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Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

11-12-1963 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1963). Winona Daily News. 421. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/421

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Russ Arrest Yale Professor as Spy U.S. Embassy Jury Shown Model of Thompson Home Staff Denied Location of Access to Him late Bulletins By PRESTON GROVER Associated Press Staff Writer PORTSMOUTH, Va. (/P) The steamship Her- — MOSCOW (AP)-A Yale pro- House Related cules Victory reported today one of her boilers had fessor who wrote books critical exploded and the other . was afire. She asked ships of the Soviet Union has been ar- in the area , 330 miles northeast of Bermuda , to rested on a charge of spying, stand by, the Foreign Ministry notified By Witnesses ' • ' ¦ ¦¦ the U.S. Embassy today. MINNEAPOLIS (AP ) - A * V * The arrest of Prof Fred C. model of T. Eugene Thompson 's JACKSON , Miss. WZ ' — The Mississi ppi Su- Barghoorn was the first such spacious St. Paul home was preme Court today blocked further mental tests case_ involving ,an American since the thaw in the cold war. brought into the courtroom to- for Byron de la Beckwith and ordered him trans- ferred back to jail here to stand trial for the mur- A relative in Amer'ca expressed day as the 35-year-old attorney 's belief his arrest was in retalia- first degree murder trial began der of civil rights leader Medgar Evers. Beckwith tion for the recent arrest oi So- its third week. was charged in the ambush slaying of Evers last viet citizens in the United States The model, built like a child's June. for spying. ¦ ¦ :. - ¦ ¦ ¦ The U.S. Embassy got the doll house with a' removable . . -TT . . . TT -TT roof , was placed at the foot of (

Nixon Has Not To Get Children mmm m m m m m m m^_ _WWT^^[^m^mmmmmW ^mmf ^^^^^^1 mm\' I LOS ANGELES CAP) - Mrs. ^^^^^^^ ^ M ^^| T| , ^L ^L ^L^-WLWm^^Wf/g ^^^^^HT1 t mmm\ ^Lmm\ I af*»af *fc 1 Ngo Dinh Nhu battling exhaus- n&^*!3$^^ § _wi D tion , has delayed a flight to i \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\¦¦ 1 mW ^Z^ ~wu\^^m lliF I I ^1 lI lL C^aklH i w9Cw w ia ^^^¦ _ ^______\\_x___\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\_\w^^^^^^^^^^^ JBJ^ jfc^aV P. Eliminated Self J^^^^^K - For- Nixon , asked about this, said leave today for Rome, then eith- I °^. fc ^ he could conceive of "no cir- er, return to South Viet Nam ||*^^ ¦%¦ Li A J i mer Vice President Richard M. Woodbury 1 Dr. West 1 5-Pound Box Nixon has stopped far short of cumstances whatever " under directly or via Los Angeles, an I 9 volt I 75* j Right UU3TO I eliminating himself from con- which he would be a candidate informed source said. for the nomination. This was sideration as the Republican South Viet Nam 's former party 's choice for the presiden- just repeating what he had said FACIAL SOAP Epsom Salts before. First Lady had said in private j 29c [ j DEODORANT tial nomination . that she believes many of the tmmmmmmm ^mmtamf A f T(JJft H ¦ J He could do it in one, simple, But Eisenhower didn 't say ruling junta which overthrew I f cakes «9Of-C 1 !• H7f» I M »W I positive sentence : "I am not a Nixon would be a candidate, her family 's regime are still on I I > ,Oz. Mennen | ^ 1 DDIICU |, . . . *1* 1 4/C 1 candidate for the presidential but that a deadlocked conven- her side, according to a source ^^^ S^*m^S«3 ^ D I I U J II tion might turn to him. ftW.W% mXX ml 'I | f *W¦ ¦ ¦ ? ««S 1«« | _^_____ i nomination and I will not accept close to her. a vDD A V & aaa¦¦*. ¦¦ 1 ¥ ' m¦ tMmmrnmimmmmmmMi ¦ OrltM I $2.00 Desert Flower I it if the convention offers it to But. for a man not seeking She believes if she can return I J 'TIH E 1 - j me or tries-to draft me." the nomination , Nixon has been to Saigon before the first gener- Instead, he has limited him- talking a lot. He explains that, al election under the new re- 39c self to saying he is not a candi- too: gime she can regain support, DEODORANT I. LOTION the source said. I I I I date for the i.omination , which "At this time I- believe I can Mr n twrnr can be interpreted as saying he best serve both the Republican Mrs. Nhu had been vacillat- lt ing for days over whether to I i\iCL IsI j^^¦ ¦ ii^^¦ r ^¦ j¦ ^ 1 i- j llaUU I .VIWI a*»%.VI.f» I will not actively campaign for it party and the nation as an in- f *^*V ^ ^^ I • 83 s- .™ . „ , ' jf ; r^ .^< «ffiim i | ^ vention. of the i Kennedy V administra- ^ v J That's a long way from say- tion policies rather than as a them in Rome, said an aide. ¦ $1.0005 .s eami.n s.w i pound \ ENVELOPES i TOOTH S 1 i ing he would not accept, the candidate. " She decided to leave for Rome fciiiftLvrw j ivuin BuY a Pair G,t a Spar# nomination or like to have it. This does have some advan- today, but Monday night found I t en AHABA/% 1 ! Last month in an interview the tages, of course, just in case herself unable to go on. the aide MOTH BALLS 07A I DACTF i SHAMPOO\ imwmmmmmmmmm \ magazine U.S. News & World the party in the end wanted to said. . AfC r A'Hsaa didates. His reason is said to imt l^ H ^^m& ^i&m ^mHimm Stover be: It' Bj p^m I ...t-rlna. 7 O, 1 I | Russell 1 s too soon to know what IM / (L sssaV fe Lisrerme /-uz. m a Aaaj |AS| A i^^^ a^^v^a- %¦ M will happen. LOTION As of now there are only two n ¦ CHOCOLATES | \a^^^^^^^^^^ ¦L^w ^/ * 1 otl | <*l -^ Wgm ^gflMk I I I iHat I MOUTH | candidates in sight: New York's l^^^^^^^H^k V*^ sH I / Fr,,h ^, Gov. Nelson Rockefeller I w Price Sdle shi¦ n• Wwk,y 'J*. and i*f ne' ij I I \\\\\\\mm\y^J)M I * 1 Arizon a's Sen. Barry Goldwater. iBib ^ ,| Rockefeller has already an- _a_g£z ______i *¦ f &<* AA . ^ ¦ B njfl ® 1 f #* *-, ^A l i^^HM fl\ 1_^_*}^_^_m* "^ KV nounced his candidacy, Goldwa- -» -^ ie> : I' ..j"" ^H la)^a)^a)^a)^aVjHaTjl^^^ mr ' ' | 33.1111HWW Effl S&l ^H I H rtanrWant i ter is expected to in January. ¦afflH ^Jt^Ba^Se^a^Se18Hi.» ll? SARDI Brand 1 ^*' . | I llry P80aOraiH 1 H^^^H^a^BdMaW ¦ | A !* | $' : BrP^¦lj il iI|Bpj||l t f]|H : And — both men have said [H ii^alHfl liUillUil i ib ! ¦* :¦¦¦ %¦* ¦ lUaftl X ^aTWW ' ¥¦ IjaVB^H __ g ^^^^^ f RIIRRI 1MB I &' mmzmmmmmBsmmsim ^^IK SP-V-^j^yJSiaWmM I ^^— ^""^-^ tfxI they thought Nixon was acting ¦H JJRJ,RJH "^L* "'-*'" >J,R;1BR;1R;1R;1R;1R;1R;1R;H ^^^^^^ B *vr i Ull ll llLIIIH A wwy^^!»jp -w;} Sj K| ¦afla'aTi^SeWC^^^S^iBaW p; ^-—T ^—^- _^ i Sj like a candidate. ¦aV^aVse^aVJ^H'* 'V Wmmmmmmmmm v^^^^^^^^^ K^^KStil ¦ One month ago Nixon said he - ¦ ' $1 50 ¦ k; hoped there would be nothing mm BATH OIL . 1 "1 - •- ' Millions of bubbles for 'Mmmam ^k rDETMC- VJ l™1 U S on the record between then and A mmmmW^f iKi^^^^^ i ^^ ¦ ¦ ^ t ^1 1 MAKE*"^ UP" 1 ^^_T __^V | r K*^Bm^K^BS^^^pure bathing luxury. l wBllLlfl Ee | ^ ' the convention to indicate he fa- Paj|B^^Ba,HJ^^j^t^^^RHR|^^^^^^^^^^^ R^^^^^H^^HH^9^^^H .,i^^^ BZSY$| I UIDDAtl KUIVwithD I ^ ^^ssSSS ^ vored one candidate over an- ^ Golden Rose, I ^ ¦^ @ ^ | | fiW Ifl l § f ^s ^ % ^ ^^^^^Ja V -IT^s V &£**i__ _iz______tf- other. 2- ^''Axl^mmm ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ R By ^^^^^KBH kCarnation, PIKICC Doubla-faced ^ ^ $J f \\\\\\\\\\\\\wy J^^^ I i I j Y /TT E< t While such reticence would ¦ ¦ IHac Pln. I ¦ | 6' magnlryin and |/ C avoid adding splits in the Re- tL\______: \. ^¦•*• _^^^^^V^y B . ' ^ .^ijl fl^^^^^ B % \\\\\\\W S^m ^m% ^ I regular mirror.fl (fe ^ l 1 ,^&^9aHB | I 1 «9 1 IJLaA]^ I yy ' ^&bf lB#*r I didate in case the convention fi- nally did turn to him. ¦w l- ' 1®®®!®®^^ 1 w 1 1 ^^&# J^^^HM I ™^Physklansr^ A 'Surgeon*^^^ 1 *"' I ' *^^ Monday in Miami editors rep- I ^mr 1% I?1 ** Cl 10 I resenting a cross-section of the mWl '*y*+J^mmmm\ I niK'A fipr L I IffXlXU I W P Vlupvl liuoil § . ''' . ¦' !¦** ~ g I nation 's daily newspapers said ¦¦^K/^^2^I ^«^^HH RA^h I ^H --1 ULUUyyUp-p-p- ^^^^*** -' " tmimmmmmmmmm they feel Nixon will be the Re- I 1 ll I^^^H FILM/*rtl ^D i m 1 publican candidate against Pres- wryJl/JHm I niuTuryr il rwPPn HH vULvn ^,i^,^,^»!=>ci=:^ ident Kennedy, but that Kenne- dy will beat him again as he did iMMW| I UlN l mtN l lIL^^nB^Si in 1960, ™Zm l I l^K^^m Fifty editors in Miami for the annual Associated Press man- aging editors meeting today, In Fine Whiskey .-^. B ! % 111 were quizzed by the Miami Her- cunm ACDC K .Deodorant... / j ISBIHT fliBH r—m I^Lf^H i ald and 26 of them picked Nixon onuuLUtKS .- ', aV4V^\^V^\^VaaVaffJaVa)^a«aaHi(^HBMAvifi s2 7« K as the Republicans ' choice. FLEISCHMANN'S S shampoo(kfamnM . - ^ i^Ba^ESSH ITIQf |C 25 . .* . , V&I 19 ^^^VI aK^^^^^^at^a,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,H I» ^ | GET ACQUAINTED OFFER^ ^ < ¦ ¦ S l i ^A V . ^ H i i Goldwater got 12 votes. The £ ^1 ; rest went to Rockefeller and S tegular use of this fine ,- # ihampoo MMMMMMM ¦WOT SB'^^ Michigan 's Gov. George Rom- is the BIG buy I A control. | | rUOWTYSON Aill 1 ney. The editors stressed that dandrufF. x i^ili^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^a.li ,,e ^iii ^ .. k; I Re «'5 » Rb^h^^^SH^^H their selections were based on ! Unconditional 8* l | H S * ^ S DURA ¦ ^ ^ ¦¦¦ ¦ i ! I?01IIITAIII I ! poarantee. * ¦'« ¦*'* I |- judgmen t and not on their po- $f 39 ^ ^^SBfffl fflWW] LMw 1T^^^ |. HS, H «p«« iByt^^^ S^S I *7«^ those definitely considered for THE FLEISCHMANN DISTILLING CORPORATION , NEW YORK CITY i "*^^i«ii!«fflfflSii •> ¦Rill^ ¦K¦• ^^4 ^^^ . ^j ^*WL«^rS 1 cL/,/L *tttfl70|79 I /I .F ll^*^^^HB h ^ ^ TKM I | ; ¦ yz/ ly*j \ y LIPSTICKS y ^Bw^V^Si^ ^^^ BB^^^ JB | ^j-*;:> ^:y.v-v:.^ .;.:..:-- *-^ i H $129 J^ * I

PA¦ ^ li r ^^ - jMr~7*^TF r *c^ r*^*'kr1 •/s*^^k.-«^ r%/W'V *•* ^^^ i ,s s :ii\xs,::w.»^^ ,rtiiifrW'^ ^1 [ ^ n MEN S SH0P Anefrin Brand I fl ^V H&w ' SHADES *ffP3f i r nVfl M I ^^^^^^^^^^ ^ * I _ ffiP^ LMHU I ; WLD' HiL ii msvALUt HI B ZIPPER flH Ufflt MlMaH HIIJa^ f TOtJ 2/24 J - jjg AilDCIII CC I ^^ HHffi uSf i j ^^^ H M^ J«^ S^M I / T\ The First Knit Underwear With | ) Ch ei>n Red M Hundreds of tiny pellets I SPIClAtf I "Fr?> " ^^ HHH ^ a ^ H TAPESTRY 1 Brazilian Beige medication con- ^ Less Than Shrinkage- TH]! j i releas* | ^^BB^n^fl UjW^Hi schoo rubheriited I if/ lj Super 1% Boxer j tlnuously over a long period ^ Toujih twill and ^BnfRRT^ Peruvian Pink I f ^H^K9M^^|^V4^| 1 mmw^^^^* \ I IJBJI. tfinM ' night relief from ^¦^ \mtKmWmmnlmmmi I Trinidad R ose r Y., ¦C ^Hi^HrWiiE^BfiP,,,,HaS9^&^SQ^^HflH tortnr trU™il or~, 4\mmt BMPTTll 1 I eoldi miseries.„UmrU. %«^J i,S ^^Hi^^^^^^^^H If H <<\) ¦Up r I:-^^^ ^ f boxen are nut fit right from thfl start arid to ktttp j|. t m / iltTOlffifflffl^ 1 ; ^^1 K B r ^^I^^^Xffo*j^^^l i^i^i^B^aliPi^e^H^H - . lifl ^^^^^ r that fit permanentl¦¦ y ~ beca\w e Pak-nit fabric assuroe l long R^^Sl^^^^^^^^ H fe; aO^HaHMKla.^al ^^^ ¦1/; . 1 I imi ai'.wPfflirilllliMlllM™W™iM l»l sWi ir An :j, ^^ ,fj,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, B ^M^Vi^^^*^*^* ^ , X^^^^H N '' '|^^^^^^ ^ nlta 1 y011 fmd that th BS^aM8a^^^^^^^^^9*jj^a 1 ^i^W i^B '; 1^107 ^- .^^II JH M ifrtntinrnYiinl ^ N lrM l n 8< * • ' '" " U\ I ! ); and with one " l ^ 2 B |N ^^^ H| 1 ^H GEHSSlTOltlil ^..tW B -» ,1 vUNUCdlAIi'Jvspontt'E | ' m /l^^li^lffl BV ^* ^ ' f ^Hfr (_ ^l-J nH I y OOM ft M K^mlmm^^^^ fabri c, even after repeated launderings , will atay | : l|0R9 By^^^^^^ H i ^^^ 9 a ^^ 1 l^i^B ]L^ > KL. and " " ^ *°'"t ^rM^ new- *00^'n8 ^or t-ie ¦¦' e °* l^e B*^ - Wmx ri pfflfflffl !ffliiiffii^\lBB * r ^ I^^^^Hl^^i K pS n,cnt' 0, w *licl* rr"-an» t>iat ^*rtcr 'a knit boxers || •.>»»/» ^^^^ffll ^ffifflffi SllllHr and ^" ever BB'^Mn7a«Bfi'r' '* i*iiii!B _i: ^^^l ^^^H '••—• ^^^R ' ^^a^^^^^PI. >\ ,i i ' u ftr T-shirU are more comfortable than | laT I ¦BdMI^IM^ H I^L^L^L^LIB^^ H V ^^^B »IH..I,VV NNWI/ / ^ffilSlllffirl fflii'^^i SlI'^ before.^ P l# I a\"af" M af" IPHtm^W ^^^ 1 .fjH a¦^^BiH **' ^ 7 ^ | / imaSi|ffly |^H|^^^M And they'll itay comfortable. Machine wuh* | Kl F rNFX III'^^^I ? WmmWX .^.-.^.Bala '' al l aZl^ ^ *- '""''" ^ ^ ^ an< no ron ¦aVjVjSeBa^T^H^JRH i Q^ HR a ) c nK ncelu^ i / B IJ ^ HEHH ' ' * * ' * * '"^^ / hiuura In thf Taltrrtall print , r»mf In I f^HHn IHPW r.rtcr'1 Palc nll knit |}i Help, build blood .. J HospiM Te.fd... | ^ ¦ " ^ K niiir.BUrl , Brown-B» -i (|fl , R«I.BI»rli . Si«n: 30-44 *$1.7S TISSUES VirK ^^ ^ I J- i HaPW *^^W ; | xilh NV»«bind »I MTM In ' f \~ ' 'J iB g | «W Cancr 'a I'aL.nit Suprr T Shirt | ¦ssiir c»UKh Mixtur. j GERITOL PEPTO f «nyr£mi \ xj Briefs . . , »1.7S I' lHl.'i shiiis . . . $1.00 |l , !' "Pak-nlt li the trademark property of Comptix Corporation sj i | 29c L gSSr* TONIC BISMOL ?8!!!at regularS price! !! I V% length thrlnkngt by Qovtrnmtnt Standard Teat 7550 » With coupon limit 2 I «•«• ™w Vu Relief for uP«r «o,„ach. | (tCCCT-WB) I ! P uZZbT' '•' I " I .on I j| CouRO„ Exp ire. " ' — — % *** R Special colds I ' j £ $~% J ^ | ' > < ! Nov • 19 J J^JT. W-f... #¦# y Hf ^ i Cff »T glvet yOU rbotij lot The Tenter of Fashion in the Cent or of Tow n -- NASH'S — Fourth at Center i* a-Iirrf; # Ziiarrbta. ^f i ^ i ^ ' I't 8 ...„ the price of one I i r; IJ?!L! ^^^ ^ I ^*^lc //1 | ' ' ¦- ,, ki£ '^m _ mi l t^Ji iM *v^^ti^mi '¦ ...*k .„.*.^ , .., ¦ • ...I;:ffi' s.yl ;>i ^&-'i&t£ i.^vi/.'^^vy^^V-. 'iliykrj j .jv ¦ ^ t^.a,..ux,:^u:..-* ' .^ ;.. .,:_,; ::. ../.-..^.j-aaJsrs-^ Acceleration Asked Cloudy, Cool Weather Due Labor Award At All Junior Highs To Continue Speaker Set The opportunity for academi- for students at Central Junior , that children of superior ability cally talented students in the High School, a member of the at Washington - Kosciusko A little cooler tonight and j continued partly cloudy is the city's two outlying public jun- Board of Education asserted ; School arid • ___ ior high schools to enroll in Monday night. ¦ ^ weather fare predicted for Wi- J e f f e r son - a nona and vicinity . For Nov. 21 classes geared to accelerated Fourth Ward Director Frank- School had no Ray Brown , manager of the OCnOOl A low of 26-30 is the temper- instruction should be made lin Tillman said that he's re- j chance to par- Winona office of the State Em- available on the same basis as ceived complaints from parents i ature forecast for the area with ployment Service , will be the ticipate in an R^nr/4 a high of near 40 expected Wed- a c c derated Doara main speaker at the fifth an- nesday. Temperatures are ex- nual Labor Man or Woman of program such pected to be near normal Thurs- Winona Co. FU as that provided at Central. the Year banquet Nov . 21 at Fillmore County day with no precipitation . „ the Labor Temple. Event Wednesday HE SAID HE thought the ad- FROM A noon high of 51 the The banquet, sponsored by ministration should investigate temperature dropped to a low the Central Labor Union , will GOP Urges ways and means of affording of 32 during the night. Cloudi- honor the man or woman.mem- Hall To Attract 250 accelerated instruction for ness moved in during the night ber of organized labor judged to LEWISTON, Mirm. these students. and the temperature got no have given most outstanding -Ed Chris- service to labor , tiansen, president of the Minne- Superintendent of Schools A. higher than 38 by noon today. church , and For U.S. Senate ' community during the past sola Farmers Union, will be the , L. Nelson said that the prob- Mean temperature for the year. RUSHFORD, Minn. - A cam- featured speaker at 7:45 p.m. lem involved stemmed from past 24 hours was 39. Normal ' paign has been started by Fill- Wednesday at the farmers-busi- comparative enrollments at the is 36. A year ago today the Last year s winner , Mrs. Ann Lynch , more County Republican leaders nessnien's banquet sponsored by three schools. Winona high was 47 and the 410 Mankato Ave., is to support State Rep. Clinton j general chairman of the event. the Winona. County Farmers ; en- low 33. All-time high for Nov. Hall , Rushford , as the GOP With nearly 450 students Master of ceremonies at Union. . j , 12, was. 67 in 1902 and the low the nominee to oppose Sen. Eugene rolled at Central, he said there ; ' banquet will be John D. Mc- More than 250 persons are ex- are enough sections to allow for 6 in 1896. McCarthy, Minnesota Demo- Several Minnesota points re- HOPES HUNTERS CAN READ . . . Gill , city representative in the pected to attend the fifth an- ; one section to be given the ac- into a walking billboard ; Masters has a herd crat, in the 1964 elections. ported temperatures below the Marion E. Masters , Aurora, Mo., dairyman, of 100 registered Jerseys and says that state legislature. The invocation Support for Hall is sought in a ! nual event at St. John 's Luth- ' celerated instruction in sciences morning with will be given by the Rev . Roy eran School here. A turkey din- ! freezing point this is taking no chances during Missouri's deer "Irene" is easily worth $800. "One careless letter sent to all Republican and mathematics. a 28 at Bemidji and the same Literski, lay students' chaplain county chairwomen and chair- ner will be served. I The substantially smaller en- hunting season that begins next Sunday. Here, deer hunter could make her 'Goodnight at St. Mary 's College. The Rev, at International Falls with addi- ' (AP Mallnr- wylotne?-tdOao.,YayeBc rollments at each of the other tional snow. Rochester had a he wields a paint brush to convert "Irene" Irene ," he said. Photofax) Harold Rekstad of First Con- men by Walter Eichinger, two junior high schools , how- morning reading of 30 after a gregational Church will give the Spring Valley, Fillmore County ever, don't allow for this many high of 43 Monday afternoon. benediction. Republican chairman, and Mrs. More Evidence sections and the . organization At La Crosse figures for the The identity of the person to L. J. Wilson , Rushford, county of a single section for academ- same times were 35 and 45. be honored this year wii! not chairwoman. ically talented. Early this morning light snow- Driver found j be announced until the night of fall was reported for a time at Else the banquet. A five-man com- THE LETTER says Hall When All "has Of Need for The superintendent said that caught the attention of political one possibility would be to Alexandria, Minn., and Bis- mittee has been appointed to and government o bservers screen students at each of the marck, N.D. evaluate nominees and make Guilty in the selection. throughout the state in just two two junior high schools, deter- Lowest temperature reported Courses Asked in the Northwest today was 15 terms of the state Legislature." mine which should be enrolled Fails, Grab Tail The evening will begin With Additional evidence of a need at Dickinson , N.D., and 17 at In the nonpartisan Legisla- in an accelerated class and , a reception for guests at 5:30 ture, not all candidates make for trained workers in auto Lernmon, S.D. Two Winona policemen turned west on Howard Street. They p.m. The banquet will follow. body work and with parents' permission, have Arrest cowboy for about half-an-hour lost it, then found it again at their party affi- cosmetology be- Snow flurries whipped through Citizen Other award winners, fore adding them attend class at Central. John F. Hamann. 1741 W. here Monday afternoon as they Sarnia and Sioux streets. Then in addi- liations known, courses in these the upper part of WISCONSIN tion to Mrs. Lynch , have been they note. Hall areas to the curriculum of the Tillman and Nelson agreed on brisk chill winds. B.ioadway, was found , guilty this chased a runaway steer on city it ran to Gilmore and Vila Street streets. where with the help of a sher- Kenneth McCready, William C. always . has run Winona Area Vocational-Techni- that the problem sited by the Cold as it seemed , however, morning in a municipal court Mueller and Roman Wiczek cal School was requested Mon- board members reflected anoth- temperatures in most of Wis- trial of the charge of failure to Their attempts to capture the iff's deputy and another police- as a Republi- , , Each year the name of the can day night by the Board of Ed- er difficulty encountered in consin still were near or slight- stop for a stop sign. The trial animal which included a try at man they cornered it. , the letter steer-roping from the window winner is inscribed on a per- say s, " ucation. having in the system three jun- ly above normal for the sea- lasted about 30 minutes, But the steer again got away and is cf the squad car , ended on Gil- and continued west. Kapustik manent plaque. d e d i c ated to Earlier this year there had ior high schools, two with com- son. Judge John D. McGill sen- been thought given to the pos- paratively small enrollments. At mid-morning today snow tenced Hamann to pay a fine more Avenue , west of Vila drove the squad car. while Latt- work for cohe- , man tried to rope the sion among the sibility that . flurries were reported at Wau- of $10 or to serve three days: Street when one patrolman steer. His A REQUEST was received sau Green Bay, Stevens Point after hearing testimony from grabbed the steer's tail while attem pt failed. differing active these two c i_ i . c o u rs.e s from the Park - Recreation and Ashland, Light snow was two Red Wing men , who made the other applied a rope. Finally Lattman jumped from Thompson Trial R¦ e p u blicans, . OCnOO l the squad car and grabbed the statewide. might be of- Board for use of public school falling in the Hurley area. the citizen 's arrest , and from . The 500-pound steer had given • " the patrolmen a merry animal's tail. The Fillmore Rep Hall fered under ¦p _| facilities for basketball and Park Falls had .19 of an inch Hamann. A $10 bail deposit was chase all r>ar the way from Mankato Avenue. Swift & Co. personnel said to- County leaders ask other coun- provisions of pOalQ swimming programs during the of precipitation , mostly in the used to pay the fine! Delays Case in t h e federal 1, winter season . form of snow, in the period Lyle Lattman caught the tail day that a man from Kujak ty chairmen to indicate their ' HAMANN, who pleaded not Trucking Co. had brought the willingness Manpower Development and ending at daybreak today, but •while Paul Kapustik placed the "to work for a The request for use of Sen- guilty to the charge Wednesday, rope on the animal to the plant earlier in grassroots, young, Training Act. most of it melted as it fell. neck of the steer. capable Re- ior High School- gymnasium, was arrested by Patrick J. Don- They tied the runaway to a the afternoon. Wabasha County publican candidate." Central Elementary and Lin- Beloit set the high tempera- ley, Red Wing, at the Westgate WITH MDT authorization , the ture of 51 degrees Monday. post in the area where it was The animal , owned by Midwest WABASHA , Minn. (Special)- HALL, born in North Dakota vocational-technical school coln school gymnasiums and Shopping Center parking lot at caught and left it for Swift & Livestock . Corp.. was not sold Arraignment in one of the four In 1926, was* graduated from would be eligible for federal the Senior High swimming MADISON HIT the low of 28 11:50 a.m. last Tuesday. Co. personnel. because the price was not high cases on the criminal calendar Carrington, N. D., public aids to finance equipment and pool was granted, subject to early today. Donley testified that Hamann Police first received a call enough , said a Swift & Co. in District Court for Wabasha schools, received his bachelor instruction for the course. clearance of dates to determine Imperial and Thermal , Calif ., was driving south on Orrin about the sleer running loose spokesman. While it was being County was postponed this ( Donley > was of science in law at the Uni- Superintendent of there are no conflicts in use. and Yuma , Ariz., hit the nation- Street and that he at 3:45 p.m. They went to Man- hauled away it broke loose and morning because the defend- Schools A. driving west on Highway 61. versity of Minnesota and his law L. Nelson told directors Monday al high of 90 degrees Monday, kato and Sarnia and followed it ran awav. ant's attorney has been sub- degree at the St. Paul College compared with the low of 14 He said that Hamann did not poenaed as a witness in tha that the state Employment stop for the stop sign and cross- of Law. He is a veteran of the Service, which makes surveys early today at Broadus, Mont., Eugene T. Thompson murder Korean conflict , serving with and Moorcroft , Wyo. ed the four-lane highway in trial in Minneapolis. of the seven-county area serv- Hiawatha Valley ' Over SO Forei gn the Viking Division. He is mar- aa front of his car. Donley said he Gerald Banick. Mazeppa ed by the school to determine stopped quickly, Catholic English , ried and has two children. He his car went charged with indecent assault, need for employes before or- sideways and that a collision Students Expected was elected to the House in gani2ation of the class is author- Husband Receives is represented by Donald Kelly, 1960. Group to Meet nearly occurred. Minneapolis, who couldn 't be ized , had encountered difficulty Suspended Sentence "He did not notice me at all ," At Rotary Meeting Teachers Elect Hall has served on the appro- in establishing need in this area Officers will be elected at a present because of the Thomp- p r i a t i o n s, reapportionment , meeting of the Hiawatha Valley A 25-year-old Winonan re- Donl ey said even though he had Between 50 and 55 foreign Sister M. Carlan. English in- son trial. for graduates of classes in cos- tooted his horn. Donley said towns and counties, dairy pro- metology and auto body work. Association at the Terrace Club, ceived a suspended sentence in students at Winona 's three col- structor at Cotter High School , ducts and livestock, temper- Lake City , today at 7 p.m. Hamann later admitted not see- leges are expected to attend THE BANICK case was add- The superintendent asked municipal court today after he the has been elected chairman of ance and liquor control , and Don Stone, Winona Chamber pleaded guilty to a charge of as- ing the oncoming car. 12:15 p.m. Rotary Club banquet an organization of English tea- ed to the calendar. Arraign- other committees. whether the board felt that, in of Commerce manager, said Earl Cutlip. Red Wing, Don- at Hotel Winona Wednesday in chers in Catholic high schools ments in the three other cases view of the fact that there sault. He has served on the educa- those wishing to go with the Wayne J. King. 507 E. King ley's passenger, said, "He came celebration of Rotary Founda- of the Winona diocese . also were postponed. The state's would be a sufficient number right straight across the high- case against Earl D. Schultz , tion appropriations subcommit- Winona delegation should meet St., was sentenced by Judge tion Week. Sister Carlan was selected tee which concerns itself with of prospective enrollees in the at the chamber office at 5:30 way." He said Donley hit the Minneiska , failing to stop at a area , John D. McGill to pay a fine Rotarians will introduce each during a meeting of diocesan state school aids to local dis- the twe courses should be p.m. brakes and the car skidded side- of the exchange stop sign, is a matter for the added to the curriculum inde- of .$25 or to serve eight days. students at- English and business teachers tricts. The dinner meeting will fea- Judge McGill suspended the sen- ways to a stop. tending. This is the first time all court. Defendant's attorneys, Hall attends Rushford Luther- pendently of MDT support. ture an address by Charles Bur- Saturday at Pacelli High Willis E. Donley and Harry H. tence on condition that King is HAMANN testified he came to Ihe foreign students from the School , Austin. an Church and is a member ot Directors said that since the rill , Rochester , district engineer not guilty of a similar offense the stop sign on Orrin Street , colleges have been invited to Peterson , Menomonie, are in Murphy-Johnson American Le- employment service had had for the state Department of during the next six months. stopped and the motor of his car attend the event. Sister M. Audrey , a business Milwaukee on a case. , gion post. difficulty in establishing need , Highways. He will discuss fu- James Soderberg, city prose- died. He said he started the en- instructor at Cotter was named The state 's case against Pat- further studies should be made ture plans for Highway 61. The cutor , made a motion for the gine and drove across the high- The world' chairman of a business instruc- rick L. Riley, Zumbro Falls, to obtain data en probable en- s wind system business session also will in- suspension. way at a slow speed. reaches up some tors' standing committee and careless driving, was continued rollments and placement before 22 miles . It is clude a review of this year's King was arrested by police at He said that , when the car so intricate that a gentle breeze also led a discussion on office by Judge Arnold Hatfield, pre- any action is taken. County School activity and preliminary discus- his home at 3:05 p.m. Sunday stalled he looked to the West may blow westward at.ground practice. siding, until the defendant is Nelson said such a study sion of plans for 1964. on his wife's complaint. He had and saw Donley 's car about one level while, high ahove , a jet Another Cotter instructor , available. He's now in the U .S. would be made and findings re- Len Anderson , La Crosse , is posted $25 bail and it was re- mile away. Donley was driving stream races eastward at 300 James Mullen , presided as tem- Air Force at Lakeland , Tex. Oflicers to Meet ported back to the 'noard president of the association. funded. fast , said Hamann. miles an hour. porary chairman at the English Kenneth Bigelow Jr., Plain- Teachers ' business meeting at view , charged with assault , Two representatives of the HE ALSO asked whether the 't, board felt that some special which plans for a February couldn be arraigned because State Department of Education workshop session were discus- his attorney, Warren Eustis, will speak at the annual school recognition should be given stu- Area Included dents who are graduated from sed. Tentative arrangements for Rochester , was in Hibbing, officers' meeting for Winona discussion of linguis- Minn., on a trial. If):."?!) a.m. post-high school vocational further County, starting al , instruction in the novel 's Wig- courses, many of them ifter tics BIGELOW and Banick will bn Thursday at the Red Men movie criticism were wam in Winona. two year's work. and arraigned in Rochester later , The speakers will be Eugene The superintendent thought made. Judge Hatfield said. He also Meyer , director of rural educa- that it might be proper for School Twenty-two English teachers presides in district court there. Survey from nine high schools attended , some sort of certificate to be Ord tion for the department and ered Two paternity cases on the Roy H. Larson, director of ele- awarded these students in con- A detailed inventory and eval- or more meetings with the consider them in the light of lature in the past should be the meeting. civil calendar were continued mentary education. They will junction with the regular high uation of Winona public school school board to discuss data ob- capacity and utilization and sub- adopted , Winona might have to Plans for a meeting of busi- to Nov . 18 . Defendants are discuss proposed legislation and school commencement exer- facilities and an areawide sur- tained to that point. After find- mit recommendations on neces- provide for instruction ot some ness instructors to coincide with Donald Becker , Plainview , and other topics of interest to school cises. ings have been drafted there vey of school population and sary remodeling and building .'iOO additional elementary school the session for English teachers James Duncan . The case board members. The post-high school grad- will be a public meeting at additions or on possible sites for pup ils. were improved. against Duncan , out on *;i00 growth trends will be made by i An afternoon session Thurs- uates could be seated in a spc- which the survey team will have new construction if this is in- "This may never happen ." bond , is scheduled for 10 a.m. day will begin at L.'.iO p.m. ciaT section , he said , and , as a University of Minnesot a field j an opportunity to interpret to dicated for the future the superintendent said , "but The state's case against La- A school bus clinic will be they are introduced , be identi- studies team during the current the community its findings and "We 'll check the financial Corps Here Verne Witt , paternity , was con- wc would like to he in a posi- Marine j ¦ held Friday at LEWISTON fied a.s to what course they year to assist the Board of Edu- recommendations. capacity of your district, " Hook- tion of knowing what we can tinued to Feb . 17 because the High School . Michael J. Hag- completed. , Maj. Michael Fibich , Minne- child hasn 't heen born vet . cation in drafting a long-range HOOKER SAID that all data er continued "and translate and should do should this hap- officer re- gerty, supervisor of transporta- I Board members said that if o it r recommendations into apolis , Marine Corps program to meet antici pated fu- obtained hy the bureau will be pen. " will be at St. HOBF.RT Alexander . 22 tion for the department , will the superintendent decided after terms of millage in any cases cruit ment officer , . Fari- I ture school needs. made available to the board for ' College Wednesday bault, admitted in court this be in charge . All vehicles that j further study that such a pro where construction is deemed ANOTHER MATTER of con- Mary s The decision to spend an es- publication of a complete report Friday, lie will show- morning paternity of a child transport school pupils arc re- ! gram would be feasible he necessary so that you can see cern for some time has been through timated $9,000 for the survey on the survey and noted that ' Ihe Marine Corps al 7 born May 1 , 1963, in Minneap- quired to be at the meeting for ; should make arrangements for ' what impact this would have on the problem of providing ade- films on was made by frequently school districts wish today at the St. Mary 's olis. The judge asked the Wa- inspection, Buses are to follow ; it. your tax structure, " quate facilities for an expand- p.m. route , directors Mon- m. a a to prepare a less lengthy sum- Student Union. The films were basha County Welfare Board their regular morning mary for distribution to inter- He emphasized that the sur- ing post-high school program of the clinic day night aft- SchOOl , shown at Winona Slate Monday to investigate the needs of the then come directly to I ested persons in the communi- vey f indings would be "tested vocational training. . cr Dr. Clil- night . child and report Dec. 1. Tha site. Road Equipment ford P. Hook- tv. for reasonableness as we seek The Winona Area Vocational- ¦ D ,~ arJ Technical School now is housed, mother will appear in court er , associate DOalO Although no definite decision to solve any problems encount- Dec. lfi when settlement and Taken From Site director of the •—— has been made , the Winona sur- ered , Our position has been that for Ihe most part, in the Sen- ior High School building and Deposit Forfeited support will be fixed. Store university 's bureau of field stud- j vey probabl y will he directed immediate problems should tie County - Attorney John Mc Christmas On Highway 61 ies and surveys, hnd discussed hy Dr. Otto Domian , director solved first and then formulate thought has been given to sep- : Clifford II. Phillips , 19, Minne- Hardy, Plainview , prosecuted, what data would be obtained of the bureau , who was an as- plans that will make Ibe solu- arate quarters for the vocation- sot a Cily Ut. 1 , forfeited $30 . Sheriff George Fort is investi- An informal call of the calen- in the survey and how this sociate in the study made here tion of future problems easier al school to relieve crowded bail in municipal court today on gating the theft of about $400 dar closed at noon. Judge Hat- Hours Scheduled could be used hy the board in 15 years ago. Dr. Domian re- for you. " conditions. a charge of careless driving. Mel field couldn 't set any trial dates worth of equipment from the S. ' will remain any possible future plant expan- ' turned during the past week Hooker said that the survey was arrested by the Highway for certain because he was to Winona stores J, Groves Co. construction site BOARD ME.MHEKS ami Su- learn would be in a posit ion to open at ni**))! for the benefit sion and improvement planning. after a leave of absence during ; Patrol on Highway 61 at fi:4 (> sit in District Court (or Winona beginning on Highway 14-61 . which he conducted a study for perintendent of Schools A. ].. study all ol these problems and p.m. last Tuesday. ,' starting this afternoon. of Christmas shoppers taken from HOOKER INDICATED that If December. Equipment was the government of Brazil to de- ; Nelson told Hooker that there submit recommendations for with the first week in , located between Da- the hoard decided to contract ! be open Mon- the site termine the feasibility of estab- : were several specific areas in future action . All stores will kota and Dreshnch , on two for the bureau 's services , the j day, Wednesday and Friday lishing a program of public edu- which the district was especial- Nelson explained that should nights last week: Monday and survey might be initiated some- nights during the first Iwo weeks cat ion in thnt nation , ly hopeful of obtain ing recoin- Ihe board determine , on Ihe On Sunday, Novembe r 17, Thursday. time this month nnd probabl y in December. The (lutes are In explaining the direction the ( -Herniations for future action. basis of the survey report , that The missing items include Iwo j would be completed sometime survey probably will take , Hook- One has to do with rural any major construction would Dec . 2, 4 , fi , «.) , 11 , and U. during the latter part of the remain open 50-foot suction hoses valued at er said , "We 'll look at your school district consolidation and be advisable in the next few the Womens Section All stores will jacks valued ] I9fi:i-fi4 school year. Monday through Friday nights $250 , two five-ton educational program and study Ithe effect on Winona 's situation years , plans would have to be nl $70, a speed coupling worth The cost of the study--sim- j the services you wish lo offer , Legislature in l%5 or ut drafted prior to the next legis- from Dec. lfi through the 21. Tho ilar lo one made here hy the if the previews before $•15, two barrel pumps valurd at determine the scope , equipment a subsequent session should lative session since the district last extra shopp ing night bureau last in IMlt-49 -was only ! -ind Monday, Dec. $14 and six grouse guns worth progmm you will need. ' make it mandatory for every charter provides lhat authori- the holiday will be an est imate. I looker said that it! We 'll analyze your enrollments , 2.'!. $27. j seemed to him that tbe work i district in the state to be in a zation must he obtaine d from The College of Saint Teresa make projections of the proba- district offering a 12-year ed- the Legislature for any bond might be done for between $11,-1 3le future school population in j| 000 and $9,000, exclusive of the ucational program. issue to finance school con- various areas of your city nnd Noting that there are more struction. Eagles Regular Meeting printing of the team 's findings , ! attempt to predict enrollments *]W^ j but that the hoard would pay than 50 districts in Ihe immedi- This would be necessary only BOOK FAIR you may expect 10 years in the ale area without a high school , in the event recei pts in the ff 3§M$| Wed.—8 p.m. in the Aerie Room \ only for lime and materials ac- future. " Delox tually used in making the study. I Nelson explained that if con- school buildin g singing fund Winona Sunday News y^^^V I'roihunkx , W.P. \ While the survey is in prog- THE Sl'KVKY team , lie said, solidation measures which have were inadequate to cover anti- ress there probably will be one will inspect school buildings, I been considered by the Legis- cipated costs of any project. They'll Do It Every Time Jimmy Hatlo Why College DEAR ABBY: 9t HappswAcLJla&t TliqhL Presidents Her Husband Dean Martin Get Gray Fussy Eater By 6. K. HODENFIELD By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN AP Education Writer Explains Why DEAR ABBY: My husband is one of those fussy eater* By EARL WILSON CHICAGO (AP) — Why col- who likes to complain about my cooking, but he never tells wrong with it, or what he would prefer. He just NEW YORK •— Some jokes are unfair and I want to apolo- lege presidents get gray : me what Is There will be 40 per cent says, "It's lousy!" I have even gone to cooking school to gize for this one, and then I'll tell it. "Why do you drink?" meals and the art of interesting more high school graduates ln learn nutrition, balanced somebody asked Dean Martin. "Because when I'm sober," re- cooking. People tell me I am a good cook, plied Dean, "I think I'm Eddie Fisher" . . . Eddie, by the way, 1965 than there were in 1963. and I think I am. But what can I do with a is involved here in meetings contemplating a $10 million facelift, A larger percentage of those husband who keeps telling me the dinner expansion and new building program at Grossinger's where he graduates CAN'T WIN got his start. "I have a sentimental feeling for Grossinger's, will go on to college. is lousy? Ninety percent of the Ameri- I've been identified with it for *. When your husband IB years," he says. 'Twas there can public believes all boys DEAR CAN'T comes home for dinner, greet him that he was discovered by Ed- should go to college, 77 per cent your hat off , Honey— die Cantor in 1949, there that with, "Don't take believes all girls should. we're eating out. And if the food is he married Debbie Reynolds in North Dakofan lain to the manager."' 1955, there that he was re- National defense and space lousy you can comp science threaten to dominate vealed to be Liz .Taylor's ina- G.I. serving in morata in 1958, Eddie doesn't the campus scene, at the ex- DEAR ABBY: I am a the Armv very far from home. Why is it need to go to fortunetellers. He Cleared in pense of the humanities and parents' consent to just calls up Grossinger s and that I do not need my Abby ' arts. marry, but I need my Commanding Officer 's says "What's new with me?" it to me, and if I go ahead and They actually wept at Ethel These facts, figures and opin- consent? He refused to give ' marry this girl (she is a Korean ) it will cost me my stripes. Merman's classic Pla3a Persian Hunter s Deatli ions are being discussed at the this girl. What should I do? annual meeting of the Associa- I don't think this is fair. I love Room black-tie opening . . . the GRAND RAPIDS, Minn. (AP) G.I. JACK cafe event of the year. — A North Dakota man was tion of State Universities and Toots Shor, Russel Grouse, cleared of criminal guilt in the Land-Grant Colleges. The 97 in- fatal shooting of another hunter stitutions represented enroll 27 DEAR G.I.: Hang on to your stripes. You've got GI. Lucille Ball, Lena Home and your temperature doesn't return to , normal Johnny Johnston got teary-eyed Monday but he was sentenced to per cent of all the nation's col- fever. If 90 days in jail for recklessly Voice of the Outdoors lege and university students. after you get home, write me another letter. In the when she belted the old songs , let your chaplain mediate. ... mentioning "Girl Crazy," handling a loaded firearm. William C. Eckermen of the meantime "Panama Hattie ," the late Richard Zwirn, 31, appeared University of Michigan told the before Justice of Peace meeting Sunday night a nation- DEAR ABBY: Happiness is knowing your parents won't "Rags" Ragland. "Too bad the a little late. Happiness Cole Porter's too sick to hear George E. Eaton here. The al survey indicates 96 per cent almost kill you if you come home Rockford , N.D., man pleaded of the public believes a college is having your own bedroom. Happiness is having your par- her singing 'I Get a Kick Out iness is getting the telephone call you've of You.' " somebody said. guilty to the charge of reckless- education is more important ents trust you. Happ ly handling a gun. now than it was 30 years ago. been praying for. Happiness is getting good grades and ETHEL HERSELF kept It But, he said, 72 per cent be- making your parents proud of you. Happiness is being light. "Anything I missed The charge was filed by Sher- lieve the most important thing included in the popular circle. Happiness is having parents hasn't been invented yet!" she iff John P. Muhar after a coro- about such an education is who don't fight . Happiness is knowing you are as well-dressed shouted. "I want to thank my ner's jury exonerated Zwirn of "training for a good job." The as anybody. Happiness is something I don't have. good friend Lucy for coming ; guilt in the shooting death Sat- next most often quoted reasons FIFTEEN AND UNHAPPY all the way from California j urday of Norman Isaksen, 31, for going to college were "so- I want to -introduce my mom Minnetonka, Minn. cial acceptance" and "getting and dad." (They wanted her i The coroner 's jury ruled Isak- to know the right people." CONFIDENTIAL TO "LITTLE LU": Don 't go back to be a school teacher.) I sen was the victim of an acci- to him unless he promises to treat you like a human In satin Hong Kong pajamas, ; dental shooting. The survey, by Michigan's being. From your description of his past behavior , I Ethel entertained afterward — j "The jury commented...that Survey Research Center is still think he'd be just as happy with a dog for companion- and Lucille Ball and Gary Mor- i the negligence of Zwirn was not under way. Final tabulations ship on the weekends. ton (who have their 2nd anni- of a criminal degree that could will be reported next summer. versary Nov. 19) discussed a justify a manslaughter charge," Even those who approve of What's on your mind? For a personal reply, send a big deal with her. "Looks like said County Atty. Ben Grussen- college education in general self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, Box 3365, Bever- dorf. "It apparently reflects the had some criticisms, Eckerrnan ly Hills, Calif. ' . .. ' - . The Merm's gonna make it," j said. somebody mentioned. j opinion of the community that there was no intent or neg- The criticisms most often STRAIGHT KENTUCKY BOURBON WHISKY • 88 PROOf. MARK GOODSON'S friends ©ANCIENT ACE DISTIlllNG . CO.. FRANKFORT , KT. ; ligence of a criminal nature, in- heard are that college educa- hope he and Mrs. G., former volved. The sheriff 's office con- tion may create snobs, make Miss Alabama Virginia McDav- siders the case closed, and ho youngsters think they are get- Nixon Doubts id will mend their difficulties. further action is planned ." ting something for nothing and . . . .Joe Levine's rumored going may tend to make them adopt to Hollywood to become its i Meanwhile, a seventh hunter radical ideas or break down Fish of the Year sota. Here is part of the factt, probably 300 deers were F J 9* K S \ new "Barnum, DeMille, Mayer ! died of a heart attack. Harry their standards of morality. He'll Be in ^•??- &&! §[ ^b^aBfllfH Unquestionably, the walleye department's press release: killed by Winona hunters. We ¦ ^^^^^ and Mike Todd" because of his Myrom, 67, Thief River Falls, as ' J was found dead in his pickup pictured above will stand up are interested, however, in un- showmanship—in a top spot at j the walleye of the year taken "Principal differences be usual deer—buck with excep- Paramount—but he denies it's i truck after a hunting trip near tween the whitetail and the .' his home. from this sector of the Upper tional big racks for example. Race in 1964 even been discussed. . . . Bugle Mississippi. It tipped the scales mule deer are in the antlers Civic Association NEW YORK (AP) - Richard beads are bigger than ever in at the Sportsman's Tavern at and tail. The main beams of Information on the success M. Nixon says he can conceive dames' gowns; expensive, too ! enough," Carroll said. "As the exactly 12 pounds, eight ounces the white-tail's antlers arch ratio as compared with oth- of "no circumstances whatev- . . . Gloria Vanderbilt's beau TV stars say, lI don't want to several hours after it was forward over the head and each er years awaits the data col- Elects Thursday er" under which he would be a smooched her publicly at Eth- be over-exposed .' " of the points or tines arises from lected by wardens from cold candidate for the Republican caught at Alma. William E. Morse, executive el's opening: Across the room, the main beam . The antler of storage plants. Minnesota presidential nomination next ^^ft* ^*^^H|^^^^ HIHHBP9HI Lena Home. . .. Cassius Clay's TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Ernest Johnson , Arcadia , the typical mule deer branches has no registration system director of the Winona Industrial year. station wagon bears a sign, Nothing has done so much to fishing off the Jones Float into two main beams, which are such as that in Wisconsin Development Association , will The former vice president "The World's Greatest." bring husbands and wives te there, got it on a red sonar be principal speaker at the says that if his name comes again divided or forked. where the total take is meeting of the Winona Civic John Ford just won a battle gether as the dress that needs casting into the heavy cur- known daily. up as a possible candidate in l^^Hk ^ ^^y^KmW ^'M with Warners over Carroll to be buttoned up the back.— rent below the darn. It beat "The tall ofThe white-tail Association at 8 p.m. Thursday the New Hampshire or Oregon Baker taking her clothes off Harold Coffin , San Francisco. the big walleyes up to Sun- is much more conspicuous, at the Winona Athletic Club. primaries he will "do every- WISH I'D SAID THAT : Most day entered in the contest being broad at the base and Guests at the meeting will be thing I can legally to get my again in a film. It happened in Association the Kayenta, Ariz., where they're bachelors are frightened to there by nearly two pounds. dark above with a white Picks .mayors of Winona and name out. " Goodview and members of the ~ making "Cheyenne Autumn." death by marriage. But then Eugene Bork entered on fringe and entirely white Nixon told a news conference ^^t Bf*^9^vY^PVV^PVV^^^^^^^K-^<\^ i£^^ H May 18 a ten-pound, 11- Galesville Banker Winona City Council and the Monday night those primary To take advantage of Carroll's so are most husbands. on the under side. The tall Winona .County Board of Com- fame for goine nude in "Car- REMEMBERED QUO TE : ounce walleye. of the mule deer is consider- GALESVILLE, Wis.—A Gales- races should be between New missioners. York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefel- petbaggers," the writers added "Man blames fate for other ac- Other big fish entered during ably smaller and much ville banker is new secretary- A booklet written by a Winona a scene in which Carroll and cidents, but feels personally re more cylindrical in shape. treasurer of the Group 7 area ler, an announced candidate for the week included a 14-pound, teacher , Miss Josephine Kukow- the nomination , and Sen. Barry some Indian gals bathe nude in sponsible when he makes a seven-ounce northern , caught It is generally white, except of the Wisconsin Bankers As- ska, will be distributed to those a river. . "No!" said Ford. hole-in-one. "—Jacob M. Braude. for a black tip. The small sociation . Goldwater of Arizona , who is by Paul Koprowski , 216 Wilson attending the meeting. The expected to oppose Rockefeller. "They have to wear bathing EARL'S PEARLS: The aver- St., and a two-pound, two-ounce size of the tail adds to the Orrin K. Anderson, cashier of booklet, "Your Local Govern- the Bank of Galesville, was Nixon said he appreciates the suits—of the period." The age taxpayer will be the first crappie taken by L. A. Quinn , conspiciousness of the white ment," is used as a textbook ^^L.f U-'JMM^ '& remarks made about him bv t ffi^. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ M wardrobe people smiled villain- of America's natural resources Fountain City . Two bigger crap- rump patch in the mule elected at the annual meeting In the Winona Public Schools. at Maple Grove Country Club, former President Dwight D. Ei- ously. They made the swim to be exhausted.—Quote. pies have been entered in the deer. The mule deer also A slate of officers will be pre- senhower on a television pro- suits long—but also transparent, "My shorthand and typing Sportsman's contest this season. has larger ears and larger West Salem. He was vice pres- sented by the nominating com- ident last year. gram Sunday, but he believes and. when wet, clingy and tight- have improved so much." a Harry Cichosz got a two-pound , musk glands along the out- mittee and the election will he he can "best serve my party fitting. Seeing this result , Ford pretty secretary boasted, "that fiveounce one and Richard Kon- side of the hind legs than Group 7 Includes the southern held. Members of the nominat- and my country as a construc- threw the swim scene out en- soon I won 't have to wear those kel , a two-pound, 11-ounce crap- does the white-tail. half of Buffalo, Jackson and ing committee are Henry Wur- tive critic." He said he plans tirely. low-cut dresses any more." pie. Trempealeau counties in addi- as, chairman; Robert Prondzin- 3ncfeirt3|ac . . . "Those who believe they have tion to La Crosse about ore speech a month and "One naked scene a year is That's earl , brother. , Monroe, Ver- ski , Jule Gernes, Franklin Till- will continue to write articles on Charter Member Night seen or shot a mule deer are non, Crawford , Juneau and man , James Mauszyck i , Wil- AMERICA'S Old-timers in the Izaak Wal- asked to notify a local represen- Adams counties. < liam Galewski and Charles Ku- current events but "there is no ' ton League will have an op- d e v i o us conspiratorial plan LARGEST SELLING 6 YEAR OLD \ N \ "ssu- tative of the Game and Fish las. thereby to become a candi- |s1L JL L J " •* portunity to tell tall "1-remem- Division. Hunters should save A lunch prepared by John KENTUCKY BOURBON T m Buys Athens date. " A MaaMM MHaHM aa M^ HMMiMi ia Mai Haa '" 'l ZZXZ WED. ber-Will-Dilg " tales at a charter the antlers if they shoot a buck Factory Janikowski , Gernes, Pronddn- member night Thursday eve- and retain the entire tail and WABASHA, Minn.-A. G. Kal- ski and Kulas will be served. ning. It will be at 8 p.m. at lower portion o( a hind leg to brenner has purchased a match HUIL the cabin on Prairie Island. factory In Athens , VAN SICKLE PROMOTED mZ) ^m.„,A A permit verification of a possi- , Greece with , -A White- Hotel . ble mule deer record." a branch at Salonika. Kalbren- WHITEHALL Wis. Wayne H. Olson , Minne hall native who has been -with Winona NEWMHN ner was with Diamond Match lr) W' NEW sota Commissioner of Con- Women ^^^ ! VOLUME 107, NO. — Roait Beat about- ^^^Q E^^^H PubllihBd dally except Saturday ond holl Open 12 noon te 9:00 p.m. Sliced Tomatoes Squash daya by Republican and Hernld PunlluY /^9PI^^H|^^^9aHfi^^^^^BIng Company, 401 Franklin St., Winona, STEAK SHOP , Pudding n0 m&n Minn. FRIDAY \ j m4$t^^K*K$i §^^^^' Z^m\mmmW NOON & EVENING '¦ ever though t J^SH^^B'^l'KtrW' SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' Our Famous Fish Smorj-j ashord. , (M f V ALL YOU CAN EAT ! I^ ^^^^H Sins'* Copy - 10c Dally, ISc Sunday •' Genuine Plke-Hacldock-Scallop n -flilJ 67lTv«red by Carrltr—Par w»«k 50 canti DINNERS quite this t\M WtmmmmwS ii^^i U waaka «*J,75 _ 51 weak* MS.50 mWm K^^'^l^mmmm\ papa r atop By mall atrlclly In advancai TUESDAY Served 5:30 p.m. pad on axplratlon date. 85c- 95c to 8:30 p.m. in Fliimora, Houston, Olmaled, Winona, Choice Steaks — Sea Food — Chicken Wabatha, Buffalo, Jack-.cn, Ptpln and Choico of soup or juice , ment Trampealaeu countlei: or fish. Choice of potatoes, MISSISSIPPI ROOM and COFFEE SHOP Itl' ~ ~" 1 ~ SATURDAY *~~~~~~~~~ ~+ ryiir . . . oo 3 monttn . »3 . M Choice of naiad or vegetahle or 1 i month! . . ti.X I montt. . . . II.U fello. Homemade rolls or Ladlei Nita! Choice Top Sirloin C| QC '¦ Adults $1.75 All other mall suharrlptlone: bread. Coffee or tea. Steak — n complete meal «pJLe»J3 — Children $1.00 1 yaar . . . 115 00 J rrvonthe . . W.II WVVT )„ t monXht . . . HOO 1 month . . . fl.40 ^^ ^X-U^^V-^ .VWJ Send changa ot addresi notlrri, unl ell v. TRY OUR PI«AS trad capias, tubscrlptlcm ordart and otliar Pecan Pio, Homemade Break- * Phon* in Yoor R«»trv«tlon I mall llema lo Winona Dally News, flo» »J, ».rVAR(M) HASIfiQWW-CUUDU (MMAIr-AfVOIIK AlMrf -SANDRA MIO Winona, Minn. f*»t Rolls and Donuts. Phont 8 MU 7-4341 I J Hotel , Winona lacend data poafaoe paid al Winona quarter ot this year, Last year's ill Must Be His | average was $394. Ten years ago the amount was $355. In Lucky Number | c****ti*%*i***^*******^-**^*s*ii^'+***.f mm\ \ m m^ ._* A. • ww ^viA^^wAAA^SA.- BOYLE'S COLUMN Barry Invites 1933, the per capita average WHITTIER , Calif. (AP) - ' was $86. But most of the ¦ Home Asks When Steve Shvibin had his 11th : increase reflects rises in the 1893 . f^ 1963 , Let Wife birthday party, it was predicta- costs of food over earlier years. n Criticism on ble that 11 persons would attend ' the celebration . British Industry Teach Everything comes up elevens Civil Rights for Steve. Parakeet WASHINGTON (AP )-If Sen. He was born on the 11th day Business Industry and- - Homes Be Barry Goldwater pitches his ex- of the 11th month at 11:11 p.m. , Modernized By HAL BOYLE | He's the 11th of 14 children of JEEP] By TOM OCHILTREE pected Republican presidential NEW YORK (AP)-Things a nomination campaign on a 1962 Harry and June Shubin. Associated Press Staff Writer columnist might never know if LONDON statement of GOP principles, he He lives at 6-11-6 S. Morrill ' (AP)-Prime Min- he didn 't open his mail: • : St. and he weighs 111 pounds, i Through America s Leading ister Sir Alec Douglas-Home's may invite fresh attacks on his If you're having trouble j civil rights stand. j Even his name has 11 letters. new Conservative government teaching your parakeet to talk .i ROCK embarked today on a crucial let your wife or child take over, i New York Gov. Nelson A. t—~ J struggle for victory in next The birds respond better to the Rockefeller, an announced can- Americans Buying .Insurance Companies year's general election with a higher-pitched voices of women ; didate for the nomination, re- call for modernization of British and children than they do to cently said he could support the ' More Food Products Arizona senator as the party's industry to get the full produc- men. j I WASHINGTON (AP ) tive benefits of standard bearer only "if he ran - Ex- 25* the age of auto- Back in 1836, America had a i Paid mation. on a party platform like the one ! penditures for food by Ameri- WINCNA INiUKANCE badly balanced federal budget. ! j cans has risen to a record high /^^\ The government , in Queen The Treasury wound up with a! in 1960." ' ' ; Goldwater, who has advocat- I per capita average of $399 a ' AG.ENCy Elizabeth's speech , from the surplus of $28 million. It solved; | year. ( jgBsr) . throne opening ed that the Republicans go be- ^ . .. . n ^ jl,..- J INSURANCE QUESTION? - ASK US1 the .new session this embarrassing situation by; I WESTERN of Parliament, also announced fore the voters in 1964 with a Agriculture Department stud- || ¦^ ' : refunding the money to the 26 ies said this average reflected ^i a \^^ 774 Center St. Phon« 33W ! plans for sweeping improve- states in the Union. general statement of principles At the End of Lafayette St. ments in social services. instead of a detailed platform, I spending for food in the second "There is only one way to replied that the 1962 statement The speech, written by Sir achieve happiness on this ter- ; superseded the I960 platform. ¦ ¦ Alec's Cabinet, promised to restrial ball, and that is to have j He indicated it was more to his ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ strive for world peace and "to either a clear conscience, or liking. none at all"—Ogden Nash. . ; I ¦ • ¦ -1 support the freedom of West " " . ¦¦ ' ¦ In a 1,500-word summary of P" • • .• . . . ' " " ' ' ^aw ij Berlin." Salt is an essential ingredient 1 J _ ' The queen's speech was read in cultivating pearls. If the salt views hammered out by a 12- ^ to a joint session of the House of content of the water falls too member Senate-House commit- Lords and the House of Com- low, the oysters die, if it is too tee headed by Rep. Melvin R. mons by the lord chancellor , high , the pearls turn golden , in- , Laird, R-Wis., the stand on civ- ^cB^Kte Lord Dilhorne. The queen has stead of developing the pinkish il rights was put this way : • r no i cl si r © canceled public appearances be- glow. "We believe that government c^^ cause she is expecting her Two 400-foot moving sidewalks must act to help establish con- fourth child. soon will be installed in the ditions of equal opportunity for As Parliament reopened, po- Metro, Paris subway, at a sta- all people and to help assure litical expectancy was higher tion near Notre Dame cathe- that no one is denied the requi- than at any time since the 1959 dral. sites for a life of dignity." general election. A classic con- Lady, if you want to keep The broad declaration ap- test seemed in the making be- your food costs low, don 't take proached the type of statement tween Douglas-Home, a 60-year- your husband with you to the Goldwater has been advocating old Scottish aristocrat who shed supermarket. His impulse buy- that the Republicans make in an earldom to succeed Harold ing adds about 9 per cent to 1964—one that could be inter- Macmillan, and the Labor par- your bill. preted by each individual candi- ty 's rapier-tongued , 47-year-old Little Denmark has one of the date as he chose. leader, Harold Wilson. world's highest suicide rates—22 per 100,000 persons, compared to This kind of statement conld Recent special elections and 10.5 for the United States and be extolled in the North as a public opinion polls indicate 2.5 for Ireland . Psychiatrists be- forthright civil rights declara- strongly that if national elec- lieve one cause is that Danes tion. It could be dismissed in tions were held today , the Con- are overprotected by their par- the South as little more than a 'i . f servatives would suffer a hu- ents during childhood. platitude. MAKE YOUR THANKSGIVING DAY A HAPPY, THANKFUL FAMILY DAY . . . AND MAKE IT A DAY OF EASE AND [ miliating defeat and Britain Men always are surprised at The Arizona senator has said LEISURE¦ ' WITH WORK-SAVING' AND TIME-SAVING FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCES. { would have a Labor govern- the contents of a woman's hand- he thinks there are adequate j ;¦ . . . . . ; ment for the first time since bag. Among the items the late laws on the books to take 'care COME IN SOON AND MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS AT THESE PRE-HOL1DAY PRICES . . . AND MAKE IT THE BEST i 1954 . Eleanor Roosevelt habitually of voting abuses. He thought an- j

' ¦ * | | ¦ THANKSGIVING EVER! f Douglas-Home is relying !»¦ ¦ oh a .. carried in hers were several other proposal to give the Pres- ¦ ¦ ¦ .; lavish program of housing and ¦ f- "short-snorter" bills, a card be- ident authority to withhold aid i . . - . ed uca tional expansion and in- queathing her eyes to an eye funds from states which fail to dustrial reform to reverse the bank, her driver's license—and desegregate was interesting,] anti-Conservative trend. Wilson a, pistol permit. but doubted that it was "either MODELS contends the government can 't constitutionally correct or mor- i ^mm^^c raise the money to make good The 80 million-plus inhabi- ally correct. NEW 1 964 | on its promises. tants of Indonesia speak a total \ In advance of the throne of 40 tongues. speech , Education Minister Sir It was David Starr Jordan Father, 4 Sons I Thrifty! FRIGIMIRE I Edward Boyle Monday night who observed , "Wisdom is \ */r| FRIGIDAIRE range with big I I \ announced a four-year expand- knowing what to do next; skill Die in Fire ed program of school construc- is knowing how to do it; virtue - feature-packed 10 . tion costing 80 million pounds is doing it." . CHICAGO (AP ) - A father ¦x&ti automatic oven at low price! $224 million a year. and his four small sons per- , ished Monday night in a fire Neg roes Planning that flashed through a West , Front Lawn Los Angeles Boycoft Side apartment. Three other , persons were reported hurt. j LOS ANGELES (AP) - The The dead were identified as Sinks Away national director of the Con- 1 Alfred Similton, 27, and his ! gress of Racial Equality says ' sons, Michael , 6. Anthony, 5,| ALHAMBRA , Calif. (AP) - his organization will launch a j Timothy , 3, and Ken, 2, all Ne- ! "We were sitting on the front I Christmas boycott of Los Anss- ' groes. les stores that practice discrim- J porch when all of a sudden a i ¦[ big patch of lawn started to ,' ination in employment. move, then dropped out of Boycotts of chain stores that Dynamite Cap in | sight," a housewife declared. | practice discrimination will be- ' "Nothing has ever happened i gin on a national scale next f Pocket Explodes i Easter , Director J ames Farmer • to us in this house before," she ! ST. PAUL (AP) - A suburb- said Monday, "but when your j added. an Inver Grove man remained , front yard suddenly sinks 18 left ," she said . , in serious condition today with : , feet that's something." "But then we discovered that , injuries suffered when dynamite 1 Mrs. Esther Baker said the the bottom of the hole apparent- : caps exploded in his pocket. j hole appeared over the week- ly is the top of an old Indian or James Nitti , 48, was using a j end. Police were summoned . Spanish well. And that means torch to cut up scrap metal in , | \-,l ^i "-"T**"^ | 10,00 cu. ft, 4 colors or white "An officer looked into the hole, it could go down another 50 or his yard when the caps explod- luggested we fill it up. then 100 feet . " ed Sunday. I I x ' ... _. I • 56-lb. freezer chest has extra fast Ice cube t x I; I • Cook-Maste r automatic oven control minds oven 1 : J freezing. Two 18-cube ice trays. y i - cooking for you, frees you for other things ! I ' j .,^„. tr «,,. •, i! i • 15-lb. sliding chill drawer for.. *fresh meats*-—a-. r • Plenty of room for even large holiday tua-key f _ . . I 1 an Enamel,- because oven is a full . Full-w.d h Force _ vegetable Hydrator. 1 i/ ^mv. I 23" wide. 5 NOW ONLY I I - SLwr -*- NOW ONLY i -»E" I;. . Full-width storage drawer $17095 Ctf . AH shelves are full-width, , pans. aft aftQC I¦ #/ .#/ WT for pots 4>|UU7J , ful l-depth. • Space saving 30" width. I # # 5 I mmrn imm is I I ; ; 1 ? j |. i ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ w.\ .•;--;,¦;;>. .:;, ;.-.:.?\. ¦ ...... ;.. ..¦;. . A , - , ¦..;. ¦ vy :!yy, - -zy:!.^&!iyx ? ¦ I ' . . . - j

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Oldinnobiln^I^i'p ^popiilnrz-prii^irrf: m fltl n.vnmnic cushion or air. l v U2*l-inch whiwlliiiB« ami fmir- CERTIFICATE \ ^ l F ^ P rl \ i DIlH tho HOW l IPl QlHf HH P"l>"l'>i'' . »''"'• . lint NOW ONLYy ft UlIU lilu UtiVf UululOl UU mil-aprinK riil n urn only a mlnrturl) Now Irnl- Easy-reach, no-stoop \Art lli *^^ ui\ ' M screen on door. ...to bo used for ' ,ii , . / r lit drive (lie Jetatnr HH - tirwrttl , low«'«f-|iric«Kl HH I'WB RlBj ^Tptl merchandise purchase \ r^i^i^ i S XN\/\ ! • Won't snag delicate \% T Ij Q j j istnelowest In nGeflotaill a.*10 cubic inch™ of hrnnd nnw .Irtfiro Rocket 0 ^ ^M.^^-^.^^y^.^ fabricsl Porcelain I ^\^ in any deportment. * A^^p- ** ATv V-R! Which l» for you? Hnsi your OlHi D«ala>rl W ; / Enameled drum is | ^JJ Jr \\ ¦ l\x smooth as glass. .. _ . . . . „...... „ ...... x^yirfW ,. .WHini THI tenon w ° No Tradt RtquirtaB r f j CrUI \ ytiii rout xocAt mirnotizio oxoiitoiiLi ouAinr DiAin j, ..a.* ALA * ^e>JJif ^>^ Ait I \ \J WESTERN MOTOR SALES, 225 W. 3rd St. . • fUtSDAY NIOHTt • CIS-TV I . , D0N T MISS IHI AWAKD-WINNIN8 'CAIIRV MOOm JHOW" ¦ ¦ mmm^iyi^tiXiX ..y„ -i:: ¦:-.«¦ :.* \:t.r.. ..;. '.>ja-flBg8im..W*g**Tra ¦' . •- "- '; ^. ^ ' ; V ^T^^^ .^v.wJi^a^iiivS^*^^ Ibsen's drama, Ghosts, with Judith Evelyn What Just One College as guest star. ANY TIME THINGS GET DULL IN MOSCOW TODAY IN WORLD AFFAIRS As might be expected, one of the ma- Means to Winona jor factors in the production's success was the performance of Miss Evelyn in the cen- THE RECENT advertiiemtnt of tha trol role of Mrs. Alving. Not only did she Back Down or Northern Natural Gas Co. in Time maga- play with illuminated intensity and re- zine emphasized the educational "part of markable range of clearly etched detail, living" in Winona. This prompted the St. but she gave a fascinating demonstration Fight Edict Mary's College Development Office to con- of how a leavening of skilled, gifted profes- duct a survey on —- "What has been the sionalism can inspire a student cast to rise By DAVID LAWRENCE impact of St. Mary's College on Winona to a fine level of achievement. WASHINGTON — A most sensational revelation has during the scholastic year, 1962-63? What just been made by Premier Krushchev. He tells the world does it mean to the community at the mo- THE OTHER MAJOR factor lay in th« that at any moment a war could break out between the ment, and what does the future hold for perceptively able direction of Dorothy B. United States and the Soviet Union, inasmuch as the Russian St. Mary's and Winona?" Magnus and her long experience in stag- military commanders on the Berlin Highway can decide for ing arena-style production at Winona. The themselves to open fire on Allied troops and vehicles. DURING THE 1962-63 scholastic y«ar- realism of the treatment, essential to lb- This state of affairs would normally be protected against sen's social dramas, was projected sound- a dangerous climax by diplomatic intervention, but Mr. $469,000 was paid in salaries and wages. ly and multi-directionally outside the pros- Khrushchev apparently have given discretion to subordinate they cenium , arch with perfect naturalness and officers to shoot if $521,000 is invested in homes by facul- regula- even a heightened effectiveness . construe existing comes as a big surprise to ty and staff people. tions about access to Ber- many people who had been There is, of course, little shock value lin to be challenged. He led to believe that the sign- $28,000 was paid In rent by college em- left in such subjects as syphilis and incest indicates that, irrespective ing of the nuclear test-ban ployes. which rocked theater-goers of Ibsen's day of the facts, he will blame treaty and the prospective forces for to their boot soles. And the social attitudes the United States sale of wheat to the Rus- $183,000 was spent for goods and serv- having .provoked the fight- sians had established a kind N seem quite far away now. ices by l,000 resident students. ing. of "euphoria ," or at least Still the dramatist s basic message of The Soviet Premier per- a spirit of mutual under- $264,000 was spent by the college for ¦ the pervasive importance of love in its wid- mitted an unedited version standing or restraint. To- ' ¦ ' . " ¦ ' day the remarks of Pre- food. . . est sense has cogency. of his remarks to a group of American businessmen to mier Khrushchev stand be- $22,000 for other supplies. And his dramatic structure, the sure de: be released without any fore the world as a disclos- his extreme ure of the strategy and $81,000 for utilities, maintenance sup- lineation . of character, and the savage pow- modification of er of his writings from a deep sense of out- statements. This is unusual. tactics of the dictator hi the lies and service. asked : Kremlin. His latest words rage keeps a piece like Ghosts very much One of the visitors "Are you saying that if will be widely construed as ALSO DURING THE 1962-63 scholastic alive. ' we cannot agree over pro- an effort to bluff the Unit- year — , I BELIEVE IT IS no reflection on th« cedure on the autobahn ed States into getting out an or- a i 1,708 students were enrolled - in the Wenon'ah Players to say that without Miss that you would give of Berlin. He may have regular and summer sessions. : der that would result in come to believe that nu- Evelyn the production would have rattled shooting and possible clear war is feared so much ¦ ¦ b) The opening of school brought an es- around in the Guthrie Theater considera- war?" ' ' ' • in America that almost any timated 500 parents to Winona for a day or bly. But with her, -the work of Miss Mag- To this, Mr. Khrushchev step which could possibly two. nus and the way the cast rose to meet the replied as follows: become an involvement in challenge and the inspiration of Miss Eve "No, we gave no such or- war will be avoided , and c) Freshman Parents' Weekend at- lyn's presence, the drama filled the thea- der but there is an estab- that concessions will be tracted 575 guests. ter admirably with its power. lished procedure ... it is made to the Communists. a matter of a soldier being Recently a "hot line" was d) 12 conferences, workshops and con- Joe Coburn as the hollow, time-serving a soldier. He has opera- installed between the White ventions held at St. Mary's brought 1,200 Pastor Manders and William Zenker as the tional instructions and if House and the Kremlin to visitors to Winona. doomed Osvald Alving turned in very cred- someone wants to break permit instantaneous com- itable performances, and others of the stu- through , then it is in the munication in a crisis. But e) Two major drama productions THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND that dent cast — Richard Timm as Jakob and natural course of things if the Soviet troops have brought 700 out-of-town patrons. force will be met by force. Maria Hogetveit as Regina —: were not far been given orders to fire getting, behind . "IT IS something that Is without in touch fi Quarterly meetings of the Advisory with the Kremlin itself , it and Alumni Boards brought 300 people to based on standing orders . A soldier is not a foreign is conceivable that blood- Winona. Fights shed will occur long before Hard enter Quie for cannot minister. He any "hot line" g) Commencement exercises in JuiJ into negotiations and he has could be put IN YEARS GONE BY to carry out his orders. to use. brought 750 people to Winona for the week- It would appear that noth- end. That is the law both for Ten Years Ago . . 1953 our soldiers and for yours. ing is more important now hi Although Homecoming activities are Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Otis, of Otis Lodge, US. Aid to Colleges "They (the Americans ) for the United States gov- ernment than to have a held on campus over 400 alumni and wives Grand Rapids , Minn., are guests of Mr. and By DREW PEARSON Peter Frehnghuysen, N.J., "I have always opposed made an attempt to ignore Mrs. R. M. Tolleson. Charles Goodell, N.Y., Re- federal aid to religious the established procedure. clear - cut understanding spent a weekend in Winona. WASHINGTON-The Sen- with the Soviet Union as Eight Rotarians will represent VVinona at ate is in for a battle this publicans ; with John Bra- schools, because I believe it Thus our armored trucks to i) Cultural contributions to the commu- the annual meeting of the 174th Rotary Club week over $1.2 million of demas, Ind., Carlton Sick- to be unconstitutional , and I came out of concealment to what it intends to do in the di- area around Berlin and to included: Candlelight dinner, Concert district at the Calhoun Beach Hotel , Minneap- rect federal aid to church les, Md., and Sam Gibbons, do not intend to change my bar the way and then the nity ascertain whether Khrush- Chorus at Winona High School auditorium , olis. Thev are S. J. Pettersen , president, Jolin and Catholic colleges. Fla. position now." protested the American and British Woodworth, Dr. C. R. Koliofski , C. D. Tearse chev has actually instruct- two major drama productions, 12 lecturers Last year the Senate held On the Senate side, Jen- Alabaman. "I consider this agreed to observe the es- and Walter Grimm. Mmes. Pettersen, Wood- ' procedure. ed his military forces to fire and four visiting concert artists. out all summer in opposition nings Randolph, D-W.Va , at compromise unconstitution- tablished worth and Koliofski will accompany their hus- to outright grants to church one time threatened angrily al, whether or not there are "It is. difficult to say upon American forces j) 750 prospective students and their bands. colleges. Though it was will- to walk out of the closed- categorical limits on feder- What would have happened whenever the latter do not act in . accordance parents visited the College and Winona for ing to vote loans to denom- door conference unless the al aid." if they had not agreed to with procedures "establish- a day or two. Twenty-Five Yea r Ago . . . 1938 inational colleges , it was not House abandoned its "open Sen. Barry Goldwater , R- that. It is possible that you Freddie Fischer of Winona and his aggre- willing to vote outright gifts , purse policy" toward Catho- Ariz., who wandered in and and I would not be here to- ed" unilaterally by the So- k) Winter Sports Weekend and the gation of slap-happy Schnickelfritzers now ap- on the ground that this was lic colleges. out of the closed-door meet- day. We would not have viets. It would seem desir- able Spring Festival brought over 350 guests to pearing at the St. Paul Hotel for the second in violation of separation of ing but seldom stayed long yielded and they would have , too, to set up a ma- HE DID SO even when chinery for immediately re- Winona. ' week. They will be featured next at the "Vil- church and state. All sum- enough to participate in the had to move over our dead mer long the Senate ahd the House wanted to vote bod ies." solving any conflicts in un- lage Barn" in New York for a long stand outright grants to church discussion , nodded his li 76 percent of St. Mary 's 1963 graduat- House fought over this with The American version of derstanding about "establis- Five performances of the Luenen Passion colleges , regardless of agreement with Hill. ing class planned to continue their educa- Play which is performed in the Black Hills of the Senate refusing to the autobahn incident is hed" procedures. budge. whether the money went for Morse pointed out that that it was the Soviets who tion in graduate or professional schools. South Dakota, are planned for Winona. Hill himself had supported But this year , the Senate teaching religious subjects. departed from the "estab- JUST IN TIME Sen. Wayne Morse D-Ore., federal funds for church- ml 21 members of the class received switched — provided the , lished" procedure. This is Fifty Years Ago . . . 1913 joined Randolph in arguing controlled medical schools. graduate awards in the form of scholar- aid to colleges bill contain- the kind of argument that ANDOVER, Conn. Wl—The John A. Thrune has been appointed a clerk that if outright grants were new town building was con- ships or assistantships. ed an amendment for a "That's special , " replied normally is threshed out by at the post office and will take up the work court test of the constitu- to be voted they must be for Hill. the foreign offices and the structed just -in time. of Fred Schaefer 's position , Mr. Schaefer hav- teaching the sciences, lan- AS OF TODAY — tionality of aid to church in- diplomats, but the Khrush- The State Board of Health ing resigned. guage and physical "VOU can 't wipe out the stitutions. The amendment , educa- chev statement indicates ruled that the 70-year-old $4,946 ,694 has been invested in buildings Anthony Spola and sister left for Palermo , introduced by Sen. tion . Morse was so eloquent constitution by saying clearly that the Soviet Town Hall had to be clos- Sicily. Sam Er- on campus. vin. D-N".C , was adopted 45 that Rep. Quie interrupted 'that's special ,' " Morse re- troops are under "opera- ed because it had no sani- to 33. with syrupy sarcasm: torted. He argued that if it t i o n a 1 instructions" to tary facilities after the out- 57 families, of lay faculty and staff peo- Seventy-^Five Years Ago . . . 1 888 There followed a closed- "We know the senator is a is unconstitutional to grant shoot whenever they them- houses burned down recent- ple, are home-owners, or tenants , who . are Some stained glass trimmings have been door argument between the distinguished lawyer and government money to a selves wish to deviate from ly- paying taxes , buying food , clothing, fuel , placed on the large front window of the library House and law teacher , but we can't Catholic college for a phys- the customary procedure > ics course , automobiles, appliances, insurance , enter- building and some very tasty inside decorations the Senate. follow your reasoning." then it should be and the Allied forces in re- WRONG MOOD unconstitutional to grant tainment , etc in wood are being put up. This year , "It isn t my fault that the sponse attempt to maintain Silas Braley, being obliged to leave for the the Senate class isn 't paying atten- funds for a medical course. their own rights. MINNEAPOLI S :;—.pu? financially inde- and will enter upon his duties January 1. i n s t ead of Then he patiently repeated for medical institutions mind the mood music ,' but up could be devised to pendent frjrr. * 'r.c- t:'.'.e:e Their operation- holding out his explanation. were not used for "'propaga- he didn 't like the loud- Quie , bring on a war. If shoot- al expenses are r.v. :r.: '.' uded in this re- One Hundred Years Ago . . . 1863 as they did 's sarcasm on top of tion of the faith. " Aid to speaker falling on his head. the interminable wrangling, Catholic colleges, on the ing starts, there will not be He brought suit for $25,000 p r >r : The official canvass of Winona County 's last year , caved in to shattered Sen. Randol ph's contrary, he said, were for time to argue afterwards against a restaurant where election shows Mr. Dixon was elected to the patience. propagation of the faith. just who departed from the LOOKING AHEAD — house of representatives and Mr. Randall and t h e House it happened and against in 36 hours. "Mr. Chairman ," he blurt- "established" rules. But the firm that installed the Mr. Hall chosen countv commissioners. "Here I am certainly in now everybody' knows that The futur e building program calls for- They adopt- ed , "I would like to make a the minority, " he added , speakers. e d the Pearson statement." the Soviet military forces A new field house by 1964 . . $680 ,000 hinting that he didn 't think have been told to shoot House proposal of outright he would be in the minority gifts to Catholic colleges HE RECALLED that last when challenged. Mr. A new student center. 1965 ,, . . $600 ,000 , on the Senate floor. ' not loans. Thev also agreed year the House had approv- Khrushchev s policy ap- ed specific grants for non- In the end . Hill and Gold- pears to be to seek grad- Meet Me 3' iiif arts building 1966 S425 to drop the Ervin amend- .O00 Try and Stop Me relig ious courses , not blank water refused to sign the ually to impose more and ment providing for a court conference report . Hill also New dormitory $300 , 000 test on separation of church "¦ checks to colleges. If cate- more restrictions until the -By Bl.'NNETT CKIIF . gorical grants were good cast the proxy of the absent Allied force s have been Face to Face and state. Sen. Ralph Yarborough , D- Remodeling by 1970 $500 , 000 The compromise — which enough for the House a year driven out of the Berlin John Straley at last is convinced that all ago , he demanded , why did Tcx,, against the report. area altogether. MISCELLANEOUS — Sen. bister Hill , D-Ala., this talk he 's boen hearing about women calls a surrender — was the House oppose them Mr. Khrushchev views it taking ovor control in this land now? SOUNDS LIKE TRUTH as a test of nerves. He Members of the faculty and administra- of ours is worked out in advance by Ihe real McCoy, lie overheard two little Speaker John McCormack , He made it clear that he says: tive staff are active in numerous commu- TOLEDO , Ohio (AP) "Evidently it must be a girls quarreling one day last week. Shrill- whom his fellow Bostonian , had opposed all aid to Cath- — nity organizations. The college operates a Sign on a loan company of- test of nerves on your part. ed ono of them . "My mother ean lick your President Kennedy, some- olic schools until Morse 's speakers ' bureau composed of faculty persuasive arguments had fice: When you decided to test &nSkUSw^S^^ mother!'' times calls the "Bishop of J^swK^^sV^^^K JS6& "Don 't many for money our nerves, we decided in members who arc available for talk s a*. changed his view , but that lo * * Boston. " .schools, organizations , and service groups. it was still all right with . . . borrow it , it 's cheaper. " response to put our armor- Kustace Johnson , of Alabama , explain- IN THK past fivr years, ¦ 1 r v Liaison officers are appointed for Civil De- him to drop the whole ques- ed cars across the auto- .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,K^alHlB&' "* 0 ,(l(KI of ly at the opening the relations between whether you measure from you '.'" can get somewhere. " of a new the the stand point this amount . What I h e y park lake. A one-pound bass Soviet Union and the Unit- of economics , education or cultural im- ¦ Stung by Randolph' s re- want is outright grants , as buke , the House conferees performed a ceremonial ed States have reached a pact . St. Mary 's College is a community now agreed to by In whom w« have i-rdmi-pCion through hln the House- held n hurried huddle nnd first bite and Schansberg point where any instruc- asset of immeasurable value just a.s aro Mood, even the forgiveness <> ( Senate closed-door confere- reeled it in. tors have to be issued to sins. Col. 1:11, onco announced their willingness the College of Saint Teresa and Winona to negotiate . They beat down the respective milit ary The House conferees who State Colleee . the Senate 's demand , how- TIMINC' THE TWILIGHT forces of these two coun- battled for grants without a ever, that church-school aid tries to "test nerves." and get complete information court lest were led hy Hep. WICHITA , Kan. Meanwhile, bo hold up until the courts i* — Tho the United on our low-cost WINONA DAILY NEWS Adam Clayton Powell , the decided the constitutional Kansas Highway Patrol dai- States, France and Great Harlem globe-trotter An Independent Newspaper —¦ Established l.S'.'i.T , a n d question. The Ervin amend- ly broadcasts the time the Britai n have explicitly WHAT OTHERS THINK Mrs. Kdith Croon of Port- ment was then knocked out. sun sets. charged in a formal note Sportsmen's W F. W HITE H. R, C I .OSWAY (' . E. L INDKN land , Oro . both Democrats. "Officers bave to know , " lhat the Soviet commander Publisher Exec. Director Husiness Mgr , The Ilepublican who fought SKiV, KILL continued '. Guthrie Theater is by John li. Harvey, Pays $5,0C0 tor accidental Pioneer Press staff writer.) Wll-I.IAM II. KlNtil.lSH ColtDON IIOl.TK d«nth plus $500 for accident Comptroller Sunday Editor medical payments ... for THE WENONAH Player, of Winoni at little $4.00 yearly. MKMI1KII OF TIIE A.S.SOI'JA'I KI) I'll KM a* State College scored a "first" and a suc- cess Saturday night in the Tyrone Guthrie "HcES***1 Theater. STENEHJEM The Associated Press is enlitled oxoluslvHy As the first collego drama oi* f*uni/alloii to the use for republication of all the local Insurance Agency to appear In the theater, the Wenonali news printed in Litis newspaper as well a.s all 209 Eflst Broadway , 1'layer.s mounted and performed an excep- A.I' news dispatches. Front Entrance Phone tionally clean and effective production of Tuesday, November 12, 1 D63 3289 LAKE PEPIN FARM BUREAU : fefltlarion 'c*aoruw, *ill na LAKE CITY , Minn. (Special ) shown. A potluck lunch will ba Want to Think served. About Winter Weather? —Robert Passe will be guest ¦ By GEORGE McCORMICK average three degrees warmer last year's, you could save 10 storm and some more tell us; we speaker at the Lake Pepin Farm cold begins cheerfully. "Winter gusts can take it. If A glass measuring cup for Daily News Staff Writer than last year's. That, Old Abe percent on your home heating weather. there ' Bureau Unit meeting at 8:30 make woolies musts," he con- s going to be a storm we liquids has a spout , one for dry You may not need your wool- adds, is 2.5 degrees warmer bill. Butv shucks, that' want to know. 't , p.m. Friday. A film from the s nothing tinues, following with "Clear And if there isn Sister Elizabeth Kenny Reha- ingredients has a plain rim. ies this winter . . , at least not than „ the average over the last DECEMBER, according to when yoa look at JANUARY. and fair means travelers be- why worry' us? if the Old Parmer's Almanac 70 years, and it's 1.6 degrees the almanac, which was releas- The rhyming predictions for ware," and "Cold and raw , this is right. Abe is much more forthright above the normal over the past ed just over a week ago, won't the first month of 11)64 make January thaw." when it comes to the beginninbg Abe Weather-wise, genial 172- 20 years. be such a bad month at all. it sound like a good time to Thaw? of APRIL. Even though many- year-old weather prophet for That may not sound like much A cold spell along about the go south, hibernate, or just 've managed to live birds are returning and "The the publication (which If we , coinci- to you, but Abe—ever a prac- second week of the month is plain hide under the bed. , we should be shad are back ," we're going to dentally, also through all this is 172 years old) tical man—points out that, if called for , and that's supposed "In this moon phase comes in good condition for what the get it in the neck. "Two says the coming winter will fuel prices are the same as to be followed by a "big snow and hard ice glaze,'' Abe almanac tells us the end of weather breeders hatched this January will be like: "Alas, no coffin feeder , " the almanac tells luck , another storm to buck." us grimly. We don't know what No Racy Goings-On Remember — this winter is it's going to be, but it's going Editors Will supposed to save you 10 percent to be bad. pn your fuel bill. O K SOMEHOW, all of this detail- \CYOUR REMINGTON6 SHAVER After the big storm at the \\I end of January, we turn to FEB- ed weather information doesn't J Hear Rocky at RUARY and find Old Abe ready seem to jibe with Abe's assur- } /^^M\ CLEANED Northwest College s with another happy note. "Hel- ance in his general forecast I ter-skelter , three big storms al- that this winter will be milder * most together," -he chirps. than last year's. j I-fRRl & , • OILED ? Florida Rally That's to be followed with " a Still , there's always the "if" BAL HARBOUR, Fla. (AP)- real cold spell ," in which , as if mentioned above. Old Abe has {'¥*¦¦ ADJUSTED i Top news executives from Given Clean Slates we need to be told , "fuel bills been wrong. For example, last §* throughout the country will By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS of times a year, with super- violation of these rules of con- swell."- week was supposed to be colder NOW than the beginning of the month. Iiiii l question Nelson A. Rockefeller ¦ As • the dispute rages over vision. duct," says Gerald Hammerlik , When it finally is supposed to ? \ I f 7CA 2 when the New York governor Main rule on such occasion: dean of men at the University warm Up, along about the end Oh well , if the almanac's I ^ ONLY jfJV I addresses The Associated Press racy goings-on in Harvard •dor- doors open. of North Dakota. . of February , there's small com- weather predictions don't al- While-You-Waif mitory rooms. Northwest college Campus officials say they ways work out, you still can get * f Managing Editors convention Mrs . Henry Linde, operator oi fort. "Milder but even wilder." SERVICE Regular Charge $1.50 Wednesday. officials are unanimous in giv- have had no major problems a privately - owned dormitory the almanac says. some good out of the book. tf ^ About 500 editors are expect- ing a clean slate to students in and that the open houses have that serves Rochester Junior After all this, MARCH looks Where else can you get ed to participate in the five-day these parts. been very successful. College, says men are permit- as if it will provide compara- "home tested " recipes for APME meeting starting Tues- However, a spokesman for the Slump and Grunt and that old ONE DAY ONLY ! i Harvard Dean John U. Mun- ted in rooms only on special tive balminess. All we'll have J day at the Americana Hotel. student branch of the Minnesota open house occasions. Otherwise to contend with will be: favorite, Crunch'' WED., NOV. 13TH (Gordon R. Closway, execu- ro said last wetk that univer- Civil Liberties Union com- partying is confined to the main * £ sity regulations permitting men "Hail on the tail of a snowy tive editor of the Winona Daily plained recently that university floor lounge area where parties gale;" HOTEL WINONA tf and Sunday News and president students to entertain women in officials have barged into rooms often last until 1 a.m. f to their rooms hau resulted in wild "in search of liquor and girls." "Rainy and wet , spring is not «^ Room 142 — 9 A.M. 8 P.M. W of the Minnesota Newspaper yet; " Association, is attending the parties and sexual promiscuity. "Nothing out of line so far, convention.) The University of Minnesota At the University of North Da- not a bit of trouble." Mrs. Linde "Drivers beware, bad spring ? kota students have had a voice , I I Rockefeller, who will address has two co-educational dormi- said. glare " and i¦ Remington's factory representative from ¦ in setting up co-educational vis- again, ¦ a luncheon, has agreed to sub- tories on its Minneapolis cam- Her main puzzle, she said, is "Snows that's plain." -^y ^y \T St. Paul will be here to serve you. iting hours. Dorm visits are us- ¦ ¦ 'Um' ^ 1 Transparent mit to questions from the floor. pus without undue problems. trying to figure out the 25 hours The only really worrisome bit ^ ually confined to the lounge and is a cryptic note for the mid- p|as,ic £¦ WHILE-YOU-WAIT SERVICE The governor is a candidate for Girls and boys are housed tn a week in which Harvard per- i¥? ^ 'ir ^ recreational hours during noon dle of the month: "111 betides M Factory Parts, CotnpkrU , Factory the 1964 Republican presiden- separate wings mits female -visitors in male ST RM Rep*in Prtew J of Bailey and and evening dinner periods. students' rooms. any storrn riding the Ides. " tial nomination. Pioneer Hails, but have com- wk&'A f "In my seven years in student l Does that mean that there INDOW° mon dining and lounge rooms. , "That's ah average of 3 i W •^ Remington owners onl who bring * Florida Associated Press personnel work to my knowl- will be a storm, or just that sB E y, 1* fktir Shaver, Open houses are held a couple edge, there hasn't been a single hours a day — when on earth fc^J newspapers will be conven- do they get their studying if there would be one it would tion hosts. Aside from the 36" *72" . H *•» done?" be bad? Or is Abe saying that Funic S«l*i * *t»»l Mouioixa •* J*N*H1 ¦ Division of'Sperry Rand Corporation ¦ Rockefeller appearance, the there might be a storm? mn to titer OM convention will Frank J. Hood At Duluth , University of Min- concentrate on Youth Killed in That prediction , is contribut- N 113 First Nat'l Bk. Bldg., St .. Paul, Minnesota y .p the newspaper nesota men's dorm rooms are + industry itself Dead at La Crosse ing to the anxiety of an already and how to improve it. open to women from 2 to 5 p.m Ji. Q.CDWL Hoffman Accident LA CROSSE, Wis. w-v—Frank anxious nation . C'mon , Abe, The agenda includes more Sundays, with infrequent use of than 40 speakers and panelists, HOFFMAN, M inn. (AP) - J. Hood , former board chair- the privilege. Liquor is forbid- Co., all specialists in various phases James Hagedorn , 20, Evans- man of the Trane who re- den on the campus, as at most tired in September died Mon- ' ' ' : , others. ¦ • ' ' ¦ ' ' ' of newspapering. ville, Minn., died in an accident . . . i Monday while he was helping to day after an extended illness. Among theni are Mason The 77^year-old industrialist A student judiciary board dismantle a gas station grease which deals with visiting or. li- Walsh of the Phoenix Gazette, pit. joined Trane In 1920. APME president, and Wes Gal- Survivors i n c 1 u d e his son quor violations hasn 't had a ma- lagher, Associated Press gener- The pit was to be moved to Wayne, a long-time Republican jor case in more than 18 al manager. another location here and Hag- leader. Funeral services were months. APME citations to 42 newspa- edorn was in the hole, handing held this morning at Christ "We have no scandals here, pers, radio and television sta- cement blocks up to other work- Episcopal church. thank goodness," said Mrs. tions for outstanding coverage men. Apparently blocks piled Grace Evans, chief housemother in various fields of news report- along the edge of the pit fel l a i UMD. She feels there is less ing will be presented by Paul V, and the pit caved in , burying St. Charles Board trouble by being lenient. Miner of the Kansas City Star , Hagedorn. ST. CHARLES, Minn. - The UMD women over 21 have chairman of the member cita- Other workmen uncovered St. Charles school board meet- dorm keys, others must be in tions committee. Hagedorn quickly but he was ing will be Thursday at 8 p.m., by midnight Sunday through dead. A doctor said death was postponed to this date from last Thursday and by 2 a.m. on When a holiday recipe calls due to a skull fracture, which Tuesday. Further discussion of weekends. Violators are con- for a jigger of liquor, you are apparently resulted from being the St. Charles school versus fined to their rooms one night safe in adding lVz to 2 ounces. hit by one of the heavy blocks. an area school is expected. Men's hours are not regulated. BIGGEST OCTOBER IN RAMBLER HISTORY! Fastest Start Ever For Another All-lime Record-Breaking Sales Year

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He WASHINGTON — Pres- WASHINGTON Gen. ident Kennedy will hold a news ret., In Pepin Pa rk was tie first to build brush Tax Filing Fee John R. Hodge, a decorat- Touring Company in conference at 11 a.m. ( ed hero of the Pacific fighting PEPIN, Wis. — The anchor wing dams to aid navigation EST ) from the "Phil Scheckel," low water. Thursday, the White House an- in World War 11, died today in j nounced today. New Law Is Walter Reed Army Hospital. He! Back in Action steamboat which plied the Chip- In 1861 Scheckel built the Taken Off Books was 70. pewa River many years during "Golden Star ," another Chippe- This will be Kennedy' ! first 1 j the last half of the 19th cen- His daughter , morning news conference since MADISON, Wis. UR-Wiscon- He had been a patient at the GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. UU— wa River boat. sin 's $2 income tax filing fee The Holiday on Ice touring tury, has been presented to the Mrs. Kathryn Brisson, lives at March 6. hospital since Nov. 6. Anderson law , designed to raise $6.8 mil- company, shaken by disaster in village of Pepin by Mrs. Fred j Chippewa Falls. Ben Tough on Jury Retired since 1953, he had Milliren, Durand. i was engineer on the "Phil lion in new revenue, has been made his home at Fayetteville. Indianapolis 13 days ago, was It has been placed in the Pep- ] Scheckel. " NEW YORK — This new law, which makes determination of ¦ Frequent Stomach both guilt and choice of execution the duty of the jury is, to my wiped from the law books. N.C. back on its blades here today in park , with a plaque identi- 1 mind a bad law, and. much too rough on the citizen who did Gov. John W. Reynolds signed Hodge was awarded the Airi as a crowd-pleasing, profession- fying it. i Acid Distress? al entertainment unit. Mondovi Man Named not sign articles to become a professional Solomon. The law , in a bill Monday repealing the con- Medal after World War II for The Phil Scheckel was built ! ...THEN YOU NEED daring solo reconnaissance ¦ - M. N. Ol- effect this year for the first time, calls for the jury first to troversial measure before il A test-of-metfc-le performance in 1880. After its service on the j MONDOVI, Wis. and then to vote flights over enemy territory in, Chippewa it was sold to Stand- 1 son , elementary principal in the vote for guilt or innocence in capital crimes, was generally collected. He said Monday night went off without again for life or death for the , the Philippine Islands at a time ; a hitch before a near-capacity ard Oil Co. and used off Flori- ' Mondovi School system, has he was "delighted" to sign the * Buffalo County condemned. ' ing dinner than deciding wheth- when he was a corps command-j crowd of 3.200 persons at Civic da 's coast. . I been named er. chairman of annual Brother- MOR Nobody I ever heard wants ! bill which went through both Auditorium. Phil Scheckel was said to be er a man lives or dies. , Feb. 16-23. 11 you miliar tnqtMntir fan ¦tamada) jury duty of any sort. It is, ! houses of the Legislature last It was the first time for the the oldest and best known pilot ' hood Week acid di-itress, you need mors than an their estimates of anticipated ordinary alkalizer. You need the of course, the citizen 's duty to j I THINK it is morally wrong week by almost unanimous unit to appear in public since sustained relief thousands of people votes. revenue by about $25 million.: Oct. 31, when a gas-triggered are now getting from MOR. MOR i» heed the call ; it is not the to make a professional out of citizen 's duty to afflict his sleep The $2 foe was made part of As a result, the $2 fee, which ! explosion ripped the Indianapo- a demulcent bismuth formula thai an amateur , with human life coata the stomach wall , protecting with the knowledge that he and i the budget-tax compromise en- drew criticism from the electo- lis Fairgrounds Coliseum. The 9 a.m. through 5 p.m. areas Irritated by excess stomach acid, at stake, to make a Solomon rate throughout the state, was DR. C. R. KOLLOFSKI thus promoting; natural healing. Tha 11 other good men and true ! acted last August. At that time explosion killed 71 spectators, MOR formula ia based on an original out of a citizen. And I also the first levy to be cut from 1 s»twday 9 to 12-30 sent a man off to fry. It.is too ' it was described by the gover- the latest victim dying in a hos- DR . M AX L. DEBOLT prescription used eucteastully lot think that there will be so much many years in the treatment of cer- much a burden on the nonpro- nor as a last ditch move to the tax bill. pital Monday, and injured about tain types ot gastric disorders. Get fessional, miscarriage .of justice, as jur- b a 1 a n c e anticipated revenues Reynolds said with the antici- 380 others. both prompt and sustained relief from i • Optometrist * ¦tomach acid distress with MOR I In the case of Francis Bloeth , j ors bend over backward not with budget spending in the pated $25 million surplus, the! It took guts, but we made it ," ¦ to bring in a "guilty" verdict , .1963-65 biennium. $2 filing fee and some other a girl skater commented in the THIRD AND \f AIN STS. 0 PHONE 6850 - 3631 INSIST ON MOR convicted of first degree mur- ' der in the slaying of a Long that the law will be soon and Since August, however, tax new taxes could be eliminated wings after the Mardi Gras FROM YOUR DRUGGIST Island woman ,; justly repealed. experts have revised upwards safely. i "pinwheel" finale. and also sus- j pected of kill- ' ing two Long j Island business- j men ui 1959, the UNSEASONABLE WARM WEATHER FORCED THIS! jgt killer sneered I CHATS at the panel as . he left the /A j t^mm^ Jyfyym. TOP ^JslLv courtroom. J^mm. .?? ^k. JA A WWWWW y ^S^BSb^, /£y ^Mz\ "Have fun ," j : he said. "You i^mm *¦ ? m'w'fl ^^m ^^^KimS ^h * MMmk tfk W i called me a ^ Ruark killer. Sleep; tigh t, gents," tw^^^^M SAVE This gibe from a killer is: /^ml ^l/l'A Kl cheap enough, but it is more ; ™ than sufficient to haunt a pil- ^^^ j low. More in point was the recent conviction and sentenc- ! CLOTHING STORE y ^l?i |»^ ing of two killers, Henry Dusa- ' .f l blon and Emanuel Samperi , > l^K^l' "who were convicted of gunning 1 down two liquor store atten- | dants in a stick-up. : ' : FIRST THE jury deadlocked DBF-HOI in AY $ iSKKW^^^ Ww^ - over Samperi , flK while ordering the death penalty for Dusablon. The judge sent the jurors out again, and this time they came back with the death penalty for Samperi as well. The shadow of doubt in the measure of guilt was there, or there would have ' been no deadlock in the first | J*t? WINONA'S NEWEST INCLOTHING — place. I have never sat on a murder STOCK PRICE jury , but I have talked with ! SLASHED ! «_ people who have, and the strain yk^[ of handing in a decision which can influence the sentence of life or death is fantastic. To compound this strain with the responsibility of becoming ex- ecutioner , as well, must be prejudice , warned not to dis- 0N MEN'S, BOYS SUITS, TOP COATS, SPORT COATS AMD cuss, warned not to read news- Q wt) "tZT j ' j || | papers , warned , almost , not to SLACKS. NONE SA E breathe unti l aU the evidence is mmi, j RESERVED! j y JB. in—this poor slob is a slob like " ON yuu and me. SA E DISCOUNT HATS SHIRTS UK DOKSNT know jurispru- W1J7 .y 1 -SPORT - j dence from jujit su. He doesn 't ! OQ^% ISl M know a tort from a tart , apple ^ - or Kcelerwise. All he knows j / SWEATERS ROBES - PAJAMAS i H l *^ is that the bench is hard , the \ Jri J task is baider , and the prose- cution shouts louder than the defense. ()u| of t he. general confusion be anil the otber poor handcuff volunteers must poll each oilier in the back- room un- HURRY ! HURRY! THIS IS A LIMITED TIME SALE! | til t hey come up with a Yes or No. Tbat , (lod knows, nlono is enough to weigh on a simple THIS IS WHAT YOU SAVE! SCHOOL man 's conscience forever , par- . . SWEAT ticularly if the prisoner in the SHIRTS dock eventually get.s strapped REDUCED into tbe hot chair with his head Save Big On Men's Suits Men's Slacks at Terrific Values Fabulous Savings Men's Sport Coals shaved. WINONA HIGH, COTTER , mm -m _* -- ** .» -_ I think it vastly unfair of the i R, 99.50 Now 79.50 20.00 Reg 18.95 fitato to saddle its responsibility w Now 15.15 s.. 3.80 R.fl 45.00 Now 36.00 5av. 9.00 onto Sam Smith and Mamie L Jones, who would rat her he i R.0 75.00 Now 60-00 «... 15.00 Reo 14.95 Now 11.95 s.v. 3.00 R.fl 35.00 No„ 28.00 s.v. 7.00 home cutting the grass or mak- 2 ^1^r R .„ 59.95 Now 48.00 Snv. 12.00 Rft B 12.95 Now 10.35 s,v. 2.60 R.0 24.95 No„ 20.00 Sav. 5.00 MS,!^. .„ 55.00 R Now 44.00 s.« 11-00 Rt, 6.95 Now 5.50 SflV. 1.45 Reo 19.88 Now 15.88 s«v. 4.00 $^66 ALTERATIONS EXTRA ALTERATIONS EXTRA N W ALTERATIONS EXTRA ° ^F •a"""^ ^^ ^ m.iv ur cil \wiili). jttJ^rJi • fjimnu DcWm'i Pills with ilinr THT I pmiiivc HIUII H CIIC tainn tciri *Lt JI I iclirf of symptomatic pmn» in I baik , lomij nnd muscle* Mildly din. I itlic DcWiti 'i I' I IK also |,,|p fl,is|i ,,tn 1 tiuuMc-m.i l.mg mul vuMrs , imiraNf I lidnry nitnily, ami inline nunm hlad- I der irrilalioiu. 'Iliiiii sanili nt

¦ ¦ 1 ^ arTlP^B *¦ ~ SALE STARTS TOMORROW 9:00 A.M. T r M »" - _ \\\______^_____ ^_____ ^___ ^______\___ ^___^^r___ ^l I _ this morning at St. Mary's Hos- TUESDAY pital, Rochester, after a three- Lewiston Firemen month illness. Home Economics The Daily NOVEMBER 12, 1963 The former Lillian Dewner, Called to Truck W EATHER Record she was born Jan. 14, 1895, at Little Valley to Mr. and Mrs. Class at Thurley LEWISTON, Minn. (Special)- French Course OTHER TEMPERATURES At Community August Dewner. She was mar- Firemen here were called to put By THri ASSOCIATED PRESS Winona Deaths Two-State Deaths ried to Jacob Waechter here High Low Pr. April 15, 1915. They farmed out a truck fire on Highway 14, Memorial Hospital F»lix Lubin iki Joseph Lince in Albany, cloudy 51 31 .01 the area until retiring and mov- Homes Discussed 2,4 miles west of Lewiston, at May Be Offered VlilMng nouru Mtdlcal and lurgicil Felix Lubinski, 73, 611 E. Wa- FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. - Jo- Albuquerque, clear 65 41 patlinta: 2 to 4 and 7 tc 1:30 p.m. (No ing here in 1947. He died Aug. A suggestion that an evening noon today but found the flames basha St., died Monday at 10:05 seph Lince, 50, Red Wing, a for- Atlanta, clear ,69 4.1 . . . chllirtn undir IJ.) 17. She was a member of St. class in general homemaking - Maternity patients: 2 to 3:30 and 1 to p.m. at Community Memorial mer Fountain City resident out on arrival. Bismarck, snow ... 47 28 T . , Matthew's Lutheran Church. be organized for women in the I'.M p.m. (Adulti only.) Hospital, a week af ter the death died suddenly of a heart attack A wiring short circuit was Boise , clear 58 40 Survivors are; One son, Hugo area of Arthur C. Thurley At High School of a longtime fishing compan- at 7 a.m. Monday at his , Boston , cloudy 48 44 .18 MONDAY home. St. Charles ; four daughters Homes was taken under con- blamed for the outbreak of ion, the late William Safranek. He was born to Mr. and Mrs. , The possibility of adding In- Chicago, clear ..... 52 31 Admissions Mrs. Vernon (Bernice) Urban sideration Monday night by the the semitrailer truck Mr. Lubinski was a retired John Lince Sept. 12 1913 j flames in struction in French to the Sen-! Cincinnati, clear ... 60 32 Ole Knutson, 1055 E. 4th St. , , in and Mrs. Freddie (Adeline) Winona Board of Education. , Northern States Power Co. line- Winona. He served with the operated by the Shari Candy ior High School curriculum in a Cleveland , cloudy .. 46 37 .01 Gary Allen Dahl, 726 Gilmore Walters , St. Charles ; Mrs. Earl Superintendent of Schools A. ¦ man. Army five years, 22 months of Co., Mankato. The driver, who cooperative prograrn with .the! Denver , clear 55 22 ... Ave. . V (Carmen ) Mussell, -Altura , and L. Nelson said that the recom- j He suffered a paralytic stroke which were in the Aleutian Is- was not named, had extinguish- College of Saint Teresa is being \ Des Moines, clear . 53 31 .. Miss Agnes M. Deering, Lew- Mrs. Don (lone) Evans, Fari- mendation had been made by 1 Thursday at the Safranek home, lands. He married Janet Tobin his own equip- explored by the Winona public Detroit , cloudy .... 49 38 .. iston, Minn. bault ; 12 grandchildren; one the public . , ed the blaze with 873 E. Wabasha St., following of New Richmond, Wis., Oct. school administration. j Fairbanks, clear . ... 17 1 .. Miss Helen M. Robb 221 W. brother Paul Dewner, Winona schools advis- a a ment when firemen arrived. A , funeral services for Mr. Safra- 24, 1945. , — Authorization to investigate j Fort Worth, cloudy .82 54 .. 4th St. and five sisters, Mrs. Albert ory council lor passing motorist called firemen nek. The two men had been fish- Mr. Lince was a member of O CMOO I the proposed arrangement was Helena , clear 39 ,28 .. Mrs. Frank F. Grupa, Trem- (Clara) Roth, Mrs. George (Ed- home eco- to the scene shortly before noon. by the of ing on the Mississippi River St. Joseph's Catholic Church g^ven Board Educa- Honolulu , cloudy .. 81 72 .. pealeau, Wis. , na) Lawrenz, Mrs. Meta Lew- nomics on when Safranek was stricken, Red Wing. D-^-J tion Monday night after hear- Indianapolis, clear . 54 26 Miss Joanne M. Holien, Whul- is and Mrs. Elmer (Violet) grounds that DOarQ Nov. 4. Mr. Lubinski suffered Survivors are : His wife ; one ing a report from Superintend- Jacksonville, clear . 70 5L .13 an, Minn. Meirike, Winona , and Mrs. Rose class meetings l—— the stroke while brother, Martin Fountain City, ent of Schools A. L. Nelson. Kansas City, clear . 55 34 descending , Lawrenz, Plainview. Her par- at the development sjte would Mrs. Norman E. Craft, 468 basement steps, and seven sisters, Scouts Honored Nelson said that enrollment at Los Angeles, fog ... 83 61 receiving a Mrs. Mary ents and one brother have died. be more convenient for resi- Hiawatha Blvd. skull fracture ' K al dun ski San Francisco the high school has become Memphis, clear .... 71 39 as he fell, ac- , , Funeral services will be at dents than sessions at one of Emil H. Roemer, 413 E. San- cording to physicians. Calif.; Mrs. Ed (Bernadine) large enough to warrant addi- Miami, cloudy 77 67 .15 He did 2 p.m. Friday at St. Matthew's the schools. born St. not regain consciousness. Kiedrowski, Trempealeau; Mrs. tion of an additional language Milwaukee, clear .. 49 35 Lisa M. Lueck, 366 Kansas Lutheran Church, the Rev. Npr- At St. Charles St. He was born here May 10, Leonard (Betty) Nealon, Red NELSON SAID the advisory to the curriculum. The College Mpls.-St.P ., cloudy .44 33 Births bert Reinie officiating. Burial 1890, to Mr. and Mrs. Eric Lu- Wing; Mrs. Charles (Josephine) committee indicated that there ST. CHARLES, Minn. (Spe- of Saint Tere- New Orleans, clear 71 5fi Mr .and Mrs. will be in Hillside Cemetery. ' Robert G. Bab- binski. He married Stella Schar- Abts, Fountain City; Mrs. was interest at Thurley for such cial) — Boy Scouts of St. Char- sa, he said , . _ . . New York , clear ... 60 42 .05 cock, Lewiston, Minn., Friends may call at Sellner a son. mach and was a • veteran of Frank (Gertrude) Hittner , Wis- ^ a course. Some prospective en- les' Troop 54 received awards ; has offered to SchOOl Okla. City, clear .;. 76 42 . . .. Mr. and Mrs. Mario Posla Funeral Home after Thursday , 940 Navy service in World War I. consin Rapids; Mrs. Genevieve rollees, it was felt , found it at their court of honor at the provide an in- Omaha, clear :..... 54 30 .. 34th Ave., Goodview noon and at the church after 1 , a daugh- He was a member of St. Stan- Prondzinski, Anaheim, Calif., inconvenient , or impossible, to school here M'anday evening. structor w ho p i Philadelphia , clear .61 34 .. ter. p.m. Fridav. islaus Church, Winona Athletic and Mrs. Albert (Isabelle) attend evening homemakers' Dana Burns received the would organ- . DOdTu Phoenix , clear ... 85 55 Discharges Club, WAC Benefit Association King, Winona. Mrs. Mary M. Slaby sessions in night school classes Bronze Palm award and Keith ize an after- *- — —- Ptlnd, Me., cloudy . 42 39 .40 Mrs. Edward H. Spel tz and class for both and Veterans of Foreign Wars . Funeral services will be at 9 INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- at Central Junior High and Sen- O'Brien and Terry Schwestka noon or evening Pltnd , Ore. , cloudy . 59 48 .. baby, Rollingstone. Minn. High Survivors are : His wife; two a.m. Wednesday at St. Joseph's cial) — Mrs. Mary M. Slaby, ior High School buildings. received Life awards. Star Cotter High and Senior Rapid City , clear .51 26 .. Linda M. Laumb, St. Charles, students on a credit ba- St. Louis, clear '...55 32 sons, John, at home, and Rob- Church. Burial will be in Ft. 75, died Monday at 6 p.m. at The course would be offered awards were presented to Gary School, . .. Minn. sis. Salt Lk. City, cloudy 59 32 . ' . ert, with the U.S; Navy, San Snelling National Cemetery. her home here. She had been on a tuition basis and . meetings Connaughty, Elliott Hawk and Michael W. Bayfield, Winona Francisco Calif.; two daugh- The course could be offered San Fran., cloudy .. 66 57 , Friends may call at Ferrin ill three months. could be held in the community Lester Schwagcr. " Stale College. ters, Mrs. Clemens ) either at Senior High or Cotter Seattle, rain .. .:... 59 47 M (Rosemary Funeral Home, Red Wing, aft- She was born in Town of Ar- room at the housing site. Eight scouts were -warded a Miss Emmerene Kutchera, 180 Riska, Winona — probably at the latter school Winnipeg, cloudy .. 38 32 .. , and Mrs. George er 4 p.m. today. Rosary will be ! cadia Feb. 8. 1888. to Mr. and The first reaction of board total of 34 merit badges for their . N. Baker St. . (Joan ) Merchlewitz — and students enrolled during , West Sa- said tonight. I Mrs. Charles Woychik. She was members was concern over a work. They were : Elliott Hawk , (T—Trace) Mrs. Milton G. Eide, Chat- lem, Wis.; 14 grandchildren the next semester (if the class , and married to John G. Slaby. They possible break in policy which 10 badges : Lester Schwager, 2; DAILY RIVER BULLETIN field, Minn. two sisters Raymond M. Lehnerrz were to be organized) could at- , Mrs. Celia Bublitz, ' farmed in the area. He died in provides that , generally speak- Richard Lange, one; Keith Mrs. Harry L. Krage and Centerville ROLLINGSTONE , Minn. ( Spe- ' ' tend a summer language work- Flood Stage 21-fir. , Wis., and Mrs. Sam . July 1962. r ing, all classes sponsored by the O'Brien , 4; Gary Lange, 4; Lar- baby , Cochrane, Wis. ) cial) — Raymond M. Lehncrtz, shop at Saint Teresa to com- Chg. (Irene Sula, Phoenix. Ariz. She was a member of Ss. Pe- regular or eve- Stage Today Miss Jill Schuminski , 901 W. 65, lifelong area resident , died public schools in ry Virnig; Gary Connaughty, plete a unit equivalent to two Funeral services will be : ter and Paul's Catholic Church in one: of Red Wing 14 2.1 — .1 5th St. of a heart attack at 6:45 p.m. ning sessions be held 4 , and Terry Schwestka , 4. years of high school French. Thursday at 8:30 a.m. at Wat- j and its Rosary Society. the school buildings.. Lake . City . '. 6:0 — .1 Mrs. E. A. Wellman, Lewis- Sunday at Community Memori- Steve Hawk, Richard Lange If the course were to be held kowski Funeral Home and S i Survivors include three sons, Some members questioned Wabasha 12 7.2 ... .. ton , Minn. " al Hospital , Winona , after a and Roliie Smith received their at Cotter , tuition would have to a.m. at St. Stanislaus Church, Adolph, Ralph and Ephraim, In- whether, if a class were to be Alma Dam — . 4. 1 .. .. Mrs. James M. Ferguson, short illness. first class awards. Receiving Senior High stu- the Rt. Rev. Msgr. N. F. Grul- dependence ; three daughters, organized in a specific area be paid for Whitman Dam. .. 2.2 Lewiston, Minn. their second class awards were dents attending. If the class kowski officiating. Burial will He was born Feb. 23, 1898, on Mrs. Roman (Joanne) Knusella , such as Thurley. other requests Winona Dam .. .. 3.0 Mrs. Norman Barth, 404 Keith Benedett , Jerry Ihrke, were to be incorporated in the be in St. Mary's Cemetery. Mil- a farm one mile north of here Arcadia; Mrs. Irene Puchalla, for classes outside school build- WINONA :....: 13 5,3 ~ .1 Grand St. ) Nicky Kieffer , David Redig, evening program, itary honors will be by the-Vet- to Francis and Amelia (Speltz Black River Falls, and Mrs. ings might be received. public schools Treml'eau Pool .. 10.3 + .1 Mrs. Valaria Pellowski John Reynolds , Ky Searce and could be made , 315 erans of Foreign Wars. Lehnertz. He lived on the home Ernest (Adaline) Miemietz, In- Nelson was asked to confer arrangements _ Trem'leau Dam .. 3.9 — .1 Chatfield St. farm all of his life^ He married Mike Wiskow. for Cotter students to attend. Friends may call Wednesday dependence; 12 grandchildren ; with the committee and ask the Dakota ...... 7.5 .. .. Gertrude Walch June 20, 1928, Tenderfoot badges went to after 2 p.m. Rosary will be said 2 great-grandchildren, and two advisory group if it might deter- Board members agreed with Dresbach Pool . .. 9.5 Conception Cath- Bruce Braun OTHER BIRTHS at 8. Winona Athletic Club at Immaculate stepsisters, Mrs. Ignatz Sonsal- mine whether women from , Jim Glover , Jack the superintendent that an ar- Dresbach Dam . 1.6 olic Church, Oak Ridge. la and Mrs. Monica Trzybylla, Thurley might be able to make Hynes, Duane Ihrke, Greg Nel- rangement such as this would La Crosse . ... 12 4.7 .. . .. TAYLOR , Wis. (Special) - members will call at 7. A member of Holy Trinity Independence. One brother and arrangements for enrollment in son , Bill Nessler, Billy Page, provide the board with an indi- Tributary Streams Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Huseboe , Joseph E. Rivers Catholic Church and its St. Ni- one sister have died. a general homemaking class if Lonnie Virnig, Joe Schwestka , cation of interest in French Janesville, Wis., a daughter*Fri- Chippewa at Durand 1.4 + .5 Joseph E. Rivers, 78, 60 W. cholas Society, he . also was Funeral services will be at 10 it were to be organized in one Len Holtegaard and Mike Met- among high school students. If day. Mr. Huseboe is Zumbro at Theil'an 28.3 the son of Wabasha St., died Monday at school board chairman many a.m. Friday at Ss. Peter and of the school buildings. ske. the interest were sufficient, a Mr. and Mrs. George Huseboe Trem'eau at Dodge —0.4 — .1 , 1:25 p.m. at Community Memor- years, clerk of Rollingstone Paul's Church, the Rev. Ed- AT THE recommendation of Presenting the awards were regular class could be organiz- Taylor. Black at Galesville . 1.3 + .1 ial Hospital after a long illness, Township and at present was mund J. Klimek officiating. the superintendent , the payment Scoutmaster John Nelson and ed next year. ' ' ETTRICK , Wis. (Special) - Root at Houston ... 5.8 . ... He was a retired railway postal village treasurer. Burial will be in the church for school census takers in tlielr Assistant Scoutmasters Ervin Mr. and Mrs. John Froseth a ., RIVER FORECAST clerk. Survivors are: His wife; three cemetery. count of handicapped children Smith and John O'Brien. Pete daughter Sunday at a River call after 3 p.m. Small Fire at (From ) sons, Paul, Winona; Thomas, Friends may was raised from $12 to $15 a Glover , Scout committeeman, Hastings to Guttenberg Falls hospital. Mrs. Froseth is He was born March 22, 1885, Kern Funeral rural Rollingstone, and Ronald, Wednesday at day. and Bill Burns, explorer advi- Little change expected in ihe former Lee Andra Ericksbn in Rollingstone to John and Su- re- Winona Industries Rochester; one daughter , Mrs. Home. The Rosary will be Census takers are paid at the ser , also were present. river stages in this district in of Ettrick. san Nyers Rivers and was a ) Ernest Donald J. (Mary Dulek , Den- cited at 8 tonight at the rate of 10 cents a name for all Firemen fought a small fire ln next several days. lifetime resident of this area. and at 8 p.m. ver, Colo:; 15 grandchildren, Miemietz home, names recorded except those of a dust collector at Winona In- He had lived here more than 50 and 8 :30 p.m. TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS and two sisters, Mrs. George Wednesday and 8 the handicapped. Because of dustries, Inc., 602 E. Front St., years. He attended Winona Nor- Thursday at the funeral home. Woman in Red (Florence) Wise, and Mrs. the additional work involved in for about one-half hour this Firemen said the fire, though Dennis J. Wieczorek , Foun- mal School and Southern Min- The Knights of Columbus will Francis (Betty) Greden, Roll- taking the census of the handi- noon. small, was difficult to reach. tain City, Wis., 10. nesota Normal College, Austin. lead the 8:30 Rosary. Truck Shot by ingstone. capped ,, a day's payment is al- A crew left the fire depart- Apparently there was not He married Cecilia Hames, Mil- 10 Pallbearers will be Marcel Funeral services will be at lowed for every 24 names. ment at 12:17 p.m. They worked much damage." A 2Mj-inch line waukee, June 4, 1914. at Holy Tri- Przybylla , Daniel Benusa , Adri- Deer Hunter WINONA DAM LOCKAGE a.m. Wednesday loyment of Mrs. Clarence on the fire until about 12:45. and booster line were used. He was a member of Cathe- an Woychik, John Sonsolla , Ed- Emp nity Catholic Church , the Rev. NEW ULM , Minn. (AP) —Red Flow—9,900 cubic feet per sec- dral of the Sacred Heart and and Adolph Kampa. Satka as a part-time instructor S. N. Majerus officiating. Bur- win Slaby isn 't always a safe color while ond at 8 a.m. today. its Holy Name Society, St. Nich- in seventh and eighth grade ial will be in the church ceme- deer hunting. Monday olas Society, Rollingstone, and Two-State Funerals Spanish at Jefferson and Wash- tery. Mrs. George Jones, 62, was Small craft—3. the United Federation of Postal mgton-Kosciusko schools at a Friends may call at Rolling- Frank Broskowski sitting inside a red truck near Today Clerks, La Crosse Branch. salary of $1,654 for the remain- stone Funeral Home this after- INDEPENDENCE , Wis. (Spe- Nimrod , Minn., over the week- Charles W. Sny- der of the 1963-64 school year Midnight — Survivors are : His wife and noon and evening. Rosaries will cial) — Funeral services for end when a bullet smacked into upstream. was approved. der , 4 barges, one son, Joseph Rivers . Jr., Wi- be led by Father Majerus at 8 Frank Broskowski will be held ¦ the truck and struck her in the 10:40 a.m. — Arrowhead, 2 three broth- Wednesday at Kern Four nona. His parents, and by the St. Nicholas Society at 10 a.m. In 193, Rome's Praetorian thigh. barges, downstream. ers and four sisters have died at 8:30. Funeral Home, the Rev. Ed- Guard , after killing the Em- Mrs. Jones, who had the bul- Funeral services will be mund Klimek officiating. Burial peror Pertinax, auctioned off let removed in a hospital Mon- IMPOUNDED DOGS Thursday at 10 a.m. at Burke Carlee Mahlum will be in the Ss. Peter and the Roman Empire, lock , stock day, had gone deer hunting with simple mistakes ( ) Funeral Home and 10:3O at Ca- OSSEO, Wis. Special — Paul's Cemetery: and Colosseum. her husband. Goodview No. 79 — Male, thedral of the Sacred Heart, Carlee Jean Mahlum, 7, died Friends may call at the fu- black cocker, no license, third the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Harold J. suddenly Monday at Sacred neral home tonight. The Rosary day. Dittman officiating. Burial will Heart Hospital , Eau Claire, will be recited at 8 p.m. in investing Goodview No. 80 — Female, be in St. Mary's Cemetery. shortly after being admitted as brown, no license, third day. Friends may call after 2 p.m. a patient. and how to avoid them Available for good homes: Wednesday. Rosary will be said She was born Sept. 24. 1956 , Preston Butter One pup and one black male. at 8 by Msgr. Dittman and the at Luther Hospital , Eau Claire, Cathedral Holy Name Society daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don- Many of the estimated 17,000,000 Americans who are share- and 9 by the St. Nicholas So- ald Mahlum, Osseo. owners have acquired stock to have a second income from Municipa l Court ciety. Survivors are: Her parents ; Goes to Holland dividend.1. Others hope their money will grow over the years. Mphonse F. Cisewski, St. two brothers, Rory and David , PRESTON , Minn.-All butter •ir ir ir Whatever your goal , you can benefit from not making Charles, Minn., pleaded guilty Winona Funerals who are younger than she ; her being churned at the Preston NeW * * * these easy-to-avoid mistakes : to a charge of fa ilure to yield grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Creamery is being exported to the right of way. He was sen- Harold C. Rand Carl Larson , rural Osseo , and Holland with the exception of Mistake No. I*. Choosing your broker at random. tenced to pay a fine of $15 or to Funeral services for Harold Mr. and Mrs. Tom Mahlum, what is sold on the local mar- KELVINATOR 3-CYCLE How to avoid: Look up a nearby Member Firm of the New serve five days and paid the C. (Bud) Rand, 877 E. Wabasha Strum , and a great-grandmoth- ket. York Stock Exchange. Each Member Firm is different, with fine. He was arrested by police St., will be Wednesday at IS :.10 er, Mrs. Ina Larson, rural Virgil Grover, manager, said its own services and characteristics, But each has these things 14-61 a.m. at Borzyskowski Mortuary Osseo. shipments to Holland will con- Electric Dryer al the junction of Highway in common: It is subject to the many regulations of the Ex- and 43 at 8:45 p.m. Saturday and at 9 at St. Stanislaus Catho- The funeral service will be tinue through December. Representatives had to measure following an accident. lic Church, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Thursday at 2 p.m. at South It's a special order from the change. Ancl its Registered Forfeits: N. F. Grulkowski . officiating. Beef River Lutheran Church, creamery's purchasing agency, NORMAL up to Exchange requirements when they became Member Loyal L. Pullius Jr., 20, Foun- Burial will he in St. Mary 's the Rev. E. B. Christophersen H. C. Christians Co. of Chicago. ^j" >. for f»«t, taf« drying of Firm brokers. charge Cemetery. officiating. Burial will he in the It has no salt, 83 percent but- tain City, Wis., $25 on a Mistake No. 2: Setting out to get rich in a hurry. of speeding, 40 rn.p.h. in a 30 Friends may call at the mortu- church cemetery. terfat , and 16 percent moisture. How to avoid: Ask yourself what's important to Then m.p.h. zone. He was arrested ary aftor 2 p.m. today. The Friends may call at Ottedahl Butter manufactured for local you. by police at West 5th ancl Wil- Rosary will be recited at 8, Funeral Home after Wednesday sale is salted , contains 80 per- with the help of your Member Firm work out a simple long- N son streets at. 1:26 a.m. Sun- noon. cent butterfat , and 16.8 percent ji ftx that removes wearwrin- range investment program in keeping with yourcircumstanccs. George A. Lica ^* kl«», but ke«ps In pr* day. moisture . K*^SSv _—'T 1 Funeral services for George j¦ $ fcy9ajjl - _^_r— »«t crenses l Keep in mind that stock and bond prices go both down and Frederick A. Noeske, Winona Mrs. Lillian Waechter Among the suppliers of but- f ^— H Alex Lica , 702 E. Sth St., will be ( up. company may not continue to dividends or inter- Ht. 2, $15 on a charge of mak- ST. CHARLES , Minn. Spe- erfat to the creamery here are A pay Wednesday nt 10 a.m. at St. ) ing an improper right turn. Ile cial — Mrs. Lillian Waechter, he Dutch of the C-recnleafton StfSi ROOM-AI R est. You 'll want to look for companies you think will prosper. Stanislaus Church , the Rt. Rev. *•§•' •: '. '{'X ; ' lor fluffing, airing and was arrested by the Highway 68, lifelong area resident , died irea. Msgr. N. F. Grulkowski officiat- ¦ dusting 1 Mistake No. 3: Investing hastily on a li p. Patrol on Highway 43 about llL> tSffe- . !' ing. Burial will be in St. Mary 's llow to avoid: Base your jud gment on facts. Such as the miles south of Winona at .*i!20 Cemetery. company 's recent record. Its earnings. The dividends it pavs. p.m . Sunday. M ,iU-y y. Friends may call at Watkow- Ihe price of the stock in relation to dividends. And ini'iiiie M ildred M. Bcran , Redwood ski Funeral Home today. Rosa- ' , ahout the greater stamtity noncls often provide. Falls , Minn., $15 on a charge of ries will be snid by the Catholic Ilv'i ' ' driving in the wrong of a 'ane Order of Foresters at 7:30 p.m. Will your broker 's jud gment or his linn's always he ri g ht? four-liinc highway . She was ar- ond by the Hev. Grulkowski at NobotlyK always ri ght. What they will gladly give you is help rested by police at Highway Bl Athletic Club members will fi , based on facts a.s they see them—so that you can make better and Gilmore Avenue at 11:59 call at 7. Wm _ thi i p.m . Monday. judgments of your own.

Edward .1. Dionysius , Winona F,. Hownrd SI., $10 on a charge ^^^^ k ^^mm _tT^___ \\$if £_y WnrM Mistake . No. 4: Investing all the money you can find. Ttl. 3, $10 on a charge of failure of parking to close to a fire money you don ' (n stop for a slop sign. He was hydrant. He was arrested hy llow to avoid : I or investing use only t arrested hy police at Sth and police at West Sanborn nnd need for living expenses or emergencies. A lot of people Iiml Center streets f it 4.-no p.m . Johnson streets nt (1:15 p.m. it wise to invest regularly. Through our Monthly Investment Monday. Sunday. Plan you can acijuirc stock by investing with as little as VI0 Arnold 0. Stench jem , 217 E. every three months. Lake Blvd., $10 on a charge of The Sahara was not always a 'll failure to stop for-a stop sign . wasteland. Pictures chiseled and KELVINATOR BRINGS YOU GREA1ER VALUE ! You find much valuable information in our lumklct , He was arrested hy police at painted on rocks thousands of " INVISIMINI IACIS." Send the coupon for a free copy. Thro UK h program of Cowitimt. Hnnic the Milwaukee Railroad cross- yoars ago suggest an area teem- • Pay ing your bills b y check is simple, safe and Improvement , K«lvinntor concpntrntea Oni/ ing at Grand Street nl 8.T>5 p.m. ipg with people. Archaeologists flnpineerintf timo unci money to brin« you convenient ., . open your account today at ^afk OK Own your share of American busineas Friday. have found (i .OOO-year-old mum- appliances tlint are more uneful , morn de- $ 1 #Q pendnble and more economical to operate. 1 Jerome M. Czarnowski , 20, 02 mies in the Libyan Desert . ^^Jf Members New York Stock Exchange Loso your income ond lo»« your futurel e FIRST MOOB "PaycH«ck Protection" can provide a •« r $159.95 I M NU I- IIH iRit III ii IK i ii. Miiil lo ii Member J irmol Ilie New Ymk Sunk monthly Income while you con't work be- BaNO DOWN PAYMENT - SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS j I'.M'hiinne , ni ui llic New York Slock l.xelmnnc , lic|il. ^-|>U, IU>. I cause of Illness or accident . . . helpi llox 1(170, New York l N.Y. QThNational Bank FREE DELIVERY - FREE FIRST YEAR SERVICE | . .l l() I safeguard your future plan*! Get facts to- I I'lmse semi rue, lice, " INVC.SIMI 'NI Mn.s," lislinj ? more limn -11 )0 slinks day about low-cost "Paycheck Protection!" I iiml luvc |t;ii(l ilivulciuh every three months lor twenty yens or more . I I | of Winona NORTHERN STATES I NAMI James Garry I Wf lMwlm ( | AI1I1HH** 1710 W. Wabasha Member Federal Deposit POWER COMPANY ¦KljBffl. ^J ^*M^7' I Prion. 3281 ^^MMMffi jilMl f tZyX'' Insurance Corporation 79 Eatl Third Sf. Prion* 8-3631 I — ~ 1^ , |Dr. Jea n Talbot Pine Creek Rosary Group Changes S Addresses PTA On Education Date oi Sale DODGE , Wis. ( Special)—The A short business meeting, a date for the rummage and bake talk by Dr. Jean Talbot , for- sale sponsored by the Rosary mer instructor at Winona State Society of the Sacred Heart College, an invitation to visit parish, Pine Creek . Wis., has the school library, and a coffee been changed to Saturday from hour marked the meeting of the Nov. 24. Washington - Kosciusko School The sales will be held at the PTA Monday evening. Labor Temple , 169 E. 3rd St., At the business meeting Char- Winona, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., i les Beckman , principal, anr announced Mrs. David Wicka , j nounced the appointment of chairman. All the women of the Jack Taylor as PTA president. parish are expected to bake and ! Mrs. Helen Whiting introduc- deliver the baked goods to vari- j ed members of the library club ous homes, designated as pick- who acted as guides during the up stations , Friday evening, or tour of the library. to the Labor Temple, Saturday. Dr. Talbot presented a pan- 1 Pick-up stations will be at the oramic view of the development homes of the Mmes. Emil Glen- of education in America and zinski , Paul Jaszewski, Thomas likened it to a series of bridges Kramer, Romuald Losinski, Cy- on the road to civilization. ril Pehler , George Walski, Dom- Hostesses who assisted Miss inic Wozney and the church Karoiyn Grundahl, home eco- hall . nomist, were Mmes. Charles Mrs. Jaszewski is the new Anderson. Richard Walters , and chairman of Group 6, replacing , MR. AM) MRS. LEO PRONSCHINSKE 419 W. Mark Rodney Marey. Mrs. Helen Tulius, who has St., will be honored at an open house- reception on their to Dorchester , Wis. ; , moved 50th wedding anniversary Sunday. The event -will be held "OH, I WANT THIS BOOK" . .- . . Those were the words of mittee, who are PTA officers. They are Mrs James E-. Burke Mrs. Glenzinski reported that in the Fountain City (Wis.) Auditorium from l to 5 p.m. No Hong Kong Talk James Malanaphy Jr:, foreground , son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Malay and Mrs. Joseph Richardson, who is chairman. seven and a half pounds of invitations are being sent. An anniversary Mass will be James Malanaphy, Houston , Minn!, Route 1, as he perused Sister M. Conna , school principal, is adviser and coordinator. broken rosaries were sent to offered at the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart . Winona, at Given at Ruskin one of the delightful books at the Cathedral School PT A They planned the fairUp enable parents and friends to make the Holy Cross Mission Society to be made into 9:30 a.m. Sunday. The Pronchinskes formerly lived at Wau- Book Fair. Other eager children are seen visiting the fair cash donations or purchase specific books to donate to the at La Crosse , Club Meeting whole rosaries and distributed mandee, Wis. (Edstrom Studio ) to browse through the books their parents and friends are school library and to provide an opportunity to buy books for buying for the school library and for gifts. The fair, gifts and personal libraries. A new feature this year are at missions. Miss Kathryn Sheehan was which Arthur Tulius won a spe- opened Sunday in the school basement, will continue through paperbacks for adults which children may purchase as Mrs. the featured speaker at the cial prize. Group .3 entertained Responsive Audience Hears Monday afternoon meeting of Friday . Hours for the display are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Not only gifts for their parents as well as adults making their own at the close of the meeting. the Ruskin Club. It was attend- the children and their parents, but the general public is in- purchases from this group. Mrs. Richard Brom , chair- ed by 14 members at the home vited to visit the fair, said members of the Book Fair com- man, was assisted by Mmes. ' Concert' of Mrs. R. J. Scarborough. Conrad Kramer, Ben Brom. Jor Burke Family -Sing Miss Francis Blanchard pre- seph Kupietz. George Tuschner sided. freshness and per- A comprehensive repertoire Robert E. Oram to Play Lead Male Chorus of Madison and George Walski. Musicality , Hong Kong was the subject of j Grieg valued at SI, fect coordination characterized i which ranged from sacred mu- Christmas gifts, Miss Sheehan's talk, the De- the Saturday evening perfor- sic through the classics. Mad- in which In 'Ring Around the Moon' To Perform at Blair School will be exchanged at she traced the history meeting. mance ol the Burke Family rigals and folk-songs was sung of the cember British Crown Colony and told Carrying the lead role in the BLAIR. Wis. (Special) - The was organized in January 1925 . Singers at the College of Saint a capella. The audience react- College of Saint Teresa pro- to hster and preserve interest capacity audience of ion was sympathetic and enthu- something about its strategic Grieg Male Chorus of Madison; Teresa. A position at the duction of Anouilh 's, "Ring in Scandinavian music and now over 600 was in attendance. siastic. crossroads of now in its 39th singing year, Trempealeau High the world and its geography. Round the Moon " is Robert E. has about ' '30 . members. Blair This unique choral ensemble THE POLYPHONIC selec- Oram of the College Speech will present a concert at Torstein O. Kvamme, Stough- To Present Play consists of the 10 Burke child- tions included "Ave Maris Stel- MISS SHEEHAN described and Drama department. Mr. High School : Sunday at 2:30 ton . Wis., a graduate of the ren ranging from 8 to 21 years la" by Thomas Luis de Victor- the industrial importance of Oram will play the part of the p.m., under the auspices of the music course at Luther College. . TREMPEALEAU. Wis.-Sen- and their father and mother. ia , who is considered one of the Hong Kong, where she said , twin brothers, Hugo-Frederic. Blair Education Association. Decorah. Iowa, and former di- iors of Trempealeau High School , The father , Walter J. Burke di- greats in (he 16th century "Anything that man would The comedy will open Nov. 22 A member of the Norwegian rector of music in the Stough- will present "The Night of Jan- rected the ensemble with skill ; school of polyphonists; Thomas want is available." and play for four nights at the Singers Association the chorus ton Public Schools, directs the uary 16" as a class play Friday and precision and succeeded in Morley 's "Sing We and Chaunt She told something about the Teresan Theatre. was part of a 700-man massed chorus. Miss Margaret Otterson at 8 p.m. in the school gym- establishing a gracious and easy banking and economy of the A seasoned trouper and pro- chorus in the Mormon Taber- is accompanist for the chorus nasium. It", a English Madrigal of the Utah, informal rapport with the au- period, written .' in Crown Colony and its politics. fessional actor. Oram has been nacle at Salt Lake City. as well as several singing Lead roles are carried by San- Elizabeth in June 1962 and will sing as dience. five parts ; a 15th century med- "It lies in the shadow of Com- on the Teresan faculty since groups in Madison. Some years dra Alseth, David Duell, "William part of the same chorus at the ago the chorus presented a con- Meunier. ieval classic. "I Sing Of A munism." she said. She des- 1959. He served as actor and Cooper and Richard World's Fair in New York in cert at Eleva to a capacity cast are Lesley Maiden ", and Bach's "Jesu , cribed the contrasts in wealth stage manager for Players In- Completing the Altar July 1964. house. , Patricia Sonsalla, Da- Holy Family Joy of Man's Desiring." and poverty among its varied corporated and traveled and Bender On Oct. 5 the chorus was host Proceeds will go to the an- vid Winters, Harold Wilber , Carl peoples,- which she called "a played in 33 states and Europe. Society Holds Meeting Christmas carols were warm- ' to the sangerfest ( singers' fes- nual scholarship and other proj- Wood , Joan Lyon, Bob Trow- ly received and included the happy and successful blend of The Teresan actor was assis- the West and tival), of the Midwest Norwe- ects. bridge, Bill Brunkow, Valeria CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) Ukrainian "Carol of the Bells" , East — of old tant stage manager for the ¦ China's skills and new Asia' gian Singers Association which Committee chairmen include Ryder, Michele Keeffe, George —The Holy Family Altar Socie- the Czech "Shepherds Hearing s world premiere of "The Little is held once every four years. Gerald Sislo. James R. Davis, ty of St. John the Baptist , energy." Richtman , Sheila Davis, Leslie Angels Sing" , the 16th Century World of Don Camulo" and Songs of the chorus are di- Mmes. Leslie Larson, Philip Church held its monthly meet- ' She ended her talk with the Lakey, Roger Spittler. Janet "Greensleeves"' . two French stage manager for "Every- vided about equally between Thomte, Walter Kling, Hans Ebersold , Sandra Gunderson , ing recently in the St. Mary j and three Christmas words of an ancient Chinese man" both at the Catholic Uni- , with the president, ; carols, Robert E. Oram songs in English and in Swed- Morken Slemer Koxlien and Susan Carhart , Thomas Daffin- clubroom spirituals. prophesy , "Across these waters versity. ish or Norwegian. The chorus William Henderson. Mrs. Genevieve Jahn , presiding. ; when 'tis dark a million lights son and Max Barenthin. The play , written by Ayn Miss Ella Murphy reported on A Russian composition. "Hos- shall glow , and in their paths AT THE COLLEGE of Saint the sick committee. podi Pomilui" was unusual and 10, Teresa, Oram directed "Night Athlet ic Club 7 Rand , is a courtroom drama of 000 ships go passing to and a murder trial. Given with per- The Rev. Thaddeus Derezin- startling. fro. " Must Fall", "Tartuffe" and 'Around the World Therne ski talked on the mission that | Folk songs, and Irish songs "The Sea Gull". He played Auxiliary Plans mission of Baker's Plays, it is being directed by Jon Hanson. will be held Nov. 12-16. The j were well received by the au- MRS. BERNARD Kelly, sec- roles in "Night Must Fall", Planned for Madison Frolic Rev. Lawrence Gavin will con- ' retary, read a letter from Rep dience. The wide range of the "Tartuffe" , "As You Like It" Holiday Event A gala event at Madison Mrs. Fred Burmeister, in urg- DUPLICATE BRIDGE duct the mission. The: repertoire displayed the un- Virginia Torgerson, urging and "Under Milkwood". members to write Plans for a Christmas party, School Friday evening will be ing the public to attend the Fun will closing Saturday afternoon will usually high musicianship and to senators Mr. Oram is program asso- Duplicate Bridge Club or representative in Congress, the appointing of a nominating the PTA-sponsored Fun Frolic. Frolic, said that proceeds from meet in the Huntsmen's Room be a Holy hour.'He asked for : ensemble of the group. ciate for all television pro- volunteers to sell religious arti- in support of the passage of committee and other business, This year's theme of the PTA's the event will go into the PTA of the Steak Shop at 7:30 p.m. Bill S-1672. grams given by the College followed by a social hour com- annual biggest fund-raising ef- operating fund , which covers cles before and after the serv- over KTCA-ETV, today. The bill, introduced and Channel 2 and prised the evening's activity fort is "Around the World." such expenditures as scholar- ices. Portia Club Hears program Father Derezinski announced sponsored by Sens. Hubert H. director of the Tere- at the Monday night meeting Frolic hours will be from 7 to ships, School Patrol Camp, CHURCH SUPPER san programs the annual clothing drive for the Talk on Israel Humphrey and Eugene McCar- originating at of the Auxiliary to the Winona 10 p.m. school patrol. Boy and Girl (Special) — Fa- KROC-TV , BLAIR. Wis. needy and war-stricken areas thy, with a companion bill Rochester. Athletic Club. About 40 mem- The theme will be carried out Scout activities and school gernes Lutheran Church Wom- overseas would take place Portia Club met Monday eve- sponsored by Rep. Albert H. Supporting cast for Mr. Oram bers were present . in gayly decorated booths in the equipment. en will serve a mashed potato ning at the home of Mrs. T. H. who Thanksgiving week. All clothing Quie, would grant S2 million in assumed the lead role this The Christmas party will be gym, where "around the world" The steering committee for and meatball supper Thursday Underdahl. Mrs. Roger Hart- week because is to be brought to the winter 1964, and a like amount in 1965, of an emergency at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 9. when mem- travelers may see a Mexican the Fun Frolic is comprised of at 5 p.m. A bazaar also will wich . president , conducted the in the (cake walk), chapel in the church to be pack- to help in the completion of cast will be Miss Gayle bers will exchange 50 cent Bake Shop, a Jap- all room mothers. Mothers from be held. Fagernes Church is in business meeting. Initial plans Viehman , , and ed early the following week, the Great River Road , now 71 Owatonna freshman, gifts. Named to the party com- anese Cherry Tree booth each of the rooms will be in the Town of Preston six miles were made for the Minnesota as the dowager Festival movie, a he said. percent complete. Thirty per- aunt of the mittee were Mmes. Mark Mod- Italian Film charge of different booths and west of Blair and served by tha Federation of Women 's Clubs cent of this will lie within, or twins, French Art Shop booth , a Plans were made to hold a , "Madame Desmortes". jeski , James, Mark and Mary of decorations. Rev. K. M. Urberg. Christmas auction for the De- state convention to be held in contingent to the state of Min- The aunt who Chinatown make-up booth , a is confined to Yahnke, Frank Wineski and cember m eeting with Vincent Winona May 11-13. Chautauqua nesota , it was pointed out. The a wheel Yankee Doodle Baseball booth , chair has arranged a Anton Paskiewiez. Reserva- Strub as auctioneer. Club and Portia Club will host club voted to write individually ball and invited a unique group in addition to candle games Following the meeting games the convention. and as a group to the sponsors of guests. tions are to be made as soon booth , nail pounding booth , Dip- were played for prizes. St. Following Ihe business meet- of the bill in its support . as possible and at Ihe latest thc-Duck booth , Mystery Cave Margaret's Circle was in ing, Mrs. Milton Goldberg gave Following the meeting, re- GUESTS AT THE hall In- by Dec. 6 with members of the bootii , etc. Refreshments will be charge of the lunch. Mrs. Le an illustrated talk about her re- freshments were served by the clude Ronald Schmidt . 1173 committee . served throughout the evening West 4th St.. Rov Frank is the circle leader. cent tri p to Israel. hostess, assisted by the Misses as "Messer- Appointed to serve on the in a Gay Paree . Sidewalk Cafe. Ella and Gertrude Seidlitz , with schmann " , who in the course nominating committee were A highlight of the festivities Mrs. McKendee Petty pouring. of the evening discovers that Mrs. Clarence Chuchna. and will be the taking of movies of money cannot buy everything, Mmes. E. J . Kleinschmidt and ^/ St. Paul's Episcopal Church MISSION BAZAAR Ihe parents and their children G^—-a \ZydAP Miss Catherine Kasper Fair- Hnrry Smoekc. A sum of S5 was These will be shown STRUM , Wis. ( Special )—The having fun. mont, who is cast as Messor- donated to the Christmas Seals at the December PTA meeting. Fairyland of Fabrics Mission Society Bazaar will be schamm 's daughter , "Diana ", bond. held at Strum Lutheran Church Also an important part of the 214 Mankato Phone 9175 Fall Festival Luncheon the object of one twin 's pur- Dining the .social hour prizes evening 's fun will be tho award- 11:00 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. Thursday at 7:30 p.m. There suit but the fiancee of Ihe oth- were uon by Mmes, , will be baked goods and handi- Wodjcski ing of prizes at intervals. er; Ann Joyce, Rochester sen- James ancl Mary Yahnke , Aug- General chairmen , Mr. and work auctioned off. Lunch will ior who , Thursday, Nov. 14 be served. The event is open to plays the "Lndy In- ust Mlync/ak Lawrence Jas- dia " and who is in zewski , Walter Banicki , SI.25 the public. love with Walter to ¦ M e s serschamm 's secretary ; Heck , Anton Sikorski , Jose- Keith Mason Weds BAKE SALE - HOMEMADE CANDY SALE Values $1.19 yd. % lf that loaf of homemade "Patrice Bombelles" played by phine Bre/a and K . W. Evans. Miss Dawn Burfield COSTUME JEWELRY SALE bread is hard to cut neatly , re- Alfred A. E. Wolfram , Minne- ^ AT PARISH HOUSE ON LAFAYETTE ST. frigerate it and slice it after it sota City. SEWING CIRCLE HOUSTON, Minn. (Special) - is chilled. The intrigue of the evening Sewing Circle oi St. Martin 's Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Rurfield tr ^M + for "Madame Desmortes " and Lutheran Church will meet announce the marriage of their C * her companion "Capulct" , Miss Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. In the daughter , Miss Dawn Louise Marcia Mullins , Hopkins , Minn ,, church social rooms. Miss Burfield , to Keith Mason , St. jg | an 3 is heightened by the arrival of Theresa Rnmelow and Mrs. Paid . Oct. 15. (pink Jf afy SHOP "Isabelle", a ballet dancer , Hugo Kochendoerfer will be The bride is a graduate of \j inch jj GIF T $FM%Grelchen Gronst;d , Carrol hostesses. the Houston High School and , ^j)V Royal O Orion ' Iown and her mother , a piano has been employed by Northern , , Corduroy. *% WSCS PRAYER EVICNT Paul, teacher . Kathleen MacKrill , Stales Power Co., St. Winter Seersucker. Many others fiula riirislmas ttlioivini* ft ' LAKE CITY , Minn. (Special) since graduation. ^ / Jff i Poorest City, Iowa. As the even- in bolts* - The Women 's Society of Chris- The groom is a business grad- ' j and remnants. ,*£* ing goes on through a series tian Service of the Firs t Meth- of gay, witty uate of the University of Ari- and often hilar- odist Church , Lake City is ob- zona and is co-owner of the Cap- . ious scones , lives are radicall y serving the Nationwide "Call V > ^^ ^ " ^ ^ changed itol Fence Co., St. Paul. in this sprightly and to Prayer and Self Denial" this They are at home in St. Paul. * entertaining comedy. week. On Wednesday at 8:30 N0S N™" Look those over! r 3 EXCITING DAYS 2 ALSO IN TIIK cast nre John a.m. there will be held a Quiet TEACHERS' SALK Day Service , TAYLOR, (S •¦- Bellairs , Teresan faculty mem- a special feature Wis. pecial' ber , ns •'Joshua " , of this event The Taylor Lutheran Church a (rumbling This year the Sunday School teachers and. sub- All Wool Remnants butler; GYmi , , self-denial of- 99c D'Amoiir SI ferings will go to designated stitute teachers will sponsor a Mary s College student , Slum- wee AfisMon , project s in the I'nited States bake sale on Saturday from 1 Kansas a.s "Ho- and India. The United States to 5 p.m. al Olson 's Hardware. NEW SHIPMENT BROCADES AIW«* mainville " , ;• potion of the %T» work will benefit three urban Proceeds will be used for pur- | arts; d'ene Bauer, Winona , 41 in Beautiful ami community centers in In- chasing Christmas gifts for the Handmade , Specia l Selected 7th St., double for the twins , dirmn, Texas and Hawaii. Sunday School students. ^ Hugo-Frederic ; Michael Hie- and Import Items sanz Winonn and Hory Matt- NEW UPHOLSTERY FABRICS <(£ son , Rochester who double a.s All Colors footmen and guests at the ball Carpet Shampooer (" ¦¦nrl r- Rent Electric • Hand Knits • Needlework • I hvoralive l .s Au and Tercsnn.s Jeanne Kmix , While * Bear Lake , Minn.. Ca- • ILiliai! ro'ilhcr Flowers V» O ¦¦ NYLON NET yd 29c rol Dauw , South St . Paul , Minn. FOR NLY $i , // and Mary IMIi I lend ricks , Now vou can rent the new Blue ; Many Other Items Including **W JBPf Minneapolis , who appear us Lustre Klectric Carpet Shampooer i j METALLIC NET yd women at HBaf 39c the ball for only ^1 per day witli purchase j flflj Artglass Christmas Art Objects £-, i WEB and all seats are reserved. Itcs- Save hi)* with this easy to use "do j I J > -^arf^S^BJ* RAINBOW NET 49c orvations may be made by call- it yourself" equipment. You 'll he ' " :' fl to f) Thurs. & Friday • 9 tn r> Satuid .iy J\ :r^v^^^Efej^ \ ing tbe college office, amazed with Ilie new look of your ^a»/-w/ :' '' " «j^.|fflP*" ^ All Sizes cai'|H 'lini; Available at Decorator Pillows LADIES All) TO MI'KT aff9VBnb *DI*$lbife Pink Lad y GtH Shop — Communit y Momoti.il Hospit.i l V( ESD Ladies Aid of the Church of " the Brethren will nurt ¦ i OPEN1 M0NDAY ^'NTT] at .' ^.CB<>*te {KS "" ¦«*• * £™ : NOWlivr il wrtlli FRIDAY' ^^ EVENINGSI C'OFFKE .SERVED CONTINUOUSLY MiKl.NC THIS KVKNT *•> i p.m. Thursday with Mrs , m~****>*C*

t A TREMPEALEAU CO. TAX REPOR T Education Week Football Field Ptogram Planned No Filings for Board Accepts Arcadia Leads in Residences At Whitehall High Sodding OKed Canton Election WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) CANTON, Minn. (Special) — $36.93, and 53.37 percent plow- 1' ,- —Among Trempealeau County able. — An American Education Week Sodding of approximately No one has filed yet for the cities, Arcadia has the most program will be held at White- 000 square yards of the football village of Canton election Dec. Resignation Arcadia — 68 residential, $5,- Charted field at Jefferson Stadium was residential units, 531, and most 032; 13 mercantile Home Gr9wth hall Memorial High School Wed- 3. The filing period ends Nov. Formal acceptance of the res- , $6,892; 413 (Special) ' Residences have increas- approved Monday night by the mercantile units, 93, but is ex- farms, $4,260 ; 75, WHITEHALL, Wis. — nesday at 8 p.m. 20. , j ignation of Senior High School 651 acres at ed steadily in all villages and cities of Trempealeau County Winona Board of Education. ceeded in value of manufactur- $33.78, and 43.56 percent plow- Included in the program will Terms of the following will football coach James Elliott ing units within the corporate in the last 16 years, according to Harley Turk , Sparta, super- dif- On the recommendation of was voted Monday night by tha able. be a panel discussion on the the administration , the portion expire: Ronald Ramlo, mayor ; limits by two other cities. Preston — 30 visor of assessments for this area. ferent classes with the students Gordon Johannsen , trustee ; Board of Education. residential, $4,- This table shows the increases: between the 20-yard lines and Whitehall has the highest val- 403; three mercantile, $6,333; as panel members Under the di- Lawrence Hudson , treasurer ; Elliott, who had asked to ba the side markers will be reno- relieved of his coaching assign- uation in manufacturing units- 268 farms, $4 ,265; 37,026 acres Villages *. 1946 1956 1962 rection of Miss Judith Lee; a vated with a new type of sod Wavil Ramlo , justice, and two of them average $538,000. at $38.10, and 49.40 percent Eleva 95 132 144 session on guidance counseling James Potts, constable. j ment effective at the end of tha ( ) referred to as "cultured sod." recently completed season, will Blair's two manufacturing units plowable. Ettrick Inc. 1948 126 136 by David Elkins ; a panel dis- Superintendent , of Schools A. Terms of all offices are two averaged $283,500 in equalized Ettrick - 45 residential, $3,- Pigeon Falls ( Inc. 1956) 66 cussion on extra curricular ac- years except trustee, which is remain on the , ' L. Nelson explained that this public schools valuation. 020; eight mercantile, $3,700; Strum : ...... 95 178 214 tivities, with Mrs. Willie John- is a Kentuc- three years. £ i l 327 farms, $5,844; 49,480 acres Trempealeau .. 156 186 214 son as chairman , and physical faculty as a bCnOOl THESE figures were among cy blue grass ' , . The election will be in the at $31.98, and 39.85 percent Cities: education demonstrations under m a t h e- average residential, mercantile, grown on peat 5chOOI bank basement from 11 a.m. to m a t i c s in- farmstead, manufacturing and plowable. Arcadia C 377 465 531 the direction of Mrs. Sheridan soil that pro- 8 p.m. D ^^-J Dodge — 41 residential , Johnson and Cy Buker; Follow- s t r u c t o r DOaiQ farm land valuations in the 15 , $3 - Blair .. 171 236 261 duces a very i At a special meeting Oct. 20 1 834; 13 mercantile, $4 ,985: 72 ing the program , student coun- p , at Central —" —' townships, five villages and six Galesville ,,...... 253 307 326 dense growth. DOdfCl the council levied $6,000 for gen- farms, $4,193 ; 13,320 acres at Independence 246 268 296 cil members will conduct tours Junior High School. cities reported to the Trempea- This sod. he- ' eral government purposes for Directors took no action Mon- leau County Board of Super- $27.50, and 37.43 percent plow- Osseo 262 339 376 of the buildings. said , provides a better playing able. next year. day on appointment of a new visors at the opening of its an- Whitehall ... 263 395 m surface because it does not be- Trempealeau — 147 residen- Members of the council whose head football coach. In infor- nual meeting last week by Har- A comparison of the livestock population in the county : come as hard as pasture sod mal discussion of the resi tial , $3,749; 17 mercantile, $8,- it is terms will hold over into next gna- ley Turk, supervisor of assess- Cows ...... 58,656 66,660 75,729 but , on the other hand , year are Lawrence Hudson, tion last week it was the gen- 012; 185 farms, $5,107; 31,412 1/ Units Support natural sod. ments, Sparta. Swine 9,261 8,204 7,420 not as tough as clerk, and Vane Snyder and eral consensus of the board that acres at $53.34, and 55.80 per- Sheep 9 , The number of units and av- cent plowable. ,164 5 036 .3,515 THE CULTURED sod will be Norman Halverson, trustee.s. no immediate action should be erage valuations in each, of the Gale — 96 residential, $4,270 ; $40.26 , and 42.50 percent plow- $3,333; 78 farms $4,508; 12,814 County purchased for an estimated 22 taken and that consideration of 26 municipalities of the county 17 mercantile, ,282; 232 able. ;")id Jackson cents a square yard and will a successor should be deferred were: $7 acres at $48.74, 66.04 per- farms, $4,990 ; 38,225 acres at Caledonia — 18 residential, cent plowable. be laid by school personnel. The Talk on Adolescence until it's known what teaching CITIES: Arcadia — 531 resi- work is expected to be done vacancies there'll be on tha dential, average $6,783; 93 mer- Superintendent next spring. By Sister Jonathan staff next year. cantile, average $12,478; six AT WHITEHALL BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. Directors approved payrolls Heard at Cotter HSA The board agreed with 1st manufacturing, average $45,- (Special) — Thirteen townships for substitute teachers amount- Ward Director Ray Gorsuch's 750. and four villages contribute to- ing to §1,507.55 ; attendance Sister M. Jonathan , OSF, suggestion that a letter be sent Blair —• 261 residential, aver- ward the cost of the Jackson teachers, $199.75; homebound teacher at the College of St. to Elliot commending him for age $5,749; 62 mercantile, aver- County superintendent of instructors, $1,022; noon hour Teresa , talked at the Monday his work with athletic teams age $11,266 ; two manufacturing, ' schools, according to an annual cafeteria supervisors , $522 ; sub- evening meeting of the Cotter during the four years he held 28 Senior stitute secretaries, $115.13; sur- Home School Association at the post. average, $283,500. Citizens report presented to the County vival preparedness instruction , Galesville — 326 residential , Board of Supervisors last week. Cotter High School. $60; study hall supervision and Sister Jonathan presented a average $6,128; 55 mercantile, Three high school districts au- Jaycee Meeting Set average $13,200; four manufac- substitute teaching, $221.62; brief insight into the psychol- are serviced by the county sup- dio-visual assistant, $18.75, and turing, average $78,375. Apartments Planned erintendent: Alma Center , Mel- ogy of adolescence. It is during At Spring Grove Club s t u d e n t cafeteria workers , the period of early adolescence, Independence — 296 residen- WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) of the two apartments in two The building will be two stories. rose and Taylor. The Black Riv- $316.85. SPRING GROVE, Minn - tial , average $5,791; 59 mercan- er Falls district has its own sup- which usually is reached at the —Within days Brookside Apart- duplexes that will be built in Each apartment will have its age of sixteen, that the child Young men of the Spring Grove tile, average $9,215; three man- ments, Inc., a nonprofit group the same area. Rental is ex- own entrance with a porch and ervisory system. OVERTIME payments of $37 community will be visited by a ufacturing, average $22,667. Mrs. Cora Heibling is the sup- to cafeteria workers and $391.43 experiences the most changes, of 40 Whitehall residents, ex- pected to be as low as 560 a railing in the front. both physical and mental, she delegation from the Preston Osseb — 376 residential, av- pects to hear that Farmers month. erintendent. for custodial employes were ap- Junior Chamber of Commerce The apartment building will proved. said. erage $5,272; 63 mercantile, av- Home Administration has ap- be heated by a central oil-fired JUDGE Richard Lawton "We should be concerned at the American Legion Club proved its app THE CORPORATION has tak- re- Attending the meeting were . erage $9,232; four manufacturr lication for a furnace. ported an increase of 832 ac- with accepting the child as he Wednesday at 8 p.m. ing, average $67,750. $200,000 loan to build 28 apart- en an option on the Nels Fred- Board President Lawrence San- They will be urged to start a rickson farm and plans to erect The duplex apartments will tions and special proceedings telman , Frank J. Allen Jr., is. The adolescents' emotions Whitehall — 398 residential, ments for senior citizens. Ap- Jaycees chapter here. Any man the apartment building where be two-bedroom. before him in the year from last Franklin Tillman , Dr. C.. R. Kol- are changing and parents can average $6,817; ,60 mercantile, plication was made in early No-v. guide the child but they should between 21-36 may join. summer. his barn now stands. This is Construction will be of brick Nov . 1 to 1 this year. A iofski . Daniel Sadowski , Ray ¦ average $12,837; two manufac- adjacent to Irvin Creek. It will and block. Floors will be tiled ; total of 2 ,215 actions has gone Gorsuch, Dr. C. W. Rogers and not try to remake him," the turing, average $538,000. The re- It's a Chamber of Commerce educator stated. PARTY AT TREMPEALEAU "Senior C iti zens Retirement be about a block south of High- the masonry walls will be paint- through his court this year. Dr. L. L. Korda. port did not include buildings on way 53 and Ervin Street in the ¦ The Rev. James McCauley, TREMPEALEAU, Wis. (Spe- leased land. Project," not an old folks home. ed; there'll be some wood pan- Fees, costs, fines and forfei- south portion of town. eling ; the kitchens will have principal, explained the mark- cial) — Towner-Little Bear It will be operated by the cor- tures have been correspondingly will sponsor a VILLAGES: Eleva — 144 res- plenty of cupboard space and higher, increasing $5,361.68 to ing system of the school. Re- VFW Post 1915 poration, of which Keil Blank The duplexes will be in the port cards were distributed by party at its hall Saturday at idential, average $4,769; 31 mer- is president and Floren Hegge, same area. built-in stove and refrigerator; $30,256. cantile Chaliield to Vote home room teachers. 6:30 p.m. , average $5,126. ^ secretary. Each apartment in the apart- ceramic tile will be laid in the Judge Lawton said they in- Ettrick — 136 residential, av- Folks will need to be 62 years ment building will contain a liv- bathrooms, and there'll be am- volved 183 probate matters; 169 erage $5,331; 37 mercantile, av- old to apply for and receive ing and dining room combina- ple closet space. civil ; 228 misdeameanors and ,000 erage $7,527. felonies; 1,443 traffic cases; sev- On $240 an apartment , either in the 24- tion of about 14 by 20 feet, OWEN & AYRES , Eau Claire Pigeon Falls — 66 residential, apartment building, or in one kitchen , one bedroom , and bath. en adoptions ; 95 juvenile cases ; architects and engineers, are 5 accident settlements; 3 illegit- average $5,553; 13 mercantile, drawing the plans.. If the loan average $7,385. timacy proceedings ; 42 Univerr School Program Out-of-Town Colleges comes through, 'building will Strum — 214 residential, aver- start in the spring, with next sity Hospital cases; 26 Mendota CHATF1ELD, Minn. - The mental hospital cases; 2 tuber- * age $5,582; 33 mercantile, aver- fall as the completion target. Chatfield school district will age $6,555. culosis sanitarium cases, and 5 vote Nov. 22 on a $240 ,000 bond The project will be in the new marriages. Trempealeau — 215 residen- Fredrickson residential addition issue to finance a two-story, tial, average $4,400 ; 22 mercan- In Physics Program opened several years ago, on the nine-classroom addition to the AT THE request of Highway elementary building. tile, average $4,986. NORTHFIELD, Minn. -ROY- Other scholarships were award- southeast edge of town. There Commissioner Edgar Olson, the AL THERN, son of Mr. and ed to Janet Black and Virginia are two private nursing homes board transferred $15 Two kindergarten rooms also TOWNS: Albion — 16 residen- ,000 from would be included in the struc- J&. TOPCOATS tial, average $3,838; two mer- Mrs. Royal G-. Thern, 1351 Glen- Hill, ARKANSAW, and Ellen in the city. the machinery to the highway view Rd., is one of three seniors Rohrscheib, MONDOVI. Members of the Chamber of ture. centile, average $3,500; 155 building fund. AT PRESENT, all available farmsteads, average $4,390; 22,- at St. Olaf College who have ** * * Commerce have voted to loan This is toward construction of been selected to participate in BLAIR, Wis. (Special)- Rog- their industrial development classrooms are filled and the news rroocoa s check ur 122 acres of land, average a new highway department ga- school is without music and flliilHBsHi^H' 'n < ^ a student research program in er Waugen, student at the Uni- fund to Brookside Apartments, rage in the Northfiel ° $40.62, with 60.38 percent d area, sick rooms. If the addition were lowable. physics sponsored by a Na- versity of Wisconsin, has been Inc., as a contingency fund. which the commissioner p feels built, part of the present build- Unity — 19 residential, ,- tional Science Foundation initiated into the Alpha Gamma Memberships are available in will be necessary as work pro- $3 ing-- would be remodeled for 758; 128 farms, $3,974 ; 21,456 grant. Rho fraternity. His parents, the corporation at $10 each. gresses on Interstate 94 which acres at $33.67 average, and He will study spin waves in Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Waugen, will cut through Jackson these purposes. represented at Emil's. Coun- classrooms is :|_SHBHH^v^pP M 57.15 percent plowable. thin magnetic films. The re- attended the parents' day din- ty. Olson said about 10 A shortage of acres of expected by next year. Princi- Sumner 54 residential, $4,- search will be carried out under ner and open house at the frat- land will be required. He esti- 048 ; four mercantile, $4,450; 134 supervision of Duane N. Olson ernity. Wabasha, Lake mates cost of land and pal and interest of the proposed ? ' * • building retired by a farms, $4,171; 21,810 acres at and Thomas D. Rossing of the at $35,000. The garage will be bond issue can be RUSHFORD, $36.01, and 60.08 percent plow- St. Olaf physics department Minn. - Jean needed in a few years when 1-94 mill levy of approximately 6%. able. faculty. Peifer will play the leading City to Gel Gas construction starts. That would mean about $3.15 for Chimney Rock — Five resi- ERIK LOKENSGARD, son of feminine role when the Augs- each $100 total real and per- dential , $3,700 ; one mercantile, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Lokensgard, burg College Society of Drama- WABASHA , Minn. — Natural sonal property taxes paid this ,000 ; 162 farms, $2,425 ; 22,457 212 W. Sth St., is a member tic Art presents "Brothers Ka- gas will be available in Waba- year, exclusive of assessments. $8 saha and Lake City by mid- Student Fined acres at $26.70, and 40.40 per- of the St. Olaf College 57-piece ramazov" in the Augsburg Lit- Matson & Wegleitner, Minne- cent plowable. orchestra. tle Theatre Nov. 20-24. summer next year, according to apolis, are the architects and Northern States Power Co. For Sho plifting Hale — 27 residential , $3,207; The orchestra is making a Springsled, Inc., St. Paul , the 15-concert tour this year begin- The Federal Power Commis- 11 mercantile, $5,864 ; 296 farms, Gerald J, Vagts, 18, Harmony, bonding consultants. VV WINTER : ning Friday -with a matinee in ' sion has issued to NSP's pipe- The board decided on the ad- $4;il3; 44 ,394 acres at $34.03 St Mary s Faculty , Northern Na- Minn., student at Winon a State each the St. Cloud High School. line gas supplier dition because constructing in , and 51.13 percent plow- tural Gas Co., the certificate College, pleaded guilty in muni- JACKETS able. Read Shakespeare cipal court this morning to a a new location would cost about MARTIN FARRELL, son of required before construction $100,000 more for new heating, I aW Burnside — 54 residential ,$5,- can be begin on the pipeline charge of shoplifting. ' 506 ; six mercantile , $22,417; 133 Mr. and Mrs . Francis M. Far- Excerpts Tonight Judge John D. McGill sen- library, lunch and kitchen fac- up rell , 607 Olmstead St., has that will serve thu area. ilities. The estimated cost in- : U«*ID farms, $4,482; $22,290 acres, Construction will start early tenced him to pay a fine of $35 HifJH- **P ' I pledged Delta Upsilon social The faculty of the St. Mary's cludes architect fees and most * $44.56 each , and 55.57 percent next year on a lateral extending or to serve 12 days. Vagts had fraternity at DePauw Univer- College speech department will of the equipment. plowable. present a Shakespeare from Northern's pipeline sys- posted bail and it was used to Lincoln — 52 residential , $6,- sity, Greencastle, Ind. Reading pay the fine. THE ADDITION would in- Hour at 8: *"0 p.m. today in the tem at Plainview . It will be 012; two mercantile , $4,000; 114 * * * about 26 miles long: 18 miles of He was arrested by police at clude terrazzo floors in the cor- DURAND, Wis. (Special) Student Union Lounge. - ridors, representing a savings farms , $4 ,576; 17 ,555 acres at — The reading hour , line to place natural gas in F. W. Woolworth Co., 62 E. 3rd $9.fi2 , and 58.(50 percent plow- Jacqueline B rotzman and Don- which is St.. at 4:15 p.m. Moriday. Vagts over a period of years, the open to the public , is the second Lake City and eight miles to able. ald Komro were among 46 Wabasha. The line will be built took a ballpoint pen , according board says, and lockers, except , event in the Shakespeare festi- to police. , Pigeon — 40 residential , $4 - students of Wisconsin State val being held at the college by the gas company and NSP for the kindergarten rooms 475 ; two mercantile , $4,250; 174 College, Eau Claire, to receive this year. will build the distribution sys- which would save glazed tile in farms, $4 ,283; 24 ,249 acres at scholarships this semester. the corridors. Participants will include tems — 15.9 miles in Lak** City Ettrick Woman Notes mi£sL, Brother J. Raymond , FSC, and 10.4 miles in Wabasha. The building won't be ready £ ^ Mrs. .Stanley McMahon , Nor- Officials said the extension Her 79th Birthday until next fall . Next spring it mdn Delue and Gerald Sullivan. was planned from Plainview will be necessary (o rent facili- Sullivan , department chairman , rather than Red Wing — which ETTRICK , Wis. (Special) ties outside the school for spring _ MENSWEAR The 79th birthday of Mrs. Oline primary, if the space is avail- E. CLEANING will introduce the program , is closer to Lake City — be- y^y- 122 Third St. Phone 5338 LEAF J which will consist of selections cause lines now serving Red Reitzel was observed Sunday nt able , because the only room in ^^ WE RENT FORMAL WEAR from "A Midsummer Night's Wing do not have enough cu- the home of her son-in-law and the present building is under Dream , " "J u I i u s Cucsar," p-icily to furnish the additional daughter , Mr. and Mrs. Raider the balcony in tlie auditorium. "King Lear , " "The Merchant service. Martin , Lukes Coulee. of Venice A. E. Freeberg, manager of The former Oline Even-son, , " "Macbeth" and <) SPECIAL S "Hamlet." NSP's Red Wing division , made Mrs. Reitzel was born Nov . , \u ¦ ;;, Other events in the festival the announcement. 1884, in Welsh Coulee. She was .hi . i . >, \ i .-J .- married first to Bernt Erriksmo- —m * m—. SAVE 50? ON AN Take No will be a full-length production ^ ^ of "Hamlet" late next Febru- TAYLOR PUBLIC LIBRARY en and the couple farmed on 8-LB. LOAD Chances. Lone Star Ridge in the Town ary and the showing of film TAYLOR , Wis. (Special) - versions of "A Midsummer of Preston , now the Archie Hun- Have Your Taylor Public Library will be- nestrand farm. Mr. Erriksmo- Night' s Dream " and "Richard gin its winter schedule Satur- HARDWOOD PANELING Clean Only£ Clothe! III. " en died about 40 years ago . ln ¦ day. It will be open from 2:30- 1917 Mrs. Reitzel was married ' 4 p.m. The library is operated Beautifully prefin ished cherry, birch, walnut... budget prices 8 Pound* Cleaned by PARTY AT LA CRKSCISNT lo George Reitzel. They lived by the Taylor American Legion first in the Whitehall area , later LA CRESCENT, Minn. (Spe- Auxiliary. cial)—La Crescent Knights of ¦ moving to Mrs. Keitzel' s farm on Lone .Star Ridge. 3*1 Professional Columbus will hold their annual GIRL SCOUTS WORK "%¦¦ turkey stag Friday at Crucifix- About 20 years ago Mr. and W Q ^mW %J Cleaner. ion Auditorium. Free refresh- ETTRICK , Wis. ( Special) - Mrs. Reitze l sold their fa rm , ments will be served from 8 Senior G irl Scouts under the di- moved to Ettrick and purchas- p.m. until 2 a.m. with n turkey rection of their leader, Mrs. Ben ed a mobile home. Mr, Reitzel dinner at midnight. Tickets are Erickson , have stamped nnd la- died Oct. 80 . 1955. , beled 1 ,500 cancer bulletins for Mrs. Reitzel has three daugh- available from John Hurrn Jo- ( seph Berg, Raymond lteisrlorf , the Trempealeau Cqunty Chap- ters, Mrs. Emil Myrtle) Stut- "^ Sweaters Dr. L, W. Gittens, Jnmes Spero- ter of the American Cancer So- lien , who lives between White- polus and Gene Klug. ciety, hall and Independence; Mrs. Raider ( Esther) Martin , Blair , and Mrs. Ben (Zel pha) Erick- son, Ettrick ; seven grandchil- ONE > dren and nine great-grandchil- 3gc#w "There's No Place Like Home!" j dren. Mrs, Reitzel is active and * .' , . . Home Ht.inds for the pooplo w« lovo bent. I •still lives alone in her mobile WEEK _^^_ ¦ the Cleaned and I * ^flHb^ Mnlui nur* homo you're worl -inK hurd home. Hand Blocked ^ to r<)vi(, cfln ftl wayn bo your loved ones * ONLY '• mimW#y VmQ*\ P ° i __\\_\_W^ $ iy___\ ¦ horaowithBpcr.inln-iorlRaR6inmiinnec. _ C.wll FLY CHKIUC LADIES All) fordetniU on our low-coflt mortRnKo policien. I . ^ ^trtmt i mmMS^^m'! BLAIR , Wis. (Special) - The " ROGER KEMP Fly Creek Ladies Aid will meet 3373 wWK__W ^f^ B. | W*Z^ Phone Winona DIAL 2222-LEAF'S ' l74 E 5th streot winonfl < M'nn - I Friday at 2 p.m. in tho Zion ^¦ira^ClP'lf ' ' I J II t h e r n n Church parlors. LAUNDRY 8. CLEANING ¦ML * .M r -*ToROUr HEAITH MUTUAL, INC. /jffjh Mmes. Basil Shelley, Aldcn STANDARD FOR THRIFT . . . reliable quality . . . helpful services Second and Main / / .JM Hom» Lyngon and Ernest Lyngen will . ksmk*m^M^: Lm^m OHIw-St. Paul, Minn. Ul ^-^ T \ be hostesses. Pack Ready Halas Crying No Solution Seen Remains Bears Getting Between TexasV In Split No. 1, Navy Big Lift for Sunday's Tilt AAU and Colleges WASHINGTON (AP , - The meeting ended Monday. Skips Into 2nd I CHICAGO .un — Owner-Coach by Gen. Committee has After mediation Dong- NEW YORK (AP) - As tbe : ; George Halas of the Chicago U.S. Olympic _ MacArthur, both sides ¦ ¦ las |l|' |ii5P0RTS- - - I ! Bears is crying that the Green last session before the only major college team still i ended its agreed earlier this year to a Bay Packers MONDAY S DAILY NEWS carried a sports item stating i will have all of 1964 Olympics with no perma- truce in their conflict until aft- unbeaten and untied , despite the that the Golden Gloves boxing program was in need of a the psychological advantages spon- nent solution in sight for the er the 1964 Olympics. slender margins of victory. Tex- sor. when the two teams clash in split between the Amateur Ath- However, this didn't stop both as retained its spot as the na- With the program off on the right foot, it would seem a their showdown battle Sunday. maneuvering for the colleges. sides from tion 's No. 1 football team this shame to see it die for lack of backing. j But an unexpected morale- letic Union and more power on the Olympic building series of events has un- week. Jim Mullen , the man in charge , has taken steps to assure Neither the AAU nor the Na- Committee. They kept up a run- folded in the- short time since Athletic Associ- throughout the two The Longhorns were first on ihe citv of a group of bovs it can be proud of. the Bears tional Collegiate ning battle edged Los Angeles dur- 48 of 53 ballots and took the top "We feel that when such a program is 6-0 Sunday and this could give ation showed any letup days. biennial meeting Just before final adjournment, spot for the fifth straight week run correctly, it has a useful place in the Chicago the necessary impetus ing the two-day community, "' said' Mullen. of the hostilities that once committee president Kenneth. L. by a comfortable margin. needed against the Packers. After seeing such a program run both threatened to wreck America 's (Tug) Wilson commented : here with a heavy The panel of sports writers ways at Albert Lea. we agree. All too often, "The Packers will be out to hopes next year in Tokyo. The "I leave prove heart ... I was sincere jn my and broadcasters voting in the Golden Gloves is connected with a group ot - our 10-3 victory over Press poll them in the season opener was plea that we should not have weekly Associated ne 'er-do-wells interested mainly in picking up that we should con- recognition as a mistake, " says Halas. "They bloc voting, also meted out tips that may serve them well in coming alley issue on its merits. due to other winners and losers. have been champions for two sider each " brawls. The conflict began Sunday Navy. Michigan State. Okla- years. They have all the over- "We won 't stand for that sort of thing. " all strength and they 've beaten when AAU forces reversed the homa and Pitt rose in the rank- \\\\\\\\\\\\\_mmiWj ^^mmmm\' of directors Auburn and said Mullen. "Once a boy gets in a street us four times in our last five \ committee s board ings while Illinois. ' of granting a Ohio State went down. fight, he s out of the . program. Also, if he games." on the question can't pass his subjects in school , we don't Mullen The Bears can more than i newly formed federation sanc- Texas, winning its eighth " ' represent the United straight game, had to go all out want him out. If he's failing, he belongs at home studying." match Green Bay on defense. : tion to But it 's a different story on I States on the.International Fed- to win a squeaker from Baylor If the program is run in this way, and we're confident it 1 be, offense and that's where the BACK OF THE WEEK . . . Quarterback Bill Douglas eration for Baseball. 7-0. That was the fourth in a will boxing has its place in Winona. backed the high row won by no more than a , Bears might wind up getting of the University of Washington is shown in action during The NCAA James Heinlen . probation officer feels the same way. junior colleges in touchdown. Instead of discount- their psychological lift. the game with the University of California at Berkeley, schools and "1 think it is an important program for our youth and the While they could muster only seeking more votes in the new ing the Longhorns because of city of Winona. " he savsl Calif., last Saturday. Douglas was named "Back of the (hose margins, the experts gave two fieid goals by Roger Le- Page 12 organization. The AAU opposed The major item needed now is a sponsor. Getting a ring Week" by The Associated Press for his outstanding per- voted down. them a whopping total of 526 Clerc in defeating the Rams, ) Tuesday, November 12, 1963 and it was is no problem. Ben Sternberg, Rochester fight promoter , has the offensive players constantly formance. (AP Photofax The NCAA wanted President points on the scoring basis of 10 group use his for local bouts and the points for a first place vote, offered to let the Winona were booed everytime they left Kennedy given authority to members of the nine for second, etc. That came Catholic Ree, which is already furnishing gym facilities has a the field by the crowd of 4$,?,12' . name three THAT'S A PROBLEM directors to represent on 48 firsts, four seconds and floor ring that may be used , for practice sessions. .: And everytime the defensive Beltveau Remains board of one vote for fifth. "We need equipment mainly. " says Mullen. "We have team came off, cheers rocked the public and help mediate the Navy moved upfrom fourth had real good attendance at our workouts, but unless we get the ball park. dispute. The AAU, which once opposed it and it to second with 446 points, re- gloves and things for the younger fellows , they may decide to The Bear offense hasn 't done favored this , was beaten. placing Illinois., which skidded drop out. " much scoring but the players NHL's Top Scorer have ears'. ' As adopted by the committee, far down the list after a 14-8 Mullen estimates that $200 would cover the cost of the Gophers Arent MONTRE AL (AP ) — Mon- the armed forces membership loss to Michigan. The voters ob- needed equipment. An additional S125 is needed for. a boxing And . as expected. Chicago treal's Jean Beliveau main- viously were impressed by the was increased from one to four license should the group sponsor a Winona card. newspapers Monday hailed the tained his National Hockey on the board of directors, and case with which the Midship- League scoring lead last week, , defense and such banner lines President Kennedy will name men massacred Maryland 42-7. College unveils its winter sports teams graced the sports pages as but Chicago's Bobby Hull made Mississippi , an easy 41-0 winner WINONA STATE one non-voting member to repre- public Friday night. "Bears offertse is sick , con- ¦ Aer ial Threat the biggest gain and vaulted into sent the inter-agency committee demonstration open to the over Tampa, a minor Opponent, in a . MINNEAPOLIS ' (AP) — The gers back to the top unit ahead At 4 o 'clock Friday afternoon , John Martin , new Warrior fused . . . defense 'normal.''' a tie for the runner-up spot. on international sports. remained in third. Michigan Minnesota Gophers have gained of Rognlie at left end. swimming coach , will show his tankers in an and "Bear defense set for Beliveau accounted for one The AAU remained in com- State climbed from ninth to " inter-squad meet. Green Bay . nearly twice as much yardage Second-team tackle Fred Nord goal and two assists last week plete command throughout the fourth after trimming Purdue No , the Bear offense 'hasn-t 23-0 and taking the Big Ten Bob Campbell's cagers will meet the on the ground as they have was .probably lost for this and now has six goals and a session, winning every vote. And been great , but the players can week's game at Purdue when- league-leading 17 assists for 23 the net effect of the voting re- lead. freshmen team at 7 p.m. and Bob Gunner 's through the air this season, and read such items as "The proud he turned up with a bad ankle points , according to league sta- alignment is to give it further stage an inter-squad meet fol- therein lies much of the answer Behind them in the Top Ten wrestlers will defensive players joke and from the Iowa game. tistics released today. strength; lowing the basketball game. to the question, "What's wrong came Oklahoma , Pitt. Alabama , " smile, dress briskly and go with the Gophers?" Campbell states that the session will be home, knowing full well that the Illinois, Auburn and Nebraska. Minnesota Oklahoma, a 24-14 winner open to all area coaches and that th athletic victory belongs to them. The of- . has crunched . for ^ 1.006 infantry yards, but has over Iowa State , just nosed out staff will be on hand following the demonstra- fense sits and sighs a little FACTORY CLEARANCE! 'll be happy to answer any ques- sheepishly like a young boy who netted only 516 in passes. Oppo- Pitt for fifth in the point scor- tions. "We nents ' learned this early this ing, 284-281. Pitt's decisive 27-7 tions they might have.'' he said. -has just beefi bailed out of a j^^^^^ ' season , and concentrated on ¦ ¦ - " #¦ scrape by his rich old man. victory over Notre Dame lifted . . • • If the Bear offense is at all stopping the Gophers on the the Panthers from eighth place. Gunner A NOTE FROM Bin Hargesheimer , dean . ground because , , capable, what more is needed they knew the Alabama idle last Saturday, re- of Southern Minnesota basketball officials who elected to hang Minnesot a aerial game was mained in seventh. j to get the team into a psycho- up his whistle last spring, states that he has remained firm in ] logical orbit? incapable of hurting them! TDIIPIf TIQIadNH Auburn dropped from fifth to his decision to quit. ¦ ninth after being edged by Mis- Referring to his offense after As a comparison, the Go- "Am going to miss calling them this season." says Bill sissipp i State 13-10. Nebraska, . ; the Ram game, Halas said "We phers' seven opponents have I HIM I lnt "Have been contacted for games, but have remained firm and ! can 't play that way against Mil holding its Big Eight lead with gained 1,051 yards by rushing a 23-9 decision over Kansas, re- said no." .' Green Bay and expect to win . and 698 by passing—the more placed Ohio State, a 10-7 loser Although out of officiating. Bill won't be That much I know." normal Big Ten balance. to Penn State, as the ninth out of contact with the round ball and hoop. But 24 hours later, the crafty The opposition has out first- team. He once again will be directing Park National Football League downed the Gophers 91-8:?. The top ten teams with first pion- Ree Bantam Leaguers and working with the ; eer said "Over-all I think our Fullback Mike Reid is still place votes in parentheses and St. Mary 's grade school team. i offense is , Minnesota 's top rusher, with 234 points on a doing a good job. It 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 ba- 'is unrealistic to expect our of- yards in 63 carries for a 3.7 sis - average. Jerry Pelletier has 183 A YEAR AGO, Holmen High School's I fense to romp over other teams. . Plv yards on 37 carries—a 4,9 aver- 1 Texas Ull , !5« basketball tournament surge amazed area After all. our opponents aren't :. Navy 14) .. j age—and Jay Sharp has 149 for . 446 cage fans. The Vikings missed a tri p to the doing much romping against J. Mississippi , 3d 1J 43 tries—a .'{.5 average. 4 Michigan Slat* (1) 303 state tournament by losing to Eau Claire 's our defense. " 5 Oklahoma 584 Bob Sadek's passing figures Pittsburgh La Crosse Sectional finals. And Bear backfield coach *. Ill Old Abes in the show 44 completions in 101 at- TRUCKERS! Check These Never Before 7 Alabama !53 A dance at the ore-season prospectus Chuck Mather summed it up S. Illinois 133 this way : "How can anyone say tempts for 43.6 per cent , 441 ^^^^^ £ *> Auburn ?1 submitted by Viking coach Dean Uhls shows Hargesheimer 10 Nebraska 14 our offense is fouled up when yards and two touchdowns. He's Prices. Compare Our Quality. Save Money. subject of amazement, but ¦ that once again Holmen will be a all we 're doing is winning. " had six intercepted. Larry for a totally different reason. ¦ Peterson has connected on only ( I OPHEHS FIN ISH THIRD Performing for the Vikings this year will be a eager by the 5 of 19 for 75 yards. NO SECONDS, I ALL BRAND NEW FACTORY FRESH I ALL POPULAR I < HAMPA IGN. 111. (AP ) - name of Eino' Hendrickson , a junior who scales 7-0 ! Central Cops Myron Itognlie is the top NO'BLEMISHES I TSR TRUCK TIRES SIZES AVAILABLE I Minnesota 's G ophers j | finished Eino , a tuition student at Holmen who wasn 't eligible a receiver with six catches for 42 I third in the Big Ten cross coun- Grid Crown yards , while Bob Brufigers , Pel- try meet here Monday. year ago. will be the key to the Viking season — and without \ Michigan (AP) letier nnri Al Harris each have St -'te won with 46 points . Wiscon- a doubt , the tallest area performer . MINNEAPOLIS - Jim Siebers' four extra point kicks snared five aerials for 89, 81 sin had 87 and Minnesota 91. and 25 yards , respectively. FAMOUS GENERAL TRACTION SAFETY RIB Thp Gophers ' Norris Peterson Speaking of pre-se•a son outlooks• , coaches,• your Daily News meant Ihe difference Monday a.s Minneapolis Central nipped St. Sadck leads the scoring with \WmWL\ vas fifth and Roger Dav eighth. forms are due!! 18 points , whilo Reid lias 14 and rOR \ Paul Humboldt 28-26 to capture T ^m HHI AL the Twin Cities high school foot- Pellctier 12. The Gophers have ^^^^ been oiit.scoreri 105-70. ball championshi p before some W RUCKSJ ^^B L_ \\\\\\\\\W^_ \\\\\\\\\ U ¦ _ 10,OflO fans in Memorial Sta- Coach Murray Warm nth did dium. somo more Monday shuffling of The St. Paul school lost when his first team. He put Peterson Dick Mendez had one of his ex- back at No. 1 quarterback H A RA Iwl S tra point kicks blocked and ahead of Sadck, sent Pe.lletier missed another. Butch Davis back to tho first team at left ran 28 and 5.1 yards for Central half in p laco of Harris, re-placed MIXED DOUBLES TOURNAMENT touchdown s. Central wound up Fred Farthing at right half wiih 8-0, Humboldt R-i . Dick Harron rind moved Rrug- $75.00 First Place Money Donated b y Hamm' s Distributing Co. of Winona, Minn, EVEN WHEN HE GOO Fr ^, H ^^ g ^^m TUBE TYPE I TWO WEEKENDS I tfiAA AA I TW0 WEE*ENDS WmmmA ^^Lmmmm ^r NOV. 16- 17 $100.00 NOV. 16- 17 plus tax and 1 NOV. 23 - 24 FIRST PUCE NOV. 23 - 24 New York Backers recappable tire fl OPEN TO SANCTIONED BOWLERS LOOK AT THESE LOW , LOW PRICES | 3 Like Griff ing SIZE PLY PRICE * SIZE PLY TR ICE* 1 ~~~ 6.00-16 6 19.75 NKW VORK im -- -A year CriffinR •/.•¦me in. On llic third 7 00-17 6 34.59 I ago the All-America scouts play he threw a Ion.** pass lo 29.17 ** to Every ONLY (ABC-WIBC) t0 Very 7.00-16 __ 6_ 7.50-17 8 47.18 | £ watched every move of (ilynn Del Shofnci* but tbe fleet ond SANCTIONED ABCWIBC dropped tbe bull. "I' " 7.50-16 8 37.86 4 Entries 4 Entr|€S (Iriffinp, quarterback of the. m .sorry, 7.50-20 8 47.39 I s;iid Shofner to the rookie in ~ University of Mississippi . the noxt huddle. "1 could have JMXM 5 6 29.07 8 25-20 10 55.55 I Now he sils on Ihe Now York gone all tho way " ~~ 1962-63 Highest Final Average. No Average Last Year. fiinnl.V bench evory 6 50-16 6 24.16 7.10-15 6 Sunday In Ihe fourth period, (' rif- _ __ 26.38 I afternoon ^ , manning the phono ling cocked his arm and threw Use Average After 18 Games This Year. from Ihe scout TUBELESS SLIGHTLY HIGHER - NYGF N CORD SLIGHTLY MORE I in the press lif-hl inlo lho hands of I.eo box , until V. A. Tittle puts Hoy Ciiffoy, an Kajdo rookie All Weather Traction Sipes 195 Scratch Both Men and Women 2-3 Pins Handicap. No Limit. the j; a me beyond reach. who ran »7 yards for a TI), ^ Sunday was one- of those The crowd cheered wben it Full Tread Depth days when V. A , was picking Sherman, who had Tittle ¦ IM I II PER COUPLE s7 Ihe I'hiladelphia Katies lo w.u niiiif 1, up, left (IriffitiR at I I nr pieces and Ibe (limits' line the controls. m W\ M lr ^ If 1 I" I" Bowling and Expense .... $3.00°° SAV E EVEN I and exuberant defensive unit EXTRA! MORE! BUY 2 or 4 ¦¦ ¦¦¦ W ¦ ll I I ¦¦ Prize Money $4.00 was ninkinm Ihe Katies wish Are you get- fry there was an oarly bus home. jttKm ^W) ting the most ' fft With ' aboul three minutes lo protection for Enter often as you like with change of partner. tfo in Ibe third period and Ihe <» *CJ ^ | (iiwil.s leadiiif* .'(ii 7, Allio your flulo ,.. ifr ''' FOR RESERVATIONS WRITE OR CALL Shenn.m took (lYiiYirif* off Ihe insurance "_____ Wk pen 7:00 a.m. fo 6:00 p.m.—Saturdays >|| 5:00 p.m . tolophono and had hiin warm dolUr? gtttf^Mmm up on tho sidelines. Tho b\n Compare your co»t imd pro- crowd of 1)2 ,Mfi nl Yankee. ©O tection with Hardware Mu- Stadium, warmed by the num- tual* NEW Sentry Auto Policy. ber on Iho scoreboard and Call today | word of an imminent defeat SERVICE for Cleveland, cheered for WINONA'SSCALMES LARGEST A FINEST DRIVE-IN TIRE HAL-ROD LANES SERVICE Phone 6932 Member Minnesota BPAA Winona, Minn. "Ihe kid." DUAME RINGLER Phone 7261 108-116 West 2nd St. "Since 1917" p hon(J 2847 There was a cheer whon EXPERIMENTA L CLASS IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION Whitworth Wins Lakers Tumble 7th Tourney of Year Detroit Pistons game here. To Pistons "Everybody knows that Bay- SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) - By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS lor and West are not for sale or The women's golf tour rolled on Shorl: 'Rumor trade regardlesi of the offer ," Auburn Turn ing to Gulfport, Miss., today with Bailey Howell had a Out Muscular Coeds bad he added. "I'm sure the man- Kathy Whitworth of Jal, N.M., hand, AUBURN, Ala. (AP ) - "I'm broad jumping, high jumping, lum—purely on a voluntary over about 110 pounds with a full but Don Ohl and John agement of the Baltimore ball putting holding the San Antonio Civitan Egan had hot hands. " old-fashioned," complained Ath- the shot, throwing the basis. meal, got off a practice broad Open Championship — her sev- ' club knows that. discus, Howell was out of the Detroit Is Ridiculous letic Director Jeff Beard. "I as part of their academ- Only four of the 38 girls who jump of 15 feet 9 inches. She's enth tournament victory of the He acknowledged that he had ic work. an art major. line-up Monday night but Ohl MINNEAPOLIS tf> — Los ¦till say I don't like to see mus- year. and Egan each scored 27 points heard rumors of the trades. One It's an experimental class in volunteered for the initial exper- Angeles Lakers owner Bob Short tha cles on pretty girls. Surprisingly, the coach says She ran her 1963 bankroll to and led the Pistons to a 116-109 proposed Baylor going to " physical education under the iment are physical education the coeds are easier to teach in labeled as ridiculous rumors Bullets even up for Walt Bella- All the same, Auburn , whose smiling direction of Auburn $24,533 Monday as she took down National Basketball Association that his club's star players, El- 's majors. And only one, freshman some events than the men are. victory over the Los Angeles my. The other had West, Jim once-beaten football newly appointed varsity track first money of $1,300 by captur- gin Baylor and Jerry West, were Selvy being tigers are Marilyn Jo Smelko .of Crystal "They're more graceful." ing a sudden death playoff from Lakers. Krebs and Frank among the nation's best, is turn- coach, Mel Rosen. But Beard the athletic direc- possible trade bait with the Bal- swapped for Bellamy. Springs, Miss., has had previous [ the acknowledged queen of the It all started several months still timore Bullets of the National . m ing out female athletes, too, experience. tor^ isn't convinced. "I'm links—Mickey Wright. GRIFFITH, CARTER MEET while rugged guys like Beard ago when more than two score having a hard time getting used ¦ PITTSBURGH (AP) - Wel- Basketball Association. Pitchers Stan Williams and moan in dismay. girl students suggested track "She ran track in high to it," he protested . terweight champion Emile Grif- "The only way you can an- Hal Reniff of the New York classes as something new in the school ," says Rosen , "and she's For the moment, though, he NBA fith and middleweight Rubin swer such a ridiculous rumor is Yankees are California resi- Thirty-eight shapely coeds physical fitness kick. When the one of our best performers." needn't fret too much about (Hurricane) Carter will meet with an equally ridiculous re- dents. Williams was born in En- spend an hour a day, five days fall quarter started in Septem- To prove that, the demure muscles. If the girls have them, MONDAY'S KISULTS Dec. 20 in a non-title 10-round ply," Short said when contact- field , N.H., and Reniff in War- a week, running the , Boiton 114, St. Louli 110. dashes ber, it was added to the curricu- Marilyn, who wouldn't weigh they're in the right places. Ottrolt IU, Lot Ans«l«i tit. boxing bout Ln Pittsburgh . ed Monday night at the Lakers- ren, Ohio. Irv Praxel Belts 257-678 NelsonsMI-TREADS Nm... For 3rd High Series Score Winona keglers broke loose The City circuit at Hal-Rod Mary King team blasted 1,035- from their doldrums Monday Lanes produced all five men's 2,718 for team laurels. The group night. The men snapped their honor counts. Irv Praxel had game was a season high, and drought with five 600 series, his ball working as he cracked the series fourth. Irlene Trim- GUARANTEED FOR LIFE! and the women barged into the a 219-257-202—678 errorless for mer's 233-555 for the Watkins top 10 listings in five different Graham & Mc- team topped individual efforts. positions. Guire. The ser- Her single game moved her in- i e s was third to the seventh position on the ' swept to all the honors. Leroy Kanz socked 232, and AT Bam- benek hit 581. The Bankers com- bined for 1 ,023-2,967. WESTGATE: Junior Girls — Nancy Smith tumbled a 179-299 two-game set to boost High Balls to 683. Alley Gators totaled 1,- 276. Here s our Alley Gaters—Shirley Squires' ^m^> 189-510 sparked Curley's Floor Shop to 865. Winona Daily News registered 2,499. ¦ Community — Mark Warren laced 209-536 for Sunbeam \ \ ill Snowmtm! Bread's 955. Tom Riska match- ed the 536 for Schmidt' s Beer , r$E while Hackbarth Feed Mill was SAlEI blasting 2,721. ilii ^mmw^M HAL-ROD: Park Rer Jr. Girls —Suzanne Laak led All Stars to 690-1,293 with her 164-284 two- game set. VFW-Joe Stolpa tagged 596 in leading Wason 's Supper Club to 2,837. Hank Paskewicz blast- ed 237 for Hamm 's Beer , and 7-Up flattened 990. Blanches Tavern took the first-half title. B ST. MARTIN'S: Ladies-Irene B Bronk tapped 179—484 for WW B Coca-Cola. Deep Rock Rock- ettes tipped 866 and Winona ¦ Typewriter Service 2,504 . Bi9J*** \\ i v^ ^ . m^iu*^ ]yl_ i\s^^HflA \ \ 2*«*""?H r The J CAGE LEAGU ES HAVE OPENINGS Most sportsmen agree that our PhtlvnCmtt l Vern Smrlser of the Park handmade Bourbon does Jiav*- a Vm»|N%li** Re<* Department said thi«s wore play- better flavor , after a fair test. ? niT"?^^ ( morning that thore Our 114-year-old sour mash y|**''°'^maaAS'|ff er openings in the IMidgrt <12- C'l% JWBt ?\n 14-year-olds) nnd Pop Wee (8- recipe gives it the mellow, ) ' ' '¦ ¦¦ 9-year-oIds Leagues. satisfying flavor you're looking ,, Kmuc.Tr': for about _ ' • ^WBouMot.df***' "Wn have room {or . a dozen boys in tho Midget 1V League, and eight or nine In ^^^taafcaaaa^l*' Z^Z-~^^Om'J the fee Wee League, " said Smnlser. Pee Wee League members are to pick up their suits this week at the Park Rer office in the City Building. Midget Hue/ Sf)o€biiuuU'""SoWKMt/ and Rantnm members will # Do8,n ym^ffT ¦ r pick up their (suits next week. RNElSfiH BH ««i M ¦¦** f br.ot ,. E '" W^^tLmmW ^^^^^^^ m **•*! OH trom STITZEL-W LLER . America's Oldest Family Distillery League schedules will he dis * I ' v H Estab. Louisville, Ky., 1849 • Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey . 90 PROOF tributed then. FREE BOWLING INSTRUCTIONS j >llv ^^^^^ |^a^^^' Guiranratd M Month* Ji^i^BBBi^i^B^B^i^ia^M»»^___ \m\ ^^^ ^ lUrfiiif «RY ^^ | Thursday, November 14 ^ E|m j ^^^ ^^^ ^^ ^^ ^¦'¦''Vafli ^^^^ m^BlHMi ^^^^^ l 1 at WESTGATE BOWL ^HH I i LEE STANCE W GOO D/V EAR MINNESOTA TWINS STAR PITCHER [ MEj lf l^ 1 MORE PEOPLE RIDE ON GOODYEAR TIRES THAN ON ANY OTHER KIND ) Juniors from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. I ^ H | p j I Adults from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. I ; ) J / ' l LET IEE HELP YOU IMPROVE YOUR OAME! | ,j j | | I . j ! j , | NELSON TIRE SERVICE Fourth and Johnson PHont 2306 ATE BOWL J I WESTGWESTOATE SHOPPING CENTER Branches In Madison, Wis., Minneapolis, Minn., and Springfield, III. Help Wanfd—M«l» t?J Think! _ 2^ Card_ * j Y6TjNli rMENto learn mtat cutting trad*! 1 P. M. New York PETERSON- . i _ _ . . _ Full time work. Some experience help to txtend our thanks ana Want Ads W» wish lui but nol necessary. Apply or write sets of Kindness, Stock Prices appreciation for th» Broadway Super Saver. Bruhn Feels sympathy, beau IM floral H. B. Nathe, by of CITY CAGE LOOP Advance messages and spiritual offerlnss racelvaov from AH'd Ch* S4 'a Int'l Ppr 34 and rela- "" ' " WILL ORGANIZE 3 Start Here our many friends, nelohbors ROUTE MAN Openings for Als Chal 15 ,i Jns & L 63 tives In our sad bereavement, the loss j 55 STOPS a day, *-day week. Start al of our loved one, Virginia Ann Peter- (85 per week. Married, to age 37. Sei Amrada 72 Kn'ct 76^ Grul- The City Basketball League son. We especially 1h»nk Msgr. Mr . Williamson, Winona Hotel, Thurt,, May Lrld F«ther Bre- ¦ Team Be Am Ch 41^ ., Rails Features NOTICE Hermann, will organize at a meeting at 44' kowski, Father Nov. 11, l or Interview. Trili newspaper will be responsible la, the Sisters of lha CoNeoe of St. ^ 7:15 p.m. Nov. 19 at the Park Am M&F 19% Mp Hon 136% of School of 7 for only one Incorrect Insertion Teresa and St. Maryi Slate Bowling Ree office in the City Build- Am Mt 22% Mn MM 65 /8 any classified advertisement pub- Nursing, Winona PO UCB Dept. and Mn Ont lished In the Want Ad section. Check State Hwy. Patrol, the pallbearers for PRINTING ing. AT&T 133^ & 23W> ¦ Train Ready to Roll Am Tb .27*4 Stock Market your ad and call 3321 If correc- and those who contributed the use of Teams interested in compet- Mn P&L — tion must be made. their cars. MADISON llf x — Wisconsin Ancda Wi Mn Chm 56>/4 (AP)-A Richard Paterson a. Steven Hand Composition ing in the six-member league NEW YORK contin- ¦ ' -& i ¦- ' The CiaplewsM Family Slated football Coach Milt Bruhn be- Arch Dn 43 V2 Mon Dak 36*r« ued advance by rails featured The Peterson .Family Meet ' are asked to register now. ' BLIND ADS UNCALLED FOR— Linecasting and Presswork " Jim Schneider, president of lieves his Badgers still have Armc St 63M* Mn Wd 34M* an irregular stock market early RYAN— faithful cus- their big game ahead. The de- Armour 40 Vs Nt Dy 65 this afternoon. D—»5, at, »4, H I wish le ttiank all my Write the Winona Bowling Associa- Avco Cp 233i N Am Av 52»4 Fractional gains and losses tomers and others who had to drive fending Big Ten champions ' a bloc k out of their way to get to mv GRAPHIC ARTS tion , today announced reserved Beth Stl SO-is Nr N Gs 51% were the general rule for most i * . - store during the Improvements ot Main . couldn t pick a better day than . — was dates and openings for the Bng Air 36Vs Nor Pac 47!8 key stocks. St. , Trempealeau, your . business Technical School RED MENS CLASS B Saturday when Illinois invades Card of Thanks appreciated. 's Grocery Redmen w L Brswk 11 % No St Pw .Wi Rails still were encouraged Ryan 1964 Minnesota State Bowling Camp Randall Stadium. JILK- Chris Ryan, Prop, for Catalog. Sunbeam ;. 11 3 ! Mrs. j 1» Ctr Tr 47 s NW Air .65% by the apparent agreement on I wish to express my sincere thanks Trempealeau Tournament to be held at Don- Ooerers i» 11 "Maybe we can roll now," j j Ch MSPP 15% Nw Bk 53' 4 sale of U.S. wheat to Russia ; to my relatives, neighbors and friends Approved for Veteran Training Bubs Oldtlmera .....11 11 Bruhn said, "if we keep up the for their prayers, letters, cards, gifts ' 3,i ¦ Lost and Found 4 ovan s Lanes on Highway 100 Schmidts n H C&NW 32 Penney 45'/4 which would involve an increase and other acts of kindness during my V.F.W. head of steam we had at the 1104 Currie Ave., Minneapoli* Chrysler 93Vz Pepsi 54% in carloadings. ; recent Illness at the Rochester Metho- StocMon in Edina. Donovan 's is the new Htl-Rod W U LOST—2 coon hounds, between end against Northwestern." 3 ; dist Hospital . and Rollingstone area. Tel. B-2B34 . Blanches Tavern ...... 14 • Ct Svc 61 4 Phil Pet 49% No particular leadership was . __ name of what used to be the Wisconsin stopped Northwest- j Mrs. Francis. Jllk Wajoni Supper Club ...... lf 14 Cm Ed 48-Vi Plsby 51 "4 displayed by other groups, how- Bill more Lanes. Fountain Brew . 1* 14 ern 17-14 last Saturday to boost Personal! - 7 7-Up !«!/, 141 Cn CI 50' s Plrd 186% ever. i its conference record to 3-2. Full-Time The tournament will ' get un- Winona Milk Co .. it is Cn Can 41% Pr Oil 41% ! GRAIN ! THE KIND OF FOOD that makes wom- Bubs Beer ...17 It "It was a tough game from The Associated Press average en want the recipe and men ask for derway Feb. 8 and run through Bunkes Apco IS It Cnt Oil 60% RCA 94M, more Is what you wlll be served at Inspector of 60 stocks at noon was up .3 ! MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-Wheat ! . Abrami Furnace Ce...... 14' a ll'Jj a lot of standpoints," Bruhn Cntl D lOl'.i Rd Owl 24Vi RUTH'S RESTAURANT, 124 E. 3rd. to train for handling insur- March 22. Hammi Beer .14 19 Open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week said. "We made mistakes and Deere 73 *V Rp Stl 40% at 282.1 with industrials off .1, | receipts Monday 257; year ago - ^ Golden Band Food* 13Vi 19' i In ance and credit reports in Fees for the meet are $5 per Bafcken Con. Co. .. 13'? l»Vj lost the ball eight times." Douglas 23% Rex Drug 38% rails up .7 and utilities up ' .1. | 407; trading basis unchanged to Sfl^HAT If we lost our first game Bernies OX IJ jl new bowling uniforms. You would, too. Winona and vicinity. In yomr Baltimore & Ohio gained a one cent lower ; prices Va to IVs If you had so many envious people mac per event except all- OO GETTERS "Maybe some of it was due Dow Chm 64 Rey Tob 40% j Icindly state your staring at you! Ray Meyer, Innkeeper; reply Athletic . W full point while fractional gains • lower; Cash spring wheat bas- , events which is $1. Reserva- I. to me and the staff ," he con- du Pont 253 Sears Roe 96% WILLIAMS HOTEL. . present occupation. Writ* Tews Garage • i tinued, "We left no stone un- East Kod 114Vs ' Shell Oil 44% were made by New York Cen- is, No 1 dark northern 2.33%- ~ ~ tion? must be paid by Jan. 5. Kramer Plumbtrettei 1 7 tra] A GIFT~\rMTCH for^any occasion, priced ! the . Warnkens Meats I 7 turned in an effort to get our Ford Mot 52% Sinclair 43% , Pennsylvania Railroad , j 2.347-a ; Spring wheat one cent for any budget. RAINBOW JEWELRY, with entries closing on Jan. 12, E.B.'i Corner 7 I Santa Fe and Southern Railway premium each lb over 58-61 lbs ; 116 W. 4th. ______. boys high and it appeared we Gen Elec 81% Socony 65Vi ~ ~ Hooper-Holmes Bureau, Graham & McGuire 7 I Gen Fds 87V8 Sp Rand 17% (ex dividend). Spring wheat one cent discount HNGERTTP DELIVERY! Mall order For those who want to bowl Winona Plumbing < t had them so high they were catalog toys are available at the Inc. PARK REC JR. GIRLS Cen Mot 81% St Oil Cal 62 Sugar stocks also moved gen- each Vi lb under 58 lbs; Protein same low prices at ROBB BROS. doubles and singles and team Hat-Rod W L strung tighter than a drum. Box 5482, Lake St. Station Gen Tel 28% St Oil Ind 61 Vi erally higher. prems: 11-17 per cent 2.34%- STORE, 57* _ E. 4th. __ event on the same day, Schnei- Hal Rod All Stirs . 3 0 That's when mistakes happen." ^ Minneapolis 8, Minn. Diamonds 1 1 i 2.45%. FOR FINE professional copy work and Gillette 33% St Oil NJ 70% photographs, por- der has a top arrangement. Alley Cats 1 1 Wisconsin held only a brief Profits were taken by trad- restoration of old No 1 hard Montana winter snapshots, send your Powder" PuHi 1 1 Goodrich 54% Swft & Co 41 traits made from Help—iVlale or Female 28 On March 1. doubles and sin- drill Monday in preparation for ers in some recent gainers. CBS 7 inali to the Kenneth M. Wright Pin Dusters :.. 1 1 Goodyear 42%. Texaco 66% 2.19%-2.40 /ii . ori. ! gles may be rolled by Winon Saturday's meeting with the II- and Bulova lost more than a Studios, Inc., 350 Cedar St., St. Paul, I MARRTED COUPLE ... Z a Pin Smashers 1 , 1 Minn-S.D. No 1 hard winter, ~ , Gould Bat 37V8 Texas Ins 94Vi Minn. SS101. Send for free prlce _llst. to manage good going business, no In- Lucky Strikes 1 1 lini who have a 3-1-1 league point each while Xerox slipped - bowlers at 1 or 3' p.m. with 2.17%-2.33%. " vestment. Man must be mechanically Spare Masters — t 1 Gt No Ry 53% Un Pac 40% ELIWI NATE the rocks In your water j more than 3. U.S. Smelting Inclined — wife to clerk and answer four spots for teams reserved WESTGATE LADIES mark. hnd '47'Vi S Rub 47 ' No 1 hard amber durum , system easily, have CULLIGAN'S In- ! Gry U stall a water softener. Tel. 3600. phone — very attractive opportunity for for 7:30 p.m. Already Westgate Bowl W L dropped a point. _ j five sets • - Gulf Oil 46% US Steel 53% : choice 2.38-2.41 ; discounts, am- secure future. Write D-96 Daily Newi. The Oaks ...... II • IBM advanced more than 5 ift{RAAAICTiLE bathrooms tor less than i of doubles are set for the 1 Grulkowski Beauty Shop . 13 12 Homestk 46% Westg El 36% : ber 5-7 ; durum 7-10. $300? Yes, we have Installed many. ! Winona Chick Hatchery IS 13 and Polaroid better than 2. Situations Wanted—Fem. 29 p.m. shift with nine sets in Corn No 2 yellow 1.09%. CURLEY'S CERAMIC TILE CO., 420 ; - Steve's Lounge . . 14 13 IB Mach 490% Wlworth 78% ¦ . : WANTED by dependable Airlines continued mostly W. Bth. _ - . BAETIYSITTTNG competition at 3 p.m. Tauscne's .13 15 Vikings Pile Up Int Harv 59% Yg S & T 125% Oats No 2 white '61V4-64 ; No ~~ party ; also Ironing. 528. E. Mark. Tel. GUTTER - Continual ,' Country Kitchen 7 30 higher although Eastern was YOU OUGHTER 6780 . On March 14 at 6:30 p.m. 3 white 56%-63 ; No 2 heavy House Gutters (one piece). Made on ; ; ; __ . COMMUNITY down a fraction in further reac- 1 there is room for 20 teams. Westgate Bowl W L white 65-68; No 3 heavy white the |ob. Julius J. Pellowskl, Stockton, Business Opportunities 37 Schmidt's Beer 23 II tion to its reported nine-months Minn. Tel. 2864. March . 15 at 11 a.m. there is , LIVESTOCK 64-66V2. . - Bub's Pilsen . 23 11 Statistics Not TDs loss. Pan American rose near- LOS tT^ETGHT safely with Dex-A-Dlet ! (TR OCERY STORE on Liberty St. with ¦ room for 17 Sunbeam Bread 32 11 ST. PAUL : Barley, cars 292, yar ago tablets Full week's supply only o_c. ¦ modern living quarters upstairs. New sets of doubles ijp — . Hackbirth Feed Mill ...... It 14 MINNEAPOL IS (AP . SOUTH ST. PAUL, Minn, USDA ly a point . 242; brigh t color 90-1.28; straw Ford Hopkins. gas furnace. 2 bedrooms, kitchen ¦ and and singles. At 1 p.m. the same ¦ I —. Cattle J.500; calves 1,700; slaughter i - j Schllfz Beer .. .. -.- .. 17 1* " ' living room. New siding, new roof. The Dow Jones r rdustrial ; RNE FABRTCS, plus painstaking skill, j day there is also room for 17 Coca Cola 1« 17 — Coach Norm Van Brock- steers , and heifers (airly active, fully ! color 90-1.28; stained 90-1.26 . Can be converted Into 9-room house. steady; cows and bulls stead/; choice average at noon was off .21 at mean pride, longest wear. WARREN i Oasis 12 31 Iin 's sarcastic Tel^950. '. sets. comment follow- 950-1250 lb steers 23.00-23.50; mixed high feed 85-90. i BETSINGER, Tailor, 6oVj W. 3rd I Erdmann Trucking 13 21 753.56. '¦ ¦ ^ ing Sunday's 28-7 defeat by good and low choice 22.50-23.00; good i Rye No 2 l.m'8-l:44%: . AT~ " Schneider also calls attention Wilier High Life 13 21 ARE YOU PROBLEM DRINKER?- J Money to Loan 40 Blumentritt store 11 22 Green Bay that "our offense 21.00-22.50 ; canner and cutter 12.00-16.50 ; Prices were mixad on the | Flax No 1 3.03. Man or woman, your drinking creates to the fact that the 1965 ABC load average choice 980 lb heifers 22.75; PIN TOPPLERS piles up , American Stock Exchange. yellow 2.76%. j numerous problems. If you need and Westgate W L statistics not points" other choice 850-1050 Ibs 21.75-22.50; good I Soybeans No 1 want help, contact Alcoholics Anonym- tourney will be held in St. 20.00-21.50 ; canner and cutter 12.00-16.00; Corporate and U.S govern- Wain Tavern 33 7 would appear to be verified by ous, Pioneer Group. Box -22, Winona, Paul. utility and commercial cows 12.5O-H.50; Lakeside Cities Service ... 17 13 ment bonds were irregular. NEW YORK CAP ^Canadian Minn- i LOANS ) the figures this week. canner and cutter 10.50-12.50; utility | " ~ i^? Watkins Mary King lSVi 14" PLAIN NOTE—AUTO—FURN'TURl bulls 17.OC-18.50; commercial and good, dollar .9281, unchanged. ; TRUSSES ABDOMINAL BELTST I ' Lincoln Insurance ...... : 15Vj l4'/i The Vikings' nine opponents | SACROILIAC SUPPORTS 170 E . 3rd St. Tel. 2915 Glass IS 15 16.50-17.50 ; canner and cutter 14.50-16.50; Hrs.9 a.m to 5 p.m., Sat. » a.m. to noon Winona Paint * have outscored Minnesota WINONA MARKETS by 40 choice and prime vealers 1.00-2.00 high- ¦ Wally's 15 15 i GOLTZ PHARMACY Hamernlks Bar 10 20 per cent, 251 points to 180, but er, lower grade vealers and slaughter Loans — insurance Reported oy CPub. Date Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1963) 274 E. 3rd _Tel. 2547_ — Vic's Bar » 21 have out-gained calves mostly steady; high choice and 'j 0' the Vikings by prime vealers 29.O0-32.O0; good and Swift & Company NOTICE OF HEARING ON PETITION Real Esta'e 'Big Tops MONDAY LEAGUE Auto Service, Repairing 10 choice 24.00-26.00; good and choice Wlnopa Athletic Club W L only 18 per cent rushing and Buying hours are from B a.m. te ' slaughter calves 19.00-24.00. ! NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that FRANK WEST Agency East End Coal Co 10 3 passing, 3, p.m. Monday through Friday. day LISTEN, is your car talking to you? 085 yards to 2,612. Hogs 13,000;. moderately active, bar- apply as- noon whereas, a petition was, on the 4th 17J Lafayette St. Tel. 5240 lit National Bank » « . These quotations ot the The family car does "speak" a lan- In other words, rows, Silts and sows steady to 25 lower i of November, 1963, presented to (Next to Telephone Office) Polly Meadow I 7 the foes are today. Winona County, Mlnne- guage all Its own. Watch this column than Monday's average; most 1-2 200- arriving alter closing time County Board of Schllti Beer 7 I All livestock : for translations of your car's warning : getting more scoring mileage 240 Ib barrows and gilts 14.50; sota, and ' : NBA Sco Phillip s U :.... ' 7- I around will be properly cared for, weighed and signals. GOODVIEW TEXACO, 1650 Horses, Cattle, Stock 43 rers ' that state out of their yardage than the 250 head 14.75; mixed 1-3 190-260 Ibs priced the following morning: Whereas, said petitioners j Cabinets by Pabst . 4 11 .' they are the owners of the tract or Service Drive. NEW YORK (AP )—Big O - 14.00-U.25; 1-2 medium 1*0-190 Ibs 13.50- HOGS SHROPSHIRE and Hampshire rams. Rea- ALLEY CATERS Vikings. i parcel of land lying and being in Com- 14.00; lew 1-2 270-280 lb sows 13.75 ; The hog market is 25 lower . sonable. Kenneth J. Kopp , Galesville, Oscar Robertson of the Cincin- Westgate W L mon School District No. 2555, and de- Business Services 141 The Vikings have chalked up most 1-3 270-400 Ibs 12.75-13.50; 400-550 Strictly meat type additional 2O40 : : : I Wis., Tel. Centerville 539-3386. Curley's Floor Shop 21 • : scribed as follows, to-wit: . nati Royals—held the National Ibs 12.25-13.00; choice 120-160 Ib feeder cents; fat hogs discounted 20-40 cents ner NO MAGICIAN can fool the eye like " Mohan's Window Ce. 17 13 150 first downs to 167 by the .j of Section 32, Township 10a : FEEDER PIGS-25 ¦¦ ' pigs steady, 13.00 lo mostly 13.50. hundredweight. SE' our expert cleaning. Old rugs look , 40 Ib. average. El- Basketball Association Nash's ' . . . 14 14 I mer Janzow, lead in opposition. Sheep 4,000; all classes active, fully Good hogs, barrows and gilts— ! North, Range 6 West; new, colors are brightened, limp fibers Rt. 1, Winona, Minn. Winona Dally News 15 15 ¦ and that the above described land ad- ; ' both scoring and assists in the ; steady; choice and prime wooled 160-180 12.00-13.O0 restored. Call today (or free estimates. BROWN SWISS bull, 18 months 0ld7" Ella) Montgomery Warts 14'.i 15'^ Tommy Mason, who has put District No. 2614 slaughter lambs 19.00-20.00; good 75-90 180-200 13.00-13.25 : loins Common School WINONA RUG CLEANING SERVICE, Ebert, Rushford, Minn. Tel. latest figures released today, Williams Hotel 13' 3 la 1 Minnesota; and ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Lewiston ' together two good games in a Ibs 17.00-18.50; cull to good wooled 13.25-13.50 in the County of Winona, "ll«i w; 3rd. Tel. 3722. v - . ' " 3774. Bud's Bar . 12 IS 200-220 but the NBA news continued slaughter ewes 5.00-6.0O ; choice and 13.25-13.50 Whereas the petitioners pray that they to Taverna Barber Supply 11 if row running , has taken a big 220-240 ¦ SOW—2, due In Dec. Eugene Bagniewskl, | fancy wooled feed'er lambs usually 60- ' 13.20-13.50 ' desire tb have air the above described , Dressmaking, Sewing 16 be the new accent on defense. ST. MARTIN'S LADIES 240-270 .. ; Dis- Fountain City. Wis. Tel. 8 MU 7-482S. lead in the Viking rushing derby 80 Ibs 14.00-17.00 ; good 50-60 lbs 14.00- 12.85-13.20 land, set off . from Common School j ~ ~ ~ ; St. Martin s W L 270-300 FOCUS ON TH_ FUTURE soon It will ~ Robertson hit 29 points in ' 15.50. • 12.50-12.8! ! trict No. 2555, to said Common School PUREBRED spotted Poland Ch!na sprln9 Coca Cola .23 7 over Bill Brown. 300-330 ' lor fhe following rea- i be holiday time. Party pretty fabrics ; CHICAGO 12.25-12.50 District No. 161* boars, 275 to 300 lbs.. S40 and up. Eu- each of three games during the Winona Typewriter Ser. 330-360 1 are available at the CINDERELLA 30'.'i 9'i Mason had his best day yet CHICAGO — USDA — Hog s 11 ,000; sons, to-wit: gene Bagniewski, Fountain City, Wis. Breltlow <* Good sows— SHOP, 214 Ma nkato Ave. week to run his total to 333 's 17 13 " butchers mostly 25 to SO lower; mostly 270-300 :.. 12.75-13.00 | So that the Consolidation Plat for __ j Tel: 8 MU : 7-4826. United Building Center . H''i 13<'i Sunday, carrying 15 times for I the Rldgev/ay area will conform to ' ~ points in 13 1-2 200-225 lb butchers 15.50-15.75; mixed 300-330 ' .. 12. 75-13.00 " games. He added 22 Farm & Garden Supply .7 33 yards, the requirements of the Slate De- Plumbing, Roofing 21 HOLST ETN stEERS-for s»le7' Franklifi 78 and now has totaled 1-3 190-230 Ibs 15.00-15.50; 1-3 230-250 lbs 330-360 12.25-12 .7-5 . assists to make it 122 in that de- Deep Rock Rocketries 7 33 I parfmenf of Education . . Dowiasch, Alma, Wis. 443 yards on 108 carries for a 14.50-15.00 ; 2-3 250-280 Ibs 14.00-14.50; 360-400 12.00-12.25 EiOCTRIC ROTO ROOTER " " partment. WESTGATE JR . GIRLS mostly 3s 260-290 lbs 1350-14.00; mixed 75-12.00 NOW, THEREFORE IT IS ORDERED, FEEDER CALVES-Il. Petef~Woyczlk , Westgate Bowl W L 400-450 11. a meet- For clogged sewers and drains 4.1 average. Brown has 328 1<3 350-4OO Ib sows 13.00-13.25; 400-500 450-500 i 11.25 -11 .7-5 That said petition be heard at Arcadia Wis. (Irish Valley ) Over-all Gutter Busters 13 3 the Tel. 9S0V or 6436 1 yea r guarantee ^ . the nine clubs were yards on 97 tries for a 3.4 mark. Ibs 12.50-13.OO ; 2-3 500-575 Ibs 12.00-12.50 Stags- ing of said Board to be held at POLLED HEREFORDS. 16 vaccinated High Balls 11 5 . • City of Winona, ih averaging 108.9 points per Cattle 4,500; calves none; slaughter 450-dn 8.75 ! Court House in the heifer calves, 12 steer calves, 14 Hol- Alley Gators 11 5 Fran Tarkenton has complet- •: on fhe 2nd day of De- GALL SYL KUKOWSKI steers mostly steady, Inslances 25 low- , 450-up 7.75-8.75 said County, stein steer calves. Wenger Bros., Foun- game, compared to 116.0 at the Glrtie Gutters 7 clock P.M., at * j ed 129 of 230 passes for 1,698 er; high choice and prime 1,150-1,250 Thin and unfinished hogs discounted | cember, 1963, at 2:00 o ' tain City, Wis. c Striketles I I will l same point la. t year. Shooting Ib slaughter . s teers 24 .50-25.00; most CALVES I which time and place said Board Septic Tank & Cesspoo Cornballs I I | yards and 11 touchdowns — a hear all persons interested, for or against I FEEDER PIGS—13o7weight 35 to 45 lb»T7 choice 9C0-1.350 lbs 23.50-24.25; good The veal market is . steady. percentage were off from .432 to Pin Points ...;. 7 » the granting of said petition ¦ Cleaning Service Sll. -Nick Lemmer, Fountain City, Wis. \ completion percentage of 56.1. 21.50-23.00; . two loads high choice and Top choice 29.00 . Alley Cats t 10 | IT- IS FURTHER ORDERED, That Special truck, Sanitary & Odorlesa Tel. 8MU7-3810. .426, as well. prime heifers around 1,055 Ib 24.00 ; Choice 26.00-28.Od | _ _ Scream Bowlers t 13 He has had 12 aerials inter- be given as G. S. WOXLAND CO. i choice 800-1,100 Ibs 22.25-23.50; good Good 21.00-25.00 notice of said hearing ; FEEDER PIGS—53. Claytoni Ketchumi The San Francisco Warriors , Pin Ups J 13 Rushford, Minn Tel. 864-9245 cepted. 21.50-22.25; utility and commercial cows Commercial to good ..... 16.00-21.00 : provided by law. . Utica; Minn. Tel. Lewiston 2721 . CITY 1963. : _ ~ ~ with a new image under Coach 13.00-14 .50. Utility 14.00-15 .00 Dated this 2; mixed 37> z; mediums 2fi ; tional Bank, 100 W. Franklin Ave., j speak at a testimonial dinner in tion of this order In the Winona Dally Mlnneapolis 4, Minn, Tel. 332-3222. with every carton of fhe Preston Town Hall Wednes- standards 33; dirties 28; checks Frocdtert Malt Corporation News and by mailed notice m provided _ by law WAITRESSES WANTED—not attending i TERRA MYCIN FOR day at 7 p.m. 28. Hours: 8 p.m. lo 4 p.m.; closed Saturday! Dated November 9. 1963 school. Apply In perion Country Kltch- ' Submit sample before loading E. D . LIBERA, try _ I MASTITI S The group includes shortstop NEW YORK (AP ) -( No. 1 barley $l .0« Probate Judge. USDA) No. ? barley 1.(14 VALUABLE BUSINESS | Zoilo Versailles, centerfielder (Probate Court Seal) OPPORTUNITY Ted Maier Drugs —Butter offerings adequate , de- No. .1 barley 94 Roger W, Poole, Lenny Green , promotions man- No, 4 barley .86 Now available tor mature woman with Animal Health CirUn mand good. Attorney for Petitioner car and 20 or more hours per week, afier Don Cassidy, and ticket Wholesale prices on bulk car- Wrlle D-92 Dally News. , Poultry, Eggs, Supplies 44 manager Charles Lavender , ln Bay State Milling Company (First Pub , Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1963) tons (fresh). Elovafor "A" Grain Prices GEESE FOR SALE 1 qanrirr , 4 hem. State ol Minnesota I ss. CHRISTMAS SHOPPING addition to talks by all four , Hours: 8 a.m. to .1:30 I year old. Armln Pa^chp TH Altura) Creamery, 93 score (AA) 59V p.m. County of Winona ) in Probate Court (Closed Saturdays) 7357 . movies will be shown of high- : No. 15 ,393 IS no longer a problem when the Avon : 59 U cents 92 score (A) 59-59%; No. 1 northern spring wheat ? Ik In Re Estate of Representative calls, Those earnings 1 DEKALB 20 week nld pullets, fully vac- lights of 19fi:i games. : No. 2 northern sprint) wheat 1k 90 score (B) 58 >:<-59. . 1 . Benedict Hanson, also known aa enn take core ol your Chrklmas -i3 ,2 processed Ameri - IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing Should be an accurate typ- all lbs. average ) 24Vi-25 .i; peeweos week, hnns houijhl every day Trucks ner. can pasteurized 5 lbs. 39',4-41'A ' thereof bt hnd on December 6, 1963, at ist and have good penman- 20-2! ; nvallable. Sale Thurs.. ) p rn. lei 76il/. domestic Swiss (b'ocks) grade 11 o 'clock A M., before Ihls Court In ship. Shorthand helpful but PALMER STILL AHEAD Browns: extras (47 lbs. min.) the probate court room in the court Farm Implements A 47-50 grade B 44-48 grade C house In Winona, Minnesota , and thai not necessary. Work will in- 48 DUNED1N , Fla. ( AIM - Amer- 41-42,/z; top quality (47 lbs notice hereof be given by publication of clude invoicing, recording INTERNATIONAL 3-16 plow nn rubber, 42-40. S90 ; 2-16 Oliver ica 's top ten professional golf- min. ) 42'/2:44; mediums (41 »|)?, Ihls order In the Winona Dnlly News plow , R fly,ifx ,hnr e, Who esnle egg offerings light, orders and production. on rubber , SS0 ers have won $(> 17, 009 so far ' average) 28V2-30 ; smalls (36 and by mulled notice ai provided by rd Ehivl. RI 2, Wi- demand good today. lbs. law . nona. (3 miles E nl Wilson) this year , led by Arnol d Palmer ( average) 2(5-27 : peewees 20-21 , Dated November 7 , 19A1. TELEPHONE 28*>7 with $12l) ,2:!0, according lo a re- Wholesale selling prices MARGARET MrCREADY, MISS ACHEFF based on exchange nnd other (AP) ( ) Probate clerk port from the Profession^ Golf- , CHICAGO - USDA - (Probate Court Seall FARMERS' SPECIAL! volume Fnles.) 2(16; John D. McGill, ers' Association Potatoes arrivals on track We have drastically reduced New York spot quotations fol- ; total U.S. shipments (or Attorney fnr Petitioner 245 RN' S & LPN' the price on Iho 'popular MARINES IO HATTLE low : Friday 4117; Saturday 326 ; Sun- (Flrsl Pub. Tuesday, Nov . J, 1963) S ORLANDO , Fla. (AP I -- The Mixed colors : extras (47 tbs day il; Monday 412; supplies Stale nf Minnesota ) ss. ) 1 PAULSON fourth annual Missile Howl foot- min. 40' 2-4 1 -;; extras medium moderate ; demand slow; mnr- County ol Wlnonn ) In Probata Court Immediate demand exists , (40 average) ,i l,i; No. 15,67.1 Manure ball game here Dec 7 will tie an lbs. 27' !-28 ket about steady; carlo! track In Ra Estate of for 2 RN' s and 3-4 LPN' s Loader All-Marine Corps affair. .standards 36-38 ; checks 30-31 ; sales ; Idaho russets 3 (ifl ; Min- Joieph B. Logelln, Decedent. . Petition lor Probate to help staff a new 24 hour Fits mosl popular Quant ico Marines accepted an Whites' extras (47 lbs. min.) nesota North Dakota Red Ri-ver Order for Hearing on makes of of Will, Limiting Time to File Clalma service. Selected individuals tractors, R e R u I a r price * Hfe 's em siMQiNa 'fl&uy Wouy dooai'mmB w. Aw invitation Monday to meet the 41-42'i- ; extras medium (40 Ihs Valley rounds reds 1.R5-2.I5. and tor Hearing Tftereon. San Diego Marines in the annu- average) 2(1-29; top quality (47 1 ucllle Clclianowskl having filed » pe will train as Nurse Techni- mounted on vour tractor is IMM /uilWMYi* lltlon for tho probate (if the Will of r ) (First Pun. Tiii'srlny, Nov . 12, I9ii.ll $29, »: al game. lbs. min. 42-44 'j; mediums (41 said decedenl and tor the appointment nf cians. An unusual opportun- Matr ol Minnesota ) iv Clarice flldney as Admlnlstrnlrlx wllh ( ity in a relatively new field. MARK TRAIL By Ed Dodd oimly ol Wlnnnrt 1 In Probata Court Will Annoxi'd, which Will Is on file In SI-KCIAI, (W Y VM NO. 14,960 Ihis Court and open to Inspection; Write or call In Rf E J M!* ot If IS ORDERED, That the hearlnn F.O.R. "Ilreezy Acres , " Gerard F. Krumdkk, DacediM thereof he had on November J7 , 1963, at mount-it-yoursplf (or Ordar tor Hearing on Final Account 10 .10 o 'clock A.M., before this Court In Ihe low and Petition (or Distribution, the probate court room In the court house PERSONNEL OFFICE low price o( llin riipri'si'illntlv/p ot Ihe abovn named In Winona , Minnesota, and Hint obiectinna nsMlii Mavldfl lll«l Ils tlnal account tnil to ttio allowance of said Will, if any, MAYO CLINIC petition tor settkmrnt nnd nllnwnnr.e he filed before said time ot hearing; $250 llirri-ol nnil (nr distribution lo lli» prr- lha) lho lime within which creditors of , Min'. thrriMjntn entitled; said decedenl may file Ihelr claims he Rochester Minn. This special offer II IS OROERCD, Thnt llm lienrlnn, limited In tour months Irom Ilie dalr is Rood lln'rro' hfl hart oil Decemh«r II. HA.1, hereof, and thai Ihe claims in filed hn for a limited lime oniy. Muy nl 10 10 o ' clock A M., helcrr IhK Caul heard on Mnrch II, 1964, nl 10 .10 o' clock Help Wanted—Male 27 .v o II r spreader In Ihn probnle court room In llm i.ourt A.M , beloro this Court In the probata now aud liou-.r in Winona Mlnn(!".otn , nnd tlml court room In the court house In Wi- EXPFRIKNCEO or semi - experienced save. Offer R oor| only until iiollre hereof bn olven by ptibllrnllnm ol nona, Mlnnnola, and thai notice hereof maat fuller. Full and pari lime. Ap December I , 1 !'(•;* , Ihh older In Ilii* Wlnonn Onlly iNnws be given hy publication nl this order In pl/ or wrlle H. B. Nathe, Broadway Super Saver. unit by innlled liollrr m provldnil by lha Winona Dally News and by mailed Inw . notice as provided by law, OnlPd Nnvnnber 1 . 19«l Daled November I, 196.1, LOCAL AREA ! F. A. KRAUSE CO MAnr.AiiFi MtrRFAnV, E D I IMFRA, ONF. married man who isn meet the Prohnlci f.lnrK, I' lObflfa Judge. puhlir and work umupervlf.ed (mat 1 "BREEZY iPinhnlp Coin ! Sunll (Probate Court Seall day tmilv Prior route rxpfilcnc r nol j ACRES" fI,er,,nn, nnn MiVVnhon, tlarnlri J. I. Ibei a, nwesiary. Send resume to D-95 Dally i South on Now HiRhway M-(i| Altornnyi tor Pel|llon«r. Attorney for Petitioner * ' STRICTLY BUSINESS Refrlgeratori 72 Houses for Rent 95 Houses for Sale 99 Used Cars 109 Ed's Refrigeration & Supply EAST LOCATION—3 bedroom horn*, Da- RAMBLE R-lMl American «-door Station rage, Tel. 8-2003. . Wagon, 6-cyllnder, automatic transmis- Commercial and Domestic PAYS CASH sion, radio, heater. If you want one Auction Sales Auction Sal— »i E. 4rh Ttl. «» that Is lust Ilka new, look this one Wanted to Rent 96 NOV is-Mon. li a.m. ' If you are selling your home over. Special, only $W5 , Don's Auto Minnesota . rn mllM 8. ef Sptciali at th> Store 74 REASONABLY VRI CED 2-bedroom noma Sales, 163 E. »nd. Open evenings. Harmony oai Hwy 139, thw S mllM wanted, In or around Winona. Will • and have trouble financing, W. Albert Olson, owner, Knudsen fc SPECIAL Warehouse Land & Auction Sales ' Clearance prlcti on glva rafarencei. Tal, 8-2235. FORD-im 300, indoor, radio, heater Erlckson, auctioneers; Thorp Salts C*.. used refrigerators and washers. Get contact and ortiir axtrai, 7,000 actual miles, Everett J. Kohner dark. yours now and stvtl B & B Sl.EC- like new. Villi sell cheap, also finance. M8 Walnut 8.3710, after houra 7114 Bus. Property for Sale 97 NOV. is-Mtw. 11:J« p.m. TRIC, 155 E. 3rd. Milton ¦[at/son, Harmony, Minn. ijTfrTp.m. S miles SW. 1 mil** I. at "Hank" Jezewski NOV. 13-Wed. Ettrick on "D", than tVt of Black River Falls on 54, then 1 mil** N.«. BARGAIN OF THE MONTH I Astor strv- "" FOUNTAIN CITY COMET—1961 4-door itdan, automatic on town road. Eric* R»mu», owners mile W Inu carafe. Lovaly flamaproof utility BUSINESS BUILDING, corner lot, for "I pay cash!" transmission, radio, other axtras. Priced . In Spring Creek. Arthur Thom- Alvln Kohner, auctioneer; Northern itrvtr can ba placed diraetly on range business and living quarters, downtown Tel. 6388 or 7093 or for quick id*. Inquire 455 Clark's as Estate & Tliresi4 Durrln, owners; Inv . Co., dark. to prepara Instant coffee, other hot location. Only »23O0. Easy terms. Lana. Alvln Kohner, auctioneer; Northim bavarages. 22K gold dncoratlon, match- Inv. Co., clerk. Write P.O. Box 345 FORD—HM, • passenger wagon, V-8, au- _ ino candle warmer. Sarvis .1. $1.88. Equitable Reserve Assoc. ~ ' ROBB BROS. STORE, 576 E. 4th. Tel. Contact Frank W«tt Agency, 175 Lafay- tomatlc transmission, A-l condition, NOV. 1*-TT>urt ilM p m7T'A miles N. REAL ESTATE AND 4007. etta St. Tal. 3240 or 4400 after hours. good rubber, 1350. Tel . Rollingstone Jt Galesville. Cordon West, owner; Al- - Lots for Sale IQQ 2732. vln Kohner, auctioneer; Northern Inv. PERSONAL PROPERTY PRESTONE BRAND Prime Gas Una Farms, Land for Sale 98 Co., clerk. Antl-Freaie. Prevents freezing. Car- ON GILMORE AVE.—Near So. Baker. buretor Icing. For faster starts. 6 cans, " 200 ACRE FARM, near H Igh I and, Minn . $3,500 takes this large lot, 50x380'. Se* NOV . 15—Fri. 12:30 p.m. Vh miles N. _^*^EN^K^fth «. Mankato 1962 RAMBLER J|L ,_ _ _ 1_ Priced at $110 per acre. Contact Lyla or call ot Hixton on Hwy. 27, then 1 mile E. " TOY CLOSE-OUT SALE i Erlckson, Real Estate and Auction Co., Ambassador Neils Stelnsfe Estate, owner; Alvln AUCTION 20% to 50% Savings Cresco, Iowa. Tel. KI7-37O0. W. STAHR Kohner, auctioneer; Northern Ine. Co.. Shep and save now at SHUMSKI'S ¦iH W. Murk T*l, itiS dark. Houston, Minn. SI West 3rd, Tel. 8-33B9 Houses for Sale 99 4-door, power steering, auto- ~~ NOV. It—Sat. 11 noon. Livestock Sal*, BY BUILD*£R 3 lBroi» bedrooms, at- Wanted—Real Estate 102 matic transmission, white Hilltop Hereford Farm, S mllei J.E. tached garage, ceramic tiled shower and ~ Rochester, Minn., on Co. Rd. Mo. t. SPECIAL SALE! WI LL P AY HlGHEST CASH PR ICES Oil space heater 15 bath, dining area. Formica cabinet and Wllllems S. Sons, owners; Saturday, Nov. 16 FOR YOUR CITY PROPERTY sidewall tires. A real good Wm. B . Gas space heater . . $25 vanity tops, sliding glass doors to patio, Donald Bowman, auctioneer. Chairs . : 25c & up forced air heat , laundry tubs, in new car locally owned. See Bob .. . . 1 P-m* Tables Jl 1 up home area, block from bus line. Tel. "HANK" JEZEWSKI NOV. 1*—Sat., 1 p.m. 4 miles W. of (Winona 's Only Real Estate Buyer) 1 lot of flat oil paint. 9745, 8-2592 for appointment. Albrecht for the best deal Mondovi on Hwy . 10, then 1 mile N. Tel. 63IK and 7093 P.O. Box 34S Charles Brantner, Many household items. $5.30 value . . ' ...... I1.2J gal. mobile on county trunk W. GOODVIEW - beautiful modern in town. owner; Jim Halke, auctioneer; Gate*- I lot rubber bass paint, furnished, with utility home, 55x10, ill Airplanes, Parts 103 way Credit Inc., clerk. Some antiques. 17.49 value ...... 11.23 room. Sacrifice for quick lata. Also Red barn paint ' . . . . $2.50 gal . modern basement house, large lot. Sir AIRPLANE—W<, Taylor-Craft, tandtm NOV. 16—Sat. IJ noon. 2'^ mllei S.W. While house paint S2.50 gal. 3 bedroom, 2 story house, 950. Many other homes. C. Shank , Horn*- L2, red and cr«am, TT 784 hours— of Dorchester, Iowa. Vincent Schulte), NEUMANN'S maker 's Exchange, 552 E. 3rd. 284 hours since, engln* majored, new WINONA owner; Strub & Ophelm. euctloneersi modern except heat. NINTH E. 1016—2-badroom T*l. fabric, full Instrument panel, always Community Loan Co., clerk. 121 E. 2nd St. Tel . 8-2133 horn*. 3079. hangered. Any reasonable offtr ac- Terms on Real Estate. cepted. Contact ' NOV. 14—Sat. 12:30 p.m. 3W mllei S.W. ' Milton Jetson, Har- RAMBLER Stoves, Furnaces, Parts 75 JF YOU WANT to buy, sell or trade . mony, Minn. of Le Crescent, Minn. Robert Morris,- Shank, HOMEMAKER'S 3rd St. & Mankato Tel auc- % down on day of sale, bal- ' ba lure to sas . 3649 owner; Olson a. Son eV Horlhan, , "He s just a kid at heart!" OIL SPACE HEATER with ¦ fan. 321 Mc- EXCHANGE. 552 E. 3rd. _ Boats, Motors, Etc. tioneers '; Thorp Sales Co., clerk. ance upon delivery of deed Bride St., Tel. 7971. ¦ ¦ • 106 : , for rent by w«ek Open Monday It Friday Nights MOBILE HOWE—45' p^m; 8th & Herman Stt., showing good -marketable USED forced air oil burning furnace. Tel. FIBERGLASS doesn't tgiZstt a fall NOV. 1*—Sat. 1 or month or taka over payments. Veryl Kaufmann, Several used oil burning space healers. ¦ ¦ price for that next spring boat. WAR- Buffalo City, Wl*. title. Farm ImpUmenti 48 Articles for 1-3636. _ auctioneer; Rlv- Sale 57 Quality Sheet Metal Works, 741 E. 6th . RIOR, 5035 W. 6th. owner; HIL Duellman, SILO UN LOADERS, bunk feeder!, barn ~~ Tel. 3792. BY OWNER—Exceptionally nice Cape ervlew Rea lty, clerk. Alvina A. Hahn, owner clatnirt, parlon, bulk tanks, pipe line Cod styl* home. 3 bedrooms, bath and Motorcycles, Bicycles WESflNGHOUSE YOUR OLD STOVE Is vrcrth J50 When 107 1955 FORD NOV 18— Mon. 1 p.m: 1 mile E. of Stan- mllKera, all otnir auppliea for the a half, newly carpeted, full basement, . Beckman Bros,, Auctioneers beef traded on a Quaker automatic oil heat- ley et Jets. NN and new Hwy. 29. mtn or dilry farmer. 2-ear garage snd w»l'-landscaped yard. SCHWINN BICYCLES-largest stlectlon Houston State Bank, clerk ELECTRIC HEATERS er, plus expert Installations, and service Tal. 6464 for appointment. Will take Ranch Wagon Arthur Helen, owner; W. A. Zeck, auc- OAK RIDOl SALES I. SERVICI Model UF20 In Winona. Sales and service. KOLTER when needed. RANGE OIL BURNER mortgage. tioneer; Northern Iny. Co., clerk. AAlnntllKa, Tail. Altun 7M». Priced ai low ta contract for deed or . BICYCLE SHOP, 401 Mankato. Tel. CO., 907 E. Sth. Tel. 7479. Adolpti - StiS. PLOWS—Meyers and Allis " TWO BEDROOM HOME, room for ex- _ _ JNOW cha? I $13.95 Mlchalowskl Visit our display room , 2-door, V-8 motor, men, straight or V-body. Will fit every pansion, full basement, carpeted living, GIVE ^/vT0T0RCYCLE for c:hrlstmas. GAS OR OIL heaters, ranges, water attached garage, standard trans- make front and manure loader Will oil heat, bre«eway, Prices start at S160. ROBB BROS. . FIRESTONE heaters, complete installations. also tit Jeep or other 2 or 4 wheel Service, under $16,500. Frank Welst, Rt. 1, La STORE . Motorcycle shop, 576 E. 4th. mission -with over- 200 W. 1rd . Tel. AM parts RANGE OIL BURNER CO., driva trucks. F. A. Kraust Implement 907 Crescent, Minn.: _ Tel. 4007. E. Sth. Tel. 7479. Adolph Mlchalowskl, drive, good relia- Co. "Bntiy Acres" OILMORE AVE.—900 block. Small home lot, Trucks, Tract's, Trailers 108 ble transportation Farm. family. Large Estate We still have some left! for couple or small Hay, Grain, Feed 50 50x380'. First class garden spot. Big V BUY THE BEST FORD—1950 Wton at this low price. ¦ garage and other buildings. Immedi- pickup, radio, heater, GOOD DRY ear corn for sale. Roland spotlight. 2 new tires, ' ' "Worthmore" ate possession. S7.000. 2 nearly new, -in. ' - Diek ragtr, Dakota, Minn. (Nodine) $295. Tel. 4785. - 1 " /MIXED ALFALFA-WO bales, no rain, MONOGRAM W. STAHR WINONA'S only truck body manufactur- $195 .2 - ~'V"~"' ¦><&*?*" immmmmimmmmimwmzg 3x2 Range, 1" Stoker. spring $19.50. .also beautiful wall pic- corner lot, big shade trees, new 6 cylinder motor, 4 speed - »j ii > tures and plaques plus miscellaneous Washing, Ironing Mach. kitchen cabinets, full bath and stoker '51 Chevrolet 4 »iiiiitin iiiiiiii r"Uffu""u"1 T 'i i4i y4 "y'"'y'' ''[iiiiiiiiiff ffl I Items Including cocktail tables, lamps 79 heat. $10,500, transmission , cab and chas- ^ and dlshei. See these at Red Top door $ 95.00 KELVINATOR automatic washer. sis. •ft Petroleum Coke Mobile Home Seles. OJ. ' 1202 W. 4th. . Doll House . . . ,1 |flHllinfTntUiM.,l,(Ti,,'tTi*ri,,iTi.ir1rn No smoke — No ash! describes this attractive two-bed- '56 Buick GENE'S APPLIANCE a, TV SERVICE home with corner lot, carpeted 1960 CHEVROLET 1052 W. Broadway room > I have decided to discontinue farming, so will sell all my j, living room, tiled bath with colored Hardtop $295.00 ; Tel. 8-1787 (Karl' s Rental Service) -fr Mobilheat Fuel Oil POLE LAMP fixtures, electric stove and a beauti- 2-Ton k personal property at auction , located 4 miles west of I Cleans as it burns. MAYTAG AND FRtGIDAIRE-Fast, ex- ful yard. 6 cylinder motor , 4 speed '55 Dodge Pickup $495.00 ,'- Mondovi on Highway 10, then 1 mile north on county | White plastic bullets. perf service. Complete stock anil transmission with 2 Berwind Briquets, Petrol- parts, H. Choate & Co. Tel. 2871. New . . . New speed i/ trunk W, on | eum Briquets, Ruby - Glo (Can use colored bulbs) Now being completed three-bedroom axle, cab and chassis. '54 Ford Stoker, Siegler and Orient Wanted fo Buy 81 rambler with bath and a half, ster- Convertible $195.00 llght celling, ceramic bath with van- -| Satardlay> Noveniber 16 Stoker. Dry Oak Block Bronze finish. WM. MILLER SCRAP IRON a, METAL ity, attached garage, In the city. J Wood. CO. pays highest prices for scrap We Advertise Our Prices Sale will start at 1:00 o'clock sharp. Lunch will be served. | Irer), metals, hlde», wool and raw for Panelling Alamode ^_ «^ 222 W. 2rtd Tel. 2047 Open planning Is the deslon ol this Not many small items, so be on time. I Closed Saturdays ^^/c a/ ^Zc $5 "- brand new 3-bedroom home. Ceramic Vfe «d(^C H E V m ! T ^CO. 50 HEAD OF HIGH GRADE DAIRY CATTLE - East End Coal & WANTED SCRAP IRON & METAL. bath with colored fixtures, tiled floors j COW HIDES, WOOL 8. RAW FURS. throughout, humldiller, attached as- 105 Johnson Tel. 2396 (g g) h 6 Holstein cows, fresh 5 to 6 weeks and open ; 6 Holstein jj rage'Wllh fiberglass door, outlying EM HIGHEST PRICES PAID th* 1 Guernsey springer; 1 Guernsey cow, fresh BURKE'S city limits by a few minutes. Open Monday & Friday Eve. - springers; | Fuel Oil Co. M 8. W IRON AND METAL CO. 39 Years in Winona , fresh 5 weeks 1 901 E. 8th St. FURNITURE MART 207 W. 2nd, across Spur Gas Station : 12 weeks and bred back; 1 Guernsey cow For Your Convenience AFTER HOURS CALL: due in Jan.; 2 Holstein cows East 3rd and Franklin Leo 8. Bee Koll 4581 Lincoln—Mercury—Falcon ^ and open ; 1 Holstein cow, , 1 We Are Now Again Open On Sals. Used Cars "Where you. get more heat ~ Letter O. Peterson 4.M4 109 due in Feb.; 7 Holstein cows, due in March ; 1 Holstein HIGHEST PRicES PAi' Comet—Fairlane - f at lower cost." D W. L. IWIb) Helzer 8-2181 " for scrap Iron, metals, rags, hides, C H E VROL ET- 1 •)56r4-door7" /- bull , 18 months old ; 9 Holstein heifers, 2 years old, due John Hondrickson 744] vl7TutorTiM- Open Mon. & Fri. Evenings | raw furs ond wool! Laura Fic-k 2HB lc transmission, radio. Winterized and in Feb. and March ; 12 Holstein heifers, 9 to 12 months Articles for Sale 57 FLOOR ready to go. Perfect S495. Fenske Auto ' s j Sam Weisman & Son Sales, 460 E. 2nd. and Saturday p.m. „ I~5 old; 3 Holstein heifer calves. 5 weeks old. This is a fine i CIVAN and mat-china chair; baby buoay, INCORPORATED BOB CHEVROLET--1957, 1-door, i~cylindeo * herd of dairy cattle. If looking for some good cattle, be stroller and playpan; large eak table; PROBLEMS? 450 W. 3rd Tel. 5847 I \ standard transmission . Like ne*. Wln- Auction Sales s• - sure to attend this sale. | i brass beds, y* slie. 201 Laird. ER li=rlzod and ready to go. Only S695. removed) stock rack Fenske Aulo Sales, 440 E. 2nd. 2,000 BALES HAY - DAIRY EQUIPMENT - HORSES "FARMHOUSE to be Free advice from our floor Q ~ ~ ALVI N KOHTJER 1 pickup. Armln FLOt* ^ " Vj to fit 1950 Ford VVTon experts . See our large "in !I Z> Tel. 2349 CHEVROLET- 1 957, BelAlr. 4-door, V § AUCTIONEER, City and state licensed I 1956 CHEVROLET TON TRUCK - N. H. BALER { Prlgge, Rt. 1, Winona. Tel , Rolling- RAW FURS 1 120 Center St . automatic transmission, excellent condi- and bonded. 252 Liberty St. (Corner MACHINERY — Fordson tractor , 1955 model Major \ stone liii. _^_ stock" selection of tion . Winlpri/ed find ready to go Only E. 5th and Liberty), Tel. 4780. * WSW.-^.CM'. „. , ( ,\ \ vl/ , '.'t' S795 F>nske Aulo Sales. 4«0 E. Jnd fluid in tires, in very good condition; Ford Fer- WE HAVE a large assortment of ap- We will meet or beat all * ^ ^J. . £ Diesel, \ pliances. New and used at price* you RAMBLER- ' l TWO-BEDROO W. mortem home, \:i new 1*63, American convertible, h guson tractor , 1947 model, good rubber; Farmall F-20 | want to pay. Come In and look around. Armstrong s Viny competition. See us before .1 spr-cd transmission on the floor, over- condition , all on one Hnor . Allr^ftiv* ; New Holland No. 33 green FRANK LjLLA & SONS, 761 E. 8th. drive, 4 , 500 miles. Tel. 8-2089 . ;{ tractor , in good condition | _ Sheet Corlon . you sell. kitchen with rubber tilrrl door , I v ing ; chopper; New idea tractor mower; New Idea 4-bar | MAHOGANY dining room table and 4 room with picture wmrj o?;' ? hidr oanv. OLDSMOBILE 1956 "8B" hardtop. J295. AUCTION II crop chairs. . Tel. 6833. _ • with larqe closet'., full bath,' oil fu' riince, Tel . 8-4198 after J. side rake; International 3-14 inch tractor plow ; 2 bottom | Also all types of floor and at the H10H CHAIR and rocking horse. 411 DEALERS WANTED nice b.isemcnl Iftrqe (ol fihrmt 5P»2W . CHEVROLET-1957 4-door sedan, radio, mounted Ford plow; rubber tire wagon with green feeding | Sioux St. wall tile. Ceramic tile and Immediate pos'iosilon Priced lo sell, hp.iler, V-8 with standard transmis- $7,700. Se^ nr Lull rack ; rubber tire wagon with rack; other machinery. THB very, very finest for vinyl floors counter top covering. Call sion. Here is Ihe kind of CM that Veryl Kaufmann Residence Is leal Gloss acrylic finish. It' s non- you havf been looking for, perfect in , over that amount x 2871 for free estimates. Schultz Fu r Co. W. STAHR every way. Only S795. Don ' s Auto Sales, on 8th. & Herman Sts. ln TERMS: Under $15.00 cash \ yelfowlng. Paint Depot. Tel ' ~ ~ 110 Rose St 374 W. Mart ^"i.< " ^>. L--J„i'i?L.. T«s»!t'itm*. &&xiss?e!aa *m Laiy A Russet tturbank potatoes, drapes.. New qas Iprnnce ? linni* bed- ing, power brakes , . Vv , .y •• *' ' ' -. *Tsin* ^1^. . 'J» i-Jmm *^Mi,v..xwj r*Ji3j iif ^j. *m»**mmo ^uM SERVICE WILSON 517 sleeping room for gentle- Vcr 1952 Brentwood Mobile w-ct-^ AUTO ELECTRIC per SO Ibs . Winona Potato Mkt . 118 Mkt. rooms r:nd den on ?tvd nor Nev- put Tel. 5455 man with private entrance and bath " white sidewall ; ,v'^^ T ~PZ lnd_ J. Johnson . side pain!. .t ol condition thmiiclt pnt Home, 8x29 ft., modern and •* v»rt %^mmm$m$mm ~ Guns, S porting Goods 66 Tel. 90?o. [U" tires , lipht blue ^ OK USED FURNITURE STORE Located well cenfMl. w,rlf.inq ilhl.m r*, furnished. 173 E. 3rd St. DISTRIBUTOR for Howett «. Black Wid- Rooms for Housekeeping 87 1 block to bus. Priced under Sll. noO tor finish. One owner We Buy - We Sell ow bows, complete" line of archery quick sale. -cheek this price , AUTOMOTIVE: 1958 Edsel furniture — Antiques - Tools tackle GILCHRIST'S, 879 W. Sth. Open ROOMS FOR MEN, with or without 2-d oor hardtop; 1956 Ford 2- and other used Hems week nlohts 'till 10. klichen privileges. Tel. 4B59 . E . Good west Broadway location, 6-room only Tel fl-JVnl home, 3 bedrooms, InrQo dining room door , V-S ; 194! Ford pickup Household Articles 67 Apartments, Flats 90 and living room. Front screened porch, with 15 in. rubber. STEREO glassed In back porch. New q.is fur- $995 Wi miles southwest of La Crescent, Minn, or 2 miles BBAUTIFUL MUSIC by a Motorola stereo ONE of Ihe finer things in life. Blue Lus- WEST LOCATION--.* rooms nnd balh, up- nace. House very neat and clean. Call (lAHACE EQUIPMENT: , hl-tl, Wa havo tha fines! selection nnd tre carpet and upholstery cleaner . stairs, on bus lino, modern except heat. us on this. northeast of Hokah , Minn on U.S. Highway 16. larosst supply of sets In thn Winona Renl electric shampooer , Jl. H. Choate Tel . «J41 or Hta . Oil filters : radiator ~ F. Ideal *ait location, large family home . araa. Come In or call WINONA FIRE 8. Co. CENTRAL LOCATION - Near WSC. VENABLES 1st Blp back yard for children to piny In. hoses ; radiator seal; ¦ 1 POWER CO., 54 E. Jnd. Tel. 5065. floor front apt,, 3 rooms and private This 2-story, 75 W. 2nd Tel. 8-2711 (Across from the new parking lot.I Radios, Television 71 bath, Furnishings optional 5-bedroom hnmo must be muffler clamps. Alimile Saturday, November 16 j . Available seen to he appreciated. Within walk- Wlnonn 'i Finest Electric Repair Dec. 1. Tel , Dakota 643-3070 . Open Mon., Fri. Evenings garage greaser , very good " "~ ing distance ot super market; n-vl i !o»e I2: ,'W P.M. Lunch Stand on Grounds ; DAILY N EWS lor All Makes DUPLEX APT. -3 rooms down, 2 bed- to bus line, condition ; wheel balanror ; Starling Time: Auttiorlied Dealer tor rooms up. May h e senn at 41o E. ADMIRAL - MUNTZ - 7ENITH antique desk ; cash register; 103 HKAD CATTLE — 1 Angus Cow, 2nd calf at side ; \ MAIL 5th. or Tel. 8-239], after 5. EL. 8-room homo, located near SI. Sinn' s. Don Ehmann TV Service ON HUFF ST.-Near Lincoln School. 1- You 'll hnvo plenty of room here, l . nrge 1962 FORD transmission grease ; chass- f; 1 Angus Cow , due with 2nd calf by sale date ; 2 Angus brlphf roomi. New gas furnacn only 1 980 W. Fifth Tel. 6103 _ bertrnom apt., full bath , pas heat, Rea- is grease; -V drive socket | Cows, springing C I OSR with 2nd calf; I Angus Cow , spring- SUBSCRIPTIONS sonable rent. 660 E. Mark . month old. 52 oallon hot water hr-nter, Fairlane Needles and Service full basement, I et us pick you up and set ; large air compressor ing close with 3rd calf ; 7 Hereford-Shorthorn Cross Cows COZY SMALL all modern apt,, hot watar, 4-door sednn , 6-cylindex mo- f . May Be Paid At of Record Players show vou this lionw . side; 2 Hereford All Maker * n«wly rcrlocoratod, available Immedi- tor with automatic trans- with motor ; Allan timing h with calf by Cows with calf by side ; 40 ' tore ately. Adults only. Tel. 6030 or BUM) A AGENCY INC. light with new ciVment ; 2 Choice llercford Heifers coming 2 vr. old , bred to st art * FED MAI ER DRUGS Hardt s Music S or Prondj-lmkl Grocery. ' / miiision , radio , heater, and tl» E . 3rd Wlnana ' A 1^*1 r- HKAI JTOHS floor jacks; 2 screw jacks; ' freshening in May; 25 Cood Hereford Heifers coming 2 NEW 2 room and kitchenette apt!, Pri- white sidewall tires. White ; ''¦ vate baths and entrances. Frlgldalre, f \ lf)9 Waln ,lt body with beautiful red nnd tires; tube testing gauge; , yr. old , bred to start freshening in May ; 10 Good Here- eloclrlc slove and drapes. Heat, hot Dib battery charger; emery; ford Heifers coming l "•.•«. yr . old , bred to start freshening water. Tel. 4741 afler 6 p.m. Phonos 4242-J)f)8n white interior. 19 ,000 miles f j B . R. Clay 8-2737 , Dill /leboll 4h.U, and It runs like a top. jumper cables; drain pans ; y in June, I Apartments, Furnished 91 E, A. Abts 3104 paper towel rack ; hand \ The above Hereford Cows and Heifers are all bred ~ "~ ~ _ - j BROADWAY w , <0? very nlea i' ro

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walktr

THE FLINTSTONES By Hanna-Barber,

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