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2-24-1969
Winona Daily News
Winona Daily News
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Continued Cloudy Read By More WifrY Occasional Than 90,000 Snow, Drizzle People Every Day Surgery on Ike Said Successful' PROMISES 70 CONSULT EUROPEAN ALLIES Reported 'Resting Nixon: Will Talk With Soviets Comfortably as BRUSSELS (AP) - President;.concern to the Atlantic allies: because we recognize that the mined to listen with a new at- Nixon had discussed with Bel- Can Be Expected' Nixon told America's European the new dispute , between the chances for successful negotia- tentiveness to its NATO part- gian officials the latest chill in WASHINGTON (AP) - For- Earlier thus morning a team allies today that he later will British and French govern- tions depend on our unity." ners," he declared, "not only British-French relations, he re- mer President Dwight D. Eisen- of Army doctors had pro- "enter into negotiations with the ments, and the possibility of an He went on- because they have a right to be plied: "I don't have any infor- nounced the 2 hour, 20 minute Soviet Union on a wide range ef East-West confrontation in Ber- ea ut b se we want nation on that." ' hower is "resting as comfortably "I realize that this course has * fd j ffBdl as can be expected," Walter operation fo>r removal of an in- issues," and he promised to con- lin. £**¦ lde.a '^to ¥*** ?- we Nixon flies to London tonight testinal blockage successful but sult with them both before and not always been Mowed in the right?;. expect that con- for -with Prime Reed Arm-y Hospital officials 1 Instead, with the aim of revi- past. But I pledge to you today, ^a talks Minister announced today after late-night had given no indication of the during the talks. talizing the Atlantic alliance, he that in any negotiations directly sultation shall be a two-way Harold Wilson, and after vists emergency abdominal surgery. former president's chances for Nixon, in a speech to the emphasized a pledge that "the affecting the interest of the street- to Bonn, West Berlin and Rome A brief statement issued at recovery. council of the North Atlantic United States is determined to NATO nations, there will be full Summarizing the approach he will go to Paris Friday to meet 9:30 a.m. CST said the gener- Maj. George H. Foster, hospi- Treaty Organization during the listen with new attentiveness to and genuine consultation before wants to take in his European with President Charles de al's heart condition -was stable. tal information office?, declined first stop of his eight-day Euro- its NATO partners." and during those negotiations." meetings, he said: "I have Gaulle. The combination of Eisenhow- to answer questions at the latest pean trip, did not hedge about To underscore this policy dec- Nixon said he knew the allies come for work, not for ceremo- ziegler said Nixon, during his er's 78 years and history ot sev- briefing. prospects for eventual Soviet- laration, he said that because had felt "that too often the Unit- W, to inquire, not to insist; to 10,500-mile trip is keeping close- en heart attacks had made the His full statement s-aid : "Gen. American talks. He said there American-Soviet talks would di- ed States talked at its partners consult, not convince; to listen \y abreast of latest reports from surgery a decided risk. Eisenhower is resting as com- will be negotiations "in due rectly affect the nations of and learn, and to begin what I fortably as be expected. instead of with them, or merely South Vietnam, where a new The report said -can His course, and with proper prepa- Western Europe, the United informed them of decisions aft- hope will be a continuing inter- wave of enemy attacks has been Eisenhower's vital signs are satisfactory and ration." States will approach Moscow er they were made instead of change of ideas and insights." launched, apparently to bolster vital signs were satisfactory. his cardiac status remains sta- The President made no men- "on the basis of full consultation GEN. EISENHOWER These would include such things ble. We will issue further bulle- consulting with them before." White House Press Secretary the communist position at the Battles tor life as pulse and blood pressure. tion of two crises of paramount and cooperation with our allies, "The United States is deter- Ronald L. Zlegler was asked if Paris peace talks. tins twice a day during the immediate postoperative peri- od." . Foster presented am answer to TO BRITAIN one previoBosly-subndtted writ- Enemy Shells ten question, saying it was not possible to determine which of Eisenhower' s previoms abdomi- nal operations had pr oduced the Nixon Makes a adhesions leading to the present 50 Cities, treatment. President Nixon, im Brussels on the first stop of his five-na- liste ning Trip tion Western European tour. LONDON Wi' Unlike his lage was described as "pleased" — near Gatwick for Sun- AAilitary Posts with the early-morning report. old hoss Dwight D. Eisen- day Mass. As he came out of the church SAIGON (AP) Viet Cong completely foiled'' with heavy Aides sadd he was being hower, Presdent Nixon is he left his — " kept constantly informed of the security detail and wialked and North Vietnamese troops losses to the enemyv The U.S. condition of the man whom visiting London this week into a small crowd of vil- raked , more than 50 towns and Command announced that more he with a minimum of exposure served as vice president for lagers, shaking hands. military posts with rockets, than 1,000 "Viet Cong and North eight years to the public. "Oh, my God, he's done it mortars and light ground at- Vietnamese had been killed . Security has always sur- again," moaned a Secret tacks today in the second day of since the attacks began Satur- The operation, performed by Service man countrywide attacks. American day night. a seven-member surgical team, rounded American Presi- had. been accepted "-with equa- dents, but the men respon- President Nixon's secur- officers said the enemy had started a spring offensive in- Allied casualties include about nimity" by Eisenhower and hit sible for the chief execu- ity arrangements in London, 100 American soldiers and an wife Mamie. tive's safety have become tied in with a packed busi- tended to generate pressure supercareful since the as- ness schedule, will keep him from the American public for equal number of South Viet- Slie had rushed to the hospital concessions at the Paris peace namese troops killed, at least earlier Suitday from their farm sassination of two Kenne- a considerable distance from 14 American soldiers and* home in Gettysburg, dys. . potential antiwar, antibomb TOP ECHELON GUIDE ... Norfh Atlan- the way to the council chamber at NATO talks. more Pa. than 100 South Vietnamese Eisenhower also had been ¦vis- Ike's trip in August . 1959 and anti-American demon- tic Treaty Organization Secretary General headquarters in Brussels this morning. CAP President Nugyen Van Thieu strators. Mario Brosio (right) shows President Nixon Photofax) said the offensive had been troops wounded, and at least 66 ited by his son Jofim and his was a ball for both him and civilians killed and another 250 brother, Dr. Milton Eisenhower, the British public. He rode wounded. before undergoing tbe delicate in an open Rolls Royce and Military spokesman said ene- operation that was d escribed by people threw flowers into IN RETALIATION^FO *^*^w^—wwm—aam ^ww—mm—mm ~m~w^m*w*—^* wi ^—wwmmmmaeemmmmwamm ^mia ^m±&SMmM *mmmeaia ^ma *mmeimm»ame *mmmmemem ^ W ' my gunners had shelled Saigon one authority as a "terrible it. A- half a million Britons and Da Nang, South Vietnam's risk" for a man of bis age and cheered him every time he two largest cities, 20 provincial meScal history. went out in England and capitals, and 29 district capitals. Scotland. Tie condition was first report- Some towns were hit several , ed Saturday right, but the deci- But Eisenhower was an Will Bombing of N. Vietnam Resume? times.-: sion to operate wa_s not an- enormously popular hero to Vice President Nguyen U.S. warnings to the North Vietnamese and Cao nounced until shortly before S the British, an old friend By FRED S. HOFFMAN Pentagon declined all comment and officials Ky, taking a plane to return to p.m- Sunday. from. World War II. Nixon WASHINGTON W — The enemy bom- refused to discuss the situation. Viet Cong about the possible breakdown of the Paris peace talks, said he Presi- bardment of South Vietnamese cities is ex- The keynote to the U.S. attitude prob- the Paris peace talks to resumed bombings It was 4=% hours later that comes strictly as a ; would recommend a resumption Brig. Gen. IFrederick J. Hughes dent, and a freshman at pected to bring U.S. recommendations for ably was sounded by a Nixon administration of North Vietnam on the scale before halt, of the bombing of Iforth Viet- that. He has scheduled no some kind of retaliation against Worth Viet- source now in Europe who said Sunday that or on a larger scale. Jr., commaJiding officer of the With U.S. public opinion in mind, Nixon nam if shelling of South Viet- hospital where Eisenhower has press conferences, no com- nam, perhaps selective resumption of bomb- authorities were "not going to do anything nam's cities continued. He said and no fol-de-rol precipitously." can hardly dismiss the offensive, although been bedridden in the* third-floor muniques, ings. his South Vietnamese air force presidential suite s5nce May, in Britain, France, Belgium, It is known that mili- ¦ Before leaving for his European trip, he could play down its importance. could do the job alone if Germany and Italy. tary cials regard the ¦ President Nixon said the "key word is shell- If he moved to resume the bombing, he neces- went before* newsmen: to say: offi A sary—"they are ready." "Gen. Eisenhower underwent For Nixon it is a "listen- widespread shelling, and An AP ing," because if this has happened "it re- would risk a break off in the Paris peace Allied spokesmen part. talks. That could well put the war back said the sec- surgery for intestinal obstruc- ing trip." use of rockets and mortars News quires some action on our " ond round of attacks today was John F. Kennedy came to as a breach of understand- Mews Reports from Vietnam tell of shelling and where it was last year — something the new tion this evening. The procedure ^ considerably less than the open- began at 9 :10 p.m. and termi- London in June 3963 for only ings under which the United Analysis other bombardment of more than 125 cities, president almost certainly wants to avoid. ing onslaught 22 hours after a triumphal States agreed to stop all towns and allied bases, including volleys of Government sources speculated that the and caused only nated successfully at 11:30 p.m. light casualties and damage. But The obstruction was Sound to> be visit to Ireland. But he, too, bombings of the North last rockets fired into Saigon, as well as some city bombardment was timed to embarrass it was felt the managed to throw presiden- ground Nixon as he opens his much heralded visit enemy might try due to two large adhesive bands Oct. 31. attacks. to keep up the effort for as tial security to the winds But pending a presidential decision, the Action could range all the way from stern to European capitals. resulting from previous sur- when he motored to a vil- much as 10 days. gery." At the outset, more than 150 CONCESSIONS OFFERED towns, bases and outposts came under attack Saturday night and Sunday. It was the heaviest ene- my blow since last May. Israeli Planes U.S. headquarters also an- nounced that enemy gunners Berlin Crisis Eases shot down and destroyed two Strike Across BONN, West Germany (AP) Informed sources said a deci- miles inside East Germany. big U.S. Marine CH47 helicop- —The latest Berlin crisis eased sion had to be reached quickly if The Soviet Union and East ters supporting Marine infantry- today after both West Germany the elections were to be relocat- Germany both warned repeated- men sweeping near the Laotian and East Germany offered ed. ly that election of a successor to frontier Sunday in an operation Syrian Border concessions. East German leader Walter President Heinrich Luebke to cut enemy supply lines. JERUSACJ2M (AP} - Israeli The situation was this: If Ulbricht made the offer of should not take place in West There were no casualties, but warplancs struck Ln force West Germany calls off plans to c oncessions this weekend Berlin, which they consider a the two losses raised to 2,362 the across the Syrian cease-fire lino elect its next president in West through the Soviet Ambassador "third German state." number of American helicopters to West Germany, Semyon today for the first time since the Berlin March 5, then East Ger- To bring pressure, East Ger- lost in the war. 1967 war, bombed two Arab many will allow West Berliners Tsarapkin , who met in Stuttgart The bulk of the fighting oc- Sunday with Kiesinger for the many imposed travel restric- guerilla ba-ses and engaged in to cross the wall into East Ber- tions Feb. 15, prohibiting the curred north and northwes t of dogfights with Syrian MIGs lin for the first time in three second time in 24 hours. Saigon, around the big Ameri- Tsarapkin told Kiesinger that presidential electors from using near Damascus. years to visit their relatives the surface routes through East can bases at Long Binh, Bien Israel claimed its planes re- during Eascr. shifting the election to a city in- Ioa and Dau Tieng. ' Side West Germany*would be "a Germany to the city. turned unharmed after shooting West German Chancellor Kurt contribution to detente and to- Then the Soviet Union an- Long Binh and Bien lion are down one Syrian MIG17. Da- Georg Kiesinger accepted the ward promoion of better So- nounced that Warsaw Pact onfy 15 miles northeast of Sai- mascus radio said three Israeli communist offer to negotiate viet-West German relations." forces would stage maneuvers gon, and elements of the North jets and two Syrian fighters ¦ *K?«.W,»JM I ¦ MIHI—— mwrw I | I ?¦¦— i --—¦-¦ — but indicated he wanted a "last- The conciliatory moves came in the area around West Berlin Vietnamese Sth Division are were shot down. GREETINGS . . President Nixon shakes a wreath at the Tomb of tho Unknown ing settlement" going far be- four days before President Nix- at a time coinciding with the reported trying to push past An Israeli army spokesman - them. hands with enthusiastic admirers after laying Soldier in Brussels today. (AP Photofax) yond Easter. on's visit to the divided city 110 election. denied any Israeli planes were Sources said allied defenses shot down. E^MC^lffii ^&JvivUi ^^^ *- "* have been bolstered around lying Binh and Bien Hoa, and to Israel died not nnraoiince how 45 RALLYING CRY IN 1968 CAMPAIGNS the south of Tay Ninh City, near many Israeli planes made tho the Cambodian border , to meet raid, but a spokesman said the a threat by the Syrians sent up about 10 or 12 North Viet- MIG17s and MIG2-1S. This namese 9th Division. announcement and broadcasts from Damascus irndicatcd it may have been tSie biggest Racial Religious Prejudice Not Used WEATHER Arab-Israeli air clasfh since the candidates filed inval- House contests it did not identi- FEDERAL FOKKCAST 3967 wnr. WASHINGTON M - The san, private organization head- "The Fair Campaign Prac- "Some The cease-firo line [between Is- committee that ed by Charles P, Taft of Cincin- tices Committee staff study id complaints against their op- fy. WINONA AND VICINITY " - nonpartisan their com- It said that in four house rael and S-yrla had been rela- watches over political campaign nati, Ohio, noted that racial and showed that political smear ponents, publicizing Continued cloudy and mild to- tively quiet- since the Juno 1967 was a major religious prejudice were the merchants still wait until the plaints and, in effect smearing races where hearings were held night and Tuesday with occa- tactics says there charges war, but the Israeli army said in appeals to racial and "two political pitches" which closing days of the campaign to their opponents by crying to arbitrate campaign , sional very light snow or wjfif Throughout this entire sector; . ^~^^ the heart of beverage buying is at yo^^^^^fe ^^^^^»&v ^ ^^^r the Beautiful Wine House. rnr ^i!v\ The explanation is simple - wflf * A - CV-/,.C V l\4 (alil EXClUSIVcI _ cgasssl wuD BBMHI mmm i ¦ ¦!¦ ¦ —— ' ¦ ¦—¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ l l ¦ mm W ¦¦ ¦ i ¦ ¦¦ ¦ __ *¦ _- • Burnett ¦ ¦- ¦¦—--¦ JK" -^ Carol li ¦—> —i m i " "MM IMMIIIIBt ^ HBa !)» " " " "*—^ **^**" — ^ P*? ^>* ^W ' ' ! IPJJ Truman to Remain $L dfappmi& To Get Award From Harvard In Hospital ) CAMBRIDGE, Mass. CAP) - KANSAS CITY (AP - For- Carol Burnett, the first televi- mer President Harry S. Truman Blondes Rebel sion performer honored as is recovering from a bout with "Woman of the Year" by Har- influenza, his doctors say, but vard University's Hasty Pud- will remain in Research Hospi- ding Theatricals, receives the tal for an undetermined period Against Wilson award in ceremonies at the club for a series of routine tests. The 84-year-old Truman was By EARL WILSON today. She will be greeted by Gov. brought to the hospital Thurs- NEW YORK — What's so bad about being picketed? 1 day night from his home in In- " ' ¦ ¦ Francis W. Sargent, at the State like it- ... . , , House tlen go to the clubhouse dependence, Mo., for treatment Twelve beautiful blondes carrying picket signs wiggled in Cambridge to receive a of intestinal flu. their miniskirts up and down in front of my B'way office be- plaque and a Cape Cod lighter, Officials said Truman re- cause I wrote a column saying "Brunettes are in charge of the a symbol of Hasty Pudding. ceived telephone calls Sunday world ... Whatever happened to blondes? What bottle of Her citation reads: "The from former President and Mrs. peroxide did they disappear behind?" Course Offered Hasty Pudding Theatricals has Lyndon B. Johnson, and his The dazzline darlings, who admitted that Clairol sent them, Voice of the Outdoors long held womanhood and act- daughter, Mrs. Clifton Daniel of carried signs with things like, * ing ability in high esteem and is New York. ¦'Lucrezia Borgia was a bru- honored to present this award in The former president spent . quire 20th Century-Fox which An Outing Sunday has been some awakening of States sp ortsmen on improving nette." Darryl F. Zanuck has said no- Two-County recognition of great acting skill much of the day sitting in a occupy * The fresh fall of snow that fish as the result of the slight duck habitats in Canada reports To and feminine qualities. chair in his room. 1 tried to get them to body can acquire ... Natalie gave the entire outdoors a new runoff from melting snow, which a total contribution for 1968 of " my office and live here, like Wood's in Kitzbuhel , Austria, Columbia , white atmosphere should be a carried a new supply of oxygen $1,643,932, or $400,000 more than the pickets did at with her fiance, Richard Greg- big inducement to get outdoors to the dormant fish The ice, in 1967. but they were too smart. They son, producer of Paramount's today. It should be a great snow however, is hazardous in some Law Officers stayed on the sidewalk. "Downhill." Also there are 3 sport day. areas, and caution should be Minnesota s p o r t j- GALESVILLE, Wis. - A law- "Has E. W. heard there's a actors from E. 86th St., Robert men were fourth in the na- The crust made by the exercised in crossing backwa- enforcement training program blonde in the White House?" Bedford, Camilla Sparv and , ters. tion with a total of $93,000. one sign said. They also listed Oren Stevens. recent thaw of the old Pennsylvania was first , will be offered local law en- *uch blondes as Brigitte Bardot, snow, should make a good Anyway, get outdoors to- California second and New forcement personnel in Buffalo Angela Lansbury, Joey Heath- ATTEMPTED suicides by two foundation for coasting, ski- day and fill your lungs with York third. Wisconsin gave and Trempealeau counties and ing and even riding down $71,000. Paxton Quigley's crime erton, Joanne Woodward, Cath- film actresses, via sleeping pills, the snow freshened air. bordering areas beginning , Jane Fonda , were hushed up ... Henny hill on garbage can covers. After all Minnesota's win- ^ erine Deneuve In enjoying these sports, Minnesota was first in the March 5. was passion.,.and his Zsa Zsa Gabor, Nancy Sinatra , Young-nan said at O'Neal's Ba- ter, if you dress and live purchase of duck stamps for N0W Dina Merrill, loon he may get his biggest crossing roadways should like Minnesotans should, is The program has been de- I Jane Morgan, be avoided. There have been the year ending July 1, 1968, punishment fits exactly! Tuesday Weld, Mamie Van Dor- break as summer replacement a beautiful time of the year. with 157,937. California was sec- veloped by the Western Wis- for, 'Laugh-In' . .. Agents for too many coasting accidents consin Technical Institute, La exhausted f^. ;¦ en, Marlene Dietrich, Twiggy, already this winter. Ducks Unlimited ond with 153,000 and Texas He's the Carol Channing — and Phyllis Barbara Bouchet (of "Sweet ¦ ¦ , Crosse, center for State Area Charity") are asking Playboy . ' Ducks Unlimited, the nation- third with 111 000. The total Diller. Ice fishing should draw its : al organization that spends sales fell just short of two mil- Vocational and Adult Educa- "Which of those are really for lOGs for a nudie layout . . . quota. Reports indicate there funds collected from United lion at actual 1,934,697. tion District 2, through the co- blondes?" I asked, They shrug- Robert Mitchum'll get $750,000 operation of key law enforce- for his new MGM film , "Mi- ment administrative personnel ged. But one of the 12 pickets , swore she's a real blonde. One chael's Day " . . Connie Stev- DEAR ABBY: Homestead Tax from the two counties and Mark out of 12, that's a pretty good ens, explaining at Danny's that A.. Smick, law enforcement co- I guess. she's dieting, stuck to broiled ordinator of the institute. average, (plus Relief Centers, chicken and salad a soft THERE- I WASN'T so stupid saying drink in a champagne glass, WILL be no cost to world. My it look like Dates Named individuals participating. The brunettes rule the "to make I'm drink- subjects to be covered during Beautiful Wife is a brunette. ing champagne") ...... Should Wife Gall Dates and places where per- , neces- homestead tax re- the 15 weekly sessions were de- Oh, I don't mean now Film censors rejected the ti- sons seeking termined at a Buffalo-Tremp- sarily. Originally! I have a tle "Rape Upon Rape," so the lief may receive advise and as- sistance have been announced ealeau county law enforcement wonderful memory. Christopher Plummer film'll be officer ad hoc advisory commit- The reason we don't hear called "Lock Up Your Daugh- Hubby at" Office? by Elenore Riphenburg, senior citizens coordinator with the tee meeting Feb. 10 at Gales- about blondes is that blondes ters" .. . George Raft sent ville. No On» .- AH ICAN INTERN^ are naturally quiet, shy and re- back a bottle of champagne to Western Dairyland Economic By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN Opportunity Council. The class will study such Under 16 WON —WETTE MB&K tiring. a fan at Joe's Pier 52, explain- DEAR ABBY: This is for the lady who has been married specific topics as traffic acci- ¦ ft tells me 'Stay ing, "Sorry — I don't drink" I To be eligible for a refund Admitted ^giSroPtiEPjnf\lFC "Everybody for 21 years, and still calls her husband every day at work on taxes, persons must have dent investigation; emergency ^j ]| £ busy,' " Jane Russell said — . . . The Supremes; -who made just to say, "I loye you." been 65 or over Jan. 1, 1968; first aid; field note taking and so she returned to work at the their TV debut only four years j You said, "Who knows? After he leaves for work , one have had an income under $3,- report writing; self-defense and Flagship, Union, N.J., three ago on "H'wood Palace," will of us may not live through the day". Well, I have news 500 in 1968; lived in Wisconsin disarming tactics; laws and months after the death of her host the show March 8 . . . Re- ' mechanics of arrest; search Adultl & V for you. . , all of 1968 ; paid rent or owned [^^/^J^MT^l^^ husband Roger Barrett whom port from Las Vegas : Liz Tay- and seizure; rules of evidence; ^1" ' It won't hurt any less if he dies five minutes after a home last year, and not re- JuDY'PACTE-MAGGiETWRETT- NAN MARTiM lor leaves her Caesars Palace : she'd married less than three you've called him at work than if he dies five hours after ceived old age assistance, aid collection and preservation of ¦ ¦ • ' ¦ months before. suite only to do her movie you parted in the morning. to the blind or the disabled. evidence; criminal investiga- ai . . ¦: V <^# w scenes. Jane's singing and dancing Besides, multinlv vour call hv 40 nr ?M1 nther rails frnm Each applicant should bring tion; juvenile justice; bees and ^roMN-N0WTp«N;STra%l< CH&MAMB H.NICHOLSbN'^s'JHUEL'lARKOFF with long-time partner Beryl Phil Harris and Harry James wives, and it adds up to a lot of the tele- social security number; exact liquor laws, and drug abuse- .(91889 Arwrican International Pletuwi Davis. She goes to Toronto from — whose fathers worked togetb phone operator 's time. Not to mention tying information on income includ- narcotics, hallucinating drugs, New Jersey. er in the circus — will appear up lines. ing social security payments, solvents and others. Jane s bridegroom died of a together for the first time at and 1968 real estate tax bill or Also, I have been with the same firm CLASSES will be held Wcd^ NITES: 7:15-9:15 massive heart attack Nov. 18. the Las Vegas Riviera . . . for 35 years, and I've found that the men information on rent paid last Nil Tflli L 1 only 47 and strong Yvette Mimieux goes from the year nesday afternoons from 1 to 4 J "He was whose wives are always calling them are . at one of the Arcadia public f 1 M 550-$l.OO-$1.25 as an ox. He used to carry me sexy "3 in the Attic" to the seldom called up for promotions. And you Applicants may call at the ^/ sexy "Jolly Girls" (about house- Arcadia city hall March 5 from schools. Instructors will fee staff across the stage and I'm a big may use my name. I don't care who knows members from various federal, girl. That was in Chicago where wives moonlighting as call girls) it. DOROTHY UEHLEIN. L. A., CALIF. 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. ENDS TUESDAY we met just last summer. The ... '. One of the more elegant There are three places to call state and local law enforce- • • . ^|----- ^M^ •m m J_r - ment agencies and educational ^*3* .^. ^ mmmmm WW0WF] *m *. ' ^. mm^m^W ¦ __¦ f ______mmT^^K^I wmmww. Manhattan restaurants is up for March 6: At the Alma city hall \ Ww\^^mKm\WLmwlm^m^r* y. 't I\A. ¦ \wm0T ___E_B^fl__D_____^^______play -was 'Here Today.' DEAR ABBY: I cried when I read the institutions. ^^ PV^^KV "And to think," Jane added, sale, "before it has to fold." letter in your column from that woman from 1 to 4; Bank of Wauman- dee, 9 to 12, and Independence Attending the organizational "we osed to laugh at that ti- TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Pat who called her husband every day just to .. . . meeting were Sheriff Stanley tle." Hemingway heard a H'wood pro- tell him she loved him. It was the most Abby city hall, 9 to 12 and 1 to 4. ducer sigh, "If only I could Three places also are listed Amundson, Investigator Milo We got a flash that Dustin beautiful thing I have ever read. N. G. L.: DETROIT Johnson and Patrolman Eafryl Hoffman was running around borrow $100,000, I'd be out of for March .11: Nefson commun- debt." ity hall, 9 to 12; Gilmanton McBrlde of the Trempealeau Central Park in the snow in his DEAR ABBY: I think it's lovely that a wife, after 21 town hall, 1 to 4, and Gales- County sheriff's department; shorts- He was, too — ' tennis WISH I'D SAID THAT: A fel- years of marriage, still calls her husband every day at work ville city hall, 9 to 12 and 1 Gary L. Redsten, Galesville po- shorts — for a tennis scene on low explained about TV vio- just to say, "I love you." But maybe she should look at lence : "It occurs at my house to 4. lice chief ; Carlyle Helstad, po- e snow-cleared court for Ms it from another point of view. Other centers: lice chief, and Norman Ander- "John and Mary" film with every time I want to change Perhaps one day she will have an emergency at home March 13, Cochrane village channels." . son, patrolman, Blair; George Mia Farrow. He and Mia are and REALLY need to talk to her husband in a hurry. What hall, 9 to 12; March 18, Foun- Fromm, "Whitehall police chief; working together so smoothly EARL'S PEARLS: William will she do if she calls and gets a busy signal because tain City hall, 1 to 4, and March Needles, featured in the B'way Edward Kaiser, Arcadia police that everything is — as the all the lines going into tie comp any are busy with wives 19, Trempealeau village hall, 9 chief; Jajnes E. Zeller, Foun- young set says — "Just wham- hit, "Hadrian VII," cherishes a calling their husbands to say, "I love you"? to 12 and 1 to 4. review from early in lis career. tain City police chief; Henry A. mo." Also most companies have a limited number of Hies, Zeichert, chief of the Buffalo Glenda Farrell, suffering a It says, "Mr. Needles gave a and in all fairness to the "hand that feeds her" those lines sew-sew performance." Meat Course Planned County traffic police, and viral infection , went into a hos- should be kept open for company business. Smick. pital. Violet Dunn took over her Van Harris tells at the Copa SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR For Co-op Project of the man who kept urging dustries, it was found there aire role in "Forty Carats" ... Sig- his delinquent son to open up nal Oil's rumored trying to ac- DEAR ABBY: I was so touched by something I read in BLAIR, Wis. (Special)—Noti- about 50G persons employed in a store, "and one night he husband fication has been received from the meat processing field, with did." . . . That's earl, brother. your column, I decided to- try it, so I called up my ¦ at work and said, "Honey, I love you." State Superintendent William a need for more trained work- Know what HE said? "Gee, do I have to lock up the Kahl that the Cooperative Vo- ers expressed by the employ- liquor when I go to work?" Very truly yours, HARRIET cational Education Project , con- era. Wr Expect Mary Martin sisting of the school districts of Arcadia, Blair, Independence, WOWLP To Return Tonight DEAR ABBY: I've been on the same switchboard for COME ONB , . . COM! ALU \ Taylor and Whitehall, will re- r DETROIT CP — Actress 19 years and I can tell you that the married men who work ceive a 3-year grant in agri- _m as w. »h «t. ~ ~" here are not bothered by their WIVES so much. It's their ENDS Mary Martin is recovering from cultural meat industries, which SCHAFSK0PF I l&IPIl 1 Nite. at 7:15 / *n Wj food poisoning and Ls expected GIRLFRIENDS who call them. I don't have time to listen, is a pilot course. TU to be back on the stage tonight but I've got about 10 bosses who are called five or six Purpose of the program is to VlNfclFlA "^,00"" ES. to perform in the musical "I times every day by a "Miss Jones" or a "Miss Smith." test new ways to prepare young \ TUESDAY \ You'd think these stupid women would use a little more imag- peop Do! I Do!." le for careers in agricul' anrew T Miss Martin's illness forced ination. ure-related occupations. Funds t0t.M8IAftCIM$K .S[N*' P|L> CCWSnU^ cancellation of the musical at If you publish this letter, please don't use my name or from the Federal Vocational :IV NIGHT8:00 8f th the Fisher Theater Saturday company . I'd like to continue working here a little longer. Act of 1953 will be utilized. jjfwraS&L * " BfflKIH' W" MBM night. "BROWN EYES" Initial planning was started by the five schools in August, ? I HO EAGLES 1868, to explore occupations f T^ST CLUB ; PUR 4 BURTON Food Stamp Program available within the project RVBRVONI WBLCOMEI Applicants Sought area. Upon surveying local in- T" jjiE ¦SB* ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ (¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ a i «=T Tapc AXMA, Wis, — The Buffalo- w j =*« 1 County Department of Social npmf gHHfltf ""aa" Services is taking applications SPECIALS SERVED ALL DAY DOUBLE FEATURE from families who wish to take FISH COLUMBIA ncrungs FJ.ED ZINNEMANIYS «-» FRESH SALE part in the Department of Agri- culture's food stamp program EVERY TUESDAY ¦^^ammm m. Now! Randall's Bring scheduled to open here in «J8b|& March. f A MAN FOR Jerome Benson, director, said PANCAKE DAY all persons now receiving some dSS ^J^ ALL SEASONS type of public assistance, aa well i '"-*«*y *H01)Eirr BOLT - TECHNICOLOR* _% as other low-income folks not ^kmLw*** receiving assistance, should ap- Fresh Fish Sale ply for fhe food stamp program Arriving Tuesday at thc Social Service office lo- "DAZZLING![Onc« wii sec it, you'll never again picture y*f^^^S(H ^L ___ Via North cated at the courthouse annex. 'A ¦ ' ¦ Centra l Airliner Directly to Romeofc Juliet quite the way you did beforer -LIFE fy ' . _ —»——^—^—«———— ,-! r i 11 ... ^3 W^NN\. Benson reminded all famil- ^—— PAMMOVNT PtCWWM . MI ies who wish to get help un- IHI IU der the food stamp program not TW to delay making application if HAPPY CHEF RANCO EFFIRELIJ Ihey are to be able to purchase RESTAURANT FrmlwtlMaf Z Mmm RANDALLFrom S food stamp coupons when the ^^NffN N^ Turner's of Boston program officially opens. More than three-fifths of all ImJSKZ. WIN*" EVERY THURSDAY ROMEO township governments in the ha- PHONE 8-3096 ' Perch • Cod • Flounder tion have less than 1,000 popula- ^^^JUUET ^SBfe . * tion. EVERY WED. FHT * STWK!!!* *!!!!!! m * Swordfish Steaks Smelts W_W_f jJ______k v': * • <*> FISH FRY f^^______^_^_^k^_ 'W^______H__R__ ipSP TENDERLOIN All THE FISH BUV ONE DINNER F^_ "B ' ^______j____j______M______. YOU CAN EAT AY l^______M -.^1 wJfeS** AT REGUlAR-Brrni AD PRICEnni«-e ^ • Halibut • Brook Trout STEAK INCWDE5 IPS ^^^^^^c 7 GET SECOND FOR .^^¦VaHH^IW^^B^^^ni^^^lH ^H SANDWICH SMAO, ROUS * ^I^K .... . • Oysters Toast & French Fries mm/m^/mm&/^immw*mMii'iM!&&> "¦ " ' ' $1.25 sTis * -MMBMriJHMMmflH^^ Teach»r» Call I m ma^s^ 5jl $ |||j |pF Westgate Shopping Center 4171 for Croup «ARTS STEAK SHOP OPEN EVERY DAY 6 a.m.-2 am lAfFQii_ Sal. Information | w»fc_i ri France to Meet Saint Teresa Apollo 9 Crew Gets Final Physical Test Center For CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) cle the earth for 10 days after Sandwiched between Mariner The National Aeronautics and -vide information on the canal- — The Apollo 9 astronauts today their Saturn 5 rocket blasts off and Apollo will be the launching Space -Administration said the like streaks that crisscross tha With Allies undergo their final major in pr* at 10 a.m. CST Friday. of the ESSA 9 weather satellite objectives of the double mission planet. Teacher Exams flight physical exam while The physical exam also pro- at 2:34 a.m. Wednesday. Whirl- "are to study the surface and The Mariners will continue The College of Saint Teresa launch crews prepare for a vides medical data for in-flight ing through a north-south orbit atmosphere of Mars to establish studies started in 1965 by tno Common Market has been designated as a test space tripleheader starting to- and postflight comparison . 900 miles high, the craft's cam- the basis for future experiments less sophisticated Mariner 4 PARIS (AP) center for administering nation- night with a probe toward the Seeking clues to possible life eras and infrared sensing de- in the search for extraterrest- which flew by Mars at a dis- - France m eets vised Wilson and Foreign Secre- planet Mars. on Mars, Mariner 6 is to rocket vices will look at storm systems her Common Market allies to- tary Michael Stewart al teacher examinations April rial ilfe and to develop technolo- tance of 6,118 miles. That probe not to dis- Sister M. Romana Walch an- Air Force Lt. Col. James A. toward that distant planet at over the entire globe. gy for future Mars missons night in an attempt to undo the close De Gaulle's plans to Brit- 12, ." disclosed the planet has densely damage done nounced today. McDivitt and David R. Scott 7:14 p.m. tonight. After an inter- McDivitt, Scott and Schweick- The agency emphasized the packed craters much like those by Britain's dis- ain's allies—including the Unit- and c ivi li planetary closure that President College seniors preparing to an Russell L. voyage of nearly five art have the complex task of probes will not detect life "but on the moon, little or no mag- Charles ed States—because France Schweickart plan several hours months, it^ is to sweep within de Gaulle wants to. scrap the teach, and teachers applying for proving the flight readiness of will help establish whether or netic field, no radiation belt and would consider it a breach of with space agency doctors, who 2,00ft miles of the Red Planet the lunar module (LEM), the economic community. confidence. positions in school systems that , not the Martian environment is a surface atmospheric pressure Foreign Minister encourage or require appli- want to be certain they are fit. snapping pictures and gathering spidery four-legged vehicle suitable for life. " one one-hundredth of that on Michel De- The trio's mission will be to cir- scientific data. bre scheduled talks with repre- All this emerged after Presi- cants to submit scores on the which is designed to land two The photographs might pro- earth. sentatives of Italy, Belgium, dent Nixon set out on what he national teacher examinations men on the moon and get them West Germany, Luxembourg had hoped would be a quiet along with their other creden- off safely. and the Netherlands to give- fence-mending swing through tials, are eligible to take the If they succeed, the way will the Advertisement French version of De Gaulle's five European capitals. Instead tests. Last year more than 98,- be clear for the Apollo 10 crew proposals to British Ambassa- he found some of America's 000) candidates took the exam- Warn Congress to fly a LEM on a lunar orbit dor Christopher Soarnes. closest friends in fierce dispute inations which are prepared mission in May and for Apollo and the future of the Common and administered by Educa- 11 to attempt a moon landing in New Way Found The British version is that De- Market in doubt. tional Testing Service, Prince- July. Gaulle wants to replace the Informants said Wilson and ton, N.J. Of Budget Cuts Mariner 6 will be followed Common Market with a loose To Stop Hair Loss/ Stewart were trying to dissuade At the 1-day session a candi- March 24 by a twin, Mariner 7, free trade union led by a four- date may take Common MIAMI BEACH, Fla. Ml - The labor federation's execu- Soames from the which will zip by the edge of power political directorate quitting because Examinations, which include The AFL-CIO said today that tive council said federal pro- Mars' southern polar cap on Grow More Hair made up of France, Britain, such a move would be political tests in professional education the Nixon administratioa and grams for slum clearance, edu- Aug. 5. Mariner 6 will pass near Germany and Italy. This ulti- dynamite in Britain and could and general education, and one the Democratic Congress could cation, housing, job training and Mars above its equator on July HOUSTON, Texas — If stages of male pattern bald- mately would lead to dissolution be widely misinterpreted in Eu- of the 15 Teaching Area Exam- tempt national disaster if they Welfare were caught in last 31. They will gather scientific you don't suffer from male ness and cannot be helped. of the North Atlantic Treaty Or- inations, designed to evaluate get into a budget cutting contest ' But , if you are not already rope. Soames refused to com- year's budget "crunch" of for- data and snap scores of photo- patternmttsm. W.Mniu..baldness , you«.rv„ can„™ ganization when a true Euro- understanding ot subject ma tter toi slash tederal funds for social mer President Lyndon B. John- graphs for 25 minutes each be- slick bald > %ow can you be su£ pean independence was built up. ment on the matter. and methods applicable to the programs. son; and " already the cry for fore streaking into orbit around HOW stop your hair loss . . . what is actually causing your France protested hair loss? Even if baldness may Britain's British sources here said Lon- area he may be assigned to budget cutting has been heard the sun. anaand growcn-nw moremnrp nair.hair (< l. "leaking" of the De Gaulle- don 's publication of De Gaulle's teach. seem to run in ym j^^ Soarnes talks. from within the new administra- For years "they said it couldn't this is certainly no proof of the Authoritative plan followed a "one-sided" ver: Descriptions of registration tion." .. /. ' sources said Debre gave sion leaked by the French to a be done." But now a firm of cause of YOUR hair loss, procedures and registration Farm Spokesman The council of the 13.6-mil- laboratory consultants has de- Many conditions can cause Soarnes a protest note which the Paris newspaper. And the Brit- forms may be obtained from ' ambassador took to London Sun- lion-member federation said Fly Tying Class veloped a treatment for both men hair loss. No matter which one is ish government felt its action Sister Romana in the depart- causing your hair loss, day after hasty consultations was vindicated by the reaction federal social programs face a and women, that is not only stop- if you ment of education, at the col- severe onslaught in the drive to ping hair loss . . . but is really wait until you are slick bald and with his government. He re- in the Common Market coun- lege or directly from the Na- Says Farming your hair roots turned to Paris reduce government spending. growing hair! are dead, you Sunday night. . tries. tional Teacher Examinations, Begins March 10 They don't even ask you to are beyond help. So, if you still Soames a conservative , was British government officials Educational Testing Service, "For Congress to enact new , programs which hold forth Jig and fly tying classes, the take their word for it. If they have any hair on top of your reported furious and consider- said Chancellor Kurt Georg Kie- Box 911, Princeton, N.J., 08540. believe that the treatment will head, and would like to stop your ing resigning Not Way of Life promises of a better life and park - recreation department's because of the singer of West Germany was Prospective teachers planning be- help you, they invite you to try hair loss and grow more hair . :.' . way* Prime Minister Harold PLAINVIEW, Minn. (Special) then to cruelly deny the neces- annual spring offering, will Wil- shocked and upset when Wilson to take the tests should obtain "Farming is no longer a gin soon at "West Recreation it for 32 days, at their risk, and now is the time to do something son's labor government had outlined De Gaulle — sary funds is to tempt a disaster about it before it's too late. 's thinking their bulletins of information way of life, it is a business, Center, according to Robert see for yourself ! handled the affair. Sources in during Wilson's visit to Bonn on promptly, Sister Romana ad- that would shatter far more Naturally, they would riot offer Loesch Laboratory Consultants, London said Soames had ad- and its purpose is to make a than the nation Welch, director of parks and Inc., will supply you with treat- Feb. 12. vised. profit," Leonard Franklin, field 's budget stabili- this no-risk trial unless the treat- ty," the council's statement recreation. ment worked. However, it is im- ment for 32 days, at their risk, and health services director of said. Two classes of three sessions possible to help everyone. if they believe the treatment the Minnesota Farm Bureau each will be offered. The first ' "The political fact of a Repub- The great majority of cas- wm help you. Just send them the Federation, told a meeting of class series will be on March formation listed below. All in- lican administration and a "Dem- es of excessive„ 1 hair fall and the Plainview - Elgin and Oak- 10, 12 and 14. The second series \Z>u«^Z 4u" un£ *JriJ.~ quines are answered confidenti- Pr oxmire ChargesThe wood Farm Bureau units at a ocratic congress provides an will be on March 18, 20 and 24. baldness are the beginning al]y> by maii and without obli- f f arena of great political tempta- joint meeting Wednesday at the Each class is limited to five and more fully developed gation. American Legion clubrooms tion, which will require great persons. here. statesmanship and responsibili- ' Registration should he made r— —— —.— NO OBLIGATION COUPON ———¦ ¦ He said there is a crucial ty to resist," it said. - in advance at the department'!* to: Loesch Laboratory Consultants, Inc. Of Valuable /'bi/^Drcifhs need for real leaders in this "Budget cutting for political office in City Hall. Materials WASHINGTON (AP) — Pri- Box 66001, 3311 West Main St. there were no overpayments to physics apparently were re- age of rapidly changing society one-upmanship must not be- and equipment will be furnished Houston, Texas 77006 vate contractors delivering U.S. contractors because "the stand- pealed* For every 10,000 gallons and industry, both of which, come the sport of Congress and by the department at a nominal military fuel in Southeast Asia ard practice of using tempera- the government bought at 60 de- he said, are over-organizpd. I am submitting the .following information with the under- the administration," the council charge to each student. standing that it will be kept strictly confidential and that I am have failed to return millions of ture conversion factors has been grees, the standard in the indus- He pointed out that 55 per- added. Hubert Bambenek is class in- under no obligation whatsoever. I now have or have had the dollars worth of reuseable steel followed . try, not a drop over 10,000 gal- cent of the people of Minnesota structor. Each class starts at 7 following conditions: oil drums as required by gov- Proxmire wrote Chaffee that lons was delivered at 90 degrees live in a seven-county metro- p.m. in the West Center base- Do you have dandruff? _Is it dry?_ or "Hyr ernment contracts, according to he has indications the secretary —the average temperature in politan area and that one farm Tramps No Longer ment. Does your scalp have pimples or other irritaiiW? ¦ ' ¦ Sen. William Proxmire. has been misinformed. The sen- Thailand." today is providing food and fi- i. ; ' . : «f gn»a CCMMAM 1 —^— 1 jn^q] : Adequate Sewage A WORD EDGEWISE 'BRING US TOGETHER AGAIN' ON THE RIGHT Treatment Needed LBJi Did Not IT APPEARS thaMher. it consicUrable Mr. Nixon Goes sentiment in the city for construction of a new sewage disposal plant that would ac- Try to Stop complish 90 percent removal of toxicity To Germany rather than 75 percent, as tentatively recom- mended by the city engineer. Bob Kennedy By WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY Jr. Nixon has rejected what he called instant ROCHE Although Mr. The original report to the City Council By JOHN P. summitry, he is in effect involving himself in summitry in recommended a 75 percent treatment lev- Since I have no intention of writing xny his trip. Because he will be meeting for the first time, as el, partly because a plant operating at the memoirs before I reach 70, and there seem to primus inter pares, with the leaders of the western alliance, higher rate would cost some $200,000 more be a. large number of people peddling "inside" and one must suppose that decisions will be made, even if to build and partly because of the dilution dope on the Johnson Administration, I may it is only rhetoric which is given out to the press and public. factor present in the Mississippi River. take the liberty from time to time of using (FDR used to specialize in this. Every time he came back this column as a corrective. The basic prob- - ~ — State regulations for this general area from meeting with Churchill . lem the historian has to deal with is the "three to announce a New Freedom, specify 90 percent treatment largely be- times in print" syndrome that is, the notion To Your Good Health cause most communities must employ far you could count on it, it that if anything appears three times in print five bil- smaller streams to carry away their plant would cost us twenty it is true. The New York Times, for example, lion dollars and six divisions.) effluents. singlehandedly appointed me "Intellectual-in- And of course the first de- ResLdence" at the White House as Professor Cyrosutgery; Despite the higher cost, both of con- cision is how to handle the Eric Goldman's replacement. In fact, my ap- Berlin crisis. struction and operation, some rather large track, pointment was on an entirely different assumed that segments of city opinion have indicated that in my obituary the Times It is widely Useful , Buf but I'm sure Premier Khrushchev took the support for the higher-level treatment sys - will note that I was Johnson's "resident intel- tem. measure of President Kenne- lectual." This sort ot thing used to bother rne, dy at their meeting in Vienna but now I am satisfied if my name is spelled It is quite likely, these groups and in- in the spring of 1961, decided No Miracle correctly, dividuals believe that standards will be that Kennedy was, at least at Dear Dr. Thosteson: , What interests me today is the growing leg- There was an article in a raised in the future. Given the inflationary that stage, an arnbiguist, and end that Lyndon Johnson threw everything he proceed magazine about a new type the thereupon decided to trends in force for the past lew years, had into a "Stop Kennedy" movement back in with the Berlin Wall. By the of surgery called cryosur- remodeling of a 75 percent plant into a 90 1967. Several of the late Senator's aides have same token, Khrushchev is gery. It is a method of sur- percent facility five or 10 years hence in- said this and, by my count if it comes out said to have become convinc- gery involving freezing with evitably will be far more costly than build - in print once more it will be set in concrete ed that President Eisenhower a cryoprobe. It has been ing the high-capacity plant now. as true. The fact is that, to the despair of his intended to defend Berlin by used in hospitals around the friends and associates, President Johnson did war if necessary, and that for world for Parkinson's dis- THUS FAR, most of the support for 90 virtually nothing to head off Robert F. Ken- that reason, as also because ease, also on skin cancers, percent treatment has come from conser- nedy. There was, indeed, a massive attempt- it happened that our missile and for prostate. Why isn't vation groups. Their interest is aroused by aim ost a conspiracy—among his staff to get superiority was overwhelming it being used more widely? what they feel is the need to maintain qual- him off the dime, but he wouldn't budge. during the period, Khrushchev The doctors here don't even ity of public waters at the optimum level of abandoned his announced in- talk about it. — E.A.B. purity rather than at a minimum level TAKE THE situation at ihe Democratic Na- tention of , in effect, incorpor- of Cryosurgery is a method of acceptability. tional Committee. L.B.J, was perfectly aware ating West Berlin into East that he would have beaten Goldwater by rough- Germany. But having given removing tissue by freezing it It is a valid point and one that is con- ly the same margin had he sunned himself in up on that point, he needed ¦with an instrument which is sidered reason enough by itself to justify Texas throughout the 1964 campaign. This may to staunch the psychological- chilled far below freezing tbe additional construction. have hurt his ego a bit, but whenever his ego ly embarrassing and profes- temperatures by the use of and his intelligence came into conflict, his in- sionally crippling flow of ref- liquid nitrogen. Beyond this, however, is a point even telligence vion out (though, sometimes it •was ugees into West Berlin. For some operations it has harder to dispute — that protecting the quite a struggle). Thus he well knew that 3968 HENCE THE Wall, which is certain advantages; for oth- river's clarity and attractiveness can be of was going to be a different kind of ball game WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND the eternal symbol of com- ers it does not. It was an in- tremendous economic value to the com- and that to win would require effective national THE munism . triumphant — and genious idea; it has had a con- munity and the area. organization. Yet , throughout 1967 he ignored the perfect backdrop for the siderable amount of publicity, the shambles at the Watergate, the headquar- libertarian rhetoric of Western hut it is, after all, only an There is no doubt that recreational use ters of the D.N.G. leaders. John Kennedy drove adjunct to the surgeons' tech- of the great river is increasing each year. Johnson was fully acquainted with the inef- them mad with joy with-his niques. More boats are launched each season and fectual standing of the D.TJ.C. In September, Brifish Lift Eyebrows declamation, rendered in Ger- A good deal of surgery (but the demand for harborage and other facili- 1967, Larry O'Brien (at Johnson's request) turn- man, "I am a Berliner." It by no means all) is aimed at ties is running well ahead of present abili- ed in a superb summary of the current situa- as good generic fare. Obvious- removal of diseased tissue. ties to meet it. Fishing, swimming and oth- tion along with a series of concrete recommen- ly picking up the echoes of This can be achieved by cut- dati ons for organizing the 1968 Prime Minister Wilson said er water sports also are booming. campaign. It it, ting it away, sometimes by vanished somewhere into the depths of the Man- Over Nixon Appointee last week in Germany, "We use of X-ray, sometimes by sion, and repeated suggestions from O'Brien, are all Europeans — free Eur- freezing, or cryosurgery. In coming years, these demands will in- as the new British for Musmanno's death to Sen. * Marvin Watson, James Rowe myself and oth- By DREW PEARSON on critic, opeans." What will Nixon There is an adage long fa- crease, according to all available pro- and JACK ANDERSON ambassador to Washington. Clark. say? , jections and forecasts. ers that the President should focus on politics . miliar among doctors: "Bo were politely but firmly turned aside. He growl- WASHINGTON — President As former editor of the IT WAS Italian resentment, Such rhetoric does not, of not the first to adopt the new, IT WOULD SEEM to be of prims im- ed about Robert Kennedy's Presidential ambi- Nixon arrives in London to- New Statesman, Freeman re- from the In- course, necessarily mean any- not yet the last to abandon peatedly attacked Nixon as a partly resulting portance, therefore, to do everything pos- tions (he was absolutely convinced that Ken- day just after standing British quirer's attacks, -which defeat- thing. President Kennedy left the old." "man of no principle" who Cubans in Miami with the im- sible to preserve the attractiveness of this nedy would end up contesting the nomination), diplomacy on its ear with the ed Clark last November. It has proved to be a pretty appointment of "Walter H. An- "dirtied his hands in Joe Mc- pression that he was going great natural resource. The rather care- but in specific political terms he did absolutely Carthy's cesspool" and whose The Inquirer and its publish- good rule. Grabbing at every nothing to head Kennedy off. , nenberg of Philadelphia, king er also waged a vendetta direct from their rally to Mi- less inattention to these matters of other , to the covet- defeat for the California gov- ami Beach to swim over to new method isn't the safest of Racing News against Milton Shapp, a lib- far as the patient is years must be replaced by a new aware- ONE EVENING, in November, 1967, I think, ed post of ambassador to the ernorship in 1962 was "a vic- Cuba with a dagger clenched method so tory for decency in public eral, non-machine Democrat concerned It takes time to ness that more care than ever is needed I took this puzzle to a colleague, Harry C. Court of St. James. between his teeth and person- . life." who ran for governor of Penn- ally attend to the libera tion. of learn how best to use new to ensure th at waters are clean and attrac- McPherson , Special Counsel to the President, Annenberg, who owns a sylvania two years. The In- tive. and laid out all the pieces. Johnson large publishing, radio and Cuba. Instead, he went back techniques; and the sure and 's behavior, FAR MORE important, how- quirer's political correspon- final test is to " see how re- I said, seemed to lead to either one of two TV conglomerate, including ever is Publisher Annenberg's to the White House and for- Preliminary studies have indicated that , dent hounded Shapp at press apparently sults between two methods inherently absurd propositions: 1) that he the Philadelphia Inquirer, crusade agai nst Gen. de got about Cuba, the sewer rental fees needed to finance the has been a loyal and generous conferences with such ques- forever. compare after they have been thought he could win without organization ; or, Gaulle -which has raised Bri- isn't it true 90 percent plant would add nearly 75 per- supporter of Richard Nixon. tions as, "Shapp , Nixon will almost certainly ih use for some time. 2) that he did not appreciate how much trouble tish eyebrows and caused Brit- you were in a mental hospi- cent to present consumer water bills. This The British understand this say something very pretty iiii Cryosurgery requires spe- he was in. McPherson and I went over the ish chuckles. President Nix- tal?" Shapp, a J ewish liberal, cial and complicated instru- is a substantial amount but may not prove ground inch by inch phase of American politics. West Berlin, but what mat- and finally he sat back, What has flabbergasted on's main reason for coming was also accused by the In- ments, and it requires a lot of to be the blow that it seems at first glance. thought a minute or two and said ters is what he and other , , "You are them, however, is Annen- to Europe one month after as- quirer of getting the support West European leaders do in know-how: Precisely what wrong. There is a third alternative which the suming office is to patch up For one thing, berg's background. Not only of the western Pennsylvania the next ten days, because the temperatures to use, where to transferring costs of op- evidence strongly supports—the simplest possi- relations with De Gaulle. Yet leader of the Ku Klux Klan. eration to the fee system will mean a sav- is he divorced, and the Court danger point is March 5, when apply them. The area which ble answer—he isn 't going to run." Since John- of St. James frowns on di- his new ambassador to Great The Inquirer also referred is to be destroyed b freezing ing of about five mills for every owner of the West German delegates y son was neither an egomaniac nor a fool, this vorce, but the Annenberg for- Britain has not only been high- frequently to the fact that are supposed to meet in West must be small enough so the taxable property in the city. At present, tho hypothesis did make sense, but I couldn't bring tune was built up by Chica- ly critical of De Gaulle in his Shapp's original name was Berlin to choose a president. body can readily dispose of costs of city sewage collection and treat- myself to take it seriously. go gang warfare, and Wal- Philadelphia newspapers, but "Shapiro," he having changed East Germany, which is to the tissues which have been ment are about $60,000 a year in funds rais- Now, with 20-20 hindsight, I find that Mc- ter's father, Moses Annen- purchased advertising space his name in the 1930s when say the Soviet Union, has.de- killed. The wise thing to do ed by general taxation. pherson's reading seems obvious. Down inside, berg, was sentenced to four in Canadian, London and Brus- many engineering firms shied clared that they may not con- is wait and watch while the Johnson had made the decision to sign off and years for evading $3,259,000 in sels newspapers to reprint away from hiring Jewish en- vene in Berlin, on the grounds pioneers in this type of work It also is likely that the sewer fee per- the consequence was not an aggressive assault income taxes. these critical editorials. gineers. Shapp won the Dem- that it is not truly a part of evolve the most effective in- centage rate can. be reduced as sub- on his opponents in the Democratic Party, , 1939 fed- As for Ambassador Annen- ocratic primary but with the West Germany, and although struments, learn what pitfalls stantial expansion AT THAT time . of city industrial and but a catatonic paralysis in political organiza- eral officials said that the el- berg's own record, he is still continuing vitriol poured out the nature of the retaliation must be avoided, and find out residential areas occurs and more water tion which left the field wide open to Kennedy der Annenberg's personal in- the publisher of the Daily Rac- by the Inquirer, lost the final has not been specified, we which cases can be most ef- and sewer users are added . and McCarthy. come was the largest in the ing Form and the Morning election. know already that the com- fectively treated in this man- United States. He was report- Telegraph without which mil- What the public didn't know munists have been practicing ner and which yield best to Aside from the expense of operating the , the art of jamming airplane ed to have paid, according to lions of American racing fans was that Shapp was then head the conventional methods. system, only a fixed annual amount can The NAACP's opposition to black stu- J. David Stern , former pub- of Jerrold Electronics, a pow- communications systems and I am by no means criticizing be applied could hardly exist. He also may have attained the skill to bond retirement and sur- dent dormitories is logical. That won't lisher of the Philadelphia owns the Philadelphia Daily er in the CATV — cable tele- cryosurgery; I am merely pluses cannot be applied to reduce bonded Black Power move- Eecord, $1 million a year to vision — world , and that An- of making instrument flying saying that the experts them- make it popular in the News, TV Guide and a long impossible. debt in advance. This means that over- ment, which depends more on action than Af Capone, czar of the Chica- list of TV and radio stations nenberg's conventional TV sta- selves agree that they don't shooting the revenue go underworld, to protect his tions have been fighting CATV. Then too there are over- know all about it yet. In any objectives -would be logic. in Philadelphia, Altoona and tones of something worse, per- pointless and would guarantee to some ex- racing wire which distributed Such is part of the back- event , it doesn't always pro- race news to gambling hous- Lancaster, all in Pennsyl- s new envoy haps even an attempt physic- tent that fees would be held to minimum ground of Nixon' duce miraculous new curses es and bookies throughout the v a n i a; Binghamton, N. Y.; to the most prestigious diplo- ally to prevent the West Ger- feasib' * levels. Hartford, Conn.; and Fresno, man dignitaries from flying that can't be achieved by oth- nation. matic post in the world — the er methods ly a The new ambassador to the Calif. over to Berlin. The threat is . It is simp It would appear then IN YEARS GON E BY Court of St. James, new "tool" for the surgeon to , , that the city Court of St. James was also most directly posed against would be well advised to Ambassador Annenberg has use in such cases as offer an look closely at indicted in 1939 for "aiding given generously to charity, the 22 delegates of the Na- the idea of Ten Years Ago . . . 1959 advantage. constructing the 90 percent and abetting'' his father, but founded the Moses Annenberg Winona Daily News tional Democratic Party , led plant. It might very well prove the more Colored slides took the Exchange Club en a the indictment was quashed by Adolf von Thadden, an ex- Fair School of Communications at Note to F.R.V.: Yes, a se- economical course in the long run. stay-at-home tour of Brussell's World , in 1942. Nazi. Interesting, that the Scotland and Ireland. Dr. J. Allen Kestle, min- the University of Pennsylvan- vere shock can trigger diabe- The gang warfare -which MONDAY, FEBRUARY IA, 196 . threat should come from peo- tes, ister of Central Methodist Church , showed the ia in honor of his father, and if the patient already is THL IS NOT meant to criticize those founded the Annenberg fortune contributed with his brothers ple who have not yet attain- a potential diabetic. who recommended the lower slides and described his 1958 trip to the British and accumulated the where- ed the status of ex-commun- level of treat- and sisters a total of $7 mil- VOLUME 113, NO. B0 ment. The reasoning was that Isles and mainland of Europe. withal to purchase the Phila- ist*-. the city lion toward a new Mt. Sinai faith , but 1 judge that he will would be saved hy the above-mentioned Sister M. Helen, chairman of the modern delphia Inquirer, started with language project at the College of St. Teresa, a circulation battle between School of Medicine in New Published dally except Saturday and Hol- AS USUAL, what is being come forward, aided by Henry $200,000 in building and equipping costs. York as a tribute to their idays by Republican and Herald Publish- fought over Is of purely Kissinger and will attend the national conference on higher the Chicago Tribune and the ing Company, 401 Franklin SI.. Wlnono, sym- a few others, There is plenty of support for this course 55987 bolic value _ the delegates education at Chicago. Hearst Newspapers, both ex- mother. Minn , with a well-orchestrated re- of action , too, and the city government tremely anti-British. Moe An- Publisher Annenberg has not could as well meet in Heidel- sponse to Russian threats would have been badly mistaken not nenberg was circulation man- hesitated to mix politics with SUBSCRIPTION RATES berg to select their next pros- which will not resolve into the to give close attention to this factor. Twenty-Five Years Ago . . . 1944 ager for Hearst. Five or six news, and he, probably more Single Copy - 10c Daily, 30c Sunday ident. But like the business crashing stridency cf: Take it Pvt. John Marsolek, son of Mr. and Mrs. men were killed in that circu- than anyone else, was respon- about the shape of the nego- or take a world war. I do not Delivered by Carrier—Per Week 50 cents tiating table in Paris So far, however, the main reaction John M. Marsolek , has been awarded the honor lation battle and gang war- sible for the recent defeat of 34 weeks-$12 ,75 53 weeks K5.50 , the ques- mean to suggest that that about the community to date has been one badge of efficiency. fare in Chicago has continued Sen. Joe Clark, Pennsylvania tion is deeply significant, rais- oughtn't to be the ultimate By mall slrlctly In advanfce; poper stop- ing once again the eternal is- meaning of Mr of support for the higher-level plant. It is WAC Pvt. Ruth Anne Carlson , daughter of ever since. Democrat, who for years was ped en expiration date. . Nixon's tone sue: Who controls West the hope of many, ourselves included, th at Mr. and Jlrs. John A. Carlson , has been as- The sins of the father Annenberg's pet hate. The Ber- poem, merely that I judge should not be visited upon the In Fillmore, Houston. Olmsted. Winona, lin? If not the "West Germans, him to be competent enough the economics signed to duty at the Army Air base at Sel- Philadelphia Inquirer staff Wabasha, Buffalo, Jackson, Pepin and of the situation will mafce then certainly the East Ger- this feasible for fridge Field, Mich son. Nevertheless, diplomacy was instructed to play up Trempealeau counties and armed forces to know what arc thc inter- Winona. . being what it is Great Brit- parionnel In |h« continental United States, mans: And tc yield now would mediary pressures ¦ . Clark' or overseas with APO or FPO addresses: this side ain and especially court so- s chief Democratic riv- be psychologically disastrous of war , al, the late Justice Musman- 1 year tU.OO 3 monlhi J4.00 , well this side of war, And he said unto them, Come ye yourselves Fifty Yea rs Ago . . . 1919 ciety where Walter Annen- < months 17.50 A month SI JO and would almost surely which the Soviet Union would apart into no of the state supreme court, a desert place, and rest n wbllr.— berg will serve, have been Alt olher subscriptions: augur fresh communist ag- find intolera ble: And that it Mark 6:31 . Robert J. Norris, son of Dr. and Mrs. F. and when Musanno died just M. Norris where gobling up details of the new 1 yaar S1B.0O 3 monlhi 16.00 gressiveness based on the is these ho will work out and , left for Los AJigcles, Calif., as Clark was running for re- 4 months 110.00 1 month 12.35 his ambassador's back ground, strategic reckoning that Pres- deliver to the Soviet Union in he will spend two months as a guest of election last year, Publisher grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Norris of They wonder whether Presi- Send ctianga ot address, notices, undeliv- ident Nixon is too frightened the days ahead; dent Nixon is retaliating Annenberg called his editor ered copies, subscription orders and other of Herblock Tracy, who are spending the winter there. mall Hems 1» Winona Dally N ews, P.O. to lay it on the WINONA DAILY NEWS against Prime Minister Wil- to instruct him, in writing the Box ID, Winona Minn . 539*7. line. To take a trip across , the Atlantic Ocean son for the appointment of obituary to be sure to attri- But watch how Nixon will An Independent Ne wspaper — Established 1RSS in a stateroom which in peacetime costs $2,- Second dais poitao* paid ef Wlnons, John Freeman, a bitter Nix- bute part of the responsibility Minn. handle it. This is an act of W. F. Wnrre G. It, GLOSWAV C. E. LINDE N 00O for thc trip from New York to London was Publisher Exec. Director Busineta Mgr. one of the interesting experiences which Capt. an4 Editor & Adv. Director Thomas D. Nelson , formerly employed at THE WIZARD OF ID By Parker and Hart Dobb's studios, refers to in a letter which has ADOLPH BKEMER GOBDON HOLTB A. J. KIEMHISCH been received by his former employer. Managing Editor Sunday Editor Circulation Mgr. L. S. BnoNK f L. V. ALSTON W. H. ENGLIS H S eventy-Five Years Ago . .. 1894 Composing t Sup . Engraving Supt. Comptroller A meeting of the poultry breeders was held MEMBEn Or TUB ASSOCIATED PIIESS at which time a new organization was deeided UJWMI, to include many of the younger breeders of the Thc«^^f» city. LIVING II, J. O'Ncil writes from Georgia, where he Associated Press ^J»2^» ia entitled and his children arc spending the wlnterr that cxc us*vely to the use repub- they are enjoying the springlike climate. Breitlow-Martin _Y _\*^ o ' jtor "cation of all tho local newa IvSHT*") ! In iKwtt printed this newspaper as well One Hundred Years Ago ... 1869 Funera l Home ^ ' *)&» ' as all A.P. news dispatcher It is tlie intention of some of the Irish fel- 374 EAST SARMIA low citizens to establish a St . Patrick's Benevo- WINONA, MINN. 8 Monday, February 24, 1908 lent Association. It Concert Set Alma Auxiliary Alma OES Chapter For Tuesday Makes Donations Holds Installation ALMA, Wis. (Special) — The ALMA, Wis. (Special) The - Of- Winona Public Schools Alma American Legion Auxil- ficers were installed at a meet- music department will present iary will again sponsor a girl ing cf the Alma Order of the to Badger Girls State. efementary, junior and sen- Eastern Star. Mrs. Keith Flem- ior high school The auxiliary voted to send orchestras in donations to Radio Free Eur- ing presided as worthy matron. concert Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. ope, Valley Forge Freedom Installed were: Associate ma- at the junior high auditorium. Foundation and to the Perpetual tron, Mrs. George Ulrich; Senior high orchestra mem- Monday, February 24, 1969 7 secretary, Mrs. Oscar Stirn; bers include: Gift of Nations, a special project WA III marshal, Mrs. Howard Achen- Violins of the Legion for its 50th -anni- — Linda Tschumper, year. bach ; star point, Ruth, Mrs. John Reed, Karen Erickson, versary Leonard Purrington, and pian- Daun SchuminsM, Janet Korda, The unit voted to again sub- ist, Mrs. Howard Mohnk. Debra Dwyer, Leslie Boerst, scribe to the "Firing lane," Arcadia Society Mrs. Louise Radke retired as Carol Runkel, Bonita Fortsrum, which will be placed in the 4Ima Youths Emotions secretary of the Alma Chapter Karen Korupp, Tim Stoltman, High School Library, arid to the Sets Social Hour after 38 years of service and Tom Reed, Barbara Johnson National Legislative Bulletin. Topic Set for Mrs. Rudy BielefeHt retired and Linda Tanner; violas — A film on civil defense was ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) — after serving as treasurer for Mary Laufenburger, Mike Lind- shown. St. Martin' s PTL St. Ann's Society of Our Lady more than 20 years- strom, Dave Lindstrom, Keary The American Legion Auxil- of Perpetual Help Catholic Practice for the March 7 of- Glenna, Nine discussion leaders, vol- Kris Aune and Maria iary essay contest is being con- church will host a social ficial inspection will be Friday. Bambenek. Cello—Lynn Thomp- ducted at Alma High School unteers from the education hour A donation was given to the son, Jane following Lenten devotions on International Van Alstine, Jill Van with prizes lor two groups: Jun- committee of the Winona Coun- Wednesday. Peace Garden Alstine, Linda Heyer and Joy ior and senior higli. Chapel which is being built in Korda; bass viol—Dick Tre- ty Mental Health Association, Group II with Mrs. Jerome Florida. maine Lunch was served by the will present the program at the Haines, chairman, and Mrs. , Jeff Harrington, David Mmes. Carroll Smith, James Lunch was served by the Sobeck, David Urness, David Wednesday meeting of the St. Franklin Haines, co-chairman, Mmes. Bernice Brose, Edna Staricka and Paul Kronebusch; Sclioenberger and Wendell Hag- will serve. Officers will be elect- Fried, Justine Swope and en. ei^aammmmawimimmaaewmmmmee ^HmnaKm™^<*' FABRIC SHOPPE 1 ; ^ - NO NEED FOR THE FAMILY TO CROWD AROUND THIS COLOR | 1f IMVEi I I i HTOrofllH„tl „ pm, J%mm*ffZBn ™.wS-mWi| TV. IT FEATURES A GIANT COLOR GLARE-PROOF PICTURE | TUBE. AUTOMATIC CHROME CONTROL KEEPS COLOR INT- | TENSITY THE WAY YOU WANT IT. HIGH PERFORMANCE ff 25,000 VOLT CHASSIS. SOUD STATE COMPONENTS FOR EXTRA fo» | | j DEPENDABILITY. Jw | 1AH ,NCH THE PAIRHIILL !_«»_»»_ I* y^sfcL/ A —~H Model GL-644 mmmug^i diag., J3' 293 sq. in. picture wBr ! \ \ INCLUDING . . . ! Walnut Finish ^ 1 ! :5 ! 1 . W . PRINTS - LACE . BONDEDS I ^ Regularly $579.95 C Jk | l . CREPE . LININGS . ^ | Q ^AT COTTONS NOW ONLY fij L W Q | Ty • VELVETS % \ Values to $5.98 yd. No Trade Required ! jf SLACKS 0 Two year guarantee on Picture Tube J by | GLEN OAKS -. i^cfX . i. • One year guaran tee on all other parts ] >7 ^J \ ege1 ! and tubes 3 mtto^ pR|CE I Permanent Press Fabric of 45% VibreP Rayon ... • 90 Days Free Service j 30% Nylon ... I ¦ ¦ V A^" WOOLS, ORLONS, DOUBLE ji and 25% acetate. Styled with belt ( SHOP EARLY! LIMITED QUANTITY! I S*^z * n I loops and cuffs. :\ B KNITS, CREPE, BONDED 3 * \ YAM ¦ ¦ m WOOL PRINTS Blue Green, Brown ALL MERCHANDISE SUBJECT ^ , Gray, Gold jj ~* TO PRIOR SALE jrf | g WM fe ft ft 1 Sizes: 28 to 36 I / hoa % , I ' ;i tes i »! _f ^mmm. 1 tawic I AS ADVERTISED S I ~^t] bho^jc ff by Francl» I J\ ^rnt ^ I IN PUAVBOY ^«y f ^'MW^mfflR^^ ¦ IrSforyHas U Young Couple By ANDY LANG Start Upholstering Quite a departure from the designs of most two-story Tlred of houses, this one includes inno- vations in both the floor ar- rangement and the exterior. ' With KitchenChair Immediately apparent on 'Modern AP Newsfeatures you are not normally the kind of moving into th« slate-floored By VIVIAN BKOWN Fearful of tackling an uphol- person who fixes things. And it won 't be long before you foyer is that the living room is AP Newsfeatures Writer stering job around the house? 'll be separate unit looking for other upholstering an entirely isolat- One young couple faas had the You needn't be. ed from the balance of the tasks. word "modern" thro\ra at them It's not as difficult as it house. until they are bored to death The seat of such a chair can with it. seems. But words alone won't be quickly removed by taking A HIGH WALL at the front give you the confidence out the screws on the underside. for privacy and large glass "We looked for a house and neces- everywhere sary to tackle this t Strip off the fabric and whatev- areas toward the rear garden people would say, ype of proj- er padding there is. Measure combine to make this room liv- 'Perhaps it isn't modern enough ect, long a bugaboo of most do- for you. the dimensions of the seat, then able and practical. Its focal '" it-yourselfers. There's one way go to a department store, spe- point, an attractive fireplace, is "Builders say, 'I expect to you can gain that confidence— cialty dealer, upholstery sup- wall opposite have something more modern on the the foyer by upholstering a straight kitch- plier or any other place that and thus quickly catches the next month.'" sells foam rubber. Purchase a eye of anyone entering the front "Real estate people tell us en chair, which usually is ju st a piece of foam rubber of the door. The spaciousness of this right off the bat that we are out fabric-covered plywood seat fas- proper size or one a little larg- entry is accented by an open in left field if we want a modern tened to a frame. You'll find it er. If necessary, you can cvt it rail stairs to the second floor house for what we can pay," easier than you thought, even if down to size at home with a pair and by the glass wall at the says the new husband. of stout kitchen shears. rear garden. Meanwhile, they lave never The foam rubber can be To the left ot the foyer, the CONTEMPORARY design and styling are placed living room that is deliberately isolated from the rest mentioned the word modern. al- family room and the kitchen New England most any thickness from half- , delightfully combined in this most distinctive two-story of the living area. "What they really mean is in an open plan, have a sweep 'kooky','* says the liride of six Heating Bills an-inch to an inch-and-a-half, of 24 feet. The kitchen has been house, with the structural portion at the right housing a fire- months. depending on how much pad- arranged by architect Herman The two are living in a fur- ding you think is comfortable. H. York with the work triangle When making the purchase, also Z-81 Statistics nished apartment while they buy in mind, with generous counter search for a house and furni- High-Here some rubber fabricating ce- and cabinet space. This kitchen Design Z-&1 has a living ment and muslin tacking tape. ture. Yon won will be bathed Ln light, not only room, family room , kitchen, They haven't quite decided on 't have any rubber from its own large window over dining room, lavatory, laun- adhesive of the kind found in the house style they would like. most offices. Ihe sink, but because of the dry room and foyer on the In the beginning, the 21-year-old Are Remedies 12 linear feet of sliding glass first floor, with a habitable wife thought she would like a These tips on how to keep Bore a few holes in the ply- doors in the family room. area of 1,157 (square feet. fuel bills and other heating wood seat if they aren't already TO tbe kitchen, Colonial house. (She's romantic, costs there. NEXT be- A garden area on this floor says her husband.) He has been down come from the Plumbing- tween it and the two-car ga- is behind the foyer. There Heating-Cooling Information Bu- These will allow the foam to rage, is a laundry room, with pushing for a house that is all are three bedrooms and two on one floor. (It'll reau: breathe. The tacking tape space for a washer and dryer, baths on the second floor, be easier to should be cemented all around and a paint, he says.) They will keep • If you like to air the house a pantry mud closet. In totaling 770 square feet. A each day, set back the thermo- the edges of the foam and al- this area, there are three door- two-car garage looking until they find a house lowed to dry for an hour or so. has a spe- that suits them, they agree. stat first. Otherwise, the drop ways, one from the outside to cial storage nook. in temperature will keep your The overhang is then stapled or the laundry room, a second There is a cellar under Many young people find them- heating system running — pro- tacked to the underseat of the from the outside to the garage, the living room. Over-all di- selves in the position of being ducing heat that literally goes chair seat, which will secure the and a third between the laun- mensions including the ga- . stamped ultra-ultra out the open window. foam in place. dry room and the garage modern, . rage, are 48 feet 8 inches when in reality they want pretty If one or more members A separate dining room has a by 51 feet 10 Inches. • Tear fabric should be ironed large triple window ard is ac- much the things their parents of your family like to sleep before putting it in place. Cover cessible directly from the main wanted at the same age, they with their windows open at the foam with the fabric, sta- hall. Off the same hall are explain. night, close the bedroom door pling or tacking it in place so tw^) guest coat closets and a "If you go to look for furni- to keep the rest of the house that it fits tautly. Screw the seat powder room. Mice, Rabbits ture, they -waltz you into a room from cooling off. back onto the frame and the The second floor has a dra- that resembles a space capsule. • If your garage is attached chair will have a new appear* matic approach because the You can't tell chairs from to the house, keep tbe door ance, especially if you have foyer is two stories high, with Busy Eating lamps. They look at you skepti- closed at all times. touched up any nicks or scratch- a balconied upper hill over- cally when you explain that • Get a thermostat with a es on the frame. looking the area. There are you'd rather start with tradi- clock-type device that auto- ^Nearly any type of fabric can three bedrooms. The owners Shrubbery tional things and fill in with matically sets the thermostat be used to cover the foam rub- have their own bathroom with On modern things later, if they back about 10 degrees at night ber, but there are - few mate- a stall shower, while the hall Mice can ruin your shrubs ever design sometliing you con- at a predetermined time, then rials which should be used only bath has the tub and toilet sep- during the winter by tunneling sider suitable. ' return it to the desired tem- wlen muslin is placed between arated from the lavatory-vanicy through the snow and eating the "When you are in college, you perature at a ore-set time in them. One of these is leather, area. bark on the trunk and branch- like far-out decorating because the morning. The heating sys- which has a tendency to abrade One of the two closets in the es. . it is to be short-lived, but .it tem will run less during the when continually rubbed against owners* bedroom is Empty milk cartons opened night, saving on fuel. foam. Another is velour, which of the doesn't make you different for- Have your heating system walk-in-type. Each bathroom at both ends make an ideal bait ever," explains the bride. "If it • sometimes will work loose when -window. station. Dig down to the ground checked to make sure it's effici- continually rubbed against the has a were possible to find such things ent. Some poorly functioning THE UNUSUAL and inter- line in the snow next to ycur in my mother's day, she would rubber. If a plastic material is shruis and fruit trees and lay systems turn on and off more selected, get the kind that has esting exterior is contemporary, have had them, too." than necessary, wasting fuel a but retains the residential char- the milk carton on its side. fabric backing and is washable. acter almost reminiscent of tbe Place a cup of good mice poi- She thinks modern dance, and "salt Abox" of New England. son in the milk carton and some phrases uttered by her that label 'kooky' stuck oh our The large areas of shingled sur- carefully cover it with snow contemporaries are ; a little generation. Actually, the kooks faces, l oth roof and side walls, again. This "will prevent birds FLOOR PLANS . . . Different but prac- family room-kitchen, with a combined length more risque perhaps than the are tremendously outnumbered make for an interesting relation- from reaching the bait and a tical floor arrangement keeps living room of 24 feet, to be used for informal living for Charleston and the 23-skidoo by young people «who have their ship. A large wall of stone at hungry mouse will quickly find for formal entertaining while permitting the members of the family as well as guests. vernacular of previous genera- feet on the ground. Young peo- the front of the living room, it in the snow. Place the bait tions—but not much more ple of marriageable age in this plus • a stone chimney . and sev- stations as close to the shrubs risque for an era that serves up generation have good common eral panels of stone at the as possible and also place sev- more permissiveness than the sense: They read and study be- eral 6 to 8 feet away from the fore they leap. front entrance, provide an in. average young person accepts. v . " More Detailed Plans B dividual character. plants. Fourth New She knows young girls who The roof lines sweep down- The best protection for apple Full study plan information on this architect-designed would have been considered There are 3,049 counties, ward, balancing the appearance trees is a cylinder of y_" wire House of The Week is obtainable in a 50-cent baby blueprint prudish in her mother's genera- 18,048 municipalities (boroughs of tbe two-story structure mesh placed around the trunk which you can order with this coupon. tion, she says. and cities), 17,105 townships and against the length of the lower and projecting into the soil 4 Also we have available two helpful booklets at $1 Home Permit "And so it is with decorating. 21,264 special government dis- living room-foyer area. An in- inches and going up the trunk each: "Your Home - How to Build, Buy or Sell It" and There is more color (because tricts in the nation. teresting design detail is achiev- as high es the highest snow "Ranch Homes," including 2i of the most popular homes manufacturers cao work more ed through the use of long level expected. This should be that have appeared in the feature. easily with the dyes and there vertical louvers both in tbe ga- placed around the tree when The House of the Week Is Issued is mose emphasis on abstract rage and second floor. Note, the soil is not frozen and may Winona Dail y News Tbe fourth new house of the design (because' we have learn- too, the placement of the garage be left on until it deteriorates. Winona, Minn., 55987 year and a city-owned facility ed to live with it) and there pLMli.^ doors facing in toward the en- If rabbits eat your shrubbery, Enclosed is 50 cents each for baby blueprints dominated construction starts in is more color ia our environ- 1 trance ,approach. go to your nurseryman and pur- of design No. Z-81 •• • Winona last week, according to ment, and there are more un- PROBLEMS? I POLACHEK An unusual two-story house is chase a rabbit repellent that is Enclosed is $1 for Ranch Homes booklet ...... building permit applications on usual styles in furniture (be- Design Z-81, but with all the sprayed on the branches. This Enclosed is $L for Your Home booklet ...... file in the city engineer's of- cause there are so many fa- Phone I elements for complete family repellent must be applied when bulous materials to work with.) I ELECTRIC living. the temperature is above freez- Name •-..... fice. ¦ Wilmer Larson, 261 Vine St., But these things aren't being 8-3762 I ing. This chemical repels all marketed for young people. It Approximately $231 annually bark chewing rodents and will will construct a house at 813 875 W." Street • •• Hickory Lane. "The one-story is the merchandise of our ls spent on improvements in and lasr. all winter if applied late u> times." around the average U.S. home, the fall. structure will measure 26 by 60 Howard City State Zip feet and will be heated by elec- This couple wants a home that according to Rockwell Manufac- The following plants are dam- offers easy maintenance, plenty turing Co., producer of power aged frequently by mice and tric forced air. Cost ia listed at honey, $20,000. of light, outdoor privacy, enter- tools. rabbits : Alpine currant, , !*' *?^^ V :¦:-: ¦:! ! ' ! !.V !! - !;!¦ ;¦ !;! ¦ .!. ! . .!. ' - !.V|. ! :.^T?l7T*T?TT' suckle, roses euonymus, spi- ff?TT? Tff?ffffTT! V:!! !i!L!l__?' : : : ; ! ! f ! The City of Winona drew a tainment features and, adds the reas, ninebarks, flowering plum, permit for the construction of a husband, "good solid workman- Phone cistena plum , crab apple, ap- pumping station at B56 West ship in walls, floors, exterior ple trees, mountain ash, willow, Burns Valley Rd. Housing the finishing." 9275 HAGER locust , and in a bad winter they ¦ ' The lady of 4he housc-to-be !,: ;, ¦ . :': ' v Answer —Sij l- . ' .l.i.m will eat almost any live plant ' ' Here s the would like a cheery kitchen, they find, including evergreens. Buildin g in Winona By ANDY LANG of those semi-automatic toast- 1069 Dollar Volume .... $476,842 preferably one painted yellow. SENSE It is not too late to prevent AP Newsfeatures ers which rings a bell when She'd like a dishwasher and CABINETS much damage if baiting is done Commercial 374,099 QUESTION: I bought some the toast is done. Lately, the Residential 81,950 washer-dryer. She'd like a real ELECTRIC 1 now and ra bbit repellent spray- unfinished cabinets which the bell doesn't ring and we have 0 14 Door Stylos on during the next warm • Public ( non- big bedroom and a canopy bed. § ed dealer told me were made of quite a time keeping the toast 20 793 The new husband points out I SERVICE 1 day we have with the tempera- burned. taxable , • 4 Flnlchat or Unfinished whitewood. A frie nd of mine from being What is New houses 4 that his wife has chosen tho I 1732 W. Sth I ture over 32 degrees. part-time as a the trouble? 0 Oak or Birch Wood who works Volume same same sliver pattern as her There are 1,565 housing and carpenter says it is actually ANSWER: Impossible to be date 1068 5479.680 mother, that her china is an v Special Cabinet Built urban renewal agencies in the yellow poplar. Can you tell certain from this distance. old-time traditional favorite — nation. noe which of these woods is However, the most common facility will be a one - story gold-rimmed white, and that she • Vanity Cabinets more expensive? cause of a nonringlng bell, structure 13 by 15 feet. Araeri- uses crystal on the table with 0» Countertopi ANSWER: Relax. White- when the toaster is otherwise can Plumbing and Heating Co. beautiful centerpieces, ' wood is another name for yel- •working well, Is a piece of is the contractor and cost is Time has tested traditional ' -^e^^^S***- FOR A FREE low poplar. dirt or crumb lodged between listed at $20,193. things for them , they say—ono QUESTION: We have one the bell and tho tiny steel ball Masonic Temple, 251 Main reason they prefer it in basic ESTIMATE ON YOUR W that strikes it. Sometimes was granted a permit for St., furnishings. I Electrical Installation B KITCHEN CAUL ft Transfers the obstruction can be dis- interior remodeling at a cost Property "That's one reason why I hate lodged simply by shaking the of $600. In Winona County toaster. Felix Bambenek, 267 E. How- ROIOIEL QUESTION : My neighbor GAIL'S WARRANTY DDBD ard St., also drew a permit for PHONE 74» BrliiBi Tremporling Co. lo Merolle says that window panes should interior remodeling. Cost was See Us For Fernhol. -Lot a a, t, 7. » Ond 9. Block never he cleaned when the fL GOOD APPLIANCE l«, Fairfax Add- lo Clly ol Wlnonn. »nd listed at $200. || Lot h Block 1, W|nort-» Athletic Bo*r-i sun is ehlnlng, hut doesn't Dollar valuation for permits 213 6. Srd St. AUUHlon. know the reason. Is this true? GEO. KARSTEN Jem*- 0. Peliwr wt e\ lo Har'y John- issued go far this year is $476,042 Contraetor -I-EI4 1, Block 21, po W of N V4 of Lot If , why? SOUND I Phon* WO Q«n«ral won At compared with $479,680 for the f|\ 7iy(- r 'i Add, to Winona, Fr»nk R«pln»kl •? im lo Devld J- ANSWER: Simply because same period last year. ¦Pmk Uwlcr ol ux-rF* .rt of Lot h Uke the rays of the sun makes them Four permits for new houses aide Ovllefe to Winona, Sic. 7M07-7. have been drawn in 1969 com- ADVICE i Mericy Leal** Woo) to Hau»">r Art dry too rapidly and this caus- J JWL Qlatt Co,, |nc.-P»rt ot Ut II, Sub. es streaking. For the same pared with only ono this same 3ec. 3M07-7. v reason, auto manufacturers date one year ago. Contract, Get Our Bid! John Palmer «1 ux to Harry Johnwn HEAVY SHEET Before You Sign That «t il-EV. of NW ot Lot 1, Clock J", advise owners not to clean 1 Wlnor>a. Now York Clty'a Central Park Taylor * Add- to cars in the direct sunlight. ¦ Lloyd W. Slark at ux lo Heuser Art comprises about B40 acres. It - . ——<*T • tilaii Co., Inc.-Part ot Lot ll, SDW. ol M tit Sec . 35 107-7. QUESTION : We have some was acquired by the city In 1856. am I Si 16 Ho L ¦ \ jI T HI'P 'WT'" T*"C3l . J \ Alfred M; Oorny et ux to Edward ft. new wood trim in our house. PrjyteraM et ux-W 'A of Lot «, Block How do we clean it before Our Spoclolliod Ssrvlcis 1), Cluite'a Add, to Winona. Kernel) corporation to Ervin F. Gernii staining since we know that Alio Include! tt ux-NW'!/ W (I. ol Lot 3, Puma Acrea wnttr should not be used on SuM. ^ • Job and Centra." Welding Good Bound advice doesn 't come from a relativo or friend. WHIfnt Co rnferlh et ux ta HUtterd W. wood? w,rt ' WPpS et etfc of NEW of J c. M1 Good sound iidvice comes from a reliable , trained person -^ MrNallv Cornforth—Tart . m j dilBh Boiler Repair Work I111. won JHOM. ANSWER: Use a soft lint- BolUvltw • with yours o( oxperianco nnd dependability behind him. For =*"f *!__, ! lEuCM f Ctrl P. ictirotitr lo Florence Seeker free cloth dampened with tur- ^^hfcHf n elect rical insinuations or alterations you enn depend on, call ~ -HVs ot Lot B end WV . of Lot 9, Block pentine. A further tip: The on tho Licensed, Bonded Electricians working for — Jf. LeM'e «- Curtis Add. to Winona. ^WT Phone, WM r. j _,. m~ .1 Building Contractor QUIT CLAIM DBBD end groins of new wood will WINONA BOILER Mar|h« Pa lmer lo fi fcholaj E. Palme r absorb more stain than the real -BVt of Wl- . of Lot 1, Block V>, Tey- (Built. lor'i Add, la Winona, of tho wood and no will come tfuMotn. FINAL CRCMK out a different color. To pre- m f*Hch»rt ce)klnet» • fenntc* '••» S STEEL GO. EL^R,C Sophia Steuernagel, decedent , to Oscar WarOrobu Yeppen ApftieniM Steuernagel at al—NW ot JEW of Sfc. vent this uneven absorption, • • 163-167 Wert Front Street ¦> HIMO 8-1059 Itore f'eturaa Deeke V«nHI*e BAUER *fk ?$ k \f-W-f i SI. of et See, 1»-10»»| 10 « • • © lev* first coat Ihe end grains with 996) 225 East Third St. Phone 0-5147 eerea In Nil '4 ot «•«. 10-IM.fj Ut 3} of « so-so mixture of turpentine PRBB ESTIMATBfl Phono County Auditor's Subd, ot WW of tec, .¦I-. -ii,- ¦ -¦ '¦ .. ¦¦ m i .¦<¦ ¦—t f wwrn 19 end 3d. »H In Township 106, Renoo ?. and linseed oil. — . nephew. The funeral service will be Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at Lys- Mrs. H. M. Weir MONDAY ter Church, Dr. J. C. Thomp- son officiating. Burial will be ip FEBRUARY 24, 1969 the church cemetery. Succumbs at 61 How att Heads GOP The Daily Record Friends may call at Stohr Fu- neral Home, Alma, from 3:30 At Community Winona Funerals Two-State Deaths p.m. Tuesday until 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, and at the church Memorial Hospital Mrs. LeRoy Gaustad Mrs. Peter Agrimson unty after 1 p.m. Wabasha Co — Mrs. In Funeral services for Mrs. Le- ST. CHARLES, Minn. Vlsllns hour*: Medical »iwl eurolcel who lived minimum number to pallente: 3 lo 4 end 7 to 8:30 p.m. ( ) Roy Gaustad, 226 W. Sth St., Peter Agrimson, 79, Miss Hulda Hahn ZUMBRO FALLS, Wis. — Lloyd Boss, both of Lake City. vide a children under 12.) were heM today at Fawcett in Arendahl Township, Fillmore (S insure reasonable representa- Maternity patlentt ! a to 3:M «rw 7 te PRESTON, Minn. pecial) - Wabasha County Republicans STATE RESOLUTIONS pass- (Adults Funeral Home, the Rev. G. H. County, until 1942, died Sunday tion. . 1:30 p.m. enly.l Miss Hulda Hahn, 91, died Sun- elected a new chairman and ed: Support Immediate replace- right Visitors to ¦ patient limited to two Huggenvik, Central Lutheran at 2:15 p.m. at Methodist Hospi- at Preston Giving 19-year-olds the ¦t arm time. day at 6:15 p.m. three other new officers at ment of the antiquated inter- Church, officiating. Burial was tal, Rochester , following an ill- Nursing Home where she had to vote. SUNDAY in Woodlawn Cemetery. ness of two years. their annual caucus at Zumbro state bridge "between "Wabasha Punishing or expelling stu- Pallbearers were : R. F. Po- been a resident 14 months. She Falls Saturday night. They pass- and Nelson, Wis. engage in demonstra- ADMISSIONS The former Alvina FordaM, was ill several months. dents who Fountain City, tratz, T. Charles Green , James born June 6, 1889, in ed 25 resolutions. A Law requiring legislators to tions disrupting classes and Alfred Bork, Loren she was She was born Sept. 23, 1877, Lester Howatt, former state designa- , Englerth, Edgar Lynch, Lac Qui Parle County, Minn., run for office by party school activities and damaging Wis. Torgerson and John Steffen. in Preston Township and was senator, was elected chairman tion and governor and lieu- Eugene Stachowitz, 363 W. to Mr. and Mrs. Peter Fordahl. postmistress in Preston 27 years. school property. until her succeeding Willard Bremer, tenant governor on a joint tick- Support "no fault'' auto in- Sarnia St. Mr*. John Sikorski She lived in Sebeka She was a member of Christ Alma Wis. Peter Agrimson who resigned. Both are of Lake et. surance, providing that the in- Larry Boettcher, , Funeral services for Mrs. marriage to Lutheran Church, and never City. constitutional amendment Tarras, 450% 1931. He died in 1988. A surer's own company pay for Mrs. Shirley John Sikorski, 767 E. Sth St., Oct. 25, married. Donald Haimes, Plainview, providing for election of 60 sen- hit by E. Wabasha St. She was a registered nurse. repair of his car if it is will be Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. at Survivors are 15 nieces and was elected vice chairman suc- ators and 120 representatives, or that is to blame for Levasseur 707 are: Three step- another car Mrs. Alphonse , Watkowski Funeral Home and Surviving nephews. Five brothers and¦ ¦ ceeding George Gilmore, Waba- a lower limit of 40 senators and the damage. , . ¦ ' . E. 4th St. at 10 at St. Stanislaus Church, sons, Paul, Peterson, Minn.; four sisters have died. <. • sha. Mrs. Vernon Yetzer, Plain- 80 representatives, which would Discontinuing issuing and Jeffrey Henning, 519 Wall St. the Rev. Donald Grubisch offi- Robert, St. Paul; Orrin , Van- The funeral service will be view, was elected new vice end fiie practice of solving re- unsolicited credit cards three step- sending DISCHARGES ciating. Burial will be in St. couver , Wash.; Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Christ chairwoman. Earl Hassler was apportionmeat problems by through the mail. daughters, Mrs. Melvin (Har- John Heftman, 1025 E. Waba- Mary's Cemetery. Lutheran Church, the Rev. Wal- Mrs. Hubert M. Weir elected treasurer succeeding adding to the legislature to pro- Handling state gas tax re- sha St. Friends may call at the fu- riet) Langseth, Lewiston ; Mrs. ter E. N. Wahl officiating. Bur- fed- ) funds on the same basis as Mrs. Michael Raley and baby, neral home after 2 today. The Robert (M argaret Currie, St. ial will be in Greenwood Ceme- Mrs. Hubert M. Weir, 61, refunds. Now farmers op- John (Ber- eral 76V4 W. 2nd St. Rosary will be said at 7:30. Charles, and Mrs. tery east of Preston. 318 Market St., died at 4 a.m. Teen-ager Finds erating farm vehicles have to Lois Fagerquist, Albert Lea, Survivors include a brother, nette) Vr asp ir, Vancouver, Friends may call at Thauwald bills and submit , Sunday at Community Memori- pay their gas Minn. John Lubinski, Winona. Wash.: a brother Alfred For- Funeral Home from 2 p.m. Tues- Fog Festival Airlines Don't the bill for refunds within four Mrs. James Ludovissie, 1112 dahl, Sisseion, S.D., and a sis- day to Wednesday noon and at al Hospital following a brief ill- their refunds are Catherine Vondrashek months while W. Mark St. ter, Mrs. Gertie Gustofson, Los the church after 1 p.m. ness. Joke Over Tri reported annually in the federal Funeral services for Cather- Angeles, Calif. A brother and ps Ricky Stock , 222 \V. 2nd St. She had been a teacher of " tax return. Steven Krage, Houston, Minn. ine Vondrashek, 877 E. 3rd St., two sisters have died, Earle Martin Called 'Most AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP.) - A or- were held Sunday afternoon at LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) English and personal develop- Support a state executive Funeral services will be Wed- ment at the Winona Medical Jacksonville, Fla., teen-ager ganization, with no elective of- St. John's Church, the Rt. Rev. at 2 p.m. at Arendahl — Earle Martin, 78, Lake City, BIRTHS ELSEWHERE nesday Secretarial School i8 years. has learned that Eastern Air- ficers appointed to it. Msgr. James Habiger officiat- Lutheran Church , the Rev. La- died early Saturday morning at ing. Burial will be in St. Mary's Methodist Hospital Rochester, ' lines takes seriously jokes about : ST. CHARLES, Minn. — Mr. Vern Johnson officiating. Burial , THE FORMER Clymene Par- Successful NATIONAL RESOLUTIONS Cemetery. cemetery. where he had been a patient side trips to Cuba. In view of the Vietnam war, and Mrs. Kenneth Kingsley, a will be in the church isey, she was born June 26, OCEAN SHORES, Wash. son Friday at St. Marys Hos- Pallbearers were Roman Zo- Friends may call at Jacobs four weeks. (AP ) More than 1,500 people Buddy Griggs, Eastern's sta- federal spending on non-essen- Jondek, John J. Lewinski, Clar- He was born Oct. 28 1890, in 1907, in Oconto, Wis., to Mitch- reduced for the pital, Rochester, Minn. Funeral Home, St. Charles, , sat in a cold, miserable, drench- tion manager in Augusta, said a tial projects be ence and Joseph Maliszewski, from 3 p.m. Tuesday until noon Arkansaw, Wis., and married ell and Philomene Picotte Par- ing drizzle Sunday. time being. Carl Brom and Vincent Glom- Hazel Peasi June 20, 1916, at isey, youth of "high school'' age was No votes in presidential elec- TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS Wednesday and at the church She has lived here since There was supposed to ski. - ". ' ' : ' " . : ."7 Eau Galle, Wis. A Lake City 1925. She married Hubert M. be a removed from flight 371 Friday tions should be released until all after 1 p.m. surf race, but the lousy tide ni Michael Ray Loesel, will be pall- resident 55 years, he was a Weir, Aug. 13, 1935, in Oconto. ght after he allegedly re- precincts are closed. Coch- Alfons Semling Six grandsons didn't come in strong enough. marked: "T*his plane is not rane, Wis., 4. bearers. partner in the Ludwig Corner She was a graduate of the In presidential elections, the Funeral services for Alfons There was supposed to be a going to Jacksonville—it's going should be given to William Edward Brang, 525 Grocery from 1929 to 1947. He College of Saint Teresa and a electoral vote Semling, 363 Cummings St., Miss Louise Lee was a member of First Congre- of the crab race, but someone swiped to Cuba." the winner in each congression- Laird St.. 5. were held this morning at St. member of the Cathedral WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) gational Church. Sacred Heart. Prior to joining the crabs. The flight originated in Wash- al district, and two electoral Mary's Church, the Rt. Rev. Miss Louise Lee. 85, died Survivors are; One son Merle "It was," said promoter Bob ington, D.C, with stops in Co- votes in each state to the can- Msgr. Edward Klein officiating. — , the secretarial school staff , she Weather Saturday evening at Tri-County F. Lake City; two daughters, had taught high school in Lanes- Ward, "beyond all doubt the lumbia, S.C , and Augusta en didate with the highest popular Interment services were held at Memorial Hospital after an ill- (Lois) Larson, most successful February Fog route to Jacksonville. vote in the state. ; Mrs. Richard N. boro, Minn. ; Sioux Falls * S.D., EXTENDED FORECAST St. Mary's Cemetery, Winona. ness of three weeks. Robbinsdale and Mrs. Willard Festival this community has Griggs said the boy was not Ask the administration to Burial in St. Mary's Cemetery, , and at Cathedral High School to Minnesota She was born to Ole and (Shirley) ZelL Lake City, and here. ever had." turned over to police after he promptly stop giving aid Tuesday through Saturd ay Fountain City, Wis., will be in Christina Olson Lee May 22, grandchildren. His wife Now in its second year, the was removed from the plane. countries assisting North Viet- the spring. seven She had been a member of the temperatures will average near 1883, in the Town of Arcadia died in 1945, and two brothers lay advisory board of the Col- February Fog Festival was He added the boy was "very nam. normal southwest, 6-12 degrees Pallbearers were sons, Stan- and lived there until six years and one sister have died. lege of Saint Teresa, diocesan dreamed up by local resort own- apologetic and said he just Take the power of appoint- above normal northeast. Normal ley, Alton, George, David and ago when she and her sister Funeral services will be Tues- board of National Council of ers who decided the only way to made the remark in a joking ing Supreme Court justices high is 24-28 north, 28-32 south. Kenneth Semling and a son-in- moved to Whitehall. day at 2 p.m. at First Congre- Catholic Women, Music Guild, get a little action in the off-sea- manner.'' from the president and have Normal low 2 below to 6 above law; Wayne Gunderson . Her sister , Clara, and sev- gational Church, the Rev. Al- Community Concert Association, son is to be a little off. them elected by the chief jus- north, 6-12 south. Precipitation eral nieces and nephews sur- tices of the 50 states plus a com- Clifford F. Murray fred J. Ward officiating. Burial Winona Public library Board "I tell people who come ta tha will average two-tenths to four- vive. Three sisters and two will be in Lakewood Cemetery. and Living RoomDialogue. mittee of federal judges on Funeral services for Clifford brothers have died. this, -You must be out of your basis of competence and knowl- tenths inch in water content oc- Friends may call at Peterson- She was the first president of curring as snow after midweek. F. Murray, 259 W. Mill St., Funeral services wifl be Wed- minds,'" said Ward, who edge of law rather than politi- were held today at Cathedral Sheehan FUneral Home from St. Anne Hospice Auxiliary, na- Awami League oi nesday at 2 p.m. at Fagernes . rounded up spectators from as cal motivation. Wisconsin the Sacred Heart, the Rt. Rev. K. this afternoon until 1 p.m. tional president . . of Teresan far away as California Lutheran Church, the Rev. Alumnae Association from ,1954 and Brit- Require a two-thirds major- Temperatures are expected to Msgr. Harold J. Dittman offici- M. Urberg officiating. Burial Tuesday, then at the church. ish Columbia. ity of the Supreme Court to in- average 4 to 7 degrees above the ating. Burial was in Sc. Mary's in the church cemetery. to 1958, : listed in 1965 "Who's law of the Congress will be Who of American Catholic Col- What most people come to see Leader May Be validate a normal highs of 25 to 34 and the Cemetery. at Johnson Willis J. Merrill is the annual North or a state legislature. Friends may call LEWISTON, Minn. - Willis lege Women," director of the American normals lows of 4 to 12 north Pallbearers were Stanley Funeral Home, Whitehall, Tues- Mid Winter Wading Champion- pro- and 12 to 17 Jay Merrill, 88, Lewiston, died Cathedral women's choir and Revise criminal laws and south Tuesday Steege, Leon Inman, Willard day from 2:39 to 5 and from 7 ships, which sends goose-pim- cedures to not permit a suspect through Saturday. Temperatures at Etta-Del Home at 7:30 p.m. previously of St. Stanislaus Matzke, Gerald Feils, Gerald to 9 p.m. and at the church Sunday following an illness of pled patrons dashing through Pakistan Boss to go free because of a trivial continuing rather mild for the 12:30 p.m. Wednesday. Church choir, chairman of the Cook and Roy Larson. after several years. Christmas Seal board and Red waves up to seven feet high in KARACHI; Pakistan (APV - technicality in arrest or trial season with only minor day to the Pacific surf. procedure. Present procedures day changes until colder Satur- Boyd N. Fuller He operated Merrill General Cross board and a member of Sheikh Mujflbur Hahrnan, East Store here until 1930 and work- the original Girl Scout Council. The waves were more like Pakistani leader of tlie Awami overly protect the criminal and day. Precipitation is expected to Mun icipal Court PEPIN, Wis. (Special—Boyd have weakened law enforce^ total 2- to Fuller, 58, Minneapo- ed for Frisch & Johnson Co. three feet this year and they League party, emerged today as 4-tenths of an inch Newcomb SURVIVING ARE: Her hus- shaped ment. water equivalent in rain or snow WINONA lis, formerly of Pepin, died of and Lewiston Auto Co. before up only after a 90-min- another potential presidential retiring in 1962. band, two daughters, Miss Anne ute rain. candidate to succeed Mo- Allow all U.S. athletes to par- Thursday and Friday. John S. Kujak, 18, 816 W. 5th a heart attack at his home sud- sports. St., pleaded guilty to making He was born April 29, 1880, C, Weir, Mosinee, Wis., and "Thank goodness the weather hammed Ayub Khan. He was ticipate in international OTHER TEMPERATURES denly Friday night. Oppose legislation against sale a prohibited stop in a traffic operator for a con- at Preston, Minn., and married Mrs. Lyle V. (Mary) Leu, Ke- was terrible—a real blowing released Saturday after two By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A crane Emma Rappe in Preston in nosha, Wis.; two granddaugh- of fire arms and ammunition. lane at 5:50 a.m. Sunday, Sth struction company, he was born rain" said Ward. "Luckily it years of imprisonment, Sigh Low Pr. 1905. She died in 1959. He was ters, Lesa and Jennifer Len; a stayed lousy. Raise exemptions on federal Albany, snow ...... 36 30 .16 ¦and Grand streets. He was fined here April 25, 1910, to John and " Zulfikar Ali Bhutto of the Peo- a member of the Order of East- brother, Alphonse, Oconto, Wis,, A junior high school income taxes from $600, where Albuquerque, cloudy 46 25 .. $15. Katherine Schneekloth Fuller. teacher, ple's party, ihe favorite in West to ern Star, Masonic lodge and aid a sister, Miss Evelyn Par- Tony Pasckvale, 25 Pakistan it has been since the lS40s, Atlanta, cloudy ... 50 34. .. FORFEITURES: He married Pearl Estes in Min- the Winona County Old Settlers , of Ho- , said Sunday he would at least $1,000. .. isey, Oconto. quiam, Wash., won the seven- be willing io step aside and Bismarck, snow .... 31 28 .. James Rowan, 415 W. Broad- neapolis. He served one year in Association. Army. He was a mem- Funeral services will be rues- heat event, competing with 45 serve as Mujibur's "subordi- FARM RESOLUTIONS: Rec- Boise, cloudy ...... 43 27 .13 way, $10 for parking too close the U.S. Surviving are: A son, Arlow day at 6:45 p.m. Boston, ber of the Masonic lodge at at Cathedral men over a 100-yard course. De- nate" in the interests of Paki- ommend that farmer elected snow 36 33 .15 to a fire hydrant at Sanborn W., Cincinnati, Ohio; two grand- of the Sacred Heart, the Rt. Buffalo, snow .....,.. 37 32 .03 and Lafayette streets. The cita- Prairie du Chien and had been children fending champion Bob Land- stani unity. committees be appointed as , and a niece, Miss Rev. Msgr. H. J Dittman offi- Chicago, cloudy .... 38 33 tion was issued Sunday at 9:45 a member of the International Madelyn Ekholm, "Winona. Two . strom, also of Hoquiam, refused Bhutto is relatively unknown the chief administrative bodies Engineers ciating. Burial will be in St. to race, preferring misery on in East Pakistan, which has 60 of agricultural programs of the Cincinnati, cloudy .. 43 35 .. p.m. Union of Operating sisters have died. Mary Cleveland, cloudy years 's Cemetery. the shore tp the "piddly" Pacif- per cent of the nation 's 120 mil- county and that policies and pro- .. 44 35 .. Van Lear W. Daniel , 22, 674 34 . Funeral services will be Wed- There will be Denver, cloudy ..... 50 25 - Survivors are: His wife; one nesday at 10 a.m. at Jacobs no visitation at ic surf. lion people. cedures originating from the .. . W. 4th St., $30, driving 50 miles Watkowski Funeral Home. A Des Moines, cloudy 36 33 .. an hour in a 30-mile zone, Broad- stepdaughter , Virginia, in Cali- Funeral Home, Lewiston, with Mujibur conferred with Bhut- Department of Agriculture rec- Detroit, cloudy 46 34 fornia; two brothers, Ben, Pep- Mrs. Marian Ayres as the memorial is being arranged. The big disappointment of thc to Sunday amd announced after- ognize that this is the only fea- way and Wilson streets, Sunday two-day celebration Fairbanks, clear .. . M -13 at 10:20 p.m. in, and Wallace, Ingster, Mich,, reader. Burial will be in Lewis- was the an- ward he would go to Rawalpindi sible and sensible way to ad- nual North American Crab Be- minister farm programs. Fort Worth, cloudy 70 39 .. Darrel R. Broth , 22, Dakota , and five sisters, Mrs. Marian ton Cemetery. 75 Pints of B lood for talks with Ayub, who has Helena , cloudy ... .. 18 6 .. Minn., Reed, Lexington, Ky. ; Mrs. Friends may call at the funer- lays featuring live dungeness said he will step down when his Oppose non-farm corporations Rt. 1, $30, driving 50 in crabs It wasn't. and large processors entering Honolulu, cloudy .... 81 70 a 30-mile zone, Broadway at Gertrude Janikowski, Grand al home after 3 p.m. Tuesday. Collected at Mondovi term ends next year. Indianapolis, cloudy 41 33 .. Rapids Mich,; Agnes and Mrs. A Masonic service will be held "We had 12 of the meanest Mujibur, 45, was freed with 33 the field of farming and some- Olmstead Street, Sunday at , MONDOVI Wis. (Special) Jacksonville, cloudy 59 49 10:20 p.m. Donald (Genave) MacKay, St. at 8. , - crabs I ever saw," said Ward. others accused of plotting the times producing at a loss or low Juneau, clear 37 11 ' A total of 75 pints of blood was "One bit a guy' margin to guarantee themselves .. Marcel J. Kulas, 22, Arcadia , Paul, and Mrs, Sylvia Seyffer, s finger to the secession of East Pakistan. He Kansas City, cloudy 41 31 .02 Lewis P. Peterson collected when the Red Cross bone. Had to cancel that, adequate supplies, making their Wis., Rt. 2, $30, driving 42 in Pepin. His parents, one brother PRESTON, Minn. denied the accusation but said Los Angeles, rain .. 54 50 2.04 — Lewis P. bloodmobile was at Central though, because someone stole he advocated regional autono- profit on processing and retail- a 30-mile zone, Sth and Hilbert and one sister have died. Peterson, 81, Preston, died Sat- Lutheran Louisville, cloudy .. 44 39 .. streets Miasonic services will be con- Church here Wednes- the crabs the night before." my. ing. This is unfair competition , today at 6:05 a.m. urday morning in Lutheran Hos- day. There were 10 rejects and for the farmer, limiting his mar- Memphis, cloudy ... 50 34 ., Eugene A. Strong, ducted We-dnesday at 1 p.m. at That race f eatures four-man The two wings ol Pakistan are Miami, cloudy ..... 18, 958 W. pital, La Crosse, following an eight new donors. ket and taking his control from . 77 62 .. 2nd St., $15, displaying Werness Brothers Funeral relay teams who pass the crabs divided by L ,000 miles of Indian Milwaukee, cloudy . 38 27 only one illness of several days. it. license plate, 5th and Home, Minneapolis. like hot potatoes while running territory. Mpls.-St.P., rain ... 38 33 T Lee Funeral services were held Granting farmers stronger streets, Sunday at 5:20 p.m. over a 100-yard course. New Orleans, clear 61 40 Arthur L. Horan today at Christ Lutheran Gives Technical Paper collective bargaining laws. New York, cloudy .. 35 34 .48 Church, the Rev. "Walter E. N. Limiting farm program pay- WHITEHALL, Wis. - Arthur STRUM, Wis.-H. D. Heath, Okla. City, cloudy .. 44 41 .. L. Horan , 67, Whitehall, died Wahl officiating. Burial was in Blaiberg Will ments per farm. Omaha, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harley G. Gentlemen/ How Restricting tax law benefits cloudy 39 33 Strike rs Return Sunday at 4:30 a.m. at his home Crown Hill Cemetery. Heath Philadelphi a , cloudy 34 32 , Strum, gave a paper at Delay Trip; for those investing in farm land .53 following a heart attack. Pallbearers were Clifford Pet- the annual meeting of the Tech- Did It Work in Phoenix, cloudy .... 59 39 To Jobs in Five He had retired in 1957 for erson, Floyd Richter, Chester to reduce their income tax lia- Pittsburgh, cloud nical Association of the Pulp Worry Over Flu bility on other sources of in- y .. 39 34 .03 health reasons from, a collection Severson and Donald, Dean and and Paper Industry Ptlnd, Me., snow . .. 35 32 T Plants in New York 11th Century? come. in Spain agency and an evening patrol Dale Finseth. City in February, describing CAPE TOWN, South Africa Ptlnd, Ore. , rain .. . 51 25 .02 A retired farmer , he was born BILBAO, Spain (APi - A 21- position in Independence. how chemically modified wheat, PHILADELPHIA (AP) - (APj — The world's longest sur- RE-ELECTED TO county Rapid City, fog 26 18 He was born Jan. 18 Aug. 28, 1887, at Fountain. He Richmond :,9 day strike of 22,000 steel, con- , 1902, in corn and sorghum flours -when Museum visitors ask Tots of cu- viving heart transplant, Dr. GOP office were Mrs. James , cloudy .. 35 1.52 Eau Claire, Wis., to Frank and lived in that area until moving St. Louis, cloudy ... 40 36 struction and shipyard workers added to paper pulps improve rious questions. Philip Blaiberg, has indefinitely Hiebert, Plainview, chairman, Margaret Keanan Horan. He to Preston 20 years ago. He the general For instance, two elderl and Mrs Salt Lk. City, snow . 42 33 .04 in this north Spain industrial strength properties y postponed a planned overseas . Daisy Pfeiffer, Mazep- city ended today. lived in Independence and Eau was married to Selma Finseth in the paper. A research chem- women touring the Philadelphia trip because doctors feel he pa, secretary. San Diego, rain .... 57 52 .39 Dec. 20, lflll. She died in 1957. San Fran., cloudy .. 50 45 .34 The strikers returned to their Claire and moved here in 1957. ist at the U.S. Department of Museum of Art were fascinated should not tie exposed to Hong Howatt and Mrs. Hiebert au- jobs in all He married E. Lillian Sveum Surviving are: Two daughters, Agriculture's northern regional by a trickling 11th century Kong flu abroad. tomatically are delegates to the Seattle, clear 43 33 .04 five struck plants- (Helen) Har- Tampa three plants ot Altor Hornos Aug. 24, 1936, at Arcadia. Mrs. Milton Hahn, research laboratory, Peoria , III., French marble fountain. Blaiberg said he is in perfect district and state conventions. , cloudy 72 55 de mony, Minn., and Mrs. Vernon Washington, cloudy 40 35 Vizcaya, Spain's largest Surviving are : His wife; a he is a graduate of Eleva- Where does the water come health but chat the cancellation New delegates elected are Jack .87 steel ( Doris) Gatk7c Preston; six from asked one. A museum Winnipeg, M firm; Babcock and Wilcox son, David , Eau Claire; two , Strum High School. He received , was "really rather a relief ." Thorson, Lake City and Donald MM M , a grandchildren ; a great-grand- guide explained that an electric < M—Missing; T—Trace ) heavy construction firm , and grandchildren , and three sis- a degree in chemistry from Eau "T h e immundosuppressive Haimes, Plainview. Holdover child , a brother, Hiram, Spring Claire motor kept recirculating the wa- Constructora Naval, a privately ters, Mrs. Margaret Miller, State University in 1961. drugs I am taking lower my re- delegates are Hassler and Mrs. ARKANSAW CARRIER owned shipyard. Chippewa Falls, Wis.; Mrs. Valley, and a sister, Mrs. Cora After three years in military ter. sistance to infection," he said. William Gjerde, Lake City, ARKANSAW, Wis. - Applica- About &0 Carl (Lucille) Parent, San Die- Stoneman, Minneapolis. Two service and three years at the That's fine, said the woman; Blaiberg, who received his Mrs. Yetzer, and Mrs. William tions for rural workers remained in but how did it work back in thc carrier at thc police custody although police go, Calif., and Mrs. Calla Os- brothers have died. Sterling Pulp & Paper Co., Eau new heart on Jan. 2, 1968, said Bruegger, Wabasha. Arkansaw post office will be termin , P ennsylvania. Claire, he joined 11th century. sources said only a few would the staff at the he was sorry to turn down invi- Advertisement accepted until March 11, accord- Northern The museum still is trying to be taken to court. The strike Funeral services will be Wed- Two-State Funerals Laboratory. tations received from all over ing to Postmaster Harvey ¦was nesday at 9:30 a.m. at St. John's answer that one. the world. Yingst. An examination without violence except for will a brief Feb Church, Whitehall , the Rev. Thomas D. Kotlarz Science Fair NO LAKE FILINGS be given by the federal Civil . 5 scuffle between INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- Slated MABEL BROADCASTER Doctor O.KsThis workers and white-collar help at Donald Theisen officiating. LAKE CITY, Minn. - There Service Commission. Qualified Friends may call at Kern Fu- cial) — Funeral services for DOVER-EYOTA , Minn. (Spe- MABEL, Minn. (Special) — the Babcock and Wilcox plant. cial) were no filings in Lake Town- Burr Griswold assistant editor applicants will be considered ¦ neral Home, Independence, aft- Thomas D. Kotlarz, a semi- — Dover-Eyota and St. ship for the election March 11, , Hemorrhoid Treatment without regard to politics, race, er 3 p.m. Tuesday. Tlie Rosary retired self-employed plumber Charles high schools are plan- says Clerk Russell Breuer. of the Mabel Record and cor- ©r other non-merit factors. Thc Only 701 of the nation's 17,105 will be said at 8. who was killed Saturday morn- ning a joint science fair March Terms expiring are those of respondent for the Winona Daily For N.J.Coiples Son vacancy arises from the retire- townships had as many as 10,00o ing when he was struck by a 15 at St. Charles High School, William Llchtblnu, supervisor; & Sunday News will talk on inhabitants in 19GO. "Mabel History Hl-Lltes ment of Irving Gibson. Leo- C. Torgerson train here, will be Tuesday at according to Roger Kehret, ad- John J. Beck, treasurer; Del- " on the Treattnent Shrinks THea. NELSON, Wis. (Special) - 2 p.m. ni American Lutheran viscr for the school science mar Hoist, justice of the peace, Decorah, Iowa, radio station MievesPainMost Cases Leo Christian Torgerson, 56 Church, Arcadia, the Rev. Har- Wednesday between 1 and" 2 , club here. and Ralph Breuer, constable. WIiarton.Tr.J. Mr. and MM. C. M. In Respect to the Memory Nelson, died Sunday at 1 a.m. old Benson officiating. Burial ¦ The annual township meeting p.ra. Tho history of Hesper al- Jcffcra report: "Our son suffered at St. Elizabeth Hospital, Wab- will be in Glencoe Cemetery. will bo held on the same date. so -will bo included. Jrom nomorrhoids. I asked the doc- tor about asha, after an illness of about Friends may call at Kern Fu- St. ¦ ¦¦ ¦ Preparation It nnd ho Charles Contestant ¦ ¦ — ¦' ! ' ' ' ¦¦ - 1 - ¦¦¦¦¦ i n i ¦ of ' """ ' ' " " " Rave "us tho O.K. Our uon ia now- four days. neral Home today. fine.thanks to A general farm laborer He was bom Oct. .ST. CHARLES, Minn. (Spe- Preparation HI' , he ,1, 1894, at cial) (Notot Doctors have pioved In- was born June 8, 1912, in the Arcadia, to Bert and Katherine — Diane H eim, daughter Most caacs Mrs. Hubert Weir of Mr. and Mrs -Prppnratiom H® ac- Town of Modena to Torgcr and Bisck Kotlarz. He married Olga . Bernard Heim, PASSPORTS tually alirlnka inflamed hemor- who is Miss St. Charles, will rhoids, In cos«i after cane we will be closed Caroline ILarson Torgerson. He Stirn Oct. 11, 1921, at Arcadia, compete Profaulenal Workmanship , tho Jived in this vicinity all his life Surviving arc: His wife; a in tho Miss Minnesota Buffercr flrntnotlcos prompt relloC Contest in June, Steve Delano, U/o^ — Fast Strvlc* — from pain, burnl-ns nnd Itchlnir. and was a member of Lyster daughter, Mrs. William (Evelyn ) St. Charles Chamber of Com- £| Thou swelling is gently reduced. Lutheran Church), Church Val- Smieja, Independence; a grand- Rtasonablt Ratotl There Monday & Tuesday merce, announced. The Cham- 's no other formula for ley. child; three brothers, Michael, ber rvj the treatment oi hemorrhoids has voted to proceed with / ** llko doctor-tested Preparation Survivors are: Two brothers, Arcadia; William, Buffalo City, a brochure on ' H. Stanley, the community. It also lubricates to mako bowel Winona Medical/Secreta rial Oscar and Ole, Nelson; two sis- and Washington state, moyowonts moro ters, Mrs. Christ ( Selma) and two sisters, Miss Helen Kot- HOSPITAL PATIENT DURFEY comfortable, PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO soothes irritated tissues and help* School Thompson, Nelson, and Mrs. lart and Mrs. Katherine Stel- Miss Jane Kobler is a patient \CCAuM prevent further infection. In. Oscar (Orvilla) Bade, Groton, maclV Arcadia. A daughter and at Methodist Hospital, Roches- Phorii Slit ointment or Bujppoaitory form.) S.D., and four nieces and one four brothers have died. ter, for back surgery. y Tournamenfs Pipers Win ^ North Stars i BeginTonightl I The long trek toward 1st Against the Minnesota State High i I School basketball tournament begins for schools | I throughout the state tonight Leafs, , Bomb and more immediately, 1 I for those teams in Districts One, Three and Four. P I Four games will be play«d in all three of the 1 I above mentioned Districts. p I by In District One 2 the Oaks pre-tourney favorites, Maple P I Leaf Conference champion Spring Valley and Boot | ST*. PAUL m — Gus Young, Erickson said Connie Hawk- I River titlist Rushford will be in action. Spring Valley 1 coach of the Minnesota Pipers, ins, the Pipers leading scorer Tie W) ST. PAUL forA 4th — touch of second period and $ takes cn Mabel-Canton at 7:IS p.m. in Chatfield. The % told his players they needed to who underwent knees surgery re- started a 19- % nightcap sends Harmony against Caledonia. j luck, says Danny Grant, start- staot barrage against Toronto fast break more and hring down cently, will be available for ed him to a hat trick and the goalie Bruce Gamble in the f At Lewiston, Rushford mets Wykoff at 9 p.m. The I the rebounds to beat Oakland in part-time duty in the two games I evening's opener has Peterson going against Lanesboro § the .second half. Minnesota North Stars to a vic- period. jg -in-nnnn .- -r -i->r- i -i—ini- tory that shot thern into fourth I at 7:15 p.m. "We just decided to go to the iri»-ir>fvv ^v^vvvvvvi ^ "I was surprised at that first I Both sub-districts get under way in District Three % boards and run," Young said place of the National Hockey goal," Grant said. "You have to | | In the eastern half , being played at St. Charles, Plain- § League's West Division. I view tackfes defending after the Pipers, down 58-37 at Winona have some luck to score from sub-district champion Lake City % halftime, staved off- Oakland The North Stars shelled Tor- I at 7:30 p.m., while the second game sends Elgin I onto's Maple Leafs 7-2 Sunday that far out. All you do ia put against Dover-Eyota at 9 p.m. t% 104-102 in the American Basket- | | ball Association Sunday night Daily and tied Philadelphia for fourth your head down and blast. I | | The West Sub-District is being played in Kasson- 1 place —the cutoff point for the think the goalie didn't even see I Mantorville and the host school, one and became the first Eastern of the favorites 1 Division team this season to Stanley Cup playoffs — after it-" ¦ News.. ¦ . . I plays Pine Island in the second game at 9 p.m Byron ¦ fe 'i. . the Flyers lost 9-1 to Detroit. P . tackles StewartvilTe itt the 7:30 p.m. opener. ' % beat the Western circuit Oaks. Minnesota plays at Los An- Ray Ctillen, who scored two District Four has games at three sites In the The Pipers, 0-5 against the geles tonight goals in the game, hit his first % ' % Oaks before the game, zoomed TRACE HISTORY . . . Barbara Jo Bubih poses Sunday , trying to take sole % East Sub-District Wanamingo meets Kenyon at West % night after she became the possession of fourth place. The marker about a minute later | | Concord, and West Concord takes on Goodhue at | to a 98-89 lead with about five first female jockey to win a Ken- Sports regular pari-mutuel flat race in the U.S. The 19-year-old North Stars play at Oakland and the North Stars were off to | | yon. Both games are at 8 p.m. The West Sub-District § miniites to play for their biggest Wednesday. I has two games at Janesville where New Richland margin and then after leading brunette holds the reins of her mount, Cohesion, which she their first victory against Tor- 1 Monday, The North Stars can thank | | tackles Morristown at 7 p.m. and Claremont meets 1 104-96 went scoreless the final Tebruary 24, 1969 rode to victory in the feature at the Charles Town, W. Va., Grant's 35-foot shot that broke onto this season. 1 Faribault Deaf at 8:45. § Vk minutes. Both teams missed WINONA DAILY NEWS 11 race track. (AP Photofax) a scoreless tie at 11:33 in the A five-goal assault in the final i District tournaments continue through the field goal attempts in the final ';¦ '¦ weekend i period, including two by Grant I of March 7-8. | minute. Tom Washington led the Pi- BOTH FLAY TONIGHT and one by Cullen, iced it. Also ^^^m ^mm ^msmmmm ^^mm ^mrm: ?^mmpers ^^^ with 29 points, Charlie scoring for Minnesota were J.P. Williams contributed 23. Parise, who knocked in his own The victory kept Minnesota a game behind Eastern Division rebound, and Danny Lawson, leader Miami. who scored his second goal in A. crowd of 2,780 watched the his third game as a North Star. WSC, "We forechecked very well," game at the Metropolitan Sports SMC Must Rebound Center, where Pipers President St. Mary's and Winona State, ponent, is just 2-8 in the league ry Grimes and Bill Artis. THE WARRIORS, who can Minnesota General Manager- Bill Erickson announced two both still very much in the run- and 7-14 over all. But the Hus- Grimes, a guard, has an 18- win their first NIC cage crown Coach Wren Blair said- "We hours before gametime that the ning for their respective con- kies are one of the .highest point average and Artis, a for- since 1951, will start Don Be- really took the p*uck away from club will play the New Orleans ference championships despite scoring teams in the league ward, is scoring better than sonen and Jim Jabrosky, at for- them." Bucs March 19 at tbe Minne- losses Saturday night, are both with close to an 80-point aver- 16 points a game. Senior for- wards, Steve Protsman at cen- Blair praised the play of de- apolis Armory and the Hew in action again tonight. age. Winona State won an ward Bob Bohse (14.7)' and ter and Rick Starzecki and fenseman Tom Eeid, who waa York Nets March 25 at the St. The Warriors can clinch at earlier game at Memorial Hall senior guard Ted Witting K10.4) Gene Schultz at guards. playing his first game since a Paul Auditorium. least a tie for the NIC title 79-56. are also in double figures. Winona State had a five-game trade brought him to the. North T*he three remaining home by defeating next to Fast Michi- Michigan Tech has a balanc- Freshman Jim Muff , a 6-7 cen- win streak snapped in the 60-26 Stars from Chicago, tfifwson games will be played at the gan Tech at Houghton in an ed attack led by freshman Lar- ter, rounds out the lineup. drubbing at St. Cloud Saturday. came to the North Stars in a Metropolitan Sports Center, 8 p.m. game. If they win, the trade from Detroit. site for mostv of the Pipers' Am- Warriors will also claim an erican Basketball Association NAIA playoff berth since. St. home games this season.] Cloud, the only other team Erickson told that would still be able to tie a news confer- should Winona State win, went ence the decision to play games last year. in the neighboring cities rather than at suburban Bloomington ST. MARY'S, knocked from was made "to see if this area the MIAC lead via Saturday's can support ah ABA team." 73-70 loss at Gustavus, makes The Pipers have drawn an the long jaunt to Moorhead to average crowd of 2,336 in home take on Concordia in a 7:30 games at the Met. p.m. game. The Redmen, now "We have been .amazed that tied for second with Macales- more people have not been out ter, must win tonight to stay to see our games,' Erickson in the running. St. John's has said. "Hopefully, we can en- a half-game lead and closes thuse people who have not been its season against last place enthused before. UM-Duluth at CoTlegeville to- night. Macalester hosts Gusta- "The thing I want to know vus tonight: when the season is over is that we have tried everything (to in- If the Johnnies, Redmen and crease attendance," Erickson Scots all win tonight, St. Mary's said. finale with St. Thomas, now ferickson skirted scheduled for Thursday, would questions fikely be moved to Wednesday, pertaining to a franchise move in preparation for a possible ' to another city, saying he Want- playoff. NO SCREEN ASPIRATIONS^ . . ¦;. Gabriele Seyfert , 20- ed to see how the upcoming ex- year-old European figure skating champion from Germany peritment would work. "Our conference has 'no pro- Is not interested in turning to show business should she "We're hopeful the people vision saying if two or more here teams tie for the title the team win the World Figure skating championships this coming , if we turn the right screw, which has never gone to the wekend. Miss Seyfert, a dazzling blonde, said, "I intend to will get to like our branch of basketball playoff or which went longest BINGO ! ' ¦ ) finish school and then become a coach like my mother." ," he said. ago goes," explained St. Mary's . . . Bill Collins (18 and J. P. Parise, in dark Toronto goalie Bruce Gamble couldn't stop the puck which (AP Photofax) coach Ken Wiltgen this morn- uniform, raise their arms'to celebrate a goal by Bay Cullen caromed in off a Toronto defenseman, kneeling at left. (AP ing. Sunday against Toronto at the Metropolitan Sports Center. Photofax) ' "So, if we win tonight and Region against St. Thomas we would have to have a playoff with St, John's and/or Macalester," City Sports revinoWins "1 Mat he added. T w _ THE NAIA playoff to deter- mine the state's representative Calendar to the national tournament in Results Kansas City is a best of three TODAY FINALS game affair with the first BASKETBALL.— Open fS—Rich Rttman (AL) dec. Rick: Loed- game scheduled to be played Winona Stata al Michigan Tech, Tucson ing (A) 2-1. SI. Mary ' s at Concordia . (AP) Lee Trevino had fired a 68 on Sat- 103—John Leach (RJM) dec. Mark Shltldi Saturday on the home court of TUCSON, Arix. — By Chester Gould ¦ ¦ DICK TRACY ¦ ¦ ' ' ' - ' ' " —: ' — - ' ^ ^ oMnaaamaa n Mai S»—«¦»__-_>_•_-__ »¦—_ _ u , » ' ' w ¦ _ ¦¦ ¦¦ '— ¦ ¦ «-»^-a--B-__«H i - - -^ . '• ' ^ V 7 " ' . . BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ w, m ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ i n. " ,—¦¦..—¦¦¦ ' ¦¦¦i m ¦ ¦¦—__¦» —— ¦—¦a.—— ¦—a—-____¦ »_¦— » — "—' iaai-i_ — — i— i — m I — — .. - » i -p— » BLONDIE By Chick Young LI'L ABNER By Al Capp THE FLINTSTONES By Hanna-Barbera ¦ ¦ . . ———« i i II ¦ ————« ¦_———————— i——_—_¦_____. » BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Lasswell STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kofzky 3-PIECE f ^^imrnm^ REX MORGAN, NVD. 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