowed to return with the crew. man who hid get there. He wasn't very Fluoridation "The Chinese don't ha*ve jacker was a fat But , he added , "I know the an automatic pistol in a shirt- threatening or obnoxious, but he LA CROSSE, Wis. m — The In New York, Eastern Air- was afraid we were not going to Joint Chiefs of Staff , and I know lines Vice President Jonathon box on his lap. Secretary Laird, and I know fluoridians are arming for bat- , Cuba and kept peering out the Rinehart said prompt release of The plane, EAL Flight 950 window," she said. what their thoughts are on this tle again in La Crosse. -ithe hijacked crew and passen- was an hour out of San Juan matter.'' What is getting to be a rou- gers indicated a "slight thaw" bound for Miami when the man The Nixon administration last tine scrap, the issue of in the Cuban government's atti- walked to the rear of the craft , Bandleader Divorced week halted the work on the whether tude toward hijackings. nudged stewardess Susanne system pending a high-level the city? is to have fluoridated The pilot of the hijacked plane O'Connor with the pistol , and LOS ANGELES (AP ) — Pentagon review. The action fol- water, is going to be on the said he didn't know why the Cu- said : "I want to go to Cuba." Bandleader Billy May has been lowed mounting criticism in April 1 ballot. The city council bans let the passengers return The trip was uneventful ex- divorced by his wife. Congress and irom residents of approved the vote Monday with him, but officials who cept for a tense moment when Superior Court Judge William areas where Sentinel sites are night. ^^^ifT ^^ asked not to be identified said it two burly Canadian wrestlers P. Hogoboom granted Mrs. Joan planned, ' The debate started about a 1 was the result of negotiations announced they were going lo W. May an interlocutory divorce Mahon said the Nixon admin- decade ago when city fathers ¦ between the U.S. and Cuba. disarm the hijacker who was Monday after she contended her istration not only will ask for decided the water should be I ^^J^M^^¦ ¦ ¦/ Take advantage In the past, crews have alone with Miss O'Connor in the husband became "abusive and the money to go ahead with the fluoridated. Opponents of the SBfe !^^ brought back the planes while rear of the craft. profane." The couple separated Sentinel, but will get it. move won a referendum and il passengers were bused to Va- "They were cursing and said July 6, 1967 after 14 years of He dismissed congressional was stopped. radero, 90 miles east of Havana , they wanted to get at the hijack- marriage. critics—who included notably A bid to reinstate fluoridation ^6^|^^ffi of SALES>.. failed in November. La Crosse now is Wisconsin's largest city without fluoridated even if you water. ^^g ^^xr don't have the ¦ Maier Requests MS^ ' *^^^^^ RE^^^WMmmmmm^£lfyk ^ - mmi tt ueajamekx ¦¦ • • . ' xr-* , .; ' ' :¦ ' . CdSHi Join Oldsmobile^ 1^HK ^^H# , Show of Support ***^* ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦: ;¦ .y For Alliance Step into They're little things ¦' k^^^^^^^ fc MILWAUKEE ; W — Alder- ^ lthat make the big things men were requested Monday by DO IT WITH ssr the big-CarlVOrld m .n.' +1.^,, + s. *rsi ,v:+s.M-.M-.' .nr^Bbr*Wl^^KB1 ^^^^^^Hm about an 88 that much Mayor Henry Maier to author- WlthOUt OVd-Stepping^ ^^ V ^ | more enjoyable ize a $15,000 appropriation in a yoiir budget * The smoother, softer show of support for the recently ^^^^^ P on re-organized Alliance ci Cities. Once you move into "^e new l°nSer» __t___ \\mmmmmt^^ ^mm ^ ' The alliance, representing 19 88's big-car world, jrou've ___ \\\\_ \\\\\\\\\\\W ^ 124-inch wheelbase. of Wisconsin's largest communi- MERCHECK PLUS got yourself a lot of ^» ^^^^ ^^ Tlie quiet comfort ties, recently became a non- / basic value. of that roomy, profit corporation , _ ^_^_m j^^^^^^ and voted But we don't stop there. ____ W\\W^____. big-car body. ^f ^^Bm ^y to employ a staff under a $30,- THE CHECKING ACCOUNT WITH BUILT-IN CASH RESERVE We always put extra values BJKSJ^ And the ? uSfflS5^Ea?2 000. budget. into an Olds 88 that keep it big, respon- ^iSHiShSEwr Milwaukee's share should fig- • Practically every stort in town has a mU going on and it's an ideal ure out to $11,300 under a for- tims to make a needed or desired purchase. You can pay cash for thesa v?ay ahead of its -price. And a new an ti- sive Rocket V-8 engine. mula geared to each member's like new guardrails theft ignition, steering Go let an Olds dealer value of property assessment. purchases easily, even if you don't have ready cash available. How? Officials said one city's share Just use the MERCHECK PLUS featura of your Merchants Bank checking would increase if some other account. You don't have Mercheck Plus? Well, that can be easily ar- members decline to contribute. ranged. Just como in and we'll explain It and set it up for you. Then ¦:¦' - ¦ . ' -¦.. . you can help yourself to savings *t the stores.

*H^Hfltf ^ . . Campbeli-Mithun ^^^^ J_____\\____i^__f^ ^^ ^^^B^^^W __^^^^^^^^^^ftftk ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - ^^. JUST PROMISE TO PAY IT BACK! X Loses Hamm Account *g**B BffM H*MBBBB |I^B5^B|Sll|gl|B A ^7. '» ^T* -—¦——-___ MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- Campbell-Mithun, Inc., the larg- BP^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^I^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^I^^^^I^^^^^^^^^^^^HHHlHHl^Mk est advertising firm in the Twin Cities is losing the $7 million Hamm beer account to the larg- est agency in the country, it .MERCHANTS was announced Monday. Theodore Hamm Brewing Co. NATIONAL BANK said it was switching to J. Wal- ter Thompson of New York be- Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Escape from flic ordinaryat yourOldsmobile Dealer^. cause the new agency "offers capabilities that match Hamm's THIRD & lAFAYETTE STS. PHONE 8-516T expansion plans."

jn - MB #A tj mmW pre Perma%M WVn en H ss _4^LW ^ ^AM laammmm. m^t^ I H^M^^^^^^^^^^^^Bimnii

H ____ ^m^^^^^^^aa-^-^-WK^^^^wwSK^m\\mw^^aa\rmW .^^^a J^KK^mmmm\\

The alf-new gas dryers for '69 give you a performance difference you can feel. Everything you ^^^^^^^^fch^_ _^f^^_i^_mmmmm^^^^^^t'' ^^ S ^^ mm ^ ^ t t ^^^ ^ ^^B dry comes out fluffy and nice. Inside, out of the weather. A performance difference ^^^ ^^^^^Z^^^^^^^^^ HlBI^P^R^W^Si^^B^l mwl you can see. Permanent press clothes dry wrinkle-free. And the rest of i ^^H ^^^^^mM^^m ^ J* ft "R.Y_ tz______r _ _ WL^^^^L ^^^ ' ^^ Bh' ^^ B^ ^mSammmmmW^mfW$ **^^Kh ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ln^^H ^Bc%7sST*B 4fc t £?* »f I .i^MwW^aW^^^HlolfjaKflHnM ^^^H _ ^_^_^LWW^^^ ______\. ^^\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ H__\ your wash needs little or no ironing. The new gas dryers give you all A WL ^^ ^ K '« II ^^ HK ^ ? WSJmr ¦ nil ^r ^ m\ ^mm^m this and economy, too. Drop by your gas company or gas appliance ** ' No r , ern m ¦ wn ^ HnliF ^V 'j9i> *^^^^^^ 9 ^-r W WXm SIlL dealer's and test dry one of the new '69's. K Naturli Gw \\\ \\ ^ P ^^^^^^^^BW M' AT I mMmjm I ^S Company W M l^^ HP^ '^ __ ^^___mmmm ^r ' plptllna (MVl mt^^iB^^HlBEi Wm^t _ \\\_aa ' aa\\wmmm Th« no Natunl ^B iWaaa^am^^MW^&^HM^^^^ml^^^^^mW^^Wlmt H ¦ Qai to your local on compwiy ___M H"'iH^^^BBwIu^rS^T^H 3 _ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ W^M^MM .i ^- -^y%yy,_^—-^TrnB >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> ^ ^j „.,, _,„ ^.^^T j|^^^BH-^^- ^ . ^ M-H ^^^^^mu HB ^' Hgt^H * -^ r> ,,**^H ^^^^^H ¦¦ A^^^^^^^^^^^^^^_^_^_^_^_^_^_a ^ — ^^^ia^^WKl1tmmmmmmwwllg m ^^Mm^xyx m ¦ ^^^^H — "" - ' ^ |^^||M^ " ^^''" m ^^^^ttmm-U^^¦¦H ¦ m ^^^^^H ' •~- **^-mmWLwLmmmmmmw,' /9GBS!t^-¦}' %* v ^A H ¦> km^m^m^m^m\ ^^^^^^^ ¦^¦^^¦¦¦¦PPIw ^T^^f-s-} 0*^** • M ^ mmmmmm\ -^^ ./ij'/w iAv^^^^^^ ijBBBHjHHB ^^ •* -F'^^jj ij^L M ^^^^^-- 1 ^^^^^^^ m wiiiisi ^^ 1 .{ i ''• '• ' ' ' i^- *r; "iff t "OF'ft^TBdtiiBBBmmwm\\_\_____^ ^M ¦ .^I^I^I^I^H, ^K^siSHMiaHi^^^^^^^^^^^^^ { ^ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦n*?^^ HBPi*^"^^^ ¦ ¦ ii ,^^'/^jMi' i,ywm^s^ammWammmmmmwm ^i^s&mmmmmmmmmmw__ mm wwwm__ ^__ ¦ ^^^^^^^^^^I HB ^^^^^HHRjR ^^it fw' * >wv. ' *- H ^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦¦ ¦^ras ^^v*"*^.'- *- 0'\%\i^_iaWLWmmmmmmmWmWi^JMSSwii ^^^^^^^^^HBS^B^HI^H^^^^^^^^^^k^ -mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ^^^^^^ -^-r^^^-^ ¦ m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m\ m^BBaW^^^'SC^^'^'"}'^ i, v ^-i^^ ¦ ^^^^^^^^^ H Sjnjjij&f ! ^Mi« ^MiHl ^ll^^^^HHi ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Z^^ A^^^^^^^^^M wtW^^^^^V- ^^- jig-• ^ ^: uy ^_^_^_w_ WKKKK^ I * ^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^H

^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_w_w_ ^_ ^m_ ^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^__ ^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^ ^M^M mmmmmmmm ^tyS ^iKt^^^KtKmm^K^^^^^^^

«w ga» dtytr from 1tm '6i Jlna-upof UWM fan-ioucnamei: Frlflldalro, a*snoraJ Eljctdc. Hamilton, Hotpoint, Kotunoro, Mnytoa, Nonjo, Pinncrc«t. Phlleo Ford, Blflnaturt, Speed Qitun, WorttaflhouM and WhlilpooL

i' Schools Keep 225 at Madison Present System Cub Scout On Insurance Banquet, Derby Retention of its present system About 225 Cub Scouts and contracting for insurance cover- parents attended the annual age during the "Blue and Gold" banquet at forthcoming con- Central Methodist Church Mon- tract period was voted Monday day evening. The event was night by the Winona School sponsored by Madison Elemen- Board which agreed , at the tary School's Pack 5. same time, that study should he Highlight of the evening was given tp possible changes in pro- the "Pinewood Derby," the cedure. racing of model cars designed _ Directors agreed to follow an and built by the Cubs and their insurance committee recommen- dads, Eliminations were held dation that it to determine the winners from follow the plan -**-——¦ ¦ ¦ each of six dens and the finals , pitted the den winners against again this year ¦ Crhnn! which provides Jcnw' each other. ¦ Grand prize winner was Ken- that Winona D Insurance DOSfCI neth Mercier of the WEBLOs Agency be the **—— ' Den. Fred Naas, Den 1, took writing agency for the insurance second and David Bjoraker, Den 2, third. and that commissions be distrib- Other individual den win- uted on a unit basis among par- ners: John Varner, Den 3; ticipating insurance agencies in Mike Vannatter, Den 4, and the city. Ron Haedtke, Den 5. SIMILAR to the policy follow- Donald Ender, Pack 5 cub- ed by the city in its award of master, was master of cere- insurance contracts, the plan monies. The banquet was held will afford Winona Insurance, as in conjunction with Boy Scout the writing agency, a 50 percent Week. Theme of various scout share in the commissions with activities during Boy Scout the remaining Week is, "America's Manpower commissions dis- Begins with Boypower." tributed among seven agencies FOREIGN STUDENTS . . . Participating derson, Nicaragua; Keasora Thitacharee, DERBY ENTRIES . . . Looking over bers are,; from left, Kenneth Trautmann, ?. on the basis of the number of in a program during an International Tea at Thailand; Brother John Anguay, Hawaii; some of the Pinewood Derby entries at the James Goetz Jr. and Michael Conner. (Loa < fulltime agents employed by Central United Methodist Guildhall were, Patricia Lord, Mexico, and Betty Chen, Blue and Gold banquet Monday evening is Sayre photo) each. Japan; Augusto An- Hong Kong. (Daily News photo) Lt. Gov. James B. Goetz. Cub Pack 5 mem- Participating agencies this from left, Michiko Suto, Staff ers Named year will be Abts Agency, Mur- : y ^^weoM phy Agency, Central 7 Insurance I ^^a-ttm. Agency, Dopke-Hill Agency and Wunderlich Insurance Agency Foreign Students each Old Settlers For Next Year to share on a one-unit Employment of two new basis, and Baumann - Mer- teachers for "Winona kel Agency and Gate City Agen- Independ- cy, ent School District 861 for the y assigned three units for dis- ^^oa Meet Saturday 1969-70 school year was ap- ^efe tribution purposes. Hosted at Church I Large and colorful travel fold- — song; Michiko Suto, Japan, proved Monday night by the Wi- y AjcJudburu^Ctl ONE change in the distribu- ers on the walls of the Guild- and Shigenori Makino, Japan — nona School Board. j ^ tion formula was effected with hall added a world atmosphere "Tea Ceremony"; Barbara Acting on the recommenda- ^ the assignment of 50 percent of for the international tea hosted Jackson, New York — "Gunga At Plainview tion of Superintendent of Schools the commissions to Winona In- by the commission on missions Din"; PLAINVIEW, Minn. (Special) A. L. Nelson, the board auth- surance. In the past the division of Central United Methodist Blanche and Mary Bennett, — The 92nd annual meeting of orized contracts for William had been 30 percent for Winona Church Sunday afternoon. Philippines — dance, "J o t a the Old Settlers Association of Schuth as a business education Insurance and 70 percent for Fifty-two invitations had been Moncadena"; John Anguay, instructor at Senior High School the remaining participating Greenwood Prairie will be held an d Barbara sent to foreign students in Wi- Ronald Bunaanglay, Jerry Per- _ agencies. The change was made nona's three colleges and high reira, Hawaii — "Hawaiian at St. Joachim's Church base- Danielson as I - . in consideration of the expan- schools. Medley" and Blanche Bennett ment dining hall Saturday, start- an elementary SCHOOl sion of Winona Insurance Agen- The Rev. Herman Knol, Cen- and Anguay — "Philippine Ser- ing with? a potluck dinner at teacher. cy during the period since the tral visitation pastor, welcomed enade." 12:30 p.m. Schuth this RftafJ last contract was year is teach- POaiq awarded. the 175 in attendance and Miss The tea which followed fea- The association will furnish The insurance committee of Mary Bennett, of the Philip- tured cookies of many coun- ing at Gale- Dr. L. L. Korda and Kenneth pines, introduced the program tries, including Finland, Ger- coffee, cream, sugar, butter and Ettrick, Wis., High School and Nelson, working with Paul W. telling something of the various many, Italy, Sweden, Scotland dishes. has had six years of exper- Sanders, business manager, rec- and England. Presiding at the The business meeting and! pro- ience. According to the salary contributions. schedule now in effect he would ommended that a suggestion The program was as follows: tea table were Mrs. Lewis Ga- gram will be at 2. All members made earlier this winter by rep- receive $8,200. Betty Chen, Hong Kong — sink and Mrs. R. H. Watkins. are to bring a friend. Short resentatives of Baumann-Merkel Chinese songs; Patricia Leon, General chairman for the af- Miss Danielson is a graduate that issuance of insurance be Columbia, and Patricia Lord, fair was Mrs. Robert Beadles. notes from persons out of town of Concordia College, Moor- made oh a bidding basis be stu- Mexico — "Horabe Tapatiilo," Mrs. Frank Cofield had charge have been solicited. head, Minn., and has taught six died by the board. of the tea table. Serving at toe Officers are: Kenneth Bald- years at Austin, Minn. Her sal- Mexican Hat dance; Augusto ary would be $7,750. Anderson, Nicaragua, poem, punch bowl were Monica Ma- win, president; Herbert Marsh- Nelson explained that both "Song of Hope," by Ruben Da- son and Susan Delano. Welcom- man, vice president ; Stanley Spring Grove Town rio; Keasorn Thitacharee, Thai- ing aiid registering the guests salaries would be adjusted in Sets Fees for land — dance; were Mrs. Danvil DeLano and Wood, secretary, and Mrs. Don- accordance with any changes Ming Chu Nguyen, Vietnam Susan. ald Carpenter, treasurer. that might be made in the Opening Driveways The reception committee will b« Mr. teachers' salary schedule that is and Mrs. Kenneth Steffen, Mr. and Mrs. now in neg?otiation. SPRING GROVE (Spe- Raymond Slawson, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie , Minn. Wood, Mrs. Otto Claussen, Mrs. August The board also granted a cial) —- At a special meeting, Johnson, Mrs. Cyril Grelve and Mrs. Art year's sabbatical leave to Earl Spring Grove Township voted Olln. a Winona Junior 4th Street Project Table committee members will be the Sc?hreiber, to charge $3 for a snow remov- Misses Merle Staudacher, May Hassig, High School English instruc- al truck opening and $5 for a and Mar|orle Amos, Mrs. Hazel Steck, tor. snow removal patrol and Messrs. and Mmes. Richard Ben- opening on Least nett, Lester Chrlstlson, Stanley Wood, Nelson said that Schreiber any driveway in the township Delayed at Year Lloyd Melendy, Elmer Young, John Lie- plans to spend next summer in benow, Edgar Herman, August WVanzow, or driveway adjoining the town- Postponement of a 4th Street widened the street from Mam Arvld Johnson, Robert Marshman, Dean travel and study abroad and ship line. widening project for at least a to Franklin Street. Hassig, John Evans, Arnold Wood, Clay- then enroll at the University of The minimum charge will be ton Bennett and Glen Kennedy. Minnesota next fall for grad- year was voted Monday nig?ht COUNCILMAN Barry Nelson $3 for up to one-half hour of by the City Council in a recon- uate study. work. Any time over a half- vened session. asked what planning is being hour will be charged at the rate done for the area. He said he Durand Debaters RESIGNATIONS of two teach- The council's vote upheld a ers also were accepted effect- of $10 per hour. The rate Is City Planning Commission rec- doesn't believe the GNRP pro- visions for the area are satis- Win Sectional ive at the end of the current rectroactive to Feb. 1. ommendation submitted at tlie school year. A bond issue to purchase a Feb. council meeting. The factory. The , 3 overall plan, ~" DURAND, Wis. - The They were submitted by Lynn new patrol -was approved, with commission pointed out th at j Durand High School debate McPhillips and Maureen Van 60 votes in favor and 9 against, the General Neighborhood Re- adop ted City by the coun- team took the second step Heerden, social studies instruc- said Clerk Harold Omodt. newal Plan (GNRP) calls for Saturday in defending its tors at Winona Senior High closure of 4th Street between cil and Hous- ' 1CoMlc>'V,M"W'1ll state vtitle by capturing first School. Approximately two-thirds of Walnut and Franklin streets. A mg and Re- place in the sectional debate ¦ to- develop- all U.S. Savings Bonds sold street improvement proposal Authority (HRA), calls tournament at Eau Claire day are purchased through the drawn up by the city engineer- ment Memorial High School. Demands Divorce on ha-ve for a 4-bIock superblock bound- payroll savings plan. ing department would , Sth Walnut and At the end of the tour- Basis of Demands ed by 3rd , nament Durand emerged Franklin streets. LOS ANGELES (AP ) - planning for the vi- with a 5-1 record and had Specific defeated teams from Rice Wealthy real estate investor cinity is under way, replied Regis William I. Hollingsworth, 64, Carroll J. Fry, city manager. Lake, Eau Claire , 1 Distinguished classicshirtings I LiMsBHSEaBS ^SviHBBBHt-^^PwHHH'luf Eau Claire North, Chip- complained that his 24-year-old He declined to give details but pewa High and Osceola. bride kept him awake nights said a joint approach now is The only defeat suffered by with demands for cars, bigger | with % remarkable unseen difference! j I being made by the HRA, the Durand came at the hands allowances and fur coats. city planning coordinator and He filed Monday for divorce li 1 the manager's office. The pro- of Park Falls. posal will be submitted to the Members of the team from his wife, Maria, and for a ¦ council when completed, he were Marie Duesterbeck, court order to make her leave Janet Weishapple, Nancy their Beverly Hills home. The By ¦ ¦ said. M/cyHonAatfam f.m The Uve Adventures, VJryanrVvnnSlinmPH/Svntli pqiq l>>\ Shatter, Mary Jean Schios- marriage which took place last § ) ¦ of Mlko BJoomfialcland AIKboper B 7^^ 1 Nelson said he considers the j ilSudSvT Ifl ! ser, Helen Simpson and Sue Dec. 31 was Hollingsworth's ¦ Il l ¦^¦mlMiniSoS^mltiMa.itn¦ nrrt-|Wn-to-^om^rtOatTb«crtbw- I Mil GNRP unsatisfactory in its i IIH ! taTflraVourCoytOnthSoaroitf _W OceenbanLBIIclattla, ¦'(« , ¦ Spergcr. ¦ * polyester nnd 50';i -cotton Oxford cloth. out of this year's capital im- ^£%"SSKS3SBSS£IS!i^HX^ *^' * * | provements program and set j?? In White . . . a selection oC colors ... or soft muted stripes. -t* back for review next year or Come in ... for a FREE Hearing Test V Button-down ColBar. | thereafter. . . . Soo Soar's New Line of Hearing Aids The vote to accept the plan- $ ning commission recommenda- 6.00 1 tion was unanimous. Councilman Richard Broberg, Consultant \\.:. MAD ACO® 1 Daniel Bambenek was absent y Wnnt a shirt wit h the luxuri ously smooth and silky quality? It's Marlaco of 80% Dnci on® | from the meeting. Will bo at Soars — Winona .-:' polyi-ster and 20% cotton, Permanently pressed to stny wrhiklc-frex*. | Kent Collar. On Thursday, February 13th—1 to 5 p.m. |j Spring Grove FFA Next Visit Will Be Thursday, February 20th ALL IN SIZES HVi TO m* ^ t SPRING GROVE, Mdnn. (Spe- Q J\J \' *5i cial) — Parents, guests and ' .: FFA members will receive ii k fl»HHHnH ^l^lHll ^lHl« ^^^^ wgpr recognition and awards at the eifOP AT SEARS | O^ovc l ' ?! P annual FFA banquet at Spring AND SAVE OCdl o 57-S9 E. Third St. MEN'S WEAR - FIRST FLOOR | I fflLti - -WaJ_K¦'J Grovo High School Wednesday Wlnono, Minn. I nt 7 p.m. Speaker "will bo Tom fEAM, aoEBVCX AND CO. i?J i Moulin, state FFA president. FAIL TO CLOSE DOWN SCHOOL ' Thompson Plea More Crewmen of Students Boycott U\ of Wisconsin Taken Under Pueblo to Tell MADISON, Wis. HV — Angry Negro demands, including crea- lies, picketed classrooms peared the demonstrators might guard against provoking police. Negro students and their white tion of -an autonomous Negro throughout the day, then march- seek to disrupt university func- They issued leaflets outlining sympathizers, being careful not studies department at the uni- ed down State Street at night tions. what they should say and do if Advisement Destruction Of Oalif. (AP) — have taken 10 to 12 hours to de- to provoke riot-trained police, versity. and circled the state capitol Protesters interrupted classes arrested. MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-Judge CORONADO, Ranks of the demonstrators before disbanding. Friday, and had sought to dis- More intelligence crewmen stroy all of the Pueblo's secret boycotted University of Wiscon- Chanting on strike, shut It Douglas K. Amdahl has taken sin classes Monday without swelled to about 3,000 at times There were no arrests. rupt a Wisconsin-Ohio State " were summoned to tell the Navy papers. down," the picketers left a ral- under advisement the question USS achieving their goal of closing Monday, or less than one-tenth At one point during the eve- basketball game Saturday until of issues to be considered at a today how much of the The Pueblo's skipper, Cmdr. school of the 34.,000-student enrollment, ning rally, the university ad- they were repulsed by police at ly in Memorial Union and troop- Pueblo's classified material was Lloyd M. Bucher, said he would Sown the ed to Bascom Hall to parade hearing in which convicted mur- z.They scheduled more rallies which includes about 500 ministration was burned in ef- the doors of the campus field- derer T. Eugene Thompson is destroyed before the ship was take the stand again near the thd picketing today in efforts Negroes. figy at a statue of Abraham house. with their placards before class- captured by North Koreans. end of the court of inquiry to room buildings. seeking bis freedom . "to gain support for a list of 13 Protesters held several ral- Lincoln as Negro leadiers spoke Police arrived on campus with Acting under the 1967 Post- Their testimony was secret, give further testimony about his Chancellor H. Edwin Young, the nearby. helmets and riot sticks, but Conviction Relief Act, the for- the Navy said, "because of. imprisonment with his crew. "Just as this effigy burns kept them out of sight as they who warned that disruptions mer St. Paul lawyer appeared sensitivity of much of whai Sen. Roman L. Hruska, R- and crumbles," a Negro youth stood guard at entrances to would not be tolerated, issued in Hennepin County District they're talking about" and be- Neb., said today that if there is said, "so must the rascist spir- classroom buildings. a statement in which he said Court Monday. cause its disclosure could harm an attempt to make scapegoats that "no one who talks about it of the university if it hopes "We don't want to do any- national defense. out of Bucher and his crew, it to survive." thing to provoke the students," shutting down a university can Ramsey Connty Atty. William The intelligence crewmen, vigorous convince me that the welfare will "provoke a most At his suggestion, demonstra- an officer said. B. Randall, who prosecuted the called communications techni- reaction" in Congress. Claims Demands Leaders of the protest cau- and advancement of black peo- murder case im 1963, argued that to a tors then strolled about eight cians, were summoned came in a -with tioned followers repeatedly to ple is his foremost concern." Thompson's petition to have the investigating His comment blocks to the capitol lead- court of inquiry prepared for a Republi- the crowd to conviction set aside was invalid. capture last year. speech ers cautioning the Pueblo's in Nebraska. clashes with police. Randall contended the post- 23 were com- can gathering Are Being Met avoid Of the 83 aboard. Hruska said "Several mem- Meanwhile, a group of about conviction procedures are in- munications technicians. the Senate Aimed Serv- MADISON, Wis. WV-Chancel- gun a management training students launched a separ- tended to bring before the court The head intelligence detach- bers of 50 Tighter ices Committee have indicated !or H. Edwin Young says the program for graduate Negro ate sit-in in the administrative Ask only such issues not previously ment , was Lt. Stephen Harris, University of Wisconsin's rec- students three years ago, long office of the Sociology Build- litigated. court last week his that the committee will proceed who told the to look into the matter." ord of -trying to meet the before many of Monday's dem- ing in protest over the refusal "The Supreme Court has al- staff didn't destroy all of the se- needs of Negro students shows onstrators were even enrolled of the university to renew the Regulations for ready reviewed the issues that cret material because of North the: school has no intention of at the school. contract of Professor Michael the petition asks this court to Korean gunfire, "a painfully consider," Randall said. ignoring the latest round of stu- The university's 33,000-student Faia, who had been criticized slow" burning process, what he dent demands. enrollment includes about 500 for his practice of giving only He listed those issues as in- excessive amount Negroes, approximately 120 of cluding the matter of venue in described as While his campus weathered "A" or "F" grades to his stu- and hea-vy smoke. them in graduate work. Bus Drivers Thompson's trial, the presenta- of material efforts by Negroes to talk fac- dents. Today's testimony would be ulty and students into a mass The sit-in, not affiliated with MADISON, Wis. wi — Tighter tion of hearsay evidence in that testi- YOUNG SAID 10 to 20 Ne- trial, the question* of evidence similar, the Navy said, to classroom boycott Monday groes are being enrolled en- the Negro-demands campaign * safety regulations were suggest- Monday from the Pueb- Vo-ung called for an academic seized from the Thompson home mony nually in graduate courses un- did not encounter noticeable ed Monday for Wisconsin school s chief communications tech- response to the demands. But he opposition from the university following the murder, the ques- lo' ¦ der just one university recruit- bus drivers who haul approxi- tion of credibility of state wit- nician, Ralph D. Bouden, of was critical of students who use ment program. administration. and a mem- tactics. mately 600,000 students daily. nesses and the matter of Dick Washington, D.C, disruptive Ne- Students engaged is the Ne- James Francis And the school wants more William Kahl, state superin- W-C. Anderson having allegedly ber of his team, ARE lots »f lessons gro students as well as more groes' campaign similarly were '-"THERE getting a stand-off reaction tendent of public instruction, recanted his original trial testi- Kell, of Honolulu. In Ihis, but I hope we don 't have Negro professors, he said. said the state can be proud of mony. Bouden and Kell testified with much of this kind of tutor- Wisconsin has set a goal of from administrators w h il e hasis on what too showing signs of respecting of- what he called a near-perfect "particular emp ing," he said. hiring 20 more Negro instruc- safety record in school transpor- Judge Amdahl Is expected to within the research ficials' warning about suspen- took place . "I can understand the impa- tors as soon as possible; but is tation, and "should strive for rule in a few days on what is- intelligence spaces on the Pueb- sion or expulsion should class- JSTEW AMBASSADOR . . iieuce of black people, and I often frustrated by similar de- perfection." . sues will be considered and then lo when the ship was captured ," As your personal share the concern of those who mands from other schools for rooms be disrupted as they John Freeman, who is to a date for resuming the hearing insurance agent, we'll make were Friday during a march AMONG THE safety standard the Navy said. ask if the world is acting rap- qualified personnel, he said. become the British am- presumably will be set. "We tried to tear up the pub- sure your interests are idly enough in righting old "We encounter strong compe- of about 500 students. improvements discussed Mon- bassador to the United Now 4i, Thompson was wear- About 200 policemen and lications," Harris has told the being served to the fullest! wrongs," he told a faculty tition for black scholars," day by the Governor's High- States is shown' at the Bri- ing a grey suit and his brown sheriff's deputies, many of way Safety Advisory Committee , court. "We reduced them to meeting. "What I cannot under- Young said, but department tish Foreign Office in Lon- hair is still crew-cut. He spent heads are under orders to con- them veterans of a bloody cam- are those involving drivers' ages confetti. There was paper all stand is the position of those don . Freeman, who has several minutes conferring with lace. We were fever- who seek to exploit these feel- tinue the search. pus antiwar demonstration in and physical conditions. over the p : served as British High Com- his attorneys, Ronald Meshbes- ish. ings, and to minimize or deny "When, there is a vacancy, we October, 1967, were among A source of the concern , ter and Gerald Singer. prhat is already being done." are urging them to seek black those rushed to the campus by spokesmen said, is that, while missioner in India, will be "We tried to keep it as order- Thompson was convicted possible, but it actually re- He said the university had be- professors," he said. bus early Monday when it ap- drivers must meet vision and 54 years old on Feb. 19. (AP March 6 ly as , 1963 and sentenced to sulted in a great deal of confu- physical requirements, they are Photofax) a life term in Stillwater Prison. required to be tested only ev- sion." Anderson testified he was over the North ery two years. hired by Norman Mastrian to When it was 's Teachers boarded the Pueblo Of Wisconsin's estimated 6,- St. Stan kill Carol Thompson, 34, at her Koreans 000 driver positions, however, Discuss Changes home. Both Anderson and Mas- and ther e were some secret Unseated Legislator more than 3,500 are filled each trian are also serving life papers in his intelligence com- year by newcomers, some rang- In Teaching Methods terms. partment, Harris said. ing in age into their 70s. On curriculum day at St. Harris estimated it would Stanislaus School teachers Officials said about 4 per- Fred Nctas cent of the state's bus drivers spent the day listening, shar- are 65 or older. ing, discussing and planning. Legion Oratory Tape recordings on innova- One of ihe Will Fight for Job Spokesmen said standards Contest Saturday tive schools made by Dr. Don- were not consistent because MICRO- Associates of Our ; ST. PAUL (AP)-An Iron quirement when a member Is are Liberals. rules change between districts. ald Glines, principal, Wilson Entries are expected from f Range legislator unseated last expelled from the House. Bis- Bischoff said he would begin Campus School, Mankato State seven or more district high ?W» ¦'WTtF-r ^stm ^vwrmm Staff Who in- Dr. J. L. Weygrand of She- w&ek from the Minnesota House choff's ouster tame on a voice court proceedings this week, boygan Falls said discrepan- College, were the main topic of schools when the 1st District Serves You First i»f Representatives says he's go- vote after a ruling that only a cluding an attempt to get an cies might be overcome if the discussion. He described the American ?Legion oratorical ing to court in an effort to re- simple majority was required. injunction barring the St. Louis functioning of his individual- contest is held here Saturday. Bischoff had been seated at the County auditor from holding a state were to adopt uniform ap- FILMING gain the seat. plication of Interstate Com- ized school. Norman E. Indall, district WINONA .! Bernard Bischoff , a Hibbing outset of the 1969 session. new election in the 63rd District. merce Commission standards. Time was spent discussing chairman, said that the public J lawyer, was expelled Friday by A key roll call -vote earlier to Gov. Harold LeVander has the tapes and sharing ideas may attend the contest at the the House for violating the substitute a motion of censure called for a primary Feb. 25, JUDGE QUENTIN John of that Sister Thelma, Mrs. Har- YMCA beginning at 1 p.m. INSURANCE state's Fair Campaign Practices was rejected by less than 88-40 with the special election slated Hayward similarly advocated ry Losinski and Sister Myron He said entries are expected taw. c vote. for March 11. uniform standards for part-time gleaned from the weekend from Waseca, Albert Lea, Wi- I SERVICE • Be said Monday his legal ac- The challenge to Bischoff's Meanwhile, the House gave or substitute drivers. meeting at which Dr. Glines nona, Owatonna, Austin, Roch- AGENCY tion will be based on a provision election was raised by former preliminary approval Monday to "All drivers should be requir- spoke. ester and New Richland. ^T7mmm„3^ 174 Center St. pf the state Constitution which State Rep. Jack Fena, also of a bill making studded tires per- ed to meet the regulations, not Possibilities of implementing As usual the topic is the U.S. PHONE provides a two-thirds vote re- Hibbing and also a lawyer. Both manently legal during winter only the full-timers," he said. individualized instructions at Constitution and its amend- WINONA COUNTY 3366 seasons in Minnesota. The pres- . . Kahl praised the safety record St. Stan's were presented. Sis- ments. Contestants deliver a ABSTRACT CO.f INC. ent law legalizing studded tires of Wisconsin's school bus opera- ter Thelma . urged teachers to prepared oration, then an ex- Junction tors, saying "you could a?&aost 535 NOTICE! MEDICAL ASSISTANCE expires this year. evaluate their teaching and to temporaneous talk on an as- PHONE 8- L987 The double-bottom truck bill, call it a fabulous one." be open to new ideas. signed topic. CLIENTS ARE WELCOME HERE. which has sparked debate in Except for fatal accidents in Sast sessions, was revived by bus loading zones, "we have :ep. John Wingard, Champlin. never lost the life of a school Wingard's bill would raise the youngster on a school bus," '^ overall truck length from 55 to Kahl said. ma\\\\\\\\a\w ^^ ' _ ^a\A\m^mw^^Ka^^^^^^ m ' ^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ mmmm\—_ iB^^^ ^^Hf _ C ^ ______^^^^^_mwBBssBKel ^m^-\ 65 feet and would permit truck- ~~ tractor units to pull two trailers JUT^f ^^t- ^lL m~] "^MHi on any four-lane roadway. W *^* TB£ -^T Wingard said Minnesota and 356 at Fillmore Wisconsin constitute an island _WBm J. F f i ¦# *tL J I U , l i l __mW J H OT ^Br Wed.-Thurs^ surrounded by states which al- M.-Sqf. j| low 65-foot combinations. He Co-op Meeting fflpj mhl ¦ * JML said the twin trailer units have it 1 IB I I T f 1 W proved safer than conventional LANESBORO, Wis. (Special) A-W tractor-trailer rigs. — The Fillmore County Co-op •flPh WSk nw«•**.» jSftji " ««« """ Several House members Services served 356 people at ll^Siiiil '! pM,» JSLf sparred with state education their annual dinner and meeting rJ*~ WSk wm?%*«««^* ™^ \mMl #W o' .SKP?^ commissioner Duane Mattheis here Wednesday. ^k£ <* iifflSm SK3 d «••»¦•¦ \ gv-= . *>i«*ii»i»t M&&&^ over school district reorganiza- Vernon Abrahamson , Canton , f mmkyW/m 'Hffl u*. WMjm\i ' -f oo mSmS^\ tion plans. Mattheis told the ap- was re-elected director and Paul «^HR propriations committee that no C. Abrahamson, Lanesboro, ¦ 1 Hl -*• - TP^B^HB^^FTW'L V was ¦•» »¦> pKftllli)) °^ I ^^Y|\ i* ^¦V'MSBH Mili'fS lm Irt P^i^! ^Jl^HHS ^ l^__^___W_wr effort at forced consolidation returned as secretary and jrdolls ' ¦ 4 i ~i§_ ** ?Wi|YBabyn , ^r»»tt \ %$M Ef 7| ScamUst. Mist- 1 XwL « ^' y > i *'~ ' w VH<^4 * 3/vr will be made before the legisla- treasurer ^P ^^ ffl ^kl9 , dslteP** Jm^^^^-WL^ . i'mtom 5\5^ f'it ll\ K°' * *"- HPlilL W \. tone, Cinntmon, ,/&§Wff l$MfEF+X ture. Sales for the year totaled \™B vViS c t(,lS-M-1- i-~-*^f 1|£ ' VSS = ]| ) ?. ,. ! II |\ Mg Suofonc, Brown Rep. Rod Searle, Waseca , ac- $616,257. Net margins of $26,- \JS W ^M^^MtaamT ' cused Mattheis of ha*ving drawn 420 were refunded to purchas- IM ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦—*«-»¦ up "a contrived map" suggest- ers. Total assets of the co-op j dmlWm ' ' mama^a a. . ^SWSjSS-T ing only 100 large school dis- are $480,654. W^ j2 i^«p ^ tricts over the entire state. Sapg Ww',Wom«,il'«79.MHw vB| | |P | i Maa'a tag. 7M h. BIFOCALS The organization has centers ^^^ffi /2r\fLM fMMM ^P^^MO There are now 447 high school in Lanesboro, Harmony and f \ ^^pkjiij^l IBHlfei -Orta^AoiHtSll IJI districts. . MiW^^N Colw.om/Sfy V-ltmtWSaithM Nflw . XMRS rfrl Canton. Garland Kotek, Har- ^V^ M &%*_¥ * W'WS m ^^ to^Ziv^tolpJ^^ Mattheis said his department mony, is manager. & would be derelict if it didn 't Wo-iroB Shirt Blovses W m MOO rtlU ^1 tW Short Sleeve Sport Shirt W ,,fl 3 99 \ ^ ' UO d* make long-range plans. Several ^'~ ? ' - ' 'WA JB *! y-Ovra^M agm ULIMU Interest rates on U.S. Sav- Ruiflc from, %,. * *Tfyq4&QA J/J&jm fnrIU 40L K . \ J.* '^ mf^ legislators said outstate admin- ^W { A .Iff, wHh ,.ils; regUI.f ings Bonds ue3.o.h«5.52-38. W ^ fflfesnN B " l |7 3 istrators fear their school dis- have been increased on dated by the State Department , ¦ 1 ^- C J. m . IAM ' fS^fM^I' ifR^W 10-13. of Education. 1941. The current rate is 4.25 P^Mter -Srrrttl^^ Pimtf .lO-tt -ftj v ^|8P^'; i^^8«ai M«Hm^ All Glasses ONE LOW PRICE The Senate approved 62-0 a percent, if held to maturity. 4 ILflsai WK3SM ~ Never before bill allowing permanent fishing i.f^iy^ in King's Optical History have we offered «o licenses for retarded persons. ^r much for , K M B so little. Think of it American made National Brand- The measure now goes to the INFANTS' ¦ ed frames , complete with the top quality bifocal lenses that House, ICE fjgBflBg^ R0oM7AR IIR^glK you need, at the one low price of only (lS.ro. Choose the Kryptok ^ Bifocal yon need, at this one low, The Senate approved the ap- low price . . . Satisfaction pointment of Arthur S. Swan, REMOVER guaranteed. COMPLETE GLASSES WITH SINGLE VISION Rochester, to the Minnesota For $id«w«lkt, Drivew , : LENSES ALL AT ONE LOWER PRICE. Municipal Commission. ay* j ;^^^^^^pl3 CRAWLERS Monday 's new bills included a •tc. Also thaw* froion SHADES 1P wBwf^^Eil PRESCRIPTION SUNGLASSES AT SAME LOW PRICE 4 0<.y, OnV-0UrR ,. J.99, G.«ron».W proposal to do away with the drain*. n jlies ^% £%m _ ^_ m 9*. ^. 1 F iT^w ^^^Mt 10-cents*a-pound tax colored Cheery IMI MO ¦lelamlne on DADD BROS. Singing Conaries . VyC „ *>kfili Dinnerware Set oleomargarine in two stages. AJcrt, ll-fel-y! Give jrour AA VA *P|^*^ PMtern, wi(h Gr.n.d. , nUDD STORE '» The bill by Sen. Rollin Glewwe, k>»e « li»mK -mUnrine! /¦ '» Reg. 1.17 ^__ W^-W ¦ ireen. hot pink, Bristol !»•• ON PRESCRIPTION AND FITTING iV LICENIBO OPTOMETRUr V & S HARDWARE (RH ff Woe or ~om South St. Paul , would cut thc *b«. t.v *iM C«^....iJt . m brown. Spcciil! © tax to five 576 E. 4th St. Phon* 4007 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY gs»j»^s> cents in 1970 and HHB BHSHKmfw SbHi repeal it altogether in 1972, H»» W^y^S AMIiH J-ttta f v-^ -#4^M Iftirlh^'S^ »•»"»¦*!I IftltHL***^""!1^ 1/ AMt« B | \ Cm I ¦R5T ' «w< ¦"¦! -taMh ¦ BMK3 ^^MB liA: ^^ "lh" | iflV firti-M. 5-7 I 1 (^L\ Mlw I WLf^"*"'' * ^— * •** HrS?^ ••*• IJ ¦ i^WSHk *M •••SSI ¦ ¦ m AOMx i^ Att *B w ^7< H m #w/^ *% ¦ / l 7-Z-H Kf XV4Wlill«X 'qtxm ily° Wm\ J, / ***'— Whllt ^vKWIiy**"' loin , H1 ¦V^&z^ 'T' •* H 1 HK.iS*VV' il l. nix^My loill | , , B! Miwr | w MBB^gjBBiHr^*" 1 M wmwBt] M, , mr HMH^^^S^I **'" * -' '**-'-*- '^ MEfl) -^*"xyy mm\\£8\amm i^A^itXi ^r^immm^t Hour*r a-m--5:-30 p-m- aM Cir4t UI VI J -ci. ' Y rtt Hilt I I ^ Incl. Wed. -ind S«t. Mix' W If* Mra 9U '*M W^lMffl IBBBIK fl I Uui fl MAIN FLOOR |, H (^^wGraL fl KJ '^ ^aaRI??-^^A HoRkttf flj P one 8 r -37ii . 0'*« ^w.ii.t.l|ir lH.B fl j Qtjjgfe ^SP WMI, ctMar[lii |7t, flj fcjumm. iMK»«.fc*. it.n, )MHU3OM BJHBI j^^^Ji^Jiij'iiJWBMlM EWHW "¦',| BMBBV—7x^773*777?—iM*mSi mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwmMmmmmmm ' ______wu______\______\______Termination High School $3,000 Contributed NoticesSent Special Merit Step Choir Given For La Crescent Pool Dog Obedience LA CRESCJENT, Minn. (Spe- ROBERT Heth gave the fes- cial)—A school instruction Action by the board would al- 1969 festival. Keith Deyo is dog obedience training classes the Title I provisions* of the fed- the board felt teacher perform- and others—members of the low the choir under the direc- pie festival corporation board vice president; James Etrheim, was granted the Winona County ed by the Vinona School Board last week. eral Momentary and Secondary Monday night to the Winona ance justified merit increases. Teachers Council representing tion of Meryl Nichols to make a a new member, is secretary, Agricultural Extension Servce School Act -was Also noted in the new board the Winona Education Associa- two - day tour to Alexandria, Presenting the check from and Dennis Stotsebery, trea- Monday night by the Winona given Monday Teacher Council for its consid- Minn., with possibly night by the Winona School eration. proposal was restoration of the tion and Winona Federation of three con- last year's festival, Erickson surer. School Board. Board. 12th step of the bachelor's de- Teachers were called in and re- certs to be given during the said the committee in charge Remaining on the board be- County Agent HarryBurcalow The most recent counterpro- gree plus 30 credit hour lane ceived the new proposal. two days. now should be making plans for sides Hillstrom, Deyo and Teachers involved who were posal to be submitted in the had requested use of school fa- hired on a one-year basis were and the 13th step of the mas- AUTHORIZATION the pool. Miss Gilman accept- Stotsebery are Donald Snyder, cilities for a 12-week period to " nearly three months of salary ter's degree lane which bad ALLEN prefaced his presen- was given ed the check on behalf of the Robert Heth and Jerome Butch- advised that ; . r . ¦ ' . . , tation of the counterproposal on the recommendation of Su- conduct obedi- .. . , . at the pres- _ .' ~ negotiations was presented by been deleted by the board in its pool fund. art. New members elected were ence training ¦ . . j , the board's salary study com- with the comment to the teach- perintendent of Schools . A. L. Holland Kratz, j 7ent t i me January proposal in accordance Nelson who noted that during Ray Bentdahl, classes to be SCnOOl School mittee for approval by the full with its policy of encouraging ers that the board had drafted James Reese, Kenneth Trehus there is no a proposed schedule it felt was the past two held one night approved plan board membership together teachers to work for advance- " and Robert Boehm. Erickson each pwarqDft ai. J with recommendations on other realistic and an indication the or t h r e e - we*k | for continuing 1 ment on the training lanes of years several was re-elected. tn conjunction BWV/PIoarc ** aspects of teacher employ- the schedule. board does not consider salary Schoolw»uvi Spring Grove the program. p high school ** HAROLD ."-'•kson, who went with the 4-H Each person has ment a n d negotiations a ing pong game." an opportu- then submit- i _ " ~ "IT'S STILL our intention to The board, Allen said, did choirs have D—-.-J off the board, will continue to program. nity to request a formal hear- the teachers visited Wine- BOaro manage the kiddie parade. Also A. class of up to 30 is con- ing before the board on con- ted to teacher ScnOOi cut back steps to encourage not feel that ' re- templated Burcalo-w bargain- teachers to advance in train- vised schedule represented a na for con- yrr, Scouter Named retiring from the board but , explained, tract termination. cert appearances. assisting with the festival will and if it is not filled by 4-H Notices are being sent to big represen- D J ing," Allen explained,' "but we realistic proposal and indica- -with POdfWoaM felt that perhaps the steps you are not ready to nego- "These tours were given the be Leon Pollick oh button sales members it may be filled out Mrs. Helen Schneider, Mrs. Do- tatives j ted " groups as awards for outstand- by applicants from the general lores Vondrashek, Mrs. Dolores the suggestion should be restored this year tiate as far as salaries are con- and Kenneth Malgrin, on the be made for since teachers had no advance cerned. We have come up here ing performances," Nelson ex- Sunday parade. public; Gallagher, Janis Vose, Susan that arrangements plained, "and I consider our For Jamboree The board agreed to provide Mueller, another meeting of board and notice of such an action but with what I believe is the high- (Spe- The first meeting of the new Mrs. Darlene Carlson, choir to be one of the finest I SPRING GROVE, Minn. board will be Thursday at. 8 the facilities of an available Judy Inman and Joseph Ger- council members when and if that they should be told that est salary schedule proposed in recent years. cial) — At a court of honor of has a new counter- this will be oiir intent in the fu- so far by any school board in have heard " p.m. elementary school gymnasium lach. the council He said that Nichols had re- Boy Scout Troop 55 at Trinity with the extension service to The board also approved pay- proposal to present. ture." the state of Minnesota and we Dinner was served by the quested permission for the choir Lutheran Church parlors Sun- Commodore, with Miss Gilman pay for the actual cost of cus- ment of payrolls for hornebound The schedule submitted to don't intend to use this as a to make the trip to Alexandria, day night Olaf Torvick, institu- SCHOOL BOARD Chairman the council Monday night springboard to bigger things." , as official hostess. She -will at- todial iservices. instructors amounting to $2,679; Allen explained at the probably during the spring, for tional representative and jam- The board also approved a re- substitute teachers, $2,156; noon Frank J. ranges from a minimum of $6,- He then explained details of tend the Lidns Club pancake start of Monday night's session a concert there — the Alexan- boree committee chairman, an- breakfast Sunday in her offi- quest by members of business hour cafeteria supervisors, $645; 500 for a teacher with a four- the revised board schedule, ex- dria choir appeared in Winona nounced that Spring Grove's work study program that in the week since teachers year degree and no previous cial capacity. and marketing classes at the Wi- , $338; members last met on plaining that the merit steps at last year — at a community scoutmaster, Harold Wright, is nona Area Vocational-Technical driver training, $432; Title 1 and board teaching experience—the pres- the top had been incorporated near Alexandria and, possibly, programs salary issues for the next con- ent figure is $6,000—to $11,100 " one of four adult leaders from School enrolled in the DECCA , $373; miscellaneous been no in response to a previously- if it can be arranged, a concert the Gateway Area Council se- Club for students in distributive clerical, instructional and cus- tract year there had for an instructor with a mas- expressed council request that in the rotunda of the state Cap- opportunity to schedule a meet- ter's degree and 13 or more lected to attend the 7th Nation- education for use of the Winona todial services, $1,487; adult teachers be afforded some idea itol. al Jamboree at Farragut State Junior High School driver training, $345; evening ing of the full board to prepare years of experience, not as to what extent meritorious Nelson said that if the tour Lawyers Expect auditorium- school instruction, a counterproposal to the revis- changed from the present sched- Park, Idaho, July 16-22. gymnasium ?March 8 for a $699 and caf- teachers at the top of the sched- were to be arranged the board Battle of the eteria helpers* $204. ed comprehensive salary pack- ule. ule may be rewarded. would have to provide about Eric Trehus and Hans Tweet- Bands dance. Also approved were overtime age suggested by teachers at In addition, steps of $11,TOO en Jr. were chosen by the com- Proceeds will finance DECCA $500 for transportation with the Club members Eayments to custodians amount- last week's meeting. over the maximum for the mas- "WE PUT $1,000 in at the top choir arranging for other costs mittee to attend; Roger Benson To Agree on ' attendance at is to $987. In a series of informal meet- three steps for merit increas- gnd Mark Johnson are alter- state and national conventions. ter's lane, $11,900 above the top ¦ -* ¦ itself. ¦ - ¦ . . ings with members of the sal- step on the master's plus 15 es but that doesn't mean that nates. . . ary committee and various hours $12,100 over-the master's that much will be paid," Allen ALSO authorized was an an- Wrecker Stolen to board members, Allen explain- plus 30 hour top were incorpora- said. "A teacher at the top nual spring trip for members of THE ANNUAL blue and gold Sirhan Jurors Hoist, ed, the new board schedule was step now may get no increase the senior class at Winona banquet will be Feb. 23 at 5:30 LOS ANGELES (AP) Haul Safe ted into the schedule for merit — "I'm PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - State Urged to drafted and board positions tak- increases that might range up at all, or he may get as much Senior High School to Chicago p.m, at Trinity church parlors. having my eyes treated" ... April Troop 55 will attend winter Thieves apparently stole a en on the dozen or so contract to $1,000 in individual cases. as a thousand dollars, depend- sometime in "My company issues still remaining for nego- ing on the evaluation of the ad- Seniors, who receive special camp at Camp Decorah near does not wish me wrecker truck, backed it tiation. THE TEACHERS, meanwhile, ministrative staff. rail fares for the trip which is Holmen, Wis.,, Feb. 28 - March to take that much time out" ... through a window of a market, " used tbe crane to loist the safe Sell Liquor With three exceptions the new- have before the board> a re- Allen told the teachers, also, highlighted by tours of Chicago, 2.V . "I have strong i .-servations est school board salary sched- quest for a schedule that ranges pay travel expenses and chap- against the death penalty. into the air, and drove away. A ST. PAUL, Minn. - The that the new proposal also con- Activities for the year were " block away they ule is the same is that pre- from $7,200 at the bottom to erone fees, themselves. Board Despite such pleas lowered the chairman of the Senate Ijquor $14,950 at ihei top. templates an implementation of action permits releax- frorv a discussed and registrations re- , which won safe into a waiting pickup truck, Control Committee said Mon- sented as a counterproposal to the merit* plan for increases ceived at the meeting, Scout- exemptions Monday, attorneys teacher requests late last The revised proposal of the day of classes for the trip. say they expect to agree shortly and sped off. The safe was emp- day that the state could make teachers for a 187-day work across the entire schedule at all ¦ master Wright announced that ty. "lots of money" by entering the month. levels of training and exper- the troop has received its •char- on six alternate jurors for the year submitted last week has " murder trial of Sirhan Bishara wholesale liquor business. THE PMNCIPAL departure a built-in provision for merit ience. Student Sending ter for the 46th consecutive Sen. Lew Larson, Conserva- He said that the superintend- year. Sirhai. from the original is the addi- increases, the teachers main- Lawyers prosecuting and de- tive - Mabel, said he expects to tion of a step at the top of the tain, in view of standing board ent of schools would be asked Back Medal He Eric Trehus, Eagle Scout, re- see bills introduced at the cur- — -with whatever assistance ceived the Eagle bronze palm fending the 24-year-old Jorda- schedule which -would provide policy that increments may be nian, charged with murdering IESSD rent legislative session to have for increases of up to $1,000 in withheld or increased by school he may require — to make a Got From Prince award for active participation a state wholesale liquor dis- merit appraisal of every teach- in the troop and earning five Sen. Robert F. Kennedy with annual salaries of teachers now directors in consideration of in- LEEDS, England (AP) - Phi- gunshots last June, said agree- pensary. , at the top of the three most ad- dividual performance. er on the staff and every teach- merit badges in additfeff'to the ¦"Theres money there er -would be placed on an ap- losophy student Julian Collier ment could come today. Earlier, MOBIL ' ," he vanced training lanes of the Alter the board formally ap- 21 required to become/an Eagle. five alternates were tentatively said. "Lots of money." propriate step of the schedule said today that he is sending David and Donald Jennings and schedule. proved the new counterproposal back a medal Prince Philip seated. A legislative study has come covering the salary schedule commensurate with his exper- Gerald Oakes were advanced to FU EL OIL Addition of the step, Allen ience, training and additional awarded him. The young man is The next step, they said, up with a projection that liquor emphasized, would allow the and other issues for negotiation second class and Randy Elling- would be a recess through the Burnt Cleaner wholesalers in Minnesota last merit evaluation. protesting a recent comment on son and Daniel Roble to first student rebels by Queen Eliza- Wednesday Lincoln's Birthday and Hotter year had net * revenue of $19,4 classs. holiday. Workmen million. AFTER hearing the counter- beth's husband. , in the mean- Students Seize proposal a member of the coun- Three years ago the 23-year- time, woujd install in court a The study says that in ,1966 RECOGNITION of troop offi- prosecution exhibit—a large JOSWICK FUEL wholesalers purchased distilled cil, John Pendleton, asked whe- old ? Leeds University student cers and members of the adult Another School Return Airlift ther the board contemplated won one of the medals the scale model of the first floor of spirits at a cost of $16.16 a gal- troop committee was given by the Ambassador Hotel, where & OIL lon, awarding full $1,000 merit in- prince gives to outstanding Hans Tweeten. committee including state and federal At U. of Rome creases to all teachers at the youths. Collier got his for life- the shooting occurred. 901 East Sanborn St. taxes. chairman, and Scoutmaster Thursday prosecution and de- Phon» 338» The sale price was $18.85 a ROME (AP — Students to- Germany top of the schedule who meas- saving and completing a 50-mile Wright/ Theme of the court of From ure up to a certain standard hike. Then last week Philip said fense would make opening state- Where you get more heat gallon, the report adds, mak- day seized another school at the honor was "Crown Thy Good ments to the eight-man, four- ing a difference University of Rome after au- on the evaluation. y students who had won his award at lower cost. of $2.69 a gal- Allen replied that this^wpuld would not likely be involved in With Brotherhood." A potluck woman jury, and then testimony lon between the purchase and thorities had decided to clear supper preceded the program. would begin. the occupied school buildings depend to a certain extent on student protest movements. sale. On Schedule "The prince said we wouldn't During 1S66, the report con- one way or another. the amount of funds available. City, police end school offi- NUERNBERG, Germany "In other words," comment- be involved because there were tinues, there were 5,894,915 gal- (AP) — The return airlift of more interesting things to do lons sold in Minnesota, making cials met Monday and decided ed ?Lowell Johnson, chairman of that student occupations -would 12,000 American soldiers from the joint council, "the teacher than protest,'' Collier said. "But THREE net revenue at the rate of $2.69 West Germany to the United 't be paid what he I have his award and I involved i^JLAST DAYS! a gallon oi $15.8 million be ended by persuasion if possi- wouldn 's . ble, otherwise by force. States continued on schedule to- worth but what money you have myself in a student protest at ¦ Net revenue from wine day despite a new East German available." . Leeds University." ¦ ¦ brought the total to $17.3 mil- This morning. *with the news- threat to West Berlin, a U.S. ' lion, according to the study. The papers reporting the decision, Allen replied that merit in \ X . . ! about 100 students took over the Army spokesman said. creases would be taken into • * •* study was projected to 1968 to "Everything is going accord- consideration in budget consid- Harvard Plans tnwicai%Cablevision . produce the figure of $19.4 mil- university's chemistry building, ing to plan," said the spokes- V ^ ¦ lion. raising to seven the number of erations for the next fiscal occupied schools. The others are man. year. Steps to Get ' ItyaYahuffl Part of the study also includes law, literature, mathematics, The troops, most of them "We'll have to put a dollar *\ _/ a comparison between Minne- physics, political science and from the 24th Infantry Division figure in it somewhere and More Into Health esota and Wyoming, which is in and Ft. Riley, Kan., are return- economics. ing from maneuvers near the somehow work it into the bud- CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - the liquor business. Authorities said they wanted get. If we think all of the teach- Harvard University disclosed " ¦ Czechoslovak border. Six plane w^^mE^^A^ no violence end pledged to ers are worth it we'll work it plans today for a program to en- Paraguay loads left the Nuernberg airport 's public railroads make every effort to convince Monday, with four more sched- into the budget if we feel the list the interest of promising -mi- cover only about 300 miles. the students to leave peacefully. uled to take off today. taxpayers can afford to pay nority group students in health -^ Unlike the arrival of the main for it." careers. * ^\iV^^tbscrm^r,. body of 5,000 combat troops "AS I SEE this plan," John- Dean Robert H. Ebert of Har- OPTOMETRIC OFFICES over a two-day period Jan. 20- son asserted , "it's weakness is vard Medical School said an in- 117 WEST THIRD STREET 21, the return is being stretched that there's no definite commit- tensive recruitment campaign WINONA, MINNESOTA &5U87 over two weeks, with the last ment. It really isn't a merit has already begun for the TELEPHONE 8-4648 flights Feb. 22. plan because it all depends on Health Careers Summer* Pro- The spokesman said there had the money that will be avail- gram , but the number partici. DR. C. R. KOLLOFSKI / been no changes in the return pating would depend on funds DR. M. L. DeBOLT » n.m. through 5 p.m. able." schedules because of East Ger- After discussing briefly the available. DR. R. C. McMAHON Saturday 9 to 12.30 many's announcement Sunday The program will include reg- of new board stand on other bargain- OPTOMETRISTS restrictions on surface ing issues the council agreed ular courses with small group travel to and from West Berlin tutorials, exposure to activities by members of the West that it would advise the board Ger- when it has prepared another of hospitals, some work in clini- "TV SIGNAL" man Federal Assembly. The re- cal teams and study of speciali- NOW Install strictions are in retaliation for counterproposal or wishes to the assembly discuss current proposals ond a zation in health work. meeting in West Dean Ebert said Berlin March 5 to elect a new meeting will be called. a grant to at Absolutely NO INSTALLATION West German president. The Both board and council have start the program was made by PROTAFOAM 1,036 assembly members will go expressed a hope that all Is- the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation by air since the East Germans sues may be resolved as near of New York, and further finan- CHARGE! SAVE $25.00! , have no control over the March 1 ns possible. cial support was being sought. OFFER EXPIRES air cor- ; ^ ^_ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14 CARPET CLEANING ridors to West Berlin. ^ ^< ^f ) ovv cfln com In this modern nge of convenience — and to protect f Report Mold/ Hay ¦vPFfift HFfsp ^ ^ou 'iave ''ie P'ef *B American Cableviston / ij *TX la v3 5ys*ein '"stalled absolutely free..,you save the entire / I your carpet investment — don't stick to the old- M Caused Horses' Deaths ins,n ation tl'orge! It's American Cablevislon's valentine GLENDALE I Iri >L *C " j \ fashioned high-detergent methods of carpet cleaning. \ , Calif. (AP) - NERVE D J LiLJ jgatiai gift to all new subscribers! But hurry...call now...this 1 \ EAFNESS ——m **—m *mofter ends SOOll t \ Carpet manufacturers say Protafoam is "A major / Moldy hay caused the deaths of J 57 horses at a stable I advance after sonie 60 years in carpet shampooing j , county of- recommend for our carpets." # ficials say. * [ ... tho only method wc The Los Angeles ' cleaning so effectively removes nil 1 County vet- " I Protafoam carpet erinarian's office said Monday COMPLETE HOME ENTERTAINMENlT^^ [ ' thc dirt and gets carpets so deep-down clean they're I that improper drainage allowed FOR JUST PENNIES A DAY! ONLY AMERICAN I f brighter than new I Detergents leave a Residue which J rainwater to soak grazing hay, CAHLEVISION «lvea you n choice of every Television Show PLUS all tho R i attracts dirt nnd soil like a magnet — requiring more % turning it into a breeding area exclusive extras—compktfl homo entertainment for every member of (lie K [ frequent shampooing and are used In conjunction with I for botulism. The horses were f lamily for Just pennies a H Cablevision Company be tjlvtn away tr.. to anyone ! ! "Your Rest Entertainment Buy" g DURFEY answering thl* adverllument. " ', "-E^iaW ^ g^. Wearteit II lr> the prlvncy ct your • -i J ^ ! PROTASIL of WINONA Photography Studio own home wllhmit fott or otiHne- I C,T " ITATE . >'C3 ^^^ s "TV SIGNAL " "~^P ^ ~~^ | | Phono 8-4494 1 (Ion ot any kind * j.| |4 » ^ 120 East 3rd ^*~~""' Phon* S9S2 *** ' ^> St. "IT'» YOUHJ FRLE TO KEf *** ' „.„.„! - — ^-^ !i^**t *^*~*tmmm *mtm *mmmmmmmmm ^mm **0mmmmmmmmmmmm *mmmmmmm0mamamB |ry>-vFi->^ <_i i_rn-ir>^-X j-%j rX-j->_*Oj -j ^ 5iie£o/an^ This By BOB JUNGHANS land, has recently been of- 30,000 miles this year, enter- Of the 15,000 competitors of some classes), exercise in both the three-horse and Upper Midwest before. World ing shows -all the "Youth" classes only and curry tbe horses, catch one-horse categories. The is the *, first time I'd ever Daily News Sporti Writer ficially accla.imed way from in the , different Champion by the American North Carolina to Mississip- about 200 or 300 are ac- a bite to eat, compete and latter, the most coveted of gone to all the generation has its pi tually serious competitors then get back on the road, all world titles, was won states (16 in all). At the Every Quarter Horse Association to Kansas to South Da- " eight young, attractive ' female (AQHA), a title for whi ch kota. Although no competi- for the world titles. This headed for tbe next show. with "Yeller Hi Life." big -shows seven or Currently there 000 competitors tor can bit most of the 1,500 is the group that makes the Miss Bo- of the top 10 riders in the athletic idol. some 15, For her efforts, Sue won You might call if is 16-y*ai--©ld Debrjle Meyer from throughout the nation shows each year, Sue man- circuit to the big shows Youth wolf. Although world would be there, so the World Champion land a lone bad really of swimming fame and 19- vie. y. aged to appear at the 60 or where championship points Mare class riding "Champs tie entire Boland family, - _you won, you something." year-ofd Peggy Fleming, the Chances are that unless 70 big ones. are acquired. For this group Tica", the World Champion which includes three broth- done Olympic figure skating you are an equestrian fan Her effort resulted in 84 months at a time are spent Youth Gelding class on '¦'Yel- ers and two sisters, are She ranks her win on champ-Ion. you weren't aware that the first places and numerous traveling from place-to- Ier Hi Life" and the World athletically inclined, she is "Yeller Hi Life" as cham- Now you can add to that AQHA awarded world titles seconds, third and fourth. place/ Champion Youth Showman- the only one who rides com- pionship gelding at the All- list a pretty, perky 19-ycar- — or that it even existed "I remember the one sixth The traveling is stopped ship class on "Poco Mon petitively. She how has a American Congress in Col- old from Winona whose fu- for that matter. But lack of place finish best," she only ^long enough to send Cherrie. She was also third stable of 15 quarter horses umbus, Ohio, as her biggest ture plans are centered on publicity doesn't make Miss laughs. "I guess if it weren't show outfits to the cleaners in Western Pleasure. The from which to choose. victory of the year. a career in the world of Boland's feat any less i re- for one of those occasionally, (for the garb of the rider combination, of these laurels "It was very excittsag — "It was sort of sentimen- fashion. pressive. 1 wouldn't have worked as reaches elaborate and ex- made the 1967 Winona High and exhausting," she said, SUE BOLAND daughter of " pensive proportions and School graduate World reviewing the past year. (Continued on Page 5B) Sue Boland, She and her three sh ow bard to get the firsts. Equestrian Par Excellence Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bo- horses have traveled over And it is hard work . plays a role in the judging Champion Ail-Around Youth ' 'I'd always competed 3n the BOLAND Maravich Nets 66 Gusties Stun For New SEC Mark St. Thomas in By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Associated Press Top Ten to see 92, Oklahoma 69, Kansas 45-41 Pistol Pete Maravich shot up action Monday—moved to easy over Oklahoma State, Creighton Tulane but when the smoke had victories. 94, Oklahoma City 80, The Cita- cleared, it was Louisiana State North Carolina bombed North del 79-77 over Virginia Military, that came out full of bullet Carolina State 85-62 and Ken- Seattle over Portland U. 107-63 Torrid MIAC By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS straight points late in the game boles. tucky rolled past Mississippi and Southern Miss over Spring to erase a 67-63 deficit. Mike Maravich set a Southeastern State 91-69. In other games, Hill 110-79. Defending champion Gustavus long out of the title fierg paced the Dragons with 19 Conference scoring record Mon- Georgia Tech . walloped Air Tulane's balanced attack led Adolphus — points. day night, pumping, in 66 points Force 788-67, Duke downed Mary- by Johnny Arthurs, Terry Habig race — has upset league-leading Only action tonight has South- but Tulane overcame the one- land 93-83, Georgia took Ala- and Bob Spurck overcame Mar- St. Thomas and thrown the Min- west at Lea and Mankato at St. man show for a 110-94 victory bama 87-78, Florida edged Van avich's scoring spree and en- nesota Intercollegiate Athletic Cloud State in a Northern Inter- over LSU. derbilt 75-73 and Tennessee beat abled the Green Wave to beat Conference basketball race into collegiate Conference game. Elsewhere, second - ranked Mississippi 61-45. LSU. North Carolina and fourth-rated • ¦ AIsof \it was South Carolina a three-way tie. Arthurs had 29 points, Habig a zone Kentucky—only teams in The 106-79 over Clemson, Colorado shot Gustavus shifted to 26 and Spruck 17 as Tulane defense late in the first half 56 per cent from the floor. and went on to dump St. Thom- Maravich, playing on a bad as 77-65 Monday night. St. knee and a sore ankle, sank 25 John's clipped Concordia 86-82 fiel d goals and 16 of 20 free and moved into a first place tie throws, shattering the SEC sin- with St. Thomas and idle St. gle game record of 60 scored by Mary's, all with 8-3 records, Bob Pettit of LSU against Loui- Macalester has a 7-3 mark. siana College during the 1953-54 In nohconferer.*.' action, Min- season. nesota-Morris routed Augsburg The 66 points were seven 99-68 and Moorhead downed more than Maravich had ever Mayvllle , N.D., State 77-69. scored before. The floppy-haired Gustavus, now 4-7 in the junior is the national scoring MIAC, abandoned its man- leader with a 43 point-per-game to-man defense when 6-10 Carl average. Johnson got into foul trouble. North Carolina scored 10 St. Thomas led most of the first straight points early in the half but Gustavus forged a 31-28 game to sprint in front of W.C. halftime lead and gradually State and opened a 39-21 lead by pulled away. halftime. Gary Gustafson had 21 points Pipers Could Charlie Scott and Bill Bunting and Johnson 20 for the Gusties, led the Tar Heels to their 18th while Steve Fritz canned 26 for victory in 19 starts. Scott had 22 the Tommies. Fall lo 4th points and Bunting 21. Joe Ser- St. John's took its first lead SUE BOLAND ASTRIDE SELLER HI LIFE at 42-41 early in the second half dich hit 26 for N.C. State. Title. Dan Issel's 26 points led four Accepting Another Trophy En Route to a World and never trailed again. Jim Kentucky double-figure scorers Holmes had 22 \ *ints and Paul Bernabel 20 for St. John's. Bob Place in ABA and the Wildcats rode a fast ST start to their easy victory over Peterson and Don See netted 23 . PAUL Ml -r- The Minne- each for the CobberSj now 6-5 in sota Pipers are in danger of Mississippi State. Issel had 26 the league. points, Mike Casey 18 falling out of first place in the , and ?Lar- Paced by Doug Maclver's 29 ry Steele and Phil Argento add- Whitehall Gilmanton Eastern Division of the Ameri- points, Morris controlled the ed 13 apiece. boards and shot 45 per cent to can Basketball Association for Manuel Washington led Mis- whip Augsburg. Dennis fiengs- the first time this season. sissippi State with 30 points. ton had 21 for Augsburg. The defending ABA champs Randy Denton, a 6-foot-lO, Gain in Area Ratings Moorhead hiked its season opened the season with four 240-pound sophomore, scored 30 record to 15-4 by rallying for 10 straight wins and at one stage points and pulled down re- By WINONA DAILY NEWS SPOUTS STAFF from three to llVa points. Rushford, which io polished off a pair of rugged foes, Caledonia of the season had a comfortable II«^« bounds leading Duke to its sixth MM»«»% ^***.S*^* » I^'*-*'N'V'»****'WW»I«I « I ¦ !¦¦ •» .'. I .^WM Whitehall, last year's area champion, within six points ^ hold on first place. But the straight victory over Maryland. and Peterson, moved to proved last week that it was the best team of the lead. ,. Pipers have been ir a tailspin Will Hetzel hit 23 and Mickey in the Dairyland Conference by knocking City Sports since an injury sidelined Connie Wiles 21 for the losers. " off Osseo-Fairchild for the second straight There were vno newcomers this w«ek al- Hawkins, the league's No. 2 Rich Yunkus scored Georgia time. though Chatfield, ninth a week ago, was up- scorer and Most Valuable Play- Tech's first six points and fin- set by Preston at mid-week . The Gophers Calendar er last season. ished with 23 as the Engineers The victory pushed the Norsemen up to dropped to 10th, swapping places with Hia- The Pipers meet the l!:ird- poll their ( walloped the Air Force. Yunkus the No. 4 spot in this week's area , watha Valley League leading Kenyon. WEDNESDAY place Kentucky Colonels tonight sat out the last 12 minutes of the highest spot of the season. Meanwhile Osseo- BASKETBALL- at the Metropolitan Sports Cen- game. Fairchild, which had been fourth last week, Following is the Top Ten with points SI. Mary's it Augiburg, MO p.m. ter. Minnesota has a 27-24 rec- Valley. HOCKEY- Ted Tomasovich had 20 for iell into a tie for sixth with Spring awarded on the basis of 10 for firs t, nine Augibtirg it St. Mary'a, 1 P.m. ord and a three percentage point Tech and Cliff Parsons led the The Chieftains' only two losses in 15 starts for second, eight for third, etc . First place lead over runnerup Indiana, 30- FltTDA Y Air Force with 19. have been to Whitehall. votes are In parenthesis. 27. Kentucky and Miami, 26-24, Wally Anderzunas BASKETBALL- are tied for third only a half- poured in strides in ""arlbautl it Winona High, 1 p.m. Gilmanton made the biggest TEN St. Paul Hill it Colter, 1 p.m. game back . 29 points—23 in the second half -who knocked TOP —hel this week's ranks. The Panthers, Winona State at UM-Morrli, 7i)0 p.m. If the Pipers ping Creighton past Okla- least a share of the 1. Durand (3) 13-1 ...... S8V4 WRESTLING- lose and Miami off Alma to notch at SI Cloud it Wlnom SHU. Till) p.m. . homa City. Bob Portman had jumped three 2. Onalaska (1) 14-1 37 . and Indiana both win tonight, 21. West Central Conference title, Wlnom High In District Thru Tour- Minnesota would drop all the spots from eighth to fifth. 3. Rushford 14-1 -.32V4 nament, Charles Wallace led Oklaho- ' SWIMMINO- way to fourth ilace. BUT YOU CANT HAVE IT . . . 4. Whitehall 13-2 ..-.27 Mlchlgtn Tach il Winona Slat*, 3:10 Meanwhile, Piper President University of North ma City with 24 while Kich Meanwhile , however , the top three held p.m. Carolina's Rusty Clark hugs the ball as North Carolina Travis, who had been averaging 5. Gilmanton 12-2 - .21 Bill Erickson said he would not tightly to their spots. lodge a formal protest over the State's Jim Risinger reaches under and around in an attempt 26.5 points per game, was limit- 6. tie Spring Valley 12-3 20 SATURDAY BASKETDALI alleged misinterpretation of the to the ball in Monday night's game in Raleigh , N.C. ed to 14 by the tenacious guard- Durand continues as the No. 1 cage pow- Osseo-Fairchild 13-2 .. ' 20 convincing Winona High at While Baar Lnkt, bonus rule in Sun- (AP Photofax ) ing of Jack Ketterer and Dave er in the area witli two more 8. Gale-Ettrick 12-2 11 I p.m. But the Panthers lost a bit Cotter at Faribault Ball-tefiem,- I day's 119-118 loss to Indiana. Hickey. wins this week. P.m. both No. 2 Onalaska and third 9. Kenyon 12-3 5 "I can't win and all a protest of ground to WRESTLING— will do is place Rushford. 10. Chatfield 10-4 4 * Bemldll »1 Winona Stale, 7:30 p.m. draw the ire of my Winona High In District Threi Tour- good friend, the ABA commis- SS^fWWSW'^O- OTHER TEAMS RECEIVING VOTES : nament. sioner Onalaska easily handled tough Arcadia on HOCKEY- , George Mikan ," said Heavy Snow the letter's court and chopped Durand's lead Randolph, Cannon Falls. Lako Foroit at St, Mary'i,' 2 p.m. Erickson. "So why protest?" SPECIAL! Forces Cage Loyola Cotter s I-^C WED.-THURS.-FRI. ONIY! f Postponement $ LOS ANGELES

FRIDAY, FEB. 7 Ronald OllenWIU .. lit 111 Itf-tfl Ralph Harfllka 17f Light Round DOUBLBS 14* 1U-4M 124—104B Dave Ruppert *U« lit tro—41) Lin Lettner 1)3 1(4 136-437 Al Rt/pport ;J1J JM 1T3-3II Charles Klllholti .. 14) 115 16-1UI !7*-4eO 31) 11 1—ltl 13*-10JJ Gaorge Rogge ..... 137 Bill Strenj ...... 1U 172 l*4-47» Len Bernall , 111 31) IM—3(2 £d Yahnke 172 » 131-410 1)*-iM7 Ill 111 Hl-410 10*— MS Chuck Oermars .. Glen Dealt* 137 134 148-411 Of Action in Jim Soderberg ... 171 IH 1*4—531 Bruce MaloIKe .... 121 111 120-341 Ht-JJ« 188- f« Kan Brandt ...... IM 1)1 in-4H UNCLES Lloyd Willing ..... 17) IIS 161-Sit lll-U M Robert fillings ...... 172 132 177 1(0-4(1 Lant Hamernick ...)1J7 14) 331 tt-ni Kan Wooster 1S7 171 HS-472 Floyd Krletel 207 137 22S 44-433 Bob kollant ...... in 17* 1O1-S70 Paul Mallslewikl ... IM 141 14» 30-432 104-11U Marvin Rupprecht ... 1*1 171 178 84-429 A Leroy Greenwood . 157 W 124—450 Blmer Schmldtknech! 178 182 181 73-420 reaTonight Rich Mod'tskl .... 144 17* 157-4*7 Richard Heitman ... 180 13( 180 1*-412 PEPIN,' Wis. H4-1141 Roger Blllgen 117 207 197 18-40) - High-scoring quarter tead and held a 44^37 Oary Ruppirt ..... io) 17( I3f-91I * Curt Brownell poured in anoth- advanta ge at halftime Jim Ruppert 174 17t 1<5—Hf Wallace Far-ran* .... 174 1*7 21* 52—401 ' before W-1117 Hal Biltgen 140 225 205 1t-*08 er, 34 points Monday night to moving way in front 65-39 after Freddy Nlhart .... 171 111 141-492 Larry Justin 171 1(2 155 110—405 lead Pepin into a tie for second three periods. Daniel Wicka ...... 157 175 144 104—413 Duane NtIMn ...... 1** 184 221 30—603 place in the Dunn - St. Croix 114-10tt John Bell ... 180 204 113 24—401 Pepin, with four players fin- Clarence Wolfe .... 117 ill 134-42* Ed Drwall 202 129 19* 44-393 Conference with an 84-62 vic- Rudy Blllngs ...„,.. 200 140 185 **—593 ishing in double figures, shot Norbert Wolle 11) 1(4 144-411 ' tory over BoyceviLle. 40 percent from tbe field Mark 170-1M7 Daryl Erion .. 171 1*4 14) U-ita . Rollie Larson lit 124 Ul—445 VIC Schewe ...... 175 111 181 41—5*5 Siefeit _had 15 Rich Chuchna 1*1 111 117 20—384 DUNN . ST. CROIX , Chuck McDon- Torn Kline ...... ill 117 141—451 ough 12 and Tim Murray 11 112-1015 Bill Strang ...... T*t ill 201 (8—514 W L W L Syl Lilla . .... 141-Hi 121-410 Ronald Oalawskl .... 113 178 152 M—571 St. Croix Cen. 13 fl Plum city 4 » as the Lakers won their fifth Jim Hlldebrandt ... us ltl 1(0-543 Bill GIOWCMWtkl .. 181 171 11) U-57* Pretcott 10 J Bo/cevlllo 3 11 straight game. 112-1015 Bruc* Miloika 11) 14* 1*5 102-572 papln 10 3 Bile Mound i II Al Schultz led the losers with Robert Hemmalman 1(1 Uf 134—431 John Tiber 170 150 123 98-371 Colfax » -J Somerset 0 1) John Tbllmany ... 172 114 TS*-4»2 Ray Schreiber ...... 10* 1*0 22* 9s-s7o Slmweetf 7 7 14 points. Ko-iei) Jon Kosidowskl .... 180 1*7 17) It-iit In Wisconsin area basketball Ray Mayers 141 1)1 122—401 Tom AbtS . 147 170 171 58—554 Against Boyceville, the Lak^ tonight, Durand can clinch its Htm Hanson 151 III «*—313 Ed Yahnke 17M9S 13» 44-552 ers jumped to a 25-12 first K2-1M1 Lao SchOllilieler ... 141 151 111 78-511 first Middle Border basketball Ken Hansen ...... 1)2 174 171—i0( Charles Kellholll ... 1(3 111 18»-**-54» crown with- a win over Gl«n- Warren Wunderllch 140 144 147—43) Bruce Resale ...... 171 123 198 44-34* 143—1081 Joseph HonlflM ..... 137 174 1I» 8*-544 wood City. The Panthers, No. Herb Let 1«?14» 12»—447 Eugana Kelper ..... 125 149 19* 74-544 1 ranked team in the area, are Jim Enalerw iu ill IH-5» Bob Stachowitz ...... 13* 170 171 42-542 10-0 in conference play while 11*0—1075 Hank Ltltmr 147 114 146 -72-531 Wayne Lltscher ... 1M 117 111—M4 Leonard Lettner ... 15* 188 1*5 58-539 Gregg Added Glenwood City is 2-9. Fred King ...... 182 147 148 38-315 Henry Ernst 171 US 110—531 The stop nonconference game 182—1074 70*1/1 Hltyrtloli .... Ut 133 173 40-533 Bob Sexton 14* 111 115-431 Tom DrtlKoWlkl ... 11* 203 151 20-5)5 has La Crosse Holy Cross at Bob Dunn Ill U» 155—494 Dick Strolnskl ..... 148 137 1(7 42—534 Alma. The tall Comets are 11-4 130—1035 Carl Zaborowskl ... 1*7 lit 143 44-313 To Packer while Alma stands 10-5. Other Bob Thurley ...... 11* 1)7 111-474 Le* Besek 173 181 156 14-331 Paul Mrachek ..... D1 117 14S-42) Sal Kosidowskl ..... 12* 194 1(8 42—330 nonloop games have Eau Claire 116—1013 Herman ScJiulh 171 122 1*8 68-53* ¦ Clto AUt 14* 141 143 10-52J Regis at Mondovi -(9-5) and wan mmIITM »iwai.aaaawww.v,/wnm- iwv,*,vw¦¦.*¦¦ mi i ¦ ii*aai»aiin» '(iaaiiHii.^^VY>TYVJ>^>V,M>^»^^-**-^-r»^^-rr^^»-f'*>V^*J.JIJ imn»W.YiVtVtY.W *"W.|I.I,,fl-l ¦•-•»' ,-™ .... ,. — .. —- three- SOUTH "Maybe Ln a coupl-e of Warren Bonow ..... II) 181 1*1-495 Jim Kramer 221 111 175—580 yoar j.C. record of li victories and So. C aro. St. 1, Smith 0, forfeit. for another HUSKY WINNER '. . . Kanangnark's Kiev wears his leanue Keglers Bill Bonow 114 24) 1*1-596 Charlie Kramer ...143 lis 172—472 28 defeats. Kentucky fl, Mill. Slate «. <% . years I'll try 45—1139 96-1141 Duke tl, Maryland 1]. world titles" she said. "But blue ribbon after being named best of breed Monday night Dick Gehlhaart's 220-617\as Marvin Rupprecht . 119 1*5 171-455 Ray Pozanc 1*1 115 198-544 Austin becomes Washington 17, Alabam a 71. 's Oeorsla right now my plans are to at the Westminster Kennel Club show in New York's Madi- Monday's best league bowling Gerhard! Erdman . til III 111-321 Dewey Grossell ...111 )12 158—553 offensive line coach , a position Tennessee (1, Mississippi 45. 154—1130 48—1145 Georgetown, D.C, 77, Xavler, Olilo il school in Den- he he3d in Green Bay under enter fashion son Square Garden. The Siberian Husky is owned by Mrs. set. It came for First National John Bell 20) 310 182—59] Mickey Spencer ... 138 172 17*—so* East. Ky. 15, West. Ky. 77, ol. ver next fall. " Bank in the Westgate Tom Draikowskl .. 170 136 1*1—489 Brvln Schewe 137 301 233—381 Lombardi from 1959-64. He play- Chatranooga (5, Oa. Stale 71. Emil Knorr of Sheboygan, Wis. He will be in contention Commu- 44-1131 52—1142 ed offensive guard under Lom- So. Carolina 101, Clemson 71. That's where she was for the coveted Best of Show award tonight at the climax nity League. Tempo and Blu- Sal Kosidowskl .... 1(0 184 170—514 Joe Mlynczak ..... 17* 170 IS*—so) Citadel 7», VMI 77. fall — unti l she mentritt' Jim Wlcciortk .... 178 157 1(0—495 Bob Ives W 111 1(0—307 bardi with the New York Gi- Go, Tech aa, Air Force «7. headed last of the 93rd annual show. CAP Photofax) s Store shared team way 111—1137 132—1141 ants prior to that . Moorhead 106, Mid. Tenn. 14, got side-tracked on her highs with 970 and 2,770, re- Eugene Kalpir .... 110 317 1*8-5(5 Fred Douglas 171 1(8 1S4-49S No. Caro. col. 77/ Morgan St. 70. to becoming a world cham- spectively. Willard Matike ... 170 1)7 110—417 Bob Sula 144 178 18*—Sll Fiorina 71, Vanderbilt 73, 144-1 13* 134—1140 Geo. Wash. 70, E. Caro, it. pion. In the Westgate Ladies Carl Zaborowskl ... 117 1(5 115-477 Charles Abta 184 1)3 170—482 Tulane 110, La. Jta1« *>* . League, Arlene Sobeck slnm- Larry Modieskl .... Ill 141 17«—411 Frank Krioska .., 1(7 17* 138—501 No, Caro. 15, N, C State «, med 224-572 1(1-1120 152—1135 Arcadia Posts Pla. St. tS, Stetson V. to lead Safranck's Daryl Erion 202 141 161-32) Fran Hengel 114 192 191-547 Fairmont tl. Wist Liberty 71. usen /th Creeley, Gabrych to 910-2,608. Leona Lubinski fin- John Tibor 1)7 1)4 111*—)M Paul Gardner 173 1(1 1*0—49* W. Wa. Bt. )04, Wheeling el. Stockha 116-1 111 70-1)31 MIDWEST ished with 500. Bud Schaeler 111 141 147—430 Crelnhton ?4, Okla. city to. In CCC Scorimq ATHLETIC CLUB — John Ray Schreiber Ill 114 111-4)3 FRIDAY, FEB. 7 lllh Mat Win Kansas 41, Okla, State 41. Cierzan laced 233-584 for 20I-P091 Bullf-r 74, Wabash Sf, ST, PAUL, Minn, - Cotter's Bob Wlecrorek .... 141 115 II7-50J BAUER ELBCTRK-VFW- ARCADIA, Wis. - Arcadia 's So . nil. tK Cent. Mo. St. 41, Bunko's Apco in the Monday Bob Slachowltl ... 147 11* 192-417 Rosco Blltner .,~0i141 Ul 100—374 8 SOUTHWEST Steve Stoclthausen ranks seven- Lead IS-to to Gery Clemlmkl ; 144 151 110-445 wrestling team won Its 11th Take Over League. First National Bank Pan Amif. 13, Midwestern, Texas 10 th in Cen'raF Catholic Confer- Lee Besek 12* 174 1(5-361 Dick Rydman .., 1)> 135 144—414 the sea- had 980 and Quality 144 1)1 1(3—441 straight dual meet of SW Tex. it. n, E. Tax. It. II. ence scoring with one gome Sheet Metal Vic Schewe 111 114 120-46) Ken Melncke ... son Monday with a 38-11 tri- How. Payne fl, Stephen P. Austin 10. 2,n08. 61-1090 Fred Bauer .. ...141 145 172—47* W. rax. St. IM, Denver to. remaining to be played. Stock- Honk Letlner . . 11) 171 1*8—411 748 71* 711-544-2711 umph over Alma Center. Mary Covering' FAR WEST hauscn a 6-4 senior forward , s B84 and Or- Dave Schmtdtknccht 158 14* 1)1—41) HAPPr CHBP-Communlly— The Ruiders close their regu- No. Aril. 13, to, Colo. St. Col. 71. , 171-1017 hat? a 12.B average. In City Doubles villa Cisewski's 451 helped Oleic Lorbeckl ... IM 114 144— 392 lar season Wednesday when Colorado tl, Oklahoma If. E.B.'s Corner to 805-2,506 in the Herman Schuth ... 15S 1)8 1*1—416 Archl* Halvorson 1)1 US 129-393 Seetrle 107, Portland U. 43. The Ramblers' 6-6 Mlka Con- Ted Bambenek ... IH 1(7 147-507 Ken Wurch 114 17* 144—44* they Biost Molroso-Mindoro for Monr. St li , Utah Stata 74, The , team of Jack Creeley 617. . way is 12th in scoring with a Go Getters League. 101-1014 Wally Marquardl 16* 133 185—489 the Coulee Conference title. Wtbnr St. 1), Ooairaga 10, OT. and Ray Gabrych took over the Fallowing are the top ten John Mayerholl ... isa 148 144—4)1 Ben Meyer 12a 172 159—45* Idaho to, Idaho State 51. 10.7 average while Tom Riska HAL-ROD — Becky Schossow Roger Biltgen ... Ill 174—311 95-Ken Bull (A) p. Terry Johnson doubles lead in the Winona standings in singles, doubles 20* (I* 71) 781—446-145* (AC) IcOlr 10>-paul Janke (AC) dec. Cent, Wash, 74, P ortland SI, 74, is 18th with a 9.6 mark . socked 343-278 for the Knock 58-1078 Paul Mallsiiwskl . 157 lil 182—308 QUALITY CHBVROLHT- Bob Kampa (A) 11; 111-Rlch RuM (A) Bowling Association tourna- and all events : WO-Men s— St. Thomas Academy's Den- Outs In tho Park-Hec Junior Rich Chuchna 158 16* 179—50) ' p. Jell Edward! (AC) 4tlli 120—Tom Pro Basketball ment at Hal-Rod Lanes Mon- Daryl Erion Ill 118 17*—40* Schnnk (A) won on forfeit; 127—Mike nis Fitzpatrick, a 6-4 senior DOUBLES Girls League. The Spares ha1 Rich Moham 131 140 1»1—4t7 Rich Bernati .... lit 1)7 131—444 Lien (A»C) doc. Larry Wolchlk * 4, Lorry WlecioreK-Oene Bork .,. 1,140 but Polachek Electric swept 1)1 1(3—Craalq Halvorson (A) won on forfeit; Philadelphia vs. C' nclnnall al Cleveland. Creeley a 198—574 errorless. Fred King 177 110 146-305 Jos Ciertan 144 KS—447 Baltimore at Chicago. 7, Keith Waltcn-Uloyd Waller* ... U» team highs with 927-2,591. 10-1053 Dan Olubka 14) 188 131—461 175-Mirch Arnold (A» p. Owynn Halvar- Harrelson Leads Tho team had 118 pins handi- 111 Bet- (ACI San Francisco at Atlanta, I, Dave Rupperl-AI Ruppert 1, Larry Justin Ill 147 147—40 7 Fred King JOO 174 144—522 son (AC) 0i3»; Hw " .—John Con-stock t. George Rogge-Len Dem.lt .... l.UT ty Englcrth's 201) for Main Tav- dec. Roland Slaby (A) 41. Only- gamM scheduled. cap. Cleo Abta 143 143 150-4)1 Jim CIsowsM ... 1(4 125 143—452 Wednesday's Oames Baseball Golf Meet 10, bill Schwerlel-Romla Kulak .... 1,147 ern wns tlie top single game. 300—1043 1)1 770 72*—304—1435 Creeley also accounted for 11, t-tan Novlan tvle Nelson 1,1» San Dlago at Cincinnati. the only change in the singles Other honor counts wore Doris B0i' other d oubles Jan Wicczorck's 201-534 for f Otj* • tralians Rod Luiver and Ken ABA ers Golf Championship. ) 7, Lani Hamernik Hi * V; Tlrctt o* burnlna you r flnflerj wfien removlno burned- «' Fenske Body Shop ' Irom sockets? Uin the pnpor Cftrton trom first prize Mondv-' **, Result Hnrrelson shot a 77 Monday change, also. Tho duo of Karrol I, Dill Schwertel 0> < was the top : ii£* « out bulbs Rosewall battled foY ». Cllll Hoil M0 ¦ ncw bulb ,0 ovcr ,hB 0|™' M'aml 1J4. Loi An-"ele- 112. individual effort in tho Alley *" _l_Wk "" ,"p '"" money in a $3,000 professional for a 232 total ai.d a single Janstna and Mel Christopher- 10, Craig Derocvln »!» Cnll Only game "¦•*«(t**ij«t. _§__, Attention auto dealers! Sentry now lio-i a policy sponsored by Today over George son slipped into fourth with a Gator's league, Sprinfl-lalc ' ^__ &j ^^ * crime tennis tournament ' s Oames stroke acfvaratatfo TOP ALL EVKNTS ___\___\_\_\\lf__k _Sm\ designed especially lor your protection . It Includes Dallas vs. New Orleans at Monroe, La. properly, liability covernge. (or the Orlando Recreation Depart- Culver of the Cincinnati Reds, 1,231 total. Jaastnd hit 216— 1. Robert Ellings t ,M1 Dairy hit 915-2,555 for team hon- \\\\\\\\\\\\Ur^W^^ tnd me Ilou-iton at Oaklaod. 582 and Christopherson 235— X, BUI Schwartal » ,MI ors. , ment. K'noiicKY at Mlmtraata. who shot a 73. »., Crslg Dirgavln 1-Ul Laver defeated Panclio Gon- Mlana at Now Tort* . In third place at 235 were Jim C00. The team had DO pins hand- 4-. Butch Kosidowskl MM Janice Drnzkowskl's 512, cs 0-7, (1-2 and M|»«nl at D-nuer. Hardin of the Baltimore Orioles , »• . Ron Gulevokl 1,l!» Barb Malcwickl' s 511 , Lurry zales of Los Angc' , Onlw g*"-*" 'f *ni,r l , icap. «., Lloyd Wallers t ,«l DUANE SENTRY-TjlNSUll/VNCK '"* Donahue's 500 and Mnrlcjie Rosewall downed countryman Wfn-sd— !• 0«m«i nnd Sammy Ellis of the Chicago Other honor counts of thc r , Ron Draikwvskl H' O RINGLER Tha Hardware Mutuala Organltalion fi-2 Monday Ho-l'-nn at Lt>< Aaigcles. White Sox w*ho Gerald Turner's 620 B. Jack Creepy IMt Flanagan's 504 wore other hon- Roy Emerson IV4, Mliwosola at Dallas, , won the tourna- night were r. AI Ruppert i ,»*' Phon*»i TM V «-> ¦»« . "Pt> to advance to the finals. Onlar aamea scheduled. ment in 1967.. and Willard Critchfield's 230- V>. Jim Yahnk e 1,114 or counts. \ Fitch Confident DEAR ABBY: WINONA MARKETS Want Ads Market Makes Swift & Company Mineral Point -rhese quote'lons opply to hog* tftllvtr- Redmen Sextet ed tb tht Winona Station by noon today. Start Here Of Split This HOGS NOTICE Heads Mat Ranks ' will be rasponsltii* It s Never Too Hog market: Steady. This newspaper MADISON, Wis. W) - Mineral Modest Rise; Meat typ«, 2O0-230 lbs, .. 1t.75-2i.1S for only one Incorrect Insertion of Butchers, 200-33O lbs. 19.75 any classified advertisement publish- Scots; School, with a 11-0 Want Ad section. Check Bombs Point High Sows, 270-300 lbs. 17.00 ed In lhs Week for UM your ad and call 3321 If • torrectlon record, heads the final Sweet 16 CATTLI Wisconsin prep wrestling rat- MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Min- Late to Learn must bo made, Trade Active Cattlt marks! : Steady. ings for the 1969 season nesota Gopher basketball coach FOR - Ties For First . By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN High Choice and prima /...... 27.15 BLIND ADS UNCALLED Final standings were reported Bill Fitch said Monday he was NEW YORK BURKE - . 7 • the lead tonight at Braemar Wiihtnglon, 12-0; 14—South Milwaukee, Ahhv in T. A rf*niinlv a woman with Our sincere thanks to everyone who has "We overcame the fears of shortened trading sessions in ef- to us In Arena in Edina by beating St. I'M - "IS—HOrtonvllte, 10-1 j 14— Auburn- been so kind and thoughtful dale and Valders, IM. tied. not winning _ game, not winning one cMd (legitimate or otherwise) re- fect since Jan. 2. The New York Bay State Milling Company the loss of our beloved husband and Thomas. on the road and not taking a ceives aid in the amount of $148 a month. and American exchanges were Elevator A Grain Pricts father. God love each and every one. One hundred bushels ot grain will be Mrs. Nell Burke, . Against the Scots, St. Mary's Patricia Big Ten game," he explained. A second child increases her check LESS closed Monday because of the (tie minimum loads accepted al thi ele- Kathleen «• scored six goals in the opening than one dollar a day! Do you really be- snowstorm. vators. ' The Gop?hers plan first to ' 1 period to eliminate the visitors Esposito wears avenge a 68-61 loss at Wisconsin lieve a woman wo^uld have "one iUegitk. No. 1 northern spring whsot ... 1J3 Personals . No. 2 northern spring wheal .... 1.51 chances in a hurry. Larry The Dow Jones average at - Wed. last month. mate baby after another for the Solev. No. 3 northern spring wheat .... 1.47. - BEST TASTE in town . Compare! Shomion finished "with three noon was up 0.31 at 948.16. No. 4 northern spring wheat .... 1.43 Special: Spaghetti and ground beef, purpose of picking up the welfare check?" roll, butter, b«veragt. "While observers have been No. i hard winter wheat ...... 1.43 vegetable salad, goals and Tom Sundby, Jim The Associated Press 60-stock Mlracl* Mali. Century Mark praising Al Nuness, the team's The fact is that nnany welfare recipients No. 2 hard winter wheat ...... 1.41 90c. SIDEWALK CAFE, . Pohl and Terry Skrypek each average at noon had gained A No. 3 hard winter wheat ...... 1.37 6-£oot-3, 158-pound captain, Fitch are so ashamed of their second pregnancies, MEMO TO l-JB-575: We found your li- had two as the Redmen rained at 360.5 with industrials up 1.6, No. 4 hard winter wheat 1.33 they wait until the last moment to inform ' ' cense plate. You can pick it up anytime warned of another Gopher No. 1 rye . . 1.14 Innkeeper, 77 shots on Mac goalie Earl rails off .8 and utilities up .6. No. 2 rye 1.12 at the Annex. Ray Meyer, threat : their case workers, thus sacrificing their $20 WILLIAMS HOTEL. Henry. In NHL Race Advances by individual stocks "We'll at least get a split in d month Tirc-natsil allowance. In an earlier game between NEW YORK LR - Boston's Abby topped declines by nearly 200 is- Froedtert Mall Corporation CARPETS and life too can be fceautlful our next two games if LeRoy Our agency dispenses information on Hours: I a.m. to 4 p.m. If you use Blue Lustre. Rent electric the two teams, St. Mary's shot the New York exchange. Cone Co. Phil Esposito is closing in on Gardner shoots 55 per cent like family planning, and contraceptives FREE through the M?edi- sues on (Closed Saturdays) shampooer SI. R. D. 83 times in winning 15-1. the alltime National Hockey The Big Board's ticker tape Submit sample betor* loading. be did against Indiana.'' Cal program, and most clients are extremely receptive to Barley purchased at prlcea iub|ecf 1o LEGIONNAIRES 8. AUXILIARr . . . Teny Flynn, BiD Marceau, League point scoring record their use. fell two minutes behind in re- market. Have you gotten your costume made or Jon Kronscbaabel, Jim Pohl, and could become the first play- portLng floor transactions soon ready for theV 'Wardi-Gras" costume Aid to Dependent Children is just that, paid to the ball Sat. Feb. 15th? LEGION CLUB. Skrypek and Shomion all scor- er in history to score more than ' after the ' opening but quickly Winona Egg Market CHILDREN — not to parents, so if a woman becomes ineli- (Winona Produce, Zlebell Product) ed in the first period while Pohl 100 points in a season. caught up. RUTH'S IS CUPID-APPROVED I Bring Wilt 19th in gible for welfare after one illegitimate child, it's the child These quotations apply as ol your Valentine in -for a delicious dinner and Shomion each counted in. Esposito, the shifty Bruins' A large number of big blocks served quickly and efficiently by our fair? Please reconsider 10:30 a.m. toda/. the second period. Sundby scor- in -who suffers. Is that . friendly staff. All of your favorites fea- center, picked up nine points crossed the tape. Grade A lutnbo (white) ...... 34 tured on our menu. RUTH'S RESTAU- KETZIN, SHANTON, DICKER, and SCHMIDT ' ed twice in the final frame four games last week, running Grade A large (white) ...ySl ? RANT, 126 -E..3rd St., downtown Wino- na. Open 24 hours every day except along with Skrypek and Sho- NBA Point Race Aircrafts, chemicals and oils Grade-A med ium < -. -...' s total to 87-14 more -^.24 his season' DEAR KETZEN, SHANTON, DICKER, and Schmidt, Mon. mion. Howe, were mostly higher. Steels, mo- Grade B .... .24 than Detroit's Gordie NEW YORK m - Elvin and the many other informed persons who wrote to point Macalester's Jmr Francis got who is in second place in the Hayes of San Diego is the Na- tors, rubbers, electronics and Grade C .12 PRESIDENT ABE had suits made to out the above to "me. We can all learn. I have learned. tobaccos were generally lower. ¦' ¦ measure; to make one for you would koth of his team's goals. scoring race. tional Basfeetball Association's I am grateful give us much pleasure. W. Betsinger The 87 points matches the to- . Boeing, American Cyanamid St. Mary's is now 13-2-1. for scoring lea der. That's old hat. LIVESTOCK DOES ONE of your loved ones have a the season and hosts Augsburg tal Chicago's Stan Mikita had But what alout that new guy in DEAR ABBY: My wife's boss comes to town, and instead and Jersey Standard gained drinking problem? If so, contact th* about a point. General Motors, SOOTH ST. PAUL Winona Alanon Family Group. Wrltt Wednesday in the conference fi- when he won the scoring title 19th place—Wilt Chamberlain of of having their business conferences in the office, she goes SOUTH ST. PAUL, Mltm. Ut - WSOA) 69V, W. 3rd. nale and Lake Forest in the last year. And Esposito has 23 Los Angeles. to his motel room, and she doesn't get home until the early Sears Roebuck and Reynolds — Cattle 4,000; calves 1,400; another very games remaining in which to Tobacco lost about a point. •moderate run again stimulating factor; MAX BUNN Is lust what the doctor order- regular season windup Satur- Chamberlain scored 66 points hours in the morning. 7 slaughter cattle trade active; slaughter ed! He can help you with a low cost, day- . top the one season record of 97 Sunday niglt against Phoenix— She is very indignant when I tell her I don't think it's Prices advanced on the Amer- steers and ' heifer's strong to 25 higher; convenient Vacation Loan. All details shared by Mikita and teammate ican Stock Exchange. generally fully 50 hlghe,* «or past two strictly confidential, repayment arrange Lake Superior Staia It, St. Cloud Z. a season high for the league- proper. I am honestly not doubting her morals. I love her days; cows strong; bulls, vealers and ed to fit your budget. Let It snow, let it SI. Mary's 12, Macalester 2. Bobby Hull. arid cracked the top 20 for the and trust her, but this is a small country town and the folks slaughter calves steady; feederj scarce; blow ...Just go) Max is waiting fa Concordia 4. St. John's 3, OT. Esposito also has 53 assists .average to high choice 950-1*200 tb sltugh- see you at MERCHANTS NATIONAL , first time in about two months, here like gossip. •ter steers 28JO; most choice WM200 BANK. Don't disappoint him! and had a good shot at shat- PRODUCE bs 27.50-28.25? mixed hig h good and with 1,209 points for a 20.5 av- DON'T MOVE! PREP REGIONAL HOCKEY I am not asking you to agree with me, just tell me what choice 27.0O-2r.5O; high choice 1004 lb Improve your home. Tel. Region l Quarterfinal! tering Mikita's record of 62 for CAP) 7841. Leo Prochowltr, Car. erage, according to NBA statis- further. CHICAGO - Butter slaughter heifers 28.00; other choice 850- "Tha Polish St. Paul Sibliy 1, North St. Paul you think and it will go no penter", 1007 E. Broadway. I a season. steady ; wholesale buying prices 1025 lbs 26.50-27.50; mixed high good and South St. Paul «V Hastings 2. tics released today. SMALL TOWN HUSBAND Mikita , fourth in the scoring unchanged; 93 score AA 66; 92 choice 26.00-26.50; good 23.00-24.00; utility Region 2 Gutrterfindt Hayes leads the scoring pa- -and commercial slaughter; Business Services race behind Esposito, Howe and fJS-yi 89 C 60% cows IWO-19.- 14 Mounds View 4, Anoka l. rade with 1,793 points for a 30.0 DEAR HUSBAND: Business conferences should be A 66; 90 B ; ; Cars 00; canner and cutter I6.oo-i8.50; ulllily Kellogg 5, Coon Rapldt 1. Hull, has 69 points including 50 and during business hours. As her 90 B 64; 89 C 62. : ¦and commercial slaughter 21.5O-24.00; cut- ICE AND snow removed from /our roof. Region 4 semifinals average. Bob Rule of Seattle is carried on in an office, assists. Howe shows 29 goals ! Eggs fully steady; wholesale ter 19.50-21.50; choice vealers M.00-38.O0) Free estimate. Tel, 8-4068. Johnson J, Monroe J, second with 1,473 and 23.8, fol- husband, you have a right to object — and loudly good 32.00-36.00; choice slaughter calves Harding 5, Murray 4. and 44 assists for 73 points while TREES, TREES, TREES - trimming, lowed by Oscar Robertson of buying prices unchanged to 1 25.00-28.00; good 21.00-25.00; feeders Region 7 Quarttrtlnals Hull is 34-37-71. DEAR ABBY : I feel like an absolute crumb. Friday night higher ; 80 per cent or better scarce. . ' stump removal, spraying, etc. Fret Greenway Coleraine 11, Cloquet 1. Cincinnati with 1,465 and 26.2 Hogs, 7,500; barrows and gilts steady estimates. Blong's Tree Service, Wi- Hibbing t, Duluth Central 3. The leading scorer in the West I was out with a wonderful boy. It was our third date, and Grade A whites 41; mediums nona. Tel. 8-5311, and of Baltimore to 25 higher; trading moderately active; I nternational Falls 4, Dt/lutli East 1 Division is St. Louis' Red Ber- we both had a grea-t time. We talked some^and then stopped 35; standards 39; checks 27. 1-3 190-240 lbs 21.00; several loads 21.25; Eveleth 3, Silver Bay 1. ,441 and 24.8. 2-3 190-240 lbs 2O.SO-21.00; mostly 20.75; enson, who has 60 points and with 1 and parked and he started kissing me tenderly. He didn't Plumbing, Roofing 21 Region • Quirterllnals Chamberlain leads in 're- NEW YORKTAP) - (TJSDA)- 2-4 240-260 lbs 20.0O-20.7J) 2-4 260-280 lbs Bemldll 4, Indus 3. shares seventh place in the get wild or anything like that, he just started kissing me 19.25-20.50; 3--4 280-300 V ib-s 18.50-19.50-. Jerry' Roseau 4, Crwkston t. bounds, ,233, and Butter offerings disrupted by sows fully steady; 1-3 300-400 lbs 17-50- s Plumbing Service scoring race with Ken Hodge of 1 per- harder and harder until I thought he was going to push 827 E. 4th Warroad 10, East Gram) Forks 3. centage, .580, while Robertson snowstorm. Demand slow. 18.50; 2-3 400-600 lbs 16.00-17.75; feeder rel. 9394 Thief River Falls *, Moorhead 1. Boston. my teeth in. I tried pulling hack but it didn't help. pigs steady; 1-3 120-160 lbs 16.00-17,00. Creamery, 93 score AA 67%- Sheep 1,800; wooled leads in assists, 531, and Larry I finally said, "Please, Rick, not so hard!" That helped slaughter lambs ELECTRIC ROTO ROOTER 67% ; 92 score A 67V4-67%. strong to 25 higher; slaughter ewes For clogged sewers and drains. Siegfried of Boston is tops in Since then scarce, steady; feeders steady; DBNNIS THE MENACE a lot. But he wasn't quite the same after that. Wholesale egg offerings fully Irading CALL SYL KUKOWSKI foul shooting percentage, .878. I talked to my girlfriend and she said, "Never criticize a active; choice and prime W-I10 Ib wooled adequate to ample; Demand slaughter lambs 27.0O-2B.M; few 110-120 Tel. 9509 or 6436 1-year-guaranlee. guy's kissing — no matter what. It hurts his ego." lbs 25.00-27.00; utility and good wooled spotty. ENJOY THE convenience slaughter ewej 7.0O-8.00; choice and of a flexible Is this right? "What should I do? Apologize to him? I Alson shower. Easily New York spot quotations: fancy 65-85 lb wooled feeder lambs 17.00- Installed with Site for NAIA am 18 and he's 19. Thanks. MADE BOO BOO 28.00. your present bath faucet. See them A Whites'. Fancy large 42-44; fan- now at DEAR MADE : Sorry, but I think your girlfriend made cy medium 38-40; Fancy smalls CHICAGO Hockey Meet Set CHICAGO WI —(USDA)— SANITARY unquoted. Hogs 3,500; PLUMBING & HEATING the boo boo. Don't apologize. Your frankness shouldn't butchers to weak; 1-2 205-225 lb butchers 16» E. 3rd St. . Tel. 2737 KANSAS CITY (AP) - Lake "hurt" him. In fact, he should thank you for the tip. . 21.50-22.00; 1-3 200-240 lbs 20.75-21.25; 2-3 240-260 lbs 20.25-20.75; Superior State College in Sault 2-4 260-279 lbs PEOPLE STOP to admire bathrooms ac- 20.00-20.35; GRAIN 3-4 270-300 lbs 19.00-50.00; cessories by Satin-Glide. Tha sparkling Ste. Marie, Mich., will be the CONPIDENTIAl TO "THE NAIVE M?RS. S., GRANADA sows 1-3 330-4O0 lbs I7.75-18.75> ) 2-3 500-600 whlta or lovely pastel medicine cabi- site of the National Association HILLS": People who send -unsigned letters and anonymous MINNEAPOLIS (AP -Wheat lbs 16.25-17.25. nets storage and relaxation units add clippings in the mails are vicious, gutless, pathetic creatures. receipts Mon. 314; year ago Cattle 900; calves none; slaughter beauty and convenience to your bath. of IntercoLIegiate Athletics sec- steers steady; choice "1,000-1,175 lb Glamorize while you organize! Many ond hockey tournament March Pray for them. 460; trading basis unchanged; slaughter steers yield grade 2 to 4 28.25- styles available and all are of the very prices % lower; cash spring 29.25; mixed good and choice 27.50-28.25; best construction. Stop today and 7-8, it was announced Monday. make your choice. DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have been married for wheat basis No. 1 dark north- good 25.25-27.50; choice 650-950 lbs yield Bemidji State edged Lake Su- , grade 2 to 4 slaughter heifers 27.00-28.00; 27 years and have had a Chihuahua for eight years. ern 11-17 protein 1.56-2.12. mixed good and choice 27.OO-27.O0; good FRANK O'LAUGHLIN perior 5-4 an overtime for the ' PLUMBING Three years ago I began having asthma attacks. Six Spring wheat one cent premi- 24.50-26.oo; ulrllty and commercial cows , , & HEATING champions&ip last year at St. 17.50-19.00. '«¦ E. 6th Tel. 2371 months ago my attacks got worse, so after a series of um each lb. over 58-61 lbs; Sheep 200; wooled slaughter lambs Paul. steady; choice and prime W-105 lbs teste with a specialist, he said I was allergic to dog hair Spring wheat one cent discount (First Pub. Tuesday, One of the four entries will be 28.00-28.75. . Feb. n, 1969) and had to get rid o£ our dog. each Vz lb. under 58, lbs. State of Minnesota ) ss. the champion of the Minnesota My problem is my husband. He refuses to believe that No. 1 hard Montana winter County of Winona ) in Probata Court Intercollegiate Athletic Confer- this allergy is due to the dog because we've had the dog 1.51-1.81. (First Pub. Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1569) No. 16,199 ence. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS In Re Estate ol for so long. Minn-S.D. No. 1 hard winter FOR Roy M. Tolleson, Decedent. My husband has always been a very thoughtful and con- 1.49-1.78. i«» Automobile Order for Hearing on Final Account No. 1 hard amber durum, sealed proposals marked "Automobile and Petition for Distribution. siderate person, but lately he seems more concerned about Bids" will be received at Ihe office of The representative of the above named estate Harva rd Ca ptures the dog than me. choice 1.94-2.10 ; discounts, am- the City Clerk of the City of Winona, having filed his final account ber 5-10; durum 10-15. Minnesota, until 7:30 P.M. on Monday, and petition for settlement and allowance Don't tell me to have the doctor talk to him. He already February 17, 1969, for furnishing "the thereof and for distribution to tha per- Hockey Tourney has. What do I do now? ALLERGIC Corn No. 2 yellow 1.12Vi- City of Winona with a 1969 Automobile sons thereunto entitled; 1.13%. for use In fhe Police txparfmenl. In IT IS ORDERED, That Iho hearlnd accordance with the .specifications pre- thereof ba had on March 6, 1969, af BOSTON (/P) — Harvard reign- Oats No. 2 extra heavy white 11:00 o DEAR ALLERGIC: Surely a formerly "thoughtful ¦ ? ¦ pared by the Police Department of 'clock A.M., before Ihls Court ¦ ¦ :. . In the ed today as champion of the and considerate" man who suddenly refuses to accept 68-72. Winona, Minnesota. probate court room In the court Specifications and proposal forms may house In winona, Minnesola, and that 17th annual Boston Beanpot Barley, cars 121, year ago notice your doctor's diagnosis, can't be considered reasonable! be obtained at the purchasing agent's hereof be given by publication Hockey Tournament. 253; good to choice 93-1.28; low office, City Hall, Winona, Minnesota. All of this order In the Winona Dally News I think your husband needs a few "tests," too, and a and by The Crimson spoiled Boston to intermediate 93-1.20; feed 80- bids musl be submitted on the proposal mailed notice as provided by good place to star! would be his head. forms furnished. University'sTiidjor an unprece- 92. Dated *CAM *>OU WAITA AAIMUTE?I A certified check or bidder's bond February 6, 1969. dented fourth straight title by Rye No. 1-2 1.17%-1.20%. shall accompany each bid In the amount E. D. Libera, HAVTA OO TOTHB BMHftXJMi* defeating the Terriers 5-3 Mon- Flax No. 1 3.06 nominal. equal fo at least five percent (5*i) of , . Probale Judge. DEAR ABBY: Guess what? You saved my life. I anN' the bid, made payable to the Cily of (Probale Courf Seal) Streater day night before a crowd of stationed at a base four miles from Cambodia. This morn- Soybeans No. 1 yellow 2.56%. Winona, which shall be forfeited , to tha , Murphy & Brosnahan, 9,236 at the Garden. City In the event the successful bidder Attorneys for Petitioner. GRIN AND BEAR IT ing at OS30 we received incoming 82MM mortar 40-50 to be falls to enter Into a contract with the Boston College captured con- exact I was sitting here reading the Stars and Stripes, City. . (Pub. Date , Tuesday, solation honors with a 6-3 tri- turned the page and elected to read DEAR ABBY. I got The Cily reserves the right to relect Feb, 11, 1969) umph over Northwestern. any and all bids and to waive Informal!- NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINO so interested in it I put off Mother Nature for a few minutes. ties. On Thursday, February 27, 1969, tha , Dated at Winona, Minnesota, Winona city Planning Jordan Commission Lucky for me. It turned out that the latrine was the Israel will February 3, 1969. hold a public hearlnp at 7:30 P./A. In Ilia center of Charlie Cong's vengeance. So because of your John S. eerier Court Room of the City Building to hear Friend! Won't Run article I am still here. Thank you! "STILL HERE" City Clerk a petition by said Planning Commission lor an amendment to Section 31-175 of Iha Zoning Ordinance which would add Again Firing (First Pub. For Mayorship DEAR STILL : Thanks for writing. You made my day. Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1?69) Ihe following; NOTICE OF HEARINO («) Offices: Business and Professional. PITTSBURGH m - Boh Everybody has a problem. What's yours? For a personal ON LOCAL IMPROVEMENT Respectfully, Box 69700 Los Angeles Calif., 9O069 and Job. No. 6877 «¦ 4B78 Charles E. Dlllerud Friend, former Pittsburgh Pi- reply write to Abby, , , Plannlno Coordinator rate pitcher who became a polit- enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Across Border Notice Is liereby given that Ihe City County of lite City of Winona, Minnesota, (First ical success, says he doesn 't By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS will meet In the Council Chambers in Pub. Tuesday, Jan. 28, 1969) want to run for mayor of Pitts- Israeli and Jordanian forces the City Hall, In said City, al 7:30 Stale ol Minnesota | ss. burgh. reported renewed firing o'clock P.M. on February 17, 1M9, to County of Winona ) In Probate Court across consider the making ol Ihe following File No. 16,513 "I don't feel I'm equipped to their frontier between Israel local Improvement (s): Job No. 6«77, In Ra Estate of be mayor of Pittsburgh and I and Jordan during the night, Sanitary Sewer system fo serve the SWA John D. Keyes, also known as of SW'A, Section 35, Twp 107 N, Ranoe John Dwight Keyes and J. O. Koyes, think I ow*e a debt to the county and each side blamed the other. 7 West, Norlh ot Counly State Aid High- Decedent. PIN TOPPLERS COMMUNITY way No. IS; section 1, trunk Sanitary Order lor Hearing taxpayers who elected me con- Westgate W. L Westgala W. L. No casualties were reported by on Partial Account sewer-net assessable: section 2, lateral Pellllon for Docraa troller, Lake-Ida Gull • J Sunbtam 33 JO either side. •nd of " Friend said Monday. sanitary sewer assessable: Parllal Distribution. Main Tavern 3 1st National Bank 48'/. U\_ Friend was * Israeli sources said Jordanian Job No. 6878, Water distribution system The representative of tho above elected controller i Cosmetics J 4 named Walkln' Benson's Feed Mill 44 31 lo servo first described nrea-asieisoble. estate having llled of Allegheny Hamernik's Bar 5 4 Blumcnlrltt's Store 40 33 machine gun and mortar fire hit Ils partial account County a year ago. Pursuant to Chapter -429, Minnesota and petition for settlement HAM Plumb. A Hosting ... 1 4 Happy chef _ VA 37V4 and allowance He was a Republican . an army position 22 miles south Statutes, es amended, Tha area' s) pro- thereof and tor a Decree ol Partial Wlnom Paint & Glass . ... 4 i Jerry' s Aulo Sales 37 31 DI* D of the Sea of Galilee, and mor- posed to be assessed for such Improve- trlbutlon to lhe persom thereunto en- Polachek Electric 4 S Olbion 13 40 rn»nt(s) (are): lllled; 5IM SI. 1.0 .A 1 • Tempo n 43 tar rounds landed near the Ncot "BLACK JACK" NAMED Section Thirty-six (36), Township One IT IS ORDERED. That th* hearlno ALLEY CATERS Frlckaon'i Auctioneers 17 4< Hakikar settlement Hundred Seven (107) North, ol Ranoe thereof be had on Westgatt W. L USS Agrl. Chemicals If 34 in the Ne- February 19, 1949, Seven (7) West: Parcel wilh 43.7 feet at 11:15 o clock A.M., before SALEM, N.H. Mi S, Montgomery Wards 11 i gev Desert 12 miles south of the ' Ihls Courl - John PARK-REC JR. OIRLS of frontage on Counly state Aid High- in tho probate court room In Iho court Stewart, who acquired Curley's Floor Shop 11 ID Dead Sea. way Number 13 (Old Highway Number house In Winona, Minnesota, the nick- Fenska Body Shop , 11 10 (End and Round) and that name "Bl ack Jack " Hal-Rod W. L. They reported another ex- ill In the West Hall of tha Southwest notlco hereof be given by publication in becom- Sunshine '5' 11 10 Quarter, per Deed Book 257, page 401, ol Ihls order In the Economy Plumbing 10 11 SOCklltomes 13 3 change of fire near tho winona Dally Newi ing one of the National Hockey Psychedelia tow 7*' Ashdot Robert O. Becker and Carol L. Becker- and by mailed notlco as provided by law. Springdale Dairy 10 11 Parcel 100 feet by 300 feet In West Dated January 24, League's all-time great defense- 11 Queens 10 I Yaacov settlement three miles 1969. Llnahans * Half of Southwest Quarter, commencing E. D. LIBERA, Jeanette i Beauty Salon ... 7 14 Gutters 10 I south of the Sea of Galilee. man in 12 seasons with the De- ' Big Nina 10 I I 23S.J feet Morth and 70.25 feet Ejsf of Probate Judge 00 GETTERS •"Fire was returned Southwest corner, thenco Southeasterly a\ —» troit Red "Wings, was named to- Knock Outs 1 » , silencing (Probate Court Seal) Athletic Club W. L 126.7 feel to point of beginning, (hence Streater, Murphy «. Brosnahan, day presiding judge for Rock- Call Appliance » 4 Spares 9 f the enemy positions," an army m /flM//0«nce. /*•« / wot transferred to Strike Outs 4 U Southeasterly 100 feel, Ihence North- Attorneys for Petitioner. 'flnt I WM *» ingham Park's spring harness Steve 's Lounge < 7 spokesman said. easterly 200 feet, Ihence Northwesterly npJottvtbyo machml E.B. s Comer ,... 7 » Royal Rollers SVi W/t CowttrJnUllistHc: this I ww meeting. ' Hells Angels 3 11 A Jordanian spokesman said 100 feet, thence Southwesterly 300 leel Winona Plumbing 4 » to point of beginning, Mary Plckart ) (First Pub. Monday, Feb. 10, 1969) LBAOUE Israeli artillery and planes at- MONDAY Parcel wilh SO loot frontage on County NOTICB TIGER By Bud Blake Athletic Club W. «.. tacked Ghor Fiffa , nine miles Stata Aid Highway Number IS In WesS Bunka's Apco 11 4 south of tlie Dead Sea for an Halt of Southwest Quarter, per Deed This will certify that Fred W. Selke, ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ , , ¦ . , whoso true and real ¦ - ' — " — - .— _ _ Qultlln's 1.0. A 11 7 Book 234, page IU, Donald Eberli Par- full noma and ad- Quality Shall Metal 10 t hour, and later Israeli artillery eel with JO foot fronl»ge on County dress is Fred William Selke, 518 East Joiwlck'a Fuel A Oil 10 I fire near the Damiya Bridge State Aid Highway Number IS In West Third Street, Winona. Minnesot a, conduct! It) National Bank • « Hall of Southwest Quarter, per Deed and transact* a commercial business In Hornet Beveraoe Service .... 3 13 across the Jordan River was re- Book 237, page 21, William R. Eberlow- Wlnono Counly, Minnesota , under the WBSTOATB LADIES turned by Jordanian guns, the skf- All fhaf part of (ho Wesf Half of name ot Wettgate W. L. spokesman said. Ihe Southwest Quarter lying Northeast- "FRED SELK E, DISTRIBUTOR, " Midland Co-op 13 » erly of County Stale Aid Highway Num- FRED W. SELKE Salranek's M 10 Jordan later announced thc ber IJ. except for parcels owned by Oruce McNally, William Eberlowskl, Fred W. Selke Ken's Hardware 13 11 bridge was closed to all traffic ,... 11 U Mary Plckart. Robert 0, Becker, Donald Slate of Minnesota > Haddad's except produce Counly o| winona ) Winona Typewriter 9 11 trucks from thc Ebert and Winona Hoard ol Education ss. School Dhlrlct Number On Ihls JOIh day of Circle* "0" Rencfe » IJ occupied West Bank. No reason I Independent January, I9<9, ¦ was given for tho SM, Arthur E. Noeska) East JM teef be(or« mo, a notary public, personally move, which of West Half of the Southwest Quarter appeared Fred W, Selke, to mo known paralyzed lying Northerly ot County Stile Aid to bo the person described YOUNG NAMED noncommercial traf- In and who fic between Jordan and the Highway Number IS, Brace McNally. executed Iha foregolno Instrument artd Tha estimated cost ol such Improve- acknowledged lhat he executed"1 Iho same NEW YORK tf» - George West Bank. ments Is <1> Assessable -pS.243.0O (3) as till free act and deed, Young, the 31-year-old Casa The occupied West Bank and none assessable )7I,9]0.00. WILLIAM A. LINOQUIST Gaza Stri Persons desiring to be heard with Grande, Ariz., schoolteacher, p were reported quiet reference to the proposed Improvement!*) William A. LlndquUt, was named to thc 1968 Ail- today for the first time after will be heard at this meeting. Notary Public, more than Dated this Jrd day of February, IMf. Wlnono, Winona Counly. American trade team Tuesday a week of anti-Israeli John S. Carter Minnesota by the Amateur Athletic Union. demonstrations. City Clerk ot laid City (My Commission Expires Feb. 6, WS) F«m«l«— Job* of Int.:—26 Mai • —Jobi of Inferuff— 27 Poultry, Eggs, Supplies 44 Articles for Set* 57 GRAFFITI by Leary Wanted—Reil Estate 102 % DAY AND NIGHT waitresses MARRIED WAN—by Mar. 1 on all mod- 8AB-COCK B-300 pulleti reach 50% Pro- BLOCK (V TACKLE for removing car en- *" 1 * % wanted. s Apply In person, *0as|s Cafe, 124 w arrt dairy term. General fa rm work. duction by 154 days. This early matur- gines etc. Tel. U4T anytime. _ Used Car* 109 ¦ Separata house. Tap wages. NOrman E. ity is an Important factor In tha over- 4l Us-Bd Car« 109 •?"'• ..{ —¦¦¦.- - > - .H , ,„., -¦*.-„<.,«,. - -- ni Helm, St. ciurlas. Minn. Tec. W2-4514. da profitability of these great Babcock RED AND WHITE dress. Ideal lor Val- ^ T ¦ VOLKSWAGEN BUS—1964, excellent con- layers. Get early order discount! entine dance, alia 10. Tel. kV-SOBO after ' ¦ ' PLYMOUTH - 19M WAITRESS WANTED-mornfng . ¦BOB ' dlllon. Tel. 4537. Bsrracud*, txcellent shift. Ap- ttwough Feb. I31h. winona Chick Hatch- condition. Regular gas, V-J, ply In person. Snack Shop. OUTBOARD MOTOR mechanics needed 4 p.m. ' JT tiut: Ttl. ery, Breezy Acree, Winone, Tol. 8-4M7. VOH T W77 or see ill 77 E. Sth. Immediately) Experience preferred. . VOLKSWAGEN - 1964 2-door excellent Dlck' SALLY'S In-lav-s coming. She didn't flust- a Marine, Latsch Island, winona. condition, Tel. 608-323-3770 afler 6 p.m. ' A POSITION ©» public health nurse I» BABCOCK B-300 pullets retell 50?, pro- er, cleaned the carpets With Blue 0LD5MOBH.E-W58 5-dOor hardlop, V-l, Fillmor e County ¦ ¦*¦ ¦ •» - Is open. 2 nurs e ser- MAN WANTBD-for general farm work duction by 15S days. This early matur- Lustre. Rent electric shampooer, SI. ¦i* »VE">*¦-»* .'.*?*¦-< RITY' H'li'i-'f ii'. *! • H-miiMH automatic, real clean. Douglas Straler vice, personnel policies, salary WSdom open, by month or yoar. Start Immediately. ity la an Important factor In tha over- Robb Bros. Store. Utlca, Minn. Tel- Lewiston 4S31. rnfidt-rn offices, - ' ' near Rochester, Minn. Richard McCains, Harmony, Winn. Tel. all profitability of these great Babcock R . REALTOR ' - 1965 DODGE /Contact Mrs. Wayne Stephens, chair- MMI13. la-y«r«. Ordia chicks nowl Wltxona Chick WARD ELECTRIC sewing machine, port- SUNBEAM ALPINE-19M, wire vrtieeli, ' man, Fillmore County Public KMT Wealth Hatchery Breezy acres, Winona, Minn, able, open arm. Like new. With Case. I20 CCNTCR- TCU snow tires, recently overhauled. Balanca ¦ c l Chatfield, . 2$49 Dart GT S2S.'"%. - . ^5K. Jt!** Minn . trips Tel. M667. Tel. 6794 from 1 to 4, of 5-year warrant/. T«rf. <0U. 55923, Ttl. 847-3W5. 00OO MAN OVER 40 FOR SHORT 4 BIt- tW "' " - PPL-iiiM * HH -HH-«*lll B-HHH HH-*ME !>¦¦*» ttrH 2-DOOR HAR1DTOP surrounding Winona. Men w» want Is ' worth up to $14/500 In year, plus regu- DEKALB CHICKS, Skyline Strain Cross, STEREO AMPLIFIER-80 Walt, complete BONNEVILLE-1W7, 9-pasJenjar sfatlM w R 8 W - Apply , White Leghorns, or facilities. Tel. 8-4504 after 4. wajon, power brakes, power aleerlnfl, i'I l? .. *NTED Garden lar cash bonui. Air matl F. F. Dick- California White V-8 engine Oate Restaurant, 5f W. 3rd. No phona M.est Type Beefers baby chicks. Place WANT TO SELL • alr-condltloned. Shown¦ by appointment. arson, Prea,, Southwestern petroleum T I ion A , 7ct7 calls, please. Corp., Ft. Worth, Texas .MW. your order now and get thc hatch date ANTIQUES FOR SALE to settle estate, • Automatic transmission * ¦ : " ¦ - you want. Our Winona office will be •: Contort Mrs. Stanley Hardt. -Til* S092. e Bucket seats with console 7 ; , ¦¦!¦ m - W H ji-i ¦4+ EXPERIENCED BEAUTICIAN Wanted MECHANIC te service John Deere trac- open starting Mon., Feb. 17. SPELTZ >***• i*t»Ht**»MYoi/u*n n ru mm mtim* YOUR HOME? CHEVY II—Nova, 1W8, aulomatlc Irani- full or part-tlmt. J & R Beauty tors and farm equipment In and around CIHICK HATCHERY, Rollingstone, Minn. VIE HAVE N EW antenna parts, rotors, • Power steering mission, 6-cylinder, blue, less than 4,000 Salon ' La CYtaetnt. Ttl. «S-2«11. St. Charlea area. Good wages, good Tel. 4W-23II. No toll charge from Wi- bays, wire, stands, pipe. FRANK LILLA • Power brakes miles. -Tel. 4804. . working conditions. Wrllt or phone nona or Wltoka. 8, SONS, 761 E. Sth. Open eyenlngs. Call Us OU • 'Wide.oval red line tires CAMARO-1947, M7, 4-speed, black wilh STOP WORRYING ABOUT MONEY Luehmann Implement Co., Ss. Charles T&R6W IT ' WESTINGHOUSE light bulbs, any size. gold Interior, like new. Bl|l Blagsvedt. YOU can earn a pood Income as an Minn. Tel. 932-4030. • Mag type wheel covers Wanted—Livestock 46 Buy 3, gel 1 free. BAMBENEK'S, 9th 'mm , I MIIMIH i n , .I I , ..mttiiit .imn inniiin" For A Inquire Co-op S-tatlon, Houlfon, Minn- AVON representative. '"' j *¦ Don'l delay. 8. Mankato. ^ • Vinyl roof Writer Helen Scott, Box 764, Rochester. MANAGER TRAINEES-SHOES YOUNG MEN 19 learn shoe store business FA.RMERS, it you want to get top dollar ¦ Free Appraisal. • Music Master radio when you will bo K&. C- ¦ $| Hornet, .as Manager Trainee. No experience for your 600-800 Ib. Holstein heifers, YOU NEVER KNOW Beautiful Mexicali yellow Mobil* Trailer* lil WAITRESSES NEEDE?D necessary. Advance to store manager if o-ptn or bred, call Ed Lewrenz, St. sick or need an operation! Gel insured ' Girls for morning shift, afternoon shift you bait ambition and qualify. Paid Charles 932-46U or 932-4474. at Sweeney's Insurance Agency, «2 W. Let Us Show with black interior. Come on 1949 STARCRAFT campers and ravel and girl part-lime for Frl. and Sat. vacation,, free Insurance benefits and W. Sth, Winona. Farms, Land for Sale 98 in and test drive today. trailers at year's lowest prices. Wa Apply in person only. profit-sharing plan. Apply Tradehome LEWISTON LIVESTOCK MARKET You Homes have 4 truckloads coming, but na stor- RUTH'S RESTAURANT Shoe Store, 52 E. 3rd. A (REAL GOOD auction mirke-t for your FRIGIDAIRE STOVE and refrigerator, 160 ACRES, located near Lewiston, on age room. Must sell 20 units during Westinghouse washer and dryer, daven- blacktop road. New barn, new milk 'Wc service what we sell." Feb. See your exclusive Stareraft Deal- 126 E. 3rd St. ¦livestock. Dairy cattle on hand ell port, drapes luggage, clothes valet, house, new calf barn and naw silo. Re- Suited To Your Needs er, Westaard Camper Sales, Rochester! tClosad Mondays) -Meek. Livestock bought every day ¦ misc. articles. Tel. 2285 after 5. Tel. 262-4415, ' I Help—Malt or Fen-ial* 28 Trucks available. Sale, Thurs., I p.m modeled 3-bedroom home with oil heat. Ttil. Lewiston J467 or Winona 7814 All other buildings In good repair. Good ( ONE of the liner things of life—Blue heavy soil In high state of fertility. For Many homes to chooso Irom at Lustre carpet and upholstery cleaner. particulars contact ALVIN KOHNER, COULEE MOBILE HOME SALES RESPONSIBLE H. Choate NEED A JOB? Farm Implement* 48 Rent electric¦ shampooer *1, Rt. 3, Winona. Tel. 4980. BOB Hwy. 14-61 E„ Winona. Tel, 427* 8. Co. v . ." I JL FOR SALE-One of the top dairy farms WOMAN 1943—FARMALL M tractor with power ALMOST NEW blue and green floral de- . In Winona County. 475 acres with 260 Auction Salei Adrian steering and good condition. JS7S. signed couch , $75; coffee table, $5. May acres tillable, Excellent set' of build- Production , Minn. Tel. Wltoka "" " NEEDED Workers Rioraff, Lamoille see at 170 Wall St. ings. New pipeline milk transfer sys- tw&feftfc ALVIN KOHNER 2OJ0. ' ¦ ¦ - . . . .-, .. tem, bulk tank, etc. Good terms. 5 ii AUCTIONEER, Cily and stata licens- TWO PAIR brown, extra large custom- other dairy farms In the Winona area. I REALTOR ed and bonded, Rt. 3, Winona, Ttl. as department manager of Needed FE RGUSON TRACTOR-No. 20 with load- made drapes; Regular 150, now $12. Contact Alvin Kohner, Rt, 3, Winona. 4110. e-r attached, Gyn- |l2Q *¦—¦¦—¦** field on Hwy. 30. Dean Flnseth, owner; ¦minute drive from Winona. ABTS 45 Years in Winona Gathje & Erickson, auctioneers; First Employee benefits. NEW New Holland Spread- AGENCY, INC., 159 Walnut St. Tel. 163 Walnut St., Winona ¦ State Bank of- Fountain, clerk. . - ers. . Furn., Rugs, Linoleum 64 S-4365. WE ARE EQUIPPED Ford-Lincoln-Mercury See Mr. A. H. Krieger FEB. 17—Mon. 1 p.m. Vi mile S. of Mon- EAST CENTRAL-Modern 2-famlly house 5-PC. BRONZE dinette, . 36"x40"x48", TO SERVICE Open Friday Evenings dovi on State Hwy. 37, then 1 mile W. on Situations Wanted—Fern. 29 •with large garage, 20x40. Rent terms Main Office wood grain plastic top. Choice of gold, . County Trunk TT, then Vi mile S. Gary 1o reliable parly. C.-SHANK. 552 E. 3rd. persimmon or beige chairs. $69 at ALL MAKES & TYPES and Saturday Afternoons Schilling, owner; Heike 8, Zeck, auction- WILL DO babysitting In my home, days, FA. KRAUSE CO. ¦ BURKE'S FURNITURE MART. 3rd & - +-¦ ¦ eers; Northern Inv. Co., clerk. : H. Choate & Go. West location. Tel. 2474. Breezy Acres Franklin. Open Wed. and Frl. evenings. DC. BRAND NEW, 4-bedroom home near Park behind the store. St. Teresa College. You can move In ' Business Opporrunitias 37 Hwy. 14-61 E. Tel. 5155 the day you buy It as tt is now com- WINONA ifsmwmmm ^M^^^^m^^^mm ^mmmsm ^^m^mm^m^i SHOP SHUMSKI'S for ceramic and plas- pleted. Basement 44'x28'. Lovely kitch- en and large living room. Price $26,900. FOR SALE to settle estate. Tavern In tic tile, Cushion-Floor and vinyl Hnole- TRUCK SERVICE ABTS AGENCY, INC., 15? Wanut St. Plastic Trading Co. Winona.. Tel. ' MS» for appointment. . urns, fine inlaids, scatter rugs, bra id 65 Laird Tel. 4738 rugs, room-siie nylon rugs, door wax, Tel. 8-4365. |: 1 tops, formica, AUCTION FOiR LEASE — 1-bay serv Ice elation. wall linoleum, counter ? Needs a Young Man SARNIA W. ^21 -Good condition. 3-bed- | As I am going into Tel. 4743. " adheslves, carpet, carpet remnants the dairy equipment business, I will I ' ' SPECIAL DEAL carpet runners. SHUMSKI'S, 58 W. 3rd. rooms, new paint lob, full basement, Used Cars 109 sell at public auction my herd of dairy cows and heifers if ' for FOR SALE-A & W root baer drlve-ln, In Tel. 8-3389. oil heat, full lot, garage. Priced for I y x Immediate sale. Financing like rent. on? I good southeast- Minn. town. $7,500, Will VOLKSWAGEN-1969 Bug, automatic plus I handle balance on land contract. Write ON NEW SAVE $10 on 9x12 nylon rugs with rub- stick shift, whitewall tires, fully equip- Color Process Work FOURTH W. 578-Gbod condition. 6 rooms A-72 Dally News. ber pads. Regular $59.95, now 549.95 ped. Take over payments. Tel. 84736 1 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15 1 BORZYSKOWSKI FURNITURE, 302 and full - bath, hot water heat. Near •venires. Madison School and bus line. Corner I ?Located 6 miles east of Chatfield on Highway 30, or 10 I Our growing company will OX. EVER DREAM of a ntce place ol DAVID BROW N 990 Mankato Ave. lot, garage. Will arrange easy loan, CHEVROLET-1964 Impala 4-door sedan | miles north of Fountain. Follow auction arrows. provide ori the job training business and an exceptional place to diesel tractor ¦ 1 l ive at the same time? If you are a Frank West Agency 283 cu, In. V-8, very good condition | Sale starts at 1:30 P.M. Lunch will be served. i and permanent employment tradesmen, let us tell you: about this plus FREE FUEL Good Things to Eat 65 new radial tires. Tel. Fountain City 175 Lafayett« 687-3453 after 6. 1 28 HIGH GRADE HOLSTEIN DAIRY COWS AND | to an ambitious youiig man combination living quarters plus plent y for the fall season. : Tel. 5240 or 4400 after hours. of room for your business, it even may RUSSET POTATOES, 10 lbs. 39c; apples, I HEIFERS: Cow No. given first. No. 3722, Due to freshen I who qualifies High school provide extra rental money to help pay $1.95 bu.! candy, 2 lbs. 59c; milk , eggs, GTO—19J5, power steering, power brakes, . MX. WE DARE YOU to let us show your with 4th calf by sale date. 3732, Due to freshen with 5th 1 chemistry helpful. Should the mortgage payments. Lef us explain. Used ALLIS CHALMERS cheese. Winona Potato Market. excellent condition. See at 557 W. Mill. I ABTS AGENCY, INC., 159 Walnut Sf. wife the kitchen of this 3-bedroom | calf Feb. 15. 7230, Due to freshen with 2nd caff April i D 17 tractor with wide home built new In T966. We know she'll PONTIAC—1959 4-door hardtop, will ac- be draft exempt. Tel. (M3S* . 1948, Due to freshen front and power steer- Musical Merchandise 70 be bugging you about the home until cept trade. 90S W. 10th St. I with 4th calf March. 3831, Fresh — 1 you deal, Among the features of the I Fresh 3rd calf Dec, open; 3872, Fresh 3rd calf Dec., ?. ? . Apply.In Person ing. kitchen I . - TWELVE STRING Frarnus guitar and are spacious storage and top CHEVROLET-195S 2-door hardtop, 26S open. 7901, Fresh 1st cafi Dec. 7974 $20,000 case, excellent condition. Tel. 8-3527. work area, built-in oven, electric renge, cubic Inch, gold and white. Tel. 4749 I f .bred Jan. 30. , Fresh I Main Office and dishwasher. If you have Ihe nerve, or -see at Quality Chevrolet. I 4th calf Dec., bred Jan - 12. 5248, ?Fresh 5th calf Nov.- 1 501 W. 3rd Winona, Minn. PER YEAR Tel. 8-4365. 7 I bred Jan. 29. 7188 - Fresh 4th calf Nov., bred Jan.. 21. I Stop in to deal on NEEDLES 9880, Fresh 1st calf Oct., bred POSSIBLE NEW ALLIS TRACTORS For All Makes § Dec. 28. 0049, Fresh 1st \% Of Record Players You'll Want to f calf Oct., bred Jan 15, etc. Dairy equipment. i and plows. TERMS OF SALE: New opportunity ! No interest 'til April 1st. Hardt's Music Store | % V* down, balance in monthly I PARTS MAN 114-118 E. 3rd ... GO | installments on bankable paper. Any credit arrange- ji Can operate from home or ments to be made with clerk before purchase. No? to do counter work and de- In These I ¦ ¦ jf livery. Permanent position. (existing business, as side- Sewing Machines 73 1 property to be removed until settled for. . "' "Jf line or fulltime. Small se- KEN'S SALES Central Location Experience preferred but WE HAVE A good selection of used sew- SHARP USED CARS I DEAN FINSETH, OWNEE ; | not necessary. Military ob- cured investment, No in- & SERVICE ing machines zlo lap* and straight Very nice, four - bedroom I Auctioneers: Paul Gathje, Lie. No. 721, Stewartville; vestment with good credit? Hwy. 14-61 E. stitch, cabinets and portables WINONA ff ligations must be Milled. SEWING CO., 913 W. 5th St, home. Newly carpeted living s| Arden Erickson, Lie. No. 17, Chatfield. Clerk: First j Winona Tel. 9231 room and dining room. 1965 BUICK Tel. Mr. Callter LB SABRE I State Bank of Fountain. ' Stoves, Furnaces, Parts 75 Large kitchen. Bedrooms i 1 Apply in person at 8-4391 2 door Hardtop, power . Hay, Grain/ Feed 50 carpeted . 1% baths. Glass- ^^^^^ msmmmi ^m ^wm ^^im ^mmmm ^^^m ^mm OIL OR gas heaters. Slegler, Duo-Therm, steering, power brakes, ra- others. Parts and service. RANGE OIL ed-in porch. Double garage. FIRST AND second crop hay, delivered BURNER CO., 907 E. 5lh St. Tel. 7479 dio, heater, white sidewall Winona Auto Money to Loan 40 Lehnertj, Kellogg I i i , i 7 also straw. Euoene Adolph Michalowski. tires, turquoise - in color, j I Tel. Plainview 534-1763. Sweet and Neat Parts Co. silver interior. ANOTHE HORP A UCTION I 163 E. 2nd Quick Money . . . WAY'-dellvered In truckload lots. Order Typewriters 77 Two • bedroom home with THIS CAR IS READY TO I" . ^j T j on any article ot value ... now. Richard Wright. Tel. Sparta, Wis. garage and nice yard Liv- NEUMANN'S BA R GAIN STORE 569-2202. TYPEWRITERS and adding machines for . . GO ANYWHERE TODAY sale or rent. Reasonable rates, free ing room - dining room for Sale 57 delivery. See us for all your office sup combination. Kitchen with $1695 ¦ ¦ ¦ ; MILLER Dogs, P«ts, Supplies 42 Article* plies, desks, files or office chairs " ' " LUND TYPEWRITER CO., Tel, 5222 Elenty of elbow room. Full SAT, F EB; .'! BARGAIN PRICES . . . Motorola Color MINIATURE SILVER French Poodle, ath. West location. > rs^ii^M: WASTE MILLS TV In crate, We service all makes I registered, proven stud, Must sell SALE SITE: 3 miles southeast of CALEDONIA/ MINN., I AKC SCHNEIDER SALES CO, Tel, 7356, Vacuum Cleaners 78 1965 CHEVROLET I Needs lor health reasons. Tel, »537. IMPALA |i on County Road No. 5, then Vz mile east on County Road i WE REPAIR all makes and models. Dis- Large Lot ¦ Shelby CLEARANCE PRICES on all remaining | No. 14 (Jefferson Ridge Road). Watch for the Thorp i Shop Purc hasing Clerk WISH N' WELL POODLES, 3500 wash posable bags for most cleaners. Hoover 4 door sedan. Turquoise in Black toys, excellent 196B G.E. refrigerators, ranges, Road, La Crosse. and vacuum cleaners. Sales and Service. Modern and convenient | auction arrows. Lunch Stand on grounds. % male toy, beautllul stud ers, dryer! end freerers. Buy now color, 327 cu. in. engine, Day Shift, some Saturdays. quality; sliver 155 E. 3rd. AREA SEWING MACHINE CO.. 129 E. service, all colors, Includ- lavel a & B ELECTRIC, three - T)edroom home with Will do telephone work and prospect. Slud 3rd. Tel. <5474. automatic transmission, ra- ing red Pomeranian. Grooming, all attached garage. Ceramic HOTPOINT portable DISHWA.SHER, front dio, heater , excellent tires 56 HEAD OF CATTLE some driving involved- Re- breeds. j | loading, deluxe model, 4 pushbutton Wanted to Buy 81 bath. Carpeted lining room and very clean. Try this Nearly all of the tired or semi-retired person cycle. Avocado color, demonstration with fireplace. Plenty of I cattle are oalfhood vaccinated and are If Horses, Cattle, Stock 43 model. Was $269.65 NOW $229.95. today. I young cows and typey. Tested for inter-state shipment, acceptable. WANTED-raccoon lur coat. Tel. " 4434. closets. Large kitchen and p APPLY IN PERSON GAIL'S APPLIANCE, 215 E. 3rd. Terry Olson. I Individual certificates furnished. 10 Holstein cows fresh; CHOICE FEEDER pins, 125. Lawrence dining room area. , $j Wis, Tel. 582-2542. Only $1595 22 Flllner, Galesville, HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS USED FOLK guitar. Must be In good con- | Holsteln cows, milking good, due to f reshen in earfy ® MILLER Sales & Service dition. Tel, 7013. fall; 2 Holstein cows, dry, PUREBRED SPOTTED Poland China Used Sew Sale ,.135 and up. 1 springing close; 4 Holstein 1 Bibcock , Utlca, Minn, Moderately Priced cows, boars. Lowell POWER MAINTENANCE & SUPPl V CO USED CAR PETING and rugs , also cheit 1965 MERCURY 1 dry, due early spring; 6 Holstein heifers, 2 yrs. old, n WASTE MILLS 932-343'', 815 W. 3rd Tel. St. Charles 2nd I, Johnson Tel. . 5455 ot drawers wanted. Tel. 4036, Four-bedroom family home MONTEREY | bred; 2 Holstein heifers, 2 years old, open; 10 Holstein % PUREBRED DUROC boars and gills, vac NEWEST IN FABRICS close to schools. Carpeted 1 barn calves. | | WM. MILLER SCRAP IRON 8, METAL 4 door Hardtop, white with clnated. Clifford Hod. Lanesboro, LINING materials, ' Interfacings, notions , CO. pays highest prices for scrap Iron, living room and dining Minn., (Pilot Mound). patterns, sewing aids. SPRING FASH- saddle all vinyl Interior, 1 30 HEAD OF HOGS: 30 heavy mixed feeddr pigs; 1 large I metals ond raw fur. ! , IONS ot distinction cost so little when room. lMs baths, Good size . - Closed Saturdays power steering, power I 10 bu. steel hog feeder; two 5-bu. steel hog feeders; 1 i C ROSSBRED FEEDER calves,^ 15 ave- you sew Ihem yourself with fabrics Irom kitchen. Some combination Train for PRINTING 222 W. 2nd Tel. 2067 brakes, radio, neater white I Martin 8 hole wooden hog feeder; 14 concrete hog troughs. % rage weight 550 lbs. Galen Tulius, Foun- Ihe CINDERELLA SHOPPES, 9th S. windows Garage . , tain City, TBI. 687-3871. Mankato or 62 W. 3rd St, . sidewall tires. This is a I 175 POULTRY: 175 Leghorn pullets, laying good; one | HIGHEST PRICES PAID beautiful car and runs out 4-lamp brooder; 1 ogg washer, new. | | ¦ir Hand Composition COMPLETE WESTERN STORE Saddles, ONE ONLY HOMKO SNOWBLOWER for scrap Iron, metals, rags, hides, Residence Phonos: After 5 I Western and English/ halters* bridles) $10S> at SCHNEIDER SALES CO. raw tors and wooll perfect. bltat (addle blankets; collar pads, all 1671 W. Sth Linecastlng and Press-work alien hoot oil) leather oil*: cow halters. Sam Weisman & Sons Bill Zlebell 4854 THEY DON'T COME ANY I FARM MACHINERY I Also boarding, breaklno, training, shoe- INCORPORATED E. J. Hartert 3973 Alfis Chalmers WD tractor ; 2 AC model C tractors ; AC i ing and horses for sale . Bob Prrybylskl, FREEZERS 450 W. 3rd Tel. 5847 BETTER FOR ONLY I Write UT costs no more to own a Gibson. Come Mary Lauer 4523 East Burns Valley Road Tel 3857. $1395 | mounted 2-16 inch tractor plow, new ; 2 AC model C | | In and get our prices. WI NONA FIRE W-M I GRAPHI C ARTS & POWER CO., 54 E. 2nd. Tal. 5065, Rooms -Without I 86 Charles E. Merkel — Realtor | tractor cult., power lift ; AC mounted tractor disc; AC || Armidexan | mounted power mower, 2 years old ; tractor chains to fit !?! Technical School 55'A " OF SNOW!! ROOMS FOR MEN, with or without WD; manure loader to fit WD; snow bucket to fit WD; Injectable Iron housekeeping privileges, No day sleep % i for Catafog. For Pigs ers . Tel. 4859. | JD 10 ft. disc grain drill with fert. att., on rubber ; AC i| ' wJf^^^m>^ll1nJ^% | No. 66 combine in A-l condition ; JD 290 corn planter i 1104 Currie Ave., Minneapolis . 100CC . $8.95 WALZ ¦ Sump Pumps iXpa'rtmentt*, Flats 90 Buick - Olds GMC % with fort , and weed killer att.; Ford 2-row corn picker % TED AAAIER DRUGS Open Friday Nights to fit AC WD and 45; New Idea 05 bushel manure ?i Approved for Veteran Training Animal Health Canter SUGAR LOAF Apartments. Deluxe l-bed- Mall 601 Main Tef. 8-5141 '& Downtown * Miracle room apartment on bus lino. Tel, (-3778. spreader, on rubber; McD. 4-bar side delivery rake; y WARD'S (;<' New Holland fill hay baler; 4-soction steel drag; 2-section X Miracle Mall Tel. 8-4301 DUPLEX, 2 bedrooms, living room and y spring tooth; two 7x16 ft . bale hay rack; Kelly Ryan X kitchen. Flreplaca, basement washing * 40 SPRING IS ONLY a coupla of robins facilities. Available Feb. 13. 12 miles ft. grain elevator; PTO for elevator ; fanning mill; 1 SHOULD YOU CONSIDER nwayl Rovltallta your hnme with wall S. of Winona, tint house N ot Lce' n $ new pump jack; cfectric fencer; 1 HP electric motor ; vi paper, Iho most versatile way to dec- Farm Market on Hwy. 61, or write Box ' 8B, Lamoille. 30 ft. endless belt ; LP Ras tnnk heater ; weed sprayer ?| orate. You can make a small room BUILDINGS % seem largo , a large room seem small 71 with boom; hyd. unloading jack ; air compressor; bale vi A CHANGE NOW You can use It to create a mood , , . y fork ; 215 ft. hay fork rope; 300 gallon formal or Informal, conservative, ele- Apartments, Furnished 91 gas tank on steel ?;? gant, whimsical. You con have Ihe H stand; David Bradley 10 inch chain saw: 3 rubber tired j ; ploaiure of marble walls, brick walla, EFFICIENCY APARTMENT for *l Individ- FOR SALE U wagons; 1 steel Flare box; 1 wood Flare box. :$. In every community there are a few men who have wood-panel|e0 lm . of ear corn; 1 ,500 bu. of :j ODD LOT CONVENIENT downtown office ond store ff maximum use of their talents. spaces . all of its present buildings for sale for occupancy [?{ oats; 2,000 square bales of mixed hay; 400 bales of straw. X Stirncmnn-Selover Co. * % HOUSEHOLD GOODS: Ben Hur 15 ft, chest type freezer; f We arc one of tho 1 argest fastest growing sales oriented CABINETS 52Va E. 3rd |- Kelvinator 10 ft , refrigerator For more information , con- d Tel. 6066, 4147 or 23«» afte r its mo ve. . companies in the nation. We are looking for a high type CHEAP | tact the Thorp office in Rochester, Minn,, 507.288-4041. y man who hns proven or potential sales ability and who Wanted to Rent 96 REINHARD'S |1 THORP ON-THE-SPOT CREDIT ^ is interested in personal and financial growth. We will MODERN FARMHOUSE wllhli» driving 227 E, 3rd Tel. 522(1 distance of Wlnono. Write A-71 Dolly Interested parties please , Minn., train you and provide continuous career trainin-g. Im- j i Sale managed by Clark Vessey, Rochester 507- X. News. fi; 2fill-401l . Thorp representatives are O. J. Strand and .;? mediate financial assistance plus bonus plan andl other contact Mr. A. J. Bambenek, President Owen Hegge DAILY NEWS Bus Property for Sale 97 $( . Auctioneers arc Schroeder Bros., Orvifle ?ij benefits. (i Lie. No. 13 and Donald Lie. No. 22. MAIL - at our main office. ; i| A most rewarding career witli unlimited personal and "B ILDING ti CARL MOE & N. C. KOEL, Owners I financial opportunity is available to the mnn who can SUBSCRIPTIONS U It qualify. May Be Paid at FOR SALE PEERLESS CHAIN CO. immmmmm *— 7, 000 squnro toot ot terrific building For personal consideration Tel. Mr. Johnson at B isin, Ideally suited lor light mnnulaclurlno TED MAIER DRUGS business. (Hnutllul olllces . Good p«rl<- Tel. 2376, N iTHORPfcutt CORPORATION Suite 27 between 8 and 10 a.m. and fl p.m. to fl p.m. Ing tnd room for expansion, For de- f;i; t¥emt umst ittxumA ttiutmu stftme NO TELEPHONE ORDERS tailed Information or to Inspect, Tel MmmmmmmmmuJ WILL BB TAKEN Jim Joi**irb»ro, 411)* or 1-19*4 , BUZZ SAWYER By Roy Cran* :. ' -

DICK TRACY BY Cherfer Gou,d

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker

¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ k ^ a ^ aM ^ aeH i II ; ' . ——¦^—"**^ . ————»—¦——— ¦¦——— BLONDIE By Chick Young

LI'L ABNER By AI Capp

THE FLINTSTONES By Hanna-Barcwra

BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Lasswell

STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff

APARTMENT 3-0 By Alex Kotzky

« Sale of the year at HADDAD'S

REX MORGAN , M.D. By Dal Curtis ANY .'A CLEANING ORDER l | ^

ts B™rf»a\ m ^ak CtVBB V&./T *»Tf«#oAmW ^^ 4|f4mmt WFill?%aWaW UriiiraiL. V I MR ., Wm ^^_ m f^ ^W 'M ' BL t

NANCY By Ernie Bushmiller Horevolum m mm^mWwWmM%M9 «9 ° '' your opportunitylarge for BIG SAVINGS on Had- dad's finest quality cleaning. Any $4.00 cleaning 0rd°r f<" °n,diicounly $2 98 Durin9 orders.fhh s,ack season you _*tMfc Mi ll MiTOP ' * WMMfc e1 « J^S^^RKM^T 0 on So check your " H ^ -fl closets now for garments you know -will have to si ^^^^ fl be cleaned anyway and take advantage of the BIG BULK SME savings todayl B^^ _^^_n M _____t\^m._m

POLICY You'll Agree That ^ ^ flM | * - f w ^ Only at ^^fljjj ^^^ A 1. Buttons Replaced 6. Torn Pockets Is the Nicest A. B Re alrod ^^ ^*l' TTH P Thing That Ever f | l - ? I | ¦ " TJ [ 2. Open Seams II I V Bl Ifl MARY WORTH By Saunders and Ernst Roaown 7. Hooks and Eyos Happened to ^flfMMMVMPMH Replaced Your Clothes! ^^^^ SUU [fU |i^^^^ fl 3. Linings Repaired ^^^^^BBMfl ****^ ^^^ 8. AH Garments A. Pants Cuffs Neatly Bagged Brushed Opened, '.^^ and Retackod Sta-Nu Finish on ^ 9- W^MW1-- ^ All Garments S ITUKL ' ^

Removed and 10. Prompt, Courteous, / . HW I > /-* \ | | II | I/A \ | | 1 WmM*k\\ liis* 'Warn %J& \ Replaced Efficient Service | UkU^UtwUnq JMLHfa-** ' a^JV \

m Mdn s,re r e8 Park,n ,n All This at No Extra Charge *' ' ° Reor ___ Phone 2301 1 I