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1-3-1966 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News

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VIET CONG SLI P AWAY Humphrey (J Sx Brigade vgdes Back Home In From Far Easl Transit Strike WASHINGTON (AP)- Vice President Hubert H. Hum- phrey r returned from a week's Red Delta Stronghold visit to Far Eastern; countries today and said that while he By THOMAS A. REEDY borne Brigade, backed by artil- Reeds near the Cambodian fron- the fighting, their spokesmen "feels good about the area" he SAIGON, South Viet Nam lery, air strikes and even tanks, tier.;.-- said, H x its New York will withhold Specific comment (AP) — U.S. paratroopers began with high hopes of rous- The U.S. paratroopers had slogged through mud and ing the guerrillas from their By this afternoon, there was until after reporting to Presi- ¦ moved westward from Saigon ¦ ¦ swamp today in their first big Stronghold; >... .. ¦;¦. - only occasional contact With the dent Johnson. .'.:¦ ' - ' guerrillas. ' into the sugar and rice fields invasion of the Mekong Delta Although they offered some around Bao Trai, 20 miles from He was met at Andrews Air but a large Viet Cong force brisk skirmishes and steady sni- A 1315. spokesman said the the capital They captured a Force Base by the diplomatic slipped deeper into the Red per fire at the start of the opera- 173rd Brigade had killed 111 ? large store of. rice and other envoys of the Philippines,' Jar sanctuary, eluding their pur- tion New Year _s Day, the Viet Viet Cong, captured 7 and de- food and some National Libera- '¦' pan, Nationalist China and suers. ; ' " '. -V. .V- Cong withdrew into the marshes tained 502 suspects. Vietnamese tion Front flags. The probe by 173rd Air- in the direction of the Plain of troops killed 125 guerrillas in South Korea and by the dean of the After the initial encounters, however, the Viet Cong headed the Washington diplomatic toward the Plain of Reeds, a corps, Ambassador Guillermo marshy Communist area on the Savilla-Sacasa of Nicaragua, northerir fringe of the Mekong Delta. It has long been consid- Humphrey told newsmen Hanoi Chills US ered a Viet Cong infiltration "we've had a very rich and re- route and base camp. warding trip.'? He declined to ' It was considered donbtful comment on any talks he may that the heavily armed Ameri- have had in furtherance of the Efforts P&ac© cans would attempt to pursue Viet Nam peace drive of the (AP)-Two achievedfc* the United States must ington haslet it be known that it the Reds over terrain unsuited Johnson administration. WASHINGTON of to their equipment. . President Johnson's peace en- halt v "definitely and uncondi- would be willing to discuss the "We came back feeling good four points if negotiations 'got Although American p lane s voys continued their efforts to- tionally" all acts of war against about the areas we visited," he day despite new dampening the North, under way. again spared the Communist The Hanoi newspaper also North from attack, U.S. Air said and described the four na- blasts from Hanoi. , U.S. efforts to get such talks The: North Vietnamese Com- said Washington would have to . Force B52s bombed jungle tar- tions in which he stopped as the four conditions started moved ahead with rov- gets in Binh Duong Province 40 munist party organ Nhan Dan acknowledge Averell "S t a u n c h allies and good branded the current U.S. peace the Communists have set down ing Ambassador W- mileis northwest of Saigon. Harriman's arrival in Pakistan friends." . . .. moves as "trickery" and said for an end to the war. What was The Communists attacked a The vice president flew here acknowledge was for talks with President Mo- that if any political solution to meant by " " Vietnamese scout company from HawSii. the Viet Nam war is to be not immediately clear. Wash- hammed Ayub Khan while G. Mennen Williams carried the command post with flamethrow- Humphrey stood in a . cemer American view to African lead- ers arid grenades 12 miles south tery in the hills above Honolulu ers.. - of Tuy Hoa, on the central where dead of World War II, As the flurry of American dip- coast. They were beaten off. Korea and Viet Nam lie buried.. ONE /WAY TO GET THERE . . . .. A girl Union against the Transit Authority entered Johnson Back lomatic activity continued, the Teh Reds were reported killed. Only a short drive away men takes to two-wheeled transportation tfear Col- its third day. The strike idled the entirr lull in the bombings of North A military spokesman said it wounded in Viet Nam lie in an umbus Circle on New York's Broadway to- subway system and most of the city's buses. Viet Nam targets moved into its ' Army general hospital. day, as a strike by the Transport Workers (AP Photofax) .i -yH y -y ' .', : was the first time the Commu- 11th day. nists used flamethrowers. The It is like that in the Pacific — At White House The bombing moratorium Is South Vietnamese didn't cap- the old battles running into the viewed as a part of Washing- ' ' ¦; WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- Johnson is in "excellent ture any of them, but they were new... : " . . ton's efforts to establish condi- dent Johnson shifted his base of health." tions favorable to the beginning believed of Chinese make and On another stop, Humphrey Auto Traffic operations back to the White To the unscientific eye of a of peace /talks with North Viet part of the equipment of a bat- saw ships destined for Viet Nam House today, convinced he's newsman, Johnson looks and talion of North Vietnamese reg- Nam, ' riding at anchor in Manila har- once again in good shape and acts much as he did before his ulars; bor with the islaind of Cprregi- ready to face the heavy work Oct; 8 gall bladder-kidney stone The public reaction from Ha- The government "force was dor and Bataan looming on the Piling Up/ May load ahead. operation — except that he has noi was anything but encburag- taking part in a search-and-de- horizon. The latest word from his per- shed a lot of weight. The weight ing. Only hours before the parjy stroy operation with South Ko- Speaking at the University of sonal physician, Vice Adm. loss is all to the good in Burk- organ Nhan Dan made its dec- rean troops in Phu Yen Prov- ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ Hawaii Sunday, Humphrey said George G. Burkley, is that ley's bpinion. .. .: larations North Viet Nam's ince. that since World War II the Be Curtailed President Ho Chi Minh had de- Another 100 miles up the (AP)-The Reporters .who were Invited to United States has suffered 175,- NEW YORK brunt clared that the Communists coast, Vietnamese: troops 000 casualties. of a two-day-old transit strika the LBJ Ranch in Texas Sunday would fight until final victory. ' launched three relatively large "We did not ask for war in hit New York this dreary Mon- to bfe served eggnog, coffee- He said he was standing firm operations to relieve pressure cookies and candy by the Presi- Korea. We have not sought war day, threatened for a time to $3;5/Milli6ri on his terms for peace — terms on Quang Ngai City, a provin- in Berlin. We. have , not sought dent and Mrs. Johnson could already rejected by the United cial capital. Several battalions overwhelm Manhattan with au- detect no evidence of his earlier States. war in Cuba. We have not took light casualties in a skir- sought war in Viet Nam." tomobiles, then eased into a discomfort when he moved Ho's views were in messages mish eight miles south of Quang slowly, deliberately, to the Japanese newspaper Asa- But, Humphrey added, "We flow described as normal. Fire Sweeps Ngai while other companies of have been called.to , the defense As traffic^ had piled tip during He walked with an easy stride hi Shimbun and to a Havana regional forces bpergjed about a around the ranch lawn, chatting meeting of leftists from three of others as well : as to our- the early rush hour Mayor John mile southeast of this battle- selves." . informally with reporters and continents. The message sug- ground. V. Lindsay warned he might be Sitka, Alaska photographers and joshing some gested anew that Hanoi would Americans do not want to forced to close off the city to agree to negotiate only after the SITKA. Alaska (AP) - A of his guests. He seemed to be A third government force haye it written, he said , that any more automobiles. in fine spirits. United States accepts its four- came under heavy small-arms we were the warriors of the $3.5 million fire destroyed an point demand, which includes " estimated 50 per cent of the Johnson had predicted a few fire about midway between 20th Century." . Lindsay, who took office just „ American troops business district of this historic weeks after surgery that he withdrawal of Quang. Ngai and Da Nang, 380 Rather, he said, it should be hours before the bus and sub- from South Viet Nam. southeastern Alaska town Sun- would be back at normal opera- miles northeast of Saigon. Un- written that the Americans way workers struck New Year' ting strength by the start of official reports said the light s day, including the 121-year-old In Peking, the official Chinese were educators. Day, climbed into a police heli- Greek-Russian Orthodox Cathe- 1966. government casualties included Communist party paper Peo- Humphrey was confronted by copter for a personal inspection dral of St. Michael. ple's Daily assailed the Ameri- some Americans. Eighteen Viet a band of demonstrators carry- His spirits and health ap- Cong were reported killed . of the choked arteries from tht "We can rebuild St. Mi- peared equally good earlier in can diplomatic missions. It said ing signs reading "End the war HARD AT WORK ... Mayor John Lindsay. New York 's chael's Cathedral ," said Sen, "monsters and freaks of all de- By venturing into the canal- in Viet Nam" and "Peace in new chief executive, presents a busy picture in his City foggy, drizzly skies. the day when he attended serv- swampy delta country, Ernest Gruening, D-Alaska, aft- ' scriptions are scurrying hither ribbed, Viet Nam." Hall office. Republican Mayor Lindsay canceled much of Then, like a breaking fever, , the ices at St. Barnabas Episcopal the ' U.S. paratroopers were er flying -here from Juneau and "thither and raising a lot of He told his audience at the his inaugural celebration and demanded a crackdown on the the crisis passed and Traffic state capital , with Gov, William Church in Fredericksburg, probing a Communist strong- some 15 miles from the ranch. dust with their sinister activi- university ceremony where he subway and bus strike, which he declared is illegal. (AP Commissioner Henry A. Barnes X-Egan, ties." It added the United hold that the French were una- received an honorary degree, "I In addition to directing his Photofax) reported traffic in Egan asked President John- States "is merely spreading a ble to control in eight years of hear people say we want peace Manhattan the town a dis- Viet Nam peace envoys scat- eon to declare smokescreen to conceal its fighting. Government forces in Viet Nam , I'll say we do. was "loosening up." aster area. tered around the world, Johnson have had no more success, in And the mayor lifted his still has to finish work on the preparations for war expan- "If you have any influence in . No one was killed or injured. sion." recent years. use it. If you have any threat. briefly. "big three" messages — State Hanoi , Power was off only influence in Peking, use it." By 8 a.m. he said traffic was The blue-gray wooden cathe- of the Union, budget and eco- ¦ Holiday Deaths "about normal now," but urged dral, built in 1844. stood in the nomic report — to the next ses- that no additional drivers head middle of Sitka's main street, sion of Congress beginning Jan. for Manhattan. like a traffic island. It was ths 10. Storms Lash eoat of Bishop Ambrossy Mcre- While Burkley or another McNamara Moves He predicted there would be jko, bishop of Sitka and Alaska White House doctor gives " the Over 500-Mark continuous traffic jams in Man- of the Greek-Russian Orthodox President at least an eye-once- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 1950. hattan throughout the day. Church in North America. It over every day, his last head-to- traffic fatalities set records The New , Barnes attributed the easing Much of U.S. On Firms Raising Year deaths how- of Manhattan 's traffic to tha was also a favorite with tour- toe physical was Dec. 30. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Resort owners said about 500 for the second straight holiday ever, were still far short of the ists visiting tills Baranof Is- fact that drivers headed for Heavy, drifting snow closed college students were trapped in weekend today as well over 500 all-time holiday traffic death work about two hours earlier land town of 3.300. • schools and highways in por- McCall, crowding as many as persons died on the nation's count of 720 set during the The town was Alaska's capi- Price of Steel than usual. This caused early- 5 Sputniks Up tions of the Pacific Northwest eight to a room with little hope WASHINGTON (AP) - Sec- highways during the three-day three-day Christmas period. morning tieups, tal during its 1790-1867 Russian New Year observance. but eased con- today while a storm that lashed of making classes today. retary of Defense Robert S. An Associated Press survey of ditions in the midst of the usual occupation. the upper Great Lakes region Police turned back students Parishioners and priests For 1,000 Years McNamara today directed the The death toll in traffic was a non-holiday weekend of the rush hour. Sunday bore down on New Eng- attempting to drive from Mc- 544, and late reports were ex- same length as the New Year hauled valuable icons, other re- MOSCOW (AP) - Five Soviet shifting of orders for future New Yorkers didn't feel tha land. Call. Both the University of Ida- deliveries of structural steel pected to raise the final figure holiday showed 420 deaths in full impact of the -strike until ligious art works and heavy sputniks in the Cosmos series Idaho officials shooed all but ho, Moscow, and Washington sil- away from the Bethlehem Steel even higher. traffic. The survey was made today because of jthe holiday doors, inlaid with gold and will orbit the earth for more emergency vehicles oil 250 State University, Pullman, said from 6 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 9, ver, from the burning building. than 1,000 years, Pravda report- Corp. and any other firm rais- The record toll passed last weekend. miles of roads between Moscow rolls would not bo called today ing prices, Now Year's traffic death count to midnight Sunday. Dec. 12. Lindsay went on radio and ed today. and the tiny ski resort village of although classes would bo in McNamara issued a state- television early today The Soviet Communist party of 474 early Sunday. The lowest The National Safety Council to make McCall Sunday as falling snow session. ment announcing that he had toll for any New Year's holiday said the final toll for the New a last-minute appeal to com- newspaper said the center for Depths reportedly made travel impossible. reached 10 directed "all defense procure- since World War II was 269 dur- Year weekend could reach 600 if muters not to drive into the processing radio information Inches as the snow continued to ment officials, wherever possi- ing the three-day period city. Eight Diamonds receiving data of 1949- the death pace did not slacken. from satellites is fall in Idaho nnd Washington. ble, to shift orders for future Before the start of the holiday from more than 20 sputniks. Drifts were four feet deep In deliveries items of steol on period , the council had estimat- Principals In the negotiations through 84 ln It said Nos. no Plane Crashes, places. A foot of snow covered which prices . have been raised See Our '66 Rolls ed between 3fi0 and 440 persons got back to the bargaining table the Cosmos scries, which were Oregon highways north of the to companies which have not early today. Stolen From bign in a bakery : "Come would'be killed during tho 70 launched to an initial altitude of California border and more than increased prices. hours (local Michael J, Quill, head of the In and See Our _fl Rolls between 6 p.m. more than 900 miles, would stay Second Missing 10 southbound cars were tied up ' " time) Thursday to midnight Transport Workers Union, AFL- f up more than 1,000 years, Cos- for five hours as snowplows Jusl. as Asst. Secretary of De- ... Today's youngsters are Sunday. CIO, the man who called the mos 100 will orbit for about 10 heaved snow from Interstate 5 fense Arthur Sylvester was so precocious —. tfiey start strike, was due to appear ln Bishop sCiialiceyears, and the first nnd third at tho Siskiyou summit. Drifts reading McNamara's state- dating the opposite sex as A safety council statement of State Supreme Court today to LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) - satellites in the Electron se- In Indonesia there were measured at five ment to newsmen, the Inland soon ns they find out which the New Year record said, "It's answer a show-cause order. Eight diamonds were pried loo.se ries will orbit at least 200 years. JAKARTA , Indonesia (AP) - feet. Steel Co. was announcing a one they belong to . . . Tho clear that the nation can 't de- As hopes for an early settle- and' stolen from the base of the ¦ boost similar to Bethlehem's best way to get your pend on mere horror to terrify ment brightenod Sunday night One Indonesian airliner crashed Highway patrolmen , &6 .000 bishop's chalice in St. in the jungle in South Sumatra at Yrckn $5-a-ton increase in certain wife's attention is to tell her drivers into safe highway be- then suddenly faded , tho na- Joseph the Workman Cathedral WEATHER over the weekend and another and Weed in North California types of structural steel, how attentive your secre- havior." tion's largest city put into effect Saturday. is missing, A total of 34 persons halted some 200 vehicles be* McNamara ordered that de- tary is . . , Women will nev- Safety officials also snid that emergency measures to handle FEDERAL FORECAST cause of snow A smaller gold chalice wns were aboard. , allowing throujn fense procurement officials er be the equal of men till there was little comfort that the the 7.4 million persons who nor- taken from tho unlocked walk-In WINONA AND VICINITY - only those equipped with "take all practicable steps" to New Year's toll was less than mally ride the subways and Occasional cloudiness tonight Both planes were DC3s of the chains. they can have a bald spot vault where sacred articles Insure that defense contractors on of their heads and the Christmas toll, since fewer buses every working day. Tuesday. Low tonight 15-22 , government's Garuda Airline. The Great Lakes storm top were kept at tho rear of the Ro- and adopt tho same procedures as still think they're handsome persons travel on the year-end Extra commuter trains and high Tuesday near 30. Both left Jakarta Saturday dumped up to 8 inches of snow man Catholic church in down- morning for South nnd Central military procurement officers . . . Prosperity is something holiday. buses were added, emergency town La Crosse. LOCAL WEATHER on northern Wisconsin and Min- with respect to their purchases New Year's was the sixth hol- parking and taxi regulations hy Official observations for the Sumatra but failed to land at nesota before moving east. that makes people feci so Police snid they were told their first stop. and those of their subcontrac- good thoy really don't mind iday period in recent months to were applied , and schools were church vault 24 hours ending at 12 m. Sun- Palebang, Snow and ice made driving a officials that the of ono plane tors." going deeper Into debt. set a national record for traffic closed. But above all else, May- was unlocked , as day: The wreckage nenawwrncklng chore for foot- always kept . was spotted from the air 63 deaths. or Lindsay urged people not to was the" cathedral. • Maximum , 40; minimum, 20; ball fans bound from Milwaukee The Defense Department uses drive automobiles In the city Tho smaller chalice was val- noon, 24; precipitation, 7 inches miles south of Palebang. Five and Chicago to Sunday's Nation- about 320,000 tons a year of In addition to Christmas, the military helicopter's and a res- except on absolutely essential ued at $600. Nine diamonds form- snow. al Football League champion- structural shapes and piling. 1965 Thanksgiving, Labor Day, business. ed a cross on the bishop's chal- Official observations for the cue team reportedly reoched ship game In Green Bay, Wis. This represents about 5 per £aJ*)Q4rFourth of July and Memorial ice, which was not taken. No 24 hours ending at 12 m. today : the area Sunday, but there was Police said traffic was backed cent ol total Industry output, Day weekends established Tho strike is expected to cost estimate was made of tho value Maximum , 30, minimum, -2; no word whether there were up for six miles near Oshkosh ut which has been running at (For more laughs see records for long weekend ob- stores an estimated $40 million of the eight gems stolen. noon , fl; prcpipitation, trace. any survivors. one point. about six million tons a year. Earl Wilson on Page 4.) servances of those holidays. a day in lost sales. ' day, totaling ITS student*. Oil mte. SlKfc* th* |fflap M teach- Two Workers the basla 6f aft eigh.'hotlf work | - - - ' - ~-^--, brte minute outside the class per 'in a Better pb&itidfl to be of as- ^ '¦ ' ¦ ¦¦ Taconite Plant stddent per day. .: Bistafl( _ e _ . • ,,' . ' ; Hear Partfaiii Even so; mass education can having the back, ViRdlNlAv Mlhft , (AP ) - Ac- The student ROME . AP) -- A s^ecM leg- ^Gfidicaps of be individualized, especially for irig and moral support of all of cidents at two taconite plants be- commission session to small groups of students need- his teachers, plus the help of islative ' ing built on northern Minne- v Ffiftlftdl* ex- jJ^Sit^ff^v^; ing specif ic assistfitide. the coimseior, will usually ftut hear Amifttflre * sota's Iron Range claimed the 4 For example in one junior effort to sal- pur« lives of two workers over the , forth the necessary plahatipn of his role in a tko high school, students below holiday weekend. ^Wcfss S oliM vage himself. ported Hanoi peace feelef wfli grade level in reading were Leo A. LeClaire, 63, Palisade, With special emphasis bn the called dff tbday, — By LESLIE J. NASON, foiLD. school situation. He can easily- placed in platoons. Each group JM^ot&ii^fe Minn., was killed when S hoist practice of appropriate reading The meeting of the Chamber ' University of S. Cdlff; become lost in the crowd. of students moved from class- By ABIGAIL, VAN BUREN . . - . ..:. failed arid a piece of heavy ma- ;skills in each class, the student of Deputies Foreign Affairs Surprising as it seeins, many room to classroom for vafiouS ; DEAk ABBY: 1 hayfe a 15-yeaf-old son who is a good bdy, "on hitti. LeClaire He; needs soirtfe personal at- makes rapid progress. While Commission had beeh called for cHinetry fell students reach junior aiid sen- subjects but remained togeth- ; ah honor student and has many frifehds. One young couple had been foreman of a crew In- tention. He needs to know that !reildiflg is the key tb success Jan. 5, while Fanfafti still Was ior high schools without stiffi- somedhe is Cbhcerhed aboUt tiitn §r throughout the day for at - (his age ) come here several nights a week and use my parlor stalling a rolling hull at a taco- in all other subjeete, shoiicom: Italy's fbrfeign minister. . cient skills and irri&tivatlc._i to and is ready and willing to help least fdUr claseeSi _$ for a lbvel-'s lalie. These kids sit it the dark , hugging and nite platit the MA . Haftha Cb. iilgs in c6mmuflic_ tive skills of He Jresighed Dec. atftid • make any progress. him.-" ' kissing for hours. 1 am sure their parents don't khdw thai is building at Cooley. . THE FOUR or five teachers writing and . reciting also re^ storm of controversy over tho Educators must llnd methods bid which he this goes on. Once I heard the girl tell her mother on the John Inthar, 36, Eveleth, died of a platoon met once or twice :spond to this concerted ap- report of a peace to Identify sueh stiideflts early TO BE successful with such a Johnson phonevthat . she was at a party with a: "bunch of kids" at my Saturday when he was burled a week either before school or ;proach. passed on to President in their junior high school ca- student, teachers must.. not. only ' (No ¦ ' Giorgio La Pira, son's hduse, one was he.e but her and her boy friend at lunchtime. Prior to 6ach ¦ ¦ ¦ from his friend under a pile of rocks: Ihtjhar reers and to educate 'them to be familiar with the specific . . and my son who stayed upstairs studying most of the time;) mayor of Florence; Ha- , had climbed id the top of a pile th6 best of their abilities. shortcomings of the pupil but meeting, a few students were . former I am a widow and am ifivited out occasionally, hilt I dofi't WORST CROP StNCfi 1905 disavowed the report- of the waste material when it This is a crucial period for the with the records and test data Singled but Ibr discussion. THUS, hbi later leave those kids alolie in my hoiise. What should I v _ like jto cbllapsed , burying him. It took pupil who is not proficient in ih Ws cuftiulative folder . They each teacher had.time to con- NEW DEHLI, Ifidia (AP)^A ed overture: Abby? tell my son to ask his friends hot to cotite over Communists, who had de- do, fellow \Vdrkers twb bouts to the three R -s: He has greater should know something of the sider a pupil's educatlbnal back- ]lationwiclfe survey shows drought The arty more? Oir should I tell them? Should their pai-eflts be , the commission ses- : free his b.dy. difficult making the transition environment in which (he child g_ bund and personal characterr seriously affected all-important inanded UNDECIDED y ' ' '¦ '¦ ¦ their questions tbld? The accident happened at the frdrii the seif-tioritained clSss- lives outside the school. But in istics. . . ' . -... foodgrain crops in six states. sion , withdrew ' de- to the government after Fan- DEAR UNDECIDED:: If you refuse: Fairlane . taconite plant being rootn of the elementary school itiaiiy schools, the teacher is Serious cases were referred to .:Mysdrfe State s harvest was fafti resigtied.. the hld_ the use of your parlor; yoii'H built near EveletH. to the more impersonal high confronted With five classes a the School counselor for asslst- scribed a§ the worst ih 60 years. only force them to find ahbthfer retiBez- 1 vbiis. Hfere is an excellent ; opportunity^ to help two youngsters who desp^ately need it. They atfe playiftg with dyna- mite and need to be warned against the dangers of too much togetherhess chargfed tip with natural emotions. IE you th§_e can't (dr woh't)be coiirisel kids, MARY J0 BA6NIEWSKI thetu^yod'd doitlg thfcm a favor". 'by •; telling their parentis. J_hlightenriieir.t is in enter he_e, nbt puriishhieht. ^ ¦fc k . ABB? ' DEAR ABBY: I am i widow who plans to remarry in March, t have two tefeh-agfe sons who will keep their father's riahie as I feel they are too eld to be legally addpted by my new husband and thereby take his ftairie aS I will. It always seems so strahge to me ^tteft fehild _ e_i do riot , have the same ' Mine . ai their riiofber. WdUld it M proper for me to keep ry\^&fsr^f A ^BS______F ¦_¦______! ^____B______H 99SBm^aaaW ^^^^^ BHv ^^__QuE^_Q___r v3__p_^__H JB^HHHBBfewy v>^ ^4, ^^^. $s5_ .+^BBfi' ^^3&&.^St _ ## * <______¦ my children's harite (say it was Bfoivii) and theti add my nfew husband's name (say it was Stohith)? I wdiild then be Mrs. BroWh^Srhith, ind thereforfe have something in cbtrirtibn ¦ with my children's name. NAME PROBLEM nAiir^uTiTD nc I -^ ; - ''^ilswBHB UAUun l LK Ur |^ > ,y^ * ' , *y' :' . . ' *'yMm&jBm DEAR NAME: 1.6, it i_ flot proper for you to keep yoiir first husband'. fiMfe , even though ybur children will retain It. Al O 11 P W% • ___ !• % '^ ^^^^^s^l^ll ^^ HHR. DEAR ABBY: Will yttu {.lease permit mfe ; to sound off |f¦ ¥¦¦ || . Q| ¦¥ ¦¦ !#• __IH1|VIIV VM1|lllV ll 4flU *^-^^v>Wh^^^n about a matter that ik becbitting increaslhgly disgusting? • ^M. Ifll Stt CIIUBII C DdQillcWj Ivl * * U^^^mmWn,S ^ Tight pants for boys and then ! It waS bad enough when ^^fc ^S^ ^W< ^t^ * _ SOHHH w6meh started pulliiiig thdse stretch things over their pos- teriors, revealing every curvfe. But these skin-tight trou- sers for men are the HtMt. Top add to tM problem, the ciiffs Fountain City, Wis. are so barre* that they c&hH get the pants on or off with- ^^fe ^^^^^^^H^ out taking their shoe_ off. The day. of btiyitig a growing boy a pair bf troiisers^with a little room for him to "grow into them" has passed: .Wheh they biiy pahts brand new, they are so tight-fitting that if th£ Wd gains six ounces he 11:20 1st can't get the pants back on with a crow bar. I won't even Born at P.M. January /l mention how terrible I think they LOOK: Am I alone? J^^'^j r^ DISGUSTED IN SYCAMORE CONFIDENTIAL TO "FEELING GUILTY" IN TROY: ^^ You are foolishly living with guilt because of ignorance and misinformation. What ybti don't khoW abdut how to live a normal, satisfying married life not only COULD fill a book, but it has, I recbrnmeiid Dr. J. B. Trainer's PUVBIOLOGIC FOUNDATiONS FtiR MARRIAGE COtlNSELlNG. Every or who is how married WINONA—1966 ^" ^^ffc person who is considering marriage, , BABYBABY OFOF 11966966 XN >- A |fs \ / «V. , should read this book. CTCQI iyr. CII VED ^^ %i^_ bfc W^^ H *XK A $ STERLIHQ SILVER il , : i f % Problems? Write to Abby, Box 69700, LoS Angeles. Calif! IMKrAMT^d h^J^^W^^ Wh -^^ r1 ^ r For a personal reply, enclose i stamped, self-addressed BABY RATTLE mrAll I I' f \M/ mt > ^W^M l i ^envelope. EnsravH with »h. XWP**^&%%$MLW®' Ct 11* *J / T^^ J/ V ^ '%& * JTt l f '3fM; ______^ff^ New Forester r- ^ MM_I MM !____¦ Bfe^!^^wl^|l^ ^ f Two Charged Named at Duluth 9^ ¦ ' »« 0 f_Hmmm ErJ')»fel___ r x?& MILWAUKEE, . , Wis. (AP) - QxfTsmMSym fly ) Announcemenfs Ak end by Secret Service agents, T^ i n nfliiAiif \ ^^T for $2,500. Peterson was arrested " ^ 10 GALLONS¦ ' ^ were released on bond after ap- >-v---> ¦ Authorities Raid . lS.flOO In / \ ¦ " / w\ 000 to $5,000 in counterfeit bills '¦¦FROM YOUR MIDLAND DEALER POUND of lHa New J YJ y ' m/ —- \y<\¦ 1 ^F . ' mm a a aaa a a \9 I ^\ vS- _^ ' ll flra Xllllfinp_. '¦DL.lC'VrfiPlrrtinn LIUI11 VIf A" 1_A^^^k. counterfeit bills was seized, and were passed in Duluth ^^_ ' Baby's Weight. J/^ •¦ , Eau I ^ ^ f ' I •¦HMMM M <^ / M S~ "\ ' /T\ U.S, Atty. Miles Lord said a Claire, Wis , and other cities. A f^ / WINONA / search is tinder way for about Secret Service agent Said bills N ^4 w*m ^ |< / AV ILLIAMSX^^CM / that much more in spurious bills, alleged to have been printed by MIDLAND STATION ®) B00K and believed to be buries In suburb- Arholm and Peterson were not Vl>Nl^i? M DORN'S' STATIONERY V1W an areas south of Minneapolis. the Same ds counterfeit notes s-i SECOND and MAIN |k %_ cnn BL a o tc_ ** ^ eo c/i MI TL J C ^it¦ f s;>. ft M 500 Huffu.,* Phohe 8-1531» 52-54 W. Third- St.. **' •««^^ In an affidavit , Secret Service passed earlier at Mankato , IPWOTMn y\ '%-> Thomas L. Schaefer Said Arholm Minn., and in North Dakota. Our Gift tO WltlOna's - ± _ For th. Ne* Year '. Baby p c/^^ P F ^ F^st 1%6 Baby T If 11 1 H CHOATE^ «. CO. >kv n /^ ^J-V Y? • ^t ^T on. cottc Su.d. j: v TO AS ^ 4 Sterling Silver WINON FIRST / ^jr ¦ BABY IN TRIINDIi ivunuLc F ^- ' * ) raedingCA«J:H• '*i*i ^ " * M J^ lS \ BUNDLE <»'M«>^ « good future With .ur lff h* C . * .. a family treasure, B - /A ^. A V\ "The.. « safest,\ sleeping-- . enrment . I/VT^A \ a tayings account \ J itarttd with )t \ l /^^^!y\ \*>,J for infants " . . , nnd it. Ri ow a ( ' ~ ,n haby'» name. ^~ \ ^ Sj ' \ \ ( * ^C> \xT^^ _\~~^_

f ** THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK h CIS* t£>% \ wjffSexoelrueffo rt N > f f M^t feAeral tepotlt — J ESTABLISHED 18M ^ I Zftl Third A Center Insurance ^ X.\ ^mW^ L- ^*^ ¦ Corporation i: , , '¦: - ;¦.¦_::_ _:,.r„.. . ¦:¦ ¦ ri' as l - ' i . . _- - > ^ road to good health. U 8 :55 A.M., 12 NOON, 5:00 P.M. \\^J /ff f £\MO /C ^ ^ \ A / V wl ^ %^ ALBRECHT'S fr-QT «-» Ba.. s.«.nd s„.., .,, .r «.rt... \ $rV F| r Suf fcjr WINONA MILK CO. % »M W, Fifth St, 77 KWNO m Miracle Mall Laird St. | AT 12-3-OH!

¦ ' __i . , ; ... Final Rushford Cp Flood^gnirol l^W Youth Arrested After Surprise Storm Plans Expected Winona today was digging out pery, but cut down holiday, acci- ers were first alerted about 4 Alter burglary ¦ RUSHFORD, Minn. - Final- of a surprise storm that dumped dents;'" . a.ra When it was evident that ly plans for the $1% million seven inches of snow on South- the snowfall was heavy. _ flood control project at Rushford eastern Minnesota and Western STREET crews went to work Crews will be on 24-hour In vest End are expected here from Wisconsin early Sunday. Sunday about 5:30 a.m. and schedules at least through to- the U.S. .•¦,.-A' :- 19-year-old Winona youth Army Corps of Engineers in late The snow, which came without probably will need the rest of night. AU streets had been plow- . January. any advance warning, blanketed the week to complete the job ed at least once: by this morn- was charged today in munici- ... A .copy of the present pre- much of the two-state area and of clearance. Street Cbmmis: ing, Brom said. :¦ •'.;¦ pal court with burglary after liminary plans and the final left highways clogged and slip- siorier Arthur Brom said work- Occasional cloudiness is pre- being arrested early today in a plans will be available dicted for the area- tonight and in the field behind Don's Standard , city clerk's office . for inspec- Tuesday - with warmer weather tion, according to: Stanley Holl- tonight, probably not lower than Service Center, 1777 W^ Service PqvvTitown Streets ' ' and, chairman of the Rushford 15-22. The high Tuesday is ex- Dr. * X -y x- - " xi :lxl'"X' y Area Drainage and Conservancy $24;000 Suii pected to be around freezing.* Dennis L. Nelsestuen, 19, 1887 " ' To Be Posted lor 'District. .--; - . . - -^ /v- Scattered light isnow is fore- W. 4th; St., asked for; a! court- X cast for late Tuesday and Wed- FEDERAL FUI.DS will pay Removal of Snow nesday with temperatures near appointed attorney to represent the major part of the cost. Prin- Downtown streets Way in or a little above normal by Wed- him pn the burglary charge, cipally will be post- Under Rushford will have to ed for snow removal beginning nesday afternoon and then cold- which carries with it a possible furnish the right of Way. Many at 11 p.m . today, according to er thereafter. U maximum penalty of five property owners have offered year- to Arthur Brom, street commis- THE EXTENDED forecast In- confinement, give permanent easements sioner..' District Court for diking to the dicates that temper a tures ^ ¦—www .y;nwiw -v. v.i FT M______B_ district. All sun 'ts.\-w.V4f?,^KV.:-?fi ^m^aaaaaaaW&am____M__NW.WsOV.W -vqE^^B^^B^H^BBl^B^M^HBBmMM^^n. _H______B_M____l other property On-street parking will be pro- Trial of a $24,000 dai^age through Saturday would be 9 to NELSESTUEN was arrested owners affected PROUD PARENTS ; - . '•:- . Mr. and Mrs. * who is; the 1966 New Year . by the dike will be hibited but motorists may use began today in District Court 17 degrees below normal . - .daily . . Jo, 's baby. Her today by Patrolmen Milton Ron- contacted nenberg and Edward E. Mat- with a view to getting their co- either the 2nd Street lot or the with the picking of a i2-mem- highs . of 12-20 and nighttime Eugene Bagniewski, Fountain City, Rt 1, weight is 7 pounds, 5 ounces and she is 19 ; thees after a chaise across a operation. Levee Park lot, said Brom. ber jury, y lows of 1-9. Wis., are looking at their eighth child, Mary inches long. (Daily News photo) The district These were cleared Sunday Precipitation five-days snow-covered: field behind the also will pay for ' ¦¦ Mr. and !Mrs. Donald W. Wood ¦ for the water and sewer line relocations night. * is expected to average two- service station which had just to North Rushford and relocat- . The courthouse parking lot 1220 Marikato Ave., are suing tenths to four-tenths (melted ) ' been entered. The patrolmen ing the sewer line to Brooklyn. will be posted tonight, Brom Miss Judith: A- Walsky, 191 E. in snow Tuesday and again New Year s Baby fired several;warning shots, but V The district, as sponsoring or- said, and so will not be avail- King St., in connection with a about Thursday.; ¦ Clitifiteld Coyp le the suspect did not stop. He ganization,: would hold the U.S. able to motorists. rearend collision Nov. 28, 1964, - The seven-inch snowfall was was found hiding in a snowbank, at the rear 450, W. Dale St. free from damages arid liability .All cats left in posted areas on Highway 43 near its inter- the most to fall on the city since WMI iSo ttonie oL-. which will Assistant >Chief Marvin ' A. - could come from the dik- be tagged arid towed away section with Sugar Loaf Road. an eight:inch fair oh March: 17. ing program, and agree to main- at owner's expense, Brom At that time it brought the Meier said today that the pa- The Woods allege that they Found Suffocated trolmen were on routine patrol tain the project after comple- warned. Posted streets will be: amount on the ground to 10 inch- To New House : tion. : XX- ..: spent $4 ,156 on medical expens- es and laid the basis CHATFIELD, Minn. — An el- ies of . Steve Oliver, 75, and his this morning in the city's; West 2nd and 4th from Hqff to for addi- Mary Jo Bagniewski, Fountain derly couple were found dead of This is what FEDERAL funds Franklin; 3rd Street from Huff es in connection with alleged tional high water in the April City. Rt. 1 wife, Lula , 69, lying on the End when theiy spotted a figura - ¦¦ , , Wis., New Year's suffocation in their home here , would pay : . . ;. ;<.;; - : r. to. Chestnut ; all cross ; streets injuries to Mrs, Wood 's . neck, floods. , v.;'/.,. baby, who; was born at 11:20 floor in front of their daven- leaving the : service , station AU diking, including all" haul- The Winona temperature rose about 11;30 p.m. Saturday when through a broken window at the between Huff and , Franklin shoulders arid arms; They also p.m. Saturday at Community firemen were called;, port. Dr: George Joyce, Roch- ed-in . fill , riprapping,; grading, from 4th Street , to the Mississip- to 40 Saturday afternoon but got Memorial Hospital, is a lucky building's west side. 1 abor' • and material, for the dik- ask, $20,O0O: .compensation for Firemen discovered the bod- ester,- deputy . Olmsted . County The patrolrrieri radioed police . ¦ . pi River, except Main arid Cen- rib: higher than 30 Sunday. Low girl. ,' y-y XXy ing prograra ' • ' ;' the alleged permanent nature coroner, said the fir _ apparent- headquarters of what they had . ter, which will be posted from ¦ Sunday morning was 30 but the She not. only will be; the re- Two new sewage lift stations, oth §h"eet to the river. .,' ¦ of the injuries. ' . .' thermometer started nose-diving ly started in the davenport from observed at 1:12 . a.m. and or- In . North Rushford and Brook- cipient of gifts from Winona to , Attorney S. A. Sawyer repre- Sunday afternoon and was down merchants, but will be living a cigarette. • dered the Unknown person lyn. . Some snow was taken from ¦ to —2 this . morning: This was in a new home When she is Wabasha flan stop. A Winona Coimty sheriff 's ':¦ Storm sewer system providr downtown streets Sunday night , sents the Woods ; Attorneys Wil- WHEN FIREMEN arrived. patrol car came to the scene. Brom said; put posting is ne- the coldest of . the season and discharged from th . hospital. ing for carrybi'f of water in the liam . M. and Robert G. Hull re- the lowest reading since Marcb the house was filled with smoke. area protected by dikes. . cessary for a full cleanup. present : Miss Walsky. 25 when the low was —5. At Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. However, they put out the MEANWHILE, Rpnnenberjg Broadway intersections, prob- Eugene Bagniewski, Charged at Alma ' ' ' High capacity pumps for re- Jurors are: Bert Gile, Harry noon today- it was 8: and her flames rapidly, confining the and Matthees had given chase. . ; moval of water accumulating ably will be cleared Tuesday. four brothers and three sisters ALMA, Wis. (Special) — and captured the Nelsestuen ; Foust,: Alfred Hardtke, LeRoy ' blaze to the living room of the within the dikes through rain- ' , ;- . Many streets will be.. replow- A YEAR ago today- the; high: moved into a story-and-bne-half James J. Freese, 49, Wabasha, two-story dwelling. Both Mr. youth. ;,, ,.; Greenwood, Mrs. Richard D. was 31 and . the low zero with home about six. miles northeast fall or seepage. ed, Brom said, because wet Braithwait.e, Richard O'Bryan, pleaded guilty to charges of and Mrs. Oliver received some Entrance to the Service sta- The STATE Department of snow was compacted up to a two inches of snow on the of Fountain City, about two ' tion had been gained by break- . John Kryzer, Gerie F, Dondling- '¦ disorderly conduct and looking burns. .- :• Officers thought they Highways/ according to pres- depth of three inches in many , ground. All-time high for Jan. months ago. Mr. Bagniewski ing the glass iii one of its doors- : err Louis Walters, Mrs David farms about 300 acres of land. into the doorway of the wo- were overcome while trying to ent plans, will do the follow- places. F. Stark, Mrs. Clayton G. Fos- 3 was 57 iri 1874 and the low for escape from the room. A ; pair of pliers and $1.77 in ing: "¦ " the day —23 in 1919. Mean for They are members of Immacu- men's toilet at Reidt's pavilion burgh and William Reps, Mr: Oliver was born May 6, cash were missing from the - Raise the Highway 43 bridge the past .24 hours was 14. Nor- late Conception Catholic Church, three miles north of Alma in service station. Fountain City. 1890, in rural Chatfield, to Ly- across Rush Creek . and provide mal for this day is 16. . Town of Nelson. He appeared Police said they also have a footbridge , as an addition to Winter slapped a hard freeze Other v Bagniewski children man and Martha Thompson Eyotan Pays Fine in Buffalo County Court this Oliver. He was a farmer be- linked Nelsestuen with the bur- the bridge on . the tipstream on sortie Minnesota communi- are Eugene Jr., 18; Gerald , 17; , ' ¦ Diane, fore retiring and moving to glary of the Shangri-La Motel side. - . :. Authority Slates ties, dropping the temperature 16; Richard, 12; Jef- rooming. on in frey, 9; Debra 5, 4. town in 1934. theMjVest Service Drive Raise the Highway 16.and 43 to as low v as —25 at Bemidji , and Karen, The incident took place at Gocdrtew earlier this morning. g 11:55 p.m. Friday. Sheriff My- The former Lula Ajinis, Mrs. , bridge across the Root River. For Drunk Driviii and International Falls.; It-was A traveler's clock and about ; Raise Highway 16 so as to Three traffic charges drew a Meeting on —20 at Brainerd , —15 at Alex- ron Hoch was called to the Oliver was born March 10, 1896, andria; —14 at St: Cloud in rural Chaffield to William $10 in cash were taken; from the make a ramp over the proposed not guilty plea and two . guilty and —5 scene by Eugene Hurin, Pa- motel. .' ' dike across the . highway. . at Duluth.- " . vilion operator. Several juve- and Catherine Halets Annis. . pleas today in municipal court. Polite Check The door to the motel's office Pay for right of Way for the , Rochester had! a morning low niles were, brought into court The couple was married Feb; ¦ Vernen J. Tritten, 60, Eyota New Director is left unlocked at night, and Root River cutoffs. ¦ - '.; . Minn;,. , pleaded . guilty to a Of --6 after a Sunday high of 31 on the same charge this morn- 10, 1915, in Rochester, I A special meeting of the Hous- : ' Surviving them is one son the burglar walked into the un- and La Crosse posted figures 'ing, * , -• .. , THE BOARD anticipates that charge of drunken driving Sat- Two Accidents >:- occupied office and took tha urday at 5:03yp.m. on Gilmore ing and Redevelopment Author- of —1 and 32 for the same times. Freese was given the alter- Harold, Faribault, Minn. A utility companies will pay for ity board will be called Thurs- The Weather Bureau predict- An apparent hjtrrun accident daughter died in infancy. money from a softHdrink vend- their necessary relocations. Avenue at Clark's. Lane: -His native of voluntarily going to $100 fine was satisfied from $150 day to consider appointment of ed the slight warmup moving in New Year's Eve and a one- a mental hospital for psychiat- Also surviving Mr. Oliver are: ing machine. . The plan's call for diking On from North Dakota will be car, mishap Sunday afternoon posted bail at the order of an executive director. ric examination or 30 days in Four brothers, Melvin, Mantorr ASSISTANT County Attorney the westerly side of Rush Creek followed by a fresh batch of were reported today by city ville; Fred and Lester, Judge John D. McGill. Dr. W. O. Finkelnburg, board the Buffalo County jail. He Roches- Richard H. Darby represented from high ground hear the old cold air arriving Tuesday or police, ter, and Andrew, , Aloysius M. Mazig, 24, Cotter chairman, said today the HRA chose the examination. He was Chatfield, and the state at the hearing this Tews Mill behind all the houses Tuesday night. Lawrente J. Anderson, 17, two sisters, Mrs. Edward on the west side of the creek to Hall, pleaded not : guilty to a will move as rapidly as pos- placed on probation with the Pun- morning in ihunicipal court. sible to find a successor for Ar- The -Weather . Bureau said not 463 Sunset Dr., was driving State Department of Public ford and Mrs. Orrie Palmer, its junction with the Root River charge of driving with illegal north on Huff I Judge John D. McGill request- (one out ) thur A. Gallien, who died Sun- much precipitation is expected Street Sunday Welfare and will be transferred Rochester: His parents five and up the Root River to the equipment . headlight at 1:05 p.m. when ^ ed that Darby certify to District on Market Street between 3rd day. ' with ttie oncoming cold front ex- his car to a Minnesota probation offi- brothers and one sister have present dike above the bridge. skidded out of control ' Court that Nelsestuen ; is indi- arid 4th streets Friday at 11:17 cept for scattered snow flurries, as he cer. . died. ' .". ' ¦; •; ' '' The present dike, the highway . The meeting will be at the Ar- mostly over northern . passed another northbound ve- gent and should have an attor- p.m.; Judge McGill set trial for thur C. Thurley commu- sections. , bridge and highway are to be Homes International - Falls has the hicle, according to the police ALSO surviving Mrs. Oliver ney appointed to represent Win raised to high ground near the Jan. 11 at 9:30 a.m. and ordered nity room at 7 p.m:, , beginning greatest snow accumulation—30 report; are: Her mother, Mrs. Cathe- The judge then set $1,000 bond Isberg property. , Mazig to post $15 bail , which he said Dr. Finkelnburg. inches. Hibbing measures 24 and The Anderson car skidded ip.- rine Annis, 93, Chatfield; two on the youth and ordered him Plans provide for diking the did. "The authority has suffered to a "no parking'' sign in brothers, Lester, Stewartville, to appear again in municipal , 315 Bemidji 19. Busy easterly side of the creek to pro^ Allen L. Rothering, 13 a serious loss," said Dr. Fin- front of 417 Huff St. and came Week and Theodore, Fountain, and court Jan. 12 to ask for or waive tect North Rushford and Brook- W. Belleview St., pleaded guil- and we do not be- Winter blew as much as eight kelnburg, " inches of snow into WISCONSIN to rest. Damage was $125 to two sisters, Goldie, Chatfield, a preliminary hearing on the lyn, to the Harry¦ Larson pro- ty to a charge of speeding 41 lieve it will be easy to find a the right front of the car and and Mrs. Margaret King, Roch-: charge. perty. " ' ¦ " . ' . - m.p.h. in a 30 zone at Gilmore Sunday. replacement as capable as was The storm hobbled traffic about $50 to the sign. For State ester. Her father, one brother Included is a proposed cutoff Avenue and Francis Street Fri- Mr; Gallien. " Patrolmen Willis H. Wogan and one sister have died. of the curve of the river above bound for the National Football day at 8:30 p.m. He paid a $25 Interim operations at the au- League and Jerrie B. Seibert Investi- . Double funeral services will 100 Ca rs Pile Up the Root River bridge and be- eight championship game in fine as the alternative to thority offices are in charge of Green Bay and turned highways gated. be. Tuesday at 2 p.m, at Boet- In Italian Fog low the entrance of Rush Creek days in jail. Rothering was secre- Mrs. Margaret Cisewski , Wi- er-Akeson Funeral and into the Root River. Mrs. Christine Pampuch , in northern Wisconsin into skat- Legislators Home, the clocked by police radar. tary. nona Rt. 1, told police that her Rev, Robert Villwock REGGIO EMILIA, Italy (AP) ing rinks. ST. PAUL (AP) - This will , Chatfield The Weather Bureau reported car was struck while parked Presbyterian Church , officiat- — Fog blanketed part of Italy 's in ¦ a service station parking be a busy week for legislative eight inches of snow pelted Wau- and political groups; ing, Burial will be in Orion new Superhighway of the Sun lot at 150 E. 3rd St. between Center Cemetery. Former Winonan sau. In Superior three inches Four legislative groups meet Sunday night and more than 1O0 Winonan Hurt fell to push the accumulate^ Friday at 11 p.m. and Satur- Friends: may call at the fune- cars piled up in a chain of col- Firecracker day at 4 a.m. The other driver at the Capitol Friday and Satur- Named to Federa l snow depth in that winter-bound day, Members of the Governor's ral home tonight after 7. There lisions. Thirty-five persons wer« city to 17 inches by early today. did not identify himself. Dam- will be no reviewal. Injured. age was $25 to right front of Commission on Reapportion- On Highway 76 Land Bank Post The snow diminished to flur- ment will meet three times, and Breaks Window ries Sunday night throughout the Cisewski car. • Norman F. Kohlhepp, 42, 713 -— Goodwin A. the State Republican Central ST. PAUL . . ' the state as the storm swept Wilson St., ' received severe Kjos, a former Winona resident, New Year s Eve vandalism Committee meets Friday night Winon a eastward toward New York and bruises when he was thrown has been elected secretary and and skaters on Lake and Saturday in Minneaoplis. from his .car Sunday night as were on the mind of Assistant New England. ' , assistant to the president of The Please Don t One of the major sessions the vehicle spun out of control Federal Land Bank of St. Paul . Police Chief Marvin A. Meier THE STREAMS of traffic on icy Highway 76 six miles today. could he Saturday's meeting of As an appraiser for the St. headed north on U.S. Highway the Senate Reapportionment south of Witoka. said,that someone had Paul bank , Kjos lived in Winona Meier 41 to Green Bay for the Packers' Cover Your Committee. Tenor of the meet- Kohlhepp was driving .south on he be- thrown a "cherry bomb" onto victory over Cleveland were The Peace Corps (he highway about 7:45 p.m. from 1942 to 1959 when ing could foretell whether there came assistant chief reviewing the side doorstep of the Tru- slowed to a crawl by slippery will be any meeting of the minds when he Wt control on a slight _ man .J. Hickethier home, 735 roads Sunday. Among the strug- Fire Hydrant curve to the left , according to appraiser o r between Conservative lawmak- isn't looking f the St. Paul Lake Blvd., on New Year's Eve. gling vehicles was the bus car- Would you like to see firemen ers and Gov. Karl Rolvaag over Ihe accident report, Blowing Glass in the Hickethier's side rying the Browns his vision, ; bank, In 19B3 he from their spend precious minutes digging calling a special session. snow had obscured door was broken by the blast. Appleton motel (0 their date for Superman. it was noted ; and the road sur- was named as- out the hydrant on your corner The Senate Civil Administra- sistant vice Mrs. llickethicr reported the in- with defeat. It took 90 minutes to while your house is in flames? tion committees meet Friday face wns icy, a.m., make Ihe 25-mile trip. skidded president and cident Saturday at 12:0fi Acting Fire Chief Ervin R. to quiz the Conservation De- The Kohlhepp vehicle investigation is Traffic was backed up for six into a row of guard posts at the chief appraiser. and the police Laufenburger thinks he knows partment about plans for reor- continuing, Meier said. miles at. the south entrance of highway's west shoulder , snap- For the past 1(1 the answer to that one, and he ganization and proposals for months , K j o s Noting that skaters have be- the Butte des Moils bridge at new federal aid projects. ping off six , then swerved 100 Oshkosh asked Winona homeowners to ' highway has served as gun to use Lake Winon a al- where U.S. 41 narrows prevent a scene like feet ncrns-s^'thc and from four to two lanes. The jam the one traveled 50 feet on the eastern assistant vice ready, Meier said lhat the park- described above by taking a lit- Also meeting Friday In an In- to rest president and recreation department hns not was thinner after tlie game. terim commission on govern- shoulder before coming I Wisconsin highway officials tle extra care when shoveling in the northbound lane facing regional miuinn- yet decided ice is thick enough sidewalks. mental immunity, studying the Kjos cr for North- to permit opening ol their rinks reported highways were slippery question of whether school dis- the way it had come. north of a line from Prairie du Hydrants located on street The Winona mnn suffered se- western Minnesota and North on the lake. ' coiners are in a p tricts should remain immune Chien lo Green Bay. lace where from negligence suits after an vere bruises after being t hrown Dakota. A park official snid today it is very handy to pile snow , that ice on the lake i.s 7-inches existing law expires in 1%8. from the car but was not hos- Mr, and Mrs. Kjos have one Till. WKATHKR niiif _. ii re- Laufenburger said . However , a pitalized , Damage lo fmnl and son. thick , Skaters can use the lake A third Friday session ported seven inches of snow fell snow-covered hydrant is hard Involves a I_eRislntive Research rear , right and loft sides and The St, Paul bank presently nl I heir own risk , the official in Eau Claire Sulidny and six in to locate and hard to dig out underside of the car wos esti- serves more than 5(1,000 farm- snid , bill should keep near Committee look at possible dup- La Crosse, Green Bay had five when a fire occurs. licating Inspections, by the stale mated nl. .$750, ers and ranchers wilh more shore. and Park Falls four, Laufenburger hopes Winonans Patrolman Oscar 11. than $5:_fl million of Tbe park department regards departments of health and agri- Highway farm moil- Highs Sunday ran Red from 22 will agree with him that, it is culture. Krenzko investigated with the gage credit in the slates of an ice depth of eight inches as at Park Falls to 40 in Milwau- worth tho time to pile snow assistance of Winona County North Dakota , Minnesota , Wis- desirable before its rinks are kee. elsewhere so that his men will Sheriff's Deputies Elroy Balk consin and Michigan , opened. This i.s partially true not have to lose any time in and Vernon L. Spitzer, because the department must fighting a possibly disastrous put its graders you, Children's Nutrition on the Ice to home. fire . lust little old remove the snow covering. First Lake City Thai Border Tree Pickup Lessons to Beg O Ths Peacfl Corps. m${ Wabasha in pening of the city rinks mny £/r !S*>* \ take place Tuesday, the offici- Baby Born to FACES SPEEDING CHARGE Washington. D, C. 20525 WABASHA , Minn, -- Wabasha At Caledonia Jan. 13 al snid. Gerald Wegman , 18, St. J^f^Jy ^^^LW\ Christmas CALEDONIA , Minn , - A se- .Jaycees will pick up Raymond LaPortes Charles , was charged with Incident ? Please tend me Information l^KfssVyjs - trees Sunday. People who want ries of six nutrition lessons will speeding 70 m.p.h. in a 55 zone D Please jend mo an application i IWVVAIO COUNTY ATLAS LAKE CITY , Minn. (Special) BANGKOK , Thailand (AP) - ^j_W^yy ^ \ trees disposed of should have be given in January and Febru- on U.S. 14 between Uticn and Thai border police charged to- them on boulevards by 1 p.m. ary for liomcma'/tcr.s with young ALMA , Wis , (Special) - Work —• A 5-pound , lii '.i-oiinci! girl St , Charles Sunday at 10:30 has begun 10(50 day that Cambodian troops Name The fire department will super- children, The first class will be on gathering infor- was the first baby of nt p.m., Sheriff George L. Fort . \ mation for a Buffalo County at- Lake City Municipal Hospital. fired mortar shells and machine i vise burning the trees at ll p.m. Jan. IM at the Caledonia State snid today. Wegman is sched- guns into two Thai villageu Address j las for distribution early next She wns born at 5:32 a.m, Sat- uled to appear in Goodview jus- at the old dump grounds. Bank , beginning at ll p.m. near the border , killing one vil- summer, Title Atlas Co., Min- urday, tice court Wednesday nt 4 p,m. neapolis, is the publisher. About She was Rae Ann , daughter of to answer the charge, lager. c». . 1,00(1 pictures of peop Mr, and Mrs. IUiymond Ln- The police fcnid the attack le nnd " Stflf e Zip I WINONA LODGE NO. 18 A.F. A A.M, places In the county will be Porte, nnd Is their first child. MRS. LUECK iLL was made Sunday nnd (ho Code m 11 included. Maps now being re- Mrs, LnPorte I.s the former Mrs. Paul Lueck , Ln Crosse, Cnmtiodinns withdrew after fir- (£k Second 1 PihU»titd ai • pDOhc !•»>.« In tcmp*n\tnn'with )h# A>ti/ *ti\tlng,C4tincU, j 1 A Work In the Degree vised have not been adjusted in Knlhy Brady, daughter of Mr , a former Winonn resident, has ing 100 mortar shells. Tuesday, Jan. 4, 7:30 o' clock I tbe county in 54 years, the pub- and Mrs, William Brady, Ar- been transferred from Grand- Cambodia charged Inst week §/wC ™ , * Rofnuhnumls HOWARD KELLER , W.M, , lisher. ..ay. The lnt .1 atlas of the kansfiw , Wis, The paternal view Hospital , Ln Oos.se, lo St, thai 200 Thai Iroops attacked 9 | counly wns published in 1930. grandparents aro dead. Mary's Hospital. Rochest er. tho Cambodian post of Osmnch, n TheyMI Do It Every Time By Jimrnie Hatld Lanesboro Sons Pepin Involved Busy Building Elect Hprthouse; gidjappsM Year Expected Install Thursday In MD1 Program four-coun- LANESBORO, Minn. (Special) DURAND, Wis.— A — Officers of Heimbygda Sons ty program, to relieve unemploy- Fearless Forecasts Af Independence of Norway Lodge 376, Lanes- ment through the federal Man- boro, will be installed Thurs- power Develppment and Train- . INDEPENDENCE, Wis, (Spe- '' v day. ;• . . v\ - ing Act has been started in cial) — The year 1965 brought were: Olaf Nort- '66 Re-elected Western W } s c p n sin. Pepin, Announced¦ ¦; for little change in the business- .ary' Berni Bre.ni- ¦X X. .X X ' "" ¦ ' 7. . .;< -By EARL ; WILSON - - ' :¦ house. president; . ea of Independence; However,, seth, vice president; Gordon Pierce, Dunn and St. Croix Here I come with my personally guaranteed NEv7 YORK -- a large amount of building is in Larson, financial secretary; Or- counties are involved. Fearless Forecasts for 1966. Hanson counselor; Mrs. Thomas Koop, vice president as the news of Princess sight for the coming year. vis , : A sensational announcement as big Marion McDowell, inner guard ; in charge of personnel for MargaretCarrying Tony Armstrong-Jones will be made in NY A hew parochial school will Clarence Larson, : outer Doughboy Industries, New Rich- skating companion (un- Mrs. about a world-famous lady and ber ice be built by Ss. Peter & Paul's guard, and Mrs. Lloyd Larson, mond, is chairman of an advi- less they cool it). ; , , Catholic Church on which low sory committee to the program. ¦' ¦ Quarter Jan. 18 and dp musician; Jayne Mansfield'll open at the Latin bids were $469,207. Completion are; Mrs. Nort- George L. Oncken, Durand, a strip — but then doesn't she New officers is expected by the end of this hoiise, secretary; Miss Mabel Pepin County agent; is a mem- always? year. secretary; Mrs. ber of the committee. Taylor and Richard Bur- Rose, assistant Liz Independence Medical Devel- Mabel Jacofcsori , treasurer; An organizational m e e t ing ton have to start '66 being pre- opment Corporation (IMP) is social di- was "ield for the committee at ' ... Town of Arcadia trM^crbss-exiamined in SOtfa's Mrs. Esther Shattuck , building a factory on which it rector; Mrs. Obert Garness, First National Bank, Baldwin. $25,000,009 suit charging that has a lease-purchase agreement The U.S. Secretary of Labor, the headlines from Rome about marshal; - Mrs Herbert Wiste, Up with Arcadia Manufacturing, assistant marshal, and Marion W. Willard Wirtz, indicates ha Valuation Eddie Fisher hurt "Cleopatra." Inc. The structural steel arrived three will sign contracts for job train- The quizzing starts in LA Jan. McDowell, trustee for last week and construction is .years.' ¦' ' ing with employers, trade asso- - ' • ' ¦ ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ' 5 — though the Burtons want ¦ •¦ "¦- - ¦ expected tb start Wednesday. . -, . . ciations, unions, and private and More Than Twice to go to Oxford Jan. 15 for Construction of several homes public agencies in this part of ARCADIA, Wis. — Town of 'M)r. Faustus." has started. Adolph Sonsalla the state ' Liz and Burton may do a and Laiiry Kampa are building Persons interested in improv- Arcadia's tax roll this year is poetry reading in August at Whitehall to Pick based on assessed valuations in the Kampa Addition. Joseph ing their skills or acquiring new Forest Hills Music Festival for Abrahamson and Richard Lana- skills should register with the jnore than double the valuation Mike Todd Jr. . and Harry han have started; building near state employment service in Eau . for the prior year. X . Bloomfield . . . also a bi§| the golf course on Highway Five Officers Claire, where interviews and Under reassessment ordered musical narration at Lewisohn BiiinHjsiiS 121.. ' . aptitude tests will be provided. Adult Everting School WHITEHALL, Wis. . (Special) by the state Department of Tax- stadium, same month. Three homes were built in By the middle of 1966 some ± —Five Whitehall city officers nationally, could ation, 4he new 1965 taxroll is FRANK SINATRA. Warrfen 1965 David Wozney arid Al will be elected at the nonparti- 400,000 persons, Kulig in the Kampa addition and be training for new work, it is based on an assessment of $8,- Beatty and Hugh O'Brian will san spring election April 5 — a , NOT get married . . . Johnny Registration Begins Everett Wozney on Highway 93 estimated. Federal funds will 048,489. In 1964, the assessment just city mayor, three alderman and as- pay training costs and allow-, Cafson'll sit in the same "To- being; survival: preparedness, blue- south of the limits. sessor. "' . was under $4 million, according Registrations are taken ances in some cases. chair in Jan; -67 (maybe , ' ¦ night" this week for 34 adults evening print reading and drafting, ma- The two-year terms of Lester ' ¦ ¦ to Emil: Pierzina, clerk! '68). NBC's so gen- chine shop practice and steam even Jan. I'm wonderingSB how good our school classes that will be offer- Eau Galle Dam Brennom, mayor, arid Wayne ; Previously the town was as- eroii$, he can't quit . . . Julie irie mories are, particularly power engineering. Luke; assessor, will expire in sessed at less than 50 percent of ed hi the Winona Area Vocation- Fillmore Co. Board will positively win the¦ ¦ Oscar when the younger generation Tuesday — Refresher typing, the spring. Aldermen terms real and true value. This year (Christie or Andrews) .- . • , .We aggravates us by not doing a al-Technical School for the win- advanced sewing, Norwegian Hearing Slated are for four years. Aldermen . PRESTON, Minn. — The Fill- it was assessed at 106 percent Taureans (April 21-May 20) will good job of cleaning their ter term beginning next Mon- speech. , more County Board of Commis- really y EAU GALLEcWjs^;A hear- whose terras are expiring are of real and true value by a have sensational success in love rooms, running errands, or ful- - ':, O, Rice, 2nd Ward ; Charles sioners will open bids- Tuesday . team sent by the district supers day. ; v . Tuesday and Thursday - T Of- ing will be conducted by the D- and finance in '66 but should filling ah assignment chore- Thomas W. Raine, vocational fice machines for high school Johnson , 3rd Ward , and Stanley afternoon for the official paper visor of assessments following be careful about punching po- ' Public Service Commission at and publication of the delin- wise, school director , said that * per- credit, English 12, for high Eau Claire Jan. 26 at 9 a.m. on Nelsestuen, 1st Ward. Nelses- a petition for reassessment and licemen. Mom and Dad get pretty up- tuen is serving by appoint- quent tax list and financial public hearing. sons may register for a course school .credit, the petition of Northern States ; a Jack Carter's line, "Ameri- set when Jane fails to hang up by calling the vocational office ment to fill the unexpired term statement, and on supplying gas- -" John O. Olson, treasurer, will ca is the land of the free and Wednesday — Beginning typ- Power Co. for permission to oline, diesel .fuel ' her clothes and straighten her at Senior High School or by at- ing, office machines/ refresher , of the late Selmer Galstad.; and furnace begin collecting taxes Jan. 11, the homo," uttered at the room, or if Junior takes forever transfer the Eau Galle dam to oil to'Storage tanks, at the eight He said the total tax roll this tending the first class' meeting; shorthand, intermediate sewing, Dunn County. The hydroelectric Holdover aldermen are Wil- Americana Royal Box, will be- to paint the fence. "Seems the lie Johnson, 1st; No man Fris- county v maintenance shops in I- year is $270,880.46 — higher than ' ' , generally knitting (continuation of fall sec- facility hasn't been operated . the county. come a classic . .. - . . so will least you could do," we; yell COURSE FEES tion), classroom driver training, ke, ; 2nd, and Eyvind Petersen, the 1964 tax roll of $239,633.16. Marlene, the beautiful French at them, "is to take care of are about $5 although some are regularly since 1961. ¦ making decoys, preparing for 3rd. Alton E. Bergh serves as w"«—-wwwwwwwwwwww , Olson will collect taxes at the busteroo with him .- ." •'.' . The your own things." Or, "Did you higher, among them a $25 fee » " State Bank of Arcadia every U.S. citizenship, upholstering, clerk-treasurer by appointment. best business -in the world will sweep the kitchen floor like you for behind-the-wheel driver Filings for city offices opened Tuesday ahd Thursday from 9 ; training. ¦ "; basic welding, outbroad motor Strii m Par ish Worke r be the battery business. (Cheez, were told?" • " repair,, refrigeration and air Nov, 26 and will close Jan. 25. a.m. to 3 pint, during January ; Now I'm not going to suggest i I got 5 radios for Christmas!) Course offerings are' in five conditioning, Injured Near Hudson No one has filed to date. [ More New every 'Tuesday and Thursday "White Jokes" will replace that we shouldn't express some main categories; B u s i n es s, the first two weeks in Febru- Polish and Italian gags. Sam- concern for the apparent lack of home economics, general inter- : Thursday — Upholstery. STRUM, Wis. (Special)-JVIiss PATIENTS FROM DODGE ary, every day the last two : and ple: At the Sammy Davis responsibility the younger gen- est and civic education , trade To be arranged .— Behind the- Marlene Hangi, parish worker at DODGE, Wis. (Special ) — Select ions j weeks in February. eration manifests in what it fails wheel driver training, fireman- Strum Lutheran Church , was in- Marcel Thomas has returned I "Man Called Adam" film set, and industrial and agriculture. ¦ ¦¦: ' ¦ ¦ ¦' ' Personal property taxes are 'posted': a dressing to do. It's just that I also be- ship. ' ¦: ' . , ; '. jured when her car went out of home after undergoing surg«ry I ON SCOPJTONE :. .« payable in full in Feb. 28. Half somebody . : Courses and the days 6h which room sign: "Peter Lawford; lieve there is merit in recalling they will be offered are: control Sunday morning near at St. Joseph's Hospital, Arcad- the real estate tax may be post- years as teen-agers, for THE ADULT agriculture Hudson, Wis. ; White Actor." ; our own classes will be in 'farm ia. . Mrs, August Kukowski .was poned to July 31 if half is paid it seems we may save ourselves Monday — Beginning sewing, and She was returning here from T by Feb. 28. ; beginning knitting, caning fur- home analysis, farm crops and a recent medical patient there. THE NEW BAR in the Pal- some worry and concern by re- Minneapolis to be present for Lawrence Toshner was a recent [ LAHC S Bar I ace Theater lobby will become membering back when. niture, painting for pleasure^ soilSj advanced farm manage- 179 EAST ment and other short courses. Sunday school when a car pass- medical patient at St. Francis j THIRD j at B'way hot spot as Gweii Ver- ed her. .The cloud of new-fallen IN MY CAslgDf seem to hear Information about the agricul- Hospital, La Crosse. , . WIAAAAAJUUUIAJUtAJIiULAJt! Lighting Judged don's "Sweet Charity" be- snow whipped up by the vehicle comes a hot ticket and Jimmy my dead Mother saying through ture courses and registration in- the years, "I can't ask that boy formation may be obtained by blinded her and she ran into the At Spring Grove Nederlander of Detroit, new Red China Is highway; railing. She was taken owner of the Palace, becomes to do a thing." Seems she was calling the vocational agricul- Notice to W/ftpna and SPRING GROVE, Minn - duly provoked to say su*h a ture office at the high school. to the Hudson hospital. Her car a hot entrepreneur .;. . Cary was badly damaged. ' Mary; Ann's Floral and thing, for as a lad, I lacked " Gift Most of the courses will run ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦; x yArea • . Friends Grant'll father a dtr. . . . Dick , • Shop, Caledonia, judged the Gregory, running; for Mayor of drive to diligently fulfill the Blocking Truce for 20 hours and a. majority of Christmas lighting contest spon- Chicago, hoping to do a Buck- chores iny folks assigned me to, the class sessions will be from STRUM WOMAN HURT sored by the Spring Grove Gar- ley, will use as his mgr. Tim often dreading the work and 7 to 9 p.m. Home economcis STRUM,- Wis. . (Special) - The Chateau Supper Club den Club and awarded first, Boxer, who just won $10,000 from then doing half a job when I Zablocki Savi class sessions will be from 7 to Mrs, Chester Peterson feD the IN LA CROSSE second and third prizes, respec- did get at it. I certainly haven't full length, of the basement Dick in a lawsuit for back press MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) - 9:30 p.m. and trade and indus- IS NOW CLOSED FOR OUR ANNUAL VACATION. tively, in three categories: agent pay. any hostility today for haying trial courses will be from 7 ot stair's in her home , Saturday carry, Government officials of Com- WILL REOPEN AGAIN THURSDAY, JAN. 27 Religions — Mr. and Mrs. Miroi Hines, the very, very been expected to in a munist Poland report that North 9 or 10 p.m. morning and received fractures Mr. and Mrs. my share of the load. It's Oscar Overhaug, funny "Funny Girl ," will be- sense, Viet Nam is ready to negotiate No fees are charged for the of both wrists. She was takeri to We Wish To Thank You For Your Continued Patronage Angus Ekern, aiid Mr. and Mrs. come heroine of a new comedy- just that I know very well I courses in preparing for citizen- Osseo Area Hospital, where and Look Forward To Seeing You When We ¦ failed to always do the best I a truce in the Vietnamese Reopen Ernest Ellingson. Commercial lovers' cult which'll have a fighting, Rep. Clement ship or for survival prepared- stitches also were required for — Onsgard store, Vick' , could. J. Za- ' ¦ s store badge consisting only of big blocki, D-Wis., says. . ness. .' . a cut on her head. and the lumber yard. Non- teeth . ;¦'..- ' The new "Art" school Grownups have a way of ex- religious — Mr. and Mrs. Gor- in the U.S. will be named "Non- pecting youngsters to fit the Zablock i said Sunday night don F-itel, Mr. and Mrs. Art" ., . Barbara Harris will image of the ideal, rather than he believed that the North Viet- Burnell Onsgard, and Mr. and become the successor to Judy to react according to the norm; namese were being blocked Mrs. Grant Ingvalson.. Honor- Holliday in Hollywood . . . Peo- Perhaps we could get more from- seeking a settlement by able mention iii this category ple will gradually learn from help, understanding, and even Red China. He is chairman of went to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence my Gorgeous Mother-in-Law and perfection from the up and com- the House Foreign Affairs' Far Bjorlo. Dinty. Moore's that you gotta ing teen-agers if we shared our East and Pacific subcommittee put some sugar in hamburger, thoughts, as well as work with which deals with Vietnamese and beans taste better with them. If two or more adults matters, cranberry sauce or on custard have a task to perform , they dion Malinovsky. pie ! (Great place for beans, you usually divide the work. Each m^iH beanophiles : TheTrattoria). takes a share and often the load Zablocki talked with Polish NITES: 7:00-9:10 TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: A is lightened by friendly chit- leaders on a recent visit to that ABOUT THE WEATHER? local store sells birthday can- chat. Too often the kids are told nation »

¦ A fellow said his doctor for- ate now. It is Peking that is : j r . WRIWPtOOUCtlBH ' *$ z IT'S EASY to be critical, but ^ bade him to smoke. The doc it takes some human Insight to causing the trouble. " added, And since you're quit- develop that know how that de- ting, I'll give you $3 for your mands the youngsters to fulfill ] .fSBfcu ! gold lighter." That's earl , bro- their duties and at the same Preston Scholarshi ps I ther. ¦ timo cause them to want to do PRESTON, Minn. — Mr, their share. If a child is thought- and STRUM l.USINF.SSMI-N Mrs. Thomas D, Differ!, owners less, careless, and a little inclin- of Thompson Abst ract Co,, Pres- STRUM , Wis. (Special) -- ed to shirk responsibility, be ton , announced they 3333 will again Members of Strum Commercial concerned and try to correct award $500 in scholarships to 24 HOURS OF EVERY DAY, THE VERY LATEST WINONA AREA Club, meeting Wednesday night him , but don't despair. Look at 1966 graduating seniors , of Fill- in the new community hall will your own past, and chances are more County high schools. Two ^WIR LORD discuss a new ranch-style house you 'll discover you yourself WEATHER FORECAST IS AT THE TIP OF ¦¦ITECHNICOLOR' PANAVISIOH' ¦¦¦ scholarships of $250 each will YOUR DIALING FINGER. the club Is building on Spruce were much the same , be awarded to two graduating Street and will select a nomina- here's a closing thought. STARTS WED.! And seniors .selected hy the school JUST DIAL THE WEATHER NUMBER . . . 3333 ting committee for 1966 officers. When you are out of sympathy superintendents according to Officers will be elected at tho with thc young, then your worth rules established by I hem, Ap- meeting to February succeed in this world is over, plications for the scholarshi ps William Amundson , president; should be made to your local Bernard Campbell , secretary , superintendent , The 1065 schol- and Richard Brian , treasurer. Two Spring Grove NITES: 7:15-9:10 arships went to Marilyn Coe, BlHl? Chatfield , 75t-iSt-MC now attending Mat}- AND WINONA DAILY NEWS Men Get Plaques knto Stale College, and Normnn SPRING GROVE Minn,-Two MONOA"O JANUARY 3, IMA . Glllund , Canton , student nl. Wi- | SEE IT NOW : 1 . members of the Spring Grove nona Stale College. VOLUME 110, NO, V Commercial Club were honored for civic service at the Decem- HEAR "WINDOW ON "LOU Published.dally except Saturday ond Hol- THE WEATHER," PRESENTED ¦ I^ SljilfmRNATIONM idays by Rapublkin and Hirald Publish- ber meeting, Preston ing Company, 601 Pranklln St., Winona, Masons Elect Minn. Presented plaques were Leo- nard Sknalen , who becomes a PRESTON , Minn. - Installa- 30 TIMES EACH SUBSCRIPTION RATES , tion of officers of Preston WEEK ON YOUR RADIO Slnols Copy — 10c Dally, 15c Junday partner in the Harmony State Ma- Bank the first of the year, and sonic lodge will be Jan. 11. Delivered by Carrlar— Par Wtek SO crnts Elected recently 5] Gordon Goodno , sales repre- were : Thomas D 26 weeki J12.71 , weekt 135.50 Kllbury, master; Vernon Spol- AT 12-THREE-OH sentative of hardware nnd ap- GDL By mall ilrlctly In advance; paper atop, hnufi, senior warden; Maynard pliances for Midland Coopera- WD IHBJgHfifflMK ped on ixplrallon data. IO tives, Inc. ln Wisconsin. Undorbakke, junior warden ; In Fillmore. Houslon, Olmsted, Winona, W. A. Garratt , treasurer; Moppy Wabasha, Huft'ilo, Jackson, Pepin and Trempealeau coyntles nnd armed lorqu HARMONY GRADUATK Anderson , secretary, and Dr. personnel In lha continental United ittlesi HARMONY , Minn. — Miss K, Ci. Dunwell , trustee for throe or oveiioas with APO or FPO addrssses; Mary E. Hanson daughter of I year ,. ,, $.17 .00 3 months .,., 13,50 , years. 6 months .6,30 I month 11.33 Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Hanson , Harmony, VIKING SKI CLUB All other subscriptions! wns graduated in De- I month .... Jl.dO 3 months .,., i<,23 comber from an accounting STRUM , Wis, - The Viking « months .,, 16,00 I year 113.00 Ski Club will pm'-mm i « ¦ ; m n , ¦ «w — ¦ '' - course at the Minnesota School meet Tuesday nt land chano* ot address, polices, undeliv- of Buslnefl.., Minneapolis. A 8 p,m. in tho new village office ered coplss, subscription orders and other graduate of Harmony High here, The club lias purchased KWNO BETTY DAVIS AS mall Hems to Winona Dnlly Nayvs. P.0 DoK ?0, Winona, Minn., 55987 , School , .she attended Luther the low formerly owned by the GOOD LISTENING . .. MORNING, NOON ,.. AND "THE NANNY" College, Decorah , Iowa , before Mondovi Ski Club. It is on the NIGHTTIME, TOO! COMING SOON • Second clan (railage paid at Winona, • Minn. enrolling in the business course. I Seymour Hollo farm. Group Dynamics, will organize Father, 102y and Son Meeting oh Sewage at 7 p;.m. today. ., Sign Up for Medicare Fillmore County District Schedule WSC Offering ¦ ' Gthers::- Politics, Sociology 413G Social Pilot Program Disorganization, Geography Sci- At Nelson Town Hall WEDNESDAY EVENING ¦ — DURAND, Wis. — A Durand ence 320G Anglo-AmericfflrGech ¦ i mm •' Business 241 Accounting, Busi- 1 1mWPm^^^^^^^*' mmW^^*^^*^*^ native and his son were among NELSON, Wis. . ' An infor- graphy, Science 410G, Polymer '^^|- A i k^__\ *C •* __r*j_l • B____L .( — 24 ' . ' mwmmy^ ^mmm^mmm^mmmi^mmwkmm^-w. < the first to sign fox1 Medicare Pays $2.7 Million mational meeting will be held Saturday; ness 203 Principles of Econom- Chemistry. Being Studied at the social security office at next week Monday at 8 p.m. ics, Business . 415 Marketing, Business 341G Accounting, Psy- SAlURDAY MORNING — Medford Ore. at Nelson Town Hall to discuss AUTQ PROTECTION , chology 312G Mental Health, Education 550 Comparative Ed- They were William C. Bearss; To Taxing Units possibilities of developing a sani- Night Classes ucation, Psychology 566 Coun- • Bodily »n|ury Liability PRESTON, Minn. — Fillmore tary sewage district in the Nel- A total of 24 night and Satur- Psychology 576 Statistics TI, Art Property Damage Liability At La Crescent who will be 102 Thursday, and 519 Art History Ancient World seling Procedures, Psychology : • ; Howard P. Bearss, Grants Pass. County's tax settlement and ap- son area. day morning classes will be 414G Psychology of Mental Re- • Medical Payments ] .LA CRESCENT, Minn. Eugene Henzel, Wisconsin and Egypt, Industrial Arts 354 $1,000 Accidental Death j (Spe- The elder Bearss presented portionment of State tax monies available at Winona State Col- Princi tardation, Art 420 Pottery, His- • cial) — The La Crescent board State Health Department; Se- ples of Safety Education, Uninsured Motorists ; proof he was born Jan. 6, 1864, lege during the winter quarters, Industrial Arts 109 Introduction tory 332G U.S. Diplomacy in • of education has' authorized ap- to the various treasuries shar- ward Neilson, Farmers Home All For at Durand, so he'll be 102. He according to Dr. F. L. Van Al- to Industrial Arts, in 20th Century, Political Sci- plications forjederal aid under has Uved more than 50 years in ing in the settlement has been Administration, and an engin- ence 328G Public Administra- A the. Elementary and Secondary the Rogue River Valley* made by the county auditor, eer will present the informa- stine, director of graduate edu- English 301 Amerclan Novel, tion and Sociology 312G The j n, ' $3.00 ' ' ' Ar ¦ ¦ ¦ '' ' Education Act ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ " tion. \ : cation. Physical Education 541 Current of 1965 which if Thelma M. Ibach, and treasur- Family. Can You Get It ' approved , will establish the first All residents of the communi- Some of the courses are for Literature and Research in phy- ¦ j er, Clayton E. Fishbauer , eJementary counseling arid guid- Blacktopping Job ty are invited. The meeting is both graduate and undergrad- sical education, History 351G Advancing cities are gobbling | PHILIP BAUMANN AGENCY ! ance program in Minnesotia un- The settlement amounted to sponsored by the Nelson town uate credit Hispanic World 1492-1825, Politi- up the nation's farmlands at a | «01 Main — Phone 2849 der this law, Set at Spring Grove board. One course Psychology 405G ¦ j according¦ to Supt. $2,760,297 and consisted of $1,- , cal Science 410 G Intenational rate of a million acres year. ^WMy^^^WWN ^VWM ^^^^ vtMf ^ William Stetzler* : SPRING GROVE, Minn. — 384,539 collected by the county, Present plans call for begin- Main Street, from the inter- $1,368,681 in state aids and ap- ning a guidance program in the section of 3rd Avenue SW to portionments, and $7,076 in liq- elementary school in the fall of the intersection of 4th Avenue uor taxes which went to town- 1966, which would be the sec- SE, will be blacktopped from ships. ' : ond such program to be estab- curb to curb with hot mix over v The distribution of the settle- lished in the state and the first the .pavement, the project to ments was as follows:' State, £n a school the size of La Cres- be completed by July 1, ac- $80,116 ; county, $385,360; cities cent, Stetzler said. cording; to Charles Burrill, Rb- and villages, $154,729; town- chester dishict engineer with , $148,083, including liquor THE STATE Department . ships of the state Department of High- takes; schools, $1,978,919, con- Education and the guidance de- ways." .:; ;;. 238 iii county partment of sisting of $610, Winona State Col- taxes and $1,368,681 in state lege have bordering both contacted school with boards of each aids, and power lines, $13,077. officials with a desire to use school district for the purpose of it as a pilot The apportionment to the program . for ele- giving members an opportunity county waS distributed as fol- mentary schools throughout to inspect La Crescent High 347, Minnesota. School facilities at their leisure lows: $61,045, revenue; $145, Title 1 programs and discuss \ and mutually ex- roads and bridges; $133,i38| wel- planned by : fare; $11,627, county bonds; the district would be available plore the direction which future Jot only to students relations between the local and $15,512, county tuition; $5,813, in the pub- county fair; $10,813, county lic elementary but Crucifixion the outlying districts will take. «lementary school retirement, and $2,062, penalties as well. LLOYD L. Daxbnry Jr., Cale- and costs. Apportionments to Stetzler said district the is donia, district attorney, was the 13 incorporated cities and eligible for approximately $32- - 000 under Title 1 directed to complete the dis- villages and their school dis- of the act, trict' application for a maxi- ' ': arid about $2 per pupil for li- s . tricts: ;. mum effort loan for construc- Munlclpalltlsi VJIIagi School ______¦ ______H__H ^____H brary materials and services . ______^______H ______H ^______H______H _____¦¦ tion of the addition which will $387,573 under Title 2: . v . Spring Valley ...... tU.Ali ^______r ^_____ ra ______T a___l ¦__¦ be built to the school the next Preston ...... 2V,58< 578.528 K ¦ Rushford ...... 6,78_ V 324,448 Title 1 funds are intended to This will be pre- ¦' 948 ¦ ^^^^K_. 1^H^^^______. school year. Harmony ...... 14,670 . 263, ^^^^^^^^ B ^^^^^ H ' ^______V ______! ^______^______™ . ^_____^______H Increase services to education- sented for action by the state Lanesboro . .. _ .: 19,551 ., 226,099 II B^ H all Chatfield ...... 17,548 . 71,293 y disadvantaged children; loan committee Jan. 3. Wykoff ...... ;.... 12,769 145,144 In addition to an elementary Supt. Stetzler was dfcected to Mabel 5,605 • 137,501 ' Canton ...... 3,676 " v 97,577 ___¦ ______¦ counseling and guidance pro- arrange a meeting between the Fountain ...... 3,518 . ?, ^Kmm W^* ^^^L\H \m\ gram, the La Crescent board board and architects to review Peterson ...... ;,. 1,378 75,590 ^ Ostrander 1,923 • plans a developmental reading plans for the $450,000 addition. Whalan . :...... ,.; 278. . •' . , .;. ?¦ ______^ . program at the junior high The board acted to correct •Founta in l» part of Preston school i A ^u______¦ ______H ? ____¦ district, Ostrander part : of LeRoy; and ______H ______! ______¦ ______¦ ¦ H school level ; expanding and ex- overcrowded conditions Ln Whalan part, r.f Lanesboro. . . ' . .. ' . tending through the summer grades 2-3 in the elementary the present remedial reading school, authorizing the division ^^ program at the elementary lev- of each grade into three sec- Trempealeau^ Buffalo el; will consider the establish- tions each. ment of remedial summer pro- Grade 3 will open Monday TB Patients Increase grams ; in selected academic with three sections arid grade WHITEHALL, Wis. — Tremp- areas, and add a full-time jun- 2 will open Jan. 17 with three ealeau and Buffalo counties ior high school counselor. sections. Mrs. Diane Blake, were among 19 Wisconsin coun- whose husband is a student at STETZLER said that, ties showing an increaise from al- Winona State College* will be 1963 to 1964 in the number of though aimed at the education- the additional third grade teach- patients cared for in Wisconsin ally disadvantaged students and er. The Blakes have moved to tuberculosis sanitoria. paid for entirely by federal La Crescent. funds, the; programs would di- Trempealeau County's total rectly benefit all students. MISS RITA Schwandt, daugh- was 13 in 1964 compared With THERE'S 10 in 1963. There were two new STILL ter of Henry Schwandt, super- I Object and purpose of the elemehtary guidance program intendent of the La Crosse city cases In the county each year. is early Identification and schools, will teach the. third Buffalo County's 1964 total treatment of educational prob- section of grade 2. She plans was three patients hospitalized lems, emotionally disturbed to commute the balance of the for treatment or diagnostic study compared with two in 1963. and physically handicapped year and move to. La Crescent ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ ¦ children, and other conditions by next September. :¦ • which might ultimately result The elementary staff addi- POWER ENGINEERiS in educational retardation and tions give a maximum enroll- The National Association of high school dropouts, Stetzler ment per section of 25 students Power Engineers will meet E said. '•:¦ or less in the first three grades at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Red The board discussed the ad- compared with 36 and 37 before Men's Wigwam. A lunch will be visability of informal meetings the new plan was approved. served.. / ™ I I TO JOIN / JACK'S ©AG/C # ATJ II WARDS'f I r l l l l_ r Vl Haglstewdsfe U. «. TridentifK OUR 1966 / 1 Growing More Popular with Every App ear i Monday, Jan. 3rd j 3 DAYS Thru I Wednesday, Jan. 5th CHRISTMAS I fc k _TI lin ^^ ' ~^~ ^ I IIIK -m' w% Hvl #l If '^KS&B * I i vlUD I ¦ ¦ 11 ¦ X ¦ ¦# \§ '% m&m ' . N-> il % . Jfw Tr \M$k^ ^^^^MmA * q/ * ¦ ' ' ~— BUST VIGNETTE f^^TK^^ ll NATIONAL . • , ' , __.' ' ' 'i|| ' I portrait of | «

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No appointment heceiiary. Xtaf.z2l£& Photographer will bo on duly regular store houn. / »* "V kJ' Complete selection of finlihed photographs to chooie from - not proofs, MSWWM u. i. Tr*™.* SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK1 Limit: one per child, ages 5 week* to 12 years. Bring all tho children. Children' s groups taken 99(J per chiltf. FIRST NATIONAL BANK |H | AnA_U_i ___-_«HU ila lvl Shop Monday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. P [ E >m Tuesday and Wednesday 10-5:30 l______iiV_v ^ v 9 B fl l Thursday and Friday W^_\_mJ_M_w_mmm_i_W *" ^ ^--=— OF WINONA l Wm_W_^0B^^^^ Saturday 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. _\\_ ^^ ^mm^^ ^ Closed tho Sunday After Now Year's MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION * Thoughts at Random ~ TODAY IN WORLD AFFAIRS yy-y l y i/y y^ WASHINGTON CALLING From Editor's Notebook ¦ ' ^^h)^^i$ics -if* ' : > THE ANNOUNCEMEN T that ths Pea- vey ,Co. of Minneapolis is constructing, a grain loading facility connecting Winona's US. Peace Plea Municipal Commercial Harbor with the Happy By DAVID LAWRENCE Rarely firm's elevator here, means that after WASHINGTON — The grandstand -play for ' ¦ is substituting /or Marquis Childs tbho 106 years, Winona again is to become a . -. (William S. White peace in Viet Nam which America is making is on vacation.) grain exporting port. around the world has many risks, the most ' It means that wheat grown in the Da- important of which is the creation of an im- By WILLIAM S, WHITE pression of weakness. For the United States to kotas and corn in this_ area, can come here WASHINGTON — The, lot of a vice-president, like that ; . go begging from capital to capital in the hope be put aboard barges of the policeman of Gilbert and Sullivan, is rarely a happy, by rail and truck to. that some influence wiU; be exerted somewhere ahd taken down the Mississippi , to New Or- one. At times it gets positively grim; and such a time has upon the Communist-controlled government in H. Humphrey. leans, reloaded for India and other parts of now arrived for Vice-President Hubert North Viet. Nam to initiate peace negotiations For nearly a year Humphrey had been having better the world. This could result in a marked requires ex- . is an embarrassing¦ maneuver that luck than had either of his two immediate predecessors, the Port of Winona. : - ;¦ expansion for planation . ., Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard M; Nixon. Arthur It was a dramatic move to send He had, by and large, been allowed to go about his busi- Cargill has extensively developed sim- American ambassador to the Unjted ¦ ' ¦ Goldberg, ness -in relativie freedom .¦:¦ .. . ¦ -. . . .- . • •• ilar facilities at Savage oh the Minnesota Nations, on a special trip to confer with the ' by its own tpwboat fleet. from inspired - rumors . — River supported Pope in Rome. Simultaneously it was announc- he's slipping; he's going To Your Good Health Grain has been similarly loaded at Red ed that Roving Ambassador W. Averell Harri- down; he's in bad at the , man has been talking to the premier of Poland Wing for a number of. years/ White .House, he won't be and to the President of Yugoslavia about pos- has ; the advantage on the ticket the next time Discharges Winona, of course, sible intercession in the Viet Nam situation. All —, that incessantly plagued of at least & two-week earlier opening of this emphasizes that the American government Nixon and Johnson as the navigation, like the corn exporting ports of is in earnest in its quest for peace, No. 2 man. the Tri-Cities downriver. : IT IS RATHER unusual to see a small na- But for Hubert Humphrey, token tion like North Viet Nam standing aloof , while as sooner or later must recall the time too, Only river historians . a powerful adversary sends its envoys around be the fate of all Vice-Pre- Ser/ol/s/y when Winona was the world leading export the world to plead for peace. This could be sidents, the time of com- port for wheat.. Steamboats lined the widely misconstrued as a desperate call by parative peace has now Levee here: waiting to be loaded by -Ne- the United States for a peace that, is equivalent gone. It is not the season to Dear Di*. M o 1 n e r: groes carrying bags of wheat aboard. The to surrender.. be jolly. Within the last few Mrs. E. P . D. wrote of ai ' inland area, , The possible misunderstanding of America's weeks there has been snow- . greenish fluid from her wheat came , from a vast ' ¦ ' The coming of the position is accepted here as a calculated risk.. balling speculation of the breasts. She has had the chiefly by ox teams. . whether a truce . ¦ problem eight months. I and more efficient For what really will count is sort least calculated tp glad- . railrdads, with cheaper, can be arranged at all , Then the conditions or have had this same industry, . den the days of the Vice- transportation, killed this ;, terms "would become separate matters to be President of; the United thing tor 12 years; You . ' ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ '¦ -A^aterborne transportation judged on their merits when finally consuirt- . States. ¦'¦:; ¦'¦, ' ¦:: .. advised her . to see a Barge lines ¦ ' '¦• vast loads and . thou- ¦mated.; NO ONE, so far as this . doctor. modernized to handle THE UNITED STATES, of course, wants ne- ¦ . I know how worried sands of bushels at a time — are now; this columnist has observed, has gotiations to start and an armistice to be for- yet suggested that Humph- Mrs. E.P.D. is;. I've bulk carrier.; v It cheapest . malized. This is the immediate objective. rey is going to be dumped been worried since my [yy y ' ' ,¦' - .:¦ yylyx doesn't matter for the moment that Ho Chi by President Johnson, in : early HOs. P e r h a p s yx itxy /# . * Minh, the Noirth Vietnamese chief , is demanding 1968, as many had predicted someone can help. — ' .' , . IT MAY NOT bo any population explb- that American . troops be withdrawn. from South would , happen to " Johnson - MRS/ G.H.; , , ' the growth .of one person- a day Viet Nam. For obviously, if satisfactory terms Jbhn Kennedy slon but vvhile^ was Breast discharges should oyer a five-year period is nothing to be are arranged, there is nothing that the Ameri- PresHreht and as even more can commanders would like better than to bring be taken seriously, since ashamed Of either. .. ;- : had predicted would happen some of them are a sign of their forces home, to Nixon while Dwight Eis- grave trouble. Others are ; s: population is now 1,876 more Knowing the anxiety of the United States : Winona' enhower was President. not. than iri I960—a gain of 7% percent, which for an armistice or truce, the Communists na- In Humphrey's case the turally will seek to exact pledges in advance Since you have had yours gives the city a total of 26,771. This, figure suggestion is not so much for 12 years, it must be the as to the peace terms. The North Vietnamese . does not include Goodview or other val- THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND that he is ''out" with Pre- benign or innocent type. may feel that they hold the trump cards, espe- suburban ; homes where city sident Johnson — as* of Please stop being fearful. ley areas of cially as American forces are already refrain- which if includ- course, he Is not — as that What causes 3uch dis- families.are how dwelling, ing frpm air attacks on North Viet Nam.; he is out with shadowy charges You doubtless ed, would push the total hear the 30,000 ¦' ¦ considered plasubie that behind the : ¦ :• But it is . , "theys" within the Demo- know that there can be a mark, ' -' ' " . ' ' ";, '.¦' is also under • . scenes, the Hanoi government cratic party itself. Recent leaking of milk after a wom- The crafty hand of Soviet di- The figure of 26,771 is satisfying be- some pressure; polls revealing the scarcely an has Vstopped nursing a plomacy is unquestionably at work trying to surprising conclusion that cause it is the highest in the long history ^^L^ ^^ i ^ i ^ ^ baby. This is whitish. to listen to Mos- - ^ persuade the North Vietnamese Hubert Humphrey is not of the city an indication that Winona is cow rather than to Peiping. now regarded by the wide I.ATER, ORDINARILY at on the move with increased demands for Tough on CabinetMembers public as : an ; inevitable 40 or so but sometimes ear- more living facilities; school expan- IT WOULD, of course, accrue to the advan- , laljor,. ' choice some day for the Pre- lier, a gray or greenish dis- and growing college enrollments. tage of the Soviets , if the North Vietnamese By JACK ANDERSON demic proportions. This is . .opposed by the sion, ; ¦ ¦¦ sidency are being trumpet- charge can appear from thp " ; - ' ¦' ¦ ' ": " " : began to follow their advice and to: pay less ' ¦: (Editor ' s Note: Drew , More than 100 members of established, old-line' banks, : - :- = ¦*¦ :¦ i ' :+ yxxi - ' '- ed most / portentioiisly nipple. This seldom leaks - .* attention to the extremists in Peiping. The Pearson is in the Hol y Congress have visited the which prefer no more com- against , 01' Hubert. , but, but can be expressed Russian government has desired right .along tp ' war zone where they tied TIMES DO change. The St. Pual Pio* Land. During his ab- , petition. Thief most effec- THEY ARE being inter- by gentle pressure. Again, establish better relations with governments in up generals who are sup- tive champion has been the rieer Press has brought to light the^ follow- sence the- column is: preted as proof certain that the color may he yellowish, Southeast Asia on the theory that the Red Chi- ywr itten by his associate posed to be conducting the senator, from Arkansas, the ing notice which was posted in railroad ¦ , 01" Hubert is reading him- and stain . underclothing. ^ nese , are irresponsible and in their cantanker- ¦ Jack Anderson:) war. y '' -y " ¦ embodiment of righteous Stations throughout Minnesota in 1910 \ x self out ' of the company of These discharges are of ous way could bring on a major war which " After a brief exposure to wrath himself, who has turn- Innocent origin. That is to warning girls against the evils of the big WASRINGT - Though all truly good liberals. What would inevitably Involve Ihe Soviet Union. ^. the war, most of the junket- ed his Senate investigators say, they do not represent ¦¦: President Johnson always he actually has done to cities: ; ing congressmen took the loose to poke , into federal serious danger. Thes breast, defends his Cabinet officers bring this about is rarely Santa Claus special (mean- bank failures. of course, is composed of NOTICE—To Young Women and Girls: in public, heaping on the mentioned. To those who ing at the taxpayers' ex- THEY HAVE found traces really, like to know what many s m a 11 secreting IN YEARS GONE BY private in Texas hyperbole to the large cities for work , pense) to such glamorous of underworld money in two glands. Some of these may Po not go he often cuts them up in the Humphrey has done to get unless you are compelled to, If you must Teh Years Ago . > . 1956 shopping centers as : Singa- federal banks and evidence himself into, trouble with the become sealed. They be- privacy of his White House pore, Bangkok Hong Kong, come cysts. Fluid from the go, write at least two weeks in advance to Adolph Spitzer, St. Charles, Winona County ¦ , of political favoritism in left wing of the Democratic office.' cysts can leak but , commissioner from -the 3rd District, was nam- Tokyo and Honolulu. others. With this informa- party;, however ) a ready , or be the Woman's Department, Bureau of La- Only Secretary of Defense expressed; ed chairman of the county board replacing Ray SEN. JOHN McClelian, D- tion ,. McClelian has tried to answer can be given. Then you have bor, St. Paul, or to the Young; Women 's McNamara and Secretary of the type of discharge you 'Kohner:- 'I: Ark., whose stern; righteous prove at public hearings To his ultra-liberal critics Christian Association in the city where you State Rusk ,.the two Cabinet describe. I 'X' Dr. W. Douglas James has been reappointed scowl befits the chairman that Saxon has been reck- Humphrey's, sins are sev- XX -; want to work. members he admires most, The , to the state Board of Dental Examiners by of the Senate Investigating less in handing out federal eral, but only two are re- flow which should seem to have been spared charters. cause Instant concern is a They will obtain for you such a position Gov. Orville Freeman. Committee, has been deemable. One is that he the sharp slash of his He has ignored the testi- dark brown or bloody color. 'tell "you about wages, boarding searching high and low for has faithfully supported the as you ask; tongue. mony that 99 percent of the policies of his chief , the Pre- This may (not always will) whatever you want to know. Twenty-Five Years Ago . . . 194 1 bank scandals. places and He has made belittling re- The motive behind his in- new banks are sound and sident, in the rain as well mean cancer, and must Winona will get an insight into Army life Two days before you leave home, write marks about all the others, vestigation, however, may that more state than federal as in the sunshine. Notably have immediate treatment. here when the 153 men and five officers of again and tell the day and hour when your often in colorfu l but unprint- turn out to be a scandal as banks have failed. Though and critically, he has been IN SUCH CASES, a mass Battery H Local National Guard unit are mo- train will arrive and a responsible woman , , able language. He doesn't eyebrow-raising as any he he promised to investigate backing the American mili- or lump usually can be de- bilized preparatory for a year's training at state bank failures he has will meet you at the , station and take you : hesitate to bawl them out has dug out. For he happens , tary commitment to South tected. A Pap test of the March Field, Calif . never gotten around to it. safely to your destination. to their faces when .he's an- to be a director and stock- Viet Nam. fluid can be performed to Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Steffes have re- gry. But, more often , he At the same time he was The Democratic Left had see if malignant cells exist. holder in a Little Rock, investigating banks McClel Do not ask questions of strangers nor turned from Arlington , Va., where they spent stabs them in the back with , long hoped that Humphrey If mass is present, it should Ark,, bank that could bene- Ian accepted a fee from the take advice from them. the Christmas holidays with their sons and his tongue. somehow could be removed for microscopic fit from the. furor he has American Bankers Associa- be drawn daughters-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. Robert Steffes UNFORTUNATELY , the into Some form examination—just the mass, been kicking up. tion last fall to address their of rebellion Ask a uniformed railway official or a and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Steffes. snide remarks have a habit — open if possible, covert at not the entire breast, unless The real object of his in- San Francisco convention. policeman. of getting back to the vic- vestigation is Comptroller of minimum — against the ra- it shows malignancy. tims. This-doesn't exactly He told the bankers what For the greenish Fifty Years Ago ... 1916 the Currency James Saxon , tionally hard line being tak- or yel- This advice is issued hy the State Bu- they wanted to hear, charg- lowish discharges Alfred Noyes, who comes to the Opera endear him to the men in who has been trying to in- en in Viet Nam. This was , once ex- reau of Labor and posted through the his Cabinet. ¦ ing petulantly that Saxon amination has House tonight under the auspices of the Winon a troduce more competition always a vain hope, for Hu- disclosed no courtesy of the Railway Officials of this had. been "too fast and lump, and a Pap test Lecture League, is regarded by many critics as White House aides have into banking by granting bert Humphrey is familiar shows free" in chartering new no malignancy, road. the most considerable English poet that has confided to this column more federal charters. with the long tradition that one can feel ¦ banks. secure that nothing ominous . .. ¦•¦ arisen Ssince the death of Tennyson. that they have heard the the first duty of a Vice-Pre- * . • "Prince," the white horse that for several President talk deprecating- sident , is to help and not to has developed. THE NEW ADMINISTRATION in New years, had helped to draw the hook and lad- ly about everyone in the VIAIA. knife the man at the top — A checkup once or twice a York City is facing its first big test with der trucks of the central station of the Wi- Cabinet except McNamara JhsL who is usually the man who year is n precaution. (It's a the transit workers now out on strike. nona Fire Department, has seen the end of his and Rusk. Even Vice Pres- made him Vice-President in good idea anyway.) But service and Is now offered for sale. ident Humphrey has come the first place. there is no cause for alarm. The demands are spelled out. — among in for his share of presiden- THE SECOND of Humph- As for preventing the dis- them a 4-day, 32-hoiir week. What that tial digs. rey's transgressions is sim- charge, I can offer no ef- Seventy-Five Years Ago . . . 1891 fective method will accomplish, if achieved , is not explain- ' But the Cabinet officer ply that as Vice-President , except to J, A. Tawney has taken into partnership who has been the object of he is in a fairly favorable hope thnt it will cease spon- ed. In the minds of many persons it means with him under the firm name of Tawncy, taneously. simply more moonlighting — additional I.BJ's sharpest barbs is Sec- position to be considered Smith and Tawney , Welcome J. Smith and D. one day My urging thnt Mrs. jobs to be taken ln spare time — and as retary of Commerce John for the Presidential Elmer Tawney. Connor. Within the White nomination itself. Other men E.P.D. see her physician a result more unemployment , for those Judge Jacob Story, who has been judge of House, the President has have other ideas about who concerninr' the discharge is who really need jobs, either full nr part probate in Winonn County for the past 23 year's, not in expectation that this ¦ ' made no attempt to hide should succeed President time. ' , retired from thc bench. hi.s disappointment in Con- Johnson, if and when, and small seepage necessarily Sen, J. A. Tawney and Reps. John Arnold most of these men' can be halted , but to make The obvious result will be to embarrass nor s strong Keyes and Louis Sikorski have gone to St. Paul THIS PUBLIC disclosure, notion is that it should bo sure thnt a more serious the new career of Mayor-elect John Lind- legislature. condition to be present at the opening of however , will probably in- Sen. Robert Kennedy of (cancer) does not underly it. say who took over the reins of city hall sure Connor's continued ten New York. Saturday. One Hundred Years Ago . . . 1866 ure in the Cabinet. For noth- Humphrey, in a word, is Advert lioment , "¦ business in nil ing irritates tlie President by circumstances the inevi- The question that arises in many peo- There was a fair amount of branches of trade. Wheat has advanced to !)7 more than rending his office tnble target of the gather- Now Many Wear ples' minds Is what is a work week? ls to 88 for No. 1 Spring. Considerable wheat is secrets in the newspapers. ing movement of the Demo- it 40 hours or 38 hours or 32 hours or per- being shipped to Milwaukee by Seavey & Co.'* He is inclined to do exactly cratic Left around Sen. Rob- haps 28 hours, ert Kennedy FALSE TEETH as some have advocated? Dlsptach Line. opposite of what . the news as the man for With More Comfort And If it is any of these, what is accom- ¦ stories .suggest, even though the future. As Kennedy hns moved rABTEKTH , a plenniuu nlknllnn plished? Is a so-called full-time job on thc Owe no man anything, save to love one Ibis menus reversing his sharply to the loft (non-nclri ) powtler, holdn ralaa teotli on every more firmly, To e»t payroll to become a half-time job in actual another.—Romani 13:8B . previous plans. issue — and very and tnlk ln mora importantly comfort , JURt'iprlnkln n UUlo PAH- With an election yenr on the Issue of TEETH on your plntnii , No gummy, practice? .And If so, will there eventually the coming up, it makes good war in Viet Nam — Kooev . pnsty tnnto or feellns. Oheoki he a nation of part-week workers and ac- Humphrey "plaiB nrliir " IdanUirtt hrnnth . , G«» politics for a congressman has stayed nenr rASTKETil «t nny dniK counter. tually more jobless than ever before as the center. WINONA DAILY NEWS to be able to give his consti- Somehow hi.s the doubling up continues and grows? very posture at An Independent Newspaper — Established 1855 tuents a first-hand report on the center is offered by tho These and other related questions are the Vict Nam war, Result: Left as evi- W. F. W HITE G. R. CWSWAY dence that he roolly C. E. LINDEN Congressional missions to "I can see right now my first New ' must giving seriouij concern these days, and no Publixher Exec. Director , Year s resolution have moved toward the nil." i. icss Mgr. Vict Nam have reached epi- responsible parlies , either on the side of and Editor & Adv. Director Isn't going to make it." right. , L_S£U labor or management , seem to be giving THE WIZARD OF ID ' much thought to a solution. W. J. COLE A DOI.PII [J RI ;MKR A, J. K IEKBIMCH By PaficSr and Hurt Managing Editor , City Editor Circulation Mgr, 'Mobilheat L. S. BnoNK F. H. K I-AOCE L. V. ALSTON Composing Supt. Press Supt. Engraving Supt. FUEL OIL W II LIAM H. E NGLISH G ORDON H OLTB Burns Cleanor Try and Stop Me Comptrolltr Sunday Editor and Hotter By BENNETT CERF MKMDEIt OF THE ASSOCIATED |'I( KS3 -4B» JOSWICK'S FUEL OVERHEARD! At a beaut a "If I only bad n mil- & OIL y s lon: Tbe Associated Press Is entitled d l , I'd buy a summer cam p in the /0T$$\ 901 Eait Sanborn St, lion o lars IW exclusively to tho uso for republica- d d , h e i l f t f \M A iron acks a winter om n Pa m llam In tion of all the local news printed in Phont 3369 p i , and a penthouse npnrlment on S r ngs w>i»^3/ this newspaper ns well as nil A P. Where yo u get more East River Drive. Then I'd lock ( liom nil heat ^Xtzxs news dispatches. at lower cost , up and fly to Rome." Monday, Junuary 3, 1906 Natib n a I X3a j I e ry oj- rt Injured Blair Man >^ frontenac Park ReprdduGtions ai tibrary In Good Condition Meeting Siajred Teresan Mental BLAIR. Wis. (Special) — A Reproductions of outstanding D.C, are on exhibit this month 55.year-old Blair Man, Victor For January 12 paintings from the National Gal- in the Bell Art Room at Winona ' Mattison, was in good condition RED WING, Minn: — The Health Talks lery of Art, Wash in g.t on, Public Library. . at Lutheran Hospital, La Crosse, f In : the traveling exhibit are this morning after being injur- annual meeting of the Fronte- eight outstanding portraits. ed in an accident with Ms truck nac State Park Association will Churchwomeri They are "Portrait of a Youth" Saturday about 4:17 p;m. be held at Red Wing Country Begin Tuesday by Botticelli, "Giovanni II and Mattison received a disloca- Club Jan. 12. v tion of the left hi^ arid College of Saint Teresa's sec- To Hear Ginevra Bentivoglio" by Rober- : Recent improvements at the tt "Portrait of a Lady" by Van compound fracture of the right ond mental : health institute .R^j iV^^ ^i der Weyden, "Portrait of a Con- leg when he failed to make park include a bituminous road will be keynoted Tuesday even- ^; dottiereV by Bellini, "MJadame a curve near the Herman Zas- to the end of Point-No-Point ing with a lecture, "Problems St. Paul's Episcopal Church- trow farm about 1% miles east bluff; a well at the point, con- women will have an opportunity Bergeret" by Boucher, ' 'Senpra of Identity " by the senior con- Sabasa Garcia" by Goya, "A of Blair on a Town of Preston struction of some foot trails aLnd on Wednesday to participate in road. The truck went off into a planting of 47,000 seedlings sultant to the Institute of Liv- a discussion of a current prob- Girl with a Watering Can" by . Renoir , and "La Mousme" by gully below the culvert on the The association is buying an ing, Hartford, Conn. lem. The Rev. William T. King; north side of the highway. It Grace Presbyterian Church, Van Gogh, additional 273 acres and nego- Dri Francis J. Braceland, a traveled about 100 feet from tiating for the site of the origi- former Mayo Clime psychia- will give some of his views of Each picture is accompanied where it left the highway until by a label which nal Fort Beauharnois. the Ecumenical Movement. points up Its it struck the west bank of the trist, heads the list of lecturer! artistic quality . and style, and Construction of camp grounds HE WILL, examine two false ' gully .and came to a stop on its will begin this year. scheduled to provide food for gives facte about the cultural wheels. Mattison still was in the student and faculty thought bases which are prevalent as background of the painter and well as' tie ones which he be- Vehicle. during the three-day confer- , the. subject. lieves to be proper "The proper A doctor arid ambulance were Former Wa basha ence, beginning Tuesday. basis of the ecumenical move- called from Blair. He was taken ment begins with the Ascension, Joint Installation to Tri-County Memorial Hospi- Resident to Show GENERAL theme of thl» with the declaration that Christ tal, Whitehall, and transferred year's conference is the is Lord over all.1' Mr. King Of Stars, Masons to ta Crosse. SarihttttakeMovie Identity which f .eels : that "it is only when we "Search for " ¦ people of college age mak«. . :. . . begin with the proper premise Held at Mondovi WABASHA, Minn. — A former that the Ecumenical Movement while trying . to ' establish their - v Wabasha resident, JEd Orbeck , offers the promise of a unity MONDQVI, ' Wis. (Special) -- Durand Car Hits now state representative in the roles in life- built upon integrity, rather than Joint . installation services for Each of four lectures by out- upon ah ill-conceived notion of Alaska legislature, vail be here men in the, field of new officers of Lebanon Chap- Jan. 22 to show movies of last standing . 'togetherness'." ter No. 89, Order of Eastern psychiatry, will be followed by ; The Rev. Mr. King was grad- Star and Mondovi Masonic Freight Train year's earthquake.; seminars of 25 members each : uated from the University of Lodge No. 252 F. & A. M. were DURAND, Wis. (Special ) - Orbeck, who lives in Fair- at which students and faculty Michigan , at Ann Arbor , with held Dec. 28, at the Masonic A 33-year-old Durand man, Dar- banks, has been assistant busi- will discuss questions raised by an AB degree. He then attended Temple, Mondovi. /• ' : rell McMann , lost control of his ness manager for the Laborers the lecture. '. • McCormick Theological Semin- car on U.S. Highway 10 in International Union there a The seminars will be led by ,, . Installing officers for the OES ary^ Chicago for four years, Mrs. Durand Sunday at 8:02 a.m: number of years and recently the 20-m.ember. psychiatric staff earning his bachelor of divinity were Past Worthy Matron , Dorwin Moliter, assisted by Mrs. arid slid into the Milwaukee Rail- was promoted to head of the or- brought to the college for this degree and completing a year's road freight en route from Wi- ganization. He will fly here and mental health institute. . participation in a clinical train- Ronald Johnston, Mrs. Donald Elkintoh, Mrs. Roy Morton, nona to Eau Claire. then to Seattle, Wash , for a A special part of the institute ing program in conjunction with McMann was proceeding west- meeting before returning to scheduled . Wednes-¦: . Children' Memorial Hospital. Mark and David Hintermeyer. ¦ ¦ ¦ is a lecture s New officers are: Mrs. Gor- erly down the. hill toward the Alaska.. • . ' . .'• • day at 8 p.m; for Winona and He came to Winona four and a business section ;of Durand. , half years ago, to be in charge don Hintermeyer, worthy ma- . A matinee tentatively is plan- area parents and teachers of Grace Presbyterian Church, tron ; Mrs. Paul Borgwardt, as- About $200 damage was done ned for school children the aft- "Parents ' and Teachers' Role He and his wife and two . chil- sociate matron; Willard Jack- to his 1957 car, ernoon of Jam 22, with a show- in the Search for Identity." The dren have recently moved into son, associate patron ; : Mrs. Claude Andrews, 28, Stock- ing for adults in the evening. lecture will be given in the Houser Rockwell, secretary; holm, escaped injury when his Orbeck also will show addition- college auditorium, West Wa- a new home¦ ¦ on the church prop- erty. ." "' Mrs. Clara Conger, treasurer; 1965 milk can truck hit the al movies on the northern state. basha and Gould streets, by . Mrs. Charles Accola, conduct- guardrail On Highway 35 two Dr. Dana L. Farosvorth of PREVIOUS to the talk, the ress; Mrs. Scott Holden, asso- miles north of Stockholm Fri- Harvard University.; regular monthly meeting of the ciate conductress; Mrs. Helen The LAKE CITIAN INJURED day at 8:30 p^m. truck ' Episcopal Churchwomen will be Wright, chaplain ; Mrs. Wesley rolled over, resulting in ex- . . LAKE CITY, Minn. — A: 21- DR. FARtiSWORTH, and Dr. held . at: 1:30 p.m. Tea will be Holden, organist; Mrs.. George tensive; damage. The truck was year-bld rural Lake City man, Howard P. Rome, senior con- served by the members of St. Brown, Ruth, Mrs. Anna Tan- empty. Andrews; hauls milk for Charles Cordes, is in satisfac- sultant iri psychiatry at the Elizabeth's Guild, with Mrs. H. er, Martha; Mrs. Arthur Hinter- the Ellsworth Creamery. tory condition at Lake City Mu- Mayo Clinic, also will give two R. Kalbrener and Mrs. Harry meyer, Electa; Mrs. Dutee Seyr Gary Dregney, Town of Al- nicipal Hospital following an ac- lectures as part of the mental Meyers as co-chairmen, A brief forth, Warder; and Arthur Hint- bany, began working . Saturday cident while cutting trees at his health institute for students and business meeting will follow. ermeyer, sentinel. Wesley Hol- afternoon at the sheriff's office parentis' farm Wednesday. He faculty of the. college. ..\: ?An invitation to attend has den who was unable to be pre-; as radio operator and deputy received multiple injuries when The 1966 mental health insti- been extended to the women of sent for the installation cere- sheriff. He was formerly em- falling tree reportedly struck tute is supported by a grant . Grace Presbyterian Church arid monies, will be installed Wor- ployed at the. Farmers store iri him. He is the son of Mr. and from the Louis W. and Maud other guests will be cordially thy Patron, at a later date. Hill Family Foundation. welcomed. Mondovi. Mi's. Norman Cordes. At the Masonic Installation, REBEKAH LODGE Milton La Duke was installing ¦ ¦ ' Wenonah Rebekah Lodge will master, and Willard Jackson, THE COURREGES; ¦ . . The three Wi- are, from leftj Sharon Ehmcke, Ann Harge- meet at 8 p.m. Wednes-. installing marshal. nona girls who vvjll dances at intermission sheimer and Cheryl Ferguson. day at Schaffner Homes Officers of the Lodge are Gor- time at the Winter Carnival square dance recreational center. A 6:30 p.m. don Hintermeyer, worshipful potluck dinner will precede the master; Edward Mahlum, sen- meeting, with meat furnished ior warden ; Paul Borgwardt , Courreges- Trib of Dancers Paulerie Breuer by the lodge. Mrs, : RbsseL Phil- treasurer; Houser Eockwell, lips, the hostess, urges all mem- secretary; Charles Accola, sen- Becomes Bride bers to attend. ior deacon; Ben Lerimo, tyler. Winter Garni val Atf raetiori Of Dona ld Storm A&D Bootery The Three Courreges, a trio tertain at intermission time, LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) — Mr. and Mrs. Donald Storm ' of Winona girl dancers, will about 3.: 30 p.m. Semi-AnnuaI' - -y- Women's . ' (Paulene Brever) are at home ^.X.~.~~~~Xy: 7 xy y. . . . y-fSSSGy;y.; . :; ;yxy.: Ifj $ M SK THESE- /l»A. , - A / be featured at the 1966 annual The square dance, sponsored Winter Carnival square/dance in New Brighton, Minn., follow- by the Park Rise Squares, will ing their, wedding Dec; 27 at Jan. 16 at Winona Senior High be one of the highlights of the School auditorium. St. John's Lutheran Church, Red annual Winter Carnival. It will "Wing, Minn., and a honeymoon THE THREE girls, Sharon be staged from 2 to 5 p-m. in the Western States, ^^^^$lW^x Tne area square dance callers The Rev. Cyril Serwe of- Ehmcke, Ann Hargesheirrter and Cheryl Ferguson, will en- are being invited to call at ttie flciated and attendants includ- ¦ dance. Master of ceremonies ed Miss Dee Ann Breuer, Far- • ¦ • • • ¦•^^ S^ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦, ^¦ ¦:• will be Ray Benedett, St. Char- mington, Minn., maid of hon- MMRORS . ^. . ¦ V . •^^ Lois Bergsgaard les, Minn., well-known Southern or, and Dr. Marlyn Storm, St. ale ¦ ^ Shoe S ¦ Paul, best man. / ¦<¦r > v To Be June Bride Minnesota caller. F,REPLACE The New Jack Frost and his A reception for 200 guests STARTS with was given in the BATHROOM J V SPRING GROVE , Minn. - Frosties and the new 1966 Queen church par- x..^^y M That m MIRRORS lor by the bride's parents, Mr. MIRRORS _E .. . - . ' m Mr, and Mrs. John Bergsgaard, will make their first public ap- . . H Christmasr . ... Spring Grove, announce the en- pearance at the dance. and Mrs. Eldon Breuer, Lake . . Jak City. The groom's parents are Gift BS gagement of their daughter, W ¦¦ EAbEEASEL ¦ Miss Lois Bergsgaard THE COURREGES have ap- Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Storm, Or- DORM m „ . . Gs , to Ralph tonville, Minn " " y ' Balllnger, son of Mr. and Mrs. peared in their dance routine . a.,»Bn0 c W * * * W MIRRORS at Gladiola Days at St. Char- The bride, a graduate of Good- MIRRORS Homer Ballinger, Stewartville, hue Minn,, why Not Minn. les, Dairy Days at Rollingstone, , High School and |j |j fjM Mankato State College, teach- 7:00 A Dodge Days at Dodge, M. ¦ ¦ Minn., . M Get a New A June wedding is planned. DINING Wis., and at last year's Winona es second grade at Circle Pines COCKTAIL 1 Mirror? B . Miss Bergsgaard teaches kin- School, New Brighton. The ROOM dergarten at Anoka , Minn. Her Winter Carnival. At the latter \ \ m event they took third place in groom 'is a graduate of Orton- fiance is a mathematics teach- ville High School , attended ( * JAm er at Milaca , Minn. the talent show, dancing to the 1 Yes, Tuesday Morning, Jan. 4, Bright and Early MURORS ' music of Johnny and the Rave- Augsburg College and is now a student in the MIRRORS Ons. School of Den- ' ^^SfS^" ST. MARTIN'S AID tistry, University of Minnesota. St. Martin's Lutheran Church ¦ WE TAKE WE DELIVER Ladies Aid Society will meet at Double Feature Independence SAVE on NATIONALLY ADVERTISED WOMEN'S SHOES MEASUREMENTS ^ AND INSTALL 2:30 p.m. Wednesday in the so- on Program ^^ cial room of the church. Mem- Slated Auxiliary to Meet bers are to bring mite boxes. Of Garden Club INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- WINONA PAINT & GLASS CO. Hostesses will be the Mmes. cial) — American Legion Short Runs — Discontinued Patterns — All Taken S5-S7 West Second St. A double program is planned Aux- Robert Hoppe, William Hage- iliary will me«t We Deliver Phone 3652 for the Thursday night meeting in the clubrooms dorn , John Kranz and Christ at 8 p.m. Wednesday. From Our Regular Stock Bender. of Winona Flower and Garden Club, announces Francis Jilk, Mrs. Ernest Sobotta, chair- ¦ program chairman. man, will conduct the meeting ¦ < J Hi mm i- "i ¦ P. M P.. ¦ ii ¦ ii ¦ n ¦ !! ¦ ii ¦ Larry Doyle of Slebrecht's and show a film on Civil De- will talk on "Greenhouse Oper- fense and U.S. Savings Bonds. ¦ ¦ She urges all \ Air Step Regular to I Buya, Several ( I I I • I I III ation" and a film , "Safe Use members to at- • j ^ ' I of Pesticides" will be shown. It tend. Lunch will be served. S n is a release, from the Depart- \ • Town & ) $16.00 \ I ! I I I I I I I I I I Tena Halderson , Margaret Wei- ^ . J J ment of Health and Welfare, mer. I Country ) I SAVE I aimed at educating people in y ' tho proper use of insecticides. '*- ' ' ( The club will meet at 7:30 (•Risque \ LlAlAf ( SAVE Aksel Andersen p.m. at Paul Watkins Memorial Sandler V SAVE Methodist Home. ¦ m LYLE'S • |\| UYf The final 1065 business meet- j j J ing of the executive board was —?——— held at the home of Miss Flor- JI DJO/U f oj V&AVU£ Storewide Clearance , Nov . 17. Later, ence Schroth Highway 61 on Dec. 22, Mrs, Irvin Blumen- tritt, retiring president, enter- MlniiMOtfl City tained the board with a Christ- for mas party at her home. $ "Qualify plo«r Covtrlnoi Contests, games, prizes, fes- At S«mlbU Prlctt" TO $1 SALE tive holiday decorations nnd special Christmas refresh- 4" 0" ments added to the evening's CARPETING gaiety. Committee chairman present were the Mmes. Elmer Seamless Floors WOMEN'S SNOW BOOTS REDUCED Continues with many gdcled warehouse items. Evanson , Robert Frank, Jilk, by P0LY-FLEC* L__M ————¦—««————¦————J. BY Leon Knopp, Martin Peterson , — OPEN EVENING^ APPOINTMENT Louis Walther , James Walz, Mr. No waxing ever; unaffected Jilk , and the Misses Schroth, by heels; built-in sheen; mono- All Shoes Will Be On Racks By Size Stella and lithic; unlimited color nolcc- Frances Dickerson , tion; comparable in cost to Advtrtlnmenl other quality floor coverings. Special sale prices on items not in stock LINOLEUM that have to be ordered. GETTING UP CERAMIC FLOORS AttarNIGHTS 31. oommon Itldnaf KT or HUdder Ir- rltttlona often occur ana mty m»ko you. & WALLS tanac »nd nnrvoua 'rom too frequent A&D Bootery Furniture ... 103 PIUIIM both dar and nliht. Seiond- Phon* Anytime: 8-3105 Aksel Andersen Center arlly, you may hue i)»ep ana tuffer trom ( Winona Exchange) Haadaohri , naokaolia and fttl old, tlrad. daprenaoit. In iuot» Irritation , OYatlCX 57 West Third St — Winona uaially brlnia tail , iclaxlni aomlort by Lylt k Joann Ziegow.WI, curbing Jrrlfatlnf tarma In »tron». acla Owneri urln* and by anatfaaio pain relief. Oat CXOXSX »t dttoiu.Vvi botUr teiU Haugen Funeral Home Tuesday afternoon at Buckman-Shlerts Weather Two-State Deaths evening and un afternoon ahd Funeral Home, Wabasha, the FORECAST til 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. Rev. R. W. Riese- Immanuel Winona Mair' EXTENDED Mrs. Lena Olson ^- Tempera- rVlONDAY GALESVILLE, Wis, — Mrs. Lutheran Church, Plain.ie-w, of- MINNESOTA Mrs. Alfred Wohlera ficiating. tures Tuesday through Satur- Lena Olson, 82, died Saturday LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) 9-17 degrees JANUARY 3, 1966 night at a La Crosse hospital Commits Suicide day will average — Mrs. Alfred Wohlers, 59 Pallbearers were Marvin, Roy normal east and south, after a long illness. f and Russell Puttbrese, Orville R. Brandes- 1629 below J^^fi^k^^Wf Lake Cityv died Sunday at 7 Mrs. Earl degress below normal Larson police today 16-22 At Community Winona Deaths the former Lena Raichle, she a.m. at Lake City Municipal , Arlo Engen and Leon W. Sth St., called Colder T u-e-s d a y, . was born Feb. 19, 1883, in the Mitchell.. to report that her northwest. A. A. Gallien Hospital where she was a par at 2:05 a.m.. warmer Wednesday, colder late Memorial Hospital Robert J. Ziebell Town of Gale to Mr. and Mrs. tieht 15 days. husband had just committed Normal highs 12-20 John Raichle. She was married Joseph Cierzan Chief >_arvin in week. . Visiting . tiourit Medical and lurgtcal Robert J. Ziebell, 62, 575 W. The former Caroline Cordes, suicide, Assistant , 20^-20 south. Normal lows patients: 2 to 4 ahd 7 10 8:30 p.m. (No to Albert Olson in 1921. He died reported today. north , Howard St., died this morning she was born Aug. 25, 1906, to PINE CREEK,; Wis. — Fu- A. Meier north, 1-9 south. Preci- children' under . '12.1 Succumbs at 69 in 1944, rushed to the scene -fi to 1 Maternity Patients: J to 1:30 and J ta of a heart attack suffered on Mr. and Mrs; Frank Cordes, neral services for Joseph Cier- Police pitation will average two-tenths 1:30 p.m. (Adultt only.) his way to work at Royal Cab She was a member of Zion Florence Township, Goodhue zan, Milwaukee, were held this with oxygen equipment but were snow Tues- Brandes to four-tenths inch in Co. He also was employed Lutheran Church. County. She was married March morning ait Sacred Heart unable to revive . ^, and about Thursday. Church was attributed tp day SATURDAY parttime by Fawcett Funeral She is survived by one broth- 8, 1946, to Alfred Wohlers and , Fine Creek, the Rev. whose death Temperatures Home. - ' Augustine J. Sulik officiating. carbon monoxide poisoning. WISCONSIN — DISCHARGES . er, John Jr., Galesville, and the couple farmed in Florence through Saturday will Mr Ziebell collapsed in the nephews and nieces. Burial was in Sacred Heart Tuesday Mi_& Ruth Kinzler, 406 E. . several Township. v, MRS. BRANDES told police 3 to 9 degrees below driveway of a service station at Survivors are: Her husband, Cemetery. V average Wabasha St. Funeral services will be Tues- that she knew of no reason why normal southeast and 8 to 15 de- Mrs. Raymond Meyer, 421 2nd and Main streets today at day at 2 p.m. at Zion Lutheran arid one brother, Arthur Cordes, Pallbearers were Boy and ' her husband would want to take grees below normal northwest Mankato Ave. 6:37 a.m. Police , administered Church, the Rev. Vernon Hinter- Lake City, Her parents and one Frank Peplinski Jr., Robert his own life. He left homie today to 26 north, 24 ¦ ' ' ' ; Normal high 18 - BIRTH . ; oxygen until an ambulance ar- meyer officiating. Burial will be sister have died. Cierzan, Jerry and Roger Bam- , hearing the Normal low zero to ¦ but Mr. Ziebell was Funeral services will be Tues- at 1:30 ai.m.; and to 31 south. '. Mr; and; Mrs, Eugene Bag- rived, pro^ in French Creek Cemetery. benek and Lawrence Losinski. car start- Mrs. Brandes believ- north, 6 to 15 south. A ' nbimced dead on arrival at Com- Friends may call Smith day at 2 p.m. at St Peter's 10 above niewski, -Fountain. City, Wis., a at ed thiat he: was driving off cold spell in the middle of the daughter. munity Memorial Hospital.. Mortuary tonight from 7 to 9 Lutheran: Church, Belvidere, another" to- ' " "Edwin somewhere, she said. week and probably SUNDAY His son, . -Robert; :- .- "was - ' once and at the church Tuesday after the Rev. Friedrich offi- Mrs. Brandes said that she weekend. One to three; 12:30 pirn; ciating. Burial , will be in the ward the ADMISSIONS sports editor¦ of the Winona Daily Illinois Plant went outdoors about 2 a.m. to tenths inch of precipitation. News. ' ." " . ' • West Florence cemetery. find their car in the garage, its of show; in midweek. Roy Jonsgaard, Dover Rt. 1, Mrs. Catherine Foley Friends may call at Anderson Chance Minn. Born Aug. 31, 1903, to Edward PLAINVIEW, Minn- (Special) motor running. A vacuum- Heavier snow more fiftely lati Annie Burmeister Ziebell Funeral Chapel until noon Tues- cleaner hose emptied the car 's ' ;. - Mrs. William Cierzan, 703% and — Mrs. Catherine Foley, 80, day and at the church after 1 in the week; here he lived here all his life. Set to Resume exhaust into the vehicle's inter- E. Broadway! , died Saturday at her home fol- p.m. - . ' OTHER TEMPERATURES Mrs. Gerald IZiegeweid, Foiiri . He married Glenys Buswell lowing a; short illness. ; ior through a rear window, she By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ¦ tain City, Wis. June 25, 1930. She was born June 26, 1885, ' v - . ' :.Miss' Emma Keith - - . , said. - High Low Pr. Mrs. Bertha Bohn¦ , 613 E. He was a member of St. Mat- to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Leon- LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) Munitions Work Police learned from Mrs. Albany, cloudy ...,. 3836 22;14 .35 King St. - . - ; - ¦;-. - . ¦ thew's Lutheran Church. ard at Millville, Minn. She was — Miss Emma Reith, 91;" died Brandes that she had pulled the Albuquerque^: clear . . '-' • wife; two EAST ALTON;, 111. (AP)— hose out of the window, turned 54; .45 . Raymond¦ ¦ ¦ Miller, 524 E. 3rd Survivors: are: His married here May 18, 1S20 to Saturday morning at Pepin Atlanta, rain ...... 67. ¦-;. sons, Robert E. and Gerald , Michael V. Foley. He was a Production of gunpowder for off the engine and gone to call clear ... 11 0 .. i t, . Arthur A. GaUen View Nursing Home after an use in Viet Nam '¦ Bismarck, Mrs. William Brennan, Minne- both of Fullerton; Calif.; one former funeral director and resumes at the police.: * ¦ Boise, cloudy ...... 39 .32 ...• • ¦ -. . -: ¦ illness of three years. She was Olin Mathieson Chemical sota City, - ' ' ' ;¦'¦ ' ' daughter, Mrs. Lynn (Kathryn) Arthur A. Gallien, 69, execu- furniture store proprietor here. a retired teacher. Corp. The patrolmen who ivere dis- Boston, rain ,.,...... 46 33 .75 . • . , . munitions pl_nt after striking John Magin, 469 Lafayette St. Foster, Winona; six grandchil- tive director of the Housing and He died Jan. 16, 1957. >; She was born March 23, 1874, patched took Brandes; from the Chicago, clear .,.., 45. 22 .01 : , union members voted to accept , Brother Hugh Elzear, St. dren; one brother, - Edwin St. Redevelopment Authority of Wi- She was a member of St Joa- to Mr. and Mrs. Herman Reith, car and administered oxygen Cincinnati, clear .. . 55 30 ,22 College; Paul, and one sister, Miss Otha chim's Catholic Church, its new contracts and return to and artificial respiration to no Cleveland, cloudy,. 54 31 .04 Mary's died Sunday morning at Minnesota City. She attended DISCHARGES Ziebell, Winona. nona, Rosary and Altar societies and Winona Normal School and work today. avail. Coroner - Dr. R. B. Denver, cloudy ..;.. 41 15 .. Mrs. Larry Huhdorf and baby. Two brothers have died. his home. Death was caused bj^ the American Legion Auxiliary. taught 34 years in schools in The International Association Tweedy, called to the scene, Fairbanks, cloudy . -30 r45 ;., arrangements ; are ' ' , . Rushford, Minn. Funeral a heart attack. ;; Survivors are: One son, Mike the Minnesota City, Stockton of Machinists AFL-CIO voted 1,- pronounced Brandes dead. Fort Worth clear .. 60 32 ¦ William Armstrong Jr., 403 W. being completed at Fawcett Fu- Mr. Gallien, who lived at 67 J. Leonard, Plainview, and sev- and Utica areas. She retired in 599-1,543 Sunday to accept ; a Helena- snow y. -x-x 36 7 T ; X A memorial is eral nep ME; BRANDES was born cloudy .. . 79 70 Broadway. neral Home. W Sarnia St;; had held the posi- hews and nieces. Two 1934. She was organist at the contract worked out last week Honolulu, arranged. ;- , r brothers and two sisters have Oct. 19, 1923. to George and Indianapolis clear . 57 27 .03 : Gerald Tarras, 965% W. 5th being tion since his appointment in " • Minnesota City Baptist ..Church in Washington. The Internation- , . died. - . ¦"- . . . • • •' -'•. - Alice (Thompson) Brandes and Jacksonville, cloudy 78 53 ¦ ' .-. . . St. : April 1954. Prior to his appoint- many years. Since 1957 she had al Brotherhood of Electrical had lived in Winona all lus life. -Miss Elaine Wicka , Arcadia, Mrs. Chester Shank Requiem Mass will be said lived in Lake City. Workers ratified a similar pact Kansas City , clear . . 56 29 . ,. : Shank , 80 552 ment he bad been a member : of ¦ ¦ He married Betty Laska here , -: Mrs. Chester , Tuesday at 10 a.m. at St. Joa- ';¦ Surviving are: ' ¦: One sister, by a 5CX-25 vote/ ; L6s Angeles,, clear . 64 42 .. wis E. 3rd St., died Sunday at, 8:45 the authority board frorrf Janu- Feb; 7, 1948. / / ' Sylvester Rotering, 672 Sioux ary 1952 to September 1953. chim's Church by the Rev. S. Mrs. Fredolph Peterson, Lake Louisville, cloudy ;•: 60 33 .14 . . - p.m- at Community Memorial E. Mulcahy.: Burial will be in Two other unions that struck At present he was unemploy- cloudy ,., 68 . 37 .40 v St. - - .V . v City, and nieces and nephews. ' ;- *;¦ ¦ . Memphis, ¦ : Hospital following a short ill- HE WAS born July 5, 1896, to the church cemetery. Pallbear- the plant Dec. 1; the Interna- ed.; :-^, . . -;..; . : :: . . -: Miami, : cloudy ;:, .'-.• ..' 7fr 71 ' yx. BIRTHS ¦ • Funeral services will be Tues- ; ness. ; Lincoln and Frances Adams Gal- ers will be Phillip and Lawrence day at 1:30 p.m. at. Petersoh- tional Chemical Worker's AFL- Survivors: His wife; his moth- Milwaukee, clear ' .- '. 40 19 .16 Mr. and Mrs. Michael Rom- The former Julia Ellen Mc- GIO and the Western Employees 612 W. 4th St., son. lien, ia Winona and . was a life- Leonard, James Bassett, Jerry Sheehan Chapel, Lake City, the er, Mrs. Alice Brandes, Winona; Mpls.-StP.. clear .32 -8v .11 pa, a Carthy, she was born: Sept.; 13, Foley, James Mulligan Trade Council, had voted pre- Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Haney, 617 long pfesident of the city. He and Rev. A: J; Ward, First Congre- one son, Thomas, at home; one New Orleans, rain . 80 52 2.23 ¦ 1885, in Lewiston, Minn., to served in the Army in World James Welti. viously to return to work. daughter, Dawn, at home; sev- New York, rain ..... 52 39 .59 : ,' ' . E. Mark St.; a son . Mr. : arid Mrs. Thomas McCar- gational Church, officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Miles Kleim war 1. .;; ;; Friends may call at Johhsoh- Burial will be in the Minneso- A company official says full en brothers, Eugene, George Okla. City, clear .- .. - 51 25 / .. thy. She had lived here 25 Schriver Jr., Jack and Robert, Winona; : ;.. Rushford; Minor s daughter^ = r _=A_tei_rreturning from the serv- Funeral Home today ta City Cemetery. ; production of gunpowder could Omaha, : clear ...... 36 22 yeatrs and"also=had lived in =the ahd until time oi service. Ros- Donald, rural Fountain City, Phoenix, clear , .. .; 57 31 ... Mr. and Mrs. Donald Larson Lewiston area. She was married ice he and his father operated Friends may call at the fu begin in a day and that full thes Winona Steam Laundry. ary will be said at 3 and 8 p.m. neral home until time of ser production pf finished ammuni- Wis.; Roy, Belrhont, Calif., and Pittsburgh, cloudy . . 55 40 J90 Jr., 854 E. 5th St., a son. here Sept. 13, 1946. . today. : . ." ; Mr. and Mrs. Milford Paul- Later he was associated with vices. tion will take about a week. Kenneth, : Minneapolis, and two Ptlnd, Me., snow .. . 31 23 ^30 Survivors are: Her husband; sisters, Mrs. Beverly Kulas, Wt Rapid City, clear ;.;38 18 .. «on, Rushford, Minh., a son. three stepsons, Clarence Shank; Watkins Products* Inc., for 19 Irviri Husman years in the rural sales depart- The strike of about 4,200 union nona, and Mrs. Jerome (Ethel) St. Louis, clear .... 57 25 .:.. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bublitz, Fountain City, Wis.; Ralph ; LA CRESCENT, Minn. ~ Ir- Two-State Funerals members halted production by Minnesota City, a Son. ment. - Berg, in Alaska. His father, one Salt-Lk. City,; cloudy 29 21 .. Shank, St. Charles; Minh., and vin Husman, 65, La Crescent the nation's only rhanjifacturer San Fran., Cloudy ; 52 46 .. Talala, Okla.; one He was a life member of Leon Rt. 1 Mis* Emma V. Johnson sister arid two brothers have Carl :Shank, , died Sunday afternoon of a special gunpowder for some died. - Seattle,: snow .,. . . 38 33 .04 BIRTHS ELSEWHERE daughter, /Mrs. Peter (Marian) J. Wetzel Post 9, American Le- in a La Crosse hospital after rifle and tracer bullets and and the 20th Aerial Squad- KELLOGG, Minn. (Special) — Funeral arrangements are be- Washington cloudy 48 44 .12 BartelJ, Superior, Wis.; three gion, a short illness. Funeral services for Miss Em- 20mm cannon shells used in Viet ;. VWAUKON, Iowa — Mr. and ron 1st Day Bombardment ing completed by Fawcett Fu- Winnipeg, snow . -11 -26 .24 stepdaughters Mrs. Herbert He was born April 2, 1900 ma V. Johnson were held this Nam:' . ' ' . - : (T—Trace) :;. Mrs. Delbert Grabowinski, a ) Harmon^ , Utica; Mrs. Group 1917-1919 Association, He , to neral Home. (Arlene Mr. and Mrs. Edward Husman, daughter Sunday. Mrs. Grabow- Hugh (Ruth ) Heape, Jackson- was a member of First Congre- La gational Church Winbna Lodge Crescent Township. He mar- inski is the former Madelyn ville, Fla., and Mrs. John , ried Dorothy daughter of Marcel North Canton, 18, AF&AM, the Winona Scot- Veglahn in 1929 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^ ^^ ^ Chouinard, (Grace) Lower, and the couple ; had farmed ¦ Chouinard, 4145 9th St., Good- Ohio; 29 grandchildren; eight tish Rite Bodies and the Osman in : ; ¦ the area ever since. He was a ¦ ^ ' ;' - '¦ ' ; ¦ ¦ ' ' view. great-grandchildren, and one Temple of the Shrine. ______n ¦ :~£_ i_M.x xx :iM_w^: ' :: '' ¦/M^— ' - (Catherine) member of 1st Lutheran HV^ttWym Bmk WAmW ' • • IC/^MB sister, Mrs. John Survivors are: His wife, Doro- Church.;- .. y y-af^ r ^y y 7 y TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS Lynch, Winona. thy Laabs - Gallien; one son m y^W : x"'7X M^m x Funeral services will be Wed- Richardj East Lansing, Mich., : Survivors are: His wife; one ^^______¦ J___Bk __¦ _»J_^___! _ TT7 Cynthia Jane Ross, 740 45th nesday at 9:30 ai.m. at Burke's and four grandchildren. His par- son, Wayne, La Crescent Rt. !• -:¦¦ ¦ one daughter, Mrs. Ira mx:;^^lymRym^my xmt,. :" Ave., Goodview, 7. Fuheral Home and at 10 a.m. ents have died. /..,. - . (Jean- i^ vv >JKE^^^Zr Patricia Ann Schmitz,/. Kel- at St. Mary's Catholic Church, ette) Gady, La Crescent Rt. 2; ^ logg, Minn., 10; the Most Rev. George H. Speltz FUNERAL services will be three grandchildren ; two bro- Officiating. Burial will be in St. Tuesday, at 3 p.m. at First Con- thers, Conrad and Edward Hus- gregational Church, the Rev. man, La Crescent FREE TB X-RAYS Rose of Lima Cemetery, Lewis- , and one sis^ ' - Harold Rekstad officiating. Bu- ter, Mrs. Wesley (Edrie) (Mon.-Wed.-FH., 1-5 p.m. ton. . Al- ___^ Friends may call at the fu- rial will ¦ be in Woodlawn Ceme- brecht, La Crescent. One son teMfW Room 8 City Hall) : v , ' B 1B # Tuesday afternoon tery.- * ;- ,. " , : .: has died. : Winona Co. residents f ree, neral home and evening. Bishop Speltz will Fawcett Funeral Home Is in Funeral *Wmf ^;::xr others, 91 each. services will , be LUC: : Wm^W ' Rosary Tuesday at 8 /-¦i : say the charge of arrangements and Wednesday at 2 p.m. at First m0 : W0: 'W^yM 'X^^^I^_ - Last week ...... 31 p.m. ' there will be no visitation. A Lutheran Church, the Bey. E. Total since 1959.... , 58,053 memorial Is- being arranged. G. Hertler officiating. ^ Ntayotte -Burial Willard P. will be in South Ridge Willard P. Mayotte, 57; a for- Ceme- FIRE CALLS tery. mer , Winona resident, died Sat. urday in a hospital at Albert Pallbearers will be Lyle Bate- Today AT&T Earnings man, Howard 7:44 a.m. - 102 Walnut St., Lea, Minn. Papenfuss, He was born March 19, 1908; George Kletzke, Ray "Walters, Boland Manufacturing Co. No. John Fokema and 2 plant, short in electric wiring at Winegar, Wis., to Mr. and James Ho- Mrs. Thomas Mayotte. He mar- And Revenue Up warth. tn a junction box on an electric Friiends may call oven caused oven Insulation to ried Alice Bagniewski of at Nelson NEW YORK (AP)—American Funeral Home, La Crosse, BUCCY Fountain City, Wis. He was burn, put out by employes with Telephone & Telegraph Co., the Tuesday after 4 p.m. C02 extinguishers. employed by the Peerless Chain and at world's largest shareholder the church Wednesday after 1 Co. prior to his three years of family, Force. today reported record p.m. Municipal Court service ta the U.S. Air revenues and earnings for the Forfeitures: Upon his return to Winona from 12 months ended Nov. 30. Ervin Burch the service, he formed the Wi- Cletus ' .V. . Fish, 22, Luana , Revenues hit $10,997,120,000, LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) Iowa, $25 on a charge of speed- nona Vets Cab Co. After operat- -Ervin Burch, 57, Lake ing it for several years, he producing net income of $179,- City , ing ,75 m.p.h, in a 55 zone on 116 ,000, or $3.40 a share. The died Sunday at his home after U.S! 61-14 (northbound ) Satur- sold it to Robert and David a six-month illness. Kraus nnd moved to Albert figures easily surpassed year- TEMPO and day at 1:30 a.m. Minnesota ALBRECHT'S earlier figures of $1,648,762,000 He was born Highway Patrol made the ar- Lea, where he operated the Al- Feb. 9, 1908 to or $3.24 a share on sale of $10,- Mr .and Mrs. John Burch , In the Mi racle rest. bert Lea Cab Co. 13 years. Ham- Mall 226,165,000. . mond, and was a lifelong resi- ' Ole T. Sande, Nelson , Wis., Survivors arc:.- His wife ; one . . - daughter, Mrs. James (Donna The figures surpassed the dent of tho area. He never - $10 on a charge of following too previous record levels for a 12- married. He worked at a Lake closely on U.S. 61 Dec. 22 at Rne) Marshall, New Brighton , Minn. ; one son , Allan Clarke, month period , made in the 12 City nursery from 1919 to 1951, Every Wednesday Night 7 to 9 Starting Jan. 4th 7:50 p.m. Minnesota Highway months ended last Aug, 31. then at the Di-Acro Corp. Patrol made the arrest. St. .John 's College, Collegeviiie , Minn.; three sisters, Mrs, Rose The higher earnings per share Survivors are: Two brothers, Penners and Mrs, Maude Kug- came despite an increase in the Arthur , Rochester, ond Clar- ler, Minneapolis , nnd Mrs. Jo- average number of shares out- ence, Lake City ; one half-broth- YOU MAY BE A WINNER Fits your seph B. (Irene) Bambenek , Wi- standing from 509.3 million in er, Luvem Weick, Lake City, budget nona , nnd one brother , Joseph , the 12 months ended November, and two sisters, Mrs. Margaret Minneapolis. 1 9G4, to 526 million in the 12 Parrott, Lake City, and Mrs. A Lucky Card Number will be called like a Funeral services will be months ended the past Novem- Ray (Adeline) Crowley, Wau- out every 10 minutes from 7 to 9 at | ^ Tuesday nt 11 n.m. at St. Theo- ber. kesha , Wis. glove m li both Tempo and Albrechf's Fairway dores Church , Albert Lea. Buri- The company hns an estimnt Funeral services will be Wed* ! You can win in both stores. All win- al will be in n cemetery there. ed 2.6 million shareholders. nesday at 2 p.m. at St. John 's Lutheran Church , the Rev, T. ners from both stores will be eligible for one grand prize each month. First Mrs. Ida Dorn at St. Martin's Lutheran Church , II, Albrecht officiating. , Burial Mrs. Ida Dorn , 90 500% Hufl tho Itev. A. U. Deye officiating, will be in the church cemetery. Grand Prize a Portable TV. St. , died Sunday afternoon nt Burial was in Woodlawn Ceme- Memorial Hospital , Friends may call at Peterson- Community tery. Sheehan Chapel from 7; Sho4ind been ill four weeks. 30 today The former Idn Tows, she wns PaJJbearers were Leo, Fred to 1 p.m. Wednesday, then nt Don' t Miss It! Do Your Shopp ing at Both Stores and Play Luck y Buggy born Jan. 30, 1875, in Hillsdale and Arthur Papenfuss, Harry the church. ffL YtyfoY ' *^ ' Township, Winona County, to and Roy Uackbarth and Arnold fJK h'^m^'i''^** Lnn/.. William Dorival Sr. v.. ** , _ vM'k- .*4iY » v ^ Mr. nnd Mrs. William Tews. She CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) \y v. vfo** , V. wns married to John Dorn Nov, v ,< \ ,^ y*{'yy^ .' Miss Hilda Sorineman - William Dorival Sr. , 60, died 14, 1805. He died in 1930. suddenly of a heart attack Sun- She wns n member of St. Funeral pervices for Miss Hil- da Sonncmnn day at 2 p.m. nt his homo. Mnrtin 's Luthenin Church. , 175 E. Wnbnshn ^&?»i$Mm Survivors arc: One son , Her- St., who died Saturday after He wos born here Jan. 18, , Winonn; four grandchil- ;in illness of .several years, will 1005, to Dr. nnd Mrs, John Dorl- bert vnl dren nnd 13 grcnt-Rrandchildrc- .n. bo. held Tuesday at 2 p.m. nt . Following graduation from One son , Arnold , died in 1%:!, St. Mnrtin 's Lutheran Church , high school , ho went to Califor- infancy, the Rev . A. U. Deye officiating , nia with his parents In 1923 and nnotlier son died in - Our new MONTHLY PAY PLAN Funeral services will be Wed- Burial will be in Woodlawn where he attended tho Univer- provides one low monthly pay- nesdny all p.m . at St. Mnrtin 's Cemetery. sity of California. He married " Blanche Rask Sept. 1928 ment for all your State Farm Church , (he Rev. A, U. Deye Friends may call at Breitlow 15, , officiating. Burial will be in Funeral Homo today from 7 to in the bride's homo here. Thoy policies, making it easier than il p.m. and al the church after lived in La Crosse for one year everforyoutotake Woodlnwn Cemetery. ^ Friends mny call nt Fawcett 1 p.m. Tuesday, in 1!M4. They returned hero in advantage of our f „MI fA,M " Funeral Home Tuesday from 7 1945, when he started the Dori- lamous low-cost ^gt to 0 p.m., and (it. the church Roy M. Tolleson Sr. val Centrn l Service Television protoctlon! later- kmSfim one hour before sorvlccs Wed- Funeral services for Roy M. Co. estod? Call for ,~~, nesday. Tolleson Sr ,, 1137 W. Broadway, Survivors nre: His wife; two complete details. *¦ ' ¦» A memorial is heing arranged, will be held Tuesday nt 2 p.m, sons, William Dorival Jr. nnd at St. Paul's Episcopal Church , Howard, Caledonia; two grand- Winona Funerals bo held Tuesday at 2 p.m. nt children, and one sister, Mrs. St . Paul's Kpiscopnl Church, Lucille Eberhard , Ixis Angeles, "Pete" Polus Mrs. Mary Papenfuss tho Rev. George Goodreid of- Hlfi parents hnve died, 126 Ertt Brondway Funornl .services for Mrs, ficiating. Burinl will be in Funeral services will ho Wed- Mnry Papenfuss , Woodlnwn Cemetery. PHONE 4520 who died nesday at 2 p.m. nt Immanuel Thursday ut tho home of her Fawcett Funera l Home i.s in Lutheran Church , tho Rev. Rich- P OBtl [laughter nnd son-in-law , Mr. charge of arrangements . ard Hansen officiating. Burial STATC TARM INSURANCE COMPANIES , nnd Mrs. Arnold Voss, lied Top i'hero will be no Visitation. A will be In Evergreen Cemetery. O dcai - Horn* . , llloonilngton, III. frailer Court , were held today memorial is being arranged. Friend .) may call at Potter- I ¦ '(¦ 1 1 House of the Week Praxel et ux-Lot 5, Block 10, Curtis Stale Building Property Transfers Add. to Winona- QUIT CLAIM DEED Herbert C. Schmltl et ux to H. K. In Winona County Brehmer-SW'A Sec. 33; SE'A of NE'A) X NWA of¦ SEV4) E'A Of SE'A Sec. 21- WARRANTY DEID 105-5. . . ¦. - .. Trails 1964 Ruby Krenzke. to Marlyn Langseth— W., 80 ft. of tot 7, Block 3, Benlcke's U .K. Brehmer fo Norbert C. Schmfti NE'A; U-Shapi Statistics compiled by the and Volkmsnn's Add. to Lewiston. -SW'A Sec, 22) SEVt of NWV* of Ralph Arnett et ux to Lawrence New- SE'A; E'/i of SE'A Sec. 21-105-5. By ANDY LANG PI^ ¦ David Bishop et ux to Larry -Johnson— Federal Reserve Bank of Min- comb et ux-Part of NWVi of NWM of ' ' Lots 2 and 3, Block 11, OP St. Charles. Effective use . - . of- all available Stc. 32-10*5/- neapolis show that the dollar Herman K.. Schultz- et-ux to James H . C.A.S. Corporation to Bellfonte Invest- space is the chief concern of ttie Schulti—NWVi Sec. 19-107-9. ment Co.—Lots 1, 2, 3 and 4. Block 1 r volume: of building in Minnesota ; conscientious and competent Abts Agency, Inc., to J. R . Keller— Lots 1 through 10, Blodk 2; Block J, during the first ' 11: months of Lot 8 and W'ly 7 ft . et Lot 9, Block », Westgate Subd. to Wlnopa. architect in designing a 'house . Hamilton's Add. to Winona. Independent School District- No. 859 .» Mildred Groth-Part of EVi of NWA Sec. of modest proportions. 1965 trailed the total for the Mary E. Houser to Francis P. Houser • • '¦ •f ux—N. 40 rods: of E, 20 . rods of 9-105-6. . • . . . ' 'In-a large house on a large same period of the previous NWW of . SE'A Sec. 11-105-7. : Ver Donna D. Erickson to Harlan S. Hllke Homes, Inc., to Loyal L, Tullluj Erlekson-Part Of NW'A of SEVi; SW'A . plot, there can be one or more year by nearly ""! -- 3, $24 million. . et ux-^Lot¦ Hllke's 2nd Subd. to Wi- of SE'A; SEVi of SWA Sec. 9-106-7. areas which serve no functional nona. ; Janet Groth to Julius P.. Groth et ux— In its monthly survey of ¦¦" purpose. In a house the size of In/In H. Przytarskl et ux to John A. EW of . NWVi See. 9-105-6. ' ' v building permits issued at re- Drazkowski et ux—W. 10 ft. ol Lot 5 John W. Bonner et al to Board of the newest House of the Week— and air if Lot 6, Block 20, Smith's Arid, Educations-Part of Ldt» 1-10."Lake-Side porting centers throughout its to Winona, except S'ly 45 ft. thereof. Outlets to Wlnone In Sec. 28-107-7. v ' •: with dimensions of 62' by 39'4", Edward P. Whitten et ux to Royal R. Agnes Knopp et al to Board of Educa- including the garage — it is im- districts, the bank found that Helm et UX—Lot 16, Block ,2, E, R. tion—Part Of Lots 1-10, Lake-Side Out- Boiler's 3rd Add. to Goodview. lots to Winona In Sec. 28-107-7. ' portant that every inch of space the. Minnesota January-Novem- Ervin J. Boehm ef al to Susan M. Charles A. MHton. et al to the Board be used well. Boehm—NE'A of NW'A; SWVt Sec. 25- of Education—Parts of Lots 1-10, Lake- ber cumulative total for 1965 105-5. ¦ - .. -:¦ side Outlots to Winona In Sec; 28-107-7. ARCHITECT Lester Cohen was $475,683,440,. compared with Arne Odegaard et ux to William R . Ben J. Sherldart to the Board of Edu- Schammel et al—Lot 3, Block 5, . Bor . cation—Part ol Lots 1-10, Lake-Side Out- has done an excellent job of giv- flagstOned floor arid arched columns $499,957,881 recorded in the kowskl's Subd. In Village of Goodview . lots to Winona tn Sec, 28-107-7. . ATTRACTIVE TERRACE . . . Placement of the front - windows, partial roof , ' Ruth L. Lltshelm et ux to Lawrence H. Jack N; Squires et ux, to Board of . ing a three-bedroom family same period in 1964. / . - . .-* Education—Part of Lots 1-10, Lake-Side terrace between the bedroom and garage wings adds 234 make it pleasing to the eye, as well. . Lamey et ux—NE'A of SE'A Sec. 18; 1,590 square feet of living area. For November, the total drop- W'/i of SW'A; W'/i of EW- of SW'A Sec. Outlots to Winona In Sec. 58-107-7. square feet to the livable area of the house. Diamond-paned 17-108-9. .; . David P. Squires et al to Board of But he has done even more ped from $42^693,830 in 1964 to Education-Part of Lots M0, Lake-Side , , than that. $40,239,841 in 1965. (hdepehdenf School District No. 858 to Outlets to, Winona tn Sec. 28-107-7. Colonial Development Corp.^Lot-39, ex- CONTRACT FOR DEED cept ,W. 155 vlt. thereof; W, 8- rods, blends well with the natural For the district as ;a whole Lot Mary Gertrude Degnan to John Joseph Through an interesting U- 50, limits of City of St; Charles. stone veneer on the front Oi the there also was an Jl-month de- Degnan et a t—S W of NE'A; N'/i of SE'A plan, yvhich places an attractive Utica Cc-bp'eratlve Creamery to Harold Sec. 2; S'/i ot NE'A See. 11-105-8, SW'A bedroom and garage wings giv- crease from i964's $Sjl ,16r,20 _ > front terrace between the open- * E. Bartsh et ux—S'ly SO ft. of Lot 6, of SW'A except parcel Sec. 6-105-7. ing a kind of colonial flavor to to $653,519,002 and a November Block 2, Vlllaje of Utica. Abts Agency, Inc., to Robert A. Pabsf ing in the U, he has provided what is essentially a ranch decline from $56,407,830 in 1964 Roland 6. Papenfuss et ux to John —Lot 28, Block "A", Goodview . Subd. 234 additional square feet of N, Kolb «t ux—Part of Outlots 14 and Bennett R.. .Kaiser et ux to Richard house. The result is a pleasant to $52,325,978 in 1965. 22, Plat of Auditor's Subd. of Sec. Sandvlg et ox—Lot 8 and W'ly 2 ft. of ¦ ¦ ' Wi- habitability. By covering half 7-105-4. Lot 9, . ¦ Block . », Hamilton's Add. to exterior, : in good taste and suit- Comparative data for select- nona. ; ' of the terrace Inform a porch, Carl Schultz . to Marvin J. Rupprecht Helen Degnan to John Joseph Degnan able for. any neighborhood. ed Minnesota and Wisconsin ef. ux—Part of NW'A of SW'A Sec. . 20- ' ' ¦ et al-S'/i of ¦NE%f-NV4 Of SE'A Sec. 2;v he has insured both the useful- cities. v. . - . v . " . 107-7.- " ness and privacy of the area. ONE OF the space-saving fea- , . ; St . of NE'A Sec. 11-105-8; .SW'A of SW'A ¦ —Jenuary-Hoveniber— Esther B. Dunn to Lewis E. Albert except parcel Sec. 6-105-7. . . . - - ' - . . . IMS 1M4 et ux—Lot 2, Block 1, Herman;J, Dunn - ¦ terrace with its flagston- tures of this design is the plac- ¦' ¦% ,. - ORDINANCE - The . * Owatonna ...... $-2,637,601 2,745,596 Subd. to Goodview , ment of the front entrance. It's Red Wing .._... . 2,438,445 1,«1,)50 City of Wlhbiia to The Public—Vacation ed floor and arched columns, C. R „ : Hauge ef ux to ChudnoW Con- ol part ot Wilson Street. at the side of the porch Rochester :.; 26,138,347 • 18,074,987 struction Co,—Lot 9 and W'ly 35 ft. of , leading St. Cloud ' : 8,380,963 6,983,044 . DEED . .. ' Lot 10, Block 25, Smith's Add. to Wi- immediately into a center hafi WINONA ...... : 7,630,419 6,983,054 nona, and part of Outlots 19 and 20, .. Harold Kohal et al to Emma C. Ko- which serves a triple purpose, Albert Lea ....;.. W6W14 1,624,518 Plumer 's Add. to Winona. hal-^S'ly 40 ff_df Lot 10, Block 5t, Hub- Austin :...... ,... 2,514,595 . 2,620,187 bard's Add. 1o Winona. . Winona Sand 8« Gravel Co It is a foyer Mankato ...... 8.188„331 : . to Nelwn ¦ Fl . s|..,N?tlonal '-Ban% WORK from the family «room portion arid family room, and the living room and dining room, '65 from seven feet of water. pel et ux—Lot 8, Block 4, Boiler's 3rd government, in hopes of reduc- \** 1 Last Permit of Investigators said the couple Add. to Goodview. ing red tape as well as the to a rear patio* Double win- create illusion of spaciousness in modest-sized home. Note . Jul* Whetstone et ux to Henry E. : Host- dows over the kitchen sink pro- A single building permit was was headed toward the sun and ing et ux—Part of SE'A ot NE'A of number of employes, has in- how single hallway serves as a center hall and a bedroom Sec. 33-107-7 lying N'ly of road. vide good supervision of the issued last week at the city en- evidently did not see the open stalled a trial system for hand- / hali Edwa rd Walch et ux fo Michael Watch backyard. A barbecue adjoin- gineer's office. It went to War- area of water 500 yards from the et ux—SEVi except . 3 parcels In Sec. 29; ling reports and files. From now ren Morley, 755 Highway Ai, shore of Lake Poygan. They N. 30 acres of EVi pf NE'A of. Sec, on they will go through three ing the range arid oven is part 32-108-9. V for construction of a playroom lived beside the lake located 20 Wllmer L. Larson et Ox to Merl L. stages instead of five, as at Advertisement whose estimated cost was listed miles northwest of Oshkosh iii Hokenstrom et ux—Lot 5, Block 1, Kit- present, before reaching policy- tie's 1st Add/ to Winona. How to BuildyBiiy at $250. east-central Wisconsin; Edward J. Hartert et al to Melvin F. making personnel. BAUER iMOYW £rop APARJMENT 3-G By Alex Kotzky ELECTRIC, INC. ftND 6 225 East Third St. / ^^ ^^ & Or Sell your Home Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor's estimate. You can ord^r also, for $1, a booklet called "YOUR HOME- Your Furnace How to Build, Buy or Sell It." included uTit are small repro- ductions of 16 of the most popular House of the Week issues, Send this coupon to the Daily News or you may purchase Is Obsolete the plans¦ or the booklet at the information, counter at the Daily ^Ji f fnoQij.. News. '• . - .,. '., -•'" . ::;- .- ' .;. . . . if it doesn't have viEiUJ " "" " Enclosed is 5(1. cents for baby blueprints on Design G-17 D Thrust-Back CoJ/or ' Enclosed Is $1 for "YOUR HOME" booklet ? TOILET TANK BALL ' ' DURAGLASS A/ntWca's largest Se/Ztr NAME' - ....:..- .;...... v... - .., - .Ix.ly •-.v...'...;..;-.. - Tha tffici«nr Water Matter instantl y ltopi . lXjl ¦¦¦ » ¦ i». ¦¦ i ¦¦ — ^ L INVESTIGATE OUR J*.—,—; 1——-, 1— i II ; ^mmmmmmam±mm^ _ of the family room's fireplace at his disposal. ; ensemble. - ; The owner of this house is LENNOX* There are two entrances into sure to get his money's worth. the <*mud room and laundry, bURACURVC- which are adjacent to the kit- chen. One is from the side of G-17 Statistics i i FAUCET WITH A FUTURE A the house, the other from the Design G-17 has a living GAS FURNACES ¦ garage. The latter arrangement Save* Work..Jimo' ,..Water Jt will be appreciated by the room, a dining room, a house-wife who has to carry combined kitchen-family packages from the auto into room, fireplace, mud room- the house. laundry, three bedrooms, The two-car garage is large two baths/ a center hall, a enough to permit the stora ge large terrace and a two-car of toys and tools. There is a garage. full basement, with the stair- Tota l livable space Is way to it at the entrance to 1,590 square feet, excluding NANCY ' By Ernig Bushmillar the mud room. the terrace, garage and rear patio. Overall dimen- A GLANCE at the floor plan Chat. J. Olsen & Sons sions arc 62" by 39'4". 111 Canter of Design G-17 shows how well There is a full basement. Phon* 7010 architect Cohen has succeeded ¦ ' - ' . - in making use of all the space Brown County Don't be satisfied Sheriff Dead See Us For ^ with less ihan Lennoxl w We NEW ULM, Minn. (AP)-John m ygs_E__L " Belle vl»H. Reitter, 77, sheriff of Brown ^ iff lH County 31 years before he re- NOW ! Non-corroding 7 tired in 1959, died - here ur ^fiP*- Phone 8-3136 Saturday. GLASS Is fused to 7 the remarkable ^o7 f iwdowLf i/uli Sta te Agriculture • Kllclun Cablneti • Porrnlci Topi « LENNOX e WirdrebM e T»pp»n Appliance* Committee Named MARY WORTH By Saunders and Ernst HEAVY SHEET • Iton Flxtur«« • Dtiki . • Vinltlot DURACURVE ST. PAUL (AP) — The three FREE ESTIMATES members of the Minnesota State Heat Exchanger! STEEL Agricultural Stabilization and This means that your Len- Conservation Committee have nox Gas Furnace will last Our Specialized Sorvlcei been reappointed for 1906, Sec- ond last with now DUHA- Alto Include: retary of Agriculture Orville L. GLASS . . . because it re- Bill Weaver Freeman has announced. sists acids and moisture, it • Job and Contract Welding They are Ben M. Wlchterman , won 't burn off . oxidize , scale • Painting-Decorating. Repair Work Plummer; Russell A. Johnson, or peel , . . and at the same • Boiler • Dri-Wall Taping M, Lang, hcntlng effi- . Cokato; and Harold time improves • Interior and Exterior Mankato. Luther .1. Pickrel , rioncy. Before yon buy any Painting furnace, get the complete Minneapolis , extension director WINONA BOILER for Minnesota , le an ex-offlcio story of DURAGLASS. Only Phona Lennox has it I j member of the committee. They & STEEL CO. 1 BBMilF l are assisted by C. Urban Ewing, state executive director. Wo Hava a Furnace for Any, Phone 5965 The ' committee administers ROLLINGSTONE, MINN. P»_W ^^^BB ^^^fr ^kV ^t ^m ^B ^BSt ^^^^^^^^^ ™ • ^*mi ^^^'^* ^m^ma^^^mmm ^^~^^^m^mm *m^^m ^m^a^mmmi Mn ¦ , 163-167 West Front Street farm action programs in Minne- • ^ r "*M^_I^^P^IWH3n5ii WTTaffB. . ^^ ^^** Heating Need ... sota. MARK TRAIL . By Ed Dodd ¦ r¦ "¦ GAS ELECTRIC l i ' i i " « i' ^^i—— '* •*. I t i« •——^aaal * • OIL COAL "JAVB $$ WITH »BN.B" »KS * • 1 QUALITY SHEET \y SENSEELECTRIC SERVICE S S\ 1732 Wont METAL WORKS H'ono WW? J^ M ^M /A Anytime HAROLD OFEMLOCH Fifth St. ' ^ C ^^YM CALL 7466 161 Eait Broidtviy 9 Industrial • Commercial jr ^Wo |#t y Phone 579? 9 Fqrm and Residential ^^SB ' GEO. KARSTEN Electric al Work * . General Contractor Pack Lead , ¦ ' ¦ ¦: ¦ - Jiminy) ' (Paul degrees. • . ' - . •• . Old Men Car- 47-y.arder to Wis. (AP ) - ' ons before 50,852 damp fans' at .Ball control did the job for ported $600,000, and Grabowski, up next fall, llornung said: TD pass was a city san* GREEN BAY, / first score of Yeoman work by the Lambeau Field./ the Packers-, a strategy dear to Illinois' record - breaking full- "We'll wait and sey about that roll Dale for the a crew Jim Taylor and Paul Hornung, ' ' itation department and . the old folks of the Grten Bay "Just a couple of oldtimers the heart of CoaCh Vince Lom- back, for a reported $250,000. next year/ ' the game. .,, snow ¦ ¦ great game, of youngsters brushed the have risen to the chal- '. trying to hang . oh ," chorused . bardi/ . Taylor and Hornung aren't Neither Anderson nor Gra- "Starr called a field, was Packers, "It was a tough off the tarpaulin so the lenge of the $850,000 bonus Taylor and Hornung laughingly "You have. to control the ball / / about to step aside , for the bowski was present since they said Lombardi. Despite The ball was slip- playable by game time. twins Donny Anderson and Jim in the Green Bay clubhouse. / against the Browns if you are rookies: are playing in the Hula Bowl in day to throw. no , ' ' receivers couldn't the snow and ice there were Grabowski . Taylor , named the most val- going to beat them." said Lom- "Donny is going to be a great . , :// Honolulu. pery, and the . " ; and each team scored The pair of 30-year-old Packer uable player in the game, car- , bardi. "We planned to stick to one ," said Hornung, who was Bart Starr, aL doubtful starter make good cuts. 't kidding. It its first TD on a pass. backs toted the heavy load Sun- ped 27 times for 96 yards. .Hor-. . . the: basics. Yes, I think there is . instrumental/in getting Ander- all week because of the back Lombardi wasn ¦ in Packer- Dale on the 47-yard day in the snow, rain and fog • nung, the former Golden Boy of a little spark left yet in "Jimmy son to sign with the Packers. "I bruises he suffered in the West- was a miserable day Starr hit - inches of snow 3:52 of the first quar- while old-fashioned ball con- the pack, carried . 18 times for .: and Paul.--/ :¦ ." .-. .. took him out in Baltimore and ern Conference playoff game land. About 3% score at the and it Cleveland came right trol game .carried the Packers 105 yards, including one beauti- . Lombardi probably , provided talked to him. " with Baltimore, called a great: .- ,/ fell during the morning,¦ ter , and ¦.intermittent-. to. the , . . ful 34-yard run and a 13-yard some Of the spark when he .' Asked if . the high-priced y game for Green Bay and com- snowed and rained ;¦ ¦:" . ' • •: ¦ ' '¦ ¦ as the PACKERS . title on a 23-12 victory - over ramble on the old Green Bay signed Anderson , the fabulous rookies were going to/ elbow pleted .10 of 18 . p9S_e_^ for : 147 ly. during- the afternoon 11) around 33 (Condoned on Page Cleveland's defending ehampi- touchdown sweep. Texas Tech halfback for a re- their wav into the starting line- yards and one touchdown. His temperature hovered

V/inona Starr, of 1st Touchdown: Not Day Nevvs Good Ball Slipped Off Hand' Sports For Unbeaten Monday, January 3, 1966 j GREEN BAY, Wis! \m - The 47-yard touchdown pass; partially 'blocked the kick, shared credit with end Lionel ' VVINONA DAILY NEWS 10 ! from Bart Starr to Carroll Dale that started Green Bay's 23-12 Aldridge and . linebacker . Ray Nitsghke. • .- victory over Cleveland .Sunday for the National Football "It was a combined' effort/'/said Jordan., "Nitschke was League championship was the big one that almost got away. pulling the guard and Aldridge pulled the tackle out. . I.sneaked "The ball squirted out of my hands,'' , said Starr, "It in between them and hit it solidly with my. hand.": ¦ ¦ slipped. But'Carroll came back and caught it." '¦. This is the way the players explained other . key plays in i 'Twa s long records :— gaining 352 - By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ticularly in clutch situations/Units He Bowl : Dale v ;. ./ ball , who left two defenders sliding in the mud and ouU the championship game: Foot yards through the air. , a , gambling, intercepted tW"o passes, setting raced three others to the end zone, explained, "I ran a fly Packers' All-NFL . coinerback Herb Adderley,, who sur- Gary Bebari j In Friday's post-season action pattern was playing me real close scrambling sophomore quarter- with 42-yard , 1 had him rendered his first ; touchdown pass in 16 NFL games when hup a TD on one . — sophomore Lenny Snow ran beat and then when I saw the ball was going to be short I ' back, and tenacious defender Coliins made his catch— return, and helped pull down for 136 yards, ; leading Georgia canie back and caught it." NeW Year s Bob Stiles. / "Collins ran a zig-out pattern. T had to commit myself, / Bob Apisa short of the goal Tech over Texas Tech 31-21 in The retaliated only a minute later i was shading to Collins' inside shoulder and looking for the Joe/LgBruzzo, a chunky little . when the Michigan State fiill- the Gator Bowl : Texas Western with a 17-yard touchdown throw from Frank Ryan to Gary post pattern." / line-buster. upset Texas Christian 13-12 in i back went, for the * tying two-, Collins and the game settled down into a/slogging ground All-NFL safety Willie "Wood; of Green Bay who .set up And Steve Sloan/; a spectac- the Sun Bowl; and Tod Hullin ol war that may have ¦ ¦ ' pivoted pii two kicks. the field goal that gave the Packers a 13-12 halftime lead Eve Party ! ular, marksman. | point conversion ¦attempt.-in the Washington tossed three scoring The first came when the snap from center John Morrow by picking off a Ryan.pass and returning it to the Cleveland . closing seconds. / ; Those were the headliners as strikes as the West beat tha for the extra point try after Collins' catch was low and kicker 10—. : ¦'' . , ' _ » GREEN BAY , Wis. I_P) ; -/If j UCLA, Louisiana State and Ala- ' ' heavily East 22-7: in the Shrine game at picked up the ball for a futile pass to holder "We had ^ralled the. right defense for this play. We shifted 't walk into a bar or , UCLA stunned the/ . you didn bama humbled college football's Sari Francisco. Bob Franklin who was tackled short of the goal line. our defense to the right . . . . The pass was intended for. Le- pay attention to an occasional j favored Spartans with two sec- :¦¦ Big Three in a sensational Franklin said the snap was "in front of me and I had roy Kelly.. The pass was kind of wobbly. It floated in there. horn blast , you'd think it was | ond-quarter touchdowns .ind string of bowl games New • ¦ to l* _ge for it. But I should have had it . It ruined Lou's At the last minute, I jumped up and tapped it and then got just like any other night in . j Kurt/ Zimmerman v kicked . the ' ¦¦- :¦ '¦ ¦¦ ' ¦ '¦ X- Year's Day; - ' timing."' - ./ .X -X X ' X . .. it On the rebound:" Green Bay — self-labeled"Ti- vital extra points. Michigan The secohd came in the third period with the Packers The Packers' Paul Hornung, who gained 105 yards, in 18 ' tletown , U.S,A.'-!'. . Beban led the: attack and j State got its two scores in. the Gophers Keep leading 20-12 as Groza tried a 37-yard field goal that would ! final period , but failed on two carries and. raced 13 yards for the . clinching touchdown in I The occasional reveler slog- Stiles performed: magnificently have pulled the Browns within the striking range of a single tries for two-point conversions. the third period , as guard Jerry Kramer cleared the way— Lged :¦ by in the slush, ' drink in on defense in UCLA's 14-12 up- j touchdown: Henry Jordan. Packers' who / "Our offensive line had a hell a dav blocking." ,. ; LStl also scored its 14 points of one hand and ' occasionally a set of top-ranked Michigan State ' second quarter, overcom- [large I redjiorn in another/ But in the Rose Bowl. LaBruzzo was 1 in fhe Surge Alive; a 7-0 lead held by the fa- ( otherwise the sidewalks were the back of the game as LSU ing vored Razorbacks in the Cotton ! nearly empty, ; topped second-ranked Arkansas J Cheerhader | Bowl at Dallas LaBruzzo, ,a 5- 14-7 in the , ending . Inside the bars,; however, out foot-9 halfback- .' rammed over i the Razorbacks' winning streak j . Trip Duluth of the show/ throngs toasted vic- I twice from the one for the Ti- ; at 22 games. And Sloan was a Has Idea 6f tory with the intoxication of a gers, carrying four straight By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS j record-smashing passer in I [ninth National Football League • times from the Arkansas 16 for sparking Alabama oyer third- Minnesota continued its recent Q ; championship, and the third in. his first touchdown and three three goals in mfij^ Ml ranked Nebraska 39-28 . in the surge by scoring [ the last five years, won by the times from the five for his sec- the final period Saturday night " '¦.' ¦ " . ' - .y. Orange Bowl; ^REEN BAY, Wis. UP) - Thi; .' ; y. . ond. to ni luckless Minnesota-Duluth Each of the losers went into p Green Bay Packers have a club- j Revelers were packed three 5-4 in a Western Collegiate Hock- the- post-season classic with : a ;: Sloan was an a m a zing house cheerleader who uses his [and four deep. A piece of gpal- ey Association contest. own pep pills. post adorned one bar. 10-0 xecbrd — and it was a sure- i sharpshooter as 'JBama : rah off j shot bet that: one of them would ^from ; Nebraska in their night /It was the fourth straight win Dad Braisher , v head 'of the .;. . Thousands of frozen , delirious for the Gophers and lipped their Packers' equipment room, has , wind up as national champion. ! game , at Miami's Orange Bowl, Packers fans had stormed the ' season record to 5-4. Minnesota a number of printed slogans football field Sunday after But Saturday s surprises j Although hampered by; a torn changed all that and Alabama , is 2-3 in thie. WCHA , while Du- posted at each locker. They Green Bay's 23-12/victory oyer i rib cartilage suffered in the '¦¦ ' read: /¦ which was ranked No. 4 after ah • opening period , he hit on 20 of 29 luth slipped to 0-5. / . / : Cleveland. .They ringed the field The Bulldogs led 4-2 early in "Anything is burs '— provided in the closing moments, then 8-1-1 regular season/ must rate /passes for 296 yards and two : the final period but Gary Gam- we are willing to pay the price." charged the! leading contender for the /touchdowns, Ray Perkins - onta it as the game : of After the Packers' victory in ended: . ' .," ¦ title_ _ off its domination of Ne- caught 10 passes for the Crim- bu.cci scored his second goal Baltimore last month, Dad had braska's massive Cofnhuskers. son Tide, two for. TD? ¦[. the game to make it 4-3. With | Playersv were surrounded by 2:14 left, the Gophers pulled a number of books of matches the mob and had to; struggle to Sloan's 20 completions and 296 The championship will be ' goalie 3ohn Lothrop from the printed. On the cover of each safety of their dressing room. yards and Perkins 10 catches there was the message: decided in The Associated i were Orange Bowl records. nets to add an extra skater. Denied, access to the perform^ ' ' "Anything equals $10,000..' Press' poll of experts, with re- ; Missouri went , into the last Doug Woog rapped in his sec- ers* tne citizens turned their sults announced Tuesday, During the past week, each ' quarter against Florida with a ond goal .to tie the game. Packer attentions to the unprotected In another post-season thriller received an envelope steel goalposts. seemingly comfortable , -20-0 Lothrop went back to the nets from Dad. Each had a check Saturday, Missouri withstood lea'd , but Steve Spurrier made it and Bruce Larson scored ths made out for $10,000 to F. U. The crossbar and sideposts the passing artistry of Steve edgy for the Tigers. He threw winning goal only lil/ seconds Win and signed Nathan L. Leg. quivered , fell upon the bodies Spurrier and edged Florida 20- for two touchdowns and scored after Woog's tying shot. The Packers will get about of those squeezed beneath , and 18 in the Sugar Bowl .at New another in the final period — S7 0O0 each, Dave Maertz scored twice for . but the extra pay were spirited away. Orleans, but the stirring comeback UMD. _ v for the college All-Star Beban scored both UCLA game The uprights withstood the proved futile for the Gators as The Gophers.whose win string next year and other fringe ben- touchdowns, was an ever-dan- assault but long after the game they failed on two-point pass includes two victories in a holi- efits will put the total close gerous running and passing to $10,000. a knot of diehard followers were attempts after each touchdown. day tournament in St: Paul , face seen hauling away with thick threat , and quarterbacked the ' Michigan Friday and Saturday ' ¦ ' : Spurrier tried 45 passes and *' Bruins superbly. Stiles was a * ¦ ropes to pull * * - down the last re- ¦¦ : ¦ .: . . . / . defensive standout all day. par- connected on 27 —both Sugar at Minneapolis. . Summaries maining fragments of steel. Most CLEVELAND . ... ¦ t . J • «_n of the Packers players GREEN BAY ... ; T t 1 }_M celebrated at a private party . OB-Oalt (U, pasi from Stirr). PAT -Chandler (kick). at the home of quarterback Bart Cleve—Colllnj (17, pan .Irom Ryan). Starr while literally thousands Marquette 5 in PAT-pa« tailed. Cleve—FG: Oroia (Ml. H of fans jammed into the down- GB-FG: Chandler 05). -! town restaurants, supper clubs GB—FG: Chandler (21). bars where drinking is legal Cleve—FG: Groia ran. on Driver's Seat! OB-Hornunn (IJ, run), a Sunday, ¦ PAT—Chandler ' ¦ ¦ ' - (kick).- ¦ - ¦ ¦ . . . . GB-FO: Chandler (}»). Att _ndancer-50,.52. Don't Bet On It ' FACTS and FIGURES i Final acoret-iOreen MILWAUKEE, .fv - Mar- ¦ Bay 11, Clavtlind i 12. ' . ! Saban Out quette and Wisconsin collide Attendance—50,5(1 (paid). j head-on tonight in the 1966 re- Receipts—Not .announced until liter ! from NFL otllce . newal of their rich basketball Winning thare—S7,0M (estimated). rivalry and the action should Loilng iharei—. .,__. (estimated). VICTORY FOR VINCE . . . Green Bay ning the National Football League champ- As be intense, uninhibited and Second-place money— .100,040 divided Coach un- | between runner-up teams. Packer Conch Vince Iximbnrdi is carried off ionship Sunday from Ihe Cleveland Browns , predictable. Third-place money—575,000 divided be ; tween thlrd-placa te _ms. ' . , Lambeau Field on the shoulders of his back- 2:1-12. Taylor was voted the game's most The Warriors will enter tho Winning coach—. i field stars — fullback Jimmy Taylor CV1 ) valuable player. (AP Photofax) game with Ihe home floor, two Championships won—Green Bay t (rec Of Buffalo victories over the Badgers ard), I and halfback Paul Hornung (5) — after win- •» ' last BUFFALO, N.Y, (AP) - Lou year , a belter record , and a S_iban , the first-place finish in the Milwau- League's Coach of the Year , has kee Classic where Wisconsin last, resigned his job with the cham- was The only Packer pion Buffalo Bills at the pe_ik of siilient fact on the form .shcefT^ , his career due lo the pressures however , is that Taylor Hornung past records mean involved and because "there nothing in can be little left to conquer this furious basketball feud. ¦; Statistics in "It' profossionul football. " s our biggest - game, I i Hushing -• know ," snid Marquette Coach GREek nAY- The Associated Press , mean- Al McGuire. I All. Nol Yard while , learned that Snban will Marquette finished the 191. 5 Not Finished Yet 1 Hornung . IR 105 portion of ils Taylor , . ,, , 57 . » he named head coach campaign with a , .Tl — Paul Hornung Again Hornung was the hero , (Ins time at the GREEN BAY Wis. ' Moore .., _ 3 University of Maryland. (.- ./record after losing in tho puffed on a cigarette nnd grinned, There was . sharing the laurels wilh Taylor , who was CLEVELAND- 1) The university plans last four seconds lo I .vnnsvlilo a fleck of dirt on his forehend. voted the Most Valuable Player in the game. Brown 1' a news Gram i s conference today but officials in the finale of the Kvansvillc Jimmy Tay lor stood nearby. Like Horn- The rest of . the Packers , including the Ryon J » J were not available for comment Invitation al. Wisconsin scored ung. he was surrounded by reporters and in coldly mechanical quarterback Bart Starr , an impressive j Passing on the report that Snhnn will be victory last week his underwear. Taylor looked more dressed also performed brilliantly. But all were up- over Pennsylvania , IGRGEN BAY- named as Tom Nugent '., succes- stopped only because of thc tape that encased hi.s legs. staged hy one of Ihe longest running (woman 1 once All Comp YriiTO In sor. previously, but has only a A month ago Hornung and Taylor , two acts in Ihe NFL. I i S|_irr 16 10 147 I , Snluiri •)-fi s ate. Taylor was almost ruthlessly matter of I Hornunfl 1 0 0 0- i made his stunning an- backs who long provided the whiplash in Ihe McGinn. disregard,*! National Football League' most stinging yards in l/l tries Rotoerli I n Fas. - Economical Tho Packers won on Unit foggy day In and caught one nass for eight yards , lie also lo conquer In professional foot- touchdown an a keeper piny in first quarter against Michi- Kickoff ItcUiins , Baltimore nnd Hornung scored live touch- blocked precisely for Taylor and Taylor ball. " gan State in first quarter of Rose Bowl game at Pasadena, 'N. GREEN HAY- Then ho downs, putting Green Bay in position to take blocked for him. uildod: He is following UCLA right tackle Larry Single. UCLA full- the Western Conference title , A reporter asked Hornung If he had suf- No, Y/lrdt "I fed my decision would be ' ,IUUD DR0S Moore 3 «« buck Paul Morgan in foreground (301, Michigan State 's I ROBB STORE The Packers won again Sunday _ !.'. • 12 in fered an unusual number .of injurie,., this CLEVELAND • the .same rrgurdloss ol Ihe tentn 576 E Scnlri I |4 (AP 4"» St. p n much bigger game — thc NFL champion- "Which one do you want to talk , or city in i 111 , Hon (iooverl , linebacker , ' gets to Hnbnn loo late, i hont ,,0,,, season. Rohorli J l «( which I was couch- ¦ ' ship ' mnlch against thc Cleveland Browns, about?" he said "My back? My ribs?" Kelly I 44 ing. " Photofax) > Ellie Hansen Green Tops Wilh 506 Ba^W^ ¦ GREEN BAY, Wis. W - ped 3% inches of snow, foi. U.S.A;" :.;.; /¦ " ., no cheering, celebrating or cause he wants to." Ellie Hansen topped weekend AnnualGridGame: There were no goats. There lowed by mild temperatures "This is a team of real dumping the coach into the "'Starr handled the game bowlers by spiking 178—506 in room./ were no alibis. There and intermittent rains left dia racter," said Packer shower v in a wonderful intelligent the Red Men's Club Ladies Coach Vince Lombardi. "It's , was little jubilation and less The Browns, right down manner," Collier said. League. ¦¦ Lambeau Field soggy. got a great deal of perser- the line, had nothing but gloom., ' . — ¦ ' "When they got ahead of us The Packers, relying on verance." praise for the victors. , the second time with the Her totals led Paffrath Paint NFL Defeats AFL Green Bay' s 23-12 victory ball possession in uie run- Lombardi minimized the score 13-12, Starr made it to an 849—2,491 sweep. over Cleveland for 'the Na- '"'We got licked by a good ning of Jim Taylor and Paul condition of the soggy field team," said Cleveland Coach most : difficult for us. He Iii the Red Men's Class "A" tional Football Le ji-gue Hornung, adjusted to the and said - "We planned to ; championship Sunday . "Their pos- kept executing; the: third circuit; Ray Thrune's 232—534 was a situation. The Browns were stick to basics as much as down plays with consisten- professional showpiece session game was excellent. paced Winona Milk Co; to 945. from unable to do so. And the Eossible; We are a pretty They made the big play. cy and kept the ball away By 8-11 Count start to finish despite 3 ad- coveted title again fell upon asic team anyhow." ¦ ' • ¦' Winona; Boxcraft tipped 2,768. verse weather We couldn't." from us." ¦;,. . : • conditions. the city of Green Bay/which The Packers took their the Father-SOn League at By THE' ASSOCIATED PRESS back/received more than $30o,- A snowstorm which drop- calls itself "Title Town. victory in stride. There was Collier heaped admiration Collier, who said the field upon quarterback Ba rt was as wet for one team Westgate found Rich Duellman The National and American 000 for signing with the St. Louis Starr, who was a touch-and- as the other, did admit that leading the juniors with 170f- football leagues, who do not Cardinals, who also grabbed ¦ 487 and Phil Bambenek topping PACKERS go starter because of rib 'it is a shame that these meet on tha playing field, have Lucas, Michigan . State's hug* , (Continued from Page 10) injuries until the day of the two fine football teams the^pops with 203—546. Bamben- eks tipped 381 and Duellmans concluded their annual game for tackle. Peay, Missouri's stand- big game when Lombardi could not have played ¦under back with a touchdown on a 17- said. "Starr will start be- better: conditions." '¦/•• " L065. ¦//:.' the top draft / 'choices'- in the out tackle and a first-round yard pass from Frank Ryan to PackersGet pick, went with the New York country; / Gary Collins. Final score: NFL 88, AFL 11. Giants as did Nebraska *od A bad break ruined the NFL teams finished sweeping Freeman White. Browns' game, plan following the country from end to end at Besides Xucas, NFL teaiiii that first TD: John Top Ouinteit signed four other second-round Morrow's the sites of the weikehd college pass from center was GREEN BAY, Wis. UP) - time All-America halfback selections — Missouri tackl« off line bowl games and wound up with Butch Allison going with Balti- and fumbled by Bob Franklin, The Green Bay Packers Donny Anderson of Texas have emerged from pro 38 of their first 43 draft eltgi- more, .Arkansas halfback Jim holding the ball for kicker Lou Tech Friday night . after Lindsay with Minnesota, Flori- ¦ ' ' football's annual battle of All-America , bles signed while the AFL Groza. "' X;" ¦ - , v ' . .- '. earlier signing to 'only 11 of 23 top da guard with the buck with all five of fullback Jim Gr abowski of latched op their top targets j including ; draft choices picked on the first Pittsburgh and Nebraska tackle Groza picked it up and fired a half; of the 1965 All-America Illinois. ; three rounds. Walter Barnes with Washington. desperation forward pass to backfield, in their fold. .Anderson was a first- Anderson and Roland ; both Franklin, who was caught on The Packers signed Neb- round pick in 1964- as a fix- The NFL's overwhelming vic- were high future picks in each ture? while Grabowski was tory in the competition was the 5-yard line by Willie Wood. raska end Tony Jeter —- a league; Peay, Allison and Lind- third - round choice, imme^ chosen in the first round of sealed when such prized catches sey were second-round choices Instead of a 7-7 tie, the .Browns diately after the Orange the 1965 draft , as wais Min- as Donny Anderson, Johnny Ro. in the AFL draff ; and Lucas, trailed 7-6. Bowl game to complete nesota tackle Gale Gilling- land, Harold Lucas and Francis Gagner and Barnes had been Groza , the 41-year-6ld field their coup. ham, signed last November. Peay signed after concluding chosen onX the AFL's third goal artist who has been playing Green Bay had added two- The Packers also netted their college careers in bowl round. choice, ' " ' ¦¦' ' another third-round games. pro ball since 1946, , had made 96 ' x .x y vWSUC "; :, ' ¦ '. L' San Jose tackle Fred Heron; The Houston Oilers made the : T h e Oilers, with money to straight conversions until this x: Con.«rene» All Oaron ^ weekend of spend after missing but on : An- W.v I. Pef. W; t. <$n the same big final push for the AFL by ¦ - - : signing one was messed up, ; A few ¦ Stout ..: .. S 0 1.000 7 J the draft. signing four tackles, including derson, did just that in 'Platlevilla¦ . 3: -l ;7S0 6 . : the four tackles — Hines and minutes later he kicked a 24- Oshkosh .:.. " -. 3 1 .750 « J their second-round selec- Glen Ray Hines, George Rice ia crosaa .. I I JM s 7 Jim Williams of Arkansas and yacd field goal that gave Cleve- tion - Maryland tackle Tom and Dave McCormick for s $1- RIver FallJ J. J .600 AS Cichowski, was a future million package, while Kansas Rice and McCormick of LStJ. Eau Claire : 1 } ..333 i ¦ 4 land a 9-7 edge. Stovens P'f . . " ' .1 .150 i '«¦ ¦ who will not be sought for City/ pulled off a surprise by McCormick was acquired in a Whltawa.tr I ¦ 4 - .000 v 1 Don Chandler, : kicking hero Suptrior .0 5 .000 17* signing until; after next sea- nabbing Heisman Trophy trade with Boston. of the sudden '.' ¦- death playoff MONDAY't SCHEDULE son. winner Mike Garrett. McCormick, a No. 1 future in Superior at Eau Claire. the AFL draft last year, was a game at Baltimore , booted a TUESDAY'S SCHEDULH There were indications the Anderson, Texas Tech's two- Whitewater at Milton. . Packers may have profited time All-America running back , fifth-round pick of San Francis- 15-yarder early in the second St; Norbert at Stevens Point. Northland at Jfout. more for less than any oth- signed with Green Bay for a co. Hines was Houston's No. 3 aiid a 23-yarder later in the Dubuque at Platteville. er team in the National and reported $600,000 that might be pick as a future and St. Louis' quarter after - Wood intercepted THURSDAY'S SCHBDULt American Football Leagues. the highest on record—- but less sixth. Rice was the OilersVthird- River Falls at Blthti: round pick this season and Chi- a Ryan pass and ran it back FRIDAY'S SCHEDULE¦ ¦ ¦ -¦ ¦ While owner Bud Adams than the $887,000 Houston owner : Whitewater, et Eau Claire. •- . .- cago's first in the NFL draft. from the Cleveland 25 to the 10. Stevens Point at L» Crosse. of the Houston Oilers in the Bud Adams said he had offered Platteville at Stout. . AFL . continued to talk of for Anderson's; services. Adams, who was specifier Oshkosh at Superior, . Missouri's all-pnrpoSe about the figure he offered An- Despite's Grbza's 28-yard Held SATURDAY'S SCHBDUH offers : ranging to beyond Roland, igoal in the dying seconds of the Whitewater at Superior. $600,000 for Grabowski and derson, refused to divulge indi- Oshkosh at La Crosse. vidual figures about the four- half , after Wait Beach haci in- Stevens Point at River Pills. nearly $900,000 for Ander- Platteville at Eau Clelre. son , there was evidence that " some because "we never give tercepted a Starr pass , the the, two All-America backs out figures on tackles." But, he Browns trailed 13-12 at the half. chose to sign with Green said, "we're talking in excess of ROSECOLLEGE BOWL- FOOTBALL Basketball Green Bay's inspired defense UCLA 14, Michigan State «. Bay for considerably less a million dollars." ( ORANGE BOWL— money than teams in the rose/to the occasion in the sec- ¦Alabama 31, Nebraska Jl. Rice was only the second of IS COTTON BOWL— rival league were offering. Scores ond half and blanked the first-round picks lost by tha LSU 14, Arkahtas 7. . Green Bay Coach Vince Browns, shutting out the fabu- SUGAR BO'WL- Colleges NFL to the American League. Mlssouri «, Florida \l, Lombardi indicated Ander- ¦ ' Duke n, Wake Forest 76. lous who made only - - ¦ ' ¦ The NFL also signed 11 of 13 . . . . - son chose the Packers be- Davidson W, William <, Mary Sf. , ' - ¦; ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦-:¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ 50 / yards on 12 carries and Statistics - . - . sow;\>j«»-AV«(_fr^svT^r->™*p^•¦•.¦•- a-/it... • ¦ /¦ ;•:¦¦;¦_ ¦:¦ •:•.•. - •'•¦,-.•..'..- ¦xw. -' *¦*' ¦ "v1 v;\t^.v.^^ .^.-.v-.>7 '-:-;--:- - ;v -- -->;^.vj,y.-»..;.:^.:.. - :•.••.,-.',•• .•. ¦«« . • - \» Georgia,11, LSU second-round eligibles and 13 of . . cause of the impression* the ' ^ • ' :*"* ' 5* scored no touchdowns during Browns Pickers : New Mexico 17, Denver U. 14 third-round picks. Pint downs :¦» ' ¦ players made, when Lom- '¦ ' ' ¦: .;¦' Cleveland line- Butler 75, Yale »7. the afternoon, ,...... :. I UNDERCUT . . .\ Green Bay flanker Sunday. Moving in to help are The AFL got five of 10 first- Rushing yirdagt ...... 64 : io« bardi himself thought : the / '.: Boyd Dowler (86-) tucks in the ball as he is backer (50) and defensive back Louisville 14, St. Louis 10: Ray Nitschke did a tremen- Passing yardage .' ., »» Ui . . Ky. Wesleyan 10, Evansvllle 74. round selections, two of nine Passes ...... S-18 ; : . 10-19, halfback was lost to the knocked , off his feet by Cleveland defender (23). Green Bay won the NFL QUEEN CITY TOURNAMENT- dous job on Brown when he ran Passes intercepted by ..;, ' I - . ¦ 2 '. AFL. "The money didn 't Championship: from the second round and four ; 65, Holy Cross 51. Punts ...... ¦ 4-« l-3i (30) in the National Football : crown, 23-12, on the muddy, snow-swept Lam- Drake of nine from the third round and when he went down field as Fumbles lost . -,:..:.;....' . ..• . 0 O enter into the decision in the Consolation: a pass receiver. Yards penalized :...... ,.; 35 ; 10 end," said Anderson. League championship game at Green Bay beau Field. (AP Photofax) Canlsius 91, Memphis State It . with one player still unsigned. The Packers ground it out in the second half , controlling the ball. They moved 90 yards in 11 plays, eating up six minutes, 48 seconds, for a third-period TD scoring on Hornung's 13-yard £|C^?i|S^;2^:- »weep around left end, '^ "That ;rtally killed ns," said Brown /after the game. "They adjusted to the. conditions. We couldn't. Those two guys (Tay- Major /?esAt/^//ncf lor and Hornung) really did a By THE ASSOCIATED >RESS Saturday night. Vanderbilt in the Los Angelesi . -/¦ great job." - The college basketball rank- The Missouri Valley and the Classic; No. 4 Iowa fell before ¦ ^ Trailing 20-12; in the third pe- ings are due for a major reshuf- SEC also opened last week. The Texas Western 86-68 in the Sun xS riod , the Browns got close fling today as the nation's top Big Eight starts tonight, and j^glKMril™ ^^^ Bi^Lfi i^m^L ' ' : ' '(_ ' ,' enough to tiy - . for- a field goal , teams happily turn 'their atten- action picks up in most of the Bowl; No. - Brigham Young ^^_w_^SB_^_wK^^^__^Sl^Sl^^k^^SSmB^BS^^^^^^^^^^Ki^^^ vm but Henry Jordan broke through tion from the ' scores of holi- others later in the week. and No. 9 Minnesota lost in the and blocked Groza 's kick. Just a day tournaments to conference Quaker City, and No. 7 Michi- few seconds earlier Nitschke ' ¦ ' ; v ; ' Georgia took Lousiana State a ^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^SK ^^S ^^^^^^ K ^^^^ races. . ' gan in the Far West Classic. ^ sJfe^TwB^ and Wood had broken up a Ryan The tournament mania was 82-59 in the SEC opener, and ^^^ pass to Brown in the end zone. Louisville beat St. Louis 84-80 in Besides St. Joseph's and i_ ^___\mj¦ ^^m^J^ bad news for most of the nation- imaaa^^^kyy-!¦ - ¦ ¦ :Wi^iW ^^^^^SSBmWBt ^^^^m Green Bay, setting a record ally ranked teams — five of the Mi*jsouri Valley. Tonight the Providence, other major tour- ^^ H ^^ H ^^^ KHHS QH with its ninth league champion- them losing in major tourna- Big Eight opens with Kansas at ney winners included defending ship, ran 69 offentiive plays to 39 Colorado Oklahoma State at IBMS__III_1I^^ ments last week. , national champion UCLA in the by Cleveland. The Packers Still another, third-ranked Oklahoma and Kansas State at 3MfciZ!?^^*W______!Sfc_SSPS«™ gained 332 yards over-all to 161 Missouri. Los Angeles Classic and Oregon Bradley, lost its lone regular State in the Far West Classic, i and outgained the Browns on season start, and the list of ma- The Atlantic Coast has Clem- the ground 204 to 64. ^<^^^Q_B__^^_S^M^^n^^_^s9HH^^HI_^BHS_IH^'^__^^IHnF jor college unbeatens dwindled son at South Carolina and '^ «_^S^*«^^^______M______^^ (o Chandler's , three field goals two — fifth-ranked Kentucky, Maryland at North Carolina. ~ '':%-^lM /**-^ tied a title game record shared 8-0, and unranked Texas West- The Southern Conference has "'^ti*Mfa_»_-_. •¦ £^s!^^ ^ ElM^ ¦' ii,, ^9iMh___u fying triumph for the Packers, No. 8 St. Joseph's, Pa., and In the Southeastern , Alabama ^^!^______H^n^_w ; - - ^^^^m^mw^Ki^Emm^f^m^fWim^^m^m^m^m^m^mwmBim^BrMr who floundered in midseason No. 10 Providence were the only is at Florida , Mississippi State Pointing for with offensive headaches and ranked teams participating in at Auburn , Louisiana State at needed help from the Chicago tournament action to escape Mississippi and Tulane at Ten- Bears to catch Baltimore. unscathed, St. Joe's, 9-2, won nessee. The NFL announced no finan- the Quaker City, and Provi- The Southwestern and Yankee League Start cial figures, but the victory dence, fi-1 , took the Holiday Fes- Thursday, conferences open CHICAGO (AP) - Big Ten figured to be worth about $7,000 tival in New York. and the Mid-American , Pacific to each Packer. Each Brown Top-ranked Duke shunned the basketball teams begin pointing Coast and Big Ten start up Sat- this week for a full start in the will get about $4 ,600 as a losing tourneys and got a quick start urday. share from the gate receipts in the Atlantic Coast Conference championship drive after a rath- and the $720,000 of television race with a come-from-bchind Knocked off In tourney com- er dismal month of warm-up money that went into the pot. 92-76 triumph over Wake Forest petition last week were" No, 2 campaigning in whiclrthey took slim 51-41 edge over outside I foes. SIGN NG. 2 CHOICE LINDSEY Iowa's Hawkeyes emerged as n primo contender with an Jj-1 a record in non - conference MiSilfR sniping. Their first loss came Thursday in (he Sun Bowl, 86-68 Vikings Complete to Texas Western. Defending champion Michigan _ J V > Sagged to 6-4 despite the brilli- _ yjffSm A^B______' r ance of Cazzle Russell. Minne-

sota, with Don Yates ineligible Py %«/^^^- y _y' \, ^^ii . "^T '{tJ&tiSr Negotiation and Lou Hudson out with a wrist Stylish injury, Tfred of looking at dream slumped to 7-3 with two cars you can't buy? The cars appear without a trace . Rear seats that quickly convert MINNEAPOLIS W) - The Virginia Union. signed with the Vikings include: losses last week, One of the de- you sea at the Auto Show and never see again? Well , into a apncloua cargo compartment. Just pop the rear all but Minnesota Vikings hnve Lindsey indicated earlier that Tackle of Purdue, feats was an 312-69 pasting by then, do something about it. See the one you ctn buy, buckets down and watch the cargo space go up. That' completed their most successful s he would sign with the Vikings No. 1; linebacker of Loyola Friday in Chicago Sta- right now , today, at your Dodge denier Ifs Charger , a Charger-breathtaking negotiating campaign in six Na- dium doubloheuder '*. new leader of the Dodge Rebel- , , Indiana full-sized, tional Football League pluyejc after Arkansas played in the Illinois, no 3; defensive back pulled a major upset by trounc- fastback action car that's all primed up and Hon. Until you've seen It, you haven't seen everything ' Hon Acks of Illinois, no. 4; tack- drafts. Cotton Bowl on New -gear's ing the unbeaten , third-ranked ready to go. With V8 power. Bucket seats, fore and aft. from Dodge for '66. Charger , a brawny, powerful dream le Doug Davis of Kentucky, no. The Vikings announced Satur- Day. Bradley Braves 154-117. It left the Full-length console. Disappearing headlights that dis- car that made it-all the way to your Dodgw dealer 's. day the signing of , 5; defensive back Bob Hall of Viking manage ment wan Hoosiers wilh a modest 4-4 n ' 205-pound , (i-ibot-3 halfback Brown , no, 5, choice from Chi- elated that he kept his word. cago ; end Bob Meers of Massa- mark. from Arkansas who wns Minne- Illinois already leads the "He's the big back we've been chusetts, no. 7; flanker sold 's No. :> choice in (he 1965 Bon championshi p race with a 90-70 draft of collegiate, talent. looking for ," Minnesota Co.-ich Green of North Dakota, no, 9; Norm Vli n Brocklin said. "With defensive back Stan Quintnna of victory at Wisconsin . That gnvo (lie NFL club a his versatility he can be tried New Mexico, no. 11; tackle The title march gets n full JOIN THE DODGE REBELLION score of 11-5 over rival Ameri- nt running back or as an outside Dale Greco of Illinois, r.o, 18. head of steam Saturday with DODGE can Football League clubs, And receiver or tight end. He runs and halfback Jesse Stokes of Illinois at Indiana , Minnesota at Doc/ne

61BL fd . LIVE IN fpr balihce trf schdol A OlNING ROOM Is sometlmei hard to Want Ads FOR A good used car or pickup, stop year, [oVe y fiom«, 2 children. Tel. 9435 tomi by loday. If you biin IdoklAg Uied 4nd see Merv a.. MerV's Used Car 'v* Car* 109 Used Can lO» . for Irtrervtew. for a! hortte with a dining room lot its Lot, 210 W. JM. T«l. fe-3211. , (how you this three bedroom home near BUICK—1942 LeSabri a-door, power-liter- OLDSMOBILE - l.rf "88", Villi 't«k» CflOK ,6R afternoon hourS) tii6 .M«Act Ojl heat, full base- brakes, . Start WHETHER Its »t6m.y or fair, .rrtiltifl St. Teresa Collcse, Inn, power air conditioning, au- older car In Irait. 761 E. 8lh. Here . fieslred; Apdiy Ih person. Pad) Wiftlns men!, large lot. ABTS. AGENCY, lUc, tomatic transmission/ Tel. Caledonli or warm, you ire Informed afjiad of - Mfemorlal Home. Tel. 8-31944 for appoint- 15? Walnut. St TSl, _ -««5. " ««7 . ./' . BLINB ADV UNCALLED FOR— . time In the weather forecast. Get the meiit; ' . DODGE — 1. 85 Molars Jrdodr hirifsfti LATfe . WEAtHER WORD 24 hours * ^ power , tteerina, V-8, automatic. Sevii : GHEVR0LET-1.58 ?-door Blscayne with t E-13> 14, it, !6, 3l.: day by dlillng the TED MAIER weath- WAlTfteSS WAlvlf_ &-miiIt "be 8v«ll_ SfOO. Private mrty, will. accep *r*i*. ': - 6f* big V-8 engine, .automatic Turbotjlldi wj . rrt_ _ lll In effjcf. er j_hdi.il. 3333; \y' . W, _6oh wortt. Pl§ase Apply Iii. t_8fs6h. New car tyi. T*l, ¦ WHATEVER YOUR transmission, *Wtt iWewall llrts. Gen* 9161. Dftlfy_ Bar; in E. 3td. , ziebiii; 3 ' miiM w. of Han- NOTICE SAVE Big I Do your own rug and iiphol- PROPERTY NEEDS ~ itery tleanlne with Blue Luitre. R ent : v DeslatiatlWs es to sed . In our .- Help : Wortien - Wanted advertising colurrini electric shampooer. it. R. D. Con* Co. Pa^tihn6 JMAG I NE!; » .rriadi Arnerlcah «eil»i only (II lo Indicate bona tide THfe Fuller Brush Co. his opinlhgi tw Phone Us Shop Where V illi HAfAfiLEt* occi* RE PR BLEM i ladles to represent s Fuller phly 16,000 miles. Seeing Is ballevliu, patldhil qU-!llflcatlolii lor employ- A vou A 6 DRINKERT- t*. ebi M4n df w j rolir drink-rip crfcates IS this low, low mileage one-oWiier ment which iii employe, regatdi ire om£n mellcs and cleanlns prdoucts in thi . For An Appfsi^l SELECTION IS TOPS' . . numeifboii problfrrts. II vou need aiid If you are looking for reasonably lieeessafy to Ihe Winona area. 15 hours *eeki flexible automobile. npffrlai . wint cohlact AlcoHollci Ahony- in . t operation fit his business, br (2) a _ Hjip, schedule, 52.20. per hour. For Interview economy plus dip?hdablll!y ritf us. Ploheir Group c/6 GkHefal De- Write Jerry JohnSba Rt. i. Rochester; Qf your pr6_3ent property 'late model automobile at a low price, a convenlerlc- to our. reader} to Ifi- ¦ ¦ livery, WlhoriJ, Minn; Minh. . . ' ' . ' ' then slop end iee-this Ijeauty. rorirt them as to which positions the and let us sfi6w you bur ;-f c-xiX i advertiser believes would be of rhbri : IX OEf A febbtj S. ART: bn a cold day by Ihtefesf fo one sex than the oilier be- Stopping Tof- Bfeakfast et RUTH'S RES- Male—Jobs of Interest— 27 photo listings of new find AAotorS cause of the. lri_t.lw_d. Nystrom *bfk sucH TAURANT. How about a stack of llght- All rtiflkeii. All models/ designations do not Indicate or Imply older prolJerUcs now nvail- ;. !nd & Washington as-a-feather cakes, crispy bacon, farm- WRITTEN APPLICATIONS for the posl- Nights _ -That ' any - -advertiser ' '¦ ¦ '¦ ' ¦ Open Friday. . Intends to prac- fresh eggs, lopped off by the best cup tion of full time Steward will be ac- :. . ablfe .. ' - Winterized. ': tices eiiy UhiMHil orefefenc*. limita- of colfee in town. There's always a cepted by the Board of. Directors of tion, specification or discrimination In warm welcome waiting at 124 S. 3rd the Winona Athletic Club. emplbymfehi Jjracflces . St., downtown Wlftchi. Open 24 hours THESE GARS every day, except Mori. ACCOUNTANTS-bsrf-tlhie, at once, jMlb : Card of 1 are thoroughly qualified to prepare BOB ^::;$i^yy ; ' Thank* AB AL BE T : Form 1040 MuSt be experienced Jh all REGONDlTiONED ¦ '.; TR USSES DOMIN LTS J, BUICK-OLDSMOBILE _ ' • SACROILIAC^ SUPPORTS . . phases of Individual Income tax 're- MALOTKA— turns. Apply 7 to 9 p.tn. weekdays, lit Open Friday Nichts And Garry a We wish to extend our heartfelt thanks GOLTZ PHARMACY Wsthut St. and appreciation for the acts of kind- Vk E. 3rd - .. . * Tel- 2547 ^YEAR WARRAN TY ness; messages of sympathy, beautlftJI S^fc^t floral .'and .spiritual offerings received Part Tfrrie if RGALTdR ; from our many friends, neighbors and Aub SefViee, Repairing 10 rouNG MAN *ilh car can eanj it.© 1964 CHEVTtOLET 4-door, r e I at I v e s ' in our sad be- *2,50 tJef- . Hoof. Write Wirreh D. Lee, l20 ClNTER-TtL.2^49 Year-End ' tu-tone finish , radio, heater, reavement, the loss '' - .'of our ' beloved . 31) . Lftsiy . Blvdi Saj La Ct-osse-, Wis. 6 cylinder enginej ,automatic ; AAother, ..- We especially theink ; Msgr. TEMPO BRlVE IN Grulkowskl tor his word! ol comfort, MARRIED OR SiMGLE man for steady Gldsebuts transmission, 5 hew white- the choir, ; those . whq contributed the farmwork. Leonard Stoskopf. Harmony, IVMnh. Tel 8B_ ¦ wall tires. Specially priced. .service, of IHelr ears, Ih* pallbearers , -333V. '60 Falcon.wagon ' . ..-.-: . $709 and Watkowski ; Funeral Home. . SPECIAL "Artd before you quit, Argyle , yfiU're going to pay for ;._ ¦; ¦ NEED EXPERIEflCED all-around floor ;-:;; :: ;¦ -> Frank Ma'otka Family. - ¦ ¦ ¦ ;¦ '60 Rambler wagon :., $.599 : : : $1695 — . layer; steady employment; Itisulatlph y m 66tM' - - , - ;. xy yxy x. '•¦ SateJ Co., Rochester, Minn. Te). 28J- '59 Ford wagon ...... $5fl.9 - imi CHEVROLET Bel Air Ldsf and Found 4 7*013. - : * Five Bedrooms '59 Edsei 4-door ,... ,. $499 \ /V-S motor WShted-^-Livestock 46 Radios, feieviilbn x 71 ¦ 4-door , automatic mmM NEED EXPERIENCED ydund SrlWiC Mr This 2-story *(_ll Insulated hbmi hai Prices cut drastically on * HAS A FRIENDLY light brown Pek- transmission, w h i tew a 11 . .WHEEL BALANCE dellvet-y to tieafby rural areis. Tfilj __ 2' . bedrooms dowristalrs, 3 up. lain, : : ingese ; found his way to your home? these • cars for . year end Well paid year-around : |ob. Prepare LEWISTON LIVESTOCK MARKET : kilchen is 15x17', with many,, all new tircS; solid white finish Answers to "Cinder , wears Balance Oiie WBeel At Our : ^ . " Annandale. resume giving experience and age. A real good auction 'market tor your cupboards. New fixtures in bath , oil , clearance. . : ' ' Virginia tags? A ' -sad ^ Ma above average conditldn. . . , .very little girl Is Regular Price of $1.40 and Write E-31 Daily. News.. . livestock. Dairy - cattle on tiahd all heat. Twb-.car gerage. Near . lake; . ' Advertise Our Prlcai ^EARS ¦ ' ¦ . y^- w , looking . tor him: Have a heart , and Tel. Get the Second for Only ' i week, hogs bough) every day. Trucks Under S1?,000. • "¦ _ ¦ .' ¦ ' • ' , ^ 7157 or 99S5 with his whereabouts. Re- It. ; ,; ;: : ¦ MAN WANTED tor general farm work, available. Sale TJiurs. Tel; 2667; : ; :;;; ;--;$ro95;.---: i- . ;; .wa rd offered for - any: information. - '. ' We Feature Famous "Weaver VALXJE LEADER ' ' ' \ quhd' : . . . . Including - milking. Write E-34 Daily ^\- :;Yebr- R'. - ' Equipment for the Best in ¦ News. ."1962 -PONTIAC Catalina ' ' ¦• ' Farm Implement.. 48 River Home - 4- Personals . / ¦: ; "/. Wheel Balancing, 23 in. Silvertone ' door , pbwer steering, pbxvcr BRIGHT, INTELLIGENT young man ' Includes-beautifully. landscaped yard. . " ' -Offer Expires Sat;, With GoGo attitude wanted to sell mo- . • ¦: TRANSFER SYSTEMS and 500' -choice river ffgntage; . . . Liy- brakes, automatic transrnis- , ' . .. : 41 Years in Winon a - NOW OPEN^Belmont Liquor . 'Drive-In, Jan; 8., 1966 : - torcycles as shop manager In Red Wing, Permanent' c'r Portable. ' .Ing room 18'xJO' , den with fireplace, sion , radio, heater , : solid 1671 W. 5th; Tel.-4391 for 'fast delivery. Minn., ROBB BROS. MOTORCYCLES, ;. - . dining room, kitchen, 3 bedroomi, . . Ed's Refrlgerition & Dairy¦ Supplies Lihcblri-Mercury-Falcon " - ' ¦ end largfe porth. Full basement, oil . silverleaf green finish. "CHARGE IT" Cell in person af 573 E. 4th; Winona. ¦;. €O^K&^\ ¦ . 5S5 E. 4th • " TW. - 553- • - - - Coihet-Fairlane . MEMO . -TO Friday. Night -Bowlers:. Re- ^ :¦¦ ¦ heat, J^car flarige. member we bowl again this week after ' ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦' ¦ ¦ Reduced $20 " : ¦ ;. .. ' • • SIYVALL ENGINE .. . Open Mon., Fri. Eve. ;. -' . y-.$) m-~xl x a two-week layoff. Happy pin-toppling SERVICE.*, REPAIR Purchase on Contract to you! Ray Mhy'r, Inifkeeper, WIL- Now Only This' reasbnably priced j-bidrbom X^nd Saturday afternoons ' : TEMP©:;;:: Fast. ^.Economical - , ' ' 1B63 CHEVROLET Bel Air LIAMS HOTEL.' : ROBB BftOS. STORE home in near e*st location. Living Stf3ad^ "¦ ¦¦ room, dining roorn, kll-ctjeii. and ball], Miracle Mall 576 fe; 4th - * . Tel. .4007 ' ' . 4-dopr , V-fi motor ,;automatic HOW MANY TIMES a dty . do you need :; . ^;>;$2V9>95;-^yy. NoW .gas . furnsce. BBS wafer heater, ' ' ' ' Hours 9-9 Mon; thru Sat. garage;' ."transmission ,. radio,: -heater ,: money? Voir . can't* get . away; from 111 ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ; owe. steering, Money Is the most common commodity v: ; Suhaay i-*- Beeble Triple-Triple ' . :' ':. A Land Buy - . p power In the world. Here at MERCHANTS ¦ ¦ ¦ VOIKS orakes, solid caravan gold fmpj ' 0LD : ' : ¦ oyment ; of . , Service , rosd NATIONAL BANK we : hav<; low-cost, Mastitis Treatment «00' level land on . matching¦ ' ' confidential loan plans to cdver ' any '; ¦:. SEARS on Hwy. M siiutK Ideal -location for . ':. . -. ', never die, they finish with - -in te- - ' ' ' ' ¦ 6 tubes: X . .. $4.50 motel or service station. < . worthwhile pyrpose, When you are short COMPLETE - .;• . : ; ior.; ¦:.- •• "We Service What We Sell" rior, whitewall tires; on cash give us a call. ' just .keep, ori running! : TED MAIER DRUGS : 57 E. 3rd Tel. 8-4371 '. - RESIDENCE PHONES.:: Animal \Mt\lfi Center - . ' .:. ' of; Factory ^ositipfts— Also " : E. J. Hirlerl . .. . 3973 - . ¦ — $1595 AN ill-Htilrig salt regardlesi cost, looks, M6fd& TUNE UP Downtown 8, Miracle Mall '¦ ' '.not : ^- bad on you and your value Is tost. W. ' .. - Mary Lauer . . . 45J3 This is even old : 1; Qualified Draftsman Bill ZleUell . '. ; 4854 . . ' Betslhqer, Tailor, 227 E. 4th. Sewing Machines 73 and .it Is EXTRA sharp. yX 1059 PONTIAC ^Catalin a 4^ « Check: Corri{)_ession Articles for Sale S7 door , hardtop, til-tone gray GINGER, peachle No. 1 New Year r Res ¦ Liberal; benefits :¦ . ' .' . /- .. WE..HAVE eabliieti tor most models of , olution. Have watch cleaned and check ¦• Check Plugs - 1964 VOLKSWAGEN arid white finish, radio, SPOTS before your eyes . . . on your sewing machines. Sewing kits, electric ed at RAINBOW JEWELRY. 116 W. 4th Profit Sharing ; . : scissors, etc. WlMONA SEWING CO.. heater, automatic transmis- All work done quickly and expertly. .. Check Points new. carpet ,, . remove them with . .•' Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer; /- -551 Huff. Tel; -93-4B. . 2-dodr, radio and heater. . sion: SI. H. Choate- 8. CO. • ' ¦AOT Main St. ' Tet; 2849 * ; • Check Generating System ., v . . (First Pub. Monday, Jan. 3, 1966) / Stoves, Fprnaces, Parts 75 : .. :';^ '$795; r- v,;;: Contact Personnel ZENITH ELECTRIC range, $25; Fr|gl- : : State of Minnesota . ) ,55. ¦" ¦ • Check Raidiatbr . daire refrigerator, !50; 23" Motorola ¦ SIEGLER . HEATERS, oil or . s»s, ¦ Install- County ot Winona ; .. In Probate Court ' ¦Otfice TV, $30; See Arthur Bakkuni, 1027'/i E; ¦ lNatlonal Bank of :- . -;¦ Parts Extra- . Ward, viz.: The .. gal. oil tank. Will sell reasonable. 16! ¦ ¦¦: • ' brakes, radio, and heater, Winona, having mode and filed - In. this Rochester, Minn. . ' :Hlgh Forest. . - Tyjj .ewriferl .' ,' . . ' *tl ; piiiijfe; REPIJCED >; Court Its final account, together with Its --- ' :: - ;^;$i495 , petition representing that said guardian- UPRIGHT FREEZER-IS . CU. ft. Kelvin- WET ANb "DRY processed copy, paper, For a quick sale ori this 3 £aj ^m\i^^ . : .:;: ship has terminated - .and praying that ator, excellent condition, .£80: Gerald R, . legal ahd-letter - size available.. We can ^121 Huff TeJ . 239& or 9210 said . account, be ' examined, adjusted and Help-^-Male or FetTiale 28 Ford, Alma, Wis. Tel. 685-3375 'evenings. .supply copy- pape r tor almost any, *o|)y bedroom jiotrte east, with __ o nn ¦ . - I960 PONTIAC Catalina 4- allowed by this Court, and., that . , said . ^A*tps!o>' " -* * -Sm} machine. See , Us for the latest lit 3 M new sidifigj combihation door, ; gusr-dlan be discharged;! • MEN OR WOMEN—full or part time, eve- NOW THAT WE HAVE SNOW, how about copy, papfers. WINONA TYPEWRITER 6PEN EVERY / radio; heater, white- . . IT IS ORDERED, That said ; petition ning work, car necessary. Tel. 8-4391. • a sled, sliding .saucer or skis .from . SERVICE, 161.E. 3rd, Tel;. 8 . 3300. windows; new kitchen, hew - ¦ . wall ti_es, .'tii-tpne green fin- be heard and . said account examined . and BAMBENEK'S, ?th 8, Mankato. . . double garage,, new gas fur- adjusted by this Court at the ^probate AUTO SERVICE CENTER ^vVEEK NIGHT ish with matching interior, Private Instruction 34 TYPEWRITERS and adding machines ndte and Water heater. See court room In the court, house In the ^MIRACLE MALL - NORELCO SHAVERS, hisads, . parts, serv- for sale or rent.: Reasonable -rates, automatic¦ transmission . City of . Winona, County :.of Winona, State ice. Yarallmfek 's Barber Shop, i 15 t. .. free delivery. See us for all ybdr' ' of- it today ! ;. : :;:. - .XX' : 'TIL 9:00 of Minnesota, on the' 26th day of Janu- WILL TEACH regular or electric guitar c . ^ ' - : 3rd, Winona. Tel; 3709. Open Weds. fice supplies; desks, files or . office " ::^' $995.^: ;; ary, - . 196.,. at. 10:45, o'clock; A.M.;. and , lessons, lead, rhylhm or bass; b^gln-. Tel; ; > Roofing 21 chairs. Lund Typewriter Co. 522* jUSTj llGijft that this ordpr be served Hy the" publjca- Plumbihg, . tiers and advance:lessons. Tel. *4)5. PERSONAL PORTABLE TVS, 9" -11" , FOR TWO tion. thereof In the Wtnoha Dally. ,;News • ¦12" - -16 . ' or 19" sets as low as 589.95. 1959 OLDSMOBILE Super 88 according to law ; Washing, Ironing Mach. 79 . KEN-WAY electric SEWER CLEANING Woney Loan 40 t . _ B ELECTRIC, 155 E. 3rd. And at a price you can af- 2-dpor. haidtop, radio, heat- Dated . December¦ 29th, 1965. ' THE PLUMBING BARN t° - ' • ¦ ¦ ' •' - ford! Only $_(_) down &M , . . ¦ E. D. LIBERA, . irO k High Forest (War) . lei. W94 HOMELITE CHAIN SAW, SOper XL dem- ed automatic trahsrhissiori , . Probate Judge. RCA WHIRLPOOL . onstrator. Reg. $199, now J179. WILSON $75 mpnthly buys this cute SPECIALS p o w e r steering, <:¦' power (Court. Seal) STORE, Rt. 2. Tel. 60-2447; Washers and Dryers ' ' • 1 bedroom home in Sawyer & Darby, . ELECTRIC ROTO ROOTER • " ¦ - - - ¦ Good- brakes , solid aqua finish. LGAJiS . . ¦ . . . :; —: . W; Slid , . . Tel. ' 8-27.1:1 NEW PORTABLE electric sewing mach- : Summary Assignment or Distribution mike , sure of Its quality, It must last a "¦ :¦' " WEST . ines - guaranteed ' for 25 years, ' look, .. . SEE .-Us ; For . Best Prl;e» . ' . . . . cylinder, overdrive. Open Mon , i-:Fri. Evenings Emma C. Kohal having filed a petition . long tlmel Choose a reputable firm to Horses, Cattle, Stock 43 Icrap Iron. -Metal, Wool, Raw Fun In-this Court alleging that said decedent , ,one wllh. years of exper- only $39 and up. Cinderella Shoppes, do the work . . M &W IRON .J. METAL CO. ,1 1950 CHEVROLET ,4: Inn died intestate end that said, estate con- ience arid customer satisfaction to rec- 214 Mankato Ave. and 66 W. 3rd: , apartments with a month - ' HOLSTEIN SPRINGERS, , i, close, second _01 W. . 2nd SI, ; Tel- KOI sists only ol the homestead of said de- . pickup. ommend it. Why don't you call us to- calf. Gordon ' Nadle, Dakota, Minn. ly- income of $225. New per- Mobile Hoirms/ Traitors ill cedent and only such personal -property ¦ BURN MOBIL FUEL OIL and en|oy the day? - WM. MILLER SCRAP IRON A METAL ' .exempt from all debts and comtort of automatic personal cate. manent siding, new roof. 1959 FORD Galaxie liarrl- ' as . Is HOLSTEIN COWS, 4, milking good, rea- ¦ ¦ CO. pays highest prices for ecrap BUDDY-)9*r mobile home, ..f) _ rio vv charges In Probate Court ' and praying . Keep , full service .— complete burner ¦ 'd*, FRANK O'LAUGHLIN son for selling, overstocked ; also 1 Iron, rhotalS. and raw fur. ' ' ¦ Double garage. You can (op, autdmalic trans- 7 b«Jro6ms, Ilka new .cnnditlfn, . coM for a summary assignment of distribu- care. Budget hlan and guaranteed price. . PLUMBING A HEATING ' Stainless , . sleel slraihers, low pouring J22 W. 2nd T«l. !0«7 tih§ n.«w '$5,100 , selling ior M.700 GeraW P. tion of said estate to the persons entitled Order today Iron! JOSWICK'S FUEL t. purchase this oil a cort- rnission. : - . 207 E. 3rd Tel. 3703 helrjht. H. 8. R. Kopp. , 3 m'les N. bl Ford, Alma. Wli, Tel. «.V _. .5-evenings. thereto; : OIL. . CO., 001 E. Bth. Tel. 3J _9; .. Closed Saturdays . vefiifent conlract Ceiitervllie, WIS. Tel. . for deed. IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing ~ 1359 DE SOTO 4-door , V-fl , IW< CHICK/VSH 'A . ICF SKATE EXCHANGE HIGHEST PfclCES PAID Hurry ! See it jpday! ., -Crest. Mettsilion. Many thereof be had on January 19, 196S, at Female—'Jobs of Interest—26 ' . _ Knller Bicycle Shop lor . scrap Iron, inRtalj, rags; hides, . ; automatic ti-ahsmissjtin, used B' nd, lfl' wiHrs. Tommy ' Triller 11 o 'clock A.M., before this Court In Sale5, ,1 rhrlps * Louse Powder 410 Mankalo Ave. Tel. SW raw furs and Wool! S. of Galesville on _3. We the Probate Court Room In the Court . 4 ntebnooMs 'trade lor nny'hlng! ' ORS Cattle and 19R4 FORD Galaxie 500, 4- . House In VVinona, Minnesota, and lhat For H I ¦' • ¦ ' Sam Weismon & Sons notice ol said hearing be given by publi- TROPIC AIRE HUljUfDIFIE- R overdrive, AN UNUSUAL Chickens ' If ynu need a large hoiti is rioor, V-S, SEE OUR line selection ' e! new and cation ol this order .In the Winona Dally Reg: S69.05, special $39.95 . . INCORPORATED : IbS. Jl.^0- W- used mobile hmties, all

  • e« ' News and by mailed notice as provided OPPORTUNltV FOR J MARK SCHNEIDER SALES m . 3rd fel. 5B«? see this nhc!. Living room VERY CLEAN. . Bank - ; «j.V =_ L flnanclnti, l-yfar plan by law ' 5 lbs. . 3930 6lh St ., Goodview . COULKE MO- . REGISTERED CURSES ' with fireplace, separate din- J9fi4 PLYMOUTH Fiiry, V- BILE HO/VlE SALES. Hwy. |4-ii E., Dated December 17, 1965. Roorris . Without Meals 86 ¦ Winona. Tel. _2/6. . ' D. LIBERA, TED MAIER DRUGS FERMAGLAS WATER HEATERS ing room . West central loca- ' . E . CenlT fl , automatic trBiismis- Probate Judge. choice positions in Animal-Health ¦ Gas or 'electric- A few Tlownlhwn-4 Miracle Mall TWO SLEEPIG ROOMS-47* Center St , tion . Ohly $11 ,500. HWV . 61 Moblle Homa . (Probate Court Seal) Spinel Ihe finer) »t aion , power steering, . , Salt's, «ast of medical and surgical sei-v- ShanqrILa Mnlel. Wa William A, : Lindquist, poWer brakes. REAL have t? v/lda* SANITARY ROOMS FOft MEN, wllh or . tut. mil on-hand, Also ntw iw« mndei ft wides. Attorney for Petitioner. ices j including some special- housekeeping privileges. No day sleep- ,, FEEDER CATTLE PLUMBING t. HEATINr. CLEAN . tal, K-Ulf ties, are now available at SPECIAL I f.7.17 ers. Tel. , 485.. (First Pub. Monday/ Dec. 20, 1965) I'd E. 3rd St. T. . AFFER HOURS ' Rochester Methodist Hospi- IJENT Of? 5ALE-Trailer .* .tin camp- tn: LMiy State of Minnesota I , ss . presently a BOO ' Apartments, flats 90 COMING! This Week! ' s, Buffalo City, \Wls. Tal. tal. This is DAILY NEWS Cochrane I48-25 _S or :i _ -2f _ lli . County of Winona ) In Probate Codrt hospital, staffed by Pat Ileiso .. S70» No. 16,104 bed : AUCTION CENTFR 27*—Delllrft 3-rooin apt., pnr- . 2 used 4-wheel-drive Jeeps In Re Estate ol Mayo Clinic physicians nnd MAIL Hally furnished, with private balh, neat Emma Elichon, Decedent. and hbi waler furnished. Jinn. Adults. Gordon Weishorh . i . 4B84 with fshnw plftw . and lock- La Crosse Moliile Homes . (or Probata surgeons. However, it will WED , JAN. 5 Order tor Hearing on Pellllon SUBSCRIPTIONS By appointment only. TH. film; out huhs. New & Used ol Will, Limiting Time to' File Claims be replaced iri 19B0 with a and for Hearing Thereon, 12:30 P,M, Sharp May Be Paid At SIXTH E. lsyi-4-mam apt . , wllh vrlubla new $14,000,000 hospital now • ' Francis Elschcn having filed a petition TED MAIER DRUGS balh, avalleble ¦Immediately. , adults. ROLLOHOME (or tho probate of the Will ot said de- under cortstruction , . , first Cnivcs. Ycil'lings, 2-Yc;ir-Olrls Tol. «7on. F. A , KRAUSE CO 1VS mile S. of City limits on cedent and for tho appolnlment ot of its kind in the world de- ~~' - ~ GORDON Francis Elsrhen es Executor, which Will iSlecrS h tloifcrs' J 9NOW PL&W SPECIALS Uip.Al LOCATION--? hedrnnniJ, heal Hwy 14, ._ <:F firtezy Aeres Is oh file In this Courl and open lo signed for demonstration Also Brood flow,. G"Of1fl.|| <, h.p. $J89 iinll for li1\ . and vvaler, prlvele entrance, wllh os- AGENCY Jacobson 3 h,p,— $219 unit for JI7J I-Iwys, Lyle Nornkog - Mollis Norskog Inspection; and evaluation of hospital , r rape. Tel, m . Tel. 2881 14 and Ml E. IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing All Rrcodfi ; While Thev Lnsll Tel- La Crosse 4-8554 Iheteof be had on January 21, 1966, at areas and patient care. • -• AUTO ELECTRIC SERVICE ^Frcsh'NHtive Cattlo ' , , Apartments, Furnished 91 102-10.1 11:00 o'clock A.M., before Ihls Court In Be a part of this extensive ' Jnd A Johnson Tel. 1 . 55 the probntt Court room In Iho court No Venl clr Slaughter Oa'tlle § ^change Bldg. Auction Sales rwin lltjhl housekeeping tiy ®U? hoOse in Wlnnna, Minnesotn,.. nnd thai research program. Excel- nt This Sale. PFFINISH WITHOUT RFMOVING. Cn.. FURNISHEO I "Vinona objections to Ihe allowance of snld Wllh lent starting salary nnd ale mndnrn wnM finishes wilhout r«. apl. 45? Main, INNESOTA If any, bo filed before sold lime of hear- moving old finish wllh Old Masters .&8g)Wt(fabfo . . . M creditors benefits. Outstanding poten- Regular Snles Every Friday Liquid Wood. ONE ROOM, kitrhenella and r.lnsel. All ( Ingi that the time within which ¦ Land & nf said decedent may llle their claims tial for advancement. Ro- 12:0(1 Noon lurmshed. 309 E, Mh. Auction Sales he limited lo Ibtir months from the date PAINT DEPOT Everett .i. Kohnir chester is an ideal place to Wanted—fteol Est«t» 102 t.m Wnlnut. hereof, and lhat the claims so filed be 167 Conlcr St. Business Places for Rent 92 1el.*]7l0, allur honrt 7HU heard on April 57, 1966, at 11:00 o'clock live, work and have fun ! LANESBORO Ihe [trobale TWO-BEDROOM HOME In low price CAUL FANN JR. A.M., belore this- Court In OFFICES IN Morgan Rldn., ^nnle. dou- Winona, VVrite for particulars today. SALES COMMlSvSION Coal, Wood, Other Fuel 63 rlass, Will nay r.flsh, Sea Hank Olson, AUCTIONEER. Bonded anil Licensed. court room In tho court house In ble or up ti? sui|e nt -t. .Sra Stpve Mor- Mlnnesola, nnd thnt notice hereof be All Inquiries lire confiden- LANESBORO , MINNESOTA Wl E. 7th. Tel. 3017. Rushford, Minn. rtl. (K.4-7BII. you BET Wc c«r .y a wide variety bl gan at Morgan 'l Jewelry. given by publication ol this order lr\ HWY. If. - PHONE 407-2192 ; ' News and by mailed tial. high grade coals. Commander, 3 sizes , WILL PAY HIGHEST CASH PRICES mmnm A LVIN KOHNER the Winona Dnlly lurnacc, stove and rangei Pelrdleum notice as provided by Ifivv, Mouses for Rent 95 FOR VOUR CITY PROPERTY AUCTIONEER , City and (lata licensed Coke; Pocahontas; Oerv/lnd VALUES Dated December 17, 1 . 63. HOCHESTER METHODIST Brlquolsi and hnnd ed . ;.w. Llhorty St , (Corner Rclss 50-50 Briquets; Slot! Petroleum E. D, LIBERA, HOSPITAL Poultry, Eggs, Suppliei 44 COCHRANE, Wis. -Oood home In choice "HANK" JEZEWSKI E. Sill nnd Llherly) Til WO . Probata Judge. BrlquMM Wlnler King Egg. 5 varieties nelnhborhoott, Odell Undniri, Tol. US- (Winona ' s Only Real Estate Buyerl 1962 PLYMOUTH Valiant nt sinker cnnK (Probata Court Seal) 1 First Avenue NW MAr.lc-r-in .lAMTSWAY nutnmnllc phu|. JOSWICK'S FUEL K JS15. Tol. Mflll or nn P.O . Box 34j wagon , fi cylinder , standard JAN. . -Tup', , in .10 a in OIL CO., 90) £j. Bth. "Where ynu oof Just W ol Eau Snyder & Jo_. n, ROCHESTER , MINN, 65001 Ify frfrtcr. C.lwnn SMnlfiy nnnrl, Fnurt' r.laira City Limits nn Hy//, l _ In Cnun- ( Tol, mi-Mf,. ' morn nt lower enst. " transmission , Very clean , By: Clement H. Snvdir .Jr, Attn: Charles .lerabck lain Cily. . Wanted to Rent 96 Accessorial Tires, Parts 104 |y Triinli "T" . Ihnn . mil's fl. rn "I", Attorneys Inr Petitioner . . white fhiish , like new tires. then I mile f- , Lawrencn A Marl'na BUY ARBOR ACHE QUEENS, _lln.1l Preslon, Mlnncsoln. *xr. Furh., RUQI, Linoleum 64 Aln«ani)er , nwnirvi Inhnson A Murray, for egg slje, Inlnnnr auality anrl pro EFFICTE NCY APT., completely lurnlsh- STARTO-JET will start your car In ser> REAL ECONOMY. i i r auclloitflfr I, Gateway ed or Willi slnve and relrlanr .alor, Credit Inc., cteik. ductlon 50 weeks pullels nvnllahlit All USF.D FURNITURE -- chest nl drawers, finds every day, For more Information WAS $1205 NOW only vm Fnr qunllly ask lor Arbor wnnted ' Ininiedlalely by n'rl »l"dnnt. yenr around. $9: % sue tied , complete, $40; lull slie or dealership call Diamond K Enler- JAU rf-luri, 1 pm. 1 rnHes NW nf Acre QUe«n millets. Wlnnna Chick »45 rnnae , lei. Elgin flta-.Wfl colled , rrlMts, St, Cher in ?.l -4 ..__ . CHECKED YOUR OIL TANK r.oil Mirny;, JR| lull size head hoard . 1962 CHEVROLET Station Pepin, Wis. nn fill! IRI. Burt Mllluen Hatchery, 5it G ?nrt, Winona. Tel. MM. tmmzmmmmzi»^ and Irome , SIS; fl pc. walnut dining properly, l ._on Si.hnnder, aucllisnier, PI«HI ¦ TWO OR THREE* mini heated ulilurnhh- wagon, V»ft , dtnndard Iraiifi- LATELY? room suit, Y10, occasional chair, JIJ; Chippnwa Valley Mn. Co,, clerk. DEKALB JO-weck pullets grown hy prfr rd apt., hv '.Inqle lady, reasonable . foohlonl, tl, noRZYSKOWSK I FUR- mission, blue finisli , good teislonhlsi In nbw envlrnnmeh' con Write (. -IS Daily New^. NITURE 3M Mankato Ave, eve- v JAN. .1-1 urr. U In pm Antique and &< IF IT'S LOW trollori tiiiiidlngs, that are wlnriO'Vlo.ij , Open Nelson Tire's tii cs, clean inside and out . II I ft jL~/ nings, ¦ ¦ I II ^11 I !¦¦ »-~ - H I.** Furnlluin auition ai J7_ l. iher|y St. p.l,» control for lloht , Available year around Farms, Land for Sale 98 WAS $1305 NOW on)y $l:MI> l.ohse , n\vnor; Alvin Knlmnr, auction- SPELTZ CHICK HATCHERY, Rolllnfl. NEW YEAft'S SPECIAL! Rlfl Sfflop chair err; Minn, l.dnd k Auctio n Serv., stone, Minn. Tel fl«B9- .:iU. ItoM PLYMOUTH Barracu- ORDER NOW! In black, red nr while pintle r.nvor. FARMS FARMS FARMS Bargain Center clerk. «W vm tr.i.|i\. ..»¦ ¦. . ¦' ¦ !* ¦¦ I I ?lfl al BURKE'S FURNITURE MART, We buy, wa soil, ORDER CHICKS NOWI da. HERE IS A REAL I I GREEN ^ rv ¦ In¦ A- /-> I A Early order du- Ird A Franklin. MIDWEST REAL TY CO. JAN. A.-Sal 12 noon. 1 , miln w.. nf STAMPS | . Cozy count, Ghoslloy Pearls • White RAckl, BEAUTY. V-8, Relax Comfort naleo, Wis. with 4 speed Housldn. Minn. Mike H Fnll . r , n*n*r. |^ 50-week pullets available Mar, ?0th. Roi , a»J-315 . , floor shift , beauti ful blue Hockninn . Urns., aucllonan r .s. Thorp Mnr. 57. Rowtkamp's Poultry Fnrit. Oood Things to Eat 65 Tel, Gltlc» iV-M» GREAT BUYS ON: - Salis Co.. rlrrk. DOUBLE SAVINGS IN _ ^P^T^X^ REALIZE nnd Hatchery, Lewiston, Minn. Tel. ~ finish , new whlt<_wall tires. -^jsa.^ i . ol. FIRST OP THE YEAR Spi_TALS n WARMTH AND fi&H GREEN Houses for Sale 90 f t Passenger Tires THIS CAR IS JUST LIKE PURCHASE OF Burbank RuJsnls and good cooking and NEW. STAMPS GIVEN WITH EVERY Wanted—Livestock 46 eaiing apples, V/INONA POTATO REMINDER MARKET, III Markel, FOR SALE by owner, J-year-nld, 3-bed- -A- Truck Tiros WAS $23Dfl NOW only $M!. 5 FUttNACE OIL. room home, attached paraae, school 1= 0 1» YOUR REST hot) market o.ontncl ¦ WHITE POTATOES for sale. Tel, »-3_) 7 hu _ turns At drlvowny. Ideal locution, ,%4 RAMBLER Classic , fi Antique h FuriiHure YOUR FREE TEXACO CALENDAR Casey Mnrcks, 81. Chatles, Minn, Tel. nftxt In supper club awl Ironl y»rd loloi W Tract or Tiro.. ' ASK FOR ».17-<|J0, OUY FOOD whoMsale on easy monthly Ooll couri.e. Reason lor selllno rlvinQa cylinder with s I a n d a r rl METERED DELIVERY lerrm, Cipllol Fond Provision Co., 3.30 In |nh locallnn, Priced a! only *l_ ,70n SHOP NOW AT transmission , ONE OWNER • «lh St., Wlnonn, Write or call 7.1.._. for quick ^alo, Tel. Rushlord M4-9J44 CAR , low mileage, spotless KEEP FILL SERVICE (of appnlnlmcnt, AUCTION • '/"IPS Musical Merchandise 70 Old "Wagon Works" Bldg. light grcCn finish inside nnd Kiln Loli:.c , Ownnr EMERGENCY SERVICE EIGHTH E„ modern 3-bodronm house , out , like new white sidewall • A__S__PM rolephonc Your Want Ads SS150, ' port terms, vronm cotlano , I".. W. Sth & RR. Tracks Loaitorl at 2211 Liberty SI, Wc Service ond Stock til), modfirn oxtopt hoot, S48..0, h. 4th, tires. A real economy ear. small house , lull basement, 135O0. 4- WAS $1(105 NOW Only $H,95 Noedles for all room house, . 2600, rent terms. C. 3rd, Tuesday, Jan, 4 BOB STEIN V£y RECORD PLAYERS SHANK, 552 E, Motorcycles, Bicycles 107 to Tho Winona Daily News Hardt's Music Store INTI_f.l ":STr:l. In motorcyclei? fa« our WINON A. UTO Starling at 12:30 P .M. Attention Veterans Shop Mnnnger /,(| under Classlllcnllon ' ' " CO. FUEL CHIEF occupan- ft'MJH.¥. f~\ OOO& l OIL NO DOWN pevmenl. Immediate II In today ' s paper, RODI_ I1R05. Miinv Antiques nnd PROMPT Radios, Television 71 cy. U) W. Slh. 4 bedrooms, lv» halhs , Motorcycle Shop, .s.3 R. ^

    ' . B Chester Gould XX: . piCK TRACY v * .

    By ' Mort Walker ;-; BEETLE BAILEY V: >^

    ; ' '' ¦ , :: . BLONDIE . ./' ' - ' ' v. 3y Chic Young

    ' : ' ¦ ¦¦V ' TIGER . :"; ' ¦' : .By Bud - Blake ';

    ¦ ' '¦ — — - ' i i - ;¦ ;-- ¦ - ¦ - - . : - . - ¦ - . - . .. . i . —r——————¦— ' - i ' ft Hanhi-Barbera THE FLINTSTONES -{yyy x *

    : ' ; : .;. LI'L ABNER ; ' yy ' ;By : AI. :Cap|i .'; : ; - v . STEVE i.C ANYON , - v-V ' By Milton Canniff

    62 TRIPLE DRESSER WITH MR. & MRS. MIRRORS

    PRICES TO FIT EVERYONE! iiA|%r • AMERICAN MADE AND IMPORTS. fflUlf E " ' - - - ' ~ - ¦ K^^^S , , v fc I . . i . . .; . . ______/ T w9k * ' <¦* . J^v ^^ B ______Ml I ____¦ 1 j / ^_____r B____W______i__J^*i^^^^''^ ^ '^ ^*^'**^^ Ire'&S ______r^______H__. ' mvVjf ISnSt 1 fl______^_H ' \ Hratatanetnntnttaiantannnnnntut' H. Men 's Dress Zipper OPEN fOR WORK or DRESS 1 TfiRPAIItlN' . !- H^____& 111 ¦ ^B \ 5F ^______BE_____P^_^______F . ^Hn • __H ___H l\l /^A^_B9___H_____I __ •* __»BK**ff^ < ___rM**^ j38oSNH______. __^s4_Uf___M______0K______^VMi^______M ¦ H_____r>& ______¦ ______E 1 . __r ¦ l_P"^^?4______l______r ™ ^ ^^ ^^ft F V_____B___S_ !_»• u -__-*A*.^« I F«*¥YMWUWWI_VV»AWWVVVWV?"* - \ e A|l Fre.h Rubber - —-^ " ' ¦ ^- Unt|| J ml RUBBERS ' ' fTtTTiSk '^ • '

    Fully lined TRUCK COVERS Grommets • W^^B Men's Unllned • Light In Weight ^JjJPJftV Full 10 In. high • jlj^^H M !_(*<_ 1 PI • Easy en >^l__l_9____n_\ - wit ' JBH______' TOE _ /_WMf. T_wL_Wm^^r ' Resistant' 1 ¦ ¦ su** ^BH ' _/& j*fi*\*31_BsB^lffl8H_^_^w255*^A^>i >.^^Mi___n0B*)^_____H^_^____^_H^______^_H^_HH^ ¦______^___^______H^__^______flH_S^fi___E3Sacu *l ______!_____¦ 0VER 16 SIZES f IN ST0CK ¦ > ^*&v jP^^siff iT*n_ n B__ P^^^^ < ^SS_t^^S___V^!^^^__^_^_^__^______^_^_^______l___^^ ^J_^^_^9^____J______J_^___88^ii^iBit^' t « ______! 95 RUBBERS ,M *1 Jl9A1 $2 93 1 ' ^H^w lllllw l H ' T °° S199 5x7 10x22 ¦ ¦ ^^^y ' . - ^^^~~ —i — 6x16 12x18 BOYS' and YOUTHS' t wSAWB *^ U.S, MADE AND IMPORT 7x9 14x16 FRESH RUBBER £91IS______ff HEAVY DUTY .-BUCKIE ftvlfl l AvOfl 4-BUCKLE sous MWt OVERSHOES 10x12un Wm ^______^____^__B! u_^**f^^^K@^^<'^3v@H^______B^BS___^^^^ ci"*^ OVERSHOES * ,• D^ uekle. 20x20 M^_mml ""^ |Qx(6 • High shin, block Sateen finish *%!______¦_ * ^ '" ^/ 20x30 Medium weight, full fittlns '*' "^ - ' • _JS______' U S ,M,, H\ " UI *?uNUmt ' s 7,4 la FULLY GUARANTEED ^Q _am_t_ wBHm^ '"* Youthi' ii to j tmrnvc Beyil le i &mmTDU CA __^PVHB^S____R_____0Prlced r^~" Mb_^_W_W_^_W^^ jtV/J J_M_^ . Reg. $4.95 ^ _^ „ X ^^BB ^^ :. J _____ ¦_____^^^"(__ / DURABLE BAKED-ON PLASTIC FINISH IS HAND RUBBED - D rAMD1 rTC >> " •>¦ UUlUrLETE TO BRING OUT THE RICH WALNUT GRAIN ** ———LADIES' FIRST QUALITY MADE IN U.S.A. ^_____9B(—- III™ H_^_k */o 62" 5-DRAWER TRIPLE DRESSER VINYL STRETCH • SHOE -^\ HPK M l___K H Now have a restful, beautiful bedroom you can proudly show off m j jvVIN TILTING MIRRORS lo friends featuring Ihe 9-drawer 62" triple dresser with twin mirrors . Clll . CITC ., u.. „__ SLUSH BOOTS iffl , . ¦• FULL-SIZE PANEL BED BOOTS m l I , . . and they tilt for added convenience. Tlie lovely Danish stylod ^ pl LARGE R0°MY 5-DRAWER CHEST bedroom has crisp, clean, uncluttered modern lines and was made * ' for years of service. The drawers are all double center guided for 0n|y top nee JM A09± n______\ • °"« »n»P JfkJy j ^^H[l\ i ie-r easy opening, and are guaranteed not to stick . . , interiors arc finish- C 'f\ Fleece cuff Weterproef ^ ^ • 8^ |^Hi\ • to ^^^ Hl l OFF LIST ed, inside and out , and will not snag your fine lingerie. The drawer 4_p I fm 9__ M eJ ^J s. le pulls arc non-tarnis'nable bright brass for years of lasting beauty ... I 4_____fl_l _B9______P__W __^__P^»^^______nt\\ WA O rl lie: ™ ¦ ^^W many other pieces are available in the group ... all for just $15.00 ~ ^ ______P_____r___r jf* 4____ **V _P* _0_E_____fl______P^HP^^ down. Please come In and see this wonderful value, ONLY $3.50 WEEKLY Open Wednesday and Friday Evenings 'til 9 ' *JG_3l_ ira-______MACHINE COVERS i OPEN MON. & FRI. TILL 9 P.M. "—• Better J2TTT)TT T?'Q Furniture Buys at ±J \J J\I\Jjj O Mart PLENTY OF FREE PARKING BEHIND OUR STORE — OPEN 8 AM. TO 6 P.M. DAILY

    Friendly low Terms AT EAST THIRD AND FRANKLIN Since 1893

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