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1-12-1965 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]. LBJ Asks $1.66 Billion for Education Invites Public Burch Quitting, Bliss Taking GOP Post And Parochial Shift Has Participation WASHINGTON (AP) — PresI- dent Johnson sent Congress a ' record $1.66-billion tots-through* Goldwater s teens education program today, with an open invitation to pri- vate and parochial schools to Approval take part. BULLETIN The proposed program, with PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP ) — heavy emphasis on the children Republican National Chair- of low-income families, is the man Dean Burch today an- heaviest presidential artillery nounced he will resign, ef- fective April 1, and that yet in what Johnson calls his Ray BUss, Ohio GOP chair- war against poverty. man, has consented to be- The provisions for non-public come national chairman. schools to share in the benefits WASHINGTON (AP) - Re- seem certain to trigger a bitter publican National Chairman fight en Capitol Hill. Dean Burch wuTannouncetoday Even before the details were he is stepping laid before Congress | down — after a , it was transition peri- learned, the group known as od—to make "Protestants and Other Ameri- I way for Ohio cans United for Separation of GOP Chairman Church and State," made known Ray O. Bliss, its opposition. a party source However, it also was learned said. that the Roman Catholic hierar- The shift , with chy generally approves, and so former Sen. do some officials of the Nation- al Education Association, which Barry Gold- BOOKED IN SHOOTINGS . . . Police detectives march ' approv- traditionally opposes the use of water s Louis Koullapis, 70 from a police station in Gardena, Calif., BUss al, will be an- , public funds for non > public INAUGURATION ONLY NINE DAY$ parade stands in front of the mansion. Four nounced later today in Phoenix, early today after booking him on suspicion of attempted mur- schools. AWAY ... Nancy Lou Larson, a White House inches of snow cover the seats. The big event Ariz. der following the shooting up of three poker palaces. More An administration source was secretary, tosses a snowball from inaugural is on Jan. 20. (AP Photofax) Burch, Goldwater^, Bliss and than 30 were wounded. (AP Photofax) confident: "This is a good bill, former Rep. William E. Miller, and one we believe we can get EASTERN U.S. HIT Battle Lines the party's vice presidential through the Congress." nominee, gathered , there for a" The comprehensive program joint news conference. would provide assistance to pre- school youngsters in the slums, Johnson and Over Sales Tax Word of the shift — designed 31 Wounded by elementary and secondary to avert a showdown vote by the school pupils in the nation's Foot of Snow national committee on Burch's pockets of poverty, and college Sato Open Begin to Form leadership — came after days of scholarships and other help for By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS behind the scene negotiations. Berserk Gunman worthy and needy high school "It boils down to this," the GARDENA, Calif. (AP) - 350 of them — were so astound- graduates. Anti-sales tax rumbles contin- party source In Some Areas ued Monday as the Minnesota said, "Burch is out Repeated fire by a berserk gun- ed when the shooting started Johnson said the one-year cost Asia Talks By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS counties were closed from the Farmers Union and Democratic- and Bliss is in." man tiiis morning wounded at that they didn't move. in excess of $1.5 billion "is a Travel was impaired, schools storm which blanketed the state But the GOP official who told least 31 persons in one poker Dave Whitmore, 28, a special small price to pay for devel- WASHINGTON (AP) Farmer-Labor party Chairman - Presi- and roads were closed and some with up to 12 inches of snow. George Farr spoke out against of the plan added the change parlor, and possibly several officer , ran out to the sidewalk oping our nation's most price- dent Johnson and Japan's Pre- less resource." Northeastern cities lay under a A snow plan was in effect for any such levy. was not coming at once, that more at two other establish- during the gunfire and was mier Eisaku Sato open strategy there would be a transitional "Poverty has many roots," talks today on U.S. policies in foot of snow in the wake of a 19 of the 23 counties and in Bal- Two other voices expressed ments nearby, police reported. wounded, police said. snowstorm which struck a dozen approval of the proposed tax. period before Bliss takes over. Within an hour after the Witnesses said the gunman the President said, "but the tap the Far East timore. Some rural roads were root is ignorance." states. closed, but main highways were Farr, writing in the State DFL The source said the actual shootings, officers had booked then drove on along the street, and Communist News, said change at the Republican Na- China's efforts New York City was hit by 5 to open. , "It is apparently on suspicion of attempted mur- firing one shot into tbe Monte- The presidential program 9 inches of snow and the sub- the fashion these days for com- tional Committee helm probably der a 70-year-old man who they rey Club next door and one at would provide for fiscal 1966: to cut American The horse races at Bowie , mentators and editorial writers would come early in the spring. infl u ence in urbs had deeper accumulations. Md., were held despite six inch- said came at them with two re- the Horseshoe Club several —Public schools : $1 billion for Most roads in the area have to speculate on some kind of William E. Miller, who was volvers blazing. blocks away. elementary and secondary Asia. es of snow. Frozen turf at Wat- Goldwater' been cleared. Rail travel was supposed shift in DFL attitudes s vice-presidential They said they captured Louis Police said one person was schools serving children from Because o f erford Park in Chester, W. Va., toward revenue - raising tech- running mate, was said to have cold weather, heavy Monday as some com- caused the day's racing pro- Koullapis by startling him with wounded at the Monterey Club, families with less than $2,000 muters were forced to leave niques to finance state govern- recommended that Goldwater and none at the Horseshoe Club. annual income. There are an the President gram to be canceled. ment operations. seek a settlement that a shot fired into the ground, arranged a late their autos at home. would One witness -at the Rainbow estimated 5 million such chil- About 10 inches of new snow avert a showdown vote. then rushing him. morning cere- Schools ln five Maryland "However, the DFL position Club alerted police to the li- dren and 85-90 per cent of the monial welcome fell in the Eastern Panhandle oi on taxes in general and the sales In a statement released to Police said his car matched cense number of the gunman's nation's school districts will for the 63-year- West Virginia and lesser tax in particular has not newsmen Monday night in Co- the description of the one which car, and officers began spread- qualify for assistance. Public o 1 d Japanese Sato amounts elsewhere in the state. changed. The fact of the matter lumbus, Ohio, Bliss said : drove by the Rainbow Club at ing through the neighborhood. and private schools would ba leader in the White House Schools in two counties were is that we maintain as resolutely "Because cf the fact that my the time a flurry of shotgun and Two officers said they came urged to cooperate in shared- East Room. closed because of snow. as ever that the best gauge of name has been so frequently pistol fire began toppling pa- upon Koullapis' car parked on time programs and other joint Britain Builds equity for programs of taxation mentioned in speculation con- trons from their seats at poker use of new facilities. This was to he followed by a Snow also struck the North- the wrong side of a Gardena is the concept of ability to pay." cerning the chairmanship of the tables. street with the motor running. —Higher education: $260 mil- flfr-minute conference in the west and a new invasion of arc- lion to provide 140,000 scholar- President's office with Secre- He added the progressive in- Republican National Commit- Police said three of the per- They said they were ap- tic air swept across the Plains come tax is consistent with that tee, I feel it is imperative to sons were critically wounded. ships, partial payment of inter- tary of State Dean Rusk and Up Defenses states. proaching it when a man est on guaranteed private loans Foreign Minister Etsusaburo principle more than any other express my views on this mat- Officers said the wounded stepped out of the shadows, re- Two inches of snow hampered levy. ter. were taken to hospitals in the to fcollege students — perhaps 2 Shiina also attending. volver in each hand, and began per cent of the usual 6 per cent, Both nations attached high travel in the Salt Lake City, Meanwhile , the board of di- "First, I must make it clear neighborhood —a Los Angeles firing wildly. They grabbed Utah rectors of the Minnesota Farm- assistance to small colleges, Importance to the meeting. For Malaysia , area. One inch whitened that I am strongly hopeful the suburb and the only suburb in him. Craig, Colo. ers Union underscored its out- National Committee and Repub- improved teacher training pro- Rusk called it an opportunity SINGAPORE, Malaysia (AP) Fraser — in the which the playing of draw poker mountains outside Denver right opposition to any sales tax. lican party will not go through a grams, and university-commu- "to do a lot of wood chopping." — Britain's biggest fleet now is — is legalized. had 6 inches of snow in a 6-hour "We expect that the 'revenue purging or bloodletting over this Police counted at least 16 bul- nity extension programs, On his arrival from San Fran- protecting Malaysia from Indo- similar to the traditional agri- cisco Monday night , Sato said, period. gap' will likely be moderate issue. I for one am determined let holes in the floor-to-ceiling Superintendent nesian attack. enough so that it can be met to take no part whatsoever in cultural extension programs. "I feel that it is especially fit- The aircraft carrier Eagle, Light snow added to the exist- window which faces the street —Pre-school: $150 million to ting now that this direct person- ing accumulation across the without the adoption of a major any such action. and provides a full view of the Britain's most formidable war- new tax system," said a resolu- "I would not accept the chair- eradicate the handicaps with al exchange take place between ship, arrived Monday to join the upper Great Lakes. Amounts play inside. 01 Schools at which slum children start first your president who embarks on were generally less than 1 inch, tion passed by the board. The manship under any circum- Far East fleet of more than 70 board is made up of presidents stances until such time as an Witnesses said the gunman grade, when many educational a new term of office within a ships. It includes the carrier but Petoskey , a northern Michi- apparently pulled up to the curb experts say they already are , and myself of the 84 county Farmers Union actual vacancy occurred and I very few days , so Victorious , the commando ship gan sports resort , got 12 inches outside the club, then loosed a two or three years behind. The recent'v come to the helm of a over an 18-hour period. organizations. were asked to do so by Sen. La Crosse Quits Bulwark , guided missile de- The group declared a sales tax Goldwater and had his full sup- volley of shots through the win- projects probably would be pat- new administration in Japan." LA CROSSE, Wis. Ml — John terned after the experimental stroyers and frigates. Temperatures remained be- would damage business econ- port For the good of our party I dow, switching weapons from Bjorge submitted his resigna- Sato took over from ailing Defense preparations were low zero all day Monday across time to time. programs now under way in Hayato Ikeda two months ago. omy and shift a greater part of am sincerely hopeful there will tion as superintendent of La being rushed ashore. The cur- the snow-covered Dakotas and the tax load to farmers and be no disastrous, intraparty One special officer nt the club Detroit , Baltimore and New A second Johnson-Sato meet- Crosse schools to the board York City. This would be part of rent goal was about 9,000 troops the upper Mississippi Valley. wage earners. struggle in Chicago." said the patrons — as many as of education Monday night be- ing Wednesday will be followed in North Borneo the President's budget for the communique. , where Indone- cause of what he termed "the by a joint sia shares a 900-mile jungle bor- Economic Opportunity Act , not With the Viet Nam situation failure of the board to give his educational program. and Communist China's explo- der with Malaysia. They inclufle unanimous backing to a new —Book purchases : $100 mil- sion of a nuclear device last Oc- 500 hard-fighting Nepnlese Gur- salary schedule for teachers. " lion in grants to states for the tober in mind, Sato said that in khas being flown from Hong The new schedule, worked out purchase of textbooks and li- the past few months "we have Kong, beginning Wednesday. after a long controversy between brary books. This would be for witnessed significant changes Helicopters were to shuttle education and city officials, was all schools, public and private, and critical developments in half the Gurkha battalion to the approved by a 5-4 margin, and now faces a stormy session with and whether or not they were areas vitally affecting the con- border as soon as it arrives in in the pockets of poverty. All duct of world affairs. " Borneo. the city council. La Crosse Is one of the comparatively few books purchased would be thoso large cities where the council used by the public schools; the hns final say on school policies purchase of religiously oriented and financing. books would be barred. Quadruplets Born The La Crosse system , Bjorge —Education centers: $100 mil- snid , has the third lowest salary lion for supplementary educa- schedule in the state for teach- tion centers and services, pro- ers. viding public and private school The 51-year-old Bjorge, who pupils alike with tutors, pro- To Kenosha Pair left Tomah to take the $14 ,- grams in remedial reading, KENOSHA , Wis. un - Quad- The first baby, a boy , was 800-a-year La Crosse post less science and language labora- ruplets were born in nine min- born at 7:34 p.m., and the fourth than three years ago, said his tories , summer schools , pro- utes Monday night to a young arrived at 7:43 p.m. They resignation would be effective grams ond teachers for handi- couple whose family already weighed : 4 pounds, 2 . ounces ; June 30. capped children , and acceler- consisted of twins not quite a 3 pounds, 8 ounces ; 4 pounds, 5 ated programs for the gifted . year old and a three-year-old ounces, and 3 pounds, 12M* WEATHER —Educational laboratories: son. ounces. The first two were boys , FEDERAL FORECAST $45 million to strengthen educa- The quadruplets , two boys and tho next two girls. All were WINONA AND VICINITY - tion research nnd extend it into two girls , and Ihe 23-year-old placed in incubators. Snow gradually ending and be- such fields as history, litei utura mother, Mrs, Joyce Graf , were The Grafs , who live in a trail- coming partly cloudy and a lit- and economics, and to develop all reported In good condition at er, may find it a bit crowded PRESIDENT MEETS WITH CABINET . . . President bor W. Willard Wirtz; Secretary of Welfare Anthony Cele- tle colder tonight. Fair and new instructional materials in Kenosha Memorial Hospital. now. In addition to the older Johnson meets at the White House with members of his brezze ; John Connor, newly-named Secretary of Commerce; cold Wednesday. Low tonight all fields. x Mrs. Graf , the wife of Robin boy, they have twins, a boy and cabinet in a discussion of the Chief Executive's proposed Luther Hodges, Secretary of Commerce who .as submitted zero to 10 below , high Wednes- —State agencies : $10 million a machine operator a girl, who will be a year old to strengthen state educational F, Graf , 24 , education program. From left, reading clockwise are: Post- his resignation; Acting Attorney General Nicholas Kutzcn- day 8-10. loyed by a Waukegan, 111., on Jan. 16. agencies, and help them identify emp master General John Gronouski; Glenn Seaborg, chairman bach; Johnson; Budget Director Kermit Gordon; Treasury LOCAL WEATHER roofing firm , entered the hospi- A search of state records Official observation for the 24 emerging educational problems, tal four days before tho birth of Monday night turned up only of the Atomic Energy Commission ; Vice President-elect Hu- Secretary Douglas Dillon; Interior Undersecretary John Car- hours ending at 12 m. today: formulate long-range plans, and the quads, which had been ex- one previous quadruple birth in bert Humphrey ; Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara; ver , and Donald Hornig, special presidential assistant. (AP Maximum , 23; minimum, 0; expand educational research pected. more than 100 years. Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman; Secretary of La- Photofax ) noon, 4; precipitation , trace. and development. P M L sssi Delay on New I1 KUDD-T »K lI i^^ttt^o^^^-IKaSSif^WiW' M-Zr?' 'M' A'^^WAH /JSN? ! rocAM I GLOVES T^DKlCt Dollars Seen Smell Medium or Lo,,. ¦ ( * /£- r^Sp^^ ;— WASHINGTON (AP) - The Plans had been announced I | BB B^ W&£sd Z ^ t ¥KE / ^M 45 miUion silver dollars author- last year to start issuing the w ™ _ ^^^ ized by Congress last year may new coins either late last year 1 z:o c iS^^ , ji^|lDnEnolDr _ 1 1 XTJ-ii—-v '^l « *«*—• never be minted, administration or early in 1965. ^ *•» sources said Saturday . There scorns little doubt that I Oo r^UJlCvm D "^11 «#• ' Minting of the round dollars the Treasury will ask that the i <»«_«,.l^-Jfe l^ a / probably will be postponed until amount of silver now in the (Jf^Bb TOOTH BRUSH decisions are made on the coins in general use be reduced |gf ^gp^ LE5^^-3 - *—'uU '^( broader problem of the silver or eliminated. I ' " J(| *l-M V«li» far content of other coins. If the silver dollars were TISSUES S=v 7/^W- V ^ A. . ^^^. ^m ^m ^BaB^ JKF*«§ i Administration policymakers minted, the Treasury would be f%Q said Congress will be asked put in the awkward position of WV^*^fc c meanwhile to rescind its action recommending silver conserva- I 4 ,0,1, o7c '! -/l| V \^f ^riSfc. -- ^T HI j Hg|»^fSltef-ll U authorizin g the new silver dol- tion in minor coins while con- I 2/ \_E^ ^^BA l lars. This request will be relat- suming 38 million ounces of sil- «>4 MVI\ Tv? ed to general recommendations ver in producing a coin which to relieve shortages of coins and has virtually disappeared , from silver. circulation in many parts of the countrv. 1 _^#^^ ^^ K^^.^-Ji^^. ' A shortage of all coins has persisted for several years des- Wisconsin Town pite a tremendous increase in production. Treasury officials ^^^ have said there are signs of Officials Wait some slight easing of the coin DRISTAN shortage. But there is usually F SllS - - ~M" some "flowback" of coins into 1I i »i**2.49 rs? ml lis fgftS ; — ^^UQ -%«ff2 |f! ?%\ ' On Redislricfinq Federal Reserve banks after the J % LlVOiV « , Chrsitmas shopping season and 39c WISCONSIN RAPIDS Wis. * Rub — An official of the Wisconsin officials probably will observe EMH PgaNg*| —VaP° Towns Association took "a wait this flowback before making a If .. and see" attitude Friday night final decision on silver coinage. ^isl-erine .,.,„.,. 99' |^#.^ QLDnSHM toward the State Supreme Court No silver dollars have been I AYTINAL JR. Chewable l ' AQUAR|UM i decision applying the "one man. minted for about 30 years. Their 1 | ^ ^ one vote' principle to 70 Wiscon- use is limited to a few western J W , Colored CHIPSM S sin county boards. states and to trade promotions I \. MULTI-VITAMINS £ ... Modess .. ^ . 1 %$EAWEED "If we can go along with the elsewhere. ; ^ court's decision, we will , but if I % _. . , M m With any $2 purchase¦ Jf j Treasury officials believe 4 % 1 Bottles *%.**049 -SF ^ft. i ' . JOBf I It takes away the rights of the minting of 45 million silver W 79W P.noni.a Stolnltn Irt , dol- ^gj , oHOO J&- 1*61*15 JSE? 1 towns we can 't." said Ben A. lars would not bring the £ ^ife» °* Hanneman of Wisconsin Rapids, cart- ^ ' wheels back into general cir- Steel c the association s executive sec- culation. Some say the 45 mil- retary. I ^% Blades "C 59 ^^J ^^ f T lion would be gobbled up imme- ^ . ^ j The court said in a decision diately by coin collectors, deal- ers and hoarders. There Wednesday that the 1849 state already Pepsodent White $1.50 Du Barry law setting the formula for elect- have been advertisements in ^ ^ __ ^^ - ^ Mtfflfllfllfll ^^ 7 $> ing county board members some collectors' publications denied equal representation and offering to sell the new coins at was In violation of state and fed- a premium bf $3 to $5. •ual constitutions. The ruling, which will provide ^^ 7Cr ^Bmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ^BfBnB^A AJ MB^^K^^^^^^^B a greater voice for urban resi- Chiang Plans / , dents in county government, *J y mmmmmmmW^m!^lf 4jilB^K^^^^^^^^^^LI DAKA D gave the Legislature until Nov. To Continue R-"**^- * -.vz iA ^ M lF i/ f JU ^^^ Hi] U D^/VID 1 to change the law. % $1.00 Mitch ums " * 11 iV l 1 ' fl PA KKIKl/^ A [A* k* FU 1 Hanneman said the court China Flights ^aaaa\\aW%A^BI^^^^^^^^M ,** "overstepped" its authority in ruling on the case. He said the TAIPEI , Formosa > . — Mili- Legislature was responsible for tary sources indicated Monday LOTION establishing proper representa- that the Chinese Nationalist air t^c We Invite You to Open a Charge Account | ^-^^^^ tion. force will continue U2 recon- I I Hazel naissance flights over Red Chi- . *J •** f |jC I sssskssSKSSSKS^^ fl Bishop I ^ V/ S» g? 7; "We would go along with any na despite Peking's claim to P ^y .^^^,^.,^, .,. .^^ ,,. 1 ^ ' fl "" "'°" -^^ reasonable changes the Legisla- have downed another of the "*"*"* || J^Swm ^;::*;^;:^M:5 ^M«^^ | $3.00 Nutri Tonic A $6.00 locien lelong | | ¦ $1.25 7 ture might make," Hanneman % Longer Lasting I high-altitude planes. li Revlon Intimate § U _ ^. _ „ U I said. "But they must be reason- The Nationalist air force con- ^ able and area, not alone popula- firmed that the plane was miss- ^" SHAMP0 C0L GNES tion, should be considered." SPRAY '^ ANACIN R SPRAY ing on a flight over North China (4I m 1 HXIR ¦ I Jar ° I§ Tail-S in° Sirocco and I Iu' HAI 9 The court ruling applies to all Sunday. It was pilot hy Maj. COLOGNE^TM r\f*i. iT ^ . p counties except Milwaukee and Chang Lih-yi, who had flown i | COLORING | | «— | -o, I Menominee, which are organized five missions over the mainland year $133 lj TABLETS 1 under other laws. in recent months, the air force 0nce a Speciat ¦ $^oo i __ said. I 1 $noo I mntmmmmmamm1 * Advtrir»«mmf I * O I Jc Peking claims it has shot i $0°° ^ I | 5 down three other U.S.-built U2 ||mmmmymmmmmmmmz | $1.59 Lilt |; y mzmmimmmmrnvMim § wll w ft ¦sfcWFFY planes since 1962. | rmrnmmx'v;Amm . mmm li Wi 7 \0 TWIW $1 00 I ur\iir ^ ldroot Q fi tm^ss^^smsm^w^m^. § Se, new Rev.cn Eterna HAIR CREAM ^^^ ^ . ^^ SECRET | | | Apartment' Building | ^^^""' BEAUTY Ro„ 0n I PERMANENT | lar8 . 7^ Sli. I Ca.hmer. Bouquet Burns at Proctor J | ASPIRIN By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | TREATMENTS j 59c 1 | CQAQ | Fires in fiorthern Minnesota 99c 49c J r] ^r™¦• ,,. ,,-,•-¦--¦— ^^ ,^^ , :,,, ^^ i I ill5-0rain, 250 Tablet! destroyed an apartment building « "•¦• ^ ^ G^m^z&xmxmziis^^ | | in Proctor and a tavern in Bi- | 1 | | wabik Sunday. NIKOBAN iApcR c c About 30 persons lost all their I s:^s 1 r^s^ r 4 • 29 49 OF COURSE MC'3 HAPPY/ LOOK personal belongings as they fled D I into subzero cold from their (making deterrent ^ Ww r — nfi^H] — . . . 7 F ATM.L THE ffOURAWCf HE HAS/ 7 \\ Jki> . /J n A II fi ^m^mmmiT^yKiA: *&tm*mx:*.mw A mm r Snap 3^=*==^ u^*^ ^m ^^m ^m ^\ Does Your Burner Perform J0r | I rM | t*\AQ ' mmT^^l: o PERFECTION CURAD" coinpiexionscnmnlexinns: . P.. \no c O 90l?r,r 0 7 | -ouchtau- # Once-a-Year^ ^I xiPP. ; sn™® ™ " • • I! PROPERLYand SATISFACTORILY? Mm nMl^*-'wAMn V-rpFAuil\ tA/V| i\ "\f , A«»orf«d colors %wm:K3&» End Coal ^youih-gMn R nifo . Futl Co ) K rni. Vou // 7 tVOI¥/ ^ ^ ^ ^ i i ^* - I ^ M ^ l> ^^ 4 rj ^,^ ;( . C: ^C ,« ^ \l I... »li» ... FlortrirL|ecTr,c . f 11 4 A ! Coll Ut For "fCRSONAl AUTOMATIC J ul Mp , ,„,,,. ... ¦ ¦ CARE" . niitiliih .VKl lahn, M VV>*ITII. I IV , yH ¦*.«*¦ « .,t^ ,h y d,ti . .. ou^« ! \ IHN »f t' IFf COSMETIC tf. rlLM w., regularly. . 1.00^^^ \ • KEEP PULL SERVICE • BUDGET PLAN : T/ un,<•/ ,, .(f ,,i(jW 7 l\ -',!-» • Wli' I Alarm Clock ^ L helT ^ ! <(.llei.u . O BAGDMV3 WlfrhWilli tI H| SIblw«IM 6O20M , 127,„ ps luins a firmer nmrt 7 Jf «k,i. .•tint ; | • GUARANTEED PRICE • BURNER SERVICE yo.,Wo/ Jpp,,Mn, .. ll o,H„ flW/ " p««HlT f«H«r.n« with 24. \\ -\\ I ' - ' JICT : ^ g MB ? hnur protfrlion »nd inli-prr. \i h.ip. («i in & matchlrto„|, I« - —-.-»r 3| "»-r 9 I N/ IK VH'ict; < .inim .mil.inr/ ilm,,,,, , • „ ,„ /,.„/,!.-/.,. ' , ,J,ui„. .0 ,»»fi Wklt. C *% H ^k. 1 , i„nl , (,llon yoll f,„ „u,t< T Jit, u.io, «,«*«!.< ^^ C " -^ horn ylhrch„,c l.of _ p < « A S fj Coln«J« / W f-i / . + *'/ U *J Roll OOr I vlinintUnt clolhing d, ' or „„„_ r ^Jf dlo , .... H "" O Q C wm AS CMS . mo. | PUM# ^ J < •"•«•< j PHONE 3389 wornrn for over :>0 yMr(. ?• by Shulton A ^ • • - *^ */ W (/ ¦ * ^ | g | —¦- ^ — >- ---.JM-'j^^j it^ij-w^aK^^asLUt^^ K J Students, Bank Staffers Annual Taxes Estimated Added to Queen Hopefuls Gilmore Pushed as School Site By C. GORDON HOLTE . for a new Senior High School owners who said they have figures on how this expendi- BOARD MEMBERS then re- Daily Newi Staff Writer building and, possibly, a struc- plans for development of the ture's impact would be reflect- turned to Senior High School ture to house the Winona Area proposed school site as a resi- ed on the local tax levy. for their formal meeting at In three meetings Monday dential area. Bonding consultants, he said, which a delegation of Gilmore night on its projected school Vocational-Technical School. Avenue area property owners building program the Board of • Submitted to the City Coun- have estimated that if the $5.98 THE FIRST two building bond issue were to be retired was waiting to be heard. Education: cil the draft of a proposed bill matters were discussed inform- to authorize a $5,980,000 bond over a 20-year period the in- The tract under consideration • Received at least tacit ap- ally at what . terest rate would be approxi- as a school site is owned by 17 proval of the Winona Planning issue to finance construction were more or ¦ i private owners and a of the two buildings. £ mately 3.2S percent or, trans- different Commission in the board's se- less briefing OChOOl lated into mills, 20.4 mills would portion is city park property.. lection of a tract near the .west • Heard from a delegation of sessions on be required for debt reduction Richard H. Darby, a Winona the site Gilmore Avenue area property end of Lake Winona as the progress Doard and interest payments. Over 25 attorney, told directors that his of the school | POoa U years the interest would be 3.3 firm represented nine property expansion pro- percent and the mill cost 17.2 owners along Gilmore Avenue gram. The meeting with the while over a 30-year period a who have plans for developing Marjorie Goodrich property owners was later in 3.4 percent rate would be an- a portion of the area under con- the evening at a regular board ticipated for a millage increase sideration for homesites. Subzero Cold meeting at which the nine di- of 15.6. "While we're not opposed to rectors also acted on several condemnation if the board feels other details associated with HOW THIS would be felt ln that this is tbe site it must dollar terms was spelled out Rose Eickman Judy Fetting school construction. have, we do feel that we should using, as as example, a proper- point out certain things," Darby " Seen Tonight The triple-header evening ty owner with a house whose Two bank employes and two Arcadia, is another graduate of — who was accompanied by started at Central Junior High market price was $21,000. students have heen added to the Arcadia High School. She lives Snow ending and becoming The temperature rose to 4p about a half dozen owners — partly cloudy and a little colder Monday afternoon and nearly School where the school board The 20-year bond retire- said "First, I think we aD real, roster of candidates for 1*965 at 550V4 W. King St. • . The 18-year-old candidate is is tiie forecast for Winona and half an inch of snow fell over was host to six members of the ment plan would increase his ize the city needs aU the tax- Winona Winter Carnival queen, sponsored by H. Choate & Co. vicinity tonight. Southeastern Minnesota and Planning Commission at a din- taxes $44.88 a year; the 25-year producing property it can have ner during which the recent de- chairman James D. Mohan said She is 5 foot 7, weighs 130 A low of zero to 10 below is Western Wisconsin. Overnight plan, $37.84 a year, and over and if this property would be this morning. the prediction for tonight. Fair the low was zero and at noon cision designating the Lake Wi- 30 years, $34.32 a year. condemned it would become tax pounds and wears a size 11 nona site as the most desirable The list now includes Rose dress. She has blonde hair and and cold is Wednesday's fare today the thermometer reading • Actually, it wouldn't •xempt" Eickman, an installment loan with a high of 8-10 above. Thurs- was 4. of some seven which had been amount to that much, Nelson blue eyes. Her hobbies are bowl- under consideration was re- HE SAID the owners he rep- teller at First National Bank; ing, ice skating, swimming and day's outlook, is for no precipi- pointed out, because taxpayers tation and a little warmer. A YEAR AGO today 3 Inches viewed. resented had been planning for Judy Fetting, a receptionist at golfing. of snow lay on the ground with now are paying $22 a year on development what amounts to the same bank ; Marjorie Good- The principal speaker at this the 10-mill levy for the school about two-thirds of the tract for GOODRICH, , lives at the high 17 and the low 1. All- , rich, a Winona Secretarial MISS 20 time high for Jan. 12 was 50 in meeting was Edwin O. Eckert building sinking fund. residential purposes and that 221 W. Broadway. Sponsored by a member of the Winona firm School student, and Jane Schoe- 1928 and the low —34 in 1912. • The net amount expected three proposed plats had bees we, a Winona State College Piggly Wiggly Store, she is the County Told of Mean for the past 24 hours was of Eckert & Carlson, associated tb be added to the tax rate un- prepared. One of these, he freshman. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bur- 12. Normal for this time of the with Caudill, Rowlett & Scott, der the 20-year plan, then, showed, made provision for ton Goodrich, Easton, Minn., winter is 16. Houston, Tex., as architects for on 25 years about 90 lots in the area the MISS EICKMAN would be $22.68, , . 20, is the and was graduated from Good Slippery stretches were re- the high school project. Eckert $15.84 and over 30 years, $12.32. board is considering as a site daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mam- Jane Schoewe Need for Home for the high school building. Counsel Academy, Mankato. CTImm Studio photos) ported on many Minnesota and backgrounded commission ert Eickman, Galesville Rt. 1, She is 5 foot 4 and weighs 108 members on studies made of An annual sinking fund levy One proposed plat he said, Wisconsin highways from the of between 2 and 3 mills prob- , and was graduated from Arcad- pounds. She wears a size 9 dress light snow. Passing lanes on in- suggested school sites and pre- had been prepared in 1960 and ia High School. Her sponsor is and has dark brown hair and ence. She was graduated from Nursing Service sented preliminary results of ably would be necessary, the he added, "We think the board Hermantown High School in Du- terstate highways, too, were superintendent added, to provide radio station KWNO. brown eyes. Her hobbies are Need for a home nursing serv- slippery and motorists were soil tests taken at four locations should be aware of these fac- She is 5 foot 6, weighs 115 luth. ice was discussed by iSftss Sus- for routine maintenance and tors. We don't know how the playing piano, bicycling and urged to drive cautiously. in different parts of the city improvement of plant. pounds, wears a size 10 dress summer sports. She hopes to She is 5 foot 3Y4, weighs 117 an Steiner, Winona County pub- Lowest reading in Minnesota that figured in the board's ul- other property owners feel but and has brown hair 'and eyes. become a medical secretary. pounds, wears a size 9 dress lic health nurse, at Monday and the nation loday was —30 at timate decision to use the west BRIESATH TOLD board we're here to point out to the Her hobbies are sewing, reading and has medium blonde hair night's meeting of the county Intertiational Falls. It was —25 lake area, is possible for the members that he had heard no board something to consider and most sports. She lives at MISS SCHOEWE, who is the and blue eyes. Her hobbies in- nursing board. at Bemidji and —22 at Duluth. new high school. opposition to the school build- when it thinks about taking 353 E. Wabasha St. daughter of Major and Mrs. The- clude knitting, sports, sewing, Intensive visiting of patients Rochester posted a low of —2 ing program and felt that it was choice potential tax producing odore M. Schoewe, Duluth, is a speaking Spanish and playing in the 65 and older age group is after a Mond".y high of 20 and AS HE HAD told the board endorsed generally by residents land which has become more MISS FETTING, daughter of 19-year-old freshman at Winona piano and organ. She hopes to needed, she said. In 1964, she last week, Eckert said that the valuable with the construction La Crosse had figures of —2 and of the city. " Mr. and Mrs, Norbert Fetting, State, majoring in social sci- become a social worker. visited 12 such patients a total 22 for the same times. architects' recommendation of Aid. James Stoltman (other of tbe shopping center. of 87 times, she went cm, visit- Edmonton and Regina, Cana- the tract lying south of Gilmore Council members at the meet- Superintendent Nelson asked, ing one such patient 35 times. da, had -34, while Minot, N.D., Avenue and just east of the ing were Daniel Bambenek, Neil "Are we to understand that had —15. new Miracle Mall shopping cen- Sawyer, Jim Mohan, Henry you're opposed in principle to HER DEPARTMENT receiv- putting the school here?" ed an increasing number of re- Light snow dusted the upper ter now under construction Parks, Clarence Tribell and quests for housekeepers and portions of WISCONSIN again would be the most desirable Harold Thiewes) asked the "WE'RE NOT opposed in City s Housing Code- nurses, Miss Steiner told the today but most of the southern for building purposes was based superintendent what the board principle," Darby replied, "but board. One nurse, however, can landscape remained bare. on the findings that this area expected the life of the new we think it would be wise for visit only a limited number of Temperatures again were on was the most centrally located buildings would be. you to consider other sites be- patients she said. the cold side following a new as far as student population is Nelson replied, "We assume cause this is choice tax prop- Tlie situation, is complicated, cold front that passed through concerned and that it probably that 60 years from now they'll erty and these people have plans How It Should Work she explained, by many patients the state Monday. Superior hit could be developed most econ- still be there and in use.- After to sell lots for houses here." By FRANK UHLIG • The over-all test should be the city should try to induce having a chronic illness needing a low of 22 below zero early to- omically for school building all, the present Senior High One of the property owners Daily News Staff Writer whether a condition contributes voluntary compliance of proper- daily care and by many families day. Park Falls had 15 below when all factors were taken School was built in 1916 and interjected , "One of the owners The fabric of urban renewal to blight or.adversely affects its ty owners. We don't deal in ab- being financially unable to hire and Eau Claire 7 below. into consideration. is still being used." in this area just lost out on a got a thread-by-thread inspec- area, Binford said. solute numbers. We want to help. The Beloit region topped the A number of Nelson recalled that in its $10,000 sale when it came out state Monday with 36. questions about discussion of -the building pro- tion Monday night by members • Owners of property should know about qualitative aspects What is worse, she said, is the soil studies and other as- about you considering this for of the City Council, City Plan- receive a notice of findings and as well as quantities." that help is not available even One inch of new snow was on pects of site gram the board had considered a school." selection were the possibility of constructing ning Commission, Citizens Ad- get a reasonable time in which for many families able to hire the ground today in the Superior posed by commission members Santelman told the delegation visory Committee Housing and COUNCIL President Harold it. area as a result of Mondayte a plant to accommodate 1,200 , to fix up defects, if repairs are Briesath asked whether the present—Vice Chairman James that the board's selection of the Redevelopment Authority add indicated. Binford added that Adding home nursing to the light snowfall. T. Schain students with core facilities to lake area site as the most de- city's present corps df inspect- , William F. White, allow for expansion to a future interested citizens. owners should be asked to state services provided by the county The U.S. high was 84 at Pom- James Foster, James Klein, sirable had been made after Elmer Binford, regional urban ors could also inspect for hous- pano Beach, Fla., Monday. enrollment of 1,800. when and how such repairs ing code compliance. public health department, Miss Philip A. Baumann and Norman thorough study and that the renewal representative, discuss- would be made. It also may be Steiner said, would involve hir- Indall — but during the session "THEN WE FOUND ont that board had not known until a ing the touchy issue of housing necessary to make allowances Any licensed, trained inspect- ing another nurse and adopting lasting a little few days ago that plans for plat- or, replied Binford, could do more than an the estimated cost of a full code implementation, said good in hardship cases, he sa*id, de- a policy of fees for services. hour no objections to the site school project would come to ting the area for residential pup- judgment in its use will preserve pending on individual situations. the job. They should report to This added cost, she said, would selection were poses had been initiated. a single supervisor, he caution- La Crescent Man heard. only $390,000 more than the lim- public confidence. At the same An appeal board should be be balanced by a decrease in School board President Law- • ed, in order to avoid duplication ited building," he continued. "UNLESS something come* time it will help head off prop- part of the enforcement appara- county payments for use of rence Santelman asked that the "We felt that in 10 years or so erty deterioration and falling tus Binford said. Only in rare and preserve economy. nursing home and hospital facil- commission at up to change our minds I as- , Delays Plea its meeting building costs probably will be sume we land values, he added. cases, where cooperation by Vose asked whether retroac- ities. Thursday consider formal action 'll go through prescrib- higher, the cost of adding to an ed condemnation proceedings," REDEVELOPMENT alone is owners is completely lacking, tive credit for implementation Miss Steiner showed the board approving the site for school existing building always is should the city have to resort could be granted by the agency a film, "Care in the Home," building purposes. Santelman said, "with apprais- but a limited tool, Binford said, greater than the original cost ers named to set values on all explaining that when there is to such measures as condemna- in connection with buildings re- dealing with home nursing. To Two Charges and we felt it would be more tion, he added. moved to make way for college LA CRESCENT, Minn. (Spe- SCHOOL DIRECTORS then of the property. As you know, a high degree of occupancy in THE NURSE'S annual report economical in tbe long run to if you're not then satisfied with an area it must be continually expansion and similar new con- cial ) — Everett Newburg Jr., went to City Hall for a meet- lete school ROY VOSE, city sanitary in- for 1964, presented at the board ing with members construct the comp the appraisers' amount you upgraded. This is why the fed- struction. 22, 3rd and Elm streets, La of the City at the outset. spector, asked Binford if the meeting Monday, indicated that Council to present the draft of " have your opportunity for your eral government requires such a This would not relate to the Crescent, asked Justice Wayne Stoltman wanted to know if government "requires that prog- housing code, Binford said, since she had made a total of 277 vis- the proposed bill the board day in court. We made studies code in any city aspiring to its to 141 patients. Most of these Lottes here Monday for a con- the vocational school contem- ress be shown in the first year it was carried on without refer- tinuance of one week on wants the state Legislature to at four sites N that appeared to eligibility for renewal assist- were made to patients in the charges plated now would be adequate to be large enough to accommo- ance. The housing code deals after adoption of the housing ence to the code or any inspec- pending against him for alleged- enact at its current session au- code," and if a systematic en- tions made under it. school age group. A total of 154 thorizing the bond issue for meet future needs. date the school building and de- only with dwellings, outlining a visits were made to 109 such ly striking a car which injured "We think that the school termined that this was the most of f actors relatirg to forcement plan required in the Answering a question by Po- school building. number second year, following this "in- patients. two Winona County girls Satur- Council President we're talking about would house desirable." health and safety of occupants. lice Chief James McCabe, Bin- day night. Harold terim" period. The Mantoux testing program Briesath explained that Mon- all that we have now — you One property owner asked It's up to the city itself to ford recited experiences of sev- was carried out in 41 schools, He is scheduled to plead next know we're now spread out all Binford answered affirmative- eral other cities. Some issue in- day was not a regular meeting whether Westfield Golf Course find the best way to enforce ly. He said the interim period with 2,239 of a possible 2,629 Monday to charges of careless night for the over the city with our voca- such codes, Binford said. He formative literature to instruct Council so no ac- had been considered as a pos- is "peculiar to Winona," since pupils take tests. A total of 10 driving and leaving the scene of tion could be taken on the mat- tional program — and would sible sita offered some general guidelines: citizens. Rockford , III., trying a personal injury accident. allow for plenty of future ex- normally the implementation of to carry out its own program new reactors was found. Vision ter but indicated that it would Santelman said that thought • Enforcement should first tests were given to 989 pupils, Lottes said his driver's license pansion ," the superintendent be directed toward locations in such a code should have started without federal assistance, found be placed on the agenda for had been given to this but in immediately. and the hearing of 1,177 was didn 't show that he had a re- next Monday 's meeting. answered. which the need for improvement it necessary to enact a strict stricted license. consideration of the fact that Is most obvious. The city should Vose then asked whether the housing code as the only meth- tested. Most of the meeting with the BRIESATH asked how many Westfield had just completed a city would be required to "show Sharon Mosher of the Pano- Council was devoted "avoid launching an attack in ' od by which it could proceed . to a pre- students were enrolled at Senior substantial clubhouse construc- two years of progress in Janu- rama Motel, La Crescent Rt. 2, sentation by Superintendent of places where you are reasonably Smaller cities have more diffi- and Eileen Gile, High now. Nelson said there tion program and that in fair- ary 1966" despite the fact the , Physical Education Dakota, were Schools A. L. Nelson of data ,100 in attendance ness to the club it would be nec- sure of compliance. Homes January culties than larger ones Binford thrown from the small foreign were about 1 built since adoption of the city code was adopted in said, but the code is "valuable Programs Topics at on the contemplated plans for but consideration is being given essary to provide a new site. 1964 and nothing has been done in and of itself to maintain a car when it allegedly was struck financing construction of the to a proposal to enroll Cotter "We felt that the cost of this building code in 1954 could well it. be bypassed." in the interim to activate high degree of values." 2 Whitehall Meetings from the rear by Newburg. The two schools. students on a shared time bas- would be prohibitive," Santel- When the city's Workable Pro- accident happened about one- Nelson explained that esti- is in the new school. man explained, adding that oth- Since it's not known what Improve- WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) buildings may be removed in a gram for Community THE ANNUAL progress re- third of a mile east of La Cres- mates call for an expenditure This would swell the enroll- er factors also figured in the de- ment' is reviewed for annual re- port needed for re-certification — Orlo Miller, state physical cent on Highways 61-14 at 10:30 of 54 ,630,000 for a new Senior subsequent renewal project , the education supervisor, will be ment by an estimated 200 and , cision. not certification next August, Bin- next August should be submitted p.m. High School to accommodate the superintendent said, a fu- inspection program should Housing here Wednesday to speak at two begin in the 2f>-bloek planning ford said , the and about June 1, Binf ord told City Sharon remains in critical 1,800 students and $1,350,000 for ture enrollment of close to 1,- AFTER THE delegation had Home Finance Agency will ask Attorney George M. Robertson meetings sponsored by the of- condition with fractures of both a separate facility for the vo- left the board took action on two area. Fringe areas around col- fice of the Trempealeau County B00 is anticipated . by- what has been accomplished. Jr. Even if the city's Workable legs between knee and ankle. cational-technical school. other matters associated with leges should be similarly superintendent of schools, Mrs. Briesath asked whether the passed for the time being, he The agency does not set exact Program certification lapses, She has 24-hour nursing service. board had made any decision the building project as recom- quotas or performance norms, Binford said , the $77,660 plan- Lily Reich. UNDER PRESENT regula- mended earlier in the evening added , until school expansion Eileen , less seriously injured, is , as to the length of time over he said, since all cases vary. ning grant now in force will be Miller will talk to school ad- tions the superintendent noted, which bonds would be retired. by City Attorney George M. plans are definitely set. recovering from head and leg Winona taxpayers now pay ap- First-year progress is naturally honored by the government. But ministrators and supervisors at cuts and bruises. Both are at Santelmnn said thnt no discus- Robertson. • IN GENERAL, he said, slow, he said, but the objective certification must be kept up in 3:30 p.rn. and physical educa- proximately 13 percent of the should begin Lutheran Hospital , La Crosse. sion had been devoted to this One requests the city engineer code application should be to build an implemen- order to qualify for any subse- tion instructors at 7:30 p.m cost of vocational education factor , but that when the board to make a position survey of the where values are going down , tation program that will be ex- quent assistance in an actual The accident was investigat- with the remainder of the cost His topic will be improving phy- ed by the Highway Patrol and had determined what it believed entire tract under consideration where defects exist and whore tended to all potential improve- project , he cautioned. sical education programs in financed by slate and federal can be headed off the Houston County sheriff' s of- , would be the most economical as a school site and the other deterioration ment areas within 10 years. A neighborhood analysis, also schools and the state require- aids tuition and other sources. period , n recommendation would authorizes the city attorney to bv systematic enforcement. fice. Both cars were proceeding At this rate, he continued , the VOSE ASKED whether the a requisite, need not be "elab- ment programs. west toward La Crescent be made to the Council. secure abstracts of title to tho • A public information pro- orate," he told Robertson , but . total building cost to the tax- , to pro- agency designates the number He then asked that the Council property and provide an opin- givm is vital , he added it should have been produced pays of Winona would come to act as soon as possible on the ion on title. mote citizen acceptance of the of inspectors needed. Binford by now. It is the basis for 2nd Dairy Meeting around $175,000. importance said this is left to local discre- Rochester Planning proposed legislative request ond Directors also voted formal code as having identifying functioning, Improv- Nelson snid that an expand- Briesath indicated it would be adoption of a resolution request- equal to that of codes for build- tion. The rule of thumb i.s that ing areas as well as those which Set for Thursday For New High School ed program of federal aids to plumbing and most properties which need it taken up at the Council's next ing legislative authorization for ing, electricity, appear to be declining and in At State Line Inn vocational education has been meeting. tho bond issue. sanitation. should be inspected in the pro- need of upgrading, he observed. ROCHESTER , Minn. - A drafted but since the formula • A sinflle comprehensive in- gram period, in this case 10 PRESTON, Minn. (Special) planetarium and a development- for distribution of funds hasn 't Taenday. January rz. 196S WINONA DAILY NEWS 3 spection , using a council-approv- years, he added . If the city ALD. WILLIAM Holden ask- — The second dairy education al reading laboratory will be in- been precisely determined yet ed check list, should bo the goal , chooses to insocct obviously ed whether housing code en- meeting will be held Thursday corporated in the new Mayo this wasn't taken into consid- he suggested. The list would in- needed areas fi rst, especially forcement could be the province at the State Line Inn for the High School scheduled for com- eration in figuring Winona con- clude such items as toilets, rental properties , and issues oc- of other than the department 60 persons who have enrolled pletion here next yenr. struction data. Any additional NOTICE OF ANN0AL MEETING plumbing, wiring, windows, cupancy certificates on this bas- of health. Binford snid the deci- for the course. The planetarium will bo a money realized from these new sion is tho city 's and that it To Mtmbers ef routes of egress and ingress. is, the HHFA will accept the Last week many farmers large, blacked-out room with a provisions probably would cut th* , could conceivably be made a Good judgm ent should always method Binford said. who had not enrolled had to be domed roof where students can the local cost of the building be exercised , he said. If a Attempting to define the de- fire department function , for program even more. Fidelity Savings & Association instance. Availability of funds turned away at tlie door. see projections of stars and Loan house were satisfactory in all gree of city compliance further , This week' planets and their relationships Joeph Krier , WHRA board mem- in one or another department s topic will bo Revenues available for thn major respects hut had a stair- quality milk ond dairy pro- to each other and will be used he explained , ber , asked if "Intent nnd some might determine the choice, he vocational school project of Winona, Minnesota way too narrow , ducts which will be conducted by all Rochester schools. this would he an instance where progress' in code enforcement noted . anil use of $200,000 the board Aid Holden and James Stolt- by two dairy specialists from The reading laboratory will believes can be drawn from PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the annual nwt.mg of the discretion is used nnd where would satisfy the agency. . have individual booths in which jud icious inspector would not "Wc don 't have set quotas ," man asked what city liabilities the University of Minnesota. the school building sinking Fidelity Savings and Loan Association of Winona will he the am studepts will use enforce- Binford said. "Y o u should would be, should Winonn decide special read- fund by l'-M>7 would reduce held at the office of the Association , 172 Main St.. Winona , demand letter-perfect ing machines march forward , of course. But not to go ahead with projects RUSHFORD PATIENTS designed to im- the overall cost of $4,605,- ment. prove reading rates and com- Minnesota, on Tuesday. January 19. 106S. at 7:30 P.M.. when the government - financed RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) 000. of which M percent for the purpose of electing Directors and amendment of improvement plan is finished. prehension levels. would be charged against — The Rev. John B. Rockne nnd nonresident students to bring Artich 8, Sec. I . of the by-laws and for the transaction of * Some justification for allotting Mrs. Ed Peterson arc patients STOCKTON PATIENT j rf^ Eagles Regular Meeting funds is needed by tho govern- the net cost nf the two such other business as may properly come before the j at Lutheran Hospital, La Crosse LEWISTON , Minn. (Special) buildings to Winona taxpay- meeting. ment, other than pure "experi- Benny Jacobson returned Mon- — lister Ladewig, Stockton , is Wed.—8 p.m. in the Aerie Room : which it does not ers to $3,684,000. FREDERICK G. SCHILLING BIJJJNSB mentation ," day. Jlobert Steinbaucr i.s a at St. Mary 's Hospital , Roches- Richnrd 4) ter Saxrttary ?- TS^V Seeling, W.P. (Continued on I'agc 14 Col. patient at Community Memor- , receiving treatment and The superintendent then pre- WHOSE JUDGMENT ial Hospital, Winona. X-rays. sented tha Council with some They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmie Hatlo Serving in Armed Forces 2 Stores Burn y 9t KjappsauuL< aii. TUqhL To Attend Army In Stevens Point STEVENS POINT, Wil. OB - A fir* Monday ruined a pair Men Who Like of buildings housing , two Jong Command School established businesses in one of ST. CHARLES, Minn. - Ma]. P. Mueller , son of Mrs. Norman Stevens Point's worst downtown arrived for duty Karl 0. Kuckhahn, whose wife L. -Mueller, has blazes in many years. Knees. Arise lives in St. Charles, has arrived with a U.S. Air Force support Fi at t e By EAJtl WILSON at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan., to at- unit^in Berlin, Germany. Sgt. remen were he s me at NEW YORK - We metf ai t being gypped by the nation's tend the 1965 spring associate Mueller, a radar maintenance midmorning and expected to re- at female fashion editors who ha i-e privately decided, during a course at the U.S. Army Com- technician, previously served main for most of the day. , Okla. He is a grad- convention here, that they'll pr ibably oppose the new "above- mand and General Staff College. Altus AFB Heavily damaged were Han- the*knees hemline" which would let us chaps see a pretty knee uate of Alma High School. His Maj. Kuckhahn is one of 455 's Pharmacy and the now and then. wife, Dorothy, is the daughter non Con. officers selected for the 18-week Independ- tinental Men's Clothing Store. I object ! I appeal to Amer can men to rise up and speak course which prepares students of Roman Mlynek , out for freedom of the knees. for duty as commanders and ence. The blaie was discovered by address: Spec. 4 Ron- "The ugliest part of a woman shouting "Down with Khrush- general staff officers of combat New a policeman around 2 a.m. The is her knees, these woman ald L. Metzler, Aero Scqut Pla- chev!" got out of prison the divisions or logistical com- local fire department -was fashion editors are saying. toon (A-119) , APO 24, San; Fran- other day and , anxious to make mands. aided by detachments from "Men don't like to see a knee." cisco, Calif. 96224. amends, went around shouting A graduate of St. Charles High nearby Park Ridge and Whit- Is that so? I happen to adore School, the major was graduat- • "Hurray for Khrushchev!" He Wis. — ing. knees. I'll bet that Kim Novak's ed in 1950 from the "U. S. Mili- INDEPENDENCE. of was sent back to prison for 5 son A vacant building next to the knees . . . and the knees tary Academy, West Point, N.Y. A.l.C. David . C. Marsolek , , Lee Remick , years. Inde- clothing store suffered heavy Shirley MacLaine He was commissioned in 1950 of Clarence A. Marsolek , Eva Marie Saint, Elke Sommer water damage and other nearb I LEARNED a neiv drunk — and was recently stationed in pendence Rt. 2 , has completed y and . Ann-Margret would not structures had smoke damage. uhhh, drink — at Killer Joe's Korea. His mother, Mrs. Louise a special course for Air Force prove so ugly as to make me at "Crowfly" (that's a new dance) H. Hoeft , lives in Johnson communications technicians wince and turn away. Could Marsolek", party at the Jack Frosts' home Creek, Wis. Goodfellow AFB , Tex. Sophia Loren's knees really be Independence at tne former Gamble Benedict a graduate of 9th Child Born disgusting? assigned mansion. It's called "Crow ." LA CRESCENT, Minn. — S. High School , is being "You fashion editors," I told support unit and it's Old Crow and aquavit Sgt. Roy F. Barkley Jr., son oi to a U.S. Air Force To Bob Kenned one of them, "are thinking of , mother is Mrs. ys and after drinking "Crow ," you Mr. and Mrs. Roy F. Barkley , in Europe. His older women's knees ... but Martha B. Marsolek , 124 W. 2nd NEW YORK (AP) - Ethel I'm sure that even Joan Craw- fly. 'Bye! 300 N. Elm St., will be an recruiter at St., Winona. Kennedy, wife of Sen. Robert F. ford and Marlene Dietrich have Outer Space news : "Do you official Air Force ¦ La Crosse. He was selected as Kennedy, D-N.Y., gave birth by real darling knees." have universities in Outer a volunteer with an outstanding Caesarian section Monday ta The fashion editors probably Space?" . . . "No. we teach our military record, according to the $11, 920 in J ewelry an eight-pound son at Roosevelt will come out for just-below-the- children to drink at home" Hospital. MM QBW Bf ^^fa*—¦—a—»J» -*»*«!«. ^?B^^g£^w^w»»*^wws-»«aj*^MM*^^ Air Force. Sgt. Barkley, pre- , there (Frank Humor Soc. ^ Returned to Owner knees hemlines. So get is Lee Wilde, viously assigned to an air base The hospital said mother and and fight, men, if you want the of America) in Germany, has completed a ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP ) - A baby were fine. aee-level about the knee-level, The young jet set s shook by special course for recruiting of- little bit of luck was riding with It is the Kennedys' ninth JOEY HEATHERTON, the 20- word from Serena Russell, ficers at Lackland AFB , Tex. Carlota Busch Flanigan , daugh- child. They have six boys and Wondshell just signed granddtr of the Duke of Marl- ten-.of August A. Busch Jr. , three girls. year-old ' by Jack Warner for 5 years, is borough, that's she s giving us president of the Anheuser-Busch The senator accompanied his up and going back to England, 2 Local Exhibits brewery and owner of the St. for Show wife to the hospital Sunday. also being wooed by NBC forever . . . Duo: Rich play- a long TV deal. "Hullabaloo " Louis Cardinals. Mrs. Kennedy, who will be 37 in choreographer David Winter wright Ron Alexander and rich She lost jewelry worth about April , had a previous child by ex-actress Jean Hipp . . . Some aays, "In 5 years she'll be play- $11 ,920 at a parking lot at the St. Caesarian section in Boston July ticket guys are on thin "ice " ing the Marilyn Monroe Story" , Contrasting Techniq ues Louis airport. It was returned 4 , 1963. hey? Monday by a man who found a . . . Henry Fonda , at a La Fon- By GEORGE McCORMICK The oldest child, Kathleen, 13, da del Sol party, posed with TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: leather case containing the jew- also was born on July 4. Dally News Staff Writer French dancer Jocelyn, 13. He Ray Rieves admits his wife is els. The senator and his wifes are ' ¦ kidded us columnists saying, a terrible cook: "She s burned A wide variety of paintings in the only members of the Kenne- "You're going to say 'There's so many slices of bread that our two contrasting techniques are Dolls were popular in America dy clan to match Joseph P. Fonda with one of his older toaster was declared a fire haz- available to Winonans in current long before . Columbus. Indian Kennedy and Rose Kennedy, " friends' " ... He's right . I, ard. exhibits here. Barkley Fremstad tribes twisted corn husks into child for child. The grandpar- personally, wronged him a cou- WISH I'D SAID THAT : An ex- On display through January PIGEON FALLS, Wis. - Air- Figures for use in ceremonies and ents had four sons and five ple of items that way ... My pense account is what permits in the Bell art room of the Wi- man Thurman M. Fremstad Jr., as children's playthings. daughters . B.W. and I LOVED Dick Shawn some men to live on the allow- nona Public Library are 20 son of Mr. and Mrs. Thurman works by Herbert Hultgren Cen- and Joan Hackett in the two- ances they get from their wives. , M. Fremstad, has completed his ¦¦ ! ¦ ¦ ¦ INDS TONIGHT character "Peterpat. " Such tral Junior High School art f *> • •> REMEMBERED QUOTE: Air Force basic military train- JOY HOUSI laughs! Director Joe Lay ton "One trouble with the publish- teacher. Hanging through Jan. ing at Lackland AFB , Tex. Air- ^% mt JM m 3 " - laughingly aaid in Sardi's, "But ing business is that too many 22 in the little gallery of the Col- man Fremstad will be trained ZylBI.BLMJBJB.Jj 7:M-9:10 • 25«-iSe-IS« I think it's easier directing 75 people with half a mind to write lege of Saint Teresa are 10 oil as a language specialist at the people, than 2!" a book , do it." — Anon. collages by Yetta Bornstein , Defense Language Institute at Norfolk , Va. STARTS WEDNESDAY Red Skelton's story: A Rus- EARL'S PEARLS: Divorces Monterey, Calif. A 1963 graduate • • sian sentenced to 5 years for have become so commonplace HULTGREN'S exhibit includes of Whitehall Memorial High ^ in Hollywood that some girls 18 oil paintings and two oil School, he attended Eau Claire State Universitv. ICDDV l EUflf /^^^yV^BTT^fTi^l1 WINONA DAILY NEWS can hardly wait for the wrong prints. The works — all but two UcKKl LHllI \M^&^P^MMP ^%A man to come along. of which were painted in 1964— • HS TU1SOAY, JANUARY It, ARCADIA. Wis. (Special) — Jkala*i§!^* 1* RTX /**t ^ !H ^r\>V ^e^l 1HI It's Bob Hope's story about range from representational ^ landscapes Pfc. Linus Weaver has returned VOLUM1 19», NO. 43 Jack Benny : "During the war , plus a portrait and a still life, through less objec- to Ft. Sill. Okla.. after spending Published daily except Saturday md Holi- Jack was a dollar-a-year man" "TIME OUT" . . One of a group of oil collages now a few days at the home of his /Wj^ days by Republican and Herald Publish- tive canvases that still contain . ing Company, _ \ Pranklln St., Winona, . . . "You mean that's all he on display at the College of Saint Teresa, this work by parents here, Mr. and Mrs. Ro- Minn. recognizable life forms to the W^^\J got?" . . "Oh no — that's all . almost complete aonobjectiv- Yetta Bornstein combines the varying textures of cloth and man Weaver. Linus is equip- he spent." . . . That's earl SUBSCRIPTION RATES , ity of the prints. paper with strong greens. It may be seen in the college's ment records clerk in a Ser- NEW POLICY NITES Slnglt Copy — 10c Dally, 15c Sunday brother. geant Missile Training battery . ^*"^ ^j ifc The painter has made textur- little gallery. (Daily News photo) MATINEES 1:15 7:00-»:05 Delivered by Carrier—Pir via* K cents Pvt . James Blaschko has re- 8B al interest a dominant theme in a*aaiBa**H****ai^H******MHBa> ^aBiBBMe«Ksu ^eoajc^v'<.>/.- .'.'*k.^t.vM.v- ¦ 16 weeks $12.75 a weeki MS.50 turned to Ft. Polk. La., after 25e-S0t-6J> JS*45«.«t ^sP all these works, often using his ^ ¦ ^¦aMMwvHnw ^aaMMMk By mell strictly In advance,- pip.r stop- Post Office Addition spending the holidays with his .^WBMBM«mHew ^^^H» . ^BBK*J ^ palatte knife to build up the ped on expiration date. parents Mr. and Mrs. Harold Planned at Mankato paint into craggy forms and , Houaten, Blaschko. In Flllmor*, Olmittd, Winona, thick planes. Wabasha. Buffalo, Jackson, Pepin and WASHINGTON (AP) — Gen- Tr*mptaHav ewnllee : This is especially evident in 1 year I11.09 3 month* .... S3.so eral Services Administration HOUSTON, Minn. — Douglas « months .... M.M l month tl .35 will award Wednesday a con- such representational works as O. Botcher has returned to the "R0BINION CRUSOfl "Pleasant " i Y f i I ^ ^#1 ^ ¥ All other subscriptions: tract of $744 ,900 for extension Valley and "Knife Great Lakes , 111., Naval Train- ^ 1 year $15.09 S montht M.J5 River Cascade. " Foreground ing Center after a two-week 4 months .... $1.00 1 month tl .M and modernization of the post rocks are almost in bas-relief in leave at the home of his par- -^Tr" ^^^^™***™^^^ ^ "STAGB TO THUNDBR ROCK" office at Mankato, Minn., Min- ENDS 7:1S , „ Sand diang* ef addrass, netleas. undeliv- nesota congressional sources the latter painting. ents , Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Sweet , :M 0 ly ered coplie. subscription orders and other TONIGHT - 7Sf*it-tSt \ mall Itemi to Winona Dally News, P. 0. said. HULTGREN HAS evoked the Sheldon. He is a 1964 graduate of Houston High School and is Second class postage paid al Winona. The award is to go to Comb delicacy of the flower by mak- Bex 70, Winona, Minn. Construction Co., Minneapolis. ing "Faded Geranium" a mass attending an electronics school of small facets of painted sur- at Great Lakes. face. Technical Sgt. Arnold R. Mi- In the less representational reau, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rich- Houston Rt. 1, works , notably "Bus Stop" and ard A. Mireau , "Behind the Squall ," Hultgren has arrived for duty at Keesler has kept within two-dimensional AFB , Miss. Mireau . a technical MialllllaHRffinNa^ yillllllaillllflM bounds more than he did with instructor , previously served at some of the landscapes. More Finley Air Force Station , N.D. textural interest retTirns, howev- He is a graduate of Houston High School. er , in the more abstracted LIBRARY EXHIBIT ... Herbert Hultgren, Central Junior work s , such as "Ice Pond" • High School art teacher , stands beside "Freighters , " an oil ALMA, Wis. — M. Sgt . Dell (loaned by Harris Choate, Tuc- painting of his now owned by Dr. Charles H. Mayo II of son , Ariz.) and "Freighters " ' li ' li ¦ Rochester. Twenty of Hultgren' COURTEOUS (loaned by Dr. Charles H. Mayo s works will hang in the Wi- II , Rochester). nona Public Library's Bell art room through January. The form of the b ird is strong- (Daily News photo ) Caledonian Visits ly suggested in "Heron , " the U Service and 11 ' , but first of Hultgren s prints at the point of abstraction at j mers in a clear blue and green the inspiration is merely evok- which Hultgren leaves off. Fig- ' canvas. Concert Pianist ed in the second, " Great Banks urative subject matter is some- CALEDONIA , Minn. - A Cal- Tender." times strongly suggested — al- ! MRS. BORNSTEIN has relied LOW, LOW Prices I! edonia couple spent part of the Unique in the show is a most explicit — but more often i on implication to an even great- y stylized still life , "Arrangement is less clearly implied. Four er extent in "A Sun Goes weekend with a concert pianist ' 5 ," in which solid forms are works are completely nonobjec- i Down , " in which she makes who played Beethoven s "Con- " sharply defined hy heavy black tive. j her point hy expert arrange- certo in G Major with the La ; Crosse Symphony Orchestra at lines. The former portrait painter ment of light. ' range from the Vocational School auditori- has used bold oils , pieces of pa- i Her abstracts MRS. BORNSTKIN'S exhibit um there Sunday night. per , strips of clot h — even bits i the lively — such as the violent of 10 oil collages starts almost ' End" — to the rest- of foil — and covered the whole "Storm s John Browning, 30 , is a cous- with heavy varnish. ful , such as the massive , blocky in of Mrs. John Bates here. The I "Beach — Pier — Waves" and musician left La Crosse for a UTH'S Human figures arc clear in vertically sweeping "Balmy H H H jthe concert at Obeiiin , Ohio , and |U!§S "Enfant , " "Time Out , " "Fi- i Day. " Somewhere in between — jyjPU nale" and "Mother and Daugh- then plans to fly to London to r^l?* g although tending toward the begin a series of concerts in ESTAURANT ter. " The figure is less obvious lively — i.i the complex "Tonal 1 in "Homage to Nijinsky, " in European capitals . In April he K IP Nuance. " Ht tmmmwhich a dancer almost shim- will play in the Soviet Union Boldness and a command of ¦ and tho Scandinavian countries. ^' "TjHnl Convenientl y Located Immmjifyi the division of the plane surface Drowning, who studied under 8r i.s evident in all of the works HfflES g In Downtown Winona afflftffjal ¦s. W^p < ' M(>*S*JL&> *^Slv the same teacher as Van Cli- *i "' - ^^ajsy**; *^iL»*ete»Vivlb displayed in the current exhibit. burn , was a guest at the Bates Bernstein's colors arc us- I I FAMILY STYLE Mrs . home when he was 9 years old. "T and they are clear li- JfSSp "^^IBpk ually warm , He now lives in New York City -*£> ^ when they are not. She combines Bales i? iano teacher herp I CHICKEN with bold modernism nn al- a p . *e£**iejC»^iJJj***«J# ^^^^^ most - impressionistic treatment I and Dumplings of faces. I I (Breasts and Lags Teacher Writes Only) Her exhibit is reached from f> A ' Teenage the fourth floor of the college's For Realist J to >§pnlf I I SERVED EVERY Saint Teresa Hall . . answer I I WEDNESDAY An article by Tad Richards of ^ f K^t Iho Winona State College Eng- , I ; I Serve*) with a lish department appcurs in tli« frp. fc\ insomnia! S>£; I I wonderful verlfty M. M **ej" ¦ ¦ ot rtrllrloiu trim "tl / K 2 Vocal Groups current issue of "The Realist. " ¦ , ¦ ininov All you ren'4'*'"' »# ¦ ¦ eat tor only The article , "A Future in Your Lutefisk & Lifts Bargain ef the Month Ford , " is a satirical esnay on | ; I (Children lie*) H0O HOOMf, WIIH A VltW • 80 LUXURIOUS MHfC; WCMtbtHtt l'i WNTHOUSr S W\T . what Richards views tin adver- ¦ Set at Wabasha PORTA BLE I lerved J:J0 j> ,m , to 1)0 p.m. MHOS Vt DINING ANO WINING ROOM* tising agencies' self - created • IRU PARKINC • Fc flex in MC'I atpiafjt I MISSISSIPPI ROOM A DINNER ltt m«.< (.•«¦a»l'»* Of WABASHA , Minn. — Two St. problem of how to use Negro ¦ ¦ PlAhrvNt ta •> T* fAncit ol Mffnvy duly -f«tf CO*-FBI S HOP ¦ ' J ' Family Style * Ue«l,.[ ««< lifclM'** •"••'"» ««••««??!••• H* »* ¦ ¦ carry Oiclin Ayalleblo 1 Paul groups which appeared at celebrities In television Compute with Index fnld«i», *ut 4 OO0 la' a»(f1>"Ji * t>PO '•' •Mflt** ' com- lock, kty the um Minnesota State Fair mercials . WED., JAN. 13 -fttSBBSBM^^ST SW »otii iimuwioa ^MI BHMHIH I will he presented ut « liootonan- "Tbe Realist , " which has In- MiHMA fdi "eYMaVMs ***^ , Serving Starts 5;0O P.M. Only SI.48 I MtlNllOM ^"" 1 ny from 2 until 4 p.m, Sunday vited Richards to become a reR- Reservations Appreciated | »*MI _____—————-~—— in the St , Felix auditorium hero. ular contributor , Is a monthly BR0S I f old. 1 '¦** ¦¦ of ' Phona 3150 D/1DD | They are the "Wanderers, " a magazine satire and criti- ' ITUDD STORE ¦ ¦ ' »Of>Wf St , . . | irio comprising two hoys and cism, lt was recently described STARTS EVENINGS AT I V& S HARDWARE Witwnci . ,:ilr _ 1»M »**'*, .. ' ono girl , and "The Misty Crys- by "NewRweek" ns an "olton WCn 7.15-9;05 576 E. 4th St . Phone 4007 ^ STEAK SHOP tals , " consisting of four boys significant , frequently funnytta- lW l*»sVr. 25< -65< -85f { nnd two girls. tirical magazine." j mmmmm ^^^^^^^^m^ ^ mmmmmmmm mmmHm ** **''*mmwmmmnwmmmmmimam * SAVE ON TIRES!! 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WHITE cording to Charles P. Stone, executive di- WASHINGTON - The "great society" has a showdown in the design of the rector of the Minnesota Taxpayers Asso- competitor. Nobody would have suspected , aft- WASHINGTON — The Republicans tp repudiate Barry Gold- ciation. er listing to the President's address last Mon- moderate and liberal s leader without directly and openly day night, that there are any states in the un- water as the party' Per $1,000 of personal income, general approaching in a cloud of elegant double-talk. ion. For they were not mentioned as partners doing so is Minnesota in fiscal 1962 ostensible target, B c , Goldwater's chosep property taxes in the whole Their Dean ur h in. his plans for Utopia. In fact, the Republican National Committee, is, of amounted to $61.21 — highest in the nation message ignored the contribution that 50 states chairman of and nearly 46 percent above the $41.97 av- course, refusing to make it can make to a "great society." cen- erage of all 50 states and the District of easy for them. Their Now, however, Gov. Nelson Rockefeller has tral argument is that some- To Your Good Health Columbia, Stone said , citing Publication of projected a "great society" for the state body — and while they care- G-SS-No. 47 of the Bureau of the Census, New York. It is even more specific than Pres- fully spell the name as U.S. Department of Commerce, dated No- ident Johnson's plan , though it is confined to B-u-r-c-h they really mean vember 1964. a single state, which happens to be one of the G-o-l-d-w-a-t-e-r — currently Answers most populous and the richest in the union. represents a " policy of ex- The new federal government figures The governor's message to a joint session clusion." That is, they ire are the most recent available offering a of the New York state Legislature on Wednes- saying that thla somebody To Some dependable nationwide comparison of day reveals that benefits are to be extended in tends to read people out of property tax burdens. Since the period almost every field under the sun, beginning with the party rather than wel- Questions covered by the federal report, there have water-pollution control and water supply and coming people in. This is the indictment been two years of sharply increased prop- continuing through practically every phase of By JOSEPH G. MOLNER, public activity. brought in by tlie Republican erty taxes throughout the state. M. D. There is a section devoted to transportation , Governor's Conference, un- With costs of both state and local gov- covering commuter service, "full crew" laws der the hot prosecuting zeal Dear Dr. Molner : and mergers on the railroads, plus accelerated of such men as Gov. Robert ernment continuing to lise , there can be How can an adult mem- highway construction. Smylie of Idaho. (Friends no hope of relief for property owners so call the governor "Smiling ber of our family be lo g i 's state d local tax n as M nnesota an A WHOLE chapter deals with "human and Bob," but this ro not precise- made to understand structure puts major dependence on the " social concerns, starting out with education , ly the nickname one hears that he is in need of taxation of property to meet revenue both in the elementary and secondary schools now around the Republican or mental help? needs. and in higher education, and including an elab- National Committee.) And physical orate statewide educational television network this is the indictment under He says that others THE ANSWER to this problem rests and a state conference on library programs. which Burch in theory and are using dope and the with the state legislature. There are proposals for increasing funds for Goldwater in actuality is to fumes are smothering low-income public housing, for middle-income be tried at the national com- him. He refuses to eat housing and for rent assistance, while continu- mittee's meeting in Chicago, ing rent control. Jan. 22-23. or be In the same room with us. He locks him- How Far Can La bor A special message is promised on holding THE DECLARED issue Is down health costs, while another committee is whether the committee is go- self in one section of looking into means of halting rising welfare ing to let Burch keep his the house and stuffs the costs, even as additions are made to the next Relations Board Go? chairmanship. The real issue doors with rags "to keep budget for these purposes. More facilities are it is going to hu- is whether out the fumes,," and RECENT FAR-OUT decisions from the to be provided for youth rehabilitation in for- miliate Goldwater by Kicking all the windows National Labor Relations Board naturally estry camps, youth centers and urban homes. Burch out and thus pro- has So that nothing will be missed, other pro- open no matter what the agitate employers, but it would be a mis- claiming in substance that posals cover such things as more protection be temperature. take to think that only those among us who Goldwater is no longer to for workers, special centers for the training regarded as even the titular Is he using this dope employ others are adversely affected by THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND and guidance of women, the development of leader of the Republican theory to hide some phy- them. more playgrounds and recreation facilities, pro- party. sical aihpent, or do you tecing the consumer and even incorporating There may well be the In the Reilly Tar and Chemical case, , think he really believes the council on the arts into the regular struc- soundest of reasons in prac- says?- WOR- the Board's examiner held it to be an un- what he ture of the state government as a permanent tical politics for thus cast- RIED fair labor practice for a father who was agency. AM A Hierarchy Plans ing the G. O. P. presiden- also a supervisor to advise his son who was tial nominee onto the ash There is hardly room for also an employe to leave the union and to THE NEW YORK governor doesn't use the pile of party history. He doubt. The man's trouble hunt another job. words "great society," but he speaks of an did, after all, manage to is mental. Even if he were abiding purpose "to prove the creative power lose in a truly spectacular using the dope theory to This incident is not too important in its of free men to direct their own destiny in a Blitz Against Medicare way. But, sound or not as a hide some physical ailment, immediate consequences, because it was revolutionary would or change." pragmatic maneuver, the which I decidedly doubt, his merely one element in a case with many One wonders, after reading Gov. Rockefell- By DREW PEARSON- consisted not only of news- IN FLORIDA, for instance, actions would still be far WASHINGTON - The paper and magazine ads J. Hal Stallings of Tampa, case brought by the moder- elements, and probably did not affect the er's message, just why it was necessary for from normal. great majority of dedicated pouring scorn on Medicare, chairman of the state wel- ates and liberals through recommendations very much. President Johnson to give a long list of fed- examiners doctors have no idea what but also organizing special fare board , described the the governors' conference is There are plenty of cases eral programs to be paid for all by the nation's short of both candor and of mental illness in which But it does mark the first time we can taxpayers, when the states themselves are fully the American Medical As- county committees to get ads as "selfishly inspired sociation does in its inner local doctors to talk to their and definitely misleading." logic. the patient realizes that cognizant of these same necessities and can remember that an agency of the federal councils They are too busy patients, stimulate mail to Not even the Goldwater he needs help There are raise the money to pay for them. . All this, plus the land- government has asserted that it has the taking care of people. Like Congress, and enlist the people are always wrong, more cases, however, in right to determine what members of a fam- Education , for example, has long been a slide victory for Johnson , a lot of union members, support of insurance com- was behind the skepticism though not many are left which the patient insists responsibility of the states. But just because they have to leave things of ily may talk about to each other. panies , Chambers of the New Jersey. Michi- to say as much in these days that he is all right and some states have been unable to put as much to the hierarchy. Commerce, manufacturer gan, and D. C. doctors at when Republican is eating everybody else is wrong. STAYING IN OR getting out of a union money into education as the richer states — or Probably most doctors do groups and trade associa- , the Bal Harbour meeting. Republican with an avid both are lawful courses of conduct. A fa- have been reluctant to use their own funds not know, for instance, the tions. cannibalism that can only IN SUCH instances there , ther who recommended that junior commit when they thought Uncle Sam would provide details of two AMA meet- Operation Hometown was At Bal Harbour , however be produced within a party is no point in waiting for the money re- a crime might be guilty of something, but needed — education has not receiv- ings regarding Medicare, at estimated to h a "v e cost their complaints were by a very bad licking at the the patient to consult a doc- ed all the benefits that might be expected in around $3 000. jected , and the board of can Washington now step in and dictate which it was decided to ,000, polls. And the simple fact tor. He won't. Arguments a prosperous country. spend around $3,500,000 to However, toward the mid- trustees got the House of what you may advise your son about the is that it is not Burch but are futile. The only course But so far as a state version of the "great oppose the bill at this ses- dle of the election, the AMA Delegates to pass a resolu- likely to succeed is to con- general business of earning a living? the rather the moderates society" is concerned . Gov. Rockefeller has sion of Congress. hierarchy — without the ap- tion giving it "unequivocal sult your family doctor , and support" for the new propa- and liberals who are pre- presented the most elaborate program anyone The first meeting took proval of the House of let him help you take such In another recent case, the Board up- place at Bal Harbour, Fla., Delegates — decided that ganda campaign because sently excluding other Re- held the right of a union to fine its mem- has set forth. Incidentally, it means a change publicans from the party , measures as will permit in his own policy of the past, for usually he when the 228-member AMA the campaign was not get- "a variety of techniques bers if they produced more in a day than and media must be utilized if exclusion means what the man to be examined has been in favor of a "pay as you go" ad- House of Delegates met at ting across and , using AMA the union wanted them to. The work was the Americana Hotel Dec. 2. money, launched a satura- to reach the public. Con- the dictionary says it does . psychiatrically whether he ministration. But now he admits that at least agrees or not. paid for on a piece-work basis. If a work- At this meeting there was tion advertising campaign gress, and special audiences part of the money needed for these purposes effectively." FOR THIS effort to oust , er produced a given amount, and then had a careful analysis of Gold- ot TV spots on the ABC net- There are some instances will have to be borrowed. water's defeat — in view work , plus a thousand ads Goldwater while seemingly I might add, in which a to quit, expensive machinery would stand of the fact that the AMA in daily newspapers and TEN DAYS later, Dec. 13, only to oust Burch is in it- person, when told that he increasing the cost of the product idle, leaders had backed him so several thousand in week- a second meeting was held self demonstrably an effort has to be examined , finally which the public must pay. IN YEARS GON E BY vigorously. One reason for lies. at the Drake Hotel in Chi- at exclusion ; and on a very will go quietly rather than that defeat , it was conclud- This was described as an cago, attended by tbe board big scale indeed. But Burch have hospital attendants or In still another case, the Board seems to of trustees plus two doctors Ten Years Ago . . . 1955 ed , was that older people "educational program" to — and Goldvvater , too, since the police escort him. have taken the position that an employer from each state medical so- Elgin 0. Sonneman , was elected assistant and younger working people boost the Kerr-Mills law and the election at any rate — Getting the patient to co- must offer less than he is really willing to were against anything which confuse the public ciety. These were not elect- cashier of the Winona National & Savings regard - has been almost pathetically operate is better for him give in collective bargaining, so that the Bank. might weaken the social ing the King-Anderson bill . ed , but handpicked by the trying to include rather than AMA hierarchy . Rebels such and for everybody else (han union can get credit for wangling more Five sophomore and five security system and they il owever, the Kerr-Mills to exclude Republicans of junior students at as those from New Jersey, doing it by force. money and benefits. Winona Senior High School, members of the figured Goldwater was a act does not operate in every shade. threat to social security . some states. Michigan , and the District English classes taught by Mrs. Bettie Hunter , Furthermore When the governors' con- NOTE TO MRS. R.N.M.: Therefore, argued the its eligibility requirements of Columbia were thus OF COURSE, THIS would increase the have had their poems accepted (or ference met in Denver and I don't know of any pill or publication AMA leaders at Bal Har- differ from state to state. avoided. prestige of unions mightily, and workers there solemnly medicine that will "improve in the annual Anthology of High School Poetry. bour , the best way to de- Therefore , many medical The meeting was dominat- resolved up- presently indifferent might be eager to on the need for " uniting " the memory." feat Medicare was to con- societies were embarrassed ed by Dr. F. J. L. Blasing- join. Twenty-Five Years Ago . . . 1940 vince the public that it to find that the AMA-financ- ame, Dr. Ernest B. How- the party and opening its doors to more William A. Mahl , president of the First Na- would break down the social ed advertising which ap- ard, and the 18 conservative people and more sophisticated anti- so on , it met under tional Bank since Aug. 4, 1M7 , was chained security system . peared in their state was members of the board of the spon- Goldwater adversaries. And completely inappropriate. trustees. sorship of what? Why, of this perhaps most of all chairman of the board of directors and G. M. TO THIS FNI), the AMA the Republican National burns them in their season Carniva l Royalty Robertson , executive vice president , was elect- leaders decided to inspire a ed president of the- bank. Committee. Yet , about the of maximum discontent. flock of mail to Congress only influential Mr.s. S. L. Parish and Mrs. R. B. To/.ier Republican The crucial fact i.s that I nvades Wa from people all over the ML to be pointedly basha were elected delegates and Mr.s. O. A. Clessler country, warning against JI *jihlA. excluded the present split within the from that alternate to the state convention of the Daugh- Medicare as a threat to so- gathering devot- G. O. P. is far more funda- ed to "unity " ' OUR AREA SURVIVED its annual in- ters of Ihe American Revolution . cial security. It wa.s also was — who .' mental than disagreement , vasion by Winona's Jack Frost the 15th , decided to have the letters Why, the chairman of- the however basic , on policy Kermit Bergland, and his royal henchmen Fifty Years Ago . . . 1915 come not from nurses , doc- Republican National Com- lines. The crucial fact i.s tors, and doctors ' wives, mittee, who later had the this; East i.s East and West Bob Olson and Bill Wieczorek , who knight- J . W. Hardwick left for Minneapolis where but from thousands of citi- pleasure to receive some of is West here ed .some of our citizens . lie will purchase new apparatus for his milk , in certain zens outside the medical the bill for the meeting. human terms depot on Fourth Street. surmounting Joe Halverson received a scroll embla- profession. All this is infuriating to all ideology, During the present week the amount of grain and it is not zoned with the title of Royal Extractor of Some opposition was voic- the Goldwaterites , but most going to be easy to get this brought into market here has shown an in- ed by the New Jersey, infuriating of High Interest , A . J. Doffing was nanied all to the m twain truly to meet afiain crease. Michigan , and District of is the semantical Royal Dispenser of the (ireen Buck , Dan skill of soon, Columbia doctors. The New their opponents. If the sit- Foley as Legionnaire Supreme. John R. Jersey State Medical Soci- ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ ^ ¦ ^ ¦ ^ ¦¦¦ Seventy-Five Years Ago . . . 1890 uation were in reverse and l Su- ety, through its delegates , Flatt as Royal Healer , Norm Scheel The stockholders of the First National Hank the Goldwaterites were presented a resolution urg- out PLAIN t, TREATED preme Ambassador of Wabasha and Ray re-elected all of the I, to knock off old directors: . C. Port- ing that any AMA propa- some liberal Young as Royal Provider of News and er , Charles Horton , Thomas Wilson , R . D. or moderate Republican (. ganda campaign he submit- Views. Cone , '. Simpson , C. 11. Porler and K. S. ed to all medical societies from headship of the party Youmans. they would simply unsheath SAND At Kellogg Glen Snider was dubbed throughout the country in The work of placing the machinery in the their knives, walk up to him For Slippery Walki "Red" Deming order to get a democratic Protector of Cold Cuts and new Porler mill i.s progressing steadily and sat- vote. in broad daylight and say post- or Auto Ballflit the Seller of the Silent Ride . Weaver isfactorily. This resolution got a sur- to him : "Old fellow , as of master Lyle Montgomery became ttie Roy- prising number of votes this moment you have had Post Card. At Minneiska " DftDD BROS. al Reader of the One Hundred Years Ago . . . 1865 from doctor delegates , even it. RvDD STORE Leroy Rogers wa.s nanied Royal Stamp though finally voted down . Fresh oysters are selling at $1 per can. TIIKY WOULD V & S HARDWARE Dispenser, Frank and Mariece Schultz Behind this protest was a n«v «r choose Home Royal Food Dispensers and "Muck" Ar- certain amount of unhappi- intermediate 576 B. 4th St. Phon* 4007 ness over last year's "Oper- victim ns a means of hit- Imckle the Baron of Bourbon WINONA DAILY N EWS ation Hometown ," the pro- ting at the real victim ALL THE RIGMAROLE led up to tbe paganda effort to defeat They are Incapable of the All Itlili 'pi -it di -t it \' , 'ii::. p , ijii -1 - t:-;tutitn,ti t 'tt IK.IH Medicare and members of 'Oil , de;ir! The fashion designers are k'oinji U> .show calm fact that Winona is observing ils annual dissimulations and the Congress who voted for it more of mo this year than has ever sound circuitous START YOUR DAY j Winter Carnival beginning with a parade W !¦' IV' iuiK (; H C I .OSWAV (.' . K. I.iNiir N approach J OPERATION Hometown been seen before." to an objective of their on Saturday, Jan. 10 , a boxing; show , 1' nlWi.vlu-r l-V{ t-t- . Director U II .VIMC .V .1 Alyr. far i with i (ind Editor A- Atlv . Itirt-rtnr ' I 4 ({iicoii imgcuii t , curling Unirtiiinunil . .square THE WIZARD OF ID By Park.r and Hart dance festival , sports gymkhana on ice , W. .' N; >/IO// Kt:XI l 4 the Duke • I of Windsor 's uorla -~ but one tune he x*jjj§Sh" ! 6:50 Each Morning ! missed was tbe theme from "The King and > < The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to Hie use for republication of all (he local n news printed in this newspaper as well ns ;ill "Lord, now Irltest II11111 (liv MTVUII I f > I di-poil A , P. news dispatches. * I JJI ¦irurr , iirr orilin^' thy word ; lor mint eye* bave seen thy salvation." Luke 2:211. i Tueuduy, January 12, llMi.S ! KWNO j ^J GOP May Not Former La Crosse China May Youth Indicted in Grouse, who has been held in Sarah Churchill Ten Outstanding Young Tie Self Up the Cook County jail without Slaying of Parents bond since the bodies were Silent of- Remarriage With South CHICAGO UP>—An 18-year-old found in the family home in ROME (AP) - Actress Sarah Refuse fo University of Illinois freshman Wilmette, a fashionable North Churchill, 50, daughter of Sir WASHINGTON (AP) - The Shore suburb new leader of the House Repub- who formerly resided at La . Winston Churchill, refused Sun- Men of" '64 Announced licans, Michigan's Gerald R. Crosse, Wis., was indicted by a The victims were Morris j day to confirm a report that sho Join (I.N. Ford, indicates some organiza- Cook County grand jury Mon- Grouse. 47, a partner in an ac- will soon marry an American tional changes may be in tbe day on a murder charge in the counting firm and former exec- artist and entertainer, Lobo N E Vll «m rt«*y 7 history, that having a tightly ¦a ** •;^ , T * There are indications that pfe#VC7 >*J$til f*^ knit coalition with the Southern ^^^^Ife77y7£vy^S^^^^AM^^^^^^ ^^ ^^ ^y W Peking still has its eyes on U.N. Democrats is helpful. So there- membership but may raise new fore, I don't believe that we demands to boost its prestige ought to handle it quite the way among the African and Asian we did in the past." nations. The Red Chinese may call for i ::AA:Vy::VyVir::wr ;? : rAyry • SyJ - -y&Afy' amendments to the 20-year-old Ski-Equipped '^M$U^^^^ ^^^^ V0 ^^ S' ^ W ^^^^^^^^; . rAAAArAA-A.:rViAy ArryAym.'0Z'AAr ^^^^^M. UN. Charter to benefit the Afri- ^fe*&g?Mkfe?^&3^^ V ':V:>;y5V ^^V :.fcv,; :^ 77 y; : can and Asian countries admit- Plane Crashes 7!lii||;liPllte^fPp7 7i|777: : vyyiy^AAMAAAAt\MmWM)m$ A&X "' '¦¦ ' 'rV'AA 'AAA.kWmAX ted to the world organization since 1945. «* AUCKLAND, New Zealand In a government statement (AP) — A ski-equipped U.S. Sunday, the Red Chinese de- Navy DCS crashed while land- tHrtxti . . tmiW| *l||§ji||H FCC chief and a student adven- ervation, who is continually destined to become the nation's But Peking did not suggest tions officer, said no one *>as turer are among the Ten Out- striving to improve the econom- yountest Pilot Astronaut ; how it should be changed. hurt but the twin-engine plane standing Young Men of 1964 ic self-sufficiency of the Ameri- In their attacks on the organi- piloted by Lt. Charles P. Hoac named today by the U.S. Junior can Indian. DR. DANIEL E. Fountain. S4, zation the Chinese Reds were was damaged considerably. Chamber of Commerce in the John Cowles Jr., 35, of Min- of Kwill Province, Republic of careful not to offend the new current issue of Look magazine. neapolis", Minn., vice president the Congo, a medical mission- African and Asian nations who In commenting on the 27th an- and editor of the Minneapolis ary from Homer, N.Y., who are prime targets in Peking's Explosion in nual award, national Jaycee Star and Tribune, who has dem- faces constant danger as doc- communization drives. president Stan Ladley said these onstrated an editor's ability to tor and teacher to 265,000 Con- Buenos Aires golese in the strife-torn prov- The Chinese statement said men "reflect the strength of contribute immeasurably to the that "it is fully understandable this nation and the world." economic and cultural develop- ince; BUENOS AIRES, Argentina E. William Henry, 35, of that newly independent Asian (AP) — The National Congress Miliulpf^ The Ten Outstanding Young ment of a community and state; ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ and African countries have .«¦ ': ¦ ¦: ;-:-:7: A -A .-:' ¦ .. .%- '- - :7V,v::".:., - ..;: . ' .¦ . AA A ] ¦: .¦; ¦ ;::¦.•,. .. ¦¦ : '.- ...... - . -. ". . yV:.-: >/.:7 :-. ..-A\-,...--,- A.' -- -^ Men of 1964 are: Capt. Joe H. Engle, 32, of Ed- Washington, D.C, chairman of building was rocked Monday .w;iw.v . '. . V . . . .*. • - - ^:A' ^ .A.^-i/^. man-eating tiger, a beserk ele- MILWAUKEE (tfi-Juan Her- ^^Sla^^E^BW^ 1 jtHa ^HataHi' boy's good condition . still trying to keep the Asian- YOUNG MENS 37, a railroad electrician, He is only the second person African plan alive. phant and captured two Viet milla, ^ ^* ^ known to survive a fall from the Most delegates feel a show- Cong Communist guerrillas in was crushed to death Monday STOCK LIQUIDATION span. Bridge authorities list 278 down is inevitable when the as- South Viet Nam (age 19). under a turntable he was at- J^^Ktm known deaths from suicide sembly meets Jan. 18 in view of The ten men will be honored tempting to repair. The accident leans. the adamant U.S. stand and the by the U.S. Jaycees at an occurred at the North Western "I was walking on the Soviet refusal to make a solid awards congress in Santa Mon- Road's roundhouse where he bridge." the boy was quoted . financial commitment. ica , Calif., on Jan. 15-16, 1965. was employed . "The next thing I remember I was in the water." SHOE INDIAN IN HOUSTON y SALE^P^ HOUSTON , Minn . - Sudhir All (None Held Back) Reg. $10.95 <^ArW ^k Dharia of Bombay, India , was t»!VJl r.Waa Warn ^ y.:; i - 1J1 A JM J ^^ ¦fc \\ M JtB a guest of Robert Onsgard , Houston , during the Christmas "BRIARCLIFF" MEN'S SHOES IN STOCK holidays. He's a student in H B y&mWBmmm industrial engineering at North at l THE TRUT I OUT KING OPTICAL C^ Dakota State University. Dhar- B Ai . B^ ia came to the U.S. lust August ^^Bmmuuum^-^^!^^mmu^Bm^mmum mmmY to study. His father is in the ' : wholesale paper industry in .mmmmmmmmmmmm ' ^ '" ^W^^SB ^^^^ ^ Bombay.

lll ljjyfr AU G^sg^Nyg^raa ^~ VmWLiJmf $ Aw»»Jf /AC!NT ¦(ii 98 »ii/i«| i ^ffl $q 98 i > A-ncrican 2 ^^^^ T^^T^^^^^ B N«v«r before in King's Optical History have we offered »o M WM 1 ¦ LM Bw much for so little. Think of it, American made National ¦ ¦ ^^^^ S J I ^*B WBmmaW Branded frames , complete with Single Vision lop quality ^^^m^tmmW^ lentet that you need, al the one low price of ALL STYLES BLACK ^^^^ M^^ L ^^^^ r^^^ "^r then for onl " § ^^^ B ^^ B ^^^ BB $9.98 . If bifocals are needed or desired, y REGULAR HEELS — MEDIUM TOE ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | }12.98 you have your choice of the kind of bifocal vou BOYS' S,ZES "A man couldn 't si art his car. al Ihe one low low price CUBAN HEELS —-POINTED TOE / jBBBBBBBBBBB need—Kryptok , Ullex or Flat-fop, , . 3' to 6 A pood Samaritan Rave him NO ArTOINTMtNT NtCIHAKY * C^atiS A to E n push . . . I lie bumper slip- the front too STYLES, SHAPES AND ped and crushed BnBHJtBESWKMS^MKKKMCASH IN ON THESE AND MANY OTHER Jujf *»r AA pays the bill? Is COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM grill. Who PIEJCmrTIONS FILLED Ei !£. ^9fiBSl9H SAVINGS ON CLOTHING AND fOOTWEAR *pDi«fU this considered collision dam- AT SAME HH^mwBBWBBwB/^B^^^ mmmmmmmBmmBW^S&SBSESBZ ^ ^BBS ^^B NOW DURING THE GREAT JANUARY CLEARANCE. ' ,'i CIIITCJv llC 1I I . A^dVHT quaillon, feel Irta ta call ut. i . w ''&\ #&&$& !Jr*HfiS^i w..t Third stre.i Phone i^ ^mm ^^m ( 8-3711 THIS SPECIAL GOOD """ TaT m^\ A '/^"^V ' A,\ A ft.r . v,,r „.,„.kl .„.ii«t.i« «i .ineila I Tha t«rm« or contanli of thli «dv«r rWXW^ , Inc. v - ¦ • wt;:,rr.^ •,, ,, ,,9,, ¦* „. c*i, ., .... ,..,. Clark & Clark ^^_^m^»AHMM«HHHM«^ * __^ ^_^^_^_ bv.'.c.u. " '~»Wiiconttrv All «rf on o* WED., THURS., FRL, SAT . ONLY / 117 C«nt«r SI. ¦Mj TT QI|fKn ^ eiattiei told only pr-Mcrtpfton licensed doctor* Phont 2904 CLOTHING — SHOES Pithy Poetry A )Out .Vermont Damage High Arson Case Times bet for Instructions Sewage Plant Heard by Ruski i Club Women In 2 Collisions B/ LWV on Voting Machines Ruskin Study Club, meeting Mrs. Petty said Hard is de- Bids Asked Two two-car collisions in Wi- Slated Friday Monday afternoon at the home scribed by Holiday magazine as nona Monday afternoon caused Trial wa§ set for Friday at Mrs. D. B. Robinson, chair- have volunteered to conduct the of Mrs. Herbert Bierce, heard ft a "120-pound leater-bound com- one minor injury and more than 9:30 a.m. in District Court on man of the League of Women demonstrations will meet in the talk on Vermont by Mrs. Mc* pendium of Vermontiana." She $700 damage. an anon charge brought by tha Voters' Voter's Service project, office of the city recorder on Kendree Petty, a native Ver- quoted Hard as saying of his At St. Charles Eugene L. Letts, 1*45 W. Sth state against Leonard J. Rich, announces that the Winona the second floor of the City monter. own poems, which seem at first ST. CHARLES, Minn. (Spe- St., was driving west on Simla 258U E. 4th St. League will demonstrate the op- Building Wednesday at 7 p.m. Mrs. Petty's paper, "Humor to be meterless, "they have a cial) - The St. Charles City a col- The action was taken Mon- eration of voting machines at for a demonstration of the op- Street at 1:25 p.m. when and Pathos-Vermont Style," kind of Vermont rhythm." Council will open bids tonight on lision occurred with a car'driv- day. the First National Bank of Wi- eration of the machines by John included excerpts of country The speaker stated that Rob- Street by Rich waived in writing his nona, the Merchants National Carter, city recorder. The pub- doubling the capacity of the en south on Huff anecdotes and c h a r a c ter ert Frost and Carl Sandburg sewage disposal plant and John G. Zenk, Winona Rt. 2. right to a jury trial, and tha Bank, and Winona National and lic is welcome to attend, Mrs. sketches in the free verse of have praised Hard's books of case will be heard by Judge Savings Bank Friday and Janu- Robinson said. changing to aerobic treatment. Lotts complained of pain af- Walter Hard. She read pieces verse highly, but Hard's critics Mayor Donald Hankerson said Arnold Hatfield. Rich entered ary 18 through 22. Demonstra- The new voting machines, ter the accident. Damage was guilty plea to the charge from his latest published work , have repeated themselves to the rebuilt plant, with minor a not tions will be mid from 10 a.m. which are being leased by the "Vermont Sampler," which is a $450 to the left side and rear Nov. 10. He is represented by say," his work is not poetry at changes, would serve a popula- about to 12 noon and from 1 p.m. to city, will be first used in the selection of Vermont vignettes, all." of the Lotts vehicle and Attorney Roger P. Brosnahan. 3 p.m. Monday through Thurs- city primary elections to be held tion of 10,000. $50 to the front of the Zenk Attorney S. A. Sawyer an anthology of poems taken Mrs. Petty pointed out that County day and from 10 a.m. to 12 noon Feb. 1. The League of Women ," Construction will be financed car. Patrolman Robert A. Theis will prosecute. from "A Matter of 50 Houses both Sandburg and Hard believe issue, to be and 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. and 6 Voters is endeavoring to in- "Vermont Valley" and "Ver- by a revenue bond investigated. The second-degree grand lar- p.m. to 8 p.m. on both Fri- struct as many voters as pos- MISS ROSANN CATHE- that an anecdote of sufficient liquidated by a user's tax. When charge against Robert L. mont Neighbors." pith and portent is a poem in ' A collision at 4:35 p.m. be- ceny days. sible in the use ol the new RINE McGRAW'S engage- the present plant was built in tween a car moving east on 2nd Keller, Cincinnati, Ohio, will Mrs. Robinson announced that machines to facilitate voting on ment to 1st Lt. James B. itself and that Hard does not 1954, a $200,000 revenue bond is- tried until the April set up shop as a formal poet: Street and a car parked on the not be those members of the LWV who election day. Young, Quantico, Va., son of sue was sold . Balance remain- south side of the street, 60 feet term of court at the earliest. JoAnn Bergey that his writing might very well ing Dec. 31 was $139,100. Robert Dunlap, Plain- Mr. and Mrs. Cosmas B. be called "poetry for the man east of Market Street, caused Attorney Young, Wauwatosa, Wis., is Also on the agenda is an ap- more than $200 damage to the view , representing Keller, will Weds Mr. Rahm who does not like poetry." pearance by Charles E. Burrill, in the state Legisla- Winona Athletic Club Women announced by her parents, A brief business session was vehicles. be busy Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Mc- district engineer of the state De- ture until then. In Hudson conducted by Mrs. J. Milton partment of Highways, Roches- Raymond J. Jaszewski , '920 Pre-sentence investigations Graw, Wabasha, Minn. The Dahm, vice president. Mrs. E. Sanborn St., was driving Install Auxiliary Officers HARMONY , Minn. (Special)- ter, to discuss lighting along are in progress In the final two wedding will be Feb. 20 at Karl Lipsohn presided at the Highway 14 in St. Charles. east on 2nd Street when he slid on the criminal calendar Mr. and Mrs. John H, Bergey tea table. Miss Helen Hlllyer U.S. cases New officer! were installed on the kitchen committee and St. Felix Catholic Church, A request for appointment to into a car parked facing east for the January term. Robert announce the marriage of their was assistant hostess. , at the Monday night meeting of Mrs. Stella Chick was appointed Wabasha. Miss McGraw is , handle the city's auditing will and belonging to John V. Boyle j. Dingfelder, 23, Fountain daughter , JoAnn Marie Bergey Winona Rt. 3. Police found a the Athletic Club Auxiliary . Fif- welfare chairman. a graduate of St. Felix High Minneapolis , to Bruce H. Rahm, be heard. City, Wis., and Dennis Savoy, ty members witnessed the cere- Mrs. Lawrence Jaszewski and School, Wabasha, and Mount broken tie rod on Jaszewski's 24, no permanent address, plead- son of Mr. and Mrs. William car after the collision. mony conducted by Mrs. Jerry Mrs. Alios Wiczek audited the Mary College, Milwaukee. Rahm, Minneapolis. Former winonan ed guilty Dec. 22 in District Rozek. secretary's and treasurer's Her fiance is a graduate of The ceremony took place at Teachers Strike Damage to the left side of Court to charges of carnal of minor girls. Mrs. Ray Bambenek was in- books. Marquette "University and Hudson, Wis., Dec. 26. Injured in Crash Boyle's car was $200; no dam- knowledge - In Pakistan Attorneys Dennis A. Challeen stalled as president; Mrs. Arvel It was announced that the Marquette College of Law, The bride is a graduate ypX age estimate was available on the other vehicle. Patrolman and Harold J. Libera repre- Allred, vice president; Mrs. next meeting on Feb. 8 will be Milwaukee. He is serving Gustavus Adolphus College and In Milwaukee RAWALPINDI , P ak i s t a n Harry Czaraowski, secretary ; a Valentine party, when mem- (AP ) — More than 40,000 school John A. Erickson investigated . sent Dingfelder and Savoy, re- three years with the Marine Is a member of Sigma Delta so- CEDAR VALLEY, Minn. (Spe- ¦ spectively. and Mrs. Andrew Rozek, treas- bers are asked to wear house rority. Prior to her marriage, teachers went on strike today in urer. Mmes Peter Kulas, Jose- dresses. They are to make their Corps. cial) — A former area man is West Pakistan Province. she was employed as an assist- a patient at Lutheran Hospital , phine Breza and Edward Klein- reservations by Feb. 5 with • ant buyer at Saks in Minneapo- The teachers demanded that Prairie du Chien TRAILER LOSES WHEELS schmidt wera named to serve Mrs. Kulas or Mrs. Breza. Milwaukee , with a heau injury the provincial government take ' WEAVER , Minn. ( Special) - Lavona Holland, lis. received when his car crashed Woman Is 102 . Prizes during the social hour Mr. Rahm is a graduate of the over all educational institutions All wheels on the rear end of after the meeting were won by Donald Meiners into the rear of an unlighted teaching the first 10 grades to PRAIRIE DU CHIEN, Wis. a semi-trailer became separated University of Minnesota and Is a truck. It was pulling a car from Mmes. Edward Wantock , Kulas, member of Delta Chi fraternity. improve teaching and working * — Mrs. William Swingle, from the frame in a freak acci- Mary Prondzinski, Rose Mro- Exchange Vows a ditch in a Milwaukee suburb conditions and to raise salaries. whose farm was the winter dent on Highw ay 61 north of He free lances as an interior de- Friday night. ¦ zek, Lucian Grupa, Anna Knop- EITZEN, Minn. (Special) - signer. quarters of the little Rlngling Weaver Friday and rolled off ick, Clarence Chuchna and Har- Lavona Hollan d , Caledonia, The newlyweds will make Roger Rice, in his late 20s, Kosygin to Visit Bros. Circus before the turn the embankment. The back end ry Smocke. Mrs. Kleinschmidt Minn., became the bride of Don- their home at 150L Hawthorne was thrown through the wind- of the century , will celebrate of the trailer dropped to the won the attendance prize. shield and received a cut across her 102nd birthday Tuesday. pavement. The vehicle stayed ¦ ald Meiners, Eitzen, on Dec. Ave., Minneapolis, until the first Bri tain in Spring 31. the top of his head from ear to Mrs. Swingle, who lives alone on the road. of February, when they will LONDON (AP) - Soviet Pre- A private wedding was sol- leave on an extended tour oi ear. It required surgery, rela- and enjoys generally good Future Activities emnized in the Immanuel Luth- tives here said. The man coup- mier Alexei N. Kosygin will vis- health, will be honored at a KELLOGG HOMES SOLD Europe. it Britain in the spring, and eran Church in Caledonia, with Open house in their honor was ling the truck to the car was family gathering in her home. KELLOGG , Minn. (SpeciaD- Discussed by Rev. Richard Hansen officia- killed. Prime Minister Harold Wilson She is Crawford County's oldest Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hoffman held at the bride's parents' will be in the Soviet Union later Parish Women ting. home in Harmony Sunday after- Roger's brother, K enneth, Ce- resident. and family moved here last Attending the couple were in the year. The circus which wintered at week after purchasing the Mrs. " noon. dar Valley, and a partner in a Dates for the trips are still to DODGE, Wis. ((Special) - Mr. and Mrs. Dean Bulman. four-passenger plane flew to her farm, now part of Prairie Clara Peters home. The Hoff- Several future activities were Eitzen. be fixed, an announcement said Milwaukee Sunday. He said Rog- Monday night. du Chien, was headquartered mans have sold their farm to discussed at the meeting of the Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Duxbury Mabel Sons Install er's condition apparently is across the Mississippi River at Donald Wille, Plainview. Mrs. Rosary Society of the and Mr. and Mrs. Ted Ranzen- Sacred Thursday good. TAYLOR GUN CLUB McGregor, lowa. The show Esther Bruhnke purchased tht) Heart Parish , Pine Creek , Wis., berger, were hosts at a recep- Officers Roger and his wife , formerly TAYLOR , Wis. ( Special) - eventually grew into the huge home of the late Miss Katherine Wednesday evening in the par- tion at the Duxbury home follow- The Taylor Rod and Gun Club Mingling Bros., Barnum & Bail- Galvay. Mrs. Bruhnke will do ing the ceremony. MABEL , Minn. - Officers of of Winona , recently purchased ish hall. A bake sale will be suburb. will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. y Circus. extensive remodeling. held Jan. 24, between and af- Mr. Meiners is cashier in the Valheim Lodge 364. Sons of Nor- a new home in the ter the Masses, to which every Eitzen State Bank and Mrs. way , will be installed Thursday Meiners is a secretary in the night. MISS ROXANNE STEV- woman of the parish is to do- nate. A public card party will Caledonia High School . The ceremonies will be con- ENS' engagement to Rod- be held in the parish hall Jan. ducted in the old gym and caf- ney Allemann, son of Mr. 31. Mrs. Dominic Wozney is eteria of the school at 8 p.m. and Mrs. Emil Allemann, chairman. A pot-luck lunch will Goodview Trinity Mrs. John Willaman, Rochester , Independence, Wis., is an- be served. Women of the par- Guild Meets Today District 1 director , will be in- nounced by her parents, ish attending are to contribute stalling officer , assisted by her Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stev- to the lunch. Goodview Trinity Lutheran husband and Verdayne Melbos- The Madonna plan for foreign Church Guild will meet at 7:30 tad as installing marshals. tete ens, Arcadia, Wis. A Sep- £t>oa MAYTA relief netted $7.75 in pennies p.m. today at the G tember wedding is being church. collected at the last three meet- The Rev. David M. Ponath WESTFIELD LUNCHEON planned. ings, it was reported. Westfield Women's Golf As- \ ¦ will conduct devotions and lead Members were reminded to a question box period. sociation will meet for luncheon and bridge at 1 p.m. Thursday Moravian Women pay their belated 1964 dues be- Members are requested to fore the publication of the an- bring their topics booklets and at the clubhouse. Reservations nual report in February. may be made by calling Mrs. s Elect Officers their mite box offerings for Mrs. John Lambert won the Van Kahl this evening. a]e missions. BETHANY, Minn. ( Special)- cli attendance prize. isc Hostesses, Mrs. Roy Rose and a Mrs. Milton Simon was elected Group 2, of which Mrs. Mar- TOLLEFSONS' OPEN HOUSE r Mrs. Gerald Bade, said friends ELEVA , Wis. (Special) - ^ president of the Bethany Morav- cel Jaszewski is chairman, en- are welcome. Open house in observance of ian Church Women's organiza- tertained. She was assisted by ¦ 1 WE RE SELLING THESE MAYTAG FLOOR SAMPLES tion at its annual meeting Thurs- the Mmes. Joseph Jaszewski , the gtflden wedding anniversary day. Roman Dorawa, Kenneth Card Party Series of Mr. and Mrs. George Tollef- Miss Ethel Hardtke was elect- Frahm, John Herek , Ben Jas- son will be held at the Eleva ed vice president; Miss Alma zewski , Frank Peplinski Jr., Start at Pickwick Lutheran Church parlors Sun- FOR S-C-R-A-T-C-H! Wollin, secretary, and Mrs. Ed- Genevieve Tulius, and Theodore day, from 2 to 5 p.m. Their j Wantoch. PICKWICK , Minn .-The Pick- children are hosting the cele- win Howe, treasurer. Mrs. Mein- ¦ wick Volunteer Fire Depart- ert Nienow will have charge of bration. No cards are being They're slightl y nicked, scratched, bent or bruised ... but all of them in PERFECT ment will sponsor a series of sent. the birthday box and Mrs. Al- Betty Jean Humm card parties Saturday evenings, 'i fred Mueller, the mission study. DORCAS FUN NIGHT OPERATING CONDITION. beginning this week and on Jan. ¦¦> ¦ ______Engaged to Wed 23 and 30. The parties, to be LEWISTON , Minn. (Special) H 0NLY —Dorcas Society of St. John's TAYLOR , Wis. ((Special) - held in the school basement, will MAYTAG , ) i ^w_ MAYTAG "HALO OF Mr. and Mrs. Francis Humra, start each evening at 8 o'clock. Lutheran Church will meet I lht% Thursday at 8 p.m. in the school ; ' La Crosse , announce the engage- The game of 500 will be played. j AUTOMATIC WASHER ' *\' HEAT" DRYER | JUMBO ment of their daughter , Miss Lunch and prizes will be giv- auditorium for a fun night . The * JH^|f ||3 Betty Jean Humm, to Marvin en and a grand prize will be Mmes. Edwin Kiese, John Nahr- w/t 1 77 Nelson, son of Mr. and Mrs. awarded at the last game of the gang, Hubert Volkman, Marv J ONLY 199.77 HAMBURGER Ludwig Nelson, Viroqua, Wis. series . Benicke, Fred Erion and Miss Ij^^ H^wS f Miss Humm, student at La ¦ Margot Schuetze will captain Crosse State University, is a EITZEN PTA MEETS the groups. Mrs. Herbert Krien- 50c secretary in the North American bring and Mrs. Edwin Kiese Van Lilies office. Nelson is a EITZEN, Minn. (Special) - will have charge of the serving. graduate of Platteville State Eitzen PTA met Monday eve- University and is the vocation- ning with Mr. and Mrs. John Steak Shop al-agriculture instructor at Tay- Stokman and Mr. and Mrs. lor High School. Kenneth Myhre in charge of the program. Lunch was served by Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Haar and Mr. and Mrs. David Kurk. " ECONOMY GONSOLETTE TV JACK PAN KRATZ 1 [_ j ST. HELEN'S UNIT WW! ... our battered Sales Manager says N 5 we need to reduce our Inventory ^~~~ LANESBORO , Minn. (Special) by M ~-~-~-_ B i - St. Helen's Unit of St. Pat- rick's Altar Society will meet e ^^ |B| ^^^SJ^^S^^MWa^^^M ¦^ ¦¦ i^ l ^H prices on these Maytag Washers and ^"^^^J ^ at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the rec- Dryers. If you don 't have the rash, tory, with Mrs. Willie Flattum come in an»wa • ¦ ¦ wc win Work 0llt and Mrs. Kenneth Peterson as ^-"" • Push-button water *' ONIY 7 MINUTES temperature controls a dcnl you can handle. hostesses. . 8 Push-button temperature * * .selectors | | * Agitator Action ~^ r Even dry|n - no hot M~ * ' ¦ : ¦ '. '3 | * Safety tub brake t\ Kl I V * S *jj$mi ^ _ Zinc coated rrtctftl \*r .__, ; ^ W M L I ^ cabinet lo prevent * Dynamic Diis c Lint Filter " i* J _——— I : fafr^ r nist - I -^B ^fety door — and many / WEDDING C%&Mk \ ¦r*"^/ I * ,,, $f othcr ,cn c STATIONERY J^B^f^ ^X 1 /|tCT| " I

.avdi ^Ll^Lflala ^LtW ^BmmwB§ *nBlL .'It M* tuba(o»erall f.'lio .) Hli£9U ] ^^ 212 tq, In. pittuff V:;r BiVkiv y 3i jC3 v: y ^ ¦•- " ^^ '' ~^ l ^ ^^^ FULLY GUARANTEED iV^^ * TV JBjflw . Wm± RCA VICTOR r^^r &y- J • All-channel VHF and UHF tuning [ 'Dvtottiuf ^onmert • Powerful Now Vista Tuners KNUTSON OUGLAS > «J I. Ith Phon« 497/ \ rcga^x MAYTAG D • Improved 22,500-volt chassis (design avorarje) X^y 7 ^^ • New RCA tinted Pan-O-Ply picture lube ;'! • ALL TMB MOST WAMTHD STYLSS FOR THi J Ask Milt to Show "7* BRIDE TO BB. >^f~4 WRINGER C y • Big 6" x 4" duo-cone speaker i you the new 1 ,n mGe One-set VHF fine tuning u/AQUCDWAMitR * • ; Announcements & Invitations } MAYTAG Lj l^^J Fred. He is a new mem- A» Low tT> 4 O Par From $8.00 Per 100 A% | 0n, ber of our sa,es forc JJalL VVa.k | ELECTRONIC V « ' \ * \\J l Viu tls j . . . NOW REDUCED / * \ ^ TH , «„ ... .„ ! Formerly with Nalton Tlrt Service i « Conventional Wcuhiri your selections. " * St. CherlM, Minn. 24-Hour Service — Free Bride' s Book CAV / C ten nn a Phone 2304 or AVt W UU by MAYTAG Rolllnottone direct 8 689-2334 • MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY • 3 * ,, :• • ¦ , „ ., , ¦ ,: ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ • ;¦: . ... :.- ¦¦ i . - . . . , ...... ¦¦ ¦ ' . ~.. , ...... ! . . -«. ';,..,,.. - ' '"" n'fiiJM* -,;,, - ¦::, -. ,: * -„VM ..—. „ H Business Mirror Central Lutheran Two in Court Huong Denies 50 Attend Hearing Annual Reports Auditorium On Higher Phone Pastor Resigns On Check U.S. Tried Rates at Lake City When Dr. L. E. Brynestad Use Approved LAKE CITY, Minn. - About btcant pastor of Central Luth- Two request* for UM of the 50 persons attended a public tran Church Sept l, 1941, he Forgery Counts Go Into Mails To Interfere bearing conducted here Friday planned to return to research A guilty pleayand a sentenc- By SAM DAWSON to the shopping center. The an- SAIGON, South Viet Nam Winona Senior High School au- by the Minnesota Railroad and and writing after 10 years. It ing were among actions taken AP Business Analyst nual report is a minor episode (AP) — Premier Tran Van ditorium were granted Monday Warehouse Commission on the is new nearly 24 years, but during the arraignment of crim- in her busy life. What is there Huong denied today that the night by the Board of Educa* proposal by Dwelle Telephone he'll still keep his vow , NEW YORK (AP ) - Another inal actions in the new term of about our company, aside from United States tried to dictate a cation. Co. to increase rates. After Sept. 1, 1965, he and avalanche of mail is headed the that would in- The Dwelle company, mem- District Court Monday after- way of the nation's stockhold- dividend checks, settlement of South Viet Nam's Winona Chapter, Winona So- Mrs. Brynestad will move to noon. terest her? What shall we tell recent government crisis. ber of the Pioneer Telephone NortMield, Minn., where he'll ers. It falls somewhere between ciety for Preservation and En- system, also is asking to extend Eugene A. Garrison, 21, 56 her?" , "The government and the couragement of Barber shop resume researching church his- Christmas cards and Velentines , she — and toll-free service to tbe Millville Hamilton St., pleaded guilty to and the bulk helps flatten the Well , any day now armed forces ef the Republic of Quartet Sing- , tory of the American colonial countless of her sisters, along and Zumbro Falls exchanges. era and writing about it His a charge of check forgery , and feet of the mailman. It's the Viet Nam," Huong told a news ing of Ameri- » , . . with their husbands — will get conference, "regard as their Manager Glens J. Dwelle said ministry at Central Lutheran Judge Arnold Hatfield ordered corporate annual report. ca, was grant- bCnOOl there was no formal dissenting will end Aug, l. a pre-sentence Investigation. the answer, thanks to the car- obligation the responsibility for ed use of the Thousands of corporate exec- riers of the mail. testimony. The bearing was LARRY J. Kenosha, 20, utives and technical and clerical resolving the internal affairs of auditorium for conducted by D W Carr, direc- HE LIKES Northfield, where Chi- DOdiuD-.---! . . cago, was sentenced to a term employes have labored long and their country, and reaffirm that a concert next tor of the telephone division of he graduated from St. Olaf Col- there has been no demand made Dec. 4 and for —' lege in 1621, because of religious with the Youth Conservation hard to enlighten, please and the commission. Commission at Lino Lakes, sometimes \o make customers by the United States to follow a rehearsal Nov. 28. The company can't proceed research materials available any particular formula for the St. Teresa Guild of Cathedral there and because it is nearer Minn. He had pleaded guilty of the company's owners. Now Rochester Man with its plans until the commis- to check forgery Dec. 3 and a this big peak in corporate activ- resolution of the past crisis.". of the Sacred Heart was allow- sion has reviewed the case. to libraries ia the Twin Cities. ed use of the auditorium for a He also plans to return to pre-sentence investigation had ity has been reached and hope- Huong said rumors of undue concert by the St. been ordered. Mary's Col- custodian overtime, $429. the East in the pursuit of knowl- fully conquered. Dead When Car American interference in South lege clioir Feb. 7, if it isn't be- Kenosha's term is indefinite. An adjustment from $6,tOO to edge. He was there after grad- Viet Nam's affairs "were the ing used for any school activity. ,194 Dr. L. E. Brynestad Theological At the Lino Lakes institution, American stockholders are 17 , retroactive to September, uating from Luther results of misunderstanding be- Payrolls approved: Home- was made in the salary of John Seminary in St. Paul in 1926. he will be taught a trade and variously estimated to number from 17 million to 20 million, Rams Info Tree tween Vietnamese and Ameri- bound teachers, $781; substi- Januschka of the vocational ag- He took his master's work at given his freedom when the ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) - can authorities, particularly tute teachers. $1,152; noon hour riculture Princeton and his doctor's work and many own shares in more department aftef the commissioner of corrections A young Rochester man was during the conferences which supervisors, $500; miscellaneous board was advised that he had at New York Biblical Seminary judges that he is ready to take than one company and will be Degrees on many mailing lists. Some killed and three other persons took place (following the event of instruction and office and .cus- completed requirements for his Anniversary and Union Seminary. his place as a citizen, Dec. 20 1964." This todial assistance, ,289; stu- were awarded by Princeton in will literally be flooded with were injured earl*/ today when , was a ref- $1 master's degree for advance- However, one to ten years their car crashed into a tree. erence to the .purge of the leg- dent cafeteria help, $316, and ment on the salary schedule. 1930 and by the Biblical Semin- are the limits placed on his annual reports. And many will ary in 1992. pay little heed to what's inside The death raised Minnesota's islative High National Council confinement. This is the period by the nation's military leaders. Plans Made af Between Luther and Prince- the pretty covers. highway toll to 19 for the year specified for the prison term Huong said " ton, he had been in the parish Corporate treasurers and con- compared with 16 through this extensive and that can be .given upon a check date in 1964. frank discussions conducted in ministry at Redfleld, S.D., from forgery conviction. trollers say they've found that 1926 to 1929 and after 1932 he the short summary at the start Calvin W. Fenner, 21, was an atmosphere of mutual con- ' , Judge Hatfield told Kenosha. dead on arrival at a hospital cern and good- will have dis- NERVE DEAFNESS St. Matthew s began a ministry at Warren "Peop of most reports will satisfy a which lasted until he le of the Indian race just shortly before 1 a.m. pelled whatever misunder- The congregation of St. Matt- Minn., don't seem to want to work . I majority of the shareholders. , came to Winona Sept. 1, 1941. "This is all I really under- standings that might have been hew's Evangelical Lutheran think that's your chief prob- Fenner was a passenger in a apparent." Lutheran -edi- lem. But you stand," writes a widow with ten Church voted Monday night to THE CENTRAL 'll have to conform car driven by Jerry R. Sorn, 20, ^*~ shares. If you he«r sounds, I. you he»r / ^^^ H ( \( 't^Ba^Vt fice then was at Center and if you want to get. along," the Rochester. Sorn and two other "Vietnamese-American rela- people talk - but you have observe the 45th anniversary of " dtffl- ^rr ^-^AAM \\-J. Hw^kwrfi there were "That's all 1 have time for, colty undir.tandlnfl VZJ * Ar the church's organization on Saflborn streets; judge concluded. passengers, Charallet Winkle tions are now , as always , inti- th« wards. If *' y-^v ^""f^-W^Hl i about 400 adults and children, explains the busy owner of you have head noise.—rlnyjng In ,^f '*rf /^^^¦^VW/SS ^^SBI Judge Hatfield expressed the and Mary Ellen Silker, both 20 mate and cordial ." he declared. the ear — your troubles may be - Jan. 31. in the Sunday many shares. *£s£«-r"- v^______^ t^___B______l_____ and about 75 hope that Kenosha would learn and of Rochester, also were hos- U.S. Ambassador Maxwell D. hirve deafness. Tha most Impor- " Yv^______t xKMKBBM The event will be observed school. Now there's a new edi- tant thing you can do today Is to JBMH3HH a trade at Lino Lakes and be But extreme brevity Isn't pitalized with severe injuries. Taylor strongly objected to the find out how Mlricla Ear can help _>>aaS^--______-___.^j ^^^^^^^^-______MWM-l_BBI _ tn the regular Sunday services fice at Huff and Wabasha able to settle down when he re- The car left a Street after military purge, and the embas- you now. Every hearing lots I. 1,900 souls and what satisfies most readers, the different. We hav« a hear frifl aid _ with the Rev. E. E. Kowalke , streets, about entered society. making sy suspended talks on plans to Com*t0m Inln n9mPhona 0rer WrWrl,ti4* in the Sunday school. Financial Executives Research a turn and struck the -to help every corrective loss tt* * Semitic language professor at about 500 tree. increase aid to South Viet If the Miracle Bar will help you. " ««..—.- -., Northwestern College THE JUDGE questioned Gar- Foundation reports. What mat- ' , Water- "It's not to my credit ," said Police said the Silker girl Nam's war effort against the • •••••••••| Johnsrud , La Cre.s»/Winen» ', j town College, Wis. , rison before ordering a pre- ters is how the material is or- who preach- Dr. Brynestad. "It has been a crawled Communist Viet Cong. MODEL OF NEW Htaring Aid Canters ed one of the sermons sentence investigation. Garrison ganized. The foundation says through the car's rear \ j at the marvelous congregation. I lov- Initially Taylor and MINIATURE HEARING Box j church's dedication said that he had been desper- the report must be so arranged window and was attempting to his aides } »" - •-* Croat* , as a guest ed every year of it." pressed for the generals to re- speaker. Dr. and Mrs. Brynestad—she ate when he cashed the check that the impatient reader is able walk on severely injured legs to AID GIVEN j 172 Main St. — Wirnwta j particularly active in for $53.50 in early September, to grasp the essentials quickly. seek aid. She collapsed in the pudiate their purge and rein- A most unique free offer ef spe- ! i The services will be followed has been clal Interest to thoie who hear but J ', their two arms of a patrolman who ar- state tl High National Council. di rot understand words, has lust ¦ ' by an anniversary dinner. The Girl ,Scouting—reared signing the name of Henry But skillfully done the summary NAMw E ! children here. Lorens, an attor- Scharmer to it. will arouse his interest and lead rived on the scene shortly after Last weekend , however, Ameri- been announced by Motorola Dahl- ! • committee consists of: Donald the crash. can officials softened their ! berg, A true life non-operatlnj j ', Kiekbusch, Leon Larson and ney, is a captain in the Air His wife had just gotten out him on to sectlonallzed descrip- modi), actual slit replica ot the j . . \ Harold Stender. Force judge advocate's division tion, special features, formal stand, and a settlement was an- smallest Dihlberg ever made, will • ADDRESS ' , N.M of the hospital with their , first The Mariner 4 spacecraft now nounced Saturday. ba given away Ira* to anyone . > at the Air Base in Clovis ., child financial statements and even answering this advertisement. ', ', In his annual report , Pastor is married , Garrison said; and both speeding toward Mars will help Wear-test It In the privacy of your ; ——- — • and Andrea Marie the accompanying notes, which ¦ C,TY STATE > A L. Mennicke commended to Dean Gillund, a third-year were getting thin because he answer a question that has tan- The United States and Brazil I own home without cost or obllga- the congregation on its finan- was broke and jobless. Garri- most shareholders tend to skip. talized men I Hon of any kind. ! j.j-it ' University of Minnesota medical for centuries: Is are the world's largest orange j "ITS YOURS FR6E TO KE6P" ! _ _,_ ? cial performance and recom- in a son, whose father-in-law posted The foundation surveyed there life on the red planet? producers. student, and is ft nurse , mended the names of 20 persons research project et University $1,500 bond for his release while practices of 183 companies for membership in the congre- Hospitals. action was pending against him, large and small. It found tht gation. is now employed in Winona, median cost Of the annual re- The election of officers to the THE END to these Winona making $60 a week, port is 50 cents a copy. This in- church council resulted in the years was forecast when Dr. He eagerly accepted Judge cludes preparation, printing and Here s The Sale You ve Been Waiting For! re-election of Donald Skeels and Brynestad read his resienation Hatfield's suggestion that he mailing, but not postage. Spend- ' ' Kenneth Spittler and Ln the to the congregation Sunday make restitution to Scharmer. ing on the reports now being election of Norman Schiepp, morning. The judge dismissed Garrison mailed, or nearing that stage, Lorenze Rusert and EIroy Gae- "The wise old king Solomon with an admonition concerning will be the same as the previous dy. Eugene Czaplewski and said once there is a time for the "check-writing habit." year. UtWdnAjonlLi John Meyerkoff were elected everything under the suit," He head ushers. told the congregation. "Believ- "THERE'S something about Reader complaints have led The council will meet Thurs- ing this to be true, I have being able to get a fast buck one company in four this time to prayerfully day evening to organize, and thoughtfully and with a piece of paper that in- seek-to improve the report by the newly elected members will come to the conclusion that the duces people to do it time and using layman's lauguage rather time has come for the good of again," Judge Hatfield warned. than accounting terms. Annual January Clearance Sale be installed at the 10:30 a.m. the congregation as well as my- service Sunday. Garrison will be sentenced But an earlier survey by the Special groups of Men's Furnishings, including: Sport Shirts, Sweaters, Pajamas, Hats Slacks self to turn the pastoral minis- when the investigation is com- American Institute of Certified , , Hosiery The congregation voted a try of this congregation to a pleted in about a month. Pubjfc Accountants found 38 and Neckwear from our regular stock of Quality Men's Furnishings. A FEW EXAMPLES ... stewardship campaign to be set new leadership." up by Herb Peter and to be Assistant County Attorney yrifys being used to state stock- He resigned effective on the Richard H. Darby represented ' equity, 25 ways of stat- held in Lent. A budget of $107,- Sept. l anniversary but said he holders REG. $5.00 LONG SLEEVE REG. $5.95 to $6.95 LONG SLEEVE 000 was approved. the state in both cases. Attor- ing earned surplus, 20 terms for ¦ would vacation during August to give the new pastor an op- ney Harold J. Libera was ap- tax reserves, 11 different titles portunity to become acquainted pointed by the court to repre- for the Income statement, and Sport Shirts Sport Shirts betore the opening of the fall sent both Kenosha and Garri- 23 labels for retained earnings. 3 Bombs Set son. One of the nation's largest program of the parish. ¦ Off in Nicosia He resigned "with a deep corporations says one reason it sense of gratitude to God and is trying so hard to raise stand- $3.50 $3.95 NICOSIA , Cyprus (AP) - this parish for 24 blessed years Canada Cutting Jet ards of readability, clarity and 3 FOR $10.00 2 FOR $7.50 Three bombs were exploded of the ministry." Squadrons in Europe simplicity is that women figure within 14 hours in this divided in 70 per cent of its stockholder REG $8.95 AND $10.95 LONG SLEEVE REG. $12.95 to $15.00 LONG SLEEVE capital. One , in a Greek sector Some 30 tribes inhabit the OTTAWA (AP) - Canada's records, either as sole or joint theater, stampeded hundreds of rugged, wooded backbone of eight low-level jet bomber squa- owners of shares. patrons into the streets. South Viet Nam. These hardy, drons in Western Europe are Sport Shirts Knit Shirts No one was hurt in the theater independent people called mon- likely to be reduced to six and "We used to visualize the lit- blast Monday night, but several tagnards, or mountaineers, re- the Canadian air force's Euro- tle old lady," says its annual nearby shopfronts were dam- sent the lowland Vietnamese and pean headquarters at Metz , report compiler. "But now we aged and one of the theater's have many grievances against France, may be closed, in- aim at the young suburban ma- $4.95 $9.95 emergency exits was blown out. them. formed sources say. tron driving her station wagon ALFRED LONG SLEEVE ¦¦ * »# ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • , Sport Shirts JACKETS SUCCESS NEWS ! AMBASSADOR BY RAMBLER S-SHT* $13.95 »»' $14*95 H ^yT Sales up 110%...greatest increase of any 1965 car! K.S* JS $8.95 tSS" $15.95 20% Read tbe reasons why: Reg. $10.95 flMO $7t95 »"¦« $2Zi95 I X^fBL. ^-Bi^L^B mt SPORT COAT CLEARANCE ¦ ^ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ w a^L^L^L^L^L^kw_ iaa^Mm&nifm -mi'^K?i T*i**¥'*mmt **l^m*^^m~*M* ~ ' "" * ¦ i _ SWEATERS ^^BBBtBBBBBBBBEBSE3BBBBBB3& JS^Bmmmm\.^^^^^^^^^ . *&m *t ' i ' ¦ ' ¦ mm^m^m^m^m^m^mwm^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^mwmw^i k'V^y& - £'' ' % WBm\ ^\^^^B. ' IM K ^^^^fc^ffo* •3HS NOW $27.95 r y2 PRICE Rig, $1.50 Manhattan £¦ Mfll/ Q

__at~^tJKBmmmmW ^^^^K^^^'& gi2BBl^BB^^^^^^^^^BBt ^^^^^B&Ajf£'' &*i..^L^L^LB-^Q^^^L^llllBlflM c£. T-SHIRTS $1.00 Rag. 5,5 95 to $16.« 31*Ca*73ciooc Reg. $1.50 Manhattan $3.50 «?« $7.95 BOXER SHORTS - VT Cuffed . rea

mBw^^r ' y CAMP HOSIERY ^^i*^ i^fc^Zi * • ¦7 ¦^^^^^ BX^ ^^^^*^''^^'-¦ -;'' - ¦¦ ^^^ ^Bymm ^^^BEHBB ^^^ ^**BHl^^¦ GLOVES ^^ ^ mtaL^BBttBk\AA ' ' . ' " -- " MW . Sin Wfl^^w ^ L.NED^UHUH.0 990-H Jl $1-00 6 P.„ $5.75 Ambowodor R ^^^"aa^a^^ ^L^LKWVZ' $2,95 S $1.50 3 P.,r $4.35 '"! H95 reason one : rftaton two: reason three): S 75c 2 w $125 -- Advanced Slyllnfl. Ambaiiador'i glam- Extra Value. The '65 Ambouador low Maintenance Coiti, High Reiale. Tho R oroui new ityllng can"5 oul tint agaiml keepj all the solid Rambler virtue, and Ambaiiador, like any Rambler, make, ,a $1.50 3„,r $4.35 SlJT. $6*95 all direct competitor. In a survey at the entra-value feature, .nth On Double- »en»e when you buy It, return, more In THANE A HYMALAYA first major .how of 1965 car.. Look at Safely Brake, (.operate »y.tem», front trade. You'll find all the realoni "why " Iho .weeplngly changed Amba.iador. and rear), Deep-Dip ruitproofing, Ad- In Ihe '65 Cor X-Ray Book. 48 page. DOBB'S HATS SWEATERS Spectacular new size and length. New vanced Unit Con.trucllon, Ceramic- with slHe-by-»lde comparisons of lead- power, Including big V-8 option., other Armored axhau.l .y.tem, Coll Spring Ing '65 cars. Can «ave you hundred, of ne xt ear. & $10-95 sporty options l ike wire wheel coven, .eats. Weather Eye Heotlng ond Venll- dollar. In the purchase of your » $5.95 ft .... $9.95 gi »g more—all standard at no Free at your Rambler dealer, reclining bucket seats , and olher sports latlng and Realms CO QC R 1MI Vf»9D HT .M 4.15-33 extra coil I American Motor*—Dedicated fo Excel/once "« 17 Q-Z * equipment. fo SIMS 4>0.jJ (10.00 $I **JJ ReB, C1COX H2.K 4>iJ*JJ ' ' The 3 Sensible Spectaculars- RAMBLER '65 . , CIAS5IC—H.w Inltim.dlat.-Sli. Rambltt • AMISICAN—lh. Comport fconomy King BEAU BRUMMEL TIES , *.** AMIAWADOR—loig.M and Nnttl ol lha N«w RambUn • sa sar $1.00 Wwuri& onA. 6 Fer 500 * "NOTED fOR QU ALITY" 9th & Mankato Wfnona< Mlnn R«g V3.0O (T*) -JC , J 121 Wo»t Third St WINONA AUTO SALES - to Sl.SD 4>t.J . ¦ ni * i - M . *k . m. „... *«._... _._ >">» ny \ta j__ __!_.. .. _„,__ ...... ' ______. ____> Mobs Riot Redistricfing Dear Abby: BILL MERRILLS.. Compromise Pill Against U.S. Faces Badger Tell Mother or QomsMim BUT Suggested , ST. PAUL (AP) — A legislat- Raphael Salmore, Stillwater Lib- In Viet Nam Legislators ive interim study group waa to eral. SAIGON, South Viet Nam MADISON, Wis. m- - The me«t today on the home reme- rules are slated to Police Promptly dies issue — trying to work out Permanent (AP ) — Noisy antigovernment tb/iktex^y 1965 Legislature, which will con- be introduced in the House today mobs roared through the central a compromise on the so-called By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN T WONDER . . . are you on speaking terms with the family, vene Wednesday politically di- and likely will be approved Wed- Vietnamese city of Hue again vided and poised for the bien- "pill bill." That would clear th« ' DEAR ABBY : I am a girl of 14. My father died before cr is yours a grunt and groan communication system? nesday. today, parading with banners in nial battle to make ends meet, The regulation spells out how way for introduction of bills. I was born. About six years ago my mother took in a man front of the U.S. consulate. Most folks are decent to be around in this whirl-a*day world the sule of home remedies who was looking for a room to rent, only we didn't have faces an additional challenge: First committee sessions will Antigovernment demonstra- of ours. They give out with friendly greetings, exchange small A Nov. 1 deadline set by the should be shared by drug stores be the Senate Welfare Commit- an extra room so she let him sleep in her room. AU my tions also began in Da Nang, and grocery stores. friends know about it because they keep asking me who talk in a market or on an elevator and make at least an effort Wisconsin Supreme Court to re- tee hearing at 8 a.m. Wednes- South Viet Nam 's second largest organize county -boards. The legislature held brief Mon- the man is and, when I say he rents a room from us, they city. at being likeable. They will even surpress the urge of disgust, in day. ask how many bedrooms we have. most cases, and based on these The Legislative Council, a 15- day night sessions -nd picked up The Legislative Public Retire- Reports from Hue, 400 miles My biggest problem is that he is always tryuig to get niceties, they are accepted as meraber group comprising lead- the tempo -today. The prospects ment Study Commission voted north of Saigon , said some of in your relationship with the ers of both parties, started the were for another four-day work me alone and touch me. My mother works from 3 P.M. happy family. Monday to recommend that the the marchers carried banners Janes and good Joes. machinery Monday to change an week. require the state's until midnight and I walk the streets so I won 't have to But the real person is the legislature shouldn 't be demanding neutralization of the IF, WHEN you get together 1849 law which the high court major retirement associa- stay alone in the house with him. I know I kind of person we are at home Daylight livings time loomed five , but I don't want to hurt war-torn country'• and no one can think of any says runs counter to the princi- tions to have complete actuarial walking the streets alone at night What kind of an individual does as an Issue again this session my mother's feelings by telling her why I'm afraid to stay Hue city was also in the grip small talk, let Dad or Mom look ple of "one man, one vote" as surveys every four years. of a general strike for the third your wife see when she pops when three lawmakers said they at home. What should I do? CAN'T SIGtt MY NAME open an eye as you reach for over to the other one and say enunciated in the U.S. Constitu- day. Businesses and transporta- simply, "You know what I'm tion. planned to introduce a bill to A that noisy alarm clock? Or, In lengthen the period in Minneso- DEAR CAN'T: Tell your mother tion faciliti es were halted. the case of the , going to do tod$y?" And before Cache of Garbage ALL about the man s behavior imme- also continued at women what The council unanimously rec- ta. ' general strike kind of an atmosphere do you you know, the small talk will diately! And if she doesn't get rid of Quang Tri, farther to the north. come forth as freely as if .you ommended for introduction in Rep. John Tracy Anderson, St. Lids Uncovered lend to the breakfast table? the new session a proposal that him at once, call the POLICE DE- The demonstrations and Perhaps you were on an elevator or in a mar- Paul Conservative,/ said he -what by a 're at your worst would reorganize county boards BISMARCK. N.D. (AP) — A PARTMENT and tell them exactly strikes were organized in tie AM, but nevertheless, it ket making like a nice guy. Yes, would introduce a measure to you have you to follow itself the "Bud- and limit their size according to cache of garbage can lids — told me. I urge group calling is you. sir, I guess if families will talk make the time correspond with apparently stashed away by this advice now. dhists and Students Protective together, they'll grow together, population. Wisconsin's. At present, Minne- And how about the kids? As Sen. Walter Hollander vandals — has been uncovered Association. " The agitation has they ready themselves for and as many a family has , R- sota has "fast" time from the DEAR ABBY. Your advice to widows Universi- Rosendale, chairman of the by police in Hillside Park. centered around Hue school, how congenial are they proved in tMs sense, life can be last Sunday of May through La- Home owners were informed who wonder what to do about their wedding ty...... toward each other, and in turn, beautiful. Now I'm not saying council's county boards reorgan- bor Day. The Badger state ex- and engagement rings was a revelation to said about 1,500 ization committee Monday and many of the 60 lids U.S. sources you to them and they to you as this communication bit will ans- , said the plan tends it from the last Sunday picked up Saturday night were me. You said, "Widows who would like to marchers demonstrated in Hue. your emotions respond to each wer all of one's needs in life, would meet the Supreme Court's in April through the last Sun- start dating again and eventually to remarry American consulate reclaimed. Neither the other? You see, the family but it's a step in the right requirements and "preserve day in September. Householders were told later should leave their wedding rings at home ABBY nor the U.S. Information Serv- should have more regard for direction. some semblance ot representa- anoth- Also proposing bills similar to to claim the remainder of the and wear their engagement rings on their right hands." ice closed their doors. In each other than for the casual Be sure you never cut off com- tion for small communities." 's are Sens. Leslie Wes- My husband died two years ago and recently I started ,000 gathered Anderson lids because they're unsightly — er part of the city 3 acquaintance in the market or munication with the family. Not Under the plan, supervisory tin, St. Paul Conservative, and and smelly. dating. But I felt guilty every time I went out with another to hear antigovernment speech- on the elevator. Yet, often all to share with each other is to districts would be created "in man. It was as though I were betraying my deceased hus- es. they see of each other is a few turn living into mere existence. such a manner that each super- band by wearing his rings with another man. After read- minutes between getting up time visor shall represent as nearly ing that piece in your column, I put my wedding ring in and leaving the house, ahd if as practicable an equal number the drawer and placed my lovely diamond engagement ring people are in a bad mood, theirs of persons, but considering such on my right hand. I broke into tears, but I realized for the is more of a grunt and groan other factors as continuity of ex- and Election Recount FIRST TTME that I am no longer a married woman, AMA Suggests communication system, leaving isting town, village and city should not feel guilty. Thank you, Abby. L.S. WEST ERN all participants in a bad mood. lines." DEAS ABBY: 1 disagree with you, Abby. I think a IF AT OTHER times through- A day after the 132 senators woman who has lost her husband and who has children New Program Plan Is Submitted BLUE BLAZE NO. 2 out the day the family keeps ST. PAUL (AP) - The Elec- and assemblymen return to the should wear her wedding ring at all times. the talk down to, ' 'Pass the but- State Capitol, Republican Gov. My father died four years ago (I was 12) and a year tions Interim Commission of the ter ," "Can I have the car to- legislature recommended Mon- Warren P. Knowles will address later my mother took off her rings. When I saw her bare night?", or, "Whose got the in- a joint session of the Legisla- FUEL OIL fingers I asked her please to put her rings back on and to For Health Care day that future recounts in con- CHICAGO (AP) - The Amer- side of the paper?", it's possi- tested statewide election races ture. J, 1 C.5< Per Gal. keep them on. I pointed out that although she no longer had ble to lose something in this a husband, she had a son, and I didn't want people to think ican Medical Association came should be handled similar to the Knowles, faced with budget out Saturday with a proposed association , causing it to fall plan used in the gubernatorial requests totaling $896 million, I was illegitimate. I would appreciate seeing a retraction in short of a state of bliss. your column. A WIDOW'S SON program of health care for tbe recount of 1962-63. will outline his program to the aged and stated it would give So, here's a basic rule. Treat Petitions for recounts would lawmakers in the 11 a.m. ad- GASOLINE DEAR SON : No reasonable person would assume elderly citizens far more than your family a little more cor- be filed in Ramsey County Dis- dress. that because a woman wears no wedding ring, her child- the administration's medicare dial than you would a casual trict Court with the case to be per Gd ren are illegitimate. Nor would I worry about the odd- plan. acquaintance. To do so, start heard by three District Court population over 300. The current 2S'9< - ball who might think so. Dr. Donovan F. Ward , presi- with self. Even before you look judges named by the State Su- figure is 10,000. NO STAMPS—NOTHING FREE. dent of the AMA, hit out at in the mirror, say, "I feel preme Court. The commission is headed by DEAR ABBY: Just read your reply to the young woman President Johnson's more for healthy, I feel happy, I feel ter- Sen. Franklin P. Kroehler, Hen- with braces on her teeth who is getting married and wanted health insurance for the senior rific." The first time you may The commission said the sug- derson Conservative. Karl Rol- to know if you thought she should have her dentist take citizens imKea not even believe it. Now say it gestion was motivated by expe- vaag, the Democratic - Farmer - her braces off for the wedding. (Her dentist said he would ; to the Social Se- again, only with more gusto, riences of the gubernatorial re- Labor candidate, defeated in- have to put them back on again immediately afterwards.) ! curity system. and finally, while standing on count of two years ago. It also cumbent Republican Gov. El- WESTERN I completely disagree with you. I wore braces for years 7 He said that your feet, say it with expression suggested that permanent vot- mer L. Andersen in the 1962 el- and it is sheer misery to have them taken off , and even and meaning, and you will be- er registration should be main- election and the lengthy recount worse to have them put back on again. She will probably program would AT THE END OF IAFAYETTJ ST. give the people lieve it. Your attitude will be tained in Bamsey and Hennepin followed . The margin was 91 have a sore mouth for her wedding, unless her braces are good , and this will reflect itself Countv municipalities with a votes. removed several weeks before the event. Then there is al- "far less than ways the chance of having her teeth go crooked again and they expect," she will only have to wear braces longer. and "have a That girl should be glad she's getting her teeth straight- disastrous ef- ened and as long as ber fiance doesn't mind, she should let fect on the qual- Young Men and YoungWomen ! well enough alone. ONE WHO KNOWS ity" of hospital and medical Problems? Write to ABBY, Box 69700, Los Angeles, Calif. Dr. Ward treatment. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed en- velope. Under tlie AMA proposal, If you're 16 through 21, here's your chance to Blue Cross and Blue Shield and other health insurance compa- GOP support because "those are nies would provide policies to our bilk which we proposed protect the elderly against the GOP Shouldn't initially." costs of illness. Republicans. Laird said , prob- Public and private funds ably will strongly oppose such would share the cost, according Buck Everything bills as hospital care for the to each recipient's income. aged financed through Social Under the new program, an Security. over-65 citizen would purchase Laird Believes "My party." he said, "believes through an insurance company in ability to pay to finance hos- a "wide spectrum of medical, WASHINGTON .(AP) .- Rep. surgical and hospital benefits, BE SOMEBODY! Melvin Laird, R-Wis., said Fri- pital care for the aged program, not through a regressive tax , and would pay all or none of the day. "I don't think we should cost of the policy , depending on oppose everything, and sug- such as Social Security. Under , " financing, the his income " Ward set forth in a gested that Republicans be Social Security statement. selective tn opposing programs man who is earning $5,000 will "For individuals with income of President Johnson . be paying as much to support under the specified minimum, the program as a man earning the state agency, using federal The GOP has some House one million dollars. " members who will oppose any- and state funds, would pay the Income tax financing would be entire cost. " thing, Laird said , but selective better , Laird said. Join Job Corps opposition to the administra- The AMA progra m would tion 's program "i.s not a change make some use of the federal- as far as I am concerned." Castro May Attend state health aid machinery set up by the Kerr-Mills Act and If you're 16 through 21 years old, out of Learn how to speak and write well, Laird said the forces that Session of U.N. now in effect in 40 states . would oppose every Democratic HAVANA (AP) - Reliable The law permits states to de- school , and can't find a job— Learn how to get and hold a good job. program do not have majority sources in Havana report Cuban termine eligibility through GOP strength , and he predicted Prime Minister Fidel ('astro is checkups by welfare depart - substantial Republican support considering a visit to New York ments on income, assets nnd can't get into the Armed Forces— Best of all... next week for the vocational id attend the United Nations o'her resources of the appli- education amendment which the General Assembly, but hns not cant. But Ward called for con- and sometimes think you have no future- YOU'LL GET PAID WHILE DOING IT! President will ask be approved made up his mind. gressional action to make some He said there were other He last attended an assembly changes. He suggested amend- JOB CORPS may be the answer. You'll amendments that would receive session in !*>(> . • ment of the present law to per- get daily spending money... mit citizens over 65 to submit *M^M***lal^^H"***********************************MMHBHBB^^^^HH"______--_--____---__--____ " ;i simple information return !o Just fill out the coupon below, send it in, and when you leave you'll be paid the appropriate state agency $50 for ., outlining income from all and you'll soon find out. every month Don't Know :, sources." you were in Job Corps ! ^ *. "On the basis of this return alone , " he said , "an individual If you're accepted , you'll live in It's all true... it's a big opportunity, Whether to WMk> willi income within limits set by Ihe states would immediately become eligible for benefits. " a Job Corps center with others your age. Send the coupon in today and start LAUGH or CRY ~ ~ ON YOUR ^^H"" "* Ward said the AMA program "would provide far more to our You'll eat good food. You'll learn a trade, a new future. elderl y citizens than is proposed iri the administration 's medi- care lax program. You'll enjoy sports and recreation . Join Job Corps and BE SOMEBODY ! "Aid would consist of compre- hensive health care benefits , rather than being limited to hos- , INCOME TAX pilal and nursing home care '" '"" '" ------i-i-----MMMH «.MM .. MMH ammmmua rnmat an^ represent ing only a fraction of If your income lot hm got BOTH __f-__l j______H_. the cost of sickness down , it ' you » tq.y to put a FEDERAL lfcl ^^^ ^^ m "Benefits for eligible recipi- imilo on your lace again. »un \B _H______. ents would include not only pay- Juit iee fh« BLOCK office ment of hospital and musing I Job Corps,Washington, D.C. SI All _-flP*__r ^B J in your neighborhood lor ^H home charges , but also payment fait, accurate MMMM ^_ M of medieal, surgical and drug ^ costs." I Opportunity Card . You 'll tmile at the low co.t , II lj*j ^^L_^B LliU He also pointed out lhat it I I am interested in the Job Corps. | ^^UP would operate within tht- estab- : (r : OUAMANTEI rr^ -~[=r-.„ , lished insurance system , private V/» guoranfta occutat* preparation of rvtry to. rrt g>n If ¦ insurance companies would ad- PRINT NAME . ___AGE I w« mok« any 4' ion that coil you any p.nott y 0 . *n t*r «tt . minister it , and it would _ p»npll or mUnil make | (fi rst name) ( last name) w< wilt pay th* y . use of existing insiii iitiee and prepayment plans in which mil- ¦ lions of Americans ADDHESS are enrolled. J1 The AMA labeled its proposal (street address or rural route) g _3ffiS§cS«- a sound and workable program «* ' Laro«»t Service wiHi Over America * Ta* 800 Office* thai would accomplish "far more" , *" ' thnn medicare "wiih - {city) (state) * none of the attendant evils of 116 WALNUT STREET iinprcdi rtiihle expense , invasion ¦ Weekday! 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.—S«it . and Sun 9 a.m. Io 5 p.m. of medica l practice by the fed- Telephone where I can ho. reached ' | Phone 8-309 . eral bure.iiiracy . or disruption ¦¦ of the private health insurance ______NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY industry by the government. " TUiSDAY JANUARY 12, 1965 Fire Damages Broadway, Nicholson in Yakima, The Daily Record 790 Enrolled in Wash., Blank «t 677 E. Sanborn Houston County St. and Joseph Lane at SIS E. Deaths Two-State Deaths Galawaki and Nld»l*on At Winona 3rd St. Community Residence on were drfoaw in • two-car coi- Memo rial Hospital MUa Martha H. Galvwtkl Alfred Bredvlatn Vocational School Case llsion Oct. 3, IMS, oa Highway Galewski, 71, PIGEON FALLS, Wi*. (Spe- A currept enrollment of 190 During Monday's discussion of Accident Cale- Miss Martha H. ) Bredvigen 59, 76, three miles north of Vltltlng htun: Musical ind lurglcal 857 E. Broudway, died Mpndpy cial — Alfred , a proposed new building to Minn. Blank was a pas- patl«nf»: 3 1o 4 md 7 to 1:30 p.m. (No Minneapolis, died Sunday at B students in the Winona Area donia, chlkJrm wafer if.) at 4) p.m. at Otpununlty Men?* East Wabasha house ai) vocational school senger in t3» GalewsW car, Maternity patients: J to 3:30 and 7 to a.m. atVeterans Hospital, Vocational-Technical School was Transferred Here ¦ 1:30 p.m. (Adults only.) rj»l Hospital after a brief Ill- A basement fire at the Bar- classes, 4th Ward Director Dan- Minneapolis, Minn., a week reported Monday night to the iel Sadowski asked whether an District Judge Arnold Hatfield ness. admitted. Hft had bara Kulas home, 873 E. Wab- RED CROSS MEETING MONDAY after being Board of Education by Superin- alternative to construction of a ordered a change in venue of a She was born here June 9, been ill several months. asha St., charred first-floor joists The quarterly meeting of the ADMISSIONS 1893, to Mr. and Mrs. William tendent of Schools A. L. Nelson. new building might be a change personal injury case, scheduled He was born July 23, 1905, and beams and caused smoke to be tried in Houston County , board of directors of the Amer- Edmund Pavek , Minneapolis, M. Galewski and was a lifelopg Pigeon, Trem- Nelson said that five courses in the graded arrangement at in the Town of damage throughout the one- conducted under after a hearing in chambers ican Red Cross chapter here Minn. resident. County, to Hans and provisions of the senior and junior high school at , noon pealeau story structure Monday after- the federal Manpower Develop- level. Monday afternoon. will be at a luncheon Rickey Freed, Rollingstone, She was a member of St. Stan- KaroJioe Bid Bredvi^en. He noon. , . Monday in the chapter house-, Minn. Society, with the Army in World ment & Training Act are in Attorneys in the Lane-Galew- islaus Church, Rosary served Fire Marshal Cleo Keiper said progress. SADOWSKI wondered whether ski case on the calendar of 276 W. Sth St. Members are ask- Karl Doffing, 330 Elm St. Society and St. War II in Europe. After the house to Sacred Heart today that tbe fire was caused shifting ninth grade classes to Houston County District Court ed to call the chapter Robert Googins, 259 W. 2nd St. Helep's Guild of St. Stanislaus. war he worked as a laborer by misuse of an electric heat- DATA submitted by. Thomas the new senior high building make reservations not later Mrs. Omer Harem Lamoille had never agreed to have the case tired in , , Survivors are : A nephew, Wil- in Minneapolis and ing tape. The tape had been Vf. Raine, vocational school di- when it's completed and using than Friday. Minn. married. Winona County, since it involves ¦ liam H., Winona, and three wrapped around basement wa- rector, show? ,—. the present senior high building virtually the same issues as ' Edward Serva Jr., 450Vfc E. (Rita) lar- Survivors are: Two brothers. that 20 are ej » i only for seventh- and eighth- DODGE WOMAN FALLS Wabasha St. nieces, Mrs. William Pigeon Falls, and ter pipes, but it was doubled , those in the William H. Galew- ras, Winona; Miss Mary, Hud- Ole and Hans, rolled in a bCnOOl graders might allow for use of DODGE, Wis. (Special) — Mrs. Allie Becker, Galesville sister, Mrs. Henry (Ann?) over itself, which caused over- ski-Charles L. Nicholson and , yard, Mich., and Mrs. Arnold one heating, Keiper said. class in auto the Central Junior High School Mrs. Jacob Losinski tore liga- Wis. Nelson, Blair. John R. Blank-Galewski and Ni- ments in her left arm between (Teresa) Rhiel, Sheboygan, Wis. services will be body repair at D ^--J building as a vocational school. Mrs. Elise Druey, 309 W. A., died Funeral MISS KULAS came home a rented build- BOard cholson cases. Both the latter the shoulder and elbow Tuesday He? brother, William at 2 p.rn. at Pigeon Board President Lawrence' Wabasha St. last Jpije 26. Thursday from work about 5:15 p.m. to ing at 1552 W, ~ — Santelman said that the present. cases are on the new January when she fell on the ice at David Angst, 58 W. Mark St. Creek Lutheran Church, Pigeon term calendar of Winona Coim- Funeral services will be find the house filled with smoke. Broadway ; 20 each in classes in formula by which state aids are her home. Raymond Jereczek Julian Krzoska, Fountain City, Falls, the Rev. Gordon Trygstad . ty. Jr., is in critical condition at Thursday at 8:30 a.m. at Bor- officiating. Burial will be in the She called firemen who, even- general office clerical work and computed would dictate a re- Wis. tually, dispatched two hose com- in stenography- conducted in duction in aids should such a fjalpwdri liVM a. KM V. St. Joseph's Hospital, Arcadia. Mrs. Adolph Hicks, 464 W. zyskowski Mortuary and at S at church cemetery. St. Stanislaus, the Rt. Hev. Friends may call at Hagen panies and a truck company. rented quarters at 79% W. Srd plan be implemented. The junior Howard St. The first of these arrived five St.; 20 in the course for high- high students then would be Rodney Sfolfaj.. 265 Vila St. Msgr. N. F. GfuUwwski officiat- Funeral Home, Wednesday aft- ing. Burial will be in St. Mary's ernoon and evening and Thurs- minutes after the call. way technicians at the Winona counted as elementary pupils, Miss Theola Vail , 21? W. Sth Armory, and 16 in a welding for aid and St. Cemetery. day at the church Irom 10 a.m. Firemen found underpinnings purposes, he said, Friends may call Wednesday of the first floor a mass of class at Senior High School. tbe resulting loss in income to Mrs. Fred Schmidt, 4610 Mrs. George BUsen Ojher courses also are under the district was at 7th St., Goodview. after 2 p.m. at the mortuary. flames, but they were able to estimated The Hosary will be said at 6:45 CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) extinguish the blaze in about an way. more than $25,000 a year. Mrs. John Loesel , Cochrane, —Mrs. George Bissen, 52, died Wis. p.m. by the societies and at 7:30 hour. Aside from charred joists p.m. by Msgr. Grulkowski. Monday at 7:45 a.m. at Cale- and beams, firemen found some Mrs. Arline Webb, 1845 W. donia Community Hospital. FOR BUiGLARY ACTION Sth St. flame damage in a bathroom. Funerals The former Helen Feyen, she Fire had found its way be- Mrs. Ottmar Kochenderfer, Winona was born Aug. 12, 1912, at La Cochrane, Wis. tween the walls in the channel Mrs. Delia Morrison Crosse to Mr. and Mrs. Emil created by water pipes. How- Mrs. Harold Bade, Cochrane, Feyen , She was married May Wis. Funeral services for Mrs. ever, Keiper said that the heat School Supervisor Delia Morrison, St. Anne Hos- 9, 1933, and had lived here DISCHARGES since. had been so intense that solder Mrs. David Stiles and baby, pice, were held today at Breit- in the joints of the copper tub- low Funeral Home, the Rev. Survivors are : Her husband: 264 E. Sth St. three sons, David , La Cres- ing melted and water squirted Wins rd' Gerald Kukowski, Dakota , Harold Rekstad of First Congre- over the flames in the bathroom Boa s Praise gational Church officiating. cent, and Allan and Tim, at Assistance gi ven law enforce- While not criticizing an in- Minn. home; three grandchildren; her wall ment officers during their inves- structor involved in last week' Thorvale Larson, Galesville, Burial was in Woodlawn . Cem- s etery. mother, Mrs. Nellie Feyen, La THERE WAS smoke damage tigation of en attempted burg- incident, directors thought that Wis. Crosse; one sister lary at Senior High School Pallbearers were Walter , Mrs . Arnold throughout the house, but no last a policy might be adopted which ^BP% I, ir-^- James Carroll, 320 Elm St . Bissen Caledonia, and one week drew expressions of com- rf^ W-^-^ ^^simiBB^^f^^^^HBHH^H^EP^^kmmmmm ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^ mmwMWHSSfsB Thompson, Robert Selover, Dr. , been deter- would preclude the possibility ^^BBtmmmvtf&SUB^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^B ^ '^ ¦mm Herman Guderian , 968 W. brother , , damage figure has mendation for the o u b 1 i c Robert and Dr. John Tweedy, Raymond La Crosse. mined yet, Keiper said. of any personnel being in a Wabasha St. One son, Terry, has died. schools' supervisor of buildings school building without specific Mrs. John Drazkowsk i , 553 E. Clyde Morrison and Richard About 500 feet of hose was Henry . The funeral service will be and personnel, John Timmons, authorization after custodians Howard St. Thursday at 9 a.m. at Steffen used in the hour-long battle from the Eowd of Education have left at night. Richard Schell, 206& Hamil- against the fire. Mr«. Beatrice E. Peterson Funeral Home and at 9: SO at Monday nigW. The burglarly attempt was ton St. Funeral services for Mrs. St. John the Baptist Catholic Miss Kulas is staying with rel- Superintendent of Schools A. Mrs. William Bailey, 510 W. atives while the house is recon- discovered last week by a vo- Beatrice E. Peterson, 452% Cen- Church, the Rev. Thaddeus L. Nelson said that after an cational school night class in- Broadway. ter St., will be at 1 p.m. Wed- Derezinski officiating. Burial ditioned. early Thursday morning attempt Mrs. Cyril Crawford , Winona structor who decided to remain nesday at Grace Presbyterian will be in Calvary Cemetery. to open a! sale ___ in the building for the night Rt. 3. Friends may call at the fu- in the high , . ^ Mrs. Earl Benson, Rushford, Church, the Rev. William T. rather than attempt to drive to King officiating. neral home after 7 p.m. today school h ad _t>ChOO^ l his home in Chatfield during Minh. Burial will be in Woodlawn and after 2 p.m. Wednesday. Retailers Name been thwarted heavy fog. Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited by police-ia D__„J Wednesday at 8 p.m. the process of DOaiQ Directors said the suggested BIRTHS ELSEWHERE Friends may call at Fawcett policy was proposed to insure Funeral Home from 7 until 9 which one po- ^ — HOKAH , Minn. (Special) - Earl Benson Infant New Directors liceman and one of the burg- that the safety of no one on Mr. and Mrs. Verian Craig a p.m. today, and at the church RUSHFORD, Minn.—A burial Four new members were the school staff would be jeop- Wednesday. lars were wounded by gunfire daughter Jan. 5 at St. Francis after noon service for the stillborn son elected to the board of directors — a question arose as to wheth- ardized should another similar incident happen. Hospital, La Crosse. Mrs. Craig Felix P. Bronk of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Benson of the Winona Chamber of Com- er the school could be opened is the former Donna Kirchof. was held in Rushford Lutheran merce retail division at a divi- to pupils Thursday morning No action was taken on eith Funeral services for Felix P. er policy suggestion Monday. WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special ) Bronk , 119 Johnson St., will be Church cemetery Monday by sion meeting this morning at the since at least one accomplice —At Tri-County Memorial Hos- at 9 a.m. Wednesday at Wat- the Rev. Eugene Foehringer. chamber office. in the burglary was missing and pital, Whitehall : kowski Funeral Home here and The child, Thomas Allen, was Chosen to two-year terms on there was tbe possibility he Mr. and Mrs. Claude Sura, In- at 10 at Sacred Heart Church, stillborn at Community Memor- the eight-member board were might be hiding out in the dependence, a daughter Jan. 5. Pine Creek, the Rev. Augustyn ial Hospital , Winona, Saturday 0. C. Bell, Harlen Holden, Leo school . Mr. and Mrfc. Martin P. Mat- Sulik officiating. Burial will be evening. Arnold and Emil Nascak. Teacher Pay a daughter Two other children survive. Holdover members are Le Roy A DECISION had to be made chey Jr., Whitehall , in Sacred Heart Cemetery . as to whether a room-by-room Thursday. Friends may call at the fu- Backus, Robert Boschulte, C. R. James A. Robinson Hauge and John Thompson. In search of the school should be Mr. and Mrs. Herman Wiench , neral home after 2 p.m. today. BUFFALO CITY, Wis. (Spe- made during the night or de- Independence a daughter A Rosary will be recited at 8 addition, Robert McQueen, pres- Talks Deferred , cial)—James A. Robinson, 82, ent chairman, and Wayne Him- layed until daylight. The latter Thursday. p.m. who retired 15 years ago from would have resulted in a morn- After a four-hour discussion ) rich, board adviser, will remain of school building matters and STOCKTON, M inn. (Special river improvement work with members. ing closing of the schools. —Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Valen- Miss Celia Walch a rundown on other items of Funeral services for Miss Ce- the U. S. Army Corps of En- New officers of the division Timmons, who has the keys tine, Huntington Beach, Calif., ginees, died Monday at 5 a.m. will be elected at its next meet- necessary for gaining access to business on its agenda, mem- a daughter Thursday. Mr. and lia Walch, 159 E. 4th St., were bers of the j . ____ conducted today at the Cathe- at Lutheran Hospital , La Crosse, ing. all areas of the high school, was ^ Mrs. V. G. Daniel, Stockton, and where he had been a patient a called to police headquarters Board of Ed- r L. I Mr. and Mrs. Donald Valentine, dral of the Sacred Heart, the ucation Mon- Harold J. Ditt- week. Death followed a long and accompanied officers to the JChOOi A FASCINATING NEW KIND Minnesota City , are grandpar- Rt. Rev. Msgr. day decided man officiating. illness. 20 Coffer Poems high school around 4 a.m. ents. in Immaculate He was born Sept. 23, 1882, Nelson said that Timmons it was getting D-.af. J Burial was too late to POqiM Heart Catholic Church cemetery in the Town of Alma to Mr. Accepted f or volunteered to accompany po- I OF NEWS ANNUAL AVAILABLE TODAY S BIRTHDAYS at Oak Ridge . and Mrs. James Robinson Sr. lice on a tour of the building. launch into s were Robert and He spent his entire life in Buf- Since he knew the location of consideration of teacher salary Pallbearer' falo County. Annual Anthology Jeffrey Wayne Hernmelman, Arthur Speltz, Thomas Lehn- all light switches, the superin- issues for the 1965-66 contract 3740 6th St., Goodview , 2. Soman He married Alvina Hoffman Poems of 20 sophomores of tendent paid , Timmons opened year as originally planned. ertz, John Schell and June 16, -EXCLUSIVELY-TH ROUGH and La Verne Walch. The Cath- 1906 at her parents' Cotter High School have been each room and flipped on the Directors have scheduled a olic Daughters of America pro- home in Buffalo City. accepted for publication in the switches so the search could be meeting for Wednesday night to WEATHER the • Survivors are : One son, Ray, "Annual Anthology of High made. No trace of the missing discuss the teachers' salary pro- vided an honor guard at his church. Memp , Tenn.; three grand- School Poetry" published by the burglar could be found and posal asking an upward revi- THIS NEWSPAPE R NOW! OTHER TEMPERATURES children, and one brother, classes were able to be conduct- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National High School Poetry sion in salary schedule figures George, Buffalo City . His wife , Press , Los Angeles, Calif. Cer- ed on schedule the next day. High Low Pr. one son, and had hoped to discuss the re- 1 964 has been an historic year—one of fundamen- Municipal Court four sisters and three tificates of Acceptance have Several members of the board quest Monday night. Albany, cloudy 27 23 .. brothers have died. said Timmoas' action "was cer- tal conflicts and of 50 26 been sent to: Instead Board President Law- human drama which struck home to Albuquerque , clear . WINONA The funeral service will be Mary Boland tainly above and beyond what , , 30 , Susan Burmeis- rence Santelman suggested that you personally. Atlanta clear 43 Dismissals: (all of charges Thursday at 2 p.m. at Colby ter, Jerome. Gallas, Paula He- he would be expected to do" , 12 -4 .0!) directors meet an hour prior Bismarck snow — Funeral Home, Cochrane, the genbart, Thoma^ Hoeppner, Al- and the board asked that the Keep its memory bright forever with this unique Boise, cloudy 35 32 .04 of driving with no valid driver's to Wednesday's session w|th the ) Rev. Gene Krueger officiating. ar Kaufman, Carolyn Karasch, superintendent convey the volume-an annual, unlike any other Boston, clear 30 22 .. license in possession . Burial will be in Buffalo City joint teachers' salary committee , which brings to Cisewski , 557 Linda Kieffer , Robert Klein- board's commendation to Tim- Chicago , clear 36 17 .. Margaret M. Cemetery. mons. and consider the proposal in de- life the history of our own time. Mankato Ave., Saturday at 11:40 schmidt, Colleen O'Reilly, Rich- Cincinnati, cloudy .. 39 28 Pallbearers will be Norman ard Philipps, Darlene Pulchin- tail. It's a book to cherish, tb refer to, and above all p.m. at Wabasha and Chatfield Hansernann, Leonard Leitha, IN REVIEWING the circum- Cleveland, cloudy .. 34 30 slci, Christine Raphael, William The teachers ' delegation then to READ. Denver, clear . 40 20 streets. Harry Gifford , Clyde Baumann, stances of the burglary attempt, Reinarts, Mary Rivers, Patric- Nelson spld that investigation will come in to discuss the pro- Des Moines , clear... 40 7 David G. Ehler, 477 W. San- Fred Hobbs and Glen Mulyck. posed schedule. ia Schneider, Douglas Smith , has indicated that apparently THE 300-PAGE HARD BACK VOLUME Detroit, clear 37 30 born St., Sunday at 9 p.m. at Friends may call at the fu- Sherman Smith , Stephen Speltz , CONTAINS: -ll -22 Sth and Lee streets. neral home Wednesday after- entry to tho building was gained Fairbanks, clear .. .. and David Wendt. through a door that somehow Fort Worth, clear .. 51 32 Edward £>. Mohan , 10CC W noon and evening and Thurs- • Month by month, tho stories thai struck home to newspaper day. had been left ajar. Eustis to Helena, clenr 33 18 Wabasha St ., Sunday at 1:45 Speak leaders. • Hundreds of h\otk and white and Huff The burglars then apparently nam photographs, dis- Honolulu, clear ... 79 74 a.m. at Broadway Laurence Miller Rollingstone Class Street. went to the superintendent's of- At DFL Dance played so you can appreciate them. • About 24 pages of color Indianapolis , cloudy 40 2ii MONEY CREEK , Minn. (Spe- fice, forced open the door by cloudy f>r> 45 Changes in the income tax I photographs. • Maps Jacksonville, , BUFFALO COUNTY cial) — Laurence Miller , 48 , laws relating to formers and breaking or removing the lock Warren Eustis 1st District , including a double spread world map in Los Angeles, cleur . 09 50 , ALMA , Wis. (Special) — The died of a heart attack Monday how to file a return will be ex- and remoyed buildings keys DFL chpirman, will speak at ! color sparring the year's news events. • A chronology of the Louisville , cloudy .. 40 29 .. license of Daniel H. Ringger . 16, afternoon at his home. He had plained by John Januschka from the superintendent's desk. , the Winona County DFL Victory year's events for easy Memphis , clear .... 48 26 .. Mondovi Rt. 4, was suspended been periodically ill for several iadult agriculture teacher at Wi- These keys would provide ac- Dance Saturday at the Winona | roofer reference. • An almanac of basic cloudy 79 64 .. Miami, for 30 days by Buffalo County years and had just returned nona Senior High School, at a cess to other areas of the build- Athletic Club. current information on U.S. and foreign governments, sports, Milwaukee , clear .. 34 11 Judge Gary B. Schlossteln Mon- from Veterans Hospital , Minne- ing such as the high school cafe- meeting for urea farmers at Dance Chairman Lester Dien- business and economics Mpls.-St.P., snow 16 -1 .02 day Ringger also paid $3 costs. apolis. 8:30 p.m. Thursday at Holy Trin- teria , in Ibe vicinity of the , births, deaths ond marriages. 52 33 He was charged with driving , ger announced that refresh- New Orleans , cloudy He was born Dec. 11 1910 , ity School in Rollingstone. welding shop from which equip- ments would be available. Tick- New York , cloudy 35 2a too fast for conditions Dec. 3 in to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miller , ment wns taken for the safe- Mondovi. He is the son of Mr. Bangor , BLAIR WOMAN ILL ets can be obtained from Dien- RESERVE YOUR COPY-T Okla. City, clear ... 42 29 .. Wis., and graduated cracking attempt . ger or William Bell at the Ath- M^ Omaha , clear .40 10 and Mrs. Herbert Ringger, Mon- from high school there. He serv- BLAIR , Wis. - Mrs. Anna ed in the Army from March 11 Johnson, 88 , suffered a stroke DURING Till!, discussion of letic Club. The dance will be Philadelphia , cloudy 33 15 .. dovi. , from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. SPECIAL PRICE OF $3. Phoenix, clear 65 40 Forfeitures on charges listed: 1942, to Dec . 2, 1945. He worked at her farm home in Vosse tho attempted burglary , direc- Pittsburgh, cloudy . 30 25 .. Gary L. Bauer , Durand, Rt, 2, at Winona Produce Co. several Coulee Sunday afternoon , and tors also suggested that steps 28 16 .. $10 fine and $3 costs, careless years, later farmed in the Wi- is in a critical condition. Garth he taken lo insure that only a Ptlnd, Mc., cloudy . minimal amount of cash is kept Ptlnd, Ore., cloudy . 40 35 driving, Mondovi , Dec. B. toka area , and moved to Money Duxbury, 7, son of Mr. and XJMCH ECKED YOUR ; THE WORLD IN W4 j Voerding, Glen- in any of the schools at one ^H Rapid City, cloudy . 35 16 .. Byron Leon Creek a year ago. Mrs. Larry Duxbury, fractured * WINONA DAILY NEWS j furnishing time. St cloudy . 44 31 . wood, Minn., $55, Survivors aro: His wife , liis left arm in a skating ac- jj BOX it , POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. . Louis, beverages to persons un- Arrangements should be j Salt Lk. City, cloudy 33 30 .24 malt Blanche lone, and three broth- cident. der 18 Nov. 13, Town of Naples. made, board members suggest- San Fran., rain 54 49 ,0Q , ers, Ronald , in the armed ¦ Thomas Thrune, 184 N. Baker forces; Golfin Bangor Wis., ed, for deposits of nil funds in ilmTf M « Enclosed i.s $ ... for cop ies of THE ', Seattle , cloudy 39 35 .. , , FIRE CALLS St., Winona , $53, intoxicants In a and Alvin La Crosse. excess of minimal amounts on « WOULD JN 1%4 ill Washington , cloudy . 39 27 .. , I Ilonp itnl costs have gono up! \ $.1 each. Please reserve a copy for me. i vohlcle carrying a minor , Jan. Funeral services will be Wed- grounds tliat this would serve Mnke miro your protection will > Winni peg, clear .... -5 -27 .. Monday aa a deterrent to future - 10. nesday at 2 p.m. at Witok a Meth- 4:10 p.m.—Sweazy Pond rub- any I jircviUo tlm Itiahtr daily room I AIUPOJiT WEATHER , burglary attempts. »urjjic.al bitnoflta you need | NAME i Robert G. Culp, La Crosse, odist Church, the Rev. Roger bish fire, ignited by brush burn- nnd • (North Central Observations) Nelson Clerk I today. For a frca nualygis of I $30 , driving 40 m.p.h. in a 25- Lynn officiating. Burial will be ing in tho area, extinguished and and Busin- Max. temp. 22 Wednesday at ess Manager Paul W. Sanders yoiir Jiealtli protection program | i ADDRESS • mile zone , qnd $13, arterial vio- in Witoka Cemetery . with 2,695 gallons of water from I gation), write, I 4 p.m., min. temp. 1 at fi n.m . lation nt the junction of high- explained that receipts in any (without obli Friends may call nt Potter- tank truck, | phono or vUit I i CITY AMD STATE j today, 6 at noon today, over- ways 35 and OS , Fountain City, Haugcn Funeral Home, Caledon- large amounts — such na those 6:17 p.m. — 873 E. Wabasha from ntlilct Ic contests — always cast sky nt 1 , 500 fwit , visibility Dee . 10, ia , this afternoon and evening St,, Barbara Kulas residence , Mondovi , , nre deposited in a bank and ! Scud ii copy of the t>ook as a jjift from me t«; | 7 miles with lij'lit .snow wind Dewey Stay, $13 , and at the church Wednesday basement fire caused by over- driving without his headlights not kept nt the schools. JAMES GARRY i.s calm, barometer 30.26 and after 1 p.m. heated eluctric heating tape, fire humidity 69 percent. on, Jan. 0. Superintendent Nelson sug- .steady, charred floor joists, smokfl dam- 1621 W. KinS St. NAME Mrs. Otto Martin gested lhat sometimes in the fu- j j ngc throughout house, two hose 3281 RUSHFORD , Minn. ( Special) ture consideration might be Phon* companies and one truck com- given to a revision in the cus- — Mrs. Otto Martin , 78, form pany put fire out in an hour. j ADDRESS j eiiy of Rushford , died suddenly todial schedule which would KOLLOFSKI 0 «. IH . throitg li " p.m. provide (ot some one to be on DR. C . R. at her home at Los Angeles, High School , bhe hud lived in '" Sl,u,r,l,iy ;;0 California since 1920 duty at lli« high school during j CITY AISD STATE . j DEBOLT " '" >'-' Calif-, Jan. 2. She was M". . DR. MAX L. Floyd W. Parish prevjotw to her Survivors are; Her husband , the night for uround-tho-clock ^HwWfiMK^^fl marriage to Mr , Otto ; two daughters; one son ; fitmerv/ufont. • i9pt»tneiri*t* Martin- j (DONOR: YOl'll NAMK ) • She WOH born at Ilushfprd nine grandchildren ; 11 great- DlRIttTOItK thought that IS 1' IIOSI : (iH.' T IIIKI ) AMI M AIN S . .O - llll.ll Aug. 27, intIG , oldest daughter grandchildren , and three sisters. study should be made of a Mutual ol ORUha limiranct CoiWV of Mr . and Mrs, Arndt Lar- One son , Dale, died in January workable |)lan such as (he su- Himt Oltlct • Omito, Ntbraika Mh'surved books trill he matled m February i 1903. son. A graduate of Rushford perintendent had suggested. MM^MMNM ^MWMmWMfMnM ST. MARY'S BOMBS JOHNNIES 75-62 Redmen Redmen First Half Enough Again Skafers By GARY EVANS He will agree, however, right as the Redmen out- defensively we were tough another drive and it was 18- Triumph Dally News Sports Editor that they do little to improve smarted a St. John's team in the second half. That helps 10. ST. PAUL, Minn.—St. Mary'i 's second-half offen- that played as if it felt a lot." No one is going to con- a team With just over nine minutes hockey team won Ita third gain* performance. slighted at Concordia's 1964 It was a contest for five vince St. Mary's Coach Ken sive to play in the first half , the in as many days here Monday trip to the NAIA football minutes, St. Mary's leading Wiltgen that large halftime That was the situation at score stood 24-18, but the night and 16th straight in tha championship game in the by 11-9 at that point. Then, leads are detrimental. Terrace Heights Monday Redmen calmly outscored St. MIAC. first half arid then coasted suddenly, it was all over — John's 14-4 in the next four Falling before the Redmen, offensively in the second 20 the ease with which the Red- minutes to make the score who have established a dynas- minutes. men packed it away again 38-22. ty in the past two years, was It was over at halftime amazing. In the span. Jim Buffo hit previous kingpin Macalester. with St. Mary's leading 49-30. It began with George Hod- the lefthanded jumper from The score was a convincing 10- but because a basketball er slapping through a jump- long range, Roger Pytlewski 3. trrs^^ 's fifth a game calls for two halfs, the er from the free throw line to It was St. Mary blasted home a one-hander, the conference this second was played and found run it to 13-9 and continued Jerry Sauser counted on a straight in year and established the Red- St. Mary's winning 75-62. after Tom Durenberger of layup, Valaika made a free men as definite favorites to The victory marked the St. John 's had made a free JSlP^ throw and Buffo two, Mal- walk off with their second ^ Redmen's 11th in 13 outings throw. oney a drive , Valaika two straight title. The season slate 's into and sent St. Mary Mike Maloney got an assist more charity tosses and Sau- now stands at 5-3. exam break with a solid 4-1 from George Valaika and ser one. WHAT BEGAN at a tight iliiiPSPORTS record in the MIAC, the . only spun through for a two-point Repeated trips to the free game ended as a picnic as the loss coming at the hands of layup. Jerry Sauser counted throw line OZZIE LOEFFLER, a familiar figure here until deciding sent St. Mary's Redmen, who broke from a 6-3 defending champion and pres- on a free throw through a St. out front 45-26 with 1:14 left score in the final period tried tp invade the north woods for a job at Bemidji State College, ent league kingpin Augs- John 's technical, Hoder hit and for practical purposes fruitlessly over the final three drops a line : burg. the game was over. minutes to set Dennis Cooney •'Someone .se ri f me tlie year-end edition of the Sunday Hews The Redmen were thwart- The Redmen toyed with St. up for his third "hat trick" ia wiih nil Ihe highlig ht;; oj 1964. I call your attention to something ed from the field in the sec- John's in the second half , three days. reported a that mig ht have been overlooked. The Warrior golf team lost ond half, scoring only five watched three of the visitors "It was wild!" 's observer. "They the conference championshi p to Mankafo State bj only one field goals, but took advan- make the trip to the bench St. Mary were setting him up right and stroke and this freshmen taaen squaa was not tage of the rugged Johnnie with fouls before 10 minutes ieft and he was ringing shots conceded a chance. Also . Dick Jones was the defense to drop IB of 23 free were past and slid home. conference meet. throw shots to keep the visi- at the net almost continuously." medalist in the In all, 31 fouls were called "Bemidji aiid the college are treating me tors at bay. When it was over, Cooney had on the visitors and St. Mary 's quarter I am teaching three classes WHOA! . 7. Arnold Foster's left hand cautions St. scored two goals to run his fine. This "That's the second home won it from the line. The Red- in first aid . one in techni ques of officiat ing, Mary's guard Mike Maloney to stop his drive, but it had weekend output to eight. game in a row that we men were outscored 23-22 Bob Paradise also came running the intramural program , and manag- little effect on the Redmen backcourt artist as he went up for haven 't done much offensive- from the field, but made through with another outstand- ing ihe training room. ly in the second half ," said two points , finished with 17 and led his team to a 75-62 vic- "Our varsity team is a young (cam a tid ing night , scoring twice on un- Wiltgen. "We get the big Page 12 ( Continued on Page 13) tory over Foster's St. John's team. (Daily News Sports we have an addition this quarter in (he person assisted assaults on Scot goal- halftime lead and coast. But Tuesday, January 12. 19G5 REDMEN Photo) Smilley. He is a 6'5" Negro who ie Haas. of a Ronald ALSO SCORING twice for the ¦ layed hig h school hall with Caztie Russell. ; p Redmen were Bob Magnuson He will probably rep lace our ineli gible Jack and Jean Cardin. Captain in the starting lineup. I rnenuonea a Loeffler Phelps Andre' Beaulieu had one as did senior and two ju niors are all ihe active young team ... one Brian Deshiens. another injured senior who will see first 14 include. We have St. Mary 's held a 3-1 lead little service. SCI Thwarts Warrior Plan 104-85 after the first period. Cooney "Had. an opportunity to play tn the Chamber tij Commerce CEDAR FALLS, lowa - around 104-85 for the War- ed both a man-to-man and team 's showing though ,' he 19 points, only made five of 1hit on an assist from Beaulieu fund raising contest of Brains vs. Brawn. It drew a tremendous Too bad the Biblical story ' worst loss of the year. said. 16 frorn the foul stripe. As at 2:2! before the Scots tied it lot of fun. Even the president of the college riors a zone press. Coach Bob crowd and was a of David and Goliath didn 't State College of Iowa , The final score isn 't indi- a team, the Warriors drop- '^W The Warriors found them- Schwartzenbach and Herb wcod, Young, Smith. McKi>n_ l«. Mayor, Forrest, by the way, is the fellow who (J^^Vv selves unable to overcome Barot. Rlieil. Shuckman. v; Poll Lead, Justmann 12 each . FIRST PERIOD SCORING: SM — teamed with Winona 's Dave Meisner to bring the 13-point deficit in (he Cooney (Beaulieu) J:_ r XTx) _£ The Warriors now rest 1; M — Nelmey- Cloquet within an eyelash of the Minnesota ^ second frame. The Panthers «r (Hauser) «:S9; SM — Magnuson r^MT \Jl\ until Saturday, when they , (Thibwlcau) 7:J3i SM — Cardin (Billv in 1963. I -Ik_A / led throughout the rest of j State Tournament championship Indiana Tumbles Wolves 2nd entertain rugged Moorhead I op) 11:31 . PENALTIES: M — Hausar ^- game by ten and 12 points. j (tripping) * :1S. • • • \ w^y State, in an NIC battle at ij SECOND PERIOD SCORING; SM — THE SWAMI IS disgusted. He has slump- BLmmamd By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The nearest State got to ^ Indiana, which slipped three the Panthers in the second Memorial Hall. Paradise (Unassisted ) *:U; SM — Mag- ed to .699 after hitting 27 of 43 last weekend. nuson (Cardina and Thlbodoau) 1:1* . &~^ spots in this week's Associated half was 72-60 and 86-72. Winona Slate (IS) state Col. lowa (104 ) '; PENALTIES: SM — McCormick (Irlp- His total without handicap stands at 235 of pins) ^^ Press college basketball poll to Lack of height told the IS « pt lp (9 » pl tp jI i: 13; M — Mayor (charging) S:J1) 336. 85-76 Stalling! 7 s S lt Daniels 13 2 7 I M — Nelmeyer (charging) 1J:S1. Hawkeyes .( THIRD PERIOD SCORING: SM — No. 5 after losing to unranked story of the loss. The sky- Werner 10 3 2 .lessen 4 * 3 With handicaps he is even worse, guessing just 21 of 43 Kasten 10 0] Kneppe I ? J 25 : Oesbiens (Bishop and Beaulieu) :U> By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ilinois a week ago, made sure scraping Panthers, led by '1 to run his total to 200 of 336 for .595. to Kansas in the Big Eight pre- And'son 10 3 3 22 McColley 5 5 2 1! M — Sandberg (Hauser and Nelmeyer) that lightning wouldn't strike 6-7 Craig Kneppe and 6-5 Peterson 13 2 3 V.detich 1 0 3 2!! 4:1*1 M — Ncimeyer (unassisted) *:S.I The journey from the plains to season tourney final last month, ' Now for Tuesday : twice. Ron Jessen swept the boards Kelly 3 0 4 4 Sch'baOi 4 4 2 11 j SW — Cooney (Beaulieu and Oesblerti) the foot of the Rockies is be- Colorado matched the Jay- Rosenau 3 0 5 4 Fuelling 0 8 2 C j 7:12; SM — Paradise (unassisted) t-.Sti Stewartville over Kasson-Mantorville by 3; Mazeppa over for a 57-37 advantage in ' j coming an uphill battle for Colo- hawks' 2-1 league record. Okla- The Hoosiers . leading Iowa by Dierclu 10 3 2 Justmann 4 0 4 II f\ SM — Cardin (Beaulieu and Bishop) Byron by 1; Lanesboro over Houston by 2; Farmington over ' four points with three minutes ricochets. Goede lit)Pray 'iln 1 1 1 1 | 1»:40; SM — Beaulieu (Cooney and Oe* rado s Big Eight Conference homa State whipped visiting Meisner 7 3 3 It Johnson 4 0 4 t biens) 11:15. PENALTIES: SM - Randolph by 4; Alma Center over Taylor by 14; Arkansaw basketball neighbors. Iowa State 67-48 and gained to go Monday night , held the Inability to score from the Asleson OOOO Beaulieu (elbowing) 1:21. over Lima Sacred Heart by 2; Trempealeau over Arcadia by While nationally ranked Wich- first place with a 3-0 mark — Hawkeyes to two points the rest free throw line also was a Totals 37 30 10 104 STOPS: factor The Warriors' Tom Total 34 H 37 IS Arctiambeau i i —II 3; Fairchild over Cadott by 1: Whitehall over Mondovi by 5; ita. Indiana , St. John's and Da- but the Cowboys have yet to of the way and won going away . WINONA IJ 52— « Krelbfch 11—tt Stallings, who finished with Elkton over Wykoff by 1; Onalaska Luther over Melrose by vidson were boosting their stock make the trip to Boulder. Okla- 85-76. A string of six points in SCI 44 SI—K4 Haas i IJ 7—lt 2; Brookwood over Holmen by 2. with solid victories Monday homa topped Nebraska 89-82 in the last 90 seconds wrapped it night , the unsung Buffaloes another Big Eight game. up for Indiana , now 11-1. SPL1TMAKERS in Winona Bowling. At WESTGATE BOWL shook up the Big Eight title pic- Chuck Gardner , the Buffaloes' Three other members of this —Nita Serwa 5-8-10, Ruth Armstrong 5-10, Barbara Kuhlman ture by knocking off conference 6-foot-8 mathematics major, week's top ten played Monday ' 6-7, Alice Neitzke 34-10, Shirley Dietrich 3-7-10, Elaine Smith favorite Kansas 61-59 for their tallied 21 points, including a night and all won. St. John s of 5-8-10, Alice Pehler 5-7, Pat EUinghuysen 5-8-10 , Lora Kanz second straight home-court up- pair od free throws that put the New York , ranked No. 7, whipped visiting Creighton 72- "Can a small-town girl find happiness 3-7 twice ; Marion Tulius 5-7 twice, Peggy Jacobson 5-7, Mike set. home club in front to stay, and 66, third - ranked Wichita Davis 5-10 George Schumanski 6-7. Bob Hughes 4-5, Mike By reversing its two-point loss held his own with Kansas' 6- , whacked Southern Illinois 94-81 ' Wegman 5-10. Janice Gady 6-7-10 , Elsie Dorsch 5-8-10, Lois foot-11 Walt Wesley off the (married to a man who s in love with his new Dodge Polara?} " ' and No. 8 Davidson trounced Anderson 5-7-9, Thelma Sebo 3-7-10. Elaine Wild 5-7, Carol boards . Gardner s 21 points last Saturday led the Buffs to an 80- The Citadel 100-8 1 Altobell 4-7-10 , Virginia Schuminski 4-6-7, Jeanette Luhman 5-7, "A Van Hoof May 77 ambush of Kansas State at UCLA , idle Monday night, man who talks Carol Johnson 4-5, 5-6, Marian Fort 5-8-10, Diane Walters Boulder. continues to lead the poll. The in his sleep A man who 4-7-10 Lyle Jacobson 4-9-7, Rich Moham 5-7, Roinman Kujak , Dave Stallworth , Wichita 's defending national champions 5-7 about such nonsense, even smiles while , Lois Ledebuhr 3-7-10, Pat Grossell 3-7, Arlene Kessler 3-7, Not See Action All-America , hit all seven of his drew 33 first-place ballots and Elaine Neitzke 5-6-10, Joan Loer MO , Irene Curran 5-10, Esther field-goal attempts and team- 394 points in the voting by a re- as a 383 he dreams about Keltn 5-8-10. Lyle Jacobson 5-10, Floyd Broker 5-10, Earl Ford gional panel of 42 sports writers mate Dave Leach connected on cubic inch V8 , the money he saved 6-7-10, Bette Sievers 4-10 , Arlene Kessler 9-10, Betty Schoon- Donlinger Set nine of 14 , pacing the third- and broadcasters over 5-10, Leona Lubinski 4-7-9 , Dorothy Adams 5-7, 5-10 , Judy ranked Wheatshockers to a 94-81 Michigan climbed back into a 121 inch wheelbase, by buying a She can There has been a change the runner-up spot which was Plait 6-7 , 4-5-7, Pete Cummings 9-10 , Judy Cocker fi-7 , Thelma ' home-court victory over South- in Friday s scheduled Golden vacated by Indiana. The Wol- and over 17 Polara instead of if he shares it i Pellowski 4-7-10 . Loretta Steivang 3-7 , Marion Tulius 5-8-10, Gloves boxing match at ern Illinois , tbe Cot- verines , who beat Illinois in cubic feet of bi Kathy Greden 6-7-10 , June Dalleska 5-10 . Pat EUinghuysen ter Physical Education building. Stallworth finished with 20 g-car X? with her their only start last week, drew 5-8-10 . Milly Lica 6-7 , Mary Schossow 7-9-10, Dorothy Chuchna Tom Van Hoof , the flash points , Leach with 19 as Wichita trunk space? Can she? y Wi- :.3f; points. once in a while!" ; 5-7 , Tom Grant 5-10 . Bruce Brakan 4-5 , Orvilla Cisewski 5-7. nonan , may not be able to fight fired a torrid 59 per cent from Wichita jumped two slots into At HAL-HOD LANES Hetty Biltgen 4-7-10 , 6-7-10 Alice Stevens Friday due to an injury . Van the floor in winning its 11th in 13 . third place and had two first- 5-10, Florence Hob. _ !-!(> , Hoof was to have fought Kenny starts. Ceil Edel 5-6-10 twice , Ann Banicki place ballots included in its 251 3-7-10 , Florence Holz 4-10 5-7 , Reynolds of Minneapolis , tbe Up- , Pat Brang 3-7-10, Alice Stevens Six straight points in the last points. St. Joseph's, Pa., with a 3-7-10 . 4-5-7 , Nancy Springer 5-10 , Bob Sehcvve 5-7-9 Betty per M id west middleweight . champion . l' j minutes sewed up Indiana 's 12-1 record , remained fourth Jaszewski :i-9-10 . ii »-10 , Irlene Trimmer 5-11-10 Met;i Lilla , To replace' the Van l loof-Key- 85-76 Big Ten decision over with 242 points and one first- 5-,'Mn -7-l (l . Frances Pederson :. , 5 fi-10 , Leona Lubinski 5-7. no/ds headJiiKT will be .firrt Don- loM' ii , .saddling the home team phice vot e. Dorothy Beynon 5-7 . Helen Grulkowski 5-8-10 , Jill Schuminski. linger , a top amateur heavy- with its first conference loss. The top ten , with first-place 6-7-R-10 . Hope Dennis r>7, Irlene Trimmer 3-7-10, Janice Tropp le weight . Donlinger is currently a Steve Redenliaug.i fired 22 votes in parentheses , and 5-7-ii . Evelyn Erie 4-III , .lean Lubinski 6-7-10 , Rut li Hop f 5-0- 1 (1 , Winona Sl ide College student. points , Dick Van Arsdale and points: Ron - Chapiewski 4-7 -Kl . Ted Snyder 4-1(1 Amos fiakken 5-fi-IO. An opponent for John AleGlocklin , 20 CM -I I , tor , Donlititfcr i.s be- 1. UCLA (13| It4 Virginia Prussing fi-7 -K) . Glad ys Hlanchfield S-H-lO . Orvilla ing arranged. the fifth-ranked Hoosiers , now 2- 3. Michigan 131 Cisewski 5-1 (1 Eleanor Griesel 4-5-7 Other Ixints will find Rusy 1 in the conference and 11-1 3. Wlchlti n> 351 . 4 St. Joseph' s (I) 341 At WINONA ATHLETIC CH II: Ruth Kukovv.ski 4-1U , Ceil Clark of Hocbester facing Paul over-all. Wisconsin surprised S . Indiana 301 Bell ,')-7 , Hetty llarcltke 5-7-it . Irene Herrman 5-10 , Orvilla Dody of SI. Paul in a middle- Purdue 7(i-t>(i in |lie only other i Providence (4) ttl weight match , and Pat O'Con- Big 10 action. 7. SI. John' s 147 Cisewski 4-5-7 . Sharon Heaser 2-7-11 ) , Bernie Mayzek 5-10 , Or- I. Davidson 131 nor of Rochester fighting Boot s ' t. Sin Francises 130 villa Cisewski 4-5-7 . Bev Porter 5-7 , Marlene Kahler 5-11-10. Bob Mclntyre *! 10-for-13 snip- Itaboin of SI . Paul in a feather- ing carried St . John 's to n 72-06 10. Duke it At KKI) .MEN < It Ii. Eva Walski 4-7-1 (1. Arlene Jandt I'-MO , weight malch. triumph over (Teighlon at New Lorraine Tod d 5 7 . John lining 5( 1 , 5 7 , 11) Emil Miller 5- , Admission lo tbe event is h y York. The Redmen , 10-2 and No. Milton Pfeiffer 5-7-0 Roy Schatipp 4-5-7 , 5-10 , Earl Svnnes 7ft , Winter Carnival button. 7 in the land , held Bluejay slur Fritz Pointer to a single field Chuchei Captures goal . Mclntyre , a f. -fool-fi junior , totaled 26 points and grabbed a dozen rebounds . 700 Club Tourney John Chuchei captured first Soph Stelter Pushes B-_^M-S-^-_------^-^-9l-->-l--M--H-li-H-HEw r "7 .JaSk^^^ place Saturday in the annual ^^ bowling tournament of the Wi- Eagles, Cowboys nona chapter of the "700" Club of America held at Hal-Rod Wisconsin Past Purdue Lanes. Chuchei scored 630 errorless MADISON '1' A husk y side shooting by guards Cop Victories kets in .succession, A layup plus 44 for a tolal of 674 sop homore led Wisconsin ' s Dennis Sweeney and .Inn . Sec- by reserve center Tom The Eagles nnd Cowboys ond was Bill Bell with (517 plus Badgers out of the llig Ten Holien , was enough lo turn Schocneck put the liadgei s notched wins in YMCA Adult basketball wilderness Mon 24 for a tolal of 641 and third And now a word from our sponsot: "Polara." Ihe trick. ahead to stay. Intramural basket ball games. Jerry Dureske with 610. day night The triump h sent Coach Purdue played n tight The Fugles pulled out a 57 Ted Mnhlke won the "gran- Six foot -eight Keilli Slcltei .loliii Eriekson 's sipiad inlo 55 win over the Bears man-for-man defense b u t , nnd the daddy " division with 574 . POLARA: Iwo ions ot body beautiful. 303 cu. in. V8 (tegular gas). set a blistering second half Wednesday 's game in t lie Cowboys hammered (be Giants At a business meeting and , Wisconsin solved It with Full loam seal* . Plush carpeting. Polata-at your Oodga dealer ' scoring pace connecting on field house against Mar- 74-411. banquet nt Williams Annex , all g~- faa* s. six straight f ield goal at ijuetle with nn over all 5 5 sharpshooting from the out- side b J, I). Burnett pueed Eagles to officers wen1 re-elected. They tempts in a Bii(l |;er rally record for Ihe season. y Sweeney anil Bohen , with (iuslafson adding ef- their win with his 17 points are : King pin , Ted Mnhlke; that Battened I' unliie 76 66 Alter a seesaw fust half , Hog Wistrcill added 12. m ince pin , Clarence Rivers; pin ^T§C||jj 'BS Dodge Polara -— for Wisconsin 's fi»>l league Wisconsin tnul ALLEY CATER S Job at UCLA Tumble Abes Westgate Feints In the preliminary to the Wi- Nash's 7 CHICAGO (AP) - Tommy Men s Tourney Fenske Body Shop 7 Prothro, seeking professional nona Higfr-Eau Claire Memor- Curley' s Floor Shop 7 ial game played at Eau Claire Twins, Mabel Tie Monlgomery Wards 4 opportunity, is leaving Oregon Jeanetfe's 1 State to take the head football Saturday night, Bob Lee's "B" Mohan's Window Co. 1 coaching job at UCLA. squad downed the Little Abes Williams Hotel I 54-46. In Darfball Loop Set for Feb. 6-14 Winona Daily News I "Financially there's no ad- The annual men's city bowling tournament PIN TOPPLERS vantage to the move," said the" Although Eau Claire was in ROOT RIVER Westell* W L command 10-9 after a quarter , DARTBAI.L LEAGUE will be held Feb. 6-14 at the Westgate Bowl. Lakeside Cities Service .... li * 44-year-old Prothro, who had W L W L Main Tavern 10 S the Hawks were out front 31-22 assisted the late Red Sanders at H . P. Twins 34 • S. C. Hlwki IS 17 Entries for Ihe tourney close Jan. 16 with blanks Coca Cola I 7 y Wallyi 7 to Oregon at halftime and 45-35 with six . t\ 14 • Garnets IS 17 available at any of the local bowling • UCLA before going Bltcktiammtr II 14 H. P. Aeai 10 11 establishments. Walkini Mary King I 7 minutes to play. State for a successful 10-year Ftushlord 17 11 Highland 117 A total of 212 teams — 306 doubles, 61? singles Lincoln Insurance I * Paul Plachecki amassed a 21- Highland Prairie's Twins and and 504 all-events — were entered in last year' Winona Paint M. Class .... 3 10 tenure. s tour- Hamernlks Bar ... 1 12 "But I feel there is profession- point total for Winona and Rick Mabel continued in a first place ney. COMMUNITY UCLA," he Curran totaled 15. Becker had tie in the Root River Dartball Westgate Bowl W L al opportunity at for Eau Defending champions from a year ago include Schllti Beer 4 S said Monday night. 1^ Claire . League after games ot Dec. 28 East End Coal Co. in the handicap team division with Miller Will IH * 4 J Winona 'B' (S4> Eau Claire 'B' (44 ) and Jan. 4. Schmidt's Beer 4 3 Prothro, attending the NCAA fg It pl tp .» » p. lp a scor" of 2,989; Thomas Thaldorf in the singles divi- Sunbeam Bread I 4 convention in Chicago , indicated Hubbard 10 1] Rowt 3 13. The Twins swept games from Oasis Bar J 4 Holubar 1 0 0 J HoWar J 1 I i sion with 668; Leo Goss and Robert Stachowitz in he would like to move his assist- _ _ Garness and Spring Grove, while Erdmann Trucking 4 5 Moen » 0 Zielia 0 3 13 Mabel beat the same two doubles with 1,268, and Harry Czamowski in all- Blumentritt Store 4 S ants to UCLA where they would Hannon * 0 • 0 Becker .4 1 1 13 Hackbartli Feed Mill 3 Pla'ecki ? 3 1 Jl Tricksy 114 1 teams three times to remain in events with 1,905. * probably receive bigger pay- Hopf 1 1 1 5 Olson 1 1 1 f Ridgeway Creamery 3 4 first .place. Scratch scores saw Ho' Fish Shop rip 2,791; Ger- Bub's Pllsen 3 4 checks. Curran 7 1 3 15 Sor 'jon » • 1 " v.F.W. "I'm not sure about my staff Fay 0 0 0. In other games, Rushford ald Turner 625 in singles; Goss and Stachowitz 1,- Hal Roil W L Ivai 113 3 Totals 17 11 U 4t won a pair from Blackhammer Bunkes Apco 17 4 hope most of Oarlach 1*13 164 in doubles, and Luther Myhro 1,768 in all-events. at this time but I and Highland , and Highland Himmi Baer 14 7 my assistants will go with me," Lee 10 0 1 Handicap will be 195 scratch , two-thirds of a Wasons Supper Club 13 I Prairie Aces took two from ' lOOy.PAL. l'M .GOWH mL'XXi ASAlM-THe 0o#fr Blanches Tavern 13 • he said. Totals 13 113 54 pin handicap. The highest average as of Jan. 2 will WINONA Highland and Blackhammer •OOrJT LET UCK IHC $POOy$l' Bernies DX 10 .1 Prothro , a native of Memphis , * 11 14 •— 54 AWY&OY be used providing at least 21 games were bowled. Bubs Beer to 11 EAU CLAIRE . 10 11 13 11-41 won two from the Aces. Abrams Furnace Co It It Tenn., was a star blocking back Anyone with less than 21 games rolled will use his Bakken Con. Co to II at Duke University from 1939- APARTMENT 3-G „ By Alex Kotiky highest league average of the previous year. Every- Wlnoni Milk Co ? 11 Jonas eV Kroeger » 11 1941. Regarded a brilliant foot- one else will bowl scratch. Clark Super IOO 7 14 ball strategist , his Oregon State Teamsters S 14 PARK REC JR. GIRLS teams compiled a 63-37-2 record . Hal Rod Lanes W L in All Stars 7 1 "They 've been the happiest Roadslders 7 1 years of my life," said Prothro, Pin Busters 4 4 whose Beavers suffered a 34-7 Hornets Blaze Wild Cala 4 4 G. B.'s 4 4 loss to Michigan in this year's Beatles S I Alley Oops 5 S Rose Bowl game. Gutter Dusters 4 4 Gutter Rats J 7 Past Eau Claire Four F's 1 » EAU CLAIRE , Wis . - The < Winona goalie Ray Mertes had CITY REDMEN Hal Rod W L Winona Hornets , operating in- j 22 stops, while Eau Claire net- Oasis Par 12 11 (Continued From Page 12) dependency this season, opened ' man Payne had 17. Merchan Bank 11 11 Speed Wash 11 23 good on 31 free throws to 16 their slate successfully with a The Hornets ' next action Linahans Cafe 31 11 for the Johnnies. convincing 4-0 win over Eau comes Wednesday night at Ath- Bunkes Apco 30 11 Claire lin e Sunday. letic Park when Eau Claire Wallys F. City 30 54 The court margin was not Country Kitchen 31 14 play, however. The Hornets were formerly in : comes to town for a rematch. Hotel Winona 14 M indicative of the Southern Minny Hockey ' Bubs Beer 13 11 Bolstered by the frantic first Papsl Coli 13 11 *I»u Claire REX MORGAN, M. D. ¦- By Dal Curtis . ») Winona CO half . St. Mary's didn 't need ___^ .— . . , . —. i. —^___»—_——___^- _ _ .. , , - . i— i— loop. j Grefiam a. McGuir* 1) it ^ — . -- i — —- —— — —--^———*Tr_-— Payne O Merles KWNO Radio If IS the buckets and was plagued WIXGMAN Ed Ratajczvk was Madlion LO Drun.il by shots that went in and Twerbeg RD Hagen the Hornet hero Sunday, skat- Shaver c Trainer spun out on repeated occa- ins his way around the Eau Martin LW RaUlczyk sions. Kelley RW Derosier Claire defense for a three-goal But defensively there was "hat trick" and,an assist. EAU CLAIRB SPARES: Gulden, Harney Walks no letdown. St. Mary 's both- Cones, LeDue, Elsdrom, MacMahan . Ratajczy!. hammered home a ( WINONA SPARKS: Hagen, Pampuch, ered St. John's with the pair of goals in the first period, Thrune, Burt, Certh, Kani, Peterson, Heckman. tough man-to-man and kept one on an assist by Jerry j perfect control of an awkward FIRST PERIOD SCORING: Winona - Away With 1st Drussel and another unassisted . I Ratajciyk (Druiiell); Rataiciyk (un- situation. The Hornet left wing slapped | assisted); PENALTIES: Eau Clalra — guess our defense al- a pass to Tony Derosier in the Tworberg (tinning). "I j SECOND PEKIOD SCORING Winona ways saves us," smiled Wilt- second period and Derosier ! — Derosier (Rafiiciykl. pushed it home for the third Wi- THIRD PERIOD SCORING Wlnoni — In L.A. Open gen. Rataiciyk (unassisted). (AP) Once again it was a field nona goal . STOPS: LOS ANGELES - Rttajczyk climaxed his after- Mertes 4 I »_jj There is this golfer , Paul Har- night for the Redmen's big Payna 4 4 X—17 six. The fi rst iive finished noon by tallying again in the j ney, who has a singular habit. third period for the fourth Roal He comes down here from the in double figures and sixth- NANCY By Erni* Bushmillar of the dny. This one was also TO HONOR MAUCH hills around Sacramento, ex- man Jim Buffo got eight. unassisted. PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The tracts $!'.! ,OOO from the local Maloney was a narrow Philadelphia Sport s Writers As- .Junior Chamber of Commerce first with 17 points. Hoder THK tiAMK was an imusiitill y sociation announced today it and disappears back in the hills counted 15, Pytlewski 13, Sau- clean affair , with only one pen- would honor Manager Gene of Sacramento. si>r 12 and Valaika 10. alty being whistled in the oon ' Mauch and pitcher .lim Bunning The fellow has done it two , In addition , Pytlewski felt test. Th.it was a first period i of the Philadel phia Phillies at years running now and hopes to , in the midst ' right at home- slashing call on Etui Claire s Al the organization 's 61st annual keep the custom going Indef- of the under-the-bn sket melee Twrrbeg. I dinner Feb. I. initely. and dragged down rebounds Hartley 's secret? All you have in convincing fashion , no one to (lo is beat guys like Arnold disputing St. Mary 's right to hands Palmer . Ken Venturi. Bobby the ball when his big All winter long»»• Nichols . Tony Lorna—and yes, swept near tbe sphere. \ indeed , a man named !>tb St. Phone 4007 Totals II 1111 17 IT. 4» !4-tl I MARY'* IT. JOHN ! » U—41 ¦ . •" i 1 P. M. New York GRAI N Stock Prices ) SET CARNIVAL Berra-Keane Whose Judgment Is If? Aerospace, MINNEAPOLIS (AP —Wheat (Continued From Page 3) If improvements such as curb All'd Ch 53% receipts Mon. 315; year ago 534 Infl Ppr 83% to 1 CURLING MEET and gutter arc specially assess- Ate Chai 20ft Jns & L trading basis unchanged Blues, Jeff encourage, Binford replied. He 68^ lower; prices ' 4 to IVi lower ; In conjunction with Wino- ed against adjoining properties, Amrada 84V4 Kn'ct 83% Fiasco Chosen said: Binford told Aid. Daniel Bam- Am Cn 45% Lrld Cash spring wheat basis, No 1 na Winter Carnival festivi- "You've made a decision to 44% Gold Mining benek, their qualifications are Am M&F 18% Mp Hon dark northern 11 to 17 protein ties, the Centerville Catling do something about problems 123 1.75^-1.82%. No 1 hard Monta- Tie for Lead Rink at Centerville, Wis., doubtful. Costs of their engin- Am Mt 15 Mn MM 58% and blight. Now if the plan eering and related expenses, di- AT&T 69V na winter 1.67%-1.78%. will be the scene of a bon- doesn't look good enough when 4 Mn & Ont 34% hard winter spiel Sunday. Top Oddity rectly related to the project Am Tb 33% Mn P&L 53% Minn. - S.D. No 1 it's finished, then you needn't Stocks Down 1.67%-1.73%. This is the first year that By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS area, would be credits, Binford Ancda 56 Mn Chm 85% NEW YORK (AP)-The stock Can you beat this? go ahead. But on the basis of Arch Dn No 1 hard amber durum, In Heavyweight curling activity has been your good faith declaration of told him. 36 Mon Dak 40% market moved irregularly high- field in connection with the On Oct. 15 a team that had Some exceptions to these rules Armc St 65% Mn Wd 38 choice 1.73-1.75; discounts, am- JUNIOR HIGH intent the agency has authorized er early this afternoon despite ber 3-5; durum 7-10, carnival. been counted out of the pennant " are made for schools, he said. Armour 47% Nt Dy 87 sharp losses among aerospace HEAVYWEIGHT The bonspiel will be held race a month before won the the advance. Nevertheless the credits for school Avco C Corn No 2 yellow 1.19'/4-1.19%. W L W L city is. not liable if it chooses Retroactive p 22% N Am Av 52% stocks and some of the gold Central Blues 1 1 Washington .: 1 ' from 1-6 p.m. The public Is World Series. The next morning go back seven Oats No 2 white 62%-70% ; No not to-jiroceed. " construction Beth Stl 35% Nr N Gs 60% mining issues. Trading was fair- Jellirson 1 1 Phelpi • « Invited. the winning manager walked , instead of the three-year Bng Air 69% 3 white 60V4-68V4; No 2 heavy Central Oolds J 1 years Nor Pac 51 ly active. into the boss' office and handed IF THE CITY "backs out, limit set on other improve- Brswk 9% No St Pw- 39% white 69V4-72V4; No 3 heavy Central Blues and Jefferson him a letter of resignation. then goes ahead on its own," ments. A school also is consid- Ctr Tr 41% The aerospace issues reacted white 67^4-69%. Nw Air 67% sharply to a forecast that De- are tied for first place in the Just a couple of hours later Stoltman asked, would there be ered to benefit a project, area Ch MSPP 29% Nw Bk 46% Barley, cars 194, year ago 203; Junior High Heavyweight the losing manager -was fired any cost liability ? Binford said to some extent if located with- C&NW \— fense Department budgeting for to chuice 1.02-1.34; low to Penney 69% aerospace will good League after Jeff was upset from that post, even though he he had never seen the question in 1V4 miles of the area, he Chrysler 60% Pepsi 59V* sink about 30 per intermediate 1.01-1.28; feed 94* 39-26 by Central Golds. This Week's had won a pennant in his fresh- arise but the law requires any said. He conceded that special Ct Svc 78% Phil Pet 54% cent in the next five years. 1.00. Some gold mining Blues beat Phelps 44-26 be- man year. funds which become available investigations of each such in- Cm Ed 55% Plsby -79% stocks con- Rye No 2 1.17H-1.21V4. hind 20 points by Mark Patter- Four days after these events, to the Local Public Agency (the stance would bey necessary be- Cn Cl 52% Plrd 186% tinued to retreat as the price Beeman , the winning manager was cho- WHRA) would be used for re- for gold in London eased furth- Flax No 1 3.19. son and aine by Jim Basketball fore a determination could be Cn Can 51% Pr Oil 59% Soybeans No 1 yellow 2.74. Stan Teske hit 18 for Phelps . FRIDAY sen to head up the team he had payment of the planning ad- made. Cnt Oil 76% RCA 33% er and the British pound ster- Gene Cady got 18 for Golds LOCAL SCHOOLS— just beaten, And about a month vance. Cntl D 58 Rd Owl 26% ling became firmer . and Joe Helgerson 15 for Jeff. Winona High •» Austin. later the ousted losing manager pursued the subject. Deere 46% A generally higher trend pre- BIG NINE— Stoltman Rp Stl 42% WINONA MARKETS Golds also copped a 41-26 de- Rochester at Faribault. took a coaching job with anoth- Would the city have to repay Douglas 30% Rex Drug 60% vailed among steels, airlines, Ion over Washington-Kosciusko. Albert Lea at Northlleld. er club , where one of his bosses the advance grant if , in the Dow Chm 76% Rey Tob 40% building materials, oils, rails, Swift & Company Jerry Urness counted 14 for Red Wing at Mankato. was a man who had been fired future, it elected to seek as- Break-ins du Pont 245 Sears Roe 128% utilities, and farm implements. Buying hours are trom 8 a.m. te 4 HJAWATHA VALLEY- 3 p.m. Monday through Friday. Golds and Kurt Kiekbusch 11. Kasson-Mantorville at Kenyon. as general manager of fhe vic- sistance on a project? In this East Rod 145% Shell Oil 57% The cigarette stocks , were Thera will be no calt marktlt during Steve Strelow had 17 for W-K. Stewartville it St. Charles. torious club he had helped to event, Binford said, the grant Ford Mot 55 Sinclair 58% mostly unchanged following the winter months on Frldayi. Zumbrota at Cannon Falls. These quotations apply «» to noort Lake City at Plainview. mould. becomes part of the project Gen Elec 94% Socony 91% their late rally of Monday. Loril- LIGHTWEIGHT today. WASIOJA— Can you beat it? cost, shared three-fourths by the , Officer Gen Fds 83% Sp Rand 13% lard added a fraction. All livestock arriving after closing tirm W L W L Solved Pine Island it Byron. will be properly cared Central Golds 4 1 Jefferson 1 1 No, say a vast majority of federal government and one- Gen Mills 49% St Brads ' or, weighed and Dover-Eyota at Wanamingo. 80% The Associated Press average priced tha following morning. Phelpi 1 1 Washinston-K 0 5 Claremont at Hayfield. some 250 sports writers and fourth by the city. Gen Mot 97 St OH Cal 74% Central Blues 1 1 of 60 stocks at noon was up .5 HOGS West Concord at Dodge Center. broadcasters participating in Any locally satisfactory sys- Gen Tel 37% St Oil Ind 42% The hog market is steady to weak. CENTENNIAL- at 328.0 with industrials up .4, Top.butchers 190-250 15.60-16.00 Central Golds hold a half- Faribault Deaf at Goodhue. The Associated Press year-end tem of inspections for code Says at Alma Gillette 31 St Oil NJ 89% rails up .5 and utilities up .4. Top sows , 12.85-13.25 game lead in the Lightweight Elgin at Wabasha. poll. By an overwhelming vote, compliance is acceptable to Goodrich 58% Swft & Co 58% CATTLE Randolph at Mazeppa. WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) League after taking, two victor- they picked this sequence of HHFA and will not be supersed- Goodyear 46 Texaco 86% Tht, Dow Jones industrial The cattle market is all classes sleady. ROOT RIVER- — Break-ins at Central High High choice .2,50 Caledonia at Houston. events as the sports Oddity of , Binford told County Attorney Gould Bat 37% Texas Ins average at noon showed a minor ies over the past week. ed School, Strum-Eleva, at the 98% ; Top beef cows . 13.25 Mabel at Spring Grove. the Year for 1964. S. A. Sawyer, citizens advisory Gt No Ry 58 Un Pac 43?$ gain of .86 at 884.08. Canners and cutlers ll.OO-down The leaders hammered Jef- Rushford at Canton . LaVern Engen garage, Eleva, The clubs, of course, were the committee member. An incon- Gryhnd 42% U S Rub The averages were braked VEAL ferson 28-20 and bashed Wash- MAPLE LEAF- and Jackson Implement, Mon- 62% by The veal market is steady. ington-Kosciusko 25-1. Against Wykolf at Spring Valley. St. Louis Cardinals and New sistent plan would bring protests Gulf Oil 59% U S Steel 51% minor losses among such pivot- Top choice .25.00 Lanesboro it Chatfield. dovi, early Monday morning Jeff , Steve Spencer counted 10 York Yankees and the manag- enough locally to create self- Homestk 49% Westg El 42% al stocks as Du Pont, General Good and choice 8.00-18.OO Harmony at Preston. he said. It's Wino- have resulted in arrests of-two Commercial and boners .. 8.00-dowr. for the winners and Jeff Percy BI-STATE- ers Johnny Keane and Yogi regulation, young Eau Claire brothers, IB Mach 422% Wlworth 27% Motors, Woolworth, Union Car- Hokah St. Peter at Wabasha St . Felix. Berra. na's code, inspections are made Int Harv 80% Yg S & T 45 nine for the losers. Biesanz had Lima Sacred Heart at Rolllngstone Roger Loomis, 26. is in the bide, Baltimore & Ohio and Froedtert Malt Corporation to Winona's standards and "we Hours; 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; closed Satur- six against W-K, Holy Trinity. Separately or collectively, jail at Whitehall , and his broth- Southern Railway. Caledonia Loretto at Onalaska Luther. behind that judgment; days. Submit sample before loading. In the other game Blues, led these events, comprising what don't go (New WEST CENTRAL— er, Robert, about 21, is in jail Prices were generally higher crop barley) Berra- we feel you're capable people," LIVESTOCK No. 1 barley Jl.ll by 26 points from Dave Czaplew- Pepin at Fairchild. one writer called "The at Alma. Robert was scheduled on the American^ Stock Ex- ski and 16 from Steve McCown, Arkansaw at Taylor. Keane Bit" were named as the Binford said. brought before Judge SOUTH ST. PAUL, Minn. I* — USDA No. 2 barley 1.05 Alma at Gilrnanton. to be — Cattle 6,000 calves 2,200 slaughter change. No. 3 barley IS greatest oddity by 175 of the (6 spilled Phelps 53-20. Scott Haz- DAIRYLAND— NOTING THAT other require- Gary B. Schlosstein at 1:30 steers steady to 25 higher; heifers Corporate bonds were mixed. No. 4 barley elton totaled 14 and Gary Bau- Eleva-Strum at Whitehall. voters and about 15 others gave ments must be met, Robertson p.m. today , according to Clem mostly steady; cows steady to strong; U.S. government bonds showed er 11 for the losers. Alma Center at Independence. them secondary mention . bulls strong to 50 higher; vealers and Winona Egg Market Osseo at Coctirane-Fountaln City. asked whether there are other Breen , deputy sheriff. slaughter calves strong to 1.00 higher; scant change. These quotations apply as ot Blair *l Augusta. areas about which the city They were apprehended Mon- feeders steady; high choice and prime 10:30 a.m. today COULEE— should be concerned . Binford day morning. 1.159 lb. slaughter steers 24.50 ; most Grade A dumbo) .2* Holmen at Gale-Ettrick. ST. LOUIS GETS choice t.OOO-1,250 lbs. 23.00-24.00 choice PRODUCE Grade A (large) 21 Melrose at Bangor. said neighborhood analysis ap- 90O-1.00O Ib. heiters 22.00-22.75; mixed Grade A (Medium) 18 admitted the good and choice 21.50-21.75; Mindoro at Trempealeau. pears to need attention , since ROBERT HAS i(Ood 18.75- CHICAGO (AP ) — ( USDA) - Grade A (small) 10 Cop Onalaska at West Salem. HELP IN NBA been done break-ins, Breen said. George 21.25; utility and commercial cows Live poultry : wholesale buying Grade B .18 Hustlers little or nothing has 12.00-13.00; canner and NON-CONFERENCE— , Mondovi, saw a small cutter 9.50-12.00; Grade C .. 10 Peterson at Lewiston. in this respect. Jackson utility and commercial bulls 16.00-17.00; prices unchanged to % lower; RACE FOR TITLE foreign car at his place of busi- cutter 13.50-15.50; high choice vealers ; Stoltman raised the question 31.00-32.00; most choice 27.00-30.00; roasters 23-26; special fed white Bay State Milling Company SATURDAY Sunday at 11:30 a.m. and I No. I northern spring wheat .... t.fif By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ness choice slaughter calves 17.00-20.00; good rock fryers 18-19%; SCHOOLS— of non-cash credits which may a few heavy No. 2 northern spring wheat 1.67 LOCAL The St. Louis Hawks, chasing it was traced by the license 13.CO-16.0O; standard and good 600 to | Third Win in .. Moorhead State at Winona State, 1:15 be applied against the city 's hens 18. No. 3 northern spring wheat , 1.63 plates. 750 Ib. feeder steers 14 .50-17.50; utility p.m. Los Angeles in the National renewal program. and standard 12.00-14.00; choice No. 4 northern spring wheat ... 1.5? Lewiston (State prelim), share of r , White- 600 Ib. Houston vs. Basketball Association's West- Sheriffs Eugene Bijold heifers H.0O. CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago No. 1 hard wlnler wheat 1.5? 4:30 p.m. An area program is divided into v No. 2 hard winler wheat 1 Myron Hoch, Alma, Hogs 12.000; barrows and gills only .37 Paul Hill. ern Division race , got some help hall, and Mercantile Exchange '— butter Cotter at St. manageable projects , Binford moderately active; weak to mostly 25 No. 3 hard winter wheat 1.53 NON-CONFERENCE— with Traffi c Officer Robert 4 hard wlnler wheat 1 Lightweight from an unexpected source each is treated sepa- lower; sows and feeder piss steady; steady; wholesale buying prices No. .. .4? Owatonna at Hayfield. said, and No. 1 rye ... Sing, Mondovi . went to Eau t-2 190-230 Ib . barrows and gilts 16.25- f\n Dodge Center at Harmony. Monday night. city pays one-fourth unchanged; 93 score AA 57% ; 92 No. 2 rya 1.10 CATHOLIC JUNIOR rately. The With county of- 16.75; medium 1-2 160-190 Ibs. 14.50- Minneapolis West at Northfield. Claire Monday . HIGH BB LEAGUE The Hawks, playing the Phila- of the net cost of each, he 16.25; 1-3 270-3O0 Ibs . sows 13.75-14.35; A 57%; 90 B 56Vi; 89 C 55%; ficers there, they apprehended 3 Heavyweight Division delphia 76ers in Tulsa, Okla., as said, and must post its con- boys at Roger's 3OM00 Ibs. 13.25-14.00; 2-3 <00-500 Ibs. cars 90 B 57; 89 C 56 4. W L WL advance the Loomis 13.00-13.50; choice 120-160 Ib. feeder pigs Knights 2 1 Royals 1 1 part of the NBA's road show, tribution in . the loot. 14.00-14.50. Eggs steady; wholesale buy- , that home and recovered Saints 2 1 Rockets • 3 whipped the 76ers 100-90 and It is possible, he said was living with Roger, Sheep 3,500; all classes active slaught- ing prices unchanged , 70 per the FAMll/AWS, overall Robert er lambs 25-50 higher slaughter ewes picked up a game on the Lak- a city could abandon its married and has one cent or better grade A whites Knights and Royals scored Set to Expose program at some point. It is who is strong to 25 higher; feeder lambs fully who lost to fourth-place De- steady; choice and prime 8O-110 lb 27% : mixed 27%; mediums 25; wins in Catholic Junior High ers, child. troit 128-127 at Pittsburgh. also possible, he told Stoltman, wooted slaughter lambs 22.OCV22.50; good standards 25; dirties unquoted ; Sheriff Bijold received a call and choice 70-85 Ibs. 21.00-21.50; utility basketball play. that the government could ter- checks 20. The Knights edged the Saints minate a program for lack of from Superintendent George and good slaughter ewes 6.0O-7.00; choice Heinemann of Central High and fancy 60-60 lb. wooled feeder lambs 29-28 behind the 10 and nine- Assistants for progress but the government 21.OO-22.O0; good and choice 50-40 Ibs. CHICAGO (AP ) - (USDA) - m. Monday. 19.00-20.50; choice 80 Ib. shorn feeder point scoring of Joe Richard- will not cancel any contracts it School at 6:15 a. Potatoes : Arrivals 50; on track son and Bob Whetstone. Bob Flier Killed Accompanied by Maurice Scow, lambs No. 1 and fall shorn pelts 19.50. enters unless there is lack of CHICAGO — USDA - Hogs 6,500; deputy and traffic of- * 190; total U.S. shipments 404; Hildebrandt and Tom Riska had compliance by the city . Whitehall, butchers steady to 25 higher; 1-2 190- old — supplies moderate ; de- ' ' ficer , Bijold found footprints in 225 Ib. butchers 17.00-17.25; mixed 1-3 10 each for the losers. Moonlighting 190-230 Ibs. 16.25-17.00; 2J 250-270 Ibs. ROBERTSON asked whether newly fallen snow leading to the mand for russets good , market In tbe other contest, Royals CHICAGO w> — The moon- 15.00-15.75; 1-3 350-400 Ib. sows 13.25- firm ; for round reds demand battered Rockets 36-1:2. Mike But Plane the city could offer commit- door to the agricultural room 13.75; 2-3 500-600 lbs.12.00-1S.75. assistant football Cattle 3,000; slaughter steers steady to moderate, Conway led the way for the lighting of ments for improvements in pro- in the south part of the build- market steady ; car- coaches who allegedly are being had been strong; load prime 1,397 Ib. slaughter lot track sales : Idaho russets, Royals with 15, while Scott ject areas as a substitute for ing. A section of glass steers 26.00; few loads high choice and Featherstone had 11. Allen paid on the side by the National posting its one-fourth cost share been broken near the lock to prime 1,150-1,250 Ibs. 25.25-25.50; choice 8.60-8.65; Idaho bakers 10.30; and American Football Leagues entry . 1.000-1. 3CO Ibs. 24.00-24.75; good 21.00- Minnesota North Dakota Red Rivers scored eight for the Misses House in advance. Binford acknow- make 23.00; load and part load high choice for keeping tabs on outstanding Missing at the school were River Valley round reds 6.25- Rockets. FREMONT , Calif . (AP) - ledged that this is possible and and prime 1,060-1,125 Ib. slaughter heif- collegiate players is expected to includes improvements made gym socks , an electric shaver ers 24.25; few lots choice 850-950 Ibs. 6.65. Lightweight Division Courage and luck were on the 23.00-23.50; mostly good 19.50-22.00; util- be an explosive item in a report within 36 months previous to and about $10. ity and commercial cows 11.50-13.25; WL WL side of Navy Cmdr. Henry T. NEW YORK TAP) - (USDA) Hunters 3 I Mustangs 1 1 scheduled for today before the project activation. cutter to commercial bull! 14.00-18.00. Stanley when his T33 jet trainer WHILE AT the school the Sheep 400; slaughter lambs steady; Falcons 1 1 Johnnies t 3 policv - making council of the A municipal parking lot, he — Wholesale egg offerings am- developed mechanical trouble sheriff was called to the Engen few packages high choice and prime ple. Demand fair today. In Lightweight games, Hust- NCAA. told Holden, would not be a garage. Coming to work Mon- 85-105 Ib. wooled slaughter lambs 22.00- The report is to be presented Monday above a Fremont resi- non-cash credit unless it con- 22.50; cull fo good wooled slaughter (Wholesale selling prices lers and Falcons came up with dential area. But fate was day morning, the proprietor ewes 5.5O-6.50. by Jim Corbett , LSU athletic tributes directly to a project window had based on exchange and other easy wins. against him. there found the volume sales.) The first place Hustlers walk- director and chairman of the area. been smashed in the back door Professional-Relations Commit- Cmdr. Stanley passed the Martin Beatty , local attorney , Here about $5 New York spot quotations fol- ed over the Mustangs 24-15, courage test. He stayed with his to gain entrance. with Bruce Pomeroy netting 10 tee of the NCAA. asked whether an initial project was taken from a soft drink low : It was touched oil by prema- plane past the safety margin — could be outlined , planned and and $2.50 from the Burglary Charge Mixed colors : Standards 28%- and John Dulek eight. Kevin hitting homes. dispenser O'Brien tallied six for the Mus- ture signings of players which trying to avoid started before the complete bottom of a drawer . 30; checks 23Vi-25. tangs. terminated their collegiate eligi- And he died. neighborhood renewal plan was While working at Eleva , offi- Whites : Extra fancy heavy In the Falcons' 26-14 win ov- banning But luck placed the crashing finished. If this were possible, cers heard over the police radio Brought Against weight (47 lbs min) 31-33; fan- bility and brought the , ) er the Johnnies, Ron Pod j ask i of several from participating in jet in a vacant lot directly in he asked, would the project be that the Mondovi implement cy medium (41 lbs average accounted for 13 for the Fal- bowl games. the heart of a bustling neighbor- initiated , and the overall plan company had been broken into. 26M.-28; fancy heavy weight (47 cons, while Sherman Johnson s review is said to put hood crowded with hundreds ol later completed , without public Missing there were 23 pennies Man; 's Jailed lbs min ) 30Vi-32; medium (40 lbs Corbett' register and He had eight for the losers. all the cards on the table "for school children headed home. hearings? from the cash average) 26-27; smalls (36 lbs ____ The plane exploded, scat- A project frequently is begun 's camera. William J. Cozart , 27 , Chica- * safeguarding the integrity of Jackson go, was charged in municipal average) 23%-24Vz, tering debris. Lou Ann Endicott , before completion of such a Carl Swain, night policeman, Browns: Extra fancy heavy Name Van Brocklin college athletics." Binford replied, since it looked over the implement com- court today at ll:;i0 a.m. with This would be to the extent of 7, was so close she was spat- plan , burglary using a tool , weight (47 lbs min) 34-36; fan- is often obvious almost from pany on Highway 10 in the west ) DAILY NEWS For Hall of Fame S admitting that possibly a large tered with mud. Cozart testified under oath cy medium (41 lbs average 27- pot "It took a hell of a lot of guts the beginning where actual end at 12.15 a.m. Monday. When (47 CHICAGO (AP)-The National number of assistant coaches are a.m., that he has no money, and 28% ; fancy heavy weight fbs and a hell of a lot of luck ," a work is most needed and should he got there again about 2 min) 32-33% ; smalls (36 lbs av- Football Foundation Honors being paid by the pros for spe- start. he noticed fresh footprints and Judge John D. McGill ordered WANT ADS Court nominated 12 college play- cific scouting reports on out- Navy spokesman said. He followed the County Attorney S. A. Sawyer erage) 24%-25%. Stanley, 39, had only seconds No public hearing is required car tracks. ers and six coaches Monday as standing prospects. prints, found the opened door , to obtain a court-appointed at- Butter offerings more than Phono 3321 to make a decision when it was for approval of the general ov- ample. 1965 Hall of Fame finalists. The pay varies , but rises ac but public and called Jackson. The place torney from District Court. evident the plane "would crash. erall plan, he said , Cheese steady. They include Minnesota Vik- cordingly for a few who are con hearings are required—by state had been ransacked. An unsuc- Cozart was released today Inps conch Norm Van Brocklin , vincing enough to steer out He ordered hiss copilot , Lt. cessful attempt had been made from Community Memorial Hos- , and federal laws—in any case nn Oregon back in 1942-4B. standing stars into pro camps. Cmdr. Harford Field , 35 of Mo- acquired to open the safe. pital and immediately arraign- ttati Birtk. NO. S4l bile , Ala., to bail out at 2,500 where land must be to proceed. If the overall plan Mondovi's police chief , Mar- ed in municipal court . His new feet . Field saw Stanley aim the was called at 4 home is county jail where he REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE Charter No. 1»MJ indicates 10 projects, for ex- cel Thoma, aircraft toward Mission , a was confined this afternoon un- Peak ample, there would be separate a.m. REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE mountainside with no homes, of The men are former Eleva der $10,000 bond . public hearings for each THK CHICAGO man's next and then eject himself. Stan- them , he said , if land acquisi- area residents, officers said. ley's chute never opened. Robert told them he had broken court appearance is scheduled THE FIRST STATE BANK ond tion is required. His brother , for Jan. 19 at 9:30 a.m. when he Winona N ational Savings Bank "Cmdr. Stanley deliberately into the buildings. of Rollingstone, in the State of Minnesota, at the stayed with his plane until Ihe ALD. JIM MOHAN asked Roger , was drunk and sleeping can ask for or waive a prelimi- auditorium in the car , he told Sheriff Bijold. nary hearing in municipal court. dote of business on Dec. 31, 1964 of Winona, in the Slate of Minnesota, al the last minute ," the Navy spokes- whether a civic ASSETS close of business on Dec. 31 1964 man quoted Field as say ing. would constitute a non - cash • He cannot plead lo the felony , charge in the lower court. Cash, balances with other banks, and cash Items In process ol collection I240,2<). -0 Publlihed In roiponte to call madt by comptroller of Iho currency, under Jeclion Down below , Lyle Nevels , 23, credit. It would not , said Bin- HOKAH WOMAN FALLS United States Government obligations, direct and guaranteed .48,0,0.on J3U, U S revlied italutci. a hatchery worker , looked up ford , since this is a citywide HOKAH , Minn. (Special) - The burglary charge against Obligations ol States and political subdivisions It.oon 0A Cozart i.s the most serious that Olher bonds, notes, and debentures (Including $130,000.00 securities ol ASSETS when he heard an explosion . He facility and not directly bene- Mrs. John Gstalder fell on an Federal agencies .tnd corporations not guaranteed by U . S.) . 130, 000 00 Cash, br.lfli.cr- . with other h. nr •,, Ami ¦ • /. «... ilt- .m In pror rv. project. can be brought under the state's Loans and discounts (Including J487._5 overdrafts) 315 . 197 « „ apparently heard the pilot eject ficial to an individual icy walk while going to church Bank promises owned $600.00, furniture and fixtures 11700.00 of collection } ?. «,4ai,|Bfl Ofl If land were acquired as part btirplary statute. Conviction ...WO OO United State! Govrrnmrnt nhlig/iManv direr t nnd oumnnTffrt himself. Sunday morning and broke her would carry a maximum penalty Total Assets , X (Net ol nny re-»erves) 4 .7S6 . S.9'J9 "1 saw something that looked of a blight-removal progra m , right hip and arm. She is a . t , 16\ 03 Ohlirjntlons ol slates ent) politic nl MJ IK ! ivhion*. he told J. D. Scott , citizens ad- of 20 years in prison , a $20,OOO LIABILITIES (Net ol nny le. civr.l ) ,4t,'j,4?'S. 'lt. like a bird , and it disappeared ," patient at Lutheran Hospital , Demand deposits ol Individuals, partnerships, and fMher bond*., note-,, nnd debentures (NM ot ,) 1 J , fine or both. nny reserve- ,96I,' 2? <40 visory committee chairman , corporations tr.u.nsM? I I oniii nnd db.uujnti (Net ol nny reserve*.) 11 190 90 Nevels said . "Three of us went La Crosse. This is her third , ,^66. the cost of acquisition could be If Cozart asks for a prelimi- Time and savings deposits ol Individuals, partnerships , and ' l Ued aufti S93. 43J 59 to look. We saw something that arm fracture in the last sev- , corporation s .1. ]U II, Other a^et*. 4/ 074 . /O considered a credit. nary hearing in municipal court . looked a tractor purt . There was eral years Depn' ' ul United Metes Government (Including postal I Public schools , in or out of . the state will have to prove that savings) , .. ,, *,)/,? is ! Total Assell . ... pi, , mated Ibe flier was at about 2 ,- son of Mr and crime. ).«4i .?5 rpoMt% ot Utilled Stntes Government , 16ft, '.41 66 such areas who attend , for ex- Mrs. Victor Klein , is at St. IT WOULD BE up to Judge .t' .i a] rjepnsit*. of ' .fflfe- . nnd pofitc nl '.ut.rllv i.mtit 1. ..i'/.VIA/fl The jet \s canopy wa.s found on Mary's Hospital , Rochester, for McGill to decide whether the CAPITAL ACCOUNTS j £>rfnr.lt: nf btiriKr. St,.' J? H7 ample—Binford said. ( Capital: (a) Common stock, total par value S.S.OOO.OO ; « JS.OOO . OO rt tiUrd mid dtti er V < tn-•./ . i|*> fly the aircraft than local taxation — and spent mitted there Friday. Mrs. Jos- not . Cozart would go free. Total Capital Accounts % 90,If' / .20 Other hnbihllr. .. 149, 671 ';/ crashed wa.s a little larger than on project area improvements- eph linger underwent major If Cozart waives Ihe prelimi- Tolal Liabilities end Capital Accounts l944 ,fA1.01 lotnl 1 mhllll'f*. U0.4M,913 23 a football field could be treated surgery Monday at St. Eliza- nary hearing, he will be bound as credits. Bin- MEMORANDA ! CAPITAL ACCOUNTS Fremon t policeman William ford said slate street and high- beth's Hospital , Wabasha. Ron- over to District Court for ar- Assets pledged or esiloned to secure liabilities, and for other purposes Common Mnrk fnr vnhre per vhrirf V00 00 I'.hlen wnlched the plane skim way aids would qualify hut do- ita , 4-month-oId daughter of Mr. raignment , where he will plead (Including notes end bills radlscognltd and secur ities sold with Nn ihfltei null .or iced , 4 ,000 and Mrs. Donald Heaser, who agreement to repurchase) S . \0O0 0C Nn vtintei ni-titAiuJing 4.000, loto l pm vnlu* 1 400 ,000 00 over rooftops , narrowly miss nations by private individuals to the burglary charge. Vice President, and Josephine Kohner, Assistant •¦mi'lm 600 .OfX) OO Mission San .lose High School , or concerns would not . He add- wns a patient there with pneu- The defendant , shot through Wa, II. J Litcher, Cnshlnr. nl Undivided ptnllts 40/ ..1IN 0i the above named bank do solemnly awear that this mnnrt of condition Is true and monia, is home now. both legs Thurnday morning at and hello! l'e *•> .(* • ... f i ,Cn t) oft then nose downward when il lost ed that federal aids for con- correct, to the best o« our knowledge) ;i> Winona Senior llifih School in its speed. struction would not be consid- HACK SHORTLY? H. J. LMCHI.R. Vice ('resident lotnl ( rtpitnl Ac round , S l , «nrt i or t A * tr, V,r (ir'.t til my Mio-vlnJut- rtrid hellel and then crash, " Khlen said . " , skated Monday and said PAUL KRONEUUSCH healed An accomplice of Cozart es- FRANCIS H A MA'tSINGI IJ Stanley, commissioned a KHEIDERMACHKR v-Vft the utirirr signed rJli e( tor» _tl * e*, t tin* i tn i ci tn**-.s ol Ihls tfpor I of < ond 11 Ion THK TI1KOHY of general, he hopes to be playing for the Directors | not caped from the school after »»¦ enrl t)<'< _s. end | hereby I J Sit VI u\* and their out such buildings as city li- weeks. Moore, .14, suffered an Roterlng in the arm. He is still certify lhat I am ml *n ofllcor or director ot this bank t I KiNL IU . t hree children , Henry T . Ill , 12 . injury at the base of hia spine in (Notary Seal) I 'IMLS braries, city halls and court at large. Holering is progress- PATRICIA KOHNER, Notary Public D.IK for i William J , 10, .and Barbara 6. , houses as non-cash credits , Bin- a National Hockey League ing satisfactorily at the hospital , Winona County, AAinn. They live in Alameda. ford told Sawyer. game in New York a month ago. an official said today. My Commission Expires Jepf, |j, |y;o Held Wantid—FarnaU 26 Hon**, Cattt*. Stock 43 OUMS Tuesday, January 12, 19€ WINONA DAILY NEWS 11 a , STRICTLY BUSINESS H for Sal* ft EXPERIENCED WAITRESS wanted for FEEDER PIOS-40. average weight 100 P«HiMM>H-«aMM ^aH ^^ i. ^^ .^^^^^ «H ^ M«i ^______hwM ^ Haa ^ B^^ M. IF YOU WANT to buy, sell er trade Want Ads day and night work, 2 or 3 days a Ibe. Allen Orr, Rt. 3. Houston, A/Inn. be sure to see Shank, HOMEMAKER'S ' U»«d Cars 109 Uttd Cart wlik. Apply In perton at The Steak T«l. i»e-M73. _ EXCHANGE, 552 E. 3rd. i09 Shop, or Tel. Frank Cunningham, 3150, PUREBRED Duroc boars, also Landrace BUICK—IMS Sky Lark, Vt, powtr (tar- I. DUPLEX on West King, between Mate ing and brakes, excellent condition. PART TIME. Age SMC. No experi- boars. Clifford Hoff, Lanesboro, Minn. College end college of Sf. Teresa . 3 Start Here (Pilot Mound), RMMnabl*. Til. MAS. ence necessary. Demonstrate Tupptr- bedrooms down, 3 bedrooms up. Oil Discouraged? wire, world's beet known plaitate burning furnace for lowar floor heif. FEEDER PIGS-15/ .25 Ibs. each/ Walter In excellent condition, reedy ts move BLIND ADS UNCALLED FOR— houseware, at home parlies. Make Blum, Fountain City, Wis. Til. 6M7- Into, Corner M. 1-car garage. Full hours. Fun, profitable. ONE Don't Give Up E-«, U, U, 71, Tl, tb, JB, It, 15. your own *t07. prlea SUOOO. ABTS AGENCY, IKC, Should have ear. For Interview In Realtors, 159 Walnut Sf. Tel. 94345 day This small ad will lead home, call your Hess & Clark or night. OWNER privacy of your own you to a big savings ln t neareit distributor. " NOTICE IRON-GRO PELLETS LOW Thli nawspapar will bt Ntpontlb la M li I*, SA^tS For Baby Pig Anemia fine wed car. tor only on* Incorrect Insertion of IM S. Wabash, St. Paul (No Injection necessary) any classified advertlstmint pub- Tel. 227-2MI $1.95 bag MILEAGE 1959 LINCOLN Capri 4-door lished In tht Want Ad lection. Check RAINBOW SALES your id ind call 3321 If ¦ eorrec- (Enough for ont titter) . Bloomington Kit., Mpls. hardtop, this car is like tlon must be made. , » . LOCAL T«l. PA MMI1 . DRUGS CALL US ' new and drives better ¦ TED MAIER i i , . ..' . " .,,' Animal Health Center FOR CARS than most new cars. Only Card «t Thanks Help Wanted—Mak 27 $1095. Poultry, Egg*, Supplies 44 FREE APPRAISAL '64 Mercury Parklane 4- COUNTRY PRINTER—wanted by new JANIKOWSKI— door 13265 1963 CHEVY II Sport Coupt, owner. Inquire Galesville Republican, DEKALB 20 week old pullets, fully vac- & CONSULTATIONS Wa wish te extend our heartttlr thanks Galesville, Wis. 'M SOO 6 cylinder, standard shift, and appreciation for the acts ot Kind- cinated, light controlled, raised or slat floors. Available yaar around. SPELTZ on the sale • Sharp. ness, messages of sympathy, beautiful WANTED-Wrlle E-JJ Dally hardtop $2085 MECHANIC CHICK HATCHERY, Rolllnastone, Minn. floral and spiritual offerings received News. of your home. '63 Ford Galaxie 500 Tel. B489-2311. 1962 FORD 4-door wagon, from our many friends, nelshbors end $2495 relatives In our sad bereavement, the ACCOUNTANTS-at one*, who are thor- We will either list it for sale V-8, Fordomatic, all w>iit« lots . of our beloved husband end fa- oughly qualified to prepare form 1040. Wanted—Livestock 46 '63 and sharp. Only $1595 ther.' we especially thank Msor. Grul- Must be experienced In all phases ef or purchase it outright. . kowski for his words of comfort, the Individual Income tax returns. Men se- Tudor $1595 choir, servers, Or. Robert Tweedy lected will receive high salary and HOLSTEIN SPRINGING COWS and heif- 1963 FORD Galaxie 500 4- bonus. H. fc R. Block, m Walnut. ers wanted, also open and brad heif- RESIDENCE PHONES: W» AdvirtlM Our PrltM _ and the nurses, thosa who contributed ^ ^ door, V-8, Fordomatic, the u<* of their cars, the pallbearers. ers. E. E. Gremelsbach, Inc., Lewiston, Mrs. Julia Janlkowskl & Children. Minn. Tel. 4161. E. J. Hartert .. . 3973 like new, 5,000 mile full ROUTE MAN guarantee. LOCAL AREA. Experienced In meeting LEWISTON LIVESTOCK MARKET Mary Lauer . , . 4523 Lotr and Found 4 tbe public. Must be married, neat In A real jieod auction market for your (gEOfcB appearance and have own car. For In- livestock. Dairy cattle on hand all Jerty Berthe . .. 8-2377 s) 1960 R A M B L E R, 4-door, write E-84 Dally LOST—Thuri., ladlei white gold Bulova terview appointment ¦weeks, hog. bought every day. Truckj "I have a contagious cold—Hand over the cash or I'll Philip A. Baumann .. . 9540 •10 Years In Winona brand new 6 cylinder mo- watch. Reward . Tel. 9394. Newi. available. Sale Thurs, Tal. 2667. Lincoln-Meroury-Falcon tor, standard shift, this sneeze in your cage!" unit is new. Partonalt 7 Farm Implement! 48 Comet-Fairlane For adverllsliiB results you can't sneeza at call 33J1 7HyWk^^i^W_W^ Train for PRI NTING lor a Dally News Classified Ad. Open Friday Evenings TRY ONE! WANTED—DeLavol milker. George Res- U^M *MMMMM^ and Saturday p.m. OUR SPECIALS every Tuei. and Wed. Hand Composition sle, Rt. 1, Winona. Tet. Rolllngstone O & J MOTOR CO evenlnfl, walleye pike, shrimp and •JV 6S9-O40. 601 Main St. Tel. 2849 "Your Ford Dealer" chicken ; every frl. evening, walleye Furn., Rugs, Linoleum 64 Wanted to Buy 81 pike; every Sun., roast chicken, serv- Linecasting and Presswork WANTED—used stanchions and stalls. El- St. Charles , Minn. ing 12 to 12. Special, all you can eat, mer Reps, Lewiston, Minn. SLEEP SALE at BURKE'S FURNITURE USED Allis Chalmers B tractor with Wanted—Real Est«t« 102 $1.50. Anchor Inn, Reads Landing, Minn. Write MART. Englandars twin size Comlo- cultivator wanted. Tel. t£87-&33. Foam mattress and box spring. "Only See tho new 12 Ib. model XL IZi WILL PAY HIGHEST CASH PRICES S49.95 set, At WM. MILLER SCRAP IRON & METAL THE INNKEEPER'S having a sale. See GRAPHIC ARTS HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS FOR YOUR CITY PROPERTY Classification 57 for details. Come ont, AUTO ELECTRIC SERVICE BURKE'S FURNITURE, 3rd & Franklin CO. pays highest prices for scrap STATION WAGON come all, set who can make the big- 2nd & Johnson Tel. 5455 Iron, metals, hides, wool and raw lur, "HANK" JEZEWSKI Technical School USED FURNITURE—oak dresser, $10; 222 W. Jnd. Tel. 2W7. gest haull WILLIAMS HOTEL. (Winona's Only Real Estate Buytr) twin Hie metal bed, $5; lull size ma- Closed Saturdays Tei. 6388 and 7093 P.O. Box 345 EXCELLENT, efficient and economical, for Catalog Pflzer's hogany bed, complete, like new, $50; that's Blue Lustre carpet and uphol- Combiotic occasional, chair, J5; mahogany knee- See Us For Best Prices stery cleaner. Rent electric shampooer, Approved for Veteran Training hole desk with matching chair and Scrap Iron, Metal, Wool, Raw Furs \M/ glass top for desk, S59. BORZYSKOW- SALE tl. R. D. Cone Co. M & W IRON 4. METAL CO. Aqueous Suspension SKI FURNITURE, 302 Mankato. Lincoln Agency, Inc. Outstanding 10 CC 2St 201 W. 2nd St. Tel. 3004 GET A HEAD START on e good day with 1104 Currie Ave., Minneapolis Open evenings. 1 962 RAMBLER a good breakfast at RUTH'S RESTAU- 100 cc il.99 Real Estate—Insurance fl Naylors Teat Dilators, 79c HIGHEST PRICES PAID RANT, 124 E. Jrd. Open 24 hours a day, for scrap Iron, metals, rags, hides, Classic except Men. Situations Wanta-d—Fam. Good Things fo Eat 65 raw furs and wool I Buys V-8, standard transmission, 29 TED MAIER DRU GS LIST WITH LINCOLN , IF your suit* fit you like a clown; bring Sam Weisman & Sons radio heater. them up and we'll trim them down. w. Animal Health Center CORN FED 6EEF-34C Ib. lor a side or *63 CHEVROLET Bel Air PART-TIME work desired by bookkeeper , INCORPORATED Bettlngtr, rillor. will quarter. Norbert Ulsclter, Fovnalln We need 2, 3 and 4 bedroom who fypti accurately and takes short- 450 W. 3rd Tel. 3847 4-door $1895 1961 RAMBLER hand. Tel. 8689-2249. City, Wis. Tel. 467-3843. homes to satisfy the present ARE YOU A PROBLEM DRINKER? - '63 Station Wagon Man or woman your drinking creatts APPLES - Cortlands, Mcintosh, Pralrte Rooms Without Mtals 86 demand. 4-door numerous problems. If you need and Bualnati Opportunitiai 37 D-DAY '65 3py, Haralsons. Priced right. Get them $1595 6 cylinder , radio, heater, "Breezy Acres , want help, contact Alcoholics Annony- at F. A. Krause Co., " EXCELLENT SLEEP INO room, 4 blocks REMEMBER: WE BUY . . . S. on Hwy . 14-41. '60 FORD Starliner automatic transmission . tnous. Pioneer Group c/o General De- 31 SEER TAVERN, doing good business. from WSC, i blocks from high school. SELL ... OR TRADE . . livery, Winona, Minn. Garage. Tel. 9336. . 2-dr. hardtop $1095 Illness reason for sel I Ing. Write E-87 BURBANK RUSSETS—20 Ibs. Wc, large Dally Ntwi. 1 960 CHEVROLET JOHN DEERE DAY variety of cooking and eating apples. TRY VS TRUSSES—ABDOMINAL BELTS '59 PONTIAC 4-door Winona Potato Markel. 118 Market St. Rooms for Housekeeping 87 Brookwood SACROILIAC SUPPORTS DISTRIBUTOR SOUTHERN Minn., alt Thurs., Jan. 14 hardtop $1095 new nationally advertised product, high ONE ROOM, light housekeeping. Suitable \FTER HOURS 6 cylinder, automatic trans- potential and permanent repeat busi- GOLTZ PHARMACY for couple. 222V. W. 2nd. '58 OLDSMOBILE mission, radio, heater. 174 B. Jrd Tel. 2547 ness, must have $2,400 to handle. In- High School Activity Room. vestment secured by stock and equip- Tree Riperted 4-door $ 795 THE ABOVE WAGONS ment, could be operated part time to 8 p.m. Apartments, Flats 90 Pat Heise . . . 5709 Buslnai* Services 14 start. For Information write E-79 Dally '59 CHEVROLET ARE IN STOCK. News. Free Movies & Lunch NEAT 3-room upper apt., all utilities fur- Gordon Weishorn . _ . 4884 4-door $ 895 PARTY-TIRED CARPBTINO can be re- nished. Adults. $55. 133 E. 8th. Tel. The following Station FDR SALE af Hokah, Minn., ORANGES vitalized end ra|uvenafed by our ex- mtivrtnl, 8-1404. '58 CADILLAC living quarters and buslnesi. Terms Wagons are coming in perts. Make colors glow again, floor Luehmann Impl. Co. miy be arranged. Inquire at Bank or THREE-ROOM heated apt., no children. LINCO LN 4-door $1095 csverlnps ready fo go again by calling ' on '65 trade-ins. Tel. 8*4-3570. St. Charles, Minn. 168 E. 3rd. Tel. 2737 J7J2. WINONA RUG CLEANING SERV- & AGENCY '57 CHEVROLET ICE, 11. W. 3rd. JUhM " OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS SPACIOUS 3-bedroom, lower duplex, ga- 4-door $ 485 1 964 CHEVROLET GgT PAID weekly, healthful work. Lib- rage, central location, ample closets, Furnitura Repairs 18 eral terms to right man In choice ten newly decorated. Tel. 4324 for appoint- P* «9 \Y. 4th '55 OLDSMOBILE Bel Air rltory as sales representative for Wis- GRAPEFRUIT ment. 9 passenger consin's Greatest Nurstry, established USElfMANURE gf%» Tel. $431 4-door $ 395 FURNITURE REFINISHING and minor V-fl , standard transmission over 53 years. No delivering or collect- Apartments, Furnished 91 repairing. Reasonabla prices, pick up ing. Liberal guarantee. Nurseries ol Last load for season •55 PONTIAC with overdrive, radio, heat- and delivery. Frte estimates. Tel. 944? over 700 acrei at Waterloo, Wisconsin. SPREADERS 2*door $ S5 noons and evenings. Robert Graves. Write: McKay Nursery Company, Wa- CENTRALLY LOCATED—3 larpe roomi Motorcycles, Bicycles 107 er, power steering. terloo, Wliconstn. 2-Schultz PTO and bath, modern furnished apt. Imme- diate possession. Tel. 7776, ask for Syd ONE OF THE LARGEST Honda Dealers SHOP 1963 CHEVROLET Plumbing, Roofing 21 1—Minnesota PTO APPLES Johnstone, in the U,S„ Money to Loan 40 we am now located at 1—John Deere tractor La Crosse, Eau Claire and 573 E. 4lh Bel Air Special Prices WOMAN LIVING alone would like work- St ., Winona. ROBB BROS. MOTOR- 6 passenger ELECTRIC ROTO ROOTER Real Estate spreader ing girl or woman to share home with CYCLE SHOPS. VENABLES For clogged sewers and drains - Loans her. Tel. 7821. V-8, automatic transmission, Tel. MW or 643t l year guarantee Life Insurance 1-Coby 75 W. 2nd Tel. 8-2711 KITCHENETTE APT.—Gentlemen prefer- Trucks, Tract's, Trailars 108 radio, heater, power steer- CALL SYL KUKOWSKI FRANK WEST AGENCY Don't forget our Teweles Heuer & Johnson red. Tel. 8-32.1. Open Friday Evenings ing. 175 Lafayette St. Tel. 5!40 Farm Seed day, January 18, TANDEM LIVESTOCK trailer, can be PUSH A BUTTON . . . dishwashing'! (Next to Telephone Office) Bluff Siding, Wis. f or Rent made Into flatbed. Merlin Hungerholt, Come in now and ma^e your done. No need to set a dial. Juit load 1965. Business Places 92 Rushford, Minn. and latch your KltchenAld dishwasher , selection while there are push a button, leave It. Dishes are done PRIME DOWNTOWN LOCATION - Re- TRAILERS several to choose from . cleaner and drier th*> KltchtnAld way. "BE A LOANS A. KRAUSE CO. Household Articles 67 tail and office space. Available now. Built . . . Repaired . . . Rebuilt "^^ F. BERG'S, 3950 W. 4th . Tel. 4933 These wagons are priced FRAN K O'LAUGHLIN PLAIN NOTE-AUTO-FURNITURE Stirneman-Selover Co. 170 E. Jrd "BREEZY ACRES" 52V: E. 3rd low to move out. PLUMBING & HEATING Tel. 2915 PILE Is toft and lofty . . . colors retain CHEVROLET—1961 Apachp plckuo, B-ft . J07 E. 3rd Tel. J703 Hn. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.. Sat. 9 a.m. to noon South on New Hwy. 14-61 brilliance In carpets cleaned with Blue Tel. 6066 or 234? box Very good condition. See Harry Lustre. Rent electric shampooer, tt. H. Krage, Cochrane, Wis. CAUTIOUS Held Wanted—Female 26 Quick Money . . . Choate 8. Co. Houses for Rent 95 on any articles of value . . , Hay, Grain, Feed 50 Musical Merchandise NEW TWO-BEDROOM home for rent. " NEUMANN'S BARGAIN 70 -1963 International Scout BUYER HOUSEKEEPER WANTED In the coun- STORE Tel. 2290 or S751. try, small family, 3 or 6 dayi a week. 121 E. 2nd St. Tel. JIM SHORT OF FEED? Don't Hcrlflce your $$## && Write E-M Dally Newi. replacement stack at today's prices. I WC^ have high quality feed and will board We Service and Stock Wanted to Rent 96 4-wheel drive, complete with I 960 PONTIAC HJVIIOIET*^ HoriM. Cattlt. Stock 43 them for you. Tal. Altura 7521. LADY FOR part-time cleaning work. Tel. Needles for All western snowplow, new 103 Johnson Tel. 2398 8-1518 or apply In person Sterling Motel. NO VACANCIES for smart landlords who Bonneville PUREBRED CHESTER White boar, 2J0 CHOPPED CORN and pea silage mixed, RECORD PLAYERS Advertise In ;'i _ Cla'.'.ili'd Section. Tel. Open Friday Night Until 9:00 LADY TO LIVE In and care for elderly 1» 300 Ibi. M. H. Treder, Allure, Minn, high teed value and easy tc handle, 3321 lor an a-i-wrlter today! truck warranty . A-l condi- 2-door hardtop, power steer- Tel. Lewiston 2741. Tel. Altura 7.521. ' lady In Winona. Tel. Rushford 164-7241. Hardt s Music Store ing, power brakes, radio, 118 E. 3rd it. WANTED ? or 3 bedroom unfurnished tion. HAY FOR SALE - Will deliver. D L. Mobile Homes, Trailers lit LADY WANTED for cleaning position. TEAM of chestnut marei, white laces, apt. Move Feb. 1 or later . Writs E-82 heater, white wall tires, V-8, Tel. MM1. weight 3200, will broke i brats work Wright, St. Charles, Minn , Tel. 932- Dally News. $1895 darneii end coflari; New Idea none tm. Refrigerators 72 1 owner, real sharp. RENT OR SALE - Tr»IHr» and eimi* manure spreader with new apron, Phil- • n. LEAHY'S, Bu'Ulo City. WIJ. Til. CHECK-OUT GIRL-J0-J5 noon a week. TWO-CAR GARAGE-neated or able to Cochran* 343-2532. lip Nortman, Black River Falls, Wis. SWEET CORN silage by the ton, deliv- heat, electricity. Reasonable. Tel. 7502 Experience helpful but not essential. ered, vary high In protein, good toed. KELVINATOR & GIBSON Tel. 1-4904. or 9319. Winona Truck Service Write E-86 Dally News. For Information contact Kramer and REFRIGERATORS, ill rlzsr. In stock, Auction Sales MOLITEIN BULLS—purebred, serviceable Falling. Tel. Witoka 2258 or Winona WINONA FIRE «. POWER CO.. 54 E. IHC TRUCK SALES Door Busters GENERAL HOUSEWORK and Ironing, \ . MOS. Houses for Sale 99 days a week. Tel. 3W6. age end /ounger. J. J. Rosenow, Wau- 2nd. Tel. 5065. (Across from the new & SERVICE ' *• mandee, Wis. parking lot .) ALVIN KOHNEF E. WEST END location. 3 bedrooms. AUCTIONEER. Clly tnd s.ata lletwtd YOUNG LADY to meet public In pleasant Articles for Sale 37 (55 Laird Tel. 47H8 HEREFORD PUREBRED bull, (Untie. Large living room. Built-in slove and SPECIAL and bonded. 252 Liberty 81. (Corner olllce In Winona. Mult be high schoo l Sewing Machines 73 oven In the kitchen. Dlnlno room. Oil E. Sth and Liberty) Tel . 4?M. graduate, have attractive personality Herb Haase, Rt. 1, Winona, Minn. Tel. ALL NEW MERCHANDISE! Ladles MIV-23U. ' heat. Excellent buy at only S12.0O0. and ba good typist. Some office ex- snowbooti, 77c pr.) boys' sweatshirts, 1 959 PLYMOUTH • USED SINGER ELECTRIC console, like ABTS AGENCY, INC., Realtors, 159 Used Cars 109 AUCTION ! I ! HoU-ehoM, Llveilock sr perience preferred. Good salary, 5-day- 73c; 2-pc. knit dresics, 76c; children s PIGS—M, weened ai)d castrated. A. D. ' Walnut St. Tel. B-4.165 nr alter hourv General . LYLE L. BOBO, St. 3, Hous- wetk , paid vacations, fringe benefits. snowbootl, He; bedroom slippers, 97c; new. WINONA SEWING CO., 551 Hull 6-cylinder , standard trans- McNally, Rt. 3. Winona, Minn. . R. Clay P-2737. Bill Ziebell 4BS4 , E. RORO-1960 FdlrMne 4-donr sedan, 1-own- ton, Minn. Tel. Hok»h 8*4-210J . Ll- Tel. 1346. Tel. women's bells , loci children ' s rubbers, St . Tel. 9348. mission , radio , heater , runs 1-1418. A. Abts 31E4. er car. Will sell lor SM0. Inquire Mer- c«m*d fc Bonded . 8Gc, Bfic; men' s tennis shoes, )1.47i chants National Bank ol Winona, Trust ' NURSB-R.N. or L.P.N, wanted for Pepin men's wlnlen caps, 43c. Bargain Cente r, real well. This is a rebuilt rooms, Wi Dept. View Nursing Home, full lime work. HOLSTEIN springing heifer. Waller Davis, Specials at the Stores 74 CENTRALLY LOCATED - 7 253 E. 3rd. balh<. engine with less than 4 ,000 Write Box 4.7. Lake City, Minn. Lamoille, Minn. . cccenlly redecorated. 110,500. Minnesota 21" 1965 Console TV Sals, Tel B-7130. DODGE, IMP 4-door , real iharp, reason- miles on it. TYLER Commercial refrigerator, 45 cu. able; llll Fnrd . -Ion pickup. Will lake Land & Auction Sales 12 PER HOUR ... all year around. To ft., In oood condition, reasonable; GE $169.95. No trade needed. ' F'DROOM , all modern trade-In. Inqulra Mankato Deep RocK. Everell J. Kohner apply write Avon, Box 764, Rochester, home type electric range, reasonable; 1 Only Phllco Strroo Cnnsole, FOUP. B tarn" , car peted, looted "Wl block on W. eth . Clos Tel, 97.S2. $245 '!» Walnut. Tel. 8-3710. after hours 7IU AAinn. LEWISTON various other items for sale nt tha $159.95. Floor modrl. See our selection of portable TV/ to schools. Tel. Iill. WILLIAMS HOTEL. See Ihe Innkeeper, CARL FANN, JR. LIVESTOCK MARKET Ray Meyer. Sets and Phononrnpr^ HOMES FARMS - LOTS- ACREAGES STOP AUCTIONEFP. Bon .ed and Llc«m**l. PRIVATE SECRETARY CORNFORTH REALTY A UTO Rushlord. Minn. Tel. 8M-7III T0RO 8N0WBLOWER—used 20 minutes. W INON Afternoon Sale TAKE MONTHS TO PAY Ln Crcr.ccnt , Minn. Tel. M5-210«" and Shop in Comfort Local firm has an opening Mrs. Wesley Stahr, 374 W. AAnrk, (after RAMBLER /" DODGE^ \ . l&~S«t. 12 .10 pm , i mitt UM. 4.30). NO MONEY DOWN at NYSTROM'S JAN " for a woll qualified secre- FIRESTONE STORE fit EyoU, Minn. Rusiell Jensen, own'r; auctioneer; Farmert tary. BURN MOBIL. FUEL OIL and enloy the 300 W. 3rd INDOOR Don Tiffany, Thurs., Jan. 14 ^BOB « Stele Dank cf Cvole. clerk. This position requires ability comlort ot automatic personal care. & SALES # Keap full service — complete burner Show Room Stovett, Furnaces, Parts 75 !;C0 « miles E. ct to work with top manage- 1:30 P.M. care. Budget planned and guaranteed Open Mon. & Fri. Eve. JAM. 16- Mon., o m. Alma, Wis. on Counly Trunk "N. " Mlrrl price. Order today from JOSWICK'S ; Tel. ment, make appointments, FAMOUS AI.ADDIN blue llama kerccne C- ^ \- 2349 1 962 PONTIAC 3rd & Mankalo Te). 8-3649 Harold, ownfr; Frandi Werleln, auc- On consignment: EAST END COAL a, OIL CO., 901 E. heaters. No smoke, no omell, burn-, J5 tioneer: Northern Inv. Co., Clark. receive business callers, 8th. Tel. 3389. 120 Center handle correspondence. 11—1st and 2nd calf Holstein hours on 1 Ballon . Also ranoes, . ' • or $ S*. Catalina oil heaters Service and parts. RANGE '^iv ; ¦*i.ru,,r*m' . , ^ZlSy3Syyyia!Ur INSULATED UNDERWEAR, heavy duty, . heifers, springing. OIL BURNER CO., 907 E. 5lh St. Tel. 4-door, radio, heater, Good shorthand and typing *m.V5 set. BAMflENKK'S, »th «. Mun- automatic trans- 8—3rd and 4th calf Holstein kato Ave. 7479. Adolph Michalowski. Specials mission, power stecrlnrj, power required. January brakes. Mclory nlr- conditioning. A heifers, springing. local one-ownrr CAT with low mlle- Salary open depending on FOR LOWEST PRICES on now nnd used 77 A. Three-bedroom brick, Typewriters aoe. Excellent condition throughout. experience ond qualifica- 9—Holstein heifers, vaccinat- appliances scf Frank Lllla fi, Sons, 761 near Lincoln School 112,500 AUCTION E. 8th. Opem evenlnos. NOW JUST ! I Located Vt mile northeast of Eyota , Minn . Lunch by I tions. ed, approx. 450 lbs. TYPEWRITERS and sddlng machines j Rensonnble rates, B. Apartment House. Eyota American Lcpion . WE CAN MIX WOOD stains, to match for 'ale or rent. $1995 7' 2—Registered Brown Swiss o(- Cenrtnl locnllon l\4,fO0 Paid vacation , sick leave any woodwork or creels now colors. free delivery, See us ter all your and other fringe benefits. cows, springing, coming Bring your sample to the PAINT DE- flce supplies, daiks, files or otllca D. Three-bedroom, fireplace, Sat., Jan. 16 12:30 P.M. H Apply ln person with 3rd calf. POT, your Flllott Crown Imperial chairs. Lund Typewriter Co. Tel. 5353. tomlly room, In Wincrest J1H. 9O0 5 - REGISTERED ABERDEEN ANGUS CATTLE - S 7 Wood Slain Denier, W Center St. NYSTROM'S H.W , 7 YOUR ONE-STOP Typewriter and Busi- F. Downtown duplex, low down 1 herd bull Rowley fi H . ., 16 months sired by . at 12—Holstein heifers, vaccinat- Chrysler- Plymouth ¦ ICE SKATE Exrlinnae, new and uiod . ness Machine Headquarters. We ser- payment SB.5O0 Own Son of imported Prince of Rowley; 1 cow Ever- ' ed, approx. 750 lbs. stock rib- Open Frlaay rJIghl* Minnesota Stale Skates sharpened. KOLTFR tllcyclo vice all types ol mnchlnos, , make; and sire type- greenmere Elba H.H.W ., due in May, 5 years old ; 1 7 6—Holstein steers, approx. Shop, 502 /'rtniikAto. Tel. 5665. bon" for any H. Coltegevlew three-be44 ) A top market for butcher beflroom rambler It/ ,SOO the Pleasure of in May with 1st calf (this cow w.is reserve champion at State nf Minnesota ) is. IEE OUH SELECTION ot med refrigera- Olmsted Co. Fair in 19tM); 1 raw Bandolier Evergreen cows and veal. K. Story and a halt, three bed County of Winona ) In Probate Courl tors, TV isti and range j. BIB ..) rooms, oil heat and garage, Serving You? R.l' ., 20 months old , due in Ma\ with 1st calf 'i No. !J,»«* ELECTRIC, 113 E. 3rd. SNOWY TUESDAY DAILY HOG MARKET Goodview tl 0,900 THIS IS A CHOICE I.OT OF ANGUS. In tht Mitttr el the Rslata et ¦ r , ¦¦ Samuel tchlappl, Oecedint. Check With Us OK USED FURNITURE STORE BRI. GHTENERS AFTER HOURS CALL: $450 DAIRY CATTLE - .> Holstein cows cominR with 2nd ' te Probale Order tor Hearing on Petition 273 B. 3rd St. W. L. (Wlb) Helrer »-2lll and 3rd calves in Feb, and March; ;: Holstein cows, fresh Will and for Summary Assignment Before You Sell! 195R OI.D.SMOr.ll.K 8ft We Buy We Soil Leo Koil 4S81 in Nov . with 2nd calves; l Guernsey cow , coming with 7, or Distribution Furniture—Antlqun—Tools Westinghouse Laura Fhk 2111 Convertible Doris E. Hewlett, having flltd t Last Week : and other items. llob Selover 7B . 7 2nd calf in May; 2 Holstein hei for calves. All of the that said petition In thli Court alleging Tal. 0 3/01 Dryers Blue nnd white willi while above c;iltle nre llanos tested Clean herd. ¦ decMlcnl died testate and that said Springers sold up to $242,50 ; titnte cronlits only ot tha homestead of One Compact Model top, V-H , mitomsifk transmis- HORSES -- 1 mare , .1 years old , broke lo rule ; 1 Venl sold up to $32.25 cwt. PERWAGLASJ WATER MEATERJ IBOB -, Q said decedent and only Mich person-l Oaa or Electric Just 2!>" wide. sion , power stecrinf*, power marc colt , 17 years , broke to ride ; 1 mare colt , r> months , property . Is exempt from all debts Holstein heifers $14.05 cwt. Select the Unfit at hral.es, white walls. sired bv Nied-A-Skect . ind clinrflej In Probate Court and pray- $114.95 ! . rN ing tor the probate nl tha Will Of said Holstein steers, $13.15 cwt. SANITARY l \- ^Tel. 234B FARM MACHINERY l'.Wl John Deere Model Ii20 decedent nnd tor » summary assign- Pl UMHING a. HEATINO Q^. $350 tractor with Rower-lrol; manure loader with scoop and ment or distribution ot nald eitata to Bulls, $18.00 cwt. ret Two-cycle Dryer -* UB f. 3rd St. . 2737 t 120 Center St snow the person* entitled thereto, which Will Butcher cows sold up tn :t Temps. 1950 CHKV ROUST bucket; McCormick Deering Iractnr plow on rubber , ll on file In thli Court and open to In- 2-l()-inch ; John Deere single disc , !.>-ft. ; John Deere spection; generally from Rel Air $12.85 cwt., DAILY NEWS $169.95 power mower , 7-ft .; .Minn, tractor manure .spreader; steel IT 15 ORDERED, That tht hearlno $10.20 (o 311.95. wn)l , , thereof bt had on January 52, IW, at 4-door, white tires V-n wai'on on rubber; -.-.section steel drug ; McCormick Deer- 11 clock A M., betore this Courl In MAIL , 10 30 o' Boars sold up to $9.25 cwt. TOP LOADING WASHER automntie trans mission inn disc drill with urass seed attachment , 10-ft . Ideal hotf the probate court room In tht court power steering, power 3 houie In Winona, Minnesola, tnd that Small pigs, $10.60 per head. SUBSCRIPTIONS MATCHING DRYER waterer, 70 j »i»l .; ;i Ideal hog feeders; power l;iwn mower; " Telephone Your Want Ads brakes, radio, white and oblectlons to the allowance of said Will, Largo pigs, $15.70 cwt, Floor models, slightly marked rubber tired whcelb.irrow ; Craftsman band saw ; .saddle. 7 if any be slated In writing and flltd May Be Paid At grey in color. DAIRY EQUIPMENT -- at or before said time of hearing) end Lambs, $20.30 cwt. Cherry-Bui rcll bulk tank , 91 A. that notice of snld hearing be given TED MAIER DRUGS $339.95 Ral.; Surge milker pump RV .:i with 2 Surge buckets; J-j by publication ol thli order In tht Wl Complete to The Winona Daily News miscellaneous utensils . nona Dally Newi tnd by milled nolle* ' is pioviiled by Itw. LESLIE GARRISON Coal, Wood, Othlr Fye.1 63 FEED: 10 ft of silage . SOME HOIJSKII01.1 » GOODS . 7 Daled December .33, 1164. HUSSEI.L JENSEN OWNER yv & SON, INC , SI Aft WOOD WINONA ELECTRIC t . D. llltLRA, Dial XY21 for an Ad T_iker. WA LZ dry oak slabs. Don Tiffany, Elgin Auctioneer Probalt Judji. Owners and Managers Irxxl ntllCK-OI.nSMOHll.IvtIMC , % (Probata Courl Seal) n^UNKOW'S SAW MILL CONSTRUCTION CO Farmers State Bank of Eyota Clcik W William A. Lindquist, Tel. Lewiston 2067 t, LUMBER YARD 119 W. 3rd Tel. 51(02 Open Friday Niuht.s Attorney for Ptlllloner. Trempealeau, Wli. Tel. 514 *314 '• s; _ .. ;..;.. . . .j, y- . "' *^__i i . | BUZ SAWYER By Roy Cr«nt ¦ : I J ¦« » *- -— - - -'------—¦*

DICK TRACY By Chwter Gould

____¦¦• ¦ ¦ ¦ — "- ' —"¦ ' ' . | ¦ I ¦ ¦ ****™*******™ f ¦ I - ™ ^ V_ ^ «B ^ W ^ — I BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walk.r

THE FLINTSTONES By Harina-Barbera

, DAN FLAGG By Don Sherwood

¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ "- ~ - ^^ ^ ^^— "' «¦¦¦¦-* ¦ ¦¦ II I ¦¦ *— ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ *•—* III | | I ' ¦ —- -W-SW^* —^— BLONDIE By Chic Young

LI'L ABNER By Af Capp STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff 11 ¦ ) i^___ a m 1 . r K m \ I v ^ ~vi (—y v 3 r II

MH j F <77 • MMM M M I t ^ I I I ^ ^^^^^ WSBBmBM Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! Igr^" t______J______? ^ _^r i* vX~ % The wore/ /s HB_____9______H_9&99.______9^______^ «t. 9 \H ouf... ¦^ P^^ Vv CffiffUl ff here ^.H V-^9 ^^______J___^______^_____J>^^______r .______F ^______^ ^i^r ^^^r ^^r ^1^9 ^B^^ ^^^^r ' ^ ^-^^ AT ^^^^ STARTS TOMORROW—PROMPTtY 9 A.M. SHARPI in m 9 J^^^Bk Just case you ^ASt £.' J^ 4^*^B^H|jf I haven't heard — we'd like '* jttBSaamt e Y ou ia olways look your /SSB^L^Bbr ve'° * " " * Y°°" m REG $55 00 9 9 JUNIOR—REGULAR—HAIF SIZES ^|rA\ est r°»e«i°nall finished Sta-Nu j S fl^HB^k ftfltk W ^fl 't ^ '" P y VI NSpBL-*^ %*W«*r cleaning from Haddad's—because nobody ^f l00^ 0e,, ,0 I /^[ V ^t^6* as g°0<* °* Haddad's ' ' DRESSES ¦ • "" MR J I \ professional Cleaners and Finishers. When tt I I VALUES TO $11.98 VALUES TO $15.98 I j I '42 9 1 gSj^ ^jTj you couple this with Sta-Nu, there's just REG 4|f -.^ % 0** J* % % m \ n! . $85.oo 9 9 "T88 1A&8 ¦ (jiwl nothing to compare with the job you get * '< * >*" i JT I \ » \ \ f * * 9 ^AB 9 9 VALUES TO $19.98 VALUES TO $24.98 fl V^ Bm

ONE RACK OF r^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^JLa aBl^tt %&

^ * '• iurtons * j MA , *** | ^W, jX R*pUced ^ \ - '^ ^ \ ' — - I SPORTS WEAR en lfi ^ Seams L»" i^ I \ ^^ H8 ^^ ^V (^"^^^^iife % \ '' ^P Resewn , 3. REG S4 00 REG $5 98 REG $8 98 '~ Liningi «P It 9 BLOUSESI - ' 9 '$ I **** '%'¦• . ^' * Repalred Jtf ! WL \ ^^^ r ^ 1 * , 4. Pants Cuffs Opened, SWE ATERS! $«%gg $M gg $# g8 I B/i' \ \ ^"*** *WiJ' , M mJ 9* SI M. 9R 5 ^^ ^< 7OT \ Brushed and Rttackod SLACK fell ¦ §p; K ?^* V «» i^ l ¦ ^ O ; i RtiJ.! %. W ^8&' ,, iM ^S> '• Dr«-ssR, Buttons Removed S SKIRTS! H ' and p,acecl I II K, ' w I ^S^*? w -^ * " ». ft * Torn Pockets Repaired J ^^fe fer'" ^teff'' j/ * BBBBmmWBBBKBBBBBBBBBBBBREG REG 51498 REG- $19.98 fl B|§ L' 1 and Eyes Replaced ^H I ^L '^^^S-- 7- Hooks ¦ 88 B}- JB # 8.- All Garments Neatly $ 88 $ 88 ' i ¦ Bagged I Bp ^\ $Jf r AR I 7 10 *14 ' 9. sta-Nu Finish «•. AH _ .^^HIH B'/ / Our work insures our ^__9 ^_9 &&'£* "*ijf Garments ¦^1 ^^V ^ M H^^^^^^^^^^^HI^HH^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ fllHHI ^^H f / Slogan! THE TOPS IN IO Prompt, Courf 0„,, f ' i f >._.. .. Efficient Service V >v DRYni CLEANING"oLc^n.nu c A T 5 AU TH|$ ^ NQ ¦» ° ¦ ¦ • ¦¦¦ » ^•¦¦¦•ww w ¦^ ¦» a___r EXTRA CHARGE IH REG. $19.98 REG, $24.98 I FancyJf Quilted ROBES * 9 $1VI88 $1088 1