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12-4-1962 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News
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' ™— I i > —' ' ! < : — H Change of Venue Sought In Recount Ships Collide in Fog, ST. PAUL (AP) - Attorneys for Gov. Elmer 1*. Andersen asked to- day that court matters dealing with a recount of the governor election be shifted from Albert Lea to St. Paul. Attorney Richard Kyle of St. Paul filed a petition in Albert Lea asking the change to Ramsey County District Court. Li. Gov N . .Y. Airports Closed Karl Rolvaag. loser by 142 votes, had asked the district court in Albert Lea Monday for the re- count. Ceiling and The change of venue likely will come up Wednesday morning as attorneys for both candidates ar- gue out final details of the re- Visibility at count. No reasons for the shift were set forth in court papers, although Republican officials had said ear- Idlewild Zero lier they -jeould push for the NEW YORK (AP)-Thick fog change. Ramsey is the home coun- blanketed the New York metro- ty of both Andersen and Rolvaag. politan area Monday night and Judge Warren Plunkett, who today, closing down all three .ma- RECEIVES FERMI AWARD . . . President is called the father of the hydrogen bomb, is signed preliminary orders setting jor airports and contributing to Kennedy hands an encased gold medal , the a scientist at the University of California. A' . : •up the recount Monday, was not a collision of two ships. Enrico JFermi Award for 1962, to Dri- Edward citation and $50,000 accompanied the medal, in Albert Lea today to act on the No one was hurt when a tanker Teller, its recipient, jn a ceremony outside the awarded by the Atomic Energy Comraision. (AP governor's petition. Plunkett was and freighter Carrie together off holding court in Preston. a Staten Island pier in New York White House, Mrs. Teller is at center. Dr. Photofax) harbor, but both ships were Teller, Nobel Prize-winning physicist who often Rolvaag has asked for authority slightly damaged. to name recount teams to check A Port of New York Authority ballots and voting machines in all spokesman said he could' recall 87 counties. Rolvaag was ahead by only six other times in the past Favor Gold water in 1964 58 votes on original returns but 14 years that Idlewild, La Guar- lost the lead to Andersen when dia and Newark (N.J.) airports the Supreme Court directed accep- were all shut down because of tance of corrected figures from 10 bad weather. counties. Meanwhile, Republican C. Don- Ceiling and visibility at Idlewild ald Peterson completed legal Work were zero early today. GOP ConservoWves asking for a recount of the lieu- The only aircraft to talte off tenant governor race by filing a from Idlewild Monday night was petition in JRamsey County district a specially equipped Navy Con- court. . Peterson had served initial stellation used . as a radar picket. papers on the secretary of state There were no landings. "." Dorit Want Rocky last Friday. He lost to A.M. Keith The heavy fog blanket over ty nearly 5,000 votes. Idlewild was similar to one which By ARTHUR EDSON country, met secretly in Chicago and that little was accomplished. FOGGY NEW YORK . .:; Fog still lingered Building in mid-Manhattan's Rockefeller Center. prevailed last Friday night when WASHINGTON (AP)-Conserva- Sunday. .• ' , One of the organizers said "I've over New York City when this view of the city's Spired structure in center background is the an Eastern Air Lines DC7B tlve Republicans have begun a Possibly because it was an in- attended dozens of meetings like skyline looking south was made this morning Empire State Building. (AP. Photofax) crashed at the airport on .arrival determined drive to keep the 1964 formal meeting, it stiD wasn't too this, and nothing ever came of from observation tower on 70th floor , of RCA from Charlotte. N.C. Of the 51 presidential nomination from go- clear what they did. them." Duxbury Urges aboard, 25 were killed. : ing to Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller One report was that $250,000 It was learned from several of Most flights scheduled to land of New York. Their favorite is was pledged as a start on a those who were there that the sen- at the three airports were divert- Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona. $3-million campaign ; iund. timent was distinctly prb-Goldwa- Bucks Congo. Middle East Costs ed to Boston , Baltimore and Phil- The Associated Press learned ter and anti-Rockefeller. adelphia. Monday that between 30 and 50 Another report was that this Goldwater said Monday night in Changes in The fog slowed land travel. Tht Republicans, from all over the was only an exploratory meeting. Phoenix he didn't knotf a thing " New Jersey Turnpike reduced tbi about the meeting. speed limit on thatNuperhighwsy He told a newsman: "I don't from 60 to 35 m.p.h. know who the group was, where Committees Russia Tells US. It The fog in New York harbor Ihey met or what it's all about. CALEDONIA, Minn. (AP)--Rep. was so thick tfiat a Coast Guard I did see or hear something about Lloyd Duxbury, due to. become patrol boat was forced to return it today; but I don 't know a thing. speaker of the Conservative - con- Birth Control I still, plan to run for the Senate to its dock before it could beat* trolled House, said today that the spot where British freight- dwo years from now." ' the the committee structure should be re- Won t Share UK Bill er Sarah Bbwater and the Ameri- But be added he might not vamped to help lawmakers get By TOM HOG E by the General Assembly instead The committee began debate on can tanker Chemical Transporter "since things change and it's too their work done on time: UNITED- NATIONS, NY. fAP) of the Security Council, where the a U.S. resolution calling for ac- had collided. For Il linois early to be absolutely certain." The reorganization may involve —The Soviet Union has told the Soviets have a veto. ceptance of the World Court's The Coast Guard later dis- CHICAGO (AP ) — The state of plan :by a vote of « to i. AH four In New York, ^Rockefeller had naming some more committees, United Nations once more it has opinion that costs of maintaining patched a cutter equipped with Illinois plagued by money prob- commissioners who opposed the no comment. Duxbury said in a news release. no intention of sharing the huge "This has been and continues the two forces come under "ex- radar to the collision scene. lems for the past ' year, has de- plan are Catholics. Some of those who attended the cost of U.N. forces in the Congo to be the position of the Soviet penses of the organization" that Officers of the Chemical Trans- cided to supply contraceptives free The committee structure he will Union ," Tchernyshev declared. the U.N. charter, porter reported"* that the tanker, A spokesman for the Roman Chicago meeting also declined recommend, Duxbury added, "Will and the Middle East despite warn- says shall be to single mothers or married comment. ings that refusal could bankrupt The Russian rejection came aft- shared by all members. anchored at the time of impact, ¦women on state relief rolls in an Catholic diocese of Chicago said reflect the concern of the Con- received a gash at the port bow comment would be withheld until But Rep. John Ashbrook, R- the United Nations. er Secretary-General U Thant and Thant asserted that the United attempt to cut welfare costs. , purpose servative group with the necessity Nations' financial plight "tran- about three feet long and 15 inch- the text of the decision Ohio said: "The real of of meeting the most pressing and Soviet d«legate Pavel M. Tcher- U.S. delegate Philip M. Klutznick Clergymen, social workers and the meeting was an effort to con- nyshev told the 110-nation budg- both warned that the United Na- scends political controversy." es wide, the Coast Guard said. atate officials have lined up large- was studied. immediate problems facing the A hole was knocked in the freight- The sources of the bitter battle solidate the Republican conserva- etary -committee Monday that the tions is headed for financial dis- "A financially bankrupt United ly along denominational lines over tive, groups around the country to legislature , without delaying work' Nations would be an ineffective er on the starboard side. stem from Illinois' financial prob- or piling up bills at the end of Soviet Union rejects responsibility aster unless members abandon the action , approved Monday by make sure we have a candidate for the two peace-keeping opera- political considerat ions and find United Nations," he said, "if in- the Illinois Public Aid Commis- lems. the session for lack of committee A small tanker. Poling Brothers Gov. Otto Kerner, a Democrat , in 1964. Of course. Sen. Goldwater tions because they were approved a formula for raising the money. deed it could survive on such a No. 14, ran aground in fog cover- sion, the state's welfare body. is the frontrunner . attention. basis." Protestants and. Jews mostly ap- has brought increasing pressure "The people of Minnesota are ing Northport harbor on Long on the - State Welfare Agency to "There are those of us who be- The secretary-general recalled Island, the Coast Guard said. proved it; Roman Catholics op- lieve Gov. Rockefeller is the. one tired of prolonged legislative ses- that member states have agreed posed It. slash its costs. sions and petty haggling." Tue severe storm in the Atlan- Some 400,000 of the state's 10 Republican .who could not win in that the United Nations is indi- tic Ocean,, after eight days, ap- The commission , in a stormy 1964." The veteran legislator said that spensable. To resolve its financial million residents receive some his faction would present a "sound peared weakening. Winds, .tides 2%-hour meeting, approved the form of state aid. James D. Martin of Gadsden. crisis would "represent a vote of and seas have diminished with new version of the birth control and positive program" and would 2 Divers Die confidence on its future, " he said. Ala., who narrowly Lost his Sen- strive to adjourn the legislature the storm center drifting east- Ten years ago th* two-year wel- ate race to Sen. Lister Hill , is Klutznick said it was not a ward some 350 miles east of fare bill was $275 million. More within the old constitutional limit question of what was the right or However, another who was there and didn 't of 90 legislative working days. Charleston. S. C. the ef- than $631 million has been voted mind speaking out. wrong method of providing the fects of the storm still were being for the present biennium — and "I'm convinced the South would An amendment to the constitu- Off California money. felt along the North Carolina that's still not enough. Tito Greeted vote for Goldwater," Martin said. tion approved by voters last month LONG BEACH , Calif. (AP) .— part Monday in an experiment to coast. The IPAC's former chairman , "He's the only one the South lengthens sessions to 120 days if Two frogmen , seeking a diving see if a secret mixture of gases The thick fog and haze also C. Virgil Martin , president of a would vote for, right now, al- needed. record , dropped 1,000. feet into the could enabl e man to survive deep blanketed southeast Pennsylvania, Chicago department store, quit though somebody might develop Duxbury said forms are being sea—and something went wrong. in the sea. especially the Philadelphia area last July, saying Kerner was try- during years. Cer- mailed this week to all House South to Send during the night and early morn- Warmly by the next two One man was fatally stricken and , ing to blame all the slate 's finan- tainly the South doesn 't want members asking that they desig- another , coming to his aid , van- Killed was Peter Small 35, a ing. The speed limit on the Penn- cial woes on welfare costs. Rockefeller." nate which committee assignments ished in the depths. reporter for the London Daily Tel- sylvania Turnpike in the area Kerner appointed industrialist Peter F. O'Donnell Jr., the Tex- they prefer. egraph. Ho apparently died of the was reduced from 60 to 35 m.p.h. Arnold H. Maremont as the new as state chairman , said several Both were English men taking bends. Negroes to Eat The North Philadelphia Airport Khrushchev IPAC chairman , and Maremont Monday night and possible conservative candidates Misting was Christopher Whit- was closed late By PRESTON GROVER almost immediately proposed the Philadelphia International were considered. He said these in- taker, 22, a geology. the (AP)—President distribution of contraceptives as a . closed early today. MOSCOW Tito cluded Goldwater, Rep. William Small and Hannes Keller , of Yugoslavia got a warm hand- means of cutting relief rolls. E. Miller of New York (Ihe GOP , 28 With Humphrey a Swiss mathematician and skin- ) shake from Soviet Premier Noting that 50,000 mothers re- national chairman) , Sen. John diver , went down off Santa Cata- NEW ORLEANS (AP — The Khrushchev and the trappings of a ceived aid to dependent children, Tower of Texas, Gov.-elect Wil- lina Island in a diving bell. Tho segregationist Citizens Council of state visit as his Irain rolled info Maremont argued that preventing liam W. Scranton of Pennsylvania men ! wore frogman suits and air Greater New Orleans said Mon- Moscow today for what is billed as more ' children from being born and Sen.-elect Peter H. Dominick tanks filled with a mixture of day it plans to send 10 Negroes to British Liner, a vacation, and getting on ADC lists would of Colorado. gases devised by Keller. Water Minneapolis "to have Christ- A guard of honor and a hand save Illinois $30 million a year. was ptille he diver ascends. humidity, 57 percent. I/ \ ¦ ; ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ;¦ ' ¦ ' ' ' ¦ " ¦ : ' ' ¦" ' " "¦ ' v ' : ' ¦; " :¦ :¦ - ¦ : ' . ' - . -' :. - - : : ¦ .. 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ENJOYED a | | $ 00^^^^^ i YOU EVER V j ^£^ 1^ ^ ^ 5 ^ SSSH^ ^^^ ^V I ' iSr-Ball Jotter Pen U Ur\IVIU 3 Assorted Colors by Parker pjl BLAME W APH MlE WftV 1 | | ? | Pf\ ^ ^ —-^1 1 ^ %l!i _ k\ ^^^ V\ 1 flGaclgef Baai I ) ' ' ¦ ¦ |ar Calf.Br«ined plastic finish 3% gf|ft ITI I V-/ I M ' 1 | ^j B3TJ ^ ON B« J#^J ' H | I ^JS3L»\^_H| *k\ Wvjf•! "~T F" ^ \ I CT I\ ""* *ft.r ««iv. io»ioi» i^>«r thav* i> A T !^^^2_^_^_^. F ^ fimiiirfll ElAcfrift ^ 1 1 I I I D I / * « »**«* r»-B.ttri< *-».<>•i.» 1 K AJB I xShw / < ' *» *«** at.. ioo ^nrfcoj.^ v» ^^^^mmwmWm. AUTOMATIC ff lA LLI M I I ILI \i v I ^gagMp^v^/ Co ¦ ¦ I ^HS IIIH TOOTH¦WWlllHI BRIUWn IISH' gPOl A, LQnENTHne: ^RozIC Tweed - J^tfl | ^ 1 HI ¦.^HM AI. H l 3 $2.00 .KiBH ' FtmPOR HERt-TT7D A Golden«- U Worlditr 1 l ofr r^ 1 ^ rechargeable *4» I #% ¦ Wj« " Fragrance ' ' n 'el': _¦¦ ¦ *W L ^^ 0^ ^ ^ ^ ^ | o u i _41fW| \ Ush ^f _» 1 / fef I 1 'C^ ^gat fff ^ batteries IW T^voed, MiMcl9l SDano- fM-i.JJ- _^_ BE Y Wp | l ^ >_^S IH B^ lfrf I I T Li ' ¦ ;-i_ __ IUAIIAIO. |a c Colo. nes , % 07, ^5*1^ ' QvTHHT ^. I vl/—gg ?J__^ _M_I_^1 Trf I <-4l_AV >i//(till7 ^P «.«», $1.50 ^^^ 3 _^_i RB ^ I! II 1 Learner fraiietsand 0. Co- j ; \w w J.OO -^ \ ii'*iwi™iiii_w#i. .^ 1 CTrfH AssortedAssonea Stvlatyicst< and roli_oiorn« T"i-nm I ¦ »»f IXNTHERIC Tweed Oi-., .? 4A W il8 »*AY ^ feI l E^ 5 , trom ^j or.) Gift ™ O^J-M^UHJ «dMpCOIOONK ^^ ' ^ ^^g& t Powderio0ne-(3 or.) Bnd BMH nO j F ***«!» «J. | _n» ^ (6 Sol ' . ^T 1 O.urlftoy^r Qetd.a i I :i »rL 11-HI ¦¦ » Q ^ lH ^ S? Il [ O • ' frl t 1 llPr I I M 71* .« $4 W^*_^_fil I • Eicoparf. • {orl Ui TlVIVC^ HCI UP t«¦WL ukfil_kl_VhlkLni DY Mf ^^ W ' sSWrfl| p»-i« '°° W J Hi rTIM'^-ST ^] y rUerKen Old Spka W Hp.pn;. ^HHHRJI ^- ,u^lV * I ^^as^i 1 BnhinQfpiii'<. I
ffi? //W/W/r. _ ^ F ^Oj r / ^^***fc-V I Gold- toilpluitd Sptay Coloana, _ ... .., . : 1 I' **W UPu ^ W mm lH *^'^^->* »»w >_ „r,1U C i A l»ov«nly ,|f»_ id.« . . . to.. trim ¦ «r_ a. or .toff, , .S5» ^^^~~ ^J ^^ ^^ .^^ irD !; P.^ B p.Mln, W.«d,W P 0«rJ.- !« _.a» 1 a | SJ^*2S«ai«fa_W« *^^ ^ pric !•««,, Dwit /. | | ta, ea ««*., § OTHBR RUBENSTBIN OIFTS TO $ 10. 00 | ^ ^ | COUNCIL; BOARD DISCUSS: WIDA Renames SET-OFFS DEBATED Should Tree Program Two Directors; County Postpones City Council Involve Assess Progress Cited To Meet With ments? S. J. Pettersen and Arnold Stoa Maintenance of tr ees on city move the diseased tree at city —Aid. James Stoltman said trees streets and roadways were re-elected to the Winona In- , as outlined expense, Allen said. __ located on city land between side- dustrial Development Association Actions on Utica uva proposed New legislators ordinance, occupied walk and curb are an asset to board of directors Monday The Winona County Board of trict, county board chairman, ask- Mrs . Beyer's husband said his aldermen and ANOTHER SECTION the or- after- Winona County' Park r Recreation W the value of adjoining property noon and Donald " .R. Holley was Commissioners deferred action ed: three children had the option of s three new leg- Board members for nearly an hour dinance would require the owner whose owners should therefore be elected. Monday afternoon on seven pro- "Does anybody oppose these pe- walking about one mile to "Utica islators, Reps. Mrs. Virginia Tor* at Monday night' of a tree on private property to gerson and George Daley and s Council meet- chargeable for their upkeep. Aid. Officers posed set-offs from Utica Common titions?" School or being driven there by Sen. ing. remove or trim the tree if it con- , all re-elected* were: Roger Laufenburger , have been . Howard Baumann, who favors as- Pettersen, president; K. A. Mc- School District 256L to Lewiston Silence followed.. their father. Mrs. Beyer doesn't It will receive further examina- stituted a hazard to an alley) sessment, said if: it were not Independent District 857, pending Alfred Steuernagel , Utica dis- drive. asked to attend a special meeting v street or sidewalk. Such a tree Queen , first vice president ; Wil- of the City Council next tion at the next regular meeting, adopted he hoped the city wouldn't liam F\ White, second vice presi- outcome of the plat for proposed trict resident who sat on a table Monday could be "summarily removed" "I ASK you what' better for evening to discuss legislation re- Dec. 17, when aldermen will try have to set up a department to dent; Daniel F. Przybylski, secre- consolidation of the two districts. because the chairs were filled, * to decide whether by the tree superintendent in the mow the grass on boulevards the children—two teachers teach- lating to the city. tree care should as tary-treasurer, and W. E. Morse, The hassle continued over wheth- broke the silence. or one be assessed against property own- absence of action by the owner, well. * "I haven't made irp my mind ing ^ix classes teacher to City Recorder Roy Wildgrube assistant secretary - treasurer. er Utica District should be con- and City Attorney George M. ers or paid for pat of gener al who would be subject to prosecu- Aid. Lloyd Deilke said the or- Morse is the association's execu- solidated with Lewiston or St. where T want to go—but I'll be a class," Beyer said. Rob- revenue. . tion in municipal court. dinance should be beefed up to tive director. Charles, and over the recently de- surrounded. I'm hemmed in and Mrs. Beyer, a former teacher, erston Jr. listed and briefly dis- Aldermen expressed apprehen- prevent planting I' not the only one." said : . cussed six topics /which will be on AS NOW DRAWN! put . of undesirable The elections were held at the feated proposal for a central high m , the ordin- sion that nonassessment would species on private as well as city school district. There was some Steurernagel explained that If "Sometimes my husband doesn't the agenda of the special meeting. ance would charge .all expenses of the city in the tree removal bus- ¦ Commerce and Industry Building. Under the city's charter , legisla- property. .' ;. ' - . Holdover directors are the officers display of temper at the meeting the set-o-ffs were approved , this get out of the barn until 10 o'clock operation to the city. In answer- iness and drive out private opera- the Utica school issue which would surround his farm and five in the mBrning. If he couldn't tive action is required to make ing aldermen's questions tors. The park-recreation depart- and William P. Theurer, Ralph over changes in its provisions. regard- THE PROPOSED ordinance- pro- Boalt and G. M. Grabow. Nineteen has been dragging on for months. others with a belt of Lewiston dis- drive the children to school I'd ing this pcunt, Park-Recreation ment would be swamped with re- hibits planting, on city land of trict land, isolating the six farms have to take them there in a coas- • A city advertising appropria- persons attended the annual cor- ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ $2, , commissioners said the matter of quests to remove unwanted trees conifers, nut-bearing, Cottonwood, porate membership^ meeting. The COMMISSIONERS could not le- from the rest of the remaining ter wagon." • . ' .¦ . ' tion of 500 heretofore renewed whether to assess or not along city boulevards, they said. each two years by temporary leg- was the box elder; willow, poplar, black next annual meeting will be in gally act on the proposed set-offs Lewiston district. Steuernagel said Erion , one of the farmers who proper concern of the Council , in Commissioner Robert ygteffen locust, Chinese elm, catalpa , birch January 1964. Retiring director at the meeting because the State such an arrangement seemed im- islation , should be made perman- their opinion. said the ordinance would require said he would be isolated by the ent , Wildgrube suggested. : and other "fast growing and non- J. M . George, who did not Department of Education is con- proper, set-offs, started smiling. Commissioner Edward M. AlLen a permit to be issued by the tree durable varieties." seek re-election, was commended sidering a Lewiston-Utica plat sub- "I feel it was done to put me • Standby authority to assess Mrs. Beyer turned to him and costs of storm sewer trunk lines said that while the ordinance con- superintendent to ctit or to plant Trees'may not lie closer togeth- for his service. He helped found mitted by County Superintendent on the spot," he said. : a tree, and Commissioner Allen er than 45 feet, from trunk to said : against benefited property should templated no assessments against the WIDA. . of Schools Jesse B. Jestus at the "It isn't funny, abutting property for said it would be a difficult task trunk, can be planted or removed THE COMMISSIONERS discuss- Uncle Freder- be requested, aldermen were told. maintenance jceport request of the Lewiston school ick." or removal of trees along boule- to keep records of all work done only by permit and may not be IN HIS ANNUAL , Presi- board. Jestus did not attend Mon- ed the legality of such a procedure While this authority is not now vards, there would be two types by the crew. touched by any wire or foreign dent Pettersen reviewed 1962 ac- day 's meeting. and Baer relayed the word to Steu- THEN SHE continued; provided, the recorder said , it of cases in which private proper- Steffen said the department object , except by permission of tivities of the WIDA, much . of ernagel that the procedure was le- We go to Lewiston to vote. We should be held in reserve for pos- would not take "hundreds of calls the tree superintendent which has been reported previ- Last week Jestus announced he gal becaiise it had been done else- go sible future use. The assessment ty owners could be held liable. , the ordin- had rejected the St. Charles school to Lewiston to church. We want to cut trees down just because ance states. ously. where in. the county. to send our children to Lewiston act also should be amended to If a tree on private property people don't want them." Pettersen said :- board's request to prepare a plat "I'm another one in that pick- specify , a ceiling of 6 percent in- were infected with Dutch elm dis- for consolidation wilh 11 rural dis- for school. They can get.religious "The past year has been one of et," said Frederick Erion; instruction at Lewiston too WISCONSIN'S spring-like weath- Christmas shopping season. northing is final until the pa- Utica plat between now and Jan. er came to an abrupt halt today, Chief of Police George H. Sa- pers ara signed. CHAIRMAN Paul Baer, Fre- 1, he would call a special meeting too, as a surprise cold front push- vord spoke to the bureau on pro- mont , 4th District, said: of the county board to act on Creamery Elects ed its way across the state. The cedures to be followed in the pre- "Every community has certain "Try it another year." the petitions immediately, before cooler air entered the state, how- vention of passing of bad checks natural assets, due to business de- City Filings Magnuson said the fair was in- another plat were filed. Baer's over, only after another series of and in the apprehension of per- velopments over the years which tended to be nonprofit. term as commissioner is expiring. WILL AMERICA At St. Charles record high temperatures were es- sons who cash worthless checks. tend to make it a central point "But I can tell by the books it's tablished. Copies of his remarks will be sent for specific industries to develop. KENNEDY , the Lewiston School ST. CHARLES, Minn. (S-pecial) losing money , " he said. "It's ri- Board chairman , looked squarely —Timothy Waby was elected pres- At mid-morning today, the cold to members who did not attend While we realize that we may not diculous. I hope to keep the fair this morning ' promoting any one Open Dec. 24 at the commissioners and said ident of the St. Charles Coopera- front extended from Wausau to s meeting. be successful in Filing dates for city office can- board more active than it has Lone Rock and was moving south- type of«industry over another , 1 with emphasis: tive Creamery at St. Charles Cath- THERE WAS a discussion of didates were revised by the City been. But the tendency for fair "I urge' the county board to School Saturday night. Ap- eastward. the November evening feel that at the present time Wi- board members has been when olic Grcon Bay hit a high of 61 Mon- store open- nona could / well concentrate its Council Monday night to conform give serious consideration to these proximately 150 attended. ings on Mondays and Wednesdays with a new state law. they 've taken on the job to settle petitions . The board should be day, the warmest weather ever energies in the plastics field. back nnd talk about tlie cows. Lyman Person was elected vice for Christmas shopping, Members Candidates now will file not concerned with the transportation r recorded in December in that felt that the "In certain areas of finished "We'll need, more interest in the , president succeeding Arnol-d, Pru - city. The previous peak was 00 November openings plastic materials, a new company more than six weeks nor les s than of children their education and John Stock was "elected weren 't too successful but that a four weeks before the city pri- fair from Winona. If I can't make the tax rate. It's poor taste for doehl and on Dec. 8, 1946. Superior ' s 55 was could move to our city, secure the fair operate, I'll resign." secretary-treasurer. Cletus Puetz a record for any Dec. 3. The old sharp increase in traffic was no- its raw materials , manufacture mary election. Under Ihe new a county board member to be Ruhberg as a di- ted at the first December Mon- amendment , filings will open Dec. Magnuson , who said the fair guided by how these petitions succeeds Donald mark was 51 in 1941, Madison 's the product , fill the product , box annually from t* MEASURE and Delrnar Ihrke succeeds day evening opening. 24 at 0 a.m. and will close Jan. gels about $2,000 would affect the Lewiston or St. rector 57 equalled the high for the date it and ship it using all local ma- the s.late in addition to county aid , Daniel McCready as another di- set in 1891. Other items to be discussed ot terials with the exception of the 7 sit 5 p.m., City Recorder Hoy Charles school districts. A man Wachter was re-elect- the January meeting will be a pro- Wildgruhe said. estimated it would take at least who did that would be derelict OP? rector. Hugo machines used in the formulation three years to put Ihe fair into the EAU CLAIRE had 60, Lone Rock posal that courtesy cards be pro- just one Filings previously were open in his duty. " | ed. of the product. This is black. (During (lit! discussion Commis- shop quartet en tertain- 59, Wausau 58, Madisoai , Beloit vided the W inona police depart- area of .resource being available from the first Monday in Decem- A barber , "We should invest in good acts ," sioner Spitzer , the St. Charles The standards of world leader- group and the board mem- ami Park Falls 57 Milwaukee 5? ment for placing on out-of-town locally, but certainly a new and ber to the second Monday in Jan- To cd the and Racine 52. cars parked overtime and the uary, Magnuson said, "Every county in resident , had expressed concern ship) are changing: rapidly. bers wives served the dinner. The exciting field which is only in its (he state has a fair nnd if we drop- about proposed departure of free- position in business, amendment con- A band of light rain was falling merits of supporting statewide infancy. hold our co-op passed nn ahead of the cold front this morn- ped ours it wouldn't look good for holders from the St. Charles High in science and invention arid cerning taxation of patronage dis- Sunday store closing legislation. "One other factor which Is of ing. Members of the nominating Stolen Car Found us. Rochester has one of the most Hchool District , Me said that would living- standards, we must ap- tribution. interest to the board is Hie fact fairs in tlie state, HOUS- make it hard for St. Charles to Cotulla, Tex,, set the national committee were Robert McQueen , that due to the current labor sup- growing ply new yardsticks to higher Tlie cooperative 's total current high temperature of 82 Monday. A car parked in front of 171 E, TON'S fair is going up and we're build a new high school. Utica compared with chairman , Itussell Price and Irv- ply in Winona , new industries are education . asset s are $39, 820. Bulte, Mont., wis Ihe coldest spot ing Gepner. going to mean new people and 4tli St ., was stolon sometime be- going down. " high school students have been total current liabilities of $52,368. early today with 5 above. tween 3:30 a.m . and 3:15 p.m. fining to St. Charles High Schoo l How are our higher institu- Tot.nl assets are $151,573.52 com- MAGNUSON, who is drama di- lor a half-century. i ? Brav«ir-but a Monday. The car, owned by Mi- High tions doing pared with total liabilities of $55,- chael itaglino, 171 E. 4th St., was rector at Winona Senior "I ask this board to con- looming. Colleges are net School nnd has had theatrical ex- crisis is 42 22 Total liabilities nmd found by police 45 minutes later sider whom they an» protect- in a squeeze, some face short- 57:1.52. perience , said after conferring ing," Kennedy said. "I ask worth is $15, nt 5th nnd Franklin streets. There ages. In less than 10 years 930 in the with the county commissioners them to think of the petitioners , Net receipts -were $61, was no apparent damage to the twice as many ap- $9,425 in the ag- ear. that the fair faces stroiiR compe- and not to protect St. Charles there will be dairy division nnd tition from television. plicants. ricultural division , for n $71,356 or Lewiston ." patrons equi- But he said (here 's a sizable po- Mr.s. Beyer turned lo Steuer- in the mod- total . Net earnings to new homes. We appreciate that among chil- To measure up , 152 in d airy awd $4 ,- there is considerable fluctuation tential fair audience nagel , who was concerned aboul we must keep our ties are $4 dren and youth who have never being isolated , anil said : ern world , .758,04 in agricultural , for a ?«,- in employment , but from _i point colleges equipped with good of economics we are in an excel- seen a fair. "1 wouldn 't worry about that , 910. "Winona people should come to Allied. There won ' t be a Utica laboratories, modern class- lent position with high employ- , compe- ment , but the registered labor the fair too. Tho fair gives them District for loo loifg." rooms and, above all Th ree Youths Admit market is low. a completely different form of en- tent teachers. "We know t hat with new jobs tertainment that they can gel False Alarms Her* new people will lie attract ed nnd only once , n year. The f air repre- IHOf AND mill MUT HELP THE COLLEGE senl-.s not ju st people from tho OF YOUR CHOICE NOWI youths will he it is not a serious .situation, due Three Winoma to the fact thai labor from neigh- rttrikl area hut city people too. washing fire trucks and doing Many of the fair 's commorcinl ex- around the fire boring communities both in Min- - To find out how Iho college crisli other odd Job s nesota and Wisconsin will come hibits are from Winona. The name department iifler school and on affncti you, write to HIGH6R EDUCA- where Iho Jobs are. It ,is n sign of tkie fair association contains the Station, Saturday during the coming words agricultural AND indus- , TION, Box: 36, Timet Square that new industries , will neces- Now York 36, N.Y. months. ' " , sarily increase our population nnd trial. " The Ihree 14-ycar-olds have na- false create a favorable condit ion for Magnuson said Ihe fair never setting many of the FublieStit na n puti ' iV ttrvict in milted the expansion of retail and profes- had n revue or variety show, ' plagued! Wino- tooparation with Th* ,t,f rci'liM tlff nlnrins that have sional services. Any community "The state fair has a revue fea- past few weeks, ac- WHAT IS SO RARE . . ,? Well , threshing Wis ,, Saturday, Dec. 1. It' was almost a little. C.'onririt ntuf the ,YrU'«|"T"r .-trf. na In Ihe ¦¦ which does nnl have this in the turi ng professional acts . It 's ex- Ufafutirta Annrintion. cording to police . ' out of n stack is, and threshing oul of n sl«ck too warm , Scmingson nnd his helpers joke d. kND MMl "MSI CUSS" rartiaing turned over tn projected future is n community pensive. The county fair had an Thoy have been In December certainly is. But Hull's what hap- (Mary Pcrhum photo) it WITH KM CHRISTMAS SUMPS their pare nts and ' that is slipping. We feel fortunate amateur revue last year and (ho custody of pened, on the Herman Somlngson farm nt Elcva, that wo have a future of crowth." was successful." l-'lro Chief Joh n L. Sleadman. They'll Do It Every Time —~V By Jimmy Ha Ho | Cornell Wants R/d ^ Rochester Dairy Of Boa Constrictor YMCA Y's Men Qt diappsmcLJ OAL TUyht ITHACA, N.Y. (AP) - Cornell ; University has asked a fraternity To Sell Trees Sales Increase to get rid of Its pet boa constric- The V's Men's Club of the Wi- tor until it can be determined nona YMCA will be selling Christ- Whether the 7^-foot snake posed mas Trees for the first time this Our Ancestors Near $18 Million a danger. year. This is an annual' project ROCHESTER, Minn.—Rochester the Delta Tau Delta fraternity throughout Y's Men's Clubs in the Dairy Cooperative had sales of said it Would comply with the re- Nation. nearly $18 million the past year quest made Monday by Charles The tree sale will open Saturday Needed Lunch and aided two member creamer- Warwick, assistant dean of stu- aUhe YMCA. By EARL WILSON .« . ¦/. ies. Sales increased $126,618, to $17,- dents in charge of fraternities; Trees to be sold are nursery grown and include Norway, Bal- .NEW YORK. ' — Is America abolishing lunch? Are you abolishing 696,618. The snake wars purchased from That was reported to the 2,500. Alfred MacDonald, an assistant in sam and Scotch. Proceeds will be yours ? used for youth work in the com- patrons attending the 21st annual the child development and fam- ' ' "We city-dwellers don't need three meals a day," says Tony meeting at Mayo Civic Audito-rium ily relation department at the munity. x , Perkins. : Saturday. school. James Dresser and Scott Tolle- co-chairmen. son are ¦ Tony's been non-lunching daily during preparations for his show ¦ ¦ • ¦ ROB ERT BAD6 ER, Rochester ¦ . . " He may organize a national non-luncheon club. Being a were in a wartime economy and "Harold. area ; Gregory Kramer, Elba in CHAMBER AT WHITEHALL milk as a food was listed high (Special) breakfast enthusiast, he feels if area ; Edward Ringhofer, Owaton- priority as one of the essentials of WHITEHALL, Wis. — people must meet to sing songs, "Certainly. Each once lived in na area, and Warren Graskamp, a wartime effort. The Whitehall Chamber of Com- they form a breakfast club and Boston." Harmony-Fountain area, wer« re- ( merce will meet at City Cafe Wed- listen to after-breakfast speeches. Bosomy Choo Choo Collins — "Many of us thought at the time p.m, • ; " elected directors. Paul Bauer, Ar- for nesday at 6:30 - "Lunch was only needed by our opening a singing engagement at kahsaw. Wis. area, is the only that this surge and demand hardy-pioneer ancestors when food Hy Vchitel's Encore before Rudy newly elected director milk as a basic food product, oth- The President's Commission on ^. er than butter and cheese, as we Campaign Costs reported expendi- wasn't so good," claims Tony. -A Vallee, Marty Allen and other According to Treasurer Badger ' check-up at Toots Shor 's, 21, Col- stars—pleased the males with her had previously thought of the tures in behalf of all candidates butter and powdered products dairy business, was a temporary for public officce in 1960 totaled ony , etc., shows however, that measurements as well as her again were the main items mar- lunches are still very popular — melodies—but it was singer Joan thing," he said. $165 to $175 million. keted. More than 10 rriillion '.'I maintain that we as dairy especially the martini course. Edwards who cried out from the pounds of butter were soldi and Perkins doesift even lunch in , "What beautiful legs! If " farmers in our area must take a ring-side more than 40 million pounds of vigorous and vigilant position -with France, where it's a two-hour I'd have had legs like that. I'd nonfat powder. The two products ritual. have been a' star!" Joan therefore regard to milk supplies and how , ".you made up 70 percent of the sales they come to be on a national ba- "Skipping lunch," he says urged Choo Choo to do a com- volume. ' notice a change in your weight." plete reversal in the singing busi- sis." ( You're so right, Tony. I noticed Total milk receipts increased by "I am glad to report to- you to- ness: To come' out and show her 26,000,000 pounds last year, to 374,- organization is in a a change in mine after skipping LEGS all the way to her waist. day that our lunch. ThanKsv' to that, huge mid- OOO.OOO pounds. ^ The increase was sound working position." ^ Outdoors attributed to the new creamery GLORIA Vanderhilt-S I dj- the THE of supper, and 4 arm icebox Voice night members, Utica and . Stewartville MANAGER Walter Paine said, raid . I eained 8 pounds.) ney Lumet marriage story is one year, but we are that Gloria might write for a slick Co-op creameries. "We had a good EDDIE Fisher's going to loaf in Assets of the dairy cooperative still not satisfied." magazine or Sidney might direct Kenneth Tallin, general manag- Puerto Rico after finishing his lor a movie. For weeks Lumet's exceed liabilities with $1. 11 in latest album. He was a -very po- quick assets for every dollar in er of Badger Breeders Co-op, Sha- lived away—partly at a top hotel. wano, Wis., spoke on coopera- ular Fall Guy at the Circus Saints But at Thanksgiving they nonchal- current obligations. Cash on. hand & Sinners where Roastmaster Tex was down slightly from last year, tives in general, milk consumption antly and jointly entertained sev- and production and dairying in O'Rourke said. "When I asked the eral guests at dinner. Lumet has to $236,487. Inventories on hand man at the record shop for his were $394,544. general using graphs and illustra- insisted on being "provider" and tions to bring across his points. latest release, he thought I meant tab-grabber though wed to a Van- There has been continued re- Taylor" Moren Bros., Harmony, re- "Sorry I'm late, dear. But I'm the one he got from Liz derbilt. A close friend says, "I'll duction of loan .and contract in- you to the Coffee Shop ... Katharine Hepburn went to debtedness, down $878,600 since ceived a quality award for 15 per- taking bet 5 to 1 they'll never divorce." years. They were awarded in the Hotel Winona for dinner the mat ihee of "A Thousand ( Some scenario? ) Sept. 30, 1961. This has resulted in fect '. Patrick certifica tes for the honor. Albert this week just to make it up Clowns" in slacks! . .;. went to Chicago to an. improved working capita.! posi- ' to you!" Dennis & Peggy Cass are doing Toots Shor tion ,, said Badger. Net overage Hadler, Zumbrota, received an "My 30 Days Up- see Frank Sinatra , Dean Martin ¦ ' award for 14 . perfect yeais, Bern- a picture book. Davis open at the Vil- was $87,464. stairs 'in the White House," with and Sammy ard Reiland, Pine Island, 13 Peggy modeling for all the First la Venise. He says they stayed up GEORGE P. DALEY, Lewiston, years, and Fred Dennstedt, Har- Lady pictures. Regarding resem- so late, they outguzzled him ! president of the board, told the mony, 12 years. About 220 quality and the cur- Flash from Alan King: Richard audience attending the afternoon awards were in the three to 15 blance between Peggy receive the News- rent First Lady, Dennis says, Nixon did not session of the development of the year bracket. paper Guild Man of the Year cooperative: Vernon Bucker, Orpnoco, co-op Award . . . Debbie Reynolds is "When our "Organization was secretary, reported. Francis Whit- saying her late '63 TV spec will founded 21 years ago, it came in- comb, Eyota, is the co-op's vice be *'$! million worth" ... The NY to being through necessity. We president. Hilton's hoping for an April '63 opening ..' . Walter . Matthau to play opposite Judy Holiday in "Hot 'GLEAIM ING HOLI DAY GIFT ORIGINALS FROM CEHEENDS TONIGHT Spot"?. . .Yul Brynner set up two trust fund for children from. "Ta- N0W..JT ALL COMES ras Bulba" fees. TODAY'S BEST LAUGH : It's FANTASTICALLY ALIVE! really amazing what scientists are doing with poultry. Now they've developed a two-pound chicken that _^_^_H§_*_^^^_B_^l_^KBfl_l-B_UE_i_i^_lfl gives three pounds of meat, WISH I'D SAID THAT: If it Fish of th» Season ing: groups were below the other cut zone ot thia boundary waters weren't that the TV set and refrig-. This big northern that tipped darns. The floats at Alma had a canoe area be expanded; the leg- - i_5P!^_BR-^*_ifipfi_S_B_^_pWlsB erator were so far apart, Borne of tie scales of the Sportsman's Tav- big play. Most of the fishermen islature provide adequate funds to fi\^fll_^lB^^_y_^_R^£!_i_H_B_il Us wouldn't get any exercise at ern contest at 18 pounds and eight were after walleyes. Sandpike develop and manage wetlands, all.: ounces is probably the biggest made up a greater part of the refuges and public hunting EARL'S PEARLS: A really game fish caught during the sea- catch. Crappies were hitting in grounds; opposed the diversion of some of the sloughs. This fish ¦HrV * - aa\m\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\waW' s4ik small *town is where one alarm son out of this sector of the Mis- game and fish funds; proposed mmmmmW-^?tm\* am\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\^^m\ W^ m\\\\\\ %'^m^ ^^a\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\m\ v&/amaeloci ^avgets e-verybody up in the sissippi. At least it's the largest seems to have moved out of the that the conservation commission- morning. to our knowledge and the biggest main channel. er be given the power to set zones, Everybody's kidding about the entered in the Sportsman's con- seasons and bag limits; proposed Kennedy Dynasty . in Washington, test. The Minnesota division that; an education program on pre- and Bob Orben figures it's just a of the Izaab Walton League, dator/ control be developed to help coincidence that Caroline got a Mike Mestal, Parkside Trail- at its annual convention in land owners -control this -problem Princess phone . . . That's earl, er Court, Eochester, caught Minneapolis over the weekend, and do away with the bounty sys- brother. it while fishing in the back- voted down a resolution asking tem. waters below the Whitman for a dollar increase in fishing _^MliKcfa?^^_B-l amm\a\\\W dam, or the small slough next and hunting licenses on the The Waltonites also propos- La ke City Librarian to the dike. He got it on a grounds that if the Legislature ed that the next .Legislature slug with a spinning ooitfit. would discontinue diverting li- .appropriate $350,000 annually Washington Meet cense fees now paid for other At irom the general revenue for T*2^_Br "H^-^-^-^-^-BHSI tMUM -Mem "II i.ii111 Ha^ir'Bf J J P PR fc* SP purposes, there would be suf- . -H5K3-BBfl-^-E-9-i-^-^-^-^-^-H LAKE CITY . Minn. ( Special)- Big walleye of the week was a "the acquisition of wetlands and nine pound nine-ounce one enter- ficient funds for the operation that a dark house license be Mrs. Mary Ellen Feehan, who has of the division. The $2 trout been employed at Lake City Mu- ed by Mrs. Ray Rice, 711 W. 4th boosted from $1 to $2 and the St, Harry Pellowski, 355 E. King stamp suffered the same fate, 10 percent dee for license be nicipal Hospital, attended an in- according to Willard Matzke, stitute for medical record librar- St.. got one an ounce lighter, or changed to a flat 25 cents. nine pounds eight-ounce. president of tho local chapter. Jacli ians at Washington, D.C. , ^^^^^^^^^^^^^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^_^-^-^-l-^-E-¦¦ ^J-B-^__H-B^-^-^-^-H-^-_-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-H-----i _^-^-^^^-^-^-^-^-^-Hf^u_iLB-i_-_i'^^.>^-;i$HtS^V^-H^-^B ¦ • ¦ ¦ H ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ HH P ammm\^^^k^a\mmmmmmmmmmaYKyy ^&!£&vP+^ . -flHHHH^_IHHHHHHIII^_HHBB_HH_ HHMNMil^_-_iHHIHHHH_ - _-^^^^^^_^_^r . _^_^_ _ B >'wI M))A "-i Officers elected were William _^-»————--——------^ *i^-MHH|_ ---- ^^-----»- - - -^_ . B CM * AJ * _ _ A^^^ Wammmammmw - -^^_ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^_^_^_^_^_ »./^_2 ^^ ;^^* ,* .^^y^-i» Ben Allen, 223 W. Howard The convention, however, passed Aulfather, president; Jake Licke, ^^^^^^^ ^ _^^^^^j St., back in town aftei a so- a resolution which called for a 50 Walker, first vice president; Miami Beach to Have million dollar fund to develop the journ in the Veteran Hospital, G-eorge Richest, Minneapolis, sec- proof). Paintings of thorou ghbred horses and festive holl- ¦ "'_H^_^T»T__!iV^/^l__^_^_!_!^^ ¦ Good Christmas Season was again catching big bass. necessary lands for recreation and retary, and Mrs. Star Hay, Min- day trimmings, topped with a bright red bow, enhance ¦ JaM DCG ITI S vICOPaTTd He entered a five-pound fish and wildlife habitat in the , the warm hearthjide scene on the package, r , (AP) three- neapolis, treasurer. MIAMI BEACH Fla. - ounce large-mouth, Incidental- state, A matchless Beam gilt inspiration distinguished by its classic Mayor Kenneth Oka says Presi- Giant ly, Ben teDs us.that while f ish- The move, Is 30 million dollars In addition to Matzke, Leon symmetry. Etched figures of Cleopatra and Marc Antony, the dent Kennedy 's remarks about ing recently in the river, he higher than the proposal made by Inman, and Kenneth Mehaffey Sphinx and the Great Pyramid, grace this Stately onyx black ere-, his family 's Christmas in Florida landed a two pound eight-ounce the Minnesota Natural Resources ation. Contains 6 year old (100 proof) Bonded Beam Bourbon. are worth more than any adver- represented the Will D i 1 g muskie , a rarity in this part Council. Chapter of the league at the •CfMGKy STRAIGHT _0« RSON WHISKIES DISTIltED ANO BOTRCT 8Y THE IAWES B. BEAM DISnUINU CLOMONr. BEAM, KENfUCKC ISKter tising campaign. of the river although they are AVAtUBILITY OF FADKAGES SUBJECT TO The council report , which convention. "And now that the heart of the caught occasionally above St. Cuban crisis is over, it looks as came under considerable fire |F«ITii$COIt|TfmiiicoiaTl Cloud. The only other muskie during the election campaign, though Miami Beach will have an verified report was a good EXTRA - "The Jet Ca_ e" excellent Christmas season," Oka had recommended a general sized one taken in Lake Pepin obligation bond issue in the "Puerto Rican Playlaod" said, "Propsects for the rest of a few y ears ago. Ben has the season look good , too." amount of 20 million dollars caught a lot of muskies and for the same purposes. had no trouble Identifying his fish. This money, according to the Waltonitcs and the council, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ BBp™§^B^^^S|ESaSwit^^^^"^'s- *™"3BwB^ v_§K_^_^_l^_i-i_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_i_^^* ^ a4^-Hc^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_H M u would be spent for outdoor rec- Fishermen do not seem to miss reation and research NOW ice fishing too much. It is nearlj , state ny.ui ' park lands and canoe sites, "^ three weeks late. The weekend purchase of the Minnesota Me- saw a lot of fishermen on the riv- morial Hardwood Forest, er. We counted 45 fishing boats - 4 GREAT STARS below the VYhitmnn dam at 2 p.m. Proposals , all of which will be l-4^^>(^ tW73 ^^ H^ "^ J / - * J^v^grafflj_^j_ B Sunday. There wore just as many presented to the, legislature when _^_l^_^_^_H V. Tti— HI - II*- 1 _^h r ii i *^^ * £^_d0tM U9t**^*^*W^_^_^_l ¦^^ ¦^> ¦ w->- ' \sf * ,. -. > > x M -y^*^ „ iTill there on Saturday. Similar fish- it meets in January, are: The no- LJ-J-W..-¦ i , .-..w-J*i-~~Wtf-A»r-^ iXmr~* • —- ' ¦&*&> jpciSSS^^^i-fS--'—" rwl: —BSSSSSKJ ^ -*—* i .i .! - l^'"w - -- "^''.JK ArJr ^t^mkmamWf 'K.?c ^St ^^ R0SAUND RUSSEll \^am\\\\\\a\v& ¦- ¦* Vi. I " ^^jS_jU*""W ^ ^ OUT-O F-TOWN COLLEGES ^ . JACK HAWKINS u ^^ JS ¦ammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmi§K^_^Q#3$4^Km^^^^^V fS ^ff > *-—«— -" w ~~-~~~*\*Ji J_^\^_^Bfii ^^_a^lL^_tt_^_B ^_^_^_^_^_HB_^ (x^S_a_M_[_H_Hr'*'^WWWi ^^¦|fM^^BH^H__ BM_RH_H_fl_^_^ iJjHMll ^^^***^ -lin »-^^qMJWt^^MWMt£ULll^iWBB^lM ^ _^_^_^_^_^_^___^_^_^ _^5_^^ aW^^^amWammmmmmW ^ V«1&%_ tf ^_^_lH_H_H_i_^_^_^B^1_^_l_^_^_^_HH ft < MflXTMIEM SCHEll' Sing in Carleton Choir _^_^_^_^_^_^M_V^_^_Hr F >-i:m&^mW^M ^ IJ^_ WCffifflD _^_^_^_^_^_HBrS-^!p^^^^' ^^^k.H.rf.l.^.Hc^^A -^ . ^y_l_^_^_^_^_^H_it. ¦> tAr^. ^-«<.^<._i>- {ft < l^_^H_^_B_^_^_i_zl_j_K_^_^_r J^_^_^_^_K^^^^I_^_^_^_^_I_^_^_H JOSEPHINE REED and JOHN disease symptoms result from _ ^_ ^_ ^_ ^H_ a%x\v r : <& >{,'^£&_^_^_^_^_^_l_^_ b * h^JH»_r^Mmffi#f - ^_^_^_^_Hw^^_^_^_^_^_^_^_H con- _^H_^_^HRI_2US_4^ 'C * ^^_1_^_^_^_^_H^%£^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_B_K> a. ^ v ._^j_^_^_^_^H_l_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_i BEYMER R. McELMURY, Winona students tracted ligaments in the pelvis, ^pP ^. ^^ at Carleton College, Northfield , spine or thorax, Minn,, are members of the 130- Dr. Soppa received a special •, voice Carleton Choir. Miss Reed clinical award and Is establishing 1963 Rambler Classic 770" Crois Country Wafion. Romblar t\%o offers 3-aeat waaons. Is the daughter of Mrs, Robert a practice at Rockford, 111. He's Reed , 167 ¥. Wabasha St., and married and has one daughter. > ' _-^-_^-^-^-^-K' ..'j tammmr^mmt. l^Amw __ McElmury is tho son of Mr. and » ? ? . ^^ Mrs. Roy S. McElmury, 602 E. CALEDONIA , Minn. — Theodora B Howard St , Rocrkohl , daughter of Mr. and S IH RAMBLER CROSS COUNTRY FOR 63 4 • ? Mrs. L. L. Rocrkohl , Caledonia, ALLEN SCHULZ, son of Mr, Is a member of Wio Gleo Club at and Mrs, James R. Schulz, 557 E. Manhattonville College of the B ST-SELLING , M BEBBS BE 6-CYLINDER WAGON Mark Sl„ Is one of three students Sacred Heart , Purchase¦ , N.Y ^a^a^r ^^^ammmmmmmL ^ a ^9A Sn_P^P^V^^P^Pm_^-i at Hamline University , St, Paul , w- •» Exciting beauty is one reason Today, four pounds of feed moke I I Juat why this new who'll participate In 1he univer- NewI nltlden compartment '63 Rambler wagon is the best seller. sity 's Washington Seminar pro- one pound of turkey, A fow years There's a ^mmm^mmm^ under cargo floor- < years-ahead quality gram. ago, tho feed-meat ration was ^^TT^^^ W;. breakthrouBh-Advanced ^ " ¦ six to one. Protects valuables Unit Construction. A supremely i ., . i i ¦ > Each semester two» or three solid Rambler ia ;. , ^midmwW#f 1 U A itia]jfcih\ Hamline students go to Washing, ] | tne re8«lfc Provides fall room | ^ g !| II m^aW^' A«5#» - for six 6-footers. ton to study at American Univer- ^ '' STARTS FRIDAY sity. They also have an opportunity ^%flPW ^ *jB^^ j_T^i j sSemr There's «©W vibrutlon-freoTri-Poised Power in to observe government operations, STEAK SHOP ¦ ¦ the '68 a««lc Slx and 2B0 HP An>baiwndor V-8 Schulz and two other students will 4amemmmmema%m <<^_ST . — Family Styli — " - -J& «mootlu«t riding; Ramblers over built. Take leave for Washington late In Jan- unOnlviy wagonwaoon winwith AAd.ancerlayancea unitUnit ^ i*tl1* .^mlMm a ...^^aBUS ^t Discovery Drive todaj . uary. LUTEFISK & LEFSE \ Construction-rattle-free ^'^^HM_8I mL f with massive single unlsldo member ^'' ARCAD IA, Wli. (Special ) DINNER , ''HT^^P^ PAIUIPI CP - Dr. replacing ninny small Ilf^lf IDLCI PO Richard F, Soppa, s«n of Mrs, parts " -2^ i DO ALU N£W All. Elizabeth Soppn, recently com- Thursday Night . .. I ... ^ . BEAUTIFUL . ALL RAMBLER pleted four years of study and internship at the National College ft o'clock of NaprapiUhy, Chicago, Naprn- Reiervatlon. Appreciated pathy Is a therapeutic system of druglcss treatment by manipula- PHONE 3159 WINONA m >»* MASBOSfttVIMli^^ iK aa trluniMIIUUS RAMBLER INC., ***** tion depending on tho theory that ---¦ ¦¦— .i .1 ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ -. ¦¦ . - ¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦ — • - , - | - | | . . _ ' I - I - If I Lake City Hospital Jackie's Unhappy Receives 1st Payment man Catholic Ecumenical Council Pope John on Saturday, and a canonization From Hassinger Trust ceremony on Sunday. About Hollywood LAKE CITY, Minn.-Lake City Recovering Municipal Hospital has received the first check from a trust set VATICAN CITY (AP)-Vatican Food Poisoning Hits Movie Magazines up by Miss Attelia N. Hassinger, sources said today that Pope John formerly of here, who died in San- XXIII, steadily recovering from 150 Students in N.M. O FREE! WASHINGTON (AP) - Jacque- ta Barbara, Calif., May 18, 1962, a stomach ailment and serious ff 18 KARAT GOLD PLATED line Kennedy isn't happy about at 93. anemia, might be able to resume GRAJMTS, RM. . _-,_»Mm. ' m '_B•_#¦|L_LI_i . - y^^^^iiS^_B_rir ^l8_^P^' I^S___8_S1B_ 1 -- ^ ^- - ^ammMIPm<<^mmavCsM ^S_ * leaders, received a $100 scholar- county who by illness. or low h> ' • ship from the foundation for his come are unable to pay for glasses, home garden project last year X-rays and dental care for chil- and second place this year. dren. (l Mrs. Harley Fagerland is chair- Home tntertamment ift! i man of the f^^^% THE CLUB award was won for league; Mrs. Nat • perennial flower bed in Lewis- Ward, co-chairman ; Mrs; John ton's park. Six members . in the O'Meary, secretary, and other of- project started with a plot 8 by ficers are Mmes . John C. Smith, 12 feet and ended with a garden Roger Thornton and Galen Lief- 9 by 20 feet. fring. Only cost of the solicitation AJ Siebenaler, owner of the lo- is for the seals and postage. Ail workers are volunteers. cal greenhouse, donated five¦ ——Jarge-jpotted—petunia—plants ,. __-' they aren't perennials hut added LAKE CITY MAN FALLS colors to the bed , club members LAKE CITY, Minn. (SpeciaD- pointed but. Elmer 0. Peterson, retired vice Perennials planted were three president of pennant & Hoyt Co., kinds of iris, phlox, late and early is hospitalized here with a broken tiger lilies, peonies, painteU dais- hip. He fell in the downtown area __ 1 ¦ ¦ ies, blue delphinium, chrysanthe- Saturday. 8 Trert your family to tlie tun and excitement 1 _^B tlll_^_l ^Stv , -T J " JXSm^:P - ^^^Bp^Bfc^ s _^H I * ' mums, hollyhocks, lilies, pansies $ of RCA Victor Color TV. Thl» beautiful ell- I ^JB-JH__L__J HBH | The ELDORADO ? ** _^_^_^_L_' j/^ & WEAVER GIVES $21 and three shrubs — honeysuckle, S wood console It priced to fit your budget. ^__B__^_^_^_^__^I-____H _H » CDnDTAPmiT T \ JammmmmmmmmmmmamT-*^ » red spirea, and hydrangea. WEAVER , Minn. (Special) - Something was blooming in the Miss Eleanor Johnson, solicitor for g . fore color picture so 3lfellke you have to see ' the friendship campaign for re- fl ^ ll S Wv^^^_F_*v V_3T« : . _5 flower bed all summer. Next year . It to believe It (sharper black-and-white ptc " I hey anticipate it will look better tarded children, reports donations | ' ^ ^ Pffi Pm HI I B W ' ~f Series 193-^51-NT mt ^m*PZamW f^ « * 1 of $21 from Weaver, Minneiska - '¦l— ¦ia««»B-S_ |pJ'Y because the peonies didn't bloom 8 up annoyirto light reflectlons.Trade tn. trade ; B | 19" tube (overall diag.) ^ ^ ^ ^ P C^' - ' rt_k. $ this year. T o w n s h i p, Women's Society of « up to RCA Victor Color TV-performance The BARBIE H ' 172 sq. in. picture ^^ * | | ILmrAL- $ Christian Service of the Methodist proved ff Mark Series 212-G-72-M 1 * « for I years In homt. tike your, from » • Alumlinized FulI-Picture Tube VT^ 8 THE CLUEt'S flowers were the Church, and school children. R eojtf to toartl 260 sq. In,viewable picture " si f\ S Per ^^ 1 I A. Low MAfi / 5 S » As $le*IO Month v 1 ¦' ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ « • - - . - ¦- • - ¦ '" ¦ Broker . K . . , __^g^_ . | 8 "¦' ROA VICTOR tleurlMa.rail vs.tipster I mrnwoT™ wilh FREE 1 RTABOUT Stand "I've got a hot tip-a chance for a quick killing [" That's the Consoiette TV ^^^te B i SPO TV Roll-About tipster speaking-a strange voice on the phone, or perhaps I 1^ ! ^ even a triend, or a broker who doesn't deserve the name. ? ; If you re thinking of investing in stocks and bonds, con- "" ¦ f^-^^H $234.95 pl ¦ ' ¦ sider the important differences between the tipster and a repu- I ' IrS ¦ ' ¦ " THE THRIFTO rT^ I !| ^.„ )&££&lHH J1 D_i»l I H I si RCA«<.. vidor. quality in a.pa«-8avino. Ill H Dnii «l table broker. f I ,ES«-«--r i | H « This slim, trim beauty Is engineered for extra H D8SI Dliy 31 \ \l Series 193-A-49 \\ » "New 19,n< Tipster: "I've got a sure thing for you. It can't miss." | r^K^r:;^!;^ \**^®<*P *™ \\ \v § R the way the camera see. it with less ^^^ gJ^S^Jai --ii^ BWr IS fulinclude Vlsta'^uner. Other*™ * Sportaboutfeatures™* ^^ ^ _ \ U (overall diag.) Broker: "No investment is without risk. When someone says j ^^^ B ^ \\ 1 "lost" edoas, s_por-p ffi | L I lT^:: ^ni:tTn J \* ™«r \m l ¦ now down, now up—like the price of almost any property,. | choice ol Mahogany, Watnut or Oak Seiies 233-C-67-M W*&? K Walnut and Tuskon Ivory finish. Low price in- -w ^-n __,r^7' —-— S nl 3 grained ^ But over the years, the value of a prosperous, expanding K hard board cabinet. 23" tube (overall dia..) H g eludes deluxe Roll-About Stand. It's the year 's . ¦ *\\W M J l l llii ]l J] chance of rising. Its dividends may also ^.t.in. pictur. " company has a good r biggest bargain In portable TV. increase." I » lL ®i"¦ Tipster : "Buy now-before the price goe%up." i ' . ^ m ¦» Broker : "Never act hastily. First, take time to check the x facts. What have the company's earnings been over the years? vi IK ?3 What is its dividend record? Have sales been going down, holding steady or moving upward? A broker in a Member E ORD mm po flBlE TV! " Firm of the New York Stock Exchange can help you get YOUNGSTER'S DELIGHT I m such information, And he will be happy to give you his opin- I FREE coLLKTroN | ion about the company's prospects." | fj Tipster : "Who wants to wait years for a stock to pay off?" Stereo Console Broker : "Set your goals carefully to fit your circumstances. RCA VICTOR Total Sound | r ' | Your g oal may becxtra income through dividends. Or you may place more emphasis on growth in the value of the stock over the years. Or you mi ght want to consider bonds which usually offer a more stable income with less risk to your principal" Tipster: "Scrape up all the money you can and bet tho bundle." Broker: "Living expenses have first call on your income. provision should be made for emergencies. Then you And mW—\ investing. W « 1.0 Great Perlormancea might consider _HMJI-^_il9lHi-^_^_^_^^_^_^_^_a ^ Le?Q &^^i Is ^^S L1IH "One convenient method for investing on a budget is the S i ^ .Monthly Investment Plan whichi Member Firms offer, You can invest systematically with as little as $40 every three . months." If you've decided to own your share of American business by investing, choose your broker with care, Not all brokers arcalikc.In Member Firms of the New York Stock Exchange, ¦ , Rcgist cred Representatives have had to measure STYLIST ~~ for extimple « s SrORTABOUT^ W up to Exchange standards for knowledge of their business— M .!WBa^v;J Mcti. f Exclmngc" In llw Moc k broker section of the Vellow Pa„cs. I $24.95 | | ^ ^ | * to a Member Firm of the New York j si NO «'OR rutin nociKUi r. Mu/1 J or lo Ihe New York Stoc k Exchange, Dept. 2-DP, J'.O. I .Slock F.Jiclinngc. | lion 1O70 , New York I , N.Y. j AI: IS," listing thnn400jtock» I ' IMeiue- isenit me, f«co , "INVI SIMI.NI I' more ' every three months for twenty years or more, I ihiit h live puiil dividends J I "* NAMP — • ' | | ——• | j „i>i)M'-ss. ——— — ' : ' j I NELSON TIRE SERVICE l Fourth and Johnson Phone 2306 | l=~ J S_M)^_^VMi^_M!^KWV»!£^S^i_BC!^ Thoughts at Random — Washington Calling — AND STILL GROWING Todav In National Affairs From Editor's Notebook GOP Closing MEMO TO Mr*. Virginia Torgerson, newly-elected city representative to the What Is state Legislature: One of the best pieces of legislation you could promote when the Ranks Quietly 1963 session opens in St. Paul in January By MARQUIS CHILDS to make daylight saving WASHINGTON—If any serious soul-searching Democracy? would be a bill is going on within tlie Republican party over time in Minnesota conform to fast time the indifferent outcome of the . 'Nov .6 election By CAVID LAWRENCE in neighboring Wisconsin. There it starts and the prospect for 1964, it is taking place be- WASHINGTON — The Russians have a way of calling their the first weekend in April and runs through hind a carefully plastered facade of statements government a- "democracy." They interpret the word as meaning September whereas in Minnesota it begins a system in which their government imposes anything it considers and news releases proclaiming that all is well. rights. Or, , good for the people even if this invades individual May 1 and runs to Labor Day—creating Well as well' as could be expected under W. Willard Wirtz, who admittedly the circumstances. The secretary af labor, no end of confusion between the two states reflects President Kennedy's views, now says publicly that com- and making it especially difficult for bor- In closing ranks the Republicans are setting pulsory unionization is "demo- der cities like Winona. the signal successes in the governorships in cracy.". He says that if two- Pennsylvania, Michigan, New York and Ohio over thirds of the employes of a To Your Good Health against the loss in the Senate and the failure plant who are members of the A FEW YEARS ago when there were to gain more than two seats in the House. But union vote to compel the other so many fatal accidents on U. S. Highway this does not obscure a threatened split in the third to join — under penalty Favorite 61 between Winona and La Crescent, it facade. On one side are the newly elected Re- of losing their jobs if they publican governors who know that national elec- don't — this "satisfies every became generally known as "Death Road" tions must be won in the big-city states. On principle of democracy with Cold Use of that slogan was part of the cam- the other is the Congressional which I am familiar." He paign to obtain the four-lane highway in leadership that tends to squan- made his statement in an at- use today. The route has been completed der its resources on tempt to influence the Lock- Remedies marfdrjal heed Aircraft Corporation to By JOSEPH G. MOLNER, M.D. from Minnesota City to Dakota and the operations in the South and in bow to labor's demand for What's your favorite cold last eight miles between Dakota and La wooing the extreme right where compulsory unionization. Crescent are under construction. Not only the big money is. remedy? No, don't tell me! But the Supreme Court of I've probably heard it before is It one of the most scenic routes in Ignoring the conspiracy of the United States, in its fam- even have tried it silence, some outspoken critics and I may America, It is now one of the safest. ous decision upholding the because when I was young and have rushed into this breach. right of labor unions to bar- dreamy-eyed I still nurtured The new "Death Road" in this area is The young Republicans who as gain collectively, pointed out the hope that perhaps some now Wisconsin Highway 35-54 from the seniors at Harvard started the specifically that the law enact- of the various folk remedies' Wisconsin end of the interstate bridge to magazine "Advance" have now ed by Congress does not pro- (new or old) might possibly 1 Marshland. This dangerous piece of road- moved it to Washington where hibit the mak- work. ing of indivi- one: What way has claimed six lives within the last they continue to express the Childi I've never found an viewpoint of moderate and pro- . : d u a 1 co n- is much more important, nei- few years-^-its latest victim l&year-old tracts by the Winonan early Saturday morning: gresswe Republicans. Besides the quarterly mag- ther have the thousands of azine, the editors put out. a newsletter, the cur- employ- doctors who have wrestled with rent one taking the form of an open letter to er with indi- the problem of the common The ZV2 -mile stretch from the . "Y" at v-i-d.ual em- more in the north end of the bridge to the Hill- the Republican National Committee. The. point cold, which costs us of the letter ployes. lost days of work and pay side Fish House at Marshland is schedul- insists that by running segregation- L i k ewise, known. ist Republicans party than any disease ed to be rebuilt, however, within a year or in the South the is. dam- both the Wag- So, if there isn 't any cold two.That's not soon enough. Only proj- aging if not destroying its chances of winning ner act and remedy that works, what are ect on Highway 35 which has priority is elections in the North. the Taft-Hart- we supposed ley act has to do about the bottleneck north of Fountain City ad- THE LETTER points out that the Democrats lormoden ais- in the South are putting together Lflwrwe. it? ja cent to the entrance to Merrick State a steadily c-r i mi n a- I say, "Un- growing coalition of liberal and Negro voters. Park. Funds for this job have been releas- THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND tion "in regard to hire or ten- d%r .s . ta'h d ed by Gov. Caylord Nelson and the con- They are aiding the efforts of several large ure of employment or any colds, as well tract may be awarded in February. foundations spending $750,000 to help the Negro term or condition of employ- as we can." get the vote, This coalition may ultimately prove ment to encourage or discour- : The first It's regrettable that the dangerous unbeatable, the "Advance" editors warn, "if the age membership in any labor step is know- Bluff Siding-Marshland stretch cannot be Republicans cooperate by taking the racists off organization." ing that the included in the same contract The road- Kennedy's hands and abandoning the Negroes to Wash ingtoris Ug ly Back Existing law really tells em- word Cold is way is narrow, has hills and curves and hirn." ployers to keep their hands off a very good the treacherous They add that the Republican candidate in the question of membership in term but we've "lip" along each side of South Carolina "showed ; how it is done." He unions. This is because for had it so long the pavement. In addition, there are 47 "managed to alienate the whole Negro vote to many years various employers that I don't Molner driveways into private property between militant segregationist Senator Olin Johnston." Yard ' S/)ovec/ Up f ronf attempted to form unions sub- suppose w/e can change now. the "Y" and the Green Bay & West- Running for a fourth term, Johnston was con- ject to their own control. The It would be more accurate By DREW PEARSON hate had welled up in the the local NAACP, lashed out em Railroad crossing at Marshland. A sidered to be ina close race with W.'-D. Workr employer has no -basic obliga- to refer to "respiratory infec- hearts -of- the "ugly" residents; at the rioting in a sermon the tion today to require an em- tions," but . I can't imagine ei- service road to be built in connection with man. He won by 44,782 votes out of . 3.12,000 cast. WASHINGTON — For the ' past quarter century, Washing- paid not only for their own ne- next Sunday. ploye, by con tract or oth- ther you or me, with , a red, the new highway will eliminate most of glect but for the hate engen- "We must continue to press these. . IN CONTRAST, the newsletter points out, ton has basked in its repu- erwise, to join a union or lose sore nose that isn't much use George Romney exceeded Richard Nixon per- tation as one of the most dered by those howling mobs for rights," he said, "but at his job. Yet, because the for breathing purposes, mut- 's which had screamed "black the same time seek to develop Until the new highway is built, drivers centages in Detroit's Negro wards by between beautiful capitals in the world law permits an employer to tering, "I godda respiradory and tried to ignore the fact that B«r--" and "black S.O.B." on a sense of responsibility." violate this principle when he infegshun id. by dose." We'll must exercise extreme care along those seven and 10 percent. Scathing attacks on the the campus of Ole Miss. still say, " " Kennedy Administration's record on civil rights it had an ugly back yard. SIMEON BOOKER of Ebo- accepts a collective-bargaining I godda code. Similes. Traffic is usually heavy and it is A championship f o o t b a 11 compulso- helped William Scranton get almost double the The things you read about ny magazine stated frankly: contract embodying no place for excessive speed. game between Eastern . High ry unionization, the practice of BUT WE should remember, 3960 totals in Philadelphia's Negro districts and in the papers or saw on tele- (Negro) and St. John's Paro- "The explosion of hate stem- in our misery, that cold real- vision featured lovely ladies in med mostly from my own peo- labor unions in bludgeoning make an 11.2 percent improvement in the city chial School (Catholic and employers by strikes or threats ly means one of perhaps . 100 evening gowns going into the ple," but pointed out that the or more infections that find the ONE OF OUR per tjripe* are thote as a whole. In New York City. Governor Nelson largely white) ended with St. of strikes to accept the man- Rockefeller and Senator Jacob Javits got over White House, or cool garden . John's the victor, immediate- majority of Negro spectators mucous membranes of our hideous five-minute parking meters which parties where uniformed but- were shocked at the brawl. date of a majority of the em- 40 percent of the vote in Harlem which was ly, Negro spectators descend- a surrender noses and other breathing pas- have been installed in several places in lers served strawberries and However, the fact remained ployes has caused sages an easy place to nest. twice the score of two years ago. ed from the grandstand, swept that this was the worst race by many employers. Thus, the the downtown business district. Five min- champagne, or exclusive little across the field like, an. angry Influenza is a respiratory di- As many Republicans are aware, Negro lead- dinner dances at the F Street ,-. riot Washington has seen since principle involved — interfer- utes is barely time enough to enter a store army and with fists.-i knives, rights of the in- sease, too, but of a somewhat ers and perhaps also the rank and file are deep- Club where lobbyists with leg- the riots immediately after the ence with the different nature which causes ,oi a bank, let alone time to transact any ly dissatisfied with the record of the Kennedy frequently rocks, pieces of pipe proceed- end of World War I over 40 dividual worker — has been islation to grind ed to beat up white^epectatorS, aching, fever and a generally business. The cuckoo who invented the Administration on civil rights. picked up the check. years ago. brazenly disregarded. • worn-out feeling. Too many The pattern, exc«pt'?if6r ;tbe One spectator told this col- f£ve-minute meters was most unkind to all But on the east side of 16th color of the ringleaders,, re- IF THERE were some kind times it even causes death, ujeer patients. , the avenue on which umn: "We were terrified. principally among old or Street sembled the melee on the There was a man in the box of award given annually in IN YEARS GONE BY the White House faces, begins campus of Mississippi. Many recognition of the courage of chronically ill people already of below us who kept threaten- suffering from heart Ten Years Ago . . . 1952 the ugly side the city—the of the spectators obviously ing those who wanted to leave an employer who stood up for , lung or back yard most people have had a secondary interest in the right of his own employes other disorders. It often hits HOW LONG WILL It take to recount Walter Williams was elevated from senior by opening and closing a large the football game: They would pair " to decide for themselves as in- pregnant women rather hard , the votes in the Minnesota governor elec- -i-.——. ~PL,—.——. il- Jimmmm,._. 3 of hedge shears. sagamore to sachem by Wenonah Tribe 20, Im- J1W C XlJCiC It ^ not have brought pieces of dividuals whether they want too. tion? That's anyone's guess but Franklin proved Order, of Red Men, at a tribal council Two Catholic priests who hasn't b e en . pipe otherwise. some, to join a union, such a badge Rogers, editor of the Mankato Free Press, at the Wigwam. safe to walk tried to break up of the go rights of their own. Certainly fights left the stadium with of merit ought this year to the unions can't have it both has got it figured out. It will take 138 George S. Sadowski, former Winonan, played do w n the ONE OF THE white students to the Lockheed company ex- assaulted was Anthony Lausi bloody faces. ways. weeks, or something over: Vk years, he a key role in the pilot planting phase of the street after ecutives. In the present dispute dark. There Jr., 16, whose father works for Washington police — there set- The right of the individual said. . .explaining it thus: chemical process to be used in the recently-com- all wage issues have been to negotiate for a job is con- pleted Idaho Chemical Processing Plant at Arco. streets are Rep. Silvio Conti, R-Mass. were 100 on hand—were un- tled by collective bargaining When he saw a schoolmate be? prepared for the riot and ceded to him by the union—so The recount in the state representative Idaho. dirty, g a r- with a recognized union. The bage c a n s ing beaten up, Lausi went to hopelessly outnumbered. They declined it is difficult to see how the race in Mankato took five days, or approx- were convinced this was far employer has merely union, in collusion with an em- kicked over, his defense, was pushed aside to agree to an election that imately 30 hours ... It was done by a Twenty-Five Years Ago . . ' . 1937 by two Negroes who tried to more than a schoolboy riot; ployer, can justly take . away children play 't could bring compulsory union- three-man team, and a pretty good one, Work has started on the new West End ele- drag him into the men's room. also convinced that you can men the right of the worker to stay ball in t he right a wrong in> Mississippi ization! If the non-union in his job long as he per- too, . .If the governor recount were to be mentary and Junior High school which will be streets, ana _. He managed to escape. wish voluntarily to join the so p#ar n ' with another wrong in Wash- forms his work satisfactorily. undertaken by one three-man team, work- erected as a PWA project on the old West End people sit on " "The fellows who went after ington. union they can always do so. circus grounds at a cost of approximately $409 - me weren't high school stu- can Lockheed This definition will be accept- ing a standard 40-hour week, the time steps in their undcrshorts to Yet how long ed by all believers in true de- needed, according to Rogers' compilation, 000. escape the steaming summer dents," Lausi said. "They ONE Negro policeman who hold out? The Defense Depart- heat inside. were grown men, about 27 or pressure and mocracy. The "tyranny of the would be 5,550 hours. . .That comes to A resolution calling upon Minnesota senators understands the sentiments of ment can exert majority" has been condemn- congressional 28. They didn't have any of his own people better than threaten to withdraw defense about 138 weeks. . .Happily, and representatives to oppose any This is the Harlem of the ed throughout history as too however, stopping or curtailing nation ' weapons, but I could see oth- white policemen, said : "I contracts unless the company there action to bring about the s capital , a Harlem often inimical to individual will be many three-man teams, so of government aid in the state highway program which has expanded into the ers chasing people with knives knew there was going to be conforms to the political objec- conceivably freedoms. the job can be accomplished was adopted by the Winona County Board of vacuum left when middle-class and broken bottles. A Negro trouble. It was sure to come. tives of an administration woman was even beating a Even 200 cops couldn't hav e votes from within a period of several weeks. . .But Commissioners. whites moved out to suburbia , which counts on the the result—ii Rogers' mathematics is cor- until today the area which white man over the head with handled 'em." labor unions at the polls and rect—is the same. "most people have tried to ig- an umbrella." But what most of the Wash- the benefits derived from big Meet Me . .It would require three Fifty Years Ago . . . 1912 That's how high tempers ran ington police don 't see, or else collect- men to work nore" contains "most of the campaign contributions from now -until the middle of William A. Buggs, who has been county su- on the ugly day -when Ameri- don't want to remember is ed by the union officers. Mem- 1965 to get it done .. By people," that time the peo- perintendent of schools during the past several Fifty-four percent of the cans were supposed, to> give that the eruption on Thanks- bers of Congress are com- FACE TO FACE ple wouldn't care who, if anyone, was gov- succeeded by A. C. Loomis thanks for their blessings. giving Day really goes back, plaining, tfliat the administra- years, and will be capital of the United States to- Mississippi or Little ernor ... In fact, they're already so tired of Lewiston the first of the year , has been elect- day is Negro. There were many Negroes: not to tion has already exerted pres- of the whole who remained in the grand- Rock , but to what has been sure in the aircraft industry to thing that they hardly care ed teacher of grammar and arithmetic at the happening right here in Wash- even now .. . Moorhead Normal School. ON THANKSGIVING Day th* stands, and some who went to> help the unions. people of Washington paid for the defense of the whites, Aft- ington, It goes back to tho A portable heating plant, the first one of its ugly side of the capital of the WHY DOES a labor union the fact that they had tried to erward the Nogo leaders de- JRCj kind to he used in Ihe local North Western ignore the ugly side of their plored the incident . Rev. E. free world, to the back yard want the minority Included? i fl_^_B , the passenger depot. A RED WING Yards was placed near capital ; paid for the fact that TYanklin Jackson, chairman of which most of the people have After all , the law provides * resident* makes* a highly tried to ignore until its resi- cannot be dis- valid point about the that wage rates unique position that Seventy-Five Years Ago . . . 1887 dents have become most of the criminatory and must be the U.S. Highway 61 occupies through tho people. non-union The Board of Trade will occupy the new same for union and Hiawatha Valley in relation to raising Min- employes, The answer fa that rooms in the Gertaen block. Jf al$ Mju nesota's state tax on gasoline. DRIVER STRIKES BACK the labor unions want more All freight and passenger trains on the Wi- GLASS U.S. 61 along the river the Trempealeau countleit the spot when this subject is for lost 20 t montlm S4.M a month* 13.30 viewed in the llght of the "civ- °<__§jffitP I year S13.00 1 month »U5 years has paid anoth er penny or two of il rights" battles of todny. Minnesota gas tax per All other mail luabscrlptioni: gallon purchased. The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively " " Many a labor union hns voted Y' year SlJ.oo 3 month. li.M STENEHJEM Just that would make a considerable sum to Iho use for republication of al) tho loca l 6 mourns Jfl.OO 1 month • si.M by nvajority rule to exclude for speeding news printed in this newspaper as well ~ Negroes from membership. the Highway 61 Improve- its $11 "Since many of you applauded when it was announced Send c1)anpa ol aMran notlcet, undelivered insurance Agency ments ' that all the river communities are A.P. new. dispatches. copies, subscription orders and other mail National ' labor leaders are pro- that we have a large deficit in the treasury, I feci I Items lo Winona Dally Newt, Box M. Wl- testing against this on the 207 E. Broadway Phone 3389 seeking. 6 Tuesday, nonn, Minn. December 4 , IW2 should explain what that means," Second cleii pottage paid at Wlrtone, ground that the minority have Zarling, Elden Lamprecht, Rob- ROBERT C. RUARK Happy Ramblers ert Rahman, Logan and Neil Jackie Visits New Deadlock Grummons, Leah Lamprecht, In New Yo rk ulty at Concordia College, Moor- worked on his doctorate. Win Wa basha Co. Ronnie and Connie Manzow, Ray- head , Minn., where he teaches Following graduation from St. mond Mussell and Billy Brink- ¦ NEW YORK (AP)-Jacqueline Norwegian, Greek and Latin. Olaf College, Northfield , Minn., man. Ordained into the ministry Kennedy is in New York for "the Rev. ^Gunderson completed Luth- Katanga Is Rich/ 44i Play Contest The winning play received a June 9, 1957, he was pastor at er Theological Seminary, St. Paul. Expected in next several days," but the First PLAINVIEW, Minn. (Special) $14) award presented by George Black Earth, Wis., - before going He also attended Union Theologi- — "Feudin " Mountain Boys," a Schwartz, assistant county agent. Lady's plans were not disclosed to Concordia and while there, re- jcal Seminary a year and a sum- Happy Ramblers V4-H Club produc- Adult leaders for the Happy hy tha White House. ceived his master's degree at the : mer school at Columbia Univer- University of j Lockheed Talks of Congo Poo tion, won the Wabasha County Ramblers are Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mrs. Kennedy arrived here Wisconsin and sity, New York City. West r 4rH one-act play contest LOS ANGELES (AP) _ . Zarling and Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Monday in the family plane, the Talks liam Rahman, Plainview. NEW YORK The rich, The Happy Ramblers, Plain- ¦ Caroline, and is staying at the may start again this weekend in — ripe reek of fish in the secessionist " ¦ view . the Lockheed strike. The subject, African state of Katanga has nothing to do with a national industry: , were chosen over the Elgin Hotel Carlyle. Y.M.C.A. HEALTH SERVICE most likely, the national industry is the extraction "of such things as copper and Eagles, Elgin, and the Hilltop BARKLEY CAMP FOR BOYS m will be the same bit- Your ter deadlock: a union cobalt from Katanga's concupiscent earth. Katanga is stinking rich, Hotshots, Lake City, at the finals FRANKFORT, Ky W) — Ken-, health is: Difficult to Regain, Easy to Maintain shop vote. held here Saturday night at the The strike itself has been temp- and the remainder of the Congo is relatively poor. tucky's boys camp near Gilberts- Rev. Gunderson Joins MASSAGE — INFRA-RED — UlTRA-VIOLET — STEAM orarily halted. Katanga lock, Plainview High School auditor- vilJe will be renamed in honor of A federal court or- is owned. stock and Moise Tshombe by the ium. Faculty at Concordia der prohibits picketing until Dec. Belgian government, via the the late Vice President Alben W. Call "Remp" Shealy 13. The court is to start hearings Union Miniere du Haut Kttanga, Members of the winning cast Barkley, a native of Paducah. ! PLEASANTVILLE, Wis. — The "governments," all clamoring and were Charles Zarling, Linda Zar- It has been operated Monday on whether to order an whose parent is yammering for recognition. since 1956 ; Rev. Lloyd Gunderson, son of Mr. 8-1521 Appointment 80-day cooling-off period the Societe Gen- ] ting, Mary Mussell, Robert Lam- as an institution for delinquent and Mrs. Alfred Gunderson , under precht OPEN TO THE PUBLIC the Taft-Hartley law. eral Belgique, one ! BUT IN THE middle of vast , Susan Mussell, Earlene boys. I Pleasantville, has joined the fac- of the three larg-' areas of looting, rapine, burning, Th« union says It cooled off est financial oc- murder, tribal warefare, and com- plenty — while waiting for a topi in the world, plete civic disorder (which self- chance to strike. Last week's This explains the called for United Nation inter- strike only lasted two days. But presence of Hen- vention ) Tshombe ran a rich-man, the picket signs arte stockpiled , ri Spaak, Foreign Uncle/Tom, orderly and wealthy waiting. Minister of Bel- state. Belgium had .left Africa in Negotiators for both sides- gium, who was in lip-service; but the Union Miniere Lockheed Aircraft \< ™T^BH_fc_. ^^__. a request by President Kennedy Minister to represent the best in- Hammarskjold in particular of per- to the Department of Justice to petrating a falsehood — saying, in terests of his country. , request an injunction. : P. short, that the UN., forces were _^U->-***^^______F *«* -_i______k_> get much coverage. ^ ' A- ^_^_^_^__ And so now there is talk of ^^^^^^^ '
¦¦• ¦ Katanga being •willing to cut a 'i. P ' P- ' <: share of its Belgian mining in- ¦ come with the hungry balance of ¦ : : ; ¦ ¦ ¦ No. T28T ' ;¦;¦: : ' ' ¦ ¦ : Nevllle-Lien Post the Congo, and the sweet converse flM ¦>' ' -&: h& '- - : ' : 9 - " . - .MMl is held between a Belgian . diplo- - -^- - ^-^^^ - -^^?v OF FOREIGN WARS mat and U Thant, secretary-gen- VETERANS eral of the United Nations. Winona, Minnesota The ostensible subject may be democracy, but the actual topic is money, and the smell is still fish. Sick Room Equipment overpoweringly of Brownsville Boy ^^^_^^&W|y[ . ^ : | i : Wins Speech Meet WmWH IIII WgmS^ ^ Gil fi ^^. 'l Fund Drive CALEDONIA , Minn. — Richard , Brownsville, received a its- Davy, 15 The Neville-Lien Post announces that it is sponsoring $50 bond for winning the Hou- annual rehabilitation work and service for this ston Counyt soj l and water con- community and surrounding area ... servation radio speaking contest. The contest was held on a La Crosse radio station Saturday. INVALID WALKERS . WHEEL CHAIRS CRUTCHES Thomas Tweeten, Spring Grove, was the other contestant. HOSPITAL BEDS "Soil and Water Conservation - How They Will Affect My Fu- This equipment is for FREE HOME USE of ANYONE , ture" was the speech topic. Davy sick, helpless or disabled. and Tweeten now will compete in the regional contest at Roches- ^L^L^m^m^mWmWL^m^m^m' ^m-^Lm __H fleiBHHHH_BHI_____l ter. A tape recording of their Your magazine subscription (new or renewal) will hel p to speech will be sent to Rochester ¦¦ further this community project. Subscription delivery Is guar- for the contest. The state contest ¦¦ _Hi' called on should ask to see introduc- will be hefti later. i^^n_____i anteed. Residents when Judges were Miss Gladys Lap- vm\m S5 tory letters signed by local Post officers. This is to eliminate liarn, county superintenden t of any misrepresentation by unauthorized persons. Donations are schools, and Earl Hunter and Er- not to be solicited or accepted, nest Peterson , La Crosse radio men. VFW POST OFFICERS CHECK THOSE BIRTHDAYS TUCSON, Ariz. Iff)—Sometimes Harold- A. Myers, Commander; Carl Hargesheimcr, Richard it pays to admit your age. For in- Sula, Earl Brugger , Floyd Kuhlmann, Chester Tarras, C. L. stance, the Bank of Tucson makes Wood , Ed Holehouse, no service charge on checking ac- counts of customers who are 65 MB . 11 or older. ¦¦ Official Notice Of ¦¦ The Place to Buy a Gift You ¦¦ Special Stockholders Meeting Of the Stockholders ¦¦ » ¦¦ Be Exchanged ¦¦ HART Creamery Ass n. Are Sure Will Not Date: Tuesday, December 18, 1962 Place: Hart School Hour: 8:30 P.M. Creamery NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a special meetin. of th. Stockholder, of the Hart START YOUR HOLIDAY SHOPPING AT at 8:30 p.m. Association of Hart , Minnesota, will be hold In «he Hart School In Hart, Mlnnaiota . on Tuesday, December 18, W2 for the following purpose : by-laws bo To consider and act on the following reiolution: Re.olved, that Article VII of the ¦ thereto a new section which shall be. numbered Suction 1, Ihe tama to read as . amended by adding .-----—— THE ™ follows;
SECTION 1 E ach member of this cooperative as of the effective date of Ihls by-law who , and each person who shall after such date become, ^ continues as a member after such date amount of any diminutions with a member shall, by such act alone, consent that Ihe respect to Ills patronage occurrlnji in any fiscal y«ar of tho association beginning after December -J, IW3, and which are rnade in written noticol of allocation (as defined will bo in 26 USCA 13«8), and which are received by said member from the cooperative, talion Into' account by him at their ttated dollar amounts In the manner provided in _6 USCA 1385 (A), less any amount wWch may be axcluded unde r 24 USCA 1385 (B), in th«j taxable year In which such written notices of a llocation are received by him. Datod at Hart, Mi nnesota this 4th day ol December, 1962. \~*a*>s«*sa04^**^~+*+a^^ "fa Exclusive Drlve ln Dispensary " •^^^^^^^ «^^»-**^^«*-^ 1 Respectfully, John Kryier, Secretary Bluff Siding, Wis. °Per> Dai,y 9 A-M. to 9 P.M. ance were Aid. Harold Briesatb, Mrs. Muriel Ollcm, Howard Etau- mann, Lloyd Deilke and Henry Russia Claims 3 Jet Bombers City Gets Gas Parks. Voting in* favor were Aid.
TODAY—¦¦¦¦IIIIM Daniel Bambenek, MrVMary Wa- WORLD i n ¦ ¦—¦ewe-—e- M—eeee— «*¦¦—— ¦ ' syga, Clarence Tribell and James Rockets Lead Leave Cuba in For 15.6 Gents Stoltman. ¦ 3J ^ ' ' , Two Bask Ways MOSCOW CAP)-The command- Standard Oil Division of the . er of Soviet rocket forces claimed American Oil Co. was the success- — today that the Soviet Union con- ful bidder «t Monday night's City l / tinues to lead the United States in Soviet Ships Council meeting for the city gaso- ¦Hli llili___F/izM the field of powerful , military WASHINGTON (AP) - The line contract with an offer of 15.6 To Keep Secret rockets. first three of the jet bombers So- per gallon for an estimated 55,000 Marshal Sergei Biryuzov 's viet Premier Khrushchev pro- gallons of 88 octane fuel. (Editor 's Note: This is the to classify documents to restrict statement in the military news- mised to have out of Cuba by Two other bids were received: second of a series of three their release, paper Krasnaya Zvezda (Red Dec. 20 are being carried away Mobil Oil Co., 16.75 cents, and analyses on government in- Star) apparently was an answer from the island by a Soviet ship, Midland Cooperatives, Inc., £0.5 formation policies. ) A year before the United States to recent statements by American reports. went into Worl d War II news or- the Defense Department cents. These prices are after re- leaders that it : is the. Soviet Un- It said Monday that U.S. patrol fund of the state- gasoline tax. By JAMES MARLOW ganizations were asked to avoid States, Saturday mentioning certain kinds of infor- ion, and not the United * planes photographed . Gasoline bids were re-advertis- Associated Press News Analyst which suffers from a missile gap. three fuselages of the Ilyushin 28s ed after discovery last month of WASHINGTON (AP)-It's not mation, like ship movements. , for Strate- BE READY FOR THE FIRST REAt COID SNAPI (The Kennedy administration did The British Institute on the deck of the Soviet freighter an error in specifications which only paper; it's people. Stamp a gic Studies, in a report published OkJiotsk as it steamed off Cuba's resulted in delivery to the city of document "secret" or don't talk. the same thing during this year's , estimated that the Rus- receive a p«r ton discount up to 3-toa Cuban crisis.) Information con- Nov. 9 northern coast. lower octaine-rated fuel. Engines Cash orders 50tf The government has those two ' sians had about 75 operational in- of city vehiclse were not respond- lots.- $1.00 per ton discount on 3-ton lots or more. basic ways to keep information trols tightened as -the . World. War tercontinental ballistic missiles, "IL28 aicraft that have! been If you don't have cash . — ask about our popular II defense program progressed. - ing and an investigation disclos- from the public. The excuse is compared . -with ,450-500 in the seen: on the island of. Cuba are ed the discrepancy. BUDGET CIRCLE PLAN . i. 9 months to pay. the general good. Once in the war, censorship be- hands of tlie West. in the process of being with- ' Midland Cooperatives, Inc., of- ¦ ¦ ¦ • Pocahontai gan again. •¦¦ . drawn," Assistant Secretary of it Stott Petroleum ^r The idea is to prevent release fered last montli to withdraw Furnace Site of certain kinds of information After the hot war came the cold MAYBE HE'LL RETIRE Defense Arthur Sylvester told a from its contract which specified Brlquetj war, far more secrecy was: need- COLUMBUS, Ohio -G-ary Mc- news conference. . . it Southern Illinois which might hurt national secur- delivery of 92 octaine gasoline for ,,, Coke, ity. Sometimes this is justified. ed , and was imposed by the gov- Donald, 11, must have the feeling He indicated that American re- 17.84 cents per gallon. • Zenith Furnace ernment, than in any previous that he's been through it all be- connaissance planes checked on Sometmes it's not . and is over- ¦ ¦ ¦ bombers In other Council action, cigar- A* East Kentucky Southern Illinois done. Two examples of overdoing peacetime period. President Tru- fore. : ' ' the dismantling of the ette licenses were issued ^ man's, administration wrestled even before they were loaded to: At- Stoker Coal Stoker .it: . ' ... On Oct. 2 , 1961, in a playground lantic & Pacific Tea . Co., 106 ity lightweight! ( with plans for withholding certain aboard the Okhotsk. . ¦fc East Kentucky Block or FurnJce Slie 1. The Pentagon several years football game at school , he was Johnson St.; Dominic Jereczek, Schwinn diamond- t-maa^ 0 E tgo concealed information on the information , the so-called "clas- tackled and suffered a broken left 851 type frame, Tulu- |l|-ya of sified" material. In 1951 he final- He said U.S. intelligence infor- E- Wabasha St.; Milton Mey- ** ^number transport planes used leg. On Oct, 1, 1962, on the same mation indicates that as of last er, 178 E. 3rd St.; Nick Deones, lar rims, 3-speed Vw Delivery Service ly issued regulations for such playground , Gary fell in going aft- gears and hand Prompt , Efficien t, Clean to ferry officials abroad. The. ban , Friday the Soviet bombers were Highway Eat Shop, Sugar Loaf , was lifted under protest from Con- classification. They were too er a pass—and broke the same leg and Brriesath Shell Station brakes. See it newt sweeping, .needed regision.. being disassembled at San Julian , 74 W. gress. in about the same spot. airfield at the island's western 5th St. LAY-BY MOW FOR 2. The Migratory Bird Conserv- In 1953 Eisenhower kept the end. . An electrician s license was CHRISTMAS OIVING ation Commission and the Indian plan but did revising, and more granted to Squires STANDARD time Kennedy's team truly "man- The Pentagon has put the num- Electric Co., Arts and Crafts Board had the of it later. Yet in 1956 one Air aged" the news. This was admit- ber of the two-engine bombers at Rochester. right to make documents secret. Force offi cial told Congress he ted by ArUiur Sylvester, assistant more than 20. Unofficial esimates Declined by the Council was a This happened under President estimated that perhaps one mil- re-application by KOLTER'S SV am^xr^0r secretary of defense for public af- have ranged as high as 35. Robert Mayer, Sales & Service Eisenhower's administration. The lion government employes had fairs, who frankly said the ad- The bombers,' capable of dropr 872% E. Wabasha St., for on-and in Winona reason wasn't sinister. authority to classify documents. mij.jstrat.0fl manipulated sews as ping a nuclear bomb 750 miles off-sale 3.2 beer Jicense f or 315 402 Mankato Ave. Phont 5665 Call 3373 To make things goofier some doc- part of its "weaponry." Newsmen from their . base were listed Steuben St. Voting against issu- Some of his aides, in a grand uments couldn't be declassified He gesture giving hotly criticized him for this. among the offensive weapons that all kinds of agen- unless the original classifier ap- spent a lot of time trying to ex- President Kennedy demanded be :s«^3^^s_a.^.^j=ft cies the right to¦ withhold docu- proved, although by,: then lie plain his phrasing. removed from Cuba. ^ ments, forgot to exclude'the bird might Jiave been out of the gov- commission ^"and the arts and ernment and even his agency But In between times three crafts board. abolished. things happened: London to Change The planes, the birds and the The White House, at the peak Jusi 10 Days More j crafts illustrate the reason for Kennedy sot up to hit neck In of the Cuban business, asked the Fleet Admirals 1 ¦¦¦' ¦ ¦¦¦ the endless dispute between Con- news blackout when the Cuban wire news services and television . " i gress and news media on one side rebels in 1961 made their tragic and radio networks to use caution LONDON (AP)-Adm. Sir Da- I and, on the other, the government U.S.-backed attempt to invade and discretion with 12 categories vid Luce will succeed Admiral of and some of its overly secret- their homeland. For a few days of information, such as ship move- the Fleet Sir Caspar John as a ' top American officials, from Ken- ' ¦ commissioner of the Admiral- ' . •:! minded officials. lord •¦¦ Your ,. ments. The i« ¦ • to Get White House withdrew . The squabbling now is with the nedy down, professed innocence this request when the crisis sub- ty, first sea lord and chief of Kennedy administration. But- it and ignorance about lelp for the sided. naval staff next summer, the Ad- has a history. From earliest times rebels; CA somewhat similar Sylvester told Pentagon officials miralty announced today. the . government, if necessary, had blackout occurred in 1960 under and the State Department told its A statement said Queen Eliza- the right to hold back certain mil- the Eisenhower administration people to report the substance of beth had approved the appoint- ¦ Free C liailw: uii Blanket itary - diplomatic when the American . L>2 plane was : ' ':- i information. every interview with newsmen. ment of Sir David , who last I ¦ ¦ - ¦ : ¦ : There were few restrictions be- shot down over the Soviet Union!) This got ; a hot denunciation from month became the first command; *. . , ¦ ¦¦ - PP P \-^PP: - ::\ fore World War I. They ¦ ¦:- : :¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' : ¦ ' : multi- Then suddenly Kennedy took newsmen, too. «r in chief of the new unified tr . . ,; > ::. .;\- P {-S '! plied from then oh. full blame for the invasion fiasco. The State Department subse- three-service command in Ihe Far ; X; . ; \ ^^' - ., Aa soon as that war began, be- Three days later he went before quently dropped its order, or so East. '' . - . .. fore this country was in it, Presi- the American Newspaper Pub- it said. But Sylvester refused to dent Wilson warned Army and lishers Association and urged back down on his. Rather, he said Arab merchants in the Middle Navy officers not to talk on Eu- "self-restraint" on matters involv- the Pentagon is giving out more Ages covered huge distances .. in ~ rope's military and political prob- ing national security. He suggest- information now than it ever did crude boats called lateen-rigged _------HH9H§^^ lems. When this country got in, ed some voluntary form of it. In the past 22 months, he said, dhows. 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ny ¦ ¦ ¦ /j ^Vf '>fii>l-^*^-f:^:{'¦^'.':_?...._..._. ,, ,-« f. i_i_<_t^„l mi,l i _di*M e '-ir- ri-nnn--- !-.-- f ¦" V"wv • r r ri —i r ir ¦ '¦ '¦ mfi '^ f a*"*""".^*'"'*^."^-^ ?^,-*\aaffi i WIMCK^NATIONAS. | WINONA FUEL OIL DEALERS I AMDO^/^BAHK \ Serving the Heating Needs of Winona With 93 Full-Time Employees I gi MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION | ¦ ¦ ¦ " » . . . II ...- ». i n ...,..!, .I, - i , ., „ . i TUESDAY DECEMBER 4, 1962 The DaHvJlecord Caledonian Named Motive Sought At Community Winona Funerals Two-State Deaths As FB Adviser Memorial Hospital CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special)— Louis Langcwski Mrs. Caroliii» 1. Lovbtrg Lmus P. Ernster, agency manag- Visiting hour*: Medical and surgical Funeral set-vices for Louis Lan- BLAIR, Wis. CSpecial) - Mrs. er of Houston County Farm Bu- !n Rifle Slaying patlants: i to 4 and 7 to 8:30 p.m. (no children under 12). gowski, 1101 E. King St., were Caroline I. Lovberg, 34, died Mon- reau Insurance Services, has beeni Maternity pjtleiirst I to »:M and 7 to held this morning at St. Stanislaus day morning at Tri-County Mem- only). appointed to the 1963 Agents Ad- 1:30 p.m. (adulti Church, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. N. F.' orial Hospital, Whitehall. She had visory Council. MONDAY GrulkowskL officiating'. Burial .was been hospitalized for two weeks Based on his 1962 sales year pro- Of Two Youths in St. Mary' Cemetery, Admissions s and in ill health, two years. duction he will be one of 12 "se- PARK HAPIDS, Minn. (AP) - Mark A- Shrake, 864 Terry Pallbearers were Edward Blank, She was born Oct. 18, 1878, in lect" aeents for Hubbard County officers continued Lane. Emil Langowski, Roger Gabrych, Town of Preston, daughter of Mr. Nebraska , Iowa * today to seek a motive in the rifle Hubert B. Feine, Rushford, Michael Prondzinski, John Kos- and Mrs. Christian Nelson. She and Minnesota slaying o4 two Park Rapids boyi Minn. cianski and Terry Wineski. lived in the Blair area her *ntire who will me e t Monday •evening. Frank Lnbinski, Cochrane, Wis., with company Ralph Diotvysius life. • Dead a_re brothers Gregory Lar- Rt. 1. She was married to Hendrik personnel two or Henry James Ozenberger, 153 W. How- Funeral s e r v i c e s for Ralph three times dur- sen, 13, and Larsen, 11, in Dionysius, 43, Winona Rt. 3, killed Lovberg Oct. 24, 1897. He died Ap- what Sheriff R. J. PoUer called ard St. ril 30. 1924. ing the year. James Hermes, 1885 W. 5th St. in an industrial accident Monday, At those meet- a slaiyinff and suicide. Miss Rochelle A. Roberts, Lewr will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. Survivors include one son. Wal- ings plans an d! Hospitadized but in satisfactory lston, Minn. at St Martin's Lutheran Church, lace, at home; three daughters, methods will be condition following surgery Mon- Mrs. Clifford Kester, St. Char- the Rev. Emil Geistfeld officiat- Mrs. E. J. (Myrtle) Lebeck, Man- discussed for, day nig_ht is a third brother, les, Minn. ing. Burial will be in Woodlawn chester, Minn.; Mrs. John. (Es- maintaining and I Erick, 8, who was shot in the side. Pittinger Trempealeau, and ¦ Mrs. Henry A. Bork, Fountain Cemetery. ther;, , strengthening the « ' ¦ No inqaest had been called Mon- Friends may call at Watkowski Mrs. Vincent ( Helen ) Howard, ern.«t»r City, Wis. WEATHER FORECAST . . . Occasional rain is expected¦ in the central Rockies. It will be continued growth * day nignt, Daniel Przybylski, 370 E. 5th St. Funeral Home today after 7 p.m. Kasson, Minn.; one brothel, An- and showers are forecast for tonight for the colder 'in -the Plains states, the Ladces area and and service of the Farm Bureau drew , Whitehall ; one sister, Anna, ^ Th« shootings occurred In rh« Peter G-iemza, 614 E. 2nd St. and at the church Wednesday af- southern middle Atlantic states and the Ohio, the Ohio, Tennessee and Mississippi valleys. (AP Insurance Services. Miss Donita Mercblewitz Bluff ter 1 p.m. Minneapolis, and three grandchil- Larsen borne about 5:30 p.m. be- , Tennessee and . Mississippi valleys. There will be Photofax Map) Ernster topped all Minnesota Siding, Wis. Mr. Dionysius was born Feb. 26, dren. Three children have died. agents in production sales in all fore the boys' mother, Mrs. Mary . Mrs. Anthony Parma, Stock- 1919, at Pickwick, son of Mr. and Funeral services will be held at some light rain in western Washington. Snow lines and was honored at the an- Larsen, a widow who. works as a ton, Minn . Mrs. Jon. Dionysius., and was a 2 p.m. Wednesday at Zion Luther- nual FB convention last month in clerk fo>r Minnesota Power and Births lifetime resident of the area. He an Church, the Rev. E. E. Olson St. Paul. Light Co. here, had returned Mr: and Mrs. Darreil E. Sylves- was a member of St. Martin's La- officiating. Burial , will be in the home. ter, Dodg«, Wis., a daughter. theran Church. He "had been em- church cemetery. Railroad Asking Practical Nursing Youth Jailed on Sheriff Potter said Monday nighl Mr. and Mrs. John Marty, 1730 ployed by Northwest Co-op Mills Friends may call at the Fred- he could find no reason for the W. Wabasha St., a daughter. since about 1959.. erixon Funeral Chapel after 7 to- Council Orders shodtin&s. Discharges Survivors are: His wife, the for night and at the church after He traced these events: Edwprd L. Franzwa, Fountain Vacation Graduates Score Assault Charge mer Rita Benedict; four, children , Wednesday noon. Street Erick knocked on the door of City, Wis., Rt. 1. Darwin, 3; Doylle, 2; Douglas, l , Jan. 7 wM be the date of a Daniel F. Wicka, 21, 416 Hamil- the Larsen's neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Darol Lee and baby, 273 and Denrse, 2 months; two broth- Mrs. Andrew Simorwon hearing on a petition by the Mil- ton St., will be spending the next Power Check W. Howard St. Mrs. Jonn Johnson, and told them ers, Edward; Winona Rt. 3 and PRESTON, Minri.—Mrs. Andrew waukee Railroad for vacation of Above Averages 15 days in the city jail. what h-ad happened. took August Fabian , Lewiston, Minn. , The/ Arthur, Beloit 111.; a half-brother, Simonson, 96, died early Monday a portion of Steuben street, City This year's graduating class of Judge S. D; J. Bruski sentenced him to the hospitad and called the Miss Carol Diderrich, College of Carl, Minneapolis, and one sister , Council members voted Monday Wicka in municipal court today Saint Teresa. morning at the home of her daugh- the Winona School of Practical At Lift Station sheriff's office. Mrs. Edna Campbell , Beloit, Wis. ter, Mrs. Emil Johnson, southwest night. Nursing posted scores abov-e both after he found hJrn guilty of the Potter went to the Larsen. home Miss.Vicki Tafel, Eau Claire, charge of third degree assault, Authorized by vote of the City Wis. Mrs. Alma Sehuppel of Preston. She had been ill sev- Now closed, the street segment state and national averages in fi- Council Monday evening, the city and found Gregory dead. Henry . eral years. is unoccupied, except for a small nal examinations given to grad- Brusk i made the sentence , a died shortly after being taken to Mrs. Wallace H. Olson, Winona Funeral services for Mrs. Alma straight jail term because of engineering department will re- The former Julia Monson Bye, house, but lots on both sides are uates of practical nursing courses the hospital. Rt. 19. Sehuppel, 200% E. King St., were by Wicka's past record. He has been quest Northern States Power Co. Mrs. Harold, Knoll and baby, she was born Aug. 23, 3860, in leased business firms in the throughout the nation. to assist in measurement of elec- held this afternoon at Fawcett area. : - ' convicted for assault four o ther Erick told officers Gregory had Rollingstone, Minn. Chapel, the Rev. D. D. Harner, Preston Township. She was mar- A report on results of this year s tric current used in pumping oper- ' final examinations was made to times during the past year, court shot him and Henry and then Mrs. Donald Orr, 117 Stone St. Calvary Free Church, officiating. ried to Andrew Simonson^ct. 12, The railroad company s petition records show. ations by the sanitary sewer lift turned the .22 caliber rifle on contends that since the street has the Board of Education Monday Burial was in Woodlawn Ceme- 1887. He died in 1938. They farmed Wicka was arrested at police station near St. Mary's College, himself.. Officers said Gregory had in Preston Township until 1920, ne-ver been open to public travel , night by Superintendent of Schools Monthly reports on kilowatt OTHER BIRTHS tery. A. L. Nelson, Nelson said that the headquarters at 4:45 p.m. IMov. propped the rifle up and shot him- Pallbearers were Donald Stead, when they moved to Preston vil- no public purpose would be served hours and gallonage pumped -jvill self pulling the trigger with his ( in opening it It has no value to passing score this year was 485. 27. He was arrested on a com- hy ARCADIA, Wis. Special)-Mr . Marvin Burns, Arthur Stokke, Ar- lage. . plaint by Glenn. Schneider, 126 W. help determine normal volume at toe. and Mrs. Duane Kampa, Milwau- Recently Mrs. Simonson . had anyone else, the petition argues, The national average for prac- the station and help show whether thur Bard, LeRoy Larson and graduates , Wabasha St., a service station Mrs. Larsen -was hospitalized kee, a son Nov. 16. Mrs. Kampa Herbert .Schladinske. been residing with several of her but could be leased for commer- tical nursing was 515 surface water is infiltrating the • cial purposes , Minnesota graduates averaged 525 attendant whom Wicka and some under sedation. Mrs. Johnson, who is the former Delane Pronschin- children. She was the oldest mem- if vacated friends beat Nov, 26. system in excessive amounts, ac- said h«r husband had just been ske, daughter of Mrs. Rosella James G, Olmstead ber of; Union Prairie Lutheran Crossed at the south end by Mil- and the Winoita class had an av- cording to James Baird , engineer. ¦ erage of 563. None of the Winona Schneider testified that lie was over to the Larsen home to check Pronschiniske, Arcadia. Kampa is Funeral services for Jam*s G. Church. waukee tracks, the street ends at working at the Erickson Service Aldermen also voted a resolution on the boys before their mother the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Olmstead, 1062 W. Broadway, Survivors are: Four daughters, its intersection with Howard girls failed the examination. of approval for plans submitted by The course, supervised by Mrs. Station at 5th and Johnson streets. got home, described Gregory as Kampa , Arcadia. were held this afternoon at Faw- Mrs. Emil Johnson and Mrs. Nels street. About a half-block between He said that at about 9:45 p.m. the Corps of Engineers for protec- "very bright and very quiet." WHITEHALL, Wis. (SpecialV— cett Chapel Dr. E. Clayton Bur- Burreson, Preston ; Mrs. John Sa- King and Howard streets is in- Alice Taylor, is offered as a part tion of the city against floods and i of the Winona Area Vocational- he put gasoline in Wicka's car. The boys' father died several At Tri-County Memorial Hospital; gess, Central Methodist Church , bo. Port Orchard, Wash., and volved. Later he was filling.out a re ceipt high runoff waters. Aid. Clarence years ago of diabetes. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Swenson , Mrs, Theodore Hoppman , Minot, lechnical School curriculum with Tribell praised District Engineer officiating. Burial "Was in Oakwood the cooperation of Community for three girls in a car behind Ettrick, a son Nov. 26. ' Cemetery, Dresbach. N.D.; one son, J. Arthur Simon- the defendant's car. Col. William Sirandberg's presen- Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Ryan, In- , son, Fountain; 13 grandchildren; -Memorial Hos pital. tation of the report as down-to- Pallbearers all members of the superintendent also report- He said that Wicka made ob- dependence, a son Thursday. Improved Order of Red Men , wer§ 25 great-grandchildren, and 12 The scene statements to the girls and earth, practical and clearly under- Man W/JO Stole Mr. and Mrs. John Pietrik, In- ^reat-great - grandchildren. She Wage Adjustment ed that Victor T. Gislason , public standable. Paul Troska, Elmer Hammann, schools director of athletics, that Wicka and one friend came dependence, a son Thursday. Robert Nelson Sr-, Albert Thiele, was the last of a family of eight . over to the girl' s car. Schneider A fourth and final estimate of Car Here Now in ST. CHARLES, Minn. — Mr. The funeral service will be Fri- health and physical education , is testified that he then told Wicka $4,986.97 was voted for the city Adelbert Bittner and Albert Paff- ene of 12 Minnesotans asked to and Mrs. James Braun a son Dec. rath. day at 2 p.m , at Union Prairie Panel in Session to leave and thie beating started. sidewalk, curb and gutter contract Federal Custody 2 at Olmsted Community Hospital, Lutheran Church, the R«v. I.eOn serve on a gftate committee that He said that Wicka hit liirn. He with R a l p h Scharmer, Total A wage adjustment panel, nam- ¦will study revision of the Minne- WHITEHALL,. Wis. (Special) Rochester. Miss Elizabeth M. Rivers Holtan officiating. Burial will be ed at the request of city street also said that his glasses were amount is $17,311.33. Five two- Funeial services for Miss Eliza- in the church cemetery. sota curriculum for health and broken in the scuffle and that his year certificates of indebtedness — Laxry Loth, 24, Cedar Rapids, department employes, met with physical education. ' Iowa, was turned over to Federal WIWONA DANA LOCKAGE beth M. Rivers, 62 E. King St., Friends may call Wednesday representatives of Local 799, Gen- clothes were tarn. for $1,000 each, drawing 4 percent Wednesday at 9 a.m. at and Thursday at Thauwauld Fu- Attending Monday's meeting of Lois Laabs, 406 E. King St., the interest, were issued to the park- Warden Keith Hardie, Madison, will be eral Drivers' and Helpers' Union, the board as a Committee of the about noon today, according to Flow—18,200 cubic feet per sec- Burke Funeral Home and at 9:30 neral Home, Preston , and at the Monday night at City Hall. It was driver of the o»ther car, and her ing meter fund by the local im- Sacred church after 1 p.m. Friday. whole were I»awrence Santelman,, passengers, Noima J. Warnken, provement fund. Eugene Bijold, chief deputy sher- ond at 8 a.m. today. a.m. at Cathedral of the the second meeting for the panel. ; iff of Trempealeau County. Monday Heart, the Rev. Joseph LaPlante board president. Dr. G. R. Kol- 477 E. Wabasha St., and Carol Aldermen passed a resolution —-Carlcuis, 8 barges, Reviewing union demands of lofski, Daniel Sadowski, Ray Gor- Hull, 178 W. 5th St., testified that agreeing to furnish four men ; at Loth has been on federal pa- S:20 pirn. officiating. Burial will be in Holy the City Council were Russell such, Dr. C. W. Rogers, Maurice role authorities said. ' downstream. Trinity Cemetery-, Rollingstone. WEATHER Wicka had started the fight and city expense to assist Corps of , Bundy, business agent, and Luth- D. Godsey and Franklin Tillman. that he hit Schneider while Wicka's Engineers supervisors in posting Loth will be charged with in- Friends may call at Burke Fu- er Landers and Harold Thaldorf. terstate motor vehicle theft and neral Home this afternoon and OTHER TEMPERATURES friends held him, fall-out shelter signs on designated IMPOUNDED DOGS By THE ASOCIATED PRESS The .panel consists of Hollis PRE-FINISH Wicka said 1hat he wasai't at buildings in the city. The worlr is being taken to Madison today. ¦ evening. Father -LaPlante will say at He was arrested by' Trempea- None . ' . .- Rosary at 8:30. Hig h Low Pr, Larsen, appointee of the union: For best results it is wise to the station^ that time, so lie will require about four weeks. Albany, clear ...... 50 35 .. Loyde E. Pfeiffer, appointee ot prefinish waBl panels before in- couldn't have been the one in- leau County authorities Saturday Available* for flc-od honrn: ' night after he lost control of a Two nice young dogs, male and Albuquerque, clear ... 53 31 '. . the Council, and Adolph Bremer stalling them . A good seal coat volved in the fight. "I won't do PLAIN AND FANCY Atlanta, cloudy ...... 61 49 .. public. plus a coat or two of clear plastic any business there again," said car owned by Robert Fort, 709 female , A well-designed fence can be •Wilson St., Winona, neat Marsh- Motorist Found Bismarck, coludy .... 45 31 .03 The union asked for appoint- lacquer or varnish is best appl ied Wicka before the judge passed made from ordinary lumber items Boise, cloudy ...... -.9 29 . . '. when the boards are flat, and sentence. land, Wis. the car overturned, ment of the adjustment panel such as 2x4s and 1x2s, with 4x4s but Ei'oth was not hurt. Guilty of Running Boston, clear 53 36 ,. after the Council had rejected , in hand sanding is much easier. Municipal Court ' ¦ for: posts. The 1x2 boards can be Foil's car was badly •wrecked. Chicago, cloudy ...... «0 42 .. part, union demands, including a OUTDOOR-IND OOR installed so that one panel is Cleveland , cloudy .... «3 39 It was taken from a parking place WINONA Tra ffic Signal .. 21-cent hourly wage boost, health HIDDEN VALUES To bring outdoors insid« the vertical and the next horizontal . at 2nd and Lafayette streets and Mrs. Grant L. Kutchara , Win- Denver, clear .... •€! 22 .. and welfare contributions and Most of the structural part , of a home, use the same siding for ¦ Des Moines, rain ..... <61 45 T Fort reported to Winona police ona Rt. 2, pleaded guilty to a John A. Farmer, 609 Market St., time and a half after 40 hours. home is hidden/ but , when inspect- wall paneling that you use on Nine of every 100 families made at 9 p.m. Saturday. charge of permitting a dog to- run was found guilty in municipal Detroit, cloudy ... 58 33 .. The Council has approved a ing a home before buying, go to the ,, outside of the home. Any pat- some form of political financial at large within^he city limits, court today of the charge of fail- Fairbanks, cloudy .... -4 -15 T budget providing a 9-ccnt in- the basemen t and sec what the tern or texture of western red contribution in the last presiden- Lo th's address was incorrectly She was sentenced to pay a fine ure to stop for a traffic signal. Fort Worth, clear .... 70 49 .. crease as of next May 1 for the 21 joists look Like and inspect the cedar makes an ideal wall sur- tial election, the American Herit- reported as 1286 W. 2nd St., Wi- of 15 or to serve two days. She Judge S. D, J, Bruski sentenc- Helena, cloudy 37 29 .. organized employes. exposed rafters. face. age Foundation has disclosed! nona-, in Monday's edition. was arrested by police at Sugar ed him to pay a fine of $10 or Honolulu, clear ...... 81 64 .. Loaf at 3:13 p.m. Monday. to serve three d ays. Farmer paid Kansas City, cloudy .. 62 50 .. Forfeits: the fine. Farmer was arrested by Los Angeles, clear .... 64 51 ..
Kenneth C. Wessin, 23, 507 police at Broadway and Main Memphis, clear ...... 69 47 .. TW . .. -...... _._«..^. . - . . TV-T\^ ¦ -.-..- -""^ Sioux St., $10 on a charge of fail- Street at 4:55 p.m. Oct. 20 and Miami, clear 76 59 ,. ff ^ "". ...I..I--.-W. -v .WW ' .- -. v w--~ -...... ^. . • W - ^ , . . - , ^ .T^ ^ * ^l u*^q| ure to stop for a traffic signal. the trial was postponed until to- Milwaukee, cloudy ... 55 40 .. He WJS arrested by police at 5th day. Mpls., St. Paul, cloudy 62 40 .. and Main streets at 11:55 p.m, Ronald Richter, Winona police- New Orleans, clear ... 73 50 ,. Monday. man, was the state's only witness. New York, clear ...... 51 - 36 ' .. Omaha , rain 57 42 .04 ¦I Philadelphia , clear ... 53 30 ,. Phoenix, clear '.. 68 43 . -. Portland , Me., clear . 47 32 .. Portland , Ore., cloudy 49 42 ,01 Rapid Cily, clear 56 29 ,. St. Louis, cloudy 64 49 .. Salt Lake City , cloudy 53 27 ,12 San Francisco, clear . 63 , 53 ,03 Seattle, rain ' ..- 45 37 ,03 Washington , cloudy .. 58 37 .. (T—Trace) He testified that Fanner was driv- ing south on Main Street and that the defendant drove across the north crosswalk at Broadway just aammmmmmmmwm^^SamwSSSamtBS as the traffi c signal turned red . then tinned ca.st onto Broadway. lll, •'¦^¦¦eM_»w _L_rtr^H_r^3K_*Z^V SSt V)#_iM_S_^_i^_H_er e5S _^K ' ImmW l l IM 'WjMP Farmer called George Jcsscn , mmmmammmmWJay'' lV^ZmmTmZ Vi am.^ St i<.p^_«^B_Be^_e^_e^_e^B_t^_H_>K bTjJ_r^fT_aFr-^^^_HBB^_ee^^^_eB^^^_B_-e^lBle^-e^-^-Sle^i3fBBBBp ^Lmmm ^v _iV |^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^"M_eli»^>Me_^e^-e^-e^-i^-i^-e^-L^^-e^^^^-e^-l^-l^^BB-B-BS-B-S-'^ ^^^^^^^^P,t l^*W__^__^_nfl_M_Tl» j-l ^ cily elect rical inspector. Jesscn " ^* ^* -^ ^ said that he and Farmer had test- ed the traffic signal at Main and ^^^^ ¦¦ aKSl^Kflfi&flH^Hfifl^^^H §H&BJgSKm\Wam\mmmmmmmW Broadway on Oct. 22. He tes- tified that the defendant tried to drive into the intersection as the lffljj | light turned yellow so that he _ele^_e^_e^_e^_e^_e^_e^_e$^ _K>_e»^ J| ^|^V *B_^K^J_^T>VII_HelH_el_eH_e^^ ''' Pp £ ' ;- '; '' might be able to make it out ol MWWBW^^^^^^^MW*MMM^J^^H -^L^E \1_K_HL mW ^*vS *W)ilt ^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ r^^^^^^m ^^^j' ^ j ^ >p ^^^r^^W^ the intersection before it turned red. He said that it was possible-, Farmer testified that he went into the intersection shortly before Ihe light turned yellow, then turn- ed east, onto Broadway and left tho intersection ns th_ e light turn- ed red, Roger Rrosnahnn represented the state.
-I . " . . , ' - .. .: .„- GUS i (HATCH ""OUR MAN HICGINS,- WEDMCSDAY HI0IIT. ABC-TV THANKS TO AML&T LOA N ft^ Ihe : Now . •. a car that 's even nicer than the '62 Pontiac the '63 Smart Dad! And he's entitled to that self-satisfied feeling you i c; ,,{ Shoe Man I get at Christmas with every one on the shopping list yrovlded Yon can tell |uit by looking at Chat n«w crille that the Pontiaci When yon put style like IhU tog«ther for and the family budget under control. with new niceties like a % are going to be easy to spot In a crowd again this y«u\ Who eUe wldev Wide-Track, an even silkier vide, and -deeply tamptnoiu Money from Minnesota Loan & Thrift for shopp ing, to ray bills \(& SAYS- i In* you in this nmppy position. In- ! *- " : or for any other reason can put i One Entire Stock would have thought of tucking the heaoHghts In M neatly, one teriors you've got a car that's nicer than t*e *6S Pcmtlac. Tour stead of many to pay-you pay only -ML&T one, convenient amount each month. So, when you think of money-come to ML&T for above the other? [Nice touch! They aim better that way, too.] FontLac dealer's got It now. 'WidC'TrtWCH JPotittaC Iirompt , understanding Jidp. Phone nliend nnd your money can : LUGGAGE lac ready when you slop by. i £ 40%' OFF i SEE YOUR AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER FOR A WIDE CHOICE "OF WIDE-TRACKS AND GOOD USED CARS, TOO,, ! 1 Group LaDallas Olson and Tickets for the concert are avail- Sale hours are from 2 to 5 p.m. The play "Thirty Minutes orchestra and from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Great Santa Clans" was presented by Royce Poss. Miss Tranberg's.. mar- able from band and ' , riage to Douglas Holte, son of Mr. members for a nominal fee arid Hall. A w ide range of handmade Howard L-jdwigson Carol Lanzel, j items and homemade candies and Merrilee Person, Fairy Mueller, MR. AND MRS. CHARLES W. ANDERSON are at home at and Mrs. Carl Holte who live be will be available at the door tha Toronto, Ontario, Canada , following their tween. Ettrick and Blair, will take evening of the concert. All pro- baked goods will be -on sale. Tea Roger Schmitt, James Zeiehert- , wedding Sept. 29 and and coffee will be served in the Oliver Bade, Gerald Gunning, Dale a trip through Eastern States. The bride is the former Miss place , at French Creek Lutheran ceeds will be given to the Good- Anstes Church Dec. 29 at 2 p.m. fellows Fund. Great Hail. Mann, Kay Dobberphul and Gene Naomi Tweito, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N«ls Tweito, Spring Olson. Grove, Minn., and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. The chorus singing throughout William G. Anderson, Winnipeg. The bride WSH Sophomores the play was.composed of Eleanor received a B.S. degree Brommer, Mafie Swartling, Arleen in nursing education from the University of Minnesota. She is employed Wilber, Marlene Brunner, Gary MR. AND MRS. C. O. HUFF, 1780 Gilmore Ave., as an instructor in the nursing of children at Toronto. & x3ffl?$flfc0THESE' ONE CARAT jj To Have Essays Holtzman, Gary Fhiry, Barry Mr. Anderson is a graduate of announce the engagement of their daughter, Judith Ann, the University of Manitoba and Schultz, Lorna"Schroeder, Grace is employed as an underwriter for the Traveler's Insurance Co. In Anthology Johnson, Mary Trau_o, Ellen Simp- to Larry James Holzer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. ' , , Seyf- Holzer, 1620 W. 5th St. The wedding will be Feb. 16 at ; $. SOLITAIRE (B&lMfffldflW tV(Ult&' A son Robert Seifert Robert tf *! Certificates were awarded to fer, Sandra Sohrweide, Sonja Ar- the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart. (Edstrom Studio) HOME ECONOMICS UNIT CHRISTMAS TREATS Winona Senior High School stu- neson, Daniel Smith and Barbara Winona County Home Econom- DODGE, Wisi.(Special) - The dents fro»m the National Essay Fayerweather, pianist. A large ics Association will meet Thurs- annual Christmas bags of goodies ^—^—^—^—^—^. .-. ' . Association today. Winning essays the drill team and the auxiliary day for school children and pre- decorated Christmas tree was in at 7:30 p.m. at the College of IL* \_^_i^_i^_i^_i^_ilFr^^^* _^_^_^_^_^_b. will be published later in Young the center of the stage. County Republican under the direction of Mrs. Brad- Saint Teresa Roger Bacon Center. schoolers of Sacred Heart parish, America Speaks, ann¦ ual anthology ford Johnson held a memorial ser- Pine Creek, will be prepared by ' ' . The costume committee was Pa- % y A^mmAAAm^^^m^iama^^ ^^Mmmmmw of the association. - . tricia Russel, Ethel Phelps and Women to Hear vice at Fawcett Funeral Home. CHRISTMAS PARTY t3ie Rosary Society, it was decid- Winners are from the English Beverly Priefert. The stage crew The attendance prize went ir> BETHANY, Minn. (Special) - ed at the meeting Sunday after- 10 classes of Mrs. JJettie Hunter were Samuel Alvord, Keith New- Mrs. Frank Eaine. Prizes in cards Bethany Moravian Ladies Aid will noon in the parish hall. Mrs. and Mrs- Genelle Jackson. Stu- comb, Keith Kelton, Stephen Brei- State Secretary were awarded to Mrs. Olga Theis have a Christmas party at the David Wicka won the attendance dents from Mrs. Hunter's classes tung, Maxine Stetzer and Shirley , secretary oi and Mrs. . Leonard Helgemoe, home of Miss Alma Wollin Dec. 12 prize and Mrs. John Herek the are: Nan cy Berkman, daughter of Herbert Johnson Green. ' the .Republican Party of Minne- schafskopf; Mrs. Guy Davison and beginning with a potluck dinner at mystery parcel provided by Mrs. Mrs. Jan Maytum Berkman¦ ; John Christmas cookies Mrs. Pearl Robertson, 500. Host- noon. There will be a program Ellen Simon. Members exchanged , son of Mr. •¦ ' and Mrs. A. Coffee and sota will summarize the recent \ ^ *575 ^^^Bi^^ *695 y^ i Brandt . V ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ esses were Mrs. . Elvira Doelle, with devotions, games, gift gifts and Christmas recipes af- ?¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Haggen, daugh- were served by Shirley Green, $1 ex- •' ' ¦- ¦ ¦ ' x_ ' ' • .^mW&wl^'m / • ¦ '1 F. Brandt; Anette Ethel Phelps, Maxine Stetzer,. Pa- elections at state and national Mrs. Bernard Doelle and Mrs. change and lunch. All women of ter the meeting. Lunch was V " • ' ' ^S. ^^amw^^ ^&M^lmama*._/ ^ - * ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Haggen; i •^v_^__^__BPi__ii3_a£s__^i_^__^_^__^_fc-/^ - -A tricia Russel¦ and Beverly Prie- level at the December meeting ol Robert Nelson. the congregation are invited. served: Nancy Holubar, daughter of Mrs. ' ' ' ' Esther Holubar ; Kathy Krone- fert. - . • . Republican Women of Winona busch, daughter of Mr. , and Mrs. Mrs. Wilma Austin, president, County. F. J. Kronebusch: and other members of the faculty, Mr. Johnson, now of St. Paul, is ¦ ^^^mmmamW' ' ^ Miss Blanche Schneider, Gerald a former Winonan and served as ¦ : ' ¦ ¦ Sharon Matluson, daughter of Nagel and Miss Beatrice Nyrud, _ director of tne I' . - i ". .¦: . ; ^ . ' " ': -I Mr. and -Mrs. F. C. Mathison; . tt Eacll stone a carat size Each stone Is mounted 1n a fj assisted with the evening's acti- | YMCA -when IK • • Peggy AlcGrath, daughter of Mr. ; : U m Eac.h stone selected for but- graceful, handwrought 18K 4 vities. | was a resident II ' ' ' \9m- ....sr-zrer/a** .: . jMn l standing brilliance and color gold mounting . and Mrs- Harry McGrath; Cheryl ¦ . m - i here. L • Each stone represents an extra- $ Mueller, daughter of Mr; and Mrs. ordinary value -> unsurpassed "j G. J. Mueller ; Robert Raaen, son LADIES AID I Virginia: T o r fl ¦ of Mr. and Mrs. Irving Raaen; St. Matthew's Lutheran Church ^ gerson, recentlj Ladies Aid will meet Thursday at I elected Winona's . ; ' P ' - ¦ John Schramm, son of Mr. and *t. '- i - r "At the Sign of the Street Clo ck" 'i' Mrs. E. IL. Schramm; Linda Sebo, 2:30 p.m. in the church basement. I representative tc ^ £ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elroy There will be a march of climes I the state legisla C. Sebo ; Don Staxicka, son of and each member is asked to I tee, will discuss Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Staricka; Bill bring cookies. I the local elec Tews, som of Mr. and Mrs. August I tions. Tews; Lee Turner, son of Mr. and SEWING CIRCLE I Mrs. W. S. L Circle 2, Sewing Circle, of St. Chnstensen Mrs. L. C. Turner, and Kathy . wil' Walters, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mathhew's Lutheran Church will Johnson . submit a reporl 1M2 Elmer G. _ Walters, Lamoille, meet at the home of Mrs. Orval from the nominating committee Minn. Hilke, 1678 W. Broadway, at . 8 and officers will be elected. A cof JEWSiERS *^A SINCE Mrs. Jackson's class winners p.m. Friday. Mrs. Kenneth Spit- fee hour with homemade cookies J tier is chairman. ^ are: Denis Duran, son of Mr. will follow the meeting -which will f- ' RINGS AND DIAMONDS ENLARGED TO> SHOW DETAIL | and Mrs. Marion Duran; John GOLDEN WEDDI NG be held Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Hoeft, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- home of Mrs. Philip Heise, Kim W h;_«^_»_Al_ iiii«i ^M!i_ik&l.«l:!i _) .m:i_ ri_<«L:i_rfr tk;^_k)iwl lard Hoeft; John Morse, son of RUSHFORD, Minn. — Mr. and berlu. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Morse, and Mrs. Peter Rye will be gu&sts of ¦ Kathleen Thompson, daughter of honor at an open house at Rush- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Thompson. ford IiUtheran Church Sunday Eag les Auxiliary Sets from 2 to 5 p.m. in honor of their ¦ 50th wedding anniversary. JNo in- Christmas Party C- ' . CATHOLIC AID SOCIETIES vitations have been sent. Election of officers for St. Jo- Members of the Eagles Auxil- \ ^ | ! iii iiiitf ii^^ seph's Catholic Aid Society and BUDS AND BLOSSOMS iary r are to make reservations St. Elizabeth's Catholic Aid Socie- SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- with Mrs. Walter Hoppe, Mrs. Quia gifting j IS__n_^_l^_l^_B_i_l^_l^_H_H__^_l^_l^_HI^_^__IVIH_^___^_H> _l^_IVI ty will be held tonight at 8:30 cial)—Buds and Blossoms Garden William Laab and . Mrs. Bernard \ at the K; of C. Ha31. A report will Society will meet Thursday at 2 Smith for the Christmas party I - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦• - • ¦ • ¦ - be made on the annual clothing p.m. at Trinity Lutheran Church Dec. 17. There will be a dinner I ..i ' - : - . . • - — - ' , ;i collection for the Indian missions parlors. Hostesses will be Mrs. at 6:39 p.m. r ! :|x-^£ . . - . * l E||_ ^ |_ ^ |_ ^ |_ ^ |_ H F ;- '¦> K""2*— ^^_l^_l^_^_t^_l^_l^} _ll which was just completed. Plans Lela "Holland and Mrs. Emil The auxiliary voted $10 for Mus- . H_H_iH_l^_l^_l^_H^^y ' ^/ *'_^ii^_l^_l^_l^_H_li ^_H will also be made for the annual Quinnell. Roll call will be an ex- cular Distrophy and draped the I' WMmmmW ^ V-C^JHI^^^^H ) Christmas party for the juvenile change of house plants with an charter in memory of Mrs. Alma members of the societies. explanation of th eir care. Sehuppel Prior to the meeting ;l ' ff ^L v * C ' W$mmT ^ ^Hl^^^^ H i - ' ^ l <* _jj ¦WmW ,d ^Smm%W^mmm\ I * .^^^ammrn^ S % ^ \ ' . . ron/ess -. runles? I Kw^amW M & ML ffl_L^_L^_L^_L^_LV_l_L^_L^_L^_L^_Lj^_B | ^yj ^^st t ^ \ t3 WmSmltaSmW ;fji ^^w! ^ii$k^sY_D iJ_BI_i^_L^_L^_L^_L^^_L_L^_L^^_L_L^_L^_L^_L^^_L^_L^H^J_LB <^^ > I mWM Wl KM ' ; RHHB ?SM ' <&m ^_SH>illi?S_^^^^^^^^^^^^^^HI_i^_i^_i^_i^_i^_l^_i^_i^_i^_i^_i^_i^_i^_ii ^_H . WLM m m^^mmmmmmmmm\^ mm^^K ^^^^^^^m\mmW Jtrl ¦ ^H _k _l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_i^_l^_^ _d_ ¦ m^AA ^AA ^AA ^AA ^AAmmmmmw T arr / I i^mWm. I ' /*, ' ' rnlmlw _ l___o^_e^_e^_e^_e^_e^_e^_e^_e^r J/r i . ^^^k • * — J ' ^ ^ !$I&£-S--H_H1B_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_I^_IV
? < ^_^_^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__i ^__^__i - M A M IJ-Jf PJ WZ ^Amm\\mm\\\\\m\\m. _H__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^H__ ^__: ^__^__ I- i Si / ''/ I ^llw ' R& SBK*^ r n j>**,¥ ii__ ^__ ^__ ^K _^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_H^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_l^_lk^_l^_l^_l^_H rL^ lmm\ ^mm\\\\\m\\\\\\\\\\w ^^ \^m\\\\m\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\W ^^mW No doubt of it, a fine watch gives a man a finished loolT vm\\\\w(mm^£^^ ^ I ....distinguishes him as a person of taste | | and judgment. \ Rolex watches are both I elegant and masculine. They \ I combine stunning design, rugged grace and unerring \ *. I accuracy. None are cheap, some are very expensive. I Handbags £ • Each is the best , the very best, of its class, | | To a gentle- j man , a Rolex is not just a watch M j( J^. , but a proud possession. ; I \ ... the gift with the difference and j distinction that she will treasure more. I t \ Precious, pretty — yes! And practical | \ j j jiy 1 too. . I \ c JM 1 f- DATEJUST Oyster Per- W^ i^^^ W ^Sf M J/ Jl XT * \ peluel (waterproof', self. VSKS, f ^a^^^^ Sf X e l wlndlno). MounKled date \ rUi ^ \P9^iy^^^^^ Sar^3 »tl* > I . / jfy runless , seamless fj changes ootomnllc«lly at ^WS|S*3fiE^^®3r \ll )/ ' j. mlrtnlght. In .led end Vr ^^^ m ^^^^ S I ¦«wf• f w s/ieerioc sheets I Odd combination (as FT Hj9 _ '."''^ ^ar% gf\ •«-« -»•- V \ JLr " ? tliown) i330.00) wilh strap, Wj OH m\\ III . §i , j T: with 5 MMOO.oo (f.t.i.).nill s/ f H# HF n **VUJUAl *250 OYSTER | / ^^ r o matte J ki 53 R( d PERPETUAL ^ f! 'Wlien cmccrown | J and crystal are Inlnct V
! "At 1hc siV n l,ie S l i • I to flatter legs t s*—i °f miles north of Kel- ter and gas heating system will Chalmers, or with trade-in, $10,- man, Claude Jasper of Madison, office will be administered by else. by Robb against Mrs-. Ruth logg on Highway 61, turn west at be installed. 320. Road Machinery Supply said the inauguration "is a state, Chief Justice Timothy Brown of Can you name four state capi- Mt. Etna Erupts Little Squaw Co., , not a party function." the State tals bearing the names of former Markle, 509 Main St., covered cost Little Ireland, and the tow is Valley will be open Minneapolii bid $7,600 on a Supreme Court. ) about a quarter of a mile away. Saturdays and Sundays only with 99 Master four-wheeler Austin, or Democratic plans were announc- Republicans who will take of- presidents? They are Jefferson CATANIA, Sicily '(AP - Mt. of installation of the tank which An attractive sign pointing the hours from 10 a.n>. to 5 p.m. As $7,000 with trade-in P h i 11 i p y ed Monday by state chairman Pat- fice include incumbents Mrs. Dena City* Mo.; Jackson, Miss.; Lin- Etna erupted Monday night and replaced ah. allegedly defective way was designed and construct- the nearest ski tow is about 50 Equipment Co., Minneapolis, bid rick Lucey of Madison who said Smith, treasurer, and Robert Zim- coln, Neb., and Madison, Wis. blasted f our new volcanic veaits one that had been in use since ed by Johnson, miles away, at Menomonie, Wis., $5,000 on a 116 heavy duty Gallon. the invitations "Will be mailed this merman, : secretary of state, and on the northeast sideyj f the 10.TJ8- on the spot of a The term "'damyankee," em- foot high central June 1957. Robb had been suing former roadside vegetable stand. tlie owners hope to draw skiers William Ziegler. Inc., Mankato, week. He said the party members Lt. Gov-Elect Jack Olson and Atty. crater. Rock and also would be invited to ployed still with more or less af- volcanic dust were hurled high for recovery from Rochester, Winona and Red submitted three bids, all for re- attend a Gen-Elect George Thomson. of the full cost of THE 240-acr* farm owned by Wing as well a s neighboring fection south of the Mason and into the air. replacement tank conditioned Caterpillar Model 12s. the and installa- Johnson, where the tow is lo- to-ants. Skiing instruction will be Two bids were $10,625, or $10,125 tion charges. cated, is a skier's paradise as it's available. with trade-in and the third, $11,600 BOYLE'S COLUMN mostly Mississippi River bluffs. A Milwaukee Railroad station with $11,100 trade-in. Two TRIAL OF THE case, at which Sunday it was a beehive of ac- agent at Kellogg, 37-year-old Leo Retraining Judge Arnold Hatfield, Rochester, Tri-State Machinery, Minneapo- tivity, with last minute prepara- Dick, loves skiing and has skied lis submitted five bids. One was presided, began Monday morning tions for the opening. The young since boyhood. He was manager 1W ,250 Caesar and the jury began its deliberation $4 , or $3,500 with trade-in; Dicks except David, 1, were tear- at Snobakken, located about a $6,000 on a Galion 116, with $5,250 Courses Being at 4:58 p.m. The verdict was re- ing down a shack and piling and mile north of Wabasha, for five p.m. trade-in ; $5,750 on an AUis-Chal- Pioneered turned at 8:08 , hauling the lumber away on a years. He'll be using the tow. mers, $5,000 trade-in, and two Cat- Testimony during the trial was tractor. The children are James, erpillars No. 12 to the effect that a water heater , 100 h.p. motor$, Considered Here 13; William, 11; Jean. 10; Ken- NOW EMPLOYED as carpenter $9,750 each, or $9,000 with trade- Parking had been sold to Mrs. Markle in neth, 9; Marilyn, 8; Marie, 6, at the Wabasha Marina , John- ins. Organization in the Winona ElISYDf 1949 and a new tank installed in Danny, 4, and Glen, 3. son , 27, was a member of Waba- Area Vocational-Technical School By HAL BOYLE 1957. When a leak developed in sha's 544th Ordnance Company The council will meet tonight to of classes in. stenography and Rounding out the family work- examine the bids. NEW YOEK (API-Things a the new tank a replacement tank ers were their pretty brunette stationed at Camp Polk, La., dur- welding may be requested by the was installed two years ago. Minnesota Employment Service columnist might never know if he mother, Lucille, busily engaged ing the Berlin crisis. Following his THE COUNCIL;- with represen- didn't open his mail: EMi IEAR James T. Robb Sr., partner in cleaning the chalet with her return in September, he purchas- tatives from Caswell Engineering under provisions of the National the store, and an employe, Robert Manpower Retraining Act, mem- Julius Caesar pioneered the idea mother. Mrs. Carl Heilscher, Kel- ed the farm from Dale jfeitman Co. and Attorney 1. L. Duxbury Jr., of traffic control by banning the (rerson , who installed the replace- logg, and sisters-in-law, Mrs. Ir- and Harry ScMcbtman of Waba- will attend a hearing Friday at bers of the Board of Education ment tank, were witnesses called were informed Monday night. parking of all chariots in Rome's vin Dick and Mrs. Thomas Dick, sha. 1:30 p.m. in St. Paul to appeal for central business district 2,000 by Robb's attorney, William A. Wabasha. For good measure Mrs. Johnson and Dick formed their placing the -village in the 1933 lindquist. partnership in September THE STATE Manpower Agency years ago. Dick's father, Carl Heilscheri and and federal grants for sewage dispos- was established earlier this year In addition to putting out the Robb testified that there had have been working on the project al plant construction. ;• ' warranty on the replace- Johnson's father, Charles Johnson, 4 under provisions of the national "no parking" sign, Caesar went been no St. Paul, were unofficial supervis- s.nce. . Mayor William Mishler and Fire ment tank beyond the one-year ¦ act to provide for retraining of along with a senatorial edict re- 1E M0SFM1IE ors." '-»* . :• Next year the co-owners plan to Chief Donald Loechler have met workers who are unemployed guarantee of the manufacturer. install a skating rink at the en- or voking the driving licenses of Ro- with members of the Dresbach and underemployed and area voca- man women but he lost that bat- Mrs. Markle, represented by THE 200-YARD rop* ski tow Is trance to the skiing area . Long J. Libera, held that there Dakota village boards to clarify tional and public schools are be- tle. The ladies enlisted the orator Harold ready for use. It was installed by range plans also call for dancing coverage by the La Crosse fire de- had been a five-year guarantee ing utilized¦¦ to implement the pro- Cicero on their side and he won lN lBE WORED the partners after clearing the hill on the spacious second floor of the HBffl' replacement tank and that partment. The new village fire gram. .• -. . .' . them back their rights to drive. on the of about 30 trees with the help of chalet. More tows eventually will truck is due . here Wednesday. she was not obligated to pay for a bulldozer. The tow is built on be constructed, and there is a pos- Superintendent of Schools A, Some 22 million Americans the cost of the replacement tank. The peddlers , ordinance and L. Nelson told the school board snore. All of them can't be hus- the north side where tlie sun does sibility of a golf course or driving anti-spiking ordinance were tabled bands, not reach. All the equipment was range next summer. Monday that the Winona office of but no wives admit to this ONE OF THREE wllnesses call- for further study. the employment service had made fault. Mark Twain's comment: ed by Libera, Mrs. Markle testi- Dr. Philip Utz, health officer, a survey of the community and "There ain't no way to find out fied that she had been willing to urged that council take the three found that there is a shortage of why a snorer can't hear himself pay for the cost of installation Industry Honors proposals—the - present system, a stenographers and welders in Wi- snore " but objected to paying for the tank Stevenson Denies village radio car and officer, or nona. If the ocean highway had been grounds that a warranty on the on Lanesboro Native county radio service within the He said that Tom Raine, direc- paved, Christopher Columbus original tank was in -force at the village—under study. At ; present might have made it faster to of the replacement. tor of the area-vocational techni- time LANESBORO, Minn.—A former time there is. no constable on duty cal school, had been asked to pre- America on foot. He averaged Other witnesses testifyin g for Urging Soft Line resident Was recently honored by during daytime hours. F. Wel- pare aii outline of courses in about 2.8 miles an hour by sail. the defendant were Milton Lithium Corp. at Bessemer City, " A recent survey showed that if West Concord, Minn., the ' ¦ ' ¦¦ ' A substitute constable is being these two areas. A pteliminary ly, N. - €. " .:-/ sought g draft of both parents smoke, a majority of salesman who sold the original durin an absence or ill- course content for the GIVE SEAGRAMS AM) BE SURE In Cuban Crisis He is Dr. R. B. Ellestad, vice ness of a regular constable. He two classes has been submitted to their children will also. GIMIH N-UTMl oil burner unit in 1949, and Miss quotable StWUHt-BISIItlEiiS COMPANY, NEW VORK CITY. SIENDED WHISKEY. 68 PROOF. 85S WMT* , a tenant of Mrs. WASHINGTON (AP)—Adlai E. president of the corporation and also would be available for callo the manpower agency. Oun notables: "A man Opal Foster American's foremost authority on during the daytime. Markle who observed the installa- Stevenson, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, has de- lithium chemistry. He is the step- IF ONE OR both of the coursef tion and heard conversations re- CLERK Robert Kies will ask axe approved for inclusion in the garding the installation. nounced as Inaccurate a maga- son of Mrs. G. B. Ellestad. zine article coauthored by a close The Lithium research laboratory Billy Oldenburg to be dog catch- vocational-technical school cur- Jurors are to;, return Wednes- er. Councilman Clarence Vetsch riculum they'd be conducted en- day morning when another case friend . of President Kennedy headed by Dr. Ellestad, liow bears his name. He came to the $7 mil- said cooperation of the residents is tirely at federal expense. Funds **%& to' be called for trial. which portrays Stevejison as hav- needed to control the problem by ing urged a soft line in the Cuban lion Bessemer City plant in 1960 would be provided to cover in- and took charge of the laboratory. signing complaints. structors' salaries, all equipment LAKE CITY SERVICES crisis. needed, building rental and al- Stevenson said the Saturday Ev- He joined lithium Corp. in 1942 Vetsch said La Crescent Town- LAKE CITY, Minn: (Special)— my when it was organized. ship residents are seeking new lowances for administrative ex- ening Post story "described pense. Nelson said that estimates To observe advent St. John's Lu- role in the Cuban affair in lan- The 62-year old chemist is list- dumping grounds arid proposed theran Church is conducting serv- both inaccurate and gross- ed in American Men of Science, that council meet with township Indicate the cost would come to E, guage cf fieefs to obtain a common dump- around $500 a student. ices each Wednesday. . Pastor ly misrepresenting my views." and in Who's. Who in America," A. GOeSfr' will be in charge ot ev- He received his Ph.D. in analy ing grounds , sharing maintenance The superintendent said that if ening services at 8 p.m. and Pas- The article; "lit Time of Cri- tical chemistry from the Univer- and rodent control. The council the classes •were organized they'd tor T. H. Albrecht will conduct sis," contends that Stevenson dis- sity of Minnesota. agreed to meet with the township be in session after regular school services in German at 3:45 p.m. agreed with .the President on the board follow their regular meet- hours and existing instructional offensive arms blockade and ing. facilities would be used, although "preferred political negotiation to MISSIONARY LEAGUE ELECTS some new equipment would have 7-Light American-Made the alternative of military ac- The Lutheran Women s Mission- THE signals at the new highway to be puivhasecl. INDOOR tion." ary League of St. Martin 's Luth- intersection at the south end of the Each class would meet approx- It was written by Stewart Al- eran -Churcll Friday elected the village have been the cause of several complaints. imately 6M: hours a day for nine CHRISTMAS TREE sop, the magazine's Washington following officers: First leader , months. Students might, how- LIGHTS Editor, and Charles Bartlett, Mrs. Robert Neujahr; second lead- They're inoperative frequently ever,: leave classes prior to the Washington correspondent . for the er, Mrs. Emil Geistfeld; secre- and markings are inadequate, for end of the nine-month period if Each light tary, Mrs. Stanley Girtler; treas- travelers. The council will write burns independently. Chattanooga Times and a long- they attained sufficent proficien- time friend of Kennedy. urer, Mrs. Kenneth Sheets; dele- the state highway department. cy before the completion of the Illustrating the article is a pho- gates, Mrs. Armin Deye and Mrs. JRobert Morrison, oil the long- term. SPECIAL ™C U.N, H. F. Broker ; alternates, Mrs. range planning committee, recom- tograph of the ambassador Mrs. Gerald While They Lartl which is captioned: "Stevenson Donald Schaeffer and mended an annual audit of the NELSON SAID that H wam't Frosch. Mayor Mishler agreed. BABB BROS. was strong during the U.N. de- village. defini' e whether a formal request but inside the White House Duxbury said a petition signed by for the two courses would be nv pD STORE bate, required number of persons f irst 576 E. 4th St. Phont 4007 the hard-liners thought he was PARISH PARTY the made but If any ma the soft." DODGE, Wis. (Special) — An and submitted directly to the state would probably-be for the course evening games party will be held could result in a state audit. The in stenography. in Pine Creek Sacred Heart par- village would pay the cost. Inquir- He was asked by directors ish hall Sunday at 8;30 p.m. Serv- ies will be made on the approxi- whether the training involved ¦ ing lunch will be the Mmes. An- mate cost. was now available ..through any ) ' " CwdshsdicLtf hmimaA, Sp wialA. \ selm Bambenek, John Gradzielew- other schools here. The superin- ski, Harry Herrick, Robert Her- tendent said that it undoubtedly rick, George Hoesley, Ben Jas- Hiawatha Birders to was but tliat the students who V Wide 8 zewski, Marcel Jaszewski, Paul See Three Movies would be enrolled probably I I 72" \ Jaszewski, Mary Kaldunski, Wal- wouldn't take such training on ter Kratch , Frank Peplinski Sr., Three movies will be shown at their own because of financial cir- - Joseph Servais, Lawrence Tosh- Wednesday's meeting of the Hia- cumstances. (INYLON NET - 29cj ) ner, Genevieve Tulius and Helen watha Valley Bird Club of Winona During the discussion of the 3$" Wide g\ Tulius. at Lake Park Lodge. proposal there was no objection ) 1 voiced by any board member for The meeting will begin at 7:30 ¦ ( p.m, and after the movies there'll organization of either of the _BH_B^_B^_^_BH^_JHJ^^_VH_|^H|i_^^^^^PV^|^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ V -39c j) be a discussion of bird identifica- classes. ( GLITTER NET SHOP WEDNESDAY 9 AM. TO 9 P.M. \ g All Coloral All the Trimmings! g\ l For Your Holiday tion, bird feeders and protection Because of the earth's centrifu- | Cooking Needs \ of small birds. Films to be shown gal force, 5,000 tons of cargo load- are "Migration of the Canada ed on a ship in the vicinity of the Goose," "Birds: How We Identify equator would weigh 25 tons more rx{%" Squaresea. 15c ( Candied j Them" and "Birds in Winter." ¦¦ \ FCI ¦¦ ¦ T¦ %°«> Black A Fruits at the poles. I H i Red, Green, White axA i Rod, green or natural QA. t The club's annu al Christmas will be discuss- Advtrtlsament I 1 lali l 72" Bolts, yd, .... $2.98 J | pineapple ring*. Lb.. . %rvl* I season bird count I I ed at the business meeting after j Citron Halve*. Lb 69* the program. The public is invit- GOLD RICK-RACK — FRINGES - BRAIDS \ \ ed. NEW WAY TO BE } 5 5 £ Oranga or Lemon J THREAD — BANDS ) j Petl. Lb SUDDENLY SUM ( ..60« j Are you a womin whose fhjnuo I " I h on the good side but misht look ) Specials On \ i Whole Red or Green : Close Out $| perfect? Youll bo thrilled by tho £f ¦ ¦ , new easy way sciencehas discov- V I ea. I / \ Cherries b 90c | ered for you to becomo Suddenly Dresses and Blouses Slim. If you're mora than IS jj Top Qualify I pounds overweight, then this Idea ( SiMS I__?_ I_!£_ I_1?JJL4_ IL5",*I _20 IJL8 I fJEH is not for you. If your wefoht prob- /I' m giving my favori+e\ I J Diced Fruit Cake lem falls within this range, then JSil pfl lHl i Mix with plenty of cherries \ you can rcnlizo a new, smoother Dr 2 3 12 13 ? i ¦ i and no grapefruit » I / !_"!LL _L L _ L ~ 1 ' ' __L 1 £<_.. figure today, with out *Het or Slw " | 32 | 34"" | 36 I 38 | j i peel. Lb OVC I Mm f !mitl§fU^m I exorcise. ' ( ^_ _ _ ~ J Suddenly Slim liar*all-new ldnd \ No. of j 1 1 J I \ best In teatoning ] of 4-or. girdle constructedof set- 5 1 | 3 | | ' 1 | Th* '/ Blouse. I 2 f I 4 SPICE ISLANDS J nice fibers. One itartling Innova- — - • tion is the sheer nylon front panel. [ T— ——— J \ SPICES i V ONE ONLYI SET OF ALUMINUM / This it permanently ntllFcncd by a WHIM VQU'U ||C-_ science procesjand cannot give or vKNOW< rOU ARtM A UUtil...^ Hew Crop ] sag. It's -unrounded by a sllmmtoff / Waterless Cook ware - $14.88 nma M ~i (NiMi h Nn mm curioAta action border, A featherstltohed. ) panel down each nklaof this girdles \ AN EXTRA SPECIAL BARGAIN SEE THIS FOR YOURSELFI / Nut Meats . will contour yonr hips If Oiey nra ? Whole Brazil*. Lb 9Bt I irtlle Itself h of: i Oregon Filbert* Lb $1.29 v n problem. Tho fl . iSfeSllIffll n "wonder" Lycra spandcx blend- Machine? Pecan Halve*. Lb. $1.59 s Buying A Sewing J 's n new power net consisting of; ( * J j Blanched AlmondsLb, Lb, $1.45 ) It proportioned to film he'r legs In a _Jl M8_ Complete Portables with attachments at low as. . . $49 ( Walnut Halves. $U» nnd. ipnndex It m\wWj ^r flfL** K\ \ j nylon, acetate smooth veil of loveliness. New JB^v jlSy as $109 ^ focls like nothing on but has such i(Ri^k*w[fiSw I Froo Arm Sewing Machines as low j SHUTTLE BUS ' you_r ( Zante Currant*. Box 25* \ FREE slimming strength, it gives To St«M* and Builim i District ' posslM* J White Raisins. Box 33« j figure «verytblng tiats J Dromedary Dale*. f f v with a foundation. I 1-Lb . Box 49* J r^j^^tf-5. r?f oviMtairt "Suddenly SHm" 1« tho »<** i Dried Pear*. 12-Oz. Pkg. Sf« ) ^&*vmJQdPr PARKINO achievement of tho deilguer. genius. OJga. Do "Suddenly STIm" today t» I (>l__-« und ''•• nop and ip«clol j pantyvenlon.Ife*. I rolt informollon. j either gltdlaor ¦ " I Nain*--^—.—— I tured »t ^ fj I AiWrtM- ¦ I ^/ ^i ^ Y l n e, \ .—— NASH'S WOMAN'S SHOP Avenue ~ \ cily \ 214 Mankato ¦| { Fourth at Canter Phflna 5458 8 Slot* No. U j SHOP WEDNESDAY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. ^pj tf ^ ^ _w_^)^_^tM)^»v_M*va()»t(Kft.\ DEN NIS THE MENACE DEAR ABBY: Where There's Life There Is Hope j t * ^^^^ammmmm\mmW ^^^^^T^t^^B ^^^^BSf 9B^^^ V9HHJ_^_^_^_l_^_B_i-l_8i_^_HK Wm\ By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN _¦ _^M , ' ¦ " A\mm\m\ mmW' W\ rn Wrn Wa%W _^_H m~-^ammmmmm\\\ ^^^^^^' am\\\\\\\\m^am\lmm\\W' * &* ^ ^ vfflM^^^^Hjj^BgH^H^. ' " ^L . DEAR ABBY: My sister and I have lived together for 15 m\\\vA if|kl#P Hf^^^^ . j^^^B^f? - „-*. / gj^HHHH^- m years and have been very close. We have mutual friends and have always gone to church , concerts,, plays, etc., together, j " Now I find myself alone and no one to share my life with. B Ammm\\\\m\\\\\\"'* ^^i ' __^_fl_^^nflHH_kra^^^^^^^^l^^V W ' ' A month ago my sister married a man after a courtship n .. . ^^^^^^m&sfc^fre **? 4$9_^_^_^_^_H_H_s_^uSp _i^_^_i^_i^_il_^_i^K" '^ft _¦ ^ ^^^ of only six weeks! A few years back I had two proposals of _^_B I H fl_^_k. ^_ft ammmmmmmmmmmWSSttsB&'* f/ *^*." * J^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^HK9¥ ' ' ^^_^_^_HI_^_^_^_I__^_^_^ HK ' marriage and I turned them down because my sister did not want to be left alone. I am very hurt because of the way she lias treated me. Am I wrong to think she should have refused this man because I turned down trwo proposals for her? My health "? LONESOME is not good and I need her. Am I being unfair Hj ^^^Hffl ^^ DEAR LONESOME: You are wrong. Your sister had every "***"' rf %_B_H_S_&3_£ ' marry, and so did you. Don't be bitter. Perhaps now ^A ^^^^^ Jaaammmmmmam WamjB&'b&XlL ?$^_^_R_Hq4&t& * "" ^am\^am\mmmm\\m\mW ^am\\ right to Tm\\\. 3_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_HHBH&' <_»._4_^_^_^_^_l_HKra_KBE_S_!W s » ^_^_^_^_^GF ' ^B that you are alone you , too, . will be plucked out of the gar- ^_R ^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_B_i'>*' '4_H_'l_^_^_^_^_HB_H_3&!_B&_&_h_rafl^_^_Nilr 'i*3 ^_^_^_^_HT - ^_L den of late bloomers . K HKa - * <_SBK^III^^^^flNHHiHP% «^* ^^^r ^b ^fc ^^^^^^^^^^m^am\\\\\\\\\m\\\\mm\\\\\\\mmmm* _,*^ ^ S8am\m\\ JJ^ ^HFv ^gSflK ' ^4^ HV :^ft DEAR ABBY : There is a woman in our ¦ JH^^^^^^^^^HHsfc ,*" ) ^&*a8ma\w&$*mmma\\WiB'J -' ScaHri * /^ * _Hr H neighborhood who just burns all of us up. She ¦ has a child who attends the same school as B ^APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kot^ky
Hundreds of happy First National Save rs received valu- able Ch ristmas Club checks in the mail recently. These smart folks "planned ahead." Their Christmas worries are over for 1 962 . . . . and if you act now, yours can be taken care of just as easily next year.
MARY WORTH By Saunders and Erntt ' ' • ' ' ' ' w " ^ . .I i-¦ i—i-nMI)fi MiirMi _^_ I . .
_^_ m _^_ NANCY By Ernie Bushmiller ' ^^^BB^*J m\r^^Bmm\ aW^^»\\mm\m
CA ^^^^^^^^A^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^¦¦HH^R^^Km^_ri^T4 - fegj^SI^-^t-W-A'^-lM-fe-.A ^Lm n^^ppr^ * ^ \ i-Js?§l$r ^_^_HK> _H
REX MORSAN, M.D. By Do, Curfl-, SHJ^KB^SH^^^ qwiiBi ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Hf^^^^^g ^^ ^&A^Jfcl' * JW$^_H_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_K
WAKK .KAIL By M DodJ
I t t THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF WINONA
Member Federal Deposi t Insurance Corporation
j_^_ , "^/W *^^^^Ai^^V^i , ^^^^* »,*Ni >^^^^V ^W%/\_ «i J ^r L ,_Oi_fl_y^i _. ^Ai^^^^_^^^ *^>^^*^ ' */^/*^^ * ' * * ^- w»v_^> w Farmer Held in PEOPLE IN THE NEWS the Red guards are nicknamed, Goodhue County Missile Workers knew how to get through the tan- Require Treatment gle of wire barricades on Berlin's Barn Fire Series Boy, 12 Injured northern border because he was TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — More on duty there. GOODHUE, Minn. — A 31-year- than 50 Titan missile workers re- old Belle Creek farmer, Harold C. quired treatment Monday when Malloy, was bound over to District Trying to Save Dog Court here Friday on a first de- a short circuit caused a brief gree arson count after preliminary By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS says he plans to go right back up fire and filled an underground silo bearing in municipal court. Robert Marshall Bradley, 12, ol again as soon as he is able—de- east of Tucson with smoke and Richmond, Va., was taken to a spite a 2,000-foot plunge after his acrid fumes. Malloy, ¦ who was returned to jail ¦ ¦-¦ when he failed to post $5,000 bond, hospital with cuts and bruises af- parachute was collapsed accident- _ - ter trying in vain to save his col- ally by a fellow jumper. LOANS is charged with setting fire to the barn of Leo Ryan in Belle Creek lie pup from being killed by a Buck, who suffered a back in- German Guard, Baby up to Township Feb. 4, I960. Ryan owns freight train. jury, was listed in satisfactory Flee to West Berlin a farm bordering Malloy's. A boxcar bumped the boy on the condition¦ in a Groom, Md., hospi- He was picked up by Goodhue head as he tried to pull his in- tal. • ' BERLIN (AP)—An East Ger- Sheriff Paul Zillgitt in October jured pet, Laddie, from the tracks man border guard changed out of where Robert and several com- The other diver, Wayne Bell, 21, BLAIR SCHOOL ADDITION ' when, the sheriff said, he admit- managed to get his parachute his uniform, tucked his baby un- . . . . Six new faces west; this newest addition, south, and a panions had been playing. The der his arm and led six refugees classrooms are included in the ted setting fire to three barns in open and landed with only minor two-story addition previous addition is to the east, not shown on the county two years ago, includ- dog, with a hind leg and the other to sanctuary in West Berlin today. at Blair, Wis., bruises.¦ High School. It extends left from picture. The $167,000 project includes kitchen ing Eyan's. foot severed by the train, was de- - ¦ West police said the Vopo, as stroyed later. the high school. The second floor ' ' ' 600 rooms (Mrs. are and lunch room remodeling. Oscar Haugen Zillgitt said Malloy is ¦ Sheriff • . ¦; completed and in use and first floor rooms will photo) suspected as the arsonist who .• * • 21 Months , 22, sky diver , Wheel Chair Hunter • be completed by Christmas. The main building started several other barn fires in Vernon Buck a Goodhue County in 1960 and one Bags Deer to Repay as recently as early October. in W. Va. Over 25,000 loans mads Malloy is married and father Bea rskin Hats Replaced HARRISVILLE. W. Va. Wl BUSINESS MIRROR Winter Maneuvers of five children. — to satisfied clients sines 1939' At Buckingham Palace Ted Cox, a Harrisville Jeweler In Central Germany similar maneuvers for other units LONDON (AP>— Sentries at who hunts from a wheel chair, bagged a deer on the opening HANAU. Germany (AP)-U.S. throughout the winter. Buckingham Palace and other ED GRIESEL Army tanks crunched across the In the season opener, running royal homes will discard their day of the season in West Virgin- Perennial Battle frozen ground of central Germany through Friday, the 3rd Armored tall bearskin hats for the regular ia. today in the season's first winter- Division has pushed across the guards cap. Cox has shot his season limit weather maneuvers for American ice-fringed Main River, using a The war office said it was easi- of one deer three times in the LOAN CO. troops in Europe. pontoon bridge and pontoon rafts. er to patrol in caps than the bear- past four years. He made his kill skins the Guards have worn since Monday about IS miles south of A. R. (Art) KNAPP 170 E. 3rd St. Starts Over Taxes The exercise, involving some Opposing the . advance is the 4th CUSTOM TAILOR - OVER 1815. here. SiEBRKCHT'S By SAM DAWSON The rub . comes -when tax cuts 30,000 troops, will be followed by Armored Group. the battle of Waterloo in ***** *i* »**» V*W**W^V%*"¥*>*VVVV%r.\j-v-v-(j-\/v>j AP Business News Analyst mean still higher Treasury defi- NEW YORK (AP) -- Business cits. This brings up the ticklish and the administration are draw- question of holding down govern- ing up their lines today for an- ment spending and how and if this other round in the perennial battle can be done, or even if it should over taxes. At conferences here be done. and in Washington the two sides A call for "less heavy reliance _are.JHiQin.ng their views. The de- on taxes which are imposed on bate is as much over the kind of business as such" is made today taxes as over the high rates. at the Tax Foundation meeting by The final stands may be made Prof. C. Lowell Harisa of Colum- clear wien the President address- bia University. He says Congress ^B^.^.^.^.^.^W B^^^ f^^t^^^' d> '& k ; J,' es a group of businessmen here should "try to reduce rather than ^^^^ to enhance the deadweight bur- Dec. 14 and perhaps reveals the (tax) forms his proposals to the new den of compliance costs on Congress business, as well as on the public will take. generally." The costs include the At today's hearing In Washing- fees of tax counsel and the sal- ton businessmen are telling the aries of tax managers, as well as Internal Revenue Service their business activities changed or objections to and perplexities hampered by complying with the about the new rules it proposes tax laws. on expense account deductions. But another speaker at the con- Commissioner Mortimer M. Cap- ference, Rep. Thomas B. Curtis, lin says the hearing well may R-Mo., says real federal tax . re- lead to a relaxation of some of form can come only from expendi- the proposed crackdown. ture cuts and the prospects for In New York, businessmen and this in 1963 or in 1964 he calls federal legislators are discussing grim. the wider problem of tax reform Businessmen generally appear at a meeting of the Tax Founda- to be plugging for a return to a tion, a nonprofit research body 47 per cent corporate income tax long dedicated to seeking lower rate. This was raised to 52 per tax burdens and less government cent during the Korean War emer- . spending. . : . . gency and renewed annually since And the complications of the tax then. The return to 47 per cent rules decreed in the Revenue Act would be automatic June 30, if of 1962 will be discussed in Wash- Congress doesn't vote otherwise in ington next week at a meeting of the meantime. business executives, their tax at- torneys, and federal tax adminis- Such a drop In the corporate trators, sponsored by the Federal rate would give business about Bar Association and Foundation $2.5 billion more to invest in ex- and The Bureau of National Af- pansion, or in building reserves, fairs Inc. or in paying dividends. How much would go directly into economic All hands agree fhat they'd like growth is moot. But business lead- to see the nation's economy grow ers say such a boost to . profits faster and that the burden of high after taxes would increase the taxation may be holding this back. pace notably.
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Onvm TnUin OCTO »- «Y BOXED TOWEL SETS V 25.95 Sunbeam control skillet 18.99 % J W^YI & *° ^ ^ U ^ ^ \\ 3 8oC Modern floral, Ivlr. and Mrs, his and her 1 19.95 G.E, coffee maker 14.99 ,J, j£m£r&A\KFor parHe i, •chool. O^^ « ,' • Imported Swiss hare $# ¦ fabrict in •CU designs. 1.98 . 2.98 3.98 . W U / ^9L >ie» dainry pat, CLEAN DEAL! | J !r%' J HHHfl ^& "^ ' ^ That's what I'd call the service I just arra nged for on MILEAGE Fuel Oil. Nice low price. Dependable delivery. Easy Budget Payment Plan. And all on a fuel that's LITER- ALLY clean because It contains a special additive. "Burn- Clean." (Which assures me of clean, efficient heat and trouble- free operations of my entire heating system.) Prelty clean deal, huh? Look nt all tho ways MILEAGE gives you your MONEY'S WORTH in fuel oil: —Specinl "Burn-Clean" additive automatically and continuousl y keeps your entire heating system — from fuel tank to burner ™ SWEATERS -j nozzle — clean nnd free-flowing. 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None ol the other Southern Cal Oklahoma, which will oppose Unbeaten , untied Southern Cali- The rankings remained un- titlists, however, boasted perfect 'Bama in the Orange Bowl clas- fornia was voted the 1962 national changed from a week ago with records. The last such USC club sic, returns to the Top Ten after collegiate football championship Mississippi's first all-winning in 1932 (10-0) lost the champion- a three year absence.* The Soon- in the final Associated Press poll team in history finishing third , ship race tp one of Michigan's ers made the grade 11 straight unbeaten but once-tied Texas mighty "punt , pass and prayer seasons in the period 1948 through today, the first West Coast team " ^ ' to be so honored since 1939. fourth, T961 champion Alabama elevens. " 1958. As New Power fi fth, followed by Arkansas, Lou- The Top Ten with first-place ; MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Minne- ahead 38-34 early in the second sota's basketball Gophers, off to half before Minnesota hit its The Trojans, who completed isiana State , Oklahoma, . Penn The poll results sets up a Rose ¦votes in parentheses: perfect season by defeating Bowl meeting between the No. 1 1. Southern California <«) 50» a high - powered start in the strike. their State and Minnesota in that order. ». Wisconsin t$) .,....«2B Notre Dame 25-0 Saturday, polled and 2 ranked teams. Southern 3. Mississippi (1) .....393 1962-63 cage season, can relax a The Gophers cracked in seven 509 points to 428 for runner-up Southern Cal was tht last Far Cal's Pasadena opponents , the Big 4. Texas ...J43 bit now while awaiting their next straight points to regain the lead squad capture 5. Alabami (1) m outing, Dec. 14 here with Bradley. Wisconsin and drew 42 of a pos- West to a national Ten kings from Wisconsin, have 4. Arkansas ., ...118 at 41-38 just 5 minutes into the sible 52 fjrst-place votes. title 23 years ago. In fact the men hit the Top Ten for the third time 7. Louisiana Stale .164 The Gophers crushed a highly- second half and held the upper The balloting was done by of Troy now own four of. the five in five seasons. ». Oklahoma ...... 173 respected Kansas State team Mon- hand the rest of the distance. slopes. ». Penn Stats (a) ...... 1J5 sportswriters and broadcasters crowns worn on the Pacific Alabama , Mississippi and Ar- 10. Minnesota .. »l day night 73-63 to establish them- The Minnesota advantage who are members of the AP poll The powerhouses of coach How- kansas—the latter two matched in Others receiving votes, listed alphabet selves as one of the early-season reached 61-53 with 6:06 to go Points are determined on ard Jones also were rated su- the Sugar Bowl—have reached the Ically: Dartmouth, Duke. Ogorgla Tech, board . Missouri, North-western, Ohio State, Ore- midlands powers. when Eric Magdanz sank a basket. a basis of 10 for first, 9 for second preme in 1928 and 1931. Stanford select circle for the third straight gon Stat*, Washington. Kansas State had been ranked i^ The Gophers then salted it away as a top contender for the Big by liitting 12 free throws down Eight championship, along with the stretch as Kansas State fouled Colorado. But the Gophers, once desperately tryuig to' get the ball, they got .their offense straightened out , made almost easy work of the Magdanz, the Gophers' senior Wildcats -in the second half to captain , led both teams in scoring Pull win handily. with 20 points, but it was the Redmen Out 81-80 Win K-State was on top 32-30 at the work of sophomores Mel Northway half as 7-foot center Roger Sut- and- Terry Kunze'. ' that provided tner sank, a field goal just before the big Minnesota lift. intermission. Tip Pointers The Wildcats then jumped The two yearlings each scored 14 points, while senior guard Bob State Seeks Bateman chipped in with 11 and Tom McGrann 8. In 2 Overtimes Suttner led Kansas State with 3rd Tonight By AUGIE KARCHER 16, forward Gary Merriott added 14 and Jim Johnson 10. Daily N«ws Sports Editor In other Big Ten action, Drake Frank Meekins, a 5-11 sopho- defeated Indiana 87-76 and Arizona At Cedar Falls more guard , played only 22 sec- surprised Wisconsin 51-46. College goes aft- onds . of basketball Monday night Purdue nosed out Detroit 73-72, Winona State at Terrace Heights. As a matter er its third victory in four starts Ohio State trampled St. Louis 84- of fact , he touched the ball only ROAD BLOCK . . . Jack Ulwelling, Stevens Point guard, 59, Michigan upset Creighton 81- tonight when it invades Cedar once. , , for a non-conference extends an arm to try to block a shot by St. Mary's Al Williams 62 and Northwestern squeezed by Falls Iowa But St. Mary's Redmen today Pittsburgh 57-55. test aganist State College of Iowa. are still taJking about an 81.-80 in Monday night's game at Terrace Heights. William s was stopped hold a 76-65 win on his attempt, but he finished with 22 points Kmsaa Stale («) . MlnnejotB («) The Panthers double overtime victory against , including a basket fg ff pf fp over Macalester in their only out- Stevens Point fg ft pf tp — and they can with two seconds to play in a second overtime to give the Redmen Tuesday, December 4, 1961 Marriott 6 2 114 Magdani « « 010 ing this season. thank Meekins, among others, for an 81-80 triumph. (Daily News: Sports Photo) ¦¦ ¦• .;¦ • ¦ - Murrell 10 1 8 McGranr . 4 0 3 8 the triumph, their second in as Pago 14. . Sutfner 5 « 3 16 Norlhway 6 1 114 "THEY'RE about the same siie Moss CO] 0 Bateman 4 S 311 many games this season. Peithman 131 7 Kunie 4 * 3H as we are, but rugged and rough," Gottfrld 0 O 4 0 Llnehan 0 0 0 » said Dr. Bob Campbell, WSC IT WAS Meekins' theft of tho CLEVELAND DRAFTS MUNSEY Slmont 0 O 1 0 Davis 0 0 1 » Cohan 0 O O 0 Jensen . 0 II 1 coach. "They have fast guards ball from the Pointers who had Johnson 5 0 J10 Pederson till and like to run whenever pos- possession and an 80-79 lead that Matusiak 0 T 11 Stang 0-1-0 -J Miller 1 O 0 4 Kessler 1 0 1! sible." gave the Redmen their chance. Baxter 0 2 0 2 Druskln 0 0 0 » Campbell's Warriors were im- "I sent him in with seconds to pressive Saturday night in rout- go and told, him to get the ball ," Totals M'M 11 62' < Totals' 15 23 15 71 ing Platevffie State 85-71 after said St. Mary's Coach Ken Wilt- gen: "He did it! How about Vikings Pick Off Top having suffered a defeat Friday at Stevens Point. that?" , "The boys did a nice job Meekins broke up a pass and Pla-tteville,H said Camp- flipped back to Jim Clarkin who Huskies Pushed against let fly with a one-hander from bell. "They bandied themselves ¦ the press and their about 2fl feet out. The shot was well against to the right of the mark and Big Tackles: Bell Dunaway gave us only a little rone press Al Williams, the Redmen 230-pound Earth trouble at the start." pile-driver, standing beneath the CHICAGO (AP) - Two of the Van Brocklin after Minnesota had area. But in honesty to myself and Back fo The Warrior defense also was LUCAS THE COACH . . . Three-time all-America Jerry Lucas, basket, greeted the rebound , with nation's top collegiate tackles as drafted him, Dunaway was non- rny family I'll have to consider pleasing' as it kept the Pioneers who is finishing work on his degree at Onio State, is surrounded open arms and stuffed it in with far as professional scouts are con- commital about his preference of all offers." off balance, forcing: hurried shots. by his squad of Buckeye freshman players durin g an intrasquad two seconds to play for the win. cerned were nabbed by the Minne- a-'team; when it comes to signing. Bobby, who is married and has game Monday night at Columbus , Ohio. Lucas, Besides Meekins and Williams, sota Vikings on the first two As is generally the case, he is a son , was drafted by the AFL's With 1st Defeat STATE offensively left littte to who is a member rounds of the annual National looking for the best offer . "Warriors hit 45 of the Cleveland Piper professional basketball team, is helping Wiltgen had other heroes—among Dallas Texans. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS be desired. The them .Mike Maloney and Tom Hall. Football League draft here Mon- per cent from the field In the out this winter in the coaching department. The Pipers are not day. "I' m so shook up, I just don't The Vikings' filial five choices: St. Cloud state was brought first half and 49 per cent In the competing and are attempting to join the National Basketball MALONEY , with his mates trail- The Vikings , selecting third know whatio say," Dunaway said, 16, tackle Rex Mirich , Arizona rudely back to earth by South second 20 minutes. "Yes, we were Stai& at Flagstaff ; 17, back Tom while Concordia Association. Lucas' team is winless in two starts. (AP Photofax ) ing 73-70 with 25 seconds to play among the NFL clubs, picked Jim Bell also was not committing Dakota State, sharp," Campbell grinned, "and in ihe first overtime, hit a driving Dunaway, 6-feet-5, 260-pound behe- himself about signing, although ho Murisex^ Concord, W, Va. ; 18, trounced Bemidji State arid St. we hustled!" lay up, was fouled moth from Mississippi, as their No. said he was "very happy about tackle Tom Mclntyre, St. John's; Mary's nipped Stevens Point . The State mentor plans no and calmly mesh- 1 choice. it" (being drafted by the Vikings) . IS, back Frank Horvath , Youngs- Wis., in Monday night state col- changes in his starting five j d the free throw Bell added, "I've had a good town ,- Ohio; 20, quarterback Mall- lege action . against the Panthers. Dick Pap- to tie the score No. 2 was Minnesota' s Bobby career at Minnesota and 3 like the ow Kent, Aiburn. ; enfuss, Clruck Weisbrod and Lyle and force a sec- Bell, the 6-4, 217-pound winner of St, Cloudywhich had won four Papenfuss will comprise the front Packers Get End ond five-minute the (Jutland Trophy this year as straight in convincing fashion , ran line with Arlie Klinder and Mark period. the nation's top interior lineman TWO SIGN ON SPOT into far more than it could handle Dilley in the backcouit. H a 1 h w h o arid an anchor in the rugged in the Jackrabbits, who bounced Gary Peterson who sat out Sat- wound up with 24 Gopher forward walls for three the Huskies 79-65 at Brookings, urday with a bad ankle, is healthy points for game years. S.D. again and -will make the trip. Dar- To Plug Defense honors, hit 12 of The Vikings also picked off Go- Tom Black scored 22 points for pher end John Campbell on the rell Schuster, another frosh, suf- CHICAGO W—The Green Bay those in the fourth SDSC, Sid Bostic 17 and Nick fered a back bump in a frosh time around they took center Carl- quarter and three lltH round as the drawing for Rams Gr^ Brod 15. Best St. Cloud , which Packers continued their hunt for ton Simons of Stanford and guard negotiating rights droned on game, but has been pronounced defensive line help Monday while on free throws in trailed 43-ai at halffime, could get physically fit. Lionel Aldridge of Utah State. Maloney overtime play. through the night. was 10 from Brad Johnson. naming end Dave Robinson of After Dunaway and Bell, the This will be the Warriors only Tackle Dan Grimm of Colorado On the defensive side, the bril- Gary Larsen scored 18 points to ' Penn State as their No. l choice liant work of sophomore center Vikings took Texas fullback Ray in Grid Draff game this week. They play host in the National Football League and guard Jack Cvercko of North- Poage third , Northwestern end CHICAGO (AP)—The National ington's Ray. Mansfield (Philadel- lead Concordia to its 86-56 triumph to River Falls State next Monday western- were fifth round Jim Rockers against Pointer pivot Bemidji , while Frank John- player draft. choices, Dick Ritzenthaler was a thing to Paul Flatlcy fourth , and Pitts- Football league labored into the phia); Oregon's Steve Barnett over night. "Robinson is the boy we want- while ends Jan Barrett of Fresno behold. burgh tackle Gary Kaltenbach wee small hours today to com- (Chicago); and Miami of Ohio's son and Keith Bangs each added "He had that guy talking Beaver s ed ," Coach Vince Lombard! said State and John Simmons of Tulsa to himself ," said Wiltgen. "Yeh, fifth. plete its marathon draft of 280 Tom Nomina (Los Angeles). . 11. Ken Hanson led the after the Packers finally got a were selected in the sixth round. he did get a little tired in the Minnesota got no 6th and 7th collegians. Before the last draw There were very few quarter- with 13. Pro Basketball Halfback Gary Kroner, a place- choices, having traded them to was made two of the first round hacks left in the draft after Baker choice in a slow-moving session. end. " That was when Ritzenthale r , Six gamas are oh tap for state NBA "He can play offensive end , de- kicking specialist for Wisconsin's got his most points, Rockers had Cleveland and New York . picks already had been signed, was picked . Stovall and Alexand- , Rose Bowl-bound Badgers, was limited him to Detroit and Baltimore grabbed er were the first halfbacks select- college teams tonight. Winona is MONDAY'S RESULTS fensive end linebacker, offensive three baskets in On the eighth round, Ihe Vikings of Iowa , Northern No games scheduled. guard or tackle." selected in the seventh round along the first 30 minutes. a pair of Ohio State tackles and ed. Pat Richter, Wisconsin 's fine at State College TODAY'S GAMES with back Turnley Todd of Vir- The Redmen, took Jim O'Mahoney, a Miami of signed them on the spot. The Li- pass-catching end , went to Wash- South Dakota Slate at Moorhead, Detroit vs. Syracuse at Mew York. at times erratic Florida back. Then came Bob Bemidji , Gustavus Ad- Los Angeles at New York. Robinson, who stands 6-3 and ginia. with 26 mechanical errors , forged ons picked Daryl Sanders, a 6- ington and Tom Hutchinson , Ken- Mayville at Chicago at St. Louis. weighs 230, still was available to to a nine-point lead at 34-25 with Hoover, Florida back, 9th ; Terry foot-5 237-pounder from Mayfield tucky end , rejouied his former olphus at Wartbu rg, Iowa, Eau WEDNESDAY'S OAMES Other Packer choices were: back Kosens, Hofstra back, 10th ; Camp- Claire at Hamline and Wahpeton New York vs. Chicago at Detroit. the Packers after 13 other clubs Keith Kinderman , Florida State; less than two minutes to go in the Heights, Ohio, and the Colts came coach Blanton Collier now on the Boston at Detroit. made a first round choice. Green half. But the Pointers bell; John Skoplan , Mississippi up with Bob Vogel , another 6-5 staff of the Cleveland Browns. at St. John's. back Louis Rettine, Villanova; , who came Southern back, 12th ; Dave O'Brien ABL Bay drew last as the NFL cham- tackle Bill Freeman, Mississippi here unbeaten in two starts/ cut giant from Massilon , Ohio. MONDAY'S RESULTS pion . it to 34-31 with a quick burst Boston College tackle, 13th ; Ralph No game-s scheduled. Southern ; guard Earl McQuiston , be- Ferrissi , Southern Connecticut TODAY'S GAMES fore the intermission horn. Terry Baker, the cover boy The Packers, who had seven Iowa; end Marv Fleming, Utah ; back , 14th ; and John Murio, Whit- Long Beach at Pittsburgh. extra selections in the first eight back D a r y 1 e Larnonica , quarterback from' Oregon Stale Chicago at Philadelphia. Notre "THIS KIND of game may help worth end , 15th. and Heisman Award winner , was WEDNESDAY'S GAMES rounds because of previous play- Dame ; tackle Joe Kellu, Tulauie ; Minnesota Gopher halfback Bill Long Beach at Kansas City. deals, took halfback Tom Brown to make men out of us," sa id the No. 1 pick . The left-handed ¦ er linebacker James Holler , South Wiltgen, who didn 't let himself Munsey was picked off by the passer went to the Los Angeles of Maryland in the second round. Carolina; tackle Joe Breen , Vir- Cleveland Browns on the fourth Ramon Mejias led (he they draft ed get carried away with too much Rams, last in the Western Con- Houston In the third round ginia Tech; back* Collidge Htmt, enthusiasm, He deplored the er- round , while Vic Lopour , Huron , ference, who have three quarter- Colts in stolen bases last season tackle Tony Liscio and Dennis Texas Tech ; end Thurman W alk- S.D., back went to the San Fran- with 12. He was Claridge of Nebraska. The next rors his Redmen made and was backs — rookies Roman Gabriel caught five times. er, Illinois; and guard Luis Her- critical of some individual defen- cisco 49ers on the 10th round. and Ron Miller, and veteran Zeke nandez, Texas Western. sive performances. The Vikings lost a coin flip to Bratkowski. It was a bruising game under St. Louis and drew third on the Four first-round picks of the first round. They then alternated as the boards where the Redmen had rival American Football League , ^B|pj same price rogular filth. Palm Beach Winner the better of the going. St, Mary 's between picking second and third made Saturday in Dallas , also | opened up the Pointer man-to-man on subsequent rounds. were drafted in the first round Moves Up a Notch defense to get virtually all of its by the NFL. They were halfbacks baskets cither on layups or short Minnesota was set to tako half- Jerry Stovall of Louisiana Slate, ATTENTION back Jerry Stovall of LSU on the DUNEDIN, Fl'a. (AP) - Dave shots around the keyhole. picked by St. Louis and the New Raga n, winner of the West Palm The Pointers, on the other, hand , first round , but he was grabbed York Titans ; nnd Kermit Alex- Beach Open last week, moved up were sharp from outside where by the Cardinals and the Vikings ander of UCLA , Snn Francisco Compact Car Owners! , a notch in the list of top ten Pro- John Krueger hit for 21 poinls and make Dunaway their top pick. and Buffalo; and tackle Ed Budde fessional Golf Association money Jack Ulwelling 12. Ritzenthaler The Vikings last year drafted as of Michigan Slate, Philadelphia winners. wound iip with 20. futures for signing this year back and the Dallas Texans. Terry Cagaanan of Utah Stale, Come In NOW and SAVE Up to ! His $2,800 prize money put him Stevens Point led 14-13 at one stage In the early going and trail- tackle John Contoulis of Connecti- Baker .was the 12th-round selec- in eighth position with a total of cut and tackle Junior Hawthorne $36,327. He has now won two ed the Redmen until seven min- tion of Sail Diego in the AFL 50% on Factory Seconds!!! a utes to go in the game. Bill Nel- of Kentucky. which apparently felt he would tournaments and finished in the Dunaway, 21, played on Ole Miss top five nine times , according to son hit a pusher to tie the score play in the NFL or Canada . Cllvl ) Suburbanite Rayon 4 nt 51-51 and put the Pointers nhend teams that won 2!) games, lost one There were many duplicate •JUAJ.J figures released by PGA head- and tied one in his three, years, t S White. Tobeloss ^ quarters. seconds later with an easy lay up choices by the two leagues which after a ball theft , lie is considered nn outstanding now must battle for contract sig- Jack Nicklaus also ' swapped pro prospect as cither an offen- natures along with the Canadian p|j' Tax ] places with idle Bill Casper by TWO BASKETS by Hall g«v» St. sive or defensive lineman. He was League. <old sour rmsii recipe. 6.00 x 13 5.90 x 15 COON Redmen got possession with two of eliglbilty left although their rjjj j • seconds left , but the Pointers stole 'Sultan of Swat' original class graduates. 6.40 x 13 6.00 x 15 i the pass-in and Ulwelling got off Among the NFL futures of 1901 , a clean shot that missed. BALTIMORE (AD - Willie who played college ball this sea- 7.00 x 13 6.40 x 15 Mays, San Francisco Giants out- son , were : 1 ] St, Mary'i (ID Sttvtni Point (»0 > fo ffpt fp toll pHp fielder , wns named "Sultan of 1$JW fa SKINS Burgman 1 0 S 4 Krutflir » 1 4 31 Quarterbacks Glynn Gritting o-f 7.00 x 14 6.50 x , !5 Swat" for IWS2 today by the Mnry- j Hall I I ill Dohman 0 o o 0 land Professional Baseball Pluy- Mississippi (New York) , Sonny Rockiri l Mil IIItitn'or f 3 110 Wllllimt 10 l in Nation loot ers Association, dibits , TCI .J- and half- ABIN Clarkin 5 t I II U (walling 11 ill Mays will receive Ihe Gold back Roger Knchmnn of l'cnsi G STILL WANTED Maloney 11)3 Oann 1014 Crown Award at Ihe association 's State (St. Louis) . ' AAaaMnt 0 0 0 0 Nation 10 14 The Bourbon Man s Bourbon ^frfeia PyflewiHI 1115 T«mli 10 3) annual "Tops in Sports" banquet ..Tlie pros conceiilniled osi VaUlka 0 0 0 » Lawottkl 0 o o 0 hero Jan. 14, tackles in the early rounds until S. Weisman Pouba 1 J 3 7 NELSON Maya is Ihe sixth recipient of they had cleaned out. jm«st of the . ! Tolali IS 1111 SI rl anion 10 0 1 miK»tfw" the nwnril named in memory of big boys. Twelve of the first 211 ^iB-w r^ TIRE SERVICE I Total* 31 I 30 to Bnbo Ruth , a Bultitnore native. wero dickies. Among them were: & Sons Error a i SI. Mary ' t It , Slavani Point M. [ Fourth and Johnson Phone 2306 ' 4S0 Wast 3rd FTMi St. Mary'a II, Itavoni Point 17. Mays batted .304 for the cham- Mississippi' s Kd Duiiilwny and ST. MARVS J4 31 J l- ll pion Gianl.'i of Hie National Minnesota 's Hobby Bell—both by STiTZtt 'WELiEB , America 's Oldest Family DIsUllory-Estnblls liedl Winona STKVBNS POINT )1 M I 7—M League, clouted 40 home Miniiesnla ' ' Louisville, Ky., 1649 Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey ; Olllclalai Ralph Liahy and Eddli Spen- runs and s Vikings ; Purdue s • • 90 Proof L. I . : «J —. - ~ I , car. drove In 141. runs. Don Brunun (St. Louis) , Wash- AAU Draws Knapik leads State Frosh Bow suffered a 63-61 defeat at the handi , " o( Watkins. Goodhue Randolph i Basketball ; To Watkins - 63^61 Bruce Hartert hit 15 and Bill Holus 13 for Watkins which led Fire for Ban Darrell Schuster scored 19 points 32-25 at the Intermission. ' ¦ ¦ ' ' Merchants to ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦: .¦. . . . : and Clair Platen 17 to lead the . . . 1 Stores Winona State freshmen in their Holy Cross and Syracuse first Centennial Favorites AIT opening game last week-end. They played football In 1905. • Of Trackmen Goodhue and Randolph are rat- Wabash a lost four of Its six top 2.955 Series Dequcsni 12, Kent Stat* SO. DETROIT (AP ) _ ed by loop eoaches as the teams Northwestern 57, Pittsburgh 55. The AAU's players through, graduation last Don Knapik and Red Chrrstoph- Pann ttata f?, Lehigh 4». action in declaring a large group to beat in the Centennial Confer- season and will be starting the erson socked 600 Colby st, Maine 5J. «3nce 1962*63 session with counts and SOUTH of athletes ineligible for compet- . three veterans. George Kratz and Art Kern posted N.C. Stall S<, CKmson 51 Goodhue, who posted a 11-1 rec- They are led by 5-10 juni or guard- 1 «corsla 19, Clladel 71. ing In unsanctioned meets met errorless series to highlight Mon- Oa, Ttch 10, Fruman 7J. (ot) ord last season, has five veterans forward Jim Glynn -xho coach day night bowling action. with resounding criticism today returning to coach Bob" La. Colttga 65, Tulana 7i. . Ron Bambe- Nelson says will be the team Knapik , bowling in the .City LIU J», Naw Orleans Loyola «. from track officials across the nek's squad. They leader. Other veterans are 6-1 League at. Hal-Rod Lanes, MUsltslapl 74, Ark. AIM •«. country. senior center-forward John. Hager, belted Tannessee 75, Rice 51. are seniors 6-1 636 for Merchants Bank as his Florida It, Jacksonville tl (} st). ¦The athletes were found ineligi- forward T 0 m and six-foot senior center-forward MtOWBJT mates sparked 1,033—2,955. In the ' »>], ble for future American open and O'Reilly, six-foot Don Wilcox. ( Cincinnati Vlrjinla •«. International competition includ- same league Christopherson crack- Ohio State M, St. Louis Sr. forward Joe Kit- Other cagers fighting for start- ed 613 while Kratz smashed a 576 Loyola Chicago no, N. Dakota 51. ing the Olympics, the AAU an- telson, a n d 3-6 ing positions are Peter Zierdt , Drake 8?, Indiana 74. nounced Monday. errorless series and Kern counter- Marquttla S7, Wake Forest 73. guard Joe Slajer- Steve Taverna, Jerry Zierdt, Jerre ed with an errorless 659. Bernle Minnesota 73, Kansas Still «5. as, and juniors Ekstrand , John Reinhardt PurtfUl 71, Datrolt 71. |t WM rh« first hard blow , Jim Zenler of Merchants posted 245. Missouri 17, Montana «. 6-3 center Lyl e BUrkhard l , Pete Ekstrand, Rich - SOUTHW6ST struck in the AAU's hitter strug- a rin&i . « 86% (3UAIN NEUTRAL SflRlTJ with 23 and in runs batted in with THE grasped power and is trying to to battle for Ihe crown. tion. They will be paced by fl-5 Forsylhe hit 160—313 for Pin Dust- 81. during 1962. FLEI9CHMANN OIST IL LINS CORPOftAnON. NEWVOftX ClIV hold onto it by this action. They Spring Grove has eight returning center Vernon Hientz , the tall- ers which rolled 1,20.1. Bev Biltgen will go to any means, even to lettermen, the most of any team est man in the loop. Other veter- toppled 150 for All-Stars and Pee ¦—^^—»^™"^—^^¦^¦^¦^^^^¦"^"¦¦^¦¦¦^¦¦¦¦¦•¦¦^¦•¦¦¦^¦¦¦¦liMa^MMiiiMM^M^BMBaafca^BaaaiM destroying American track and in the conference. Seven of them ans are 5-11 forward Jim Harris Upsets Badgers Wee's totaled 631. field to retain this power." are seniors. Returning for the and 5-9 guard Mike Percuoco. TUCSON, Ariz. MV-^A crmvd of ST. NIAfcTIN'3: Ladles-Irtne Lions who posted a 9-11 mark last Battling for starting roles will 3,524 wildly cheering fans tore Bronk socked 183—476 for Coca down the basketball nets here season will be cenier Butch Bjorlo be DeVVaj lie Schroeder, John Ask , Cola as her . mates tallied 2,399. -^il'^^^' ^al^^ guard Wayne Olson , guard LarM Jim Erwiti, Ken Larson , Paul Ren- Monday night after underdog Ari- Goede's Chick Hatchery chalked .jj ^f^LiJ^^^ V ^am ^^"afcak^afll Anderson, f 0 r- slo, Robert Giblih , and King Dean. zona ~t«ok a 151-48 upset victory up 889. ward Milt Myhre from the Wisconsin Badgers, 10th KEGLER'5 LANES: Sah»!llt» — LADlfeS forward G a r 3 MABEL, last season's tltlthold' ranked in the current Associated Evelyn Tripp tossed 180 for ¦ er with a 12-0 record , faces a St. jaartint- w. L. jMouker, forwar( re- Press poll. Lang's Michelob which posted ^^LtJF &H^mmaa& 'eB *^^^^^ ^fm &8fe'** *$]&t ammm Coca-Cola 51 ' Dennis Williams building year with two reluming The free-wheeling Badgers got , ¦ ¦ ""^ a » t brtltwvn - ' M l< : 868—2,470 Bunhy Mahaffey sock"- i g. ^ Winona Paffn ft Gaf«*6ll . .. 31 1? forward J 0 hi veteraris. They are forward Char their game into gear only once, for ed 472 for Sunbeam Bread. . P«H Winona Typewriter Service ....11 1/ Sylling and junioi les White and guard Craig Try- a brief period midway in the sec- OniteO Building Center ..;.:... 17 M stad. Skelly Girls » 33 center Mel v i 1 ond half -when they pulled from a ...... 14 M The squad coached by newcom- Paint Depot Homulh. 35-27 deficit into contention at ¦37- GdMel Chick Hatchery ...... Is 3* er E. William Baumgarten, wHl 39. • ¦ CITY Other top pros- j Mil-Rid W. L. pects for the team coached by have several top prospects fight- Midwesterners KwNO Radio 5.9 U Ron Julson are Roger Lanswerb, ing for a berth on the first five. Wiscsnsin tied the score at 44 Oasis Bar ...... ;...... HVa Wb They are Robert Rommes With 2 minutes and 9 seconds re- eunkei APCO « 1» Dave Solberg, Robert Muller, Don . Lowell ii 10 Faa, Dan Crawford, Rfrffard El- maining, but Arizina went Into a ttita Wash Kiorrie, Gary GlasrUd add Afark ¦ ^0aa\ k%\ mmtM mr!^ ¦ ¦ ^* ^^ : Ora'ham & McQUlrt ...... 22 10 lestad, Dennis Usgaafd, Terry Stall until the 48-second mark asaV ^ kmtmma Merthents Bank JIVi WA Ellingson. Head East Willys Ft. City 21 21 Vatland ,. Paul Johnson, Albert when Wildcat sophomore Albert HlMSod Lanes 30 21 SIX RETURNING veterans will Spande and Dan Knuth. Johnson Paul Flatley of Pei W«e> ? U Ryari, and 5-11 junior Nortlwesfern. Alloy Cats I 14 guard John in 32 points in a 71-03 non-confer- Wildcats. Arizona , which out-shot Snar-lti" « M guard Craig Johnson. ence viclory over Northland , un- Wisconsin 19 baskets lo 18 f rom The end crew is headed by Ken- Hippy Oo Luckyi : I 14 Other top prospects for the Tro- able to use three starters because the floo r , connected on 13 on 21 tucky 's Tom Hutchinson and Bos- V.F.W, , with Hal-Rod W. L. jans , coached by Ward Huff , are ol injuri es. free throws. Wisconsin hit oil 18 of Ion College's Art Graham Ooltferii Brand Food* t 1 Paul Dvorak , Torn Cillhane , Dnle 51 shots from the floor for a Sii such other standouts in the line Barflies OX 7 3 Beloit used all 11 players in beat- Vogcl of Ohio State Bubs Beer ; 3 Olstnd, Ed Sandsness, Paul En- percent average. Arizona ' had . a as tackles Bob ing Wheaton 71-61. and Don Brumm of Purdue , and Bunkos APCO , I 3 grav , Rex Manion , Gary Johnson , Stout' s victory at Ashland was 30.2 percent record from tho floor. Special Jltorlyi Bar-caie 3 4 Verri Bunke, and Doug Rislove. Wisconsin took an early lead , guard Ed Budde of Michigan BUY A PAIR | Wisehi Supper Clilb ] 4 its first in three gomes, and State. j/m Widen* Milk Co 4 t surge started with but the Wildcatw charged back to Blanche FIVE RETURN ING letterm«n came with a 's Tavern 4 3 3'i minutes remaining. Northland , squeeze into front hy the end of Th6 ttani was announced Mon- /•UP 4 3 will bolster a Houston loam that the first half . Arizona led in the GO ANYWHERE | '*«<>"<"» '*" Wml Hamms Beer 1 7 won only two conference games now 2-2 , was led by the 27 poinls day hy Andy Kerr , head of the fountain B«W 1 7 of Jack Povaser. second period until Wisconsin tied East selection committee. Bakken Const. CO. « » last season. Veterans coming back the score ot 39-all. The lend chang- NYGEN CORD LADIES to llle Hurricane squad couched Beloit , in evening Its record at The squad: ... for Jeoson-afler-s .t>ason JUIIIll S^^^KLA W«»t>afe W. L. 1-1 , was paced by the lfi points of ed hand s several t (rue's ' until t lie ENDS—Tom Hutchinson. Ken- Mj ¦Vf l \\. m W M t^^^3^Uw^mmm\\ The Oaks u IS by Jim Plumedahl are fl-1 senior strength H 11 IW IF 3llv a ptmnon o I i (own HH W Die. in-Colcdonl« Dec. 4-Plne island al Maieppa, Oreck 1 I 4 B«hnen O t o Larry Ferguson , ; WooWy M ™ T ECONOMY I Weifgit* w. t. Orove at Houston, Peleradrt at Mtttel. Dec. 7—Randolph at Maieppa, Faribault la.e* C .* H ¦ T Curley s Floor Shop 3a 11 Spring ooolen ill • ~ Moore . Indiana ; Paul Flfllloy, JUSt SOY " Dec. it—Peterson at Canton, School tor the Deaf al Ooodhue, Lavoy .D 0 o Totals la 10 46 M " WINTER Vtlonllna Trucklntt Jj 17 Orove al RuSttlord, Mabel at Houston. Elgin at Wabasha. Northwestern ; Jerry Jones. Min- ^V Taverna Barber 1 Beauty ....ll 17 Tournamlnt (Harrrleny, ^ D«C 7,7-rMlrjei Dec, e-Qoodhuo al West Concord, Totali 1* 13 ll nesota: Hoy Walker , Purdue, Mantgomery Ward in H prailon, Caledonia. Mabel). Elgin. mE Wllllami Doc. 11—Dover-Eyota at CHARGE 'EM ^ Hotel id 31 Jan, f—ROshford it Linisboro. Dec. 14—Maieppa it Faribault, Goodhue al ^ ^cZ%W ^ \ (Not a 4th Lln* Tlr6) I¦ Bu«l» Bar 17 11 Jan, I—Spring Valley al Lyle. Elgin, Wlbaiha al Randolph. r^ ^ CiOv .*Ml O) N»ih» IT 77 Jan. a-Sprlni) Oroya at Lanesboro, Wy- Pay V, December \ \» . I m Winona Dally Dec. 31—Wabasha at Alma, Ellsworth al v ^ News 11 31 koll at Peterson, Orantl Meadow at Spring Goodhue. January ^ ^iM Vf^ m ^^ ^^ SATELLITES valley, /darns at clutch, Houston at Dec. It—Wanamlnrjo it Goodhue, Wabasha \^ H |MM MM WLfLm Ke«|l«r» vy. I. Caledonia Loretlo. et St. Felix Holiday Tournament. ^^ . ^^ - Uitejj Mlchelob J4 I V» February % M* \ ^ \-.%lO\ / Jilt, It—Contort it Iprlng Orove, Wow- Jan. 4—March of Dimes Tournament at * If V ADD $2 FOR WHITEWAUS sunshine Cite , 17 12 V > •ton at PeMMOn, Rut Word al OleHlon- Elfin. MONEY ' t Mitt.^^ - TUBELESS SLIOHUY Nflbltts mi, i»u, la. HIOHER S, S. Kreige 3014 Jan. (-Ooodhue al Pine Island. | » Wyhofl t ^ lk'i Jan. U-Lanisboro It Hsulttn, , Oodclhue at ..i a M ^ LM ^ V . ^^ 0 ^ CMi-Coli 30 1» at CantM, Ltwlikn It PIIBnon. Jin, Tl—Elgin at Miteppa' Lanebralni ^^^ 7 ^7~~ ^^ M m 6.70*19* UlaA tvbo t ypa ' flut tax and moppabU tlr* / ¦ 17 1» Jin. IS-CanlOn it Mabll, Ituihlerct kl Wabatha , Randolph at Faribault. ^ ^^^ 0 0* ^^ Spacticulirs *. ,., • :» Pitirtorl, Caledonia it Spring Orovi. Jan. 11—Dover-tiyota at Maieppa, I for Christmas otxtt 4 :i Jin. Jl — Grand MSadiw al PrMlori, Jan. ll—Pepin at Wabasha. | Mabel al Spring Oebve, Caledonia at Jin, ll— KVahasha at Maieppa, Elgin at Houston, Faribault, Randolph at Qoodliue. fo *6D0 Jin. is—Peterson at Spring Orove, Hou- Jan. lt-rVnleppa vs, John Marshall "»" k{ *25 1 BELL AWARDED ston at Rushlord, Mi)bol it Caledonia., It Rochester, Alumni teams at shopping, to pay bills, Open 7iOQ a.m. to 6:00 p.m.—Saturdays 'til 5:00 p.m. Jen. l&~Rushford nt Clnton. Faribault. J* For J ^^faMa^aaaMtMj l^; OUT LAND TROPHY Jin. If-Canton at Caledonia , Mabrl kl Jan. 35—Maieppa al Goodhue, Faribault al Plterson, Houston il Spring OrOve, Wabasha, Randolph at Elgin. j j or other needs. & NEW YORK IS - Minnesota Feb. I—Spring Orove al Caledonia, Pa- Jan. Is— Byron at Maieppa. can on tenon at Rushford, Mabel at Canlon , Jan. II—Alma at Wabasha. m Ua l Yov depend J Ittcklc Bobby Boll Monday vn.1 Peb, l—Houston vi, Lewiston at Winona Feb. I—wabaihe al Blgln, Qoodhuo at %%tj f* ^%J i named for the ftecoiul slrnlRhl Stale CollcDo, Faribault, Mirappa at Randolph, TIRE year lo Ihe All-Amoricn fool ball Peb. 5—Calidonli II Harmony, Chat' Feb. J—Maieppa at Wanamlngo. Ptfk/C FIN If AI1AEC Held at Mlbel, canlon al Wykoll, LeRoy Feb. I-Randolph at Wlbalha, Elgin al ANCE team fidectod by Look Mfigrt- at Sprlrie Valley. Soodhue, Flrlbaull at Maieppa. ¦maMi lino. Peb. «—Canlon al Polarton, RuiMord Feb. t—Ooodhue al Wanamlngo, \ \ lilf lKa9 SERVICE at Spring Orove Feb. 11—Elgin at Dover-Eyota, Maieppa at ^ Boll , nlso was awarded tho , Houilon at Mabel. ¦ WINONA'S LARGEST AND FINEST DRIVE-IN TIRE SERVICE Feb. ?—SprlllH *OrW» al Cfalco, Peter- Pint tlland, % 3B1 Cbotttt Bldg. Ph&ne) 2348 k Oullnnd Ti'opliy, RIVCII anniially eon va, Lawliton at Winona stile Cal Feb, IS—Wabasha at Ooodhue, Maieppa »l Chrl»tm»i Until I a>,iti. »V 108*116 W«st Second Strett "Since 1917" Phon» 2847 < elgln, Parlltault at Randolph, t_ Optm S«furday» 'III hy ihe football writers lo tho Peb. tt-Ruihford If Mebel, Lyla al Feb, II—Maieppa al VVabaiha, Faribault tor Interior linornnn of the y«nr, Spring Orove. il blgln, Ooodhue at Randolph, 1 P.M. . New York WiNONA MARK ETS Stock Prices Reported bv Tax Checks Swift & Company Abbott L — Jones & L 49% Buylno hours ere Iron t a.m. teif.nu Monday Irtrough Friday. - Allied Ch 42H Kennecott 67V* These quotations apply ¦« ot noon tod^y. Allis Chal 15V4 Lorillard 44M All livestock arriving alter closing, time Closed Circuit TV On Expense Amerada 116'A Mpls Hon 83V4 will be properly cared tor, weighed mnti priced the following morning: Am Can 44% Winn MM S4W HOGS Am M&Fy 21 Minii P&L 393/< The hog market I) it«ady. . Strictly meat , type additional 20-40 ttratsi Am Mot 16% Mori Cham 49Vi tat hogs discounted 20- ¦«> cenU per hun- ¦ Accounts Hit AT&T 114% Mon Dk U 35V. dredweight. ¦ Discussed Good hog», barrowi iiwi gills— " „„ Schools Anaconda 411a Mon Ward 34 In 14.50-13.SO circuit - tele-vision'-in- about the possibility of adding a be excessive. He added, however, WASHINGTON (AP) - A U.S. 160-160 ,,...... ; ••. ••• A closed Arch Dan 39V4 Nat Dairy 60% 1SO-2W> 1S.50-15.7-5 ' proposed for closed Circuit TV installation as that he was willing for a repre- Chamber of Commerce spokes- 15.75 - stallation has been Armco St. 527/» No Am Av 68% 200-220 Winona 's seven public schools but an instructional aid. sentative of the company to Tneet man today branded proposed new 220-240 '¦ 15.JHi.75 administration doesn 't with members of the school staff tax regulations on expense ac- Armour 41'A Nor Pac 38% 240-270 14.9WS.S5 the school Such a system would allow , for AvcoCorp 24% No St Pw 33 270-300 .... M.WW.90 think the school system is in a the transmission of demonstra- to explain how the television in- counts "a callous invasion of pri- r 300-330 • 14.00-R30 be utilized in the Beth Steel SlVs Nwst Airl 39 330-360 • 13.W4.O0 position to undertake such a pro- other class- stallation could vacy in collecting taxes." ¦ tions, lectures or Boeing Air 387/s Penney 43% Good sows— j - . ¦ ' . gram, at least at present. rooms in classroom program. Charriber director Barlow ..¦• 14.0M4.2J room programs to any Joel Brunswick UVB Pepsi Cola 43 270-300 . ' Members of the Board of Ecru- Cost for one channel would told an. Internal Revenue Service 300-330 13.7W4.O0 the seven schools. ' 13.50-13.75 cation were told by Superinten- come, Nelson said, to $208 a hearing; that the proposals which Chi MSPP 10% Phil Pet 50V« 330-360 ...... Chi & NW 14V4 PiUsbury 55% 360-400 : ...... ;'..;. ••• 13.2J-IJ. iO dent of Schools A.,L. Nelson Mon- NELSON SAID that -from whal month. Charges "would be grad- could put a crimp in deductions 400-450 ••• 13.0W3J5 'd heard about the system it ap- uated downward for each addi- Chrysler 71% Polaroid 129% 45O-J0O, .,..; ..12.JW3.-CO-;- day night that Bell Telephone he for business travel and entertain- ¦ ¦ ¦ might tional channel installed . Cities Svc 52'A Pure Oil 357/s Staqs- „„ ' . Co. has contacted school officials peared to him that the cost ment would pose "impossible ad- 450-down 10.M In addition a television cam- ministrative requirements." Comw Ed 44 RCA 57% 450-vp 9.W.U-00 era would have to be purchased ConsCoal 36V4 Rep Steel 37& Thin and unfinished hogs.. dlscounled CALVES and this wo uld represent an in- In the first of two days of hear- Corit Cam 44% Rex Drug 30 The veal market Is steady. vestment of another $1,500 or so, ings on the regulations, Bartow, Cont Oil 54% Rey Tob 42% Top criolce .' ..:...... —.... 28.M Plainview Co-op Deere 7 Choice . 25.00-37 .OO although less expensive models— a Washington lawyer, said in pre- 51% Sears Roe 74/s " ' ' ' Magazine Picks Good . ;.. - ... ..- ...... 20.00-24.00 as well as more elaborate ones- pared testimony that the propos- Douglas 33% Shell Oil 33W Commerclal to good 17.M-1M0 are available. One camera would als would require endless and cost- Dow Chem 58% Sinclair - 35Vs Utility ;»... - ...... 15.00-16-00 23214 ; Boners and culls KOMown Head Re-elected have to be bought for every chan- ly detailed recordkeeping and dup- du Poht S&coriy 56% CATTLE PLAINVIEW, Minn. (Special) nel. Such cameras would be used lication of records. East Kod 108 Sp Rand 13% The cattle market Is steady to weask. All-America for locally produced telecasts. If ' ¦ ' : Ford Mot 45 St Brand 64'A Drvlcd Siteers and yearlings— - Milton Schwantz was re-elected *A PWASr -I'M *A FHASB I 'M "They also move in the direc- Exlrerne fop 27,» president of the Plainview Co- films were to be transmitted on tion of requiring sworn state- Gen EIec 75V2 St Oil Cal 64% Choice to prima ¦ ' ...... 25.50-J6.7J the closed circuit another unit Gen Foods 7414 St Oil Ind 47% Good 1o choice ... 23.50-25.50 at the 40th Gome Tw.couGri r' GOING THOUGH/* ments, collaborating witnesses, - rjMl.00 operative Creamery costing upwards of $15,00 would Comm. to good . 16. annual meeting here. and an almost impossible burden Gen Mills 31'/« St Oil- NJ> . 56V4 Utility . 16.0M«wn 'Silver Roster 200 attended the have to be acquired. of proof in an increasing number Gen Mot 56'A Swift & Co 38V* Dryted toelfera— More than ' Directors' agreed with the sup- Extreme top . 26.75 NEW YORK (AP) — Associate at the Plain- - Ox fax cases. Congress itself has Gen Tel 23Va Texaco 57% Choice to prime 25.00-24-M meeting Saturday erintendent that the cost factors Supreme Court Justice Byron view High School auditorium. Society Briefs repeatedly refused to require un- Goodrich 44 Texas Ins 63% Good to choice 23.50-25.00 would appear to rule out such a reasonable disclosu res, such as Goodyear 32V« Uai . Pac . " 34% : Comm; IP good 14.00-2O.5O (Whizzer) . White, former college William Rahman Jr. was re-elect- ~ Utility ....:: i 16.00-down system in the immediate future. HOMEMAKERS MEET ^—. County Buys Gould Bat 38V4 Un Air Lin 33V4 - ed vice president and Ralph Tie- those proposed , and such callous Cows— BETHANY , Minn. (Special) 15.00 football star at Colorado, heads , who recently replaced NELSON ALSO advised the - invasion of privacy in collecting Gt No Ry 44V8 U S Rub «Vi Extreme top deman board that improvement of gen- Bethany and vicinity Homemakers Commercial 13.00-14.00 the 1962 Sports Illustrated Silver also was re- taxes, " Barlow said. Greyhound 31% U S Steel 47V4 12.00-1 3.25 Lewis Dickerman, eral science rooms at Washing- met at the home of Mrs. Alfred -Utility Anniversary All-America rosier elected to> the board. . Homestk 43% West Un 27 Canner j and cutters 12,50-down ton - Kosciusko and Jefferson Mueller Thursday evening. The Tax Writer- IRS Commissioner Mortimer M. IB Mach 399 Westg EI 32% Btiir«- amendment to the by-laws 15,00-17.00 announced today. An schools would be desirable. lesson was on Chrl-stmas crafts. Bologna Also selected were r-Yale's Clint was approved. Caplin, who has said he believes Int Harv 49% Wlworth 67V4 Commercial ...... :. 14.SO-15.50 Remodeling of the Senior High Members and guesfs spent the the regulations Would put an end Int Paper 27% Yng S& T 85% L ight thin .....^:...... 14,50^1own Frank, Pittsburgh's John Michelo- School and. Central Junior High "Western Reserve's Frank A NOON luncheon was served evening making a number of the to "expense account living," was sen and School science departments , has items suggested by the leaders, expected to stress that the pro- Frcedtert Malt Corporation ! in the school's cafeteria following Schools Heard Hours: 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; closed 5jli*rdaya, Leon Kelker, the first Negro ever been completed but nothing has Raymond posals are not final 1 ' 'will be named for the award. [ trie business meeting. The Plain- Mrs. Dorn and Mrs. and . Submit sample before loading. High School, directed by been done with the science rooms Mueller Plans were made for a A tax writing machine bid ol "subject to corrections" prompted No. 1 barley .....:.. Jl -05 I view . ,500 less $150 trade-in from Ad- No. 2 barley ...„. .« in the two- outlying schools since $4 by testimony at the hearings and - The 25-member s quad was David Kallman , played. Christmas party for members and dressograph-Multigraph Corp., St. Investments No. 3 barley ...... ;, .TO- . they were constructed in the mid- more than 800 letters of protest. No. 4 barley .85 picked, from among former col- In the afternoon the Sepko their husbands Sunday at the Paul, was accepted this morning legians who played their last foot Quartet, Minneapolis , sang; Mar- lS30's. home of Mr. and Mrs.. Ervirt Bo- More letters, telegrams and showed films Expansion of the science areas by the Winona County Board of Winona Egg Market ball games in 1937. The major re- tin Klosex, Chicago, now. There will be a 50-cent gift Commissioners. resolutions of protest were said Grade A dumbo) ...... '. .34 in each building could be realiz- 'Grade ' (large)' .11 quirement for selection is a nomi- on dairying and the dairy indus- exchange. The enteriainment com- The machine, a Model 190O Ad- to be on their way from Florida 's , A Higher Grade A (medium) .22 s record of success in his try in the Hawaiian Islands, and ed, Nelson said, with the removal mittee includes Mr . and Mrs. Les- tourist industry which fears the Push nee' of existing; walls which dressograph, will replace an old Grade A (small) .14 chosen field in life. Harley Wood. Rochester, resident constitute ter Luehmann and Mr. and Mrs. regulations would cut into the Grade B . .22 separations from workroom areas. ina.ch ine ol the same model used Grade C ...... 17 Also named were Dr. Weldon inspector of the USDA, discussed Alfred Mueller. Lunch was served. by County A u di to r Richard convention business. Gibson, Washington State; Donald cleanliness of milk. HE ESTIMATED the total cost would come to hot more than $8,- RIDERS MEET Schoonover. The firm also sub- Trading Heavy Bay Sfafe Milling Company Hart, California at Santa Bar- "We ourselves cannot detect mitted a bid of 37,570.50 for an Elevator VA" Grain Prltii 000, of which 40 percent would be PLAINVIEW , Minn. (Special! (AP)—A Hours: 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. - bara ; John Oswald ,. DePauvv, Wal- bacteria in our food or the milk - improved Model 2000. PRODUCE NEW YORK revival of Zable William G. Mary ; El- we drink, but through the aid of reimbursed from National De- Plainvicw-EJgin Riders Inc., met speculative and investment de- (Closed Saturdays) . ter . fense Education Act funds. Thursday, ) (USDA)- No. 1 northern spring wheat 5? 74 mer Dohrihann, Nebraska; Frank microscopic help we find and de- evening at Timm's Cafe ONLY ONE company submitted NEW YORK 25.00-27.50 ; utility and commercial cows Slate of Minnesota ) ss. first place , but the pension com- JERUSALEM (AP) - Prayers 700,000. The Defense Department used to back the 16 regular Army ler steers 29.50; bulk choice 1000-1275 lb 14.00-16.50 ; utility and . commercial bulls County of Winona ) In Probata Court and reconstruction of CSAHi 20.50 to 21,251 mixed • good and choice 1I.0O-20.00; load choice and lancy 1,000 No. 15,«7 mittee refused to change its mind. for rain are being said twice hnd wanted to reduce this total to divisions in a crisis. 10 and 27. 28,00-28.50; few heed high choice slounh. lb feedlnn steers 27.75. In Re Estate ol' Tlie active players don 't want to daily in Israeli synagogues to 042,000. The remaining 17 Guard nnd B Four thousand dollars was trans- ter hellers 2V.00; most cholcs 27 75-20 50; Sheep 700; slaughter lambs steady; lev, Edward E. Murphy, Dicedent. pood 25.50-27.50 ; utility and commtrcinl lots mostly choice 90-105 Id native wooled Order for Hiarlnrj on Petition for Admin- combat unseasonable hot dry ' cut the old timors in. Ticketed for major surgery are Reserve infantry divisions would ferred from the building fund to cows 13.5O-15.S0 ; canner nnd cutter 11.50. slaughter lambs 19.00-19.50 ; good and istration, Limiting Tlma to Flit Claims wealher Hint has brought anxiety these Hcserve divisions: he kept at about 50 per cent (lie school transportation fund. 13,00; utlllly bulls 19.00-11.50 ; canner and chiolce natives 17.00 19.00; cull to good and lor Hearing Ther«on, to local farmers. The 79th of Pennsylvala , Dela- strength. culler 15.00-lS.O0; venleVi «ind slauohter wooled slaughter ewes 5.00-6.00. Theresa Murphy having (lied herein • There wasn't enough in the school petition for general admlnltlraillon stating fund following the November tax that said decedent died Inlesjaio and pray- settlement. The money will bo BIG GEORGE Ino that Leo F. Murphy,, Jr„ b» appointed repaid later to the building fund, administrator; This Week s i • IT IS ORDERED, Tflol the hearing The commissioners held a non - thereof be had on December 30, 1?63, «l controversial hearing on n rural 10:30 o'clock A.M., bclore this Court In the probate cowl room In Ihe court house r.chool consolidation. They dissolv- in Winona , Minnesota; that Iho time within Basketball ed Common School District 2580, ¦which creditors ol said deced-enl may file * their claims be limited lo lour months Irtish Creek School , on petition of from the dale hereof, and that the claims TONIGHT district freeholders , and attached so tiled be heard on March 39, 1963, at Ihe district to the Rushford Inde- 10:00 o'clock A.M., before t»ils Court In the probate court room In Iho courl house CENTENNIAL pendent District. In Winona, AMnnosola, wd that notice Plrll Island al Moiappa. - Attending the meeting were hereof be given by publication of this DAIRYLAND Rushford superintendent D. A. order In Ihe Winona Dally News and by Nallltvlllt at Alrma Center, ' mailed nollce as provided by law. Surand at Eleva Slrum.* Bvflns nnd these mem bers ot" the Dated November 33, 1MI, „ lair al Trempealeau. * Ilnsh-Creck Hoard — Ray Johns , E. D , LIBERA, Fa ll Creek al Augujfa.* chairman; Arthur "Wundcrlicli , Pro*at« Judge, MAPLE LEAF (Probele Courl Seal) treasurer , and Alvin Rasmnsscn , Streater & Murphy, Lanatboro at Peterson. • Attorneys (or Petitioner, Prealon at Canton. - clerk. Hush Creek doesn't operate Billion al Chilli eld. * its own school. Tho consolidation fFlrst Pub. Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1?62) Cejloy al Wykoff. - Sprlno Valley at Sprlnn Grove.* is elfedive July 1, 19(53. Stale ot Minnesota ) ss, An off-sale beer license was is- Counly of Wlnonn ) In fro bate Court ROOT RIVER No. 13,011 Wurmonv at Mafcel. -, sued to Mrs. Evelyn M. Little, In Re Gitali t>4 WEST CENTRAL Homer Sloro. Jack r=, Oukk, alto luiown at Alma at Wabasha St. Felix ,. Jack Falln Oulek, 0t7 so their children can gn Ihe probnle court room In Ihe court houj« Nat'l Hockey League lo Lewlstoii High School. In Winona, Minnesota, «nd (hat nollco hereof be olven hy publication ot II1I9 MONDAY'S RESULTS . Consolidation had been pending order In Ihe- Winona Dally Now» and by No games icti-edulcd. mailed nolle* as provldM TODAY'S GAMES TITO IN RUSSIA .. , President Tito of Yugo- for talks with Premier Nikita Khrushchoy, Others between tlio Priggo and Lewiston by law. Dated November 30, Hi), No gamai iche-dulod. , slavia , right , Ktnnds nl microphone os he makes districts hut Fringe freeholders E. 0, WEDNESDAY'S GAMES nre unidentified in this photo from the Russian LIBERA, turned down assumption of their ,„ , , , . . , Probate Judge. Montreal at Toronto, fipeoch on nrrivnl in Ihe village of Chop hi Ihe ngency Tass. TuasrJay,December , 1962 WINONA DAILY NEWS 17 Hprf i, Cattla, Stock 43 Artic le for Sala 57 Wanted to Buy 8S HEREFORD CALV6S-4 steeri and 4 HUMIDIFIERS euto«na>Jcal)y add needed HIGHEST PRICES PAID heifers. Heifers vaccinated. 350 lbs,, 28- moisture to heated, drled-out air; stops for icrap Iron, metals, rags/ hides, raw Houses for Sate 99 Used Cars 109 30c. Howard Jacocson, Taylor, Wis. winter colds, chaled skin, costly fuel furs and wool! - - THJS Ts ONE of the finest KEDetj» »IGS-17 "^eod" bills, restless Sleep, shrunken woodwork. a*edro6m WERCURY-1954, 2-dr. Priced for quick ones. AllawTRan- homes on Sunsat Or. dall, Houston, Minn, Tet. R u a n f o r d COMPLETELY automatic and guaran- Sam Weisman & Sons Beautiful view sale. Owner going Info service. 2_ Man- from glassed in- porch. CarjMMng Itaro. ¦ . UN 4-M17-. teed. Two models to choose from at INCOR PORATED In bed- : ROBB -BROS. STORE, 57i E. «1h. Tel. e'll want It for his own. Handy for fat ¦ E. «h. Tel, 3389. UPSTAIRS APARTMENT residential UH Walnut Tei. 8-1678 our very finest. One FREE wedding photo day Time . ' , . anytime. Let Mom BO area, but near downtown. Ulvlng room property and appraise it with -fellows who Won't shovel, At BAM- to you when y«ju select a diamond at modern. Fanta sla with a tlsh float from Livestock Commission mahagony-panelled. Kitchen, two bed- BENEK'S, 429 Mankato. Business Equipment 62 a suggested asking price. No RAINBOW JEWELERS, next fo post of- LAWRENZ FURNITURE. rooms, bath with shower; Atr-condttlon- ¦:¦ ;.; ¦ ' RUSHFORD, MINN. Jlce. . - . .. _ SHOPPING CA R TS-28; 1 check-out ed. Refrigerator, stove and kitchen ta- "high pressure" but plenty of DA VINCI'S MASTERPIECE .. . The Last ONE HUNDRED YEARS too late, but give stands, 200 concrete blocks, 2x12 lum- ble set furnished—otherwise unfurnish- CHRISTMAS TREES you can ««r before Supper . . ,.32x15 Palnt-By-Number Set Mom her freedom on Christmas, 1962— Telephone B64-9M9. ber. Sea H. B, Nettie, Broadway Super ed. Heating furnished. J1I0 per month. IDEAS to help sell it. Per- you buy. In choice of Balsam, Fir , Scotch -faithfully end beautifully portrays this -with a GE Mobile Maid automatic dish- Saver. Tel. 9350 to see It. ind Norway Pine, Wrealhs and roping. reverend occasion. « pre-mlxed paints to washer. Needs no Installation, . rolls on Sale every Wednesday, sonalized, service with OF-THE-BEST Sturdy stands for trees up to 100 lbs. do It justice. No better way to spend wheels, prertlrsses, washes, dries. A par- Coal, Wood, Other Fuel 63 Apartments,- Furnished 91 A. GRAMS & SONS, 120 E, 2nd. leisure hours. PAINT DEPOT. feet gift at B LB ELECTRIC ¦ ¦ ¦ f CENTRALLY LOCATED—3 room, private m aIa Sports Coupe, " ¦ ~ I BOB ' A (\ ^ P Poultry, Eggs, Supplies 44 ¦ SLAB WQOD bath and entrance, all utilities paid, r 0 DU white, turquoise interior, Good flusllfy green slab wood. available Immediately. Adults. Tel. 7487 ER V-8, automatic transmission, pow- DAVE BRUNKOW «, SON for appointment. u OV . Glean-Up Time ¦ Treinpealeau, Wis. II . SEL.J Tel.. 2349 er steering, radio, whitewalls. This CENTRALLY LOCATED—all modern fur- 110 Exchang Building Trades 13 Help Wanted—Male 27 Fix-Up Time nlshed apt., heat, water and hot water | , e Bldg. car has been driven only 20,000 Fmrniture, Rugs, Linoleum 64 furnished. Private bath and entrance. careful miles by local business- WHEN THE LITTLE tots gather 'round MAN WANTED—between a. es of 23 and On the Farm! Immediate possession. Tel, 7776, ask (or Want USED FURNITURE — Mahogany drop : Ads thai trae, let them feel the softness, man. It has had the finest of care. 62. Enloy a pleasant business servicing Syd Johnstone . warmness of new wall-to-wall carpeting farm trade In your community. II you leaf extension table with 4 matching Motorcycles, Bicycles 107 Owner's name on Installed In time for Christmas by qualify we ha-ve a guarantee to back you SEE US FOR , dhalrs and pads for table and leaves, THIRD E. 314—2 furnished rooms, down- 't. OOOQ stairs, utilities furnished. PARTS AND SERVICE for Indian, Trl- >PZiC70 Start Here HALL-HAFNER FLOORS. 920 W. 5th. up. High commission Income possible Just Ilka new. $90. Platform rocker, room request ...... Tel. 417t. 17 years of Imtallatlon. first year. It- will cost you nothing to Poultry & Hog 15; twin meta l bed and spring, SS; 3 CO^V^ETEDT^UliNISHED—4 low- umph, BSA, Matchless, Jawa and other BLIND ADS UNCALLED FOR- get details. Write D-90 D-ally. News. piece ; white wood dinette suite, SIS. er apt., near St. Matthew's Church. popular Imported motorcycles. Allyn I£J Impala . 4-dr. Sedan , V-8, Business Services ~ &ORZYSKOWSKI FURNITURE, 30J all furnished. Morgan, Lake Blvd. T\ 14 VVE Ar^~^£XPANDTNG and need Feeding Gas heat, Hahts, water OU . Mankato Ave. Owner spending winter In Florida, will . automatic transmission, ra- new men. Will consider part-time help. GIRL'S 24" deluxe bicycle; Like new. D-2, 3, 35,-78, 81, 87, Jt. IN ANY WEATHER there's nothing better rent Mill summer. ABTS AGENCY, INC., attractive 2-tone beige Car essential. Income open, will dis- E Call at 148 High Forest. . dio, and than ZEPHYR ventilated awnings and quipment Realtors, 159 Walnut St. . Tel. 4142 or doorhoods. Cuilcm built, permanent year cuss at Interview. Write complete let- BARGAIN BASEMENT Sierra gold, Driven just a little ter of application to W. 8. Doty, lS'Vi 3184. Trucks, Tractors, Trailers 10S NOTICE . around protection against sun, snow, " " ¦ over 20,000 miles by local me- Main St. . . NINTH E. 451-2 room furnished apt. CMC—1940 1 ton truck, excellent condl- This newspaper will be responsible for rain, , and sleet . Fret estimates without FARM & GARDEN SPECIAL ' All utilities turnlshed. On bus line. tlon. Priced right. 210 W. 2nd. Tel. chanic Owner s *tlQQQ only , one Incorrect Insertion of any Obligation. WINONA RUG CLEANING WANTED—Two men or mail and wile S-Pc. Bedroom Suite. 8-3030. . name on request .. classified advertisement published In SERVICE,. Ill W. 3rd. Tol, 3722. combination tor work through service BROADWAY E. 255—3 room furnished ... Y • '/O SUPPLY wall-to- the Want Ad section. Check your, ad BOAT REPAIR costs more In the spring. organizations In Winona and surround- 38 inch, 9 drawer triple dress- apf.i private fcath and entrance, DODGE—1950, panel. In good condition- Above average : earnings • and call . 3321 If a correction must be Have It Done Now! WARRIOR MFG., ing counties. 116 Walnut walt carpeting. Refrigerator and gas May be seen at 512 AAaln. : . ; Both of these cars are the fin- bonui. Tel. 8-3769 ier. 34% inch chest, bookcase made. 5035 _th St. Tel. B-3800. paid dally, plus large monthly stove. " ¦ Car necessary. Age no handicap. See oUR TRUCK BODIES end repair ar« est , we have seen in many ; ' ; ' , - = "bed. Walnut' or spice mahog- SNOW, SLUSH and Santa-they all come Mr, Don Mc t ver—Room 17—Williams Ho- Wanted—Livestock 46 Houses for Rent 95 gaining popularity. See us now. BERG'S months. Words cannot describe tost and Found 4 In December. And when they do you'll tel—TUBS, and Wed, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. any. Almost A-l. TRAILER, 3950 W. Wlr ' versal 3-4 unit- pump, with Immedi fe Years AVOID HARSM SOAPS and detergents Hand Vi h.p. mo- fer some larm experience. s) ^r Composition Lincoln—Mercury-Falcon—Comet with oceans of hot, soft water. Call tor ; Jeep pickup, ' f box, 4 wheal Household Articles 67 occupancy. Eugene G, Sobeck, Rt. 1. Open Mon. & Frl. Eve, S. Sat, p.m. AT . "HEY CULL1GAN MANI" Tel. 3600. Linecasting and Presswork drive, with radio; purebred Shorthorn CARPETS clean easier with the Blue Winona. (Garvin Heights) bull weighs . about 1,150 lbs. OAK only Jl per SOMEWHAT SLIMMER. . .OR, . .altera- Write Lustre electric shampooer, FTFTH W. 55S—5 room house. Tel. 6494 . 109 TRADER TED'S RIDGE SALES & SERVICE, Mlnnela- day. H. Choate & Co. UsecTCars tions by WARREN BETSIWGER, Tailor, CHILD'S Ka, Minn. Tel. Altura 7881. LOCATED—B room modern . CENTRALLY PONTIAC—1955 and 1955 Chevrolet. In- UVs W. 3rd. . ' ~ furnace. Tel. 6411. Just across the Mississippi GRAPHIC ARTS nHOMELITE C»KlifSA\NS Radios, Tetevtsion 71 house, oil quire 129 E. 3rd or Tel. 8-3403 be- DINING GLEE at a modest fee, be It Be sure and see tha new C-J homes, Immediate oc- a.m. and 5 p.m. REPAIR, all makes, ex- NEW 3-BEDROOM tween 9:30 bridge in Wisconsin hnornlng, noon, or night, we reward Technical School $149.95 RADIO AND TV per month. Also a few lar- ^ pert work. WINONA FIRE & POWER, cupancy, $49 7RD_]954, V-B 2 door< standard trans- your appetite wilh tempting delights, Portrait AUTO ELECTRIC SERVICE ger homes w/lth family rooms and soma PC for Catalog. 54 E. 2nd, Tel, 5045. emission, good motor and tires. 1961 RUTH'S RESTAURANT, 126 E. 3rd. Snd fc Johnson Tel. 5453 with fireplaces, $99 per month. Tel . I960 THUNDERBIRD ' license. 5195, 342 Hamilton. Tel. 9481. Open 24 hours a day,JT days a week. FOR BETTER RADIO TV SERVICE 2349 dilrlng business houre- Like new, less than Ms the price lobs, big or Approved for Veteran Training Breza ' t TV Service Jan, CHEVROLET—1950, In good conditloj. HOMETCARE SERVICE-rOdd MODERN 5 room home. Available 2471 of new ones. America' small. Free estimates. ROBB BROS. For II W, Belleview Tel. 747t, Good second car. Tel. Rolllngstone s most taken in your - 1. Tel, 8-1729, Rl. 1. 4th. Tel. 4007. home 1104 Currie Avenue, Minneapolis collect or . write Jerry Grum, popular car. See it and drive it. STORE, 576 E. WEW PORTABLE 19* TV set. Also com- • - ' Winona. D for Christ- bination console radlo-recorcf player. Cof- Wanted to Rent 96 VOU MAY FTN more time and s In for Christmas S^les & Service fee table. Coll after 4 p.m, weekdays. BUICK^IWS, Holiday, power steering 1981 CHEVROLET IMPALA mas shopping with a watch that' Situations Wanted—Female 29 WA.NTED-ln vicinity of 9M Tel. Frank (or 511 Laird St. 5ARAGE power brakes. $550. 473 E. 4th. good repair. Bring It to on block, W. Wabasha. Tel. 4529 between 4-dr., JEWEL- " " 3941. ______loaded. They don't come expert, fast work. RAINBOW DAY NURSE RY ln my honne, completely LOWEST PRICE In the country todeyl p.m. 4th. John Deere Machinery, New 4 and 9 "" any nicer. Less than others ERS, next_to the post office on modern, properly equlppe-d. Inquire et Motorola 19 In, portable TV. Wires all /+» I-./ .! - 1W OLDSMOBILE - NO SITTING FEE WANTErJ^larga room or small apt., by time you're '03 E Howard . Idea equipment, McCulloch hand soldered Into position, all parti ask for 60's. MEMO TO THE IRISH-Ntxt __ _ ^ ______Write J. P. Jones, 119 John- 1 ask the bar- puaranteed tor 1 lull year. Only S1J9.68. the month. fU'- 4-dr. Sedan. . tn tor dinner be sure to- NO EXTRA CHARGE clftin saws, Mayrath elevators, son. tender fof a Wacholder Berran Brand- Situations Wanted—Male 30 WINONA FIRE «. POWER, 54 E. 2nd. Light blue, power steering, power FOR GROUPS. Oregon chain and radio, heater. V-8, automatic WE HAVE A weln Hahnen Schwani. RAY MEYER, Tel. 5065; 99 brakes, LIGHT CARPENTER work, cement work Houses fQT Sale _ excellent tires. INNKEEPER, WILLIAMS HOTEL. TELEVISION SETS—consoles and transmission, and odd |eb). Tel, 9389, Nick Lorang, USED Teresa College. This USED portables. The aUe and atyle you want buPLEX-Menr St. LARGE DISPLAY OF Customer Keeps 1 Lenox , home for a Young married ^^^ at . It an Ideal FARM MACHINERY coupla starting out, the rent will take WALZ '61 FORDS & CHEVIES (First Pub. Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1942) Proofs Money to Loan 40 s Music Store care of taxes and payments. Archie . Hardt' Estate, 104 W. 3rd. Tel. Buick-Oldsmobile-GMC ) ss. - SEE - 118 E. 3rd Winona McGill, Real State of Minnesota NEED MONEY? Whatever your specific , _ Mon. and Frl. Evenings ) In Probate Court 4015 or 5137 Open __ County of Winona need may be you'll have the funds (or s Finest Electronic Repair Also 60's, 59's, 58's & 57's. Soma 15,347 ^Winona ' SCHOOL-? bedroom No. FRAN K BRUESKE It when you borrow fnm MINN. LOAN for All Makes NEAR MAD ISON . Querdlaninlp el redecorated, Avalletm " Id the Mailer ot the & THRIFT, 164 Walnut, Tel. 8-3974 and DURAND home, completely HE RTCE GOES Very Nice Older Models. W»rcf. 818 ,W, 7th . Archie McGIH, Real Es- T ' > Cecelia Hoffmann, Phone 8-2012 your money can be ready when you Don Ehmann TV Service Immediately named Ward, l 4015 or 5137. Tho guardian of Ihe abov« stop by. IMPLEMENT «_0 W. Fifth Tel. 630J tate, 104 W 3rd,jre . Bank of CO., INC 'WAY DOWN vli,:- The Merchants National Moving, Trucking, Storage 19 Authorized Dealer for 2-48—2 bedroom home, laroe having made end filed ~ ~ ADMIRAL-MUNTZ-ZENITH MARKET If you think cars are too high Winona, Minnesota, AROUND THE WORLD-or "hd Dixand, Wisconsin oarage. This home Is 7 years 1959 STUDEBAKER account, together orbu the ri lot, 7 car In this Court lis final block, we'll move you anywhere, anytime, G 100 . Archie McGill, Real Es- Lark Regal 2-dr., hardtop, 4-cyllnder ., drive across the bridge and representing that said 72 old. $13, w|th Its petition expertly and quickly. WINONA DELIV- Refrigerator! tate, 104 W. 3rd. Jel 40l5 or 5,37, straight stick, gas-saving overdrive , guardlenshlp tias terminated and praying LOANS u, cf _ see. ERY i. TRANSFER, 454 W. 4th. Tel. » Hay, Grain, Feed 50 on block wilh red Interior , one owner, lowi trial said account be examined, adlusted PLAIN NOTE—AUTO-FURNITURE s Refrigeration & Supply EoTTs MINUTES to the country 3112, Free Eallmates. 170 E. 3rd St, Tel Ed' land. Nice mileage. Spotless. Reduced. and allowed by this Court, and that said , 291S Commercial and Domestic trunk highway. 2 acres of Hrs. 9 a.m. lo 5 p.m., Sat. 9 am to noon 3 bedroom home, all on one floor, At- 1-YEAR GUARANTEE guardian be discharged) Plumbing, Roofing 555 E. 4th Tel. M3? Pric- NOW $995 That aald petition 21 tached 1 car flnraae. Low taxes. IT IS ORDERED, b* IT' S BACK! AGENCY, INC., account examined and ad- Loans — Insurance — ed at ony 34,800. ABTS Imperial - Chrysler VERY EASY TERMS heard and said Specials at the Store 74 Tel 4242 or at the Probata Court ELECTRIC ROTO^OOTER Realtors,. 1-59 Walnut St. . lusted by this Court, Real Estate — Availabl e Now — R. Cloy 8-2737, Bill Plymouth - Valiant Roorn, In the Court House In the Cily oe For clcooed sewers and drains. Economy alter hours: E. WE TRADE Tal, 9509 or E, A. Abls 3184, Bill Zle- Sales ft Service Winona, Counly or Wlnonn, State ot Minne- «43a 1 year guarantee Nutrenn Pagel 4501, FRANK WEST AGENCY * Ready-Mix Bait bell 4B5<. sota, on the 37th day ol December, 1962. CALL SYL KUKOWSKI_ 175 Lntayelte SI. Tal. 5240 _ at 10:45 o'clock A.M.; and that this order (Neat to Telephone Office) WARFARIN BY OWNER—3 bedroom home, fireplace, NYSTROM'S fce served 'by publication thereof In tho ARE YOU BITTEN by the remodellno bug? CALF-O-LIFE tiled ball! and kitchen, full basernerit, 144 W. 2nd TRADER TED N«w kitchen, laundry arta. bathroom ? We 2-Lh. Bag Near schools, Winona Dally News according to law. oarage. Choice location. Open Mvondays 8. Fridays 'Til 9 p.rri_ have the finest quality fixtures. Set ui Dogs, Pets, Suppllas 42 Price reduced to Dated November 30, 1963, GROWER RATION churches and the lake, ' BUICK ELECTRA E. D. LIBERA, for •sllmatei. These are> tha finest ot " 99c SB87, rr-1 .nr- »«» COOhMMOU NO PUPS- amnll nona. and clnated lor cholera end erysipelas. Clif- transporting said properly from 4th Halp Wanted—Female South on New Highway 14-61 " ' " r to 26 ford ItoK, Lanesboro, Minn. (Pilot Typewriters 77 Image? $1795.00 MOBILE 1IOME-1960 1 bedroom, l (lxir , Buchanan Street, Winona, Minnesota, Mound), ~ ~ The Right to MTNN, LICEN STD haWressar, neaf,~Tn- _ _ BIE L L RiNOER — Used Do you picture yourself as the owner ; CopperlOfio kitchen, porch nnd rnrin' S tha warehouse address above referred " h CLOSED SATURDAY AFTER- A Cli R 1ST WAS and (or atorlng the same slnca the 26lti telllgenlt '+30 years of ago. to work FOR LEASE^^ outstiind lng second and typewrllors, standard and portable, of this attractive new 3-bedroom home Ford ed. Very clean. tt.WO. Tel. 8-13/9 . and that true at an assistant to a hair stylist. Guar- third calf springing cows. No cash out- NOON UNTIL NEXT SPRING ouarnnlood, as LOW as Sl»,»5. WINONA In recently developed araa, closc-InT 59 V~8 day of December, 1961, Ranchwuflon 4-dr, Radio, Fordomatlc, amount whici) will bo duo on Ihe data ol anteed salary, paid vacations, Write lay. To qualify, farmer must have suf- TYPEWRITER SERVICE. 1«l E. 3rd. There ore i rooms, Tho bath , Is tiled , Auction Sales ficient loed and housing available. he« colorful Clean. " tha sale above mentioned l» the sum of D-J4 Dally News. All replies conlWcn- Write Tel. B-MOO. A very modern kitchen ^ALVIN KOHNER to Dairy Program, Box 334, Harmony, Articles for Sale 57 t498.00, exclusive ot Ihe expense of thli m. _ bullMni, Attached oarage. Gaa hot $1495.00 AUCTIONEER, Cily and il.-vte licensed " "" Minn. Tel, 68-44562 evenings. ~ ^ - Washing, Ironing Machines TH water heat. Reesonaoly priced, aale, PERSONABLE young girl to herp wlih - CH f)i stMAS TRE E S-lor aa'ift wholesale. and bonded. ?5J Liberty Si (Comer That tha properly to be sold Is generall y " ' housework and child care, Own room RUSHFORD LIVESTOCK COMMISSION Evergreen Pappy Truck Stop, Wabasha, MAYTAO^ND~i=RlGI0AIRE - Pad, ax- E. Slti and Liberty). Tal . 4=60. described as follows : and bath, Recent r«(«rence« required auction every Wed, afternoon. Livestock Minn. Tel. 365-4676. Home and Shop pert service. Complele stock of parts. , first floor Is suit- '60 Chev. 6 Approximately 400 cases of 34 bottles Good salary, Write 317 Ravine Dr., High- bought dally. Tel, Ruihrord 664 ?U9 col- In excellent location Sedan, One local owner , Extremely low USED LUMBER - JxJ't, JxlO's, exl'a, H. Choate 5, Co. Tol, 2K7I, apart. Minnesota •ach al different iliai , available for land park, III, lect. able for «hop or office, Very neat mileage), bottling Tip beverage, charged wator 4x4% board), All In 17, 14, 14 and 30 ment on 2rad floor has 2 large taedroomi, - liipe-r- FEEDER STEERS—I Hol itelns; Tflamp- Wearing Apparel, Furs 80 Land & Auction Sales and olher carbonated beverages under WANTED Three ladies to assist It, lemplha, Tel, 3B2e,_95B W. Jnd. carpeted living room with picture win- vlior In this area. Above avernge earn- shlro boar. Robert L, 5r»s«tllng, Kefloofl, ~ ~ ~ $1495.00 Everatt J. Kohner the tradei names ol Zln and Dream, to- ft v' MfN K HrTAD fur coat, about alio IB, flood rtow, well planned kl|ch«n. Tiled bath ings palot dally, Agi net handicap, Minn, Tnl, 7«7-44_ REFRIOERI ATOR-a cu, .i 40' eleclrjc 962 _. We Advertise Our Prices 1M Walrwl S-3710. alter nmir i )» * ether with tho cases In which sold For o, ^condition, 3150, E, 5th. Jel. 4741 , wilh shower. ^ ^ ~~ Interview, see Roger Slellen, Williams deluxe ran . e; Hot Point automatic _ p'.mr~ ,3 ' ' ¦) E ottles are contained , IKDLSTEIN BULLS—r 'egllter'edi servlco- washer, fjrend new transmission. Tel. DECr5-W«d 2' mi le s N » Hotel-Tuts, and Wed. J p.m. to V wo«k Center and m|lo> That all al said properly la located Hn abla toe In- p,m. Eat Christmas Breakfast 8''i sw, nt u*a p.m. , Dill A herd average 54], 3150 between 6 snd I Wanted to Buy 81 Cily, AAlnn. Jersey Sate Fr.snk luinl. th« basement of tho warehouse building el dividual records to 741. Alfred H. John- " ~ ' ~ ^ ~ ~ " "~J In the roomy kitchen of this one-floor, - B translilor PONG tab la_ wantod, lar owneri Maas & M.siu, .tuttioneert. Ihe address .above referred to. son, Pet-erson, Minn, CHANNEL MASTER ra- USE^ 0 PTNO . 2-bedroom homo In good west neighbor- Help Wanted—Ma U 27 dlo; Indies' llgure skates, size 5; good condtllon. Tel, 7850 alter 5:30 p.m, sE£atS£) Lake Cily Mate Bank, clerk property will bo hood, flnlh has new fixture!, Full base- ( _ That iho sale of sold " ' ' Ve#i}^ '"" CHRISTMAS PRESENT—Shatlnnd ponlai. man's (Kates, aire 10. Reasonable, *~ ^V_el 36 Veers In Winona " ' conducted by Iho Sherlll In and for Winona Hour* 7 smaii blcyclV ment, gas wafer heater, oarage. 10,500. DEC. 7- Fri!" 10:30 a.m. '. mlies wr trl DBPENDABLS single man wilh eipttr- Choice a| 13, 6 montha lo l year old, Tel, «M4. WANTED-iiTri* AUo^ LliKOln- Mercury—Falcon - Comet ' County, Minnesota, at Ihe time abowe _ _ _ chlld'a toy horse and American fl-yer Arcadia. Wis. on Howy. 9J. ihon 4 nin es lence on modern dairy farm. Good shorter or taller, males, various colors, Open Mon. ft Frl. Eve, ft Sal. p,n am) good * train accmwrleir Tol, B-1466, ' R ESIDENCE PHONES! _ SW. Georoo Arnold Estate. cAiuir Enj. •pecllled. horn* wagti, Russell Church, all gentle, Dec. e, I »o 5 p.m.al Roy USED APPL rANCES-w« hav^lhem. ?•• ~ That properly belonga to the VWI. frlgerators, wringer washers, dryurs ~ ^ ' e. J. Hartort , , . 3973 . &~rrtc DODGE Ilsh t, Kohner, aucfion«r<; Nnrtnrm sold Minnesota City. Chrlillonion Farm, I miles N. ot C«n- WANTHD SCRAP IRON 8. METAL nona Beverage Company, n corporation, " and rangta, FRANK L1LLA & SONS, (Vinry Lou .r , , . 4531 4DR. SEDAN, Inv. Co., clerk . ORANlfe POLISHER and cutter terville, wis, Hgwy, »s, i miles s. -ot Tel. 3004 tor pickup. VVl which carried on business af 1000 Baiif H*ND Jerry Dorlhe B-2377 *l" ' ^ Block"" and while, tor die members molds, Roy V Ttl Eum. _ HIGHEST PRICES PAID DEC. 8-Sal. 1 p.m. i ir.-lle N. ot Nelson, Minnesota, and dlicew- snd Steady 'i Store In Fox Coulee, . mile. automeflc transmission, V-8, povvar ' 4th Street, Wlnonn, work. Roosevelt Oranlta Co,, Inc., Sny- Watch for sign, Will trade for live- PfiRCH SALE—Christmas cards, decorl- M I, VW IRON AND METAL CO. Phil Ip A. D»umw)r» . . . 9540 Wis , Lea Amdahl, owner. Fr.wK U k".>-r-. tlnued operations on October l, 1961. steering, whitewalls, radio, heater , der , Oklahoma. stock, Will hold till Christmas. Bring tlons, glrtt. toys, gohleta, dishes, youth 207 W. I-odi serosa Spur Oas Station loin, Auctioneer; Noriiicni Inv , Co, Daled: December 3, IBM, ~ "~ ~' " truck, Contact Roy Christiansen, Tel, chair, lancy blue bedjpreeDICK TRACY . By Chester Gould
«¦ ^ ¦¦¦¦ » fj ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ I »_ BB» «« __ ^ Tw^TtMM ' * r.—r—:— : . BEETLE BAILEY- By Mori Wa!k«r
" ' " ' " ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ - . . . . : &
THE FLINTSTONES By Hanna-Bprbera
¦ ______¦ i ¦ ¦ ¦'¦ - ." ______-—••__—————__^_____^_____a_ar__—_—_«••——_l—___a_____M pill a i i i ¦— a_aa_a—— ¦—¦ ¦ i ¦ ¦ RIP KIRBY By John Prentice and Fred Dickenson
BLONDIE By Chic Young
111 ABNER . By A| Capp STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff
___ _!a^effHH£ *li^i^HP¥e^BM_K rr ____F*^ -*Pr ^ ™ T^ ' r " " T r ^ ^ ^ ^m T ' "»" " T^ r^ r ^ r ^ ^ »^ , ~ _T^e T^_* . . . * *• ^^ . » e ^ . • e^l^ , " •i ^^ ^ eTei^"r** C« ^"\ ' • l ^ ta , aaTajT^ ^^^ *i ^ *»^^ «i ^* ' ••^'^ r r»^^ e . ^ T »« ^"\ #»T^ % _<^^'i _»^Wl |_^_g^^ ^^ *• *• *• " *#^^^ Its ' so nice to get a " I Ci^fJ]ln ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ 1 ^1 ~iu u~~s I«KJ^-.V J^ll ' ' ¦J I gitt trom Jordan s f ilil l/ -^ I - I; i ^^ ^^ 1___F ' _§ ' f I W PW^ cute, cuddly |
]__ * ¦___> ..: and our sportswear ______£____t_f 1_[ _»ll___A _t \___BP _ I I f TOY DOGS |It' ^^HHKf ^M""** . H XaW " ¦ ¦ onc dog free with | t \ 00 every § I \ gifts head her "most-wanted" list «| lw y l j $ Dry 6 Cleaning Order j of or,on s I wW-^ JK i i^r^ — > SWEATERS W00'' I ^^^^^^^®| i J ^ i * _ regular $2.95 value I 1 g SITTING BULL _-__* _¦_3»_X $ w /•* ___ "^^\ «5 : ,n or « A__ ___P <_ __\ £ s,lrn pIealod I* *j , __ __ _ '^1 SKIRTS ^^ff |F I i _4£2* _& ______l r 1si 5 v ^^S^^^Slv ^ § ThMe 9R/ l______¦_ 1 « doggies |__*fer ______¦ « warm th* ! __¦ ______¦ W of every little $ *^»______4 boy . . . ><^F I | | -_M <__k^______F CHIEF I ffi to ^ ^ 4_____T _aVa_ _J______' ' j^^^^^^^^BW\ CJ WK&L ^fl _K i i ______,':fciv $ « Tk ______k V' ____%- ^ wcar cottons nnd dncron nnd cotton H .| u They're well V ^ _3ll^___P _0^^ i jjt* V ^S/ ^*^^ n«_v ^W _^ ^a___K^^*__V_T _JW _ ?- __ ft ^ _ made of top * *• TL V>_ ^^».' I % blonds in solids nnd smart now , _. H j | | h^mZ^ ^ Ufc i^F__ ^_ ^ _T ____ b C aP S KODCS K quality materials " r ^^ K; ^X ^^TOKJ ii-^^v prints RO with all her sportswear. Slips ^f GoWttS ¦ | j _« __T 1__fl_ari_____r^r J_^P- _^ __ * ___ w » ^ ^^^ Sizes 30-3« ?3.98-W.98 ^ ^ ¦ : f ;-_^^_^S_ _fl^^_f A, _. & V * f ^" _lL^ ^X j ! • ••*«ribbon,«' ••* and Aw» » ^ V UJ *X W._7 OI Pajamas ft Dresses 1.5 I * _HF ______(%__ l^ __ ___k ___i ___^% \ « « ^ * * n M 91 APIfC in s''m tapered If 1 I ^__T'<____r • __ mmW V*~ _L« __l ^i I -HUIVO slylcs flllly llnM, t0 coars ft Car Coats ¦ 5_; {^ > j __ W |t ____ delight her! Choose n basic color ^ l l Get as many as ^ Wfc" AW ?/ L _J>* #* / 6 ! W00 sne C <#• ? a# ^V_r_N"* _i AW* » >ic\'er has OIIOIIR II * Vou whh . . . ^1#_ *_ * *> ¦ ' — " - X' ^A '" ' • • • B J ' _» %¦* A*¦ - - " ft '£• lA pairs I Sizos 10-10, ... $5.98 to $8.9$ ^^^ j but don't «Jelay ' ?-T^Z.,. * ¦ ¦ -->' f# W ______flW £ " — - * ... offer Is in , w ^ J effect only while _4__llln__X-- ^ _ _ our supply lasts. 5( / v\\mTUt \ . _—-,_ ' ¦ ' V E | USE ou« CONVB ' r DRIVE-IN PARKING [JX UmmHSMmU/_Uli/UlmL ^^*^^^ — **^ r 11M I ** ¦tVe_ia___» ^g^^^__ i^B«- J ? LOT AT REAR OF OUR "f!?1!!"? 1 - £j Q ^ Across From Foil Office I BUUDINGI S Vyrtf_7T I g. 60 W*U Third St. .1 I WE ALSO DO ALTERATIONS t^HOIiG «4V I f S ' § 8»__lW_tti^i_mi^__;iwcj3tt i k