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11-9-1965 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News

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This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ '' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ 58__ __ Dead. - .. ' . . ¦!* _ . , "». . ' . ' V ' in.. . Jet Crash- .;.'- . - af Cincinnati

DISASTER FROM THE AIR... Firemen crashed Monday night in northern Kentucky GRIM TASK BEGINS . . . Youthful volunteer workers REMOVE BODIES . . . Rescue workers awaiting tractor to pull them down steep hill. and rescue workers mill around the tail sec- near the Greater Cincinnati Airport (AP carry victim down rugged terrain, seven hours after the sit alongside canvas-covered bodies of plane (AP Photofax) tion of an American Airlines 727 jet that Photofax) crash. (AP Photofax) crash victims on farm wagon early today Four Thrown Cloudy, Warmer Tonight; Scattered Clear of Rain, Snow Wednesday Wreck Live CINCINNATI, Ohio Wl - A jet airliner within landing sight of the runway crashed and Aluminum Price 17-Year-0ld exploded during a lightning- laced thunderstorm Monday night, killing 58 of the 62 per- GIs Won't Go tons aboard. Dispute Raging Eisenhower in Hospital, Five persons -were thrown WASHINGTON (AP) - The dent Johnson maintained an clear of the exploding wreck- aluminum controversy is gener- official silence. Secretary of the age. One died in a hospital. ating new steam on four fronts. Treasury Henry H. Fowler To Viet Nam Pour lived, but one was in very The dispute swirls around the warned of disturbing signals in WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre- industry's announced price in- the ration's price picture. critical condition. tary of Defense Robert S. Mc- creases . and the government's Industry — The president of Namara ordered today that 17- The American Airlines three- decision to reduce its aluminum Reynolds Metals Co., J. H. Mc- engine Boeing 727 jet smacked year-old servicemen be banned stockpile by 200,000 surplus Connell, declared the price in- from duty in South Viet Nam. near the top of a 3O0-foot wood- creases Heart Specialist Called tons. Much of it would be trans- are noninflationary. The ed hillside a mile and a half The new policy, effective im- ferred to government contrac- president of the U.S. Chamber mediately, will not affect men from the Greater Cincinnati tors., of Commerce, Robert P. Ger- Airport. on sea duty in waters off Viet As charges and counter- holz, charged the administra- Nam. Nor will it end overseas "About 75 feet more and be charges ricocheted through the tion's action was an "unwar- duty for 17-year-olds elsewhere Midnight Trip would have made it," said Wil- capital, these were the develop- ranted attack on the free mar- in the world. liam Wilkerson, operations ments: ket economy." The minimum age for service director at the airport in Ken- Government — While Presi- Republicans — Tom R. Van in South Viet Nam will be 18, tucky 13 miles from downtown Sickle, chairman of the Young the Pentagon announcement To Ft. Gordon Cincinnati. Republican National Federa- said. The wreckage flashed flames tion, accused Johnson of "bla- Into the murky night sky for Couple Faces tantly blackmailing" the alumi- Army Hosiptal hours. Workers, certain no one num companies in an effort to lived in the melted metal, wait- control prices. Sen. Wallace F. FT. GORDON, Ga. (AP) - ed for. fires to subside before Bennett of Utah said the John- Youth Sets Former President Dwight P. beginning the-gruesome search Operations for son administration's "overac- Eisenhower, 75, was hospital- for bodies early today. tion" was an unjustified, angry ized today with a possible mild Ten Civil Aeronautics Board gesture. heart attack and placed in an Investigators flew to Cincinnati Same Condition Democrats — Many senators Fire to Self oxygen tent after suffering to begin probing the wreckage CHICAGO (AP) - Mr. and and House members spoke up in chest pains. to learn why the plane had Mrs. Alvin Dru'yor are carrying favor of the administration's Dr. Thomas Mattingly, a itmnged fatally, just moments togetherness right into the oper- action. Sen. Stuart Symington, heart specialist who treated the rem a safe larding after a ating room. chairman of the Senate stock- Before U.N. five-star general for a heart at- flight from New Tork City. The Prairie du Chien, Wis., pile subcommittee, flew back to tack in 1955, said it would take the capital from his Missouri NEW YORK (AP) - Police up to 36 hours before it would visible couple will undergo surgery said a 22-year-old man set fire The plane was barely for home to support the administra- be known whether Eisenhower with sparks of Wednesday In Chicago to himself in front of the United in a downpour, similar heart conditions. The tion's strategy. He declared the had suffered another bout with lightning^ said Mrs. Ralph government's action could not Nations Building today and was his heart. open-heart surgery will be per- critically burned. Sprague, who lives nearby. formed by Dr. M. S. Mazel, a be considered antibusiness. "We know where the end of Police identified him as Rog- Mattingly said if the illness top pioneer in the technique. er A La Porte, 22, of New York was a heart attack, "By all that runway is just over the "They're going to flip a coin of the hill," she said, "and the City. symptoms and characteristics, to see which of us goes first," La Porte was taken to Belle- it certainly was a mild one." Elane banked like it was ' said Monday very Alvin Dru yor, 62, Cedar Bank, vue Hospital where he was re- The former president waa eading for it, but it was night in a telephone interview low and dropping fast. ported in critical condition with placed in an oxygen tent for sev- from his bed at Edgewater Hos- burns over his entire body. eral hours after he entered the "I knew it was going into that pital. He is in the publishing screaming Police said La Porte told them Ft. Gordon Army Hospital dur- hill, and I started business. before it hit." Near Anoka, he tried burning himself be- RUSHED TO HOSPITAL . . . Former today and a heart specialist was summoned. ing the night. At midday Mat- cause, "I'm anti-war, all wars." It crashed "like a clap of 'yor said be has had a (AP tingly said he still was under Dru He identified himself as a President JDwight D. Eisenhower was rushed Photofax) thunder," said Mrs. Gilbert Dol- heart condition for about seven oxygen periodically. member of the Catholic Work- to the Ft. Gordon, Ga., Army Hospital early This, the physician said, is "a wick. "In a minute we could years. His wife, Inez, 60, accom- ers hear people calling for help." Held Up by 2 , a group of pacifists who matter of precaution used with panied him to Chicago two work with alcoholics and 'yor's physi- (AP) the any patient with chest pains." Dolwlck, who owns the weeks ago for Dru ANOKA, Minn. - Two poor. J. P. bandits held up the Farmers Pearson Will Stay in Office He described Eisenhower's plane crashed, cal examination. condition as " farm where the "She never had a physical State Bank of Cedar, Minn., to- The Incident came one week very satisfactory raced to the wreckage to find a at this time" and said the gen- herself so we decided it was a day and fled with an undeter- after Norman R. Morrison, a man and woman, both wearing one," eral remained in bed "at our on the ground. good time for her to have mined amount of loot. Baltimore Quaker, burned him- , airline uniforms, "They discovered she The bandits entered the bank self to death outside the recommendation not because 't make it, we he said. Penta- he doesn't feel like getting up. "We just didn had the same condition I had shortly before 9:30 a.m. One gon to protest U.S. involvement 't see the hill," Dolwick didn only her's was worse." pointed a long-barrel pistol and in Viet Nam. "We think this la simple, said the man had mumbled be- "What was strange was that gave orders to bank employes Liberals 5 Short good, common sense." fore passing out. " he was El- she'd had no problems, to turn over the money. After sleeping several hours, One of the survivors "I was always the com- A witness said the men fled in of Saratoga , said. mer Weekley plainer." a maroon colored car, possibly Calif., an American flight offi- Plans Legal Johnson Sends but not as a a Pontiac. The Anoka sheriff's cer riding tbe plane The operation, called a cardl- office was given a license num- member of the crew. arteries Lead 'Get Well' Note unblock Canadian is to Of opexy, , 25, ber. Another was Toni Ketchell leading to the heart. Dr. Mazel Cedar is in Anoka County, TORONTO (AP) - It was an Ceditlste parties. gram has fallen by the wayside JOHNSON CITY, Tex. a stewardess from West Mon- heart has performed 250 open about 10 miles north of Anoka. Fight for Job election hardly anybody wanted, One possibility out of all this under these conditions. He even (AP ) — President Johnson roe, La., who was in critical operations. These will be the is that Pearson will call another changed the Canadian flag with Sheriff Ralph Talbot said the ST. PAUL (AP) — Insurance and it solved nothing. learned early this morning condition. first on a husband and wife. bandit, pointing the gun held in Commissioner Cyrus Magnus- election. This seems unlikely opposition help. of the illness of former The Dru'yors, who entered That was the net result today because Canadians are tired of Other survivors were Israel his left hand, spoke in distinct son, fighting his ouster by Gov. Monday night, President Dwight D. Eisen- the hospital Sunday, are shar- of Prime Minister Lester B. voting — they have had five At one point hower, talked with Mrs. El- Horowtiz, 49, Closter, N.J., di- tones as he demanded money. Karl Rolvaag, was not in his of- Pearson's foreign secretary, records for ing the same room. He was described as about 5- five Monday and presumably Pearson's unsuccessful effort to elections in eight yejrs. senhower and also sent a rector of classical "That seems to scare every- Paul Martin, spoke of the possi- Decca Record Co., and Norman feet-8, 160 pounds, about 35 huddled with his lawyers to pre- win a majority in the House of The strongest prospect seems "get well" message. body," said Dru'yor. "The to be that Pearson will go on bility of forming a Liberal-Mew Spector, Valley Stream, N.Y., years, square jawed, broad pare a legal fight for his job. Commons and a clearcut man- The Texas White House nurses look in and you can tell governing as he has geen doing Democrat coalition. The New said Johnson had his physi- an electrical engineer with build, medium build and clean Rolvaag suspended Magnus- Democrats' leader, T. C. Doug- they're thinking, 'Has this hos- shaven. Both men wore dark date to carry on his programs. for the last 2'/_ years —¦ with the cian, Or. George G. Burk- Bechtel Associates. or something, son last Friday, pending re- las, shot this down. He said his Ketchell seemed pital gone modern clothing and neither was moval Pearson thought he had such cooperation of opposition par- ley, call Eisenhower's phy- All but Miss man and woman in proceedings the governor party would support legislation putting a masked. has instigated against a victory within his grasp. Ho ties. Little of his legislative pro- sician, Dr, Thomas Matting- in fair condition. the same room?' " the com- it approved, but would remain "It is a miracle, isn't it," said missioner he reappointed to of- thought that Canadian voters, ly, at Augusta, Ga. The with "Liberal prosperity" swell- in opposition. 3) fice earlier this year. President also Instructed (Continued on Page 11 Col. ing their pay checks, were Diefenbaker declined to say Secretary of Defense Robert Harder to Save whether he would offer a motion AIR CRASH MagntMBon was among 17 per- bound to come to the aid of his S. McNamara to put any- party. It's harder to save money of no-confidence In Pearson's thing necessary — planes, sons recently indicted by a fed- government when Parliament eral grand jury investigating today than it was 20 years doctors — at the disposal of So he called Monday's elec- ago — especially if you reconvenes. This conceivably his predecessor. the American Allied Insurance tion. It cost Canada $10 million. could bring the government Co. weren't married 20 years It cost Pearson a measure of ago .. . Experience is some- down. Mrs. Anderson In ordering the suspension, Eisenhower awoke and chatted prestige and left his Liberals thing you never have until The election result confounded with his wife , who was with him Rolvaag listed 11 misconduct still in power but with only 128 just after you need it . . . forecasters, most of whom had charges against Magnusson. along with their son. seats, S short of a majority in Retirement, we're told, is discounted Diefenbaker's Mattingly summoned to Ei- Going to Guam The commissioner, however, the 265-seat House. That was that period when you drink strength and predicted a major- senhower's bedside early today, indicated he would seek a court just one seat more than (he Lib- coffee on your own time . . . ity for Pearson. spent hours in consultation with UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) order allowing him to continue erals had when Pearson called Taffy Tuttle figures she Even so, it was likely Diefen- other physicians. — A U.S. delegation spokesman on the job. the election. must be In love with her fi- As he started to fly from Eu- baker's last election. He is 70 , announced Monday that Mrs. The surprise to many was the ance — she waited a week Washington before dtiWTi, the genie M. Anderson, of Rod strength shown by John G. Die- and had told associates he was WEATHER before having the engage- ready to step down if the Tories physician had said he didn't Wing, Minn., U.S. ambassador fenbaker's Conservative party. ment ring appraised . . . ' , FEDERAL FORECAST lost again. know tho nature of Eisenhower s the U.N. Trusteeship Council It won 09 seats, 7 more than it Many a woman has helped illness. and the Pacific Winona and Vicinity — In- and refurbished Dicfenbak- It could also be Pearson's fi- will visit Guam creasing cloudiness wanner had, her husband to the top of Mattingly said chest pains Islands trust territory soon with er's vote-getting prestige. The nal effort as leader to win a ma- tonight with low of 22-28. Most- the ladder — and then de- He is 68 don't necessarily indicate a the House Committee on Insular result looked like a reward for jority for his party. , ly cloudy and warmer with cided the picture would look and some Liberals say he lacks heart attack , but added: "Ob- and Territorial affairs. the hard-hitting campaign the better somewhere else. viously that's the first thing you "This Is the scattered light rain or snow Tory leader had fought. the spark of an outstanding He told reporters: high 84-40. Partly think of when a man has suf- U.S. mission Wednesday, campaigner. first time any cloudy and colder Thursday. , after express- fered an attack in the past, but delegation member A third party, the New Demo- Monday night member or LOCAL WEATHER crats, also Increased its stand- ing disappointment at the re- it doesn't have to be." has been invited by the congres- PARTNERS IN SURGERY ... Mr. and Mrs. Alvin At 10:30 a.m. an Army public to make this Official observations for the ing, from 17 to 21 seats. These sult, he would say only : "At the sional committee Dru'yor of Prairie Du Chien, Wis., sit arm in arm on hos- 24 hours ending at 12 m. today : and the Conservatives' gains moment I am still prime minis- relations officer posted a notice " trip with them. pital bed ln Chicago as they both await open heart surgery Maximum 48; minimum, 20; were largely at the expense of (For more laughs see ter and leader of the govern- (Continued on Pago 0 col, 7) Anderson's husband, , Mrs. for similar heart conditions. (AP Photofax) noon, 38; precipitation, none. tho small Social Credit and Earl Wilson on Page 4) ment and we'll leave it at that." EISENHOWER John E. Anderson, will go along. DEAR ABBY: | U.S. Goes to Worried Father High Court Wants Assistance I By ABIGAIL VAN BDREN DEAR ABBY: My wife died leaving me with a small daughter to raise. She it now 16 and wants to spend nights In 2 Mayings and week-endi with her girl friend. I have never met the WASHINGTON (AP) - The girl friend's parents, nor have they ever called and asked government asked the Supreme my permission to allow my daughter to stay with them. Court today to reinstate felony As a matter of fact, I have never even met the girl friend. indictment* ln two civil rights On the basis ef these facts I have refused to allow my daugh- TWO LARGE MODERN STORES TO SERVE YOU slavings. ter to spend the night with her friend. I do not wish to re- I i mHMaa PRICES EFFECTIVE IN BOTH STORES THRU SAT., NOV. 13 MMM M MM M M M In a broader sense, it is tak- strict the child unfairly, but I feel that staying out all night ing the court to rule that federal is a serious step, and I am fearful. My daughter says that law — in this instance an 1870 I am much too strict. Please give me a woman's viewpoint. 9S* Vlck's Formula 44 1 S1.29 ______Y__ __>fl___t statute — constitutionally can WORRIED FATHER I-VVH -HS M Ik '"'* ^ !! be used to mete out some pun- ' ¦ ishment In such crimes. DEAR FATHER: A woman s view- HIM COUGH Cold Ca sules point is no different from a man's. The MaLsia I P B4*HH If the court rale- that the gov- common concern is for the child's wel- ' D,scs rrnment improperly used the 85- fare. Do not permit your daughter to _E __B Tablets inaa year-old law , the Justice De- spend a night away from home unless I tTa I I partment will be stripped of Its you not only have MET the girl and her only available federal weapon parents , but are reasonably certain your for civil rights murder prosecu- daughter will have the security and su- tions fn the South. pervision she has at home. P.S. And I _ 89 $1.25 Congettaid j_ |____fii Two federal judges already am not being unduly protective because I /4nKO_V I r» • • I ¦ ¦ * I _£3_P I have ruled against the govern- the child is a girl. I would require the I tSSSlILM 1 Bayer Aspirin I ¦* u ' . _• i_ I i /ADMKV I ment in the two cases at hand: same of a boy. toe Deep Heat Ruk SYRUP 1 The slaying . of civil rights I ' J^^SSR 1 I COUGH ^^ M|ii\ 1 workers Michael Schwerner, ABBY DEAR ABBY: My husband, who Is In Andrew Goodman and James his 40's, is getting bald. I would like him to get a hair Chancy near Philadelphia. piece but he won't even consider it. I don't like to say much c c Miss., in June 1964 : the shotgun about it because I wouldn't want him to think I don't love 66 77 murder of Lemuel Penn on a him the way he is. I do, but I could love him just that much I^^P^ j 6fr I iWm^mt Georgia highway the following more if he had more hair. I think he'd look so much nicer, J month. and younger, too. I also think it would help him in his work Honey I Vte5___S_BHBF_l I %*a* \/-,4_.--.-.vademacum,.-. I Personal Sin §_-_». _ - Horehound_• - _ J I \ ^ i N ^ ' i i i l I as he is in tales. lEif | 1 35^ A | Now the government, In the I don't know why men balk at the idea of a hair piece, I liCTn^lSi^rn I \ si i b l.ll 1 person of Solicitor General Abby. We women do so much to help our appearances , TOOT CAMAY SOAP Thurgood Marshall a Nefiro along. To me it 's no different than buying false teeth if I l H PASTE ! J DROPS . ffij | f who was once chief counsel for your own fall out. Please say something in favor of hair ||| f J j NJj the National Association for the piece*. He reads your column. ARNIE'S WIFE Advancement of Colored Peo- ple, is appealing the rulings to DEAR WIFE : I'm in favor of promoting love, so tell 44c 3-23e I lo«¦ I Y the high court. your man that hair is definitely "in" and to try a hair I ALLAii TiMCYTIMEX II ^^ I . % ' I ^ \&S„Ip ?I Schwerner and Goodman, piece just to please you. Go with him and make sure he both of NPW York, were white , gets a good one. But don't blame me if he looks so young WATCHES , All NOMICO ElECTWC i Chancy was a Negro from Me- and attractive that YOU have trouble holding him. j I , .,. $1.50 T„, „„„ .,J . UK . ., *, j * ridian, Miss., and Penn a Negro ^^^ educator from Washington, D.C, DEAR ABBY: Perhaps the woman, who complained RAZ0RS " husband got the pillow cases so dirty """ "¦""" ¦¦ Murder , unless committed on that her "unclean ""'" I HAIR SPRAY I HAIR JEL SlSSi 1 ««OT 1 federal territory, is a state of- she had to tear them up for rags, would like to trade hers i -" fense. for my "immaculate" specimen. My husband spends an hour i>y H«I cum. I |g3 ~--™™-™--~ I in the shower, and 15 minutes scrubbing his fingernails. You I rDcuc DIMCC 1 ™ i ^m 1 would think he was a surgeon preparing for major surgery. I CREME RINSE I" _ I C - ft „{ PoHy I K ,NS »Z. 1 Airlines Unite BUT, I wish there was some way to scrub his mind! This JJ W man has the filthiest, most vulgar mouth of anyone I have U To Help Refugees ever known — even in front of his children. (His rotten jokes ' SCORE % Pint aaAQc Vw B a! 1S MIXED NUTS S^ ja OSLO, Norway (AP) — Scan- have been their sex education.) He twists everything that V/^ «M is said to give it a dirty meaning. Four-letter words are a I I w^i^iasMs^^ kwmmmmmmmsmma j dinavian Airlines System will, ¦¦ 1- /V- * HAlR CREAM I part of his everyday conversation. He doesn't take criticism 1 ' 1 k i W I S along with a number of major smmmmmmmmms Wsmmm $1,00 Darma-Fr«th $1 .7$ Casual I >^a%9 J I international airlines, take part very well so I've niven up trying to change him. Perhaps I I | | I in the United Nations' current am the one who is odd. Am I? "ODD BALL" drive to help the refugees of the DEAR ODD BALL: People who are preoccupied with HAIR 1———• e world. ¦ COMPLEXION Z 66 sex, and make a dirty joke of it , have some serious, I "NEW ' fbrlhe... Natural !1 !I MM -. 7** Oillefto Super I _ 1 A long-playing record, "Inter- deep-rooted problems, Invariably related to sex, Your -. /->^vi ^ I ^'* i J national Piano Festival," on husband is a classic example ot a four-letter word — COLORING CT - I mmmmmmmmamm^ which six on the world' out- "S-I-C-K." 1 Uaif-00 LOOk! 1 LOTION I J A|K., FW ¦ * ' i ¦ . ¦ . $5.29 Matreeal 1 standing pianists have recorded III ** I /I ' • I' ! I 1 ^ works by their favorite compos- CONFIDENTIAL TO M.W.: Don't feel guilty. There are ers, will be sold on board SAS really no "good losers." Just good actors. C $ STEEL BLADES planes in international traffic, P - | CH0C0LATE Troubled? Write to ABBY, Box 69700, Los Angeles, 5 ¦ 1 beginning in early November. 13-O Z. ' -4B I J Double Pack of 1 , Calif. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed |HWSIHM 1 ° 1j . - . Edge 5 DAU/nPI? envelope. R-C mjmsmammmmm s » __^_^_H J C >M r^% g +sW **w |> , - i;^__^H__i _J T_T * l_^_^_^_^_r P \ 7 (I W- c /i 'US. tan Orbiting Nuclear 1M_BB 1 I^^I^B1 1 1 I i ^mmmm^s^mmawmmsi l_P *n New Slim 1 IH6S 1 /^Vv 1 $10° Old Spfeo 1 $ A A A

Missile Idea Out SSl I i , _|r i _J| (mm\ I I mmm^ffimmmmmm j il^^¦S> Bs_^- ft J l__¦ v £_ IV \ E> ¦__ «« WASHINGTON (AP ) - U.S. claimed can orbit the earth with ^ -B- ^ _____tft__kia«M__^-i_H I ^* J I mm mWm. Warn. mmm. Bk a\ k. ¦ _^_M B authorities considered — and a nuclear warhead. DEODORANT I rejected — th* idea of building P V_S/ 9.VoIf orbiting nuclear missiles, American sources said the 1 I IBS 1 I technique of putting an atomic Reg. $1.00 Jergen 0 sources said today. I I 1 's j T'V I TDAKICICTAD weapon in orbit is no more diffi- !_ ¦ Reg. $1.49 Bon i i * KAIN il ^ UK They rate It a clumsy, Inaccu- cult than orbiting any space ve- I Ml . .HI LOTION/>-.|*%LI I ' i ' ' rate method of waging atomic hicle — and this technique was I a\\\\ r^k T I 1 i . war — far less effective than long ago mastered by the Unit- land-based and submarine- ed States. 1 _^_t-^_^Hs_Vnl_9_H I 1 ^','1 'Sres ^!, Pen,er 1 1 f launched weapons. Such a weapon would be fired ^^^^^^^^^- DON'T 6ET The experts calculate that a by radio command from the warhead launched from orbit earth's surface — another tech- wouldn't come within perhaps nique that is well within "the CAU6HT SHORT 50 miles of its target on earth. RIGHT NOW Ii FLEX-O. state of the art." The problem of intercepting a CLASS time! So fi- yourself Compared to this, they said. wmM^M;iimM^-i^i some low-coat , draft gtoppint U.S. intercontinental ballistic missile fired on a trajectory | I ammmmmmmmwmmmRf. na 1 l_\___W_\__Wmm\\\\ma\ i storm window* with Varp'i from several thousand miles D Cel1 missiles and submarine- 1 $1.39 Fashion Rite 1 I 1 1 " FLEX-O-CLASS. It'a easy! Just away is much more difficult 41 BRSCKBB-PI_ m launched Polaris missiles have 1 1 *l Ms U i cut with -hears — tack over an accuracy within one mile of than intercepting a vehicle in screens or frame*—and you'rs orbit. H0M E fixed for the whole winter. target. Shi FLASHLIGHT Save* ' • T P«>° _ up to 40?; on fuel. Warp's cry*- By and large, the U.S. experts I Max. c Tu u "" KLEENEX tal-cle_r FLEX-O-CLASS laata regard an orbiting nuclear mis- PERMANENT 9' *an BATTER| S for years at a fraction the cost sile as more a psychological . ^ . ^ cl glass. Only 90a* a square ysrd weapon than one with real mili- Sergeant | ^ at your local hardware or lum- tary value. I OOC 1 77e I smawsmsw I O JL WZ C i * \ 4 tf\s* 1 ber dealer. These views, which have been 1 oo 77 I »«-65 prevalent In the Pentagon for Explains J jj * 3 I 2 *>' 19 I quite some time, were under- I <£. ¦ .¦• i -*.,». -, . . , , +¦- *•* ¦""¦ - rf ,f<«T-- C*i* i>¦. - l¦':->..•«-_» '>^ !.*~!V/••W --¦ ' ".n«wf*V*«»;ty '¦ • -. ••* ' «««¦_ •.. . "' •. -flt} are here to help, not to hurt. We * * 1 '"' '»'*;T,"^'^?.,''. "f ' ;- * 'T'f ' •'•** ' ¦ ¦ • V. _*>. ' ' . . -. . . • ' are here to build up, not to | I ' ' ' fl?) ' " ' ' ''--- knock down." Thus said the let- l ' «">» »«' I VS"* Wre her* ,em ym' I <^{__u_-s«-mW AMI 1 J i FREE* *L- 1— -with ~ i I '^P -sW*^m M^k | | Br_M_rtfi i the finest*° modern medl- § ter from Viet Nam. ~ and ilckroom supplies 1 "We could easily win... but to V3___3S_ I ¦¦¦ ¦ I H i f UBasmimW i S \. Wl <>"«* %'fl M II I V_/ \aS I ll | llro_5__TJ i l *J \ svaikble in town. When you I win we would gain nothing, un- xHUj_pBB*_ need snythlnf In % hurry, I less we won their hearts." wKJHpvJM 9 >^ I \ / tot ssmtiinl&tlB^^Bi^K^^^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.1 ' '* wVjKtwA ¦ ¦ ^ Just phona Ul for del,very. 1 The letter was a thank-you r% i-% /»i i 1 1 tV\ m note from Sgt, l.C. Richard V. I y_iM D IV.VJ 4_9PI 1 1 m \ ¦ tormlyextra fair, and there'ino 1 Hubnnd of Richmond to Mrs. eh gt dellV6r7, Robert M. Blanton of Rich- BATHROOM i m " 1 mond, who had written him to I ^^ % I TISSUE ^J^ \ To VB ^ « PharmocUt. ^© ^ say she was proud of his serv- 8 >-_ ^ | | ice. ! ^^ _^ I \ ^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_i_^_^_K. Huband, a medical corpsman, c paek You who flics to South Vietnamese Twe hamlets to treat the 111 and ! w 2 - 69 ^Stai " w ^_^_^_^_^_H^_E_^_^_^. wounded when the Vict Cong cut r c off Ihe land routes, wrote: "I j 23 \y ^ ' «K«______believe that everything; I do just 1 . 1 for myself while I am on this earth will die with me. '^E_ffPP^_tt!i^_^-l "It is all the little things that '^La\a\aW^ ^9amWtmmmmm\ I am able lo do for someone else ¦ ¦ that will live long in the hearts ' ' ^_iBi^^_^_y^^_^_H of others after I am gone. " r - .^_____PMPKI__H ^______^^_4_____| For Lower Prices on H and Mennen _!!H I I8 Clip-On then reward yourttlf ^^^j H Roll Roofing | | H-k!!-!^»-^ \ _^PT^E^\\ with Americas most & Shingles | HALLMARK | I CLOTHES PINS ' ^B^B SOF'-STROKE I A ^"c^_\,c 5»_ popular whltkey. I CHRISTMAS 1 AFTER SHAVE I '* | {_|E!___|rJ f J ^M _. _^ .__ _» Aerated Shava N 4-0*. 8 1 TT DADD BR-* iJ . W All - V.? I Seagram's 7 Crown- _ IfUDD STORE $ S l t-r- I i-#% I ALL HAIR _\\\\\\\\\\\______\\ V A S HARDWARE rADHC e c ! The Sure One. ______¦ _¦ CARDS IH E. 4th St. Phona 4007 £i*ik»uDiiiiiuncoui '/uiraf*n)»«tiir.BUi'MD»VHinir -MH(K»-«6?iOi»ia»iiinaifiiin 55 j . I I 66' I I 58 DRYERS Judge Reviews New Federal Programs Records in Spring Grove Charter Commission Sentencing 2 Given Preliminary OK Widow Loses Maps Study A resolution Plans authorizing appli- tent that, funds become avail- Scrapes with the cational programs to assist edu- law while cation for approval of projects able. cationally and economically de- The city charter commission, tions of mayor and council in that some charter commissions they were awaiting sentence ap- that might be undertaken under moving cautiously at its second areas of lawmaking, finance parently cost prived children. , work for as long as eight years. two defendants provisions of a new federal law NO SPECIFIC projects are In Home in Fire meeting Monday night , voted to appointments, planning and pol- Present commissioners are ap- possible leniency when they tbe works right now and Mon- The superintendent told direc- providing financial aids to tors Monday that an education- SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- give members two weeks to icy. The makeup and functions pointed for four years. were sentenced today in District day's action represented a nec- study a proposed plan of pro- of boards and commissions, their Court. school districts, and to request ally deprived child is defined as cial) — A Spring Grove widow Some sort of standard is need- funds to finance essary preliminary for partici- cedure. powers and the extent to which Judge Arnold Hatfield such projects one who has -not achieved to lost her home and all its con- ed by which to evaluate or de- ques- as may be found necessary, was pation in the federal program. The commission also set up they make or influence policy tioned sharply both Leonard his grade level while an eco- tents in a fire Monday after- termine the commission's main approved Monday night by the Legislation under which proj- noon. an agenda for its next meeting, would be examined. Discussions , Dienger, 18, f55 Grand St., and nomically deprived child is one with mayor, objectives observed Duane Pe- Board of Edu- ects might be undertaken has Mrs. Rozelia Hefte is em- Nov. 22, and voted to encourage aldermen, depart- terson. This implies a need for LeRoy E. Ledebuhr, 24, Hous- _ who comes from a family comment and questions from ment heads and members of ton, Minn., cation. , . been designated as Public Law which, on the basis of the 1960 ployed at Control Data , Spring authoritative information and concerning the of- 89-10, consisting of five sec- the public at its iheetings. boards would follow. fenses both had The effect OCnOOl census, had an income of $2,- Grove, and was at work when Study of representative advice on the major forms from pleaded guilty tions, three of which could be • city to while awaiting sentencing in of the resolu- 000 or less or a child whose par- told her home was on fire. When A SCHEDULED review of governments — Using field trips which the commission might District Court. tion would be D/_ at.J applicable to the Winona school ent is receiving aid to depend- she reached there at 3:30 p.m., legal responsibilities by the city or visiting speakers, the com- eventually choose, he said. In PO q district. everything was gone. She DIENGER was sentenced to to place Wino- | °' ent children. said attorney, George A. Robertson mission would study working his own opinion, said Peterson, up to five with the na in a posi- The first, and the one which this morning she had only a lit- Jr., was laid over for two weeks examples of several types of the (wo essential elements of a ^ears Youth tle insurance. Conservation Commission tion to initiate educational potentially could have t h e A SURVEY has Indicated thai because Robertson was ill and city government elsewhere in governmental system are re- projects in areas where , is Ti- in Winona County some 945 chil- sponsiveness to the public will (YCC) on 'the charge of burg- need is greatest financial impact THE TWO-story home was on did not attend . Members will the state. established when, and to the ex- tle I, providing funds for edu- dren would meet the provisions hear from Orville Peterson, and efficiency. lary against him. However an 87-acre farm five miles Citizen, professional and Judge Hatfield of the act, 298 of them in or League of Minnesota Munici- • Indall explained his suggested noted that re- southeast of Spring Grove. She organizational participation — lease at any served by the Winona district. and her son, Richard, palities executive secretary, sequence of program studies. time within that BUSINESS AS USUAL il operate Dec. 13. Invitations to meet with the period is discretionary with the On the basis of a $275-per-pup it in conjunction with her other The general study of several aid formula, the Winona dis- Only one meeting will be held commission would go to the styles of government should commissioner of corrections. employment. in December. Members voted public, to local political science Ledebuhr was given trict apparently would be eligi- Richard was in Waukon, Iowa, come before all else in order to a straight , to skip the Dec. 27 meeting. specialists and to civic groups. 90-day jail sentence under terms ble for about $125 000 in aid for Monday to enlist in the U.S. Professional furnish all members with tha projects it might determine Aside from this exception, the consultants also broadest possible background, of the Huber Act when he Offices to Close Army Reserve. Mrs. Hefte's schedule calls for meetings on might be employed for this changed his plea to guilty of were advisable for these chil- daughter, Mrs. Sonia Lord, and phase. he said. dren. the second and fourth Mondays drunken driving last summer. two children, who have been of each month. • Evaluation — Comparisons IF THE commission were to Dienger was accused of tak- For Veterans Day Title II provides aid for pub- living at home since last sum- The tentative program of of various forms of government begin with a review of the Wi- ing a case of beer from the lic school improvement of li- mer, had left at 1:30 p.m. to at- commission action was submit- would be made, previous char- City, county, state and fed- ed, except for essential police nona government, he cautioned, Hamm's warehouse, 5245 6th brary facilities and reference tend a parent-teacher confer- ted by Norman Indall, presi- ter commission reports would the group might find itself be- St., Goodview, the night of Sept. eral offices will be closed Thurs- services. facilities and the superintend- ence at Dorchester, Iowa. dent. Indall said he was unwill- be studied and strong and weak day for the Veterans Day holi- ing merely critical instead of 22. He pleaded guilty to the Minnesota State Employment ent estimated that perhaps be- It was shortly after 2 p.m. ing to try to impose arbitrary points of Winona's government analytical. Efforts should be day. Service offices will be open only ,000 might when Clifford Homewood, liv- schedules and invited members would be determined. charge Sept. 27. Post office windows will be tween $7,000 and $8 made to avoid fault-finding and While free on his own recog- until 9:30 a.m. Thursday, dur- be available under this section. ing about IV. miles from the to criticize it freely. He said • Final report — To judges to encourage sound evaluation, closed and there will be no city ing which time unemployment of ,the District Court nizance awaiting sentencing, Title III provides for supple- Hefte farm but working in the he has no target date for com- , to the he said. or rural mail deliveries. The compensation checks will be field, saw the smoke. Just about pletion in mind at this point City Council and to the public. Dienger pleaded guilty to sole exception will be special mentary aid for educational cen- . On a motion by William P. charges of driving after revoca- written. Thereafter, the offices simultaneously, he, harry Mey- As proposed by Indall, the If the commission recommends delivery service which will will be closed for the day. ters. that a new Theurer, the commission voted tion of his driver's license, be- er and Clarence Schulte, other commission's work would pro- charter be adopted, to delay settling on a concrete carry on as usual. Also closed for the holiday Although nothing definite has neighbors gress through six stages: a citywide election will be held. ing a minor with beer in pos- Regular , called the Spring program until the next meeting. collections and dis- will be the Social Security Ad- been drafted here, the superin- Grove fire department. • Orientation—General study A 55 percent majority must be. session and disorderly conduct patches of mail will be made, ministration offices at 356 E. tendent said, one possibility tallied in order for the change In the meantime, members will by fighting. Firemen still were at the of all forms of city government, formulate their own criticisms according to Postmaster Lam- Sarnia St. might be the establishment of aided by reference material to become law. HIS ATTORNEY, Dennis A. bert Haraersfei. scene when Mrs. Hefte left at of the proposed agenda. A furth- Downtown businesses general- an area psychoeducational clin- 8 p.m. to stay with her brother , from libraries and other Challeen noted that Dienger had City Hall and Winona County ly will be open for the regular ic, perhaps on the Winona State sources. Aspects of charter DISCUSSING target dates, er consensus was that setting Alvin Mohwinkel, who lives two con- Roy Wildgrube exercised poor judgment in the courthouse offices will be lock- hours. College campus. struction and reform would be , former city re- of target dates and appointment traffic case but that there were or three miles away. corder, advised colleagues not of committees might be done Here would be made available Mrs. Hefte said firemen be- explored with the help of out- extenuating circumstances. side authorities, including Pe- to be hasty. Much time will be more easily after the program to schools without such facili- lieve the blaze started from an required for Dienger, Challeen said, had ties diagnostic assistance in terson. trips, interviews is adopted. taken over driving of a car explosion, probably in the wa- with officials such areas as speech therapy, of other cities and from a mend who had become Buffalo County ter heater. • Concentrated study of Wi- to set dates for visiting speak- SINCE THE commission is a Board remedial reading and others. At public body, suggested Martin "high" after taking some pills, IT WAS a six-room house on nona city government — Func- ers, he warned. Wildgrube noted apparently a medicine. He did such a center diagnosis by qual- Beatty, a part of each meeting ified personnel would be made two floors. Fire spread to the should be given over to com- not know about the beer in the " summer kitchen and burned off car when he was arrested by a Filings Open Nov. 26 available for children with dif- Elementary Classes ments and questions by the gen- ficulties and treatment recom- the roof , but other buildings eral public. He followed with a Minnesota Highway Patrolman. ALMA, Wis. (Special) — The water demonstration by men were saved. Nothing was saved Hearing Set To Be Dismissed In the second case, Challeen Buffalo mended. motion to this effect. County Board of Su- from the state Soil Conservation Nelson explained that such a from inside the house. Some of Emphasizing the point that he said, Dienger walked out of a pervisors was told Monday by her daughter's effects were " At Noon on Thursday Winona restaurant one night to Service about a mile north of center has been in operation on did not object to public partici- County Clerk Gale Hoch that stored elsewhere. On $144-751 pation, Theurer said the com- find two youths fighting. One persons wishing to run f or Alma Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. toe University of Minnesota Classes in Winona's pub- coun- campus for a number of years A cat was missing after the lic elementary mission should avoid random had opened a gastr in the other ty board next year may begin Assisting will be County Agent fire but may have run and hid schools will Archie Brovold with the first and that establishment of area be dismissed at noon Thurs- discussions of aspects that have youth's head, and Dienger grab- filing nomination papers Nov. somewbere. not been studied. It would be bed the first youth in order to counry zoning ordinance of its centers would bring the serv- Mrs. Hefte, Mondovi Budget day to allow for parent- 26. Deadline is Jan. 25. widowed since teacher conferences well to set public hearings on prevent further harm to the Nominations kind in the U.S. It is based on ices closer to the children who 1959, was back at work at Con- MONDOVI, Wis. (Special ) - in the must include buildings in the afternoon. various sections of the study as gashed boy, according to Chal- from 1-3 percent of the names soil surveys. require them. trol Data this morning. A hearing on a proposed budget The board may adjourn the of $144,751 will be conducted by Dr. Carroll Hopf, director they are completed, he sug- leen. of electors in their districts. NELSON SAID that while no annual session Wednesday. the Mondovi City Council Nov. of elementary education, ex- gested. Dienger later pleaded guilty to Filing will be with the county definite steps have been taken charge 16 at 7:30 p.m. plained that the afternoon Public hearings are desirable, the disorderly conduct clerk. Board members will be in any project area, the resolu- Beatty agreed, but other par- on the advice of a policeman elected at the spring election The budget is about $3,000 closing applies only to the tion proposed Monday was nec- Corn Picked higher than last year. Increased elementary schools and not ticipation should be encouraged who told him that further pub- April 5. to establish future eligi- "unless it becomes cumbersome licity would have a bad affect Mondovi Protests essary anticipated revenues also are high school classes. AFTER NEXT April the bility for participation in the aid higher so the proposed tax levy In Washington - Kosciusko or disorderly." on the charge pending in Dis- For Farmer might trict Court, according to Chal- board will be half the present program. of $59,426 is $3,000 less than and Jefferson schools, where Because individuals size, cut from 28 to 14 mem- He explained that any individ- ST. CHARLES, Minn. - More last year. both elementary and junior raise questions for which the leen. Its Exclusion than 40 friends, neighbors and commission is unprepared, sug- ASSISTANT County Attorney bers under new redistricting ual project would be submitted WAGES of firemen were high school classes are of all counties of the state. to the board for approval, add- businessmen of the St. Charles raised at the council meeting housed, the junior high gested Peterson, the question Rjcbard H. Darby interposed at area picked 60 acres of corn at period should be devoted to tho this point to say that no police There wiD be two representa- ing, "We don't intend to create last week from $2.50 to $3 for school classes will observe As School Site - projects just to spend available the Severn Norvet farm, seven the first hour and from regular afternoon schedules. matter studied at each pro- officer had advised Dienger to tives from the city of Mondovi; $1 to $2 ¦ ground. He one each from the cities of MONDOVI money but it would seem to be miles southeast of here, Satur- for each hour thereafter. gram. He offered an amend- plead guilty on any , Wis. — Mondovi day. 's motion which Dienger to confirm this, Fountain City and Alma; one is protesting its apparent re- a wonderful opportunity for do- On request of George Jack- ment to Beatty asked Norvet, whose son, Sylvan, would put the open forum per- and the youth did.' from the Town of Nelson, and jection as a site for the $5.2 ing things that we ordinarily son and C. R. Nelson, chief and Injury at Harmony one each f rom would not be able to do." was killed in a farm accident secretary of the fire department, iod at or near the end of each Dienger explained that a po- the following million state boys' school. this summer- HARMONY, Minn. - Mark combinations; Village of Coch- None of the Western Wiscon- , has been in ill appointments of Bernard Weber session, with comments or ques- liceman had told him before his . health and was unable to do all Mason, 10-year-old Mason City, tions to be relevant to the ma- arraignment in municipal court rane and Buffalo City, and sin counties, which applied for and Laverne Bloss to the fire Iowa, boy, was treated and re- towns of Maxville and Modena; the school at a hearing before the farm work himself. company were approved. George terial. Beatty said he would ac- that the charge would do him The men, armed with 13 corn leased at Harmony Community cept the amendment and the no good in District Court, and Canton and Mondovi; Naples the State Department of Public Diabetics Hear Nogle has resigned. Hospital Sunday after the car and Dover; Gilmanton and Al- pickers, 32 tractors, 30 wagons The council approved appoint- motion, as amended, was adopt- he added that the municipal Welfare at Eau Claire, are and four elevators, in which he was riding went out ma; Belvidere and Lincoln; being inspected for location, completed ment of Robert Sing as fire in- ed unanimously. judge told him after he pleaded ac- the job in five hours. Fuel, food of control and rolled over on a Indall said later that questions guilty that it was probably the Montana and Glencoe; Waum- cording to a letter received by spector succeeding Herman Ber- Research Report and beverages were furnished. ger gravel road near here. He was about topics not yet studied wisest course he could have tak- andee and Cross, and Milton Joe Peterson, Mondovi city , resigned. a passenger in a car driven by When the Winona County Dia- Wives of the men served din- The wages of city employes would probably be deferred and en. and Buffalo. clerk, from Wilbur Schmidt, ner and an afternoon lunch for his brother, Dean Otomo, 23. resubmitted for answers when Challeen told Judge Hatfield, head of the department. betes Association met Tuesday working by the hour, now rang- THE ANNUAL budget hear- evening at the YMCA, Dr. S. O. the work crew. Robert Decker, ing from He received a cut in his side, information had been fully de- "I stand corrected." Schmidt said the committee $1.35 to $1.85, were the Fillmore County sheriff's ing was held. Proposed for 1966 Hughes discussed research to en- a neighbor, assisted by Larry raised 10 cents. The salaries of , veloped. Judge Hatfield then denied has inspected locations in sev- Stock, William Watts Wayne office reported. The accident Members present were: In- of is a budget of $1,123,736 and en eastern counties heard at able diabetics to control their , monthly employes were raised Challeen's plea for a stay Decker and Leonard Prigge, occurred three miles south of dall Wildgrube, Peterson, sentence . He told tax levy of $587,393. A budget the hearing in Wausau, and that disease. $25. . On the new schedule the , execution of started the project. Harmony on Fillmore 30. Theurer, Beatty, Mrs. Virginia Dienger that if he could behave will be adopted later in the the building would be located A question and answer period city clerk will receive $525 after ¦ he had while session. in that area if a suitable site followed. Jan. 1; the police chief , Marcel Torgerson, Mrs. John F. Wood- no better than , under threat of sentence he Twenty-five members were can be secured, he said. The association is urging par- Buffalo Co. Drive Thoma, $450; the other police, Canned drained sweet cher- worth, Harold Streater Dan Trainor Jr., Dr. W. O. Finkeln- could not be expected to be- present for the Monday session. Letters are being sent by Mon- ticipation in National Diabetes ALMA, Wis.—Funds gathered Robert Weiss and Carl Swain, ries are good added to a mold- have very well if shown len- Lloyd Bond, Fountain City, was Detection Week Nov. 14-20. Free in the Buffalo County campaign each $350 ; Oscar Thompson, wa- ed salad made with any red- burg, James Bambenek and dovi and Buffalo County offi- James Foster. iency. a substitute for Oscar Florin. cials protesting that the eastern detection kits will be available for the Wisconsin Association ter superintendent, $375; librar- color flavored gelatin. However, the judge noted that Board members were guests area is nearer Kettle Morain, a at all drug stores. for Retarded will help in re- ian, $150, and dump caretaker, Dienger would be examined by ty Teachers College today, new boys school near Plymouth. Next association meeting will search on pheynlketonuria, $150. YCC doctors who might be able at dinner at the Buffalo Coun- It is just south of the line from be in January. Persons wishing known as PKU, which causes Chief Thoma was given per- to find out what was wrong The board will see a soil and La Crosse easterly to Manito- to join may contact Carl Klagge extreme mental retardation in mission to train a relief officer or Rueben Sather. with him. In any event , Dienger woc, to the north of which the ¦ one of every 10.000 children born for the police department. be held long would not likely new school is to be located. The each year. The Rev. Jerry AT THE REQUEST of civil YCC, the judge said. western counties feel they are A bird's feet are so construc- Kuehn, Alma, is county chair- by the Shoplifter Caught defense director Charles Giese, unfairly being left out of con- ted that the foot is forcibly clos- man of the drive, which opened Howard Mohnk LEDEBUHR, who had appeal- At Miracle Mall sideration. ed when the leg is bent. Sunday. , county CD di- ed three guilty pleas in munici- rector, will give a demonstra- pal court to the District Court, Apprehension of a Juvenile tion on a communications sys- changed his plea to guilty of shoplifter at the Tempo store tem consisting of a base station driving after revocation and of in Miracle Mall and theft of and two walkie-talkies he pro- drunken driving. City Prosecu- $50 in clothing from a Winona posed the city should purchase W. Soderberg moved woman were reported Monday through the CD. \LOOK!\ tor James YOUR REMINGTON SHAVER { for dismissal of a leaving the to Winona police. Cold Will Stay; The clerk was instructed to scene of an accident charge. Chief James W. McCabe said advertise for bids on a new } The three charges grew out that a 15-year-old boy was ap- pickup truck for the water and sewer utility, the present truck V CLEANED of a series of events last July prehended Monday at the Tem- J ygjMMjf * j 17. Ledebuhr had been free on po store with a dog collar he to be traded in. 1 $275 bond following his appeal was attempting to filch. The The council authorized the I rJNJRTi V* OILED i guilty pleas in youth has been turned over ry sale of the city tenant house to of the Mercu Hits 20 July 27 to juvenile authorities. Edward Everson, provided he ( municipal court . The coldest weather of the the wintry cold into the north cities, Including Eau Claire, ADJUSTED Judge Hatfield noted that Led- Mrs. Lila Stoneburg, 761 W. still wishes to purchase it at ¦ j season, 20 above, hit Winona central United States from the Wausau , Park Falls, Superior ¦H ebuhr had been jailed about 10 Mark St., reported that two the price offered. He has been i* and vicinity this morning and a new charge of boxes of clothing were stolen Upper Great Lakes to Kansas. and Ashland. Measurable living in one part of it for some NOW days ago on although slightly warmer weath- d , driving after revocation. His at- from her garage sometime be- The mercury dipped to 1 be- amounts of snow were confined time. 1 I*-I BIJF"* ONLY 7^0Y Challeen, ex- tween Thursday and Sunday. er is predicted for tonight and ¦ # I torney , Dennis A. Wednesday the prediction of low zero, at Roseau, in northern to Upper Michigan. ^ Ledebuhr lives in One box contained women's WhllfYou-Walt ) plained that scattered light rain or snow re- Minnesota, low for Continental Wisconsin's high mark Mon- ? Regular Charge $1.50 Houston but works in Winona. summer clothing, and one box, U.S., before dawn and to 4 day was 54) at Beloit before the m SERVICE <| , he women's winter clothing, she mained in the forecast for Wed- (or When he can't get a ride nesday. above at Bemidji, Minn. It was cold front arrived. The nation's Doors Closed must drive himself to work , told police, She placed the val- 15 at Duluth and 11 at Fargo, high was 90 at Palm Springs , ue of the clothes at $50, Warmer tonight with a low of Challeen said. 22 to 28 and mostly cloudy and N.D. Calif. ONE DAY ONLY ! Judge Hatfield asked Lede- Rochester posted a low of 16 Wa basha Case l had to go charge concurrently with the warmer Wednesday with a high buhr whether he of 34-40 is the weatherman's after a Monday high of 52 and GALE WARNINGS were dls- (Special) 5 WED., NOVEMBER 10th < signs on the way 30-day driving after revocation played In the Upper Great WABASHA , Minn. - through stop sentence he is now serving, Both word. Partly cloudy and colder La Crosse had extremes of 19 Doors have been closed to the whether he had to and 52 for the same times. Lakes. HOTEL WINONA to work or sentences will be served under is the outlook for Thursday. public for the paternity case J 142 I drive while drunk in order to An Arctic air mass gave WIS- Light snow fell from Upper Room admit- terms of the Huber Act, allow- Previous lows were readings which Is in progress In Waba- ^~ J get to work? Ledebuhr 5 and Oct. 29. CONSIN a foretaste of winter to- Michigan to northern Minneso- sha County District Court. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. .^ no excuse for ing Ledebuhr to go to his job of 27 on Nov . ta. One inch of snow covered ted that there was during the day while paying day with daytime temperatures Defendant is Roy J. Rouse, Os- not expected to get very far the ground at International _k_k__J___J_^_ . _l amm^SSmSSmmam*m ^±&^mmhmm ^mmaaa-Mmamm\. ama-tUSma, ¦ _l these offenses. . . T ._ room and board at the county THE TEMPERATURE got no seo, Minn., formerly of Lake MMIMnQNOVT Bajiwy tatp iwaj alsaawamWON* The judge referred to Lede- higher than 48 Monday after- above the freezing mark . Falls, Minn., whore the temper- suppl ed jail. City. < St. Paul w9 IM bar* to MTW» 1 buhr's traffic record , noon, dropped to the 20 reading Superior registered a frigid 15 ature was U above zero. Drawing of the jury was com- ye* in asking the (Ledebuhr was originally sen- Blustery northwest winds ^ by Soderberg, tenced to serve 105 days ln coun- at dawn today and was 38 at degrees above zero during the pleted at 11:30 a.m. Drawn WtHUMTOtf-WAIT SMVICI questions, noon. night for the lowest reading in produced snow flurries over the g 4 ty jail under the Huber Act. were : Mrs. Walter Ahrens, 1 factory Fwfc, Cbmpfafc fUpafn, Factory MOM This was on the basis A year ago today the Winona the state. mountains of northern and west- Lake City ; Mrs. Rny Borgan, | JUDGE Malficlu ordered Led- of 35 days Wisconsin ern New England as the tem- W-day sen- each for the three guilty pleas high was B8 and the low 42. Some other low Millville; Bryce Carlson , J Mrs. ebuhr to serve a temperatures overnight were: perature dropped into the 20s. drunken driving in municipal court.) All-time high for Nov. 9 was 69 Norman loechler and MJN . Kd ? kmmlnqtonowMrs oaly,who briny hi tfctfr Shavi, J tence on the in 1931 and the low for the day Eau Claire 17, Madison 21 , Wau- Showers and thundershowerH Miilonc , Wabasha; Lclnnd 13 in 1821 . Mean for the past sau 23, I>one Rock 24, Green fell from Texas to New Eng- Funk , Thellmnn; Donald Mor- 24 hours was 34. Normal for this Bay 26, Racine 27, Milwaukee land. Widespread fog cloaked riscy nnd Joseph Roland, Zum- V Division of Spwry Rand Corporation I Eagles Regular Meeting time of the year is 38. 30 and Beloit 32. the metropolitan East. bro Falls ; Donnld Parker, N. ^Mr | 113 Flrtt Nat'l Bank The thrust of freezing - »:10 • 2S*-«5t-90< ily. Her father, James L. Kil- Winona area hunters — A club committee has been S ^ gallen, was with the now de- Iowa annually for pheasants, pointed out, whenever large appointed from members of funct International News Serv- chudar and quail, the following stands of unpicked corn offer William Allen Post 179, Ameri- ice for many years and is now data on changes in the pheasant cover to the birds. can Legion. • Starts • with the Hearst Headline Serv- regulations is timely. The sea- George Cook and Howard WED ice. son opens Saturday: Hungarian partridge regu- Bennett will serve one-year lations reflect the change terms: Donald Pille and Her- Her father was transferred to Shooting hours for pheas- in hunting hours for pheas- man Liebenow, two years ; New York and she grew up In ants are from 8:30 a.m. ants. This year Huns may Martin Beyer and Walter Ku- P

¦25B EVENINGS—7:00NOT -9:40 | i» 1 Dallvarad by Carrlar—Par WM* SO canti 35r-$1.0O-S1.25 FUEL OIL >a waafca 11171 tt weeks IX3.S0 HKH PASSES ^f vj| ^^ _ HONORED By mall strictly In advancai paper atop- S ^^ JLf* Per Gel. pad on axplratlon data. In Flllmora, Houston, Olmslad, Winona, H UTH'S J Wabasha, Buffalo, Jackson. Papln and It H GASOLINE Trempaalaau countlts and armad torcai ESTAURANT Ml K CoTo* I CoS>« parsonnal In ttit conllnarrtal Unltad Itataa, IL " H _ or oversaas Willi APO or F I'O axtorttstt: kV Cl>7" Per m Batt T 1 1 strMt Gal. t yaar ... 11} 00 J months W.JO wflm ______B * " mm NO STAMPS - a monlha ... M.S0 1 montti ... *1JJ NOTHING FREE All other subscription!! W^_W_ ^^C_P Conveniently located in *__R__H I yaar Its 00 3 months ... WIS downtown Winona < monlha ... MOO 1 month 11.40 ^HM ^* . v *v___P_l_^_H ^k^iu^ci ! WESTERN Sand chanoa ol addratt, notlcaa. undnllv- | ) arad copies, subscription order* and other __BS_i_*- _^Q_H mall Mams lo Winona Dally Nawi, P.O. " Box 70, Wlmr>«, Minn , ])«!>. WORLD" At the End of ¦_ -fi - w J4-aa\Wm\ Dancing 1 Lafayette Street lacond tl«»a poatafla paid af Winona. * Saturday Night Minn. Chief Clerk of Senate Selected Other Sites At KELLY'S WASHINGTON (AP)-Darrell St. Claire was appointed Mon- day chief clerk of the Senate Suggested for effective Jan. 1. Emery L. Frazier, who be- comes secretary of the Senate Tech School at that time, told a news con- A location for Winona's Area ference that St, Claire, a veter- Vocational - Technical School an of 32 years in Senate staff building was touched on briefly at two points during Monday service, will succeed him in the evening's meeting of tbe Board $24,000 a year chief clerk post. action was of Education but no __^_ _ _^_^_^^_ _ flBHMHM . t taken by school directors who _^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__k. ^ ^ ^^ ^_^_^_^^. are continuing their delibera- tions on site selection. Nine visitors.were in attend- Pope May ance at the meeting, presum- ably interested in what might develop on the site issue fol- ! lowing two sessions — one a WINNERS AT PHELPS .. . Here are three of the win- Visit Poland public hearing — at which site ners from among 27 entries in the "Bock Character I Like selection had come up for ex- Best" contest at Phelps School Junior High School. It was tended discussion. hfeld in conjunction with Book Week. From left , Michael BOARD President Lawrence Sexton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sexton, 735 47th Ave., In Spring Santelman explained , however. Goodview; Sharon Schultz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Everard WARSAW, Poland (AP) - that the board Stftultz , Goodview Rt. The possibility is still alive that ' 19, and Steven Cox, first, son of Mr. *-. • • i still was en- arid Mrs. Thomas Cox, 3940 6th St., Goodview, who drew Pope Paul VI will visit Poland bCnOOl gaged in study "Crazy Horse." Michael and Sharon got honorable mention. next spring. of proposed Seteond place went to Scott Krage, Both the Vatican and the Pol- n J sites and be- son of Mr. and Mrs. Jun- DOdrQ cause of this ior Krage, Minnesota City Rt. 1. (Daily News photo) ish government have denied ¦ Roman press reports of ar- 'the matter rangements for the Pope~tir had not been placed on the ie, Minn., State Bank said an come to the May 3, 1966, cele- agenda for action at Monday's auction Saturday of livestock bration of 1,000 years of Chris- meeting. DON'T MISS OUT ON THESE FANTASTIC BUYS ON Farmer Indicted * and farm machinery belonging tianity in Poland. Most frequently mentioned as to Olson brought about $51- The feeling here is that the a possible site for the school 000. About 300 people attended denials were prompted by pre- have been a tract in the vicinity In Double ing the sale. mature publicity for a project of Siebrecbt's greenhouse be- Slay ¦ that could take shape in the Highway 61 , (AP) tween old and new LOTTLE FALLS Minn. coming winter. near the east edge of the city — A Morrison County grand Ray Bliss and, more recently, a four-block jury indicted Anton E. Olson Some Italian reporters who the east fringe of the accompanied President Gi- area on on charges of first degree mur- Hospitalized at downtown business district useppe Saragat'to Poland last should property become avails der Monday in the shooting month wrote about a papal visit - able through an urban renewal Furniture Carpets deaths of Sheriff John E. Stack Albuquerque as if it were already decided. and his chief deputy. Andrew Erogram. The latter site has ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) Prof. Aleksander Skarzynskl, een under fire by persons in- P. Herlitz. director of the Polish govern- — Ray C. Bliss, chairman of the cluding property owners and TJhe officers were wounded ment's Office of Religious Af- businessmen in the area. fatally by shotgun blasts on the Republican National Commit- fairs, told The Associated Press , tee, The vocational-technical school Olson farm, near Sobieski the was to be released today there was no truth to their sto- site first -was mentioned Mon- night of Oct. 15. Authorities said irom an Albuquerque hospital. ries. But he did not rule out the day night when Superintendent Stack, 45, and Herlitz. 55, were Bliss, 57, was hospitalized last possibility of a journey here by of Schools A. L. Nelson read a shot from behind in the farm- Friday when he complained of the Pope. letter received from Dr. J. H. Appliances yard. chest pains. Doctors said they Numerous matters would Foegen, 323 Elm St., a mem- found no trace of heart trouble. have to be settled first, the ber of the Winona State College The victims reportetdly had A physician said Bliss would gone to the farm to talk to Ol- director said. business faculty who said he check into an Albuquerque hotel felt that "neither of the two EVERYTHING GOES —NOTHING. HELD BACK son about the location of some for a few days of rest before Many Polish Communists as * farm machinery on land abut- most talked-about sites have returning to his home in Akron, well as Catholics are interested have too much to offer. Or, to ting that of Olson and a neigh- Ohio. in having the pontiff come here put it differently , there are con- bor. Investigators said Olson He was attending the Western because of the prestige this vincing arguments against both and neighbors had gotten into States Republican Conference would mean for their country. of them." a hassle over the matter. when he became ill. Communist regime officials Dr. Foegen had three possible ¦ ¦ Olson is being held in the ¦ ¦¦¦ ;.. are also pondering possible dis- alternative sites hi' mind and county jail here in lieu of $200,- advantages. There would be the suggested that if they haven't 000 bond. Quick supper : Heat chunks of SOFA I frankfurters with baked beans. danger that the visit might dis- beenconsidered by the board ROCKERS Am official cf the Long Prair- Serve with cole slaw. rupt' public order, something they might merit study. I DINETTE dreaded by any regime in pow- | THESE Included: Polish Catholics are so fer- •"Existing square blocks of park land in the central city. $ vently religious that more than 100,000 will spend days walking Since precedent has already to reach appearances of Stefan been set, in the construction of 5 99 I the post office and in the Cen- 1 Cardinal Wyszynski, the Roman *4 *28 I tral Park block, there should Catholic primate of Poland. The not be too much commotion on Pope could draw millions. Han- this score. What with Lake Park dling such a crowd would re- and others, these central parks, quire the kind of church-state are, in my opinion, obsolete. In P.M. EVERY DAY cooperation that does not now horse and buggy days, or when OPEN 9 AM. TO 9 exist. Despite this, one War- people had to walk in parks, saw diplomat has predicted to they served a purpose. With his government that there is a today's mobility, who wants to 60-40 chance that the Pope will use them? Also, by using one Fast, ifucfeJt sirvfei and mtaffity fail ill It yaw but bit come here. of these blocks, no property for wintertime hona comfort Try oir service... Md cleaa would be removed from tax CHAIR LE »urnlnf PhHIwat Jiome baatlnf ell fro* PMIIipt «. BLAIR PATIENTS rolls and you would still have ««™»«° I BLAIR, Wis. (Special)-Mrs. the advantages of a relatively I OTTOMAN 11I 11I central location. * A. J. Sather is at Lutheran Hos- — GR0UP™ 1§ PHILHEAT' pital, La Crosse, where she un- • "The North Western depot derwent surgery. Irvin Solberg, site. I don't know if this would who was a patient at Tri-Coun- be large enough but few would MODERN OIL BURNER SERVICE ty Memorial Hospital, Whitehall, argue that it is now badlv in 213 Center St., Winona 24-Hour Service several days, was transferred need of 'renewal.' Central loca- Tel. 8-2174—After Hour* 8-2051 to the Veterans Hospital at Ft. tion, urban renewal and no-real ¦ Snelling. displacement of already - estab- ______¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ _ i__ r " *ii8 " ^ ¦_ ¦¦ _ ¦_ ¦¦ lished business would be factors L_!_!_J here. • "And what about any num- NO MONEY DOWN- 24 MONTHS TO PAY ber of possible locations in Goodview? Since it is to be an area and not a city vocational school, there should be no need to locate it in Winona proper. WALIIUT WHETTE Since it would be non-taxable, | anyway, no loss of taxes would I Scrr.TECTIUinBAL.A.Sc I I I I be involved." The letter was placed on file BOOKCASES I CHAIRS I with no comment from the , of people \A w* board. A lot | LATER IN the evening, Snpt. Nelson said that as a conse- $T99 $500 are taking a second look . quence of suggestions made at *16 I I XJ\ f previous meetings attended by the public, the Wincrest area m______mr " r *-¦_ ¦_ ¦¦_ ¦¦_[ at , the low-price field n> had been visited during the past /=^J ILL week for inspection of possible school sites. He said that W. Wayne Smith FREE DELIVERY UP TO 200 MILES «— ¦¦¦—¦¦_ ¦ mmamamawaaamamamammmmmamMk_w M 1 1-,— ,l,,l| —IW,—i"^" ~ ~ wl , B, i — of the architectural firm pre- - y--" "^ - * k p " " * " " """"^^"' " ^^"' i paring plans and specifications for the new building, and school officials had been taken to Win- CAI ET crest by the developers for a KING K01L 1 m on look at areas that might be suit- 20% I ?r I able. k Nelson said that there was I ~ one "fairly good area of several DAVEN BED . .„ I " I blocks" that had been seen. It I Ethan Allen I $088 I was within a few blocks of «* existing water and sewer serv- ^^^ssa\\\\\\\\\wa\a% ice, he said , but one drawback C ^^^nfl ______as a site might be the uneven 148 M^^ terrain, [ FURNITURE I -£%XT | *' " WB _ H _ H _ I _ ^ The superintendent said that J the study had not been extend- ^^^^^^^^^vii_^__^__^__i__^__^__B_H______r . ed as yet to such a point to where any recommendation might be made. This Is Not A Cash Sale-Use Your Credit *..since this new Olds F-85 came on the scene! Ever team canned kidney We aak youi sJid Mving money ever look «o good? Don't answer till you buckle up and take beans with canned tomatoes for \ the wheel of a new 1966 Olda F«83. You couldn't bargain for a smoother, quieter, sweeter a vegetable dish? Season as you I performing car. 1 CQMPI.BTH WITH aAFKTY PBATURKS UKB a FRONT AND REAR BEAT BELTS like—with minced onion, brown . TWO-SPEED WINDSHIELD WIPERS a WASHERS a BACK-UP LIGHTS a OUTSIDE sugar or chili powder. MIRROR-ALL 8TAWMWP-ANP AIA DESIGNED TO MAKE YOU A SAFER DRIVER! ¦ priced right down In the low-price field! So take that aecond look at the expanded LAY-AWAY NOW Yet It'a FOR CHRISTMAS line of r-85» "«w ¦ ' Jrour OldamoWla Dealer'a. Your "Juat looking" day* may be ©-erf LOOK TO OLDS FOR THE NEW I Schwinn 5- & 10-SPEED M r-———-'¦ _„ - i i —I — rr n-Ti T firr—i n imr-i rn nu n imiiai IWI in BICYCLES ^ZZZS' 5 OLDSMOBILE \¦ i ai— n » wwim mm ¦..-¦- iia tim urn— tm i« tuunmtu.w—w S Speed .JOWIS 10-Sp-ed «pbOa"5 FURNITURE B WESTERN MOTOR SALES 225 W. Srd St MILTER'S K' Next to Winona National and Savings Bank , •ALBS S. SBRVICe 40) ManKalo Ava. Phona SUI mil mr^mu^mmmmmmmmmmmmmamammm -mmmmmmmm ^m^^^^^m^^mmm ..n.n ,«¦—iw-M — ----- —¦ ¦ * Invest in Learning TOUAY IN NATIONAL AFFAIRS 'WHAT DO YOU THINK OF MY NEW HYBRID? WORLD TODAY GUARANTEED FOR GREATER HARVEST!' To Enhance Government Acts Personal Fulfillment Party Labels (Editor 's Note.- This is Ihe third in a To Control Prices scries of Guest Editorials written by Winona civic , educational ond religious leaders in By DAVID LAWRKNCE connection with thi observance of National Very Confusing ' Education Week , Nov. 7-13.) WASHINGTON - The Johnson administra- tion has taken a fateful step that may change By JAMES MARLOW ; f ' ' ' ' By S. J. Kryisko America's economic course in the near future. Associated Pre« New« Analyst ;. . . Prnident, Winona National For the White House? has endeavored to inter- WASHINGTON tf) — Sometimes you can't even Mil tile , and Saving* Bank fere with the law of supply and demand by - get mixed up. proclaiming players vrtth a scoreboard. Things. that it will dump on the market the Republican who just got elated LIVING EFFECTIVELY today de- within the next year John V. Lindsay, 200,000 tons of aluminum York City on a "fusion" ticket and played 1 rhands more of us than coping with the en- in an unprecedented effort to mayor of New break down an down Ms Republicanism, says it wasn't a Republican Vfc- circling limitations which often flow from already announced price increase of half a cent a pound. tory. environment. These demands make it nec- He was talking Sunday on . . essary/that we develop those qualities nec- No such pressure was exerted a few months To Your• Good• HealHi• the CBS radio - television ¦ , . . . " ' a— essary for formulating and reaching wor- ago when the labor unions forced an increase program "Face the Nation." thy goals. Such development is almost im- in wage scales amounting to $20 a week or But New York's Republican possible in the modern world without ed- more for employes and other benefits, the high governor, Nelson A. Rocke- /?ecfuc/rr ucation. This Is what makes education to- cost of which is still difficult for the industry feller, said it was a GOP sf day a special sort of an investment — an to calculate . victory. He was talking on another Sunday radio-televi- investment whose benefits pay the sub- JLIST LAST Week the aluminum companies Method stantial dividends of personal growth and sion program, ABC's "Is- Increased their prices to cover their wage costs. sues and Answers." fulfillment. The new prices are still below what they week's election When we speak of personal fulfillment were in 1961 . The federal government today After last Is Safe returns, Rockefeller said In this sense we understand that in a com- has no legal right to fix either wages or By J. G. MOLNER. M.D. prices. Such laws are usuall New Yorjk City is now a plete individual it is inevitably the sum y passed only in Dear Dr. Molner: wartime. The existence of a stockpile of 1,- "Republican town." But of many phases in the acquisition of knowl- 400000 tons of surplus Lindsay said under him Would you discuss fastV , aluminum held by the ing to reduce weight? I edge and a natural result of education. government for many years now has been New York would be "non- used as partisan." ' / . have heard of talking We all know that most investments, as a club over the aluminum industry. Of only water and vitamins we understand them, require that the cap- this amount, 500,000 tons can be sold without whose relations ' specific authorization Lindsay, for 20 to 30 days, with- ital be put away, untouched, until the in- by Congress. So the ques- Rockefeller seem less out hunger, and tion is one of motive — whether the with with vestment matures—but not so with educa- objective than hearty, said that while beneficial results, is this • Is to get rid of 200,000 tons of aluminum in the gov- tion. This peculiar type of investment the next year or just to break he would endorse method really safe? down the price another term he Must it be supervised by yields returns immediately — in personal and put the companies in a hole. ernor for maturity and enrichment and, too, because would not campaign for him. a doctor? Is there an the investment was honestly and diligently When a price increase was announced by Last week Ray C. Bliss, age limit? - H.K.E. some aluminum companies last week, the ad- made. GOP national chairman, I would say that there Ha ministration let it be known that it was think- "leftist- while denouncing some difference of opinion A CHILD AWAKENS to th* world ing of selling some of. the metal it held. But the oriented" groups in on this method of reducing. around him and discovers an Immediate It was denied that this had any connection with urged all Democratic party, So far as I know, it is safe pleasure and awareness In his newly found the price changes. Then a few days later it Republicans to "reject This happens at the very was officially admitted that there was a enough when properly super- understanding. membership in any radical vised—but this means much relationship. Executives of several aluminum attempts beginning of his education. organization which closer supervision that you companies were Called to Washington to discuss Republican party Important to remember is that an edu- to use the suppose : Either in a hospiti- projects for the disposal of Some of the accum- for its own ends." cation investment continues to yield price- ulated aluminum. They offered plan tal, or under complete daily after plan berated less dividends throughout life. Once our to buy 200,000 tons as a part of an agreement He specifically supervision of a doctor who to cover purchases of 500,000 tons in the next Robert Welch, founder and understands this method basic formal education is complete, we president of the John Birch cannot help building upon it with each new 14 years. They thought at first that this pro- thoroughly. Society, calling him an "ir- It is NOT safe attempt experience, thus enriching our character posal would be accepted but their offers were THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND to abruptly rejected. responsible radical." any such regimen and seia at every stage of our lives. We could say Meanwhile, Welch, also your doctor once a week , or that life has no real adventure unless we THE NEGOTIATIONS were carried on with over the weekend, once to call him and say you still have continuing curiosity and"education to the secretary of defense but, as the story goes again said the government feel good. Rather, a battery expand our horizons. he had to make a telephone call to President Congressmen Start Trips was under Commuaisf influ- of laboratory tests must be Johnson in Texas after each meeting. The net ence. employed repeatedly. Far Most of us believe in one way or an- result was an announcement at a press con- other that education should not cease when just a couple of examples , ference in Washington on Saturday that the Welch, who calls democ- the mineral balance in the we leave school. The finest product of for- price increases were above the so-called racy "mob rule," considers body is important. If it be- mal schooling is the desire to learn from "guideposts." The chairman of the President's Before Congress Closes the income tax destructive, ings to get out of balance, Jt life itself and to make the conditions of life economic advisory board finally said that the accused former President should be corrected By JACK ANDERSON spending. No longer are charges all members of the prompt- such that we all learn to give and take in price rise had violated the "guideposts" laid , Dwight D. Eisenhower of ly. Or, under such a rigid congressmen permitted to House Post Office Commit- the process of living. down by the administration, whereby price WASHINGTON - Like treason and put the Com- fast, gout may occur due to changes would not be regarded as justified un- school boys on the last day drop by at American em- tee, are eager to visit the munist tag on the late John uric acid accumulation. This Conditions change so rapidly in our bassies and stuff their pock- less they came within certain limits of produc- of school, congressmen scat- Dollis Hill postal lab out- Foster Dulles, considers the must be corrected at once. world that we soon learn we must continue tivity. tered to the four winds, ets full of local currencies side London, he said. Jim- United States "one vast in- OBVIOUSLY IT is possi- to jpjild upon our basic education to enrich whooping joyfully, as Con- and they are now obliged to my promised that they sane asylum." limit themselves to the ble to lose weight rapid- our 'lives. An indication that education gress closed. Many didn't would see some modern let- Not long ago, a Republi- ly and in large amounts hy v same amount that any oth- ter-sorting machines that must Continue throughout life is the rela- stop until they got on the can senator, Thurston B. this method, and after the tively recent growth and development of other side of the globe. er government official is would astound them. Morton of Kentucky, who IN YEARS ' permitted to spend in a day. first few days people report adult education programs. We see evidence GONE BY President Johnson s stern Highlight of the trip is a attacked the Birch Society that they stop feeling hun- admonition to his fellow This varies in each country tour through the post office said there is no rea- of this in the fine and varied adult pro- but . before, gry. However, as you c;ftn citizens to see America averages about $18 a in The Hague, described as son for it in the Republican grams offered tn Winona. Ten Years Ago . . . 1955 first and spend their money day. Understand, it is neither a the most modern post office party. simple nor inexpensive The Winona County Historical Society will re- at home went unheeded. At This fall a few members in all Europe. Stops in Ber- THE DIRECT BENEFITS of •ducation ceive a national award of merit for its "dis- method because of the are not necessarily its most important as- . least a fifth of Congress of Congress, wary of bad lin and Frankfort, Jimmy "As a partisan Republi- tinctive contribution to the cause of local his- am con- amount of testing and su- sets. Fringe benefits are themselves great headed for overseas vaca- publicity, are paying their said, will ascertain how the can," he said, !'I tory," from the American Association for State own way overseas. Three cerned by the fad'that; the pervision required. " actually summar- tion spots. zip code is working in Ger- The word "education and Local History, during public ceremonies. The fact that they are arranged trips at their own John Birch Society \m pick- I don't know of any age izes something that is good in itself. For many. As for Paris, the limit, but a person should Mrs. Donald Schaefer, president, and Mrs. spending the taxpayers' expense to the Par East, in- congressmen intend to ed niy party as the vehicle many it represents not only the key to be in robust health before David Kinowski, secretary of the Auxiliary to money, not their own, is a cluding stops in South Viet check on the mail service to promulgate its monolithic knowledge and to tbe good things in life, Leon J. Wetzel Post, American Legion, will at- technicality unlikely to win Nam: Sen, Ted Kennedy, philosophy. In so doing, this starting such a program. to American servicemen in ba_ic but it also brings with it a sense of pur- tend a two-day conference in St. Paul. The con- the President's approval. D-Mass., Sen. John Tower, Europe. group seems more dedicat- Possibly the mest pose and the increased awareness which ference is primarily a school of instruction held Even before the final gav- R-Tex., and Rep. John Tun- ed to the defeat of Re- objection is this — the meth- Morrison acknowledged is an invaluable and gratifying aspect of each year to aid the president and her secre- el fell in Congress, the ney, D-Calif. publicans than Democrats." od doesn't teach the patient tary in their duties as officers. great exodus had begun. Others have worked up a that most of the congress- new eating habits. He got a fulfilling life. men will bring their wives He also added this: That Two of the old curmudgeons semblance of justification Birchites of the left have a fat before! If he goes back In all his endeavors the educated per- of Congress, Rep. H. R. for their trips. Rep. Jim- along. The wives, he said, to his former habits, he can Twenty-Five Years Ago . . . 1940 . could occupy themselves stronger hold on the Dem- son can find greater fulfillment because Gross, R-Iowa, and Rep. my Morrison, who repre- ocrats than any "extremists get fat again. For this rea- Mrs. M. L. Spencer, has returned home aft- with sightseeing and shop- son alone there is a great education creates the ability to control re- er spending the weekend in the Twin Cities. She Howard Smith, D-Va., la- sents the strawberry section ever had on our party." sults and to direct them toward achieve- mented what was happen- of Louisiana and ranks ping while their husbands deal to be said for the slow, was a guest of Sen. and Mrs. Joseph Ball were absorbed in postal ment of purpose. It develops ability to ing. high on the Post Office Sen. Everett M- Dlrksen simple way of reducing — at their home in St. Paul and attended the matters. the Republican learning to eat a little less choose, to challenge, to change, and to American Legion Auxiliary breakfast. Committee, has organized a of , "WITH ALL the junket- tour to inspect European Those listed for this tri Senate leader, while agree- of everything, and especial- think. Mrs. 0...-F. Burlingame left for Milwaukee p cers that are taking off post offices. He assured this are Congressmen Corbet, ing with Morton that the Re- ly to eat less of the more An educated person can make intelli- where she will visit her nephew, Dr. M. Kel- these days," snorted Gross, column that publican party has no place fattening foods. and his wife for several weeks. there is much R-Pa., Daniels, D-N.J., Der- gent choices; an uneducated person is logg Mookerjee, "I note about 70 absentees to learn about the mails in winski, R-I1I., Dulski, D- for Birchites, said they have THAT, IN FACT, Is the this morning, and I know London, Paris, Berlin, Bern N.Y., Green, D-Pa., Hanley never been a part of the strongest argument against more likely to have either only a vague no- ' that some of them are off tion of his goals or none at all. An educat- Fifty Years Ago . . . 1915 and The Hague. D-N.Y., Johnson, R-Pa., and GOP and never will be. all special methods of re- W. E. Smith, who has been superintendent and running to foreign coun- HIS CONGRESSIONAL Olsen, D-Mont. ducing. If they don't estab- ed person is ablo to make the distinctions tries. I just wondered But Sen. George Murphy, necessary in choosing the worthy and of the government fish hatcheries at Homer California Republican, saw lish a new eating habit, the for the past four years, has been transferred whether there is going to patient may have gotten practical action over the unworthy or im- be enough funds to take the danger from Birchites a to the government hatchery at Spearfish, S.D. little differently from Mor- slimmer, temporarily , but practical; in this sense he is his own mas- The contract for the erection of the new care of all the trips. There JhsL $VILL he won't stay that way. have been meetings all over ton. He said 60 percent of ter; he is free. four-story and basement building to be built them are Democrats. Why, some people, under the place the last ten days Not too long ago, an ordinary man's by Latsch & Son for occupation by the In- Over the weekend Barry special "crash" reducing ternational Harvester Co. on n lease, has been on who is to go where and programs have lost 100 adult life was spent working at his trade how." Goldwater declared America or craft from morning to night, deriving awarded to the J. and W . A. Elliott Co. of faces a new breed of ex- pounds and more, according Minneapolis. Gross asked whether tne self-fulfillment from the completion of his United States had enough tremists who, he said, are to scientific reports, and then in a matter of months product or the support he earned for his local currency on hand in associated with the Demo- Seventy-Five Years Ago . . .J890 Italy to take care of all cratic party. gained it all back. What's family. The complexity of modern life may the profit in that? make involvement much more difficult The weather last night was the coldest ex- the junketing congressmen. The 1964 presidential can- perienced season the thermometer today. It may require far greater invest- so far this , 'i understand," said didate was referring to registering 16 degrees above zero. Smith, "we have a bundle draft-card burners, attempts ment in education. Locally the opportunity A company of carpenters in charge of O. P. of them over there." for infinite kinds of involvement and en- to block movement of troops Orad went out on the Southwestern Road to Smith added that his to Viet Nam and "leftist richment is here and active acceptance of erect grain elevators at several stations. House Rules Committee had groups planning to send sup- ggagi the challenge brings to us rewards that been "very niggardly about plies to the Viet Cong." He arc surely worth the effort. One Hundred Years Ago . . . 1 865 granting" authorization for called them radicals who i FINEST IN FAUCETS 1 overseas travel. "for the most part consist- ACTIVE SUPPORT of our fine schools The festival at the courthouse passed off J For New Homes and OVd « pleasantly , though it was not as largely attend- "I have been hearing ently vote the Democratic and colleges is a type of involvement which criticism," observed the ticket." is particularly satisfying because the re- ed as such entertainments have been. The prof- congressman from Iowa, sults can be seen in community growth its from the entertainment will be applied to "that the government is not Former Vice President and development and in a resultant per- the furnishing of St. Paul's Church. providing big enough and Richard M. Nixon, who last m\\\\\\\\\\ml^mmma%mm\\\\\\\m^Jm\\ sonal enrichment in the lives of countless aa fast enough jets to get the week refrained from calling people as they pass this way through life. junketeers over to Ouagan- Lindsay's victory a Republi- For we are labourer! together with God : ye , ire God'i husbandry; ye are God's building. dougou or wherever they can victory, said oyer the Ample opportunity for individuals seek- —I. Corinthians 3:3. are headed. They are also weekend Republicans are ing an extension of personal self-fulfill- complaining that they have stronger because they have ment is available through many fine edu- to take smaller planes to healed their ideological split cational outlets in our city . Among them get to certain countries of 1964 and repudiated the are the adult evening classes at the Wino- which planes, they say, are radical right extremists. Sanitary Plumbing I But not long ago Bliss na Senior High School during each school WINONA DAILY NEWS not comfortable enough." had & Heating Co. I An Iiiaeprfidcnt Newspaper — Kstnblishrd IS55 said Goldwater's new Free tie E. 3rd St. Prion* Z7J7 I year , the expanded facilities soon to be IT IS TRUR that con- Society Association will hurt available to those who wish to develop spe- \V. F. W IIITB G. R. CI .OSWAY C. E. LINDEN gressional junkets aren't the GOP's long-range inter- cial talents through vocational training and Publisher Exec. Director Business Mgr. whnt they used to be in the I just told Henry you invited us to the opera Sa- ests. Goldwater insisted his Ihe libera) arts programs of our local col- anJ^v/ newspaper A.P. ^ -^s' news dispatches. develop and become the forward moving KU .\0 keystone of our daily lives. t Turnday, November », 1J65 | j IN DAY ¦¦ ¦— -—¦-—¦--»--— *-»wACTI-^- VITY CENTER --w«a»M*^«^^__B««i—^—--—w-^ -<—WMW,^ M—-w ' BILLMERRILLS' the princess sat at the, head table when security . officers Princess Hit stopped him. Reporter Finds 'Happiest Children' The man, described by wit- nesses as "obnoxiously drunk.'' By VI BENICKE Each student will bring one fof began shouting unintelligibly Dally News Staff Writer pictures of his classmates and By Laryngitis and officers hustled him out of Some of the happiest children their projects. Various colored Today let's pay tribute to the the ballroom. in Winona can be found in pictures from magazines were housewife, whosem activity makes Moments later, as the prin- Room 102, Central Elementary going home a welcome thought. cess made her way out to the School, from 9 to 11 a.m. each shown by a girl student of Join me as we survey in a few And Fatigue royal couple's special retiring school day. things she especially likes such minutes what it takes a woman HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Fight- room, she saw the man being Eight mentally retarded as furniture, foods, etc. All of pride a heap of doing to ac- ing fatigue and laryngitis, Brit- questioned, appeared confused complish. for an instant, then returned children are being taught in joined in singing "He's Got the ain's Princess Margaret showed the Winona Day Activity Cen- You'll not catch me getting instead to the ballroom. Whole World in His Hands." royal stamina by sticking right ter there by Mrs. James Cole. Listening time was enjoyed. involved in a wordy discussion Police did not arrest the man They are learning how to com- A student produced one of his on who has the tougher job — through to the end of a dazzling because, they said, the incident municate with others, courtesy favorite records, "Beer Barrel the housewife or the bread- charity ball that broke up in the had occurred on private proper- and health, and skills in handi- Polka." He contributed a dance winner. I'll settle for bread- wee hours today. ty. Palladium security guards craft and recreation. They take solo while the others sang and winning any day. It takes a One small incident marred also released him and he ran off trips and tour various places certain touch to make a house the evening's gaiety , but only down the street and disappeared clapped their hands. With his briefly. in the crowd. in Winona and area towns. hands on his hips, he kept time seem like home. Saying little and dancing not ¦ AN OPEN house Is being con- to the music, alternately kick- Recently my wife and I were at all, the petite ing his legs high into the air in a home where things appear- princess ducted at the center this week. reigned smilingly from a, dais 4-H Leader Training Final hours are from 9:30 to and stomping his feet. Another ed in such a way as to indi- over the World cate that this heme was lived Adoption Inter- Lessons Scheduled 11 a.m. Wednesday. boy student did the "twist" and national Fund dinner-dance at The children are bubbling the "swim." A boy twirled a in. It wasn't immaculate, but the Hollywood In Fillmore sufficiently neat. The wife was a Palladium. County over with enthusiasm. All are girl around and around while Usually celebrity-satiated Hol- helpful and smiling. another student remarked, happy person that indulged in lywood stars twirled by, stealing PRESTON, Minn. — Objec- "Are you happy?" one of the "Hey, that's cute!" conversation with her company glances or outright gawking In tives to help leaders in the 4-H students asked Mrs. Cole. freely, and without any ap- her direction program leadership role will be HANDIWORK displayed In- parent concern for the house discussed in two lessons In Fill- One girl student took a guest cluded: Wall plaques, door by the hand and escorted her itself. We enjoyed her home, as The princess, In a diamond more County. weights made out of catalogs, it was lived in. crown, a necklace with marble- The first series, 4-H around the room to show and book marks, hot dish pads, "Th* SPECIAL CHILDREN, SPECIAL CLASS- sized diamonds and a cornflow- Leaders Job and Understanding rugs. Raymond Ames and John Holzworth, explain their handiwork to her. book ends decorated with color- A HOUSEWIFE: that works ' ROOM . . . Children enrolled at the Winona standing in the center, are sanding a piece "Can I hang your coat up er-blue gown that matched her Boys and Girls," will be held ful pieces of glass, wooden salt at the task is a most interesting eyes, managed a few Day Activity Center at Central Elementary of furniture. Jean Yarolimek is holding a for you?" a student asked this being. She whips up meals on soft words at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Wykoff and pepper shakers covered with her dinner partner, Los School are showing some of the guests at their scour stick made of colorful nylon net Ralph reporter. schedule with an ease that I Community Hall and 8 p.m. with tile and loom-woven rugs. Angeles Mayor Samuel W. Yor- Thursday at Lanesboro Com- current open house some of the things they Burmeister, seated at left , is holding a bird A girl student affectionately "One of the most dominating find amazing. What's more, hugged the mother of one of the ty, at the head table . munity Hall. do. Standing from left, Joann Goetzman, house and Ralph Ames, right, is showing a characteristics of these child- those meals have variety. In Her husband, boy students. this sense the Earl of The second series, "Four-H Duane Streng and Paul Habeck are demon- decorative paper weight. (Daily News photo) ren is their capacity to give , she needs not only Snowdon, c h "a 11 e d affably One of the children rang a " to be just a cook, but a creative Teaching Techniques and 4-H strating the use of the loom for weaving and receive love, said Mrs. throughout the dinner with any Program bell to call a meeting of the Cole. "They are over affec- cook, with ideas about what to Development," will be They recited the and all about him, including held at 8 p.m. Monday at Lanes- students. tionate." feed the family. She often is a comedian Bob Hope. pledge of allegiance to the flag. "Many parents who have humorist as she points out in boro and at 8 p.m. Nov. 24 "Thank you God for watching mentally retarded children her own way, a chuckle or two. The princess appeared mo- at Wykoff. over me," was added at the don't realize their children can One housewife used to cut car- mentarily upset, witnesses said, end of the pledge. lead such a full life. So many toons from the paper or maga- by one incident, an unidentified Ever add mushrooms to Three Schools Involved zines and with magnetic weights man in a brown business STUDENTS took tarns show- of these children are shy. sel- suit, a creamed spinach? Yeu can use attach them to the side , of the drink in one hand ing and telling of things they dom speak, can't read and , made his canned mushrooms or sauteed won't play games. They are refrigerator where the whole way to within 10 feet of where sliced fresh ones. had brought from home. One family could muse on the fun- showed pictures from the mag- withdrawn. In this special class they have a feeling of belong- nies. In Principal Changes azine section of the Winona I know a very successful busi- ing and a pride in accomplish- they go Sunday News of the upcoming ness man. His house is a beauty the whole way in comfort and warmtli Appointments for three ele- Nelson, Verdi F. Eules, who has The appointments will become play, "The Wizard of Oz," at ment. They also have fun. mentary school adroinistrative been serving as principal of effective January 3. "Many people have a feeling in an exclusive neighborhood. Winona Senior High School. This That house could easily appear un assignments were approved Madison and Central Elemen- The new organization had special class of students plans to of dread when they think of visiting a classroom of this in one of the homebuilders Monday night by the Winona tary schools, was appointed full- been discussed a month ago af- enact the play, "Snow White and magazines as a dreamhouse for 8ingwear " Last year type. They think they will go _ 7 Board of Education. time principal at Madison. ter school directors had been the Seven Dwarfs. Mr. Ritz. Yet, when that man ^ 1 Upon the recommendation of they presented "Cinderella." away feeling depressed but it DAVID MAHLKE, who has advised by the administration is just the opposite. Their spir- speaks of home, he talks of the ^ Superintendent of Schools A. L. that school enrollments at Madi- Another student showed a woman who shares it with him, been a teaching principal at photo album he had purchased. its are uplifted when they Lincoln, was relieved of teach- son, Lincoln and Central Ele- see the happiness the children praising her for her part in this climb from nothing, ing duties and named principal mentary had grown to the point are experiencing. to a of Central Elementary and Lin- where a change had become man of means. I've only met "STRETCHY flL "Each child is an individual his wife once. I wouldn coln. ; . necessary. Ia Crescent Post and each one adds something 't know Board members noted Monday her if I met her on the street, Under the « • a to the group," said Mrs. Cole, new adrninis- that Madison's enrollment has Nearing Ninth but I know this — she has a OCilOOl who is pleasant, patient, under- happy, appreciative man trative organ- now reached close to 500, there by all of tbe , in- than 300 at Central standing and loved dicating that as a housewife, she ization Mahlke D_» are more All-Time Record children. DOar*»OJ and nearly 300 at Lincoln. has excelled at the task and that will be at each LA CRESCENT, Minn. ( Spe- school oh a ~——' — SOME OF the remarks made beautiful dream house is mostly THE STATE Department of cial) — A membership of 302 a fine arrangement of brick, half-day basis with an assistant that by visitors at the open house LONGIES^ Education recommends for 1966 was reported at the Fri- Monday were: mortar, wood, and glass — the in each of the buildings to be any elementary school with an day meeting of GittensLeidel Elllea Mahlke j available when he's absent. "I'm glad I came." soul of that home is in the $035 ¦ /% enrollment of 4O0 or more should Post 595, American Legion. A to- " presence of his wife. &_ /j ^mmWi have a full-time principal and "We enjoyed it. tal of 49 more are needed for an "This is just wonderful." those with from 200 to 400 en- all-time high for the ninth suc- MANY A SMALL child will ^TTTI ^ half- "It's a good project." break out into a dead run when i rollment require at least a cessive year. that" there Is time principal. "I know now he leaves school, anticipating A new 60-star flag will be do- hope for my child." Tbe current enrollment at nated to Crucifixion School. Do- tbe joy of seeing Mother and Madison includes 56 students nations were made to the TJSO, sharing with her the activities NEEDED who ordinarily would be enroll- Hurricane Betsy Fund and of the day. And home takes on NO CASH Old fashioned warmth meaning when I If 1 1 ed at St. Stanislaus School but Christmas Seals. Masons to Receive , In reply tb his b combined with new 1 II I a are attending public school Commander Stuart Clark "Mother, I'm home," she ans- I combed-cotton comfort. 1 fi B ital Award wers, "In the kitchen, dear." g classes awaiting completion of and Adjutant Raymond Reisdorf Hosp | Exclusive Sfaretchy -eeat \ W\ ¦ the new St. Stanislaus building. will attend the fall conference Here,once again she fills a spe- I | | stretches up and 1 l\ ¦ I Originally it had been antici- Dec. 3-4. At La Crescent cial place. I down as you bend. | 11 M H pated that these students would Two teams will represent the Housewives are a group of I You buy comfort and Va* I m I LA CRESCENT Minn. (Spe- [ return to St. Stanislaus late this post at the 1st District bowling , specialises who appear to be 1 fit in the Longies knit ! ¦ f cial) — Clyde E. Hegman, ' -/I | fall. tournament at St. Charles. "Jacks of many trades" and by Munsingwear! fl\ # _# 1 president of the Masonic Me- Regulars and Tails- Fourth Ward Director Daniel The annual past president- masters of most. I say, hats off Q / ^r 1 Sadowski asked Nelson Monday past commander potluck dinner morial Hospital Fund, Inc., to these women that do much whether there had been any will be held in the clubrooms Minneapolis, will present an to put meaning and purpose to new developments in the paro- Nov. 20. All Legionnaires, aux- award of merit to Morning Star life. Fellows, don't take them chial school building situation. iliary members wives and hus- Lodge 29, Nov. 16. for granted. The superintendent said that bands are invited. The local lodge placed third And now a final reminder, he understood that the comple- The post will hold its 20th an- highest in the state with 83 per- fellows — some men think that tion schedule for the new St. niversary banquet at Crucifix- cent of its members contribut- marriage entitles women to the Stanislaus building had been re- ion Auditorium Jan. 29. Gene ing to the fund for the cancer protection of strong men to hold vised to a Jan. 1 date but that Lindquist, Clarissa, national hospital. The hospital was built stepladders for them while they CAR HAVEN GARAGE now school officials feel that committeeman from Minnesota, at a cost of $1,000,000 and was paint the kitchen celling. s perhaps occupancy may not be will be speaker. opened to patients in October wait.. . 1958. Why possible until perhaps in Febru- ies. The addition Is under con- ary. These patients, with an av- rememb er fast win ter! call.. . CUB SCOUT POW WOW erage stay of 23 days, have struction. EN A matter related to the ad- ROCHESTER, Minn. -About helped make the hospital a A pancake supper will be ministrative reorganization for 300 attended the annual Cub teaching and research center. served to members at 6 p.m. the three elementary schools a Scout leaders now wow of the Masons in 1963 pledged $1,- with the meeting to follow at Gamehaven Boy Scout Coun- 8 p.m. Hegman will speak. STANDARD new instructor was hired for 100,000 to build two additional ¦ cil here Sunday afternoon. ^ Lincoln School to fill the vacan- floors. The new third floor V_-_^B3 __1 |H ^H mT ma^ma\\mm a\a\\\a\\sa\wt _E_B__H__i cy created when Mahlke as- will consist of rooms for the The pika, a member of the lumber sumes his full-time principal du- ted from Winona State College at care of 40 patients, including rabbit family, is one of the few Your best STANDARD for reliable savings ties in the two buildings. the end of the current quarter. five children, increasing the hos- mammals rugged enough to Hired as an elementary teach- His salary was set at $5,000 pital's capacity from 80 to 120 spend its entire life in the high, Phone 3373 Winona er at Lincoln was Charles Earn, a year, In accordance with the beds. The fourth floor will house barren mountains of western | "Where Quality Clothing is Not Expensive" | Mabel, Minn., who'll be gradua- teachers' salary schedule. specialized research laborator- America.

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WINONA NATIONAL AND Q^/^ BANK i MEMBER f.DERAl DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORAT ION votes to one In the 630-member Queen Urges HARRIS SURVEY House of Commons. Knowles Vetoes Sen. Nelson British Labor Special elections are due shortly to fill two vacancies pre- Honorable Majority Down viously held by Labor men. The Settlement Driven Bill 868GetX-Rays Speaks Friday Laborites are sure of winning MADISON, Wis. W - Gov. Vigor Won one but face a tough fight in LONDON (AP)—Speaking on Warren P. Knowles vetoed Mon- To Single Vote the other district. behalf of Britain's Labor gov- day a bill that would have al- Wilson nevertheless has pro- Elizabeth II At Arcadia; LONDON (AP)-Prime Minis- jected among his followers a ernment, Queen lowed mothers to sign as the At Arcadia called today for a peaceful and ter Harold Wilson's Labor gov- sense of certainty that they will the Rho- sponsoring authority for chil- ARCADIA , Wis. (Special) - ernment entered a new and win out against any acts of God honorable solution to dren under 18 seeking a drivers' For Lindsay, or moves that Edward Heath's desian crisis "on a basis accept- U.S. Sen. Gaylord Nelson will stormy session of Parliament able to the people of the country permit. Unit af Blair speak on two occasions at Ar- today with its majority down Conservatives might make. The governor said an amend- WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) to ¦ as a whole." cadia Friday. a single vote and with revolt In the speech from the throne ment changed the legislation's —A total of 888 residents of the He will speak at a short pro- threatening in Rhodesia. opening the new session of Par- original intent. But the 49-year-old Labor La Crescent to Serve Knowles said the amendment Arcadia area received free ex- Pollster gram at open house at the new liament, the queen pledged aminations at the state Board Says leader and his ministers were Hunters Breakfast Harold Wilson would require all mothers sign- By LOUIS HARRIS York* sets whole new A-G cooperatives pellet mill at Prime Minister proof of Health mobile unit last week. perspec- blandly proclaiming confidence and his Cabinet would make ing as sponsors to furnish In-depth polls taken during tives for the Republican Party 2 p.m., and at the 18th con- they would ride out the- tests LA CRESCENT, Minn. (Spe- seek a of financial responsibility. A total of 2,813 now have re- cial) — The cooks at Crucifix- "unremitting efforts" to the recent New York mayoral- and its potential in the big servation recognition banquet and shocks of the legislative t settlement through negotiation "If this bill were signed into ceived the free examinationsto at the Country Club at 8 p.m. year ahead and emerge in front ion School will serve a hunter's would be re- ty campaign reveal much about cities. The following table com- with Prime Minister Ian Smith law these mothers date In Trempealeau County, the underlying political appeal Between the two appearances, of their Conservative challeng- breakfast Sunday starting at 4 of Rhodesia. quired to furnish proof of fi- according to Mrs. Oscar Love- of John V. Lindsay. pares the Goldwater 1964 big he will tour Arcadia Industries, ers. a.m. In the school cafeteria. The nancial responsibility while fa- city vote among five key Inc., and all the plants of A-G man-sized breakfast is open to thers and guardians in legal lien, Whitehall, coordinator. The public profile of Mayor- groups with the Lindsay show- Cooperatives , including cream- Death and one election defeat the public. Proceeds from this Nice for company: Cauliflow- elect Lindsay in the minds of have cut the government's mar- event will be used for cafeteria erets (cooked) served with custody of children would not be The unit is giving free X-rays, New York voters emerged ing last week : ery , elevator , broiler plant, required to furnish such proof," high blood pressure and diabet- when hatchery and mill, plus area gin over its Conservative and curtains and other hot lunch brown butter sauce and slivered they were asked what they GOP BIG CITY VOTE broiler houses. Liberal opponents from five equipment. toasted almonds. the governor said. ic tests at BLAIR today and will thought of him. He was most Gold- Llnd- Net offer tests to Preston Creamery THE OPEN house at the frequently described ¦ as full of water lay Differ- ¦ ¦ ' ¦ • • • « .. employes Wednesday from 9- youthful vigor and new ideas, ence $150,000 pellet feed mill will . 11:30 a.m. a dramatic, handsome and at- Per Per Per open at noon and continue until Wednesday noon the unit will tractive man, extremely arti- Cent Cent Cent 2 p.m. Free barbecued Arcadia move on to the ETTRICK village culate, bright and intelligent Negro voters 5 42 Plus 37 Fryers will be served on the hall where it will be set up from and outspoken liberal who was Jewish voters 13 42 Pins 29 {rounds. The chancery of the 2:30 to 4 p.m. It will be in the interested in the less privileg- Italian voters 26 40 Pint 14 a Crosse diocese has issued same location Thursday from 9 ed. a dispensation for the day so to 11:30 a.m. and Irish voters 3.1 41 Plus 8 all Catholics may eat the Why does the head chef 1 to 4 p.m. ' White Protes- The state unit will be at Schil- BUT LINDSAY was criticized broilers. ' by New Yorkers tant voters 54 01 Plus 7 Improvements at the hatch- ling Electric, GALESVILLE, for being too Lindsay demonstrated a ca- Friday from 10 a.m. to noon and ambitious to succeed In politics, ery will be on the open house return to Galesville to be set up too young to take on so much pacity, even against an active itinerary. conservative opponent, to hold Everett Herness, Whitehall; at the Waldorf at the municipal building Nov. responsibility, too rich and too 16 and 17 from 9 to 11:80 -a.m. much from a privileged back- the relatively more conserva- Luke Pientok, Arcadia, and and 1-4 p.m. and Nov. 18 from ground, too glib a talker and tive Republican white Protes- Richard Nelson, Eleva , will be 9 to 11 a.m. not enough of a doer, tant and Irish voters, while the Trempealeau farmers hon- gas cutting mainly into -dominant ored at the banquet. with The last stop will be at the If this seems to have a some- ^cook ? Trempealeau village hall Nov. what familiar overtone lt is Democratic big city groups Six youths will receive prizes such as Negroes, Jews and for posters on the subject of He cooks with gas because he needs the kind of con- then and there. Turn t burner on a gas range up, 18 from 2:30 to 4 p.m. and Nov. perhaps best summed up in the why they should be interested trol only gas can give you. You get the exact cooking down , on or off and it goes up, down, on or off. 19, 9 a.m. to noon. fact that without any prompting Italians. If there is a road back ¦ ¦ ' to a Republican majority, then in conserving soil and water. temperature you want because you have hundreds Instantly. This kind of perfect control is why tht 26 percent of New York's elec- Winners are Nolan Nelsestuen, of heats to choose from on a gas ratige, not just great chefs appreciate gas ranges. And why you'll torate volunteered that "Lind- the Lindsay pattern in a usual- ly Democratic stronghold points Ettrick , grade 8; Patty Kujak, fiva or six. And you get that exact temperature right feel the same way. Live modern for less... .with gas. Feed at La Crescent; say reminds me of John F. Ken- Arcadia, grade 8; Suzanne nedy." to one possible path. LA CRESCENT, Minn. (Spe- Yet the "cross" that Lindsay Instenes, Blair, grade 7; Hazel ) Both Kennedy and Lindsay Gunderson, Osseo, grade 7; cial — The annual Cub Scout stood out for their vigor and bore In the campaign in New ham and bean feed will be held York City was his Republica- Robert Wagner, Trempealau, campaigning energies, were grade 8, and Louanne Thomp- Saturday in the Public Ele- dramatic In impact as person- nism. For New York voters are son, Blair, grade 8. mentary School cafeteria. Serv- alities, tended to be intellectual registered 3 to 1 Democratic ing will be from 5 to 7 p.m. in politics came down on the li- and 43% of the city's voters NIC JENSEN, Arcadia, pres- Tickets are available from any held Lindsay suspect because ident of the Trempealeau Coun- Cub Scout or at the door. This beral side. But both were also criticized for being too young, he seemed "too close to the Re- ty Associated Conservation Clubs is the annual fund raising proj- too ambitious, too easy talkers, Sublican Party." Thus Lindsay , will present a book award ect of the Cub Scouts. too rich and too privileged. ad to hew out his winning from to three schools for conserva- the remaining 577. of the elec- tion promotion. Sen. Nelson ETTRICK RIDER HURT OF COURSE, Kennedy had a torate, much as Kennedy had will discuss "Conservation and ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - religious handicap to overcome, to give away better than 30% People." Sheldon Cantlon. Ettrick post- since he was the first Catholic of the vote on religious grounds Tickets for the banquet may master, was injured Saturday to be elected President. Lind- in i960. be obtained from Lee Sacia, afternoon when the hone he say is a Protestant, a minority Just before the election, vot- Galesville; Paul Lehman, Trem- was riding fell with him. He re- in New York City, although a ers were given a series of state- «ealeau ; Odell Schansberg, majority everywhere else in ments about Lindsay — pro and Whitehall; John Walek , Inde- ceived a gash in his forehead Sendence, and Ray Nereng, which requiredstitches , and he the United States. con — and were asked: lair, county soil "Do you tend to agree or dis- conservation wis shaken and bruised. The Lindsay vote in New district supervisors, or at the agree with these statements county extension office. itttm mvm mm *WHISKY • as MOOT ¦ (gwewmm pisrauwo co^ ra*wnwmT. KY. about John Lindsay?" _Hj_ii AT THB BULL AND BRAS. Oxfod Iota-AUis-unBaas' Stc* IBIIII1 ATTITUDES ABOUT LINDSAY ______r_rhiVct -Clnitt inflMMnffiaB-l Agree Dis- agree Scouts "Ifyou can find a betterbourbon.Juy it!" Compete u Per Per 9H Over Charred Cool* s_uwsf t-_V>u-_j«_» IB Cent Cent ||§|§|§ Wtsai lsstrtsrtft wd-Ms US Loads- Und ftffl Itt Often Betms^ ind Mint Jallf IBB _32__W_W_\ tVM aBtaoalM E_gB»hlots lon- Cup. 15S ... MfflMM Showed real courage In Rifle Match BHotaSttokS-O Prim* SaJtabtn- Stacdt US /T rf^i-l_^ in opposing Goldwat- H^H ¦& ___ ROCHESTER, Minn. — Area «a» er in '64 7« 24 B ^B M^*»»w l».nV -^h-lW--<-_-f tJI CumrfMoMa&k-i-a-lkt, Explorer Scouts placed in the , ______Has youth, vigor, "~Hn| « «kC*op«-i4A|_J» «ou_i«S Chu^,M_*iGf«n_reetnSt_i »____¦ individual matches in the an- new ideas 58 42 nual Will rid New York National Rifle Association of boss rule 55 45 Explorer rifle match at the Runs too much on Southern Minnesota Sports- HHj The Cold Coll ation pstsitji>a<«tws, Fi«nchP«u 1H1 his personality 44 SO man's Club near Chester. la too close to the John Kemper, Preston, was Republican Party ^S 57 one of the range officers. Doesn't care about Receiving high scores out of working people 16 84 a possible 300 were : Scott Han- »^niU«(_Ttt*(^baie_,Xssigo<_ 3.90 LobwtSlid 5» non, 192 ; Criag Zeches jWfliP Sw6etS Olid FrUltS 111111 , 132, and KH Is too liberal 15 85 «RI^_HI__S Q 1_k____ AM__I P_S _ _^EI_H3EH38| Obviously, the positive- about Dusty Bertel, 114, all of Post 6, - 1 Winona, and Duane Hoberg, Kenya to tha fl|K __^______Lindsay carried the day. Yet _^_HH p__„.i jorJ- evenE ____ ing« Potm- ar ftiif Ctm, JO aiahidSeg.70 H-H_f ^^|^^^H^_^__ at the very top of this list was 149; Charles Lammers, 52, and ¦ ^n ixepaat Fi _t T_t, wpp*4 ci-_» _o 9_-i*- „j ||| H Steve Corson, 50, all of Post 67, MMtJ B«>a«lBe«asi <>( t_kka -l_ H_>i, Muslstiion_ *° you'll naver W his outspoken opposition to Bar- ^^jf^'sLrtmie. with Cxi_ Uj T WLWm ^_ ^_ ^_ _m^_m^^j^^m^_!^^^\ ry Goldwater in 1904, New York- Preston. ers obviously considered that George Hogenson, Post 113 , ' < 0'} an act of political courage. A Rochester, fired 291 out of a ^_^_^_^_H -_^'£^-*\$ a\\\\\\\\\WQueens subway employe put it possible 300. He to the defending this way : "He had a lot of plain national champion. He also had iw htt40 "" ' high individual score. , v ~^aa\\\\\\\\a\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\Ta\\\\\\\\\\\\a\\\m\ ^vUf //¦.«*S fa***'rM' 'h mSsa\a\a_$re_B^__^__^__B \.guts and courage to do what t *maa\\\\\m\W^ i'_sW- The winning team with the JIB ______r ______^m\\\\ 3T^fc*'-"''* l_WSk\a\a\m\H__^__k he did on Goldwater." A law- ^ ^ ^^^^sr 5.M PSP ^^s BB ^l^^W^ ^^M% «"t<*'^_-\jL yer in the Bronx said, "Lindsay highest score was Post 113. * JjH^^Bputs conscience over party. They shot 1,091 out of a possi- That means everything to me." ble 1,200 points. Team members This final attribute of cour- are Jerry Janz, Rick Trachy, age, running against big odds, Greg Gunsalus and George Hog- in the end was what made Ken- enson, all of Rochester. nedy appealing to millions of Post 67, Preston, shot a score voters in America. By all odds, of 408. Manford Corson, Pres- |k I Northern lt was probably the biggest ton, is the adviser. Team mem- 1X1 Natural Gas f2% W BOURBON £J^IWC f I X Company single key to John Lindsay's bers are Bill and Charles Lam- Th* *laslln4 Mivlnf Nitu-I Amerlci't Largitt Soiling 6 Voir Old Kentucky Bourbon! victory as mayor of New York mers, Steve Corson and Duane ••• i* jrtur MMI »•• ii*M>r City last week. Hoberg. .

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MNAS v^moaKAJJMOITAM AHOHIW T Out to Show Draft-Card Burners TUESDAY LBJ Clears The Daily Record NOVEMBER 9, 1963 EISENHOWER (Continued From Page 1) At Community Winona Deaths Big Turnout Set Farm Outlook Two-State Deaths Desk of All to newsmen on a bulletin board Memorial Hospital Mrs. Frank Kaldunski F, here, giving a dialogue between Rev, Calvin Srrafton Eisenhower and his wife after Visiting hourti Madlcal ind surgical Mrs. Frank Kaldunski, 83, 703 PLAINVIEW, Minn. - The patient*; 1 to 4 and 7 lo 1:30 p.m. (No W. 4th St., he awoke: In N.W. Area children under 15.) died Monday at 2:40 Rev. Calvin F. Stratum, 79, '65 For Veterans Day Maternity patlenta: 1 to 3;30 ind 7 to p.m. at Community Memorial West Liberty, Ohio, died sud- Legislation Mm. Eisenhower: "Now, gen- 1:30 p.m. (Adults only.) Hospital after an illness of sev- denly of a heart attack there JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP ) By HAL COOPER In Denver, Colo., the United eral , don't you worry. I'm going MONDAY eral months. Monday. He had preached a —President Johnson has cleared (Associated Press Writer) Veterans Council, sponsor of an to stay right here with you at sermon Sunday at West Of State Grim ADMISSIONS The former Mary Klein- Liberty Veterans Day observances annual parade, arranged for one your bedside or in the next schmldt, Presbyterian Church. his deak of all 1986 legislation, room." By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mark Carey, St. Mary's Col- she was born here Thursday will point up a mas- section to consist of unorganized Nov. 1, 1882, to Joseph and An- He had served at the West including one bill that could lead sive national backlash against citizens who want to join the Eisenhower: "Well , what will The farm situation in crop- lege. na Liberty Church 13 years and to insurance Mrs. Rose Kluzik, 110 High Kleinschmidt. She lived here for millions who draft card burners and other line of march as a sign of na- you do if they take me home?" damaged area of northwestern her entire life. She was married prior to that at a Plainview Forest St. church 13 years. now cannot buy protection critics of U.S. policy in Viet tional solidarity. Mrs. Eisenhower : "Well , I'll Minnesota is "rather grim," to Frank Kaldunski Feb. 6, 1906 against floods or hurricane- Nam, reports from across In Columbus, Ohio, the parade follow you." Curtis Allen Czaplewski, 613 in St. Casimir' He was born April 28, 1886, Gov. Karl Rolvaag said after a s Catholic America showed today. grand marshal is Postmaster The conversation E. Wabasha St. Church, of which she to the Rev. and Mrs. Calvin driven waters. came after ground and aerial tour of the Robert Norton-, 322 W. King was a Stratton in Pickerel Town Ohio. In addition to the traditional Victor J. Bodlsh who arranged tho former president had sever- member. She also was a mem- , Johnson, the Texas White area Monday. St. He married Lottie Sine, Lima, turnout of war veterans, pa- for the city's letter carriers to al hours sleep. ber of the Sacred Heart ahd House announced Monday night, rades in many cities are expect- march in their working uni- The governor said It may be Mrs. Leo Hartert, Rolling- Ohio, July 2, 1908. She died here Eisenhower's son, John, was Holy Rosary sociej^s. in 1948. He served churches in signed all pending legislation ed to attract thousands of ordi- forms. Students of Ohio State necessary to establish a source stone, Minn. Survivors nary citizens who want to University planned a blood-do- near by. He had flown in from Mrs. William Schultz are^JBto' husband; Iowa and Ohio before coming well in advance of a midnight of feed for farmers to carry , 926 E. one son, Roman, Winona; five march to demonstrate support nating session which they Pennsylvania after receiving 5th St. here in 1937. He moved to West deadline — and without allowing word of his father's illness. their foundation daughters, Mrs. George (Doro- Liberty in 1951. tor their country 's cause. dubbed a "bleed In" — a switch herds through Mrs. Austin Baertsch, Foun- thy) any measure to die by pocket on the "teach-ins" which have Eisenhower , the nation's 34th the winter. It may also be in Neeck, Winona; Miss Jean He was.a member of the Ma- The national headquarters of president, tain City, Wis. Kaldunski, Minneapolis; Mrs. veto been held at some schools to complained of chest order, he said to establish Frank Duffy, Winona Rt. 3. sonic lodge and was active in . the American Legion touched pains about midnight and a , William (Modesta) Speck, Wino- community activities. protest the Viet Mam fighting. a new base of credit " to aid in DISCHARGES ) After a bill reaches the Presi- off "Operation Show Your Col- heart specialist, Dr. Louis Bat- na; Mrs. Millard (Klenette Survivors are: Two daugh- Vice President Hubert H. tey of Augusta carrying through the herds Mrs. Bernard Hennessy and Mrs. dent, he has 10 days in which to ors" involving the distribution , was summoned Plate, Huntington Beach, Calif., ter^ Martha Calbreath, of 10 million ^metal lapel pin Humphrey will address Wash- to the Eisenhower vacation res- in cases where farmers are baby, Lewiston, Minn. and Miss Cecelia Kaldunski, at Altoona Mrs. David Hander and baby, , Iowa, and Mrs. Jay sign or veto it or, after Congress flags. With each pin comes a ington's major Veterans Day idence at the Augusta National faces with the loss of cash crop home; 17 grandchildren; five (Esther Louise) La Rocque, has adjourned, to let it die by card saying "Americans are rally at Arlington National Golf Club. Hospitalization fol- Income. 462 E. King St. great-grandchildren, and two Plainview, and five grandchil- Mrs. Charles Koehn, 1763 W. inaction. Press secretary Bill D. serving the cause of freedom in Cemetery and place a presiden- lowed. brothers, Dominic Kleinsch- dren. Viet Nam. I wear my country's tial wreath at the Tomb of the On his return to the Twin Broadway. midt, Winona, and Nicholas Funeral services will be Moyers said Johnson now has Col. William W. Cox, the sen- Cities Monday night, Rolvaag Scott Huntley, Fountain City, flag to show that I support their Unknowns. Kleinschmidt, Minneapolis. A Thursday at 2 pun. at Commu- acted on all measures Congress " ior medical officer at Ft. Gor- spoke in Hopkins to a con- Wis. passed before adjournment. efforts. A sponsoring committee said son, Florian, and a daughter, nity Presbyterian Church, the Frank Brockhoven, chairman it expected, one of the greatest don, said Eisenhower was given servation awards dinner. He an- Karen Stoffel, 1169 W. Sth St. Mrs. Edward (Helen) Speck, Rev. Charles Schwenke officiat- One of the final bills to get narcotics to relieve the chest nounced there he would call a Mrs. Frank Brueske and baby, ' of the Veterans Day parade in throngs ever to attend such a have died. ing. Burial will be in Greenwood Johnson s signature provides Boston, said, "Everybody wants ceremony, partly because col- pains, allowing the former pres- conference next year of gover- 416 W. Howard St. Funeral services will be Cemetery. special federal aid for many ' ident to rest easily. nors of all states bordering on 652 E. Waba- to get in it — everybody s call- lege student leaders in the area Vernon Spitzer, Thursday at 9:30 a.m. at Wat- Friends may call at Johnson victims of Hurricane Betsy in ing me." He estimated that plan to demonstrate Cox said Eisenhower played the Mississippi Eiver to con- to show sider flood sha St. ' kowski Funeral Home and at 10 and Schriver Funeral Home Louisiana, Mississippi and Flor- more than 12,000 would march, their feeling that the draft card golf on a par-three course Mon- control and other Mark Webber , 76 W. 2nd St. at St. Casimir's, the Rt. Rev. from 8 p.m. Wednesday to noon ida. If they qualify for disaster led by servicemen home from burners represent only a narrow day, problems concerning the river. Mrs. Donald Nicolay and officiating. Thursday and at the church loans from the Small Business the war in Viet Nam. fringe of their generation. A par-three golf course is a Rolvaag proposed, in his Hop- Msgr. J. W. Haun kins talk , a four - step water baby, 845 46th St., Goodview. Burial will be in St. Mary's after 1 p.m. Thursday. Administration or Agriculture smaller layout than a regular Mrs. Wayne Erdmann and Department, up to $1,800 of course and each hole is a par conservation program. He spec- Cemetery. L Burt ified a proclamation baby, 202 E. Mark St. the fu- Emmet* principal repayments and inter- three. Because of the shorter outlining Friends may call at HARMONY, Minn. (SpeciaD- Paralyzed Viet the needs for a water conserva- George M. Robertson Jr., 277 Wed- est will be written off the books. distances , there is little need for neral home after 2 p.m. Emrnett L. Burt, 61, died Mon- Damage High wood shots tion program and proposals for E. Wabasha St. nesday. Rosary will be said at .> Soldiers in U.S. , and the course de- . Amund Berge, Rushford, day at 11:20 a.m. at Harmony The special aid ii intended for mands accuracy more than action, appointment of a bi- 3 Wednesday by the church so- Community Hospital shortly Minn. af- hurricane victims who suffered (AP ) strength. partisan committee to prepare cieties and at 8 by Msgr. Haun. ter being admitted. Cause of NEWBURGH, N.Y. - recommendations to Kevin Johnson, 1271 Lakeview losses tor which no commercial In Crash at Fifty-six South Vietnamese the 1967 death was a stroke. insurance was available, such sol- The former president's son Legislature, a statewide Minne- Dr. Mrs. Velma Martin Mr. Burt, an employe of Mor- diers, all paralyzed from the was whisked through a side Mrs. James Keller, Winona , 57 Chi- as damage from flood, high sota water conservation confer- Mrs. Velma Martin , em Implement Co., was born waist down by oattle injuries, door at the hospital. He did not ence and the conference of Mis- Rt. 3. cago, formerly of Winona, died water or wind-driven water. Minnesota City arrived here today for medical Oct. 22, 1904, to Merritt and In the long run the new law talk with newsmen. sissippi River governors. Kevin Allen, Winona Rt. 1. Monday morning after an ill- , A Winona woman received treatment and rehabilitation or- Cora Burt at Waukon, Iowa. He may have greater significance The former president Is con- ness of three weeks. married Jalna Sampson and face cuts and $800 to $1,000 dam- dered personally by President fined to a special suite always While touring the northwest- She was a bailiff for the Dis- the because it authorizes an imme- Johnson. BIRTHS ELSEWHERE couple had lived here 34 years. age to her car when she was kept in readiness while he is ern portion of the state, Rol- trict Court while a resident diate study by the new Depart- They were accompanied by 14 vaag observed 1965 was a dis- He was a member of Greenfield Urban De- visiting the area. ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) — here from 1951 to 1957. Her late ment of Housing and forced off U.S. 61 at the south Vietnamese doctors, nurses and mal year for many area farm- Lutheran Church. velopment to devise a perma- The suite is in one of the hos- Mr. and Mrs. John Mack , Ona- husband. George, was manager limits of Minnesota City Sun- medical corpsmen. pital wings. Military policemen ers. High, water last spring pre- laska, a son Saturday at a La of the Goodview Liquor Store. Survivors are: His wife; two nent plan for protection against vented them sons, day morning, according to the guarded the entrances. Secret from getting into Crosse hospital. The mother is Surviving are: A daughter, Richard and Leslie, Min- uninsurable disasters. the fields. This was followed by neapolis ; three grandchildren Minnesota Highway Patrol. Service men stood by. the former Irene Myrland. Both Mrs. Donald Blake, Winona; a ; "Such a basic study is long a rather dry summer, heavy son, George Martin Jr„ Costa one brother, Wayne. Sioux City, Mrs. C. Robert Stephenson, Elsenhower has been a fre- parents are formerly of Ett- overdue," Johnson said in a Board OKs quent visitor to the golf club. rains during the harvest season Mesa, Calif.; her mother and Iowa, and five sisters, Mrs. statement. 410 W. Broadway, was treated rick. ) He and Mrs. Eisenhower ar- and finally an early killing a brother in Chicago, and her James (Grace Johnson, Decor- for a cut cheek and lip and re- frost. half-sister, Mrs. William Lu- ah, Iowa; Mrs. Ed (Velma) Among the other new laws he rived about 12 days ago. They leased from Community Memor- ' TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS kitsch, Winona. O'Brien, Alliance, Neb., Mrs. signed were ones expanding the Changes in were staying at "Mamie s Cot- been mild and Eisenhower had ial Hospital after the accident tage," a house built for the for- Buffalo Funeral arrangements are be- Donald (Mabel) Larson and federal vocational rehabilitation been playing golf frequently. Lori Ann Burmeister, ) sugar quotas, at 7:45 a.m. mer president and named for City, Wis., 3. ing completed by Hursen, Fu- Mrs. A. (Hazel Bergeson, Mil- program, setting Mattingly said he has been neral Home, Chicago. Burial waukee, and Mrs. Willard, (Ger- increasing by $120 million the She told Highway Patrolman Personnel his wife. This was his "Little checking Eisenhower periodical- Sondra Ann Bork , Fountain Four public schools White House." City, Wis., 10. • will be there. trude) Manthe, San Bernardino, authorized revolving loan fund Nathaniel H. Miller that she was personnel ly and that he considers him la Mary Ann Norton, 551Va Huff Calif. of the Small Business Adminis- driving north on the highway matters were acted on by the The cottage overlooks a fair- excellent condition, . Mrs. Florence Curran Board of Education at its St., 11. Funeral services will be tration and another calling Con- when a southbound car at least meet- way at the famous golf course Eisenhower was in a Denver Mrs. Florence Curran died gress back to work, at noon on ing Monday night. suddenly at a Rochester hospi- Thursday at 2 p.m. at Green- partly in her lane of traffic ap- where the Masters Golf Tourna- hospital for seven weeks fol- field Lutheran Church, the Rev. next Jan. 10. Mrs. Loyal Hoseck was em- ment Is played every year. It lowing his heart attack in 1955. FIRE CALLS tal this noon. peared not to be going to stop. ployed as a part-time secretary • - Survivors include two daugh- Martin Ford officiating. Burial was one of Eisenhower's favor- He spent many additional weeks Today will be in the church ceme- Mrs. Stephenson said that she in the guidance department at ite retreats while he was presi- convalescing before deciding ters, Mrs. C. E. (Mildred) WEATHER swerved to the right and braked a salary of $133 a month for 11:01 a.m. — 530 W. Sth St., Linden, Winona, and Mrs. W. tery. dent. that he was fit to make the race Mrs. Martha Stroinski resi- Pallbearers will be: Charles hard. Her car smashed into a the remainder of the current Doctors said the weather had for a second term in 1956. E. (Marian) Mueller Louisville , OTHER TEMPERATURES school year. dence, overheated range stove, Ky, ; one son, B. D.^ Curran, Deiinstedt, Gerald Roche, Har- High Low Pr. telephone pole, snapping it off. Mrs. Stephenson was wearing stood by until cooled off. Green Bay, Wis., and a sister, old Ihns, Herbert Meyer, Ralph Albany, cloudy 60 39 The resipation of Miss Do- Mrs. A. L. Twesme. Galesville, Yeoman and Milo Afseth. Albuquerque, cloudy 70 43 .. a seatbelt. loris Fix, an elementary teach- Wis. Friends may call at Abraham cloudy ..... 75 55 .. The pole fell across the top of er at Lincoln School, was ac- Atlanta, cepted Funeral arrangements are be- Funeral Home Wednesday after Bismarck, clear .... 37 18 .. the Stephenson car lengthwise , , effective Dec. 22. making a deep crease. Addition- Also accept- ing completed by Burke's Fu- 5 p.m. and at the church Thurs- Boise, clear ..:..... 59 33 -—— Oaks Burglar neral Home. day after 1 p.m. Boston, clear 52 45 .06 al damage was to tbe front and ed was the c L I right side of the car. resignation of dCnOOl Albert Reidt Chicago, clear 59 33 .03 WINONA DAM LOCKAGE Cincinnati, clear ... 67 39 .19 A telephone cable was lying Mrs, Donald NOTICE ALMA, Wis. - Albert Reidt, across the highway for some EUefson at p 61, died Monday at 4 p.m. of Cleveland, cloudy .. 66 36 .20 "OaiQ/%__ r«4 Gets Stay of Flow — 24,500 cubic feet per Denver, cloudy .. . .. 59 23 time after the mishap. Tele- secretary - ac- second today at 8 a.m. a heart attack at Sacred Heart phone company crews made countant i n l —' Hospital, Eau Claire. He had Des Moines, clear .. 54 22 Monday clear 60 30 .06 temporary repairs Sunday and the business office. Mrs. Char- been employed as a construction Detroit, replaced the pole Monday, 4:30 p.m. — Horstense B. In- Fairbanks, clear ... 5 -10 .. along les Russell was hired to fill 20-Year Term gram, 4 barges, up. worker at River Falls, Wis. with a length of cable. the vacancy. He was born Sept. 21, 1904 Fort Worth, cloudy . 66 57 Stay of execution of a 20-year 8:30 p.m. — Tradewinds, 3 Helena, cloudy 43 29 Mrs. Stephenson was taken to In other action, the board barges, up. to Jacob and Eliza Lehman Winona police headquarters by sentence was given a 23-year- Reidt in the Town of Gilman- , cloudy ... 82 73 .30 authorized that three children old Winona man, the father of 9:10 p.m. — Badger, 8 barges, , clear . 70 33 .11 a passing motorist. Police took be excused from attendance ton. He married Adeline Loesel Indianapolis her to the hospital. in three, today in District Court. UP- Jacksonville, clear . 74 55 school because of physical dis- 11 p.m. — L. Wade Childress, Aug. 8, 1959 in Winona. He lived Richard J. Ramer, 121 N. here his entire life. Kansas City, clear . 60 28 ability or retardation. Baker St., had pleaded guilty 14 barges, down. Los Angeles, cloudy 71 55 Payrolls approved were for Small craft—3. Survivors are: His wife; two : Sept. 27 to a charge of burg- brothers, Dwight Louisville, cloudy .. 62 . 48 .21 Homebound teachers, Today Reidt, Rapid cloudy ... 70 53 .03 11,128 ; lary with a tool in connection City , S.D., and Jacob Reidt, Memphis, Texan Changes substitute teachers, $1,224 ; dri- WHEN YOU'RE READY with the entry Sept. 15 of the 2:30 a.m. — Dan C, 6 barges, Miami, clear 78 72 .03 down. Menomonie, Wis., and one step- ver training instructors, $480 ; Oaks Supper Club in Minnesota brother, John Steiner Milwaukee, cloudy . 54 30 , Alma. clear .. 46 18 .. miscellaneous instruction, cleri- City. Two sisters, three brothers and Mpls.-St. P., Plea to Guilty cal, TO TRADE CARS, PICK put Ramer on probation. New York, clear ... 56 45 .21 custodial and other ser- Ramer's court-appointed at- two stepbrothers have died. * Freddie R. Mullins changed vices, $2,074; substitute secre- torney, Harold J. Libera, re- He warned Ramer that his Funeral services will be Okla City, cloudy .71 44 probation officer might require his plea to guilty of armed rob- taries, $246; work study pro- YOUR MODEL peated to Judge Arnold Hat- Thursday at 2 p.m. at Stohr Omaha, clear 51 21 bery Monday afternoon in Dis- gram, $220; cateterla AND that the defendant abstain Phoenix, clear 81 48 supervi- field that his client has had Funeral Home, the Rev. Gene trict Court, and the Texas youth sors , $643 and cafeteria helpers , no previous serious convictions from all alcoholic beverages Krueger, St. Paul and St. Luke Pittsburgh, cloudy . 64 38 .34 was sentenced to up to 20 years $492. and even make him observe a Ptlnd, Me., cloudy .. 47 40 .32 HAVE YOUR DEA LER and that he has been out on United Church of Christ, Alma, with the Youth Conservation Also approved were overtime bail since shortly after his ar- curfew. officiating. Burial will be in Rapid City, cloudy ..40 22 .. Commission CYCC). 44 payments for custodians rest, supporting his wife and However, he reminded Ram- Town of Lincoln Cemetery. St. Louis, cloudy ... 74 Mullins, 17, Dallas, Tex., was clear . 67 32 amounting to $672. CALL US- three children. er that, on probation, he would Friends may call at the fi* Salt Lk. City, scheduled to stand trial on the Assistant County Attorney actually be serving his time neral home Wednesday and on San Fran., cloudy .. 64 55 .03 charge beginning Monday af- Attending the meeting were outside prison. The restrictions Seattle, cloudy 56 46 .21 Board President Lawrence San- Richard H. Darby made no Thursday until time of service. ter he pleaded not guilty to it Yos I Be sure you get best statement to supplement the pre- in prison are now more strin- Washington, clear .68 50 .06 late last month. telman, 1st Ward ; Dr. L. L. DAILY RIVER BULLETIN Korda and Dr, C. R. Kollofski bank-rate financing for that sentence investigation supplied gent than those on probation, Lawrence J. Rotering The youth and his court-ap- , b ^ to Judge Hatfield. Judge Hatfield said. ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - Flood Stage 24-hr. 2nd Ward ; Frank J. Allen Jr. « "^ *^f new or used car, have your pointed attorney, William A. call The judge then sentenced Ra- Ramer agreed. Lawrence J. Rotering, 74, died Stage Today Chg. Lindquist, had contested the 3rd Ward ; Franklin Tillman l-^rtMsU.T dealer us, first. Terms mer to up to 20 years in St. The $2,500 cash bond which suddenly at his home at 12:30 Red Wing 14 3.4 - .1 ' and Daniel Sadowski, 4th Ward, ore always flexible so you can 1 state s charge that Mullins held iv E/_Jb Cloud Reformatory but stayed had been posted by Ramer's p.m. Monday. Lake City 6.7 - . up Elmer G. Wadewltz , Stock- and Dlrector-at-large David F\ ¦ 4 : " fit monthly payments to your father was ordered refunded. He was born July 21, 1891, in Wabasha 12 6.9 - .1 Wynne. execution of the sentence and ton, with a "loaded" pistol. L , budget ... add more of tbe Fountain City to Bernard H. Alma Dam 4.5 It later became apparent that and Mary Rotering. He mar- Whitman Dam ... 2.5 — .3 «J> S L "extras" you'd like. .... 3.5 — .3 there is no difference in the ^ ried Theresa Schlesser Oct. 19, Winona Dam charge of armed robbery wheth- k t£s Extra-fnst , completely confi- 1918, at Our Lady of Perpetual WINONA 13 5.4 - .3 ¦Clark & Clark, Inc. I " "• ¦ dential service , Just ask your Help Catholic ' ... 9.4 er a weapon was loaded or not. Church here. He Trem au Pool dealer to call 2811. OptkL bif. PLYMOUTH farmed in Fountain City Trem'au Dam ... 4.7 — .4 County Attorney S. A. Sawyer 'C. -3 and agreed to the deletion from the Arcadia all of his lifetime. He Dakota 7.7 — .2 KATIOrUb Uwd ctr nanc|-- too? Yes complaint of any reference to fi ( , was a member of the Upper Dresb'ch Pool . .. 9.5 - .2 BANK at only slightly higher rates. CONTACT LENSES Eagle Valley school board many Dresb'ch Dam ... 2.7 — .1 the pistol being loaded, however. % years. La Crosse 12 5.2 — .1 Judge Hatfield ordered a full r Stop In , talk things over.your Stop ht for So Many Eyes post-sentence psychiatric exam- ln at any I,ocal Denier—he is Are Rig Survivors are: His wife; three Tributary Streams equipped handle sons, Willard, LaVerne and Chippewa et Durand 1.6 4- .3 ination for tho youth, who will l^-^-g- ^-j to deal Lloyd , all at home; two daugh- Zumbro at Theilman 28.5 + .4 be transported to the Lino ___ efficientl y through our bank. ^mam\£\mam. ___^M__4TV^___l__k ters, Mrs . Vernon (Rosclla) Trem'au at Dodge . 0.0 — .1 Lakes receiving center of the Burfeind , Buffalo Ridge , and Black at Galesville . 1.6 — .1 YCC for the examination,-* Mrs, John (Carmen) Killian, La Crosse at W. S. 3.9 -I .1 The robbery took place Aug. Arcadia , and seven grandchil- Root at Houston,... 5.0 — .1 22. Mullins confronted Wadewitz dren. Four brothers and two RIVER FORECAST with a pistol In the parking lot sisters have died. ( From Haitlngt to Guttenberg) of Hotel Winona, 3rd and John- Funeral services will be Predicted stages for Winona: son streets. Thursday at 10 a.m. at Our Wednesday 8.3, Thursday and He forced the Stockton man Lady of Perpetual Help Cain- Friday 5.2. to drive nearly to St. Charles olic Church , the Rev. John P. AIRPORT WEATHER before relieving Wadewltz of his ( Trant officiating. Burial will be North Central Observations) car and about $65 ln cash. \is_i?'j_,5?'*_r"> _esw fcjassy in St. Joseph's Catholic Ceme- Max. temp. 40 today at noon, Art You Inturad 2*!U«£.- __-wfeP£^W«5kr tery, Glencoe, rural Arcadia. min. temp. 21 today at 8 a.m., GENERAL GREETED Friends may call at Killian clear sky, visibility 15 miles, Contact lenses have come a long way since they were Funeral Home after 7 p.m. to- wind in calm, barometer 30.30 FT, KNOX , Ky. Ml — Against This? fi rst introduced to the human eye. Now they are wafer day. Rotary will be said at 8 and falling, humidity 53 percent, When Pvt. James Keyser Burglary happens every day, than a dime. In most instances, they and 8:3q today, Father Trant stepped from the bus at Ft. It could Imppen to you. thin and smaller will say the Rosary Wednesday field Lutheran Church, tho Rev. Pro- THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK give you better vision , are undetectable. Even your Knox , ho began wondering tect yourself now with a at 7:30 and 8:15 p.m. and the Martin Ford officiating. Burial what he had done. OF WINONA closest frlonds won 't know you're wearing theml Catholic Order of Foresters will be ln the church cemetery. "right for you" burglary in- Wednesday at 8:45. Pallbearers will be: Larry Waiting to greet him waa surance policy. See ua now. the commanding general 177 Main St. Phona 2811 Dlract A Sava — $45 Pair Hudson, Charles Dennstedt , , — Buy Factory — who presented the Chicago Two-State Funerals Merle Bergey, Arland Hanson, Member Federal Dapotlt Inturanct Corporation Ronald Fishbnuglior and Greg soldier with • cake and a Clark & Clark, Inc. Arnold M. Afteth Erickson. fancy picture album. H. W, Clark F. W. Nana Plymouth Optical Co. HARMONY, Minn, (Special)— Friends may call at Ahruhnm Keyser was the 500,000th soldier to pass through the C, ft, Brown Jr. 78 Watt Third — Ground Floor — Prion* 4222 Funeral services for Arnold Af- Funeral Homo today after 5 leth, rural Harmony, will be p.m. and at tho church Wednes- reception center since Us 117 Cantar St. Phona 3904 i_£i___ffl__KJdJ _ Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Green- day after 1 p.m. activation In October 1056, m J Pruter-Anding Mrs. Robert Jacobs Wabasha Junior Nuptials Held Elected President Glass to Give In Lake City Of Grace Lutheran LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) Play Thursday — St. John's Lutheran Church STOCKTON, Minn. - Mrs. was the setting for the Oct. 30 Robert Jacobs was elected WABASHA, Minn. - The Jun- will present "Court- marriage of Miss Rosemary president when the Ladies Aid ior class Anding to Marvin Prater. ship of Eddie's Father" as its Church met The Rev. T. H. Albrecht o«V of Grace Lutheran class play Thursday at 8 p.m. ficiated. Organist was Gerald Monday evening. at the high school auditorium. Bunkowske and soloist Miss Others elected were Mrs. Da- In the cast are Linda Hollo- Lois Kroger. The latter is of vid Olson, vice president; Mrs. well. Betsy Hennings, Wendee Marquardt, Rochester. secretary; Kennebeck. Mary The bride is the daughter of Leonard Burfeind, Boots, Mary Ellen treasurer; Norma Mr. and Mrs! Mortiz Anding, Mrs. Claude Kratz, Schmidt, Diane Law, Judy Zumbro Falls, Minn. The groom Mrs. Linda Anderson and Mrs. Bruegger, Gretchen Palmen, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Benicke, altar com- Jack Alton, Bernard Wallerich, Chester Pruter, Lake City. mittee; Mrs. Arthur Ledebuhr Bob Bruegger, Mark Kennedy, The bride wore a gown of and Mrs. Ralph Benicke, sick Wayne Johnson, Bill Malone, white brocade with a controlled, committee; Mrs. Gene Schu- and the stars, Jeff Peters, Ed- , bell-shaped skirt, cathedral Elsie Gaulke, 's father, and Curt Dunn, tak- train, macher and Mrs. die romance neckline and LWML delegates, and Mrs. ing the part of Eddie. long sleeves. The bodice had Mrs. Alvin an inset cummerbund Claude Ktitz and with a alternates. double bow at the back, Her Burfetod , The Mmes. Alvin Burfeind, veil of silk illusion fell _ from ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦'¦• •^sm "" r*'*s*."- 'r- :T •• ' ,'?. r.wnit mpiiw^BPwuniwwmawwawamtmatar:i ^-:v. x> ". .•.^avmw -..-.r.w.-rf.y.,- .-.;.•>¦ ¦: 7.7 ..y.v.-J.yf.Ty.&mam;.*.'.' ¦;.; _ •¦vwWvtt^-WX-- - ¦vr- _w*fe*v. s( Ray Ledebuhr, Gaulke and Ol- Call the a flat petal flower of silk and MEMBERS OF NEW FRATERNITY . . . committee lace, embroidered in pearls and Diane Klasse, Mrs. Lyman Judson, Miss An- son will serve on the Participating in impressive weekend events, gelyn deGroot, Miss Kathy Heiller, Mrs. for , the Christmas party Dec. 13. ¦ brilliants. She carried a bou- «S*S!S~*>WS:::>'' f 'iyy '«wmtmaMmmms *a*mmm_>_ Priced From McCall's. 54^0" wide. faffi. SffirtS_?& ^ °" ™ ^ after the program. Mrs. Leo BAZAAR ITEMS . . . Mrs. Alvin Relyea, left zanne Petersen. The tea table , holds up «• wide - $1.98 value flannel m «* newest F. Murphy Sr. poured at the a Christmas centerpiece to be sold at the Holiday Fest was decorated with a bouquet Values to $6.98 yd. Now only ... now only ... fall colors . . . only so tea table, which was centered Saturday at Taylor American Lutheran Church. Others ad- of pink Killarney roses. by an arrangement of white miring the centerpiece and other handmade items are, from A scroll and two pink roses mums, flanked by red tapers in left, Mrs. W. H. were a gift from the St. Cloud _^y hobnail crystal holders, Winkler, Mrs. Morris Casper and Mrs. Selmer *¦ ? chapter, the first Minnesota $1.97 99c 29c Hulett. ( Photo by Mrs. David Lunde) * * chapter of Alpha Xi Delta. Mrs. Arthur Kitt, an adviser, pre- Taylor Holiday sented a floral bouquet to the Fest Set initiates. Phi Sigma Epsilon j uef iupwu) fraternity gave a floral bouquet and greetings. Delta Zeta Sor- sale For Saturday at Church ority sent a silver serving dish sale sale 30-DAY POSITIVE MONEY TAYLOR, Wis with their congratulations. Num- .. .hfpm.ni . (Special) - year's Holiday Fest Immediate- erous greetings and congratula- * «JS*y-J sheath BACK GUARANTEE II Holiday Fest, an event of ly following the previous one. » _= -J-L-!-LL-Vprime importance tions were received from other .ph.M.ry malarial -=- to the women The circles have regular work- chapters of Alpha Xi Delta, as ZZ? linings of the Taylor area , will take shops throughout the year, pre- Now the largest selection i"6-1 buy when you get ° Automatic Tlckat Prlnteri well as other local Greek or- ' place Saturday. paring articles to be sold. Many ganizations, and clubs on cam- in this area . . and «" ~ THE ANNUAL pre-Christmas cordSoy^W lllches ^ «*« Cortland's of the items are made in the pus. All the clubs and the facul- just about all colors and wjde( wery yanj __ wash to choose^ from. In our QUALITY JEWELERS DOERER'S festival sale is sponsored by the homes by individuals and some ty were Invited to the recep- PHONB MU Taylor American patterns to choose from. fast... in lota of colors. Mankato Avenue Church Wom- of the articles are originals. tion. l's to 6's. en and is held In the church 64* wide. shoppe only . . . basement, where the dining room is attractively decorated UP yd Discriminating Brides-To-Be S1 .98 * Mankato Avenua for Christmas. Coffee is served ^ "-w-#29C throughou t tho SHOPPE ONLY ^" - . . . always choose the Soclal- afternoon, begin- .^ Y^"~ ~-5$>< ning at 2 p.m. at 4:30 p.m. a NERVE DEAFNESS ,y Correct Wedding Stationery f__* _4fl£ \\ Sc _l G0LD Swiss-steak dinner is served. MIRACLE EAR \'lfl j^fJs/^-\V!^Pr ff 'rom our 8elocUSILVERon °' PLAIN , The event is open to the public. - Each Sunday School ^ ^ a^^hds ^ or EM- room ia ^^^^^^^^^ XW > designated as a special booth, <«^ BOSSED, Liturgical and II you htor sounds, 11 you hear 5^»^^^^^5^__| I m"hlm ln one are Festive Foods, in- ^ /Cifi! _^_^__ l "wln* people talk - but you hw» cJIffl- i sale \ ^__Slifc ' vHIl sale ^* \_2sS___rT__| Drkle-Edged designs. cluding lefse, sweet soup, Nor- culty understanding tha worda. It ~* i_„J \Wi^j uits^ ___Pr^ i IV 1''HirwifflllH Mra Hl wegian cakes, cookies, etc. In you Isisve head ooltaa-rlnglnfl In \-CJy*"_M_7_~U-^f . " l l l M l 'tnprinted Ida oar - your trouble may ba Jx '^rl ,^y?iML\Ssllmmaammmm\ values to SPECIAL ribbons and \ "'V -^^jSaK? • Stationery Gay Gifts, aprons, dish towels, ntrva daalnasi. Tha moat Impor- *c^j^>-CC _J____" v ______H ^ ^-' l^H ™ tote bags, bedroom slippers, lint ttilng yov can do today Is te W______. \______H ^ v/^^v- • Combination Gift Bor«s find out how Mlraclt Ear htlp _d2_^_^_^_L_^_^_^_^_l sioc yard. New eie-t-ic portable laces ^ purses, etc., will be offered. A you now Evtry (.taring loss It yfl HH HHH I Imprinted Matchbooka Tots, Toys nnd Togs dllletant. Wa have a hearing aid This is always a sewing machine!. Large selr-cUrm • room will to h«lp avary correctlbl* loss Sea Coma In — Phona or Writ* Or yw contain play outfits, slippers, II tht Miracle Ear will hup you...... popular sale at the Christmaii wpf,iy nm Invliatlon* rsmo-ably A()() ,he benuty 0, gpfy ^ your blouses , mittens , doll clothes * • • ' Johnirud. La CrosM/Winona j Cinderella Shoppcs. ( Downtown CinforrtU priced Irom $B nnd furniture. MODEL OF NEW _•» #%_* clnl table setting with our at- H..rln« Aid Carrtar. All great fabrics . ., ^P Shopp* only. t p ar hundred and up ... The Yulctide Shop will be MINIATURE HE\R1NG _B39 I- ...-..-.,., \ tractive Holiday Napkins. \ Ba« fll -L4 Croata stocked with Christmas decora- AID GIVEN | Main St. - Winona yn ffc yd. Guaranteed for 25 years. IA tions and eentcrprieccs and in A mo»t unique tret otter ot ipa- ! _/Q Pf Uat iisiim ' NOTE—WE Home Furnishings, such articles del Interest to thott who hear but j ~«w- . GIVE ONE DAY SERVICE do not i>nd«ritartd words, hat lust [ j as pillowcases, quilts, rugs and boars announced by Dahltwrg Elee- j i trays will be sold. tron'fe. Inc. A true lit* non-op- j ADDRESS I THE CHURCH women esti- erattng model, actual ilia replica ' j ol the urtallest Dahlberg ever j j YES, WE SERVICE SEWINQ MACHINES. FOR THE BEST IN mate that several hundred made, will be given away free •o | ; SEW- anyone imswarlng Ihla advertise- ,' CITY *TAT« ! items will be on display, prob- men). Wear-test It In th* privacy INS MACHINES SEE THE BERNINA AUTOMATIC FREE All E. Sanborn WINONA Phbne 4977 J j ARM SEWINQ ably more than at any previous ol your own home without cost or • j obllosHon o* any Kind. ,.., i FREE BRIDE'S BOOK Fest. j w MACHINE AUTHORIZED DEALER. "ir'a voim* F« _e IO Ke.r>" t j Work begins on the next .._. . -VjnTmTia-TTr-ATysaftagT.fcar-ij.nJsrpinan1. son, N.J., who was to address a away," Weekley told officials at storm, with what the Weather AIR CRASH national Methodist meeting the hospital where he was taken Bureau termed moderate show- (Continued From Page 1) here. in nearby Covington, Ky. irs spiced by lightning. The Weather Bureau said the airport approach, said Clarence Wilson, He also was being tracked on Mrs. Horowitz in New Jersey. The pilot and his first officer supervisor were veteran fliers. Capt. Dan- It was American's first fatal dad a 1,500-foot ceiling at the of the Federal Avia- radar. The plane disappeared crash since March 1, tion Agency at Cincinnati, Aboard the plane, but not iel Teelin 46. had 20 years of 1962, when time. from the radar at 7:02 p.m., 22 among the survivors, were two 95 persons died after a Boeing meaning he had the field In minutes after its scheduled service with the line and was a The pilot was making a visual sight. men from television station superintendent of flying at New 707 Astrojet dived Into the water landing time. WPIX in New York. They were York's La Guardia Airport, shortly affer taking off from Jack F. A. Plynn, 44, son of F. where the flight originated. New York. M. FTynn, president and pub- It was the second crash of a lisher of the New York Daily His first officer, Capt. William J. O'Neill. 39, had been with 727, a fairly new Boeing air- News, which owns tbe station, plane designed for medium- and John Kirchstein, 29. Flynn American 14 years after flying with another airline. range jet service and capable of was tbe station's national sales carrying 100 passengers. It went manager, Kirchstein its re- Weekley, also a veteran pilot, CLOS into service in February 1964. ttn E was not

^^^8-_B / Jewish Rabbi Plainview Woman 98 $ —SHOES BY— 98 KICKERINO $Q y\ Injured in Crash To Address i7 HEEL HUGGER SHOES FOR _ BBL YA ^ I" PLAINVIEW, Minn. — A rural Church Women NATURAL BRIDGE X MMm\ Plainview woman, Mrs. Paul IlllSUr Y little.w mm mmu m m ._,.. A,_e X mmm\Wa\ TEACHING PIJUNVIEW, Minn. (Special) Never before in King's Optical Hufory have^ we offered so SMART AIRE V^ Hyne, received a broken leg in _W\^_^_^^_^^_^M_ ^______¦} — Rabbi Joseph Schachter of ¦ | SB If ^fl -^^^^ k much for so Think of it, American made National nai B'rith group of Ro- a one-car accident about 10 the B' B ¦ 1 H ______^ Branded frames, complete with Single Vision top quality

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On Our B«»t Fully Querwieed WATER SOFTENER. | or Your Money Back y_l|Vi tlAy J I Spartans HE MAY BE VIKINGS' STARTER Yes, Winona First for Opp ortunity Open to Osborn Legion Won see Mason retained hl» Viking MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL ing a sharp turn on a wide lin said of Osborn, "and I'm said. "We'll know when we the movies what I should have leadership despite a poor day Whether the participants know It or not conversation Third Week (AP)—Rookie Dave Osborn of sweep. sure we're going to see a lot of . a done." . He has gained 493 yards by Winona Daily and Sunday News Executive Editor Gordon By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cando, N.D., and the University Coach Norm Van Brocklin him in the future. He doesn't Sunday Osborn is just gutty enough carries (4.3 average) to R. Closway and Len Dorsch set off a statewide search for Michigan State, Arkansas, of North Dakota may get the hopes Mason will be available, have the greatest hands in the Brocklin without on 115 , to impress Van ' yards on 90 Information, recently. Nebraska and Notre Dame biggest opportunity of his foot- but he admitted Monday that world for catching the ball, but bringing the wrath of the Dutch- Bill Brown s 428 Dorsch had mentioned to Closway that even though most gorging themselves on touch- ball life next Sunday. nothing will be known until late he fights you." man down on his head. tries (4.8). downs as if trying to outstrip He may be the Minnesota in the week. Mason is almost Once in Sunday's game, Os- 's injury is worry- Fran Tarkenton's passing sta- people didn't remember or believe it, Winona had won (he , continued to pace While Mason show 110 _ _ each other Vikings' starting halfback sure to be slowed, at any rate. born was the ball carrier on a ing the Vikings, the Colts have tistics for eight games y <~ - —» »-^-^--_-~^*<^>-~_-- — state American Le- the national rankings today in in 196 attempts for gion baseball against the Baltimore Colts, After Mason went out of the wide play. He tried to run something to fret about, too. completions C / fjF ^JB *ea~ \ cham- The Associated Press college ,766 yards and 12 touchdowns. ( ! leaders of the National Football Rams game early in the third around some defenders and got Quarterback Johnny Unitas 1 *-•» * W^ ^^SM __ ji pionship in 1931 . football poll. ' ' Paul Flatley has caught 31 of ^ League s Western Division. quarter, Osborn came on to gain smeared for . a loss. Van Brock- sprained his back in Sunday s V m\^yMr> ' Not only that , but The Michigan State Spartans , Regular halfback Tommy 48 yards in nine carries, includ- them for 550 yards, Brown 27 „ ¦ V P for their lin thought Osborn should have game at Chicago and a Balti- \ ¦'^'?^— x_-' he had a newspaper who crushed lowa 35-0 Mason tore some ligaments in ing a 21-yard touchdown sprint, cut sharply to the inside behind more spokesman said Monday for 393, Mason 16 for 271 and ¦ ¦ " ' ¦ '¦ ; eighth straight victory, extend- \ •u'S ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ;#«f%_(^_r%iP_P» ( c]iPPThein8 to prove it. his right knee in the Vikings' .That gave him 100 yards in 18 his blockers, and let the young the injury is bothering Unitas Red Phillips 14 for 171. > j| J ed their No. 1 position to the field goals and { ^bi?w5«iK^\Uf I V ( paragraphs 27-22 victory over the Los An- rushes for the season, a 5.6 halfback know it. more than he will let on. Fred Cox' 13 ' third week by polling 32 of the conversions for 69 points :^;i':;fe ; ¥rVI\l W j stated that the club, geles Rams here Sunday and his average. Osborn was unruffled. "He And Colt linebacker Don Shin- 30 J 1 51 votes of a special panel of status for the C "He's a great competitor." lead the club, with Mason next *--•—-—• *——— coached by the late . olts game is thought I should have cut, but nick is out of the game with sports writers and broadcasters cloudy. He hurt the knee mak- Viking Coach Norm Van Brock- I decided to go outside," Osborn at 48 and Brown third with 42. Andy Lipinski , went to the finals of the regional meet at Park Arkansas , with 14 firsts , re- a broken arm. River , N.D., before losing a tough 4-3 decision to Milwaukee , mained the Np, 2 team after a Wis., County Post. 31-fl rout of Rice while Nebras- Ethnically speaking, it was a select final. All but one ka, with four No. 1 votes, clung Milwaukee player was Polish as were most Winonans. to third on a 42-6 triumph over Familia r Names Kansas. Notre Dame had the biggest ' No doubt, you remember most of the Winona players. field day of the leaders , trounc- Yanks They were the late Mark Klonowski , Mose Bambenek , Henry Webb Claims ing Pittsburgh 69-13, and must- Kluzik , Dorsch, Irv Gappa, Ches Wieczorek, Lambert Kowa- ered a challenge to Nebrask a lewski, Joseph Janikowski , Dan Glubka , George Lipinski , for the No. 3 position . The Irish Leonard Speck , Harold Happel , Joe Cierzan and Dan Micha- collected the other first-place lowski. vote. And the group had many chuckles over the fact that The standings are arrived at pitcher Klonowski threw to a catcher who was his nephew. on the basis of points , figured on (AP) PowerLooking to the Yankee future, RetuLOS ANGELES - The rn "Thisto is the jet age and base- _ lace Dorsch did the receiving — and he was older than his uncle. a formula of 10 for _i first-p World Series should be played ball ought to adjust to it. Webb predicted that New York , nine for second and on Well, we took all this into consideration and then, because selection without the interruption of a day "A Series that is stretched out second baseman Bobby Rich- down the line. off for travel. ardson Vill^ not be around next Winona had hosted the 1965 state Legion meet, we checked Michigan State's point total all those days gives the pitchers During the season, pitchers itch- year. state records because we couldn't recall a city championship. was 482, compared with 459 for an unfair advantage. And p should pitch every fourth day ing is 80 per cent of the differ- "We offered him $60,000 to No Record Arkansas, 406 for Nebraska and lay this year. And there's a 381 for Notre Dame. and should not be rested to point ence in a short series." p Sure enough, Minneapolis North Side was listed officially for a particular game. Webb, once a pitcher in the funny thing about that," Webb as champion. That team had beaten Winona 14-13 for the title. The Top Ten, with first-place who season rec- The New York Yankees may old Pacific Coast League, thinks related. "Richardson, We talked it over with Maurice Godsev and he searched votes in parentheses, and his ords and total points : be in dire trouble, but they have it nonsense not to make the wants to be a preacher, the Winona records. All he found was a brief 1. MICH. STATE (32) 8-0...482 the organization to return to pitchers work every fourth day. wife thought over the $60,000 a mention in 1931 post minutes that a protest 2. ARKANSAS (14) 8-0 459 power. few days. "Too much rest and they get he had been filed and Winona won the state . 3. NEBRASKA (4) 8-0 .. •• .406 Such are the candid opinions "He came to us and said So Godsey wrote to state secretary Frank (1) of Del E. Webb, former co-own- rusty. Whitey Ford, early in his wasn't worth that much. Maybe 4. NOTRE DAME 6-1 . 381 found this out. And they Momsen. Late last week he received this 5. ALABAMA 6-1-1 . 288 er of the Yankees and a man career, $40,000 or $45,000. He said he should understand they are ex- answer: 6. SO. CALIF. 5-1-1 . 240 who, in the process of amassing didn't want to appear to be dic- 7. UCLA 5-1-1 170 a personal fortune of millions, pected to pitch nine innings — tating terms, but maybe we " We are replying in a separate letter to or more if necessary." you concerning the dispute which arose fol- 8. TENNESSEE 4-0-2 96 has been active in baseball for could give the $15,000 or $20,000 ' and keep lowing the close ot the 1931 American Legion 9. MISSOURI 5-2-1 .... .- .. . 94 40 years or more. to some worthy cause 10. KENTUCKY «-2 • • 73 him in mind for a scouting job state baseball tournament. I have -searched Webb, whose construction and or something later on." the baseball file and the Winona Post file hotel empire spans the country, and the Americanism file, and can't find any Chargers Running Off was talking with friends in Las Webb pointed out what has correspondence whatsoever on this situation. Dorsch With Statistical Gems Vegas, Nev,, at the recent $100,- been said all year about the However after a very careful search of the 1931 issues of 000 Sahara Golf Tournament, Yankees — Mickey Mantle has , ) The Minnesota Legionnaire, I have come up with this : NEW YORK (AP - As the one of his diversions. bad legs and an injured shoul- American Football League sea- ". . . The State Tournament was held at Stillwater that "If a World Series goes seven der, Whitey Ford can't go on son heads into the home stretch , games, it should be played in forever, Roger Maris has inju- year , and Minneapolis-North Side Post was at that time in the the San Diego Chargers appear Tenth District, and heat Winona, 14-13, for the championship. seven days," Webb declared. ries, Richardson will probably certain to run off with most of "This business of stretching it retire ... the team statistical honors, if A Protest Lodged ¦ to nine or 10 days is obsolete, "But they have the organiza- __.! " _. _!_.'___ _._._. _. __. _. ¦ _. ._ l_ "ai . . . SomewhereO along- the line11 , a protest must have1 been not the league championship. something that goes back to the tion to come back. They'll just The Chargers have averaged Page 12 lodged, because we find that A. B. Kapplin, department com- years when teams had to travel have to work at it," Webb con- ¦ ¦ ; - 356.4 yards per game for nine - ' " . ::H____BR^:^BW: '>-'-.-:"^- -":- : -::„::-:-::,_> mander, called a meeting in St. Paul, involving the prin- • J M RH -W ^.^' :" by railroad. Tuesday, November 9, 1965 cluded. outings as compared to second- WINDSHIELD FOR SUPER cipals, on Aug. 8, and it was determined that North Side had SAM ... England's entry place Houston's 307.1-yard aver- In the Washington, D.C. International doesn-'t care played with one Ineligible player. A replay on Aug. 10 was age for eight games. The margin to have rain on his nose. He worked out in a ordered. is not as decisive in the defen- light drizzle here Mon- BATTEY HAS ". . . Apparently this became rather involved, and Winona sive figures, which show San day in preparation for the Thursday race and wore his spe- ' cially made raingear — a clear plastic hood. had to replay Marble, and won, 12-5. Ap- ______Diego has given up 224.8 yards "Puffer" TAX WORRIES ammaa" per game. Johnson rode the English entry during Super Sam' patently Hinckley was elevated to represent RBE^** Kansas City is next s workout. Oasis Ties 9th the Tenth District in its bracket and was HHP with an average of 237.6 yards. (AP Photofax) FROM 1962 beaten by the St. Paul Juniors, 13-3. In Min- _-. . ST. PAUL MV-Minnesota ^R[ '^' neapolis, Preston-Crichton team then defeated ^ ¦ f >j| THAT'S HANKINSON Twins catcher Earl Battey St. Paul, 3-2, and in the finals, Winona defeat- ^^Rb'^ _W Deacon Just With 1.066 Tilt indicated Monday that he ed Minneapolis-Preston-Crichton Post 8-5, and ^HB . » 774 behind 211 from Norm Ban- expects to work oat an in- was declared the department winner, and to Oasis Bar-Cafe moved into a PflEl"' y ninth place tie in team game icki and 561 from Rich Chuch- , '^^SL come Ux matter with the represent the department in the regional tour- < > t *\ behind 1,066 in the Hal-Rod na. nament. • ¦ J * «•> "• Can' State of Minnesota. ' t Like City League Monday night. Go Getters — Eleanor Han- ". . . The regional tournament was held Gophers Led by 237 from Gordy Ad- The state Tax Department Great son's 179—452 led E.B.'s Corner at Park River, N.D., Aug. 14-15. Winona won charged Battey with not fil- dington, the quint tied the to- to 885-2,498. the first game over Cooperstown , N.D., Aug. Kowalewskl tal posted by Fenske Body Shop ing a state income tax re- 14, and lost to Milwaukee, 4-3, on the 15th. QB Tarkenton in the Hal-Hod Retail League RED MEN'S: Mondaynite - tarn for 1962, alleging the Doerer's shot 2,774 behind 524 "... To the best of our ability, we have tried to list the LOS ANGELES (AP)-David Sept. 22. baseball star's salary that names of the players in the box score. ( ) Other members and their from Henry Fegre. Roy Nel- Deacon Jones, whom the Los year was $27,082. "... Seems that they had a little different system of scor. Yardage scores were : Joe Monahan 211, son's 205 paced Sunbeam to 960. Gainer Angeles Rams think is the best "I plan to discuss it with Ing and I was not able to get the exact positions these boys MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - John Joe Holmberg continues to defensive end in the National Carl Fischer 203, John Drazkow- Football League, is delighted ski 196 and Jim Klein 174. The HAL-ROD: Park-Rec Jr. Girls the tax people," Battey said. played, but here is the list of players: Hankinson, who for the second lead the rushing with 347 yards ^Carol Lilla with 144 and Mary LIPINSKI KOWALEWSKI he won't see quarterback Fran team had a 45-pin handicap. He said he had not re- straight season is re - writing tn 105 attempts for a 3.3 aver- Leaf with 263 two-game set led GAPPA HAPPEL age, while Hankinson's six Tarkenton of the Minnesota Vik- Ken Praxel's 587 paced Lina- ceived the complaint by the Minnesota Gophers' pass- ings again this season. han's to 2,815 and Earl Kane All-Stars to 1,224. Wildcats belt- Monday, but said he knew WIECZOREK KLUZIK touchdowns top the scoring list ed 641. ing records, now is a virtual "That man always gives me flipped 519 errorless . ¦ about it. He would make no KLONOWSKI GLUBKA with 36 points. and all the rest of us trouble certainty to write his name in , " In the VFW League at Hal- other comment, other than BAMBENEK DORICH Last missed Monday 's light said the 6-5, 250-pound Jones, "... and there is one we can't find for sure, but in the the school's books as the great- Rod, Joe Stolpa leveled 210-211- New York Jet fullback Matt to say he had no plans to Gopher practice with a swollen recalling Sunday's game in Min- 193—613 for Wason' Snell was named rookie of the hire an attorney to repre- box score, it is written as . . . HMRSKI. est yardage s. Jack Swin- gainer in history. knee, but he is expected to be nesota. son tipped 220 for Vets Cab and Year in the AFL in 1964. sent him in the matter. "Actually I am very happy that you brought this to our Tarkenton led the Vikings to With two games to go, Han- ready for Saturday's game at Bub's took team honors with 1,- attention so that we can set up our permanent records cor- Purdue. Defensive back Tom a 24-13 victory. kinson has gained 1,310 yards 021—2,888. X rectly. Apparently in setting up the permanent records some- Sakal remains doubtful with The Deacon, from South Caro- SUNNY BROOK OISTILURY CO.. CHICWMTI, OHIO. BLEWOCDWHISKEY 80 PROOF. 85% CRAIW HtUTRAL «P1MT». rushing and passing. The Min- one found only the final score of the original tournament at two broken fingers, but all lina State, recalled the dou- Helen Nelson led the distaff side when she ripped 194-195- , nesota record, set by Paul Giel other Gopher hands are ble lateral when Tarkenton, Stillwater and did not pursue it further. I have now made 170—559 errorless for Watkins this correction in our book. I haven't the least idea who launch- in 195 1, is 1 ,473. healthy. trapped, flipped the ball to his center, Mary King in the Westgate Pin ed the protest or what in the world it might have been. That means that Hankinson ¦ Mike Tingelhoff , who in needs only 163 yards in his fi- turn unloaded the ball to full- Topplers League. New Regulations nal two games — against Pur- LAKE CITY FETE back Bill Brown, who ran for a Betty Englerth shot 208—535 "Incidentally , in going through the files in the basement, due and Wisconsin — to wipe LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) touchdown. for Main Tavern, Homernik's It is obvious that some protest came up out the All-America Giel's rec- — The Lake City Chamber of "That 'play' won't work 942 and Lakeside Citgo 2,605. somewhere , because the athletic committee ord. Commerce will sponsor a ban- against anybody but us," said a Irene Gostomski combed 533, came up with recommendations very closely quet to recognize the Lincoln rueful Jones. Irene Bronk 522 and Audrey Go- Hankinson, drafted last year "But you can expect anything ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ I^^^^^HMK governing the method and the limits In pro- High football team, Hiawatha recki 502. -K^utf^;3^_^_^B_Ha^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^B as a future by the Minnestta Valley League champions, from Tarkenton. He might lat- testing games for future tournaments. This Vikings , has averaged 164 yards eral the ball to a fan," the good- WESTGATE: Alley Gators - __l_H^__EHP^iil!l^_l_l_l_l_Hll would indicate that the protest was launched coaches and school officials. It per game so far , and needs to will be held at the Terrace Sup- natured giant continued. Arlene Kessler waxed 520 for __H_SHKmljHPifeM ^m_p5iH__^_H sometime after the tournament , which would ^^¦HRypC 'ii§f§B______average only half that in each "They say a quarterback Fenske Body Shop. Sue Plait's jft_^ _». air mwJm___\__\\\\\____\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\_\ per Club. The tentative date is -^-^-^-^-^-^-^.H-^W ^ K r have been held July 26-27-28." of the Gophers' last two games Nov. 22. can't 'scramble* in this league. 197 paced Curley's Floor Shop _^_Effl^^ _^**lt_^ Ma\Wa^aa\\\\\\ So you see , Winona did win a Legion to break Giel's mark. But he's been in the league to 909—2,576. Betty McDonald m\\\\\\\\\\m\a ^aY$mm\:>Z5£'' WH&lr ¦!m '^SP!IP^__il__^_i state baseball championship. And it's a good Hankinson already has broken five years and he's still scram- toppled 500 for Mohan's Win- ^_^_!_^_H_!imP^_E*3 PN£______I?^ "^^^^SIwS-^-B i thing Len Dorsch remembered It or Leon the school passing yardage rec- bling. " dow. ______f$&r%'- _sfTj__fl_|______*' )¦' ¦ y ¦ _? _fl_^_^_^_^_^_h_ ^^^maamammmW J. Wetzel Post No. 9 would have had the , Jones recalled a game against —¦ ^^^^^^^^______KMxi*:¦<***i\> - __]__i__^__^__^__k* _ ^ ^^MmmaVtt&mmmmmmm' .^22B%ammmmmmaa, ord for one season with 1 175 . Ladles Esther Kelm with ______£&***-«• _8^H___^_^_H? ?.!!BM__^__^__i honor go unrecorded. Wieczorek He broke his own mark of 1 ,084 the Vikings last year. 182 and Mary Jo Grulkowski ^______&&|K„'** __^H__^__^__^Hs<^^ •&%&______% Funny what those quick conversations will turn up some- set last year. "I chased him three times. with 515 paced Grulkowski 't Twice I fell down. Finally on Beauty Shop to 898—2,568. __^__HG_& ¦EPP '^ ttmes , isn it? Gopher statistics after eight the third time I got him. But he tf *^ma\a\\\\\\\\ games show Hankinson with 89 Community — Ray McNally's __^__^B_i* \\\\Wy^ $ :3_iH__H threw the ball into the end zone ^ ' ^^^^^^^^^^ H MRW \ TJW _ma\\MWw _ _/ N__v'\l_^__l__^__^__^__^__^__^_B completions (another school 542 shoved Frickson s Auction- _^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^H^J_-LTV _*_* ' _TBV ^ w 1 *M_k?4^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_H for a touchdown." ^^^^^^ ¦ K^. IT _ record) in 173 attempts for the eers to 981 while Ray Ruppert Q nil7 * '\_/ \_wv! ^-H_J^-^-^-^-^-^-^_B APPROVED 1 , 175 yards and seven touch- was tagging 208 for Sunbeam, downs. He has had 12 aerials which tipped 2,782. intercepted. Wildcats Win in WINONA AC: Monday - _^_^H-B1 Schlitz Beer recorded 1,010—2,- '^ii-HflS-^-^H Flanker Km Last ha* taken ^^^Eiri£iil_Mt(^_^_l_^_^_H Deer Hunting ! over the Gopher pass reception ^_^_^_G_L-L-_^_-Vi^__^_Bi^_^_^_^_^_^_^H lead with 20 catches for 295 Bio Ten Runoff ^^^ ¦B_B_ ^_K :^-_H_I_^_^_^_^_^_I ! yards. Anion Brown — who MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -North- ^PHIIH_^kt»^l_K______j i-nught 8 in the 27-22 victory western, led by the defending over Northwestern Saturday — individual champion, won the has 1!) receptions for 274 yards Big Ten cross country title Mon PARKA day with 40 points. i while Kent Kramer has caught ! Runners from eight conference Ifl . for 223. schools competed in mid-30s Regular $4.95 $^ *m *m temperatures over the four-mile Now course at the University of Min- Mm. J # MOTORCYCLE nesota golf course. Finishing behind the Wildcats New 8mOOthne88! Ultra-smooth! That's new Get your Doer Slugs Tags, Blaze Orange Capt, Sunny , • REPAIRS in order were Michigan State 65 -, ,| - . Brook. An extra proc- Glovet, Jackets, Coveralls — all your Hunting points, Minnesota, defending NCW mildness! • ess rounds off its edges, bright- ens its taste. Needs al Lowest Possible Prices at th* • PARTS champion, 82; Wisconsin M , KT - _ t So smooth, it wis Iowa 107, Ohio State 132, Illinois INCW enjoyment ! voted tops among,n 6783 people ,1»m ,

¦*^^>»^^*^ Let's assume you've decided to join the millions of people : Part Time Ire) —! —¦ ¦ " —1— ¦—¦ ' - —» Ti_TiT-r - — ^¦^^*^ ^^^^»^^¦i*^ >«¦ ¦ ,~^*»*^*>^»«^>^*-^W^w^K-fc_l_M_M_>_a-»-_»_Wfc-»-P-W I i _—__—¦—_——-——_» who hope to brighten their financial future through stock "rTMTir^^y^^- ; 1T~TT~^ - ^*^^^' ^^ ^^ WINTERIZE YOUNO MAN with car can earn 11.80- M.D. By Dal Curti$ $2.50 per hour. Write Warren 0. Lee, ownership. Perhaps you have a specific goal in mind—a re- REX MORGAN, 311 Losey Blvd. So., La Cross*, Wis. tirement fund, or money for a child's education, or a second YOUR CAR income to buy some of the luxuries that make life more pleas- While you shop ant. Where do you go from there? How do you choose a Train for PRINTING brokerage firm? • We'll add Anti-Freeze to Hand ¦ ° ^V Composition • • • . test to 34 Below Linecasting and Presswork Many investors look for a firm that displays the sign, "Mem- • Check for Hose Breaks ber New York Stock Exchange." There are some 3,500 mem- • Check Fan Belt Write ° ber firm offices and probably one near you. • Check Exhaust System GRAPHIC ARTS Only $2.87 _ • • • Technical School As p otential Investor, you might be interested to know that Oifer expires Sat., Nov. 13. every member f irm is subject to the Exchange's many rules and ^Charge It" for Catalog. regulations. Approved for Veteran Training For example, Exchange rules require that a member firm 1104 Currie Ave., Minneapolis maintain adequate capital, have an annual surprise audit by TEMPO its independent public accountant and submit financial in- Miracle Mall formation to the Exchange periodica lly. j NANCY By trnie Bushmiller Hours 9-9 Mon. thru Sat. Large restaurant ln Winona r Sunday 1-6 • • # has opening for young man In addition, tht registered representatives(some 33,000 bro- TO LEARN COOKING kers employed by member firms) are subject to Exchange regu- Business Services 14 lations, too. In fact, before they could act as brokers in member SMALL ENOINE Age 18-25. Steady year SERVICE & REPAIR firms, they had to meet Exchange standards for knowledge of Fast - Economical around employment, good tbe securities business. R0BB BROS. STORE 57e E. 4th Tel. 4007 chance for advancement. • • • Apply in person Once you've chosen a broker, a good way to "break the ice" is to discuss your investment goal. For good current Hunters! yield with relative safety, you might examine dividends fro m Have Otto make Minnesota State preferred stocks or interest from bonds. For long-term capi- you some good venison Employment Service tal growth, common stocks might be best for you. Also, sausage or bologna. 163 Walnut St. though dividends are never certain , a company may increase PRESTON LOCKERS them as prolits rise. Preston, Minn. Tel. 765-3849 Help—Male or Female 28 | | | | |__—• ~"" -"^ *^^ maaam*^^ w—' / _r/X-'ZiMm\\\\\\\\\\\I «P '*«* »» »»•««¦« ™"*« I T**^* . U». | WW- -y I • • * ^____ FRY COOK-full or part-time, evening Whatever ynur goal , consider investing only money that's wor k . Apply In parson, no phone calls. MARY WORTH By Saunders and Ernst Plumbing, Roofing 21 Shorty's Bar Cafe . lefl after y ou' ve p rovided for living expenses and an emergency i fund. { The Monthly Investment Plan is a systematic way to 'flM_i_H_H_H_M_nSS9_R_S9_HMMH_B_MI HE • for sale ^ . Good Income from connecting " Septic Tank & Cesspool bowling alley Included . Write D-92 Finally , ask your broker for his opinion. He won 't alway S*' Dally News. be ti ght, but he may point out a new direction for you to Cleaning Service Special truck. Sanitary & Odorlns i consider. G. S, WOXLAND CO. | • • • Rushlord, Minn. Tel. 844-911] Openings For Men Sensible investing could make a wonderfu l difference In your ' to handle distribution of life. I lint I N why it is so important to know that there Jerry s Plumbing ure right M7 E. 4lh Tal. and wrong ways to go about it. 9JI4 dairy and meat product* on established rural Help Wantad—Female 26 miles Own vour share of American business routes in SE Minnesota. MARK TRAIL By Ed Dodd PART-TIME WAITRESS and kllchan An excellent opportunity for help. Uncls Ctrl's Oaks. the farmer or mnn from Members New York Stock Exchange smaller communities vKho might have three diiyn available each week for this | | a*.Nt> roil mrr snnini. Mall lo a member firm of Ihe New York Telephone Your Want Ads kind of work . Roule Hales distribution also cst»b)ijs)iorl | | Slock r.M.li»n(;t , or lo the New York Sioik I \dtange , Drpl , 5-AP , (or j I'.O. Hon 1(170 , New Yoik , Nt* York IIMMH. u, anyone seeking full-tiino duty. Sales experience I Plrnt.f send mr . Iter , " INVIMMINI I- AC II . " Iisimp sonic MM) shirks lh al to The Winona Daily News desir- to able but not I have paid cash dividends ririy llirrr iminlhc inr ^11 KM) years, essential. I Write: NAM* , Dial 3321 for an Ad Taker. Rura l Food I I Sales Inc. | | * r in MM I Box 1lfi2 Rochester , Minn I I For further Information or <"I1Y , , JiAir /ir corir . _._ i interview If this opportunity [l 1 interests you. Business Opportunities 37 Article* for Sale 87 STRICTLY BUSINESS HoutM for Salt 99 Ui.d Cm lot SMALL RESTAURANT downtown loca- P H L ¦«""'«""« Tues. nlqht tion, excellent business. Archie McGill a?« s__? _ D. $450 DOWN, balance 185 per month. FORD WAS0N-1M7, MM, straight trant- 1:30, Wed. i, m,j p.m. Men's suits Real Estate. Til. 4015 or 5137; West location. Neirly new home. 3 bed- mltilon. Tel. 8-4 1M. Ut«d Can roomi. Pull bastmtnt. Oirtge. Nice 109 Used Cam 109 w men » d" girls' elolhMi toys; DEALER for Amarlean-made leep-type !__• 4 _ "" lltttf lot. ABTS AOENCY, INC., 119 pool tabli; misc. Items. 730 W «th, BUICK, 1M0; Tapein eat range. Beth MERCURY-MO Monlersy ? door hard- vehicle, will go almost anywhere, very . Walnut St. Til. MJ45. good condition, reasonable. Tel, Lewis- CADlLUAC - l»ti Stdan OtVllli . *doef top, full power, all whit* with red In- hardtop, full pow»r small Investment will gat vou started, MOUNTING BOARDS, names -num. ton 4180. with »lr. 120 47m WILSON STORE. Tel. TO-iW. and TWO STUCCO HOUSES- ) J bedroom, I ttrlor, a real beauly, wlnftrlzad, nol Ave.. Gdvw. f r ra m«l«*»'*». ROBB BROS. I give-away, but in A-1 car Insldi -SSi. _ 2!. i 3-or 4-bedroom. Garaget, Witt 'Kitten. DODO . - INS Pelira 2-door hardtop, STORE, Pe E. 4tti. Tal. 4007. tnd out, rttsonably nrlead tt INVESTMENT PROPERTY, will nil un- Cirpetlng. Will flntnci. Til. «3». power sheering, V-l tnglnt automatic. i»J. JHIPT Into HIOH GEAR. Try bank fl- ' (or deed, new Sea bthlnd Bautr Eliclrle on im ntnclna for your ntw tuta loan. You der contract 4 unit A HBR «fl pMENT ef Ntw ear guarantee gets with cir. WIM building. ~_I „ apple peelers, 3-btdroom . st. Tti. i-m*. will bt tmtttd tf tha saving!, fa fd- luxury apt. Writ* El Dally , nd wrM K. WE1T LOCATION. oTl accept trad*. Tal. 1317. **¦*>• "08» ¦ II- I ¦ ' ¦ dltlon you Newi. Kih l i£SLJ ' heat, full besmeent. Otrtgi. Nici lot. —¦ - —- .!_.__ - | , I—I — win build vatuabla bark -ROJ STORE, 574 E. 4th. VOLKSWAGEN— Tel. 4037. Smtll down ptymint, bllance like rtnt. \w Mlcrobui, 1500 ma- credit wlhcrt may bt vtry valutblt t9 ter Let us thow you this good buy for only , txctllcnt condition, low mlltfgt. you In tht futurt, All our loans ar* Money te Lean USED REFRIBBRATORS, electric elothit Moving To New Bdmund Luehmann, L«w"lilon, Minn. tailored to tht borrovw 40 drytrt SiM. ABTS AOENCY. INC., 159 Wit- 't rK|i/lr»m»nt» and ritigw. B&B Electric 155 Ttl. 1J07, and you can drlvt assurad you htvt B« nut St. Til. % SM,S. 3rd* Location thf hast deal In town. Sat tht I nattll- AT AUCTION—»xS0 framt ichool houtt, Must Move By Nov. 14 FORD - 19sl Sttrllner, txcelltnt condi- mrnt Lntn Otparlmtnf tt lha MHR- Fy'T AND vwtable standi for tali. tion. T»k» over pnvmrnts. Tel. Foun- „ built In 1939. Locatid on tbeut VS acrt 1984 FORD Custom 508 4-door ttdtn, ra- CHANTi NATIONAL BANK toddy . OAN S K Tils 7356. tain Clly MI7-A7J4 «fter 5 p.m. _-AUTO— FURNITUR?B of land overlooking ttie Mississippi Riv- dio, hatter, evcyllnder. ittndtrd trans- LPLAIN HOT 2915. er. Has new Ltnnox oil furnace, will mltilon. 35,000 actual miles. Jutt Hkt 1» E. ird. Tal. SORRY SAL It now a mirry gal. Shi and electricity. Would make tomeoni brand new. Thti car WILL BE SOLD. Hrs. » a.m. to 5 P.m,, Sat. ? a.m. to noon used Blua Lustra rug and upholltery a year around borne or tummer homt. Any of fir I cleaner. Rent tl«trlc shampooer, SI. FOR SALE H. Choate I, Co. Located along Hwy. il behind the Dogs, Pets, Supplies 42 Twin Huff Mottl lust west of Dakota. lttt PONTIAC Cattllna 4-door hardtop, ONE CAR radio, hatter, automatic trintmitslon, BATH KINO shower cabinet, Auction will be held en Sat., Nov. 30th ¦fiS RAMBLER AMERICAN PLAYFUL SIAMESE KITTENS - for White power ttetrlng and Isrikts, perfect In Steel enameled, 32"x32"x74" with steel at 10 i.m. Proptrty onto for Inspection sale, S week* M, $10. 1W4 w. 4th. Sat., 13th, 2 to 4 p.m. and at every reepect. Don't put up this tre- 2-door, automatic trangmls- base and doors, all fittings. Tel. 8689- Nov . SPECIAL 2440 after 5 8:30 morning of tale. Also telling 30x30 mendous buy I , SALE—1 short hair, 3 long p.m. May be seen at 462 *ion whitewalla, radio, Hest- PUPS FOR High Forest freme school on Richmond Ridge that (5 each. Tel. 6389 Sun. or even- . er, low mileage hair, would make a good home. DON'S AUTO SALES 1962 MERCURY . Excellent ings. DUO-THERM oil heater with fan) 265 165 E. 2nd condition , perfect second Oil. fuel oil tank; Maytag < wringer CENTRAL LOCATION -4 bedroom Ttl. t-ltil or 6817 Meteor GERMAN SHORTHAIRED Pointer!, AKC car. Any reasonable offer washing machine. 168 High Forest. homo, on good slit lot, owners how Open every nlaht 'til ». registered, s wteki old, excellent hunt- reeclvt IM monthly room rental, be- 2-door sedan , 6 cylinder , accepted. Intelligent and good disposi- ing dogs. TV TRAYS tides their own living quartars. The Will train. LeRoy Woychlk. Ar. tion. King size ....89c each price It right end can be bought standard shift , radio, heater , Tel. 8-4331 weekdays Wis. ¦ cadla. BAMBENEK'S, 9th 8. Marlkata with a 10% down payment. Gttt Clly Agency, Inc. Til. 4813. BREEZY AGRE light turquoise with match- or PUPPIES—Wrltt Box 332, JKIPPERKEE Repossessed Portable Phono ing interior, low mileage, Hokah, Minn, or Tal. Hokah IM-25VO. Just Like New FOURTH W. 631-Neer Madison 8, St. Tel. Dakota fi43-2Ml Cttlrrlr schools Tiki over payrrnnts of 15 . Modirn 5-room bunga- CAR VALUES one owner car. SPECIAL Horses, Cattle, Stock 43 per month and Save $1 low, good condition, large lot, 1 car Call Leo at Jiarage. New paint |ob. Will arrangt THIS WEEK ONLY ting term loan. 1959 FORD 2-door hardtop HEREFORD COWS-11. with calves al ¦ FIRESTONE V-8, automatic transmis- side; I yearling heifers. Call or set 8-1343 Frank West Agency 1956 CHEVROLET William Oobilsteln, Arcadia, Wit. "I'd tik»thi. on* far my office." 175 Lafayette sion, excellent tires. -$1195 - Til. 5240 or 4400 ifter hourt BUCKS-2. Tel. WauwandM Clearance Sale Z-door , fi-cyiinder , straight SUFFOLK _ Sewing Machines 1964 FORD Galaxie 500 4- 624-2330. New Used Shotgun s, Rifle* 73 Houses for Sale 99 Rifle Ammunition, also door sedan, V-8, standard W INON A UTO stick , radio, heater. Recent- Deer Slugs 8, Shot Shells TWO USED portable sewing machlntt, FIFTH R.—2-bedroom house, large lot. ONE SHEEP BUCK. Tel Lewiston 2824 transmission with overdrive, RAMBLE ~ DODCI ly installed muffler and tail alter i p.m. 10-Gauge Shotgun Shells forward and reverse stitch. Your Priced to tell, rent terms. C. SHANK, SUoti:iL Clai^ /\ Traps & Rubbar Trapping Glovtt choice 135. WINONA SEWINO CO., 552 E. 3rd. snow tires on rear wTieels. pipe , carburetor kit, fuel SHEEP—So young ewes, will sell any NEUMANN'S 551 Huff. Ttl. 9348. REAL ESTATE BROKER — Tel. 6841 A LOW mileage, clean, one BARGAIN STORE HOMES-FARMS-LOTS-ACREAGES 2-BEDROOM, 1-floor home. Larqe, #¦ pump and amount. Freddie Frlckson, 4 miles E. owner car. Must be seen to ir SALES generator . $290. of Ridgeway. Tel. Dakota 643-2943. Stoves, Furnaces, Parts 73 CORNFORTH REALTY carpeted living room, wllh flrep^ce. FREEZERST La Crescent, Minn. Tel. 895-210* Partitioned and pantled basement , be appreciated. Open Mon. _ Fri. Eve. HOLSTEIN FEEDER steers, 7. Henry LINK BELT STOKER end controls. with tiled floors. Vk balhs. Lennox Tel. 248ft IT COSTS no more tc own • Gibson, Call AVAILABLE for Immediate occupancy Lettner, Fountain City, Wis. Tel. 687- Come In and get Bruce Malotke, Fountain oil furnace. 1-car attached garage. On 3rd & Mankato Tel. 8-3649 our prices. WINONA City, alter 5. 2-bedroom brick, recreation room. Tel 1964 PLYMOUTH Fury 4- 4746. FIRE 6V POWE Tel. tSUm. big lof, with 82' frontage. Looted R CO., 54 E. 2nd. Tel 8-2598 lor appointment. door sedan , 5065. west In city In area ol newer homes. , V-8 automatic THREE PONY stud coirs, mixed breed HEATERS, oil or gal, Convenient to shopping cinter. Price transmission, power steer- Mobil* Homes, Trailers 111 Instilled, told, STOCKTON, MINN.-3- .pt. building and puppies. Lavsrne Kreher, Fountain serviced; Aladdin Blue $18,500. Tel. 8841. PLUMBING FIXTURES TO SUIT Flams portable Must be sold. Aodress in- ing, power brakes. LOW City, Wis. Tel. Arcadia 48-F-22. heaters; also oil burner vacant lot. ALL BUDGETS parts. RANGE quiries to the Merchants National Bank. RENT OR SALE—Tralltra and eamp. OIL BURNER CO., 907 E. mileage, one owner car. A •rs. Leahy's, Buffalo City, WU. Tal. 5th 8t. Til. Trust Dept., Winona. Tel. 2B3T. Sale or Rent; Exchange 101 WINTERIZED TEAM OF heavy work horses, choice ol SAN ITARY 7479. Adolph Mlchalowskl. Cochrane H8-2532 or 248-2670. 5-year-olds, 1 team well matchrd, real jim-dandy. 3 or PLUMBING HEATING all broke and qtntle; 1 purebred 1- - floor. 168 E. 3rd St. Tel. 2737 D. 5 ROOMS and bath all on one SEE OUR tine selection of new and year-old German shorfhafred pointer, Typewriters 77 Near tail end super mirket, Available 1964 JEEP Wagoneer cus- AND ONE YEAR used mobile homes, all sizes. Bank good watch dog and fair hunter. All balance only 167.50 GIVE YOUR HOME a new look for the at onct. 1800 down, tom station wagon, 2-wheel financing. 7-year plan. COULEE MO- priced reasonable. Leo Koushkouakl, FOR SALE holldaysl Work color magic with Elli- TYPEWRITERS and adding machines . per month. ABTS AGENCY, INC., 159 BILE HOME SALES, Hwy. UeT E., Buchanan, N.D. Til. 487-4698. drive, 6 cylinder motor, ¦ ott's Vinyl Super Satin Latex Interior for tale or rent. Reasonable rates, Walnut SI. Til. . 8-4365. WARRANTY winont. Ttl. «7e\ paint. Provide a luxury background free delivery. See ut for all your of- standard transmission. CALVES — 500 Ibs. Donald for OR RENT FEEDER furnishings during this peak home en- fice supplies, desks, files or office THREE BEDROOMS, fireplace central HWY. il Moblla Homt Sales, ia.it of Woodard, Dakota, Minn., (Ridgeway). Tel 8-2446. tertainment season. The vinyl ingredi- chairs. Lund Typewriter Co. Tel. 5222. location. Dave Henderson. . 1964 PONTIAC Catalina , 4- Shangri-La Motel. Wt have 12 wide* Tel. Houston 196-3161. ents of Super Satin Impart a durability on hand, also ntw Mi medal 8 wides, Winona. Suit- Building at Srd and Wash- Will Be Coming Soon! door , solid white finish , au- and toughness for year around wear GOING OUT? Keep the amatlng 24-hour F. SMALL ACREAGE near Tel. 8-3624. HOLSTEIN HEIFERS—3, close springers. able for retiring couple. Excellent home ington Streets, formerly oc- tomatic transmission, radio, and tear. Choose your colors now at "telephone secratary" on the lob while 1965 JEEP Wagoneer 4- Herman Arneson, Fountain Clly, Wis., the you're away. ANSA FONB answers with attached garage. Also has good in- cupied by Linahan 's Res- power steering, power Auction Sales (On Hwy. 95). your phone, records ail meuaget auto- come from apples ind honey to sup- taurant and Lounge. Avail- WHEEL DRIVE custom PAINT DEPOT matically. Solvi the unanswered tele- Fdement your retirement Income. This brakes, LOW mileage. phone problem as s a real opportunity. ABTS AGENCY, able Jan. 1st. wagon 4-door , CARL FANN JR. Vitamin A & D 167 Center St. never before! Ar- 6 cylinder. range a FREE demonstration In your INC., 159 Walnut St. Tel. s-4365. Just like new. Snow tires — $2495—- AUCTIONEER. Bonded and Licensed. offica. Sea ANSA PONE et WINONA Call John Fort Rushford, Minn. Ttl. 844-7811. Soluble Powder DAILY NEWS TYPEWRITER SERVICE, IH E.. 3rd. SMALL THREE-room house In east lo- Reg. $4.45 cation. Lot 40x145'. S4.00O. Archie Mc- all around. I960 CHRYSLER Imperial Our price ... $3.99 MAIL Gill Real Estate, Tel. 4015 or 5137. Minneapolis 332-7755 Le Baron 4-door, radio, au- MINNESOTA Wanted to Buy 81 or 588-4085 tomatic transmission, power Land & Auction Sales TED MAIER DRUGS SUBSCRIPTIONS DW. ECONOMY PLUS, to slretch your retirement Income. This 2-bedroom F steering, power brakes, Evtrttt J. Kohner Animal Health Center PRIVATE PARTY wants to buy car or . A. KRAUSE CO home can be yours for only $8,500. Oil IM walnut. Tel. 8-3710. after hoort 7814 .Downtown !¦ Miracle Mall May Be Paid Af station wagon for cash. Must be Breezy Acres many other fine accessories. In furnace, full basement. Garage, room good condition. Ed Bronk, Goodview Wanted—Real Estate 102 Hwys. 14 and 61 East Solid black finish. Household Goods Our Specialty TED MAIER DRUGS Road. Tel. 8-3823. for garden on the large lot . S210 taxes. Poultry, Eggs, Supplies 44 About $100 per season to heat. It's truly HIL H. DUELLMAN, Fountain City, retirement economy with value plus. WILL PAY HIGHEST CASH PRICES Wli. . Ttl. 1487-3631 or 8«7.3a76. WM. MILLER SCRAP IRON & METAL — $1295 - Baby Merchandise ABTS AGENCY, INC., 159 Walnut St. FOR YOUR CITY PROPERTY SANITATION • ISOLATION - Vaccina, 59 CO. pays highest prices for scrap Tel. 8-43(5. ALVIN KOHNER tion • Ventilation - Perspiration era Iron, metals, and raw fur. "HANK" JEZEWSKI 1962 PONTIAC Catalina 4- AUCTIONEER, City and tfata lleanied ANNIVERSARY SALE SPECIALS-Lulla- all back of Ihe Dekalb 20-week pullets 222 W. 2nd Tel. 5M7 (Winona s Only Real Eitate Buverl and bonded. 212 Liberty St. (Corner bye cribs, reg. 138.95, riow J29.95 ; reg. ' COMPACTS door, power steering, power produced by SPELTZ CHICK HATCH- Closed Saturdays Tel. «3B8 or 70M P.O. Box 345 E. Jth tnd Liberty) Tal 4»M. ERY, Rollingstone, Minn. Tel. 8689 115.98 folding high chain, now $12.95; brakes, automatic transmis- 2311. Available yaar-around. reo. $21.95 deluxe strollers, now S13.95. SEE Us For Best Prices ' ' sion, radio, solid Yorktown NOV. 10-Wed. 12:30 p.m. J miles B. BORZYSKOWSKI FURNITURE, 302 Scrap Iron, Metal, Wool, Raw Furs Accessories, Tires, Parts 104 SAVE YOU of Ltwltton, S milts S. of Stockton. _ BUY ARBOR ACRE QUEENS, exeellint Mankato. Open evenings. M 8, W IRON METAL CO. blue finish. Jot Dtgnan. owner; Alvin Kohner , (or egg size, Interior quality and pro- . 201 W. 2nd St. Tel, 30O4 FOR THE VERY best price In new auctioneer) Minn. Land 8. Auction duction. 20 weeks pullets available all Building Materials 61 New Rambler truck tires, call Dan al 8-1102. MONEY —$1795 — Strv., cltrk , year around. For quality ask lor Arbor HIGHEST PRICES PAID Attractive 12 x 19' living room with Acre Queen pullets. Winona Chick for scrap Iron, metals, rags, hides, acrllan carpeting, 3 bedrooms, nice '64 Falcon wagon .. $1795 1964 CHEVROLET 4-door, „ NOV. 10-AVtd. 1 p.m. 1 mllai W. of Hatchery, 56 E. 2nd, Winona. Tel. 5614. USED MAPLE flooring, 1000 board ft. raw furs and wool ) kitchen with formica cupboard, pret- Boats, Motors, Etc. 106 Blair on Hwy. »5. C. B. Immell, Contact Victor Gibbons, Midway Tav- ty bath . Gas heat, self-storing win- cylinder motor, automatic Trustee; Walter Ztck, auctioneer! ern. '64 Valiant Hardtop .. $1495 Sam Weisrnan & Sons dows. Attached garage. ALPEX—15'9" "Bali" Fiberglass run- Northern Inv. Co., clerk. Wanted—Livestock 46 INCORPORATED a bout; 1961 75 h.p. Johnson outboard, transmission, radio, tu-tone 450 , W. Srd Tel. 5847 all controls and accessories. Contact '63 Studebaker 4-door $1095 finish, five new whitewall Business Equipment Deluxe Living NOV . 10—Wed. V30 a.m. Currlt Motor YOUNG GUERNSEY milk eow, perfect 62 Three bedrooms, 15x26' living room, Steve Allen, 328 Wilton St. Tel. 7676. tires. Co., St. Charles, Minn . Going Out-of- bag, must be trained to lead. Clem beautiful kitchen, built-in stove and '61 Falcon wagon .... $ 995 Business Salt. Graft & Mallila, auc- Rooms Without Meals 86 , Ideal for pontoon or Burrlchter, Wabasha, Minn. COMPRESSO R — Vi h.p., guaranteed. oven, all bedrooms carpeted, new BUS TOP — 8'x20' tioneers; Thorp Salet Corp., clerk. 45 h.p. — $1795 — Thorpe's Refrlpjeratlon: nylon carpeting in living room, rec- houseboat. With or without '60 Falcon wagon .. $ 795 SLEEPING ROOM for girl. Tel. 8-2349. engine, complete LEWISTON LIVESTOCK MARKET reation room or 4lh bedroom In base- Gray Marine Inboard NOV. ll-Thurt . 1 p.m. 4 miles S . ot A real good auction market tor your with transmission and all accessories. ELLIOTT ADDRESSOGRAPH machine. ROOMS FOR MEN, with or without ment, new 2-car garage. House new- '60 Rambler wagon .. $ 795 1961 CHEVROLET Bel Air Biair. Thomas Radcllff, owner; Alvin livestock. Dairy cattle on hand all Good running order. Ttl. 8-2«80 after Reasonable. Tel. 8-2121. housekeeping privileges. No day sleep- ly decorated in 1965. Located west automatic Kohner, auctlonter; Northern Inv. Co., week, hogs bought every day. Trucks 6 p.m. 4-door, radio, ers. Tel. 4859. end of city. Home must be seen '60 Valiant 4-door .. $ 595 clerk. available. Sale Thurs. Tel. 2667. ELECTRIC MOTOR, 3 phase, 3 h.p., to appreciate all the fine features. transmission, V-8 motor, 1700 rpm, heavy duty, $45; electric Motorcycles, Bicycles 107 '59 Opel wagon .... $ 295 solid white finish. Excep- NOV. 11—Thurt. 11 a.m. 4 mllti E. of portable steamer, used for steam Rooms for Housekeeping 87 Pride of Ownership Houston, Minn. Alvin H. Olson, owntr; Farm Implements 48 cleaning used appliances, working pres- Can be yours with this pretty 3-bed- tionally clean throughout. Beckman S. Schroeder; Thorp Sale* scooter, 3 years sure 60-100 lbs., steam generation 100 GIRL TO SHARE double housekeeping room rambler, with carpeted living HARLEY DAVIDSON Many more to choose from. Corp., clerk. will tell reason- WANTED-flood Super H tractor with live PSI, 1-2 hours, 220 voll, 14 amp, 3000 room. Tel. 8-2466. room and dining area. Hardwood old, In good condition, — $1 195 — able. Tel. 8-108J. hydraulic Tracy Redalen, Fountain, weft, 60 cycle, 125. Inquire A. H. Krel- floors, good closet space. Full base- We Advertise Our Prlcei «^ NOV. II—thurt. 7 p.m. Located al I' ll Minn. Til. 268-4940. ger, H. Choate - Co. ment, oil furnace. Centrally located ^ W. Sth St.. Winona. Robert Nissalkt. Apartments, Flats 90 excellent condition, less 3962 PONTIAC Catalina 2- on attractive lot In area of lovely HONDA 90—1964 owner; Alvin Kohner, auctioneer; Minn. Call Rick Kurz, St. USED BADGER silo unloader, 14' and homes. than 5,000 miles. door hardtop, solid Silver- Land 8, Auction Serv., clerk. Coal, Wood. Other Fuel 63 DELUXE GE ill electric 1 bedroom Mary's College, 2807, Ext. 44, after 7 16'; also new Van Dale unloaders end apis., carpeted, air conditioned and leaf green finish, matching Lewis- RESIDENCE PHONES: p.m. NOV. 12—Fri. 10:30 a.m. 2 miles N.B, bunk feeders. Allyn Tews. Tel. BURN MOBIL FUEL OIL and enloy the garages. BOB SELOVER, REALTOR, E. J. Hartert . . . 3973 green vinyl interior, equip- of Whitehall. Goodwin 8, Morris Ever- ton. 2796. comfort of automatic personal care. Tel. 2349. Mary Lauer . .. 4523 HONDA—1965 Super Sport 50, good eon son, owners; Alvin Kohntr, auction- Keep full service • complete burner Lewiston 41 Years In Winona ped with automatic trans- LATE MODEL DO? Allli mounted corn Bill Zlebell ... 4854 dltlon. Leonard Monam, eer; Northern Inv. Co., clerk. car*. Budgtt plan and guaranteed price. IN ALTURA—2 bedroom modern apt, mission, power steering, picker, all new gears and rear end. Minn., (Thi Arches). Order today from JOSWICK'S FUEL for rent. . Available Dec. 1 or before. Lincoln-Mercury-Falcon »2O0. Bernard Jacobson, Rushford, - power brakes and radio. NOV. 12—Fri. 2 p.m. Located In tha OIL CO., 901 E. Sth. Ttl. 3389. W. H. Batzel, Tel. Altura 6352. MOTORCYCLE EXPERTS Plainview Minn. Comet-Fairlane Village ol Plainview, Minn. ROBB BROS. MOTORCYCLE SHOP Municipal Liquor Store, owner; Maaa LOVELY 4-room modern apt, with bath, 573 E. 4fh. Eve. — $1 795 — HOMELITE CHAIN saw parts, service Furn,, Rugs, Linoleum Open Mon., Fri. 8. Maas, auctlonttrs; First National 64 all utilities furnished, $125 par month. Plainview, and sales. AUTO ELECTRIC SERV- and Saturday afternoons Bank 81 Peoples Slate Bank, Tel. B-ll-B. 1959 CHEVROLET Impala cltrk. ICE, 2nd and Johnson. Tel. 5455. ALMOST A CHAIR, 33" round hessocK, 601 Main St. Tel. 2849 Trucks, Tract't Trailert 108 15" high, weighs 60 lbs., In 21-or. sup- Convertible, V-8 motor COZY TWO-BEDROOM upper, heat and , au- NOV. 13—Sit. 13:30 p.m. 3 miles E. 0# DISC SHARPENING by longer lasting ported plastic, choice of colors, $27.50 series. Don utilities, bus at door, west. Refer- SMC-195S '-4-ton pickup, 150 tomatic transmission, power Alma on County Trunk E. Ralph Rich- metal saving rolling. Fred Krani, St. , 3rd at BURKE'S FURNITURE MART ences required. Tel. 6979 or H787. Allen. Rt. 3, Winona, Winn. ards, owner) Jim Helke, auctioneer! Charles, Minn. Tel. 932-4308. Franklin. Do You Want It steering, power brakes, lo- 8, Be Sure and Northern Inv. Co., clerk. FIVE-ROOAA APT.-S70. Inquire at 402'* STUOEBAKER-1961 Mon, V-8, chassis cal ONE OWNER car. MILK HOUSE EQUIPMENT ANNIVERSARY SALE Specials—2-pc. liv- condition, make otter. E. 6th or 290 Chestnut St. Tel. 7108 or and can. perfect NOV. 13—Sat 10 a.m. » mile E of Ar- Rath wash tanks, fans, air Intakes, suites, nylon frieze, fcam ^Sold . . . SEE . . ing room 8-2453. Tel. Altura 7521. cadia. Louis Servais, owner; Alvin Koh- hose parti, storage cabinets. 95, now $139.93 ; 9-pc. $1095 cushions, reg. S119. — — ner, auctlomar; Northern Inv. Co.. Supplies lay Ed's Refrigeration 8- Dairy dinette suites, large table with 8 ALL MODERN 2-bcdroom apt., fireplace, Or J ust Listed?? FORD TRUCK, 1957 F-60O, long whiil Our Disp 5532 clerk. 055 E. 4th Tel. Chilrs, now only $99 95. BORZYSKOW- full basement, 12 miles south on Hwy. base, 5-tpeed transmission, with box; 1959 PONTIAC Catalina 4- 302 Mankato. Open SKI FURNITURE, 61, furnished optional. Inquire Ttl. Da- 1959 Plymouth Belvedere 4-door herd- of door hardtop, NOV. 13—Sat. 11 a.m. E. ol Sumner St. ' N St. tu-tone gray TRI-BAN Evmlngt. kota 643-3070. We don't Just list or tie up top, red, V-8. Reasonable. 44 Lenox and white finish , radio, In Village of Trempealeau, Sarah Oen- your property for a long automatic nis estate; Lee Harnisch, auctioneer! Rot & Mouse Apartments, Furnished 91 TIME USED CARS transmission. Northern Inv. Co., clerk. time nor throw it in the JUST IN NOV. 13—Mon, 1:30 p.m. 2 miles N. of THREF ROOMS, private bath nnd en. on our Used — $895 — KILLER DUCK HUNTERS Cenlervllle, Wis. Phillip Foss, owner! CARPETING trance, suitable tor \ or 2 employed hopper with many others. pickup, econ- Regularly $3.95 ECONOLINE, 1961 'Won Alvin Kohner, auctioneer; Norlhern tnv. Inquire 171 W. 4th. Vj-ton car lot 3V4 lbs $3.15 olrls. When you list with us our omy plus, only $895; 1953 Ford Co., clerk. pickup, 3-speed, 6-cyllnder. standard EMPLOYED GIRL tn share my furnish- entire staff gives your pro- transmission, $495; 1919 , Ford Vj-lon This week NOV. 15—Mon, 12:30 p.m. 4 miles N .W. TED MAIER DRUGS SALE ed apt., private hath and entrance. 1959 Eel Air Downtown & Miracle Mall perty personal attention. To pickup, V-8, 3-speed, $395; VENABLES to Indcptndtnc* on 121 to Russell't ¦fr Carpeting Reasonnbln rent. Tel. 3005. 4-door, small V-8, automatic transmls- 75 W Store, then A milts N. on County TrunK tion, $595 ; 1959 Chevrolet Bel Air sta- . 2nd Tel. 8-2711 "V". Stanley Saverson, owner; Fran- APTS FOR RENT-automallc heal, ce- us "SOLD" is a very neces- tion wagon 4-door, 6-cyllnder, standard Open Mon & Fri. Evenings cis N . Werlein, auctioneer; Gateway f t Cushion ramic baths, all utilities furnished, . RENT sary part of our business. transmission, $595; 1959 Ford 4-door, 35 Credit Inc.. dork. OUR STALK CUTTER available Dec. 1st. Buffalo City Resort. V-8, Automatic transmission, locel, 1 Beautiful Used •ft Installation Cochrane, Wis. Phone us and see. owner, perfect shape , $495; 1959 Ford for chopping your corn 4-door, 6-cylindcr, automatic, only $195. Cars on Display 17 Patterns FURNISHED 2-room r.pt„ laroe closet, ft ,A. ^ stalks. $15 per day. electric stove, refrigerator, suitable for FENSKE AUTO SALES PRICED TO SELL! f{ Hill "iiii iminif OTXK tHA HH 170 Colors 1 or 2 people. 157 W. 4th. ioO E. 2nd f2»\i itm| | | 1 ZZJ XXTOIIII , .iiwim.AtTtti lMHUMHiifr nBHie* ,^1 l| l||| ^,. 114 >M4 '^¦<$ Kochenderfer & Sons BOB Wlnnnft, Minn. Nylons, acrilans & i See Them at ii i iJw SB^irfpm Fountain City, Wis. Business Places for Rant 92 1 all wools. I Mil NORTHERN INVESTMENT COJ LAW OFFICES occupied as such since |U I Prices start at 1890 are now available In the Morgan W dt tLYkl Building at modest rental, tea Steve USED J EEPS NYSTROM'S New Idea Mercian af Morgan's Jewelry. T REALTOR $6.99 sq. yd. 1953 UNIVERSAL 4-Whocl Chrysler - Plymouth M sf 2-row mounted No. 307 PRIME DOWNTOWN 120 CENTER -m.23i49 p Due to the loss of my barn by fire, I will dispose of the LOCATION - Re- Drive , complete with Open Mon. & Fri Nights || ; For free estimates tail nnd office space. Available now. vmmmmmmmmaaiaamwBm mm . y. following personal property at public i t SUrneman-Selover Co. Cab, A-1 condition .... $(595 CORN and to see samples 52W E. 3rd. Tel. 6066 or 2341 1946 UNIVERSAL 4-Wheel Tel. 8-4371 Drive complete with STEP THIS WAY PICKER Garages for Rent 94 The Gordon Agency (Dealer's cost) AsH for Andy or Dan Cab , good $395 AUCTION Realtors FOR I 2 miles north of Ccnterville —OR— 13 miles south of I;• GARAGE FOR RENT-449 Harrtat, rear ii Arcadia on State Highway 93, then Vi mile east on all y cottage. TRUCK ANDERSON AUTO CO. THE PRICE IS RIGHT WINONA SAVINGS, PLEASE! s weather road on the Orville Lindberg farm. Watch for g Allis Chalmers SEARS Houses for Rent 95 I arrows. y On this 4-bedroom 1%-story SERVICE Now Idea - Gehl 57 E. Srd fi5 Lflird Si. 'f.l TEMPEST 2-door Sedan , NEW 2-bedrcom house, garage, gn* heat , home, west, with krge liv- Arkansaw, Wis. "Satisfaction guaranteed west end. $85. Tel. 8-3529 or 1283 W. tu-tone green and white Sth lor appointment. ing room with bookcase with green upholstery, | Monday* November 15 g Tel. AT 5-5937 or your money back" wall , full basement, new LOVELY SPACIOUS, newly decorated, rudio, heater, white :"': heated duplex, 20 minute drive Irom roof . Only $9,000 . . . Call 196 1 FORD sidewail tires, 3 on the Sale starts at 1:30 P .M. Lunch will be served. >; Fertilizer, Sod 49 Winona. Tel. 9287. now to sec this bargain! Good Things to Eat 65 floor trnnsinission , SEV- 35 HEAD OF CATTLE (34 HI-GRADE HOLSTEIN 3 - TWO-DEDROOM S, garage, central V2 -Ton 1 BLACK pulverlc- loca- EN tires with mud and ) DIRT-all top soil and RUSSET POTATOES, 100 lbs. 13.98) 10 tion. Adults only. Inqulrt 249 Winona ONLY $400 DOWN . . . HEIFERS — 32 Holstein heifers, 15 close springers , re- ; «d. 4-yd. , »B. Call HALVERSON % load Ibs. onions 59c, All varieties ol apples, St. $76.76 MONTHLY fi cylinder engine , snows. Very clean. Pric- mninder bred and springing; 2 Holstein heifers, 20 months <| BROS., 4573 or 4402. WINONA POTATO MARKET, 118 Mkl. " —— ed at ¦¦- ¦' ¦; —I-.— --¦ V — NEW 3-BEDROOM home, 2-car garage, old , open; 1 Angus bull , Registered, 2 years old. A Rood ';* all lop soil; also 4-.s|ined transmission. GOOD BLACK DIRT, nice location, available around Dec. 1. Buys this 1-story home 2 crushed rock, Buy Food Wholesale herd of well bred Holstein heifers. Many are close spring- ? fill dirt, sand, gravel, Tel. 2900 or 80-2541. blocks from school. Living Trenching, excavating, and back till- Capitol Food Provision Co., 3930 Only $700 ers and vaccinated. \'i ing. Mlnneso- 6th St., Gdvw. Tel. 7336. room, dining room , beauti- FIRST COME DONALD VALENTINE, COMFORTABLE 3-bedroom home, dou- ta Clly. Ttl. Rollingstone 8689-3366. ful new kitchen, .') bedrooms, DAIRY EQUIPMENT - Gas hot water heater with t ble garaoe, full tasement, SIOO month. FIRST SERVED! Wi CADILLAC 4-door hard- Guns, Sporting Goods 66 May be seen between 5 and 7 p.m. 573 new gas furnace and water circulating fan; double wash tank; 2 stainless steel milk '$ Hay, W. Dellevlew. top, power steering, Grain, Feed SO heater, double garage. New y cans; 2 stainless strainers. USED SHOTGUNS—singles, bolt actions, power brakes , power « CORN FOR SALE—from picker, Triors , slide actions. Gamble Store, Rushford, MARION ST. 1134—3-bedroom home, oil Eormanent siding and com- MACHINERY - A.C. "WD-45" tract or with power \ Fri., Nov. 11 - 12. SI. John's Men Club, Minn. heal, 1115 month. Tel. 3273 or Inquire sent , power windows, ra- steering; A.C. CA tractor with cultivator ; Ford Dearborn ,—,— " , ¦ ination windows . . . over- |:| > Contact Oerhardt Belike, Lewiston 3561 .—. i 1075 Marlon ft. dio, heater , premium ¦!' or Marvin Saekrleler, Lewiston 2814, SHOTOUN5, automatics, pump*, doubles sized yard. See it today! | f l-row corn picker; Case Model 33 PTO bay baler; chop- • and bolt actions, 13, 30 and 410 gatioet. THREE-BEDROOM home, modern ex- amaasaZ ttt IV101 IT <^C0L tires. Runs good, clean. y per box with false endgate; J.D. Model 45 manure loader; EAR CORN-from Ihe picker. Peter Ol- New „tnd used. Buy, sell or trede. cept heat, available Dec. 1st, Clarence AFTER HOURS ^ Chock this one out today. . green feed box ; Gehl green crop chopper; Winpowcr .l- ;» son, Lanesboro, Minn. Tel, Peterson Seller! Sport Shop, Utica, Minn. Will be Schorbrlno, Minnesota City, Minn., 121 Huff Tel. 2306 or 51210 . ¦75-6163. open evenings until Sat. lllh. (Middle Valley). lon wagon , new; J.D. row crop chopper with corn and ' ; Open Mon, thru Fri. Only $400 .; Nohrlng, Pat Heise .. . 5709 ; hay. att.; McD. wagon ; unloading jack; :i steel farrowing , CORN FOR SALE — Marshall Musical Marchandisa 70 Farms, Land for Sal* 98 nicht until fl:00 ' , Cenlervllli, Wis. Gordon Weishorn . . . IfiBI Kvory one genuine , ..) crates with feeder and waterer ; 15 Jamesway .slanclimns , STORY !¦ CLARK iplntt piano for tile. FARMS FARMS! FARMS real good ; 15 Mitchells stanchions, fair ; misc. small items. iJ EAR CORN tor sale. Rex Fink, Alma, j; Market Sf. We buy, we sell, wi trade. Wis., (Cream). ill Ussd Can 109 dependable :¦ ¦ MIDWEST REALTY CO. TERMS; Under $10.00 cash; over Mint amount cash ^j Osseo, Wit. USUI) CAHS ,: or '/, down and balance in monthly pnymenls. T.',. nrlded '3 B1 We Service and Stock Ret. 695-3157 BUICK, 1954, with very oood engine for Artlclea for Sale good sernntl Tel. Office tm-USS htilrod; 1948 Chtvrolst, to balance for Ii months. Your credit is always good with Needles for all car. Tel. 8 3310 f\ NOROE FREEZERS - »1J9, $199, Ml?. . the Northern Investment Company. FRANK , 761 E. tth, ^ LILLA «. SONS RECORD PLAYERS Houses for Sal* 99 CHEVROLET—IMS Imptlt Sport Cnupe, ' Open evenings. ' ;% PHIl'-LiP FOSS, OWfiJKR . ' ? Hardt's Music Store 213, standard tranimlislon, radio , heat ;| DW. BUFFALO CITY. Clots to good hunt- er, excopllonally clean, flood gas niMn HOTPOINT range, 40"; am) Alvin Kohner , Auctioneer ELECTRIC Ing and flsh'ng. You cm alia* this A|)e, rum good Very reasonably nrlr> § set ol white twin tubs. Tel, anemal MacMnas 73 neatly new 2-bedroom homt, wllh at- J/4R, Slavt Nahroann 7262. Sawing ml. Tnl. I.ewltlo'i WA LZ Northern Investment Co., Lester Senty. Clerk a ^T-,.IL„- unM ev/ \TMI .incT I

DICK TRACY By Chester Gould

BEETLE BAILEY - By Mort Walk*

' ¦ ¦ f i .i i j i i . ' . ' . "i i f _. ,__„ , x — — — BH ¦¦t ee— ¦¦¦¦¦ ™~~™~ ™—"~™™~~""—™"~~™¦ . ' —-— — ——-— —-————i —————aaaap—— —« l___^_M—l__B__u_ c_a—Ma_»-_____| BLONDIE By Chic Young

TIGER by Bud Blaka

' ' THE FLINTSTONES By Hinna-Barbera . in i II in i. i J «. ' ' i " ' ' ' . > . . . .. A

¦ —- - . -^ ¦- ...... I [ i~ LI'L ABNER By Al Capp STEVE CANYON fly Milton Canniff —¦ ——: ' ' I ' " ' l /g-wewr— I ^ ——\ i > A . JI ' . . *i

' " ' ' ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦ •>¦ ¦ ; .:. .: Starting Hex! Sunday, Nov. 14th, and Every Sunday, We Will Feature ^m. It's Just Like PRIME ' ^_§m- FINDING I^H liBi 1^1 I I /v 11 \\_____fy ou' D:nin<> Room \\W^ | _^_ ^_ ^W_ \\II \\^_\ I R5^ H ^^^^__. ^^^__^__. WVS

5. Dress Buttons Removed and Ar(*Bm£^V

7. Hooks and Eyes Replaced kHBBMHH -HIHH__i_ __^__^_J SUPPER CLUB B__. 8. All Garments Neatly Bagged Fountain City, f__ V ^__^__^__^__ 9. Sta-Nu Finish on All Garments 165 Maid St. ACCOM FrOITi I St Nat'l Batik 10. Prompt, Courteous, Efficient Service _____ ¦ ¦ now ,im to ,Urt A _ffc V I" "'* * linking about Christmaa Parties. ^R ^V Al I I I W Mek* yot|r Reservation NOW for the night you wish. sS • ^JBL^T _ ALL THIS AT NO EXTRA CHAROE _P EM W I I i • Phene IM-7«_ l for Information. >»_>*e* *~~* .HONG 22^91