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12-7-1964 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News
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Gromyko Asks Disarmament Parley Proposal First New Viet Ta lks May Lead Declaration of To Bombing of Red Routes New Leadership UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. SAIGON, South Viet Nara U.S.-Vietnamese planning ses- * As ," war against the Communists an outcome of my visit (AP)— Soviet Foreign Minister (AP) — U.S. Ambassador Max- would be broadened. It was be- sions. Taylor said, "the President has well D. Taylor and South Viet- lieved that President Johnson "I think as time goes on the instructed me to consult urgent- Andrei A. Gromyko today namese Premier Tran Van had ruled out attacks against results of the decisions will be- ly with the government of Pre- called for a world summit con- Huong today opened planning North Viet Nam, but the Red come apparent," one official mier Tran Van Huong as to the ference on disarmament. talks expected to lead to bomb- supply routes through southern said. measures to be taken to im- The Soviet proposal was mad* ing of Viet Cong supply lines in Laos were considered likely tar- Taylor on his return said new prove the situation here in all before the TJ.N. General Assem- Xaos. gets. measures by both the United its aspects." bly in the first major policy de* Taylor returned to Saigon States and the South Vietnam- The ambassador said Johnson Officials said no announce- claration of the new Soviet lead- Sunday from Washington amid ese would be discussed. He re- had "reaffirmed the basic U.S. Increasing speculation that the ership. ments were expected from the fused to say what they were. policy of providing all possible useful assistance to the South Gromyko also submitted a Viet Nam people and the Huong detailed memorandum on disar- government in their struggle to mament, outlining measures to defeat the externally supported Mother Kills 3 Children be considered at the proposed , insurgency and aggression being conducted against them.' conference. Thousands of police were The Soviet foreign minister Hangs Herself in St. Paul strung out along Taylor's route declared that the present inter- from the airport into town. national situation was ripe for There had been rumors that 3CE-TORN LIMBS ... The damage to gathered on power lines and tree limbs and progress on such measures as a Buddhists planned demonstra- a these trees on a residential street in Sche- tugged -wires to the ground, tion against the Huong govern- leaving a total complete ban on nuclear weap- nectady, N.Y., is typ ment. None materialized. ical of the destruction of 75,000 homes and businesses without elec- ons, the liquidation of foreign ) The South Vietnamese forces wrought by the weekend 's combination rain- tricity. (AP Photofax bases and the reduction of mili- scored a major victory against sleet-snow storm in New York state. Ice tary budgets. the Viet Cong in a fierce nine U.S. Delegate Adlai E. Ste- hour battle Saturday on the Ca venson listened intently as Gro- Mau Peninsula, at the southern myko spoke in quiet, concilia- tip of South Viet Nam. The gov- Ice Storm tory words. ernment said 115 Communists The Soviet delegate specifi- were killed in the encounter at Wilson Offers cally endorsed Red China's Tan Lac village, about 150 miles Hits New Proposal for a meeting of the southwest of Saigon. eads of state of all countries South Vietnamese officials to consider a ban on all nuclear said their side suffered 86 casu- NATO Plan weapons. He also backed the alties, but the battle was re- York Area WASHINGTON (AP)-Prime organizing a nuclear weapons recommendation of the nona- Minister Harold Wilson was to I force within the North Atlantic ligted nations at Cairo for a garded as a psychological boost SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP) for the government's war effort, present to President Johnson to- Treaty Organization. world disarmament conference. which had been sagging badly. — Cold and hardship continued day new British proposals for i U.S. and British officials were He said: Six U.S. airmen were wound- today for thousands, of families hopeful for early agreement on "The Soviet government lg to participate in furUh Jeffrey, 7 Timothy. 4 Susan, 2 ed in the attack as U.S. helicop- in an ice-crippled eastern por- the rough outlines of a com- !prepareder discussions in any . forum ters raked the Communist bat- tion of New York. Power crews mand and control system, ST. PAUL (AP)-A 29-year- [ which would then be negotiated and at any level, including tits talion with rockets and light sought to restore heat and light 4 Teen-agers * highest one, of the problem ot old woman described as a "good bombers dropped 500-pound with West Germany and othwr , interested Allies. general and complete disarma- mother" in a "happy family" bombs. Communist fire dam- for nearly 40 000 customers. stranded her three The sun glistened this morn- nent, of banning and destroy- children and aged 14 helicopters. The Johnson-Wilson confer- Burch May Not then took her ing on a winter wonderland ence will continue through Tues- ing nuclear weapons, and of Killed as Car measures for the curtailment own life by created by ice-laden trees and day. hanging in the power lines. Temperatures of the arms drive." family's home ranged down to 10 below zero in The President will then meet Stem GOP Attack Sunday. Thompson the wake of one of the state's Leaves Highway with Soviet Foreign Minister Gerald E. worst storms. Andrei Gromyko on Wednesday. By JACK JHSLL to step out. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS That meeting will afford John- Neubauer, 31, a The bitter cold added the Florida Law WASHINGTON (AP) - Re- This was based in part on re- welder for son an opportunity to stress to ports given the governors In threat of frozen water pipes for Four rural West DePere teen- the new government in Moscow publican governors have started Northern States Starts Second agers — a boy and three girls- ¦a tire within their party that closed session that as many as Power Co., stricken residents, most of his view that the projected 70 of the 138-member Republi- whom were in an area bounded were killed Sunday night when NATO nuclear force — opposed •could make it difficult for Na- found the bod- a car left the road and wrap- Held tional Chairman Dean Burch to can National Committee may ies when he generally by Albany on the by the Soviet Union — will not WW •command the broad-base sup- favor replacement of Burch. returned from Prison Year south. Glens Palls on the north ped itself around a tree. lead to the spreading of nuclear Burch's own canvass of his and Amsterdam-Gloversville on Their deaths , plus five other weapons. port he needs to hold his job. Mrs. Neubauer work about 4:15 (AP) - Today strength within the committee p.m. ST. PAUL the west. fatalities in separate weekend Althoughlhey stopped short in marked the start of the second Wilson arrived from London By High Court was said to have been some- Three deaths were attributed accidents, and one resulting a declaration at Denver, Colo. , The victims were Mrs. Irene year in Stillwater Prison for T. Sunday night. Obviously con- what disappointing to him. to the weekend onslaught of from an Oct. 1 crash, added 10 WASHINGTON (AP) - Th* Saturday of calling collectively Neubauer; Jeffrey, 7; Timothy, Eugene Thompson, St. Paul scious ot the danger that other for Burch's resignation, there Sen. Thruston B. Morton of 4 , and Susan, 2. snow, sleet and freezing rain. names to the state's record- Allies might think Johnson and Supreme Court struck down to- Kentucky, former head of the attorney convicted of first , day a Florida law making it a appeared to be majority belief "They were a normal, happy degree murder in the slaying of Many schools closed Friday breaking highway toll for 1964 he were "ganging up" to decide among the 18 who attended that committee, made the point on a couple getting along fine," remained closed today. Others now rapidly approaching the 1,- the nuclear organization issue, crime for a Negro man and television broadcast Sunday — his wife a year and nine months white woman, or a white man after Burch canvasses the situa- neighbors said, "She was ago. served as emergency centers 000 mark. he told newsmen "we don't ex- ABC "Issues and Answers" — for those driven from their pect to finalize anything." and Negro woman, habitually to tion thoroughly he may decide always good with the children." The slaying, one of the more The total fatalities for the that the chairman has to have homes Churches, fire houses occupy the same room at night. Police said no note was left. bizarre in Minnesota murder . year reached 986—156 ahead of The head of the British LaboT broad support within the com- and other public places also Justice Byron R. White, for a 't The children were found in two annals, also sent two other men last year. government which took powei mittee. He added he didn know were opened for emergency use, unanimous court, said the Flori- " bedrooms, the mother in the behind bars for life terms. Killed in the Brown County in mid-October described anybody who would want to and cooking facilities were pro- the da law represented "an exercise stay in that position that didn't basement. Police said the The murder occurred March conference as "the beginning c«f of the state police power which Max Conrad vided . accident Sunday night were: have support of his own com- youngsters had marks on ' their 6, 1963. Mrs. Carol Thompson, LaVerne J anz, 17, daughter of a fruitful cooperation , the be- trenches upon the constitution- mittee." necks, but that they might have the mother of four, was beaten The Weather Bureau said to- John Janz; Larry Schmitz, 18, ginning of a series of discus- ally protected freedom from been smothered with pillows. and stabbed. She died, the state son of Henry Schmitz; Kathleen sions which we hope will lead to invidious official discrimination Morion who had announced night and Tuesday would be a , Relatives said Mrs. Neubauer charged, pecause Thompson deRuyter, 17, daughter of Mr. the strengthening of the al- based on race." Flying Across his backing of Burch, said it is bit warmer, amid scattered had received some pills from a wanted to collect a huge Insur- snow > and Mrs. Herbert deRuyter, and liance." up to the members of the Na- doctor about a year ago for ance windfall. A Florida law prohibiting Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, her cousin, Susan deRuyter, 18, tional Committee and no one "nerves'* but otherwise had In prison, Thompson earns 55 marriages between Negroes and else to determine whether touring evacuation centers in daughter of Er. and Mrs. Don- whites was attacked in the same South Atlantic seemed in good health. cents a day as a laborer. He the Schenectady area Sunday ald deRuvter, Burch should be replaced. Autopsies were scheduled on operates a machine that winds case, hut White said the court (AP) night, declared, "We've had ice All of the families live in ru- SAN JUAN , P.R. -Max He added : "He must have the four victims. twine into balls. In his spare Russians Will was not expressing any views Conrad, the 62-year-old flying storms before, but none has ral West DePere , but the Janz about that law in today's opin- broad support in the National time he directs a 15-member ever fceen as bad as this." and Schmitz homes are in Outa- granddad from Winona , Minn., Committee itself , he must have choir. ion. The court dealt solely with was winging across the Atlantic , a Minneapolis gamie County and tho DeRuy- the statute dealing with persons broad support among the Re- C. Paul Jones County. on his 142nd crossing in a publican governors, the Repub- attorney handling Thompson's ters in Brown of different races using the Fly Arms to same room at night. light plane today, due to touch lican mayors, Republican lead- appeals , says he likely will file The Brown County sheriff's down at Dakar, in West Africa. ers, state chairmen, vice chair- the appeal with the Minnesota Job Corp s Explaining the court's ruling. office said the 1950 Chevrolet , White said that , because the Conrad left San Juan Sunday men, Young Republicans and Supreme Court after the first ol apparently driven by Schmitz , all." the year. Thompson has lost a section as to persons using the on the 3,200-mile trip, hoping to was traveling east on Brown Congo Rebels same room applies only to a avoid- bid for a new trial in district Comps in land in 23 hours. He planned to Although the governors County Highway S when it went CAIRO (AP) - The Soviet white person and a Negro who fly from Dakar to Capetown , ed naming Burch in a declara- court, off the road on a straightaway. Also sentenced In the slaving Union reportedly has agreed to commit the specified acts — South Africa. tion setting out their ideas about The car careened into a ditch, help finance the growing arms living together — and because revising the party leadership, it were Norman Mastrian , onetime State Asked came out of it and slammed into From there. Conrad planned middleman, airlift to the Congolese rebels. no couple other than the one seemed clear a majority were boxer labeled the BAGLEY , Minn. (AP)-State a tree. The car was ripped al- made up of a white and a Negro to shoot for a world-record light not offering the chairman the CHRISTMAS SEKLS fight IB and and Dick W. C. Anderson , a An East Europoan Communist lane flight by gunning for an ad- Rep. L. J. Lee says he is dis- most In half by the impact and is subject to conviction upon p kind of "broad support" Morton oilier RESPIRATORY DISEASES sometimes salesman who diplomat said tho Soviets proof of tho elements ,500-mlle nonstop from plot. turbed by the fact young men the engine was shoved on top compris- 8 Jaunt sold was necessary. mitted carrying out a death from Minnesota are being agreed last weekend to replen- ing the offense It proscribes Capetown to Now Orleans. of Schmitz , recruited for federal job corps ish stocks of the Soviet-made "we hold (the section) invalid That would break hla 1959 non- camps outside tho state and weapons which Algeria and tho as a denial of the equal protec- stop distance mark. He flew 6 ,- ' for Raise suggested the state needs such United Arab Republic are ship- tion of tho laws gunrnnteed [ Couldn t Wait ' by 5)11 mllea from Casablanca to camps. Hangover ping to Chrislopho Goenye s the 14th Amendment." forces. The Russians also re- El Paso. Tex. in 57 hours , 27 Lee wrote to Secretory of the A hangove r, we 're told , Is minutes. portedly will pay part of the Interior Stewart lltlahl about tho mourning after the night airlift costs. tho matter. Ho said n couple before . . . Laziest guy we Cou rt Will Rule Good Secretary Absconds of possible sites for such camps know is one who has insom- Communist China has sup- On Estes Plea WEATHER While Earth nia and has his wife count ported the rebels through its Hut Ciermalnn was In _ hurry town when an accountant had in Ihe state arc the MIDLAND , Tex. (AP) - India n Reservation and Itasca shoe)) for him . , . Tho embassy in Burundi , east of the WASHINGTON (AP) - Tha FEDERAL FORECAST come in to make a routine When independent oilman H.C, Deputy Sheriff Gene Howell State Park arcn. prices some mechanics Congo, but when the rebels were Supremo Court decided today WINONA AND VICINITY — Hood needed a secretary in Ocs said. Two days after she went to check of Hood's books. charge to txuie an engine , driven north toward the Sudan- to rule on whether live televi- Howell nnd Texas Rangers Lee is a member of the state Partly cloudy tonight and Tues- tober , an employment agency work for Hood , shu started writ- Democratic - Farmer - Labor you 'd think tlicy wore grad- ese border , the supply lines be- sion coverage of the trial of day, Warmer Tuesday. Low to- sent him attractive , red-haired ing checks nnd signing her em- arrested her on n Fort Worth uated from Jiiilli nnl , . , A ey Central Committee . came difficult to maintain. The Billlo Sol Estes on a charge of night 12-18, high Tuesday 30-35 , 32-year-o} d Germalne Springer. ployer's name , Howell said. street over the weekend. Th ¦ college foodwill star was of- Chinese are reported try ing to swindling violated recovered oighteen $lfl() bills , his rights LOCAL WKATIIKR Oermalne asked $500 monthly She bought an automobile fered $25 ,000 to piny pro improvo (heir supply, and the under the U.S. Constitution. "I didn 't the car and fur stole. salary. Hut said Hood, with a check for $2,49fl , a fur Goodfellows Fund ball , but his wife tinned it Soviets apparently are trying to Estes, the Texan whose f|- Official observations for the 24 have enouRh work to justify that Sunday night , C-ermaine wns hours ending ut 12 m. Sunday: stole with nnothcr check for $1 ,- down — no trading ntismps. counter this. nmncial bubble burst with kind of pay. I told her I would 080 and ,700 for , In a jail cell aftev six weeks of Previously listed ... $829.15 25; minimum, O; paid $1 a watch Witnesses have seen Soviet- heavy losses by lending compa- Maximum. start her at $.150 and .if ^things Howell «»id. She ev«n paid off extravagant living. She was Ainnndn Anrrstad ... 5.00 noon , 20; preclpltatioru none. worked out after a couple ol charged with forgery. Fnt-d nod Agnes 5.0(1 huilt Antonov transports of nies , appealer! to tho high tri- an old debt to an Illinois savings Egyptian und Algerian registry bunal from his conviction by a Official observations for the 24 months I would give her » and loan firm with another "She did this after all of us All«n S. Morgan 5.JI0 , " T, 10.00 ferrying weapons to the Congo stiito court Jury in Tyler, Tex. hours ending at 12 m, today : 1*11iftfi '' check (or $1 ,395, he added. had tried to befriend her A. C. 28; minimum, 20; "That Ml be fine." Hood quoted mused Hood. "She was a dnrn (For more laughs see Karl t hrough Khartoum and Juba, in Ho was sentenced to eight years Maximum, 4), noon, 26; precipitation, none. her as saying with a smile. Last week , Grrmalne left good secretary." Total to Du in $851. 15 Wilson/on Page Sudan. Imprisonment. Shop Tonight-Winona Stores Open Until 9 p.m. and 30 handicapped children Big N.Y. Store Sunday. Has Shopping Day Proceeds from the third an- nual Sunday open house — Arabs, Negroes For the Disabled 'llch helps the customers who Sn't walk to their Christmas NEW YORK (AP) - Alexan- shopping without the usual der's department store threw weekday hustle and bustle — open its doors and cleared the went to the 12-non-profit hospi- Battle in Sudan aisles on a Christmas shopping tals and homes from which the KHARTOUM , Sudan, (AP) ~ gro mob. An hour later thou- day for 400 disabled oldsters shoppers came. Arabs and Negroes battled sands of Arabs armed with through the night in Khartoum, sticks invaded the Negro quar- and fighting continued today. ter adjoining the airport. Bloody An estimated 10 persons were clashes were reported through reported killed, and scores wer e the night. injured, including an American The demonstration started at Dr. R. H. Wilson couple. Khartoum Airport when a WINONA COUNTY ADA . . , Officers and delegate* of The racial warfare broke out crowd of about 5.000 Negroes the Winona County unit of the American Dairy Association, when - thousands of Negroes assembled to greet Interior shown with Charles Peterson , regional representative , left, from South Sudan massed at the Hn/wunaidu Minister Clement Mboro. Mbo- are Clarence Mundt , producer delegate; Cullen Pierce, alter- Khartoum Airport to protest ro, a Negro, had been touring nate delegate; Malcolm Hobbs, chairman; E. W. Gaedy, domination by the East African South Sudan, where Negro his offiet at 76 East 4th .Street will be OPEN. 10 a.m. te nation's Arab majority. Then secretary-treasurer; Al Rivers, delegate ; Eugene Kalmes, WHAT COULD SAVE BIICKLED tribes are rebelling against the . p.m. Monday, thru Pridays, DECEMBER I until DECBM- they invaded the city, smashing ! Arabs of the northern Sudan vice chairman, and Alvin Nisbit , alternate delegate. m5,000 LIVES SEAT Automobiles and attacking Eu- who dominate the government B-R II for the purposa of paying on accounts and slgnlno , ropeans and Americans as well and the army. authorization to transfer your records to any doctor of yOur YEAR AND REDUCE BELTS! as Arabs. At fi rst ] held in check by the Winona Co. ADA choice. These records will be of great value to the doctor SERIOUS INJURIES Apparently the Europaras organizers , the crowd chanted La Crosse Man , slogans calling for the separa- you designate. All records not transferred by December and Americans were mistaken ; BY ONE-THIRD? in the dark for Arabs. "Thl9 is tion of the southern provinces Renames Hobbs 20th, 1964, will be destroyed. not against you," a leader of the j from the rest of the country. Recovers Watch It' s a fact . The National Safety Council says that if i Then the mob broke through the LEWISTON , Minn. - Mal- a car was protected by a buckled mob told an English family and , everyone riding in two Americans at the airport. thin cordon of organizers and colm Hobbs Winona Rt. 3, was I have on hand quite a few Hems of equipment that any 5 000 lives could be saved each year. stormed the airport building, re-elected chairman of the " Wi- seat belt-over r - smashed windows ¦ Lost in 1949 doctor might be Interested in at greatly reduced prices. And serious inju ries could be reduced by at least The rioters smashing doors and glass. nona County unit of the Ameri- and at Communist China 's embassy. LA CROSSE, (*—Willie They may be seen at my office at tha same hours. one-third. Take a tip fro m the Safety Council The crowd had grown to about Wis. can Dairy Association. Eugene tim e you drive. Iron shutters were lowered : 10,000 as it spilled into an adja- Curtis , associate hydrologist Kalmes, Rollingstone, was ap- buckle up for. safety every o>ver the windows of the U.S. j cent residential with the Coulee Experiment section. pointed vice chairman. Published to saVelives In cooperation with The Ad- (WLiy V&*M*^^ Embassy, and a Marine guard Forest near La Crosse, is feel- Ewald Gaedy, Houston , was vertisingCouncilandthe National SafetyCouncil. was on the alert. R. H. Wilson, MD. \5*5' ^j ewy :Pepin County Names ing better now about an item he re-elected secretary - treasurer . Helmeted police and troops borrowed and lost 15 years ago. Clarence. Mundt , St. Charles , ¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ . ¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ m ¦¦¦ ¦¦ ¦' ¦" ¦¦ i with bayonets dispersed the Ne- Two to Committee In June , 1949, while checking was elected proder delegate and ' _ ; " ,;'¦' , " ~"'" '*—-" '¦ W--I--W ." . 7" Advertisement On Vocational School rain and stream gauges in a for- Al Rivers, Rollingstone, was est manned by the Coweeta , nominated delegate . Alternate More Comfort Wearing DURAND Wis, ( Special) , - N. C. Hydrologic Laboratory, delegates are Cullen Pierce, Ut- Walter Hartman, Pepin, and Curtis lost a pocket watch he ica . and Al Nisbit. St. Charles . FALSE TEETH Donald Summers , Durand , rep- had borrowed from his brother- Her*) la > pleasant way to overcome resent the Pepin County Board The group heard _ discussion FOR CHRISTMAS af* A loo»« pl»t» dlicomfort. FASTEETH , in-law , Robert L. Brabson of ol the Minnesota Dairy Indus- DDCT *n lmptove
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. _ 1. _..- ~— L . . . ._. at (RumamLak. ihsL <&msrfi^ QhaidmaL Tow Heads South; By RUTH ROGERS has announced it is waiting for the first list of 2 Passengers Daily News Area Editor names. Perhaps the majority of the Daily News read- As a result of this thinking-of-others campaign, ers already have received at least one Christmas this holiday season can be brightened a lot for the Navigation Ended Slightly Hurt greeting. following: All , perhaps , except the elderly in nursing Mrs. Martha Jordahl , 101 years old, c/o Wil- The L. Wade Childress was homes, the lonely who have no relatives , and the liam Nelson, Blair , Wis. wrestling 15 barges, loaded ill , to whom the morning mail , if it brings some- Mrs. Sarah Peterson , Mrs. Lena Amundson and with grain , down the Mississippi thing for them, may be the biggest thing in their Gunder Scott, c/o Carl Johnson , Blair, Wis. River today and the navigation In Collision A passenger in each car was day. Henry Bochenhauer , Ole Helleque , Mrs. Beata season in Winona is at an ap- Solberg, Mrs. Hellek Olson and parent end. slightly hurt when two cars The annual Christmas card shower for these Halvor Knutson, collided head - on on a blind people has received approval from many individ- Blair Rest Home, Blair , Wis. River observers were won- curve of Warren Township road uals, and this year a greup of Winona churchwomen Miss Daisy Immell , Blair , Wis. dering whether the Childress No. 5, 2 miles South of Stock- would escape having the navi- ton, Sunday at 3:05 p.m. gation season end for her be- Both cars received about fore clearing the river ice, some of which is $500 damage to their fronts reported at least -?—•¦randleft fenders. Police Check as far south as Lock 18 (Burl- City Council May Act ington , Iowa). Sheriff's Deputy Lamar Fort said that William F. Wicka , And there was a report that ( 22, 416 Hamilton St., was driv- Bar Break-in, Lock 24 Louisiana , Mo.) would ing south on the road when he close Dec. 20 no matter what. apparently tried to cut the blind curve by driving into the On Vacancies Tonight THE SPEED the Childress was making last night and this nortbbund lane. Packed snow Theft in Car City Council members, hold- ered for the appointment. Council President Harold morning wouldn 't get her that made the road's surface trea- A break-in and a theft from ing their first regular meeting They are Mrs. Mary M asyga, Briesath said today he assumes far south fast. cherous. a parked car were reported of the month tonight, will scan former alderman at large, and the appointment will be pro- , , Wicka didn 't see until too over the weekend , Chief James a long list of possible appoint- David L. Johnson radio an- posed although no special pro- She locked through the Wi- , includ nouncer. vision—has nona Dam at late the approach of ^_cat W,_McCabe said today. ees to various .positions : been made on th« 5:40 p.m. Sunday ; ing those for three major city meeting's agenda. The by 7:30 a.m. driven north on -the road by A janitor discovered the pried- council today she had jobs. OTHER NAMES mentioned must appoint a replacement cleared the Carolyn J. Laufenburger, 16, open rear door of the East Side tor Trempealeau .Dam , BLIND CURVE, ICY ROAD ...The car in the fore- Most of the interest is cen- have Included Charles G. the term which expires next but three hours later she Lewiston, who couldn't see Bar, 851 E. Wabasha St., Sunday ground was moving south on CSA 33 Sunday when it encount- Wicka either because of a high at 6:24 a.m. tered on the problems of filling Brown Jr., Northern States April. wasn't in sight at the Dresbach. the 1st Ward council position Power Co., sales representa- Dam , 12 miles downstream. ered a car being driven north at this curve. The high bank bank abutting the road on its Inside the bar , cash boxes of Mayor R. K. Ellings will sub- at left prevented either driver from seeing the other until north side. a bowling machine^ and a ciga- vacated last month by Mrs. tive, William F. Holden , drug- mit the names of appointees The Childress has been Muriel Ollom 's resignation. gist and former alderman , and tri too late. A passenger in each car was slightly hurt . (Sher- The cars collided head-on. rette vending machine had been to two city boards for council ple-tripping; that is, taking Two avowed candidates have R. Burr Mann , paint store own- ratification. a few barges at a time and go- iff' s department photo ) Gerald Boland , 21, 53 Vine St., rifled , and $7.95 was missing These will be re- asked by letter to be consid- er and former alderman. placements for ing back for more. a passenger in Wicka 's vehicle, from the cash register, also William Thur- received cuts on the forehead. pried open. ow, who resigned from the Although another tow was de- Winona Housing finitely planning to come to Wi- His glasses were broken by The amount stolen from the and Rede- velopment Authority board nona before the end of the navi- the impact. Carol Richman , 17, machines is not known. The de- , Mild Temperatures and Hollis Larsen, who resign- gation season , it now has turned Lewiston, complained of pain tective division is investigating. Rochester Dairy after the collision but did not Tom Barth, 151 W. 4th St., Switch Engine ed from the City Planning around. That's the Bull Dur- Commission. ham, which was to deliver see a doctor. reported Saturday that a port- three barges of oil products to Sheriff 's Deputy Lamar Fort able transistor radio worth $69 Sales Increase IN ADDITION, Predicted for Week had been the council the Western Oil & Fuel Terminal investigated. taken from the glove probably will A spell of milder weather, just A light freezing drizzle, too compartment of his Strikes Car be asked to ap- parked car. prove a list Co. the kind for Christmas shopping, sparse to be measured, fell early ' The theft took place at 4th A single accident marred Sun- By $3 Million of 64 election jud- tt had instructions to unload was predicted for Winona and today but warmer temperatures and Johnson day driving in Winona. ges, submitted by local party streets sometime t at Fulton, 111., across the river vicinity this week. prevented walks from becoming between 12:20 and 1:30 a.m. Sat- Charles W. Rogers Jr ., 19, ROCHESTER , Minn. — Sales chairmen to a committee of from Clinton, Iowa , but it could- Temperatures through Satur- more slippery. Goodview Votes urday, Barth told police. 378 Main St., came out second- increased nearly $3 million at j four aldermen. The judges, n't even get there. There 's an day, said the weatherman, will A year ago today the Winona best in a contest with a Mil- Rochester Dairy Cooperative \ who will serve at city elections ice jam in a bend of the river average 5 to 10 degrees above high was 36 and the low 28. All- waukee Road switch engine during the past year, it was I in February and April, will b» near Lock 14 (Le Claire , daytime normals of 25-31 and time high for Dec. 7 was 57 in On Liquor Store Sunday at 8:15 p.m. revealed here Saturday at the j the first to preside over ma- Iowa). nighttime lows of 5-15. No im- 1916 and the all-time low -20 in firm's annual meeting. chine voting. They are being portant day-to-day temperature 1882. Judge Sales jumped from $18.9 to; chosen earlier than usual be- ANOTHER TOW—maybe two change is expected after a sharp Grants CITY ACCIDENT BOXSCORE $21.9 million during the past Lowest reading in Minnesota Revenue Tuesday j cause they are required by —still were scheduled to come warming up at the beginning of —To Date— year, nearly 16 percent, stock- 1 law to attend special instruc- upriver, but now they're report- the week. today was -3 at International One referendum will be on the holders were told . This was I Falls. Rochester had a low of 18 1964 1963 tion classes in machine opera- ed to have turned around. One No precipitation of any conse- ballot as Goodview voters go to Deaths .- .,,.. 1 4 double the increase for the pre- 1 tion and election laws applying developed mechanical after a Sunday high of 20 and 3 Divorces of them quence is expected. the polls in their municipal elec- Accidents .. 440 374 vious year. I specifically where machines difficulties. La Crosse posted figures of 16 tion Tuesday. Three defaulted divorces were and 23 for the awarded by Injuries ...., 168 116 Increased exports of butter ; are used. So in Winona Dec. 6 becomes PARTLY CLOUDY tonight same times. District Judge Leo abroad, an increase in out-of- In addition , the voters will F. Murphy Property j the official closing date for the and Tuesday is the immediate after November damage . $97,386 $74,475 state grade A fluid milk sales, forecast with a low of WISCONSIN had snow and choose one trustee, one con- hearings navigation season. Closings in 12-18 to- freezing drizzle today, stable and one justice of the , Assistant Clerk of plus a new record in ice cream j night and a high of 30-35 Tues- but tem- other years: peratures were climbing. peace. Court Gertrude Miller said to- mix sales, helped boost the total [ 1856.... Nov. 27 1910.. . .Dec. 3 day. day. Rogers was driving north on sales. Woman Driver The temperature rose to Light snow and freezing mist The referendum is on the 1857... Nov. 19 1911... Dec. 2S 25 question of whether the village's Mrs. Elsie E. Tews, 55, 110% Laird Street, didn't see the The cooperative during the Saturday afternoon and was resulted in slippery highway switch engine approaching from past year churned 10 million 1858...Dec. 1 1912... Dec. 12 stretches throughout Wisconsin liquor store revenue should be W. Wabasha St., won a divorce 3 1913... Jan. 12 24 on Sunday. It was chilly Sun- , from her husband the west as he neared the tracks pounds of butter, made 32 mil- Unhurt in Crash 1859. .. Dec. day morning, this morning. pledged to pay off a $65 000 , Arthur H. | 24 1914 ...Dec. 16 the official ther- bond issue for construction of a Tews and got a crumpled left front j; lion pounds of dried milk and I860.... Nov. mometer registering Snow was falling at mid-morn- , 63, 206 W. 2nd St., after fender when the engine struck \ A Utica woman was the un- 27 1915 ... Dec. 21 a low of new store. ! distributed bulk fluid milk to its 1861.... Nov. zero but this morning the mini- ing at Milwaukee, Beloit , Madi- a hearing Nov. 18. his car in the crossing. harmed victim o£ a spectacu- 1 1916....Dec. 16 'If the voters approve, bonds : retail and wholesale outlets. larly wild ride 1862....Dec. mum reading was 23. At noon to- son, Lone Rock, Green Bay, Mrs. Valerie D. Grenier, 23, '. A total of $248,324 was refund- today at 3:15 1863....Nov. 27 1917... Dec. 9 will be sold — probably Dec. 22 Ray Kulasiewicz, 467 Junction j a.m. on CSA 33, 2 miles south day it had risen to 26. Wausau , Clintonville, Stevens 1014% E. Wabasha St., was St.- was the engineer of switch iied to shareholders, employes 1864... Dec. 4 1918... Jan. 3 — and construction should start j lot Altura. Point, Janesville, Oshkosh and | divorced from her husband, | engine No. 920. More than $100 and participating creamery 1865 ...Dec. 4 1919 ...Dec. 3 the Hurley-Ironwood area. Light early next month . ' Thomas, 25, 917 E. 4th St., aft- ' operators. This was almost an A car driven by Mrs. He- There are no contests for vil- damage was done to Rogers' 1866 . .Dec. 9 1928... Dec. 24 freezing drizzle was coming er a hearing the same day. | car, none to the train. j $100,000 increase from last Peterson drifted off the road lage office on the regular bal- ' 1867....Dec. 7 1921... Dec. 22 City down at Eau Claire, Wausau, I A hearing Nov . 19 resulted in ; Patrolmen William A. King. .- year's refunds. to the left while moving south 1868 ...Dec. 8 1922.. .Dec. 13 Judge Asks Stevens Point and Manitowoc. lot in this election. None of the ' ! Vernon Rueker, cooperative on CSA 33. The Peterson car incumbents — Trustee Harris a divorce being granted Kath- ; and Glenn M. Morgan investi- 1869 ...Dec. 18 1923 ...Jan. 1 Temperatures early today , leen A. Vannatter, 24 Canton, gated. j secretary, said the number of traveled 100 feet in the left Anderson , Constable Willis Nor- , i patrons dropped by 3'A percent , 1870. .. Dec. 25 1924 .... Dec. 14 were well above the minimums I Minn., from Hubert L. Vannat- lane 75 feet in the left ditch, ...Dec. 15 Wife to Suggest reported early Sunday. Beloit ton and Justice of the Peace during the year ending Sept. 30, jumped a 6-foot cattle pass and 1871.... Nov. 23 1925 Floyd Famholtz — filed for re- j ter, 26, also of Canton. J 1872.... Nov. 22 1926 ...Dec. 7 had the low of 7 above early to- i while milk receipts increased came to rest 40 f eet f urther day. Milwaukee reported 11. election. All three divorces were grant- : by more than 14 percent. Oper- on. 1873 ...Nov. 29 1927.. Dec. 7 The only names on the ballot Winona Debaters ...Dec. 23 ' Lone Rock and La Crosse set ed on grounds of cruel and in- ating costs were primarily the 1874....Nov . 30 1928 . Mate s Sentence will be those of Herbert C. Kley- same while handling increased Mrs. Peterson was unhurt as 29 1929... Dec. 29 the state high of 24 Sunday. human treatment. Attorney P. ' 1875 ... Nov.. ' The judge let a Winona man's la , operator of the Shangri-La volume, he said. her car stayed on its wheels the 1 1930... Dec. 18 Park Falls was the coolest spot S. Johnson represented the whole time 1876....Dec. wife recommend the sentence Motel , who filed for the. three- and the Five directors whose terms , coming to rest with 18. plaintiffs in each case, Win 4 Out of 6 facing south. Damage to the 1877. ...Dec. 8 1931. ...Jan. 20 for her husband today — she year term as trustee, and Lyle defendants did not defend the expired were re-elected during 1878 ...Dec. 13 1932 ...Dec. 9 decided on leniency. Jacobson , 3925 4th St., who filed The Winona Senior High Saturday afternoon 's meeting. vehicle's front end was more HIGHEST IN the nation Sun- actions or engage attorneys. four of 1879. ...Dec. 12 1933 .. Dec. 13 Municipal Judge John D. Mc- as candidate for constable. The School debate team won They included Francis Whit- than $200. day was Naoles. Fla., with 79, The Tews couple was mar- I860.... Nov. 20 1934 ... Dec. 12 Gill heard Raymond E. Erick- justice of the peace will have to six matches at the annual Blue comb, vice president; Rueker, Sheriff's Deputy John Schnei- compared with the low of 13 be- ried at Lewiston , Minn., Nov. 20, (Minn.) High School In- 1881....Jan. 2 1935... Dec. 23 son's guilty plea to' simple as- be elected by write-in. Earth secretary : Orville Kvam , treas- der investigated. There was no low zero early today at Craig, 1929 and had no children. Mrs. vitational Tournament Saturday. lR82...Dec. 6 1936... .Nov. 27 sault against his wife, then call- Colo. Polls will be open from 7 a.m. , urer , and James Caulfied and explanation for the car's leav- Tews did not ask for alimony, 1883... Dec. 17 1937... .Nov. 29 ed Joan Erickson forward. i - ¦ until 8 p.m. The polling place is Coach Keith Larson entered a Paul Stellpflug, board members. ing the road. Nov. 30 1938.... Dec. 1 "What is your suggestion as the village hall. but she was awarded the cou- mixed team of experienced and George Daley, Lewiston , is 1884.... , ...Dec. 6 1939 ...Dec. 26 to your husband's sentence?" ple's household furnishings. beginning debaters in the B di- board president 1885 Rochester Dairy purchases 1886..».Nov. 26 1940....Dec. 1 asked the judge. VWell, I don't The Greniers were married at vision of the tournament. Whitehall Students Melrose Farmer Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 21, 1960, only grade A and manufactured 1887....Nov. 28 1941....Dec. 9 think you should put him in School District On the affirmative were bulk milk from farmers . ! Dec. 28 1942... Dee. 2 prison ," replied Mrs. Erickson. and have one child , a 3-year-old. Kathy Twomey and Jeanne Hitt- To Attend College 1888.... ¦ j 889,...Dec. 20 1943... Dec. _4 Judge McGill asked if a sus- Hearing Held Custody of the boy was awarded ner and negative David Vickery FILLMORE COUNTY DFL Killed, Tractor to the mother. Mr. Grenier was Planning Session 1890....Dec. 20 1944. ...Dec. 21 pended sentence might be a re- and Lee Turner. PRESTON , Minn. - A DFL 1891.... Dec. 25 1945...Dec. 13 straint on any future violence By County Board ordered to pay a lump sum in Among the 25 high schools appreciation dinner and social WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) 1892 ...Dec. 9 1946. ..Dec. 6 by Erickson towards his wife. settlement of alimony, to pro- represented at the tournament evening will be held at the Pres- —A planning day for juniors and Falls in Creek A public hearing on a pro- ' 1893... Nov. 29 1947....Nov. 29 "I think so , " she said. And vide support for the couple s was St. Charles , Minn. ton Servicemen's Clubrooms seniors will be held at Whitehall ... Dec. 8 MELROSE, Wis.M-The body posed school district dissolution child and to give the household High School Dec. 17 at 1:45 p.m., 1R94... .NOV. 30 1948 Judge McGill accordingly sus- was conducted by the Winona The Winona team will com- Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. 1895....Dec. 4 1949 ...Dec. 9 pended sentence of a $35 fine or of Ira White, 60-year-old farmer furnishings to Mrs. Grenier. pete next in an invitational David Elkins, guidance counse- County Board of Commissioners OPEN HOUSE AT VIOLA , 1896.,..NoV. 29 1050....Nov. 23 12 days in jail on Erickson. of rural Melrose, was found The Vannatters were married tournament this weekend at lor said. Saturday in a creek near his this afternoon. ELGIN , Minn. — Open house Representatives of schools of 1897... Dec. 1 1951.. ..Dec. 15 The suspension is conditional Beginning their December at Canton Feb. 20, 1960, and Mankato. 1898....Nov. 28 1952...Nov. 30 on Erickson's good conduct for farm. have two children , aged 2 and will be held Tuesday fronti 7:30 higher learning will be present meeting at the courthouse, the (o talk to the students, 1899 ... Dec. 24 1953.. ..Jan. 21 "at least" the next six months, Jackson County Dist . AUy. 4. Permanent alimony and child to 9:30 p.m. at the VioIa 'Town including commissioners held a hearing Hall for a business established the University of Wisconsin; 1900... Dec. 25 1954... Jan. 4 the judge said. The couple live Robert Radcliffe said White on a request that Common support were awarded Mrs. Van- World Population 14 1955 ...Nov. 28 apparently was killed Friday fur- two miles north of Elgin just Eau Claire, Stout and River 1901....Dec. at 23 Otis St. School District 2567 in Stockton natter , and the household Falls state universities; 17 1956 . ...Dec. 9 , while operating a tractor which Near 3,283,000,000 off Highway 42. Greetings Rub- Luther 1902.... Dec. Mrs Erickson made the com Valley be dissolved. Voters in nishings were divided between ber Stamp Sale & Service is the College ; Winona State College. ] 10 1957.... Dec. 11 was pulling a manure spreader. 903.... Dec. plaint against her husband Sun the closed district have indica- the two. WASHINGTON (AP) - The name of the new business, start- Secretarial School and School of 1904....Dec. 16 1958.. ..Nov . 29 day at 5:41 a.m. He said that when White ap- ted a desire to have their dis- population of the world in mid- proached a tpwrr road to turn ed hy Ardell F. Brueske. The Practical Nursing; Eau Claire 1905... .Inn. 1 1959 ... Nov. 17 trict split bewteen CSD 2558, 19f>4 was an estimated 3,283,000,- concern will handle greeting Vocational; Milwaukee School of 1906 ...Dec. 18 I960... Dec. 21 the vehicles around , the tractor Stockton , and CSD 2565, Minne- 000 and it is growing at the rate went off the edge of a bridge cards, gifts and gadgets in ad- Engineering, nnd Northland 1907 Ian. - 9 1961.. ..Dec. 12 sota City. Minnesota City of about 65 million n year . In dition to rubber stamps. College. 1908 ... Dec. 9 1.W2 .. Dec. 12 which had no guard rails and Pupils from the Stockton Val- 1980 it is expected to hit 4.3 bil- 1809... Dec. 10 1963 ...Dec. 14 2 Durand Bars dropped about 12 feet to the ley district now attend schools lion. 1964... Dec. 6 creek . in Stockton and Minnesota City. The figures were compiled t^^&Oaam Regular MMttagi Theft Reported ^^ *. Ut Othtr Radcliffe said White was un- An affective date of July 1 , 1965, primarily from United Nations -^^ xQl W/ ^ i and 3rd Mondays—8:00 p.m, married and his housekeeper wns requested for the proposed Sheriff George Fort today re- est imates. They were released Social Nights 1 ~~^^^aa^jj — Mondays Deposit Forfeited Burglarized was visiting in Nebraska . action. ported a theft and Bn attempted by Ihe Population Reference k^^*£r DURAND , Wis. (.Special) - break-in in the county late Inst Bureau to point out the long- INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODDFELLOWS On Open Bottle Count Two break-ins Saturday in the week. range problems posed by the John G. Schmidt, N.G. James M. Haskett , 21, 703 Wil- Durand area may hnve been AS USUAL Vern Tarson , Rldgeway, told global population increase. son St., forfeited $.15 In munici- done by the same person or the sheriff Sunday at B:30 a.m. pal court today on a charge persons, Pepin County Sheriff that someone had attempted to of violating tho state open bottle Victor Seline believes. break into his garage Saturday law at 4th and Walnut streets Entry to the Lone Pine tavern night. An investigation showed Sunday at 12:26 a,m. The arrest on Highway, 10 about 12 miles that a window in the garage's east of Durand was made Record Postal front door had been broken and 9 P.M. IN WINONA wns by police. SHOP TIL ¦ through a kitchen window. Ap- the door opened. Kharkov Jail in Russia can proximately $550 m cash was However, a soft drink cooler house 40,000 prisoners-, taken, plus an undetermined Volume Expected and other items piled near the amount of liquor and cigarettes door made entrance impossible ON CIRCLED DATES tn cartons. Thomas Anibns, The post office department Christmas rush here would for the burglar, owner and operator, discovered Is predicting that a record vol- start today. Stamp sales were Mrs. William Emmons, Min- WINONA the break-in Sunday at S a.m. be said, in- reported Sunday Not far to the east on Pepin ume of mall will be sent dur- up late last week, nesota City, DECEMBER dicating that many Winonnns that half n tank of gas nnd ACTIVITY GROUP County H Ihe North Bar was ing this year ' s Christmas rush , a transistor radio had entered by prying open the were going to address and possibly SPECIAL MEETING C. L. Wood , assistant postmas- stamp their cards over the been stolen from their garage front door , Ed Weiss, owner Thursday. and operator , told the sheriff ter here, said today. weekend. TUES., DEC. 8 nbont $95 was taken, plus candy This Is a safe prediction , he He added that persons who She told the sheriff (hat Ihe explained , because mail volume gasoline was drained from n 8:00 P.M. barn and cigarettes . gel their Christmas cauls find The bar Is three miles north has been risi ng at the rate of panels in the mail earl y make car parked in their garage nnd of Mondovi in the Town of Al- nearly 3 percent a year , and it possible for holiday mi»il lo that the transistor , with its ATHLETIC GLUB bany. Weiss discovered his lass this Increase is reflected most he delivered on time . I( would leat her oa.se, was missing from 6 (p 8 (j) 10 12 ¦ ¦ Imperlmtt . . . n work bench in the gnmge. <1p xtremtly Sundav morning. clearly around Ihe holiday sen- be Impossible , he said , if every- All mtmbori uro«fl lo _ll«nd. Fingerprints hnve been taken son. one were to do his holiday mail- Sheriff Fort said that the loss and Investigation is continuing . More than million pieces wns discovered Thursday at II 1~ ing Ihe week before Christmas bul not reported till Sun- of Incoming and outgoing mall loyes al the p. m . There are 75 emp day »l 6:25 p.rn, The radio is are expected lo go through the post office here , Wood said. 13 (S>(S) (S) (W) (^ 19 KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS worth $30 , he said , postal system during Decem- Last year , they handled a total ¦ Reg. Meeting Tuesday, Dec, 8 ber, with about 10 percent of of 2, 73:1,600 pieces of mail hy HOO.STKIIS AT PHRSTON th*' year's rwni! moving in a Dec. 24 . If Ihe predicted 3 per- PHKSTON , Minn. The Pros- 8:00 p.m. ih/irp In tht clubhoui*. — period of less than three weeks . cent rate of Increase holds ton Monsters Club will have ils 20 (§) 24 —« DON NYS6TH, Grand Knight Wood said. true , thoy will deal with more December dinner meeting to- (Q) @ I #I ¦ ¦ '— ¦— ¦— ¦—- Wood predicted thai, the than 2.8 million this season, night at 6:30 al the Victory Cafe- . " j They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmie Hatlo Ringo May 9L dtepp&md. Jaii Wight. Pentagon Team Lose Home Writer-Composers LONDON fAP ) - Ringo Will Stay On Starr, the Beatle drummer who lost his ionBils last week, may WASHINGTON fAP) - The is likely to succeed LeMay. also lose his home. will Defense Department team ol Adm. David L. McDonald His neighbors have petitioned Have a Secret top civilian leaders, headed by finish a two-year'term as chief By EARL WILSON his landlord to move him out of Secretary of Defense Robert S. of naval operations in June. He his $125-a-week apartment in NEW YORK — Robert Goulet was singing his love songs in McNamara, is expected to re- probably will be given a second Palm Beach when a smitten woman demonstrated her fondness Westminster. His teen-age law main ¦ intact at least until mid- term. are driving them crazy . in an unusual manner . . . she leaped on his back and shoulders , 1965. - Otherwise, Gen. Earle G. and locked her arm s around him. "Ringo's tonsil operation ha_ McNamara reportedly huu Wheeler is only I few months given us our first peace for Lyn Duddy and Jerry Bresler, who "wrote Goulet's act," into his term as chairman of the 't patter for such an discussed with key members of months," said Lathom Gedge, a as they say, hadn supplied Bob with any his team his wish that they stay Joint Ciiiefs of Staff. The same enthusiast. K. John- neighbor. with a woman around on and see the Pentagon's pro- goes for Gen. Harold "Teen-age girls scream and "How would you like to take a bow , - grams through the Congress son Army chief of staff. Gen. shriek all day long," said his your neck? ' says Duddy. Wallace M. Greene, Marine did. He next session. They were said to wife. "They get hysterical, fight "That's what Bob awake, so they can say, 'Don't Corps commandant, still has smiled, took his bow , and have agreed. and kick each other and chase) those guys write wonderful This is taken to mean that Mc- three more years to go In a walked off with the woman still acts?' " says Duddy. every car that arrives in case hanging on. He did just the right Namara himself intends to re- four-year term. • Ringo is inside." TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: main in office at least that long. thing." Soupy Sales figures his brother- ARCADIA BOOKKEEPING "It's a drag," said Ringo, due Goulet, whose women fans us- in-law is really a golf nut — Associates said they had been . ARCADIA, Wis. (Special ) - out of University College Hospi- ually go no further than throw- the guy just had his golf cart unable to detect any signs that An aduJt bookkeeping class will tal on Thursday. ing their room keys at him , or equipped with snow tires . McNamara is thinking of step- begin after the first of the year screaming "I want you," had a WISH I'D SAID THAT: "I ping out. He is nearing the end if enough persons are interest- to call the Arcadia High School big, successful engagement at didn't hear my marriage cere- of his fourth year as secretary ed. The class would meet for office or Mrs. John Killlan, the Plaza Persian Jtoom — and mony too well," admits Ray of defense, still well short of the approximately 12 two-hour ses- commercial instructor, before Lyn Duddy and Jerry Bresler Rieves of Norfolk, "—my bride record of 56 months set by sions. Interested persons are Dec. 31. were usually ringsiding be- talked right through it." Charles E. Wilson in the Eisen- i , , cause some people think they're EAUL'S PEARLS: A man hower administration. rs *^™^^^ :^^;^^ ;*^r »'^;^t^H™~^t^tt^_ the Rodgers and Hammerstein never tells his wife a secret — The only member of McNa- of the Saloon Circuit and of NASON ON EDUCATION he just thinks he does. New Era of mara 's top group to resign re- course they're inclined to agree. Hermione Gingold was asked weight — cently was Thomas D. Morris, They carry a lot of about the fad of gals wearing lie ^__^__^__^^r______PV__^__^__>. t- *r^_^' ^______l 1 and so do some of their stars, assistant secretary of defense ostrich tail feathers. "Poor for installations and logistics. for example, Sophie Tuck- birds ," she said. "Soon they'll ' Freedom at er, Kate Smith and Totie Fields. W hen s Time to He will be succeeded by Paul have to hide more than their , who is being promoted They're also writers and ar- heads in the sand." . . . That's Ignatius rangers for Van Johnson, Gor- earl, brother. from undersecretary of the don and Sheila MacRae and California U Army. Jane Morgan. Goulet's success Leave School? A change in the military high helped them leap to national at- BERKELEY , Calif. (AP) — command will come in early tention, however. By LESLIE J. NASON. Ed. D. i ed these people is in excess of Morning classes were recessed February when Gen. Curtis E. | EARLY /f^H^^^^mi Mental Health J16 million dollars . " at the University of California LeMay retires as Air Force "SOPHIE TUCKER likes num- University of Southern Calif. today so students and faculty- chief of staff. - bers kidding herself — especial- Should a child be permitted STROM ADVOCATES that SHOPPERS ^- Gen . J ohn P. McConnell, who weight," they'll tell you. more attention be given to the could hear a plan of department | Jf ^1 ly her Budget May Be to leave school when he has 's second Sophie'll therefore be "the .individual learner and that the chairmen for a "new era of has been the Air Force reached age 16, or any other in command since midsummer, first woman astronaut" in her age? growth of an individual be freedom under law" on the next act. measured in relation to his pre- Considered High Or should the law be changed vious position rather than by campus, in turmoil over student "I ought to know something him in school until he MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A to keep comparison with others. He political-action demands. about space — I've taken up an specified level WVWWWMAAAA J^L ¦ ^ ^ HFl mental health spending program has attained a suggests that one out of every Ahead of that was scheduled MAZED FRUIT GIFS f awful lot of it in the last 76 of education? years," she says. "And I've "that might be considered for- five children in the United the mass arraignment of 814 flown many, many times — once midable" is among Gov. Karl Our reply is a big "yes" to States is a slow learner, and • Rolvaag's proposals to be placed question. We feel demonstrators arrested in the in a plane." the second that individual achievement breakup of a sit-in at the univer- Fancy California c a n d i t d before the legislature. that age alone is an unsatis- , should be based on personal sity's administration building , figs, dates attractively [ Duddy, the writer and Bres- The governor said Saturday, when a fruits Annual Discount \ , factory measure of rather than group progress. early last Thursday. Of these, ler the conductor and arranger "We need vastly expanded released from gift packaged. have one secret trick. They in- child should be Strom is in agreement with 590 are students , 89 are teaching staffs, both at our mental hos- school. Under a competence sist on the heat being turned off pitals and schools for the re- me in recommending more at- assistants and others connected —and the air conditioning being plan, the education of dropouts tention to pre-school prepared- with the university and 135 have $1-25 to $4 J5 tarded. And I mean to push a , turned on — 15 minutes before not only would be upgraded ness for reading and continued no connection with the universi- Event Tuesday ; drive for the funds needed 4° but it would give them some- I the show. meet those requirements." attention to developing a stu- ty. CHEESE GIFTV "It keeps people alert and thing to work toward during dent's ability to read and Regardless of these events, He said he is still pondering their last months in school. write throughout the time he the budget he will offer the law- Too often , the answer to, student leaders of the move for !l WINONA DAILY NEWS is in school. As long as a child increased freedom to recruit Night-5 to 9 p.m. makers, who meet next month, "How are you getting along in has not sufficiently mastered Unusual cheese in lovely holi- MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1964 and gave no indication how big school?" too often is, "I'm volunters and solicit funds any- "~~ the art of reading and' writing, where on campus for off-cam- day packages. VOLUME W, NO. 14 an increase it will be. He said just waiting until I'm 16 to get his major activity in school f THIS IS THE SPECIAL EVENT j pus politico-social causes an- $ 85 85 Published dally except Saturday and holi- surveys show an additional 833 out." should be in those fields regard- s days by Republican end Herald Publish- workers are needed to meet nounced they would set up pick- 2 - 3 "-'_• ing Company, 601 Franklin St., Winona, REFERRED to by teacher! less of the grade level or age et lines today in an attempt to YOU'VE WAITED FOR! Minn. minimum standards in schools he has attained. \ \ for the retarded. as "sitters," these childrer force a shutdown of the univer- JAMS 'H JELLIES SUBSCRIPTION: RATES have given up trying to mastei Perhaps if permission to sity. GIFTED Jingle Copy — 10c Dally, 15c Sunday Rolvaag spoke at a Democrat- X COME ONE-COM E ALL j ic-Farmer-Labor party women's schoohvork and, as long a; leave school were dependent The peace proposal was 8 Delivered by Carrler-P«r week 50 centi they cause no disturbance ii upon his acquiring these abil- worked out in four days on con- **W_&*WBBiB^*PH'_6-,w*wfe&t^«W*7g 3$ it weeks $12.75 52 weeks S25.50 conference. Another speaker was Rep. their classes, are allowed ti ities we would have fewer "sit- ferences by the university's Smuckftr's delicious holiday — By mall strictly In advance; paper stop- Council of Department Chair- . Donald Fraser, quietly await the magic da; ters" in the last years of a boxes. i i td en expiration date. D-Minn., who preserve and jelly gift said that a state sales tax would when they become 16. student's voluntary schooling. men, consisting on 73 chairmen In Fillmore, Houston, Olmsted, Winona, be preferable to any drastic and 12 deans. Box of 12 CA £C Wabasha, Buffalo, Jackson, Pepin and Being 16 does not prepare THE REQUIREMENT that a Assfd. Preserves . ^rtewJ Trwnpealeau counties: slash In state services. boy or girl to make the chang child learn to read and write It has the council's unanimous FREE Turkeys 1 year $12.00 3 months 13.50 from school life to the worl Box of e>
Two to make read y after the bath and all art H_H__^mH lor Cliristmafl gi-ving—a bottlf of Blue Grasn JS5>cJutttiui -. i^^m Flower Mist awl a box of Blur Grass Dusting ^ tlrf»i B_fter . . . lads Longer ¦_9_M^^_H * I lT old favorites and l. T ^ P^ plM i'owilcr to mnlcli only await your card , 6.00. WHBraW«||M I ^y i d -OS . .. | | Ijrtra built-in Schwlnn quality maani 1 J" fascinating new games. |j' ^^^ s\^ , | battar ptrformanc* and longer Irou- bU-fi»« lit* Schwlnn quality eottt mt.wv , DRAFT, lata In lh« long runt fi \f ^m\\iB ff^^m^^ >>^ i no A n no "l J ! n ff \\ Christmas | ll 98 and 2 - 98 OKSIUN SKT 4.98 I ^ * " £# A M ™om | ^^ P^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ f I iwm^Hhd^ <;h,i 'ie Spray I tf f/ Make this a memorableOirihlnms — with tti*, IH ! Klizabeth AnW | j | new MemoireCh^rie Spray ^ I f. _ now brings you thn precious fragrance of | ,rir world' prized French Perfume in I \^^^MflflBflfl|ft^, s moM | BASKETBALL AND I SKETCH A GRAPH _.M i | : BHI^HBW^^^^^^^; tne li'irst Spray Atomizer ever made, 5.00. I _ HKr I ST' : JL - : 8 mK/BSKm. P\ ' \ $¦ M -: "" ', SawAamavSp U COLLEGIATE _ fl.SPIID DIRAILLIURI ' NOMA CHRISTMAS .nv,. A SKKK .* I I ; ' " A presenl which will be rnjoynl th« y» ^ Bf% n v.,„v LOW PRICE $C/L95 TREE LIGHTS I
Am ouMondlng -«o(u»l Mwion q«<4- Comp lete assortment . . . both indoo r and outdoor . | ofwlar Ity In a llol«tw»«0t'« WcytU. " hmut S-apaa* Sprla l d»'olHa»r , b-aUt, 5
Buying a Color TV on Terms? It wil l he obsolete before you net n p„id for , UN- i.KSS it 's n . . 23" MOTOROLA COLOR TV "An Exclusive Drive-In Dispensary'' from Winona Fire h Power Equipment Go. BLUFF SIDING, WIS. Acrou From md ll. Mrklni t«t ______-___¦__——ataaamaam ______—.—______, ,—,—,—_ . , _ Wabasha Auxiliary St. John s Ladies St. Charles Post, ry to Meet To Excha nge Gifts Aid Holds Party Auxilia ST. CHARLES, Minn. - A WABASHA, Minn. - Wabasha , Minn. ( Special) Legionnaires , Auxiliary LAKE CITY get-together of the Hugh American Legion Auxiliary will —The Christmas party of the joint have a Christmas party, when Ladies Aid of St. John's Luther- Watson American Legion Post Members Usher in Holidays the members meet at 8 p.m. an Church was attended by and Auxiliary will be held Dec. Thursday in the Auxiliary about 60 women Thursday after- p.m. Dishes for a upstair, at the Legion 13, at 2:30 Legion members and then- favors. Mrs. R. V. Hammond, Room, noon in the church social rooms. potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. are wives ushered in the Christmas as hostess, greeted the mem- Club. Alter group singing of Christ- requested. There will be games dinner dance bers at the door. Those who attend are remind- , the Rev. season at a holiday goods for the mas hymns and carols and entertainment all afternoon , Memorial Club The clubs Random Room , in ed to bring canned H. Albrecht read the Christ- family. Members at the Legion Christmas baskets. The gifts al- T. for all the Saturday night. A cockta il hour which the steak dinner was mas story. The program includ- t and Auxiliary are so may be taken to Legion Club of the Pos was held from 6:30 until 7:30 served at 8 p.m. had as its dom- ed a Bible quiz and Bible verse asked to bring 50 cent gift p.m. in a gaily decorated ball- inant Christmas decoration a any time from now until the in charge of Members matching game, items for therapy prizes : play- room festooned with gold , silver huge rounded tree illuminated baskets are packed. Gerald Dzwonnkowski, toiletries, stationery, also are expected to bring dona- Mmes. ing cards, and brightly colored mobiles by soft blue lights. The dinner Walter Nelson and Leland etc. Children are to bring 25 and Chirstmas stars. tables were centered with minia- tions of trading stamps or certi- gifts. ficates. Lortscher. cent exchange ture Christmas trees and red During a brief business ses- A LARGE Christinas tree with velvet reindeer cavorted at their There will be an exchange of lights was the 50 cent gifts between members. sion, it was voted to repeat in multi-colored bases. Mrs. Robert S exton was , which focal point of the Christmas 1965 the calendar project chairman of the decorating LWV MEETIN G CANCELED during the last two years has theme and Henry Burton and committee. iu/w™ i ^S^ij sS-'SsiaL his Orchestra played for danc- The meeting of the morning brought in more than $200. The ing later, before a white back- IN ADDITION to members of Unit f. League of Women Vot- members planned to wrap pack- drop studded with large red the local post, Legion guests ers, which was to have been ages for shut-ins before Christ- poinsettias. were present from Houston, held Tuesday morning at the mas. Guests were given bouton- Stockton and Richfield , Minn. hoAe of Mrs. Milton Goldberg Hostesses in charge of the of yellow The Legion Christmas celebra- has been canceled. potluck lunch were Mmes. Iver ifi llll nieres and corsages , Eggenberger, Vincent Heise, Available In Any Amount pink and red tea roses as party tion continues Tuesday night LADY BUGS YULE PARTY with the annual joint post-auxil- Henry Hinck and Ed Corleus CENTER The Military Order of Lady and Miss Anna Heise. iary dinner and meeting. A ham p.m. Tues- Missionary Talks dinner will be served at 6:30 Bugs will meet at 8 BEAUTY SHOPPE day at the home of Mrs . John There will be an exchange of Opin Mon. * Thuri. 'til 1 p.m. p.m. The Brigadiers will en- be re- AU Day Wturdtyt. At Installation KozlowBki, 254 Orrin St., for a gilts and secret pals will 4JJ Ctntir SI. Phom Mil tertain at 7:30 p.m., meetings membered. Of Rushford ALCW will follow at 8 and at the con- Christmas meeting and party. clusion of post and auxiliary RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) business, the men and women — The Rev. Gunner Lislerud , will join in Christmas caroling. missionary to South Africa , was guest speaker at the December meeting of the .American Lu- Miss Eileen Bakken ^^^^^^^ theran Church Women at Rush- -^--ffnTTiBBf^-B^H-lr^-i^-^-l^-^-^-B-^^^-^-fTT-l^i -ft-rf^-tf^^^BSv^5™M--^ft lord Lutheran Church. Becomes Bride of Officers were installed for Robert Severson the coming year and a Christ- mas pageant was presented by ETTRICK, Wis. (Special)-A a group of members. wedding at French Creek Lu- theran Church, Saturday after- THE REV. yslerud, who is noon united Miss Eileen La living in St. Paul with his fam- May Bakken, daughter of Mr. ily while home on a l&-year and Mrs, Joseph Bakken , rural furlough, talked on his work Ettrick, and Robert Severson , in the mission field. Galesville, Wis., son of Mr. and "To be called co-workers Mrs. Chester Severson , Milwau- with the Lord Jesus Christ is kee. UNDER THE ADVENT WREATH . . . chats with Sister M. Lorraine and two wonderful," he told the church The ceremony was performed decorations at the College of the guests at the AAUW Christmas lunch- "We are here to tell Festive holiday women. by the Rev. H. A. Lease. Miss fresh green eon. The guests are, from left, Misses Cynthia the story of Jesus and His love. of Saint Teresa include this Helen Enghagen was organist. Advent wreath in the lobby, beneath which and Zenaida Resurrecion, CST students from Our job is to be a burning light The couple was by- attended Mrs. E. J. Boiler, left, president of AAUW, the Philippine Islands. (Daily News photo ) lor others to follow." Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Redsten, A native of Norway, the Galesville, brother-in-law and i Eev. Lislerud received his sister of the bride, and Gary Holiday Season Opening for Students Expected masters degree of theology Bakken and Judy Severson, Irom St. Paul Lutheran Theolo- brother and sister ol the cou- To Follow Rules gical Seminary. During his ple. At Dakota Dance last term in the field he was AAUW Features Vocal Music president of the joint Lutheran THE BRIDE'S white gown As St. Nick's Day signaled The Triple Trio sang " Come DAKOTA, Minn. (Special) - group which represents six was accented by the red roses the arrival of the Christmas Let Us Sing a Joyful Song," Officers of the Parent-Teacher TH aynods and 600,000 Lutherans. she carried, and the brides- season for Winona children this "See the Shepherds Dancing," Club announce the second Sock maids wore identical frocks of "It Soon Will Be Evening" and 66 ANNIVERSARY MRS. M. EUGENE Foehring- medium blue. weekend, the annual luncheon Hop for the Dakota School will installed the officers: Mrs. "Deck the Halls." •r A reception was held in at the College of Saint Teresa be Friday from 8 to 10:30 p.m. Kermit Holger, president ; Mrs. the Members of the Triple Trio church dining room. Cuests we opened the season for American Dancing is for students in Melford Eide, vice president ; Association of Universtiy Wom- are the Misses Barbara Garde- grades six through age 19. registered by Sharon Greenwold. wine, Cartersville, Iowa ; Ro- SET Mrs. Palmer Peterson, secre- " SLEEP en memfcers and guests. Lhndy Shannon will spin disks. tary; Mrs. Styrk Isberg, The wedding cake, made by sanne Molinari, Winona; LaRi- trea- Mrs. George Severson At the November gathering ^ features exclusive miracle edg e support and surer; Mrs. Ray Bentdahl, sec- , was serv- The hospitality at the lunch- ta Callahan, Elizabeth Twomey, ed by Darlene and Janice John- eon Saturday included the lunch of youths from a large radius, retary of education.; and Mrs. Pat Poskozim and Nancy Dee- some students proved difficult POST.R-: pUdhm good sleeping comfort Rollie Rollefson, secretary of son. La May Anderson poured served by students and a mu- ley, Chicago; Mary Clare Al- to give you and Delayne Affeldt and Donna sical program. Sister M. Lor- in that they refused to obey stewardship. brecht, Winona; Jane Longmei- rules and regulations for the Greenwold assisted in serving raine welcomed the guests. er, Independence, Wis., and and matching box spring set offers you AWB^ Mrs. Elvin Humble was nar- dances. At Friday's dance, all This quilted mattress £ atW^^ rator and Mrs. Marvin Manion, the guests. Mmes. Lauritz Le- Mary Nilles, Rollingstone. Their fine sleeping comfort. Exclusive King Koil "Miracle Edge" bakken and Ole Hovre APPEARING in native Fili- rules and regulations will be 9 ^f ^B ^f _B announcer, for the pageant , Town of pino dresses, director is Sister M. Marie. edges from breaking down and keeps the ™ Gale, were in charge in the Cynthia and Zen- strictly enforced. support prevents the mmW ^mmaW presented by the morning aida Resurrection, CST stu- Jan. 16 the AAUW will meet Four couples who will chap- entire sleeping surface level. Exclusive "Posture Platform" in kitchen. mW^aammW^ama. circle. Taking part in the dra- dents from the Philippines, at Community Memorial Hospi- eron are Mssrs. and Mmes. Ro- the box spring gives you proper firmness for correct body ^1 B^I Wm ma, "The Message of the Mr. and Mrs. Severson will j sang native songs accompanied tal, Mrs. E. J. Boiler, president, land Papenfuss, Harvey Allen, support. You get years of extra wear . . . years of extra com- Candle," were Mmes. Humble, reside in Galesville "where the on the ukulele. announced. Walter Bartz and Ralph Grant. ^¦^V^H__F Eno Morken, Bertram Jensen, bridegroom is employed in a fort with this King Koil sleep set. ^^^^ ^^^^ Eva Stevens, Foehringer, Rob- factory. c E ET ert Betz, Ed Nelson and Rob- Minnesota City AVAILABLE IN SIX DIFFERENT SIZES « ?2 _5 _ __ -_¦ ert Highum. Yule Rarty Planned AT THESE LOW PRICES — «» w «- *« Mrs. Minar Himlie was CCW Will Meet $44 Each chairman of the hostesses : By Goodview Guild /¦ -\ MINNESOTA CITY , Minn. - f —» ( N t 1 J" ' Mmes. John Hovde, LuVerne Goodview Trinity Lutheran St. Paul's Parish Council of Peterson, Warren Miller , Nor- Church Guild will give a Catholic Women will hold the win Neisheim, Wallace Himlie , Christmas party for members annual Christmas party in the Stanley Hoiland, Carroll Col- and friends at 6:30 p.m. Tues- parish hall at 8 p.m. Tuesday. benson and Wilbert Feine. day at the church. A potluck All members are cordially invit- CHRISTMAS DREAMS BLAIR CHURCH PARTY supper will be servied. ed to attend and to bring a 50- BLAIR , Wis. (Special) - The Christmas literature for the cent gift. There will be an ex- blind will be purchased with the change of gifts, Christmas mu- Blair First Lutheran Church will annual gift offering that will be ARE MADE OF THESE hold its Christmas meeting sic, and refreshments which will made. be served by St Francis Guild Tuesday at 8 p.m. A skit , "The Serving on the program com- . . by _H_BJGJ_^_^_BI^_^_^_I_—__H_MS_L. Jama '®^&_^_H_B__aH__H^_^_i __^__^__^__^__^HH__i_^K__I___^_^_^_^ _H__'imamW^_^_H„' Si_il_l__!__^__H f _^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^__ ^_^__H___^__B__^^__^__^__ MAPIE BOOKCASE n„i p . soK BB. »» "l ^^^^!^^^^^^^$aaMe]ejejajejm ^ma\wQa^ma^ma^ma^ma^maf o ^ma^B tg_u£_l_^_^_i___^_^_^_^_^_^_i MPP «B F"o™ ~£?^i£_H__^__^__^__^__^__PF ¦|[ ^^^^^^H£E)Mlii^__^__^__l^__l aa\\\\\\\\aa\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\m^aa\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\^f '"*~»*. ^^^^ B .__pi^_^_^_^_^_^_^^ ^__^__^_H_L Optnt IntB btd ^^_^-^-^-k _^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_ '^^_^_^_^_^__ _-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-k^_K * You'll be proud /f j | J/ M __^^____ f ^iT^> ?i^ l | H||Hs^__^______rjj ||^^HComplo t, SOLID ¦ ¦ to put this MAPLE BUNK ' ¦/• ^B v '^H^__^__^__^_L ¦ * /wfl ^^-r1__B MB ttA ^H ^^^^^^ H^^HHH BED * m\\m_ ' ^^_^_^_^_^_^_H^_^_^_RI_te_--- under her tree! ^"^ ' /«' - mi^J%ma\\a\\\\m\m \ma^maa ^^ ^X _^7_KT« Such a lovely gift at J JVmtm ^ m\ ' '"+*'I v*^^__Pa"-J|M^^6»C.- such a tiny price! Watch [M [ yF F, ' M t ¦ EXTRA SPECIAL I - j c h oy Ch0 ¦ *¦*¦ her eyes glow with • ¦' - • •• -.*¦ • . . . .„ .r v. , , . . ':- > ' iV ; ;._ ' ' ». im ^'mW^rmfJO ' * _¦ KINO KOH _ " ° * pleasure. Satin em broi- ' ^^^^^ ^ Monthly Lm vff ifff- lff lw - lfrimr flfk °* °" ' ¦ _i~l nft ' "" dery trim and scalloped J-\\^'-kT: %$'<¦§ ' _F DAVERBEDS i SnO fldge Continental ns the ' H Alj>5 I hem. Wash iVwear , Pink [\w T ' ' "'" f/A ^ The- sleek fashion look of Joyce ' li^ht shoe hoot * or blue. S, M , L , XL f \\ J I lh »«" on fl «u;ivr little heel. Wnter r epellrnt rh.umer thnt ivarnn SI79 your stockinged toei in fleecy lini ng. Walk« on a noivnkid sole, Flntten the femnle in you H!!9_-H_HOn-_MW with ' " ItnophisticiUriS linri. J 0.?5 l*-^- j W L*j fcj / qj OinotiA FURNITURE CO. 166 Main $fr..t phon< 3I45 "Where Fine Quality Furnilur« and CarpvtinQ 1M Not Erpemw -a" 1* « Road Mishaps 'SOMETHING TO LIVE BY ' Art of Decision McNamara Hopes Mariner Cruise Take Lives To Keep Budget Going Smoothly Under $50 Billion PASADENA , Calif. (AP ) - A Needs Developing scientist at the Jet Propulsion WASHINGTON (AP) - Sec- By BILL MERRILL CERTAINLY WE do not wan. retary of Defense Robert S. Mc- Laboratory says of Mariner 4's Of 3 in State "Don't just stand there — do to Imply that snap decisions are Namara says he hopes to keep smooth cruise toward Mars: uujj LJ ' Lf u|ij |i»ii a| s»i»»|i»»Lij |iu >i|Mi au<»i1i»»)an IJ li^^iyff.M «r» f g 1 ^ KEM - » ^^ , f_ | CARDS /j9JKJj) ^ Surprise your card playing j C^ Amm\m\a\\\\\^^-^- ^fe-^-^-^-fe-i * Amm\m\a\\\\\ I------I------I^^ / MWaS^n 11 friends with the perfect gift / ^^SS J.MCKM I , ' " . . Kcm Cards. They re pure / fc Jmfyi' Ssf ^T I plastic to stay fresh nnd clenn / W^p e/maWkIJ even after months of me. The / U^J ^\^f\ ym I pleasure / * lieautiful designs add ¦jy VI/jl ^^S* B PARTY BAGS^^PVoR months / miles \ SKI FANS: jOf^f j r/f*^ of G«iwr«l Tli« nrovlniotii of lliin warranty nluill not ni>|ilv *N*u> ithill. wirritnl y—IJulcW Motor Division lo nny Molnra Corporation warrant* aach MI Opel Kariatt Opel Ksdott motor vahlcla or rlmnala whlrli linn tirrn motor veMi-(» ami chsaali li\clu our warranty* ^ | Hd || ^ 9i MATCHING CI&ARETTE Our car. AVAILABLE. Opel. ALSO Made by GM. HOSIERY AND LINGERIE DEPT. Free Christmas Gift "Wrapp ing WILLIAMS OPEL KADETT BY BUICK HOOK a.ml VI VI IO\ Ll! V I YOU ARC INVITKD TO CHAHOK IT '"' .»»¦))¦.»,i ¦ m ¦¦ nationwide by Bulck/Opel donlnrs . >*^****>a'*tm»awMa *aaata»*ama*a n»i* i'»»aatmi*i miimmwm *mm*m0mamm a*Mm *m> is ii*».» ¦ ¦*¦>!,» — n— »jaai sua »»—»»—U P W ¦,, »*aaaamma-wmiamimmi' -i "—¦¦*«<» wammw "¦¦ % Sold «nd serviced 52-54 W«st Third See one of them about his European Delivery Plan. , ,,> mmmwmum ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ . . _^ - ii- .niiri nr ni n. i I- I r - ¦ ¦ i ¦- II ¦ - - - - "' ""''OPEN fONIGHT "'Tir9"' the comments made by the pub- Positive W lic is that control of crime is Negative 27 Many Feel Crime Increasing no longer considered strictly a Not sure 8 MONDAY James A. Sfeen matter of catching and punish- law enforcement requires a Federal ing criminals, but M DECEMBER 7, 1964 total effort on the part of many Positive The Daily Record individuals and many agencies Negative 27 Dies at Osseo of government. Not sura • Seven Out of Ten While a majority of the public ¦ OSSEO, Wis. (Special) - At Community Winona Deaths Two-State Deaths James A. Steen, 56, Trempea- now expresses confidence in law leau County" highway commis- enforcement agencies, sizable Memorial Hospital Mrs. Mae S. Hughes _ Mrs. Henry Herold minorities feel they are doing Mrs. Mae S. Hughes, 85 1767 "FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. (Spe> sioner the last two years, died visiting hours: Medical and lurglcsl . an inadequate job. Green Bay patients: J to 4 end 7 to B:30 p.m. (No W. Broadway, died Sunday at cial) — Mrs. Henry Herold, 77, at 4 p.m. Saturday at Osseo Believe U.S. Social The cross-section was asked: children under 12.) Com- Area Hospital of a heart at- to 3.30 and 7 lo 4:50 p.m. at Community Memo- died Sunday at 6 p.m. at you rate the job be- Maternity patients: 2 tack. He had become ill at his "Wonld • ¦30 p.m. (/VrJultl only.) rial Hospital. She was admitted munity Memorial Hospital, Wi- ing done by law enforcement Saturday after a fall in which nona , where she had been a pa- home earlier Saturday after- (on local level, SUNDA Y officials the Store Robbed her hip was broken and for tient four weeks. noon. Problems Worse state level, federal level ) posi- («-Thres ADMISSIONS which she underwent correc- The former Minnie Hunger, He was born April 22, 1908, tively or negatively?" GREEN BAY, Wis. Mark D. Pellowski , 411 Ham- tive surgery Sunday. she was born Jan. 9, 1887, in the in Town of Hale, Trempealeau By LOUIS HARRIS armed men held up the Mont- Couny, to Sever and Bertha More than seven out of every 10 Americans are aware that RATING OF LAW ilton St. The former Mae Sophie Grae- Town of Cross, Buffalo County, ENFORCEMENT gomery Ward store in the down- to Felix and Minnie Fricke Hun- Steen. He married Alice Stieg crime in their home area has been on the increase in the past Dean C. Patterson. Kenosha , ser, she was bom Jan. 21, 1879, Total Nation town area early today and es- at Menomonie, Wis She was ger. She was a lifelong resident May 20, 1933. year. Wis. . people see this growing criminal activity symptom Percent with an undetermined married to John L. Hughes, Me- of this area. She was married Most as a caped Philip J. Duffy , Winona Rt. 3. to Henry Herold Nov. 12 , 1912. A LIFELONG resident or this of deep social and economic prob- Local law enforcement of loot. nomonie, and had lived in Wi- Positive M amount Henry B. Olson, 900 E. Wab- The couple farmed in the Town area, Mr. Steen moved here lems besetting American society ¦ nona since 1943. Her husband Nov. 1 from Town of Hale. Negative 84 asha St. of Cross until four years ago In the 1960s rather than as a The average Sweedish factory died April 23, 1962. He was grad- simple breakdown of law en- Not sure 2 Lawrence Keen. 1050 E. King Survivors are: Two sons, when they moved to Town of State law enforcement worker earns $1.21 an hour. St. Milton. uated from Os- forcement in their communities. DISCHARGES John, Winona, and William G., seo High School Underlying the current crime Plauified, N.J.; two 'daughters, She was a member of St. David L. Marshall, Winona s United Church of Christ and attended wave, in the opinion of most Mrs. Maurice (Mary Ellen ) John' the University State College. and its Women's Guild. Americans, are such unsolved Godsey and Mrs. Irma Abreu, of Wi s consin problems as disturbed and rest- Mrs. Vincent Joswick, 526 Winona; nine grandchildren, Survivors are: Her husband ; one son, Andrew P. Herold , ru- one year. He less teen-agers, unemployment, Olmstead St. and one brother , William Grae- worked in a racial tension, broken homes, the Mrs. Albert Wenzel and baby, , ral Fountain City ; three daugh- ser, Woodstock Vallev Conn. (Hermina) drug store in population increase and a feeling Winon a Rt. 2. Funeral services will be Wed- ters, Mrs. Bernard Winona; Mrs. Ralph Whitehall, - then -that moral standards are gen- Donald W. Franklin, East Boland, erally lax. nesday at 2 p.m. at Fawcett Fu- Kathryn) Russell, Glendora , returned to his Burns Valley Rd. neral Home, Dr. E. Clayton home farm. In addition, there is a widespread belief that criminals are Dale R. Gile, Isanti, Minn. Calif., and Mrs. Leonard (Fran- ¦ at BORZYSKOWSKI FURNITURE Burg«ss, Central Methodist ces) Lettner Fountain City ; 23 He was . a ,« c, not kept In prison long enough. By and large, a majority of the David P. Wardwell, 520 E. , Mr Steen public expresses confidence in] - — Church, officiating. Burial will grandchildren, and three sisters, member of the ' Broadway. be in Woodlawn Cemeterv. , local , state and federal law en- Table Lamps $3.95 to $25.95 Mrs. Edward Cada , 423 E. Mrs. Emma Halbrugger, Foun- Caswell school board 12 years is handled among teen-agers Friends may call Tuesday tain City; Mrs. Sophia Biasing, was chairman of the Town of forcement efforts, although and in the type of punishment 3rd St. more than one in three are Pole Lamps $5.95 to $49.95 BIRTHS from 7 to 9 p.m. Alma, and Mrs. Lydia Plank, Hale board 18 years and was which is meted out to them. brothers and a member of the Trempealeau critical of their own commu- Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wiczek Cochrane. Five There is « strong feeling in Plate Glass Mirrors $3.95 to $31.95 , Jonathan D. Erickson four sisters have died. County Board the same length nity's police forced the public mind that juvenile 4574 6th St., Goodview, a daugh- Jonathan David Erickson, 2- A cross-section of the public $6.95 ter. Funeral services will be Wed- of time. He was chairman of crime could be sharply reduced Magazine Racks „ days, Detroit Lakes, Minn., John 's was asked : if proper programs and coun- Mr. and Mrs. David Trocinski , nesday at 2 p.m. at St. the county board one year. died there Sunday morning. He Church, the Rev. George H. He was a past member of , seling services were provided Hassocks $6.95 710% Mankato Ave. , a daughter. was born Friday to Duane "In the past year do yon Schowalter officiating. Burial the board of Tri-State Breed- feel the crime rate in your by the schools, parents and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Heller, and Annabelle^Bergsrud Erick- Public community leaders. This feel- Desk Lamps . $H.95 Alma, Wis., a son. will be in Fountain City ers Cooperative and was on neighborhood has been increas- son. Cemetery. Pallbearers will be: the Trempealeau County Fair ing, decreasing or has it re- ing was indicated by many of $15.00 Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Brink , Survivors include his par- those who talked of disturbed Boudoir Lamps, pr. $5.95 to 867 Grand St., a daughter. Lester Plank, Vincent Kammuel- Board. mained about the same as it ents; one brother, Jeffrey, at ler, Melvin Lorch, Dale and He was a director of the Os- was before?" teen-agers or mentioned the Lane Cedar Chests $43.00 home; one sister, LeAnn, at Gerald Boland and Thomas seo Area Hospital board at the CRIME RATE IN OWN AREA lack of education and broken home; maternal . grandparents, Lettner. Tota l Nation homes as major factors in the Samsonite Bridge Set S29.95 W EATHER time of his death. increase in crime. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Bergsrud, Friends may call at Colby Fu- In addition, he was active in Percent EXTENDED FORECAST Winona, and paternal grandpar- On the punitive sides, how- TV Swivel Chairs $24.95 neral Home, Fountain City, church and community affairs. Increasing ¦ 73 MINNESOTA — Temperatures ents, Mr. and Mrs. Arvid Tuesday afternoon and evening, Decreasing * 1 ever, some Americans think He had been trustee and trea- that teen-agers or all criminals Recliners $69.95 through Saturday averaging 5 to Erickson, Kennedy, Minn. Wednesday until 11 a.m., then at surer of Elk Creek Lutheran Stayed same 21 10 degrees above normal. Nor- Graveside services were held the church. Not sure 5 are mollycoddled. The 13 per- Lazboy Reclina-Rockers $99.95 to $219.95 mal highs 20-28 north Church, and was a deacon at cent who said that criminals , 25-31 this afternoon in Woodlawn the time of his death. He also Despite the attention that has I south. Normal lows 1-8 north, 5- Cemetery, Dr. L. E. Bryne- Frank Delton are released from jai l too soon ( had been active in 4-H work. been directed toward crime in Step and Cocktail Tables $4.95 to $59.95 15 south. No important day-to- stad, Central Lutheran Church, ARCADIA, Wis. Special) — cities of the country, or that the law favors criminals Survivors are: His wife; one the big were joined by some day changes after warming officiating. Fawcett Funeral Frank Delton, 76, Eau Claire, a the public is convinced that who indi- Platform Swivel Rockers $49.95 to $99.95 trend at beginning of period. No former resident here, died at 3 son, David, on the home farm cated they think the restlessness Home was in charge of local in Hale; three daughters, Mrs. crime is on the increase fairly precipitation of consequence ex- arrangements. a.m. Saturday at an Amery, the suburbs, small of teen-agers could sometimes Sofa Beds $89.95 Francis (Charlotte) Stamm, uniformly in be curbed by sterner handling cept .10 to .20 inch melted north- Wis., hospital, where he had towns and countryside as well. 2-Pc. Living Room Suites $149.95 east in occasional light snow been a patient several months. Mondovi , and Nancy and Kar- who live in rural areas, of juvenile offenders. Winona Funerals Of those Many people mentioned to about Wednesday and again Funeral services will be con- en, at home ; one brother , Har- 69 percent think crime in their old, Portland Ore., and three our interviewers the lack of 3-Pc. Bedroom Suites $149.95 near end of week. Mrs. Harold Gates ducted at 3 p.m. Tuesday at a , sections is increasing, as do 71 OTHER TEMPERATURES , sisters, Mrs. Melvin (Martha) who live in steady work, broken homes and Funeral services for Mrs. Har- Methodist church in Eau Claire percent of those racial tensions as major factors 5-Pc. Dinette Suites ... $59.95 to $244.95 By THE ASSOCIATED,, PRESS old Gates, 1402 E. Burns Valley with Masonic services at 8:30 Skogstad, Eleva, and Mrs. small towns, 75 percent of those High Low Pr. Jane Marie Zielsrjorf and Mrs. and 77 percent of in crime. On these counts they Rd., were held this afternoon at p.m. at Smith Funeral Home, in suburbs indicated that they believe solu- Albany, clear 24 3 .01 First Congregational Church, Eau Claire. Norris (Audrey) Nelson, both those in big cities. Albuquerque of Eau Claire. an expla- tions will not come quickly be- , cloudy 37 26 the Rev. Harold Rekstad offici- When volunteering cause these problems require BORZYSKOWSKI Atlanta, clear 38 24 nation of the sharp increase in ating. Burial was in Woodlawn Adam Void FUNERAL SERVICES will considerable thought and plan- Bismarck, clear ... 28 13 ELEVA, Wis. - Adam Void, crime, people most often cited FURNITURE STORE Cemetery. be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Elk ning at all levels — from the Boise, clear 42 27 65, died Sunday morning at the the sense of restlessness among Where Yov Always Buy Quality Fwnihira For v Lewi Pallbearers were Lloyd Oz- Creek Lutheran Church, the neighborhood to the federal gov- Boston , clear 30 27 .10 mun, Roland Stover, Harry Mc- Osseo Area Hospital, where he teen-agers which, they believe, 302 Mankato Ave. Open Evenings, Except Saturday Rev. Donald Myhres officiating. acts of vio- ernment. Chicago, cloudy .... 23 17 T Millen, Cy Hedlund, Earle "Welty was a patient three days. finds expression in The clear Implication of all Cincinnati, cloudy . 30 12 , Burial will be in Hale Ceme- lence. This public concern with and Wesley Kittle. Honorary He was born here Feb. 27 tery. Cleveland., cloudy -. 28 12 .03 1899, to Mr. and Mrs. Ole Void. juvenile crime is warranted. A pallbearers were Walter A Friends may call at OftedahJ showed a 13 Denver, clear ...... 36 19 Dopke and John Wheeler. He married Sadie Everson June recent FBI report Des Moines, cloudy . 22 19 Funeral Home here Tuesday percent increase in crime for 28, 1923, at Winona. She died afternoon and evening and the first nine months of 1964 Detroit, snow 22 16 T in June 1962. The couple lived Fairbanks, snow .. -3 -22 .01 Two-State Funerals Wednesday morning, then at compared with the same period 1 in Eleva where they operat- in 1963 and said that 46 percent ^ aaaaaaatt ^^^a^^^TftSffi nm B?^^™ "^ Fort Worth, clear -. 45 24 Leopold Thoma the church after noon Wednes- ed the telephone exchange the day. of all arrests for serious crimes Helena , clear 34 8 INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- past 40 years. He was Honolulu, clear .... 81 71 a mem- were of persons under 18 years cial ) — Funeral services for ber of Eleva Lutheran Church Indianapolis, cloudy 25 14 of age. .. Leopold Thoma will be at 9:30 and the volunteer fire depart- FREE TB X-RAYS People were asked: Wl^aaaWa ^aaaaaxmmw &L -.^i^fc,*PPJ*-t J i^B^ra KS ^* ii ^iflH ^i^H> ^iVM ^iVsi ^Hl ^i^^ ffi ^iVJo Jacksonville, cloudy 55 37 .. a.m. Wednesday at Ss. Peter (Mon. -Wed.-Frt., 1-5 p.m. v^aaaamAaaaaa ^Aamaw ^t ^b^^HLi^£t -^.^b^K£^£f^y*ll£ B^b^H^b^b^^^ b^bKl^b^B$££b ^bK^b^KSS^b^Ki9 Kansas City, cloudy 29 23 .. ment. "Why do yon think crime has & Paul Catholic Church here, Survivors are: One son, Phil- Room 8, City Hall I increased In your neighbor- Los Angeles, clear .70 47 .. the Rev. Edmund J. Klimek Winona Co. residents Iree, lip, Eau Claire; one brother, hood?" at1 * < C^|^^^^ ||^^H[ ^^B^^^^ B Louisville, cloudy .. 35 24 officiating. Burial will be in the others, JJ each. jSJ%tAmBt$Aw\tAw '' '' '^ > V^^^H^^^B^.^ S^^^HH ^^^^^ | Memphis, clear .... 38 24 Otis, Royal Oak, Mich. ; two sis- REASONS FOR CRIME church cemetery. ters, Mrs. Jerome (Mildred ) Last week 87 INCREASE Miami, cloudy 75 61 Mr. Thoma was born Nov . 15, (Mar- Total since 1959 54, Total Nation >j Milwaukee, snow .. 20 11 T Johnson and Mrs. Melvin 031 KLi^AaaaaM ^\aaaaawA^^A- f ^ < m Plane Crash Soldiers Killed tar mT ^BBT -tHfc He Plays Cards LISBON, Portugal (AP) - The beautiful Galaxie II f f The New %' Ten Portuguese soldiers were * POLAROID* killed in action In Portuguese f If: J Kills Four Guinea Nov. 32-38, tha army information services reported in Wh ile She Works a communique issued at Bisaau. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY : While a In Arkansas senior at the university last year, and said he was making his fi- a^r I fell in love with another senior. We werts married in July FAYETTEVILLE, Ark . (AP) nal approach on instruments. JBJJ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ HP ^HH BHJH^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ K ^—\ Hatt^^-^BKa^BaaaaaW^tBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVi ^ Jmrn tar BB Ami aff* and I agreed to take a job on campus to help put my husband ^ ^^BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBV&BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBT A^LaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaWaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBBBBaaaafm^a^^^ aaaaaaav amWT through gruduate school. I became suspicious when I never — Four persons were killed and When the plane failed to land, saw him studying and he appeared so nonchalant about another was injured when their search parties went out and finals that I checked up on him. I found out that while I wag single-engine airplane craahed combed the rugged Ozark Moun- working like a horse all day he was playing bridge. Then while attempting to land at the tain terrain throughout the I discovered that he wasn't even registered In the university! Municipal Airport here. night, Tha wreckage was spot- He says he loves me and if I give him ted by an airplane Saturday another chance he'll enroll next term and The Federal Aviation Agency morning. make it up to me, and give up bridge said the plane, a Cessna 208, Tha only, survivor was identi- entirely until he's finished with school. was enroute from Modesto, fied by authorities as Mrs. Ken- ^ What do you make of this and what Calif., to Fayetteville . It waa neth Gladden ( age unknown). mm? ^K ^amf a^^m ?aa\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\a ^AAa ^^^ WWW should I do? STUNNED scheduled to arrive at Fayette- She waa found outside the ville Friday night. wreckage beneath a sleeping DEAR s just say bag. mm M^flpjLuA^pJhuHB STUNNED: Let' It was last heard from, the ¦ ^Lmmm\^[mt^^JtWt^^k t m\i^^J ^A ^ J^S^M^UMHif^L^ your husband finessed your Jack ! Give FAA said, when the pilot. Merle him another chance. But save your A NEW Heffner of Modesto, radioed for The U.S. Dept. of Defense THI PASTiST MANUAL PORTABLE IN THE WORLD tOWBR-PRICRD MODEL - THE0r AUTOMATIC 101 heart and lead with a club If he cheats landing instructions at p.m. spends over $50 billion a year. ¦ l ct la ack 7:5* The all-new, exciting Galaxie II offers Changeable Type, new » S^^ ^l c ! again. ™Jm.^« s £H r S?,S ^ dS? a d^ blackT? a 1 jeweled escapement Smith-Corona natural-Ire action, ct.sh- WSjS? "?f , " f°B T0,J ,u « m:^W|^^E:^aaa^Taj|Ban?faigggll wonder what to do with an actor fire eater and folk ballet per- I aVaaaaMMattaWMattMBttaBaaaaaJjBMBal who borrowed a policeman's former, police said as they f 66 EAST THIRD STREET j uniform — because he was mulled over how to dispose of cold, he said—and was found his case. L*k:i^*k:^«a:: ^«v.:ae ^:;aa^:;«i.e atf «aL*v.i ^*;:«**k:;«*)a.4 m HroJa AAW aaaaaaaaaaaaaB^B^a^Bn KC..-i.^. V. '^aasMaaKffiR^^^. 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Andf' iifvcr ^^[g^^^^jg^^^j|fraj||^jg| ^ a fine piano is a rich experience to be drawn upon all their before sucl) power wi(h (ools which att .ich eoinemently at lives. Because they deserve the besl , see and hear the knee height in back of cleaner. "A new time-to-empty signal'' £ammmmYm\m^^\\\\\\\\\\m Wurlitzer. More than 50 styles and finishes to choose from. built right into the Dial-A-M ntic to let you know when Ihe All heirloom quality. Priced fro m $495.00. throw-away bag should be changed. HARDT'S MUSIC STORE R - D- C0NI E C0 - , E«it Sacondl Street Phont J304 114-118<>< i«. Eastm TThirdLI J Streetr. A Winonam, ** m at%amm afm t I A It's a longer , Tower, wider, roomier. Toarl. And even ihat '11 soem newer. "faSK 4P, , swankier kind Becauae now Chevrolet 's Jet- ¦ ^ H WL¦ rOl4fiTm quieter, handsomer XaWaW^ ^aW U BlwW ^aWU^aw m ft f Chevrolet. Fact, IR , just, about smooth ride is smoother than «>ver. ' show it off. everything'* new right down to the And we re itching to AW ^r"052fc* ilwar Y^aL ^™^ 1 ¦aV ¦ aam^^aaaaaaaaaY* *lu UBamfflff^ ' *»W ' 'tiiii'M'-.MBBaaBVBjBBBanfl^ttFWBBaBBl&fc New Cormir Corm Sport CoUp* , tnej " 'r" > m mm.mam af m ,_.!.« St/a a racier looking, quicker ateer- And up to 180 hp available in S AMITH - CORONA MARCHANT \ J fr4U*^!^P "" "W \ "¦¦ZaK ¦— aa^aY\Jtma\u\ 3na. fl atter cornorirw , roomier ridint" new foriae. Where do you nnd out V%P Wi W*»i« Ymd of Corvair for '6f. . With a about thin firsthand? Just folio* longer, wider new Body by FiabAr. the enthusiasts—to our showroom. , THE WORLD'S FIRST BLBCTRIC PORTABLE " l^>w:^>>.:^ak:^ai.U. ^a».: ^.iw:^,av:'^. *v:u^>kX^.A Portable lypinfj uoes modern with electricity In the Coronet , » "*e»a>^aBB»^#»B*«iawTB^B>TajBBBB*Baj^a^ world's first portnlilr electric lypewriter Perfect for all- Moreto scr. mom to try in the cars more p eople hry around home , office and school use , the Coronet fives even ANY SEASON , ANT REASON less cxpcrliwwl lyplbta shnrp uniform immob.sions and a fart . Voil don - , n,.ofl . , s 01. , reHWll ,0 g|ve whil.naii .-, Sam- Chaose a new Chevrolet , Chevelle,Cheuy H, Corvair or Corvette mw Coming Sunday, December 20— Wild and Wacky Wizard of Id Dal Curtis Joins Daily and Sunday News Comics REX MORGAN, M. D. By NANCY By Ernie Buthmilltr / v^till)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))) ! ." ' ' ' Johnny Hart and Brant Parker , co-creators of The j Wizard of Id , ponder medieval mirth beneath thir- 1 trenth century fountain at The Cloisters in New _^^^—^. f\A ^ York' /Z«/ J / KS s Fort Tryon Park. rt^rjl ^*^ -f/'^ M The VV' jr-ntrl 0/ Id , America 's newest humor sensa- * JR \ ^N&KS^TTXW \ tion , joins Winona 's outstanding array of newspaper com cs beginninR Sunday, December 20. MARY WORTH By Saunders and brnif I NJI7 if] \ ' '1IK "W Z " is a wi,{1 L^&Z/X1 — JH * 1 \ ' ' by nm* °>'iginal new brew of humor Brant Parker and Johnny , Ihe t ^ u rUi BaV A ^~\ toHart young cartoonist who sky-rocketed 1 1 /85' ^35r m I \ / \ comics stardom with B.C. six years ago. J-~> *£***""> f TPTT i^l \M \ I \f I ^rS^J^^ki yf I \ \Jff Teammate Parker Actually "discovered" f^ I \. 4 $J newspaper 1 Y t^P^Q^rlV i \ \/S!r I \\m^ " nr * wnpn Park<"' w "s a mr- Ss toonist nnd Hart a talented boy in f *««J_i—^7/ jL^riffl*f \ I high schoo l ' Binghnmton , New York. m J *%C\i™Y** I I I 'NoW afler fl ( ccat e n tnn rnlflron , Parker m r XJ V Av?A / / ' ' ' ' yV «n«l m\ J V^f y / / "art have mixed ofa manic potion ion iiiedi- eval mturiment into one the znniest new cornk MK ^»— W~-^ viy^x x. // s fl V Vir jf \ % /TX since K mzu Knl. You 'll SOP , when you meet l/ic ^ ¦ I \ t | Wnard of Id — Sunday in Thi! Winona Sunday Ntnvs ^ ___^_~-f r*l ^^ -ar* nil I P" ( comics I Is MARK TRAIL By Ed Dodd (j^» 3 >KWtDoFl0 Winona Sunday New s Winona Daily News ' AND VIKINGS TUMBLE GIANTS 30-2 1 Redmen in Boltin' Billy Brown Runs Wild Win; upset of the Green the middle for a touchdown as The Giants wiped that oat on Third MINNEAPOLIS Iff) - The caught 45 passes for 575 yards. Angeles in an Minnesota Vikings overcame He's already cracked the Vik- Bay Packers. the Vikings obligingly fell to the Wood's 42-yard pass to Aaron their own erratic play and For a while Sunday, nobody outside to open the path. Thomas, sending New York in the goo of the Yankee Stadi- was sure the Vikings could over- Tarkenton passed 43 yards to front 21-20. um field to crack the New York RAMS LURE SNOW come their own bumbling play. Hal Bedsole, and the Minnesota That's when the galloping ' Brown pulled in Tarkenton's Knights Giants 30-21 Sunday and insure Brown s 48-yard run set them quarterback swung wide on a Eye INTO NFL FOLD themselves of an above-.500 fin- * up with a first down on the rollout to score a touchdown pass to score, and the Minne- DAVENPORT, Iowa-Blister- ence foe St. Norbert will pro- ish in their fourth season in the Jack Snow of NTotre Giants 17-yard line. But they himself for a yard out to shove sotans tacked on Cox' 27-yard ing the nets on a 42-percent vide the opposition in the final National Football League. Dame, the Vikings' No. 1 goofed around and wound up the Vikings in front 17-7. fielder for the clincher. shooting display, St. Mary's tuneup before St. Mary's swings When it was over, Coach draft choice signed over the with only Fred Cox' 18-yard New York countered with an Tarkenton finished with 13 shoved its win streak to three into MIAC competition Satur- 11-yard scoring pass irom rook- completions in 29 attempts for Norm Van Brocklin paid the weekend with the Los An- field goals—the first of four and made its overall record 3-1 day night at Macalester, pro's tribute to his bow-legged three-point boots by Cox. ie Gary Wood to Frank Gifford, 244 yards. He had none inter- St. geles Rams in a "lateral" with a 64-59 victory over SUNDAY , the Redmen went cowboy from Illinois, Bill Brown Then on the ensuing kickoff , and Cox added a 47-yard field cepted. Brown, Tommy Mason, Sunday night. that succeeded In keeping Ambrose here behind 6-0 immediately, then Giant rookie Clarence Childs goal for a 20-14 Viking lead at Paul Flatley and Hal Bedsole The Redmen now go after "Bill Brown played a sensa- him in tbe NFL and away streaked 100 yards straight up halftime. each caught three of them. showed their prowess by reel- from San Diego of the AFL. their fourth straight at Terrace straight points. They tional game for us," Van Brock- Non-confer- ing off 11 lin intoned. There could be no Best guess is that the Heights Tuesday. never again would be headed. dissenters. Vikings will get two play- With forward Roger Pytlew- Brown , built like a young erg after the season from ski blazing in six of nine field Hereford bull and maybe the LA, or players and a high goal attempts, the Redmen hardest fullback in all of foot- draft choice next year. parlayed the 11-8 lead at 13:52 ball to tackle, bludgeoned the into a 35-29 halftime edge. Giant defense for 103 yards on Ramblers Heading for While it was close the rest of 18 carries, once burst 48 yards ings' season scoring record with the way, St. Mary's maintained to set up a field goal and caught 13 touchdowns, eight of them on its edge. a 30-yard touchdown pass from passes. Frank Tarkenton. The Bees did narrow it to Minnesota has one game left three points at one time before "He got yardage," Van Brock- —at Chicago next Sunday. , Campion St. Mary's whisked ahead by in said "when an ordinary man Battle With would have been stopped." The Vikings, now 7-5-1 and as- eight. By ROLLIE VVUSSO W Prairie du Chien, Wis., and a tempt to get back on the win- Monday, December 7, 1964 Since coming into his own as sured of their finest season, still WHEN THE CONTEST wa§ <. an NFL fullback this season, have a chance at playing in the Daily News Sports Writer game with Campion High School ning trail after suffering a 76- Page 14 Coach John. Nett's Cotter tonight. 53 loss to state champion Be- history, Pytelwski edged team- Boltin ' Billy has proved he is no Miami runner-up game. But Maloney for game ordinary man. He now has they must beat the Bears Sun- Ramblers put themselves back The Ramblers will meet Cam- nilda Saturday at St. Stan's. mate Mike together today and headed for aion in an 8 p.m. game in an at- honors. rushed for 769 yards and has day and have help from Los The Ramblers now stand 1-1 with 22 on the year. Pytlewski finished HIGH TIDE . . . Defen- Gophers Look points on a 10-for-22 field per- As soon as the game was his- sive back Larry Wilson (8), formance for the night and Ma- tory, there was little doubt in St. Louis, grabs Cleveland 12. George Hoder ' loney had anyone s mind that Benilde was Browns pass in end zone, in played a supporting role with Raiders Push the state champion. fourth quarter Sunday, mak- To Battle With 12 points. THE RED KNIGHTS, com- ing play a touchback. Pass, Jerry Ketelaar topped four pleting an outstate tour with the intended for flanking back double-figure scorers for St. Patriots Into victory over the Ramblers alter Gary Collins (86) , if success- Ambrose with 15 points. Lou fashioning a 72-55 win over Ro- ful, would have made score Marquette Five Kaiser wound up with 13, Tony (AP) - The chester Lourdes Friday , showed St Louis 28, Cleveland 26 MINNEAPOLIS McAndrews 12 and Pat Murray . Gophers have the early-season class in several de- with time for more scoring. Minnesota 11. . best basketball record in the Big ' partments. Final result was St. Louis Driver s Seat Ten heading into the second TUESDAY NIGHT, St. Nor- Racing to a 22-7 first quarter (AP By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 28, Cleveland 19. Photo- week of the young season, and bert will come into the contest lead which left the fans breath- fax ) unbeaten and fresh from a 106- It was only fitting and proper. less, the visitors streaked to a Coach John Kundla is worried. Back in October the Oakland "I look at the Big Ten and I 68 mauling of Northland. 44-29 halftime advantage, then The victory was the Green Raiders, with some last-minute hung on for the win. shudder ," Kundla said Sunday heroics, delivered what ap- Knights' third straight. All 11 Tbe Ramblers, completely after his Gophers returned from St". Norbert players saw action peared to be a knockout blow to outclassed in the first period, a two-victory trip to Iowa over Boston's hopes of an Eastern Lois Schacht and each scored at least four played the Red Knights on even the weekend , running their rec- points with John Patterson col- Division title in the American terms for the second and third ord to 3-0. lecting 23. Football League. periods. Benilde outscored the "There isn't a weak sister in ," Kundla added. "We Sf. Miry '» (M) St. Ambroj» <5») And now, with some last- Ramblers 17-9 in the final stan- Rattles 528 in the bunch (9 fi pltp ffl It ol tp minute heroics, the Raiders za. haven 't played anybody at all Pytletki 10 l 4 M Krlpptl 4 » 1 I Buffo 0 0 0 0 Vanouem 9 0 0 0 h ave knocked the Patriots right Sparked by 5-11 playmaker yet. We won't get a real test Vilalki 1 1 5 4 Kaixr 4 S I IJ back into the drivers' seat. for a couple of weeks yet." Hider 4 4 1 12 KettUir 7 1 4 15 guard Jim Felling, Benilde Miloniy 7 4 1 It McAndn 4 4 I U whipped to a 13-3 advantage Then Kundla remembered the Sauttr 14 3 4 Murray 4 J 1 11 The Raiders' Tom Flores did Guys and Dolls early in the first period. A pair Sunday marked a quiet night Gophers have a game with Mar- Youno • » • • the job this time, hitting Art quette in Williams Arena Tues- Tstlli 34 14 It M Powell with a three-yard touch- of free throws and a basket by on the bowling scene. Tetalt 33 13 13 If John Nett Jr. gave Cotter its day night, and backed up a lit- ST. MARY'S iS-l*-4* down pass with only four sec- Lois Schacht made the big- ST. AMBROSE » K-M seven-point total in the first gest news for the women as she tle. onds left and boosting Oakland quarter. Bill Browne had ac- to a 16-13 victory over Buffalo scored 185-390-153—528 in the "Marquette will be a belter counted for the other three Westgate Guys and Dolls cir- Sunday. markers. test than we've had so far ," he cuit. That led her team to 807— said. "Drake is going to be a Boston had been struggling 2,186. John Cisewski tipped 196 desperately to catch up ever COTTER AND Benilde traded pretty good ball club, but Mar- baskets ui the second stanza as for Fenske-Cisewski and Tony quette may be a little tougher. since Mike Mercer kicked a 38- Lubinski .543 for Lubinski-Davis. yard field goal with five seconds (3) (54) blocks Cow- well as the third. The teams They've got a winning tradition 25-YARD GAIN .. . Jack Concannon Eagles' center Jim Ringo scored 22. points each in the In the His 'N Hers League at left in the October clash when in his first pro start as Philadelphia Eagles boys tackle Bob Lilly (74). Concannon car- Hal-Rod, Ed Kauphusrnan laced and spirit, of course. And Mar- second period , and 15 each in quette has a real outstanding Oakland tied the Patriots 43-43 quarterback , takes off through hole in the ried ball eight times for 99 yards and threw 225—566 for Kauphusman-Kau- the third. player in Tom Flynn, and appeared to knock them out two touchdown passes as Eagles wen, 24-14. phusman as Margo Dubbs' 162 He's 6- line for a 25-yard gain in second period of The fourth quarter told the feet-5 and a well-built kid." of title contention. (AP paced Overby-James to 796— Sunday's Eagles - Dallas Cowboys pro foot- Photofax) story, however. Trailing 59-44, Marquette also has a standout They finally overhauled the ball game in Philadelphia. In background, 2,222. Bev Wolfe socked 445 for the" Ramblers had an outside McElmury-Wolfe. sophomore in 6-2 Bob Wolf , for- Bills by beating Kansas City 31- cnance of catching up to the 24. That left Buffalo with a 10-2 HAL - ROD LANES: High mer Wisconsin all-stater. BALTIMORE STREA K ENDS AT 77 GAMES Red Knights, despite their cold School Girls — Susie Burmeis- The Gophers broke Iowa record and Boston at 10-2-1. The tirst period performance. Patriots are idle this week, ter's 171 paced Gutter Dusters State's stingy zone defense in Forward Art Moore dumped to 2,031. Cheryl Biltgen went on the second half to belt the Cy- while Buffalo has a game with in a long jumper to make the Denver. Regardless of the out- a pin smashing binge for Scram- clones 63-53 Saturday night at score 61-44 for Benilde, but then blers with 494. Scramblers Ames. Friday night, they whip- come of the Bills' game with the visitors went into a five- Denver , the Eastern title goes produced 755. ped Drake 67-60. St. Louis Yells to Giants minute scoring slump. High School Boys — Joe Al- ' Our defense looked pretty on the line in the final game of During this time, Cotter had brecht raked 201—542 f o r good for this early in the sea- m\mamaW^^^^^^^^aamm\ the regular season, Boston at sliced the lead to-61-51 with 3:58 Buffalo. Knights. Pin Smashers tripped son ," Kundla said of the Iowa remaining. The Ramblers got 774 and Pin Busters 2,173. trip. "And we found out on this H The San Diego Chargers most of their points on free Park-Red Boys — Bruce Bilt- tfirows and a long jumper by trip we can play against a zone. BT Guardian wrapped up the Western title, For Help in Eastern Half gen's 176—337 was enough to We had a little trouble against H Nett. Rog Huling and Mike Lee their second straight and fourth l?ad Four Go Fours to 1,410, Al- the zones at first because Terry I PREMIUM I in the five-year history of the By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Should the Browns win Satur- passes as the Lions ended Balti- flipped in a pair ol free tosses, ley Rats picked up 731. anq Browne added one. Kunze shifted to forward and Jj Nylon AS LOW AX K AFL with a 38-3 romp over New It wasn't so very long ago that day, Sunday 's game between more's win streak that started WESTGATE BOWL : Saturday had to adjust." Felling was high with 25 * York in the only other league the St. Louis Cardinals were the Philadelphia Eagles and St. the second week of the season. Boys — Don Michalowski's 186 The play of sophomore Paul ¦9 • Brll. CMllivcflai $ J C H points, including 11 field goals, B • Midi* kill In (it ¦ ¦ ] game played over the weekend. vitally concerned with what Louis won't mean a thing. But a led All-Stars to 732-2 ,037. Dar- Presthus, rebounding of center K • i(i:mi,ii«u IJw §m Pittsburgh scored the winning mostly from long range. ryl Smelser turned 465 for Strik- Boston 's Babe Parilli passed went on in Yankee Stadium in Giant victory could give the touchdown midway in the final Mel Northway and development New York and it will be that Cards the crown if St. Louis Nett hit 18 for the Ramblers, ers. for 300 yards and three touch- period and then halted a last- while Browne was the other dou- Junior Girls — Pozanc Truck- of reserves were other pleasant downs in leading the Pats to way again next Saturday . gets by the Eagles the following surprises. minute Washington drive for its ble-figure man with 12. ing slid 683—1,331 with Pin their key victory. A 29-yard This time it's the National ,' day. I u. ROYAL victory. Ed Brown's 47 - yard Cotttr (33) Bcnlldi (7«) Droppers tying the series fig- "Presthus has come aloflg WAm\\\\\\\\\\\\\ touchdown pass to Art Graham Football League's Eastern Divi- The Giants lost their ninth in p) pass to Gary Ballraan produced 19 It m U> lg it tp ure. Patty Romball had 145—277 real well," Kundla said. "He' brok e a 17-17 tie and put Boston sion title going up for grabs and 13 games Sunday, bowing to Naif 7 4)1* Savaga 1 O i 4 s the deciding points. Huling 0 3 12 Moora S 1 10 for Strikettes. going to be a big ahead to stay. the Cardinals will be the foot- Minnesota .'10-21. In other • help. North- j Pallowskl 2 « I 4 Polwn 4 111 Kings and Queens — C & way is looking good rebounding, V San Diego totaled 466 yards on ba ll variety instead of baseball. ! games, Detroit ended Balti- Rooklf Jack Concannon Allalrt 11IS Falling 11 3 4 JJ Ks hit 765—2 u-»- «OVAL l Brown* 3 1 1 13 Mahoniy 4 I ,159 behind Ann and I think the reserves are a AS LOW M offfn.se Against Ihe hapless Jets more's 11-game winning streak sparked the Eagles' victory * • |J j The Cleveland Browns had a j Kulai 0*10 Thomat • 0 0 C Case's 168. Verna Otis picked up little better than I expected.''' and scored the first three times , Pittsburgh topped Wash- over Dallas, completing 10 of 20 L*a 14 14 Pallet 1*11 chance to wrap up the Eastern ! 31-14 470 for Double O's and Ray The Gophers and il ROI its hands on the ball. John ington 14-7 , Philadelphia passes including two TDs. Holmay O 0 0 0 Mikan 1 J 1 I Cyclones title Sunday but lost to St. Louis ! Pilowikl 2 1 J 4 W«»lbrk 1 « 0 1 Gady 192—540 for Musketeers. were tied 26-2fi at the half , but Had! completed 15 of 17 passes , Ktlly 19 11 2)1-19 allowing the Cards to ; downed Dallas 24-14 and San John Brodie threw a pair of Jacks and Queens — Maxine Minnesota shot Its way into fnr 240 yards and two touch- , Francisco defeated Los Angeles aggressive Totals II 17 II 13 Smith 14 3 1 a 37- creep within a half :game of the j TD passes and an Stinocher swept 156—414 and 30 lead early in the second half downs. i 20-7. Saturday it was Green Bay Totals J) 10 34 74 lead. Cleveland visits New York San Francisco defense stalled Cliff Madland 204-525 for 300 and it was never tied again. 17, Chicago ll the 4flers re- COTTER 7 11 t5 »—Jl but Jokers picked up team Saturday and the Giants i . Los Angeles as BENILDE 11 11 IJ 17-71 Club, SOCCER CHAMPION , strug- i Northway and Yates tied for t Safety ¦ ) gling through a dismal season versed an early season loss. Officials: Snenctr, Addlnalon, highs with 756—2, 145. scoring honors , PROVIDENCE , R.I, (AP - [ Charley Johnson keyed the each with 14 , 800 ^mmammaAmm Navy, a team with a mission , is after three straight Eastern Cardinal triumph , pitching two while Lou Hudson added 12, Blemithod %S$mam\mmm \ the 1064 NCAA soccer champi- crowns, once again are a vital touchdown passes and running Archie Clark 11 and Kunze Narrow *~5BammmAm\ on. (actor in the Eastern race. short yardage > for two more eight. Al Koch got 13 for Iowa Whit * Low As H^^^H scores as St. Louis stalled State. 1 HBBVAVBV Cleveland's title drive, Johnson Gunner Predicts Better $l6a95 completed 15 of 22 for IG7 yards. f B|wP6 No wond er these people are Lou Gro/.a kept the Hrovfns in , ' the game hooting four field Ches Lilla Atop ¦ enjoying the holidays 1 goals. Finish for State Matmen m K2 ttl • I' ••'»- rUIIMII mi* SR a 147- ander Ramsey. Milt Plum threw three TD A list of nine leltermen make N.Y.; Merle Sovereign , HAZARD GUARANTEE gJ up the Winona State College pounder , who finished second in Mikkelson Is 130 pounds , Wicks Mg ROAO BuiVs Pin Classic i g Unlimited as to ¦ jfijBPW®***^ ¦ ¦' '¦ "' wrestling team which will in- the NAIA at that weight, and 167, and Drange, 177. Also in- p>< .^ \ m\W'' ' " J^aHH^ Chcs Lilla vaulted into mllMtil - '^ f augurate tho Warriors ' 1964-65 second in the conference at ten cluded is John Zwolinski , a first Wgg tlmi or . place after completion of first- iKBsun M» u. «. »•«•"•" r^ 'B' Saturday pounds heavier; Perry King, a heavyweight from N. Tonawan- »•»•' L Mk 1 Hawk Mat wrestling campaign «' 1 "'1 ' B week action in the llln.l l'»" £=i ¦^¦W ' ^aW^^'Ki ^V > ^^^^^^ 137-pounder , and Buzz Mattson, da , N. Y., who is a transfer two-week ^ ¦fe lll. .Hh.tr 1 in the La Crosse State invita- Bub's Bowling Classic at Wino- ' < both from Canlslus University, and ^V Am\ ' \t "*r VV***9V 'T^L^L^LW tional . a 147-poundcr who were na Athletic Club Saturday their who also was the national and h Team Beaten The Warrior grappiers were third in the conference at Sunday. Va»p M»"« «"•"' '" ••""""" ,'' yz; I respective weights last year. YMCA champion while in high wis..* «IKI«|" »¦"' " 'YM :|3 r ALBKRT LEA , Minn. - In slated to open their season last Lilla wrapped games of 11)3 , ¦Saturday in the Stale College of Also returning are Dan Sera- school. ¦^^ ^7 \r . v ' '*****. Ihe- preliminary lo the varsity 194 , 247 and lfi3 Into a 787 to top ^^^^^^^ ;^^^^^^^^^^ . JW—.-¦...>- ...... Tom Westberg, a transfer AaaWAamwammaWaAmax. mRBHMk i""«-> - • wUm^ Iowa tournament , but had to beck , a 157-pound performer; Rochester ' j match here Friday night , Wino- from Iowa State, and Byron s Dan BJork by two pull out of the 12-team field Larry Wedemeier, 191-pounder pins. Bjork had i na High School's "B" wrestling year Bremer ol Lake City at 157 are games of 175, They got their kind of lorn I learn was beaten 35-11 bv Albert due to insufficient funds avail- who was third in the NIC a 215, 218 and 177. ALL PRICES PLUS TAX AND , ago , and Dale Nelson , who will also possibilities, Westberg Is SMOOTH payments j hea 'H. " able to transport Ihe team to Winona keglcrs hold third and TIRE OFF YOUR CAR with jt iefr kind of Winona wins came from Pat Cedar Falls. go at 167 or 177 pounds. a 130-potindcr. part of fourth places. Irv Prax- YOUR BIO CHANCEl roople 'd money need it »re differen t — especially mt thin I Anderson at 120, Hon Hoover at DEFINITELY have a el follows Bjork with 784 , Ralph r Till! TWO REMAINING mon "WK tim« ol the year. \ntl nobody does quit* »s murh a limit | l.T» and Bill Itoth at lfi. >. A YKAK AGO the Warriors ogram winners are Leo Simon better team than last year, " Pnlblcki netted 777. Frank Hell- it as Public Finance . I ALBERT LEA "B" 31, WINONA "B" II had n 3-!» dual-meet slate, but and Tom Curon , who won letters says Gunner. "The only thing man of La Crosse tied Pal- • »3 OeraW Biklta (AD die. Don Ml, had a late-season surge tlial bicki' Oct the right kind of Holiday loan (or you .. . tailor mnde (W) j -ti s 777. ! ; ; kalowikl l»3— Dava R|ark« (AL) two years ago, but sat out last that worries me is that I don 't U.S. BATTERIES ] to fit your individual nn-dn—with nenRiblopaymontiiyoi i \ woo on forfeit; III—Tom f= a*ry (AL| resulted in a fourth place show - season. Simon Is a 157-pound- know just what the other teams Tentative low pay Is 745 with can allord. Your good credit the way for you. , dac . Lot Bohnm (W) »¦]; 110—Pat An. ing in the Northern intercollegi- one weekend to go. ] i Dry Charge j op*nn dtnon (W) dec . John Tollmen (AL) , and Caron is a 177-poundcr. have. er Defending 1 1 74-Month Guarantee < Call an \i» ll you 7\rr<\ money lor the Holklnyit--$'25 to 5 3, \n— Jim Den (AD p. Hog Haiti. ate Conference meet nnd a The only loss from last year's "The conference is getting bet- champion Villi Ion (Wl 1:17; 111—Mlka Klalmchrodl ninth-place finish in the NAIA Zierke of La Crosse, who won M LOW $600 i/our kind «>f loan with your kind of payments . (AL) dec. Mill. Jalewikl (IV) 4 1/ squad is Pat Flaherty, who is ter each year, but I think that I la—Ron Hoover (W) p. Larry Torge moot at Spearfish , S.D. with 86.1, will bowl Sunday nt A You can depend on... now coaching at St. Puul Park. Mankato and Moorhead should |i . $12.95 | ion (AL) ) I 34 J 1 «—Tim rmnorma (AL) dinner lias seven of the nine 2:45 p.m. Second-place l)u- t^> t p. Jim Rodgtn (Wl 5:13/ ll«-Oan Gunner recruited several he rated as tops, with us a dark- Wayne Ynntes , who laced IW2 Ma ilman IAD won by lorftll, WJ—Bill leltermen back fro m the same outstanding prospects, Among horse. I really do feel that we , Roth (W) dec Ron Weonlr (AL) 10/ squad which had the late sea- is in California and won 't com- U» - Oavo Bratlen (AL) dec Chuck Luaclt them are Don Board , a Im- should he pretty tough , " snya pete. (Wl 110; Hut .—Ncxtger Klufctw (AL) son surge, and hones that they pounder from Anoka ; Steve dinner, who is starting his third KJWBl/C FINANCE dac Tom Backer (W) 4 0 BUB'S BOWLING CLASSIC ANGST ran carry It over in to an entirt* Rcirci, who was third in the year. Winona AthMtlc Club ^ )r^ ^^ CORPORATION Football (.'osu'h Woody Hayes season performance this year state of Iowa at 130 last year; The Warriors , after next Sat- HIOH FtV« Motor Service Chtt Lilla, Winona , It? stal l ed the 19H4 season with a Hack are this year 's captain Larry Mikkelson of Harmony, urday 's meet , have their first Don Blorlt. Roihaalar 15B Market St . 302 Choato • 1*9 Phone «2M1 Bldg. Phono 2368 word of 6(1 victories , 19 defeats Larry Marchionda . a senior Ray Wicks of Dccorah, Iowa , home meet Jan. 9 against River Irv praml, Winona 7M Ralph palblcMI, Winona .. ir> U. S. ROYAL and six lies at Ohio State. 12.1-pounder from Penn Yun , and Steve Prange from Alex- Falls. Ralph Mailman, LR Croat* .,, in TIRES \ am am -— —- a^^a*wmm ^^m ^^aa ^am ^am ^4ma ^ma wamm^iaw^kWm^m m ¦¦•¦¦-»»-- w — — — — — — — — ' -¦¦•¦»¦:amw^m^m FRIDAY NIGH T |« ¦ ¦ .www wvwww«w«wwvww«v««. Fakler Laces This Week's Basketball TONIG HT 623 to Pace LOCAL SCHOOLS— Winona stata at Plattivllli siala. Winona Slata Prattiman it Plattavllli Fraihman. Cottar al Prairie du Chien Camolan re$f one jm^ City Keglers TUESDAY Howlers at Westgate came up LOCAL SCHOOLS- with a pair of SI. NorOart at St. Mary 'l, I a m., honor counts to Tirraca Height!. HOLIDAY SAFETY SERVICE highlight Friday night action BI-STATE — ®Ti || St. Pelir at Omlaiki Luther. on the city ROOT RIVER— flBfi kegling scene. Spring »rove at Houataal. In the Braves and Squaws Mabel al Petenon. Canton al Caledonia, loop, Gordy Fakler cruised to NON CONFERENCE— the night' Tremp«aleau at Taylor. s high with 225-175- Chippewa Falli McDonnell at Llmi 223-«23 for Fakler-Fakler . Sacrad Heart, Holy Trinity it Letviifan. Janice Drazkowski's 194—497 Indepaeidanca al Arcadia. One* at Palrchlld. paced Wegman-Drazkowski to Elava-Slrum at Pall Craak. 2, 227 while Wiczek Northfield at LiSueur, Duellman Hay lie til vi. Medlerd at Univarally • was picking up 791 and Dick Mlnntiola. Flatten of Winon a"Tool Co. 230. In the Lakeside circuit , John Erickson's 234—612 paced Vik- AUmT BRAKE ing ' I s to 2,924. Brems Sign Co. State Swimmers ! / STk totaled 1 , 012. WINONA AC: Major — Irv Praxel's 585 paced Peerless Chain to 2,890. Hal Joswick Eye Macalester picked up 219 for Nelson Tire ¦nd Mississippian hit 1 ,005. Meet Tuesday RELINE Nlte Owl — Vera Bell's 166 \M \ Macalester College , which •J/ paced Curley 's Floor Shop to 674-1 , 901. Ruth Kukowski tip- took a runaway first place in ped 453 for Coca-Cola. the Titan Relays at Oshkosh, fl^_ HAI.-ROD LANES : Legion — Wis., Saturday, moves into Wi- nona State's Memorial Hall pool Mm Erv Schewe 's 236 led Bauer WAioraro! Don't take MW MM Installed . Wt^M m*taited I mB im Installed ¦ ¦ Don 't take a Elect to 1 ,026. Dave Miranda Tuesday afternoon for a 4 p.m. :$|Q88m fM^H m cfaanee* \ a chance. Repiaooj ^^ WpV $1095Exchange ^ Exchange Replace worn dual meet with the Warriors. - u § Exchange LVfl Baa,- ^m ¦ I ma\mW ' $?395aaaflaaaH^ m\mW tripped 597 for NSP and Hamms i it now at our low, amam ^^^ ^™ ^^^ ^^"^™ __^^^ :11H shocks wm... . for safe, I Winona State, which finished f 2,763. Ed Kauphusman speared low price*. —AM " I ^. - - _ ._ ^^ comfortable driving 544 errorless. fourth in the ten-team meet Sat- urday, will attempt to avenge I ig Pin Dusters—Vivian H. Brown ) MO« 6 vort 5 GUARANTEED | GUARANTEED GUARANTEED to .ffi ft < and Lucille Weaver , both tub- its only loss of one year ago. ¦ or i d>, The Warrior tankers had a 13-1 tt^OO Miles 1 Year 20.000 Miles or 2 Years 30.000 Miles or 3 Years "** i I blng, led Winona Rug Cleaning U95 j j j* r to 868 with their 209 and 518 , record in 1984-65. ™ ^ respectively. Steve 's Lounge MACALESTER was the iur- Cbiir-Fwd-Do^ L I OF clobbered 2,547. prise of the Titan Relays Satur- M ««N ^ WESTGATE BOWL: Satellite day, amassing an 80-point total # —Irene Pozanc of Watkowski'g to walk away with first place. j HERE'S WHAT WE DO: «% 90 tripped 189—413 with Shirley Loyola of Chicago , last year 's 1¦ O \ I M y^^ •Repiaee old lining and ahoea on ail fourBra wrxw**ke wr &i Aw j Squires tying the series mark winner , was a distant second ' m Firestone? Factory EngineeredBoend td lining!. . ^^^^1 ^fA *^ I » I *» T E?r» to- lead Cozy Corner to 2, 469. with 64 points. Host Oshkosh | ^,* jM * mm -._ •Ctean sad inupcct brake druihei for traeoeaav m AM m\^ INSTALLED was third with 32 w(fh ^m\ | L-Keys tripped 843. and Winona ?rlria i« aaA H i ^l 0 aV •Iwspect complete hydraulic tyaUM. _^\ W^mWAW^- Am. fourth -with 24. ^ ' " ^> m \ AmP WAMV •Inspertbrtte Bboe wtotnwh4iprin^gii far e^JeuitWJ mX'W ' ^ amW ' \ Warrior coach John Martin ™ M ^ o»jal«arid «^ ^ ^^o^fe - ^ **. . WA * «ln«p«Ktf^«4M^ b«*wiip. «^L * . was satisfied with his squad's ^^ * ^ Uw ^ ^ ^^^m \ ?JBaaaa^^v ^mr ^Ar Am. * Adjust brakes onto all toot wheels A. aw ^ r \^^ \ performance, considering his ^P for full contact dra««. ^^ < ¦ Preston Matmen team's lack of depth. - \mW\ JmrnW* ^LBW «¦¦¦¦>I M V m4a\\w "It (the showing) wasn't too bad co nsidering the shape we JiT Wheels j Level Eagles were in, " said Martin. ^¦^ for.Jf the r:^iffo»! _ "A lot of Brake number mflea and. ¦ \ V^ AM ^, %^gji A ap«cified ^^aw ^»k 9**— Ijp^k t PRESTON , Minn. - Pres- our kid s were out of action Just Mats ^^ ^ ton's wrestling team took a 35- prior to the meet. Pat Ford was ^ ^ II decision over Dover-Eyota in the hospital; Mike Anderson nn here Friday. was out for cross-country and Adjustment + A\ ESS-Sijs m PRESTON 3!, DOVER-EYOTA 11 hadn't «ven a week of practice , % „ Svlvasfer Bllrlnjer (D-B) dac. Oary A^T *J— and Terry Hoyston M i? ! had an + ear J ¦urrasen (P) 7-3/ 103—Lyle Lawr«ni Repack (D E) doc. Doug Harm (P) 3-1/ ill— Infection. I was satisfied." +atjf TF,oor° m^ Jehn Arnold (P> doc. Tim Bowman (D-E) \ The Warriors competed in all ! "ssa 4-0; 110— Jim Llttla dac. Torry Wlngort (D E) I-],- ill— the meet. The best placing the Vlnca Arnold (P) p. Davt Ihrko (D-B) |4S; tankers took was a third in the . 13S—Dannli Oornlnk (P) aloe. Rati 400-yard freestyle relay. Clark (D-B) t-4 i MS-Killh Mayar (D-B) "THE MEET tomorrow will won on torlaltj i Sa—Roai 'oroMan (P) 5S die . Jirry Lotttlfn (O-E) 4-3; HS-Giry be good experience for us," said Chrlifotlrion IP) ate. Dava Nellar (D-B) ?^ \ Martin. 99°> "Macalester is the . best SO; US— Darrell Burgaii (P) p. Dernll i\^sL^5v £ JacobsOn (DE) 4:31; Hwt.—Bill Man- in the area , and you only make Ban (P) won on lorlalt. good improvement when you meet good teams. "Loyola was a little shell- Gophers Gain Vital shocked, " said Martin , referring ^ ^r «M«>ftvy ~~ ^*^ \ ^ AmW ^T Mm. ^A W dutv molded robber ^g C ¦ A\ W ^ V \2T^«W back to Saturday 's meet, "They ^ xelumve new d«,i(m *% ^ ~ < Spirt With Wolves f W^ Amf am. ' mm^M 1 Jy ^^' ^r -lP ^ M -**«« m had gone in there (Oshkosh) the oW0ta mm AA\ Mm "AW (Unive rsal At —door-to-door ¦ ^ MB i Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS year before and copped every- '\ M| \\ \ W* . *W U H 'Black , white, blue, green, red | ^ 4^ fg \% M\ Minnesota gained a vital split thing, then when Macalester laid m+ ^ with defending champion Michi- it to them this year they were gan away from home over the a little stunned ." weekend , while North Dakota OSHKOSH MATE SWIMMINO HI- LAYS: fnacaloiter ll, Chicago-Loyola »4, ran into trouble on the road in Othkoih », Winona (Minn.) 14, wiscen- the Western Collegiate Hotkey iln-MHwaukee 10, Central Michigan U, Stevenl fftlnl ll, Lawrence Fresh 4, Mil- Association. wauikie Tach ana kawrenct vanity l. the Gophers shelled the Wol- A\m\\\aavaam\\w^SS ^^^aaaaaaa\m\ m £'2$ verines 10-3 Saturday night after l*Yl losing 7-fi Friday to push their \W^f WJ^t7a^V/f ^^Aa\\ tyCHA record to 3-1. ma\\W^1^^B11 L ] ¦ Cotter "B" Team J&^£X aVH aam%% MMMMMW VF$$$^r ^TS JtaWj T^'m AW* ^- < ^mATAAAamWA\\ma\maaaaa\Wma\a\\\wMM\M\m\ ^¦^L ^L^L^L\^aa\mL^LHal^^L^L^L^L^L^L^L^L ^L^L^L^L^L^L^\\WL^H a \W M At ^B a^iii« aH^H H Aaaaaaaaaaaaataaa^¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ B A ^L^H MLT4 ^M ^o^a^i^L^L^L^L^H Topples Frosh Pro Football The Cotter "B" team downed the Cotter freshmen squad in a ) \$y ?R!mMkAWmm \ preliminary contest to the Cot- 1jmff lm\\&^:aCmT '££jmaaam&^^ BBAi—mAtt Standings ter-Beaiilde game Saturday night eS^@liKM^^n ^§M ^§A ^§A ^§Am^^kMlWamaammmm NVl, at St. Stan 's. ammWaamatKMSASM EASTERN CONPiRBNCI Tim Browne paced the B's" ^V^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H W. L, T. Pel. PT OP 64-35 win by popping in 14 ClavHand » 3 1 7M 14! 311 tt. LOUlt 0 3 3 .717 111 317 points. Tom Wenzel and Jim Waahlnnton 6 7 0 .462 3« 340 Heinlen added 10 each. Philadelphia a 7 0 .447 371 377 PltHburoh 3 0 0 .115 111 3»» Bob Greden paced the frosh ¦ ¦ JBBW BiM ANY S|ZE LISTED Dallns * 1 »3 111 375 with 17 markers . ^^__ 1 »l I ¦ ^^. Naw York 3 ,1" I * 3" Cottar "•" (44) Collar Froth (15) ]mvmSaaaaa\wmmWm ^ u .^MHLfeL. ^AAUM——. WR1TENN CONPERENCI rf rt fl ip ft II al ia ^^ 111 301 •altlmort 11 1 0 .146 Brauie a l > 1« Wicka 113 1 5 0 6IS lit 311 GREEN BAY 0 Spelti 1*11 Sehler 0 8 10 7 3 1 .501 314 311 MINNESOTA Hainlan U IID schneldr » 7 3 7 Detroit « 3 1 , 343 »1 1S3 Brduylc 3 3 1 a Malar 10 0) 3 1 1 .417 35» 113 A WT Lo» Anooltl Twamty 4 11* Thomptn all) ^^AAA — Chicago 5 0 0 .313 241 330 Warm 0 0 3 0 Oradtn I 1 3 W I ^^ili ^i^a^HBHoiflHHHHi ^HB ^a at a.maamaWflHHa^aflafl ¦ ¦ .aAmm WW^ aaaaiaiBBiiB^ti^l^tiBiBBi ^ « 0 .108 lit 106 ^¦^^^ ¦^^^^^ ¦^M ^B W ONLY^aw ^m ^m ^mr^^^— t^;res Mm^e ^ia9 San Prancltco 4 Schoeno-r 3 0 3 4 Wlltqm 10 4 1 nn^^nH^B^M^H^^^^^F^B ^ SATURDAY'! RESULT a^^^^*^^^^^&.90 -13 £.70-13 7.00-14 5.60-15 6.40-15 Hlr c Leal 0 3 3 2 Bleiani 0 10 1 law. ^^^^•¦o^BB^^B^^af BHaffllfflBa^BBBBBBB^BBm^B^i^^a*At HBaaaaBBHI B °" *r ORCeN BAY 17, Crtlcaflo J. Ehmcke- 3 0 14 HI ^ SUNDAY'S RBSULT S Wcniel 4 1 I 10 Total* 11 11 13 3! It. Louli 1(, Clavaland It. Hoapanar 1113 JCaO 52°-13 I I 6 40H I I I I Othar Sizes I Phlladilphla 14, Dallai 14. f la^Bl ^ C aC ^ffiHaioflHiHr i^B^a^Vi^r M I Priyblafcl 0 0 1* Baltimore 14. \ WKEF hit ttl MHaHB^aaaaHak^^AW 5.60-13 6.00-13 6.50-13FIRESTONE 7.00-13 7.50-14 5.90-15 6.70-15 Slightly Hi gher { DclrOll 11, f imN ^' ^m ^m ^ San FranclKo It, Los Angela! 7. Total* 11 13 II 44 ^aHy^HBEXa^HaBBBBHaBHaV Aw9 MINNESOTA 30, Haw York 21. COTTI* "B" 1* 10 31 17-44 I JMj Ipp f la Qnniilf ^HHLa^a^aloHallaBV^BBlr^llo^a^HaBBBWaT All T* I 0ur i*tr«ada, WentlHed by Mextallion and shop mark, ore I rillihurgli 14, Waihlnglon 7. COTTER FROSH 11 4 I 10—1! l Ot OIIUW T€SS guaranl««d by thotiaanda and thouaands of Firastona NEXT SUNDAY'3 GAMES ¦ [ Jmtl **C ^^^^¦^L^^I^^^BS^^IH^^^IKr DOUBLE I at Lot Angalai and Stoma throughout lh» U. 5. and Canada i Ofteeu BAY . Michigan lias won or shared I /If CPDADCD ^BaBvaBvaBvaBvaaavaaHH^alvliaBaBBp MoUflted GUARANTEE • Oenler * MINNESOTA al Chicago ! 1 *» rbll A<1 ul By ClW«r Gould DICK TRACY ^ BEETLE BAILEY By Mort W. lk.r THE FLINTSTONES By- Hanna-Barbera \ DAN FLAGG By Don Sherwood BLONDIE By Chic Young LI'L ABNER BY Al CaPP STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff _T# lAf im | | Give a Warm y and Comfortable % 89" Luxurious Kroehler Sofa in dork Kroehler Sofa Bed, "The Sofa With a black, brown nylon tweed. Allows Secret," in dark brown ny lon fabric. 82" of soft foam seating space. 3- Big Shepherd casters and innerspring tfO^Q AA P 4 1 cushion style with 3 big reversible mattress w.t. e^feie/ej IiVV > biff rftl r back cushions. 4 legs are set on 11111 rui £OAA A A ——————______. .^ -eg pretty Shepherd casters w.t. ^__"f«r . wU , 6-pc. walnut Dining Room Ensemble, 42" square round table with plastic Small smart modern Sofa in perform- ,op 4 sicJe cna rs 36 glass enclosed ti_QA AA ' ' > tf 0"fO ance tested lon cover in gold. . . w.t. china cabinet AA Innstmas ny ^eiJivv w.t. tayami *fiVV 1 ^| Beautiful French Provincia l Sofa by 3-pc. Danish walnut Bedroom Set, Krothler in light champagne beige. dou D e dresser , chest and open back £ 1 AA AA ' ' £1f_A AA Matelasse with fru ilwood trim. w.t. $JL «# %F-Ww panel bed. Plastic top w.t. $JLO«f-UU 91" extra long 3-cushion Sofa by Kroehler 3-pc. Sectional, wide sloping BLANKET ESS!, Kroehler. Nylon fabric, zippered cush- SALE p illow arm sty le in heavy brown tf^CA ions in bei AA ge, brown and charbrown &4 QA AA n y|on freil wt ^-«05J MUU Na 0na ly F U color. Your choice ° - GENUINE 100% WOOL vi.l. ^JLOe/t.VV ' _^PH__fc^ " E P T"° ' Our best Kroehler 2-pc, Living Room Smart slim line high back Lounge Chair Suite, foa m tufted back, gracefully b y Kroehler or Valentine Seaver. Choice tf*AA c urved arms in brown boige or green AA , ^*_f *_pA AA of color w.t. «P«F«J-VU frcize w.t. «P*I_IJ«J -UU Valentine Seavar "Presidential Sofa" Irctlian Provincial Bedroom Group in features curved f ront in deep, rich distressed fruitwood finish by Kroeh- brown ny lon matelasse. Snap-down ler. large 56" double dresser with cushions with covered deck. Six vortical framed mirror. 37" 5-drawer £*)AA AA small casters for ease in moving c llost Qu en si ne ttOOA AA - *-' *° pa ' bed. . w.t. *P_-«f«f.UU CAMTA rrrn.i n • f i r . . Solid oak and oak venee red 3-pc. SANTA SPEC AL— Pair of bcaufifu doc- w i i n i r i J . -, . . . ' ' . Kroehler Bedroom Group in desert orat.ve Table Lamp,, traditional sty lo, satu| finish, double dresse r , mirror , • ilk shades marble platforms, many tf* AA /||| /||| S-drawor chesl and footless book- Friendly Low Te rms AT EAST THIRD AND FRANKLIN Frae Cuitomar Parking in Rear '' ¦""" " " " «J " " ¦' " ' ""> ¦¦ - .11 - !¦¦! . FEITEN IMPL. CO. appointment, ¦sir Passenger Tires Tel. PA 1 2411 HOLSTEIN BULLS-for sal* or lease, HORSESHOE COUNTER, 50 ft., with tor- DEC. »-Wed . I p.m. 11 miles N.E. of ready tor hrtvy service. Pat Daley, mica top end It stooK 1175; long 113 Washington Tel. 4832 NYSTROM' IF YOU WANT to buy, sell or trade S Hwy. 35 to shuttle board, good cond ition, S7S. In- -ft Truck Tires Winona, Minn., on Wis. Lewiston, WUnn, Tel. *802. be sure to see Shank, HOMEMAKER'S Chrysler - Pl ymouth F near Acorn Ballroom, quire Dew prop Inn, MonOovlj Wis. County Trunk EXCHANGE, 552 E. 3rd. ¦& Open Friday Nlgtitj then t mile N. On F. Douglas Lind- REGISTERED Holsltln bulls, J, service- Tel. 6-3t«7, Wearing Apparel, Furs 80 Tractor Tires able; also Surge seamleas milker buck- berg, owner; Alvin Kohner, auction- FASHION THREE- OR POUR-bedroon house, cork eer; Northern tnv. Co., clerk. et. Robert & Bernard Schmldtknecht , length, brown mink Coel, Wood, Other Fuel 63 BEAUTIFUL full and carpeted, bullt-lns, new furnace, SHOP NOW AT Cochrane, Wis. Tel. M6-2500. sides coat, to settle estate . May be seen gas water heater, central air condition- DEC. 13—Sal., 13 30 p.m. 7 miles N.E. at Purs by Francis CREAM OF THE PUREBRED Spotted Poland China bears. BURN MOBIL FUEL OIL and en|oy the ing, 2-cnr garage, screened patio. 1 of Winona Bridge on Hwy. 35, 5 mile* ADV ISORS! W. 5th k hi?. Tracks W. of Oodge, 1 mile S of flcfirl's Ve tfey These boars, will weigh from 275 lbs. to comfort ol Automatic personal care. BROWN FUR |»Ck«t, siie 14 , excellent lot for sale. Tel. 6M9. School. George Stuber, owner; Alvin 37] Ibt. Tops In bloodlines. Contact Keep lull sarvlce — complete burner condition; Boy Scout uniform, size 14 , and guaranteed Kohner, auctioneer; Northern Inv. Co., Unequalled opportun i t i e s Gary Smlkrud, Galesville, Wis. or Tel. care. Budget planned like new. Tel. 9041. Old "Wagon Works" Bldg. CROP now with the Fashion Wagon 7-F-12. price. Order loday Irom JOSWICK'S clerk. EAST END COAL & OIL CO., Ml E. WITH NEW CAR ol Minnesota Wooten Co. COMPLETE HERD ol 13 Hclsteln cows, ith. Tel. .3389. Wanted to Buy 81 DEC. U—Sat. 11:30 a.m. W mile W. of close springers. Will sell lor cash or on Motorcycles, Bicycles 107 Lund, Wis., on J. Carl H. Barnel, own- PARTY PLAN or appoint- terms. Write P.O. Box 341, Winona, SLAB WOOD SLED5, TOBOGGANS and toys for 5 WARRANTIES er; Leon Schoeder, auctioneer; Chip- pewa Valley Fin. Co., clerk. ment sales, full or part Minn. Good dry oak slabs. boys. Tal. 8-1394. TELL SANTA you would like • new wind- time. No experience neces- BRUNKOWS SAW MILL CALL US shield for your n'otorcyclt this, yearl iPOTTSD POLAND China boars, blue * LUMBER VARD CrtORD ORGAN—in good condition. Tel, ROBB BROS. Motorcycle Shop, 573 E. 1 964 BUICK sary. Tremendous nation- ribbon winners at State Fair . John Trempealeau, Wis. Tel. 514-Hlt I-397S Sun. belore 6 p.m., weekdays FOR 4th . " Dykatra, Calesvllli, Wis. Tel. 12-F-22. Le Sabre "Another THORP Sale ally advertised complete after I p.m. FREE APPRAISAL line of clothing for all sea- Rugs, Linoleum 64 Trucks, Tract's, Traitors 4-door , coral and white , FEEDER PIGS—200 head, 8 to U weeks Furn., OLD DISHES, dolls, wooden trunks, pic- 108 QUARRY sons, all members of the old; also 2 yearllno Poland China boars. ture Irames, clocks, lamps, vases, any- & CONSULTATIONS power steering, power family, James EllMtad, Hwy. 43, 5 miles N. ot WALNUT COCKTAIL tables, S4.«; 3pc. thing old or antique. Write to Oliver INTERNATIONAL-1951 2-ton truck , com- , whitewali tires, I PM ENT Save customers 20% Mabel, Minn. table group. Including 2 step tables and Oredson , «921 Abbott So., Mpls., 55*10. on the sale bination box end racK . Very good condi- brakes EQU to 40%. Start earning cash matchinq cocktail table. S19.?5 k.d. tion. Tel. St. Charles M2-31J7. many other fine accessories, BORZYSKOWSKI FURNITURE, 302 of your home. today, the Fashion Wagon PUREBRED Duroc boars, also Landrace WM. MILLER SCRAP IRON & METAL 6,900 miles. boars. Clifford Holt, Lanseboro, Minn., Mankato Ave. Open evenings. CO. pays highest prices lor scrap TRAILERS way! For details write Min- (Pilot Mound I. iron, metals, hides, wool and raw fur. Built . . . Repaired . . . Rebuilt AUCTION Thrifty Gifts at We will either list it for sale nesota Woolen Co,, Duluth, J22 W. 2nd. BERG'S, 3M0 W. 4th, Tel. 4>33 $3095 by HOLSTEIN BULLS - purebred, service BURKE 'S FURNITURE Closed Saturdays or purchase it outright. Property formerly owned Minnesota. Include your able igt, dam records up lo t>94 lbs., Triple plate-d chrome coat hanger Neuheisel Limestone Prod- phone number herd .average SSa Alfred Johnson ' 1 pole — 2 adlustuble racks — S9.95 WANTED SCRAP IRON & METAL, Usad Cars 109 1964 OLDSMOB I LE . Sons, Peterson, Minn. Tel. 175-37,11 Neuheisel Lime or COW HIDES, WOOL, RAW FURS. RESIDENCE PHONES: ucts Co., 875-5J43 Burke's, 3rd & Franklin HIGHEST PRICES PAID FORD—1959 4-door, good condition Inside Jersrar 88 Works and Norbert Neu- M a, W IRON AND METAL CO. E. J . Hartert . . . 3973 and out, radio, power brakes. 157 W , REDEEM VALUABLE COUPONS 4-door, astra blue finish, heisel. Repossessed and now Good Things to Eat 65 307 W. 2nd, across Spur Gas Station 4th, ask lor Richard. Oct. Farm Journal Mary Lauer . . . 4523 • whitewali tires, power steer- owned by Thorp Finance (Inside back cover.) For your convenience NURSE-TEACHER " CHEVROLET — 1954, 2-door, standard NUT MEATS—Black Walnut, Butternut We Are Now Again Ope n on Sets. Jerry Berthe . . , 8-2377 ing , lots of other equip- Corp. The conaitions and transmission, (-cylinder, runs and han- New Tri-Ban and Hickory. $1.25 qt. Tel. 5951. of this eauip- Philip A. Baumann . . . 9540 dles well, body rusted, SI 75 Tel. 6-1463. ment, 9,000 miles. specifications COORDINATOR 2 food flavors rats crave.) HIGHEST PR ICES PAID . and no Triples youf chances to BUY YOUR winter potatoes now while for scrap iron, metals, rags, hides, ment is not .known outwit rats and mlcel the price Is right, full line of apples. raw furs and wool! TAKE . OVER PAYMENTS on 1940 Cor- $2945 warranties are implied or POSITION vair wljh no money down Ray's Trad- x OPEN - Oppor- Winona Potato Market, 111 Market. appearance, tunity to help develop and Save 20% Sam Weisman & Sons ing Post, 216 E. 3rd. Tel. 6333. intended. From TED MAIER DRUGS A-fPLES — MOntosh, Cortlanda, Heral- INCORPORATED 1 1 964 OLDSMOBILE much would be classified as organize a new local and sons, Delicious, Prairie Spy. At reason- 450 W. 3rd Tel. 5547 Animal Health/ Center Dynamic 88 "fair to poor" although state board approved pro* able prices. F. A. Krausc Co., "Breezy 601 Main St. Tel. 2849 items. Acres". S. on new Hwy . 14-61, Rooms Without Meals 86 there are some good gram in practical nursing Poultry, Eggs, Suppliea 44 4-door, dark turquoise fin- been operating scheduled to begin operation PINCHED , power It has not ROOM FOR 1 male student, with kitchen ¦ ¦ ish, whitewali tires Household Article* 67 ¦¦' ' ' ' ' for some time, but was in September, 1965, DEKALB 30 week old pullets, fully vac- privileges. Tal. 1-1319 for appointment. steering, power brakes, cinated, Haft controlled, raised on Hat FOR SPACE? working and producing lime. floors. Available yaar around. SPELTZ CLEAN rugs. Ilk* new, so easy to do with Lincoln Agency, Inc. loaded with equipment, 5,850 when litigation halted opera- Candidate must meet Wis- CHICK HATCHERY, Rolllngstone, Minn. Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer, Rooms for Housekeeping 87 LOOK AT miles. consin certification require- Tel. 8689-2311. SI. H. Choate 8, Co. Real Mate—Insurance tions. ments, including R. N. certi- ROOMS FOR MEN, with or without $2995 Wanted—Livestock 46 Mutleef Merchandise 70 housekeeping privileges. Tel. 4>59. THIS ONE! EVERYTHING WILL fication , with Bachelor De- . - BUY OF THE WEEK BE SOLD gree (Master's preferred), HOLSTEIN SPRINGINcTcOWS arm hell- SPINET PIANO — like new. Teakwood Apartments, Flats 90 1 963 OLDSMOBILE wantad, BE IN FOR CHRISTMAS. training •rt also open and bred heif- finish. Eaal Duncanson. Tal. Lewiston ' 196 1 VOLKSWAGEN to include studies ers. E. E. ' Gramelsbaclv Inc., Lewiston, 4872. Dynamic 88 Wed., Dec. 16 in professional and practical Minn. Tel.