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Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

5-6-1974

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1974). Winona Daily News. 1369. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1369

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]. P^ Nm- By C. BARTONI^ ItEPPERT constitutional dispute between tual tapes at the White House. legitimate questions and for Rep. Paul S.. Sarbanes, D-Md. terviewed on "Face : the Na- ' ¦ ' . WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres- Congress and the President They have not yet accented the people involved to dp any less '"The" difference in opinion Was , lioti' . broadcast by the VCBS-. - .. offer.' . * . '¦¦ ident Nixon's chief lawyer says oyer what amounts to an im- than their best,, they would¦ ,.of in the proper response." .', v . - television and radio networks. . peachable offense could be re- Haig said anyone who reads course,' be remiss."' '. '¦ .' Rep. Thomas ' the President's defense against . RaUsback, R- In/related - developments: . . solved in court. the transcripts "knows without . Meanwhile, two members of 111., said- the .vote / reflected —The White House said it has impeaichment depends on In another . televised inter- a shadow of a doubt that there , the House panel.warned against procedural differences .which do; found "a number . of important whether Nixon himself was iii- view. White .House chief" of staiff has - not been much tampering interpreting the committee's not;' affect the committee's ulti- contradictions" between Dean's . volved in . tiush / money pay- Alexander M; Haig Jr. . said he with the contents of them. They party-line vote on. -'.' the tran- mate goal of reaching the truth sworn testimony. about six talks ments to Watergate defendants; hopes the leading . members of speak for themselves." _ scripts as a sign of a .partisan in its impeachment probe, ¦ - he had- with the President; and .' ' ' ¦¦ ' : . . James , D. ¦St. - .; Clair,White the House Judiciary Committee Haig declined to reply split oh the impeachment issue. [ - Interviewed ; oh NBC's ' "Meet the transcripts of those cdnver- .. .. House special counsel, said w|ll: personally listen to the; directly, to .questions about ¦ ¦: ' ' ¦ ¦ - ¦ : . After receiving ypdited tran- the Press" program, St. .Clair sations. ; " . .; '. . ./. / Sunday V the presidential tape /White House tapes .and verify : whether the White Hoiise . also scripts from . the White House said : ''the: President has been —Former Watergate special transcripts released last week the transcripts.;:. woujd turn oyer evidence instead of the actual . tape , charged with essentially . a prosecutor. Archibald Cox said prove : Nhcon . neither authorized V Nixon said in releasing the Sought on issues other than Wa- recordings, the " committee criminal plot to; obstruct jus- that . '..judging.- '.- .by- the ' White : nor knew of the payments: arid material - that . Chairman .Peter tergate, such as' the milk fund, voted ;20. to 18 last week to ihr tice;. This is by paying people House transcript of Nixon's ¦ thus is innocent of any "crimi W: Rodino Jt*;, D-N.J., and the ITT case and;.;a $100,000 form /Nixon he had riot com-- hiish money to keep quiet March . 21 : ." • , 1973, meeting with nal plot; to obstruct justice ;' - Rep. Edward Hutchinson of would-be campaign contribution plied fully with its.subpoenal. /'.-, : Haig appeared on ABC's "Is- Dean; ''I. think it could be infer- , St. Clair also said he consid- Michigan, the senior committee by Howard Hughes. V'Few if any really , thought he" sues arid Answers" while Sar- red . that there was an intent to ers it unrealistic to thihk that a Republican,- could hear the ac- But he added that these "are was in full compliance," said bahes / and : RailSback were in- obstruct justice.on that date.'' 1 — ^ ; _^_:— : ______—

¦" - ' ' . X / X -X:/ -y-^ Cloudy tonig ht Person to Person and Tuesday with Communicators! qhancie of rain ''ON" Want Ads

HAIG OjN TV ... President Nixdn's Chief of Staff Alex-V ' runoff seen ander Haig rep for lies to a question during his appearance Sun- Close : day on ABC's "Issues, and. Answers" from Washington, (AP .; Photofax) V ¦ - .-. 9 ¦ ¦ - . -. : ¦ ¦ Nixoii/ aides on daily presidency in France By PAUL TREUTHARDT nated French politics for more Card d'Estaing ; would switch PARIS (AP) — Socialist than a decade under Presidents their votes to the 49-year-old fi- Francois Mitterrand will face Charles - cialist-Communist union but . engaged in a/daily, public relations blitz to convince the, pub- . France's • voters - decided Sun- 693,168 votes; or 14.64 per cent, avoided naming either: Mitter- lie he is innocent . of any wrongdoing, y: day." - . in what was billed asa pri* rand or Giscard d'Esaing. /The White House ytias been sayirig since the transcripts m ar y aga ins t Giscard Gaullist party leaders . were : ' Backed by the powerful Com- were released that,; despite - their ambiguity,. Nixon did not d'Estaing, the.leader of the jun- meeting today to decide their :know of the cover-iip until Dean told him yon March 21, 1973. munist party, Mitterrand led a tactics.* Should large * numbers field of 12 candidates on the ior party ih the Gaullist coali- Dean told the- Watergate committee Nixon knew as early as tion. : ' of hard-*line Gaiillists stay home ¦ • Sept. 15, 1972.:/ • " ' . ;- . - . . ' -;. ; ' • '- ' • first ballot with 16,935,763 votes, Mitterrand could ¦ ¦¦ or 43.36 per :ceir of the total The consensus of politicians on May .19, ' -:' Nixon returned to the -White House Sunday night from squeeze throujgh to-victory. ;y. Camp David, Md. He scheduled a meeting today with Secre- cast, Giscard d'Estaing, a and newspapers was that the major shakeup the political Gaston Defferre,. the Socialist tary Peter J. Brennan and Undersecretary Richard F. Shu- member of the Independent Re- in maypr- ofy Marseille whoyis ex- bert to discuss unemployment insurance proposals that would publican party, ran second with pattern made the outcome of or, the , runoff unpredictable with pected to be premier if Mitter- extend benefits another . 13 weeks for the jobless .in pairticularly 8,286j382, 32,85 per cent. . , rand wins, admitted that not all depressed areas; Since the heavy turnout of 25 the. result . likely to be a photo finish. '' the left wing had turned out-to tiespite a Gallup n'pll released Sunday showing that , by million . voters gave no ; candi- back its standard bearer Sun- 3-1, 700 persons surveyed . had a "less favorable" opinion of date a majority,, a runoff, must i The big quesion " mark was day. It has been suggested that • Nixon after release of the transcripts, the White House be held , between the two high y how many of the :14yper. : oent some Socialists were, wary of HAPPY CANDIDATE . . .Trench Finance Ferrand, France, Sunday. Hei will face So- strategy' clearly i? aimed at going over the heads of the men in two weeks. But the vot- I who supported Chaban-Delmas the link with . the Communist MinisterV Valery Giscard d'Estaing, center cialist- candidate Francois Mitterrand in a after a campaign marked by left, in runoff election for the French presidency, House Judiciary Committee toy the public now that the 1m- ers dealt a shattering blow to party, .which is expected to give reaches out to jpyoUs supporters . ; ¦ : peachment hearings are to begin formally this week. the G-auilist Party, which domi- i personal bitterness toward Gis- the Communists a third of the front of Chamalieres- to\wn hall at Clermont- .May 19. (AP Photofax)V .": cabinet: posts If Mitterrand¦ is elected. . X Y' ' :-¦ '" . '' / * '""""^ Under bond .Defferre said these . Socialist Former debutante stay-at-homes' : constituted y "a reserve for the ¦ second ballot; and Francois Mitterrand should win." r ed "A good portion of those who arraign Lawyers ask Calley freedom voted for Chaban-Delmas may V^ornan in By KATHRYN JOHNSON Robert Elliott freed the 30-year- review, of the case not to re- he was "deeply disappointed in not vote for Giscard d'Estaing COLUMBUS, Ga , (AP ) - At- old former officer Feb. 27 on duce Galley's sentence further. the President's action.'' in the . second round,'' Defferre personal recognizance in lieu of "I have, reviewed the record . Galley had been under house added. Culture Minister 'Alain torneys for William L. Calley arrest since , his ' /March' 1971 , $1,000 bond. of the United States vs. Calley - Peyrefitte, a veteran Gaullist Jr. asked a federal court Elliott said that in 1969 ay Su- and have decided that no fur- conviction . for murdering at agreed, saying that . the "dy- theft of rriasterpieces today to . allow their client con- preme Court Justice freed on ther action by me in this case least 22 Vietnamese civilians at namic of the majority," or DUBLIN, Ireland . (AP) -; paintings stolen April ,26 by. a I Miss Dugdale is the daughter tinued freedom under bond, a bond Army Capt. Howard Levy, is necessary or appropriate," My Lai. Testimony at his court- bandwagon effect, which fa- Bridget Rose Dugdale, English ! woman and four rneri from the ; 6f Col. James Dugdale, chieif of status being challenged by the who like Galley had been con- Nixon said. martial showed hundreds of ci- vored De Gaulle and Pompidou debutante turned revolutionary, ! country home near Dublin of an insurance syndicate at Nixon decision upheld Army vilians died as Galley's platoon , ¦¦ government. victed by court-martial and ex- 's in the past might work now for was formally charged here to- Sir Alfred Beit , and .' .the other Lloyds of London, and was ona hausted military appeals. Levy Secretary Howard H. Calla- swept through the hamlet on Mitterrand. Government y attorneys have day on five counts in the theft ; three paintings were in the of the first women accepted as was convicted for refusing to way's April 16 reduction of Gal- March 16, 1968. Michel , d'Qrnario, secretary- of 19 masterpieces worth $20.4 trunk of the car. They included a member underwriter at asked the court to revoke Gal- train Green Berets ahd medics. ley's sentence from 20 toy 10 In granting Calley temporary general of Giscard d'Estaing's million — the biggest art rob- masterpieces by Vermeef, Lloyds. She lectured on eco- ley's bail on grounds it is un- The Army dismissed Calley. years. freedom , Elliott said he pre- party, indicated a "red scare" bery in history. Hals, Rubens, Goya and Velas- nomics at London University precedented for a military pris- on Saturday after releasing a One of the former lieuten- sented no threat to himself or campaign for the next two iMiss Dugdale, 33, was also quez and were valued at more ' and in the United States and *' J. Houston Gor- society. Elliott also said Calley oner to be- granted bail. statement from President Nix- ant's attorneys, weeks. : charged on five other counts in- than $20 million, j worked as an economist for the U.S. District Court Judge J. on saying he had decided upon don of Covington , Tenn., said had been a model prisoner. "What will parents of school- volving possession of explosives British Ministry of Overseas police, children think if the minister of and. firearms in. County Done- The gang had sent the Development . and. United , Na-y ' a note saying it would destroy . education is a Communist party gal, a trouble spot on the Irish I tions agencies. member?" he asked "What the paintings unless $1.2' million republic's frontier with vio- , j. Last year she was given wili the farmers think in a sim- lence-torn Northern Ireland. in ransom was paid by May 14 a ilar case? .What will the French and unless the sisters Dolours two-year suspended sentence Israelis show signs o people think if a Communist Slie was charged in Dubl'n's and Marion Price were - trans- for leading a gang that burgled no ferred to a prison in Northern holds the foreign affairs port- Special. Court after traveling her father's home of $192,000 folio when major international under heavy army and police Ireland. The sisters are serving neogtiations are in progress?" guard from County Cork where life sentences in a London jail worth of silver and art works she was arrested Saturday at a for bombings in the British cap- while her mother and father ital. remote cottage with the 19 oil¦ were attending the Derby. yielding to Syria demands Bulletin paintings stolen 10 days ago. ' . * MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet For- Most of the cases heard at By MARCUS EL1ASON fluid and nothing has crystal- October. But the Syrians are "there will be no limit to their eign Minister Andrei A. the Special Court involve mem- JERUSALEM (AP) - The lized." demanding that the Israelis re-, demands," Gromyko will meet Tuesday bers of the outlawed Irish Re- Israeli government showed no Health Minister Victor Shem- treat behind that line to give up After meeting with Syrian with Secretary of State Henry publican Array, a pre- signs of yielding to Syrian de- tov told newsmen the cabinet the devastated town of Ku- leaders Saturday, Kissinger A. Kissinger on the island of dominantly Roman Catholic neira and strategic mountain mands today as il. went Into an- would meet again today after talked for three hours with Is- Cyprus to discuss the Middle guerrilla movement battling to other round of troop dis- its leaders talk further with areas dotted by Israeli settle- oust the British from Northern raeli leaders Sunday, then flew East conflict ,. the Soviet news engagement talks with Secre- Kissinger. ments established since 1967. agency Tass reported today. Ireland and unite it with the re- tary of State Henry A. Kissin- Perhaps the toughest decision Premier Golda Meir warned to Amman , Jordan , for a three- public. ger. facing the Israelis was whether in a speech Sunday night that hour meeting with King Hus- Police earlier named the A government spokesman to modify their initial refusal to Israel , would depend less on sein. They reportedl y discussed woman arrested in Saturday 's said a cabinet session Sunday give up some of the territory Kissinger's diplomacy than on Jordanian hopes for an Israeli raid as Dr. Bridget Rose Dug- produced no decisions on the they seized from Syria in tho ils own "fight for survival." withdrawal from the West Bank dale, but noted that she refused next. move. 10R7 war. "If the Arabs , and our of the Jordan River , increased Wit! IgjL- to confirm-her identity. "We are still ni the beginning Israel has already signalled friends, think wo want peace so U.S. economic and military aid , Daughter of an English insur- of this whole negotiation ," said willingness to give up the terri- much that we don't have the the Geneva peace talks and the ance magnate and a doctor of official , confidence to light," she said , Palestinian issue in general. t^oper,} (one Israeli_ . "It is all tory it captured from Syria last y&wh philosophy, she has been sought ^ • by British security, forces sinco ¦^>au.i . . Wty February in connection with arms smuggling into Northern "If political parlies are Ireland, Mrs. Kissinger s supposed to have to voto Police , in the British province j together on . everything, On the inside:¦ ¦ ¦ also want to question her about 1 [3 ^ let each pnrty only send v y a bombing raid on a border po- ¦p,l one man from the entire & PftltOTOSC -**"c disclosures of lax returns or not worth $ lice base from a hijacked heli- | | UUIBgO Uoo | iavo v,ccn n)llf | fl |, y n| )(,ut fin m0i*n|.e.'S of Con- fi United Stales. Party poli- copter earlier this yenr. , pnRe 2 shyness in storage tics is tho most narrow- ?{:;•! gross — slory . U ' •:.;! By BARRY SCHWEID between their heights. minded occupation in tho Tlie police snid that ln tho | | llinSn'tiM A Soutli Vietnamese nrmorod push into Cam- f, world . A guy raised in a cottage they found J« oi the 19 |; Y ltrlllullll hoditi hns stalled against heavy AMMAN, Jordan (AP) — A chain-smoker , she doesn't communist¦¦ ||j break out her cigarettes in pub- straight-jacket.is a cork i-1 resistance — story, PURO 4. . ' ti Nancy Maginnes Kissinger lias screw compared to a *.{ j;-; lic, ' thick-headed pnrty poli- | | Tafaf-o A secret informmir who met with Sim Francisco if. ; put her shyness into storage, And sho pads to the back, of Reinecke trial | | freMIa Mayor Joseph Alloto in 12 "Zebra" slnylngs mny I In 90-degrce Egyptian heat husband Henry Kissinger's jet tician. l\ appenr before n-grnnd jury — story, pane S. 'yj she cheerfully scrambles 80 to chat with reporters , memo- "All you would hnvo slated July 15 |, rizing most of their names on to do to make somo men | | Cnnpil ' wo m«nt li« nfior (he 55 mile per hour speed limit iy| yards down to inspect, the Ro- WASHINGTON (AP) - A u tt-JJCGU WPn t into offeel. on n nationwide basis , an Asso- the first shot . atheists , is just to tell | | man baths at Alexandria. Ihem (lie Lord belongs to July 15 trial dato was set to- f. cialcd Press survoy shows Americans have slowed down n |! Reared In n wealthy, subur- dny for California Lt. Gov. Ed >| Utile but nro slill driving fnsler than lho law allows slory, $ An Episcopalian, the opposition political — s|ie visits ban New York setting, Nancy party. Aftor thnt thoy Reinecke on perjury charges i¦¦ pnge II. }|| stemming from the ITT case. f.i Jerusalem nnd toiirs Judaism's Maginnes learned the social could never seo any good ¦* Alii 'iifHoln 's aging homo run slugger Harmon Kll- | Walling Wall , the Moslems* amenities long ago nt the Mas- in Ulm. " March 29 1925. Tho action by U.S. District Tw ine , Parker in- | | I WlllO ipioow , postponed n Shiny of retirement talk Sun- ty Dome of the Rook and the tor 's Girls Scliool in Dobbs Fer- Judge Harringto n I day with a pnlr of homers that carried the Twins j s dicated the court will turn down to nn H-3 Christian Church of the Holy ry and Mount Holyokc College, | | victory ovor Detroit •— story, page 12. jp But moving onto tho world ponding motions by Reinecke to RECOVERED MASTEM-IECE . . . Cork , Eire, police Sepulchre. diplomatic stage of dismiss the indictment 6r, fall- I f> Smf 11 l>,nno crnslie in Michigan , Texas and 1 as tho wifo Sgt. Pal, O'Leary, left, and Detective Jerry O'Sullivan wlio UlKaehnc aaliua ' ** A 6-footer , she hugs President Kissinger, n globe trotter with ing that , to move the trial to !| iho Cfirolinns have claimed 10 lives — story, lj Will were Involved in the recovery Saturday of 19 stolen art trea- Anwar Sadat's wifo and man- an impulsive and offbeat sense All right! merved lor Poner* 'California. § page lfi. j.ji Mctniorinl CtmimUslon ^tilled tiv sures, are pictured with one of the paintings , 'Tho Luto .i< ages not to appear awkward of humor, is a test oven for this Dry*ti\ .i ,. , iwawff ,-iVrt-u.-i tmrh-to ^tW , • ii -f?;: .. .M I despite the six: or eight inches .smooth, 40-year-old . socialite. cent to the charges. Player, ¦Mti ^ In other weekend/district con*. per cent endorsement vote -¦ ' in the midst of the 21st ballot conservative bloc of voters in than Turnbull. 18th ballot and TlVz-sm oh the cans.. Zwich is retiriag at vie By GERRY NELSON . . . - : s District Republi-y ' ¦ Babcock , 44, once was a Be- ity became, apparent he Minnesota, Babcock called it /Following th 17th ballot , 20th ballot. As the first counties end of this -year. . ., ventions, 1 t- . . MANKATO, Minn. "(AP) — when endorsed Rep. Albert publican but has been active in had reached* the :60 per : cent " a very favorable; year for both Candidates:returned to the began reportiiig in bn the 21st - "Jon "will be a tougli arid for- cans Steve Babcock, a Mankato busi- the senior congressman ' DFL affairs for some 15.years. plateau, Turnbull; . then asked Democrats." ..' . . * V rostrum to make a second ap- ballbt,.it became, apparent that midable opponent, . Nolan said Quie, nessman and longtime friend . of '' Minnesota fbr . another ¦He. ' -will' -oppose - State; Rep. the convention to make it unan- peal to delegates, Babcock. said Babcock had enough votes for; after his victory, /'but I'm .opti- from , Sen, Walter, F. Mondale, was: ; • Babcock, ywho. credited Jionr ¦ by acclamation. He has Thomas ,M.' -Hagedorn ¦ Truman imous, Both candidates , had the 30-year-old Hagedorn . will the victory. mistic. ; ... • ;¦• ' -• tertri endorsed, for Congress Sunday . . , , dale with bringing him into the ' ' S. House of Rep- who was endorsed by Repubh.- be a tough' candidate and im- Nolan, a '.' businessman em-* been in the U . by' the 2nd District DFL Con- urged the convention to choose Democratic Party in. the early Babcock, who was Blue '¦ cans in a 20-ballot marathon they plief would be, the, tougher ployed: by Pihgerhut Corp. of resentatives since 1958,: V vention. - . '. - any endorsee . and said he Earth County DFL chairman in , 1960s, said, "I think a moderate of the; two Democrats to. run Minnesota, called for a new ap- Rep. Donald Fraser, D-Mirin., apparently last weekend would not enter an open pri- 1966, served as s 2nd ; It took 21 ballots, ' ' Democrat , can' , win this • dis- him."^ Mondale' proach . to government. : V was unanimously: endorsed for .y Fort . the' first, time- in more maryVV-' - '¦;. . " against District : . . ' a record in Minnesota politics, trict," He said he believes he. 73% to 60Vi-on campaign leader: in "We need a government that a . seventh term Saturday _ by than 30 -years . Turnbull led . 1966 and 1972 ' ¦ before Babcock win out .over , Democrats See a / Turnbull was the 1972 candi- will, be able to appeal to key Babock led , He is . president, tells us the truth,";he told dele- DFL delegates to Minnesota's .' the first .ballot. of a stone quarr-ying ¦ ¦ Charles Turnbull, St:. Peter.- . V chanco of winning the 2nd Dis- date against Nelsen: and had independent voters in the 2nd the;4th through the Oth company, gates; ;. - ;., 'y .y'V :? 5th District Convention. ' , from , J a director of the '^ .. trict - seat, with- the * retirement been running eyer since for a District. moyedy back Nicollet Coun- ¦Fraser The two had slogged through ' . , V' - . V- ' ballots . Turnbull ty Bank in ' told the convention he second chance. : v "¦ the 11th St. Peter and has six hours, of inconclusive ballot- this year, of veteran Repubticafl He said the convention dele- into - the, lead on . farming and gravel would vote in favor of ah im- ; ' ' ' ' ' ' 17th ballots. Bab- interests in Grain Belt reports ing with neither -.ible. -tc . . ga.ri)er congressman ¦Ahcher Nelsen. . Although the lG-county 2nd gates apparently; decided in the through the LeSueur County. : peachment resoiution y against the 81 votes necessary for a 60: ' :'Bab'cock :'s . .cridorsement. 'c'ame District is considered the most end 'that he was more electable cock moved ahead 67-66 on the President Nixon " right now on .. . He and his wife ear ni n gs off sh a rply . . , Patty, have the basis , of evidence available , ; five; children : . . ST. PAUL, Miim. (AP): — to me at this time." " y X' Daily New« re- Winona . Democrats began their attack Grain Belt Breweries, Inc., '. . In :the;4th District DFL con- 2 Minnesota . on Hagedorn at earnings Winona, the. convention, ported first quarter . vention, Rep. Joseph E. Karth Turnbull called : 1974 . Hagedorn .."one of $6,000, or 1 cent a share- won endorsement. Karth, now ;. . MONDAY; MAY 1, of. the. most Conservative . Abiu|;;60vCQp men down sharply irpni $101,000 and serving his eighthi term, was in Minnesota. " 11 cents per share in 1973. Unopposed; ',; ¦Gerald' N; Meyer, president , Gov, Wendell Anderson, who Republicans , . of the regional brewery, Said Fourth District addressed the convention j said convention . of rn first quarter sales were down concluded a two-day Hagedorn was one r©- ret s> : of 10 who Saturday without endorsing a tax slightly, due ta inclement weath- fullyyd-is - voted against the campaign re- d^M u -; candidate to oppose -Karth. y Kronholm form bill when the House er and , intensified , competition - By WILLIAM L," CIIAZE closure. / The House,. , however rity of government: has fallen to ly. Percy's daughter Valerie, ; , , passed that; rheasure 118*10 dur- of national ; brewers who ship . Joan Frydenlund, 411) District ¦WASHINGTON CAP ) ; - has acted ori . '.neither*bill/. ,' its lowest ." - , was beaten arid : stabbed to V ing the ,197.4 legislative session, into this market.;- GOP ' chairwoman, said dele- About 60 of the 535 members Of Most . members -who. have Metzenbaum, with a reported death at the age of 19 in 1966 : Sixth District DFLers meet- He said the earnings.'-, decline gates will y caucus iat the. Re- y C o ng r e s s - have /voluntarily moved qli iheir own to disclose net Vbrth of $3.& million, _ is by. an unknown , assailant. :, '. ' ;¦' suspect s ...... ' ing in Marshall Sunday unani- was caused by large, uncon- publican state - convention in Y rhade public disclosure of . their tlie.ir finances -say tliey did ; so among the wealthiest members* .Of those who make a policy ¦ : ' mously endorsed. 'Richard' ' No- trollable . " supplier : price in- June in an effort to. find an op- tax , returns or net financial in nh . aUeinpt. to : restore the of Congress. -But some of the of disclosing their; net worth . . ' ¦¦ , a lan, who narrowly lost a bid agricultural in- ponent for'KartH. ; Y- . .' - ' ,wortlu . credibility of; government, ' espe- richest men in Congress have number are multimillionaires.: creases for . two 'years ago to . unseat Rep. - supplies she : is ; . Another 25 contacted in ' ah cially- in light of Watergate. yy not disclosed. They include Sen. They include Sen. , Claiborne conditionstable ; ¦ gredients, packaging Mrs. /Frydenlund said John Zwach, R-Minn ',y -. y y V can be Associated Press survey say ."those of us who have been Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.; Pell, D-R.I,, -who lists his net . and . utility . services that the "hopeful" a candidate - .- MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) pass will not . ' .- they are preparing to make a elected to the legislative branch Sen/ James Buckley, Cbri.-R.- worth in excess of $3 million, Nolan, 30;. will face Jon Gruh- company was unable; to found-biit. said the GOP . — One of three men charged in for the public accounting of their fi- can . help restore credibility 'in N.Y.; and Sen. Charles Percy, arid Rep. Ogden Reid, D-N.Y., . seth, who recently won endorse- along to: consumers because of endorse Someone "just . nanceis ydr are considering' that government by being frank and -&I-V V who lists his at more than $4.15 the abduction of a South St. ment from 6th. District Republi- I competitive conditions. sake of running.'-' '" . ' • • ' ' "'¦ .step.. - : , ; ,' y-z y.y open in . all .respects ," says 'Sen. Buckley . says he receives million. ' •- . ', -; Paul bank president's wife re- mBBRJBtRBBmBK^jmmmMBmRmmmm ^E&RB^mmmMmmmmmmmmK ^^mtmmmmmmtRmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ^ Full public disclosure by; Frank. E.:, Moss,. D-Utah. . "One about . 200,000 letters. eachVyear mains in stable condition today members of Congress is not re- way to be candid is to make from constituents, but has nev- Others are R;ep. Jerry L. Pet- . ¦ quired .by law. - full/disclosure of personal' fi- er been ; asked- to make ah- acr tis, R-Calif., $1.3 million; Rep. at University of Minnesota Hos- ' House members must file nances.'' xx,'. . . • "• . '..' . countLng;' He says he might at Pierre S. du Pont, R-Del., $2.5 pitals after being, shot in the with ah ethics committee a Mbss gives' an . accounting ev- some future date. : . million (in stocks); and Rep, head early .SaturdayV Gilbert Gude form listing business interests, ery two years, His rriost recent Kennedy likewise has said he , R-Md., with $2.3 James W.. Johnson, 36, million. - • ¦ , : but the worth of . those interests statement listed $118,636 :.in as- might -make some form of pub- charged with kidnaping Mrs. is kept confidential by the pan- sets;, against $126,917 . in; liabi- lic disclosure. -But, in the past,, ¦ -¦ Rep. Charles W. Whalen Jr., Eunice Kronholm March 15 and el.,' lities. , ' he has refused on grounds.his v R-Ohio, lists his worth ait near- extorting $20O;00O- ransom from Senators inust file;:with ' the Sen! Howard Metzenbaurri, p- separated finances cannot be , ly $!¦ million. Sen. Robert: Taft her husband, .'Gunnar, was shot comptroller general a copy of Ohio,' - disclosed his net financial from . for disclosure purposes, Jr., R-Ohio, reported' his: net while , driving; on a highway their federal income tax return wotth -immediately upon* being other - members of his family. . worth at about $2 million when south of Minneapolis-St. Paul. and a list of finances not cov- appointed to serve ,_ out the re- Percy says the . experience of he was elected in 1970. He re: Authorities say their .investi- ered in thei return. TOe infor- mainder : of . Atty.: Gen . William thayHearst family in California leases tax summaries each B, ' ¦ gation has* ; turned : .rip no sus- mation also is confidential. Saxbels term, He said dis- shows that disclosure of finan- year. : ; - ,;" " ,The Senate twice has passed closure was important because cial worth can endanger the pects atid no apparent motive legislation requiring fuller . dis- "public confidence in the integ- safely of a public figure's fami- Many of tlie others who have for the shooting. • disclosed- list . net worth.of sev- ; Ronald Meshbesher ,;. John- eral hundred thousaind . dollars son's ; attorney, said after vis- They include Sen. Adlai: Steven- iting him at the hospital that Split developing son IH,; D-II1.,; with $668,250; Johnson indicated he jnight Rep. Richard F. Vander VeeUj know who shot him. He .did not D-Mich, $244,518; Rep. Guy elaborate./ Vander Jagt, R-Mich., $327,000, Police said Johnspii fold them y and Rep. . Charles A. Mosher, R- he was shot; by sbrneone- in a J:M:dtC!: af^:;:Cpni Ohio, $235,«00. yy car that pulled alongside his on Also; Rep. Johri Dellenback, an exit.rampyof Interstate 35W R-Ore:, $469,200 ; Rep. William in ' Burnsville, - a Mirineapolis : suburb, . . Lehman* D-Fla., $621,000; Rep. . ,V ;vtov:g Bill . Archer, R-Tex., $409,293; Mrs, Kronholm 46, was held ready Rep. Richard T. Hanna, D-Ca- for 80 • hours after being ab- WASHINGTON (UPI) - The should not . be used ," . Rep. President Nixon's chief lif,, $545;244; Rep, Claire W. ducted near her north suburban ¦ V • House Judiciary Committee this Edward Hutchinson of . Michi- Watergate lawyer, James. D. St, Burgerier, R-Calif;, $334,898; home. After the ransom was gan told . UPI in ', an interview Clair, said Sunday he does not D-Calif., ¦week finally gets down to the Sen. Alan Cranston * paid , she . walked- away, froni Saturday. . V- - think Nixon : will be:impeached, $547 800; Sen. J, Glenn Beall, the man holding her in a business at; hand-examining , .Burns- Because of: ¦ constitutionally ¦but':.that if he is, there will be R-Md., $305,817 ;/ Sen. Walter B. ville home, just , a few hours evidence;to determine whether guaranteed pro tec tion from self- no appeial¦ to. the Supreme Huddlestbn, D-Ky., $215,167, after Jolinson: was arrested by • ' ¦ ¦ ; ; ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ' ¦ e,e President Nixon should . be incririunati'on more than ,- a Court. ; * • and ' Sen. ' •.• Clifford : P. Case, R- the FBI.,V ' ^' ' ¦ ' ' ¦ V ':cy Washing Selection;;; , v ' ' ' ¦I liii ' ' 'iSBfTili ' ' - ; iriipeached.y Vy dozen prospective key witnesses ¦ N.J:. $685,963. ' 'y : Watertemperatu ¦:. •¦ . A Gallup ' poll released Johnson, theyfather of three ' " " 'S '11 IHll' l 'fj ll ./. - '.. V '-i'*rV - ' would be lost to the/ committee children, has pleaded innocent ' S!fi ' : ' on . Although the first few days of Sunday showed , that the nearly At least seven hst net worth ¦ '¦ ¦ ' : ;' '¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦ ' Se, c ; Available In V; if Hutchinson prevails. 700 persons surveyed felt "less in excess of $100 000 They are to federal charges of extortion ' Ull ^i| I'P ' • '' '' - ' - ^ ^ hearings, scheduled to begin ' , . ¦ : IB ¦ ¦ : Railsbaek and Sarbanes, ap- favorable"toward Nixon since Sen. Birch Bayh D-Ind and state charges of kidnaping. ' 'YXy- ; '(: ¦ ¦ " eith r White Harvest'Gpid, ; ;:.";,: "Wednesday or Thursday, .will , . ., ^S!fc^¦ , 11 pSj il liU^^ •> - ^' •- - ¦' ¦ ^ ^ : pearing Sunday on OBS' "Face he released the transcripts. : $180,831; Rep. Edward J. Bles- He was released on bond April . - '.^- ii lJ lJHP ^ , .:- . ' :' Avocado or Goppertone. be closed to the publio and the Nation ," took exception to 15. ' ' ter Jr.,. R-Pa., $126,049; Rep. press, a split : already has Hutchirison's position. ' - ,. • • A poll by Daniel Yan- - kelovich, lnc, showed that Wendell . -. Wyatt, R-Ore., Frederick¦;.; Helberg Jr., 42, D- developed about procedure in "Tliis particular ijiie'sttoh of prior to !the transcript:release, $118,636; Rep. John Culver, has been indicted on both state Iowa , $115 000; Rep. John the open hearings that will possible ' impeachment ; of the 55 per_ cent of those surveyed , and federal charges. A 'third begin no sooner than two weeks Rousselot, R-Cahf., $150,000; ¦¦ President of the, United . States thought Nixon should either man, Thomas Hodgman, 31, from . now; ' , should be of overriding im- resign or be impeached. In the Sen. Edmund S. Muskie; D- was charged in federal court port ," Railsbaek Said. "If we last ; such poll , taken in Maine, $153,141, and Sen. Wil- with extortion. Convmittee Vice Cliairmnn decide that we need somebody's November,. the figure was 39 liam Lloyd Scott, R-Va,, Rep. Edward Hutchinson, R- $150,000, Mich., says witnesses should testimony to really clear it up per cent. ¦ ' ¦ ¦ so that Me can make an Maines two representatives ' .V '\V \ ./ /- ' "V-'V Model DA6121 not be granted immunity from " I IN THE I ^ . intelligent decision , I personally • House .- Majority, Leader — Democrat Peer Kyros and y PUBLIC INTEREST prosecution for what they miiy Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass., said I | reveal. But panel members think that: we may very well Republican William S. Cohen — ? Feature Length Color <| have to ' grant immunity. '' Saturday he is "certain" list the smallest net worth of ^ Reps. Paul Sarbanes, D-Md., impeachment will reach the ~ iy .— Movie EntiHed <| and Tom Rallsback ' R-Il]., Sarbanes added that "you those who have disclosed . ASK ABOUT OUR / A , House floor by the third week "TURN ON TO I ^^T disagree. They say immunity don't like (o , grant , immunity, in July. - Kyros says his is about $25j : [ 0A6121 COMPLETExx ...... / Y. \ may be necessary to get the but it may become necessary if 000 and Cohen lists $29,000. LIFE" ! FULL V full stoi*y of Watergate and you are to obtain the full Michigan was the first state "I'm worth so little my staff / related matters. story." to abolish tlie death penalty- is embarrassed about it," said » By Dr. Reginald Gold, DC J} "The doctrine of immunity In otlier developments: , the yeai;j 1847. Kyi*os. » on t| PYRAMID OF £^*j™PARTSHABORX ^ CHIROPRACTIC I PROTECTIONDDnTCfvrinw P^ WARRANTY | | EVERY WED. 7 P.M. f \ I \nd how it relates to tha S i health and well being as < \ \ indicated in (lie following S "~^ > topic. (If you plnn to at- 2 Y^k MATCHfNG DRYER r^_Mi°iii mHim^s { tend this FREE showing, < m^ I please phone ns seating is 5 ^^ ^ ^ ¦ i^ ) ' Rust-Proof , Chip-Proof IHCOHVEHIEHCEI { limited, $ ^b^0&0 ££ £^^\. . I /Xy ^YXY ' (. J 'S^*^ , A: Stainless Steel Drum, Ideal for Durable Press Who s Boss? 1 vS. and Knit ^ ; ' ^IS ^^W > Fabrics; Lint t Ever opon one oye vory core- C ^ Multi-Cycle Drying * fully In tlio mornlno. «tnro woe- c V\ /w^^^^^^^- In-A-Door • fully around tho room and wonder C TH^^"^ Selections; - J wlial's fhe uso of trylns to do <[ Y^^^^P^pT"' Screen; Available • anything? j i. >lfx) ILr/y \ In either // White, Harvest Gold «^© V^^^^AX , Avocado:or Goppertone. " ' \M m ^^^^^^^ ^^YrX ¦ ¦ '\[Sf W^Mw ' C^I^JIP O*; , M P?W ¦¦¦ P M** I \^^^^0^ * J^L PL^W charge of your | y^ I s I body nnrt mind? 4 \ \ ^ ==^ ^ Modol DE6231 ( Somnnno should pass lho word i .' \ _^-5=y ( ^^^^ » «l> out rhlropracllc nnd tha J hcnllhy, ' happy luellng lhal te- I ; stills wh«n fhe brnln nnd tho i t ^zZZ:^ ' Starling May 7lh, wo will be doing Teller Units. ' body's nervous sy'lom nra prop, J, Model ¦ ¦ [ erly In tuna nnd nil fhe nlnnds, Ji DE8231 some remodeling in our Drive-Up Bank- r- . ! 0roans, ond muscles nf Iho body Ji For your convenience we will keep I nro opornllno properly nnd offl- Ji ina area [ cltnlly. JI two drive-up lanes I All bodily nellon! are conlrolled 4 ' open during all t by nervo Impuljos from the brain, 4 ' 1 It thos» iticssnnos ennnot , reach , ' In order lo improve our drive-up banking hours throughout this remod- > Itiolr propnr dojtlnnllon hocnuM I service I ol prossuros or Implnnomonh In C ! , we are installing a new Visual eling. I Ida splnHl column, Ihe worn-out I IS SPEED QUEEN HI * old body |usf doosn't want to r»- l[ Auto Teller Syst em to replace I spond lo Iho orrior to ool up nnd our T.V. 1 J| move. J1 a McBraw-Edison Company Division 1 Thnt healthy, hnppy feellno re- , < 1 turns fnst , howovor, when a com- 1 1 1 niilonl clilrnprnclor ponlly ad- j 11 "no Ihn splnnl ailunin In nllnw 1 .-. Busiiiesa 1 lusts 4 ! Thflt Servtoo 1 froo flow of nervo energy through « ' yr j A4/UJr Built" 1 the body. Nature Imperle Ihn plow a 1 1 o| henllh and tho M/\N nonln ho. < ' IRST ATIONAL 1 comes the mnstnr ol tho hody, _____ F N 1 1 «nd llfo Is a plonsnnt, nmv oxpor- ' 1 lenro ovory day. rtnntfirr Honlfh 2• MEMBER F.D.I.C. 1 nnd Life Article from the Olflce t, B B_A_II II % 1 oli lj PHONE 452-28)0 177 MAIN MPF%M WW \ ttp Wuffl Qy^y]^ Dr. Deimond J. Smllh x An/Uflllata of Northwest Bancorporatlon • carpenters, ce- '' operating a public or* private ment , masons and construction their deeds," the group decided tees included Mrs Barbara Gib- in a split vote against ahy am- swimming pool. - Presentations son, Utica township, resolu- Jefferson Field drivers - - under . provisions: of will include fescue training and Wihnebagos differ on a reopening clause .of a; three- nesty. V. tions; Jerry : Pap«ifuss, 1710 next /Several resolutions called for emergency care, pool water W. 'Broadway, / rules; / Mrs/ . year contract: that expires chemistry and proper operation year. . '/ campaign and election reiorrh, Pauline Knight, ^1305 Conrad; name diange io with Republicans opposing elec- of pools and pool equipment. / Dr.- credentials; and Dr. Leo registration , fee will ; be , 574 . y Mankato tion day or/ postcard registra- A . y Ochrympwycz .* disbursement of f urids tion and fa\oring restoration of ;cha.rgea. . y Ave., .constitution. :'"• be asked tonight By PEARL PORATH record of positions on the pro- ed with the. P. . C- Ziegler Co., . A ieqest that Jefferson Field Daily. News correspondent posed settlement: of the claim Minneapolis, The business com- WSHSleam beV renamed Paul . .Giel Field, BLACK RIVER FALLS, .Wis; of the Winnebago nation against mittee is to act as the trustee. ¦ . honoring a. Winona native . who ' — , Wisconsin's Winnebago In- the. /United States, Rev. Wliiterabbit :said v that became a . . two-sport All-Ameri- dians have made it . clear , to ¦'. He explained that, after the originally he was for :the 80-20 can at the University of Minne- the, Bureau of Indian Affairs hearing, the. transcript will be percent plan but , that was loses game in sota: and now is the university's that they don't like the propos- forwarded to the Secretary of ."shot down by members want- director of . athletics/ will bs ed settlement by the federal gov- the Interior and then to .. con- ing full control of their inon- • ¦ '¦ ' : presented to the School Board ernment . for . lands the Win- gressional committees/ which . ey." - - . .;' : y of Winona;Independent District . quiz playoffs nebagos ylost more : than 1O0 may act at once. ;But, he said; . Myle . Greendeer, Baraboo, ¦ 861 at its committee of the years agoV persons may submit statetnents said that the Winnebagos got Winona Senior ; High Schools whole meeting tonight. At-a public, hearing here Sat- to the area director in Minneap- only a/ "measly $4.6 million" defending Super High Quiz Bowl Dr.C H. Hopf ,. s.uperintendr urday, the Winnebagos brought; olis until May 13. champions //Were eliminated when land was taken frorn¦ them ent of. schools, also is expected out many other views about- the There is a 60-day waiting pe- but the government recently frbm 's further competition in this to make a report pn 'the search disbursement of the year's playoffs when they weer $4.6 million¦ riod for approval pi* disapprov- gave $9 million to disaster vic- for a person yto fill the new -po- oh a 100 percent capita basis.. ' al of the disbursement plan, but tims .in the " , recent Oshkosh defeated 155" to lis in Sunday sition of administrative assist- ; '' ; evening's game ,; of quick re- ¦' .. - Elmer/; TV Mitzschek, Minne- it appears now that the money area storm. ant, .Vy ;. -.: apolis field : solicitor could be given to registered call ytelevised by Xif i. Crosse. for .the ¦ He said he would have liked ¦ Several plant . improvement Federal Department of: the In- Winnebagos by; mid^August. . - ah. appeal of the entire Winne- Channel 8. V proposals - are expected to be terior, and . Casimer LeBeau, The award was/ provided by bago claim but, since it is too The Winona team was elimi- discussed by directors. trial operations officer, U.S. Bu- Congress , oh Sept. & 1970, , ahd late, he favors the. 100 percent nated in the quarterfinals of The proposal that.the athletic reau of Indian Affairs at Minne- disbursement has been /bogged plan;".' . competition among three-time ; : field be renamed for Giel will apolis,; were in charge of . the down in red tape ever since. Myron Lowe, Middleton, ex- winners in regular season play be made by the Winona Boos- hearing attended ; by about SO The Wisconsin / Winnebagos, pressed concern about the min- iy, Westby Wis,) High School ter Club. V Winnebagos from Wisconsin and numbering about 2,500 unlike eral rights the WinnebagosJb3t lh the second half/.of"- a double- The meeting; will begin . at 7 Minnesota. the in their agreemerit with the/gov- header match. : ' Nebraska Winnebagos, of p.m. in the lower/library at Wi- ;., NITZSCIIE stressed that the whom there are about 2.C0O, far ernment.' He ; added : "We.: are IN THE other half Madison nona Senior High School. * ;- .. (Wis.) High School advanced to hearing was strictly to secure a vor 100 percent disbursement. acting like a white man now, ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION . . .The Col. Joseph. P. Emanuel, Winona; Col.; Cecil saying, take the semifinals by. defeating Hoi-* . Each Winnebago will get about /'I'll .the money.'" 25th anniversary of the 419 Civil Affairs Com- B, Kase, Cinciniiati, Ohio, and Lt. Col. Joseph $1,100. Miss : Mar len Elkmound, Min- men (Wis.) High School 130 to . . / :¦ ;¦ ¦ ¦ '• S. Rislove Rushford Minn., ahd seated from The Wisconsin -Winnebagos neapolis, favored 100 percent ¦oo: . "/ pany, Army Reserve, held Saturday at West- , , , are scattered throughout the disbursement, saying that ur- The Winona team of Mark field Gplf Club, was attended by 54 couples. / left: former Company 1st Sgts., Dan Trainor County library state. ban Winnebagos wouldn 't bene- Hunn, Joe Berkman,; j -'ii 1 i e The reserve unit: was activated April 4, 1949V Jr. andi David Peplinski, Winona; Donald The Nebraska band, more fit from community betterment Keller and James. Henderson; deactivated in January 1968 and is now Sec- Lafferty, Lake City,:Minn,, and; John Haggen, concentrated, had called for an programs. / coached by, C. D; Stephens, tion I, 407th Civil Affairs Company, : Fort Winona, and Frank Siebenalery Lewiston, 80 percent disbursement with HENRY beebfah, St. Paul, chairman of the high school . Snelling, Minn. Standing, from left, are Lt. Minn.; (Daily News photo) 20 percent of the money going said the director of the BIA of- English department, jumped to contract sidned for community development fice in Minneapolis had fail- an early lead during the first • minutes in its match with West- By STEVEN P. JOHNSON agreed it would likely meet the projects. -/.- ed to lead the Winnebagos dn ¦ ' ¦ ' ' the right course of by- ' • :¦ . . .. • . : .V- V-y - Daily News Staff Writer intent of the new law if the Thei award is for land ceded action. He Quie expects Action or taken from the Winnebagos added that he knows of many At: one point, Winona led by Gity wakes up by the Winona- County news media were notified. a score of 100 to 45 but West- Board of Commissioners this by the government in the 1880s. Winnebagos not listed on the morning clears the path for Even such routine county The lands " were in northern Il- tribal roll of those who will get by ran up a succession of points reelection despite board functions as road tours linois; southern Wisconsn and a share of the money. to trail 85 to 105 and 95 to 105 freejibrary services for rural , before taking a lead of 145 to county residents. when they "visit highway, pro- parts of Iowa and Minnesota. - Mrs. Alberta Day, Wisconsin to record Mw Commissioners Litigation for the settlement Dells, said she supports the 100 105 and held/the edge in the signed a con- ject sites and problems around closing, moments to take the Watergate V Winonans awakened today to the coldest May 6 morning tract with the city of Winona started in the 1940s. percent plan and a policy of self- in the city's history after the mercury had slipped to a low , , ' , ;• ' the county, now fall under the The money is now deposited determination. match. ROCHESTER, Minn.-Despite ' ' _ . _ ...... _ .. .. today to pay The quarterfinals • continue of 27, breaking a 30-year record. -- -:- . - the city .$27,- public notice requirement. in six Federa l Reserve Banks, • Calvin Whitoeagle. Black Riv- the bleak outlook for Republi- The reading erased the previous record of 3d for this date One is slated for 9:30 a.m. drawing interest, er Falls, a former committee- next Sunday evening when Cal- temperatures expected to into CouhfV m for free (Minn ) High School cans in this post-Watergate era, set in 1944 but are library s e r- Wednesday, beginning at the The governing body "of the man, said he, too, favors 100 edonia , more seasonal ranges today; and Tuesday. , county highway department's Wisconsin Winnebagos consists percent but with some reserva- meets Bangor (Wis.) High First District Rep. Albert Quie Under fair skies, the noon reading today was 50, a low Board vices {or rural and Aquin- residents for offices In Goodview. of an elected business commit- tions, School in one game expects to he re-elected, the around 40 is expected tonight and a high in the 60s for Tues- J In other action this morning, He pointed out that it is hard as High School , La Crosse -will' Minnesota congressman told a day. tJ,,, rest 0f tiie tee, wliich held a business ses- ( year, commissioners awarded a- con- sion before Saturday's public tp come up with a positive en- be paired with Onalaska Wis.) The normal temperature range for a May 6 in Winona High School in the recent Chamber of Commerce ——————The board today also told tract for purchase of a squad hearing. .Arnold Garvin is chair- rollment list and that he Lutheran ls from 66 to 44. meeting here, car to Tousley Ford , Miracle man , and Ona Whitewing is sec- foresees the need to have a second half. The record high of 93 has stood since 1934. County Attorney Julius E. Ger- STEVENS will have two Those chances will be hurt This morning's weather forecast indicated skies will be- nes lo hnve a similar contract Mall. retary. fund in case someone eligible is In bids opened this morning not listed and sues for his members oi this year's squad only if traditional supporters re- come increasingly cloudy tonight and continue cloudy to -for $10,5(10—with the city of The Rev. Mitchell Whiterab- act to the Nixon administration partly cloudy Tuesday. St. Charles ready for county for the sheriff 's department bit , how of' Hudson , Wis., exe- share. returning for next year's com- ' ¦ ' - political corruption by staying The clouds will hold the possibility of some scattered board signatures Tuesday. new car, Tousley had the ap- cutive director of the St. Paul . - petition. showers Tuesday, parent low bid of $3,799.41, in- They are Henderson and Lisa away from polls altogether, he AI.L THAT THEN remains American Indian Center and a Two boys arrested for explained. before the long-awaited¦' county- cluding trade-in of a 1906 car member of the business com- Steffen , the latter an alternate Winona Daily News now . used by the zoning ad- mittee told of the committee liquo r possession on this year's team. Quie, First- District congress- wide library service can he , 's man since 1958, said that incum- implemented is for the two cit- ministrator. efforts for the past two years to Two 17-year-old Winona boys APPLE PRODUCERS MONDAY, MAY 6, J971 Other bids came from Wino- bents have somo election ad- Winonan injured VOLUME 118, NO. Ml ies to sign llielr respective determine wishes of the major- have been referred to juvenile Wash (UPI) na Auto Sales, West . 3rd and OLYMPIA, . - vantages, In addition , he point- . Published dally (xc«pt Saturday and c«ir- contracts. Both city councils ity about the disbursement , and authorities after being charged Washington was the nation's tiiln ' holidays by R«publl?fin ond Horqltl Huff streets, ,940.40 ed to his strong race in 1964 Publlshino Compnny, «01 Franklin St., have said they would sign such $3 , and of the Jan. 26 vote for 10O per- Friday night with possession of leading apple producing state in Quality Chevrolet Co., West 3rd when Republicans as a whole in one-car crash (Vlnona, Minn 55987. agreements. cent per capital disbursement. liquor. 1973, with a record crop of 42.8 fared poorly, and Huff streets, $4,604.75. TjlK COMMITTEE, he ex- The two were arrested at SUBSCRIPTION RATES Gomes said the Winona con- million boxes. The State President Nixon would do IIAltT, Minn. , - A Winona Slnolo Copy ISc Dally, 30c Sunday tract is effective April 1 — plained, voted Saturday to pro- 11:20 p.m. in St. Yon 's Valley Dollvorod by Carrier—Per Woek 75 centi, Agriculture Department said better to make complete public man suffered a head injury ' over n month ngo—nnd it is his The island of Jamaica got its vide that minors have their by police who were investigat- New York ranked second and 13 weoki $9.75, JJ wMkJ $19.05, 52 wook* first constitution from Britain disclosure of Watergate-related when his car rolled over near 138,10, opinion any rural county resi- shares protected through a trust ing an alleged attempt to siph- Michigan third in apple produc- information Quie emphasized, dent who bought city cards in 1662. fund agreement to be establish- on gasoline from a car. , hero early this morning. Ho Dy mall strictly In ndvancoi paper.(top. tion last year, Nixon did not comply with the ped on expiration dalo, sinco April 1 should get a re- wns brought to Community Me- fund. The cily charges House Judiciary Committee's Local Area — Ratoj bolow apply oni/ non- morial Hospital about five hours In Winona, Houiton, Wabasha , Flllmor* -year. sulmoena for Watergate tapes residents $12 per later. and Olmsted counties In AAlnnejolai otitt County board members said by turning over only edited Bullalo, Trempealenu, Popln, Jackson transcripts of most of the re- nnd La Crosse counties In Wisconsin) and they would deliver tho Winonn The driver, Glen L. Hines, 27, nrmed (orcos personnel wllh military contract to city officials todny cordings, <)ule added. Tlie con- 1402W W. Broadway, was listed addresses In the continental United Statu to speed implementation , gressman said tapes wou ld be in satisfactory condition this ?r oversea, wllh APO or FPO addressei. " In order to hear I yenr $30,00 » monlh*i $24.00 In other action this morning, "valuable morning by a hospital spokes- ( month! «1».00 3 montha $10.50 commissioners approved a voico inflection. man. Elsewhere — In United Stales and Canada meeting notico procedure to The accident occurred about I year U1.0O 9 months S37.M bring county meetings Into com- I a.m. todny on Highway 43, i months $27,50 1 months $12.50 pliance with Hie slate's new Houston man hurt about 12 miles soutli of Winonn. Sunday News only. I vear . .. $l£.0O Single dally copies mailed 25 cents each. public meeting law. According to the Slato Patrol , Single Sunday copies mailed 75 cenla ¦Tlie new law took effect Wed- in one-car crash Hines apparently fell asleep toch. nesday nnd calls for fines for Subscriptions tor loss than one montlit HOKAH , IVIinn. - A Houston , while southbound in a 1071 for- I) por week, Olher ralos on request, officials holding secret meet- eign model car. The vehicle lilt ings and automatically removes Minn,, man escaped serious in- Send change ot address, notices, undo!!**- jury Sunday evening when he a township rond crossing and trcd copies, subscription orders and olhtr tliem from office after the third rolled over in tho opposite ditch. mall Items to Wlnana Dally News, P.O. car near here. Oox 70, Winona, Minn. 5J987 offense. demolished his Hines John George, 21), was listed in , who was ablo to crawl For circulation Information call '!*- vmm pitocRDUitrcs «H to the roadway, attracted the 1961; classified advertising. 452-33211 dis- by commissioners todny, all good condition this morning at play advertising, 452-7020i news, 452-3324. St. Francis Hospital, Ln Crosso, attenlion of a Rushford , Minn,, Area code. 507. meoliiiRS of the counly bonrd motorist , who brought him Wis. Ho has abrasions and lac- into Second class (tostaoe paid at Winona, nncl Its committees will bo an- the Winona hospltnl. nounced by notice on a bulle- erations, according to a hospital Minn. spokesman, The vehicle wns termed a to- tin board on Ihe first floor of tal loss. the tompornry courthouse and The accident occurred al 7:40 on «' bulletin board in the p.m. Sunday on CSAH IR , one sheriff's office , mllo west of Hokah , in Houston bo post- County, Wlnoni loaja No. is A,P. **. A.M Tlioso notices must SWIM-/Y-TJION ... An annual event at the YMCA is tho ed threo days before any meet- tho 20O laps. All participants earned funds from sponsors for According to the Stato Patrol, agreed. If swlm-n-lhon to benefit underprivileged children in the Winona each lap completed. About nine participants, who could not fleorgc, driving n 1071 two-door ««kJSL TUESDAY, MAY T ing, commissioners arcn. Thia year a situation arises whero the 's event , held Saturday, had 55 participants. attend Saturday because of other activities, will compete model , struck n guard rail when iSvrjjjf Stated Cpmmunlcatlon—7:30 p.m, About $1,000 wns realized . About 20 participants ranging from ^ three-day' posting requirement , today and Tuesday. QDally News photo) he pulled out to pass another f VX Richard Horst, W.M. can't bo met. board members third grada students tiirough senior high scliool, completed vehicle, . \ _ • Ceramic studio, Tonight tomorrow on TV offices approved Borzyskowski iiOO Germm 2 Lueim B«ll 11 Merv Orlffln it Jerry , Lohse Military aid to South News . 3-4-5-S-10-1M9 ' ¦' To Tell tin Troth l» . ' ftalfylon V 31 Drive, son of the 4th Ward Truth or Con- Garden ' 31 1:11) Book Beal; 131 councilman, won board of ad- Sequencer 6 «:45 veteram' 'Forum 1 -IM interiors 2 -'To.retl Hu Trulh' . - .f . 7;M Alvin Alley » JWMIcal justment approval last week to Future Is Now 31 Snow Gees* . J-4-1 • Center . W-l put a ceramics studio and two J:30 Consultation .2 Magician * H0-1J . Music ! 31 City Hell 3 Rookies M» »i» Mews l) offices at 601 E. Sanborn St. Let's Make . : Dealer s Choice . 11 10:00 Mews J-4-J-H0-1J YOUR ' The stydio will be operated FOR Vietnam in Congress A Deal ¦ ' M3 Target - . Jl • Perry. Mason 11 . Hollywood-SljjjaresiS -7*30 F.ather Krtowa 10*15 Hews M-l» by Borzystawski's wife Diane, By HARRISON HUMPHRIES Kennedy said lis amendment bill on which the Senate failed Movlo ° --- '6 * Best II IOIM Movl* 38 presently an assistant teacher Nashville -Music I . French Che! 31 . J. . Carton 5-10-13 WASHINGTON (AP) - Mili- would reaffirm the decision of to override President Nixon's Trulh or- a .M. Music , '¦ I Straight .* Talk .31 of ceramics at the Clay House, tary aid to South Vietnam, Congress to limit military aid veto on March 6. Consequences ? Pageant 3-4-S . 10iU Movie " 4-4-MI-19 167 E. 3rd St. The^ard okayed Bobby Goldsboro 10 . Movie M-Md-lJ-ir 12:00 Tomorrow 5-10-13 OR . CLUB postcard voter registration and to South Vietnam this year to , , y h structural alterations and the conversion to the metric sys- "the massive sum of $1,126 tril- Scheduled for House action in |!l *-^— ' - ' < ~ -" tr- *-*p~-v~~~<~~» -y „j . -"ffyw- vT V?***~**"'^-*Ty ^*'''**7*7r" ff? *' y- 1 forming use for another. among the issues facing Con- know Congress is tired of the postcard voter registration and M xX.< i. .. Y ' ^ ...x :(hL. ^x* today in connection with a The Senate resumes debate federal elections — Wewlywcd An(ly Grl,Illh „" To TM Iht Street side" lot line. Members supplemental de- ' Tru"' $571.3 million Tuesday on - .'legislation' to allow and congressional — would be movieMovie ii11 «'» Sesame Slreet J-31 , ., '» said the garage would fense authorization bill for the employes of non-profit hospitals permitted by mail, in addition G- liioan'-t Seamanship 31 and windows of the PICNIC... 1:30 Edge of Night 3-4 1 island Ml 7;00 BUI Moyer* J-Jl the porch remaining two months of this to engage in collective bargain- to in person, under th-e postcard Doctors S-10-13 B^aZ *JJ Maude 44 Gerhard Wendt home, 166 Kan- Bcver|y HHIbllllis 1» f"m']7 fiscal year. ing under the National Labor bill opposed by the Nixon ad- MyMv LifeLl_. <-Mfi. if Happy Daysn '"Jtli6-9-I9 sas St. S Tru,h you' re plan- Relations Act. ministration. J:C0 Price Is Right Ml *°° L" ™| u* J Desler'* Choice 11 Whatever kind of get-together Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- Another Z,i !. i. ?'» Hav»a» Flve-0 J-t-8 Mass., is pressing an amend- Legislation to give the Presi- The metric system bill would World i-IO-II Trmh nr Banaak 5-10-13 Mobile health team General Movio ning, get together with the Colonel and ment to prohibit a fund transfer dent standby authority to ration establish a 21-membei National Consequence. a *'9A1 Hospital i-9.19 Munsters 10 FMer Know» visit Conversion Board to: es- J.-30 Match Game 3-4 3 B slates Utica that would make $266 million fuels and control energy con- Metric Bewl ched 11 «' » finger-lickin' good time. It ; tablish guidelines for a 10-year How To Survive ,,,«,.f- ... 1:00 Drug Education 2 UTICA, Minn. — The Rural you'll have a a v a 11 a bl e for additional sumption in event of severe Marriage 5-10-13 Si3° Electric - 2-31 Morv Griffliv-- ^ 11 llime- Nc«s 3-4 5-C-8-9-10-13 Mobile Health Team unit -will resupply of ammunition and shortages comes before the conversion of inches to mi One Life . Buck Journal 31 a meeting or a ounces to grams and gal- to Live 11-11 Mission l:M Religion 1 be parked in the Dale Hulchizer can be a party, a picnic, petroleum to the South Viet- Senate Wednesday. The bill re- ters, 3:00 Reading 2 „ Impossible n f ,oO Concert 1 namese military. places the emergency energy lons to liters. Tatlletalee 3-4-B Bl-a, ™ Cl0«k 1f Police Story 5-10-13 lot, Utica, Tuesday through Somerset 1-10-13 _ . Marcus Welby <-!•!» Thursday. banquet. Pyramid Evening Consumer 31 available in Game t-9-1* _, »:30 Urban Life 2 A nurse will be Gomer Pyle li 6:00 Teaching 2 News 11 the trailer, and a social work- 3:30 Sesame Slreet 3 News 3-4-5-8-10-13-19 Breast Cancer 31 home It can be a small group or a big crowd. Movie 4 Truth or Conse- 10:00 News 3-4-S-H-9-10- er wiE be available for Dick Van Dyke 5 l"tK es < 1M9 visits. Free services include vi- Mike Douglas 4-9 J° T«» 1l1« Truth ' Perry Mason n sion and hearing screening, Colonel Sanders con feed any number of launch Bewitched 8 ¦ Zoom 31 iO:30 Movie 3 8 Viets ¦ South ¦ ¦ Not For ' . . . 1:30 This Is Thi Life 2 J. Carson 5-10-13 blood pressure check, urine test Women Only 10 . Outlook 3- Mystery *-M9 and hemotrocrit people in mighty fine style. Petticoat Junction 11 for diabetes, ; Animals 4 10:50 Movie 4-11 Munsters 13 Price Is Right 5-13 12:Ofl«Tomorr6w . 5-10-13 blood test. Gomer Pyle . 19 : . - Jeannle . * Mows ' . 6 Hours will be 9:30 a.m. to 4 drive into Cambodia 4:10 Mr. Rogers 4-31 Bobby -Goldsboro « Western 9 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, So come to your Kentucky Fried Chicken By ALAN DAWSON the insurgents overran the 350- pulled back about half a mile and 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Thursday. store and see the store manager for details SAIGON (UPI) - A South man garrison. and called in artillery and air Monday Through Fdday Morning Programs i Vietnamese armored column More than 500 South Viet- strikes. on catering. launched a new drive . into namese troops and about 40 The South Vietnamese gov- STATION LISTINGS tanks pushed across the Cam- ernment, which pledged in the Mlnnoapolls-St. Paul . .Winona—Edu. Ch. 12 Bali Claire WEAU Ch. 13 Cambodia, but was stopped by W C 'i Auslln-KAUS Ch. 6 •*• Crosso-WKBT Ch. t along 1973 peace agreement not to KS1PfleiS Ch.rt' i KTCAJf?. ^Ch. 1 . . „„- La Crosse-WXOW Cti 11 heavy communist resistance at bodian frontier Sunday Roehesler-KROC- ,, , Ch.,. 10,. Highway 1 about 35 miles fight in Cambodia, refused KMSP Ch. •> # La crosse-WHLA Ch. 31 WKBTTV If you cook up the occasion, we'll cook up a village four miles across the Winona—Cable TV .1 . . Mason Clly-KGLO Ch. » programs subject to change border, field officers said northwest of Saigon, field officially to acknowledge the new drive, the latest in an tiio Sunrise Verlety i» Restiesa 3-4-8 j 'WINONA' 1 the food. , today. officers said. Semester 1-4-8 : 9:30 Gambit 3-4-8 Jackpot 5-10-13 eight-day series of cross-border Not for-: ... -. . Jeeipardy 5-10-13 Password «•»¦!» South Vietnamese mili- "They didn't tell us we were ¦¦ ¦ Th? going into Cambodia/' one . of operations. Womcu Only¦ - - 5 Grucn Acres. » ' That Gin . 11 Sales/Service tary ' command reported an : Variety . ..' . 11 Jeannle It- 11:30 Search for the officers said. "I only knew The . Cambodian incursions Religion 13 Zoo Revue 19 Tomorrow 3-4-8 estimated 199 communist sol- TiOO News J-B-9 because suddenly the signs have been aimed at destroying K. O0 E|ee,r(e Co> a celebrity Sweep- I OFFICE diers killed in battles along the a m,n Now You st akes 5-10-13 were written in Cambodian, a massive communist buildup Today? J_ HO-13.,_,,J Cambodian border. Government Sc0 ,, ,.,., split Second « 9-H and the highway markers said in the Parrots Beak, a Zoo Revua 11 Wliara of Variety 11 TiM Clancey 4 Kentucky tfkictou casualties were listed as one 0(M5 Sesame Streel 31 fried s-10-13 how far it -was to Phnom province of Cambodia that juts Fopevo 11 dead and 17 wounded. Beat the Clock » 11t55 News 5-10-11 452-8912 arle,y 31 l2- w Setam» s, el J Penh." into South Vietnam to within 35 r Fa ""!r Knl,w • " Becl In Cambodia, government The military* men said Viet miles of Saigon. Kintnroo IM " «ow» M-5-10-13 Kangaroo S4-J At,damI Fam|| „ A|, CATERING SERVICE forces recaptured an army Cong and North Vietnamese Officers who moved into the DWJ NJW! » ,0:35 N * Chilirat, at v 1558 Service Driv* training center 21 miles north- defense line at ?™«,_.i.„rf.. ">:2° L0V » ••"• w** Noontlma I forces set up a northern section of thie Parrots •-in I Hollywood°* west of Phnom Penh in,bitter M I. I ii:is Variety 5 Bavet, a Cambodian village Beak Sunday said a similar oom...™ ,. - , Squares i-10-13 ]j-30 As the World Winona, Minn. fighting with rebel troops. four miles inside the frontier, push was M™SI. ,. II Bral" Bunc'' «*9*" r «r "> M4 underway to the Munsters 11 Andy Grlflith ll Let s Make BfWWWft and opened up- with heavy fire south, forming a pincers 9:00 Joker's Wild J-4-8 10:40 Electric Co. . ll A Deal 4.9-11. ¦ TOMORROW'S The Cambodian command on the approaching government movement against communists Hazel 9 10:55 News . 1-8 Three on ¦ ' said the government troops in the region. Dinah Short 5-10-11 Religion - 4 Match 10-11 JtsJmgerJickin' good. retook " the Long Vek training troops. Flintstones 11 11:00 Young & Verlety 31 — SPECIALS - The officers said the govern- Breaded

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At 11:00 Only I ^ Richard Harris I STEA K SHOP 7:15-^:20 fmcgonaicns "A MAN CALLED HORSE" JI 125 Main ano Bpdy bl hitchhiker Unprecedented numbers o! found iri state lake IJS; CEN'l^lSR,- Minn. (AiP) — vided some olu«s. blacks endorsing Wallace Results of an autopsy were to . The young woman's -mude, By RANDALL H. HARBER In making; his endorsement, been trying to tell the news be . released today : in the death partially decomposed body was MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) Ford said Wallace has changed media for years that they were of ay young hitchhiker whose found on the fourth daiy of an — An; unprecedented humber of his views on race. So did misinterpreting me. I said in body was found Saturday in extensive search conducted oti black politicians are endorsing Probate Judge William McKin- 1962 that black and white Scotch lake in LeSueur County. foot, on horseback and in heli- Alabama Gov. George C. ley Branch of predominantly people could get together and ; The body of Barbara Jime- copters in LeSui^ Wallace, but other blacks say black Greene County. work out their problems by nez, 22, a Mankato State Col- An employe at Sakatah State Wallace will not get black "1 think he has had a change themselves." Park, 15 miles southeast of voters support either in his bid of heart and I think he is a fine Wallace maintains he was legey student, was : positively lambasting big government identified from a scar, said Scotch Lakey had found a box for re-election or his campaign fellow," said Branch. "I think containing clothing belonging to for president ih 1976. he is bearing a lot of blame for when he shouted "segregation chief deputy sheriff Pat Smith forever, and he has been back ¦V* d-yy ;yV Mrs. Jimenez Thursday. That "You could put the most many things he didn't create. " ^' yV .. *: : Racism is a dominant thing to the University of Alabama to : discovery.prompted searchers liberal candidate at the top of Mrs. Jimenez's husband, Mi- to comb the lakes iii the area in the Democratic ticket but if throughout the United States crown a black homecoming chael; 24, was found shot to ian effort to locate her body. ' :¦:¦ Gov. Wallace was on that ticket from the White House to the queen and to Tuskegee to speak death nearly two weeks ago it would be very hard for a lot poor house." to the Southern Conference of near Smiths Mill, about . 18 Black Mayors. of people to vote Democratic," Wallace made an inaugural Wallace says he is proud to miles south of Scotch Lake in Gundersen to direct said John Lewis, head of the speech in 1963 in which he southern Minnesota. . ,' :¦¦• Voter Education Project and a haye Ford's endorsement, but Thomson campaign vowed "segregation now, segre- makes a point of saying he has the couple . was last , sieen veteran civil rights worker. gation tomorrow and segrega- not asked for the endorsement April 21 .when they left Em- IA CROSSE, ywis. -y Dr. "He still represents the tion forever. And later that of anyone. poria, Kan., to hitchhike¦ back Adolph Gundersen year he made his famous "I think I will get a larger to Maiikato; . , president of symbol of segregation in the Gundersen Clinic, La America." "stand in the school house vote from all groups than ever . They reportedly hitchhiked to Crosse, - door" in an attempt to block before , and the fact that I'm Emporia, -will" direct 3rd Dist. Wallace has picked up the the home of Jimenez' Rep. Yernoh Thomson's bid for endorsements of a black integration of the University of going to get my share of the sister, to pick up a car they Alabama, black vote is important to me,'* had purchased. reelection to his eighth term in sheriff , a black judge, a black The title trans- Congress. r y.;y ACKNOWLEDGE VICTORY ., V Texas Briscoe easily won the Democratic nomina- political organization and the he said. fer, was not completed; how- ¦ [will face Republican Jim Cranberry y i But Wallace says he was Dr. .- Governor aiid Mrs. Dolph Briscoeacknow- tion and black mayor of Tuskegee, misunderstood ever, . so. the couple decided to Gundersen, who indicated ledge the cheers of supporters and a wide- : in the general election for the office of gov- ¦ on race. "I have Winona Daily Newt E , the campaign would involve Johnny Ford, in his race for a never been against anybody for Winona, Minnesota hitchhike back to Mankato. margin , victory in the Democratic primary. . ernor. - & said Smith; "but I'm - assuming become more actively involved she was killed a day or so after in our political process." He ci- he was." y V * ted Thomson as a _ man of comT yOlULJjDVSL... An • autopsy had- determined plete integrity. . V Kidnaping fear fttfs ^W/nneso/o J^Y April 22 to be the date of Mi- MINNEAPOLIS- (AP) chael's death. 4-H MEETING : Minn. people," Enlow siaid. "We know partment complain if you ask ment authorities immediately. -~- A growing concern , by many this through the number of tele- them to make an extra swing Enlow said the FBI suggests CbuL CL $$t phone d calls, contacts with the Smith said no arrests have HOMER, . .Minn. — A . potluck wealthy . Americans . who fear ¦ ¦around your house." some of the following steps to been : made-in connection with dinner for .members -and par-- kidnaping has spread into Min- public * ' . law. enforcement men EhloWyetnphasteed the impor- /^^^^ either death. He, said author- ents of the Homer Hi-Liters nesota, the FBI reports, and our own social contacts." tance of talks with children to avoid a kidnaping: ^te^^Aaaiei ities, were checking out all 4-H club will be at 6:30 p.m. "I don't, think it should be a ¦Crimes : involving hostages, warn, them not to get into cars —Instruct family and rela- leads and that the discovery' of Wednesday at the Homer Town scare situation," says . Min- such as . kidnaping, are the of strangers or respond to the tives to provide no personal or /^^^^ S Mrs. Jimenez' body had pro- Hall. neapolis based FBI agent Phil- "most heinous;" Enlow . said , "candy bit." V y family information to stran- "because you re dealing most ip Enlow, "but the possibility ' He said if a person finds him- gers. exists that it could happen to of the time with an innocent in- self a kidnap victim, he should —Vary daily travel routines anyone." dividual — sometimes a. child." cooperate completely . with his Among the strongest anti-kid- and other habitual patterns. $bjL disVL yank.<£ovsLe..dnj£ Enlow , assistant special captors. .V :¦ agent in charge of the Min- naping measures to develop, —Lock house doors at night Enlow said, is ah awareness of should remain calm neapolis FBI office , said his bu- "Victims and see that children's rooms reau has been advising the your surroundings. "If anything and follow, directions," the d 5igt 3>JWWL ChocdsLL unusual occurs, do not hesitate agent advised. "It is the FBI are not accessible from the out- wealthy and famous about y ways to avoid being abducted, to call the police. Some, people position: that . no action be taken side. are afraid of hieing, considered to jeopardize a victim, but this Added Enlow, "A big dog "I think It is universal tliat a crank, but I don't think . I does not mean that the family also can be an effective kidnap- kidnaping is a major concern to have ever heard -ai- police de- should not notify . law enforce- er deterrent;" yi^E^INl^UI^W Before grand jury S.F. informant ^fti^ iijppear SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — A that Alioto acted on information of : the Black Muslims. Four evidence in the case. secret informant who met with from a former . mental patient were later released for lack of Mayor Joseph L. Alioto in the evidence. Before the court's gag ord.er in bringing charges against the was issued , Alioto said the "Zebra" slayings, which have suspects. Alioto, who met with the claimed 12 lives, may appear informant in the; predawn hours slayings were part of a Blouses in cotton blends or polyester in solids, before a grand jury tonight. Muslim Minis te r John of April .27,_ said tiie perSOh was [ Statewide conspiracy by a cult Mahammad identified the infor. influenced by: a $30,000 reward j called the "Death Angels," prints and stripes. All Spring fashion colors. Although authorities were which he described as a "kind barred by court order from mant only as "Anthony. Harris" for information , leading to and . described ; him as a convictions in the . random of reverse Ku Klux Klan." Sizes 30 to 44. making comments, there was The three men in custody, speculation the informant would "crackpot" and. a ''man who street slayings. be required to appear when the has a mental problem." -y The mayor was expected to Larry Green, Manuel Moore, $ $ grand jury hears evidence Seven suspects rounded up in go before the city's Board of and J. C. Simon, were due for 8 to 20 their next court appearance which led to arrests in the case. a massive dragnet . operation. Supervisors this week to seek The leader of the area's May 1 ' were black and some additional reward funds in Thursday. The long-lingering charms in it would lead to new At that time, Municipal Court Black Muslims said Sunday were reported to be members hopes SSS SPORTSWEAR those unbreakable Rive Gauche Judge Agnes O'Brien Smith ^ ^T^ f/ ^ - was expected to rule on bail Vt2#M-«r i~± «Jt> j m. MAIN FLOOR cylinders is typically French. and hear the men's pleas. She also was scheduled to rule on fjppo te Spray Cologne $6.50 Ohio governor Regulations on defense motions to reveal the jV (( a Where Pet-tonal Servbm identity of the informant and to §^? \ *S V> StiB.Tmportafft Splash on Cologne $6 boundary area discover evidence. S ^% COSMETICS places prestige ^ ** MAIN - fL ^.^r/f^ JO J FLOOR fishing changed on line Tuesday ST, PAUL, Minn. (AP) - mmte By IRA K. ALLEN vote-getting ability m advance There, have been some changes jv 11 o Where p ersonalSeroteB made in regulations governing tJf f» SHB Important 1 UNITED PRESS INTERNA- of a possible presidential ^j \-/ TIONAL candidacy in 1976. fishing on Minnesota-Wisconsin ' MOTHER'S DAY:.. . MAY 12th Athough he is practically The Cha r 1 o tt e Observer, boundary waters this season, easy win in North Carolina's largest news- certain of an endorsed Henry Hall the Minnesota Department of ' ' QM Tuesday s primary election, the paper, . . ;: WL ChjDjairiL Democrat Howard N.C, last year after a 12-year session limit" which is double Here's a rather amazing BW- baum. the limit previously in effect on fact. ll And even though Alabama absence, running third behind Gov. George C. Wallace ap- state Attorney General Robert boundary waters. Iv If you spell out air the numbers, Il easy renorni- Morgan and former Congress- However, the spokesman said pears headed for , nation to a third term , lie, too, man Nick Galifianakis Minnesota cannot go along with starting with one, two, three, four, 11 prestige o the line. Wasliinffton. D.C, utiuids on has the verge of an elected doubling the limits taken from etc., and keep going all the way ii In tlie nation's capital , where government for the first time in the Minnesota side of the nobody will be elected in 100 years. A charter, calling for boundary waters. up, what's the first number you ¦ Tuesday's balloting, the size of an elected mayor and 13- The spokesman said persons the turnou t coud be as member city council, is on the would come to containing the S important as the issue —a ballot , Its adoption appears fishing with Minnesota licenses ' referendum on the city's first certain , although a low voter will be governed by the Min- j l letter " a"? - 1 home rule in a century. turnout could embarrass civic nesota limit, regardless of what Other voting occurs in, In- and congressional leaders who part ot the river they are fish- fought for home rule for years. diana, where all 11 congress- ing. 11 Oddly enough, you would not 11 men arc expected to bo Opposition to the charter renominated without trouble, ste,ms from Congress having In addition , while Wisconsin \ m use the letter "a" until you reach ij and in North Carolina where 10 final nuthority over the budget license holders may still fish candidates aro vying for the and from tho requirement that the Minnesota side of the |H one-thousand! lj Democratic nomination to the nt least three Republicans boundary waters ( Mississippi, seat, held by retiring Sen. Sam serve on the council In a city St. Croix and St. Louis rivers) J. Ervin. overwhelmingly black and they -will be required to abide Wj That seems hard to believe, || Both Gilligan and the Demo- Democratic. by Minnesota limits while fish- cratic state committee are ing the Minnesota portion of m but it's true. When you spell . II "CHOJUL CCOISL' (BI those waters. Satin. backing Metzenbaum over for- Minneapolis man 11 numbers, you'll find that no number ¦ ^ mer. ...astronaut John Glenn, Minnesota's stream trout sea- trying for a "Senate sent for the drowns in lake son got underway Saturday i l between one and nine-hundred H S^nAcdioft. third time, and making "bos- with water levels in most of sism" a main issue. while smelting the state reported normal. H ninety-nine has an "a" in it. H Bridal satin pillow cases in new hot colors, also State leaders and labor Tlie DNR said 125,000 trout officials had been unable to TWO HARBORS, Minn. (AP) the soft colors and the traditional rosebud persuade Glenn to abandon his hnve been distributed into des- prints. senatorial goal npd seek tho — The body of a 50-year-old ignated steams with more j/ ' Minneapolis man was recov- stockings planned during t|ie Whnre Personal Hervles lieutenant governorship Instead. tI X^sfit^l// §§§ ered Sunday from Lake Superi- summer and fall. Hi Kzsse^iff J' U Stilt Important W Gilligan himself is expected Wisconsin 's general fishing III // 5 S400 to walk away with his party's or just 40 feet from whero he ¦ $32 also opened Saturday, to nomination for another term , drowned whllo smelling, offi- season cials reported. nesota's opens May 18. ¦ j* LINENS — but ho may face a hard raco in Lake County authorities said (Jmate November s general election , I **^^ ^ SECOND FLOOR ' RESEARCH GAINS¦ / /fJ Robert Stenmnn slipped in the (UPI ) ^^ 7 Wallace, who has spout more lake at the mouth of the Stow- - Con- solidation Conl Co. said it J^^^mP ^dm^L. - aJL m^ than $300,000 In his primary art River Saturday while sein- campaign in an effort to win by ing for the small, silvery fish. proved the feasibility of con- t& a huge margin , now has Stenman was wearing neck- verting coal to a petroleum base CjfiP a that could be converted to fins. ^r// If Q 'Where Personal Serctm unprecedented support from high waders which authorities Jf li Slltt Irnportant black politicians, said filled up With water when ollne more than four years \J Campaigning from a wheel- he foil and tho weight pulled ngo. mmmmmmmmmmmmmamMmmsmmmmmmmmmmmm Th« firm conducts research MOTHER'S DAV MAY 12lh chair, V/allaee's efforts, aro him under. Tho body was found at — seen as an attempt to provo hia about 10:30 a.m. Sunday, a plant in Cresap, W. V*. — WINONA DAILY NEWS A page of opinions and ideas \(yhere were those • Winona Daily News, Winona, Minnesota tte iiS^iS^llgBUT MEMBERS of the House; are MONDAY, MAY t, 1974 ri WASHINGTON . . "There, must be -- beginning to read the. transcripts some mistaike about , all those spec- : sensif hfe^atjo al now With wonder and anger and tacular documents ott the James Reston Water- thinking : about who will restore the gate, Those conversations can't have Secref nlie^tirigs him out of trouble and with, cops to integrity of the government;.if . they happened in the White House. won the preserve his privacy, and end up don't. The president has "P" must.. stand for Pendergast or biit his tactics, his lan- Security matters? losing public support and privacy, first round, some other county-courthouse boss. for Con- in the deepest public trouble? guage and : his contempt clon t cdrtfribuf conversation, Sept. 15, 1972, before Consider the facts. For iiiore than to create a new What he said in one public stater gress are beginning these ipen knew of the deep trouble 25 years,. Richard Nixon has . beeii ^^ ¦ irient at thfe beginning of. his crisis situatibnV : . - they ¦ were soooti to be in, Dean re- complaining bitterly about his ene- Torri yWicker was contradicted by ywhat he said somemingymad about to gdyemirtent marke^that-he had started a list mies in Congress and the press who . There is ; in another public explanation of the all . this. The White House announces ofypefsoiis "who are emerging as have criticized him as a shifty op- ' - ¦ ' _ : "facts. '' Even on , the eve of releas- President is going.to "tell ;. . " . The manager of the city of Winona is selected WASfflNGTON If nothing;eiSe, : less than our friends. " y, portunist. Why, then, would hei pub- .that the ! ing the documents that ywould "tell gets op television, he for ari "indefinite period." Tliat is, he does : not the • transcripts Of Richard Nixon's: 'UV-T want the most comprehen- lish a document that makes him allV When he all," -he claimed things the docu- has behind . him> not one book but . have to. have a contract for employment for ai speci- conversations have shown how hol- sive^otesron all those who tried to look inore shifty and opportunistic - ¦ ments denied.;Even his. opponents a stack , as- big: as, a : refrigerator, fied period of time. The .city charter says "he may . tfr- do us in. They didn't have to. do it.. than anybody eyer charged? " low the once magic invocation of couldn't believe he would be that arid he waves at this Vast , pile as a be removed by the council at any time." If the If we had a very close election and ¦ ¦ the words; "national security can ': Mr. Nixon came fo power pro- clumpy. ¦' ¦' :¦ symbol of his generosity-in giving it manager, wishes he may ask , and receive -the rea- '' they were playing , the other side I Besides, trie personal conversation " But when the reporters next son , for such removal in writing. be.; It may well be that Nixon has would understand this.;N6' — they claiming the."new morality" and ar- "all. ' , iri those White House eXcerpts of the press room, they are unwittingly done the public the great were doing this quite deliberately guing for "Jaw . and order " So how day rii$h to the could he tapes are not believable. Outside handed: a volume only about as big It is unfortunate that the charter places: so service of destroying that- phrase :. and they are asking for it and they possibly have agreOd . fo pay blackrhail money to burglars of his old . .friend, John Mitchell, as a telephone book,. and they won- jnuch emphasis* here on the wishes of the manager. as a useful tool of. used the power , in .this first: four , or .agreedV that ,/a former attor- who -addressed i him in this: tactical der disbelievingly over ; these; televi- presidential decep- years as. you know. We have never ¦ . ¦ ¦ ' - ' ney general of: the United States junglei as * 'Mr.. President, ' there are sion: tricks. : : The.emphasis should . rather be on the wishes tioh. y X- yX y- " [ used -it. We have not used the ' oc- should arrange the paypff or in- no . manners, and . certainly no dis- ; of the people whom the councilmen serve. The passage Bureau and we have hot used the true, they say. struct his aides ori tihe arts of avoid- cussion of right and, wrong. IT CANT be Ther* curs in the : famous Justice Department but .things are must be some mistake. The White : Nixon - Haldeman' - ing , perjury i before a grand jury? going to change how. And they are EVEN John Ehrlichman and H. House can't possibly still be play- Last week the council discharged its manager-^ Dean conversation : That is all too • ¦bizarre- ' ; weU, technically either going , to do it . right or go." R. - Haldertian, whom he fegards .as ing games, still trying to limit the they asked him to resign — with- of March: 21; 1S73, But .In those : Watergate; docu- out explaining / "D. What an exciting prospect," his closest advisers, almost as his question to the- Watergate; break-in , why. just after Nixon has. ments, which are supposed to repre- ¦ Two months later, the man who sons, talk on those tapes — uncon1 alone, still , trying to insist ' that im** expressed concern sent his thought, "P" Often comes said that "things are going to change sciously, because ¦ they; do respect peachment ^an : result /only froim : We surmise that thei council may have chosen about the "Ehrlich- out -confused , inarticulate, .indeci- now" won re-election by a land- him — like equals to the President. criminal offense and .nothing, more, not;to . explain its action to the public to avoid.em- man situation de- .... . sive and even vague about the ele- ,cker slide :— . four more years.;. He im- That makes it; all the harder tb com- still trying to keep the lawyers and . : barrassment . and friction. The discharged employe Vriving -tram- the ;^ ' mentals of the law. The , documents mediately set , about extending his prehend. . :. - '¦ ' •. ' the technicians from checking the may appreciate.this.ybut we-; suspect that many citi- burglary of ilaniel . Ellsberg's psy- have to be wrong. . personal control over the depart- . There, has; to be a mistake about tapes and leaving it all to Reps.Ho- . - zens would like to know the reason and all are en- chiatrist iri 1971. E. Howard Hunt , ¦ Any way you look at it, this whole ¦ ments - and agencies of government all that and particularly about ' the dino and Hutchinson and the televi- titled to know. has been . threatened to talk about thing isV irrational. Mr: Nixori . is a by. placing . aides specifically loyal president's approach to the Con- sion. ' :•" • that burglary, which could yimpli- master politician who won the pres- ' to him in- high posts — Egil Krogh gress; If: the news is right, he has . It is also - regrettable that the council y majority . cate John Ehrlichman, Nixon's top idency in 1972 by the largest mar- OBV40U§LY it must be a fantasy. as undersecretary of, Transporta- treated the House and the Senate, > L : apparently came to this decision; privately-and fur- assistant; for. domestic affairs. gin in the history of the republic. Maybe , they senU thrnvrong---evi-— tion; for instance; - arid .L. Patrick particularly the Judiciary Commit- ' ther that the decision was delivered to the manager JOHN DEAN says: '• You might How, then, - could he end a war and ¦dence ':' ' Hil - --Pulledy-out ' the ' • Gray as FBI director, . tee; of the House, with contempt.;; - td th6' . |, . in secret.; Such procedures are both; morally and put it. on '.a national security grounds still lose the support of the country wrong:drawer or rhisunderstbod. the " He will live OiV die on what the _ legally wrong. -y basis."' .. - ' X" : 'X: THE exploding Watergate case and even of: his Own party within question. Nothing like this could hap- ¦ House and the : Seriate do,:, but yhe :¦' ¦ quickly: knocked . Nixon . from the 18 months? . Presi- "It absolutely was," - interjects H; argued his case, on teievisiqn before pen in the White House. The. Still pinnacle bf power he had reached his honor -in or- y , this should .be said for the majority. Five R. Haldeman. HOW COULD he spend his life he gave his docuihents to the . Judic- dent couldn 't lose of the six councilmen present were ready to just after his second inaugural. If to save his job. there must be, . put ; An unclear passage follows, then mastering the- techniques- of public iary . Committee, and ih the short der :. the matter on the; agenda late : thus guaranteeing "P'. It hadn 't, who knows where his ex- wrong ! , ' comments: ''Na.tional security. something¦ Judiciary Com- ¦ ' ¦ ' relations, /surrounding himself with run he divided the :* ¦ ¦ ¦* - "/ - action during a public, session, but . unahinious con- We had to get .. * information for na- pressed willingness to . use- govern- , . -: . /. : . .. ' advertising men- to command pub- mittee along partisan lines arid made sent was required.; That was a bad decision; biit so tional security grounds." ' ment :¦ power for his personal .-politi- New York Times News Seivice taken: him and lic opinion,, with lawyers to keep some progress. , .: was the retreat .. to the privacy that followed.—A.B. .;¦ But if . they make that claim, asks cal ends might have Dean, why wouldn't they have . had the country?. Still, the point is hot Nixon might the 'FBI or. the - CIA do the : job so much:what Richard rather than the White House have, done, or even, as he contends, v the-point "plumbers"? ' ¦ . V whaty other presidents did ; president could do; as ^-Avless^ ''P. Because we had to ..do it on a is what any " ' ; long as the present power relation- confidential basis...... , -.; - : . . WASHINGTON^ffiilij -: - "It'll stir ^^S^^^McCord or that he had; taken tlie ships between-:-the" White : House, the ^p "H. Beca'UseVwe were checking quite a storm,", a drained,, relieved notebooks' from Howard Hunt's: safe ' ;¦ federal agencies, and : thie other ¦' from Goodviev^ them. - ::. - ¦ . - President Nixon told a caller a few . and V shredded . that . evidence;" ;in branches; of government are . as one-, ,- - . Welre reluctant to reintroduce a topic : that is so "P. Neither could, be trusted." hours after delivering his television William Satire ''telling all," Dean did not begin to . ' sided as ' they have become in this sensitive for the Winona City Ccmncil, yet there may -More discussion. Then ;Dean says ¦ address • releasing tape transcriptis. sketchy the: outlines of his own yil- century- - ' * " " ¦¦: • ' ' ' ¦ ¦¦ be some consolation in last week's growth report on matter-of-factly: "I think: we could - / "There's some rough . stuff: in ' jainy. .;• . y ... . . / - 'X. -X y. .. ' ; " language; used in private is not the Goodview. get by on: that." : ; This central problem also Vis ¦tfe re.'** - ,;* I. - ' .. problem — in fact, "since March 21 SPEC I AL prosecutor Jaworski's This is the. cover, story construct- apparent in the sohcitiide- the other - ¦ - 't he released them . . And why hadn when 1 had that conversation : with unwillingness to move against Dean Late last year , the city council charged ahead ed, one that has been used ever principal Vactors who speak in these months earlier? He had to wait un- . '•¦'¦ Dean, I have broken my.ass to; get On. a set of -perjury counts is^ with a special census confident that it would re- since to describe the reasons for remarkable transcripts . -- frorh H. til : the indictments : , the facts of this . case," is the most cover-up scandal in itself , and one the burglary, one that is still being R. Haldeman to Henry Petersen ^— were in; the Presi- veal growth since 1970 and : thus enrich, the city heartwarniing.' observation , in it — day: may receive, the- investigation . treasury because some state aids are based on a used by Ehrlichman in his defense showed at all times for the protec- dent explained, and but the President's reluctance to it deserves.. ; : ' : ': -head counts . ¦;.;:- . - against criminal charges that ulti- tion of what they persistently re- then until the Stahs- . —¦ recognize,. reality is incredible, and Just as the transcripts answer the mately stemmed from the same ferred to as "the presidency" Mitchell : trial was burglary.. Thus , is it shown, as has never Richard . Nixon's scalp. They the weakness displayed iri not taking famous Senate; committee.,, question : ; Alas/ the census showed a decline of; nearly 5 over — and,.. V'it long been apparent to close observ- were like courtiers surrounding a charge of events so as to build a —"What did he know and when did percent, or about 1,300 people in three years. . No took time, toy get all ' ers, how easily the phrase "nation- king .who could very nearly say firewall, between, the : presidency he know it?"—jn a way that show matter that the census inay have been poorly done, . this together." V . al security? cari be trotted out for with Louis, "I am the state." and the, scandal is inexcusable: : the President to have been-wrapped the count was 25,152, and ever since then we've But the primary almost any purpose aypresident de- • Thait is .why the real problem is in an innocent cocoon , they call at- : been trying to. forget it including the cost of $4 500. . reason for withhold-, ONE OF HIS advisers at the 'time . , , - ;¦' tention to his damaging acquies- sires. . ,. deeper than that of determining; ing, the transcripts recalled: a remark; attributed tb Nixon's guilt or innocence of spe- - cence in the payments to Howard The: good news last week was that neighboring ANOTHER passage suggests not until survival de- ...f,r Gladstone: "A prime minister must ' cific deeds, important as that is. ' 5 y: 'V Hunt. V Goodview's population has grown '. more than 500 only s tarn of trciind but the manded; theiryre- ^ ^ be a bit of a butcher"; Nixon did : . Nixon Rather, it is to find a new set of V"Oh, they'll pick out a line here V since, April 1970. That's a gain of about 28 percent danger inherent , in the kind ofy un- lease dawned on the caller after not have the heart to swing the ax- checks and balances . capable of re- ' and a line there," Nixon tejjg^ his over the 3970' almost unlimited power reading, the quarter-million words in : with moral fervor and suffers for it 8 1.820. checked, straining the imost powerful execu- friends, but he believes the totality that had been developed in the the sky-blue: binder: some of the now. In a genuine panic, the sensi- tive office in history. That is a sub- of the evidence . \vill enable his to the time, the Wa- stuff yis damnably rough. ble man is the One \yho pushes tha At this point the college enumerators — en- presidency up ject requiring further discussion. presidency to survive. And so it tergate case began to take it apart. panic button. gaged in a larger socioeconomic project — don't THE TAPE-AND-TELL memoirs might; perhaps the Congress will y Nixon-Haldeman-Dean The President's defense is that know where the 500 immigrants -came from, but In another New York Times News Service illuminate . a: dark side of Richard be satisfied with the personal hu- he was groping in the dark: in the certainly some of them emigrated from Winona. Nixon. His need to hide the sleazy miliation of the President. - ;' . " '¦ wiretaps and breakins that took weeks . after March" 21, as the mys- tery slowly unfolded , the transcripts HIS FRIENDS always knew there So our congratulations to Gpodyiew on its place before : Watergate; his desire , Presidency stainecl showed his agonized amazement. To was a dark side to Nixon; seeing growth. Maybe:the city of Winona could learn to appear candid while remaining , his post-speech caller the other day, it so vividly in this excruciating ex- something from the city of Goodview, if nothing circumspect; his feat* of personally WASHINGTON - To any man the President laid stress on how culpation , it is hard to keep iri mind else on how to run a census that shows a gain. — confronting John Mitchell, passing ¦¦ not. blinded by passion against or much had been withheld from him that there are other sides to tha A.B. Willia m S. White that unpleasant job along to John for President Nixon, these are sad Ehrlichman with .instructions to se- by John Dean on the 21st: "What man neither phony nor ignoble. *¦ ¦ days in Washington.- * : . *;- . cretly bug the room. No wonder , the he didn't tell me was more impor- That is why the . first reaction , to tant than what he did. " his temperate speech Was one of The disclosure of the White er the health and vitality of ah President never wanted this to see Daily hope, and the reaction after reading Winona News House transcripts may or may not enduring institution called the presi- the light of day: much of this scur- Dean did not tell the President that he had coached Magruder in the poisonous fruit of his eaves- An Independent Newspaper — Established 1855 lead to his impeachment (indict- dency: rying around is what goes on under ' s pres- dropping tree is ',' (expletive dele- ment) by the House of Representa- No matter what one thinks of the a flat rock. . * February in John Mitchell' MEMBER 01' THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ted)!" tives , and his trial by the Senate. substance of these papers on the The transcripts saw the man in ence, or that he had handled payoff The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the Oval Office to be guilty of con- money himself , or that he had offer- AT STAKE Is not a man who question of Mr. Nixon 's innocence New York Times News Service the use for republication of all the local news printed duct unbecoming a President. The ed clemency to Magruder and James in this newspaper as well as all A.P. news dispatches. happens to be President but rath- or guilt of any impeachable offense, there can be no doubt that in their publication the institution of tiie presidency has been twice stained, in , unrelated ways. The aura — almost one might Power to the person say the odor — arising from these has love Lucy, television belittles transcripts at the very least ill A woman who . been reading them about the Symblonese Liberation as eccentric elitists. If they serves the dignity of the office and decline ' to serve Caesar immensely serves all those who Army s devotion to The People , government pecks "Who are The Peo- Russell Baker them to death with subpoenas so long and so bitterly have sought writes to ask, and court orders. to belittle all our Institutions and ple?" our whole political system. Tiiis quesfion betrays a serious as The People. These birds are can- Being merely a person, and The junior-grade cynics, the one- misunderstanding about The Peo- nier. "We are in touch with The therefore potentially dangerous to "Who are the People?" book skeptics are having a field ple. Asking, People , " is all they ivill tell you, Tho People, the person Is fnir game is like asking, "Wlio are the automo- day . This, then, describes the first "and we lenow what The People for kidnapping or murder in the o[ these two stains that have been bile?" or, "Who are the wenlh- want," cause of whatever political uplift cast upon the presidency. er?" Curiously, what The People want is desired by The People , be it Pal- The People is not a who, and The always coincides THE SECOND it far mora pro- happily with the estinian restoration , Irish resolution People is not phiral. It is a single views of those who claim to be in or Symblonese liberation. found and , unlike the first, is one thing, The People. Usually pro- touch with The People, of those damned spots that can This creates nounced THE PEOPLE I The ques- problems for the New York Times News Service never be rubbed out. Thlsjj. the human being, or tion , then, should be: "What is THE person, who doesn sheer fact that the President has 't know how to PEOPLE?" •get in touch with breached two centuries of tradition The People. *• thnt his office has a right and duty THIS IS NOT easily answered, If he considers commercial tele- to maintain the confidentiality of Its for nobody has ever seen The Peo- vision entertalmment a shabby show files, Its papers and its ln-house ple. The world is full of men who and complains, he is reprimanded conversations. claim to hnve , seen it. A notable for not being content with what Tha This precedent is thnt from now case nccurrcd in Philadel phia in the People want to see. Por, say the on any president who falls into wido late Bth Century when some high- television men, who are in touch disfavor, justly or not,, can be bred gonllemen, mostly lawyers, with The People, "we are only giv- forced to lay open his privnte pa- asserted that, they had seen Tha ing The People what they want;" pers to nny Congressional commit- People and that Ihey were lt. "Wo, WHILE WE can on)/ guess about tee, however fairly or however un- The People . . .," they wrote, "in what The People really looks like— fairly motivated. order to form a more perfect un- my own guess is that It resembles ion ..." THIS columnist asserts that from a large wet pudding heed with fro- this day forward the central con- Tills absurd clnlm is easily dis- zen fruit and chopped hamburger— stitutional principle of n wise and missed , for The People, as we know thero is no doubt al>out what its right separation of powers ns be- from subsequent sighlings, is with- enemy looks like. It is biped with tween the executive brunch nnd Con- out fault , nud therefore could never one nose, two eyes, n navel and a , .Thomas A. Marlin gress Is compromised. And this is hnvo made tlie linguistic error of mind. It is,, In short, the ever-trou- mAflsrm ^ trnfiedy. writing "more perfect," knowing blesome person. FUnERAL Home. The presidency hns been forever perfection to be n stnte beyond All the trouble The People suffers Form«rl)f weakened , potentially .so beyond ra- modification. ln this world is the work of these Bnlllow-Mirlln Funtril Homi tional argument otherwise. Nowuln .v.s, nn Democrat , ItepMb- dreaded misfits. Those who servo 376 E..t 5.ml, • Wlnonn llcnn or Symblonese llbcnitor would The People use nnnny techniques for Phon* D«y or Night -154-1942 ''WOULD VOU BUY A USED ENCYCLOPAEDIA FROM THIS MAN?" United Feature Syndicate drenm of Irvine to oass himself off destrovlne them. If thev refuse to l^mmmmgmmsms^M PresidentNi*o^ Nlxoh maintained a Handiln* ralatlehs ¦ NIXON RATINGS ON Early Miren ...... u 71 - ¦ • with Congress ...... T« It " -. -J- FOREIGN POLICY ISSUES Feb...... 2» 41;.:. J ' ¦ Sl percent; positive Job: rating HIs cooperation with * . Not - • Jan. . . ;,...„ -...... 30 61 l House Judiciary on his performance in the White - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ Positive¦ ¦¦ Negative Sure ¦ Nov. '7) ...... 37 41 3 Committee ....*...., Jt 74 10 ¦ ¦;¦- -¦ . , ' ¦ '- . .- .- % - % 7o - .* • Oct. ....;..;., si ta, ¦ < ¦ ¦ House in a Harris Survey con- Harris Survey Handling Water. ' Worklng for peace : July ....,..:«.« 4 ¦ * sale c«sa ¦ las M 4 in the i world :..,.,. ti 32 2 June ...... *». . 4>' - ' '»- ' - P^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Hi^^^PipHBPHHHfMHH^^^^^^^^^^^^ Hfl . ¦' ducted between April 15 and Handling - Water- - . - • Handling relations March .;...... !» 4» ' a 20: He thus held onto ..the .' fiver gale tapes ...... ii M 8 with Russia ...... S» -U --- .S-- . Feb. , ...... ,; 40 3» 1 Significantly, personal confi- Hainilng corruption - . Handllng relations ¦ ' ' point gain he -had previotsly In government .:.., 10 15 3. . ' with China ..; 54 Jl * • : registered from his all-time low dence hi Mr. Nixon hit an all- Handling Middle The PRECIPITOUS drop In time low. No more than 13 per- East . crisis: ...... 5! 44 5. . Mr. -Nixon s overall standing of 26 percent early in March.. In all; cases, whether dealing Handling relations ' cent of a national cross section with Western Europe . Mr. Nixon's rise has been al- with the broader . questions of 3* 51 .13 took places last¦ October at they of 1,503 adults* said they' be- working with Congress or . conclusion : . of the Watergate most exclusively based on rising pro- With the : exception of rela- lieved the President "personal- tecting the rights and : privacy hearings. While he has eome ..' ¦ 3 Convenient Locations ' public confidence .In his foreign tions with our-allies in Europe, ' ' : policy, . arid sonie.. easing of ly inspires confidence in the of individuals . or the more, nar- back from his all-time low . of EAST ,y x- [ ' . : CENTRAL V V .VV .WES? VV,. . :: ;V \ White House;" compared with Mr. yNixori comes up with uni- 26 percent; positive, nonetheless, criticism of hitn over .the ener- row ones , centering on- his hand- . . 48 percent who felt that way ling of formly positive ratings oil forr the American : people still were gy: shortage. ; . the tapes and Us re- eign policy. '. back in.early 1973. ' ., lations with, the House Judiciary giving him no better than 2-to-l )y AT THE SAME time, the Periodically, the Harris Sur- Committee looking . When it is all added up, the negative marks on his , conduct . into: im- yy$i&§ti.: ¦ x President . appeared; to be in vey has asked samplings of the peachment, President Nixon overall standing of Mr. Nixon of office just before he began Cleaner* & Launderert ^X"¦ Cleaners ^^xxt& taundarers Cleaners ^^y & Launderer* dent Nixon now received a 84- Protecting rights and privacy of 12 percent negative rating, Individuals ..: ...... a a I compared with 80-16 percent in Way lit 15 cooper- ating, wllh Impeach- March. ment proceeding! .17 TS f To the editor

Congressman Quie and the energy act Since Congressman Quie's recent return home, he has SAVE TO 28% il Ij 1 repeatedly expressed, both through the newspaper and in .n ^^ 1 1111 ill l l il l i l i i I W4MII WWftR ^TFSl YARN campaign speeches, his concern for some form of an emer- SHEER PANEL il gency energy act. Jffi ffSl if B|9tHffltB liln M 1-E1|HI1 The congressman appears upset that such legislation has ^ not yet been signed into law. In my opinion, Cong. Quie is not justified in feeling upset that such legislation has not been enacted. After all, when the emergency energy act was introduced in the House, he voted against its passage. And when Presi- dent Nixon refused to sign the bill, he -was undoubtedly count- ing on Quie's vote to uphold his veto, as Quie subsequently did. Our congressman's vote was that of an ideal Nixon Re- •DuPont registered trademark N. S \ publican, and the President viewed it that way. Cong. Quie's intentions were quite clear. In the face of pressing energy shortages, he was quite willing to forego the more comprehensive and immediate emergency energy act in support of a distant Nixon energy act. As this seems the case, Cong. Quie has no justification in feeling upset over an emergency energy act not being passed into law. Such actions unequivocally demonstrate his interests in maintaining his status as a good Nixon Republican above those more press- ing needs of his constituency and the country. MICHAEL J. LAAK Citizen appreciates

confidential services SAVE TO 20% SAVE TO 23% SAVE TO 25% l^^^^^m : : : ^J ^j ff ^P MO-IRON CAPE CODS FASHIONGLASS CAFES FLORAL RUFFLE TIERS Qw III UM S T^ *Kodel" polyester/Avril" polyesteryAvril" • rayon • Pinch-pleated, with rings • *Kodel" rayon SAVE 20% Machine washable, 62" wide pr. Gold or red prints, White, gold, green. 6^W prs. ftm manager • • 44"W prs. • i^^vrvr** ii-r/\r-,nn « from the city • White with matching tie backs • Hand wash, drip dry, no iron • Machine washable, no iffining DECORATOR PILLOWS »«««.*»¦•«» »»7o, » 1,0 -S575 -7 City Manager Paul Schriever has done much for the M • Elegant plains and textures aware. cflQ7a/ fe/V / asking for his resignation are very minor and that " ^ ^ nod E«tonder 15-2478 24" 57c Malchlna Ca|o Had 15-2493 SB -IB- S4.57 hOT pillOWS and toys sons for ¦ ' Aj^S^-^kXg^^Lj^^ W / is the reason they refuse to let the people of Winona know. CAFERODS , ' , Malchlng CilB Rod 15-2500 48 81"' S5.B7 110-7903 / XseA-^X\ I ffS ^jC^i While or Br«u Standard 15-2405 .7 \ 1848" Rug. oat 77« Mritchlnrj Cale Rod 15-2501 86- 1*0" . . SG.97 Bar. ' _f% 4%rt nnr. 1 h _• *S>'*1 "'S^ / , and I feel the council should ' * White or Bran Standard 15-2496 8 4B86" 11,67 Mnlchlnj Rings 15-2508 10 nv. SI.13 reg. ¦HHJt n0" u ^^YYC' Winona will lose a good man A^-%Si iw . , „ >T ^ ''^'^'" •S' -^L.lH^ v / s CURTAIN RINGS Bag - do not , hopefully, ho can re- _^?y$!e2£& *F yr^ 31.37 mJimM \ ' - ^ -^ £*'•-• HiSir / reconsider its decision . If they * ^ Whlle " 14 ". .Oval 15-2538 ,40 , ID em. 834 . V ^ ^ ^ ' main in Winona as he desires and show the council what he ^^^S^T ^ r/ can really do. Personally, Paul , thanks for the help you have given to me. ROBERT P. LEMBKEY ' ¦ ' ' *; . : FASHION FABRICS FOR SEW-M^ Law catches up Liquor, beer tax collections increase ' with topless bars | ^„- ..- _ . SAVE 223% SAVE 24% . ST. PAUL, Mlnri, ,(\P) - Li- ^ ¦ SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - quor and beer tax collections in (^Lr— GINGHAM CHECKS NO-IRON BROADCLOTH apparently hns caught Minnesota during April were up : - ' ^ ' The law . . . >"-jL: - ir ,n in;, •y;;y^sT^ "" ' ". . ' • Perma-press 65% polyestcr-35% cotton • Machine wash 65% polyester-35% cotton less joints —five , of $124 ,017 over April 1072, State ¦ '* in up with top f. y ai IPJ '¦" - v \—-x * Bright country colors 45" widths • 45" wide, lor fashions and decorating establishments in Commissioner Arthur ff ^H ' A^:ri t ''II' ¦ ^ uo-5300.5400 5500 ¦ - the leading Revenue * Jfrarn^HiiBI whwUft •- '-- . . - .. -k^ DO-HOOD San Francisco's North Peach C. Roomer said Friday. area will have their liquor Liquor tax collections of JX 1 llitfa ^1m r& Reg. $1.29 *fflW Reg. 51.17 ' 0*fi Y .nri licenses suspended this sum- nearly $3 million were up $85,- YARD ¦ ¦ ¦ mer. 401) and beer tax revenue of ' ' The stale Alcoholic Beverage $726,972 increased by $39,349 l \^^K¥^r ' Control office issued tho sus- over a year earlier, k' SAYE 27% . 'SAVE 28% - pensions Friday nfiainst. tho Total liquor-beer collections \R .rll V-; .// >s Dig Al's, Off Broad- for the first IB months of the /: KETTLE-TYPE CLOTH Condor, ' ^ '^- -/- 7 colors for super summer SHEATH LINING . the hungry I. current fiscal yonr amount to \ » lfe ' l tt/\ ' ' " ' ^Id casuals . for * way, El Cld and A U^^^ K if '' \ •• ' > <. / •- /'• . Machine woahablo polyesier. 45" wide taking effect $3n.ft million , up $1.3 million "" - • Permanent -Prcss ^"W |yeste Excellent The suspensions , - • P° - coats , dresses, suite ,».«»» ln Juno, rnngo from 40 to 45 over the previous year, Roomer > \ N - O^^^l - A' ' // ^^ said. ' /; ' days. They aro tho culmination -» ^ //' $ 29 Reg. $1.39 QQO of two yenrs of effort by tho LYRIC RESISTED BURGLARY \ ^¦H&^S A - j "-B- 1 YARD VV VARD liquor control, agency to !). \ ^ - ' <\ [I- •/: I ^ stato YUMA, Ariz. (AP) — Nothing S^ iliili ^ - regulate nude entertainment in seemed to go right for burglars X " ' bars. who broke Into the Lyric The- * \ 4\ ^ v *\ ' [^ DAN RIVPR RIPPLESPUN I A court decision upheld the ^^^^^ »v • -/'7 SAVE 36% but ater here. government's authority, First the burglars were ' " Rosenborg, spokesman 1 * DECORATOR BURLAP SEERSUCKER PLAIDS Davey unable to open tho safe, al- -A P' ' s^BI^./ Endless uses for creative homo decorators •'¦r " wide Ass't SprinR Colors ; for tho topless industry, snid i \ ^^^^^ -v^NL V / * wove • ' • though causing $20O dollars f\ f \ * ' » Toxturod n Jute, In 36" widths • Popular Wide PJnld Pattern the suspensions would bo damago to tho metal box. xi ' ^ «W ^ y appealed again. Thoy wero unahlo to enter $ "I don't think It's fair to tho projection booth , after Yard knock off an industry at tho breaking a key ln tho lock. k; \<^ ' "! > ^^^^ T 2«**¦ Yds. $1.58 &,9 '^1 I L 2 , _J Rosenberg *A , , V ^^^ ^^^ TW YARDS | height of summer ," But thoy managed to break t ^^^ snld. "Tourists won't como to a into a gum machine, However, city that closes up at 10 o'clock tho machine had boon empty at night. " ¦ tot several weeks and thero was no monoy inside. Hyrrogon, a colorless gas, Tho final haul: six packages MIRACLE MALL - OPEN 9 TO 9 MON. THRU FRI,, 9 TO 6 SAT., NOON TO 5 SUNDAY CHARGE f$Sj. was discovered ln 17CG by Hen- of cigarettes and a pair of m ry Cavendish. pliers. if^^J O WJnona Dally News Bui has to yield to the . changing / COMFREY , Minn. . (AP) :- A and, ' \ ¦"leaves In outlining his views to the winds, in Washington to accom- opposed in the election last year. pendent of the armed forces- be- Island High School four 'Ah has been .con- Another , problem lie ' The teachers also asked , Mrs. rural Brown County girl was fore the selective service law jun ior high.schools. : '' AP¦¦ Senate during; his confirmation plish anything. ' ¦ .'•, "•¦' ' firmed by the behind is a sagging economy. Thompson to: voluntarily give up killed and her brother critically died about 10. months ago. . - ..; s recommendation V , injured when both were shot in . The-, panel' XXY-. News ' Senate, and ; It is a ; measure ;of the; respect her lifetime membership in the There r|s no word yet on how goes to the Board of Education At % he probably which ; most people have for WEAC. • . . / the back of the head Saturday Analysis .yy> . ' .- ' black recruitment went in the which will make' the y ¦ wm be sv^orn Shultz that he is:. - rot widely The delegates : late Saturday night. " ;..' • " : board is/expected ; . ' ¦¦ ¦¦ ' - ' :-j; into . office at . ;- .' Brown County Sheriff Ervin Marines, the Navy and Air decision. The .; ¦¦ blamed for the nation's eco- night reaffirmed their; desire for : Force in April. V* . to take up the issue at its May mid-week. • . . nomic . difficulties, ¦"¦ ' flagpole sitter Weinhauff . said today- that an . - a centrally-directed union by re- 14 meeting. ' "- ' investigation of the shootings is Hoyvvever,, the Marine . Corps ¦ Shullzr,y53, the last member of X Although Shultz was Nixon's jecting a resolution supporting reported that just under 21 per The: hard-cover , version of the unrivaled lop economics ad- local control of teacher groups, continuing, but no arrests have the original Mixon Cabinet still been made . "... cent of its recruits were black book , is published by Prentice-/ ;on the job, has been anxious; to viser, it didn't, mean his views y Mrs, Wynn has been ah.active - Marcia Jean Wendler, 14; and in the .nine months since - the Hall, Inc., and the paperback leave for some time. Aides say always prevailed..He opposed dies alter fall supporter of striking teachers in draft law-. went. off . the books. by Avon Books. wage and price controls from By GREGORY. GORDON Ohio, as he lay conscious, Hortorivile, even- serving on the Mark Wendler, 19, / were . found the outset and tried... unsuccess- ' writhing on the parkino lot at picket - line ; several times. She by their; parents, Mr. and Mrs. YY<^OA<&<$2Y) ~ Since the . Andrew Wendler lying near fully to .resign 10 months' ago to Depression . years, 71-year-old the ' Dixie Square ^Shopping is also a supporter of increased , ¦ power for each' other . in the yard near protest the President's second Richard "Dixie" 'Blandy was a Center. They rushed ; him . to the state : group¦¦ over price 'freeze/ . Ingalls Mem a rial Hoepital, local WEAC units. ;. ' their home, . five miles north , of fixture on a flagpole. A friend ¦Comfrey; • ' . ' . ^^^^^^ ^^^^^^ 8. Welcome Visitors saw said flagpole Mtting "was -his where, he died three hours later V The .WEAC, Mrs. Wynn ,.says, - . - ; But Nixon has needed Shultz ' Miss .Wendler "was dead. Her life.* '-- . .-- . -yy ' : of* a rhassive skull fracture¦ and is . at "the most significant time . — possibly more because of his mutiple internal injuries, ' ' foryteachers brother was taken ; to. St. Jo- high moral standing; in Wafer- Sunday, it ended in tragedy. ¦: ih Wisconsin," She iHiiiiiHBi . The; Guinness Book of World says the next few years will be seph's Hospital in Mankato, gate-tainted Washington than Blandy, who claimed to be -Records ; credits '; ' Maurie Eose the time . when , - will move where he remains in dritieal because of his economic ex- the world champion - flagpole : . "we ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Kirby of Indianapolis, Ind., faster toward a state .' political condition.; .. .;.- -. pertise. '"_ - :' •// '.¦;- '¦';• - . ' sitter, was perched / on an ¦ '¦ with setting the world-record body," ' •. ' - Weinhauif ; said the. two Weri- FMSSS Shultz says his. five years in aluminum chair at the top of a for ".pole sitting" of 211 days, Hahner had : contended the dlers had - been target shooting ; : ^I Washington have strengthened 50-foot pole in suburban Har- nine hours, in 1959, group was ''starting to get out with . a .22 caliber- automatic re- his belief that we ihust do our vey, calmly waiting through the I BETTER ! . " . of hand" and charged thr mem- volver earlier Saturday. The ¦^^^ 2th' Ahriiversary. . best to hold the line against the final few hour? ofy a Jour-day Earl Lakes of Dayton, a bership ho longer had any real sheriff's office ; said' the gunshot S L-j iJ^Si Wk ^ ^ . . encroachment of government shopping center promotion. friend; of Blandy's for about 20 authority. . Wounds in both were from a I years, said Blandy claimed a 1 HEARING on privateV institutions... : V He asked through a communi- . small caliber weapon;: . Minutes before : closing on each , of 20 consecutive Shultz is the first economist world flagpole sitting record of DON'T POLLUTE WHISKY ' /y- biisfnesf days, a customer was asked to draw just 1 cations . wire Attached to a UPI) " ¦¦' to serve as treasury secretary 103 .days about¦ seven years ago CARACAS 'V( - , the ¦V. . . reg istration slip /ronv thai day's entries, The person " I MONTH! irattSr below ; that a security in Sweden, y• ' ' .' . finance - ministry and Uie ' ¦ in modern times. He was at th^ ^guard move the trailer, aside to . 4-H federation sets -.-. . . whose name was draiOn received: from tis his choice J University : of , Lake's wife , said -Blandy was national .guard have launched -. .'- of the 20 small Prime Gut Diamonds we had oh dis- y Chicago when make room for equipment meeting on Tuesday; ¦ " ¦' ' ' : ' Nixon named him to his first able to make his living through "Operation . Battle" against play. ; . * . y [ ' [yr: - . - ; ¦ ' V- ' - ' : - ' which would whisk Blandy to flagpole sitting since the late night clubs and bars in Caracas Cabinet as labor secretary in the ground at day's end. TheVWinpna County 4-H Fed- THE WINNERS ARE: ; V 1920s, and once was paid $900 a; and : oh the coast which sell v 1969. eration will -meet Tuesday at 8 "; ' - But when the trailer , moved, day .for 44 days in a promotion adulterated whisky. y 4.8-S4 - , . .v . 4-19.7f - He became the first director "pim.yat the Winona Arete Voca- ¦ the wire became taut. The pole is Pennsville, N,J., : about 15 . Judge Erwin T. Chacon of the '• '"¦' ¦ ' ¦' ¦ ' Mrs, Clair - Jesme'r ' " of the Office of Management . tianal-Technicaly Institute; * • Erin 'bdmbronsW- • .;." ' . - . , snapped eight¦• feet above the years ago. Sometimes, he even finance ministry said that , not 1068 East iSth and Budget; in- July ef 1970 and ground and crashed Business.will include .a^ discus- Rout* #1 St.. —along pedaled : y a . bicycle nonstop only were the falsifiers of ' y Winona, MN. Winona, MN. ' ¦;. moved; to -Treasury to replace sion- on the Montana¦ exchange. with Blandy —to earth; police throughout the promotion. / whisky duping the treasury, but ¦:- ? . . - * .' . John B. Connally in ' . ' ¦ " June¦ of said;; -y. y "He liked ityup there " Mrs. they were y causing alcohol The- earth's : atmosphere 4.9.74 *y , .-y 4-20-74 . . 1972. ' - . - ' .V- * ' ' • ¦ .-. Ambulance paramedics tried Lakes said ''It w*as his life. He poisoning among some , of the weighs an. estimated 5 '. .' ' Hilda - ' Don Graham ¦ ¦¦ ,809 tril- Muhl* - Sonotone's Aides say he may join a ma- to help Blandy^ of Dayton, said he felt near PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A run by the Justice Department, time to beat the five-year stat- on five key figures "and a few The statute of limitations on was separate from an investi- ute of limitations of ' ' ¦ federal criminal investigation federal aides." conspiracy, which sources in- ; . . . y 4 «-74 • - 4-24-74 gation by the Securities and conspiracy charges. "This involves millions of dol- : . has developed evidence . that dicated was tjie*-ceritral charge Esther H. Salisbury Cheryl Craven Exchange Commission, which . . The grand jury investigation, lars in personal profit , said a ' some high officials of the Penn " under cpnsi.46ratipn, runs from 1645 Gllmoro Avenue 77 Ea»t Sanborn last week filed suit charging five years after the"la'sfdvcrt Central railroad made millions the railroad and certain indi- . Winona, MN..... Winona, MN. " act of .conspiracy, but it is not .. .. . _.^ ,. , .. Wiih Sonotone's new behind- i of dollars in personal profit be- viduals with massive fraud ' to Woman clear when exactly the statute . . . . - 4:25:„ , - ,. -- . . . - thc-ear hearing aid, sounds } fore the nation's sixth largest gets toug h CST president conceal losses and deceive runs out in this case. Mrs. M. L. DeBolt Leroy Meyer froni the front are emphasized . corporation went bankrupt in stockholders. P, O. Box 424 while conflicting noises from June 1970 with students in Heads state group Although the public . was una- 215 Washington Street , sources familiar The SEC suit is a civil action , MN. Caledonia , MN. lhe back aro subdued-as much with the case say, ware of It , the Penn Central Winona as 15 clB. This enables you to which , although it seeks to re- her chicken pen of private colleges was in trouble almost from the concentrate on the sounds you A federal grand jury that met 4-15-74 on 4-"-74 cover personal gain by some IU3NO, Nev. (UPI ) - When Sister M. Joyce Rowland , day it was formed in 1968 by ul, want lo hear, wllh reduced In- secrelly in Philadelphia for 13 Mr. L Alston "a former railroad officials and Carrie Fishbuxn heard a president of tho College of Saint merger of the New York Cen- . a 3^fl W ka terference from annoying back- months went out of business . 200 East 8th St. ^R ° ''?. ground noises. others, also seeks to enjoin de- commotion in her ohickenhousc, Teresa , was elected president tral and the rail- Winonau.f , MN. late last year without ^eing fendants from continuing , ac- roads. Winona, MN. for (ulldetails , contact us today. asked to indict anyone the sho stopped milking her cow, of the Minnesota Private Col- , tions which presumably they lege Council its spring meet- 4-27"74 sources say. armed herself with a rifle and at It was forced to file for 4 is 74 couldn't take anyway after the board , and set out to do battle. ing. , .. J-. 1 . Mrs. Walter Gustafson tfMM\\mmill1M\MlHmj aamem..wiurailroad went bankrupt. reorganization after failing to ,M Ed E. Viking Drive SONOTONE HEARING "It's those college kids Other council officers are . /l Z?T. "5 C. Oliver Burt III, nn assist- James A. Robinson , Macalester obtain $200 million in emergen- . 505 . East 6th . St. St. Paul, MN. 55117 TRUE-TEST & G.E. 1 again ," she said to the pot Winona, MN. AID CENTER ant in the U.S. attorney's office parrot perched on her shoulder. College, St. Paul, vice presi- cy federal loan guarantees. 4-29-74 here, said the-investigation still years she and her dent, and Harvey Stcgemocller, At Park Plaza Hotel Dehumidifiers B For 27 , Tho Nixon . administration , "•1M4 N«ncy Such J is active but declined further husband have operated their Coocordia College Moorhead , Mrs. Jnmes Glende N There's a sha | which initially had been pre- c/o College of St. Teresa comment. Burt was assisted by farm , and for the last 10, 'Minn,, secretary, 375 West 10th Street Wed., May 8 for every need. p pared to approve a bailout Winona, MN. a Justice Department lawyer students have raided it tp get They also serve as officers of , Winona, MN. from 3:00 to 5:30 p.m. BtflRR BROTHERS I from . Washington who also said chickens they need for initiation the Minnesota Private College backed off at the last moment 4-30-74 or write ravPp STORE, Inc. I ho could hot comment , . Into a group at the University Research Foundation. when Chairman Wright Pat- 4"78-74 Mrs. Haiel Feiten Bud Freeman Hearing Sources say the grand jury of Nevada , Reno, This tlmo , man , D-Tex,, of the House Mrs. By rnn Buross 151 East 5th Street Aid Sales 1 had difficulty obtaining all the SIK figured , she would teach Fraternity upset by Banking and Currency Com- Rushford, MN. Wlnonn, MN. Zumbro Hotel records it needed. Ihem something they don't mittee, objected. !Qh^l/a^ coed chapte r house ¦ ¦ learn in School. — —-—-— , , ' ™^ .^^-__-___-----i P.O. Box 8Q6 FREE DELIVERY H TIip.vo sources say prose- EVANSTON , 111. (UPI) - A Rochester, MN. 55901 "They were drunke r than S78 E, llil St. Phona 4S2-4007 B cutors slill hopo to obtain tho skunks ," sho said of the five chapter official of Phi Sigma records and present their case young men she found ln the Kappa at Northwestern Univer- sity said thot the fr aternity's < "¦¦« "i^^i'i"HBn «HManaiiiBnii ^HBHB -__ BHq ^ chlckeiipen. ^jllP ' What did she do? national headquarters took a "I mauled ihem with the two- dim view oi a noblo experi- ¦ ment in which six coeds have SINGLE VISION by-four. " : ';w— Hr *f f { \A ANSI allsly ilindiidi. MM m MahnLTD-soo... H J^^^^ k. Did thoy run? been sharing tho quarters. . ^*g& ' ^ ^ H I H^H "They did when I showctj my "The living of females in tho ¦ 30-0fi ," she said , patting the fraternity houso wos not '^EI______^_^^^_^JB__r/JL&d built to last! Hiil_ilJJIiH stock of her rifle. "I told them compatible with the aims of tho to tnko the message bnck to national fraternity ," tho sad- school." dened spokesman said, "Wc ¦ hnd tho choice of being dropped Normandy, In France, derived by tho national headquarters or its name from Norsemen who dropping the girls. Wo decided settled there. to drop tho girls." Advertisem ent How Carolina Lady Gets Relief Fbr Hours From Pain,Itching f SINGLE VISION MmntnoT l ^J^I^Pk T -WPP^i CONTACT Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues $70 . tP^Ljr 1 IiyMuny Cases Medication Gives Prompt , Temporary ^ ^ mfo ^ Relief from Pnin , Itching in Such Tissues. ^ Mrn. C. MrKlntn-y of Riilher- - I' ropnnit lni . H* In many cnsei DOWNTCWM WINONA ^^-w^ ^ ford , N.C Hnyii : 'Treimniti. in II p\<'» l>j»*pt . Uymi mniry relief fnr l0,lr,i fr I"" 11 ,l '•¦'•''ll'lT in ^ ^^ mB H',-.,li,.vn,l.lKived niymv ptlnninl ll nimmid IUUilcli iorfor 'hf-morrJiniihil"'" II ^MIM"". II. ulmi notu- 111 MAIN STREET R9 mUH hoiim. I enn now work -mil he (l) 1 ,„,, s ||hr||l|( |)1|(nfl| | MV( ,|||n|>, km ooinfortiibl i* , I vn told lotn or of „„,,), Kmnn ni „ BC .( | i,y |n n«n_ - TELEPHONE -454-3711 ^ ^^ who've hnd the mime SS\ WHHESSESSII fricmlH mntinn nml infi 'dliin. Thorn 's no ri'.Niilln. " ot h«*r formula hlui l't'cpnriilloii II, N OPEN ALL DAY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY l^-PpS!) (Note: Doctor:! hnve proved Ointment or Kiip iioiutoriM.) DENNIS SCHMITZ SALES & SERVICE ^ _^ Rural Routt 1. Dakota, Minn. M-—- I---- —— ^___^„_.______„ , .. rden club ¦ ¦ ¦ v f¦ ¦ ¦Q^¦' ' ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦' ; ' .'. ' - o . . . ' . * . . - . y VVltOKA/Minnv -- Mrs. Frie- da Sirueve, hostess for the Fri- day evening meeting of the Witoka-Ridgeway Organic Gar- den Club, presented films of gardens and places club mem- bers visited during the past year. Readings On garden cul- ture were presented by mem- bers arid guests and a garden quiz was conducted. ¦ ' ¦'-' .' • .* . • ' ¦."' Marriage plans X IA CftESCENT,,Mim. — Mr. and JVIrs. Floyd Brown, Brhok- lyri Center, Minn., . announce the engagement of their daugh- ter, Linda Mary, to David Rae Severson, . son of Mrs. Marga- ret Severson, La Crescent, Minh:, and the late Harry Sev- erson; V Miss Broym is a graduate of Minnesota School of Busiiless ¦ ¦ , Minneapolis, and is employed by Control Data Institute. Her fiance : attended La . Crescent High School and Golden Valley DAY WITH TlflE GUESTS . . . StVAnne Joseph Bendry, Rochester, MHAA District Lutheran College. He is a grad- Hospice auxiliary hosted its ioth annual - 'Day F. chairman; Miss Susan -Meyers/ scholarship uate of Control Data Institute with the Guests" Saturday at the Hospice. .recipient ; Mrs. Lambert Hamerski, chair- and is employed . by Control Assisting with the program, are, from left: man of the event; Miss Effie Bafnhbldt, viceV Data Aerospace Division, .".- - 'y the Most Rev. Loras J. -Walters, Bishop of. president of MHAA, and, seated, Mrs. Edris The wedding is' ; planned for Winona , celebrant of the morning Mass; Mrs.: Holliday Hospice gusst. (Daily News photo)" Oct. 12 in Minneapolis. . ^ . ' ¦ ' SO YEARS OF FASHION . YY . St. Martin's Lutheran. Gvild : the confirmation dress' - wioirri in 1918 .by Miss Esther Schmidt, : .y : ¦ Hagedorni in a ¦" ¦w^^^^^^^" • ' s ^^^m¦ ^m ^m ^l^m' ¦ ' . V_ observed its 50th anniversary Sunday evening ynth a pinner : a charter member of the guild ; Miss Loriy QS . ' .^¦ . - r* :¦ . . -: '. " X ¦ ##§: ¦ ' '¦ ' H ¦ and a style show of fashions from the past 50; years. Thirteen ; . ' black faille:-suit of the IMOs, owned by Miss Schmidt ; Miss . ' . . . Xi0-. .:X: Winona Dally News « ' .V : ;' .V • '. . ¦%$$.¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ : charter members of the guild were, honored. Styles shown Ranae Holz, wearing a.suit; frorri the early . 1950s , owned by ^ y ' " - ' ;V W;iibn8'/.'fti'lnnes9ta «* . : . ' Y - , y^0i¦¦ -. - . ;V. ¦' WH- included, froni left: Charisse Larson, daughter of yMr. - and y . Mrs. LeBoy • Steber, and Mrs. Barry . Owens, modeling the : 'ii '. •<:• ' ' ' ¦ '¦¦ annual ^D ^'S^ *^J^»i' .: Mrs. Gerald Larson, wearing a flower girl's dress ;of 1974,-, .' suit in which Mrs, Roy Burmeister was married: in 1935. . One'.'. y- : : and Mrs. Kim youmans wearing her wedding gown in : -which himdred and forty persons - attended the anniversary Celebra- ; ; The auxiliary of St. Anne by Sisters Linda, Mary and ¦ ¦ ¦ Y ' ' ' : ' ¦ ' • . ¦. ¦ §:¦¦ M M ^^^mW- . . she, was maimed in; 'i9ra.;- - .;Miss' -- -LynetteVLuMstr'a,. ihbdeling tion held at St. Martin's Lutheran School. (Daily Newrs photo) :/. " . •' Hospice hosted its 10th annual Kathleen, members of the staff . ;¦»¦ "Day : with the y Guests"; Satur- at St. Stanislaus School/ Several • ¦fM-m#*%&**:m^% -m^ day at the Hospice. ". - auxiliafts aiid their mothers, • ¦ • ' | K«|-- -- . - .- ¦ . . jMjl . Tlie Most Rev. Loras:J; Wat- who are guests of the. hospice, -: m\:-:-.:- . . - .- MONDAY, MAY 6/1974 V'. - fei 'Ghu^ v Ybij r horoseope ir- J^eane Dixon ters, bishop .of Winona, cele- formed the offertory proces- - ¦ ¦ • pi- ¦ "¦ "¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' "¦ ¦ ¦ ' - ¦' m sion;. 1 •¦'. - x- $#. ? - . - . ' . : - . - • - •:- . , /|# brated the 8 a.m. Mass, as- . '' : . : &'' //z?:t&"'ft-?rs ':'i-:tt.' 'Z'X^ sisted by tlie ; Revi- Frederick : One hundred and seventy-five ... For TUESDAY, Mfr 7 . willing - to exchange or lend resources. ' . .. immy.&^i^M'i says;v^ Your birihtlay loilay: Hard work cltar-' Technical decisions come easier, should Dorn,. •/'.hospice' chaplain, Tlie auxilians and guests /attended acterizes all enterprises in:ml directions; be put into effect. Short trips provlda liturgy of, the Mass . was simg the Mass and the breakfast ^^^^^ "Before . Vatican II," said , the Daughters of America Commu- likewise virtually : guarantees , hlshcr re- much salisfaetion. ' sults lor any sustained effort, ' however . Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21_)_ Rearrange : which was held immediately Rev. / James Habiger, "the nion,¦ breakfast held Sunday at poorly formulated it may ba at the be- finances; attend to the . care of loved St. • John's Catholic : Church ginning. Relationships endure well, ones. Get past troublesome part of day's following. * . church was thought of as a ,. ' Miss Susan Meyers', daughter pyramid with the Pope at the Msgr. Habiger . cdntiriuecl , y'Aft- deepened in significance as - tha year obligation . whila your energy is high. College series V: prcgresscs. Today's natives lend to re- As day unwinds, Ufa becom-es more com- top . and the bishops; priests, er . Vatican II, we think of the plex. of Mr. and Mrs. John Meyers, Squaivip fain as secret much of what they learn, received 1 the St. Anne Hospice religious and laity under the church ,as a- horizontal circle Whereas their Interests might be belter Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Tha recital slated Pope on separate levels." • with : three, words around the served by discreel-" publication..' -. - good things bf life are fun to pursue to- Auxiliary scholarship award at Aries (March Sl-Aprll 19) : Jn turnlns day. Work goes especially ivell, personal Guest speaker at the Catholic co-responsibility, collegi- r :' The music department of the the breakfast meeting of the circle* - • away from the harshness of yesterday's plans even moro so. Invile friends to ality -and subsidiarity. Every. experience, be willing to meet others at share your enthusiasm and - good fortune. College of Saint Teresa will pre- auxiliary. Miss Meyers, a se- Catholic'-is/"fully " responsible for least half way—Including , slranaers. ' Tech- . Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The post- sent the. : sixth college series nior . at Winona .^ Senior , High the church and all must work nical or professional guidance Is favored. poned and neglected are . top - . priority.- ' recital Wednesday at 8 p.m. School/is a member of the hos- Wilson resident : Taurus (April JO-May 50): A confer People at . a distance are: still waiting ts '• together, as a unified whole, to enco opens tip penetrating: lines of hear, frcni you.yGet as miKh .dane early iri the college auditorium. The pice Pihkettes. Mrs: Anthony - . DEAR ABBY: This is to inform your correspondent, Bar- thought, fresh perspectives cn finances. as- possible as effective cooperation bridge the gap between the: old / public is invited to attend. Chelmqwski, president of- the bara G. in Wilkes Barre, Pa., that she is not losing her mind notes 96 years and new. There must be con- Action In good faith promises Immediate wanes with the daylishl. . . —she did read that it is possible to /square' a circle. ¦ results, provides humorous stories for. Aquarius (Jan. "20-Feb. 16): Take up Recital participants include : auxiliary, presented a check . / , ' ¦:¦ later . recounting, y ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ nection , and unity." . . an angle .you've nbt : explored, see your pianists:Mary Beth',' Halteirian, . ' . The mathematician ,who worked it out was Edward V. .WILSON- .Minn. — Mrs/..Al- Gemini (May Il-June 20): This Isn't a work and life from a" different viewpoint from the auxiliary to Hosnice - Mrs. /Ross Nixon, state re- Waukegan, III., freshman, study- administrator, Sister Amadeus Graef ,, and a technical paper explaining the; method was : vina: Keller, Wilson, . celebrated : day fo work, alone or sulK. Como out of as If for the first time. The question ing with Sister Faber Bird , arid gent, was a special , guest at, the Ihe sidelines; ask and give help and "what am I doing here?-" may occur Klein The money received will authored by him and V. C. Harris of San Diego State College. her 96th birthday with friends cooperation. : Reconciliation' of old differ- to you. . . -." _ ;. . Jane Biunan, Harlan, Iowa, . breakfast. Mrs. Rohian Bork, If one changes the rules slightly,/he can trisect : angles a n . d relatives ¦ ences comes easier. Home conditions Pisces (Feb. y1»-Marcb M): Thers'a be used to purchase equipment .; local' -. regent, was mistress ' - oi ' -' freshman, studying with Sister -¦ ' Frid evening are Improved. a high premium on extra effort, so git. for the Hospice. . ;_ and square; circles. Using the/kind of curve they. do,, they are ay ceremonies and musical selec- Cancer (June 21-July 21): Fellow busyl Sketch in the broaid outlines, fill ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ . Ethelreda. Fisch ; guitarist Edr ¦ ' "¦ • ' ¦ ' ' ¦ • ¦ • ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ workers toko the initiative eagerly. Be ' ¦ " '. a b 1 e to ' .. '. " '; - ¦:/ • ' • - ' ' ." ' ' - . -¦ '• - at the home o£ tions were presented by Jiilie in details when you-come to ' theni. -It's ward Kaufman , Winoria fresh- Afternoon events included a : careful of what Is left open for their a switch-pace, switch-place sort of - ___ ¦//¦ .; ' day. ' solve . three . - . | hei* . son, Her- and Jana Kadmes; Altura,. Minh. choosing. Preclude additional diversions ' ' ¦ - :¦ man, studying with. Mr. Richard film;: Disney's "So Dear to . My . ¦ • . . . a ivcie nt bert; Wilson. . • The next meeting will be May by personal' moves taken early In the Husie; sopranos Susan Stehr, Heart," which was the theme Dear Abby: ¦ ¦ morning. Minneapolis junior and Malia of the day. -A social hour and problems — • '.-: ' .' • • Mrs, Keller 13 at the Cathedral of the Sac- red Heart. Leo .{July i3-Aug. 22)i Oalher - lha SaladVlunch&on j has three chil- ' ' general group Fox, Winona freshman, study- refreshments f we d the " ¦ ' * clan, make deals about olio ¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ •¦ By Abigail Van Buren ¦ . . • ; ing with Sister Lalonde Ryan; Sg - t ; dren;' -. '' Herbert'; actions, solicit participation from . every- : ETTRICK, Wi5;VcSpe5ial) -i movie ¦ ¦ ¦ body concerned. Romantic and senll-; . recorder players, Susan Kaplan , - 1 e^C2) - • ¦: . ' _ : ' ' - " ¦ - ' ' Mrs. Lambert Hamerski was - ,; /- /-X. X. - - - yx - :¦ . . . . // Paul,. Witoka, Coachmen campers menfaf erilerprlses fake iriore time, Hardies Creek. Lutheran Church Minneapolis and Susan Hall, squaring the circle, and. (3) duplicating the . cube . — with. and Mrs. Bert bring excitement; - Women will hold a salad lunch- Byron Minn.,.junior, and giiitarr general ¦ chairman for the event ¦ Virgo (Aug. 53-sept. 22): Carry out lhe . " ¦just one. methodV . ;" .' - L a u f eVn The Hiawatha Coach- routines of the,day; pick up the pieces eon Saturday at 12:30 p.m. Sen- ist . Stephen Kelleher, Fort assisted by:; Mrs. Lambert Ga- ' : " Valley lewski, decorations;'. Mrs. Ann / . I hope this helps your correspondent. I.enclose a copy burger, Winona. men Campers will -meet Friday from recent-upheavals:- Home arrange!- ior citizens \vili be lonored and Dodge, Iowa , senior students in of the article, winch was published five years ago in the, men's need review, probably, basic ¦ ensemble groups directed by Dr, Rand, program ; Mrs. Theodora ¦ . She_h_asV5Weral through' May .12 at KQA Camp- changes. Lively talk, shared pastimes Mrs. B.orghild Olson, prfncipal ' ' . r: - '/ fill , evening. - Donald Echelard.: Lester,: - tickets; . Mri. Larry Pittsburgh Press. - gr. .a'. h :d ."c' *h''i;'J-'., Mrs. Keller ground. A pancake breakfast of Jefferson -.'School/ La Crosse, HENRY G. GOULD: PROF. OF MATHEMATICS : Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): New prob- -V ' Two movements from Mozart Gilhooly arid Mrs. Ted . Trusk; • dren; and great-grandchildren. will be served 'May 12. lems unlikely. Associates are generous. will be the guest speaker. V: quartets - for strings with flute dining room, and Hospice Pink- / yW. VA. U., MORGANTOWN, W. VA; / ¦ and oboe by Sister Genevieve ettes, service. Members of the . DEAR PROFESSOR: Barbara will bless you tonight '¦:_ Speltz will be performed by auxiliary assisted. : ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' . , ' - ¦ - '¦ •. . in her prayers.. Now, if anyone out there has a. niathe-- Mary Speltz, Winona sophomore, :: . m - matical problem flute; Debra Roetrnan, Vermil- , those with lifi«flse numbers ending in an lion, S.D., freshman, oboe, and ODD number please write to Professor Gould on Monday, Jamie Scltain, Winona , Sister Arcadia prqnri Wbdnesday and Friday. And those witli EVEN numbers , Helen Rolfson, and Ann Fnindt, write on the remaining days. Thanks, Henry, I needed you. strings. ; royalty crowned Saint-Saens DEAR -ABBY: Knowing that our crews isn't the heaviest ' Caprice for pi- fs small consolation, There are many of us- but those who Are Good ano V and three woodwinds, di- Here 5 Reasons rected by Dr. Echelard , will aren't in pur positions rarely give us a second thought. We Bp^p I be played by pianist Elizabeth are single fathers caring for small children. Wimunc, Downers Grove, 111., The cost of day-care and maintenance of the households ¦ freshman: flutist Mary Beth we have put together in better days causes us to lead semi- ¦ ll You Sh Clayton, Anoka , Minn,, fresh- cloistered lives. If we should meet some attractive lady; we man; oboist Debra Roetrriari, can't ask to take her out to dinner and a movie because the and clarinetist Mary Allyn Re- budget doesn't allow for that plus a sitter to stay with the K ! For Your stad. Palmer, Alaska , sopho- youngsters. An invitation to spend an evening at my home more. is given awkwardly, and is sure to be misunderstood/ Nobody ¦ ¦ ¦ ' . ¦ is going to call me, and nobody is going to visit me, so after Bridge winners the kiddies are iri bed I sit here wishing away the best years - ¦ ¦ - ¦, ;¦-¦ ¦¦•:¦- ¦¦ ¦¦ •• ¦ •:¦- ¦-¦ Brother Ambrose TrusTt was E. Klonecki * Sch«ltz of my life. ." ' : . . . ** *• - .. first place winner in the Wi- ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) Can you put In a good word for us, Abby? I have a nice nona Duplicate Bridge Club's - little Home, two pretty little kids, over 200 bottles of homemade Miss Eva Klonecki, daughter of ; individual garhe held Wednes- wine in the basement , and time on my hands. ' . ..- BILL day at the St. Mary 's College Mr. and "Mrs , Ray Klonecki, center. and Henry Schultz , son of Mr. DEAR BILL: Haven't you ever heard of Parents Mrs. Mabel Smith was second . and Mrs. Darrell Schultz, Ar- Without Partners? They are looking for men like you, so Miss Michelle Valletta , third , cadia , were crowned queen and start looking for them! ¦ ¦ and Mrs. Willard Angst , fourth. king of the Arcadia High School DEAR ABBY: The U.S. Post Office Is the most used prom held Friday evening. , yet -¦rl'- .S the least understood service in this country. A reader wrote, G-E-T concert Theme for the prom was "Here's how I succeeded in getting my name off . junk mail- GALESVILLE, Wis. - The "Dancing in the Moonlight' ing lists: I simply cross off mv name and address, and Gale - Ettrick - Trempealeau with music by the Phases. write senior bund will present its 'REFUSED-RETURN TO SENDER' on the envelope, spring concert Wednesday at 8 Members of the court were: then I drop it in the mailbox, It costs the company money p.m. in the high school gym- Brad Iteiiter and Natalie So- to receive this mail , so tliey quickly drop niy name from their nasium. Soloists and ensembles botta , Darrell Berg and Jane list," competing at the state music Kostner , Bernard Bisek and Abby, for heaven's sake, NO bulk mail Is returned to festival will nlso be featured. Cheyenne Kamla and Matt the sender unless It bears specific instructions, "RETURN Don Rowlands is director. Angst and Mary Lalibcrte. REQUESTED ," or "ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUEST- ED," or "RETURN POSTAGE GUARANTEED. " AU bulk mall which does not bear one of these instruc- tions , is returned-lo the Post Office by the carrier, Inspected by the supervisor , and then thrown in (he trash. This extra LYLE'S INTERIORS handling makes extra work for the mail handlers, for which the public must pay ! Sj|| gffl« || MKfl Von hnve asked jor il and ?io») LYLE' S Please print this, Abby, I've been employed at the Post |aflMy ™jByffi has il — a tolal decoraling store ! LYLE ' S Offlco for 17 yen rs and know whereof I speak , I tmlLe*.jJ&r-*¦' Winona 's deale r for Jewel Calorise r HARLEY D. WHINERY, LYNWOOD, CALIF. 1: W Tolnlcolor Point. We have a pninl consul- ' \5f*»| loo Any : *i . . ';-;-\ '^m taut ! possible color can "he mixed DEAR HARLEY: Of course I'll print your letter. " , jf eiXx, '¦¦' yo"r "JIS'1CS. a,lrf KYLE'S will do lhe job It's the least I can do for tho U.S. Postal Department. Ym '°or 1, | They've dono so much for me, MHnT'fo__)i ^ uou' '"' "ou w's' YcS cn'1 LVIJFJ'S t0r WP-ML'.,-|PBM J/°"r fo 'n' pninl needs , or wallpape r or Bnl'iTlrfflintffl drapery or carpet or hard surface needs . 681 "I'm very happy with tho "Very nice job — Tlio twfl "Tho carpeting looks Just §$9 | HflBf|f| | of in our Comullants will bring samples to your home , withoul obli- KBB K HI cleaning tho furniture. fellows can como beautiful. "You hnve bo HprgS gation : and aho give quotes. CARPET |^ 1 REMNANT RMjfffflaS ffl Everything looks like new home anytime — so con- nice fellows working foe Ijg9 LYLE'S is having a hiiqe. sale May flf .i l/irotif - . t thu 2,'ird to introduce their Jciucl Colorizer Paints wiih io%. off the full Unc i Also huge savings of 20% on the 'full llrkov and IH»Hn|%[ B Lucille Dolan A. B. Wohlhaofcr Norman J. Wnlz , Sr. ' Era Liml Dodge lines of fabric , or fabric and . 'labor (custom matic draperies). ] luc\e savings on carpeting and 10% fl// on nil wallpaper. Plus many carp el remnants and specials! Drive out and see f.YLB'S carpeted car (j/ fl .i, on lhe Pjjjlij M Wc Are Proud to Have Served These Fine People . . . mm outside of tint earl) on display during LYI.E'S biq sale. Register for free prizes , There will he orchids for the first 7!> ladles lhal make a purchase during our sale , Do yon WEDi ONLY have _iii|/ really ttfcJiiiicat paint or wallpaper questions or ¦ Uk probleins? // so, Micro wi'JI'ba ropreseiilatltx-s fr om Chicago mBmJ^T ^K^ cell ,.. JL g%JMJW A FURNITURE A M and La Crosse al LYI.E'S on May lSlh lo answer Ihem for n/p/**\SA ULM JL*RUG ... TODAY vm you , IBBf/fl" iBT J LA CLEANING "Happy Mother 's Day " to all of you Moms fro m every- ^ one at LYLK'St

WE CAN OFFER YOU Highway A TERRIFIC PRICE ON jfiitfi A' M CARPET & PADDING THAT CAN'T BE BEAT ANYWHERE C^MJj CiA^ Mlnneioto CHy „ (2 Mllei Wc$t of Wlnqna R«d Owl) TOTAL INTERIORS WINONA ROOFING & SIDING SO? E. 3rd Sf. ED RATAJCZYK ' Phone 452-1848 |A Winona Dally Newt ¦ ¦ ¦ " Winona, Minnesota MONDAY MONDAY; MAY 6, 1974 6, €> l ^ W^ r*#f> rfr ^^^^ ^ The daily ' record Pcxlii^ E.' 2nd St;, 45 windows broken Six killed in Burglaries sometime over weekend; $125 Community WINONA COUNTY loss.. * ' /¦• - '• • Wiriona Funerals Twq-S^te Deaths At Sky Vu outdoor theater, National Food Store , 128 W. WisGonsiiv; entered by plants f oad Arthur W. Kerkow Mrs. Marvin Currie Memorial Hospital Goodview, lounge 5th St;; boxes of potted prying door sometime Sunday tipped over,: bags of peat brok- Arthur William Kerkow, 86, ST. CHARLES, Minn. : — SATURDAY machine enter- 116% Walnut -St., died at his Mrs. Marvin (Helen O.) Currie, night; cigarette . en Saturday night; $90 lc«s. . l€ll hits 199 Admissions ed, ho estimate of loss. Holes punched in gas , tank of home Sunday. He retired in 1952 52, Monticello, Minn,, former Earl Wachholz, Winona Rt. 1. United Press International as sheet metaQ worker for the St. Charles resident, died ' Sat- car belonging to George ; Po- Larry Jcnsgaard, Winona Rt. Saturday Wisconsin , traffic claimed six Chicago and North Western Rail- urday at Fairview, Hospital, , Thefts ¦ zanc, 827 E. Mark St., 3. - ' .CITY. - * ¦ ¦' • parked in garage; lives during the weekend,- boost- way System. Minneapolis, Minn., after ain ill- . . - night , while ' ¦ Discharges William . Junegbauer, estimate of damage. ing the toll for the year to 199 .The son. of Ferdinand and Hen- ness of two years. ,. . Mrs. Thomas Theisen and From no rietta Spierling KerkoWj he was The former Helen Kjos, she St. Mary's College, Billiard ball thrown through Sunday, compared with 311 on baby, Arcadia Rt. 2, Wis. : , the. same date last year. born in Winona Feb. 10, laiBft. He was born in rural UtiCa, Minn., racket taken from room at :Ed- window of David Rompa resi- ¦ " Mrs. Luella Beggs, - 6l4 W. Friday night; $40 4th St., Friday Tlie victims: ' • never married. He was a World Oct.; 8, 1921, the, daughter of ' wards Hall dence, 221 W. Broadway value. . nig;ht, no estimate of loss. Leopold ¦ Chocholous, 17, Wa- War I veterah . and a member of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kjos. She Debra Tropple, 558 E. 3rd St. terloo.:-, .¦:' the Fraternal Order of Ragles, Charles From Janet Hanson resi- ' . •'VyV'V ¦ graduated . from St. ¦yyy :, : - Myron Beldngia,. , W e s t Winona Aerie:1283. High School : arid oh June 6, SUNDAY . dence, 1(>9 Zumbro St., stereo- Accidents ¦¦ 3^¦ one Bend. -- ', - . " y- ¦:", ;-' > ' ' : Survivors . are:; two. sisters, 1942, married Marvin Currie at Admissions radio combination arid yy "Yx 'Y" - / -OTY' -Xy 'ft-; ¦ '¦ '' ¦ ' ¦ y Donald W. Burt, St;, Charles, speaker taken Saturday night; ¦„ :¦ ' '¦,- , ' ' WEATHER FORECAST . -. . . Showers are forecast from , Michael Mayer, 27, rural West Jtrs. S. M. (Daiseyj Duncanson, Kansas City, Mp. ' . . ¦• . ¦ Saturday :- .- . . ' Winter Hayori, Minn. .. .- . : $300 loss. ¦' East 4th Street ¦the Southwest to they, western Gulf. Rain is expected ,for Bend:' : \Fla.v and Mrs. Survivors are: her husband; 11:35 p.m. — Dennis Gilbert,: 21, Two Riv- Elmer (Hulda) DeVoe, Owosso, Mrs, Matiel liangord, Eiish- From . J; C.- Penney Co., 1858 near Market Street, .. parked . Florida. Rain is .forecast for part of Washington, the eastern ' tyyo sons; James, Monticello, y key case valued at ers. /-Yy, Mich., several nephews and and Michael, Rochester, Winn., ford, Mnn. . . .y; Service Dr., cars hit: Mary M. Peterson, y Plains and showers are expected- for the lower Great . Lakes. . . Mrs. Allen Hock, 223 Mar- $4.50 takea 3:10 p.in. Friday; Brian Hoffman, 19, Two Riv- nieces. -V. one daughter, Miss . .Carol Cur- Homer, Minn., 1968 sedan, $225; : Warmer -weather^ is forecast for south-central areas .and colder "' Funeral arrangements are be- ket ; St. adult male suspect appiehend- Holtan, 404 Grand ^ ' ers. . rie, Monticello; three grand- ' ¦ Marvin L. weather for the:Great Lakes. (Ap Photofax) . -; Edward C. Bloc*, 52, Grafton. ing made by Fawcett Funeral Mrs. Edward Mohan, Minne- ed-.V; • '.; V-? .. St., 1966 sedan; parked, $175; ¦¦ children; her mother, Mrs. Ber- ; ' • ' . Ctiochblbus- died Sunday in a Home, Winona. tha Kjos , Rochester, Minn., aiid sota. City, Minn. . . . From Robert Breza, 479 E. Lawrence W. Moline,' Bloom- two-car .accident at . the inter- Mrs. Clemens Riska, 1402 W. 3rd: St , bicycle taken from ington, MinnV,. 1983 sedan, park- Local obsewations Carl W. Snyder two sisters, Mrs. Clayton:, (Flor- section of Wisconsin 89 and ¦ ence) . -K' el'chum, Lewistop; 4th :St. ; -XX ' YY: yard sometime Tuesday; green ed, $50. y for Dodge C6i^ iTrunk - 6AV::He -Carl W.-S»yder, about 68, Discharges Huffy, $10. y Simday . OFFIGIAL WINONA^^ WEATHER OBSERVATIONS thei Chicago Minn., and . Mrs.-. fierald (Ver- .- '24 was dead on arrival at a: Col- , a former Winonan, nelle) Froin Lisa Kuhlniahn, 252 E. 1:22 a.m. — West . Sanborn ' . houre ending at noon today. died Sunday afternoon at his Stukey, Wichita, Kans. : Mrs. Patrick AJnderson and Maximum temperature 54, mihimuiii 27, noon 50, no pr6- umbus^ hospital. - - .;- ./r y baby, "Stockton,.. Minn. ' ' " 3rd St.,. bicycle taken sometime arid Huff streets, intersection ¦ ' : : Chiciagb home. Funeral services will be at .2 • . Yellow . Huffy id- . clpitation'. ' -- ' '- - -/ . Belongia and Mayer died ear- p.m. Wednesday at North Prai- Mrs. Ronald Bunke aiid baby, Saturday;* collision; Gregory. D, Breitung, ."- .: A year ago today: High 62, low 42, noon/53, precipita- ly Saturday when their cars col- He was born in Winona : to Rushford Rt.y 1, Minn. . .. - speed , ?65. . Fountain City, Wis., 1964. sedan, , rie V Lutheran Church, . rural Becky' Carlson, Winona 1108 tion _03. ?;: lided on a road ¦northeast of Mr. and Mrs. William Snyder Fillmore County, the Rev. Miss Betty Barnewitz,. Winb- From $100; Mark H. Grangaard , ¦¦, WestyBend.' .r y . -;¦ Y ¦ ' . and -formerly worked in the State College, bicycle taken niiotorcycle, ¦ ¦ Normal temperature range for tliis date 66 to -44. Record • • . -y XX. Bruce: yMiller,y Monticello,. offi- ¦npnay.Rt.-i; . W. Mark St., 1973 " high '88:-In 1934, record low 30 iH 1944. Gilbert and Hoffman died Sat- First National Bank here V He sometime Sunday ; red Road- $550; . Grangaard was treated . . ciating: Burial will be in the Mrs Ronald Wheeler 117 . Sun rises tomorrow at 5:50, sets at 8:16. urday when the car Gilbert was moved to Chicago about-. 40 , , master, no estimate ,of value, and released at Coniniunity Me- ' church cemetery Main ; St. V 11 A.M. MAX CONRAD FIELD OBSERVATIONS driving missed a' curve on Man- years- ago, x '"'X X' - , .- From Thomas Flak, 1178 W. morial Hospital. : Friends may call after 3 p.m. Mrs 'No r m an Bollinger - bicycle taken Satur- ; (Mississippi Valley Airlines) itowoc County; VV near. Shoto SurvivorS i include: his -wife, Tuesday ar^J untjl noon Wed- , Broadway, WINONA COUNTY Barometric pressure 30.10 and falling, .wind from the and crashed off "the road. ; Alma Rt. i, Wis. y day night; J. C. Penney, blue Saturday . Flora,. Chicago; a brother, nesday , yat . Jacobs - Funeral . northwest at 15-20 niph, cloud cover 2,000 scattered, visibility . - Block died early. Saturday in Robert Helwig, Cochrane, Wis.: and white, ' license 1759, $50: .ii:40 . - 'a.tn V — CSAH Vl6 at ¦ Manuel Snyder, Winona, and a Home, St. Charles, then at the ' . 10+ miles. . a tworcar accident on U.S. 45 sister Mrs. John (Faith) ' From Margaret Zuehlke,. 701 Elba, sideswipe; Donald D. Re- DEGREE DAYS south" Sier- church from l. p.m. until time ' W, bicycle taken about four miles of Ciin- acki, San Bernardino, Calif. of services Wednesday; Y x FIRE CALLS Howards St., dalen, Red Top Trailer Court, (As temperatures .droR degree days rise ) tonville. Three others were in- between 3-4 piin, Sunday; Ster 1970 sedan; .$250; Keith .L. Mielr One.methpd of figuring heating requirements is tp calcu- - .• " ; Funeral services and burial • '., ¦ ,:-¦- .•; blue - -y jured.- ' : V- .:. • . will, be Thursday in Chicago ; Mrs. Iriga Emerson .:. Sunday .. XX Clubman, , $200. . - . ke, St; Charles, Minn.; 1962 Van, late how many degrees a day's average , temperaiture yfeil . . 11:53 p.m. -y- Garvin Heights ¦: : ' ¦ ' ¦¦ ' ' ; • ' JELEYA, Wis: - Mrs./Inga - . Y- PSPINV COUNTY : - ;:. $75..V : below- 65, the-ppint at which artificial heat:is generally con- Eme«sony 92, Eau Clair, Rt, Road, bonfire extinguished y by Froni Edward FisherV^ rural ; 4:55 p,m. — CSAH 17, Hom- sidered necessary.. The resulting figure can be used to esti- Winona County Court three unidentified persons be- er Township, mbtoreyclerbicycle 3,. Wis., died Sunday at Luth-¦ Durand ,; WL?., 2,000 .'..bales - -of mate fuel consumption. '; CIVIL, CRIMINAL DIVISldN eran Hospital, Eau Claire fore : firemen arrived, returned and a collision ; Sharon * I>a*riSi Pick- For the^4 hours ending at 7 a.m.: '' :,- . hay, valued at $2,000, • . . • Eight St. Mary's College stu- Qsseff : The former Iriga: Tollefsbh , 12:23 a.mV saddle, valued at $175, taken wick; Minn., bicycle, ;$75; . Ed- Today 15 Season total 6,732 V- dents entered not guilty pleas mJHi she was born in rural Eleva ward Erdman, Houston, Minh;, . 1973 15 . Season total 7,753 ¦: , from a barn on Pepih County. - in Winona County Court to a A :u g. - 3, 1 8,8 '1, v the WINONA . DAM LOCK^OE " 1973 . motorycle , no estimate of • - Highway M, north of Durand ; charge of fraud, and a trial daughter of Biernt and Lena cubic feel per second damage. Miss - .pavis was treat- . - • Flow — .54,500 . ¦ Pepin County Sheriff's office. date is . to beyset. ' . ' at 8 a.m. today. . ' . '. ybriiises : and rer . . Torperiger Tollefson. On March ¦ ¦¦¦ ed for cuts and ' They, are: -, . - . ; charged afler Saturday • " . BUTFALO CPVNTY St..Francis'Hospital 19, 1904, she married Ed Emer- 6:05* plm.—U. Wade Childress, 1< barg- From Orlan Noah, Buffalo leased at , Richard Tohin, 19, Mark B.. son. . He died in. January 1941! es, up. - . * . - La Crosse, Wis. -10:5S : p.m.-^C_>cella Ann, crlsM"¦ barges, City, Wis,, 30 to 35 two-by-fours, ' ' Olita, 19, Timothy G. Tyler, 20, She was a ¦ • .:¦ --¦-:-. - .: lifelong member- of down. . . - . . . each about eight feet long, - n:?5'p.n-i,' — -Ihca; six barges;' down. . : val- Nancy; L.,iLaSer, 18, Thomas. J. the Eleva Lutheran Cliurch ¦ ¦ ¦ car crash . "•- . ' '' Sunday " . - ued at $50j taken either . late AVA GARDNER RETURNS Evon, 19, Dohna L. Virzi, 18, and its ofganizatibns.;V. 2:25 . ;a.m; — Magnolia,, eljtif barses, ¦ ¦ OSSEO, yWisV down.... * ' - '. . /- . ' ¦ .' Sunday night or early - this HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Aya 1st Quarter Full 3rd .Quarter New Elizabeth C. Bono, 18, and Lor- ;(Special): - Survivors are: one son, Leon- . ¦ etta Razhy,. eighty were James Anderson; 42, ' ard 4:50 a.m.—Tara Ann, 10 barges, down. morning ; Buffalo County Sher- Gardner, who hasn't worked in ' 'V'May- ": ' /-' " 19.: The Osseo, , Eau Claire ; one daughter, 3 p.m.—:20 a.m.—Lady Slipper, 12 barges, Sheriff' down. . ' of guilty to Va charge , of disor- s office, ; was - listed in Lutheran Church, thei Rev. Clif- • ¦;• - ¦• night and mostly cloudy Amarillo .68 . 46 . -. ..ch .- . . •;. yTuesday. Chance' of UgW; Anchorage .53 31- ..cdy derly conduct,. "Winona County satisfactory condition this morn- ford Pedersen officiating with rain lati tonight and Tues- Asheville . 60 43 .31 cir Court Judge Dennis A. Challeen ing at . the Osseo Area Hospital. burial in the church . cernetery. Hcitd refuses nude day. Highs Tuesday most- V*v ." :74 54 .01 cir referred them to court services He has. a deep cut on his bot- Friends may/ call Tuesday killed on Atlaiita . ¦ " / Nine ly 60s. Chance of rain 20 Birmingham - 76 48 _ X cir for a presentence investigation. tom . lip. -:- . after 3 p.m. and until 11 a.m. male in Playgirl cake Wednesday percent ,tonight and 30 per- Bisuiarck : -V- 62 33- . ..cdy They were arrested Saturday The accident took place at at Kjentvet & Son ,' : - 9::36 p.m. Sunday at the in Fimeral Home* . Eleva, . LOS ANC3ELES (UPI) - The centyluesday. , Boise . 77 51 . : ... cdy for fighting in front of the ter- then at Century .Plaza Hotel would not • ' '¦ 58 44 ..; rn Country County bar, 767 E. 5th section of . Jackson County the church Wednesday from $tate bighv/ays ¦" let a nude male 'pop.', but . of .a Minnesota " St. ::- ' Trunk Highway. G and Highway noon until time of services. - . . V Bro-wijsville 84 71 .06 cdy five-foot . cake at: Playgirl By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Langsjpen, 24, was killed Satur- Beceming mostly clondy Buffalo 58 39 .37 rnCharles- James G. Hoover, i29,: Winona 10, just south of Osseo. . . tonight and Tuesday, A Jackson County Mrs. Ludwig Heck magazine's- first¦ anniversary Nine persons,: including four day yvhen the car he Was driv- Chance Charleston 75 55 .43 rn Rt. 1, and Daniel G. Hoover, Sheriffs ¦ party Friday; ' . . of light rain late tonight and ' ¦ ¦:' 61 45 .34 ;clr. 23, 500 W. Belleview St., plead- deputy reported that Anderson MONDOVI, Wis. — Mrs/ Lud- - teenagers killed shortly after ing was hit. by a train in Breck- -Charlotte. wig (Marie).Heck Publisher Douglas Lambert ; enridge, Minn, v Tuesday with - a few snow Chicago X:.r ' [- 65 36 .. cir * ed not . guilty to a charge, of apparently fell asleep' as he was , 79, Mondovi, they left their high school flurries possible extreme ..cdy _ 9 traveling west on Highway , died Saturday: at St. Joseph's said he was not told abeut the prom, died oyer the weekend ih , Breckenridge police : said Cincinnati .V 66 49. assault and trial was *set for 10 Hospital ban until the day of the party. northeast late tonight and Cleveland * . : 69 42 .24 cdy. a.m. July 5. The two were . ar- in a 1974 two-door su&compact , Marshfield, Wis. Minnesota .traffic accidents, Langsjoeri died at a Fargo, model.' The former Marie Roetter, "When we made preparations raising the state's 1974 death N.D.i hospital a few. hours after early Tuesday. Lows tonight Denver . 75 44 ..cdy rested by city police Friday;in foi* the party we had no 30s to low 40s; Highs Tues- Des Moines' 72 37 .. cdy connection with an alleged fight Anderson's car veered off the she was . bom .in the town of idea toll to 193, compared with 267 a the accident;. A passenger in day 50s northeast and 60s to 64 38 .06 cdy left side . of the highway and Albany, : Pepin - County, i)ee*"*9, the hotel would reject this year ago. y the car, Bob Enger, 24, Fergus Detroit in front of 767 E. 5th St. feature," Lambert said. "I , low 70J southwest; 46 26 ;0iyclr 20; Min- down into the ditch and was 1894,. the daughter of Emil, and Falls escaped with minor in- Dtduth : Richard . Maroushek, Margaret wonder if it had been girl The latest reported victim is juries. : Fairbanks 55 37 .. cdy nesota City, Minn., pleaded not out of -control for 296 feet. The Breiter Roetter, Ori a Mrs. Delia Hill, in .her late 70s, - Nov. 2, 1921, popping: out of the cake,, would South St. Paul police said Lu- Wisconsin Fort Worth 69 542;49 cir guilty to a . chairge of drunk vehicle then struck a cement she married Lud- who died Sunday afternoon in a Mostly fair, continued cool to- wig Heck. They farmed in. rural they have¦ found it objectiona- cille A. Buggert, 52, was killed Green. Bay 59 31 .63 cir driving and trial was set for culvert, flew over the culvert, ble?" - - .: two-car collision one Mile south night, l»ws upper 20s north- Helena. 76 45 .. cdy 9:45 a.m. July 2. He was ar- bounced another 30 feet, Wt the Mondovi, retiring here in' 1959. of Kragnes, Minn. when the car she was driving east, lo*w to mid 30s west andi Honolulu 88 74 ... cir rested Friday near East 5th and ground; and traveled another She was a lifelong member of collided with another on a city aouth. Increasing cloudiness, St. Paul' ity Persbyterian Church, the street, The accident Houston 80 64 .28 rn High Forest streets. 14 feet before stopping. , s Lutheran Church, Rev. John Greene officiating. Authorities said Mrs. Hill was . occurred warmer Tuesday, chance of Ibid'apolis 71 41..cdy Richard Frey, 273 Chatfield The .car received an esti- Canton. a passenger in a car driven by early Saturday. . . Survivors ' Burial will be¦ in Greenwood rain southwest by afternoon, Jabks'yille 85 62 .. . rn St., pleaded guilty to drunk mated $1,000 damages. . are: her husband ; Cemetery. . ' • . her husband, who . was hospi- Highs In the 50s. two sons, Arnold . Juneau 46 40 .03 rn driving and was referred to , Mondovi , and Friends may . call Tuesd ay talized. Kansas City 73 47 .. cir presentence Orlin, Snohomish , Wash. ; six The driver of the second ve- 5-day forecast court services for: a after 3 p.m. and until noon Wed- X 'J>j£f, ' ¦ <&X7P ' ¦ Las Vegas 86 61.. cir arrested grandchildren; one brother, hicle was John Hest, 79, Perley, $YY/ , \'. ' J\ . . MINNESOTA investigation. He was Two Houston nesday at Jphnson-Schriver Fu- j< dP^—"-~ Little Rock 73 49 .. cdy Sunday near West 2nd and John- Ernest Roetter, Mondovi, and Minn., and four passengers in ^ Fair to partly clondy and - two sisters ) nera l Home, Plainview, then at a Los Angeles 68 . 56 .. cdy son streets. , Mrs. Paul (Ottilie the church from 1 p.ni. until the car , all of whom were hos- y 3 no]_E cool Wednesday through women to appea r Heck and Mrs, Albert (Hilga) ^ Friday. High ln 50s, except Louisville 67 51 V. cdy James McGill , 19, 117 "E. time of services. • pitalized. to Heck, Mondovi. locally over 60 extreme Marquette ¦ ¦ 44 25 .15 cdy King St., pleaded not guilty on drug charges Pallbearers will be Byrl, Ver- Authorities . said the accident Memphis - . ' • 71 52 .. cir charges of shoplifting and dis- . Funeral, services will, be at " southwest.' Low in upper 20s 1:30 p.m.. non and Karl Zarling, Orville occurred at the intersection of Miami 82 75 ., m orderly conduct and trial was CALEDONIA, Minn. - Two Tuesday at St. Paul's and Davia- Timm and Harold a county .road and U.S; 75 about to mid 30s north, 32-40 Lutheran Church , the Rev. south. Milw-auk(9e 53 34.181 cdy. set for 10 a.n'l. May 31. He was Houston, Minn., women were to Ellinghuysen. one mile south of Kragnes near 5-way mobile Mpls-St. P. 62 27 ' .. . . cir arrested Friday at the Red Owl appear in Houston County Court Donn Radde officiating with here todny at 4 p.m. on drug burial in the church the North Dakota border. Tlie Mississippi RO 67 .01 rh Store, 4450 Service Dr., Good- cemetery, Silas E. Johnson The Wright County sheriff's home protection Flood Stags New York . 56 47 .. rn view. charges. Friends may call today after StoBO Today Sherry Ann Crady, 2*6, has BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. office said four Buffalo , Minn,, AU this at AUslalc's low rates: ' ' ¦ Okla. City ',- ' 71 51 .. cir 1759 3 p.m. arid until 11 a.m. Tues- Red Wlno ...... 14 7.2 . Arlin M. Peterson , 22, been charged with delivery of (Spatial) — Silas E, Johnson, high school students drowned protection of your mobile La ):» Clly ... 10.1 Omaha 74 42 .. cdy W. 5th St., pleaded guilty to a day at Kjentvet & Son Funeral 70, Black River Falls, died at home, Improvements and Waba s ha * .. 15 8.9 substance and early Saturday when the car r a controlled Mary Home, Mondovi, then at the most personal property aRainst Alma Dam, T.W. ._ ,.- .12 rn charge of shoplifting and was Lynn Tylinski, 20, possession of about l p.m. Saturday while they were riding in overturned Whitman Dam . ,. «.3 phia 60 46 ..cdy for church from noon until time of fishing with a son on Beaver lossbyfirerindman*votherhai- Win na Dam 6 4 Thilad' referred to court services an amphetamine drug,-/ in a creek. o . , T.W , . services. Creek , about one mile south of ards. Aho protects against loss WINONA .., ' 13 7.6 Phoenix 92 61 .. cir a presentence investigation. He Both were arrested Friday at Tlio victims were identified by theft and includes family Tr emiwolcau Pool 1.1 Pittsburgh 61 .46 . .02 cdy was arrested' Friday at the J- 7 p.m. in a Houston home and Frenchville in Trempealeau . liability insurance. Trempealea u Dam ...... 6.8 ' Albert Wurl County. According to Mrs. Mo- as Dak B. Sawatzke, 18, rural Dak ota ...... 8.5 P'tland Ore. 72 56 . . cir C. Penney store, 1858 Service were released Saturday on $309 Buffalo , believed to liave been Dresbach Pool . - 9.6 P'tland Me. 54 3!) ,.. rn bonds. PLAINVIEW , Minn, ( Special) nica Liley, Trempealeau County Dresbach Dam , 5.7 Dr. - Albert coroner, death was caused by (he driver of the car; Terrie La Crosst 12 7.6 Rapid City 72 35 .. cir Trost 255 E. San- . Also scheduled to have ap- Wurl , 75, Plainview , /instate* FORECAST Michael J, , a heart attack. He had farmed Anderson , 18, Delano; John R. ¦ - Reno 79 ' 37 —•.••-• -oli* '- leaded* hot guilty to peared today was Ernost.Knud- died Saturday at Hillcrest See or Phone . ' i Tues. Wed. Thurs. born St., p , in the Melrose-Taylor area, re- Schindlcr, 16, Buffalo , and Peg- Red Wins 6.9 6.7 6.5 Richmond 53 45 .50 cir zone, son 43, Houston Rt. 3, who was Nursing and Retirement Home • speeding, 70 in a 30-mile tiring here in 1973. gy L. WINONA 7.3 7.1 6.8 arrested Friday evening by the here where he had been Larson, 16, Brooklyn GENE REGAN Ln Cross* 7.5 7.3 7.0 Hi-Prcvious day 's high. Lo- and trial was set for 9 a .m. June a Houston County Sheriffs office resident 10 Tlie son of Mr. and Mrs, Park, SEARS STORE Tri butary stre«m« This morning's low for 24 hours 25. He was arrested Wcdnes- days. He farmed in Tollef Johnson, he was born in Chippewa at Durand , 3.1 for writing a check with in- the Plainview area retiring A Minneapolis man Victor 57 on tbe Plaia East Zumbro at Theilrnan 30 .0 ending 8 a.m. today Eastern dnv on West Broadway. sufficient funds. the town of Franklin, Jackson Trempoaleau . fll Dodos 3.2 1 here in 1962. Walther, 59, and his wile, Char- Phono 452-7720 Black at Galesvllle 2.1 time. Conditions outlook for to- Richard D. Wood , 1202 Man- He was arrested on a war- County, Juno 1, 1901 On April lotte 58, day. ^ Tho son of Mr. and Mrs. , died Saturday morn- Res. Phone 454-2276 La Cross* ol W. Salem .,,. 4.2 knto Ave., pleaded guilty to dis- rant after a complaint had been 8, 1925 , he married Myrtle ing when they were hit by a obeying a stop sign and was signed against him by Leroy William Wurl , he was born in Hoom. *l--i | ~ * - ««l -«« l ^ « l «", ^"^«^«'^»"-^'i«11 car as they walked in a high- ^—- « " * i fined $25. He was arrested Sat- Johnson , Peterson , Minn , Hanklnson , N.D., Nov. 20, 1898. Survivors arc: his wife ; one On Juno 11, 1924 son, Dnvid , Blair. Wis.; threo way rest area in Dakota Coun- urday at East ard and Zumbro Knudson was released Satur- , he married ty. streets, day after posting a $300 bond. Caroline Zarling at Wa basha , daughters, Mrs. Woodrow Jef- Winona , Minn, He served as elder in the frey, Scott City, Kan.; Mrs. Authorities years John J. Williams, James Lcffingwell , Black River said a northbound In gone by pleaded guilty to a 20-hour Plainview Community Presby- car on Interstate 35W went out terian Church Falls, nnd Mrs. John Scholze, parking violation and drew a Ettrick Lions several years. Taylor , Wis.; 10 grandchildren ; of control , shot through a ditch was ticketed Jan. Survivors are;, his wife ; two and struck ( Extracts from the files of ihii newspaper.) $!> fine. He seven great-grandchildren ; two the Walthers , pin- 14 on West Sarnia Street. honor persons sons, Jesse and Donald, Plain- brothers, Roy , Milwaukee, Wis., ning them against another ve- FORFEITURES view ; one daughter , Mrs. Harry and Edmund , Galesville, nnd hicle in the Lako Marion rest Ten years ago , Kolhcrlno A, Mr.GrflW, WnbnM*;* . aiding auction (Emogene) Kaufman , Haw- ono sister, Mrs, Thelma Cliurch area, The couple . . 1964 Winn,, HI, ipeiKi l nn,. S3 In n M-mlti* died nt Fair- April 11. Hlnhwny 61 thorne, Calif, ; seven grandchil- Decorah, Iowa. . view Hospital rone, 4:1* p.m. LA CROSSE , Wis. (Special) shortly after the Jnmes \V. McCabo was named pollco chief , Marvin nl Mlnwsc-to Clly. , ,., .. . dren; three brothers , William , Funeral services will be at accident. Lvlo F. Py/in, St, Chnrles, Minn,, S46 , Meier, assistant police chief , and Marlowe Brown wns promot- «il0 — Persons who served at the Henry Tuesday at the Upper Rpnnrilno, ' 76 In rt.. . 55-mlle ione . and Rhinhnrdt , Hankin- 2 p.m. A Fergus Falls man, Roy ed to captain. n.m. Ar-rll J», |HnlW»y H nnr UovvH- Ettrick Lions Club community son, N.D., and four sisters, Beaver Creek Luthernn Church, Rep. Adnm Clayton Powel l , D-N.Y., hns been granted ton. auction , and their wives were j the Rev. Vern Barlow officiat- Grooory W. Iliioy, Rrxheiler , Minn., Mrs. Edward Pehjc.icamHWi 9., another delay in answering n $40 ,500 judgme nt against, him $!_>, spnpdlnn, 6i In n 55-m|lo ione, 5;15 honored at a Friday evening Lawrence ing, with burial in the church , lllohwoy 14 nMr Lewis- Hansen, Rosholt , held by Esther Jnmes, Harlem widow. a .m. April 2a party at the Seven Coves Sup- S.D,; Mrs. John Petrich, Alex- cemetery. Have St., more money Jerome M. Vnnhoof , 31? McBrlrte per Club here. Friends may coll todny after from 3|. • THURS.-MAY 9 • s just right West. 4th antl Huff -.treats. munity miction In Juno. 8:00 P.M. § Month Hint' for you. John Willinm** Sr.. Cedar Rapids, Iowa, JS, parklno In snow remova l zone, 10:0S TO BE HELD AT One-hundred years ago . . . 1874 p.in , Feb. 5, West Kino nnd Main ttrrioh. Tlio highest point in Alnbnmn THE RIDGEWAY FIREHOUSE MINNESOTA LOAN & THRIFT Flags were displayed in various quarters of the cily to- Richard Tobin, St. Mary's Collwo, >5, is atop Chcnha Mouutnin , 2,407 173 Lafayette St. WINONA Phone 454-2492 IIlooal pnrklno, lliiO a.m. April t>, E. W. Gaedy, Sec'y loani under Stoo may ha made at a IHoU 'r. rata ol charo*. iay, In honor of tho Father Maltow demonstration, East Mark and Lolayetlo streets , feet above sea lovol. . » I i Winona Dally Hawt 14 ¦ ¦ Winona, Minnesota * MONDAY/ MAY 6, 1974 House of the Weefc

Nixon aides had suggested move M By ANDY LANG to Camp David AP Newsfeatures WASHINGTON (AP) - In Floor plans have a way ef one of their conversations aibout looking alike until they are ex- amined more carefully. the yWatergate scandals top . ¦ , A close look at the layout of aides to President Nixon pro- this traditional house uncovers posed moving to the presiden- something a bit out of they or- tial retreat at Camp David, dinary on the first , floor — a master bedroom. Houses with Md. to avoid potential sub- " poenas from the a second floor and . three or SenateVWater- four bedrooms, generally have gate committee. all the heirdoms upstairs. . Transcripts . of White House Here, architects Herman H. ... tape recordings'disclose; the fol- York and Raymond: Schenke lowing ''. exchange at a..meeting have, placed the owners' bed- TRADITIONAL CHARACTER of design is area around the covered entry* the dovecotes; y . room downstairs in a cul-de- ; ; on . March 22, 1973 among. Nix- : reinforced by the attention to detail incorp- of the front gable, the lbuvered shutters,, sac to the left of the entrance orated by the architects. These include the garage cupola and Chimney cap. ' .,'" on, : White "House Counsel John foyer. The adjacent bathroom V . . W. Dean III arid Chief of. Staff serves the dual purpose of a H; ' in simple frame construction : R-62 STATISTIC^ R. Haldeman: :• semi-private bath for the own- in the form of a Dutch dormer, : . Dean.* They can subboena ers and: a: powder room for : Design - R-62 has ;a living ¦ ' ¦ partially across the rear of the any of us. There is no doubt guests. ::.' roof. The upstairs closets are -room, dining : room, family about that. If they . don't serve room, kitchen, master bed- THE ADVANTAGES of such large both in size and in num- , it here (at the White House and ber, with additional storage room, foyer and split bathroom Executive Office ; Building) be- a layout . are many. The own- on the first floor, totaling ers do not have to climb stairs space , under the: rafters, ac- V cause they can't get in, they cessible from the . bedrooms. 1254 square feet.V'.-There: is a can serve you at home some- to reach their bedroom. They laundry room, pantry and lava- are separated completely from The exterior :has a pleasing where. They , can always,¦ find . appearance, with wood shing- tory . -: behind the garage. The : . . ' ' ' : ' ' ' . ' - the : 'children's.:- ¦ and/or guest V ; y0U. . /. :.: -; , . -; •. , . les on: ajl the walls. Whether architects have shown both - a Haldeman: "' ' We move to rooms. And their; entire, living ' . the shingles'are stained , paint- one-car and a two-car garage, Camp David . and. hide. They needs are taken care of in -one With a one-cat* ; garage, the story, . minimizing travel dis- ed or left natural, is a matter . can¦ 't get in there. ot, individual taste. .. laundry room is; tucked direct? ';. . " . Nixon: Well, go ahead. tances between rooms. ly behind it. With a two-car¦ ga- . The entrance* to Design R-62 rage, ythe laundry room : ' al- is through'a coveried entry.por- . JRadon , discovered in 1900 by ixon pays back so isy behind ":it, but there , is : Friedrich tico, with enough space;on the N space for a largei storage area.. : Ernst born, is -the front porch yto accommodate . . heaviest ,of gases. '. Upstairs, there are two bed- several lounging : chairs. The income taxes, rooms arid a bathroom, with entrance .: stair hall foyer is plans for y another bedroom if larger ' than, customarily found penalty, interest ' reguired. The over-all dimen-¦ in> house of medium size. Be- SACRAMENTO, / Calif.y (AP) sioiis: ofyfc house are 5ft' by. cause of. the. available wall . ;; —President Nixon lias paid his 35'; . with a one-cai* garage, 60' POMCHEE . W space in the foyer, ah attrac- back California, income taxes, by 35' with a two-car garage. FLOOR PLANS: Downstairs arrangement tive .furniture and picture back- stairs, there are two bedrooms and a bath- , penalty and interest totaling is a complete one-bedroom apartment for a room , with an optional extra bedroom if drop can be arranged, both 052,26 for 1969- and -1970, state The first ice skates were deer visible from the room-. $5, fyj*couple, including a spacious bathroom and a heeded. living- officials said/ . or ox ribSj . strapped onto hide The fireplace' . . in the living sizable family room-kitchen combination. Up- The President's tax counsel boots . with leather thongs, ac- room, because .of its location, cording to the National Geo- adds , to the attractiveness of has also filed a 1973 Nixon tax; . return showing¦: tbe Nixons graphic Society. Building in Winona the foyer. The stair, railing . ' ' leading yto the second floor also owed no. state income taxes on : y.\ M ' 963 .WiVFifth ' Volume $3,758,071 More detailed plans adds , toy the interior design pos-. ah adjusted gross "California il ,136, said - Commercial ,.. 1,988,044 Full study plan information on this architect-designed sibilities of the entrance. . source" income of $26 : y v> :yy BURKS Martin Huff , executive officer site Residential „. 397,746 House of The Week is obtainable in a $1 baby blueprint which The kitchen and family room building quality pumps since VU y; are treated as one huge space, of the state; Franchise. Tax : Plione. :V Thtost-Baek Colldt Public (nontaxable) ., 1,372,281 you can order with this coupon. v ; ' Also we have available two helpful booklets at $1 each: 26' ;, in length,, with a second Board.; . .:, :V. Ii|| ' TOILET TANK BALL New houses 5 " haye ruled ¦ ¦ 452-9275 •¦;; Amiiim "Your Home - How to Build , Buy or Sell it" and "Ranch fireplace at the far:, end. Sliding Although they PUM 's (araeii Seller PS New multiple- 24 of - the most popular homes that glass doors lead directly to; the Nixon aiid-his wife are not Cali- Via atHtien, Woler Mojttr (niton.)/ iteps Homes," including AND WATER SYSTEMS tht flow ol wetter alltr tach (lujliinj. family units 0 have appeared in the feature. private, rear .terrace for dining fornia residents for tax pur- ¦ 75r AT HARDWARE STORES Volume same date The House of the Week and' lounging, A low railing! sep- poses, state tax offieials.de- Economical Well in 1973 $2,382,982 Design No. R-62 arates the family room from cidied the President did. have a V Drilling to 210 Ft; the kitchen but the overall ap- fory some ; income Winona Daily News tax liability pearance is one of unusual spa- earned -while in California. The Winona , Minn. 55987 lava- on, an; appor- Gerald Buege ciousness.. The: laundry, tax was figured Pickwick, Minn. ' y Phono 054-lMJ Enclosed is $1 for- baby blueprints tory and pantry are convenient- tionment of Nixon's $250,000 an- Enclosed is $1 for Ranch Homes booklet ly placed between kitchen, ga- nual salary and . allowance Enclosed is $1 for Your Home booklet rage aR^back door. V based oil the amount of time he , plus income (^ , spent in California ON THE UPPER floor two property in Nixon s bedrooms from rental ' eedft ^p^^ Name • •• or three additional, hometown of Whittier. are provided. The rear upstairs ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ - - . You'll sleep better knowing ¦bedroom as shown can be add- SERVICE A French researcher found Street ed at a; future date should the ; heeds of the family be limit- that great vintages in Bur- m ed to a total of three bedrooms. gundy wines follow maximum your SmokeGard" never does! j ^f^rum City State Zip This fourth bedroom : is done solar activity.: . ^ More than $1 .25 million B uilding vo lume bwmsttp^ Planning to and laboratory building will be Remodel? J New construction in Winona to be drawn this year for con- rections be made. 1 awakened from its mid-Spring struction of a new house. ¦ The city of Winpna drew a of masonry construction, one Don't settle for second best. story and is estimated to cost doldrums with a spurt of acti- These permits swelled this permit for construction of. a new ' year s building volume to $3,- $48,340. CALL US i vity last week. Building per- ' city garage at 1104 W. 3rd St. mits with a dollar valuation of 758,071, compared with $2,382, The contractor is Klug anrl project carries a $447,332 For professional , residential or commercial more than $1.25 million were 982 at this date a year ago. The Smith Co. issued by cily building inspec- cost estimate and the general wiring we can give The largest permit was drawn Klug and Smith also is tho you an estimate for tor George Rogge. by Hal Leonard Publishing contractor will be Nels Johnson contractor for dismantling the your needs. Act soon. Major projects that contribu- Corp., 64 E. 2nd St., for con- Construction Co., Winona. garage at West 3rd and Olm- ted to the boom were the new struction of a new plant at 960 FROEDTERT MALT Corp., stead streets for which a cost Hal Leonard Publishing Corp, f t Mark St. 500 W. 3rd St., drew two per- estimate of $350 was given. building, a new office and lab- Estimated to . cost $667,000, mits, one for . dismantling a The garage is 22 by 40 feet. BAUER; ELECTRIC oratory structure ior Eroedtert will)be 200 by 3O0 garage . on its property , and the Co;, 1065 E. '" Vv: '""V "'"' V'iNCV' -v. '-y - yyv* the building Winona Boxer aft . Malt Corp. ' and a new city gar- feet and of structural steel con- other for construction of a new Mark St., drew a permit for in- 517 41st Ave. Goodview age. struction. office and laboratory building stallation of partitions estimat- 454-5564 AMONG THE 20 permits is- The permit was issued on the on that site. ed to cost $24,080. sued last week was the fifth condition tliat certain plan cor- The new 32- by 71-foot office Nels Johnson Construction¦ Co. SmokeGard® is the contractor , : . wppiE^^ Unit Holding Co., 876 E. 3rd St., drew a. $12,000 permit foi Early remodeling. . H^^^^H ^SSS^^ The new house permit was is- F T sued to Kenneth Patzner for construction of a $33,778 house at 1408 Skyline Dr. The house will be of wood frame construction , one story , 76 by 36' feet, have three bed- : rooms and a garage. ULnsrTBrr'TADl tU lUK ls"\mm. '3iiii Last week's other permits ^^S|S|| went to: j Wsa^^ I FEATURES OF THE ^WWW ^ Euoene Malolka , 1055 E. 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t : To lif t Twins toy 8r3^&£ iHSps

BLOOMINGTON, Minn. CAP) win each slammed their fifth "I hit the ball well earlier in falling in: for a month the way second in -r . Harmon yKdlebrew, : Min- homey runs of the season for the season, but it didn't seeni these guys are swinging,'' said ^ Minnesota, All four home ; runs to. carry," Killebrew said."I Minnesota Manager y Frank nesotas aging home run slug- " ger, postponed , a flurry of . re- came, off Detroit starter Woodie feel pretty good now." - . '-V Quilici "We're starting to put ^ "I didn't want to start anoth- it together. We've g;ot a: couple tirement talk ywith a pair of Fryman, now 0-3. home run blasts Sunday which : "I thought. -I bad good Stuff ," er:, left-hander against Min- of well pitched games arid its a Big Nine carried the' Twins to an 8-3 vic- said Fryman. "However a nesota; said Tiger Manager great help to; get some wins." Mii«i.^-iU)ches- . y. Minnesota ' , third . baseriian OWAT6NNA,.; tory over Detroit. pitcher's stuff, doesn't mean Ralph Houk. "Lerrin LaGrow - : s overwhelming depth " '' much if he can't make the was supposed to pitch, but he Eric Soderholm .was bit behind [ ter Mayo' -.: "I don't remember . the last proved . to be the. deciding fac- time I hit two in one game, pitch. Any ball . hit iri the air had to fly home because his the right knee by a Fryman pulled away wife is quite sick. * itch in the fifth inning follow- tor as the Spartans said., .-the Minnesota first base- was a home run." " p and the rest of The , 37-year-qld Killebrew, The Twins claimed the three- ing. Killebrew's second home from Winona, man. "I was just looking for ¦' the Big Nine Con- the ball.'*: ' - - . who accepted a pay cut from game series with Sunday's vic- run. ' the field in . ference Girls' Swimming Meet .Killebrew, ; who slammed ... 'a the Twins following the 1973 tory. ' Left bander : Vic Albury, "It's only a bad bruise, . So- - .. ' two-run first inning homg_run season, has four home runs and now 1-0, was credited with the derholni said. "I don't blame here Saturday.' V. and added a 434-foot poke over 13 runs batted; in. Killebrew, .win. . :.. ' "' .. ' -X Xy anyone for keeping the batters . Mayo piled up 401 -points, which was un- the centerfield fence in . the who now has 550 career home : Bert . Blyleven: hurled Min- honest, the way our guys were ¦while Winona, fifth; had : not hit two home runs runs and 1,499 runs batted in, nesota to a io-0 deciision Satur- teeing off." : y . heaten in five dual meets, is- " a: 62-51 triumph over in a single game¦¦ since Septem- had a pair of run-scoring sin- day following Detroits .; opening Detroit scored its runs, on eluding : '¦:- gles in a.4-S setback to the Ti- game victor Friday night. home runs by Gerry Moses aad the Spartans, had: to settle for ber 1971. ¦ ' ¦[ Harmon Killebrew Larry . Hisle ¦ and Bobby Dar- gers Friday night. , V'The base bits could keep Gary Sutherland. It was the second place ¦with 1VA. , : first of the; year for both play- . Austin . was third with 58 ers * followed by Rochester ¦ ' points, Detroit '¦(») ¦ ' ¦ ' . Minnesota. .(i). ¦- - ¦ . Marshall with 45, Al- ...... abrbw • ' - «br hW' John Sharon,d 4 12 0 . Hlsle.lf - 4.1 1 1 bert Lea with 38Vfc arid Owaton- ¦Suttirlnd,2b 5 12 2 Garew,» 4110 'y MStanley.lb 5 010 Ollve.dh /Ib 4 O 0 0 -&a with i4. K^llne^fh 4 00 0 Klllebrw 3 2.2 J , Winona entrants took firsts in WHorton,H 4 0 10/ Ferreopr , 01 ft 0 Go^ms L's;lb 0O00 including the : 400-- Mosesx 3 1 1 T four events, ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ BIS ;TEN ti^f^ GBrowri.pti 10 0 0* Sodrtilm.Sb 2 00 0 the final weekend of-the season. triumph over Purdue, 6-4 and 8- conference action this coming yard freestyle relay where Liz W. L.. Pet. OB Knox,3b 0 0 0-0 : TerrellJb • 0*1 t»0 Iowa ...... 10 4 . .714 Minnesota blasted . North- 3, to boost its record to: 7-5. weekend. Indiana is at . Mich- Northrup.rf 3 0TO Oarwln.rf 2 211 Hartwich, Roxy Magain , Ann ' Minnesota.¦ ' .'..... ;-.. 10 4 .714 ' . western 7-1 and 4-0 Saturday The Hlini have season-ending igan ,: and Ohio State is at Mich- ARodrgez,3b 2 0 0 0 Brye.cf 4 01 ! and Molly Murphy .'Illinois .:.' ... 7 5 .583 - 2 ¦ : Oqlivlle.ph 1 0 0 0 Braman,c 3 0 0 .0 Sheehan . Indiana :...... _. 6 6 .500. 3 while Iowa had to settle for a doubleheaders against both igan State for doubleheaders Lamont,c OOO 0 Gomez,ss 4 0 0 0 combined; for a 4:25.5,time, .Northwestern ...... 7 -7 .500 3 .- split with Wisconsin- losing the Minnesota and Iowa. Friday. The teams then switch BBrnkmn.ss 3 0 0 0 Albury.p 0 OOO faster tban . Michigan Stata...... 4 ' 5- .444 . 3'A Fryman.p OOOO BCmpbell.p OOOO nearly five seconds Seelbach.p O<0 0 0 , —— Michigan __ ...... 3 4 .429 3Vi first game 3-2-but . capturing Do u g Kleber's three-run for , : Saturday doubleheaders • second-place Mayo, y :y . Wisconsin . .' . - , '.« 8 .4» . 4. - * the:nightcap , 8-7. ¦ - *:¦ hbmer in the sixth inning of the with Indiana at Michigan State • - -,_ . —— .. . TotaU 30 8«» Ohio . Slate ...... 4 8 .333 5 . . Totals 35 J 8 J * Stacy Hughes of Winona won :•- ' ' ¦ i DETROIT . 000 OOO . 120—S . . Purdue ,.....:...* ... -4 10 .286 6. - . - . . - . '- jThis- leaves both teams with first . game against Purdue and Ohio State at Michigan. . . the 50-yard breaststroke in 35.2 ; MINNESOTA ....:...... 210 020 Mx-^8 identical 10-4 records, Neither backed the four-hit pitching oi . The final weekend of play E—A. Rodriguez. COB—Detroit' 9, Mlii- and took a fourth in th? ipo- By THE ASSOCTATED PRESS Mike: Scholz and the Iilini raK finds Iowa at Purduei and Min- .nesota 4. 2B—Brye. H R—Killebrew (2) 4, of the two teams plays confer- Moses 1, Sutherland yard breaststroke, and , team- Darwin¦ ¦ 5, Hisle 5, Minnesota's defending Big ence games next weekend, - but lied for five runs in the fifth nesota at Illinois for double- T. ¦ ' :¦ _ ¦ ' . mates Murpliy' . - . and Hartwich both will be oti the road the fi- inning of the second game to headers May 17 and Minnesota PITCHINO SUMMARY ¦ 1 Ten champions... have IP H R ER BB SO BAT DAY. . '.; ' -. Recipients of free bats hold- up their tro- won tlie 100- and 500-yard free- nal weekend of the season,: May erase a .24 deficit. at Purdue and Iowa at Illinois Fryman- . (1> 0-3) -7 ' 5 8 6 4 3 , • s game between the StyleVrespectively. climbed into a first place tie 17-18, for douWeheaders, :. . The . Michigan at Michigan for doubleheaders May lS./ The Seelbach - .:....:.;. 1 -1 O. 0- - «. * O phies for the photographers at Sunday' ' I Albury. (W, 1-0) ' _* . 7 5 3 3 3 5 Minnesota Twins and the Detroit Tigers at . Metropolitan Sta- Murphy was clocked m 1:01.5 with Iowa but the conference Illinois took over sole posses- State game Sunday was rained results of these " games should . BCampbell .. ..5 3.0 0 1 V . : ' in; the 100, almost three seconds championship will hot be de- sion of third place to return to out . • ' ¦ decide, the conference cham- - HBP—fcy . Fryifian (Darwin), by Fry- . y diiim. Not : only were they treated to the bats;: but the Twins . nian • (Soderholm). PiB—Moses. T—<" i33. ¦ faster than second-place ySarah i pionship, A—18,673. won 8*3. (APyPhotofax) V cided for at least two weeks or contention with a double Only four teams will be: in : '. Johnson of Mayo. Hartvsich swam a . 28 flat to win the 50. Joan Salzer. of Winona .ywaa second to Sally Brinks of Mayo r freestyle and Classic in . the 400-yard Nelson took a sixth in the 200-yard Bu<:k$|^ !^ ! |i ||p i |^ freestyle, Hartwich was third in the 200ryard individual medley, delayed, rain; Anne fuglestad was third in tha 50-yard backstroke and fifth in s*§rre& the 100-yard; backstroke, Shee- v^ifh^ han was fifth in the 50-yard but- ; the Allin in lead BOSTON (liPI) :— Now it's In the;- fourth game; . the turnovers and that was . terfly, Tam ' Taylor was fifth Tommy : Heinsbhn's turn to Celtics' best' defensive guard — difference," Costello said. X. and-jerry y DALLAS (AP); After a 16- trying to keep in the IM Magln wa* — come up with something Don Chaney—was forced to "We ; were . : sixth in ' the diving. , v month tour as ah artillery.:offi- different. ¦ switch off Oscar Robertson and everyone low . because : when -: Tami Thatcher of Mayo . and cer in Vietnam, Buddy V Allin The Milwaukee Bucks insert- cover the 6rfoot-7 Davis. V you're close to the basket your man has to stay with you. That Linda Van Greyehhoff of John can't; get too excited over i ed Mickey Davis, a reserve .;yWith Chaney: guarding Davis, Marshall, Robertson was able to bring the leaves thei ; lane open for were double wlnneira forward, into their starting in the meet. Thatcher took day!s : .postponement . in the lineup Sunday, and the rookie ball up court y -with : less Kareem (Abdul - Jabbar) tq $150,000 Byron ; Nelson Golf difficulty, since he was being work," Davis said. the- i200-yard individual -medley from Duquesne scored 15 points and the .100-yard breaststroke Classic . ' •' as'- , the Bucks defeated... the covered, by Jo Jo White. ,'¦ Ahdiil-Jabbar made the most , Boston Celtics 97-89 to even his working space,, hooking arid Van Grevenhoff won yhoth -. .. The. 29-year-old Allin was. the Chaney. said the Celtics would Of the 50- and 100-yard backstroke their best-Kif-seven NBA .playoff have to work out a counter and popping for 34 points, to leader going Into today's final races.- -. series at 2-2. - y.yy. V move to Costello's strategy.... . lead all scorers: . round of the Nelson with a 12- ¦ The game followed a pattern "We'll- work , something out Even so, Heinsohn said he , MO-Yd.v. Frcesfyle . —. 1 Julie B«llaeh under-par 201 total, just one (O); 5. - Brinks' .:(«_); 3. Insram (A); 4. established in the first three. arid make the other team was pleased -with the Celtics' Williams 1M); . _5; ' Lsrseri (Ml; 6. $ah stroke ahead of Efomero Bucks'; coach .Larry Costello adjust," said. Chaney.; "That's defense. - - . .. V ler (W); T-2:25.9. . . 200-Yd. IndlvldUBl. Medley — 1. Taml Blancas. yy : adjusted his offense to cope the name Of the game in the . "We gave them 76 shots arid Thatcher (M); 2. Boettcher (All J. Hart- with; Boston's full-court press. , we could wich- (W); -,. ' Nelson (AL); .5; Taylor Officials of the Professional playoffs. There's a lot of that's super. I wish . "' (Wli- 6. Slllnasen .(0)i Tr-2:2i3,e. : . Golfers' Association postponed Costello did the same thing strategy going on put ; -there,"- hold them to 76 shots every 50-Yd. Backstroke — 1. - Linda 'Van ' after the Celtics; took the first ' :¦ Costello said the insertion, of game. They had 17 turnovers Srevenhoff . .(JMI; J. Joyce ' .(If-);I 3. Sunday's scheduled final round . - Fuglestad (W);;,.^: Schanwnel (A); 5. game of the series 98-83 in Davis helped, but it was not the and .were being very * careful, Gabrielson (A); 6. Hagberg (W); T— after heavy rains flooded the ¦ - .;¦ Preston Trail Golf Club and Al- Milwaukee and the Bucks came whole.story. - ': but they shot 50 per cent and 0:32.6. . we just didn't execute (on 50-Yd. Breaststroke — 1. Stacy Hugh*« liri spent his time waitching the away . with a 105-96 win : in the "We made some changes in (W)| . 2. Ostein (A*);3. Fischer (A); 4 . the lineup. That helped. It gave offense)," said Heinsohn, whose Folven (AL);. 5. Latala (M); 6. Relnart. B os ton-Milwaukee National second game. " JF/j^e^s (W)>.:.r-0:35:2. ; . • : . ' .. . * Hei n s o hn, Boston s fiery us more firepower," he said. tearii shot 40.9 per cent. Basketball Association playoff ' i50-Yd. Freestyle: — . 1. Liz Hartwich ori television. BERNIE IN THE NETS . .. Philadelphia delphia Sunday. Parent led the Flyers to. tha coach, made some adjustments "It was a team win , thpuigh. The only negative aspect of (W); .2. Rowe IA); 3:-' Betladi -(Oi; 4. in his press for , the third game "We didn't throw the ball Blumer (AL); 5. Johnson (ftAJ; 6. "I was in some hectic times final round against Boston by stopping the the game for the Bucks was an Relchart. (W);. T-^O:58.0, . Flyers: goalie Bernie: Parent stops .a New and wound up with a 95-85 win away like the last time. They !n Vietnam -and/It's hard to get York Ranger shot during the final game of Rangers .4-3. (AP Photofax) :' , - . .' ¦ aggravation of an injury to Jon 50-Yd. : Bullerfly - 1. Cathy Boeltchw in Boston. didn't get 32 points on McGlocklin, who played a key (A); 2, Johnson (M); I. Knudson (AL)j nervo lis over just a one-day de- their NHL semifinal playoff series in Phila- t. Rosencranls (JM); 5. Sheehan (W)l role in the victory. 6. Johnson (M) ; T-OI30.B. lay," Allin said caimlj^ "There Dl/lng — 1. Amy Howard (JM) ; J. was just a Uttle more at stake McGlocklin scored 10 points Wopdhouse (JAAI; ; 3. McLaughlin . (JM)| 4. Johnston (M); 5. '/V.lkesh. (JM); t. over there." despite a reinjury of a muscle Masln IW); P1s—151.65, iri his right leg, . 100-Yd: Frecs-lyle _ l. Molly Murphy .Allin said "The . delay might - . - Toronto finds IW); 2. Johnson (M); 3. Blumer (AL); "^^ "It hurts, I don't know If 1*11 be the best thing that happened 4. Rowl (A); 5. Relchart (M)t t. Per- ;: ^^ij be ready for the next game. I ions (M); 7-^1 :01.3. although I wanted to play. A J^^^ ¦400-Yd ::^ . Freestyle — l.. Salley Brlnki ei^^i "^i^; V^^__^ hope so," he said, (M); 2 wet course makes it easier ior (AP) thought this series would . Salzer (W); 3. Ingram (A); 4. PHILADELPHIA — ence in the Flyers' season." "I Philadelphia has won only once John Havlicek, who led all Ulrey (A); 5. OitUevsop (AL)i 6. Lar- the big hitters but I putt much I sen (M); T-J:16.J. ¦ , There is an automobile bumper New York's Pete Stemkowski never end," said the Phila- in Boston since entering the some solace in Boston scorers with 33 points , better on slow greens." 100-Yd. Backslrcke — 1. Van &reven- sticker that reads: "Only the offered this tribute to the Phila- delphia netminder. "But we got league in 1967, and the overall said McGlocklin could be. a key hotl (JM); 7.\ Wodash (AL); 1. Joyce The S-foot-9, 133-pound Allin delphia goalie: "Parent robbed a shot at the (Stanley) Cup ! series stands 4-30-4 in favor of IM); 4. Warfield (M); 5. Fuglestad (W); , Bernie factor. 6. Gabrielson (A); T—1:10,9. established a course: record Sat- Lord saves more . than myself the Bruins, '¦; . ' ' us. He robbed Park, i now, and that's all - that j .- ' "I don 't think Davis was;the . KX^Yd, ; Tlreaslstrok e - i; tbatcWr urday with an eight-under-par Parent." (Walt) Tkaczuk, (Rod) Gilbert counts," . , The 31-year-old Dornhoefer 94 Cougar win W); 1. Fischer (A); 3. Ostein- (Ni); 4, key. McGlocklin . wasn't playing Hunhes (W)i 5. Larson (M); i. Relnarti 63 on the 6,957-yard par 35-36— The New York Rangers will and probably a couple I didn't Parent looked ahead to the I scored the key goals for the (AP ) (W); T—1:17.0. TORONTO - Toronto in the first three games, so he F C ' ' • 71 layout. Allin is a three-time buy that. notice that well." j Flyers against the Rangers . Lf^l^V ™ S'V>« Relay - i , Winon* seven-game final series starting Toros' Coach Billy Harris has was a lift for them," Havlicek (Hartwich, Roxy Mag|n, Ann Sheehan, winner on the tour, including Parent and veteran Gary The 29-year-old Parent made Tuesday night in Boston Sunday, the third , and the found some said. Murphy); 2. M ayo; 3. Austin; 4 . Albert ' ¦ ' solace in his team's Lee; 5. John Marshall; T—«.2J,i, the Doral this year. - . . Dornhoefer keyed a 4-3 victory at least six spectacular saves against the Bruins. fourth and winning shot. . 9-2 defeat by the Chicago Cou- The scheduled final round to-, for the Flyers in Sunday's sev- Mllw--ul.ee m): Dandr.dfl* 7 7-8 il\ for the "The thing that will give us I Dorhhoefer's first goal boost- gars, who tied the World Hock- Warner 1 1-5 3| ^bdul-Jobbar 14 4-7 J4; day was to be televised 3:30 over the Rangers Sunday to ad- enth and deciding game . of the confidence is the game we beat ed the flyers to a 3-1 lead. ey Association best-of-seven Robert-ion 5 O-O 10) Davis 5 J-5 Hi Mc- , j bitterly contested semifinal Glocklin 4 M 10; Wllllanw 0 M 0) Per- meeting p.m -5:30 p.m. CDT, on ABC. y vance to the finals ot the Na them at the end of the year to j Then New York made It 3-2 on semifinal series 3-3 Saturday ry ID* 4. ToUU: 38 2*1-24 97. Lee Trevino and Bruce tlonal Hockey League Stanley series against the Rangers. clinch first place in our divi- 1 a score by Steve Vickers. It HOUSTON, Minn. - An or- night, ' . 'Boston . (19): Havlicek 12 9-10 13; Nel- Crampton at 204, Jim Simons playoffs against the Boston Parent sat in front of his sion. That's the one we still re- looked as if the Rangers were son 1 0-2 5; Cowens 10 4-4 Ji4| While ganizational meeting for all Cup "They have the momentum, ! at 205, Bob Charles at 206, and Bruins, locker after the Flyers' fourth member. " i rallying, but Dornhoefer took 0-2 10; Chancy .12-2 8) Silas 3 3-2 Bl fast-pitch teams in the Hous- victory of the series — all cn The Flyers would rather for- l the heart out of them 12 sec- but I'd much rather lose 9-2 West-phal 1 0-0 2i Williams 0 M 01 ton Softball Hale Irwin and Charles Coody "Parent is a great goalie ," than 3-2 or 2-1, said Harris, Fhnkel 1 0-0 2. Tolal!; 34 174? 09. Association will be at 207 were within challenging said Rangers coach Emile home ice — and admitted he get that victory was the first in onds later with his second goal . " held Tuesday at 8 p.m. at Hous- "We've only lost one game at MILWAUKEE ., 2» 31 ' 21 V-fl dog five years over the Bruins. BOSTON ...:. 27 12 2< 24-W ton High HKI distance of Allin. Francis. "He was the differ- was tired. | of the game. home during the playoffs S^ I, and all team and representatives are the last time wo got beaten Tolal fouls: Milw a ukee 20, Boston 15. urged to at- Fouled out; Perry. A—15,920, tend. badly — it was 11-3 — we won the next six games In a row." Tho teams meet again tonight Brewer slump doesn t worry Scott at Maple Leaf Gardens with the winner qualifying to meet the MILWAUKEE (WI)_ George ner thought buck to the opening ell. bounce of the bnll meant they Scott, who was picked off after Houston Aeros in a best-of-sev- Soott of the Milwaukee Brewers of the season when Chicago lost Mitchell slammed the ball lost some games. the lucky catch, said thei'e is en championship series. knows all about streaks in base- eight of its first nine games, right back at Forster who som-e- Brewer Manager Del Crandall hope for Milwaukee. Both coaches adopted ball , the good ones along with said piny how caught it — though he ad- admitted the same thing. ve beer in losing streaks an And ho the that "I' "anything can happen" atti- You cairt ImprowT^ERjJ, \"*s*v the bad ones, and he says his saved the gamo for Chicago Sun- mitted "it scared hell out of "When we have a chance for like this," he said . tude, te.iminntes shouldn 't worry day proved liow slim the dif- me"—and then picked off Scott a big inning, " he said , "instead "This is when you really have onthe original. I ^ nbont their current one defi- "It's ono game now, so any- y \*$§A — ference between winning and los- for a double piny to win the of going through , the ball is to work . . . you've got to turn it thing can happen , said Cougar nitely a bad one. ing it , always at somebody ," " game. around. We'll bounce back be- Coach Pat Stapleton . "If they Tlie Brewers Sunday lost to the Relief pitcher Teny Forster "In the beginning of the year The ninth was a big inning for cause we've got a good club this let us play hockey It should be came on in the ninth inning aft- Milwaukee, which was held Chicago White Sox 4-3 to drop wo had those kinds.of shots too ," year." an Interesting game," nil three weekend games with er Milwaukee rallied for three Tanner said of the Brower bad scoreless by Kaat for eight inn- Milwaukee tonight plays an ifeA Stapleton has complained tt Chicago and lose their fourth runs off starter Jim Kaat. The brenk, ings while Chicngo scored four exhibition game with the At- J"ffl^GALLON. several times during the play- W^^m gnmo in five days, Brewers had runners on first "When we were one and eight runs on loser Jim Slnton , who lanta Braves . and Tuesday re- Vi Tho loss put Milwaukee below and second with one out when wo had those kinds of shots ," evened his mark at 3-3 for the sumes league action against the offs about the number of penal- tho .500 mark (10-11) for the first Forster pitched to Bobby Mitch- he said, admitting that the luckv year. Minnesot a Twins. ties called on his team, After 1. There's a handle on It. the fifth-game loss in Toronto, - %lIS^w§j Mll \ aft time this year and two games Easy to oarry, easy to pour. TOJMBgBgHm^fr AM back of New York , which is lend- he said the officials were not 2. Lest ohance of ing the American League's East- letting tho Cougars play the ^^P^^^^^^^flL^V ern division , game, 3. It's a sensible way J^S^^ "I hope the fans don 't panic ," Rosaii-e Paioment, whoso to onjoy Jim Beam Scott said. "We've got a good Utah./ 0-2, limps home tonight throo goals Saturday — his /QPf^^^^^^^SPSP^Pi^^^^^^^PPP^ sixth , seventh, and eighth goals club. W|iy should I get down SALT LAKE CITY (AP) when there - whether Beaty can play. Bent y, heavily bandaged ," Kirkpatrick Bruce Seals, Inserted into the of tho playoffs - powered the 's 140 games to go?" who once scored M points in snld. , .Scott snid the current down- The Utah Slnrs , with as mnny * starting lineup at forward, has Cougars' victory, -was optimis- THEWORID* FINEST as four players listed as ques- game , has been sidelined with Gerald Govnn , hobbled by been effective, Govnn struggled tic. l^ H^^^^^ ^^^ HB turn in Brewer fortunes a severe groin infection since BOURBON. shouldn tionable , limp home tonigh t , knee and ankle injuries , and for 33 minutes on an injured "It's anybody 's game now 't bo taken too seriously tho Stars played the Indiana knee and W and Chuck Tanner, manager of hoping to regroup in Gamo 3 of Rick Mount, slowed by a leg in- left ankle while tho and I think lt vill be our ^I SS ^ ^^ ^ W their Americnn Basketball As- Pacers in tho fourth game ol jury, are also considered doubt- Nets coasted to n 118-94 victory game," ho said, tho victorious Wh ite Sox, hack- tho ABA semifinals ed him up. sociation championship series . ful for tonight' s game. in the second game. . If (ho Cougars win tonight with tho New York Nchs. Hon Boone has played 574 Against tho exuberant Nets, It was New York's «ighth their first problem will bo find- Chicago lias won five in a row consecutive games since be- and 11 of their last 14, but Tan- The Stars nre hoping thnt a the youngest team in tho consecutive playoff victory , In- ing n place to play their homo possible return by (i-font-10 cen- coming a pro in 1908, His pres- league, the Stars ' shooting, re- cluding a four-game sweep over games, ter Zelmo Benty can get them ence became doubtful when lie bounding nnd defense all hnvo The Cougars lost thoir rink nt hack on the winning trnck after Injured his hand after slugging suffered noticeab ly — mnlnly Kentucky in the semifinals, nnd the International Amphitheatre -!•> Winona Dally New» losing the first two games of Brian Taylor in Saturday's due to the absence of Benty, n their 14th in n row at the Nas- to a theatrical production and ¦* , game. U PROOF KENTUCKY STRAIOHT DOURBON ^ffi ^SaS Winona, Minnesota the ehnnipl(uwhlp.. sork,s, livo-timo member of the West sou Coliseum In Unioiidnle, held their playoff games In a \\ &Tiytn MftVi\u \ got some wwsHiy- DisriiUD AND iiomto ay 11 ,.„ -»%/ talf i^ 3\\\nl«' l Mali spokesman Harvey "lie apparently Division All-Star turn, N.Y., where they havo beaten sm.ill,' suburban nrcna. 'Hie THt MMHB. IlAMOISIIlllMCO , V «tf\\\vKV Will ' ..f I MONDAY, MAY 6, 1974 .ll|-W* K«TUCKY \ W . M Kirk pnlrick said JJoaty 's doctor und of infection. Ho had it lan- Neither Govnn , moved from the Stars six times in six meet- WHA has banned use of that ,.MM. ^ \ \ " r«««W NMttlOT . ' would mako a final decision on md and drained and has it forward to center, nor rookie ings this season. arena in the finals. in brief Winona Dally NeWt Sports -JO¦ Brewington Winona, Minnesota ** WS§ gils split Scoreboard AflONDAY, MAY 6, 1974 Pro Hockey Ployoffs NIC Baseball breaks mark . W. L, Pet. ca ST. PAUL, Minn. X— . Bob ¦' ¦ ' " '' . • - 'V'. - NHtV"V. - WINONA ST...... 7 : 3 .700 Briewiiigton turned in another Southwest St...... 8 4 . .«7 . md^^ SEMIFINALS ' clears

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WORCESTER, Mass. CAP) - the. meeting, Humphrey called Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, p- the tape transcripts released by MORGAN. President Nixon ; last week ^ M ^ ^ Minn., has called for the United ' : "devastating, . and , said the States to establish a list of pri- transcripts /were y ¦ "very shock- orities to handle the next . 25 ing to me." •-..¦. . ,"' • . years of. continued prosperity . Humphrey; said he. was not with 'limited resources. speaking of . any possible crimes Appearing, as the keynote .involved with the events meii- speaker-Sunday - at : the seventh tiofaed in the transcripts. : 1b- annual meeting r-of-ytheHSmall *T5teadrhe-said7^I . aim referring Business Service Bureau, Inc.; to the low -quality, of conduct, ¦ Humphrey said he was refer- the climate that existed in the - ¦ ' REDEYE by Gordon Bets ring to limited . food , fuels¦ and White House." raw materials. : yy' : '- tVhen asked if he believed all He said, proposed '. drilling ¦ the facts pertinent to the . Wa- ythe : along Atlantic coast would tergate investigation . were in- : ¦ ¦ ' ¦ Ernie BushmjHw do little giood .on a short-term cluded . in ythe .transcripts, NA^CY '.' -. ' ' : '• by basis. Humphrey claimed that Humphrey said . "No, not all. the technical know-how is not He.;¦ said he feels there , were available currently to get oil things left out,. ''but I have no frorii the ocean floor. idea .what." ; The . 14,000-inember (. associ- Humphrey criticized the Nix- -ation honored- State Sen. Daniel on administration for hot being J. Foley* D-Worcester, and pre- "people : oriented." He said that sented him with its public serv- "If you are big,, you get in. It ¦ ice award- for 1974. (the administration), is": willing :: ' ' ';¦ '>¦¦ ' : '" In a . news conference after to buy/and sell iaiiythihg." :::> BblZr^AWYER . .vV; -^ . \ . : // - : V^'1** -^ -^n^ by Fred Lasswfell y Ctashes of liqhi BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUJF^MIJH ^ ^ planes kill 10 X By United Press International 700 yards from . ¦ .the , shattered A series of four small plane fuselage. '. crashes - duringy thie weekend One person was killed and have left 10 persons dead and three . others, injured when a ' ' ¦ ' " ' ; ¦ ' ' ' three, others injured : ^ . ' /BEFrLE';BAILlEYy : ' .'V ' . VV: - ' . by. Mort Walker —two vintage Stearmaii biplane made ^seriously, y " a-, crash landing on Interstate 85 . Four, men —nine of them a east of Burlington, N.C., Detroit judge, —were killed Sunday, hit a camper-van and Sunday when : their single- then plunged over a bridge. WIZARD OF ID V;.yyy: ylv::Pa_l.ei inil'Hat»> engine plane broke apart in flight and crashed into a field Mrs. . Frances r isom, " 52;. near Freeland, Mich. The dead Spartanburg, S.C., a passenger were identified ' as y Detroit in the van driven by her Recorders Court Judge John husband , James, 60, died of R.; Murphy, 36, Detroit; John- head injuries at an area hospital. Isom was treated and Leo Canu, 43, Femdale, Mich.; released. ¦ Ronald Kidd, 29, Birmingham, Mich.y and the. pilot, identified 'A passenger in the plane, Al only as R. Goldschmeidihg. Peoples, 23;: Louisburg, . S.C., MAfcY WORTH by Aljen Saunders and Ken Ernsl Tlie pilot was reported tP was : taken to Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill in . serious ' have been warned, twice that : 'V " "Yy by rain and fog had made , the condition with second and third MARK . TRAiL „. [ -Y Id Dodd flight from Pellston, Mich., to degree burns. The pilot, Vernon Detroit: inadvisable. V Dickerson, 26,y also of Louis- Another- single-engine . plane crashed. , in ay pasture in rainy burg, was hospitalized with a weather in the .north Texas fractured . back, jaw and wrist. community of Blue : Ridge A prominent Lakewood, N.J./ Sunday, killing Larry Russell, physician was killed : Saturday Lakeview, Minn,, ' his 'wife,' son when the private plane he . was and daughter. flying crashed pn a golf course Witnesses! said - the plane hear North Myrtle Beach, SC might have exploded before it He was Dr. Milt-oii Jaybush, 50, crashed. The wings were found a family, medicine specialist, l*'''' '''***'***'''*'* l*' ^'''* ** ^*!**' *** "'''^' ^'*"'''' ^***' -''*P ****»^ "^ MMW» "^ vv ] vEd^KJ _ |^^ . a^aBM^BBj ' ' ______H______I ,^y* yiT^_ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ _^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | g B j v ImMuKr^M/ J7j - - ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ^^HBI' ' ' ' ' ¦" ' - ' ' ' * * ' ' ' ' ' ¦ - ' ' ' " '"¦ "" ¦ aB B H H H H v.i^^^H ' * . , . - ¦ * - - ¦ ¦ '" * - - - . \. ; . .. . . - ;...... ' • ...... " . ¦ . ^ ^^ ^^^ . _ . .. ' " _^^H^S * i * i ^^^VI^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ I^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^l^»^ ^r______H T '"li V -^^H

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' i . , See these and many more trade-in specials — Shop early for best selection of New Spring Styles! ' OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL 9 .. . FREE tftllVERY , ... \*- } FRIDAYS EVENING Better T) T T T) IZ " TX? O Furniture mj ^S^^S^Hm OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. OR ANY BY APPOINTMENT Buys At jy\J i\i\i2/ O Mart " ' 81 YEARS THIS 74 Phone 452-3762 PIENTY OF FREE PARKING BEHIND OUR STORE East Third A Franklin & 155 East 3rdB St. We Service What We Sail . . . With Oor Own Service Dept, B ELECTRICPhona 452-4245