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6-11-1974

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1974). Winona Daily News. 1399. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1399

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]. Fair to partly ^ Person to Person cloud y tpnijgjht Communicators! and Wednesday "OH" Want Ads ' " ' ¦ ¦ ¦;¦ ¦ ¦" "' ' ¦*' " X . . . . . ;. . Medieval SaIzburg Nixon touch stone? By-SENNETH SALZBURG ropean leoders before he gets ventiori Monday in ;Atlantic Expressing a hope ior similar SALZBURG, Austria CAP) —. to MOSCOW. V City, N.J., that hei thought Kis- success on his trip to four Arab President Nixon met more than A final determination prob- singer had brought some, stabil- nations and Israel, the Presi- 1%; hours today . with Austrian ably will depend on whether a ity to the. Middle East, and M dent added: "Every nation in Chancellor Bruno . Kreisky to hew 7 declaration of: principles fears the President's; trip might the world has. a stake in; this lor the North; Atlantic Treaty bungle: the ., cease-fire agree- journey." , discuss the American 6hief ex- '¦ ¦ ecutive's- trips to the , Middle Organization ' :is . initialed by ments, "- . . ' Nixon had told a : farewell East and Moscow. ; NATO foreign .ministers in Can- Nixon appeared to be coun- crowd at the White House: '"We Nixon . leaves, this ada later this month.: . ting oft medieval; Salzburg to be realize , that one trip is hot go- medieval ing to solve are, city Wednesday for . Egypt , on Ziegler also defended VNixon something of a good luckV talis- differences that against criticism by7Sem: Henry man for his trip to the Middle very deep, which go backmany the first : stop of a five-nation ; ' Middle East tour. . M. Jackson, D-Wash., who said Ea^t..y XX 'x . X . . ",'- years and in some cases cen- that the. President "is screwing turies; But we also realize .that Standing bareheaded in a '¦ The talks also touched on Eu-. it • iip,'' in. reference;; to the steady rain, Nixon on his arriv- a beginning has to be ioad6 . ..- ropean matters,. ; presidential Middle East 'achievements- by al Monday night recalled his 7Nixoh was stopping for 36 spokesman Ronald Ziegler said, Secretary, of State ,£enry . : AV stopover: in the city en route to hours in .Salzburg; to adjust to particularly the European is** Kissinger. Moscow .in 1972 and said . that the change in time before fly- curity conference that includes ing. Von to Cairo Wednesday : "That view is not shared by journey V"not . only . created a Russia and other eastern Eu- the majority in; the. Senate,'.' new . i ..direction as far as the morning. The only item on his ropean nations. , ;. Ziegler said, and . not /'by the Soviet Union, 7 and the United schedule today was a tworhdur Ziegler raised the possibility majority -. of the American States : (were concerned) .. meeting \yith Austrian Chan- that Nixon will hold ' a summit people, in my view." but contributed to peace.for all cellor' Bruno Kreisky, but his REVIEWING THE TROOPS .. ':• ItesidentNixon/accom-7 night on his arrival in Salzburg for a two-day stopover before meeting , with : Western Eu- Jackson told a labor con-* nations of the world." aides insisted that the Presi- panied by. his wife7and Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky, . traveling .on to the Middle East. (AP Photofax). V dent was not vacationing. reviews the Groedig Uniformed Marksmen Company Monday "Ho j^laiatioii at all,'1" ialfl chief of staff Alexander . VM. Haig, Jr., "it will be a period Cairaxgefy of Very intensive ybTk." - -; ^ Spokesman Ronald L. Ziegler said the President spent neariy pt all the 8%-hour flight from Washington, preparing for the talks he will have with; the leaders of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, li' ^'' - ' X'- - - . to escort Nixon and his -wife on the trip from Cairo airport; rMxj imkfc ¦ .'I- : 'y Z.- . .By MOlAELX$AT8X.Z'. Syria Israel and Jordan. ' used previously only by ' , CAIRO iUPI ) — Authorities liaiided ' out . thousands of to the 400-room Koubbeh . Palace, By JOHN BECKLER cans say other former White refusal to comply with the sub- ^ , Egypt's kings and the late President Garftal Abdel Nasser. . . Nixon; talked at length with Ainerican flags and workmen gave Cairo a last-minute face- : WASHiNGtON V (AP) — ;The House aides such as . John W. poenas; for tapes and other evi- SecretaryV; of Slate Henry k. lifting.today in a massive effort to. give President Nixon the American flags, including 3,000 the size: of small blankets . Dean IH, H. R. Haldeman and ' ¦ - ' ^ House Judiciary Committee, dence makes, it all;the more Kissinger about the v trip and largest Egyptian welcome in modern time. ;;. ... fluttered in Cairo and Alexandria for . thei first..time since driving , to complete its im- John D. Ehrlichman also important to call witnesses who how to Mow up the successes Government officials said the fanfare over Nixon's three- 1967, when Cairo broke relations with the United States M- V peachment inquiry by July 15, should be called. might be able to supply the Kissinger achieved in negotiat- day visit beginning Wednesday .will outstrip; even the mob lowing the six-day. Middle East war,. V ,7 , - The Republicans said N ixon " ' ¦' ' iarrippost in the traffic- ;;;./, is resisting Republican mem- 's same information. • ing disengagement agreements scene;that greeted the late.Soviet Premier Nikita: S. Krush- . Workmen painted every rusty ¦¦ clogged capital of 5 million andV along the nine-mile route, ::¦ bers' demands that it decide between Israel and Syria and chev in 1964; V -;X"ZX ' new Whether to call key Water- Egypt.;. yX -yx The enormous welcome ceremonies were planned: m part, but to the pyramids and the Sphinx, although TNixon is only .;. v gate! witnesses.. After accompanying the Pres- to thank Nixon for the: United States' crucial role iH7 bringing to whirr over the highway in a helicopter. V. ident to the meeting with Kreis- about a troop pullback agreement betweenVEgypt and. Israel. Donkey carts hauling apricots and watermelons to market : It also is refusing to get into 000 bodyguards from skittered aside as ' truckloads of workmen. rushed to patch ;Ven7 argument with President ky, Kissinger was. to make a Authorities mustered morer thaii 30, y forces and ordered 100,000 cheerleaders, frorn the potholes with asphalt and cement filler. V , - . Nixon over its right to snib- brief trip to the German border securit Ghoneim 61 order-: ¦ to meet with West Germany's Arab Socialist Union to whip up enthusiasm for Nixon . with Master of the camels Jamyi Ibrahim , , . poena "White House tapes, ig- two assistants -tb brush down.a gentle camel named , new foreign minister, Hans-Die- bands, banners, flags and street applause. . . . : : ed noring his latest rebuff and Lahce-carrying horsemen in blue , and white were readied Canada Dry in case Nixon accepts his offer of a free ride. making plans to issue a new \Aaln© governor ter Genscher. ¦ubpoena. By UNITED PRESSINTERNATIONAL Chairmais Peter W. Rodino . Ten candidates ar» running for governor in Maine, and "Jr., D-N.J., said after a meet- because of it -- or despite it - a newspaper poll shows half Kissinger ing of committee Democrats oil the voters still don't know whom they'll piclc in today's pri- ludg septate? Monday that it was "important mary election. In Virginia, Democrats are vying for the f and urgent" that, the committee chance; to unseat , the state's sehioir and junior Republicans meet its July 15 deadline for in Congress; Ihreaferis recommending to theV Houso Six Deinacrats and four Republicans w«re trying for a Ci^3i7ciii^a^/-J#f#. ^whether Nixon should be im- chatice to succeed IMtaine's two-term,Democratic governor, l^; fpeached. ' Kenneth M. Curtis, who is barred by the state constitution 77 from seeking reefection. ' : ' foresign ., If necessary, the House lead- A poll by the Maine Sunday Telegram showed roughly SALZBURG, Austria (AP)— ership wants an impeachment half the registered Voters in both parties were undecided on fifes vote by the full House in late ¦because of Secretary of State Henry A. ' their choice for governor. WASHINGTON . (AP) . -; A sought by Ehrhchmau, for his July or early August. Election officials predicted that no morfe than half of the federal judge today severed the defense. .' . V. Kissinger said today he would V V : 7The Democratic caucus : fol- state's 550,000 enrolled voters would go to the polls, Also at conspiracy trial of John D. Eh- resign unless the controversy . lowed a similar meeting of the stake were six congressional nominations and 250 seats In rlichhnanV from that V of three Instead he severed Ehrllch- over his role;in national secur- . Republican members, who the state legislature, : ' other defendants in the Ells- man's case and said Ehrlich- agireed unanimously Virginia ity wire tapping was cleared to send 's two races are for House seats irom the suburbs berg *reak-in case. . man would be tried later. X Rodino a letter demanding the of Washington, D.C. Democrats are convinced that Watergate up. ; U.S. District Judge Gerhard The other three defendants go question about witnesses be set- will be a big help in ttie ef fort to vote Reps. Stanford Parrls President 7 Nix- His voice breaking with emo- and Joel T. Broyhlll out of office. A. (resell said on trial Monday. : tied this week. on's refusal to allow. Ehrlich- tion, Kissinger said thie con- • Rodino has insisted that the man and his lawyers access to The three who will be tried troversy is hurting America's presentation of all documentary the: files he needs for his de- Monday are G. Gordon Liddy, foreign policy. evidence gathered in the in- Bernard L. Barker and Eugenic fense "makes .lt impossible for "I do not believe it is possible quiry be completed first. the court to do its duty" to con- Martinez, who were convicted ¦ previously in connection witli to conduct the foreign policy of The presentation, which con- duct ' a fair trial.' . . tinues in closed session today, On the inside: the Watergate break-in. the United States under these rroday is due to end June 19 or 20. 1' AIM 's scheduled session of the trial for AIM, 1 James D. St. Clair, President Ehrlichman, Liddy, Barker circumstances,'! he . told , a news S- " ¦ !« -. - leaders Dennis Banks andV Russell Means was | Nixon's ~ chief" Watergate law- and Martinez are charged with As for witnesses, Rodino has | canceled because of an illness that prevents conference. "If it is not cleared indicated the number the Means from¦ a yer, told Gesell on Monday that conspiracy to violate the rights com- I traveling — stories, page 2. ' , 7'J up I will resign." mittee Is likely to call will be the President still reserved^he of Daniel Ellsberg's . psy- s x f rms final say over what materials chiatrist, Dr. Lewis Fielding, Kissinger, his eyes glistening limited. I l_ 21llH UCA ' * Monday warned Winona city | ; \ T*I|IU *J*V couhcimen they would consider moving | from Ehrlichnian's own files by, sending White House agents with tears, claimed that leaks Charles W. Colson, former t to other cities if forced to relocate. Those spokesmen were I the former domestic aide could into Fielding's office . to the news media defamed his White House counsel who | among two dozen witnesses who has testified at a public hearing | use. Ehrlichman is also charged ' agreed to testify in pending | on the proposed city land use plan — stories, page 3. &' "The proposal is unaccep- with three counts of lying to; a honor and reputation. of "It is not possible to conduct Watergate trials, is the only po- The olosinS the Pickwick School Monday was I table," Gesell said, "It denies grand jury and one of lying to tential witness in which ^ ClACPfl him the right of counsel," the FBI. national policy under this sort the I V^?^'?" . aPPrw«d by the School Board of Winona Inde- 1 Democrats seem interes ted. | pendent District 861 — story, page 3. | ITALIAN GOVERNMENT RESIGNS ... Mariano Rumor, Gesell has said that he, not Tiere was no Indication when of attack," he said in delivering The Nixon , would be the final judge Ehrlichman will go to trial. his threat to quit. committee staff has been Italian prime minister, and Treasury Minister Emilio Co- instructed to question i IRA Sources '« the Irish Republican Army 's provisional I of what material could be ad- Also pending before Gesell The Nobel Prize-winning dip- him pri- ¦ ¦*/- ! Wing Say the lombo arrive at cabinet meeting Monday in Rome. A cabinet vately to determine what he | extremist group is considering a I mitted as evidence at Ehrlich- was a motion to find in con- lomat, again denying he or- ceaso-fire as a possible step toward talks wilh militant Pro- s member announced : that Rumor's coalition government, fac- s trial. has to say. l testants — story, page 16. g man' tempt "those persons in . posses- dered wiretaps on his subordi- ¦ ' ¦ ' "' ing a revolt by the Socialist party and by labor unions, has In their letter, the 17 Republi- }. - ; £ Gesell had threatened to dis- sion or control of the docu- nates, called upon the Senate ^^^^^m^mm^smm^iw^mm^m^smm:^^m^mm&decided to resign. (AP Photofax) miss the case against Ehrlich- ments called for In the sub- Foreign Relations Committee to man entirely unless Nixon poena," filed by Ehrlichman's reopen its hearings* to in- agreed to release the material lawyer. vestigate the controversy. Silo killer missiles Premier quits; 61uK'C Italy in vacuum l\Pf Mer5 y& W> ^^ , By VICTOR L. SIMPSON J>Ut4.i i. . Vrh/ win Senate's OK. ROME (AP) — The resigna- "Well I see we have of- tion of Premier Mariano Ru- WASHINGTON (UPI ) fered some peace plan over - ate sources said, Various after 1075 and prevent the mor plunged Italy Into a politi- there, Personally I can The Senate held a rare se- private Air Force 't groups have esti- from test firing cal vacuum today, com- think of anything that cret session Monday to see Minuteman missiles over mated that a Minuteman pounding the nation's worst would encourage a war classified Pentagon docu- warhead already is accu- the Northwest. more, than for a couple of ments then Mclntyre has argued that economic crisis since World and voted to rate to within 1 . nations to know they had allow the military to de- ,500 feet, the only gain from more War II. equal armed forces, If you velop highly accurate "silo and Senate sources indicat- accurate warheads would Rumor quit Monday night know thoy are equal to killer" missiles. ed the Air Force statistics be to allow the United States after the Socialist party, the the other fellow's, you will Today the Senate planned actually showed even great- to knock out a Soviet silo ,No. 2 faction in his coalition always figure that your to take up two controversial er accuracy, .with one missile instead of government, and the trade un- mon ore superior to theirs, liberal amendments to the To dramatize the current the three currently thought ions refused to go along with so you are ready to go lo military's $21.8 billion -weap- accuracy, the sources said necessary. his proposals for an austerity war any time with him. ons bill. One would reduce Mclntyro told senators what He said such a threat to program of tight credit and There is enough sports- the ceiling on military aid buildings within their sight the Soviet missile force higher taxes to stave off nation- manship in every country to South Vietnam from $900 on Capitol Hill would be hit would actually make nucle- al bankruptcy. It was the sec- that If they knew they had million to $750 million and by even an inaccurate mis- ar -war Ukoly. "It will put ond center-left coalition headed an equal break, to take a the other would set on over- sile. a hairtrlggor on a nuclear by Rumor to collapse in .11 try at the other (tountry. all ceiling on military Mclntyr* lost on a 48- war ... It might motivate months. "So this old thing of reg- spending. 87 vote, the Soviets to strike first In ulating armed/ forces so Sen. Thomas J. Mclntyre, In five days of debate so a period of international Italy's 30th government since thoy are equal, is the D-N.H., chairman of the far on the weapons bill , the tension." World War II lasted only three houie." / armed services research Senate has beaten.back ev- Defense Secretary James months. May 5, 1028. subcommittee, called for the ery major liberal assault, R. Schlcslnger has said /resident Giovanni Leono closed session Monday. and no weapons program neither side can gain a dis- asked Rumor and his cabinet He gave each senator a hns been deleted or cut, arming first strike capabili- to continue in office as a care- chart, stamped "secret" on The only notable changes ty so long as both sides taker regime until a nerw gov- ernment is formed. The presi- ffj ui./taj"* the top and bottom margins, made were to prohibit test- hav e untouchable submarine BOLSHOI SEASON PROTESTED . Bolshol Ballet, which begins Wednesday, The All r lahli resinei for Will ««?•'» that gave the official Ait* ing poisons on dogs, forbid missiles. He proposed the dent was expected to start con- Gdlled t»> Actress Diana Rigg speaks Monday at London protest was aimed Mtmorlol Commlrulon Force details on the accura- the Navy from give the sultations with political leaders at Soviet treatment of Bryan Starting using the* new warheads to whore she delivered a 20,000-signa- (AP cy and power of existing Puerto Rican Island of Cule- President "m ore options" in today ln search of a new pre- Coliseum, Jews. Photofax) U.S. missile warheads, Sen- bra as a bombing range times of tension. mier, ture petition against the six-woek season of the At AIM convention Posfor fe fp ihe un Wiitona fflan Iridiw ; t^y(AP ) ' i^Mohawk of , repre- ment las Ignored treaty provi- the' organization in certain Workshop on drug; abuse prob- . MOBRIDGE S. - MOBRIDGE, S. 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BUY WHATEVER YOU NEED FOR YOUR FAMILY, HOME AND CAR WITH WARDS CHARG-AU f* ^ ^ JOS MIRACLE MALL - WINONA L MIRACLE MALL - WINONA AZtoL>#x^ J Open 9 to 9 Mon., Wed, A Frl,, L ^ 'OQ k ll/l/ARPLQ ^^ . ? fO 5:30 Tuei,, Thur». & Set ,, I to 5 p.m. $und«y ^msr es . x ' t to 5:30 Tuei., Thur*. & Sat., 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday O ff ¦ Jl - , - . 7 * Jy i y -iyy 'XXj iX XJJ ^ Six y- .y By ;SySAN;.LOTHV-w'VV erfront use, said forman Kautz, pany's east end : switch yard Relocation , costs should be an outgrowth of an earlier plan ure to communicate'.' caused At-large Councilman Stephen missioner Eugene Sweasey said Dally NeWs staff Writer president of ; Bay State7 Milling might ,have, to move if the pre- shared by city and business, by a planner "nbt educational^ the uproar. TheVland use plan Delano, (1st, 2nd Vfards) sup- he appreciated input, but won« . Six local firms Co. 55, Franklin St; ' , including Pi * : : sent plan is carried out, he ex- y ' ' ' .'¦ ,. ' ly ; and is an excuse is only policy-vthe commission, ported Murphy's suggestion tliat dered "Where were you a year berite ;Inc., VBay State plained, v Mrs, : Cowj-jiil added/ V ;. , . quialifted" the city consider land use plan Jvfiiiuit , The city no longer is the best X X : Co. and; Winona BJiittlng Mils spot for; a flour mill, and relo- :¦•; A similarVwithdrawal can bt 7- The Land Use 7 Plan will.get for property confiscation . ; to his knowledge, hasn't eyen and zoning ordinance separate* ago?" 7 when the commission Monday support from ; JPatrlck Lowther considered a zoning ordinance public hearings, were held;' warned city councilmei¦ cation wdiild derive: residents expected if the east end oil COUNCILMAN Eugene Gongh ly, rather than together as the y T™»M ' v. ' : " , . ¦ ,ohce incorporates jolicy on ta implement the guideliiies, he Councilmen said they were the of 120 jobs and Va 7 $1.4 million tanks are ordered to move; said it chainber Vhas asked. •: ' consider mov- company payroll; William Mann of Williains-Wil- historical preservation, the rural (2nd Ward) left the chambers isaid. And although the plan en- pleased by. the "chance to see ; PLANNING commission mem- democracy in action;'* in; the ing 7 to other QtV Why can't Winona Knitting hert Vault Co;; 1635 W, 5Ui St. Wucionan said. for the. last part of Beatty's visions eventual return of rivet'*' 7 . ' talk after objecting; "He s not front industrial land to public bers said the plan was a policy words of Mayor Norman In- cities .if forced < Mills; S02i% 72ad Str . be-' at- V Additional support for the Wi- . Attorney Martin Beatty; 116 ' t o relocate. nona Area "Chamber of Com- Center St., Repeated his objec-! talking against the plan, he's use, "There was7 no intentVby guide only. Mrs; John luebbe dall, . "Wv" >Coou ti nP»nr il tached to the east end industrial ' " '¦¦: Speakers zone? asked; president Leslie merce position onV the land use tions presented at the May 13 talking against: people." the planning commission . . .. asked witnesses for inore posi- The mayor added he is look- were .among ' " '...' .; . . plaii catme from David John: hearing that the plan assumes: Attorney Leo Murphy . Jr., to have : the city take over ahy tive Vsuggestidns for change, ing for a planning commission- Woodwprlh . . rather, Kellum two doz^n witnesses who testi The wills is a good neighbor., ston, phamber executive vice population growth when there; chairman of the planning com- riverfront: property until: it be- than the vague . recom- er to replace Jerry , who fied at president ; J. Theodore Biesanz, Vdecline; jeopardizes mission when the land use plan comes economically useless," mendation'.; ' to "makei it. more said he resigned to! avoid voting a public hearing on th« with a payroll of over $2 mil- has been : ¦¦ proposed land use plan. lion arid ;without pollution or owner of WiiiCrait Industries. Amtrak service to Wihoha; is was adopted, said , "some fail- lie said. economically feasible". Com- conflicts of . interest. Fiberite and Miller Waste police -problems, he iwited. ' 1124 tt. Sth St,; Daniel J. Gos- Mills Inc., 501 W. 3rd St., In 1S6S, .the Winona VGlove tbmski, president- of Winona Heating and Veritilkting councilmen decide needs a Midwest location — bul .Co.,;. 416 VE. 2nd St., relocated Co., City it doesn't have to be Winona , to avoid : a: zoning conflict, as- 324 E. 2nd St.;VLedf Holan, vice warned company president. Bei serted president Byron: White. president of Winoria industries, Miller* '"We don't want ,to leave The toiripany can't be inter- 602 E. Front St.; arid Eugene here," he said.V Malay, Burlington Northern lo- "If we have to, ested V in another relocation " we will. But you leave lis no every 12 years, he added. White cal /agent.; V, . '. : Who would buy Vmanufactur Lir^ alternative: if you keep oft the M also doubted that the city caii way you're going:" afford the money to ; maintain fog .properties if they wero re The proposed land use plan mission at a special meeting biisihesses and industries will gan Block experience of the more than $63 million for land, zoned residential? asked ' , , buildings more park areas: '- David needs revision, city councilmen June 24. ' become npn-conforihing: uses, Winona Housing arid Redevelop- utilities and streets, , TIIE COMPANIES employ King, president of Watkins Pro- ment. Authority. railroad connection and reloca**: more than SOO persons, and have GREEN BAY and Western decided after a 2%-hour public V THE LAND USE plan -endors- and eventually have 7 to move, ducts,Vine., 150 liberty St. ¦ . If the city did vforce the 73 tion expenses. a combined payroll of about $S railroad might, abandon Minne- More opposition to the pres hearing Monday. ;' '" " ' . .:' ed by the city planning com- if: amortization outlined in the firms to relocate, it would need Even though the land use plan million, he said , y- , ' sota operations if tlie city insti- ent land use plan came fr on Council chambers, were jam- mission "is totally unrealistic, zoning ordinance draft is car- 552 acres of new industrial land is only a policy guide without ., Winona can't "afford the lux- tutes " any change whatsoever," Robert Nathe of Nathe s Whole med by more than lio persons as it lacks all concern for ; the enforcement V provisions, . is v ' ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ried out; he added. The result and a lot of money,. . BreWer ^t ury" of . zoning industry; out said C. H. Halverson, vice pres- sale Meats; 164 E. 2nd "St.'; Rich ¦ '' ¦' . ' ' '' - • - ¦ '• • ' ¦ '—!.h'-c-l ud* economic impact" on Winona, (State and iederal lays foreninner V of ra zoning '"- .. prdi«:;" of existewe ¦ ' would be either a lower.tax base noted. foivrecreatianal riv- ident : of operations: JTie com- ard Ozrnun of Ozmun Trucking V • - . y ' - ,. I ing, many sup- asserted Paul . Brewer, cham- control relocation in .Minne- nancie and any possible. restric- . 1350 East: Burns Valley and ox , prohibitive . relcicatipn ex- Rd. GitV porters of the ber . first vice president . sota), Total cost -of '. relocating tion has. a "very, subtle effect Maynard Whetstone of. 7 Whet -X: ' ¦•' •' a chamber coin- penses.yv. V . Winona Area spokesman for ¦ the 73 firms was estimated at on industry and business," he¦¦¦ stone Machine Co;, 270 W. Belle mittee which . has studied land ; Thirty-two manufacturing and said. •; ':. - .;; . view St.; union spokesmen Rob Council: «- use; during the last three weeks. 4-1 . other firms . in areas which Budget V ¦ St^ . a realignment ert Lindner . for .Bay State-basec ' . '. .. ' which 1 a. st Under the plan, and an unof- would 7 be . rezoned answered Port Authority will THE CHAMBER committee grain millers and: Donald Mul month called ; for- reopening of ficial zoning ordinance drafted committee survey. Although also objected to removal of riv- len for Watkins-hased chenai the May 13 hearing. Gbuncihnen by ' the planning department, many are home-grown;.Winona- hear report on erfront industry, which may les- cal workers; 7 and in letteri w i'l 1 V recommend: , specific about 70 percent of the city will owned operations-, most 'do only barge -fleeting area sen .Winona's.; chance at federal cal Jed for By Quie from the Winona Area a fraction of their sales in Wi- funds for a permanent sys- y Indus changes for the planning com- be rezoned , Brewer said. Many dike The United States must ; re- son who pleaded guilty last trial Development . Associatioi nona.;. " Reports on. a proposed city tem; arid - . -, to 7 the . planned a Jign the with' week to a- felony chaise' ot' ob- and the Winona Contractors charter amendment the tempo: ' : . . federal budget in- ¦ As- Companies forced to relocate , downzoning of many city res- come ahead of time, hot after structing justice, recently made sociation. thus might' consider other cit- rary barge fleeting area and ideritial properties. Buffer zones ' ¦ public Sis conversion to Chris- '¦ inarine insurance were expect- the fact, if inflation is to be : ¦ ¦ ¦ CHAMBER i-es to . escape Winona. and-or around existing industry were . tianity. - . ¦:- ¦• ' • ' ".• *'..' .' PRESIDENT Wil- tax: burdens Brew- ed 7 at a rneeting of the Winona suggested as alternatives: to re- ; curbed , First. District Rep. Al- ' ' liam Cftristehsen thanked the y , . . '. .. For. several months the. form- •^BlgP^i V er continued. Port Authority at 5 p.mV today moyal. It urged the planning V bert Quie said Monday. ; council for opportunity to talk ^rt ¦¦ er White House .aide has been in oity hailV V coriimission; to ."redo" the.plan : A cutback . in .' '' government meeting with a four-member at the reopened hearing; V the IF THE W firms left town, planning City Attorney George .Robert- after studying economic impact, spending can cut back on jspiral- Washington prayer group — in- commission for sever- property .owners; would have to son JrV was to discuss the pro- iiig inflation, al years of work on the -land developing a: specific railroad the Republican cluding Quie — 7 and discussing is dfead«for hov\/ pay an average iS.S percenf in- posed amendment, which paral- relocation planj and developing, Congressman told 225 men at the personal problems.. use plan, and labor and cham- , crease to replace the $707,000 . V , Paul Giel Field is dead, at That motion died for. lack of . lels special 'legislation . concern- the landuse plan together with . Winona Athletic Club's annual ber people who assisted in the least for now, " in lost tax Te"yenue, : the commit- stag banquet. . -' EARAIER Monday, the con- recent study. ;V a second V despite Board Chair- ing land transfers to the author- a zoning ordinance for ''prac- .;• V 'V: It died for lack of a second tee ; reported. Vy • ¦• .;¦ ¦ -' ¦¦ gressman -met . with • about 25 . The League- of Women Voters man Frank Alleys plea that "I ity.- 7 7 ' •. v- -V' - • ' ' tical impleiheiitation," Otf THE WatergateV affair. ' at Monday night's riieeting. of ' Relocation; likely would force persons during : afternoon office hasn't . taferi a 7 stand for or the Winona : District 861 School reailly think this Should be about. 23.5 percent of the firms Quie said he -expects the House hours; at the temporary court- against the entire use plan,' but ' ¦: brought to '& vote." V of Representatives to: impeach Board. - out of business, based on Mor- house.. . it does support ". the : plan's a, President Richard * Nixon. But ; ; After discussion that ran OTHER BOARD members 7Quie hasn't stepped up visits theory of ' 'sustained but con- sca r c e1y ¦ ¦ the Senate probably will . up- to Mnnesota because of the an^ trolled" ; present — 2nd District- Director Good hews^iun growth: to a maximum more than a -; a V ' , . Trophy correction hold Nixon, he added, Quie said nounced -candidacy of Wiiiona of 35,000 by 1990, : preservation : Mrs. Shairpri Hull was absent- he will withhold final judgment minute, . :4th * voiced no. reason for their si- DFLer Ulric Scott — [ he tries of bluff faces, arid subsidized District Direc- School The Ritshford Color Guard on impeachment 7 iintil . he's to reach the district every oth- mass , transit lence and representatives of the received third pl.ape trophy , 7 is to heard evidence from the ,. . . according : to tor Daniel i?a-. " goirig st^y cbm- er . week, anyway, he . said. spokesman Mrs; Kent Cowgill. ' ¦:. • ' . Board Winoria High Boositer Club Vivho in Vthe .1st District Liegion .; gressipnal committees. doTCski nioved ¦ • • • ... had sought, the vote stalked out. The sunV has broken tnrough and—riiore good, news—this Incumbents who have kept The league also called for a Jefferson . ' -.; ;¦—~" parade Sunday. Albert Lea forecast says it's going to stay. Asked what former special clean and ' stayed in' touch : with ' " . . 7 The issue may V arise again, was Incorrectly reported as White House Council Charles community committee to draw Field be naimed Paul Giel Fiek Skies will be fab* toVpartly cloudy Wednesday. Tempera-V . constituents have nothing -to a downtown plan of restoration since the board has not formal- Vwinner in the Monday pally tures will lows in the 40s and highs in the 70s Colson knew, Quie said the re- fear hn. autumn elections, the , in honor of the city's most fam ly rejected ; the V proposal" and • News.v ¦ be cooler\riih . renovation ; and redevelopment. oils athlete native. . ' ' ' ' ' ¦ TWiriona's high for Monday was 69; the low was 49. Since velations will come in trial. Col- congressman added. since ,half the board, will be re- - ¦ . ¦ 7 a.m. Monday, .11 inches of precipitation has been recorded V placed next month. BbARD TO MEET - ; making thes total for June a. whopping 4.94 inches. This com- The three newly^lected . direc- SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- pares -with .57 inches for the first 11 days in June last year, tors who will take seats at the cial) 7 — The Wilniington Town remainder that month board table next month — Rod although 2.98 inches fell In the of . Board will meet Thursday at High and lbv? temperatures for a year ago today were 94 Henry, . 1st District; Mrs. Mary 8:30 p.m. at the town hall, 7 an- rainfall. Trautner, 2nd District, Vand Dr. arid 70. There was no nounced¦ Arlb . E. Myhre, chair- Vflie record high for this date was set in 1956 with a read- Curti*? Johnson, at-large — were man: .: ' " irig bf 94 arid the record low of 48 was set in 1936. 7 all present ; Monday but didn't comment ; The field; naming issue wasn't on the board's . agenda,; -. bul Booster Club President Robert Lee asked for quick action to en- Wabashi Sthbol Bbard able the club to proceed with plans.for dedication ceremonies. "It's only fair that the; pre- sent school board members .. . rejects bill pub]ishirig be allowed ¦to¦ vote ¦tonight¦ ¦ ," Lee . WABASHA, ' Mirin. (SpecLaD— William Hawkins V and Matt ish and English; passed a res- " • " '. ' . ¦ -• . ' ' ¦ said. : . A motion by a member of the Metz7 Voting in favor were olution that nine-month non-cer- CHAIRMAN ALLEN noted board of education of Wabasha Bruegger, Wilson and John tificatory employes will be on Schouweiler. . that, in addition to the booster School District 811 Monday eve- . . a leave of absence when they club's support, • letters / support- A delegation of five women ing the naming have corne from ning to have the bills published to pro- are riot working; accepted th» from Kellogg appeared Frances the Winona Area Ice Associa- along with the minutes of the test the closing of the kitchen at resignations of Mrs. . meeting was defeated by a four ¦ ¦ Iverson, of the Kellogg cooking tion, Winona Rotary Club, Amer- Kellogg School. . . " . . -;• . ' ' "'• ican Legion, Kiwanis Sunrisers, to ;three vote. staff , and Mrs, Cecelia Jacobs, Winona Kiwanis Club, Winona Clifford Wilson, in making the AT THE beginning of the head cook at Wabasha, and ap- motion, said : "The people have 1974-75 school year the school proved the contract with the Area Chamber of Commerce, ^ Women's International Bowling the right to know." William district will, conduct a satellite day . activity center for next Congress ," Winona Area Jaycees Bruegger approved the motion. food program; through which all . ¦yearV-...V"..7 :..Xy and the "Winoria labris Club7 food will be prepared at the old Two meetings were scheduled Allen said he had heard of no SUPT. WILLIAM Sand&erg school here and transported by for this evening — non-certifi- opposition to the Giel Field pro- explained that the cost of pub- vans to the new Wabasha High catory employes at 7 and the posal, but added "there Is still lishing the minutes for one School and Kellogg School. teachers, regarding salaries, at meeting was $68.43. He said that ' ' some apathy," Mrs. Arthur Hager, Kellogg, 8. " . . . V' V- . Giel was ah outstanding high it could cost from $500 to $600 Members of the negotiating a year to publish the bills. spokesm an for the group, said ¦aWa*M«IKimMa«a ^MW« ^X«

Winona KNOWN HORRORS Kentucky Tried A^k«« Community Theater SPIRITUAL MURDER I (MUim I SHIRLEY Ma dAINE SUPPER ClUB 3^05FOUNTAIN CITY, WIS. 1558 SERVICE DRIVE, WI NONA • June 14-18 * • • "THE POSSESSION OF JOEI D^LANEY • R /S^jmKELLY'S

BEGINS TOMORROW Kelly s Bring You: WITH Kelly s Bring You: , 0R 0VER^ • 88 /ears of furniture __\W&RM?mm ' Bassetrncra Rowe experience PURCHASE • • .A i^^^ pW^ , .. ^^^^^ K^^^^ fa - - Chro ft Jamison $750**.-*,000*** of fine F ^f lPW i1 • • • || Jf ^ft Hfi m Stratford Lees furniture, bedding and carpeting ^^¦' • • • S-TRANSISTOR • Newest styles in Traditional # La-Z-Boy • Hammary Colonial and Contemporary ir^w^sW ™ZtoO • Simmons • International Exciting fabrics in Nylon >»» • M j ^ H # Singer • Lane Prints, Herculon and Velvets 1 1 IHHH i Ih 'WXWWKB M Kroehler t> Daystrom • Bold colors in gold, olive, ~. I II blue and rust I I eompiet. with radio, carry. # Keller Barwick f\\ vA\l|/A{> ln8 • *trap' arPhon« «*tath" UW /// ra H$ac\\ //>5&^ d * • Eight-store buying power ""*' "" **""* • Br°yhl • ThomasvilleEthan \\\\f/I sS^#^= Howard" • Free delivery or U-Haul ^-^ I *%^lj tijj §^ • M Allen for sgreater savingsy 1 ' '/l li^ ,L . II A QUALITY^ GIFT • Stanley _/» * .. *. \I ( ZENITH ' • Convenient terms \f -—- » YOU'D EXPECT KEUY'*! And Dt»ens of 0t,,e • Satisfaction guara„t«d ™" «' SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY .... DONT AAISS IT This Is Only a Partial Listing of Kerne Brand Furniture on Sale!! Entire Stock Included

¦ I *«¦• WW h t *•«* $,W r' hi m «•>« ?"¦ 1 All k ^ ! W ^J : ETHAN 4 fl * fci I ALL 1 i international M #; .i M kFI FR r > -¦- A ¦*¦ »-«- 4 U 7 DIC*PC A i i i-wi N l\LLLX !\ TARI, F^ i ruAiD N /-PIECE &^ ^ ALLEN ADLW I * CHINA 1 |;j I DINETTE tt I fe ti OHo/ occ I $ 15% FF 2 1 W W I Balance of °ftock <199 Mediterranean \U i < -] ; | V' ' —1Colonial |v : ; " '88 I I i.\ ,r! ; j .»—nj^. ' \ - , ; '1 , , , jf-7^*.».r-r;™r,--,-™.,-,- -_J.... ., . , ,,...¦,.—„^gv.. Jr „, ,!.^,.^,—^— " " - — "-i_ '""' T"ne " """'""'"** ', ' ""~^^,'nTT'T!^-""*^^~J'lC>T 'f . -"" \ { * — '*""'s^"J'<~', "'^7 ^'ra -^:""J'~"'r;,,!^'"s'*i5?"7 . ,, y-n--^~^.- -- rn % * y ?^.^yT «BHjvFfl 11 ¦ ' v f\ ' ¦ * '' ''" "' ¦ - f, , * " 1 ' 'i n'. ' i'»t J. »ter> jn.«if. ;i< wi, i. ij iJ..j .1'^^. Ji a' a* '. ^ ' ah iWiAettn.lmim'iH <^rfAi< er'*( i ji *..inlti»'|iJt>e fj t , j «e«»-Ofl« »riW*v> >Jnt»rfffl'fe*>j;WiWtJI,Wl^l1 < 'l>'!!)*,> V{, ul Vxi ^J^«^iiV»f»ig(J 1lllite)'jsjJ"jJ l^Ji4't '¦^ ». .t,v > .i ;7 ¦ j;,. .-. '¦' , i»^^W i l l^)^ ) ' ' *'' ' * ^ ' ' ^'^?i^^^^^-TT^ " ' ' 'ift ^^f j fWfei8W SHOP MON. -WED. - FRI 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

,.„. y «.,. ssie '" '•»'«•"" i " " " «TA ' - ., j "' ,.„;„;, ""i *« j 'li ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ^ V| ¦ ¦ ¦ «-«. ,. - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦' ¦ LAP,L ANEC ; ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ 1 -r y "!" . , I nRPKFp j i. I . | Twin Hollywood y : . . .jj . • . . . ' . . H Traditional¦ 1 DRE55EK & | j ncnc Xi y m*™ M GHEST i 7 , 4 7 . ¦ , LOVE SEAT jGEDAR . ;; S0FA ¦ 7 : . : MIRROR . ¦ | . f . . : | J 1 $ $ " ¦r: ' ^ ' ' ¦ ¦i- ¦ ; " -¦¦ ' 9 ¦ ' : '^¦ ^ • . -- C V ; . : . - i 68 ^' V . . . i^ - ¦ " - . Complete With Bed-,:, .!" -! " I \J \J , i " 5 fl 249 *2*8.' V || ' g «18 P- J ¦ ^ ¦ 8- ' ; , * : ¦ Box S I Padded Top |*;j ' Arm Capt . i;X Solid Pins pl } prlnfl & MattroiiM. . VVj, I m ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦:¦ ¦¦ ¦ ;'¦¦¦ ' mxm1 , 7V7t~ , n "(TO;rj ;*wr ,J r >i ¦ ' ¦ ' . .. .;:¦ ;y.z.' •' ' . " y< " ' ' yZ^yZZZ:^tym,- " ' ' •"71?''' X'WZZ 'XZZXJiZi*'] '^K^'i^'TWWl^^Tr^t'*$, &.4» 'Tia^ T-v''P' F'rv" > .' -P't 'V !; |^^ | ¦ "»;-v "eiHr ,"3"' '' ,T^-w*3ra'ra**"rr' *-; 'I", ' '- ' ' i - '"Y*'• .'~?."-Tri"i*;vrrfr.vTMr'aBrwS"SK^^ , :. M ;;^ ^taV !^ ^ ^-^itM^I^:^*^ ^ \ •^.i::.a:5;i!i^^li»S»^^^W ; , , ¦& ' ¦ ' *"¦ ' !¦ ' LAMPS I "•"•KROBHUR ; " "'' """¦ ! ALL 1 "* i| OOIIN»" IIH I|' i Harculon" • ' I Wediterrcn.cn"" IIf ' ^ j . & WALL . COLONIAL | MATTRESS & | Stratolo„ngcr I BEDROOM I "ECES BO NG I ¦ ¦ ! ¦ ¦ SOFA¦ I Sf. I RECLINER I ! SET | • ' & 1 i*"14^ ^ ' i . $ W » $ f^ 15% OFF »i89 I 119 I 99 ? ! 298 1 ¦ Free Delivery SHOP IN ,|#'«| j \f ! C' AIR CONDITIONED 1\ t L L 1 5 U-HAUL COMFORT! In Westgate Shopping Center cior or.-Nr s.vi...) ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦' '¦ ¦' ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦:¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦ '¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' ' ' ¦'. . . . . ¦* . '. .' .. ' , . .. * ¦ ' . •' . . ' . .. ' '. . ' ' .' ' . ' * -».7 ' ' ,' ' ". ; , *>?•' '' Don t make

derriagoguery rind falsehood.e Out- Presi- muddl Gilmore Creek The Thelatest charge against milk dentVNixon, churned -up by a:staff lays for milk supports actually drop- report from; the Senate Watergate james J. Kilp airift ped after Mr. Nixon's action—from a storrri sewer Committee, is.that the President ac- $214 million in fiscal 1871 to $174 cepted a bribe ¦- that in return for xhiliiotf in 1972. The 7 county board v merits appreciation for bor controls a potent vote^ the AFL- kicking off the fund drive for improving the Gil- a large pledge to his 1972 cam- the milk producers contributed. CIO makes large contributions: to the gn, ntibre Valley Greek ditch by allocating $95,000 . from paign, he granted the nation's dairy- $427,0007 to the -Nixon campai It men in 1971 an increase iii milk campaign of the congressman, the was a .iEat suirn,: But the milk produc- federal revenue sharing. That has encouraged • the congressman subsequently votes for consider allocation ask price supports. ers were buttering -up everyone. One vn tonight. Let Washington, the President rarely is ? The imost expensive and most permarient solu- go IN HIS JANUARY statement, Mr. accorded the slightest benefit' Of the the scoundrel . V. about his own tion is putting in a culvert and covering }i. Then BUT I HAVE returned M Mr. Nix- Nixon made ng bpnes dcwibt, In an inflamed editorial last motivation. He overruled his secre- Jt would bea storm:sewer.Vy on 's own. statement on , the milk af- weekj . the Waashington Post ; exul- tary of agriculture, and granted the fair released by the' White House on tantly seized upon what it regarded , higher price support, for largely pc 7 In 7 some stretches that may be the Jbest solu- , and that* statement still as new prOof of Mr. Nixon's perfidy: Jaii. 8 li' , He feared a¦' liemo- tion, but we hope that those concerned reaaTlize th^t strikes me! with the bell-like ring of iical reasons : The President had . decided to crat-controlled Congress would vote this waterway could be a thing of beauty which truth. ' the events Of late 1970 and grant the higher7 price support on . the price increase if he failed to could "be . .enjoyed by ; the public. You need only early 1971 cannot be viewed in a March 23,.1971, but the leaked staff - it by; executive;; order. The look . at what'the College of Saint Teresa Has: done vacuum. 'When the political wheel- grant report . "made the highly Interest- favor with its stretch of the .waterway 7to appreciate the ing and-dealing of the milk produc- Democrats would --thus gain ing .point that, two days elapsed be , and Mr. possibilities; — A.B. -7. ers is considered in sum, and when with the milk . producers tween the President's decision -and Nixon would offend a "vital political the public, annpuricetiierit of it." For account is given to the whole na- ' tute c>f political contributions, the constituency." the record, it ought to be said that Mr. Nixon collapses. ; The . President also believed — cor- if that point is highly interesting, the case against.v " Consider for. a moment a couple of rectly, V as it turned out — that the President himself made the identi- The home buyer not-so-hypothetical cases. Let us sup- public interest would .be .well served cal , point in his statement of Jan., 8*. pose 7that a major ; aircraft com- by the .higher'. support price. The The mlik deal, in briefs strikes pany, through its executives, makes Senate staff . aides who prepared the me thus; far. as spniething less than large contributions to; the campaign recent leaked report said the .higher a hot story. Me.mhers of the House dncl those of a senator. Oh a crucial vote, in- price was "worth hundreds of mil- Judiciary Committee ; apparently volving millions of dollars in con- lions of dollars . to* the industry — feel the same way. My thought is to tracts, the senator . votes; with thei and costing the same amount- to the cqoi''it.:V certain government and consumers." That clpsitig t caught. We ' of- any , much different it seems to me, as and give . them the assignment, ypu be required to disclose whatever charges Vere to as critics sometimes charged , ; all know that one does not need to , but a ogy 7 or foreign ; government. - to justify homilies by Halberstam at ought - not to say: "Please tap: tha be made 10 days in advance of their payment. reflection of postwar reality; At that Obviously, the 7putnt)oded Attorney • . use one's private telephone for the the expanse of buggers. telephones of all' of the loose talk- time the small but energetic Com- General's list did not include these purpose of communicating govern- They are 7 really after Kissinger ..' ers who . are privy to the minutes : V There's not : much controversy about that re-: munist PartyVUSA was busy set- terrorists of the SLA and ment ' secrets..- .- . recent these days on the matter_ of did he of the National Security Council." It qulrement, but Senator Proxmire says they're ting tip front organizations to ; lobby Weathermen stripe. Even ' if it had, or did he not 7 initiate the bugging 1) MR. KISSINGER was asked is Vrnore - proper to say * "Tap the meaningless without a control on closing charges. for its pro-Stalinist line:' But Stalin we're riot sure what good; it would '' of some of his subordinates,, or in- : by. .• '.Senator Fulbright,; during . .the telephones of everyone privy, to the is long gone, few Americans any- have done. deed of soine tmbmbers of the press, hearings on Kissinger's, appointment minutes of the National Security Well, more look to Moscow for guidance in ¦ It has become obvious in our own many people have had enough of federal during the 1969-1971 period, and . it as secretary of state, a question I Council.' ' That way you are not say- regulation and maybe' establishing a classless society and time that these organizations claim- federal regulation of closing 5sV.useral to consider the arguments remember at the time thinkin g of ing something: iyidious about a par- the ' international climate has ing some high-political purpose are . charges would create another administrative mon- and their progressive derailment at as highly indelicate. It was the ticular person, such as that Joe is strosity. " ', ' ' ' '¦' ¦:. changed. Russia remains a repres- in fact largely refuges for criminal . / the hands of Mr. Kissinger's most ' question: Did Kissinger himself ini- known to run off a bit about inti- sive, dictatorship with awesome mil- and disordered minds. The way to ¦ vehement critics. ; ' . • ' . - . ' tiate a wiretap of any single indi- mate matters when he has too much 7 The underlying trouble, at least right now, is itary capability, but it. no longer deal with them is not .through sub- vidual? Mr. Kissinger replied-In the to drink, or whatever. that home : buyers are so happy to get a loan seems quite as belligerent or reck- versive lists but through just appli- 1) WHEN THE headlines report negative, and, when pressed, said If Mr. Kissinger was pressed: to that "No Security In- they'll readily agree to any closing charges, of less as it once .did. Consequently, cation of the criminal law. triumphantly only that he had acquiesced In the give the names of-one or mote peo- which they're apprised when everyone gets to- ple whom he had observed to be a gether for the closing. At that point it's. either take little loose-mouthed, loyalty would it or leave It. — A.B* require that he not disclose this pub- ¦' ,. - ' ¦ . ;. ' a ; ««AfIII.C lfcl y. Because, for one thing, to be Spain oh the brink a little loose-mouthed is not neces- Wherefore let them that suffer according to sarily a critical disqualification . No the will of GooYcohimR the keeping of their souls MADRID 7— Long lines of people it were approved in a-referendum.- :: W(ipWiS|7 one Is more indiscreet than Winston to him in well doing, as unto a faithful Creator.— are forming these days in the Paseo All parties are outlawed here, but Churchill was — with the possible I Peter 4:19. del General Martinez Campos to see the communists probably would re- Tom Wicker ; exception of Henry Kissinger. And the new Carlos Saura movie, "La J main so when and if others wert vvi ip: i* i both are great statesmen. Priiriera Angelica," 'at the Cine plication Franco, cannot long sur- made legal. l Mp7,\«VV:; V Amaya. vive the great man himself. Franco Spain's concordat with the Vati- AND FINALLY, 3) I return to the point of the "bonded bugger." The film is about a man' s recol- is 82, . can and its agreement with the lections of the Spanish Civil War, United States on military bases her» l » i i| : No decent government official and of the families Portugal is a matter of keen In- must soon be renegotiated; both ne- should , permit himself to look at the broken along the terest in Madrid. That a . dicta- gotations could have unsettling ef- logs of telephone conversations ex- s harp political torship older and more restrictive fects on the regime.. cept Insofar as they deal with gov- lines of that time; than Spain's could tumble so com- MeOfcii ernment secrets. These excerpts, if lt deals frankly with pletely and . quickly has frightened BUT THE primary reason changa they occur at all , should be pulled a boy's sexual the old guard and stimulated the op- is in the air in Spain is that , as one out of the telephone logs by an an- position, of all shades and varieties. experienced lawyer put it, "Every- awakening and it ; onymous and highly trusted civil ser- has some satirical Spain, however, is not Portugal. body knows we are at the end of an ^"^itr^H^S^V^V 77VvV .l' vant pledged with priestly gravity scones about the It is not waging an endless colonial era." Both government leaders and fcn:;!:i!i !J*;;,;M>;v;^!i:!w;il';^M^ to guard the confidentiality of con- Falange, the offi- war , its army is mostly conservative the conservative establishment, versations extrinsic to the point in cial party of Fran- ; and loyal to the regime, and its peo- therefore, prefer some "liberaliza- question, These logs should be in- cisco Franco's in- ple are much better off economical- tion while Franco is still at the head stantly burned, and the bonder surgency in the Wicker ly* of the state. Otherwise , they fear, The work bugger protected by law against any 1930s. Even the major communist fac- his death and the sudden absence questioning about them. of his authority would risk greater THAT IS JUST the sort ol Him tion , which long , ago broke with the Why are these elementary subtle- thnt was forbidden , in Franco's Soviet l/rilon , over Czechoslovakia uphea val and .more democracy than in success ties escaping the attention of the re- , they care to contemplate. tightly controlled Spain , until a re- and other developments is moving William Bean, Sir William Osier fined inquisitors of the Nixon ad- sedately rather than swiftl y for cent relaxation of press and cultural That is why the censorship has Professor of Medicine at lowa, ministration? Is it because they are censorship, At the ministry of in- change, Santiago Cnrillo, the com- been relaxed — and why as yet the spe-aking to honors graduates: becoming primarily inquisitors , and formation, for another example, munist leader, said In recent- change In Spain is mainly In the only secondarily men of refinement? ly that the communists could accept name. they will tell you proudly thai only I urge upon you the need for Wjs/iington Star Syndicate a monarchy after Franco's death, If New York Times News Servic* . ' Y&H, DAD, 4URE YOO KNOU H0IO IT FEEL9 one book has been banned this yenr, work. William Osier described To &er ewocK our TWEE TIMES IM A as against about 80 in the same pe- work as the master word In medi- ROW., . BUT" HOT BY A &RLZ riod last year, cine and I would take his aphor- The Spanish press — which still ism a step further and say it IB tha apfiajpntly Imposes a pnjdent A matter of scale master word in any accomplishment. amount of self-censorship — import- If one balances great talents Winona Daily ed fully on tho revolution in TortiiRal. An editorial In , er scale, when applied In two di- against great capacity for work, so News also It gave avid renders relatively Portland Oregon I an mensions, makes the difference in often the world's achievements will An Independent Newspaper — Established 1855 complete accounts of (he recent The map makers are unfair to our scales appear even greater. Alaska, be found to be those of the well- clash of government and tlio Rom- MEMBER 0» THE ASSOCIATED MUSS newest states — Alaska and Ha- on the map, looks to have about organized person with an Infinite ca- Catholic Church , , en when tlie KOV- waii Nearly all atlases and other the same area as Oregon, wherenas pacity for work, rather than bril- WILUAM F. W HITE ernmment tried to exile the bishop reference- . , Publisher works, in presenting maps its land area amounts to 560,432 liant, erratic, lazy and disorganized , " " ' of Bilbao for urging greater auto- .. --T- SERVICES FqR.. ' C, E. LINDEN . . , , , But. Mgr., A&v, Director of the United States, reserve the square miles as compared to Ore- persons of vast talents nomy for the Basque region. . ADOLPH BIIBMEB . . .. ,..' . Editor-ln-C/ile/ corners of the page for much di- gon's 90,209. For genius , which Is rare, my 0RUN B. J0ST The more open Spanish press- OAKY W. E VANS Manag ing Editor minished mnps of the noncontlpu- One Alaskan - Bob Pavitt, the little sermon has no meaning slnca Funeral Hold Today free would be too strong a . word ' -— 1 ous states. As a result ,Vhoth the Btnte director of M, SUB ROETIIKI .I! Asst, Noma Editor planning and re* genius defies all rules. is A strong new f orce stimulating Arctic ' slate and tho island .slate ap- swircJi — iMnks this C, GORDON H OLTE practice of the DONALD LEDEBUHR . ....„ . . Sunday Editor discussion and ferment here about pear to be relatively much smaller WILLIAM H. ENGLISH ...... cartographers fools people into be- Arrangements. Incomplete Con(ro//cr the possibility of political change- in area tlinn they rcnlly are. Learning to Live A. J, KIEKDUSCH . .,,...Circulation Mgr. lieving thnt the 200 foot swath to Its accounts of the revolution In Por- The most recent largo-format at- ' L. S. BUONIC ...,„..,.Composing Swprf. be cut across the state for tlio Her days were long and mean- iximTin > L. V. ALSTON tiigfll and the ciectlorio in France K'is received nt The Oregonlnit Alaskan pipeline will seriously dam- jFuneft/H- Horns...... Engraving Sup t. ' ingleis Fcrmori .' ROBERT VOGELSANO , . hnvo helped develop what appears shows 4B slates on a scale of 100 age the ecology. j* . . Press Superintendent "It Is something Her life an empty sieve Snltlc/w-MsiIln Funirsl The Associated to he a political cliche bore — that miles to % of an Inch. But Alaska , Moms Press Is entitled exclusively to like being worried almut a string on She never gave, so never got ona-mnn 376 E*st SarnU e Winoni tho use for republication ol all Itio local nows print cd governments like t hose of and Hawaii nrii on a scale of the ground in your backyard ," ho Sho never learned to live. ID this newspaper ut well as all A.P. news dispatches. Salazar and dc Gaulle, and by im- 100 miles to Vi of an inch. The larg- Phone Day or High! 454-1940 says. —Ruth D. Smith ^t^r^^^^^iH^Bmmmmmeem ammmmweammmmmmr

Is To fm ediior Biggest farm surplus The impeachment of Congress WASHINGTON - "Congress- a particular candidate then I you will be impeached?" man Cheesedip, how do you say God bless them. That's the "WHAT ARE you talking i s i n US D A person ne I feel about the Watergate af- Art Buchwald American way of doing things." about?" fair?" "But isn't that the very thing "The Constitution provide* t|rjy feacher May I say to you our greatest surplus In agriculture Is "I am shocked, appalled and that got the Committee for the that every two years the Amer- inexperienced personnel in our U. S. Department of Agricul- and I have said this publicly Reelection of the President in horrified that such a thing could many times — that we must ican people can impeach a con- ture. They just don't seem to realize agriculture in itself is happen in this great land of all this trouble?" gressman by voting him out of reproductive. If consumption is to increase by both more ' have reforms in our political ours." process. But I believe it would "1 don't think we should be office." tetirem^rif cosily and more of us, we first need to step up reproductivity in tarred by what the ' "What is Congress- doing to be a very dangerous thing to Committee "That's outrageous. You have all .-agrifculturei '.;. for the Reelection of the Pres- itS5 SK f*X* . time enoiigj to concert prevent future Watergates from pass aAy laws that would to prove he's guilty of a high * *** This takes Va anarket the American' farmer may count taking place?" make it more difficult for well- ident did. I am proud to say crime or a misdemeanor." on pri.7 Agriculture -needs 7 collective bargaining which gives "We are studying the matter that, although I have received r meaning people to contribute to "No you don't. All you hav» - ;^° 5 -thiflgi every year a teacher teaches, he or she the : fanner ; cost of yproducttpn plus a reasonable profit, very closely." a political campaign. Their contributions from the milk pro- to prove is that the congress- agriculture must be competitive with other industries, and ducers, the oil companies and "Do you believe there is any voices should be beard, and if the construction man did nothing about corrup- f&SJj .S** ;^-^ *^&E must provide . good experience for* farm youth. . possibility that the House will they want to do it bl financing industries, I tion in government. Any Voter ere X "t re^? Valise of being over 59 Efficiency starts when the farmer's products leave the have never permitted this to in- will tell you that' &of age^X^', the - ? years pass serious election-reform leg- terfere in how s an impeach- government (translation -^ taxpeyers) would have farm .and go from thereV to the retail consumer. Repro- islation this year?" I would vote on able offense." to pay (via grants available. Our any particular bill. Every con- , low-interest loans: etc.) my university duction is the ability to have a fresh suppljr Hmmrummf son's expenses. Would that surplus is inexperienced jpersonnel in our yU. S. Depiartnierit "I DIDN'T understand the gressman on this Hill feels the , I thought you make 7 Mr. E. happy? PuHher- . wanted to talk to me about Wa- more, If teachers are hot permitted to teach after their fami- of'Agriculture. ' ;' question." Faculty member same way, If we didn't, we nes are grown, and thus ' would of course ask for JStiong- tergate." save for retirement, taxpayers .' . ' ING 014IE1M "Congressman Ch e e s e- W^-W^ may have to pay support for many elderly dip, what I meant was that al- er election laws." Los Angeles Times Syndicate teachers. Nursing ¦ ¦'¦ ¦¦ homes^ are very, expensive, these days. .. .'.'.-' ' '. • Perawah, though most members of the at WSC named "Aren't you afraid , Congress- Dally teachers ' " ' '¦¦' : Wlnon* Naw* Tf i i T* ^fPI^ P^y for is, of :course, a whote IZ -X X'y 'XX .Xi X . . •». : - . ; V- .y: 7 House are very critical of ev- man Cheesedip, thatlfyoii don't Winona, Minnesota topic by itself. Teachers have pass some ' »™ totraditionally been underpaid. ery aspect of the Watergate, reform legislation TUESDAY, JUNE 11, W* asking /or only that: which they believe they are they seem to be dragging their to committee entitled^ .,- taking Into- consideration thei pay . scales of con- feet wien it comes to making A member of the Winona struction workers) plumbers, truck drivers electricians, etc. the elections in this country less and considering also educational requirements, inflation corrupt, State College faculty has been * AAp raised for " appointed by the Minnesota TJTaO^McL p adAm experience* and responsibility involved. ne>r "I will not accept that. We I'd like to suggest, that: if Mr. Engrav is a teacher unable have been thinking about elec- Higher Education Coordinating to 8** a job, he find an alternative job. Back in depression tion reform for some time now. Commission (HECC) to a spe- days I couldn't get a job as a teacher, either, but I found We have been talking about it cial committee to develop the and held other jobs , and such experiences helped me to be poor in Africa for more than a year. How can full potential of technologies in a better teacher later on. you say we're dragging our post-secondary education in Min- MRS. MIRIAM ERWIN We would like to express our gratitude to the persons in feet?" nesota. Caledonia, Minn. the Winona area who financially supported 60 some "tast- "Mainly because you haven't He is Dr. James Spear, pro- ers" for African relief on May 16. done anything." fessor of audio-visual communi- By the combined concern shown for the famine and star- "Well, I -would like to say cations at Winona State. College vation stricken peoples in Africa by Winona State this. Reforming election cam- The committee on educational student rasters and by Winona citizens and organizations, a paigns is a very serious mat- S'JHL Qwmq.Wl y,(Dad... been sent for food and technologies was established in total of §462.76 was collected and has ter. We have to look at it from accordance with an HECC con- medical support. This money has been sent via the Ethiopian. all sides. It's true that there Project Relief, Inc. A clusion that planning for the in- Relief Committee in Minnesota . and have been abuses, particularly tegrated application of educa- special thanks goes to the Winona Ministerium and several in the area of financing politi- clergymen who went an extra mile in aiding tional technologies in the in- of our area cal candidates, and we're structional process is necessary J/ijj&L our project. very concerned about this, At Irlll^ In addition lo expressing our thanks, -we would urge all ih Minnesota. the same time it would be a Membership was drawn from Winona area citizens to read newspaper and magazine ar- mistake if we abolished these ticles which help you to become informed of the problems of institutional faculty, educational abuses and made it more dif- technologists institutional plan- Wil the poor and farciine stricken peoples of the underdeveloped ficult for men of high principle , ' World" countries. It is our hope that through such ners and private citizens. v -c "Third to run." the first priorities for * individual efforts we might call for a national bipartisan poli- "Then , Congressman Cheese- Among 'WM WL ' 88 QjuilbtcL tical leadership * which will promote heallh and wholeness the committee will be an as- * dip, could I say that you are of existing plans in ed- among our poor brothers and sisters of our world in their against election reforms this sessment dfanwnb&A- lZj & ^$Jj time of need. ucational radio and television, year? " computer assisted instruction JiibiciStJ^ , Ethiopia slrw TSEHAY ELIAS "1 AM NOT against election and interinstitutional informa- L^ I take the position tion services. a Ministry reforms, — TWIN P£AJ ^ ^-a^^» REV . JOHN PRESTON, United Campus $ 9.00 £ $. / FULL $11.00 QUEEN $16.50 .WoJltWip jj T\ - WhatarelOjsiggest boo-boos? the job. I doubt if Q — "With the U. S. bicen- the door. the harder ¦ ¦ ¦ any nation since time began tennial coming up, I still haven't • •. . .• has done more chuckleheaded found a high school student Q — "I have grandchildren Dr. Max Rafferty without stum- | things in a comparable period who could name who graduated from the pres- of time, so my difficulty is lim- bling all of the original 13 col- — "I am putting together the examples to 10. Never- onies. What are they teaching ent system of teaching. While book iting ZOOM'N'GROOM what I hope will be a theless, and after much mental the children these days?" — some of them had sufficient titled, 'Why Are We So Stu- wrestling, here are the 10 big- W.H., Pompano Beach, Fia. ability to see beyond the messy id?' There will be three main p gest American boo-boos of the A — Relevance, life ad]ust- teaching and the false premis- subtitles: Political, Social and past 40 years, arranged in de- ment, sharing with the "peer Economic. Would you be -will- and ongoing forward- es, I throw up my hands at scending order of comparative group" the stupidity of some oi their ing to make a list of the 10 asininity: lookingness. stupidest things we have done * * * thinking, and they are so cock- 1 — Fighting two major wars sure that they are right! during the last 40 years under with an annqunced "no-win" Q — "I grew up in a Piotest- any or all of these classifica- ant home. My parents lived in "It seems to me that today's y' mmmi *m&aimmmmmmfmmm_ ^ ___yZf \ policy. Ma/? wMMMmmj. mm$$M!l v«*7j!?\¥ VmB X& tions?" — F.W.F., Monroe, La. school systems are banded to- _rf/>tb jammwmm ^jmmmmm '.jmp s "'i iM ^ " -?mmf4 &<. Pouring gasoline on rag- an Illinois county that was 92 \\, .f nnti tf *J=;=st!l~P*BU 'sesB£__ ^ _a s always tough to single 2 — gether to 'graduate' a bunch A—It' through consistent- percent Roman Catholic in 1930 out, rope and extract from a ing inflation, of know-it-alls who really don't ly unbalanced federal budgets. and was full of excellent, no- herd of jackasses the 10 biggest nonsense Catholic schools. know anything. In other words, ones, and the larger the herd 3 — Permitting our schools a generation of sheep who will permissive baby-sit- "Crime rates were lower in to stress adjacent follow the leader. A nice field ting instead of real education, that county than in 'WacAonJ ^SS QmltuL counties where school discipline to be harvested by some dem- 4 — Developing partisan "ad- was more lax. Respect for el- agogue, don't yon think?"—Mrs. vocacy journalism" in news- ders was high. Courtesy was L.K.B., Jacksonville, Fla. CindttfL. (Band papers and on TV. considered a quality to be ac- A — This seems to be my Shfbb flEBSftj^* 1 "" ' busing fm j(_j »Ty ^__^^_tf * 5 — Forcing school quired by all pupils. Morals week for stupidity. All my let- M ABSTRACTS » to achieve a mythical "ethnic and morale were both high. ters seem to be concerned with TWIN ' $7.25 H AND REGISTERED 19 balance." lack-wittedness. It's true . that ¦ "What has happened- to H PROPERTY- 6 — Relaxing r of obscenity change all this?" — E.E.J., the national school achievement FULL __ $9.00 j1jj OjJtMjnpPn?5^^'*^ F"^^^*MAM -f iVt\—tm\y ^fL\ ^^SBB9WWlmma\\ ^ Court. WL ABSTRACTS B controls by the Supreme Edwardsville, 111. level has been dropping for the 7 — Discouragang of capital A —We educators began ask- past 10 years, but I don't think punishment by the Supreme it's because everybody is more *MmMmMV ^ ing ourselves bonehead ques- C ^--ss** // /J LINENS - 1^ Court, tions like "What right do we stupid ; it's because we have ^==S^ SECOND FLOOR 8 — Depending increasingly sold ourselves on so many isms 'I fir • High airflow and 700 watts (or fast, thorough drying? on' overseas oil while simul- have to impose our middle-class and theories wbich don't work Bn standards and values on lower- ¦ • Two-way power control- "Dry" for fast joom-drying, taneously failing to build the that we just look stupid trying y ¦ ., ¦ . - ! class children?*' and "Won't we (ff l** » . ,. "Style" for gentle grooming. * i Winona County H Alaska pipeline. to reconcile ^preposterous pos- rx Where Personal Servica- . 9 — Giving billions of Am- sow the seeds of future trauma- tulates with hard facts; // II t • Styling Brush. Wide Comb, Regular Comb attachments. . ny/ . V_y Is Still Important Abstract Co. Inc. H erican dollars ! to nations who tic psychoses if we insist upon Los Angeles Times Syndicate /•Shaping Comb Accessory-Snaps into styling brush. detest us. strict discipline?" . to form body wave brush. 10 — Developing a chronic When we finally started be- Phone 454-5520 H itnd monomaniacs!, obsession lieving guff like this, it. was with Watergate. all over. Nellie, and Katie, bar '3tij ^ ' $1 088 r^^'x ^^. .79fe (OcuL... Wtetifc Out JM. Mi/L 9rt yviVLdiomsL - HOT; MOIST SHAVE CREAM! (tfiik &

'• Uses any leading standard aerosol sfiave cream, . CL PJCWL {pajomaL ' 11 oz. or 6 or. can, ofi jHSp p / Shorty or regular styles in Knits or Pol • Hot, moist shave cream for smoother more yester L l^^^ vy f comfortable shaves, . Cottons. No i roning in Solids and Patterns, ' • Preregulated shaving cream tempo rature plus i jfvffill*"^tJm heating system that shuts off automatically. $ $ • Completely waterproof design. 495 to 900 • Bracket for wall mounting plus amp l« - cord storage. l^H^

' S f l^ tf // HOUSEWAI1ES - t^ "^ LOWER LEVEL ^ // /LS Gppote ' .) ^y/ [j WhereSM« Persona! Service FATHER'S DAY ate ^'fc Importan t l^ ? JUNE 1 6th Cpf// Where Personal Scrwice te \ \ J APPLIANCES - YrPP^^"7/ II' «. Where Personal Service fL*r Vy u Still Important LOWFJt LEVEL ml Im rlani J \}U V° FATHERS DAY ... JUNE 10 FREE GIFT WRAPPING School board roundup X zXlZy XXlzJiXi G<*jiviev*/ bij ildin^ ¦ ¦ By TOM JONES , night by V the Goodview City sota. '' ¦ ' "".' ' ' :. ' employee would V be the best that choice to fill the inspector's p*iH Ually News Staff Writer Council following a discussion Hendrickson emphasized Cooks to get with State Building CodeV Con- therie is a difference between sition, but that all applicants (js^ A decision to contact the Min- sultant Sivert Hendrickson. building and fire codes in the must have some background in * nesota Attorney General's of* The. council has been: dis- States and that any Vstate-con- the construction field to avoid might fall expenditures for training,. . fice v to determine if the city of cussing the installation and in- trolled code Goodview ISpercenl spection of gas hookups hi' Good- under would pertain to construc- , Hendrickson told the council Goodview is covered by a build- j view, particularly.In like . Vil: tion onlyV and that 'safety and that ¦candidates would; have to ing code was reached Monday lage Trailer Court. According to maintenance of any building af-* have .-'* a pretty good knowledge of building" to; pass the state A ratine request for pur- attorney to study the matter to department to maintain a $20 Minnesota statute, municipal ter construction would be up to . chase of two new cars, devel- see what sort of requirements, change fund. 7. salary hike building codes have been super- individual cities. He said that exam. He noted that any code oped into a discussion of the use The department needs to Winona School District 86i's Sewage licenses seded by state law since July fire codes do not pertain to pri- the city might fall under by;hir- the district: can make. ing anv ihspector would not ; lie cf auto seat belts by the Wi- make change for persons from cooks will receive a 13 percent 1.V1972 ; 7 ' V ' y vate homes under, any circuni- . 861 School tlie : community using the de- stances, with the exception of i»-7 retroactive to the: July 1972 stat- nona District Leave of absence ¦ wage hike under a liabor pack- will go into vv Board Monday night; 7 partntent's services. COUNCILMEN : are uncertain spectlon, of fire extinguishers in ute date. He said that - the orig- age approved by , the school whether Goodview is covered Superintendent Dr. C.H. Hopf The school board has granted ¦ ¦¦ ¦ apartment buildings. inal purpose of the state statute board Mon. : ' ¦- ' "-V effect July 15 by the state code, or if no code Councilmen; who have been to: provide uniformity for asked permission to seek bids a leave of absence without pay Rollingstone bank* ; was day night. Firms that install individual for Goodyievp exists, as is ihe discussing, the possible hiring of construction companiesto facil- on two new station wagons, one because of illness to Mrs. Shir- added as depository -with gas instal- worn out vehicle ^ The board vStho bl Case -municipalities which a city Inspector for itate inspection. to replace a . ley Mohan, a secretaiy at^^ Min- g a v e quick sewage disposal systems in ru- have adopted no official guide- iations ^arei uiisitre if such , a . to. be traded in and the other to Routine designation 61 city ral Winona; County must; be H- . THE COUNCIL alsoj 7 V fatal nesota City School. . :. official approval -tp . lines of their own. Such situa- move would place the city un- replace one wrecked in a banks as; depositories . Board censed by VJiily 15. : ' Met with BiChard. Will, crash on Highway 14 May 22. Administrators. said her sick district funds for the the proposal, . . . . tions are exempt /from , state der the state building code by • leave with pay expired Monday for school hamm « r- ' regarding building codes. guideline. park recreation director, to coming fiscal year included the : \ County Sanitary Administra- law constituting a formal The board approved the re* noon and asked the leave, which ed out /in talks . between the discuss a $2,300 expenditure for quest but not before At-Large addition of the First State VBank tor Larry Rupprecht has an- According to Hendrickson, the THE COUNCIL was advised 7 * will expire Aug. 12, the first cooks V and .' v.Etpard : Chairman state has no plans to force a by Goodview City Attorney Goodview park equipment. Director Dr. Charles W. Rog- ' of Rollingstone. : 7 ' ¦;' nounced the licensing condi- day she would normall¦ ¦ y return Frank Allen last week: uniform code oh cities Good- Kent Gernander to contact tlie • Discussed the possibility ers suggested , seat belt use be to work in the¦ fall; '-,' '¦ .. Business; Manager Paul Sand- tions, approved by the county amending city assessment mandatory in district cars. Rollingstone bank IN MOVING for approval of view's size, but there has been state attorney general's office of Officials said Mrs. Mohan is is said.the board last week. some discussion concerning a to determine the status ot the policies. Two district teachers were expected to be recovered from is not: as. handy geographically, the . almost undiscussed pack- The annual license fee is $50, seriously injured in that May 22 but said it will age At-Lafge Director ¦¦ Dr; state-wide compulsory code for city in relation to state law . No action was taken in either lier illness .by August..Her last as city banks, , but has been set at $25 for the every matter.' crash and VprV Rogers said "I be satisfactory for investments. Charles Rogers called it. "rea- municipality in Minne- Councilmen agreed that a city normal work day this spring : remainder of 1974. In . addition, strongly , suspect" lap and would be Friday, so she is ac- Board approval ndted rou- sonable." .- a $1,500 bond is required. shoulder belts were not being Rollingstone bank In his report to the board in tually missing only five paid tinely the Any person or firm installing ,4'g'flVni/rV)— .s-^*»-*\-v >-~>,^v^,.» i ¦ the wage > increase Business used. "The injuries aren't com- days. - ';. must pay. interest competitive , sewage systems for other pro- patible with; their -' use," he said, with Windna banks to 7 receive Manager Paul Sanders said the perty owners must be licensed, 9'WL $wmq. Tft y. (bod.. .. suggesting the "school should Petty cash inc rease investments: increase ; "will still leave them .Rupprecht said. License appli- be in 7 a position to dish put Other depositories will in- (the cooks ) somewhat below the cations are available at his of- some kind of penalty" to teach- The school board has routine- clude. Merchants 7 National wages of comparable employed fice in the county jail annex at V ers not using the safety ! equip- ly raised the: Winona Area Vo- Bank, First Northwestern Na- in other kitchen positions in the WVest 3rd and Washington ment provided. V cational - Technical Institute'is tional Batik, Winona National community, but they do recog- streets; (L Sy&cuwcL Board Chairman Frank Allen petty cash ifund from $i()0 to and Savings Bank and Town nize, that working conditions in The licensing regulations are /j fi llll ^t said he would ask the board's $120 to permit the cosmetology and Country State iBank. the. school district are better aimed at making certain rural than they . would¦ find in private sewage systems are built to indiistry. : P&iiccblszJ. V. TV payment delayed " • -. county and state health depart- &^VO The cooks received a 4.5. per- ment standards. A piece of televisionVprddiic- cent hikes in 1972 ahd a 5.5 per- tionV equipment won't be paid cent increase in* 1973. , for this month as Business Man- The 28-cent ,- . pay increase ager Paul Sanders had asked. across the board brings the pay Nelly Don ends The school board told Sand- range to $2.40. to $2.99: per hour. ers to put the bill through tegu. talks ta acquire I SVU/ANIA* |[ §1 lar board channels Vin July. He AS PART OF the. package, f BBW h^^^^A had wanted authorization to the cooks also received three Brooks equity additional holidays .jer year pay the bill when it comes lat- , Minn. (AP) er this month to clear his books and agreed to drop a request \ I J»l ^Sl ^e^ / for dental insuranoe since iriany — Nelly Don, Inc., an apparel of the matter before the fiscal manufacturer and fabrics retai- year ends June 30.". - .' . cafeteria employes do not work ler based (aiough .qualify for in Minneapolis and ' The v modulator costs $1,090 V hoUrs to Kansas City, Mo., has termi- Your choice of colors ( 7 Tl and is the only piece of televi- such a: benefit. nated negotiations to acquire In other action, the board Choose &om decorator colors of sion production equipment not an equity interest in Brooks In- tangerine, white, beige or yellow. III I \\\ V. financed by a; grant. approved leaves of absence dustries, Inc., of Los Angeles, without pay for the summer for Sylvania 100% solid state portable x^PJ V^N Calif black & white model MW3041 Vi Accounting machine the district's 42 cooks. . Nelly Don President W. R. £^?r ^=^ BusihessVltanager Paul Sand- The action is taken for tie Saeks announced the termina- with 12" diagonal screen. ers has been authorized to ad- seasonal, employes 77 to protect tion of negotiations Monday. vertise for bids for purchase of their rights under PERA. Sallrin & Linoff, Inc., a Min- ¦ a hew accounting machine. :-¦ . neapolis-based operator of spe- $9 995 The machine is ejroected to cialty shops and junior depart- cost about $19,500, he told the Routine fund ment stores, was to have par- school boards and will supple- ticipated jointly with Nelly Don ment an existing overwork- transfers QlCed in the equity financing propos- APPLIANCES al. That firm is still interested rSsssS^^/f^^f/) - ed accounting machine, Jr//S LOWER LEVEL 7 The district's accounting op- Three routine- fund transfers- in the transaction and intends ^*h a. ¦ ¦ : to pursue further negotiations ^" • W I WW i \Mt "^^Lm\ erations will eventually be phas- were 7approved by the school , /^h\x\&1'& ed into a computer operation, board to clean the district's said President M. L. Salkln. L /jf IT- FATHERS DAY "V **$ SlWlf I M *¦ JF ^T Brooks Industries operates Where Pers&nal Servka Sanders said in answer to- a bookkeeping as the fiscal year ^* >y ll a JUNE 16th Peck & Peck and House of Nine - - Is Sm ImP°"flnt question from 1st District Direc- ends: thisyjmgnth. : A -J " \J i tor: Nfttmfln Deckeiybutrilrwii] women's specialty shops. be at. least three years — if A transfer will . be maiie irom riot7 longer '— and Sanders is the general fund to. the trans- worried Vthe V present machine portatiori fund to cover trans- may not last that,long. . portatioh costs not reimbursible by the : state, said Business Secretaries get Maniager Paul Sanders. These HHH&aBa Mk mymMmW ^MMMMMMMMm\\^^^^mmmm-^^im - ^<-i< '& > ^V^i^i '.. < > *X~ " f ^^i^^^^^^iWBBBmlMmMMj include busin gof tsudents be- m ' ^ u\l ,^ >*' "*' MII / m i \ l ^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^^i^iHm m M_s_BBgB&m im lt^m^^^m^^^^mmmmmm\^ i^^&'^^^K-' * iiU'^i'^<^ * '' \ _ _ ' T ^ ^ *^ _^t^\j ^ '\%S0'' ^ _W^^______M BmMmmmm^B ^ ^mmW ^^MMMMMMMMMMMMM\ salary increases tween the junior and senior high The school district secretaries schools and buses;" to ' ' , athletic have received salary increases events.; . 'V' - . under a contract negotiated a The school auxiliary fund will year agoV gain a transfer from the gen- MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM mSiY J i -T I J * 4.^ *V^*44K|£ L «¦ * ^^L\\\\\\\ MMMMM M\. ' ^^ -m\\\\\\\\\mm\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\m\-' mmMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMWi! __m*r \ *|/ e, \S * ?* *^Smt **A^^^mMMMMMMMMme----m4-mMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM\ The board gave routine ratifi- * * *L eral fund to cover costs pf ath- ^i^i-sHi^b^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^iii ^i^i^i^Br '^Kffifj ^tit 's ^ i^ i^ i^ Hi^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^H'¦ cation to the increase, part of letic programs, which routinely MB^BBmlmmmmmmmmmr^ * *S\^^^^LMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM\ ^ ' Arrow knows the action man wants his comfort a three-year contract negoti- exceed athletic program , in- in style. Here's tlie shirt that makes , his moves . ated with the Winona Associa- come. easy — stretches then snaps back into superb tion of Educational Secretaries A temporary transfer from shape. It's 100% textured polyester 7*3tretch knit. V last year. 7 an unspecified fund will be Just right for the SO-yard line or the armchair The increase is 6 percent for made to the debt service fund quarterback. In smashing patterns and solids. the 41 secretaries , Business to make a June principal and in- The Scrambler — all-comfort ware in all-star Manager Paul Sanders said , Short sleeves, $12 , terest payment on bond issues. fashion . and brings the secretaries to an The money will be returned in average salary of about $2.45 July when the first real estate THE SCRAMBIER per hour. tax money is received. by ^MMMMMMMMMMema * VF** ^^|^P ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ HSS ^^^^^^^^^^^^ | »Ai ;row> Rushford names ^^HuHll ^MlSBMMM^SKBS.^^Ss9im9^^MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMm ¦ ¦ ^^HBBH^^¦ K ^^ S p S ^ l i i ^ i ^ i ^ i ^ H i GIFT WRAPPING, , ¦ ¦ HHp f + *lW^**^- ^tWmmMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMm\ '¦¦' ' " ' OF COURSE! n^mt£M% y f vfM£_%______w_M___\ ¦Hffi ^K^nRp honor students iF +*+$&• ^-^QgfflB| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Bj B B^M^^^ + RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) Boehmkt, Jay Boehmke, David Brown, gK ** ___. ^^ P^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H Lori Colbenson, Kallri Dahl, June- Even- — Rushford High School bas re- BelmiMmBsmMmmmt £n _ ^A «, ""^^ ^' * » * leased its scholastic roll for the son, Scott Feins, Mary Frollsnd, Ov»n * Mm ^tmM^m jn ^HH ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H Gaasedolen, Jeffrey Helling, Christ! ¦f SsH^H^ ._jjj r^ ^V^ -y I* \_ ._f __B__\___ \_S fourth nine weeks period of the Johnson, Lisa Johnson, Allen . Kirchhof, ¦ ^¦ *MfB "*¥9H^ \ ^^_ l^_ f ^[^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1 Donald K]os, Karl Lind, Mark McManl- BHHH.HwWBB^ ^H ^ * ^\*^m^^mm\mmmmnlSm^Wl^i\\ rfj| A|H ^^^^^^^ H 1973-74 school year. [| |C| AfP* y f______\\_____ ! W____m^mmm\i.* *eJ$MBmMmmMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM Students whose names appear mon, Cheryl Peterson, Robin Rasmussen, John Rislove, Karon Sand. SVLSH |3* WBBSBMMBB& * i f 8htWWi3lfl"3WB^^T'^^^'^^mBi^^^H^. *%. *%. ^&BM MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMW on this list have achieved the Grade nine: Jelf Albrecht, Terry Iral ^Un 3 ** '*nHH|HH|ttttUri ^rfa(>a.^i» V" ^Hf^^lFSH^ **f* ^MmMMm^Bil^MMMMMimt *3* £t uEluyH ^^^^^^^^^^^^ I equivalent of a straight B aver- Bunke, Kathy OrolvoW, Mike Ebner, age or better in all academic Debra Forsythe, Karen Halverson, Craig subjects. Jameson, De-bra Johnson, ' Kim McEl- HHHHH9tt *' "wpBiw^BM^^tttoS^jM^^BH MEN'S SHOP ^ Grado seven: Ann Colbenson, Robert mury, Robert' Mlll«r, Ruth Nordby, ^i^K Cvlhone, We ndy Ebner, Alison Holland, Teresa O'Donnell, Faye Torgerson, Doan Mary Inoram, . Dinlse Jacobson, Doreen Westby, . Fourth at Center Jacobson, Br«nd» Johnson, Lnorls Jorde, Grade 10: Mary Arnold, Michael Bak- Karen McElmury, June! Nelson er, Karen Bakken, Debra Benson, Dawn , WINONA , Helen H9H ^m^^^k +4i+i'S* It MmW ______DOWNTOWN Nordby, Denlol Olson, Les Pederson, Bremseth, Jay Bunke, Julie Butterfleld, ¦H^^^^^^^^^^ tt / AMMMm ^MWmWSmmmr * WBmmMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMW Lisa Sasl, Llia Westby, Brian McMonl- Joan Grover, Tocfd Hlmllo, Holly Holland, Bf **Mfrt ^__J ^3_ ^L9S-tm\PxTOfc ^J^h^-\\\\mMMa\\m\mm^Mmi^^^* i W^KMwiJ ^^^^^^^^^^^ H mon. Susan Hunoertioll, Dick Johnion, Renae Oradt tight: Kalhy Bakken, Cindy Kahoun, Rebecca Lombard, Marcella Myeri, Fatly Olstad, Karl Schueler. Grado li; Scolt Anderson, Patricia Austin, Terri Barr, Cindy Bunko, Faith H | ^^^^^ H ^ fc k»£ Erdmann, Lori Fort, Kalhyl Frolland, ^*mmmmm?m\m\%+^ * aSL ttJsW^ , % * *F v!u99Sl ^ l^9i ^ i^ i^ B> SH ^JMyii ^ i^ i^ i ^ i ^ i^ i^ i^ i ^ i ^ i^ i^ i^ i^ i ^ i ^ i^ H Ronald Gaskln, LeAnn Halverson, Patty B______mEk * Jw fTT* TB Tr* '* *+ ^ -bt Jmm ^^^ MK ^sflD ^^^^^^^ H^^^ H Hatllno, Judy Helleland, Loulio Highum, Patly Hlmlle, Howard Jacobson , Jackie Johnson, Debbie Kllbury, Leslie Koehn, Andrea La rson, David Laumb, Marvbeth LeticMtnbtrr o, Pamela Moran, Scoll h Moran, Diane Nielsen , Cynthia Peterson, ^^^i^^s^Bi^*' ^J^M^^S&C" *iA 1 * t-^^^^b j ^if f y^**&s^ Laurie Rollefson, Shelly Sorum, Pamela Woxland, Jnmes.Yonls , Mary Y«nls, ™_^ti=^!j r ™ EMlSlM ^^K3is^^^Bi^^^^BilMMBCT Grade 1?: Carol Anllnson, Peter B ouole, »^Ml- * "M ?a^L^s^BL^LWBl Russell nrown, Mark Colbenson. Ulrlke Fuerst, Ross Hlmlle, Scoll Hovland, Tim Mc/V-anlmon, Diane Myers, James ¦C- i Wilier, Sharrlo Pedersen, Wanda Scat- *^^A^^^L^3A|^2iW'*UKSi^H%0^ turn, Joaft Thompson, Jill Tortors-on, Dale Webber. KSaajSpV'' ''; '° Aspin cites violations 'tl^i-^^BRSS^^^^'^mPs^-^B in Viet peace pact ^mpF ^i iO90 X ^BfBmM 'MMMaB^^^^MM 'fflmMmmm-' ^amvm y W^ffl&S&SBmmm o0 x ( ) V2^ as low as $* I #j WASHINGTON UPI —'Rep, Les Aspin , D-Wis„ said Sunday • •• purchase one CHOICE OF FRAME FROM A LARGE I Mm he has found evidence In recent pair of glasses SELECTION - OF LATEST FRAME STYLES -. ' , . Pentagon teslinicny to Congress ^^_^_^_^m iFTl!III!!ST'w^^^ *», «toRs..NciuD.,.o W «ES. - of four direct U.S. violations of at regula? price, the Vietnam peace agreement. and pay only half SH itf | ^ Aspin, a frequent critic of the +m *%im~m4. -^mmm I ______f__fBa^mwK93 Defense Department, said all ^ I^^M ol regular price mm ^ ¦¦H^W ^^ ^mmH' wm^^'* rT four violations Involved provid- ™ MM *^F___f ^r M ^^^ \h\ ^A l Mrt mm^JiiicicntF ,l . , '^ ' ^^^ imMMmm\ r y0Ur D°S ' ing airplanes to tho Snlgon Wt imWnwimWi-ASPC ; Kk ^I?o W,N0NMT I" MAIN STREET government that were superior 'S ^ »»~'ivifel ^^iLI^HW PRESCRJPTION^ * TELEPHONE 454-3711 to those it hnd when the 1" ^KllI^IlS.r5*^Si^:i'V SUNGLASSES I — agreement was signed 17 STRAIGHT KENTUCKY BOUKBON WHI8K&V - 80 PROOF • t2>lBT4 ANCIENT OlSTIUjNO CO.. . -t-... J 1 OPEN AU DAV MONDAY THRU SATURDAY months ago. rR/WKTORt:KV. . . r^Mga___mr -.. --"

.1 /' " pcrf-¦ v ' S^H^ vla»pl ^v 7^- >.v: v 7v ^ ; /v V v; 7 ^ Hearings set policies ie ^ ifig^^ ¦ music at 550. V the district administration for absence, and : Mrs, . The Winona District 7 861 reason for us to give this leave Winona School District 861 cal $7, Eleanor German teacher spending ; a Yahhke •¦at School Board told its negotiator at all," said At-Large Director has a new philosophy; following Cfieraldine Blomgrro^ was re- 15 years of service on the board.: , secretary • . .- Central * year in (Germany. V onpiteif Elenientary SchobL to take a hard look at policies Dr. Charles JEiogers. "if negotiations you should school board action . Monday hired after being: severed in During his : 15 years On the concerning ; aileage payments ' Hp drew agreement froiii-the knock out every leave you pan,'' nightV y-;. ;Z ' February as a lisdf-time Ubrar- board, Dr. ; Rogers has served ; and leaves of absence in hegb- rest ; of the board Sewage connection inVarguing Rogers said, calling it a policy The board acted to adopt the ian at the senior high school at as vice: chairman, treasurer ttations . -with, the district's 'UeaveS should be given for le- left . "from the days '' ' when we compensation formal philosophy, 'the; first $4,442V50. :¦ . ' , ¦ - and sclool physician. A Rollingstone firm will con- teachers.. gitimate reasons that benefit had 'to hire anybody who could V, ' ¦¦; Minn. (AP) Caret Rustad wal rehired nect the Rollingstone School to ,pe complicated existing sys- the school district," such aa a walk," :¦ V MINNEAPOLIS, time the district educational pol- His term expires this month, j tem 7-for: — Sens; Walter F„ Mondale , XDr after a two-year absence as a that city's hiew municipal sew- piyiiig mileage to icy has been rewritteh since time as do the terms of 1st District ; , ' ". y .i teachers work- Minh;, and Harrison A. "Wil- thre^-fifthis business edu- »ge system. V7 '. ' 1958-:It was rewritten by a com- cation teacher at the senior Director Noman Decker and H & M Plumbing Co. submit- ' :' w- " x 'X .i Ing in outly- liams, P-N.J., will , hold hear- ¦ ¦ aid District Director Mrs. - » - -y mittee of teachers and admin- high: for $5,598 '- ¦' ; " . Shar** ted thei low quote . -.of ,525 for OChOOl ing schools ings in Minneapolis IWday on . ' Hull.: ' .' ' ' ' ¦ ^1 ; ' " " istrators . meeting during the Mrs.7 Richard Affles , a Col- oh ; . : X j[lie hookup. Other quotes wen i4 ; •-•'i:'' clrow fire from N^gofiafioris wim pr..op o sed wbrkera' com- pensation legislation; school year, and Superintendent , lege of Saint Teresa graduate, $2,171 and $2,198, Jstrict offi- Board board mem- Dr. C. H. Hopf, noted it has • ' '. . '' bers eager to The hearing will be the latest was hired as a three-fifths time Resignations OKed cials said. ¦ ¦ V . . . been approved by a parents * ' - . - ... "' ¦ " cut costs; and in a series of regional 7hearings home, economics teacher at the VFour resignations drew rou- group./ CUT TO ORDER tlie board Monday night also custodians to open being conducted by; the labor . senior high at $4,530. : tine school board approval. Tbe. general philosophy covers DOUGLASTON, N.Y". (UPI) tightened up district leave poli- Contract negotiations between , subcommittee of the iSenate Accepted were resignations of '; ble-time for all work on Sun- five areas: recognition of in- - A, iiiew restaiffant inv this cies and suggested further re- the Winona,:School District 861 V Committee on Labor and Public Asfistantipriheipal '¦' ; days and holidays. dividual differences among stu- Susan M. Johnson, an eleonen- ;suburb . ofi VNew . York . . City, strictions. Board and the district's custod- "Welfare. Williatns is chairinan tary art- teacher Mrs. George ; Union members V want- Jtwo dents; importance of assisting The School board has ap- .; features steak l»y the ounce-r- Negotiations between - the ians will begin Thursday, of both the Vwbole committee Ciptfv^, a three-fifths time home j the more paid holidays — tiiirPri- the student in formulating a set proved the return of the assist- from 55 to 70 cents an Voiinc*, board and 7..-district V teachers board learned Monday, night. day and the subcommittee. 7 and eebnoniics teacher at the sen- \ ' following Thanksgiving and values; need equipping ant jjunior high schoqKprlncf depending oii the cut. The were to resume this afternoon. Board Chairman Frank Allen Mondale is a member , of the of for ior high ; Mrs. Diane Dowhie, ; ¦ the employe's birthday. Allen students with tools of learning ; pal and the reassignment of the s(eaks are cut to order for each In a short report to the rest of *sajd the first meeting With the said the contract committee. ah; elementary teaicher who guest and grilled on an open proposal seeks concern for career development, man who took his place. . . the boards Chairman Frank Al- iriainteMtianee employes repre- to speed up the rate at which They will hear testimony on has been on a year's leave of hearth.:; " and development and strength- Assistant Principal Ron Weiss len—theV board's negotiator — sentative is set for 1:30 p.m. additional vacation time accum- the National Workers' Com- ening; 7o£ the student's sehsejPf is returning froin a year's leave ;said talks thus far have seen no Thursday ii the Junior high ulates alffiqugh pensation Standards Act, and ' ¦ ¦ , it would slalr. governmental responsibility. on"absence io Germany, the real agreement on anything school. - . ] ' stppi ,, on four bills dealing with respi- v at a four-week . ceiling; The philosophy states hi a gen- board noted. Den Groth is being teachers don't have in their 7 Allen said : the ratory diseases related to work- ALLEN SAID he has proposal seeks eral way the role, function' and reassigned to iiis former ibeiial current contract. received to accumulate ing environment. The Act PIANOS & ORGANS the union's sick -leave at the / respoonsibility of the city's pub- studies position after 7 filling 7 in i WINONA'S LARQEST STOCK . V V VTHE cURRENr mileage pay- . initial contract rate of 12 days per year instead would set minimum standards • -• ziienfc system proposal and hasn't yet had lic schools; : for Weiss: for a year. ' "heeds some over- . of the present 10 and would see for state workmen's icom- ' • CURRIER • WURUTZER • MELVIUE CLARK hauling, time to digest it all, " Allen saidi calling it but gave¦ payment . for unused sick leave pensation programs. fcomethingv other ho ard ¦ - - ' "' ' " " " y "that has develop- . " ' on 'retirement. V Among the witnesses will be Safety coprdinatof Good-by said to ed over the years" without a m em be rs. V- - , yy ¦ | jAA ELECTRIC PIAN0S ¦ ¦ " , , Sen. Hubert Humphrey, D- The school, board - has . named ) FENDER RHODES-WURLITZER ' hard lbok. . - . a. brief .sum- 5Cn66l V THE PROPOSAL for griev- . mBfUgM ' Mihn., aind Minnesota . Croir, a district saMy coordinator to three directors 7 The district currently pays naary of the 7 • V . ance procedures is identical to Wendell Anderson; mileage to teachers working in prop what teachers and secretaries meet requirements of the Occu- 7 .Th-e school bibiard said good-by os- "Board¦ ¦ . ¦ pational Safety and Health Act schools outside the city and ail's; high- , .;¦ ; . ,: : now have to three of ' its members Mon- , :Allen said, arid the (OSHA).V. y7 Goodview, and 5th District Di- lights... . . • '- , ¦ ' - . -: ¦ ¦ . ¦'. CLOeKWATCHING day night, a rhpve that includ- ^iy X^fr: Buy Now and Save . : . - union wants dental insurance (UPI) ' rector Mrs. Paul Kronebusch The custodians V seek a 20 BUENOS ;- AIRES7. - T*he safety coordinator's du- ed a resolution thanking one for and. hew regulations covering Employes of the various state yas harslly critical of a sys- percent salary increase, he ties were added to those , of his services! , transfers and filling vacancies. -in the province of tem . that pays, teachers .to go and also want a change ministries Norris Abts, assistant , director Retiring At-Large Directox said, The proposal also seeks two 15- Catamarca in the Argentine V HARDT'S MUSIC STOR E irom their homes to worfcV of the vocational-technical . in- Dr. Charles W. Rogers drew a V 116 Lavta Plaza Eait Z- ; Phohi «J*a7IJ in overtime policies that he minute coffee breaks per day. . northeast can stop clockwatch- . ( She said it would be difficult thinks could prove costly to the stitute. . thani-you from the , board and In addition to the 20 percent ingV" XXi Xi < "y A.hts will regularly inspect dis- to justify to her Rollingstone district: - ' ¦ -'• wage , increase Allen said the , A new work schedule plan trict facilities, listing safety . -V lPub. bate Tuesday,: .Jun. 11, 19741 . . . ; constituents, for example, how Maintenance employes ar e contract draft asks clauses, for it is residents of that eliminates all . reference to code violations and setting 7 up area now paid time-and-a-half 7 for all longevity increases and month- . ¦working ill Winona drive, arrival and departure times, but tbe machinery *ifor correcting there work over 40 hours per week ly adjustments to reflect in- it their pwii expense biit * says the employes must be at thein. : V REPORT I , and Allen said they are asking creases in the cost of living. . / PLANNED USE teachers working ih Rolling- . their desks during the same : C5lVSr time-and-a-half for everything ¦ 7 GENERAL REVENUE SHARING . "It says nothing about . what period that , the ministet in ¦ ¦¦ ¦Gemie) Reysnue Sharing prbtWei federal funds -directly to local and stata gbv.rnments. The t*wr«qui.res,eact) Bbvarnment t9 atone and living in Winona : Bill paying approved : to ei over eight hours each, day and happeiis if the cost , of living at fo? the^usa of these funds w inform its citizens ajid encoiirese their nlelpevon lti iaiWnt tWH; drive to work at taxpayers' ex- charge of each department¦ is¦ publish a report of Itt plans ¦ for all Saturday ' - ' ' ' - .:- ' • IhemoneVoughttobBtpBnt.Withlnlhepurposes llstad.yourBOvarnmentmaychangathls spah^ . - ' . pense; - V'7 work, and: dou- goes down," Allen: said. his. :• . .7 . . • . , Business Manager Paul Sand- The confusing present sys- ers drew blanket school board - tem sees, district teaechers paid approval ; to pay all biHs that 7: wfe.„.., T^SSnT ¦ Ja^Jxx ' mmrmmmyy ¦ '¦ ' ¦ ¦ : ' ¦ . mileage from the last in-city corne : this tdonth for the voca- • , ...biir^nv ' •• ' -x - - ' . • -: i. ' ¦ : • ¦ ANnCIPATlNaAGENERALBEVENUESHARWOPAV' . ¦ ¦ . . tional-technical institute. - . . . , xcu-f ne • •¦ : ¦rtt-tJ-'r . . .. school to the rural school they ' : ' " ' ' " " 'V 7 -;V.: V V" ;¦ ,V .' " . , " •'• , FIFTH EMTITl.?MSNT PERIOP,JULri.187« 7 teach at Alma students The fiscal , year ends this 7 * ' V $ $ . . " " ioW , although teachers hbnbred ISbS ^ : (Special)''' Daughters of the American Revolution: Wanek. ; : ' " ¦'" : n - ¦ ' .. . . . ¦ ¦ . ' ' ' .. 1HROU0HJUNE30.1976.FLAN5TOSPENOTHESE;, working in the city and- living ALMAW Wis.:. 7 — month, and Sanders noted it is i-^..!. " - ' LuAnn Pearson. . VVarslty basketball—Bernie Backer,' bast ; ¦ in Three members of the Class of Betty Crocker Homemaker of Tomor- important , to pay as many bills $ ;^BSFC?«^ rural areas receive no mile- percentage), all-conference first - »^ ;v - jijJr -j-Ji v:; . age. row r Laurie Youngbauer; . field goal ' as possible - within the year to ¦' ¦ ,: ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ 1A74 at Alma High / School Gold Home Economics Plris: Laurie teamt Rich B»cke»r, rebounds,'- . rnosf v ¦ - ' $ -v ' ¦;¦•' TOWNSHIP . :. The Winona Education Asso- Younobauer, Beth Baecker, Linda Krei- : ' gain state categorical aid re- f^ V' '^ ' . v . " —- v: pLEflsflwr HitL - . . were recipients of scholar- ¦ steals, honorable mentionI-. all-potiference; ¦ : ' ; ¦ ' ' ; V ; ciation's contract proposal seeks bich, . and Rose Rinehart. ',. - ' imbursement, The reimburse- " « MCREATION -: " i 7. ¦ . TWP. Ct.ERKV' " 7" ' ship awards; Speech: Patty Gross, Dabble Schroeder/ Ted Green, best free-throw percent, most - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦: * ¦ " ' " " ' ' assists, honorable mention for all-confer- 7 1 . .- ' ,'i: . . . . . - . . . . . ¦ . . i .- WINONft COUNTV 7-7 . '- to increase inileage payments Deborah Iverson received a Julie Wemette. Jan Sdiamoun, Debbie ment is lost if bills from this , e.^W wm,- . - s. . „. .,y.. . , .$I . , = ¦ ¦ . ¦zz. : x - from 10 to .15 cents, per mile Iverson, Steve Gorell, Vicky Green, ence. fiscal year carry over into the : ¦ - x m^mnE.±-x - music .. scholarship to Luther Sharon Baldwin, .and Judy Minting. ¦ /'Athletic ' letters-Mike Abts,. Bernie ¦¦:¦ ' '¦¦ ¦ , and suggests no changes in the Becker, J. Reed Benson, Ed Fernholz, nest. y 7 fg^a B 'S-V ' ¦ x % ' .:. . ¦; x- V HOUCTOH flINf«SOTfl i . xss*& College, Decorah, Iowa; Dan 'Journalism. Club:. Editor-ln-ctilef—Hose ' Dan - { I. present .system. Rhvehart;: Business . Manager—V I c k y Steve Gorell, Ted Green, Markey, i: ; ;;: Sohultz,V a four-year appoint- Green; Feature Writers—Randy Mueller Randy Mueller;. Tom Rothering, Bob : - : : dre-jliUon. docunwntlna . . ¦: ANOTHER POMCY the board Schneider,' Dan Schultz, David Stone, . • - - i ment to West Point Military and . Sherry Ebert; Mlmeotraph—Tom : B ^ ' * o, |a~a ^^ Jeff Baecker, Randy Balk,' Rich Becker, Five teaching MuaiPUBPOSEANtt¦ - « ¦ . I Mv» tieonla *• corwnta ol tW» ¦aid needs a hard, look is the Rothering . end Robert Carothers, FBLA • .' OHBRALWvr. '¦• ¦ S ^ ^ ^^^^^^^^ Academy; Dffvid Stone; an ag- Business Law: Sharon Baldwin, second Steve: Carothers, Greg Hetflck, Jerry . ffVf^^ granting of leaves of absence, Hoch, Kevin Larson, Dennis Mueller, ^^^ M ^IMm.teertH &m^ riculture grant to Wisconsin In state leadership conference: In. busi- vacancies filled IP EDUC y ; ^ »toe»lir and y board members Monday- ness law competition. Steve Peterson, Randy Radsek> Dave ^ s ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^ By yjtf^*^.. ^ — State rUniversity ¦- . River Falls. Brevick, Gene Dlereuer, Dave Greerl, ' f^rj , x voted unanimously to deny • a Senior certificates of sward for .Youth- *' ¦' ' ¦ " ||) iWNCI«!ll citoijo X'-X ' Tara Ruben won the Reader's Helping-Youfh program: Steve Gorell, Curt Heller, John Hoch, Torn Noll, The school boart has acted " SSSmiuettTPEVEl-OPMtWT - S*" -^^^^^^^^ /^ i- . ^ , leave requested by a teacher Randy Reidt, Kevin Rltscher, Jock Ru- ¦ ^f ^y Z ^r ^^^ i l •»ulr.th.8^t^•t^of •^T^^»mny»h«th«In n<»^^I»Cl^mIni•ran ot top student in Linda. K relblchi, and: Lori Smith. • . . to fill five teaching vacancies. 12 H0USING&COM- " -y ¦ ¦ ' " ¦¦ Xs&^t&M&gG&Zggattoo end other etatatoiy j»qolfirr»iiti Itrrtwl I th. and recommended by Supt. G, Digest Award as Library aides certificates): Twb-yeir ben, Lea Scharr, Joel Schoilmeler, Bruce eifcni .ceompmyfrw thh teport mill te opnplW tvlth Schultz, Robin Secrlsr, John Averbeck, TBarbara Cox, a graduate of _____—.—__MUNlWOEVr-toPMINT S i . ' httni H, Hopf.77 ' the graduating 7 class. —Connie Brommer, Mary Fernholz, Klrri %88&^^^^^^^^^$&s8mss&s$i ' •• ' liy tMi recipient sovetnment *lth iMptot te tl» entWimmt Annuel Stafi: Linda Krelblch-Editor, Iverson;- Marilyn Johnson. Beverly Mc- Glenn Axness, Pan Freese David Gorell, Luther College, Decorah, Iowa, Mrs; . Paul Green,. Alan Klrchner, John Marty, .^¦¦ gsgssasiirt* - ' $ VU , Cleo McMillen had ask- Chuck Passow—Assistant Editor, Dan Qulston; one-year--John Averbeck, Ger- - ¦¦ I L Don Ruben, Kevin Salisbury, and Bruce was hired to> teach elementary M OTHER ISptcify) $¦ . -- BW ' y Q&i(t^Om^.^^ - - ed a year's leave to accom- Schultz— Business- Meneser, staff mem- aldlne Baecker, Barbara Boettcher, Lu- ¦ . _^^^^^X ^^ ' ^i ^ ^ n , -- Lu- Ann Burce, Kim Freese, Lynne Schrelner, orchestra at $7,550. ; bers—'Mary; Brevick, Debbie Iverson, Godel. Perfect: attendance: '¦ . pany her husband ori sabbatical Ann Pearson, Tara Ruben, David. Slope, Erin. Green, Janet Loewenhasien,' Wanda . - Seniors—Linda xfaiJitotf ivH : Averbeck, Tom Rothering, and . Bob Nancy ; Boyuin; a . : Winona , ^^"^ai v /* JX "ilz/*7-i7JXi - leave to Vancou'ver British Co- and Debbie Strand. The annual was dedi- Passow, Mary Purrlngton, Petsy Stelner, ' " ¦ - ¦ ' "¦'• " T fi.m.«iTOi-PlMf«f>^ Print ¦ : ' . . , D«t». ;/ , Schneider; Jurilors^-jerry Hoch, .. Casey ' "U TOTALS . ' - ' . • / 0£.e. Xi "X -I . . . ; cated fo 'Mr. Gordon Jen sen. : David Sundbera, . Kay Vote. State College graduate, was , ' * S &AA/*7 lumbia. National school choral awa Miller-, and Steve Peterson; . Sophomores -m_ ^_^__ wmmmm__j__*__\_^^————^__}±_w l Business education: Lori Mueller, Ju- rd—Debbie —Dale y. Dienger hired to teach elementary vo- ^ ^^ "I dcffl-t thinl there's, any lia Wemette, and Randy Oesau, Iverson; John - Philip Sousa award—Rob- , .. Alice Earney, Kim ert Carothers. : . ' Freese, Randy Oesau, and Jock Ruben; Freshmen—Dan Freese and Lynri« Godel. Second-year Art—Mike Abla, . lori ' ' ' ' ' ¦ ¦¦ ' ¦ ' " ¦ Smith, Bob . Carothers,. Casey Miller, J. . Reed Benson. First-year art-Sharon Baldwin. CAR POOLS Mathematics—sophomore Janet Lee- DEKALB, 111. (UPI) — More wenhaaen, flrat In the preliminary con- test Wisconsin section. than 800 o{ Northern Illinois EASY Cheerleadlngl letter*---KaHiy Wantk, University's 4,000 commuter vB FREE 1 WAY— Beth Baecker, Patty Gross, Jan Scha- students have signed upV for maun, Debbie Schroeder, Julie Wemette, Kim Iverson, Sonye Youngbauer, Lori Compool, a computerized sys- Mueller, Judy Menllng, Cheryl Mlqheels, tem designed to help students ^B-^bfetiw^V"^ Ruth Carothers. Cheerleadlng certificates and . staff members form car I ; I MINIMUM ORDER REQUIRED S ^-—^ 7 -A/lcky. Green. Michelle Abts, Vlckl Wen- ger. Girls track—eeth Baecker, Kathy pools. jl lS;^;;^;^ COU PON SPECIALS! EBPT __¦_¦_¦_¦RUPPERT'S GROCERY ¦_¦ ¦¦ ¦ ffiS^SBB^ E ¦r ' FOLGER't l ":'^ iS - 1 :^??: " At Foto Foto Fun Fun...FamousWilson I INSTANT GOFFEE P|f I I Billy Casper lOO dolf Balls, only 29< each 1 f'10-Or. $| 49 With JE^S I I Regular 8O0 value! Jar Ji Coupon /ffljjfSmS I 1 Without Coupon 4t .1» iMmMliil ¦ Oood Thru 4-15-74 ffl j UHHIi ^ | .... 7.50+3- . M___mW §¦

RUPPERT'S GROCERY _¦ _H Hi •¦¦¦_[ Hi H | FOLGER'S COFFEE j 2 lb wi,h - $009 Coupon I Cnn' M_ ¦ | COMFORT... '. ' j. ACAPULCO - Handsome dpub(pknit Ko-del* Without coupon liM ' ,„ , , '' ' ' M ¦ ¦ 20+3 f Oood Thru 'W*74 . fj polyester Insure footwear designed to match his other doubleknit leisurewear. Diamond pattern in red and black,- bronze and gold, blue and black. HORMEL SKINLESS Machine washable and dryable. S,M,ML, and I wl I XL, $5.50 a pair. |jHMMWMM>ii i>WiilMii> I I PI II*——MM*MWMWMMMMMMM MMI WIENERS ^J? (JtFFlES®LEISURE FOOTWEA R FOR MEW LARGE GRADE A, ¦ FREE GIFT WRAPPING, I I OF COURSE)

EGGS... I 49' I orpurchaseoitworollB 1 ¦ ¦ ^r^ ^^B ^BB ^^^ of fllm pnor to m M Father's Day, June 161 JB RUPPERT'S WBBB (Limit 1 dozen p'er customer) MMM — GROCERY — MEN'S SHOP ^ 0PEM DAILY 8:O0-«:3O-SUNDAY >!0O-12:3O pA^ Fourth al Center " 7 B m St DOWNTOWN WINONA Phono 45M4M , „ __ . J* ' ' TUESDAY v ib licie riplrt ; -VV :. :The;Weath^ The dmy^record JUNE 1I> 1974 vice, 608 Huff St., ; hell »»• Burglaries Sunday rights ¦ ¦ ¦ takenyfrp.% drive ,w - . . . . •. - . : - ' " ¦:• ¦ " .;¦ . ¦ ZZ..y -' ; CITY v - ' ' '. ' , E. Fv Harveif, $70 ; lOSSi 7 y ; ^V ZX--: Two-State: Deaths Wiribna Deaths AiCdrrvnvumty Piggly Wiggly Store; 126 E. 5th St., entry breaking glass Memorial Hospital Vandalism¦¦ Bruno Reissman Neil R. Malyr-szyeW in door ; found by police:patrol- ¦ • ¦': CITY ',": (Special) for Neil , R. ' ¦ ¦' ; cigar^ DAKOTA; Minn^: r- Funeral services -yv- MONDAY • ¦ .' men ' •: at 3 a.m. today Flowers destroyed, saind put former fire Bruno Reissman, 76 Dakota Rt. Mialszycki 18 Hastings, Minn., taken; $100 , , , Adtoissions; ettes valued at $250 in mailboxV at Werner Bother** 1, a retired barber, died Mon- a native Winonan, were held this Clarence Cheslik, 403 E. 3rd dainage to door. 3 Fairfax St., at; Boniface Catho- ' : ing residence, day afternoon at a La Crosse, morning St St;- • .: " " ;yZ -' -;;x; x . -. . p;m./ Sunday; $5 da- Wis, hospital. . -".."_-' - " lic Church, Hastings'. The Rev, Michael ; Hazeiton, 815 40th abuot 5:S0 captain, dies - fhdfts v'Vv- inage. He Was born July 22, 1897, in Robert Blumeyer officiated. Bu- Ave., Goodview. 7 v -' .CITY- -;: The body of Ernest F. Harvey, Germany. He was an honorary rial was in St. Boniface Ceme- V Mrs7 Mary Duellnaaiii Foun- : : Greg Olson, 225 EV :Sanborn Accidents 9i; 52ft Johnson St., was found member of the Frohsihn Singing tery, Hastings. tain City, Wis. , V : Watch'taken from cafeteria Society; ;.;;¦> ¦ -; He was killed in a two-car Discharges St., Z-y.. .; GPTY:.V". at his home Monday afternoon. table at Winona Area Voca- Monday -; ' 7 ; Survivors are; his wife; Linda, collision early Saturday morn- Alyin Ekern, Winoria Rt. 2. , about According to7 Dr/ R. B; Tweedy, ingV on tbe Highway 56;bridge, 459 E. 5th tional-Technical School Time unknown, location, un- and a son, Rolf ,: Dakota; two Jfesse Drazkowski; Monday; Seiko brand, Winona County medical exam- downtowa St. Paul.;. st.; -;- 10 a.m. known; hit-run; Ralph L. "Wi- daughters, Mrs. Donald (Irma) loss. iner, death from an apparent McLees Genoa, Wis., 7 He was born in Wiriona July Marlow XramV565 E. King St. $75 . czek, 4574 . Sth St., Goodview, , and Mrs. PVom Steve's Standard Ser- ' ¦ heart attack had occurred some- Gilman (Liiise) Breeser, New 28, 1955, to Mr. and Mrs. David Mrs. Henry Kuennen and 1966 4-door, $30. • • . . " . . "., 7 Malszycki WEATHER FORECAST . V. . Cooler weather aiid sunny tin^ Thursday. Albin Iowa ; eight grandchil- .7 7' twin sons, 1054 E. Sanborn St. 7:18 p.m. -*r parking lot at . V * SuFvivois include: his par- Robert Lindner Jr.; 205 Whit- skies are expected for most of the. nation. Showers are* fore- dren and a sister, Miss Frieda Traffic case taken Cozy Corner Bar, 901 W.7 5tb He had retired July 15, 1945, Reissmanj ents, Hastings; one sister, Mrs. ten St. Pendle- cast for part of . the Pacific Northwest and a band of showers Austria. One brother St., hit-run; David GV as a : captain V on the Winona and a . sister have died. Thomas (Barbara ) Hansen, Mrs; Alt Schonsby, Rushford; under advisement Wabasha St., 1965 is forecast from Oklahoma to the lower Great Lakes. "Warm ' Hasting^; two brothers Michael ;case of a ton, 161 W. Fire Department after 25 years Funeral services will be Wed- , Minn. - • •• ; Testimony in the $20. weather is forecast for the Gulf states. : (AP Photofax ) and Douglas, at home, and pa- Goodview man charged with 2-dpor, of service. nesday at 1:30 pm. at St. John's ; Mrs. Norman KLee, 117 E. Tuesday Lutheran Church, Nodine the ternal grandparents, Mr. and 1 - "' making an improper ; driving The son of VWilliam C. and , Howard St. ." . •Time unknown, 865 Gilmor* Rev. Frederick Mueller officiat- Mrs. Alex Malszycki, La Crosse, Births 7y ., V" 7 start was taken under advise- Loca/ observations Rachel Grey .Harvey, le was Wis. -7 . ment Monday by Judge Dennis Ave., hit-run;. Winona Cira- ing.. Burial will be in the Nodine VMf. and Mrs. Janies Nogosek, WEATHER OBSERVATIONS for the born in Winona County Feb. 26, Cemetery. ' :¦ A. Challeen following a short itruction Co., 51 W. 4th : St., OFFICIAL WINONA Mrs. Lloyd Peterson 140 Fairfax St., a son. .-: . . 24 hours ending at noon today. V 1890,. arid had lived in Winona Firiends may call at the ¦ ¦ ' trial.in Winona County Court. 1964 truck, $400. . .:•- -; Dick- :' Mrs. Lloyd (Sadie) Peterson, • Mr. and Mrs. Steven Dicic, 59 B40 44th Maximum temperatiire 69, mihimurn 49,. noon 66, pre- since 1912. He ^was a World War inson-Jackson Street Chapel, La ; V Arnie Odegaafd, , 2:10 a.ni. — Chatfield Street 1 ¦ ¦V- ¦ ¦ 70, 471 VGrarid St;, died at 9:45 620& W. 4th St., a son.- Ave., was charged in connection cipitation , .11. V •' ' " ' . -; ' I Army veteran. On Nov. :?, Crosse, today from 7 to 9 p.m. p.m. Monday at Community Me- near West King Street, parked today: High 94, low 70, noon 87v no precipi- he married Laura Mae rMr. arid Mrs. Michael Carl- with an accident Feb. 26 near Thomas E. Lee, 830 A year ago . . 1918, and at the church Wednesday morial Hospital:: a: daugh- cars hit; tation. ' Burke in Winona. He; attended after 12:30 p.m. son, 67 Chatfield St., West 3rd and Olmstead Streets. 48th'".- Ave., Goodview, 1973 4- date .78 'to 57. Record • Tne former Sadie Thebline ter. Testimony caime froiri police Normal temperature raftge for this . the Pleasant Valley Evangelical Christianfion, she was born at door, $800 ; Donald S. Jaskola, high 94 in- 1956, record low 45 in 1936. . ' Free ' Church and was a mem- Frank Brownell patrolman James Bronk, Nor- Black Biver FaUs, Wis., Aug. man Heffiie , 659 E. 2nd St., Ode- 423 Chatfield St.,; 1963 4-door, Sun rises tomorrow at 5:23 sets at 8:5». ber of Neville-lien . Veterans , of ALMA, Wis. (Special) — Fu- ¦ BIRTHS ELSEWHERE ; $50 both OBSERVATIONS 11, 1903, :' the daughter of Ole gaard ahd his wife, Mrs. Evelyn $500, 1966 ; 4-ddor,. , 11 A.M; MAX CONRAD FIELD Foreign Wars ; Post 1287, Wino- neral services for Frank E. and Mary parked; Lee was treated for (Mississippi Valley Airlines) ; Brownell, 61, Alma Rt. 2 Thompson ; Christian- MILWAJJKEE, Wis. -.- Mr. Odegaardy na Barracks 1082, Veterans of , who son; She had lived in Winona minor injuries and released at Barometric pressure 29.92 and rising, wind from the NW and Pickwick Ma- died of a s^lf-inflicted gunshot and Mrs; Keith . Thomas, South Hen26j a driver for tie Yellow World War I, since 1942. Prior to . that she . Satur- Community Memorial Hospital. at 12 mph, cloud Cover 5,000 ft. scattered, visibility 20+ miles. sonic LodgeV A.F;¦' -.& A.M. ; wound Sunday, will be at 2 p.m Milwaukee, a daughter, Cab Co;- 260V W. 3rd ISt., testi- Thursday at lived at! Blair, Wis; She was a day. Maternal grandparentsVare fied that Odegaard had back;- Survivors are : his wife;, one Stohr-Hagen Fu- member of Central Lutheran daughter Mrs. Charles; ;(Mari- neral Home, Alma, the Rev. ' ^ Mr. and Mrs. LaCrpix Johnson , ed . his car into the cab Herize , Church.: , '" ' ' -Z- was drivirig on 3rd Street that lyn) .Monson, Rockford, V 111;; Lyle J,; Ness, Lyster Lutheran Cochrane, Wis. . Pickmck School Church, -; Survivors iare: 3ier husband; ;VMfem. - Mr. day. Odegaard said that he hit (Continued from page 3) five grandchildren ; one broth- officiating. Burial will two sons/Eugene, Circle Pines LEWISTONi CTydeV Winona, ; aid¦• one be in Nelson, Wis., Cemetery, * and Mrs. Robert Rowekamp , the Cab, but was "barely . mov- er, The son of Minn., and Douglas, Rockford, ing" at .the time arid that a de- tion swells. sister, fltos.. Otis (Merle) Gross, V pred N.. aiid Rachel III., :and eight grahdchildreh V Lewiston, a son Monday at St. Letts Brownell, lie was born in Marys Hospital, Rochester. . * . . livery truck 'blocked his vision Winoria. One son has died. Funeral services will be at as he backed 7into .the street, . ONE MAN asserted class '. ' Funerial services will be at Iowa April 30, 1913.7 He was a 2 p.m. Thursday : size was hot the: completeV rea- 1st Quartet Full 3rd Quarter New World War II veteran ; at V Central : WINON A DAM LOCKAGE 7 : The case was .prosecuted by :¦ ¦ 2 p.m. Wednesday at Pleasant , serving Lutheran Church, the. Rev; Flow '-T 5V,6O0 cubic fe«t ptr tecontJ st son- Pickwick students receive June 25 .-:.- " , July 4 ¦; June 712 June 1» with "the G. H. ' '. Assistant City Attorney Rich- . V a 11 ey Evangelical Free Army Engineers in Huggehv-ik officiating. Burial B i.m-. today; . ;¦ a superior education,.sincerhav- Italy. '"' . ¦V- V .y V . V- -V V •¦ . -; ¦ - ' Monday ard Blahniki Church, the Rev; Patrick Clin- will be an Woodlawn Cemetery. 4:4H': p.m. . — . GeorM Weathers, . nine ing three grades iii each: room Survivors . : Forecasts ton officiating.: Burial will ;be are.* two brothers, Friends may call Wednesday barges, down. .' .' . ' : LODGE TO MEET prompts student interest, "They George, Durand, Wis., and Fred, SiKl p.m. — . H, F. Leonard, .. .tight in Bush 7 Cemetery, Rldgeway, after 7 p.m. at Fawcett Funeral - other , to learn," ha : Nelson, and one. sister Mrs. Le- barges, down. SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe^ teach7 each . SJ^ Minnesota Minn. ' Home, Winona, where a devo- . 8:W p.m. — Joseph . Henry! nlrie cial) V^* Valheim Sons of Nor- said;"-. -- -' ,' •¦ ". '• Roy (Blanche) Burmeister, Al- barges/ down.. . .'- ¦¦ Scoit makes Friends may call today after ' ¦ ' ' tiorial service. will be at 8:45. .;• that if costs con- - . . ¦ ' ¦ Small craft — Seven. way Lodge 364 will meet at the . Allen noted Fair to partly cloudy to- Fawcett. Funeral ma. - . .. . - . . -Vy A memorial is being arranged 7 p.in. at Friends may call after 3 . Spring Grove High School cafe- tinue to rise ahd school popula- night and Wednesday. Cool- Homey Winona, . -pirn. FIRE CAXLS : ' decline resi- er tonight! Low tonight mii y V V Wednesday at the funeral home, teria Thursday. . at 8:30 ;. p.m. tions continue to , A memorial is. being ar- : dents district-wide will Have to Pallbearers Family ni ht slated ' . .' ' . Monday . , There will be a business meet- *0s. High Wednesday 68-72. - will be Marvin g Fillntorefy ranged. Schroeder, LaVern Carothers, SPRING . 9:34 a.m. — East Broadway ing, reports on Syttende Mai ae accept a poorer education "be- GROVE, Minn. (Spfc s all we'll be able to . Mihnesofa Eldon Bee, D.M. Ungenfelter, cial)—- Prof essorJoseph and Franklia . Street, fire in tivities, entertainment and cause that' ¦ Lang- . 7- ' • ' ' ,; afford. V ¦: . • • " Ulrich VReigh, and Russell Mc- lanid, Amherst, Mass,, wHl truck owned by Hal Leonard luridh.V " Fair to partly cloudy to- Dpnbugh. Publishing Corp., 64 E. 2nd St., ' speak att a family night Thurs- . night and Wednesday. Cool- . one-day Mir day at caused by overheated emergen- tonighl with scattered Five Winonans Roy Hazel 8 p.m. sponsored by er Ulric Scott, DFL candidate Sr. the Highland Lutheran Brother- cy brake, out on Varrival, re- frost extreme north. Low for 1st District Representative, LANESBORO,.Minn. (Special) hood at ' turned 9:42 a.m. tonight mid 30s V extreme ' — Roy Hazel Highland Church; debits made a day-long campaign Sr., 98, Lanes- Langlahd will talk on the cus- 5:19 p.m; — report of fire at Winona hank north; upper 40s extreme; boro, died Monday morning at no such address, tour through ¦ Fillmorie; County in toms arid cultures of the-people 619 E. 5th St., south. High Wednesday up- Monday, y' plead guilty a hospital at Osceola, Wis. of northern Norway. returned 5:24 p.ih. per 50s extreme northeast, "V A retired farmer; be was horti percent south. isiting with residents : at Nov; increase 19 LOT? 70s extreme their places of business, Scott 2, 1873, in Burr Oak, Iowa, Harvey, ^ Minneapolis; one to Dallas and Sara. Hazel and daughter X A 19 percent increase in Winona bank debits for the first ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ stopped in Eiishford ,. Mabel, , Mrs. Alvina Link, Winorian changes ~ those for January through . :' -. ' ' ' .wnscbitsin-v " ;_ - ' . ., -; Buffalo County married Theodosia Sprague at Minneapolis ; : nine grandchil- four months of this: year over . . Canton, Hatthony, Ostrander, Prosper, :April debits of $B6,554,O0O were 21 percent higher than that ; fair and cold topight Spring Valley, Wykoff Foun- ALMA, Wis. — Five Winonans Minn., on June72, 1906. dren; seven great-grandchildren guilty Mostly , The couple farmed in Spring plea to Bank of Minneapolis.: . . V V with chance of scattered; light tain, Lanesboro and Preston. — four men and a woman — and one sister, Mrs. Carl (Es. ',21 He^ Valley and Preston, Minn., and ther) VBandkau today Changed April debits of 586,554,000 were percent higher than that : frbst except partly cloudy ex- and his wife, Mary,: were Monday afternoon pleaded guil- , Owasso, Mich. A Winona man recorded the same month a: year ago; ; slight ty to two counts of theft and Stanley, Wis., before, moving to A great grandson, a brother his plea in Winona County Court treme soittheast with escorted by local Democrats in a farm north The total for the first four months of this year - was showers. Lows to 30s two counts of criminal dainage of Lanesboro In and two sisters have died. from not guilty to guilty of chance of each community. 1937. He was a member of the $334,686,000. and low, 40s. Wednesday inostlj when they appeated in Buffalo Funeral , services will be at charges of possession of . mariju- Mrs. Pearl - . Hughes, member Lanesboro United Methodist ¦' ana and driving left of the cen- ; Because bank debits represent, for the most part, the gunny and a little warmer. , County Court. V , .: ;; 2 p.in. Thursday , at St. V John's : volume of checks drawn by depositors against their accounts of the. executive . committee of The defendants were : Church., Lutheran Church terline.'V -; : : Highs low 60s to low 70s. tbe county. DFL, who was with Survivors are: here, the Rev. for payment of goods, services, debts and other reasons, they . Mrs. Rhoda R. Brandt, 22, B22 three sons, David .TFischer . officiating. Bur- DeWayneV Kreckow, 20, 1557 Scott in Spring Valleyy said the Ronald, Osceola;. Owen, Water- had been scbed- are consiidered an indicator of business , activity : in a com- v 5-day forecast Chatfield St.; Donald L. Lassen, ial wilt be in the church ceme- Cilmore Aye., ¦ ¦" , ' ; ' ' candidate appeared pleased , 229%V ; a former town, S.D., and Roy Jr., Lanes- ¦;. nled to stand, trial on the charg- munity.- - . 7 . . - MINNESCWA 'V7 43 E. 3rd St., '- tery.; . Statewide, the April volume of bank debits for reporting with .the response to his tour. Milwaukee resident ; gynther A. boro; ^vo . daughters,: Mrs. Friends may es today. He had pleaded hot Variable cloudiness with Robert (Alice) Roche, Hender- V call at' Jacobs cities in Minnesota increased 42 percent from April of last thun- According to Mrs. Hughes, he Benson Jr., 24, Wabasha St.; Funeral Home after 3 p.m guilty to both offenses in Winona a chance of showers or said he didn't want to speak to sonville, N.C, and Mrs. .Edwin . year. ' V derstorms Friday and Sat- Edward J. Bolstad, 22,207% E. ( Wednesday and until noon County Court following his ar- large crowds, but wanted to 3rd and Albert J. Bolstad, Gail) Sanden , Morrison, Colo.; rest by city police Feb. 24 near Debit figures for selected Minnesota and Wisconsin urday. Warmer Friday St.,. seven Thursday and . then at the cities are: meet people face to face and 24, ai Winonan now living in grandchildren and eight : West 5th and Johnson streets. ¦ aight. Lo-ws 47 to 55 Thurs- great-grandchildren. His wife church after 1 p.m. MINNESOTA ' -" 68 to 67 Satur- listen.- V Lancaster, Tex. • ; Winona 7 County Court Judge " ¦;¦¦' .. day becoming has died .; Donald E. A. Dennft A. Challeen referred "; (ooo omitted) day; Highs 70s north to low Scott arrived at Preston judge Gary Schlosstein placed Ledebuhr : Cumulative fbout 6:30 p.m. and visited each of the defendants oh proba- Funeral services will be WILSON, Minn. -^ Donald E. Kreckow to court services for 80s south. Thursday at 11 a.m. at Lanes- Jan.-April Pet. Chasge the VFW, local shops, taverns tion for two years and ordered A. Ledebuhr, 63, farmer in the presentence investigation. ' - . ¦ ¦ '¦¦ to make restitution to two boro Methodist Church. Burial Assistant City Attorney. Rjch- City , : 3974 " 1974 1OT3-74, The Mississippi and cafes. Upon request he them . town of Warren, Winona Coun- Albert Lea ...... $ 41,609 ; $161,885 - . .' " ; area farmers, Norman Litscher will be in the Prosper Ceme- ty, died at his home at 9 ard Blahnik represented the V+6 Flood Stafl* i4-hr. spoke briefly to meetings of the tery. .¦• ' p.m. Austin ...... 86,517 332,935 -4-21 Chg. ' and Heuben Suhr, both of rural Monday of an state. Kreckow was not repre- Stage Todav Farmers Union and local fire- Friends may call at Johnson apparent heart Lake City ...... 8,350V;" -' ¦; 29,783 +18 RED WINO ...... H B-0 +'•« Fountain City. attack he had while mowing sented by an attorney. ¦ ' men. Funeral Home here Wednesday the Lanesboro ....;...... 3,616 . 17 105 + 11 LAKE CITY • '»• *< + '•' According to his escort in The defendants had • been lawn. ^ WABASHA .- 14 M + •* charged with ripping copper from 7 to 9 p.m. and at tbe Lewiston 3,040 12,108 +12 . Almo Dam, T .W...... 7.5 +.7 Preston, County DFL Secretary church Thursday after 10 a.m. He was born in Winona Coun- Mankato 147,642 103,107 +43 Whitman Dnrn ...... 5.8 +,5 lightning rod wires off buildings ty Oct . 31, 1910, the son of Carl Drive r satisfactory T.W. Mrs. Jim O'Connor, Scott said Plainview ...... S.758 35,541 +28 Winona Dam, .... <•« + • *" he hadn't met one person that near County Trunk M and Coun- Joseph Bethel and Lydia Gahnz Ledebuhr. On r crash WINONA ...... U M +•' ty Trunk P, in rural Fountain after one-ca Red Wing .....;,.,...... : 31,969 116,910 +3 di)y who was disillus ioned PLUM CITY. Wis.V— Joseph June II, I960, he married Thel- ¦: Trempealeau Pool ..... 9.S +.1 with City. ' Wis. - A riira> Rochester .. 185,082 CM .451 +14 Trempealeau - Dam ..... 7.3 +¦' politics. People indicated they Bechel, «2, Plum City, died ma M. Feine at Wilson. He was GILMANTON, St. Cloud ..,....- ...163,319 018,406 •"" V • 8.B '—.1 Three of the accused were iiiari was listed as +29 DAKOTA ... ¦ Sunday at Chippewa Valley a member of Trinity Lutheran Eau Claire, Dresbach Pool ...; ' 9.8 would go to the polls and vote each fined $59 on other charges- morning at a Wabasha I...... 4,92a 17 ,557 +35 D-resbach Dam 6.2 +.7 Area Hospital, Durand , Wis. Church , Wilson. satisfactory this , new people in, he said. Benson, driving after ' revoca- where he was WINONA ...... 786,554 334,686 +19 LA CROSSE II 8.1 -M He was a retired farmer. . - Survivors are: his wife, and Mondovi hospital WISCONSIN FORECAST AUCTION RESCHEDULED tion; Mrs. Brandt, allowing an three sisters, admitted today following an RED WINO 8.7' 9.1 9.1 unauthorized person to drive her The son of Matthew and Su- Mrs. Linda Arcadia 8,474 32,281 +19 IVINONA ...... 8.7- ' ?.0 9.3 ETTRICK, Wis. ( Special) — san Fink Bechel , he was born Blank, : Winona; Mrs. William early morning accident near Durand ,. 10 205 41,636 LA CROSSB 8.6 9.0 9.1 vehicle, and Lassen, littering, , +19 The eighth annual Ettrick Lions at Minneapolis, Minn., April 20, (Ella) Kunst, La Crescent, here. Galesville 3,535 • 14 ,357 Tributary Slrcarm Roger Hartrnan , Buffalo Coun- Ralph M. Sandberg, 23, Eau +6 Chippewa at Durnnd , .. -7.7 +2.7 Club community auction , which ty district attorney, prosecuted. 1892, He moved as a child to Minn., and Mrs, Stanley (Lil- La Crosse ...... 214,617 792,700 +10 (will crest *9,s ft. Wednesday) was canceled Sunday ) . Claire Rt. 4, is a patient at Buf- Zumbro at Theilman 37.0 because of Plum City where he married lie Kline, La Crosse, Wis. One Mondovi 5,462 24,366 . +25 (crest today) a downpour of rain, will be held Anna Schmitt Aug. 10, 1920. brother has died. falo M«morial Hospital, Monda- Trempealeau a I Dodge • ' ...... 6.1 +,< next Sunday, beginning at noon, Survivors are: his wife; thre Funeral services will he at 2 vi. His injuries were not avail- (will crest 7.0 Wednesday) Hearing set for e Blnck '-M' Galesville *.S +1.1 In the previous seven years the sons, Melvin, Eau Claire, Wis.; p.m. Friday at Trinity Luther- able. . Lake City Water Ski Dayt Present (8.5 crest Juno li) sale has been held , inclement Eldon, Clearfield, Utah , and an Church, the Rev. Galen Som- The one-car accident took La Crosse at- W. Salem «.2 +.6 Winona man in Root at Hou slon )2,« +3.4 weather hns not been experi- Earl, Chippewa Falls, Wis.; 10 mer officiating. Burial will be place at 2:41 a.m. on a town (will crest today) enced. basha County grandchildren ; two great-grand- in Wilson Cemetery. road, just off county trunk high- Wa children ; two brothers, Matth- Friends may call Thursday way Z, is in the township of Jeanne Pruett * * WABASHA, Minn. - A pre- ew, Elmwood, Wis., and John , after 7 p.m. at Martin Funeral Dover, east of Gilmanton. ^ With Paul Richey ^• liminary hearing . for Bruce Hankinson, N.D,, and three sis- Home, Winon a , then at the The Buffalo County Sheriff's Sharp, 22, 778 Gilmore Ave., ters, Mrs. Gertrude Winters church Friday from 1 p.m. un- office reported that Sandbetg's , til time of services. A devotion- SATURDAY JUNE 29 Winona , on a felony charge of Redmond, Wash.; Mrs. Helen 1971 two door sedan ran off Lak* City,, Minnejota High School In years gone by Lofberg, Elk River, Minn., and al service at the funeral home the roadway and rammed into criminal negligence, will be Spsclfy 7:00 or 9:30 p.m. Show held at 10 a.m. Wednesday in Mrs, Peter (Margaret) Under, will be at 8:45 p.m. Thursday. a tree, Bay City, Wis A memorial is being arranged. Tickets $2.50 Advence $3.00 at Door (Extracts from the files of this; newspaper,) Wnbasha County Court. . . Sandberg was taken to the Judge Dennis Weber will pre- Funeral services will be at hospital by the Mondovi Ambu- Wrlta P.O. Box 22 Laka City, Mn. 55041 10 a.m. Wednesday at St, Ernest Watson : " ' r " ' side. 7 PRESTON , Minn. (Special)- lance Service. . . Ten years ago . " . . 1964 The charge, along with two John's Catholic Church, Plum City, the Rev, Henry Hoerburg- Ernest Watson , 100, Preston, ( Pub, Date TUMday, Jun* 1'/ WI): : Eifjlit hundred forty-four families comprise Ihe cnselond others, stem from a fatal acci- died Monday at the Methodist dent near here May 27 which er officiating, with burial in - 'for tho county welfare department , William Werner, director , the church cemetery. . Hospital, Rochester, Minn,, fol- - PLANNED USE REPORT reported , allegedly resulted in the Friends may call today after lowing n throe-week illness. GENERAL REVENUE SHARING A now lnw requiring death of David R. Schmitt , 24, GBnoial flevornio Sliailng provides federal funds directly to local and iiats novefnmcnis. The taw rofliilros each tjnvornmant ta equal |>uy for equal work goes Into p.m, He was born in Fillmore publhh a report o( lis plans for tha us» of those funds to Inform Itacitlzeni and to encourage th efrparticipation In riocldlng effect 2 at Hhiel Funeral Home, how today, covering more than 7 million women under Winonn. Durand , whore a prayer ser- Township, March 5, 1874, the Iha monay ought to bo aponl, Within tha purpo»d> llatad, your Qoveinmant may changa this apandlug plan, the Faij Labor Standards Act. Sharp, who was the driver of PUNNED EXPENDITURBS , vice will be at B. son of James and Sarah Smith . __l ,THI QoVBRNMINTOf the cor involved in the accident , Watson. He was employed by CATEOOniEBtA) CAPITMIB) HINQNfl COUHTV ' ' also has been charged with pos- MA^TENAN^JCT Twenty-five years ago . . . 1949 Edward J. Marxhausen Northwestern Bell Telephone ¦ ' ANTICIPAHNSAOfNEBMREVENUESHARINQPAY- session of a small amount of LEWISTON, Minn. - Edward Co,, from 1905 to 1918, then wns I NJBUCHAmY $ 150 , 000 $ . Secretary of the Treasury ¦ ~~~ ~*~~ *453* 028 Snyder said tho country was marijuana and open bottle. J. Marxhausen, ftQ, Lewiston , employed by the Preston Stock a INWIRONMINMU , ,« mn MENT OF . exceptionall PROTECTION . fg J.J3«UUO FOR THE FIFTH ENTITLEMENT PERIOD. y strong financially , both as to individuals nnd Both nre misdemeanors. died Monday at 6 p.m. nt Com- Yards until 1932. He worked on 5 JULY 1,1974 as to business, and the nation need not fear a a rumic ' ' nn, n,o ^ THROUGH JUME30.1075. , PLANS TO SPENDTIIESE repetition of munity Memorial Hospital, Wi- a ranch at Modesta , Calif., un- •MANSPOnTATION $ J.u^ » U<=c» $ FUNDS FOPyTHE PURPOSES SHOWN. the lioo in-bust, cycle that followed tho first world war, NATIONAL LEAD ___ nonn , where ho had been a pa- til retiring here in 1945. He had ; V^couNrtio.24 l 085 -383 William .1, Mutejka , 409 E. 3rd St,, hopes to operate his OAK RIDGE, Tenn. (UPI) — tient ono week , been a resident of the Preston ; 37-fnot pleasure craft , the Hiawatha , which took to tho Mis- The Atomic Energy Commis- * * • .HINONft COUNT? A retired farmer and Wino- Nursing Home since Aug. 16, e eicmiiQN $ $ fiUOITOR' sissippi tills morning, for pleasure excursions in Ih-o summer sion has extended for three na County 1903, CWTV months and hunting parlies In the fall , 's first supervisor of years a contract with the .assessments, ho was liorn May . Survivors are: one groat- e wsmii* s __ $ HO, 000 WlNOHfl MXNN ' 5558? Co, of Ohio for National Load 22, 1804, in Norton Township, nephew, Harold Watson , Aus- Fifty ye a rs ago . . . 1924 . operation of the agency's feed Winona County, to Henry and tin Winn., and one great-niece , fo n AOEOORPoon S 5«O0O $ materials production center. , , Robert Maxwell will arrive home tomorrow from a year Emma Rupprecht Mnrxliausnn. Mrs. Eugene Moans, Preston , ADMiNiSTnATION $ $ (D) Tha ntwt tnidla hav* bitrt adytiad that copyat Tile new agreement for the "~~"~~~ ~~"~" been In a local* niwipipir Ho married Lena Brel Jan. 21, Five brothers and three sisters '« „i».l.i,n.n,. ,.ih "~"*"" WXSS^mSSSHSlSS/iSI *'* "l*"* •"" hava r*WI»hid Dm ef oinicilot of poslgraduale study at Harvard university. cenler al Fernald, Ohio, under •trcutitlom. I rttotdi «4ocurnanllna coniint* ihla 1917 in Hanover, Kan., nnd wns have died. otNEriALaovr $ ^^^^ S^ffi ^ jurisdiction of the Oak Ridge " " " rapoit an* th«V »r« opan forpMbllo aerullny —______n member of St. John s Evan- Funeral services will IPUCATION' i^lsisiasBaiSSii »* Seventy-five years ago . . . 1899 thp , extends ' be at 2 10 s Wlnon» County Auditor a Of Operations of AEC gelical Lutheran Church here. p.m, Thursday at Thauwald Fu- S^^TO^ . ' floe A through Sept. 30, 1977. " Ix&Wi |J| ASBU|IANCB8|Rihrlo¦a*ur* lnHruellon«) G. A. Terrill lias boon employed by the police department ¦ Ho formed for 30 years, from neral Homo, Preston , the Rev, D?VELor*MriNr-""'i ,,,,, S Wl ^^^^^ flaanuty Traatuty --—"""" " — ^^S^^ ' 1 th* or ih* that thaIn non-itlaciltnlna> IMPOUNDED DOGS 1917 to 19-17 1J II0U5INQ8.COM- SK tion and othir Until Pm ol to spot unlicensed dogs. , then moved Into John Payne, Spring Valley Uni- S^SSSSE S 88 K»& ataluiny xquliimMiti ¦ iha Winona MUNITV OEVfLOPWeNT S _ 8898 ' ¦n»"l"itK"wolplantrt aeoompinylnB thla uponriipict will ba torppllid Willi ¦- Ixnviston. He wns appointed ns ted IWcthodlst Church , officia- —————— ^ by thla toviromaiit ' Nn. 90 Lnroo, black and Inn (omnia, II ECONOMIC ' ^M^^K^M wllh lo th» antlilarnanc One-hundred years ago . . . 1874 purl Mioplurd nnd woll, ovnllfiblo. the first supervisor of assess- ting. Burial will bo in Crown $ ^^^^ No. 91 - Medium, block nnd brown te- wvgSiPMw 11111 111 Jytyflz^n- c^,,. io" -r ments for Winonn County, serv- Hill Cemetery , y wewetOtiattlKKiiili/a mum. oik Iraund, no license, nvollnblo, OWner \ S~\ A party of Polish immigrants reached (his city Inst ni ght No. 97 - Smell block nnd while fo- ing in Hint capacity for 1*1 yearn. Friends may call nfter 2 p.m, W ^^^^ S^^ Chairman i by tho midnight train horn tlio east and before morning ono m.ilii nilxml breed, no llconao, nvnllnlilo. Hn retired in 19(52, Wednesdny, until time of ser- -~- — ^^™^ffl^^^ County Board 6-7-74 No (eninle, of the women in tlie party gave birth to a healthy infant In . ico — Smell, Wick lono- 16 TOTAW 4'Q.OOO . " NamaftTltla-riiiw film "oii ' ha|rm| nilxcd-tjrood, no I Iconic, aocond Survivors nro : his wife; two vices Thursday at tlie funeral $ ^33 , 028 $ the waiting room cf the depot. iley. sons, Lenhni'd , Rollingstone , and home, WinpnavOpS v &la^§vhd^ ho^ts annual vv friendsKip nigfit Winona Chapter 141 Order of sfoc|sv !@rv pareFitsv Eastern Star hosted friendship ¦ night Monday evening at the - ¦ ;;' VPEAJt ABBY ; Judy, our 22-year-61d daughter, isa gradu- Masonic Tempte. Visitors at- ate student, hying out of state. She's pretty, aiid popular and tended from Rochester, .Pick- always has been a leader aiid an honor student. : wick, 7 Elgin,' Lewiston and Cale- Judy had witten us about a fine black girl she had La'Crosse, On- ¦ ¦¦ ¦ v^ry¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ •¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ donia, Minn., and bee o me: ' " ' '- '-' ' ' iZ " y ' • .. . ' alaska, GalesviHe and ; Alma;, ' ¦ ¦ : ' friendly : y V A Y-v ' Wis. ;'. ' '; V' V with at ^ Arnold Ufrich , Rochester, past coi- Dear Abb¦ ¦ y:¦ ¦ lege. 'We ' . .. " .: . ' " " grand patron of . the grand chap- y ter of Minnesota and Mrs. A. G; - ' v vv- By Abigail ¦Voti¦¦ Biireh¦ ¦ ¦ 7' ¦ smallI- £— xciitd:.£ \- .-y :;-y - ¦ ;.:¦¦:¦ ¦ - ¦ ¦¦ ¦.¦ . - ' "• • ' . . ¦ •; Lackbre, Winona, past grand ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ w estern . .' -. - . ... ; ' ¦ ¦: Martha of the grand chapter of town and never had anything to do with the few black fami- Minnesota were introduced. lies who live oil .the highway; Officers from the Pickwick Chapter were Honored as the V Judy phoned a few days ag6 and asked if she could bring 1 a young toan home for a visit; I said: "Certainly." - sister chapter and were asked 'vv/vSti iii 7 KayV;' . /; - '' ' Then she said : "He's black.": s^a . V. , to join offiews of the .WiftohB¦ , I asked: "HOWT black?" xi-J-,J : 'i;:- '.. chapter at their stations;' ' • '. ;Hi^\i\imiJ Chester Breitenfeldtj ; worthy She said: "About as black as black can . get." Then; she ¦ . went on to tell me that he was the brother of her college Mr, and Mrs. Herhert K.. patron, was master of ceremon- friend -student arid ah; outstanding person - : Highum _• Peterson!.- Minn./ ies and presented awards to: , also a graduate , ¦ ¦¦ ¦: ¦, , . etc.: V .- - . ' ¦: .:-' -; ' ' . .-. X : -y -: ,;:; . announce tlie engagement of Miss Margaret Ferguson, Mrs. . .. —- . - . . ,- ¦; * --T* * '¦ *'¦* —' — --«-*¦ V . - -v.;- . - .-- -.vi...... -0.VM ; I managed to control my emotions, and asked whether she their daughter, Susan Kay, Arthur.Jackmaii, Mi-S. Gladys ; 7 V V TO UVE IN WASHINGTON, D.C,. . . MrV aiid Mrs. Rich-; was serious about him, She. said: "Possibly, but I don't think td MichaelvP. Anderson, son Anderson, Mrs. George Elliott, WABASHA COUPtl! WED> V. . Miss Barbara Jehice ard7Wa'yne. Young (Robin Bauer) are at home in Washirigtoia, . I'm lucky enough to get him.',' (My stpmachyturned over!) V ' ' ¦ Cai*l7 Frank, George Elliott, Phil . Balow, .daughter of Mr. aiid . Mrs. Jack . F. Baldw, : Wabasha, of . Mf. aiid Mrs. Morris C. . Ralph . .D:C,, following their May 25 wedding at Central United Metho- .7 Abby; no one in her father's family or mine woUld ever Rushford Hicks, Mr; and Mrs . Minn., and William Steven Meiirer, son of Mr, and Mrs. Otto . . Aildersoia, ^ ' Minn. Bowers Mr; and Mrs; Edwin . dist Church. Tbe bride is the daiighter. of Mrs. Norma Bauer, •; understand it if Judy tvefie to marry a black man. I can see Miss Highum is a gradu- , . Meurer^ Wabasha, were married in a May .25 eerenvony at,-X ' nothing but heartaches and problems ahead for . her if she Greethurst and Mr, and Mrs. 8TO E; .5th St., and Dr. Robert . Bauer, Newark, Del., and the V . ' ' 7 uate of Lutheran Deaconess Ervin Laufenburger, VSt. Felix Catholic Church, Wabasha. Miss Caiidy WQlfe and ; ... bridegroom is "young, " married him; 'I'm hot. a bigot, but we just aren't ready for ' the son oi Mrs: Ruth L. Fort VWorth, something like this. I told her not to bring . him home? until I School of Nursing, Minne- Mrs. George Elliott, chairman Bernard Bouquet were honor attendants. Following a camp- . X Tex. and <5erald Young, St. Paul. MrsV Gene Mrozek- and apolis. Her fiahce is attend- of thei OES picnic,v announced ing trip to Taylors Falls, Minn;, the cbuple are at home at > : could prepare her father for the shock, so she said: ."Unless ' ' ¦ ¦ '. . Thomas Vujovich attended the couple. The bride is a gradu- you will treat him properly, I'd rather hot subjectVhitn to any :,ing;the University'of Min- '. the .event will be: held Saturd'ay V 116 E. Broadway. The bride is a graduateVof Wabasha High ates of Hamline University, St. Paul/, and is a graduate stu- humiliation;" That's where ve left it... • nesdta-Waseca. at Prairie Island in the first School and .Rochester Area VocatidnaVl-TechnicalV Institute.. 7 7 dent: -at- George ¦Washington University, Washington; Now; what dowe doVA.bby? SLEEPLESS NIGHTS = . A July 6 wedding at Rush- shelter, weather permitting. In She is employed as . D.C/ . . ,V , a dental assistant.. The bridegroom is a Thei bridegroprn V; ford Lutheran Church is the event of raiti, the picnic will graduate, Hi . attended Hamline University and is serving you and Temple. of Wabasha. gh . School and Winona Area Voca- . with the U.S. Navy, in- 7 DEAR SLEEPLESS: ^Unless . your husband.; planned. 7 7 7 be: held at the Masonic tional . The couple honeymooned the Eastern , Games are planned and a picnic . :Technical Institute.: He Vis employed by Bihoer-Evers " -.; '-. United States; : (Camer-a Art Studios) can treat your . daughter's friend as: though he were a Construction, WSbasha. (Gene s; Studio); 7 Caucasian with a siintan , tell her not to bring hini; home. supper . will jbe held at 6 vM- ' . But don't be surprised if Judy doesn't come either. She's le to live \ Persons planning to attend are old enough to choose her ownVfriends. And by the way, . Coup asked to call Mrs. Elliott for Elected to V reservations. Cotter dance ; what is your definition of a bigot? ¦ iri Lake City ¦ " ¦ state office 7The.Cotter High- School cheer- . DEAR ABBY: My career 7 is my home and family, and I LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) literature leaders will , sponsor, a dance am proud of it. But for some Tstrange reason, when a . house- — Mr. and Mrs.yRandy Klenke Writing^ TREMPEALEAU, WisV-MVIary Wednesday froni 8 to li p.m. at wife is asked what she does, she very apologetically says:¦ (Janet Mayei:) are at home in ; ' ¦ ' ."¦ ' Workshops slated Vyilber, a senior Vat Gale-Ettrick- the Cotter Recreational /Build- *Tm ONLY a housiewife." This irritates me- no end. . .• Lake City following their recent Trempealeau . Senior: High . VWheri 1 am asked What I do, I. proudly say. "I am an marriage at St. Mary's Catliolic Two . workshops :on writing ing.; All ninth through 12th-grade pakologist." The word comes from the Greek words "oikbs," School,.was elected to a state ' . . Church, Lake City. and literature will; be offered office at' the state convention of students are invited to attend; which means hduse, and . ''blogist'' ; which iiieans ^one who bride; is .the daughter of at the College of Saint Teresa 1 ' ^:y The. the Wisconsin. Music will be by Pegasus, tick- studies ' or "is an expert ix." . . Mrw ' and Mrs. : Noriian May- this summer; Association o £ 7 ; Please pass this oh for other housewives. Perhaps they er Chippewa Palls, 'Wis., and V'Writing ,of: tiie American ets will be sold at the door. , , . Future Home- will feel more important if they use it, too OIKOLOGJST the . bridegroom is . the soil of South" will be taught June 17- in a kefcVs oE Mr., and VMrs. . Glen Klenke, July 5 by Dr. Margaret Scaii- America held at PEAR OIK: I couldn't recomniend springing that on 7 . ' the Area :cbup|$ the average Joe without defining '. it. The oikologist" Lake . City.; . ' . .; lan.;The; course; will survey Grieen Lake, ¦ " The bride is a graduate of literary renaissance in the - • might be mistaken for an expert on pigs, ¦¦ ¦;. ¦;¦' .. 7 Wis., recently. • Chippewa Falls : Higjr School South and incliidie discussions The;. daughter exchange vows and Rochester School of Prac- of Faulkner, Warren, Ransom of Mr. . and DEAR ABBY: I hope you'll put . this in= your column for Couple ;to i B itte rsweet: club v ; CALEDONIA, Minn. '(Special) those nice , people who are: guilty, but arc not aware of it. tical Nursing. She is employed and O'Connor. ive-vv Mrs. R. J. Wil- Roches- , (S — Miss Mary ( Kay Wermager 7 Two months, ago . I had a breast removed, 7also the lymph by St. Marys Hospital ^ . 7"Reiigious . Experiences and LAKE CITY Minn. pecial) V ber, . - "Trempea- ; ter. The bridegroom is a' grad- study . well- in La Crosse and . glands undermy arm. (Cancer.) I am doing fine, and I look Literature" will; . — The Bittersweet Garden Club leau, she jVid John Williarii ©linger ex- uate of Lihcpln. High School and known . literary works which accompany the fine, so I started to go to. jay cluh meetings ahd to church. l LAKEVCITY,,Minn/ (Special) voted , at its .recent meeting ta changed nuptial vows in a May ¦ ': ' Just about every cither person I meet is . so happy to see is employed by Di-Acro; Lake ha-ve significant spiritual and state delegation M. Wilber 25 ceremony at St. John's Cath- ¦CityXiXi: -• Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nibbe join the state: association of the to national convention in me up and around, again that they slap or grip myVsore arm. religious • implications. the ¦'¦' ¦ I' Taught • by Sister Carlan (Nancy Mae Dettinger) are. at Federated Garden Clubs of Chicago . July 15-18 V dlic Chiirch. .. . . m sure they donit realize how painful this is because they America.;.The club, has set Aug. KeyhoteVspea&er for the state The bride is tbe daughter of don't connect my operation with my arm. Kraman, June 24 to July 12, the home in . La Crosse following " They are dear people; and I wouldn't hurt thern for the course will examine different 10 as the date for the annual convention ' was astronaut Don- Mr. and Mrs. Odin Wermager, Band concerts their recent marriage at Upper flower, show. 7 ._ . '¦ ' • ', world, but Abby, my arm is still swollen j has fever in it, and authors' ; understanding loi the ald Slayton, . Caledonia, and tlie bridegroom LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) Pigeon Creek Luflieran Church, . The FHA .chapter, was when it's gripped it hurts like mad. It's getting sol hate to . religious depths underlying or- G-E-T is the son. of Mrs. Jean Schiltz, go .anywhere because. I'm afraid of this painful greeting I'm — Summer band concerts, will Hixton, Wis. V ;y represented at the state meet Caledonia,; arid the late Am- dinary life. Authors to be stud- " sure:to get. begin Wednesday at Patton ied include Dostoevski,' Mauriac, The' bride is the daughter of by. Lori Corcoran and Renee brose Olinger. ". " : V- hand paiilus, voting - delegates, and Maybe some of those liice but slap-happy people will: read Park at 7 p.m. The , di- Salinger, Tolstoy, Updike and Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Dettinger, Mrs, James Ross, twin sister this and take note, yy ACHING ARM rected by Gordon Johnson,, and ¦ CARPETING Beth. Remus, chorus member. of the bride, #as matron of hon- Yeats; Hixton, and . the bridegroom .is comprised" of V students and Further information may: be They were accompanied by Mrs. or and VBobert Olinger; brother DEAR ACHING: Consider it done the son of Mr ", and Mrs. Meriyn Eugene Paulus, chapter moth- . V adults, will present concerts had by contacting the college's of . the bridegrtkiQii was best each Wednesday evening for Nibbe, VLake 'City. Aiji&ijx y er, . and VMrs. Julia Jacobson, man. 7 summer session director. . seven weeks. : The couple were attended by advisor. : Tbe bride is a graduate of ¦ ' ¦ ' ' - " . ' . . ' ;' • . ¦ V Patricia Ott arid Mark Caledonia ;High School and Mrs. :Wi- Your horoscope Jeane Dixon Thomson authors :Nibbe, brother of the; bride- DRAPERIES nona Area Vocational-Technical 40th anniversary groom. V Catholic vows Institute. She is employed by ^ legislation on The bride is a . graduate of McLoone Graphic Inc., La For WEDNESDAY; June U should be left: alone in their dignity..Set- WAUMANDEE, Wis. — Mr. unite couple Crosse. The bridegroom is a Your birthday today: Opens i yenr of tle your personel accounts/ agree on new and Mrs. Elnier Schaefer, Wau- Whitehall, Wis., Memorial High ofi^zzy Intellectual srowlh, many episodic of terms and budgets. loan applications School and Western Wisconsin X 'X .graduate of . Caledonia High high adventure, occasional frlum pit. It mandee, 7 will celebrate . their :: HOKAH, Minn. - St. Peter's Is belter lo use or take Immediate cash Virgo (Aug.. U-Sept. 22): It , may be ¦ WASHINGTON, D.C, - Third Technical Institute, La Crosse. vV7 School and is a .student at Wis- when It's available rather than deal in lime to reveal jong-ranga soils to your 40th wedding anniversary with V7:-V7Kinds7V Catholic Church Hokah was , . , *. Ions-term credit arrangements; better correspondents, but not for local pro- a Mass of Thanksgiving Sunday District Republican Congress- She is. employed by Lutheran consin State University - La Involvement and the setting for ; the May 25 also to abstain from motions, investigate additional methodis man Vernon Thomson has in- Hospital, La Crosse; The; bride? Crosse. The couple will live be tree 6t extra The bride is a graduate of be held June 20 at 2 p.m. at the It watching you today. Business and view your work are temporarily difficult cial) -*- Mr. and Mrs. David CIO to exercise "veto power" Viterbo College La Crosse, public l ib; are emphasized. Details re- to please. Mate or partner is at odds. , Buffalo* County Courthouse con- lating ID your household and homa life, Capricorn ^';- M | | NEW WAREHOUSE John's Lutheran Ladies Aid. The The 23rd state convention of ; ; ¦ **¦—-•—— : — : next meeting will be held July the Square Dance Federation o£ , 5 at 2 p.m. with a potluck picnic Minnesota Inc., "will be held Fri- lunch set for 4 p.m. day through Sunday at Circle Pines, Minn. Tho annual meet- ing will be held Saturday at 11:40 ' a.m. ' at the Circle Pines LAWN BOY Elementary gymnasium. Events scheduled include dances, work- JhA 9 HELP US POWER MOWERS shops, panel discussions, skits Xtt* *^,) She wfll bring congratu- MANY , MANY MORE TREMENDOUS VALUES! Are you In a hurry to cook lhat roaatt It'll cook K ' _ SALE HELD AT OUR DOWNTOWN STORE—166 MAIN In half the time If you allck aevoral laroe o»lv,lf -10 0 V . Redmen w|ii Leeip ¦: . . ' S 1 2 .Anderson.p . . TOO. AP Sports Writer ¦;.,' Martin was fired by Detroit At West, just two games be- Evans lofted a fastball from Lou Piniella drove in the; win- 1-1, was credited with the victo- KSco«leld,rl. - -.' . 4-;i 3 yGruhlke.cf 3(1 3 general manager Jim- Campbell hind Oakland.; ry after he pitched 4 2-S innings 0 .2 Hasel y.ri 3 00 right fiel run with an eighth inniiig Foreman.** * Billy Martin ' learned Monday Vida Blue ^own/fche d ning Coulee tilts Crawford.sa ; » 0 0 Wlfliera.lb •/ 2 0 0 . last September. Shortly after Dwight Evans' three-run In relief. Twins' starting pitch- Boynton,! b 20 1 Proper,rf TOO night that , yes, you can go he signed a five-year contract homer and Luis Tiant's;,stand- line in the fifth . inning and it double , and then scored on in- ' ¦ er Ray CorbhS was removed :; Gale -. Ettrick - Trempealeau Norton/lb' St- .l 1. Tarara.ss . 20 0 home 'again, y . "' •- . to manage the Rangers, out pitching carried the 'Red just curled inside the foul pole surance tally in the; Yankees' CBSB.II . S00- B»slmsh,5> TO 0- a .. from the . game in the .'first in- preserved its perfect record Willgen.lb y. O I 0 ' Whlsnant,3b . .3 O 1 young team which he; , for . the homer, capping the triumph over California. V ., ¦ Martin, a crowd pieaser in has Sox past the A's ini a battle of ning: after being . struck on the and Oiialasfca trimmed COch- Srnllh,2b¦¦;. .. Z 0 1 Laney.Jb 20 0 Detroit during his tbriee years pitching hand : Brandon,3b . 1 1 1 DeFrang.p. TOO ^^ by a,Coggins line . rane-Foijntain City 4-2 in Cou- as manager of the Tigers, drive. Total* • »10 T5 Totals 27 0 J lee Conference : baseball action ¦ made his. first appearance; in BtlHmwt ti) Minnesota (*) LeJETZ :.....-. ;..,, . 411 010 3-^10 ""¦; ' ¦ Astrodome roof •brhfcl . ' «b rhM Monday night. . SPARTANS ;.. ..,....,...; 000 000 C-^ '!¦ Detroit as . skipper of the Texas Off Sumbry-,11 -1 0 0 fl Carew.Jb 4 1 i 1 E—Tarara•!,- ¦' The Redmen boosted their Laney, RBI—Lee 4, L. Rangers VMonday night and Baylor.lf 2 01 0; HlslMf 5 0 0 0 Scoffield 2, By Smith 5, WI. Smllh."-2B- record to 6-0 and 74-0 in the walked away with a 6-3 . victory. CeSglns.rf 4010 Ollva.dh ' . 12 32 Norton. L. Scoffield. HR—Lee. SB—Nel- Grlch,2t) 3010 Darwln,rf 5 2 4 2 conference with a 4r0 conquest son, K. . Scoffield. SF-M. Smith. Left-. . . He received an ovation from TDavls^fJIt . 4 1:1 0 Kusick.lb 4 0X0 LeJeti 16, Spartans 8;'. y et West Salem.7 Fuller,! '-J 0 1 0 Sm)rhlm,3b » 0 2 J PITCH INO SUMMARY the Tiger Stadium cr «¦ - ' . San Diego oyer Pittsburgh. ., ' ¦; .Tola! M f-TS f John Christiansori tagged two Chiefs to host to the mound to 'make a pitch- the : Houston Astrodome. Mike ball might . have hit the flag set the stage for BUI Robinson's BALTIMORE ;:. ... 000 001 000-1 triples; diove in one run and MINNESOTA -..- .; :.... 200 105 10x-» ing change, there were a. few Schmidt did: Monday night ... ..; above the electronic scoreboard two-run double. A sacrifice fly Pittsburgh built an 8-0 lead . Ttwo . E-Gomez, Fuller. DP—Minnesota 2. scored Wr the winners, Cavaliers tonight boos mixed ih with the cheers.: in a ma:tter of speaking. in centerfield if it hadn't: hit the by Mike Anderson staked Jim through 7% innings , but -starter LOB—Baltimore' 8, Mlnnesdla 9. 2B—K0- teammate Jim. "Walters bunted .Martin said , he was very The Philadelphia . Lonborg to an early, threernin .sick; Blair, :.3B—t. :, Davis, DarVflii. HR- . Phillies' . in- . Jim Rooker and a string of four Borgmann (1). The 'Winoiia Chiefs, idle, since ¦ SB-^Carew. . S—Gomei, another run home and Larry pleased by the reaction 'he re- fielder hit a ball in the first in- lead, It was all downhill after - . - ¦ . single. June 2, are scheduled to host ' relief pitchers: could not stave Carew. . Dahl¦ had an RBI : ceived from the Tiger fans : • ' - . 7 ning that appeared; headed ' for Lois Schacht that,- ' , ,. PITCHIMG SUMMARY . '¦' the Eau Oaire Ca-valiers, one IP H R ER BB SO .; Rich Baureis and Jim Mar- home run territory, in center In the? other National League off the Padres, who rallied for ¦ ' of the premier amateur baseball ; "l don't know how other rolls 105-530 McNally (L, 4-J) .. 5 10 5 '¦*. i I quardt had the only two hits field before it bounced off games Monday night - 'the Mon- four runs in the bottom of the Hood .....,;.... .-,. . . t/, 1 2 0 0 0 , a - off Onalaska pitcher Mike Loo- teams in 11K state of Wisconsin, managers would feel but when Alexander •.. ;-. ;... -2% ' 4 2 ' ' 2 0 0 speaker hanging from the roof : Lois Schacht turned .in scores treal: Expos trimmed the . Cin- eighth and five_ih the ninth. ' i ¦ ' mis. C-FC hurler Ed Miller tonight at 7 :30 in Gabrych .Park. you come back to the town you ' ' Corbin ,.. .:• • :...... /i) l o o .o « of the.chic glass .house;-- . of 195 and 530 . for the Oasis cinnati Beds 3-1 in a rain-short- Butler i{W, l-l .) ....,-4% 7 f -1 2 j Thursday the Chiefs will make managed in and they cheer you - ¦ struck but seven but gave . up The ball fell back on the field Bar iri the Sunset League at ened, eight-inning game. . The Hands ..,:...... ;.,. 4. yi.' 0. 0" 0 2 ¦ . ¦ ' - : :¦¦ ii walkis. ' ' another attempt to play the St. like : that, it really made me tf^e Westgate Bowl St. Louis Cardinals beat the Save^-Hands (1). T—3:00, A—5,-3M. - feel good. and Schmidt got . only a: dis- ¦ ¦ Monday G-E-T will be at Holmen Paul Merchants (the two teams " tinguished single out of it. Was night.- '. ' • ' -' .-,. ' ' • .¦¦ . Los Angeles Dodgers . 4-2 ¦: in 11 Pack s Carter were rained out last TFriday) in Elsewhere in the American Wednesday night, and the Pi- he . mad—even though the Thes Big ; "O" swept team innings and the San. Diego rates, how 1-3, will host Mel- an 8 p.m. contest at Gabrych; League, the Boston Red Sox PliillJes won the game 12-0 scoring as well wth totals of Padres stopped the Pittsburgh is hospitalized ; and Saturday they'll host the al- beat the Oakland A's 4-1, the , ;i^&j;;P*roteci V rose-Mindoro. 901 and 2,522, V Pirates 9-87 GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI) - WBST SALBM ...... OOC 00O . «-*J 4 1 ways-strong Austin Blues in a New York . Yankees trimmed If I'm one short of winriihg • ¦ • ' In the Bermuda League at Green Bay Packer middle line- ' J-E-T .;...... ;. ..;• .. M0 IM x-4 4 • pair of seven-iiining gjames the '/ 'California:' Angels 7-5 and the ^National League,home run Pitcher Steve Reiiko tripled /'^Iftj r Your Mark RodflMi Btid Bob Gornlok; D«v« ' Westgate, Marilyn Dragavick backer Jim Carter was in a - -: starting at 1 p.m, the Minnesota Twins routed the title, think back to home one run and scored an- ¦ . IWall and John ChrhHanson. /I'll this one rolled a 162, Idnda Daniel card- . local Hospital for treatment of : ;: : COCHRANE-FC .. ... 000 010 «-i 1 J The Chiefs' Tri-State League Baltimore Orioles 9-1. that i didn't; 'get," said ed a 162 en route to a 429, the other . ..to lead Montreal over " ONALASKA ...... 003 001 x-4 T 4 game with Stoddard , Wis., Sun- After leading the Tigers to Schmidt. "There' Cincinnati in:'. a game called phlebitis after twisting his left ^^ Ed Miller and Rich Bsurei; Mlkt s no doubt in Gutter Dusters hit 841 and Vthe kriee playing , the club ^^Si Looml« and bava SteHilar. day was also rained out. the AmericanVLeague East pen- my mind; that it would have Pinsters wound up with 2,389. after eight innings because of mm4fm rain./ ,, - • said Monday. """SS . Dr. ES; Brusky, team physi- With a Guaranteed Jde Torre led off the 11th In- Income ning ivith a honfe run into the cian, said the twist produced "a FOR THE BEST left field pavilion at E>bdger little ligament problem for which In QUALITY and SE RVICE Imlachdisrupts Stadiumi helping St. Louis beat Jim is being observed and fur- In DISABILITY and Los Angeles. ther diagnostic tests on the knee LIFE INSURANCE. After Torre's blast off rebev- may be necessary in the future. SEE OR CAUL ME: er Charlie Hough/ .6-2, the Car- "The phlebitis should clear up Marv Fuglejtad dinals eventually added an in- without any incident and Jim 45W608 Introducing NHL^roceedirigs surance run on Jack Heide- should be released within a day MONARCH LIFE MONTREAL (AP) - The Na-, Wednesday. In effect ; mann's single. Cardinal reliev- or two," Brusky said. , the He described; phlebitis as an tional Hockey League passed Hangers would then be protect- er Orlando Pena, 4-0, was the IMSi C0r sweeping changes Monday winner. , inflamm ation located in the deep «3VJ W. 4th St. . to ing 19 players—one over the veins of the leg, speed up its hockey games, limit. Horace Clarke delivered a ' then put the theory into prac- Otherwise, there wasn't much America s tice at the intraleague draft. action. The New York Islanders It took just 25 minutes for the selected Dave For tier from the 16 teams to conduct the draft, Stanley Cup champion Phila- but the Buffalo Sabres' mis- delphia Flyers, the Vancover SMMJBU Winona Furniture Co. chievous General Manager Canucks took Jim Wiley from Punch Imlach found time to the Pittsburgh Penguins, the St. friendly disrupt the activity by drafting Louis Blues drafted Brian a player who had been taken Ogllvie from the Chicago Black >taVa1la^a^ ala^a^aVa^HI i ^^^^BUl earlier in the proceedings. Hawks and the Detroit Red a The California Seals opened "Wings drafted 2ton Busniuk FORCED TO MOVE TO the draft by selecting defense- from the Buffalo Sabres, man Jim Neilson from the New Changes were made to stiffen York Rangers. The Rangers, penalty times for various in- with the option of taking com- fractions , and in goalie equip- pensation in cash or player per- ment repairs and substitutions. NEW WAREHOUSE sonnel from the Seals, selected Linesmen will be instructed big forward Walt McKechnie. to drop the pucks for faceoffs The deal had been reported even if one center—after prior coming last week, McKechnie warning—is not suitably pre- would go to the Rangers, then pared for the faceoff. be traded by New York to the The league also said Boston Vl^T^&B^Mr B *^SI^^^BB^BB^aB^BB^^B^BB^BH«B^B Boston Bruins for center Derek Bruins defenseman Bobby Orr Sanderson. was the only unanimous selec- The surprise HELP came when US Im- ti on to the NHL , All-Star team. ! Ammmm. *,4 tdfi«-/%t.sM ,tt...^vs^iit1ff aiy ^MMMMMMMMMMMSi TRAILERS aTa*BBaTaTaBBTaB 8 ' l»^n*i(u«Mi>Hv, • !lV ,fBTaTraBBTaBTaBBBTaBTaBTaBTaBTaf policy wllh the new monthly I " f*t*tt«. «iAr,M!» atFftow For Camping & Traveling mMMMMMa I^WMMMMMMMMMMM K or qunrlorly payment pinna. MMMMMMM. M^^ma^^mm^^^-MMMMMMMMMMMm\ $39-95 * $49 96 Call and Compare! KOLTER'S 8 DUANE RINGLER , IAUBS A SERVICB^' P.O. Box 665 Phone 452-7261 C, "Sine* !»«" m\\wmSERVICE" tHOMM OISTJLURS CO., II. V. AWIRICAN W|II5KEM BUND, BO ffiOOF. SENTRY INSURANCE! Phone 452-3145f i "SMITH'S MEANS 166 Main 402 Mankito Ay*. Phor» 4|3 I««] Winoni* Dully Niwa 1 p.m, Klew York f¦ 9 ¦ ¦ ¦ : iVinotiB, Mlnnt»ot« • •" > ;¦ - stpc k , prices-; f : > TUESDAY. JUNE 11. W4 Market prices ¦ " AUiedCh ; 42%yIBM • ' - .. . 228 AUisCh - .- , 87/8 IhtlHrv %% Livestock SOUTH jr. PAUU Minn. : (APJ AHss . V^. VlnlPap ; .-48: (USDA); — Cattle and calves «O0i pill back after slaughter; stee;rayand heifers .slow, ur»- : ii iii^^ ^ll Amfemd :35%7 JnsiL; ' 7 ; 19% even; steers S0-1.00 lower, heifers nipstly AniCan 297 . Jostens 13% 1.00 lower, cow ' steady,' bolls; about "ft0$;iC6ttf V 7 steady, yealars fully staady; load mostly A 21% Kencott 35% average choice 1211. lb. 'sl aughter steers .. • 37.50, cholct 10OWJO0 .10. SJ40-37.0O, rally bogs down AmMtr •;' ' : 6% Kraft : 40% choice, Including few prime; 1200-13M lb. 34.00:34.00, lead 1424. lb. J3.00, mix»d NEW YORK (AP> -- stock AT&T y. 48 Kresge 38Ys high gpod: and choice 90-1200 lb. 34.00- ' ' ¦ ' ' " * M.S0, load average to Moll "'choice' I0Z9 market prices pulled back tor J^IF : - .: . 197 Krogpr : 7 21% Ib slaughter.halters 37.50, choice:900-1100 mitk , bog- AncohdaiV 233/4 Loew's ' lb. . 35.50-37.00, mixed : htgl» good and: day as a six-session rally 7V 1J V* ; Cm^ ' choice, 35,00-36.00; utility arid eonirher. LAKE, Ciry, Minn. — Terry where he -Win compete with the ged down in profit-taking. ArchDrt ix 15% . Marctr . 26% del slaughter cows 27.O0-2J.00, . cutter Kieffer, a native of Lake City Cardinals 2J.58.27.M, wiiner H-OO-JiaO; y'eW Srada ' Glass A team in the y^The noon7 Dow Jones average ArmcSI 20 Merck .'; 83& who just completed his junior Florida State League. 1 1700-2000 lb. slaughter bulls 34.00-J5.50, - Ayeo'Gp 5Vt MMM V .:": 7 few high dressing ».O0, 1-1 14J0-UJO lb. year at the University of New -The University of New . Or- of 30 industrials was down 3.83 77% 32.50-34.00, prima vealers. up fo J5.0C» Orleans/ has signed a profes- leans was "beaten. -by- California- at 855.84V.iosers just about dou- BeatFds 193/4 MinhPIi . 16 ~ choice 4«.0O-Sl,M/ good . 37,00-47,00. sional -baseball contract with ' ' • .HOBS.»,500; barrows and gllts general,.." Irvine iii V the championship bled the number of gainers in BetsStl - . . 30V4,Mpb0il 7 43% ly 1.00 lower, extremes 1.50 " lower,- X-t the St. Louis,Cardinals. game of the NCAA College Divi- Boeing 18 ' MnCh'nt . 69% 190-240 lb. 24.00-24.2J, M 19M40 lb. 23.50. Kieffer, a 6-1, 175-pound left- light trading; on the' New. York 24.00, 2-4 240-2M lb, 2J.5O-23.50, 2-i 260. . sion WoHd Series leld in Spring- BoiseCs 16% MontDk ' Exchange; 28% 300 lb. 19.50-23.50, sows. 1.00 lower, M hander,. was originally drafted field, 11!., last Week. Stock Brunswk . 15% NorfkWn 64% 300-400 lb. 17.00-18.50, -3 4O0-700 lb. 16.O0- by the Cardinals 16.50, boars 50 lower 300 lb. and heevrer and was re- Kieffer picked up victories .Analysts said it seemed; the BrlNor . 37% NNGas : V . 49% ¦ drafted in the secondary 19.00-19.50, under 250 lb. 17.00-20,00. .- phase over Valddsta (Ga.) State and momentum of last week's sharp CampSp 30% NoStPw 20% Sheep 600| all classes generally steady, of the Major League draft last New Haven (Conn.) during the advance had been largely dis- Catplr 65% NwAir 26% choice and - . prime) . 90-11» |b, spr.Ina. .weekj v;'- ' . tourney to slaughter lambs 43.00-49.00. good ant boost his remarkable pelled by the failure of a prime Chn'slr l7% : N-wBanc : 46.0^48,00, choice and.prime 90. After four days ¦ 44% cholca of: negotia- record to 15-0. He finished the rate cut posted by New York's CitSrv ': "'¦ 39 Penney " : 77 110 lb. old After the brief training session, College Baseball All-Ainericari proposed plan to restructure 8 Hockwl' • .. 27% yeai* tional Basketball Association, fashioned a a: fi v«-year contract -with the NBA team; iii DbwCm 67% Safewy V V 40% Sprlno wheat cash tracing basis uiv he'll return to St. Petersburg Team; . ':" • Lockheed Aircraft, " the 7finan- ¦ chanoed to up 3|. prices op. .2-5. ; broad smile Monday night - as He. anaolinced Seattle earlier in the day. CAP /Photofax) duPont ':. 17134 VSFeln ; " 32% No. 1 Wr* northern 11-17 protein. 4.tt- cially7press.ed aerospace giant. 5.11, ' ' ". '" - the signing:of 7-i2 Tom Jur]esoii (seated) frewn EastKod 113% SearsR 88% Test weloW prenilums: 'one cent -each Oh the American Stock 7 Ex- Esmark 29 ShellOil pound SS to 61 lbs; or»t:. cent discount: 52% - ¦ - change, the market value index Exxon ,7 77% Singer V :32% each Vs- lb under, 58.Ibs. : .. . -- . - : - Protein prices: 11 percent 4.M-4.J5I 1*. was down: .37 at 86.22. , , .,. Firestn . .18% . SouPac 32^ 4.W4.37; 1J, 4,59; 14, 4.71) IJ, 4,97; l«, Scorebbard :; The NYSE composite index of 417 5:091 17, 5.11i . ~ According to Miller FordMtr 7: 54% SpRand : . 4.1M.44), : No. 1 hard Montana winter some 1,800 common stocks¦ re- GnEl . 50 StBrnds 53% ; -Mlnn.-S.D; No. 1 hard winter 3.93-4.37- St, LbulJ,..- ".;-...<..; 28 27. - .509 .2- .. : ' ' ' No. 1 hard , ember durum, IS^TMi ' treated .37 to 48,62. - " . GnFood. 25% StOilCal .0O«. - l>ro Bawbqll Montreal ' .. 25 25 ,300 2Vi . 28% discounts, amber 75 16 l.30j durum 1 - GenM. '¦ 1 .80. :. "' ¦V' New YorK C.,.. 23 32 .411 7 54% -StOillnd : 83% Corn No. : 2 yellow 2.73W-2.76'A. . . . V AMERICAN IBAOUB Chicago '..'...... 21 30 .412 : 7 . - EAST . ' - GenMtr V 52% Txaco V 28% Oats No. 2 exf ra heavry whlte l.48. y ¦ . Plttsburoh ;....:.... 20 33 .377 . '?- . Barley, 125, year BBO .202; Larker W "' L.. -?ct.. ' ". ' ¦¦ '¦ ¦ ciar* . , 'OB WEST . GeriTel 24 Texasln : 7i94% 2.29-3.10C Blue Malting 2.29-2.95) DIcKjon ¦' " ¦ 77 ¦ ¦ Boston . .v.V,ii... '31 25- ;554. " ^Uj. rtlHillli ...... « .712 Jil^^iSii^lii^si^tie^^ Park-keJ Gillette 34%; UnOil 39% 2.29-3.05) F«ed 1.95-5.28. " . ' • '. ' Milwaukee ..;,..;; Sa 14 .531 1 Clnclnhatl ...; 32 " 23 .582 .» By BOB; GREEN ' Flax No. 1 ».25. Cleveland .....-..,. 27 27. .soo 3 great player,. Mahaffey is, arid one-two in both categories go- Goodrich. 21% Un'Carb . 7 42 Atlanta ..,....;,...V3V 24- .544 10 ' Soybeans No. 1 ' yellow 5.27V4, ' - (Green ) "U.S. ¦ ' ' '¦-¦ ' ' " New York ...... 29 SO ;492 3*v4 . Houston ; ...... ; .. 30-29 .508 12 - MAMARONECK, N.Y. (AP). I gfless Hubie. has been ing into the VOpeh cham- Gbodyr 21% UnPac 74% . - - . . . - . Detroit ...... 27 -28 .491 3'/i . San Francisco .... 30 30 .500 ' 12V4 . ' ¦ ¦ — The Jack . Nicklaus era is the outstanding player on the pionship, the most prestigious softhtill Greyhnd 14% USStl 44% Baltimore ...... 26 29 - .473 '4Vs San' Diego ...,.. ... 2-4 39 .381 . 20 • ' . WEST over, says' Johnny Miller. tour in the last two months— of all the world's titles. GulfOil 21: :WesgEl : 7 15% Wirtoiia markets: ¦ ¦ . MONDAY'S OAMHS MEN'5-SLOW-WTCH Oakland ;.;.' ;....:. 32 as - .561 . ¦ ), Montreal 3, .Clnclrirati; ¦ (B Innings, That doesn't mean, that the BenV Crenshaw, .Tom i Watson; Nicklaus, winner of but one open .league Homestk 40%;Weyrhsf 39% : Bay State Milling Co. Texas ..;,.....;;.. 30 27 .526 : 2 .. - ' ¦ . ' ¦ . ' ¦ • • rain). . . 1 '¦:« ¦ .. w t Blevitor A Oralh Prices • • chlcaoo ;.„;....,-in as- ,5io ,3 ' slender young blond is ready to Forrest Fezler, Lahny Wadkins; title; this season but : still the :• L . . Hoiieywl : ,70 .WinnDx .42% " ' . . Philadelphia 12, Houston 0 , 1 2 No. TN. Spring Wheat - . ';;..„. 4.09 Kansas Clly ,..,,.. 26 28 .481 4'A * Oasis Bar 11 Shorty's : > San Dleflo 9,' plttsburoh 8 . • claim: pro golf's throne for his even though Lanny has had: his game s most feared competitor, 1 St. -Stan s 1 3 InlStl V S2# OTffdrth 16% No. 2 N. Spring Wheat .,: 4.07 ' ' - ' M- East Slda Bar 2 ' - ¦ ¦/vllntiHOta- . i ...... :. -2» .442 m •; St. Louis 4, Los Angeles. 2 (11 Innings) :¦; ; ¦ ¦ .;- ' ' 4.W , ' own—even , though his creden- troubles.this year, he's a Ily said of the emergence of the The Levee. . ' 12 . Mo. S N. Sprint V/ttmat ...... California, ; ..;...... 55 33 .431 ;.7Mi . Only names scheduled re* No. 4 N. Spring ¦ game s young players: Dean Horton tossed a rara two-hit shut- Wheat ...... J.t» . MONDAY'S OAMES TODAY'S OAMBS tials are all in order;V V good player. He's-a real com- ' "I' m s East Side Bar blanked : No. .1 Hard Winter Wheat ...... J.W ; aj- out as Johnny ' * Taxaa I, Detroit 3 : . New York (Seaver 3-5) Atlanta petitor. glad to see it. J was .' In Its first Open League No. J Hard Wlntar Wheat ...... 3.8V " ' ' ' ¦ He wants to beat your glad to see St. Stan's- 54 . yA Xi$9QSjy;JiJ No. i Hart Winter Wheat ...... t.lf. New York -7, California S . . . (Capra 3-5), N :' Not at all. lyX . game in a' month Monday night Boston 4, Oakland ! Cincinnati.. Nelson ' 3-4) at Montreal brains out for 10 cents,'' Tom (Weiskopf); come . along . NEW YORK ¦ EGS*¦ MARK5T No. 4 Hard Winter .Wheat ...... 3.7J ' ' ¦ the Levoe evened Its record at 2-2 by , . • No. 1 Rye .;. 2.24 y Mlnnespta 9, Baltihnore 'l (Blair 1-1), N "I just . think that tii'e . time. Is ' '¦Miller "7 . Medium white , ., .,...... :.. -3I-.M: ' added; "Aiid there's like lie did last year. ,1 was outslugglng .the Oasis Bar 17:15. Harry Laroe white ' .42-.-M . No. 2 Rve ;....., ;. '. 2.» Only oamw scheduled.: Phlladelptila (Ruthven 2r2) at Houston. past when any one V man will win; ' ' (Tom) Weiskopf, too. In just glad wlieri Lee (Trevino) came Mitchell¦ belted , two homtjrs . for the TODAY'S OAMES ; . (Dierker 3-J); N .. dominate the game," Miller ners. Oakland (Hunter B-6) at Boston (Cleva- St. Louis (McGlothen . 7-3). at Los An- the last year he's become a along. I'm glad- to see . Johnny WOMEN'S: SLOW-PITCH '¦ N ¦ land.4-5), N oeles fMesscrsmilh 6-1), said. ''There are too many good V '._. ¦ ¦ Class.' A Plttsburoh (Brett 6-4) at Jan Diego ! great player. and . Lanny, and Hubert and the Texas (Clyde 3-iy at Detroit (Pryman ¦ ¦ ¦ ' . ' ' -W;L. ;. : :WL . .(Jdnes-3-10), v ¦ . players for that to happen now. : 2-3), NN. N . "I disagree ';• with . Tom; other young ptayers developing. Cheer's - 3 0 COry Corner 0 3 California (Lange 1-2) at Chicago (Fralllno 4-5) at San Fran- V ¦ 7 New York 1 "I'm not knocking Jack,*' , Wi nona Liquor 1 .1 .. - VVV7 ^- GARPENTERV;;VV ; - "y " Cisco (0'Acp.ulslo;«.5), N> though. He said he thihksV the ;''They provide : competition." . {$toftlemyre 6-7); N ; , Miller emphasized. "Not at all. Which,- Nicklaus says is what Cheer's Liquor remained undefeated In Milwaukee (Wright 5-6) at Kansas City WEDNESDAY'S- GAMES golf courses .are being set up , " Class A wilh .a 7:0 trlurnph over; Winona •' . ' (Rltimorrls 5-2), N - He's still my. idol—sort .of. He's : . Chicago al San . Francisco - . too easy and that's why we re this game is all about. It's com- "Liquor. Linda' Diersen went 3-for-3. at . Balllmora (Palmar 27) at Mlnnesola ; New York af Atlanla, N ' ¦' : VSU^NTRApfOBS • ' probably the best player iii the the plate for¦ Cheer 's. (Blyleven 5-7), N Cincinnati at Montreal, N ' getting Va.ll; these . real lo"w petition.'' ;, . -Class ' B' : ' ¦world. ¦ " ' - ¦ ¦ Wilh 2 or i man erew to fr*ih» 'iingla dwtlllnfl, multl- . Cleveland (J. .Parry 4-SI at Chicago V-pwia'delphla..at Houston, N. . ' But I don't think Vy ou're ' - ¦• .v. W-L; ;'¦ • ' . - : W L y- " scores. ... . • . (Bahnsen 5-6), N. : st, Louls at Los Anueles, N going to see Jack •winning 50 Sunshine . 4 .0" Mick-Meyer - . ;l-2 ; level hornet; In yi>ur area, F or; a n»tion*wId» homo WEDNESDAY'S GAMES Pltjsbm-oh at Sari Diego, N :•;. - . "IV think we're , getting : all Wincraft 4 0 Oasis Bar 13 ¦ ' . per cent of his starts any more; Goldsworthy named builder. Imirlediafe Employmient/ Good Compensation California.at New York . these real low scores because fast Side . 7 1 North, . Aluiin. 0 4 Oakland at Boston, N Pro Tennis ¦There, ' ' are, just too many there are just so many good to NtiVs 3rd team The.Levee .2 3. - . Package wilh Pay-Out on eomplellon ef rough ereellon. : Taxes at tetrolt, N ly THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. good young players now," he The Sunshine : Bar i Cafe ' clobbered Milwaukee at Kansas City, N, WORLD TEAM TENNIS V players .but here now. Boy, you Northwest Aluminum 1J-S In Class B ac- For More infbrmation, Call Construction Balllmort at Mlnnesola, N ! MONDAY'S.GAMES said MONTREAL 7 Que. (AP ) ' • Department • , and ticked off the* list of make one mistake and a whole . - tion, .Wincraft kept pace with a 7-3 vic- Claveland at Chlcaoo, N y; New York.2». Baltimore 27 the men who have become Right Winger Bill Goldsworthy tory oyer The Levee/ , and East Side Bar Boston 30, Toronto- sMlalo 18 bunch of 7 guys just go flying of the: battered Mickey 'Meyers' 12-2:'' V; NATIONAL¦ lEAOUB¦¦ ¦ 7 Detroit 22, Pittsburgh 19 known as the game's ;Y6ung Minnesota North Stars in make-up. games played recently, " - • • right by you, just whoosh. It 7 .EAST Houston 2?, Los Angeles 21 • Lions: "Hubert .Green,, Jerry has been named to the third Sunshine disposed of the Oasis .13-9 and iMM^JlJJ: ' X i ¦ ' . : . - W. L. Pet. GB: ¦Mlnneiola 30. Florida 21 happens al! the time.:. 7" The Levee rlppid East Slds 32-9. y ¦• Heard.7 John TNational Hockey League all ¦'¦ ' . . • ¦¦ ¦ ¦ Philadelphia ...... 31 56 .5*4 . . Philadelphia '25,. Golden Galers 18 . Mahaffey—he's a Miller and Green,, of course, V " ; .. -.-Clatt-'C - ' . star team picked by the Profes- W L WI ¦ have been the dominant figures sional Hockey Writers Associ- Minnesota City 4 i: SorouU 2 1 on the 7 tour, this year. Miller ation Club Midway J 2 Hauser Art t 4 .. Minnesota .City protected Its lead by ;v Ca|»p; l1^m^:; has won , five k tournaments and Gbldsworthy's position is the trouncing the Sprouts-30:2 In Clajs C, MinneapollSy Minnesota $203,009,;; Green has won three highest ever for a North ahd Club Mlttway knocked off Hauser Stars Art: Glass 15-3 wllh tha aid of two events;and $156,000.7They rank player in the all-star selecUons. homers by Marlon Brewer. Ashe olit ^_ . . PARIS (AP) — The men's Forest Hills . runnerup in 1971 Van Dilleii of Aptos, Calif., vs the Ten- and ^1OT3. But in the. crunch It singles of Bjonv Borg of: Sweden, a co-No. nis tournament settle down to- was Kodes will wilted in the 3 seed; Harold ; Solomon of Sil- day to the usual European fla- cool night air. ( g| vor, with some Latin American In the third set, Kodes served ver Spring, .- lid Vy vs. Marty |pt^su\^r^7^7^-^-7^5 IHS lliyilw ^llC fi JB MrmMmmW tx~'"x ^'.y2m&wMmmm' ;¦ '• " V 'V: . Riessen of Amelia Island , Pla , epice. . . . . \ . a double fault at break point In With four quarter-final spots the . ninth game. In . the lith U.S. ranked No. 7; and Iii f filled, the; lineup, reads: . One game he: led 40-15,: then served NastaseVof Romania, defending . Frenchman, one Spaniard/ one three double faults, including seeded No 1, vs. West German and one Chilean, the final point.V ". champion The last four quarter-finalists The top hal f of the quarter- Onny parun of New Zeland. •will be decided today. final draw pits. Jauffret against {PiibXoate Tuesday, June 11, 1W4 ) . The biggest surprise was the Hans-Jurgen Pohmann of West . GENERAL NOTICE TO SEVVA&E arrival , of Francois Jauffret, a .Germany and DISPOS/VL SYSTEM, INSTALLERS Notice Is hereby given this 10th day 7-6 7-5, 7-5 winner over Jan nf Spain" against Patricio ' Corn- ot Juno, 1974, pursuant lo Winona County ,;V Zoning OfcT.Tunca 1»73, Secllon M, SuMI Kodes of Czechoslovakia, the ejo of Chile. 7 . mat vlilon 3(E) w y -„;- „, 1970 and 1971 French champion Orantes defeated Arthur Ashe 1. No porjon, partnership, firm, or corporation shall engage In Ihe bun- co-No. 3 seed 6-1, 0-2, ¦ who had been seeded No. 2, in of Miami, . nesi o-l Installlno, eonitructlno ' or a match that finished under 6-2. Pohnjann eliminated Eddie : repalrino . a sewage disposal system wifnin Wi« County wlthwt l)rs) se- floodlights on the red day cen- Dibts of Miami, co-No 9 seed, curlno a license to . carry on such ¦• ¦ ¦ ter court at Roland Garros St a- 6-3; >Jv" 4-6, 6-4. Corne jo de " occupation from 1he County Board N|m Schain Frod Naas Dick Horrt David Culver Tom § ol Commissioners. . P McCarthy diiim. Seated Jaime Fillol of Chile, his 2, Any person, partnership, or corpora- Jauffret , the No. 1 French doubles partner.. tion deslrlns a sewage syslem con- tractor ' s llcenie, shall make written pkyer who is at home at Ro- Fourth round matches today application to Iho Wlnonn County land Garros, was not rated in to complete the quarter-final Sanitat ion Department on forms pro- vided lor this purpose which shall the same class as Kodes, the had Raul . Ramirez ot Mexico contain the- lollowlno Information: 1973 Wimbledon champion and vs. Tom Koch of Brazil; Erik . a. Name , and address of the appli- cant „ , , b. Eicperlenca of the' applicant In ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ " ¦ ^ ¦ ¦ •• ^^ ¦ ¦ ^ ^MMi "^— "^^^^™ Iho construction ol aewaoe dls posal systems. c. Number ol years that 1he appll cant has been enonoed In said . business. ' J. The application shall be accompa Your Day Bright Which ahall Start nled by tha license fee bo S5O.0O per year ($15.00 for re malnder of 1974) . Uconsa shall ex plre on December 31, next fol(ovdno tho dofj ol Iheir Issuance , r—— ——— 4. The application . Shall also ' ba ac with a companled by bond In tha principal sum ol tl.500.00 conditional upon tho Dick Theurer Art Pica rd Ken Mogren Al Nelson observance ol all laws, regulations, || j end standards relative to the con «(ruction of sewaoe disposal ayilemi and i**pon the fallliful and workman- like performance ol all work per- formed or to be psrlormed pursuanl to ' such llcomo, Such bond shall run ¦ ¦ ¦ to Iha. Counly of Winona and shall bo lor tha benefit of any person; lajjBMsw^^ if MJM IIgm ^ I pIBll^K firm, or corporation who shall »u* mM MmM MLmmM MMMM Mm\ . w^^ tain nny Injury covered by the bond p and shall provide thai any person, firm, or corporation so Inlured may brlno, an . action In his or lis own nam« lor Hie recovery ol damaoi upon the bond In addition to any o hor ramedy. The s This licensing shall becoma eHactlvi Best on July 15.' 1974. Application for such ComPanies . i »• _ license shall be made In Iha otllc* ol |S5| mmm tho Winona Counly Sanitarian. j i Larry C. Rupprecht USF&G <^? v^Pyx sip cf our fresh steaming coffoe 3^^i£? " ^^ y. 1 —^ From that . first Larry C. Ropprecht, For Your 4 WM& to Hie Inst bite of your choice from our breakfast Winona Counly Sanitarian menu, you 'll experience a great new way to start (First Pub. .Tuisday, May II , 1974) your day, , State ol Mlnnesola ) Counly of IVInona > u, In County Court Get a head start on tomorrow by joining us for Probata Division breakfast, . File No. 17,953 INSURANCE Y& SSL •» la Re Bitale of to Arlhur W. Kerkow, Dtcsdant. ^ Order lor Hurlrte on Patltlon for Administration, Limiting Time te file ¦ ¦ Claims and (or Hearing Thtrion. ¦ ¦ ¦ PT MAIN DINING ROOM OPEN FOR . Hulda OeVoe having lllect herein a ^ - *§s@/ ; '»-* SERVICE palltlon 1or general admlnlatration stat- «* ^BES - NFFM l " . ... FOODPOOD A BEVERAGE Z^kks ing tliat aald decedant died jntestala FROM 5 P.M. ON SUNDAY. and praying that Robert G. Hull be ?$$ £ appointed administrator; IT IS ORDERED, Thst the hearlno thereol bo had on J una 24th, 1914, at 9:45 o'clock A.M., before thla Court In *<** tho county court room In Iho courl house , Mlnneiola 1 tha lime W,N0NA In Winona that within which creditor s o) said decedent may ills their claims be limited to sixty Jtmak^^<» ¥ HA«rtFCMA comacixur E HWY. 43 S. A, Sawyer S WWramW V i ^mmmmJrmmWWtFW ^mW & 14 AND STAT MaWm^S& Judge ot the County Court P I PHONE 454-4390 — (Court Seal) PHONE 452-3366 sW - HULL and HULL ^ ^^ | ^^^ * Allornoys lor Pelllloner g Business Placer for Rent 92 -Z •Ifl VWInons Dally Newt Lost and Found 4 Ho Caltlf, Stock 43 E Musical Merehandlt* ¦ ¦ 7(J Apartments, f=latstvVyV . ' -yy . JO ¦¦ ne*/ ' DENNIS THE MEMAC V 'JJ * -¦ " FOR: RENT-Approxlmately VW : • Winoni, Minnesota l-bedrocm apartment. Stove, OFFICES FOUND — Idtntificatton bracelet, down FEEDER PIGS—42, 3-way cross, iv«r- PUMP . ORGAN - 90-yar-old : Slory.. «nd MODERN " ft., ground floor. Heat* air, condl- . TUESDAY, JUNE IT , 1974 : refrigerator, air conditioner, gartao* . so • neat* lake, Tel. 452-3175 after' -5. . : age. 05. lbs. Teh 507-432-7754. . ; 'Cltrk, sood/ operating, condition, - 55 tlonlng and some furniture; ' Private . disposal Included, SIM .per . - month. key l> stop with foot- pump and side ; restroom. . Available Immediately. , Tel, . pump. Submit sealed bldi ' before July .Available)' - July lst. Tel. 454-4J11. after ¦ ¦ : REGISTERED POLLED Hereford bulls, ' ' ' ' ' ¦ ¦- ' ' ¦¦ " " ' ' ' ' ' " - ' ' ' V- ' ' ' ' ' ' " 4S4-4812-; .. . ' . 'V. ; ' Personali : ' ' ¦ ;. ' v *:- ' ¦ ' ' ' . ; 7 77 '* ¦ • ¦ " ¦ ' ; ¦ ¦ ¦ 2 and 3 years.old, .several to ciioos* IY- 19M to, Stockton Meth odist ChOrch; . ¦• ¦ from. Earl Holfiworlhi Rt. . 3, Winona, Stockton; Minn. Board' of'trustees ' re- and full balh, rlVr WERE YOU THE MAN. who at 1:05 a.m. . . Tel. 452-9321. . - . . servti right to reject any or all bids. FOUR LARGE rboms Farms, Land for Rent 7 ;9? VVahtVAds last Friday, stumbling around looking '- Tel. «89-2743.; ;. er vlewr In Trempealeau. Stove, refrig- . for the light In the ladles' room, pulled . 4:30 ; p.m., lovely erator, h«at, hot water, new carpal; fur- HORSE SHOW-Fri; 100 acrei . basturti the. mirror oft the Wall? . D.C., THE trophies, 6 ribbons; 18 classes, bring ZILDJIAN: CYMBALS, : drum ted,, gui- nished. 5110 plus .deposit. Tel, West- FOR RENT— 75 to * Tel, .454-3270j!lt(r ' - ANNEX . ' ;¦; .family. ' Big Valley Ranch; Tel.:454-3305. . tars, amplifiers microphones, accord- . . Salem 786-0956 or. Holmen 326:3495.- ' ^orey%lley area. ¦ • ¦ ¦ - ¦ ¦ • ' " - ¦¦ Start H-are lans, violins, standi. Bargains! All .;«. .; . ..' ' . . .;. . 'V . . . . . - v. .' : - . . ' NURSING SCHOLARSHIP AWARD win; REGISTERED POLLED Hereford bull, 4 ouarentted. A. Weisch. Fountain¦ -Clly, ' ¦ ' ¦ ' - riers and their parents will be HONOR- , Rt. V- . : ¦: ¦ ' • LOAFv ; V FOR RENT—35 acres for hay . grouniji :• ¦LIND ADS UNCALLEp FOR- ;. years old, best offer. Travis Nelson . ..WI1. iZ x. ;. - . . . x SUGAR I, ED liy the 40 eV t) at, their Dinner & 3, Homer Rltlge, Winona, Tel, 454-4628. ^ Cprey yalley area.. .Tal. 454-3370 altar . June '¦ ' ¦ A* 14, 720, SlV 30, 44,;47> V>. ' Prominade Thurs.. . . 13 at. . the ;.' -' American Made ,;. • V APARTMENTS ' ¦ ¦¦ LEGION. CLUB. REGISTERED ANGUS bulls/ on . 2-year- 658 E, Sarnia ¦ - Aparfmenti Houses for Rent y ;> V;9S "' ' old and yearlings. Gordon Rein 8- Sons, 2-Bedfoom CONGRATULATIONS to .. ilhm V.F.W. Whalan, Mm. Tel. io7-2378. ',. featuring,* , ¦¦ ¦ Hal Leonard iMpsic "•;. Card of thanks . Buddies on their victory. One down and • Air eondillonlhg .: ;. . FOR RENT—5-bedrbom honie In WlsceV . , Good -Tacit. V.F.W POST ' "-m facilities beaullM. ; 13 more to 50 ¦ POLLED SHORTHORN Bull 'Sale, June Laundry Valley, 2 baths,, large yard, ' ¦ ¦ ' ' ' y ' ¦ • i287. ' ¦ . .; • Blitejcal lnstrumeiits V; WAGER- -.. V \- '- -: : ; ;. -y . 14th, Lanesboro Sale Barn. 10 big, com- • Reserved¦ parking setting, responsible family only.. Tel. , I wish to' thank the nurses and Dr. Herb ¦ Patio - : " '- - ¦ - . . Ing 2-year-old bulls. Jim Bryan, Red • Electronics •VSupplIes V • . ¦ 4S4-327p alter 6. ;: . . j : . . .; Helse and all who took care tit me at HYPNOTISM INSTITUTE . INC. High sue- - Wing; Curtis. Solium, Goodhue, consign- • Shag carpeting, .: '• tor ¦ -• the hospital. Also thahks to everyone cess ratios In weight control, smoking ors. ..; " 'y 7 • Instruineht Repairs : FOUR' BEDROOM honie Itt Minnesota the cards and gifts and tor the flowera elimination' and -Image ad|ustmenl V yTEU 452-2725 7 City, large . lot, Ideal for family, . from. Circle C. : . .¦• '. areas , at a low cost. Cell for appoint- SI)C-YEAR-OLC 689-2938. ,. • , V> Arab Vi quarler horse 7 64 E; 2nd V Tel. 4S4-2920 . mediate possession. Tel.. . .- ' Mrs. Carl (Sally) Wager ..' ment or Information.. . Free brochure mare, been worked with cattle, also VA- CENTRALLY LOCATED — 1-biedrobin mailed upon request. Newburg Building, month-old colt along side, Tel. Mabel, apartment and 1 efficiency apartment, FOUR-BEDROOM -4 living room, . dining y 421 Main, La Crosse. -Tel. 784-10BO. Minh. : 493-39^*1 after 6. Sewing Machines stova, refrigerator, heat, hot water, fur- room, kitchen, full 'basement.. -57* Wl* ?3 nished. 305 Winona St- cpyta St. alter a. Tel. 452-7434.; . CARRIAGE HOUSE Cleaners for altera. FOR SALE—96i feeder pigs, castrated, I - . tions, repairs, . tewing, pocket.-Uppers; weeks old. . Dittman Bros., Caledonia, CLEAN USED sewing machines, straight ONE-BE DROOM •lliclency apartment, air THREE-FOUR bedrooms, furniihed, ctiw lining, general sewing. Gllmore Ave. AAlnn. Tel. 724-2132. stitch end zlcj :ag, S» and up. WINO- conditioned, carpeted, electric stove ahd Aug. 1-May 30 on le«K»' ¦• Jx tral. Available ¦ mi^x-x at Vila St., Miracle Mall entranca. NA , SEWING CO., SIS W. 5th. refrigerators $135 per month. Tel; 456- ¦' ¦ , «00. :Tel. 454~<244. . ' ;¦ . . . ENROLL IN eur riding classes. Enjllsh- ji92. . : GOT A PROBLEM? Need Info rmation or Western, adulls-chlldren. Trail riding T/pewriters AT" 304 LAKE STREET—lovely J-5 bllt. . ' lust want to "rap"? Call YES evening* every day, reservations required. Tel. 77 y ¦ E) :¦ room, V/i *alh, 2 fireplaces, rec room, WANTE 452-5S90. . . " ¦»• . Gayle, 452-3305. Big Valley Ranch,¦ Inc., :- and' adding machines Do You Already. Own S385 per month. Tel. 454-105?. " .: ¦: • . -.¦ • . .- TYPEWRITERS¦ " 1. Air-conditioner y. ". Riding.'Academy. . • . . for rent or sale..- toy- rates. Try us . live In weekends and babysi t, . 2. Shag carpeting ' GIRL to Business Services 14 for all. your office supplies, desks, FURNISHED HOUSE for rent for : J or ¦ reliable, is years or older, may 3. Private balcony ¦¦' - must lie HEREFORD BULLS, good herd bull pros- files or office chairs LUND OFFICE 3 girls, 'A block from WSC. Na pets. , live In all the time, Tel. 454-2002. SNOWBLOWER, tiller pects, . big and rugged, Anxiety 4th 452-5222. 4. Washer 4. dryer Tel. 608-782-6918. , power mower and SUPPLY CO. 128 E. 3rd. Tel. S. PaHoy ' '' ¦ ' ' other small ' engine repairs, sales and breeding. Rush Arbor Farm,.Elmer R. ' . * ' • - • COOK—Experience necessary. Altfer. " 6.: Gas charcoal grill FRY service, Howard Larson, Old Minnesota Schuelei*, ¦fcushlord, Minn. Tel. 507-844- ¦ noon shift. Apply in person, Ruth's Reis- - »I22. '- . ' Wanted to Buy - . WE : DOI ;- Wantirsd to Rent fl* , . City Road , 'Tel. 454-14B2. '. . . V 81 taurant. . '. " ' ' ., . Tt|. 454-4909. 1752 W. Broadway r ;¦ young married couple itr , ERV'S FIX-IT Service, home and house- PUREBRED - rORKSHIRE and Chester MV FW£N0 HEPE tX^T BELI&V/E YOti m LARGE INSULATED dooJjouse.yTtl. 452- ' RESPONSIBLE . ¦ V VKEYVAPARrMENTS V .house , or apartment. W. i X .;. WAITRESS : hold repairs, remodeling, end painting. while boars, 40—300 . lbs., gilts 40—150 M70 alter. 5 . p.m. . . sires small z- Tel; ' July lsf.y Tel. 432 11M ¦»« B ' Fridays S. Saturdays . . • ;;Tel. 454HQ1&- lbs. Merlin Johnson, Durand, 715- PILE It HI$H£R AhJyeOG/ IM TOWN; "J side. : ¦ . . . . 1>1AH ' Tel. ' ¦' ": ' " y- ¦ •¦ '¦ ' " Steve 's Lounge 672-37H. .. .. WANTED TO BUY-pl cnle table. Apartments, Furnished 9 1 y p.nn. -. - .. . . . 454-2002. Busihess Services ¦ ' ', 6-8 weeks old, J23| S bedroom home In WI- METER CHECKER - City of Winona. 14 WIS. FEEDER pigs Fertilizer NEAR ST. TERESA'S COLLEGE; Avail- WANTED—4 to HO weeks old, $26. Erysipelas vac- , Sod 49 Articles for Sal* 757 : . 452-5827. High School ' .graduate. Ability to type . OLDER USED saddles and broken re- able July 1st, 2-bedr6om apartment .noiia area. Tel. . YOU CAN AFFORD .this electrician..' For cinated, castrated, delivered. C. Ack- ¦required. . Neat ' ' appearance. 5375 ,p«r" . ¦ - ' pairable .saddles. Te|.:St. Charles 932- with 3. porches; Stove and refrigerator. . prompt , service Tel. 452-2160. House »-, Middleton, Wli. Tel. 608-83S-8764, MLC CO.—landscape contracting, dirt VE HAVE Just thi .right'up for your, ' ' ' ' ' month starting salary plus fringes, Ap- . . ywork, sod, trees, black dirt, • ' J70O. • - . -. . . . V- '. .¦.' . Tel... 452-6451.. . : y .. powe r Is bur specially. . Bonded;, li- fill, re- pickup ' . '.box: -STOCKTON GAMRER Farms; Laiid for Sale 9S . Rpom. 19, City Hall, ' Mr. - Norton.. taining walls, driveways, • ply . censed and Insured electrical, con'trac- POLLED HEREFORD bulls, 2 years old! cat Work and SALES, Stockton, Minn. Tel. 507-689- - ¦ ¦ ¦- WANT 10" radial or circle saW, Tel; 452- WANTED—1 girl io live With 2 others at near - - . : tor: . . • - , .; John Klhneberg, Rushlord, Minh. . trucking. Tel. 507r452-71U 2670. . ; " ' BEAUTIFUL US' acre hobby farm . WOMAN WANTED to help elderly, laidy . - 7597./' . 312 Winona St. Utilities furnished. (60 :lnsul!lea , . Lake City, Minn. .3 . large ¦ . - with mear preparation, light housework sluf-glsri drains- not month. HS blocks N. WSC, Tel. 452- :'2' • big machine shtds. CUSTOM ROTO tilling wllh a troy belt, PUREBRED CHAROLAIS bulls, polled Hay, Grain, Feed ; .EAKING FAUCETS, , SCRAP IRON A METAL y.3m.;-y buildings and . ,.¦ ' and . other , duties . In .small ,;aparltfient. . - . 7 . ' -SO enough hot wet«r? We can cure these WM. MILLER . . home en any size garden, reasonable rate. Tel. or horned!. Lloyd Duncanson, St. hlghset . prices for scrap Iron, Superbly landscaped ^ew ¦ Maximum of 4-6 hours a day. Inquire ills! THE PLUMBING BARN, Service CO. pays elevation giving commanding view 'of ' - . y 452-4»0. y ..-Charles, AAinn.' 55972. Tel. .932-3464. STANDING HAY for ' sale. and raw fup. LARGE 2-bedroom . Mrs, Mary '.Ka'rsiiia,' •: Community WW- . . Conrad Brandt, and Repair Division. ' - Tel. 454-4246. \ metal apartment tor 4-5 stu- valley.;- Land has great • development .- ' • ' ' • '¦ . Lewlsion, Minn. - C los-ed Saturdays dents available now rhqrlal Hospital. Tel. 454-3450. . • . . through Sept. 1. ' potential. MLS , 1184. Contact Richle«- PUREBRED YORKSHIRE and Hamp- 1252 Trempealeau Drive Tel. 452-2067 Tel. 454-2898. ' ' Painting, Decorating 7 20 shire boars, test and scan-o-gram rec- FEN-FOOT' radial arm ; Shopcratt saw, . Really, Home Federal Dulldlng, 4lt*i : CIRL OR LADY lo help .care (or bed- WANTED TO BUY—20O bushels . of cob ¦ ords. Roger Owen, Durand, Wis. Tel. like nev, SI35/ or best otter, and girls' ' ' and. Cenler, "Winona,; . Minn. -Tel. «2- ridden lady. . Must live: In. Fra nk HOUSE POINTING — Interior, ' exterior. corn or oats. Call Ed Kulak. Tel. Tay- Tel, . WANTED-Llonei American flyer . toy TWO ROOMS.Vlarge . closeis, air eleclrlc - ' 672-5717 . "* ; pottjr . chslr. . .452^4695. . any - • 1151 or 452:155ft . Morey, Caledonia, Mlntl. Tel. 507-7-24- Roof.coatlng. 15 Vaafs experience. Fully lor, Wis! 662-2853. . trains, sets, parts or accessories, kitchen, employed couple, no pets. .321 ' ' - ¦ condition, also : V.'-t h.p, to 10 h.p. gaso- Washington St., ; .2567.: Insured.,.Tel; 454-4808. ' . ' "- , HCTPOINT REFRIGERATORS , Apt. 4. HOBBY. FARM FOR SALE—13 acrel, S QUARTER HORSE stallion for sale, dark FIFTY ACRES standing hay. Robert- or line englnes.: Soger. Loslnskl,. Tel. 454- chestnut virllh blaze -face. Tel. Arcadia illNE sizes available to meet your needs. ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦' ¦ ¦ ' bedroom ,: house,' gas . furnace, . . ' fresh • • • ' LABORATORY INSTRUCTOR: for chem- Thomas Tibor, Minnesota -City, Minn, ' 3886. ' -iy:- ' - " ONE-B EDROOM, available July' l, naar ¦ . '323 3078.':y Reasonable prices. GAIL'S :- APPLI- water brook. Tel. ,Alma (I85-3234. ¦> ' istry labs, part-time beginning. :-felt Plumbing, Rooming 21 ; Tel. 507-689-2458. ,y ANCE, 215 E, 3rd: ' • ¦ Colleoe of St. Teresa. Tel. 454-1S85. Irunks, wood Ice box, semester. Requires a BS In chemistry. ROUND TOP? "•¦-' TIP TOP TAP suggestion . . . Install WANTED: gentle riding horse (no pony)! . desks,.high- back chalrjs, any. old items,: LAND LISTING i SELLINC : Firtna, Contact Sister Helen Elsbernd, Vilerbo WANTED^-ear corn. Eugene Lehnarlz, JON'T MELT this summer • . . . come SEVERAL 1,. 2 and 3-bedroom apart- ' - ' ".- - Moeri 'Dialect or l-control faucets Ih Suitable for children. Reasonable. Tel. 452-4515- ' Hobby Farms, -.Small . Acreage Our . College, La Crosse. . . . ' ! ¦¦ ' ' ¦ Tel. 507-534-3763J . In,, talk to us about^ a low-cost Home Tel. . ments available at . various locations, ' ¦ your kllchen and balh. Combine beaut/ 454-1291, : " -. : i i :¦ ' Specialty. Free Appraisals. . SUGA R ¦ Improvement Loan. Wr» will help you ¦' nlcel y furnished and carpeted, Tel. 452- LOAF. Tel. 454-2367 or 454-11M It-City of Winona. 5 to 5 with . savings and convenience.; . .- ' 'HIGHEST PRICES PAID ' • ' 3778. - ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ MECHANIC I . (IEGISTERED POLLED Hereford bulls, en|oy . tliat air conditioning system, - ¦ eveni ngs. ; ' . years experience required. Capable of Seeds, Nursery Stock 53 . for scrap irron, ' metalsi .rags, hides, 6 yearlings, . Lewis H. Schoening 6, ¦ sooner; than you anticipated. . Conven- .operating a front end loader and small Frank O'Laughlin ¦ • . raw fur and. wool. Sons, Tel. , 452-6380. .' - ' « /C~V V ' . " ' V'V , : ient terms will be . arranged to fit your THREE-BEDROOM, spacious well , kept IF.YOU ARE In the market for a llrrh grader, desired. - $4,44 per . hour . p-lus .PLUMBING & HEATING PLANTS ~ Tomatoes, cabbage, pepper, budget. MERCHANTS NATIONAL apartment for 3 persons for summer, 1 761 E. : 6th . ' Te|. 452-M4J brussel . sprouts, coleus, ' or home or .. are planning to sell real. ¦ fringes. Full-time position. Apply Room . " .petunia,, ger- BANK; Have a Happy.Dayi Sdrri Wfeismdn & Sons one block from WSC, $60 each, Ttl. " MIDWEST BREEDERS — tor!the most aniums, msrlfjold, salvia, garden seeds, . INCORPORATED eslate ol any type Contact NORTHER*! . !»; . Clly. Hall, Mr. Norton. ¦ ¦ . 454-1111, days, 454-4745, evenings,. COMPANy, EXPERIENCED ROOFING>- fret esti- Complete Artificial Insemination Serv- -berry.- '.boxes. Winona Potato Market. . . ' • 450 W. 3rd ' .; .'.Tei .452-5847 . . INVESTMENT Real Estate - ices of all. Tel. toll tree 1-80O-552-7255. Brokers, Independence, wis., or Eldon. fULL-TIME - shipping and receiving. 40 mate. . 'Tel.. 452-7198. AUST SELL—Ward's Signature washer; avocado color, : 2 years old, - TWO-ROOM apartment, shoWer balh, en- W. Berg, • Real Estate' -'. - talisman.,. hour week, . Must be physically fit to BLUE AND white spruce trees, 3' to 5' holds IB : closed entrance, . lbs., .9-cycle.. . S!0O.; .Tel. 3. Rooms With AAea|s 7 85 2nd floor. Prefer 1 em- Arcadia, Wis. Tel. ,328-7350.' handle ell, Incoming fre'ght Including Situations Wanted—Fern. 29 tall, J5 «ach birch trees, 8* . or more, '^52-868. . ployed person. No pets. Tel; 452-4077, . . ' . appliances, : television, carpeting and ... S2. " 'CJrcl« , G Ranchi, Tel, 454-1160. . LARGE HOME.- converted ' , to . . sleeping near Dover,' Minn, 'with ' other merchandlsj. Neat topearlTig. 5ARAGE SALE—20"' boys' jSchwinn, 20" nice 318 ACRE farm . . .. . : - EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER, will boys' Penney rooms :or . room .and board for men, GIRLS^exceptlbnall/ aparlments tor 200 acres open. Only *v4 mile Irom ., ¦ '¦ Apply man office, H, CHOATB 1 CO., : 's bicycle, miscellaneous, sumrner : . • provide own transportation. . Tel. . 452- ;X - baby "' . 'home cooki ng. 203 Main St; So. Tel. or fall, .fully: furnlhsed, fully Highway 190 rampl Stream: throuoh Ntn Krieger. . . - :- . ¦ - ¦- ¦ ¦ . JJ-[3l^X ' Antiques, Coins, Stimpj 56 furniture. Including General Mo- . . . . vf y 1503. . : ¦ : . .;;; ¦; x . . : l , . l-6O0-2'48-264O.' .carr>eted, very clean, very cheery, tei, ¦property fed by 4 springs. Ideal for tors carseet, 18" black and white port-' . 454-3323. . , LOTS. OF NICE, souvenir .spoons, , oth- able; TV, old tables, antique desk, ba- " - recreational ' .development - or beef cow -.. DUE TO OUR plant expansion wa ..are EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER will sit ' ¦ ¦ er sterling pieces. Mary Twyce An- con, crlsper,; Hoover vacuum- attach- operation; MLS .1178. Contact RlChlV ' In need ef 1 working foreman, exper- tor 1 or 2 children up to 6 or 7 years, EVERY THURS; Rooms Without Meals 86 GIRL WANTED to share large,.comfort- ' - separators, evaporators; d ry- tiques & Books; 920 W. ilh.y : ments, miscellaneous clothing, ladles . Realty, . Home Federal. Bulling, 4th arid . ienced lit days, preferably my home. References ¦ ' able 3-bedrooni apartment, all utilities ¦'¦ ¦ u ' .' ' ' . size T4 and lunk, »65 VV. Howard. ; -.' - . ..- Center, Winona, Minh. Til. 453-llil or ers, etc. Salary. 115,000 year., Profit ' ' v . ' . . TTU -452-8604. paid. $45. Tel. 454 4812 after 5 p.m; ' ¦ ' • furnished If heeded. .Tel. 45M864. LARGE ROOMS for rent/Tel. ; 452-1550.. - ¦ . . . sharing, 'hospitalization! etc. Also - ¦;-^^J Articles for Sale 57 IOAT, 19', 75 h.p. motor. Coronado dish- good dairy plant workers. Level Veils/ FURNITURE REFINISHINO done at ^'?t- : guys Clean,-nicely decorat- DELUXE DUPLEX—3 . bedroomi, aVall- wash er, 900 BTU air conditioner. Msy ROOMS FOR Dairy :Co., 807 Plsasanf . Valley Road, reasonable rates. Tel. Fountain City . yThiirs. ed, single and double rooms, reasonable able June: to Sept,, $200. ideal for 4 ".. a goiod day to .DROPLEAF KITCHEN -table and 4 be seen at 470 Junction St. y-. . - Houses for Sale 99 West Bend,.¦ Wis. 53095. Tel. 414-334- 687-0702 or .454-1796. •¦: ' rates, nlCe.. big kitchen, TV lounge, girls! . Tel;-. 452-4649. ' ' - ;-' ¦ ¦ ' . ¦¦ - " .. . " chairs, very good condition, $25. 1311 . , 7711. ; v ;; . . .;;; V sell market cows. ¦ ' ¦;¦' ¦¦ quiet. Tel. 454-3710. ;.- . - ' FINANCING AVAILABLE — mwl be . ' w, stn.y ;• " ' . •VERVTHING . must BO, colored TV, liv- CAPABLE BABYSITTER available "any- ing room set, , bedroom set, kitchen ap- ¦ seen, expertly, constructed 1 anil V WE HAVE an opening for a full-time au- : time and will , babysit In your. home. . Several packer buyers • : room for yovna man: ¦ ' FOR SALE—18/0O0 BTU air conditioner. pliances, dinette set,: miscellaneous. SJ9 CLEAN, SHARED ' Stay Gool bedroom Townhouses. Attached serines. tomotive .salesman. Excellent company Tel. 452-4357. y • .: Separate ', entrance. . .TV end cooking ^ Open dally; Tel: 454-1059. benefits. Apply In person to .:. -ya.lways present. * . yTel. 45fll38.y Winona St.; ' . Penney's area. :provided; Tel. 452-7700. . . . . ' Aulo Cenler between 9 a.m'. and 5 p.m; - . ..: at: tfte . X BABYSITTING In my home. Tel. 452- ISED RCA color TV-stereo . weekdays,; ' COFFEE TABLE, living room chair. Good , AM-FM ra- . . ; 7278.- ' ''condition.: Before S Tel. 452-5461; after -30 washers, fforge Village, 60! Huff. upstairs "' carpeted ; pervisor positions available alter proper TWO-BEDROOM ¦ ¦ HIGH SCHOOL.' boy or -man for farm lengths. Some like new. Cheap. 2 pair ¦apartment. Stove and refrigerator fur- TWO BEDROOM : -furnished apartments, :: ' training and knowledge ot products. Tel. ' ' work,.very little' chores. No milking. drapes. Tel. 452-7560. . ALC CO. trailer hitches Installed, All 'Available Immediately. Tel. 454- near WSC. Available June v to girls. : :- • nished. i™4.^¦ : -452-4649. custom work foreign and domestic auto-' ' ' Tel- 687-7414 Or . 454-2J61. ' I^UOUHH _ ^; Tel. Lewlston 5771. Write Box 239, Poultry* Eejgi, Supplies 44 . 4400. . . . • . . . -.- 'W Lewlston. MOVING SALE — Antiques, furniture, . mottles. ' Call for prices and. appoint- LAUNDROMAT—ideal business for handy- POULTRY RANGE house, 8x12', good dishes, bunk beds, mowers, record play- ment. Tel. 507-452-7114. STUDENT APARTMENTS now avail- man. " Shows good-net Income. Tel. Joe DOWNTOWM 1-bedrootn apartment, com- EXPERIENCED — semi truck driver. ¦ condlllon. Clarence Scherbrlng, /Ainner ers, bicycles, file cabinets; 21T W. 71h. renriodeled and carpeted. Stove able for summer and fall. Please Tel. . Maas Realty 507-288-2400. . . .' pletely ' ¦ Write A-n Dally News. ; ;sota 'Cify. Tel. . 454-2370. - ' and refrigerator, kitchen set fucnlshed. . 454-5870; If ho . Answer 452-4007 or ¦¦: NEE/PLES E 454-4489 or 452-9035. Leave your name ' . : TWO SEPTIC.tank cleaning; outfits, ; - No students. No pets.: 175'A : , 3rd. Tel. Youv Can Start com- LAST CALll Lest haitch of season, June THREE-FAMILY Backyard Sale. Bar- . For Ail Makes . . .. ' ' ¦' ' ' arid requirements and ' your call will plete ready 10 work, 1,000-gal. . 452-9319, " :" . . OFFICE MANAGED and V 14. : ORDER NOW. SPELTZ CHICKS, gains , -galore ! ' Starting " Thurs. and ot Record Players. ' be- returned. . SOO-aal. wilh: factory vacuum and pres- ' ' Smiling Rollingstone, Minn. tei. - 68M31I. .. . • through . Sun.; 9 to I. SIT E.. s*|h. decorated upper aparf- sure pump.. Reason for selling other DELUXE newly ' v DEEDED ; ¦ ¦ Hardt's Music: Store air conditioning, carpeted, stove ONE BEQROOM-S130 month. . NoVpels. Here. isV a fineVS bedrooin , v . business interests, Tel.,' «08-26?-216>. •iifrlliplMa ' , ' • - - . ment; . Accounting Experience required, Su- ORDER NOW-Slarted 3-week-old XL.10, KITCHENETTE TABLE and chair set, E. .". refrigerator, heat and water. Couple No students. Acorn Motel, Minnesota ' ' ' ahd ¦ 2-story home. Only minutes . pervlslohal. experience preferred, ex- XL-9 broad-breasted males; also started MS.Scar seat, J3. 615 W. 8th. . . preferred. 5150. Tel. 452-9325. .;. City. Tel. 689-2150. . citing opportunity Iri Foreign Trade Dogs, Pets, Supplies 43 Babcock ' pullets;, goslings; ducklings. Business Equipmenf 62 from downtown, excellent tor the right man. Apply: Poultry feeders, waterers and poultry CONSOLE Stromsberg and Carlson Stereo, AVAILABLE JULY 1—lovely v bedroom, ' TWO CENTRALLY located : 1-bedroom : condition. : MLS #1144. ENGLISH SPRINGER Spaniel :. ' puppies, wire available nowr. Vie have caponlz- 78 record player with AMFM short wave ApLTILITH MODEL.80, offset printing apartments with heat, stove end refrig- 274 E. Broadway, all untitles fur- stereo, 2 record nished. SI65 per month. Tel, 454-1059. MARANGQNI U.S.A. AKC; .8 Weeks , old. Tei.. Rochseter 285- . ers, markets and service. BOb's Chick radio* S35; console RCA pi-ess. Will print up to xl4" sheet erator furnished. No unmarried stu? • ¦ ' radio, $35; air conditioner, S'A" . ¦ ,;. 4M0 W. Service Drive, ¦ .°5M. . :- . .. . Sales, Alice Goede,' manager, 150 W. - players end Good condition. Reasonable. Tel. 454- dents, Tet. 452-9287 for appointment. . ' For Details, Call . Winona, Minn. 2nd. Tel. 454-1092 or 454-3755. Formerly 8,500 BTU, $50. Tel. 4S4-2O02. ; 1Uf>. ' ", 452-4934 ... ST. BERNARDS for sale. Tel. the .Wlno-na Chick Hatchery. . CENTRAL—3-bedroom apt., ground Life is Good ¦ : Table and,4 cbalrs. EAST WANTED—boys or gl rls for strawberry . 689-2705. DINETTE SET — floor. Heat and water furnished, Tel. Very good condition. Tel. 454-353d. Furn., Rugs, Linoleum ' ' picking. Tel. 452-4813. AVAILABLE NOW: Started XL-9 Extra 64 452-9020 , after. 5. . xXx i rt/'theX l . . FOR SALE—1 registered Blue Tick Coon- Hevay Broad Breasted Males at Special SALE—eleclrlc stove. 158 Market or : ^ Pa per and Paiiiit- MLC, WESTGAT E Gardens, help wanted hound, ternale, very good. Bob - Fort, 701 Prices. • Finest eating for broiling or FOR ATHER'S DAY SPECIAL—47" high-back AVAILABLE JULY lst..2-bedroom duplex ¦ ; Should have chauffeur's license, be fa Wilson St., Winona, Minn. , roasting. Less care Is-requlred-onstart- -Tel. 454-5073. . foam padded recllner In black expanded ' lake. Working couple Key Apa rtments! Small . brick" . liome, hard- apartment- near YOU lL love relaxing In .your soundproof, miliar with tractors and trucks. Apply ed birds and baby chick problems are vlriyl, only 186 wf. BURKE'S FURNI- . "pels.' Inquire 713 Wash- preferred. No . xlr conditioned apartment or entertain- wood .floors, large kitchen, after 5 p.m.! In person. TO GIVE AWAY—part German Shepherd, eliminated. Capon!zed birds available FRIGIDAIRE—8,000 BTU, window air TURE MART, 3rd; 8, Frankllnr-Gpen " ingion:- . male puppy, Tel. Arcadia 323-7375. . on May 24th,: day old XL-? on May 17. conditioner, ' 2 years old. . Good condi- Frldsy evlnlngs. Park behind the store. ing! guests on your private patio with a new roof , East location, 2- Electric 20" color meal prepared oh our charcoal grills. Leghorn pullets for white eggs. We tion, $170; General LARGE EFFICIENCY aparlmenl. Tel. car garage. MLS #1161, Management ¦ ' TV, $70. 275 W, 6lh or Tel. 452-6980. ¦ ' ' Each spacious 1-bcdroom Is exquisitely GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, white and have goslings and ducklings, Tel. 507- Good Things fo Eat 454-3752.. ' " . . . '. ' brown, Tel. Alma 608-685-4556. 454-5070 or write, Coral City poultry 65 decorated with co ordinated drapes, Trainee Products, Inc. Box 381, Wlnone, Minn., GIRLS' SCHWINN .' -bicycle, - 16x8 screen — 2-bedroom apartment luxurious shag carpet and completely A SINCERE DEPENDABLE ' Tel. IN LEWISTON furnished Includi ng electric We are looking for six Individuals SHELTIE5 (Toy Collies). Sables, trls, located on Breezy Acres. Free price awning , for recreational vehicle. now. Slove, refrigerator, car- appliance*. ; COMPANY available There are excellent laundry who want to lilt the ceilings on their rare blues, Pet, show, Tel. 507-895-471-1. list. :. ,452-9698. port; Tel. Lewlston 523-3778 or 454-4768. facilities on Income and "to got the better things Hart's, La Crescent, Minn. \ . the premises and an abundance ot stor- SPECIAL age space. Close to shops Office: 315 Mankato Avenue In lite for themselves, ahd 'their-fam- USED G.E. refrigerator, good condition, DOWNTOWN—1-bedroom completely re , on busline. ilies; $I4-$1B,000 first year Income. Wanted—Livestock 46 $50. Tel. 454-3291. apartment. 17S2 W. Broadway. Tel. 454-4909. 454-4585 ' SPITZ PUPPIES, white, 5 weeks old, modeled and redecorated 'Automatic. Increases each year. $35 each, also rabbits, all colors and Sauerkraut and Polish Sau- refrigerator, , air conditioning " WANTED—Holstein -calves. Norbert . Stove, KEY APARTMENTS Pat Magin: 452-4934 THIS IS A CAREER OPPORTUNITY* sizes. Dale Lee,/HoU'slon. -Tel. ' 896-3434, Gre- ONE SMALL girls' bike and one small and Water furnished. -1)70. den, Altura, Winn. Tel. 796-6701. unit, heat WITH A 100-YEAR-OLD COMPANY boys' bike; 415 W. Broadway. sage, includes bak-sd potato, Inquire HARDT'S MUSIC STORE, 116 FOR PERSONAL INTERVIEW , IRISH SETTER, male, 1 year old dog, Levee Plara E. Business Places for Rent 92 KELVINATOR gas dryer, good condition. AKC, shols, $60. Tel, Whitehall, Wis., Farm Implements , 48 jello salad, dark bread and " Tel. 788-3474 ' 715-538-406. $40. Tel, 452-3823, SECOND FLOOR office space, 1,000 sq. WI ULTIPLE (between SPACIOUS 10 and 4 p.m.) IHC No. 1 hay conditioner. Clarence beverage. 2 servings for , II. Prima location overlooking the FREE PUPPIES—Tel. Rollingstone 6«- Scherbrlng, Mlnnesola Clly. ' RUMMAGE SALE-2112 Onalaska Ave., APARTMENTS • : Plaza, 3rd and Lalayelte, Reasonable. 3913. . La Crosse. June 12 through 23. Lois of $2.70 with this ad — present - Old NSP building. Tel. 434-4071 9-5. L ISTING mlsc, no antiques. 2 Bedrooms 1 Bedroom v THREE MATUR.E ALLIS CHALMERS roto-baler, real good : • • E condition, used very little, 5400 or' best ad when ordering (serving 1 Bedroom Efficiencies OFFICE SPACE for rent or lease, 13,000 REALTOR • C offer, Some twine. Mayrath tubular EIGHT-FAMILY Garase Sale. Myles • sq, ft. Prime E. location, Inquire Mer- ¦S Vaughn, Rolllngslone. Frl. 8 a.m.-l p.m, Unfurnished ERVICE PEOPLE NEEDED BOOK — BOOKS elevator« . '<"# 38' long, with or with- 11:30 to 10 p.m.). Good on . Furnished or chants Bank, Trust Department , Tel. out 2 h.p. motor and cord, s.250 or best Playpen, stroller, frinonth crib, wig, LAKE PARK & VA.LLI 454-5160. IMMEDIATELY offer, . Rudy Hesch, Cochrane, Wis., lamps, books and magazines; boys' June 12 arid 13 only. "We have Books on (Waumandee). Tel. 608-626-3561. girls', men' s, women ' s. clblWng, all VIEW APABTMENTS WAREHOUSE OR storage space for renf. sizes; records, 35 1b. Ben Pearson bow, $200, Includes heat, lights and outlets. MINIMUM 40 HOURS toys and gomes, much mlsc, Tel. 452-9490. Almost Any Breed of Dog. FORD BN tractor with itep-up transmis- Located at 1671 W. 5th. Tel. 452-1751. PER WEEK sion, excellont condlllon, Tel. 687-3854 HILLSIDE ¦ , AREA—Peluxe one-bedroom Also a complete selectkSPoh . (Marshland). DINING ROOM table, 3 combination GOODVIEW TO HELP US SAVE LWES windows, 28x50; sink wllh cabinet, apartment, furnished or unfurnished, 452-6533, Birds and Small A.nlmals — ENGLISH SADDLE-Complela wllh fit- kitchen wall and base cupboard, Tal. FISH HOUSE adults only. Tel, EARN UP TO $40O ting. Tel. 4J4-37»1 alter 4. Houston 896-3866 after 5:30, . ' ——I AFTER HOURS CALL* also Tropical Fish . . TWO ROOM apartment In Fountain City, PER WEEK furnished, available Im- Avla Cox ...... 454-1172 WANTED — lunk old model IHC trac- LAWN MOWERS: one 32" lelf propelled Guns, Sporting Goods heat and waler A BOB tor lor parts, need not be complete, reel-type, ona 16" Jacobson push-type 66 mediately. Tel. 687-7741. Laura Fisk .... Kitchen exhaust tan. 612 Lalayelte, Tel, At /) A . . 452-2118 For Interview Tel. 507-24)9- . Tel. 608-687-3352. ft The Aquarium 452-2174, , . WINCHESTER MODEL 1197, 32 caliber, STUDENT APARTMENT for rent, approv- Nora Heinlen ,.. 452-3175 5423 between i!:30 a.m. arid good condlllon, John Woycilk, Arcadia, ed for 4 people, Logcks Auto Supply, Wl YitilGViVt, MILK HOUSE EQUIPMENT DOUBLE LAUNDRY tubs with stand, Wis. Tel. 323-3422. Tel. 452-2644. Myles Petersen ' 12:00 Noon Only. 'Pets & Hobby Center RAT H wash lanks, fans, air Intakes, Hi" ^LZYTJIZZ .. 452-4009 hose, parts, storage cabinets, Lindsay soft water unit, 55-gnl. pres- ' " sure tank and 55-gal, waler tank, dou- l! REALTO R* Jan Allen ,...,., 452-5W9 GRAOJATEs7~ 159 E, 3rd — Downtown Ed's-Refrigeration & Dairy Supplies HIGH SCHOOL Gof un to 1127 Wankalo Tel, 453-5532 ble habar,hl, 90 h.p. air motor, Mc- MJOO cash bonus II you qualify:' To- . Cullough prop, combination aluminum I20 CCNTER* Dick Rlan 454-201)0 day 's Army haj some chnllcnglnn tech- door, 8" chimney kit for llreplact. Tel. xamammammaammmmmmmrMarge Miller nical Jobs and a. special Horses, Cattle, Stock 43 JOHN DEERE RG-430 cultivator with .... 454-4224 cash bonus (or shield, top condition, SBOO. 3-polnt hitch 452-4907. those high school graduates who cnn for 50, W, 70 tractor, JJ5. Roger Baer, quality. You earn full Army YEARLING BULL, vrciiarolals, priced BUY-RITE REALTY, INC. pay vvhlls Lewlston, Minn. RUMMAGE SALE-Tues, K Wed. Snow- you learn and receive Irom SI 500 to •nenr mnrkct. Selecl 7/8 yearling out of blower, bicycle, toys end many other VALUE-PACKED W50O In cash when you complolo Sam 951, 122) Ibs. at 365 days. David your THREE Prlde-of-the-Farm 35 bu. steel articles. 768 BlullvltW Circle, behind ROCHESTER, MINNESOTA training, For lull details Tol. 4j'-5j«7 Schac-for, Rl. 1, Whitehall, Wis. 54773. KAGE Radio. HOME in near west location; living room, separate collect. Tol. 715-538-4875. hog feeders wllh cast Iron boitomi also dining 8-lt , field digger. Galen Engel, Foun- room, enclosed porches and kitchen are ALL tain Clly FRIGIDAIRE air conditioner, 12,100 BTU, enr- MARES — Arabian-Welsh, sorrel. Appa- $100, 417 E. Sth. Tet. 452-5666. peted. Three bedrooms, carpeted bath. Combination loosa pony, orange end white. Highest win- ofler accepted. Tel, 507-695-4711, McCQRWVlCK No. 47 baler wllh No. 10 dows throughout, and three garages. Opportunities - bale thrower, good condition, ceoros NEW FEEDERS, 24,000 BTU, central air conditioner. Tel, 60J-6B7.4945, DEEP COW5-32, with calves al side, Sanness, Spring Grove , Minn, 55974 or 498-3995, Plant & Personnel J410 por lamlly. Donald Dammen, Rush- FOR BETTER cleaning- lo keep colors BUILT FOR ENJOYMENT lord, Tol. 864-9149) 8M-7459 alter 6. - FITZGERALD SURGE gleaming, use Blue Lustre carpet clean- FOR the entire faniily, roomy split foyer Would you like er, Ken t eleclrlc shampooer Jl, M arit) has four bed- to FIVE DUROC sows, due to farrow In ' Sales & Service Tel. Lewlston 523-2525 or $3. H. choate & Co, rooms, two baths, carpeted living room and family room, . . . assign individuals to J-4 \vccKs, j<95. Also 16 feeder pigs. ill St. Charles 931-3255 Lovely yard and patlo-deck. their respective each. Daniel Slellplluo, Trempnaleau, CARPETS and Ilia too can bt beautiful work TW, 534-6)38. schedules and work posi- REAR MOUNT 3 point, 2 row cultivator II you use Blue Lustre. Rent eleclrlc wllh gage wheels, on each gnngi late shampooer $1, $2 and $3, Robb Bros. tions? REGISTERED ANGUS hulls tor sole. Slore. INSTANT HOME Visitors always welcnnve. Phillip Abra- John Caere n and 2 row cultivator; John Deere 60 Iractor, power steering; CLOSE Lo schools and shopping, you . . . assist in hamson, Lanesboro, Minn. Tel. 447-3701. OVAL RUO, chair, miscellaneous. Ul E, can move Into lliis the settle- LPTO, elevators lor bales, New Idea r and Owatonna, Chrli Moen, Beaches King. four bedroom , bath and three quarters, NOW, PRICE ment of hospital claims, FEEDER PIGS-90, average weight 40 — Corner, Ellrlck, Wli. LOW TWENTIES. insurance cases, mcdtqal lbs, Eldor Matthees, Rollingstone, Tit . HEAVY DUTY portable washers, wllh Lewlston JJ3-3777. cases, etc? NEW HOLLAND—402, hay conditioner, agita tor wash by Speed Queen. FRANK v like new; triple *wagon box and wagoni LILLA & SONS, 711 E. Bill. TAKE A Vacnllon. Leave your children BARGAIN! about 125 eheels used tin, 10' . . . interview people for wilh us during our August horseman- and 12' long; 1 Continental 40 HUGE DISCOUNTS on all remaining ship camp. Realster now al Big Valley h.p. molor, Te|, FIVE room home In central locatlon is priced UNDEB plant jobs requiring aver- 534-3791, ' 1974 G.E, black and while and colored Johti Prenctergflst ¦* Ranch, Tel. 454-330S. ,' TV's. Prices as low as $69,95. B (¦ B $10,000. ago skills? Vt ELECTRIC, 155 E. 3rd, FOR SALE-Hcrri ol 33 Hnlsleln cowi, Fortiliier, Sod 49 ... bo a part of a safely 2nd calf cows. Tel, Ellrlck 575-3400. USED MELROE Bobcats. Tel, 533-3367 "Urge Selection or Farms CALL THE MOVERS program for employees? CULTURED SOD—delivered or laid, Tel, ~ FOR SALE or renl, responsible parly 454-1494, GARDEN TILLER RiNTAL-al30 lBwn YOU can have Immediate occupancy of this three bed- These and lo milk 16 cows on shares. Renl good thatchert and vaccums. WINONA FIRE Th roughout Southeastern Minnesota room home with its carpeted living room, separate ether rela ted cows, For particulars Tol, 454-1102, BLACK DIRT, all top loll. Archie Hal- i. POWER EQUIPMENT CO.. IS* B. " dining duties could be performed verson, Tel. 452-4573. 2nd. Tel, 452-5065. room, two car garage. Near everything and priced In by you provided AT STUD-colorful Appaloosa, grandson " LOW TWENTIES. you have ol Apache No 730, National Halter- CULTURED SOD SNAPPER COMET riding mowara now In Offices in: average intelligence and are Parlormance Champion, grade J35, reg- I roll or • 1,000, may ba picked up; stock for Immedlalo delivery. Reserve willing to learn. Istsrod S50, Big Valley Ranch, Tel, 45'- Also black dirt. youra nowl WINONA FIRE 8. POWER VRocheSter 507-288-6909 330*5. After 5i30 Inquire 126 B. 711). EQU IPMENT CO., 54 E . 2nd, Tel. 452- Better than average com- Tal, 4J4-5MJ or 454-4132. 5065, "The business that service built," Kasson 507-634-7730 'Bob^ SsikpsDv, JburfhfL LIVESTOCK WANTED - market cavva pensation and opportunity, feeder cjllle, Holstein springing cows BLACK DIRT, fill dirt, (III land, crushed WANTED — steel part bends, Tel. 453- Dodge Center 607-374-6328 nnd helferi, .Trucking to Spring Oroya rock, dravel, excavating, landscaping, 2697. Agriculture-related industry. Sales Darn, ^>>ues, Hubert Volkman, cal and I rent loader wtrk. "Serving Ihe West Concord 507-527-2807 Lewlston , Minn. Tal, 573-7420, Winona area lor ever 25 years". SPRAY IEXTURING ol callings or walls. 120 Center Tol. 452-5351 Write Lewlston 507-523-2482 , UJ ~ VALENTINE TRUCKING New and old Painting and In lor lor m • A-52 Daily News OPEN HEIFERS. IB, about 17O0 Ibl, Mlnnesola Clly, Tal. 454-1782, remodeling. Brooka 8, Associates. Tel, ' REAirOft * - . John WoKilk, Tel. Arcadia 323-3422. I It no answer, Tal. 4SI-S3I4, 454-53(2. HoutM lor Sah ' "' ' . 89 HOU«M for Sale .. .. . ;. ' . • V BMts> ~ 99 Motor*, Etc. 7 106 Troekf, IraeVa,Twite* 108 Trucki, Tracfa, Traitors 208 Mobile Hornet, Traitors til NEW SPLIT foyer, -4 .Urge bedroomav 2 BY OWNER, deal dlrecl.- 3 bedrooms, TWO ; USED ' full baths, rec room- llvlnfj room, coin. large: airy living oems-16' Larson with Mer- FORD—1970 Rengef, XLT plclcup, automa- CMC—1M0, %-ton, Awheel, drive with Ei-COflA—19«8, M>(6, fufnlthed. In room,: large kitchen cury 85 h.p. and hesvy ¦' - ¦¦ ' blnallon ltltchen and dining room, celv wilh cupboards duty trailer. tic, factory air.. Tel. . St. Charlts. ?»- snowlow- Tel. - 689-2627. . . Sood epndltloh. iTel. Pilerion 875-2590. tral air, • all'. built-in on two sides, Special. SlWJ) ' F.D. 356&. .-;¦ ' carpeted, larga double lots, of closet 14' Alumacraft . ;. flarage. Located In excellent spsce, basement wired ; Wlth id ti.p. Johnsoii • (manual), Ilka ' " . . . area an < for washer^ end dryerj and X Haw Can ' "..V -. ' ' . STARCRAFT CAMPERS - spacious lot With a view. practically rew. : l695, B«b'« Marine, ft. ol Laird. ; .- . Trili«rs Pickup Many oHier new wjster softener. Garage and ECMIKE VAN - 1965,' 6. eylindtr, . 4 CampfSr* xx : y •xtraa. ftO Hltkory ' Lane; Tel a half. (A leading brand that l« alio i- «4-4JS|. West location. Under J2o,00o; standard transmission, excellent run- :¦ - .' ¦ 1974 CHEROKEE 4-wh«e1 drive. Will sell' 72' CRUISERS INC., laprtrake, 1971 best, . •old by » d*Blar In Wlnsna) : ra Ct lt | TBI ning condition. While 11 lasts, U9S. KEN'S SALES 8. SERVICE . ¦ ^ THREB BEDROOM ho«»e, rls! P'r y* . * Dakote off shore, dMp ildes, 135 h.p. Mercury, ¦ • ¦¦ Sales — Servict — Reintali*. . Central loca- 2fr620i - ' Fenske-Auto Sales, 460 E. 2nd; Hwy. 14-61 E. y Tel. . 452-9231 : . tion, new. carpeting. Available now, •xtra prop, .water skis, tow ropes, '14 DICK'S SPORTING GOODS . • ¦ ¦ ttm IIIB ^Q2BV SIISP - Hff axjXPTnf lUjl - /t^aWTTTTTTTrW^ 3^K .- IHM n -agent owned, low down payment, bal- life lackell, *,80fl. 717, Wilson, Til. 454- ' :¦ Ourand,' Wli. . . •¦' - K' * ' - a*i^Sul L B I ^ Q NEW HOMES' ready, for occupancy, j7si. ; y. ' - • " ance like rant to qualified party. Tel, 1-5 ; :.' .y:.: ;; 'V' x , .y-. F0Rb-r173.14-ton Pickup, txeelltht con- Wanted—Automobiles 77V 110 • _ ' . . TW, 71M72-88r3 of. SI2-S\99.y : TH bedrooms. Flnariclhg available. Wllmor Larson dition.. T«l. 60S-J34-2362, y INVESTMENT Construction. Tel. 452-4533 - or ' ' : Travel , frailer, 452-3801 . - -:. . " . - " .:¦ : ~^ - ' • *' HAVE YOUR lunk car. picked up end re- AWiF SltAVPER—1974. ^ ^A|* hir: OWNE R-r»pectacsilar . .. Motorcycle*, Bicycles 107 1 I ^^EI K^ ^^ <^ J valley view eelvs .a bonus. Tel,¦ Ungeri Recycling 18', 10' -fold-down pIcKup camper, soma from split foyer fri, secluded ' ' ' CHEVROLET ' - 1966, 1-ton- truck wltti , Servict,. 452-llaj. used lold-downs; STOCKTOW : CAMPER . . neigh- ¦ borhood behind Sugar Loaf. Lot .TRIUAAPH-nW'M motorcycle, ". 500, excel- Feurtielm grain:box and canvas cov- SALESi Stockton, Minn. Tel. 507-M* 3 ted- % Sal* 100 er.' ' roomi,-2 bathi, formal dining * .Hilt , condition. ' Tel. «0e-323:34«. . F. A. KRAUSE.CO,, B rmy Acres, CAMPBELL'S AUTO Salvage. Wanted, 2670. • '." ¦ '. room, : Vilry, 14-61. E. ' Wjnona. . ipacloue paneled family room-wlihlire- l-Ol 'NJTOCKTC^xISS'. Prlcitt . |w>Jf. cars. Any condlllon, . any shape. iLocatedrot: place, Seated garage. . - et Will pick them. up. TeL 454-5769 any- MOBILE HOME TRANSPORTING i 416 So. Uth St., La;Crosse, TOsy 1 Tel. 4S2-50O1, - , $J500. TOWN J. COUNTRY REAL 6? HONOA—1973 175 Scrarhbler .only 3,000 | : TATE, Tel. 454-3741. . . actual miles. «00 firm. Tel. Lewlston INTERNATIONAL 1972 . «4-t0n pickup, time. . .- . . -v. : , ' , Winn, and Wli. ICC license . .; ' " ' BY OWNER—charmlno J-bedroom, 2-storv .;52>3204. ' . excellent condition; .1950 International ... Dale BUM Itr, M Lenon ' ; ' - ' brick home on . former. estate, near city HALF ACRE to i20 .acre bUltdlno sites, • 2-ton pickup wllh ullllly bore has nevir Mobile Trailers 111 ¦ .Winona. Minn. 7V . V:^JiM : llmlla, . beautiful MOTOR- ; Home*, ' Tel ^S2-?4i e. ¦ groundji $8,500 down, priced from 'J2BO0 end up. Very good aCObtER-$40. .Tel. 452-4254. engine, : very good condition; 1949 In- ,. -: take over contract. Teh - ; 454-5724. selection. Many with water. Sugar Loaf ternational Travelall, . excellent .condi- Camper, »V sleeper, ; '' ' ; Devel B&AT OWN E RS-g'rt your Coait Guard STARCRAFTJr-WO POR SAUE--Mallai-dV Trailer, 1940, twin ' y V' ' 7 ; "nme:V3:00:.P.M. '' opment and Construction Co. Tel. tion) 196i Chevrolet convertible. Tel, excellent condition., $975. Tel. 454-4434. |V' .V.: : V- . v' V' yV VvvV^ .W- - . COMFORTABLE W. central .home, by 454-2JW; evenings ;4S4-3348.¦ ¦ ' . ' . opprbved fire extlnsulsher. now . at WI- 454-M11. ' • ' . . -. ' . . ' beds, pas stove -/and rtfrljerator, new y . owner, walking distance' to schools, 4.5 NONA FIRE & POWER . EQUIPMENT tires, lacks arid hitch. Beit bid over i HOUSEHOLD GOODS: Coldspot : refrigerator; Frigid- i : HARDTOP — 1969, foldout camper with bedrooms, J baths, T -' CO.; .54 E. 2nd. Tr,[. .452-50«. ''The $900 takei. Halm Ferdlnandten, Tel. 6C- «ox]50' lot. 8|. ¦• ¦ ¦ canopy, 'furnace '- 'and ether extra fea- : ¦ aire automaitic washer; Frigidaire dryer; . 452 J97?. ' Wanteck-Real £*tat*» V102 business that service bunt." ...... «477, -y ;'-y ' - . | mangle;.RCA M : tures, sleeps 8, J995. Tel. 452-4096. . color ; white; ¦ | TV, portable; tliree TV sets, W^ck^and p FARMS, HOBBY FARMS MUST SELL-14X52 ' Pathllndar, i larpe A .UNIQUE well-kep^p- duplex, apirt- / AND sunny mobiles home. Own. |, 35,000 BTU '-Warm Morning*' gasV heater with blower; • . menls side by side, 1 country lots lory new home slte**r-We 7 V YAMAHA! V TRUCKS SHENANDOAH 14x60 bedrooms, carpeltd throughout, large , i and 2 bedrooms, • your own home for less than rent. Tel. full, basement, 2 screened-ln' have many buyers for each category. Quality Sport Center . porch. Make an otter I Ttl. 452-8883. - | glass front; iHoover floor wax«r; stereo record player; p poftties, Front 5-5,00C -:¦ '- Coinfort Llvlns.451-9273 Owatonna, col- / double, garage, Central location across acresl Contact Richter ire a . Hsrrtel - ; .. . . Tel. «2-239» , : • ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ radios ; Presto humidifier , Realty, Home- .1ect. yy . . - , ' . . . y. ' ;. -- ' - . SEE THE hew 1974 Lnrk travel and | ; round dinette table,. 2 extra p from, park, Mid 20's -by ' : owner. Could federal Building, 4lh TR-llGKS • and : Center, HONDA-1973, 100, like new. 557 Sioux camping trailers — set Gary at Wi- leaves, 4 chairs ; , easl y. be converted toyslrigle-famHy ¦ Winona. Tel. 452-1151 or bunk, | kitchen work table; extra chairs; drop* #1 ¦ ' ' 452-155J. - .:• ;. \ ¦St. or-.- Tel. 452-4110. . , HALF-TON CAMPER with fold-out nona KOA, :t mil es S. of .Winona. "The dwelllM.; Tel^ , 452-574i. : . . : . Tel. 452-9349. . leaf table; four metal folding chairs; ' lots good wicker inquire 1888 VV. 5th or people that know eamplnp." | of j l : HOME FOR SALE-by HONDA-IWO, 750CC, oood condlllon. Just T " I .furniture including tables, chairs and rocker; davenport; -m owner. Tel. 454. Boats, Motors, Etey ; 106 JUNE WEDDING? Carry, your bride '• & ' IMS or 10 Otis Street. been tuned up, tow mileage, gels about. TOWN .. COUMTRV SUGAR LOAP 2 studio couches; desks; 2 recliners; occasional chairs; '• '¦SO mllei per gal. 454-2946 after 5. home lo this quality 1972 Boise Cascade CAMPER SALES, .1974 Starcrafti (No. % m "' . home. LaroVkltchen-dlhinB arca, . SHELL LAKE-15' fiberglass bba. f, 25 h.p. Mobile l In camplnfl) CMW on display at Hwy. upholstered chair; rocker; V coffee table; card tables;: YOU Invest In a home every day. ¦ living room. | §1 yours Johnson motor and Spartan trailer, $750. REDUCTION Sale on ell 1974 New GMC Trucks 3 bedrooms and spacious . 43 and Pleasant Valley Road. 15% " or your landlords. FIRST ¦ y STOCK . Really, 9x12 oval braided rug; Ourpw rugs; pole lamp; wall lamps; FIDELITY Tel. 454-2W7, Honda and Yarriaha motorcycles. This MLS 1181; Contact Richter. • discount for month ol May plus free I m . - .. .Seylngs.gi .Loan helps you.get ¦ Cen- a . hornet only—Hondas; : CB-750K<, tl633) 3-^6500 Series with; 427 cu; Home Federal'.'Building, 4th and hitch or spare , tire Installed. ' mirrors ; room divider; fireplace tools ; pictures; -tables -;M week . or 452-1550. I CHRYSLER. OUTBOARD, Lund Alvma- CBS50, IIS99: CBJiOi IICS5: CB t CL- ter, Winona. Tel./. 452-1151 RbtUINGSTONE-3-bedroom ranch, in. 7 engine,, 5 speed and and stands; TV trays; wood bed; complete; wood twin S| for- craft boats, also boat motor rental.. 125, J599; CT70,' $399. Yamahp; GT-MXi I , rhal .tllnlng, finished' • basement, camper 14', sleeps 8, V Auction Sales for . Flshlna tackle. Live ball. Paul's Land- $399; ^D-250-A, $917; DT-360A, $999; .'7.7 -2 ' speed.7 HARDTOP fold-out bed; 2 rbllaway beds; 7 baby crib; chestsV.pf drawers ; apartment, patio, 2-car garage, Hnjnc- • J7P5," Hazeiton Va- | || ing, R eads Landing, Minn. Tel. (S12- TX-450-A, 51635. All new . : models water, sink stove; , Ing' . -Tel, fi8»-2B4*^-58?-2234,' : ' ¦ '5«-34<«. . . '74 452-4004 " . | vanity dressers ; V bedding and linens; metal and wood M . sale priced to move. Hurry In, the 1—«500 Series witli 366 cu. riety;- 217 E. 3rd. Tel, . . FOR YOUR AUCTION use the Boyum prices are low; Over 100 machines In Systerti. BERTRAM BOYUM Auction- 1 cabinets; telephone desk and chair; two school desks; f| in. engine, 5 speed and TRAILER 16V new gas or elec- : stock for delivery. GTC Motor Parts & ¦ TRAVEL eer, Ruihlord, Winn. T«|. 844:9381, c heat- . tric refrigerator, sleeps I,' gas furnace, | Central and U.W.L.C. annuals starting 1918 ; electri |j Equplmenr; Whitehall, Wis. Tel,. 715- .. a^speed. 7 ' ' . new fires, .Use. Tel. 454-3*90; y-" - ¦ FREDDY PR ICKSONV p ers and fans; bulletin and blackboards; Christmas decora- ' .538-4309. Authorized Hpna, 8. Yamaha . i ¦Auctioneer": x z Dealer, : 1^-6500 Series7. with. 366 cii. : t tions; bird cages; F. V& W. 7 ft, slate top pool table with p f j ^^' TRAVELALL' TRAILER-1W6. $995. Tel- Will handle all sizes and kinds of . in; engine, 4 speed and ' 454-2129. Tel. Dakota 643-6143. ping pong top, 'good condition ,* FoosbaU game; 6 string :&. HONDA - 1973 CB^SO, less than'' ' 2000 ; . ; auctions. | ¦ . miles, plus, extras. Tel. Galesville 582- 2 speed. " . guitai*;. folding ping pong table ; dishes including Japanese DETROITER — 1971, 14x64, 2*edroom, T. ALVIN.KOHNER y | | y 4!60. .; , . 10x10 utility shed, furnlslied or.unfur- and stata licensed i tea set and Korejin dishes; kitchen! utensils; silver in- 1. 1--6000. Series with 350 cu. ¦ AUCTIONEER-^CIty . ; nished; Tel. 452-6647. ; . -' • . ' , .,. - - and bonded. Rt. X Winona. Ttl 4S2- ; v - in. engine, 4 speed and ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ I eluding some Reed and Barton; World War II items in- .1 " : ' : ' ' ; 7- -\vv.;:-.RUPp, v v-i v ^ 7v • 4980. / . . ", .. " ' ' ¦ ': ' ¦ 7 .;MJRAGLE -7MALL-y; -y 7v: ^ 2 speedV . RICHARDSON — 12x5S, 2 bedrooms, VM |V¦ eluding Nazi flag; books including set of old Wonder . : p. |: :^ : c! . v y; :v vv : v; I Mlnl-Enduro, M.CC y. . 875-2271 alter 5.. • : , baths. Tel, Peterson ' ' I' " World ; two French doors; other wood doors; combination $lre«l'legal ... . $429.95 l-€500 Series. TANDEM -: .; Minnesota Land . & 7 f WINONA AUTO SALES MOBILE HOME pads for rent. Many ad- Auctibn Service | aluminum- storm door; 1% H.P, jet pump and pressure | . 3rd J, Huff ' Tel. 454-5950 with 10-12 yard dump, vantages, TR Mobile Home Park, Lew- : ; Everett J. Kohner |. tank; boy> and ^rl's Schwiiui bicyefes. yi I I Center City --JJ V 427 7cu. in. engine, air ; Iston. Tel, 523-2904; . $ OUR SHOWROOMS AT?E NOvV ,. Winona, Tel. 452-7814 ANTIQUES AND ITEMS POSSIBLE ANTIQUE 1 1 Newly redecorated 2 bedroom homeV new7 hot water: heat. | OPEN FRI. NIGHTS FOR-YOUR . . brakes, 5 speed and . 2 .; Jim Papenluss. bakota Tel. 643-61J1 . . 17 OF ¦ ' VACATIONING? Rent a- Winnebago over 100 years old;. , % a ara2e Not a drive by, you must see the CONVENIENCE UNTIL 9 P-W, ¦ speed; . 7 Motor Home, self-contained. Weekly I . VALUE: . Break front china cabinet, i ? i F,¦£8 * inside.: § Honda . ;- JUNE 12—Wed. 10 p.m. 13 miles E, ot & Sm.aH home ¦ or dally rates. Motor. Home Rentals. ¦ copper coffee and tea set bowl arid pitcher set; kerosene 1 , smaller price. See MLS; 1080 & • • ' . ' Triumph — Norton — BMW . ' Wlhoha, Minn. Mrs. Mable Splitter •& \ ; ¦ 1-6500 Series. TANDEM, . Tel. : 687-4945., : Parts—Sales—Service y . Janet. Ecker, . owners; Alvln Kohner, ¦ | wall lamp with china reflector and complete bracket- gold . I MOTORS', INC. auctioneer. Norlhern Inv. Co., clerk. ' : ewel ROBB^ 7427 cu: in. engine, air RESISTER for free drawing to be |: purse; tortoise shell combs; uphol^grM chair ; j 1 |v . X- JXX' i:"i:X; Big: Value . : V. '. .- Winona, Mlhri. fc Eau Claire, Wis. made each Sat- We have the largest - ; f y brakes, 5; speed , and. 4 JUNE 13-^-Thurs. 4:45 . p.rh. Furniture dishes; round oak table § y In scenic Stockton Valley. Multi-bedroom Vhome, 2% baths selection of -mobile domes In Winona, I boxes; dishes including doll laBfe^ , ? ;; speed, . plus a free pair of children s shoes Auction, ' 617 Center St. Cbetween Sar- family ' Wlnone, | and six chairs, good condition; pictures; doU house; bed 'f. 3 room. All brand new, choose your own floor covering. § (1 per family) . lust . for slopping at nia and Milwaukee tracks), ' Kohner, y Quality 3—3500 Series. 454; Veil. in. TRI-STATE MOBILE HOMES, Breeiy . .Clyde Morrison Estate; Alvln and Vhigh chair; dolls including: china doll over 10O yearsy| construction on big lot, with double garage, Let us S 74 KAWASAKISv ' • .. I ¦ ¦' ' '¦ '' engine. '' Acres. Tel; 452-427*. .. auctioneer; . Ev«rett Kohner, clerk. . old and many other items.; & show 7you MLS 1134.7 . . . - ' § -. "All Models RdUtiig' lh"l . | ^V fl HOL I DAY : RAMBLER 22' . camper, gas JUNE 13— Thurs. 5 p.m. 1 Block off IXill. NOTE THE 3:0O P.M. STARTING TIME. i ' stove, . refrigerator; hot water heater, Hwy. 43 Iri N. Rushford, 602 High St. ¦ BOB'S MARINE- VWe also have a7 good Sup- Retina . Bunke¦: Estate; Bert Boyum, | | Peterson, Minn. | toilet, shower, . furnace, sleeps 8. Com- ' | TERMS: NORTHERN ON THE SPOT CREDIT, | j? Three or more bedrooms, plus family room, fully carpeted. ? Ft. of Laird ply of % or % Ton pickups plete , equalizer trailer hitch for car, auctioneer; 8oyunt Arjency, clerk, Auctioneer -mirrors, electric brake control. Bob | v Alvin Miller, ¦ 1 Tel. 452-2697. in two wheel drive or four JUNE lS-Sat. 12:30 p.m^ Vh miles N.W. ' § Central Air. Tuck under double garage, fi acre 16t just 2? V KanZ, Lewlston. Tel. 523:2015. . . |; Marvin filler, Repr. Northern investment Co., Clerk ." ' _ I > wheel drive models- • of Elba, Minn, on Co. Rd. 21. Elmer . 5 years old. Low, Low; 30's. MLS 1093. \ Hill, owner; Montogmery J, Olsom au<- i i - FOR A REAL BARGAIN on a new '.*^/62-'fJ4 Volkswaoen, engine cu. in. engine, 4 speed .- ;Lynch by: Squaw Creek Ladies Aid. V vi doesn't need tb work. Tel. 454-1176. V and 2 speed, 15' platform I .. V SPECIAL ANTIQUES: Rarid carved black walnut 1 CAAAARO-^-1968, 4-speed, custom palrit lob, V with ;lioist.V | Costumer (hall tree) from . mags. Hooker headers, • Gabriel air ' Vyy V -X ;; Starting Time 12;30 P.M; 7 V V M the Price House in B.R. Falls- il shocks, Edlebrook hl-rise, Holly carb, te«| o-iv i| Cherry 1969 CHEVROLET l ton. 292 Wood pump organ from the Wilson House in traction..' bars, shackles, hew brakes, mm •; I ' ¦ ¦ 15v : Noi-th. Bend; several-. bracket lamps .. lust tuned. Ekcellent condition. 1108 W. cu. in.' engine, power ' j v I , aU original and I " Mark after 5. . steering, some with; utili- f . SMm^j J •;. : | | complete; Old American wall telephtSiesr'Black walnut § Shop, Saws parlor table; colored stained glass PONTIAC—1964' Tempest Custom, 2-ioor, ty lioxes and platforms. I .Tractors> Equipment, Kckup, Woodworking , i I leaded window 2&"xH'l'm I 375 h.p., 326 cu. In, engine, track grind (5 units). I Planers, Jointers, Household, Antiques. . VJ ' " cam, Holley 780 carb, Mas tractor bars, |7 .. . -. ANTIQUES &- COIXECTABLES:VGlass candle hold- 'I ' VlHC 7"H" tractor with loader bucket An almost new 3 bedroom 4-jpenl, aluminum slotted wheels, new 1968 CHEVROLET 80 se- |yV,tRACTOR: , § I ers, tall and short; assorted miniature I Neat — clean — almost new ! Good Veer N-50 I12'/i" wide) tires on 1 snow scoop. . !. ' . ¦ :¦# kerosene lamps; | 1 rambler 011 an extra large carpeting — 2 bedrooms — - rear. T»l. 454-2946 after 5. ries, 401 cu. in. engine, I wooden spoons; beaded purses (one-Germany); ' I: " " ' PICKUP: 1968 Chevrolet % ton pickup with. 32? en- | wooden j lot. Full basement — your formal dining room and ', ' tandem , with airlift, 5 match safe; animal topped candy dishes; old "Priscella I DODGE 1970 Super Bee, 383,- ^barrel; 4-.' i gine, pow. steering, & brakes, 6 tires & wheels, good cond. I| I '' 1 t own well and septic tank, more. Under $15,0001 .' ; speed, mags, air shocks. Tel. 452-2572 speed and 2 speed, 16' * and other pattern books; many pieces of Old World! § afternoons, ask for pick. grain box, 50* bu. capa- I ELEVATOR, AUGER, SCREENER, CONVEYOR: | | China j See It today! ¦ ' , Nippon, Limoges, Bavarian, etc.; Pressed Glass, 1 ¦ '¦ ¦• '" '¦ • ¦" 1 Owatonna 40' grain and bale elevator with long hopper i DATSUN—1971 510, 4-door. >speed, -30 ' ;city* . . • i Pattern Glass, Depression Glass, Milk Glass, Cut Glass . 1 I Two formal living rooms, - i PTO or motor driven; Bale Giant 16' baJe conveyor wth 1 mpg. 918 aPrks Ave., Apt. '205. Tel. 1966 GMC 7500 series, 401 and Satin Glass; old collectors' bottles, including fish 1 Four year old modular chandelier, beautiful wood- 454-2617. , 1 motor; 16' grain auger with motor ; 5' cylinder screener; f I | j home on a scenic wooded work, some stained glass cu, in. 9 yard dump with 1 J.D. No. 25 combine witli motor ; two 14' plows; spring I I bottle; hat pins; old fountain pens and marble base desk 1 ROADRUNNER—1949, cross iimi, 2-4's, ,• loadall. a pens; leather match safe; wooden chopping bowls; wood- > lot. Three bedrooms, family windows! Three bedrooms VA cam. See at Cook's Aulo Body, hay tilter; tumble hug; clover hull I | P tooth; double disc; en spoons I room, utility room —. full V— in central location. Gall Alter 3:30 Tel. 452-1591. Built for rac- 1966 CHEVROLET 50 series. fe' cleaner. fe; I , chopper ; china doll dishes and tin frays ; | basement. Call now! for more information. ing! . WOODWORKING SHOP, SAWS, PLACER, JOINTER , I Sterling souvenir spoons; crocks and jars; fruit jars with | [ 292 cu, in. engine, 4 speed § | | zinc and glass tops; PLYMOUTH—1969 Fury 4-door, automa- and 2 speed, 13' grain i. EQUIPMENT: Rip saw and planer on .single stand with | . many insulators,* enamel ware (blue 1 ! Three to four bedrooms — full basement — 2 baths in this tic, power steering, power brakes, , A-li , HP motors blades and accessories ; table saw | and green coffee pots, cups, pail, etc); iron spittoons; 1 neat one story home. IM*. car garage. Priced under 20! $850) 1970 Ford Squire 9-possengcr wag- box and hoist § 3 HP and 2 , | I [ on, air, power steering, power brakes, S and jointer with % motor; cut off saw-table and motor, | cream whipper; old plush photo album with pictures ; 454-2159. 1966 CHEVROLET 50 series. p $1395. Tel. , 1 other equipment. i |. glass top trays; pictures and frames, eight new Japanese • |> 292 cu. in, engine, 4-5 porcelain plates, hand painted in china; Souvenir china. "I For Fu ll-Time Alert-MDourteous VOLKSWAGEN—1970 Bug; red, black | • DRILL PRESS, VISE, WRENCHES, TOOLS:. Drill I 1 ~ I I Interior. -918 Parks Ave., Apt. 205. Tel, yard diimp lox, 24,000 grinder with % HP motori ' I slipper; Souvenir glass canoe;' inooseV cream pitcher: "| U 454-2617. miles, like new. I press with motor; bench vise; | ¦ ¦ i pipe wrenches; W electric drill; bolt cutters; anvil; two | | miniature doll collection; Sparta High School "Spartans*' 1 " - ' VEGA-1971; recently -tuned-lip, now ' get- by j SsJgSf Service—Call Any Time 1966 CHEVROLET 60 series. 1 100' welding cables; 5 HP 3 Phase motor ; Presto Light | I 19O5-190&-1907; three sheep bells; collection pottery | ting 30.9 miles per gal., dean. Tel, I R"d Winrr , McCoy, Hull , etc.; old Tungsten light bulbs; ^AA«WAftnAAAftA^AftWVVlAftftft ^AftWAft»»ftArtftArtAWAWAMW 454-3101. ' , 366 cu. in. engine, 5 speed i torch; extension cords; trouble lights; saw set ; sprayer; I | and 2 speed, power steer- d other tools and equipment. , i | Stereoptic viewer with pictures; razor straps; apothecary | PLYMOUTH, I960 Satellite. 1964 Temp- 1 jars, glass topped ; old violin; mantel and wall clocks; est. De*t oflerl Tel, 454-1204, ing. 7 UNLOADER: Silo Unloader 14' | 1 SILO silo. | fancy; meat grinder; large Lumber, Household Items, Antiques, Guns, Old Items , I | kerosene lamps, plain and % VEGA-1973, ilka new , 16,000 miles, 27 1965 FORD C-7O0. 330 HD P; 1 number of Avon bottles ; picture of Mary pickf qrd and | ml|«s rp«r gal., new tiros. Tel, 454- engine, 5 speed find 2 g Many Other Items. i 1537 between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Mix s horse Tony; large antique doughnut kettle; A Home With A Past speed. (2 units). |V . ELMER HILL, OWNER I I Tom ' | §' Auctioneers: Roy Montgomery, Les Olson % bamboo magazine stand ; horse tethering irons; antique f| HIGHWAV 1963 seml-troller, meat-rail- 1963 GMC 4000 series. 305 | | Santa and sleigh; wooden cheese boxes and many/ many er, 40' with Thormo-KIno In It, 1 . Clerk: First National Bank, Plainview, Minn . | | 1973 Chevrolet 11-ton pickup w|th top- cu. in. engine, 4-5 yard | other items too numerous to mention. per, Contact Install ment Loan Depart- dump box. 4 speed and 2 I ment, MERCHANTS NATIONAL ¦ ¦ spee/4-ton, 1 . Saturday, June 15 1 Zenith console TV, black and white; two portable AM-FM | truck. . | with record player; Zenith AM-FM radio, Ranch-Type Ranch-Type V0LKSWAGEN-I963, 4-spetd, rodlo, gal A renl clean I radios, one | healer, new paint, Candy Apple Red, I Starting at 10:30 A.M. Lunch by Lydia Circle I a table model ; four oak dining room chairs with upholstered | Summer time and the Starling with the extra $695i 1966 Mustang. 6 cylinder , 3- bed, good condition ; de?k living is easy with this large lot this FIVE BED- spcod, red etc Only $795 ,- 1965 Che- I seats; sewing stand; daveno | voile Malibu 4-door, 6 cylinder, auto- GUNDERSON I REAL ESTATE: Modern two story eight room house | I chair; several plant and fern stands; square hard rock home. Living ROOM has the charm etc, cheap, g beautiful matic transmission , radio, gj located at 513 South Sherman St., in Houston, Minn. Large # table; two steel cots with innerspring mat- | room, kitchen , two full found only in a home, cheap, cheap. $595 . Fenske Auto Solas I maple parlor 460 E. 2nd Streol, MOTORS § sized lot, private water supply with city sewer. Electric 1 I tresses; picnic table, nearly new; two card tables; step | baths, family room nnd Living room, kitchen, bath Pontine • Cadillac - GMC $| water heater. . New bathroom with built-in shower. New 1 chost; child's rocker ; storage cupboard; FOUR BEDROOMS. MLS- and a FAMILY ROOM. V0LKSWAOEN-1971 Super Beetle, ex ¦1 stool ; cedar | collont condlllon, radio, $1 ,795. Tel . PKESTQN, MINN. I gas burning forced air furnace located in basement. Small I frames; steel utility cabinet ; shelves 1139. MLS-1110. i 4'x8' murals with | 451-1078, I garage located at rear of lot, This home has been kept p $ Including book, corner and knickknack ; lots of shelving; i i^iMMM ««WMWWMMWM MWN«m«PHHM ^MMMM ^MiOT ^Ht«r«i. i in excellent condition. Terms: Ten percent day of sale, | I two kitchen cabinets, upper parts; large oval braided | A balance on delivery pf

' ' ' : lEANUfS : 'X "XZ -Iy ; l' XI, ' ' ' 7 v7' . V;. . V: V V-V 7/ y M' y by 7Charle» M. SchuU Rio^W^ ; Provisional leadership In new violence, a bomb Northern Ireland. ^7- By FRAJIK JOHNSTON the promise 7 to Tepatriate the strife, to blast badly : damaged a The report: said there BEIFAST (WI) - The Irish prisoners from Eng- 4'dn't Vwart new 2,258 shooting '.,; inci- Irish Republican .Army s lish prisons has produced an ruin the chances fer possible Roman Catholic school on vvere ' outskirts V of dents in April 1972, but the provisional wing is serious- entirely new climate," said talks with.militant Protest- the northern - May ants. . Belfast ; early today, .,- the. figure dropped to 353 in ly; considering a cease-fire a member close , to the this . '¦ in Northeam Irelard as a IRA's Belfast; command. Both sides expect talks Xfrtay said. No lpjuries were of . ^year. prelude to possible peace "A truce li the present may comfe soon because of' reported. There were 39 assassina- talks with militant Plot- V situation is now closer than the collapse in May of: the 7 Police and army 7irpfl tions last month, thei same ©slants, IRA sources . said at any time" since 1971; the moderate Protestant-Roman cordoned : off the area aft-: as in May . 1972, but the num- today. V f they: found what appear- ber of- gunmen detained or •source said. Catholic power-sharing 'ex-: . er from 7"Growing talk within the ; The IRA sources said or- ecutive" that ruled the ed to be a second bomb in jailed^; jumped 1,033 to BLONDjE byVCIiie Youricj British government of/e, ders have gone put for a re** months. front of the school, but the 1;501. y i 'ZX- province for five , withdrawal of troppr^and ductidii of violence because •The downfall of the coa- V device did not explode. Police statistics put the lition was brought on by a Talk of peace feelers and toll at 1,033 lives- lost , iii Protestant general . strike. ai reduction in" ' jiiostiliUes in nearly five years oi fighting Not Kissinger' s The Protestants brought Northern Ireland coincided among the : Protestant .ma- Northern Ireland to a stand? ¦r-^itih a report by the British jority, Roman Catliolic mi- still to back their demands army showing a. dramatic nority and. security forces in for new elections. ". 7 drop in shooting incidents in . the British, province. V Nixoh s hair WMMMMMMMMMMM mMMMMMMMMMMmMMMMMMMMjBMmMMWBMMMMMMmm to SMMML, Winona Furniture Co. ': cul ' f^sy ' y Gordon Best REDEYE JJJJ . x-yJ. - X. -J. XX i; *V By TOM RAUM . President despite the rigors of ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ • • ¦ ¦¦ ' ' ¦ " •' ' " ¦ "¦¦¦¦ ) y ¦J ' . : * • '¦ ¦ ' ' ¦»- II [ WASHINGTON CAP Pres- .. _ - .¦_ ' his office and the troubles of z. . a I . MI ' . - H, ¦ ¦' ident Nixon's, hair -is easy to his; administration. ;-. . cut¦ , but Henry A. Kissinger's? "I've never, sieeh a person, un- FORCED TO MOVE TO ' ' 'It's a problem because it's so der the pressure he's under so curly," Vtheir barber Confided. relaxed," he said. .'.'I : see. no "First I have to shampoo , it, change in the President." then cut it Tivith scissors. Then I use . a . razor to blend the hair, Pitts spends each Tuesday and Thursday manning the one- WAREHOUSE and the. hot air blower to dry NEW and style . it; V ; chair barbershop in. the White House West .Wing, trimming, "lliat gives it a curlyX hiii clipping and styling the hair of smooth look. There, look how the President, Cabinet : mem- smooth it , ' : looks: in the photo- bers and¦ top White House BUZ SAWYER v . X by Roy Crane graph.^'.; yV ' ' aides. ¦: Milton Pitts-, who has been Pitts, a 58-year-old native of clipping the presidential hair Greenville, S.C., also runs a f or four and a half ^ears, point- barber shop in the : Sheraton- ed to 7 a photograph of: Nixon Carlton Hotel a few blocks with his secretary of state. "I from the White House. He ffSMife^^S gave them both haiwuts yester- charges $4 for a straight hair- day." y cut and $8.50 . for the kind of All Regular Stock Items by: Nixon's haircuts—once V a hair styling Vhe7 does on Nixon •week, : - 'never any longer than and Kissinger. ik* FLEXSTEEL "^ BROYHILt HOWELL ' ' ' ^ 10 days"—take about 20 min- He is on call at all other VV- , *jtVBAMETTyV ; V^ U.QYDS ;J\. ' i-- DREXEt .' utes; During that time the times : if the President .suddenly ^ President is quite : congenial, decides ,to get a haircut XPitts He MERSNiAN -A* LEWITTES [# BERKLINI ^ ¦' ¦ :X- Pitts says, - and "talks to me said. . :' ' .- . - ' 'ic SEALY -i StRATOLOUNGER • KINO KOIt quite a bit, but usually ' ' :' in gen- . "When I read about some of XX it lMK li l i:: li - ^- PETERS 'J % REVINGfON eralities , and never about -poli-¦ the people that are in trouble, X x ' y 'vy:: y\. 7V "^ tics. -- . " ¦: •¦ • •: ¦ . V •*¦ STIFFEL XX.Xiy ^. STYllNE . -Jlif /FINE :ART$7.V BEETLE •BAILEY : Vb/ Mort Walker " I'm quite . surprised," Pitts : ' : From: his vantage point, Pitts said. "They were all such nice X 'Xic-BRADLEY W 7 sees no physical change: in the people."

SALE HELD AT OUR DO^NTO\yN STORE--T66 MAIN could^ come ' -^^'iiwfee^ : By GEORGE SBBERA But in. an apparent effort to si-: '-77^^f|fi « | ( P'ARIS UPI)-Trench ships lence domestic and foreign crit- mm ¦ H ^ i i . . .-¦¦ . 7— — and warplanes fanned out 4 ^ fc ^ . ^ 1 ^ ¦ — _ ^ around a South Pacific testing ics V of- the V testsV Giscard and Ken d'Estaing announced 7 that all MARY Vi/ORTH Allen Saunden Ernrt ground today¦ and government Phone 452^3145 ; >'SMITH«f MEANS M li* Main ^ officials, • said ; France's first future tests as of 1975 will be ^ nuclear blast in. the atmos- held underground. 7 \. phere this year; may come as early as this week, 'y-. - ' A special coioimunique ban- ned all civilian shipping aiid airline flights from a vast area over the testing V ground at Murora atoll, 500 miles south- east pf the island of Tahiti. No^ French navy and air force ^^ units took' up positions around the tiny .. South ; Pacific atoll, guarding against possible REX MORGAN, M.D. y by Dal Curtis moves to send protest ships into the region to halt the blasts. Out Your Closets and Get Australia and New Zealand repeated Monday strong com- plaints against the French tests. Both nations sent ships into the French zone last year. Australian Foreign Minister Don "Willesse said his govern- ment "deplores the prospect of nuclear tests in the Pacific FREE INSURED this year." French officials said the purpose of the tests was to per- fect warheads for medium- range missiles to be based on NANCY bv Ernie Bushmill* underground silos in France ii ii II ¦¦¦ ¦ ll iw^ waainm -ii i >¦¦¦¦! i i. . ni a- i. ¦ P I .,,, ,.. . ¦¦ . • ¦' .. I. ¦ M | ^- I" "" —q * .i— and aboard the nation's fleet of STORAGE— nuclear-powered submarines. President Valery Giscard d'Estaing, in, his first major policy decision since his elec- tion May 19, gave the Pacific | AT HADD AD S command a go ahead for the controversial nuclear tests. Candidate schedules Preston news meetina Break Away From Old A, # Hoddad's storage protects your gcrments BARNEY 600GL1 AND SNUFFY SMITH PRESTON, Minn. — Dean by Fred Usswell Nyquist, Brooklyn Center , Fashioned from mildew and moth larvae and setting Winn., candidate for the office ' of attorney general, will hold a FADING, WRINKLED UNIFORMS of stains/ besides giving you additiona l news , conference at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Victory Cafe closet space. When you take your clothes Wit here. out in fall you pay only the He will be available to meet regular price the public following the confer- ¦ ¦ JL ¦ of cleaning — THE STORAGE AND «nce. ¦•% ¦% Bk ¦% '•£ II tlAUlr AII 9 MOTHPROOFING ARE FREE. (All gar- ¦ments ¦ stored in our own local vaults). WIZARD OF ID by Parker and Hail Apparelrr Master . Dll, „„ Hi,689-2237 4g Free. Pick-up and Delivery In iF NO ANSWER Radio-Dispatched Units.