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Continue Farm Price Johnson Asks None Be Denied Supports, LBJ Urges Earthquake Hits WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- have helped create a commer- the consumer is the major bene- Right of Vofe dent Johnson told Congress to- cially successful agriculture. ficiary of farm progress. While WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- day that farm price support pro- retail food prices have risen in dent Johnson, with direct allu- And over the past four years, recent years, the prices of what sion to Negro efforts to register grams should be continued and he said, the price support pro- the fanner sells have actually in Alabama, urged all Ameri- improved. He called for atten- grams have raised and sustained declined 15 per cent since 1947- cans today to join with him in Aleutian Chain tion to other measures aimed at net farm income at an annual 1949." expressing concern over the loss parity of opportunity for rural level of nearly a billion dollars of any citizen's right to vote. Americans. above 1960. This, Johnson said, is what Is In a hurriedly announced In a special message, Johnson "Few activities so dramatical- needed to have parity of oppor- news conference, the President Tidal Waves said the price programs, initiat- ly indicate the value to farmers tunity for rural Americans: said it is essential to the free- ed 30 years ago in the admini- of good programs well-adminis- 1. National economic prosperi- dom of the nation that voting stration of Franklin D. Roosevelt tered." Johnson wrote. "Yet ty to increase their employment rights are secured for all cit- opportunities. izens. Feared Along 2. Full access to education, training, and health services to "I intend to see that right is expand their earning power. secured," he said. 3. Economic development of Johnson's session with report- Pacific Coast smaller and medium-size com- ers was conducted before live ANCHORAGE (AP) healthy eco- T Alaska munities to insure a radio and television at the White — An earthquake, almost as nomic base for rural america. House. It was his first such pre- powerful as a deathly one here In recommending that present announced news session since last March 27, shook and rattled price support programs now in last July 24. Alaska' commodi- s Aleutian Island chain effect for major farm Wednesday night and touched ties be continued and improved, Continuing his volunteered re- marks, the President urged that of! fears of tidal waves all Johnson wrote: around the Pacific. continue Congress leave him freedom to "These programs can But the powerful jolt at 12:06 to serve our objectives of in- deal with the question of sales of surplus farm commodities to a.m. Eastern Standard Time creased freedom of operation , a was centered in an unpopulated steady improvement of income, the United Arab Republic . The on market House voted a ban on such area. No casualties were report- a greater reliance ed. There were no reports of forces , and lower government sales but the Senate Wednesday passed a milder version. major damage. costs." And expected tidal waves Specifically Johnson advised On possible exchange of visits with Soviet leaders, Johnson which sent thousands fleeing Congress: frorrp-tSQas^il areas down the Wheat and feed grains — Vol- said he had no addition al in- coast to California, in Hawaii, untary feed grain and Wheat formation to offer other than what he said Wednesday night and in Japan didn't materialize. programs should be extended. All alerts were called off after Specific recommendations will — that he is very hopeful of vis- iting the Soviet Union this year. a series of swells fanned out be submitted to Congress aimed around the ocean of these He said discussions had taken , and people to permit the operation returned to their homes and programs to be simplified and place between Russians and Americans', but that no details coastal maritime activities were make it possible for additional resumed. crops, particularly soy beans, to will be made public until some- thing more tangible is estab- The quake and tidal waves be grown as needed on acreage ¦ Bi ¦ ~ l ibi&&^^^n^^^^fT^AIeni&&^n*e^-)-- i -&-s*,-rri4fcv '' .,-,- ePfo' 7 .. :. .7,77: /- 7-'' lBwtfWBBrff^WBWB^^HHMB^BBMBMIIH last March killed more than 100 grains. Authority lished. ^ diverted from persons in Alaska and spread of the secretary of agriculture Responding to a question, LOVING HANDS . . . Juan F. Sierra, 24, ran a red light. Elizabeth was injured when support levels and Johnson said that in the light of of Denver, comforts his daughter Elizabeth, she hit the windshield of the car. Hospital devastation around the state. to set price ^ Many other Pacific ajeas were to adjust other program fea- newspaper interest "I might 4, following an accident in which the Sierra authorities listed the young girl in satisfact- have made a mistake" in not hard hit. tures as conditions may require car was hit by another auto that police said ory condition. (AP Photofax) The Alaska Defense Com- should be continued. sending Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey to represent the mand here reported Wednesday Cotton — The cotton program night's temblor was centered in (Continued 9, Col. 5) United States at the funeral of on Page Sir Winston Churchill. the Amcbitka area, a small is- FARM MESSAGE He said he had hoped to go land community out near the himself if his physical condition end of the Aleutian chain. permitted. Johnson Visit to A command spokesman said airplane taxiways and masonry He said he had his staff con- buildings at Shemya IsIadrJ Air WEEPING MOTHER WITH SON . . . Mrs. Frances 47,800 Killed tact former Presidents Harry S. Station, about 100 miles west of Waswil weeps as sb« stands beside her son, Eugene, 17, in Truman and Dwight D. Eisen- Amchitka, were cracked. Boys Court. Waswil is one of the three school,drop-outs hower jn hopes they could ac- Russia Planned Extent of damage at Shemya and Amchitka were held in connection with the slaying Sunday night of- Fred company him. Truman was WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- Soviet leaders will visit the b'rith, was interrupted twice not availa- Christiansen , 66, in a $11 robbery. State's Attorney Daniel P. In Traffic unable to go. Eisenhower ac- by applause as he voiced the ble, military spokesman said. dent Johnson, newly on record United States in 1965. Other military installations in Ward said murder ifidictments will be sought against all cepted the invitation. as very hopeful of visiting the key sentence in his speech : He said he had personally the Aleutians escaped damage, three youths. (AP Photof ax ) Soviet Union this year , has ini- Some senators said Johnson's "I have reason to believe that called Chief Justice Earl proposed trip might further ease he reported. '64 tial backing from many sena- the Soviet leadership would wel- Northern Japan apparently Mishaps in Warren and asked if he would East-West tensions and de- come my visit to their country go with him. tors — Democrats and Republi- got the brunt of today's tidal CHICAGO (AP) - A record served approval. Some others (applause) — as I would be j "I felt that with the former cans. y would do no waves, but no damage was re- traffic accident toll of 47,800 Johnson . pulled a surprise said it certainl very glad to do ( applause)." Three Dropouts j president , the chief justice , the harm. ported. lives and $8.2 billion in econom- Wednesday night by hinting that In Crescent City, Calif., hard- distinguished ambassador of black" Johnson had begun by saying ic losses last year was reported that we had a good such a journey already is tenta- Johnson , addressing a hit by the tidal wave spawned this country, Anti-Defama- his Jan. 4 proposal that the So- by the ^National Safety Council delegation and a high ranking tively in the works. And he cou- tie dinner of the by the quake last March, evacu- today. tion League, an arm of the Jew- viet chiefs visit the United delegation ," Johnson went on. pled this with an equally firm States was receiving active, ation of low-lying areas was or- Admit Slaying that the new ish service organization , B'nai dered. In San Francisco The council contended in its , "I had no particular reason for expression of hope constructive and, he hoped, , police report that prevention tech- i not asking the vice president to cleared the beaches but there CHICAGO (AP) - "I beg you , "I'm sorry, mother , that yoi fruitful attention in Moscow. to forgive me for ha ving failed , have to meet your boy ii niques are being applied "in a go, although the vice president 'I am very hopeful," he said, was no general evacuation. , "I love court ," said Judge Saul A. Ep half-hearted, haphazard man- was addressing the delegates of is out this Residents of coastal areas in you " the letter said. "that before the year three Washington counties were you dearly and because of my: ton. "It's a sad meeting, but i ner" in too. many areas. 50 states on his new responsi- exchange of visits between vs bilities in the field of civil Out love I failed you." was a sad incident for the com 105 Cadets may occur." The 1964 death total showed rights." ¦ That was the beginning of a munity." an increase of 10 per cent over letter from Yvonne Del Vecchio Christiansen was shot numer the previous igh of 43,564 Johnson was asked aT)»ut the to her son, George, in a juvenile ous times with a 22-caliber rifle recorded in 1963. current Viet Nam situation. He Quiz home Wednesday. Del Vecchio, said this country's position has In Academy beaten and kicked. An estimated 1.7 million 36, Eugene Waswil, 17, and Jo- not changed in its desire to help AIR FORCE ACADEMY, sulted in the resignations of 105 Extension of sepn varcneuo, Christiansen, a blller at thi Americans suffered injuries the Southeast Asia country. violating the acad- that disabled them beyond (he Colo. (AP) — Air Force Acad- cadets for 16, are charged Railway Express Co., had let Referring to McGeorge emy officials say they have end- emy honor code. with murder his home Sunday evening to buj day of the accident. Bundy's present mission to ed the two-week investigation of The officials, in statements and robbery. a package of cigarettes. "The tragic record for 1964 is South Viet Nam , Johnson said which re- DST Asked a clear indication that we have --classroom cheating Wednesday, defended the honor Police say the , he was looking forward to a full more According to police th< failed to keep pace with the vast exchange of views on the Viet system and praised the three, nil high youths were cruising Wavelani than 2,400 cadets cleared of any school dropouts growth of our automobile pop- Nam problem. Avenue on the Northwest Side ir ulation," Howard Pyle, council Johnson declined to speculate complicity in the theft or use of In Minnesota a stolen car when they sav president, said in a statement. stolen examination questions. on the purposes of a Soviet dele- Jenkins Asks ST, PAUL (AP) - A dozen Christiansen walking alone. gation's visit to Hanoi , capital Warren, Del Vecchio said he fired re "Fundamental prevention Maj. Gen. Robert S. witnesses representing business, of North Viet Nam. He said ttys academy superintendent , WHERE QUAKE HIT peatedly at the man. The othei techniques are widely known , country would have to await industry and labor presen ted but in too many areas they are blamed the scandal , largest in what a sponsor called a "logi- two said they kicked Chris developments. To Be Excused the history of U.S. service Hansen to stop his screams. administered in a half-hearted, cal , non-emotional" case for ex- Asked about a possible confer- WASHINGTON (AP) - Wal- schools, on a "cancer of 105 evacuated , state civil defense haphazard manner. tending daylight saving time- at headquarters at Olympia , "He kept screaming an( ence between South and North ter Jenkins , former top aide to cadets who chose to live outside a meeting of the Senate General screaming," Del Vecchio said "From 1954 to 1961 a limited Vietnamese, and what would President Johnson , failed to ap- the honor system." Credit Wash., reported. Legislation Committee today- At Eugene, Ore., Lane County "so I stepped back and pu application of these techniques happen if the United States pear before the Senate Rules should be given to cadets who Opponents of the proposal are about eight more shots in him.' contributed to a reduction of were asked to leave , Johnson Committee today in response to "had the guts to stand up and sheriff's deputies said people? to have their innings next along the Oregon Coast were traffic fatalities from 9.8 deaths said he would not want to specu- a subpoena for questioning in support their honor system ," he Thursday. Christiansen gasped out por late on what happens im this sit- being warned of the tidal-wave tions of tlie story before he died per IOO million vehicle miles to its Bobby Baker probe. said. 5.2, a reduction of 47 per cent." uation or that situation . While the measure under dis- threat. George Instead Jenkins' lawyer, Pey- Among the cadets who re- cussion would extend Minnesota and from bro- Mrs. Del Vecchio. 32, sail Slight wave action was report- ton Ford , and a psychiatrist signed were 40 athletes, includ- dates only to conform to Wis- ed in Sitka , Alaska , but other- k e n families , state psychiatrists had advisei who has been treating him , pr. ing 29 foot ball players. Warren consin DST dates, most witnes- have admitted her three years ago to pu wise the wave apparen 'ly Leon Ydchclson , went before a said 20 would have been candi- ses said they would favor ad opt- passed up Alaska points , the shooting and George into an institution. closed session of thc committee dates for this year's varsity. It ing the even longer period which "They read f rom a repor 17th District Coast Guard Head- robbing Fred A . and asked that t/ie f ormer normally numbers 45 to 50. prevails in eastern states. quarters at Juneau said. Christiansen , 66. which said that some time - White House aide be excused Ninety cadets resigned In a while high on Joseph oven without his realizing it - from testifying. Minnesota now has daylight "goofballs" (pep pills) and li- George might kill somebody,' 1951 investigation of honor code saving time from Memorial Day This information was relayed violations nt the U.S. Military quor and needing money for police quoted her as saying. to newsmen by Sen . Joseph S. to Labor Day. Maddox Ruling more barbiturates. They took But she said she had hean Academy at West Point^nclud- The bill under discussion Clark , D-Pa., who left the com- ing 43 football players. $11 from Christiansen who died bad reports of boys (correction mittee meeting while it was would extend this to cover thc a few minutes Inter in a hospi- al) schools and didn 't want he still going on. Questions of whet her academ- period from the last Sunday in Promised in tal. son sent to one. ic and extracurricular demands April through the last Sunduy in Mrs. Del Vecchio put polici on cadets are excessive, and September. In eastern states "We were laughing fit to die. " More to Respect wcilJifi;! onto the youths' trail. She re whether the code is too rigid , DSTLJ.i l runsinitio throughmi nu^l! October.. police quoted Del Vecchio as remain to be answered by a The bill i.s sponsored by Sens. Next Few Days "We were hysterical. It | ported Monday evening thn 're told , saying. George had been missing sine Young people, we special committee headed by Leslie Wcstin of St. Paul , Ray- ATLANTA. Ga. (AP> - A was the (pep) pills that made us were more respectful of Gen. Thomas D. White , former mond Higgins of Duluth nnd 1 Saturday night and that he hai federal judge has promised to do it." their elders in the old days. Air Force chief of staff. Raphael Salmore of Stillwater. rule in the next few days i*n He and Varehctto were taken a gun. She showed officers i Perhaps , says the cynic, be- Witnesses said the present sit- newspaper with an apmtmen Parents of some of the cadets contempt charges brought because of cause they had more to re- uation has Minnesota out of to a juvenile home advertisement circled. Tin who resigned have questioned step against segregationist Le.s' their age. Waswil was lodged in spect then ... It isn't so the code. with the rest of the nation , lim- Maddox by three Negroes who police youths were arrested nt thi hard to live on a small sal- its the time for business ¦com- jail. All three have apartment the nex t clay. said they were refused servico records. ¦ ary, if you don 't spend too Warren »aid only cadets In- munication with eastern cit ies at his cafeteria . Mrs. Del Vecchio's letter much money trying to keep volved in the theft, sale or ille- to about three hours a day when Dist. Judge Frank A. Hooper snid: "Because I failed to do WEATHER it a secret . . . Tliere nro gal use of examination ques- the east is on DST and M inne- took the case under considera- my duty toward you, you have times when silence is the tions were nsked to resign. He sota its not , nnd generally inter- tion Wednesday at the end of n killed a man. I hopu that God FEDERAL FORECAST best way to yell at thc top said "other thnn honorable " feres with business. three-day hearing an a crowded can forgive both you and I for WINONA AND VICINITY - of your voice . . . Firmness discharges Would be recom- Also mentioned was thc con- courtroom. pence Mostly fair with modcratini is an admirable, quality in mended f«r those who stole or fusion in railroad and airline l>elense attorney Sidney our mistakes. Make your s just , and your bur- temperatures tonight , low ien ourselves; in others it' sold examination papers, and schedules and in programming Schell described Maddox us a with God , my son detestable stubbornness. den shall be lightened. to 8 below. Increasing cloud! honorable discharges for those for radio ond television sliows. sincere and honorable man con- ness and warmer Friday, higl who only used the material . The Mayor Rudy Klllngs of WINO- fused by the meaning of thc civ- failure to academy has refused to identify "I will carry my 15-20. SWEETHEART OF A HAIRDO . . . The pretty face NA recalled thnt the Winona il rights law. you as a cross. any of the cadets. City Council voted last year to " LOCAL WKATHEn belongs to Donna Leonard who models thc hairdo created "It's our duty to understand Waswil's weeping mother, Official observations for thi , Secretary Eugene M. Zuckcrt stay on DST as long as W Iscon- the man , a man confused hy Frances, stood beside her son 24 hours ending at 12 m. today for St. Valentine's Day by Huth Regina of Miami Beach. of the Air Force will personally sin did. He said he was sure the what the Congress of the United during a hearing in court Maximum , 7; minimum, -17 The arrow , we are sure, only goes through the hair, Donna (For more laughs sec Earl review each case before final same action will be taken this States hus done and what tho Wednesday. noon, 7; precipitation , none. Is a native of Alliance, Ohio. (AP Photofax ) Wilson on Page 4) disposition. year unless the Legislature acts, law is," said Schell. Ex-Winonan Heads j Honeywell Sales, I Earnings at Peak ABBY: Research Group Russ Release DEA R MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Hon- For General M/7/s eywell, Inc., Wednesday report- WORKS ed record high sales and earn- WIKONA CLEANING Ray Koehn, son of Charles J. U.S. Student ings for, 1964 on the basis of a Koehn, 1763 W. Broadway, has preliminary unaudited j report. He Checks His been named head of the pack- J Earnings for the year were aging research department of $41,389,166, about 19 per cent General Mills at the James Ford In Auto Death greater than the previous year Bell Research Center, Golden Bulk Dry Cleaning MOSCOW (AP) - Peter Lan- and equivalent to $2.89 a com- Bills Carefully Valley. mon share on 14,060,886 shares Koehn, who is mayor of derman, an Amer ican student By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN outstanding. Earnings in 1963 Mound , is a graduate of Winona jailed for the death of a Soviet were $3,669,623 or $2.41 a share. - DEAR ABBY: My husband has a "thing " about money. Senior High School and of St. in an auto accident, was re- Sales for 1964 increased 3 per stingy or anything like that. In fact , he is very Mary's College. He also has leased today after serving 16 cent to $667,193,406, compared He's not served on the school board at , but this is what I mean : He likes to play gin months of a 3-year sentence, an With $648,481,914 in 1963. generous Mound. He is married and has Paul B. Wishart BUNDLE the , board chair- $_ «00 $T.95 rummy, but if he doesn 't keep the score he goes over two children. American Embassy spokesman man, said sales increased in all I fl J figures to make sure there are no mistakes. When we dine He has been with General announced. major areas exqept the military FOR out , he never pays the check without going over it very care- Mills 27 years. The spokesman said tbe presi- and space field where volume C | fully. He always counts his change no matter how long the dium of the Supreme Soviet re- declined as anticipated because £ DODGE PATIENTS of reduced government procure- line is. Abby, he is not a poor man. In fact, he owns his own viewed Landermcn's case and ( ment. 's a self-made man who started with nothing DODGE, Wis. Special) — decided to release him "on hu- business. He Robert Wener, son of Mr. and manitarian grounds." SAVE $1.05 ON EACH $4.00 BUNDLE and has worked hard for what he has , and he's done very Mrs. George Wener , has return- last Dec. 23, he was brought to j j well. But it is embarrassing to have a husband who gives ed home from Lutheran Hosi- Landerman , 24 , of Riverside, Moscow and permitted to visit ( S&H 201 E. Srd St./ everyone is out to tal , La Crosse, where he had Calif., was turnc' over to an one hour with James A. Klem- Phone 2175 W* Glvt Stamps the impression that ' cheat him. HIS WIFE knee surgery. A senior at Ar- official of the embassy s coun- stine, consul at the U.S. Embas- sellor section at noon today. He sy in Moscow. cadia High School, he injured " DEAR WIFE: 1 admire your hus- the knee at football last fall.. will fly to New York Friday. mand. No honest person resents hav- It \vas necessary to remove car-J A former student at the Uni- ing the figures checked. He welcomes tilage. David Hoesley received^ versity of California, Lander- it. And anyone who pays a bill without extensive injuries to his left man was sentenced on Sept. \ Begins this Friday...one . week only A going over it , is foolish . "Change- hand when it became caught in 27, 1963, after a four-day trial. v counters" are appreciated in every re- a pulley at the Jaszewski Mill. He was driving a car filled liable place of business. ( The cashier One finger is broken and the with American students when doesn't enjoy staying late to figure out others have flesh injuries. He he hit a Soviet pedestrian near why she's 30 cents short.) Don't be was a patient over night at St. Minsk on Aug. 15, 1963. embarrassed. Joseph's Hospital , Arcadia. ¦ Landerman told the court Next time you are serving the man was pushing a motor- DEAR ABBY: I am a newcomer in town. I recently met franks, you might like to cut cycle along the road and that a rather attractive, middle-aged single woman briefly at a them in wedges and heat them there were no lights on the mo- party. We exchanged a few words and I got the feeling in a barbecue sauce. Allow the torcycle, lie said lights from that she liked me. (A man can usually tell those things. ) franks to stand in boiling-hot oncoming traffic temporarily Yesterday she telephoned me at my office and invited me water ( off heat) for 10 minutes blinded him. to what I am sure will be a very elegant party, and I ac- before slicing and adding to the American officials had hot cepted with pleasure. After I hung \up I realized that she sauce. Use a barbecue sauce been informed where Lander- had made no mention of my wife. I' m not sure she know s with a tomato base. man was serving his term , but ^^^^^^^BBteVV:;*VVVVP« ^Ammm/m/m^mmmiM^m J|3l£t ;§|ijjM|# ^^ I am married. Would it be improper of me simply to bring ^Vv;V&«-S»^i^^ Mymfm^f l7ym7M'm^iA/7y/^^^m^J^yiiim^m Jm&myAm^ymAjgAgKF^^"^^^^^mmmmm^mmmmmmmmmmWI^^^ my wife? Or should I call her and ask if my wile is wel- _, -¦ m/M/^m/A^r yiviilir JmmAiimm;m___ \r ^ come? What if she thought I was unmarried and expected " ^7-yA J^y://7//m:::. f 7 -/// __W^ \ ^f/////mym ^:MmmjBm/m7/ :yMr *i me to be her escort? She is one of the leading socialites in ¦ town and I wouldn't want to do the wrong thing. / 3r _^,a^^^MB§M«^^^Mt JH r liiil l vfflllp IN A QUANDARY SAVE $60M DEAR IN: Call the woman and ask if the invitation includes your wife, suggesting that perhaps she did not know ycu were married. If she is a lady, she'll include -#» SNOW your Mrs. —. but don 't count on it. I have a hunch she knew you were married when she invited you — alone. DEAB ABBY: It so happens that 1 dislike mashed pota- ^\ BLOWER toes so, when I am served mafehed potatoes, I always mix ls»N^_ 20-lnch — Self-Propelled STANDARDLUMBER I A ^jffmother them with something else so I can get them down. Is this / comes^ . // considered bad manners? Reg. $189.95 A very educated lady who thinks she is better than 1^-jT fif anyone else recently said to me, when she saw me mixing NOW ONIY Floor Tile ==r^ my mashed potatoes with stewed tomatoes and peas ( whi ch tf^S^^t Prefirmhed Wall Paneling / . 7 ^> Standards quality Philippine Vinyl-asbestos , the extra-wear / ^/? §£/ cr/ I also mashed ) , "Will you kindly refrain from mixing up your floor tile Subject to prior sale / / mahogany. SOS^eeL ,A . L food that way — it is positively nauseating!" n i- \ n t because this low, low price can / Sa lgOJ/rt/«»-. Jf I am awaiting your opinion of (a) my table manners . .. Our biggest seller! / /^""-i£ iS2 ! 5 appIy only ,0 on stocks on hand 0/| (b) her rudeness. Sincerely, f BURNING IN SALT LAKE CITY *$P M29' p0n.i 4x*.*. *4.49 pcr t.|e /•""*"»'* y .^. DEAR BURNING: If you'll just skip the mashed pota- SOME MODELS PRICED EVEN LESS! 4x7-ft. Pat,_.|... $4.w Q

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SAW JL d_H__bJ_^Mr JL NELSON TIRE SERVICE lumber Your best STANDARD for Fourth and { re/iqJb/e savings i Johnson Phone 2306 Pho„e 3373 ' . m , . . , , f Winonj l Two Injured WSC Women s Any Regulation of Business Temperatures In Accidents Dorms Raided Bad, Chamber Speaker Says From 60 to 100 "unidentified repeated their pattern, working To Continue On City Sf reels males" invadecj three Winona down irom the upper floors. Ap- By GEORGE McCORMICK He defined a free market as inessmen to produce better school — "before basket-weav- spreading of the alarm Daily News Staff Writer "that area where free people goods more cheaply. The con- ing and the social studies Pour accidents State College women's dormi- parently, Wednesday tories Wednesday night after and growing fear on the part of A former president of the Na- make free choices." sumer would benefit while the crowded economics out." and one Monday caused two in- businessman received a higher disabling the switchboard at the men involved led to the in- tional Association of Manu- INDEPENDENCE from gov- He is concerned today, how- juries and $840 in property down Upward Trend profit, he said. ever, with the "economic il- damage. Morey Hall. truders' merely running facturers denounced any regu- ernment regulation is an im- The masked and gloved in- hallways in a third women's For the first time in a cou- lation of business at Wednes- "What's good for business is literacy" shown even by some Both injuries resulted from portant criterion, Grede assert- good for all the people," Grede a truders moved with disciplined dorm, Richards Hall. ple of weeks the term "moder- day night's annual Winona ed. Speaking of the individual, businessmen. He declared that two-car collision at Broadway speed to their first objective, ating temperatures" appears in Chamber of Commerce dinner asserted. if such men as sociologists, and Huff Street By this time, most girls had he said, "When we increase his He contended that no firm Wednesday at Conway Hall, about 7:30 p.m. the weather forecast for Winona meeting. dependence on government we teachers and clergymen were 4:12 p.m. A car driven east on locked their doors. The "invad- could make too high a profit. not economically naive Here, they started on the fourth 7:45 p.m., and vicinity. William J. Grede, chairman destroy his freedom and the free , they Broadway by Orville F. Harm, ers" had dispersed by "The company that makes would not be taken in by what floor of the dormitory and and police arrived to find no one But for the ninth consecutive of the board of Grede Found- market." Cochrane, Wis., was attempting worked their way through the 'too much profit' gives the cus- he termed socialism. about , according to Chief Meier. day temperature dipped below ries, Inc., Milwaukee, con- An unregulated market, sub- tomer the most for his money," to make a left turn north on halls, entering each room and gjvernment ject only to the law of supply "I don't think a man should Huff Street His department's investiga- the zero mark with an official demned regulation he maintained. when the collision grabbing whatever objects were -17 in Winona at 7 a.m. today. of the economy, the income tax, and demand and the law of graduate from any college un- occurred with a car driven west tion did not begin until a second less he available. call was received from the col- But for tonight the weatherman businessmen who think of the diminishing returns — what TAKING A swipe at educa- 's had at least one semes* on Broadway by Stanley C. public rather than of their Grede called "the arithmetic of tion today, Grede said he ter of the arithmetic of econ- Riva, 361 ONE GIRL, living on the lege, today, Meier said. said mostly fair with moderat- Druey Court. ing temperature with an over- shareholders and the creeping economics" — would allow bus- learned economics in high omics," the speaker said. fourth floor of Conway Hall, was Dr. Nels * IMPACT SPUN the Harm car injured when she fought off men COLLEGE President night low of zero to 8 below. socialism of which the rest is AFTER ATTACKING last Minne said, "It isn't clear yet" symptomatic. around into the crosswalk on trying to rip an article of cloth- FOR FRIDAY the prediction year's tax cut — contending that the north side of Broadway. just what happened. He said ing from her person. including is for increasing cloudiness and HE CALLED for « free mar- taxes are supposed to raise rev- Here, the Harm car struck a that college officials enue, Mariner and the deans of men warmer with an afternoon high ket run by individuals commit- not to stimulate tlie econ- pedestrian walking west across COLLEGE Personnel Director ted to independent action. omy — Grede turned to the in- M. L. Mariner said that as of and women are investigating of 15. Huff Street with two friends. "This is the story of Ameri- come tax law itself. Jane Van Alstine, 13, 701 this noon this was the only in- the incident. They began their Nearer normal temperatures jury known to college officials. check Wednesday night, shortly are expected Saturday with no ca ," Grede said : "More and "The federal income tax leg- Grand St., was taken to a clin- better and cheaper products for ic by investigating However, a person-by-person after the "raid," Dr. Minne important precipitation. Normal islation that's now on our books patrolmen. more people." is the most regulatory She was treated for bruises on survey was under way. The one said. temperatures this time of the legisla- girl's injuries apparently were A dorm counselor said that year indicates a daytime high Americans must become com- tion on the books—and, inciden- her knees and released. Mrs. mitted to these principles, he Harm also received bruises in confined to bruises; however, the raid was carried out at just of near 20 and a nighttime low tally, the most socialistic," the she was referred to the college's the right time, while most resi- of -2 to 7 above. said, then must actively advo- speaker maintained. the accident and was admitted cate them whenever possible. to Community Memorial Hos- health service for an exami- dent counselors were attending The Winona temperature rose "The politicians have been us- pital. nation. night classes. The intruders al- to 6 above Wednesday afternoon "I'd suggest you be an ex- ing the income tax law ... not , Damage was about $70 to the He refused to identify her un- legedly assembled on the foot- and was 7 at noon today. tremist," Grede said to raise revenue, but rather front of the Riva vehicle and til an investigation being con- ball practice field and, moving just a facet . . . of the free to regulate," he said. about $105 to the right rear of ducted by college officials and at hand and whistled signals A YEAR AGO today the Wi- market, and if we are to re- nona high was 38 and the low main free, we must develop "This is socialism," Grede de- the Harm car. city police is completed from one or more leaders , pro- clared , and it' , where 9. All-time high for Feb. 4 was individuals of self-reliance and " s so creeping we Sergeant Ray L. Kauphus- Mariner confirmed that there ceeded to Morey Hall don 't even realire it." "has been some personal prop- they effectively disabled the 53 in 1890 and the alltime low character." rnan and Patrolmen George M. All regulation hinders the Liebsch and John A. Erickson erty loss." Reportedly, paja- college communication system -26 in 1893. Mean for the past 24 investigated. mas, underwear, cosmetic for a short while. •hours was -5 in conttasjijfifli a economy, the speaker said. Ha bottles and books were among normal mean of 17 above. singled out for attack such reg- A collision at 464 W. Sarnia STUDENTS emphasized that St. at 7:55 a.m. occurred as a the intruders' loot. Low temperatures were re- Chamber Unit CHAMBER SPEAKER . . . Engaged in conversation be- ulatory practices as price and He said that the faculty's stu- the raid was not a free-for-all. rent control in effect during and car driven west on Sarnia well-planned by corded throughout Minnesota fore the Winona Chamber of Commerce dinner meeting are dent citizenship committee It was obviously this morning with -28 at Inter- after World "War II. Street by Thomas P. Joswick, a recruited group of men. Arnold E. Stoa, outgoing president of the group; William 978 Gilmore Ave., slowed down. would begin a formal investi- national Falls and -26 at Bemid- gation early this afternoon. In- Mariner said that 322 women J. Grede, Milwaukee, main speaker of the evening, and HE ATTACKED, too. busin- dormitories ji. It was -23 at Rochester and Asks Sales Tax A CAR DRIVEN bv James terviews were under way with lived in the three -20 at Duluth and St. Cloud. William F. Lang, new chamber president. Grede is a former essmen who felt they had a pub- W. Dresser, 534 Glen View victims of the raid and with during the fall quarter. He said , president of the National Association of Manufacturers. lic trust to keep prices — and, "The college staff responded In Wisconsin La Crosse re- thus, profits , down. He told of Drive, also moving west on male students at the college ported a -21 at the airport. (Daily News photo) Sarnia Street collided with the believed to have been among pretty effectively to restore or- In Minnesota talking to the president of a rear of the Joswick vehicle. the participants. der , " with the assistance of lo- Minnesota and Wisconsin high- steel company after the war, Damage was more than $200 cal authorities. ways were reported in good win- A policy statement support- and of asking him why he did to the left rear of the Joswick ASSISTANT POLICE Chief No one was taken into custody ter driving condition today with ing a sales tax in Minnesota Lanesboro Street not raise the price of pig iron car and about $65 to the right Marvin A. Meier said that two either Wednesday night or this the exception of secondary roads was approved by the govern- Hospital Tells he sold to Grade's foundries. front of the Dresser vehicle. d etectives from his department morning to his knowledge, Mari- which were still slippery. mental affairs committee of the Sign Plan OKed If the steel firm would raise Patrolman Willis HV Wogan were investigating the incident ner said. Lone Rock, WIS., recorded 27 Winona Chamber of Commerce LANESBORO, Minn. (Special) its prices $5 a ton, Grede said investigated. in cooperation with college offi- "There has been some person- degrees below zero at 8 a.m. to- Tuesday. *, —Duane Thompson , president of How to Respond he told the company president, A two-ear collision at Waba- cials. al property loss," Mariner ad- day and Madison had 23 below The group called for a sales the Lanesboro Junior Chamber "I'll get $15 a ton from my cus- sha and Olmstead streets at The raiders moved from Con- mitted. The extent of loss is al- at 7:55 a.m. Madison's mini- tax that would eliminate the of Commerce tomers." way to Shepard Hall where they , said the street 8:20 a.m. caused $125 damage so being investigated. mum broke the record of 21 be- personal property tax levy sign project, sponsored by the To Emergencies "We're entitled to as much and ease real estate taxes, pro- to the vehicles. low for the date set in 1883. Jaycees and 17 community or- Better public understanding of profit as anyone is willing to Franklin D. Heatwole, 24, 921 Superior had 20 below, Wau- vide additional money for local ganizations, has been approved emergency room uses pay us," Grede told his capac- government is the ob- W. Wabasha St., was driving sau and Park Falls 19 below, and avoid income by thte village council. jective of 8,000 brochures mail- ity audience of chamber mem- west on Wabasha Street; Bon- Madison and Eau Claire 17 be- tax increases. They plan to install about 40 ed this week by Community Me- bers. nie J. Chapman, 18, 660 E. Barn and Cattle low, Racine 13 below, Green THE RESOLUTION suggested signs this spring. , morial Hospital. "We do have a moral obliga- Mark St., was driving south Bay 12 below and Milwaukee 8 no sales tax rate, reflecting the Jaycees plan a donkey bas- tion to make the most on Olmstead Street. The cars committee's stated feeling that All Winona postal patrons profit below. ketball game Feb. 27 at com- were sent the instructional fold- we can ," he asserted. slid into each other. Racine and Lone Rock topped this must be determined when munity hall. , Damage was $100 to the Burn at Mondovi state and local demands are con- ers, the hospital administrator, Freedom Grede maintained, MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) - , Lost in the blaze were 17 Jersey the state Wednesday with 8 E. W. Hagberg, said. is neither political nor economic right front of the Heatwole car above zero. Burlington had 7 sidered. and $25 to the left side of the A large dairy barn and 31 head I milk cows, five 2-year-old heif- In a companion resolution, the When a person is faced with in origin, but rather is a "re- of cattle were destroyed by fire ers, 2 bulls and 7 calves. Five above, Milwaukee, Madison , an emergency, the first thing to ligious discovery." He said that Chapman vehicle. Patrolman Beloit and La Crosse 5 and Wau- group opposed reinstatement of Wogan investigated. early Wednesday morning on ! head escaped. the household goods tax in Wi- St. Stanislaus do is call the family physician, the individual person is impor- sau 1 below. tant, and added that Christ said the 0. D. Mikesell farm in Town I There were 60 or 70 tons of non a County, calling it outmod- the hospital advises. There are A COLLISION at 4 th and of Albany, Pepin County. ! S.D., ed , inefficient and unfair . no resident physicians at the so, too. Johnson streets at 8:20 p.m. oc- hay in the mow. Also destroyed ABERDEEN. had the The farm is five miles north | were several pieces of machin- national low of 28 below early The committee, led by Chair- Pupils Attend hospital, a fact of which many THAT MAN has a soul and curred when John A. Kirch, 18, of Mondovi bn County Trunk H. persons are unaware Hagberg U ery stored in a lean-to attach- today, and Miami, Fla., set the man Robert C. Olson, urged tax , a child of God, Grede said, is 54 W. Mark St., stopped to dis- reform in the state. Members said. charge passengers while driv- ed to the barn. They included high of ao Wednesday. , best illustrated in America, an elevator, grain drill, wagon indicated a belief that business- School Saturdays If the individual cannot reach ing north on Johnson Street. ' where — when the market was and roto-mower. men and farmers should not pay An early spring dismissal of liis own physician, friends or free—"we've built more church- A car driven north on John- taxes on machines and equip- son Street by Robert O. Beck- Meyers Asking The 34- by 66-foot building was classes at St. Stanislaus School family should do so, the folder es and schools than anywhere all ablaze when discovered by ment. advises. And the hospital should er, Winona Rt. 3, collided with is planned to facilitate the pro- else in the world." Mrs. Eugene Gruber, a farm Watkins Dome Tax reform would result in a jected school building program be notified in advance of the Declaring that a welfare state the rear of the Kirch vehicle better job climate here, and it patient's arrival, causing $5 damage to its rear. neighbor, about 5:30 a.m. She expected to begin sometime if possible. will "dissipate our talents" and For Jury Trial alerted Mondovi firemen who would bring greater prosperity When the person's own physi- Damage was $100 to the front Trial of David Meyers, 25, early this spring. Saturday destroy morality, the speaker were joined by Durand firemen. to the state and its people, the school has resulted. cian is not available, the hospi- of the Becker car. 1652 W. Sth St., on a charge of committee concluded. tal will supply its own said , "Let 's discard our govern- Patrolman Richard D. Peter- They fought the blaze two hours Work Started Classes for students in kind- on-call ment crutches." having a protected deer in his in temperatures 16 degrees be- OTHER BUSINESS included: staff member. «on investigated. possession was postponed to Plans for a special care unit ergarten through eighth grades He urged his listeners to re- low zero. • Approving plans for a "Re- are scheduled for dismissal May Calls for ambulances should Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. today in were approved by directors of port to the People meeting with ject the next government pro- A COLLISION which occurred Harley Mikesell , son of 0. D. Paul Watkins Memorial Home " 1 to allow for razing of the be placed directly to the ambu- muncipal court . Mikesell county legislators Feb. 13. gram offered to them , citing an Monday at 12:05 p.m. at 3rd , was owner of the cat- at a Wednesday luncheon meet- grade school building to provide lance service since the hospital and Main streets was belatedly Meyers has asked for a jury tle and machinery. He lives on Making preliminary plans urban renewal program as an trial , and it was impossible to ing. • a site for one section of the does not furnish its own , the example. reported by the drivers today. a nearby farm and operates his to sponsor a bus trip to take folder notes. Persons arriving at draw the panel for a six-man ' Contractors are now at work Winonans to St. Paul to visit new structure. Ironically , shortly before this, Robert A. Perry, 262 Walnut father s place. Houses and garages on prop- the south side emergency en- St., was driving east on 3rd jury in time for the trial sched- on the fourth floor remodeling the legislature later in the cur- William F. Lang, new chamber uled today at 9:30 a.m. project whose total costs are erty at East Sth and Zumbro trance should go directly inside president, had urged the aud- Street when he stopped before rent session. and summon assistance by us- The charge against Meyers Dover-Eyota Roll estimated at more than $22,000. Hearing a report by 5. J. street are being removed in pre- ience to support the federal ur- making a right turn south onto • paration of a site for the sec- ing wall phone if no nurse is on Main Street. A panel truck driv- was brought by Game Warden Funds for the project were Pettersen on the findings of the hand. ban renewal project proposed en east on Srd Street by Ter- Francis Teske in connection EYOTA , Minn. (Special)- At- made available from the estate legislature's interim tax study tion which will house first for Winona. taining the A honor roll at Do- In cases of severe bleeding, rence T. Bormann , 24, 174 E. with the slaughtering of a tame of the late R. H. Watkins. commission, which held one of through fourth grade classes burns, America is threatened by col- deer that was let out of the ¦ver-Eyota High School the last and which is expected to be choking or suffocation , Sth St.. collided with the rear The new unit will occupy the its public hearings here last patients should be taken imme- lectivism , Grede argued , and its of the Perry car. Izaak Walton League deer park period were: Jackie Nigon , Vir- top floor of Florence Hall , the February. ready for occupancy at the be- citizens must try to preserve ginia Tesch and Linda Tetzlaff , diately to the hospital, the book- Damage was $154 to the car on Latsch Prairie Island Park new west wing of the retirement Making plans to attend the ginning of the fall term. let advises individualism. last month. grade 12; Donna Frick and Ros- • , and notification and $17 to the right front head- home, The 19 rooms will be ar- leadership forum of the United In anticipation of the early should be left to others , if pos- "I'm not opposed to democ- light of the truck. alee Wingert, grade 11; Karen ranged to accomodate up to 21 States Chamber of Commerce, spring dismissal , classes are be- racy when it describes what Schmidt sible. , grade 10, and Cynthia persons who need extra care. to be held in Sioux Falls , S.D., ing conducted on an accelerated ¦ we've got in America," the Winona Police Attend Giese, grade 7. ¦ Special facilities will be incor- next Thursday. schedule. speaker assured his audience. porated into the design , includ- The school day has been 81 Pints Blood Funeral in Mankato JUST IN TIME Blair Lions He went on to say , however, ing such things as shower baths mer 4 Toye, electrical contrac- lengthened somewhat — running Host that he was against democracy Given at Osseo Police Chief James W. Mc- NEW YORK (AP) - Two men for persons confined to wheel- tor is Bauer Electric Co. Addi- from 8 to 11:15 a.m. and 12:30 To Area as defined in a diction ary—ma- Cabe and Captain Marlowe L. willingly helped a driver push chairs. Mealtime tray service tions to the intercommunica- to 3:20 p.m. — students at- Members jority rule. Brown attended the funeral to- OSSEO, Wis. (Special) - De- his stalled car from a deserted will be available to residents tions system will be constructed tend school on Saturdays from At Grede called his speech a re- spite subzero weather , the Red day in Mankato of the former 8 a.m. to noon and usual free Independence Mankato police clljef , who died Lower East Side intersection. and the unit will have its own by Edward Mahlke. fresher course in the American Cross bloodmobile collected 30 Then two policemen arrived and nursing station . Present at the board meeting days and Holy Day dismissals BLAIR , Wis. (Special )-Blalr heritage. more pints Tuesday between 3 Sunday of a heart attack. have beeir elinunated. " Stanley W. Christ , 49, police started to help out , but then Architects for the project are Wednesday was Dr. Edward W . Lions were hosts recently at a and 7 p.m. than on its last stop. realized the car was stolen. Eckert & Carlson , general con- Foote, Itochester, superinten- There also was a shortening meeting of Lions clubs in Dis- BEFORE Grede spoke , Arnold chief at Mankato since 1951, E. Stoa , outgoi ng chamber Eighty-one pints were received. had recently cooperated with They arrested the driver on a tractor is the P. Earl Schwab dent of the Southeast Minnesota of the Christmas vacation trict 27-E at an Independence A total of 130 volunteers had charge of grand larceny. Co., plumbing contractor Kra- Methodist District. period. dining spot. president , reviewed the group's Winona police in the apprehen- accompl ishments during signed up. There were eight re- sion o( Erwin Jones of Man- Lions from Blair . Whitehall , 1964. jects. Pigeon Palls , Independence and He then installed Lang as new ¦ kato, who has been charged with burglary and agravated as- Black River Falls were present president . BLAIR PATENTS sault in connection with the Sen- and a rep resentative of each re- Dr. M. L. DeBolt was master ported. of ceremonies , and the invoca- BLAIR , Wis . (Special) - Mrs. ior High School burglary at- tempt Jan. 7 King Trial in Weekend Recess E. L. Friede, president of thc tion was given by the Rt. Rev. Wayne Nyen , who has been a . ¦ edly was it being the fertiliz- a lot of used fertilizer equip- Blair club, was master of cere- Msgr. J. Richard Feiten , direc- patient at Tri-County Memorial The Bohr-King Gas trial was E. Crowder objected to two , (or adjourned to Monday afternoon of the items on Bohr 's list of er season. ment including the six applica- monies. Some 70 Li ons were tor of Catholic Charities the Hospital , Whitehall , has been Spring Grove Barber present. diocese of Winonn . transferred to a Rochester hos- by District Judge Arnold Hat- improperly maintained equip- tors. field Wednesday after cross- ment. Judge Hatfield sustained BOHK ALSO admitted that lie Crowder said that Bohr claim- pital . The daughter of Mr. and SPRING GROVE, Minn. ( Spe- could not , of his personal Mrs. Gene Johnson , who was cial) - David Broers, formerly examination of the plaintiff had the objection , and the alleged ed lift-jacks were on all the loss was reduced to $ft ,798. knowledge , state whether all the Bohr born last week at Tri-County Me- of Waseca , is employed at El- begun. leased equipment actually came applicators when leased. replied that he did. (The lift- morial Hospital, Whitehall , has ton's Barber Shop here. Mr. and When the case was placed on ATTORNEY Crowder began into the hands of King Gas , Survival Preparedness Classes been a patient at a La Crosse Mrs. Broers and daughter will District Court's calendar, it jacks were not on the applica - examination of Bohr on the sub- since he had moved to Arizona by King hospital . Earl Loken , area far- move here, having purchased was estimated by the attorneys ( Bohr Aug, 11)59 , five months be- tors when returned : Be prepared if DISASTER strikes! ject of conipunv names. 1, Gas, Bohr had testified.) mer underwent knee surgery at the former Gerald Schlce resi- that it would take two days. alleges that King (ins painted fore thc lease took effect. Attend any of the following classes Bohr denied that the appli St. Francis Hospital , La Crosse. dence. Thus , Judge Hatfield had sched- its name in large letters on Bohr said he didn 't make a cators in question are now ob- Classes meet once each week for five weeks. uled work for himself in Cale- much of the equipmen t return- wholesale inspection of his fer- donia this morning and other ed to him. ) solete or that they had com- tilizer equipment before turn- depreciated by Jan. 1, Mo pre-registration necessary. work for the rest of the week. Bohr said that he is not aware ing if over to King Gas. As al- pletely 1965. TESTIMONY by plaintiff V. that a name i.s important in ways, he added , he inspected COLLEGE OF ST. TERESA, Monday, February 8, • He denied that a lift-jack in- NOTICE A. Bohr, Scottsdale, Ariz. , as developing and operating a the pieces ns they came in from 7 :00 P.M., Francis Bacon Lectu re Hall. business. He had the name the fields. ! traduced in evidence Wednes- it turned out , took the two days day morning had been taken .since the trial began Monday "Philgas" on just about all his Asked to produce depreciation WINONA STATE COLLEGE, Wedneaday, February 10, equip ment before leasing it to from a tool shed on hi.s prop- the Village records on his fertilizer equip- 7:00 P.M., Room 303, Somsen Hall. Residents of and a clay more as well. Bohr ¦testified , Tho erty.- +He had testified that he will resume the stand for cross- King Gas , Bohr ment for the years 1957 and name of his firm wus Minne- 19511, llohr said he had been dug it out of a snowbank Tues- WINONA SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL, Monday, February 15, examination Monday at 1:30 day night. ) of Goodview p.m. sota Butane i Equipment Oo. unable to find them. He did Uohr said he didn 't know 7:00 P.M., Faculty Dining Room. have records , however , for 1954- BOHK ADMirri- O thnt farm- must be purchased before March Wednesday afternoon, Bohr whether the lease agreement Dog Licenses completed his lengthy testimony 56 and for 1959. ers usually have their own liSt- COfTER HIGH SCHOOL, Tuesday, February 116, Clark' Office, 4245 Fifth Street. mentions names or the removal The missing records, how- 1 al tho Village * on direct examination by At- of names, or not . He didn 't re- jacks , but he added tbat these 7:00 P.M., Audio-Visual Room, requires each dog over 6 ever , contained information on nre used for specialized jobs. Village ordinance torney William A. Lindquist bv move any names from equip- Ihe age and value of six ferti- setting his loss at ,188. The A fertilizer dealer must still ST. MARY'S COLLEGE, Thursday, February 18, months old to be licensed, Unlicensed dog* $9 ment before turning it over to lizer applicators that Crowder loss was sustained, Bohr told have his own lift-jacks on his 7:00 P.M., Room 102, St. Mary ' s Hall. and Impounded after March King Gas, Bohr testified. wished to know about. will be taken up the court, because King Gas Crowder asked whether some applicators , Bohr told Crowder. & Fertilizer Co., Lewiston 1 , 1965. , had of Minnesota Butane 's equip- BOHR SAID that he was nn- Cross-examination was inter- For further information tall Winona Area not properly maintained fertiliz- of farm- nhle to give nny figure for the rupted after nbout I'i hours C. Ehmcke, Clerk ment WHS in the hands Technical School 8-3671 , Exte nsion 27. Pleasn Henry er equipment leased from Bohr ers at the time of the lease six applicators separately. He when Judge Hatfield recessed Rex A. Johnson, Mayor in 1959. signing, June 17, 1959. Bohr did know , Bohr told the court , the trial for the day and the post on your bulletin hoard. Defendant' s attorney William answered that some undoubt- thnt ho paid about $24 ,000 for week. They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmie Hatlo ] Bigger House QL dtappw&LJE OAL If UqhL Senate Asked l^^t^PS^. Broadway Music Mondovi Concert Miami Beach To Be Presented In State Bill At Whitehall High ST PAUL (AP) - Another Slated Tonight 'Action Capital' plan to reapportion the state has WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) - been offered to the legislature, —"An Evening on Broadway " A concert of instrumental and By EARL WILSON The proposal , presented by will be presented by the high vocal chamber music will be n-up of Frank Sinatra and Joe Rep. Walter Klaus, Farmington school band at 8 p.m. Saturday presented by the Mondovi High MIAMI BEACH - The teat music department at a at "Tbe Roc" — as the hipsters refer Conservative, would increase in the school auditorium. School E. Lewis in an act here p.m. today in the band room. to the Eden Roc Hotel — has imade Miami Beach the "action the Senate membership from 67 The first half of the program capital" of this hemisphere. to 69, and the House from 135 will be in the form of a variety Groups participating will in- With real diamonds, their owia fast boats and $50 tips, they're to 138. show featuring soloists and clude a clarinet choir, a wood- ell here in the biggest dress parade since the Inaugural. Names Klaus said Wednesday he will small groups performing show wind trio, a brass trio, a trass varying from Liz Whitney to Leij Durocher, and the N. Y. Yan- draw up a bill, implementing tunes and some scenes from sextet and a vocal triple trio. kees' Joe Pepitone to Harold the plan, and hoped to find co- Broadway productions. In addition, trombone and tenor Gibbons oi the Teamsters authors. The second half of the pro- saxophone solos will be pre- Union and 79-year-old Swifty One other plan , the first to be gram will include music from sented. Eichmann Aide Morgan are adding excitement introduced, was authored by "My Fair Lady," "Sound of Richard Putzier is senior high to a city already as filled up Sen. Donald Sinclair of Stephen, Music," "West Side Story" and school music director, and as Joe E, Lewis gets frequent- and Sen. Gordon Rosenmeier pf "Hello, Dolly," performed by James Lundquist is in charge 3y. Little Falls. It holds the Senate the concert band. of music in the junior high Gets 5 Years Even Keefe Brasselle of membership at 67, and reduces Proceeds from the concert will school. CBS-TV was here boasting that House to 134 members. It will help sponsor a foreign exchange Refreshments will be served his wife Arlene just had their have its first hearing Tuesday student here next year. by the Music Mothers after the For War Crimes second baby. Keefe, who ex- before the Senate Elections program. Proceeds will go to FRANKFURT, Germany pected a son, sent wjt tele- Committee. the group's fund. (AV) — A German war crimes grams: "We decided to name Another plan has our son Melissa." been pro- court Wednesday sentenced posed by the Governor's Reap- Jackie Gleason wired him : Panama May Adolph Eichmann's top aide, portionment Advisory Commis- "That's a funny way to run an sion. It does not change the Art Workshop Hermann Krumej, to five heirline." membership of either house. years at hard labor for com- The practically sold-out Sina- Voice of the Outdoors A federal district court or- Go It Alone plicity in the murder of at least tra-Lewis show plays to about i dered the legislature to reap- At La Crescent 1,800 people a night, meaning portion districts 200,000 Hungarian Jews. because the LA CRESCENT, Minn.—About that if Harry Mufson is paying present alignment does not fair- His codefendant, former SS . Sinatra and Lewis a reported 50 teachers from La Crescent ly represent population centers. schools will attend an Capt. Otto Hunsche, was acquit- i $115,000 for the two weeks, he's Klaus said he will introduce On New Canal and area y getting a bargain. PANAMA (AP) - Panama art workshop Feb. 16, 17 and 18 ted. j probabl his reapportionment bill later in here. Sinatra icfers humorously to the session. He said he made may go it alone and build a sea- in the school After an often stormy trial the bitter rivalry between the his proposal public how to stim- level isthmian canal by borrow- A service provided by Binney that lasted more than nine Elden Roc and its neighbor, the ulate discussion. He is a mem- ing from institutions such as the & Smith, Inc., manufacturers of months, Krumey was found Fontainebleau. ber of the House Reapportion- World Bank, Foreign Minister school art supplies, the work- the ment Committee. Fernando Eleta says. shop will be conducted by Miss guilty of participating in "I ALWAYS work next door, The possibility of such an un- Rasmussen, a former 1944 deportation of 437,000 Hun- Sigrid but it's a fcig happy family," he A DFL group with representa- dertaking would be contingent, teacher who holds a master's garian Jews to the Auschwitz says. "I saw Ben Novak and tives from both houses met Wed- where the be said, on determination that degree from Columbia Univer- concentration camp Harry Mufson walking down the nesday to start work in their excavation by nuclear methods majority of them were gassed. sity. street arm in arm — both arms own reapportionment plan. The would be feasible. Even so, the The teachers will devote 15 He was acquitted of a sup- were broken." party is in the minority in both plementary charge of extortion. cost would be $600 million to hours of their own time to learn- The B.W. and I saw the show houses. $700 million. ing about art education and Krumey, 60, an ex-SS lieuten- three times, and it's constantly Also on the elections scene, ant colonel and Eichmann's Eleta discussed with newsmen some of its materials and tools. changing. In one show Joe E. the House Elections Committee "learn by doing" deputy, once offered to trade , "Pay atten- Tuesday his talks this week with They will — shouted at Sinatra approved a bill to have the gov- the theme of the workshop. the Western allies one million tion to me, you bum!" Frank ernor and lieutenant governor U.S. Undersecretary of State Hungarian Jews in return for said Joe E. is Dean Martin's run as a team. This is a con- Thomas C. Mann. Mann has School officials responsible for 10,000 trucks. His offer was re- drinking coach. stitutional amendment requiring been visiting the four countries arrangements for the workshop jected- "What a roommate Joe E. is," voter approval if it gets through under consideration by the Unit- are W. H. Stetzler, superintend- ent of schools, and Mrs. Elnora Hunsche, 54. an ex-Nazi offi- he said. "It's like sleeping in both houses. ed States as sites for a sea-level a brewery." Rep. Martin Sabo. Minneapo- waterway replacing the Pana- Zimmerhakl, elementary princi- cer and Gestapo agent, was liai- pal. between Eichmann's "Old soliders never die," Joe lis Liberal, introduced tbe ma Canal. son officer hilosophize, The foreign minister did not special bureau "for the final E. remembered to p perennial bill to have legislators "because young soldiers do all run with party designation. rule out U.S. construction of the solution of the Jewish question'' new canal in Panama. the Hungarian regime of the fighting." Ettrick Village, and It's the fashion to take a big Fifth House Liberals sent a Admiral Horthy. letter to the Minnesota congres- It was considered possible The state prosecutor had party to the show. It was mem- Town Nominating orable wken Jackie Gleason — sional delegation asking Con- Eleta made the go-it-alone asked for life in prison for both gress to consider minimum suggestion to strengthen Pana- Western Germany has no who's now "Mr. MMjnlr Beach," Caucuses Slated men. " Forgotten Boats posite Franklin street, the av- his bill th at nonresident li- standards for unemployment ma's hand in negotiations with death penalty. afed referred to as "Oiff Jackie — came with 14, including Am- A drive around the various erage was four parts to a mil- censes are falling off. But compensation laws in the states. the United States to revise the ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - A bassador to Switzerland True boat harbors in the Winona area lion parts. Shields testified while indi- The Liberals said "repeated 1903 Panama Canal treaty. caucus will be held March 10 at and along the highways border- vidual license sales have Similarly, many Panamanians 7:30 p.m. at Community Hall to Davis and Mrs. Davis. Park board plows are failure" of the Minnesota Legis- WINONA DAILY NEWS SINATRA SINGS 10 to 15 ing the river shows the usual dropped, tie combination li- lature to act has left the jobless feel the most feasible route for nom inate candidates for village number of "forgotten boats". being used to clear some cense for nonresidents have a new canal is across Panama offices. songs, as beautifully as he did strips in the foot-deep snow benefit fund "close to insolven- THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1WS in his youth, so the girls say, Most of them are fishing boats, been increasing, and non-re- cy," and said Minnesota benefits and that Washington has pro- Officers whose terms expire ~~ some frozen in the ice, others to let some sunlight to the sident fisherman are more posed the other routes to bolster VOLUME 109, NO. 6) and with the same old sex ap- ice. Whether sufficient sun are below the needs of unem- are: A. M. Hogden, president ; peal for them. He also does a beneath a snow drift, but most and more angling in Min- ployed workers. The group said its position in the treaty talks. Published dally except Saturday and Holi- rays will penetrate the ice Robert Wall , clerk ; Smith Beir- days by Republican and Herald Publish- with some jokes of them have been hauled up nesota. similar situations exist in other Eleta said he was sure private monologue to benefit conditions is m ne, treasurer; Lewis Sander, ing Company, 60) Franklin St./ Winona, favorite people. To- above the high water mark and states. financing could be obtained and Minn. about his questionable. Cletus Casey and John Briggs, gether he and pixyish Joe E. just turned over. The head of the House High- that a sea-level canal would be trustees; A. W. Mahlum, asses- SUBSCRIPTION RATES out of a way Committee, Rep. August self-financing through tonnage (Insli Copy — 10c Dally, 15c Sunday make a mockery State fisheries officials have sor, and Arthur Runnestrand, Shakespeare reading. The owner of the boat pic- predicted a heavy winter kill Bundy Tells Mueller of Arlington, named a revenues. supervisor. Delivered by Carrier—Per week 50 centi Tony Bennett, Phyllis Diller, tured above apparently de- of fish and have opened up more 9 - member subcommittee 1o 24 weeki 312.75 53 weeks MS JO cided a little snow would be ETTRICK MAN RECOVERING Holdovers are Bennett Ons- Enzo Stuarti, Frances Faye, than 200 shallow lakes to wide work over the five bill-board ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - rud. Donald Beirne and Henry By mall strictly In advance) paper flop- Adam Wade, Morgana King, good for its upholstery and open fishing to date. Many control bills introduced thus lar. ped on expiration date. interior jmachinery. Anyw ay, Emil Helstad, 63, who received Knutson , trustees. Jerry Lester, Alan Gale, Cab more are expected to be opened Vief Nam War Some of the bills would restrict serious injuries while hanging The Town of Ettrick caucus In Fillmore, Houston, Olmtted, Winona, Calloway and Marion Colby are the runabout stands on a in an attempt to rescue and billboards on interstate high- Webastia, Buffalo, Jackson, Pepin and dock in the Winona Marina. Christmas greens here, now is will be at the hall M arch 12 at Trempealeau counties: also appearing here. save fish, it is indicated. ways only, others would provide We noticed , too , tbe doors of able to walk without crutches 2 p.m. Terms of all officers ex- 1 year I1J.00 3 monttii .... 13.50 And there is a dance craze de- for scenic, billboard-free areas and carries one arm in a sling. pire. They are: Irwin Hogden , t months ....«.50 1 month Jl J5 veloping. It's the "Milonga," a several boathouses appar- Shields Approves Spearing throughout the state. ently have been whipped The State Conservation Will Continue Helstad fell from a platform chairman; Mrs. Harvey Twes- All other subscriptions: fast tango demonstrated by Ol- mounted on a truck while run- me, clerk ; Norman M. Thomp- 1 year U5.00 3 months XA.7S ga, ol Pedro and Olga, frequent- off by the wind, allowing Department cannot support SAIGON, South Viet Nam New bills introduced Wednes- t months .... tt.OO 1 month tl.M snow to stack up in the a ban on the spearing of e or tea . ^fty ^nPl m^r^-^AI11 ALL SEATS 25C r~ ESTIV RM} \MP#'^^ •****' ^MmmWk- ^ t Enlorlainmonl By 11 _^M^ ^______\__\____W \ «kiy?m!!v^. VtfUrlmW i SERVING HOURS: UniHm-in i^iM^yft%LOL \ 1 EVERETT MUILIER I there s e^i^i^im:vv*vvwrix Friday* —$ p.m. to 10 p.n*. ^fP^ft '^rM^ ' I and BUD SOBOTTA 1 ft^h^^Miaf ^^K^ Saturday* — 5 p en. to midnight It COJDB7„A fSTO-fi^-Bi^w&oiBWBL aaaa" Sunday* —5 p.tti. to to p.m. W^ yrmMtd food! WLVW),, nfeMwtcoM* SHOCKTREi^ENTr FREDDY'S \^R/mgw rtcMtcoto*' ' ¦ Stockton, Minn. 1 - JW^EPI^ n oouwantfitA g AND t Buffalo City Resort "3RD SECRET" Tht Avenue Cafa I FRI., FEB. 5 BUFPAIO CITY , WIS. 31ft Mankalo Ava. j nmmm-miMM ammM aum SUNDAY STARTS SUNDAY memwt - im f kmi- ieuwfflMi' ' ' ¦ ¦ - ' I,, ing had milk delivered to our door in glass bottles, and prior Fruit Wasting BILLMER ILLS to homogenized milk, I was Dock Strike to ILA Vice President James T. Arrests Up to ^ quite sure now that I under- Moock, is the union's demand Man Swaps $2 for stood why the top of the bottle for a 1,600-hour annual work Bandit's Pistol always contained a sizable a- guarantee. Shipowners report* mount ol cream. The farmer, In 25th Day edly want to guarantee only 1,- LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - A Because of I figured, put it on the top of 300 hours. bandit swapped bis pistol for $2 2,300 at Selma the bottle as a bonus, so to PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Ne- The U.S. Maritime Adminis- Wednesday night. SELMA, Ala. (AP) - Arrests Still other Alabama cities and speak. In keeping with my gotiations moved slowly in the tration reports the strike, which Albert Stober, 36, told police theory, have mounted to more than 2,- towns are targets in the mas- I wonder whose the greatest I began to fill the glass costly ' and crippling has idled 60,000 longshoremen, he had stopped bis car at a traf- Labor Shortage which King bottles about three-quarters full East and 300 in an expanding Negro voter sive campaign greenhorn? The country boy Gulf Coast has set the national economy fic light when the bandit opened MIAMI, Fla. (AP) started 17 days ago to drama- leaving a sizable amount of longshoremen's back well over a billion dollars. the door on the passenger side. - Millions shattering the whose knowledge of life is more strike, of dollars worth of citrus, veg- drive aimed at tize the voter registration effort or less limited to the ways of space at the top. My farmer which entered its 2Sth Stober said he pulled out the ti etables and sugar cane are white political monopoly in ru- in counties where Negroes out- friend looked at the bottle, and day today. in his pocket and when he band- the farm and small town man- with a strange smile asked, ETTRICK PATIENT turning to* garbage under the ral Alabama. number white residents but ners, often called a "hay seed" Holding up settlement of the ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - ed it to the man, knocked th« Florida sun, and farm leaders Negroes planned more march- comprise only a fractional part "Why don't you fill them up?" gun from his hand by his big city brothers, or^the Amazed at his lack of under- strike are unsolved agreements Harold Pederson was taken to . say the cause is a labor short- es today in Selma, where Dr. of the voting strength. big city brother who has never a La Crosse hospital late Mon- The bandit grabbed the mon- age created Martin Luther King Jr., is in standing I said, "Why that's for between dockers and shipping by the federal gov- V. S. District Judge Daniel H. learned the simple facts of life day night. ' ey and fled. ernment. jail,, and in Marion, a small any farm kid comes to under- the cream. " officials in Philadelphia; Gal- For 20 years, town 30 miles to the west. Thomas of Mobile turned down And that's where Bill Merrill, veston, Tex., Miami, Fla., and Florida's crops a request by King's forces to stand. were harvested largely by labor My folks didn't even raise a city greenhorn, learned that the Hampton Roads, Va. imported Nearly 800 demonstrators compel the Dallas County Board cream is in the milk and that from the British West were jailed Wednesday in Selma of Registrars to meet more of- garden, and my knowledge of ) Indies and the Bahamas. But the soil was nil. I grew up in it (the cream rises to the top, The International Longshore- this source and Marion. The swelling num- ten. a fact that many a city youth men was cut off last year bers forced authorities to house The board has scheduled ses- a city of 21,000 and in my young 's Association has refused when Congress refused to ex- mind, anything one needed was of our day may never learn, to send any of its men back to tend the prisoners at a state prison camp sions for two days this month. considering that milk is now work, act governing use of near here and a jail in Thomas- Thomas also Wednesday re- purchased in a store, and I am even where new contracts migrant farm workers from sure I gave little thought as to homogenized, and if it wasn't, have been settled, until total abroad. ton, Ala. fused to prohibit city police it's placed in cardboard and Negro students released from from interfering with demon- how it got there. agreement is reached. The supply of Mexican labor- We did own a car, and the you couldn't see it anyway. A federal mediator in Phila- ers to California, where they custody said Wednesday night strations under a parade ordi- It's obvious that our day is delphia, where James J. Rey- they were kept in unhealed and nance. family often went for small narked with progress, educa- long had been used to harvest unlighted cells. Police denied King was arrested Monday for trips through the countryside, nolds, assistant secretary of fruit and vegetable crops, also which broadened my scope tion accelerated, and thus labor, is attending the talks, was cut off. The this. parading without a permit. knowledge is broadened. Yet, I said that a settlement in this California De- somewhat. On one such trip, I ¦wonder partment of Labor has launched observed a cow with a set of if the difference be- Delaware River port city had no a crash program to recruit do- horns on her head. May Ibe tween a greenhorn and the well- connection with any of the other mestic -workers, Cattle, Hog seasoned isn't still simple ex- negotiations. R but a depart- quick to say, I was just a little perience had by doing the lfs ment official said Wednesday boy. "What are those on the Federal Mediator John R. FACIAL TISSUES "we're not getting them fast Kosygin on Rustling Up £ chores, be it city or farm? I Murray said "all are going on cow's head," I asked. 'Horns," suspect we do the kids a fa- enough." Lemon and date grow- (AP) came the terse reply. $Jow this separately and many have dif- ers say they stand to lose mil- CADIZ, Ky. - A wave vor if we assign them a worthy ferent problems. All are keys to of cattle and hog rustling, opened up a whole new trend task here and there. lions of dollars because of the Way to Hanoi of thought to me, the city-bred -¦ eventual total settlement. Every labor shortage. marked by an exchange of shots lad whose knowledge of horns agreement helps the next one." In an attempt to attract MOSCOW (AP) - Premier between a cattleman and night- was limited to 'the honk of a CLASS AT SPRING GROVE Murray and Reynolds an- American farm workers, Secre- Alexei N. Kosygin flew toward intruders, has* been report- truck, the beep-beep of a car, SPRING GROVE , Minn. - nounced a recess in talks be- tary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz i time Problems of herd health will be Hanoi today where he is expect- and the variety of big horns tween ILA Local 1292 and the set minimum wage scales rang- ed in Trigg County, in southwest and little horns blended to- discussed at the Monday eve- Philadelphia Marine Trade As- ing from $1.15 to $1.40 an hour. ed to discuss Soviet military aid Kentucky. ning meeting of the adult agri- to Communist North Viet Nam, gether in a parade. I tried to sociation Wednesday midnight Animals valued at $8,000 have figure it out, but it was beyond I culture class at the high school and plans to resume discussions which nourishes the Viet Cong here at 8 p.m. Dr. Roger Ben- in the fight against the Saigon been stolen in the last 12 me, and thus, after some time, at 10 a.m. today. Assessor Not- my folks were challenged with der, a veterinarian,' will assist The major obstacle to agree- government to the south. months, the Trigg County Farm with the program. He planned to stop in Peking the question, "Well, how do they ment in Philadelphia, according Decided on Bureau estimated Wednesday. get them down to blow them?" on his way to the North Viet- There are indications thieves Resigning Yet namese capital and again on his MY FATHER is a grocerman, trip back to Moscow. It will be have used tranquilizer guns on and he has come to know many BRAINERD, Minn. (AP) - the first visit to Red China by a livestock to make loading easier Crow Wing County s controver- a farmer, having purchased ' Soviet premier since Nikita S. and to reduce noise. goods of the land directly from sial assessor, Harold Martinson, Khrushchev stopped there in 1 There are indications thieves now says "my mind is not made these farmers. One of them had 985 1959 on his way back from talks I have used tranquilizer guns on a boy just my age. "You know up" about resigning. with former President Dwight livestock to make loading easier Martinson said Tuesday he how it goes. Parents will say, Phone D. Eisenhower in the United \ and to reduce noise.' "Sure would be nice if your 1 would quit, as requested by the States. i Board of County Commissioners, lad here could spend a couple, ^ ^ ^L The Chinese Embassy in Mos- three days with our boy." At which contends he recommend- party saw Kosygin off at the which the boys jump up and ed a 10 per cent across-the- cow boycotted Kosygin's airport airport yfith your purchase of 8 gallons of board real property valuation in- departure. Under normal diplo- , indicating the impor- down and push the folks for Wty t\\y^W* Winona's Newer) tance of the mission. Others in an exact time and a settling of ^^^Am\ crease to State Tax Commission- matic protocol the Chinese en- the farewell er Rolland Hatfield. voys would be expected to see party included For- all details. And thus I began But Martinson issued a state- hum off. His trip to North Viet eign Minister Andrei A. Gromy- what became a great number ff i ko and Defense Minister Rodion of visits to the farm, and in CENTER mu/EGASOLINE! * ment Wednesday saying "a Nam has strong overtones of a Malinovsky. fcjkr great many people" had told challenge to Peking's influence exchange, my new-found friend f him it would not be in the coun- in Hanoi. started a long line of visits to I 'lllllW l at tha On the plane with Kosygin the city. ^ ty's best interest for him to quit. Kosygin s departure came were experts on military aid I Corner Center & Mark Street* ¦ ¦ i And he pointed out that the shortly after President Johnson Going to the farm opened a Tfjm /fi ^ B MIDLAND COOPERATIVE and on foreign contacts. new world to me. I learned to commissioners, who hired him, disclosed in Washington that the ®I JJm (Across from tho new Soviet leaders would wel- North Viet Nam has been sup- top onions, sack spuds, and pick ^^ BBY could not fire him. He could be porting China in the Soviet- * Milwaukae Depot ) removed only on a charge pre- come his visit to the Soviet Un- berries, but it was in the Milk f f V^^BF Chinese dispute. The Soviet Un- Department that I proved that TRI-COUNTY GO-OP OIL ASS'N. ferred by Hatfield and then aft- ion and are likely to visit the ion has promised North Viet er a hearing. This was con- United States themselves. I was a real city greenhorti. Nam "the necessary assist- We were filling milk bottles, as firmed by County Atty. Carl E. Leonid I. Brezhnev, first sec- ance" in case of an American RUSHFORD WINONA HOUSTON Erickson. retary of the Soviet Communist these people used to sell milk attack. to neighbors, who for one rea- 307 Elm St. Second & Main Highway le Diplomatic observers here son or another didn't have any Phone 864-7722 Phone 9345 or 4185 Phono W6-375S regard possible Soviet military cows. It was up to us boys to COLD WEATHER NEEDS! assistance for North Viet Nam haul the milk down, the base- WWft*¥WWIWWimW ft Complete Stock ot as more of an effort to buy mod- ment of the house and pour it ff H**W*>l ; erating influence in Hanoi rath- through the separator. I had put i KIT AC .[' 2; 4-, 5-Buckle er than irritate the situation two and two together, but ob- S (7 there. viously I came up with six. *''** OVERSHOES Soviet officials said Kosygin's If you have ever seen a milk L* n , n-* group will spend Friday night in separator, you know the milk HeaHhknit 2-Pieoo Thermal Underwear. CJ QO Peking, arrive in Hanoi Satur- comes out one spout and the Extra warmth without bulk Each «J»fciVU day for a four-day visit. It was cream comes out the other, and not clear where the group will thus, it does what it's name im- spend tonight. plies — it separates the milk OUT - DOR STORE from the cream. 163 Eart 3rd No date for the end of the visit was announced. BEING A city boy, and hav- ' dUcmr the dig^ee >ffi ChWTOletS u IUJ muu, ImpaleSupe r Sport Coup* * m^ M li I FEBRUARY M ? ^^N^P^ y§k /)/) " ? ? r^^Mmi 1* S ? £-* «*lHM&^fcfc ,< jSIMm M\ i m1lr£>/ JrJrjJ/fJMJwfJiJrj *hflfi/tj> ?

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Drive something really new-discover the d J R^. $35.oo N 1 I Vl PRICE! y,/r/- :./ :,, . : . •- , „. ,,^- .,^-^ I Chevrolet• CheveUe • Chevy H * (Jorwir * Corvette ijiljP UJ | I Reg. $39.95 to $49.95 f . . . ,^, - ^. J I AISO REDUCED! Entire* stock of wool sport nhtrls, T ~~ I MOWKlnwi/ W7.7JOQ Q"i TUfo ^7.7J£3Q Q*i ' ' li nn | t tlie Lord : the Elbe . 45* and be sure your sin will find yen out.---Num. the war in Viet Nam" un- a 42 percent gain in employment . The "Once the success of the less a more stable :i2:23. main "thrust is assured." govern- HOME OIL CO. state's important printing and publ ishing a continued Eisenhower , "I ment is established for "un- til we stop the Corner Second & fraternity added a tenth to its payrolls. propose to take action to revolving Washington clear the northern ports , chair system there is very All these manufacturing activities have WINONA DAILY NEWS which in the case of Kiel little hope of much progress. been gaining ground. In contrast , several will entail forcing the The situation worsens every An Independent Newspaper — Estabhshed 1855 long reliable sources of employment to Min- Elbe . " time they have a coup and START YOUR DAY change j nesotans are on the wane. W F. W H ITE Morning j manufacturers — has shrunk until its work force is a third smaller than it wns al the The Associated Press ls entitled exclusively on < to the use) tor republication ol nil | war 's f iul the local news printed in (his newspaper II .S well as ail In a recent report on the economics of A. P. nowa dispntohoa. the area , the professors employed by the e) Thursday, February 4, 1U65 KWNO I Michigan Snowballs Malaysia No For Texas Fight HOUGHTON, Mich. (AP) - Students at Michigan Tech are Appreciation and Thanks supplying ammunition for a Pushover snowball fight in Texas. I sincerely appreciate tha vote and Tech campus leaders say 500 snowballs scheduled to be air- support given m« for Alderman-At- lifted today to Southwest Texas large Jn Monday's primary election. For Sukarno State College will give students LABUAN, Malaysia Borneo at the San Marcos, Tex., school (AP) — Borneo is a huge cup of a chance to experience "joys of Barry Nelson a real snowball fight." an island, bigger than Texas. PAID ADVERTISEMENT — Prtpared by the Nelson Volunteer!. Mrs. Dorothy Indonesia occupies the main The snowball airlift is spon- Adami/ Treasurer, 431 Welt King, Winone. tne Injerfed tl fhe regular general part, the center and south. Atop sored by Blue Key, a national advertising rate. this, like a broad layer of honors fraternity, and is a part whipped cream floating on cho- of Michigan Tech's annual colate , lies part of Malaysia, the winter carnival. SHOP THE EASY WAY — READ THE ADS FIRST federation which Indonesia's President Sukarno has vowed to crush. But Malaysian Borneo prom- ises to be no pile of whipped cream if Sukarno tries to move in. FOLLOW THE LEADER ™ Thousands of British, Gurkha and Malaysian soldiers, sailors and airmen are guarding the frontier that splits Borneo. Soldiers patrolling the jungle always have a finger on the trigger, always ready for an Indonesian infiltrator. British commandos who patrol the maze of creeks and rivers in the east cover every mangrove root SNOWBANKS OF 8 TO 10 FEET IN MICHIGAN TOWN Laurium, Mich., population 3,058, street as church congre- with a machine gun as they . . . This winter up to 200 inches of snow has fallen in Michi- gations leave services. John Jackson, a county highway en- pass in assault boats. gan's Keneenaw Peninsula, the northern-most part of the gineer, said he anticipated a fall of 300 inches before May The Malaysians in the thriv- Photofax) ing towns of eastern Malaysia state which juts into Lake Superior — but residents get 3. ^^^ _ ^_^m^m m Economy. carded parachute from a supply Charged in Slaying "It's just as nice here as it Is Eight persons were known alist side in Wednesday's m ^^ ^^^^^ if lB ^BtKl ^^*^K ^^^^^^ m ^^^ ^^^^^^ * drop. Children are nearly al- in the summer," said Kewee- killed and 38 others wounded in fighting. ways dressed in uniform as they MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A 48- 1 VllenLHlHL ^L^LfleV ^^LILV _ _ ^^ B^^^^ VBr / Yes — we have naw County Sheriff Ted E. Rog- bitter fighting Wednesday be- Deputy Premier Phoumi No- ¦ t^r^^^^^ ^^^iT ^^y i^^^¦) ^r >ur avaii- go to school. Mostly they speak year-old man was charged -with ers, "except it's colder. savan Bi^^ i ^^B ^ir~^\. r^P^^ewm ^^ ^ ¦B^eW / f '" ,n " fore Abhay's men put down the , a rightist general who 11 *J I ill L*!'Ill m//i T^m~ ¦ ¦ a* I *b" t two words of English — "Hullo" third degree murder Wednesday Rogers and his men police a revolt of some 800 dissidents. once headed I ^Jm^______t__tt_m______m' i j .M A I aV^\. I eaw/ in the slaying of his girl friend. the army, charged and "Goodby." wild , sparsely populated region in an interview that Kouprasith BM ¦ ¦ B B B B B B B B B B B The charge was filed against that is the northernmost point of The U.S. and Thai Embassy was to II ^^^^^^^V^^^^^ V^ Jfe^t^t^^^^^^^L^iT^LaV / An English soldier griped : Henry Godek blame for the hostilities. , accused of shoot- Michigan. The Keweenaw Pen- buildings in Vientiane sustained Earlier Phoumi " Why should I be shot at ing Dolores Pochardt, 34, Mon- had rejected insula is a large finger of land minor damage. A Thai Embas- the charge of Premier Prince when everything is just normal day night in the apartment balanced atop Michigan's Upper sy official was among the dead. Souvanna for the Malaysians?" building where they both lived. Phouma that Phoumi Peninsula and juts into chilly None of the 1,000 Americans in was behind the uprisings in an But their feeling does not ap- Godek was seized shortly aft- Lake Superior. the capital was believed hurt. effort to OPTICIANS ^rt A pear general among the 10,000- regain power. er the shooting when he went to Vientiane airport was report- Souvanna is GROUND FLOOR - 78 WEST THI RD STREET - PHONE 6222 >iA plus soldiers who are here. a tav ern and handed the bar- Rogers estimates that be- the leader of ed still closed to commercial Laos' neutralist-rightist Troops in the field are confi- tender the gun. tween 175 and 180 inches of govern- » A.M. TO 5 P.M. INCLUDING SATURDAY - 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. FRIDAY ^ BH R traffic. ment engaged in a guerrilla war snow have fallen thus far in the An unconfirmed report in All Eyeglasses Made in Minnesota by Minnesota Technician! j i Calumet area. against pro-Communist Pathet Bangkok said foreign corre- Lao forces who control two- "But it's really no trouble," spondents in "Vientiane had been " « thirds of the tiny, landlocked "Safe Eyes Save Lives 5 OUT FROM UNDER \T. tion . we won all the marbles in Class IV.) l • Helps Eliminate Fumes —Soot — Smoke ' ¦ ¦HttK \ \ l - Now then. If you' re going to enter som e- • Saves Money RUSHFORD PATIENT K^j B \ * \ H a^^^Mata^LtfLfe RUSHFORD, Minn . — Mr.s. thing-like a car—you might as well do it pTj P| \ = I • Prevents Clogged Filters wjJVIPV Odin Brevig is in St. Mary 's IVPP Hospital, Rochester. to win, too. Your Buick dealer can intro- I <& li \. \ \ \ • Protects Equipment ¦lil m •dvertHemen! duce you to the driver's seat of a Buick ¦£¦ ¦ ¦ ! 11 1 Wl li 11 m\ \^ %\ f WLWLAtW Special. 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PLAINVIEW - Ph. KE 4-2002 3321 ¦ ¦ ¦— ¦¦ ¦¦ v PHONE «—^————»————— - - ———— —¦ ¦ .,_ Phone 3366 ' r i n ----- miir 111 in AtiM-i ¦ ri.^in. • •>». ».._ ^ _._._ —¦i i . .I i n a Arcadia Auxiliary Larson-Feran Town-Countr/ Rosary Society Faith LCW Hears Opposes Veterans Vows Exchanged Topic Heard by Announces Card About New Trends Spring Grove ALCW From Onamia Pastor Hospital Proposal ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - Pa rty Winners In a ceremony performed Sat- Faith Lutheran Church Wo- ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- urday at Living Hope Luther- PINE CREEK, Wis. (Special) Tickfer-Erickson Unit 17, cial ) — The Rev. Rolf Hanson men heard of trends in the an Church by the Rev. Mark —Cards were played at 21 ta- American Legion Auxiliary, M. Ronning, Cora Feran, spoke on the town and country ecumenical movement during a daughter of Martin Jacobson, situation of today, its problems bles at a party sponsored by dinner meeting Wednesday eve- passed a resolution Monday ning. La Crosse, and Norman Lars, and our need to meet them the Rosary Society in the Sac- night unanimously opposing the La Crosse, -were married. red Heart parish hall Sunday Guest speaker was the Rev. proposal to close some hospital when the American Lutheran Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brush, Church "Women met Tuesday afternoon. ' L. Walrod , O n a m i a , Minn., facilities and services to veter- Ettrick, were attendants. The Mrs. Walter Kratch was high who has just returned from , an ans. Copies were sent to Wil- afternoon at Trini ty Lutheran bride wore a dark blue velvet Church parlors. scorer in schafskopf and Mrs. inter-faith discussion meeting liam J. Driver, veterans admin- dress and had pink and white Verna Sernec, second. Mrs. with priests of the Jesuit Order istrator, Congressman Vernon flowers. Her attendant wore a ^Rachel Circle was in charge of the program and Mrs. Palma Paul Jaszewski won first place at Marquette University, Mil- Thompson, and Senators Willi- pale blue velvet dress and had in 500 and Mrs. Celia Jumbeck, waukee. am Proxmire and Gaylord Nel- Anderson announced it. Mrs. a corsage of maroon-colored second. Mary Guenther, Foun- Mrs. Ralph Leonard sang son. carnations. Nina Gulbranson presided at the tain City, Wis., received first business meeting. Four hundred "The Lord Is My Shepherd," Speaker of the evening was A reception for immediate rel- place for a special card game accompanied by Mrs. Kenneth 1st Lt. William Braun, who atives was held at Oscar Jacb- dollars were allocated to the and Stephen Kaldunski, sec- son 's home in La Crosse. work of the church. Harstad. Mrs. Robert Hollon led talked on the National Guard ond. the devotions. unit. He said there are 70 mem- MISS GLORIA DANIEL- The couple will live in rural It was announced that articles Mrs. Jacob Wicka, Winona , bers in the three platoons, SON'S engagement to Nev- La Crosse. Mr. Larson is em- being made and purchased for won the mystery prize. Special Plans were made for the Da- namely anti-tank, mortar and in Vrieze, son of Mr. and ployed by a lumber company in the New Guinea project must be prizes were awarded to the kota District Lutheran Church medical, and stated that the Mrs. Earle Vrieze, Spring Onalaska, Wis. turned in at the April meeting. Mmes. Mary Wagner, Mary Jas- Women's conference to be held community is fortunate to have Valley, - Minn., is announc- Mrs. Ernest Ovestrud was zewski, Mary Kramer, Winona; at Faith Lutheran Church in chairman of the social Dr. Thomas Chisholm as a ed by her parents, Mr. and March of Dimes hour. Nathan Wolfe, Arcadia , Wis., April. Mrs. Kenneth Hubbard Mrs. Charles Roverud sang a was appointed representative member of the medical platoon. Mrs. E1 n o r Danielson, and Anselm Bambenek, and The unit, Lt. Braun said, is re- Benefit Card solo, accompanied by Mrs. Dan Literski and Daniel Jaszew- to the Community Memorial Chatfield, Minn. A May Obert Dafile. ski. Hospital Auxiliary. sponsible to the governor, ex- wedding is planned. Miss Party Saturday cept in the event of a national Danielson is a graduate of FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. ( Spe- R^WsrvS&t^^ emergency, when it can be fed- Lanesboro (Minn.) High cial) — The March of Dimes eralized. benefit card party sponsored by Members agreed to sponsor a School and is employed at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester. the Better Homes Homemaker high school girl to Badger Girls Club of Bohri's Valley, which State. The auxiliary also is Her fiance is a graduate of was scheduled for last Sunday sponsoring an Americanism es- Wykoff High School and the evening, was postponed, and say contest for junior and senior Moler Barber School, Min- will now be held Saturday eve- high school students, who will neapolis. He is serving in ning at the Cross Ridge School write on the topic, "America, the Army, stationed at Ar- on Highway 95. i I A emmmmmssmm the Citadel of Freedom." Mrs. lington, Va. Playing will begin at 8 p.m. (Beaton Studio) David Krett is essay chairman. and sheephead and 500 will be Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Endl r During the social hour, Mrs. Mrs. William Rogers, Miss Ger- played. Lunch will be served i /« -^k l __ Um WOMEN'S George Glanzer was given a j trude Fugina and Mrs. Esther and prizes awarded. The public Endl-Brunner ried a single red rose. The special prize by the hostesses, Lisowski. is invited. ' crowns were pink ¦¦» MWHU SH0P bridesmaids wffeff^refy \V*W'*w(p « ¦«••* «. ¦* " < v ^- W-ANAaaaw r v. A v \ vX. w. S-. -A v\-. < v Vows Said and they carried single pink * * •* % v JZUv *• ^Q y^ _ i I ™ W ' upper Level roses. wZ N*A*u The flower girls wore long ' At Arkansaw cranberry-red dresses, styled ARKANSAW, Wis.—Miss Na- like the bridesmaids' daughter of Wil- talie Brunner, Roger Brunner, Arkansaw, i liam A. Brunner, Arkansaw, be- brother of the bride, was best came the bride of Kenneth R. man. Groomsmen were Richard BOY'S SHOP Endl, Durand, Wis., son of Mr. Endl Jr., Durand, brother of the kLower .Level s and Mrs. Richard Endl Satur- groom, Ray Fitchbauer and pm FEBRUARY FASHION ) Ushers were morning. Francis Koller. day Douglas Brunner, Arkansaw, THE WEDDING was in St. and Eugene Endl , Durand. Joseph Catholic Church , Arkan- A reception was held at Eau saw with the Rev. Henry Cas- Galle, Wis., Parish MaU in the Winte r Clearance afternoon. sidy officiating. taffeta peau The couple will be at home at The bride wore a 2121 Colfax Ave. S., Minneapolis. gown with a chapel train. It The bride is a graduate of ENTIRE STOCK (EXCEPT AWARD JACKETS) was styled with a bell-shaped | j {** ¦* J i skirt and an over-jacket of lace Elmwood (Wis.) High School with long tapered sleeves. Her and the groom of Sacred Heart Jackets-Car Coats- Parkas silk illusion veil was held by an of Lima Catholic High School , 11 *^§^ f organza rose and she carried a Durand. He is employed by the cascade bouquet of red roses Electric Specialty Manufactur- and pink carnations. ing Company, Minneapolis. s $095 $1 195 wffSMtiV MISS JULIE Heit, St. Paul, was maid of honor and brides- Panel Study Club | | e R«9- to SIMS Reg. te $22.95 Reg. to $2*95 INM 7-MAC^ maids .were Miss Babbette Makes Contribution ^ M Glaus, Durand; Janice Meixner, Arkansaw; and Marlene Heit, SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- 95 95 $ 95 ¦ s $17 » i \\ Values to 535.00! j St. P aul. Flower girls were Nan cial) — It was voted to contri- |If 1 1I J*% I / 07JLehXWL Paul Roverud was assistant With or Without $ hwstess. f QQ ^ Stirrups. / • O M Why not start the year \ \ i right ' Having Income Tax f i troubles? Wondering if you I DRY CLEANING I Values to $13,001 : have purchased enough Pre- scriptions and Drugs for a de- duction? Remember , I li a t UHi imHiiiiiiimiiiui ¦¦¦¦¦ : each month with your drug ? SPECIAL 57 blouses state in e n t irom BKOW'N NOW GOING ON " D31UG , you receive an exact J $ duplicate of your purchases ' •' -- ' ' . I ' 3.99 \ Why not - for that month — have either a large envelope or a file into wliich you can | ! Values to $14,951 I drop these slips — then at Mid-Winter | the end of the year you have | Scfioffcra| an exact record — no guess- \\ ing — it' s all there for you. 68 skirt s Keen looking for a good , li a 11 (I y purse size 1IA1K s SPRAY for touch - tips or to travel ? We now have one — II% • • ! '' 4.95 *7.95 I ¦ " ¦ ' f ' SUDDEN HKAl'TY - only j "BUNDLE CLEANING SPECIAL ] -. 'I*) )* — Why not pick up a ¦ couple on your next shopping j Values to $14,951 j trip lo Brown 's — keep an ¦ it • extra on hand — will hold hair without stillness. New shi pment of KABHI MiK 96 sweaters — slop to see thc display of Kabergr Lipstick and Nail Clares - - their nail prepar- $ $ ations are really quite differ- 5.98 to 8.95 | ent you will I ind lhat they ' | ' f:$ I l•i : - - • .' lay on much heller than any ..* other and without chipping — JWk V; ¦ Values to $99,951 OF j yes. they are more expensive , *-yJmM r than the """ ^H- usual — DIM afraid il will spoil you for using the other lip- sticks — I!2 shades I rom which 1d chouse — We also have the I untrimmed coats ! Lip Glace' in I'istaclun i'liiiilllf l mill V.ruypr U> slie), $ over your regular lipst ick . to s 00 For vou fellow* — we again 19°° 37 have Faherge's - BJUJTK - after shower , afler shave — >y : '— - ;•- ' ' $¦ would nvikc it nif <' Vlilt'iitiue f| This s*n««fion«l Dry Oeenlng oiler It food et a i Values to $49,95 1 i Gift. Mr Ca,h n Carry Plant AND ON ALL THE "Sc/uffef's Care Means Longer Went ' ¦ Be suic lo see? the nice H ||| ||| TRUCK DELIVERY ROUTES THROUGHOUT ¦ assortment of (Jlhson Valen- ' ' THE TRADE TERRITORY I . . . ,0 everybody . ; ¦ ; JH ¦ 11; car coats tines and also Valentine ^*^ fc So hurry, fl«th»r ALL your clothing — _%__\\^^ _ hearts on display at Brown 's f§ fc ^J __\\_^__\__7 ^ 0 — we will also be luippy lo Jl or h«av/ ~ lummir or winUr - or ^^^fc M^LMrM ^T |lm\ {Wk £ ^l^^^^ L. M hei)) you choose a small re- M worain' i - EVERYTHING - and trot It right %mJF ^^ M W^tQntrW4 %^_ \%. %^ fg S itiemliranec for one you love 7OO tQ $2900 | I H down l»er« to Sclialfer's for the Savings of tho H — and wrap it appropriately • ¦ III Seaionl Offer good for a limited time only. tor a Valentine Hilt. 164 West Third Struct Phona 2888 " *...... ~...... -...~...... ^...... -._...,., .. ...„..._,.„___._ • For Ihe finest In (.'osmetics . 1 visit Hrown Drug. ^ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ a CLEANERS LAUNDERF.RS « ¦¦¦ " [ I The Center of Fashion in tlit- Conter of Town -- NASH'S - Fourth at Center •¦ ¦ ; ¦ ! , • j-.:...... „J—_ „ : 1 -piV *- ¦)' ¦¦^'f ¦¦!»'WlWritKs Bv ii'iiiMli;iiyiiii >if ii>l'litiM SPRING GROVE , Minn . ( Spe- quilt blocks to the meeting. edral of the Sacred Heart at Livestock — The administra- WHITE - BONE-BLACK I Group 8 is in charge of the story frame house situated west tion will continue to cooperate i\ cial) — Hospital Club will meet about 1:30 p.m. of D kota, a frame and con- Monday at 2 p.m. in the Trinity quilts, a with livestock farmers and VA SIZES: 6V2 To 8 j crete barn, a stone hog house ranchers to maintain fair prices Lutheran Church parlors. Host- Serving will be the Mmes. El- and a corn crib and milk house. esses will be the Mmes. Palma mer, Ervin, John, Louis, Milo, Harmony Man Named in the market place. "We will It paid $50 for the house and $10 help them to build markets here Anderson, Rudolph Tweeten and Ralph and Raymond Duellman, To National Board for each of the other three A. B. Rosaaen. and George Ewing. and abroad, and to preserve fair For your complete Spring j Of Limestone Institute structures. competition in the marketing of < ^K\ The only other successful bid- livestock and livestock prod- HARMONY, Minn. (Special} der was Lloyd Moldenhauer, ucts, and continue our present I Glove Ward robe — Perry Pederson of Pederson Dakota , who bought a chicken measures which will prevent an M^w j Bros., Harmony, has been elect- house and coop for $31. undue increase in imports," ed to the board of directors of Bids were opened in St. Paul Johnson said. Jan. 14. The buildings must be (comparable ' ^ ^j ^ the National Limestone Insti- Other commodities — Contin- 1 "* r^^O) i \ ^ ft tute, Inc., for a three-year term. moved from the land on or be- uing study is being given to pro- Va,ue •**& only 1 U His election was formally an- fore March 27. grams and needs for other farm J J ! nounced by Robert M. Koch, commodities and appropriate m %mm-m president of the 576-member changes and recommendations I $2.00 to $3 .00) j association of limestone produ- Man Hospitalized will be made as circumstances cers which has headquarters in require. Washington , After Collision JLiUUUUUUUUUUL 4JUUJUUUUUUUJUJU D.C. Election was prmmm^rmmmt^n^mm%wiweimmemK*»mmmmrf_^trr ^wmmmm ^m ¦ ¦ ¦ mmmtm ^mmmamit. unanimous by mail ballot of as- sociation membership. Meetings In Wa basha Co. are in Washington in January WABASHA, Minn. (SpeciaD- and Chicago in June. A head-on truck-car collision on ' a bridge Wednesday caused | cyp mr^ Jtemww Wabasha Winners more than $400 damages and * $7 j : put one person in a hospital for WABASHA, Minn. (Special)— treatment and X-rays. Two brothers won top places in The truck driver , James the 29th annual Time magazine Schmidt, 22, Theilman, was driv- 4 current affairs test at St. Felix 7 ing west on CSAH 4 as he ap- High School. They are Michael proached the bridge about four and Matt Schuth, sons of Mr. miles east of Theilman, at 1 and Mrs. Matt Schuth. Michael p.m. Walter Mischke, 22, Theil- scored 95 percent and Matt 94 man, driving east, rounded an in the test composed of 100 ques- ¦ icy corner approach and was un- { i tions and taken each year by able to stop in time to avoid the | 750,000 col lege and high school crash. students. Third place was won Mischke's passenger, Julius ^" by Larry Brandenburg, son of Mischke, 58, Theilman , suffered | by Nancy Wayne I Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Branden- head cuts and was taken to St. 0> burg. He scored 90 percent. Elizabeth's Hospital , Wabasha. : " TmBwPill^m ^^Hian MHIa^Lffia^LH jtffe BLAIR MNC CLUB His condition today was called c^" J H good. A Special on dresses "' * °MJ^^^^^^^^H2 BH^B i ^^^Bl^^^ft^Lmmmmmm ^^^^^^^A ^^^A BLAIR , Wis. ( Special) - Mrs. j £l ^B ^ ' i 'aw^Lfla^L^L^B £ ^L^LBi^ ^L^H«9B^LK Each vehicle had more than L. H. Jacobson wil! be host- $200 damages. ess to the Blair Music, Needle- ¦ so easy ,ve n ---And ( e \J craft and Culture Club Friday JmtmSk *° ' ' ^^fc^B il jf/' __ m\f HHi^L^L^LI t ^ V^Lfti^HaffiSaaaaaaaaaaaa»m«n^BaT»^St9 A half cup chopped walnuts or ^ HHI ^L^L^ H ¦ afternoon. Mrs. Donald Erick- raisins added to a standard two- so economically priced. K^^fe&v 9HB^L^L^L^L> JaVa^H^HL^HP^^^^ son will present a topic on fed- cup muffin recipe does great tWmmmM r ¦ k* MHI^L^L^L^L^LB v^^ Wk I ^^^^*V ^^^^^^^^ K jH^^^l^^^^^^^ lr fl^^^^^^^^ H erated activities. things for this hot bread. NL ^^^^^^^^^^V* J^* _a^L^^^^^^^^^I

BUY A PAIR! BUT DON'T STOP THERE1 HAVE ALL OUR RUSSTOGSI I PAT HARVEY ! pAf fAm who it experienced in all phase* KxJ THE "MOD" LOO K FOR YOUNG MODERNS of hair sty ling and hair care, has imm W^ (ADAPTED FROM BRITAIN'S SWINGING %&M joinod Ethyl, Florence and Jane at Hp NEW LOOK) IN NAVY PEBBLE CLOT H (A ZINGY, TEXTURY RAYON BOUCLE) A. A-LINE SKIMMER JUMPER. 8.95 L%Z

mml mil ¦¦ ¦ ¦ — - ¦ ¦¦ "' "" - ^e^.t» ''¦¦ 11 ¦ i i -^^——i ¦ ...... _ 1 COTTON SHOP-FIRST FLOOR ' itiraafflS?B33EX^,^ :jk^^ port on her income, assets and Moran testified he turned over ing unto he gets a financial re- Mrs. Peters. Nava l Academy Gets expenditures. all his earnings except $39 a port of ¦ Seattle Man week to the woman with the Cuban Oil New Superintendent Mrs. Peters, 4 feet, 9 inches sweet telephone voice. Ever serve appetizer kabobs Business Mirror WASHINGTON W*-Rear Adm. tal] and weighing 370 pounds , Moran said his total loss was made with marinated cooked Draper L. Kauffman, a veteran appeared in court here last Sept. $39,541.52. shrimp and chunks of fresh or Loses $39,000 in drained canned pineapple? of the French army and the 30 and pleaded guilty to grand The judge continued the hear- Depot Shelled British Navy in World War II, larceny by bunco. U__ . ____ MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Anti- j was named today superintend- NSW AND USiD ______\_ t/_\\\\\m_*___^______Drain on Gold ent of the U.S. Naval Academy Phone Romance She admitted defrauding Ken* Castro commandoes shelled an I neth L. Moran , 34, over seven at Annapolis, Md. SEATTLE (AP) - A former important Cuba oil depot Tues- Kauffman, 53, a native of San years during telephone chats in day and claim to have caused Moorhead , Minn., housewife, ac- which she pretended to be a SKATE HroL Easy to Explain Diego, Calif., will take over next heavy damage. June from the present superin- cused of cheating a Seattle man pretty young women in need ol , real estate sales- Exchange l i j By SAM DAWSON the foreign-held surplus building The Cuban government said tendent, Rear Adm. Charles S. out of $39,000 in a telephone ro- money. Moran {J AP Business News Analyst Minter. mance, was ordered Wednesday man and longshoreman, said he up over the years. damage was minor. ¦ fell for it without ever meeting •Jrfri»*P uOfatrAjf&P f J PHONE NEW YORK (AP) — All of Trade cannot be blamed. U.S. A gunboat bombarded the in- to report her financial condi- her. ^^^ g the debating in Congress and commercial exports topped im- stallation at Casilda , near Trini- Next time you serve liver tion so that a court can decide paste as a spread for crackers! Judge Soderland imposed a SHARPENBrnESSll out on whether gold backing for ports by $3.6 billion. And to this dad , with 57mm cannon and how much she has to repay. sentence of up to 15 years, su- can be added $4 billion of net machine-gun fire, according to you might like to try adding Equipment U.S. currency and bank deposits Superior Court Judge Stanley spended on condition she make 1 Radio-Dispatched should be maintained or cut income on foreign investments. a Cuban armed forces commu- pine nuts to it. Interesting fla- restitution. KQLTER S •Kg The loss was from other finan- nique broadcast by Havana Ra- vor and texture change for com- C. Soderland gave Mrs. Mary SM.eS » 'lERVICt can 't hide the underlying prob- en Miitktt* Av*. Plrant sen DOERER'S lem: cial dealings. dio. pany ! Ellen Peters, 39, 10 days to re- At Wednesday's hearing. U.S. gold reserves would not have been drained since 1958 nor threatened now if the United States hadn't been running a continuous deficit in its interna- tional financial payments. What to do about this moneta- ry deficit, and who or what is to blame for it will be increasingly debated as Congress acts on gold reserve revisions. AFTER-INVENTORY SALE The gap between the outflow of dollars and the return flow widened in the final quarter of E^ 1964 after showing some im- Jlf provement early in the year. And the drain of gold increased this January after dropping to a trickle last year. President de Gaulle of France is blamed for the most recent j OPEN from 4-9,.. TONIGHT! { loss because he wants his cen- tral bank to hold fewer dollars ILj fete l and more gold. But he couldn't have got the U.S. gold if this country hadn't been running a balance of payments deficit. That let the supply of surplus dollars pile up in other nations. And their central banks can and occasionally do turn in some of this surplus for the gold the U.S. Treasury keeps at Ft. Knox and A lower Manhat- SAVE V - % - in its vaults in Vi SAVE tan. Last year the United States sent $2.6 billion more dollars, SALE WILL CONTINUE THROUGH SATURDAY, FEB. 6 lor Final Liqui- for private and government spending, abroad than it got back, adding by that much to dation of Seasonal, Discontinued and Floor Sample Items! Senate Gives LBJ Food for | SAVE Vz to Vr I I SAVE Vi I I SAVE Vi I I SAVE Vs to Vi Arab States ENTI RE STOCK ENTIRE STOCK GIRLS' 7-14 FALL and WINTER WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate has voted President Johnson the discretionary au- Boys' Winter ' thority he asked to ship surplus Girls Winter HOODED YARD foods to the United Arab Repub- lic, but dealt hirn two setbacks on the domestic front. It climaxed more than six hours of fiery debate Wednes- JACKETS OUTERWEAR SWEATSHIRTS day night by approving, 44 to 38, GOODS an administration - supported amendment modifying a House ban against shipments of sur- plus agricultural commodities to Cairo. The administration lobbied to have the ban lifted or the grounds it would tie the Presi- dent's hands in dealing with I SAVE Vz I I SAVE Vz to Vi I I SAVE Vz I I SAVE Vz to Vi I UAR President Gamal Abdel Nasser. But minutes later , by a stand- Misses' and Women's MISSES' SIZES ing vote, the Senate attached to Misses' and Women's a $1 .6-billion emergency agri- cultural appropriation an amendment to deny the Veter- ans Administration use of any funds heretofore voted to carry W,NTER 11 hospitals SKI out its order closing and four soldiers homes and ROBES relocating 16 regional offices. After that vote, the Senate SWEATERS hastily passed the money bill M COATS JACKETS providing funds to reimburse . I L [ [ | the Commodity Credit Corpora- I I 1 1 tion for losses incurred in farm price supports and related pro- grams. Berikr in the day, it adopted ^by "voice vote another amend- ment to shut off any of the funds lo carry out a Dec. 31 order by Secretary of Agriculture Orville I SAVE % SAVE % I SAVE Vs I I SAVE Vz L. Freeman calling for the | dosing of 20 agricultural re- search stations and projects In OUR ENTIRE STOCK Discontinued Numbers 34 other stations until Congress MEN'S WINTER ONE SPECIAL GROUP investigates this spring. ¦ State Secretary of OES Crash Victim JACKETS DINNERWARE CLEANING ALUMINUM MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The secretary of the Minnesota (irand Chapter of the Order of QUANTITY LIMITED BUY NOW AND SAVE Eastern Star died late "Wednes- SUPPLIES C00KWARE day when her car hit a tree in northeast Minneapolis. The victim was Mrs. Frances

, of Minneapo- ¦ I Abi-ahamson , 68 .-• . • nmim i ¦ ¦¦ "¦ n ¦¦¦ - ' ' «—i ^.¦•—¦—- m mee *mmemm e,mmmmmimmem —m—*—m- m i ., , I Nm n-i ¦¦ ¦— ¦ m ¦ — .... lis. i»-ii«w«ww>>W«WWWiww>> -—, f An autopsy will be performed to determine whether the wo- man died of a heart attack or of accident injuries. H SPECIAL SAVE Vu to Vz SAVE up to VJ To make toast the traditional 25% OFF* way, to serve with Welsh Kab- 6-TRANSISTOR bit . follow these directions. Cut . away the crusts from white .... . _ Major Appliances SMALL ELECTRIC bread and toast thc slices; but- mr _.^.^ ter each well and cut diagonally into four small triangles. ANY TIRE RADIOS & stereo Se«s TOOLS and BATHROOM m SEAT ¦ «¦»» Fit* on any bowl. Solid T..T " HARDWARE con»tructlon. *5" one-piece I I I 1 | "- | | | SPECIAL Jpls*/** DOD D BROS IfUDD STORE VAS HARDWARE Try Our New CHARG ALL the most liberal Credit Plan in Wards 92-year history 576 E. 4th St. Phone «07 ial will be Saturday at 1 :30 p.m. THURSDAY in Woodlawn Cemetery, Taylor, the Rev. L. H. Jacobson, Blair, The Daily Record FEBRUARY 4, 1965 officiating. Nation Cold Friends may call at Frederix- At Community Winona Funerals Two-State Deaths on Funeral home Friday from De Gaulle Asks Examination of U.N. Charier 7:30 to 9 p.m. PARIS (AP) - President ell. They also were the five in- ol tha International Monetary Memorial Hospit-al Henry Lockwood August R*fl«z From Plains Charles de Gaulle today pro- viting powers to the conference Fund at Tokyo. This proposal ( Larson Vlslllng hours: Wedlcsl end suroletl Funeral services for Henry HIXTON, Wis. Special) — Fr*d Sised a five-power conference, in San Francisco 20 years ago was that world trade be eon* patient*i 3 to 4 and 7 to 8iM p.rn. (Ne Lockwood. S25 Dacota St., will August Reger, 90, Hlxton, died ETTRICK, Wis. - Fred Lar- eluding Communist China, to which drafted and adopted the ducted on the basis of a new children vndtr >1.) son 89, died Wednesday after- Metirnlty pitlmUt 1 to 1:30 end 1 to be Saturday at 2 p.m. at St. Wednesday morning at Commu- , examine and perhaps revise the original charter. unit of account, in turn based 1:30 p.m. (Adulft only.) Martin's Lutheran Church, the nity Hospital, Black River Falls. noon at Mulder Rest Home, To Atlantic United Nations charter. on the currencies of 10 principal He said the pretest monetary Rev. Merlen Wegener officiat- He had been a patient there West Salem, where he has been By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS He also called for a new world trading nations, WEDNESDAY ing . Burial will be in Woodlawn one week as a result of a iall a resident several months. system, which relies chiefly on Zero temperatures main- monetary system founded on the dollar, no longer corre- De Oaaik today, however, as- ADMISSIONS Cemetery, in which tie broke his hip. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Mat- something more than the dollar 18, 1874, he was born Nov. tained a tenacious grip today sponds with the real situation hi serted that gold should ba tha Mrs. Clifford Rothering, 463 Friends may call at Fawcett He was born March thew Larson, and pound sterling. ultimata basis. W. Sanborn St. Funeral Home Friday from 7 to in Switzerland. He moved to 12, 1875, In Town of Gale. He from the central and northern the world. The French president told his He said circumstances have "Exchanges ought to ba Lori Ann Tudabl, 753 E. Mark 9 p.m. and Saturday at the this area about 48 years ago. spent his lifetime farming in Plains to the Atlantic. semiannual news conference St. church after 1 p.m. He was a Hixton school board the Hardies Creek area. The mercury failed to climt changed "and France wants the evahwd on an indisputable mon- the Jackson France is making this proposal system changed so that a fun- etary base, on something which Mrs. Orville Harm, Cochrane, member and on He married Othilda Olson, above the zero mark Wednesday to bring the U.N. charter up to Edward C. Tarras County Board of Supervisors over much of the area from damental lack of balance shall does not carry the imprint of Wis. Jan. 1, 191 1, at South Beaver date. ^/ Richard C. Zenk, 219 W. 2nd Funeral services lor Edward many years. Creek Lutheran Church. northern Wisconsin to north- cease." any one country. What out such St. C. Tarras, 420 E. 3rd St., were Mr. and Mrs. Regez observed Survivors are: His wife; one eastern Montana. He said such a conference De Gaulle recalled that a base be? There is no criteria? Joseph A. Bambenek, 1251 held this morning at St. Stanis- their 65th wedding anniversary (Ferne- The temperature in Interna- should be held in Geneva. He France last fall proposed a other than gold which has no na- daughter, Mrs. Winfred tionality." Gilmore Ave. laus Church, the Rev. Paul Last year and were believed to da) Buiom, Ettrick; three tional Falls, Minn., has risen mentioned the Soviet Union, change in the world's mone- Mrs. Lyman Fries, Watkins Breza officiating. Burial was in be the oldest married couple grandchildren; one brother, above tero only once in the last Britain, France, the United tary system, during a meeting Memorial Home. St. Mary's Cemetery. in the county. Carl, Rockford, HI., and one sis- week. Chicago went through its States and China as partici- Miss Henrietta Schultz, Wi- Pallbearers were William Tar- Survivors are: His wife, Em- ter, Mrs. Mathilda Grant, Gales- seventh consecutive day cf pants. Charter Not to nona Rt. 19. ras, Edward and Bay Ram- ma; three sons, Lewis, Port- ville. subzero weather. These — making allowances Lanesboro Seeking Blame, LBJ Says Mrs. Hilda Falkenberg, 1009 czyk, Thaddeus Glubka, Robert land, Ore.; William, La Crosse, Funeral services will be con- for the difference of policy re- Walther and Ronald Hammond. Hixton ; two daugh- Snow fell from the northern WASHINGTON (AP) - Pm- W. Mark St. and Albert, ducted at 2 p.m. Saturday at Rockies to eastern Washington garding China — are the five Campsite Listing Mrs. Valentine Pelows.ki, ' 816 ters, Mrs. Donald (Margaret) Hardies Creek Lutheran ident Johnson said today UM Stronberg, Black River Falls, and south and east of the Great troubles besetting the United E. 2nd St. Church, the Rev. H. P. Walker Lakes. Rain dampened southern Robin ML Pruka, 5«2 W. Two-State Funerals and Mrs. Helen Baur, Colum- officiating. Burial will be in the In AAA Directory Nations do not stein from its bus, Ohio; 12 grandchildren and Texas and western Washington. charter, but from those nations Broadway. Robert A. Schuchard church cemetery. Western New York State was Terms Impossible LANESBORO, Minn. (Special) seven great-grandchildren. He Friends may call at Smith which have violated the chart- DISCHARGES ELGIN, Minn. (Special ) — of 12 laced by high winds. Watertown WASHINGTON U) - U.S. —Registering Lanesboro as a was the last of a family Mortuary from 7 until 9 p.m. er. Mrs. Reuben Kaste , 8«5 39th Funeral services for Robert A.. children. which received seven inches of officials regard as virtually campsite in the AAA directory Reacting at s news Schuchard will be Friday at Friday, and at the church after is being studied confer* Ave., Goodview. The funeral service will be new snow, closed schools for the impossible the proposal by by the Lanes- ence to French President Tara D. McGovern, Rushford 3:30 p.m. at Johnson & Schriver 12:30 p.m. Saturday. A prayer first time this year. More than French President Charles de boro Community Club, it -was , Saturday at 2 p.m. at Our Sav- service will be conducted at 8 Charles de Gaulle's call for a Minn. Funeral Home, Plainview, the Hixton 50 motorists were stranded in Gaulle today for a five- announced at a meeting Monday Charles Schwenke, Plain- ior's Lutheran Church, , p.m. Friday. five power conference to exam- Rory A. McGovern, Rushford, Rev. the Rev. Franklyn Schroeder Adams, south of Watertown. power conference, including night, Orvis Hanson, president, ine and perhaps revise the U.N. Minn. view Presbyterian Church, of- But the cold didn't stop about Communist China, on revi- said. pact, ficiating. Burial will be in El- officiating. Burial will be in Tri- Canute V. Campa Johnson said he -would be Gwendolyn McGovern, Rush- nity Rest Cemetery. TREMPEALEAU. W?. - Ca- 2,000 Marines from Camp Le- sion of the United Nations. A coinmittee planning the an- glad to consider the proposal ford, Minn. gin Cemetery. jeune, N.C, who started a nual high school athletic ban- Palbearers will be: Alphj Pallbearers will be six grand- nute V. Campa, 89, died Wednes- later, after it has been studied. Miss Alaina Mohr, 617H> Da- children : Alan and Steven afternoon at his liome here. month-long winter exercise at quet April 6 includes Stanley But the President said he Martin, Lloyd Behrens, Martin day Camp Drum near Watertown. cota St. Stronberg and Roger , Dean, He was born Jan. 19, 1876, in nations which hold permanent Johnson, Gordon Peterson and does not see the charter itself Edward M. Serva Beyer , John Schuchard, Myron seats on the U.N. Security Coun- Harris Overland. Jr., 450V4 Gary and Billy Regez. Matehuala, Potosi, Mexico, to Four deaths related to the as the basic problem. E. Wabasha St. Pretzer and Leonard Olson. Friends may call at Jensen Friends may call at the fu- al] Mr. and Mrs. Miguel Campa. He weather were reported in Ken- Mrs. Leo Borkowski and baby, Funeral Home, Hixton, day months. 3975 Tth St., Goodview.' neral home until time of ser- Friday. has lived here seven tucky. Much of the state was pal of the pub- Mrs. Raymond Beach, Minne- vices. His son is princi still covered by snow, but all sot a City, Minn. Mrs. James J. Fradkin lic school here. main roads were open. Schools three Mrs. Edward Barnewdtz , Wi- WEATHER SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- Survivors are : His wife ; in 20 or more counties were nona Rt. 1. cial) — Mrs. James J. Frad- sons, Ben, Trempealeau; Char- closed again today. AN EXCLUSIVE! Lori Ann Tudahl , 753 "E. Mark OTHER TEMPERATURES kin, 69, retired director of the les, Skokie, 111., and Michael, The lowest temperature St Visiting Nurse Association of St. Paul ; three daughters, Mrs. recorded in Kentucky was 14 BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rochelle, Thomas J. Glenzinski , 358 E. High Low Pr. Brooklyn and New Padgett ( Irene) Herst, Houston, below in Somerset. Other read- Wabasha St. N.Y., and former supervisor of Texas; Miss Justa, Miami, Fla., ings were —9 in Whitesburg, — Albany, clear 15 -12 .. nursing at Long Island CoUege ) 4 in Covington —3 in Bowling Roy Northrup, 3920 6th St., Albuquerque, clear . 61 34 .. and Mrs. Peter (Polly Lopez, , Goodview. Hospital , died Jan. 10 at Grace Dalles, Texas; 10 grandchildren, Green and —1 in Corbin. Atlanta, clear 41 23 .. Community Hospi- Robert L. Johnson 511 Liberty New Haven and 17 great grandchildren. The cold siege took its seventh , Bismarck, clear — 2 -28 .. tal. St. Funeral services will be con- life in Tennessee Wednesday ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦I MIM If I II III 11II l| TOIIII ¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ —— II Boise, cloudy 41 33 .. Born in Spring Grove, she when a Nashville woman was WMMIMIWIWWIMIIIIII — M IIIIIWI MIWI1—HI —Ml BIRTHS Boston, clear 24 9 .. ducted at 2 p.m. Saturday at Mr. and Mrs. graduated from Augustana Col- Smith Mortuary, Galesville, the found frozen to death in her John Holland, Chicago, clear...... 10 1 .. lege School of Nursing, Chicago. Rollingstone , Minn., a daughter. Cincinnati, clear ...20-10 .. Rev. Richard F. Cagle of First yard. She served in many capacities of- Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan R. Cleveland, clear ... 13 2 .. retired Baptist Church, La Crosse, An elderly couple was found in the nursing field and be in Wolfe, 860 47th Ave., Goodview, Denver, cloudy 31 10 .. in 1952. She lived at Wilton, ficiating. Burial will frozen to death in a room of a son. Des Moines, clear .. 13 -8 Conn. Trempealeau Cemetery. their Elwood, Ind., home. Mr. and Mrs. James Chris- Detroit, snow 16 6 T Survivors are : Her husband; Friends may call at the fu- Residents in Calumet, Mich., topherson, Rushford, Minn., a Fairbanks, clear . -18 -40 .. two daughters, Bonnie and Mrs. neral home from 7 until 9 p.m. took the 200 inches of snow daughter. Fort Worth, cloudy . 49 40 B . Kimberly Prins ; three grand- Friday. which has fallen this winter phi- Mr. and Mrs. Ray Peterson, Helena, cloudy .... 24 19 children ; one sister, Mrs. Anne losophically. "It's just as nice 360% E. Srd St., a daughter. Honolulu, cloudy ... 75 65 .06 Rauk , and one brother, Ru- Fred H. Wilson here as it is in the summer, ex- ^WHf^ISS^ l^il Indianapolis, clear 14 4 dolph Tweeten, Spring Grove. ST. CHARLES, Minn. (Spe- cept it's colder," one resident * funeral service for /-x /"V T T \Hr*s* ? MV* ¦* **» BIRTHS ELSEWHERE Jacksonville, cloudy 54 45 cial) — Tbe noted. T"* -j^ - Kansas ity, clear .. 28 12 Helmer Emilson Fred H. Wilson, 83, who died River craft smashed open a nOO K ¦Jrw. j3L HARMONY, Minn, (Special)- Los Angeles, cloudy 69 50 ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - Tuesday night at Olmsted Com- Mississippi navigation channel Mr. and Mrs. Norman Nords- Louisville, snow ... 25 15 T Helmer Emilson, 74, died Wed- munity Hospital, will be Satur- near Cairo in Southern Illinois a _j___w£^______W__C y**- Am\ riga , a daughter Monday at Har- Memphis, clear .... 42 21 T nesday at Minneapolis Veterans day at 2 p.m. at Sellner Funeral few hours after ice floes cover- mony Community Hospital. Hospital where he had been a the Rev. ^^gjg B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BK Miami, cloudy 70 69 Home, St. Charles, ing 90 cent of the river had ^"WNRfg*'' ^______tt HIXTON, Wis. (Special) - Milwaukee, clear .. 5 -7 patient since August, 1963. George W. McNary of the Con- i£mWl^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm\%.^¦^¦^¦^1 ^wj£A. formed an ice jam. . ^(^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦ ^ Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Pederson Mpls.-St. P., clear .1-19 .. He was born Aug. 31, 1890, gregational Church here offici- The Weather Bureau aald the .^¦^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^HB^HRVr ^H^HrW,^H^H^H^H^Hljn^nV' ^¦^¦^¦^¦^a M^W^. A HB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^^^B^B J a son Tuesday at Community New Orleans, cloudy 49 43 .. at Chaseburg to Mr. and Mrs. ating. Burial will be in Oak- rich vegetable growing areas of ^ ^B^K^ B^B^B^B^H^H Hospital , Black River Falls. New York, clear .. 24 15 .. Ole Emilson and served over- wood Cemetery, Rochester. Florida and southern Texas ap- CALEDONIA , Minn. (Special) Okla. City, clear .. 46 22 .. seas 22 months in World War Friends may call at the fu- in the Beaver peared to have escaped the —At Caledonia Community Hos- Omaha, clear 17 -1 I. He farmed neral home from tonight until worst of the cold weather. pital : Philadelphia, clear 25 6 .. Creek area more than 30 years. time of services. He was a member of Living Warm rains fell along the west- Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Otterness, Phoenix , clear .... 72 45 .. He was born in Rochester ern Gulf Coast and headed east- Spring Grove, a son Jan. 20. Pittsburgh, clear .. 16 2 .. Hope Lutheran Church and Run- Jan. 13, 1882. He married Ida nestrand-Pederson American ward into northern Florida , end- Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hasleit, Ptlnd, Me. , clear .. 23 6 .. L. Davis June 25, 1903, at Red- ing the frost threat to these ar- Caledonia, a daughter Friday. Legion Post. wood Falls. She died the follow- Rapid City , clear .. 23 7 .. Kamprud eas. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Zibrow- St. Louis, clear 27 9 He married Ida ing year, leaving one daughter. June 25, 1929. Early morning temperatures ski , Caledonia, a son Jan. 28. Salt Lk. City, cloudy 52 31 .. After her death he moved to ranged from 24 below zero at ^B^B^B^a^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^alB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^HBbli^Jl^Bl Mr. and Mrs. Francis O'Re- Survivors are : His wife; one Warren, Ark., where he was ^^^^¦^MBVB B B B B B BVB B B B B B^II ^^^ ^*£§«M San Fran., cloudy .. 50 49 daughter, Mrs. Agnes Tolokken, Aberdeen, S.D., and Bismarck, ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ gan, Castalia, Iowa , a son Sat- Seattle, rain 45 42 .04 married to Willie L. Garrison N.D., to 72 at Key West, Fla. urday . and one granddaughter, Debra , Oct. 30 , 1907. ^^I^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H^^^^^^^^^^^^j^aflMHffr^'' K ^'*i * Washington, clear .. 30 15 both of Ettrick, and two broth- Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wagner, -7 -23 .. At Warren he managed a ^B^B^B^BHB ^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BHF^ Winnipeg, clear ... ers, Earl , Rochester, Minn., and ^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BK^V New Albin, Iowa , a son Sunday. (T-Trace) warehouse and lumber com- Municipal Court (Special) Victor, Beloit. BLAIR, Wis. - Mr. AIRPORT WEATHER The funeral service will be pany. In 1910 he moved to Ro- ¦iBB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^Bm^iSL y;^ and Mrs. Clarence Schultz Jr., (North Central Observations) chester where he managed a WINONA ¦ ^^^ ¦Vak Saturday at 2 p.m. at Living James D. Jordan, 52 , St. Paul, ^ ^^^^^^^^^^ a son Tuesday at Tri-County Me- Max. temp. 5 above at noon Hope Lutheran Church, the Rev. garage. In 1928 he moved to morial Hospital , Whitehall. Mr. today, min. temp. 20 below at St. Charles where he was self- pleaded not guilty to a charge #^HBB ^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BB ^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BV. Mark M . Ronning officiating. of assault brought by Raymond ?/ ^W^^^ and Mrs. Clarence Schultz and 8 a.m. today, clear sky, visibil- Burial will be in the Ettrick employed as a service garage fB^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Hk Mr. and Mrs. Claren ce Koepke, ity 15 miles, wind is calm, operator. He was an honorary Meyers today at 12:34 a.m. at Cemetery, with military rites was in Blair, are the grandparents. barometer 30.48 and falling by the Legion post. member of the St. Charles (ire 129 W. 3rd St. Jordan Mr. and Mrs. Gary Busson, slowly, humidity 49 percent. department and a member of city jail pending the posting of ¦ A devotional service will be St. Paul, a daughter Jan. 22. held Friday at 8 p.m. at Run- the grand lodge of United Work- $50 bail set by Judge John D. Victor Melby, rural Blair is the nestrand Funeral Chapel. men. McGill. Trial of the charge is set maternal grandfather. Harmony Association Friends may call at the chapel His second wife died Feb. 11, for Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special ) after 7 p.m. Friday and at the 1959. He then returned to Ro- Forfeitures: —Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Frei- Holds Ladies Might church Saturday after 12:30 chester where he lived with Joseph G. Bolotln, Highland heit , rural Lake City, a son HARMONY, Minn. (Special) p.m. relatives. Park , 111., $30 on a charge of Tuesday at St. J ohn 's Hospital, — About 120 attended annual Survivors are: Five daugh- careless driving on U.S. 61-14, ...at the small cost of $320 1 , Rod Wing. Mr. and Mrs. Hugo ladies night of the Civic & Com- Mrs. Minnie Bathrick ters, Mrs. Loretz (Ida) Ness 1% miles north of Lamoille Johnson , Goodhue, and Mr. and BLAIR , Wis. (Special ) — Mrs. and Mrs. Rose Shattuck , Ro- Monday at 4:45 a.m. merce Association at Greenfield (Bette ) Laurel O. Hanson, Winona Mr.s. Theodore Freiheit , Lake Lutheran Church Saturday Minnie Bathrick , 95, native nf chester; Mrs. Irving City, arc grandparents . this area , died Wednesday after- Smith, St. Charles ; Mrs. Nor- Box 434 , $25 on a charge of night. Women of the American noon at Hastings, Minn., where man (Nell) Rasmussen, Hutch- speeding 37 m.p.h. in a 30 zone Jlygk Legion Auxiliary served the TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS she had lived many years. inson, and Mrs. Lester (Louise ) on 2nd Street from Johnson to meal. The former Minnie Ellison, Dyar, Tenstrike, Minn.; three Washington streets today at 2:55 i^f^Sm^m. Jeff Allan Gunderson, 806 W. Guest speaker Leonard Eks- she was born near Taylor Jan. sons, James and Fritz, St. a.m. r ¦ """" 'V /// ^«»o l/ Broadway, Winonn , 2. trand , Rochester, talked on 13 , 31170, to Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Charles, and Joseph, Minnea- LeRoy Meech, 173% E. 4th St., Ir****^ ' "Selling." President George Ellison. She was married to polis ; 14 grandchildren , and two $10 on a charge of going through % y FIUE CALLS Frogner extended the welcome Reuben Bathrick in 1888. He died great-grandchildren. a stop sign on Highway 43 in Wi- ' tsitLJS j^r...._ \ \ and announced the program. in 1927. nona Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. \\\ ^ tie* / Today The Rev. Thomas P. McHugh Survivors are: Two sons, Mrs. Stanley Kamrowski Arthur L. Hittner , 36(5 W. Mill 7 a.m. — 602 E. Front St , gave the table blessing. Floyd and Alvin, Hastings ; four ARCADIA , Wis. (Special) — St., $10 on a charge of parking \ys#z*/ I \ - f I \j » Winona Industries, dust burning grandchildren ; several great- Mrs. Stanley Kamrowski , 73, in a snow removal zone on 4th \ XJ^Jf* // ^ #vn?\ / NATIVE UIS1IOP died today at 3:50 a.m. at St. Street Monday at 12:25 p.m. around motor and hopper , put 1 grandchildren; one great-great- out with C02 and 1 % hose line. COLOMBO , Ceylon (AI ) - grandchild , and one sister , Mrs. Francis Hospital , La Crosse, GOODVIEW 1 $0 , 7:45 a.m. — 856 E. 3rd St., For the first time n native of Levi (Edna) Brown, Blair , the where she was admitted Jan. Richard Mohan , 4045 Sth St., ; I : lX "* *.W: ;in.Iv !H«i - ^¦*Sj *~w Arthur Mueller residence , chim- Ceylon , the Very Rev. Harold last of the family. 24. Goodview, pleaded guilty to a ^^ >_. / ney fire, nothing used to put de Soysn , has been appointed as Funeral services will be at The former Katherine Rossa, charge of illegal parking in jus- out. Anglican bishop of Colom bo. Hastings Friday afternoon. Bur- she was born Feb. 15, 1891 , to tice court there Wednesday. Bartholomew and Anna Rossa, Justice of the Peace Floyd 'T'HE WORLD IN 1964 gives you the full , inside story in words and pictures Arcadia. She was married to Farnholtz' imposed a $10 fine, -*• of a great news year- and the cost is only a third of what you would expect Stanley Kamrowski here Feb. 9, plus $4 court costs, or five days Ice Fishermen & "Dear" Hunters Like Our Food 1914 , and the couple farmed in jail. Mohan paid the fine. to pay for a volume of this quality. in the Tamarack area until Farnholtz said Mohan's car Its value will grow for students and general readers with every passing retirement several years ago. was parked in the lane of traf- year. More important , it makes fascinatin g Some (top by for early breakfast before their trip, others She was a member of Sacred fic nt 40th Avenue and 6th reading right now. Heart Church , Pine Creek . Produced for this newspaper by tlie world's foremost news gathering or- ^X *,0P or a friendly glass of boor and refreshing Street. The car owner was ar- //f '"** *° ty * Survivors arc : Eer husband; *i~yy '^\ dinner after th«y get back (tired and hungry, it always rested hy Wil age Marshall Ray- ganization, The Associated Press, Ti f fi WORLD IN 1 964 is a unique reading three sons, Joseph, Albert and mond Kulns. f f \ teems). And quite a few sportimen have discovered how Sylvester , Arcadia; seven experience. (laughters , Mr.s. Frances Lee ~f~"V__Ji easy It it to havo ut pack lunches for the trip itself. NEXT TO IMtOPMKTY V nnd Mrs. Ann Morton , Arcadia; An em on our menu con be fixed for Carryout Servico. UT) Police Ij^iU^'i Y »' Mr.s. William (Margaret ) Swart- LOUISVILLE — Judge William Colson agrees j _-»( \ Give ut a jingle the next time you get a "fishy" idea . . H ling, Mrs . Alvin (Alice) Ga- ) that cleanliness is next to god- brych, Mrs. Don (Betty Kac- THE WORLD IN 1965 j zorowski nnd Mr.s. John IP check or money order j Su- LEBANON , Ky. (AP) - A ; ADDRESS • Church, the Rev. Autfustyn . remittance for $3 to the i ( 11k officiating. Burial will be 9MVpound Black Angus heifer ln the church cemetery. jumped the fence at the Stock- address indicated on ^bfcw CORNER MARK and CENTER STREETS • ffi U SHORTY'S ' • ] Friends may call nt Killian yards and fell into the city s coupon. Thc book Funeral Home Saturday after only private swimming pool. the 7 p.m. and Sunday. Rosary will J. T. Whitlock estimated the will be mailed soon. i CITY AND STATE j be said Saturday and Sunday heifer caused $500 damage be- ^ai^F—-w^rat 8 and 8:30 p.m. fore she could be rescued. !fcfiVs&&^^^ Minnesota Hog Farm Calendar Urban Students Monday, Feb. 8 WAUMANDEE, Wis., 8 p.m.- Buffalo County Holstein Breed- Attracted to Slaughter Dips; ers, St. Boniface School. SPRING GROVE, Minn., 8 p.m. — Adult agriculture class, high school. Campus Others Gain CALEDONIA, Minn., 8 p.m. Farm ST. PAUL, Minn, — Houston County 4-H Federa- ST. PAUL, Minn. - The St. — Commer- Uni- cial slaughter plants in Minne- tion, city auditorium. Paul "farm" campus of the Minnesota is becom- sota during the January-Decem- Feb versity of Tuesday, . 9 urban in its stu- ber 1964 period killed 1,696,000 HARMONY, Minn., 12:30 ing increasingly population. cattle; 230,300 calves, 5,792,000 p.m. — Harmony-Bristol Farm dent hogs and 875,500 sheep and Bureau unit, Power House. Assistant Dean Keith McFar- lambs according to the Crop and MONDOVI, Wis., 8:30 p.m. — land of the College of Agricul- Livestock Reporting Service oi Buffalo County 4-H and leaders ture, Forestry and Home Econ- e-venr the Minnesota and U. S. Depart- Ereject meeting on care of omics said that while ment of Agriculture. ouse plants, Robinson Green- county has students on the cam- house. pus, about half of all undergrad- Comparable figures for 1963 uate students there are from the are : Cattle, 1,453,000 head, up WINONA, Minn., noon - Wfc nona Chamber of Commerce 9-county area surrounding and 17 percent; calves 196,500, up 17 including the Twin Cities. percent; hogs, 5,820 ,000, down agriculture committee, Hotel 27 percent are irom less than 1 percent, and sheep Winona. In fact, COCHRANE-FC Wis., 8:15 Hennepin County and 13.8 from and lambs, 820,000, up 7 per- , cent. CHURNING BUTTER ...A group of ery the childern put cream in a fruit jar p.m. — First of 10 sessions of Ramsey County. young farmers agriculture class, Yet, McFarland said , de- Cattle slaughtered during third graders at Osseo, Wis., School learn- and shook it until they had butter. Two De- high school. mands from industry for grad- cember 1964 totaled I ed how to churn butter last week as part teachers, Mrs. Robert Nelson and Miss Rita 159 ,000, Wednesday, Feb 10 uates of agriculture, forestry head . , up 24 percent from the of a social studies project. After making a Jensen, accompanied the children on the tour. DURAND Wis., 7:45 p.m. and home economics programs , , — 128 000 slaughtered in December j tour of a modern dairy farm and a cream- (Mrs. Jann Peterson photo) — House remodeling meeting, far exceeds supply. Among 1963, and 10 percent above No- courthouse. graduates in agriculture alone, vember 1964. The average live- ARCADIA, Wis., 1:15 p.m. he said, 60 percent enter pri- weight of cattle slaughtered was — Dairy clinic, Trempealeau vate industry or business. The 1,050 pounds per head compared Electric Cooperative. rest take positions in public with 1,086 in December 1963 and Thursday, Feb. 11 employment or are sell-em- 1,061 pounds for the previous ployed. month. CANTON, Minn., 8 p.m. — Substituting point- Grain Adult agriculture class on swine McFarland In forestry, December calf slaughter to- nutrition, high school. ed to heavy demand for grad- ¦• ¦ ¦¦- t taled 30,500, 23 percent above uates in the forest products, 'TIL SPRING . . . This roll of barbed wire, probably the same month last year and merchandising and research ar- 7 percent above Nov ember flung on the fence post as a last gesture to the departing fall 1964. eas. Currently, the majority of Calves slaughtered averaged 170 em- must wait for spring — and the farmer — before forestry graduates accept weather, pounds per head liveweight , 4 For Hay Suggested state or Turkey Aorta ployment in federal , it will be used. With the recent snow and the cold weather, pounds less than December 1963 By OLIVER STRAND For example, with a low On the basis of estimated local public agencies. it will be a few weeks before the farmers start repairing and also 4 pounds less than a Winona County Agent supply of mixed hay avail- net energy, one pound of In home economics great their fences. (Daily News photo) month earlier. shelled corn will replace two shortages of gr aduates exist in LEWISTON Minn.-Many able it is suggested that The hog kill in December at , pounds of hay in the ra- Study Backed education and dietetics, but Winona County and South- the dairyman limit hay to 594 ,000 head, was 12 percent tion. However, each cow ST. PAUL, Minn. - Two Uni- there are critical needs for per- 6 to 10 pounds daily per degrees for above the 532,000 slaughtered in eastern Minnesota dairy should receive a minimum versity of Minnesota research sons with advanced December 1963 cow, plus all the corn sil- college teaching, research and , but 3 percent farmers are critically short of 6 to 10 pounds of hay projects on turkeys, one deal- Grain Plan less than November 1964. The age the cow will eat (if per day in the ration or the related activities. Feed of hay and grain for their ing with a turkey health prob- average liveweight for the silage is available). In ad- fat test will tend to drop. lem and the other with nutrition, month "was 249 pounds per head herds this year because of dition he should feed a 16 recently received additional sup- compared with 253 pounds a last year's drought condi- percent crude protein ration EVEN AT current prices port from the U.S. Public Health Signup to Begin year earlier and 253 pounds dur- tions. consisting of 4 parts corn of $L30 per bushel of shell- Service. Professor Paul E. Wai- Radcliffe Urges ing November 1964. Normally a dairy farmer's or oats and 1 part high pro- ed corn or $2.30 per cwt. and Signup in the 1965 f eed grain sult of the county average yield bel in the Department of Poul- Sheep and Iambs slaughtered winter feeding program is tein concentrate to dairy $4.40 per cwt of soybean oil program begins Monday and ex- being raised from 70 to 72 bush- try Science is principal investi- in commercial plants during De- determined largely by the cows at the rate of 1 pound meal a farmer cannot af- tends through March 26, says els per acre. ford to pay more than $30 gator. cember totaled 89,500 head, the type, supply and quality of grain to each 2 pounds of Oleo Opposition John F. Papenfuss, chairman of On a farm established as an same as a year ago, but down hay that he has available milk over 15 pounds for the per ton for average quality STRUM . Wis. - John Rad- the Winona ASC Committee. AORTIC rapture hai long average farm in the county, the 10 percent from last month. The to feed. With hay in short low testing breeds and over alfalfa hay when he is ship- cliffe, assemblyman from Jack- Papenfuss said county offices been a problem in turkey pro- minimum 20 percent diversion average liveweight for the supply locally and because 12 pounds for the high test- ping for the energy and pro- son and Trempealeau counties, do not yet have authorization to (This duction, and losses from the rate is $17.14 per acre, the max- month was 103 pounds per head, the quality of purchased hay ing breeds. tein needs of his cows. urged farmers to fight against payments. This problem have been estimated to make advance imum rate is $42.84, and the 4 pounds over a year ago, and — even at relatively high If corn silage is limited is using the basis of esti- a bill before the Legislature prob- account for 2 percent of Minne- authority is expected but price support rate per acre for 2 pounds more than a month prices — is generally ques- also, shelled corn or corn mated net energy which is which would permit the sale ably not by the beginning of the sota's turkeys. Basic causes of each acre of corn grown is earlier. tionable, it is desirable for and cob meal can be substi- more accurate than com- of colored oleomargarine. the problem are still unknown. "If the bill passes, let it spec- signup. $14.40. most dairymen to consider tuted at the rate of 1 pound parisons made on total di- It involves a rupture of the wall ify that the color be black." The chairman said Winona substitution of grain or of corn to replace 4 pounds gestible nutrients when SINCE THE advance pay- of the posterior aorta, followed Radcliffe suggested. "Coloring County this year is a "Certifica- other concentrates for hay of average corn silage. With comparing a concentrate ments probably won't be avail- ) by hemorrhaging and death. it black would not detract from tion County." This is new ; in the ration to as large stored shelled corn available "ith a forage feed. able by that time, it may help the ingredients, and it would it was used in several selected Electric Co-op an extent as possible. to eligible farmers at $1.19 Oat straw and chopped The problem often has been to spread the signup over the through the local ASCS Of- or shredded corn stover viewed as due to high blood not go on the market under period and counties in the nation last year. seven-week signup DAIRY Husbandry Fact fice and on the market cur- (with ears removed) have pressure or weakness of the false pretenses. the relieve some of the rush at IN A "Certification County" Sheet 1, "Winter Feeding of rently at $1.25 to $1.30 per just over half the net ener- aorta wall. Studies at Minnesota "Butter is our best buy fn the first county office during the farmer may certify he has Dairy Cows," by the Uni- bushel, many farmers gy value of average quality have dealt mostly with nutri- food today. Its nutritional value days of the signup, the chair- ! Districts Elect diverted the amount of acreage versity of Minnesota dairy should think seriously oi alfalfa hay for dairy cattle. tional, biochemical, physiologi- is very important to low income man said. he agreed to and did not over- ARCADIA. Wis. (Special — department, is available at adjusting their dairy rations Beet pulp can also be add- cal and pathological aspects of families as well as all others. Notices of acreages, yields "We are the only state in the plant his acreage permitted for Trempealeau Electric Coopera- the county agent's- office. It to feed more corn , rather ed to a high grain ration the problem. and payment rates have been tive has elected 72 district com- U.S. prohibiting sale of colored feed grains. His word is accept- can help in making needed than paying excessively high to improve palatability and Findings to date indicate that mailed out and Papenfuss point- mitteemen to represent them margarine. Let's be proud of ed, but 25 percent of these feed adjustments. prices for low quality hay. bulk content. certain tranquilizers and blood ed out that county farmers will farms will be spot-checked by at the district conference Feb. it, let the rest of the nation pressure - reducing drugs have notice that their payment rates field reporters. Where the farm- 17 in the Willie Wiredhand know about it. Wisconsin is the AGRICULTURE COMMITTEE some effect in delaying the on- are higher this year as a re- er is short of diverted acres or Room of the Trempealea u Elec- HOUSTON CO. FB WOMEN dairyland of tlie country. Farm- tric Building here. set of aortic rupture. One tran- ers should stand up and be over-planted on feed grains by ) The 1965 program will be dis- CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special | Farming Strong quilizer , reserpine, is currently counted against the sale of col- more than a small tolerance, he The co-op is divided into 24 — Activities during the past cussed at the Tuesday meet- nominating districts. A roster used for this purpose by turkey ored margarine." Buffalo Co. 4-H will be out of the program with year and new projects for 1965 ing of the Winona Chamber of no chance to adjust. Feed grains of all members living in each producers. In addition to illegal sale of were discussed by the Houston Commerce's agriculture com- are corn, barley and sorghum. district is mailed to all mem- | Pillar, Houston Findings indicate that die- colored oleo in Wisconsin, Offered Cours e County Farm Bureau women at mittee at a noon luncheon at The chairman said this will bers within that district . Mem- Hotel Winona. tary copper deficiency may re- there's a 15-cent tax per pound present no great difficulty be- bers vote for three committee- their first 1965 meeting. Mrs. ; ¦ sult in aortic rupture. on uncolored oleo. In House Plants cause premeasurement services men to represent their district. Dillon Hempstead reported on i To enliven the color of mayon- FB Crowd Told One of the more significant District Directors up for elec- the national convention held at ] naise made with a whole egg, findings is that weakening of ALMA , Wis. — Buffalo Coun- again will be available. Where CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) tion in 1965 are: Philadelphia. ' add paprika . »• thc aorta can appear in turkey ' W^LVJLHIIIHHVHHV ty 4-H members and leaders will the fields are premeasured, the — "Agriculture is a strong pill- District 1. Ted Gilbertson Sr .. Osseo; poul ts starting as early as three receive professional help in acreages will be known and ar in our economy," Dean Berg, District 4, Elmer H. Anderson. Blair, and weeks of age. The problem or- growing and caring for house there will be no problem if the District 3, Nick Jensen, Arcadia. University of Minnesota, told plants. farmer plants as he designates The annual co-op meeting will be «l the 400 people who attended dinarily has not been detected the fields to the reporter. Whitehall on March 20. until birds are about 8 weeks Edward Robinson , Mondovi , Committeemen elected: 55.6 Average Leads the recent seventh annual Hous- will conduct the program at his Generally it will be an advan- District IB and 2B—Wallace Olson, Si- ton County Farm Bureau ban- of age. tage to use premeasurement, ex- mon Wold and Wilfred L. Adams, Eleva; green house Tuesday and Feb. District IC and 2C-La Verna Gulllcksrud, quet here. cept in cases where the same IN THE OTHER project, sci- 16 and 23 at 8:30 p.m. Paul A. E ide, Strum, and Ed Brlxen, "No nation is ahead of us in Topics for discussion nre fields are used as in 1964, or Osseo ; District ID, 2D and 2E, Norman entists are using one of the where the farmer is very sure E, Olson. Roy Hagen and Philip Idle, Wabasha Co. DHIA production of food and fiber," newer techniques for studying General growing conditions such Osseo . WABASHA , Minn. — Top herd in the Wabasha County he said. "By 1970 we will have watering, light of his acreages, or where he is District 3B—Wendell Burt and Oscar amino acid requirements. as soil mixtures, L. Berg, Independence DHIA in December was sure that he has overdiverted or , and Oliver Haw- owned by Forest Lamprecht, Plain- increased our output 20 per- Tne scientists are using an and temperature requirements; kenson, Eleva. District 3C—Waller Smick , view, South Unit. His herd of 36 grade and registered Hol- cent." tpti-/ncCtt&l} underplanted by a safe margin. Independence; Raymond Schaefer, Osseo, analyzer to determine the levels r propagation of plants by leaf , steins averaged 55.6 ^ The premeasurement fee is and Curtis Mueller, Strum. District 3D pounds of butterfat . Berg said the Russians are of "free" amino acids in tip, or stem cuttings , and pests and 3E—Hnlvor J. Haugen. Wnldemar $10. This will permit ground E. Top cow in the county was owned by Paul and James today where we were in 1890. blood plasma and tissues, which and diseases of house plants. Pederson and Laurel Bern, Osseo. Goihl , measurement of 3 fields in ad- District 4A and 4B--John Walek, Ladis- Lake City, Central Unit. Their N-j . 9, a grade Holstein , In Denmark about 90 percent then may be correlated with laus Malchey and Emil Kontcr, Indepen produced 137.2 pounds Soc Your Factory-Trained Dealer dition to officially measured of butterfat. of the people own their farms changes of amino acids in the ience. District 4C -Bennie Kullq. Inde Top herds in the other four units in terms of average Holstein Breeders fields which are unchanged pendoncc, and Milam Witt and C. A. and in the United States about diet. This makes possible thc Kuhn. Whitehall. District 4D and 4E- butterfat production: Clarence Reese, Lake City, North Unit, 80 percent , he pointed out. from pr i or years, and those Erllnq G. Hanson nnd Qdell Bnrriwn. simultaneous study of levels of Ed's R efrigeration 52.7; Harlan Siewert , Zumbro Fails , Central Unit , 51.3; W. To Meet Monday at fields which can be measured Whitehall , and Raymond P. Picrrlna, "We should strive for an un- many amino acids, even though Ul.w C. Drysdale & Son , Wabasha , Unit 4 , 45.3, and David Zabel , derstanding of the forces in thc St. Boniface School from the aerial photograph and District 5A and SB- Wilfr«f Brrska, onl y one may be changed in the & Dairy Supply Plainview , Unit 5, 52.7. world today and what they verified by the field reporter. Lambert Walski and Pdward Schank, Ar- diet. 5S5 East 4th St. Wlnono ALMA , Wis . - Buffalo Coun- There will be an extra charge cadiii; District 5C-Bennett O . Anderson, County report: mean to farmers and the man Whitehall, and Robert Gilbertson and NORTH UNIT Phone 5532 t y Holstein Bleeders will con- of $1.75 per field for all fields Myron Scow, Arcadia on main street ," he said . duct their an nual meet inR at (1 in excess of three which must Dl'.trlcl iD nnd 5E-- Hansel Johnson, TOP FIVE HEROS N. Thor Kjome , SprinR Grove, Hempstead to Speak Your Dari Kool Dealer p.m. Monday al St. Uonifaoe R/))pt> Sthnn:berfi end Roll Rude. fll/ilr. No. No. —Avg. Lbs - vv;is he field measured. Di- .tncl 6A Bensel Haines, Donald r-or Breed Cowl Dry Milk BF tonslmaster and the Rev. School at Wiiumandee. Emmons i.yllu- and Angus Andre, Arcadia Dis- Clarence Reese. Lake Cily .. GH 31 7 1,550 52, 7 Rolf Hanson , Spring Grove, At Harmony Tuesday Vinci-nl Eversnian. WiiHaslia Ac cola . Mondovi , is president. THK CHAIRMAN sail! Du re trict 611 Joseph J. Rossa Jr., Prrcli/el CM >0 * 1,360 51.5 gave the invocation. llhudi- .ind 0. I .. Nlh.estuen, Arcadia Donald Grulke , Mn/i'pp.i GM 49 V 1,250 50.0 PRESTON. Minn. (Special ) - Projects during Ihe past year i.s interest in Ihe wheat .substitu- Donald P.ilmi.-i , Lake clly GH 37 2 1 47.1 With this MtW WAR RANTY.. OKtricI 5. He said this Helstad. rilrick , tint Thomas W. Shay. Morr is Meincke , Lake City GH 18 6 1,0(10 39.9 Arcndin . District 60 and 6E • Ralph Kit presi- fair and at the stato Holstein provision will have limited use TOP FIVF. COWS Guernsey Breeders state Farm Bureau vice tlesi ii, Or'in Hue and Arnold llrovold, Cow ' s Nama —-Lbi. dent , will be speaker at the Breeders con vention , a twilight in Winona County because it is r. ttrifk. District 7k .md 7B- Carroll Car- or Number breed Milk BF hart. Trcn-i[M-ali' ,iu, Farm Bureau meeting and the district black available only to those farms and Henry Kopp and V.nc nt nvfr'.mim, Wnhmh/i No. 13 GH 2,*50 107.8 BLAIR , Wi.s. (Special) - The Harmony-Bristol which have established Hymn Ko|.p, r.,ilesvlllc. District 7C Wil- Lloyd Mn|erin, M.i .'uppn ,. No. 17 GH 2,190 105 1 revised constitution of the meeting Tuesday at the Har- nnd white show. what al- li,im Tlirmnas and Orville Mahlum, El D.Wfild Griilke. Mn/cpfm No 23 GH 2, 1110 102.4 lotments nnd only then where kirk , and r.nrclnn Deeren, Galesville . Morris Mcilnckr, Lnki' City ... No. 16 GH 2 ,450 9D.0 Trempealeau - Jackson County mony Power House. An oyster District US and IF. I loyd f kern, ft mk theI farm i.s entered in V.nnmt rvcrsm.in, Wnlhulm . . .. No . 5 GM 2,000 94.2 Guernsey Breeders Association stew dinner will be served at ^ ^ belli the trick , and Arnold Smikrud, r.nlesvllle ^^-f&aiajflAMXflUS-^^^MI ^^ feed grain and what stabiliz a- District HA anrl HH Alhert Schirr. W rKNTH.11. UNIT will )>e discussed at Blair Feb. J2:.10 p.m. Amherst - Canton i I Adams and liny l akey, Trempealeau . TOP FIVE HERDS 10. Time and meeting place will Farm Bureau members are in- m ANNUAL t ion programs District fir Kohr, | c. Docken. ¦ ¦ ^ Gnlcsvlllc HorUn Meviprt. 7umhro (nils RH 45 6 1,226 51.3 be announced later. vited. "FROZEN GROUND SPECIAL" I PapenlUK.s also noted the G lllx-rl Slrlllni;, Millville GH 39 3 1, 511 50.7 "cross compliance" rule , which F'aul 8. Jim Goihl, l.nki' City , ... GB.HH 40 10 1,264 50.2 OIL SALE L«ilie Di-llmcr . l ake Clly ... . GH 39 one of them in the feint grain I'/iul 8. Jun Goihl, I ,iki' Clly No. 9 GH 2.540 137.2 j ' ^ ir program Federation Plans (Mill 8. Jim ( ".mill , l.nkir Clly No 14 GH 2, 700 113.4 , lie cannot overphmt F' nul 8. Jim Goihl, I nkn Cit y No. 5 61 GH 2.410 110.9 ¦ im E E 1 the feed until) base, or liases Gill),., I Mrllirxi, Millvillr Nn. 28 OH 2, 480 99 2 I Monday l(C|i()|.|iilnn ¦ " AU PURPOSE ¦ , «>n any other farm , or (arms , in Meeting llrcilhirfs , doodling . .. . No. 18 GH 2,140 96.3 HANK WILLIAMS - \\\\ CJtl TWII UMIT ¦ ¦ SOCKET WRENCH ¦ which he lias an interest in feed ¦ ¦ ¦ , ('AI.KI)ONIA , Minn. -- The ^j | OR 3*T. SttPlAD DER grains in i««;5. TOP FIVE HERDS AMERICA'S GREATEST Houston Counl y 4 11 Fedi 't ii- f or.-- .) I /linpiri hi, f'lrtlnvli'W ... . R«GH M 7 1.663 .15 6 - TRICE PROTECTION SENSE TOP FIVK HERDS prolerti you lor a l/'^^tir \j period ol J. year or ELECTRIC SERVICE t)6vlrl 7Mwl. I'lnlnvkw ...... OH 30 O 1,686 52 ,7 Jr-c- I | I'lolnvk- GH 28 1 1,386 44 .1 1200 tract or hour* Hi - eyl 1732 XJ> "Wllllnin G. Knhni i.il, w . • We*» Pliorm 8-376? S S A Arthur SctiulU Sr. \ Jr. Plainview GH 16 1 1,224 44 .] (whlch«vor como* if _/ -v/ Fl't»» St . Anytime C,( M w*f). /£ ^i / //Si I vmrinvtm IM other* , KclloOQ . ' ' 'I" -"¦' F. A. KRAUSE CO. Jy^f^mS John Weill, Clnlnvlciv GH 32 6 1,098 J7.0 Industrial Commtirciol "Breeiy Acres ," Edit of • • y l^A^j/JPij* ' TOP FIVE COWS Hmrl GH 1,980 79 2 Winonn Hwy. H 61 • Farm ond R«*idontilxnne, Klllocju No 6 GH 3,300 77 0 - Kochenderfar & Sons Eluctri cal Work No, 10 GH 2,190 lif rnnrrnriT'T ! I Phon* 5155 ^^J l'.v«isin«ll nrolhtrs, KilloGU SATURDAY I A jJifr V/A1 I 25r-65<-85f Fountain Clly, Wi*. William llahninn, I'lalnvic-iv ...... No. 3 GH 3,390 75 ,6 ^fl Arlliur Stliulll Sr. 8. Jr., PUInvlow .... Ho 4] Gli 1,980 73.1 Young Farmer Moves Ahead Meat Tenderness By FJtANK BRUESKE May Be Affected 11 Farm Soil Dally Newi Parm Editor MINNEISKA, Winn. - Wino- na County's young larmer of tbe By Contractions Plans Developed year is always looking for bet- MADISON, WIS. - What ter ways to operate his dairy makes a piece of beef tough or farm. tender? In Winona Co. He is Nick Meisch, who farms Most people say it's the age LEWISTON, Minn. — Eleven about 6 miles south of here. He of the animal and the amount sew conservation plans have was selected by the agricultural of fat or marbling in the lean. been prepared for county farm- committee of the Winona Junior But University of Wisconsin en, according to William Sill- Chamber of Commerce as one meat specialists say that more man, Winona County soil con- of the top young farmers in the than these two factors account servationist. county. for tenderness. , Farmers are : David Heim, A factor in beef tenderness Carl Mundt, Goodwin Boyum, MEISCH. 35, operates a 320- according to H. K. Herring, R- acre dairy farm. In addition he G. Cassens and E. J. Briskey, is TOP RANKING TEAM .. . The Cochrane-Fountain City Ed Lehnertz, Conrad Krieder- , , Leon- rents another 120 acres on how much the muscle shortens FFA judging team placed fourth in competition with 35 other macher Donald Maschka shares. after slaughter while the car- ard Heuer, Alton Albrecht, Rein- teams at the Wisconsin Duroc show at Madison Saturday. hard Rivers, Henry Tveten and Meisch has been farming 17 cass is cooling. In normal meat High individual for the team was Gene Baker, second from years. He started working for Vernon Feine. processing the muscles shorten left, who placed seventh in a field of 140. his father and now employs a Other team mem- A conservation plan estab- as the carcass hangs and cools, bers, from left, Gail Anderson, Barry Auer and Dan Dittrich. full-tlnie farm family and owns but the extent of shortening or lishes land use on the farm with- the farm. contraction appears to be high- Ray Scholl is adviser. in its capabilities and treat- He has increased his original ly variable. ing each acre according to its dairy herd from 16 to 65 cows. Under experimental conditions needs for protection and im- His average butterfat production when muscle portions are re- provement, Sillman said. has increased from 375 pounds moved from the carcass and put During 1064 Sillman'* office per cow to more than 500 pounds under tension and stretched prepared 30 conservation plans, ¦while they cool they are ten- 4-H' per cow. He produces grade A , er of Week made six revisions and signed milk and feeds out about 30 der. Conversely, when portions PLAINVIEW, Minn. - Rob- up 63 new cooperators. dairy steers a year. from the same muscle are rfee ert Lamprecht is one of Waba- In 1964 3,747 acres were laid A member of DHIA, he is on to contract as they cool, they sha County's top 4-H'ers. out for strip cropping, 44 acres its board of directors. He tests are tough. This 18-year old 4-H'er is the of waterways, 4% miles of di- his soil and fertilizes according In this experiment the re- son of Mr. and Mrs. Forest version terraces, 4 miles of field FEEDING . . . Meisch takes time out to his livestock. He also feeds out about to the tests and uses the Min- searchers designed a special in- Lamprecht and is a charter terraces, 31 farm ponds and from his other farm duties to help feed hay 30 dairy steers each year. nesota Farm Account Book. strument to keep the meat cuts member of the Happy Ramblers pits, 5 grade stabilizing struc- Meisch also belongs to the farm under tension. They measured 4-H Club. tures, 4 flood retarding struc- management service. He has the amount of stretch or con- An honor graduate of Plain- tures were constructed, 65 ac- his hay and silage tested yearly traction through special micro- view Community School, he is res were prepared for wildlife scope techniques. These tech- attending the University of and feeds rations accordingly. niques involved the microscopic and 1,875 acres went into wood- He green chops hay and uses Minnesota. land protection. measurement of the muscle His 4-H projects included crop rotation system. units, which are called sarcom- Meisch also is conservation dairy, agronomy, corn, soil and eres. water conservation, farm and minded. His entire farm is con- Then the meat scientists re- toured stripped; he has a wild- home shop, health and junior lated eating quality to the phys- leadership. Some Wisconsin life plot and has constructed a ical shortening or lengthening pond. He has been a 4-H Key award of the muscle and the micro- winner; has received the Farm MEISCH believes records plan scopic changes. Experimental Bureau service award; has at- Farm Prices Up cuts were roasted at 350 de- an important part in the suc- tended the junior leadership MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin cess of a farmer. grees to an internal temperature conference; the agronomy con- Robert Lamprecht I farmers received higher prices "We wanted to sell three of 150 degrees. A six-member on Jan. 15 panel judged the meat for ten- ference; dairy cattle congress; , 1965, than ia mid- cows," he said. "All we did was conservation camp at Itasca LmmmmmmmmmmmiM January last year for hogs, to look at the DHIA records to derness. The researchers also (cut- State Park; Farm Boys Camp; sheep, lambs, wool and all milk, spot the lowest three producers measured the shear force but lower prices ting pressure) needed to cut the has been a delegate to the Min- Trempealeau County for milk cows, — and we sold them. If we nesota Association of Coopera- beef cattle, calves, and eggs. didn cooked meat. Muscle which was Farmers 't have records we might not allowed to shorten was tives ; has attended the Dairy Recipients of 4-H received the same have sold some high producers. Conference at Chicago, and has price for farm chickens and much more tender than that Calves Announced turkeys as they Our records don't lie." which was permitted to con- been an active state fair exhibi- did a year ago. Earle Drenckhahn, chairman tract. tor. WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) Jan. 15 prices of steers and of the chamber's agriculture His 4-H activities include ra- — Trempealeau County 4-H heifers averaged $19 per hun- Amount of connective tissue, dredweight, committee, said Meisch's re- size of muscle fiber, and chem- dio speaking, good grooming, Agent Ray Shanklin has an- up 70 cents from the cords have been entered in the softball, one-act nounced the names of the coun- previous month but stayed the ical changes in the carcass are, plays, talent same as a year ago. Slaughter Minnesota young farmer of the of course, still important fac- shows, dairy judging team, de- ty 4-H and FFA youths who will year contest. tors in meat tenderness., monstrations receive project calves: cows averaged $11.80 p«r hun- . He was president dredweight, up $1 from a A member and treasurer of ¦ of the Wabasha County 4-H lead- Holiflln — Mary Pederson, Larry month You may want to try some ol Mh rer, Mary Bert and Sandra Olson, earlier and down 20 cents from Jehovah Lutheran Church, he is ers federation two years. Osseo; Roger Klein, Trempealeau; Terry treasurer o! School District 2572 the butter-type cake recipes us- ¦ Serge, Daniel Klotzbach and Cathrine January 1964. Beef cattle and is a member of the Farm ing sour cream because the A tablespoon of catchup is a Berg, Blair; Larry Gilbertson, Arcadia; brought $13 per hundredweight, Randall Post, Galesvllltt EUane L. Berg, up $1.10 above last Bureau. cream usually adds a rich, moist good flavor addition to salmon Ettrick; Cheryl Russel, Karen Iverson, month and quality. croquettes. Eleva, and Larry Estenson, Osseo. 30 cents below a year earlier. Selecting the young outstand- Guerniey — James Nehrlno, Trempea- Calf prices at $22.30 were up RECORD TIME . . . Nick Meisch, Wi- other children, Terri , 9, and Ricky, 10. ing farmer in the area is an leau; Kenneth Corgdon, Ann Thompson, nona County's young farmer of the year, They have increased their dairy herd from Sacia Betz, Galesville; Irma Christopher- $1.80 over a month ago but down annual project of the Chamber sen, Whitehall; Byron Anderson, Ettrick, 30 cents from January 1964. his wife, Darlene, and their 5-year-old son, 16 to 65 and the average butterfat produc- of Commerce. and Timothy Flsclier, Osseo. Hog prices averaged $15 per Phil, discuss the latest DHIA reports on the tion per cow has almost doubled. (Daily hundredweight on Jan. 15, or 70 Meisch dairy herd. They also have two News photo) Jackson Co. Man cents over a month earlier and $1 above a year earlier. Houston County Retires From Post Prices received for farm Ijg^jfb r On Cranberry Board chickens were estimated at 8.0 cents per pound, unchanged National FFA By FRANK BRUESKE NFO Re-elects BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. from a month earlier and a year Daily News Farm Editor ago. Egg prices averaged 25 CALEDONIA, Minn. - John Pepin County's 4-H speaking contest has been re-sched- — A Jackson County man re- Petersen , Hokah, was re-elect- cently retired from the board of cents a dozen, — down 3 cents President Set uled for Feb. 15, says GEORGE ONCKEN. county agent. from last month and down 9 ed chairman of the Houston Deadline for entries is next Thursday . . . This may not be directors of Ocean Spray Cran- County NFO. berries, Inc., Wareham, Mass. cents from a year earlier. Jan. the time of the year to think about pocket gophers, but this 35 prices for turkeys averaged Herbert Staven, Black Ham- is just a reminder that most counties have a machine avail- Gerald M. Potter, Warrens, For Talk in City mer, was named vice chairman; who had been on the board since 21 cents per pound, the same able which will help kill the gophers. See your county agent as a month earlier and a year The National Future Farm- Arnold Ideker, Brownsville, sec- for full information . .. According 1961, served on the marketing ers of American president will to the Marketing Services ago. retary, and Julius Lehmann. La Division of the Department of Agriculture, several chain committee. Although no longer be the featured speaker at the Crescent, reporter. Named to representing Wisconsin cran- Milk producers in Wisconsin annual Winona FFA chapter grocery stores in Minnesota have announced record profits received an average of $3.60 per other county posts were: Arn- and intend to construct about 75 new stores in 1965. This berry growing areas with the banquet Feb. 17 at Cathedral old Goetzinger, Caledonia , dis- corporation, he isn't retiring hundredweight for all milk sold of tie Sacred Heart. should make many farmers happy — especially the ones in January — down 7 cents from trict delegate ; Charles Horihan, who have taken a beating on prices at the market place from interest and membership He is Kenneth H. Kennedy, a Hokah, alternate, and Hubert in the cooperative. December 1964, but 13 cents during the past year . . . Armour and Co., at Chicago, also more than in January 1964. 20-year-old specialized tobacco Burmester, Eitzen , county direc- has announced record profits during 1904. Lester M. Gordon, Tomah, Cad)2, Ky, He was larmer trom tor for a three-year term. • was elected first vice president named national president of the Committees were formed to What's happened to the egg* eaters?* Egg production Is of Ocean Spray. Symptoms of Distress Arising from 37th annual FFA convention at organize a feed sale and dance decreasing, prices are low — even in the grocery stores — The president of the board Kansas City, Wo., in October. to be held in the spring. but egg purchases are very slow said sales of Ocean Spray cran- STOMACH ULCERS Chapter achievement awards , says the USDA . . . TED THORSON, SCS project engineer at Caledonia, said final berries last year were the larg- DUE TO EXCESS ACID will be presented during the est in their history, reaching a banquet which starts at 7:15 plans on Crooked Creek "Watershed Unit 1 are nearly com- QUICK RELIEF OR NO COST Egg Output Up plete. Construction on the watershed should be started in total of 8,519,273 cases of all p.m. products. Special invitations have been PLANNING MEETING . . . Winona FFA banquet com- 1965 ... Be sure and read directions while mixing frozen In Wisconsin; orange juice concentrate says MISS KATHY HISEY, Waba- sont to past honorary chapter mittee prepares plans for the chapter's annual meeting Feb. , ? Oree Set million packages et the sha County home agent. Manufacturers are now permitted Don't over-bake those brown- WILLAHD rMATMENT have been told farmers, past state farmers and 17. Seated , from left , Lee Herold , Mike Thill and James (or o( dUtrtst uliini from chapters in the area , Higher in Nation to sell more highly concentrated juice which means the ies if you want them to have a nlM ol trmptoos to 60 FFA Hobbs, and standing, David Belter and Leon Bowman. Na- soft fudgelike quality! If a wire Stomachtnd kWeanal Ulcers due to b- said Harry Peirce, chapter ad- MADISON, Wis. — A total ol homemaker can add more water to it. c*u AtM-P*orOI(Mtl«l, tour or Up«rt tional FFA week will be Feb. 20 to 27. cake-tester inserted in the cen- ItamMh, Oflmw, Htartfewn, flMp- viser. the monthly estimated egg pro- IMMMM, etc., due to KxrtM JUM. Aik lor Thirteen new district* cooperators * *have been approved ter comes out clean, the brown- MM which fully exp duction in "Wisconsin during 1964 '•Wllfanl'* M *" lain* shows the lowest production for 1965 In the Root River Soil Conservation District, says ies may be over-baked ! This ttik bona treatment—tne—at Preston, 't al- State Secreta ry since 1939 and nine percent ARNOLD AAKRE, district conservationist. Cooperat- standard test for cake doesn GOLTZ PHARMACY TED MAIER DRUG'S smaller than 1963. ors approved include JEROME GUNDERSON, LINUS WENT- ways work with brownies. Of SWCD Slated Egg production per layer on IIOLD and BLA1N VATLAND, Mabel ; LYLE DRINKALL the state's farms was at an all- and Son, Whalan ; FLORENCE DONOHUE, Pilot Mound ; For Ettrick Talk time high but the number of VANE SNYDER and V. P. ABRAHAMSON, Canton, OR- ) layers in farm flocks was the VILLE VAN SANDE and ERNEST MEVER JR., Wykoff ; BUILT FOR YEARS OF SERVICE ETTRICK , Wis. (Special - ELMO DAHL, Harmony; IRVING ABRAHAMSON. Lanes- I. O. Hembre, conservation ed u- smallest since records began in . . , P.T.O.-Powerod, 139-Bushol Heavy Duty 1925. boro, and M. E. MUSSEY and NANCY BROWN, Chatfield cational specialist and executive . . . Minnesota ranks fourth in the nation in swine pro- COUNTRY secretary of the Wisconsin Soil Egg production in December duction, raising about seven million hogs anually . . . and Water Conservation Com- was five percent lower th qn a JOHN DEERE 33 SPREADER year earlier and the lowest for HARLIE LARSON, Houston County soil conservationist, re- Ctfioah. mittee, will speak to the French- minds all seed establishments and farmer dealers that seed *m§B, Beaver Creek Watershed Feb. the month since 194 1, according to the Wisconsin Statistical Re- offered for sale which may be transported within the state for 15 at fi p.m. at Living Hope seeding, must be properly labeled. Anyone who wants to Lutheran Church , Ettrick. porting Service. Egg production in the nation have seed tested by the Stato Seed Laboratory should sub- *P «a &Lr «£ Hembre has been nsked to de- mit samples by Feb. 15. ^V^7 scribe Public Law 566 process, In 1964 was two percent more PRODUCT NEWS OF INTEREST TO FARMERS the Importance and need of con- than 1963 and the highest on rec- ord. Farmers and soil conservationists were happy to see all servation practices on the land , ¦ thc snow. The moisture* will *be needed* in the spring. They and what a watershed could hope the spring run-off will bo slow so the moisture will have look forward to if the entire Cochrane-FC Class a chance to soak into the ground . . . Farmers who pur- area was under a soil and water chase milk in grocery stores should know their markets. control program. COCHRANE-FC, Wis. - A young farmer class will start Prices of skim milk per half gallon vary as much as five Peter Bieri , Trempealeau cents between stores while whole milk varies about four County agent, urged both rur- at 8:15 p.m. next Tuesday at Cochrane-Fountain City High cents a half gallon . . . Just a reminder — deadline for girls al and urban residents to at- , entering the Miss Trempealeau Rural Electrification contest end. Lunch will bo served. School Ten class meetings will ¦ be heW. is Feb. 17. Corn Support Deadline LEWISTON , Minn. ~ John F. Look af these outstanding features: /•*/ * Wkm UmUUfUUut »\ Papenfuss, chairman of the Wi- Pi J row •»"« . •* "••*>« I-»lw»»o*- Wi • LOADING HEIGHT —- only 41U inch** for fWI IM imt »<*IM. nil "4 *"* «*¦ nona County ASCS committee, said the (leadline for price sup- easy clearance under a barn cleaner. port applications for corn Is INSIDE WIDTH OF BCD — 52 inches, inside TRIPLE-TRIPLE May 31. • OINTMENT CHAINS flares. MASTITIS TIRE CLOSE-OUT OF COMPLETE INVENTORY Quickly and easily you bring th»m back to full milk • SINGLE BEATER — for easy cleaning. JANNEY BEST productivity. Contains tin wonder drugs sulfas and 3 APRON SPEEDS — for thick thin or in- l i • , , penicillin — fights mastitis causing organiims. §" VW VMMVWWUWI ^^I W between spreading. PAINT M M ^J AIWW**IWW 6 TUBES OR SYRINGES $4.50 ^^ • 20-INCH WHEELS — for good carrying cap- CLOSE-OUT aciry and high ground clea rance. 12 TUBES OR SYRINGES $8.50 ^^^ As Low rn. PASSENGER —TRUCK — FARM TRACTOR ¦ ¦ ¦¦ SEE THIS SPREADER BUY NOW AT . . . "¦ " * As JUL Cal. Come In and looUl BROS Ted Maier Drugs DADDIfUDD STORE ANIMAL HEALTH CCNTER KALMES TIRE SERVICE V& S HARDWARE FEITEN IMPL CO. 108*116 West Second Street Ird & Lafayette Winona $76 E, 4th St. Phona 4007 11J Washington St. Winona MMiBaiaaHHMllaHH Rebekah o>fle»n: Neblt oreni, Mr». te nobUi or»m), Mn. William TOIIMJWW Richard Kram; y dessert ... assort* \ 's budget reveals that rate discriminations against em; right supporter of vice grand, next two years. "Today , hasp off one cell block door ,; erets to add to cut green beans? Howard Applen; left supporter of vice campaign to have been a slick then the hasp from a gateway ; Midwest shippers. Nice dressed with butter or a grand, Stanley Todd; right scene sup- Authors of the statement were fraud on Wisconsin voters." i The MRA will be financed porter, Arthur Haugen, and Mt scene and finally one bar from a win- cream sauce. supporter, Maynard Sexe. three Assemblymen. Speaker dow leading to the outside from through assessments against the An influential Republican. As- | j Robert Euber of West Allis. the second floor. member states. Minnesota 's con- Homemade , Style / co- semblyman Curtis McKay of Ce- j ) ¦r2^^ J George Molinaro of Kenosha, j Blankets were tied together tribution is $6 ,480 of the $100,000 darburg, also was critical of the to chairman of the Joint Finance slide to the ground and free- j biennium budget. Committee, and Majority Lead- budget message. i dom. ! i i S | t ICE CREAM of Abbotsford : "I'm terribly disappointed ,"' j er Frank Nikolay Deputies said marks in snow ¦ J. Oucey and "Th e ex ecutive has S Pleasant Valley Lt. Gov. Patrick he said. on an entry way roof reaching Zaborski of Mil- brought its problems to the Sen. Richard up to the second floor showed ^ legislature for solution. No Teachers Union ^ D'ABETIC ICE CREAM V waukee, Senate minority leader. a hack saw had been tossed ¦ '"^IBllSlSfr "flooded the tel- amount of public relations, no ¦ The governor there. Wire screen over the win- Guernsey Dairy F AND SHERBETS \ of this amount of effort, is going to off- evision and newspapers dow had been pried open from ¦ ^ I I IJ Q §110 million HOME OWNED — — HOME OPERATED :state with political ads promis- set the impact of inside to retrieve the saw. To Observe • J ing to hold the line on spending : increase in taxes." Both men fled without outer ) WOLL'S DAIRY, RUSHFORD ; ( gj Buy the milk that's FRESH DAILY at the store or ¦ ¦ garments into the -13 below ze- lOlh Anniversary \ .' Regular or Homogenized / ¦ ¦ phone 4425 for home delivery. : ' ¦ j^v ro cold, deputies said, adding A banquet meeting marking : it was likely they were picked the 10th anniversary of the or- H - : a up by an j ¦ PLEASANT VALLEY FRESH GRADE A ¦ ) accomplice. No trace ganization of the Winona Fed- | GUERNSEY GRADE A MILK Safranek s of the escapees had been \ \ | found eration of Teachers is planned ' ) In quarts or half gallons, cartons or bottles. ( up to noon. 601 East Sanborn |S J _ \\_W: 4 for Feb. 27 at Hotel Winona. ¦ f^W^l£_\\\\\\\ * Joyce had been lodged in the MILK ££~Ze »"- 37c | FARM FRESH : I ^ The WFT received its char- , . ) :\ Freeborn County jail by the ter Ln the spring of 1955 and * ll sheriff at Steele County. Berg- j 3 STRICTLY FRESH ) • GRADE "A" EGGS ; / now has a membership of 431 fl \ U. S. CHOICE AGED \^8P§^E 5^ land had been in jail about 60 J among the Winona public school j : •2% LOW FAT MILK ( ) ' ^ |B!!iS * » ^ " days following revocation of a | ! STEAKS A ROASTS J faculty. ¦; ' sentence involving willful des- - GRADE A EGGS S • BUTTERMILK • COTTAGE CHEESE \ Treat Yourself fo a Steak You Will Enjoy truction of property. Speaker for the anniversary ; ) CHOCOLATE MILK (Made With Whole Milk} (< [ J banquet will be Mel Hoaglund. • ¦ ¦ ) Minneapolis, president of the Jumbo Large Medium ) 1 • ORANGE • SOUR CREAM \ ¦ 5 ¦ Minnesota Federation of Teach- ;¦ ¦ ; • WHIPPING CREAM • HALF & HALF 1 ; \ ¦ - Fresh Maryland Oysters - Minneapolis ' : >i i ers. 2 ¦ ) ( ¦ ¦ SERVE HOT or COLD 1 : • CHIP DIPS ; [ ROASTING CHICKENS,. 6-7 Lb. Avg lb. 39C ; Earl Synnes, Senior High Plans Drive on ; • WE HAVE A VARIETY OF COLD CUTS / j Heavy WHITE ROCK HENS lb. 29? ] School instructor and president ) 5 S . Carryoufs of Malts, Shakes, Cones, Novelties ) ARCADIA FRYERS — HOMEMADE SAUSAGES Drug Addicts of the Winona local , will pre- : Chocolate Milk - ^ 37c > • \ { side at the banquet and esti- • ¦ 5 Free Samples Served in Our Store! eg MINNEAPOLIS (AP) mates that upwards of 150 will I Fresh Old Fashioned Baked : — City ( ¦ < and county officials, educators attend. : ' i Homemade Summer Beans b Mrs. ¦ y < and businessmen met Wednes- Invitations, Synnes said, have ¦ i Sausage ...lb. 85^ Lossen . . . pt. 39<* i day to launch an assault on been extended to members of Sour Cream - 'later Topping ¦yj , — , , , ' juvenile use of drugs and nar- the Winona Education Associa- J L Margie s ¦ ! FRESH HAMS for Roasting or Slicing ...... lb. 69c < cotics. tion , all Winona union locals, Half and Half for cereals and coffee! Cottage S ! Twenty-five Roosevelt High teachers federations at Albert .' ! FRESH SIDE PORK lb. 59? ! S Cheese — Chip Dips — Buttermilk — Low Fat ___\ y*™^' ' ^v- -™^™™,- ^^.-.-..-^.- ^^^^ ^^~~>^w School students were arrested Lea, Austin and Rochester, fac- \ > ( last week for using drugs and and Skim Milk. ; ¦ Homemade Slab Bacon Sexton's S ulties of the city's colleges and ; J 1 J j narcotics and the investigation others interested in education. JL 550 lb. By the Piece Bulk Mincemeat ' \ NMwr M-rMmMJ? ; j is continuing in several other The banquet will begin at 6:30 , I ^" I Pert Fl^jj 1 I ¦ THESE ARE CASH AND CARRY PRICES AT THE 5 JlT^v j | 65? lb. None Better I ; schools where a dozen other p.m. J students are suspected ¦ Derinded & Sliced 65c l of using DAIRY . DELIVERY PRICES ARE SLIGHTLY MORE. ¦ | y pr. > drugs. J ¦ ¦ * ' Mayor Arthur Naftalin named ' Pick up your SUNDAY PAPERS here! Wr Cottage ? BEEF, VEAl & PORK, Ground f orToal ... VlbT ^ Detroit Lakes Man I J an eight - member interim com- JJ Homemade HAM LOAF lb. 90^ Dead at Crossing |¦ Open 7:30 to 6 Every Day Except Friday Until 8 3 I CORNER SEVENTH & MANKATO (l J J mittee to map action against -y ^T-^. ¦ ¦ J Our Own HOME-RENDERED LARD lb. 250 the practice. DETROIT LAKES, Minn. Open 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sundays ¦¦ | PHONE 4607 /, J A. Harris Kenyon ^^^X^^/ \ Smoked PORK CHOPS lb. 850 , district di- (AP ) — A 20-year-old Detroit J rector of the Food and Drug Ad- ¦ 179 East Fourth Phone 4425 Lakes man was killed today J \ OPEN 9 A.M. TO 7 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK (l ministration said there is no ev- when his car was struck by a All Cuts of Fresh Lamb idence of a narcotics ring in Northern Pacific passenger train r ' —'—¦ < operation in Minneapolis. here. I Dial 285) ior Free City Delivery \ The victim was Gregory A. We close Wednesday afternoons at 12:30 * Bleninger. His car was carried \ Wisconsin Trading about 300 feet by the westbound j Stamp Bill Delayed train No. 25. The accident oc- ! curred shortly after midnight. ^""7 MADISON, Wis. ifl-The Sen- Dr. Virgil Watson , deputy I W ate trading stamp bill will not j * Becker County coroner, indie at- reach the floor of that house ed he would hold an inquest. j QUALITY S for at least one more week. HIGH TUSHNER The death was Minnesota 's j Y0UR COMPLETE FOOD STOR E The delay of the bill that 56t h traffic fatality of the year ¦ j ¦ I VflftUJ fl*KI%BDDirr JRLATrn 501 East Third Street Since 1896 0> jootls || would allow Wisconsin residents compared with 51 through this ! to redeem trading stamps for date a year ago. | either merchandise or cash ¦ came from an unexpected Gerber's Strained Grade A 2?" ¦ _ source — Sen. Leland McFar- Warren Leaves «IU... I* «"» O^A land , D-Cudahy, a committee ,e .. ***** For Philippines iar°e whi Marshmallow treme Jar *oc member and one of the propos- 1 Babv Food 10c al's sponsors. SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - •* m?t*f*G. HERSHEY'S He said he would like to hold Chief Justice Earl Warren left tuub r BAUER'S CHOCOLATES M,\ the bill in committee so he could Wednesday night for Manila to Baking Chocolate - £ 39c obtain additional information be guest of honor and principal Sun Maid «nd t $ 150 $3.00 boxes JV'' about the profits of trading speaker at the 30th anniversary stamp companies and be able to of the Philippine Constitution. 2 D c Pocan-Hohocs , The Farmer' mso. s Danshtor , J.A \\ defend the measure better. Warren , accompanied by his ; P C 39C °- Hormel Spam - - • °- 39c T,le Traveling Salesman , I Don ' A . ' ¦ Raisins - £49 \Ws______t fare, y \\ ¦ wife, departed from San Fran- flggjljg Bavarian Mints , English ' H ^ VpfkM ] A'' To pep up oil and vinegar ci sco International Airport. dressing for salad , add a gen- The Warrens will return next FRESH FROZEN P& lates for your Valentine I JE ^|yjfc : |% JLJL SWIFT'S WELL TRIMMED I^^^^^ y^y gffi \l\ erous pinch of cayenne pepper. Wednesday. Ureame iies PREMIUM CHUCK Lb I^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H Roasting Chickens 37c Mr.s Stevens ' J ; 39C ¦ Mint Juleps - - - - 3 boxes $1.00 $¦ °°' Slewing Hen$ • 29c ROASTS - - 59c ~~" " SMUCKER'S OLD-FASHIONED ( ///' PLANTER'S COCKTAIL LEAN MEATY COUNTRY STYLE .j + r^mfof+ U- ¦. rn^mee Ablll<«ir - - Pure Strawberry Preserves iv ^_ LB S,ZE PEANUTS poRk RIRQ Lb 49r As gonrl as the n 20-o/ . PORK RIBS - a3c /LC r (§\\ "l Pork Loin Roast Lb 49c heM honu-made . *• jar OjC ,7 Can 2 JARS FOR $1 . 10 (y/l 35c ~"^ __ _» DECKER'S IOWANNA SWIFT'S PREMIUM — CENTER CUT Sn«)U<'(l I'ish . Salilc or C > E y\v x^'nH^^ Sauerkraut -v, ,No. I Chillis lu . t V I Qt 30c HAM ROUND "fQc ^ 2, -lh Um ,,sl Chili c7nCarne {JUAJtohA.\JAfMA-XJlXX^ |ro/(. lillU>flsk"' ' V ,. n SV29 ,/ { ' T.n T E ^TtAK... Dir.H I Irom ' "'¦ M0"'1 l,,,v (\\\ FULLY COOKED SMOKED 29c ^ J2.49 ° the Coast S;,U ro,,,lsl1 85( jy .1 )l> . lia;; .jumbo / \ Vahisc o cleaned Shrimp $5.35 V: \ . HERSHEY'S FRESH _ LEAN LEAN - CENTER CUT Ovster Crackei ' s . Ih 39< Yl-n/. box Alaska ^i PICNICS CARP K III R Ci ah l.e^s S1.55 V 5c Candy Bars pQRK CUTLETS ,». 49c PORK STEAK Lb 55c ' Old Monk Finest Quality Olives (¦¦ 10,or 39c Tri ple Stuffed .. 55< Aiirlio\y S(uffe< ( . . . 5Je' . 29b 3 5 it -— WHOLE - LEAN - BOSTON BUTT \ \ 0UARANTEEI> _ TENDER On ion StuKed 55t Mmowl StkiKed . ... 59« '.' , n HOMEMADE Super Celess.il Stuffed queen , !().«/ . i,'ir 9B( j SPICED WHOLE PORK ^ftr DETCET AUDIT ~~ 8 STRICTTr PoTTHriTRDS // SUMMER SAUSAGE ¦ " - 3" " ' , ChOMTsI Wild Sunflower . ' , Mit or Mifcut Garlicl ^y 79c r : STEAKS Bird !• ond , .'l lll I inv: 59< Seeds , ,> Ih . liaR Ut I. (

We Do Custom FROZEN FOOD LIBBY'S FRESH - SLICED - YOUNG _ jf? UU " ' B in9 Lock«s for lb : c:s;:p ^^_^mt PEACHES pORK LIVER u 25c Pork Hocks 25c Jt/UUL.! j ! rFrci —H. wm $£M H^\ m Curln

Man Found Dead Freight Train CLU Opposes 6714 Patient Near Farm Home In Derailment FORT YATES, N.D. (AP) - Paul Keeps Eagle, 70, was found dead of exposure outside his Near Benson Household Tax Another group has joined the Days Counted home, about 10 miles north of BENSON, Minn. (AP) - Sev- list of those opposing reinstate- Port Yates, Wednesday. enteen cars of a 70-car Great ment of the household goods tax His nephew, George Keeps Northern freight train derailed Eagle, found the in Winona County. body while Wednesday night about five At Caledonia feeding cattle. The time of death The Winona Central Labor CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) was placed between 7 and 8 p.m. miles west of Benson, in west , — A total of 6,714 patient days Tuesday. central Minnesota. No one was Union, representing 2 102 mem- in 1964 was reported at the an- injured- bers of 32 local unions, went on nual Caledonia Community Hos- Fifteen of the derailed cars record as opposing the tax at "Gwrg», about clearing th* front walk .. ." pital Association meeting in the were loaded with grain and two its last meeting. conference room of the new 35- Crash Driver were empties. The CLU notified the Winona La ke City Historians members remember their fa- i "wwr Aiesef bed hospital Wednesday after- The accident tore up 780 feet County Board of Commissioners | thers going out with lanterns to noon. ot track, and railroad spokes- of its action in a letter. The let- ) Patient days at the 32-bed men said it would take at least ter was received after the board LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special assist in the rescue. Doughnuts Tuesday. T«rms expiring ara nursing home — the former hos- At La Crescent 24 hours to repair the damage. adjourned its February meeting, —Despite the cold weather 14 and coffee were served. Next No Filings Yet those of Arnold Kalmes,. super- pital which was converted last Train No. 14 Wednesday night however. members of the Lake City unit meeting will be countywide, in visor; Edward Matzke, treasur- April. In Norton Town er, and Hilbert Gensmer, con- year — were reported at 3,983 and Nos. 31 and 32 today were The county board, by failing of Wabasha County Historical ¦ for the six months it has been Pays Three Fines rerouted by way of St. Cloud. to act on reinstatement of the Society met Saturday afternoon ALTURA, Minn. — The annual stable. The supervisor term is open. Three cursing home pa- The crew of the freight includ- tax at its February meeting, in the museum at the library. If you want a snappy tasting meeting of Norton Township three years and the others, two tients are housed in the hospital LA CRESCENT, Minn. (Spe- ed Conductor F. O. Berglund maintained the present situa- Members brought old photos. A cheese sauce, use Vt pou»d of will be held March 9, when of- years. Albert F. Gensmer is cial) — Everett C. Newburg Jr., township clerk. at the present time for lack of 22, and Engineer Marvin Ellingboe tion, in which the tax is not pamphlet was read telling of the sharp Cheddar cheese for two ficers will be elected. space in the home, which is at- La Crescent, pleaded guilty both of Willmar, Minn. levied here. Seawing disaster in 1890. Some cups of white sauce. Filing of candidates will close No one has filed yet. tached to the new structure. to three traffic violations before Babies born here last year Justice Wayne Lottes Monday totaled 125. The payroll was night and was sentenced to fines $117,601.41, according to Styrk totaling $172. His driver's li- Stenehjem, administrator. cense was revoked. Four directors were re-elect- Newburg was sentenced to For millions of readers, ed: 0. J. Strand, George Schau- pay a $100 fine and costs for ble, Herbert H. Fruechte and leaving the scene of a personal Mrs. B. A. Qualy, all for three- injury accident. He struck the jargon of science and the everyday language year terms. Walter Thiele was rear of a car driven by Sharon the shortest distance between the .. . . . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦¦¦.. .. _ ..-. . . ..-¦ . - „^_. . , . . ¦ . , . ..., ,, . j ...... «...*¦ ¦ .W jiAi *j.q^*uAitw.. */ vs. _^r ¦*£ , Mosher , 17, Dresbach, on High- ;--e ^g^^^mm^mMeMg. . . ^mmgg ^mgg ^m^mm^j. mmg^^m^mmMm^mgggm^^ggm^^ . - . - .' — . '. .^. ff. ' 'j-- J x \. JC Q / S- ***t **. ftAfi, AjfL ^K elected a director to replace ¦HK¦ :¦ • : miaiMBBffi 9 *< £< ^-rifeS^ _T VI V& 1& %£$0,~ am.mP m^te^^^ ¦^a^a^a^a^eY-' ' > '!)BM^BM^BMBIABB^BM^BM^BM^BBBM^BM^BM^BM^BM^BM^BM^K '^T1' v Tfriiff ujc *%m y laaV \aV* ^^. K K ^m. ^_^« ^ih ^mmi ,4b *M \J >zZ$mi flHHNMH||Aritt$i g4&HR v.Wk s Mrs. Robert Zimmerman and underwent further surgery Tues- ^^^^^ ¦ ^ : >^^^^^^^^^ H ^H|j l^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H| H :^^^^HHvi * i*w3 __\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\_\\^____fSSmR m, X IM Mrs. William Murphy were day for fractures of both legs ^N-^ ^' ¦BKilBBBK\^mm J limm ^^^^^^^^Km ¦ ^^ ^^^^^KF^^S^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Km:^^^Km ¦ ITl ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^^^ li ^i ^i ^iHiH.i ^H - *im " r ic*iw elected by the Hospital Auxil- below the knee. ¦ " iary to the board. ¦¦^^^ ¦f ^^lW ^i &iwW^'l - •, ./»Jei^eBa^ei^ei^H*^eHj*^B^LV ¦*' . - "s» .EV '' 1 Ui He was sentenced to pay mmmmmmXi. ^^^ *W, Directors will elect their of- $54 on a charge of careless driv- Hm^H^BV IH M»j|ll&M :: ....!.„ . ^..^n^^^^^Btmmmm ^ , ,-_.„, ,. i ^H » - , ficers next -week. Strand cur- ing and $14 on a charge of nol ;H-;: rently is president and Schau- wearing the corrective lenses Bm^w:^mmmm^^^^^^^^K^^^B^Em^^^U^^^Km//A/ ' A7^ #v - JH^^I»*»MVV IWWVL ble, president. which his driver's license re- ^^^^^ ^^ '' m quired. WK ^^^^^^ S ^^^^^^^^^m W^K^M^^Jm E ^K ili •¦ US^EWmmi Pennsylvania-Dutch style with Sharon's right leg is mend- t ; ham loaf; baste the loaf with ing satisfactorily , her mother, KS^B ; ¦ SM , ^^______ill l______f f &.!^ !?!Z ^ ^ -KA X&L.J.AZ ., '' '* : ' ?! ? t 'MWM&M______WM JJlakeslee a dressing made of brown sugar , Mrs. Clayton Mosher said, but BPIHHfcK^t'mmmmmmm^^^^^^^^Em£&£mmii..jmmm^^^^^^g^. ir * - . y #w- ~ «.. * ^SI ___\ M ¦ :§B^iB^lB^lB^lB ^lB^lB^lB ^lBm^il>B ^I^I^I^I^E ^yy^y dry or prepared mustard, cider ¦SB¦^K^BhSKt> ^l^l^HW IHH ^^>SSEt>H&«9lf ^l^l^l^l^l^K^BaVBP'><. VflilB ^lB^lB^lB^lB^lB ^lB^lB^lB^lB^lB ^HiB ^lB^B "i yi (fr i. ¥ \ U^2CE2V^^^^ I ^^I ^I ^I ^IS^I^HH» the fracture of her left leg still ., ^^^^^^^ ^ ^ ^^^ y^^^Lm vinegar and water. is giving trouble. jrA ^^^^^^mK^m-^M^^^^JT^^^^^^mBK^^K^i.,N IKtWI^B^r. ^Wfr^^tiBRw^ ^/^EQ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^,^-^I' ^^^^m mB^I B^IB^IB^IB^IB^IB^H^^IB ^U^:::^IB^IBH^ rfr ^HESHKSH' ft^l^HBJi^l^l^l^l^H^S^HHWST (Flr»t Pub. Thursday, J«n. 30, 1965) Eileen Gile, Dakota, 17, who ^ ) ^K J K P I y ^^LmmmmmmmmmmW^^^^K^^K^M^A ^m > :f : - B I B ' IK Stat* ef Mlnnnorti u. was riding with Sharon, was less y *' " B H BBBH County of Winona 1 In Prolutt Court severely injured and has return- IBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBS\\\ ^£W^II^IBBBBBBBBBB>^HHHR ^^^ ^IB9 ^^^ -::; ^I ^BBIBM ^ M» No. 15,757 ' In Re Estiti ed to high school in Winona. m\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\m m m ^^ 'V v^i alHBBHByHi _^_ *f ^ ^^ ^ Cnirltt E. Quamen, alio known «i T^^^^mmWB-^^^KK^K^^m^Kmm ^UKKmmmmmmmmmWm ^^^^M \ k ^V4r«^lB9BBBWi BBHI ^titi/MB ^M^ C. E. Quamtn, Dtctdml. B^B^B^P^" mlf i if Onttr (or Hairing on Petition k B ¦Hp&iBl!P*^l^lVII«^l^9Hl^npl^^l^iP^m s j ^ iH^^Btf¦^^Bfl^HS^^H^^ fo Sell Real Eitale. HBVBVBB^BT ^ mmT ti ^¦^¦^¦^M ^ ^B^»^Miii?i) V^^fctaawBTi aBMB^B^B^B^BW^»Jr^^F T^™ ^ T ^# ? I aBBB^B^B^Bf #Y«^BBM ^B^B^3S^?^1MBB^£^HL Th» reprejintative of said estata hiving 2^1 jE^^^HfilZ fi led herein a petition to sail cartaln Blood Collection ¦¦K ^ • BBBBBBBBBBBK^^SZSS ^H BS raal (stata described in said petition; IT IS ORDERED, That tha hearing "^ ».-I.^M B1 , .>. >,1« i thereof be hod on February |», 1965, at ¦II^IHH^If^^^^^H^^^^^^K^BBBBBBBBBBBBBB ^BBBBBB ^S^ ^ " ^-VT 1C.-4S o clock A.M., before mis BBBBBBBBBBBBRBBBBE^B^SL^H S VBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBl^BBBBBBBBBBBBBBiBBBBBB^BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB ?«W#BBBBB Wffli.% -4X imJ^^V^f^^m.B1 '-v -*¦£ ^T^y*mm #** %Hlt4£9mttJB» ^lk M- * " BI QT^IMBBBBBBBBMBBB! ' Courf Pv^BBB^BBHCV^^^BBBBBBBBBBfi!^ff4BBBBBBBB^MBnBBBB> v % ^^BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBJBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBEHXBB^ OOJOJUUL *reuiS^iSaSSiji^&iSSSiSR ir swSSsSst»*V £Mv~ ^ .BM -BBK K J idfc' WMWBaBBBoiBMH/ ^ a'*tA * ' SBBnBBlDBBBBBBBB^^^^ jflRIPBBBBBK"^^BBBBBBBBBVIBBBBK, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦ B^BB BV "^^ ^ wSSB^S^PSiffi t S^^^^iJ^i3BWBBBBBBBBBBK^ ^i i* ^fifl» * Jto£l8?®mWlVX*- y ^fflfflrWJMBWBBBBBBBMBBBl In ttia probite court room In tht court At itlBBT ^ IIMffnnnhi ' IBBIBBBBBBBBJBBBBBBT^'^ ^ KBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaiBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBTStSS ^*OS6»»^F S.SHSxSS^^£^£^BKBBBBBBBBBBKS&HBBn ,^1 1 ™ JR3H * «3**CK»#vi *JS ^5Fr4HX9BBBBBBBBBBBBBi Blair Friday ^X' *~ Jl ( ^* i ^. ^masAaS ^m ^^^^K ^^m ^^^^^^^^^^ M ^^^KK! ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ BmM. wmmsMt^ B BBBBBBBBBBBBBB X BBBBBBBBBB house In Winona, Mlnneaota, and that - L I^&^^V HI 1; ^ -|gy^HH^HgU tfte^aw$*% ^ ** ^f VU K notice hareot be olven by publication of BLAIR, Wis. (Special ) - ttiI j order In the Winona "Sff lSMgSRS ^.t Dally News Miss Alice Stumpf , Mrs. Fran- HBBBBBBBBBBBMBBBBBBBBBBBBB»Bffli^BBBBBBBWMBBBiBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBM M ' 'll" '' ' ' IB ' i |l ||W \ ? < ^ 00 and by mailed notice as provided by cis Herreid and Mrs. Marie Ber- law. ^BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBMBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB HO ^^BH PBl^Bl^Bl^MWr^^BBBBB^BBBBBBBBV ^^ eme^£ ¦¦ IBBBBBBBBBBBBBBm^ SBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBC ^ * X ^BA^BBBB^ Dated January 25, 1965. sing have completed arrange- JBBBBBBBB ^BBBBBBBBJiB^BBlB^BB^BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB™# ^^^SS^^ .. J. ¦Mr ' S^B^BBBBBBB ^BBBBBBJBJBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB VBBBBBBBBBBBBJ^BBBBBBBHui' " oi ^ No. 15,719 Elner Olson and rAri. Roger Anderson, ^B^B^B^BK^B^B^B^B^B^L3SIBBHL ^BB^KL : cTBlB^BB^B^BBB^BB^H*J?W«WP^^ f - ^^^^ ^^^^^^^oi ^^ H ^^^^^^ H In Ra Estate of typists; Miss Tena Houkom end Mrs. -:B^BMB ^B^HBK: 'r&kd .B^^H^BBB ^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^HBB ^B^BBBHHBIBS ^B^B . A & ^BB ^BBBB ^JBSS ^BBBI ^B^B^BV Christina Plury, Decedent. Herreid, receptionists ; Mra. Jeromt ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^A ^KB^m^^^^^^^^^^^^Kl^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^A^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^K^^^^^^^^^B^^->*»*ki w^ ^ ^ * A B A AS A Order tor Hearing on Final Account Strand*, bottles labeler , and Mrs. R. E. B^BS^B^B^B^B^HB BSBBB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BIB^B^B^B^BKBIB BI^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BBHHB^B^B^B^B^BBKBIBSP L B^B^B^B^BJBJBJB^B^B^B^B^BrT^BjB^ ^B^B^B^B^^BBBBBB ^^BBJ^B^B^B^B^B^^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^ ^Rm* Sk^^M ^BB^BB^B^BjPflSHBW^l^m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^BHiB^^^^^^^^^^^ ^B^B^B^BS and Petition for Distribution. Anderson and Mrs. Robert Scharlau, ^ s^^-^^BBBT lf^^^K^S^^^^^^^^^^^_\______m Tha representative of tha above named aides. ^_ estate having filed his final account and Local graduate nurses assisting will petition for settlement ano allowance be Mmes. C. 8. Immell, Eldred Sex*, thereof eni for dlitrlbutlon fo Ih* par- Donald Erickson end Richard Martin. ions thereunto entitled; Canteen workers will be Mmes. Sophus IT IS ORDERED, That thi hearing Dahl, Martin Anderson. Arthur Galstad, thereof be had on February 19, 1945. at Clifford Skogstad and Aimer Olsen. 10:30 o'clock A.M., before thli Courf In Tha recruitment committee Is compris- _\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^EH$!b^^ the probate court room In the court ed of the Allen Boras, Elmo Stutllens, ^^^BB^BB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BnB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B B^B^B^B^B^BHBB ^' ^^^BB^B^B^B^B^B5p*^^BvlB?^K!B66PrM^HRB^^^^^ house in Winona, Minnesota, and that Wllmer Johnsoni, Ronald Johnsons, Arn- H^^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BK' ^BBHB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BI notice hertof be given by publication of old Olsons and Larry Bradleys; Gerald thli ordir In tha Winona Dally Newa Slslo, James Davis and Mmes. Melvin W_ \\\\\\WS/PQU^ and by mailed notice as provided by Hlerleld, Don Hulbr«o.tse, Curtis Evenson, law Glen Hamilton, Melvin Syverson, Ray Dated January 35, 1965. Solberg, Arthur Galstad, Everett Hanson, _ \\_ \___ \\____M^: ^_ Mu E. D. LIBERA, Harold Utne, Arthur Elland, Norman ^^^^^ ¦ Protate Judge. Nelson and Harry Paul. Mjj ^HHj ^Hlj ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H^^^HB ^^^^^^ H^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Bik "ijMJj ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H (Probale Court Seal) Harold J. L lbara, The bloodmobile was last here Attorney for Petitioner. May 5. (First Pub. Thursday, Jan, 2«, 1945) BLAIR PATIENTS State of Minnesota ) ss. jMMmr Counly of Winona ) In Probata Court _ \__\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\^7/777'7jlJ NO. u,m BLAIR, Wis. (Special) — Mrs. B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BBBJH^iiBBB^B^BB^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ K ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ KI ^^^^^^^^ K ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ l Ritale af BBTBBTBBTBBTBBTBBTBBTBBBTBBTBBTBB BBB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^^B B^B^B^B^B B B B B B B B B B B B B B In R* Myron Nestingen has returned ^ I ^'- B^B^BV^ H Dora P, tchmltt, Decedent. from a La Crosse hospital. John Order lor Haarlng on Final Account ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ and Petition for Distribution, Schultz has been in Tri-County The representative ot the above named •state having filed Its final account and Memorial Hospital , Whitehall. A petition lor settlement and allowance freshman at Blair High School, thereof and for distribution lo th* per- he fractured - '1 , 1 ' ,4:; sons thereunto entitled; an ankle. He is the B^B^BBF^BA^^''' ' vB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B IT IS ORDERED, That Ihl haarlng son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence thcreol be hod on February 24, 1V65. at Schultz Sr. 10:30 o'clock A.M., before thla Courf In the probate court room In the court houie In Winona, Minnesota, and that notice hereof be given by publication of AIR CONDITION this order In the Winona Dally News TAMPA , Fla. (AP) — Farm and by mailed notice ss provided by law. Editor Lyle Van Bussura of the Dated January 26, 1965. Tampa Tribune says be recently E. D. LIBERA, Probate Judge. received a note from a farmer (Probate Court Seal ) friend telling him about a prob- B^B^BBB^B^B^L^BL.i^HB^Bm^BB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B Hull and Hull, Winona, Mlnnasota, lem faced by the board of Attorneys for Petitioner. church deacons of which he is ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H| ; • ix v ^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦ ^^^^^^^^^ HiSv i I:^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B BIB B B B B B B (pint Pot). Thursday, Feb. A, 1945) a member. ______^ ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Slata of Minnesota "Members are split. " says DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS Van Bussum, "over whether to NOTICE OP CALL FOR BIDS air condition the church or hire FOR ROUIPMBNT RINTAL a new pastor who preaches less ¦ ¦ IDS CLOSE fire and brimstone." 1I:M A.M., FIBRUARY lt, ltt»- Mecltiiter, Mlnniioti SHEEP BY AIR Simply stated, Science is th€ continuing As Science and Medical Editor of Tbe more such men to cover the field of science Sailed proposals will be received by ROME (AP ) — Two chartered the Commlulonar of tflghwaya tor fhe search for nature's truth. Simply stated, Associated Press, Blakeslee regularly attracts for you: John Barbour and Frank Carey in Slate ol Mlnnitota, er the Area Main- planes air-lifted 300 Rambouillet tanonce Oltk* of tha Department ot ewes and 100) rams from Hous- nobody tells it better than Alton Blakeslee. t he largest newspaper audience in his field. the East, Robert Goldenstein in the Midwest, Highways

HuffTitle? will go with an all- saysto Roadstop him, Inside attempt to " Havethe Trojans 65-58 in an over- WillThe same general feeling WhoWUSSOW By ROLLIE senior lineup, a bit taller Dally News Sports Writer comes from Spring Grove, time at Spring Grove. Huff. Game With Schroeder rates the Tro- than the Lions. At Center "Tbe team that gets by where Coach Dennis Schroe- The two teams, which der says simply, "It's the have been in the top spot in jans as the "second best will be 6-2 Rex Manion, at this one should have the in- team in the district , next to forwards Dale Olstad, 6-1, title." big one!" the league singly or at least v side track to the Harmony," and will play and Ed Sandsness, 6-3, and So says Rushford Coach If the first game of the tied for it most of the year, will go to it at 8 p.m. Fri- them accordingly. at guards 5-11 Terry West- Ward Huff about Friday's conference season between The biggest strike against by and 5-10 Vern Bunke. 5' Root River Conference bat- the two clubs is any indica- day in the Trojan gym. Lewiston a few The locical problem for the Grovers seems to be the Attempting to counter-bal- Hard-luck Lewiston travels to flu this week, as well as tle between his Trojans and tion, this one will be a starter, Roger crowd-pleaser. In that meet- Huff and his cagers is how location. ance the Trojans' superior Rollingstone Holy Trinity Fri- reserves. Another Spring Grove , both current- "Their gym is smaller will be Homuth at ' s top ri- Kulack, is due to take a physi- lace tie with ing, the Grovers, behind Mel are they going to keep tabs height day in one of the area' ly in a first p than anyone's barring Can- center, Gulbranson and Don valry games. cal examination for a service 6-2 records. Homuth's S3 points tripped on Homuth, who seems des- tined to become the highest ton's," chortled Schroeder. Solberg at forwards and Tre- Tbe Cardinals, 3-6 on the sea- academy Friday and may not scorer in Spring Grove bas- "Last year we beat 'em in hus and Ken Halverson at son under Coach Curt Peters, be home in time for the game. ketball history. an overtime. It'll be as the guard slots. Schroeder have been saddled with the loss Says Peters about Rolling- tough this time." "We'd like not to give him feels that Don Rosaaen and of 6-6 Jim Matzke. He is out stone, "they're pretty well bal- Huff had a chance to ob- Rolf Hanson will play key for the season with a football anced. They get pretty fired too many (points)," says serve the Lions Tuesday. He Huff of Homuth. "It's hard- reserve roles. injury. Then several players are up at home no matter what the LWTS ^mw^ saw that he didn't have to out with the flu and one of records are when we play there. \ C^X er than heck to keep him worry only about Homuth, After Friday's game, only TOWERING CENTER down, so we'll be satisfied if three league games remain Peters' stars may be absent "It's a good rivalry. Most of but also about Wayne Gul- . . . Eino Hendrickson, Hoi- Friday because of another ex- the kids know each other, and we can keep him below his branson and Lowell Tre- on each team's schedule. average (which is 30 men's 7-1% center, tower* cuse. things ordinarily work out pret- hus, who both came up with "All the eggs aren't real- , points)." above fellow teammates Trinity Coach Jack Rader who ty well." stellar performances. ly in one basket Friday," saw his team drop a 58-47 de- Homuth had a "below av- says Schroeder. "But the The Rockets will be shooting "We'll have to watch while grabbing a rebound. cision at Lewiston in the first to fell the Cards for the first average" night Tuesday in 'em," says a wary Huff. "If way everybody's been beat- the Wisconsin's tallest prep meeting. time since 1960, when Rader the team's 69-60 win over Homuth should happen to be ing everyone else in playing in your Houston , scoring "only" 23. league this year, we need basketball player won't be "IT WAS like himself was playing for ths down, they could break own kitchen," jested Rader biiPSPORTS "We'll use a zone in an loose." this one." ih action Friday because Trinity outfit. WATKINS PRODUCTS, INC., celebrates its tenth anni- about the Cardinal court. "We In an attempt to do this, Ra- versary of flying Winona athletic teams Monday by carrying he is ill with pneumonia. think we'll give them a better der will start his "kiddie the St. Mary's College basketball team to Moorhead, Minn., game down here." corps," an innovation which the for a bout with Concordia. Peters has Dean Wilde, ordi- coach has come up with in re- St. Mary's made the first trip back in 1955, a four-game OUT WITH PNEUMONIA narily a regular, out with the cent games to combat relative swing to Rockhurst and St. Benedict's in ineffectiveness. The "corps" is JEfiJgggiillllJgKansas and to Lewis and Chicago Teachers made up of three sophomores, a junior and a senior. """"" Winona nrm & S § ^'nce *at tr'p ^e s quarter- The lone senior will be for- <>n dollar DC-3 has logged more than the junior H j *»wli mu^ ward Ken Peshon and > es day a guard. Sop- during the Winona State and Fri is Dave Arnoldy, i ^ WW Worif Play ™' Eino Ii»^P jtll Marv s courtesy flights homore center Dave Mueller, ItL j^- ¦ *»•*>¦'V'^Vtja i affair , won on Al Johnson 's two to falter in the weekly battle for ^ ways has kept in close touch free throws. Johnson scored six among Wis- games by defeating Monona wmsiiMSKmmKtt^nKBZ^^7j&k:<.ii:¦ ¦^.Val^iiC ..&&£**£&<»yj the No. 1 ranking Grove 64-55, while the Blue Dev- with the rich basketball fields of consin public high school bas- western Pennsy lvania. ils rallied in the second half be- LOOK AT THESE LOW PRICES! ketball powers. hind Larry Holmes to get past f \ Basketball Auggies Gun Marin put on hi.s best per- 1 6-VOLT 12-VOLT I I form ance of the .season, pouring M onroe's Cheesemakers re- Milwaukee Riverside 8681. in 32 (mints in Duke's 12th Catholic Playoffs tained their slender hold on the Others receiving points in the top spot with North' s Blue Dev- balloting which includes both •1 Scores triumph against two defeats. 1 < I $11.95 For 9th Win "We d have won without him ils close behind today in the As- large and small schools include $15.95 i select Exch. Exch. M COU[ Qlt in there; he was out of this To Begin Sunday sociated Press poll of a HOLMEN , 14 0; New Richmond, ^^^ EAST Hv TMIO ASSOCIATED I'KIOSS committee of tho Wisconsin AP 11-0; ALMA, 13-0, and Piatte- Alio Delco Headquarter* Sf Joieph i »0, Georgetown J}. world ," snid Maravich after he Catholic Junior High Basket- ^^^^ ^^ M P«nn Mil. at, Weil Virginia n . Augsburg .shoots for its oth Sports Writers Association. ville, 11-0. I cm pit »» saw his 11-gumc winning string ball league playoffs begin Sun- , Virginia J». Monroe grabbed all first The Top Ten. Villaiiev* n. Canlilui tt. straight Minnesota Intercolleg- halted . He hadn 't lost wince tak- day at 1 p.m. at the Catholic Fotdham 11. lorn Ul. place votes except three cast W. I. retail iate Conference ing over from Kverett Case two I. Monro* II » 174 Aimy H, AlbrloM 4} victory tonight Hee. for Nort h in rolling up 17fi (.•layiflr it. Lahlgti It. months ago and had the Wolf- J. Mllwauktt Norlh ... II » 1*1 when it visits Macalester. At 1 o'clock the St Stan's 3. Steven, Point II t 115 Philadelphia Texlllt fl. King ' i ;l pack tied with Duke going into . points. However , the Blue Dev- SOUTH In Wednesday Hustlers tackle the St. John's 4. Manitowoc It 2 M night' s only the game. ils were voted no lower than 5. Manaiha lt 2 t4 Ovl,f. «« Norlh Carolina Stale I* 's Georgia T «rh tl. clemion 7a i game, Hamline suffered its 9th Marin , averaging 16.6 points a Johnnies with the St. Stan second on any ballot and had 4. Appleton 1* 2 41 Soulh Caroline It. Wake Forttl H. straight MIAC defeat , ai-7(i , In Saints going against the Rolling- 165 points in the scoring based 7. Waukaaha II 2 44 William » Miry l», citadel 71. game before the vital ACC con- I. Madlton E«ll 1» 2 44 MIDWB5T overt ime to St. Thomas. The test, flipped in 14 of 17 tries stone Rockets at 2 p.m. At 3 on 10 points for first , 9 for ?. Superior Eait 11 2 M 11 1 17 Oayton 117, Xavier (OI1I0) II . Pipers, 2-15 for the year, tied it from the field. With slightly o'clock the Cathedral Mustangs Kccond nnd HO on. 10. W»uwito»» Bui . Drikt ti. lo«* Slate 37. Olheri racalvlno poinli: Holmtn (1441 73-nlI to force the overtime tangle with the St. Caslmlr Fal- Stevens Point clung to third III Baraboo (lit) Wi tau Clalra Mtm- Toledo tl . Rowling Oreen »• , then more than five minutes to play, NELSON WJttfjitwr Q *J, Danlaon eO 14 OT). saw (lie Tommies score 10 : State cut the Blue Devils * lead cons and the Cathedral Knightjs place in Ihe Top Ten with 125 orltl 110 )) 14/ Cumbtrlana (tee) M/ Ivemville tl . pePAuw at. meet the St. Mary 's Royals at points, while Manitowoc jumped Janejvlllo li Ntw Richmond (IM) SOUTMWeiT straight points in the extra ses- to 70-67 , but Marin 's jumper 4i Alrn. (114) li Plallavllli (114) ll A lgomo (toil 1; Pirtwllla (IM) ll Klm- TIRE Arizona el. Bra.llry tl (1 Of) sion . Fred Korba had Xi points. triggered Duke to its winning 4. from sixth to fourth with 'Ml SERVICE T«>«« Wi-il 11. Arlmna State 40 b*tty (t-4) li Madltwi W«it (101) ll Fourth A Johnion pt,on, 2306 tor St. Thomas , while Al Frost I margin. Both St. Sinn's teams sewed points. Menasha slipped a notch I; Jonam ll llill AIM I). Arkantat 7* (OT ) Southarn Door Ol-I) Pan Amtwu* at,, T*«ai Southern »1. got :t:i /or Hamline. I HI. JoBi'pfi 's, Fa., was (he only up undefeated championships. fo (Uth with M points. Wiu.au (f t) I. VAN HOOF DRAWS_ _. BYE -—-— ^ | No Trouble Two Winona Finding Kids Af Galesville GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special ) Most mothers knew where their children were this past week- ROCHESTERBoxers, Minn. —Two of ment heldWin here end, because most children Wednesday night and Winona's four fighters in action emerged victorious . their parents were at the Curl- during the opening round of the Winona is the defending team ing rink. It was the annual sectional Golden Gloves Tourna- champion, having won the Mike Adult-Gale-Ettrick High School Sternberg memorial trophy in Bonspiel. 1964. Norm Vallska has nearly 80 Taking opening round victor- young people in his Curling Sfate Swim ies during Wednesday's first course and teaming up with round were Lee Huwald, fight- adults for this event is one of ing in the featherweight division the highlights of the season. Team Bests after copping the lightweight Winners of the First event was title last year , and Gordy Hess the Bob Nelson rink, skipped by La Crosse in the novices lightweight divi- FIRST EVENT . . . Winners of the first event in the Nelson and featuring high sion. Adult-Gale-Ettrick High School bonspiel, are, from left : schoolers, Karen Remus, third John Martin's Winona State Janice Stellpflug, Karen Remus, Pat Anderson and Bob rock ; Pat Anderson, second; College swim team stretched HUWALD WON a decision ) and Janis Stellpflug, lead. They its record to 5-1 over Jeff Moen of Chatfield and Nelson. (Liz Dahlgren Photos with a 54-41 defeated tbe Wilbur Polzin rink. A HARD LIFE . . . The linesmen ap- game in New York. Linesmen are Neil victory over arch-rival La Hess decisioned Ken Henke of Harlen Hunter rinks won the pear to be getting the worst of it as they Armstrong, left Crosse at the Memorial Hall Chatfield. , and Matt Pavelich. New second event with Verneille try to break up a battle between Bobby pool Wednesday. Losing decisions were Winona York defenseman Harry Howell, right, is Hunter , third rock ; Bill Finch, Hull (9) , left , of the Chicago Black Hawks, blocked out of the fracas by Matt Ravlich Two records were set, both by State's Walt Maeser in a light second , and Kristy Peterson, and Bob Plager (2) of the New York Rang- (5) of Chicago. Chicago won the game, 4-1. La Crosse's Goers. He pushed heavyweight bout and Don Ben- lead. They defeated the Ernie ers in third period of Wednesday night' (AP Photofax) through the 200-yard freestyle den in a welterweight match. Johnson rink. * event in 1:58.0 to break Bill Maeser was beaten by Roger Jim Quinn skipped the third- Kohler's 1:58.1 clocking and Hildebrand of Chatfield and • then took the 100-yard freestyle Benden by Bob Sullivan of Ro- event winners of Betty Quinn, in 52.1 seconds to break Dennis chester . third rock , Tim Hanson, second, Blanchard's record of 52.6 sec- Tom Van Hoof , who won the and Gail Flaherty , lead. They onds. 1964 welterweight championship defeated the Earl Trimm rink. Valiska presented trophies to Flares, but is fighting in tbe middle- Action . Hawks Win Blanchard did gain some runners-up and a NEW YORK (AP) - Chica- The Hawks were sitting on a bear hug. glory, however , swimming the weight division this year , drew the winners, a first-round bye and will be in school trophy. go's Golden Jet, Bobby Hull, 3-1 lead — one of the goals com- "I wanted to let Brownie and event in :52.3 in tying for sec- ing just as Plager completed a ond to set a new Warrior vars- action during next Wednesday's Thirty-two rinks competed. fired a couple of after-burners Mikita go at it ," Plager said competition. ¦ two-minute penalty for elbowing ity record. at the New York Rangers , and Hull — when the sparks began later. "I wasn't going to let Hull State's next tank activity will today the Black Hawks' bomber to fly. get into it." CHAMPIONSHIPS will be de- READY TO GO? come Saturday at 2 p.m. in St. cided next Wdenesday and tlie is the center of the National Chicago's Stan Mikita, who Hull, needled by the fans all Paul against St. Thomas. eight division champions will SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Hockey League's latest feud. had engaged in earlier jostles night, became infuriated and WINONA M, LA CROSSE 41 move on to the Upper Midwest U.S. Open golf champion Ken Hull , who admitted after Chi- with New York's Rod Selling dropped his gloves after finally 405-Yard Mtdlay Relay: I. Winona (An- tournament in Minneapolis Feb. Venturi, recovering from sur- cago's 4-1 victory over the Ran- and Lou Angotti, dug into a breaking free from Plager . It denon, Ford, Sage, Blanchard); 1. La 12-13. Caledonia' gery to correct faulty blood cir- gers that his six-game scoring corner after a loose puck with was an unusual pose for the All- Croite. T—4:0».l. s Bob Boroviak SECOND EVENT . . . This team won the second event. , is the only competitor defending culation in his hands, said slump is getting on his nerves, the Rangers' Arnie Brown. The Star left wing, who led the vot- 100-Yard Freestyle : T. Goers (I); 3. From left are: Mr. and Mrs. Harlen Hunter Kathy Peter- Eaiten (W)| J. Chlldert (W); T—1:Sl.t* a 1964 title. He copped honors , Wednesday he hopes to be phys- helped precipitate quite a fracas two came together and their ing for tbe player who best com- M-Yard Freestyle: 1. Raymond (L)i 2. son and Bill Finch. ¦raun (W); ]. Keenan (W); T— :JJ.«. in the flyweight category and is ically fit to compete in the $35,- when he tangled with rookie sticks went up. When Hull skat- ! bined gentlemanly and effective 2W-Yard Individual Medley: I. Blanch- a strong favorite again this 000 Pensacola Open in Florida defenseman Bob Plager in the ed toward them, Plager play for the first half of the sea- ard 1W)J :. Ford (W); J. Polan (L),- year. on March 3-7. third period Wednesday night. grabbed Bobby from behind in a son. T—1:M.». 1 ' DIVING: 1. Stover (Wl; 1. Manegold Also climbing is Jim Donlin- L^LIHHaHaV ^alaHHHa ^HaHaV^a^a^a^a^a^Ha^a^aHaVJHHaln (M; 1. Callahan (W); Points—1.2.55. ger of team favorite Rochester ¦ ^ 2tO-Y«rd Butftrfly: 1. Von Allman (L); ^^^ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ^ J. Keenan (W)l 1. Nash (W); T—> :«].!. Firemen. He won the welter- tOO-Ytrd Freestyle: 1, Goers (L); i. weight championship five years tie between Blancherd (W) and Raymond ago and now is a heavyweight (L); T-:M.1«. 20O-Yard Backstroke: 1. Anderson (W) ; entrant. 1. Grade (W); 1. Dowd (L) ; T—2:21.1. The team score after the first 500-Yard Freestyle: 1. Chllders (W),- z. night finds the Firemen and Magermen (L); 3. Keenan (W); T-5:M.4. 200-Yard Breaststroke: 1. Ford (W); Z. Chatfield leading with five Tingle (L); 1. Blalze (L); T-2:U.7. points. Winona is second with WO-Yard Freestyle Relay: 1. La Crosse (Pickett. Goers, Von Allman, Raymond); three. 2. Winona; T—1:17.4. LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT •New poet recordi. Roger Hlldtbrtne (ClteffltU) iet. Wall NOTICE! Matter (Winona). I TIRE INVENTORY CLEARANCE Dave Rahl (Chatfield) dtc Paler Jonti (Rocheittr). Derby Picture Is HEAVYWEIGHT I We have just had our year «nd inventory of good mod tires, some only slightly Bill Rlnoenberg (Recliettar) ate. Kins McAlplne (Rochester). Greatly Confused MIDDLEWEIGHT I used, old treat designs, slock retreads, take-off tires, some only I of a kind. Cheek Mike HIMebrand (ClwlflaM) tac. Fret MIAMI , Fla. (AP) - The Grover (Austin). special prices offered — Sale starts 8:00 WELTERWEIGHT I our list of deals below for your size and Kentucky Derby picture was Bob Sullivan (Rochester) dec. Dan more confused than ever today Btnden (Winona). I A.M. Tomorrow — Ends Saturday — ¦with LIOHTWBIOHT Sadair retired to stud and Wayne Crewun (CHatfltie) TKOei Bill Bold Lad out indefinitely with [ Wagner (Caledonia), third round. an injury, leaving only Jacinto i Vic Hall (Roeheetir) dec. Dick Heln (Char/laid). THIRD EVENT . . . This team won the third event. among the Big Three still in j Roy Sutherland (Chatfield) dtc. Larry Tim Hanson training for the May 1 classic at I Engertoll (Austin). From left are: Mrs. Jim Quinn, Gail Flaherty, FRIDAY & SATURDAY - 2 Days Only! John Jofinton (Cnatflild) dec. Mlki1 and Jim Quinn. Churchill Downs. Barone (Wlnsna). I money-win- NOVICE LIOHTW1IOHT Sadair, champion | Ken Henke (Prtsten dtc. Mick ¦reoki ning 2-year-old with a record {Austin], SPORTS SCORES DOUBLE SPORTS $498,217, suffered a fractured ! Gordy Halt (Wlnont) dec. Ken Hankt I USED PASSENGER TIRES NEW PASSENGER TIRES* (Chattlald). NBA FEATURE FRIDA Y right wing of the coffin bone in ! FEATHERWEIGHT WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS ¦ ¦ $4.VU his left foot Monday and Mrs. I Lie Huwald (Winona) dec. JeH Moen Philadelphia 114, New York »S 4.50x1 3 Your Choice 7.00x14 Black Tubelt.i, 2nds $14.00 j (Chatfield). Baltlmora 11], Boston 114. The Winona High swim- Mary B. Hecht , owner of the NOVICE BANTAMWE IGHT Cincinnati ix, Los Angelei *9. ming team will host Austin IplUiUU ff4C AA *wift Florida-bred, said Sadair Dan Prleit (ReehtiHr) dec Ken Lar- I Detroit ill, San Francisco 10*. at 6:30 p.m. Friday — the I 1.20x15 U%ed Pr«mium I ton (Auitln). TODAY'S GAME J-0MA Narrow Whtfe wailt jlVeVlM would be retired to stud in Ken- Scott Brooks (Austin) dec. Jerry Fln- 1 St. Louis at Ptilladelphia. same time the "B" squad I CC AA H 4.70x15 Snow Type «pD»UU tucky. I ley (CnaffltM). basketball team tests North- CQ Aft field in a preliminary to the H CC AA o.70xl5 Nylon Whitiwall 4 KI1UII ¦ varsity contest. ¦ 7.40x15 Regular Tread 4>U«VU , high school Vic Gislason 7.10x15 Nylon Whitewall $9.50 . athletic director, announced I 6.40x15 50% Worn $5-00 that for one admission eith- Exclusively on er or both events may be fl 8.50x14 Snow Type - 2 Only Both for !})1U BUU 7.40X 15 Nylon Whitewall .Jll&aUO KWNO viewed. Tickets wilE be sold at the main entrance of the ? Wxl4 Original Equipment $4.00 1 6 .0Ox , 3 Ny )on whitewall $9.0 0 auditorium. Also on the Winhawk I SMx H Regular Tread IJ OBUU ClAAft. 6-50x15 Nylon Whitewall, Tubelesj 4>lUa«/U calendar ar« two fl CC AA wrestling meets . The I 7.50x14 Regular Tread •jDaVU Dave Moracco-coached CO AA H CC nn 5.40x15 Nylon Whitewall , Tubeless 4>OeUU ¦ grapplers travel to North. ¦ 7.00x14 Narrow Whitewall, At% Worn «j>U»U V BASKETBALL! field Friday before meet- H CF AA 7.50x14 Original Equipment (T| Q (iff ing St. Charles at 1 p.m. In 7.10x15 Snow Type .jO .uU Tubelest Narrow Whitewall, 2nds .pJLOiUU Q\ The preliminary to the Wi- fl 7 nona State-Bemldjl State FOLLOW THE H 8.50x14 Snow Type - 3 Only Bolh ««r $lUaUU lj>15:0U " * meet at Winona State's Me- Tubeleie Narrow Whitewall, 2nd* $& Ik morial Hall Saturday. Lloyd "OK" Tread -2 Only Both far $9.00 Luke 's swimmers host St. ¦ **"" 8.Mx , 4 Nylon Wrlp .Arflund( 2ndj $14,00 BOUNCING BALL" \| Louis Park at 2 p.m. Sa- j|||j turday. 7.60xH Premium Narrow Whitewall, 2nds .... !(>£.leUU fl TRIIf'K RFTRFAnV^ AT 12 3-OH RADIO J ^B L1. A fl «.„ „» u Sk?R OH 8.50x14 Nylon Tobeleii Narrow Whitewall 4>lleUU W»*» H'w-y Tw^ Benilde Takes ¦ -Plue Ta* - Exchange ij AA FOR COMPLETE | B 717.5 Traction Type jlja UU aiMafla * MHBa * aaaMMMHM tW9 fl First Place in ¦ 7.50xl«J Traction Type 3>15eUU BASKETBALL COVERAGE 1.25x20 Spreader Tiret - lot-Ply JpO.VV ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ • ¦¦¦¦ MBi fM(i/^ V.OOxM) Traction Type «|Ol evU Catholic Poll fl ALL THRU THE SEASON. p^HpL St. Louis Park Benilde has I ,17 5 Traction Type $ 18.00 USED TRU CK TIRES replaced Austin Pacelli as the No. 1 Minnesota Catholic Bas- I 7.00x1 7 Traction Type $ 15.00 ,„ , Tr.ction _ , $ 12.00 ketball team in the poll con- Typ, 0ft|y ducted by the Minnesota Catho- fl I lt.S Hiway Type $16*00 COO AA lic Education Association . 'Exchange — Tax Included 1.25x20 Hiway Type 4>&&aUU Frl, Feb. 5 | f^ The Red Knights received 228 fl \^L first-place votes to 220 for Pa- Cotter High vs. Rochester Lourdes '¦ celli , which stands 15-1 on the \__m aavM M jkwjfta* «ii M^a» .'. ' -22.5 Traction Type JJfcJeUU ijWr&j^ff season after Saturday 's «6-54 ¦ TRACTOR TIRES * loss to the defending state ftrt fl C1H CA 10.00x22 Hiway Type 4>JJ.UU ¦ { champions. ¦ 5.50x14 2-Rlb 3>lUwU Winona Cotter held sixth place in the poll after a loss to ¦ ,.0O 2.Rlb »¦««• Hh", T,M $30.00 third-place Minneapolis De La *U $11.50 ¦ ¦ Salle. Dropping out of the top ALL TRACTOR TIRE REAR S 7 00x17 Hiway Type 2 for $30.00 ten was Friday's Rambler op- ¦ Buy ftrit at regular price — gat aecond tire Vi oH that ponent , Rochester Lourdes. I H price. Coma in and check the price for your die . COQ AA Cotter High vs. St. Thomas I. lain! Louli Park lenlMe . m (ill) ¦ 'Plus Tax ».00x20 Hiway Type JMLZMV jB®vf 3. Auitln Pacelli na OM) 1J ^ I. Minneapolis De La lelia .. lie 0^4) 4. lain! Paul Mill M4 <*»). J. SI. Clove Cathedral na (il-z) 4. winona celler te (».*) 1. Mint Jehn'a Preei ao (IM) I. Merinall Central 51 oral t. feint Paul Si Agnta ... 4» in al ie. Owatoona Marian la (II 41 WILLMAR JC MTH i DODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — Winona State vs. Hamllne jM ^h Bfir Willmar, Minn., Junior College ia ranked 18th in this week's ratings by the National Junior ( College A t h lctic Association . Dodge City Juco, with a 1R-1 record , retained its No. 1 rat- I & Ml****-** ing. NHL WIDHVIMVS NVfULT CMMIe 4. New York I. fl BOB OOBMAN, Managar TOPAY't O-AMIl ^*SSSJ r Im ww N w Terenle air MeeUeel. [ Detroit al Bute*. 1 P. M. New York Plumbing, Roofing 21 Sfock Prices ELECTRIC ROTO ROOTER Boxing Group Stocks Move Want Ads For clogged sewers and drilm All'd Ch 57 Int'l Ppr 33Mt Ttl . W or 6436 1 year guarantee Als Chal 23% Jns & L 70ft CALL SYL KUKOWSKI Amrada 87 Kn'ct 103 Start Here Help Wanted—FemaU 26 Wants Floyd Am Cn 43% Lrld 45 Into New , Slate Am M&F 38% Mp Hon 67Ve BABYSITTER—good wage*. Tel. a169 lit- Singles Doubles NOTIC I er 8 p.m. eg Am Mt 14% Mn MM 64 Banlekl m,j_„j cu *« 1-4U Merlin StorsveenSlorKveen •- Bob Stuava 111-111 11-11 Phil KirslraaKirslna - Norm Banlekl STENOGRAPHER, shorthand Wednesday, 10 1 AT&T 67ft Mn&Ont — Thli newspaper wli) b» r«sponslt>la CLERK - F*b. Jerry Nelson • Ofc* Mlrmndm John Oretky - Jarry Meier necessary, paid vacations, stele leave, l.U p.m.— Barry Nelson • Jack Swanson James Hemes • Irvin Praxel i Am Tb 36Y4 Mn P&L 58 for only on* Incorrect Insertion or Record Write A-19 Dally News. For Title Go Highs hosplralliatlon. 11 Mike Storsveen • Kannttti Thomas 7-1 Fred King • Richard Mohan 12-14 Marvin Nelson - Sylvester Lllla any classified advertisement pub- Frank Raines Sr. - Frank Raines Jr. William Nelson - Jim Hllldebrandt Ancda 62 Mn Chm 90 lished In the Want Ad section. Check George Goetrman - Barnard Thlcke PROVIDENCE , R.I. (AP) - NEW YORK (AP)-The stock COMBINATION CASHIER and credit Wally Serwa • F. C. Vondrasek Ted Mahlke • Emil Nascak your id end call 1321 It correc- Richard Housa - Donald Sobeck Arch Dn 36% Mon Dak 43% • manager wanted In popular priced M Jerry Serwa • Don Merchlewlri The World Boxing Association market made further progress tion must be made. Mt John Cliewskl - Norm Juneau 15-14 Ed Lano - Vern Brandt ladles apparel shop, experience pre- Fran Haney - R. Ciaplewskl Armc St 66 Mn Wd 38% into record high Ray Gady - Ed Lllla Zeke Cida - Bob Cada has proposed that Floyd Pat- ground early ferred but will train, chance for Larry Santelman - John McGuir* Tom Bescup - Ches Lllla Al Abrams - Dean Danden Armour 50V4 Nt Dy 93% Write A-17 Delly Newi. • W. Christopherson terson meet the winner of the this afternoon in active trading. advancement. 14 E. Brommerich 11-11 F red Wnuk - John Drazkowski Singles to follow CJ) 23% N Am Av 51% M. Storsveen - Ro»«r Schutz AVco Gold mining issues BLIND ADS UNCALLED FOR- Larry Wleererek - Rog Czaplawskl upcoming Ernie Terrell-Eddie rallied on LADY TO DO general cleaning on Thur». Schossow • Harry Brendan Beth Stl 36% Nr N Gs 61V4 Bob Frank Krzoska - Charles Abts French President Write A-15 Dally News. Sunday, Feb. 14 Machen bout for its version of Charles de A-3, t, 7. t, 13, lt. 7-1 Fran Hengil - Dick Henfel 11-14 Robert Ives - John Orlowske Bng Air 65% Nor, Pac 51Vt Bill Blancbard 1 p.m.— the heavyweight championship. Gaulle's proposal for a new Paul Gardner • Dick Majln - Dick Ozmun YOU CAN EARN S30-J40 weekly. No ex- Jack Sherman 1-2 Howie Hanson - Bob Fischer Brswk 9% No St Pw 39% John Sherman - Ev Stark • Dava Stark Jack Tiylor - Bruce Stanton Tony Maceroni, chairman of world money plan linked to gold perience necessary, we train you. - Art Moore Mt Dan Glubka 1S-14 Jim Kauphusrnan - Bruce McNally LeRoy Anderson - Al Hemmesch Ctr Tr 40% Nw Air 68% Avon Cosmetics are In great demand. Tom Riska - Jim Clsewskl the WBA's championship com- and independent of the dollar Mike Breza - Bill Galtwtkf 2-4 Ted Schneider - Carrot Bakken Write Helen Scott, Box 764, Roches- Woodworth • Wegmaai Ch MSPP 26% Nw Bk 48% Card of Thanks Les CHiic* C. Opsahl • W. Lang Brink Iverson - Amos Bakken mittee, wired the Patterson and the British pound. ter, Minn. - Joe Drazkowski 11-11 Bob Bundy Singles ta follow Dan Klueneaer - Frank Wieczorek C&NW 53% Penney 68% Warren Bonow camp Wednesday night, asking Wall Street's background was Bill Bonow - » p.m.— 2-4 Boo wadewitz - Gordon Halleli SPARROW — COCKTAIL WAITRESS. Wrltt A-13 Dally W. Livingston - Frtd Burmeister Chrysler 58% Pepsi 67% bri 1-1 John MeyerftoH • Vern Senty Llewellyn Hatlell - Jerry Heme if Patterson were willing to ghtened by President John- Sincere thanks fo all my trlend» and News. 11U James Meinke • Wen. Schwanke Ct Svc 81 Phil Pet 58% Bill Strong - Clint Kuhlman LeRoy Kotiner - Ken Donahue son's disclosure that neighbors for their calls, visits, cards John Meinke - Dave Melnki meet the winner within 90 days the new Chester Wiczek - Dutch Duellman 7-1 Gene Rega n - Ralph W ieczorek after the March 5 bout in Chica- Cm Ed 57 Plsby 79% employment figures and gifts during my slay In Community EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER—want. Mike Deep - Joi Lombardo 2-4 Carlus Olson - Tony Lubinski Del Prodzinski - Dick Seeling will show Memorial Hospital. ed, to live In end care for elderly cou- Clifford Hoel - Luther Myhro Cn Cl 56 Plrd 50% 11-14 Harold A. Brandt - Wally Conrad Ken Hubbard - Mark H ipps go- the joble ss rate at a seven-year Rudy W. Sparrow ple. Write A-12 Dally N ews. Wally Dubbs - Karrol Jaasfad Ray Cyert - Chester Tarras 9-lb David Schewe - Ken Tepe Cn Can 51% Pr Oil 59% ¦ Red Christopherson Maceroni said the -winner of low . Alfred Cortes 14 Clarence Wolfe • Donald Wolfe Ray Schevwe - Vic Schewe Cnt Oil 79 RCA 32V4 VAIL - SUPER MARKET CHECKER-fult tlmt Singles to fellow Wayne Llfscher - Norbert Wolfe Mike Hagcjtn - Nell Haggen the Terrell-Machen bout is com- Thank you to my friends, relatives and |ob replacing 10-Year employe. Good » p.m.— Henry Ernst - Mel Schlesselman 11-12 Irv Brabbit - Dave Theis Cntl D 59 Rd Owl 27% A generally higher trend pre- nelfltibori for ttie many cards, visits working conditions. Paid vacation, hos- mitted to meet either Patterson pre- 1-1 Dave Wnuk - Martin Wnuk 7-1 Tom Barth - Rocky Haddad Orv Henderson • Garry Buerck and gifts. A special thanks to Dr. pitalization Insurance. Experience Red Zecbes - Earl Wanek Deere 50»/4 Rp Stl 43% vailed among chemicals, air- employes Sonny Ehlers - Ed Hemmelman Jim Wiecrorek - Shorty Wieczorek or an opponent named by the Hughes end the nurses. ferred but not essential. Our Zeches complete details John Wendt - Gene Al Kreckow - Eldor Holtz 13-14 Donald Skeets - Orval Hilke Douglas 32% Rex Drug 32% lines, ofifce equipments, non- Mr, John Vail know of this ad. Give Hennessy WBA. He said Patterson earned A-J Dally 1-4 Bob Kratz - Wm. M» Oerhard Erdman - Mirv Rupprecht Wm. C. Mueller - Herbert Pagel . Rey ferrous metals plus two references. Wrltt wally Greden Dow Chm 81" Tob 40% , rails, utilities, Karl Conrad • Paul Erdman - Ervin Erdman Robert Nelson Sr. - Steve Belisle the title shot with his Monday News. O'Laughlin Sears Roe 129% electrical Lost and Found 4 Wm. Ward - Ray Dick Flatten - Lewie Czarnowskl 13-14 Robert Nelson Jr. • Roy Nelson night victory over George Chu- du Pont 256% equipments and mail S-i Jim A. Kauphusrnan - Del Serene 1101 Roy Bell - Mike Cyert order-retails. Chris WleFenbich - Joe Lewinski East Kod 156% Shell Oil 59% HOUSEWIVES Tony Wlnczewski - Ron Dreas Bob Kosidowski - Duane Kosidowski John Pozanc - George Thilmany valo. LOST-hub cap, corner et Huff and Ford Mot 55% Sinclair 58% Enloy; Independent Incomt. Earn tl Noel Hoist - Len Strange Willard Anderson - Norb Thrune Patterson held the champion- Steels, oils and motors were Broadway. Will the party ttist found It, Singles lo follow Top quality 7-1 Ray Busack - Gary Baab Sobeck - Larry Peterson Gen Elec 100 Socony 87 please contact Mrs. Roy C. Keller, you learn. Spare tlmt. 1J-I4 Eugene 3 p.m.— ship twice before losing it to generally easy. plastic food container company nteds Sherm Pampuch - Pate Marr Syl Kammerer — LeRoy Kunst Minneiska. Tel. Rollingstone US9-2S66. 1-2 Bob Thurley - Paul Mrachek Gen Fds 83 Sp Rand 14, women to plan, participate In homt Joe Knopp - Warren Wunderlich Hank Scherdin • Jim Ives Sonny Liston. Cassius Clay de- : Fred Thurley • Jim Kleinschmidt parties. Fun. Easy. No experience MO Ben Little - Frank Tuttle Karrol Bublitz - Everett Holz Gen Mills 52% St Brads 82% Among silver producers, Sun- HEREFORD COW-strayed to my farm. 15-14 Frank Dorsch - Harley Greenwood feated Liston for the champion- needed. Most friendly people. Mekt David Ruppert - Gary Ruppert Warlln Bublitz - Louis Boehmke : Henry Locher, Rt. 2, Winona. 1-4 Ray Eichman - Herbert Peter Gen Mot 100% St Oil Cal 72% shine Mining lost a fraction and extra money. For private Interview, Jim Ruppert - Ray Ruppert Wayne Holz - Milton Bublitz ship but the WBA declined to John Alampi - Ken Poblocki Hecla Mining gained a fraction. BASSET HOUND—« months old, brown, call the distributor nearest you: 11-13 Earl Strelow • A rthle Welch Singles to follow. recognize the fight and stripped Gen Tel 36% St Oil Ind 43% Gens Ehlers • Ken Applebee Duane Beeman - Harold Beeman Gillette 32% St Oil MJ 86% Up more than 3 were IBM black and white, white tip on tall, 2 M H SALES Elmer Mueller • Ben Gordir S-4 Chas. Hagedorn - Wayne Gunderson Liston of the title it originally white front paws, red collar. Strayed 102 S. Wabasha, St. Ptul Saturday, Feb. 13 B. Jaszewski - Ron Czaplewski and U.S. Smelting. from B24 W. Howard. Reward. Tel. 6129. Tel. 227-26*8 12-14 Jot Bush • Stan Bush recognized. Goodrich 60 Swft & Co 63% j Jack Whltfen - Cl iff Madland 2 p.m. Chas. Evensen - Dave Sievers Prices were generally RAINBOW SALES — Anderson - Jim Boynton Goodyeax 48% Texaco 81% higher Vlrg Stlnacher - Emit Mahaffey 1-1 Gordy Addington - Cart Fischer 7-1 Jerry REWARD to anyone knowing where- 3206 Bloomlngton Ave.. Mpli. Roger Broring - Sob Nogosek in active trading on the abouts of Hereford cow, strayed from 15-14 Dick Hennessy - Jack Richter Jr. . Joe Monahan - Jim Kline Gould Bat 40% Texas Ins 100V4 Ameri- Tel, PA 1-3411 LeRoy Kanz - Joe Trimmer Nodine. Last seen In Pine Creek area. Bill Richter - Bob Vogelsang John Drastcowski - Ray Bambenek can Stock Exchange. MO Jim Englerth - M. Von Bargen Gt No Ry 57% Un Pac 43% Ross P apenfuss. Tel. Dakota 443-3841. Mark Warren • Lenn y Hinrichs M Tom Drazkowski - Walt Woege Dick Schultz • Ed Lynch Corporate bonds declined. Singles to follow John Bauer - Geo. Kostner Gryhnd 25% U S Rub 67% Jim Ehlers - John La Barre Bullets Prove U.S. government Help Wanted—Male 27 Lee Besek - Loren Kreher U S Steel 51% bonds sagged. 11-12 Bob Kramer - Ray Schreiber Gulf Oil 59& Personals 7 H Ron Galewskl - Dick Galewski Thursday, Feb. 11 Earl Ford .- Pete Wolfe Homestk 47% Westg El 46% Rudy Schneider - Willy Wenzel WILL HIRE honest, dependable married IMS p.m.— Rollin Ha nsen - Bob Heftman ¦ Al Smith - John McElmury IB Mach 444% Wlworth 27 MEN'S BOWLING Tournament coming couple for farm work. Modern. Wrltt 1-1 John Chuchel Phil Bambenek 13-14 Gordie Nyselh - Bryce Tschumper 7-2 Gorman Hall - Joseph Trochta PRODUCE up this weekend. Watch for our Sunday A-20 Daily News. John Wcisbrod - Frank MenceC Al Ruppe rt - Bill Haack Celts Can Lose Int Harv 78% Yg S & T 45 night bowling scores. Ray Meyer, Inn- Roger Ladewig Ed Mrozek • Vie Pellowski Frank Rossln - Dick Pozanc Jerry Turner - Walt Williams NEW YORK (AP) — (USDA) keeper, WILLIAMS HOTEL. HIRED MAN for year around work on »-4 Dennis C. Daly - Robert O'Nell Harold McCabe - - C. colbenson 13-14 Lans Hamornik - Harry Czarnowskl modern dairy farm. Must have oome W. H. crlfchfleld - Jack CrltehfieM MO Mllford Thompson — Butter offerings increased; RIP Dewey Cllnkscalei Sal Kosidowski - Jon Kosidowski A In a new suit can leave you up- experience. Either single man or Bob Beadles - Earl Kane John StanUstede - set; we Ted Bamtienek - Ed Dulek demand spotty; prices un- 'll fix it like new so don 't you young married couple. Write or In- Dureske • Gordie Fakler Marv Schultz - Myles Vaughn On Home Court Jerry t-i Singles fo follow fret. W. Betslnger, MVt W. 3rd. quire A-18 Dally News. ¦ Warren Weigel 1102 Rudy Ellings - Don Knapik changed. Jim Yahnke 4:30 p.m Jaycee Oirry Hanson (AP) Mondovi Bob Stein - Clarence Rivers Robert Lseftler - BOSTON —The proof ! AFTER BOWLING or a movie date stop - Ken Kinowski Cheese steady; prices un- MAN; FOR general farmwork or lust fot 7-1 Jln> Garry - Ray Thrune Leon Bronk 1-1 Ray Meyer - Hans Hanson has arrived at last. The Boston for a piece of tasty homemade pie or i 11-14 Clarence Chuchna - Bill Schulti Mark Modieskl - Len Bernatz ch anged. chores . May live wilh family. Richard Bill vogel - Dick Niemeyer Celtics can be beaten — even on b delicious hamburger and cup of II Johnson, Rushlord. Tel . 864-9108. jerry Mertes - Wirv Niemeirer Eugene E. Lovas - Doug Cava Herb Lea - Carl Klagge "Wholesale egg offerings coffee at RUTH'S RESTAURANT, 126 Robert Krause In- ! MO Joe Clerzan - Ed Zakrzewska Dave Krause - 3-4 A. SchilcSknecht - L. Merchlewitz their own court. E. 3rd. Open 24 hours a day, except I Rocco Russo Chapter Planned creased on mediums and ade- MAN WANTED—age 26-43, to take over 15-14 Roger Zehren - John Grams - Bud Berger Deward Grossell - Bob Dennis Mon. j going business. Must have sales abit Martin Pepllnskl Jr. - Henry Smith Carl Heirman - Arnie Stelvang The fired up Baltimore Bul- j Bob wteciorelc - Laverne Buchholz quate on balance; demand slow Ity, good education, character and Lloyd Walling - Don Dooney 5-4 Leo Schellmeler - E. Schmidtknecht MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) - 11-11 Leo Goss - Bob Stachowltz lets turned the trick Wednesday- CLEAN!NGEST carpet cleaner yoo ever pleasing personality. Permanent posl Charles Keilholtz • Len Leftner for mediums and fair on bal- Ray Pozanc - Jin Weimerskirch Singles te follow night, handing the Celtics their A group of young Mondovi and used, so easy , too. Get Blue Lustre. tion offering thorough training. Wrltt Floyd Kriesel - Richard Heitman ance. George Pozanc - Rich Chuchna 4:45 p.m.— Rent electric shampooer , II . R . D. A-16 Dally News. 7-1 Helmer Weinmann - Roy Larson second loss at home this season!, area men have voted to organ- 12-14 Ed Lynch - Ollie Davies 1-2 Henry Pasklewlez • Jinx Jennfget (Wholesale Cone Co. Rome Lieberman - Frank Devine selling prices Poo) Klagge - Bob Klagge Cummings 122-114. The loss snapped a ize a Junior Chamber of Com- MAN TO CALL on restaurants and Inst I. Leo Kobus - Don Elmer G reden - Harold Cada based on exchange Louis Wera - John Richter Harold Skroch - Bert Jumbeck merce chapter and affiliate and other WHEEL CHAIRS-for every price range; tutlons, must have good meat back- MO N. L. Pederson - Andy Owecka string of 14 straight home-court 15-14 JOB Flelschman - Vince Suchomel M Harvey Slever - John Bell Jr. volume sales. ) adjustable walkers. For rent or sale. ground and references. Call or write C. Arnit Breltlow - George Kratz with state and U.S. organiza- Bill Silsbee - M ike Hengel ¦ Bob Bell victories for the defending Na- First two months rental cred ited to- M. Hooley, Wholesale Meats, Stillwater, George Rogge Rod Doebbert - Ray Beeman New York spot quotations Clem Huff - Fred Huff Kukllnskl tions. fol- wards purchase price. Crutches, wood Minn. Bill Bell - Andy 11-12 Clem Dulek - Frank Adams tional Basketball Association Singles to follow 2-4 Gene Sobeck - Glen Buege low : mixed colors: Standards, or adjustable aluminum. TED MAIER NA •* p.m.— Romie Galewski • Jim Jumbeck champions. Temporary officers elected at 21 DRUGS. Ron Habeck • Clem Sobeck Ed Drwall - Ralph Hardtke 28-29^; checks Vz-23. 1-1 Rocky Carlson - Vernon Burke Bill Hufman - Bill Armstrong a meeting last week are: Har- SALE X ENT Darrell Erickson • Otto Julsrud ; 13-14 Al Leik • Stuart Clemence The victory moved Baltimore Whites : extra fancy heavy FILTHY- face on yoor wristwatcti? We'll 7-t Bruce Krings • Rod Klagge Helvln Pielmeier - Ron Mullna vey Watts, chairman, and Hol- Kenneth Hegland - Leland Jamet Erv Baudhuin • Rilpti Albrecht to within a half-game of the sec- ' ) even wash Its hands! Expert watch TRAINEES Bob Cyert • John Przytarski weight (47 lbs min - 31Vi-33; ^^years, who UM repair . . . RAINBOW JEWELRY. Married^ men, under 35 1-4 Hugo Curran - Geo. Modleski Jolin Thilmany • Richard Modjeski lis Herrell, secretary-treasurer. 15-14 Hal Biltgen - Gene Kaehler ond-place St. Louis Hawks in (41 ) dhsafJsfiwS wilh their presen t job be- Jerry Glenztnski - Jerry Fakler J- Borzyskowikl fancy medium lbs average lit W. ^th. Mb Mike Gostomski - Hugh Orphan • Don Graham They'll serve until March. cause of potential or money. Up tn Jim Wiczek - Willard Jochimsen Jack Creeley - Dale Kauffmann the Western Divisiori. 25-26^; fancy heavy wei Vern Ot is - Nord Overland ght <47 BORROW HAPPINESS! Then, repay on- SI00 per week during training. Stn Hilly Waadevlg - Cliff Buege livery, Winona, Minn, Bob Jandt - Sam Morken Cas Ku-stelskl - Art Petersen Philadelphia romped to a 116-95 I The new Junior Chamber will lbs average) 25^>-26; peewees, Feb. 5, 12 noon to 2 p.m. R. T. Percy - K J. Maehutt Rog Leonharlt • Carl Leon hardt Geo. Squires - Fred Ostertiolt victory over New York. lilt James Dean - Mike Dein 2-4 Bark Weaver - Bob Swinsen MO Norman Troutmann - A. Schreiber meet "Wednesday at 8 p.m. at (31 lbs average) 19V^-20V4. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that an " ' Walter Marquardl - Floyd Broker Norm Weaver - Don Pellowski Oscir Swenson - Bud Hansen Detroit whipped San Francis- I application for renewal of Radio tie supper club. Chairman ' Broadcast license has been filed with WANTED Artie Morcomb • Robert McNally Bill Burmeister • Pete Polus Lyle Turner - Arnie Michaels Two strong healthy men, willing to co 111-106 to build up a four- CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago ! the Federal Communications Commis- Singles te tallow %-i Bob Ozmun - Elmer Stuhr 11-12 J. Kreidemacher • Bill Klinger Watts issued an invitation to work 50 hours per week . Car a sion by the Winona Broadcasting Com- Friday, Feb. 12 Tom May - Chuck Silsbee Roy Speltz - Harold Hengel game victory skein for the first Mercantile Exchange — Butter necessity, married, age 21-37. Guar- all men between 21 and 35 to j pany, a Minnesota partnership operat Vern Thill - Clarence Braining Willie River - Jack Lehnertz antee to start $110 a week. 5ee Mr . 1:45 p.m.— time since February 1962. j , steady ; wholesale buying prices ing Radio Station KAGE. Stockholders 7-1 Gene Revoir - Jim Ahrens 12-14 Chuck Williams - Fran Whalen ¦ join , regardless of occupation j Olson, Thurs., Feb. 4, 7 to 9 p.m. at 1-1 Bob Emmons - Gordy Steffen 3 of winona Broadcasting Company are Bob Babler - Leo Puttier Alvin Kohner - Norman Girtler unchanged ; 93 score AA 57 /4 ; the Winon a Hotel. Dave Joswick - Dan Pelke Others attending the organi- j James B. Goell. holding 507c; Merlin Ed Feltz - Al Feltz 1-yle Halllday - Klkl Williamson Dick Jaszewski • Bill Hamernlk 92 A 573 90 B 56; 89 C 1 i; 55; cars J. Meythaler, holding 25t, and Rex Ml Tom Hartert - Jim lehnertz 15-14 Ron Schtcht - Bill McCaseland zational meeting were James 24 Jim Bambenek - Frank Braun 90 B 56%; 89 C 56. N. Eyler, holding 25 came in games of ! Elected to the club's board Cr.ide A (medium) . 17 Jerry's Plumbing giving age, experience and Athletic Club W L. without a defeat in WSUC action Grade B 17 »2? E. 4lh Tel. 9394 personal background 224, 191 and 200. i Super Saver 10 5 Lone New Entry of directors were Donald Morri- to A-21 Grade C. 12 Sloppy joei » 4 by heating Hiver Falls 114-80 Daily News In the Hal-Rod Commercial ! son , Harold Riser and Hans Die- DINGY, OLD FASHIONED laundry lobs . Plsaiant Valley Dairy 41 i 7' 1 Monday night. \.n Crosse enter- trich, three-year terms; Gerald have been replaced I See the new circuit , Dick Moham slapped 002 S Ed Phllllpi 7 a In Cage Poll Hay State Milling Company Serve Sink Molded stone construction tains Piatteville , 5-4, on Satur- . 1 nor thern tpnno wheat .. 1.72 for Sam 's Direct Service and Winona Induitrlas 1 t Kahl and Albei t Pries, two No with virtually staln proof surface Is Situation * Wanted—Male 30 Warnken' j 51 1 •' i day. By THK ASSOCIATED PHERS No. 2 northern jprlna wheat 1.70 stron g and sanitary, easy to keep clean. Sunshine Cafe cruised to team ; years, and Lawrence Larson No. 3 northern ftprlnpj wheat .... 1.66 ACQ Wall hung or metal storage cabinet WORK WANTEO by a high tcfiool |unl Oilier VVSl'C games Saturday and Truman Matteson , one year No. 4 norlhern spring wheat I.a2 highs with I .0«:i—2 ,80:i. Ken Alhletic Club W . L. Arkansas AM&-N i.s the lone extra. lor . Saturdays nnrt after school. Ttl. ; have Whitewater , 4f!i , at Hiver each. The board elected Morri- No . I hard winter whe-al 1.62 :i»06 . Tepe of Winona Rug denning Schmidt' s. 10 5 new entry in Ihis week's Asso- No. 2 hard wintrr wheat 1 .60 MamrrnlK' i Bar I 7 , r) Frank O'Laughlin dusted 234 and Irv Praxel of Falls , 4-fi; Oshkosh «4 . Mary D.oti Haz- Lang'i Bar 14 14 31 3 Northweslern nf Wisconsin goes took over the runner-up position [Pirate Mafmen slaughter steen and liellers steady to ,i higher; cash spring wheat elton powdcre-d 521 St . Clair. 1S"» 14>i 31 slrong, cows sendy to itrongj bulls BTP 15 15 3D outside the conference to wel- basis No 1 dark northern 11 to Quick Money . . . from High Point , N.C. aleady fo 50 cents hlQher; vealers and on any «rtlcl«« ot vnlue Dianne Hardtke pushed Man- W&S Hoplo 14' 1 U'i IT . . . come St. Proeopius. slaughter calves steady; feeders scarce 17 protein 1.79*i-l.85= 4. NLUMANN'S BARGAIN OOrn'l IGA 14' > 1J> | lu' i The Top Ten, with first-place STORB knto Bar to 2.S32 in the- Stinsct- and steady; average fo high cholca 1,250 1!1 E. 2nd it, Main Tavern IJ 11 la voles in parentheses , and total Drop Augusta No 1 hard Montana winter Tel. • mi j Ih slaughter steers 23.50; most cholca tcrs League at Westgate wilh a Mahlke' s Oo Nuti U 17 ta ! 950-1,250 lb 22.75 23.25; mined high floodI i.vi'i-uftti. Sporliman ir> points: S29 series . I,e.s Krage picked up 'i Tap .13 la COCHRANE - FO UNTAIN and choice 22.30 22.75; choice «5£ 1,050 lb Hortet, Cnttl©, Stock 43 Fenikt Body 11< 1 1. Evansvllle (Ul 1SI Winn. - S.D. No 1 hard winter 17'1 lS' i hellers 22.0022.50; mixed hloh good and 194 for Boland Manufacturing ¦ Will Rocky Play ). Central Stall 118 CITY , Wis. — Jerry Friemark's PAIR OF ipotted cholca !1 5.0-22.00; good 10.50 21.25; utllllyI l.ro'.-i-urrti. ueldlnpi , wnloht 3400 and Sunbeam Sweets 91 fl . Esther J Hl«ri Paint 14 lbi , Herbert Wlubfce, rosp«r, Winn. 4 Fairmont (W. Vi ) 7) Cochrane-Fountain City High and commercial cowj 13.50 14 50; utility No 1 hard amber durum , »' Hardt laced 504 . end commercial bulls 16 50 18.00; choice1 r I. Gannon 45 School wrestling team stretched choice 1.73-1.75 ; discounts, am- CROSS ORE D brood sowi, t, dua to far- vealers 30.00 M.00; good 24 . Ofr29.00; WINON A .•>< ' : Arr •-- .Joe t. Winston Salim It its record to 6-2 by whipping row In l eh., 2nd litter. Wnllnr« Jotiiv Firsi, Outfield? 7. Arkansas AM8.N (I). 31 Au- choice slaughter calvei 180021 .DO) goodi ber 3-5; durum 7-10. ion, Nolion, Wis. Miynczak and Clem Hozek team Fralzke s Team 14 0017,00; cholca 770 lb feeder ileers1 CI.KVELAND (AP) - Now 8. Philadelphia Textile 31 gusta 38-5 here Wednesday Corn No 2 yellow l.ZWl-l.SHi. ed with 250 and 5RI lo push Jer- ». Wittenberg 3» nighl . The only points the Pi- 20 50. Oats No 2 white 607<«-<>77V»; No ftrotR CAi.vrs H. T «I . enn. stark", r that the Cleveland Indians have 10. Oramtjllng (11 5) 24 Hoga 7,000 ; trada s low; borrows andi Hwy. 4). ry 's Plumbers lo l ,0.>!C 2.I MMI . ¦ rates gave up came on a draw gilts steady or folly 75 cenls lower; sows 3 white SIHWir^ii; No 2 heavy j Kocky Colavito under cont tact steady; feeder pigs 5 cents lower; 1-21 Majorette — Winona Indus- RUSHFORD Llill. Plu Sah at t eglon Leads Bowhunte rs , at m and a decision at unlim- 190 230 lb harrows and gills 17 00-17.25; while 66%-Wi; No 3 heavy for an estimated $50 000 to $55,- I' ark, Ith, », « to 11 a.m Contact C as- tries lagged 5)05- - l' Wlf, behind 13 190250 lo le.50-17 OO; 250 280 lb 15.75 . 000, Manager Kirdio 'lVWictls Power Fined $15 ited. white B4-«17'i(. per I ncision, 1*1. Hushford Ul 74M, tor l !Ui from Cliris Foster. Belty Dick Carr with IWI' led (, ary j 16. 50; medium I and 2 160 160 Ih 15.00-j Harley, cars 61; year ago Information , Fratzke ' can concentrate on Ihe problem Thc Pirntes now rest until 16 25; 1BO-1W lb It 00 17.00; 1 J 27O400 Brandes tipped 467 for Pleasant s team into top honors jOn Speeding Charge II) sows 1375-14. 50; 2 > 40O J00 lb 13.50- 107; good lo choice 1 ,08 - 1.3(1; HOMH)AI £ PnlU-il Shorthorns of wh«re to play the popular 1 , hulls and Valley (lie journeying to Osseo next Wed- 14 25; (holes 120-160 lb feeder pigs MOO fcmalcis , imun l Dulrv Wednesday at Winona Bow- slugger. (AP) low to intermediate 1.03 - 134; ypm cnttlr , nil „oe„ WEi (CATC MEN | MINNKAPOLIS - For- nesday. 15 00 . 3 horntd bulls . Kaehler llrov , St, Wrstnalo hunters. Indoo r .shoot al the M>een 900; active; all classes steady;, le«(I 05-1.02. Poinli To Colavito , declaring himself ! mer Minnesota Twins first toase- COCMRAMH FC II , AUOUSTA J Cbarliis, Minn. O'Laughlin plumbing 31 YWCA . | cholco end prime 85 110 lb Vyooled slaugh- Rye No 2 1.184-1.22^. "happy to he lia7:s Un a J . l.lj total . Olh- , by ttttl«ll/ 130—Don Krumtn (O <>¦<. 100 ib shorn lambs with No. I and falli Soybeans No 1 yellow 2.95'i. awi. Wuntlrrtlih ln->uiane Id stndiumi it makes no difference ' cou rt to a charge of driving Paul Prlca (A) 4«; 117-Jim Baenltwifcl shorn pelts 23. 50; utility and good slaugh- er tenm members nnd scores (C) won lot lull UJ-BIII Woichlk (Cl Auppc-rt't Grocer y it where he plays . j without a valid license nnd had bf ter ewes 7.008.00; cholca and fan*:y 60- or heifers tor a market (est; ifweral New from Heche Pederatcrl Mutual . 11 were : Cury Fnitv.ke 241 , Dick draw wllh Nail Manning (A) 111 Me— 80 lb feeder lambs 23 50 24 25; good andI lot s good 900 1,100 II) slaunhler steers Rocky is an outfielder by Ills trial set for March .3. Ron Woichlk (C) die. Jim Rallha (A) Winona Cltanrn ... IS O/miin 2lfi , Sinn U-debuhr 215 ¦) Choice 50- M II) 21 00 2)00; good 40 50 Ibi 10 10 32.Mi • few good tOOVJ)Ib helleri KORTA-MAST Ooldrn rood •'lodutti . . . 14 | (rode, although he had a brief Power, :). , traded by Ihe | lo, 17.00 It 00 30.00 33.O0; utility and commercial cow s L-Cove Bnr Mi and Klaine Iticman 207. fling al pitching when Iw was j Twins to the I*os Angeles An- Ml— Roo.tr Wo|chm (C) p. John Po4 ClllfAG.0 ifl - (USOA)¦- Moss 5.500 ) 12.MM.CMi cutter to comrnarclal bulls For Mastitis rAatrkr > mor* i)i , I doc k I A) 1:31/ 114—Prad Nallnl (Cl butchers Heady; 1-2 190 225 lb butchersi 14 00 KM). • Winona Ahiffn ll 13 lli/;h individual .scorers f or Ihe last in n Cleveland uniform , but flels last .season, pleaded fluilty tf«c. Jim enalatdy (Al loi lil -Don 17 50 1(00) lnl»rd 13 190 2.M lbi 17 .00- 3h*ep 200; wrxiled slaughter lamli i .!)e Korhlrr Aula llcdr I) evening were Itoy Haekus Z55, he says he 'll be happy In play io another charge ot speeding ermnan (Cl p. Dtrrtll Otuhan (A) };Bii U. iO; 3 3 IVl i'O lln li.fi li/I. I) -400 al>o,il iteatiYi lew trnall loft cholcti ans RricfcwM' a I Rob Fratzke 25:i . Carr 252 and j first base if that s where Tcb- nnd was fined $15 by Judge El- llmltHt-Pal Vlnopal (Al die. Bob Btuiai 13 75 H25 34 OO J4 V); cull to good woclMf slaughter j TED MAIER DRUGS ftWada ' ear % Jim Backus 245. I betls wants him. mer R, Anderson . (C) M. Cattle eoDi not enough slaughter ateerai ewes 5.50-7.00. Animal Health Ccntar ' Horsci, Cattlft, Stock 43 Coal, Wood, Other Fuel 63 Apartment*, Flat* 90 STRICTLY BUSINESS llUsed Cars 109 Thnrsday, Febrnary 4, IMS THNOrVA DA11T NEWS It

PUREBRED Duroe boare, else Landract SLAB WOOO—I' to Iff tenghtt. delivered, WEST END—5 rooma eni bath, 3 bed- FORD— )ta Gtlaxlm iM i-dw, Crulio- Clifford Hoff, Lanesboro, Auction S»l»i Auction $»!•» boars. Minn II.S0 cordi tawed lenfltha to fit your rooms, 1st floor apt., full basement, oil malic, radio, hesler, . mow tlret, A-l (Pilot Mound). itove, 115 cord delivered. Til. M05. hast, garage. Available at once. Com- iliape. low mileage. Gerald Baures, Rt. FEB. a— Sat. 11:30 a.m. Joe' s Auto Serv- FEB. t—T U«J. 1 p.m. 4 mllet NE. of pletely redecorated. ABTS AGENCY, J, Fountain Cily, (Blulf^Wing). ice Auction, Wabasha Transfer Dursntl on Hwy. U, then Tft PUREBRED spotted Poland China boars, Bldfl, mile* INC., Realtors, Iff Walnut St. Til. Jnd St.. Wabasha, Minn prtced for quick tale. Lowell Babcock, Furn., Rugi, Linoleum 64 . Joe Theis- E. on Counly Trunk A and Vi mil* M365. mann, owner; Don Tiffany, auctioneer; Poejcriel, Utica, Minn. Tal. St. charlea 913-1437. N. Wm. J. owner; Jim Hilt Realty, Inc.. clerk. Helke, aucll6ne«r; Gitexey Credit, «X> GROUP TWO BEOROOWS, carpeted llvlna room, WILL FURNISH 3 eomplet* roomi, living SEE THIS Inc., clerk. Poultry, Eggs, Supplies kitchen with new cupboards, tiled balh. FEB . B-Mon.. 10:30 a.m. • miles S. 44 room, bedroom and kitchen wllh fine Tel. 4815. quality furniture. Pay only *40 down ol Eau Clalra on HWT - M to "HH," FEB. 10-Wed. 12:30 p.m. t mil* W, el and BEAUTY than E. 3 miles ana ',-i milt S. on all North Band on 54, then 2 N, on ROWEKAMP'S Chicks, Ghostley Pearl M, WIS weekly at HEATED 3 txdrooms, carpeted living milt* weather road Les Woodford, iwnir; County Trunk V. Bennie Odarooe. own- WWre Rocks, Day old and started up BURKE'S FURNITURE, 3rd It Franklin room, all electric kitchen, washer ana Johnson 8. Murray, auctioneers; Gale- er; AMn Kohner, euctinne«rj Nortt>- to 20 weekl. ROWEKAMP'S HATCH- dryer furnished. Tal. 5083. IN OUR ERY, Lewiston, Minn. Ttl, 57«l. Good Things to Eat 65 way Credit, Inc., clerk. crn Inv. Co., clerk. VOUNGER BUILDING-opposIra post of- FEB . »-Tuej. 11 ».m. 2 miles tt. Feb. lO-Wed. 10:30 a.m. I mllee I.E. DEKALB 20 week old pullets, fully vac- fice. Living room, dinette with pullman of LAZV A BURBANK Russets 20 Ibs. for INDOOR of Lanesboro en blacktop road. Alvin cinated, light controlled, raised on iltt kitchen, bath. Ideal for bachelor or Mindoro. Wis. on County Trunk D. 11.50; cooking and eating apples tl.50 Bakke, ownen Knudsen, Erlckion 1 floors. Available year around. SPELTZ working girl. Available March 1, Tel. Chirles i. Milo Uslby. owners; Kohner per bu. WINONA POTATO MARKET, 4, Schroeder, auctioneers; Community Erickson, auctioneers; Thorp Silei CHICK HATCHERV, Rollingstone, Minn. 3M9. IIS Mkt. SHOW ROOM Loan 8, Fin. Co., clerk. Co., clerk. Tel. 8489-2311. - THIRD E. 157V4-4 rooms and bath, mod- Household Articles 67 ern, oil space heater furnished. Tel. 1964 CHEVROLET ^mm^^^m^mm^mmmmmmmmm^^ssi^^^^^m^^| TERJ^MYdiN tm or ton. I- wi iii i iii ii in i inn t' uwi ty"""" u """i '"m»»'h|"'y"|4,"w 'HWIBBBW ;' THE amazing Blue Lustre will leave -your Irnpala ' " ' EGG FORMULA upholstery beautifully soft and clean. THREE-ROOM' APT., near downtown, 1 A Suggested Price $3.98 Rent electric shampooer, Jl. H. Choate bedroom. Available Mar. 1. SS5 per 4-door hardtop, automatic i j$$fP'i&Mi s !IY \ Our price & Co. month. Stovey refrigerator, heat and air |;j flllllllUltllWiiiT(|iniijftmiimiiiffliMiiii rTO^ / J|B^ furnished. Inquire First transmission , radio, heater, % Lb J2.8J conditioning Having sold my farm I will sell my personal property Machinery and Tools 69 National Bank, Trust Dept. power steering, one owner , | | TED MAIER DRUGS extremely low mileage, still Is at auction on Anlma! Health Center Apartments, Furnished 91 has factory warranty. * Wanted—Livestock 46 THREE LARGE ROOMS, private bath | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8 EARN • and entrance, everything furnished. 71* I Sale Time 10:30 Lunch will be served. W. eth. Tel. M571. $2695 HOLSTEIN SPRINGINO COWS and belt- it A large amount o£ small items so sale must start promptly. . ers wanted, also open and bred heit KINO E. 2tr-ldeal ground floor apt., ers. E. E. Gremelsbach. Inc.. Lewiston, 6% INTEREST completely furnished, suitable for 1 or 1; Located 9 miles south o£ Eau Claire on Hwy. 93 to "HH" Minn. Tel. 41&1. 2 people, private bath, private entrance. then east 3 miles and *<2 mile south on all weather road ~ on your cash or Rent reasonable and heated. Inquire Uf NYSTROM' S I or west of Brackett on "D" to "V" then west 1 mile and LEWISTON LIVESTOCK MARKET E. King. Chrysler - Plymouth A real good auction market for your present equipment M Vi mile south on all weather road. livestock . Dairy cattle on hand all Business Places for Rent 92 Open Friday Nights 1 42 HI-GRADE HOLSTEINS (19 COWS) - 3 springers, •weeks, hogs bougni every day. Trucks or both, 4 recently bred back, 8 just fresh .available Salt Thurs, Tel. 26S7. "There's no end to Argyle's achievements — inasmuch _ | 4 due to freshen May, PRIME DOWNTOWN LOCATION - Re- | and open; 3 Holstein yearling heifers; 3 Holstein 8-month- during tall and office space. Available now. as there's been no beginning." Farm Implements 48 StirnemannSelover Co. "SMOKE OUT" | old heifers; 6 Holstein heifers, 2-3 months old; 6 Holstein 52W 6. 3rd Try a Dotty New* Classified Ad and you'll find there't no end to their I yearling steers; 1 Holstein bull , 13 months; 1 Holstein A Tel. tOii or 23i» profitable result*. Call 3321. HORSE CUTTER — In fair condition, ADV NCE a( Sizzling Deal Today | bull, 6 months; 3 Holstein bulls, 2-3 months. Mostly all 135. Clifford Jenson. Rt. 1. Whalan, I young cows, from artificial breeding, production results Minn. Ttl. 447-2237. Garages for Rent 94 DELIVERY Homes for Sal* 99 I While the I to be posted . These cows are very good replacements Allis Chalmers round baltr. WANT USED GARAGE FOR RENT et 321 Main St. Mostly all vaccinated. This herd State Lab. Gesme, Jolce, lowa. I for any herd . Earl W. DAYS Tel. 4717. HOME-OWNED 8-roorn bungalow, 3 bed- FIRE'S REALLY HOT! DIVIDEND rooms, hot water treating, 3 car oa- 1 Tested by Dr. Drehemel of Fall Creek. Owner will care USED CHAIN SAWS rage. By appointment. Tel. 5S2J. 1962 FALCON for any cattle purchased for 48 hours after sale free of 'H Wright saw, like new. Houses for Rent 95 Buy eligible New Holland charge. '43 Wright saw, A-l condition, U7.50. equipment now, and get a THREE OR FOUR bedroom home, by F utura 1962 BUICK I Strunk chain saw with 20" bar, $25. 14 MILES soulh on Hwy. 61, overlooking owner, 3 baths, carpeted and drapes, I MILKING EQUIPMENT - 2 Sears St. steel hanging Used Simplicity snow blower, demo. check amounting to 6% of Mississippi River. Love ly, modern ceramic tile, double saraoe, screened Radio, heater, 6 Electra 225 | buckets ; 3 Anderson St. steei buckets, floor type : 1 Surge Used Homellle 420 chain saw, 20" your down payment (cash, home. Tel. Dakota £43-3070. porch. Immediate occupancy. Tel. 6059. bar, reconditioned. Perfect. cylinder, automat- i milker pump; other misc. items. both!) Automatic transmission ra- AUTO ELECTRIC SERVICE trade-in or figured HOMES FOR SALE: Ready fo finish ic transmiss i o n , , FEED — 1,500 bales alfalfa and brome liay; 100 2nd 8, Johnson Tel. 5455 Farms, Land, for Sale 98 homes save you thousands of tts In heater full power tu- on a per annum basis from solid beige finish, dio, , , | bales Canary grass hay; 17 ft . alfalfa silage in 14 ft. silo, the time you buy to July 1, building costs. The home of your choice tone finish , real sharp. ONE OF THE BETTER dairy and stock Is erected with cjusranteed materials bucket seats, easy access to silo for loading. 1965. Hwy. 76 and construction labor. Prices trcm MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS terms In this area, located on whitewall tires, PIGS — 7 feeder pigs. between Houston and Winona. 617 acres $3315. No money down, financing avaM- x New Model MAC 15 Light- The sooner you buy, the with 200 acres tillable plus open pasture abl> to qualified buyers. Visit or wi'e V driven only 24,065 1 962 RAMBLER TRUCK — 1954 FORD V-8, 4-speed transmission , \ ton weight 17-inoh bar. $124.95 and wood land. Large modern house, today for complete Information. miles. pickup truck . bigger your check. See us basement barn with 44 stanchions, pens FAHNING HOMES - Waterville, Minn. ti FEITEN IMPL. CO. now for details. and barn cleaner. Milk house, granary, C ustom 1 SADDLES, ETC. — 2 full size saddles; 2 brtdies ; 2 hog houser 56x(0 beef barn, double corn HOMES—FARMS—LOTS-ACREAGES $1595 ! ¦ : martingales: 2 hackarnores; bits, reins, etc. 113 Washington, Winona, Minn. crib and other buildings, Mar. I pos- CORNFORTH REALTY 4-door sedan. 6 cylinder , au- F. A. KRAUSE CO. session. Terms. MINNESOTA LAND «. La Crescent, Minn. Tel. 895 2106 tomatic transmission , heat- | HOUSEHOLD GOODS - Washing machine with lim- AUCTION SERVICE, 1.58 Walnut Sf. it er and pump; 5 oil space heaters; wood range ; wood "BREEZY ACRES" Prompt Service er , a real cream puff. burning heatrola; folding picnic bench; oak library table ; WE ARE PROUD FARMS FARMS FARMS VENABLES !l We buy, we sell, we trade. Real Estate Sales 75 W. 2nd Tel. 8-2711 I complete bar bell set. South on New Hwy. 14-61 Ml DWEST REALTY CO. ' TO ANNOUNCE Osseo, Wis. & Loans Open Friday Evenings |§ MACHINERY — Jamesway silo unloader, complete, Tel. Office 597-365» WlNON A UTO with motor and winch , not in silo, ready to move away ; FRANK WEST AGENCY - i! THE ADDITION Of Rea. 695-1157 RAMBLE/) DODGE Musical Merchandise 70 17S Lafayette Tel. 5i«0 or 4400 / \ ^ 1961 Ford Super Major Diesel tractor, 700 hours, live It? ACRES, 145 open, extremely high power , full weights all around, fluid , purchased new Lloyd Hunger We Service and Stock fertility. 107 acre corn base. Terms. and in like new condition ; 1949 Farmall "M" tractor. (arms, '60 T-BIRD SALES TO OUR SALES STAFF. Needles for All Many olher $50 per acre and up. ir ft Super kit, purchased new in '49 and still has original BOYUM AGENCY White bird, real clean. Open Mon. & Fri. Eve. Lloyd will specialize in the RECORD PLAYERS Complete equipment. |l rear tires, very good , with cultivator; 1949 Farmall "H" Tel. Rushford 864-9381 3rd & Mankato Tel. 8-3649 , new rubber, good condition, Farm Machinery Section of Hordt' s Music Store or All time style leader. 1| tractor with cultivator; Com- RUEBEN OLSON, Utica Family Rambler fort cab to fit IHC, new; Allis WC tractor with 2 row our business. Lloyd has ap- »ll E. Jrd St. Te l. St. Charles M2-37M Popular proximately 10 years sell- Large living room with new cararf- Price | | mounted corn picker ; Ford 7-ft. combine, auger feed , Ing. Three bedrooms, Ihe master ong II ing experience in Allis Chal- Sewing Machines 73 Houses for Sale 99 12'xl5' . Eating area in kitchen, hard- very good condition; New Holland Super "66" baler, pur- mers farm machinery and wood floors throughout. Large screen- $1895 LET'S FACE IT! chased new in '57, excellent; 1961 New Idea hay condi- < USED NECCHI Zlgiag sewing machine BY BUILDER. New 3-hedrooms, large ed porch In back, fenced o*>tlo, yam completely enclosed wilh white fence . |V tioner, like new; Co-op 4-bar side rake on rubber; Case other lines that we sell and In deluxe walnut desk, only $125. WI- kitchen, built-in stove and oven, dining We Advertise Our Prices service. NONA SEWING CO., 531 Hufl St. Tel. area, ceramic tile balh and shower, Full basement, recreation room, oil ^^ » -^ THIS IS THE 7-ft. mower , 3 point hookup, mounted; 44-ft. Little Giant 9348. gas forced air heal, attached 2-car ga- furnace. Under SI9.O00. / || 21-inch all purpose elevator, like new; Gehl hopper blow- , Before you fill your farm race. Tel. 9745 or 8-2592 for appoint- fV _ri0Wt,r>_?s TIME OF YEAR ment. South Central | il er with 9-inch pipe, 3 years old ; 2 Gehl self unloading equipment needs, call Lloyd Specials at the Stores 74 This attractive home has carpeted i ¦iln' ftb iel&b? you want a car you can $ boxes, new in '61; 2 Case 5-ton wide track wagons, like for the best deal in the EW. NEW 3-BEDROOM home. Located living room and inq srci, beautiful kitchen, ceramic brlh wilh shower, || new; Case field chopper with corn and hay head, good , s area. ON HAND NOW—Commodors hand add- only 5-mlnute drive to downtown. If depend upon to start .. . to ing machine. » column list and total, you are looking for choice new orop- recreation room, large attached ga- ^ 40 Years in Winona ^ get there . .. and bring you |l Case field chopper with corn head ; John Deere 2-row direct tubjtractlon, credit balance, com- I erty call us on this one. ABTS AGEN- raoe. Lincoln-Mercury-Falcon § corn planter, with disc Morken' s Service pact site (size of telephone base). Also CY, INC., Realtors, 159 Walnut St. Tel. home again ! , openers , 3 point hookup, new , available In electric model. WINONA | 8-4365 day and night. Purse Pleaser Comet-Fairlane | | 10-ft. John Deere tandem wheel disc, with heavy duty Rushford , Minn Tel. In good west neighborhood. Living . 864-7187 TYPEWRITER SERVICE, HI E. 3rd. | disc and 20-inch disc , new, never been used; 4-bottorn Tef. S-3300. FOUR OR FIVE-bcdroom home, on W. room, large kitchen, 2 nice bedrooms Open Friday Evenings SELECT 6th, corner lot, close fo churches, and large dining room which mloM and Saturday p.m. || 16-inch Ford plow, 3 point hookup, mounted, with auto. schools and stores. Te!. 5159, be used as a 3rd bedroom. New roof , from trip bottoms Stoves, Furnaces, Parts 75 new wiring. Garage. 58,000. , like new, plus miscellaneous items. SPREADER APRONS D. IDEAL HOME for couple. Modestly TERMS: Under $15.00 cash, over that amount V\ RESIDENCE PHONES: ONE OF THE If ; OIL HEATER, 4 or 5 room size with fan; priced at J6.500, • T -floor , 2-bedroom II down , balance in 6 equal monthly installments, home, with shower bath. Nice cup- E. J. Harttrt . . . 1172. HOT VALUES 3% added. New Idea , John Deere, small whire kitchen oil heater; also Mary Lauer . . . 4523 rubbish burner . 168 High Forest. boards. Oil heat. Full lot. Garage, I LES WOODFORD, OWNER space for two cars or workshop. Short Jerry Berthe . . . 8337 7 For A Cold Day Schultz , IHC, Kelly Ryan, Philip A. Baumann . . . 9540 FAMOUS ALADDIN blue flame kerosene walk to bus. Northeast location. ABTS | For A Top Dollar Auction — See Us Before You Sign !! and other models. All at heaters. No smoke, no smell, burns 53 AGENCY, INC., Realtors, 159 Walnul 1963 PLYMOUTH Valiant 2- | | Clerked by Gateway Credit Inc. St. Tel . 8-4365 or atler hours: E. R. hours on I gallon. Also ranges, gas or , straight ;l Johnson & Murray, Auctioneers Erv Schmidt, Rep discount prices. oil heelers . Service end parts. RANGE Clay 8-2737, B lil 21-ebel! 4854 , E. A. door , 6-cylinder Abts 31 84. Oil BURNER CO.. 907 E. Sth St. Tel. drive, low mileage. Car 45 ¦:'v:::0:::S ;£:::iS $; :;? ^^ .-I 747». Adolph Michalowski. like new and priced to BY BUILDER—Beautiful 5 bedrooms, at- 401 Main St. Tel. 2849 CLEAN FEITEN IMPL CO. tached double garage, choice location. sell. 113 Washington Tel 4832 Must be seen to be appreciated. Tel. USED CARS . 8-1059. Lots for Sala IOO 1963 FORD Country Sedan Farm is sold so owner will dispose of the following at Station Wagon , V-8. stand- public LUCKY E. NOT ONE BUT 2 fireplaces lo en|oy;, CHOICE LARGE building lots and acre- one In the living room and one In Ihe ard shift, full guarantee. Hay, Grain, Feed 50 age on blacklop hwy. In Bluff Siding, basement recreation ronm. Ask us to country living and r-nly 5 minutes trom show -you this west location, 1 bed- 1959 FORD 2-door hardtop, Winona. Wida price range. John Mar- EAR CORN for salt. Dean Martin. Tel. rooms. AGENCY, INC., Realtors, ABTS solek. Tel. Fountain City 6B7-6241. V-8, Cruisomatic, color Peterson 175-5198. 13 159 Walnut St. Tel 8-4365 day or night. WALZ red. Sharp ! Priced right. BUICK-OLDSMOBILE-GMC I AUCTION I Hour Special IF YOU WANT io buy, sell or trade Wanted—R«al Estate 102 I! 1 mile west of North Bend on 54, then 2 miles north on Article* for Sale 57 1958 FORD Country Sedan Open Friday Nights Frid ay Only—From be «ure >o see Shank, HOMEMaKER'S V-8, over- County Trunk "V" —OR— 6 miles southeast of Ettrick \ EXCHANGE. 55V E. 3rd. WILL PAY HIGHEST CASK PRICES Station Wagon , $ on "D ," then 1 mile south on "V." Watch for arrows JINGLE BED, used only a month. 1730 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. FOR YOUR CITY PROPERTY drive. A real buy ! Kramer Drive, Apt, D. THREE-BEDROOM home, nowly redec- II off ."V." 30" MONARCH GAS RANGE orated, parfloe, crnlrnlly locjtrt. Tel. "HANK" JEZEWSKI Mobile Hornet, Trailers 111 WHEELCHAIR) MO tt. of walnut lumber. 8-1683. (Winona ' s Only Real Estate Buyerl Mrs. Roy C. Keller, Minneiska . Tel. with features like Tel. »38» and 7M3 P.O. B OK 343 O & J MOTOR CO. Rolllnostone BlBf-Wi Sundays. RENT OR SALE - Trailer! ind camp- •fr Large 25" oven en. LEAHY'S, Buffalo City. Wis. Ttl Wednesday; February 10 ' "Ford Dealer" J \ ELLIOTT'S Crown Imperial Wood Stelna ¦ir Simmer burners RBOB trj Accessories,. Tires, Parts 104 Cochrane 248-25W. come In 24 beautiful custom-mixed col- ¦JV Drip pans St. Charles, Minn. Sale starts at 12:30 P.M. \ ors tor Interior end exterior decorallno . ; PAINT DEPOT, 167 Center St. •fc Convenience outlet I rW^ Auction Salet WIS Homemakers will serve lunch. :< ¦ji- Clock and timer Tel 2349 y BURN MOBIL FUEL OIL and enloy the * CL ^.^ Nelson Tire' s comfort ot automatic personal car«. ft Light U ^ 120 Center St. THE ALVIN KOHNER | 14 HEAD OF CATTLE — 1 Hereford-Guernsey cow, Keep full service - complete burnrr Monarch's heavy quality AUCTIONEER. Cily and itate licensed ft and bonded. 252 Liberty SI. (Corntr || due in March ; 1 Guernsey cow , due in Feb.: 1 Guernsey care. B udget planned and quarantee-ti construction. price. Order today trom JOSWICK'S Bargain Center SHORTAGE E. Sth end Liberty) Tel , 4980. || cow , due in April; l Hereford heifer, due in March ; 1 EAST END COAL & OIL CO.. Ml E. 52(19 Block From School Hereford heifer , bred for fall; 3 Hereford heifers, 8-10 Regular price .95 AUCTION I I I Household. Livestock or Ith. Tel . 3389 . FOUR BEDROOMS months old; 1 Holstein heifer 1 year old; 1 Hereford- SPECIAL .AT 5l(?ry I'tici a hMI home wllh cfir- GREAT BUYS ON: IS OVER! General. LYLE L. BOBO, Rl. 3. Houv , STAUFFER reducing machine, for sn le rift'ud livlnn room. I 1 ) baths, Mo- ton, Winn. Tel. Hokah 894-2)03, Li- || Guernsey heifer, 8 months old; 4 Hereford feeder steers. reasonable ment rl,iy area, k itchen wllh dining We now have a complete cenced &. Bonded. ¦' . Tel. 86J925CII. $144 .95 |l DAIRY EQUIPMENT - 2 Surge milker units; strain- .Ufa, garage, tomer lot. ¦fr Passenger Tires line of: Chevrolets (Impal- SMITH CORONA adding machine, can er; McD. 8-can mlik cooler; steel wheel milk cart; 8 milk Friday Onlv ns, Bel Airs, 6 cylinders, Minnesota % bn attached lo . cash drawer , S5~D; Three Bed room East •fr Truck Tires f \ cans. tr.iall healer for tIMi housi\ kcro'.ene with corpclrd living room* bin ^''' V-8s, standard transmis- Land & Auction Sales r dr fact ait. tt.SO. Tel. I- int. GAJL-ROSS f 23 lo "A,," Ihen USED Hl-r-'l or slnrro , doe-, nol Iwivc lo .uk in for Ihe dct«H-.. Vir j " " Rldfjeland on Hwy. I? pickup cover; 2-scction springtooth ; manure carrier with- be In [jocxJ uinJillon. Iel. MOI, ircond car! HOBB UROS. Molorcyclt- 1 mile W to hi roil d N „ lit farm. WINTER ARTICLES wanted hack must Mmp, 573 E. 9 Chevrolet, t-cyllnder, K/xz'//:^:/ A V \ /h:/:///'/m' < yvr-y-'^^/^i. i. /: / /. i AAmmyt ?! some steel fence posts; IOO electric steel fence posts ; matlc washers, H/9.95, FRANK LILLA Kitchen jack; saw arbor; several wooden fjatcs ; Jl-ft . and 10-ft. and other 'terns. Closed ialmoayt Soiling li settle r-.tntr . Mrv Lester '/ steel giitcs; 50 gallon barrel on stand; David liradley D21 Tel. 0.3701 In Town Oenn , Wlillehnil, WK. Tri, KEY t HBO I Located 4 miles northeast of Diir;ind on Highway 85, HIGHEST PRICES PAID Wr'.l, in «n Are* nf new horrtfv Big Or KEY 8-830&. then 2',s miles eust on County Trunk A and \-t mile direct drive chain saw ; Mall 7 H.P. saw with 4-ft . and STEREO for screp iron, metals, mat. hides. |lviini room v.-ltii t .fli.enuMil window?,, 2-ft blades; two (i-inch skilsaws, 1 Craftsman and I turs end wool! north; or 10 miles west of Mondov i on Highway 10 and •> . BEAUTIFUL MUSIC liy a Motorola CM pt:ted. mrt\1cr brdroom with ori- Used Cars 109 V , | Black A Decker; Airline radio; roofing tar; time clock; stereo hi II. We have the finest selec- VMC h.tlf bnlh, tull tiflth oil center 4 miles north on V to County Trunk A supply ol sets In the Sam Weisman & Sons hftM. double tjnr rtpft, stonu And red- 4 door se- : 10 gallons red barn paint; 2 gallons white outside paint; tion and InroeM INCORPORATED Ol DSMOBILE--1M0 Super Btl " Wlnonn area. Come In or call WINONA wood dim. dan, power -,leerln'|, trover brake*,, TUESDAY , FEBRUARY 9 ; 430 W. 3rd let , StM7 ¦ j whitew ash basin with faucets; four 50-gallon open end FIRE a. POWER CO., 54 E Jnd. Tel. Red Rambler low nilleniie, Al ronrilllon. Prlvnlely Sale Time 1:00 O'clock. Lunch will be served . ; ' j| ' i barrels ; several pulleys; TV antenna; slush scraper: 5045. (Across (rom the new par king owned. Tel . 78/9 . | 21 HEAD OF CATTLE — 2 Guernsey cows , due in ; lot ) Rooms Without Moali 86 r< -".bly p/ilotfd . bit; yfiiii , Mk'irn ¦; i several lug chains ; 11(0 ft , plastic pipe; lots of iron. i' wiTn tat- - at c ufibO'irds (inrf en ting April; 2 Guernsey heifers, 12 mos. .ind open; 2 Guernsey «i() .R3 rti c.i, Hirer tit'drooii^ on lipntr b'vil, . misc. farm tools . glass chicken waterers with plastic I'EUMAGLASS WATUR Mt.AlT- ROOM POR GIRL Willi kilrlmn iirlvllru springer; 1 Guernsey I Gas or LMr-c .ll Ic on, pla-.tlc |c<-lhina 1, tTi. 75v E. eth. Tel. 4|0/. ' Clerked by Gateway Credit Inc. sprint), Morken s Service Hep. by Jos rails, Choice nl wfilln or rliesfniat fin- j \ VIII Ccn '.or St . .Inn Hcikc , Auctioneer Al Lehman, Representative . and Dave Noi gaaid , Melrose, Wisconsin ish. W9. 95 llOII/YSKOWSKI (URNI- THREE-ROOM healed npt , with retrlaer Kuslifm d , Minn. Tel. Ilfi-1-7I«7 TURt, 302 Maiikalu. Open evening. ilor and stove. 352 E. tth. BUZ SAWYER By Roy Crarti WINONA DAILY NEWS | 28 Thursday, February 4, 1965

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker

THE FLINTSTONES By Hanna-Barbera

DAN FLAGG By Don Sherwood

BLONDBE By Chic Young

LI'L ABNER By Al Capp

¦¦ — ¦¦ ¦ ¦ STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff

APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kotiky I^W ^^^^^^^^^ ^^ S^^^^^ ^^ P^^^OV ^HRU FEB. »th_J |

REX MORGAN, M. D. By Dal Curtis COIVI IVIUfSIITV * ill ill l l « ill SILVERPLATE ll ll iff 1/ BY ONEIDA SILVERSMITHS \ \ Vi I ill I If ill ! M Choose from 4 lovely patterns and save now on l\i \l ,\uFim • \ if £// /'# £ * quality Community silverplate ! Most-used pieces \ul *W •) I 3 I ¦ * iliW I w I have extra silver overlay at wear poi nt. Hollow-han- 1.1 If i A I " /'If die knives and deluxe stainless serrated blades. lll l If ^ 1 * i\M co W^k I Wi /if D o 111 II W\ il Ofc-rCi*** SERVICE FOR O Ml ML y ™\AA NOW «fc ^k f\ mmm J^%^S^L^^mlL REDucED^nUHS^^ A^^^Mwj BJHKjv TO ^.# ^^^ ^ ^^ NAMCY By Ernie Bushmiller ^

™ h II j BONUS OFFERI Jnm ^^^l^^mL

M cimo*to: coid Hut r.rk . r#%nc Also available! ^^^^BK ^S ^fmjBm&M \ill If?17 w ¦jflM *l^B ^^^^a^^LIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi ^LSiaa ^alW^^^^l^alllllllll__\\\\\f ' f""r L »d i« B,"i' sp"" - f ll«J nr» ij ^ ^ H l i i h — ¦' ------'¦¦ — — - -- i .— — ,i , --——. -¦— ¦¦¦- ¦ ¦ ¦¦ — . _. _ . .. —- !.'J v II ll ' , n~ i I i 4T I KfaJ^:;zT?i*Tv un' 3 76 -Pc. Service for 12 ^"^^^ MARY WORTH By Saunders and Ernst Ope« Me. *129 t^TSll \ llv ) Be««Ur Sleek J19.50 RegUlarlV M iVrf ^J* rJ\/ [/.. II II Py.//. ¦¦¦! " i I Only "89 •fultniu'tu et OiMUIiUfc

&moiaMOrUNCI 1MI I JEWELERS tzz f ^ /