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11-11-1965 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News

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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]. F Mostly Qpudy,v Going Hunting Scattered Showers For a Home? Check Tonight, Friday The Classified Ads Independence Proclaimed by Rhodesia 3 Aluminum Ready fo Defy my 'ofB/ackouf ProducersBack British Threat we Down on Hike Of Sanctions (/f>cv?s WASHINGTON (AP) - Three SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) S^ red of the nation's four big alumi- — Prime Minister Ian Smith de- num producers backed down to- clared Rhodesia independent to- day in the face of stern Johnson day, the first such declaration administration opposition and canceled price increases the against Britain since the Ameri- government-had called inflation- can colonies broke away in 1776, ary. Britain retaliated swiftly , in The Aluminum Co. of Ameri- effect outlawing Rhodesia. ca—No. 1 in the industry — called it quits Wednesday .night Prime Minister Harold Wilson by rescinding the increases an- declared in the House of Com- nounced Monday. Reynolds Met- mons that Smith and his minis- als followed two hours later. ters had been fired—an action Kaiser Aluminum and Chemi- which will be ignored in Rho- cal Corp., third biggest, joined desia, the procession midmorning to- Wilson asserted his gov- day. That firm called the price ernment will have no dealings rises "restorations" and said its with the Rhodesian regime. action followed "similar cancel- lations by other major produ- Wilson expelled Rhodesia cers." from the sterling area , banned That left Olin Mathieson exports, including British pur- Chemical Corp., as the one big TAPS FAVORITE . .. . Edward Hartley, at a gathering of World War I veterans in chases of Rhodesia's $112 mil- holdout at the time. 70, left, a private who served under 'Black- Dallas. Hartley says his Mail Call is hope- lion a year tobacco crop, ended Alcoa's decision to cancel the jack' General Pershing as a bugler, blows a ful; his Pay Call, gay; his Sick Call, cynical, all British aid, suspended trad- price increase was announced call on his battered up bugle for Walter Noble, and his Taps, his favorite. Hartley of Denison at a hastily called night press , ing preferences. 74, sporting his old buck sergeant's uniform, is a retired railroader. conference by Secretary of De- (AP Photofax) Britain embargoed the ship- fense Robert S. McNamara. He ment of all arms to this central hailed it as "a patriotic act." African country, and asked for A SHOCKING EXPERIENCE ; . • ' . Edwin federal agencies are making intensive investi- The defense secretary also an urgent meeting pf the U.N. J. Nellia, hand on head, systems operator in gations. Power conservation is beiAg ob- said the government agreed to Security Council. charge of Consolidated Edison's energy con- served in the city as full power is not ex- an immediate resumption of Veterans Day Takes Britain's allies, including the trol center in , talks with his crew. pected to be restored for several days. (AP negotiations for the orderly dis- United States, and Common- wealth members are expected The cause of the historic breakdown remains Photofax) posal of a surplus of 1.4 million tons of aluminum now held in to join in ignoring the declara- as dark af the blackout itself, but state and national stockpiles. tion and in imposing economic NEW YORK (AP) - The na- McNamara said he ¦ s believed On New Significance7 isanctions. tion's populous Northeast strug- the government would be able ** FEAR 'FULL-BLOWN ATTACK' By JERRY BUCK Iowa, the war in Viet Nam sud- Students at Alabama College While Smith still was speak* —-—¦ I ^m——m——m——————m—wm^ i —— gled today to return to normal to limit the amount of alumi- Associated Press Writer denly comes close to home to- at Montevallo have scheduled a Ing on the radio, British Gover- as government agencies sought num disposed of from the stock- pile to less than 200,000 tons and Veterans Day takes on added day. Donald D. Raskins, 22, a blood drive for U.S. troops, plus nor Sir Humphrey Gibbs an- an answer to the paralyzing thus "avoid disruption" of significance today as Americans sailor fatally wounded at Da a fund raising campaign to pro- nounced that Smith and all his power failure. ' prices. take time to tell their fighting Nang last month, will be laid to vide a special gift for the Amer- ministers had been dismissed Last Saturday men in Viet Nam, "We're be- rest. ican forces. Other activities in- on orders of Queen Elizabeth Businesses and transportation when federal The American Legion and ike Back in officials denounced the price hind you." clude a flag raising ceremony for "an unconstitutional act of facilities, crippled by the 10- increase, they also announced In Main Street parades, on Veterans of Foreign Wars in and a speech by Sen. John independence." hour blackout that spread speaking platforms, in blood Hamilton, Ohio, pat on an "Op- Sparkman, D-Ala. With his proclamation of inde- across seven; states and into that the government, was con- sfatertng -^releBS_ng 209,000 tons drives and among the long rows eration Boost" parade sup- Dave Watson, commander of pendence, however, Smith had Canada Tuesday night, hopeful- porting American involvement from tbe stockpile in 1966. of white crosses in military the VPW post in Muscatine, ceased to recognize the powers Qxygeh ly looked to near normal opera- cemeteries, the nation pauses to in Viet Nam. Marchers have Tent of the British governor and Lon- On Monday, officials of the Iowa, said the hope behind the FT. GORDON, Ga. (AP) heart attack of 1955. tions today. remember, reflect and rededl- been asked to bring personal don has said it will not use -~ Power conservation is being Office of Emergency Planning town's parade is that it "will Former President pwight D. In their mention of a full cate. items to be sent to servicemen offset some of the publicity force. observed in , announced they had begun mak- To the people of Audubon, there. Eisenhower was reported in blown heart attack the doctors ing preparations for the imme- being given to the demonstra- Smith and his Cabinet deter- generally satisfactory condition defined the phrase as meaning hardest Mt by the massive tech- tions against U.S. policy in Viet mined to go it alone after nological breakdown. Full pow- diate release of 100,000 tons of today after a second attack of "coronary thrombosis and myo- stockpDe aluminum, raising to Nam." Bremer County, Iowa, months of fruitless negotiations er is not expected to be restored ¦ heart pains but his ' doctors cardial infraction," which 300,000 tons the amount of alu- veterans are calling their pa- ' i i m. I ii i raised at least a possible spec- means heart muscle damage. for several days. minum the government rade a "walk for the men in The Veterans Day holiday is planned 2-Month' ter of "a full blown heart at- to make available. 1 Rive r Viet Nam." " Capt Wallace Hitchcock, pub- contributing to the return to Some of the surplus The national headquarters of tack. , government alumi- A medical bulletin from the lic informationofficer here who normal. Schools num, McNamara said Saturday, the American Legion distributed ' facilities banks and some busi- team of doctors attending the read the doctors statement to , would not be sold but trans- 10 million lapel pin flags for newsmen,, was asked if the re- nesses are closed today—grant- Season Discussed 75-yearold five-star general ferred directly to needed de- "Operation Show Your Colors." ing a day's grace to New York's DAVENPORT, Iowa WI - creased from 400 to TOO barges said: currenceof pains means further fense producers. If effected, the Each pin comes with a card hospitalization. heavily taxed transit operations. transfer would have cost the Congress is being asked to study a year," said Bernard Gold- saying "Americans are serving for pa- Hitchcock replied that doctors The closed facilities also will the feasibility of a 12 - month stem, a member of the Daven- "It Is not uncommon aluminum industry a huge sales ' tbe cause of freedom in Viet known coronary dis- said the stay is based on the require far less power. shipping season on the upper ?.rt Chamber of Commerce s tients with market, -asportation Committee. Nam. I wear my country's flag ease to experience repeated ep- evaluation of the individual pa- Cause of the historic break- Mississippi River, Rep. John to show that I support their ef- down remains as dark as the Schmidhauser, D - Iowa, said Richard Konisek of the Iowa isodes of chest pains which may tient and the doctors will give Wednesday. Development Commission told forts." or may not progress to a full a combined statement when blackout itself , but state and the meeting the commission Vice President Hubert H. are making Schmidhauser said it is hoped blown heart attack." available. federal agencies feels that shipments of coal, Humphrey laid a wreath for has a record of The doctors said that in the intensive investigations. Congress will determine "if the Eisenhower Highest State tremendous cost of the proposed fertilizer, grain and industrial President Johnson on the Tomb coronary disease — his major meantime they will continue the James A. Lnndy. chairman of goods would multiply with ex- of the Unknowns in Arlington Public Service firoject will be offset by the dol- in which the British government accepted therapy and prevention the New York ar value gained in increased tension of the shipping season. National Cemetery across the "which is to treat the patient Commission, said he was confi- demanded guarantees of even- shipping." James R. Smith, vice presi- Potomac River from the na- with threatening attacks as if dent tbe reason for the failure Property Levy tion's capital. tual political power for the colo- he had suffered a heart attack." will be uncovered. It apparently "We have learned that If the dent of the Mississippi Valley ny's 4 million Africans. Smith Association, said tbe navigation In prepared remarks, the vice Hearing Set originated in Upstate New York. river remained open the year president said: "We are in Viet and his colleagues are deter- At a conference Wednesday Uppermost in the minds of round, barge traffic would be in- season along the upper river mined to preserve rule by Rho- Eisenhower went from 248 days in 1940 to Nam to keep a commitment es- doctors had said government and industry lead- Seen for Year tablished by international trea- desia's 225,000 white settlers. would be confined for at least 293 days last year. ers is the prevention of a recur- ST. PAUL (AP) - Minneso- ty. We are there because, once two weeks. He had planned to that it "We think it shows that keep- In proclaiming independence, For Rochester rence. Some warned tans are faced with the highest again in history, it must be Smith rejected last-minute ap- fly to Walter Reed Hospital Fri- could happen again unless the ing the river open all year is Eroperty levy for state purposes " proved to aggressors that the peals from both Wilson and day to convalesce. cause is tracked down and elim- Byrd Retiring not only feasible but practical, I the history of the state. he said. firice of their aggression comes Queen Elizabeth II. Wilson had The physicians said in a bul- inated. State Auditor Stafford King The comments came at a ar too high . . . telephoned Smith at 6 a.m. to- Banker Nov. 24 letin: set the levy Wednesday. It te- meeting of representatives of "We will remain ln Viet Nam day in a final attempt to dis- ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) - "General Eisenhower spent a als 18.42 mills. Last year's levy From Senate the shipping industry and fed- until a just and lasting peace suade him. hearing has been good night without further pain totaled 16.14 mills. V eral agencies. can be established there." A preliminary RICHMOND, Va. (AP) Smith and his Cabinet sent a set for 2:30 p.m. Nov. 24 for or discomfort. He is > comfort- The state mill levy makes up - Sen. message to Queen Elizabeth II only Harry F. Byrd, a strong voice Rochester banker Joseph S. able this morning and his gen- Young Pacifist a small portion of the to- Wednesday pledging loyalty to theft by eral condition is satisfactory." tal tax bill for taxpayers in for economy in Washington for Cotter, charged with the past 30 years and head ot the crown "whatever happens." false pretense. each local taxing district. City, In effect the physicians were County and school Virginia's domi- Some British officials in London district taxes to Cotter, 53, a \ice president of renewing what they said Dead of Burns make up the bulk of the levy on nant Democrat- considered this a prelude the First National Bank of Ro- seizure of Independence. Others Wednesday night after recur- NEW YORK (AP) - . A young property. ic state organ- chester, requested tbe prelimin- ring heart pains forced Us re- The state auditor has little ization, an- considered it political brink- ary hearing Wednesday when pacifist who set himself afi»e manship designed to impress turn to an oxygen tent. in front of the United Nations choice in setting the' levy since nounced his re- he appeared before Municipal The pains Wednesday were he must collect taxes in tirement today. public opinion in Rhodesia and Judge William S. LaPIante. to protest war died Wednesday Britain. "more prolonged and of longer of burns. amounts needed to support pro- Gov. Albertls " than the mild The bank executive, one of duration attack Roger LaPorte, 20, a volun- grams approved by the legisla- S. Harrison Jr. The qneen Immediately re- 's most active com- of angina pectoris, or heart teer in the Catholic Worker ture. made the disclo- appeal for the .Rochester sure at a hastily plied with an munity leaders, was released pains, which occurred just after movement, became the third The highest previous levy was white leaders of the central Af- en |3 ,O0O bond. midnight Monday night, doctors American to die that way thii 17.14 mills in 1963. called news con- ference. He said rican colony to avoid Illegal acts brought said. year. One mill levied on all taxable and demonstrate their loyalty The charge was Announcement of the sadden property ln Minnesota the resignation the state pub- Like the others, he poured will raise by "continuing to act in a con- against Cotter by reversal In the condition of the about 12,270,613. One mill with Sen. Byrd was effective ic examiner's office. Examiner fluid on his clothing and ig- stitutional manner. " 75-year-old five-star general nited lt. He was burned over homestead exemptions figured immediately and that he Robert A. Whiteaker told the planned to name an interim sue* Smith's broadcast was moni- Board ot Com- came about an hour after the 95 percent of his body and doc- in will raise about $1,732,982. Olmsted County The state levy, payable next cesser until the next general tored In London at No. 10 Down- Cotter admitted doctors had said he was making tors at Bellevue hospital thought ing Street while the British Cab- roissloners that good recovery and might be year, does not apply evenly on election in November 1966. embezzling $78,000 in county a it remarkable he lived as long inet was in session considering playing golf again in two weeks. as he did — more than 21 hours. all property in the state because Harrison gave no. intimation funds, in addition to $40,000 of certain laws, mainly those af- of anyone he had in mind to the crisis. from other accounts. fecting teacher retirement pro- succeed the 78-year-old Demo- grams. cratic chieftain but speculation The foil rate of 18.42 mills ap- was that senator's son, Harry plies on non-homestead proper- F. Byrd Jr., or Rep. William Winds of Hell M, Tuck might be on the list. Marcos Ahead 3 Planes ty outside of cities of the first ¦ Red class. The rate within cities of the first class is 9.93 mills on Defect to Chiang Were Loose non-homestead property. WEATHER In Philippines Main reason tor the difference FEDERAL FORECAST TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) — Twenty-five years ago today the most savor* Is that teicher retirement funds MANILA (AP ) — Sen. Ferdi- Three Chinese Communist air- storm in Weather Bureau record* for November are supported locally in the WINONA AND VICINITY - nand E. Marcos -was virtually men defected to Nationalist swept tho Northwest, killing 54 persons in paralyz- three cities of the first class- Mostly cloudy through Friday. HUSBAND KILLED AT 17 . . . Mrs. Eugene Pendola assured of the Philippine presi- Scattered showers China today and flew their Ilyu- ing wind and snow. Minneapolis, St. Paul and Du- tonight and holds picture of her husband, 17-year-old Pfc. Anthony Pen- dency Thursday night. Friday. Low tonight 38-45, high He had a commanding 530, shln 28 jet bomber to Formosa, Today tho Wlnpna Daily Nawa raprints tho ac- luth, Teachers in other areas dola of Peoria, 111., who was killed when two companies of 971- Nationalist Defense draw retirement benefits from a Friday in top 40s. the U.S. 1st Cavalry division were ambushed Saturday west vote lead and Intimates of Pres- the Chinese count of tho lata Gordon MacQuarri*, than outdoor LOCAL WEATHER v Ministry announced. state fund. of Plei Me. He apparently was the last 17-year-old to die ident Diosdado Macapagal prl« •dltor of tha MHwauk** Journal, who mad* a lour Official observations vately conceded defeat. Two of the crewmen were in- The three main programs for for the In Viet Nam. The Defense Dept. has ordered all 17-year-olds of tha aroa tha day following the blizzard. 24 hours ending at 12 m. to- Marcos was carrying his vice jured, one seriously, in landing which the state collects proper- banned from duty In South Viet Nam. Mrs. Pendola is hold- an air force base For an interesting word plcturo of tho death- ty taxes are soldiers' relief, day : presidential running mate, Fer- the plane at ing tholr two-month old daughter, Tammio Lynn. (AP Photo- nando Lopez, along with him in north Formosa, the ministry dealing 1940 Armistlca Day storm road "When tho teachers' retirement and state Maximum, 45; minimum, 35; by noon, 40; precipitation fax) a slim 40,936-vote margin. aaid. Winds of Hell Wore Loos*'' on Pago 8. building programs. , .02. in _ i.i can Legion pott It's baaed on Blair Council OKs State Commander pints donated by members Buffalo Memorial to Attend District of tha respective organizations. Record High Budget ¦ ital Meeting VFW Meeting Here Hosp BLAIR, Wis. (Special) - The city budget--$82,78_ Stata Commander Ronald St. Mary's Business Slated Wednesda y record high — has been approved. 10, Koenltz will attend the district Fraternity to Initiate MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) - 000 Area Residents than the council Veterans of Foreign Wars meet- No one other ing here Jan. 9, it was announc- Six Pledges on Sunday The annual meeting of Buffa- members .appeared at the bear- ed at a meeting of Neville-Lien The five-week pledge period lo Memorial Hospital will be ing. Post 1287 Wednesday evening. of the Alpha Kappa Psi, busi- held at Mondovi High School Tax rates will be announced The post went on record in ness fraternity of St. Mary's hot lunch room Wednesday at after the Trempealeau County Try support of the government's ac- College, will end Sunday with established this week. Expected to for Deer levy is tion in Viet Nam. A VFW initiation of the pledges. 8 p.rn. More than 10,000 men, women 20,000-acre refuge is the pri- to Willis Kruger, Wabasha Coun- spokesman said that the mem- Administrator Otto Bollinger and children in Southeastern mary deer area of the five ty warden, and John Anderson, Michael Accurso, a Junior bers "feel it is much better to from Mt. Prospect, HI., and will present the annual finac Fountain City Fire Minnesota will dress in red counties. Over 300 deer were Red Wing warden. fight enemy over there then and killed there last year. "We had only one road kill ti>e chairman of this semester's cial report. Directors will be go deer hunting this weekend. in the past three weeks," Krug- Cancer Crusade on American soil." pledge period, announced six elected to succeed LaVerne Department Elects The refuge has some closed The annual Christmas parts* The season opens at sunrise areas. The Whitewater State er said. "I have not seen near- pledges: Michael Baroqe, a Wright, Charles Brenner and FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. (Spe- ly as many deer as in for children will be held in the sophomore from Chicago; Da- Saturday and continues through Park, adjoining the refuge, is past clubhouse Dec. 18. In charge Alvin Semingson. All are eligi- cial ) Fountain City firemen closed to all hunting, as are all years." Chairman Named vid Crandall. a junior from Aus- have re-elected Duane Baertscb Monday in the five-county area. are Walter Kirch, Edward Hole- , ble for re-election. parks,. Many hunters in these two tin, Minn.; Dennis Dahlman a Wright, chief. counties plan to go north for house and Floyd Kuhlman. The junior from Stevens Point, Present officers are: THIS ESTIMATE In bisrd on "Closed" areas of the Upper Thanksgiving dinner for child- president; John Tanner, vice Wilbert Schmitt is assistant Mississippi Wild Life and Fish their deer. Wis.; Robert Godar, a junior Roger Adank, secretary the present demand for the $5 ren of St. Joseph's Children's from Chicago; Al Versino, a president; Mrs. Lester Moy, chief; license. It is greater than a Refuge also are closed during SOUTHEASTERN Minnesota Home is in charge of Chaplain secretary; Brenner, terasurer, and treasurer, and Larry Korb, the deer season. sophomore from Wilmette, HI.; and treasur- year ago, when more than 10,- wardens don't expect as much Raymond Buege. They also will and Larry Wojtasiak, a junior and Milton LaDuke, Martin assistant secretary hunting pressure this year, er. 000 licenses were sold in the WEATHER it the biggest be- attend tbe Christmas party on from Chicago. Heike, Orville Klevgard and cause there is a one-day open Dec. 18. Aldrid Branger, directors Elected as captains and lieu- fi ve counties of Fillmore, Hous- single factor in deer hunting. Charles Emrich, Chicago sen- season across all of southern In reporting on the Red Cross ior fraternity president, said whose terms aren't expiring. tenants, respectively, in charge , , When it is too dry hunters , ton Olmstead Wabasha and make considerable noise mov- Minnesota. However If hunters blood program, Chairman Ger- that the organization aims to Branger was appointed to fill of trucks were: Korb and Allen Winona. in this zone don't get a deer ald Van Pelt said that securing promote among students and tho unexpired term of Mrs. Abts, city pumper; Elmer ing through the woods and the they The 19M sale in Winona Coun- deer axe "spooked." When it the first day will migrate of blood donors is becoming the public a better understand- Clarence Ness, resigned. Schmidtknecht and Ralph Ru- ty was in excess of 3 ,00O, ac- rains and cover Is wet , the deer into Zone 6 for two days more more difficult. He said that for ing of the business field and en- The meeting is open to the ben, new community,truck, and cording to Richard Schoonover, usually lie low and travel very hunting. the fourth time the VFW has courage education leading to public. Refreshments will be Roy McQuinn and Ed Hentges, county auditor. His agents sell little. A hunter nearly has to Advance deer , license sales, won the trophy from the Ameri- business degrees. served by the auxiliary. tanker. licenses throughout the county. step on the deer to get it up. county auditors report, indicate None are sold after Saturday, Rainy weather also decreases a greater migration of local the first day of the season, ac- visibility. hunters in the north woods for cording to the game laws. The ideal hunting conditions the rifle zone season. Many Agents must turn in all license include a little fresh overnight plan to spend most of the nine- books not later than Monday snow and cold, snappy morn- day season in the north woods Come In and Spin The morning. ing with sunshine. The deer providing there is hunting snow. Possibility of bagging a deer will be alive and moving. Deer is reported plentiful in ¦¦¦____¦__»«__-»___-_-_-_-_____¦¦¦____¦¦ is about 1 to 3 in Southeastern Population of white taS deer some northern areas not hit by Dr. E. V. Schoener Minnesota. Game biologists es- is up this year in HOUSTON the deep snow last winter. timated that 33 percent of the and FILLMORE, according to Chairman of the 1966 Cancer hunters in the five-county area SHOOTING HOURS sunrise Crusade in Winona County will Philip Ham, La Crescent, war- to sunset for the Winona area were successful last season. den, and Robert Rlslove, Pres- be Dr. E. V. Schoener, who is "WHEEL FORTUNE" are: Saturday, 7 a.m. to 4:42 OF Statewide 122,225 deer were , vice president of the Winona killed in 1964 by 270,000 hunters ton warden. p.m.; Sunday, 7:01 a.m. to 4:41 "We need more hunters and p.m., and Monday 7:03 a.m. to County cancer board. for a success ratio of 44 per- The crusade is scheduled for cent. a heavy kill," Ham said," the 4:40 p.m. at WINONA FIRE & POWER EQ. CO. herd is causing a lot of dam- April. Volunteers will distribute HUNTERS In Zone 6 (South- age, and there is almost a car- WISCONSIN DEER season literature when they canvass eastern Minnesota) are not per- deer accident every night." opens a week later, on Nov. 20, biMhess and residential areas. mitted to use rifles, but only Rislove predicts that with with the state divided into four City residential chairman Will

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STEREO ¦^^ ¦^ ¦^ ¦¦ fw rj ¦ CLOS E-OUTS A. Because we have stock-piled Rectan- gulir Color TV for the past six T 1. Yon get a _n__ariotttwool fo brto 4. "Ybu get genuine Tlom buttons J ot the same grade and quality -not plastic-and they're moored __-______-_-_ _.__. *B* months/ we can deliver NOW, while ¦ usually found only in suits selling down with 3-ply nylon thread to Save from $20.00* to $130.00 -I- , . :— at hmiry-clMs price*. keep "em from popping. ' *M. ourft competitionv takesfc orders. Seec theL •*i\_ • 4-Sp««k*r Store* f_\ nT' 2. You get hand-tellortd work- 5. You get bulge-proof pockets in AM-FM R«du M largest color stock in Southeastern H manshlp In no less than 14 areas the coat-hidden "bellows" pleats • of the Pinnacle. do tho trick. Mi— 3. You get a costly lining- pure Come try on a Pinnacle and you'll £& £ *|A¦ goo /f _ Bemberg-evcn inside the Ueeve*. set why it's well worth its price. ¦Mif Jk_k___ib_____Wi______ib_^tal_____H__^_BMf

In Navy. Bottle Green C11A end Brown Gold m?*,AV WINONA FIRE & POWER EQ. 54 East CO. The Center of Fashion in the Center of Town-NASH'S-Fourth at Center 2nd St. "Tha Business That Sarvica Built" phona S065 — ACROSS FROM THE SECOND STRUT PARKING LOT — I I ¦«««4Maa-__BatoM_M_-_-BaaiaB*_»«a*^^ j " ¦: . r : ~ Area May Miss MercbanfsBank Snow Flurries; Buffalo Co. Rain on Boosts Capital Budget Up, Friday An increase of $150,000 in its Grabow said. Tbe previous to- Ihe prediction of scattered surplus has raised total capital tal of capital and surplus was showers tonight and Friday $1,500,000. remained of Merchant* National Bank to but the weatherman to G. Deposits at the bank have Levy Down wasn't sure the area would get $l,650,00Q^Wcording M. reached a record high of $28,- ALMA, Wis. (Special)— any of the snow flurries mov- Grabow, president. 600,000, directors were told A ing across the state today. The increase was ordered at Tuesday. budget Of $1,062,600 — $61,126.37 The prediction of scattered a meeting of directors Tuesday. less than proposed—was adopt- snow flurries GRABOW SAID bad weather remained in the FUNDS ed by the Buffalo County Board area forecast for late WERE transferred throughout September has put this after- from the bank's undivided pro- of Supervisors before adjourn- noon, however. But tonight is the bank's expansion program expected to fits, boosting the surplus from a month behind schedule. This ing the annual session Wednes- be mostly cloudy $750,000 to $900,0()0. This with scattered showers and a includes extended parking day afternoon. Last year the low of 38-45. amount, along with capital of space, three new drive-in win- budget was $937,424. Friday, too, will be $750,000, brings total capitali- mostly cloudy and dows and installation of an In- A tax levy of $521,784 was more rain zation to $1,650,000. ternational Business Machines is forecast for the day with the This transfer has adopted; that's $65,609.09 less high in top 40s. increased computer system of bookkeep- the the bank's lending capacity, ing. than proposed. The tax levy this MOSTLY FAIR and quite Grabow said, and was made be- The computer room is about year is under the 1964 levy of cold is the outlook'for Saturday. cause of active demand for 90 percent finished, Grabow $546,813. Wednesday's drizzle amount- loan capital in the regional said, and the computer is to be ed to only .02 of a foot economy. Under banking regula- delivered Jan.. l , 1966. HIGHWAY appropriations to- but kept taled $564, the ground wet. The tempera- tions no loan may be for more In preparation for the book 606. Other county ex- ture rose to an than 10 percent of a bank's com- keeping conversion, Grabow at penditures were appropriated afternoon high at $364,210. of 45 before dipping to an bined capital and surplus. tended an IBM customer-execu over- The lending limit On motion of Otto Bollinger, night low of 35. At noon today thus is rais- tive program school at Endi ed from $150,000 to $165,000, cott, N. Y., last week. Mondovi, $50,000 was transfer- the reading was 40. red from the general fund to This contrasts with a high of highway purposes, cutting the 63 on this day a year ago and a appropriations, low of 44. On that day .04 of Effective Jan. 1, salary and an Jnch of precipitation was Trempealeau Cuts wage increases were voted by measured. the board a_ follows, on recom- All-time high for Nov. 11 was mendation of the salary com- 68 in 1909 and the low 9 in 1926 mittee consisting of Lorn C. and 1950. Howard, Emmons Accola, Al-

Cold weather continued over ::::::- . ..v.: _ .::' . .v.v.v .:.am ,A JW I I N ll_a_ _ Supervisors to 20 vin Borgwardt, Edward Baeck- W-VA&. ' uf,^vr. a _ -_- _B.il III) __^PWWWp|«WIWIWIPW|qW^^ much of northern Minnesota with er and Harold Zittel : FOR VETERANS DAY . . the thermometer dropping to 12 WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) at large. . A small crowd of onlookers military and veterans groups fired volleys in commemoration Traffic Officer Henry Zei- were gathered at 3rd and Center streets at 11 a.m. today — at International Falls and 16 at — The Trempealeau County At the September session, H. chert, $410 to of that armistice. Ten units participated in the inarch from $435; Traffic Of- the 47th anniversary of the end of World War I Ribbing. It was 24 at Alexandria, Board of Supervisors has re- Ray Nereng, Blair, board chair- ficer Robert Sing, $400 to $425; — when the American Legion Club. (Daily News photo) 19 at Brainerd man, requested that any amend- , 21 at St. Cloud duced its membership from 39 Elmer Austin, night jailer, from and 22 at Duluth. ments proposed to the original $230 to $240; TJndersheriff Mrs. Rochester posted a low of 30 to 20. ordinance be given to the coun- Myron Hoch, from $25 to $35; after "a Wednesday high of 40 According to the ordinance ty clerk so copies could be sent Walter Kalmes, veterans ser- Judge Dismisses and La Crosse had figures of 34 passed Tuesday there'll be 16 to all members before the an- vice officer, from $340 to $370; Man s March Toward and 37. supervisory districts with four nual meeting. Sandra Ebert, deputy county Good duck hunting weather having two delegates at large. Only one amendment propos- clerk, from $290 to $310; Del- prevailed over most of WISCON- Case Against THE ORIGINAL ordinance, al was sent in. A plan for the bert Stelmach, highway com- SIN today. Sties were cloudy towns of Arcadia and Dodge missioner, from $485 to $520; over the state this morning with presented at a special meeting in September, had proposed di- would have meant changes in Bergie Ritscher, highway Human Rights Reviewed drizzle reported at Oshkosh clerk, Mabel Driver , info a 17 su- several other districts in tbe from $445 to $470; Carrol Clittonv-IIe and Rhinelander viding the county Haeuser, clerk from PRESTON, Minn. (Special) - Milestones in the development men who fought and gave their expressed confidence that these pervisory districts with four original ordinance. Donald For- , $425 to and light rain at Green Bay. , , $450; Judith Bucbholz, exten- and protection of the basic dem- lives to protect these freedoms. problems will be solved and districts having two delegates syte, Town of Arcadia super- The criminal case against Rich- The weather conditions today visor asked that members con- sion office secretary, from $220 ard Delroy Benson Mabel ocratic concepts of the rights A CRUCIAL internal problem that, as in the past, tbe nation , to , , re- were a carryover from Wednes- sider the 'amendment. $240; Palmer Peterson, jani- of man were reviewed this developed, he reminded his aud- is up to the task of dealing day when a little light rain and tor, from $370 to $380; Clar- presented by Snyder & Joerg, From the floor, Irwin Hogden, Preston, was dismissed in Fill- morning by Henry Hull, an as- ience, when democratic princi- with its external problems ai drizzle fell over much of the ence Gross, janitor, from $125 ples were challenged "by the state with some areas reporting Planners Slated supervisor of the Town of Et- to $130; full-time secretarial more County District Court sistant professor of history at well. trick , stated that he thought he dangerous ulcer of stateaucra- "Many of you young men a little snow. help, $175 to $185; part-time sec- Tuesday afternoon by . Judge Winona State College, in a Vet- " had indicated at the September retarial help, cy and a war between the will be called to serve your Precipitation amounts for the $110 to $120, and A. C. Richardson. erans Day address at Winona states was fought to resolve 34 hour period ending at 6 a.m. session mat the Town of Et- Milan Schlitz , patrol superin- country in the days ahead," ba To Meet Tonight trick would like districts 13 and Benson was charged with cri- Senior High School. this problem. said to the student audience. today included: Park Falls .08 tendent, froirK$4§0 to $485. A veteran of five years serv- inch, Lone Rock .05 A regular meeting of the City 14 in one district, with two su- minal negligence in the deaths "Our nation did not perish," You have here in this auditori- , Madison THE ice in the armed forces, Hull .01 with traces at La Crosse, Planning Commission will be pervisors at large. His amend- SALARY of Deputy of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore J. he observed, "because there um today men who are exam- held this evening at 7:30 at ment was approved by oral vot- Sheriff Clem Breen was left at EspeHen, Spring Grove, Jan. was the principal speaker at the were those who took rifles in ples of those who in the past Green Bay, Wausau and Eau annual program for students Claire. City Hall. ing. $355. The car allowance of Sher- 1 about 3 a.m. Benson wars driv- their hands" — citing specifical- have accepted their responsibil- On the commission agenda is Voting by ballot, the amend- iff Myron Hoch was increased ing east and the Espeliens to- and the public at which repre- ly at this point the participation ities for the preservation of Heavy fog developed in some from senatives of a dozen Winona areas of the state during the a petition for rezoning of pro* ment proposed for the towns of $100 per month to $125. ward Prosper to eat at the State of Minnesotans and Wisconsin freedom." night. perty at 366 E. Sarnia St., own- Dodge and Arcadia, lost 19-17. District Attorney Roger Hart- Line Cafe when their cars col- veterans organizations were volunteers — to preserve the Acknowledging that there re- ed by Cortland Hauge. The com- man was allowed actual secre- lided on Highway 44 about Vh platform guests. rights of free men. mains the right to hold dif- MAXIMUM temperatures mission was unable to act on the EDWARD KULIG. Independ- tarial and other expense. miles west of Mabel. AMONG THOSE introduced Although the Spanish • Amer- ferences of opinion in free de- Wednesday were somewhat be- petition at its last meeting for ence, moved that the original The extension agents received A jury was drawn Tuesday ican War historically has been mocracy, county increases by Senior High School Princi- he emphasized that low normal. The highest tem- want of a quorum. ordinance presented by the re- in accordance and testimony continued into a subject of controversy, Hull the basic goal of this nation to* The north half of the lot in with the state plan of increases. pal Robert H. Smith was P. F. perature reported in the state apportionment committee be Tuesday. The case was dismiss- 415 V.. Sanborn St., said that the actions of men day Is to preserve the democrat* was 44 at Beloit. Temperatures question is in an M-l (light with Hogden's recom- County Agent Archie Brovold Loughrey, adopted, ed before going to the jury on one of five surviving Winona like P. F. Loughrey who went ic ideals of freedom. in most areas fell Little during manufacturing) zone, while the mended amendment. received a county increase grounds that testimony failed from veterans of the Spanish-Amer- to the Philippines after that war "It is a privilege for you to the night due to the heavy cloud south half, nearest to Sarnia It passed, 31-6. < $309.15 to $325; Home to prove criminal negligence. to help in the education of those street, is R-3 (multi-family resi- Agent Nancy Gerner from ican War who spokebriefly and serve in this cause of free* cover. Tlie only exception was The reapportionment ordi- $166.- J. F. Herrick, county attor- people "certainly doesn't sound dorn," he Concluded, "a priv- in Superior where skies clear- dential). A group of three apart- 66 to $180, and Albert Franken- recalled that among those who nance, to be sent to the secre- ney, prosecuted. served their nation in that con- like Yankee Imperialism to ilege to help keep the Ameri- ed for a while causing the tem- ment buildings will be erected tary of state office for certifi- stein, 4-H club agent, from $141.- on the lot if 65 to $155. flict were "many volunteers. .. me." can eagle of freedom flying peratures to,dropto 22 degrees the zoning change cation, will provide for 16 su- great holo- high. is granted. No residential con- Board members were guests who were anxious to fight." He went on to the " for the state low. pervisors. St. Charles School caust of warfare" — World War struction is allowed in manu- at dinner Wednesday noon of Hull's remarks were keyed to THE SPEAKER was introduc- The four areas represented Arthur Wolfe To Hold Parent "the American eagle as a sym- I — "where men fought under facturing zones and the resi- by two supervisors elected at , Fountain City; ed by Miss Edna Nelson, an in- dential portion of the property Elmer Brenn, Naples, and Ed- bol of freedom. . .a symbol of conditions that almost would large will include the following Meetings Next Week make a maggot sick to its stom- structor in the social studies de- is too small to provide mini- ward Baecker, Town of Mon- hope for all men in the world." partment at Senior High School Firm Purchases combinations: tana, who were ST. CHARLES (Spe- He traced the history of the ach but they helped keep the mum lot areas required for mul- Albion elected to the , Minn. and the invocation was pro- ti-dwelling construction. District 3 — towns of highway committee. cial ) — Parent-teacher con- democratic philosophy of the eagle of democracy flying." and Chimney Rock and villages nounced by the Rev. G. H. Hug- If the commission recom- ferences for all grades, primary rights of free men from the WHEN NAZI tyranny and the genvik, pastor of Central Lu- Former City mends rezoning, the petition of Strum and Eleva. through high school, in the St. through the —¦ Town of Lincoln early Colonial days, threat of Japanese imperialism theran Church. also must have a public hear- District 6 Charles Consolidated School Revolutionary War period and and City of Whitehall. Defendant* Freed threatened the free world, he The colors were advanced by ing before the City Council. will be Tuesday, Wednesday and in other crises which have sub- continued, "The American eagle the color guard of Leon J. Wet- District 10 — City of Arcadia. Thursday starting at 2 p.m. nation. Hall Building District 16 — towns of Trem- In Wa basha Co. sequently faced the never screamed more loudly" zel Post 9 of the American Le- each day. He also dwelt on the names Winona Warehouse Corp. is CLU Concerned About pealeau, Dodge and Caledonia and again dedicated men pre- gion, a Senior High student, the new owner of the former Paternity Case Classes on those days will be ot those who were responsible served the freedoms that had and Village of Trempealeau. dismissed at 1:30 p.m. and Linda Buswell, led the audience city hall building at 4th and Laf- Draft Card Burning; Districts represented by ONE for preserving the heritage of been handed down to them. in the pledge to the flag and corporation offi- WABASHA, Minn. — Defen- buses will leave at 1 :35 p.m. freedom the United States is ayette streets, SUPERVISOR will be: Osseo; dant in a paternity case He acknowledged that since there was music by the Senior cers said today. Vets Holiday Asked in Wa- Parents of each child in the seeking to safeguard in the Sumner and Unity; Hale; Town basha County District Court elementary classes will be call- World War II there have been High band directed by Robert Former owners are Mrs. Dor- Concern over draft card burn- of Pigeon and Village of Pi- world today and called atten- no easy times and noted that W. Andrus and the high school won his case Tuesday against ed in to conferences with their "incredible self-sac- othy Owen, 718 Main St., and ings and "other examples of geon Falls; Independence; the state. tion to the the nation still is coping with choir directed by Meryl Nich- 318 Huff respective teachers ; parents rifice, the selflessness" of the Mrs. Rose Whittaker, non-patriotism" was expressed Town of Burnside and that part Roy J. Rouse, about 30, Osseo, certain internal problems. He ols. St. Ownership was transferred will receive the report cards. at a meeting of Winona Cen- of the Town of Arcadia north Minn., formerly of Lake City, Parents of high school stu- last month. of the south line of Independ- tral Labor Union Wednesday was represented by Gary E. dents who don't receive re- John R. Nankivil, 1338 Win- night at the Labor Temple. ence School District; Town of Persian, Minneapolis. County crest Dr., is president of Wi- Arcadia with the exception of quests to a conference and wish Members voted to direct the Attorney John McHardy repre- to meet with a teacher are to nona Warehouse Corp. education committee to draft a the part placed with Burnside; sented the state. Rouse and the Car Wrecked At present the building's resolution endorsing the desig- Town of Preston; Blair; Town call the high school office for girl, 22, rural Lake City, were an appointment. occupants include Standard nation of Veterans Day as a and village of Ettrick and that the only witnesses. The trial i ^ir^JV Lumber Co. home offices, the work holiday in future contracts part of the Town of Gale lying lasted from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., i \ Hiawatha Mental Health Cen- LANESBORO PATIENT Survives w^^ with employers. According to between Ettrick village and the with the jury taking an hour Man ^w_ W^ XA ter, Frank West real estate Howard Hoveland, committee Jackson County line; Town of to deliberate. LANESBORO, Minn. (Special) An Altura man had minor in- + agency and the J. G. Hoeppner chairman, such a reservation Gale with the exception of the The jury will return Tuesday — Melvin B. Benson entered juries, but his 1965-model car W pw Insurance agency. The building would help "restore this day to part attached to Ettrick; and at 10 a.m. for three cases sched- the Veterans Hospital, Minne- was a wreck after a 578-foot * Toasts formerly housed business of- its former status." Galesville. uled. apolis, as a surgical patient. ride off Highway 248 Wednes- fices of the Northwestern Bell day night, according to Sheriff A "xa£r 'n Tidings Telephone Co. George L. Fort. Nearly all first-floor space Willis Pasche, 30, was driving QJOUA hostess has been renovated, according his two-door sedan south on the JgC^X. cAiinneso-0 to Robert McQueen, an officer highway, about a mile north of Winona Warehouse Corp.. Veteran at 7 p.m. when A Profile of the U.S. of Rollingstone, according to a recent re- year and divers now turn up hospi- Beer, and will be available for rental The , war veteran population forces during the various wars, returned to civil life (12.3 years tion operates the largest the road, he port, U bringing riches to some such cans under two inches of system in the U.S. a deer came onto occupancy. No other changes has grown in proportion to the from . the Revolutionary War of school completed — median) tal and clinic told Deputies John Schneider Vietnamese, and possible ideas sediment, scientists reason .edi- are contemplated, he said. remainder of the population dur- through the Korean Conflict; than World War II veterans had On any day, 110,062 veterans ct desertion to certain ideas ment increases at a rate of at in its 169 hospi- and Elroy Balk. least 2 inches annually, The building was erected in ing U.S. history. over half of all participants been when they were discharged are cared for He pulled to the right to avoid Cong members who see their 1W6 and occupied by city gov- served in World War JI. from the armed forces (10.9 tals. In an average year, 729,- relatives making beer profits. Steak Bserpari Since World War H, one out the animal, Pasche said; and who earn ernmental offices until 1939, years of school completed — 991 patients are treated. In ad- American servicemen, u bottl* u, OI ) b»«r of every five persons aged 18 • The last Revolutionary War his car traveled 428 feet along more per week than the average _ ',| | l_) when they were moved to their or more has been a veteran. , more than median). dition, 4.9 million outpatients |bfc flr0und f o veteran died in 1869 at VA the right shoulder before strik- Viet Nam civilian earns per S Tbsp buH.r present building. In 1915 only one percent of the 85 years after it officially end- a Veterans will be a signifi- treatments are provided year, relax with beer in off-duty t3 ing a post that marked a cul- 4 fWn M^ Cordo-Vox standing very near Her High- of two footmen who unpacked fire department. There were ness, in my dinner Jacket, of so that the Princess never saw 370 certificates awarded men course, my pencil poised to this unsightly operation. who had attended 75 percent make Joltings on a small dis- or more of the sessions. creet The $140-a-day (plus tax) Pre- pad. Twice her ducal es- sidential Suite — which is Esch course met for four corts spied roe, sharply clapped three-hour sessions and most their hands, "more for corporation presi- L-l-V-t Music mm and cried out, dents than president of nations" of the men who received cer- mm. "Walter ! More chsmpsghe!" tificates attended the entire 12- My name was — delighted closet-conscious fe- on everybody's males. Margaret has she beige hour training course. Course :W VJ rHlUAl - lips ln the royal entourage. It content was divided into three tha "T-ppars" W^k was Earl this and Earl silk-lined closets within a closet, that, a gold-domed entrance, three sections, each 12 hours in __L J- CAT Music by tha Jk___M and even the photographers length. »" ¦ " "City Slickers" kept yelling, "Hey, Earlt Just fireplaces, s large curving bar Hn ^v * __7__\___\ shaped like • question mark, Volunteer fire departments on* more!" participating in Firemanehip Actually the and a balcony all around the * Princess Im- suite on which she could go out I training and the number en- i^kmmw ^^^fc __i_\W^^ ^______K' pressed the hotel, which is ac- rolled were: Mabel, 16; Chat- customed to royalty — movie In the morning and sniff the Voice of the Outdoors royalty California smog. field 19; Rollingstone, 17; Ho- — with her non-autocra- NO PRESIDENT has stayed kah, 27; Houston, 16; Dover, tic manner. About 30 bouquets 17; Minnesota City, 25; St. were waiting ln her suite, In the Presidential Suite, but snd Johnny Carson has. So have the Charles, 21; Harmony 22; Eit- she personally inspected esch zen, 20; Goodview, 29 and Rush- one and read the cards of all Shah of Iran, David Sarnoff and William S, Paley. Joseph E. ford, 27. f L COVE Bar I the senders. Highway 61 at Minnesota City Kv; | Departments participating in $$* ¦ Levlne, of the movie royalty, :•:. .' ! ¦ Try eur famous "Ham on Rye" —. . . BvVv- SHE WAS on a working sche- tenants an almost identical Firemuuhip II and the num- We Stack It High) ber enrolled were: Goodview, $!$iV W$ti dule. Half an hour after arriv- suite next door which he pre- S..!: I Wln»r» «llow«4-y-U tftll bi cartfully checked I'V'.*/_ ing at the hotel, Margaret and fers because the view permits 22; Chatfield, 19; Houston, 13; ** Tony were out again — "Sight- him to see movie theaters, form Eitzen, 19; Rushford, 23; Min- seeing," on* aide said. which he gets tome of his mon- nesota City, 21; Hokah, 18; Roll- The "sightseeing" was princi- ey. ingstone, 14; St. Charles, 15, pally a cocktail party given by A woman in slacks and wear- and Harmony 16. Vincent Price. ing a Mexican serape was seen Volunteer firemen from these j-'*III^^ "They were most gracious/' in the lobby. A hotel executive towns received Firemanship HI said Stewart H. Hathaway, said, "Princess Margaret is III sessions: La Crescent, 14; ||| | [ "Serving the Finest managing director of tha ho- bringing all sorts of strange- Goodhue, 25; Lake City, 20; Al- 7^^jj |J ||| tura, 18; Caledonia, 26 and . tel. '*As they were leaving to looking people in, isn't she?" i Seafood Every Friday " J | |H||M go sightseeing, Lord Snowdon Another hotel executive said, Spring Grove, 21. bowed to me and, with a nice "Oh, didn't you notice? That's Additional classes will be or- sense of humor, said, 'Mr. Taylor." ganized. Volunteer fire depart- Elizabeth ment chiefs are asked to con- I Hathaway, we've had a pls- TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Leo WmiArmm\9_ W9_WMW aant stay and will see you again Pinkus thinks his wife's a lit- tact Raine at the vocational of- HIM IH ^- A / l lllili ficers at Winona Senior High J SEAFOOD ^ some time."' PB tle too interested in interior Inasmuch as the Princess decorating — she wants to re- School and request -the particu- III! H __ %¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ _/^c_#_£___Hlli was Rolls-R-ycingoff by way arrange the scats in his car. lar section needed. of the hotel garage frequently, WlSfl I'D SAID THAT: We'll H_ P. RIIEtET C/J ^9 Hathaway went home to set be facing a faahion crisis in the wm DUrrC I mm some black four-in-hand \y ties for future, when the rising hemline SERVING FROM 5:30 to 1:00 P.M. III the throats of his garage em- meets the dropping neckline. — More 1-90 Bids IIUII I ' || | | ployes, who usually went tleless. Monty Hurst, Dallas. llllj The whole family will love our wonderful variety l||i,l'l| THERE WAS only one pro. QUOTE: Kafood and fish dishes . . . why not take ||LJB REMEMBERED II1 11- °* tocol problem, Somebody hung "They don't make things like Due on Tuesday ||| l them this Friday night! li SUII up the Union Jack cither back- they used to — and they never MADISON, Wis. — Five of 10 ADULTS $2 - CHILDREN $1.25 III! wards or upside down. It had did." - Herb Shriner. «KS^»W«BIMHMB-Be-iMMMSWaaS_SBSB projects covered by bids to be | to be rehung. Afterward no- EARL'S PEARLS; Bobbl Montana Antelope wild, they reported. The herds er had to do was look at the opened Tuesday by the Wiscon- body except the British could Traynor saw this sign in a fur- Two Winona hunters returned were small compared with oth. sky and find an excuse to go sin Highway Commission at tell tha difference. niture shop: "We refinish an- Monday from a two-week hunt er years. They got the' ante- hunting. It was a holiday also. Madison call for further devel- HOI cHoiot U)lmmcL fl On the tour tha royal party's tiques like new." with two antelope and two lope in open plains while tho opment of Interstate 94 ln Eau MISSISSIPPI ROOM COFFEE SHOP WM luggage — 68 pieces — preced- Jason Robards, attending a deer wars killed in draws where The Legion had a big free JJIJ ™ ______^ * mule deer from the southeast dinner in the Owl Motor Co. Claire and Jackson counties, BllB_^_p«_tH|n___B White Houaa dinner with Lau- corner ot Montana near Ekala- there was soma cover. amounting to six miles of grad- l 1 ren Bacall, saw her talking ka and a report of very hard garage and John McCormick Ranchers are of the opin- entertained the boys and ing and 10 structures. with Congressman John Mc- hunting and a big decrease in The three Jackson County Cormack. He asked her later: game. The winter kill was ion that the season should German Band at the Hotel have been closed this year Winona. After the party, a projects are as follows: Grad- "What was the speaker of tha blamed by the natives. 1-94 starting nation's House tailing the speak- because of the heavy winter group, headed by the band, ing 2.619 miles of marched down Third street. about .5 of a mile inside the nNITI$_7:0-rrr-T.1I . er of my house?" This Is the seventh year kill and small herds this • that Kenneth Seebold, 1612 fall. A lot of hunters, de- village of Hixton, with the bal- 25t<45«-M« BUILDING AT ETTRICK The first we knew of the ance northwesterly toward ) Edgewood Road, in checker- spite rancher guides, came MATINEES-1:15 ETTRICK, Wis. (Special - ed shirt, hunted in the home without animals. storm wag at the Athletic Club Northfield, deadline 220 days. Ut-Mt-TS* Mr. and Mrs. Lester Tranberg area, and the sixth for his when Browney Kulas, who had Two bridges in the Burton are erecting a garage to be at- partner Merlyn Von Ber- Armistice Day Memories been hunting, came in declar- road • Hlxton section spanning tached to their dwelling. gen, 111 E. Sanborn St., It was 25 years ago today, ing "that all hell has cut loose toe Trempealeau River near | SU IT MOW j the other party in the pic- Nov. U , 1M0, that the big storm outdoors." Hixton, deadline 180 days. Two bridges in the Hixton Inter- WINONA DAILY NEWS ture. The two doe antelope , hit the Northwest and the Mis- An hour later, working in •Ai weighed about 100 pounds sissippi River bottomlands, tak- change to carry the new inter- classy a spy THURSDAY, NOVBWBgR 11, \tli , the KWNO studio, we start- over Highway 95 and each. They used .243 ri- ing a toll of nearly 50 lives ed collecting storm reports. state VOLUMB 10», N9. W> tracks. Dead- film as fj | fles with scopes and got more than 20 in the immediate Telephone calls came by nearby railroad PUMWMS dslly .«e»pt Sj .hirt.y' and H* their animals at 200 yards. Winona area. The morning was line 250 days. Pvbllih- the scores seeking informa- you Mtv. by Rwublican and ll.r.ld nearly perfect with ducks rid- The two Eau Claire County *___r^__ i__H A ^^^W______H___ ^______-_ ^^^^ iT> Wmwm ttvMjBt. , ' Company, Ml Frwklln St., Wlnon., tion about lost hunters. We " ) lna Hunting pressure was heavy ing a light wind, indicating the Grading of 3.533 wwn. broadcast the information projects are : and the animals extremely "big flight" was on. All a hunt- miles and installing two cul- SUBSCRIPTION RATBS and asked the hunters to re- between Slngl. Copy - is. Osily, »« SunO.y port if they were safe. We verts about half way ~ the south county ¦ ¦ >w recall some of the reports. Foster and . -t.r.rnta jXi Mlvw^d by .rrUr—r W»t* 50 Me.lt about one mile northwest s^ nS H Wfk. SUJi n w—k. tU.» Judge G. L. Pattison from line, and 2% miles southeast of a By mall strictly In -dvan-»> Paptr .Us- Red Cross to Deliver Alma, Wis., reported two D Delicatessen Sandwiches fl pit en aKplr.ltan ~t%. hunters frozen to a barbed- point where the Interstate un- derpasses County K, deadline In Plllmor*. Houston, Olnutad, Wlnen., wire fence. Wabasha had at _pln bridges In the Wabattia, BuM.la. JackMn. P and least five deaths. This went 220 days. Two Fresh Oyster Cocktail Trempealtau cnuntlts and armed torctt Yule Gifts in Viet Nam on throughout the night. Foster-south county line section H^B MOD pmonntl In tha comtlntntal Unltad Vatw, fl QH Many others served dally 11 a.m. to 12 Mldnlt* i DD or ov«riea> with APO w FPO addrnwi: Christmas gifts for American ing new equipment would be carrying a town road and Coun- 1 year |lt« 3 monthi U.SO Sheriff PYed Seeling resetted ty K over the interstate gener- « month. .. WJt 1 month S1JS servicemen In Viet Nam may welcomed: 50 hunters bringing them from "yffftfJV be delivered through Red Cross Tape recorders and tapes, , ally north of Osseo, deadline All nthir lobtcrtptlonai , an island to what is now the ISO days. 1 month .... II.Ml month. .... MM channels the Winona County self-processing cameras and Minnesota City Boat Club dock, S montha .... IB.tt I year ..... I1J.W chapter said today. film, record players and 45 then known as the Stanz Land- r.p.m. records, pocket sets of Send changa ot addraaa. notlcaa. tmdeltv The chapter said it has had ing. He made a score of trips Meteor Observed BD COaKTAIL LOUNGE ared capiat, aubscrlptlon ardtra and other inquiries from individuals and checkers, chess or cribbage, across the slough with a row- EB recHmcoioir(& TICHMSCOPPT mall ttwni to Winona Dally Nawt, P.O. harmonicas, banjos, ukuleles, At Min tiea no I is Box K, Winona, Minn., SS9I7. groups interested In sending boat. Max Conrad with a plane packages (or distribution guitars and adult-level jigsaw Second elate pojlage paid at Winona at dawn the next day, spotted MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - An . Minn. among troops. Interest in this puszles. many hitters and directed, white-hot, tailed ob- " ' "~ —— ' " ¦ !¦¦ ¦ — ., ¦ ¦ ¦ _,— .^—.-,. sort of giving has been stirred Gifts for Christmas delivery from the air, rescuers on the apparently —"' —' should be submitted before ject observed west of Minneapo- by demonstrations all over the ground to them. The river and a me- country respecting administra- Dec. 10. sloughs froze over, the wind lis Tuesday was probably ¦ University of Minnesota HELD OVER tion policies in Viet Nam. «iled the ice high on shore. teor, . In addition to families which 36 Whooping Cranes le compiled a long list of veri- authorities said. EXCLUSIVE AREA ENGAGEMENT send gifts to their own ser- fied dead and missing for the Such Wonderful Food vicemen, many persons have Return to Texas newspaper the next day. Sights asked how to send articles to WASHINGTON (AP) - A that live vividly in our me- the troops generally. total of 38 whooping cranes mory, were five bodies stacked Wedding B^^Kfialrv^B _¦______. ______B______H ______^______B______HiPV_r_ N______-______¦___¥__¦ M. *JSL ?$m ^B^HHj^H V_BEM9^_3 .______¦ ^^^Ka___H ______¦ £______Perishable items should not hive completed their fall like cordwood waiting for un- at the B>:-. .\ •_/. ' £MM^ mmMEMMMm} Ms_wvfM9U_-flVIMHR^P_H_**v MMMMW9MWm\AmMMMB ^fMm »uca iun ESBi MUM MMM MMM 2_JB5_____ be sent, the Red Cross advises. migration to the Arkansas Na- dertakers at one landing and On the recommended list are: tional Wildlife refuge on the the Labrador standing over its WIT0KA BALLROOM Paperback books, toilet articles, Texas Gulf Coaat, the Interior master, frozen to a tree, tbe razor blades, pre-sweetened Department reported Wednes- scene which was the subject of SATURDAY, NOV. 13 powdered drinks and popcorn day . Ernie Baudhuln's painting which can be popped in lis con- Bight nf the birds are young- "Fatal Armistice." (or tainer. of-the-year. But most people, we in- Iran* Larson A Ray G«dy ~| Recreational equipment also There were 42 whooper* In cluded, were too close to Muile by Rmll Noumann WINONA Is in demand, says the Red l ||| the wild flork that wintered at the forest to see the trees. and Hit Swiss Olrla g IT'S THI BIGORST ENTERTAINMENT JJuoP Cross. Donations of the follow- Arkansas a year ago, a record It took an outsider, Gordon ____. EVER TO ROCK THE SCREEN Spr .i number. MacQusrrle of The Milwau- if *- With two week, ISEfl p WITH LAUGHTER Mt #§l or three of kee Journal, who wrote the the normal migration period article "The Ducks Came still remaining, the department and Men Died," to grasp tbe Sons ot Norway BN$ ,T said conservationists are hope- terrible story of the moet C C C SPSS HUNTERS ful the number of whoopers will deadly storm in history to Lutefisk A Moat Ball fhzm SEENOT NOW iJrii BRING US YOUR set a new record when the mi- wrought its force on the 1 gration has been completed. duck hunters of the river. finsM BSfi ^_ ^_ EVININGS—7:00-9,40 ' li * 1 DEER HIDES ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ PASSESss. .$ i .oo-$ . .is ||$%n DINNER Wllh all tho trlmmlnit That' s What M M HONORED _j ySt_m HIGHEST PRICES fp Deer Hunte rs ^ Wfnona Glova Co. | fl ^ CHICKEN Sun., Nov. 14 Every body Says About ^^ .14 E. 2nd St. COLOR COLOR ft I MMmtta "ITft 1 MW MASS Mitrau 's Mobil Station LANESBORO Ru.hford 5 a.m. Nov. 14 Br««Ma.t 1:10 A.M. COMMUNITY HALL Majsrui Standard S.rvica BIS AVENUE Lanesboro, Minn. St. Charlas St. Aloytlui Sarvlni from 11 a.m. to S p.m. Jor-lid' Sporting Getda SUPPER CLUB I - Church Adult* $175 Children 7f* woftur ' La Creicant Elba, Minn. ______AT THE TIL-STAR SION IN FOUNTAIN CITY j i DEAR ABBY: KEN'S HARDWARE Pay for Good Grades Scored ' By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN .. . . . DEAR ABBY: Do you think parents should PAY their children for getting good grades? Somehow I can't seem to convince myself that it's right, but other parents do it and get results, so maybe I'm wrong. Our son needs some sort of motivation to do better in school. Richard has as much intelligence as any of his classmates "'™ '"~'^^"""s»a»_^^ who make the honor roll, yet he barely EAGLE AWARD . ... Principals in the Eagle award cere- gets by and it doesn't seem to bother him. mony in Lake City, Minn., Monday night were, from left, Mrs. My husband thinks we should offer him Cecil Carey and Mr. Carey, parents; their son, Thomas, re- money as an incentive. Richard is only 14, cipient, and Scoutmaster Albert Hoffman. (Mrs. Meta Cor- but he's saving for a Car. Do you think $50 leus photo) for every "A" he gets and $25 for every MOVING "B" is too much? RICHARD'S MOTHEB DEAR MOTHER: I think the whole New Report Card Lake Citian Gets idea of PAYING a child for the priv- ilege of getting an education is "too Introduced at _s____-H_i__-_B much." First, Richard needs to learn Eagle Award ABBV .r the value of KNOWING things, not HAV- St Charles High LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) ING things. It's all right to "reward" a. child for a job ST. CHARLES, Minn. (Spe- — Thomas Carey, son pf Mr. well done — but "bribing" him for doing what he should ' do for nothing makes no sense at all. Mediocrity, when cial) — Report cards, which and Mrs. Cecil Carey, Lake City, received his Eagle Scout one can do better, calls for discipline. were issued in St. Charles High * School Wednesday, have a new badge at a Troop 73 c«irt of look. honor Monday evening in St. DEAR ABBY: I work, and live alone. I get very tired They' Mary's Catholic Church base- of eating out all the time, so I frequently invite a friend or re self-duplicating cards two over to enjoy a home-cooked dinner with me. I appre- and need not be ment. signed or re- ciate having someone offer to help me with the dishes /^______r ______^______r______H turned. Each quarter's card James Peterson was master of ceremonies. Present were afterwards, but how would you like it if your guest took will include the grades for that the dish towel out of your hands and said, "Get out. I'm quarter plus the cumulative re- Tony Kuntz, Red Wing, execu- tive of the Cannon River Dis- doing the work!" port. The master stays in the There are two people who push me out of my own school files. trict, Gamehaven Council, and Edwin Herman, Lake City, dis- kitchen this way and it irritates me. Should I just go in the Achievement grades will re- other room and sit down? Or should I say, "This is MY main A, B, C, D and F. Effort trict committee chairman. ' We Kuntz administered the Eagle home, and if you want to HELP me, fine ; otherwise YOU 're Moving Temporarily Into a Pole Barn grades also will be given. go in the other room. I'm staying." IRRITATED Previously the school file had oath. Mrs. Carey pinned the a number of subject cards for badge cm her son, who present- ed her with a long-stemmed DEAR IRRITATED: Your "helpers" mean well. each student. The new system They're just a trifle heavy-handed. Tell them if they on the Parking Lot to Make Room for will reduce paper work. rose. Mr. Carey presented Tho- mas the Eagle Scout certificate. want to "help," they're welcome, but YOU are in The Careys were introduced charge of K.P. in your own kitdhen. And put some au- by Albert Hoffman, scoutmas- thority iii your voice. Randall's Super Valii During Reconstruc- Retarded Fund ter. The ceremony was pre- ceded by a potluck supper at DEAR ABBY : I, have been married for a year. Before Campaign to Aid I was married I was a pretty sad case. (I guess you'd say 6:30, with invocation by the Rt. ") Rev. Msgr. Warren J. Ryan. I was "promiscuous. My husband knew about this because tion of Their Buildings Annandale Camp Mike Myer advanced to first I was going with him at the time. When we were first mar- ried, I lied to him a few times about where I was going. I The new camp for the retard- class; Mike Huettl to second, Steve Fuchs really didn't cheat on him those times, but I was going with ed near Annandale, Minn., will and Joe Black, , some girls I knew he didn't like. I've been 100 percent true to be among the facilities benefit- Joe Herron and David Peterson " my husband since our marriage and always will be. Well, he ing from current fund campaign to tenderfoot Tim Tibesar and found out I lied to him, and now he won't trust me. of the Minnesota Association John McKenzie received merit Yesterday our telephone rang three times. It was the for Retarded Children. badges. same person calling a wrong number. My husband was sure Six Winona County residents Dave McKenzie received the it was a man for me and I was trying to cover up, so he were among the 514 young and Eagle award last summer. said, "Why don't you call your boy friend back and tell him Our Inventory Is Troop 73 is sponsored by St. Too Big adult campers there last sum- I'll be gone-all day tomorrow?" Abby, I love my husband mer, according to a campaign Mary's Church. and want him to believe me, but how can I when he's so spokesman. unreasonable and suspicious? ' NOT TRUSTED Campers stay one or two weeks, living in cabins in Moyie on Program DEAR NOT: You earned your husband's distrust and groups of 6 to 10 with adult now you will have to win back his confidence. This can For Indian Guide be accomplished in only one way — performance. If counselors. For These you consistently tread the straight and in time New narrow, Quarters Of the 514 campers, 288 were from state institutions. Birthday Dinner your "bad'.' reputation will fade, and a better one will A loth anniversary reunion replace it. It can be done, but you must avoid not only evil, but the appearance of it. of all YMCA Indian Guides members will begin with a 6:15 CONFIDENTIAL TO "M" AND "M": Goethe put it this C IJUJUUUI p.m. dinner Tuesday at the Wi- way: "Love is an ideal thing, marriage a real thing; a So, We Are Offering Discounts S J nona YMCA. confusion of the real with the ideal never goes unpunished." ' About 200 former members There is no perfection. Don't expect too much. STING RAY are expected to attend, accord- Sports Fun-Bike ing to Warren Macemon, pre- sent chief of the We-No-Nah the Walt Disney film, "Beaver ceive invitations are asked to I $49.95 _ $56.95 Nation. Special recognition will Valley," also are on the pro- call the- YMCA office so they Lay-by Now for Christmas be given to members of the can be included. gram. ¦ ¦s______^ ^______l ______i B first tribes organized here 10 T ^^^^^^^^ ^^^______P^______r toller's £S. years ago. Charters will be Invitations are being mailed The barn or screech owl is Sales & Service presented to two new tribes to all men whose names and often called the "feathered cat" 402 Mankato Ave. Ph. SMS during the program. address are available. Form- because it is a great foe of Displays of Indian crafts and er Indian Guides who do not re- mice. I

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Editor's Note: Let- ters fnust be temperate, Good Citizenship of reasonable length and Expert on signed by the writer. r Editor's Not*: This is tht fif th in a Profits Studied Bona fide name * of all keries of Quest Editorials written by Winona By DAVID LAWRENCE important letter-writers will be SiWn ///s civic, educational religious leaders m WASHINGTON - What is more , and profit made by published *. No religious By JOSEPH G. MOLNER, M.D, today — the total amount of medical or personal eon- with 1Ks observance of National a company after taxes or the rate ef divi- Education Week , Nov . 7-1J.) troceraiM are accept- Dear Dr. Molner: I dends paid to its stockholders? Indeed, which able.) is more relevant — how large a number of have several skin prob- By Herald J. Streater individual-) a company employs or how high Writer WIO Not "B«ck lems. Tbe skin is very Attorney at Law a wage rate is paid to each employe? It Down" on Position oily. I also have black- has become popular for political reasons to de- heads and bumps under increases and point to "big prof- To the Editor: IN ANCIENT times the word "citiitn" nounce price the skin. They are more " " "inhabitant" or "den- its" — as if to say, "They're making big mon- I am taking this oppor- meant native or like small boils. izen", and the word was used primarily to ey, so their prices shouldn't be raised. " tunity to reply to the letter country today, how- Should I take vitamins identify the environs or place of origin of The question before the which appeared in the Daily ever, is not how much total profits the alumi- a person. Ove"r>the many centuries of de- News last week which at- or something for my num companies or the units in any other in- blood? I had boils velopment of political science, government dustry have been making, but what dividends tempted to explain away and mores of the people of the earth an they earn as wages for their stockholders. my strong criticism of the when I was a teen-ager, entirely new and different concept of citi- What, tn truth, is the rate of return? Unless Neighborhood Youth Corps but my skin got better zenship has emerged. Today we necessarily the wages of capital are adequate, public con- as to how this program had in my 20s, and I don't fidence tends to break down and the whole eco- see why I should have attach to citizenship the meaning of mem- been conducted in Buffalo, bership in a political and national body nomic system is impaired. this trouble now. Pepin and Trempealeau with the attendant rights, duties and ob- The price of aluminum has recently been 1 know what foods I in ligations which this membership entails. raised. But it is still below what it was counties during the past can eat and what I can't 1960. Yet the prices of every other metal—cop- As citizens of our city, state and country, summer. The long delay of —fresh fruit of any per, lead, zinc, tin and steel — are higher kind eggs, chocolate, we all have rights and privileges derived an answer to my letter of , than in 1960. Aluminum stands alone, not only nuts, etc. Besides this from our citizenship in each of these politi- Oct. 1 is cause for some with the lowest prices but with the lowest re- mystery. I have brown spots on cal bodies. More important to the writer, turn on money invested. When I wrote the article my. face. Can you help however, are the duties or obligations which TAKING THE period of 1955 to 1957 as a published last month, I me bleach them out each citizen owe. to his city, state, country measure of sustained economic activity at high made it perfectly explicit '¦:. . without bleach cream . and fellow citizens. The effective perfor- levels, the profits of the three big aluminum that I was not questioning which I cannot use? mance of our duties as citizens is essentially companies, amounted to 9.7 percent of sales. the personal motives or the I wash my face twice a Question of education, for understanding But in 1960, this had dropped to 5.1 percent. personal integrity of any a day with oatmeal is based upon interest, study and the practi- It now has risen to 6,5 percent, but still is con- one individual, workman or soap, and put alcohol on cal application of what we have learned. siderably below the figure of the 1955-57 base administrator, who had it at night. I hope you period. taken part in the summer can help me. — MRS. In this field of education for citizen- When profits are ranked on the basis of a youth corps project. How- W.J. ever certain persons In the ship, I believe our secondary schools and percentage of equity, the three big aluminum , -I can, area bad decided that they To such degree as colleges have made great companies in the period 1955 to 1957 had a help on skin strides. The in- had could and would read their I try to offer * .15.J . percent return on their money. This , but most skin terest of our present students in govern- percent in I960, and is own, ami desired meanings problems dropped down to 5.9 conditions have to be seen ment is greater than ever beforeh and with still only 8.8 percent in 1965. into my words. They came interest comes learning and comprehen- up with the false impres- to be identified accurately. Contrasting with this profits as the percent foregoing letter is sion. Our young people today realize that of equity for all manufacturing companies, the sion that I was merely try- The ing through my letter to fairly typical of quite a few as adults they have not only the privilege figure for 1955 to 1957 was 11.7 percent and to alum- harm the reputation, if not that I get—and have but also the duty to participate in govern- in 1965 had gone up to 12.8 percent. So , because in general. the possible future political leave unanswered ment, not by the rather simple exercise inum Is worse off than industry there is no universal reme- cf the ballot, but by becoming affiliated To sum up, the return on investment in the ambitions of an area ad- ministrator of the youth dy for complexion troubles, with civic groups and political parties, or aluminum industry, despite some improvement any more than there is any since 1960, is still considerably lower than the corps. by seeking elective or appointive office, so THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-KOUNP Such opinions of my in- single medicine that "is return in manufacturing as a whole. Certainly, ails that as citizens they will actively partici- president's council of tentions are completely good for anything that as the chairman of the " pate in our government and in the fram- economic advisers says, there has been a gain false; so ridiculous as a you. ' ' - ¦ ing of its policies. .. in profits in 1965 as compared with preceding matter of fact that I now I COULD make any num- years. But the result is still much lower than ask why Mr. Lucas insinu- ber of suggestions to you, I BELIEVE OUR teachers have realis- investors are entitled to expect for the use of Russ ImmigrantWho Made ated that there were darkly Mrs. W.J., but you would ed that effective citizenship is generated their money. hidden motives behind my waste time and money try- by the promotion of interest in political af- honest criticism of the ing them, and probably get DIVIDENDS, FOR Instance, paid by the Neighborhood Youth Corps fairs and that our high school graduates only little or no benefit. Why? three big companies in aluminum are up administered in the three Because without seeing you, are emerging today with something more 12 percent since I960, whereas the rise in divi- Good in U& counties by Charles Zepp. By DREW PEARSON heads-they-win, tail s-the- known for ' both'^'s ^cham- I have no way of guessing than the bare knowledge of the structures dends for all manufacturing industries has been Figures relating the num- of our government. The great majority of government-loses contract. pionship of minorities and what the real trouble is, and 46 percent. WASHINGTON — This is ber of persons employed in 't know the trouble these young people are looking forward to The Harveys 7 got an agree- his friendly policy '-toward if I don - Labor - costs are significant, too. In alumi- the story of an American, the, youth corps project and I certainly"' can't guess at active participation in num, the rise last June was 4.1 percent ac- ment to sell aluminum to labor unions. Nevertheless some manner in born in Russia, whose the Johnson administration the wages paid to then- the right approach. governing cording to administration economists. It was adopted country gave him the government for five were taken themselves. A fine recent ex- pf rents office space from the from a story For one thing, what are higher than in the other metal industries. These such opportunities that he years, plus a certificate which was printed on the ample of this is the interest generated, dis- tax amortization on their Harveys for the Agriculture those "bumps"? Are they played and put into practical effect by the same economists now ignore such figures and became many times a mil- front page of the Sept. 16 acne? Does the oily skin , 3.5 new plant, plus an agree- Department, the GSA, the members of the Junior Chamber of Com- claim that the wage rise was only about lionaire, but who is now Department of HEW, Inter- issue of the Buffalo County contribute to them? Do you percent and hence was within the "guidepost" ment that a power line Journal. It had been merce of this city with regard to a com- howling his head off be- nal Revenue , the Housing re- have a chronic, low-grade pattern The administration evidently has tak- cause the government that would be built from the ported in that article that plete examination and study of our munici- . Dalles, Ore., to Bonneville and Home Finance Agency, staph infection stemming en the same facts regarding wages and reach- helped him wants to hold Treasury, Post Office De- $122,487.68 had been spent from your teen-age /boils? pal government. The emphasis of the ed whatever conclusions are in line with the down the price of alumi- to bring in cheap govern- by the Neighborhood Youth spools upon attendance at City Council ment power. partment and the Social Or are the "bumps" some- political needs of the hour. num. Security Administration. Corps in the three coun- thing entirety^ different? and board meetings, tours of the state "brainwash" the American ties It seems easy to It's the story of Leo THE POWER line was to This is all rented from over a five-month per- : Many people have learned capitol and the mock legislatures of people,- as has been done in the last few days Harvey , head of Harvey cost Uncle Sam $2,200,000. the company which last iod. The 313 workmen re- to see their doctor when the American Legion and YMCA all con- by planted speeches and statements given out Aluminum. With it goes the But at the last minute week complained because ceived $99,853.44; the "29 they detect su-piciotis symp- tribute to this effort v by senators enlisted by the administration for story of his family which watchful Rep. Clarence Can- the government was trying administrators" were paid toms. Yet some don't oft- its publicity drive. also received great benefits non, D-Mo., knocked the to keep aluminum prices $22,634.25. I believe the in- en do so when one partic- The citizens of Winona tpday are faced from the United States of item out. down. formation in tbe Journal ular organ is involved. The was correct. with many difficult but intensely inter- America. It's a story not un- On top of this, the gov- THE HARVEY family al- organ? The skin! esting problems. like that of the other alum- There was no response to Urban renewal, charter IN YEARS GONE BY ernment dug a 15-foot barge so owns the building at 909 my charge that officials in- OH, YES, the skin Is an reform, equitable and efficient taxation, inum companies, most of channel up the Columbia S. Broadway in Los Ange- which were put in business volved in the youth corps organ, the largest in the are but a few of these problems. The gov- Ten Years Ago . . . 1955 River to the Harvey Alumi- les, where they follow the program received high body. It not only covers a erning body of our city by Uncle Sam, loaned mon- num plant at the Dalles, a same policy on minority must welcome the Cotter High School debate teams were win- build ther fac- monthly salaries paid from considerable area , but assistance ey by him to channel which chiefly bene- races and unions. While the federal " of any interested and knowl- ners of five rounds in a debate tournament at , given a guaranteed poverty" funds. weighs, all told, somewhere tories fits the Harveys. federal government rents no That is the onl edgeable citizen who wishes, for no more Sibley High School, St. Paul. price, plus government con- y logical con- around 10 or a dozen reason than Olaf • At that time, the govern- office space there, Gov. Pat clusion one can reach after pounds. that he is a good citizen, to Min Mary Haake, freshman at St. tracts. Brown, a close friend of aid in the efficient administration College, Northfield, Minn., is a member of the ment had a staggering studying the Journal's ar- Yet folks seem disinclined of our Yet they are now squawk- stockpile of 7_ 5,.oq tons of President Johnson and in government and the solution College 60-piece orchestra which will make, brief ticle. Similar figures ap- to get-expert diagnosis, and of its prob- ing because the government aluminum. Uncle Sam need- sympathy with him on keep- peared in other lems. The achievement by tours the next two weekends. them is area publi- instead fuss around with our schools of which befriended ed more aluminum like he ing prices down, does rent cations. _ , and promoting interest its stockpile soaps, creams, lotions in government in the selling part of needed a hole in his head. space for the Colorado Riv- I shall not back down even "blood purifiers" Twenty-Five Years . .. 940 to keep aluminum prices er Board and the California students, and thereby providing the impe- Ago 1 Despite this, Tom Dewey's from the position which I which are a total waste of of down. Division of Water Re- tus for learning and understanding of these A. W. Doerer was re-elected chairman law firm had managed to have assumed. If any .In- time. County chapter of the American sources. problems, is to the writer the most signifi- the Winona LEO HARVEY, an ener- persuade the government to dividual or individuals de- Maybe it's our fault for cant advance in education achieved in the Red Cross. William W. Gurney was elected buy 200,000 tons of alumi- The state of California al- sire to distort my opinions not having emphasized this. Capt. Arthur J. Frey, getic Russian immigrant, so rents space in the Har- past two decades. Each year the problems vice chairman to succeed big money num from the Harveys to then I shall call upon that After all , complexion who left the city . began to make vey building on Hill Street, of administration of local, state and nation- on munitions contracts dur- add to tbe stockpile. Dew- person or persons to meet troubles aren't often of se- Miss Mary Mead, instructor in social sci- testimony for Its Department of Reha- al government become more complex, and ing th elast war. At that ey, according to with me in public debate vere peril to general health ence at the College of Saint Teresa and social before Sen. Stuart Syming- bilitation, and garages all on any day, time and at any consider- the effective solution of these problems time the Navy investigated its cars connected with , or life. Still a worker of the Diocese of Winona, was one of ton, D-Mo., did this by call- place of their choosing able variety of blemishes more difficult. held at and stopped his brother, narcotic cases in /that build- the speakers at a get-acquainted party from ing on Sherman Adams, whereupon this issue might can be readily identified by St. Joseph's Orphanage at Wabasha. Herbert Harvey, ing. / off-sized 20-mm then No. 2 man in the White be settled once and for all. a skin specialist. EDUCATION OF our citizens it the sole sneaking In the Virgin Islands, Har- I merel shells past Navy inspectors. House, who in turn called y sought last Oct. So instead pf relying on means at hahd to meet these problems then head of vey Aluminum recently per- 1 to express my feelings on Fifty Years Ago ... 1915 But the Navy didn't prose- Ed Mansure, suaded Secretary of the In- the oatmeal soap, alcohol and our educators are to be commended Grain receipts in Winona continue very light, General Services and in a matter which caused me rinses and other home rem- cute. And the Harvey fam- terior Udall and Gov. Ralph great that in this year 1963 our schools are turn- but few farmers coming to town at the present more gov- charge of stockpiles. In- concern and anger. I edies, go to a dermatolo- ily went on to Paiewonsky to OK the pur- felt the*, as I feel now that ing out young adults with the equipment, time. It is thought receipts will begin to in- ernment contracts and big- structions were given to buy chase of a large tract of gist and find out (a) what the energy and the inclination to meet crease at the end of the month when farmers also the 200,000 tons of alumi- it is morally wrong for the your troubles really are; ger profits. The family land on St- Croix for bauxite federal or for any these tests. Each citizen with will generally have finished their fall work . cosy- num. , level of (b) whether any of the Interest in his went on Into politics, development, despite the op- government to tax the peo- community and with the energy to study, Under direction of S, S. Strouse, secretary Ing up to both political par- This is the same Harvey position of many Virgin Is- things you are doing can ple taking their hard earned help, or whether they may learn and understand the problems, and of the board of municipal works, work has been ties and contributing sub- Aluminum which now com- lands residents who wanted lains When tbe United dollars and then placing even be harmful; and (c) the diligence to do something about them started on connecting the four new artesian stantially to each. p to keep that scenic area as city well. States government sells the those dollars in the palms of what you CAN do that will by personal activity, is making wells with the north On the Republican side, a non-industrialized tourist those citizens a contri- same amount of aluminum mecca. who are not improve the health of your bution both to himself and to his fellow eit- the Harveys hired Tom in financial need. Only the candi- which it once purchased The story of some of the skin. zen which can have the result of the effec- Seventy-Five Years Ago . . . 1890 Dewey, twice GOP real needy should receive president. On the from Harvey — 200,000 tons other aluminum companies tive and practical solution of Considerable hay is being marketed at the date for aid from the government, Dear Dr. Molner: Is our problems. Democratic side, Mrs. Car- — after Harvey and other and the concessions they following quotations : Timothy $9 and wild $7. members of the aluminum and I am willing that the dizziness a symptom or Connection was made at the lower end of mine Warschaw, daughter got from a kindly govern- diabetes? - MRS. D. J. industry had Increased ment which they are now real needy should receive the city between the Southwestern, North West- of Leo, has been Southern government assis- ern and Green Bay railroads. California chairman while prices. criticizing for holding alum- Dizzy spells are a symp- inum prices will follow in tance. However, the rest her brother Lawrence was , Is only tom of so many things that Nothing THIS, HOWEVER another column. of us, the vast majority of I wouldn Served By once candidate to be Demo- story of the Rus- Americans, 't single out dia- One Hundred Years Ago . . . 1865 part of have the betes. Yes, someone who has Another commodious dwelling house Is being cratic national committee- sian Immigrant and his PRAYER ANSWER ability and the means, have man from California. diabetes and doesn't know Senseless 'Protest' built on 2nd Street , opposite the planing mill. family and how they have NEW YORK W> - An the obligation to care for it might have such spells. The number of buildings erected this season is However, it was under the benefited from a kindly Un- estimated 13,000 people, our own humap needs as greater than it has been for a number of years. Republicans that tlie Har- cle Sam. gathered in the World's best as possible. Advartlwrotnt WHAT CAN one say of a suicide? In veys got some of their juic- The Harveys own the Fair's Singer Bowl for ob- That is my central theme the case of Norman R. Morrison , an offi- iest help from the generous Harvey building at 417 S. servance of "Christian of this entire controversy. FAT cia l of the Society of Friends who set him- government which gave Hill St., Los Angeles, where Science Day," heard • I believe that a majority of them a haven. Christian Science lecturer, the readers agree OVERWEIGHT self afire in front of the Pentagon , the feel- WINONA DAILY NEWS up until the spring of this with me Avtllabla lo you without a Ooctor a pra- In 1955, Tom Dewey sent , on this ' ing is of pity at a temporary derangement An .tid.pewienl Newspaper — Established IS55 year no minorities were em- Arnold H. Exo of Chicago point; thus answer- ocrlptlon, our product call*) Odrlntx. . his law associate, James F. assert that the world' ing an earlier You rm»»t lo»» only fat or your monty ployed and where a strict s question of bock. Oarlna* It a tiny tablet and easily W. F. W IIITK G. R. CI .OSWAY C. E. LINDEN Nickerson, to Washington to modern difficulties and mine: Who is to blame? twillowad. Got rid The Quakers have a long non-union policy was en- ot axcon tot and and honorable Publisher Exec. Director Business M0r. persuade Elsenhower offi- forced. needs can be resolved only Lance A. Lamphere Mvi lonoor. Odrlntx coils 13.00 ond tradition in the religious It 10W on thli ou-r_nl«o : If not ootls- and social history and Editor & Ad v. Dire c lor cials to give the Harveys a President Johnson is well through individual prayer. Nelson, Wis. flod for any rooion, |uit roturn mo of the United States. They helped to found pocksflt to your druofllit and got your W. J. COLE ADOLPH BRKMICK A. J. K IEKUUSCH full monoy bock. No quosthxw OIKM. this country, lt is astonishing to find among THE WIZARD OF ID By Parker and Hart Odrlnan It told with mil guarantee byi Managing Editor City Editor Circulation Mgr. Irawn Dnif Storo-ii7 W. Ttilr_ Itroot them expressions of oondonement for Mr, : Mall Or_.ro Flllod. Morrison's self-immolation, L. S. BRONX F. H. K LAGUE L. V. ALSTON Composing Supt. Press Supt. Engraving Supt. VIOLENCE TO SELF Is, after all, vio. W ILLIAM H. ENGLISH GORDO N OI TI lence and not pacifism. Nothing at all was H . . Comptroller .Sunday Kclttor GOOD GOOD I served by this senseless "protest" over U.S. policy in Vict Nam . Still less that is MfcMBER Or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS of value will be realized by crediting lo the L0VIN' I cause of peace a plain act of folly. ON SCOPITONE AT I /02?&S The Associated Press Is entitled ¦f iMm exclusively to the use for rcpublicH- . Hut If thr Spirit of him that raised up 4e*us Ib;l W tion of all the localas newsas printed in from tho dead dwell In you, be that raised up this newspaper well all A.P. LANG'S Bar I WO*-^ W C'hrM from tht dead shall «ls«i quicken your ^ —i^ news dispatches. BAST THIRD , I aortal bodice by Mn .Spirit (list dwrllrih in you , -.tomans -ill. Thursday, November 11. JDdft Toy Christmas land

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Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday Thru Saturday & Sunday 1 to 6 for Your Shopping Convenience — Open Friday Night TH 10 p.m. 25 th Anniversary' of" * Armistice Day' II Storm ¦ .1 i m i i .i l i 7 ' .i un . i n , i i. i i i i i i n i i n i M I '1 i II .in i II Some Widows Some Teeners ' File for Early Get Licenses When the Winds of Hell Were Loose Social Security Many 60- and 61-year-old wid- & . $i Age of ows have applied for reduced At 16 PAUL (AP) - The attor- | | (Editor 's Note: Tht most tragic autumn storm in Mid* end ST. % widows' benefits since the general's office • said west history took ploci 25 years ago, on Armistice Day, ney % of July when President Johnson Wednesday that "farm work" \ 1940. Mere than 30 hunters died in Mississippi River sloughs : | signed the 1965 social security restrictions imposed on some I and tnarshei in tht immediate Winona area. Throughout the §j amendments into law, Victor teen - age drivers are Canceled | | Midwest, the storm's death toll topped 100. i E. Bertel, social security dis- at age 16, thus giving the youth- fully valid licenses. 1i Everyone in the Winona area 40 years old or older who ii trict manager in Winona, Minn., | | Normally, teen - agers cannot m_ 1 teas her. In 19.0 tnusi hove vivid .nor.e- of that tragic | | reported today. become licensed drivers until dnV> . § "But we think more should age 16. However, licenses can I " Bertel be issued at age 15 to rural * We received the jirs l reports of Ihe storm 's severity | have applied than did, continued. "And we are con- youths to perform farm | | about 8 p.m. on that horrible night and drove through swirl- | | cerned that those widows who errands. ing snow to the Louis Slant landing near Minnesota Cily Jf where some of the firs t dead were brought in. |j haven't applied possibly are not These restricted licenses also aware of the change in the can be marked to permit a farm * As a "stringer " for The MiMfaukee Journal , we tele- | | | | law." youth to ride a motor scooter. :> phoned the story to thi slate editor them and the following pi Widows can now choose to Atty. Gen. Robert Mattson restrictioiis are I morning took ihe Journal's outdoor editor, the late Gordon § ruled that the start their monthly payments cancelled automatically at | | MacQuarrie, on a tour oj tht area and with us mhile we age as early as 60, but in a reduced 16, and that the permit then be- s interviewed storm victims who got out alive. if amount. Social security bene- comes a full-fledged driver li- fits are not automatic; an appli- | | Hers is his epic story, titled "When ihe Winds of Hell § cense. cation has to be filed. G. A. Hatfield, state driver li- j Wert Loose . . . . *') • 1 Widows who choose to take censing director, said there has their payments before 62 will been some confusion over farm Kzmmmmmmrnmmmmmmmt® receive monthly benefits at a work permits and other, which slightly reduced rate from what permit only the use of motor vyINONA, Minn. — Tht winds of hell were . playing a bigger game with the wind, and their v they would have received at 62, scooters. loose on the Mississippi Armistice Day lives were the stake. but they will get payments for and night. By that time men along the Mississippi were a longer period of time. They A license restricted to farm They came across the prairie, from the drowning and freezing. The ducks came and will receive about the same to- work means that the youth has north and west , a mighty, freezing force. They men died. They died underneath upturned skiffs tal amount of benefits either passed his driving test in a car charged down from the high river bluffs to as the blast sought them out on boggy, unpro- way, Bertel said. and merely lacks a year of age the placid stream below and reached with tected islands; they died trying to light fires The district office is at 356 to qualify for a full license, Hat- deathly fingers for the life that beat beneath and jumping and sparring to keep warm; they E. Sarnia St. field said. the canvas jackets of hundreds of duck hunt- died sitting in skiffs. They died standing in Motor scooter licenses also ers. river water to their hipa, awating help ; they can be issued at age 15, but People will tell of this for years to come. died trying to help each other. A hundred tales Mothe r Killed by- these involve only a driver test of heroism will be told, They will recall how dad and brother were long after the funerals Car, Father Dies taken on a scooter and are not saved. The men who came through it alive to- are over. to be used for automobile driv- gether will look at each other with new un- —f yr Tf FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) - Three ing, Hfitf_a& added. derstanding, as is the way with those who have Over in Winona General Hospital Tuesday children who lost their mother A license restricted to scoot- seen death brush them closely. And eventually night lay Gerald Tarras, 17, a survivor. He seven weeks ago in an auto ac- ers alone, he said, does not can- they will look back uppn it as "the year of the is a big boy, nearly six feet, and strong. He cident were orphaned Wednes- eel the restriction at age 16. big wind." To such a futile phrase will come had to be to live. He saw his father, his broth- day when their father was killed The question to the attorney what now seems to be the greatest hunting sea- er and his friend die. He has not yet come by electric shock while working general was raised by Bob B. son disaster in northwest history, and maybe to a full realization of what has happened. atop a power pole. Ebbesen, Redwood County attor- the greatest in the history of the country. Young Tarras, his head buried in a pillow, The father, Oscaf Y. Fields, ney. The dead in this area , so miles up and his frost blistered hands clutching nervously at 30, died instantly when he down the river will likely come to 30. the bedspread, told part of the story haiily. touched ¦ live wire carrying 7,-' south of Manassas, Va. ¦ ' fr ¦ fr ft "We went out about 10 in the morning, the 000 volts. His wife, Ruby, was Their three children are Eu- They came, those winds, with little warring four of us," he said. "It was raining and warm. killed Sept. 16 when her car col-• gene, 12, Theresa, 5, and Cecil, The wind came at noon. We began to lided with a tractor-trailer truck of their intensity. After a poor duck hunting worry. "FATAL ARMISTICE" ... This is Er- were purchased throughout the Upper Mid- : 4. My father said we'd better go back. It got season along the Mississippi, hunters welcomed nie Baudhuin's famous painting, a memorial west. Baudhuin, then a resident of Winona,, , MIMMflNMMMIMWAl ^ liked it in its fierce. Then Bill Wernecke died. He was cold. the wrath from the west. They to the tragic Armistice Day storm of 1WO. is now the executive vice president of a early stages. They tossed out their decoys and We boxed each other to keep warm. Bill died. Titled "Fatal Armistice — When the Ducks large color processing printing plate said: "Let it blow, that's what we've been I was holding him. He went 'O-h-h-h' and he firm in waiting for." They stationed themselves In tiny was gone. Came and Men Died", hundreds of prints Milwaukee. sand pits and boggy Island*, and the ducks "We were standing in water. We had a I came with the blast, riding It bewildered Md black Labrador dog with us. My brother Ray time through channels over which marooned and probably saved their lives, talked in clip- It's time to winterize... j headlong. died next. I knew he was dead. He was told. hunters could follow in skiffs. ped words. He said: "We could have gotten our limit easily," An airplane flew over and I moved my arm. It "At 9 Monday night it looked bad to said a man. saw us. Then my father died. They took me ¦ ¦ Harold Eastman of Winona, a safety engi- me. I needed a good, big, fast boat to save it . ;• ¦ ' ¦* off in the government tug and gave me some • those fellows out on the river. I was looking coffee. They gave me some whisky." neer for a utility comp*any, Told * Conrad's story Tuesday night, on Louis Statu' boat livery and his own better. especially for Eddie Whltten. I went to town dock, a few miless out of town, lay SO skiffs. X «_? -_v and got Al Squires. We got a 12 horse out- The dock was snow covered and deserted. Sev- In a Winona restaurant sat Max Conrad, the "I was hunting with R. J. Rice and Richard Guelzer Monday afternoon," Eastman related. board and started out. lt swamped. Then we en dead ducks, frozen stiff , lay there, forgot- aviator, Tuesday night, sipping hot coffee with rowed, each with a pair of oars, shouting to ten, on the dock where the river goes by. The Bobby Rean, his assistant. He told his story "The wind caught me on a bog. The oarlock broke. Dick said: 'We camp here.' We turned each other, 'One two, one two,' to keep the people who crowded to the dock all day Tues- very badly, for he is a modest man. stroke. day had other things to think of. Up the bank Conrad took a Cub training plane with a top up the skiff for a windbreak and lit a fire. speed of 79 miles an hour and led the govern- "At 9:30 a.m. Tuesday we heard a plane. "Our backs became ice coated. I had put on from the dock Tuesday came five dead men. an aviator's suit. We got to the island where The wind did it, the furious wind that pierc- ment tug Throckmorton and other rescue boats We fired our guns. The plane did not see us. 'to marooned hunters on the river. He flew all At noon the plane saw us. It was Conrad. I I knew Eddie was hunting. There were 16 oth- ed any clothing, that locked outboard engines ers there. We got Eddie back ashore and call- in sheaths of ice, that froze on faces and hands day , sometimes with Bean, sometimes alone. know him. He saved our lives. He woiild fly his plane repeatedly over a ed the police for help. We needed good oars- and clothing, so that survivors crackled when "Conrad yelled down at us from the open men. The men on the island were lying on top they got to safety and said their prayers. spot where hunters were marooned, and the res- door of the plane: 'Sit tight; we will get you of the fire — not beside it on top of it. Mother Nature caugtjt hundreds of iduck cue boats would know where to go. He would out of here.' In a few minutes he was back , hunters on the Armistice holiday. She lured toss out five gallon cans containing sandwiches, with a tin of food and cigarets and dropped It. "They- had been shooting off boughs for fuelx them out to the river and the marshes with whisky and cigarets. He would open the door He kept flying over us, then hollered down : with shotgun shells. Two men would shoot at her fine, whooping wind and when she got them of his plane and, with the motor cut , shout 'Start out and go in the direction I- am.1 once and knock off a bough. I came back and below : brought off a fellow named Anderson. I brought ¦ _____IH____JH9___1 afi^—^im^-WL^a^aaal-^-^^aWaaa^aaaaaaaaaaaWaa^ there, she froze them like rAUlkrats in traps. down to the men "We took our shotguns and started. Conrad ______Hfi8__ _nlK_^^_K______H______H_s a hatchet for wood and some whisky! Then we She promised ducks in the wind. They came, all "Hang on, help is coming." ' ^______PyM^3i^^^^^^^ H^^H^^^^^^H shouted, 'Leave your guns and take the skiff. ______P^^^^^fl______B______K right, but by that time the duck hunters were He would route the little plane time f fter worked it this way: Every man who got ashore ^______l*__fyf ¦ %______H______B______. We did. We broke through ice several times, in tbe rowboat went back and took off another, then we would hang onto the skiff and work it and the one he took off went back and took along to new ice. The tug Throckmorton pick' the next. ed us up. Conrad saved our lives." Draft Dropouts, Conrad said the river lowlands were bad "It was in what we call dark slough." Electricity Goes iled upon banks and islands, : because pan ice p &- J____I___H_11 :. H H j& ¦ K¦ ¦¦ B % \ i' IWMMMMMMMMMHI^HI ^MMMMAWH ^ so skiffs could not get through. He said he Some of the• dead brought• in •, like those at ™ ^HB^______" j______^______H__ ^l& Hershey Suggests saw dogs alone abandoned on boggy islands. Louis Stanz' river landing and boat livery, BH_S___E_L *• iS______^______^__^____Ml He said: . had their faces and hands blue and bruised. OKLAHOMA CITY (AF*. - , The Wrong Way "The guys who used melr heads built wind- The bruises, it was said , were from the men in Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, direc- " ¦ breaks with their skiffs and then built fires. the bitter night beating each other to keep ^L ^Hm m^LW ^^^K ^^^^^__WH^__S^t tor of Selective Service, has TORONTO (AP ) - The elec- opposite direction to the normal He added that a lot of fellows "lost their warm by shadow boxing and sparring, prob- ^ suggested that high school drop- tricity that browns your toast , flow at that hour. Unchecked, heads." ably, even when their bands were frozen and outs be placed in the armed cooks your dinner .or sends you this could have caused enor- He will not even guess at how many are without feeling. Thus they died on the . Mis- home on subways or streetcars mous damage to distribution services. dead. It will take days to find out. sissippi on the night following the Armistice Day went the wrong way Tuesday equipment. when the ducks came. ^_^______^^4_____ffi__^___S_____^___HB^_^^_H__w_i "They 've got to be some place night. The result affected 30 . Technicians at the Rlchvlew Some time• later , over* at the* Conrad home But hundreds out on the Mississippi made it where they can't drop out," he million people in Canada and control center in suburban To- four small daughters , Judy, Jane, Betsy and ashore under their own steam. Men stood, white said Wednesday. "We've got to the United States. ronto spotted the reversal and Molly, said: "Daddy is a fine flier." He was and shaking, on solid ground and looked back MMmmmmm ^mmmmmm ^mmmmmmmmmmmmmm ^mmwL^sSkm9 ^^i help these young people become Officials of the publicly-owned pulled switches that isolated sleeping hard then , for Wednesday he was to on a river running four foot waves. They came team players in our democracy, Ontario Hydroeleetrlcal Power southern and eastern Ontario take up the patrol again, looking for skiffs and ashore and home and put down their guns and or we won't have one." Commission, at a candle-lit in- from the interlocking grid. men, dead or alive. looked about them, hardly believing that there Hershey visited the state Se- terview during three successive was a safe, warm world and that they were lective Service headquarters That's when the power was blackouts in Toronto , told this Calvin Volkel• , who* helped rescue* 17 men in it. and later addressed the city version of how it happened: cut off from various centers in Ontario. The blackout lasted | Chamber of Commerce. Duofold At around 5:15 p.m., when 2-LAYER INSULATED UNDERWEA R He estimated the draft rate wives were getting supper and from five minutes to two hours technologi.al breakdown o f 1 will stay at about ..fi .OOO men a commuters in southeastern On- in some places because it takes modern times . ______f_____ ^______J____^n_l______-B month nationally. tario and along the U.S. Atlan- time for generating units that ¦ are in reserve to build up to the The interconnected system is I|j Avoid sudden freeze-up. Change over to warm-dry tic seaboard were starting home the epitome of sophisticated —there was what Consolidated power demand. |j Duofold now. Duofold's exclusive Thermal-Action j Auto Workers Sending Edison in New York called "an The surge of power from New technology. It operates almost || keeps you going in great shape from 20' below i York entered the Canadian sys- automatically. Because its parts Hospital to Viet Nam electrical disturbance" some- || outdoors to 70* above indoors. Out on the |ob or j where in northern New York. tem at Cornwall through an In- _ ^______H were so united, they dropped all ______^_ ^_ ^_ ^_ ^_ ^_ P^ ^: _ ^_. ^_M^ _j______%^ v______^^^^W^J H WASHINGTON (AP) - The terconnection, flashed across K > "* HP | out for sport. Skinside layer of soft cotton abiorba A complex of interlocking together. Like a tree felled by ______rw'" < ' ,£y______H United Auto Workers Union is the southern Ontario network ______$__ _-^_.€______Piil______l P sweat... whisks It through insulating air space to power lines extends from Que- and back Into New York through an ax. ______-_M*B-*"^ _^_-_^M___^IH!__-______I sending a fully equipped pediat- ^^^^^^^^^^^^ B__ ^U_____HK ^S A_3S______H If the outer layer of virgin wool/ k JMMW_____ I bec through Ontario to power ______Er___ «______¦ ____ * J^______^T^t ^r -"3______R f ric clinic and three tons of food an interconnection at Niagara This system is part of a na- H__ * _P^** and medical supplies to South companies of New York State, Fal ls , officials said. I cotton/Nylon ... evaporates it^_ /*^_j j JEK j and from there south to the tionwide power grid in which 97 Viet Nam. Wheh Ontario was disconnect- Walter Routher, president of Gulf of Mexico and west to Mon- per cent of the electric indus- ed from the grid, Steam-pow- f means no itch, no freeze, no the AFL-CIO union, said the tana. try 's generating capacity is w|Ji(M||fcidH_____l ered generating systems near sweat! 7 different warmths, in $250,000 shipment will allow This Interconnection complex, joined in five large networks. B I ^H&f8_l______l Toronto and Windsor , Ont., IMH--HBSHH-B^ South Vietnamese trade unions called a grid , carries electric ^^ were put into operation to pro- The U.S. government , mindful to establish a children 's clinic. power from the rivers of north- ern Quebec and Ontario, from duce needed power. that the nation's elcctrcity steam-operated power plants in IroniC-lly, the interlocking needs have doubled every 10 Ontario and hydroelectric plants power grid designed to assure a years for the past 80 years, has nestling on both sides of the Ni- supply of electricity in an emer- encouraged and prodded utili- IONO SLEEVE T-SHIRT |WESTERN agara ltiver and in New York gency helped spread the black- $5.95 j | ties to intcrlie in this manner. What Can a Piano Mean SHORT SLEEVE State. Power is traded back and out over a huge area , including Today government and utility T-SHIRT , . .,. $4.95 ! BLUE BLAZE NO. I forth among the compunics, and all of New York City. About I engineers in Canada and the UOHT & HEAVY WIIOHT regions as demand rises and one-fift h of the U.S. population United States are trying to find To Your Little Girl? DRAWERS $4.95 & $3.95 j falls. was affected, FUEL OIL out how to keep the system SHORT SLEEVE UNION .94 The blackout .spread could not ASK YOURSELF SUIT $9.50 | The Kyklein I* called C.VMJSl., from failing again and spread- M Per Gat. have occurred "20 years ago ing chaos. WHAT IT COJLD HAVE MEANT TO YOUI IONO SLEEVS UNION SUIT or Canada-United States-East- when power lines were not so $10.50 j ern interconnection. When one united . The lines today are GASOLINE link in the system needs power , Joined as tightly as telephone ETTRICK lWTIKNTS 1 -I We it draws It from another. lines. ETTWCK, Wis. (Special) - £f Per Gal. Tuesday evening power was Miss Margaret Harmon who Let Her Take Lessens on a NO STAMPS - moving into Ontario through Ni- In New York a spokesman for had been hospitalized at Lu ¦____^__ f^___.^______H______M NOTHING FREE agara Falls from Upstate New Consolidated Edison Corp. , said Crosse , returned there for fur- Rental Piano From Us York when something liapjx'iied New York City might have been ther treatment. Mrs. Henry in a high-voltage line south of spared if thai utility could vol- Solberg is recuperating from { WESTERN ] Niagara Vails, N.Y. untarily have released itself im- surgery at Tri-County Memor- " ' ' ' '" ' ' ' ¦"" ""' '"" "T" ¦ Then, Ontario hydro officials mediately from the interconnec- ial Hospital, Whitehall. Albert - .. ! .. .7- w i 7 ' 1 Hardt's Music Store said, "n surge of electricity" tion. Johnson, elderly Tappan coulee At Hi* f nd ef 116-118 East 3rd Sf, Ufay«H_ Street sent power flowing into the sys- The blackout result was , by man who recently sold his prop- Phone 2712 I "Wnere Quality Clothing h Not E xpensiVe" I tem al Cornwall. O.it. in tho many standards, thd greatest erl , is hospitalized at La Crosse. ______M______I_^ n , 'Around the World' Party Attended by Blair Girl Scouts New Community Orchestra BLAIR, Wis. (Special) - to Play Thirteen Girl Scout Cadettes and three adults from Blair at- tended the "Around the World Mozart at a Glance1' party Friday at Program With Guest Violist Lincoln High School gymnasi- A new community orchestra viola. She received a bachelor Present-day audiences find it um, La Crosse. will try its wings publicly for of music education degree at difficult to understand the non- Blair Cadettes represented the first time Sunday with all- Wichita (Kan.) State University acceptance of Mozart's melo- Denmark and wore symbolic in 1963, Mozart conqert at Somsen Hall having obtained scholar- dies by contemporary listeners. peasant dresses. They did a , ships to both Tanglewood and Danish . Mr. and Mrs. Winona State College. In the same year , Mozart Congress of Strings. She was composed the "Prague Sym- Julius Stenberg, Ettrick, taught Open to tbe public without elementary string instructor at phony, the troop the dance as part of a " from which the Winona charge, the performance be- Rochester, Minn., public orchestra will perform the first series for the folk dance badge. gins at 8 p.m. Richmond Mc- schools two years. Mrs. Harry Paul and Mirs. Cluer, orchestral music direc- movement. Alfred Einstein, a Mozart scholar, calls the de- Art Mathson met separately tor at Winona State College, The three-movement is con- with the two patrols to bake will conduct. sidered the finest of Mozart's velopment section "one ot the Danish cookies for the party. compositions in this medium. greatest, most serious, most ag- Mrs. Don Huibregtse. Cadet.e A FEATURE of the program It opens with an allegro, almost gressive of all the composer's leader, Mrs. James Davis and is a double concerto for violin symphonic in conception, con- works." trasted to the singing style of Mrs. Donald Ericksoff accom- and viola, Mo- THE ORCHESTRA, organiz- the second theme. Other por- panied the troop. zar t's "Duo ed this fall, is the current re- Con certante." tions include the "Mannheim" A guest perfor- crescendo, the string pizzicati vival of a tradition extending Nurses Hosted mer is Myra and horn and oboe melodies in back to 1906. The first commu- , , the first movement, an extend- nity symphony was organized Janzen violist then by Carl Ruggles a concert At St. Mary's who will fly to ed dialogue of violin and viola , in the second movement and violinist who moved here after Mrs. O. J. Fawcett, 6th Dis- Winona from touring America for several trict delegate to the Minnesota the University unusual entries of solo instru- ments in the final movement. years. He came as a private Nurses Association convention of Indiana for violin teacher at the Mar d' Mar held in Minneapolis Nov. 1 and the concert. Vi- OPENING the concert will be School of Music, located in the 2, gave a report at the group's olinist will be Choate building. Tuesday dinner meeting at St. Eugene Vui- the overture from "The Mar- riage of Figaro Mary's College. cich, string in- Miss Janzen , " first played Shortly after arriving, Bug- to the indifferent reception of Thirty nurses attended as structor at the College of Saint gies organized the orchestra Teresa and concertmaster for Viennese audiences in 1786. Mo- which quickly became well guests of the college. Brother zart gave the orchestra more Justus welcomed the group and the orchestra. Miss Janzen and known throughout the Midwest. Vuicich played the duo together prominence in his operas, a Local businesses contributed Brother Leo gave a brief his- departure with which audiences ' MISTERSSIPPIS WIN .. . William Silsbee jackets and dark last March in Rochester. $2,300 a year for the orchestra s , left, area bats and string ties with their sleek tory of the Christian Brothers seemingly could not cope. His budget . It had 40 members and counselor for the Winona Chapter, SPEBSQSA, congratulates trousers, as they appeared in the contest, are, from left, Wil- and discussed their aims and Miss Janzen is studying with William Primrose, Indiana Uni- compositions also betrayed a was separate from the com- the Misterssippis quartet as he hands them the trophy they lard Adank, David Broker, Bruce Odell and Michael Hengei. objectives. A tour of the college profound exposure to the con- munity band, also sponsored library and gymnasium follow- versity, on a graduate assistant- won at the Land O'Lakes District convention and quartet Their barbershop singer emblem is on the right. (Daily News ship for a master's degree in trapuntal styles of J. S. Bach. by business contributions. competition Saturday at Appleton, Wis. Wearing jaunty top Photo) ed. " Committee members in •f ' ...... &*w< *wws...AMV I Gftp Harry Paul, campaign chair- Dakota PTC 9r// If I Winona's own Misterssippis, this last summer. Members quartet that doesn't use a pitch theran Church Women last ** are man. Sets Sock Up who will be featured in the 10th Willard Adank, tenor; Bruce pipe, Mr. Adank said. During Thursday attracted 1,300 per- v- _ Anniversary Parade ot Harmo- Odell The goal was set at $275. sons. s I , lead; David Broker, bari- 18 years Of traveling, they have m DAKOTA, Minn. (Special)-!! } - ny here Dec. 4, won first place tone, and Michael Hengei, bass . sung in 38 states and several was announced at the Monday Consumed were 800 pounds in the Land O'Lakes District This is the first time any provinces of Canada. Betrothed Couple evening PTC meeting that a each of lutefisk and potatoes , convention and quartet compe- quartet from Winona has won The New Lisbon (Wis.) Chor- chaperoned sock hop for stu- 420 pounds of meatballs, 2,000 tition Saturday at Appleton, in the district competition and us will be the guest chorus ap- Honored at Shower dents in grades six through 12 pieces of lefse, eight bushels of KNIT Wis. is considered a great honor for pearing on the Winona show. will be held in the gymnasium rutabagas and enormous ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) — cranberries and WP\ the Winona Chapter. Last spring, during the begin- Friday from 8:30 to 10:30 p.m. amounts of Miss Susan Giemza and Frank THE FOURSOME of male ning of the flood, the Winona Mike Wiegel , La Crosse, will Norwegian baked goods. singers of the local chapter of The Dec. i concert will be Klimek were honored at a pre- held in Winona Senior High Chorus traveled to New Lisbon provide the music. An admis- Men had to drive to Ettrick M the Society for the Preserva- nuptial shower at the Arcadia ^ow to be on their show and invited sion price will be charged, to purchase an additional 50 W School auditorium, beginning at tion and Encouragement of Bar- Country Club Saturday. Host- before the \ them to appear here. pounds of lutefisk ber Shop Quartet Singing in 8:01 p.m. esses were the bride-elect's The recent bake sale netted "Little did we believe at this bridesmaids, the Misses Diane $35.90. In charge were the serving ended. America, Inc., was reorganized MR. ADANK, president of Wi- time that it would be the New Mmes. Ralph Grant, Harry Diners came from Pensacoia, nona SPEBSQSA, promises that Kiehl, Sharon Giemza and Bev- Lisbon Chorus that would win erly Kuka. Music for Foust and Otto Dobrunz. Fa.; Winona, Minneapolis and the quartet serenade show "will dancing La over the Winona Chorus in was furnished by Walek's Or- The PTC will purchase an Kiester, Minn.; Neillsville, be of the same high quality en- Class S competition by five chestra, Independence. American flag for the Scouts Crosse, Sparta, Batavia, Osseo, tertainment as in past annual for Holmen, Black River points last May in Rochester!" The young couple $15. Mrs. Joe Brown will Merrillan, concerts." He announces names said Mr. Adank. will be mar- buy gifts for the children for Falls and Westby, Wis., and ried Nov. 27 at Our Lady of of the guest quartets and chor- the Christmas party Dec. 17. neighboring communities. TICKETS ARE on tale at Perpetual Help Catholic Church ¦ 1 us scheduled to aid in the en- Seventh and eighth grade stu- """"^ Farrell's Barbershop on Main here. ! £P^ '¦ tertainment. dents provided the entertain- 500 CARD PARTY I ' *' Street, both Ted Maier's Drugs, ment. " Coming here from Park at Dora's IGA grocery and from AUCTION RUMMAGE SALE NELSON, Wis. (Special) - Cp jAtVV . Department Is Ridge, 111., to headline the show all members of the Winona DODGE, Wis. (Special) — Following the meeting, a The Nelson Fire will be the Impostors. The chapter. Women of the Rosary Society number of persons went to the sponsoring a 500 card party Sat- We are starting this week to Impostors, organized in 1962, new La Crescent High School urday at the community hall time tet up our little gift tables in of the Sacred Heart Church, are I in but with many, years of quar- BLAIR MNC CLUB sponsoring a White Elephant where they heard William Stetz- here starting at 8:30 p.m. the up-front section of tbe BLAIR ler explain the function of the Prizes will be awarded and Cosmetic Department of tet singing experience, has a , Wis. (Special)-Arn- and rummage sale Sunday, long list of credits. They won old Thorpe, Blair, District 10 new school and its needs. Then lunch will be served. Roy Syn- BROWN DRUG — Many of starting at 1:30 p.m. in the they toured the building. replace the late Ar- you wait each year for this third place in last summer's In- vice commander of the Amer- church hall. An auction will be stad will min Schmidlin as the depart- selection of gifts — we are ternational Quartet Competition ican Legion, will speak on civil conducted by auctioneer, Henry PEPIN BAZAAR defense when the Blair Music, ment's secretary-treasurer. proud of them because of the Said Mr. Adank, "The Im- Glensrinski. Many articles of PEPIN, Wis. (Special) -Men f or uuMim Needlecraft and Culture Club \ small price and tbe wonderful postors have been such a busy clothing, household supplies, of the Immanuel Lutheran COUPON DRIVE variety — One table has gifts quartet that the Winona Chapter meets Friday afternoon at the furniture, both new and used Church will hold their annual (Special) of just one dollar — the other has had them booked for this home of Mrs. Harry Paul, articles will be auctioned off. ETTRICK, Wis. - gifts under one dollar — A fall bazaar Saturday at the par- Legion Auxiliary members are engagement for over a year. It BLAIR AUXILIARY Lunch will be served by Group ish hall. Hours are from 1 to 4 small price doesn't necessarily will be a real privilege to watch collecting coffee coupons to be mean a cheap product — there BLAIR, Wis. (Special ) - The 10, with Mrs. Edward Kramer p.m. Items to be sold are pil- redeemed'for toys for needy chil- Start Early on Lovely can be many lovely and use- and listen to this great quar- Blair American Legion Auxili- as chairman. low cases, dish towels, aprons, j tet." dren. Coupons are to be brought ful gift ideas at modest prices ary will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. woven rugs, novelties, Christ- to the auxiliary meeting Mon- — Presents tiny in price can A topic on membership will be PLEASANT VALLEY CLUB mas articles, homemade baked Terpen- THE FOR MOR Quartet, Mad- day evening or to the j Bernat Knit¦ ¦ Gifts j be important to the giver and presented by Mrs. Albert Ste- Pleasant Valley Social Club goods, homemade candies, ing Grocery. Deadline for re- •» to the receiver — We love to ison, Wis,, will also be one of \ . i the leading quartets on the phenson. Assisting hostesses will meet at 2 p.m. Saturday Christmas cards and napkins. deeming the coupons is Dec. 10. have you look at these tables at the home of Mrs. L R. Har- Pie and coffee will be served and begin getting your ideas show. Organized in 1948, the are Mrs. R. E. Anderson and . Mrs. Kenneth Willgrubs is aux- I CHOOSE FROM OUR WIDE I for inexpensive remembrances For Mor Quartet is the only Mrs. James Berg. ris, 1770 W. Wabasha St. during the sale. iliary president. — for youngsters with a limit- ed imdget — employees seek- SELECTION OF YARNS ing presents for office parties — women who trade token BERNAT'S KNITTING WORSTED gifts with fellow club mem- | bers — people who want to 100& wool — moth proof — 85 colon | a little 4-oz. skein 1.59 | tuck in something 'i extra in Christmas packages — and definitely for people BERNAT'S OPALSPUN . 7 for a real # | who are looking 75 West 27 iridescent color* * | buv. / *_ 1^\ _¥_TV W\\J^^ ______\_____W Winona V^l _-__£__ W^ __4______H______r 20-oz. ball 1.00 I ______:t _W^4 » mw^ M 9 r f« BERNAT'S BERELLA | SPECIAL! Acrylic — 100% washable 1.00 2-oz. balls 1 p . : SUPER MORSHIRE | j 90% Virgin wool, 10% mohair I Vl off 2-oz. balls 1.00 | ____f rTi___i^^ % v^ , 0^- \ >* ^V _n______H___ SCA.NDIA | GIBSON and Fnmous bulky knitting yarn I ______^^ \_N A ^ <^ _ %^* ___-______H-_ ^"--si All Other ^ ^ - 2-oz. skein 8_< | FUZLLLI | NEW Exotic Yarn — Mohair and wool ';, Christmas 2-oz. skein 140

Cards PLUS . . . BERNAT'S ^^?^?? "?? ?^ We have testers and more ! KNITTING PACS testers of our good perfume and cologne fragrances on counters at PAC [ the Cosmetic } « c ¦ RAGLAN QUARTET SWEATER BROWN'S — why don 't you ______¦ Y^ _m_oP\J «.* 1_^k^k^^^k^k_^k^^kH^kM ;__ \ Your choice of four raglan styles in Super Worsted trying one o* ^ t\YA ^ V * make a practice ef Yam. Complete with yarn and directions 2.D9 or two of theses each time you come to the store — that y ^____ w v you • is the way to find If ^^H *% * \ \ SHE SHELLS PAC would care to buy a new frag- * ! Pnc makes one of four styles in Super Knitting rance for yourself — Have Worsted *. 247 you ever tried any other frag- rance in Chanel than tho very popular Chanel 5? - Why not PRINCESS STOLES PAC \\ 22 or the newest IH Pac makes any of three stylos in Mohair-Plus 7, try Chanel ifOSrance f GUERLA1N _^H | Yarn 3.47 "CHANT D' AROMES" (ex- ^______^Jk ______ur clusively at Brown Drug> - L RIIUSH UP STOLE PAC tho 4711 TOSCA or - take ______k j f V_ style stole of Mohairspun 66% ti your choice! ' i Rounded shoulder — Dry lips? Why not give Rev- ^^^______L ______I Mohnir , 17% virgin wool , 17% nylon 7.05 \\ LIPSTICK a ^^______M^______-mWaaWaaX WmmT * X^^^^^^^^^^^^tW L. ^^ iew, '- MOISTURE try? Same pretty shades as formulas, but when | CUDDLE MOC PAC jj the other ; applied to dry lips do no Easy to make slip-on slipp«r_ of Curidlespun yarn — | blot - apply UvUy and let ! 60% wool , 50% nylon l.OO absorbed by the moisture be ! the lips - the drier your 1 ps are when applied - the better ! it will stay on. YARNS — SECOND FLOOR For the finest in Cosmetics WINONA J visit BROWN DRUG. ' mm in i_iiiTi iri_. ' n«in»iim____miM_____n____r^^ the Green Bay and Western game and other games. 'God's Love Gift' John Saverinskis Railroad for several years prior Fun Night Set Seventh graders do not dance events. Dress for the at Blair Honored on 50th to farming in Wlckham Valley. at YMCA Presented At YMCA for evening calls for leisure clothes (Special) At Independence The following 20 yean he farm- and swim suits in the pool. BLAIR, Wis. — The Feakes-Reglin ed in tbe Fox Ridge area. He Mmes. Oscar Hovre, Ray Blus- INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- 7th Graders The Fun Night will be ctup- was employed by the Trem- eroned by parents. A small ad- ke, C. B. Immell, John Kuy- Vows Said at cial) — Mr. and Mrs. John Sav- pealeau County Highway De- A Fun Night for all Winona mission fee will be charged. partment until he retired in ¦ kendall, Oscar Lee, Donald erlnski were honored on their seventh grade students will be jacobson and Carl Lokker par- St. Matthew's golden wedding anniversary 1952. He and his wife then CALEDONIA «UPPER moved here where they still held Friday from 7:30 to 9:30 ticipated in a skit, "God's Lova Miss Barbara Jean Reglin, Sunday with a Mass of Thanks- reside. at the YMCA, according to CALEDONIA, Minn.-A pub- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lam- giving at Ss. Peter and Paul lic supper will be served at Gift," when Zion Lutheran Their seven children are : Larry Schiller, youth work se- Women held their No- bert A. Reglin, 816 W. Broad- Catholic Church, were they cretary. the Sheldon Community Cen- Church way, were married Nov. 22, 1915. Mrs. Elmer (Genevieve) Hag- starting at 6 p.m. meeting. became the bride of Bert enbarth, Mrs. Clarence (Agnes) This is the first such event ter Saturday vember R . Feakes, son of Mrs. Bert They were ushered in by a of the year and is open to The menu includes hot dishes, Mrs. Lokker contributed two miniature bride and groom Dubiel Sr., Mrs. Dominic (Cel- coffee. A. Feakes, Motley, Minn., and ls) Klllian, Adolph and Al- boys and girls in the area rolls, salads, pies and vocal solos. A birthday gift was the late Mr. Feakes, Oct. 30 while the senior choir sang a presented to Mrs. L. H. Jacob- Polish hymn. About 400 attend- phonse, all of Independence; who are in the seventh grade. at St. Matthew's Evangelical Mrs. Alphoose (Blanche) Kll- Activities will include basket- TURKEY DINNER son. Lutheran Church. ed a dinner at Club 186. Guests ) Plans were discussed for dele- were from this area as well as lian, Blair, and Mrs. Richard ball, volleyball, badminton, use BLAIR, Wis. (Special - St. The Rev. A. L. Mennicke (Pelchie) Rathki, Eau Claire, of the trampolene, swimming, Ansgar's Catholic Church will gates to attend the triennial performed the ceremony. Mrs. Staples, Minn., and Kimberly, general convention of American Wis. Wis. A daughter, Mrs. John and use of two game rooms serve a turkey dinner Sunday. Gerald Thaldorf was organist (Fella) Kokott, died in 1950. equipped with pool tables, ping Serving will be from 11:30 a.m. Lutheran Church Women in and Miss Jane Hilke, soloist. MR. SAVERINSKI worked for There are 12 grandchildren. pong tables, a bumper pool to 3:30 p.m. Portland, Ore., July 6-8. MISS CAROL MEYER wai the bride's personal attendant. Miss Mary Reglin, sister of the bride, was maid of honor and Mrs. Kenneth Bench, sister of ' the bride, bridesmaid. Miss i A¦ m OUR CAIS SURE DO KNOW YOU — WHAT YOU WANT, WHEN YOU WANT IT... AT• THE PRICE j m Cindy Bench was flower girl (Camire Art photo) YOU WANT TO PAYI SO WE LEFT IT TO THE LADIES TO PICK OUT THE BEST BARGAIN BUYS! j and Marvin Feakes Jr., ring Mr. and Mrs. Bert R. Feakes _ \ W bearer. Marvin Feakes, Fesscnden, , ren N D., ALWAYS FIRSTneiff brother of the groom, 1 QUALITY * was best man; Harvin Christen, ^^ ^ groomsman, and Kennet h Bench and Charles German, ushers. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a floor- length gown of satin brocade with a princess bodice, sabrina neckline, long sleeves and bell- shaped skirt with a detachable chapel train. Her silk illusion veil was held by a crown oi pearls and she carried a cas- cade bouquet of pink roses. HER ATTENDANTS wore deep-pink crepe, floor-length dresses with empire waistlines, scoop necklines and short sleev- . es. Their crowns held maline —ftsTj^O^-^ fl______veils and they carried bouquets "™"""^l of long-stemmed pink roses. Ma The flower girl's dress was sim- y ^ ' _kmsi ^r WM ilar to the bridesmaid's and 1 Fashion nor ' •s^ she carried a basket of pink \^ff t Mmh ¦HVs*_ and white mums. ¦¦ The bride's mother wore a »^__S2_K_%( II ¦ -i ¦ __^ _r green knit suit and the groom's I ¦ ?^a.>'^'i -?^3_i^f k" '* _#*i ») ,. Both had corsages of pink rose Mr. and Mn. Ronald Schrelber j « |p§ blankets reduced! # ] buds. All f ff ^^ m ^Wk A reception was held at the Ronald Sen re i be r, I ^ ^ acrylic electric blanket! American Legion dub. Assist- Government Topic m?i ¦ (LW ^^Wm^^ \^&_ ^^rh. Sophie Sobczak '¦>& __ ": Y/l/ hmmWmWmWmWmw ^X OR# y *~*; vllvS-3 Karen Knoppe and Mrs. Roxy University Women will hear ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - re ,4S0 N0W Cordes and Mrs. Kenneth Sal- Henry Hull, assistant professor Miss Sophie Marie Sobczak, ____mi_m s- < 11 jk*=\ jg «"x«4" twin the, 72"xM" full size ¦ ¦ ^^W ^^a W^^tm^mm wey. of history at Winona State Col- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Steve ^S ^ T b^l . [)m^^nW^'l'^^SS^M Following a trip to the Black lege, speak on "Framing of the Sobczak, became the bride of ^^^ Hills and Yellowstone National United States Constitution" Ronald Schrelber, son of Mrs. Park, the newlyweds are at Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at Glide- Helen Schrelber and the late Oscar Schrelber, Oct. 30 at the Dual control home at Chester Heights Trail- meister Hall, Winona State Col* f '^^§§ & 80"x84" double bed size er Ct., Rochester. lege. He will discuss the need American Lutheran Church. . }r J \_ m ___\^^_\_\\_Wf The bride is a graduate of of early American colonists for The Rev. Howard Benson Winona Senior High School and & Ml of right*. heard their vowi. Miss Judy Nylon was formerly employed by the Topic for the evening is "Law Wiemer, organist, accompanied j Our famous downy-soft acrylic with high-loft Super-nap. Y ______Mrs. Roger Tamke, soloist. fff ^^B^ matter drops. UfIfUlfflUlfi UlnLCfd aClllElb-lTftCTMl DftUTC Winona County auditor. Her and Aspect of Government." ^|j ^g |^^i ^ Dial . the warmth you like and stay cozilybinding. warm no I fAHTa husband works for Lystad's Ex- Miss Maureen VanHeerden la The bride wore a floor-length ^"'•I ^^K^^ how the temperature Snap I ITALIAN HAND'KNIT corners. Machine colors. IkW^ TOPS terminator Co. Inc., Rochester. topic chairman. Prospective by- gown of lace and peau de soie. ^• | | ^ | ^ ^ washable. Decorator I A prenuptial shower was giv- law changes will be announced. Tha fitted lace bodice was styl- No reservations art needed to ed with long sleeves and a en by Mrs. Roxy Cordes and an- ^^W 'Miootd <«f«et» In matirltl or workmanship dtvttop w* will rcplac* I neckline. The skirt S ~t_antim 4 _P%_P% other by Mrs. Kenneth Bench attend. rounded I eontroJ for will notict tti. bUnktt for 3 years, I weaters ^ wool-mohair-and. * * -nylon accented with lace Hi* * ytrt i w* ^^J _J+mM^J and Miss Mary Reglin at the Dr. Margaret Boddy will lead front was ' I rt»«lr tt for 3 yt_ri. I w ww letter's home. a discussion of the Tyrone Guth- ruffles and the chapel train fell from soft pleats at the back. Luxurious sweaters of , rie Theatre plays at Gildemeia- 1 | m ii ^^i^^^^^^^^^^m |^^^^ __ J Wend FLY CREEK AID ter Hall Nov. 22 at 7:15 p.m. A high tiara crown, highlighted ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^*E_ ***ff i ** ^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^ hand-knit in Italy specially for Penney's! Favorite BLAIR, Wis. (Special)-The "Education, an Antidote to Pov- with cultured pearls, held her "•* colors, sizes M6. Rayon-and-stretch nylon pants Fly Creek Ladies Aid will meet erty" will be the topic of dis- veil of silk illusion and she car- are tapered, , bouquet of red with adjustable side tabs detachable at the home of Mrs. Glen Olson cussion Nov. 23 at 7:30 p.m. ried a cascade foot stirrups. Black, red, blue, 7-16. Tuesday at 2 p.m. Assisting at the home of Miss Paul- roses. ^^ hostesses are Mrs. Arnold Ol- ine Uttlnger. Mrs. John Breit- MRS. KAY Humphrey wae son and Mrs. Norman Olson. low is topic chairman. matron of honor and the bride's lister, Miia Stella Sobczak, bridesmaid. They wore floor- length gowns of royal blue peau de soie with fitted bodices, three - quarter - length sleeves and shaped skirts. They carried TEFLON :: cascade bouquets of blue and • I " white carnations. \J^^te 4-PC, COOK WEAR SET! t\ ,^ _Jl B t^,MnM,S ;*/ 1 j. —_ —_ CHRISTMAS David Schrelber, brother of _____rRaHIA »U4 ^ fl ______f _i% a^M, *^^9 _ 0g ^^J ^^^ _ , ^ ~ iK was best man and *~ . t I!_ »»>^*»*»« ^*N . Even heating elumlnum with DuPonf % M\ J mm the groom, f * ^ Adrian Sonsalla, groomsman. [j. Jm\ -\ a_f Tefloo® coating oven, 1, 2, J-qt. saucepans , ' ' ,t »> i* jP°on and ipatulal W. _ groom, and Orlen Erickson Jr. _^_m_^MW__§:i$__^_^_^ikW_aW ' w Ceek'" wlth' 'mm greas B,scu broym (__ ^_MS_ W ______were ushers. MMmWmWm ^^mmWMmWaa^lla^^^Sif ^ ™ " " CHARGE ITI ~i2~*** ^¦L -¦"Zf tol 3______, IW& J0mA W* V ^ " ln, f or«' •¦Xellt* handle.. jm " ^^ ' ^ ^ MM The bride's and groom's f ^f/MmmMWaWi(>__! * * ' «^BP/ fl mothers wore royal blue dresses and had corsages of pink carna- j tions. L A dinner and reception were ^^*nmmmkmkMg mWMm~r m ^^T^ ^* ' •*¦ jT^ r x_j^^i^^E_iiii__Sie»»^* ' ^ '^^'a^-—kkm~9Mj-M0^^^% »••••••••••/ A___ 5ft/ held at the Arcadia Country WW TT v *L" *» Club. Music for dancing was / ,* > > . furnished by Chester Rossa's Reserve your / - * 4*u / Arcadia Ramblers. Bulova while / Wito I The bride attended Arcadia selection* are *** / High School and is employed / ^y at Arcadia Manufacturing Co. complete / fyjjw * / The groom is a graduate of Arcadia High School and is em- ^ ^_ A 6loved as a painter for the ^ [aines Decorating Co. here. The newlyweds were honored at a prenuptial shower at the ArcadlavCountry Club. They will live at 141 Harrison St. here. ¦ 'The Jury Room' / A^^^^^ \ gf w •***"• ^wt ___l__v^bvW To Be Presented At Caledonia HS CALEDONIA. Minn. (Special) —Students of the Loretto High School Genesians are presenting their first class play of the sea- son Sunday at 8 p.m. at St. Mary's Auditorium. PRINTS ' Cast of characters fro the ^&HPF " ft • play, "The Jury Room," are •••••••••••••••CMCOT* "U" MTt KIM "NT MM? IMV "I" • Sharon Danaher, Michael Mul- FL Ortu your unlit wllh for »a outdoor man. SwIrUhtM ?»*' ** beauty. IT lowoli. 1. |«w.U. with twe tfatriliii venna, David Utke, _{ary Hoff- Shock-railtW. ShoclMttlitiftt. diamond*. Facile* ¦ Ytllow or wtiiu. Hlli time Md dati it 4 cryital. 17 Jawile- man, Larry Wagner, Geraldine flt.W jltnct. Ytllow. MJMWIMIU. P a 1 e n, Geraldine Welscher , ™L\ $| / Shirley Klug, Lucile St. Mary, T^ WOK!^^ MEM'S At Chrlstmai, there's no gift like a watch ... and no Allan Frank, Anthony Klug and FABULOUS Jswelry that tells per- Carlene Deters. ll watch like a Bulova. It's precious ^^^^ ^M^ WiSl fect tlm*—• watch you can take pride In giving because Antazln you quality BLAIR CARD PARTY " Jit 1 0 ' It's made with pride. Made to give mora 3 of wftly for your money. Come In toon. Our Watch Experts will BLAIR . Wis. ( Special) - A ?J^w y-s nappd ^ f gg help you choose from our large Bulovi selection. public card party is .slated for Saturday evening nt the Lakes Coulee School. Pr f0 ^ ^ " " ; h*6 M 8 LUXUr'0U8 V,rKln 0r- COMMUNITY CLUB w ar! Sck P towi ,on?°1 7Z t ITT fu, j. , * acryUc-mohalr wool blends in solid color V- t BLAIR, Wis. (Special) - The t *" " neck pullovers and cardigans O) lore Sunnyslde Community Club will i or, bold horizontal QJ lager {jewelry meet at the Sunnyslde School I stripe cardigans, All machine washable, low prloedl Friday evening. A program Is Third I Center boing planned. Hostesses will be Mrs. Svend Johnson and CHARGE IT! Penney's Open Monday and Friday 9 to 9 -¦¦• Mrs. Melvin Syverson. V_ttte&«._ttt^>^.M_*i_M*ti.M<__>^^ >o.._ .-.in. n-IM .iiM-r. - . i. ¦.-. - ..I - _W-_r-H_ -_^.Ma_.__i.-lti__ ifnmr i < ( --¦^- ¦naw waMwumweaww

FRESH HOMEMADE j i Safranek's fi ffi ^ i Wabasha 4-H Plans ______H______. 'Wizard of Oz' LIVER Matinee Show To Honor Parents ^^fcm At Wabasha School SAUSAGE < [ Summer Sausage "\ Open to All WABASHA, Minn. - Parents tb ^^>9 ! > Brarwurtt « ,- "The Wizard of Oz," which of Wabasha County 4-H'ers will •! Ham Leaf All is to be presented by Winona be honored at the parents' night 59c ^Wy < | Braunschweiger ! Senior High School Students program next Thursday at 8 FRESH HOMEMADE !| Ring Liver & Blood M_>fflf* Friday and Saturday, will bold p.m. sponsored by the < ! mUmW a matinee performance Satur- county Breakfmt Links . [ BRAUNSCHWEIGER i * day at 2 p.m. for youngsters, 4-H federation. The event will - u 69c Polish Sauiag* _i be held at the high school !| Old Fashioned M ; high school students and adults. here. ! i Corn Beef _¦> ¦ ¦ Evening performances Fri- Matt Metz, county agent, will AG. SALAD DRESSING _„39c * day and Saturday will begin at talk on the responsibilities of ; I All-Meat Wieners $31 TB ^k S 8:15. Adult and student tickets GRAOE A - 16- to U-LB. AVERAGE i [ All-Meat Bologna J ] the 4-H parents. Mrs. Vernon ¦ , i Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Mercer will be sold at the door for all j> — three performances. Smith, Pine Island, will discuss Altura Rex TURKEYS - Lb 39c < ! Shipped Direct ! Leonard Mercers ¦ the changes in 4-H during the - Fresh Maryland Legion Auxiliary past 20 years. Choice Betf Sidts & Quakers j j Oysters - i Schedules Nov. 18 Feted by Children Trempealeau Couple at all times - Order Now! I Large White Rock ROASTING Notes Golden Year j CHICKENS . lb. 39 . I Public Card Party On Golden Year WSC Teacher Writes I; Large White Rock HENS lb. 29 . j CHOICE AGED STEAKS <¦ ' GILMANTON, Wis. (Special ) TREMPEALEAU, Wis. (Spe- I —ARCADIA FRYERS A CHICKEN PARTS — ] A card party, open to the cial) — Mr. and Mrs. Henry On Rare Fossil Find I public — The children of Mr. and Cut to order ar all times. , will be held Nov. 18 at Mrs. Leonard Mercer, Alma Schultz observed their golden "The Journal of Paleontol- J ! CRANBERRY, Mad* by HOME BAKED j 8 p.m. at the Legion Memorial Rt. 2, wedding anniversary Sunday in i Club, under were hosts when their ogy" will publish an article by J BANANA & DATE Roy's Wife BEANS < the sponsorship of parents celebrated their golden St. Bartholomew's recreational Dr. T. N. Bayer of the Winona Fresh GROUND ROUND Lb 59c NUT BREAD Marge 39 the American Legion Auxiliary, hall. ! [ . pt. ! it was announced Tuesday wedding anniversary Sunday State College faculty. FRESH LUDEFISK evening at a meeting of the afternoon at the Evangelical A Mass was celebrated in It's entitled "An Occurrence auxiliary. United Brethren Church. their honor by the Rev. Edward of Desmograptus Cancellatus in 1 1 Fresh Spring Lamb An j Musical selections were pre- Sobcyzk. Dinner was served to the Maquoketa Formation of Th«r*'t nothing t* III* but good living, Poiki, «n|ey Free City MRS. LEONA R D Roeelle, sented by members of the con- 75 relatives and friends. The Minnesota," concerning a rare tfi» »xtra ttmtorntu of our «xtr» ag*d eholct bMf ... ![ Delivery — Dial 2851 ! chairman of the arrangements gregation and lunch was serv- honor table was decorated with S j > We close Wednesday afternoons fossil the sedimentary rocks of 7 and the »xtra ig« doatn't cott ona Axtra emtl at 1 2:30 \ committee said that bridge, 500 ed by the WLCS, of which Mrs. golden leaves, streamers, a Southeastern Minnesota. This and schaf-kopf will be played, Mercer is a member. large centerpiece of yellow and article is extracted from his as well as other games that bronze chrysanthemums and a THE HONORED couple has doctoral dissertation. DEER ¦ LOCKERS ___, foursomes wish to play. A prize three-tiered wedding cake, Three other papers^are being will be given at each table and nine children. Present Sunday made by ^frs . Harvey Olson, «V were Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy prepared for another geological PROCESSING coffee and refreshments will be Lake City, Minn., sister of the journals. Yta '2f JJ fil E served. Mercer, Arkansaw, Wis.; Mr. Wa will maka Sau- Lockar from Nov. J' ffi^_Bir* groom. to July for Proceeds will be used for and Mrs. Harold Seyffer and tage. Dried Venison, __F n _BS.b Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mercer, DURING THE dinner, a poem LA CRESCENT CLUB ttc. for you. auxiliary programs of com- $9.00 tf^t =S> munity service, child welfare all of Pepin; Mr. and Mrs. entitled "Early Courtship tp LA CRESCENT, Minn. (Spe- ICE CREAM and Americanism. There will Clark Mercer, Arlington, Kan.; Present Time," composed by a cial) — The La Crescent Home ^«B^aB be an advance sale of tickets Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Wilhelmy, neighbor, Mrs. Morris North- and Garden Club will meet at and tickets also will be sold at South St. Paul ; Mr. and Mrs. rup, 85, was read by Albert the home of Mrs. Phillip Lar- Richard Najmon, Scheer. Mrs. Mary Lehnerts, | 1 the door. On Mrs. Roselle' Pine City, son Tuesday at 8 p.m. Mrs. ______s ___L______^H ^^ | H > *'^r* ----_----_ : ______- -_-B _Ffv5* • _f V P ^^^^^ - ^ - - * ^ committee are Mrs. Duncan Minn., and Mr. and Mrs. Don- Broaster, Minn., Mrs. Schultz's Alan Roth is co-hostess. Flor- WARKKIK S Green and Mrs. Alvin Beeman. ald Mercer, Byron, Minn, Their sister who was her bridesmaid, lan Heintz, Boyer Furniture Co., HOMEMADE SAUSAGES - GROCERIES - LOCKER PLANT pP"" ""^ The committee suggests that four great-grandchildren attend- was present and also a daugh- La Crosse, will speak on inter- 477 W. 5th St., Winona, Minn. Phon* 31SI SO HANDY TO HAVE IN ^ ter, (Erna) ^ ^oAM women planning to attend make ed. Two sons, Elden, Pepin, and Mrs. E. C. McCall, ior decorating. YOUR FREEZER ^JMBNlfllP F up their own tables, although Vernon, Kenosha, Wis., were Princeton. 111. this is not necessary. unable to attend. An open house reception was In other business, certifi- Mr. and Mrs. Mercer's at- held in the afternoon. Mem- cates of commendation from tendants, Mrs. Elmer Wilkens, bers of the Altar Society and CREME-DE-fAINT ft PEPPERMINT STICK everofferee// the State of Minnesota Depart- Waverly, Wis., and Frank Gar- nieces of the honored couple ^ Be/er^By ment of Public Welfare, for field, Spring Valley, Wis., were helped with the serving. The volunteer service at the Crip- also present. dinner was prepared by Mrs. pled Children Services Field _nlff ^_B__F _mll vM * An added surprise came Sun- Harvey Olson, Lake City; as- IBB H faW^-iWlJ -S-B-M- Clinics, wer. awarded to the day evening when neighbors of sisted by Mrs. Lehnerts. Mmes. R. Burr Mann, Donald Mr. and Mrs. Mercer chari- Guests attended from Min- .ORANGE DRINK V. Gray, Roy Haake, Herbert varied them. neapolis, Lake City, Winona, La Honer, Donald Burt, Barrel The honored couple was mar- Crosse, Galesville, Arcadia, § 5 * Nowlan, Arthur Dorn, H. S. ried Nov. 6, 1915 in St. Paul. Trempealeau and the surround- ~ f WHIPPING Dresser, Judd Frederiksen, They have lived on a farm near ing area. Oldest couple present /zGAIS. George Goodreid, Beeman, S. was Mr. and Mrs. ll ____ Ji ll . . m HOMOGENIZED GRADE A Alma for 13 years. Prior to that Norris North- •K W. Mann, LeRoy Roth, Arthur they farmed in Pierce and Pep- rup, neighbors. He is 97 and she, \ *SO GOOO...SO ECOH0MICAL ! Steffes, W. J. Thurow, John in counties. 85. The honored couple received m fl ( vV" ^\ Dativered ti your dear CREAM MILK Timm and Earl Toye and Miss many cards, gifts, flowers and Made from Eleanor O'Meara. p,«» ¦ BENEFIT GAMES PARTY a golden money tree. ot carborfatod • No preurvativi 55C Mr. Schultz and the former DUI MOO _>%_ fflTV * treMlpsned % GaI *yj r MRS. GRAY reported on the DODGE, Wis. (Special)-The -VlinUu i^fW ^i^ • fruit ALSO V- PINTS «'$15 party", Nov. 27; the post- ealeau, and Henry F. Schultz auxiliary Christmas meeting Viet Nam, Mrs. R. H. Watkins Jr., Arcadia. and dinner, Dec. 14; and the presented a reading on the annual Children's Christmas background of "The Battle party, Dec. 17. Hymn of the Republic, " com- Margie's Members were reminded to pleting it with the recitation of give their trading stamp dona- the versus of the hymn, with tions, which will be used at the members joining in singing the _n_ __ Nov. 18 card party, to Mrs. chorus. " Roselle, and to cooperate with The Swiss-steak dinner which **• * - the post in a dish benefit be- preceded the business meeting was cooked for the auxiliary by QUALITY TUSHNER'S l l_flli *ll ing planned. HIGH Set member David Morse, I _flllf __!¦__ I.PB AT Y0UR COMPLET E FOOD STORE IN HONOR of Veterans Say onald Hammond and Clar- Wfl r K ll l i Ml 501 Eost Third Straat Slnco 1896 _^^ 11 and the men now fighting in ence Olson helped serve. VrATT^Ui i ayrie?P INSTANT MAXWILL HOUSE FESTAL Open 7 days a w««k UST C PUMPKIN "».:" 2-23c YOU J ¦'W rrB B '£ 7QM W § 9 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. COFFEE MANDARIN Phona 4607 Mankato ft Wabaiha ' OSAGE RAGGEDY ANN Cmt CAN T BEAT c ORANGES ' 2 49C Peaches 25 MIRACLE WHIP -49C t Chapin's Sausages ROCK Flavorful... Tangy... Delicious! LIBBY'S FRESH — WHITE ROCK FRISH — WHITE All cH£ • Thiy'ri Noma Mads RED SALMON T STEWING «)Qc I ROASTING *>- C Jars Many Tasty Varieties AT Special Sale - Smuckers 20-oz. ||J • g 1 Pure Strawberry Preserves «* > for *"• M 89c HENS.. " ? '^ CHICKEHS J/'" Peach Butter * J J* J* gf/ »? * for 5,» CHAPIN'S SAUSAGES Cider Apple Butter SAUSAGES FRESH MEATS »HF-WEIL TRIMMED ^ • POPCORN SWIFTS WEU-TIIIMM-D CHOICI Ma Brown Hilla Bros. U/J 95S West 5th Street MiMIUM CHUCK WHITE - YELLOW || | g CORN RELISH COFFEE ® QQc Tastes like homemade. . ^. ftjM b s Lb yy~ Q /CN r. 25c BEEF 12-Oz. Q7,. Tin «P' - Vy, IT'S PLEASANT VALLEY FOR FQc STEAKS OT Jar J/c ' f/A ROASTS iT" Zl^^Z DAIRY PRODUCTS \2____ TIIM- _ TUNA MSAIY — COUNTRY STVlt PARrVRBK «l_rlC jAMk S~b~t Oif -i-M- Guernaay . , .. ._¦ UAN — «»"» Dairy Farm §\\ pint 55C HBMHIVf H,C > NU l\ ^Hvjj ^H^^^^^^^^ S ^?JiT-c PORK SAUSAGE Inst. Cocoa Mix CENTER CUT MEATS 1 TROPIC AN A PURE LEAN - FRESH Good halves. I-Lb. Box Bulk TN 1 VS-Lb. s n l'Lh« Box Llnki •»? / Bag 6VC ' 2 c-na69c PORK # U| Orange Juice "ists 49c ~ Cc OYSTERS Usinger's Fine Milwaukee Sausage I GRADE A GUERNSEY STEAK . 0> Bratwur»t, Wieners, Bologna, Salami, Poliah Sausage, Tea- 7// — and that famous Braunachwolger- I CAI_L T P0RK wurst, Blood Sauaoge J c ^fl I IXCILIENT FOR MEAT LOAF CUTLETS "*' 59C MINNESOTA WILD RICE III Aft I Llv 3/ PRESHLY GROUND " Long Grain — Supply I« Limited! /// 1 fl_T» Box ___> i/a-Lb. Bafi *2,3» ' 1-L.b. Bag $4.75 7// EGGS . VEAL & /Iftc M-LB. SIZE The Original j I Grade A Large, While They Lost 3 Doi. L 59c POPPY COCK SPICE ISLAND $1.39 Gro«l« A Small (Pullet) PORK . . 07'" Pork Loin Roast . Pecans, almonds, popcorn Grade A Med., Doi. 40. Eggi, Oox. 29. PORK TBEAHS In a truly delicious butter Herbs, Spices 4 Vinegars, crunch. Regular $2.00 S I M p0r trie best ln seasoning. SUNDAY NEWSPAPERS AVAILABLE can . !¦» 4^. 45c CASH AND TUSHNER'S FAMOUS SAUSAGE BUCKWHEAT GRITS. 2 LB, BAG «» PIEASANT m\wm ¦ ¦ ¦ J , . i ' ill _, suNSHitm . 3 ASK FOR IT AT FOOD - 8 - It's Time to Feed the Birds Again 111 --T VAi**»MW^ Y» PHONE Peed THE DAIRY n^C Krispy Crackers o.uc.ou; THROUGHOUT 5-Lb. Bag Mixed Wild Bird »* \\ W J ST0RES 35.iSiiS 5-Lb. Bajj Sunflower Seeds »•? \|| 179 Bait 4th Jt. A - 8 - __P\t^ 31C - 8 - SOUTHEASTERN MINNESOT HOME-OWNED — HOME-OPERATED ______^ ^_lggi_ _ _ ^__ _ gi li 1( g lglgiilll 1 l lllilii ilg 1^l^f lllllll^llll^llllll^^ll^l^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ MOST Of HARVEST REMAINS Corn Crop Below Expectations ," said Oncken. ture content is around 15 per- crop Is still third year com also is in poor corn crop ever By FRANK BRUESKE percent of the com "But the heavy soils are not Daily Ncwi Farm Editor cent or less. The moisture is in the fields, said Russell shape in the county. There al- crops. The av- stalk rot and stilt too high for tbe corn to be producing good High moisture, Krech, county agent. Most of so is a difference in tbe differ- erage county yield will be about winter weather. These are-the put ln wide cribs. The cool corn in regard per acre." Thta issues that face area farmers weather the past few days has the corn is too wet to pick yet. ent varieties of 70 to 75 bushels Quite a bit is above 25 percent to stalk rot, Hoberg pointed out. would be just a little better as they head into their final slowed drying considerably. About 80 percent of the soy- harvest of the year — the corn Average county yield will be , says. than average. in moisture he beans in the county have been The' bean harvest in the coun- harvest. • between 65 to 70 percent. Strand Spring plowed fields appear average yields. Stalk Rot Considered to be one cf the estimates. This compares with harvested with ty is nearly completed with a to produce higher yields than The beans, with about 13 per- little better than average crop. most vital crops to all farmers, an 83-bushel average in 1963. good the corn crop, although better Some corn is being piled on tbe fall plowed fields. cent moisture, have been Moisture in the beans averaged than the drought-beaten crop ground, "This is one of the things quality. Thirteen percent mois- 13 to 14 percent, said Oncken. Bothers Some last year, this year is not com- The soybean harvest in the ture for beans is considered nor- they didn't write in the books," mal. ing up to earlier expectations. county is nearly completed with Krech said. Trempealeau below normal yields. Beans were of good quality. County He urged farmers to crib their Buffalo IN TREMPEALEAU Coonty Corn in Area Winona average yield will be between corn in cribs no wider than 5% about 75 percent of the corn has ALMA, Wis. — Corn fields li- OLIVER Strand, Winona 15 to 20 bushels per acre com- feet. This will give the corn a STALK ROT and high mois- been picked, according to Ray the area are suffering a great County agent, said that only 30 pared with 13 last year and 24 chance to dry out. ture have delayed corn harvest- Shanklin, county 4-H agent. He in 1963. ing in Wisconsin. Archie Bro- said the moisture content is deal from stalk rot due be- or 35 percent of the corn in Soybeans are good quality but agent at Winona County has been picked. vold, Buffalo County down to 22 to 24 percent But cause of the climate conditions are small. Most of the beans in Alma, said only 50 percent of there are isolated cases with Moisture is still high in much Houston has been of the past growing season, Ar- of the corn ranging from 20 to the county have been harvested the county's corn crop late maturing corn or corn that's chie Brovold, Buffalo County above 30 percent. Ideal mois- IN HOUSTON County about 75 and are yielding well. picked. blighted where the moisture is "The corn fit for cribbing agent, higher. said. already has been picked," he There has been "a lot" of The most common causes of Wabasha noted. "Wet climatic conditions stalk rot in the corn and farm- an early stalk rot are: Excessive popu- MATT METZ, Wabasha Coun- in September plus ers are hurrying to complete lation, -unbalanced fertility, frost made tbe corn plants open the harvest before all the corn ty agent, reported between 40 corn erop will frosted inmature corn, exces- and SO percent of the corn in to stock rot. The ends up on the ground. Most not be as good as conditions in- farmers are cribbing the con- sive moisture, insect Injury his county has been harvested. MKi I •——m—/M—m——mMW ikmup-_->_-_-_-__«-_____-_-_--___»— ~ Moisture has been running dicated earlier." while a few others are shelling and adverse growing condi- Corn on the lighter soils is about 30 percent with some and drying it. A few are put- tions- doing better than corn on the ting the corn into the silo. By FRANK BRUESKE fields under this figure. It hasn't heavier soils. County average According to plant specialists, dried out much during the past Shanklin says the county yield Dally New. Farm Editor yield is about 75 to 80 bushela will be above average. the cold wet weather of Septem- week. The early maturing and per acre and Brovold believes When is corn dry enough to crib safely? The Wisconsin early planted corn is down to The soybean harvest is near- ber created conditions which Statistical Reporting Service says the average corn sampled the county will have an average ly completed in the county with about 25 percent. A lot of the in the corn rang- caused the corn hybrids resis- during Oct. 16-24 was 36.7 percent which compares with 31.5 picked corn has gone into the yield. Moisture a good crop and above average tance to stalk rot to break down percent in mid-October, 1964. Corn should be no higher than es from 22 to 34 percent. yields. Most of the beans are silo as silage. The soybean harvest isn't and the crops failed to pro- 22-25 percent moisture to be cribbed safely without artifical "The farmers are losing a dry enough for storage, said drying; Ground corn and cobs may be stored safely in a completed yet, according to Shanklin. Many farmers are sel- duce-adequate levels of sugar. lot of corn from stalk rot," moisture silo at 32-35 percent moisture, providing at least two or Metz said. The corn falls to Brovold. The frost and ling the beans as soon as they Along with the early frost on three inches per day are fed off the top in cold weather hurt the bean crop. The early are combined. immature corn, this created a the ground and cannot be picked than average and 4-5 inches in warm weather to prevent spoilage . . . up by the picker." Several farm- beans were better Although there is plenty of situation which even the most The telephone is often the fastest and most reliable quality but the late beans will wet corn in both the Minnesota stalk rot resistant varieties ers in the county have pur- average. The total method of calling for help in an emergency but a surprising chased driers to dry their corn. be below and Wisconsin area, it is diffi- could not tolerate. number of people panic when they attempt to call in an county crop will be about av- cult to assess a dollar value to Selection of resistant varie- Corn yield is about 65-70 bush- emergency, says ARCHIE BROVOLD, Buffalo County agent. els on the county average, erage quality. the amount of corn that has ties, correct maturity, proper He suggests posting emergency phone numbers near the been lost because most of the fertilization and reasonable which is down from previous BALANCED SCALES . . . This huge bead of cabbage telephone. In an emergency be sure and tell what happened, years. corn will be fed to livestock plant population are manage- give the correct address and then know your farm fire Pepin in one form or another. Wet grown in the garden of the Melbourne Dahlers at Spring ment factors which may re- number. The soybean harvest has been Grove, Minn., weighs exactly the same as their 2-year-old completed with average quality IN PEPIN Coonty, about half corn will not have the food duce the loss caused by stalk + * * beans. Yields have ranged the corn has been picked, ac- value the drier corn would daughter Maxine: 26 pounds. Maxlne displays the cabbage, breakage. When farm prices are down, the farm organizations blame , Pe- have, but it still will provide which Is 48 inches in circumference. It was not fertilized dur- from 15 to 30 bushels per acre cording to George Oncken each other for failing to help up the prices. But when farm with the average -yield slight- pin County agent. Moisture con- a good quality feed for livestock. ing the growing Mason and waa picked in October. prices are high, all groups take credit for it. As an ex- ly below normal. tent ranges from the high 20s Soybeans are mainly a cash ample, ORLEN L. STALEY, National Farmers Union presi- to the low 40s with most of the crop for the fanners. But here Grain Terminal dent, told members attending the recent Minnesota conven- corn in the 30s. Lot of corn in also, it is impossible to find tion that the NFO's meat-marketing program is credited with Fillmore the county is going down from a cash value for the part of responsible for half the increase in the farm prices. He stalk rot. the crop which was lost due to Mondovi Herd Leads Meeting Slated said the "NFO influence" raised hog prices $4 per hundred- CORN PICKING has Just got- "Some fellows on the sandy wet climatic conditions, Shank- weight and cattle prices $2. A few days ago Minnesota ten under way in Fillmore Coun- soil say they're having the best lin observed. ST. PAUL, Minn. — Leading Farmers Union president, EDWIN CHRISTTANSON, told Wi- ty, Milton Hoberg, Fillmore DHIA figures in the shaping of the nona County Farmers Union members that the government County agent reported. He said Buffalo Co. nation's agricultural policy will price support programs backed by the Farmers Union was about 25 to 30 percent of the ALMA, Wis. — Top herd in October in the Buffalo County discuss farm affairs ranging partly responsible for the increased prices paid to farmers. crop has been picked at this double barrelled opportunity from nutrena DHIA was owned by Emmons & Lee Accola, Mondovi. from details of the new farm We have yet to hear from the Farm Bureau ... time. Moisture content varies Their herd of 40 registered Holsteins averaged 49 pounds of bill to how to use America's Two high school students in the Buffalo Electric Cooper- from 25 to 30 percent and there butterfat and 1,212 pounds of milk. food abundance to help promote ative area have won prizes in an essay contest sponsored is quite a variation in the same High cow in the county was owned by J. J. Rosenow, Coch- world peace during the 28th an- by the Wisconsin Electric Cooperative. They are JOHN fields. rane. His Dora, a registered Holstein, produced 110 pounds nual meeting of tbe Farmers HESS, son of MR. AND MRS. ALBERT HESS, Nelson, and "Fanners realize it's near- of butterfat and 2,390 pounds of milk. Union Grain Terminal Associa- CLAIRE HALVERSON, daughter of MR. AND MRS. ERNEST ly the middle of November and The county report: tion in St. Paul Tuesday, Wed- HALVERSON, Independence. John placed second in the con- they won't be getting any more TOP FIVE HERDS nesday and Thursday. test and received a $200 scholarship while Claire placed drying weather," H<*erg noted. Na. No. —Avt. L- i. - third and received a $100 scholarship. "The corn v is there, but there ^^^^______P^_l______^______l____r^/ •reed Cowa Dry Milk «. Vice President Hubert H. ^* Emmons a, Lea Accel*. Monawrt RH 40 4 1,211 49 Humphrey will address the tra- will be storage difficulties." ' **"*^i^^^2^^3*»lssssfc ks»W~- ^^ Kidney Myren, Nelson OH n 0 1,154 42 • • * Harry fAarka, Mondovi ..RH 14 7 1,077 41 ditional "farm dinner" audience Fanners who intend to feed soft corn should remember that There is some stalk rot in the Lloyd Heigh, Alma RH 30 3 1411 39 at 8 p.m. next Thursday to cli- the digestible protein value of soft corn is a percent to a per- county and the county average Earl HICK , Mondavi G*RH 38 7 1,172 31 yield will be slightly below Allan Moy, Mondovt R&GH 41 4 1,154 U max the three-day convention cent and a half lower than good No. 2 corn, says MATT METZ, nor- TOP FIVE COWS in St. Paul's municipal auditor- Wabasha County agent. Farmers should add additional pro- mal, Hoberg believes. CoWs Nam* —Lb*.— ium. tein or feed more corn to get the same protein value, he says. Thick planted corn is in the *r Number in*- Milk if worst condition. Second and J. J. RoMnow, Cochran* ... Dora RH 2,390 110 Five U.S. senators also head- The total digestible nutrient content is about 15 to 20 per- Jim & Jack Cook, Mondovi Mackl* GH 1,530 lot line the program. They are cent less than good corn, Metz points out . .• . J. J. Roaanow, Cochran* V. Gladys RH 1,025 103 LOW BOOKING PRICES Kenneth Moy, Mondovi No 1 GH 2,448 101 Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy and Church Lane Resolutes Cheryl, a junior 8-year-old regis- Jim & Jack Coek, Mondovi Wanda GH 2,184 101 Walter Mondale of Minnesota, tered Guernsey owned by ELVIN PAULSON AND SONS, Buffalo County 4-H Unit report: 1,220 cows on teat; average* — tit pounds ot milk, 1.83 per- cent ten and 11.1 pound* of butterfat. Mil.oh R. Young, and Quentin Houston, produced 13,437 pounds of milk and 668 pounds of Girls Invited to N. Burdick of North Dakota and butterfat in an official DHIR test in 365 days . . . Valley- PLUS George McGovero of South Da- land Sheila, a junior 2-year-old registered Guernsey, owned Knitting Workshop Fillmore Co. 4-H kota. by OLAF J. KJOME AND SONS, Spring Grove, produced Fillmore Co. Fair , , ALMA, Wis. — All Buffalo PRESCRIPTION FEEDING Several thousand men and 31 198 pound. oi milk and 576 pounds of butterfat in 305 days County 4-H members who have Federation to Elect women from the farms of Min- . . . Hflldale Willful Twinflo, a junior 5-year-old registered taken or are interested in the Meeting Tuesday nesota, Montana, North and Guernsey owned by WACHHOLZ BROTHERS, Stockton, pro- It paid to book Nutrena Cattle Feed last year. For ex- At Fountain Meeting duced 11,800 pounds of milk and 610 pounds of butterfat in knitting project next year were PRESTON, Minn. - Fillmore South Dakota, and portions of invited to a knitting workship Iowa and Nebraska will attend 301 days on official test. ample, buyers who booked Nutrena Beefcake-32 last PRESTON, Minn. - Officers County Agricultural Society Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at Gil- will be elected at the Fillmore the GTA annual meeting. They manton Grade School, Nancy fall stood to save $12.20 per ton on the average on this will hold its annual meeting will be representing more than L. Gerner, Buffalo County home County 4-H Federation meet- Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the court- 600 local grain cooperatives that fee when taken out in December compared with the ing next Thursday at 8 p.m. at agent, said. house in Preston. Five direc- market cooperatively at the re- Thos just learning how to same feed at regular December prices. Saving for the Fountain, Elementary gional level through GTA. Fountain Herd Leads School. tors will be elected. Moppy knit are to bring four-ply yarn October through March of 1962-63 was $. .% per too The present officers acted as Anderson Is secretary. and size 6, 7 or 8 needles. a nominating committee. All ___ 3 Pesticides Removed A representative from the (average - all Nutrena plants). adult leaders, officers and jun- Fillmore Co. DHIA Yarn Shop, Winona, will discuss ior leaders were urged to at- Winoha 4-H Leaders From Recommended PRESTON, Minn. — Top herd In the DHIA in Fillmore selection of patterns and yams. See us also for money-saving facts on Nutrena Pre- tend. County in September was owned by Tillman Fingerson, Mothers were encouraged to scription Feeding Service and its advantages ¦ Council Meets Monday List in Wisconsin Fountain, Unit 2. His herd of 20 Holsteins averaged 51.1 attend. proved pounds of butterfat and 1,420 pounds of milk. In Nutrena Cattle Research. HARM01SYBRISTOL FB LEWISTON, Minn. - The Wi- MADISON, Wis. — Three cur- rently recommended agricultural High cow in the county was owned by William Broadwater, DECORA GO-GETTERS HARMONY, Minn. (Special) nona County 4-H Leaders Coun- Preston, Unit 5. His No. 31, a registered Ayrshire, produced — The Harmony-Bristol Farm pesticides will not be on the GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) cil will meet In Lewiston High 1966 list of chemicals recom- 96 pounds of butterfat and 1,910 pounds of milk. —Decora Go-Getters 4-H Club Bureau unit will meet at 8 Top herds in the other units in terms of average butterfat p.m. Monday at the Harmony School Monday at 8 p.m., John mended by the University of will hold an autumn fun night Wisconsin. production. Nerval Johnson, Lanesboro, Unit 4, 37.9, and School Saturday F. A. KRAUSE CO. Power House. A member of the S. Halvorson, association coun- Juan Tammel, Preston, Unit 5, 44.4. at the Grant "Breezy Acres," E. of Winona, Hwy. 14-61 Phone 5155 Harmony school board will ty agent, said. All adult and Aldrin, dieldrin and heptach- evening. A fish pond and a can- lor are not being recommended The county report: speak. Elmer DeVries, Preston, junior leaders are encouraged UNIT 2 dy sale will be conducted and will show slides. to attend. for certain uses in 1966, ac- lunch will be served. The pub- (• cording to Walter Gopmerac, Five High Herds No. No. -Avfl. lbs.— ic is invited. Parents are to University insect specialist. The Bra*H Cows Dry Milk B . bring homemade candy for the Tillman Fingerson, Fountain H _t A 1,420 51.1 w, university will not recommend cH cK for the H sale and something aldrin and heptachlor for use John 1. Smith. Harmony H 34 J 1,271 40.6 0 Victor A-lMW, Fountain H IS 3 1,016 37.1 Nutrena* Ye$y lunch. Its True! Now yon can cultivate a wMsi against corn root worm. Dieldrin Murrell Jacobson, Harmony B5 21 0 1,004 39.7 Mrs. Ed l> Loren Gra.kamp. Fountain G 2. 3 122 38.4 strip up to 5 m.p.h. adding Power! will not be recommended for High Six Cows HowT Eaar -Uk Bjtoflitf , a Obooo* AeM culti- use on apples and cherries. Cow's Name Lbs.— vator. Each patented apri ni cootraOed Use of these chemicals pre- or Number Breed Milk BF atiank wort* htiliptmkMtyfrom all tha Tillman Flnoarson, Fountain H 2,310 83 ctiien-c acl- it free to rue tntr immov- sents a remote, but inherent Tillman Flngerson, Fountain H 2J0O Bl able rod-land otttructkm and snap danger of. contaminating dairy Tlltmon Flnoarson, Fountain H 2,310 7* back tn fuS depth, all withouta atop. feed says Gopmerac. Other Tillman Flnoarson, Fountain, H 1,«0 78 ; Design nmimtoa •Wmcc" and "drift** Lowell G, Johnson, Canton H 2.090 73 i—makn a Okocoe harder to dot thaa M available chemicals will do the Ed Jorda B. Sons, Rushford H 1,450 73 ¦ay OOKT -t-hjva-ormade. Available ks ¦> Unit report : 790 cows on test; avaraota — 74» pounds ot milk. 3J per- m same job, but are less likely cent tnt and 27.3 pounds of Stand-id taoddaT W to It* wide. la ___i fl to persist, as residues in soil butterfat. V iWinj rodde 2-W to MVV ***•• •n Silo & Stack Unit report: 849 cows on lest; averages — 703 pounds of milk. 3.71 per- cent test and 24.1 pounds of butterfat. I PORTABLE ELEVATOR MFO. CO. Block Olaacaa, Mlaa. •¦••mla«t*B> tillable Concrete COVER HOMER HILLTOPI'EKS FARM TAX COURSES Go. # HOMER (Special) ^^L^A+f '^J lr , Minn. - ALMA, Wis. - A University ^^k9y,__ W ss Fret Estimatesst mi ^___ ^B___r MATERIAL Homer Hilltoppers 4-H Club of Wisconsin agriculture eco- w,rt slxth Phona SOLD BY will meet Friday at 8 p.m. at nomics department farm tax ^ ^m_ ^ " * Vi^_____!__r BR0S the Homer hall. Demonstra- short course will be held at II DfinnVDD STORE tions will be given by Linda Chippewa Falls Dec. 1 from 4 V AS HARDWARE Schneider and Sandra Plttelko. to 9 p.m. It's for those who Kochenderfer & Sons Mrs. Russell Church will be assist farmers with tax returns. Fountain City, Wli. 57* E. 4th St. Phona 4007 guest speaker. A future card County extension offices are party will be discussed, taking reservations. Buffalo Co. NFO 50.6AverageTops To Send Group 53.1 Leads DHIA To National Meet Spring GILMANTON, Wis. (Special) Grove — Dean Helwig, Gilmanton, In Fillmore Co. Winona Co. DHIA PRESTON, Minn. - Top herd in LEWISTON, Minn. - High held in September in the president of the Buffalo County October in the Fillmore Winona County DHIA was owned by Alvin and Elmer Simon, National Farmers Organization, County DHIA was owned by Tillman Fingerson, Fountain, FFA'er Tops Wool and Lamb Farm Calendar Altura, will head the county delegation Unit 2. His herd of 28 Holsteins averaged FRIDAY. NOV Unit 5. Their herd of SB registered Holsteins aver- 53.1-pounds of . 12 aged 50.6 pounds of butterfat and 1,313 pounds of milk. to the national convention at St. butterfat and 1,403 pounds of milk. HOMER, Minn., 8 p.m. - Louis, Mo., Dec. 1-2 Top cow in tbe county was owned by Norbert Spelts, Min- . High cow in the county was owned by Ed Homer Hilltoppers 4-H Club, neiska, Unit 2. His No. 146, a grade Holstein, produced 113 Other county delegates In- Jorde & Sons, Mabel Judging Sale Deduction Homer Hall. pounds clude Ervin D_ellman and Har- Rushford. One of their Holsteins produced 102 pounds of of butterfat and 080 pounds of milk. MABEL, Minn. (Special) - SATURDAY, NOV. 13 High herds in the other four units in terms of average old Franzwa, Fountain City; butterfat and 2,120 pounds of milk. GILMANTON, Wis., 1:30 p.m. butterfat production: Allen Aarsvold, Peterson, Unit 1, Charles Helwig, Independence; Top herds In the other three units in terms of average A Spring Grove Future Farm- —Knitting workshop (or 4-H'ers, 47.3; Russell T. Church, Minnesota City, Unit 2, 49.1; Ro- Alvin Sobers, Wilmer Zlege- butterfat production were: Lowell D. Roelof, Preston, er of America was named top To Stay Same bert Pittelko, weid and Elmer Servais, Ar- Unit elementary school. Winona Rt. 3, 36.6, and Russell Persons, St. 3, 44,1; Teake & Witte, Spring Valley, Unit 4 individual judge from more LEWISTON, Minn. - Deduc- Charles, Unit 4, 39.3. cadia; Jay Ward and Arnold , 46.6, and MONDAY, NOV. 15 Juan Tammel, Preston, Unit 5, 49,9. than 180 FFA members who tions from wool program incen- LEWISTON, Minn., 8 p.u_. - The county report: Weisenbeck, Durand; Donald participated In a general live- UNIT I Owen, Nelson; Gene Weiss, Arn- The county report; tive payments tor the 1965 mar- Winona County 4-H leaders UNIT 2 stock judging contest here, Sat- council, high school. TOP FIVE HERDS old Weiss and Kenneth Wald, keting year to finance the wool N«. N«. -AVf, Lbs— Alma, and Floyd Knecht, Larry urday. HARMONY, Minn., 8 p.m. - --tad caws Dry Milk a. FIVE HIGH HERDS He is Charles Casterton, who and lamb producers' self-help Allan Aarsvold, . atlrion OGGH 33 1 1,2.4 47.1 Hilliard, Clayton Nelson, Lee • Na. Na. -Avf. Lbi.— Harmony-Bristol Farm Bureau Culltn Plarca, Utica, OO ii J ¦ named top Judge of the show promotion program will contln- »« 42.3 Helwig and Charles Rutschow, _. »>ee# Cowl Dry Milk kp unit, Power House. Elmer Wirt (, Son, Lawliton HO JJ ID sal 4__ Tillman . Ingaraon, Founttln H 28 1 1,403 53 1 at the Robert Miller farm. More Ronald Brtmsatri, Rushford GH 37 t 1,210 41.3 Alma. Bd Jorde & Ions, Rushford H 41 1 1,121 43.3 ue at the same rates as in the John N_hr_ than 180 FFA members from TUESDAY. NOV, 1« an., Lewiston ..... RGG 49 4 IM 40.4 Next county meeting will be Mra, Louise Runga a tons, Harmony H 34 . ns 37.A past Anthony Helm, chairman, PRESTON, TOP FIVE COWS John Z. Smith, Harmony H is 1 1,042 147 three states participated in this Minn., 8 p.m. - held Dec. 9 at Gilmanton, Murrsll Jacobson, Harmony BS 25 34,1 WinonaCounty AgriculturalSta- Annual meeting of Fillmore Cew'a Nami —Lbs.— 1 174 show which included judgingof «rN_m_«f Breed Milk I . FIVE HIGH COWS Angus steers and heifers, Ox- bilisation and Conservation County Agricultural Society, C. H. Mueller & Sons, Lewiston Blossom RH 2,070 104 Elmer Wirt A Son, Ltwltfdit Oana RO 1,710 103 Cow's Nam. —Lbs.— ford and Southdown sheep and courthouse. ¦ • ar Number Bread Milk B. Committee, said. C. H. Mueller A Sons, Leylston Clara RH 2,000 100 Soil District Bd Jorde & tons, ftuthferd H Yorkshireand Hampshire hogs. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17 C. H. Mueller & Sons, Lewiston Br mine RH 1,980 9. 2,120 102 Deduction rates will he one C. H. Mueller l> Sons, Lewiston Melody RH 1,920 fl Tillman Plneereon, Pountiin ,H 2,640 95 Dodge Center was named the LAMOILLE, Minn., 8 p.m. - Arne Agrlmion, Peterson H 1,750 91 cent per pound from shorn wool UNIT 2 Dinner Slated Ed SwMum & tons, Utica H 1,310 tt Sp Judging team and Kasson- Annual meeting of Burnj-Hom- TOP FIVE HERDS Lowell O. ohnton, Canton H 2,120 81 antorvlUe second. payments and 5 cents per hun- , Unit report : 7f_ e_*» en test) averages — 479 pounds of milk, 3.9 usr- ¦ er-Pleasant Soil and Water Russell T. Church Minnesota City ..GH 69 11 1,352 49.1 At Cedar Valley 24,t dred pounds oC liveweight from Conservation District, Cedcr Howard Anderson, Altura ..... GH 43 10 1,257 41.8 cent teat and pounds ef butttrfat. Charles Meyer, Rolllngatone .. OH 3. 5 1,012 31.* UNIT 3 unshorn lamb payments. These Valley Lutheran church. Stephen's Shady Elm, Alhjra RS.GH 68 16 1,096 37.1 LAMOILLE, Minn. - The Trempealeau County rates are the . same as those Leonard Kreldermacher, Mlnnelskl OH 46 5 1,011 37.2 annual meeting of the Burns- FIVE HIGH HERDS INDEPENDENCE, Wis. - Lowtll D. Roelof, Preston . OH 3t 2 1,345 44.1 made from payments received TOP FIVE COWS Homer-Pleasant Soil and Wa- Roland Grallno, Serine Villey OH 26 4 l Delegation to Attend Rainbow Homemakers, John NorBert . Spelfz, Minneiska 146 GH 1,980 ,Hi 41.J by producers since the begin- 113 District will Everett Junga, Harmony CH 38 4 1,124 39.4 Pietrek home. Leonard Greden, Minneiska 5 GH 2,450 91 ter Conservation Harold _ Paul tIKklnH, Farm Bureau Meeting ning of the program. Russell T. Church, Minnesota City 1(3 GH 2,410 87 be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Lime Springs, Iowa ..... OH 26 4 THURSDAY, NOV. 18 NoCbart Speltz, Minneiska 42 GH 1,600 86 991 37.7 Eugene & Jerry Scheavel, Preston . RH 64 10 1,028 35.2 . Toe chairman pointed out FOUNTAIN, Minn., 8 p.m. — Charles Mayer, Rollingstone . . .17 GH 1,460 85 Cedar Valley Lutheran Church. ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) — the promotion is conducted by The district's conservation FIVE HIGH COWS Several Trempealeau County Fillmore County 4-H Federa- UNlt i Lowell D. ftcftlofs, Pretlon . GH 2,470 99 the American Sheep Producers tion, elementary school. TOP FIVE HERDS award will be presented and Eugene & Jerry tcheavel, Preston RH 2,MO u Farm Bureau member* will bo Council, Inc., under an agree- MINNESOTA CITY, Minn., Robert Pittelko, Winona Rt. 3 H 36 3 996 36.6 the watershed program discuss- Manyn k, Darrell Key, Preiton RH 1,910 tt delegates to the state conven- ment With the Secretary of Ben Laskt, Winona Rt. 3 ROIGG 37 7 731 34 .5 Kmnstn tcheavel, Preston OH 2,170 to Ag- 7:30 p.m. — Winona County an- William Si Arlo ttove, Winona Rt. 1 .. H 46 5 999 34.4 ed. Pictures of soil conservation Art Maloney, tprlng Valley . GH 2,120 76 tion at Madison starting Satur- riculture. The : present agree- Ivan Sperbeck, Dakota Rt. 1 . GG 27 5 758 34.2 work during the past 25 years Unit report : <79 cows on fast; averages — 821 pounds of milk, 3.57 per* day- nual 4-H leaders appreciation RoMrt McNally, Houston Rt. 1 H 25 5 869 32.0 cent test and 29.3 pounds of butterfat. ment — covering the years banquet, tbe Oaks. will be shown. They include Arnold Brovold, 196*65 was approved in a pro- TOP FIVE COWS Church women will serve the UNIT 4 Beach, present state director; WABASHA, Minn., 8 p.m. — Robert McNally, Houston Rt. 1 it H 1,8*5 75 ducer referendum held in 1962. Georoe Koenie, Winona Rt. 3 ...... 16 H J,HJ 74 dinner. FIVE HIGH HERDS Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Sexe, For the 1964 marketing year Wabasha County 4-H Federa- Donald Dickragir, La Crescent Rt. 1 12 H 1,640 72 ¦ Tasks a Witts, tprlng Villey ... . R&GH t 1 1,212 4_.« Town of Ettrick; Douglas Saeb , tion's parents' night program, Robert Pittelko, Winona Rtt. 3 Clover H 1,970 71 Oonttd Jache, Wykotf QH 29 3 984 34.T • deductions from payment s f or Donald Olckrager, La Crescent . (.-Crescent Rt. 1 H 1,735 71 Nerval Johnson, Lanesboro OH 32 9 837 33,« and Leonard Bender, -Town of high school. Howard Clark, Racine OO&GH 26 A 456 33,1 financing the council's activi- ¦ UNIT 4 Tri-State Breeders Myron Larson, Spring Valley R&GH 24 5 793 28.7 Gale; Prosp«r SdiWUc, Arcad- ties are estimated at $2.5 mil- TOP FIVE HERDS Of Fillmore County FIVE HIGH COWS ia, and Mr. and Mm, Richard lion. Russell Persons, St. Charles OH 41 4 1,119 39.3 Robert 6. Balllnger, Ste*art.illa OH 2,170 »7.o Fox, Town of Pwatot-/ Curtis Persons, St. Charles ....GH 66 15 -931 37.9 " Kalstabakken & Elckhoff, Fountain GB5 2,170 S3.0 The chairman stressed the Loretto Students McCarthy Si Sh.a, St. Charles OH 43 7 997 37.7 To Meet November 22 Myron Larson, Soring Villey , GH 1,470 82.0 Mrs. Sexe la chairman of importance of submitting Lao Kramer, St, Charles ...... ; OH 42 5 1,082 37.3 Olaf Hove, Chatfield 06 1,270 76.0 the county Farm Bureau wom- sale- Kan Rupprecht, Sf Charles OH 25 5 979 36.8 LANESBOBO, Minn. documents to the county office Win Root River - A di- Robert E. Balllnger, RaClna CH 1,920 75.0 en and a district committee- TOP FIVE COWS rector and eight delegates will Avery Vrleze, Spring Valley OH 1,880 7-.0 at once, whenever sales of wool Stan Harcey, St. Charles . .... Lady GH 2,150 88 Unit report: 705 cowl on test; averages — 591 pounds of milk, 3.1 par- women, She will serv *on tht and unshorn lambs are made. Speech Contest Leo Kramer, St. Charles Midnight GH 2,010 84 be elected Nov. 22 at the Fill- cent test and 22.3 poundi of butterfat. state resolutions committeo. . Ken Rupprecht, Sr. Charles ;....,... Becky GH i,sio 76 more County annual Tri-State UNIT 5 ¦ . m Too often they are something fcmll Fabian, St. Chariot . No. 24 GH 1,790 75 that are easily forgotten until CALEDONIA, Minn. - Two Mayntrd Millard, St. Charles .;. .. NO. 63 GH 1,860 71 Breeders Cooperative annual FIVE HIGH HERDS Loretto High School students UNIT 5 meeting. Juan Temmel, Preston OH 36 3 1,315 49.9 the deadline is past for filing Hugina a Mlio Broadwater, Preston . OH 32 8 1,343 4t.« Wisconsin Youth applications. won top honors in the annual TOP FIVE HERDS The event will be held at 8 Miner Brothers, Whs 1 in OH 49 9 1,001 34,8 Root River District soil conser- Alvin & Elmer Simon, Altura ...... RH 58 S 1,313 50.6 p.m. in Community Hall here. Dottna Tammel, Preston ..... GH 42 7 917 34.7 Dead in Cave-in Heim said that sales docu- Clayton Ketchum, Utica R8.GH v 37 6 1,264 48.1 Merlin Willing 1. Sons, Preiton OH 33 7 946 34.5 ments for all sales made in vation speech contest. Schrelber Bros., Winona R&GH&GG %43 5 1,050 ' 40.5 Olaf Sande is the current direc- FIVE HIGH COWS SEATTLE, Wash. a. — Mor- Joe Deufel took first in tbe Kermlt Vertheln, Altura GH 36 4 1,080 39.2 tor. Members will receive a re- 1965 must be in and applica- tester uehmenn, Altura GH 26 2 1,023 37.7 Evgtna.lt Mllo Broadwtler, Preiton GH 2,330 91 gan Kidrlck. 16, of Beaver Dam, senior event and Rita Ernster port on the past year's business Eugene Mllo Broadwater, Preston GH 2,220 89 tions signed by the end of Jan- •fop FIVE COWS Miller Brother*, Whelan ....GH 2,450 8t -, Wis. was killed Tuesday when a uary 1968. placed first in the junior com- Alvin fc Elmer Simon, Altura Tonka RH 2,310 106 from Nellus Larson, general Eugena S> Mllo BrMdweter, Preston GH 2,090 M ' sand bank caved In on him. The petition. Joyce Miller, Caledon- Clayton Ketchum, Utica . .,.., 1 79 OH 2,250 104 manager. Free lunch will be Eujina li Mllo Broadwtler, Preston ,...GH 3,440 17 Alvin Si Elmer Simen, Altura ...... LOflll RH 2,040 104 Unit report: 155 cows on teit ; averages — 785 pounds of milk, 3.47 oar* boy and his mother were la ia, was second in senior compe- Alvin & Elmer Simon, Attur* ....Silver RH 2,120 98 served. cent test and 28.9 pounds of butterfat. Washington to visit relatives. MEADOWLARK CLUB tition and Kathy Swenson, Marvin Mussell, Utica Betsy GH 1,740 94 ARCADIA. Wis.— IS~. Linus Spring Grove, second In the jun- Wolfe will demonstrate making ior event. greeting cards at the meeting The winning speeches will be of the Meadlowlark Homemak- taped and entered In the Area ers at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the 7 contest at Rochester. The Buffalo County 4-H'er Trempealeau Electric Coopera- area winners will compete in tive building. the state event. Achievement Winner ffflAM ALMA, Wis. — A Buffalo lected as a state 4-H achieve- iTem^ol PujJl County 4-H'er is one of 37 in ment winner in competition YOW STOW WITH ___.AT lOWEH ~~ Wisconsin who has been se- judged recently at the Univer- MJ-lltr PRICES ^ I— ortRATio tr OAMBLI-SKOOMO, INC —J sity of Wisconsin. CHAMPUN...AQ Q&NMO /fl the Grotl Plsint He is Lee tkhrke, 17, Alma, " . .t . . ¦ . ft 11 a?'¦ ' , y ....¦J ;...... T"' &x ~ ^" ' "" ¦ ¦ '¦ ¦" * ' '*- mm mml ^ - —' -i" fil % " - ^ m_t^ ' ?'' "*' . ".'''. ''' "$*?? i' * who was named state winner Single Cross in 4-H conservation achieve- ment/ The son of Mr. and Un. Corn Compared Erwin Gehrke, Rt. 2, he receiv- Tempo Is Proud To Announce ed the award for planting and improving the timber stand on THE ADDITION OF For Production hit father's 296-acre dairy MADISON, Wis. - Since hy- farm. He also has started his brid corn became common in own Christmas tree stand. the United States, the type A senior at Mondovi High most Commonly used has been Champlin Petroleum Products School, he has been active in the double cross. But in recent years single 4-H seven years and has car- cross hybrids have been in- ried projects in woodworking, TO OUR AUTOMOTIVE DEPARTMENT creasing In the com belt. It is forestry, dairy, tractor, auto- estimated that last year 10 to tive, nature, conservation, elec- is percent of the corn belt was tricity and junior leadership. planted to single crosses or Lee has served as president, modifications of them. vice president and treasurer of GIGANTIC 3 DAY OIL SALE Corn breeders in different his 4-H club and has received places have reported higher the Winona Dally News achieve- yields and superior quality ment award. He also has re- only MIDLAND . from single cross hybrids com- ceived county awards in wood- pared to double cross and mul- working, forestry, elementary To Introduce This Famous Oil! tiple hybrids. Based on these and agriculture. reports, University of Wisconsin The 4-H achievement winners corn breeders Devender K, were chosen for their progress Nanda and N. P. Neal studied in 4-H work and overall contri- INFRA-HEATthe relative merits of single, butions to their communities FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY double and multiple hybrid and counties. Factory Representative Will Be Here These 3 Days to Tell You of the Merits crosses. , r. , , FUELa OIL contains They selected seven sets of hy- Anv.TiH'iliv.v^.\ ^.; v.'. ;'.'.v.v.v. . r._ j brids ranging from early to late of These Fine Products. maturity. Each set consisted of .'i'l ^?^rnT\^__a TviS'i'i'i''" four single crosses, two double ~| and one multiple (double-double) ''"/ ^>_*wkmm\W__\J \\ >r: R AD hybrid crosses. They gathered Champlin Champlin Deluxe Champlin Hl-V-I C AL- and analyzed information on grain yield, number of days to . . Haavy Duty Heavy Duty More Heat Trans-Saason _C • Gikres mid-silk, moisture in ears ab __.. AAl Determent Oil lOf D«tar 0«nl Oil All Saaaon .0W30 OII ^ C Fumes-Soot-Smoke tiarvest, plant height, ear length £L£L <" 10-20-30 Walflht #W » 10-20-30 Wafght # E • Holps Elimittate and shelling percentage. R«sular «S« Qt ~~ Rtflular 5S« Mm M V- R«sular 4S« J_H4-# >l MmMmrh / per acre. Double cross yields FREE UREASE JOB FREE QREASE JOB TMK TO THE MIDLAND ranged from 65 to 162 bushels. BONUS OFFER MAIIR NIARIST YOU. SEl NAMES BELOW. Multiple hybrids yielded 101 to with any oil change of with any ell change of 153 bushels per acre. The CHAMPLIN TRANS-5IASON ¦ ___¦ _____* CHAMPIIN TRANS-SIASON ASSOCIATION scientists explain that the vari- POWERw..*.i» PAKna« CHAMPLIN LEWISTON CO-OP or CHAMPUN DELUXE ^^T or DELUXE LiWI8TON - Ph. 3141 ation in yield was mainly due Oil Additive. M V to differences in maturity. Friday and Saturday R*^ Friday and Saturday When they compared indivi- Non. Fln«r. M M a ROMLINGSTOUE 00-OP OIL ASSOCIATION Ragular $1.29 l ' ROLUNMfON i-H.. MM dual crosses ln all sets, single MAW M " crosses showed better perfor- CO-OP OIL GO. mance. Of the 10 highest yield- FOUR SQUARE , five were (1) Savo more ot each litter CAUHDONIA SPRINO OROVB MABEL ing combinations and (2) cut (e«d coita by Ph. 7J4._7W Ph-'M* Ph- m single crosses, three were dou- Most Spectacular Price How On Non Detergent Oil Ever . . . ble crosses, and two were mul- war-Dim hogs with a KnJpco ASSOCIATION tiple hybrids. portabl* -iMtar. It burnt low TR9-00UNTY CO-OP OIL coat keroMno or #1 lust oiL RUSHFORD - Ph. 144.7m HOUSTON Ph. VN 4-J755 Single hybrids tended to be WINONA- Dial 9J4J or «M taller than double or multiple Mova it anywhera. Plug in. hybrids, possibly indicating Btatts instantly. Champlin CMO-Non Detergent FILLMORE CO-OP SERVICES more vigor for the single cross FREE FOLDER SHOWS HOW yjz LANESBORO - Ph. HO 744U HARMONY - Ph. tU-

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WINONA KNITTING MILLS SALESROOM 903 East Second Tal. 3395 2 in President s THURSDAY Sibley Believes Watkins Plans The Daily Record NOVEMBER II , 1965 Race at Stockton Hesper Historical Rolvaag Being STOCKTON, Minn. — A con- Crossing Repair Sites Visited; At Community Winona Deaths Two-State Deaths test has developed for the of- Griswold Is Guide Memorial To Add 4,000 fice of president on the Stock- Hospital Mrs. Marion Queisser Charles F MABEL, Minn. (Special) . Seller. Unfairly ton Village Council. Incumbent To Take at Least - VUltlnj hour*: Medical and suralcat Mrs. Marion Queisser, 77, COCHRANE, Wis. (Special) Treated The Winneshiek County home patMnts: 3 to 4 and 7 to 1:30 p.m. (No Paul MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Mffi- George Hinton filed as did Vin- ctiiwrtn wMtor «.) Watkins Memorial Home, — Charles F. Selfert, 77, rural Gov. Karl Rolvaag is, In economics committee sponsored MatarnHfy Mtltnh.: l tx> }:3t art 7 tc died at 11.30 a.m. Cochrane, nes-ta City Dealers cent Daniel. p.m. Wednesday died Wednesday at "being maligned Another Week 1:30 (Adulfi my.) at Community Memorial Hos- 12:45 p.m. at his home. He bad some respects, a heritage tour at Hesper, Iowa, and treated unfairly," Prof. Allan Mueller filed for trus- Given good weather, the Saturday. WEDNESDAY pital after an illness of three not been ill previously. said Wednes- tee and Clyde English, treasur- Franklin Street crossing repairs months. Mr. Seifert was born Feb. Mulford Q. Sibley Burr Griswold, Mabel , local Admissions day. er. Both are incumbents. No one now under way can be finished She was born Feb. 17, 1888, 25, 1888, at Lewiston, Minn., historian, lead the group en a Vldd Kanriner, Houston, The University of Minnesota filed for the justice of peace of- in another week , Milwaukee Minn. at Lansing, Mich., and was to Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Seif- , i defender of contro- Railroad officials said today. walking tour of the village, married to ert. After attending Lewiston professor fice, which is vacant or for con- Jeffrey T. May, 936 43rd Ave., Walter Queisser. He versial causes, defended Rol- If weather is unfavorable, the pointing out locations of the old died in 1959. She was a member schools, he moved to tbe Coch- stable with Jack Duellman as job may take 10 days to Goodview. vaag in a talk to the Hillel two hotel ; the foundry in which the of St. Paul's Episcopal Church. rane area where he was an Foundation at the university. incumbent. weeks. Archie Milton, Dakota Rt. 1. Surviving active farmer until his death. first steel harrow in the coun- Donald K. Nicolay, MS 46th are three sisters- Sibley said he believed reports All terms are for two years Crews are now in their fourth in-law, Mrs. Paul (Esther) He married Lydia Bollinger at week of work on the crossing. ty was manufactured; millinery St., Goodview. Cochrane Nov. 28, 1912. He was of Rolvaag's unpopularity with with the exception of trustee Wallace J. Voss, Forsberg, Rochester; Mrs. R. he voters were "exaggerated." which is for three. An origins! estimate that the and drugstores; the old mill, Fountain K. (Frona) Dennett, Chicago, a member of Christ Lutheran crossing would be closed for and the first Winneshiek Coun- City, Rt 2, Wis. Church. It is premature to say that Rol- The election will be Dec. 7 HI., and Mrs* Ray Sutton, Los vaag cannot win re-election next Sexton Petersen two weeks has proved to be ty fairgrounds. Gary W. Lockwood, Winona Survivors are: His wife; three from 1:30 to 8 p.m. in the vil- optimistic. Rt. 3. Angeles, Calif. year, Sibley added. lage hall. Also included on the tour was sons, Lesley and Loyley, rural Watkins Products, Inc., plans Workmen have been delayed a stop at the Friends Church, Mrs. Sylvia Rogers, 829 W. Funeral services will be at Cochrane, Sibley said he admired both 10:30 am. Friday at Fawcett and Linley, Westcliffe, Rolvaag and Lt. Gov. A. M. to add 4,000 city dealers in 1966, by emergency situations aris- were Pastor Gene Ward explain- 5tb St. Colo., and 11 grandchildren. ing elsewhere in the area, ac- ed the beliefs Discharges' Funeral Home, the Rev. George Keith because "they defended a it was announced today in con- and different Funeral services will be Sat- compiunist (small O" namely cording to Donald Doumas, sects of the Quakers. The group Mrs/ William Schultz, Goodreid, St. Paul's Church, urday at 2 p.m. at Christ Lu- junction with appointment of Milwaukee agent here. Applica- 926 E. officiating. Burial will be in _uj___elf- Mabel Cable Job also toured the school, built in 5th St. theran Church, the Rev. Theo. The professor added that several persons. tions of bituminous surfacing 1872, and in constant use ever Daniel Mensink Woodlawn Cemetery. Kuske officiating. Burial will at the Baker Street crossing , Bushford, There will be rio visitation. Keith's association with U.S. Craig C. Currier has been ap- since. Minn, be in the Buffalo City public pointed recruiting and training took two days, he said, and Members of Hesper Improve- cemetery. Mutual Insurance, an affiliate of Nearly Complete had to be finished before weath- Mrs. Robert Kramer, 264 E. American Allied, "will be a director of the city sales divi- ment Club served refreshments 5th St Winona Funerals Friends may caD at Colby MABEL, Minn. (Special) — er conditions worsened.' mark against him" as a potent- sion, of Watkins Products, Inc., A bituminous in the community building. Stance Cyert, 271 Steuben St. Funeral Home, Cochrane, Fri- Installation of underground tel- seal on the Women serving wore costumes Mrs. Frank Kaldunski day afternoon and evening and ial Democratic • Farmer-Labor it was announced by C. C. Cur- Main Street crossing required Mark Carer, St. Mary's Col- governor candidate "because a ephone cable for the Mabel and prevalent in the area in the lata lege. Funeral services for Mrs. Saturday until 11 a.m., then at rier, vice president of the divi- Burr Oak telephone exchanges a day; another day was need- 1800s. Frank Kaldunski, 703 W. 4th the church. lot of people don't look at the has been nearly completed by ed for work on the Broadway Mrs. Ralph Bechly, Fountain St. , facts." sion. crossing and emergency Among descendants of Hesper City, Wis. were held this morning at the Midwest Utility Construe^ re- pioneers attending were Mr. and St. Casimir's Church, Rt. Rev. Mrs. William Straschinske The new director will continue tion. Co. of Prior Lake, Minn. pairs on a Minnesota City Thomas Maloy, Lake City, Msgr. J. W Haun officiating. OSSEO, Wis. (Special) - Mrs. the administrative activities crossing took two more work- Mrs. Glenn O. Taylor, Clarinda, Minn. William Straschinske, 51, died launched in 1962 by Myles Pet- With continued good weather ing days, Doumas Iowa, and Mr. and Mrs. Rich- The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Henry F. the drops to the homes from said . ard "M. Mrs. Clarence Widfe, Foun- Speck was present in the sanc- Wednesday morning at her Youth Sentenced ersen, who has taken a tempor- At first , the plan was to re- Smith, Winona. The tain City, Wis. ¦ ¦ ary leave of absence from the the main cables should be com- women are daughters of tha tuary. .' .: ¦ . home on . Osseo Rt. 1. pleted by Thanksgiving. build the crossing only for the Mrs. Avilda Quarve, Rush- The former Wilma Harris, she company because of illness. double-track main line at late Mr, and Mrs. John P. Burial was in St. Mary's Approximately half the tele- Street, Hesper. ford, Minn. Cemetery. was born Nov. 22, 1913, at Rich- To Youth Center The company Franklin Street. When excavat- Mrs. Helen Merchlewite, 111 land Crater. Wis., to Mr. and vice president phones for the two exchanges ing began, Doumas said, work- Hamilton St. Pallbearers, nephews, were: Mrs. William Harris. Mr. Stra- Freddie R. Mullins, 17, Dal- also announced have been installed. Most of men found that a side track Mrs Vernal Johns, 159 E. Ambrose, James, Michael and schinske was her second bus- las, Tex. — who admitted a that Thomas G. the phones in Mabel and north also needed new ties. This School for Boys Henry Kleinschmidt, Andrew They charge of armed robbery Mon- Sex ton, assis- of Highway 44 are ready for work was added instead of be- Kipg St. band. were married Feb. test ringing. Some splicing Recommended for Jeffrey T. May, 936 43rd Ave., Kaldunski and Joseph Draz- 15, 1950. day in District Court — arriv- tant director of of ing put off until later. Doumas kowski. ed today at Lino Lakes recep- recruiting and the overhead cable in Mabel said, so that the crossing would Area Near Wausau Goodview. Survivors are: Her husband; still is incomplete. All phones one son, Glen Hizer, Milwau- tion center of the Youth Conser- training, would not have to be closed again¦ for Mrs. Florence M. Curran assume increas- in the Hesper area should be that purpose. ' ' . MADISON, Wis. m - A new Funeral services for Mrs. kee; three brothers, Theron, vation Commisfon (YCC). Sher- installed within two state school for boys will be BIRTHS ELSEWHERE Rockford, 111,; Arthur, Californ- iff George L. Fort reported. ed responsibil- weeks. m Florence M. Curran, formerly Mullins was sentenced Mon- ity in supervis- As test ringing begins the located within 50 miles of north- KELLOGG, Minn. (Special)- of 415 Washington ia,: and William, Milwaukee, and TO BUILD HOSPITAL ern Wisconsin's population cen- St., will be five sisters. day to the YCC for a term "not ing the indepen- phones will be left hot for sub- Mr. and Mrs. Donald Giem, a at 8:30 a.m. Saturday at Mrs. Gladys Bailey, scribers to use for local calling BLACK RIVER FALLS, ter which is 10 miles north and son Nov. 8 at St. John's Hospi- Beloit; Mrs. Hazel Gaston, Mad- to exceed" the 20 years in pri- dent operations Wis. Burke's-Funeral Home and at son an adult would get as a ot more than Craig Carrier and in town and between neigh- — Dr. John H. Noble, presi- west of Wausau. tal, Red Wing. Mr. and Mrs. ison; Mrs. ZeUa Carry, Bock- The State Welfare Board vot- 9 at Cathedral of the Sacred ford; Mrs. Crystal Klimek, maximum penalty. Judge Arn- 450 metropolitan distributor- bors. This will be for test pur- dent of the board of directors Leo Giem, Kellogg, are grand- Heart, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Har- Mil- poses only. No charge will be of the Black River Memorial ed Wednesday to limit tbe pos- parents. waukee, and Mrs; Dorothy Cele- old Hatfield immediately sen- ships and counter branches old Dittman officiating. Burial tenced Mullins and ordered a throughout the U.S. ahd Can- made until cut-over. Hospital has received favorable sible sites for the new institu- RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) bron, Phoenix, Ariz. tion to this area will be in St. Mary's Cemetery. Funeral services will be Sat- post-sentence psychiatric ex- ada. The new telephone directories word that its application for "as a recogni- — Mr. and Mrs. David Rislove, will not be mailed until some- federal Hilh Burton Funds to tion of convenience to the peo- Fargo, N.D., a daughter Oct. 28. Friends may call at the fu- urday at 1 p.m. at Osseo Luth- amination for the youth. Craig Currier, 875 W. Mark neral home Friday afternoon eran Church, the Rev. P. W, St., joined the company in 1S56 time in December. assist in the construction of a ple of northern Wisconsin." David, is the son of Mr. and This will be carried out by following his graduation from new hospital. In a letter Dr. The legislature stipulated that Mrs. Elmer Rislove, Rushford. and evening. Rosary will be Broetzmann, St. Peter's Luther- the professional staff at the The company is hoping for a said by Msgr. Dittman and the an Church Foster, officiating. YCC reception center. Judge Winona State College. He has simultaneous cut-over to the E. H. Jorris, state health offi . the school be built north of a HARMONY, Minn. (Special) served the company in many new automatic dial system cer wrote Dr. Noble that on Nov. line irom La Crosse to Mani- — At Harmony Community Hos- Catholic Daughters of America Burial will le in St. Peter's Hatfield has frequently pointed for at 8 p.m. Cemetery, Foster. out to defendants that the YCC administrative capacities in- both the Mabel and Burr Oak 5 the state board of directors towoc. Since the bill became pital: cluding the position of regional exchanges sometime before approved the Black River hos- law northern Wisconsin commu- Mr. «nd Mrs. Kenneth Knut- Friends may call Friday after- is equipped to train youths for noon and evening and until noon manager at the Denver, Colo., Christmas, according to Ernest pital's application for a federal nities have been bidding to get son, a daughter Nov. 5. productive roles in society and branch and most recently as Carson, local manager. grant in the, amount of $600,000. the new facility in their area. Mr. and Mrs. John Rodgers, WEATHER Saturday at Oftedahl Funeral usually does not hold them for assistant to the general mana- a daughter Sunday. Home, and after noon at tbe more than a year, ger of the city sales division. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Nash, OTHER TEMPERATURES church. Mullins travled to Lino Lakes Petersen, who has developed a daughter Wednesday. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Roy Samson with Deputy Helmer Weinmann. many of the company's recruit- High Low Pr. GALESV1L__E, Wis. - Roy ¦ WINONA FURNITURE COMPANY'S Mr. and'Mrs. Gaylen Caster- ¦ ¦ '¦ ing and training programs dur- ton, a son Wednesday. ~ Albany, cloiidy " . . . .. ". 43 25 .. Samson, 60, died Wednesday Pine City Man ing the past three years, joined Albuquerque, cloudy 63 38 evening at Community Memor- the company in 1945 following Atlanta, fog .. . .. 61 so Ji ial Hospital, Winona, ' after a Dead in Accident his discharge from the U.S. WINONA DAM LOCKAGE , cloudy .. 40 33 .08 Bismarck long illness. PINE CITY, Minn. (AP) - Navy. He is a graduate of Wi- Flow — 25,600 cubic feet per Brise, clear ...... 58 34 .14 Born Sept. 19, 1905, in Town nona State College and lives .. Roger Haavisto, 26, Pine City , second today at 8 a.m. Boston, cloudy ..... 40 32 of Gale to Mr. and Mrs. George was killed Tuesday when the with his wife, Dens, and family Wednesday Chicago, cloudy .... 45 42 .7 Samson, be was employed as a large earth loading implement in Valley View. 2:30 p.m. — Badger, 5 Barges, Cincinnati, clear ... 48 34 .. pipe hand by the U.S. Corp Sexton, a former district , cloudy ,". 44 27 . - - . he was operating overturned, down. ' • ¦¦•: Cleveland .. of Engineers and worked on a crushing him. An employe of sales manager, has been asso- 7 p.m. .?-. William Clark, 9 Denver, clear ...... 56 25 :. dredge on tlie Mississippi Riv- ciated with the company in an Des Moines, cloudy . 49 43 the Pine County Highway administrative capacity since barges, down: er. He never married. Department; Haavisto was 7:25 p.m. — Tradewinds, 3 Detroit, dear 43 37' . ... Survivors include on brother, 1961. He is a graduate of the Fairbanks, clear ... 5 -13 .. Bernard, working on a county road proj- University of Wisconsin and barges, down. Galesville; two sisters, ect near Pine City when the ac- CHOOSE 8 p.m. — Nelson Bt. Broad- Fort Worth, cloudy : 07 55 7. Mrs. Glen (Rose) Gunderson, lives with his wife, Sharon, and Helena, rain ...... 49 33 T Fountain City, and Mrs. Rus- cident happened. family at 928 W. King St. jf^ft foot, 2 barges, up. cloudy 49 38 ) 10:45 p.m. — Captain Howder, Indianapolis^ .. sell (Hazel Park, Galesville, NAPLES-MONDOVI FU 8 \y tge_, down. Jacksonville, fog . 76 63 . -. and six nephews and nieces. MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) - L.fc p.m. — Hitman Logan, Kansas City, cloudy 54 50 .. Funeral services will be at Erwin Gehrke, adult 4-H leader, Los Angeles, clear . 70 52 2 p.m. Saturday at First Pres- will show slides and speak on 6 barges, ap. ., Couple in Good Today Louisville, /cloudy .. 51 34 byterian Church, the Rev. Ro- his trip to several European Memphis, clear .... 64 41 bert M. C. Ward officiating. countries co the Naples-Mondovi 5:20 a.m. — Charlotte Ann. 4 Miami, clear ...... 81 71 . Burial will be in barges',' ' op- Decorah Prai- Farmers Union Friday at 8:30 Condition After Milwaukee, cloudy . 40 39 .. rie Cemetery near here. p.m. in the Mondovi City Build- ' Provincial Mpls.-St.P., snow .44 28 1 Friends may call at Smith ing, The juniors and seniors alsd H9WG§Bp~ New Orleans, clear .79 61 .,. Mortuary from 7 to 9 p.m. Fri- will meet Mrs, Marvin Moy New York, cloudy . 47 , 44 day and at the church after will report on her trip to Bailey, Heart Operations Stolen Car Okla. City, cloudy .. 70 48 .. 12:30 p,m, Saturday. Colo., to the National Farmers CHICAGO Wi — A Wisconsin Omaha, rain 47 36 .21 Robert J. Mack Union Youth Camp. The public couple, married for 37 years, Philadelphia, rain .50 42 .06 is Invited. took togetherness into surgery Recovered Phoenix, clear ...80 42 PLAINVIEW, Minn. — The for similar heart conditions and Pittsburgh, cloudy .. 47 34 retired editor and publisher of William Allen American Legion are in "very good condition" to- A car stolen from Winona last Ptlnd, Me., clear ... 80 42 the Plainview News, Robert J. Post, Plainview, and of the day. August was recovered today in , Ore., rain ... 57 46 .45 Mack, 68, died early today at Masonic lodge at Plainview. He Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Dru'yor of Ptlnd his home here. He had been Rochester, and a vandal broke Rapid City, cloudy . 44 21 .. was active in Plainview civic Prairie du Chien, Wis., under- -J- ¦tcU.JLdJ -.JL a storm window in a Winona St Louis, cloudy . 58 51 ., HI a long time with emphysema. organizations. went open - heart surgery Wed- FRENCH S__!oa1 ___^Pi1 home Wednesday night, Police Mr. Mack was born here Sept. , nesday by Dr. M. S. Mazel . PROVINCIAL I^SqP^ 1 -ar-m • Salt Lk. City, cloudy 59 35 .. Survivors: His wife; one son \ | # • | Chief James W. McCabe report- cloudy .. 64 57 25, 1896, to Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Robert M., Plainview ; three Tbe operation, called a cardio- San Fran., liam Mack. He 4 1 ed. • Seattle, cloudy 51 44 .32 was the second grandchildren, and one sister, Iiexy, was to unblock arteries , Froviiiciai The 1956 sedan reported stol- Washington, cloudy . 52 46 .01 generation oi Macks to edit and Mrs. Einar (Elizabeth) John- eading to the heart. 112 S ¥££ I f I en Aug. 1 from Ivern Thompson, Winnipeg, snow .... 24 20 .02 publish the weekly News; his son,, Park Rapids. Minn. His " farad today son now represents the third Mazel said the Dru'yon prob- 463 E. 4th St., was (T—Trace) parents, one brother and one ably will be and walking to- at 7:10 a.m. parked behind a AIRPORT WEATHER generation a_ editor and pub- sister have died. up SlLtai avail- J. lisher. day and will be back at work \\s\\Wi Rochester bar, Chief McCabe North Central Observations Funeral services will be held in two or three weeks. said, It had apparently been Max. temp. 41 today at noon, Mr. Mack married Gladys Saturday at 2 p.m. at Commun- Goocher Sept. 13, , The couple came to Chicago abandoned several days ago, be min. temp. 37 today at 8 a.m., 1919 after ity Presbyterian Church, Plain- two weeks ago so Dru'yor, 62, Provincial added. broken cloud layer at 900 feet serving with the Navy in the Charles H. c -i ¦. $*1Q100 view, the Rev. who had a heart condition for special . jr china 4 cane back Thompon's car was stolen and overcast at 4,000 feet, visi- United States and Europe dur- Schwenke officiating. Burial seven / years, could have a 1Q jWT > from in front of his home late bility four miles, south-southeast ing World War I. He was a will be in Greenwood Cemetery checkup. His wife, 60, decided ^^ ^^ ^^ chairs, oval extension on the night of July 31. At the wind at 5 m.p.h., barometer graduate of Plainview High and graveside military services to have one while she was here table 42"x_-"x72", plaa- time, police believed It might 30.12 and falling, humidity 86 School and worked as a lino- will be conducted by his Amer- — and the tests disclosed that have been taken by the same percent. type operator and newspaper ican Legion post, she had a similar condition, on- man who abandoned a stolen publisher in several Iowa and Friends may call at Johnson- ly worse. car near the sewage disposal Minnesota towns before going Schriver Funeral Home from after be- St., reported Wednesday night to work as a commercial print- They checked Into the Mine plant earlier that night Friday noon to Saturday noon room at Edgewater ing chased from Horner, Minn., that a storm window on the east er in Minneapolis. and at the church after 1 p.m. Hospital by a Minnesota Highway Pa- side of her house was broken He returned to Plainview In and underwent surgery one-aft- 8:15 p.m. 1943 after 20 years in Minne- Ida Nelson er - the - other. Each operation trolman. about Mrs. lasted about one hour. Chief McCabe said that Ro- She told police that she ran apolis to become editor of his BLAIR, Wis. (Special) - no one: Police father's newspaper. He retired Nelson, 75, collapsed Mazel, head of a seven - man chester police have not arrest- outside but saw Mrs Ida surgical team which performed ed anyone in connection with found no missile which might from active newspaper work in and died Wednesday noon after home from shopping, the operations, said the surgery finding the stolen Thompson have been used to break the 1958 but left his son on the job returning is designed to give the patjent window. Value of the window as editor and publisher, She fell as she was about bo CAT leading to her a balanced supply of blood. Mrs., Earl Seebold, 426 E. 4th was not given. Mr. Mack was a member of enter the porch "We took him in at 8 a.m., second floor apartment. She had finished him at 9 had a heart condition 1V4 years, , then he went The former Ida Severson, she to the recovery room," Mazel Many "Dear" Hunt ers Like Our Food in North Beaver said. "I went down and told his (top by for early breakfast before th.tr trip, «thtrs like was born wife that everything was Sort* Creek, rural Ettrick, Sept. 15, fine. to atop by for a frlondly plait of boor and r*fr**hl_0 dlnnor of four children of We operated on her at 10, and altar thty pel back (tlrtd and hungry, it always loatnt). And 1890, one were through by 11, " qultf a low sportsman h_v« discovered how easy It It to hava ua Mr. ^and Mrs. Lars Severson. ack lurtch's for tha trip Itself. Any Item an our menu can ba She was married to Bernard Hospital officials said the cou- OR ... something modern r£> ber of years and then farmed anxiety for each other that in walnut with plastic table top. near Osseo until his death 11 might possibly cause further moved to years ago, when she damage to their hearts. Thia la Ju»f a Partial Lifting, Monjr Chairs and Varying Styles of Table*, Chinai, Blair. Mazel has performed more Survivors are: Two daught- than 200 such operations. Buffets and Hutches Available. ers, Mrs. Alvin (Doris) Lee, Dru'yor is president of Travel J J\ pH0NI F0R CARRYOUTS rural Black River Falls, and Mat , Inc., a national paper mat """v)\ 2622 w Helen, Los Angeles, Calif.; printer. THREE WAYS TO BUY! eight grandchildren; three He formerly published the Terms As Low As $5 Monthly great-grandchildren, and one now - defunct Crawford County • Gash • 30-60-90-Day • slater, Mrs. Clara Utne, Blair. Press, a weekly newspaper. Funeral services will be Sat- urday at 2:30 p.m. at Zion Lu- theran Church, the Rev. h. H. SPEAKER AT HARMONY SHORTY'Sand | Jacobson officiating. Burial HARMONY , Minn. (Special) qiJutoita fl^H^L BAR-CAFE—Corn.. Hark Gintir will be in South Beef River — Martin Elstad, Canton teach- FURNITURE CO. \M Church Cemetery near Osseo. er, a commander in the U. S. Furniture Is Not Expensive" I ' "¦ ' ¦--' -—L-mwmmm~~~~--ma—- *^m Navy Air Reserve, was speaker "Where Quality jW______mri___ Friends may call at Frederta- ^""^^^^H^^Mi^^^Htf ' on Funeral Home Friday after- at a Veterans Day program Phom 3145 I ^^m^m^^^^^^^^^^^m ^m ^^ noon and Saturday morning and presented at Harmony High 160 Main Si at the church after noon. School auditorium today. Potentially Hawk Bucketeers Are Sound Unit...BUT... ," mused Kenney wry- By GARY EVANS was elevated from the "B" squad to the var- Now assuming everyone was ready to go, Basically, the Hawks are favored by their "That's all they'd need (Harmony y Daily News Sports Editor sity Jan. 9 last year, missing by six the quarters selecting a starting unit probably would be no schedule. Their first three games Nov. " conference quickly, necessary to letter. He had 16. problem. It seems 19, Minneapolis Roosevelt Nov. 28 and the Big Reviewing the rest of the natural that Addington and , Northfield ai start- Make an analysis of Winona High School's And also there is Paul Plachecki , the 6-6 jun- Hazelton would fall into guard roles, Larson and Nine opener with Owatonna Dec. 3) are at home. Austin hal three starters back er and a 6-5 transfer who has the tools for star- basketball team and your thinking always seems ior who was a leading performer on Bob Lee's Benz into forward spots and Plachecki into the Then they play at Albert Lea Dec. 10 before starter each outstanding sophomore unit. pivot. tackling Rochester at home Dec. 17. The holiday dom, Faribault and Red Wing one to lead back to the same spot : potentially good, , none. Also returning are 5-11 lettermen John Ahrens Right now, for practice purposes, Plachecki break follows. and Mankato and Albert Lea # but . . . And, no doubt, Kenney expects a typical title and John Walski, both guards a year ago. is the center, Walski and Larson the forwards "We aren't looking past any of those," he Certainly, back are two bona fide starters, BUT. and Hazelton and Ahrens the guards. And that fipi* -_ Tnb_6 stated. "Those five games can tell us a lot." Other than the lettermen and holdovers from plus another who can be considered that , another Benz aggravated a knee injury in the final is not likely to change before Friday when the Art who saw extensive duty and a $-6 junior who While Owatonna and AJbert Lea probably will last year, working out are: Scott Harmon, football game against Austin last Friday and Hawks run against St. Charles in a scrimmage Pat Hopf, could have much to say. here. not be in the chase for Big Nine roses, both Humphries, Roland Austin, Steve Moen, Kenney doubts that he will be ready for full-speed David Block. But also on the scene are two injuries that duty until after Jan. 1. And Addington suffered a Friday also marks the day of the first and could create a stir. Owatonna has a pair of start- George Hubbard, John Foster and could have more than a little effect on the club. only cut Kenney ers back and Albert Lea is tough at home. HAWK NOTES : Once again in command of shoulder dislocation that could handicap him. He will make. He has 15 boys whose team Fulltime starters back from last year are is working out. drilling. Three or four will go. Then, of course, comes mighty John Marshall. the "B" squad will be Bob Lee, 6-1 guard Gary Addington and 6-5 forward Larry "He could be ready for Harmony," said "-.dually, 't for the notched a 13-4 mark , last year ... . if it weren two injuries, True, the Rockets no longer have Dave Daught- night. Larson. Both are seniors. Then there is 5-9 Don Kenney of Addington. "It's just a question of we'd be in good shape," said Kenney. "Of course erly and Fred King. But they do have the likes Kenney has set Monday as parents Hazelton , a guard , who started three-fourths of whether or not he gets it bumped in practice. I've the boys who were out for football of Bill Schwartz , Activities will get under way at 7 p.m. . : are in good , Darrell Moon, Larry Noser junior: vasr- the season and was a leading performer in the seen that happen before,", ' condition and the' others seem ready also. But Rick Bowron, Bryce Kommerstad, Al Fierke and The Hawks this year have eight one-point tournament loss to Rochester. Harmony, incidentally, marks the Winona with the injuries, we could get off to a slow Al Hiley. And it also is rumored that the JM sity games scheduled and need just one mora Also back is 6-1 forward Loren Benz, who High opener Nov. 19. start. " forces have captured a 6-6 transfer. to fill.. - . . ' QUESTION FOR ST. MARY'S B' To By GARY EVANSOr Notsons) are three starters andto the sixth and seventh .?men. Daily News Sports Editor Returning starters are 6-6 senior forward and captain Rog Pytlewski (the-only senior on the unit, incidentally) , 6-0 To "B" or hot to "B"? junior guard Jerry Sauser and 6-4% junior forward-center That, interested citizens, is the question being pondered George Hoder. Jim. Buffo , 6-1 junior guard-forward, was No. on the St. Mary's College campus as the basketball season 6 man last year and Dennis Ludden, 6-1 junior guard, the approaches. seventh man. You see, the entire problem surrounds 6-10 transfer Gary Also back are <6-5 junior center-forward Jim Murphy, 8-3 Addis, the La Crosse Logan marvel, who is (hopefully) be- sophomore guard-forward Tom Keenan and 6-3 junior Ward ginning a basketball tenure with Ken Wiltgen's Redmen. Hertsted. Since Addis is here after beginning his college education Completing the transfer picture is 6-2 sophomore guard- at Gannon, Pa., College, he won't be eligible to compete until forward Jerry Westemeyer, here from Gonzaga. Dec. 17. But since he also is on a St. Mary's College scholar- Because of tbe returnees Wiltgen says: "I'd like to ship (academic) he needs a "B" average to keep it. think we'll be prefcty good. We're big enough and potentially "Now we're going to have to wait and see," said Wiltgen. good enough." SECOND TIME . . . The "He is an excellent student, but..." But there are a couple of problems. The most major is Say Hey Kid, who won the JUST LOOK AT 'EM . . . This is a ing a Winona High drill one day last season. But make no mistake. Even without the giant from La how the Redmen wall fare defensively. National League's Most Val- sight that will make a football coach proud, Shown are Hawk varsity, "B" squad, fresh- Crosse, the Redmen potentially are a sound unit. "Right now we don't have that man who can take an uable Player award in 1954, Back from the team that compiled (that opponent' Daily News Photographer Merritt Kelley got men and junior high teams in action. (See a 17-9 record is s leading scorer and do a job on him," said Wiltgen, did it again this year and this pattern of action at Jefferson Field dur- Let's Talk Sports) the same mark St. Mary's has had for two consecutive sea- who misses departed graduate George Valaika. "We're going to miss Valaika more than (Mike, graduated guard) Maloney promptly went out for a for that reason. But Mike was my leader and we're going round of golf Wednesday. to have to find someone for that job, too." The remarkable San Fran- And, of course, then you ask where the Redmen could cisco Giants centerfielder, X Thurley Is finish in the Mianesta Intercollegiate Athletic Conference. Willie Mays, was on every ¦ ' _m ___w$?' \uW "Anywhere except 17-9 for the season and 9-7 in the con- ballot cast by delegates who Is This End - _^ii$ (Continued on Page 17) chose him. (AP Photofax) ¦¦ ¦ ¦ TO 'B' OR NOT 1 SPF ¦ W Of Road for JPI Top Scorer ¦ :l ; v • , • ; • '• • • • . "¦ ^ -^PlP0RTS It was Winona's male bowl- HAMLINE UNIVERSITY WILL tell nothing but nice tales ing population that made the Ray? about John Kobs. That is the way it should be since the majority of news Wednesday Sugar night although top ten depart- former Lake City man is one of the school' s greatest all- ments went unchallenged. PITTSBURGH >b Miretiantt Bank 7'^ 2J'^ ACB P POUR-CITY Athlatlc Club urdue Riding W. I. Mondovi Equity on Retribution Road? Hal-Rotf Palnla Morcbanti Bank lt 11 LAFAYETTE. Ind. (AP) ~ aroused Ball'! Bar M Schmldt'i Beer 11 14 Boilermakers blasted Purdue is 3-2 in the Big Ten runner, halfback Dave Colburn, The contest also matches two Burmalttar oil is Jirry'i Plumbiri lt 14 Oft-Denied Purdue, lb Rosa Wisconsin 45-7 last Saturday. this season, compared to Minne- Lant'i Bar 1» Winona Hilling Co lt 14 for the remainder of the season of the top passers in the nation Chrlttantan Orvsa it Hamernlk'i Bar II II Begins Building Bowl hopes and The Boilermakers, who have «. A. KrauM .,.., « championship sota 4-1 mark. with a broken collarbone. With Winona viti cab tt 11 never made the trip to in Minnesota's John Hankinson Mlka'* Plna PMd. IB MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) — ambitions only a cruel memory, Pasa- The Minnesota-Purdue tussle Olrtlar OH le CLASS "A" dena, also have Colburn on the sidelines, the and Griese. Rid Mm The Mondovi Co-op Equity Asso- attempts to take a second an old score to Is traditionally one of the hard- Cantral Moltri » W. I. step settle with the Gophers. A 14-7 Gophers were able to gain only Hankinson, with two games Oaldan Brand Poodi 1« Winona Boxcralt ca .11 1 ciation held ground breaking on the road to retribution est hitting struggles of any sea- Wllllami Olin Houit it Ounn'i Blacktop u 11 Satur- defeat at the hands 75 yards rushing last Saturday remaining, Winona Truck tirvlci is day when the Boilermakers of the Go- son. has already broke Wlnana Milk Co II 17 ceremonies last wweek for its host phers late last season cost Pur- against Northwestern. most of the school passing Parman Ca«> n Kalmii Tlrea It 31 Minnesota. due a share of Statistics show that the Go- WINONA CLASSIC new mill and bulk feed plant to Purdue was sailing the Big Ten title phers Purdue had been relying heav- marks. He has completed 89 of Athlatlc Club W. L, toward an with Michigan and a trip to the have gained over 50 yards ily on the passing of Bob Griese 173 tosses for 1,175 yards and Hot Flit) Shop ,. 1* 11 replace the mill destroyed by unbeaten season, a conference a game more than Purdue on Buk'i Baar U 14 Rose Bowl. until the Boilermakers broke seven touchdowns. He is also Hamm'i Baar U ti fire in November 1964. title and possible national cham- the ground. But Purdue is ex- MMiwoir .. is li Purdue finished 5-2 last year loose for 253 yards on the ground the Gophers' top scorer with 36 Bmll'i Arcadia Golf Albert Heck, board president, pionship when a fourth quarter and handed pected to field a much more po- points, •aMan . rat SAittut cluk ..u u letup against Michigan champion Michigan tent running attack. against Wisconsin. Rd Buck'i Camira Shop . 11 1. turned the first shovel of dirt State its only league loss 21-20. "They finally turned loose Purdue had gained 1,484 yards RRTAIL Oct. 23 coat the Boflerosakera The Boilermakers The Boilermakers have aver- Gordon Teter and John Kuzniew- through the air in seven games Hal-Rod W. L. Polnti Other members present were: two touchdowns had 33 re- Sunburn Cakaa II 1> U and a 14-10 de- turning aged 109.2 yards rushing in five , 1 IS 12 24 Banquet Set feat. lettermen and is regu- akt-a couple ot bulls " said Go- before switching Its emphasis to BTI Herman Linse, Edward Linse, lars from last.year , so ¦ 5*2-1 league games, compared with pher assistant coach Wally the ground against Wisconsin. Bahrani l» » « (Special) Illinois upset Purdue 21-0 Panka "•• H M it ARCADIA. Wis. - Rufus Machmeier, Gerald Eds, the record to date is somewhat of a Minnesota's 163.6 average. Johnson, who scouted the Boil- Griese threw only nine passes Lang's Bar IS IS 21 The annual banquet and awards following week before the disappointment. WBS Hopto 14 14 ti secretary - . treasurer; Marvin But Minnesota has lost Its top ermakers. and completed five for Si yards. IOA .., II IS 2t night of the Arcadia Men's and Don. * Moy, Marvin Stay, vice presi- Bub't 14 H » Women's golfing associations Main Tavam i> is it , and D. L. Mahlka Do-Null U is 11 will be held at Arcadia Country dent; Clarence Ness St. Claln u 17 1; Club Sunday, beginning with a Soholt, manager. Sportunan'i Tap 10 10 11 Headaches + COMM.SRCIAL social hour at 6:30 p.m. The new mill will have ths SPORTS nirflu* — . s.. Reservations for the banquet latest milling equipment, includ- Orv'» Sktlly 11 I Wlnana Rug Clianlng li t are to be made with Howard ing premixer, vertical and Pappy'* 1» 11 Reedy by Friday noon. Tro- horizontal mixers, an air sys- Big Expense: SHORTS MeNally ButlSart is ^1 Spiltx Takaeo IS 11 phies and awards for the 1965 tem device for moving grains, Sprlngar Slsna u it !|olfing season will be presented which meets the Federal Food By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Qualify Chivrolit 14 ;t Bam'a Dlract Sirvlca ...... 14 it ollowing dinner. and Drug Administration's re- Unbeaten Maine has closed Schlitz Baar 14 14 Music for dancing will be fur- quirements, snd a large roller Racing Tale Vine A Milla 11 11 the gap in its bid. to replace Cltga larvloa ? 11 nished by the Louis Schuth Or- mill capable of rolling ear corn North Dakota State as the na- AlbracM't 4 It chestra. as well as any other grains. LAUBJBL, Md. (AP) - tion's small-college football WBSTOATB MSN laurel Waitgata Polnti The building will be erected race track officials will spend leader. Ruppart'i Orociry .34 on property owned by the Bia. _ standard it an estimated $250,000 to stage The Black Bears trail North Mjmwiil Htuaa C»H«a 11 Dormitory Council Equity to the rear of the East the 14th running of the Dakota State by only 18 points Winona Cluning Worki ?. Side Service Station. The drive- Washing- in the latest balloting by a spe- Ortdan Po«d ; 1. , with ton, D.C, International Wundarllch Inauranca it Elects Officer way will be on the west r today. cial panel of 14 regional experts Koahiir Auto Sody W/a the grain dump on the south, But they gladly would have Mltikl Block* » in the weekly Associated Press . Montgomary Warda n Miss Patricia Swanson, White and the load-out on the east spent more to save tho head- Maine was 41 points be- Swada'a Liquor Stori, Stockton . il There will be ample parking fa- Soil. L-Covi Bar 11 Bear Lake, Minn., has been ind a week ago. Praddy cilities. aches that have plagued them ¦ 't Sir, Stockton 11 elected treasurer of the Wom- ». O'Laughlin Plumbing 11 en's Dormitory Council at Wi- since they started putting the • • Pidaratat Inauranca iTVk Winona County .,.. nona State College. field together for the 1%-miIe KANS AS CITY — St. Abttract Ca. ?! INDEPENDENCE SALE John's of Minnesota retain- Unltad Parcal Sarvlc* 11 She joins an executive board graft course event. ed its No. 1 ranking In the MAJORRTTR INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- Athlatlc Clut W. L. composed of Elizabeth Walters, cial) — American Legion Post John Schaplro, president of latest NAIA football poll by Squara Dili ,.. Jt | Bloomington, president; Ann closing its Pleaunt vallay Dairy 10 It 186 will have its annual sale the track located midway be- regular season Wlnana induaMaa 11 n Williams, Edina, vice presl- Sunday afternoon and evening with a 10-0 victory over de- Sd Phllllpi 14 it dent, and Rosemary Roberts, tween Baltimore and Washing- Ragan's iniuranca Agancy . 11 10 at Club 188. Dressed ducks, tur- ton, gave the figures fending NAIA cot-champion Lang'i Bar ... I 14 East Long Meadow, Mass., sec- keys, geese snd capons will be after the Concordia, Mian. SUNSSTTBRS retary. ' field had been cut to seven Waitgata W. L. available. The Legion Auxiliary Sul Ross State of Texas Boland's Mlg .... If 14 Three members-at-large were will serve lunch. Club 186 on Wednesday by the withdrawal retained second place In the Commadon club II is also elected to present the three Mankato Bar 11 it Highway 121 east of Indepen- of Hill Rise. HAWK RETURNEES . . . These are Wi- and John Walski. The Hawks, under John poll and Northern Michi- Meft'i Markat 11 15 women's residence halls. They dence was remodeled last sum- Nov; 10 against gan climbed from eighth to Schllf- Bur 1. u are Janet Arts, Harmony, Con- mer. A large new kitchen was Hill Rise, last to be invited nona High School's returning basketball let- Kenney, open their season third. Others in the top id Jordan's tt 1. termen. From left are forward Larry Larson Harmony at Central Auditorium. (Daily News Ooltt Pharmacy 11 it way Hall; Kathryn Scheevel, added to accommodate groups but second choice in the ad- \ are East Stroudsburg, Pa.; lunbum Swaata II lt Spring Grove, Lucas Hall, and of more than 500. Modern and guards Gary Addington, John Ahrens Sports Photo) WBSTSATI MIXHRS rest* vance line, developed a 103-de- East Central Oklahoma. Westgata W. L. Judy Rose, St. Charles, Rich- room facilities were installed. gree temperature Wednesday Ottawa, Kan.; Omaha, von Rohr Drug » » ards Hall. to rent tht Da Luxa Biauty Shop 1H4• nvb Anyone wsnting club morning following a satisfactory Neb.; Fairmont, W. Va.; Ooldan Brand .11 11 Mrs. Le Roy Stadler, assist- until Dec. 1 and after March 1 workout. Owner George A,. Pope Southern Colorado and Wil- Skelly Olli M II Marigold Dairlaa ...... It 17 ant residence hall director, is may make reservations at Kern Jr. lost no time withdrawing Ids Wiza Leads llatnette. Ore., tied for Bay Stata 111. 11V_ the adviser of the council. Furniture Store. 4-year-old, who had scored an rd To W Or Not ninth and 10th. ' •¦ " •¦ impressive victory in the Man o'- (Continued from Page 16) .? • War at Aqueduct his last time Knicks ference (the Redman's mark for the past three years) ," NEW YORK - Howard Twil- out. Past smiled Wiltgen. Of course, his tone meant better things are ley, Tulsa's pass-catching whiz, The withdrawal of Hill Rise expected. • continues to pull away in rec- . was tbe latest in the long line of 'Last year, the Redmen were perhaps seven men deep. ord-breaking fashion from his disappointments as Schapfro Wonderland This year Wiltgen expects bigger things from his bench. major college football opposi- organized the field. First he had tion in scoring and pass receiv- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS "We should be tougher there," he assesses. "Keenan is NEW hoped to get Kelso, the world's pretty good and Hertsted could help." ing. | GC> FOF ^U£^N^ leading money winner, but the The Wizard of Oz led the New The S-foot-10 end caught 15 York Knickerbockers through Since the school now offers no athletic scholarships, fresh- 1964 International winner and men talent list year was lean. The picture, at least until this passes and scored 86 point* on five times America's Horse of Wonderland agam and he's got , Hartr Gallatin about ready to week, was brighter. five touchdowns a two-point the Year, suffered an eye ¦ _ ___- I______M ______K M______. ¦ ¦ inju- Making up the unit working under former St. Mary's and conversion and four conversion ' A«- --W-- « M E - ! - - j__^_r^M 1UH_1 ry. .:¦ - . . start talking back to that loOk- i ^T^^mT____W______WSmMmmWMkWk9 Winona State star Tom Stallinga, now the Redmen assistant kicks against Louisville Satur t Myk&vgM ff l : ' ' coach while doing his practice teaching at Washington-Kos- day, f m _j_ Before and after there were ^Ii -:::n_&nM :|o^- ' unc_ -r' the <^vffVP^9_____l___P^______such : other setbacks .as: Tom nanie sof Oscar Roberbjon and ciusko and Cental Junior High schools, are two members of Rolfe,' foremost American he Dlny^s backcourt for the the Cotter team that took second place in the state Catholic It's a good thing for the 3- year ago. i tournamenta rest of the league that Keith *'_W*f ______w___W i *%• &3&&$a|dJ! year-old, declinedthe issue; Inl- Cinamwti Itoyals. But he's the Jp j &&t« _nBH______m______rS__B_M______W__^n_____il__i______^ ' _ . *&AJba/_, K.M______and's Meadow Court failed to WJjstd all right. Just ask Galla- They are 64 guard Bill Browne and 6-3 forward Dan Lincoln still has a sore right t hold the form he showed ln win- tin end the refit of the National PelowsU, who Wiltgen feels shows much promise. Then there foot. The San Diego Charg- ning tile Irish Derby; owners of Basketball AssoclaUcra coaches are 5-10 Bob Souchak, »-2 Tim Balakas, 6-0 Tim Lamb and ers' fallback only scored Sea Bird and Reliance, Eu- whose, dubs must play the Roy- 6-10 John Mastarson.0nc« on hand were Cotter's M Joe Wil- three touchdowns and pass- denborg and a W seminarian. Now both have departed. ed for another last week. t J^f ^^M^M^M^M^M^M^M^MW—^maaMMMMMMmaWaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaWkWM ' rope's , two best S-year-olds, ad- sis, . , j ^ —^ vised their colts would not be Oscar, had a routine night "Where we once had some size, now we have none " Imagine what he would f' ^ __i______-______-______-______available; England's Coovar- agaliist the Knickerbockers said the coach. have done If he had been more turned up lame; Italy s Wednseday.He scored 41 points Cn the conference scene, Wiltgen expects St. Thomas and healthy? ' Gustavus, both with four starters returning, to be the fav- Hazeltine was Injured in a and tacked on 17 assist* as the For this fine performance *wM___l______4tfBlM^^^^^B^^^^^^^^^^B-______K ri Hi III , its orites. workout; Russia's Anallne Royals handed New York "But at least," he says, "we won't be fighting that against the Denver Broncos third in 1964, failed to appear, 14th straight loss In Wonderland size." In a 35-21 victory, Lincoln t and Venezuela's Calces came ... er Cincinnati124-110. Both Augsburg giant Dan Anderson and University of was named today The As- down with colic shortly before The Knicks, who play like a sociated Press' Offensive %^/ ^^M ______^M wag Cincinnati, Mlnnesota-Duluth's towering Mike Patterson are departed. _^^^^^^^W^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^K he scheduled to leave Cara- Jinxed club in "Unless someone has gotten s big man (and UMD cap- Player of the Week in the ^^ cas. opened an 11-point lead in the tured Eau Claire Memorial stars 6-9 Jeff Ellenson and 6-5 American Football League. The International is a race ln second period but saw it whither ) surge by Robert- Gary Rheinganns I don't know about, there shouldn't be y ^WW which Laurel picks up the entire away under a the real big one left," said the coach. mmamWmaaaWaaaaWaa ^mmWmWmWmWmWmWmWmWmWMmWm ^iW^a check for shipping of the horses son and Co. Except Addis that Is. f jy| W_ and the expenses of the owners, Jerry Lucas helped the Big O, 3BK_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^__%^_^^^_^_^_ pulling St. Mary's opens its season against Lakeland here Dee. Winona Boxers trainers, jockeys and other han- scoring 28 points and 1 and gets its first taste of conference competition at Gus- dlers. There is no entry fee. down 21 rebounds. Dick Barnett III FL tavus on Dec. 11. __ * _Rn ______ifpl l______9r_t_^^Bilwi_^^ ^^^^^^^^^H^^^HB^Bp^ilp led New York with 36. against Jerry West and Elgin Baylor "And that," said Wiltgen, who will run his team Win 3 Bouts y is between Winona State in a Saturday scrimmage, "would be a good _ % i j Hiiiii ii^^ SPORTS SCORES combined for 70 points Winona fighters won three IT one to win ..." HHIffflTlB • then as Los Angeles ripped De- bouts and lost three in action glj|Mg^lj.^w-•(r____w i^illp I _nll_Trlii_-n--nnrfTi^B--t^^BI^ ,-77 "w'*" NBA troit 133-125 and Baltimore stood ^'_WMM_-_}_-__ Wm\wMma\mmmW __ * >' WIDNRSDAY'S RRIULTS FAVORED at Rochester's Mayo Auditorium ,l ^ ^^ Cincinnati 124, New York 111. off a late St. Louis surge and LACUNA Friday night. -^____H___i___l-_D______fw______Rittfmori 114, tt. -wlf III. beat the Hawks 134.117 in the Ui AngelM 131, D*tr_ lt III. MgW YORK (AP) - Ismael Wisconsin Winona fighters were paced TODAY'S OAMES only other NBA games played Laguna the world lightweight Sin Francisco vi. Phllidalphla a< , by stalwart Tom Van Hoof, who Wednesday. _^>#__THI___I______M_**M8-M-HFn -_____P-V_!_H__M _ _J_-B_B _ Boilon. boxing champjon from Panama, chopped up Dan Geng of Min- ;'***. i % * \ M . ^ y_M___-toTO-J_4 Hal CWdtittr, Jack early draft. an Boehmer, Sidney Lee, Lyle Oribli, Ortfl MlllK. . rat Naltul, Dan Tho AFL action, announced tion came to light from the understand the NFL has made Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. Don flittitir Tony Rotanew, Tom Roianaw, by Commissioner Joe Foss, ig- practice of players being hidden elaborate plans again for baby- Hulbregtse. Mrs. Huibregtse Dara Schaltntr, Curt fchlonar, Daimli sitting with and we TacM, Bill Wojchlk, Diva Wolchlk, Kan nited the college-pro controver- away for several days prior to prospects won first place In the first flight Walclilk. J«tf H«n»n (man*«*r). Jury dispute the fast two drafts. I think It's in want to get the chance to talk CMrad (managir). Stova Krvmhali sy all over again. The and with her husband took first (man_g*r). raged last year over alleged the best interest of all that we with these prospects." place ln the Pa and Ma tour- rOOTBALL NUMIRAL WINNBNS - pUyer-hlding, do our best to try and eliminate Mlka Btur.i, Bill BoiMI, Tad Bra.ti. Tar- secret drafts, Commissioner Pete Roxelle of nament. ry Braun. Ooan Dlackman, Scot) Jahm- early slgnlngs and double slgn- an Increasingly unhealthy situa- ¦ rvi Baa Kantar, Oary Kraut*, Jaiin tion." the NFL didn't «ay anything KrtaMl, Jtff Laimtnck. Lanny Latlaar, ings. about the baby-sitting charges WILL COMPETE John Lodntkl Brian Ichnltpp, Oarv latin. Rlcli Voti, Ran I»ch«i, oicfc Following that extended bat- nut James Corbott ef Louisi- but ha did say the league tenta- BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - Wlclu, Jahn Rutin, Larry Brntt. told the ana State, chairman of the tively Is planning its draft for Gaston Roelsnta, the Olympic SAIIBALL LITTBRMBN (SUMMHR tle, both pro league! INI) - Rich AMa Bth Baurot, Tad National Collegiate Athletic As- NCAA committee on pro rela- Nov. 27, "ln accordance with steeplechase champion from Brtati, David Binning. Jim BrtnuMM, sociation they would refrain tions, didn't take that view. the wishes of colleges and uni- Belgium, has accepted Invita- Dan Dlttrlch, Bill Haritman, John Kan- , compete in Indoor track nal, Tom Roiinow, lob Walla, from Signing players before "The AFL action," he said versities. tions to NUMBRAL WINMRNS OR CBRTIfl- MmxW ON-THl.l»ARrV. TRACTOR The "makes a mockery of that "However, we may be forced meets at Los Angeles, Jan. 22 CATS OP PARTICIPATION - ttava .« _. ._.*_..__. .. TIRI SIRVICI their eligibility had ended. Avar, Rich Burmalitir, Mlka Baurai, BOB OOEMAN, Manager NCAA also asked that the drafts league's agreement with the to draft much sooner if others and New York, Jan. 27, it wns Vlnca Ooli, Oary Kr*u»a, Lanala Rahrar. be held no earlier than Nov. 27, NCAA and Its member collegs. fall to honor request*," announced here today. Kan Walctilk. Farm Implements lever stalls 29, good USUSED JAMESWAY LOST bright carpet colors . . . restore 8- Arlen S^itt, Foun- ANOTHER LARGE c * ** C687-3840. BILLMERRIUS Want Ads them with Blue Lustre. Rent electric tain City, Wis. Tel. Slip shampooer, SI R. D. Cone Co. Stocks . SALE Ova LUCAS WANTED-oood Super H tractor with Fountain. WE'VE NOTIFIED the mailman, the Located at edge of Wiscon- hydraulkf Tracy Bed.len, Start Here delivery man, too; and now we're tak- 6M960. Princess Takes sin Rapids, Wis., city limits Mi nn, Tel, - ing the . time tell It to you . . . our new unloader. 14' and BLIND ADS UNCALLED F0R- address Is 227 E. 4th St., corner of on County Highway F, ad- USED BADGER silo In Veterans Franklin. W. 8ETSINGER, Tailor. V Dale unloaders and ,- also new Van joining the radio tower or .&' Lewie- t>-M, H 100. E-J. Vesper on bunk feeders. Allyn Tews. Tel. MABEL/ ple.se came home; since we 7 miles east of ton, 2796. have twltdied to Mobil Fuel Oil your F. ^ ^ Desert NOTICE County Highway corn Look at room and the whole house much AHIi mounted I* MODEL D-17 Thli ntwspapt r will bt r««pen.fbl» LATE TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Brit- rived Wednesday from Los An- ' more comfortable. picker, all new gears and rear end. Today we re going to observe Day Trading for only Incorrect InMrtlon ot 15 on* Nov . Rushford, _ Monday, J2O0. Bernard Jacobson, ain's Princess Margaret gets a geles for a 4V -day rest to break that disappointments are not all any classlflwf advcrtlument publish- ATTENTION COIN collectors, see page m NEW YORK (AP)-The stock ed In Ihs Want Ad taction. Check Starting at 12:00 Sharp. Minn. look at the stark beauty of the up their three-week tour of the 71, Nov, m Issue Numismatic News. I your ad and call 3321 If a correction have them. OKofns Si Supplies, 7Z7 W. bad. Some good may come from market was irregularly lower Be Early As Sale Starts HOMELITE CHAIN £*£»¦ - »"j| » old West today—and probably a United States. must be mada. 2nd, Wlnons, Minn '*" reverses. early this afternoon in slack . Promptly — Tractors and and sales. AUTO ELECTRIC SERV- kitchen refrigerator where an ICE, 2nd and Johnson. Tal. 5455. invitation to her wedding once No trace of the laryngitis that Many a destiny has been Veterans Day trading. Card of Thanks ARE YOU A PROBLEM DRINKER?- Rolling Equipment Sold In- Man or woman your drinking creates SHARPENING by longer lasting Loa An- numerous problems. If you need and side. All Items Subject to DISC was stored. plagued her in smoggy shapened by circumstances. Aluminum shares showed McNALLY — metal saving rolling. Fred Kranx. St. help, contact Alcoholics Anony- when she Thanki to all our relatives, neighbors *yant Prior Sale Will Be Reason- Chsrlei, Minn. Tel. 932-4308. The princess and her hus- geles was present some sharp losses following the mous, Pioneer Group c/o Sometimes what appears to be and friends for rememberlm) u» wit General De- For More made a planeside speech at Da- rescinding of the aluminum - livery, Winona, Minn. ably Replaced. band, the Earl oi Snowdon, ar- a reverse will prove the turning cards, flowera and gilts during my stay Collect 423- V-S-Monthan Air Force Base. price boost as a result of a gov- at Rochester Methodist Hospital and Information Call Attention Farmers TRUSSES—ABDOMINAL BELTS clearance, prices slashed. Ex. point of one's life. ernment plan to release stock- recuperation at home. Thank you to SACROILIAC SUPPORTS 4279. Picker Waiting at the plane along Pastor Mennlcke for his visits, also TRACTORS ample: Woods single row, was S26S, were I once encouraged an employ- piled aluminum on the market. special thanks to all our employees tor GOLTZ PHARMACY now J150; Minneapolis Moline, was with Gov. Sam Goddard their extra efforts and gifts and to all 6000. Ford Diesel $225, now S125; 7 more fo pick from, 274 E. 3rd Tet 2347 63 Model her host, Lewis Douglas, and his er to utilize my services to a Brokers also cited the Rhode- our customers for their patience and with wide front; 63 Model we are going to sell them; 42 and .34 Caught Sharman, sian declaration of independ- understanding. ft. 2-wheel elevators, like new; 4-2 bot- Man daughter, Christ wife. Their greater degree, seeing only the Bruca McNalty S, Family Auto Service, Repairing 10 Oliver Diesel with wide tom plows. Will trade. See and Princess Margaret became immediate increase in my in- ence as a caution-breeding front; 61 Model D-17 Allis Moen; Beach es Corner. close friends when Douglas was piece of news. SPITZER - I wish to thank my friends, neighbors Gas with wide front; 63 BOU-MATIC MILKERS come, while I was at that par- milking parlor. ambassador to Great Britain in and relatives for cards, visits and Case Comfort- Bucket, pipeline or Losses of a point or more Model 930 S. Dairy Supplies After Stealing ticular task. In my mind the calls, while I was In tha hospital. Spe- WINTERIZE Ed's Refrigeration 1948-50. Ring; 62 Model 930 Case; Tel. SHI were also taken during the cial thanks to Father Nelson and S55 E. 4th best thing that could have hap- Margie, 61 Model GV1 Moline Dies- Douglas invited 200 neighbors, pened at that point in my life, morning by some of the recent Vernon Spltzer YOUR CAR big gainers among color televi- el; 59 Model GB Moline Opportunities 37 business acquaintances and was to get the boss to go along Farm- Business sion makers, aerospace stocks Lost and Found 4 While you shop Diesel; 61 Model 560 Sheriff' friends to a cocktail party buslnesa with my desires. Circumstances 85 Mas- RESTAURANT s Car and airlines, but a number of all Diesel; 60 Model ESTABLISHED Wednesday night at the -pictur- and I was forced LOST—Coonhound, yellow, south of Stock- We'll add Anti-Freeze to for sale. Good Income from connecting (AP) prevented this, • sey Ferguson Diesel; 60 Write D-n WARREN, Minn. - A these declines were tripped as ton, Albert Nako Jr., Minnesota City bowling alley Included. esque Arizona Inn to meet the to find another source cf the test to 34 Below Model 65 Massey Ferguson ' man who allegedly disarmed the session wore on: or Robert Anderson, 442 E. 10th, Wi- Dally News. royal pair. extra income I felt the need of. nona. • Check for Hose Breaks Diesel; 62 Model 3010 John and handcuffed three law offi- Alcoa was the worst sufferer SMALL RESTAURANT downtown jOOJ. "She's a darling," said a Cheek Fan Belt Deere; 60 Model 730 John buslneu. Archie McGIM cers here fired a number of shots IN THE BACK of my mind Personals • ilea, excellent guest as the princess made the in its group, losing well over 2 7 Deere ; 61 Model 460 Farm- Real Estate. Tel. 4015 or 5137. and then drove away in the I had the ambition to_own my points. • Check Exhaust System shortest social stop of her trip all Diesel Row Crop; 60 American-made leep-type sheriff's car late Wednesday own business, enabling me to be TODAY THE NATION observes Veterans DEALER for was arrested by police at Crook- so far—45 minutes. American Telephone, down al- Day. Considering the draft card burn- Only $2.87 Model 630 John Deere ; 59 vehicle, will go almost anywhere, very my own boss rather than merely ers protest groups demonstrating around Model D-14 Allis; 59 Model small Investment will get you started. ston early today. As Princess Margaret circu- earn an income that would most a point, was touching a se- the country, it was good to see the , Offer expires Sat., Nov. 13. WILSON STORE. Tel, 80-2347. guests some- military observance on Third St, this "Charge It" 880 Oliver Gas with wide Held without charge in the lated among the , eventually culminate into anoth- ries of new lows for the year, morning. Also a belated congratulations front; 57 Model Super 88 40 Polk County jail at Crookston one splashed a drink on her er man's holdings. I found my- continuing a process which was to tha three colleges on their support Money to Loan beige, chiffon dress. triggered by recent news of a march last Saturday. Ray Meyer, Inn- Oliver Gas; 61 Model M-5 was a man identified by offi- self developing a business that keeper, WILLIAMS HOTEL: Moline Diesel with wide cers as James Lannoy, about 40, "I got wet, did you?" she said could some day support me, government investigation of its TEMPO front; 61 Model M-5 Moline rates. IF YOU WANT your docked cleaned . . . u^el a former resident of nearby with a smile. even when I was beyond work- see Frank. All work done quickly, ex- LP gas, wide front; 62 LOANS pertly, reasonably. RAINBOW JEW- Miracle Mall PLAIN NOTE-AUTO-FURNITURS Newfolden and now of Big Lake, ing age. The best thing that The Associated Press average Model Fordson Super Pow- Tel. 2.15. After the party, the Snowdons ELRY, 114 W. 4th. ' Hours 9-9 Mon. thru Sat. 170 E. 3rd. could have happened to me that of 60 stocks at noon was off .7 Hrs. 9 a.m. to S p.m.. Sat. t a.m. to noon Crookston police said the man returned to the Douglas home Sunday 1-6 er Major; 56 Model Fordson had four guns on his person day when I offered extra effort at 352.4 with industrials off .8, WE ARE NOT a restaurant but an Major; 54 Model Super MTA for a quiet dinner. "extra kitchen" for you and your Wanted to Borrow 41 when he was arrested. in exchange for a mere salary, rails off .3 and utilities off .6. friends to use when you are too tired I.H.C. Diesel; 54 Model to cook, unexpected guests arrive, was to be refused and in this Corporate bonds were nar- Business Services 14 Super MTA I.H.C. Gas; 58 $3,000 on contract. downtown shopping, etc. Here's food WANT TO BORROW Marshall County authorities sense, the disappointment was Write E-6 Daily Newt. rowly mixed. Dealers in U.S. for every mood. RUTH'S RESTAUR- ATTENTION HUNTERS! , Bring your Model 620 John Deere ; 60 gave this account: to my own advantage. Treasury bonds were closed be- ANT, 116 B. 3rd. Open U hours every- venison for processing, curing and Model 430 John .Deere Util- A mhn visiting a woman If a fellow were to watch cause of Veterans Day. day, except Mon. sausage snaking to us Eitzen Locker, ity with power steering; 58 Dogs, Pets, Supplies 42 Relations of Eitzen, Minn. Tel. 495-6411. friend here became unruly and the movement of a mountain Characters normally don't have memor Model 5 Star Moline LP les, but this one does — Character SMALL ENGINE GERAAAN SHORTHA1RED Pointer*, AKC the woman called police. lion, he would be tempted to Sensor with Gas: 57 Model 5 Star Moline Memory. What Is It? Ask SERVICE S> REPAIR registered, 8 weeks old, excellent hum. about If at kill it in defense of the big 1 P.M. New York WINONA TYPEWRITER Fast - Economical on Gas, with 4-row cult, and Ing dogs. Intelligent and good disposi- A Warren patrolmAn and a SERVICE, 141 E. 3rd St., Winona, ROBB BROS. STORE tion Will train. LeRoy Woychlk, Ar- game warden came to the house cat's prey. This animal ef pos- Minn. 4-Bottom 3-Point Plow; 52 . Rolvaag and sibly 150 lbs. will stalk and kill Stock Prices 574 E. 4th . Tel, 4007 Model M Farmall; 62 Model cadia, Wis. ^ and the man slugged the warden WHEEL CHAIRS—for every price range; SKIPPERKEE PUPPIES—Writ. Box 332, as many as five large grazing adjustable walkers. Plumbing, Roofing 21 2010 John Deere Utility Gas; and seized his gun. He then dis- Allied Ch 46% I B Mach 534% For rent or sale. Hokah, Minn, or Tel. Hokah 8.4-2-VQ. animals a week. The uninformed First two months rental credited to- 62 Model John Deere Utility armed the policeman and hand- Allis Char 30 Intl Harv 40 wards purchase price. Crutches, wood Diesel with Loader ; 50 WANTED—1 male Siamese cat. Please ,.forcing observer will see such an at- or adjustable ELECTRIC ROTO ROOTER cuffed the two together Amerada 72% Intl Paper 30% aluminum. TED MAIER write 1o Ervin E. Erdmann, Dakota, Keith Aired tack as is necessary for this DRUGS. For clogged sewers and drains Model WD6 I.H.C. Standard them to lie on the floor. Am Can 56% Jns & L 64% Tel. 950. or 6434. l year guarantee. Minn, or Tel. Dakota $43-2891. kill as a tragedy, possibly feel- Diesel; 54 Model U.B. Mo- Marshall County Sheriff Oscar MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The Am Mtr WYt Jostens 17 TOP VARIETY of seafood and fish din- CALL SYL KUKOWSKI REGISTERED FEMALE Norwegian Elk- ners served line Gas. wide front ; 55 ing it is a shameful waste of from the Seafood Buffet hound. Arthur D. Witt, Rt. 2, Houston, Erickson was called to the relationship of Gov. Karl Rol- AT&T 62V- Kencott 121% every Frl. night the bigger, but helpless game from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Model U.B. Moline Diesel, Minn. Tel. 896-3794. home. The woman met him at vaag and Lt. Gov. A. M. Keith Am Tb 39% Lorillard 45% In the Mississippi Room or Coffee Septic Tank & Cesspool that proves the cat's victim. But Shop. wide front; 50 Model Mas- the door and asked for protec- Anconda 80 Minn MM 63% Treat the family. Adults $2. was aired in court Wednesday. again things are not as they Children $1.25. Hotel Winona. Cleaning Service . sey Harris; 53 Model 88 Horses, Cattle, Stock 43 tion. , Arch Dn 36% Minn P&L 30% Rolvaag's chief seem. The fact is that where Special truck. Sanitary tt Odorless Oliver Diesel with Large Keith, deemed Armco Stl 69% Mn Chm G, S. WOXLAND CO. 84% Size Rear Tires and Wide SPOTTED POLAND China boars, new rival for the Democratic, Farm- the mountain lion lives, the graz- 7 Rushford, Minn. Tel, S64-9243 As the sheriff stepped Into the Armour ST /. Mont Dak 387 GRAIN bloodlines; 1 Charolals bull. Lowell with ing animals thrive. It seems /a Front; 58 350 Farmall Gas, house, the man me^him a er-Labor governor nomination, Avco Corp 23% Mont Wd 35 MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-Wheat Babcock, Utica, Minn, Tel. St. Charles he attacks mostly the , Row Crop; 56 300 Farmall 932-3437. pistol pointed at/the officer's testified fit Hennepin County sick , receipts Jerry's Plumbing ^_ Beth Stl 37% Nt Dairy 87% Wed. 140; year ago B27 E. 4th tei. 9394 Row Crop; 52 A John Deere; head. Erickson/then was dis- District Court in the libel suit weak, old, or crippled critters, 7 PONY—stud colt, will b» 2 years In Boeing 119 /8 N Am Av 58V . 93; trading basis 1 lower; prices 56 520 John Deere ; '54 60 , dark dapple, , a Uni- killing them In sufficient num- HOT WATER UNLIMITED whpn you April, light mane and tall armed -an__ »4II three officers brought by Arnold Rose BoiseCas 56% NN Gas handle, gentle. Will 59% 2% lower; cash spring wheat ba- consult us about the proper slie water John Deere; 55 70 John easy to catch and were forced to lie on the floor versity of Minnesota professor. bers as to keep the herd down sell for cash or trade for grain, hay or Brunswk 8% Nor Pac 53% sis, No 1 dark northern 11 to 17 heater tor your family . If your present Deere; 56 400 I.H.C, Diesel; while the man fired a number to proper proportions to the Catpillar 49% No St Pw protein heater Is too small/ give us a call. straw. Tel. 8-2484 Winona after S:30 or Counsel for the defense inter- grazing 35% 1.72%-2.13%. 56 400 I.H.C. Gas; 55 300 on weekends. of shots. Several of the slugs area available. You see, Ch MSPP 41% Nw Air 117% No 1 hard FRANK O'LAUGHLIN jected, on cross-examination of Montana winter I.H.C. Row Crop on LP Gas; HEREFORD SUCKING calves, 11 Steers, were reported to have struck where every animal is allowed PLUMBING & HEATING C&NW 104% Nw Banc — 1.55%-1.84%. 50 E-3 Co-op; 57 WD-45 with 10 heifers, 400 to 500 lbs. William Du- Keith, questions on the lieuten- to go without threat of attack , 207 E. 3rd . Tel. 3/01 near the officer. Chrysler 54% Penney 67% Minn. - S.D. No 1 hard winter ^ wide front ; 52 WD Allis with ane, Lewiston, Minn. Tel. 3824. Crookston police spotted the ant governor's relationship with often'the herd gets so large Rolvaag and the American Ai- Cities Svc 41% Pepsi 76% 1.55-1.83%. Help Wanted—Female 26 wide front; 51 WD Allis PUREBRED DUROC boar, 300 lbs., 1 car at a service station shortly that winter feeding becomes a left. S65. LeRoy Senn. Tel. Fountain led Insurance Co. case. The Com Ed 55 Pips Dge 76% No 1 hard amber durum, with wide front ; 46 B John before 4 a.m. A man Jumped problem, and death comes pain- ComSat 42 Phillips 597 choice BABYSITTER—In my home, 1 Child, 7:30 Deere; 46 C Allis with cult.; City 8687-3744.. presiding judge said the ques- fully and surely through star- /s 1:74-1.80; discounts, am- to 3:45. Tel. 2790. from the car and fled when offi- Con Coal 63% Pillsby 45% ber 2-3; durum 4-7. 51 77 Oliver with 2-row RUSHFORD Little Plfl Sale et Legion cers approached, they said, but tions were immaterial and vation and disease. LADIES WANTED-full or part time, Park, Nov. 13, 8 to 11 a.m. Contact ContCan 61% Polaroid 100 Com No 2 yellow 1.11-1.12%. earn extra Christmas money. Write E-7 New Idea Mounted Picker; Casper Ladsten, Tel. Rushford 8A4-746J they caught him after a brief Keith did not need to answer them, but the lieutenant gover- HAVE YOU faced, or are yon Cont Oil 73% RCA 45% Oats No 2 white 62-65%; No Dally News. 53 88 Oliver; 46 A John for Information. chase. Police said he offered Deere; 49 Ford; 56 860 nor responded nevertheless. facing some reverses? Take Cntl Data 40% Red Owl 21% 3 white 60%-63%; No 2 heavy WOMAN TO HELP with housework at PUREBRED POLAND CHINA meat-type no resistance. courage. It could be a good Deere 45 Rep Stl 41% white 65%-66%; No 3 heavy least 3 mornings a week. In reply Ford; 56 500 Case Standard boars. Henry Holmen 8. Son, Lanes- Authorities said Lannoy was I Rose asks $100,000 in his please give days and time you can boro. Minn. Tel. Ai7-33S7. thing in disguise. Put your mind Douglas 64% Rex-dl 47 white 62%-65. address. Write Diesel; 59 700 Case Row by a con- suit against Christian Research work, your name and employed near here to it and be determined to turn Dow Cm 78% Rey Tb 45% Barley, cars 71; year ago E-8 Daily News. Crop Gas; 55 400 Case Dies, SUFFOLK BUCKS-2. Tel. Wauwandee struction firm last summer. Inc., and its director, Gerda du Pont 241 Sears Roe 65% 77; good to el; 47 SC Case; 56 John 626-233.. Koch. Rose, a former state rep- that stumbling block into a choice 1.16-1.42; low PART-TIME WAITRESS and kitchen stepping stone. Accept defeat East Kod 108% Shell Oil 65% to intermediate 1.10-1.36 ; feed help. Uncle Carl's Oaks. Deere 70 Diesel with Brok- SHEEP—56 young ewes, will sell any resentative, said the organiza- Ford Mtr 57% Sinclair 61% 1.02-1.08. en Crank Shaft; 45 A John amount. Freddie Frickson, 4 miles E. tion published a pamphlet which and you can be sure whatever BABYSITTE R and light housekteplng for of Ridgeway. Tel. Dakota . 43-2943. Gen Elec 116 Socony 91% 2 children Mon. thru Frl. Own trans- Deere with Hyd. Loader! described Rose as a collabora- that reverse, it will consume Rye No 2 1.08-1.14. Gen Food 84% Sp Rand 16% Flax No 1 3.00. portation and references required. Tel. John Deere R Diesel. Nearly 20,000 tor with Communists and Com- you. 7114. Poultry, Eggs, Supplies 44 One last minute reminder is Gen Mills 61% St Brands — Soybeans No 1 yellow 2.43. ^ CRAWLER TRACTORS munist frontiers. BABYSITTER—6:30 to 3:30. 117V - Man- Gen Mtr 103% St Oil Cal 48% 58 420 John Deere Cat with BUY ARBOR ACRE , excellent that opportunity is often missed kato Av«. or Tel. 5733. Keith said he has known Rose because we are broadcasting Gen Tel 45% St Oil Ind — ' Loader; 52 HG Oliver Nar- for egg size. Interior quality and pro- Miles of Federal WINONA MARKETS row Gauge Cat, very clean; duction. 20 weeks pullets available all for six years, has "great ad- when we should be tuning in. Gillett 39% St Oil NJ 83 Part-Time year around. For quality ask for Arbor Swift & Company Women - 55TD-6 I.H.C. Cat; D-2 Cat, Acre Queen pullets. Winona Chick Goodrich 56 Swift 50% THE Fuller Brush Co. has openings for miration*' for the professor and West Highway 41 Hatchery, 56 E. 2nd, Winona. Tel. 5.14. two ladles to represent Fuller cos- needs some work ; 61 Model t_oodyear 45% Texaco 82% Buying hours are from 8 a.m. to 3:38 has never heard Rose say any- metics and cleaning products in the Highways in Use P.m. Monday through Friday. 340 I.H.C. Cat, rough, needs ENVIRONMENT controlled, light control- Gould 32 Texas Ins 159% 15 hours week , flexible thing that indicated Communist There will b'e no calf markets en Fri- Winona area. led Dekalb 20-week-old pullets. Strictest schedule, $2.20 per hour. For Interview work; EM Cat; 58 Model WASHINGTON -pe. trlct If possible, Reasonable. Tel. S-tm rooms. Let ui show you this new Hat- eporty, V-«, «00. 44 Lenox St. new tires and battery, Excellent run- dinette suites, Urge table with I after 4. INC., 159 Walnut ning and body condition. May be teen ing. ABTS AOINCY, NOV. 15—Mon. 1:3d pm. 3 miles N. of lr, 0 •»¦«• BORIYSKOW- CHEVROLET—l»6J Impale Sport Coupe. Lot n R»d Top Trallar Ct. Nov. U-Tuei. 1} noon. J miles g. af EWERS0N-196S 11" TV set with new £". . ..I?" . '"* St, Tal. NW. __ Cenlervllle, Wis. Phlllij i Fo«, owner; SKI FURNITURE, 302 Mankato. Open WANTED-garagt within 2 or 3 blocks of _____ 2(3, atanderd trammlHlon, radio, heat- Ettrick on "O". thin 1 mlli E. on picture tube. Tel. nv . Merchants Na- Bv Alvin Kohner, auctioneer; Northern Inv . tow n road. Clayton A Mary Walters, tnlng *. Flberlfe Corp. Til. Fountain City UV- RETIRING SOON . Want something to er, exceptionally clean, good gai mile- PLYAnOUTH-H&O convertible V-8, auto- tional Bank, Co., clerk. owners; Alvin Kohner, auctioneer! 471$, occupy your time and supplement your ege, rum good. Very reatonably pric- matic, oewer (tearing and brake. SMALL BUT CO/KPORTABL- ¦ i — Northern tnv . Co.. dark . RUMMAGE SALE - W Wilmi. " ' '" Income. We have a smell acreage with ed. Tel. Liwliton 6741. Steve Nthraeng U. Laird. p.m. Men's, *rm* rocker, In nylon cover cloth NOV. 15— Mon. 12:30 p.m. I mllei N W. ladles', children's clothing, _ er a set of good buildings, near Winona . all sizes; supported plastic fabric. Available In Farms, CHEVROLET—195* Bel Air 4-door hard- lo Independence on ill to Russeli' t NOV. 17-Wad , ll . a.m. f mllM N, of dishes; toys; misc. 117 Chatfield. Lend for Sale 98 on main road, This place Is all set up BUICK, i»»i Tappan gas range. Both itmlSTtJJ^fWMk J^'V *»• ' BURKS'* to produce good Income from fruit and good condition, reasonable. Tel. Lewis- top, automatic, V-t, good condition, Store, then 4 mllai N. on County Tr'ink Houston In Loonay V«lley. Carpantar . PWN1TURE MART, 3rd 8. Franklin. honey. See us tor complete Information . ton 47H. woman ownar, 303 W. Ith. "V" . Stanley Sevenon, owner; Fran- Sa;h, owners; kohn«tr K Sehroader, ANTIQUE 4 poster bed, antique chest, FARMS FARMS FARMS ABTS AGENCY, INC.. 15. Walnut. Tel. cis N. Werlein, auctioneer; Gateway auctioneers; Minn. Land *7 Auction 15 cu. ft. deep freeze, buffet, chine We buy, w» sell, we trade. PONTIAC—1950 4-door Sedan, all original, Credlf Inc., clerk. Serv., clerk. closet, large office desk Good Things to MJ45. MUST SELL IHS Mercury Mentclalr, , glass top Eat 65 MIDWEST REALTY CO, Interior and extarlor, Ilk* new, clean- table, mangle, eelctrlc roaster, power Onto, Wis. blue, with extras, 1,000 mllei. $3,000 CINTRAL LOCATION - 4 bedroom eat car In town. .3,000 _ct _ „i tnlles. NOV. I7- Wed. 1:30 p.m In Village nf mower. Redwood porch furniture, GOOD HOMEGROWN rutabagas, $1.30 Ret, 4950157 or fake over payment!. Tel. faSI. NOV. 14— Tues. 11:30 p.m. J miles N. ot de- home, en good size lot, owners now See car at Magic Mist Car W«»h, Ettrick, Wis. Eddie Forseth, dwner/ humidifier, bench type power bu. Lsiy-A russet potatoes, 20 lbs. Tel. Olflce 597-W9 Canton, then V. mill W. Jamas Erlck- saw, receive StO monthly room rental, be- 408 W, 4th. Tel. 9917. Walter Zeck, auctioneer; Northarn Inv, numerous household Items. Route A3, 65c. WINONA POTATO MARKET, 111 ion, owner ; Knudsen Erlckson , auc- sides their own living quarters, The * Co., clerk. opposite Glenvlew entrance. A. Market. FARM! FOR SAL! tioneers; Thorp Sails Corp., cterk. L. KIM, price Is right bought FORD WAGON—19-7, 1133, itralghl tram- owner. NEAR Monty Creek—520 acres with over and can be with a 10% down payment. mlMlon. Tel. M191 200 tillable, modem house. Balllbn roof Gate ONE-CAR NOV. 17—Wed. 11:30 a.m. 1 mlla t. nf Buy Food City Agency, Inc. Tel. 4112. NOV . 14-Tue«. 11 a.m. 4',. miles W ot Humblrd on County Trunk , then ANOTHER SHIPMENT of apple peelers, Wholesale barn, with stanchions and drinking . I "P" Capitol Food Provision VOLKSWAOEN-1944 Mlcrobut. U0O m. Menomonie on State Hwy, 39. Thomai •4 mlla W. Frank Patterson, owner; peels, slices and cores, MM. ROBB Co., 3930 cups, complete sat of outbuildings. tin St., Od . DW. NEW LISTING with a dining room, tor, excellent condition, low milr .ge. Kallcy Farm Propsrty; Jim H.lki, BROS. STORE, 576 E. 4th. Tel. 4007. wv. Tel. 73_». Russell C. Schroeder, auctioneer) if you have been looking tor Edmund Luehmann, Lewliton, Minn. autlloneer; Northern Inv, Co., clerk. I Northern Inv. Co., clerk NEAR Plckwlck-IM acres with about U a heme SPECIAL . with e dining roe— Tel. «07. tillable. House has 4 rooms down, up- i, hare Is your oppor- mm CANARY AND STAND. JS; new da- Guns, Sporting Goods tunity. 3 bedrooms, large carpeted liv- 66 stairs unfinished, furnace and water. humldlfler, to price; new 13 volt bat- ing room. Located a short distance 1965 RAMBLER RAMBLER—1941 Station Wagon, (. cylin- M tery charger; Spinet Baldwin organ. Small barn. 2 real nice springs. W^\lY^ ^^^^ MUST SELL—new model 94 30-30 Win- from Winona. Will handle on FHA or der, automatic. 60,000 mllos. Reason for ^^^\^t^ff ^^Sm^^^^^i Tel. 8-1776. VA terms. Reduced price chester lever edlon carbine. Tel. a-3845. 10 MILES from Winona near Wltoka, H If taken af Classic 660 i. lllng, need money for college. Tel. once. ABTS AGENCY, INC., 15. Wal- i-2575. MOUNTING BOARDS, names and num- acres, almost ell tillable, modern .4 REMINGTON MODEL 722, 237 Roberts nut St. Tel. 8-4365. bers for rural mailboxes. ROBB BROS. bedroom house, nice barn and mlsc Costum stock, with or without K4 4-door sedan, standard PLYMOUTH—1955 4-door i»d»n, t. vary STORE, 576 E. 4th. Tel. 4007. scope, outbuildings. Immediate possession. with flip motmts, Tel. 8-2814. Wanted—Rail Estate 102 transmission with over- good condition. Call eller | p.m. MINN. LAND AUCTION SERVICE 217 W. 6lh. Due to other employment, I have decided to sell all my UPRIGHT PIANO, girl's 26" bicycle, drive. I . j KRAG 30-40 bolt - action sporterlred 15» Walnut SI. Tal. S-3710 or 7114 THREE-BEDROOM modem home, In Wi- ¦ boy'e 3-speed bicycle. Moving. Tel. rifle, excellent MERCURY-1960 Monterey 2-door hard- I personal property at auction , located 6 miles northwest ' 2442. appearance, $M; GE nona or outsklrti. Medium price range. -! stereo record player, new condition, 2 UNDER 13,000 top, full power, all while with red In- I of Independence on 121 to Russell's Store, then 4 miles 3 Prefer fireplace but not e must. Must terior, a real beauty, winterized, not . years old, all speeds and external Houses for Sal* 99 have garage, Will consider new home §7 north on County Trunk "V ," or 2 miles south of Eleva |] speakers, sell V_ price, ISO. Tel. 4622. actual miles, • give-away, but an Al car Inside DAILY N EWS er older home In good condition. Tel. and out. reasonably priced at 19.5. :¦ ••4243. I on 93 and 5 miles southwest on County Trunk "V" on . SHOTGUN-Wlticheiter pump, 410, like DELUXE 2-bedroom apt., In choice WW See behind Bauer Electric on 3rd MAIL location, heat and water furnished, St. Til. . 3734. new. Tel. 741». WILL FAY HIOHMT CASH PRICES - $2145 - I, 41 IS. Tel. 4IU, MONDAY, NOV. 15 FOR YOUR CITY PROPBRTY $ SUBSCRIPTIONS USED SHOTGUNS-elngles, bolt actions, I Sale time 12:30. Lunch will be served. U May Be Paid At slide actions. Gamble store. Rushford, MODERN 3 room apt., heat and wittr ''HANK" JEZEWSKI I 42 HEAD OF HOLSTEINS — 3 Holstein cows, just y Minn. furnished. 477 W. Sfh. Tel. Jill er (Winona 's Only Reel Estate Buyer) INON A UTO ' 327*. Tel. 43M or TOM P.O. Box -Don t Delay- I fresh; 4 Holstein heifers, springing; 6 Holstein cows, U TED MAIER DRUGS 345 RAMBLER ~\ DODSS ' AT HUNTLINE Gun Shop there li still W f 1 springing; 5 Holstein cows, due in Jan.; 3 Holstein cows, Il time to have a scope or peep sight FIFTH E.—2-bedroom house, large let. Don's Auto Sales GIVE YOUR HOME a new took for the put on your deer rifle Priced to tell, rant terms. C. SHANK, Accastoriat, Tires, Parts 104 I due in Feb.; I Holstein cow , bred to freshen in May; 6 % holidays! Work color magic with or shotgun. Mod- ¦ Elli- el 12 Winchester, like new, S100; SOU 552 E. 3rd, Is Moving Holstein heifers 12 months old , open ott's Vinyl Super Satin Latex Interior SALES 1 , , vaccinated; 6 Hoi- % Sporter, with peep sight, $45; model 70 FOR THE VERY best price In new , & ft To A New Location paint. Provide a luxury background , tor Winchester, »«, wtm tyman DW. ONLY 13 riart. You csn save M- truck tires, calf Dan at S-lim, I stein heifers, S months old open , vaccinated; 6 Holstein % furnishings during this peak 4X home en- scope, new $M0. 3 miles N. of Hoimen, 500 by buying this 3-bedroom home Open Mon. & Fri. Eve. car go by heifers, 4 months old and vaccinated ; 2 Holstein calves, | tertainment season. The vinyl Ingredi- Every must 1 Wis., on County trunk "V". Tel. 526- this week. Owner wants to sell now In 3rd & Mankato Tel. 8-3649 Nov. 14. 2 weeks old. These cows are good high producing dairy y ents Of Super Satin Impart a durability 3626. order to buy a 4-bedroom horn* being I and toughness for year around wear offered. New listing. Don't waste any Before You Buy Look cattle, that show good care and breeding. This is a young and tear. Choose your colors now at DISCOUNT time, see this one now. ABTS AGENCY, Nelson Tire's herd of good uddered cows. Herd 100% clean. Tested by the INC., 159 Walnut St. Tel. 8-4345. Over the Tremendous Buys % % CLEARANCE | Dr. S. J. Kowahl of Independence, Wis. n PAINT DEPOT STOCKTON, MINN.—3-apt. building and 1 965 RAMBLER at 165 E. 2nd MACHINERY- 1950 Model "M" Farmall tractor, 167 Center St. SALE Bargain Center % 3-ln. Magnum 12 gauge BB vacant lot. Must be sold. Aodress In- Tel: 8-1678 or 6817 I good condition; John Deere Model "B" tractor; New % 10% OFF ON All Tlmex Watches, all Discount $1 oft quiries to the Merchants National Bank. Ambassador 990 . Trust Dept., Winona. Tel. 2«jf. | Holland Model "67" baler, 3 years old, like new; John %, Norelco electric razors. All Gibson and 16 gauge Super X Open every night 'til 9 Hallmark Christmas cards, all hair Discount $1.25 GR^f BUYS ON- Deere chopper with hay and corn head attach.; Gehl % Many other discount 2-door hardtop, VS , beauti- dryers. 98c Vlck's Formula 44 cough SMALL TH REE-room house In east lo- unloading gear box ; Case wagon ; chopper box ; McCor- |j discs, t; 59c Vademacum shell bargains ful one owner LOW mileage I _ toothpaste, cation. Lot 4M .5' . $4,000. Archie Mc- Passenger Tires mick Deering 3-bar side rake ; John Deere blower; corn § 44C; (H3 . Fashion Rite home perma- Neumann' Gill Real Estate. Tel. -4015 or S137. 'fr car, complete power equip- | nent./S8C; 69c Dr. West toothbrushes, s sheller ; cultivator to fit Farmall M or H; McCormick 2/6?c; SI Magic Turban, 77c; Barasln Center ment, bucket seats. Spotless 1 % 27c Kleen- TWO STUCCO HOUSES-1 2-bedro8»i, 1 Truck Tires ex 200 2ply, 3 boxes «5e; $5.29 fr WINTERIZED | Deering 3-bottom 14-inch tractor plow ; 8-ft. John Deere £ Metrecal 3-or 4-bedroom; -Garages. West 'ocetlon. and ready to go. You can chocolate powder, $4.44; 88c Party Musical Merchandise 70 Carpeting. Will finance. Tal. 4059. I tandem disc; Minneapolis-Moline tractor spreader; John y \ Treat mixed TVactor Tires SAVE $1200 on this car by nuts. 5tc; *? Get Set Hair fr Deere semi-mounted No. 101 corn picker; John Deere g Jel, 77c; many other Items at special buying it at AND ONE YEAR I prices. USED SELMER elerlnet, good condition. FIFTH E. 1MB — To settle estate, lo- corn planter with fertilizer; McCormick Deering PTO f. 1154 W. 5th. SHOP NOW AT I ttery home, 1 rooms up. Inquire at — $2495 — 3-section drag; Co-op 7-ft. tractor mower; TED MAIER DRUGS 1027 E. 5th or 104 . E. 4th. WARRANTY | grain binder; \\ Downtown Si Miracle Mall We Service and Stock W. 5th & RR. Tracks 1 David Bradley hammermiU. M HOMES-FARMS-LOTS-ACREAGEI TRUCKS - 1946 International pickup; "54" Ford J Needles for all CORNF0RTH REALTY 1961 FORD 196. PONTIAC Catalina , 4- | STEREO La Crescent, Minn. Tel. S95-21M Old "Wagon Works" Bldg. b Vt ton pickup , good condition . ;' BEAUTIFUL MUSIC by a au- Motorola RECORD PLAYERS T-Bird door, solid white finish , | FEED — 1,800 bales good mixed hay; BOO bu. new •tereo hi-fi. We have the finest selec- tomatic transmission, radio, % tion and largest supply ot sets In the Hardt's Music Store KATIE BLUWENTRITT. ESTATE ear corn ; 180 bales straw ; SOO bu. oats. yy HOUSE to be told at auction on Set., Motorcycles, Bieyclas 107 Converrible steering, power I Winona area. Come in or call WI- Sower FURNITURE — Nearly new Kirby vacuum cleaner § NONA FIRE & POWER CO.. 54 E. Nov. 20th at 2 p.m., located In tha One owner locally owned rakes, LOW mileage. I 2nd. Tel. 5065. Sewing Machines 73 village of Dakot a oh new service road. HARLEY DAVIDSON scooter, ) years I with all attachments. ' s. - Open for Inspection Sat., Nov. 13th automobile ¦ old. In good condition, will sell reason- that is perfect —¦$2495 . DOG - White German Shepherd dog, very good i| WE OIL, CLEAN and adjust all makes from 2 to 4 p.m. 7-room modern house able. Tel. 8-1089. in every respect. Buy —. - . on nicely landscaped large lot. 4 bed- this I cattle dog. Riding Lawn Mover. Miscellaneous. NOTICE of sewing machines. SCHNEIDER SEW- . one now \\ I AM asking for sealed bids on a barn ING _ APPLIANCE. Tel. 7356. rooms, almost new furnace. 2-car ga- HONDA 90-1964 excellent condition, less at its new reduced I960 CHRYSLER Imperial i| TERMS: Under $15.00 cash, over that amount VA, is and granary 1 mile W. of Ridgeway, rage and other small buildings. than 5,000 miles. Call Rick Kurz. St. price of Le Baron 4-door , radio, au- said building to be removed from right- TWO USED portable sewing machines, Mary's College, 2807, Ext. 44, afler 7 down, balance in 6 installments. Filing fee and 3.% added. £ of-way 1-90, barn is forward and transmission, power 36x74 with 30" loft, reverse stitch. Your FOURTH W. «2-Near Madison & St. p.m. — $1695 — tomatic M STANLEY SEVERSON, OWN^R II ball roof, very good construction; No. 1 Choice $35. WINONA SEWING CO., Caslmlr schools . Modern 5-room bunga- steering, power brakes, For A Top Dollar Auction — See Us Before You Sign 1! %¦ or 2 fir and pine lumber; granary Is 551 HUff. Tel. 9348. low, good condition, large lot, 2 car Motorcycle Sales & Service 22x24, 2-story, very good construction garage. New paint |ob. Will arrange ROBB BROS. MOTORCYCLE SHOP many other fine accessories. I Clerked by Gateway Credit Inc. i of fir or pine. Bids to be accompanied Stoves, Furnaces, Parts 75 long term loan. 573 E. 4th. Solid black finish. | Eau Claire — Mondovi -r- Cumberland by check for S% of bid and be in by NYSTROM' Jan. 1st, 1966. All bids subject to refec- Frank West Agency S 1 Francis N. Werlein , Auctioneer Al Lehman, Rep. % tion end return of check. For SIEGLER HEATERS, oil or gas. In- !?. Lafayette Trucks, Tract's Trailers 108 — $1295 — particu- stalled, sold, serviced; Chrysler - Plymouth lars write or see Leon Henderson, Rt. Aladdin Blue Tel. 5240 or 4400 after hours ^^mmswmmmmmmmmmmmmm^ mmmmmmiwmmS 1, Houston, Minn. Flame portable heaters; also oil burn- INTERNATIONAL-1957 2-ton truck, com- 1962 PONTIAC Catalina 4- er Open Non. & Fri. Nights parts. RANGE OIL BURNER CO., pletely rebuilt. May be seen at the door, power steering, power 907 E. Sth St. Tel. 7479. Adolph Mlcha- Attractive Merchants Hotel at 4th S. Walnut, i lowskl. 3-BEDROOM rambler, attached garage brakes, automatic transmis- 1 Having sold our farm we are selling all . of our personal |l and breezeway, handy spacious kitchen, CMC—IMS' Vi-ton pickup, 150 aeries. Don sion, radio, solid Yorktown Typewriter* tiled bath, oak floors, drapes, landscsi> Allen, Rt. 3. Winona, Minn. § property at public USED 77 ed yard, TV signal. FHA approved, blue finish. If 555 47th Ave, Tel, 8-3007. By appoint- TYPEWRITERS and adding machines GMC—1957 1-ton, with Feurhelm folding COMPACTS ment. rack, good condition. D__ _e 7enke, ______B .___p_i. T____K______H ______k for sale or rent. Reasonable rates, — $1795 — ^ fl__ is In. ^ . APPLIANCES free delivery. See us for all your of- Dakota, Minn. '' -- " It „B8& | _ __ ,itniiiii|^ minimum 4im*i _i_\, ffi _ __ H fice supplies, desks, files or office -SAV E YOU 1964 CHEVROLET 4-door, 6 JEEP—1946, with new cab, chairs. Lund Typewriter Co. Tel. 5222, UNIVERSAL NORTHERN INVESTMENT Westinghouse double NEW HOMES In very good condition. W. H. Sel'ert, cylinder motor, automatic 1 I I ' coj|U | Utica, Minn. , oven electric range, ex- Wanted to Buy 81 ( MONEY transmission radio, tu-tone cellent condition FOR FALL STUDEBAKER—1961 5-ton, V-8, chassis finish, five new whitewall and cab, perfect condition, make offer. '64 Falcon wagon . . $1795 i^iiw m m wm BASSWOOD and walnut wanted, green or tires. | /w mm^ air dried 4/4 sawn, mill run, RW-RL Madison School Tel. Altura 7521. '64 Valiant Hardtop .. $1495 t'l Located 4Vi miles west of Menomonie on State Highway § Westinghouse electric truck and carload quantities on a con- — $1795 — range with large 23" tinuing basis. Write Nielsen - MHIwork District '63 Studebaker 4-door $1095 I 29. : | 4. Mfg. Co., Mend-la, Minn. 4-bedroom ihicco brick, with family 1961 CHEVROLET Bel Air oven, temp-control room, living room, dining room, kitch- WM. MILLER SCRAP IRON _, METAL '61 Falcon wagon .... $ 995 4-door, radio, automatic burner, all deluxe fea- en -with pantry. 16 bath down, full USED 16 I CO. pays highest prices for scrap bath up. J-car garage West on j Tuesday/ . Nov* Iron, metals, and raw fur, . ,. transmission, V45 motor, tures Broadway, Under JI4,000. '60 Falcon wagon $ 795 122 W. 2nd Tal. MS. PICKUPS solid white finish. Excep- p Sale start* promptly at 11:00 A.M. | Closed Saturdays East Centra l '60 Bambler wagon .. $ 795 tionally clean throughout. Hotpoint 2-door 1964 INTERNATIONAL C- _| Lunch served on grounds. | refrigerator SEE Us Por Best Prices *60 Valiant 4-door .. $ 595 || This is a complete sell out so be on time. Scrap Iron, Metal, Wool, Raw Fur* Income 1200, heavy duty % ton , V- — $1 195 — | M S. W IRON Si METAL CO. property. 3 apts. Including 1 2-bed- 304 engine, 4 speed trans- '59 Opel wagon .... 5 295 i 85 CHOICE BEEF CATTLE — 28 Outstanding Here- | Westinghouse Automatic »1 W. 2nd St. Tal. 3044 room unit arid 2 single bedroom 1962 PONTIAC Catalina 2- mission, 700x15 6 ply tires, i ford Cows. These quality cows are all three and four | washers "" units, gas heat, garages. Close lo door hardtop, solid Silver- HIGHEST PRICES PAID Cathedral and walking distance do. n- A-l condition $1495 Many more to choose from. I years old; All are bred to a regiltered Hereford bull I Small combination gas Mr scrap Iron, metals, rags, hides, town. Low dpwn payment, balance on leaf green finish, matching pud during the raw fur* snd wool I 1963 FORD F-250 heavy We Advertise Our Prlcee i and are bred to freshen the last of March >| and wood range contract for. dead. -^ «^ green vinyl interior, equip- 3 Augus heifers,, 1 bred for Jan. freshen- | duty % ton, big "6" engine, ped with automatic trans- i month of April, Sam Weismdn & Sons Deluxe Brick i ing, 2 bred for Feb. freshening; 3 Hereford heifers, bred Wringer washer INCORPORATED 700x16 6 ply, 4 speed trans- mission, power steering, ^ 450 W. 3rd T«l. 5147 mission. A-l condition. $1395 % for April; 22 Holstein steers, average weight 750 lbs.; i Colonial power brakes and radio. , average age 6 months; I Top west central location. Larg* liv- i 28 high quality Hereford calves Rooms Without Meals 86 ing room wllh fireplace plus family 1 Holstein bull calf; Registered Hereford Bull , 3 years ' 41 Years ln Winona — $1795 — I | GAIL-ROSS room and second fireplace, spacious WINONA TRUCK p old. SLEEPING ROOM for girl. Tel. 1-2349. central hallway and blg dining room. Lincoln-Mercury-Falcon i modern cenmlc t^lftsjcltchen wllh SERVICE 1959 CHEVROLET Impala § DAIRY EQUIPMENT — 400 gal. Dari-Kool bulk tank, I APPLIANCE ROOMS FOR MEN, With or without dishwasher, powder roo7ro\5 bed- 65 Laird St. Comet-Fairlane Convertible, V-8 motor, au- $ very good condition!; 3 Surge 50 lb. buckets; Surge 3-4 h housekeeping privileges. No day sleep- rooms and 3 baths, .walking distance tomatic transmission, power 217 E. 3rd Tel. 4210 ers. Tel. 4859. to schools, churches and downtown. Open Mon., Fri. Eve. | | unit pump and motor; stainless steel double wash tank; | and Saturday afternoons steering, power brakes, lo- % stainless steel strainer; 30 gal. electric water heater. § COMFORTABLE sleeping room for gen- St.' Teresa Area cal ONE OWNER car. pj MACHINERY — An exceptionally well cared for s! Baby Merchandise 59 tleman, close In. Tel. 7924. Two big bedrooms, all on one floor DRIVE OUT home wllh fireplace, breezeway with — $1095 — £i line of farm machinery. 3 tractors : John Deere 30-10 I ANNIVERSARY SALE SPECIALS-Lulla- Rooms for Housekeeping 87 Jalousie windows, fenced yard, douW* AND CHECK % Diesel tractor , exceptionally clean, fully equipped ; John % bye cribs, reg. $31.95, now $29.95; reg garage, cornir lot. •fr ECONOMY 1959 PONTIAC Deere 60 tractor, very good condition; John Deere late $15.98 folding high chairs, now $13.95; GIRL TO SHARE double housekeeping Catalina 4- $ % reg. $21.95 deluxe strollers, now $13.95. room. Tel. s-2444. Beautiful THESE PICKUPS door hardtop, tu-tone gray f| model "B" tractor,. a good clean tractor; John Deere | BORZYSKOWSKI FURNITURE, 3M # PERFORMANCE and white finish , radio, it 620-H 4-14 plow, new with cover boards and trip bottoms Mankato. Open evenings. 1960 CHEVROLET | Apartments; Flats 90 Edgewood automatic transmission. li .pull type with large rubber tire tail wheel); John Deere « Four bedrooms, two baths, game Vt ton, 6 cylinder motor, 3 # GOOD LOOKS Building Material* 61 DELUXE GE III electric 1 bedroom room, carpeled living room, conven- i No. 8 mower with hay conditioner hookup ; John Deere f apts., carpeted, air conditioned and ient galley-typ* kitchen with Ameri- speed transmission. Excel- — $895 — i% 2-row quick-tach cultivator; 2 J.D. hydraulic cylinders; | parages. BOB SELOVER, REALTOR, cana CE range and oven, big yard. RELIABILITY : USED MAPLE flooring, 1000 board ft. lent tires. SHARP! & ' Tel. 2349. 0\ John Deere 16-A 6-ft. green chopper, like new; John | Contact Victor Gibbons, Midway Tav- You Name It - This car 14T $2000 Down Deere baler , like new ; John Deere 10-ft. double disc | ern. IN ALTURA—2 bedroom modern apt. 1963 GMC, V-6 Engine has it! will buy thli big new rambler, ipa- || ^ grain drill on rubber with grass seed attach., like new; $ for rant. Available Dec. 1 or before. clous kitchen ¦with built-in range and VENABLES W. H. Battel, Tel. A(tura 4351. 4 speed transmission, Fleet- | | John Deere 40-ft. elevator with bale chute and truck Business Equipment 62 oven, eatlnj bar , three large bed- 1 962 CHEVROLET 75 W # rooms, plus built-in garage. Move side box , custom cab, rev? . 2nd Tel. 8-2711 | | hopper, very good ; 1V_ h.p. electric motor ; John Deere $ FIVE-ROOM APT.-S70. Inquire at 402Vi right In. Bel Air Open Mon . A Fri. Evenings , COMPRESSO R - V. h.p., guaranteed. 8. 4th or 290 Chestnut St, Tel. 7108 or rubber, a mighty fine pick- | | 10-ft field cultivator on rubber, very good ; John Deere | Thome's Refrlgerstion. 8-2453. King Size up. 4-door , 6 cylinder with :§ 1064 new wagon, with new bale rack ; John Deere hay | BLECTRIC MOTOR, 3 phase, 1 h.p.. large carpeled living room, 1M4, ~ also — overdrive. Mobil* Hemat, Trailer* 111 si conditioner ; John Deere 290 corn planter with side opener f; 1700 rpm, heavy duty, $43; electric Apartments, Furnlsfiad 91 with stone fireplace; kitchen blg» 2 low priced International 15x18; two larga bcdrooms; pij fert. attachment; Massey Harris No. 60 combine with $ portable steamer, used for steam recrea- PRICED TO SELL RENT OR SALE—Trailers nnd camp- ROOMS with bath, private en- tion room with bSr^and flreplicer pickups. g! scour kleen cleaning used appliances, working pres- TWO in, Leahy's, Buffalo Cily,, Wis. Tal. , excellent condition ; heavy duty rubber tired I trance. Tel. 9287. two built-in garages atwf sure 60-100 lbs,, sleam generation 100 screen** $1498 ' Cochrane 24B- -S32 or 248-7670. fi wagon with good bale rack ; Lindsay 4-section drag with ;,. PSI, 1-2 hours, 310 volt, 14 amp, 3000 patio . WO.OM. N. APTS FOR RENT—automatic hea folding drawbar ; John Deere 8-ft. double disc; McDeering \, watt, *0 cycle, $23. Inquire A. H. Krel- l , ce- F. A. KRAUSE CO SEE OUR fine ••lection of new end || AFTER HOURS CALLl X gar, H. Choate a. Co. ramic baths, all utilities furnished, used mobile homes, all sizes. Dunk | 4-bar side rake; Kelly Ryan manure spreader, PTO ; Leo Koll 4581 N_ Breezy Acres f available Dec. 1st. Buffalo City Resort, finnnclnn. 7-veer plan, COULEE MO. ; Cochrane, Wla, W. L, (WVIb) Holier 13111 '! tractor sprayer , complete with 20-ft. boom . '.. Hwys. 14 and fil East BILE HOME SALES, Hwy. 14- 1 E„ * Laura Fisk 2111 . Coal, Wood, Other Fuel 63 Winona. Tel. AV6. , Business Places for Rant 92 Mrs. Frtn k "Pat" Mortes 27/f V monlliM, Your credit la always good m white sldewills, 1141. Tol. 7413. slon leaks $100 Northern Inv . Co., r.lei k. 'y Investment Co. f o Telephone Your Want Ads RESIDENCE PHONBSi with tho Northern B. J. Harterf ... JWJ 10 am, V tnlla E of Ar- THOMAS KELLEY FARM RAMBLt -l» « 4-door very NOV. 13 Sat. . £ Men. Lauer . • • 452J . *•«•"' I" ownar/ Alvin Koll- flood condition, rtuth button nutomatlc cadia. Louis Servnli, f: NOHTHERN INVESTMENT CO., OWNER | ' SHI Zlebell . .. 4S54 I Inv, Co, SEARS to The Winona Daily News drive, good tires and tnow tlrei. 1193. ntr, auctioneer/ Nnrthern ¦¦: Mondovi : , .llm Hcikc , Auctioneer , , Wisconsin Tel, tl'l or eee Ml" Harriet Kelley or clerk f 57 E. 3rd Merrill Kelley, M Northern Investment Co., Lester Senty, Clerk |j Dial 3321 for an Ad Taker, NOV, 13 -S,\ t II am, ?.. nl Sumner SI. WA LZ Triimneeledu, Sarah Hen llcp. by Chuck Accolu , Mondovi , Wisconsin guaranteed fORO, WW 4-door , V-«. stlc^., 1 nwran In Vll|nu« ot l\ "Satisfaction milCK-OLnSMOWLR-GMC lee HarnNrh , aiirllnnaeri 1953 Ford Vi-lon. icyllnder pickup. Tel. nil eat-le; ;,,,,. . ... ,. ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦; ¦ w : back" iL\WMim£-M ... : . - ; •>v''\V'! . '* :- y. ,' ^.}Y-%'i:!f' *\iy'": ;'?...: ' or your money Inv . Co., clerk . l.\\ .^ 401 Main It. Tet. IMF Centervllle H. 3411. Open Mon, & Frl. nicht Northern ' BUZ SAWYER By Roy cr.n.

, DICK TRACY By Chaster Gould

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker

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TIGER By Ernlo Bushmiller

THE FLINTSTOIjlES By Chic Young ¦ ¦ ¦ _ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ , m—m———t*~ i_ 4 I " I ™-•»«-«__¦¦«_ i -____--| (_____»-> i i _ , -_—___¦_ , „, , ' , ——— , , , )

U'L ABNER By Al Capp STEVE CANYON 3y Milton Canniff

MMmmmmmMMMM mMMMMM WMMMMMMMMWMMMWMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM Virtually Indestructlble-MAXIMUM PROTECTION GLASSES Genuine First Quality Brand New ATLAS

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maaaaarammaaaamamaaaaaamawmaaaa aamwmmwmaanwm———^—mm—mt^—mmtrn—wmmmwmmmmm—wmm—mm— ^ The Lenses are shatter-resistant. The Frames are Nylon Plastic. 1-Year Warranty covers ALL or ANY AMOUNT of breakage to Lenses or Frames. CHOOSE FROM 1000 s OF STYLES

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JOIN THE PARADE OF SATISFIED FAMILY PLAN PEOPLE WHO PURCHASE GLASSES FROM UST Plymouth Optical off*, t you a full 10% ditcouri. en mar* mm Writtm on fiMrMha ft lar a!r ^______°* , da. igned far Mom, Dad and tha P____ M^ C " * P »'•»»•• \ M I $* Kid.I ™" ^7J | % M ||| Compare 10% DISCOUNT > p^*- UL W NTER LO Q Trad6.|rs flccaple4 Includts Framai, Latitat and Matal Clip or ««• <•»' NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY ^^ -fr Cantirt Lattsa*. BIFOCALS, IF DESIRED . __„ ,.__ „ Pira *n«lna latl ADDITIONAL AFFILIATE OF * _- itt, STANDARD •tr I (Ostomy. H _f ll H#l __^^ (Kry i». Oit v*,, rUtop, mmmmmmmmmm Onaiiiy. ___^^— ^mmm ^— ^ * Ull.x ~ Your Choic.) -ii^^ v„ _ wa hv.. __MaBl^-_-f«i*^^^^SZ^^^^Maps«>«^||^^B^Z^^2^^- aB_>* «>* SERV,CE ^ksm______r ^^______|i ^2_ '^_ >a. h«wr Your cholco-WI.it., W______-______J^____T «•> ^______F^______T______7 • » ¦ *» ______T^______r______, i ii_ WaaawaWa mmaaawaakwaWm______JI -mHnja pciai. or Sunglass Gr aan, or Gray 1 V>*1¦• ¦• ^ ¦¦^^ ¦•^W l "^B /H^mvs. m __\ J _r __F _T__ MMI III I nl \T \\^l__i_Sl_i_l_A_m '/ [ r*| •JILjlilB/ «A R R frama i.ylan alio 1S^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ M ¦V^^T^^^^^V_____Vf ^___^m ^^ l L MA ^uimA^Mj M^a\\\\\\\\~-v ^ ¦¦ ^ , ___B .___¦ MM^^ CT*^A _U _R^ ^ ¦'^^ r puflMt QQA7 ^H NOW! " " Ul lt 9VU/ BROKEN FRAMES ^** HIGHWAY 61-U Jun Wait of Ih* Country Kllclwr. In Winona *|k FOR ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^*^^5_5J^^^^ P^If! i ^^^^ 2! 5^^^*^ _F____k__ \ iw^~ ¦»»s»*aaa__-«__-BB- ««r PRii 0 REPLACED WHILE tj______NOW OWNED and OPERATED by DON VANO Pktaif. «nd rW\ J^f'*'* ' ¦ ¦ YOU WAIT «W?"^ _ Dallvary ^ I FOOTBAIX OPTICIANS ^T* Il ' '¦¦j l Bl TICKETSI 7» «_M ' ' GROUND FLOOR WEST THIRD STREET - PHONE ^ S 9 5 - ^ \ ^ \/ From 9 A.M, TO 5 P.M. INCLUDING SATURDAY - • A.M. TO . P.M. fRIDAY *I*f Formerly MIKE'S StandardWl Service J ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦'¦ Jj ¦ — ? ¦¦' ¦ II ¦ II III ¦ i. n aii i n.iai.ai.aai.iiy. n M I . I W I I . I I i i''|— ¦ ¦ ¦ M I- IIIH. I» ¦ ¦ ¦ a. ¦ ¦ IIII .1 niai . I» b-Sai; fm^ T'"' J ' N " " " " ' " j s Th« larmi and eontanls el Ihls advartlsim-itf not applleabla in stalas whara praMblMd by law, ^ ^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ K

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