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6-6-1972

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1972). Winona Daily News. 1188. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1188

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 277 delegated would be big tiep toward nomination McGovern strong favorite to win California primary By CARL P. LEUBSDORF of the primaries/' McGovern arid the presidential race would- elect 238 of its 278 delegates on sues but promised to oppose that's all right. But I wanted to ing President Nixon in the Cali- McGovern's proposal /or a $32 LOS ANGELES (AP) - Cali- told several thousand cheering be thrown wide open with June 20. McGovern, virtually "frivolous" challenges to dele- talk to him about some things." fornia GOP primary. billion defense spending cut, a fornia holds its crucial Demo- supporters in Albuquerque, Humphrey as the new front unopposed in more than one gates at the party's national He said his own polls show In the presidential primaries, $1,000 "inco me supplement" for cratic presidential primary to- N.M,, Monday before flying to runner. Both men have pre dozen. New York congressional convention. his support coming up and re- this is the situation ; : day with Sen. George Houston, Tex., to confer with dieted the California winner districts, expects to win at least Humphrey, meanwhile, cov- ceived a last-day boost when CALIFORNIA — All 271 dele- everyone to replace the welfar* McGovern the strong favorite Democratic governors. will capture the nomination. 200 delegates there. ering California from Oakland Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty. gates will go to the top man in system and , in the closing to capture the state's 271 dele- Success in the four primaries Besides the presidential pri- As two weeks of hectic Cali- to Los Angeles to San Diego, one of the eight Democrats . on the statewide Democratic presi- days, his civil rights record. gates and take a big step to- could shoot McGovern's dele- maries, voters in Montana and fornia campaigning wound assailed McGovern's decision to the California ballot, urged This ' dential preference vote. Besides McGovern, hitting Humphrey ward wiruiing the Democratic gate total past the 850 mark— Mississippi are choosing candi- down Monday, McGovern made go to New Mexico and Texas. backers to vote for Humphrey. McGovern and Humphrey six hard for ".' supporting; U. S. in- nomination. 1,509 are needed to nominate— dates for state and congression- final stops in Los Angeles and "I think he should be here in Polls show Yorty with about 1 other candidates are on the^ bal- volvement in Vietnam while ' . New Jersey, New Mexico and and virtually end Sen. Hubert al posts. Sens, Lee Metcalf , D- Sail iDiego befor e flying to Al- California and not take these per cent. lot arid ." a write-in campaign vice president, spent most of South Dakota also are holding H. Humphrey's hopes of win- Mont., James 0. Eastland, D- buquerque and Houston. voters for granted," the Min-' Republicans are also holding could put Alabama Gov. the campaign defending his presidential primaries. The ning the Democratic nomi- Miss., and Clifford P. Case, Tt- 'He described a two-hour mid- nesota senator said. presidential primaries in the George C, Wallace into third proposals while pledging to South Dakota Democrat ex- nation for the second time. N.J., are all expected to win re- night meeting with 22 Demo- Referring to the inability of four states today; The only place. create full employment and pects to take a majority of the If Humphrey defeats nomination. cratic governors in Houston as the two camps to work out ar- question is how many Califor- Out-financed and out-organ- •warning "the American people 144 delegates in those states. McGovern in California, how- After today's four presiden- ''enormously beneficial." He rangements for a fourth tele- nia Republicans will back con- ized in the nation's biggest will not stand for a rerun in "I'm going to predict here ever, McGovern's surge toward tial primaries, only one will re- said he compromised none of vised debate, Humphrey said, servative Rep. John M. Ash- state, Humphrey based his 1972 of the choice they had in this afternoon we'll win all four the nomination would be halted main—in New York, which will his stands on controversial is- "If he wants to take a Dowder. brook of Ohio, who is challeng- camnaien on sham criticism of 1968. " Connally trip Fair to partly ' " ¦ ¦ I , - - ¦ 1 'A . IT'I OUTA IIOHT tHE WAY cloudy and warmer . ' ' ^PSL ' WANT ADI Nixon stokes Mg/Bf3t Things Mown? through Wednesday speculation on Explosion strikes in Rhodesia running mate By DON McLEOD possible a Democrat j such WASHINGTON Of) - With as Connally, could get the the Republican convention GOP vice-presideiitial nom- Utile more than two months ination. away, President Nixon has House Republican leader 468 SALISBURY Rhodesia CAP)miners He said 435 Africans and 33 feared dead killed in the Honkeiko Colliery. plosion. The spokesman could stoked speculation about his Gerald R. Ford of Michigan — A total of 468 coal miners whites were underground in the The worst in the United States not describe their injuries or 1972 running mate by send- said Sunday in a radio in- are feared dead in the worst mine at the time, and there ing John Connally around terview that he disagrees raining disaster in Rhodesia was on Dec. 6, 1907, when 361 say how they were caused. 's was no ¦ indication of anv survi- the world. with Vice President Spire* history, a spokesman for the vors. ' died ai.Monongah, W. Va. There was no explanation of Indications from the White T. Agnew s assertion that a ' ' Wankie Colliery said today. Rescuers were hampered by A spokesman at the Wankie what caused the blast. . " . '.' , . .. • House that Connally might Democrat on the GOP ticket A major underground ex- gas and by damage to the ven- Mine Hospital said only four The Wankie Colliery, owned also be explaining to; world in his place would be in- plosion occurred this morning tilation system. miners had been admitted with by the giant Anglo-American ; leaders the President's Pek- conceivable. at the mine about 200 miles THe world's worst mining dis- injuries. They ¦were four sur- Group, produces about 3^ mil-- ing and Moscow trips add to With the time of decision, north of Bulawayo, the spokes- aster occurred in Manchuria in face workers injured as a re- lion tons of coal a year. It sup- the importance of the trip drawing near, Nixon has man said. 1942, when 1,549 workers. were sult al the underground ex- plies all Rhodesia 's coal needs. and to the outgoing Treasury never said whether he wilt secretary's stature as bear- keep Agnew as his vice er of such news. president, and Connally has This is the kind of mis- not definitely been taken out sion traditionally handled of the picture. Appeals court by a vice president if not White House Press Secre- a secretary of state. The tary Ronald L. Ziegler said Washington rumor mills in Key Biscayne, Fla., that have Con nally available Connally will be ready tot changes ruling for either post if Nixon take up "any subject which is re-elected. Regardless, his hosts wish to raise,'' in- the trip will give Connally cluding Nixon's trips to public exposure in the for- China and the Soviet Union. on Richmond eign-policy arenak Among The complete itinerary RICHMOND, Va. CAP)—The his stops will¦ be South Viet- has been announced. Con- 4th U. S. Circuit Court of Ap- nam. nally's first stop will be in peals today reversed the land- Nix on' s announcement Venezuela, Columbia, Bra- mark order for consolidation of Monday that Connally will zil, Argentina, Bolivia and represent him on a 15-ria- Peru. To follow will be visits Richmond city schools with tion tour beginning today to South Vietnam,. Australia, those of suburban: Henrico) and came a day after ainother Singapore and New Zealand, Chesterfield Counties. key Republican said it is Connally said when he re- In a 5-1 decision, the appeals signed last month that he court said the. key question was — Wpmen . drivers had no political aspirations , whether a federal district judge Some women think they but, when asked about the could "compel one of the states know all about driving once vice presidency, ,,he duck- of the Union to restructure its they learn where the horn ed "that kind of specula- internal government for the is located . . . Joe Apple- tion at this point in time." purpose: of achieving racial bal- gate invented a; new type of Two days later, Agnew ance in the assignment of pu- glasses for men who watch said it would be "totally un- pils to the public schools." miniskirts. They're called realistic to expect the Re* "We think not," the appeals thigh-focals . . . Says the publican convention to ac- court said, unless there is "in- in the es- THWART INVASION . . ' . Three women up later. The beach was the right one for cynic: There's a lot of mon- cept" Connally on its na* ON MISSION .. . Outgoing treasury Secretary John vidious discrimination . tablishment or maintenance of sunbathers and a small boy lie undis- war games at Camp Pendleton, but wrong ey to be made in television tional ticket. Connally today began a tour of South American countries local governmental units." mayed b Army reservists who invaded the one for sunbathing, Marines said (A\P Pho- — as any repairman can The . closest Nixon has for President Nixon. He left Key Biscayne, Fla., for y . tell you . . . A man who come to addressing the sub- Therefore, the court said, it beach at Camp Pendleton , Calif.| expecting tofax) 's Vciezuela ¦(!) ' . Other countries he will visit, in chronological bored with his retirement ject directly was in a tele- was reversing the Jan. 10 deci- (2); (3); (4); to find resistance by Marines, who> showed sighs, "Every morning I get vision interview last winter order , are: Colombia Brazil Argentina Bo- sion by U.S. District Court Merhige Jr., up with nothing to do — when he said he saw no livia (&) , and Peru 6). The trip will conclude June 14 and Judge Robert R. and by nighttime it's only reason to break up a win be followed by Connally visits to the Far East, South Asia the first ruling in which sepa- half done." ning combination. and Europe. (AP Photofax ) rate governmental entities had been ordered merged to attain Planes knock racial balance in schools. Richmond's public schools Army told to are 64 per cent black, while those of neighboring Henrict and out 100 Red Laird says arms Chesterfield 91 per cent white. S On the inside: "The district judge felt com- ,c is lo ' pelled to order consolidation of D A I AC P°stal Service expected act within 30 £ trim the fat ^' ;> ikaleO clays on recommendations of its Postal Rate Com- £¦: the three school units partly be- supply boats : his concern with what ? mission to substantially cut proposed higher mailing costs — k cause of By ROBERT A DOBKIN or early retirement for over- SAIGON (AP) - American limitations can K .story, page 2a. seemed to him an unfortunate WASHINGTON (AP) weight GIs — and Army fighter-bombers knocked out racial balance in the three sep- The old adage about an ; A new w nona c ty manao <-'r was lured '§ arate systems and partly be- women — who fail to shed more than 100 supply boats " **HHW"liwUAnnnittfpd ' ' army traveling on its stom- >k Monday night by the City Council and will % cause he felt this racial balance the extra pounds. A spokes- Monday in the most damaging S report tor work next week — sto ry, page 3a. k: ach apparently has fallen be OKed safely was the result of invidious state into disfavor with Gen. Wil- man said the re has been no attack on North Vietnam 's in- action ," the circuit court said , ik: It Minnesota 's birth rale during the first third liam C. Westmoreland. He change in the Army 's stand- land waterways sinc e the re- By HARRISON HUMPHRIES be a grave mistake " Laird told OilRiff ill Idlefaff* ; in the majority opinion by % 0 f the year v/as running a( an all-time , ;; has ordered his troops to ards, just a new empha- sumption of full-scale bombing WASHINGTON CAP) -De- j two congressional committees M low — story, page 4a. j> < Judge J. Braxton Craven Jr. literally trim the fat from ¦ sis "reflecting concern for fense Secretaiy Melvin R. Monday. concern for effective the ranks. two months ago, the U.S. Com- The Winona County Board of Commissioners k "In his the health and welfare of j- i Pft!||<| : of the 14th U.S. Army commanders mand said today. Laird says Congress can safely "This is an interim freeze on ?: UUUI I knuckled down Monday afternoon to begin prep- ;k; implementation the military population and ¦ Amendment —the-— opinion 'around the world were told the need to maintain a rea- U.S. officials said that with approve the Moscow arms-limi- numbers only," the secretary ;: arations for the creation of the new county courts system i ," if the added , "he failed to sufficiently in no uncertain terms last sonably fit army." tation accords only said , adding that limits on •• : next month — slory, page 10a . -k its harbors mined , lis two rail- United States continues weap- consider , we think, a funda- week to make frequent No one will be tossed out ways to China cut and much of weapons modernization and de- Wisconsin Democrats Monday demanded ;¦¦ principle of federalism checks of everyone in their ons development and modern- velopment k- Wl^rnnQZn mental of the service just for being its highway system, severed , arc possible in the II laUUIIOill postponement of next month's special Ic-gis- incorporated in the 10th units to find those who ization. followup negotia tions " overweight. Hanoi was turning more to expected ;: lativc session — story, page 12a. Amendment. are becoming obese and "If we stand still, this would t o continue through the " , The Army' s heavyweights small craft and barges to move next The appeals court also dis- commence corrective ac- will a chanci to slim five years. : : Winona State College ; have supplies. But one senior U.S. of- .; UUCP dropped a 4-3 decision to k counted one of the key con- tion. " down, If their problem Is "Th e way to .succeed ir. the :¦;; " La Verne, Calif., COHCRC Monday night in the open- ficial said America's air forces \\ ins round of the National Association of Intercollegiate tentions of the Richmond The new regulations ts- att ributable to nonmedical ¦were successfully countering negotiations is to be strong '" ued by Westmoreland .; .-: Athletics baseball tournament in Phoenix — story, page 4h. % School Board , which filed the , the causes, they will be placed this. when you Diifcr them." Laird suit for consolidation on which Army chief of staff , could on a medically supervised said. Merhige ruled affirmatively . lead to eventual dismissal we ight-reduction program. The liijjgest kill was claimed Laird testified Monda\ before by Navy pilots from the carrier Appropriations committecs of Coral Sea, who reported de- the House and Senate and Soviets demonstrate capability stroying or damaging 69 water planned closed sessions today craft. Most, were caught on the with the two Armed Services Song Cn River and tributaries panels. two miles from tho coast near As the negotiations continue , the city of Vinh , a major trans- he said, development of such Killer satellite system to be studied shipment point lfio miles south weapons as the Bl bomber, Tri- of Hanoi and I4S miles above dent, submarine and site de- Ity HOWARD BENEDICT a "death ray," perhaps a laser team; by signals pon the United States does not possess—the frac- the demilitarized zone. fenses for Minutcman missile CAPE KENNEDY , Fla. (AP) - The Defense that would disrupt the payload's electronics, or by tional orbital bombardment system (FOBS). In The U.S. Command said launchers must not stop. Department has decided to study the feasibility more than 220 strikes were of blowing up the American satellite, destroying both several tests in recent years the Soviets have dem- Laird said the onl a killer satellite system capa ble of intercept- flown across Norlh Vietnam y budget ing, inspecting paybacks. onstrated that an FOBS rocket is capable of hurling savings from the arms-limita- and destroying hostile space ve- Monday, hicles. The Soviet. Union already has demonstra- Satellite explosion is tbe technique used by the a nuclear bomb into a low earth orbit and that tion agreement will be from un , In South Vietnam , the Saigon ted this capability. Russians Since 1068, the Soviets have successfully it can be called in on an earth target in less than command said government built defensive nntiballlstic mis- demonstrated their spacecraft system at least one global pass. siles— The Air Force space and missile systems or- killer supporting U.S. ABMs—a total of about ganization seven timcn according to U.S. sources. But if it were used , the action would be a viola- troops and $5 billion over in Los Angeles asked industry on May , planes continued to battle the next five 26 to submit proposals These sources say the successfu l test. involved tion of a U,N. treaty prohibiting the placing of 'ESSENTIAL* years. on the system. At least *? North Vietnamese troops hold- GO-AHEAD three companies are expected to be to 12 separate launches ol Cosmos satellites, Five nuclear weapons in space. selected northern part of . . , Defense Secretary Me l- While the offensive-arms conduct competitive studies. were target satellites and seven were pursuit pay- In 1960, the Defense Department began dcvcl. ing out in the vin It. Laird tells a Senate agreement freezes Russia with If defense officials decide on the basis of the loads that flew near their quarry. After an in- oping a satellite interceptor under Project Saint. Kontum in the central high- subcommittee it is "abso- 1,618 ICBMs-long-rangc mis- studies to develop a satellite destroyer , it is be- spection , five of the interceptors blew apart on This was abandoned in 1062 for financial and tech- lands. lutely essential" the United siles—against 1,054 for tho lieved subsystem testing could start next year, aim- radio signal from the ground. nical reasons. Instead , the United States developed A South Vietnamese spokes- United States man at Pleiku clnlnncd that by States proceed with subma- and with more ing for a test launch In 1075 or 1976. When President Nixon and Soviet Communist a landbased antisatcllite system at Johnson Island Soviet than America) subma- dusk Kontum has been entirely rine and bomber develop- If interceptor satellites arc built, they -would party leader Leonid Brezhnev signed the nuclear in the Pacific. rines and submarine misisile be able to they snicl on- The system still is in operation , but the rockets cleared of North Vietnamese ment to maintain a bar- fly alongside an alien spacecraft , de- arms limitation treaty last month , launchers , the United States re- termine its assignment disable site inspection was not necessary, that .spy satel- are obsolete b today's standards and they would troops, but. other sources said position for further and , if necessary, y gaining tains technical superiority in or destroy it. lites could do the job. be relatively ineffective against today's highly some snipers might be left in SALT talks. (AP Photofax) dcploymont, Laird said. Destruction could be effected by some sert of The Soviet Union has an operational space wea- mancuverable satellites. i the city. 8-cent letter ra te OKed Legislative organization group OK's Bernidji paper Posfal ission six percent pay hike for lawmakers Comm MADISON, Wis. Wi — The assistant,'* for example, would has to consider merit increases. posed the measure. purchased by Joint Committee on Legislative jump from $600 per month to The measure passed swiftly The program places four OK's $1.5 billion hikes . Monday on a roll-call vote after chiefs of legislative services in Organization has endorsed a $650. . By JAMES PHILLIP8 circulation and therefore de- plan for increased pay of at In addition, the maximum scant discussion. salary categories greater, than Idaho chain third-class mail. least sis per cent for legislative pay scale would be boosted Republican Senate Majority that of the governor, who gets POCATELLO, Idaho (AP ) — WASHINGTON (AP) - The Within 30 days the board of crease the flow of Information employes. from $780 to $840. Monthly step leader Ernest Keppler of She- $25,000) annually. The Bemidji (Minn.) Pioneer Postal. Rate Commission has governors Is expected to act on throughout the country." " com- The new compensation sched- increases" of $25 are in- boygan cast the lone "no" vote, The director of the Legisla- has become the fourth news- approved about $1.5 billion in the proposals which the The temporary rateg by law ule includes an automatic cost- corporated in thr arrangement. maintaining that starting sala- tive Fiscal Bureau would get paper to be owned by the increased mail rates, most of mission says will save publish- y over expire 30 days after the Rate of-living adjustment. Each Caucus secretaries, research ries already are too high. $27,108, ah increase o* $2,600. Scripps-Ifft Newspapers Inc., which have been in effect on a ers $21.8 mlUion annuall the temporary rates. They ex- Commission issues Its findings. employe covered would get ei- assistants, analysts, directors, "I just don The Legislative Reference Bu- based in Pocatello. temporary¦ basis since May 't think we have to ' ' pire in 30 days. The governors of the Postal ther a six per cent or $30' and legal counsel are covered pay that much to get good reau head would get $28,992, an G. Nicholas If It III, president 1971. 1 The effect for most 1 mail The commission replaces monthly salary boost—-which- by the salary schedule. people," Keppler said. "I real- increase of more than $1,600. and general manager of the Service have four alternatives. ever.is larger—tacked on to the Sen. Rohert Knowles, R-New Idaho State Journal Inc., an- users will be to make per- Congress as the rate-setting ize that We're competing with The revisor of statutes would , They can approve the commis- . basic pay raises. Richmond, said he heard "by nounced , Monday the purchase manent the 8-cent cost of mail- body under the 1970 Postal private business, but we're sup- receive $27,468, an increase of an attempt sion's rates, reject them, modi- word of mouth" that the feder- posed to be keeping was made June 1. ing a letter, and 11 cents for Reorganization Act, "A further of this new- a tight $2,600, and state Auditor Robert to put the service on its feet fy them or permit them to go al Pay Board approved the watch on the taxpayers' money, Ifft said the Bemidji Pioneer air-mail letters unless the Post- plan," Kenneth De Prey, chief Ring wood, head of the Legisla- al Service Board of Governors and! end recurring deficits. into effect under protest. cost-of-living escalator sug- not spending it when there's no is a 6,200 circulation afternoon s recommen- of personnel services said, "is tive Audit Bureau, would get rejects the rate schedule, an For second-class mail, the The commission' gested by the state Personnel need to." daily located in the northern dations, if approved, are unlike, to standardize the classi- Bureau. $31,452, an increase of m ore action viewed as unlikely. commission recommended a fications required of job appli- The committee unanimously than $2,900. Minnesota Lake region. Be- Instead ly to benefit the average mail "We believe it falls strictly midji has a population of about 1.6-cent-per-p5ece rate cants for any particular posi- adopted proposed pay and mer- The . increases are to be effec- Nevertheless, the new rate of the 1.9-cent cost, put into ef- user except for postcards, within the federal guidelines," increases 11,500: : ;¦ proposals drew immediate criti- which go from a 7-cent tem- tions." Knowles the committee chair- it for Legislative Fis- tive July 1. . fect by the Postal Service tem- , cal Bureau employes, Garph A. Lords, former cir- cism from magazine publishers porary rate to 6 cents uhder the "We want to bring out rules man, stated. The discrepancy between the porarily last year. closer into line with those legislative salary levels arid culation manager of the Idaho and other mailers who use sec- permanent schedule. . o^ A third set of wage hikes " ¦ ' , ¦ ¦ ¦;¦ the civil service," he said. No one seemed certain as to covering the state auditor, chief that of the governor prompted State Journal in Pocatello, was ond-class fates on a broad In New York, Andre-w Heis- ¦ •; Under the plan, the minimum what the rates would cost the of the legislative reference bu- committee members ; to say appointed hew publisher of the scale. kell, chairman of the board of HAS SURGERY taxpayer because the pane! still Pioneer; : . The commission says it has Time, Inc., which publishes salary of an ''adnaihistrative reau, revisor of statutes, and there is a need for a revision of (Special) executive salary programs. Ifft also directs two Montana substantially . cut the temporary Time and life magazines, said ETTRICK , Wis. - director of the Fiscal Bureau , has had passed 3-2. . A proposed program. revision newspapers, the Bozeman Chro- rates the partially-independent the new rates "will drive a Donald Corcoran, 63, out of surgery at a La Crosse hospi- nicle and the Havre Daily Postal Service proposed for the number of magazines ' Keppler and Democratic Sen. died in the 1971-72 legislative ' :' Fred Risser of Madison op- session. News, k publishers and for users of the business, force others to cut tal.;

., k^ SOCIETY COIN-MEDAL .. . . . Front and reverse sides ¦ of the first coin-medal struck by the National Commemora- tive Society honoring Robert Fulton are shown. The medal was presented to the Winona County Historical Society and PB^nil^^fli^HP^^^ ^ I» IM T¦ nj^^I tmKiy ^yCEW&R CUT will . be housed on the Julius C. Wilkie Museum with other i^r fl rf Fulton memorabilia.

>bu.<>i».ia!s Society receives : ¦ -»,w»»* " //) la. ^^^^^^^^^B l'k^M ^ 1 flA T l.o,cto<»j> i ^^^^^^^^^MB^^^mm mm ' m7 ^PmrmrMmaWmTW mtMWyL W^MaW *Kr„ . V ^^¦\Viy ^ <^ Mm mmmAm+T * ^r^& ^W \&, ¦ Fulton medallion - ' '^^^^^^a^Ma^Ma^Ma^Ma^Ma^Ma^Ma^Ma^Ma^Ma^Mr' ' \^mm^mm^m^m^m^Ma^MT^^^^^^m\*\~^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ ^ _^titt^ft >^^^^K!F^^^H^lH^^^3iBl^^^vJK»^^B*. ka\ The Winona County Histori- steamboat," by the National cal Society has been presented Commem orative Society: : k f^UdfllM ^KV^^A^^B^^^^^Ii^^^^^^K MW^^ml^^^^' ' : A^F >^^^^' ' m^^^F ^^ ^^^^^^^BkV MW ^W' ^^^^M m\^mmW^^^^^m^mmmm\m\^KMmWamr^^ the first sterling silver proo f The irreplaceable proof , val- of the 89th commemorative ued at $100 Or more, was do- coin-medal issued in honor of nated to the society because Robert Fulton, "father of the the National Historical Founda- tion, board of directors felt the Winona organization "the most worthy recipient of this valu- Deadline lor able piece," according to the accompanying letter. The county historical society has the largest collection of estimated tax U{^^^SMmmmmmm\ B "^ft : Mama ^mm^MmW ' ^^5^T^^J»J^^HBI^^^M^^^^^B8Hi^^2yHP^^OP^^^^ T^B^ Robert C. Fulton documents in ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^ the US. : The medal will soon be on filings is near display, with other Pulton me- . 5. PAUL, Minn. — June 15 morabilia, at the Julius C. Wil- is a special red-letter day for kie steamboat museum in Le- 269,595 taxpayers in Minnesota, vee Park, according to Dr. Lew- according to George is I. Younger, executive direc- ^ ' O. Letl- jyf-rpimigmL wmiLr^jfaT . - - ; . ^^.W ert Internal Revenue tor of the Winona County His- ^aa jwlm^m^m^m^m^m^'^^ '^^H ^Ktv* , Service WamkVm\^^r'PMmmmmmmmW^ FRESH FROZEN ^ OSCAR.MANEU.AU-fctEP District Director for Minneso- torical Socety. PERCH Lfl: 79c; ta. That's the deadline for tax- FILLETS KS payers filing estimated tax ffSgwW^^ ; TO^¦ H.~89* vouchers. ¦ ¦ : ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ - ¦¦ ¦ ¦ . . SUCED ScOH Gl who sued Nixon ' ;¦ ' '^ ' . ¦ : ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ' ' - ' 3 ' ' ' " ' . '" ' ' " "- - __ - . . '¦ i-t e.WGS%. ¦ ir^. ' - ^^mmm\\mmmat *m^' r^* ^ ! ^^ttmm^^^mmM^_ Many estimated tax filers ' j BJBHSl^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ l ASSOW&O RAVORS i^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^^ k^ may be unaware that they are over Vietnam war 'PSf ^ /ltf\'9 ' " paying more tax than is neces- ¦ WHAMU PUNCH ^ ™™ sary due to recent changes in being sent home 'T^SH O wohS^W Ml A ^ * ^ * federal tax laws , Lethert said. ¦ M SAIGON (AP) - Spec , 4 Er- • SAIAO- OBBSSIMS- These tax filers can make the h-sr l ^k fLs * ^fs r mmm v. *M¦ 3»Ur ^^k necessary changes , in their tax nest Dacosta, the American frl : Mlraole 32-02 > * -„ ¦ ^ who opposes the Vietnam war i - j A tt\c ^^a\^^^ -^- M W^ll .. ^^k liability by amending the June Whip « ¦ BW WI CF(S, »«.! « __ ¦ tea /I* j*?-„ j>l« m 15 voucher. so much that he sued President I : *fT —— , Nixon, has been sent Space to compuete home to i^T an amend- the United States aboard a MUSHROOMS 3,«aM ^ ¦ ed estimate is provided in the - IS ' medical evacuation flight , mili- fir^ o^ Jf upper right corner of the Esti- tary officials said . mated Tax Form (1040 ES). A U.S. Army spokesman said w DRTssXr!..2sj^E99V All estimated tax filers aie the 22-year-old Queens XsP^R uged to , N.Y., A^¥lK:io° ^o0s # make any necessary soldier underwent surgery for fX fRyiT changes at this time and re- removal of a cyst on his lower ^ ComwL...3^^9 du ^ jr c their tax liability, Letheri back and doctors decided he ^^^ ^^^ said. •NABISCO ^^^2^ should go home rather than re- \^^^ ^^^^^eaWMmmmW^^^4^^ Individuals reeding help to de- turn to the field. His tour was termine their proper tax liabili- OREO CREME Sandwich Cookies...'SS 45* nearing completion anyway, s*/^e.isc£> mmmi ^\ \ ties can receive additional as A machine-gunner with /MmmWT^3a\mmmm sistance a 1st at their local IRS of Air Cavalry Division reconnais- RIT Z COCKERS S2- ficcs. .39 * B V IGA TABLER.T* ¦ sance platoon east of Saigon , ^T/vtoom c Dacosta has a lawsuit pending ^ noz %O^^ The number of hunting licens- against Nixon , charging thai ^Mpr Vj LARGE es sold in the United States the President illegally escalat- . j Mmmmmfmm mmmmmmmm tvJ J *W " climbed to a record high in ed the war without congression- ^ ^ 1971. al approval. I CHICKEN, TURKEY J HB ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^m ^ ^ ,GA BiEF, NERS ooz ^ft GimMr ^ ^ m^ fy D| N - - -- 39c For the Latest "Winona ««- GM' 59c Area Weather Forecast QQi CREAM -*• "' W ^ szs« Vjf % ICE Any Time of Day or Night MJ t*. ^L I KRAF1 » ,, t |4C i— PHONE i 55

IGA WEST— TELEPHONE 5th 454-3030 — STREET Taxp ayers protest real Moving here from Arkansas Four hurt in New city ^ thanag^r^h;ir^(d: > estate valuation moves By FRANK UHLIC. job of executive secretary for the Port Authority. By STEVEN P. JOHNSON plaining that the rural move- department to attend the Coun- Daily News Staff Writer ment of city dwellers who do ty Board of Equalization meet- collisions on Dajly News Staff Writer Winona County Assessor Da- not gain their income from the ing July 3. Winona will have a new city manager next Monday, There was no debate on the appointment and no other vid Sauer met with the County soil is inflating land prices. In his opinion . Sauer said , just one week after its first manager, Carroll J . FTy, left candidate was nominated at the council meeting for con- the post for a similar job in Carbondale, 111. Board of Commissioners Mon- The county assessor said the there is little the townships can foggy highway sideration , day afternoon to brief commis- last few township boards of rer do about the situation and noth- The City Council voted unanimously Monday night to hire sioners on their scheduled meet- view have refused to act as ing the county can do. ELGIN, Minn. — Four per- Paul G. Schriever, Texarkana, Ark., as Fry's successor. Schriever , married and the father of two children , has ing this sons were injured in a two- Schriever, 35, recently resigned as manager ¦—-——-—. served as manager at Texarkana from March, 1969, to afternoon with boards of review pending to- "I can't see where anybody ¦ ' taxpayers angry over . real es- day's meeting with the County can dp anything about this," vehicle accident at 5:20 a.m. at Texarkana arid:told Mayor Norman E. In- • /¦. March , 1972. He is a veteran of Army service and was tate revaluations. Board. he said , "unless they want to today on Highway 42, four miles dall by telephone that he will be on hand C i ty discharged in 1966 from the reserve. The upward revaluations were Sauer and Board Chairman go to court and get next Monday morning. an injunc- south of Elgin. /; While in Texarka na he helped establish a functioning urged by State Tax Commis- Leo Borkowski agreed to ask a tion, and that will affect the Schriever was chosen from among the Goii ncil Model Cities program , set up a neighborhood-oriented social sioner Arthur C. Roemer in representative of the state tax whole state." According to the Minnesota three candidates interviewed by a commit- Highway Patrol , a heavy fog service delivery system, upgraded the municipal salary sys- 1,700 letters mailed to local as- tee composed of council members and rep- ~ ~—~ tem , worked with minority groups, established a comprehen- sessors late last year. this morning caused a north- resehtatives of various community interests bound truck driven by Robert . sive juvenile program in conjunction with county govern- That move, Sauer told the Salary for the position will be $20,000 to start , with a ment and a mental health clinic, presided over a $3.2 mil- board, was in reaction to a R. Liesch, II, 38, West St. Paul, Minn., to slow down to avoid review of the stiuation scheduled after six months of work lion bono and construction program and created a broad study up through 1970 that show- Expanded vo-tech and the likelihood that it will advance to $21,200. Th* latter range of federal grant-in-aid programs. ed market values listed on tax hitting a slowly - moving car ahead. figure has been established for the post which , includes the He is a graduate of Elgin , 111., Academy, attended North- rolls were about 15 percent be- western University, Evanston , 111., and earned bachelor of low Liesch veered his truck to tbe the true market values. The enrollment seen arts , and master of arts degrees at the University of Texas, law requires tax lists to be at right where it struck the shoul- The possibility that the enroll- ment of around .1,000 but he der of the road and overturned Austin, He is former president of the Arkansas City Man- , 100 percent of market value. Man- ment at the Winona Area Vo- pointed out that this would not on its left side, partially block- agers Association, a member of the International City COMMISSIONERS WERE " ing the highway. Schriever was an administrative intern at Austin from scheduled to meet this after- cational - , Technical Institute be a realistic figure since all of Following the Liesch truck 1958 to I960, admimstrative assistant there from 1960 to might swell as high as TOO next noon with representatives of the ^ those who have made applica- was a car, driven by Arthur 1962 and staff member for a year for the.International City Winona County Township Offi- fall was suggested Monday tions will not actually enroll. O. Matter, 72, Austin , Minn. Management Association in Chicago. night; to thek School Board of cers Association and , other tax- Last year at this time there The Matter car struck the over- He worked as consultant to the planning commission of payers angry over the revalu- Winona Independent District 861 turned truck. the City '. . of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, N.C, was ations, which they fear will by William L. ¦ ¦ were 802 new applications for The drivers, as well as two assistant county manager for Forsyth County, N.C, from the 1971-72 year. ' raise taxes. Hemsey, jnsti- c i. • passengers In the Matter car, January. 1964, to. August, 1966, and . was city manager at The township group is threat- tute director. bCnOOl More reliable projections, were taken to St. Marys Hos- Meberly. Mo., from August , 1966, to March , 1969. " ¦ ' ening court action in an effort The institute k. • - , ' Hemsey explained , can be pital , Rochester. Liesch is list- He h . an Episcopalian and was a member of the St. to block the upward revalua- is housed in a Bodrd drawn from; the 5-17 applications ed in satisfactory condition with James Episcopal Church liturgical committee, tions, and Sauer said he has already accepted and a fractured left ankle. Matter is building on ______¦ for which agomert Association and of Rotary International. run into fierce battles with Homer Road """" ¦ .. . ¦ fees have been paid. also listed in satisfactory con- township boards of review over constructed in 1967 to accommo- dition and is being held for ob- y the revaluations. date a student population of 385. THERE WERE 511 accepted servation. r Sauer pointed out that objec- and fee-paid applications in the John Volkeman, 85, and tions are not that the higher THE FINAL phase of con- files at this time last year, Charles M. Steward, 86, of City iit b///, valuations are in conflict with struction of an addition now is In addition there are 266 . ac- Brownsdale. Minn., were not reality, but just that they are nearing completion and the in- cepted applications for which admitted. Volkeman was treat- being raised at all. stitute had a fall enrollment fees have not been paid — there ed and released and , Steward last year of 630. were 173 of these last year at declined medical attention. manager reports "THE PEOPLE we've been this time — and 42 incomplete Extensive damage is listed to Hemsey told board members Winona 's new city mana- ness of City Council seeing never say 'you've got my he based his 1972 fall enroll- applications, compared with 118 the Matter car while minor mem- land assessed for more than I damage resulted to the Liesch ger said he chose the city bers and the lay committee could sell it,'" Sauer said, ment estimate on data available on June 1, 1971. because it was in one of the He added that completed ap- truck. by whom he was interview- " they ju st say. 'Why did you June 1 which show that new three areas of the country in ed last week. "That' applications for enrollments plications are being received s the raise it? ? " which he and his wife want- way I like to do business," Commissioner James Papen- numbered 843 and there will be daily and it's expected that a The Royal albatross, with a ed to live. ; , breeds in he said. fuss said he attended several 161 returning students. number of additional applica- wingspan of six.feet Paul <3. Schriever , who tions will be received in all sub- the wild and remote islands of He also was impressed, board of review meetings and These, he noted, would add was hired Monday ni ght by he said , by the city's physi- ject areas. ; the sub-Antarctic. .' ' noted that termers are com- up to an apparent fall enroll- the City Council, said Wino- cal aspects. Winona appears INVESTIGATE WRECKAGE .... . Searching the wreck- na had: "fit the ball just to be one of the few cities age of a Viking International Airfreight airplane, which about perfectly." He will ar- with a park system to: be - rive here next Monday for proud of , crashed near Cochrane, Wis , late Thursday night , are mem- he coitlmented , work and his wife and two and the beauty of the city 's bers of the Federal Aviation Agency .'(FAA)! and National young children will move as setting also is extraordin- insiruction plan Transportation Safety Board: Tom Jensen and Jim Pender-: soon as he sells his present ary; " ¦ ¦ ';¦ Computerized . ;. . gast , both of FAA , headquartered in Minneapolis , Minn .-, house in Texarkana , Ark. Schriever and his wife are a ir* Dave Daily, National Transportation Safety Board. The Schriever said In a tele- parentis of a son who will plane apparentl phone interview today that start second grade next ¦ y came through the trees to the left of the . . men, clipping off the tree on the extreme left. The point of he was impressed by the school year and a 3-year-old authorized for Lincoln School candor and straightforward- daughter. By C. GORDON HOLTE reduced substantially. will come from.''' Mrs. Hull , had any specific pro- impact was in the left foreground. (La Croix Johnson photos ) ¦ ¦ Daily News Staff Writer Mrs. Hull asked whether the Superintendent of Schools A. gram in mind. " ¦ , Use of a computer-managed proposed expenditure of $27,000 L. Nelson pointed out that a She replied , "I could come up Dense foliage hampered search program for individualized in- for PLAN would require any new foundation aid formula , to- with several" am Drl Rogers struction at Lincoln School next cutbacks in educational serv- gether with an increased sec: commented, "I could, too, and year was approved Monday ices in the district- She recalled so could any of the others. But ondary school enrollment, will this is a program we've had ex- night by the School Board of the time board members were provide the district with more Plane crash site still sealed off Winona Independent District told that -budget limitations perience with, the only one. If ¦ " ¦¦ • ¦¦ state school aids next year than " COCHRANE, Wis. — The area The crash was the second one was killed when his Sky van La Crosse, Wis., tok Anoka, 861. . . . might make a half-day kinder- you have an idea I'd suggest in 1971-72. around a wrecked Viking Inter- this year for Viking Airfreight. crashed short of the runway at Minn., late Thursday night Oyer the objection of one di- garten class at Ridgeway in- that you sit down with Mr. national Mueller and talk it over and I'll Airfreight plane, which rector, the board authorized the feasible next year. . "WHILE THE financial sitiia- In April, a 29-year-old Osseo , the La Crosse airport. when the plane disappeared. say that it would take two or crashed near here late Thurs- a d m i- .n'i s- ... ; ; Mueller said that enrollment ton is critical,'' Nelson said, day night¦; continues to be seal- Minn, pilot, David E. Hanson , Johnson was en route from The Civil Air Patrol (CAP) ¦¦ ' ¦ ¦ :¦' three years before yoti have tration to con- -, t . '. .. adjustments appeared to have "the funds are there" if the ed off while an investigation is searched a 50-mile corridor been effected and the adminis- board were to decide to extend something. 1 think we should tract with 5chOOl stick with something we under- conducted to determine the along the Hiawath a Valley for W est in g- tration how plans to maintain PLAN to Lincohi. cause of the crash. B j I'm not married to this three days before the pilot of a a kindergarten class at Ridge- Daniel S. Sadowski, 4th Dis- stand, The body of the p house Learn- DOSTO program but I don't want to go ilot , Gary CAP plane out of Chippewa •;¦ . . way.; : trict director, said that what he Lowell Johnson, 31, Wanamingo ing Corp- for . all over the map looking for oth- , Falls, Wis.¦ , spotted the wreck- i in p 1 e - "It looks to me like $27,000 had heard of PLAN indicated Minn., was found Sunday in the age. is quite ers . I'd prefer to stick with mentation of its Program for a cut into the budget," to him that Lt was a worth- something we know something wreckage, in a hilly, heavily- Persons at the scene called It Learning in Accordance with Mrs. Hull declared , "and I'd while program and commented, wooded area on the Willard W. fortunate that the wreckage had like about." Eikamp farm about three miles Needs (PLAN) for 200 students to know where the money "If it's as good as they say Supt. Nelson observed , "Per- been spotted from the air among at Lincoln beginning next fall. it is, we're discriminating year northeast of here, in the Town the dense underbrush. haps during the coming of Waumandee This would represent an ex- against other schools by not out staff could study some other . The plane was last heard from tension of the PLAN program using it. I think we should look " Members of the Federal Avia- as-it . left La Crosse at 11:23 approaches. tion Agency (FAA ) and the Na- which has been in use at the at the implications for the next . Mrs. Hull maintained that an p.m. Thursday for Anoka. John- Progress on three years and if PLAN proves tional Transportation Safety son had not filed a flight plan , Goodview School during the past alternative could be found that Board are trying to determine year to be as good as it's said to be would be less expensive than according to La Crosse airport year — Goodview's first the cause of the crash by read- manager James Cote, of operation. I think we should put it in all PLAN. elementary schools." with ing all instruments and examin- The largest section of the The only dissenting vote was Dr. Rogers countered , ing parts for any previous de- RAP revamp The superintendent said this "All of these jobs have to be wrecked plane found was the cast by Mrs. Michael Hull, 2nd fects. They are being assisted tail section. , would be possible if Westing- done" in individualized pro- Parts were scat- District director, who said she by Buffalo County Sheriff My- tered over a 1,000-foot area and felt that in view of the $27,000 house realizes its expectations) grams, referring to the use of to reduce the cos* of the pro ron Hoch and Dr . jvlarvin Timm , the wings apparently were estimated cost of PLAN for Lin- the computer in PLAN. Wabasha , Minn., Buffalo County is detailed gram by about one-third , "Then let teachers do them," shorn off by trees. coln, alternative programs of Progress on an extensive re- deputy coroner. Miscellaneous radio equip- individualized instruction should Mueller said he felt PLAN Mrs. Hull answered , "there are vamping for 1972-73 of the Re- had something Dr. Timm said the pilot died ment, personal possessions and lie explored to offer all plenty of them around. " source Action Program (RAP ) schools and observed not teach- instantly when the plane hit the navigation maps were scatter- that its "We need clerks, steep hillside. IN RECOMMENDING to the for students in Winona Independ- use at Lincoln would give an ers for these job s," Dr. Rogers ed evcri further away. board that PLAN be extended ent District 861 with learning indication of PLAN'S effective- answered. The pilot's bod y was found to Lincoln, E. W. Mueller, as- and behavior problems was re- ness in a conventional self- He then asked that the motion Columbia Heights on the ground about 15 feet sistant superintendent ef schools viewed by Dr. . . contained classroom situation be put to a vote and it was ap- from the cockpit . . The plane for elementary education, re- C. H. Hopf , At Goodview it's used proved by a 4-1 majority. Mrs. reportedl y had a in a man succumbs to cargo of about 140 pounds ported that he, Lincoln Princi- assistant su- bCnOOl school constructed with an Hull said she was dissenting on , Hogenson and a rep- peri ntend- "open space grounds there should be study which was considered a non- pal Robert " design concept. crash injuries load cargo. Westinghouse ent for sec- BOBTCi Mrs. Hull said that from what giv en to alternative proposals. resentative of The foliage was so dense ob- had had three meetings with ondary educa- she understood about PLAN she ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - A , served those at the scene, that parents of children irt the Lin- tion , at Mon- felt that it did not constitute suburban Columbia Heights of the one could walk right past parts coln district to explain PLAN'S day night's meeting individualized instruction in the man has died of injuries suf- SECTION OF CAB , . . Lying in the deep foliage and School Board . true sense fered in an automobile collision underbrush on land owned by Willard W. Eikamp, three of the plane without seeing operation and objectives. . Windows broken them. Lester Plank A major change in the-feder- "They're (pupils) in which his small son was miles northeast oi Cochrane, Wis., is the cab section of a , whose land Mueller estimated that be- still told adjoins Eikamp's, can testify to tween SO and 90 attended these ally-funded program , Dr. Hopf what to do by a computer ," Wiled. Viking International Airfreight plane. The Cessna 207 was The death of John C. Caton the density of the woods since and that a followup explained , will be its new vo- Mrs. Hull asserted. "If you're owned b meetings at parochial III Monday raised Minnesota's y the Minneapolis-based air freight firm that serves he was momentarily lost while session was conducted with a cational orientation with an ef- going to have individualized in- pants in 1972 road toll to 272, compared both La Crosse and Winona. searching for the wreckage. selected group of parents, PTA fort to place partici struction the pupil should be representatives, board mem- jobs when employment readi- working with th« teacher with 349 a year ago. more." school building Caton , 31, was injured Satur- bers and interested persons in ness is established. Mueller disagreed, holding, to answer questions Because of this, Dr. Donald "There 's far more Three windows valued at $40 day when the car he was driv- the district teacher in- ve- determine opinion, Skay, director of special educa- put than appea rs." each were broken early this ing collided with another nnd hicle at an intersection near Mueller said reaction to the tion for the district , will be re- Goodview Principal Richard morning-It St. Stanislaus Calh placed as project director by Adank at this point olic School, 602 E. 5th St . Forest Lake. His 3-year-old son , proposed use of PLAN at Good- said (hat killed In favorable and William L. Hemsey, director of there was a common misconcep- According to acting Chief of John B. Caton IV, was view had been the crnsh. Hint there appeared to he agree- the Winona Area Vocational - tion that the computer dictated Policq John Scherer, the win ment that Ihe program should Technical Institute. the learning program, dows, four by six feet each , bo instituted on a one-vonr trial Dr. Skay, Dr. Hopf said , will " What I like most about were discovered broken at 12:32 ed car while it was parked In h.-'Sl.s. continue ns a consultant and the PLAN is its flexibi lity, " Adank a.m. today by Patrolman Mich- front of his house, Asked by Dr , L. L. Korda , recruitment of staff Is now in said ."We have to get over the ael Mullen . The windows were The stolen items are valued progress. Mh District director who pre- idea that the computer is mak- broken by stones. at $40. sided in the absence of bonrd Dr. Hopf said he antici pates ing educational decisions. Those The incident remains under Scherer said an unidentfied President Frank J. Allen , whe- there will he a full-time staff of are up to the teacher and stu- Investigation. citizen called the police station seven _ ther there bad boon nny objec- two work teachers, two dent." Two stereo tape players were at 10:41 p.m. Monday to report counselors tion to PLAN , Mueller renlied , a project coordina- He said , rather , that the role reported stolen Monday. that someone was siphoning of the ho had heard no direct objec- tor, Special Learning and Be- computer was one of per- Ronald Kirkeby, 1740 W. gasoline out of a pickup camper tion although one parent had havior Problem teacher and forming clerical tasks which Broadway, reported at. 8 a.m. truck at the rear of 008 V*. qiif-tinned the cost factor. p roject psychologist — augment- freed the teacher for more di- that a tape player , valued at Broadway. rect work Mueller said that if PLAN ed by a corps of college with the student . $69, was removed from his lock- When the police arrived , the students who will work with ed car while the car was parked wore to be continued at Lincoln AFTER Dr. C. VV. Rogers, owner Paul Gardner , said he for a second year an expendi- RAP participants on n one-to- in front of his house. Scherer had heard some noise in his one basis. director nt large, moved that ture of about $11,000 for supplies, PLAN he implemented said there was no sign of a backyard and when lie turned He said that one of (he nt Lin- $?konn for inservico t mining of objec- coln and the motion was second- forced entry. on the outside light he saw tives of the program will be teachers and the cost of inserv to ed by Sadowsk i , "Mrs , Hull sug- David Dennis, 4<>:i Sioux St., three persons run away. He was training of Ihe project co- have every participant placed gested Hint reported at 1:10 p.m. Monday unable to give a description of if in a job "w« think of two or ordinator — in this case Hogen- by tho end of tho next three other alternative that a stereo tape, two speakers the persons, school pro- son _ would not he required, year. grams which might give us the nnd two cassette tapes were In other action , police appre- Dr. Hopf Th is would reduce tho cost to said that with the type of education we want In our taken from his locked car. The hended a 13-year-old Winonn nroun'd $17 ,000. comprehensive changes being system, I'd like to see nnother car was parked in front of his youth at 0:08 p.m, Monday at e ffected in the program , staff project that's not quite as cost- house and entry was gained by St. Stanislaus school playground HE A1£0 NOTED that Wcst- selection becomes increasingly ly. "' forcing the vent window open. for using obscene language and TAIL SECTION . . . The largest portion scattered ove inghouso was attempting to important hut that ho hopes to Dr. Rogers Stanley Sorem , 1715 W. Broad- disorderly conduct. r a 1,000-foot area. The engine, maintained that of the wrecked Viking Internatlional Airfreight build a broader base of partici- have at least several recom- any study of alternative pro- way, reported to police at 0:15 The boy was released to the ccokpit and cabin were spotted in various for PLAN In the area ¦ pation mendations for appointments grams would require two or a.m. Monday that golf balls , custody of his parents and he plane that wns found was the tall section . locations up to 400 feet fro m tho point of and that if this is realized the for presentation to the board at three yenrs. Kenneth P, Nelson , a driver's license and credit will be referred to juvenile Part of the ftisilage is visible in the above Impact. cost of tho program would bo its meeting next Monday. 1st District director, asked if cards wore taken from his lock- authorities. photo. Sections of tho plane were found ENDS TONIGHT : : Tonight, tomorro w on TV 7:15-9:15 -55#-?1.0O.?l.S0 " ' Bicyclist hit J l^#/i0H^i^i^i^^ - /n: Afey^ £>e/jf»i X > ' " ' Tonight' ;. - ,/; admits he s NEW YORK . _ I hope performed the little wreath- Mack McG-innis ' by car loses laying just as Churchill and not impressed with one of «:MN«wi M-I-H MI- H (:30 Cannon U-M Nawi «-M> that President Nixon, who Trulh Of Com» Jamti Oarnir 513 Hitchcock 11 STARTS WED. Mrs. Roosevelt and the oth- the political candidates: wheels to driver qvinctt 4 f:M Mtreut Wilby (-M * 1D:1> campaign has been placing wreaths Earl Wilson er distinguished people had "He'd come in third — To Till lh« Truth « Jeannl* 11 -71 1-54-NM! DOUBLE FEATURE (AP) Lou H. Klllcbrew 11 »:30 Focui After Dick Clvttt (-Ml on graves of the famous, done it. even if he ran unopposed." RACINE, Wis. - 4:30 Clon Campbill 3-«.8 Dar* 1 Movlt 11 AT 7:15— R "But," said the voice, now Ann Volpe, 18, was riding her Ponderoia SI3 Moor* on Tueidiy A IOISO AAovli < never has the experience I We had not been back in REMEMBERED QUOTE : Squad S-M9 Sanlord Son s "" tinged with disappointment, friend Thursday Mo* * "^'Movla ,, once when paying my the room long before . the An old Irish proverb says bicycle with a Bauball Ifrii country Placa t "too ''• did Roose- 7:30 Hawaii Flve-0 3-4-8 Primus IMS UiOO DavK . Fr«l I Mahatma Ghan- "Mr. Churchill, Mrs. phone rang, it was the same that "courting a girl is like when a car veered and hit her respects to velt Bernard Baruch and NBC Playhouw 5-13 Hews 11 Elictlon m «->•» - , voice that 1 had thought to dying — a man must do it and her bicycle. Movie *-10» 10:00 Ntwa 3-4-5-MO 13 Movla . 11 di. every distinguished visitor told police the the op- be from the Embassy. himself. Miss Volpe ¦ assssaauaabC I t^Emmmmk One very hot day " BBBBBBBaSSBK \J ^eaSaBBBBBSaBBB rang me in a hotel has done so. And if Mr. "This is the flower shop," driver put the bicycle in his car f erator Earl Wilson doesn't . . :. . . EARL'S PEARLS : Sheby > ¦BSvaBBBL ^ Jlf * ^*aBBBBBBBBBH Delhi. the voice said. "We wonder trunk and said he would follow ^<^ i. s - Wetmsfar i~ "~/i ] in New well. . .'," Friedman mentioned his her home. "I think it's the . Ameri- when you expect to pay home town: "The place was aBBBBBBBSFS^ - 'jaSSSSSSBSBMBBaaSaB I could see all of India us for the flowers and the Instead, he took off , leaving Ai»»»»a*raaBsa»>«B^ scientific." "No THREE Ch. 3. . ^4in_ Ww^- LOCA1 NEWS, 5:00 Cable TV-3. 4:00 A ction Auction 3 quences * \Nulern , » people!" said Miss Loos. , Trulh or cons* Mouse Factory 10 . Movl» 11 starring ROCK HUDSON GLEW CAMPBELL (repeat). Milton, Berle, Dom De- quences a Baseball 11 Galloping "Who's the third?" I asked. Gourmet 'It ANGIE DICKINSON • TELLY SAVALAS State birth rate ' Luise and singer Freda Payne present The Golden Years . Lancer * Hogan's Heroes 13 "YOU!" replied. - Miss Loos. 9:M Playwright Neil XDoc) Si- of TV, featuring comedy spoofs, a spy story and blackouts Second Feature mon and Saint Subber, pro- of TV Westerns, 6:30, Chs. 3-4-8. Academy Award 'Winntr __ at record low pace ducer of 7 of his shows, BASEBALL. Minnesota Twins vs. Baltimore Orioles. 6:30, ttqriring Chs. 10-ii. • : : ; Monday Through Friday Frt^a«a$J ST. PAUL, Minn, (AP ) — for the future may have to be have ended their relation- ship after lo years "NBC ACTION PLAYHOUSE." The Enemy on the Beach" The birth rate in Minnesota lowered. , and his is a World War II drama about war experts order to disarm Mlnneapolls-St. Pius STAllON LISTINSs through the first four months of Population projections are es- new show, "The Sunshine Cbs, 3-4-8. WCCO Ch. 4 WTCN Ch. 11 Austin—KAUS Ch. 4 nau Clair*—WEAU Ch. I) Boys, new German mines. 7:30, KSTP Ch. 5. KTCA Ch. 1 Rochc»t«r-KROC Ch. 10 La Crosie—WKBT Ch. a. 1972 is running at an all-time pecially important when plan- " will be produced by CAMPAIGN 72 — THE ELECTION YEAR. Analysis of KMSP Ch. ». Winona—WSC 3 La Croise—WXOW Ch. It low annual rate , the Minnesota ning school oi hospital con- Manny Aizenberg and Gene the California , New Jersey, New Mexico and South Dakota Mason Clty-KGLO Ch. 1 Programi *ub|«ct to ehanja v Wolsk. "They are two en- ' 5-10-11 ¦Jf^aaarBi^fflPBrmIT -' *^7'^ ' I Department of Health says. struction. primaries , with John Chancellor and David Brinkley , 10:30, Semester 3-4-a Hanny & Protestor * Wh«r* .¦^. J < \ ergetic Minnesota Today , Jack LaLann* 11 Spill Second 4-t-lt B^BIaB^BBBBBBBBBBBBBBt£ ^*' ^^ ^¥fr Heller said he was "sure that boys and I think the Chs. 5-10-13; Walter Cronkite, 10:30; Chs. 3-8; Harry Reason- The department, announced theater needs new blood ," 4:10 Sunrise Sosam* Street 11 Oounmet 11 . Monday that babies "were born people are. more aware of birth er and Howard K. Smith, 12:00, Chs. 6-9-19. Religion 11 10:00 Electric Company 3 11:55 Niws 5-IWI k Simon says, "this; 7i» News «-» 9 Family. Affair 1-4-1 12:00 New* 1-4-5+10 in Minnesota control methods and . family may be Wednesday during the first the start of another 10-year Cartoon* 4 Sale ot the All My four months of the year at an planning" and that this was in- LOCAL NEWS, 5:00, CabIe TV-3. Today i-lo-13 , Century 5-10-11 Children 4-Mt volved in the decrease, relationship." liOO Cartoon* 3-4-B Green Acre* » : Luncti with annual rate of 14.3 births per TIC LAUREL AND HARDY SHOW. Stan and 0 Hie are News » 10:30 Classroom 3 Cnsiy 11 JfWUTiMi Mm*$HAm hb mtnL Secret . StuU: Tht NY ' Comedy 11 Love ol Lit* 1-4-I 12:15 Variety 1-10 ~' 1,000 population . This reflects The recent drop in the econo- at their Laughable best in "Hog Wild" ( 1930) in which Ollie mamm a\ am\ma%a^AmT\ Racing Commissioii brass . lj» Claisroom 1 Hollywood 12:30 World Turn* ' 1-4* an 11 per cent drop from my may have been "one of the Squares 1-10-U Lai's A has had a couple of meet- installs/ a wireless for a wife. Host John Gallas provides Movl* ¦ 4 ¦ ¦ Mak* . 1971V when ; pressures" encouraging some Cartoons . ¦ t " ' Bewitched J-s»-l» Deal M-\t the birth rate was ings on biographicalinform ation about the comedy team and sup- ' i?lsssss.ssssss^^H H ¦ l H ^^fllt 16.1 per 1 families to limit offspring, he its current thorny t:K Jack LaLann*- J Beat the Clock 11 Tttrem on a ,000 population. problem and anticipates pUes old-time-movie fans a wealth of trivia about the "Gol- Lucille Ball 4 11:00 W her* th* Match IM1 said. a Dinah Short 5-1013 Heart Is 3-4-1 1:00 Lov* is a Many The 16,1 rale was the lowest battle . . .. Monique Van den Age" of comedy. 6:30, Ch. 4. . Woman's World « jeopardy 1-10-U Sp/entded Thing 14» IB11M,PjtA-:ton* I I WW THRItLS-LAUGHS I \J\J Elsewhere - so he sent, her to Hainhom?. " Stewart Granger. In United States ana Canada WISH I'D SAID THAT: Wcstcvr tale about blood brothers engaged in gan g warfare. German or American Potato Salad, Beans, Col* ACRES OF FAMOUS I year S4O .O0 9 months 130.50 6 months . . $20,75 3 months 111.00 (lt)6P) 3-30, Ch . 6. ( Slaw, Relish, Rolls, Ham, Chicken & Ribs TENTS CIRCUS STARS Sunday News only, I year $15.00 ENDS TON ITE Single Dolly Copies mailed 2J cents each A BALLET COURSE "ANOTHER DAWN ," Errol Flynn.. An English colonel _^ WILD ANIMALS AERIALISTS Single Sunday Copies mailed 75 ¦ cents ASPEN, Colo. (AP) returns to his military outpost with his young, American ELiPHANTS ACROBATS each - A ( Main Main Subscriptions for less than one month! three-week course for ballet bride. 1937) 3:30, Ch. 19. STEAK SHOP C A\/t ADVANCE TICKETS $1.00 p«r week Other rotes on request. students will be offered by Bal- "A PLACE FOR LOVERS," Marcello Mastroianni . Story lliTSKPH OAVt AT REDUCED PRICES ¦ ' "" ' ' ' Send chanoa of address, notices,/undeliv- let West here, July 2-22. of romance filmed in Northern Italy. (1969) 10:30, Chs. 3-8. NOW ered copies, subscription orders arid olher : "OPERATION IDIOT," Ugo Tognazzi. An Italian officer TICKETS ON SALE mall Items to Winona Dally News, f O. It is limited to 100 students Box 70. Winona, Minn 55987. who are 12 or older and have a attemnts to seize a prominent philosopher. (1966) 10:30, Ch. Ted Maler Drug—Snyder Drug minimum of four years of bal- 11. I Second class postage paid at Winona, r 'fj) Choose r^PI All Winona Banks \ Minn. let training. "HAST OF SUDAN ," Anthony Quayle. Story of adven- Happy Chef Restaurant Ballet West's home is Salt ture as four Britons attempt to escape Moslem rule. ( 1964) 7:30 — 53.H — R Lake City. 10:50, Ch. 4. H£\ \\ from our "SOMETHING FOR THE BOYS," Perry Como, Musical, ^ mm fuH ¦ ¦ STARTS j£> WED. with songs of Cole Porter, featuring seven cousins who inherit Wfm- f^A a plantation. (1944) 12:00, Ch, 13. im ft ¦i^HBNMMBMHBHBMBOTHHMHHHMMBBaBBBBHBMIBBH ^HMiH ^BH^^B

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R-e II a wholesome breakfast . . . noon Special occasions are more so business luncheon . . , or n relaxing fcl^^T^^g^^TMaVae^^^ J dinner with friends . . . you 'll find the lasto superb and (he sorvico tops at ENDS TOMIGHT when you celebrate them here CHOICE Mnnhnn 's! We 're nlso equipped lo linndlo Rrniip dinners for ns many as ISO people. wwm\ ^ ^ ¦ Knl out this week , . . with us! "HANG M iwT¦ ' ¦ When you want to honor a friend or commemorate an event, RIB EYE STEAK 1 n, H FtW you'll find our delicious food and prompt, courteous service f fc AM MAIN DINING ROOM OPEN FOR Served With Your j Silp/V i I full Cholct of AiMrkan ^ » | "ICH" y worthy of the occasion. Just check with us to make res- 1 Frlos or French *m* ¦ *aT w^ iJ FOOD & BEVERAGE SERVICE PJfllUlllI ervations, select special I Fries, Toast , Salad ¦ J FROM 5 P.M. SUNDAY menus for delicious dinners. and Coff.a. JUST . ¦ M ^ LT WORr AT 9:10 • AT 11:00 Nothing to celebrate? Our cuisine is, in itself , an occasion CLINT EASTWOO D for celebration. From snacks to full course dinners, your taste STARTS WED. always gets a treat here. Attractive atmosphere, too. Wc&mAonX, < RESTAURANT t • CALL 687-4221 FOR RESERVATIONS • «l£|pj| UTH S cot os |tal«n» "^«ai|Bii# Wm3j PHONE& LOUNGE JFB INTERSECTION HIGHWAYSIGHWAY 41 DOUBLE FEATURE W AESTAURANT 11 ^8SH™ ||nW/ t$irftet 3toig W Wm\ Wk 136 Eatt Third Str«r N^ |L^^^^ f/ & 14 AMD STAT E H « -5? 5|W-|C|^ '© OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY 454-4390 SUPPER CLUB FOUNTAIN CITY, WIS. • • f- ^ ^^ ^ W|TC^9E5 Suggests newsmen go to work : - H;uhijpfi' : r^^ Winonan at Daley humor can be cutting By F. RICHARD CICCONE that come in and know the attitude toward the media when are we having objections to ' pension—and he introduced a new aide who men and women who were ) elderly people on .b traffic safety CHICAGO (AP - Mayor , you ought to formerly worked for a Chicago elected, with any sincerity? AU . . y/: Richard J. Daley, one of the if you don't know '^ than $1 million. E. Cole, Cleveland, 000; get off the chair!" newspaper. it is, is to get themselves on ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP ) - As debts of more $35, Democratic party's most pow- this thing, shrugged at the Sen. Hubert H. Humphey, D- According to a report filed Stanley Goldblum , president of erful leaders for two decades, Later, another reporter asked "He's one who sat out with " he the Minnesota the Equity Funding workshop session about a story that said the In- you a few years ago in your television cameras, "and in JWinn., tries to win the impor- Monday with Corp., Los also is known for his humorous your columns . .. tant California primary today secretary of state, Humphrey Angeles, $25,000. Dr. Hugh Capron, Winona and caustic quips which often ternal Revenue Service was in- distinguished and august seat," " : debts totaling State College Traffic Safety Cen- vestigating alleged kickbacks to he told reporters, Daley 's often loose rhetoric he is confronted with campaign had campaign Others were George O. Gor- mingle with his syntax at news slipped into one of his periodic $1,149,967. Federal law requires ter director, was ont of 32 per- conferences. Chicago aldermen. No names He went back to his dislike of man, 'Washington consultant, were mentioned. lapses when he introduced the the filing of such reports prior $10,000; Herbert J. Waters, sons to attend a recent four- In his latest meeting with the the media and renegade Demo- to each election. This one cov- "Is that good journalism? Is crats in answering a question new deputy mayor , Ken Saine. Washington consultant, $10,000; day workshop at St. Cloud State press Monday, the mayor sug- that good reporting to throw a "He is one of the most able ers a period from May 18 to 27. James Aithy, $10,000; John College. gested that some reporters about the challenge of his regu- E. cloak oh all aldermen for a ru- lar party delegates to the and talented deputy mayors in Mrs. Lucey Since the law took effect Home, Washington financier, With the ii e 1 p of specially should be investigated by the mor? Maybe some of you re- the city of Chicago ," the mayor $1,000; Eugene V. Klein, Los federal government and that D e m 0 c r a tic National Con- April 7, Humphrey has oper- equipped cars, participants at porters are under investigation , vention. said as reporters laughed. ated on loans totaling $992,000, Angeles businessman, $50,000; the workshop learned how to one newsman "ought to get off too." Saine is the only deputy may- including new loans of $370,000 Richard McGuLe, Washington handle tire blowouts, skids on the chair." He relaxed a moment in his "When in the name of God, or in Chicago. unhappy with in recent days, the report attorney, $70,000; and Daniel wet pavement, obstacles on the Schwartz, Los Angeles , After Daley led off the con- showed. , $50,000 road and getting back on the ference with an announcement Included was a $100,000 loan The report showed $1,000 con- road safely after leaving the that the city was cutting ex- from Meshulam Riklis, New tributions from Lowell Swen- pavement. The workshop was penditures, a reporter asked trailer lest the sixth in the nation offered MADISON, Wis. (AP) The York, chairman of the Rapid son, president, and William G, about the public's concern over - American Corp. by GM since the company start- taxes. wife of Gov, Patrick J. Lucey Ness, vice president of Arctic The largest campaign contri- Enterprises of Thief River ed the program last June. , says she is disappointed , with "All you have to do is sit in bution listed for the May la to Falls, Minn. WINONA STATE College was this office and read the letters the State Highway Commission 27 period was $27,000 from Under federal law the finan- established as a traffic safety for allowing trailer homes up to Charles C. Bas'sine,- New York. cial disclosures are filed in center by the 1966 State High- 14 feet wide on Interstate 94 for Other Humphrey creditors Washington, D C. and in the way Safety Act and serves 13 a three-month test. and amounts included Joseph home state of each candidate. Southeastern¦ Minnesota coun- ties. "¦ Transfer of Mrs. Lucey , in a letter to a According to the college, six newspaper, referred to the de- Winona residents have been ap- cision as unpardonable. pointed to the nine member Wi- nona - Rochestei Traffic vo-tech credits Commission chairman Robert McGovern hikes ¦ and Huber, who was appointed to Safety - ; Center which serves the post by Lucey, explained in nearly 14.000 driver trainin g stu- an interview the permits are dents and some 400 driver edu- to be explored being granted for a trial period delegate total cation instructors from 65 area ¦ schools. MADISON, Wis. (AP) _ The to help persons who must move WASHINGTON (AP > - delegates to stand firm. ' '.. ' their mobile homes. Committee members appoint- transfer of college credits be- George S, McGovern has McGovern added delegates ed to the board from Winona , tween Wisconsin vocational He said permits had been pushed his nationwide total of over the weekend ir Oklahoma , granted in the past for U.S. 12. and the factions they represent, schools and public univerities delegates to the Democratic Kentucky, Connecticut , Colora- are: Judge S. A. Sawyer, 427 will; be. probed by a committee Party. The That policy has b^n changed , National Convention to 537V£. do and Illinois in caucuses and CHICAGO'S TOP MAN . .. Chicago May- as his power in the Democratic he said, because U.S. 12 is too W. 5th St., courts;; Police Sgt. of the University of Wisconsin or Richard J. Daley, shown when he start- 70-year-old mayor's favorite reprimand is, And as the South Dakota sen- conventions, plus a couple in Dale A. Schafer , 1151 W, 5th Council of Chancellors in an ef- ) narrow and the wide vehicles ator waited today for the out- the official Nebraska canvas. ed his 18th year in office in April/ is known "You should get out of bed." (AP Photofax "created too many problems St.,. enforcement agencies ; Wal- fort to avoid duplication of come of the California primary Gov. George C. Wallace of ter L, Greden, 643 Terry Lane, services. for his humorous and caustic quips, as well for motorists." with its 271 delegate votes at Alabama stands second in the Mrs. Lucey said she was automobile dealers ; Edwin J. The council passed a resolu- ' ' stake, the prospect was that delegate count going into the Spencer, 1110 Marian St. , high kaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaataaaaaaaa^^ speaking against th-. decision, victory would bring him dele-; July 10 convention with total tion; by UW-Su{*erior Chancellor not as Wisconsin s first lady, school administration ; David Bjarne Ullsvik to work with a " ' gates committed to Sen. Ed- of 318. A. Mahlke, 761 W. Wabasha St. but. a'sa private citizen ," mund S. Muskie of Maine. Sen. Hubert R. Humphrey of , j oint UW Board of Regents-State Winona County Safetv Council ; Board of Vocational Technical "I am not a disenfranchised The 62 Illinois delegates com- Minnesota is third in the count and James T. ' citizen just because my hus- Schain, 59 E. and Adult Education panel set ' mitted to Muskie may switch if with 299%. Muskie has 166 and Broadway, insurance industry. There s More To Love At..» band happens to be governor," McGovern wins decisively in there are 449% uncommitted up last month to develop a Mrs. Lucey said. California , Angelo Geocaris, delegates. Vancouver's "Chinatown" is transfer system . The governor was in Houston, Muskie's Illinois chairman, said It will take 1,509 delegate almost a misnomer. Only 7,000 Chancellors said in the reso- Tex., for a national governors' Monday. votes to capture the nomination of the Canadian city's 45,000 lution it was "not in the best BETTER PERSONAL conference and was not to re- Sources said the switch could for president at the Miami Chinese live iTjfljY con- in the 11-block dis- interests of public post secon- turn home until Friday. occur even if Muskie asks the vention. trict. dary education" to develop an- SERVICE other educational system paral- QUALITY ^J^ lel to the UW system. UW President John Weaver said the merger of the old UW ——— U.S. CHOICE — arid state universities systems —— T could be negated unless some O ETHIN process for credit transfers was 1T S S M Q worked out. CHUCK STEAK |ff^%, The vocational-technical pro- gram is "a tremendously im- ¦ : JM o)l portant and valuable p-art of ^ S^^^^^S^^ a^r .^^fc/ REAL SPECIAL |^* the post high school facilities in the state," he said, but there is concern where "it duplicates collegiate education." : : FOR FATHER "If , indeed, we find we have i^^^^^^^^^^ fc - :^M^M'::' left a majok- loophole here, then r we must make sure that the ^^^_ state knows that the loophole exists ," he said. ¦ ' ' ¦' ; ' 'i.Ai As, A ' - *- ' ^ ^ Ja. As, 4J» a * a a. f UW-Steyens Point Chancellor US. CHOICE BEEF U __ _ Lee Dreyfus noted associate de- W HOLE gree programs at state techni- : ¦ ROAST-69c¦ ¦ ¦- - : CHUCK . cal :.<- . colleges . in Milwaukee . , . CHUCKS . . BEEF *- h Madison and Rhinelander con- Includes Roast, Chock Steak, tain some libera] arts and other U.S. CHOICE ^ nontechnical courses. He said « ^ ° - : development oi such courses in Char Grill Steak -*• 79c : other Wisconsin technical schools would be counter- HORMEl "frU ih productive. y 'My own personal feelings are we need this like we need a CHOPPED HAM - 89c |_ < I headache," he said. FIRST CUT VAN S STUFFED L Divorce PORK CHOPS 49c PORK CHOPS 89c party + *. *s.±±'L^+-t. A A.4e.A», Ae, J R

includes usual ^gJ ^l^^O^^^ . « SWANSDOWN I aw-wD^V : Cake Mixes 3-89c :| Wedding items Jr SA BOLTON, Mass. (AP) _ The #Fruit Drinks^ „ pk : occasion was accented with all 1CC , Pka, t1 the traditional extras—a three- // mi \ COOKIES^ 3 $l I tiered wedding cake, inscribed c matchbooks, gift-bearing guests » ' «-.. m and a little graffiti on the car. /I A#79 ft -° -. J But David W. Durranfs cele- . Ih Soft Swirl 2°' 59c I bration was f ar from tradition- \\ — ¦ al—ask the 60 friends he invited PEPSI COLA /a: *»,,*. :8 to a \\\ after a busy "wedding in reverse" to day. The deep upholstery is a big plu$. celebrate his divorce. GELATINS - 10c % + P Limit79c s,.J// : Kcguliirly ?120.95 The wedding cake was topped ^^k * Two /f IGh ? \ with black icing and a tiny ^yj * Cream plastic groom on top, but with- h Gal out a bride. Ice 59c ; ^ \ aS k _,j/** : Except French Vanilla Four guests arrived In n ^^*vlE*^*S9i ^^ ^ stri pped down antique car with "Just Divorced" painted on the side. On the back of the car, where yHOHIHIUHHIH^i ! ^'1^^ 1 .1 the trunk us-ed to be , was a ¦ large suitcase labeled "Divorce VAN'S COUPON — g j REGISTER il Case." The gift;; were divorce spe- cials—a "Iiis" towel without a mate, a single frying pan and a s CHEERi5+3 ¦ s F-R-E-E' HAMs lone egg, and a single tea cup, II ; -^^^ *^^ ; t~7Q OR This Burris chair which $1 10 An unusual lii-lcp chair 7 ~^ tho ID-LB. CANNED ^ ' also reclines is designed ^ which also reclines , ' ' ' promises to satisfy married in their native Eng- I j for your relaxing comfort , styled with a Scotcligarded^ velvet cov- nl0st discriminating of people, land seven yonrs ago but had 5 r ^^ l -NT S to add a distinctive chair to your crin£ that means long, carefree Upright , TV and full recline posi- been separated about two years ¦ ybmy ) ¦ ! Jiomc. No strip-down, it has life for the chair. Also available lions. Fine casters assure easy before the divorce came AO- ¦ quality, comfort and price. in sturdy vinyl. 100m placement. through. mWK^ii c ? NAME "It's 0 celebration of my freedom ," the g $10(1,95 2»-year-old inte- O" ¦ Ur-Kulnrly Regularly $140.95 IlcRiilnrly $149.05 rior designer said. IS XmMlI PIll fKj l m ! ADDRESS HOME FURNISHING DEPT. - MAIN FLOOR ¦ Ut'ZaMmA W,TH TH'S ¦ : 5 ImZ^aamW^^ COUPON 5 ¦ ¦ ym^*^ ¦ ; PHONE ¦ ¦ ' ¦ VAN'S IGA - EXPIRES JUNE 18 \ \ ¦ : VAN'S IGA j § JtMs/iW* (Day. (BbnuiL §J ^__-__ ¦¦¦¦¦¦ —«-.« ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ -i- -.- -ia-nJ5 i • • AND STORE HOURS: MON.-WED. 8 TO 8 —THURS.-SAT. 8 TO 9 — SUN. 8 TO 12:30 C=^/ £/ § FREE WITH CHAIR PURCHASE % tG A 500 G,FT ERTIFICATE GIFTS ^JhfOS 1 • • • $ C g FOR ALL OCCASIONS ¦ BROTHERS (I where Personal To Purchase a Shirt or Tie for Dad Dfl DD ^ ^/ j service P| g "VDP STORE.. INC. VAN'S IGA SUPER SAVER Trtw Valuu Hardware U ' 724 E. BROADWAY *^ 2 !S1 „ ^0OOOOO0 O0Q00QQQ9Q^.^ilMM0 0e5l9Jl ^ S76 E. *Ah St. Phon« 453-4007 PHONE 452 3045 • LOCALLY OWNED • * e «c*, inc Angela did get Touchdown I hope that Hanoi, which no a fair trial doubt fondles ..every editorial and news story concerning American miiam Although tbe defense had suggested that Miss fatigue and hostility to the Viet- F^ Angela Davis could not expect fair treatment be- nam enterprise, was tuned- in Thurs- anti-Vietnam hobgoblin for years. cause there were no blacks on her mufder-kidnap- day night. It was when Mr. Nixon The predictions of the American to conspiracy trial, the jury took only 13 hours reiterated our determination to seek military, and oi Presidents Johnson return an innocent verdict. an "honorable" end to the Vietnam and Nixon, have proved pretty war that the applause was most in- shaky, as regards the successful Since we believe in the jury system and the tense, military conclusion of the war and concept of American justice, one must agree It would seem small potatoes, one the success of Vietnamization^ But 's decision with one nagging ' and applaud the jury , Nixon s own summit is tempted to reason, up against the sibylline utterances of the other reservation.. Miss Davis made her own opening so imposing a backdrop. After all, proved preposterous. , making of high policy he sits always Bide have statement when the trial began two months ago. WASHINGTON - The loner who hadn't President Nixon just return- been Richard Nixon has alone at every point of crisis. In "that statement she labeled the state's charges always has ed from Warsaw, where he did the ON ONE POINT we should ba how toiled upward to his third sum- namely that the aggression "utterly fantastic.'' Still when the defense pre- William 5. White INDEED, ONE of the President' whole champagne bit, and has not agreed, mit within months — this one the s would have sented Its case, she did not take the witness stand oldest and closest associates once Poland been satellized for years and against South Vietnam power and influence even years ago to label those same charges as false under summit of his said of him with a wry grin : "When years and years? Granted there petered out months and perhaps also of his poularity. pie in his own administration would laid down a blockade at tirth. Although weir aware that a defendant's fail- he is writing a letter to a friend was a flash of quite bitter disap- if we had The President has returned from sometimes say in private conversa- military imperative ure to testify should not be weighed in the scales and wants to be especially warm pointment some time after Yalta the time the to Moscow — which had tion that while their boss was back in 1965. of evidence, -we confess to commonly held view- his mission able he is as likely as not to sign it 'Very when the world suddenly realized crystallized. 1 mean followed a mission to Red China .. — But they were saying then that to point, however erroneous it may be, that when he was simply "not liked" by the truly yours'." He is of course, the that Stalin had squatted down on with more , than the diplomatic vic- would trigger a war with the principal in a case does not take the witness people. quintessentially "Square" official of precisely that area of Europe the do so tory now widely saluted. His per- China. So seven years later we laid stand her defense is weakened. There was genuine fear among our era, immensely correct and independence of which was the for- sonal triumph is in a sense even , and a war with China them — and indeed a touch of that proper and wholly unable to make mal objective of the allied powers. the blockade more striking. No politician , in told us that But Miss Davis has been acquitted. So be it. fear yet remains — for the out- any kind of relaxed small talk. Ev- But, after a while, what is there to was not triggered. They American history has ever ascend- we risked a face-to-face collision One would suppose tiiat this would restore her come of the presidential election erything about him is buttoned-up. do, except settle for what you can? ed so high from so many seemingly with the Soviet Union if we im- confidence that the American judicial sytem works. of the coming November. Their con- : Having known Hichard Nixon Why couldn't a future president of final disasters to his career. plemented our blockade. The only Not so. After the verdict that brought her so cern was that Mr. Nixon simply did since he first came to Congress in the United States, touring in Asia, collision that resulted was^between much joy, Miss Davis said, '"The very fact of an THE MAN WHO lost the presiden- not curve through.-as understandable 1946, this columnist did not for sev- do the champagne bit in Saigon* ¦ Russian and American champagne acquittal means that there was no fair trial be- cy in 1960 to John F. Kennedy and to the public. , '¦; eral years break through to the capital of: a southern province of glasses in the Kremlin. cause a fair trial would have been no trial at all." went on to crushing repudiation in There was some truth in this for "real" Nixon until at least the real- communist Vietnam? • ¦Letting by- They were as wrong in their opti- his home state for governor of Cal- the President is by no means a re- ization came that what had seemed gones-be-bygones? mism as in their pessimism. If we Is she suggesting that we try only the guilty? ifornia only two years later has dis- laxed , a gregarious or an easy per- a mystery was no mystery at all. BUT RICHARD Nixon has appar- would stop the bombing, the North - "• A.B. ¦ pelled at last the loser's image that sonality. He has always played The key to Richard Nixon is that ently no such intention. "I empha- Vietnamese would go to the confer- had somehow clung to him even everything close to his chest, his he is deeply shy, to begin with, size to you once again that this ad- ence table. If we would yield on after his narrow victory in 1968. manner tending to shut out familiar- and that the adversities he has ministration has no higher goal the shape of the table, they would Up to now, even some of the pec- arities of any kind, just as in the known have bitten into him to a than bringing the Vietnam war to prove conciliatory. If we sat down degree he never exhibits., either in an early and honorable end " he bargained, they would prove public or private. . and The institute said, knowing no doubt that tha malleable. The reasoning that took Like all public men, he wants pub- word "honorable" would stick in the us from American softness to North lic approval and even public affec- throat, of the legions whose deter- Vietnamese reasonableness collaps- keeps on growing tion; but he had always questioned mination to discredit the Vietnam ed in a ' . ', soritic'al heap; but the whether he had the one and been war has grown to the point ol critics never looked back, never A total of 365 graduates from 101 communities fairly certain that he could never obsession. When Hubert Humphrey seemed to wonder why the Cambod- the other. in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa in 19 subject achieve . said in his television debate that if ian incursion didn 't lead to Chinese areas. All this has been changed by the he were elected President he would intervention or nuclear war, why success of Moscow and notably by cut off South Vietnam "flatly, "he the Laos invasion didn't lead to ei- Those are the distilled statistics for the 1971-72 the outpouring of obvious fondness was expressing something more ther, on the contrary appear in re- academic year at Wuiona Area Vocational-Techni- that Mr. Nixon met in both Iran than the desire to bring back Amer- trospect to have keen a preamble to cal Institute, but not quite all. and Poland. If the President is not ican fighting men (that is already the Spirit of Peking, There is very yet entirely confident of the Amer- agreed upon), something more than little left for the hysterical ; critics ican public's good will in personal military husbandry (a couple of bil- to join the cornmune A few more. First of all this one: 2,600. That's to do except terms — and one doubts that he lion dollars here and there never the fever swamps, where the approximate nuirfber of students at the insti- down ih is even now — he is, at any rate, got Sen. Humphrey all that exer- they call boozily for the impeach- tute during the past year. This total includes ¦ ¦ now aware that he is no longer cised), ' ¦' ¦ ' Richard Nixon in a center nighttime, adult students. Another one:, 3,500. This ment of held in this country to be solely a Humphrey was expressing hitter- the New York Times, total includes adults who came to the institute spread ad in skillful , but not a popular, figure. ness tow ards South Vietnam , and or two from Prince- fox one-day seminars and conferences. a kook professor there is no doubt that that is in the fellow- THIS recognition has done some- ton and Harvard , old hands at air. The inflections harden , as you mindless thing for him. To apply some ama- traveling ; two or three Quite an educational , force in Winona and en- wander around the country , at the and the Medici of teur psychoanalysis here, the Nixon congressmen, virons. : . mention, for instance, of the name , Corliss who has never doubted his person- American pro-communism¦ of President: Thieu. Nobody ever . ¦ ' ¦ '"¦ , - al capabilities now sees that he is Lamont. How are these 365 graduates faring in the job accused , Thieu of waging an ag- also more than a merely tolerated And. after all that. Richard Nix- market? Surprisingly better than a year ago. The gressive war, or of engaging in sys- President in more "human" terms. on still gets a great ovation from placements now are around 75 percent; by the tematic terrorism, but when his " he hasn't got, and per- Congress when he reiterates our de- end of last summer they were better than 90 per- "Charisma name is spoken, the icicles form. Not haps never will have. But Moscow termination : not to ditch Vietnam. cent. And the institute hopes to match or better so, strangely, for the bloody Gener- has accomplished what Mr. Nixon 's , Never mind for a minute all- the that. The best fields are business marketing, auto- al Giap. withdrawn personality could never other things. By God , I was proud motive mechanics, machine-tool/die and general of- What's eating us? We no longer lish on its own in signaling of Richard Nixon Thursday night. fice. Weaker ones are auto body repair, legal sec- accomp have, even, the excuse of a third le the slogging, deter- retary, accounting and soil conservation, but at to the peop world , war, : which was a favorite . Washington Star Syndicate nature least some of those graduates find jobs easily in mined , utterly indomitable that underlies an outward absence fields. ¦ related ¦¦¦ :¦ ¦ ,<¦• ¦: ¦ ¦' - • '- 7. -<: ,:?•*!.''¦. ' ' ^-rt',.,.'r-.'. -- .v^f.. -.v- -^ - • -- : • . » njv nt..,-,*1HE s..-..r<-*r of easy appeal to others. Meanwhile, the pressure is on to get . into the k - . ¦; WWHlMYOl] it!)^$iWt) 1WY011JE MM '::; ; ; United Features Syndicate Nonallied alliance Institute nest year. Although in general the insti- PARIS — The relationship ber tute can enroll those who want to, certain subject tweeh Russia and America has ¦ practical nursing and airplane areas — such as changed less dramtically than the C. L Sulzberger mechanics — are under heavy pressure. The prestige of the United States and practical nursing course, which can accommodate But, until the United States was only 32, had 10 times as many applications for next Final examination the position of President Nixon as able to break dawn the barrier that year. a world leader. This is an interest- separated it from valid contact with WASHINGTON - This is the fi- body has invented another way to ing Russia's Chinese adversary, there nal examination in American stud* kill you. Devise three ways for con- aspect of the closely connected Plainly the institute is a success. — A.B. was insufficient inducement Ln Mos- ies. Each correct answer is worth verting any common household ap- series of events that led to the re- Russell Baker cow to risk formalizing that impli- 10 points. Grade your own paper. pliance — such as a washing ma- markable Moscow accords. cit agreement already in effect by Students scoring less than 70 points chine, a hair dryer, an automatic or less, explain why an electorate The President correctly, perceiv- rendering it explicit. should leave the country immediate- dishwasher — into a weapon for which is so vocally unhappy with so ed for a long time that there could The President was able to elim- l killing our enemies. y. many aspects of American life pre- be no important improvement in inate this final but major obstacle Making it big fers to vote for candidates who 10. Physical education: After per- United MULTIPLE choice questions: States-Soviet attitudes until by going to Peking. Once this event promise not to change anything. forming each of the following exer- there 1. You want to be shot. The best had been prior improvement had occurred , the Kremlin was un- 7. Mathematics: Two cars cost cises, take your pulse beat twice— in United way to go about it is¦ to: (A) States-Chinese attitudes. ready to place a roadblock on the Run $6,000. Insurance costs are $1,000 per the first time, immediately after This in two sports for office (B) Join the police force "Chinese option " lay at the avenue thereby opened up. year, It costs 32.75 each time a exercise ; the second, after five min- heart of (C> Buy a pistol and leave it in the protracted negotiations Nixon briefly faced a difficult de- Our congratulations to the Winona State bat- car is parked downtown. Gasoline utes rest. culminating in Nixon-Brezhnev un- the drawer next to the liquor cab- (A) cision : whether to risk disaster in ting Warriors who made it to the NAIA World Se- costs 45 cents a gallon. Rise from your sofa , go to derstanding. inet where your wife can easily find the refrigerator , open another can South Vietnam for the sake of ac- ries in Phoenix this week. Using these figures, prove that in accornplishing his long-laid plan. it on Saturday night. of beer and return to the sitting ON MARCH 8, 1971, tha a nation of more than 200 million President He gambled — and won, In this 2. You have just bought, a new position. told me: "I seriously doubt if we was tlie first time since 1963 that a Winona people it makes more sense to own sense of prestige, he achieved a It . car. The firs t unhappines you will (B) Place the beer on the floor, will ever have another war ." He State nine has made it to this national tourna- two cars than it does to ride pub- personal victory at Soviet expense. experience with it will occur when: rise from the sofa , walk to the tele- indicated how he planned to insure ment, a real tribute to Coach Gary Grob and a lic transportation which costs 40 (A) It is recalled because of faulty vision set , change the channel from this by saying : "We must continue NOW, te am that has established a reputation for ac- cents per trip. although — perhapi in part brakes, carbon-monoxide leakage the basketball to the baseball game, our Soviet negotiations and open to avoid criticism from Peking as complishing what seems to be the impossible. 8. Sociology: In America there through the steering wheel and dan- take up the beer and return to the the door of cooperation to China." well as from !NATO and Warsaw are many oppressed peoples. They gerous tires (B) The price of car sitting position. The reason for parallel if separ- Pact allies — . the two sides made shoot- include, among others, black peo- Coming on the heels of the sensational insurance goes higher than the pur- (C) Placing the beer on the floor, ate developments with both Peking *'No claim for themselves and would "world ple, woman, convicts, students, ing Warriors, who missed the basketball chase payments (C) The stereo- repeat the preceding exercise, but and Moscow stem s from a more not recognize the claims of anyone week's play at homosexuals, taxpayers, persons o( series" by a bucket last March , this tape deck is stolen. spin the channel selector to see if thoughtful appreciation of the Sino- else to any special rights or ad- Phoenix demonstrates again the high caliber of Slavic, Centra l European , Italian , 3. You go to the store to buy a you can find a football game. If Soviet split than had previously vantages in world affairs ," they did State. Latin-American and Arabic back- intercollegiate athletics at Winona door knob to rf place one , unable to, return the selector to been apparent.in Washington. in fact move to a kind of accord. that was ground , bus drivers and , of course, removed by the burglars the basketball game, readjust the When Moscow first brok e with who stole the great silent majority. Identify Frontiers are not specifically Winona High School fans, oi course, have rea- your television set. At vertical hold know and , leaning for- Peking, it faced a choice of moving the store you the seven persons living in America mentioned. Yet they will ult imately son to be proud , too>. Its medley relay swimming discover that: (A) ward , adjust the fine-tuning knob. ideologically either to China 's left The price of today who are not oppressed. Ex- be frozen juridically by a European team, coached by Lloyd Luke, was named High knobs has doubled since or right. It realized that such a de- you were plain why it is sometimes said that security conference more or less School Americans by the National Jnterscholastic a child (B) They don't make knobs New York Times News Service cision, in one or the other direc- ratifying existing European borders. Swimming Coaches Association. anyone who is not oppressed ought tion , would have to be accomplish- anymore of the kind you need, and to le shot. China knows this and the next move you will have to buy a whole new ed by specific actions. Russia 's must almost inevitably be Peking's fl. Science: Congrat ulations then to a score of young door (C) There is no place to Defend the proposi- Hurrying to end leadership decided to accept China 's endeavor to stress its own "Ameri- men. — A.B. park. tion that it is not necessarily a opposition as from the left. can option " In Moscow. 4. You #o to n vast shopping ren- symptom of paranoia to think—the Speed doesn't shorten the road; For the first time since World ter (or "plaza ," or " mall"). The instant you hear the phrase "a new lt shortens your life. — Mason City War II relations with China became New York Times News Service Thou shalt lend unto many nations , but thou thing you are most likely to do scientific development"—that some- Globo-Cazetta. primordial in Soviet calculations shalt not borrow.—Deuteronomy 15:6. there is: (A) See some plastic flow- and transcended in importance re- ers (B) Dent a fender (C) Meet a lations with the U.S.A. One conse- Presidential enndidate (O Get Graffiti ... by Leary quence was the development of a shot. subtly paradoxical tie between WINONA DAILY NEWS 5. Blindfolded , you pick n mnvie Moscow and Wash ington . nt random from the newspaper list- Both the Kremlin and the White House saw that, although they MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ings and, removing the blindfo ld, go. The one thing you are most shared a common purpose — avoid- W ILLIAM F. WHITE Publisher likel y to see Is: (A) A horse (Ii) A ance of mutual destruction — and sWli\^FMiw] ^WwI C. E. LINDEN Bits. Mgr., Adv. Director naked woman (C) Somebody being although they could develop emer- ADOI.PH BREMEB . . . , , Editor-in-Chtef shot (D) Nazis (K) Actors photo- gency precautions like the hot line, SERVICES FOR G-AKY W. EVANS , . . News Editor graphed running happily In slow they could not become directly in- C. GORDON UOLTB ..»,..,.Simdap Editor motion . volved with each other. They were MR. and MRS. FKANK It. U HLIO EfWortal Writer forced by ideological commitments: W ILLIAM H. ENOLisn Controller THE FOLLOWING are essay ques- to mai ntain only n tacit relation- JEWELL R. JESSIE A. J. KIEKDUBCH .-..,».Ctrculotion Mgr. tions: ship. 1:00 p.m. Wednojdny L. S. BnoN» ...... Composing Svp t. 6. Political science. It has been Whnt this meant was t hat Ihe Martin Funeral Chapel L. V. 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A— - ^ -- this is directly attributed to Insecurity created by the omni- ( , , CLVAQ QC potence of the city manager over tho employmen t of city big queen size mattress. Now WT ^«3Hr 3P««F H 24-inch Crystal Chandelier. 12 lights, hand detailed cast t,8ar workers. Hopefully, the council will reconsider 2 the authority br°" ^^ "^ Save $25 on a Recliner, yaur ch°ic. of supported vinyl cover. <* £*% : """l"* °° "" ^ T ^ "" of that office and through charter amendment restore to the QC 1 ^n6anH' o $240 O Now ^1Q ^ .3395 department hends the prerogative to manage their own af- and green and gold fabric uphol.lering. Now ...... $09.9!> "V^ *** ' ° - Slfi9 fa i rs in -accordance with policies established by the mayor Fivo l ' h B n Candelabra, clear cut crystal trim. nnd city council. large lounge Chair with matching Ottoman., your choice of 'fl * r° " CAQ QC EVAN J. HENRY green naugahyde or brown twe>ed upsols»*ry. Save $46. tf»< **A ftP Regular $69.95. Now «P*f«? ¦«?«# Now ' ^+*<* '^^ Lamp and d»-T A|- larges.t display of IA-Z-BOY Re Qj" pad attached. Now . . Sq. Yd. 4>f «*U Small Occasional Chairs Low Back Swivel Rockurt High Back Rockers Ny on 5,,aa Car M wS,h heay y COQ QC C?Q QC C/IQ QC P CAt QC *P£*J i«l«9 «p3«F i«l-9 *47Ht&m*J*J density' pad attached. Now Sq. Yd. 4> ii^

Let ot tliow you how easy It It to make your summer mora en|oyable, Check our complete line of quality air conditioners for homei or office. You'll Ilka our priced H & Ml PLUMBIN0 * "BATING BORZYSKOWSKI Furniture PHON E 689-2237 or oB9-3«l - ROLLINGSTONE • EASY TERMS • 302 MANKATO AVENUE • FREE PARKING • WVQlt MmT ' . * '' —mmmwA) ¦ ¦ ^^^ '¦•^^ ¦ # . ^» ¦ ¦^¦sssssssssssssl'^^i^a^a^a^a^ssssssssssssss^^^^ > *W% 'AwZ^t^. Jl- ^Kmrnrmmmr - —' ^k^^j^^^SMB* wwKW f t\f%O?/ "U V l\ ulc3 ammmaa^^mmmma_^ ammfammm\mm ^mi^mtMWmi mAfMmm\m, ~ ^|^^^ mMMm\)- ' %»\\\\\\Al Htf ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ HUU |L V \ ' ^. ' AT a\f :^3B r np^ -^ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦¦ ¦ mmw / ¦ •V^ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦^fc -^ ' ^ JUH~™~ llwR~ww* * • •*• • • • m^LW^ ^ ¦ifMuaMM ' v^ftr ^^ JLAT ' v^--/^ ^^^^ * ** MillIEI WPIMIIM w pAllWIIEi- ^^^ 4^^^i^^fc|^^t^^^it^^^^|^^ffl3BI r^PFfjq»«g : r ^$y ffl^ft1- tfifHMM :itiISli< IIK^fli , daii FS^ftiV ' - - : - ' ' ' ' - : " RED OWL EXCLUSIVERed i|ili0Hl^' - iA Otawina.to be Saturday. (B-j_ Ovvremploym ^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^? ??^^ |^ H^ [ { 'j ilfS i CONCENTRATED ^P «V ^ ffllfll lBn f HUH ^P ^P '^^ in =^^ P 0^° win drawing. LIBBVLAND.CHOICEDIV J k i APPROX. 10» LONQ J' -—£ ™^.J t H SHM I gsj ri- r^ , | KT OFSEA £ R, SUN. } SCHWEIGERT , I m&ir~\ 6 0Z. CAN IH OOWN SUPPER, J ' PffP' 17 "' ^H^V X^SaSfcZT •JiP 'Ste . / HEuriiiTBrcurMiccR1 USE 1 MflhalfeM I (WITH COUPON) I V*- */! H ^^V \i«--JSt *7»a\i Mj-^> :- „, .,. GOLDEN STRIKE OR¦ * ¦ ¦¦ - I'5Sf j lP J I "LLsouitrPILLSBURY , LAYfenUMTCK I¦ Itff'/J^ '^^^ fj ii i ^ B ke shown SA FARI «;UPPF . FROZEN ' • EIIIITFaUU ¦ ! ¦ Vf ' ^ 'J ^ A\WW^ "R ' . riPw ¦ - -^ WITH COUPON) ^ JQ(\WMerb AWAI is not bik* fC-Li£i_^. ¦ ¦ • ^__--,-^— v . ..; -. ; —._-— ! < EB^fisT ¦"mmmm^^-~£^^^^^^^^^^^^^ _^^^^ ¦WiflH ^«tet 'a'!^- ' MOHH¦ ¦! SAUSAGE! L0M6 i CAKE i SLmmmmmm^;. -^ , DINNERS ! PIZZA i HOTDOCS | MIXES i GHEERIOS | M AMmMmjMJh'^^ MI 10OZ. PKG, i LB. 11 OZ. SIZE POUND S I LS.10Z. PKG5. 10 OZ.BOX PPPCREAM P PfiaW^BWH;, ^^^P f fH B^MP ^ II M/^^VI. w PPPP S ¦ ¦ ABOYSOR GIRLSBIKEIWOURGRANDPRtZEDRAWINQ ' • ¦ 'aW. Choc Jumbo, /ripY " . " 'Hi" - . " ' • ^^m\ W ^aWlaW M0THIMGT0 8UY...JUSTMIC0ME .N AND REGISTER k' ¦' - " ' ; ' ' A . ' ' ! ^ "' - J . . 'fi^ 29<:.mJaM - 79< VVUMEtf M ^ " 55< 1 41 ^ ' ' RIHPMNDntllll ltn ^ £ •ONEBIKElBOyS OR GireLSWlLLBE AWARDED FERSTORE ^' " ^ r IE ases!(SaveIOC)..... - ^ ¦¦¦¦¦¦ aMaHHBa ^ HHHBBBB k^ i^ i^ . ' ^^PiW ^ 4 99* •-™s- »^sv . ^^^^^^^ CHOC. SKIM MILK - TS? 39c S'^jgiBluaaWg^^v.' ' r-—-~~?^ ^------T m m m m ;: S ^ HAWAIIAN PUNCH 35c ¦ ¦ ¦ ^ ¦ KIDS WEEK "WIN A BIKE" 12of Mm W m m m . ' ' . SODAmmT mMW.mmVammm\ WaY . mWwmU-,/ - , ' , mmmW^ ^a^a^Ba ^a^a^afe^ |P |^ .: ^ POP i k: ;^o "^ :¦ | JJ F WOODY^ CORH D0BS.....a^^f^59» : ; NAMF . ; ^^ ' Nestles Cocoa Horshey's Choc. Flavor k : [ ,„»„ „ . \ a^MmW ' ^m ^M.^^1MmmmmW ^H n |li ^tt U^I Mm^W. 19 Mm^^MX-^^^^a^ VL ii j g^!! ¦ !_^fHo,E( ____!»;:^AWLkJfltaHHHHHHMMHHMMHHnHHMH ^ HMMV . . . . ll ' | O I I UNDERSTAND NEED NOT MAKE A PURCHASE OR | ^^ K ¦Ma^mWMW| H B J k P ^ I D^«V k

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B fl l {t&s&km^t|\ SEWINGFOR OF wmmw Wmmw WM „^^ .,.„ # na-,iy I HlahMitiaii! J^7iT»«]9BH .BPBVAVBK ^SBfe a^i^H ?\ ^^ K ^^ K V RED OWL 1 ° „„m I aHlMilnrlSrVfl yHr]!^^ BVAVAVAVAk BBH I^^ H J^fthW3-RING _^TA1_^VI BUNS CONEYS Bi 9 WW •-::;:rnv I ¦¦¦¦ L flB & \ 9s. *° < PKG. OF 8, 4Q I . |^^ a ^^^^^ P ^M ^mUU ' ¦¦¦¦ si A S.^^a^a^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^ . ^ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ Ll rWe \ SIPa^P ^^ P D ' 1 L 10 12 IOC 1 » Q,rv\ce ^^ MMH P Ri M p ^^ ^M ' 50 ' I : ^fl Condensed, Chlc.-Noodle^Cream of Celery or % i l 4* nd«\o« %MPl |^ ^ % ^ ^ WlP ^ ¦ . ^ 7-<5o° 4^ i I ^^^ V | ^^ R SOUP...5 ^ ^A9\ - —J ^ ^^^t ^tWmMW ^ ^ W^ W^ ia ^a^a^a^V a^a^ H Chicken Rice _ ^ 'K-^ ' ^ ^^ ^^ p P. K H RM OWL "^79* FflR Fleur y y»"M^^ifz\ Redeem I ^ I ^^ IH OREOColored COOKIES...... K49» a ^ ^^BJHJB ^Hal ^tfMlMMWBJSJBrM pa Mii ^Bk any 1 coupon • Thlscoupon entitles customer to purcnase one doz. 5j ^Hfta ^^ H I %#| % ^^^^ H or White, 50O Sheet Rolls g0 a^al Vft III FOR 5 4R0LLPKG ^ iM llI !lllk *WB ^ s^oS^ny -^-m *r> 'i l ^^^ W ^ H BATH TISSUElwvUb ¦ . ¦ ¦ ¦ ' O3 Jl I.WW00 ^ . ^ ¦'J. 'JL* J» *J| r* j^^^ 2 coupons with pur- ' CaT*W^" i ^aWta\%' WKmm^aWMmW mmmM l ^ ¦fP plip aVM |MWHI MM M chasaotS15.o6or I PHQ9a5fel DOZ. I1C >; V ^^^^^^^^ V moroor oll3coupons I >; ^^^ H ^ ¦ i || iiiiiii lBUuUj| U|| &U ormore(ex. hU UII purchaje, , fl**' ^a^aHi ^HaV ^ "^^ ^ n ¦«#% ¦¦ A RIWAO aW 5S withpurchasoof I \$i al ^^ B _ ¦ffiiP IPIIIi HP PV MVMi ^ I with ' ^ ^ H tftlMA¦»^^IWB1 « ¦ PIZ^ZAS ¦ *!¦¦¦ «-««# ^¦Upj Ui ^^Jl ^Olia jjr iM ^^^ HV%\ftf: J22.50 coupon end Limit one dor. with B? I ^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmW cludlngdsarettes) cj^Unnlt NEWCROPCALIFORNIA SUMKIST I yX.^X^TAmwrr.'^^JP I ^ P"rt VALENCIA _ I SAUSAGE BEEF CANADIANPEPPER0NI OR MM KM UU UU ^ BACON [ ^^ ¦ ^ ¦ ^^ H ^UM UUUutu uUu -Ut«wataiBHrft < t>ui».iiifff^^ af^aTtt Jl Ik LG. 113 SIZE H"A I i^i^M.^HHHHH M.r^ O lll li S l ^^ l5 I IH A\|MI EACHI Hv I ' 70^ 13- QQ l»^WW lSBii Mii i^^ !e0n8 Red« m-«y wrvi *l^l,Jt*lP"^J ^ ^ I oz. I^C Qz. 855C Th,5CO U i , S C ^^^^^mmm^mm^mmmcoupon ^mmmm J T ,r b: l GREENTO "WuSThlaSST G ?ad o^^c^ ' I g J ™"? »« ^^ ^^^T.LDor GREEN ?? .1 I FPFF CAMDI TC RADISHES ONIONS 0* *Ht*> iAIWfLW l^n^K .' DIIT ^ER in* I 1 •&*&$&"«» mmmmVmZ ZT^ m^ I : I ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ La ^n^sc - FORTHEKIDS I -SK^issfe,wnhVrch.seT' I.' 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Ready- , fe TFAER >l ' « f: i EIIMIUV t 1 JH H-B. \1 | | JF^fl V := JJ1JL. . J^R ^^W^0'"- PI ^ fl^- ^ T I ¦^ .A A I I 12 AAA F I r^Kie II 1 ll «"W„e b0 E ¦^ f l lllO S ^1v 1 l w!.h fftCit Pkg.. || T , umlt, 4 p" 11 Un* 0 J ¦R • ¦¦ D WWftHiwi CANNED §¦ TQtm V P G coupon. mi Pvrilli[^^» EDACTIMfii'"!!L : p PACK g with coupon. Lm II:on. 4 e cpu- «Rs»' ' iS: %; ^ .^¦a^.^M^a^ Hyp HaiaaUlBBBaflV I l Jl Mil E!L & fe !A!; B# 3m %' feii ^ - "iv | ! S w || p0n psr (uatomer. Explr.tlon«« il !; datayK^^vrx Sat June l(f 1972 I ¦ liUfTI ^ S aff ¦ lllfu p: ¦ " :3 ponporcuitomer-Fxp ration a g d.te June" \Q 1972 %^ ^ *^n,... J ^?- MmammWrnM\mt mm a^B S I - ^ » fe Sat.. . ,^10,oic—frvJininiV ' "™ 1 as sass I i »-> ,97J 1 »-

m MONSANTO MIRRO GREEN X 75 FT. . JUU M M iRED l Ifw/ fiWt l M * ^ 6171^BHH ^^ M^^ Ik m | | GARDENHOSE £ V hj ^SlM V ^MBH V

¦ ¦ DELUXE 7k 17 GREEN AMD WHITE WEBBING. . ALUMINUM FOLDING /^^^ ^^ HIlE ^Scff CH ^/HI ^K It \\\u Jmw\W I

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I^JAAW^^ H ' MIRA ^HI ^^ I IPUTEB iP mmW ^^^^ BS3M&fiS ^PSlP9rVrP a^H I I I J "1 I I I ^ ^a^ai I Chromed grid, ._ _ V ¦ ' H[ ^ | JJ iH «^^ ^^ A UNAPPROVED.ADDDm/cn MHa^aMa^HH ^^ ^^^^^^^^^BBBBI B^ a^a^al ^1 I ' • • ' I 1 L H H 10" x 10" sq. ICP CHPSX ^" ^^^^ i^P ¦ 1 111 I 'I'PaV'^^P I -PLAYER H SV^af^F SP^^Q^V 4 ^P I 1 ' ". I 1 I I I I I ^P H $ Badminton Set $2 99 15 |99 2 ' f¥W |yM I

¦' ¦/ • WM ' i I (Rw|.88cand77c) Regular Willie Baseball, orGiant H PI I I I ' ' W*$$&W ?& ' . —i Pt ^^ P . ^B

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^^^ _ ^^^^^ _ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ _ ^^^^^^^^ | ! ;3 j _ COUPON ENTITLES CU ST. TO PURCH. B ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ ^ — MFMVMJ MU a^^ H MACLEANS VI7- ^^ ..IA ^-¦-¦^.•.¦^^ YES! ' r——i \mWJ^L\\m\ I GOING CAMPING? You Ca„ stm Get Jl?wl \ &&l l ( ^ a TOOTHPASTE ....40 l DON'T GO, Until You ve Checked Our Tremendous Values And A Fishing License ' Each Up \*™*A mW ^m^ ^ Selection, Of Name Brand Camping And Fishing Equipment, At Our Service ipn,*,*i TfJ' v vi>vwcoco ¦ ¦ ,¦ « ¦,¦ ¦ [kiWi\\!£££fiWflWiWiWWiWiWiMMjWiiimjj^^ ^^ ¦PPPPHHPHHPPBP PHPPHPHPPRPPPH i g«Miimfl\Fftw^^iAVM»mi^fA\iAu^ 5 #^M rm^^m^^^kfBSSma SAVE with RED OWL GASOLINE feS ^ ^ " ! ! I ^ AND COUPONS H |p^^ PFSl Im^m^^^m^m^M W^W P^ TAMPAX. 99*1

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all a^^^^ k. I Mnm?rmV °n ^ P a ^>EPIAI 7a ^ ^mW ^m \ mV HP K ^ P PaPaflPaVPaB^^^ ¦¦¦¦ Lw. i ^ P H ffi.imw 1973. '"'l»» Corp. ^fel I a l^ l^ l lll l mW ^ mm — I KjiHjiLjJflj^^ 3 ^ ¦ ¦^^ ^ critically short, This spring New York City board check to see if it can of Winona Municipal Court fa- ployes. They would be given * he and Com- during April and May cost the and salaries. nesota. missioner James Papenfuss police had about 800 men in- legally move the hall without cilities in City Hall. She recommended that the first choice at the new county state nearly;$100,000 in special openings under the law. said. But Baer noted that funds vestigating murders. a referendum. State Patrol services, patrol The county hopes to locate county court absorb the three chief Lew Versnik said. one of the two county courts in Col. Versnik said up.to 100 City Hall until courthouse re- Catholic schools, troopers put in more tlan 7 000 modeling bids are taken in Sep- , tember and another location for hours of overtime during 17 all county offices is selected. County numbering days of anti-war activity at the Let Us Power Vacuum Your University of Wisconsin-Madi- THE CITY HALL courtroom churches said son campus and the state Capi- will likely house conciliation tol.\. kv .' ' " . - ' ' court and misdemeanor crimi- system foreseen nal court much as It does now, no belter off now Included in the costs, which "Winona County atlas Co., Inc., Minneapolis, told Furnace & Air Ducts! must be paid for "from already as well as civil suits under A new ST. PAUL Minn. (AP ) - ' '¦ commissioners his firm hopes . established,. limited budgets," $5,000. . . will be assembled this year, Catholic schools and churches The present probate and juve- the County Board of Commis to begin work later this month Versnik said, were $1,593 to re- on a county atlas that will give have no more money now than pair 18 damaged vehicles and nile court facilities in the court- sioners le arned Monday after- they did before the Minnesota house will retain those uses, as noon, and through it the board an easily-located number to $6,640 to feed and ioige person- every ruraL residence in the Tax Credit Law went into ef- nel called in from remote sta- well as expanded family court saw the key to a possible solu- fect , according to supporters of jurisdiction county. tions of the Madison patrol dis- in divorce and oth- tion to its desire to create a the law. Only the parents of the er areas. . rural numbering system to aid The atlas will be completed trict. Commissioners in November, he said. Roeder students are better off , -they received noti- emergency vehicles, said. FRACTURES WRISTS fication Monday that County said the system gives each Commissioners have been John R. Kenefick. an assist- ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - Probate and Juvenile Court rural residence a number that Judge S. A. talking for months about the ant attorney general, made Gerald Arnold, 89, has been Sawy«r has been includes the township number , sworn in as one county judge. possibility of creating numbers the number of the section in those points in Ramsey County moved from a La Crosse hos- for each residence In rural District Court as ' i m mtT$ x His term expires in November which the home is found , and part of his K'S BP i55? ^sss ^^^ pital to the Grand View Nurs- 1*76. . areas, along the order of fire final argument in defense of ing Home at Blair. Six weeks ¦ a residence number within that The status of the other judge- numbers found in other coun- section. the 1971 law that grants tax ago Arnold fractured both ship remains undetermined ties. This would ease efforts credits of up to $140 a year per ^^¦^ wrists in a fall. His son, Alex- Many counties use the firm's -*-^!Li " pending a ruling by Minnesota by fire trucks, ambulances or numbering system in creating pupil to parents of children at- cihSi. ander Arnold, Charlottesville, Attorney General Warren Span- other emergency vehicles to tending private or parochial L *l fek ' ^ i > ' > --v• &**522 1 Va.; few here Thursday to see naus on emergency numbers, Roeder a^af^Pn [ Am^mwm\\\mL. wt

^n ^^ | i;; 1 i w ^^^^^^^^ m ^ '^K?-^^a^a^EMiaL]4^B^ 'ffifig * A viaKmfUBsnmWSS^LWr ^mWtW 11 You can even open your account by mail APT T I IMTO , AOUUUIMS I lb j t's tnaj . eaSy \Ajyyen yOU nave time, stop in for LOANS FOR a VISI*' We'd 'ike *0 meet you in person. EVERY PURPOSE ^ ^ ^ and * ^ PLUS EVERY WkJ ^n LounTru MOPSY - Beit of Bread ov»r 22 of tha fined Cairn* In the flve-«ta»« araa OTHER BANKING STATE - at Davenport, low*, May 14, 1972. "Mln Clip Joint" heraelf , Birth ¦raffl ntrairaL BANK T*n»eth, holds Mopsy' i trophy. SERVICE ^^^-^^ I' THE ONLY PLACE IN TOWN YOUR DOG GETS THE LOOK OF A W1NNERI ' '[( HFMjfi WEST BROADWAY & JUNCTION STREET rigrl^rf "NEIGHBORHOOD BANKING FOR EVERYONE" taui hrohi •****<(mw UUJIM • TROPICAl FISH • nPl PET SUPPLIES || > l^llTk Irkinf • * Call "Weathe rphono" 454-1230 Any Hour for Woalher Information PHONE 454-3645 A X1H> V>4lJL Lf J %JM.LJL V 7th ST. 8, MANKATO AVE. S A r TUESDAY dies from The weather JUNE 6, 1972 Man wamaawmmmmmmmm ¦ The j** m m mmt meamBmmmamBamew ^ record '* '** a***™s *** oo/fy ** *

St. Cloud At Community Winona funerals Two-State Deaths ice pick wound Memorial Hospital Mr. and Mrs. Jewell Gustav B. Place T. Sgt. Cyril R. Pellowski, church about 6 pan. May 19 and NELSON, Wis. (Special) - 50, 360 Pelzer St. died at 1 p.m. was met at the door by her hus- Visiting novrat Medical ind turglcal R. Jessie band who had an ice pick thrust teachers sign patlentsi 2 to 4 and 7 to 1:3b p.m. (No Funeral services for Mr. and Gustav B. Place, 84, Nelson, Monday at St Marys Hospital, children under 11) died Monday at Lutheran Hos- Rochester, Minn. He was admit into the right side of his head. Maternity patients? 2 to 1:30 and I to Mrs. Jewell JL. (Lina Hamilton) Pellowski was taken by Prax- 8:00 p.m. (Adults only.) Jessie, 317 E. Howard St., kill- pital, Eau Claire, Wis. ted to the hospital following a Visitors to a oatlent limited to two at stabbing incident in the early el ambulance to Community ed in an automobile accident He was born in Pierce County, salary pact oni time. evening of May 19 Memorial Hospital but later that Sunday on Highway 61-14, will Wis., March 17, 1888, the son ST. CLOUD, Minn. (AP) — MONDAY of Peter and Anna Bart Place. According to acting Chief of same evening he was transfer- be at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Police John Scherer , Mrs. red to St. Marys Hospital wher« The St. Cloud Teachers Associ- Admissions Martin Funeral Chapel, Winona, In 1924 he married Mabel Han- Mrs. Curtis Bartelson, Utica, Pellowski, returned home from he remained in serious condi- ation and the school board of the Rev. John Kerr, First Con- son who died in 1927. In 1935 Minn. he married Violet Johnson who tion with a brain injury until District 742 have agreed on a gregational Church, officiating. his death. Miss Linda Pehler, 509 E. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cem- died in 1971. He was a veteran salary schedule for the 1972-73 Municipal Court Since police never had an op- Front St. etery. Of World War I. Pello-wski and 19)73-74 Survivors are: one daughter, portunity to talk with school years. Karol Heilman. 875 49th Ave., Friends may call at the fu- WINONA about the incident it was not Mrs. Martin (Bernice) Riehm, 403 W. Wabasha Under a new state law, how- Goodview. neral home today after 7 p.m. John V. Leaf, determined if the injury was an leasant weather Eau Claire; one stepson , Clar- St., pleaded guilty before Judge WEATHER FORECAST . . . Sunny, p ever, the contract cannot be Mrs. Ruth Knutson, Rushford and Wednesday from noon until attempted homicide or self-in- is forecast for most of the nation today. Showers are fore- services. ence Johnson, Sacramento, Dennis A. Challeen to a charge given final approval until after Rt. 2, Minn. daughter of operating a vehicle with no flicted , Scherer said. cast for the Northeast. (AP Photofax) Calif., and one step , He was born June 30, 1921, Juiyi- Mrs. Mildred Voreeck, 557 E. Mrs. Minnie B. Miles Mrs. Jarvin (Myrtle) Lee, Nel- Minnesota registration. He was Wabasha St. son; nine grandchildren ; one arrested at 8:30. a.m. Sunday in Dodge, Wis., to Felix and The hew contract raises the Funeral services for Mrs. Amelia Waniorek Pellowski. On Local observations starting salary for a teacher Ty Smith, 102 Stone St. Minnie B. Miles, 633 Clark's great-grandchild ; two brothers, on West Belleview and Huff streets. Feb. 8, 1943, he married Bon- with a bachelor's degree from Gilbert Peterson. 503 E. Wa- Lane, will he at 2 p.m. Wed- Elmer and Alvin, BeidenviUe, OFFICIAL WEATHER BUREAU OBSERVATIONS for Wis., and four sisters, Mrs. Inga He was fined $15. nie Jean Kukowski in Texas. $7,300 to $7,450 for the up- basha St. nesday at Fawcett Funeral After ; graduation from high the 24 hours ending at noon today : coming school year, and to $7,- Home, Winona, the Rev. Har- Lundby, Miss Amy Place and Gerald F. Wehrenberg, La Maximum temperature 76, minimum 53, noon 76, pre- Discharges Mrs. Andrew (Selma) Jess, Red school he had enlisted in the 600 foi the 1973-74 school year. lyn Hagmann, Central United Crosse, Wis., pleaded guilty to in various cipitation trace. Scott Kotlarz, 619 W. 3rd St. Wing, Minn./ and Mrs. Flavel an improper Army. He served The maximum for teachers Methodist Church, officiating. a charge of making military operations in Europe A year ago today: with master's degrees was Mrs. Robert Gerth and baby, Burial will be in Woodlawn (Effie) Robey v St. Paul, Minn. left turn. He was arrested at High 92 low 69, noon .86 no precipitation. during World War II with the , , boosted , from $13,948 to $14,374 652.% Wilson St. Cemetery. Funeral services will be at 11 3 :55 p.nu Saturday on Highway Normal temperature range for this date 76 to 56. Record, by the Min- U.S. 3rd Army. Among his re- in the first year and to .$14,884 Mrs- Frank Chuchel. 518 E; Friends may call at the fu- a.m. Thursday at Lyster Luth- 61 at Clark's Lane high 93 in 1952, record low 41 in 1894. eran Church, Dr. J. C. Thomp- nesota Highway Patrol. sponsibilities was running a dis- in the second year. 3rd St. neral home Wednesday from for Polish Sun rises tomorrow at 5:24, sets at 8:47. son officiating, with burial in $15; The judge placed persons camp A school board spokesman Mrs. Curtis Mihm and baby, noon until time of services. He was fined refugees. . 11 A.M. MAX CONRAD FIELD OBSERVATIONS the church cemetery. suspended $ 15 of the fine. (Mississippi Valley Airlines) said the new contract amounts 745 46th Ave., Goodview. A memorial is being arranged. After the war he transferred to an increase of 3.3 per cent in Friends may call at Goodrich Miss Alice Perry, 157 E. 5th Baiometic pressure 20,17 and rising, wind from the east Carl Sandvig, 451 W. Waba- Funeral Home, Durand , Wis., St., pleaded n o t guilty to a from the Army to the Air Force at 5 mph, cloud cover clear visibility 20+ miles. the first year and 2.5 per cent sha St. Julius B. Steen arid was assigned to various , Funeral services for Julius Wednesday after 2 p.m. and at charge of towing a skier on the in the second year. pulling in military posts throughout the The Steven Speltz, Fountain City, B. Steen ,. 65, Austin, Minn., the church Thursday from 10 Mississippi River and Minnesota School Boards a.m. until services. tewbpat at 9:30 a.m. world. . Association said Rt. l, Wis. were held Monday at First front of a the St. Cloud ¦ ¦' ' ¦: Thursday. She was arrested by He was a member of St. agreement was the 27th so far Birth . . . . Methodist Church, Austin, with John Lubeck the Winona County Sheriff's of- Marys Catholic Church here. this year among the state's 435 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Abts, 824 burial in that city. He died at FRONTENAC Minn. (Spe- St. Marys Hospital Rochester , fice. Survivors are: his wife, his public school systems. W. Wabasha St., a daughter. , , cial) — John Lubeck, 85, Front- She was released on her own Minn., June 1, He had under- parents; three sons, Michael, SUNDAY enac, died Moi.day at St. Marys recognizance and trial is set for Winona; David and Daniel, St mmm—^^^^^~^^m^^m ^~ MMMHMMWMM * ma^^^^^^^^a^mm gone surgery. ' . . ¦' ' ¦ - Hospital, Rochester 9:30 a.m. June 23, ...... ; . V. . . Late , Admission , Minn., Paul, Minn.; three grandchil- One county Survivors include one sister, where he had been a patient Roger J. Corey, 1741 W. Wa- 1st Quarter Full Last Quarter New court Mrs. Harry Passe, 1719 W. Mrs. Raymond E. (Janet) Muel- to a dren ; five brothers, Clarence, Sth St. since May 16. basha St., pleaded guilty , Hayward June 18 June 26 July 3 June U ler, Winona. disregarding a flash- Arcadia , Wis.; Basil , to be located in The son of John and Augusta charge of Calif. ; Capt, Evarist, TJSAF ' ing red light. He was arrested Lubeck he was born in Front- Langley, Va.; Aaron, Reeds- forecasts The Mississippi Winona City FIRE CALLS enac Dec. 20, 1886. A lifelong at 2:40 a.m. Sunday at . West Flood Stage 24-hr; Hall 5th and Main streets. burg, Wis.; Robert , Lake City, Monday area resident he was retired as three sisters, Mrs. Good- Stage Today Chg. One court of the new He was fined $30. Minn.; S.E. Minnesota ' county 5:25 p.m.—Nathe's Wholesale a farmer and self-employed car- win (Cecilia) Gunderson , "Wino- Fair to partly cloudy Red Wing ;- .;, 14k 6.3 - .1 courts system that becom Pair exchanges FORFEITURES: es ef- Meat Co., Inc., 164 E. 2nd St., penter. He never married. , na; Mrs. Glen R. (Theresa) through Wednesday. A little Lake City .... . ; 9,0 — .1 fective here next month will be Survivors are four nieces. Arthur E. Teachout, 1.8, Utica overheated compressor motor, Two leaving the scene Foust ,, San Diego, Calif ; Mrs. warmer Wednesday. Low to- Wabasha ...... 12 8.4 0 located in City Hall, it was brothers and six sisters have Minn., $300 , no fire, returned at 5:36 p.m. of a fatal accident , l a.m. , May James S. CLucille) Tynes, night 52-58. High Wednes- Alma Dam, T.W... 6.0 - .1 agreed this morning between died. 9:30 a.m:Stan's Union 76, 529 shots with . 28, Highway 14 at Stockton , Baton Rouge, La., several day 84-90. Chance of rain Whitman Dam .. 4.3 0 Acting City Manager Robert Mankato Ave., flushed concrete Funeral services will be at 2 by the Minnesota and nephews. One son 5 per cent Minn., arrest nieces near zero tonight, Winona Dam, . 5.6 0 Bollant and members of the Wi- near pumps following gasoline p.m. Wednesday at Peterson- Highway Patrol. and one brother have died; Wednesday. WINONA ...... 13 6.8 0 nona County ' ¦ Board of Commis- spill, no fire, returned! at 9:58 Sheehan Funeral Home, Lake Oscar F. . Meyer, Reedsburg, Funeral services will be held Tremp. Pool ... 9.3 — .2 sioners. . .; ' Minnesota . a.m. /' village officer City, Rector Brad Robinson , Wis., $35, speeding 80 in a 65- at 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Tremp. Dam .. .. 6.0 0 Details of the agreement for LA CRESCENT, Minn. - The Frontenac, officiating. Burial mile zone, 8:15 a.m. Monday v Marys Church with the Rev. Fair through Wednesday. Dakota ....;... .. 8.2 0 county rental of Winona . will be in Frontenac 61-14 south of Winona , A little warmer Wednesday. Muni- IMPOUNDED DOGS Cemetery; Highway Joseph Mountain officiating. A Dresbach Pool .. 9.5 — .1 cipal Court fa- " ' ' " " "" ' ' La Crescent Police Department Hiehway Patrol. Lows tonight 46-58. High , . Friends may call at the fun- preliminary service will be held Dresbach Dam .. 4.9 4- .5 cilities in City Winona is investigating a shooting inci- eral home this afternoon and Everett L. Edstrom , 735 Watkowski Fu- Wednesday 78-90. ¦ , permitting dog at 9:30 at the La Crosse •:. 12 6.9 4- ..3 Hall remain Co U n tY No. 144 — Small tan female dent which occurred here early evening and Wednesday until Johnson St., $15 Burial will be at to run at large, 11:30 a.m. Mon- neral Home. Wisconsin FORECAST to be worked pup, mixed breed , available. this morning, with bullets ex- services. Fort Snelling National Ceme- out at the next day. Tonight, fair and cooler, lows Red Wing ..... 6.3 6.3 6.3 BoSTcJ No. 145 — Small black and ' the off-duty tery. . ' ' Winon a ...... : 6.8 6.8 6.8 City Council brown male terrier changed between Mrs. Alfred Mayer LAKE CITY mostly low or mid 50s. Wednes- , available. ' at the ifc La Crosse .... 6.7 6.7 6.7 meeting ¦¦ . ' . ' - chief of police and two other DOVER, Minn. - Mrs. Al- LAKE CITY, Minn. — The Friends may call day, mostly smray and pleas- - . . . ' No. 146 - Small black and ¦ p.m. Wednes- Tributary Streams June 19. persons. .;.' fred Mayer, 48, died at St. following persons forfeited fines neral home at 7 ant. Highs 78 to 85. brown female part Beagle, Rosary will be said Chip, at Durand .. 1.8 .6 The rental will include coun- available. Marys Hospital, Rochester, recently before Lake City Mu- day. The 4- Chief Dennis Swedberg re- A, Military services will ba Zumbro at Theil. . : 2?.7 — .2 ty use of desks and other facil- No. 147 — Large black Minn;, Monday afternoon of nicipal Court Judge Philip at 8. 5-day forecast . . and ported that about 3:30 a.m. to- conducted at St. Mary's Ceme- ' Tremp. at Dodge . 2.2 0 ities : presently located in Muni- tan female part shepherd ; avail- cancer after a two-year illness, Gartner: MINNESOTA day, while driving his pickup Falls, tery. ; ' Black at Gales. . 1.9 — .1 cipal Court Judge Dennis A. able. The former Phyllis Ketchum Glenn Adams, Zumbro Thursday through Satur- ield right day: partly cloudy and warm La Crosse at W. Sal. 3.9 o Challeen's chambers. No. 148 — Small brown male on Oak Street, he saw a car was born to Noel and Pearl Minn., $50, failure to y accident; with chance of a few scat- Root at Houston .. 5.5 "— .1 The court facilities there will Dachshund , no license, third parked in. the middle of the Block Ketchum on Feb. 22, 1924 of way involving an ¦ ' ' ¦ at Dover. K. C. Meyer, Lake City, $10, tered thunderstorms Thurs- : likely be used for about the day. street. One man was in the car She taught school at oper- St. Charles. Minn. , for several no motorcycle endorsement. Steel imports day through Saturday. Lows same court functions now No. 149 — Small white female and another was tinkering with mid 50s to low 60s ated by the municipal court, poodle, no license, third day. years before she was mar- The following forfeited $30 north and Sentence man in ¦ Wi- upper 50s to low 60s south. which will be abolished June 30. Goodview another parked car, he said. ried at St. Charles June 29, for speeding: John Hanlon, Highs 80-90. County use of city facilities No. 214 — Female gray Ger- When the two saw the pickup, 1946, and was a member of nona; Mark Rasmussen, Frid- drop after Minnea polis death Holy Redeemer Hokah; . . . . ' ¦ ' will continue at least until man shepherd, third day. the one in the car drove off. Catholic Church, ley Conrad Roverud, Eyota , ^ MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) courthouse remodeling bids are The other one ran after his Minn. She farmed with David Andrist Jr., Z u m b r o ' her husband at Dover until her Falls; Eriing Stafberg, Brain- pads Bakery union — An 18-year-old Minneapolis taken in late September and a WINONA DAM LOCKAGE companion's car. caught up with trade youth has been given an unde- re- death. erd. determination is made about it and jumped in. PITTSBURGH (AP)-A drop termined sentence at St. Cloud locating all county offices for 10:35 p.m. — Delia Ann, li' Swedberg followed the car Survivors are her husband , Lewis H. Buck, Lake City, seeks mediator three was found guilty of assault fol- in the volume of foreign steel Reformatory for a fatal stabb- the two-year remodeling period- barges, down. around several blocks in town sons, Keith and Chadd, at ' ' ' appears ' ¦ ' imported during April ¦ ¦ ¦ ' home, lowing a court trial. Sentencing ing. . ¦ . and Curtis, Eyota ; two . Small craft - 15. at high speed . Then, said Swed- for strike talks daughters, Cheryl and Kay, at was stayed. to be the -first effect of a The verdict, handed down in Today berg, as he pulled alongside gned agreement be- Hennepin County District *iome: and two brothers, Clay- BUFFALO COUNTY recently si LA CROSSE, Wis.-Ray Ping, Court Dropout Bacharach Flow — 45,300 cubic feet per the other vehicle the driver tween the United States, Japan chairman of the board of Erick- Mond ay, means Wayne E. Car- second at 8 a.m. Ion, Altura , Minn., and Kermit, COURT given honora ry degree started shooting at him. Rochester. "Wis. (Special) and the European Common son Bakery, ^a Crosse, said to- son faces up to 25 years in pris- 1:30 a.m. — Magnolia, 12 Swedberg said he was able ALMA, - The following persons recently ap- Market limiting the amount day he was glad to know union on under the third-degree mur- MONTREAL (AP) - Pop barges, down. to open his right side window Funeral services will be held peared in Buffalo County court. and type of steel imports. members were willing to meet der conviction. composer Burt Bacharach, who 8:45 a.m. — Universal Chal- and started exchanging fire. Thursday at 2 p.m. at Hoiy Re- David G. Becker , Cochrane, Imports of al. types of steel with bakery management but He was charged in connection was a dropout at McGill Uni- lenge, eight barges, down . Then the passenger in the flee- deemer Church , the Rev. Edgar , tons in Schaefer officiating. Wis., , improper muffler; totaled about 938 000 , that he was unaware the union with the Kan. 22 stabbing of versity, received an honorary 9:15 a.m.—Kertzman Dredge, ing white car opened fire, too, Burial will $35 cent from be in the church cemetery . Wilbur C. Jensen April , down 15 per was trying to bring in a fed- William K. Carr, 27, Min- doctor of music degree from equipment, down. he said. , 10 days in 09 million Ions shipped to this jail , 1, eral mediator. neapolis. the school Monday. When Swedberg had emptied Friends may call at the Ja- no driver's license and no during March , and the registration ; Clarence Clark country A three-year contract be- Bacharach , 43, left McGill in his 5-shot .22 caliber revolver,, cobs Funeral Home, St . Charles, , first time in several months im- tween Bakery and Confection- had read it in Monday's La 1948 after two years of study. he drove to the police station after 3 p.m. Wednesday. Ros Alma , $20, no stop lamp on ports fell below the million-ton ery Workers Local 390 and the Crosse paper. The company has to get help and a patrol car. ary will be said at that time by trailer; Thomas R. Zirzow , level , government figures show. Drivers unhurt , speeding; Doug R. Erickson Bakery, a subsidiary not been contacted , he said. Returning to his pickup he dis- the Rev. Schaefer and a Rosary Alma $35 The American Iron & Steel Elsewhere and scriptural service will be Severson, Mondovi , Wis., $45 in- of G. Heileman Brewing Co., David Clarkin, president of high Low Pr. covered that the right front tire Institute says the figure repre- ]. held at 8 p.m. attentive driving; Evan L. Ad- expired May Work continued the local, said Monday he was 7fi 55 .. in 2-vehicle was flat. sents a 32 per cent reduction on a day to - day basis Albany, cldy ams, Waunakee, Wis., $30, from the amount imported in until trying to reach the mediator so que clear 87 59 .. A slug, probably from a .38 May 24 when the 46 union mem- Albu' , Two-State Funerals speeding; Hubert F, Hales , April 1971. a meeting could be set up. The Amarillo, clear 85 59 .. caliber pistol, according to bers including three from Wi- Haines City, Fla., $30, non-reg- • A record 18.3 million tons of union is willing to hold such a Anchorage, cldy 53 44 .. Swedberg, was removed from nona , went on strike. meeting, street collision the tire. James V. Scanlon istration. foreign steel was received in he said. Ashevlile, cear 86 55 .. CALEDONIA , Minn. ( Special ) Ping said he did not know the The Gardner Bakery No injuries resulted from a He estimated that about 10 Elwyn E. Bundy, Spring the United States last year. Co., a Atlanta, clear 90 67 .. —Funeral services for James V. Grove Mirjn., using stud- union was attempting (o get Heileman subsidiary two-car accident at 3 p.m. Mon shots had been exchanged dur- , $29, in Madi- Birmingham , clear 91 65 .. Scanlon , 29, who drowned Sun- ded tires ; Harry Fitzgerald , hold of the mediator until he son. Wis., is also on strike. day on East 2nd and Laird ing the short interval. Bismarck, clear 79 51 .. day while swimming in the Mis- Mondovi no mirror; Lon streets. Police Officer Keith Josewski , , $20, use of licens e and $50, too fast Bouse, cldy 89 67 .. According to police , a car sissippi River north of Browns- I1'. Truax , Ettrick , Wis,, $20, ex- for conditions ; Ronald H. Fet- Boston, cldy 66 53 .. who was outside of his house at ville, Minn., driven east on 2nd Street by the time of the chase, had heard pired chauffeur 's license; Earl ting, Cochrane , $20, no protec- Buffalo, cldy 73 56 .. Lawrence P. Wood , Trempaa will be held F. Van Someren , Mondovi , $35, tive headgear on motorcycle; Charlotte, clear 89 64 .. the shots but thought that some- Wednesday at In years gone by Jeau, Wis., collided with a car one was getting an early start operating over center line; Lowell M. Flattum, Lanesboro, Charleston, clear 88 72 .. driven by Leonard W, Diengcr , 10:30 a.m. at St. Larry A. Oium , Eau Claire, Minn., $50 speeding; Glenn A. on a July 4th celebration by Patrick' , Chicago, cldy 73 65 .06 622 E. Wabasha St., southbound s Catho- Wis., $19 , expired registration Davis, Mondovi , $25, operating Cincinnati cldy 80 61 .31 shooting off firecrackers. lic Church , (Extracts from the fitcs o/ thia newspaper .) , on Laird Street. plates ; Keith C. Hough, Waba- unregistered snowmobile and Cleveland, cldy 69 55 .01 Brownsv i lie. ' sha , Minn., $30, ; speeding; $25 , operating snowmobile on Denver, cldy 72 55 1.03 The Rev. Msgr . Thomas W. Werlein , Mondovi , Ten years ago Richard roadway. ... 1962 Des Moines, clear 90 68 CITY ACCIDENT BOX SCOItE Speltz $40 and 5 days in jail no driv- will officiate , Timothy McCauley, Mondovi, It may take time but the Winona High School class of Detroit , cldy 76 60 .. Man sought in er's license; $30, non-registra- $30, disturbing the peace; Rob- l'J62 numerals will get around. Just Duluth, clear 80 47 Deaths 0 0 and burial will tion and where they will be • dis- Accidents 020 320 be in the church $50, too fast for condi- ert L. Streiff , Rochester, played and who will read them are moot points tor Fort Wortli, clear 90 63 tions. they ore Injuries . 110 74 cemetery. Minn., $59, littering, Robert E. inscribed on the shell of a good-sized snapping turtle. The Green Bay, clear 68 52 .01 Yvonne Hurtley, ' Damage S205,(i2fi $172 ,613 Scanlon Friend's mav Mondovi, Beyer , Rochester, $59, littering; snapper was daubed with the legend "Class of 1962, WHS" Helena, clear 84 47 North Ireland $20, expLred registration ; Lar- Flowers Transportation Corp, by John Van Winkle Stockton Honolulu, cldy 85 69 call at the Steffen Funeral , , and Strand Wedul and Djamal Home ry Rud , Mondov i , $30, failure to G reenville, Hiss., $209, improp- Arninoedin of Winona , seniors. Ho uston, clear 87 67 . , Caledonia, this afternoon and evening. stop at sign; Richard B, Oium, er lavatories on hoat and $59, Ind'apolis, cldy 84 68 .43 The impact forced both ve Rosary will be said this evening at 8 b Alma , $45, inattentive driving; polluting water; Douglas It. Twen ty-five yea rs ago Jacks'ville, clear 86 62 .. hides onto the southeast cor- y Msgr . . . . 1947 ner boulevard where the Dien is arrested Speltz. Frederick J. Zieglaer , Fountain Polus, Winona , Minn., $50 and Kansas City, clear 95 73 .. City, Win., $35 speeding; Ron- One hundred and seventy-six employes of the Donovan ger car struck a tree. BELFAST (AP) - British Scanlon was born May 19 , , 5 day3 in jail plus 15 days pro- Little Rock, clear 97 65 .. paratroopers spotted a wanted ald L, Tanke, Fountain City, bation , disorderly conduct and Manufacturing Co. went on strike when contract negotiations cldy 96 68 .. Damage to the front of the 1943, to Vincent and Mildred Los Angeles, member of the Irish Republi- Driscoll Scanlon at $35, speeding; Gerald D, Ode- causing bodily harm to anoth- between tho company and local 396 of the International cdy 86 68 .. 1969 Wood sedan is $1,600. The Brownsville , Louisville, can Army on a Belfast street and had been a lifelong gard, Mondovi, $55, unlawfu l er. Moulders & Foundry Workers of America broke down. clear 69 56 1963 Dienger sedan had $90O resident Except for one class, Winona Marquette, Monday night , chased him into of the area, He nui rried Jean 's adult vocational program Memphis clear 92 70 damage. The lawn and tret- for the 1946-47 school term came to an end, Nearly , a house and arrested the fugi- Ann Schulte, Dorchester , Iowa 100 aaults, Miami , cldy 83 75 .74 owned by Ernie Fratzke, 453 E. , both veterans and civilians, have been enrolled in the six tive nnd seven other men found Aug. 8, 1964, and farmed in the Milwaukee, clear 65 56 .01 2nd St., had damage estimated cou rses. at $25. inside, The army said the Brownsville area until his death, Mpls.-St.P. clear 82 57 ,. captives included a battalion He is survived by his wife ; New Orleans, cldy 87 71 ,. OTHER ACCIDENTS Fifty yea rs ago . . . 1922 Today commander and two senior one son, Timothy, and two ANNOUNCEMENT New York, cldy 80 61 ,. company officers of the IRA daughters, Teresa nnd Mary Jo, The pupils of Mrs. Willard L. Hillyer will be heard In a Okie. City, clear 91 64 .. 8:05 a.m. — 5lh and Centei streets, intersection collision : Provisional wing, all high on at home; his parents; one broth- DR. piano recital in tho First Congregational Church , Omaha, cldy BB 66 .. the wnnted list. er, Gale, Rochester, Minn.; two EDGAR A. HOOGE Phllad'phin , cldy 81 60 .. Stanley A. Dlsher, Minnesota City lit. 1, Minn., 1906 model The capture touched off at- sisters, Mrs. Russel (Shnron) Optometrist Seventy-five yea rs ago . . . 1897 Phoenix, cldy 99 76 .. tacks against the soldiers by Field and1 Mrs. William (Cathy) hardtop, right front . $100 ; Mis* Pittsburgh , cldy 76 55 .. mobs throwing rocks and at> Hughes, both of Madison , Wis ,, ] HAVE MOVE D MY OFFICE FROM 'HIE Miss Emi ly Frick is homo from Chicago where she has Pt 'land, Ore. cldy 82 57 .. Eva ll. Waiinskl , 710 E. Sth and grandmother , been pursuing kindergarten studies. 11)67 hour-long gun battle between Mrs. Charles Pt'land, Me. cldy 60 48 .. St., model hardtop, right troops and snipers. Sporadic Driscoll , Brownsville. OLD LOCATION OF 111 A MAIN ST., WINONA The tench ers at tho Madison School tendered an elnboratc Rapid City, cldy 75 50 ,. rear , $100. bttiiquet this afternoon to the principa l, Miss Emily Straycr, fights between soldiers and Richmond , cldy 83 63 ,. Monduy gunmen continued throughout 3:41 p.m. — Airport Road MY NEW OFFICE IS NOW LOCATED AT: , St. Louis, cldy 93 68 ., the night. 14-yenr-old Protestant boy was One-hundred years ago . . 1872 Salt Lake, cldy 83 63 .. 400 feet west ol Gnlowski Drive, No casualties were reported , reported wounded when fiom

Praise, threats Angela deluged ¦ ¦ ¦: ¦:¦ " : . " . ^^Check Tomorrow^Ad k by telegrams f^^^^^X AAAA ^| VJS, &r)^^^ fi x f A\ A. ¦ AA.I '¦ %*!/Sf ^aMa ^. I 'if a\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\al/Ba\For*. ^. Complete Details ^a\ By EDITH M. LEDERER the nation and throughout the m^Lrytm. fs> bJ /mmmtu. > SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP > - world far outnumbered the hate \ / ^H ^^ AAA A * ^ Angela Davis has been deluged calls and death threats. ^ ^ ^ ^ by hundreds of congratulatory One telegram came from San Wi > 1/ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ telegrams and phone calls Quentin inmate Fletta DrUmgo, ^ praising her acquittal. But she ¦ one of the two surviving Sole- WW ^K^. J* r 'k . mWMWMWMWtmwmmmmmammmmmm ^^%mWm—- aAmu^m\^mWm - also has received about 20 dad Brothers. ^ '^|^^^^^^ _ ^^^^^^ .^|^^ |^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ _ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ fl death threats, a spokesman Drumgo said: "Dear sister said. ¦ and comrade, Anticipated victo- The 28-year-old black Com- ry. Revolutionary love and sol- ¦ B- mm! r ¦ ^M ^ ^ % I ^H mMl mm^MmX __^g . ^k^^ munist spent Monday swim- idarity." f^^Am%mT SaW jnS^^mf \ k—^L—^L—^k ^H T mm Mt mt Mrnmsm^^m^a^M L^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^M ming in nearly 100-degree heat, During the 13-week trial, i he \LAmyT ^^W kmf ^^bii ^fef'S! ^^^^ « § ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ B^SI^H ^^H^^^^^^ fl ^^fljj ^^^^^^^ H ^^^^^^ M^^^fl ^^^H ^^^^ M^^BMl^^Hlflfl —W—W—W—W—W—W—W—W—W—W—W. taking a sauna bath and dis- prosecution contended that cussing vacation plans, spokes- Miss Davis helped plot the woman Stephanie Allan said. courthouse escape try in hopes of freeing the man she loved- The all-white jury of seven Soledad Brother George Jack- women and five men acquitted son, -who was killed last year Miss Davis Sunday on murder , during an alleged breakout at- kidnap and conspiracy charges tempt from San Quentin Prison. stemming from a 1970 court- Drumgo testified for the de- house escape attempt in which fense that he knew nothing of a judge and three others were the plot to free the Soled ad killed. Brothers. Relaxing at her San Jose apartment on her first day of Communist leaders In freedom in 22 months, the tall, France, G ermany, Australia attractive militant said she and Britain joined American I ^m\\ MWl ¦11 PX^a^aK^T* MmmmmmM hadn 't made any firm decision Communist party officials Hen- tj~~*/"*) ( tl ^M , y/ mmmWmmmm *. ^ mm% m WAm^^^mmmmmmma about the future. ry Winston and Gus Hall in E. A I ik m£l&&eg> ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^^^ Miss Allan said the telegrams cheering Miss Davis by tele- ItiS &^^aX of congratulations from across cram. r W I fli^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^B^a^a^S^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^H ifl a^H Bl fl ^*»f J / jja**ffl9F ]W a^a^a^H^aV 1 WamP>Ttmiat ^H I I I^MJ I ^f^^flflflflfl ] I / lt£gLj$k%w ^^^^^^K^^^^!^^^^^^^^^^A^^^^^BflMflMflMflMflnB | See possible fl^ I / , feSSflm. i'. A Jfll Am vflMflM^lJA^^M— A^A^^^^^ik AAi^^^^^^^^ B Humphrey break J w \¦ v m^mmm Iflrl l ^f '^^HHi^Pa^Hiii ^|i^H^^Hi^^|H^HHH|H|^H^H^ of election law WASHINGTON (AP ) - The nesota Democrat , Paul R. That- >A IT'S FOR J^Lm\\ ^m federal election watchdog has cher , treasurer of The Com- ^ TOTAL SAVINGS Mmm^ handed tho Justice Department mittee for the Nomination of ^^^^ 7g fg Af what, was termed a "possible Hubert H. Humphrey, said the \\> n7 ^^ f l5 U^^^^^^ violation " of the new election group had kept the government law involving contributions to advised on what it knew about Hubert H. Humphrey's presi- the contributions of John L. and dential campa ign. Frances L. Loeb of New York 'The referral of the case Mon- Clly. day by the Office of Federal Philli p S. Hughes , director of Elections was the first such ac- the elections office , said the • Guarantee tion taken under the 1971 Fed- case involves eight contribu- You ^HHtfHBfeH, flHH eral Election Campaign Act, tions of $fi ,000 each under vari- ^^^ Can A spokesman for the Min- ous names. He added that the p> • 100's of Famous Brands ^^fi contributions were "acknowl- ^ Trust j5lllT*TZVl5«ll¥u edged to have been made pos- ^^\ • ^^^Uyjj ^y sible " by the Loebs, m SAS ^^^^^ U^^^^ H A spokesman for Congress' '^ V_ Credit Convenience General Accounting Office , the m * W^^.^fl ^PH^^ UHIPU! ^^ !PB^^W parent agency of the elections 4&• Complete One-Stop w^^ office, said all information was ^UAl^fl.-K^Ifis turned over to the Justice De- ^ partment. Also turned over to l^rtA w % mwj the department was a letter of ^E^r^B9VflV9P i^^ explanation from Thatcher . Section 310 of the law prohi- bits .giving contributions In the Jw Winono County \* namo of another person or re- ceiving .such contributions. Pen- j| Absfratt Co., >. alties arc fi nes of not more than $1,000 or a year in prison [ or both. j Loeb is n senior partner in I the New York investment firm of Loeb, Rhoadcs & Co, Mem- PHONE 454-5520 bers of tho firm hnve given lo 131 Jvtrxiian $t. I Democratic causes in the past, 1 Board prepares Two sewage for contract contracts win negotiations council OK Organization of committees io Two contracts involving col- meet with four public school lection and treatment of sani- employe groups for the negotia- Grant continuance in tary sewage were approved . ' I tion of sala- Monday night by the City Cv.L-.-J ries and vari- OCriOOl ous other Council. One spells out terms under 0~-»..J term s of Googins drug hea fi ng DOard emplo y- which the city will treat some A continuance was ordered in St., were obtained from an ille- when Googins '. -: ' ' . • '•- I men t prob- knocked at tha 250,000 gallons per day of efflu- a preliminary hearing held Mon- gal search. Langford objected front door. When he entered, ably will be effected by the ent discharged by Froedtert day for Steve L. Googins, 24, to the pills as evidence and Shannon said he identified him- School Board of Winona Inde- Malt C o r p. without the evidence, he added, self as a narcotics i ¦ 276 E. 4th St., by Winona Mu- agent and pendent District 861 at its meet- The other is ' -,. there is no probable cause to told Googins to place his hands ing next Monday night. the latest ver- City nicipal Court judge Dennis A. justify binding him over for on his head while he made a Superintendent of Schools A. sion of a Wi- _ , ' Challeen. : trial. check for weapons by "patting L. Nelson explained that four iiona - Good- Council Googins, who is charged with "Instead oi a preliminary bim down" (running his hands employe organizations are in- view contract ' • .-. ' ' . possession of a controlled sub- hearing we're having a Ras- along the surface of Googins' volved.; under which ' stance, was arrested at 8 p.m. mussen hearing," County Attor- clothing). the village system would be May 4 at 252 W. 4th St. by a ney Julius E. Gernes argued. Another agent,. Paul Pederv THE WINONA Education As- Minnesota Bureau of Criminal He added the defendant is en- sociation already has been cer- linked to that of the city. sen, testifying for the prosecu- Under the contract with Apprehension (BCA) narcotics titled to a Rasmussen-type hear- tion, said he was standing near tified by the state as the exclu- agent. :'' ing in district court. sive bargaining agent for teach- Froedtert, the firm will pay the Googins and removed two plas- city about $2,289 per month, Challeen continued the hear- Prior to the court's granting tic cylinders from the defend- ers in their 1972-74 contract ne- ing to next Monday following an Gernes called four gotiations. based on present volumes and the delay, ant's right vest pocket directly the current financing situation objection by Googins' court-ap- witnesses to testify. after the search. According to An organization of secretaries pointed attorney, Robert Lang- Undercover agent Patrick L. has been recognized by the regarding the city's new treat- Pedersen, Googins told him the ment plant. Costs to the firm ford , to the admission of the Shannon stated he, along with pills were a prescription drug School Board as a negotiating other members from the BCA, group but formal certification will be lowered if the city re- drugs allegedly seized prior to belonging to his wife. At this PRINCESSES PAST AND PRESENT . . . from left are Sigrid Goplin, Osseo, 1971. at- ceives the full 80 percent reim- an arrest. Winona Police Department and point the agent indicated he wag is being awaited from the state. Lynn Marie Boland 16, Independence,; Wis., tendant; Cindy Hammer, Osseo, 1970 prin- Winona County Sheriff's Depart- Nelson said that it appears at , bursement it is expecting from Langford argued the two plas- ., motioned to another room by tic bottles of pills reportedl ment were executing a search this time that the' schools' cus- pictured seated at right, was crowned 1972 cess; Martha Halama, Independence, 1971 state and federal governments. y Sheriff's Detective Bruce Stan- todial and maintenance staff Trempealeau County Dairy Princess Satur- princess, and Pat Shay, Independence, who Froedtert, which . formerly taken from Googins' vest pock- warrant May 4 at David J. Has- ton and was told Googins and s apartment 252 W. 4th St.,- and the cooks do not wish to day. Seaited at her left is her attendant, reigned as princess in 1969. (Mrs. Bill Knudt- had discharged its effluent into et when; he entered 252 W. 4th sett' , his wife were divorced. have formal recognition of a Debbie Paulson, 17, Osseo, Wis. Standing son photo) .: . the Mississippi River, has been After Stanton provided tha bargaining group under provi- required by the state Pollution agent with , the information on sions of the new state Employes Control Agency (PCA) to ar- Googins' marital status Peder- Labor Relations Act and pre- Dispute unresolved range for treatment that will l sen told Shannon fo place the fer to negotiate with the board lower the effluent's high BOD Bibles in schoo defendant under arrest. as they Jiave in the past. content to conform with stand- Stanton also testified , report- ards for interstate streams. ing that he told the agent about THE superintendent said) that Th e Goodview contract would he advisable , Googins being divorced and air it probably Counci I proceeds with whose terms have been ham- could create suit> so that lour or f ivepersons had for the board to name commit- mered out in considerable de- indicated to Stanton that Goo- tees to meet with each of the that this should tail at previous meetings of the gins was involved in drug traf- four groups and city and village councils next meeting. , spells fic. be done at the out maintenance requirements Mrs. Janet W. Jensen a BCA He also said he had been noti- curb and gutter program school board told , for testing and measuring appa- crime laboratory - analyst, tes- fied by the WEA that it wished be ho benefit commensurate perty. Willard Ward and Ron , Granting permission for an not available to him and that next City Council members voted ratus sets fees and provides for tified that after running three to meet with the board Monday night to proceed with with the estimated $900 cost. organization to offer free Bibles for that reason he would not its proposal on Dreas told the council there was periodic review by both parties standard tests on the drugs sha week to present a planned sidewalk, curb and City Engineer Robert J, Bol- to the agreement. to students in certain classes write an opinion. forthcoming contra ct matters. no possible benefit and pointed in the public schools could received from agent Shannon, gutter construction program lant said the street was built Langford told the board that she determined the pills in one out that the property had never Terms of the contract specify make the school district sub- but reserved the option to re- for access to a subdivision laid that Goodview will pay Winona he generally agreed -with the container to be methampheta- been a corner lot until the street ject to a lawsuit, members of Marijuana smokes apportion costs of a controver- out by the late Orval Hilke. an estimated $22,968 a year for the School Board of "Winona In- 1957 statement. mine and the second cylinder sial curb and gutter section. While the developer agreed to went in a year ago speciiically 20 years. . ¦ ' ' ' ' -;¦ ' • He noted that "a number of contained a drug which is not a dependent Dis- . . . ¦ . . . . " . itself in oven At issue in r— . k—- pay for street base and a loop- to serve the Hilke subdivision. Councilmen . directed that no- trict 861 were I • . . separation of church and state controlled substance (not ille- . " '¦ ' ' MILWAUKEE (AP) — Mari- a public hear- **' ed water main, Bollant said, he the city tice of their ratification be advised' Mon- cases have come about in the gal). :. .. . . * * They agrued that SCnOOl At this point Gernes moved juana itself was doing the ing on the as- V-lty¦ had declined to pay for the 't have accepted the given both to the PCA and the day night . Supreme Court. In general, the , sessment fi- ' ¦ ' . .. shouldn the drugs be admitted as evi- smoking, firefighters reported -, 250 feet of curb bordering the plat without having gotten Hil- village. They noted that the The opinion tender Of these cases is that after extinguishing a minor nanced proj- COUnCll drive-in restaurant property. PCA deadline for completion of BQarc| the utilization of public facili- dence. Langford objected , argu- ' ' • ¦ ' ¦ ke's agreement to pay all curb was given by I. kitchen fire late Mondaj . ect was a 250- . .. ' Standard city policy, said Bol- • ¦' the contract and signing by both ties for any religious purpose ing that agent Pedersen did not coste.k' • •: . t h e board's know what he was searching for They said the substance over- foot section of lant; dictates that the abutting council parties comes on June 26. legal counsel at with the support of the school ; There was some board request system violates separation when he removed the two bot- heated while being dried in an curb and gutter on Bluff view property be assessed. He said with this position, the agreement Other council business: after school directors last doctrine of the Constitution." tles from Googins' vest pocket. oven. ; Circle. It runs along the eastern the situation is the same as if from Councilmen month had been asked by two They found no one in the property line of the Mr T's Res- particularly Bids for repair of City Well Langford said that while he Gernes argued the agent did . the property Were a corner lot. Howard Hoveland and G-aylord representatives of Gideons In- smoke-filled apartment and po- taurant, and owners of No. 10, at the Johnson Street was not sure about the condi- have the right to remove the , that pro- This concept drew strong pro- Fox. Fox wondered when ihe ternational for permission to lice said they were trying to perty protested the assessment tests from two members of Ihe station, will be taken July 3. tions under which the Gideons plastic bottles because they refusal to pay had occurred The well is producing at only offer Bibles to students in the expected to make the distribu- were in plain view. identify the tenant. proposal en grounds there would GRC Corp., owner of the pro- fifth and ninth grades and was told it happened this partial capacity and hasn't been of dis- tion, he felt that any appear- The issue, Judge Challeen spring but that previous to that serviced since 1957. trict schools. ance that the distribution was said is whether the bottles were Gideons is an organization , the city had assuiried (incorrect An interest rate of 7 l/t per- sanctioned by the school dis- taken as the result of a search ly. it turned out) that the Hilke approved for deferred that provides free Bibles to ho- trict would be factual grounds or if they were in plain, sight. cent was tels, motels schools and other firm would cover, all costs. assessment payments for pub- , for a lawsuit. The judge stated someone There was no dispute about at the recom- institutions and the two local In his opinion, Langford said, "can't search to get evidence Recreational vehicle lic improvements representatives had requested assessment against other pro- mendation of Finance Officer "authorizing the Gideons to to make an arrest." perties touched by the proposed this permission to go into the class- distribute . Bibles in the school Darrell Johnson. He said rooms "It seems you have a real improvement. , explain the nature of during class or school time serious arrest problem here will cover costs of bonds that their organization and . , Hoveland complained about attorney , as the could subject the district to a Mr. Gernes, and I'm sure you are issued, including students left the room, to have repair course backed breakdown of communications fees, without charging the costs suit by a taxpayer or citizen realize it;" he added. the city administration Bibles available for presenta- who objected to such distribu- "My position at this time is Informal approval for the or field and that the supply of He said, nevertheless, that he between to general taxation. The change tion without charge to those and the public and called for . tion.'?^ it (the pills as evidence) . is not ganization of a course In recrea- qualified repairmen was limited. believed that motorcycle repair was suggested by the state pub- who requested them. tion vehicle mehanics at the could be accommodated within guarantees that such things lic examiner, Johnson said. ; The board was meeting as a admissible," he said , but indi- After hearing Hemsey's pro- Asked about the legality of committee of the whole Monday Winona Area Vocational-Techni- the nine-month period wouldn't crop up again in the Specifications for purchases cated he wanted more time to . such a procedure, the board's night and couldn't take action. study the plain view ruling. cal Institute was given Monday posal, no objections were ex- In answer to subsequent ques- future. He said cases of unjust of petroleum for city vehicles, attorney, Robert D, Langford , night by the School Board of pressed by the board to his re- tions, Hemsey said there were assessment have occurred in the July through September, and of cited conclusions of then Attor- Winona Independent District quest that be begin looking for only a few institutes in the state recent past and that they could a slide for the park department ney General Miles Lord in a 861. an instructor for the course and offering such a course and that have been avoided by exercise were approved. Bids will be similar 1957 matter. Plans for the . ¦ continue with planning for its there was agreement that the of a little foresight. taken at forthcoming meetings. At that time Lord was asked nine - month organization. Winona institute was a logical After asking City Attorney for an opinion , on the consti- Council approves , j place to offer such instruction course, which SCnOOl The board, however, was George M. Robertson Jr. wheth- tutionality of. a plan for distrib- ' meeting as a committee of the due to the city's proximity to er it would be proper, Fox pro uting Gideon Bibles in a public would be add- the Mississippi River. ed to the in Board whole Monday night and could posed that "we put the whole Stevens County school system, but he declined stitute's curri- take no action on the matter. Director Kenneth P. Nelson thing in and adjust the assess- to write an opinion. Pelzer project culum next L- ' Dr. L. L. Korda , presiding in asked whether, when it made ments later," He said deleting First, Lord said, he did not a statement of need for such a fall, were reviewed by William the absence of board President the section from the overaii feel that if an opinion were is- City Council members Mon- closings be considered. Instead, institute director , Frank J, Allen, said the pro- course, the Department of Man- contract would be wasteful since asks disaster sued it would settle the prob- day night approved plans and the city can pay the costs with L. Hemsey, power Services provided data who said preliminary approval posal would be placed on the piecemeal work is too expen- lem. specifications for the Pelzer its state-aid funds, he said . concerned with the number of sive. This, he said , was a case Bollant said the city would of the program proposal ha-s agenda for action at next Mon graduates that might be placed Street bypass project and will been received . day's regular board meeting. Councilmen wondered wheth- aid for farmers where the parties involved have to pay crossing-construc- in jobs. (AP) could be expected to go to court take bids July 17 on the work. tion costs on a time-and-mate- Instruction would be given, Hemsey was asked about Hemsey said that projections er they could turn again lo MORRIS, Minn. - The Two permits stiil remain to principally, Hemsey said , in costs involved in the establish- the restaurant firm for payment Stevens County Commissioners and that the court wauld be rials basis, with railroad per- made by the department indi- the proper forum for deter- be secured from state agencies, sonnel doing the work . repair of snowmobiles and boat ment of the course and he re cated that the demand for grad- in case the city tried and failed have passed a resolution asking reported Cit Engineer Robert de- mination of the question. y Much of the uproar was motors and that applications for plied that he estimated an ex uates would grow, reaching a to assess the development com- Gov. Wendell Anderson to J. Bollant: a permit to depos- enrollment already have been penditure of between $3,00o ana figure of around 160 within pany. Robertson said he couldn't clare the county a disaster area He said that certain court quelled by Councilman Howard $5,000 would be required for answer that one for sure. because of adverse conditions cases had been cited in the re- it fill dredged I Hoveland's pacifying motion to received. about four years, but that the from Crooked Hemsey recalled that tne equipment. exact area in which job place- Pointing out that bids will affecting farmers. quest for an opinion but that in C"\\\i refer the matter to the admin- Slough onto V-lly istrative section for further course has been in planning He was asked whether motor- ment was expected had not been be taken July 3, Councilman Officials said muddy, wet these cases there was present- ed expert testimony that was the proposed /¦< 'I investigation, Hoveland pointed since 1971, that content had cycle motor repair would be in- defined precisely. Earl Laufenburger proposed fields have hampered farmers V-OUnCII-,.. cluded in the course. He said that when a brochure in their spring planting. Only 20 right of way out that it isn't known yet been developed with the advice approval of the whole project , and a Public | He said that the original pro - on a proposed course in auto with a final decision on the dis per cent of the crop is in the whether the Milwaukee will of an advisory committee and permit to agree to any such offer. posal included instruction in parts considered for addition to putcd section reserved untii ground. Service Commission Mean- that a need for graduates who cross two sets of railroad while, he said, Bollant should would be employed in recrea this area but that state depart- the curriculum was circula ted , June 19, the next council meet- If the county Is declared a ment officials had expressed another concerned with the pro- disaster area , it would be eli- Council rejects tracks at grade. have some council guidance on tional vehicle motor repair had ing. The motion carried without Both are expected to come whether to investigate the mat- doubt that this could be cover- posed recreation vehicle repair opposition. gible for emergency funds. been established by the Winona ed in t h e nine-month course course also was distributed through shortly, Bollant said. ter further. office . Also involved in the contract of the Department nl outlined and suggested that , Hemsey said only two appli- Bollant noted that it then will The counci] also got off a few Manpower Services. will be sidewalk repair work that sidewalks will be assessed. liquor license city to ne- shots at rain-oat" perhaps, the course be length- cations for the auto parts course that regulai be necessary for the maintenance Hemsey said that Flay 11. ened to 11 months. were received but 19 were re- mostly between Wabasha and Estimates are gotiate apportionment of grade of existing crossings in connec- cost aboul Brown , manager of the Winom Hemsey said institute admin- ceived for the recreational vehi- King streets all across the 4-inch sidewalk will crossing and signal construction tion with another agenda office of the employment ser istration was reluctant to do cle repair course and that 10 city. Bollant said trees and 90 cents per square foot and costs with tho Milw aukee and item. (for vice had found that there was this and had decided to hold already bad paid preliminary roots will be grubbed out by that 6-inch concrete drive application Chicago & North Western Councilmen took note ) 95 cents of a pe- a demand for graduates in this lo a nine-month course. fees. the city park department and ways will cost about . Councilmen turned down al- railroads. tition bearing 79 signature s most without comment a re- The C&NW portion will cost protesting the Milwaukee's quest for the city's single unal- an estimated $21,000 nnd the practice of leaving a switch en- located on-sale li quor license Milwaukee portion about $64- gine standing on tracks between Monday night. 000, Bollant reported. Main nnd Johnson streets with Filing the request were Mr. He added that the Milwaukee its engine idling, Taxpayers fight valuation boost and Mrs. John Beck , who op- might be willing to talk about Petitioners charged this goes erate Char- I some in-city grade crossing on for hours at a time, es- By JIM JOHNSON in Minneapolis alleging cur- basing taxation on market val- farms during the past decade, can influence the legislature, the lie's D&D Bar r. closures as full or partial pay- peciall y between 4 and 7 a.m. Dally News Staff Writer rent method of financing ue of property, which varies "either from exessively high With a personal note illus- and Ca fe , 117 V-lty ment of its crossing costs. This and 2:30 and 7 p.m. it creates LEWISTON , Minn. - There schools, partly from property according to the use of the pro- taxes or low farm prices," that trating his belief on the current Main St. -, ., is a matter that historically has excessive smoke and fumes in will be a great change in tho Westbrock When Coun- LOUnCll been a sore point with coun- the neighborhood, they charged, 1973 legisla- taxes, is unfair and discrim- perty, that an equitable means farmers had to unite for their taxation situation , composition of the "1 am looking forward to cilman Earl cilmen and the current revival as well as a noise nuisance. ture based on candidates' posi- inatory. would be to base taxes on the own survival. said, Schulz: pointed out that the rental value or the land . He buying my own home, or my L a u f c n- proved no exception . Councilmen directer' the man- tions on tho current real estate "Here we have one man in moved to deny the ap- Nominated for consideration ager 's staff to l ook into the 1971 legislature's levy limita- said that Chapter 31 of the the state capi tol (referring to father's farm , but this is im- burger valuation question , Roy Schulz current plication , Councilrnar Howard were crossings at Winona , Min- matter, then began criticizing night's tion put a ceiling on the amount 1971 legislature extra session Rocmcr) who suggests taxes be possible with the real predicted at Monday estate taxes. Hoveland protested thnt it nesota and Garfield streets. Al- constmctlon methods used on meeting of the Wlnonn Chapter the dollar levy can be in- laws, Article 23, directs asses- raised and all the assessors in " creased by local taxing units sors in ad valorem taxation lo He called for a strong or- should IK? processed through ternatively, Bollant went on , the crossing. Councilman Borzys- of the Minnesota Real Es- the state have raised taxes not dis- each year, but State Tax Com- consider earnings potential ganization at the local level to regular channels and council might consider Wilson , kowski pointed L the rugged tate Taxpayers Association across tho board ," lie said , add- summarily. Dacota , Harriet and Lincoln Mankato Avenue crossing missioner Arthur C. Rocmcr computing market value. fight combat rising property eval- missed as an (MRETA) meeting. ing, "We have to for our Councilman Gaylord Fox then streets. example of unparalleled rough- hns ordered county assessors A letter has been sent to those pres- uations and led the meeting for Between 125-150 persons gath- freedom!" He urged moved to table tlv matter and Cries Immediately arose that ness and Nelson said other rail- Golf nnd Rec- to incr«ase tho valuation on Commissioner Roemcr , said ent to join the taxpayers or- the nomination of Winona Coun- ered at tho Cady officers. got n second , a maneuver that the proposed closings are con- roads manage to build and reation barn here to listen to property, thus effectively in- Schulz, asking for guidelines ganization and sat down to ty MRETA chapter , elected county shut off debate. The vote to ta- centrated in a single area , maintain relatively smooth Schulz , lobby ist for the organ- creasing the tax burden on the bnsed on the article, and he heavy applause. Earl Timm was individual. He contended that plans on distributing the policy director ; Elmer Ploctz, vice di- ble was unanimous. namely the 1st and 2nd Wards. grade crossings, unliko those of ization and a 20-year veteran of ' license request was The same kinds tho Milwaukee. legislature from the in his home county some pro- to members of the MRETA. I.EON Westhrock , 21 , organ- rector, and Mrs, George Slav- Another of complaints the state approved , however . It was sub- have in past years Bollant noted that recent Mankato area. perty taxes have risen as much "Wo have a high quality of izcr for the state association en, secretary-treasurer, all from greeted pro- as 30 percent because of in- life in Minnesota ," lie told the nnd a Hoffman , Minn., teacher, rural Winona County . mitted by Leo Orlikowski , 1062 posals to discontinue some changes in crossing design — THE TWO-YEAR-OLD tax- creased valuation. Market vnl- nudience, "and maybe wo arc followed Sfchulz on the plat- Before the almost two-hour E, King St., who applied for grade crossings In 3rd and 4th including use of continuous an- payers group has strongly uos throughout tho state for proud of it , but can we afford form . meeting adjourned , Timm an on and off-sale beer license Wnrd confines. jolnted rail — had produced urged members to "go to war " farm property hnve risen an av- this high standard of living?" Seeing his role with the or- urged the audience to attend for :il5 Steuben St. Orlilowskl Mayor Norman E. Indall not- smoother, longor-lastlng cross- on the local level in the fight erage 15 percent, while the resi- referring to increased taxation. ganization as a "mission," ho the county commissioners rneot wrote that he plans to retire ed hastily that hearings would ings for tho Milwaukee. These against valuation increases on dential values are increasing at A man In the audience said said , "Wc havo 15,000 d ues pay- ing this afternoon with mem from the city fire department have to be held on any such methods will ho used ir* future real estate. MRETA has filed an average of 10-20 percent. that because 300,000 farmers ing members now, but we need liers of the local MRETA chap nnd purchase the establishment proposals and Councilman Bar- construction nnd maintenance, suit with U. S. District Court Schulz argued that Instead of have had to abandon thcit at least 40,000" beforo the group tor. from Vincent Wcavci. ry Nelson suggested that no he said.

v fi Hairdressers offer Donna Gehlhaart to tips on tipping head J o b's Daughfe rs some "The Twenty-Third Psalm" Installed with Miss Gehlhaart, DEAR ABBY: I never thought the day would come when was the theme chosen by Donna daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rich- something in your column would provoke me «nough to Gehlhaait, new honored queen, ard Gehlhaart, were Jean write to you, but "PERTURBED," who claims that in some for the installation ceremony of Haeussinger, daughter of Mr. small towns hairdressers make as much as i$100 a day, so Bethel 8, International Order of and Mis. - Frank McKeown, why tip, certainly got my back up. senior princess; Cheryl Eddy , I have been a hairdesser in Massachusetts and Florida Job's Daughters, Sunday after- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Al- for 12 years and I have, yet to find such a place. I've noon at the Masonic Temple, '¦ '¦ ' " ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • ; ¦ ' ¦ "- bert Eddy, junior princess; . . ' . ' . : ' . - ¦ ' . . . ' . - . . . .worked in ' - _ . . . ¦ -. . ¦ ¦ ¦ ~~~~ I some of the Jane Robertson, daughter oi . . Mr. and Mrs. George Robert- ^ sl Frauenkron -Tul ius; Dear Abby: S r Z son Jr,, guide, and Louise Ro- weddi ng postponed binson, daughter of Mr. and By Abigail Van Burea Mrs. Harvey Robinson, marshaL ¦ ¦ ¦"¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ . • , .. . . . " . - ...... - ...... meet. After The June 10 weddiniz of MJss Appointed officers installed were Jenny Church Linda An- working 5V4 days, my gross pay was $50 for the week. So Kathy Lynn Tulius and Michael , ^ ^ derson, Barbara Blumentritt, (puri.y fiirfi.) you can see where I would be without tips from my cus- D. Frauenkron has been post- tomers. ; poned due to illness in the fann- Joan Cotton, and Dorothy Fitch, Pamela Krick We hairdressers pay a lot for our schooling, and today ily. The couple were to have messengers; Jayne Polley, mu- we make less than a gu-1 who has just graduated from high been married at St. Martin ' sician; Laurl Tschumper, chap- The engagement of Miss s plain; ICande Larson recorder; school and takes a secretarial job. Lutheran Church. , Pamela Krick, daughter of J. P., PLYMOUTH, MASS. Parn Larson, treasurer; Dede Mrs. Kathleen Krick, Roll- Hinds librarian ; Gehl- , Deann Minn., arid the late DEAR ABBY: You can tell your hairdresser , Cioyd, haart, inner guard; Nancie ingstone, that he can move to Duncan, Okla. There are seven beauti- Rushford woma n Pickett, outer guard; Jane Hag- Francis. Krick, to Richard cians in the shop I go to and they all make at least $90 a berg, junior custodian; Mary Wood, son of Mr. and Mrs. day, and $100 on Fridays and Saturdays! And this town has honored on Reinatts, senior custodian. Floyd 'Wood, Is announced [f. " REGULAR PATRON. a population of only 25,000. Installing officers were Pam- by her mother, DEAR PATRON : I gave Cloyd your message,; and he 91st birthday ela Kinzie, retiring honored Miss Krick is employed says the hairdresser who takes in that kind of money (S Sueen , and past honored queens , Tina 's Beauty Salon, RUSHFORD, Minn. pecial) inda Heyer Kim Linahan by MUST have a very lucrative sideline. , , , and her fiance — Mrs. Clara Anderson cele- Margaret Ferguson, Christine Rollingstone DEAR ABBY: Tell "PERTURBED," who doesn't think JOB'S DAUGHTERS INSTALLATION Kinzie, retiring honored queen and install- brated her 91st birthday May Snell, Mrs. Susan Holan, Mrs. is emp-loyed by Gilbertscn beauticians need tips, to come off it. There are some jobs ... Miss Donna Gehlhaart was installed ing officer for Sunday's event, and Mr. and: 28 with a party at the home of William Ferguson, and majority Trucking, Winona, , her granddaughter and family, that wouldn't be worth a plug nickel without the tips. honored queen of Job's Daughters at a Mrs. Harry S, Johnson Jr., associate Bethel members Leigh Ann Neidig and The "wedding is planned Waiing on tables is one, and hairdressing is another. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bunke. .' • Sunday ceremony at the Masonic Tempie. guardian and Bethel guardian respectively. Mrs. Becky Nyseth. for Aug. 19 at Holy Trinity -- . -; -. . -/ ¦ BEEN BOTH Mrs. Anderson has been a Soloist was Mary Gerlach. Pictured from left , Miss Cheryl Eddy,, jun- The Johnsons resigned their posts after Catholic Church; v for 18 years, resident of the Good Shepherd Ushers , were Gary Ahrens, Bri- DEAR ABBY: I have been a hairdresser ior princess ; Miss Gehlhaart ; . Miss Jean having serve>d the Bethel for the past six Lutheran Home the past two and only once did I come close to making $100 nv one day. an Masyga, Jim Wright, and ¦ ¦ Haeussinger, senior princess; Miss Pam years. (Harriet --ally photo) years. Prior to that time, she And that included my tips! ' .;¦- " Kevin Sonsalia. Herbert Schla- Kuecker open house "PERTURBED" is Disturbed. ROSE ; and her hus- dinske was in charge of stage band , who has and lighting. Mrs. Ralph Hub- CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) what that beauty ¦ DEAR ABBY: T would like to know Babysitting since died, liv- bard aitd Mrs. Maurice Godsey "— . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kueck- operator who told "PERTURBED" she made $100 a day ed at Choice, were In charge of guest boks. rural Brownsville, Minn., was smoking. She must have meant $100 a WEEK! class to be Minn , where A reception was held in the er, NOT HACKING IT IN HACKENSACK they at o n e ballroom following the installa- will observe their 4(Hh wedding - DEAR ABBY: After reading tile letter from "PER- offered at YWCA time operated tion. . anniversary Sunday with art "tips " the Choice Those performing in the arch open house from 2 to 5 and TURBED" who says beauty operators don 't need ¦ because they make so much money, I had to write: '¦ The . VWCA has announced Store, v. of roses were Leslie Woodworth, from 7 to 9 p.m. at their Dawn Church, Cheryl Pickert, home. Children of the coupla I wish "PERTURBED" could be a hairdresser for just plans for a class in babysit- Until the past schedule several years Jane Sawyer, Gretchen Garber, will host the event. No invita- eight hours. She'd find out what it's like to keep on ting to be held June 13, 14 and with clients calling and begging, to , fee worked in on a Fri- Mrs. Anderson and Kathy Hipps. tions have been sett. day afternoon. Also, trying to be pleasant to a different per- 15 at the "VWCA. The class, free had been active son every 20 minutes when your f«et are killing you and of charge , is open to boys, girls in B arden- Wrs. Anderson you are half dead. and adults interested in learn- irig. She still enjoys reading THE LOGKHORNS No beauty operator I everknew could cut the mustard ing different aspects of baby- and reads daily newspapers to without tips. I don't care where she works. sitting. Classes will be held at keep up with world news, she BOILING OVER IN BALTIMORE 7 each evening. says. - . ¦ ¦ Mrs. Norman Baron will : '", ' DEAR ABBY: I am a beauty operator who wants to tell ' Mrs. Anderson has three liv- speak on. physical care at the ing children Mrs. Buelah Ben- you how I feel about tipping. first session; Mrs. John Breit- , In our profession, tips are appropriate, but a Up should low will speak on the mother's ston, Rochester ; Gilman, Tor- not be expected. I get. tips, which I appreciate, but if I Your horoscope -—Jeane Dixon rance, Calif., and Ordell, kMa- " ' • ' ' point of view at the second ses- . . . '- couldn't make it without tips, I'd find something else to do sion and the final session will beU for a uving. After all, a tip is something extra gi-ven because : Mrs. Anderson was born May thing. For WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7 include talks by a local fireman the customer feels generous, and it's never a sure on safety and emergency plan- 26, 1881, to Herman and Caro- Please print this in defease of th« hairdressers who want Vour Birthday Today: Begins a journey into new experi- line Dahl Anderson. ning and a talk by Mrs, A. E. ' - ¦ ' ¦ ¦ their patrons to know , that we apppreciate their patronage ences/ changes of goals. Experiments are always at hand so • • . whether they feel like tipping or not. There are three opera- that no matter how many are rejected , there are plenty Schleder on children 's games tors where I work and they all agree with me. more. Today's natives tend to be inventive, lucky, Those of and stories. MOVES TO PEPIN ¦ ¦ HAPPY IN NATCHEZ, MISS past times have been daydreamers, but moderns have above Persons interested in t h e NELSON, Wis. (Special) - normal energy, course are asked to call the Y Paul Klitzing, rural Nelson, has Problems? Trust Abby. For a personal reply, write to and register oefore the first ses- moved to the Sass Nursing ' Aries (March 21-April 19) : No easy solutions are likely. . ABBY, BOX 69700, L. A„ CALIF. 90Q69 and enclose a starrip- Apologies may be in order, if so, do the niceties gracefully. sion. Persons completing the Home, Pepin. He had been rf , addressed envelope, ; Romance saves your share of the day. course will have their names making his heme with his Taurus (April 20-May 20): Circumstances bring you face added to the YWCA file for daughter, Mrs. George Fulher, Haessig open house to face with an unfamiliar view of yourself — it's time to babysitting. Nelson. break bad habits, leave behind outworn ideas. Reput)lican ^aBnaaeaaeBaBHaaaBa MaManaBaBa^aaaBa^aaaMalaBeaaaaaeaaaaeaeaeaaaea ^a^aHaMaBalaB - PLAINVIEW, Minn. (Special) Gemini (May 21-June 20); Unexpected is the word for — Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Haes- most of what's happening. Being patient brings you comfort women set late in the- day, and you collect rewards. sig, Plainview, -will celebrate Cancer (June 21-July 22): The pursuit of pleasure dis- their 25th wedding anniversary tracts you and others so that not much is done. Distant affairs meeting Sunday with an open house from are more amenable to progress than local issues. ) 2 to 5 p.m. at the Immanuel Leo (July 23-Aug. 22): If you must offer advice, be sure aWK WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special that you are being paid for it. Minding one's own business wFF%m ^H *wma^mra Lutheran Church here. Children ¦ — A joint meeting of the State is a delicate art and its practitioners are ahead . I l la^llK^VA I ^L^^a^H w-v^k wiI'^#l^i ^J || H Hi Federation of Republican Wom- of the honorees will host the Virgo (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Trying to patch things up is PA1N 1 V I k I 1B |7A *I mH mw*Mm7*IBfcelHiAwm. MM. Va%Tii m. ii^^iI ~ft>V^BLafl k^ en and the Third District Re- event. Friends and relatives are premature. Some matters have to proceed another notch so in * ******** * *» L_j others can agree with you that changes are needed. publican Women 's Organizations invited. No cards have been sent. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): All is pleasant enough if you will be held June 14 at 10 a.m. ¦ relax and accept the flaws of the world along with the good at the Midway Motor Lodge parts. You can do a lot about your share of both . and Hoffman House, La Crosse. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Enjoy the changing conditions, Flower d isplay watch for stimulating suggestions. Theatrical qualities show The theme of the meeting ordinary episodes " GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) up in what would on other days be very . will be "Women in Numbers. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Tensions abate somewhat. Speakers at the morning ses- — The Garden of Eden Club display Business news is spotty , and you needn't believe much of sion will include Mrs. Byron staged its spring flower activity is more important. at the Bank of Galesville Fri- what you hear. Social Ising, Oshkosh, Republican na Capricorn (Dec . 22-Jan. 39): Persist in clearing up rou- tional committeewoman; Mrs. day. The display is presented something different when the ittlcr tine , so you can be ready for Mark Everix, Chilton, State Re as a memorial to John Sp , time conies. Have pleasant social action. publican Federation president, who organized the club in 1961. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Conciliation is the thing to» and Mrs. Lowell Jackson, Madi- Flowers featured in Friday 's attempt now. Work , however, routine, doesn't go as planned , son , State Republican vice- show included iris , lilies, paint- but provides openings for innovation. chairwoman. ed daisies, tulips , peonies , col- Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20): The emotional side of life A panel discussion will be umbine and roses. comes out on top today, more and more as the hours are presented by State Republican filled. Find and share good entertainment. Federation chairwomen. Reservations may be made by Correction made on writing Mrs. John Satory , 1404 Iris, Peonv Show Ettrick children Summer music ' J Main St., La Crosse, Wis., j MISSES' I ' larnvta^M® 71$^^ 54601, by Saturday, The identification of Mis. ALL-NUDE COTTON BOXER WOMEN'S W. W. Lowe was omitted in leave for Norway program begins TANK TOPS SHIFT DRESSES f R.B. ».« .. b.r. PANTY MISH SHORTS'N JOGGING f RUSHFORD OFFICERS the picture in Monday 's edi- ETTRICK , Wis. (Special) — The summer instrumental mu- tion as a court of honor win- HOSE PANTIES VEST SET SHOES RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) Like a fairy tale come true Is sic program in Winona Public j Sift.* $468 4ft $JB — New officers of the GARA ner at the minimi iris ami' ,.- ¦ peony show held Saturday the trip to Norway planned for Schools began Monday. Rehear- * | Mc at Rushford High School are ^K ^Jic W99 v at tin; Merchants National the four children of Mr. and sals and lessons for both junior i MISSES' JAMAICAS S B m m «•»¦A*9 » - < Days cWy Connie Johnson , president; Joan %F V W mWt a. WlP M J a»" Hank, Mrs. LQWC , with an . 3.1t..4 Doy3 gm R-B. ««-4 D0y, ».,. «».5»1 to. H.g. 1.33-4 Doy, «.„. 3.67-4 Day, Thompson , vice president ; Re- Mrs. Robert Hanson , South high and senior high band and *.a MJ l Spnngr, ^ngy ,l„v.l. .. .t yle, , JX Pol ye.lor •f ¦ \ J arrangement "IHowcr Girl " , puH-on ! Popular lhodei In flo»llcwolj|andlog, Notacoltonor cot- Wl>ll»ornav y cormi» 2 ond color* In mochlne--washable. nae Kahoun , secretary; Patty Beaver Creek. Relatives in Os- orchestra students are schedul- 0 ilyios. Suos 818. -mmmf h . | . collons or fln» owloU using Karl ICoscnfeld pe- |0p 0 loo »h««rB, Floral prima or while, Ion polyMtar. Cut» upp»ra wllh itrlp* J blendi. Hatling, treasurer; Patty Aus- onJes, won the arrangement lo, Mr. and Mrs . Jon Godager , ed weekly. AH of the rehe ar- 6 9 S»«ml.i»»tr«ichn»~ Bminli.5-7; brUlt, prlnli ond lollda. trim. Whlt»»tlpp U I Sliw. 1 0-20, 3B-44 . 16K -24K . lon S/MMT/r. 5-8 , 4 doyi w,ly I Boyi'M. Charge III «ol«.5-10. Chor tlon , senior high representative; sals and lessons are held at ILKXMXKX KKxioMxwiioMaeJi ' 8« III L.r,nnM rinrnninwunni Diii M » j JoAnne Wcstby, junior high rep- reserve championship. who are in the shopping busi- Judges for (he show were resentative, and Debbie For- ' ness, hnve invited tho Hanson the senior high school. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. siiul l. children lo .spend the summer Summer schedules have been sythe, pointkeepcr. Stillwater. Mr. .Shutf Is n With them. given to each hand and orches- senior judge with the The four , Connie , ill , Shelly, FAREWELL PARTY American Iris Society and' tra student and parents are 16, David , 14, and Susan, ll , urged to have the students there WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) rejliwial vice president of left on the frcighLship, tbe — A farewell party was held AIS Itetfion 8, and also is at the prescribed times. This Norsk Carrier , owned by the program Is offered b the pub- Thursday afternoon for Minnie president .if the American (Jodngers , Monday evening, y Schultz, who has been a cook Peony Society. Ills creden- lic schools free of charge. Sunset Elementary from Duluth , Minn. Seventeen If any student did not receive at for many tials were incorrectly given dnys will be required for the years. as Mrs. Sii»l»"s a schedule , or if you are new trip to Norway, with a stop at in the city, tho following in- P , Rotterdam in Holland. T h e structors should bo contacted at 2 Godngers also have four chil- the high school; Robort Andrus, 4Dr 45" Ulw? a63&-, Z™f*¦ awm1V VO Boy* ' or rjlrli'llo hlwolflhl bBk«i. FoldlM olumlnum dome on poly jj ^^^^^ S^mmr dren , three boys nnd a girl. senior high school JL ^ ¦ *ll 5 ' ««0 J «V7 lo -4 Doyt a^ mr band; Jerry 3 »p»od,boK Ion; M j 6 Iwlti-orlparora , luogogacm ritr, propy UnewebbedchoIr or73" S .. . .",' ' . „ „' „ . ' ¦V& Mrs, Godager is a niece of nhrrvnam bhde. M aWChttreaIII t I hondollperbrake. , heodll rjhf. dmlm. Sp«lolly „k«ll A day! j 20 •ldM e« ..II • odhwlve , # »vjp Lehmeicr, senior high school or- 9 r ocelot«-«w»r ibeett. Print ^¦ ««lJl I Robert Hanson's fa ther, Harold chestra and junior high school I «x>OB^o«i««iitioiie»>». taae«i aoi««eaeB»w"« aaB«inw ooi»e»»"at »»ii»M i wli rayontal»«ripoddedcovmr. mt led) Hanson , Ettrick . a native of orchestra or Jackson Herr , jun- Norway. ' ior high school band. S^§P1 ^^I POOR BUSTER ! p ^ ^ ^ ^H] p 0°R BUSTER! BOXED ^SS^Ii,^^^^^ « fe^^ PIALLOWS 11 HUie RENT JUM CARDS ^ ^^^ «; |% M ort,d Color, f^f^ Nfii^Wm r ^ ^ffl FLORAL SHEARED TOVVlELS 200 FACIAL COSMETIC - — ^ m^mm. mmr TISSUES PURSE Mat.earn. m) imfLC V' A^C «.aH«r c S^k SRm •Wtmmmm^' V '" AT AT Kr..s.i «ff)c Kmaaa; ««( *& M a9%9 "' fACi9miovm I TTIITX CK tow Prhi fO Uw Prk*

j. . , niversary Sunday with an omen house from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Nelson ladies aid Ballroom, Centervnlle. Acorn NELSON, Wis. (Special* — The honorees' children will 6ost Grace Lutheran Ladies Aid will the event Friends and relatives meet Wednesday at 2 p.m . at Brornmerich 25th are invited* ¦ the church. The Rev. R. T. 5T7) ' ' ¦ CM FFY I . ?-> Beckman will be in charge of Mr* and Mrs. Ervta Brom- There are about 200,000 Cu- the topic lesson. ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' merich, Trempealeau, Wis., will ban refugees in southern Flori- . . ¦ ¦ ¦¦ • ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • • ¦• ¦ ¦ yy . - ' " observe their 25th wedding an- da. - MUSIC. HOBBY DAY DOttle STj iHj Wellington l| | Advertisement RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) fe I I MAIER DRUGS —Fourth, fifth and sixth grade J TED | -- -^ students at Rushford High By DOTTIE WELLINGTON foamy. Add cream of tartar, Money Does ! JJJ School presented a music and Special occasions in our fam- vanilla and salt and continue DOWNTOWN J ^— hobby day May 24 at the school. ily are often celebrated wth a beating until egg whites are al Thru Use Our Prices Good A concert was given by the Glorified Sunshine Cake. A pale most stiff . Add % cup sugar Aam^^tWw^frrffL^fmMtm*. Sunday J ' Computer Matter . . . W m fifth and sixth grade bands and yellow sponkecake is filled and very slowly, beating all the mm\\^4fSSam ^ammim ^4imWmm\ June \ By MIKE LEONARD while; it will form a meringue Service m 11, 1972 Jmatmm^*\WmWaTrl crafts were displayed by fourth frosted with a rich mixture of Charg* \^ m^mmmmmm\\VlfaA^kmW § Banks are in business to loan y graders. A demonstration of custard and whipped cream, with the egg whites. Srape in- ^Tj\^ * m* I to another bowl. money. It's the only way a hank ^a** MSLA making of lefse was given as Kept in the refrigerator until I part of a Norwegian Next put 4 egg yolks into mix- can earn the money it needs to \ ^HZ..m1 - \m theme. serving time, it is delicate, ^ pay salaries, costs of operating, >A^r^^ i m cool and delicious. Try it for er bowl (no need to wash it) ^ your next birthday or family and beat until thick and lemon I SUMMER ^ '^m— W Edie reunion. colored, about 2 minutes. Add ^ ^^^^jf I There are many different kinds ''{Si Adams weds ^ ^ ^ GLORIFIED SUNSHINE Vi cup sugar gradually, beat- c^^T of loans -which a "Full Service" Jg W A^miSm ¦ ¦¦ ¦'¦ - Bank makes — personal, rnort- jf. i, trumpet player CAKE ing all the while. The egg yolks NEEDS .clj^PS ' gage, farm, improvement, busi- Mp % jSmWrJ^l ¦Cake: , • • will increase in volume and be- ness, short-term, long-term, etc. JSMTa4aWmW^I SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - 8 large eggs come pale and thick. Fold egg C^^ And, sometimes when a local ^K\v Actress Edie Adams and white and yolk mixtures to- ' ¦ ' m^^^&sj separated ;¦: $12.95 v«lu. :; ¦ ¦ 99, Vol.. / merchant or manufacturer needs trumpeter Pete Candoli Iiave % teaspoon cream gether. I; . ; Valu ; ;. ; more money than we have at •-- AammmAmamcfiWflaP^^^~&t&s&.-j | S | $t ^ . \ to married in a private ceremony of tartar Sift cake flour and measure. the moment, we borrow the . the .ol, .. . at the Fairmont Hotel, vrhere SCHOLL SCORE Mm money from other banks, and Our eongr^ulatlons 8radu- \Vz teaspoons vanilla!" Sprinkle over egg mixture in PAlM0UVE |p > 1 n0 Miss Adams is performing her %¦ teaspoon salt thirds and fold in gently but I then loan it :to our customers. ^L i5 ' « , T' nightclub act. atura Just as a merchant buys a re- gW> W'"0"^"^ C .."l«9.e. of IVi cups sugar, carefully. Pour into ungreased N l Teresa St. M^ry It is the third marriage for ; Rapid 1^^ frigerator for a lower price cost St.j s 'eae divided 10'' tube pan. Bake in lower I ExerGise : ^ H | and then sells it for more money ™l the ,W.A.^ Vo/Tech Inrfifute. Miss Adams, who was married I cup cake flour third of oven at 350 for 30 to 35 In order to pay his operating : Our best wishes for continued to the late comedian Ernie Ko- HA,R success! , Separate eggs while cold, but minutes or until caie springs costs and make a small profit — vacs and recently divorced pho- let them warm up to room back when pressed lightly with 1 Sdndols M so do we operate, tographer Marty Mills. Can- SHAVg . ; At the First National Bank of temperature before beating, It finger. Invert and hang on a 1 SPRAY mm n-oz. I That is what our American free Winona we are deeply concerned dpli's four previous wives in- will increase their volume and bottle or funnel to cool. Cooi clude actress Betty Hutton. ¦;• enterprise system is all about, about each customer, be he a the size of your cake. Four egg completely . — about 1# hours. FOR MEN hjl. ' neighbor arid j j mmwj m ^HB 1 Our product is money — our merchant or a —. yolks will be used in cake, the While «ake is baking, make I IC concern is for the economic we are concerned about hirn as In 1936 the world's first chain rest in custard. ¦ :¦ ¦ ¦¦ :- s the .only custard.A i - • ' • F E.t^\c . • M '- '"^AW *^mwP I soundness of the community in an . "individual." It' of five radar warning stations Do use your ekctric mixe* IH ——— - • . ^\ A ^* A . AAW/-. r«(oui.^' <\ , 4 which we operate, and the well- way in which we know how to be Custard: :• • - ^W¦¦ ' ¦ ' was greeted along the east for this one. Put egg whites hi P 'J " " " ^Si—¦¦¦¦ zs^^- 1 being of our customers. truly of "Full Service." 4 egg yolks ' SOt Value ' %* <* . - . . . k . -— ' : coast of Britain mixer bowl and beat until I . . . ; . . | % cup sugar ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ 1 tablespoon cornstarch : ¦ ¦ ¦¦ :- ::. . . $i.6o vcu . 1 pinch of salt 1 ::TOOTHBRUSH ' - ¦ - VYi cups milk i . _, .. - $2.49 Value - . . ; ; . I 1 envelope unflavored TUBE PH gelatin I ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ MYCITRACIN¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ^ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ % cup cold water ¦%. - ' ' ' ' ' or ¦ :. ' . ¦ ' ' : ¦ . . . ¦ " ANTIBACTERIAL 1 ihi teaspoons vanilla; Put egg yolks, sugar, corn- SOAP DIS^ starch and salt in large sauce- j ¦ H a.i»#'" ¦ ' . . , T-„ Aids in Heeling8 and U pan. Beat well and gradually I MIX OR*.m MATCH ^ ^I CAUCCD I TO? beat in milk. Cook and stir over Infection Fighting LLtANbtK MOST LISTENED I medum heat until custard | comes to a boil and is thick- ened. Remove from heat and stir in gelatin which has been softened 25- in cold water for i 5 2 ¦ :: ¦ ¦ ¦ : ¦ : minutes. Stir well to ; "- melt gela- ¦ :'1- .66:¦ ;• I - ¦ - "::¦ " ¦- --¦ " - ¦ . - " -" - , - " - - ¦¦ - - • ¦ ¦ - ¦ " , - • ¦ c¦ ¦ tin and then stir in vanilla. Cool -|i- ,- ¦ : ¦ -;. - m- . vaiuo- . - - - - . . . :•-- : . = - • -. • ¦ ' -«,. ¦ . ¦ ¦yfOO ^y . . - : ¦ . - "1¦/% THE WINONA AREA to room temperature and re- % ¦ IN swEiNrfs .' . ' . ¦: value,:,..; ; frigerate. - . M *w ______^____:: 1 When cake is thoroughly cool , I ; ^ ¦ ¦ ¦ run knife around pan and re I P0iS0n ¦ k : 1M Fantastik ; -¦;.;:/' ¦ k , " ;, | move. Slice horizontally into _ $1.50 Valu. h I I P-A ^PRAY three layers. Make filling. 4 D J «*¦«¦¦*•/« ' 'li'£si\" jrKAT -y Filling: I reanuts* ' -/feAV - Mtu,MEDI-wumOUIIC I IT'S 1 recipe custard (above) ¦ , CLEANER - ,:,: - | I ' ' M\\ ; 1 cup heavy cream U KILtS GO PHERS ' |H|V' ' ¦ ¦ >¦• A* I W Beat custard until smooth. | , '.: .' & MoiEs . j 32-oz. - Whip cream and fold into cus- v j BBJ j-irst Ala I tard. Put filling between lay- ers and on top and sides oi cake. Refrigerate 3 or 4 hours before serving. Serves 12. : ¦¦ : : ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ I- ' . ¦ ¦ ¦ 'W' ^, ' ' ¦ ": ¦ ,: I IS^KS^S^S^-d:i , , . • . -, KWNO I ; . ; _ ;; : (\ tQC , | $1.50 Volue js—sa $l -«9 Value Give conditional I ; jf^ 7 1 DESERT . ;: FJ RAID _^______| RADIO TWELVE-THREE-OH liquor license I k FLOWER- - .kk ; j rra House ::: I I - : 4 4 ¦- ¦ iwfnl ' $1.49 Value - ,J IN MARCH AND APRIL OF 1972 A RANDOM TELEPHON E SURVEY to 5f. Cloud Elks 8" ' Garden ST. CLOUD, Minn. (AP) — t> i w fT? I The St. Cloud City Council has j Deodorant BUG CONDUCTED BY STUDENTS OF THE BUSINESS & MARKETI NG voted 7-0 to give the local Elks (4J& I Club a conditional liquor li- 4.0I. ^ ; CLASS OF THE WINONA AREA VOCATIONAL-TECHNICAL INSTI- cense based on a recommenda- I 1SJ KILLER r^Si S tion from the city Human | Rights Council. I "W atT r #*ai~~a •mW TUTE*, ASKED . ., The Elks Club was given the $ 23 ¦ license on the condition that the T m *. . club vote against the national I 75 1 •s=s=s« whites only membership policy I L ¦ ! at the fraternal organization I ¦» • I 's it $2.07 VALUE ( _ | I national convention in July. ^ s "WHAT WINONA RADIO STATION The resolution also states that the St. Cloud Elks would have 90 days to remove the | VO-5 SHAMPOO j r^ mmlAVm X clause irom its local charter if Regular er Dry for Frequent Shampoos QV^ DO YOU LISTEN TO MOST?" the national discriminatory I membeiship policy remains after the conveniion. If the local $ BALSAM | fails to meet con- r ditions of the resolution, the I £* 1lei 10 M EXTRA BODY I City Council could revoke the club's liquor license. j . I THE WINONA AREA ANSWERED ... The Human Rights Commis- sion, which drafted the resolu- Ted Drug mm tion last Friday, has been urg- k |p«| ^ Maler Coupon ^K?l m a\ aVa\ m ing punitive action against the Elks Club for some time. I I ffl MAALOX Limit OQc II OO I Radar was known as early I l l SUSPENSION 2 KWNO... 62°/o as 1886 when Heinrich Hertz ^^ BU 1 showed that solid objects k HfleV With Coupon. Expir«» Sunday, Juna II, Wl. ^B»H U re- ' Oos<1 0nly Ted M>ler D Downtown. 98^ alue KAGE-FM ... 207o flect radio waves. - 1 ^ 1 ^ . *' '"° ' .^RCfl V N r 1 KAGE ... 18

To Whom It Way Concern: In March and April, 1972, I supervised a random telephone survey of subscribers of Northwestern Boll reachable through tho Winona , Minnesota, central office. This would include telephone subscribers in Winona, Goodview, Rollingstone, Minnesota JL a new City, Fountain City, Bluff Siding and Witoka. baby? ne sted mftieR - rf i In all, 694 direct-dial calls were attempted. 630 calls were completed, and O) tho question was asked Kuna , "Which W inona radio station do you listen to the most?" I i^Niicmri | The results wero as follow*: KWNO . . . 390; KAGE-FM ...128; KAGE-AAl . . . In this world, 112. there's always DISCOUNT room for AAA/ j I hereby certif that tho abovo figures are an accurate ! y tabulation af the re- one more. sponses received, and hove in no way been altered, or rephrased. / ON ALL PHOTO FINISHING MWm/V ^aW J Q^af . I J B)ack & wh |o and CoJor | Thomas Reeck <: Winona Area Vo-Tech FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY- IN CITY I mkwm1 N t a n 0 h r- 1 •t^l* 13. j Institute Call your Welcomo OPEN SUNDAY FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE I Waaon Hostess now. P Phone 452-4529 | DOWNTOWN 8:30 TO 6:00 — 452-7000 j : > Umim)srx mimam>#xwir^wmr,M\xm Warriors drop game of W to La Verne 4-3 kto|^ f|wctefk North Star veterans tiM^ made draft available ¦ . . .. • By STAN SCHMIDT from the tournament, but if it MONTREAL (AP) - The protected and the North Start Daily News Sports Editor should win it will face the loser went might take a chance on twjuees- Hockey ing him through the draft be- Ariz. — Winona of the David Lipscomb-Lewis into today's National PHOENIX, with a cause of his age and salary ar- State, suffering a case of first game at 4 p.m. Wednesday. League expansion draft chance of losing veteran for- rangements. game jitters, dropped a narrow The Leopards jumped on los- wards Ted Hampson, Charlie But when the list of protected and tension pack ed 4-3 decision ing pitcher Terry Brecht, 6-2, players was made public Mon- to La Verne, Calif ., College Burns and Craig Camsron and in the for single runs in the second promising young goalie Gilles day, it looked like this: here Monday evening Worsley and Ce- 16th annual and third innings before tally- Gilbert. Goalies — opening round of the the de- ¦ World Series. ing what proved to be The iour were among those sare Maniago. NAIA , ciding two runs in the fourth. Fred Barrett, The Warriors, trailing by one not protected by the North Defensemen — in the second inning Jim Stars for the expansion drafting , Ted Harris, Doug run going into £he top o£ the with a but took advantage of Hause led off single by new franchises at Atlanta Mfohns, Dennis O'Brien. Tom ninth inning, was cut off at second on alield- some wild pitching by relief and Long Island. Reid. ' . ' " er's choice which allowed Nick Among other players not on Forwards — Jude Drouln, pitcher Frank DiCrasto to ?ose ' could have won Leyva Aer reacn. Leyya then the protected list of IS skaters Bill Goldsworthy, Danny Grant, a threat that scorecF on back to back singles the game. and two goalies were centers Buster Harvey, Dennis Hextall, by Jim McNamara and Lou Terry Caffery and Gbrd Labos- Lou Nanne Bob Nevin, Murray Dean Yoost led off with an in- Berthelson. In the third inning , field single, . Dick McNary drew siere, left wings Bill Heindl and Oliver, J.P. Parise. Willie Norwood singled stole sec- Dean Prentice, defenseman a walk and Jefi Ross lined a single by The North Stars have an- run- ond and scored on a Bob Paradise and goalie Fern single to left. Curt Bailey , Hause. nounced the signirigs of every ning for Yoost, however, was Rivard. player for next year except for by a perfect throw In the decisive fourth, Mc- picked off Namara drew a walk and st ole Hampson, Nevin and Cameron. from La Verne leftfielder Jim liVJEN BEATS TAG .. . Winona State's Ron Evjen, scoring on an inside the park home run, in the eighth in- Prentice has announced his second. Veal, who in the first and Veal in a very close play at the evades La Verne College Catcher Lou Barthelson at the nirg. L<* Verne -went on to stave off a Warrior threat and retirement while Caffery inning singled to; rightfield to 10, Labossiere have said they plate for the inning's second he raced home on a drop WSC 4-3 in the opening round of NAIA World Series extend his hitting streak to 28 plate in the Warriors^sixth inning as signed contracts with the rival BOWLING out. Nonetheless, Dan Halvor- games in a row, also got a throwing error after lacing a triple. He repeated the fete, action in Phoenbx, Ariz., Monday. (AP Photofax) son drew another walk to ,load . SUNSET free pass. While Veal was try- First-year professionals such WDStgate; . W. L. the bases — only to see Tad to steal seco nd Winona" , Little Joes 9 3 ing as left wing Gary. Gambucci ". . The Jokcrj ,...... 8 4 Both-well, who had doubled and catcher Dan Halvorson attempt- Jury Creampulfs ...... B 4 McElrnury, were automatically singled his first two times at ed a pick-off. But the throw Harlows Harem ...... • 4 ing for the WitK exempt from the draft. Fllntitonej ...... At bat, go down swing went into centerfield and Mc- M»'$ Olrlj ...... S . 7 . game-ending butt. ; Namara came home. Veal then There had been some specu- East Sldert ...... 3 7 dropped the War- lation that 43-year-old goalie Wollbanseri ;... 3. 4 The loss scored on Dave Cripe's single. ! Cfonle Re|»fls 1 » riors, now with a 29-11 record , "The first four innings," not- Gump Worsley would not be Mlnlulppl Queens ...... 1 I into the losers' bracket of the ed Winona State coach Gary double eliminatcon tournament. Grob, ''I definitely think we had Twins contribute They were to face Oklahoma the jitters. I think we had the Christian College of Oklahoma jitters, yet I think we found City, this afternoon at 1 p.m. ourselves real well — but it was (CDT) Oklahoma Christian fell a little too late." SPRING SPECIAL! into the losers' bracket when it "This is the second time this to Orioles woes dropped a 1-0 decision Ln the year we beat ourselves. La y friendly Verne didn't beat us, Winona By GORDON BEARD i even extra batting practice, the arrival of usuall bottom of the ninth inning to BALTIMORE (AP), - Not ! spectacles for Boog Powell, or Minnesota pitching could snap Frostburg, Md. , State College beat Winona . Of course this is what you run into in a tourna- the Baltimore hitting, slump. in the tournament's opening Instead, the Orioles once game. ment like this; mistakes will kill you." Austin ousts New Richland again surrendered rather meek- La Verne, sporting a 40-9 although they ly at the plate Monday night as mark will meet Frostburg The Warriors, PWI^ belted , to- did strand an even dozen run- the Twins won 3-2 on a sixth KJX tire night at 7:30 p.m. : ners, proved to.be a better hit- inning double bv Bobby Dar- J^vs!^^ In the other two games Mon^ ting team than LaVerne , which win. l^ p of prime day, David Lipscomb College, has the best team batting aver- The victory ended a four- Nashville, Teain., clobbered age in the tournament. The game Minnesota losing streak y)yyyyI polyester and* High Point North Carolina Col- Warriors out hit Lai Verne 10-7 , and enabled the Twins to slip n^W/ lege 13-1 in a game called aft- s Tigers Ly^ fiberglass cord rip into second place in including the tournament' Caledonia the Ameri- j nHM g er seven innings because of the first home run-, an inside .the By BRUCE CLOSWAY out by the Tiger runners, pro- son with a 12-5 record the can League . West, five per- ten-run rule and Lewis College , and construction , park roundtripper by Ron Evjen Daily News Sports Writer duced one run , and then a solid loss was Conway's fourth in ten centage points ahead of the idle V^^dJ!] ™ of Lockport, 111. , came from be- in the eighth inning. • Chicago White Sox. RED WING, Minn. '- Lake single to right off the bat of decisions. hind to score a 4-3 victory over Evjen, w h o went three for McNee brought in two more and Austin , 17-2, and Lake City, Both Minnesota and Chicago Sam Houston Slate University four, also scored the Warriors' City stormed into the Region a relief pitcher for the War- 14-2, have not met on the base- are four games behind the sur- of Huntsville, Tex. second run in the sixth inning One baseball finals for the first riors. ball diamond since Huettl ging Oakland Athletics, who a triple to In today's second game, in when he cracked time si n ce 1963 here Mond ay Gary Birkeland replaced Con- bested Jim Riles and Merlin topped the sagging Cleveland the loser's bracket, High Point Ieftfield and scored on an error. afternoon by posting an 1-1-1 way on the mound for Cale- Ehmke 2-1 in the . semi-finals Indians 3-2 on the 10th inning was to meet Sam Houston at 4 The Warriors . tallied their donia and was greeted by sin- of the First District American home run by Campy Camp- p.m. in the winner's bracket, first run in the fourth inning conquest of Caledonia. gles by Steve Preble and Haase Legion baseball tournament last aneris in the , only other major David Lipscomb takes .on Lewis off winning pitcher Ben Ochoa The Tigers, who have reeled to account for two more tallies. summer. Huettl and Ehmke will league game played Monday. 14-4. on a walk to Halvorson, a at 8 p.m. off 14 consecutive victories Lake City continued to rough be the opposing hurlers in One other scheduled game, If Winona State should lose double by Bothwell and a field- up Birkeland in the sixth in- Thursday's game. Pittsburgh Warriors could since dropping their first two at San Diego in the today it would be eliminated er's choice. The ning,' and after an error, a base Caledonia (1) Lake city (11) National have scored at least one addi- games of the season to Red ab rh ab rn League, was posl- Wing and Wabasha , are now on balls, and doubles by Torn Wohlers, lb 101 . -Htaia, JI illponed by rain. tional run in the fourth inning Eggenberger and the younger J. Cnwy, p-lf 111 D. Coyle, rf 2 0 0 just one stop away . from earn- Russert Manager Earl Weaver of the hut the rally was cut short Tackmann pushed in three ad- , If 0 0 0 Huettl, lb 3 13 ¦when Bothwell was cut off at ing a berth in the Minnesota Stark, ef 3 01 D. . Tkman, e 4 7 1 Orioles , at a loss to explain State High School League base- ditional runs, the game was Lange, » 2 0 1 Egnberger, 3b 4 2 ] Baltimore's .220 team Sf. Charles and third when he overran the base. called due to tho ten-run rule. Birkeland, c-p 2 0 0 Stefnhagen, el 1 2 0 batting Brecht drew a walk to load ball tournament set for June Oiler son, lb 2 0 0 J. Tkman, p A 0 2 average as compared with last "We've got the momentum Brown, rf 2 00 McNee, If 2 21 him- 14-15 at Midway Stadium in St. season's league - leading the bases, but Ochoa got now, and we're developing more Ballard, lb III P. Coyle, If 0 0 0 .261 R. Cnwy, If-e 2 1 0 Preble, Jb 1 11 mark Mazeppa nines self out of hot water with a Paul. confidence in ourselves each , ordered batting practice Yoost and But the one obstacle still Totals 20 1 2 Totals 2111 11 Monday morning. called third strike on game," noted Kieffer who was CALEDONIA O 0 V 0 0 0— 1 a ground ball fielder 's choice towering in Lake City's path reluctant to admit that his team LAKE CITY 1110 5 3—11 Against Minnesota starter ¦which picked Evjen off at third. 6—R , Conway, Lango, Wohlers, Preble. Dick Woodson happens to be Austin, the Big may have been looking ahead RBI—I. Conway, Haase 2, Huettl 1, , 4-3, and ace re- post Legion wins about our "I've no qualms Nine Conference champions. to a showdown with Austin, "I Eggenberger, J. Tackrnann 3, McNet 3. liever Wayne Granger , how- The home diamond proved to hitting," continued Grob, "The The Packers made it ten in a was a bit worried in those first . 2B — Lange, Huettl, Eggenberger, J. ever, the Orioles managed just be an advantage in Am erican Tackmann. only thing was we left a dozen row Monday night by knocking few innings because I've seen SB — Eggenberger, stelfenhagan, P. five hits and two of those were Legion basebalL action Monday men on base." off New Richland 8-1 in the oth- two many peculiar things hap- Coyle. bunts. Last season, Baltimore as St. "We seem to play better with S — Birkeland, ste-ffenhaoen, Preble, Charles played host to er Region One semi-final con- pen in a high school baseball Haaie, hit an amazing .312 against Wabasha and clumped the visi- our back s to the wall. The only test played at Red Wing Ath- game.'' SF—J. Conway, MceNee. Minnesota pitching. time this year when we were DP — Caledonia (J. Conway-Otlcrs-on- tors 10-4 while Mazeppa wel- letic Field. Wohlcrs), Veteran Brooks Robinson really tight was against St. "(Jim) Tackmann has come d/d comed Dover-Eyota and sent Lake City and Austin will tan- along real well for us this sea- Left — Caledonia a, Lake City I. slam his first home run of the them home on the short end of Cloud. I don't think we were le for the region title at 6 IP H R ER IB SO season, in his tight for St. Thomas and we g son," Kieffer added , "He keeps J. Conway (L, 6A) 4'/a 4 7 5 S 4 158 th trip to the a 1-0 score. p.m. Thursday in Red Wing and his Birkeland 1 S 4 1 I 0 plate. ¦weren tight for the Area IV the ball good and low, J. Tkmunn (W, 7-1 ) « 2 10 1 7 Dean Majerus took the win in 't The tournament last weekend." with the winner taking on the fast ball has a little dip on it HBP — D, Coyle (by J. Conway). Orioles have now lost six the St. Charles victory, strik- Region Five champion in the too. We've been playing tough WP—J. Conway. of their last seven games to fall ing out "We haven't quit yet, we still PB—Birkeland. seven while giving up opening round of the slate tour- defense behind him, and his 3% games behind Detroit in the " ju st two hits and seven walks. have another chance. We dug NEW RICHLAND p«0 ipo 0—1 2 3 GOLD TWIN it hell of a hole, there's no doubt ney the following week. earned run average must really AUSTIN 210 005 X— 8 10 0 American League East. "7©w He got his offensive Bruce Prescher Jeff Arnfllt (4) and support play an average The Tigers, under the direc- be down by now," , Powell , Baltimore's erst- from Chris Searcy's two hits about that. We Dave iNcubaucn Jim Rllei, Morlln BEU — ("Tuesday afternoon) and if tion of eight-year mentor, Bill Caledonia concluded the sea- Ehmke (7) and John Sebastian. while slugging first baseman 10 one a double — and three runs club SEAL •we win we're right back in the Kieffer , scored single runs in with a .152 pverage , was hitless POLYESTER BIAS-PLY TIRE batt ed in , and Bill Hankerson's each of the first three innings in three trips to the two hits , thick of things." plate Mon- BODY. Two-plies of heavy gauge Ochoa , in eight innings of against Caledonia's starter day. He wore glasses for polyester for an Ideal combina- Ron Voeltz a ccounted for the the ¦work , gave up eight hits, walk- John Conway and then broke it first time on one at bat , and tion of comfort and strength. Mnzcppn win as he pitched a ed four and struck out five. open with a five-run outburst in NHL, WHA face struck out. TWIN FIBER-GLASS BELTS throe hitter - striking out four Brecht; Roing the distance , also the bottom of the fifth. In Cleveland , the homer by for strength and satety. For stability, and walking three - and also control, nnd longer tread life. walked four and fanned five. The Warriors only run off Campaneris extended Oakland's scored the winning run. In the Winona Stale (3) UVorno (4) WIDER, FLATTER TREAD , 27X ab r h winning pitcher Jim Tackmann winning streak to four first inning he doubled , went to ebrh and deeper than conventional tires. Yooit Jb 5 0} Veal If 311 was unearned. dealt the Indians their 10th third on 3b 4 0 1 loss a wild pitch and .scored Llnbo II 5 0 0 Cripe Tackmann , a talented sopho- legal showdown in 12 games. SAFETY-SHOULDERS patented moments later on a similar McNarv lb> 3 00 Norwood cf 411 by Dunlop. For steady, sure) Ron 3b 4 0 3 Clark 5b 4 0 0 more who was one of the lead- Reggie Jackson hit a two-run piny . Lo.sing pitcher 3(0 Haute lit 302 control. Tim Brandt Halvorion < ing ground gainers for Lake homer for the A' struck out eight and Bothwell cf 3 0 J Leyva a« 4 10 s, giving him TWIN-WHITEWALLS. Same as also gave Sauar rf 4 0 0 McNamara rf J 1 I City's football team last fall , the league up but three hits lead with 11, th« tires on most 71 cars . Ev|on si 4 3 3 Herthelfon c 3 0 1 aided his own cause by driv- § 1 he next action will he (irccht p 2 0 0 Ocrioa P J 0 0 over draft rights Bailey pr (a) 0 0 0 Hmvr ptl (v) 1 0 0 ing in three runs, and team- Thursday when Mnzoppn meets Snmn pr (b) 0 0 0 DICraito p 0 0 0 McNee also collect- By HAL BOCK 31 4 7 mate Don nighl. RR Saddle Club Wabasha in Kellogg at fi p.m . Total! JJ 3 10 Total! ed three RBI's. ) The announced signings of 111! I Jl ¦ ¦ ¦ Shocks, Mufflers atirl St. a—Ran for Yoost In Slh. MONTREAL (AP - The Cha rles travds hi b— Ran for R OM In 9lh. Mike Huettl knocked in the Plcnu and Selwood with tiic v-Oroundcd out (or Ochoa In Ith. stago was set today for a likely plans horse show Wheel Alignment -nd Plainview for a 7:30 start. of the game with a WHA didn 't seem to bother the M^IC WSC 000 101 010—3 first run legal showdown between the es- RUSHFORD. Minn. (Special") Ad|utt caster, camber and Work expertly LnVerna Oil 10O OOx—4 double in the bottom of the Maple Leafs and Canndiens toe-in to manufacturer '! E — Halvorion, 5«o«r, Ev|in, ClarV , — The Root River Saddle Club QQ rt\ Tom Hanse singled in the tablished National Hockey Monday and if their 14 big specification. U P«rform«d by Williamson in line Levva. firs t , will be holding Its annual in ^H>*3 RBI—Sauer, Bv|cn, Crlpo, Hauia, Bfrr. second run an Inning League and upstart World brothers leavo any quality pi ay- Master thnlion. Tigers' strueiionnl show Torsion Bart & Air Cond. Mechanic winners picked Hockey Association as the ers who are WHA-bound open for young mem $2 More for Blazers ' iob 3B—Bolhwoll. later, and the bers this Friday at the I ' TOM HOLMAY 3D—Bv|tri. the third NHL's two newest franchises , J Triple up another run in today, tbe Islanders and R Ranch MINNEAPOLIS. Minn. (AP) MR—Ev|«n. a throwing error by the New York Islanders and At- Flames are likely to draft first , beginning at 7 p.m. — J^ormer U.S. SB - McNary, Veal, Norwood, Mc- frame on The show will be open Olympic hockey Namara. Caledonia's shortstop, Mark lanta Flames, stocked their and ask questions later. to horse- coach Murray S—Ochoa . men Ifi years old and COMPLETE 11-POINT Williamson is ex- Lange. clubs in the expansion draft. Vancouver nnd Los Angeles younger pected to beco DP-Wlnona 1- Rou-McNary. nnd there will bo no entry fee. me general man- Loll-WSC IJ, LaV ». A single by Dave Tackmnnn , General Manage rs Bill Orrcy chose two players each in Mon- IP H R BR BB SO Prizes ager of tho Philadelphia Blaz- who han- of tho Islanders and Cliff Flet- ick- will bo awarded , with a Brecht (L, 4-J) ...» 7 4 3 4 5 Jim's older brother day 's draft , tho Canucks p troph BRAKE RE-BUILD SaZ„ ers of the nc-w World Hockey Ochoa (W, 14-4) ,. I 13 3 4 5 cher of the Flames were inter- y nnd ribbons going to dles t h c catching chores for ing Dan Tnnnaliill , a 30-goal 1. R«pl«c« br»K« lining &. Inapect brake hotat tr"% a att f DICraito 1 3 0 0 i 1 tho top six on all four whwli Association , the Minneapolis City, and three straight ested bystanders Monday as places in each class. 7. Replace dalecllvi iho. Ti%ll *IK HBP-Bracht by Ochoa. Lako scorer with Boston's American t. Arc llnlnj for perfect return aprlnrji »P<«*TrmU Tribune roportcd today, AI1. tho 14 established NHL clubs Sid Larson. Preston, will serve -3I7. T—3:25. bunts, all of which wcro beaten ti- Hockey League farm club, and contact with drumi I. Add heavy duty brake „, . . . died up their rosters in the in- Gerry O'Flalierty from To- as instructor and judge for the I. Rebuild ell four wheel fluid *' 0r '»'" cylinders "ropecti show's nine classes. For arn true , Adluit br«k«. tra-league draft, Eight players ronto, and the Kings getting further -. Xm^ br.k. changed uniforms, tho most no- information prospective entrants £ ^fronfLe, -"• ••»' «-« •. . Kendell-O'Brien Doug Volmar from Detroit ana 3 table being 42-year-old defen.se- Barry Long from Chicago. should contact him by Juno 8. 3. Impect miliar cyllnderll. Road ten car '"'' adds to trap lea d mnn Tim Horton , claimed by Plcau and Horton were tho oth- YOUR Buffalo from Pittsburgh. er players drafted. YOUR DOWNTOWN HOrAE OP l^trS \ $i *g£nH Tho shooters from Kendell- But the most significant draft Chi- In exchange for Long, I tV Brand New! COMPLETE UNDERCAR CARE EARNINGS O'Bricn added to their overall may have been 's selec- cago accepted Bill Orban from ... I mkL jgtfjE lend in Monday Night's Class tion of Larry Plcau from Mon- Los Angeles. Montreal took Sel- "The Bugger" A Imp shoot at the Winona treal and the Canndiens' sub- wood as payment for P1C*HU . ranteasd 's Club with a 223. sequent claim of Brad Selwood Bicycle ^mj/ ^lmWU Guo Income) t^^pjW IQP^ Sportsmen The other clubs which lost play- Trailer bettering Mntzko Block's 203. as payment from tho Maple ers, accepted $40,000 . draft price For}. $0095 MARV r lU f. n | PAUL Rolling- Leaftt. Camping TAGGART r0rAr lnB DBflft Betty and Bill's 203, as payment. • ^*f FUGLEST.AD " BUSCHER 's 202 nnd the Both players Hiave signed con- • Touring stone Lumber In other aclioxi Monday, the up In QUALITY «iid SERVICE In Oasis Bar's 200. tracts with tho New England NHL Rules Committee decided • Shopplnu DISABILITY and LIFE INSURANCB Jon Fort led tho individuals Whalers of the WHA as have to ndrl n two-minute minor pen- B SEE or CALL TIRE SERVICE with a 48 followed by Vic several of tho other athletes alty on the automatic $200 line K0LTER'S £:- SALBJ a SRRVICB Opan 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. — Saturday* 7:30 a.m. to 12 Noon Vaughn'fl 47. The only shooter whoso names appeared on the assessed for any stick ex- "Since 1M5" MONARCH LIFE INS. CO. was Tom Huts of draft ollgiblea submitted 401 MankMo Av«. Phono WJ-SUJ 116 W. 2nd St. Phon. *WMi Weit Fourth „ Phina 454-460* to break 25 straight ceeding tho allowable half-inch 452-277J I 1 Henjel, a Junior shooter . to Torrey nnd Fletcher Monday curve on the bln Minnesota at Baltimore, night. Thursday. "We do not want to State has finally been dethroned Hou»ton .24 1» J7I tVi Oakland at Cleveland, night. petition for Sunshine. 423-yard 18th, Moorhead won NIC cham- settle fourth in the standings AtlanU 20 IJ .443 a led the way with a first Oakland 3, Cleveland 2, 10 innings. Dick Jones finished second with is the second of the season on Pam Grover cops four Minnesota 3, Baltimore 2. 199 and a foursome of Harold the course, with the first com- with a 2,453. place finish in the Men's Archer Tuesday' s Games Calllornla (Wright 4-J and Rose 10) Libera, John Clemens, Wood, ing May 17 when Mrs. Eleanor places in horse show category, with LeEoy Fladham- at Detroit (Lolich 8-3 and Coleman 7-4), and Carl Fischer were third Scnultz dropped her 2, twl-nlght. tee shot on Pamela Grover and Jim mer a close second. Grupa scor- Mlnnesolo (Kaat 4-1) at Baltimore with 200. the third hole. Heise of Winona each placed ed a 231 and Fladhammer a 229. " ¦ ' ¦• in last Saturday's Hilltop Rid- Beth Fratzke captured the .:« kk' - ing Academy Horse show in women division with a 202, St. Paul. ; while Ro Backus was second Miss Grover, riding her y Rehabilitation is working thoroughbred hunter, Lady Steel In Class B of the men's free- Blue, copped four places, while style with a total of 431. THE STATE OF WISCONSIN, long a leader in the Heise, atop bis hunter-jumper Julie Fratzke wo_ the junior program to reclaim and rehabilitate lakes once choked with rough fish, has been reaping the rewards of its efforts. Immediate O All Talk, took a fourth in the penings. girls' division with a 296 and Amateur owner working hunter Rich Drazkowski Jr., won the Three southern Wisconsin lakes that were once over- class. ¦ run with carp and stunted parifish, are now turning out novice class with a 184. , Miss Grover's places came practically all the spawn used in the state's walleye and The high score of the shoot nort&en) stocking programs. on a first in the 13-year-old and went to Wayne Jacobs of Tom- under category for Hunt Seat ah with a 496 in freestyle, with In th late 1950s and early '60s Beaver CallTollFree. 800-328-4775. Equitation; a third in the Jun- Keith Bitz, also of Tomah, right Dam Lake, Fox Lake and Little G reen Lake ior Hunter class; another third behind with a 489- were treated with chemical poisons fo rid the in the Junior Hunter under sad- The next regularly scheduled wafers of all fish life. Walleyes, northerns and dle; and a fourth in Hunt Seat shoot for the Winona Archers is a few other game species were than stocked. lo Minn.dial 800-552-tf74. Equitation over fences. set for June 18, in Winona. Today, millions of wa lleye and northern eggs are taken from these lakes and the fry that evolve go into waters throughout the stae. Results such as these are encouraging to other states 9AMto 8 PM. looking to reclaim some of their unproductive lakes — such as Lake Winona — and are prime examples of what can Your local Army Reserve needs the skills of men and women for four be accomplished in efforts to turn lakes crowded with un- and two weeks each suimner.You 'll earn from $2.40 to $4.20 wan ted fish into bodies of high quality recreational water. A-h our sessions a month Lake Winona as a case in point. "With the plans drawn up an hour. Plus promotions and. retirement benefits. Call today or mail the coupon. by JVtarv Gunderson and Dr. Cal Fremlin& Lake Winona coul d be put on a par with these productive lakes, which ineer Specialist1! Hioto Equipment Repairmea would make the shimmering body of water as valuable be- Accountants Eng neat h the surface as it is on top. Aircraft Maintenance Personnel Equipment Storage Specialists Photo Interpretators "The bio lie!" AirframeRepairmen Jmancc Clerks Power Generator Operators/ "IS THIS TO BE the last generation of hunters that AmbulanceDrivers and Forklift Operators Mechanics will enjoy the privilege of going afield with shotgun or Specialists Programmers rifle- to hunt the bounty of wild game?" Orderlies General Supply Tha*'s one of the main questions asked in a feature Artillerymen GPPower Generator Operators RaclarRepairmen arlick- in tho June issue of Outdoor Life Magazine, entitled Auto Repairmen and Mechanics " Radio Repairmen "Th-e Bip Lio," The feature discusses the growth and meth- ods of the antihunting factions in the United States and Camera Repairmen HeavyDutyTruckDiivers Refrigerator Specialists concludes that there is plenty of reason to fear that the Card Punch Operators Heavy Wfeapons Personnel Repair Parts Clerks answer will be yes. Riflemen Written by Ben East, the feature is the first of a three- Cashiers IntelligenceAnal ysts pan scries and asks two main questions: "Will hard core Circuit Controllers Interrogators Sewing Macliine Operators fanatics .resorting to misrepresentation and falsehood, suc- Clinical Specialists Madiine Operators Shectmetal Workers ceed in convincing the majority of Americans, who know notraJn/; about hunting, that the sport is cruel and destruc- Communications Special ists Machinists Slnpping/Recdving Clerks tive anri that the hunter is an arch enemyof all wildlife? Crane Operators Medical lab SpecialasLs SystemsAnal ysts And will television deal the final blow? Medical Suppl Specialists TeletypewriterO perators/ To make his case for the misuse of televi- Data Analysis y sion, East refers to the special, entitled "Say Decontamination Special isis Metal Body Repairmen Repairmen Goodbye/ ' suposedly a documentary on endan- Draftsmen Missile SystcmTechaiicians Welders gered wildlife. This show — first televised last Ditching Macliine Operators Personnel Management "Wircmen January — showed scenes of many animals, Engineer Equipment Specialists Wrecker Operators but the one that was tha most damning to the hunter was a series of shots depicting what Repairmen Personnel RecordsSpecuili.si.s vi»t supposedly a polar bear hunt. The footage showed a female bea r and her two cubs chased from a helicopter and, finally, , j Ihe big b»ear was felled. The film went on to I Commanding General I WE MADE IT . . . Ross Bartschy Jr., a pro at the make the hunter look like a fiendish character I fiBlh U.S. Army HesorvaiCommune! I Znncstyilte Ohio Country Club swings his putter over his , , , who would shoot a mother and leave her young I Jlu!IdinK67, rortSnelllne; j lifter dropping his final putt in tho Cincinnati sec- | St.r-aul, Minn. 551H I htvid Bielpless, "What the film didn't show or explain tions) of tho U.S. Open Qualifier Monday. Bartschy carded Tblliiioall tlienMtoniltpayitoifotomceilngJ iina lvome lnformation nbout —but what scientists and sportsmen all over I ff j a 73-66 — 139 to tie Barney Thompson of Lesage, W. Va. | tlioRo!orToftn!tnoar >nycomniuni!ty.Iundcrjtnndrmundcrn»obUgulIon. I -the country were quick to point out, however for third place — winning a trip to the Open at Pebble -too lute — was fha fact that less than 30 min- I j Bcaco, Calif. (AP Photofax) I iu.rsfn.rut.—. ; 1 xes later the bear ambled off with her cubs, | .Addrm,.- | ¦none the worse for har experience. { - .... The facts in tho case have since come to light , but the | ciir .—. sum zip I f,„ ^....»m 1/>y»...i» hunters in tbe country suffered a black ey«. You see the I r | ben r was tracked ' , with a helicopter and waB indeed shot, riiono, , , ______| IS THAT . s with _ druR-flllcd dart, She was given a quick medical check , j MililtryB»c l:rnmnd(If«TlY) | "on* drink too many" hecomlnrj a habit with you or tagged and released as part of a study aimed at helping KonW. TMOS KMOS JJilcot.^opmnllou. I tho polar bear I lomeono In your family? Th* Wi nona chaptar of Alco- survive. Some of tho funds for this study 1-Y/D j corni> from hunting licenses and taxes on sporting goods, holic! Anonymout stands ready to talk fhl* ovar with but that wasn't even considered. - you. Call 454-4410 — th* number It In your phona book. Outdoor Life's story warns that unless the huntors of " America join forces and act together to state their case " l All calls art confidential. If you ntsd AND want hilp and counteract theso self-proclalrncd saviors of tho world's l^^itee ^k with a drinking problem, call Alcoholics Anonymous wildlife, thorc will bo a day when wo can no longer trudgo It to tomeetings. NOWI n cornfield looking for pheasants or sit on a cold Tldge pays go looking for that whitetalled buck, ft could happen , and 1 -'¦--—-¦¦ ¦ '¦¦¦ ¦..¦—.. , _ ..¦,.,,,., . • • .—I —- " " V " I " l"" _ ^, .. it's frightenin g. , i Livestock SOUTH ST. PAUL. Minn. (API - ' Want Ads market (USDA)" . — Cattle 4,000) ealvet 700i Automobile Stock 5l«UBhter iteers and tielftrj moderately active and steady Tuesday) (ew loads CONDITIONER high ctiolce Including some prime 1.100- Start Here AIR 1,200 It. steers 37.75; tew loads mostly high cliolce 1,025-1,350 Ibs. 37.50( other NOTICE SERVICE upward; choice 950-1,300 lbs. 34.00-37.25; mixed Thli newspaper will oo respotulble tor ¦ turns only one Incorrect Insertion ol any ¦ Summer school high good and choice 35,50-36.00; Oood - . • ' ' 32.50-35.50; choice 650-1,050 lb. slaughter classified advertisement publlshect In • REPAIR . hellers 3S.55-34.25l good 3l.50J4.75i tha Wanl Ads section. Check your ad Air Conditioner systems slaughter cows fully steady; utility and and call 1534311 II a correction must commercial 26.50-28.00; lew 28.50; cutter be mad* : • RECHARGE fradina active 23.50-27.00; utility and commercial Air Conditioner systems bus rates to slaughter bulls 30.00-33.00; lew commer- BLIND ADS UNCALLED FOR - 2B.0O-31.O0i vealers SEASONAL NEW YORK (AP) - The cial 33.50; good E-SI, 60, eS, 79, 83, !6- • steady choice 53.0o-57.00; prime up to Air Conditioner checkups stock market turned upward to- 65.00; good 48.00-54.00. gave way Hogs 6,500; barrows and gills only • SALES & SERVICE day as profit taking moderately active; weights under 260 Card of Thank* negotiated lower; weights over for MARK IV be Ibs. steady to 25 ¦ ¦ to bargain hunting. ' - ' op- 260 lbs. 25-50 lower; under 260 Ibs. JENSEN — . • - . ' .. . . ; • : ' . . . . Air Conditioner un}U Meetings with school bus Trading, which had been slow steady to 25 lower ; weights over 240 Our sincere end grateful ttianks era ex- erators to negotiate charges for lbs. 25-50 lower; 1-2 190-240 lbs, 26.50- tended fo all our friends, neighbors end prices de- 26.25-26.50; 2-3 Tel. 452-4080. transportation of children at- near the start as 26.75) 1-3 190-240 lbs. relatives for their various acts of kind- clined, was active. 240-260 lbs. 25-75-26.25; 2-3 260-380 Ibl. nesi and messages of sympathy shown tending summer classes in the 24.75-2S75; sows slow; 25-50 lower; 1-3 us during our recent bereavement, tha 30 400-600 lbs. schools of Winona Independent The Dow Jones average of 270-40O lbs. 22.00-23.00; 2-3 loss of our beloved Aunt. We especially industrials, off more than 3Vi 21.00-22,15; boars steady. thank Rev. A. U. Deye, Rev. Krueger, District 861 are being arrang- Sheep 300; slaughter lambs moderately those -who sent floral offerings end do- MYSTROM'S ed , Superintendent of Schools points earlier in the session, active, steady to strong; slaughter owes nated food, the pallbearers, the St; War- Cadillac • Toyota - Pontiac was up 3.39 at 957.78 by noon. and feeder lambs steady; choice and tin's Ladles Aid and those who donated A. L. Nelson told School Board prime 85-110 lb. sprlnug slaughter lambs the use of their cars. 165 W. 2nd members Monday night. Declining issues held nearly a 34-00-35.00; good and choice 32.00-34.00; The Family of Minnie Jensen 2-to-l edge over advances, but choice and prime 90-110 lb. shorn old Nelson said summer pro- crop lambs with o 1-2 pelts 32.00-34.00; grams are being conducted this tbe gap between the two was good and choice 31.OO-32.00; utility and - .: In:Mem6riam good slaughter ewes 5.00-6.50; cull 3.O0- year in Jefferson, Washington- narrower than it had been ear- lb. feeder lambs 28.00- ' : 5.00; choice 60-85 Kosciusko and Winona Senior lier. ". ' 29.00; 85-100 lbs. 25.00-28.00. IN LOVING MEMORY of our beloved The losers included oils, air- son and dear brother, Joey Hermanson, and Junior High schools. who was so tragically taken from us He said student loads during lines, motors and farm imple- June 3, 1969. to ments. Mail order-retail issues Grain Do not ask us If we miss him, ihe summer are reduced There' s such a vacant place a bo u t one- • . k ... were higher. All other groups MINNEAPOLIS Wt—Wheat re Oft we think we hear his footsteps fourth of what _ _ were mixed. ceipts Monday 220; year ago And see his smiling face. . OFFICER CITED ... Minnesota State joining the patrol Feb. 15, 1952. He was one Days of sadness still come over us. Front-End they are dur- Analysts attributed the early 149; spring wheat cash trading Tears In silence oflen flow, School re- ing the regu- Patrol Sgt. Arnold Waldron, right, presents of four officers in the Rochester District decline to profit taking and a basis, unchanged; prices un- Memory keeps him never near us Alignment- a 20-year pin to Patrol Officer Clyde E. See- ceiving 20-year pins. Lyle Loeding, formerly negative news background. changed to % lower. Though he left us 3 years ago. lar school Board Sadly missed by Mom, Dad, ye ar and Mns. Seckins, originally from South St. Paul, oi Winona, now stationed at Rochester, was They cited government figures No. 1 dark northern U-17 pro- Sisters Judy a> Janet 8. Cut tire wear. Improve ' Families therefore it's ' . ' . - . '¦' Minn , has been stationed at Caledonia since one of the recipients. (Daily News photo) which showed that inflation "and tein 1.48%-1.93%.. your steering. Get not feasible to have as many unemployment last month were Test weight premiums; one routes as during the regular at about the same rate as they cent each pound 58 to 61 lbs; Lost and Pound 4 Guaranteed . ' year. -. were before economic controls one cent discount each % lb un- ' ' FREE FOUND ADS Wheel Alignment Fpur buses transport children were imposed last August. der 58 lbs. : AS A PUBLIC SERVICE to our readers, ; outside the city from the south Program prices: free found ads will be published when ' : Board upset by Philippines a person finding an article calls the V , - \^by ' v . - and three buses are used for 11 per cent l.48%-1.52%; Winona Dally & Sunday News Classi- living north of the city. 12 1.52%-1.54%; fied Dept. 452-3321. An IS-word notice those I P.M. New York , will be published tree for 2 days In Le Roy Greenwood In addition, within the city 13, 1.56%; . an effort to bring finder and loser Stock Prices together, —featuring— k are routes that, basically, fol- planning report asks Ui. of 14, 1.60% ; low Broadway and Sarnia Allied Ch 31% Honeywl 151% 15, 1.74%-1.76%; Street, in addition to running to The Winona County Board of hands. Allis Chal 13& Inland Stl 35% 16, 1.87%-1.88%; REWARD for Information leading to ar- Bear Equipment and some of the out- Commissioners this morning He said, however, that he is Amerada 537/8 IB Mach 396% 17, 1.92%-1.93%. rest and recovery of 2 complete aircraft Goodview engines stolen oil PA-H Clipper and $8.50 lying residential areas. • reacted adversely to a report not certain the county can issue military bases Am Brad 47% Tntl Harv 34 No. 1 hard Montana winter J-4A Cub Coupe from Fremont School, children are required Planning building permits for the subdi- Am Can 29'/8 Wed. night. (Lycoming 0-235-C, 5411-15, Call for an appointment He said that the Winona City MANILA (AP) --- The Philip- Intl Paper 2m 1.49%-1.66%. 108 h.p.) (A-65-8, 3385558 Continental, 65 the bus route streets Commission had rejected a plat vision without city approval of Am Mtr winter h.p.) Call sheriff, 452-2383; F.B.I., 6T2- today! to walk to , pines asked the United States m Jns & L 17% Minn-S.D. No. 1 hard but that he didn't think uhis for a residential subdivision in the plat. AT&T 7'/s Jostens 32% 1.49^-1.66% 339-7801. . - . - . Monday how long it intends to posed a serious problem be- East Burns Valley. COMMISSIONERS agreed to Anconda 19% Kencott 21% No. 1 hard amber durum , LOST In Lake Center airport area, 2 TEL. 454-4301 cause summer weather condi- The City Planning Commission 6ake no action on the Severson use its five military bases. , in Arch Dn 41 Kraft 43% 1.73-1.76 ; discounts, amber 2-3; mixed breed dogs. Brown, tan and white. , 1 medium male, 1 small female . -MIRACLE MALL- tions are more favorable than reviewed the plat May 18 un- matter today, but will consider the islands. The request was a Armco si 22 Kresge SS 122% durum 3-6. wllh short tall. Wearing harnesses. Tel. ' ' ¦ ' ' ' ' . '¦ ' 452-9728. .1719 W. 5lh. Apt. 3. winter. d«r a law au- r , . . it further Thursday. . prelude to renegotiation of the Armour 38% Loew's 55% Corn No. 2 yellow l.isy*- running thorizing the _ The County Board today also Business Services 74 Although buses are bases agreement. Avco Cp 15% Marcor 26% 1.19 V*. STRING -OF- KEYS found parking lot 4lh reduced loads, Nelson said , city to exer- GOUnty delayed action until Thursday Beth Stl 31 Minn MM 152% heavy white & Walnut Sat. Inquire 211 E. 3rd. - with Foreign Secretary Carlos P. Oats No. 2 extra SMALL still have to travel cise authority ¦ on a petition for a conditional GLASS installations. Bring win- operators :n Romulo handed U.S. Ambassa- Boeing 21% Minn PL 20% 71. FOUND SAT, on W. 7th, bundle of laun- dows to Weaver & Sons, Inc., «01 E. he o-ver subdivis- land' use permit; to allow con- 7th St. Tel. 452-4414. considerable distances and DOS TCI dor Henry Byroade a note also Boise Cas 13% Mobil Oil 53% Barley, cars 121, year ago dry sacks. Tel. 452-5258.. would be fair to i on matters struction of a . house on a five- didn't think it asking whether the United Brunswk 51 Mn Chm 43'/i 145; Larker 1.11-1.24; Blue Mal- BROWN PLAID Ralnfalr raincoat lost In WILL DO any kind of local hauling af within two J——-— acre parcel in Richmond Town- reasonable prices. Tel. 452-1241. pay for service on a pupil ba- States has installed or intends BrI North 46% Mont Dak 30% ting 1.11-1.16, Dickson 1.11-1.18 , downtown area. Reward for recovery. miles of the city limits. ship. Tel. 452-7244. £15. Camp Sp .28% N Am R 32 Feed 95-.0. TRASH HAULING— had agreed to to install intermediate or long- "Nothing too small, He said there would be ne- That body The petition, brought by Ax- Catpillar. 55% NNGas 44V Rye GIRLS' NEW green and white Sdiwtnn nothing too large!" Tel. 452-242J. county range ballistic missiles at ei- 4 No. I and 2 1.00-1.04¦ . gotiations .with the operators on send it back to the nie.Egge, Minnesota city, is the Ch MSPP — No St Pw 25g Flax No. 1-2 2.80. ' ,' bicycle taken from pehneys Wed., May but the Coun- ther of the two major bases- • 24. Reward offered. Tel. 4J2-4908. S.E. CARPENTER SERVICE. Homes, re- a charge schedule and that he without approval , first to come out of what is Chrysler 31% Nw Air 47% Soybeans No; 1 yellow 3.45%. modeling, additions, garages or lust an- Clark Air Force Base, 45 miles ¦ ' ' ty Board today expressed sym- slated to become a general de- ¦ ¦• ' FOUND-2 Siamese kittens. Tel. 452-7183. nual repairs. Tel. 454-3270. hoped a recommendation for Cities Svc 35% Nw Banc 43% .. - • developer Delbert north of Manila, and the Subic rnight be made at next pathy for velopment of five-acre lots — ¦ LAWN MOWERS, scissors, eawi sharp- payment Valley, Naval Base, 50 miles northwest ComEd 34 Penney 80% Rowers S Monday's meeting. Seyerson , East Burns thus avoiding county subdivis- ComSat 65% Pepsi 84% ened. Rlska'a Sharpening Service, 751 working on the of the capital. Winona markets E. Front St. Tel. 452-7281. who has beeri ion regulations—hinging on con- Con Ed 24% Pips Dge 36% BEDDING PLANTS of all kinds. Rushford nine-lot subdivision for 18 struction of a new road. The U.S; also has three other Greenhouse, Tel. 844-9375. Open 7 days POWER MOWER , tiller and other Cont Can 27% Phillips 28% Froedtert Malt Corporation a week. • - . ' '' months, and . indicated opposi- The Richmond Town Board bases on the islands. Hours 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. . small engine repairs. Howard Larson, Cont Oil 26% Polaroid 136% old Minnesota City Road. Tel. 454-1482» tion to the changes the city has not yet approved dedica- Byroade also called on. Presi- Submit- sample before loading. CntlData 71% RCA — Barley purchased at prices sub|ect to Personals 7 If no answer, Tel. 489-2334. group asked be made. dent Ferdinand E. Marcos who chanfle. review of the new road , which will be Dart Ind 55% Rep Stl 23% Village THE COUNTY Planning Com- an extension of ; told him the Philippines is Bay State Milling Co an existing Deere 64% Rey Ind 71 . THE SAFARI Bar 8, Lounge presents Painting, Decorating 20 mission has approved both the dead-end ready for high-level talks to re- Elevator A Grain Prices "Pick The Price Of Your Drink" start- town road, and com- No. I northern -prlng wheal ;. - Dow Cm 92% Sears R 119 . 1.53 ing Monday, June 12 and continuing WILL DO painting, in or outdoors. Prev- preliminary and final plats for missioners noted that until the negotiate the agreement. No. 2 northern spring wheal du Pont 169% Shell Oil 44% .... 1.51 every Mori, through Sat. from 4:30 on. ious experience. Tel. 454-3273. . the subdivision, and all that re- road , is dedicated The current 25-year agree- No. 3 northern spring wheat .... 1.47 Try It, you'll like . It! Your genial host meeting , Egge's pro- 1 No. 4 northern spring wheat- board .... 1.43 East Kod l24 A Sp Rand 39% Is Innkeeper Ray¦ Meyer, WILLIAMS NEED YOUR house painted? Rates very, mains to be done is for the perty is landlocked. ment expires in 1991. However,. No. 1 hard winter wheat ...... 1.51 ' ¦' • HOTEL. . . . very, reasonable. For free estlmetei Firestone 23% St Brands 51% No. 2 hard Winter wheal ...... 1.49 County Board to give final ap- Board members agreed to Marcos has indicated that bo> Tel. ' 454-4030. proval; a move they indicated delay action on the Egge peti- cause of the rapidly changing Ford Mtr 66% St Oil Cal 58% No. 3 hard winter wheat ...... 1;45 WINONA RECIPE Service: We speclallte Gen Elec 69% St Oil Ind 66% No. 4 hard winter wheat ...... 1.41 In group offers through Box 873. Send they wish to make despite city tion until commissioners can superpower alignments in the No. 1 rye ...... 1.05 for complete price list. New: I will find recessed No to be Gen Food 25% St Oil NJ 71% . 2 rye ...... 1.03 HOUSE PAINTING the opposition. meet with Richmond Town wake of President Nixon 's vis- missing recipes or make up a recipe for At the regular meeting of County Attorney Julius E. , he Gen Mills 49% Swift 33% your favorite dish. Send 25c In coin plus Interior & Exterior k/illage Council Mon- Board members Thursday. its to Peking and Moscow details of recipe to Box 873, Winona Goodview Gernes told commissioners this Gen Mtr 75 Texaco 31% 55987. Price list will be sent free. Roof Coating a letter from County would like to see the United day night, morning that city rejection of COMPLAHVTTS UP States give up the bases ear- Gen Tel 29% Texas Ins 160% Eggs Assessor David V. Sauer was ¦ " ¦¦ DID THE Income Tax bite hurt? Now All Work Guaranteed. the preliminary plat and its re- INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-The lier. .; ¦ . ¦ ' Gillette 47% Union Oil 29% Is the time to save on nex year's taxes. . ' ¦ Fully Insured. read in which he requested that ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ CHICAGO WHOLESALB For further Information come In and fusal to consider the final plat Indiana Division of Consumer : Goodrich 25% Un Pac 54% the Gooodview Board of Review EGG MARKET see or call Art Thelen or Bob Meier. Tel. 454-2133. : is not binding on the County Protection , a branch ot the at- The Impala antelope Teacts Goodyear 29% U S Steel 30'/4 Orade A large while ...... Ji 1st Selected Securities, 502 E. Broad- ' meeting scheduled for Thursday Board. The county can approve torney general's office; closed to danger with soaring jumps Greyhnd 18% Wesg El 50% Grade A melium while ".' . ...Jl way. Tel. 454-3931. until June Plumbing, Roofing at 7 p.m. be recessed it, Gernes said, dumping the 174 complaint files last month that carry it 10 feet , high and Gulf Oil 24% Weyrhsr 48% (1st Pub. Oate, Tuesday, May 30, 1972) 21 21 at 7 p.m. He said that he FINEST QUALITY photo processing, 20% whole matter in the city's .. .and opened 242 new ones. three times that distance. Homestk 29% Wlworth 36% State of Minnesota > ss. discount. Snyder Rexall Drugs, Miracle will need the extra time to com- County of Winona ) In "Probata Court Mall. ELECTRIC ROTO ROOTER plete work on assessment books. MARK TRAIL By Ed Dodd " No. 17,535 for clogged sewers and drains In Re Estate 01 LET US power vacuum your furnace and CALL SYL KUKOWSKI residents from Alma Yeckel, Decedent air ducts. Your home will be fresher, A delegation of Tel. 452-9509 or 452-6436 l-year guarantee Street and 63rd Avenue Order lor Hearing on Petition lor cleaner and more en|oyable to live In. thei 5th Administration, Limiting Time to Call us today for free estlmatel . . . area met with the council to re- File Claims and for Hearing Thereon JOSWICK FUEL 8. OIL CO., 901 E. SEPTIC TANK & quest some improvement on 5th Harold L. Yackel having filed herein 8th. Tel. 452-3402. DRY WELL PUMPING a petition (or general administration Val Kowalewski, Minnesota City Street between the Winona limits stating lhal said decedent died Intestate DOES ONE of your loved ones have a Tel. Winona 454-2436 and the Rollingstone Township and praying that Harold L. Yackel be drlnWng problem? If lo, contact Ihe j appointed'administrator; '. < —————— line. The street will IK oiled to Winona Alanon Family Group. Write NOTHING lasts forever , . . but a Kltch- IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing tP/i W. 3rd. . . enAld dishwasher comes closel It works control the dust until plans can thereof be had on June 27, 1972, at 10:15 so well and lasts so long because It Ii o'clock A.M., before this Court In tho made by a company with more ex- bt made for applying a black- court probate court room In the house Transportation 8 perlence In making dishwashers than top mat on the street. In Winona, Minnesota; that the time anyone else. But don't take our word Liquor Store Manager Dennis wllhin which creditors ot said decedent WANTED-a ride to Yellowslono Na- for It, ask someone who owns one. may file their claims be limited to sixty tlonal Park. Will share expenses. Tel. Rn'hiecki was authorized ex- days from the dale hereof, and that the 454-1008. Frank O'Laughlin penses to attend the Municipal claims so filed be heard on August 3, PLUMBING & HEATING 1972, at 10:30 o'clock A.M., before this SENIOR CITIZENS-N.W, tour, Calgary 761 E. 6th Tel. 452-6310 L>ior Stores Association meet- Court In the.probate court room In the Slempeda with other stops. Visit friends, in • at Rochester on June 15. court house In. Winona , Minnesota, and shore expense. $150 1o firs) person, S3O0 that notice heroo! be given by publication each for 5 more. Tel. Fountain City PLUMBiNG BARN Dally News I he village clerk presented the ol this order' In the Winona 467-4742. Open Mon. and Frl. evenings, also r- "iril with an estimated popu- and by mailed notice as provided by Sat. mornings for our customers con- 1 : THE WIZARD OF ID By Parker and Hart law. venience. I* 'n increase of 334 since the Dalcd May 26, 1972. Auto Service, Repairing 10 154 High Forest Tel. 454-434* f Val census was taken in S. A. SAWYER, Probata Judge. CAR SHAKE and shimmy? Tire wear l'" i when the official popula- (Probate Courl Seal) unoven? Alignment neededl $8.50 most Female?—Jobs of Interest—26 te rf the v'llafic- was reported C. Stanley McMohon carv Taggart Tire Service. Tel. 452- Altorney for Pelllloner 2772. DEPENDABLE GIRL to babysit. Room as.l f',2fl , and board and wages. Tel. 454-2002. (1st Pub. Date, Tuesday, May 30, 1972) (First Pub. Tuesday, June i, 1972) H" hnswl the estimate on HOUSEWIVES, earn high Income State of Minnesota ) ss. In spare II" o persons living in each of TO WHOM IT WAY CONCERN: flmo showing No, 1 value lino of family County of Winona ) In Probate Court I will not be responsible for any bills tl' Tinbil p homey fashions. Samples furnished. Use ot car . in Lake Vil- No. 17,3*2 Incurred by anyone olher than myself, Need manager. Write ¦ In Re Estate Of Minnesota Wool- li <" Mobile Home Park and Earl J, Gllgosh ens, 4820 2S>th Ave. Gatilall, Decedent S„ Minneapolis, nelsons Raymond A. DBA Winona Bicycle Service Minn. S54I7, D' for each of the new Order for Hearing on Final Account 417 W. Sarnla St. Distribution. d .veiling units and Petition lor Winona, MN 55987 LET AVON occupied since above named HELP make your summer Tha represonlallvel of tha Warren Wundorllch ej vacation dreams Ann! , 1970. Membors final account come true. Start build- of the estala having filed his Warren Wunderllch, Notary Public ing your getaway and allow- " " fund as an Avon ecnncil thought the estimate too and petition for settlement Winona, Winona County, Minnesota Representative. You distribution to tlje 'll never know how ance thereof and for My Commission Expires April 9, 1978 easy It Is to earn extra lov. nnd will arrange to have a persons thercunlo entitled; cash the Avon way until you try. IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing For a personal In- owns taken of the people living (lit Pub. Date, Tuesday, May 30, 1972) terview wllhout obligation Ihereot bo had on June 29, 1 972, at Tel. Mrs, in the Sonya King, Rochester 507-28B-3333. new homes and mobile 10:00 o'cloc k A.M., before Ihls Court State of Minnesota ) ss, lie'""'S, In the probate court room In Ihe court County of Winona ) In Probate Court '''he house In Winona, Minnesota, and lhat File No. 17,405 Male—Jobs of Interest— 27 mayor and clerk were in- notice hereof bo given by publication of In Re Estate Of Oscar Oaarden, Decedent. s'-uetc d to prepare a letter of this order In the Winona Dally News PERMANENT PART-TIME help, prefer GRIN AND BEAR IT DENNIS THE MENACE provided by Order For Hearing On Interim K " ¦ ond by mailed notice as college student who la neat, courte- l "k.s to the members of Scout M —¦i———I — ¦— 1—— . Account and Petition For law. ous and annresslve . Apply In porson, Partial Distribution T oop No. *>02 for efforts in Dated May 25, 1972. Dig Bear Store, 4540 Service Drive, (• 'caning up .'he area along 54th 5. A. SAWYER, The representative of the above named Winona. Avpiie Probale Judge, estate having filed her Interim account recently. (Probale Court Seal) and petition for settlement end allow- FA.RMWORK-16year old boy or ance thereof and lor partial distribution older, ¦ Dergh 8. Poole some experience. Richard Luchmenn, Attorneys for Petitioner lo the persons thereunto entitled | Lewiston. Tel, 5726. By Alton E. Bergh IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing thereof ba had on June 27, 1972, at 10:30 St. Charles. Minn. MATURE MAN to work In dish room Christian Action o'clock A.M., belore thi s Court In the and floor care, Write E86 Daily News , (1st Pub. Date, Tuesday, May 30, 1972) probate court room In the court house In Winona, Minnesota, and that notice :; " PART-TIME BARTENDER-For about i ia ns unbeaten Slate ol Minnesota ) ss. hereof ba give n by publication ot Ihls 20 Probale Courl hours a week. Write E-82 Dally County of Winona ) In order In Ihe Winon a Daily News and Newa . CHURCH SOFTHAU. No. 17,534 by mailed notice as provided by law. MANAGER-TRAINEE. Career opportun- National League In Re Estate Of Dated: May 24, 1972. ity In markellng. Wo seek W L Mary M, Kalmas, aka Mary Kalmas, S. A. SAWYER , the man W I Decedent who la aggressive , confident and will. r ii.-Mlnn Act. a 0 Cathedral j 4 Probata Judge, . Order for Hearing on Pellllon lor Ing tp assume responsibility, College da. r n' ,1 Luth, 5 1 United Melh. i 4 (Probate Court Seal) Probote of Will, Limiting Time fo gree necessary. Good company ben*. f Matthew 's 4 5 K ol C 0 i Strcaler, Murphy, File claims and lor Hearing Thereon fits. Write E-65 Dally News , fv < Baptist 4 1 Faith Luth. 0 a Brosnahnn 8, Langtord Bernolle Schorbrlng having tiled a Attorneys tor Pelllloner <' ;ristU111 Action kept its per petition lor the probate of ihe Will of fei record sound Monday ankl decedent and for tho appointment (First Pub. Data Tuesday, May 23, 1972) ot tlernetto Schorbrlng as Executor, Train for PRINTING night with a 5-2 win over Cathe- wh ich Will Is on file In this Courl State of Mlnnosola ) dral to lend the National League and Open to Inspection; County of Winona ) ss. IT IS ORDERED, That tho hearing In Probata Court ¦ft Hnnd Composition in church softball play, while thereof be had on June 27, 1972, at No, 17,015 Cenlrn l Lutheran stayed ju st 10:30 o'clock A.M., belore Ihls Court In Rt Esta|a of Linecasting and Presswork In Ihe probate court room In Ihe court Victor W. Botinen, Decedent a notch back with a R7 win house In Wlnonn, Minnesota, and that Order lor Hearing on Final Account over Faith Lutheran. oblcctions to tho allowance of anld will, and Petition for Distribution Writo II any, bo filed before said lime of The representatives of Ihe abovo named First Baptist tipped the lieorlno; lhat Hie time wllhin which estate having filed Ihelr final account GRAPHIC ARTS K'lights of Columbus 9-7 and creditors ol said decedent may file and petition tor settlement and allow- Technical School S. . Matthew Ihelr claims be llmlled lo sixty day s ance thereof and (or distribution to Ihe 's beat United Irom the dafo hereof, and Dial the claims person s Ihoreunlo entitled) for Catalog. Methodist, but no score was re- so filed be heard on August 3, 1972, at IT IS ORDERED. That the hearing 10:30 o'clock t\M„ boforo Ihls Court thereof be had on June 13, 1972 at 10:00 ported. In Ihe probnlo court room In tho Court o'clock A.M., before this Courl In the Dan Kohner collected n home house In Wlnonn , Minnesota , nnd that probate court room In the court house 1104 Currio Ave,, Minneapolis nollco hereof be given by publication In Wlnono , Minnesota, and thai notice run for Cuthedral in the losing of Ihls order In the Winona Dally Nows hereof be given by publication of this effort and Tom Styba lashed a nnd by mailed notice as provided by order In Iho Winona Dolly News nnd Approved for Veteran Training law. by mailed notice as provided by law. jroundtripper f or the Knights of Deled May 11, 1972, Dated May 18, 1972. Columbus, also In n lost cause. S , A. SAWYER, S. A, Sawyer ". . . And in closing, I confidently jay 1o members 6f Probale Judge. Probale Judge Robin Wright of First Baptist ' Help—Male or Female belongs to osl,. . 'DONTSJlK HERUPN0Ne..JJD$T 6OT HBR QMAi£t) I)DyV/4 . (Probale Court Seal) (Probate Court Seal! 28 was tho only ono to slnp a hom- iho class of 72, tho world Peterson , Challeon, Slronler, Murphy, Brosnahan L Acquiring a , however, may take a little longer!" Delano & Thompson, Ltd. Landlord BOYS OR Gl R LS wanted for slrawberrv er in a winning effort. job Allorneys for Pelllloner Attorneys lor Pelllloner picking. Tel. 452-4813 alter 5, Help—Mai* er Ferrul* 28 Poultry, Eggs, Suppll»» 44 Articles for Sal* 57 Apartments, Furnished 91 Houses for Sal* 99 Houses for Sal* 99 Trucks, Tract's, Trailers 108

ARE YOU Interacted In CAPON AND Roasters outlook Is good. SPRAY TEXTURING ol ceilings or walls. STUDENT or married housing available DREAMERS, see the doers , . , see NEW SPLIT foyer, 3 bedroomsi carpet- CHEVROLET—1 972 aj-ton pickup, heavy on* of the most ' exciting real estate positions) possible? We have a complete program. W-52 «, Brooks 4 Associates, Ttl, 454-5382. for summer months. Tel. 454-2009 or FIDELITY SAVINGS & LOAN for Ing 'throughou t , 3 balhs, douhle garage, duty . suspension.. Tel. Centervllle 539- Both local ind Florida sales with week- XL-9 Broadbreasted Malts for added 4J4-3MI. home financing. 172 'Maln. . Tal. 452-5202. formal dining room, wllh 2 acres of 33W evenings, 539-3634 days. ' Used Can end trips to the Southland. We need 3 profits to. .your farm Income. Order UkWN MOWER-14" real push type. Tel. lnnd > In Cedar Valley 6 miles from 109 salts persons at once. Contact Jerry these fine checks now. Available June 452-7957. ONE-ROOM with bath and kitchenette, NEW 3-BEDROOM homes on Bluffvlow Winona. Also 3-bedroom home In Twin GMC—1967 1 ton, cab and chassis, In filaltdell, TOWN 4, COUNTRY REAL 12, June 19 and June 22 hatcties. Ready Centra! location. MO. Tel. 454-3034. Circle, wllh double attached garages Bluffs area with river view, Tri. 454- very good sha pe. 10' cattle rack, 9' CHEVROl_ET-19«< 4-door, t-cyllrxjar, au- ¦ tomatic transmlsjiTon, ESTATE, Tel. 454-3741. to lay pullets year aound. Winona Chick A LARGE selection of ladles' quality Also duplex. Reasonably priced. Tel 2672. cattle racK, 14' cattle rack. Ed Law. Run$ gootf. Tel. Hatchery, Hwy. 14-el E.. Breezy Acres, sandals from 54.99. Baker's Shoes, 133 TWO GIRLS to share 2-bedroom apart- Orval Hllka. 453-4127. renz, Box 147, Dover, Minn. Tel . St. iU-Vel. ¦¦ ment at Lake Park Apartments with FRIENDLY AMBITIOUS men or women Winona. Minn. Tel. 454-5070. E' 3rd. J CENTRAL LOCATION. Under $17,000. By , Charles 932-4615. tarn U te (5 hour, 20 hours if you qual- other girls. Tel. 452-7505 alter 5 p.m. owner, 3-bedroom house, full baaemant , DODGE—1«» Chirtitr, grain with vinyl ify. Tel. 507-175-2352 before 10 ».m. Wanted—Livestock PRESSED GLASS In many patterns; de- NEW HOMES ready for occupancy, 1-5 central heatlno. , 502 Harriet. For ap- FORD-1968 F10O, i cylinder, 3-ipeed. lop, JW, 4-tpetd, tach, chromes, JiO-14 46 pression glass In 12 colors. MARY GIRL WANTED to share furnished apart- ; bedrooms. Financing available. 121,500 pointment Tel. 452-3341 after 5 p.m. J1700. Tel.' 452-6222, weekends only, r«ar tlrtj. T«l. HouatonU4-3M4 . - SHORT ORDER CHEF wanted. Give ref- TWYCE Antiques aY Books, 920 W. 5lt». mtnt. Tal. 454-4531 afUr 5:15. on up. Wllmrr . Larson Construction, HOLSTEIN bull calves wanted. S-4 days Tel. 452-4533. FOUR-BEDROOM house for sale, alto 3 DODGE, 1964, i, S-speleoV- ' H-ton , choice erences. Writ* E-n Dally News. old. Norbert Greden, Altura, Minn. New Can PIONEER TURNTABLE, Sherwood am- THREE SPACIOUS rooms, private bath, or f lots lor »«|e. Tel. 452-«059. ot 3. 1965 Dodge, V-8, 4-speed. '.Vtpn, Tel. 7701. ; plifier and KLH carpeted, large backyard, near laki , choice of 3: 1963 Ford, 6, Vi- speakers, S500. Quasar BEFORE YOU buy, see tho beautiful 3- long box KEN'S SALES & SBRVICH Situations Wanted—Fern. 29 portable color TV, J300. 452-5979. and WSC. Ideal for 3 or 4 people. For CORNER , 10th' & Walt. 2-3 bedroorn brick Ford, V-I,' T«l. . - bedroom . arid . Ihe lovely 2-bcdroom . ton- l'SI - '.Vlon/' as Is. S65. JEEP, 4 WO Vthlclit «, Accajjorli* summer months only. Tel. 452-5374 or house on large lol, plui 1 extra lots. 470 Mankalo Ave Townhouses. Tel. 454-1059 lor Inlortna- Ideal Auto Sales, . Hwy. 14-41 E.- T«l- XJ2-9231 WILL DO babysitting In my heme for any RUM/WAGE SAYLE-Women'a and chil- 452-4761. ¦ ¦ Tel. 452-3987 before '5. 452-6J1I after 4. tlon. ; . ' . . age. East location, have references. WANTE D dren's clothing end miscellaneous Hems. FORD EXPLORER—1971 pickup. 302 VI, Tel. . 454.1640., Tues. through Frl, 9 to 9. 459 Olmstead FURNISHED AND carpeted 2-bedroom MERRICK PAFiK—cottage or year around automatic transmission and power steer- Mobil* Homas, Trailers 111 Holstein springing heifers, SI. . .. •. apartment for summer, I block from NEW HOMES for Immediate occupancy* living. Good location . Partly furnished. ing. Tel. Minnesota City e"8?-2737. : WILL BABYSIT In my horn* children 2 WSC. suitable for 2 or more girls. Tel. or we will build to suit . Need a home Carport. Tel. 454-1149. months to 4 years. Contact Eva at t27 2-6 weeks from freshening; SAM'S PHOTOFAX , TV l Radio Service 452-4413 or 454-2541. today? "Wo are geared to do It now." FURNISHED 8x41 mobllt homi. on iof. V bedroom, hill c«rp«llng and E. 7th or Tel. 452-5323. Information folders and cabinets. 150 Quality built Homes by Continental BY OWNER. Large duplex, 3 bedroomit UiW' Cara v»ry 109 clean. HIM ciih. also open heifers, from 500- through 1159; Sencore transslstor check- THREE-BEDROOM apartment available Homes. Tel. 454-1815 or sivanlngs, 452. carpeted din ing room, living room and T*l. iSJ-W?0. SUMMER BABYSITTING |ob wanted. er, color dot bar generator, battery now through Sept. 3. Tel. 454-5837, 1645. aunroomr large Kitchen, large bath- 800 lbs. BUICK-1948 Special Station Wagon, V-l, AAOBILE HOME—8x40, unhlrnlshed, new Ttl. Housjton 894-3435. eliminator, picture tube tester, tubes room down. 7-room (3-bedrooml apart- automatic, power steering. Jie25. Tel. THREE BLOCKS from WSC, complete ment upstairs. Large aouDie garage cerpetlng and skirling. JlteT itied. Weif and other .articles. - Tel. Wabash* 565- 3- OUT 4 miles, small 2 or 3-bcdroom, . 454-5)58 evenlngi or weekends. bedroom carpeted house lor group Under S22.0CO Inquire 221 E. ith or End TraKar Court, Lot No. J4. 4739. C. McDonald, Reads Landing. of needs some work. Garage with work Situations Wanted—Male 30 girls In fall. Tel. 452-4483 or 454-2541. Tel. «4-5837 . ED LAWRENZ area. Vi-acre of land. Jl2,900. MLS 681. FORD-1963 Galaxie 500 with new rebuilt TREMENDOUS BARGAIN on a deluxe PORTABLE HOOVER washer and dryer, Ed Bolt. Tel. 454-35871 CORNFORTH transmission, power brakes, power 1971 mobile home, STARTING YOUNG contractor will do Tel. St. Charles 932-4615. 6 months old. Between 1 and 5 Te). ONE ROOM furnished including all util- FOUR BEDROOMS, H,i balhs, family 14x6J7 » bedrooml, " REALTY, Tel. 452-6474, steering, air conditioned, new paint job. Ourengo III, Connor Legendary cab- roofing, masonry, cement vvork and ad- 452-7170 or alter 6, 452-4111. ities. $40. Tel. 454 2541. . . j room, formal dining. Completely remod- Tel. 617-7262 evenings, ditions, Professional work and reason- I eled. Must,be seen. 31« E. 8lh. Tel. 454- inet! and Mediterranean tumlrure, with THREE 8EDR0OMS—by owner . Ideal W. able rates. Tel. 452-9931 before 4 p.m. USED FURNITURE—refrigerator , AVAILABLE NOW—1 bedroom, kitchen, T059-' Washer and dryer. Completely skirted , couch location. Gas heat. Attached garage, VOLKSWAGEN-1969, In excellent condi- Farm Implements 48 living room and bath Suitable for with jtepa. Immediate) possenlon. Lo- other Items. Tel. Lewiston 4461 after J. . cou- ' Fairly: new carpeting. Tel. 452-5815 lor tion. 34,000 miles. Tel. Houston 896-2020. TEACHER WOULD like to do house ple without children or 3-4 singles. ,A|| SPLIT FOYER, -4-year.old 3-bedroom, cated at Lake Village, Lot 41. TOWN appointment. 4 C0UNTRV MOBILE HOMES, Hwy. painting;. Previous experience. Tel. 689- WANTED—narrow front lor Oliver 770 NEW fashion colors are Sue's.- , delight. utilities and furnishings Included. Fu My built-in appliance*, 2 baths, rec room, FORO-1970 Maverick, white vinyl top, 2031 tractor or will trade the wide front She keeps'her carpet colors bright, with carpeted. Tel. 454-3323 . patio, garage, outside utility building. 4} & Sugar Loaf. Tel. 414-52 87, evenlngi . , BE THE FIRST lo live In this new I- hula blue, 6-cyllnder, 2-door, faclory Alphonse Kokott, Rt. 2. Blue Lustre! Rent electric shampooer Must sell. In St. Charles. Tel. St. Char- Tel. 453-J412. Arcadia, Wis. bedroom carpeled home- with appli- air. 33,000 miles, l-owher. Good condi- Tel. 323-3078 ' ¦¦'• ¦ ' Jl: Robb Bros; store. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCr"— luxury apart- les 932-4145. .-. , ;. . ances. Full basement. . tion. Tel. 452-1526 after 3:30. . ' Business Opportunities 37 ment. 3 bedrooms. Mammoth living MOBILE HOME—l»tl, 10x51, 1 bedroomi, partly furnished. Also Includes air con. INTERNATIONAL-^ Cub tractor with ANTIQUE CLOCKS—Tel. 452-4491 between room with huge firep lace. Formal din- INCOME PRODUCING propetllet for LIKE NEW 3-bedroom ranch home with FORD-196J Fairlane Station Wagon, V-t, dltlonlng end 5x6' steal shed. Noiv 'il plow, cutlvetor, digger and snow blade. 5 and 7 p.m.- . ing room. Completely furnished. Air sale. Terms to qualllled buyeri. JIM WE HAVE a wholesale business, all cash finished basement. Large lot , large dou- automatic, good motor. Tel. Lawlslon Fountain City Trailer Cou rt, Tel. 687- accounts, growing by leaps and bounds. All In good condlllon. J595. Tel, 452-2132. conditioned. Family or girls only. Tel. ROBB REA.LTY. Tel. 454-5870 I a.m. '4115V , ble , garage. . , ' 3304. ' "" ' . We need a dependable associate In DINING SET, wire bed, refrigerator , 454-3323. , . to 5 p.m., Mon. through FrL . 46 BALER. WcDeerlng side delivery rake, stove, coffee table, artificia l free, dre*s- your aria with $900 minimum to invest WHY RENT when you can buy a home PONTIAC—1971 Grand Prix. Sacrl'lcel MOBILE HOME, 8x45, compieta with ncl Farmall H tractor with cutlvator. ers, rocker, clock, miscellaneous. 45B ONE EFFICIENCY an {, of Galesville, V hay windrower full width conditioner evenings. Park behind the store. POSIT WILL HOLD YOUR . DODGE Dart, slant 6, less than Wis. Tel; 408-582-J371. Both In very good condition. Russell CUSTOM APARTMENT. M O D E L ,000 actual miles. I owner. A-l shape. Church, Minnesota City. . TWIN SIZE rollaways with Inner spring ~~ EXPERIENCE 31 APARTMEJNTS NOW !wiNONA?_z-r First $1795. Apt. 1, 312 E, King. . BUSINESS mattress, S47.95. BOKZYSKOWSKI Skamper Campers CORN CULTIVATO R for H or M. Reg- FURNITURE , 302 Mankato Ave. OPEN FOR YOUR IN- . COUNTS! ; PONTIAC—1967 LeMans, In gooct condlllon, FOR Immediate delivery. Fold downi, Inald Fink, Alma, Wis. ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ truck niounls and travel trailer!,' SPECTION.! INQUIRE 1258 • . ' For :. 3-speed on . floor . with bucket seats. OPPORTUNITY V-» engine. Jl 150 STOCKTON CAMPER SALES, ALLIS CHALMERS rotobaler, 1-owner. Good Thinqj to Eat 65 . power steering, 324 RANDALL ST. TEL. 452- COURTEOUS IF YOU'RE BUYING plle-r. Tel. 452-1462 :: Stockton, Minn. Tel. d Excellent business location. TWO-BEDROOM apartment. East loca- or Weekends UT-1964, 4-wheel drive, good con- Tel, Fountain . City 6J7-3IT8. Tel. Rushford 864-9315. - serving Winona's Real Es- SCO. Pertinent information avail- .- . tlon. Tel. 454-2574.: .. - . dition Tel, 454-3541. REAL BARGAIN! Lady's wedding ring tate needs for over three . TRI-STATE MOBILE HOMES able to qualified buyers. ELECTRAK Garden Tractor* I; to 16 set, diamond. Engagement, and wedding, Office Hours : 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. generations. Bre«y Acrei h.p., runs on batteries: No gas or oil $250. 321 Washington, Apt. 3. ''NEW" AT AUCTION Hwy. 14-41 Eatt,"W'lnbni needed. Free mower with purchase ol 6 days a week. 3 CARS Siown by appointment only. Completely Furnished Auction: 1971 Volkswagen tractor. TRI-STATE MOBILE HOMES, OFFICE HOURS: 9 to 5 HOUSEHOLD Beautilully Decorated 4-speed, -stereo tape, ra- 3930 6lh St. Tel. 454-3741 , Machinery and Tools 69 GENE KARASCH . REALTOR Super Beetle, Green Terrace MobUe Homes 1-Bedroom Apartments weekdays and Sat urdays ; 1 dio, excellent ' shape. 1 95S> Oldsmobile, 1962 Volks- CAT FOR SALE-John Deere 350 diesel, Many luxurious features. 601 Main Street to 5 Sundays and every excellent, tires, good runner. SPRING SME SCHMIDT'S SALES 8. SERVICE Porjch NO RTHERN So. of 1-90 at Wilson, bucket loader with teeth. Good shape, Tel. 454-4196 wagen, lull Custom Bala Bugi 1972 Chickasha Dlluxe 14x70 ¦ evening by appointment; Interior; profes- Tel. 454-5618 " , must be seen. Westgale Gardens. KEY APARTMENTS powered! full custom Regular Price tfiOO INVESTMENT CO 1752 W. Mb Tel. 454:4909 sionally done candy tangerine metal Sale Price J1150 ¦ ¦ pearlescent Ivory ¦ OFFICE PHONE 452-5351; flake, golden lime and 1972 Medallion UK «0 Real Estate Brokers, . : " . HOMELITE Musical Merchandise 70 mile N.E. Riding Mowers, Chain Saws, Pumps FINE off-campus housing for girls b-elng paint. Over. $3,000 Invested. 1 Regular Prlca JJBO0 Independence. Wis. Tel. 715- rented now for summer and fall. Lloyd ' o( Rldgcway. auction signs posted . Auc- Sale Price 17J0O Also Construction Equipment RENT/ MUSICAl INSTRUMENTS from ¦ ."..; After Hours Call: , Dellke.' Tei. 452-4649. . tion start* at 7,. Wed.,. June 7. Come a I , "' :1949' Blair House w|lh air conditioner 98W191 or Eldon W. Berg, POWER MAINTENANCE 8. SUPPLY CO. HAROT'S. Pianos, violins, clarinets, . : . 6 to sea machinery. and extra half bath, iti us on Green 2nd & Johnson Tel. 452-2571 trunnpets, etc Rental payments apply Jan Allen A:.....: . 452-5139 Real Estate Salesman, Ar- LOVELY 1-bedroom apartment. West -end. Terrace Lot J7, ready lo ltve In. Only tow&£d purchase price. HARDT'S . Tel. 454-1787. Pat Magin ...... 452-4934 ' J5350; ¦ cadia, Wis. Tel. 608-323-7350. FITZGERALD SURGE MUSIC STORE,' lie Levee Plate E. Sales & Service ^^^^^^^EB^^^fflJuS^aW ^PJ^^^^^^^ W Laura Fisk ...... 452-2118 WE SELL ONLY THE BEST Tel Lewiston 6201 STUDENT APARTMENTS now available, Myles Petersen .. 452-4009 Tol. 454-1317 Sewing Machines 73 JIM ROBB REALTY. Tet 454-5870, I CHEAPIES Dogi, Pets, Supplies] a.m. lo 5 p.m.: Mon. through Frl. 42 MILK HOUSE EQUIPMENT E- 2cd kfiffl j) 454-SMl' .;. .;$ RATH wash tanks, fans, air Intakes, ALL MODEL Vikings are. on sale now '64 FORD Wagon 99 Tommy s MALE AND FEMALE Gerbil, new cage; hose pa rts, storage cabinets. during Spring Clearance, WINONA NOW RENTING Lots for Sal* 100 '64 FORD Wagon ..... $329 also male Gerbil In small cage. Cheap. Ed's Refrigeration 8. Dairy Supplies . ¦SEWING CO., 915 W. 5th. > Trailer Sales Tet, 452-5258. 555 E. 4ttr. . Tel. 452-5532 A MI» June- One-Of-A-KInd Sale* . . WINONA'S NEWEST LIVE IN BEAUTIFUL Green Acres, large •63 CHRYSLER ^ ' ¦¦ Travel trailers, pickup campers, tent lots, underground, utilities. 'Country'liv- ¦ ¦ AFGHAN FOR SALE - Black and tan, Typewriters 77 AND FINEST Service New Yorker ...... $329 campers. Open daily until p.m., Multiple listing ing In the) city. Tel. ^54-4232 or 454-' I about I '/a years old. Tel. 452-6 162. Fertilizer, Sod 49 Sun. 1-5. Hwy. 35-53, 3 milei S. of TYPEWRITERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED 2707. '63 OLDSMOBILE 98 , $229 and adding machines Galesville. Tel 608-582-2371. : for rent . PEKE-O-POOS, Coek-o-pcos, Poodles, or sale. Low rates. Try us STUDIO APA-RTMENTS Gazebo In Back Ya rd ' •65 CHEVROLET , k CULTURED SOD, delivered or laid/ Ken- for air your office supplies, deski MODEL APARTMENTS NOW OPEN BUILDING LOTS . - -with acreage In- city Cockers, Terrl-poos, Dachshunds, Bas- tucky Blue Grass 99% weedless, lawn files, or office chairs. LUND OFFICE . FOR YOUR INSPECTION. This lovely 2 story home has limits. May be used as large estate Wagon ...... ,...$389 New & Used Campers sets and Cclllei. Don Lakey, Trem- ¦ ¦' mowing contracts. Tel. 454-1494. SUPPLY CO, 128 E. 3rd. Ttl. ' 45J. INQUIRE 125! RANDALL ST. area or divided Into. .. Iota. Sewer and BUY NOW so you can look forward to pealeau, Wis. ' 3 bedrooms, dining room , •65 PLYMOUTH . 5221 . water in at properly line. TOWN 4V weekends and. vacation). Sleep 6 or 8. BLACK DIRT, fill dirt, fill sand, crushed family room and COUNTRY REAL E5TATE, Tel 454- CHAMPION sired AKC Collie pups, ' In- \Vz baths, . Fury III ;..-...... $389 Wide telc Egg* Supplies 44 unfurnished . 2 swimming NYSTROM' S EDDIE'S Independence , \Vls. Tel. 71R- Jim Mohan 454-2367 Cadillac - To.vota - Pontiac Bank, Plainview , cle rk. LAST CALLI USDA reports smallest pools. 1 bedroom nnd 1-bod- nnri-aiili or Eldon W. I?erg, CHEVROLET-1954 pickup, M.tnn. 461 W. chick hatch In 25 years. Chicks avail 1O70 E. Broadway room efficiencies. Addition nth alter 5. 165 W. 2nd Tel. 452-40H0 JUNE 1ft-Sal. 9:30 n.rn. Minnesota Motel, able June 3 and June 10. Hurry, Real Estate Sidesman , Ar- Mark Zimmerman, La Crescent, Minn. D. S. Prim ItiQ, to auclloneer*; hurryl SPELTZ CHICK HATCHERY, Tel. 452-H02JI Lako Park Apartments. cadia, Wis. Tel. 60f)-:)23.7.'!50. Realt or 454-1476 GMC '. j-to[i pickup, 1962 model, Tel, Open Mon. & Fri. Evenings owner) Boyum 8. Beckinan, Rollingstone, Minn. Tel. e»M31l. Tol. 452-0490 Minnesota Clly 689-2110 . Boyum Aiency, clerfc, By Roy Cran. BUZZ SAWYER

DICK TRACY By Chester Gould

Wa!k«r BEETLE BAILEY By Morf ,

BLONDIE By Chick Young

LI'L ABNER By Al Capp

¦ ¦ ¦ :;| ' •' ' REDEYE '. : . By Gordo n Best "

BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Latwall

STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff

APARTMENT 3G By Alex Kotzky

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MARY WORTH By Saunders and Ernsf

FAIRFIELD OCCASIONAL SERVING PIECES CHOOSE ONE OF THREE FREE WITH EVERY $3.95 INCOMING DRY CLEANING ORDER!

TIGER By Bud Blak. HURRY! QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED! KSD /^ifiMasagBi U4 Main S,ree» FrM Parki"« !» • You ll Agra. That Only at ^<" Hacldad'i Is tha Nicost Thing W^U Maf*r\ *%*%A\am That Ever Hcppened to Your Pl10!i e 452 -230 1 Clo thosl

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