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Winona State University OpenRiver

Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

3-31-1969

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1969). Winona Daily News. 873. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/873

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Chance of Light Read By More Snow or Freezing Than 90,000 Drizzle Tonight People Every Day Kings, Commoners in Final Tribute to Ike WASHINGTON (AP) - The The leaders of American gov- fectionate line moved. By mid- der the soaring gothic arches of common people of this silent ernment and representatives of morning full y half its numbers Washington National Cathedral capital trudged in shuffling, most of the world's nations were children. Schools were would be over and a funeral ever-lengthening lines past the would be there this afternoon at closed and government offices train would be carrying the soldier's casket of Dwight D. Ei- the start of his funeral proces- excused on this day of national one-time Kansas farm boy back senhower today while ' world sion. mourning; to the plains of Abilene for buri- leaders assembled to pay their Among them: President At the other end of Pennsylva- al. final tribute. Charles de Gaulle of France, nia Avenue, De Gaulle, here to Among the throngs that cams The funeral day of America's the Shah of Iran, King Constan- mourn a World War H comrade to the Capitol to pay their per- 34th President dawned radiantly tino of Greece, King Baudouin in arms, conferred privately in sonal tribute and murmur their clear and the file of mourners- of Belgium, West Germany's the White House with President private prayers were thousands two lines, moving de- Chancelor Kurt Xiesinger and Nixon on the problems of a of the Negroes who make up liberately but steadily—quickly dozens more. world not yet made safe for de- three-fourths of Washington's grew. The march of mourners halt- mocracy. population. Soon it stretched from ' the ed briefly while King Baudouin, Other presidents, prime min- But most were the white, mid- hushed Capitol Rotunda, where clad in air force uniform with isters, kings and chancellors dle class Americans who made the hero general of World War purple sash, presented a white were to be received formally by Ike the most popular figure of H lay in state, down the broad floral wreath. He placed it gen- President and Mrs. Nixon in the his era. into the Capi- tly, then stood at sharp atten- early evening. ¦ steps and far They blinked in the harsh ^^m^^m^^mimsii ^mm ^^^M^^^mm ^Mgm^f^m^m^m^xmmsm ^^ tol Plaza where he twice took tion and saluted. By then the invitation-only fu- wreath lights of television as they came A FALLEN HERO .. . The body of former President At left of flag-draped casket is President Nixon. The the oath of the presidency. Again the quiet, tearless, af- neral for the hero-president, un- Dwight D. Eisenhower lies In state in the Capitol Rotunda. was placed by Nixon. (AP Photofax) in from the cold to the place where their Ike lay in state. Inside, their ranks parted to file by on either side of the plain Nixon Meets Gl coffin where it lay on its Israel Digs in bier, draped in the Stars and d Stripes of toe country Ike s Family Compose he had Services for fought for in war and led in As Settlement De Gaulle peace. V/ASHINGTON (AP) - There, President Nixon had During Eulogy Service French President Charles de said in eulogy earlier, lay "that Ike Scheduled Gaulle arrived a few minutes WASHINGTON (AP) Ma- Nixon The four grandchildren have rarest of men, an authentic — Dwight D. Eisenhower, WASHINGTON (AP) — This is the day-by-day program ahead of schedule at the White hero. mie Doud Eisenhower's eyes said, spoke these words to his attended the public services, as Is Rejected " of honors to he paid former President Dwight D? Eisenhower. House today for a meeting with There lay a man whose last never left the flag-shrouded cas- wife just before he died last Fri- erect and composed as their JERUSALEM (AP) -Israel The body lies in state in the Capitol rotunda. President Nixon. ket of the husband whose last day. grandmother- words to his wife were just the was digging in today for a criti- 3 p.m.—Casket will be carried to the hearse for return Riding in a small French- ones these people who came thoughts and words were for When the eulogy was over, When Eisenhower's body was cal spring and summer after its to Washington National Cathedral. her. taken into the rotunda, the made Citreon sedan that barely through the night might have Mrs. Eisenhower returned to se- Cabinet rejected any Big Four 3:30—Arrival ceremony at cathedral's North Transept, accommodated his tall frame, hoped he would say: Twice she seemed to fight clusion and private grief. grandchildren walked slowly up settlement for the Middle East followed by Episcopal funeral service in cathedral attended De Gaulle drove up to the South "I've always loved my wife. back tears...... the steps behind it. by 2,107 persons admitted by ticket. She and other members of the and Egyptian President Gamal Portico at 8:57 H.m. CST to be I've always loved my children. Amid the great assemblage of family have stayed close togeth- David, 21 today, and Julie his 4 p.m.—Casket placed in hearse for trip to Union Station. world and national leaders in wife and daughter of President Abdel Nasser talked again of greeted by Nixon and an Army I've always loved my grandchil- er in hotel suites while leaders 5 p.m.—Approximate time train departs Union Station honor guard. dren. And I have always loved the Capitol rotunda, the former Nixon and David's sister Su- war. for Abilene, Kan. of the world gather for the fu- The French leader, who spoke my country." president's wife of nearly 53 neral. san, 17, went first, all holding Israeli Defense Minister Tuesday: years was calm and composed. hands. Also there were Mary to Nixon in Paris a month ago, A small, bent shadow, Mamie Moshe Dayan told border set- 12 midnight—Approximate arrival of train In Abilene. And so she remained daring Mrs. Eisenhower has sought Jean Eisenhower, 13; and Bar- paid a courtesy call on the chief Dowd Eisenhower, 72, fought tlers the summer would be Wednesday: back tears and grasped the arra President Nixon's 16 minute eu- to restrict this sorrowful part of bara Anne; "19, and her husband, "most critical" because the executive while here to attend logy, through the President's her life to members of her fami- Fernando Echavarria-Uribe of 9:55 a.m.—Casket is moved from train to hearse. funeral services for his World of her sturdy son, John, as her Egyptian regime is under heavy 10:50 a.m. recitation of her husband's last ly, a friend said. Bogota, Columbia. pressure —Funeral services on steps of Eisenhower War II comrade in arms, husband's Vyice president and ¦' to renew the war or Library. eventual successor words. ' ;¦?' . " Through it all, in public, Mrs. Mrs. Eisenhower, John, and abdicate. And Nasser said Sun- Dwight D? Eisenhower. quietly ad- "I've always loved my wife. Eisenhower, 72, has clung to the his wife, Barbara, did not stand day that war with Israel is inev. dressed the solemn gathering of I've always loved my children. arm of her son, John, 46, who at the steps for the ceremony itable "so long as they refuse to dignitaries for 16 minutes before I've always loved my grandchil- has been seen often to give her there but went into the Capitol withdraw from the occupied the Rotunda was opened to the dren. I have always loved rny black gloved hand a reassuring by a door beneath the steps atod jfcrab lands " public- ' ' ¦ '' ¦ Ted Kennedy country." pat? • • , •. left that way. Addressing the national con- Bomb Halt It was Nixon who disclosed to gress of the Arab Socialist Un- Has the world the last words Eisen- ion, Nasser said : "The days hower had spoken to his wife when we could not answer Is- just before his death Friday aft- ' raeli shelling have passed. We Will Resume Firemen s Strike - ernoon. British Flayed now can back, and hit vi- Nof Hurt US. Dwight Eisenhower, said Nix- WASHINGTON (AP) olently." However, he said - Pen- 20th parallel to encourage Hanoi on, was Egypt still hoped the tagon officers say the United "one of the giants of our coming Speechmakinq to enter peace negotiations. time ... probabl Ends in Madison four-power talks In New York at States has suffered little mili- Last Nov. 1 y more loved (AP) , with talks immi- by more people in other parts of MADISON, Wis. W — A walk- the United Nations would result WASHINGTON — Ed- tarily from the prohibition nent, he made the prohibition out by Madison firefighters, in some kind of peace settle- ward M. Kennedy is about to re- against bombing North Viet- complete. the world than any president Snub' turn to the banquet circuit after America ever had." For Ike ment. which created what Mayor Otto nam, begun in limited fashion There was some concern the LONDON (AP> - The British is on a trip to Africa, and the a three-months confinement to one year ago today. Bells tolled across the capital, Festge termed the "most serious Because the meetings of the Senate chores. But his aides bombing halt would bring a dan- quietly celebrating Palm fovernment faced criticism in Queen and Prince Philip were gerous North Vietnamese threat Sun- situation" in the city's history, United States, Great Britain, deny any intention to compete This attitude would seem to day under spitting, cheerless 'arliament and khe press today attending the dedication today be an admission that the air to U.S. Marines stationed below over what some newspapers of a chapel in memtfry of her has ended. France and the Soviet Union are with the far-flung politicking of skies, as the Eisenhower family expected to begin this week the Edmund Muskie, campaign against the North, the demilitarized zone separat- called a snub to the memory of father, King George VI. The 52-hour walkout was halt- , another poten. and dignitaries cleared the Ro- Israeli Cabinet decided Sunday tial candidate for the 1972 presi- launched in February 1965, was ing the two countries. The Unit- tunda to make way for the pub- former President Dwight D. Ei- ed shortly before 3 a.m. Sunday not as vital as the ed States warned Hanoi in ad- senhower. to state its position before rath- dential-nomination. Pentagon lic. when the Common Council and er than after the talks. While the Massachusetts made it out to be. vance to respect the supposedly Britain sent Earl Mountbatten The body, in its $80 steel cof- foe firemen agreed on a new The Cabinet communique Democrat has concentrated on But, military men say, the mutual nature of the DMZ. fin the kind the Army uses of Burma, a friend of Eisenhow- Officers say Hanoi still plays to contract, boosting wages for said; "Israel entirely opposes being his party's Senate whip, North Vietnamese have gained bury all its soldiers—had been er and a distant relative of Wilson Leaves the plan to convene representa- Muskie made more than 50 fast and loose with the DMZ but Queen Elizabeth II, to represent firefighters to a penny an hour operating flexibility and are no borne majestically to the Capi- tives of states outside the Mid- speeches so far this year in longer paying as high a price not to the extent that U.S. forces the royal family at the funeral less than comparable pay for what he admits is an tol on the traditional, creaking dle East in order to prepare re- effort to to infiltrate men and supplies have been placed in serious artillery caisson drawn by and Defense Minister Denis policemen. commendations concerning the lay the groundwork for a possi- jeopardy. southward. horses. Healey to represent the govern- For Ethiopia It also provides for amnesty region. Such a procedure under- ble bid for the Democratic nom- (AP) U.S. Intelligence ment. LAGOS - Prime Minis- to firemen who had walked out mines the responsibility devolv- ination. At the same time, however. estimates The clatter of their hooves "This Is not really good ter Harold Wilson left today for Thursday despite state law pro- ing on the states of the region to Some Kennedy allies around Hanoi has not been able, or has 1,500 to 3,000 North Vietnamese Addis Ababa operate continuousl broke the silence as crowds enough," said the Daily Tele- , still waiting for hibiting strikes by municipal achieve peace among them- the country reportedly feel that not chosen, to build up a much y in the 12- lined Constitution Avenue for Biafran leader Odumegwu mile zone but few graph. The pro-Labor Sunday Ojuk- employes. selves." the Massachusetts senator larger force in Sou th Vietnam. are combat the full-dress cortege. wu's response to the should resume political types. Mirror headlined its story Briton's in- No major fire occurred in the It was no secret that the Is. speech- Its troop level today is about Drums muffled and draped vitation to meet. making to counter the Most are patrols or are in con- , in "America Bewildered at Royal city of 158,000 population during raelis opposed the talks. They favorable what it was when the bombs black, sounded brisk but solemn Snub." Wilsdh said he had bounced a the walkout, the first by muni- are said to believe that an im- impact of Muskie's appear- were falling—around 100,000. struction units sent in to repair posed solution could only benefit ances. But the senator aides fortifications in North Viet- cadence. A Labor member of Parlia- message to Ojukwu "off some cipal employes in the city's his- Former President Johnson re- In black trappings, riderless, ment, Miarcus Lipton introduced unidentifiable satellite as he the Arabs because they expect deny that Is the reason for the nam's six-mile portion of the " tory. decision. stricted U.S. bombing of North a motion saying Britain should wound up his four-day visit to Russia and France to insist that ( (Continued on Page 9, Col. 3) "Maybe we were being watch- "If he were trying to compete Vietnam last March 31 to the Continued on Page 9, Col. 4) have been "more adequately Nigeria and recaptured parts of commented Sgt. Jim Israel withdraw from the lands FINAL TRIBUTE ed over," it occupied in the June 1967 war. with Muskie on that score, he narrow panhandle beneath the BOMB HALT represented at the funeral of the eastern region. Dolderer, a Fire Department Gen. Eisenhower." Before Israel gives up its big- would do a lot more," a Kenne- There remained the possibili- dispatcher as he and fellow fire- dy spokesman said '.'A member of the royal fami- lighters returned to duty Sun- gest bargaining lever, it wants a . ty he would meet Ojukwu in with Kennedy plans to speak April ly should represent the Queen, Ethiopia or some other African day. signed peace agreement not Lord Mountbatten," said the Arabs. 8 at Detroit's Economic Club en capital on his way home. "We've been very, very The Cabinet asserted that in route to three days of hearings Lipton. "You might as well send While in Addis Ababa Wilson lucky," Dolderer said. and field trips the assistant postmaster gener- the absence of a signed peace by his Indian ed- Will meet with Ethiopian Em- During the strike, nine of the treaty with its neighbors, Israel ucation subcommittee in Alas- al as Mr. Healey for all the peror Haile Selassie and offi- city's 10 fire stations wero un- ka. American public knows of the will "consolidate her position in cials of the Organization for Af- manned while nearly 270 fire- accordance with the vital need defense minister." rican Unity. men were off their jobs. Prime Minister Harold Wilson of security and development." As if to underscore this, Israel jets streaked over the Jordanian Election Tuesday cease-fire line Sunday morning. The army said they attacked guerrilla positions which opened For Laird Seat fire on a patrol and wounded MILWAUKEE Wl - Lead- four border guards. ers of both major The planes went In as the political par- U.N. Security Council continued ties are expected to pay close to study a Jordanian complaint attention to the outcome Tues- against a similar attack day of the battle for Wisconsin's Wednesday in which Jordan 7th District Congressional seat. said 10 civilians were killed. Voters in the spring election There was strong pressure to besides naming a successor to pass a resolution condemning Secretary of Defense Melvin R. the raid . Laird in the 15-county district, will chooso a Supreme Court justice and a superintendent of public instruction and state their WEATHER positions on five referendum FEDERAL FORECAST questions. WINONA AND VICINITY - Democrats pinned enough val- Mostly cloudy tonight ond Tues- ue on tho special 7th District day with occasional very light election to throw the weight of enow or very light freezing driz- former Vice President Hubert zle tonight, possibly continuing II. Humphrey and Sen. Ed ward into Tuesday; moderating tem- M. Kennedy of Massachusetts peratures; low tonight 20s ; high behind tho candidacy of Assem- Tuesday 34-35. blyman David Obey. REPUBLICANS are hoping BROKEN JUNGLE ...A command .offensive around the Mlchelin rubber planta- LOCAL WEATHER that the voters who sent Laird helicopter hovers over a narrow jungle ition. The operation, dubbed "Atlas Wedge," is Official observations for the to Congress for IB straight intensive air strikes near an attempt by tho U.S. command to pre- 24 hours ending at 12 noon to- clearing created by years will cost their bnllots for north- i lana for on attack on the capital, SALUTE TO FORMER COMRADE-IN- Dwight D. Elsenhower, former President, in day: State Sen , Walter John Chil- Dau Tieng, South Vietnam, 40 miles empt any p ARMS . . . President Charles do Gaulle of tho Rotunda of tho Capitol. (AP Photofax) Maximum, 19; minimum —5; scn. Both candidates are from west of Saigon. Armored personnel carrier (AP Photofax) France, salutes at the casket of noon, 19; precipitation, none. Wausau. in foreground is involved in allied counter died in 1918. He then married Gertrude Starve Nov. 23, 192L MONDAY They settled in the Viola area MARCH 31, 1 969 _ where they farmed until 1367. The Daily Record He then retired and moved to -op's Revolving Elgin. Co Deaths Two-State Deaths ' Survivors are: His wife; three Area Musicians At Community Winona * sons, Raymond, Kellogg; Fred- Memorial Hospihal Carl A. Karow Mario* A. Morse erick , Hammond, Minn., and Russell, Chatsworth, Calif.; one ' Carl A. Karow, 278 E. Sanborn DAKOTA, Minn. - Marius A. for State ' Vbhng . houm Medical end tairijleel daughter, Mrs. James (Doro- Rated Challenged ant 1 to 8:30 pm. < i St., died at 8:3Q a.m. today at Morse, 56, operator of Morning p»tlem«: 1 16 * dit Stewartville; 15 Cre thy) Flynn children under 12.) Community Memorial Hospital Star Orchard here and research , reten- ryland Power Cooperative, La Nleitmlty pt1len»>: '=30 ,0 grandchildren and 3 great- "justify the huge * »° •"« ' following a long illness. He was associate in the biology depart- RUSHFORD, Minn. - Tie re- tives m rosse, in returning capital cred- I; 38 p.m. «UDodge ... 3.4 and Mrs. Joseph Duane, Lewis- life except from 1913 to 1923 Marguerite, has died. PICKWICK, Minn. Funeral Tremp. ing outstanding patronage capi- when he lived in Rush soprano; Vicky King, mezzo; Neillsville .6.1 v.. '(Spe- ton, are the maternal grandpar- City, A funeral liturgy -will be held services for Mrs. Anna J. Ber- Black at INDEPENDENCE, Wis. tal listed on the report is $9,- Minn, Karen Lee, drum; Jessi Fedie, Gaiesville .6.4 .. ents and Mrs. Emma Dnane is Wednesday at 5:15 p.m. In Uie nadot were held this afternoon Black at cial)—Three students at Inde- 663,479. sax; Jonette Slabey, piano; La Crosse at W. Sal. 4.6 the great-grandmother. He was a member of the chapel at St. Mary's College. at Fawcett Funeral Home, Wi- pendence High School have been Brotherhood of Maintenance of Mary S. Schlosser, bassoon; Root at Houston .-¦ 7-4 THE MONEY held in credits TAMPA, Fla. — Mr. and Mrs. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. William T. nona, the Rev. Walter KoepselL ex- Way Employes and Order Barb B r u nn e r, Jessi Fedie, RIVER FORECAST accepted for the student is used for financing projects Robert Reinert, a daughter Sun- of McGee will officiate at the serv- St. Luke's Evangelical Lutheran Eastern Star and Jasper Ma- Mary Hurlburt and Rick Thom- (From Hastings to Guttcnberg) change program and will spend of the cooperative, Johnson said. day. She is the former Andrea ices, which will be held in lieu Pickwick, officiating. sonic Chapter 164 AF & AM Church, as, sax quartet; Barb Brunner Tues. Wed. Thnrs. It is more or less an insurance Stallknecht daughter of Mr. and , , of a funeral since Mr. Morse Cedar Valley the summer in South America. , Rush Cily. He was a 50 year Burial was in and Jessi Fedie, sax duet; Dan Red Wing ... 7.5 7.9 8.1 policy against a storm or other Mrs. Carl Stallknecht, Winona willed his body to the University Lutheran Cemetery. 0 8.2 Paula Andre, daughter of Mr, Mason. / Busche and Mark Rutherford, WINONA ..... 7.9 8. problem that would - need im- Rt. 3. of Minnesota medical school. Pallbearers were Raymond 4 and Mrs. William Andre, will go Surviving is a sister trombone duet; La Crosse .... 8.3 8.3 8. mediate financing. There is in- , Mrs. McNally, Victor Gunderson, El- Harry (Ethel) Einhorn, Wino- Jane Brommer, Linda John- OTHER TEMPERATURES to Ecuador; Kay Evenson, surance for this, but the rates Edgar Olson Ben Tarras, Clar- TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS na, x BLAIR ( mer Walters, son and Mickey Miller, clarinet By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 0. J. put it out of reach, he contin- , Wis. Special) - Omer Harem- Pr. Private funeral ence Davis and trio; Karen Hunter and Becci High Low Evenson to Ar- ued. Because the co-op's assets Brenda Kay Malesker, 618 Funeral services will be Wed- services for Ed- 36 16 nesday at 2 p.m. at Breitlow gar Olson, 76, native of Blair Schlosser, oboe duet; Toni Albany, clear . gentina, and are under an REA (Rural Elec- Wilson St., 8, , cloudy 77 40 . Martin Funeral Home, the Rev. were held March 7 at Portland Municipal Court Kremer and Mary S. Schlosser, Albuquerque, Kathleen Galla- tric Administration) mortgage, Jean Marie Harders? 815 W. , ...... 64 34 .01 E. L Christopherson, First Ore. Burial was there. He died bassoon duet, and a clarinet Atlanta, clear gher , daughter other financing for this type of Howard St., 1. . WINONA rain ..... 20 15 T Baptist Church, officiating. unexpectedly. choir composed of Joli Schwel- Bismarck, of Mr. and Mrs. g y h n? William J. Beranek, 419 Wil- ...... 74 51 .. emer enc is ard to obtai Burial will be in Woodlawn He was bom here April 3, lenbach, Patti Baskin, Nona Boise, cloudy Kenneth Galla- son St., pleaded guilty to a cloudy ... 39 28 .. One thing that can be done WINONA DAM LOCKAGE Cemetery? 1892, to Andrew and Martha John so n. Barb Weisenbeck, Boston, .. gher, to Peru. charge of careless driving and clear ...... 27 16 .01 with the capital retained mold Friends may call at the fune- Odegard Olson, attended school Mickey Miller, Sandra Carlisle, Buffalo , All will attend Flow — 52,100 cubic feet per here and -was fined $25. He was arrested Candy Kees Chicago clear ..... 27 12 . - . '. . be early retirement of the loans ral home Tuesday from 7 to 9 moved to Montana Jane Brommer, , , school and ob- second at 8 a.m today. as a youth? He by city police Friday at 2:01 Carol Forster Linda Johnson, Cincinnati, clear . .. 35 17 but this would not be good busi. p.m. and until time of services enlisted and , serv*e the class- Saturday served in the U.S. p.m? at 5th and Stone streets. David Broberg, Bob Heike and Cleveland, cloudy .. 29 22 .02 ness, Jolnsdn said. Wednesday. A Masonic service Army during es and mechan- 5:30 p.m. — Greenville, light World War I, homesteaded FORFEITURES: Sue Smith. Denver, cloudy .... 68 41 .. Henry also attacked the con- will ba held at 8. in ics of the edu- up. McCoae County and ' Wallace H. Jackson, 19, 452 Dirrand's directors are Arnold Des Moines, cloudy . 26 17 . ... gressional appropriations of mil- boat, married sys- Mattie Childress Aug. 18 Main St., $15? disobeying traffic Checkalski and David Slosser. Detroit, clear ...... 29 15 .. cational 11:15 p.m. — Denis Brown, 4 , 1923. will Paula A. lions of dollars annually so that Winona Funerals They established a home signal, Saturday, 7:55 p.m. 4th Mondovi, with 48 winning out Fort Worth, cloudy . 52 44 .17 tem. They barges, doVn. on a families. They electric cooperatives may bor- farm in the Union community. and Main streets. of Helena, cloudy ..... 47 28 .. live with typical Today Mrs. Clara S. Rierz of 61 individuals and 24 out Fla., in row at 2 percent. ¦ In 1940 they moved to Wash- Steven E. Flemming, 161 N. ratings Honolulu, cloudy ...79 69 .. will leave for Miami, 11 a.m. — W. S. Rhea, 8 bar- Funeral services for Mrs. 38 entries receiving top late in Johnson pointed out that the ington and then to Oregon Baker St., $30, speeding 60 —Karmen Eide clarinet solo; Indianapolis, clear .32 17 .. early June and return ges, down. Clara Susan Rietz, Des Moines, , , ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦' ' cooperative had not borrowed where he was employed in the m.p.h. in a 30 zone, 12:32 this Shelley Glanzman and Sharon Jacksonville, clear . 82 52 .. August, v ; v • ' Iowa, formerly of Winona, were any of these funds since 1960. shipyards until his retirement. morning on West 5th Street. Heike alto sax solos; LaRae Juneau, rain ..... ?. 4L 36 .07 Sponsored by International held today at tbe Cathedral of , Survivors are: Two sons, Ro- Michael L. Whittaker, 18, Wa- Severson, tenor sax; James Kansas City, cloudy 35 32 V. Fellowship Inc., Buffalo , N.Y., the Sacred Heart, the Rev. Ger- IN A prepared statement Hen- aul, who is overseas , and conia, Minn;, $30, speeding 70 Miles, trombone; James Fors- Los Angeles, cloudy 79 63 .. girls rank scholastically in ald Schuh, Dorchester, Wis., a all ry also urged: Ten Deaths on Eugene, Portland, Ore.; six m.p.h. in 55 zone, Sunday, 3:50 ter baritone horn; Shelley Louisville, clear .... 41 19 50 percent of their nephew, officiating. Burial was , the upper 1. That the federal govern- grandchildren; six brothers, p.m., Highway 61, Pelzer to Or- Glanzman Ruth Kilde and Bar- Memphis, clear .... 52 34 .. are responsible, depend- in St. Miary'a Cemetery. , class, o e l i Warley, Delbert and Amos, rin streets. bara Goss, mezzo soprano solos; Miami, cloudy ...... 75 71 .. cooperative, and are ment n t b come invo ved n able and the creation of an "Electric Pallbearers were: John Rietz. Lindsay, Mont.; Burdick, Spo- Junior H. Zieman, 255 W. 2nd Karmen Eide, Beth Erickson, Milwaukee, clear .,, 22 10 .. highly regarded by their teach- Wisconsin Roads kane, Bank" or any other federally James Preston, Leo McCarthy, Wash.; Verschel, Butte, St., $30, speeding 45 m.p.b. in Sandy Ness, Sharon Heike and Mpls.-St.P„ cloudy .15 -1 .. ers and community leaders. The THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mont., and fostered scheme whereb funds, By Rdbert A. Meier, John Schlae- Gilford, Colville, 30 zone, Sunday, 11:55 p.m., East Judy Wright, alto solos; David New Orleans, clear ., 74 52 sponsoring organization is a y Wash., and one otherwise refundable to mem- The deaths of 10 persons in fer and C. A. Fockens. sister, Mrs Broadway between High Forest Heike tenor; Karmen Eide and New York, clear . .. 45 28 ... nonprofit corporation whose pri- Lloyd Venn, Lindsay. bers could be diverted. ' weekend accidents raised Wis- and Vine streets. Bonnie Crowell, clarinet duet; Okla, City, cloudy .. 47 44 .. mary mission is to foster better Edwin A. Brown Richard F. Ames, 23, 855 E. Mary Brunner and Shelley Philadelphia, clear .47 24 .. 2. that the corporate income consin's 1969 highway toll to 155, Funeral services Mrs, Peter Gran relations between the U.S. and for Edwin A. King St., $35, disorderly con- Glanzman, sax duet; Karmen Phoenix, cloudy .... 91 54 ?. tax be applied to undistributed compared with 236 on this date Brown SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- other nations. , a longtime Winona phar- Eide Bonnie Crowell Nancy Pittsburgh, clear ...31 15 .. '¦ profit margins as- a means c(f last year when a gory record cial) — Mrs. Peter Gran SS duct, Sunday, 1:39 a.m., 3rd , , ?; macist and former mayor of tbe , , Kisselburg and Diane Dregney, Ptlnd, Me., clear ... 42 21 .. encouraging greater cash distri- was set on the state's roads. Spring Grove, died at 1 a.m. and Huff streets. city, who died Friday at Sauer clarinet duet ; Ptlnd, Ore., clear .. 70 45 FLAGS AT HALF STAFF butions to the members. today at Tweeten Memorial Michael E. Casper, 1550 W. .. Allen D. Schultz, 24, of Tinley Memorial Home, Were held this Hos- Mary Brunner Shelley Glanz- Rapid City, clear . . 42 25 .. 3. That federal 2 percent fi- pital following a King St., ?35, disorderly con- , . WASHINGTON (AP) -Cur- Park, was killed Sunday night afternoon at Central Lutheran long illness, man, LaRae Severson and Shar- Richmond, clear ...58 25 nancing be extended to only The former duct, Sunday, 1:39 a.m., 3rd .. rent rules specifying that U.S. when his truck overturned after Church, the Rev. G. H. Hug- Hannah Olene on Heike, sax quartet; Judy St. Louis, cloudy ..., 33 20 :. those electric cooperatives Halverson, she was and Huff streets. flags are to be flown at half- leaving highway 18 about one genvik officiating. Burial was born here Wright, Beth Erickson, Nancy Salt Lk. City, cloudy .. 73 44 which urgenly need funds and Jan. 21, 1881 to staff for 30 days from the death mile west of Sullivan, Jefferson in Woodlawn Cemetery. Christian and Kisselburg, Susan Martin and San Fran., cloudy ,. 65 52 .. hi h a e d t Barbra Kinneberg of a president or former presi- w c l v emonstrated tha County. Pallbearer s were Arnold Halverson. Mary Bauer, woodwind quintet; Seattle, clear ...... 67 46 .15 they function for the exclusive She lived here all her lL' dent were issued Dec. 13, 1956, His wife and two small chil- Stoa, Chris Severud, Clarence e and: a clarinet choir composed of Tampa, cloudy 79 62 by then-President Dwight D. Ei- benefit of the member-patron was married to Peter McCarthy Trails dren were hospitalized at Fort Thaldorf, Paul Gooderum, J. E. Gran, Karmen Eide, Nancy Kissel- Washington, clear .. 44 29 .01 senhower. and tre public. Atkinson with injuries believed Stenehjem and Martin Peterson. June 20, 1906, in Spring Grove. burg, Bonnie Crowell, Diane Winnipeg, cloudy .. , 15 -3 not critical. He died in 1955. Dregney, Sandy Ness, Kathy (T—Trace William J. Kaehler Surviving are: A son Erickson Rihcard E. Brooks, 42, of , John. MacGregor in , Susan Goss, Randi Funeral services for William Mabel; a daughter Hagen, BATTERY STOLEN Caledonia died Sunday when his , Mrs. Clif- Ann Luedtfce, Linda Hag- J. Kaehler, 625 W. King St., ford , (Hilda) Housker er James Waldo, 717& E. 3rd car crashed through a fence in- , Mabel; , Donna Lawrence and Mary were held this morning at St. two grandchildren; two great- Moy; trip composed of St., reported to the police de- to the Root River sduth of Mil- ' State Poll partment Saturday evening Mary s Church, the Rt. Rev. grandchildren and a brother, Sylvia Bloss, Diane Browskow- that waukee. MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-The someone had stolen END OF Msgr. Edward Klein officiating. SEASON ski 2 battery Nelhis Halverson, Mesa, Ariz . copyrighted Minnesota Poll in , Diane Parr, Patti Olbert, A Milwaukee man, Rodger J. Burial was in St. Mary's Ceme- Her Maureen out of his car. Waldo said that husband, a son, a ' daugh- Sunday editions of the Minneap- Werner, Connie Hage- Dcrouin, 25, was killed Sunday tery. ter, four brothers ness, Christy Berger, Julie Wil- he put his car in the garage and two sis- olis Tribune showed Sen. Eu- when he when his car hit construction Pallbearers were Pete, Eu- ters have died. liamson, Patrice Unger, and left town on March 16. A grandson was gene McCarthy currently behind Upon his return shacks beside a Milwaukee gene and Robert Kaehler, Loren killed in Vietnam. madrigal singers composed of he found the CLEARA a Republican opponent in ef- NCE boulevard. Weed, Michael Voelker and John Ruth Kilde, Shelley Glanzman battery missing. Funeral services will be forts to retain bis seat in 1970. , Mrs. Audry Granrath, 34, of Holubar . Thursday Kathy Pattison, Carol Quarberg, at _ p.m. at Trinity McCarthy tallied 35 per cent Franklin died Sunday when the Sharon Heike, Mary Bauer, Fred J. Sherman Lutheran Church, the Rev. Mi against Rep. Clark MacGregor's car in which she was riding col- Judy Wright, Beth Erickson, Funeral services for Fred J. G. Hanson officiating. Buriasl 47 per cent with 18 per cent lided with another car in Green- Daniel Heike, John Gfrtzman, SELF-EMPLOYED? Sherman, 253 Grand St., will be will be in the church cemetery. expressing no preference in a field. Karmen Eide, Linda Thompson, Tuesday at 10 a.m. at Burke' Friends may call at EngelB- sampling of 600 persons polled. s John Schroeder ' Robert Elkton, Who will take care of your lob, A Marshfield motorist, Den- Funeral Home and at 10:30 at Roble Funeral Home Wednes- MacGregor however trailed , , Steve Hayes and Scotty Glanz- if you are lald-up, disabled, and nis R. Ewert, 23, died Saturday the Cathedral of the Sacred day afternoon and evening and former Vice President Hubert man. unabli to work. Will you hava to when his car skidded into a Heart, the lit. Rev. Msgr. Har- Thursday morning and at the Humphrey by a 2-to-l margin if Richard Putzier Is director of pay a replacement? Learn how ditch and overturned beside a old J. Dittman officiating. Bur- church after 1 p.m. Thursday. the two were pitted against each music at Mondovi. Marathon County road. ial will be in St. Mary Metropolitan's Disability Incomt 's Ceme- other for the 1970 Senate seat. Osseo - Foster — Bill Cox, A Marathon tery. Frank S. Shiek Plans help meet tha expenses County man, Den- brass solo; Diane Kaufman, nis Motensen, 23, of Birnam- Friends may call at thc funer- ELGIN, Minn. — Frank S. DE GAULLE PAYS RESPECTS when disability hits. Shiek woodwind ; Sigrid Goplin, alto wood, was killed Saturday night al home today from 3 to 5 and , 88, Elgin, died Saturday WASHINGTON (AP) - evening at French President Charles sax; Hazel Gunderson, piano; r< when the car in which he was 7 to 9. Msgr. Dittman will con- Hillcrest Nursing & de Sigrid Goplin Retirement Gaulle wearing his uniform as , Sandra Lange, riding overturned north of Hat- duct a Christian wake service Home, Plainview, , Janice " where he had the marshal of France Kuehn and Kathy Boui- ^K^WW^ ley. at 8. been a residemt , spent llon ^ 2 days. about 10 seconds in , sax quartet, and Marcfa the Capitol Oftedahl Miss Diane M. Benning, 20, A retired rotunda Sunday paying , Mary Olson, Gretchcn farmer, he was tribute Sleg, nnd Charles E. Gallagher, 19, Bay died Saturday in a two-car, born Aug. 31 to Dwigh t D Carolyn Goplin, Polly Laf- , 18B0, in West . Eisenhower. fo both of Madison, were fatally in- Brown County collision. Union Iowa ^ and Wayne Olson, vocal , , to Mr. and Mrs. He saluted upon entering and solos. jured In a three-car crash In Alvin Jolinson, 75, of rural Adam Shiek. He married Fran- leaving, then went to make a Madison Saturday. Clayton died Saturday in a Bar- ces Conrad March 28, 1D07, brief visit at the hotel where ron County collision Jacob Craanen, 76, of Green . and! they farmed in Iowa. Sh*e Mrs. Eisenhower Is staying. Search for Elderly MUST GO! Man Rofl. Prlca

WrCHFIELD, Minn. (AP)- Sn

ic Stan Wieczorek .... 8*3041 ic Joseph Gallflfllier .... 5056 ^V. NOTICE ic Dan Sullivan 4490 ic Dava Morrison .... 8*321« ic Ralph Donahui .... 8-1979 ic Randy Eddy A-34S9 ic Richard Brown 9053 ic Jamea S^kolik, Mgr. 4971 PLAINVIEW VFA WINNERS fCorute . . . Awards and honors h-carta; Joseph Maas, local auctioneer, honorary chapter, Metropolitan Life presented nt the annual parent-son banquet of the Plainview farmer; Toby Xlassen, chapter star former, and Jack War- A imtfft/WCK COM TAN V ACE HARDWARE I MfW YORK H. V, (Minn.) EFA chapter Tuesday included, from left, Miss theson, star greenhand. About 200 attended tho banquet and . J-W PhonnillB. ^fek ( Marie Wartheson and Miss Carol Gossncr chapter sweet- heard an address by Don BuW, stato FFA reporter. , EVEN WI TH 9-MONTH CITY 'YEAR? One Injured Warm-Up Coming In Collision; in City Cemetery Bill Some relief was being felt record lows for these dates in previous record of 5 above set Total Taxes in 1887. here today from a record-shat- Winona, and although a wann- tering March-ending cold wave ing trend was being noted this Sunday morning's low of zero but there appeared to be a morning temperatures probably scrapped the 70-year record of Stirs Storm good chance that moderating will hold below seasonal nor- 6 above established in 1899 and Damage High temperatures may be accom- mals for the next several days, this morning's 5-below replaced One person was admitted to $360,889 Increase panied by the unpleasantness at least. the 6 above record low that Community Memorial Hospital A total of $4,591,09* in taxes The mill rate on non-agricul- school district tax increases ac- of freezing drizzle or some The -3 reading Saturday had stood since 1923. this morning following a three- for city, school and county pur- rural land in the city totals count for the rise since the lev^ Of Protest more snow. morning was the coldest temp- 21.74 mills for city purposes is down. WEATHER during the last car accident at 8:45 on Huff and poses will be paid this year by 339.61, a rise of A quiet little cemetery bill, For three successive days erature ever recorded on March city of Winona residents, ac- from the 1968 rate. temperatures have dropped to 29 in Winona and shaded the week in March this year repre- Howard streets. This drop in city taxes is suddenly controversial, last sented a complete turnabout cording to an abstract prepared THIS YEAR'S tax total Is however •Charges are pending somewhat illusory, , from that of a year ago. against by Winona County .Auditor Al $360,889 higher than the $4,230,- since the 1969 city levy is for week headed for that big table one of the drivers, said an Wiczek. 201 levied last year. County and the last nine months of the year up in the state capitol after Last year March bowed out officer. Damages to the cars only. The first three months local legislators were showered Levels with a spell of midsummer for Minnesota River were estimated were provide^ under a city with complaints by western Wi- temperatures that saw the mer- at $2,200. cury rising into the high 70s budget that covered the fiscal nona County residents. Off; Small Miss Pauline R. Utzinger, 22ft year extending through March ? during the final week of tha In the language of its au- Dropping W. Sth St., was reported in satis- 31, 1969. This year, under pro- Rise by Thursda y month. in City thors, the bill would "take the factory condition at the hospital Taxes. Mills visions of the newly adopted Where the final days of home rule charter, the city con- state out of the cemetery busi- The Mississippi River has March this year were marked with a possible facial fracture, Amount Grain Tax 1969 1968 COUNTY Levied Detail Mills Mills verted to a fiscal year that co- ness." The business involved is At Mankato leveled off and the rise by one of the seasop's heavier lacerations and abrasions. incides with the calendar year. Revenue ...... -..... 202,239 $ 654.54 15.00 14.42 that of state maintenance of By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS through Thursday will be snowfalls, March's ending a Police said that James M. % Taxes next year will once more year ago brought electrical Road and bridge ...... 337,077 v 25.00 24.04 four old burial grounds in the Slowed -down by wintry weath- only .3 of foot. Schlesser be an accurate reflection of city a storms and warm rain. , 20, Arcadia, IWS., Welfare ,...... ; .. 283,702 21.04 13.54 government the Minnesota River contin- 967 2.00 2.87 costs for the full Whitewater Game Refuge. Au- er, Here's the record and the The record high for a March driving a 1964 four-door sedan, Poor 26, year, since the new budget will Building 26,967 2.00 1.98 thors of the bill were Reps. ued its steady drop at Mankato forecast: 30, incidentally, was established was going north on Huff Street cover the period . of Jan. 1 ¦ ' ' PERA 18,877 1.40 .... Frank Theis, Winona, Charles and New Ulm today in clinging ? Feet a year earlier — in 1967 — when and stopped 16 feet south of the 944 .96 .... through Dec. 31, 1970. a high of 82 was recorded. Mental health ...... 12, Miller, Wabasha, and Sen. Rog- zero cold. Warmer temperatures . 7.20 south curb when he saw a col- Extension 10,922 .81 .... This year's 9-month city levy Wednesday The mercury rebounded quick- is $261 027 lower the er Laufenburger, Lewiston. and precipitation are predicted. Thursday ...... 7.39 lision would occur. Harry John- Grain tax . 656 , than $1,- ly from this morning's 5-below 742,768 collected in 1968. A storm of protest raised by The Minnesota had dropped to Friday . 7.72 low and reached 19 by noon. son, 542 Main St., driving a 1965 m. Saturday . 7.9 Total County ...... $ 920,356 $ 654.54 68.21 56.85 TAXES FOR county purposes survivors of persons buried in 15.57 feet at Mankato at 6 a. four-door sedan east on Howard recession Sunday ...... 7.88 SKIES WERE overcast this WINONA CITY increased from $756,078 in 1968 the cemeteries caused the leg- today, in a steady ..... 7.9 morning and were expected to Street, collided with the 1964 night when it TODAY four-door sedan being driven General ...... $ 387,933 $1,066.58 28.77 44.34 to $920,356 for 1969, a rise of islators to take quick steps to since Friday Tuesday ...... 7.9 remain mostly cloudy tonight $164,278, or 11.36 18.1 feet. south by Miss . Utzinger and she Welfare ..... 24,675 1.83 .42 mills. stop the bill from becoming measured Wednesday 8 and Tuesday. 24 23.13 With sunshine and moisture in turn hit the Schlesser auto- Fire 434,723 32. By far the largest increase law. It was passed without ob- Thursday ...... 8.2 This brings the prospect of Police ?. 264,555 19.62 23.55 came in school taxes levied in still a big factor if they arrive, some intermittent light freezing mobile. The Schlesser car was jection both by the House and meteorologist pushed over to the curb. Park ...... 186,628 . 13.84 15.53 the city. Here the rise was Joe Strub, federal drizzle or drizzle and snow for Estimated damages: Library ...... 85,892 6.37 6.40 $438,192, from $1,728,671 last Senate about 10 days ago. Its at the Twin Cities Weather Sta- tonight. Schles- Bath 5 .40 .39 Minnesota ser car $700 front right front ,393 year to $2,166,863 in 1969, or authors sought last week to side- tion, predicted the A low of 20 to 30 is predicted — , , Police relief ...... 44,631 3.31 1.93 30.61 mills. recede at left and front; Utzinger — $500, track it on the way to the gov- would continue to ,500 Visit for tonight and a high of 30 Fire relief ...... 39,812 2.96 3.39 least through Thursday, when it 2 front and front right, and John- :...¦.. 11.28 ernor's desk, a maneuver that Tuesday. Flood emergency ...... — will be down to 12.9 feet- Temperatures Wednesday will son — $1,000, front. Band ;...... __...?..... 6,337 .47 .48 was successful when it was ta- On Saturday at 9:55 a.m. a Strub said no rise is expected remain a little below normal Airport ...... 20 bled by the Senate after being in the Minnesota before next car and truck collided on Main 1, Valley View but no important precipitation Grain X... L...... 066 Legion weekend, weather permitting, Street, 100 feet north of 3rd Club recalled while en route. Open house at Valley View is forecast. ' largely from the Blue Earth Street. Arnie Odegard, 840 44th Total City ... ..? $1,481,741 $1,066.5*8 109.81 131.04 THE STATE has maintained Tower Sunday attracted 2,500 Ave., Goodview, driving a 1969 River tributary. Strub is still Winona Housing & • the four cemeteries under au- at Mankato, visitors, according to George E. one-ton truck south on Main predicting 29 feet Housing and Redevelop- Redevelopment Contracts OKed thority of a special act passed stage is 19 feet with Mayer, Street, collided with a 1964 four- where flood ment Authority executive direc- Authority .....—...$ 13,483 1.00 .... in 1957. They are the White- protected by height- door sedan, driven by Elizabeth the town tor. County Tax J. Bull, Chippewa Falls, Wis., WINONA CITY SCHOOL water Cemetery, north of Elba , ened dikes. Fairwater Cemetery on the At New Ulm, the Minnesota Serving as guides were mem- which was backing into a park- General ...... $1,750,820 $1,545.72 129.85 104.38 At staff and 18.16 La Crescent Whitewater River's north was down a foot from Sunday at bers of the authority ing stall. Truck damages were Bonds and interest .... 319,839 23.72 high school ushers 657 7.02 7.44 LA CRESCENT, Minn. (Spe- branch, Beaver Cemetery? near 790.23 feet today. Flood stage is board and estimated at $80 damages on Building and sinking ... 94, cial) club members. On Income the right side, Grain ...... 1,545 — A total of $62,367 in the old village of Beaver, and 804 feet. The Cottonwood River, There was no contracts was estimate of damages on the se- let by Gittens- Young Cemetery, a private bur- Minnesota tributary, was 7& First occupants will begin ,166,863 $1,545.72 160.59 129.98 Leidel American Legion Post ial plot. moving into the new facility dan. The accident was not in- Total school ...... $2 595 feet below flood stage at Spring- Grand totals ...... $4,582,445 . $3,268,84 339.61* 317.87* last week for construction . A number of pioneer settlers field 30 miles west of New Tuesday, Mayer said. Forty-sev- Suggested vestigated at the scene. of a 50- by , 60-foot addition to and several Civil War veterans Ulm. en of the 130 apartments in the WITOKA, Minn. - A resolu- SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS its clubrooms. assign- A HIT-and-nin driver knocked Sewer ...... $ 955 reportedly are buried in the Below zero readings were tak- building now have been tion asking the Winona County over a lamp pole in Lake Park Sidewalk, curb, gutter ..7,105 The addition will include a cemeteries. Residents believe en again today at several Min- ed? V? Board to consider unification as Saturday at 10:56 a.m., 50 feet Weed cutting 24 new kitchen, equipment. The the cemeteries' historic and nesota points, including -7 at Al- Extensive screening of each a cheaper means of operation west of the band shell turnoff. Water .... 560 structure also will include ? a scenic values justify continued exandria, -3 at Bemidji and -6 applicant for admission is neces- of local government and a coun- The driver was going west on large area for dining, dancing state care. at International Falls. Reporting sary, Mayer said. Each screen- ty income tax to* pay for the and Lake Park Drive when he went Total special assessments ... —. $8,645 meetings, restroom facili- State maintenance came about zero were Rochester and Duluth, ing takes two hours or more, he facilities, was approved at the off the road and struck the pole. ties and a storage area...... $4,591,090 when the state bought up large with Redwood Falls 1 above? added, and is needed to estab- meeting of the Pleasant Hill Winona City Total Tax Lexy .....;. . lish the applicant's net worth THE PRESENT clubrooms on tracts. . of land in the White- Farmers Union Friday night. (•Non-agricultural land? Agricultural land levy is 314.62 water valley for conservation and other qualifications for en- mills for 1969) >,-V the main level will be complete- The principal object oi tha ly remodeled, and game management purpos- trance. Residents must be 62 or proposed county income tax is into a bar and es. The maintenance agreement Hearing Asked on older and have limited incomes Cathedral Pupil cocktail lounge. Bids will be to pay for the new courthouse sought was among the purchase terms; and assets in order to be eli- or county office building. The later on a new oval Now the state — namely the Car Theft Count gible. 3 Deer bar and the cocktail area will group made no recommenda- Spelling Vandals Dump be Department of Conservation — Keith Lyle Smith, 19, 366 More than 140 applications tions on the tax except to say Wins in on a raised area on two agreement and sides of the bar. wants out of the Laird St., appeared in munici- were on file with the authority it would be a more fair way to Winner of the spelling contest sought to void it by getting the shortly before the new facility lor the city of Winona Friday The present pal court this morning with his pay for county operations, rath- /C///ec/ i>y basement will be bill passed. It is alleged that was accepted. Some have been at St. John's Catholic School Milk at used for meeting rooms and the attorney, Dennis Challeen, to re- er than increase tax on real es- annual maintenance costs the quest a preliminary hearing on ruled out because applicants tate property. was Mary Rowan, daughter of present kitchen will be an aux- state $4,000. Rep. Theis said Mr. and Mrs. James F. Rowan, iliary kitchen plus storage. a charge of auto theft? had incomes or assets beyond Sen. Roger Laufenberger, Small Car today he does not know the Judge John McGill set the the prescribed limits. Lewiston, suggested that this be 415 W. Broadway. She is an Elgin Creamery Receiving the contracts were: basis for this figure. Several ST. CHARLES, Minn. - trial at 11 a m. April 7, Smith Authority offices are being included on the upcoming court- eighth grader at Cathedral ELGIN, Minn. (Special) — Don Bateman Construction Co., area residents, survivors of . School. When a motorist accident- general construction 048; is free on $500 bond. moved into ground floor quar- house referendum vote. ally strikes and kills a Vandals who broke into the , $37, persons buried in the plots, Fourteen con- Bissen Electric, Caledonia, elec- the figure. They charge Smith is charged with the ters in the new building. Mayer deer while driving a small Elgin Co-op Creamery this dispute theft of said it will take about three THE COUNTY income tax t est ants in trical, $5,495, and Allco Sheet that maintenance consists of a I960 model car owned was proposed by the Winona g r a des 5 foreign model car, that's morning between 3 and 5 dump- Metal, Winona, plumbing, heat- by Frank Took, 302 E. Howard weeks to move all equipment, bad enough. But how about ed 5,000 pounds of milk into mowing the plots twice or three County Farmers Union at their through 8 par- ing, ventilating and air condi- times each summer, plus re- St., during the early morning records and materials from the in the three deer at the same the drain from a holding tank, former offices in the annual meeting last fall. Coun- ticipated tioning, $17,885. setting of some of the old head- hours cf March 9. community ty Farmers Union Chairman Ar- annual spelling time? 5,000 pounds from a tank truck, room of Arthur C. Thurley stones. The state says vanda- He was arrested by Sparta, thur Aldinger, Witoka, Minn., bee. That's what happened to scattered records in the office THE NEW kitchen will in- Wis., Homes'1690 Kraemer Dr. all' over the floor, spilled sticky lism is extensive and that re- authorities later that same presented the proposal to mem- Mary will be Danny R. Kvan, St. Char- clude a built-in gas grill, two day on a similar charge. He les, at 12:30 a.m. Sunday concentrated juices over them, pairs and cleaning up litter are The Thurley offices will be re- bers of the local Friday. He said a contestant in ovens and a six-burner surface pleaded guilty to the charge in tained as administrative quar- the state con- on State Highway 74, three and' took a milk truck. range .All new cupboards, sinks costly. he had discussed the issue with Sparta and was given a sus- ters for Thurley and Schaffner Commissioner Paul Baer, Utica test April 26 at miles south of here, in Sara- The truck was found four or and other facilities will be add- "A DEAL IS a deal," say , Hotel Leaming- toga Township. f ive miles away in the ditch ed pended sentence on condition homes. Mayer's office and that who agreed it was the best way . The entire clubrooms will those protesting the state's ac- waive extradition and ton, Minneapo- Mary The- 1966 model, which off a highway southeast of El- be air-conditioned. There will that he Robert L. Ferluga, will be in to* pay for a new courthouse. tion, and the state ought to return to Minnesota to face the director, lis. had been traveling north, gin. It was only slightly dam- be almost 5,000 square feet of of the urban renewal The group made no recom- keep its bargain. Sen. Laufen- charge here. the downtown building. Three top spellers were The- had estimated damages of aged. floor space when the facility there two mendations on the continuation burger had said are of the proposed tax after a new resa Wadden, daughter of Dr. $200 to its left side and Apparently nothing was taken is completed. active cemetery organizations and Mrs. J. Vincent Wadden, front. The Winona County from the plant. The Wabasha Work is to start immediately. area that could take facility is paid for. ; Margie in the 1269 W. Broadway sheriff's department inves- County sheriff's office could not over the operations .This, too, Unification of county and city Foegen, daughter of Mr. and tigated. Deputy Bruce Stan- be reached this morning for is disputed by area residents. government operations had been Mrs. Joseph H. Foegen, 323 Elm ton said all three deer were questioning. The plant manu- Theis Opposes State proposed two years ago by mem- Mary's Sen. Laufenburger and Rep. St., students at St. killed. factures cheese. B. H. Chis- look into bers of the Farmers Union Lo- School and Therese Strong, Youths Fail Miller now plan to , singer is the manager. the possibility of amending the cal. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. The night policeman went off Philip Streng, 462 High Forest bill to limit state maintenance Fair Trade on Liquor SEN. LAUFENBURGER told duty at 3 a.m. and Crissinger or to phase it out St., St. John's School. Humphrey Pays found the vandalism . when he In Attempt to Rep. Frank Theis said today son, Cotter High School prin- the group that his bill to allow The following schools each came to work at 5 a.m. he will vote to abolish fair trade cipal, and five students were "double bottom" trucks on state were represented by two stu- highways was dead in this ses- for retail liquor sales when and present. Students were Rosanne dents: Cathedral, St. Mary's Tribute fo Ike Halt Theft Suchomel, Greg Nixon, Mary sion of the legislature, but that Catholic, St. Martin's Lutheran, to a young Demicrats' meeting, if the matter comes up for con- Wissman, Jerri Jeresek and his bill to exempt school buses St. Matthew's Lutheran, St. ST. PAUL (AP)-A former said of Dwight D. Eisenhower, PRESTON, Minn. - Two Man Shoots at sideration by the present legis- from lo'ad restrictions would ba vice president paid tribute to a the late 34th President of the young Preston area boys un- Katie Murphy. Stanislaus Catholic, St. John's lative session. Six members of Winona 's passed. Catholic, and Minnesota City. former president here Saturday United States: "A leader can be successfully attempted to stop Rep. Theis said a previous He told the group that Inter- night as a man who had "the brilliant and courageous and two men from taking the battery League of Women Voters chap- Judges were Mrs. Madeo statement on the matter had ter attended the league's 50th state 90 would be completed Molinari, James Hohnbaum, greatest quality of all in a lead- have many other good qualities, from a tractor in their farm- Litchfield Pair been misinterpreted. through this area by 1971, Min- Sister M er—trust." but to be trusted is the greatest yard Sunday at 2:45 p.m. anniversary ceremonies March Sister M. Myron and . LITCHFIELD, Minn. (AP)- 24 at the Capitol and spoke to nesota has completed more free- Marita. Hubert Humphrey, speaking quality of all." Larry Trende, 14, and his A Litchfield couple was startled BORDER communities such ways than any other state, he brother, Mike, .11, saw two men as Winona suffer because of local legislators. The league Sunday when several shots were members served coffee in the said. coming into their place about fired at their car by a passer-by the fair trade law since liquor seven miles south of Preston'. prices in Wisconsin are con- capitol rotunda and toured the while driving on U. S. 12. governor's mansion. Winona Sons of Mr. and Mrs. William Mr. and Mrs. James Hannon siderably lower than in Min- Trende, they were at home nesota under present conditions, members were Mrs. Miller Officers Named told authorities they were Friesen, Mrs. Edward Jacob- School Board Filings alone. The men beat Larry over stopped by a man in a car who Rep. Theis said. A free market Mrs. Henry Stankicwicz, For Bi the head and in the nose when identified himself as a patrol- and pricing system is needed sen, g Dutchie Mrs. John Luebbe, Mrs. Karl he attempted to stop them, and man. Later, the man passed in Minnesota in order to keep Ray W. Meyer is the presi- one of the men produced a business profits and tax revenue Lipsohn and Mrs. Curt Siemcrs. them and motioned for them to Hearings are scheduled lor dent of the new Big Dutchio knife and cut his arm. stop. When they didn't he fired in the state, he said. , Wednesday on several consum- Products Corp. He also is To Begih on Saturday Mike, seeing what was hap- several shots with a pistol at A bill that would give 2nd treasurer. pening, rushed out with a shot- their car. class cities authority to issue er protection, bills, Rep. Theis Filings for thc second annual tho city's 4th Ward, where dir- elections in the five districts. said. He said some are restric- He and two other officers ectors will be named for three- gun and fired into the-air, The Meeker County Deputy Sheriff more than the present minimum were elected at thc first meet- election to be held in Winona Incumbents in the 3rd and 4th repercussion threw him to thc Marvin Johnson said a man was of 15 on sale liquor licenses la tive to the of banning sales year terms. districts, respectively, arc of magazine subscriptions by ing oi thc board of directors. Independent School District 861 Tho 1st District situation ground. being held in connection with currently in a Senate subcom- Tom M, Price is vice presi- beginning Sat- Frank J. Allen, board president, with students and cookies by Girl will be accepted arises irom the resignation last and Daniel Sadowski. The men then escaped thc incident. mittee, he said. It would allow dent — public relations and sec- the battery. They were driving the city of Winona , for example, Scouts. Bills proposing to regu- urday with four School Board September of Lawrence Santel- late activities of door-to-door retary, and Morris E. Grove is man who had been elected in The filing period for this a red car the boys thought was to issue two additional licenses. posts to be filled in the May year's election ends April 29. salesmen arc of much import- vice president — chemical May for a two-ycci* term. a 62-64 model Ford . The bill is bogged down be- formulation and sales. 20 election. Because the opening day of The Fillmore County sheri ff 's Driver Charged cause of a House amendmen t ance to companies such as Wat- Actually, only three of the kins Products Inc., Rep. Theis The ncw firm will manufac- KENNETH NELSON was ap- filing is on Saturday this year office is investigating. that would permit communities ture commercial floor wax and five school dis- pointed at that time to serve and the board's business office After Accident operating municipal li snid, and will be scrutinized I— ? quor cleaners, rug shampoo, liquid tricts will be as 1st District director until the at Winon a Junior nigh School stores to issue private retail carefully. next school election. Carl S. Dailoy, 28, 851 W. antiseptic hand soaps and a dis- involved in SchoolWI is closed on Saturdays, filings licenses as well. This is known this spring's ^M That means that lie post will will be accepted this Saturday Sth St., appeared before Jus- A PROPOSED hill to place infectant for rinsing glasses for Opening as the "split liquor" concept. vocational - technical schools restaurants and bars. election with D „*-....4 be open at election time this at tho homes of Paul W. Sand- Trout tice of thc Peace Lewis Albert DOarO spring since state law provides in Goodview this morning on Backers of tho 2nd class cities under jurisdiction of the State one district, [ ers, board business manager, at bill — which is relatively tion- because of an that appointments to fill vacant, 1522 W. Howard St,, and Super- charges of careless driving and Junior College Board was killed Several gold and jewelled technicality, having cics are mndo only to the next driving after revocation of driv- controversial — are working Saturday on Rep, Theis' motion boxes filled with dried roses still election intendent of Schools A. L. Nel- Proves Chilly with split-liquor advocates in two spots on tho ballot-for two election , not for the full portion son , 1516 W. Howard St. ing privileges. in the higher education subcom- giving off rose fragrance after DULUTH , Minn. (AP)-Brrr. an offort to reach a compromise 3,000 years were found when terms for the one director post, of the unexpired term. After that, until the end of just He was fined $50 or 30 days mittee of tho House education Fishermen and fish were in Winona County Jail on each that would assure passage, Rep. the ancient tomb of the Egyp- A director will be elected!, the filing period , candidates their annual committee. The bill's author wns THAT'S IN the 1st District, too cold to begin charge. Theis reported. Rep. Alfred Schumann Eyota. tian Pharaoh, Tutankhamen, therefore, to servo the 1st Dis- may file at the board office buttle. , which embraces the city's 1st trict from the date of the elec- during regular offico hours. The highway patrol said that It wns tabled by a 4-2 vote. wns opened . there will be nn The state trout season opened Dallcy, driving a 1964 four door A DELEGATION of Wino- Ward, where tion until Juno 30 and for the at House election for a director to serve HOLDOVER directors will lie in sub-zero weather Saturday sedan, and traveling cast on nans appeared Friday period from July 1 to Juno 30. but game wardens reported few education committee hearings in for a little more thnn ono month 1070, when Snntol Dr. C. W. Rogers, director at Highway 14 at 1:45 a.m. , Sun- Winoni L0da» No. tt A.F. ft A.M. man's original fish caught and anglers out dnly behalf of bills calling for tuition and for a one-year stint. term would expire. largo whose term expires In day, struck the rear of a parked 1 The other* two elections will 1971; Dr. C. R, Kollofaki , 2nd In tiny numbers. 1963 two door sedan, belonging reimbursement for parochial §_ WORK IN THE FIRST DECREE be in the 3rd District, bounded FOR THE drat election last District , expiring in 1071, and But a cry is out. "Wait unill to Mrs. Hilary Jozwick , Stock- school students and payment of (_ TUESDAY, APRIL I 7:30 P.M. by the of Center Street spring, terms were set by lot Dr. L, L. Korda , sth District, next week , " said Hon Gustaf- ton , The car was parked in state aids for transportation d§b — / >&" » Dinner Club — 6:00 p.m. *— Pronram and the center of Vine Street , at one , two and three years to encompassing areas outside the son , area fishery mnnagcr of front of tho Jozwick residence. of parochial students. Rep. * v * Walter A. Dopk«, W.M. and the 4th District, covering allow forfuturo three-year term city of Winonn , expiring in 1070. the French River station. Both cars nre total losses. Theis said the Rev. Paid Nel- parking spots the officers had MARK TRAIL By Ed Dodd I Parking Spots Reason used. Early The four employes first on the For Arriving job get them—and free all-day diapp w^ Wjy hL SALINA, Kan. (AP) - City parking. SL hall employes here have a new early. The Erigbaagtsa Indians of reason for getting to work the Amazon spend nearly all Police have moved out of the daylight .hours cooped up in their old building next door to dark palm huts to protect them- hall. In front of the selves from clouds of tiny blood- £ ///of Gould the city flies called piums. building are four unmetered sucking

ENDS Has a Secret m , . II y ^ Mj NITES: 7:15-^15 By EARL WILSON NEW YORK - Elliott Gould, Barbra Streisand's tall, good- M4M[^B j TUES. looking and estranged husband, is whizzing right along in his P* ^ own career while not only speaking highly of her but faying SPECIAL FAMILY ADM. $3.00 she is "an original beauty." AND AIL THEIR CHILDREN Wearing a full deep black beard he'll wear in a movie Arrests Are High Inc. MOTHER, FATHER ~ called M.A.S.H." playing a military surgeon, he sat in For Easter Weekend : Kippy's and confessed among other things that he's a bubble- DFL Leaders Criticize ruu«OTnc!iraimOT *A lM^ * kjk mim fancier who still loves it. : :—: ——:. PALM SPRINGS, Calif. Wl ¦¦¦ "When I buy it now, I say street, will be another singer — Police say an estimated ffiBidetitto. JDHj 'I'm buying it for my kid.' Did —his wife, Connie Stevens 25,000 youngsters are in Palm GOP News Service Plan you know they have Bobby Ken- With Liz Taylor's back still ach- Springs for the annual Easter nedy bubblegum tickets now? ing, producer Bob Fryer's again ST. PAUL (AP)-DFL leaders inder has allowed himself to Grlttner's comments followed Week holiday. The influx of high in the Minnesota Legislature : manipulated into a position a weekend announcement by the When I was doing a bedroom thinking of Anne Bancroft ¦ for school and college youths has scene with Dyan Cannon in 'Bob "Myra Breckenridge" . .- .¦ Joe criticized a Republican party nich is demeaning to the high state GOP that the party is pre- "A FRESHAllO STIMULATING '' doubled the population. plan to use a special assistant fice that he holds." Grittner paring to set up a broad state $_JjK&Smt and Carol and Ted and Alice, Namath may be available dur- Police Sgt. Thomas M. Aitken I was chewing bubblegum. Have ing the off-season—at big mon- to Gov. Harold LeVander to set Ided it was the first time in news service for rural editors. said Sunday arrests for vandal- up a party news service. s memory "that a political The news service, for news- you ever tasted sugarless bub- ey, of course—to star in such ism, drinking and possession of blegum?" musicals as "Pal Joey" and Senate Minority Leader Karl irty has established its ap- papers and the broadcast me- alcohol by minors increased by Grittner said today his "conclu- iratus within the governor's dia, is to be financed from a AMSAMOUSt f lCKtt Jsss^*W^fKtWiammmmWkWSmMm& After "M.A.S.H,," he'll do "Damn Yankees" . .. Desi Ar- more than 30 per cent r«»i*1S0N**TKHNIC0l/)P naz will undergo abdominal sur- . sion is that once again Gov. Le- fice. " $50,000 fund set aside in the "Move," based on a novel by party 1969 about a dog-walker gery. state Republican Joel Lieber budget. ~~ who has many problems includ- James Earl Jones (of "Great WALT DISNEY'S "SMITH" ing sexual. White Hope") is going to Sing Coordinator will be Scott Ben- and "THE INCREDIBLE JOURNEY" "I have to start living with Sing—to give diplomas to pris- ton, a special assistant to the a St. Bernard in real life tcf oners graduating from the com- Californians Jumpy as governor, who is on the state STARTS WED. get ready for that picture. In puter programming classes . .. . . payroll at $21,200 a year. 'M.A.S.H.,' I have to perform Underground star Ultra Violet Benton's official duties in- operations. In trying to get ordered a white velvet formal clude scheduling appointments, frfTTTfnrTf*! NITES: 7:15-9:20 ENDS motorcycle jacket for her hero, ' serving as liaison between Le- them to show me some opera- Doomsday Approaches k i l jj/Ail 3S# 90«.$1.25 tions in hospitals in advance. Andy Warhol ... Joey Heath- Vander and the legislators and l l iL TU |S. There s a lot of gore to it. And erton and footballer Lance Rent- LOS ANGELES (AP)V- early March requesting pam- after Day" which forecast im- state departments, and in pub- ' ^ I'm a guy that hates to cut any- ' zel were invited to honeymoon Against all scientific evidence phlets on what to do in case of minent disaster has jumped in lic relations work for the ad- emiasas ^.:^^^..- ..?. ? thing, including a steak." next month at the Miami Beach prophets of doom say April is an earthquake. three weeks from 20th to 7th ministration. lS Hilton Plaza . . . Secret Stuff: the month when a super earth- —A spokesman for Los An- place on radio station KHJ's Grittner said he has "never JK ^SSk MonT-knoR SON JASON, 27 months old, quake will topple half of heard of state employes whose dmwmLlJiJWJNmu A prominent singer bawled out Califor- geles city schools says children compilation of retail record mv!tWmJm m Is < v v ^S^SS^^^^f K^^^^B about $620,000 annually for MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1969 • Wednesday Night That release quoted Dr. service is expected to go into |f *' -:. :;4M¦ »J ^^^'x 7- . \ fl a six-year program. Charles F. Richter, developer of - :/: ••" •• v • * ,„;;?; ' , , St. Peter VOLUME 113, NO. W full operation after the legisla- | •* **. %y f*^f $1.25 Resolutions on two major , in southern Minne- the Richter scale for describing ture adjourns. I sota has Published dolly except Saturday arid Hol- »-»i state issues will be sought at , a proposal on the bal- earthquake mangnitudes, as Im IhftSUflk„ „_„ ^/yj y. n^w tlwaii^iX^^i^_%Mi^^_^_^_^_^__W__^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_m__ ' ^ _\_sm_x_w WS ' HAPPY CHEP 2 E£BS (scram- ______RESTAURANT R TrjM^?i^. I —-—>—_»». H* ^N^i^tfi^x ")'e<' or fr'ct" • of ail JCT. HWY. 14 & 61 m\ J^Wtf X -. Hash Brown Po- DBF HH H ¦l Ham 0»^_ ; ¦ WINONA, MINN. EVERY THURSDAY ¦ \^^JL^L| totocs, Sausage, H ff _ B<£ »t ' ^^— Bacon. PHONE 8-3096 mv ^Hir^Jl or M ^ _W I II ages... ¦V i\TA/ GoWen Brown ff ff Toast Jelly ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^i EVERY Wi / { - n«d t __w_____^______\ WED. & FRI. Coffce" Re0, ,0 *1,10 Enjoy the good food at _____W______i \ — STEAK"/•" FRY m\ / I HYLA - II ' 1 All for Just. ?|) B; two s*$ reasonable prices here. FISH FRY I BUY 0NE D,NNER Bv*: NOW AVAILABLE AT BOTH X ssWWsss ^—kti\k * *^^^B > AH THE FISH m.'!-: ll Quick service, too! 3i^KvT^^^^^y^^^y^j YOU CAN EAT AT REGUIAR PRICE J| Cojm^H- Jfikhjvt&L. INCLUDES FFS 0ET SECOND FOR SALAD, ROLLS & ¦V HIGHWAY UTH'S »™ B?:: Hwy. tl at Orrln St. Va PRICE • ESTAURANT $1.1 5 BIL.li|^X DOWNTOWN«< J* 176 East Third Street w- Th'»"«i Huff st. / _W0^ I 0k^(j£\ /_rJJ^ OPEN EVERY DAY 6 a.n.. -2 a.m. Located in the Heart oj Downtown Winona. ^ ^ Winona Dally News E Winona, Minn. w Judiciary Puts MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1969 Suite of Three Cells Committee Slaters Selected State Legislatu re to Work At La Crescent Being Built for Sirhan LA CRESCENT. Minn. (Spe- LOS ANGELES (AP ) - A not meaningfully premeditate find other uses for the cells," ST. PAUL (AP) - When the moved out nothing of major sig- Minnesota Congressional dele- grandstand play, and one, Sen. ) the assassination in Los Angeles Gutfcrie said. Gittens-Leidel American ' cial — suite of three cells-complete ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ cork pops out of the ¦ ¦ ¦:¦ ¦ Minnesota nificance. Part of the reason gation and federal officials in an Robert Brown of Stillwater, who Legion and Auxiliary named last June 5. . legislative bottle and bills flow of aid voted with Anderson on the par- with living and dining quarters begin was that 10 members—most of effort to step up the Scott Lacheckl and Kris Harris Phil Guthrie, the corrections Soldiers Accompany Casket to flow more smoothly, it also them committee chairmen — from the federal cornucopia. ty designation issue, said it ap- as representative to Minnesota and a television set-is being officer, said preparations for means the Senate Judiciary joined with some House mem- peared the minority was cam- built for Sirhan Bishara Sirhan WASHINGTON (AP)—- A On Thursday and Friday, Boy and Girls State week-long Sirhan's incarceration were Committee is moving out more bers in a junket to Washington, paigning for 1970 already. session in government training. in case the young Jordanian is being made in advance of a ver- procession of 1,824 soldiers, vet- proposed measures. D.C. They conferred with the however, when the Senate was Coleman, Anderson and Ma- convicted of assassinating Sen. erans and bandsmen made the back at full strength, it got tan- Scott, son of Mr. and Mrs. dict because 'we'd get him The committee, under Sen. jority Leader Karl Grittner all Chester Lacheckt, is active in Robert F. Kennedy. within days after sentencing." 16- march accompanying Gordon Rosennaeier, Little gled in debate between the Con- have been mentioned as possi- athletics? music and drama. He The California Department bf the casket of Dwight D. Eisen- and the DFL If the jury convicts Sirhan of Falls, has completed action on Telephone Firm servative majority ble gubernatorial candidates is a member oE the National Corrections wants Sirhan to first-degree murder, it will de- hower from the White House 52 of more than 200 bills that minority. next year. Honor Society, student council stay in the special extra-secure cide the penalty—death or life area to the Capitol Sunday aft cell whether he gets life impris- ernoon. have been referred to it. Sixty Urges Care in On Friday, it was confronted and German club, imprisonment. ¦ to 70 per cent of those were giv- with an 11-age list of 82 gener- Kris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. onment or the death penalty. Sirhan would be confined to en favorable recommendation to Vicinity of Wires al orders that had been passed Stanley Harris, is a member of 'If he's convicted," a Correc- three adjoining cells—each Between 7,00fl and 20,000 self- ' pass. out of Senate committees or re- the concert band, National Hon- tions Department officer said, about 10 by 15 teet. In one would proclaimed witches — a word Persons planning to dig ferred from the House. Three Slate or Society, "There's always the chance that be a kitchen with a stainless that applies to both male and Nert to the Civil German club and Administra- trenches or excavate in the vi- student council. some inmate would try to kill steel stove where uniformed female practitioners — are be- tion Committee's glut of local cinity of buried telephone ca- General orders are the second him. We've spent about $5,000 to guards would cook Sirhan's lieved active in Britain. Many reading of the bills—the ones Alternate Steven Merrill, son bills, more measures crowd in bles and wires are being asked remodel this section so he'll meals. Most prisoners eat in a belong to covens, a basic unit on the judiciary unit where they're explained in full of Mr. and Mrs. leland Merrill, than any to proceed carefully- by North- Road Deaths is also never com-e into contact with central kitchen. Sirhan's quar- of 13 sorcerers. other. It handled session and where any debating active in athletics, stu- 1 about 400 two western Bell Telephone Co? of- dent council, German club and other prisoners. ' ters, Guthrie said, would "elimi- years ago and is running at a ficials here. is done. nate the risk of someone trying is junior class president. Alter, The walled-off suite of cells is little higher pace this session.. Each spring and summer a So the upper House has an im- nate Mary McLaughlin, daugh- to poison his food." The reason that Judiciary gets Over Weekend being prepared at the California number of cables are cut by pressive backlog to catch up on, ter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mc- Medical Facility at Vacaville, In the second cell ,a living For Faster Results- so much business is that many careless digging and excavat- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Laughlin, is a member of the bills cleared in other commit- Some pressure , will be taken near Sacramento. A bill pending room with television set, Sirhan ing operations according to B. off this week, when the Senate Three deaths were reported National Honor Society and Ger- in the California Legislature would receive visitors. He would tees have to go to the all-lawyer S. Eichenwald, local manager on Minnesota man, library and Latin clubs . would permit Sirhan sleep in the third cell. A. bath- group for the legal test. moves up its starting time from roads over the , if sen- for Northwestern Bell. He said 11 a.m. to 10 a.m. The House weekend, raising the 1969 toll to Candidates were chosen by tenced to death, to stay there room is off the kitchen. One big measure referred to today that individuals planning 106, compared with 212 a year members of the La Crescent rather than at San Quentin's Full-time security g u a rd s subcommittee for consideration began meeting a half hour ear- such work in the vicinity of a °X High School. death row as is now required? would be posted near Sirhan's this week is the consumer lier, at 1:30 p.m., last week, and - credit buried lines should get in touch held its first Saturday session Sirhan's trial, starting its 13th quarters, Guthrie said, and the bill, a 153-page proposal which A 9-year-old Richfield girl, * with the company. Locations two days ago. The Senate will En glish stationers began week, was recessed Friday until cost of imprisoning him would A was okayed Brenda North, died in U niver- by commerce first. will be pinpointed by company hold its first Saturday meeting manufacturing Valentines at Tuesday with rebuttal witnesses probably far outstrip the $2,800 technicians so that such acci- sity of Minnesota Hospitals Sat- J^^^k The bill to liberalize the abor- April 12. urday, the turn of the 19th century and for the prosecution on the stand. yearly spent on average prison- dents can be avoided. after being in;ured ear- dominated the commercial tion statute is pending before lier that day in a three-car acci- The defense has rested its case ers. the full committee. Eichenwald said one cable Ironically, the Senate stalled market for about 50 years. with testimony that Sirhan did If Sirhan is acquitted, ''we'll can carry several business and last Thursday when it aired a dent in Scott County. Judicial reorganization and ft%**ff£S KC»Wft*W>MWMW . residential telephone lines and charge by the minority leader- Brenda was the daughter of reform also confront judiciary, that some transmit television ship that Conservatives weren't Mr. and Mrs. David Nort*. Her and a number of bills dealing and radio programming. Sever- getting the job done. Asst. Mi- parents, two other North child- with various drivers regula- ing these lines always is a seri- ren and one of the other car tions. nority Leader Sea Nicholas ous matter, he said, but is es- Coleman, St. Paul, suggested drivers were injured in the Meanwhile, the Senate got pecially critical ia the event the Senate quit holding formal crash, on Highway 101 between bogged down last week and Savage and Shakopee. ' emergencies arise. sessions April 2 to 28 and con- centrate on committee^work and Robert L. Fox, 22, Dilworth, Yjfioa te's also find out what voters are Minn., was struck and killed \ while walking along fovtfo Highway 10 I thinking about back Home. j near Dilworth Saturday night. On Friday, another Di?L lead- Gary Horejisi, 16, Burnsville, er, Sen Wendell Anderson, St. ¦ also died Saturday night when I I m n a I AT~9 fl ^ta*. (HAP BHlp_^C^V 1§ Paul, tried to dislodge the party his car collided with another STlOOTOlO ^ designation bill from the Elec- iJlj KjXCLXlJ kmm four miles south of Jordan, in JL ^^SmWm i ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦/f ' lj r 1 tions Committee, where it had Scott County. < HnS-ssI*? fl w***ifI M H lost out in an earlier test. He wag defeated in an at- EQUITABLE: RESERVE ASSN. Francis says— tempt to bring it to the floor for _ Wm\\\ms,^ ^a The Winona Assembly of the ¦ ¦ ^^^3^B M— 9 % ¦ 1% debate, but got eight Conserva- Equitable Reserve Association ^ tives to vote with the minority. "Bring your own fa- ^^^__ \^i X //\ will meet Wednesday at 8:30 ^ Some Conservatives interpret- p.m. at the home of Mrs. John vorito stereo record v^» / ^ ^^^^^ _ \ \ ed the DFL moves more as D... Bergler? -Gilmore Avenue. to our Display Show- .^ *7t ; ^>k ______' room . . . and listen f****^ *Vc^^BB how much BETTER it \ 4* ^Aj (*» -^^__4 sounds on one of R Ji \?V>'^^^ these Sylvania Sys- ^ ^Jt ^ff •

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J.U.V - ¦ ¦:• ¦ ¦ .. - , -,.: I. .,, ¦ . ¦•r^,; V .-A.. - . J 49H - , I . L^.^ . ¦ ¦,.,,, .^ . .1 :, .,.:. . ¦ : j- ¦ -Q -,., } :. .- ¦..:: . ,_L >.. i ?.- ., -, •. -. -¦. - Vj v , .,:. -. j.. .._,. ..w-u:; : ¦. :< > .-. /. .. -. ,: ¦- ;¦ i ¦:• . . uii::li. ^ .W iJJ ^.t' xi*:*. .;* - * > ,^ *T;, , ; ,* *... ' ».*• ' ' 'ti^ - - * \*. i^ i. - - * - y •:. * -.^; * -*- ¦- '- I.*** -~. / - * * , " J V 1' „ , *^,, v ; - ^ v , , ^ r, ^ * ^ - , v Guest Editorial A WORD EDGEWISE 'LAST FULL MEASURE OF DEVOTION' ON THE RIGHT Car Insurance System McGovern s Moral EMK Reasoning Needs Improvements Bookkeeping (By George Rossman, Publisher, By JOHN P. ROCHE China On RedWILLIAM F. BUCKLEY Jr. Grand Rapids, Minn/ Herald-Review) By One aspect of the debate over Vietnam has The ironies are almost unbearable. Consider: . puzzled me for years: Every time Hanoi has Magazine: "It was an extraordinary scene. There, INSURANCE re- distinguished iw office in Bonn, AUTOMOBILE ha* thrown a punch, a number of In Chancellor Kurt Kiesinger's antique-filled ceived considerable public attention dur- Americans denounce the United States govern- Ambassador Semyon ('Scratchy ) ('Seta chy' to sat Swiet" Painstakingly, ing the last few years. Costs of car insur- ment for provoking it. This is, of course, a U Thant? Leonard Lyons?) Tsarapkin. for those who have whom concern ova: the first ance hare been rising as the number of legitimate line of argument Se Russian explained Moscow's g^ve accidents and the size of claims have in- argued that our very presence in Vietnam is dash early this month tp the head^ of a gov; China border ; chief villain and creased. a provocation, that the war is wrong. But when ernment long reviled by the Soviets as the ' someone like Senator George McGovern, who menace Jn Europe. Patiently, Some people complain that it is diffi- has never to my knowledge advocated a pull- the German listened as Tsar- Your' Good Health cult and expensive to buy good insurance out, comes up with this view, I find it quite kin charged that the "chau- To I have a high ap coverage, especially if they have an acci- distressing, particularly since vinist foreign policy of Pe- dent record or are in high risk groups. opinion of McGovern. king' threatened the cause of Legal costs are often large in order to col- The nub of the dispute is whether the re- peace and stability in the ¦ ¦ Answers lect damages. Considerable time can elapse cent communist offensives in South Vietnam world." . , between an accident and payment of a are an understandable response to American Had enough ? No. The ef- claim. A few insurance companies have raids on Viet -Cong strongholds in the South , frontery is incomplete". . To ypur gone bankrupt or are very difficult to col- and to our alleged "rigidity" at the Paris ne- "If was probably (Time con- any lect from? Some drivers still do not carry gotiations. While the proposition has been ex- tinues) the first time that the gist of it is that formally Questions liability insurance and are difficult or im- pressed in different ways, Soviet envoy had so the war would be over if we got down to ser- policies of the possible to collect from in case they cause attacked the ious negotiations and stopped opting for a "mil- communist giant. Be- Dear Dr. Thosteson: Did an accident. other itary solution." Nobody to my knowledge has hind Tsarapkin's words was a you ever write ?jii the pa- Responsible insurance companies, at- pointed out that the war would be over if Ho warning . . . In Paris, Rome diverticulitis is col- per that torneys, legislators and public officials are Chi Minh stopped opting for a military solution and Tokyo, Tsarapkin's giving the "nothing"? I have?been told deeply concerned to see what can be done and started negotiating seriously. Here I think leagues were President Nixon made a serious mistake in Italian and Japanese so, but don't believe it. — to reduce abuses in automobile insurance French, foreclosing a cease-fire. The way to stop tha Foreign Ministers roughly the B.D. ? ?? ;l administration and also to improve the sys- killing is to stop the shooting, and I can't see same message . . . The intent I haVe said, on tem. any reason why we should not say so and call was clear : China, no longer a I did not. for a cease-fire immediately. socialist nation but more than one occasion, that A HOT CONTROVERSY h« developed brotherly instead a dangerous foe, diverticulosis — that is, tlie over proposals to revise car insurance so* PART OF the problem is that si number be expelled from the of public figures are forced to rewrite present should mere presence of outpouch- that a person would be able to collect cer- ranks of civilized nations." tain amounts for losses under -$10,000 from history to protect their reputation as prophets. ing areas in the colon — his own insurance company regardless off For the benefit of those who came in late, let THIS ACCOUNT of the So- often exists without bother- whether he or someone else were at fault. me recall that throughout 1967 and '68 there viet Union's diplomatic offen- ing a person at all! was incessant clamor for a bombing pause. sive against Red China wduld Diverticulitis — with the Only for claims over $10,000 would a per- Time after time we were told on the highest son be permitted to sue another driver alone animate an entire book "itis," not the "osis*' ending . intellectual authority that if we stopped bomb- Orwell. The notion Proponents of this protection by George is quite another matter. That "basic " or ing the North, Ho Chi Minh would negotiate. Soviet Union ostracizing a pouchy sec- "Keeton O'ConneH" of the indicates that plan argue that the It was a beautiful orchestration. a nation from the "ranks of tion has become irritated and costs of handling claims would be so much So we stopped the bombing with a clear civilized nations" would pro- inflamed. And that is any- lower that the overall rates for car insur- understanding (or whatever one chooses to call vide the story line. It is all thing but "nothing." ance could be reduced substantially. it) that reciprocity was involved, notably that so ludicrous that dne wonders Hanoi would respect the DMZ (Demilitarized how Prime Minister Kiesinger Dear Dr. Thosteson i I am At first glance this sweeping proposal Zone), pull out some North Vietnamese reg- restrained himself from plant- an elderly woman who has has some appeal. But careful analysis In- ulars, recognize Saigon in the negotiations, and ing a few thumb tacks on developed intestinal candi- dicates that it has shortcomings even more stop city-busting (random rocket attacks on Scratches chair. I cannot dal overgrowth from the use serious than the present system. One of Saigon, etc?). This was a one-for-one trade; we THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND think of any other means by of an antibiotic. did not agree to stop fighting the war in the Is this an irreversible/!pro- the troubles is that it would not cover which the realities might have ' some eosts to the innocent victim as well South. been reintroduced. The no- cess ? I discontinued { the as he is now covered by the liability in- tion of an ambassador of the drug several months ago but HANOI THEN went to Paris with its sane- see no change. Can any- surance of the party at fault. Another is tuary intact, sat down and in effect said, Soviet Union lecturing the , thing be done? — R.F. ' that insurance companies would find it "What will you give us next to get genuine head of the West German hard to resist unjust claims which would negotiations started? " Assuming that the bomb- state on the nature of imerna- This candidal overgrowth Memories of Ikes titfnal proprieties . .. .0 Geor- mount in number and cost. Also on a sub- ing would not be renewed, they were in the means that the normal bac- it was stantial claim it would still often be neces- happy position of playing on our end of the die, jingliiig Geordie, terial content of the intestine grand to hear the Baby Char- eary to employ attorneys in order to get field and counting on American war-weariness has been suppressed by ?,tha to force the critical concession: les laying down the guilt of a reasonable settlement from a person's Coalition gov- antibiotics, so other organ- ernment. Triumphs , Failures dissimulation, the Steenie lec- isms (yeasts, etc.) have flour- own insurance company? The end result turing on the turpitude of in- would probably Figuring they have us in a vise, Hanoi is ished. ' be rates that are higher which caused him to cut off Committee and that Demo- continence! irreversible than present costs -when now turning the screw and testing President By DREW PEARSON This is not an , especially it is Nixon by its reinvigoration of the war in South WASHINGTON—I first met Gen. Bradley's gasoline when crats on that? committee lov- The difficulty is that for condition; but it may take taken into account that many recoveries Vietnam. I doubt if Ho Chi Minh would be Dwight D. Eisenhower almost he was about to cross the ed to investigate Southern Re- every communist incredibility time. j would be smaller in accidents where a per- perturbed if Senator McGovern denounced his 37 years ago, when during the Rhine in October 1944 and publicans. ' ' : there is in the West — a Ken- Buttermilk, p r e p a r, a- son is without fault. provocations, but it would improve my opinion summer of 1932, he was as- could have won the war be- But Ike was cautious. He nedy. tions containing lactobacilltis, of the Senator's moral bookkeeping. signed as liaison man between fore Christmas. Instead, Brad- didn't move, BO the issue of Herewith, in the very sha- and certain malt preparations THERE ARE, however, a number of ¦ the Army General Staff and ley's supplies and manpower unseating Taft delegates be- dow of Scratchy's imperti- (not beer), will re-establish the changes that could be made in the present the D.C. metropolitan police were allocated to Field Mar- came the most difficult at the nence, a statement by Senator bacterial balance. ¦•. car insurance aystem that would improve Be strong in the Lord and in the power of regarding the bonus army. I shal Montgomery so he could Chicago Convention. Edward Kennedy. He wants it. Better supervision of the insurance in- his might.—Ephesians 6:10? was covering the bonus army, catch up with Bradlej? and D u r i n g the preliminary the United Nations to recog- Dear Dr. Thosteson: A dustry could about 20,000 destitute World the British could share in the skirmishing for President, Ei- nize Red China. Now : If one year ago we, tried every- prevent irresponsible and un- 11-year-old fair insurance companies War I veterans who had camp- glory of victory. senhower was the guest of thought that the senator's ma- thing for my from operating several leading Republican bad breath with, in Minnesota. ed in Washington demanding That caution coupled with neuver was motivated by a daughter's Laws could be modified so further pay or jobs for their Montgomery's ego resulted in businessmen at the "F" street no results. One day I kiss**.*1 that contributory negligence -would not pre- desire to exasperate the. So- IN YEARS GONE BY patriotism. the Battle of the Bulge and club in Washington. The dis- viet Union one would reason ed her goodby and her vent partial collection from a driver who I asked Eisenhower was then a delayed the war an extra four cussion got around to taxes. one's way happily through the hreath didn't smell, was mainly at fault. While uninsured mo- young major attached to Gen. months? thereby causing the Ike observed that in wartime her about it, and she said " be- anfractuous implications of his tongue. torist, medical payments and loss of in- ^° Ten Years Ago ' - . . . . 1959 Douglas MacArthur's staff extra loss of lives. when American lives were audacious suggestion. she had brushed her come benefits can be purchased now on an and his system of keeping in- After Eisenhower came ing sacrificed, property should If she forgets, I send her Ronald Richer re-enlisted for six years in Ike But alas, a suggestion by optional basis, the limits on these are low the United States Navy. The son of Mr. and formed regarding the bonus back to the United States to be sacrificed too. Lives, back to do it. No bad army was to sit in the Dis- a hero's welcome, he became said, were more important Senator Kennedy is not to be breath. Hope this will help and should be raised for those who desire Mrs. Edward Richer, he was sent to Washing- confused with a suggestion by to purchase greater ton, D.C, for re-assignment. trict of Columbia press room Chief of Staff. I lunched with than property. someone.—Mrs. L. S. • protection. reading westerns, There he him on occasion. He was a There was a storm of pro- Senator Machiavefii. It isn't Mr. and Mrs. John Fluegel returned from But since It might could learn the news from the firm believer in civilian con- test. The businessmen present as if we were listening to Thanks. It might. also be practical for the sta te an extended trip west and south. They visited there are meny differen t insurance press. Also he could keep out trol over the military, work- said that if this was Ike's someone who proceeded on the department to establish a ref- in Oakland, San Francisco and Los Angeles, assumption that the enemy of causes for bad breath , it won't eree or arbitration of trouble. ed for better education and view, they would support Taft. system under which a Calif., Phoenix and Tucson, Ariz., and in Hot In some respects this char- other opportunities for his Ike retreated. The incident il- our enemy is our friend, No, help everybody. Spaces on the person with a relatively small claim could Springs, Ark., for several weeks. acterized much of Eisenhow- men, favored arms reduction lustrated two important ingre- the analysis of Senator Ken- surface of the tongue may re- ask for a recommended settlement which rather than a military build- char- tain debris that causes the er's life. He was sweet, con- dients in Eisenhower's nedy turns out to be pure ¦ both the claimant and the insurance com- Twenty-Five Years Ago . . . 1944 siderate of others, cherished up. acter: His essential fairness; Eleanor Roosevelt. The recog- odor. . ' '! panies might accept. This could provide Mrs. Henry Johnson will be leader of a new the highest ideals, but very I was among those who urg- but his awe of wealth. nition of Red China by the more rapid and less expensive settlements Girl Scout troop which is being formed at the cautious. He wanted to keep ed him to for President Throughout his -eight years in U. N., he explains, should be relegated by four America)! in many cases where a person must now McKinley Methodist Church. Assistants will be out of trouble. and touched off a flood of mail the White House he stood in done "without waiting for re- presidents including his own either accept the offer of an insurance Mrs. Harold Frederichs and Mrs. C. S. Hilde. This was probably why he by a radio program to that awe of men wtio had made solution cf the complex ques- brother. ? company or hire an attorney to start Mrs. M. L. Spencer was re-elected G.O.P. side-stepped the Bay of Pigs end. money. tion of Taiwan." That means, Senator Kennedy's rationale court state chairwoman and a delegate to the na- invasion when the CIA recom- In December 1951, I for- He also stood in awe of proceedings. Such a system would not elim- very simply, that the question is the sentimentalist rationale inate tional convention. mended it in the fall of 1960. warded 18,000 Christmas cards John Foster Dalles. History, of Taiwan — which is that that Red China will dissolve the use of legal procedures in larger He put 1,000 troops in South to Ike in Paris, all urging looking back on >the Eisenhow- cases, or where the claimant or an Red China is governed with- into peacefulness immediately insur- Fi Vielnam but nevsr got as that he run. er Administration, has already out the consent ance company were not satisifed fty Years Ago . . . 1919 of the gov- upon imbibing one chocolate with the deeply involved as Vice Pres- Four months later, April indicated that Dulles got the erned — is to be ignored. But milk shake at the U. N. Ms. recommendation. Wingate Anderson of Minneapolis, former ident Nixon wanted him to. 1952, when he was definitely United States irito more diffi- Winonan and grandson of B. A. Mann of Wi- the best is yet to come. In Nixon, as alsd the scores up- He appointed some courageous a candidate, I had an interest- culties than any other recent UPI's paraphrase : The subcommittee on insurance of the nona, will remain in England for the next four southern judges who ruled for ing visit with Ike at SHAPE Secretary of State, and that on scores of Democratic leg- months in attendance islators who have stood up Minnesota Senate studied automobile in- at an English university. integration; but he himself Headquarters just outside Par- after Dulles died Eisenhower "ONCE THE OLD policies T. L. Davis will be installed as exalted ruler against the recognition of Red surance during the last two years. After kept strictly aloof from that is. He was then steeped in or- himself led the country toward were dropped , Senator Kenne- reviewing the of tlie Elks Lodge. controversy. If he had given ganizing the first NATO Army the most important foreign China, has an opportunity to present system and propos- dy added, it might be possible sug- ed alternatives the Supremo Court even tok- but still naive—as I found out policy of this generation. fondle Senator Kennedy's , it concluded that defects for a political accommodation gestion back into the ideolo- exist in the present system hut declined to S*vpn*"-Five Years Ago ... 1894 en support after its historic —about politics. It was only six weeks after to* be reached between the school desegregation decision I told him how the Repub- Dulles died that President Ei- gists' crib in which it lies. make specific recommendations until ex- G. TJ. Mitchell returned from Cortland , N.Y., communist regime on the where he spent the winter. in 1954,, federal troops prob- lican State Committee in South senhower decided to cool the And, meanwhile, to take a les- haustive studies have been completed by mainland and the government son from Soviet diplomacy. There were but few vacant seats at Central ably would not have been Carolina — only two Republi- dangerous rivalry between the of Taiwan, various groups. called out in Little in which case Tai- When the Soviets want some- Methodist Church on the occasion of the lecture Rock. cans — had met in a car out- United States and the Soviet wan might be represented in But Ike wanted to stay out side Charleston to elect Taft Union by inviting Nikita thing, they do not hesitate tb IT SEEMS by Dr. Levi Gilbert on Abraham Lincoln, the the United Nations as an auto- TO VS that tha insurance Great Emancipator. of trouble. delegates, how the Republican Khrushchev to Washington. plant their demands right up industry, bar association and other inter- Eisenhower was nomous unit of China, similar on the opposition. command- state chairman in Louisiana This set a policy which John to tho status altar of the ested groups should seek to make improve- er of thc greatest army ever had elected a Taft slate ol F. Kennedy and especially of Byelorussia When will we do likewise? O^ Hundred! Years Aqo ... and the Ukraine in the ments in (he present system now. The pres- 1869 assembled by the United delegates after permitting only Lyndon Johnson followed. United What if Prime Minister Kies- The Nations as autonomous prov- ent system involves principles of justi ce, Winona plow and wagon manufactory , States. He was President of one minute of debate, and Eisenhower was cautious inger had been in position to under the management of the new firm, Messrs. tho United States at the peak that lie, Ike, would have the and slow in pioneering the inces of thc Soviet Unlffn." say that he tp liability and insurance which has evolved To speak of the would listen over Curtis & Perkins, is turning out a first class of its power. This instinct for convention stolen away from policy. But he did pioneer it. "autonomy " Scratchy only after learning decades and centuries. It is doubtful of Byelorussia in the constel- if a radically lot of wagons, plows, etc. John D. Mason has cautiousness influenced his him if he did not do> some- Eisenhower was not always lhat thc Soviet Union hnd different system can be de- retired from tho business and Mr. Perkins hns conduct in both important thing. happy about his role as Presi- lation of the Soviet Union is veloped which will ceased shipping arms into be any better or less become a partner with Mr. Curtis. posts. Ike sal on the edge of his dent. He had misgivings as to something like asserting the North Vietnam . expensive than can be arrived at by re- As commander of the Eur chair, incredulous. "Do you whether he should have run. autonomy of Charley McCar- fining Iho present system . openn theatre, Ike did a good mean to sny things like this Once he told Speaker Sam thy. The sheer idiocy of it all job . He had the benefit of has the strange impact The thc happen in the United States?" Rayburn that historians would of re- best hope for motorists lies in re- best combat officer of mod- he said. have ranked him with George minding us that Senator Ken- ducing accidents and their severity. Good WINONA DAILY NEWS ern times, Gen. Omnr Brad- I suggested that he could Washington and .Robert E. Lee nedy is not an idiot , Which insurance protection is highly desirable, ley, plus the common sense prevent them by an investi- ns one of tho greatest military requires that we consider the and substantial coverage should be requir- An independent Newspaper — Established M55 of Gen. George Marshall, who gation cf the "election" of leaders of the nation. But as chilling datum that even as ed . But money cannot compensate in full on one occasion when Ike lost Southern Republican dele- President, he said, ho wasn't the Soviet Union attempts to W. F. WHITE G. R. CYOSWAY C. E. LINPEN his head for loss of life, health or happiness which and his heart to a gates, that two of his staunch- so sure how he would be rank- consolidate world opinion Publisher Exec . Director Busmcna Mgr , British WAC, rebuked him es! supporters is caused by accidents. Safer highways, — Henry Cnbot ed. against Red China , the lend- and Editor & Adv. Director with such sternness thnt ho Lodge of Massachusetts and Historians will be debating er of vehicles and drivers are essential as ^ the American opposition the did not get a divorce. Jnmcs Duff of Pennsylvania that question for sofiio time i.s graduating Red number of vehicles In the United Stales Anoi.ru JJ IIKMER G ORDON Hor/rn A. J. K IEKBUSCH China from Managing Editor It was Eisenhower's caution —were members of the Rules to come. tho Coventry to which it grows at the rate of more than 2 million Sunday Editor Circulation Mgr, was a year. Poor drivers and unsafe vehicles L. S. BKONIC L. V. ALSTON W. H. ENOM .SH THE WIZARD OF JD CONVENIENCE must be kept off tho highways. Penalties Composing Sup t , Engraving Supt. Comptroller By Parker and Hart for unsafe driving, and especially for drink- SERVICES FOR ing and driving, must be stiffened. MKMIIEIt OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STANLEY K. YOUNG CAR INSURANCE it important to el- Wednesday—1 P.M. most everyone , and improvements can •"*3&B<**» Broltlow-Mnrtln Funeral Horn* undoubtedl y be made nt reasonable cost. But thc public should not le misled to be- j*5!2 *** Tho Associated Press J.i entitled to tho use for CARL KAROW j lieve that there is some magic system &( A ^% exclusively rcpub- Arranogmonti Incomplato which can provide much greater insurance Mention of nil tho local news f('« fl /V benefits at sharply reduced insurance IL /? printed in tills newspaper ns well ^L, costs. Tlie state legislature will not he *i»ri»-'' ns all A.P. news dispntchc*. Breitlow-Martin wasting ils time if it concentrates on Im- 1-ioving the present car insurance system Funeral Home Winona Dally Newi 376 EAST SARNIA and in measures that will increase highway 6 Winona, Minn WINONA, MINN. safe ty. MONDAY, MARCH 31, 196? Was Eisenhower Preordained f or Greatness? (EDITOR'S NOTE: This turnmg points. If he had made a and the physical and mental the Belle Springs Creamery in taking special studies im prepar- is the first of fim articles different decision at a particu- stamina to work long hours. He Abilene. ation for a second try. J life of cme^of tlie •on the Ameri- took advantage of his opportuni- s closest friend "Swede" often came to ca's best-Ioued fig\ wes. It is lar moment, or if events had de- Eisenhower' at night to pass tie ties, but nothing came to him on was a schoolmate named Ever- creamery based on the avihi^' s forth- veloped differently, it is ex- One night, le a silver platter. ett L Hazlett Jr. Dwigbt called time with Ike. coming book, "Dwight D. tremely unlikely that he would . , an idea—wiry have been chosen to lead the Nonetheless, his life is a fasci- him "Swede." Throughout the broached . Eisenhower: A . Gauge of shouldn't Ike try for an appoint- Greatness.") mightiest army in history, and nating study in "ifs." Second World War and even then when he was President, Eisen- ment to the Academy? He pic- to be elected President of The first of these appears in could have to- the United States. hower corresponded regularly tured the fun they By RELMAN 'MORIN Indeed, it is 1910, the accident that sent him might even be doubtful that the world ever with his friend. Some of his gether. They AP Special Correspondent to the United States Military roommates. But he touched the would have heard his name. Academy. most interesting and touching A strange pattern appears letters began with the saluta- most responsive chord when le ¦ this way, Ibe. again and again iii the whole of The nexns—destiny or blind* He had graduated from high tion, "Dear Swede." _ said, "Look at it Dwight D. Eisenhower's story, a chance—is clearly visible, bind- school in Abilene, Kan.., and was Here's a chance for an educa- sequence of even ts that seems ing together the strands of his desperately anxious to go to col- In the year before, Hazlett tion and you dom't have to pay almost to have pyeordained him two careers. lege. Any college. However, his had received a congressional for it." for his great role in history. This is not to say that Eisen- elder ' brother, Edgar, had just appointment to the United The thought took root. He makes a certain decision, hower was merely a fortunate entered the University of Michi- States Naval Academy, tut had Ike promptly wrote to both unaware that it? will lead to a man. He brought to each new gan and Dwight, for financial failed the' extrance examina- Kansas senators asking for an turning point tti; his life. Sheer undertaking a keenly analytical reasons, would have to wait? He tions. Now having obtained a appointment to Annapolis. One, accident brings, him to other mind, vision, determination took a job as night foreman insecond appointment, he was J. L. Bristow, replied that he proposed to fill them in competi- tive examinations? May the best man win. With "Swede's" help, Tke crammed furiously for a month and then went to Topeka for the examinations. Flaying it safe, he did not express a preference for the Naval Academy. He took the tests for both service schools. To Ms Immense delight, 4he senator later advised him that he had scored highest (among four applicants) for the appoint- ment to the Naval Academy and second (among eight) for West Point. Then came a cruel shack. Having passed his 20th birth- day, Ike was ineligible because of age for Annapolis. Bristow wrote that the boy who had scored No. 1 in the test for the ROTUNDA VIEW . . . This is a fish-eye casket of former President Dwight D. Eisen- Military Academy would not be of the Capitol hower stands in the the lens view of the interior xo- ¦ center of floor taking the appointment and tunda during Sunday 's funeral activities. The .' circled by dignitaries. (AP Photofax) therefore he was awarding it to Ike. . " ¦'" Both boys were deeply disap- nroec ¦ -¦¦— MMnwm wwpntwnwMiMiBwiiiiiiiiiiiiiitwiiiiiiii'iM^iiBiiiiHii " MIHIII I iiT-rrairifliyrnrr inn frfflflriiMaiiniiiiiiwMiiiiiiii mini ^j_ i rmsW\swiiJwnms^^ pointed. But, Hazlett recalled EfULOGY TO A FALLEN LEADER .. . President Nixon, son John and his wife; Mrs. Nixon and daughter vfricia. later, '"Ike mumbled something delivered a eulogy to Dwight D. Eisenhower in the Standing next to Tricia is Col. Donald Hughes, milit^y aide Sunday, ' about not looking a gift horse in Expect 100, «' 000 ' rotunda: of the CapitoL In front from left are: The widow; to Nixon. (AP Photofax) 7 ? ; the mouth." So it was to be ' IIIII IM i un it i n i II IIIII IIIII winum mn in mm mum West Point, not Annapolis. He was luckier than he real- ized. Suppose he had attended the Naval Academy. With his at- To Visit Abilene tainments, he might have ABILENE, Kan. (AP) - have recited their recollections ten throw in a hearty breakfast. reached the rank of Admiral. Dwight D. Eisenhower's home so often they could almost do it Several people called in to say But would he nave become the town, already bursting at the in their sle«p. they speak a foreign language first Admiral elected President seams with visitors, expects "But we don't mind," said and would be happy to help of the United States? 50,000 to 100,000 persons to flock Henry J. Wadden, a realtor and guide foreign guests and act as in Wednesday for his burial. accountant who has turned his translators. The second turning point was The municipal election of city downtown to come four years later. office into an emer- "Most of these people prcha- commissioners, a school board gency housing center for the Eisenhower's grades were bly never even met Mr. ELsen- and a hospital board goes on as ceremony. "It's a Midwestern hower,'' said Madden. 'But well above aTerage at West scheduled Tuesday because the attitude. We open our doors to they still look on him as one of Point. He graduated in the top law requires it, but two polling people and. want to help them." their own, and they want to do third of the Class of 1915. places have been preempted for The 225 hotel and motel rooms anything they can to help." However, a serious question use by the Army and¦ newscast- in Abilene filled up quickly with Police Chief Fred Garten has arose as to wlether he should ers. ' , ' ?¦ . • official guests, military person- obtained about 100 men from be commissioned. The nearly 8,000 residents of nel and newsmen. Most rooms the Kansas Highway Patrol and this one-time terminal on the in nearby Junction City and Sa- the Dickinson County sheriff's He injured Ids knee playing Chisholm cattle trail are getting lina also are taken. football against Tufts College in office to help his seven-man accustomed to the television So far there has becsn no trou- force. They've stopped giving his second year as a cadet. (Ei- cameramen who ston them on ble finding space iai private out parking tickets until after senhower said that in the en- the streets for interviews. Boy- homes. Most residents not only the burial. suing years more than two doz- hood friends of Eisenhower refuse to accept payment but of- en Tufts alumni each told him The funeral crowd is expected that he had been the one who in- to be the largest the town ever has seen, far bigger than the flicted the injury and apologized audience which crammed Ei- "for hitting you so hard. " He senhower Park June 4, 1952, to said, wryly, that he often won- hear the general announce his dered how many men Tufts had candidacy for the Republican on the field that day I) presidential nomination. Characteristically, he ignored n the pain. Then, in a cavalry drill, he jumped from his horse and the knee buckled like a Ike's Coffin ¦ jackknife. He was hospitalized, ,| SOLDIER'S FUNERAL . '. ". Troops lined Constitution The former President and General of the Army lay in state in traction part of the time, for (AP Photofax) | | Avenue salute Sunday as the caisson bearing the body of in the rotunda of the Capitol overnight. 30 days. Army Issue I Dwight D. Eisenhower passed on its way to the CapitoL When he was about to gradu- ate the medical officers at the WASHINGTON (AP) _ Gen. Academy were not certain Dwight D. Eisenhower will be whether they should recom- buried in the same $80 steel cof- mend him for a commission. fin furnished for any soldier The authorities hesitated to buried by the Army. commission any cadet with a se- An Army spokesman said the rious physical defect which only difference is that the sil- might force him to retire early. ver-gray casket has a $115 inner In that event, the investment of glass seal. Eisenhower, once the four years' training in the Acad- commander-in-chief , requested emy would be lost. What sSiould the standard military coffin they do about the man wit3i the which was draped by a govern- trick knee? ment-issue American flag. The question oi commission- ing him hung in the balance. Eisenhower did not attempt to argue his case. He had ach ieved Senator Declines his objective, a college educa- tion, albeit primarily in military science. If he was not to go into VIP Treatment the Army he would have to try (AP) some other profession. WASHINGTON - Sen. Mark Hatfield , D-Orc , walled The medical officers offered in the cold with hi.s wife and to recommend him for a com- four children for more than an mission in the Coast Artillery. hour to pay tribute to Dwight D. Ho refused. He said he wanted Eisenhower st Washington Na- the Infantry. After long deliber- tional Cathedral . ations—and stretching the point Hatfield declined VIP treat- —they agreed!. ment which would have allowed If they had decided otherwise, him to bypass the long line of there would not have been a Lt. persons waiting to enter tho Eisenhower, much less the Al- cathedral Sunday. lied Supreme Commander of Hatfield said he recalled his days as nn enlisted Navy that name nearly 30 years later. CROWDS AT CAPITOL ... The general public line up man Washington bunclay. 'iho officers sometimes took advan- MILITARY TRIBUTE . . . Raven, tho riderless horse caisson of Dwight D. Eisenhower in Next ; A General Named outside the Capitol Sunday to view the casket of former tage of their rank to go to tho carrying boots reversed In the stirrups , followed behind tho tribute symbolizes the loss of a leader. (AP Photofax) Conner.) President Dwight D. Eisenhower. (AP Photofax) head of a line. Between the Man and the Public Figure, There Was a Difference (EDITOR'S NOTE: A re- sort of pixie smile, "is it all charisma touched off wildly en- tary sternness that suggested flo fish ffry on the bank of the At the time nf the first of his that morning. Wc were elated . porter who covered Dwight right if I show them what you thusiastic ovations wherever wo some that they ought to snap fio stream—a treat wc hnd enjoyed seven heart attacks, Sept. 2-1, The White House announced a D, Eiscn/ioiucr, as candidate gave me for nay birthday? of tho news corps followed him attention . imme nsely. 1955. Elsenhower was vacation- bit later, however, thnt Elsen- and President , f or nine The five-star general, soon to on his travels throughout tho Sometimes it was quite under- There was no invitation that ing in Denver. He had nn office hower was indisposed and would years recalls in the follow- bo 34th president of the United world as pres ident—arms out- standable, like one summer day day. at Lowry Air Force Bnso and not come to the offico thnt day. ing story a scries of inci- States, scuffed tho toe of his stretched high above his head. in a Colorado trout stream As president , Elsenhower re- was staying a few miles away Later in tho day It wns disclosed dents that add up io a fas- shoo against tho porch floor for There was tho man of intens e, where Iko wns having remark- fused to spenke critically of at the homo of M amie's mother. that ho had suffered n heart nt- cinating personality study.) a moment, and then tho famed Imperturbable concentratio n, able success. As reporters those who were critical of him Eisenhower was an early ris- tnck. Eisenhower smile lighted his whether fishing for trout, watched from a highway over- or of Ills administration. WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- face, lining up a putt, drawing a looking tho stream, ho hauled in er and loved to kid reporters as- The small flag had told n stlo- dent-elect Dwight D. Eisenhow- 4 'Oh, all right," he consented bead on n quail—or studying a ono trout after another—nnd wo "I never deal in per.sonnli- signed to the Summer Whito ry wo wero unable to decipher. er had a look thnt night of boy- reluctantly. classified document nt tho mo- reported his catch in detail. tles," became a familiar re- House at Lowry about helng That night, long niter tho sto- ish embarrassment. Mnmio disappeared into the ment a visitor was ushered inlo He went over tho legal limit, sponse at news conference. Into. Newsmen could tell from a ry hnd been reported to tho It was thc Gfith birthday of his cottnga nnd then returned to the his White House office. hut neither ho nor we WCTO But then after thus divorcing distance whether they had won world, we snt around tho press- wife Mnmlc, Nov. 14 , 1052. The doorway, holding before tier a There was the man whoso ut- nwnre of it. nt the time. his remarks from individuals ho or lost the dally race to beat room nnd concluded that Iko two of them had been chatting beautiful negligee. Iko beamed , ter essence wos warmth naid When Eisenhower found out would go on to declare : him to tho base . A largo U.S. wouldn 't run for a second term with newsmen on the porch of pleasure overriding his embar- cordiality and humor in tho about it later thnt day, nmd "Bwt I will sny this ..." flag always was run up over the next year, 1956, even If he tho Elsenhower cottage nt Au- rassment. company of Intimate friends. about the fact his unwitting We learned to wait for that bnso headquarters when tho recovered. gusta National Golf Club in To this reporter, Dwight Da- There was Ilio man, too, who transgression was making head- phrase, knowing that he usually President was im his office , A That was the- first of ma ny Georgia , where they hnd gone vid Elsenhower was n fascinat- never wns quite at case with the lines, he turned a baleful glower was -about to make news, even smaller flag flew when ho vas mistakes wo made about tho for a rest after his first-term ing personality study. news corps in s«mo public, upon UK. though stating only his general not. amazing recuperative powers of election 10 days earlier. There wns |ho mnn with tho somo private circumstances. On other occasions, reporters philosophy on a controversial is- The small flap; was snapping the mnn—or, rather, about his "Ike," Mamie asked witli a magnetic grin—tho man whoso There could he nn Inbred mili- had been invited to share In tho su6. ln tho brcczo wmen wo arrived indomitable will to live. leader ofl Troop 664, St. Paul'i Scouts, Leaders Episcopafl Church; Miss Char- Elgin OES Conference lene Lanbon, leader of Troop Attend 626, Central Lutheran Church, Installs Heads "Opportunity" was the magic and Mary) Edel, leader of Troop (Special) word re-vealed to over 350 Girl 664, St. raid's Episcopal Church. ELGIN, Minn. — volunteers at attending were 18 Cadett-a Temple was Scouts and adult Also The Elgin Masonic conference held Saturday at scouts atw two senior scouts. the scene oi the Tuesday in- a Rochester. EYOTA G1JILD MEETING stallation of officers of tbe Or- John Owens, executive direc- der of Eastern Star. tor of the River Trails Girl EYOTA, 'Minn. (-Special) — Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Abbott Scout Council, was the guest The womenfs guild of St. Paul's were named worthy matron and speaker at the morning session. Church will! meet Thursday at patron arid Mr. and Mrs. Roy Group discussions were held in 2 p.m. at ttye church. The pro- Hoist were named associate the afternoon. gram will m entitled, "Enrich- and patron. ment of Wbrship Life." Mrs. matron *^ * Leaders attending from here Other officers installed: Winona Daily New» MONDAY, MARCH 31, \W were Mary Ann Wardwell and Harold Ihrkttrial^I El- Wabasha city hall Monday •uch cases, CVSTEX usually trlngi Johnson Jr. All are past ma- assisted by Mrs. relaxing comfort by curbing irrltat- roy. Fountain City, Hixton and . Ellis Scharr through Friday from 9 to 11 ALTURA HDWE. Ing germs ln acid urine and quickly trons. Ushers were John Fair, Wonewoc, Wis. and Mrs. Virginia Severson. Altura, Minn. ' ¦ ¦ ' ¦ oaslngpaln.GetCYSTEXatdrugglsts. past patron, and Earl Good, Demonstrations a.m. ' ":¦ "" ' ' " ' The colors for the year are were on mak- : . :u .

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The veteran of Rookie pitchers who could open their tional League All^tar, is beinj! tion. , right-handers Bill 1S59 base- touted as? savior of an infielcI southpaw, Is slated for relief cause of surgery to an infant swinger says a poor start in his said Nettles, who needs more 14 professional seasons, Grzen- action include daughter. early minor league days was work on his defense. "A few da also has seen brief major Zepp, Charlie Walters, Bon ball season a week from that helped drag the Twin!3 work. Crider and Kansas Cily. In down to seventh place in thij The Twins traded promising "I've worked with Leo one solved by putting oa 40 pounds. more games out tbere (left league duty with Ne\ York, De- Oglesby and Jerry Tuesday at Jim Ollom. the jirst of a jive-part series, 1968 American League season. left-handed Jim Merritt day and I don't think I have to "Now I'm up to 195," Manuel field) and I'll feel more com- troit and Kansas City. southpaw the worry, second baseman Rod said. "I've slowed down but fortable." 'I went back to Denver to Rookie George Mitter- The Associated Press took As for the rookie hitters, out- to the Cincinnati Reds for " the fielder Charlie Manuel set ii 30-year-old Cardenas, a former Carew said after his initial key- speed is no good unless you get Martin says Nettles will be a prove to the others I could do wald appears to have won a look at the Twins' rookies string job behind John and newcomers.) sizzling pace with a bat irl teammate of Martin's, in hopes stone workout with Cardenas. on base. valuable pinch hitter, and the job last year," the 31-year- second s really going to Nettles, another lefty who set "he'll kill some , poo-r pitcher. old Grzenda said. "I'm not Roseboro. Mitterwald, hitting spring training and outfielder- of plugging the gap. "I think he' 11 ST? PAUL UD — A classy imielder Graig Nettles displayec1 Cardenas, a 5-foot-10, 163- help the club. It was at snort- the AL afire last fall with five He'll break his heart." thinking of Denver or any oth- .267 at Denver, played in shortstop, a pair of power-hit- long ball power. Martin eitheir. pound Cuban native, has an stop that we had trouble last homers in four days just after Hall chalked up a 2-1 record er minor league club this year. games with the Twins last sea- ting rookies and a crop of will work them into his platooii" eight-year major league batting year. We have to make those he was called up from Denvei, in a late season appearance It's the Twins and the majors son. Tom Tischinski, also with pitchers are some new wild system or use them as pincll average of .261 and a fielding double plays." has been termed a good fast with the Twins. He also posted — or nothing," Denver, is battling sophomore cards holds in his hitters. mark of .969. Manuel, a 25-year-old West ball hitter. He has trouble with 6-3 and 4-1 records at Charlotte Other rookies vying for a reg- backstop Bruce Look for a spot first season as manager of the Skinny rookie left-hander Toni Already, Cardenas' presence Virginian who batted .283 for the curve and the cliangeup still and Denver respectively? ulation pitching rotation spot on the team. Minnesota Twins. Hall, a 144-pounder, is a to]3 is being felt although he was Charlotte in the Southern puzzles him. Grzenda recorded 15 saves are right-handers Danny Morris Next: Hitting. ¦ ¦ ¦ ' • * •* m^mmmmmmmmm ~M^mim Twins Idle THIS YEAR'S NORTH STARS Today After Last in the NHL, Chisox Loss ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — The But 1st in Draft Minnesota Twins hejd a morn- LOS ANGELES (AP) -If son, stopped 35 Los Angeles Oakland's Norm Ferguson for ing practice and took the after- there's any solace ia being the shots. the all-time NHL goal record for noon off to observe national worst team in the National Joey Johnston's first NHL a rookie. Grant wound up the mourning for former President Hockey League, it's getting to goal at 16:29 of the third period season with 65 points, a NHL Dwight D. Eisenhower. be first in fine when the draft tied the game in which the record. The two players are rolls around. prime, candidates for rookie of The Twins exhibition baseball Kings never trailed. . game against the Philadelphia The Minnesota North Stars, the year. With the award goes Phillies this afternoon was can- by virtue of a 3-3 season-ending And Danny Grant scored his $1,500. celed because of Eisenhower's tie Sunday night against the Los 34th goal of the season, tying The tie snapped Minnesota's funeral. The Twins, eight days Angeles Kings, wound up the six-game losing streak but gave away from their season opener 1968-69 season in a fifth place the North Stars a seven-game tie in the West Division with the at Kansas City April 8, play; the winless streak to start out the Phils Tuesday at Clearwater. Pittsburgh Penguins. Winona The ex- But the Penguins won two 19S9-70 season next October. ploded for five runs in the sev- more games and officially fin- The third-place Kings, prim- enth and beat the Twins ished in front of the North Stars. DM/ ing for the playoffs, took a 1-0 6*4 Sunday after opening day Pittsburgh had a 20-45-11 record lead on a goal by Howie Hughes. for 51 points pitcher Dean Chance had held , the North Stars News ; Ray Cullen tied it in the first the Sox to an unearned run 18-43-15 — worst in the NHL- for 51 points. period with an from Leo through six . . Boivin. Duane Josephson slammed a Minnesota inherits the distinc- Brent Hughes sent the Kings bases loaded triple off Ron Kel- tion of being able to draft first ahead again before Grant ler for three of the seventh in- in each round of the NHL's sel- Sports rammed home his record tying ning runs. Joe Graenda and ection of amateur players after goal at 15:15 of the second per- HANDBALL CHAMPIONS . . . These six handballers Miller. Guillou won the city title by defeating Rogge in the playoffs are concluded. Dick Woodson let in the other battled their way to the finals of the city handball champion- straight sets while Miller defeated Krieger for third place. iod. Defenseman Larry Cahan two runs on two hits. , There were some bright spots *f4 Winona Dally News gave Los "Angeles another (Daily I - lead Chance scattered six hits and ship which was held last week at the YMCA and St. Mary's Burdick downed Hall for the consolation crown. News in the tie against the Kings. * Winona, Minn. at 7:25 with a long screen shot four walks while striking out College courts. Players, are (from left): Gene Krieger, Dave Sports photo) Goalie Garry Bauman, who has MONDAY , MARCH 31. 1969 before Johnston's 30-foot shot three batters, and Manager BurdicV Lou Guillou, Spike Rogge, Tom Hall and Jerry seen only limited action all sea- tied the game. . Billy Martin said he was satis- fied with the showing. Chance had pitched only three innings IN NBA PLAYOFFS prior to the game. "We'll pitch Dean a few in- HURRY! HURRYl nings against the New York Henry Latest NOW THRU Mets at New Orleans next Sat- APRIL 6th urday," Martin said. "I'm con- vinced that he'll be ready to go Celt ics, Knicks after that." The Twins will break camp Friday and travel to New Or- leans to wind up the exhibition U^^ schedule against the Mets Satur- f* Toke J-OLeads day and Sunday. Chance has not been satisfied By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS playoffs, shift to friendly home with his pitching because of re- The try courts Tuesday after Saturday's YilCwt\V Win in Golf 116-114 less to the Hawks. The ^ porting to camp two weeks late. tonight to break the division MIAMI, Fla. (AP ) — Bunky ent winners? Jack Nicklaus and Hawks had to use Walt Haz- "My shoulder is tight and I winners' jinx and get back into just can Henry bounced his tow-headed, Billy? Casper each won cne, but zard's two free throws with nine 't get anything on my the National Basketball Associa- seconds remaining to clinch fast ball," he said. 2-year-old son—one of three—on the other top check cashers the "My break- tion playoffs. victory. ing pitch isn't sharp either. I'm his knee and talked about what were largely outsiders. In five The Lakers, regular season Walt Frazier, who set a New ready to pitch the opening game he was going to do with the Florida tournaments, the win- at Kansas City. But I'm sure I winners in the West, play the York playoff record with 17 as- 000 he had just won ners were Tom Shaw, Ken Still, sists won't be 10O per cent" $40, . San Francisco Warriors in Oak- , put the rallying Knicks slap it in the Jim Colbert, Ray Floyd and ahead 115-114 with 1:29 remain- had a double and "I am going to land and a third straight loss a , scoring for the Twins bank," he said. now Bunky Henry. ing on a driving layup. Willie would put them in the same Reed, scored 35 points td spark in the fifth inning on Frank Henry 25, son of a Valdosta , Henry said last Tuesday Mur- Quilici' boat as the Eastern kings, the the Knicks. s single. Harmon Kille- Ga., banker and formerly a phy told him he, Murphy, felt brew's sacrifice fly scored Ce- Bullets, who are The Boston-Philadelphia place-kicking specialist for the great and thought he would V)^** SuSklsG\*St sar Tovar in the sixth as the win. "We'll finish 1-2," Bob dtftvn to their last shot against game was tied 21 times before ° Twins took a 2-1 lead. Georgia Tech football team, is predicted. the . Bailey Howell completed a the latest of succession of dark- three-point play that Minnesota got its final two "On the putting green, before The Knicks overcame a nine- gave the If runs in the ninth on ground outs horse winners on the $6 million point deficit in the last 6% min- Celtics a 95-92 lead with 23 sec- the final round, I kidded with onds remaining in by Rich Reese and Ted Uhlaen- pro g-olf tour. saying 'I' utes Sunday and rallied to beat the third pe- Murf , m going to lick riod. The 76ers never caught up. der after a walk to Charlie Man- Despite a triple-bogey 8 on you,'" Henry explained. "Bob Baltimore 119-116 and take a 3-0 uel and a double by Bod Carew. one hole, the boyish-looking laughed and said, 'Doa't forget lead in the best-of-7 set. The de- Havlicek scored 23 points, 19 southerner overtook his best the order is me one and you jected Bullets have until in the first half , while Jones fin- pal, Bob Murphy, for the first two." Wednesday to regroup for what ished with 26. HVL MEETING prize check in the bizarre could be the final game. Henry shot a final 70 for 278. ¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦ ^ SET TONIGHT $200,000 National Airlines Open Murphy skied to a 76 for 279, John Havlicek, Sam Jones ^ ¦— ¦¦ ^ ¦ ^ ¦—— ^ — 11^— Golf Tournament. tying Dan Sikes, who had a and Don Nelson led the defend- The Hiawatha Va Hey His best paycheck previously hole-in-one in his 68; Australian ing champion Boston Celtics to Baseball League will hold this year was $322.50 at Pensa- Bruce Crampton, who shot a 66, a 125-118 victory oVer the Phila- delphia 76ers Sunday night a meeting tonight at Shor- cola. He had missed the cut in and Dave Stockton, who had a to two tournaments and in six oth- 72. A BUNKY BIRDIE . . . Bunky Henry of Peach Tree grab a 3-0 lead ia the other K______^_M ty's Bar & Cafe at 8 p.m. Eastern semifinal. SS^ ers had finished between 41st City, Ga., uses body english to sink a birdie on the 12th Any teams Interested Arnold Palmer shot a 72 for In and 79th. 283. He was tied liole Sunday in the $200,000 National Airlines Open Golf The Celtics, fourth-place fin- with PGA ishers in regular Joining the circnlt should at- In 13 tournaments so far this champion Julius Boros and Sam Tournament at Mami, Fla. Henry went on to the win the season play, tend. year, there have been 13 differ- tournament and the $40 ,000 first prize money with a 30- could wrap it up Tuesday when Snead. Gary Player was at 285. action tinder-par 278, (AP Photofax ) switches to their home court and erase the embarrass- ^Hj^^u^y^^^^^^H ment of their lowest finish since 1950. Ipf lL . Tlie upset-minded San Diego (v ' Rockets, trailing the Atlanta Dpn*ait n f We Don t Tanniehill 3rd Hawks 2-0 in Western Division v Cq/ft°- for Old,Mon l Weather ^^ Z" 1'"1 L MONKEY Pipers Lose, Close \ In NCAA Mat Season Thursday o«Dflf r^ TARPAULINS Just as in the NAIA national ago he finished fifth at lfiO. He MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-Tho Min- AR0UND tournament three weeks ago, has finished third in tho NAIA nesota Pipers got high scoring NOW X^*-w Winona Stato College's Jim Tan- three times nnd also has three efforts from the two top figures I ^L^flF ^^ WE SERVICE YOIIR CAR FOR niehill made it as for as the Northern Intercollegiate Confer- of their 1967-611 championship X PpJL Ovor 15 y : *;J|fS| \; Jv* semifinals before losing Satur- ence championships under his team but fell behind in the sec- ^ SPR,NG THE WAY IT SHOULD BE day; in the NCAA universit di- belt. His over all record ond BTT ^TOicB'f? ¦ ' r y as a period and never caught up 1^ lnTnff ijfri iiiiri..¦ >i .. ¦^i>ii| Stockl*II*WVI\I jTiX , s1 AH *l I jB/M YxXx-^ X^i, .. Xs' 't jA I. All itimi in is 0ur au,omo vo experts kj iow lust what to do to rid vision national wrestling meet Winona Stato groppler is 98-12- in a 126-118 loss to Miami. ;;: ' " I I —f-W^^-W^-s " ' ' I.V????- -? ??:?V jfe < double lock ultehid if-i your car w'nter lag and' let-down. They'll g|v« in Provo, Utah, at Brigham 2. - ' •* • scored 28 and TRI/CKi'tOVfRSvAv, ,or ,xtM ,,r"n«,h- 1 Wt V °' Young University. Charlie Williams, hitting 17 Jtm > " . $ I'10' *',af ',av* Iowa State captured the team five 1 W H B " ° *pr'n° w'" " PWlno Ilk** * TO- M H Tanniehill had through title with a recotd of three-point baskets , added 26 for ¦ I I kitten and running moro economically and swept 104 points. - .yy**' ' ' > .* .¦¦ fJ» iB« . < T&*a% WK^ sMiclently the Pipers r^^v^SL^.; l£j_JT "T"WJtV ' f, " his first three matches, defeat- Tho Cyclones of tho Big Eight , who close out their I I than ever. Stop In or call us. regular portion of: the ¦ '¦' ' ' ' ing Bill Trammel of Ohio Uni- Conference had the team champ- 1968-69 bv \l*0- S*IS ¦ *¦ 2. Himmid on ill 4 *#' ' fj American Basketball (' '^-rurW '¦ ¦ '¦ sldu wllh iilntorcid , *«\ «., > versity in tho quarterfinals Fri- ionship in tho bag before tho A s s 0 - ; • ' ovary aviilo 3 O FLUSH RADIATOR elation schedule THiursday ?* - ' " tCPfi. "' ¦¦fi Jfommetm ' //,, \,f\X day before running into an old championship nnd consolation fi- night , : ^ nemesis, Rich Milml of the Uni- nals wero held Saturday. Dan at Kentucky. I Jp nr- v 'x ' ^^K -# '.''' 4 CHECK IGNITION versit Gable, Iowa State Tho Pipers held n 25-23 edge © ENGINE TUNE-UP • SYSTEM y of Iowa, in the semifi- 's 137-pound- going 5x7 nals. cr -who won all five of his Into the second period l>e- i-vTI~ matches b fore the Floridlnas shot 50 per Io i^ *Q49 ftU .„,, rtll 0 P-ftr ® BRAKES & IIRES Ho dropped a 3-0 decision to y pin cn route to that cent $5 35 N0W © CHANGE OIL & GREASE^ weight division crown, wns from the field and zoomed Ro°- Mihal nnd then came back to to a 64-54 hnlftlme lead. iflfflVy,-«^T ;¦• ?. i ¦ * win two more matches to take named outstanding wrestler of 8xio j»«99 third place. tho tournament. N / © WHEEL ALIGNMENT wUlflHSA, J'' ' ^w£t,K ¦•* **¦» °W With his 5-1 NCAA record, the There wero a total of 380 XXXxyX ' :^Jxl: 12x14 $1088 f it, wrestlers from 100 different \ ¦¦ x ' 1 Paul junior co-captain fin- We Can Help You! ¦K?,* ' ' • '; ' . . 77V Rofl. $29.57 NOW IO 1 J HI ICII tho season with a 33-5 rec- schools in tho meet, and they * JmmTt mm ord, Two of those losses enmo took part in 463 matches. ¦ ' ; "¦ < ' r ' ;'3S 20x20 oo \ _m j^ rPCil at the hands of Mlhnl. Besides Because of the size of the tour- >i--t*.?....-:' :;^..:iS iij Reg. $70.40 NOW MA¦fr 1 l F Mtmjw ^m w^ the setback last weekend ho had nament there lins been some * | \ JA B CO/ lost to tho Hawkeyo mnlman In sympathy expressed for region- tho finals of tho University of al wrestle-offs which would nar- 15 Sizes in Stock | STATIONS Northern Iowa Invitational be- row tho Held to Mir or eight fore Christmas. in each weight division for the Opsn 24 Hours — Phone 9431 jp roiym w^^^2^r^HMk^WMIHl/ir ^™^ It was also tho second time national meet. . ^ ¦¦ MS - S^ H™ ^ WEST: Highway «1 at Orrln Sf. in two tries that Tanniehill has Next year's national NCAA EAST: 700 E. Sarnln — Phone 98i9 been a place-winner in the NCAA meet will bo hosted by the Uni- university division Two years versity of Minnesota . Breaks Still Going Atlanta 500 Win Against Da vis, LA Yarborough's By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS San Diego 5-3, Seattle got by the ready." ? Baltimore's Jim Palmer and Angels' B squad 2-0, the Chicago The Braves spotted the Dodg- Los Angeles' have Cubs pounded Oakland &3 and ers a 2-0 lead on Bill Sudakis' been running into trouble since San Francisco outlasted Cleve- first-inning homer, then came First of Year fateful 1966 World Series land 13-11. their back to win as Milt Pappas and ATLANTA (AP) - Ex-farm way through the pack at such encounter . Rain washed ' out the New Cecil Upshaw flipped hitless Palmer appears set to Ydrk boy Gale Yarborough won tbe breakneck speed that he took Now, Yankees-New York Mets ball over the final seven? Atlanta 500 stock car race Sun- the lead within 55 laps. From do an about face after two game. Rookie Joe Hague belted a seasons. But the day then headed back to South then on it was a battle between throw-away Today's schedule has been two-run eighth inning homer off Carolina to await the birth cf these two drivers aad every- breaks are still going against curtailed because of the funeral Chris Short, powering the Cardi- 027 thing else was incidental. the Dodgers. his second child, with a $21, Davis and of former President Eisenhow- nals past the Phillies, aad left- check to pay for it. "It was a great ride," said Palmer, plagued by recurring er, with three games called off hander Frank Bertaina pitched "I hope I get there in time," Yarborough, whose $136,000 in arm trouble since 1966, whenffie and others pushed back to start two-hit ball for five innings as winnings last year set a record for Baltimore and then said the blond, stockily built won 15 no earlier than one hour after tie Senators finally beat an driver who celebrated his 30th for stock car drivers. "I never became the youngest pitcher the completion of the ceremo- American League rival after 11 thought I was in trouble, and ac- toss a Series shutout, birthday in the Atlanta raceway ever to nies at Washington. The Yan- setbacks. garage area Wednesday. tually I thought I had a lap scattered three singles over kees-Kansas City, Baltimore- lead." eight innings Sunday as the Or- Pittsburgh and Minnesota-Phila- Reggie Smith's 12tfa-inning Yarborough, a popular favor- single delivered the tie-breaker ite with the crowd estimated at Yarborough averaged 132.759 ioles soared past Pittsburgh 5-0 delphia games were postponed. miles per hour for the 334 cir- a 17-3 exhibition record. Palmer for Boston in a duel that pitted better than 85,000, drove his 1969 for , a 23-year-old right- the Red Sox cuits of the 1%-mile track. He Meanwhile, Davis, whose bander who came up with ' Jim Lonborg Mercury across the finish line shoul- against the Tigers' Denny Mc- three seconds ahead of close led 308 laps, with the only other three errors on successive plays der and back ailments following leaders being Pearson? Bobby Palmer and the Orioles his brilliant Lain for the first six innings. MONROE DRIVES ' ", Baltimore's Earl Knicks in Baltimore. New York took a 3-0 lead friend David Pearson to claim helped '66 Series perform- 's three-run dctoble in .. his first victory of the season. Isaac and Charlie Glotzbach, trim Ltfs Angeles 4-0 in the sec- ance, has posted just one major Monroe drives against New York's Dave De- in the best-of-seven semifinal series in the both in . game of their '66 Series the eighth? after a leadoff hom- But it was Pearson who cap- ond league victory in the past two BTisschere but misses the shot in NBA play- Eastern Division by winning 119-116. (AP tured the crowd's fancy. The He and Pearson were learned he'll be sidelined seasons er by Tony Perez, swept tbe sweep, . He appeared in just Reds past the Astros. off game Sunday between the Bullets and Photofax) 34-year-old Ford driver elected equipped with Ford's new 429 from three to four weeks with a nine games for the Orioles in Duane Josephson rapped a to start at the rear of the 50-car cubic inch Boss Mustang en- hairline fracture of the right 1967 and got into 10 with three ST. PAULITE WINS field when he decided to use a gine, as were four ether Ford arm. minor league clubs last season. bases-loaded triple as the White _ Sox struck for five runs in the STILL TICKE TS READING, Pa. (AP) Jerry tire compound different from products in the field. Only one The Dodgers' fleet center But he breezed thrtfugh the Daniels of St. Paul, Minn., took the one on which he qualified for of the engines suffered mechani- fielder, "who batted .284 three Pirates' jiue-up Sunday, throw- seventh to overtake Minnesota. FOR CAGERS A three-run eighth got Montreal the Eastern Opener in the USAC the front row? NASCAR rules re- cal troubles. years ago, broke an ankle slid- ing 96 pitches, and also contrib- Yarborough, who almost quit past the Dodger Bs. CLUB BANQUET Sprint Car races Sunday. quire that the car be started on ing the following spring and uted a single and double to the He gained the lead in the 27th the tires it used in qualifying. racing three years ago, now has missed 20 games, finishing with Baltimore attack, which was Pitcher Rudy May hit a grand The Winona Cagers Club lap of the 30-lap event and held The daredevil Pearson, al- won $290,696 on the professional a .257 average, then, dipped to keyed by Mark Belanger's two- slam homer in California's vic- banquet will be held tonight Kosidowski the margin. ways a charger, threaded liis stock car circuit. .250 last season, was hit in the run homer off Jim Bunning. tory over San Diego but the An- at 6:30 o'clock at Kryzsko by a Claude Raymond Davis gels' B team managed only five arm was flown from the Commons. pitch in Saturday night's 3-2 vic- Dodgers' Vero Beach, Fla., hits off Diego Segui, Darrell tory over Atlanta. camp to Los Angeles, where Dr. Brandon and Bill Henry in bow- The banquet is being giv- Hits 277-678 The Braves beat the Dodgers Frank Jobe, the club physician, ing to Seattle. en to honor the Winona 4-2 Sunday while St. Louis was to study X rays of the inju- State College basketball • ;:¦ Ron Santo cracked two hom- topped Philadelphia 5-3, Wash- ry, .v v . . ers, driving in five runs, as team which was co-cham- ington downed Kansas City 5-t, "This is pretty rough tin In City Pin Willie the Cubs whipped the A's for pion of the Northern Inter- Boston edged Detroit 5-4 in 12 and the club," said Manager their seventh victory in the last Mixed bowling leagues are innings, Cincinnati downed Walter Alston. "He might just eight starts. Jim Davenport's collegiate Conference this not known for a propensity for Houston 6-4, the Chicago White as well not have come to spring past season. high bowling scores, but Jon two-run triple was the big blow Kosidowski paid little attention Sox handled Minnesota 6-4 and start all over again when he's in a six-run eighth that won for Several area athletes and Mintreal hipped Los Angeles' B training, since he to the normal routine Sunday 'll have to the Giants in a struggle marked coaches will also be guests. in the Guys & Dolls circuit at team 7-8? able to play. Even then, it'll by 16 walks, seven hit batsmen Tickets will be on sale at Westgate Bowl. Elsewhere. California shaded take him six weeks to get and six errors? the door. Kosidowski. rolling for the Kosido-wski-Evans team, scat- tered 277-678 to . easily walk away with weekend bowling honors. His 277 game put him in a tie for third in the top ten in the ctiy? while the series missed the elite list by only three pins. Team honors in the loop went to Niemeyer-Stahmann with 773-2,236 behind Marv Niemey- er's 578 errorless. Mary Doug- las topped the distaff side, cracking 208-527 for Douglas- Neitzke. Jan Neizke had a 501 __ ^^^™y and Leona Lubinski a 500 in the _ji_\f f-ffiS^^^^^___*m^ • tuhfeSfeSS • vtfhklft&iitf,&ll'^v ¦* same league. -fJsssaBf^KkaS^Sr^^Bs^s^KK^^^^^B^^K^—' ^ ^A In the Father & Son loop at Westgate? Bob Swinsen show- ed the youngsters how it's done when he shellacked 266-637 to General top the bid-timers. It led the BB l^lB p^ I ETF Swinsen-Wise team : to 396. p Meanwhile the Schneider-Ander- son combo shot 1.082 behind Daryl Anderson's 190-493 which ^^ was the best sons' effort of the mr ^ftHftft \t AAO 1 V« ^B? -^-W^m^^M ^^B^^B-^9 day. ATHLETIC CLUB: Sharon Praxel dumped 461 to help Wa- basha Cleaners to 836 in the Nite-Owl loop. Dick's Marine tagged 2,372, and Gert Jereczek hit 183 for Curley's Floor Shop. WESTGATE: The Bowlers, with Kathy Benter hitting¦ ¦ 460, totaled 808-2,307 in the Kings - * BI ^MI FULL STOP . *- . . Toronto Maple Leaf goalie Johnny man Brad Park (2) tangle during the Rangers' final game & Queens Iqfip. Arwin Overby rijflfeft. - jgf ^mE*__Wn59JB \ i l ^ i ^ r W,rfuBsfSflSf "™"*^™ Bower, right, puts the stop* to a scoring attempt as New of the regular season in New York's Madison Square Garden rapped 207-544 for The Silver York Ranger forward Jean Ratelle (19) and Toronto defense- Sunday night. (AP Photofax ) Tops, and Evelyn Luinstra had 169 for The General Line. HAL-ROD: Alley Gators took team honors in the High School PREPARES FOR PLAYOFFS Girls circuit with 931-2,628. Deb- bie Kaehler had 184 for Ding Dongs, and Linda Schultz bag- ged 440 for Yippies. In the High School Boys loop Rod Hanson led 8-BalIs to 2,273 NHL Winds Up Record Season with his 227-517. 69ers shot 818. KB^__^^^ ¦RraL vB TWy^^^^L_\^^_^______^_W__^U_^ KOMI ¦ M By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS York thumped Toronto 4-0, Bos- record-setting. ner-up spot was worth $750 to H STH H^^'l-inaWHBffiBQKn& pHB'^tt^fiEvQKl 'B' HSBI Its record-breaking regular ton slugged Montreal 6-3, Chica- In Boston, Phil Esposito Giacomin. The Rangers' total of season ended, the National go walloped Detroit 9-1, Pitts- pushed his point scoring mark 196 goals alltfwed was thc best Re-Elect Kulas Hockey League prepared today burgh edged Philadelphia 2-1 to an incredible 126 and tallied figure in the East Division and for the annual Stanley Cup play- and Los Angeles tied Minnesota his 48th and 49th goals of thc second only to St. Louis, which offs . 3-3. season, shattering the record allowed 157. President of In the East Division, thc In Saturday's games Montreal for a centerof 47 held by Mont- Ron Stewart scored a pair of champion Montreal Canadiems clinched the East title by beat- real's Jean Beliveau. goals as the Rangers pushed host the third place New York ing Boston 5-3, New York topped Esposito's lincmate, Ken their home ice unbeaten streak to 18 games, tying a club ^oflball Group Rangers and runner-up Boston Toronto for third place 4-2, Chi- Hodge, scored his 441h and 45th The Winona Softball Associa- Bruins face tho fourth-place To- cago and Detroit played a 1-1 of the season as the Bruins fin- record. New York set team re- cords of most victories (41), tion elected officers at a meet- ronto Maple Leafs in Wednes- tie, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh ished the senscfn with a record ing Sunday and Max Kulas was day' tlhe tied 3-3 Oakland bombed 303 goals and 100 points, three mtfst points (01) and most goals s opening games. In , (231). re elected president of the or- West, champion St. Louis is Minnesota 7-2 and St . Louis short of the Canadlens' cham- scored llpftagisBifgm^ Pit Martin scored four goals ganization. Bob Hogenson Is this f ' home against dropped Los Angeles 3-1. pionship record haul. ^ third place PhMa- and Bobby Hull boosted his sin- year 's vice president, while Roy delphla while second-place Oak- With all final positions deter- New York goalie Ed Giacomin Hazelton is treasurer and Jon land faces fourth-place An- mined after Saturd ay's games, clinched second place In the Vc- gle season record to 58 in the Los Black Hawks' romp over the Kosidowski publicity secretary. Complete geles . Sunday 's action wns strictly for zina Trophy race by shutting A deadline of April 13 was Front End In Sunday New individual bonuses and more out the Maple Leafs. The run- Red Wings. Gordie Howe , who 's final games, celebrates his 41st birthday to- set for any now team which Brake Relme day, had two goals and two as- may wish to enter the league Alignment sists raising his season's total this season. There are current- Our speclallm , Our specialists correct caster,mt,ama f reimo an i . _. _ to 103 points . Esposito, Hall and ly seven teams in the league. f *A —^ _^ camber, toe-in, toe-ont 'oJ^yH $n'd.Vffi 1 '«« «¦* '«» Howe are the first players in A meeting will be held April , SfcTftQ afi manufacturer 's specifications , r m broke drums. *p M \\\\~M~ # * Ford NHL history ever to pass 100 13 to set tho schedule for the anrl qnfotu.plinrlr vniir rnr' «* flf M|ust br«ke«, U _f ChevrolM ana snicLy-ciu cK your cm s m rta)0r8 (|u|d Jr Jg points for a single season, coming year. League play will Steering. m ____ JLW Ramhl«r Pittsburgh , out of tho playoffs again be held on Tuesday and Tofil CMt - firl» ¦ ¦ ....- m"W*jm MBfm for thc second straight year, Thursday evening of each week. Steer Clear of Accidental tni Lat>«r Moit Other Car» ... $3**MS stretched its season-ending un- Last year thero wore eight beaten streak to six games by teams in the circuit. Returning knocking off Philadelphia. from that group nrc Main Tav- LUTHER BURBANK GcoYge Swarbrick scored one ern, Oasis Bar & Cafe and Man Penguin goal and assisted on kato Bar. Missing from last the other. year's league are defending FLOWER SEEDS The Penguins finished in a tie champion Hamcrnik's, runnerup for fift h place in the West with Federated Insurance, Cheer's # Special free gift for all visitors — two packages of famous Minnesota. Barbershop, Hof Brau and Dan & Marks. EHJEBl Luther Burbank flower seodsl Giant zinnias and mari- Lang s Bar has taken over 1 BI LCB^ golds! Kaloldoscopicl the Hamernik'a franchise, while Rod and Gun Club Sunshine Bar takes over for Federated . Dutch's Cafe is n Meeting Tuesday completely new team, while COMPLETE UNDER-CAR CARE . . . Thc Winona Rod and Gun Scotty's Bar is a combination Club will hold its monthly meet- of the old Cheer's and Hof Bra u ing Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in teams. Holzlnger Lodge, A business ¦ meeting will be held, and dis- ANNOUNCES SIGNING f^iMi* TAGGART cussion concerning the anti- WORCESTER , Mass. un - draw down bill nnd the pro- Ma tchmaker Sam Silverman posed raises in license fees will announced today the signing of be conducted. light heavyweights Hal "TNT" TIRE SERVICE V WESTGATE LIQUORS A wildlife film will be ahown Carroll of Syracuse, N.Y., nnd VS? Open 7:30

DICK TRACY By Chester Gould

BEETLE BAILEY By MorT Walker

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BLONDIE By Chick Young ,

LI'L ABNER By Al Capp

THE FLINTSTONES By Hanna-Barbera

STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Lasswell ' ' ¦ ' ' " ¦J : . _ ; ; ; ' . V . i » ) > J ' * > "I

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$12.00 Silver casserole with cover and lVfe qt. pyrcx liner $9.00 SEE OUR STORE FULL OF SALE-TIME VALUES IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, RINGS, MOUNTINGS * tlps and Io fer8, DIAMONDS, LIGHTERS. CRYSTAL, IDENTIFICATION BRACELETS, AND WATCH BRACELETS \\N \I>-> " <3 ."^v J-S^Q? £ym' IIAKEIt'S SHOES ^|Sp I C^/ A »j 123 EAST THIRD ST. PHONE 7078 A^^^ ^v j jz• iz— Q?ffiX®i(mritt> la • SHOP FRIDAY NIGHTS 'TIL 9 P.M. © j |*MBMIHlllliM| JEWELE RS *\g/ SINCE 1842 SS y^i-0^\Z^y7^l/^aa_<>aa^J>\ty>iiy>\iy^ *s_. >-w . v-, ,*_. *, j *. . „ «_- A.. . ^