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12-13-1965 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News
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This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Light Snow Sports Equipment Late Tonight, Tuesday; Sells Thru Temoerature Mild Classified Ads Snow, Rain, Fog Snarl Midwest Randall Sleet Storm in Governor Race, In Dakofas, LeVander to Follow Tonight Wires Down By THE ASSOCIATED By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Randal], 49, now in his second lawyer, is expected to announce 1963. Andersen, in a 1949 special PRESS A blanket of William Randall has announc- formally his candidacy at a election, defeated Randall for a wintry weather term as Ramsey County attor- — snow, rain, ed he seeks the testimonial dinner tonight. sleet and fog — Republican nom- ney in St. Paul, announced bis state Senate seat. stretched across the continent ination for governor, Harold Le- decision at a news conference Still to be heard from is form- Harry P. Strong Jr., GOP today. Vander is expected to do the Saturday. He said he would base er Gov. Elmer L. Andersen, St. chairman of the 4th District, A sleet storm paralyzed same tonight por- , and State Rep. his campaign on his concern Paul, the man ousted by 91 where Randall and Andersen tions of the Dakotas and west- Walter Klaus has bowed out as over "lack of moral values" in votes from the governorship by both live, said he doubts Ander- ern Minnesota, knocking out a candidate for the gubernator- state government. Democratic - Farmer - Labor- telephone communications and will become an active can- ial nomination. LeVander, a South St. Paul ite Gov. Karl F. Rolvaag in sen isolating some communities didate for endorsement by the without power. Republican state convention. Snow, rain and fog snarled "I think Elmer has just wait- traffic and caused many acci- ed too long and I think it's im- dents. portant to have another man in A Greyhound bus en route to the field," Strong said. "I still New Orleans went off a highway feel that Elmer is the strongest during a rainstorm Sund ay near candidate we can field, but in Pensacola , Fla., killing four my opinion it's too late for El- persons and injuring 19. mer." An Air Canada four - engine Randall was told at his news turbo-prop revved its engines conference that some Ramsey just before it was to take off County and 4th District leaders WHO NEEDS A RINK? .. . These seven from O'Hare International Air- ing on the sidewalk. At least two deaths were port in Chicago for Toronto, have indicated a fondness for Toronto Andersen. Randall answered , Canada, girls decided to take ad- traced to icy highways in the province. (CP Ont., Sunday. The plane skidded that the GOP leaders also want vantage of an ice storm that swept southern Photo) off the runway and became a candidate who is running, Ontario during the weekend and went skat- stuck in mud. The 71 passengers and he added, "I am the can- were transferred to another didate who is ready and willing plane. to go." A pilot apparently became Klaus, 53, of Farmington, was lost in the fog near White the first to announce for the en- Man Admits Viet Cong Pull Plains, N.Y., Sunday and was dorsement but he pulled out Sun- killed when his plane crashed. day night. He said he wanted Snow fell on the ice-coated to devote his time to the issue Setting Fire, eastern section of North Dakota of legislative reapportionment. Back to Hideouts and northwestern Minnesota. The Conservative lawmaker SAIGON, South Viet Nam tor, found a guerrilla training was the author of the measure The Northwestern Bell Tele- (AP)—A task force of U.S. Ma- area and some warehouses full phone Co. said at least 20 from which evolved the reappor- ,000 Killing 13 rines and Vietnamese troops, of gray and black cloth, obvi- wire breaks were reported in tionment bill passed by the 1965 teamed against the Viet Cong in ously desiped for manufacture veto- CHICAGO (AP) - "I just South Dakota Sunday. The com- Legislature. Gov. Rolvaag a five-day battle south of Da of the flimsy pajamas many pany said more than 2,000 tele- claiming it gerry- got mad. They shouldn't have ed the bill, Nang, estimated today ground Viet Cong use as uniforms. phone poles had snapped under mandered in favor of Conserva- thrown me out." and air strikes have killed about This was the explanation of The claim about enemy the ice loads. The company sent tive incumbents, and Klaus was 1,000 of the Red enemy. Action 520 workers from four states who Robert Lee Lassiter as be ad- casualties was not broken down to among nine representatives was dwindling. repair the damage. HOPE TO GO UP LATER . . . Astro- The Titan II rocket never was lifted into challenged the veto in count. mitted using a borrowed match Marine patrols, moving as to direct attack, artillery fire nauts Water Schirra, left , and Thomas Staf- space after a mechanical failure brought to touch off a fire Saturday and aerial bombing. Whether it A telephone company spokes- The State Supreme Court upheld through hills in the Que Son sec- man reported 40 per cent of th» ford, disappointment on their faces, leave about the delay. The two had hoped to rendez- (he governor' veto power Nov. night which killed 13 persons would be borne out by body * count remained to be seen exchanges in the Fargo, N.D., launch pad at Cape Kennedy, Fla., after vous in space with Frank Borman and James 26. and injured 22 in a West Side . tavern. Major ground fighting else-1 district were out of order Sun- their flight in Gemini 6 spacecraft was post- Lovell who continue to orbit the earth in day night. poned until at least Reapportionment now Is a Lassiter of Chicago where also ebbed. U.S. briefing Wednesday or Thursday. Gemini 7. (AP Photofax) has , 26, , was deadlocked issue. Rolvaag charged Sunday with 13 counts Ten Dead in officers said the Viet Cong may He said more than 80 North insisted legislative leaders draw of murder. be pulling back to their jungle Dakota towns were affected by up guidelines for a special ses- hideouts to recover. broken lines and poles and that sion, and Conservatives have Lassiter, a laborer for an elec- With partially clearing skies, it would be Wednesday before balked at the demand. tric company, told police that he Minnesota U.S. warplanes resumed raids service is back to normal. Near- New Gemini 6 Try Asserting the reapportionment splashed a gallon of gasoline in on North Viet Nam after a two- ly 300 men were reported work- measure passed by the 1965 the door of the Seeley Club on day lull blamed on bad weather. ing to restore communications. Legislature was "basically West Madison Street, then bor- Air Force F105 Thunderchief Air traffic was stopped at " Klaus said he expects sound, rowed a match to ignite it. Auto Mishaps and F4C Phantom jets blasted Friendship International Airport to have an active part in resolv- Tbe incident that touched off By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS two bridges northeast of Dien in Baltimore for 12 hours Sun- ing the issue. the fire, Lassiter said, was an Ten persons died as the re- Bien Phu, set a five-building day. Shipping in the port of Bal- for Klaus has served in the Legis- argument with Eddie Gaston, 38, Set and only Wednesday military complex in the same timore was paralyzed, lature since L956 and is former sult of Minnesota traffic acci- a a waiter at the club. Witnesses dents over the weekend area aflame and cratered the one of the nine ships due to sail SPACE CENTER, Houston, Jr., sped nine days deep into The Gemini 6 pilots, Navy GOP chairman in the 2nd Dis- , raising said Lassiter had been flourish- the state's 1965 toll to 790, or approaches to another bridge on departed. Highway travel was Tex. K*iiutAliaasWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW ^S.^aVfJ RaaaW aa^V BWaaasaSr^aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ BlUkm V AW-Ma^M *^ *\_ __^r ^ ¦ BSM. *—Ma\\\\\ — \wMMa ^*w3 ^—* a\ *\ *— —tiJ—XmrtxnJ—t—i—a-*—.* V-»
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He wouldn 't wear * good business suit But they have jeweled-lever movement* when he's out whack.ng golf balls, du ck (all working jewels). Precision parts, an un- hu nting, tinkering with his sports car, or breakable mainspring, stainless steel back, puttering in his garden. waterproofing4 and shock-resistance And he shouldn't wear his $100 watch for Sound cheap? these things cither. Not to a watchmaker. Or anybody. What he neexls is a sturdy everyday watch And there's another way for you to judge The Bank That SERVICE Built . . . to knock about in. Inexpensive. But not ourCaravelles-. By the name on the box -and dfr ^^;^ cheap. on the guarantee. Our Caravel le" watches cost only $10.95 That name is: Bulova. to $29.95. Wei I, what are you waiting for? Christmas? A NATIONAL fl^fl^l __ IV lERCHANTS OPEN TILL y? ¦ 9 PM. Q J___M sissi (0^'"waLoiacm:s... ^*^,.,. (wBm MON. -FRI. 1j_gfflEa W-MW M\\W
\ ^0 0^ YOUR IOCAI INDEPENDINT BANK MEMBER FEDERAl D£p0s,T . ^^ CORpORAT|OM *aam *ama *aamaa **m *ammmtmmmaamm *mmmm ^mK *u^*^*mmm ^mm *****mm—m.m—~——-- * ^ _ _ . Area County Low in Catches Part Welfare Cost Poor Writing Of Big Snowstorm Per Person Delays Mail A widespread Midwest storm to Winona in Minnesota and La night with a nighttime low of Winona County ranked well which dumped snow, sleet aad Crosse to Green Bay in Wis- 18 to 25 and a high Tuesday in the state lor 1964 net per rain on Minnesota and Wiscon- consin were reported slippery near 32. capita welfare costs, the coun- At Christmas sin over the weekend brought due to the new snow. Cloudy with scattered light ty welfare board was told "One of the biggest problems Winona its first real snow and a little colder is the Thursday. Only 11 other coun- snowfall Patrol cars on the big inter- postal employes face is of the season today. state highways reported those outlook for Wednesday. ties had lower per capita costs. Olegibl* And more is predicted for to- routes wet but in good winter Temperatures for Winona and Winona County's county cost handwriting. At Christmastime, night and Tuesday when north- driving condition. Highway de- vicinity this week are predicted was $6.92, compared with a when mail volumes skyrocket, west winds bring lower temper- partment officials cautioned to average near normal to 2 to state wide county cost average this can become a major prob- atures. motorists to watch for changing 6 degrees above normal daily of $18.04. State welfare pay- lem ," Acting Postmaster Lam- temperature highs of 24-30 and nighttime AREA conditions as the ments to Winona County aver- HIGHWAYS became dropped. lows of 6 to 13. bert J. Hamerski said today. slippery as the aged $19.58, compared with the snow fell and Precipitation through Satur- statewide average of $38.76, Wil- "The use of ZIP Codes by authorities issued the custom- THE weatherman predicted day is expected to total one- mailers does help speed up th* ary warning to weather tonight liam P. Werner, welfare depart- drivers to exer- mostly cloudy tenth to three-tenths of an inch ment director, told the board. process because often if th» cise extreme caution. and Tuesday with the possibility mostly snow on Tuesday. city and state are unreadable All main roads north of a line of more snow. He saw north- The welfare board discussed the ZIP Code will direct the from Wortbington to Rochester westerly winds diminishing to- TEMPERATURES remained new procedures in budgeting for mail to the post office from above the freezing mark gen- determining allowances for pub- which ._it_wiH- be- delivered. erally in Southeastern Minneso- lic welfare recipients, as re- Clerks in that post office, being ta and Western Wisconsin over quired by new federal legisla^ FOR THE VIET NAM DEAD . . . Army the Army Reserve armory to keep faith more familiar with local resi- Special the weekend. Winona's high tion . The new standards will be Reservists fired three volleys Sunday in mem- dents, may be able to figure A applied in determining allow- with their "brothers" fighting in Viet Nam. Judge OKs temperature Saturday was 42 ory of their more than 1,000 comrades who out the person to whom tho and Sunday 43. Low Sunday ances based on current cost The volleys and invocation were part of a have fallen in Viet Nam fighting. The Rt. retreat ceremony ending the 419th's train- mail should be delivered." Little Girl morning was 36 and this morn- studies, Werner said. Another significant problem ing 31. These same procedures will Rev. D. D. Tierney (background facing offi- ing year. (U.S. Army photo by Capt. William ) is the number of parcels delay- Settlements At noon the temperature had help the welfare board in ad- cer at right urged the officers and men of A. King) ed or actually undelivered be- Dog dropped to 30. ministration of new federal pro- the 419th Civil Affairs Company Sunday at cause of poor wrapping or pack- Misses Since the rain began Friday grams, which will become ef- ing. Acting Postmaster Hamer- A tan Chihuahua female night 1.65 inches fell on Winona fective Jan. 1, 1966. ski urged that special care be In Two Cases dog is strayed , lost or stolen and vicinity. Had the tempera- The welfare department re- taken to see that each package ture been 25 or lower nearly 15 Judge Arnold Hatfield approv- and-10-year-old Terry Stolpa commended to the state reli- Projects is tightly stuffed and that noth- ed two minor hopes she can be found. inches of snow would now be on censing .of two foster homes Anti-Poverty Damage$1,775 ing rattles around inside. settlements—for the ground from the weekend $4,800 and ,000, Terry, daughter of Mr. for care of children and pre- Parcels are generally shipped $4 respectively moisture. — after hearings today in Dis- and Mrs. Donald Stolpa , 451 sented an adoptive study, in bags and often heavier items trict Court. E. King St., is unable to All-time high for Dec. 13 was which was approved by the rest on top of smaller, lighter 56 in 1891 and —21 in 1903 Suggested in Pepin Co. Bruce C. Luehmann, 13, son look for Chiquita the Chihua- was board, recommending an adop- In Three City packages. The postmaster en- of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Lueh- hua. Terry is a cerebral the low. Mean for the past 24 tion be approved. DURAND, Wis. — A steering Wisconsin area including Pepin couraged mailers to be a bit mann, palsy victim, almost com- hours was 37. Normal mean for Werner also reported comple- committee was appointed re- County. cautious and insure all pack- St. Charles, won the $4,- ' 800 settlement from four de- pletely helpless, unable to this time of the year is 21. tion of six cases in juvenile cently to implement projects un- According to Dr. Evelyn Ri- ages. fendants in compensation for an leave her bed. By this time last year five court involving dependency der the Economic Opportunity mel, Menomonie, coordinator, Street Crashes All parcels should be address- inches of snow had fallen. First Act or anti-poverty program in members from this country are eye injury suffered June 4, 1S62, Chiquita has been her close hearings and mental deficiency Police reported today that ed on only one side and should in a St. companion, sleeping within snow was 3 inches on Nov. 20. hearings and the placement of the seven-county northwestern Clem Bignell, Pepin , and Wal- three accidents on Winona have the address written some- Charles City park. ter Harmon, Durand. However, part of the settle- easy reach of the girl's bed. SNOWFALL was general over 13 persons in proper situations streets Sunday caused three in- where on the inside of the pack- her- Suggested projects include: juries ment was won from Dale Lueh- Terry, who cannot feed Minnesota and temperatures to receive psychiatric care se- —- none serious — and age in case the exterior wrap- self unaided, can move her ven of which were voluntary • Establishment of day care $1,775 in property damage ping should come mann, son pf Willard Luehmann, dropped as low as 14 at Inter- centers and/or Project Head off. It is a St. Charles, a relative of the in- hands just enough to touch and six were committed. Somebody The most spectacular mishap good idea to also enclose a list Chiquita and pet her. national Falls and 19 at Be- Start for children. "They must jured boy. midji. Rochester had a low of The department also asked be helped to get out of the pov- occurred Sunday at 2:37 a.m. of the contents. Since Chiquita scooted for appraisals on two parcels at East 5th and Wall streets, Poor packaging and illegible THE SUIT arose when the accidentally- 29 this morning after a Sunday erty cycle," said the Pierce through an of real estate as part of settle- Doesn t Like County nurse. sending one driver to Commu- or incorrect addressing ac- Luehmann boy was struck near opened door Saturday, noth- high of 44 and La Crosse post- ed figures of 34 and 42 for the ment process involving old age nity Memorial Hospital with a counts for about half a million the right eye by a piece of ing has been seen of her. assistance lien claims. • Job counseling and train- neck injury after her vehicle undelivered parcels each year. shingle discharged from a trap Terry has been depressed same times. Christmas ing for women with less than had been knocked into a home shooting device in the public and has shown little appe- Precipitation at Rochester high school education and no at 901 E. 5th St. park. He was playing with tite, her family notes. They measured .08 and La Crosse .62. Vandals believed to be juve- special skills, particularly wi- friends, including Dale Lueh- are offering a reward for It was snowing at Minot and niles are up to their Christmas- dows or women who must sup- WILLIAM R. Ebert, 19, 963 mann, Rollie Smith, son of Ir- anyone who finds and re- Fargo, N.D. Youth Shoots time tricks again, Police Chief port the home. E. 5th St., was driving east on Trucker Fined McCabe reported. ¦ving Smith, and Richard Ver- turns Chiquita. A storm center moving across James W. • Off-season employment for 5th Street when he collided with non, son of Wilson Vernon, when WISCONSIN today brought Four Winona householders re- marginal farmers involving a car driven south on Wall the mishap occurred. snow, rain and a mixture of Himself in Hand ported over the weekend that guidance, education and jobs. Street by Carol A. Becker, 22, By Both Police, Luehmann sued the city of St. the two, and created highway light bulbs had been removed George Oncken, Pepin County 878 E. Broadway. The Becker Charles and the Smith and Ver- hazards. from their outdoor Christmas agent, said, "We need training car was driven into the home non boys. Dale Luehmann and GOP Charges Light snow was falling at 8 Accidentally displays. in chain saw operation, engine of John R. Grochowski, knock- Highway Patrol St. Charles Junior Chamber of a.m. in the Superior area. Else- Chief McCabe also reported maintenance, wood pulp cutting, ing off some siding shingles, Commerce (which A Winona youth accidentally the holing of a residential win- fertilizer uses, cement work, mangling a small evergreen Two defendants pleaded guil- sponsored where in the state skies were ty today in municipal court the trap shooting device) were shot himself in the hand Satur- dow, app arently by an air rifle road building and other fields and tearing up some lawn. to cloudy. day afternoon at his home but traffic charges and paid fines brought in by Vernon as third- Rolvaag Should pellet, and the finding of two that will let persons continue to Mrs. Becker was rushed to party defendants. In mid-morning, the State was treated for the injury and bicycle tires. live where they are but with imposed by Judge John D. Mc- released from Community Memorial Hospital Gill. The settlement approved to- Highway Department reported Community Mem- Mrs. Leonard Erdmanczyk, better wage opportunities." that roads in the northern quar- orial Hospital police reported by ambulance for X-rays. Dam- Nerval B. Swenson, Gales- day by Judge Hatfield orders 1116 W. Mark St., reported that • Extension of library serv- age to the left front and right vllle, Wis., pleaded guilty the following ter of the state were generally today. ices from home to school and to contributions to Call Session 21 colored light bulbs were tak- side of the Becker car was $400, charges of driving with a load the $4,800 total: City of St. slippery due to a mixture of Donald Husman, 561 Garfield en off an outdoor Christmas tree establishment of home library MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Gov. St., to the front and left side of the projecting 7 feet, 2 inches, Charles, $2,300; Rollie Smith ram and snow. was cleaning a .22-caliber in their yard. Earl Holte kits which would be rotated dur- Karl F. Rolvaag has an obliga- rifle Saturday afternoon when , 371 Ebert vehicle, $300. (with no flags), driving over- -and Dale Luehmann, $2,300; Bain and fog covered much of "W. Mill St., reported 18 bulbs ing the year and year after Ebert's access to Wall Street width by .9 'feet,.5'inches (with- tion to call a special legislative the state during the weekend the mishap occurred. Husman year. Rollie Smith and Dale Lueh- session to consider reapportion- missing from bis Christmas dis- on 5th Street was controlled hy out a permit) and driving with mann, $2,300; Richard but the rain changed to snow set down the rifle on its butt play. More elementary school Vernon, ment, say a group of Minnesota while keeping bis • a stop sign. Patrolmen Edward a loose load. He paid $15 fines $100, and the St. Charles Junior in most northern sections Sun- left hand over guidance and work with homes E. Matthees and Joseph F. Republican leaders. the muzzle according to police. The chief also noted reports on each guilty plea as the alter- Chamber of Commerce, $100. day afternoon and brought a from Richard Rains, 509 Wilson so as to clear up early develop- Bronk investigated. Damage to native to a total of 15 days In a statement issued Satur- A shell in the chamber dis- ing deficiencies, emotional, phy- Luehmann testified that his day, cover of fresh snow to those St., of nine bulbs missing, and Grochowski's property was esti- in jail. eon's vision is now normal with the group- said Rolvaag's charged, and the bullet pierced sical, reading, etc., which might Minnesota areas. Wausau, Eau Claire, Husman' from Ed Peplinski, 377 W. How- mated at $50. Highway Patrol corrective lenses. No permanent demand for pre-session "guide- s hand between the result in dropouts. made the charges lines Park Falls and Superior all re- second and third fingers without ard St., of two bulbs missing. in the first loss of vision occurred, he told " is a violation of constitu- Provisions for extended A TWO-CAR collision at 5th two instances Thursday at tional principles. ported one inch of new snow touching 20 Ho uston Correction Ed Drury Is project sus- Christm as. Ohioan Refused PLAINVIEW MOY CITKD tained deep wounds on both was having been started 100 years schools from 50 states, the Dis- The goal is 200 lights Pcrlt said a St. Paul man trict of Columbia and American On Friday 's farm page the chairman. PLAINVIEW , Minn . - A legs and about the body as Friday near Prescott, ago. The building, no longer glowing over the intersection by arrested preparatory schools abroad. current presidency of the Hous- Lawyer Before young Plainview lad , James most of his clothing was torn Wis., on U.S. Highway 10. Com- suitable in the current program ton County Agricultural Society Christmas. Petty , John with the other finalists son of Mr. and Mrs. off. He is undergoing skin graft- mission agents seized from his to increase its collection and was erroneously attributed to " Richard Petty, has been honor- ing at St. Marys Hospital, Ro- expand its services will be re- was recommended for a scholar- DURAN D TAx sat»2,326 Test Loses Plea car 44 bottles of liquor worth , the late William J. Daley, who - Total tuxes ed with a junior engineer certi- chester. subject to a placed by a new multi-level ship, He is the son of Mr . and DURAND, Wis- WASHINGTON (AP) - The $180. Violators arc Mrs. James Mulligan. His Eng- was president when he died property in Durand in 1966 ficate by Toy Tinkers, division jail term of 90 days, a $100 fine, structure containing galleries on Supreme Court refused today to of A. G. Spalding k Bros., Inc. lish teachers have been Harry this year. Nenl Feuerhelm, will be $302,32H.3:i. This will In- and loss of the liquor. and an outdoor exhibit area in Caledonia ; hear an Ohio man who claims James received the award for Santa at Plainview the vicinity of the Luther Col- Schlieff and Miss Judy Pe ter- , is the 1966 Houston clude a $25,1131.15 city tax levy constitutional rights were vi- Peril's office has brewed a County president. and state his creating an original model from ege campus son. $117 533.50 county olated when police rejected his PLAINVIEW Minn. - Santa fancy enforcement scheme: ¦ • $1611,961.68 local a Toy Tinker construction set. levy, nnd recjuest to consult a lawyer be- The model automatically will Claus wilt bo in Plainview Sat- Commission agents will check school levy . fore consenting to a drunk test be entered In a nationwide com- urday beginning at 2 p.m. certain Wisconsin border area ACCIDENT CORRECTION KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS — purchases by It was incorrectly reported POST OVFMlNf i The case oi John J, Diet z petition to find the most Imagin- There'll be free shows for chil- stores for large WABASHA pojflons in Minnesota cars. Then Sunday that the driver was Reg. Meeting Tuesday, Dec. 14 WABASHA , Minn. - Appli- against the City of Toledo would ative creation of the year. First dren at I and 2:30 p.m. Stores (8 p.m, (harp In the cluhhoute.) court an op- , the agents will radio the license killed in a truln-car collision nt cations are being accepted at have given the high Erlze will be a $1 000 Savings will be ooi-n Friday, Saturday # Dlnnar Meeting 6:30 p.m, office for sub- portunity to further amplify Its ond and an expense-paid trip and Dec. 20 through 23 until numbers to commission person- West Howard and Minnesota the Wabasha post in cars on the Minnesota streets Dec. 3, It was the pas- I DON NYSETH, Grand Knight clerk-cnrrler. The posi- interpretation «f the 0th Amend- to New York for the winner and 9 p .m. and close at 5 p.m. nel stitute ment right to counsel. his or her parents. Christmas Eve. side. senger who died. tion will pay $2 67 on hour. M>, semblyman John Radcliffe, Sponsors of Krebiozen say it is There's a French word they call Strum, asking the party to go but the gov- SELECTIONS 107-pound brunette doll is going , an anticancer drug, me which means, I suppose on record in support of Presi- contends it is worth- to be after she becomes world ' " ernment 'spoiled brat. dent Johnsons action in Viet less. Dr. Ivy asked that the on Scopiton* famous with the release of the 21 last July 31, 4 " Geraldine, Nam, was passed unanimously. trial be halted until effective- film "Dr Zhiyago , says- 's religious, she be- "What 's your answer when she ness of Krebiozen can be tested lieves in God but not debutan- MUSIC STUDY CLUB in a case in another court people repeat the charge that her WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special ) 's a Communist?" I teeism. she never saw your father grandfather Eugene O'Neill. . . -The Whitehall Music Study high school Monday evening. LANG'S Bar asked Geraldine, who had just program and she thinks Marlon Brando, Club will meet at tbe home of There will be a short 179 EAST THIRD ST. arrived from Paris and was on Tom Courtney, Mrs. Willie Johnson following of group singing and a gift ex- her way to Hollywood. Spencer Tracy, Peter 0'Toole and Omar Sharif the Christmas concert at the change. "I say 'Ask him'!" Geraldine . "I don't know . But the are her favorite male actors laughed. "Still got that crush on way he lives proves he isn 't a Communist ... a huge house Sharif , eh?" HH ^ PRE-CHRISTMA.S In Switzerland ... A Fine Com- "Yes ," she laughed. , munist!" "What do you plan to do on your nights in New York?" "Omar Sharif told me that " your father saw you in a ballet "Watch television and said you were lousy, " I EXPLAINING this wild plan, said. she added , "I've been hearing ECIAL , SP "First of all Omar Sharif about the wonderful American ! 't KB! doesn know my father , and television that lasts all night. Ba BB B SHOP 9 to 9 EACH DAY second daddy's never seen me I j r In France it's on one channel m anything ! ' and off at 11 . . . ' . " "Sharif also told me you get Geraldine, one of the nic- i- a | crushes on bullfighters , etc. " est, most naive, most attractive 8 ' — | GIRLS' 7-14 I've "YES. HE WAS right on and delightful celebrities ^^^^ had even a wilder that, I do for about a week. It's interviewed, I' plan for the TV evening. usually on people ve never chewing gum had met. As soon as I meet them, After the lost its flavor, she said, fear- DRCSSJES the crush is over." I lessly, that she was going to j j "He also said you probably , 4fkOI Waldorf kitchen had a crush on him." have, from the a large hamburger. "Well, yes, I had sort of a LAUGH: crush on Omar ." TODAY'S BEST ¦ actors interested "You've been called beatnik , With so many II :< ¦ ¦ in political office, Jan Murray WATCHING THE 'CHOO-CHOOS' .. . 953 W. 5th St., Sunday afternoon. A record fll kook. . ." second terms are "Well, beatniks have long wonders if ; Charles B. Silsbee of the Winona "O" Gauge number - L.019 — attended and $100.89 -was called re-runs. I Model Railroad Society is at the controls contributed to the Goodfellows. From left, WISH I'D SAID THAT: Many for a group of youngsters visiting the layout Silsbee, Gary Boettcher, Arthur Stirneman WINONA DAILY NEWS ' ' roll favorite is an SKIRTS | a rock n j above Holden's Drug & Department Store, and Mark Erdmanczyk. (Daily News photo) MONDAY. DECEMBER 13, 1»M untidy fellow making a tidy U r ~"~ I ll VOLUME 111), NO. J» sum. REMEMBERED QUOTE : "A | •> I ubll»ri«d dally txc«pt Saturday and Hol- HOW who rises Police Break '3" idays by Republican .and Herald Publish- good speaker is one NASON ON EDUCATION I ^ ing Company. Ml Franklin St., Winona, to the occasion — and then Minn. promplty sits down. " — 0. A. Up Melee at SUBSCRIPTION RATES Battista. Slnglst Copy — 10c Daily, 15c Sunday EARL'S PEARLS: L. S. Mc- Movie Theater Dallvarssd by Cerrlir—Par Weak » cent* Candless reports on a new drink H Wteka SI275 33 wttki 123.59 Holiday Effort j MINNEAPOLIS OB - Some no called The Ugly Girl. It has 15 squad cars and 30 patrolmen DISCOUNTi -< By mill strictly In advance* piper atop- chaser. pad on expiration date. responded to the alarm when a Robert Merrill , recently on melee broke out Sunday in a In Fillmore, Houston, Olmsted, Winona, the Steve Lawrence TV'er, not- !i Wabasna. Buffalo, JacKson, Pepin and Lake Street movie theater. on n || ITALIAN j Trempealeau counties and armed forces ed he'd almost became a base- Can Aid Pupil Trouble started when a thea- 0na I personnel In tha continental United Slates, By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed.D. The solution ball player: "Just think - I for the faltering ter employe, an off-duty police- or ovaratai with APO or FPO eddraisai: University of S. Calif. student is relatively simple but 1 yaer .. .. SI1.M 3 montne . 13.50 might have been with the Mets, man, halted two youths engaged '< " | KNIT j « months ... fe.50 I month .....11.35 instead of the Met" . . . That's The Christmas holidays are a does involve some "work. He can put in a jostling match. Others in All othar subscriptions! earl, brother. welcome breather for college himself in a solid position oy making two the audience hooted the officer 1 montts .... tl .10 3 month* ....*OS and high, school students. systematic and some threw rocks. • months .... tt.00 1 year 115.00 Mid-term examinations and drives. swtMK$ Management halted the movie land Chang* el addraii, rtotleei, undeliv- their aftermath have drained First, he must review the ered copies, subscription orders and other Hong Kong and police officers cleared the I S 100% Acrylic 1 their energy. The students need course from the fi i beginning, CHRISTMAS mall Items to Wlnorva Daily New*. P.O. theater of patrons, mostly teen- Box 70, Winona, Minn.. 55987. ! Coolers May Be to recuperate and get set for striving for complete under- agers The melee continued out- Second cleu poitae* paid at Winona, the final spurt that ends the se- standing of the concepts pre- side where windows of two near- Minn. Contaminated mester. sented. At the same time he by stores were broken and head- For the student who has done must get the best possible grasp lights on a parked car smashed. NEW YORK (AP) — Health well, who has the course mate- of the overall organization of An 18-year-old youth was tak- | rial fairly well organized in his ELECTRICS authorities in nearly a score of the course. »s en into custody. | | s states are looking into reports mind, the holidays are- happy B that plastic drink coolers im- days spent with family and EIGHT OR 10 hour*- of this aoac ported from Hong Kong contain friends — a time of relaxation type of study will do wonders Kenaaa Entertains NITBS: 7:00-9:10 contaminated water. and a time to build up mental in bringing order out of the *S«-»5<-»0* Sales of the coolers have been and physical strength. This chaos that may exist in his James Kenaga, Chicago fresh- M IW mind. These eight or ten hours S D,,I banned in six cities and three break in the rush of informa- man at St. Mary 's College, en- l "^™ •¦* «|0IB ! ENDS TUES, I states. Many civic groups sell- tion is just what is needed. can be spent over two or three tertained with magic at St. Jo- M^J 7 I i ' ing the novelties to raise funds But for the student who days or possibly take up only seph's Orphanage Saturday. spent the weekend getting them has not succeeded well, the hol- one day of the vacation. back from customers. iday break in classes does not The second step which must he can keep it organized. For- eliminate the worry. This stu- necessarily follow the first is to tified with outlines either writ- Discovery of germ-laden cool- dent, should spend at least part read and skim ahead to the end ten or mental, he will gain the ^^ ers in Arkansas set off the flur- of his vacation period doing of tlie course. In some cases, maximum benefit from the re- aa*»»aa*>>a^a»>a*>aa>a*ai ¦aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaajaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaafl%afH af l_ Y M M L > ___ ry across the nation. Arkansas something about his plight. an actual written sentence out- views presented in the class- 7t ^^ \ authorities quarantined S0O line of the remaining chapters room. His own final efforts and S ^^E^M-gg***. *•" *•" _M l ff M i boxes of the novelty sets. THIS IS THE very point in to be covered will be necessary preparation for the semester * " No illness has been traced to the semester's work where a if he is to follow class discus- examinations will be more ef- the novelty coolers, said a little well-directed effort can sions. fective. spokesman for the communica- produce startling results. If he With this background of read- Two or three days' work is a ble diseases center of the U.S. does nothing during the vaca- iness, he can enter the last small price to pay for the high- Public Health Service in Atlan- tion period, the student will re- month of work confident that er grades achieved. JWlMlWW)WMBaJWi«lWWlW^W«(JJWl«j«»WW j ta. enter his classes in January I The product Is i water-filled even less prepared for the wind- plastic ball or cube designed to up in each course than he was MEN S IMPORTED | STARTS WED. chill drinks. at the start of the vacation . | STUDENTS' AND MEN'S ]
" CARDIGAN V ciFTS THE WHOLE FAMILY *? CDADT tMITES: TiOa-MMSt-WIt CAN SWEATERS , ENJOY! A j j ^ KHaiaK*#^ ^r^As*l^*r rUK ¦WVeaaaaHaH. ^ A WeV'VV' ^1 I ENDS TUES. ^ "WILD ON THE BEACH" AT 7:05-« :SO i ;- $ MiiKiy 5 ! Ea»y-Care , ' :' ' Fabrics j ' flaaaaa ^faKv^aaaa*V' 9aam ^BBaaaaaaaaaaVKnKfleas ' I I i -- **~~'*'"~ ft l)WWa»W*«»WW3rW51«M)«WW!m * mac mr ii^H WtthJHW^Miro^MyMwraJfflwJB . /«C * ' i- ')>'"- ^VJitlW i hot*»m tttJOBaaaB " tt VMOi ' satmala/KftfraWtsi ML^Bfmllla^^aaaaaai^aat.X\ ¦ &* ^BW^Jf* fafQLWM- S ONE "REWARD" at 1:10 Only ^ *^ JL ^^^^^^kBk m HHH __ ^\f__WU_ t___ __t t____m__, SMUCKERS PRESERVES SKIRTS 1 -JK BBP?y I V 7B | Now ! _W WE ALSO MAKE UP Mrs. Stevens i THE PAUL HARVEY NEWS j FRUIT BOXES Chocolates $ s-u* Tin 77 THREE TIMES EVERY DAY i and BASKETS p^gui* fc 8 :55 A.M., 12 NOON, 5:00 P.M. < 1 Mrs. Stevens Best 1 2 Luxury Assortment $4.77 I R«iular $3,99 Values P i I to ! u/j_^__Wm_^ ^ Glazed Fruit KWNO -^/^fpPfii ll n *? Assortment AT 12-3 -OH! I _/i, ^^^ifbiodai On Wicker Tiny EAST K* ¦Ev2CiHMHfr^#!WliilUT^W iSlM^^ H VDcc THIRD anMWmffMMNmKMMM MMMMmmM^MMMOTM * on DEAR ABBY: Christmastime . . . Anytime Count Penney' £ |^ k s For First Quality Always % Neighbors ' Didn t K ALWAYS RRST QUAtJlY * \\\v ¦ v f* 1 ^^Jj I I ^^ M-M\\M-MM\M\* \\\ M ^^ Bring Chicken By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN saj ajaj aja_^^aj .jaj ajaj ^^^a»jaj a^a>^ ; DEAR ABBY: Recently w had a death in our family. ^^aj aj ^ a^K Kind friends and neighbors carried in much-appreciated food. f. ^^^^^^^^^ ¦¦ But, Abby, WHY don't friends and neighbors get together HBBHMPPH # and plan what they should take? After all, who can use 15 cakes, 10 pies, 12 dozen cookies and 8 bowls of jello salad? ISo one brought what we really needed, like chicken or meat and potatoes. With seven carloads of out-f-town relatives to feed, we finally had to send out to a drive-in for sandwiches. Don t get the idea we didn't appreciate folks sending in what kW\-. they did, but at a time like that we would have appreciated f: /HH"™' 1\ a^aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa^aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa^aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa/^|pB38 ^J^\ I V &- * _f V. J V ^ ' ™' T L , \^J^^ j fl some meat and potatoes a lot more. HAPPENED TO ME ^ DEAR HAPPENED : Only if some- one assumes the responsibility of taking charge of the food (a dubious honor for which few will volunteer), can this prob- lem be solved. In the absence of such a coordinator, each friend and neighbor will naturally bring whatever he finds easiest to prepare and within his bud- get. If one inquires, "What shall I bring?" suggestions can be made. Other- wise, the recipients should accept gra- ciously whatever is brought and pro- vide whatever is needed, but lacking, ABBY themselves. DEAR ABBY: I am sure that "CONFIDENTIAL TO PERPLEXED" was meant for me. Someone apparently wrote *""^^"^ m ""'t K J -^^a^s«aaaaa»W^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^i»aaaaaa *»»w— _f ^tt ^ jfcfcv,'' '- ' '¦ "" " and asked if sending gifts with the price tags and sales *T _.^a#**^ ^ Jf- W I ^^ . .^aaaaaaaaCu^jaaaaB fe. — J M ^___K&a *MMMt' -t-f ' ^ \ W4*\ slips enclosed was a "new-fangled custom" and if it was proper. Your answer to both questions was a flat NO! I don't ordinarily send my gifts that way, Abby, but I have a niece who has exchanged every gift I have ever sent her, so why should I bother to gift-wrap them? The price is no secret because when she goes to exchange the gift, she finds out how much I paid for it anyway. If she's offended, it's just too bad. Don't ask me why I continue to send her gifts. I feel compelled to because her mother -was so good to me, but _»/ that's another story. Since you printed her complaint , I hope \ lllPPiB^;Pw[ ilSPHK ' WASH 'N WEAR WASH 'N WEAR $ /^ WAS H 'N WEAR NO-IRON NECESSARY you will print my explanation. NO GIFT-WRAPPING I- 111 iPiiilB^ Hi|t»ul I^ LT Y a*—-*- -*-^ # DEAR NO: Since you feel "compelled" to give your ' STR,PED DACRON niece gifts, why don't you save your energy and send COMBED F0RTREL § her a gift certificate? * l l l l l ^ WlLW tiapr COTTON DEAR ABBY; I sure got a bang out of your telling that ft. ' I 7 _W_IY WHITEJ$L ' ««™. POLYESTER 1 man who didn't know the color of his wife's eyes to check her _W_$F * r/M COTTON I driver's license. But I don't know why a wife should get t: Sj r Button-down collar, white, ox- pima cotton oxford cloth True -wash 'n wear short point, 'if upset because her husband didn't know the color of her LMsSk > i ^hon ford cloth. 14%-16V4. short point, button-down. 14*- pointyollarycmvertible wbite. 13.17, « eyes when he probably didn't even know the color of his f f__\_\ OWN eyes. \' I am a driver's license examiner for the State of Okla- " MamMrxMm .^aaaav ^aa. ^a_ Maaa'a <1» homa, and I have seen men, while filling out their applica- tions for a license, yell, "Hey, Mabel, what color are my eyes?" I have also seen people check their -wallets for other licenses to see what was put down for the color of their 398 eyes. And in our applications, under EYES, someone "wrote, If -MMWMW 2 ^^ 5 « m I "TWO." Someone else wrote "20/20" and one person even // *M\ 3" JB; ? MM * wrote "BLEW." E. E. IN SHAWNEE CONFIDENTIAL TO MRS. P. T. R. JN HARTFORD: There is hardly a more earnest champion of teen-age morality than this writer, and because I published a letter signed "ST. LOUIS" without comment, I regret that it gave the IC ALWAYS THE RIGHT CHOICE ..A PENNEY GIFT CE^ impression that I was all for pre-marital sleeping together. You are right. I should have blasted the writer. Troubled? Write to ABBY, Box 69700, Los Angeles. Calif. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed MEN'$ MEN'S MEN'S envelope. \ MENS GERMAN MEN'S J um,TY =,,, BOXED ' Belen at the same time and ar- RFI TC JADE-EAST 1 rived at Manzano on schedule, \ BELTS STE,NScmNC TIETIES 8 Peace Corps and a third group crossed from * JEWELRY _s Manzano to Belen without inci- IV KITS Redi-tie, four-in-hand. « Authentic beer steins. Color- Gift sets, tie bars, J9 dent. I Large assortment. . ^ Gift ge(s> co,ogne> : made ta West Germany ^^ assortment. Workers Lost The hike is part of a 14-week Cowhide leather. ™ ' - L^e tie tacs, key chain, | Peace Corps training period of | ^ ^^ ^ | the University of New Mexico ^ ^^ in Albuquerque. A university In New Mexico spokesman said the trainees 5 95 95 98 50 95 50 50 MANZANO, N.M. (AP) - An were in their ninth week of |5o M <> extensive search continued to- training. 2 3 -6 3 1 1 1 -3 2 -6 1 day for eight Peace Corps train- | ees missing on a four-day hike They were identified as Mike through the rugged Manzano Mitchell, 2L, the Bronx, New Mountains in central New Mex- York City; Tom Jacobs, 23, Co- ico. lumbus, Ohio; Bruce McCrack- About 40 persons participated en, 25, Wellesley Hills, Mass.; In the search, which started aft- Linda West, 28, Hurst, Tex.; er the group failed to arrive at Jane Whitmore, 25, Manhasset, Manzano Sunday on a 30-mile N.Y.; Judy Johnson, 21, trek which began at Belen Pleasantville, N.Y.; Sue Selbin, Thursday morning. 22, St. Paul, Minn.; and Bill Another group of trainees left Pastreich, 24, New York City .
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Premier Uses A LOT OF MONEY -was made — and Angry Cry for doubtless a lot lost — in the wide swings of prices in heavy trading on the stock ex- U.S. Reporter changes last week. Who made it? And Hy D.WH) LAWRENCE how? And why did some others get caught? Martin s Head WASHINGTON — Any reporter who goes By MAKQUIS GUILDS vSoine brokers will admit that much of all the way to Moscow and gets an opportun- WASHINGTON - As though the air "were not suffi- the sharp drop in prices Monday morning ity to interview the Soviet premier is to be ciently charged with political tension, Chairman Wrlllam and the even larger advance last Tuesday envied by members of his profession. But what McChesney Martin's action in casting the deciding vote was artificial — in the sense that st ock the head of the Communist government said for the higher interest rates ordered by the Federal Reserve the stock marke market technicalities operated rather than this week to .lames Rcslon of the New York Board adds a new element. The reaction of , ' it plain this was a wel- any reasoned appraisal of the actual val- Times — as revealed in a transcript subse- narticularlv in bank stocks, makes quently authori7,erJ for publication — can only ues of the stocks involved or of news come Christmas present for bring dismay and disappointment to the Amer- . events. the financial community Good Health ican people. When Congress comes To Your This view is based on belief that profes- For Aleksei N. Kosygin used the occasion back there will be angry sional traders know hOM- to take advant- to transmit to an American audience a bitter cries for Martin's head. The screams age of such wide swings — thereby tend- denunciation of the government of the United most impassioned Answers come from ing to exaggerate and p rolong them. They States as an aggressor and as an evil force of outrage have eager lo make war throughout tlie world. those who still speak for move quickly to make a fast buck. And These tirades from government spokesmen the Populist South and they have automatic devices for cutting To Your have been issued before by the Kremlin, and Southwest , notably Sen. Rus- short a loss when an unexpected news similar criticisms arc broadcast daily by Mos- sell Long of Louisiana and event startles 1he general public. cow over the radio and through press Rep. Wright Patman of Tex- Questions statements reachi ng far and wide What Pre- as. Theirs is the loud echo SUCH AN EVENT was the announce- . Dear Dr. Molner: I mier Kosygin has just said i.s not so impor- of William Jennings Bryan ment that the federal Reserve Board was tant in itself , but does he really believe what — the "Cross of Gold," the have a terrible pain in Wall raising basic interest rates to slave off the he says'.' "Conspiracy of the my right hip, and down threat of inflation. Quickly came word Street Bankers," the farmer the fat part of nay leg. from the Texas White House that President WHAT TO BK SUNK, motivates tlie Soviet and the working man caught 1 have used Itotiments Johnson disapproved because, in his view, mind? What are the influences that persuade in the money squeeze. dearer money might upset the un- as high as official as Mr. Kosygin to disre- It so happens that both but still lave/the pain. gard all the facts of life and the truths of precedented five-year upturn ot the econ- Long and Patman are pow- What can I /do?—MRS. the modern worl d and imagine that he can direct an omy. erfully placed to M. D. V paint a picture of America as an aggressor? attack on the Federal Re- Many stockowners were uncertain what The record , on the contrary, clearly shows serve stockade in the best It sounds like sciatica — might come of all this — -particularl y what countless acts of aggression committed by the tradition of the Old West. involvement of the sciatic Communists to which the United States and its Long has said he intends might happen to stock prices still near nerve. In such a case lini- allies have properly risen in defense. Was to take the chairmanship of their record highs. Many apparently de- America the aggressor when it came to the aid the" Senate Finance Com- ment will not help. The cided to sell, get out of the market wit h of the Itu.ssian people in 1917 and again in mittee left vacant by the nerve may be inflamed, or their profits, and see what would happen. 1941? retirement of that gracious irritated, or pinched. Con- financial Into this situation the pros could move .Some allowance has to be made, of course, guardian of the sult a doctor so he can for what is considered political ideology — the establishment, Harry F. quickly. By dumping stocks or selling short the exact cause and reliance by .Soviet officials on propaganda and Byrd. At the same time, identify they could force the faltering market still distortion as a means of influencing public opin- Long means to keep his post prescribe treatment. lower for a time — and fast. Then they ion. The Russian people themselves are not as majority whip, second in Mrs. M. L.: You are close could buy back fast; at the bottom and pick getting the truth , as the Communist govern- importance only to that of up some quick profits. ment keeps thern from learning many things majority leader. to 50. Your hysterectomy going on inside and outside their country. Where was seven years ago. Peo- THE EXCHANGES have specialist, as- AS CHAIRMAN of the news is suppressed or censored, public opinion le at this age tend to put signed to keep such a market from getting House Banking and Curren- p can be inducted to accept incredible reports. out of hand. But apparently some couldn't cy Committee, Patman has on weight even when they halt the sharp drop In heavy trading early THIS CORKKSI'ONDENT lias often won- THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND kept up a constant harassing have not had a hysterect- " "tight Tuesday morning. dered if it would be ' possible ' some day for a attack on Martin and omy. When needed tbe op- money." As the unadult- reporter to interview the Soviet premier, or eration is very helpful , but Also they were fighting a stock market anyone in high office in Moscow, on a single erated voice of Populism, don't make it an excuse for technicality. Tlie sharp drop set off stop- subject — morality. What do the Communists he is as loathed by the pow- bank- other problems. loss orders. These instruct the broker to really think is moral or unmoral ? How do they GOP to Ask Equal Time ers that be in oil and ing in his native Texas as sell a stock if it falls below a certain price. arrive at their standard for judging what is Note to H.A.: Sodium he is in Wall Street. right and what is wrong"? How would they de- (-whether Such selling poured another large volume But because of his wide- in ordinary salt fine the word '"freedom" for the individual? or other forms) is present of stocks orito the market and aggravated ranging knowledge of the And do they honestly believe there is no su- . naturally in so many foods the decline. On State of Union Message economy and how it oper- preme being watching oer the destinies of man- entire avoidance is ates — he was for many that its By DREW PEARSON ' The reversal started within a few hours. kind? Goldwater s disastrous more attention to the p arty years professor of econo- doubtlessly impossible. In A government composed of men who have Some of the buying was by pros who saw WASHINGTON - The Re- speech that "extremism is line than to production mics at the Univeristy of fact, a certain amount of so- power and have the physical means of for bargains. Som e by traders who previous- seized no sin" and the refusal of problems. Chicago — the opposition of dium is necessary maintaining themselves in office can be an ab- publican coordinating com- ly had sold short and saw a grand chance Sen . Paul Douglas of Illi- health. For practical pur- monarchy. There is, in fact, little dif- mitee, meeting in Washing- Chairman Dean Burch and Meanwhile, democratic to make a profit. As soon as the prices solute nois will have a greater poses , then, we should think the rule of the Czar and the has an important Rep. William Miller to re- criticism has increased in ference between ton today, •weight. Bankers themselves of a LOW-sodium or LOW* started their fast recovery more short sell- inflicted today on the Rus- 'ument brewing behind the Soviet. The Russian peo- ritualistic discipline arg pudiate the Ku Klux Klan. concede in their more can- salt diet, but not a NO-salt ers jumped in as buyers', either to take by the Communist party. If the the scenes plus a dramatic (a) ian people They will call for a forth- ple expect more from their did moments that Douglas diet. Just avoid: salt, profits or keep from having worse losses. Soviet Premier are to be taken move to win more support words of the right repudiation of the leaders, don 't hesitate to knows as much about the whether at the tank or in as a sincere expression of his beliefs, one won- from American voters. (b) A short is one who has borrowed a stock John Birch Society and ex- criticize their government. mysteries of finance and the cooking; any salted many Russians who have visited The latter is a State of ders why the The policy of . more guns money market as anyone in foods , which includes all to sell and sooner or later he must buy have not, on returning to the Union message by the tremists of both the right the United States and less butter is not popu- this capital, not excluding sorts of preserved meats; the stock to replace the one he borrowed. told their high officials how Republican party to rival and left wings. the Soviet Union , lar. And with an increase Martin himself. Cc) any food or preparation If the price has gone down , he makes they are when they attribute to the the annual State of the Un- mistaken BEHIND Premier Kosy- in the Soviet arms budget, Out of this background when the label says it con- a profit. When prices are rising fast, people and their government evil ion message by the Presi- American there will be a decrease in Douglas challenges the tains sodium. This would in- as they were Tuesday, he can lose money to upset the peace of dent. gin's bitter blast at the motives and a desire butter. heart of the argument for clude certain flavoring com- fast — and the higher Republican leaders will United States last week, tbe prices go, the the world. That's why Kosygin was higher interest rates. He pounds, tenderizers, "fizz- more he loses. demand equal time at a given to James Reston of genuinely sorry to increase ing" agen ts. THE COMMUNIST party may feel it can joint session of the two contends that inflation is the New York Times, are the Soviet arms budget and THESE technical factors — first send- only retain power and high office for its lead- houses to hear either Sen. not a threat today since the certain domestic economic bitter against the United United States has had the the FED in January, Mar- ing prices down faster than the news jus- ers by persuading the Soviet people to believe Everett Dirksen of Illinois, States. minority leader of the developments. lowest increase in prices of tin happens to be a poor tar- tified, and later sending them back up fast- that an attack and aggressive war are being Sen- threatened by countries which do not accept ate, or Rep. Gerald Ford of Primarily, Soviet mana- AN AMERICAN hospital any industrialized Western get. Before a hostile com- er than the news did either — account for mittee chairman he can be communism. Communist doctrines are the sub- Michigan, minority leader gers are having trouble with in Communist Poland was country . On the face of it much of the tremendous volume of trad- as bland as a bowl of. jelly. ject of hitter controversy everywhere. But there of the House, os the GOP a sluggish economy. A ter- dedicated by American con- the record is phenomenal— ing. a 3% percent rise in whole- In the words is not the slightest evidence that the American can get an equal break in rible cold spell came early gressmen over the weekend of one of his presenting its program to sale prices, using the 3957- most frequent cirtlcs, "It's people have ever wanted to engage in a war this year, setting back both in an exhibition of pecple- the nation. to-Jpeople friendship 59 level as a base. like punching a piece of thousands of miles away solely for the purpose agriculture and industrial which could not have occurred in dough. There is no perma- of establishing colonial power or to promote sel- The argument brewing production. WESTERN European backstage is over the ques- the old days of the rigid nent impression." fish interests, as the Soviet premier charges. The economy has also countries have had rises as tion of "extremism" and long been bogged down by Iron Curtain. Try and Stop Me The tragic fact is that morality seems to high as 10 and 12 percent WITH CLOSE tics with outlawing the John Birch a heavy layer of bureau- A delegation of Poiish- have been shunted aside by the Commu- in the same period of full the financial community Society. crats who put directives Arner i c a n congressmen, By BENNETT CERF nists. If it has not , then a dialogue on what or virtually full employ- Martin is a man of wealth Gov . Robert Smiley of and dialectics ahead of ini- with a sprinkling of Irish- the Russian leaders really believe is or is not ment, Only Japan among ¦who lives modestly. He has Because Idaho has already announc- tiative and efficiency. men and one Italian-Ameri- of changes in the neighborhood , morality in the world of today would indeed he the industrialized powers come through ed that he will demand a They are inclined to look can, flew in an Air Force many attacks a movie exhibitor stopped showing .Amer- enlightening. For religions in all ages have has done as well. This back- formal resolution denounc- upon farms and factories jet to Krakow for the dedi- with a skill that a profes- ican pictures and began featuring all- taught at least one major truth — that without ground will be fully de- sional ing the Birchites. But an- as political rather than eco- cation. The hospital was the politician might en- Spanish programs. Old Mr. Slopkin how- understanding of mor ality there can veloped , a better other high-ranking GOP nomic units, as schools for idea of Wladek 0. Biernacki- in the investigation vy. Five more years of ever, faithfull between individuals or na- y turned up every Mon- hardly be peace leader , Ex-Vice President teaching their own specialty Poray, a Montclair, N.J., into the FED's action al- his term as a member of day and Thursday evening. "Why do you tions. Richard Nixon , considered — communism. They , pay architect. ready announced by the the board are still to run. continue going to that movie house?" de- the spokesman for the mod- Joint Economic Committee. Since he became chairman manded his practical daughter. "You don't erates, has urged a go-slow Patman is chairman of that of the board in 1951 he has committee and Douglas is understand one word of Spanish." policy . He warns that big dealt with Presidents Tru- VL %bdL vice chairman. man , Eisenhower "Agreed ," nodded Mr. Slopkin. "Did I un- IN YEARS GONE BY Republican money will dry JJ , Kennedy It happens that Douglas is and Johnson and derstand English?" up if the Birchites are offi- no one can cially condemned. up for re-election next year. say that he came off second * * * Ten Years Ago . . . 1955 His opponent will almost best. Famous old Columbia football coach A Christmas project created by a former SEN, TIIRUSTON Morton certainly be industrialist Partly this may be put Lou Little tells about an Ail-American back Winonan , now stationed with the U.S. Air of Kentucky, former GOP Charles If. Percy, who is down to the built-in inde- who was lamentably weak in spelling. An Force in Ciermany. has drawn favorable com- national chairman and the cast in the role of a John pendence of the FED. Whe- man who first spoke out exacting English prof thcatencd to declare ment in the (Jerman Press. He is Maj. Joseph Lindsay — the New York ther that independence will against the John Birch So- him ineligible L. Klonowski. City Mayor-elect — with a he modified as a result for the climatic game of the ciety, is also wavering of A court ot honor for Hoy Scouts at St. John's a more moderate cast. Percy the political season but was finally prevailed upon to bit. He says it may not be embroilment Catholic Church was held with Scoutmaster Pe- was defeated for governor beginning in give him a makeup oral test, on the eve of necessary to pass a formal January it is ter Weingart presiding. Badges went to Frank- last year when he got too early the contest. The whole squad gathered to resolution. to say. But the lyn Bilder , Ted LVap. lewski , Clarence Chuchna , caught in the Goldwater un- power of the FED's chair- cheer him. The star athlete missed the first However , some of the top Richard Hermit.'., Simeon Mason and David Da- dertow. He is young (4f») , man and the banking com- word by a wide marg governors of the nation are in. "Strike one, " ex- vidson . dynamic, personable. munity should never be claimed the prof ominously. The second coming to Washington all steamed up against IK underestimated. word baffled him even worse. "Strike Twenty-Five Years A 940 the ANYTHING could soli- go . . . 1 Hire-hit os. They include dify the Advertisement two ," intoned the prof. That's when the establishment S. J. Kiy/sko left for Chicago to attend the Governors George Romney across the board in support sympathetic captain of the team called out Midwest regional inter chapter faculty confer- of Michigan , William Scran- of Percy against Douglas it from the back of the room "Make FALSE TEETH , the, big ence of the American Institute of Hanking. ton of Pennsylvania . Nelson is the conflict over the in- burn pitch to you!' A. A. Prcmtergasl & Associates of Minne- Rockefeller of New York , dependence of the Federal Chewing Efficiency ¦ apolis was low bidder lor the construction of and John Love of Colorado . Reserve Board and its right Incre ased up to They plan 35% By the rivers of llniiyhiii . (lu re nr MI C down , the main channel shctin c of the new inter- to remind their to det ermine the flow of OUnlcdl teste prove you can now fellow Republicans of the ohnw better—melee dentures average yra . we wept , when ve miu mlM ivrt /Ion. state bridge. money. Nevertheless the to M% lesson of the Goldwater de- 'ip more directive — If you —P*alm 137:1. "Old Lion of the Prairies"— nprlnklo » little FABTEKTH on your feat — namely, that the Re- Moles. 1'A.STEETH In the alkaline Fifty Years A go . . . 1915 Douglas Is 72 — will put on publican party cannot tem- (non-acldr powder that holdn falee ' the kind of intensive town- truth mores firmly so they feol more The Rev. .Alfred Saner of St. Martin s porize wtih extremism of comfortable. by-town and Nogummy, Roney . paJty WINONA DAILY Church left for St. Paul where he will look over either the left or the right. precinct-by- tu.iiB. Doesn 't eour. Olieckn denture NEWS a number of large pipe organs in St , Paul prccinct campaign that has brenth. dot PA8TEETH Powder to- They will call for a forth- diiy at drug counter* everywhere. churches. He is chairman of the committee won him large majorities right repudiation of tho An Independen t Newspaper — K.sfablisru-d mS purchasing three times. His is an in- which has charge of selecting and John Birch Society and all the now $11,000 pipe organ for St. Martin 's formed and even a scholar- W. P. W HITE C. R. C I OSWAY C. E. I.INUJ N other right-or left-wing Church. ly roar but it persuades Publisher Exec. Director Humnestt Mgr . groups. "Wh y don't you ever dance me out to the terra ce to W. .1 . I.udw ig, formerl y special otficer lor the voters. and Editor A Adv. Director Therefore they will recall look at the moon?" the North Western nuiil at Winona , left for As for the struggle over li^il W. J. Coi.ic Auoi.ru BKKMKR A. J. KfKKisuscn New Orleans. THE WIZARD OF ID By Parker and Managing Editor City Editor Circulation Mgr . Hart Mobilheat L. S. BIIONK F. J]. Ki.AM.r I.. V. A I .STO M Seve n ty-Five Yea rs Ago . . . 1890 Composing Sup t . I ' trss Supt , Engrav ing Supt . ('. V. Atuliiitf of the Sugar Loaf mill i.s plac- ing st eam equ ipment as an auxiliary to the W ILLIAM |(. E'NGI .IMI C'OKDON H OI .TK wider power mid i.s also increasing his capacity FUEL OIL Comptroller Sunday Editor for Hour output to UN) barrels ;i day in addi- Burns Cleaner MLMIIKK OK THE ASSOCM T* [> i-KKS J) tion lo the increased manufacture of feed . and Hotter Joseph Leichl , editor of the Wesllicher Her- •^JJJJ** ald , has returned from a tour of the Dakolas. JOSWICK FUEL The Associated Press Is «'iilillni One Hundred Years Ago . . . 1865 & OIL exc lusively to the use for republlCH- Wood is In demand and sells for $5 to $5 lamation , drama und singing. Man Steps on High on a high voltage wire knocked down when his car struck a util- will come to Blair Saturday aft- Voltage Wire, Dies ity pole southeast of here. yj oiLJkaf liL Ph&BJuui W&ah. Santa at Blair ernoon rain or snow. He will diim.c& ut Authorities said John distribute treats after a free STEVENS POINT, Wis. WV-A BLAIR, Wis. (Special) - At By RUTH SchJack's car struck the pole movie at the State Theater, as- ROGERS Odin Johnson, c/o Carl Johnson, Blair, Wis. 2%-year-old Neenah man was after failing to make a curve the invitation of the Blair Cham- Daily News Area sisted by members of the Editor Miss Delia Mfeisch , Room 312, St. Elizabeth's electrocuted when he stepped at the crest of a hill Saturday. ber of Commerce, Santa Claus American Legion Auxiliary. Sunday we inadvertently had a slight error in Hospital, Wabasha, Minn. an address of suggested names for Christmas cards. Laura Sheely, Thoen's Hotel, Lanesboro, Minn. In printing tbe address of Kenneth Holtegaard of Ronald McGilvary, Trempealeau, Wis. St. Joseph's Hospital, 2464 E. Ojai Ave., Ojai, Calif., Mrs. Martha Hagestad, Bethany Lutheran Home, we used street instead of avenue, but by doing so La Crosse, Wis. we got an idea how many folks are sending these Mrs. Felix Malchaski, Elmcroft Nursing Home, cards: Kenneth received 70 last year. Gaiesville, Wis. YOUNG This was Blair Rt. 2 Wis. Now 45, MEN _ a good Miss Evelyn Greeno, , S suggestion, to list Mrs. Robert Bohn and family, 120 E. Mark St., Winona, Minn. she's been handicapped since she was stricken -with This is their first Christmas without their husband polio at 7, is in a wheelchair, and cared for by her and father, brakeman on the Milwaukee Railroad father; her mother is a patient at the sanitarium at who was killed in an accident. Onalaska, Wis. Other suggested names: Mrs. Amelia Gross, River Vue Rest Home, Alma, Mrs. Julia Arneson, Blair Rt. 2, Wis., a bed Wis. patient. Benjeman Ostrander, Garnatz Boarding Care Fred H. White, Sage Nursing Home, 9632 W. Home, Lanesboro, Minn. .Appleton Ave., Milwaukee 23, Wis. Miss Edna Hall, Room 315, St. Elizabeth's Hos- Louise Trumpi, Garnatz Boarding Caie Home, pital, Wabasha, Minn. Lanesboro, Minn. Fred Deering, Trempealeau, "Wis. _ Mr. and Mrs. Helmer Christiansen, Bethany Mrs. Clara Hendrickson, Bethany Lutheran Lutheran Home, La Crosse, ,Wis. Home, La Crosse, Wis. Mrs. Jessie Plank, Room 214, St. Elizabeth's Mrs. Minnie Schneider, Alma, Wis. Hospital, Wabasha, Minn. Mrs. Clyde Taylor, Durand, Wis. Over 200 Pair — Reg. $5.98 and $6.98 Pants Mrs. Delia Fluekiger, c/o Harry Fluekiger, Lars Lee, Thoen's Hotel, Lanesboro, Minn . Alma, Wis. Rudy Dunand, Alma, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. David Manor, 418 E. Madison Mrs. C. T. Hanson, 96, and Mrs. T. T. Hanson, St., Durand, Wis. 92, Blair, Wis. They are sisters-in-law. Mrs. Agnes Vandergate, Elmcroft Nursing Bryce Opperud, Garnatz Boarding Care Home, Home, Gaiesville, Wis. Lanesboro, Minn.
marred by the human greed ex- Santa Claus and Movie emplified by what he calls the NOW "despicable sneak thief." *AQQ Sheduled at Durand J Wisconsin Hoover Warns ¦ QQ DURAND, Wis. (Special) — Santa Claus will be in Durand Ban on Prayers JUST Saturday. He will distribute ^B . Accidents treats to children following free Of Shoplifting Appeal Rejected TAPERED movies sponsored by Durand FBI Director J. Edgar Hoov- ^B^^ SUM DRESS businessmen at the theater. A er issued a warning recently WASHINGTON (AP) - The show at 10 a.m. will be for against what he termed the Supreme Court refused today to ^^^ AND SCHOOL PANTS Fatal to 6 children living in town. The aft- "scourge of shoplifting " during review a ban on the -voluntary NO REFUNDS — EXCHANGES SPECIAL SELECTION — AIL >—\ By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ernoon how at 2 will be espe- the Christmas season in Amer- recital of nursery-type prayers ¦ Six persons were killed in cially for children from the ru- ican communities. by public school students. ALL SALES FINAL FROM REGULAR STOCK ral area. weekend accidents as Wiscon- ¦ "Encouraged and unwitting- Parents of 21 New York City Sizes 28 to 36 sin's 1965 traffic toll reached ly aided by bustling crowds and school children had asked the 966, compared with 1,019 a year jammed stores," Hoover wrote court to rule the simple nonde- ago on this date. Young Man Dead of the Winona police department, nominational and nonsectarian James P. Freeman, 19, of Be- Smoke Inhalation "the shoplifter and two of his prayers constitutional under the MAKE YOUR SHOPPING DOLLARS COUNT loit died Sunday in a Madison lawless allies, the purse snatch- 1st Amendment guarantee of WISCONSIN RAPIDS, Wis. freedom of religion. hospital of injuries suffered Fri- died of er and pickpocket, are bold Ronald De Mares, 28, and aggressive. HURRY - DON'T DELAY day evening when his car over- smoke inhalation Sunday in a " They appealed to the court FOR BEST SELECTIONS turned after leaving an Inter- fire at his apartment. His body Hoover expressed alarm at after the U.S. Circuit Court in state 90 exit ramp at Stoughton. was found by firemen summon- shoplifting's increase in the New York reversed a lower fed- Hobert C. Krueger, 20, Mari- ed to the scene around 7 a.m. past five years. This crime has eral judge and upheld tbe ban on, was injured fatally Sunday Police Lt. Don Knuth, who an- nearly doubled in frequency, he the school principal had put on when the car in which he was nounced the cause of death, said pointed out, since 1959. Last the voluntary prayers. year, shoplifting accounted for riding struck a utility pole in the fire was caused by a ciga- CHRISTMAS PROGRAM Oshkosh. rette smoldering on a couch in about $5 million in stolen goods. ZA "¦ ? CLOTHING (The Winona police depart- WHTTEHALL, Wis. (Special) \_\_\W_\" JF A two-car collision Saturday the living room, where most of —The Coral City School will near Appleton took the life of the damage occurred. ment announced last week that HOURS ^ 3-year-old Todd VanderLoop of it would put on extra patrols in present its Christmas program : / m I A 3rd* of Chilton Winona stores during the Christ- Tuesday at 8 p.m. The program rlL rural Kaukauna. overturned southwest / f rI " 1/ rP^ & Main Henry Watzka, 75, of rural Saturday. mas season to guard against an will be presented by the school 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. * * W Green Bay, died Saturday in a Francis Pezelli , 23, West Al- already, noted surge of shoplift- children under the direction of Whona two-car crash near New Den- lis, died Saturday when his au- ing.) Mrs. lVIelvin Anaas and Mrs. mark. to struck a utility pole in the Hoover urged that whole com- Leonard Ellison. The commu- David J. Dann, 19, of rural Milwaukee suburb of New Ber- munities be alert to prevent nity club will serve lunch follow- Chilton, was killed when his car lin. the Christmas season's being ing the program.
B J* _WMW^^^-MM\\\\ -MM\\MWMW^BM\W___ \ \ t%*i%lX\ Nil '" /"v* r. 1 " / J- W_f ¦ 1 RCA VICTOR SOLID STATE RCA VICTOR SOLID STATE L -* . ^jj lik y PORTABLE STEREO ¦ ^y 1 PORTABLE STEREO X^SBfflB - luxe changer feather-action jff " g^^ >*^|lp duo-cone speakers tilt-down • ^^ ^ A^^^^. S MMBW^S N • ®K/ / ^ W^^^^ ^- ^ V changer full-size turntable, tone arm, diamond stylus ^^ * , • { JfV*"\ 'wH / / jf^ffill^^ r
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-» $"-00 . We Service EveryHiing We Sel l Phone 2306 •• *lCm™ * Fourth and _. $\. Johnson Yes ...... SERVICE - --- - \> ||| | |f r| r , iri |-nni| TIRE a A^ I rrr I NELSON -£r_ _ ,, iij w j.. jii mi .. Eleva-Strum Central School s Tree Mitten School Concert Yule Program, Bake Feature of for Thursday Sale Is Tuesday Set Party ELEVA-STRUM . Wis. - Cen- "Symbols of Chrislma.i" is the WCTU tral School's Christmas concert theme of the Christmas Program Women's Christian Temper- will be presented by the music Thursday at 8 p.m. to be held at Central Elemen- ance Union will hold its Christ- department tary nt 2:15 p.m. Tuesday. Skmgs home of in the gymnasium. mas meeting at the 98-member Junior Chorua and narrative will be present- 710 Main The ed by children of the kinder- Mrs. Gertrude Tillman, will open the program. The Ca- garten up to the sixth grade. St., at 2:15 p.m. Tuesday. det Bard will play a selection ol The mixed ensemble will con- A tree will be decorated with Christmas songs. Both the Girls sist of Jeffrey Walter and Dav- to be given to (he Sal- Glee Club and the Senior Chorus mittens in the concert. id Hoffman , trumpets ; Gayle vation Army for its annual will participate Bcrndt , Vicki Debolt , Nancy Po- Cheer baskets for The vocal groups; are directed Christmas Wojner. zanc and Tacy Rygmyr, flutes ; needy families. Members are by Mrs. Myrnel Mary Durfey , clarinet, and Peg- to bring mittens for the Under the direction of Arthur asked will play gy Peterson , saxophone. tree. Reif , the Senior Band The music teacher, Miss San- several numbers. Robert Hatch- dra Pederson, is in charge. er will narrate " 'Twas the A bake sale also will be held Christmas Operetta Night Before Christmas" with Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. the band accompaniment! | This sale is one of the main Be ing Presented There will be no admission money-raising projects, and it is By Blair Children charge and Music Mothers will used for the Minneapolis trip, serve lunch following the con- Welfare Fund, Legionville, BLAIR , Wits. (Special) - A cert. School Patrol , State High School Christmas program will be pre- league , Scholarship Funds, and sented by children in grades 1 the Kindergarten Roundup. Mrs. through 6 at 2 p.m. Wednesday Gary Hanson is the chairman. at the school. Scandinavian "Christmas on Cloud 25'' is the operetta the children will HOLIDAY Legion Auxiliary- girls' CONCERT MUSICIANS . . . Frank Vo- tion, (center ) and Milton Davenport, one of present. The boys' and sing and a speaking COOKWARE Votes to Give truba , left, veteran musician, talks over the the Instigators of the Christmas concert in choirs will choir will perform. tefse Grills and Christmas Gifts evening's concert with Harold Cooke, Roch- which people from many groups participated. . a fantasy • COLLEGE SWEETHEART . . . Rollie Wussow, Winona, ) The operetta is Rolling P ins ester, director of the "Messiah" presenta- (Daily News Photo about the joys and troubles of president of Sigma Tau Gamma at Winona State College , , (Special) t , . 1— EYOTA Minn. - and white Sandbakkelse Sets honors the fraternity 's n«w sweetheart, Susan Zimmerman, The American Legion Auxiliary, a group of pink, blue, • Winona. Miss Zimmerman was crowned Friday night at the meeting Wednesday evening in Lutheran Girl angels. • Rosette Sets fraternity's Jingle Ball dance at Kryzsko Commons, Winona the Legion Hall , heard reports All-City Choru s, Orchestra John Jacobson will play the Krunkak* Irom Thomte, ele- • State College. (Winona Daily News photo) on rehabilitation by Mrs. Ed- Pioneers Give lead. Mrs . Philip ward Reinicke , and the confer- Church P rogram mentary music superviser , is rjADD BROS. ence she attended by Mrs. Performs to Overflow Crowd assisting the elementary teach- nUDD STORE Duane Bierbaum. St. Matthew^ Lutheran ers with the presentation. V&S HARDWARE 576 E. 4th St. Phone 4007 Mrs. Nerval Predmore pre- By FRANK UHLIG Church Woman's Club held its Lunch will be served in the jit's Children's Gift . Time J sided. It was voted to give a Daily News Staff Writer Christmas party Wednesday cafeteria after the program. box of canned goods to a vet- Were Winona to build a fully adequate municipal evening in the social rooms. ' The program was presented eran s family; $5 to the For- auditorium, it could be no more suitably dedicated to ' gotten Children Fund; a maga- by the Lutheran Girl Pioneers, [ at Togs n Toys j zine to St. Cloud's Veteran's public use than by a performance such as Sunday night's after Vicar John D. Miller open- Hospital; money to, the Legion rendition of Handel's "Messiah" at Winona Senior High ed the meeting with devotions. Little Girls Love | Fund for hospitalized veterans; School auditorium. The girls sang Christmas car- and a gift to the "adopted" vet- If an annual tradition was inaugurated, its begin- ols and then gave readings on eran at Rochester State Hospi- nings were far from humble. The chorus and orchestra, how Christmas is spent in Eng- GRANNY tal. composed entirely or city land , Germany, Italy, France During a social hour Christ- residents, were "urged by and the United States. strings displayed mature mel- Carols were sung by every- mas carols were sung and Guest Conductor Harold lowness and intonation, particu- GOWNS! games played. Mrs . Lawrence one present, after which a Vrieze was in charge. Cooke to performance lev- larly in the middle and later Christmas lunch was served. From her tiny toes to her » Hostesses were the Mmes. els that a minimal schedule passages. An especially pungent Mrs. Harold Schuppenhauer and pretty chin , she'll be cuddly yj Gordon Hardtke, Leo Fix, Al- of rehearsals could hardly note was added by inclusion of Mrs. Ray Burmester poured. and warm in her provincial S bert Bierbaum and Herman be expected to produce. a harpsichord, played by R. H. , The Monday evening Bible McCluer, print cotton flannel granny Schriever. Circle will meet at 7:30 p.m. in g CONTENDING with fearsome All orchestral sections and gown. Long sleeves and ruf- w the sewing room, with Mrs. acoustical difficulties, created the full-throated chorus com- Schuppenhauer and Mrs. Elmer fled hem complete this we!- $ Girl Scouts Giving by architecture and the presence bined magnificently in the rous- Viestenz as hostesses, com* gift ) Sizes 4-14. g To V iet Namese of an overflow audience , the ing finale, the famed Hallelu- Circle I of the club will meet singers and players emerged jah chorus. That part of the au- for a Christmas party at 8 p.m. LANESBORO , Minn. (Spe- withal as undisputed victors. dience not already standing Tuesday in the social rooms. All cial) — Instead of a Christmas Vocal solos were ably sung rose to its feet and responded members and friends are in- party with exchange of gifts, at with prolonged applause at the vited to come, a member said. ~ by Harvin Christen, tenor, Wal- their meeting Wednesday Lanes- close. Everyone is to bring a gift for —~? Also available — Boys' and » ter Hinds, baritone, Miss Pa- boro Junior Girl Scouts Troop tricia Casserly and Miss Eliza- exchange and also a magazine Y § § girls' pajamas — $3.00 up. jfl 148 will bring pencils, tablets, IT IS one reviewer's opinion 1 M beth Gunhus, sopranos, and to be used as part of the enter- tooth brushes and tooth paste Mrs. Frank Van Alstine, con- that the community owes a vast tainment. Hostesses will be the SHOP EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK to be sent to Sgt. Paul. A. debt of sincere gratitude to the , § tralto. Mmes. Edwin Moore, Gilbert Marquis of Lake City, who is volunteers who organized and Matson and Lambert Reglin. stationed in Viet Nam. He will The chorus comprised mem- presented the performance. Not OUR GOLDEN iJW <8P ) give the articles to children In bers of several church choirs one is paid. All are local per- PEPIN YULE PARTIES j Viet Nam. and groups from College of sons. Special recognition should PEPIN , Wis. (Special)—Ruth Saint Teresa St. Mary's College Circle of Methodist WSCS will GIFT WRAP ^A -£? Friday' the Junior troop, ac- , be accorded to college students, ,( Cb companied by their leader, and Winona State College. A most of whom will live in Wi meet Wednesday evening at the Mrs. Orlie Johnson, visited contingent of choristers from who ^contrib- home of Mrs . Joe"Juliet for a nona only briefly, Mrs. Ronald FOR THE ASKING I J&L $JUIUU cuut &01f Ju l three area rest homes where Stout State College, Menomonie, uted so extensively. Christmas party. ^|K^f ^V they presented wreaths they Wis., was to have participated Marcks will be co-hostess. The ^ > 4th and Main Phone 2697 Organization of the orchestra ha Circle will meet at the | had made and sang Christmas but did not come because of has been the dream project of Alp songs for the residents. unfavorable weather forecasts. church annex on Thursday for Vuicich, Davenport, McCluer its Christmas party. A potluck A CHILDREN'S chorus , and Paul Parthun. Vuicich, dinner will be served and drawn from city grade schools, who was concertmaster Sunday there will be a gift exchange. sang "He Shall Feed His night, teaches strings at Col- Flocks" with great musical lege of Saint Teresa. Daven- was supplied by Mrs. Gerald poise, responding attentively to port, who directs Winona Sen- Sullivan, St. Mary's College Cooke's fatherly direction, subt- ior High School orchestras, has vocal music department. EVENINGS * ly accompanied by the orches- been responsible for rehearsal An added feature was the in- ^F'^yK -/ ' iKl tra. and auditorium facilities in ad- troduction of Frank Votruba, a 9 A.M. -9 P.M. V fo organizational work played vio- J»| j j to Mm\ Built around a core of com- dition to retired barber who • and participation as first violin- lin many years ago with the MONDAY ^^ r | if V %Soj CX petent strings, the orchestra McCluer is orchestral direc- hony Or- JfF^ ***** achieved a quality that gave ist. original Winona Symp I- tor at Winona State College and chestra, forerunner of the pres- THRU ' promise of much future rich- Parthun directs vocal music at orchestra. Mr. __f l Smm - _. n ness. Paced by Violinists Eu- ent municipal St. Teresa. Votruba took a bow from his r ^uI^P gene Vuicich, Milton Davenport, section. Emil Guenther and others, the ADDITIONAL vocal direction chair in the violin "" CHRISTMAS j "Jf vji B REPEAT OF A SELL-OUT!
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¦\mMMMMMMMMMMMmMBi -xm ^i*a» MR. AND MRS. DONALD LEON GRAY are at home in Winona following their Nov. 27 wedding at St. Ann's Church, BBBB ^^ ^' Arlington, Va. The bride is the former Miss Barbara Ann £X m^ W ast^ssi^ —^*^^r* I I *a*— _B^^^ ^BBBH I I * Burko, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Burko, Arlington. The groom's parents art Mr. and Mrs. Donald "V*. Gray, 67 E. Howard St. Chief attendants at the wedding were Miss Gretchen Smith, maid of honor, and Allen Scott Gray, brother off the groom, best man, A wedding luncheon was held at Holiday Inn, Arlington. The bride, a graduate of Washington-Lee High School and the American University, Washington, D.C., is employed at Cathedral Grade School as a fourth grade teacher. Her husband, a graduate of Cotter High School, served four years in the Navy as a missile technician. He Is now attending Winona State College.
Program Announced Stockton WSCS For WSHS Annual Schedules Party Christmas Concert STOCKTON , Minn. - The Wo- The annual Goodfellows Fund man's Society of Christian Ser- Christmas Concert at 8 p.m. vice of Stockton Methodist Tuesday in the auditorium of Church will hold its annual Winona Senior High School will Christmas party Thursday at 2 be jointly presented by the high p.m. in the church basement. school band, orchestra and Secret pals will be revealed and choir. The young musicians will there will be an exchange of be directed by Robert Andrus, gifts. MRS. LIZZIE EGGERT Milton Davenport and Meryl Everyone will serve the pot- Nichols. luck meal. Members are to The program they will pre- Dodge Rosary sent is as follows: bring gifts for patients at Ro- Lincoln School New Horlioni, concert march . .. Walters chester State Hospital. Friends Cftaltti Suit* Thlalman are welcome. Society Meets Rhapsodic Essay Cavtcis Sets Bake Sale, Praludt to Christmas --* ¦£> Parish met Thursday evening Orchestra be held at Lincoln School, begin- Dtractor: Milton Davanport DURAND, Wis. (Special) - ning at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. for a Christmas party. Gifts Chorales from tha were exchanged and a lunch was "Christmas Oratorio" J. S. Bach Durand Goodfellows once again bars cook- fxultate Deo Scralatt A variety of cakes, , , with Mrs. are seeking donations from the and pies will be offered. served by Group 1 Ha It Born French Carol ies, John Pehler as chairman. As Lately We Watched Austrian public. sponsored by the folk song The sale, The society -voted to donate Collection boxes are placed in Lincoln PTA, will precede the Star Carol Burt $1,000 toward the Parish indebt- Joseph Dearest. Joseph the Security State Bank, all city Christmas program, which be- Mine ....arr. Lubotl edness. Beautiful Savior .arr. F. M. C. taverns and at Club 10. Dona- gins at 2 p.m. Choir tions of food and clothing also ¦ A question and answer dis- Director: Meryl Nichols cussion on different aspects of Chrlstmts-Tlde .., Bourdon may be made by contacting CIRCLE D PARTY Choir and Orchestra The annual Christmas dinner religion was led by the Rev. Galen Lieffring, city clerk . party of Circle D, St. Martin's Augustine Sulik. The Goodfellows provide Lutheran Church, will be held The committee serving lunch Open House Set needy families with clothing and Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the at the afternoon of games and food for Christmas. home of Mrs. James Carley, a card party in the church hall For New Rectory 119% Kansas St. Sunday included the Mmes. Hu- bert Jereczek, James Brom, Ben Of St. Paul's Wabasha Co. Board Brom, John Jereczek, Eugene The new rectory of St. Paul's To Open Bids Jan. 4 Zabinski, George Wener, Vernon Episcopal Church at 1715 Edge- FOR THE jtfk Gibbons, Clarence Kline, John wood Drive will be the scene of WABASHA, Minn. - The Wa- j (no trade-in required) Herek, Elizabeth Herman, El- an open-house Christmas tea basha County Board of Commis- BEST IH IBB don Herman, August Jereczek, Wednesday between 1:30 and 3 sioners will open bids on gaso- fl Frank Jereczek, Stanley Losin- p.m. line, diesel fuel and heater oil HAIR HP Bob Davis and John Zabin- ^ ski, All Episcopal Churchwomen, Jan. 4, and on printing of its I We will be open Monday thru Friday Nights CARE . , . Tglf ski. including those not members of proceedings and legal notices in- MINNESOTA CITY AID guilds, are cordially invited to cluding the county financial • Permanant Waving MINNESOTA CITY, Minn. - come and join in the festivities. statements and delinquent tax I \ plus Sundays, 1 p.m. till 5 p.m. • Shaping Lutheran Ladies Aid will meet There will be no other guild list for 1965. • All Typti of Hair Cutting meetings during the month. ¦ ... now Latest Marhodi in Styling In the church basement at 1:30 ~W^ until Christmas.WARE • for the annual Refreshments in keeping with j CALL RICHARD ... p.m. Thursday, DRILL IN LA CROSSE Christmas party- Members are the holiday saeson will be contri- WINNER to bring Christmas cookies. Of- buted by guild members and Winona and area members of CORNING 9 Center Beauty Salon others will act as hostesses. Mrs. Naval Reserve Surface Division J^^j ^ OF THE 422 Center St. 5M1 ficers of the aid will furnish Phon* sandwiches. There will be an Alvin Lafky, Mrs. H. R. Kal- 9-211 (L) are reminded that the Official Member of the Hair brener, and Mrs. Ronald Zwon- division will drill at the Naval ELECTROMATIC PERCOLATOR — Fashion Guild o/ America exchange of gifts. The meeting is open to visitors. itzer, guild chairmen, will pour Reserve Training Center. La M\ at the tea table. Crosse, Tuesday night. This will MRS. ESSLER Members who are unable to be the last drill for the year IN^t EDWARD K I attend church services will be and Lt. Cmdr. D, J. Harris, com- M LEWISTON, MINN. remembered before Christmas manding officer, says 100 per- I ^ with greetings and gifts. cent attendance is mandatory.
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The W * VW^-MMMMMMMMMa\T ' Slacks v subscription will be started as per your instructions. Rates are shown at the f V_MW*MMMMMMMM\\ ^^S^iMy January. ^V left. If you prefer, you will be billed in % * TUB Jaal^B^alH! WMMM MMM \\ \WI Local Area — INTBRWOVBN K^ j^mfwjj^^^j^mi^wwKtt :^^ m s^ ¦ * Socks \^HaN§ 1 Fillmore, Houston, Olmsted, Wabasha, w JJ ^ wia^affi» I and Winona counties in Minnesota Buffalo, , . fe A gift ca rd in the sender's name will be fi ¦ TIXTAN I Jnckson, Pepin, and Trempealeau counties t uewnere - « => rj ¦ * \!W Wallttt and Baits $ H MrT / h In Wisconsin, and to servicemen in the con- in United Slalos and Canada, j* Sent to the subscriber. (Your Hometown S mKl °Vl"'M'aS WiL" JOCKEY Sis.oo 6 Monrh, . $8.00 N ewspaper makes an Ideal Gift for Service ¦ * f 1 ATO OI- m)1ddr ^;; On. Year | Undarwiar '' | 3 Mo h» $4 25 Month $1 60 ¦ PME GIFT ¦ On. Y.ar $12.00 6 Month, . $6.50 "' ' ' Personnel .) ¦ 4r SWANK £ I ¦ ¦ 3 Month. . $3.50 1 Month . $1.35 Sunday New* only 1 Yr $5.00 j.w.lry WRAPPING ^m^www _^mwwww ^wm^^^m^w^i I f WINONA DAILY and Sunday NEWS _ MENSWEAR J fc ^ 122 I. Third 51. «»«• *'» Wl RENT FORMAL WEAR off from trouble after taking politics. Is the main reason behind Moral opposition to war tends to think that the demon- City for Minneapolis. When people were asked for the demonstration! against strations are merely an excuse Kansas 10 10 14 20 G.L. Parent, tho reasoning behind their the war in Viet Nam?" i to let off steam on the part of The pilot, Capt. Think Viet Nam war wrong Big Jet Lands a 50-year-old mechanic restive young people, particular- nose gear would not re- views , MOTIVES ATTRIBUTED j said the in Lincoln. Neb., said, "Those 11 9 9 15 ly students. HARRIS SURVEY TO DEMONSTRATIONS | kids don't know beans from but- Not sure ¦ two-engine jet, with 48 Total Grade High 1 2 1 R Foamy Runway The mem- termilk. If they 're willing to ALTAR SOCIETY O passengers and four crew Nation School School College Kan. (AP) - A jet and circled take all the country can give, Again, college graduates are OLATHE, bers turned back «r, % % % ; WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special ) nor- while> foam it looks to me they owe some more willing to accept the mo- airliner carrying 52 made a more than two hours Just demonstrating against —St. John's Altar Society of St. station Americans 10-1 loyalty to it , too." A farmer ral principles behind the dem- mal landing on a foam-covered was spread or, the air something ! onstrations and take them at John's Catholic Church will outside of Fresno, Calif., said, Naval Air runw ay as a precaution. . M 27 '34 39 i lace value. The less well-edu- meet at the home of Martin runway at the Olattae returned "People should stick up for their The passengers were Tool of Communists cated are more suspicious that Matchey, Wednesday at 8 p.m. Station Sunday night after hav- and Bran- government whether right or to Kansas City by bus " 26 36 27 20 that the demonstrations are This will be the Christmas ing trouble with the landing flights for wrong. In Verona, N.J., a 22- iff arranged other Against Pulling year-old office secretary said, Trying to avoid draft part of a Communist conspir- party with an exchange of I developed them. . 14 16 16 5 acy . The biggest over-all group gifts. The Braniff BAC111 M "It is crmiinal to endanger the ' .Ill II i—rf^*— ^'i morale of our men in combat." Such attitudes, however , re- Nam main In the minority. In Colum- Out of Viet bus, Ohio, a manufacturer's rep- By LOUIS HARRIS in four sees the protests as resentative said , "Free speech As reported last week , the Communist - inspired. Another is a right , even though I think American people oppose a U.S. one in seven says the "peace- they just do It to get attention. " withdrawal from the fighting in niks" are young people trying In McCall , S.C., a white-collar Viet Nam by more than 10 to 1. to avoid the draft. worker said , "Any citizen of And the hostility engendered by It is evident that the anti- the United States has the right picket lines, the burning of draft war movements have failed to to do pretty much as he pleases. cards and even the self-immo- communicate what their organ- We can object if we don't like : lation of pacifists now runs so izers claim to be their purpose something." And in Kerman, deep that one American In every To rally public opinion in oppo- Calif. , tbe wife of a ranch man- three would deny opponents of sition to the shooting and bomb- ager said , "Free people have our policies in Viet Nam the ing of soldiers and civilians in the constitutional right to voice right to demonstrate. Viet Nam. their objections — good, bad or A majority of Americans, 59 Nine out of ten Americans otherwise. " percent, take into consideration report that they have seen or When all of the volunteered the constitutional guarantee of read about the protests, but the comments were added up, here the right of peaceful assembly net impact, if anything, has is the way the replies were dis- to speak out against the policies been to produce a firmer re- tributed : solve among other Americans Of government, but the opposi- REASONING ON RIGHT tion to organized dissent stems to continue the fighting until we can negotiate on our own terms. TO> DEMONSTRATE partly from the fact that many Total consider the United States to A carefully drawn cross sec- tion was asked: Nation be in a state of war and partly % from fogginess over the nature "Do yon think people have the right to condnct peace- Why do have right: 59 of civil liberties in a democracy. Constitution guarantees it 42 Moreover, only one person In ful demonstrations against the war In Viet Nam?" As long as it's peaceful 10 every four is willing to concede OK to oppose government 4 the underlying sincerity of the EIGHT TO DEMONSTRATE AGAINST VIET NAM WAR They're for peace 3 anti-Viet Nam policy demon- Why don't have right: 32 strators. Don't Have Have Not Subversive, revolutionary 10 One in three regards the Matter for government demonstrators as people who Right Right Sore % . % % to decide 9 ff" Just want to demonstrate Demonstrations unlawful 5 • Glorious STEREO FM • 15-WATTS nndistorted ^^^^ £ ^l3Wp^^^»r ^p against something. Another one Nation-wide 59 32 9 By education Comforts enemy 4 Grade school Upsets our soldiers 4 or less 40 41 IS One fact is abundantly clear: ^^^ < v High school 59 35 6 The demonstrators have not im- MONAURAL FM • MICROMATIC PLAYER ^^HP! r . ^^ li College 81 16 3 presed the American people The more educated Americans with either the seriouness or ^ believe in the right to protest , sincerity of their cause. The • Plus.. . powerful AM lets your records last 'fl^ HH : AUTO PROTECTION while those with less education cross section was asked : '^^^^^^ w ^^^ ^^ "The I • Bodily Inlury Liability would deny it. Because educa- demonstrators against ; • Proparty Damage Liability cation and economic opportunity the war in Viet Nam say : • Mtdleal PaymanH go together, the same division they sincerely think the war ;• $1,000 Accidintal Daath occurs along economic lines. is morally wrong. Other peo- ; • Uninsured Motoritti The same schism exjsits in an ple say they are tools of All Por increasing number of issues. the Communists, while oth- The affluent tend to be the most ers say they are trying to • As Low C) AA p«r Af *p... in the Re - creation of guaranteed 5 yean — _ ...... music . . .AT MODEST replaced by us if de- COST fective in normal use. l—"~—————— Woofers plus four 5'.
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FAMOUS BRAND GIFTS Imitation by Yugoslav youth Somerset Maugham Has Generation of their Western counterparts began several years ago, when Mink es By JAMES MARLOW he wrote in 1938 on his life, his & 3 #. B t Christmas Ever! 1 Associated Press News Analyst work, and his outlook, he said, Britain's Teddy boys were much WASHINGTON (AP) - W. "In my twenties the critics said imitated here. Somerset Maugham at 91, get- I was brutal; in my thirties they Of Beatniks As prosperity increased and ting too deaf to listen to music said I was flippant; in my for- BELGRADE , Yugoslavia Yugoslavia moved ever further and too blind from cataracts to ties they said I was cynical; in (AP)—After 20 years of com- away from the strict conduct of my fifties they read , began slipping toward said I was com- munism, Yugoslavia is making conventional communism, the death Saturday in a way that petent; and now in my sixties the painful discovery that it has youthful trend toward independ- would have pleased him. He they say I am superficial. a generation of beatniks on its ence spread. was in a coma. "I look upon it as natural then hands. The country has never seen Twenty - seven years ago, that the world of letters should Stealing cars for thrills — and when he was 64 and beginning have attached no great impor- anything, however, like the car often smashing them up for ex- theft fad. Hundreds have been to look down the uncertain cor- tance to my work." tra kicks — has become a fad ridor ahead, this English novel- stolen in recent months by Maugham admitted his mem- among Yugoslavia 's swinging youngsters who take them for ist,; playwright and 6hort-story youth. writer explained how he would ory was bad but he said his joy rides, abandon them after a head was always full of ideas Beatle hairdos are the rage. day or so or smash them into like to die. Youngsters fill the night clubs. OLIVETTI UNDERWOOD 1 He hoped he would not for writing. He worked hard to trees. M l be improve himself, considering They snap up the latest record 1 ^ ^ I aware of death's approach, he imports from the West, couldn't Thrill thefts have become so said, or undergo its pain. Yet, "simplicity not such an obvious numerous that the Belgrade merit as lucidity. " care less about socialist preach- he guessed wrong about the ings, and generally carry on Politika Ekspress has started a thought of growing old. He said He regretted that he didn't free column of missing-car an- have someone "with good like young people revolting it didn't dismay him. against the establishment. nouncements for unlucky own- sense" to direct his reading ers trying to trace their stolen "It would be a very silly per- when he was young. But be Parents despair, newspapers machines. son," he said, "who drew the traveled the world in search of THE FUR BOA THE OLIVETTI UNDERWOOD STUDIO 44 curtains and turned on the light experience for his writing. He DENNIS THE MENACE Newest and most fascinating fur accessory ... can be worn offers all the important advantages of a full-size standard to shut out the tranquility • of the warned writers to seek experi- .. ——;—,———— *¦ _] so many ways . . . as a neckline decolletage, a jaunty typewriter tn a compact , easily carried machine, and meets evening." ence, not to wait for it. , , But at 91, deaf and going This was why he condemned shoulder scarf a circlet a chic shawl or a neckline ascot. the most rigid periormance requirements of the business or blind, he was saying: "I am one of his contemporaries, Henr- What a Santa you would be with a gift like this. In all professional office or studio. Extra-quiet operation , too, is sick of this way of life. The wea- ry James, for standing at a win- shades of mink. Prices $35.00, $75.00 and $85.00. appreciated in office or home. Now just $99.50. riness and sadness of old age dow. In "Tellers of Tales" — a make it intolerable." collection of short stories he In this spirit he approached edited — he said James "failed FURS BY FRANCIS WINONA TYPEWRITER SERVICE the end of a long writing career of being a good writer because 57 Wert Fourth St reet 161 Eatt Third Street Phon* M300 which no one, including his experience was inadequate Maugham, considered great. He and his sympathies were imper- was a third-rater who made a fect." rich living out of it. He said be Maugham, in expressing lack had been writing for money of illusion about the merit of his since he was 18. work, called'hlmself a "teller of But he was a good writer, tales round the fire." very readable, always clear and, as Clifton Fadiman said, a professional - "offering high- Youth Killed While grade entertainment. His hall- mark is neither passion nor Crossing Race Track depth. It is good sense." QUITO, Ecuador (AP) - Maugham wrote 30 novels, 25 Cristolal Aguilar, an 18-year-old plays, 120 short stories. His best spectator, was killed Sunday work was his novel, "Of Human when he attempted to cross the Bondage," written in 1915. He course and was struck by a car thought it was his best, too. during the City of Quito six-hour By the time he was in bis 60s, auto race. Fausto Merello won the race. with most of his work behind ."¦ . him, he said he had no illusions 100% about his place in English lit- Some of this country's 608 DACRON* I erature and that only two im- National Historic Landmarks I ^« 1 I 1 portant British critics took him are federally owned and ad- seriously. ministered but most are state, •MUST U A FoneiaN CAP.* In "The Summing Up," which community or private property. APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kerzky
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i:4uW^l4t»Tli|»T4nTlt l;iW TJr *TliOOTM ,287 gins to get a little monotonous t the family room , and the TV-hi ever — the finest product in the with less than Lennox ) fi built-in is duplicated in the Public (non- and the process becomes rather EJOME nlIMPROVEMENT CENTER , world and the most efficient mechanical. BIG basement room. t axable) 4 396 ,741 techniques will not hide a sur- rt^i tWr.™ « SAVINGS! N*w houses 28 face that has been improperly Teachers in woodworking in NOW! AT TIIK ristht side of tlir Volume same Non-corroding , across the center hall , pr epared. high schools say they constantly Phone house date 1964 S6 .K2 1.719 |] l is the bedroom wing. The mas In some cases, the tiniest of have to remind their students GLASS is fused to ter bedroom has its own dress- scratches will assume gigantic to sand in a straight line, since ihe 927 5 ing room and lavatory. Note the the hand and arm have a ten- remarkable im heiwh , plus iin outdoo r storage proportions after a clear finish dency to wander off course. unusual amount of wall space are;i accessible from the rear has been applied. LENNOX in this room. To the rear are patio. There is an entrance Power sanders are indispen- two other bedrooms, each with from the patio to the mudroom- sable for anyone who works a DURAOURVE plenty of closet space. The fa- laundry area , and another door lot with wood, especially for Heal mily bathroom , with an a lcove leading from the latter section the initial sanding. It saves Exchangerl vanity, is convenient Irs all to the garage. Packages (bus time. It saves labor . And it ac- 1 / DIAl This menus thnt ymir Len- rooms. complishes results that the no- ,rp can he carried from the car in- nndami w T' ,V'" lafit The two-car garage is gener- to the kitchen without going vice could not have hoped for last w.th new DURA- ous in size an includes a work many years ago. through any of the other rooms sisls acid* n„(| in ihe house. won „ moisture it BUT VVIIKN II cmmeii to thai 4578 ]m oft ox iil«e . sen l" # or Peel . . am, a , „ IfNCI.liniNTi the garage, (lie superfine finish just before the timo improves " first coat is put or«, most mas- hmtinc m. LYLE S ove rall dimensions of Design t I TOP cioncy. n«.for« you !,f B Jhoh, Qovs-hhiq, are 7.1" 2" by .11 ' 2" A ter cabinetmakers — and ap- v ™» ( horizontal sanders for the necessary jf paneling. Choose from our complete selection. Furnace for Any "QUALITY FLOOR COVERING AT SENSIBLE PRICES' * nnd vertical siding add in\ iling smoothing between coats. many Heating Need warmth ' While trx'i e are varie- CEILING TILE — Complete Selection \/^T\ INSTALLATION GAS CARPETING • * ELECTRIC "JAVE SJ WITH $EN*E" V Vi WORK FLOOR TILE — All Types Available f OIL Seamless Floors by POLY-FLEG • ^ COAL "The tluorinj.-. ol Ihe (iilnve TODAY . " Never needs wax «up, INSULATION lias built-in sheen , uiiiillVrlcd liy Milelto heel-., Iirmitilul Ask 1 We furnish materials fast at Lowott Cent! lis HIHIIII ll! Jl i.s unlieli evable The complete lloor i.s pott I ed SENSE \k QUAUTY from cans . ELECTRIC SERVICE , SHEET 1732 Wr / / " Photta n-3fa Boston, rain 37 34 .38 Todahl, 71 died unexpectedly at 1964 and 1965 tax cuts have "al- the house and asked his wife to In addition, the President Rol- WASHINGTON (AP) - Wil- kowski Funeral Home and 9 with copies to Gov. Karl Chicago, cloudy .... 57 38 .47 her home at Eleva early Sunday most completely worn off ," the search for new jets for a car- faces new decisions on Viet vaag and state and federal liam McChesney Martin Jr, , a.m. at St Stanislaus Church, Cincinnati cloudy .. 57 42 .12 morning. She had been ill for proposed resolution said. buretor. She left the bedroom Nam and that subject is certain agencies said the plant's first chairman of the Federal Re- the Rt. Rev. Msgr. N. F. Grul- Cleveland, cloudy .. 58 45 .05 some time but apparently was serve Board, said today its in- In recommending a 50 per and entered the kitchen. to take up much of his time. unit would at times discharge kowski officiating. Burial will Denver , clear ... 50 19 unproved. Mrs, Mars said she heard a There will be holiday festivi- terest-raising action will help , cent increase in Social Security dangerous gases into the air. be in St. Mary's Cemetery. Des Moines cloudy . 52 33 .01 She was born Sept. 19, 1894, shot and saw her husband fall ties, too — the lighting of the The second unit, the group said, the U.S. economy and any de- Rosary will be said Tuesday Detroit, cloudy 52 44 benefits, federation leaders said lay would probably have re- .23 at Eleva to Mr. and Mrs. Sig- through the bedroom door into a national Christmas tree behind "would positively pollute the at 8 p.m Friends may call Fairbanks snow ... 15 -6 .03 the base on which Social Securi- quired stronger measures. vart Semingson. She was a life- ty taxes are assessed should be hall. Officers found a 38-caliber the White House on Friday aft- area. " This air pollution could Tuesday after 2 p.m. Fort Worth, clear .. 65 40 .. time area resident. She was Martin also told the Senate- increased from the present $6,- revolver beside Mars, who died ernoon and a presidential party be avoided if natural gas is Helena , cloudy 28 25 .. married to Hjalmer Todahl en route to a hospital . that night for White House em- used instead of high-sulphur House Economic Committee Mrs. Romuald Galewski Honolulu clear 81 67 .. 600 to $15,000 a year, supple- Dec. 4, 1917. at Eleva. He has mented by extra money from Mrs. Mars said her daughter, ployes. coal. Save the St. Croix said. that his independent agency had Mrs. Romuald Galewski, 54, Indianapolis, rain 59 40 .25 died. kept President Johnson's ad- 522 E. 4th St., died today at the federal Treasury. The cost Sandy, 12, was also in the house. Jacksonville, cloudy 75 61 .41 She was a member of Eleva Daniel ministration continuously in- 5:10 a.m. at Community Memo- Kansas City, should not be charged to future Another Klan official, cloudy 51 40 .. Lutheran Church and its organ- City, shot formed. rial Hospital following an ill- Los Angeles, clear . 60 47 .13 generations of workers and em- Burros of New York izations and of the American in Reading, ness of several months. Louisville cloudy .. '«1 48 .33 ployers, they declared. himself to death "There has been a continuing Legion Auxiliary. when the New York Times The former Eleanor Florence Memphis, cloudy ... 67 37 .. Social Security benefits now Pa., frank exchange of views be- Survivors are : Three sons, Or- average about $92 per month for published a story revealing his and Gabrych, she was torn Nov. 6, Miami, cloudy 75 69 , tween the Federal Reserve , Wis to Mr. , ville, Holcombe Rt. 1; Laverne a retired single worker and $137 Jewish background shortly after administration officials, both be- 1911, in Pine Creek . Milwaukee cloudy . 52 38 Dayton Ohio , and Robert, Bi- and Mrs. Michael Gabrych. She , for a married couple. the committee hearings. fore and after the board's ac- Mpls.-St.P snow .40 29 .12 loxi, Miss.; two daughters, Mrs. tion!," be said. had lived in Winona 35 years. New Orleans, fog ... 75 56 .44 Norman (Viola) Berg and Mrs. The recent 7 per cent increase care benefits under Social Secu- She was married Oct. 14, 1930, in New York rain ... 42 39 .24 barely covered tbe increased rity — which do not go Into ef- The action, taken by the Helen Butler, Eau Claire; 11 Sacred Heart Church, Pine Okla. City , cloudy .. 60 37 grandchildren; five brothers, cost of living, the federation fect until next July — should be board a week ago, raised by Creek. She was a member of Omaha, cloudy 38 32 the dis- Curnell, Herman, Alvin and said. improved and extended to sur- one-half of one per cent St. Stanislaus Church, Sacred Phoenix , cloudy .... 63 45 AFL-CIO leaders said medical viving widows and children. count rate that determines the Odin, Eleva and Peder, Eau Heart Society, St. Anne Guild Ptlnd, Me., snow ... 37 26 .51 Claire, and three sisters, Mrs. cost of borrowing money. It and Winona Athletic Club Auxil- Ptlnd, Ore., fog .... 46 28 was deplored by President John- Anna Hanson Eleva, and Mrs. iary. Rapid City. clear . 39 21 Tillie Hanson and Mrs. Jack son and others and there was Survivors are: Her husband ; St Louis, cloudy . . 58 40 special criticism of the timing (Nora)) Pierce , Eau Claire. ^ one son, Ronald, Goodview ; one Salt Lk. City, cloudy 49 32 .23 Funeral services will be Wed- \ 1^^^ A km I^^H IIi ^^l^^^MfflRVWiy^^H V of the move, since federal budg- daughter, Mrs. George (There- San Fran , clear ... 54 48 available nesday at 2 p.m. at Eleva et Information will be sa) Cierzan, Wabasha ; 12 Seattle , cloudy 43 34 .02 (L^B&flB&nHHfl ^ v in just about a month. Lutheran Church, the Rev. Cal- ) ll^i^i^ESla^l^t^Sj lS^i^i^ila^V^i^^i^i^i^^^i^i^^^KS^^i^i^il^^^^ H fl ) grandchildren; three brothers, Washington, rain ... 50 47 .31 vin Larson officiating. Burial MM iM Winnipeg, snow ... 26 22 ( MM\\\wSSw*WmM\W-^ wk. M M I Some of the Federal Reserve Alvin and Elmer Gabrych, .17 will be in Eleva Cemetery, (' Board members who voted Galesvllle, Wis., and Eugene Friends may call Tuesday aft- against the interest charge, in a Gabrych, Fountain City, and Municipal Court er 3 p.m. hnd Wednesday until SAY MERRY 4-3 split, joined in the criticism. two sisters, Mrs. Alex (Cecilia) 11 a.m. at Kientvet-Strand Fu- %1/lf Walksi, Fountain City, and Mrs. WINONA neral Home. Eleva, and at the William ( Rose) Pllnski, Leba- Forfeitures : church after noon. WITH A BAS ET Who'll put this college non, Ore . Her parents and two Elmer S. Rislove , Rushford, K ax!^f^J_W\ brothers have died. Minn., $25 on a charge of driv- Joseph Kulas OF FRESH FRUIT, m_ ^M S/F I program together? Funeral services will be ing 60 m.p.h. in a 40 zone on DODGE, Wis. (Special) — , died CA DY AND NUTS Thursday at 9 a.m. at Watkow- Highway 43 through Hart (south- Joseph Kulas, 84, Dodge N B$&MMMW II ski Funeral Home and at 9:30 bound ) Dec. 5 at 5:40 p.m. Min- 0' uremic poisoning Sunday at 4:30 a.m. at St. Anne Hospice DELIVERED FREE rWyHHV rapidl increasing enrollments at St. Stanislaus Church, the nesota Highway Patrol male The colleges arc facing y W nursing home, Winona. He had J MK MI Msgr. N. F. Grulkow- the arrest. every year. Rt. Rev. officiating. Burial will be in Mrs. Nicholas J. Smith, 850 been a patient at the home That's the problem. ski since January . St. Mary's Cemetery. E. 4th St., $15 on a charge of Higher education needs financial help for ihe eiiuip- He was born Feb . 27, 188 1 , to ( (i Friends may call at the fu- driving with no driver 's license ) ment, facil ities and teachers to educate this crop of Mr, and Mrs. Jacob Kulas and ENGLISH CALIFORNIA ) neral home Wednesday after 2 at East 4th Street and Mankato lenders. Avenue Sunday noon. attended grade school in the potential p.m. Rosary will be said Wed- It's really our problem. Without enough leaders to p.m. by the church Donald T. Bellman, 450 Man- Dodge area. He married M ary nesday at 7 Berzinski in 1908 at Sacred lan u»e of our resources, manpower and skills , we societies and at 8 by Msgr. kato Ave., $15 on a charge of p Save with Heart Church, Pine Creek, They WALNUTS ORANGES s Grulkowski. driving in the wrong lane of will go downhill. ft j pH|l|j State Farm' farmed in the Dodge area until niuintiu n our ovv nsurance traffic at East Broadway and Without strong leadership we cannot ilBr U&il ' ' WalUr C. Schildknecht Zumbro Street Sunday at 8:20 he retired, high level in jobs, op portunities and living standards. He was a member of Sacred Walter T. Schildknecht, 73, p.m, and $10 on a charge of The colleges are doing <«//• job—Icl 'a j>cl toget her on i^lj Pltg .ctreiul drivers. driving with an expired driv- Heart Parish and Sacred Heart 72:i Clark's Lane, died today at cW the problem, (live to the college ol " your choice. See me. er' Society. He was a former trus- 3i* s license at Broadway and i 7:30 a.m. at a nursing home in tee of the church and director Preston . He hod been ill about Carimona Street at the same ( FRESH, MOIST, PITTED WIS. WHITE or ftUSSET I "PETE" P0LUS two years. time. of the State Bank of Dodge . Mt Ba»J Brc»dw»y He was born July 29, 1892, to Mrs. John R. Blank, 62, 677 E Survivors are: His wife ; College Is America's best friend and H«lena Tarrae Sanborn St., pleaded guilty to- three sons, Joseph Jr., Dodge, 45M Christian Phon* Schildknecht in Winona. He mar- day In municipal court to a and James and Florenty, Wino- DATES POTATOES ¦ ¦ public to CAoptnllofl wltti Th« AdvtilM*| Willard West Nov . 26, charge of shoplifting at the S.S. na; two daughters, Mrs. Ed- riitillstiod si ttrvlc* t f*Sl fry ried Miss Mil to Education ind , at Trenton, Mo. In 1920 he Kresge store, 51 W. 3rd St., Sat- ward J. (Altrude) Kleinschrnidt Council , Ihi Council lot Financial th* ftW^j X RE STATE FARM 1919 ( N«wipip*[ Adv*rtliln| tKKutivot Atsucution. moved to Kstherville, Iowa, anil urday at 2:15 p.m. She paid a nnd Mrs. A. Grant (Lillian ) ) 2-Lb' C 50 Lb- 512" v*WV years. $35 fine imposed hy Judge John Burleigh , Wlnonu; 13 grand- HQ * lived there 42 He operated ( Pkg. B(a° ( ^AUTOHmmlWIUl HttMIKtCO aWAat M I a plumbing heating business D. McGill as the alternative to children, and two brothers , Lar- J Horn*Mi Olhes. (l oomln fton, IllmeU 0»_li there and moved to Winona in 12 days in jail. ry and Dominic E., Dodge. Yince Plays Hunch, Hornung Scores 5 Times DEJECTED AFTER 2~-7 LOSS TO VIKINGS Sayers Punches All Alone 49ers run. A d»- g Division stretch Raps Team for Lettin ern Gilmer PRESS Down By THE ASSOCIATED s hunch gem by Robinson, how- DETROIT . AP* Though he not so much the passing. "We were showing some im- l switches. Vikings' score. Vince Lombardi' fensive turned Paul Hornung loose on a the momentum could have Warned the rain and provement in our last few Rookies Tom Nowatzke, a The Lions penetrated Minne- ever, provided I "A team 's passing should have fullback , ajid end John Hender- live-touchdown spree to- Sun- Packers all but shattered a sloppy field for his team s games but we slipped back as sota territory but two times in League as the poor showing Detroit Lioii™ * the advantage under these con- son started for the Lions but day's National Football hopes. ; far as we could go today, the game. Baltimore but Baltimore's title Coach Ham Gilmer instead ditions , Gilmer pointed out. " he j neither showed much because of power struggle at it was a right guess by Green dropped the Colts took a slap al the players. ! Thf way thev keep changing, j lamented . "We were kicked in; the Lions lack of offense. Vikings' Coach Norm Van The loss ; i the pants Trorn both ends (of- i Bay linebacker Dave Robinson game behind Green "It was hist a matter of one 1 tho ball now. it's not hard to The Lions picked up 29 yards Brocklin came to the defense of corner for the one-half i fense and defense) and didn 't do ' rushing and 106 through the air. that turned the length ahead team wanting to play and an- '. thro w or catch. Packers. Bay and one-half other not . '" Gilmer wiid after the , ' a thing ahout it . j Minnesota had 75 on the ground his former assistant and chided ' And a receiver has a better the Detroit fans. Hornung, given a reprieve by of Chicago, which stayed aliv« Lions lost a 29-7 decision to the and 199 passing. chance to move than a mani I "It's just the natural thing ' "If the people don 't quit boo- Coach Lombard! after languish- by smashing San Francisco 61- Minnesota Vikings Sunday. ; trying to i i when you start talking about Tom Myers came in at quarter- , keep his footing while ing the Lions, they'll never play ing on the bench for two weeks 20 as rookie flash Gale Sayers Most of the pame vva.s played trying to defend against^ him."' ( trying different players at back in th« last quarter and Ed offensive well. That booing takes the heart responded with an six touchdowns. The in a steadv rain wh ich kept Ihe "I'm talking; in general teams; |differen t positions. No one Sharockman intercepted his sec- binge that vaulted Green Bay bolted for ¦ it up by beat- field muddy . and hampered the now . not about my team," Gil- | plays," ond passing attempt and re- VIKINGS PAUL HORNUNG past the crippled Colts 42-27 and Packers can wrap running game of ench team if i mer said disgustedly. He referred to some lineup turned it 40 yards for the final (Continued on Page 15) Golden Boy Struts into the lead in the NFL's West- ing the 49ers in next Sunday's —- v— finale, regardless of how th« Baltimore-Los Angeles and Chi- cago-Minnesota games turn out. SPEAKING OF FI NAL GAME The Rams upended Cleve- Houston in land's Eastern Conference champions 42-7; the Vikings beat Detroit 23-7; the New York Petersen Point Giants topped "Washington 27-10 82-57 Rout and the Philadelphia Eagles trounced Pittsburgh 47-13 in Shula: Doesn f Sunday's other games. Dallas whipped St. Louis 27-13 Satur- Of Badgers day. HOUSTON, Tex. Wl - The Robinson, a third - year pro Production Off from Penn State, came up with By BOB JUNGHANS ever since until a week ago Campbell of Winon a 's loss Houston Cougars ripped off 15 Daily News Sports Writer when . the Warriors played at the hands of the Jack- straight points in a three-min- the big play for Green Bay in Loras. ute span early in their encount- ' the final minute of the first half. rabbits. "We did a pretty There have been some Tonight, Petersen will be er with the University of Wis- Matter Much BALTIMORE - "As racked up as we Ordell Braase was back at end and Don worried looks around Wino- decent job in spots but not t*l The Johnny Unitas-Iess Colts al guard again when Winona consin and raced away for an are, I don't think it really matters what Shinnick at linebacker on defense for the first driving na State College basketball entertains Hamline Univer- straight through. " trailed 14-13 but were 82-57 basketball victory Satur- happens in the final National Football League "They hung in there, touchdown be- circles in the last week. And sity in a 7:30 p.m. game at "I was more than pleased day night. time in several games. for a go-ahead the No. 1 question that has with the way (Mel ) Homuth games, Coach Don Shula of the Baltimore but . . ." commented Shula, hind reserve quarterback Gary Memorial Hall. The Badgers lost the ball on brought on the furrowed The Warriors will be gun- came off the bench and Colts said after the Green Bay loss. Most of the dressing room talk after the Cuozoz. With the ball on the brows is. "What's happened thefts five times and had six Green Bay 2, Cuozzo dropped ning for their third victory scored 20 points, and also That was after he first said stoutly, "We 42-27 victory by Green Bay was about a Cu- to Gary Petersen "?"' , with ( Bill) Werner. And we shots blocked during the siege back and lofted a flat pass in in eight outings trying to of futility. still have a glimmer and have to go out ozzo call at the end of the first But one of the worried rebound from a 104-80 beat- still have (J. D.) Barnette half . the direction of fullback Jerry faces doesn 't belong to War- ing at the hands of South when he's well . The depth Wisconsin, its record lowered and win Saturday" at Los Angeles. Then With second down on the Packer two, Hill. rior coach Bob Campbell Dakota State Saturday night. appears to be coming to 1-2, returned home soundly the Packers would have to lose the next day he tried to lob a pass to fullback Jerry Hill. But Robinson, anticipating the Petersen, normally one of "We just ran into a good, around." whipped and went through a at San Francisco for the Colts to recapture Linebacker Da-ve Robinson intercepted, ran to pass, drifted to his left, reached Winon a's highest point pro- These three will be on the it off — ' then hot shooting team." said Sunday afternoon workout to the Western Conference title. the other 10 and the Packers up and picked ducers, has scored only 22 bench and ready for reserve try to prepare for its Big Ten scored. raced 87 yards to the Baltimore points in the last three War- duty tonight as Campbell opener at Madison against Illi- But when Shula thought of the injury jinx The Colts were trailing only 14-13 at the 10. Bart Starr fired a TD pass to rior contests, far short of plans to stick with the same nois Tuesday. which has descended in force on the Colts, time. Boyd Dowler on the next play, his usual average. lineup he has used in the It was the Cougars' first vic- he shuddered. They may even have to play "It was a bad decision on Gary's part," boosting the Packers' halftime Campbell has an explana- last two outings. tory in four games. said Shula. It was a gamble bulge to 21-13 and Hornung tion for the dropoff, how- Dave Meisner will team Los Angeles without an experienced profes- and he didn't Houston led 10-9 when the have to. He should picked up the pieces. ever, and he doesn't expect with Petersen at guards, sional quarterback. have just rammed it in The three-time NFL scoring Cougars suddenly clawed Wis- there. it to last long. with 6-4 Tim Anderson, 6-6 consin with the 15-point out- Gary Cuozzo, trying to fill in for John " king ran for three touchdowns "It's true Gary isn't scor- Mike Jeresek and 6-7 Charlie burst. Leary Lentz contributed Unit as, suffered a slight left shoulder sepa- Cuozzo himself defended the call. "It and tallied on 50 and 65-yard ing, said Campbell, "but " Neal in the front line. eight points toward building the ration early in the second half against Green was just bad execution," he said. pass-run plays from Starr. The the reason is the shift back Neal, a freshman from St. margin to 25-9 before Mike Car- Bay Sunday. He returned to direct two touch- Shula blamed the defense, particularly in over-all performance gave Horn- to a guard spot. He's setting Paul Central, will be playing ung a club record for TDs in a up tne offense and setting lin finally counted a field goal down drives in the last quarter, but a deci- letting Paul Hornung loose for two touchdown against a former teammate for the Badgers. sin gle game. up shots for the others in- tonight in the person of 6-2 sion is awaited on whether he should play passes, more than the offense for the loss. stead of being set up him- Ron Larson. Larson is a Six-foot-nine Elvin Hayes Until Lombard! gave him the blocked the six shots himself. the last game. "There is no way to excuse it, the defense self . freshman on the Hamline just blew it," he said. green light against the Colts, "We don't feel it will con- squad and is one of the Don Cruse stole the ball from If not, then halfback Tom Matte steps Hornung had scored only three tinue, We think he will start Pipers' first line reserves. Wisconsin three times. in with only slight game experience at quar- In the first period , Hornung was all by touchdowns and had lost his to contribute when he gets Hamline is in much the Houston surged on to open a terback. He was in for one series against himself in taking a pass and running it over starting job to Elijah Pitts, "It used to the moves as a same situation as Winona 24-point lead before Wisconsin for a 50-yard play. In the last quarter, when was a hunch — but Hornung's a trimmed ft to 49-34 at the half Green Bay and moved the Colts 34 yards guard. It's just a matter of in the terms of height and the Colts had pulled to within 35-27, Hornung pressure pl ayer," the coach time." experience, The Pipers play behind the efforts of Carlin, by running. He then missed on two parses caught a 15-yard pass, broke away from a said of his decision to start the Petersen played guard his two freshmen, a sophomore, Mark Zubor and Dave Roberts. and the next was intercepted. eight-year veteran Sunday. freshman year at Winona one junior and a senior. Bob Carlin was high for Wisconsin Offensive tackle Bob Vogel also came up tackier and ran 50 more yards for another touchdown. With Unitas on crutches — State, but was switched to Kramer, a 6-4S sophomore , is with 12 points. Zubor, Roberts with an injured ankle and flanker Jimmy result of a mangled-kneeinflict- forward his "If you don't .cover a guy it's not hard sophomore year. GARY PETERSEN one of two returning start- and Ken Barnes each contri- Orr had to be replaced for a spell by Alex ed by the blitzing Bears last He has been in the corner "Newcomer" at Guard ers buted 10. for him to get into the end zone,'' Shula said Hawkins. disgustedly. weekend — and Cuozzo slowed Statistics by a shoulder injury in the sec- ond half , the Colts' attack _. _. Packer! Colli Flr»». down* u JJ couldn 't keep pace with Hor- Rushing yardage 144 74 Passing yardage 2JJ 1J» nung and Starr, who completed Passes 10-17 jo-41 10 of his 17 pass attempts for 222 Wiltgen Augsburg Passes Intercepted by J I Looks Punts S-44 4-35 Fumbles loif i I PACKERS Yards penalized ...... u 17 (Continued on Page 15) For Director Cops Easy By GARY EVANS Daily News Sports Editor The search is on at St. Mary's College. MIAC Win Ken Wiltgen needs a take-charge guy to direct his By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS basketball team. Defending champion Augsburg "More than anything else , 1 realize now how much we launched its Minnesota Inter- miss (graduated captain , Mike) Maloney out there ," said collegiate Athletic Conference the Redmen coach, who Saturday watched his team falter basketball season with a one- W5-C1 to Gustavus Adolphus in its first MIAC start. sided win over Concordia Satur- The Gusties, probabl y to insure no further injury to day night, while Gustavus Adol- guard Phil Rogosheskes' ankle , came out in a surprise /.one phus and St John's also claimed defense. Then when Rogosheske left for a rest , the Gusties wins in their league debuts. went rnan-to-inan- Augsburg led by Ed Nixon's "Thcir zone surprised me," explained Wiltgen , " and 24 points , zoomed to a 48-33 half- I'm sure it surprised the players because we certainly didn 't time lead cn route to its 95-73 handle it. But wc didn 't handle the man-to-mnn cither. We win over the Cobbers. Bob Lim- showed we hadn 't played aga inst it. ey had 14 for Concordia. "They bottled up Roger (Pytlewski) and he didn t shake GustavuN. pegged as a leading loose, lt makes a difference when you haven't anyone to set title threat , beat back a late things up and run them. " rally to subdue St Now the question is . Mary 's 6fi- , how severe were St. Mary 's title fil The Gusties led 3B-24 at KKDMKN halftime but St . Mary 's tied the (Continued on Page 15) game at 56-nll with 4:5C left. Bill Loumann had 25 counters and. —— ' i ¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦ i—^—^—m—^^^^^^^^—m^—^^^^^^^^^m^^^m C01JT SCORE . . . Halfback Lennie championship in the National Football League Al White 18 for Gustavus. Tom Moore, 24, of the Baltimore Colts drives into another week. Identifiable players are: Green Keenan tossed in 25 for the Hodmen. the end zone for a touchdown in the sec- Bay-Willie Wood, 24; Lee Roy Caffey, 60; ond quarter Sunday against the Green Bay and Lionel Aldridge , 82. Colts—Bob Vogel, St. John 's survived a lute (AP Photofax) scare to ton Hamline 7IMW. Tom Packers in Baltimore. Green Bay won, 42-27, 72, and Raymond Berry , 82. Melancon collected 17 points anrl to put off a decision on the western division Hob Thibedea u 15 for the win- ¦ JJ.IMMJ #5j5d&£ ners. For Hamline, Al Frost had 20 and Dave Poison 16. [FHil'lHl J£^t..,I Mncalester ol the MIAC drop- ^ ped ait SI-76 decision to St. Olaf of the Midwest Conference. And Travenio (Who He?) Winon a fell lo South Dakot H Remember All The Delay and State HM-HO. Bem idji and Mankato of the Incon venience of Your Car Not Northern Intercollegiate Confer- ence split agnlnst non-league Starting Last Winter? foes Is Chargers Big Star M l .uiU.iiKiliilf- . , i( in JJDD I I iiu'clii iiiii'iil cDiiililKiii . will st;irl Tlie i II in b <' r jacks piu'layctt By TDK ASSOCIATED lMtKSS The Oilers led 19-14 in the I— for Travenio, a 34-year-old! in rold WC ; I || H - I il pi(i|)ci |v si'i'\ ircil with tin- «|iii|>inriit superior height into a 105-lKi win The San Die/jo Chargers have third period when Travenio was third-year pro who skipped col- iind know ledge Id coiirctlv tunc ;uu| pirpaiv your or lor over Northland at Ashland , Wis . wrapped up their third consecu- put to work , He kicked a 32-yord lege, refined his football know- cold wt'.illici' sliirtiiif.. Why •liin 'l you ml! <>r stop in anil Dave Odoitanrd hud 2!l points tive West ern Division title in the field goal , then came back early (' and '23 rebounds Norm in the fourth quarter nnd kicked how in the U.S. Marines and sec V. AiiyM Motuv « aWtwil u \\Vr\ class Timo-V'p on your Mnnsnlle American Football League, and Drive in today and see your hit :>ll points and grabbed 2r> re- there's little doubt that a key a 12-yarder thnt put the Charg- was found by the Chargers i ill ;iwl «'i»l vow colli \M-allu i wori lc.s 'I'licv h;ivi> the 1 , houmls am Murk I'arlin added but overlooked factor has been ers abend 20-19. The Oilers , working in the local post office . General Tire Specialist ri|iji|>ii)i'iil ami < X| HTII 'III c lo j;i\' yon liuiiblr ln'c Wiiitrr it points to (lie Heiindji attack . Herb Travenio — the post man however, quickly regained the .sliiilinn Jim llanraliim hanged 30 points for whom they Imd to ring lead 2(5-20 on George Blanda 's Travenio caught on with Sun A WINONA anil Bob llammnii 27 lor Ash - twice, third touchdown pass. Diego last season but eventually OWNED AND OPERATED FIRM II- ,i lull liiiitcd I H'lco I'uiif I p In Ihe V Am;.st iMiitor litml Paul Lowe becuine the first But the Chargers pounced was also dropped by the Charg- (fill I' c\pi>i 'ls. Co ynur licil I'liilcd Dt lco uni' C |> Mnnlwito led until the final 11(1 two-time l ,(XX)-yiirrJ ground Rain- bark again, moving 7f> yards ers and went back to his post- ¦seconds before .succumbing ta er in AFL history unci Keith before Hadl plunged a foot for office job When injuries deplet- #^ STOP AT THE UNITED DELCO $IGN ON JACKSON ST. Morningsidi* (>7-iif> . .lolui Vermil- Lincoln , Lnncc Alworth und the tying points Travenio added ed San Diego's kicking corps KALMES GENERA^ yeu 's free throw with eight sec- John Hurl' played their usual tho conversion /or a 27-26 lend , this season , the Chargers rang onds U'ft won it after Mankato roles for u.e Chargers. Hut it and followed minutes later with for the postman again. TIRE SERVICE led :i7-:>» al halftime. The Mar- was Tiavc.ilo who provided the another 32 yard field goal that Travenio hub responded with oons , ).| v Hl7 " V. ANGST MOTOR CO. who mt 13 of ^ifl losses, crucial point.s with his place put It out of Houston's reach. 37 conversions without a miss 1N.m W. M Sl. "Sloe. .9,7" 357 Jackkon St . Phoaic 6VS» were pueed by Vcnuillyea 's 15 kicking in Sunday 's title-clkneh- Avll things considered It was a Op«n 7 «.m. to 6 p.m ^ ^ points. Dung Hurt meshed 20 for ing :i7-2(i victory «v. Houston S3, Wisconsin 57. 46 yards in 12 carries. Fullback nal word. But just to make 774. John Walski and George Phillips 6.4'ers 101, Rice 45. Bill Brown, Minnesota's leading sure, the two schools were go- Hubbard each registered 509. Tulsa 64, St. Mary's, Tex. 51. CARE ing to contact the secretary of Texas Tech 74, New Mexico 41. CAR , was held to mi- Park-Rec Junior Boys — Pin ground gainer FAR WEST — us two yards in three at- the Wisconsin Interscholastic Smashers leveled 663—1,260 and Air Force 41, Loyola, La. 55. Sports Athletic Association for an of- Dave Prodzinski 183—348; two- Nebraska 70, California 61. tempts. Baylor 71, U. of Calif., Santa Barbara The victory lifted Minnesota , ficial ruling. game set for Unknowns. 75. Calendar 67, into fifth place in the West- Colo. State U. 14, Ariz. State U. 41. Nevada If, Miami, Fla. 79. TODAY ern Division past the Lions. De- Utah 95, St. Mary's 51. BXSK0TBALL- troit, now 5-7-1, is winless in its REDMEN Arizona 61, Arizona Slate College St. Wlnsna State vs. Hamline, Memorial Montana State 74, Seattle 73. Hall, 7:M p.m. Y0UR CN0ICE last five games. (Continued from Page 14) Fresno State 109, Sacramento State 71. FRIDAY Conzaga 64, East. Montana 46. BASKETBALL— The Vikings conclude the 1965 Denver 98, Calif. State 70. Wlnont High vs. Rochester, I p.m. I MUriSffiSM hopes hurt by the opening game loss? Cotter at Rochester Lourdis. campaign next Sunday at Chi- TOURNAMENTS "Naturally everytime you lose it hurts," said Wiltgen, SI. Mary 's al (.ulnar. cago. STEEL BOWL - WRESTLINC- "but I really don 't feel it means that much. We've got 15 Championshlp Wlnone High at Rochester. more to play, and I figure a team with two or three losses SWIMMING— Duquesne 44 , Miami 60. Rochester vs. Winona High, Winona will win it. "Unfortunately, we have one already." Consolation High pool, itM p.m. AFL Pittsburgh 45, George Washington If. There were some bright spots in the loss. Wiltgen learned KNIGHT! OF COLUMBUS - (Continued from Page 14) of added depth in the person of Mankato sophomore Tom Championship Keenan. Tennessee State 104, Idaho 93. and 17 of J» field goal attempts Consolation PACKERS Starting in the of the ailing Jim Buffo, Keenan Portland 76, Pordham 45, for 88 points — tops on the team place ' (Continued from Page 14) in the league. most nearly approached the take-charge aspect as he scored Minnesota Colleges! and fourth nest s While the Chargers were 25 points — 12 of those in a 15-point spree that saw St. Mary' Augsburg 95, Concordia 71. yards. Cuozzo hit on 20 of 38 for close the first-half gap from 17-5 to 22-20. SI. John's 71, Hamline 63. wrapping up their fifth title In St. Olaf ll, Macalester 74. 212 yards and one touchdown. "It seem s funny," said Wiltgen , "the guy's starting his Atarnlngside 47, Mankato 44, Sayers shocked San Francisco illBMIlJJ the six-year history of the Iff first game. He's got every right to be nervous and hesitant. Bemldll 105, Northland, Wis. 94. league, Eusterii champion Buf- ¦ with a one-man show that set a pped Kansas City 34-25, But he wasn 't , the other guys were." single-game NFL mark of 336 falo whi have to tak e a in$fon Whitewalls or I Oakland clinched the runner-up Then, too, St. Mary's learned it will WHITEHALL MATMEN WIN yards rushing, receiving and I M0SSkT ^ ~ffi*<(&""fy\ West by downing brushup course on how to play against the man-to-man . WHITEHALL, Wis. - White- reluming kicks. His six touch- apot In the "We don 't feel they beat us " assessed tbe coach. "We" I fafSMaWWINTERh TREADS Blackwalls I New York 24-14 and Boston de- , hall High School wrestlers re- downs gave him a total of 21 for \ beat ourselves. Defensively, we were all right , but our offense corded pins in the final three the year — one more than the I \K-M-M\W»WMa.RETREADS 0R 0N ON SOUND TIRE BODIES % _f\ r nn I feated Denver 28-20. just didn 't do anything.1' Y0UR owrj Travenio s 12-yard field goal matches to give the Norsemen league record set by Balti- TIRES And it is a safe bet that the Redmen will make sev eral a come from behind 33-19 Dairy- Moore last season I yf Sf ^I- Wrh m M I came at the end of a fi2-yard more's Lenny attempts to correct that before traveling to Decorah , Iowa, land Conference wrestling vic- and matched by Cleveland's ANY S,ZE LISTED m £m ONLY I drive in which Lowe picked up I W£SlB 5.20-13 6.50-13 5.60-13 _ f il Oil I then passed 22 for a bout with Luther Friday night. tory over Auguet a Inst week. Jim Brown this year. I Sl ImH ^asP W v£ 0\ 38 yards. Hadl 5905.60-13 6.70-13 6.90-1 5 M M yards to Lincoln and rushed for The rookie from Kansas car- I M IMKBsssB 7.00-13 6.40-15 fc#iMM £*.^ T I ¦ ried nine times for 11,1 yards, ¦ VvK^H^K 13 M f ¦ 46 yards himself in a 76-yard ¦ Umm ¦ ¦ caught two pa.ssea for 89 and 1&_M\\\\\ MMMT 6-00-13 7.00-14 6.70-15 W drive that wound up with Tra- M 6-40-13 7.50-H M Plus tax and 2 tn»d«-ln flrw ¦ returned five kicks for 134 , top- ^___M__W venio's conversion putting San ¦ Oth«r sires slightly higher of s«m« size off your car. ¦ War- ping by five yards Ihe mark set ^»a\a\\ WaW * Diego ahead to stay. Jim by Wally Triplet! of Detroit ren 's Interception set up Tra- Stout Wins Game Fight . against Los Angeles in 1950. g venio' final field goal. on an 80-yard Lowe, who scored the last San Sayers scored screen pass from Rudy Bukich , Diego touchdown in a 15-yard 84-yard punt return and Bill yards In 19 an ^^m f jaunt, rushed for 99 jaunts of 1 , 7, 21 nnd 50 yards ^^1 »Tf I \m BM MMX 1 1 rB f_Wt \ fl I 11 _M 111 _ M_ ^_\W' carries and brought hit ground- from scrimmage. That brought gaining total for the year to 1,- Is Draw-Boxers Thumbed point total to W8UC hi WSUC play against the half to turn the game into his league-leading C8» - within 10 yards of the 12fi , two short of the rookie rec- Sensational Battery Offer! league record set by Oak I and'a All Titans' 3-0 slate Thursday a rout. :^^^^ ^^ can'. Oamai ord established in 1950 by the Don! rely on an old, tired battery +"*** ***¦>— *~»>~>~~~~ —~**# Clem DnnHs in I IKi:i . Lowe, who W. L. »>c1. W, L. night at Menomonie, Platte- Oshkosh jumped to a 16-4 Lions' DoJik Walter. 010 vards in 11)63 , has ffouf .. .4 * l.oaa i • to start your ctf .lt gained 1 , •Utfevllle 3 0 1.900 I 1 ville , third member of the lend against River Falls and Roman Gabriel sparked the EftTllllllfcn OUR GUARANTEE :\ one game remaining before the Oahkath 1 • LOW « l current unbeaten triumvir- never let the Falcons get nt River Palls 1 1 .IH ] l Rums' upsot. of Cleveland by MMMatMMMMmanc. !!'"r! ' ."¦!!'' ^> *<**™**tt* ut*. ar iMoouc-u - :, Dec. 26 championship game La Creue ,.. » l ,ua it ate, faces a less imposing within five points afler that, pusses and! run- Tltata^M iltil H'MtOnS Extra-Life, ; tinmlmn >nul •»( Sfeutii* Pimr (tarantowl ¦ ' tossing five TD (./"•¦On*,^^^; . J. •.J ^ |5I tui~> lie IO ' tor fi inoitha utter pt>mh«»e. I»ral«r or Hlom , against Buffalo Stavani "alnl 1 1 .131 I « foe Saturday as the Pio- John Lollensuck led the Ti- ning for a sixth score. The a~55=.— ,r. f .\, TrWj'Ifcl "• lco Writ PT** , ; will |»y up U> 1.1 Town*- or »Urtin« clmrje : • Jack Rau Clalra t 1 W 13 II jirovidwl rUim «ri«v, w >Ulv U-iimmli hattrsry ) The Bills tuned up with Whitewater 0 I .*M 4 1 neers, also 3-0, meet La tans wilh 24 points , held Jim Brown to 20 ^BWfP|fj|jB|^-~| fl Delco EnerffJZftT... ! l-Uni.N MM \ ,IMa. DtC ,., „ '" ¦< inability l<> rrunk miiinr nncl not. through other « Kemp firing three touchdown ivaarlar • 4 *M Of Crosse ______M M uUartntee <-«,««• aucli M Unity ignition or merh»nir»l > MONDAY' S SCMROULR . Platteville got 24 points yards in l,'l carries while win- passes — 66 and 13 to Bo Roher- ^^^^esssssssssssssssssssssssr «i>rf ! ^'"cta '" a**t v*hml« him noi li*,l nommbU ! Carroll at Whitewater. Oshkosh ripped lClvcr from jC luy Gust and 22 from ning their third In a row. Tom- • ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^k^^^^ J«t> H IW»« , wiutar r"ol««n>ot\ , V and 48 to Kd Uutkowski — • au Clalra at Besthel. ^ *on TURIOAV-' tCHROULR Falls 7B-60 Saturday ralfiht Ken Sprugue in socking Su- my McDonald caught three Ga- «nd Pete? (Jotfolak kicking two Northland at lucMrlsr. und Platteville slopped win- perior by a 22 point margin. briel scoring strikes on plays field goals THURSDAY"* lCHIOUia The Yellowjuck ets 5-fool-5 Whitewater at Rlvai r"illi. less Superior 1)7-75. Defend- t hut covered 4H , 42 and 43 yards. La Croaia at luparlar. ing champion La Crosse all-WSUC Nlur , Jim Scvnls, Karl Mornil lilt Homer Jones Oehkoeh at Haul , hit 26 points. Ireveni Point at lau Clalra. whipped Whitewater 80-fiii in with a pair of nroring bombs, SATURDAY'S SCHIOUl.ll the other WSUC cont est Stun Johnson of Eau good for 74 and Tl yards , in the Engine Plattaville al La Crow*. while Eau Claire went out- Claire sank 14 of 20 floor (ilants ' victory nt Washington , Small By THE ASSOCIATED PIW588 side the conference to lose shots and 15 of 17 free which kept them In second place w^#r<* youf w mor* Stout lout two starters In 127-106 to St. Norbert. throw* for a sensational 43- in tho Kiisl , The Giants can J(\WBM *°** ******^^ Serv ice s Repair ¦ basketball brawl Saturday Stout's Willie While and point performance , but St. clinch a berth in the NFL Play- night but rallied to over- James Conley were ejected Norbert used balanced scor- off Bow l at Miami if they get by ing in running up a uchool UII II HH next .Sunday, p#»t . Economical come Stevens Point 74-M along with Stevens Point's and retain « slim hold at Howard Ochs after a slug- record of 127 points in its Philadelphia defenders intor- the ton of the Wisconsin ging match late in the first victory, cupted nine Pittsburgh passes, BROS- State University Conference half when Ihe Blue D*vlls This week is the final running three hack for touch- BAQD ¦landings as (he Blue Devils led 2:1-20. downs, in the KHfjlcs ' one-sided If l/DD STOR E The Pointers edg- round of WSUC play before ^ t~w ' prepare for a showdown ed ahead 2»-2fl by hnltt Irne, teams take a holiday horn vietory , The loss wns No. II for *ES m ON-THE-PARM TRACTOR TIRE SIRVICi S76 S. 4th St. Phont 400» with Oshkosli. hut Stout outhcored Stevens iiitrHconference action until t he Stealers in i% games, their BOB OOEMAN, Manager Stout will pit its 44) mark Point 46-27 L11 the second Jan. 3. worst record In 2.1 yean. 1 P.M. New York LIVESTOCK Stock Prices SOUTH IT. PAUt Want Ads Hayfield in Strength for SOUTH ST. PAUL. Minn. uB—(USDA) Allied Ch 47% I B Mach 516 -v-Caftle 5,000: calves 1.JO0; slaughter Allis Chal 34V„ Intl Harv 44% steers eesd htlfers mooeretely active; Start Here meetly 2J cents higher; some tttar* UNCALLED fOR- Amerada 70% Intl Paper 29% 55-50 cents BLIND AD» Am Can — Jns & L 64% Selected M cent* hlgheri helfert Winning? Something to First Alone bulls, «¦ hlgheri cows steady to elrona; K-1J, 14, 21, 23/ «/ Am Mtr 7»/< Jostem 17% wa ters, slaughter calves and feeders AT&T 61% Kencott 125 stedy; high choice 1,905 lb slaughte r Am Tb 38% Lorillard 43% steers 26.74; molt choice 950-1,250 lbs NOTICE Anconda 80-% Minn MM 697/a Stock Issues 25.5M».»; good 2J.25-2J.O0; hlof) choice Wasioja Ln our Help in eex Designations as to «r lb rselfere 26.00; most choice 850- WASIOJA Arch Dn .38% Minn P&L 30% NEW YORK (AP) - Selective Wanted advsertulng columns Is maole 1450 lbs I4.50-J5.50; good 21.50-24.00; only (1) to Indicate bon« fide occu- About at Osseo W L W L Armco Stl 66% Mn Chm 81% tor employ- Holler strength highlighted a mixed lifications utility and commercial cows IS.50-tJ.00; pational qua , leads the team in scoring. Hayfield 4 0 Byron 1 1 Armour 42% Mont Dak 40% an employer regards art OSSEO, Wis. — When a school hasn 't had former last year Wanamingo 3 1 Pine Island 1 1 canner end cutter 11.00-13.50; utility and ment which stock market early this after- necessary to the normal , you can Dodge Center 1 1 claremont 1 J Avco Corp 26% Mont Wd 32% reasonably n winning record in eight years At the forwards will be 6-0 junior Jerry cutter 11.OJ-13.50; utility and commercial Ms business, or (J) as West Concord 1 1 Dover-Eyota 0 noon as trading fell considera- operation ot expect the fans to become a hit hysterical McN allie and 6-2 senior Darel Hanson . The * Beth Stl 36% Nt Dairy 85% bulls I.0O-1V.00; cutner 15.00-17.50; choice a convenience to our readers to lev positions the when things start to bounce in 1 he r ight Boeing 138 N Am Av 64% bly below last week's record- vealers 2J.OO-30.00) good 2.00-24.00; choice form them as to which guards are a pair of juniors , 5-8 Dave Nelson Hayfield moved out fron t in advertiser betllevei would be of more .00; good 14.00- directions , and that' s the case at Osseo High Boise Cas 56% N N G-as 60% breaking rate. slaughter calves 19.00-21 Interest to one sex than t*i» other be> and 5-11 Ken Jacobson. Tim Brotzman , a Wasioja Conference by trip- 18.00; good 550-900 lb feeder steam 21.50- the cause of the work Involved. Suctl • School. 6-fl senior , and Steve Nelson. Dave Brunswk 10% Nor Pac 56% 24 's twin ping previously undefeated Wa- Steels moved ahead moderate- .00. designations do not Indicate or imply 35% Hogs 5,000; moderately active; bar- The Chieftains last won more basketball brother , are the two first line reserves. namingo 75-62, and Dodge Catpillar 51% No St Pw that any advertiser Intends to prac- ly as a group following a report rows and gilts steady to strong com- preference, llmltev. games than they losl in 1 957. when the cur- Ch MSPP 45 Nw Air 135% s close; sows 50 tices any unlawful The size situation will be abou t even Center stumbled to its second pared with Friday' discrimination in rent crop of cagers was in the lower echelon C&NW 123 Nw Banc — that prospects for the steel in- cents fo 11.00 lower; feeder pigs steady; tion, specification or between the two teams with Eleva-Strum 's in a row , this time falling 1-2 employment practices. system , loss 67% dustry have been brightened by boars steady to 50 cents lower; of the grade school front line going 6-2 all the way across. Last to Byron 40-35 in a rare round Chrysler 53% Penney 190-230 16 barrows and gilts 27.25- But this year , Osseo has romped off to year the Cardinals won all 14 conference of Saturday conference gamesc. Cities Svc 40% Pepsi 75% brisk demand from the construc- 27.50; mixed 1-3 19O-240 lbs 27.00-27.25; Lost and Found 4 f ive 240-260 lbs 2e\25-27.2J; 2-3 260-270 lbs straight victories . If No. 6 is to he games and are off and running again this West Concord also lost a Com Ed 53% Pips Dge 72 tion field. 25.50-26.75; 1-3 270-330 lb sows 23.25- chalked up Tuesday night , it will be the big- year with four straight victories , two in the chance to gain ground by being ComSat 38 Phillips 57% 24.00; 33IM00 lbs 22.50-23,50,- 2-J 400- WOULD the gentleman please return my gest one of the season because the Chieftains Con Coal 65% Pillsby 42% Some of the aerospace de- 500 lbs 21.50-23.00; choice 120-160 lb feed- dark suede Dobbs hat taken by mistake conference. clumped by Claremont 59-49, fense, electronics and airline is- er pigs 24.50-25.50. Sat. afternoon from First Congregation- travel the 10 miles to arch-rival Eleva-Strum , Mulhern feels that to win the crucial con - while Dover-Eyota tumbled to Cont Can 59% Polaroid 116% Sheep 1,000: tairly active; slaughter al Church Senior Cltliens* dinner.. Your the defending Dairy land Conference cham- Cent Oil 70% RCA 47% sues did well but the list of key lambs aeid ewes steady ; feeders 50-75 hat Is in the church, please return my test his team must stop Roger Tollefson and its fourth consecutive loop loss, stocks in major sections of the cents hlgtiar; choice and prime 85-110 hat to the pastor and pick up yours. pion, for an 8 p.m. clash. Tim Bue, both 6-2 Eleva-Strum front liners. 56-45, at the hands of Pine Is- Cntl Data 37% Red Owl 22 lbs wooled slaughter lambs 25.5O-2i.50; "We thought we'd have a pretty good Deere 49% Rep Stl 40% list was patchy good and choice 70-90 lbs 2«.5O-25.50; "This Tollefson was all-conference last land. Du Pont and IBM were off at choice and prime 107 lbs wltti No. 1 Flower* 8 club," said Osseo coach Harold Mulhern . ' Douglas 75 Rexall 47>A pelts 25.50; utility and good wooled year. He s their key kid. He can shoot from slaughter ewes 6.0O7.00; cull 5.00-5.50; ' 'd least 2 each. ARTIFICIAL WREATHS arsd hangars for "but we didn t think we be undefeated at anyplace. BYROZV 40 Dow Ch 76% Key Th 43-% choice and fancy 75 lb feeder lambs " said Mulhern. "And Bue is tough , door or cemetery. New shipment tiolly " 26.75; most choice and fancy 60-80 lbs this point . DODGE CENTER 35 du Pont 234% Sears Roe 63% garlands, Christmas be-lls. mistletoe, too. If we can contain those two we should All Big Three anto stocks 25.50-26.5O; good and choice 50-60 lbs The string of triumphs caught still reeling etc. Lofquljt Variety, Ml racle Mall. Mulhern do all right ." Dodge Center , East Kod 106% Shell Oil 63% 23.50-2J.5O. , hands of showed minus signs despite the nomewhat. by surprise but t he second-year Besides the full round of conference games from a loss at the Ford Mtr 54% Sinclair 61% forecast by the General Motors CHICAGO coach does have an explanation. Wanamingo Friday night , lost CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)- Hogs 7,000; Personals 7 in the Dairyland , two other league tilts are Gen Elee 11.1% Socony 94% chairman that car and truck butchers about steady; 1-2 190-22 lb but- "Our kids have picked up on defense ,' Byron live 40- 28.25-28.75; mixed 1-3 190-230 lbs ' slated for tonight, and they are important to a determined Gen Food 85% Sp Rand 21% sales in 1966 would be "at or chers LATE WORD er> the local weather scene he said. "Last year (when the Chieftains ones . 35. Gen Mills 56% St Brands — 27.50-28.25; load 2-3 290 lbs 26.00; 1-3 Is right at your fingertip*. Simply dial above" this year's record level 350-400 lb sows 22.75-23.25; 2-3 450-500 Ted Maler -weather phorte 3333, posted a 6-17 mark , Ml in the conference ) Byron grabbed the lead at the boars 18.50-20.50. Conference favorite Kenyon tries to move Gen Mtr 102% St Oil Cal 78% The Associated Press average lbs 21.25-22.00; we were last in the conference in defense and managed to hang Cattle 14,000; slaughter steers steady MAKE SURE Santa's suFt Is perfectly . into a first-place tie with Kasson-Mantorville outset Gen Tel 47% St Oil Ind 46% mostly prime 1,175- of 60 stocks at noon was off 2 fo strong; 20 loads styled and on Christmas morn he'll This year we're right up near the top and onto the slim margin with Mer- 5 28.50-28.75; high in the Hiawatha Valley in an 8 p.m. game Gillett 38 s St Oil NJ 82% at 354.7 with industrials off .4, 1,375 lb slaughter steers ¦ drive the ladies wild. W. Betslnger, that's the difference. " against once-beaten lin Cordes firing in 18 points 49% choice and prime 1,100-1,400 lbs 27.50- Tailor, 227 E. 4th. Caiinon Falls. The game Goodrich 54% Swift rails off .3 and utilities up .3. 28.25; choice 1,100-1,375 lbs 26.50-27.50; Although not big by current standards , and Mike Hodgson 10. 75; high choice and prime is at Cannon Falls. Goodvear 47% Texaco 80% good 24.50-25. FOR "a |ob well done - feeling" clean Unofficially, the Dow Jones 26.25-26.50; the Chieftains do have adequate size. Tues- Fred Kraeger 's 11 paced 900-1,07 lb slaughte-r heifers carpets with Blue Lustre. Rent elec- And in the West Central , Arkansaw enter- Gould 31 Texas Ins 188% 050 lbs 25.O0-26.O0; good day night 's starling lineup ' usually high industrial average at noon was choice 800-1, tric shampooer, SI. R. D>. Cone Co. will have 6-3 Lvle tains Taylor in a battle for second place. Dodge Center s Gt No Ry 58 Union Oil 52 22.25-24.25; utility and commercial cows up 1.54 at 954.06. The official 13.00-14.50; utility and commercial bulls Sell at center. Sell, an all-conference per- scoring attack. FOR MOM OR DAD, Sis or Brother ______-BOB JUNGHANS Grevhnd 21% Un Pac 43% averages were 16.50-19.25. delayed by me- Caravelle swatches starti ng as low/ as Gulf Oil 58% USSteael 49 Sheep 800; wooled slaughter lambs fully TONIGHT PINE ISLAND 56 chanical trouble. and prime around $10.95. A great stocking stufferl RAIN- - steady; package choice BOW JEWELRY, 116 W. 4th St. LOCAL SCHOOLS— DOVE R-EYOTA 45 Homestk 45% Wesg El 63% 95 lb woold lambs 27.50; good and choice Winonai State vs. Hamline, Memorial 25.00-26.50; cull to good ewes 6.00-10.00. Hell, T:J0 p.m. Dover-Eyota was minus its Honeywell 75 Wlwtn 29% General Dynamics was so CHRISTMAS SHOPPING «ot you best? NONCONFERENCE — entire starting unit via one route swamped with orders that the (First Pub. Monday, Nov. 29, 1965) Relax over lunch at the Captain's Quar- Mencel Shares Pro La Crescent et Lanesboro. stock could not be opened in the ters, WILLIAMS HOTEL. Say "Hello" TUESDAY or another during the final pe- State of Minnesota ) ss. to Innkeeper, Ray Meyer, tell him Fri- HIAWATHA VALLEY - riod and lost to Pine Island 56- PRODUCE morning. Demand for the stock County of Winona > in Probate Court day sent yew. Kenyon at Cannon Falls. followed news that the company No. 15,170 DAIRYLAND — 45. CHICAGO (AP) - USDA)- In Re Estate ef JINGLING BELLS of Christmas usually Football < Marlon B. Queisser, also known as mean less 1 ingle In the family pocket- ' Cochrane-Fountain . D. Severaon. La Cross* Oakland 14, New York 14. Hotels won its first game of quate to short, demand good. No. 2 barley 1.08 bate Court Room In the Court House In 7. Pate Marr, Winona 711 M HAYFIELD 75 Amie Glenna Boston 2*. Denver 20. No. 3 barley 98 the City of Winona, County of Winona, La Crosse 771 is Standards 44%-45%; checks 37- •. Ray Llcht*. NEXT SATURDAY'S GAM! the campaign by dropping Sun- WANAMINGO 62 No. 4 barley .91 State ot Minnesota, on the 22nd day Oeorge Myer. onalaska . 771 l« Tel. 8-3595 *. Houston at Boston. In the battle of unbeatens, 38. Winona Egg Market of December, 1965, at 10:45 o'clock 10. Bob Jeakln*. La Cross* 774 » NEXT SUNDAY'S 9AMBS beam 10-8 in overtime. A.M.; and that this order be served 11. Hilary Janwick, Winona 771 » Hayfield demonstrated why it Whites: extra fancy heavy These quotations apply as of Oakland at San Diego. Todd Taylor and Rick Massie by the publication thereof In the Winona 12. Rill •urroualti, La Crease 771 II Denver at Kansas City, is ranked as one of the teams weight (47 lbs min) 4«-50; fancy 10:30 a.m. today Dally News according to law, and by (First Pub , Monday, Dec. 11, 19«) IS. w. A. Critchfield Winona 747 17 Grade A\ (lumbo) .42 (utlalo at New York. each bagged 10 points to lead ) the mailing of a copy thereof to the State ol Minnesota ) ss. 14. Owen Hasten, tprg. Or. 7al 1< to beat in Region Two with a medium (41 lbs average 46%- Grade A* (large) .37 named legatees and devisees In the Will H.St County of Winona ) In Probate Court 15. Bill vogel, Winona . 7S* 76-62 triumph over Wanamingo. (41 Grade A (medium) ,31 of said decedent. Bob Welsbrod '5» use the Pa int Depo>t assault, while 47%; fancy heavy weight No. 16,180 1*. Winona 7 Grade A\ (small) 13 Dated November 24, 1965. 17. Bob Beadle*, Winona 70 1} But it took a last quarter rally lbs min) 47%-48%; medium (40 Grade B 31 In Re Estate of Sports Scores Don Florin had eight for Coke. E. D. LIBERA, Henry Hanson, Decedent , II. Doner Wlemer, La Crotae 741 11.11 to post the triumph Hayfield lbs average; 45-46; smalls (36 Grade C .'. U Probate Judge, 1*. Bob Stein, Winona 741 11. a] Greg Zabrowski paced Winona . Order lor Hearing on Petition lor Probata Bay State Milling Company (Probate Court Seal) of Will, Limiting Time to File Claims it. P. Scharfhausen, La Cr. 744 10.St NBA had led 39-27 at half but saw lbs average) 39-40. Harold J. Libera, 11. Law Lewlson, La Croita 744 » Hotels' victory with six mark- Elevator A Grain Prices and for Hearing Thereon ¦ ¦ ASTERN the margin shared to 51-50 by Attorney for Petitioner. W. Frank Pomeroy, Winona 744 e DIVISION ers. Starting Oct. 15, 1965, 100 bushels of Anna Erickson having filed a petition ». Bill Bell. Winona 741 i W, L. Pet . OB the end of three periods. But the grain will be the minimum loads ac for the probate of the Will of said de- (First Pub. Monday, Dec 1965) 14. Did' Ohalll, La Crossa 741 a Boston II 7 .710 cepted at the elevator. . e, cedent and tor the appointment of Wi- Vikings posted a 23-12 margin 1 northern spring wheat .,.. l.«2 U. Hank Krwiiar La Cross* 741 t Cincinnati 17 11 .407 i", BANTAM No. State of Minnesota ) ss, nona National and Savings Bank aa Ex- No. 2 northern spring wheat .,.. l.oO je n** L*JtT Ls Cr^J? 75? • Philadelphia ... 15 10 .400 1 W L W L in the final period to wrap it up. of Winona - ) In Probate Court ecutor, which Will Is on file In this '' No. 3 northern spring wheat .... 1.56 Count/ 17. id Mroriik , Winona .. .; 73a 7 New York 10 17 ,144 » Central Melh. l 0 Sunbeam 1 1 No. 16,173 Court and open to Inspection; Mark Fredrickson hit 22, Lar- , No. 4 northern spring wheat .... 1.52 Red Men Club 1 1 Peerless Chain 0 1 Bluebonnet IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing 11. Earl Kane. Winona 731 7 In R« Estate of No. 1 hard winter wheat 1.52 14. Art Ollle-s, La Crosse 711 7 WESTERN DIVISION Athletic Club 11 ry Edlund 18 and Don Proeschel Walter H. Schmidt, Decedent. thereof be had on Janu ary 7, 1966, at No. 2 hard winter wheat ,.. 1.50 11:30 o S*. John White, La Crossa 71* 7 Los Angeles . .. II 14 Mt and Gary Fritze hit 15 each for Order for Hearing on Petition for Probata 'clock A.M., before this Court 11. Harold Hoddens Recti . 710 7 No. 3 hard winter wheat 1.46 in the probate court room In the court Baltimore . . .. 14 17 .453 Jh Central Methodist opened its Hayfield. Grant Hoven paced No. 4 hard winter wheal 1. 42 et Will, Limiting Time to File Claims S3. Pete Nonitad, La Crosse lit 7 San Francisco . 11 li .441 IVi and lor Hearing Thereon house in Winona, Minnesota, and that (Four Oernes) season with a S6-29 victory in No. 1 rye 1.13 ob|ectlons to the allowance of said Will, HIOH SERIES St. Louis 11 H .407 4Vi Wanamingo with 20. Dean Ho- Liberty No. 2 rye 1.11 Alma D. Hofemelster having filed a Games If any, be filed before said time of First Week Detroit t 17 .144 4 the Park-Rec Bantam basket- ven hit 14 and Tom Foley 10. petition for the probate of the Will of Frank Memo I all II said decedent and for the appointment hearing; that the timer within which (First Pub, Monday, Nov. «, IMS) o-f HIOH SINGLE OAMR SATURDAY'S RESULTS ball league, while Redmen ol The Merchants National Bank ot creditors said decedent may file their claims be limited to tour First Week Stele ot Mlnnesott ) ss. Winona as Executor, which Will Is on months IM It Boston 141, San Francisco 104. Club was handing Sunbeam its from the date hereof, and that Rollie HerwKk ... County of Winona ) In Probate Court file In this Court and open to Inspection; the New York ISO, Baltimore 117. claims so »lled be heard on , first loss 19-10. The combined Id, 142 IT IS ORDERED, That the hearlna April 20, Los Angeles 131 it. Louie 101. Set This Week No. 1966 , at 10:30 o clock A.M., before this (OT), In Re Estate ot thereot be had on January 5, 1966, at ' Philadelphia 135, Cincinnati 131 outcome left Central Methodist Court In the> probate court room Kllubeth Cathirln* Moher, fermstiy 10:30 o'clock A.M., before this Court In In the SUNDAY'S RESULTS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS court house In Winona, 101. atop the league with three Beck Gets 30 Elizabeth C. Jung, Oecedint. the probate court room In the court Minnesota, and Lor. Angeles HI SI. Louie , The Bluebonnet Bowl and the Ord«r for Hearing on Petltlo* house In Winona, Minnesota , and that that notice hereof be gl ven by publica- squads tied for second . tion of this order Badgers Swamp TODAY'S OAMES Liberty Bowl push post-season to Sell Real Estate objections to the allowance of said Will, In the Winona Dally News and by Bob Browne rammed In 15 The representative ot said estat* hav- If any, ba tiled before said time of mailed notice as provided No games scheduled. college football activity into its by law . TUESDAY'S OAMHS points and Pete Hardwick 10 to ing filed herein a petition to sell certain hearing; that the time within which Dated December 9, 1965. Phlledelphia al Cincinnati. major phase this week as the real estate described In said petition/ creditors of said decedent may file their pace Central Methodist. Tony But Main Bows IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing claims be limited to four months Irom E. D . LIBERA, Baltimore vs. Detroit et New York. . Nusker Tankers first of 11 top year-end attrac- thereof be had on December 23, 1V65, at the date hereof, and that the claims Probate Judge. San Francisco al Nsw York. Winczewskl bagged a dozen for (Probate clock A.M.. before this Court so filed be heard on April 13, 1966, at Court Seal) ¦ tions. 10:30 o' Harold J MADISON , Wis. 1*1- -Wiscon- the losing Athletic Club , Gary in the probate court room In the> court 10:30 o' clock A.M., before this Court In . Libera, Six small-college bowl games Attorney (or Petitioner. sin won all 11 events Saturday ;KVKTS FOR KICKPY Wenzel's eight paced Red Men 's house In Winona, Minnesota, and that the probate court room In the court SI . . last Saturday left the field to th« notice hereof be given by publication ot house In Winona, Minnesota, and that as it swepl past Nebraska in a In City Play (First Pub. Monday, Dec. II, 1961) (AP) victory, Jim Zaborowski had six this order In the Winona Dally News notice hereof ba given by publication of ST. LOUIS - Funeral majors with the Bluebonnet at this order In Ihe Wlnone Daily New s nonconference swimming meet, end by mailed notice as provided by law. Stale of Minnesota ) ss . for Sunbeam. CITY HASKETBALI, and by mailed notice ei provided by services for Branch Rickey, one Houston matching Tennessee Dated November 1* . 1965. County of Winona ) In Probali Court 75-20. W L W L LIBERA., law E. D. . No . 15,754 1st Ntn'l Bank 1 o Main Tavern 0 1 and Tulsa and the Liberty at Probate Judge. Dated Decembe r 3, 1965. William Swano unci Mark of the dominant figures of base- Williams Anx. 1 0 Lewiston 0 1 In Re Estate ef Memphis sending Mississippi (Probate Court Seal) 6. O. LIBERA, Rudolph R. Noeska. Marsh each won two events for ball in a career spanning more Welkins 1 0 Mont . Word 0 1 Decedent . against Auburn getting the fire- William A. Llndqulst, Probate Judge. Order for Hearing on Final Account the Badgers in their opening than half a century , were to be Attornsy for Pelllloner. (Probate Court Seal) and Petition lor Distribution Harold J. Libera, , Watkins dumped Main Tavern works started this Saturday. The representative ot the above named meet of the season . held todnv in St. Louis. t, l«45) Attorney for Petitioner. Richards Is (First Pub. Monday, Dec. estate having tiled hla final despite Fred Beck's 30 points The North-South and Blue- account State of Minnesota ) ss. ond petition lor settlement and allowance IT Gray all-star games are sched- (Pub, Data Monday, Dec. II , 1965) thereot'and GRIN AND BEAR to highlight the opening round County of Winona ) In Probate Court for distribution to tho per- uled for Christmas Day before No. 16,131) NOTICI It HHRHBY OIVelN THAT sons ihereunlo entitled ; of City Basketball League ac- In Re Estate ol IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing the usual year-end msh brings WHEREAS, A Certificate was, on the thereof be had on January 7, by William McKinley Oarlnger, Decedent. 6th day of December, 1965, presented to 1966, at Fired 10:30 o tion Sunday. on three more bowl games Dec. Order lor Hearing on Pelition 'clock A.M., before this Court In the County Board of Winona County, the probatB court room In the Watkins posted a 79-56 vic- 31 and font on Jan. 1, to Sell Real Estate Minnesota, executed by the Clerk of court The representative of said estate having house In \Ailnona, Minnesota, and that Common School District No . 2608, slating tory to knot itsel at the top of The nation's No. 1 small-col- cirtaln notice hereof be given by publication f filed herein a petition fo sell that a Resolution had been adopted by of lege team, North real estate described In said pelltlonj this order In the Winona Dally News the heap with Williams Annex , Dakota Stqte , the school board ot said district on the and by milled notice as Houston Club IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing 25th dny of October, 1965. and that provided by which downed Lewiston 63-46, held rugged Grambling to 16 1 963. at thereof be had on December 29, pursuant to Ihe provisions of said re- 11 o clock A.M., before this Court In Dated De-cember 10, 19M5. HOUSTON , Tex, (AP) - Paul and First National Bank , which yards in the air and 81 on the ' solution, an election was held on the the probate court room In the court E. t> . IIBEHA. 23rd day of November, 19>65, on the Richards , who came to the pounded Montgomery Ward 50- ground last Saturday en route to house In Winona, Minnesota, and that ,„ , , Probate Judge. question of dissolving said school dis- (Probal* Court Stall Houston Astros as general man- 33. a 20-7 victory in the Pecan Bowl notice hereof be given by publication ot trict, and that a ma|orlly ot the votes this order In Ihe Winona Dally News Sawyer & Dnrby, ager in !%t to huild up the club , Beck fired in 30 for Main at Abilene, Tex, cast at said election were In favor ot Attorneys for Petitioner and by mailed notice as provided by dissolving said school district and having . i.s on the outside? looking In to- Tavern, but he didn 't get much The NAIA championship went law. tht territory embraced (herein attached (Pub. Dale Monday, Dee. 11, Dated December a, 1965. lo oilier existing school districts or un- 1WJ) day but lie isn't bitter. help. The balanced Watkins at- to St. John's , Minn . , which MARGARET McCREADV, City of Winonn Minnesota organliad territory as provided by law; BOARD OF ZONING Hoy Hofl.ein.7 owner of the tack was led by .lack Bennedict •whipped Linfield , Ore., 33-0. Probate Clerk. NOW THEREFORE IT IS ORDERED, APPEALS " (Probata Cam I Ual) Thnt a hearing be held on said Certifi- Notice of Hearing Astros , fired Richards Sunday wilh 14 , Roger Wistrcill with 13 Elsewhere, East Carolina Roger I Hartman, . cation al a meeting ol said Board at and replaced Field Manager crushed Maine 31-0 in the Tan- Attorney tor Petitioner, Pt EASE TAKE NOTICE : and Tom Von Feldt with 12. Ihe Court House In the City ot Winona That an Alma, Wisconsin . In said County, on Tuesday, the 4th day application has been made Luman Harris with (irmly Hat- Von Feldt ena gerine Bowl at Orlando , Fla.; by Jack N bled Watkins to ot January, 1946, al 2:00 o , and Dona ld A. Wall for (First Pub. Monday, Dec. t, KM) 'clock PM., a var iation from ihu ton intiiiat>cr of Houston 's Okla- control the backboards. Tennessee A&I and Ball Slate al which time and place this Board '<•(,, .irnments ol will he Wlnon-n /onlnn hear all persona Interested , nnd 1r.lln.ince -so at homa City farm club in the Pa- Williams Annex broke away battled to a 14-14 tie in the State ot Minnesota ) st. their o permit constructio n Counly ol Winona ) In Probate Court evldenre and arguments for and agnln-jt ot an addition ]A >UR UC. to Itwlr present oarn(|« c| cific Const from a slim 25-22 halftime leaii Grantland Rice Howl at Mur- dissolving said Common School District 0„, r , 0 ,h, No . 15,753 ,hm re No 2408, ot Winona Counly. [IZJl ""' "'" Wlred SO-fool to post its easy victory . Hob freesboro. Tenii.; Los Angeles In Re Estate et Minnesota; setback? from. an tal Smith , N|)t-clfll assistant to Cliauncey tl Erwin, Decedent, IT IS FURTHER ORDtRED, R Dls.trId at Ihe lot- . That lowlnn devalued properly: Larson meshed 15 unci Tom Slate edged California Santa Order lor Hearing en Final Account nolica of said hearing be given Hofhrinz , wa.s mimed dirt'tloi of by Ihe lots 1 .wl 3 mid ll,« , Barbara lrt-10 in ihe Camelia and petition tor Distribution. publication of Ihis order tor one week Northerly 30 Stagings VI for the winners l«;t ot I cl 6, block <6, o, P. Ad- player personnel Smith and Tha representative ol the above named prior lo said hearing In the newspaper cllllor., Bowl nt Sacramento-, Calif., and or at in Went Third Stree t , lewiston was led by Sandy Hen- estate having filed her final account and known as the V/lnona Dally News, put). Not ,.. I, le.n, ,„ ' Hnltoti will share Richards ' petition for settlement and allowance Ilihed and printed In said lhB ||c(m1 a ry wi th 13 and Hon Krdmann Fullerton. Calif. , defeated Hen- County; by n Ihr- owners of property duties thereof and for distribution to Ihi per- affected by former and the general the tiostlng of copies thereof In Com. the appilrnllon. ' witlt !(l . derson , Tex., 20-15 in the Junior sons (hereunto entilled, mon School District No 364H, proposed ninnagt'r title will be retired. . ,hls IT IS ORDPRF.D, That the hearing to be dissolved , at least ten nlu„n 'T"".'Y' "," ,">m""1 will he The story was nearly the Rase Bowl at Pasadena , Calif . days before tW <0 rl Rt> judge thinks t hat Crady thrreot be had on January S, 1964, al seld day ol hearing; and H»n m " m ol lh« City "The ¦ hy tbe mail- Hall, Winona, Minnesota" same in the First National 10:45 o 'clock A.M., before this Court ing ol toples thereof to , at 7:39 pm¦ and Til l can run the club better the Clerk of on December v:i. IMS, Bank-Montgom ery Ward game. In the Diobate court room In the court Ihe nliove named school district and to «t wh|tn ,,m group, " Richnrds said FULLBACK SIGN* house In Winona, Minnesota, ami that the Clerk ol each adjoining; school than »>ur ells In person. In writing, nr b First National lirok o away from Fin. (fl-The Mnimi nollce hereof be glvrn by publication ol trlrt and Ihe Commissioner of Educa- y a0 rnt , or al a flurried!)' called news con - MIAMI. ntB ' this order In the Winona Dally News tion, etc, at least ten days before said inT' '""' """ ""V rrason a 17 13 halftime mark to post Dolphins , newest member of Ihe whichWhich l iny m„v h(1 lv „ ,„ „ ference' set up by Hoflieinz. and by mailed police as provided by day ol hearing, as provided by law o> dnnylng ot u 9 THf= thK netlebn. " " the victory. Chuck Goerish had American Football league, an- law . COUNTY BOARD OF H»'V am i "That 's 100 per cent okay with Dated December 3, 1V65 - uqunifed lo prepare their ( " WINONA COUNIV, .MINNESOTA < <"<•. rtrta.l, n do/on and Itarlie llcigen 10 nounced Sunday Ihe signing ot RA, "I and pre -in, all atldrnce me E . D i.int By Leo R . Borfcowskl, '«l« imi to this "Both %ido$ ot thm Vitt Nam €ontiov«r$y /iowa been whine-is , fullback from Su- Probate Judge. pernio,, ,| ih, llmS "lt't. his team. He wasn 't sal- for the Perry King Jack Pugliski Chairman. ol Ihe scheduled heating recorded and diyiiod by our computer, gentlemen University of Wi s- (Probate Court 3eal) Attest: RdsprOtully, Lsfied with the progress of the was cited on defense for tho perior State Harold J. Libera. RICHARD SCHOONOVER, UUSSfci ROSSI ...one/ now H want * to give a pint et bloodl" winners. consin. Attorney for Petitioner. County Auditor. , Chain,,,,,, team. " Board ol Zoning Appeals. BUSIIIMI Ssrvlet)i 14 Situations Wanlwl—P.m. 29 Poultry, Eggs, Supplied 44 ArtlclM for StU 87 Wanted te Buy SI ACCMMHM, TlrM, Part* 104 Trash «nc! Rubbish Hauled Reasonable Rates D 0U NEED y0ur h0UM? DEKALB 30-weeK pullets grown by pro- TROPIC AIRE HUMIDIFIER TABLE JIGSAW wanted. Clarence Crav- h<"P " T,,• fessionals, In new environment Tel. 8687-4895 «M1 con- Rtg. *«m speclel U9.?S en, Stockton, Minn. Ttl. Ltwliton 3754. Usad Can 109 Used Cart 100 trolled building*, that at* wlndowlass MARK SCHNEIDER SAL SI for light control. Available yew around. S934) eth St.. Ooodvlew WM. MILLER SCRAP IRON I, METAL Nelson Tire's plumbing.. Roofing 21 Busintss Opportunities 37 , SPELTZ CHICK HATCHERY, Rolling- CO. pays highest prices for scrap CHEVROLET-USD. Privately owned. All Hon* Winn. Tel. WW-2311. 1 SNOW PLOW SPiCIAU Iron, metals, and raw fur. r»conditlon«d. completely cleeniKl ant Ooodell h.p. - utt unf for tlii m w. 2nd Ttl. tow read y to 90. Tal. J-H93, KEN-WAY electric SEWB* CLEANING * ClMtd Saturdays ONE-OWNER THE PLUMBING BARN . Partner In Profit WanUd—UvMtocW 46 Jaeobttn 3 h.p.-M!9 unit tor »T7» Bargain Center While They Ltstl ' MiJSTANG-1945. V-l, ?W, J.iDMri, bur- trd l> Hlgtl Forest (rear) Tel. v»4 SEE U» For Bait Prices Sunay, muni i»ll, In Ihe «*rvlc». Arly FOR YOUR BEST hog market contact AUTO ELECTRIC SBRVICH ' of $25,000 Jnd Johnson Tel. USS Scrap Iron, Metal, Wool, Raw Pura CAR Hemmenn, St. Charltm, Minn. Tal , ft}. ROTO to $50,000 ¦ yeir. AmaElng Casety Marcki, St. Charles, Minn. Tel, * M a, W IRON » MtlTAL CO. GREAT BUYS ON: 3337. ELECTRIC ROOTER "•w Product. $7,300 Invaitment secured. W2-4TJ0. Ml W. ini St. Ttl. 3094 For clogoed seweri and drains Write century BrleK Corp.. of America, OLD MAtTBRS LIQUID WOOD. Mod' 1962 MERCURY S-22 Tel. iSO) or 6434. 1 year guarantee. Century Br ick Bldg,, Brie, Pa. LEWISTON LIVESTOCK MARKtT irnlit and raflnlih old dirk itemed -fr Passenger Tires and painted furniture end woodwork HIGHEST PRICES; PAID 2-door hardtop, 6 cylinder A rial good auction mirkff for your tor scrap Iron, metals, rage, hldet, I960 FORD 4 door sedan, CALL SYL KUKOWSKI livestock. Dairy cattle on hand all without removing eld finish, scraping engine, automatic transmis- Money to Loan or bleschlng. vt raw tun and wood £¦ Truck Tires 40 weak, hogs bought every day. Trucks sion, whitewall tires, red V-fl , automatic transmission, Septic Tank & Cesspool avallablt. til* Thurt. Til. tut. PAINT DEPOT Sam Weisman & Sons Tractor with black nil vinyl bucket 1W Center St. INCORPORATOR •ft Tire* radio , heater , whltewull "Cleaning Service 1 Farm Imp1«m«n»« 48 410 W. Jrd Ttl. «M? seats. Special truck. Sanitary «. Odorless SHOP NOW AT tires , white with green In- 0. *. WOXLAND CO. LOANPLAIN NOTE-AUTO—S " FURNITURK:I AUSSEY HARRIS, 1M2 modal 39 with DAILY NEWS Rooms Without Mnals 86 1957 DODGE 4-DOOR Rushford, Minn. Tel. 864-ttU 170 E. Jrd. TH. 9915. Davis hydraulic loader with mow buck- W. 5th & RR. Tracks Sedan., V-8, automatic, pow- terior. THIS WEEK'S Hre. f a.m. to 5 p.m.i Sat, • e.m. to noon it, live pump, naw front Mres, excel- MAIL LAROB PLEASANT siMplnfl room, sil WINTER'S bad weather means an In- lent condition. Priced to Mil. Ttl. 14341 B. 3rd. er steering, power brakes, SPECIAL! $600 Slnk-Erstar Garbage Disposal will be or may be seen at 561 E. Batlevlaw. SUBSCRIPTIONS Old "Wagon Works'* Bldg ALL JNEW premium white- especially welcome In your home, No Dogs, Pats, Supplies 42 ROOMS FOR MEN, with or without messy wrapping, nevir leave the kith- VAN DALE SILO unloader and bunk May Be Paid At housekeeping privileges. No diy iloep- wall tires. In great running en, lust scrap, waste Into the disposal. RAT TERRIER puppies, Ideal squirrel feeders; used Badger 14' unloader. trs. Ttl. 4159. shape , looks sharp, too. Have Santa get you one todayl dogs. Will hold until Chrlstmes. Tel. Allyn Tews, Rt. 1, Winona, Minn. Ttl. TED MAIER DRUGS WALZ 8-2621. Lewiston 5796. FRANK O'LAUGHLIN Apartmants, Flats 90 COMPLETE BUICK - OLDSMOBILE Baby Merchandise PLU MBING fc HEATINO TROPICAL FISH - Rid Tall, Black H0MELITE CHAIN SAWS — ntw and 59 MT E. Jrd Tel. J70J Sharks. Regular $1.49, special ale. Lof- usad, free servicing and havt « full CENTER SKWt-dtlux* 3-reom apt., par- MOTOR TUNE UP W INONI A UTO Open Mon. >c Frl. Nlcht qulst Variety, line of parts In stock. Alma Motors, DELUXE STROLLERS, 113.95) baby tially furnished, with prlvalt bath, *' Miracle Mall. drapes and carpeting. Avallablt Jan. RAMBLES ~\ ~6obni^ COMPLETE PLUMBING Alma, Wis. Tel. 685-3235. lumpers, Se.U. BORZYSKOWSKI FUR- • Check Compression f Hydronlc Heating Service OIVING AWAY 2 pure white psrt Sia- NITURE, 302 Mankato Ave. Open eve. 1. Adults, By appointment only. Til. TRANSFER SYSTEMS «7W. Mobile Home», Trailer* 111 mese cats, t months old. MT) Lincoln nines. • Check Plugs SANITARY St. Parmantnt cr Portable. ^- :. PLU MBING (. HEATING Ed'i Refrigeration & Dairy Supplies FIVE-ROOM upper apt., neat and water ft. SALES STAR 1961 lflxss, 1 bedroorm. on tot , lei 6. 3rd St. Tel, 2737 555 E. 4th Ttl. S532 Building Materials 7$ I furnished, Immediate possession. Call • Check Points reedy to move Into. Tel. »-2n»i HOUSEKEEPER WANTED to live In, 2 school buses. Lawrence Paste, Kel- FURNISHED APT., prlvaft tntranct, pri- condition, wllh porch end large oil tw references, no oblectlons to 1 or 2 chil- logg, Minn. ¦YOU BET WE carry a wldt variety of vate bath, available Immediately. Tel. rel. Tel. 355!. dren, $23 per week. Write E-27 Dally SCRAPERS high grade coals, Commander, 3 sizes, 9287. Parts Extra 4-door sedan, V-fi , automatic HWY . i(l Mobile Home 5 i on*t|«, . „ o I THE Fuller Brush Co. has openings for of stoker coals. JOSWICK'S FUEL t, * HOLSTEIN BULLS-reglsfered, service- 45 tractors. ble or up fo suite ot See Sieve Mor- RENT OR SALE—Trailers and clmp- two ladles to represent Fuller cos- able »ge and younger, sired by Plney- OIL CO., 901 E. 8th. "Whera you get *¦ snows on the rear. Very metics and cleaning products in the more at lower cost. gan at Morgan's Jewelry. er*. Leahy' s, Buftalo City, Wis. Tel . hlll Waiorlty or their dems are daugh- " clean . PRICE IS RIGHT. Cochrane 248-2532 or 348-2670 . Winona area. IS hours week, flexible ters that are Minn, leaders for either Can be reversed and used AUTO SERVICE CENTER schedule, $2.20 per tiour, For interview Dry or green slab wood. . $1500 milk or fat. They have up to 21,470 lbs. Houses for Rent 95 MIRACLE MALL ALL MODERN treller house, !x«', Hloh write Jerry Johnson, Rt. 3. Rochester, milk and 887 lbs. tat- as 2 year olds. for pushing. Ideal for clean- J7 per load. Minn. Tel. 8-2133. Ouecn, all like new, will sleep !, rea- Alvln & Elmer Simon, Altura, Minn. FARM HOME near Lewiston. Tel. Lew sonably priced If taken at ones . Mr». ing feed lot areas. Iston 2207. Motorcycles, Bicycles WALZ Clyde LaRocaue. Rt. 2, Box 125, Pl*ln- Furn., Rugs, Linoleum 64 107 vipw , Minn. Tel. 534-1783. N. F. -180 IN MINNESOTA CITY—t-bedroom home BUICK - OLDSMOBILE NORTH CENTRAL Under $100. Tel. 2959. ROBB BROS. MOTORCVCIES Open Mon , HARDROCK MAPLE living room group ihopi, & Fri. Night AIRLINES Suspension Kochenderfer & Sons Including sofa, arm chair, platform 6 the largest dealer In Mlnn.-Wlv La Crosse Mobile Homes For Baby Pigs rocker, coffee table, 2 lamp tables, ? FIVE-ROOM HOME, all modern, avail Winona shop, 573 E. 4th. Fountain City, Wis. ablt Jan. 1. Inquire 211 W. Mill alter 5 New & Used 450 CC $11.95 table lamps and floor lamp. Brown and Is Interviewing now for tan upholstery. Brown lounge chair, Trucks, Tract's Trailer! 108 brown recllner chelr. Reasonable. Tel, Wanted to Rent 96 ROLLOHOME TED MAIER. DRUGS 9387. THESE CARS AIRLINE Animal Health Center FORD, Ittt H-ton pickup, SlJO j toil 1^ mile S. of City limits on Downtown & Miracle Mall WANTED IMMEDIATELY 3-room fur- Chevrolet, Sliti 1954 Oldsmobile, »>35. STEWARDESSES CHRISTMAS SPECIAL! Corduroy cover- nished or unfurnished apt., family wllh WILSON STORE. Tel. tO-2347. Hwy 14. . MAES ed foam filled decorative pillows, SI baby. Reasonable, Tel. 64(6. RECONDITIONED Lyle Norskog - Hollls Norskog Milker Inflations each at BURKE'S FURNITURE MART. Are you a high school grad- Special • 3rd Si Franklin. CORRECTION Tel. La Crosse 4-8554 Pall Cover Gaskets Farms, Land for Sal* 98 uate, single, between ages Feeder Cattle • TABLE GROUP, 3-pc. Including J step We Have 2 And Carry a 20-25, height 5'1" to 5T , not Air Tubes for and 1 cocktail table. $19.95,- 32-pc. dln- 160 ACRES, 115 tillable;, 36 stanchions, 1950 CHEVROLET Auction Sales • nerware set, «.«J. BORZYSKOWSKI real good buildings on all weather over 135 pounds, with nor- FURNITURE, 302 Mankato Ava. Open road, 8 miles N,W. of Houston. Kvale Vi-ton pickups. (Not 1959s). mal vision and two years DE LAVAL & SURGE evenings. Real Estate, Spring Valley. Minn. Tel. $295 1-YEAR WARRANTY MINNESOTA of work experience or col- AUCTION Milkers 346-2011. Land Auction Soles Good Thingi to Eat Fenske Auto Sales 1965 CADILLAC Sedan De & lege? All Fresh Merchandise 65 FARMS FARMS FARMS Evarett J. Kohner Wed., Dec. 15 We bu y, we sell, in trada. 4fi0 E. 2nd Ville 1i» Walnut. Tel. 5-3710. after houra 7114 If you qualify, please write LARGE se lection of Christmas candy and MIDWEST REALTY Cd. 12:30 p.m. Sharp nuts at low, low prices. Fresh pitted °sseo, Wis. 1964 PONTIAC Catallna 4- CARL FANN JR. us for an employment ap- F. A. KRAUSE CO. dates, 2 lbs. 49c. Wlnone Potato Mark- Res. 695-3157 door AUCTIONEER. Bonded and Licensed. et* 118 AAarket. Tel. Office S97-3659 1960 750 Tel. 864-7811. plication. We will contact Calves, yearlings, 2 year Breezy Acres 1964 CHEVROLET 4-door Rushlord, Minn. you regarding an interview. Hwys. 14 and 61 East " ¦¦ old steers & heifers Buy Food Wholesale Houses for Sale 99 1963 PONTIAC Catalina ALVIN KOHNER Capitol Food Provision Co., 3030 FORD TRACTOR AUCTIONEER, City and state licensed Free air travel, paid vaca- Also Brood Cows eth St., Gdvw. Tel. 73J6. TWO STUCCO HOUSES—1 2-bedroom, I Convertible and bonded. 252 Liberty St. ICornef tions, and other liberal All Breeds Hay, Grain, Peed 50 3-or 4-bedroom. Garages. West 'ocatlon. 302 motor 1963 CHEVROLET Bel Air E. Sth and Liberty) Tal 4980. employe benefits. Carpeting. Will finance. Tel. 6059. Fresh Native Cattle CORN WANTED—George Bronk, Stock- APPLES 4-door DEC 14—Tuas. 10:45 a.m. Ray W. ton, Minn. Tel. Winoni 8-1237. ALL MODERN—1-ffoor, 2-bedroom bunga- 1958 750 1963 PONTIAC Tempest Bauer farm, 1 mile N.W. af Durand, NORTH CENTRAL No veal or slaughter cattle ~ For your Christmas enjoy- low, altaclied garage, lots of extras. 4- Wij. Ray W. Bauer, owner; Leon at this sale. Articltu for Sals Tel. 9325 or 208 E. 81h. • door Schoeder, auctioneer; Chippewa Val- . AIRLINES, INC. 57 ment or as a gift the whole FORD TRACTOR ley Fin. Co., clerk. family can enjoy. Refriger- D. NEAR ST. MATTHEW'S Lutheran 1962 PONTIAC Star Chief 6201 34th Ave. So. Regular sale every Frl. AMERICAN-FLYER S-geugt old style Church and school. If you have been DEC. 16—Thuri. 11 e.m. 7 itlllei i. of electric train. Tel. 7958 weekdays, 6 to ated storage. 302 motor 4-door Minneapolis Minn. 55450 wanting a new home In a west loca- Arcadia, Wis. Emll M. George Sr., , 12 Noon . ' *. - . tion, be sure and call us on this 2-bed- 1961 CADILLAC Sedan De owner; Alvln Kohner, auctioneer) ' room home. ABTS AGENCY, INC., 159 Northern tnv. Co., clerk. PLANK, beams and candle Jay Spittler s Ville AN EQ UAL OPPORTUNITY BRIDGE "I" ECHO LODGE ORCHARDS Walnut St. Tel, 8-4365. Two 32' Trailmobile EMPLOYER Lanesboro Sales iron and all bridge material. Tel. Plain- 1961 CHEVROLET Bel Air DEC. 16—Thurs. 1 p.m. at tha Mobil Sta- view 534-156?. 3 miles E. of Marshland STOCKTON, MINN.-3-apl building and tion on Hwy . 52 In Harmony. T & K Commission vacant lor. Must bt sold. Aodress In- SEMI-TRAILERS 4-door Service & Tire Center, owner; Howard BEAUTIFUL HAND—smocked silk and and Vi mile off Hwy. 35. Qulrles to the Merchants National Bank, Knudsen, auctioneer; Harmony State Lanesboro, Minn. satin sofa pillows, all colon. May Be Trust Dep-t., Winona. Tel. 2J3T. Single axle, vacuum brake I960 PONTIAC Star Chief Bank, clerk. Male—Jobs of Interest— 27 seen at U8Vi Walnut. Marie Ledebuhr. , Hwy- 16 Tel. 467-2192 insulated 9-20 tires. 4-door hardtop THREE-BEDROOM home with butlt-lns. , DEC. 18—Sat. 12:30 p.m. 3 mlltt E. of MARRIED MAN wanted, with good farm CHRISTMAS TREES - Norway pint, _ ^_MS_____ ^. carpeting throughout, walk-ou t base- I960 CHEVROLET Impala Trunk "E", then 2 times, , on the Alma on County experience, no milking, top wages. Har- sheared 2 and 3 5'-!' ment, large lot. Also beautiful view of 4-door hardtop miles N. on town road. Arnold Hager , old T. Johnson, Harmony, Minn. stump, IOC each. Minimum order 25. JMMMM\\__ Have Hlawalha Valley. Tel. S3(9 lor appoint- owner; Jim Helke, auctioneer; North, Tel. Whitehall, Wis. KE8-495I. \ ment. FEDERAL BAKERY 1959 PONTIAC Star Chief ern Inv. Co.. clerk. ACCOUNTANTS — full or part-time, ex- ATTENTION 4-door perienced In Individual Income tax re- FOR CHRISTMAS Bambenek's have to- YOLJ FOR SALE OR RENT, 4-room house, GARAGE DEC. IB—Set. 12:30 p.m. 2013 Stout Rd., turns. Salary and bonus. Apply 116 boggans, toboggan cushions, skis, ski M ^P east Filth St. Also for sale or rent In 1959 PONTIAC Catalina 4- Hwy. 12 Menomonie, Wis. Mike Clark, Walnut St., Dec. 15, 12 to 5:30 p.m. poles. Now all we need Is the snow. MIM Fountain City, 3 family house with run- owner; Johnson & Murray, auction- FARMERS BAMBENEK'S, 9th & Mankato. y ning spring water, 2 lots, on North door hardtop Mrs; Gateway Credit Inc., clerk. •TEADY EMPLOYMENT With future, k' Registered Shore Dr. Rent terms. C. SHANK, 522 , ^i^ Used Cars 109 1959 CHEVROLET Impala experienced production wood finisher; DOUBLE BED bookcase headboard, E. 3rd. DEC. 18—Sat. 1 :30 p.m. 2 miles N. of experienced silk screaner—all phases. complete $40; rollaway bed and mat- Convertible 53, then 5 miles E. on "C", tress, $12. Inquire 368 Carlmona St., CHEVROLET—19«3 ' Impala 2-door hard- Ettrick on Will hire as leadman or foreman If IMMEDIAT E occupancyl 861 W. Sth. 4 top, V-8, automatic, power steering, then 2 miles S. William J. Hermeyer, qualified or will train to supervisory For Sale mornings or evenings. or 5 bedlrooms, l'/j swrhs, full base- — also — owner; Alvln Kohner, auctioneer; North' , level. Resume For TV Sets 32,000 actual miles. Excellent condi- with reply. Box 388, ment, oil heat, 2-car garage. Will ar- tion. 11,700. U3 Dacota. ern Inv. Co., clerk. Faribault, Minn. FOR SALE-2x10s and boards, at Weav- range long term loan with payments Many others to chosoe from. 40 head of Holstein close er, Minn. Tel. Winona 3826. To Be Given Away At... springing 1st and 2nd calf like rent. CHEVROLET-IMS' Impala «oor tiard- Part Time l 13 head of Holsteins FOR SALE~2x4s. W8 W, 2nd. Frank West Agency top, black with red Interior, V-B, au- YOUNO MAN with car can earn catt e. tomatic transmission, excellent condi- 11 .80- McDonald's? 175 Lafayette tion, must sell. Steve Nahrgang. Tel. FARM •2.50 per hour. Write Warren D. Lea, just fresh with calves at TWO 820x15 Goodyear Suburbanite white Tel. 5240 or 4400 after hours. 311 Lose-y Blvd. So., La Crosse, Wis. side. Financing available. sidewall snow tires and wheels, good Lewiston 5748. VENABLES tread, from I960 Bulck. May bt seen at Easy terms. 6 to 36 months 1026 W. Wabasha. Guns, Sporting Goods 66 CHEVROLET— WT 4-door sedan, Dava 75 "W. 2nd Tel. 8-2711 AUCTION to pay. U.S. Government Lllla, 761 E. 8th. 6 miles S,W, of GUITAR, electric Gibson, Kalamaioo am- WEATHERBY SCOPE, 2'A-10x variable; WHATEVER YOUR Open Mon, k Fri. Evenings Located Steady Employment Bonded for your protection. plifier, both 1 months old, both for 1100. lee skates, men' s figure, size 11. Tel. FORD - 1957, $175. Straight shltt. Tel. Stewartv ille, Minn. PROPERTY NEEDS 8-4198. Tel. 2790. 353 Dacota St. 7456 after 6. Friday, Dec. 17 For PLAINVIEW SIEGLER OIL burner, good condition- Musical Merchandise SUBURBAN CARRYALL, 1944; 2—IMS Tel. 3688. TO Phone Us Dodge Cornet 440 4-door, 6 cylinder; A NICE CHRISTMAS Starting at 10:30 a.m. ORDER BUYERS 1965 Dodge Cornet 440 4-door , I cylin- BABY GRAND PIANO, cornet, Lunch on grounds. Factory Positions Minn. GIFT PACKAGED Towel Sets, 98C-S3.98. violin. 412 For An Appraisal der. If Interested call or inquire St. Plainview, Tcrry and plastic ta&lectotrts. Lofquisf Wilson St. Tel. 8-1021. Mary's College. GIFT 79 HOLSTEINS Office Tel. 534-2614. Res. Variety, Miracle Mall, Mostly calfhood vaccinated, HAMMOND chord organ, tn excellent Of your present property CHEVROLET—195) Bll *lr 2-door hard- Also Al; condition, Tel. 5719. FOR THE FAMILY free , artificial Tel. 534-2613, talk to BURN MOBIL FUEL OIL and tn|oy true and let us show you our top, excellent condition. 5595. Way be all Bangs or St. Charles S32-4615, talk comfort of automatic personal cart. seen at Bill's Texaco. Tel. 9946. tliis breeding. 18 cows milking, 1 Qualified Draftsman Keep full service — complete Burner WURLITZER PIANO-second hand, In photo listings of new and springing. 3 first to Ed. care. Budget plan and guaranteed prlca . good shape, Norman Kopperud. Rush- CHEVROLET—1955 Bel Air, S175, flood fi cows Order today from JOSWICK'S FUEL 8. ford, Minn. Tel. B6<7«61 . older properties now avail- runlng order, all winterized. 407 W. 1 963 PONTIAC calf cows; 7 second calf ir Liberal Benefits We also pay top prices for OIL CO., 901 E. 8th. Tel . 3389. able. Bth, Hubert Zechas. T«l. 3017. cows; 6 cows milking since Buyers We Service and Stock Catalina butcher hogs daily. DUNCAN-PHYFE dining table, 3 leaves? BUICK—1957 Special 4-.* .'. .< .' . .'.",', ..ViVA't -.% ¦ V,,V .SYi' -'» VI' I »Wi ?i\ (WV/iii'.Vtt ', .. .. '.U^V •¦.»>->* '• A" - jM 310 we get an ad written. Why? * BANK Installment L OAD Dept. may no* .— ¦ ¦ I cure the children's measles but we may FIRESTONE Because we have an up-to- ¦™ bo able to euro your fin nnclnl dilllcul- Low T~J1 S&H Green Stamps llos and make lite worth living ngaln. 200 W. Third Winona date p rospect list. And be- Spend 10 minutes of your time with one cause we are experienced in ot our friendly loan officers and be con - dealing with Real Estate Priced i ¦j^^ij%,ij ri WITH EVERY vlnced. We will try our level best to Sewing Machinal 73 NORTHERN INVESTMENT COJ wM ;] |j0jM I assist you. problems. USED VIKING (rat arm automatic, port, Bargains 200 GALLONS ICE SKATE EXCHANGB able or cabinet. WINONA SEWING Call us today and we will 1¦¦ 2QTAMEEE PS2 B|i Kolter Bicycls Shop CO., 551 Huft. Tel. M4J. .. , $,r.9!> 400 Mankato Ave . Tel. 566S do our best to pleaso you. 'fiO Rambler Wntfort ? 'fiO Valiant 4-door .... $495 2 miles north of Ellrick on 53, then 5 miles east on "C ," < vLm* m OF FUEL OIL Stovas , Furnaces, Parts 75 •60 4-door $:195 *0f Falcon tlien 2 mile* south. Vfatch for arrows. FROM TEM PO'S IIEOLER HEATERS, oil or gas, Install- '60 Falcon 2-door $295 ed, sold serviced/ Aladdin Blue Flame •59 Buick Sedan $f>95 eorlebl* heaters; also oil burner nart» , ORDER NOW! TRADE IN SHOP RANGE: OIL BURNER CO., 907 E. Jth '59 Ford Wagon , 9- St. Tel. HV), Adolph Mlchalowskl . 601 Main St. Tel. 2849 passenger ., $599 Saturday. Decern bet IS - j 1—Used Coronwlo 13 cu. ft. •59 Edsel 4-door $499 Relax In Cozy Comfort Typewriter! 77 Sale starts at 1 :30 P.M. Refrigerator , real nice. '59 Ford Galaxie 4-door $290 '\ Realize Double Savings in stamps and warmth from Wantsd—Raal E»Ut» 102 $120 TYPEWRITERS and eddlno machlnts '5fi Oldsmobile 4-door .. $395 27 - HEAD OF CATTLE - 27 ' clean burning furnace oil , lor sale or ra.nl, Reasonable rules, '5B Ford Custom 4-door $149 12 cu. (t. Upright Freezer. tree clollvery. Sea ui lor all your of- WILL PAT HIGHEST CASH PRICES (23 COWIS) fice FOR YOUR CITY PROPERTY '57 Ford Station Wagon $149 Be sure and osk for your 1968 $65 supplies, desks, files or ottlce '.'2 Holsteln cows — 2 springers. 1 fresh in clays , '\ chairs. Lund Typewriter Co. Tel. U33. "HANK" JEZEWSKI '57 Plymouth 4-door .. $145 2 freshened .September , :! freshened Orto- Texaco Fire Chief calendar, , open 1—Frigidaire Into model Re- THE RIGHT CHRISTMAS (jHt lor your (Wlnonn ' .-s Only Real Estate Buverl '5fi Dodge %-ton pickup $295 lier , open , 2 bred for January freshening, 5 bred frigerator. Needs gas, but son, daughter, husband , wife, dad, Tel. 63B8 nr 7093 P.O. Hox 345 '54 Plymouth 4-doi>r .. $ flfl mother, the Olivetti-Underwood for March freshening, .1 bred for spring freshen- • METERED DELIVERY has useful parts. $5 Lellera 37 typawrlter, light anotigh tn Utt Accessorial, Tir«t, Parti 104 Many more to clunnse from , ing, :i butcher cows; 1 Ayrshire cow, bred for ;.; • KEEP PILL SERVICE " wllh ana finger, slim enough to slip April ; 1 Holsteln heifer , bred for April; 3 Holsteln / j P\ A dandy ARVIN portable Into a desk drawer, Sea the Lellera 5NOW Tines, J 75(7*14 4-ply lubelnst, nil priced low ! EMERGENCY SERVICE TV with stand . . . less 32 priced at only 17*.59 at WINON A like now J 2 750x14 -4-ply lube less mow heifers , open. Some are vaccinated. • Ajj tSn TYPEWRITE R SERVICE, l«l E. Jrd, tlrei, hlflCk . Cheap. Tel. B 4241. we Advertise Our Prices than 1 year old. Only $(10 Winona. ^ ^^ TERMS: Under $10.00 cash ; over that amount cash STARTO-JET will start your car In sec- j w \\ down and balance in monthly payments. 3% added ' > CORONADO 2-hont automa- Washing, Ironing Mach. 79 onds evetry day. For mora Information BOB STEIN Enlep i to balance for fi monlhs. Your credit is always good with .;. Vgy tic clothes dryer. or (lonlenhlp call Diamond K ; $40 prlaei. St, Charles fiUM. Cg ! the Northern Investment Co. RCA WHIRLPOOL EM^ \ WH.UAM .1. llAKMKYNIt , OWNER ( CHIEF 41 Years In Winonn OIL CO. FUEL Washers and Dryers Telep hone Your Want Ads ; I Llncoln-Mercury-Fakon ¦¦ TEL. 4743 FOR PROMPT FURNACE OIL TEMPO Sales and Service Alvin Kohner . Auctioneer FUEL OIL DELIVERY Miracle Mall io The Winona Dally News Comet-Fai rlane Northern Investment Vi> ,, Lester Senty , Clerk FEITEN IMPL. CO. Open Mon., Fri . V,w. Hep, by .los . nnd Dave NorRaarri, Melrose, Wisconsin < Hours 9-1) Mon, thru Sat. ' Nights and Holidays 8-3450 and Saturday afternoons y Sunday 1-6 113 Washingt on Tel, 41W2 Dial ;cm for an Ad Taker. BUZ SAWYER By Roy Cr«n»
DICK TRABEETLE BAILEY By Mort Wallcar
BLONDIE 9y Chic Young
TIGER By Bud Blake ___ . ¦¦ , - — ---- - '¦ ' ¦ II . .li l- » . Bj THE FUMTSTONES «y Hanna-Barbera
WL ABNER By AI Capp STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff
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