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4-12-1974

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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SALI Wxjsiijt^ Simon's naming acforcl ai treasury unlikely National energy chief expected WASHINGTON (UPI) - By HENRY KEYS . President Nixon is.y expected , .WASHINGTON (UP I) - Secretary of - State: Henry V A. shortly, to nominate energy chief Kissinger today ruled out any William E. Simon to succeed chance of final , agreement with George P. Shultz as . .treasury the Soviet Union this year on secretary, ' ' . limituig nuclear strategic arms proposed policy Simon will .be replaced -as. of the two superpowers.: . ; By DICK BARNES public today ; by William V 0. sightedness that makes it slow- federal energy administrator by Kissinger was questioned by WASHINGTON (AP ) -' A Doub, an Atomic Energy com- er and more difficult to benefit reporters as he escorted Egyp- bis deputy, John Sawhill, an presidential study team says missioner and . chairman of . the from, new enexgy technology. tian Foreign Minister Ismail that iederal energy, regulation studyy^teani formed as a' result administration ; source predic- ' —poor data coordination. The '' ' ¦¦ : " ' " Fahmi to his limousine follow- is iuiTesponsivei . .to change, of President Nixon's energy ted. :• .- ' 7 : yy:-y . -y ] y ing a breakfast, meeting. poorly: coordinated and suffers statement of June 29; 1973. . 7 study group ifouhd there is no The White: House announced ; Asked about the outlook for a from lack of an. over-all nation-? Deficiencies, identified by the , central data base for energy :fc - March 14 that ; . Shultz would permanent agreement in Strate- al ienergy policy. . study 'yvteaim ' . - 'in they , organ- .' formation, and : most agencies resignV sometime - early in May. gic Arms Limitation Talks . But a super regulatory agen- izational structure, pi . federal ' rely on the regulated industry Simon, who kept-his title as (SALT), Kissinger replied: . cy woa't solve the; problem, and energy regulation include : - deputy secretary of treasury u ¦ for the figures. It . believes such . ;,V We; will '..- not: have . y- . 'a neither, will partial ; consoli- while V he; ran .' the administra- —Lack of a . means to guide a lack of information; hampered pei* m a nyent agreement this dation of the existing . 40-pIus agencies oh over-all energy pol- tion's energy program, was energy, reaction to the year. Whether there canLbe an agencies that regulate icy. . The study team:found, for government Shultz's personal , choice as his agreement on part of it really the team has found. example - that while Federal Arab oil embargo. : successor, sources said. 7 is not clear yet. . federal — state — local : 7 It recommends instead that a Power . . Commission policies —Poor GROMYKO ADDRESSES GENERAL AS- .dayi He^ said : the. big oil companies:are pri- . A former v Wall Street invest- , coordination. Each level of . gov- :"We are in the process of National Energy Council be first, drove : many large con- SEMBLY .;. . . Soviet foreign Minister. Aii- marily to blame for the energy crisis. (AP mentybanker, Simon 7-46, set up discussing . it and we; have to ernment often; doesn't take no- , created to supply over-all pol- sumers of natural gas to use of V drei A.- . Gromyko addresses the United Na- ; . PhotofaxX V - .' '•".' the fuel allocation program to formulate some proposals -. now coal arid oil later decisions byV tice of the . : other's interests, . ;. corhbat the -, icy guidance and that coordina- , 1 York' '- ' ¦' ' ' . energy " shortage in response to ' the Soviet the Environmental Protection with a resulting piecemeal, tions General Assembly in New . Thurs- . • and organized: ¦¦' ¦ tion among yagencies be in? ¦' . a . rationing proposals' '¦• and . then we will Agency then: limited the y kinds parochial and . stop-gap' ' . ap- system for use if. the; shortage ' • ¦ creased in such areas as licens- know." '.: • ing and data collection. of oil these consumers could , proach to energy problems. 7. worsened, V Kissinger, had hoped to gain a And it warns that unless fed- burn; But neither , agency had The National Energy: Council iy '' Using a . highly personalized . ¦ ftyfe' lyfv y:^7 SALT breakthrough . 7 With ' the eral, state and local govern- an effective means to y take ac- proposed : by the study - group style, Simon created a national So"vietsV in a recent trip to count (of the other's, objectives would develop national energy ^ image : for himSeif as the : ment can better coorlinate . the ¦ Moscow. He had gone there to siting of new energy facilities, and policies. objectives, review energy regu- nation's "energy czar." . lay plans for President. Nixon's the ' federal government may —Unresponsiveness to* change. lation y of; other agencies . and Like Shultz, Simon takes :a expected summit trip .to the have to. preempt' the-, right' to Because agencies regulate on a propose both [new laws and ex- classical view ." of price as an Soviet capital, :; at' which the ecutive actions to meet evolv- allocator - of /economic resour- make such decisions. . case-by-case 7 basis, the teana I ' ¦¦¦ ¦ fv^p ' President .had hoped to con- ing energy problems. ¦ces. ¦¦ The report was made found an inflexibility and short sr^ clude another _ phase of , aims ; He, is a believer .in . the accords. marketplace as the arbiter of '. .The Kissinger trip was supiply and price, and is flatly , ufisuccessful from the stand- lor iutce^soi' opposed to . inore government !<>ok ' regulation than point of a breakthrough. ' By JACK R. PAYTON with. Katzir. Likud, chief Mena- seven new seats in ' the vote, is is necessary, officials .close to him' said! TEL 'AVIV-(UPI) -^'Israel's hem Begin was expected to ask the: second largest bloc iri the legislature with 39 , The blunt-spoken VSimon has two major political groups, the for a chance to form a .members publicly clashe ' " other ; -,- Labor party sources said the d with socialist Labor : alignment and workable*, coalition;.; administration officials, includ- U-S; official rightist ' Likud bloc,; began favorites to s ucceed Mrs. Meir . ¦ . ing •; Roy Ash, the director of the soundings , today ' .to pick a Labor party leader's said, as prime minister were - Fi- ' ¦ however,. Katzir would probably Office of Management and " successor to outgoing Prime nance Minister . Piriha§ Sapir, Budget, who reportedly- coveted said kidnaped Minister Golda Meir. y. pick an interim prime minister Justice Minister Ham Zadok from within Mrs. Meif's party, the treasury secretary's job. : ; The ;V 75-year old .premier and Labor : Minister Yitzhak Shultz, who has served in tha which has ruled Israel since Rabin. . ' -V . handed in her formal resigna- independence in 1948. Nixon administration .; since its Argentina tion to. President : Ephraim . Defense Miii i-ster Moshe inception, ' said he wanted ; to in . Mrs : CORDOBA, Argentina CAP) Katzir Thursday and told the . Meir's badly split Labor Dayan, criticized by some return : to private life. " alignment lost eight seats Dec. : ' — -Police said the chief of the. Knesset (parliament) she y fa- Labor leaders for Israel's Shultz ywas dean - .of:-,- the . States Information VServr 31 in tyhe last national election, handling of last October's war, University of Chicago's Gradu-y. Uiiited vored early national elections - ' ¦ - ice: in Cordoba yras kidnaped to- instead of trying to maintain a but . still enjoys '. a . 51-seat has ; threatened; -to • take his ate School of Business when he ; plurality in the -.. 120-member day in a violent incident. . They shaky, caretaker government. V : supporters over to Likud to joined the Nixon cabinet as identified him as Alfred Laun. Knesset, Likud, . which won forge a ruling rightist coalition. labor secretary in 1969- There was no immediate con- Acknowledging a gatHeriug firmation from the U.S. Embas- wave 7 of: national discontent, *y ; v " y Mrs..;Meir told the . legislature, A y spokesman for . the police "I came; to the conclusion that jwecinct in suburban Unqiiillo, perhaps the public, should be about, given , the opportunity to reas- VVhifii five miles; from here, said about tiine unidentified sess jts political wishes." ..: .. H^ persons, including, a womanj Under Israeli law, the resig- kidnaped Laun from his home. nation automatically brought The State Department's Bio- down her entire, five-week-old over graphic Register lists an Alfred Labor government. - ipmex:fro^i^i^^:^ Laun HI as 36, and says he is Katzir said he would begin By JOHN BEGlaER stitutional responsibilities." I Ziegler spoke several hours from Wisconsin. immediate consultations with WASHINGTON (AP) — The Ziegler said the materials, to laffcer the subpoena was hand- • "" American oilmaal Victor Sam- leaders of all parliamentary "White House, facing a House be turned over . within two delivered to the White House. : uelson is still held by Argentine factions before picking a new Judiciary Committee subpoena weeks; would bear put . the The committee voted 33-3 to prime minister ; to form a far;tapes and documents, says [president' s past explanations of subpoena . for its. impeachment guerrillas despite the payment 1 V of a record ,$14.2 million for his transitional government. . He it will turn over at . least some his Watergate role and "re- inq^uiry 42 presidential tapes relea se... Samuelson of said Mrs. Meir would stay on of the materials. ceive the support of the and related documents the pan- , 36, POPE IN HOLY THURSDAY CERE- Holy Thursday service, in St. John Lateran Cleveland, Ohio, manager of an until replaced. • Presidential Press Secretary House." el believes are tied, to the Wa- Esso refinery north of Buenos MONY . . . Pope Paul VI kisses foot of boy basilica in Rome Thursday. The ceremony, Political sources said re- Itonald L. Ziegler on Thursday However, Ziegler declined to tergate cover-Up. . Aires, was kidnaped four in reenactment of Christ's gesture to the 12 marked the start of four days of Easter public presentatives of the opposition said President Nixon would say that the" • response would "The playing of games is months ago. apostles on the eve of the Crucifbcibri during services. (AP Photofax) :. Likud bloc would meet Sunday give the committee, materials comply fully with the demand over. The committee means "consistent with his con- by the House committee. "' | business," said Rep. John P. Seiberling, D-Ohio, summing up the committee's mood as it voted to demand delivery by '< April 25 of the evidence. On the inside: The committee lias been gather An attorney says, he will ta bury §i . seek a new trial for - Israelis waiting for the material since Pny|u . g-lWr »*!•*.-fSrm^Urtited^Mii^WBT^^ Feb. 25. ¦¦¦ ¦ |V (Tony) Boyle convicted of fi rst-deree murder in the Yab- i . . ' ¦ 7 ' . . ' . ' . ¦ |:j lonski family slayings — story , page 2. . PlnnnorC T,ie w n°na City Planning Commission voted in Galiiee ^i| rlaiiKCI » . ! ' ih eir dead 5 ursdi,y 0 Th t reject a Fiberito Ccrp. rs- By United Press International for the Liberation of Palestine- Thursday but agreed to stay on •:| quest to change a site plan for a biiilding . already .under Ehrlichman : General '. Command said it until her successor was picked , i |. construction upholding a city order to stop work-on a portion Israelis gathered to bury | of the building — story, page 3. > their dead beneath the brush- staged the raid in a bid to free told the Knesset (parliament) 100 guerrillas from Israeli jails. the attack was "assassination T 1C M nnesola Department of Natural He- covered hills of Galilee $¦ I,Rfi<5G8*VPBM 1 ' ' ' / conspiracy today and angrily blamed The assault came a year and for assassination's, sake." !;? '" sources .recommends on-lnnd disposal of Re- a day after Israeli commandos Information Minister Shimon g|: serve . .Mining- Co. taconile wastes near Babbitt — dloty, neighboring Lebanon for the - 1;; page 5. Arab guerrilla slaying of 18 gunned down three top Pales- Peres said Israel ' "shall , not tinian guerrilla leaders in their hesitate to take the urgent was wornca 'who first , carried the H men, women and children at •^ -WflttlSn ¦¦ ^ RU ! tidings ' trial June 17 the town of Qiryat Shemona. Beirut homes in retaliation for measures necessary, both for i U»"B" of Christ's resurrection on lhat. first Easter — terrorist attacks , our defense and to prevent conclusion of a five-part WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Lebanese government $ Easter series , pafto 9. has- ' "The . .' Mrs. Meir , who resigned murderous attacks," federal judge set . June 17 — must know that we regard it two years to the dty after tho and its citizens who are aiding 1972 Watergate burglar,: —for the terrorists responsible for the beginning of the conspiracy the massacre," Israeli . Prime trial of John T) , Ehrlicliman Minister Golda Meir said . and five others involved in the Ellsberg brenk-in. Lebanese Premier 1' aklcddin Sutvival -of campaign reform U.S. District Court Judge met in Solh , fearing retaliation , Gerhard A. Geselt Thursday Berut with envoys of the said in a brief order the trial United States, Soviet Union, date may ho changed pending China , Franco and Britain to motions by some defendants for warn of "aggressive intentions" measure separate trials. , in by Israel House doubtful (AP) Charged in the case with A tbrce-man guerrilla squad , WASHINGTON - The But the bill the Senate passed were 23 Republicans and nine This compares with about $55 Senate has passed a sweeping Ehrlichman , President Nixon 's which Israel said canio from then has been stuck ever since Democrats , all southerners ex- million spent on President Nix- former domestic affairs ad- Lebanon, ran through two campaign reform bill and sent in the House Administration cept for Adlai E. Stevenson III on 's re-election in 1972 and up- viser , are Charles Colson apartment buildings In the it to the House, where its Committee. of Illinois. wards of $25 million spent by former Special White House chaiiees of survival are in The House committee is his Democratic , opponent , Sen. northern Galilee town Thursday The ninrgin hy which the bill Counsel ; convicted Wntorpnto morning, killing residents who doubt. working on a bill of its own , George McGovern of South Da- burglar G. Gordon Liddy; and is oxpecled to tun. out to was passed was far short of the kola. ¦ answered knocks on their Senate passage by 53-32 vote which two-thirds majority that would throe Cuban Americans , Felipe doors . Thursday capped nearly three be far different from the Senate Campaign contributions , un- be required to override a veto. limited under present, DeDiego, Bernard L. Barker weeks of debate, with the bill's measure. law , and KiiRcnio Martinez. Three townsmen , five women, Under the bill, major party could not exceed $3,000 by an eight children and two soldiers provisions for government fi- The indictment charges they nancing of Another hurdle for Uio Senate candidates for president and individual , or $0,000 by an or- were slain by bazooka , subma- campaigns for feder- for the Senate and the House conspired to violate tho civil al office the chief issue. bill is the threat of a presiden- ganization , to any candidate's chine gun and grenade fire. tial veto. would be entitled to full public campaign for federal office. liberties of Dr. Lewis J. Sixteen other Israelis were Sen, James B. Allen , D-Aln., President Nixon has snid us- financing of their general elec- ¦ Fielding, tho Beverly Hills wounded . who led the opposition , pre- ing tax funds to finance federal tion campaigns up to cert ain psychiatrist: who onco treated The guerrillas died in a blast dicted tho fight against the election campaigns would |>o a spending limits, Steelworkers approve Dr. Dnniol Ellsborg. Ell;;borg bill 1 of explosives after , holding off in tho Senate would strengthen raid on the Treasury, The use of tax funds to fi- WASHINGTON (AP) - ' Tho LEAVING THE WHITE HOUSE . . , P ress Secretary Ron wns the nwn who made public Israoll troops for 4'/j hours the resolve of opponents in the "Tho single most important nance campaigns would be op- United Stcclworkcrs today ap- Ziegler leaves the White House Thursday after briefing news- the "Pentagon Papors" on Vietnam, from a fourth floor apartment House. action to reform campaign fi- tional with the candidates , proved a new three-year con- men about a subpoena recoiveel earlier by the Whilo Hoiiso ,000 porsons a tract with tho nation 's 10 major Tho defendants nro charged In the town of 18 Except for Its public financ- nanclii g should bo broader pub- Tho bill's spending ceilings from the House Jud iciary Committee requesting tapes of mlle-nnd-a-half from tho Leba- ing provisions, the measure re- lic disclosure," ho said, would limit presidential candi- .stool enrnpaniefl nrovidinfi wage in the White House "plumbers" presidential conversations. The committee is conducting an nese border. semolos a campaign reform bill Voting for tho Senate bill dates to expenditures of about Increases totallin g about 05 operation to break into Flol- A small commando group tho Senate passed over- were 37 Democrats and lfi Re- $17 million on general election conts an hour for 3,W,0O0 work- investigation Into the possible impeachment of President ding's office to obtain Ells- calling itself tho Popular Front whelmingly last July. publicans. Voting against . it campaigns. ers. Nixon. (AP Photofax) berg's psychiatric records. ¦ " - - No da te ¦;: set f or sent cfricing; - :./ v ^:;: -^:^;- .^^., - -;- - -; ./-V:; f .; I pii^ HHH demands B^By XEE LINDER Sprague . previously had con- Kenneth Yabloriski, who liad bitter battle to> ' unseat Boyle . MEDIA, Pa. '(AP) - W. A., victed or obtained guilty pleas fouaid the bodies fives days after from the job he.;had . held for chaH apologylroi "tony " Boyle's attorney says from eight others in the Yab- sister were nearly a decade,; . '" •• ' his parents . and . . By WILLIAM R. LONG rested in recent , weeks. They Geisel , a former , general he will seek a new^ trial for the lonski case: 7 ;• . ' ¦ "Boyle was the originator, slain as they slept in their; rural v ) include students, V professors, haadpicketi for the. job by his former president of the United . " SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP — Mine Workers, convicted of Sprague said. "We . got back: to Qarksville home ; in south- Wisconsin LWV y economists, Roman Catholic la- predecessors, was elected to University students , are chal- bor leaders, and social workers. Nixon nominee murdering union rival Joseph the beginning and that's where western . Pennsylvania, «ra- lenging the power, of President : ' the ' presidency by the govern- "Jock' - YablonsE y V we 'stop.''' ."¦ ':¦.¦ ; president denies A Sao Paulo police . - -spokes-, ¦ 7 WASHINGTON (AP)— Sen. . braced Sprague. . , Ernesto Geisel', the hew leader man said si)ch arrests are "re- ment-controlled Electoral. Col- : V The jury which returned its The . .jury of nine ihen and :'"You: know .how y happy : I Hubert H, Humphrey, D-Minn., • . anti-solpn campaign of Brazil's authoritarian re- served" matters . about : , which lege in January and took office verdict Thursday evening also three women deliberated 4. am,'.'he said, tears- swelling In "¦ - has demanded ah apology from found the ailing 72-year-bld hours before , returning a ver- " ¦ gime,: in a campaign against the government does not . com- ¦last month.. ' . his. eyes. ' . MADISON . tpPI) 7 r- Floss ' '' President Nixon s nominee to Boyle, now. serving, a three-year dict. ' . Boyle the co urtrootn : es- political arrests. ment. :" . ; • A. female: . student active in ' left¦ Whalen, president of the Wis- : said ' federal sentence. for. misuse of . . Members of the Boyle and corted y by marshals,. . turning Tlie " protest movement is a . ^Political arrests, often made the new protest movement be ambassador. .to Belgium, for . consin League of Women Voters, . without charges,, have been the committee > hopes that 'be? UMW fuhds, guilty of killing Yablonski families : were on op-" first to wave toy his wife and major defiance of the political . a 1968 incident in Liberia; , 0 ' said Tuesday a report that the V imposed oh Brazilian common ' during the 10 years cause of the large number of Y ablonski' s . wife and. daughter posite sides of the hushed iriuirmeri "Grbodbye." . blackout . Humphrey made the demand on Dec. 31, 1969. ¦ courtroom's, center aisle when : universities in theV ..late 1960s the military has. been in control persons involved, ^ authorities; 5 Sprague built his : case against LWV --planned to campaign " Wednesday at a Senate Foreign the verdict : was read. All had B»yle when the military regimei . pur- of Brazil. ' will not take action against it, The convictions qan'y a niau- ; . primarily oin the testi- against legislatorsV who voted ,.; V risky, but 1 500 Relations Committee / hearing their eyes :riveted on the white- mony of William TTirnblazeiV a ¦ ged campus political' circles "Thousands of young stu- "It is still f : , . datory life: term. No date was against^ the , -women's equal. ;¦ . intellectuals , and . workers persons meansVsomething," , she faced defendant sitting erect former president of UMW ^Dis- and ordered ; strict 7 measures dents, - ¦ on Leonard K, Firestone's ap- set for sentencing. ' rights .bill was . false. . , antigoyernment activi- disappear , in the jails . of . thei said. ' ' ¦ ¦-: . and . unmovingy iri the carved trict 19, embraciiig Kentucky against pointment;; Defense lawyer Charles F. armchair. . She said the league . was a ties by students. . country, are tortured and are Moses, claiming the . evidence and Tennessee. Turnblazer has Open protest meetings such ;The Minnesota Democrat said . pleaded , guilty to; - federal nonpartisan organization and killed," Said the protest leaflet. 5vas insufficient, said he. would Boyle's wife was heard to "does not support or oppose : Last Friday an estimated i,- to Geisel . it as tlie ones at the University of as Vice-president he went to chVarges. of yiolatihg Yablonski's In a: challenge, virtually file a. motion next week for a whisper,: "He didn't have - any- any political . party or can- 500 persons met oh the campus added: Sao Paulo have been Liberia for the 1968 presidential ' civil rights. This., c arries a life nonexistent since 1968, when po-- hew .triai .V X: 7. .. . / thing to do with it;" His daugh- - . ' ¦ ' ¦ ' " didate." :- ; of the University of Sao Paulo. inauguration, He; said while he sentence. V . . ..-, . ; "Com- "AU of the conduct of the re- lice broke up a student demon- special yProsecutor VRichard ter, Antoinette, held back tears She said, however, that many The meeting set up a k.,: Sprague, who charged Boyle ¦ mittee for the. Defense of Politi- cent governments, including the stration in Rio de Janeiro. 7. was there he met with-a group and bit her lips as she rubbed Turnblazer said Boyle gave LWV . members feel strongly was killed then. - :: including some bad ordered Yabloriski killed her eyes. the "kill Yablonski "¦:.' order at:a about the measure "and iam cal Prisoners in. Brazil." yy. 'new' one — whose only new One . student of workers, v ¦¦¦' meetings . were feature is the name the pres- Authorities arrested hundreds jform- and then authorized $2Q,000 : in . Kennethy ahd Joseph . Yab- June 23, 1969, meeting in a hall- sure they will be: active in po- •. More such : - . : °f ; Americans, interested in union fu rids to finance it Jr; held this Week : and subcom- ident hot even elected; by the of persons at a secret meeting , said: lonski: , - the.two lawyer sons way -of the UMW . . building in litical . campaigns this fall. How- , ing a . -union on the Firestone ''This man used , the blood ¦ mittees are seeking support people — maintains its: policy in . 1969 of the outlawed National . of the siairi union V leader, Washington, DX. ever, they will do it as .indiyid- rubber plantations. and sweat V of miners for kill- clenched and unclenched their The slayings : .occurred three uals and not in the ; name;, of ,-y and ; distributing leaflets accus- mainly at the expense of. super- Student Unions .' '- "I ' juBt listened," Humphrey ¦¦ . : , those incidents, politi- '"' ' ¦ ¦:' • ' ¦ ;¦' ' fists and scowled. .0 x weeks , after Yablenski lost a the league." 7" ing the government of y repres- exploitation, maintaining low Since said ,. but . after he 'left "article . ™8* ¦: • • ' i xXx . : ' ¦¦ ' :¦ ' sion. ' :: ' :.: salaries arid increasing enor- cal protests by students have after article'' appeared in the V . One leaflet lists753 persons it mously the profits: of the: com- been limited mainly to - under- ¦ ' : Liberiaii press "making it look said political police have ar- panies. ^ ..."' ground proclamations. ¦like I was "trying to stir up a revolution." .7 OnW'S pectacula r / Humphrey said the articles were : generated ; by. the Fire- stone company. CGinrtitinfcol/on$ iti/n/sfir ': "Iresent it," Humphrey said. careier <>v0r ey«5n "I . want Firestone to• give me an apology¦ ¦ before he is con- nters m firmed.""' •. •' e Firestone had testified earlier convietiori By GERARD LOUGHRAN 1 Royer, 53, a national legisla;| meet, in': a :¦ May-' . '-19 runoff that : he was never active in before Firestone's international com By JOHN BRONSON Boyle was elected president PARIS ' (UPI) — Comrmuiica- ¦ tor and mayor of the city of election if none- of the candi- ; 1 pany,y but had . . visited some MEDIA, Pa7 (AP) ; —7W.A. of the Western States District resigning as dates , getsymore than 50 per 1 tions . Minister 7 Jean Royer Tours, said he .was -in plants ..abroad. 7 ¦tony' Boyle has eaten ' the 27 in 1940. y minister 'to' cent of, the¦ vote the initial ' ; : Thursday, night became the communications ¦¦ balloting. ¦ When ' Humphrey .was told ' of hard rock dust of the Montana Lewis made. Boyle an assist- campaign for president. '¦: -.. . he third Gaullist: candidate in : yRoyer, commerce minister this testimdny, . he said he coal fields,^and also knows ant in 1948, and Boyle worked in \vould expect V a letter from asures Fraiice!s .7 presidential-7; race- y Opinion polls have shown under Ppmpidpu's predecessor, the opulent ple that went the shadow . Vof . his: boss until 1 Mitterrand leading V Giscard. the late Gen; Charles de Gaulle, Firestone,. who 7 had left : the with the V presidency . of the Lewis; retirement; in I960. further weakening the : divided ' V ar- ' ' d'Estaing and Chaban Delmas, won the support of France's robmV before7. Humphrey United Mine Workers .union. ,. . He " inherited . the ;$50,000-a- conservative opposition to lef-. rived, disavowing, any -part .in but failing; to get . the necessary shopkeepers by. restricting the But his ohce-spectacular ca- year presidency inyl963. - : tist Francois Mitterrand. : majority... needed for ,a first- building of supermarkets and the' Liberian episode. .: reer as a labor leader was al- y \ champion of France's .victory. - ; discount - centers- across the ready over Thursday when a He also inherited a union that Royer, round ¦ ^^iGftj^f^^ ^ ^M 1V million . shopkeepers/ , joined The ,, two - top finishers would nation. ' ' jury convicted him : of three would soon .. be seething with discontent. : the. campaigning for the May ,5 Judge questions counts of: murder in the slay- ings pfy UMW rfebei Joseph y. Ih 1968, nearly 80 men died in I -ffiiSSll presidential election promising boycott the; Farmington, W. Va,, mine !£^^' There's no time like the secondary '.'Jock" Yablonski and his wife \\js&z z»Z-~~23£& a. "hew style of action." and daughter.: 77 disaster. ; ' present to start thinking about Ny]/iets provision of law . . Seven¦'. months after Farm- a new garag e To help make the decision a bit easier, The entrance of; Royer in the overrun The verdict came more than ington, . Yablonski, head of the Sussel assembled dozens of garage design ideas into marked; the third major (UPI)-Dane Coun- contest MADISON : four , years after a trio of hired union's , lobbying arm , chal- this interesting catalog It s yours free for the asking change in the line-up of ty Circuit Judge Richard : W. gunmen shot the Yablbnskis. to lenged Boyle for the presideh-; Just give Sussel acall If you like, we 11 bri ng one out to Bardwell said Thursday he had ' :¦ ; ¦ , Saigon deathV in their beds, at their ¦cy. - ' • your home and give you a free no-obligation estimate candidates for the post since pastnear . . reservations about the state law ';¦ . President Georges -Pompidou Clarksville,; Pa .. farmhouse. Shortly after his death the Sussel-The Garage Builder with three exclusive ¦:¦' SAIGON, 7 South . Vietnam Vietnamese; government - pro- against secondary boycotts; . V Yablonski once had , been in ways to get more garage for your money, the Un-Bilt, died of bone cancer last week. - (AP) Labor Department challenged — North: Vietnamese and posed a cease-fife in the area V Bardwell refused to declare Boyle's inner ' circle, .but his de- the election that Boyle had won Near-Biltand AII-Bilt. . National Assembly President Viet Cong forces apparently to allow for evacuation of the the entire law unconstitutional, fection over the issues of min- by 3fl ,O0O votes. Vy: overran the Tdng Le Chan but questioned provisions which Edgar Fanre and Prime sick and wounded' and; an inves- ers' health; safety and welfare In a court-ordered rerun , Ar- BUILD NOW-PAY NOTHING ranger camp .50 miles north of prohibit picketing aga'nst a bus- Mihis:ter Pierre; Messmer tigation y by - the four-nation In- led to one of the most bitter in- nold Miller, a Yablonski sup- AT ALL UNTIL 1975 : Saigon early .Friday after . a iness not directly involved in. a ternal struggles of the labor jumped in and .dut, leading .a siege . of" nearly 14 months, gov- ternational Commission of Con- , porter, rode to¦¦ victory yon a re- For a Iree estimate or a free calaloq /cniVonc niif\ dispute with a. union. V 7 movement, form slate, ' ,' ' '; •¦ national radio commentator to ernment military sources re- trol and Supervision of ..- , the . Bardwell's decision concerned ol qaraqe design ideas call \JU// L03'1)44U It was II years, ago -that The rapid , decline .of a once- say, "everytiine it - topics like ported, ' 7:- '.. : fighting there. a request by Jon' L a q.u.o r ncFIPP Hni inc- 9'00"5-30 Monday-Fndav -aj ^fc, - s Boyle gained the union presi- powerful union boss . had begun. OFHct MuuHb,penkii pyA ppoin1mMt .-**a™akiHWBaa-^^ . the race has-. finally taken its The sources said they had re- State to prohibit .picketing by ports Brig. Gen. Pliari Hoa Hicp, dency as the hand-picked heir On Sept. 6, 1973, Boyle Was definite ':¦ shape somebody else that the rangers fled from ¦ ¦ the United Farm , Workers, AFL- , Lewis.:•' "' ' ' ¦¦' ¦ , the camp after a heavy mortar South "Vietnam 's chief ¦military of John L :: • . indicted on charges of enghieeVr > : throws a 'monkey wrench in the delegate to the Joint Military CIO. The store was selling prod? Born in Montana in 1901, the ing the Yablonski He . ¦;7 i)PEN-ll0ySE| attack followed by an infantry ucts of the Guild 'Wineiry in murders. t£S^^ Commission, said the Viet Cong son of Irish immigrant parents, already had been convicted of I FREE (3IFTS and refreshme nls.: y ¦U/^i"'CU'ft4 ¦works." ' assault. . California which was iii a labor .y 7 ," rejected: the proposal at a , Boyle went to work as a coal misusing union funds for politi- : Politicians said Royer's can- dispute with the UFVf. . Kings Row Bui IdiTig. B21 3rd Avenue S.E.. -,* Roches ter . Minn. 55901 . ' • didacy would take votes away The South Vietnamese com- meeting of. the joint commis- miner aft er graduating from cal donations and was free on * mand said the: attack began sion Friday. , Bardwell : denied the request high school. : ' ¦¦' ¦;¦¦ TWIN CITIES EAU from the two : other 1 Gaullist ¦ $179,0OOVbbnd i • MANKATO CLAIRE late Thursday afternoon. It Said '• " ¦'Lt;-: Col. be Trting. Hien, the saying he thought the union contenders — Finance Minister had ya right to peacefully picket ; (507) 387 B247 y 1612) 645-0331 . 17 15] 835-4351 Valery Gis-card d'Estaing . and 900 mortar shells hit the base chief spokesman for the com- A few hours before a hearing during a four-hour barrage , mand, said the post is strategic the store and advise the public IRS refunds to state on the niurder indictmentsj former Prime Minister Jacques of the dispute with the Guild The Sussel Co. Chaban-Delmas. , knocking . out the radio an- because it sits along an east- Boyle was rushed to a hospital, Winery. : ; ' . residents average $361 where a potentially lethal' dose Kings RowBuilding,821 3rd Ave. S.E., Rochester, Minn. 55901: The politicians said, however, tennae. west highway and blocks North Radio contact with the base Vietnamese arid Viet :Cohg ac- Bardwell took issue with a The Internal Revenue Service of sleeping pills was pumped Please send me youhgarage design catalog. . the new candidate might also ' ¦ was lost shortly after midnight, cess to; the provincial capital of ruling last year by Circuit Judge says it has refunded; just over from his stomach. .. ¦ ¦ ¦ take votes from Mitterrand , Name.—_ • ' ' . ' ;——.—;Rhpne______u__ X secretary general, the command said. V An Lo-c, 60 miles north of Sai- W.L. Jackman, who enjoined $233 million:, to Minnesota tax- After a month-long trial, of the Social- y : • ist party arid choice of a wide The base was manned by gon. picketing at another liquor store payers so far this year, with Boyle was found guilty in the A(Jdress- . ;_ X. y about 400 rangers, and one of Elsewhere, heavy fighting He questioned the law, but would •refu nds averaging $361 range of ,' leftist groups, includ- , Yablonski slayings. '• ' ' ¦' ' • ¦ ' the last messages V received was reported in the central not declare it unconstitutional- The error percentage is 5.7 As he led out of City_—^_—_^_——-——-, ..Counly . ing the Communists. : was the ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ ' ' • ¦ ¦: "¦ ¦ ' 7 IP - '¦ ' ' ¦ ' from it said at least 14 of the highlands: about 25 miles south- "It depends on the facts and percent so far this season , the courtroom , he waved to; his Slale_— .. . .— \ men had been wounded. west ef Pleiku and 220. miles circumstances to which the stat- IRS said , with simple mathe- wife and voiced the word, State road toll Earlier this week the South northe ast of Saigon. ute is applied ," Bardwell said. matical errors topping , the list. "Goodbye." 64 below 1973 Peace negotiations endangered By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The death of a St, Anthony TKe Time Is Right \rfC X-i^X- T~* ^*V "*<*J 1 ; mWm ' ..atiTii^.' mm m M ta^aafM » man has raised Minnesota 's ^ ' ^ f* 1974 road toll to 146, compared ^ with 210 a year ago. Israeli /ns/afc/ a fw/s/ To SAVE On Meanwhile, a Florida acci- //fy new ^^^ O^^ den t took the lives of an Ex- By WILLIAM L. RYAN the resignation of Golda Meir effort that might lead to stabil- of the hair-trigger situation. celsior, Minn,, couple and the AP Special Correspondent and her cabinet seems to turn ity , even if that should require No Syrian government is ever man's mother. In the Middle East , if it's not the picture upside down, and modifying florid vows against without a generous share of in- one thing, it's another. the Arabs seem more stable Israel. ternal enemies. The current Russell Severson, 44, St. An- This thony, was killed Wednesday time it's not Arab but . Is- than they have been in 30 And Syria , its politics always one is no exception , even raeli instability that endangers years. among the most volatile in the though it has lasted longer than t&^ when his car went out of con- :—: 1 the delicate trol and struck the steps of a area , also seems more stable. any of its predecessors. Lack- An AP framework 0 f Egypt's President Anwar Sa- Although the Israelis captured ing military disengagement and building near Sixth Street and peace negotia- dat exudes confidence in the Early Bird 1st Avenue North in Min- still more Syrian territory in at least an appearand, of Is- . News tions Secretary wake of Israel's withdrawal the October war, the Syrians reli concession on the Golan Jjy^ Specials neapolis, authorities said, e Henry Canal, Analvsis of Stat. from the Suez seem to feel they fought well Heights, President Hafez Assad James L, Rice Jr., 40; his analysis A Kissj11Rer has Jordan , Israel's neighbor to wife Elizabeth both of Ex- and proved their potential, If would he unlikely to welcome a , , 30, ——I const ructed the east, seems to have been a little HALTS PLUS prevents crabgrass celsior and his mother Lucille Israel gives up at least risk of downgrading the mili- • as , , since October. having some respite from con- of t he territory it took from tary situation. Eice, <>5 , Bradenton , Fla,, were After the Arab-Israeli wars cf stant turmoil. Syria in 1967 that can be repre- On the Egyptian side you feed your lawn, Scotts sends killed Thursday their auto - , , there is when 1948, 1950 and 1967, Arab politi- Tho Arab oil nations , raking sented as a Syrian achie-ve- now uncertainty about how far collided with a police cruiser on cal instability and divisions in more riches than they know mettt , . and how soon Israel will pro- its way to a trouble call in Bra- presented formidable obstacles what to do with , are displaying All this makes Kissinger's ef- ceed with withdrawing from denton. to settlement efforts. This time. a tendency toward the sort oi forts for a Syrian-Israeli dis- Sinai, This , could bring new engagement agreement an pressures on Sadat. HH $2.50 REFUND yXX enormously important phase of j ¦ the search for a final settle- STATE OF FIRSTS MM II I'U \ LLJi'lf 'flJl!"-U*gjj Mfc ment, INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) R P | Hut Israelii uncertainty is a — Indiana 's economy has been Scotts OFFER EXPIRES SINGLE VISION ra thei* long-term prospect that acclaimed as a world leader in I ^^ • might last through the summer, the production of limestone and TU RF BUILDER m, L3 19 or until elections straighten a frontrunner nationally in i lSS T-rSfa ° things out if , in fact, thnt can manufacturing of trailers, pre- J ' y^ GLASSES be achieved at all , fabricated homes and band ' niiiTTfirti ii AmwX' ' ' ^^^^Sm Hi flHB tW^ y*s& flHMBk That's a lot of time In terms instruments. OFF fff^^wPfPI $2 00 on i5,ooo PIANOS & ORGANS \ BiW , WINONA'S LARGEST STOCK , • • H f«rilmiopiiiK««ii»T'nl»i» But w hy wall until Ihe salt i* ' • CURRIER • WURUTZER • MELVILLE CLARK ' H Help* i^rAumuHlpt) lltctt ovi>r? H iw..iMwm ,^-«l,H **!**» I > mmWmmmmmmiM'M ORDER BY PHONE LARGE SELECTION OF KTlM pTiHTffll lBBllirr ^ AA ELECTRIC PIANOS | Kj ^^^MMmm WE LL DELIVER... FRAME STYLES AND COLORS ' FENDER RHODES - WURLITaCR ' IdrWHHMlwi iitt ^^ wWRH- I ' Wm PLAYER PIANOS < ' -ggMMMP- Buy Now and £&Stfi$b] at^ gMtWS^^MrVti^, ' Save ' ^Z?! DOWNTOWN WINONA Wmmmmm^mWEwf tlSM ^^ §(jyri£$ ACE HARDWARE iBB 111 MAIN STREET ^^¦* -* ii '«'irt n,n\

ri¦ '[¦¦ ¦ By STEVENj^ P. JOHNSON going to get it done; one. way plenty steamed tip about this,' ¦; handled. V - ; , V ' .• . VDaily News Staff Writer or another;": Goldberg said, but explained building py "I , think the city:was , 1 lans; — fi- ,short- The attorney for Fiberite added he didn't know if; an nanced by $25 million in city changed , : I think' the neighbor-, VGorp.,; 501 W. , 3rd St., didn't appeal would be filed.• council-issued industrial V reyen- : hood was short-changed, I think know this morning if the firm ; Neither Goldberg nor . city ue bonds everybody was short-changed,",V — were changed sorne-^ ¦.' would appeal the Winona City .planning department officials time between site plan approv- he emphasized.: . • .. Planning Commission's action know . whether jn appeal would al Attorney Goldberg Thursday > . . in August, and . the: time the night said , it was a "mistake ' Thursday night forcing it to go to the city . council or. disr building permit was drawn 'iii modify a building already un- ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ Fiberite ; didn't come back, to trict court, since the ordinance' January. y . .. ' '' ';¦. " ' • ' .. ' • ':'. the commission der construction. ;¦ 7 V ' v 1 to amend the. is silent on appeals and no com- Neighbor Harry Losinski.ySOS site plan,. calling it "more than The commission voted . 5-1 to mission site plan decision has , unfortunate; 1. - . ' ',' s Attempt to W. 4th St., called him two weeks ' 7 reject Fiberite' ever been appealed: . ' .'• ago to; point but that construc- V Biit he said : Fiberite's action amend its Aug. 16, 1973, Site If it doesn tion: wasn't in compliance: with was7 riot , intentional fraud; plan for an addition at West 4th 't appeal, Fiberite could modify building plans to the site plan, Dillerud said, and "That's a .serious charge." and Olmstead streets to coin- City Building Inspector George cide.with actual construction. comply 7 with city orders — a A MEMORAM)UM from po- costly process, since the build- Rogge: issued an ordefr halting construction on. that part of the lice Traffic Sgt. Dale Schafer* , FIBERITE attorney Steven ing is already under construc- building.. . noted :the dock under construc- Goldberg met this' .' /morning tion — or ask tlie commission tion is recessed : 48 feet, not 7 Work continues on the rest enough to allow a tractor-semi- ¦ with corporation' vice .president to consider another . site plan of the WORK 1LALTEP ..; Work has been stopped by city order ' weeks ago and the city planning commission Thursday night' but said no :' ' building, but under the trailer to get inside, saying it : E. F. Tambornihb, amendment. ;V ' '- 'SSl v commission's ruling Thursday V * the loading V dock portion (at left) of Fiberite Corps's ¦refused: to approve a pian change that would allow construe- , made concern-; would illegally : block the side; ~ decision has been ¦ : > Central to the dispute i5-a-r«* •Qlght must nbt resume in that walk there. addition under construction at West 4th . and Olmstead streets.. 7 tion to proceed/ Work continues on the rest of the . building; V ing a possible appeal. . - . .' . cessjed loading dock on the 4th area except to eliminate the Work was ordered " (Daily hottt) Goldberg countered only stopped on:that portion of , the building two . News p . . "I assume they're: ( Fiberite) Street side of the addition, in- recessed loading dock : and corii- shorter, straight trucks would cluded in current building plans ply Vwith the August site : plan. use that; dock, saying another hut not part of planning commis- Noting Fiberite should have dock, farther west on 4th Street returned to the commission with would continue, sion site plan approval last ¦¦ to handle all ' ' August.. ' . . ' ' .:;• ¦ ' ' -v " a site plan amendment when large rigs.. . ' ' Mayor resting Winona man : . . it changed its plans, Dillerud C&R unit lo Gloomy weatmr CITY PLANNING Director "I'll vote in. favor of it if I said, "What I object to was the get $5 for every semi that goes afler surgery Charles Dillertid, who said ''I'm mariner in . which • this Was in there," said disbelieving found guilty of neighbor ¦Donald¦ Justin, 467 W. quit Medicare Mayor Norman Indall contin- 4th St. '¦ " '¦ .' ti\$y linger <>ri ues ¦ ; to rest at: Community Me- V "He's got a deal," said Gold- ital following re- berg.; The warm, gloomy .weather that sloshed into, the . area morial Hosp speeding charge ' moval of a tumor Tuesday. . Praiiners OK. : City Councilman B. Eugene* Thursday is likely to.hang . around for a few days, putting a , . Michael A. Courtier, 377 W. dough , 210 ;. Wilson St., whose program May 1 Doctors : removed .a "fairly damper¦ on .leave-raking .and other outdoor activities; '. : Wabasha St.,. was found guilty 2nd Ward includes the . Fiberite Voluntary withdrawal of the ' ¦: The weatherman Thursday:had said showers, which had good sized" tumoi from the : in Winona County Court Thurs- area,V argued a recessed loading Convalescent and Rehabilita- dropped :li of ah inch of rain on the city by early today, mayor's, bowel area , reported day of speeding, 40 in a: 30-mile Faifway Woods dock should V fee on wider and tion Unit (G:and R). of Com- would leave .this afternoon but the revised forecast now calls iridall's daughter Dianne, Mrs. zone, on East-' 2nd Street be- less-trayeled ' Olmstead Street. 7 munity Memorial Hospital from for a 30 percent chance of showers tonight and . Saturday, Duayhe Malewicki: bf Brooklyn - The proposed Fairway Woods Dale Schafer called; that direct /'This loading zone should not ' with the likelihood of rain diminishing gradually : by Sunday. tween . Lafayette and Center the : federal .. Medicare program Center, Minn. The family hadn't streets; Feb. 28. .- . .:; luxury apartment complex on access to Homer Road, a high- be on. this street,''.G.ough said.. effective Miay 1. has been ait- But mild weather is likely to hang around, making the 7 the hea.rd Thursday, . she said, Courtier V was y fined $25 by the-city's far eastern edge drew speed: county road,. "a hazard", ALSO AMONG the approxi- riounced by Earl "W. Hagberg, rain a little fnore toleralile. Tonight's low should be: in whether7the tumor was malig- ; 40s, with Saturday's higli in 'the SOs and somewhat cooler Olmsted . County Court Judge a pair of Winona City Planning and asked it be. eliminated. mately 15 people in the audi-" executive vice president .and ad- temperatures moving in Sunda^ - ,y : nant - or benign. ; , for Commission approvals .•Thurs- Even .with a. stop sign where; ence, most of whom were neigh- ministrator of the hospital and ¦ Gerard Ring, , who presided ' ' . '.': Thursday's ' high was . a fairly comfortable 58 and this . The outlook is good; she. con- Judge Dennis. A. Challeen. ; V .dayV..night., : the driyewayV exits onto V the bors 'objecting to" tbe peti- G; and-R unit.. 7y morning's low was '44 . It .was 60 at noon today. .. tinued, because idoctoxs y said The commission's actions in- road , Schafer . wrot.er motorists tion, was 4th District County Hagberg. said the C arid has remained fairly : Testimony came from police ; ; R ' While Winona's ^veather stable, they found no spread of the dis- and cluded a recommendation, the would treat it as a normal drive- Commissioner Edward . Male unit will no. longer participate Mother Nature has: beie running amuck Ln bther parts of the patrolmen . Michael Mullen way; exit arid yield creat- ¦ ¦ n ease in lymph nodes. Indall will Nichols and fro in city council give E-2-zoning to . at! - 9:S6 M. AT HOLIDAY try for Easter.. 9:00, Ch. 8. NBC News Presents-. You're ¦V•INN-DOWNTOWN ' 1313. ' coverage of golf's first Big Four , N ICOLLET, MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA . 55403. Too Fat!, special report on event ol the year ¦ at' Augusta What's Impeachment A11 " , About? 9:30, overweight Americans and their ' Ga. 3:30,, Chs., 3-4-8: : Ch. 4.7 . 7; 77 - This hearing is belng. held pursuant ..to Section . 4M(b) of the. Federal Water . 7 Feast of Love. Greek Ortho- attempts to shed pounds. Solu- .Pollution .Control Act Amendments, of 1W2 to receive Wide World of Sports. : comments: on the State of Figure dox ' Easter service at ; New tions range from starvation , ' skating and' wrestliag, 4:00 Minnesota's request. Persons wlshlng y tb make a statement at the hearing are ; , York City's Cathedral v6f - the diets to exercise programs to . ' ' . 4:0O; Chs. : 6-9, 4:30, Chi. ;19. ' . . .encbwraged , to do-so, The. hearing wliiy.be .conducted ; In. a . manner . designed to Holy Trinity. 10:00,; Ch. 10. "bypass" surgery. 9:00, Chs. . :•;. . encourage -maximum , public . .participation, All' , oral and .written comments '.-will' be Easter Is..In this family-type This Is the Life, Story, of.the 5-10-13. ' - ' drama Benji and hisJuly 7, llU. A description , of the ' Ch. 10. 0 n y Easter : morning . . . and NBA Play-Off the presidential Democratic requirements of Sectioni 402(b) of:the Act relating to this,request can- be obtained (or conference . . Benii is reminded, of Easter's final) 12:00, Chs. 3-4-8; nomination. 9.30, Ch. 4. ' ¦: from' the U.S. EPA by ' contacting .the hearing clerk listed below, 7 . Stanley Cup Play-Off. Mon- treal Canadiens vs. New Tork Movies . . .All comments should' be - directed to; -U.S, ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ¦ Rangers, 1:00,. ChsV 5-10-13. Today ';¦ ' AGENCY, / ATTN:: JA.NET.VMASON, -ONE NORTH WACKER. DRIVE, CHICAGO, ' American Sportsman. A fish- "Ben-Hur," Charlton Heston, ' '¦ ' ' ILLINOIS, ,40664, 312/353-5232; -MINNESOTA . iiusity . . . . POLLUTION "CONTROL; . AGENCY, fi^ ing expedition plus, a lesson in Biblical drama (1959), 7:00, Chs. 7. ATTN: DIVISION OF WATER QUALITY, 1935 WEST COUNTY ROAD B2, V TflHIfiHT } 3-4-8. ' ' • . 'jr. ' ''The . Lamplighters . , y ROSEyi.LL.E, MINNESOTA . 55113, . 612/2967361. . . " \ : "The Greatest Story liver Told," Max Von Sydow, drama 7The ' entire Minnesota document:Is available for Inspection, and "iopyins © 20c Television of life of Christ (1965), 8:00, ¦* ( SAT., APRIL 13 ) V^^^* "• ^^.^^Srfr^^H^^^K jt ^mB^SmmwSSr> ^^jjd .. .per . page at- the above. State , and Federal . 'offices. .In addition/ copies of. ihe com- # "The Country Varieties Chs. 5-10-13. " I ^ " piete spbrrilssion are available for. ¦review at the 'Minnesota' Valley Regilonal Library. i < ^^^KsSSdSBBr ^H ¦?> «^-B . Charle Chan at the Circus," J.,, v >« - V vrt-.«- i*v, . ¦ "»« «¦ ( ASSWW "^&>W*AtKrt«,>FRANKLIN J SCHAFfNER y"^wyw^| DIME¦ H US ; shall, drama (1973), 7:30, Chs. PANAVISION' TECHNICOLOR' IQRIGIWAL SOUND TRACK OH CAPITOL RECORDS! -.ALLIED ARTISTS*,-GD |P GT' : WIT EASTER ¦ , ^ ¦ ' 1 r for " ¦ f 7 v .v : r ;• Free Easte egg? the ^^ ' • ' '•v^ 6-9-19. 1^ "The Greatest Story Ever COME EARLY -— FEATURES 7:02-9:40 , RTCTV Told " .(conclusion) Max Von $1 00-$1.75-$2.25 NO PASSES K M U Sydow, religious drama (1965), • U U I 8:00, Chs. 5-10-13. "The Robe,' Richard Biirton, religious drama (1953), 10:00, ELLIOTT GOUID AND ROBERT BLAKE HELD OVER Ch/ 6. ' ¦ DO TO THE POLICE FORCE IN "Man - Easter of AGAIK . , . Kumaon," . 'A\ - Wende 11 Corey; adventure WINNER OF 7 afcy f irSS0 (1948), 10:00, Ch. 19. "BUS-T I j&©Sw^r^ U B IS "A Man V Called Sledge yWhat Elliott Gould and DonaldN^" Sutherland 7 A.CADEMY AWARDS W ^r^5'T^B ." ¦ Jf James Garner, western <1970), Did to ihe Army in ¦:. ' - : ' ; ¦ including K. X ^W 10:30, Ch. 8. ' r ' g^^ ¦\ : ' : ' ^' '" '" ' Best Piet'r* • Director M* ^ "The Secret Invasion," Stew- X - ' %i^'i^^^^ OCEAN FRESH BREADtD LOBSTER TAIL DEEJ> FRIED A art Granger, adventure X»V\j l I : ' ^/M5N GOLDEN BROWN WITH BROILE 0964) , 10:30, Ch. 9. V ^^ ^V r :x COMBINED A D SIRLOIN "The Journey," Yul Brynner H^SJ ¦ , FILET, BAGON WRAPPED AND drama (1959)^ 10:50, Ch. 4. .- - " . if^ \y j WAr^fff ^0 B^^ Imitation of Life," Lana L COOKED TO YOUR LIKING. A y 4i |$S§X E turner, tear - jerker (1959), \ ^B& $3£ ^ 11:00, Ch. 11. "The Walking Dead," Boris Karloff . V thriller (1936), 12:05, Gh. 5, "Shadow of a Doubt," Teresa I PJKTL (1942) 12:05 Wright, suspense¦ ¦ , , I NEWMAN Ch. 13.. ;¦: ¦ . Sunday I JiQBEXT "Tarzan and the Lost Sa- I REDFORD fari, , jungle tale hXX " Gordon Scott I AGEORGE RCf/IIULFlLM TOeKADE ) /'v '^HBB^M |j| ^ ^ r • . , (1957 , 6:00, Ch. 11. L HOME^ OF THE FAMOUS SIZZL1N'SIALOIS PHOHB 454-4!3t 2480 SERVICE DRIVE ^ |j| "Thursday's Game," Gene THE PG Wilder, comedy - satire (1974), &TING 7:30, Chs. 6-9-19. "The Happy Thieves,1' ; Rita COME EARLY (1962); FEATURES AT Hayworth, comedy¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ 10:30, Ch.;;9.7 V . . . ' ' ' "Journey to Shiloh," James 7:02 - 9:21 Sandy's GREAT!V, . Good Friday Special DANCE Caan, drama ( 1968), 10:30, Ch. 91.O0-$U5.U25 EAGLES CLUB 10, New Clubrooms, 4th Franklin "Yesterday, Today and To- * 7.-15-9 :15 $1.75 ENDS TUESDAY l No MUMmE morrow," Sophia Lorcu, come- • • j^jJjflMtW liiBiiiiiiiP'""fiiiBBMM Bma dy (1963), 10:30, Ch 13. SAT., APR. 13 . mm,**mmi^^mmmmmmmamamamm— ^*^mmm0mm *—ft "Twilight of Honor," Richard LEON A KAY Chamberlain, crime drama JUST^S. . — MEMBERS — (1963), 10:50, Ch. 4. 's ¦ y^^twdy y Roast Beef Dinner PREGNANT Iii: and Distressed? | SCHAFSKOPP TUESDAY ' Filet 00 . ¦ ' WE CAN HELP YOU i pvvvvyvSi ^W•ww , $| r>^v-v* '^'>^Nr'v r*fvsrsrs '3 ( *\ ^ L *^^N*»^>' ' TOMORROW'S Free confidential , non-> | Good Friday — SPECIALS — Sectarian service. | | x ^ • Chicken Fry—All (P4 AQ \ ^ You Can Eat ;.. ^AeaJ HAM , FREE Call BIRTHRIGHT f f/ • Children's Portion I ^^ * * Winonn M OPEN EASTER Phone 452-2421 Smelt Fry | ' • PRIME RIB I 4 to i p.m. t-^cw.- and all the trimmings /' It's a WHALE of a Deal... On a WHALE of a Sandwich! FRI., APR. 12 COUNTRY ' KITCHEN , . Plus Complete Menai k If you haven't tasted Sandy' s Filet-of-Fish sandwich, 1611 Service Dr. DANCE Call For | Reservations |J you'ye got a treat coming. And if you have, you know IIVE MUSIC WINONA SUN., APR. 14 iVUVUVWi ' ¦ ¦ ; . what we' re talking about. It's a breaded fish filet, deep- "-~!——*mmmmm~-a ,—mmmmmm—mm ~immam ^~mm I JOAJL a-i2 ATHLETIC CLU B | B ComfL & JM fried to the go lden-crisp peak of flavor, garnished with —• Music by — : Red' s Polka Bend MELL0T0NES i\ (HMJXUIMM. tartar sauce, and tucked into a toasted bun, Sandy's deep- Now rv, /^§ SATURDAY l^'lrk S« "0 «' / / ' fried fish sandwich — it's quite a catch at 3 for $1.00 ! Club 4-Mi!e SATURDAY , ' 12:0° Nom^^**k. Months- •^v4rt£ ^)/^lw ALL-BEEF OFFER GOODt 0 ^Amw ^- Friday, April 12 Hamburgers ^iiniUHiiif^ mm\\xm\ w#yM # En joy [ DAN Reg. JCp [ D.AV C l ! 13 j^y SAT., APR. 13 I Call 454-2231 for Corryouts SAT. APR. 13 < DANCING DANCE ^y 9 to 1 . ^I Wo now sarve [ AT THE SATURDAY ^^^ W \ 1 Mus|c by NITE Cloned Eacfar Sunday WW ' mT ^^HaP ^t ' ^^^^^ - SmlT ^^ I Mu.lc by | — ~ I Tombstone Plus. , "Tho Blue at tho , ( The Rhythm Klnpi j \ LABOR TEMPLE ' Danlm Fftrmors" ( ORCHESTRA TEAMSTERS CLIIB HUFF & HOWARD STS. — WINONA Bortwood Golf view LAKEVIEW Every 20B East Thltd St. | RED'S i Sat. Night Music by This Wosk i Supper Club DRIVE-INN "Ths Hiippy Doati ' Rushford, Minn. DOGPATCH Minnesota Ranch Honda " Have a Very Happy Easter — From the Staff at SANDY'S. \ 410 East Sarnla St. i MB^BERI Gaiter Sunday Dinner ] i Troy MBM0BRS ¦ ¦ - -- - ¦ ¦ — 1^_ .._. . _ ...... _ - L ^ ^IIIIHHlllli' iX xXxiX-XXXxxXX^ Saxke' i first tOOld ¦:¦¦ By MARGARET GENTRY on the department's broad pbl- Saxbe frequently describes for us to fulfill, we're going- to. He says he is studying ways officials questioned what : it from Ohio and his Senate staff. that stance. He says y ¦¦ punish- WASHTOGTON (AP) - In his icy questions. Yet his personal the department as a law office do it. Jf we differ froni . that, to deal; with those .problems would; cost y and V whether . -it ' They- have: nbw:. decided 7to ment . ought ; to be . considered a first 100 days of office, Gen. style , ind limited experience and, in a recent discussion of we'll tell them. But ;we'xe not ^ but .y when pressed .for details, would iaccomplish; anything scrap the plan arid return the valid purpose of imprisonment. William B. Saxbe has sounded point to broader and more in- his long-term ; objectives, he going to change : policy interr he answers; .vaguely, mentions anyway, he agreed to reconsid- department to its/ old vorgan- He' has expressed . ' '¦• '' '¦;. "¦ ¦' "¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦" skepticism . no ringing themes and prom- fluential roles for the departs said: "The only . general prior- hally. I think the very essence old proposals; occasionally mis- ef.y ; .- • -, . - . . . . , , - - . .7 - .- . izatipnysystem with virtually all . about -proposals elsewhere in ised none. ' ¦ -. ment's lesser officials, particu- ity that : I have is that we fur- of a police department for : a: states the facts and sometimes Saxbe suggests that social officials reporting to the attor- the department to steer crirrii- He has set; forth some modest larly the deputy attorney geiier- nish the government the best city or anything else is to not seems surprised . to V learn of and economic factors play a ney general through; Silberman. iiai suspects away from:; the : " - ' • ¦; ' ' V and tentative objectives for the ¦al ; . .;. : . . - . . j .7-;' : possible legal representation." ; assume a pplicy-hnaking role." projects already under way in part ih the rising crime rate, ; The Saxbe proposal, subject court .and prison , system and , justice Department he runs those assessments emerge On another day, he went fur- The statement grew from a the department, .;- but insists that the department to staff , - .'review.', for,-two weeks provide early rehabilitation. ' ¦' " ' ¦ '¦ discussion of internaj security . Ori ykidnapihgs le says, '"The must limit its approach to •while moving ( . . . •¦ , X.. :. . from conversations with. . Sayxfe, ther, in defining a limited rdle , law before taking ' effect , , would Saxbe jiasV won high marks : for himself and the department but; the thought isV con- best way I know to discourage enforceraerit because the socio- to narrow the . A- in dozens of department officials laws, abolish four top-level jobs Rich- for accessibility to newsmen. •scope and iriflu- ; and outsiders who deal yregii- in the Nixon adrhinistration. sistent' with the position-he has them is to catch the kidnap- economic ills are "beyond the ardson ' created. Only one, the He meets ..with reporters weekly . '.'. ' ence of his own News larly with the ' -.nation's ', chief lavv "One thrig I'm determined to taken,¦ on otheryissues. as-well. ers"-:, .-Wy. v scope of ¦ the Justice "Depart- position of associate attorney for an hour-long informal¦"ques-.-W' - -;' ' ment. ¦ , . - .' role in the ha- A --,, !...;! - enforcement agency. There is do here in the Justice Depart- .. Saxbe expresses deei> con- When FBI. figures showed a ' general, had ever been filled. tioh-and-answer session on the tional policy- Analysis an obvipus caveat; A. public of- ment is to stay away from na- cern with; such pressing law en- 1973 increase in the, crime rate, Saxbe also expresses coneerh 7 Philosophically, Saxbe de- record and . makes himself . making scheme. L————— ficial's early record does' not al- tional policy except where we forcement problems as Kdhap- he. reacted by suggesting a con- with a range of 'difficiiit con- scribed himself as a "law and available for questioning; at oth- . He insists that, : he is and ways set an unchaiiging pat- have a responsibility,V he said. ing . and .terrorism, rising crime ference of the nation's law en- stitutional 7 problems liiigering order man" on the day he took ef - times , when hevvs deyelop- ought to be the decision-maker tern. ''If Congress sets out ah area rates and drug abuse. . . forcement officers. After other over the department, but he ottioe and seems -committed to medts warrant. ' has, presented no- .proposals of his own to deal With .them. . The issues brought to the fore by Watergate . and disclosures Tonight,, weekend TV of possible government abuse tr ace of civil liberties during,; the tur- AtfeiTiftf to . rB^^SJK^Wte3'S3;**Hg moil, of. the late 1960s and early 1970s include policies on .wire- ng .liiiiiipllliiif ^^ tapping, computerised; collec- tion of crime records and FBI bills hri^ki U - Pwoninn 7 7:00¦ Washlnjton . , • Odd Coiipta . >»-it Evening . ;. ¦ ¦ . , - . .- » • spelling' ". ' 2 fa spying on individuals and or- , in Review 4i00. disposal of iiings . 4(60 Wealhtr a ; Coachea Cdmrhint j Torn. *•» ganizations the agency views, as Easter 1» ; ST. PAUL, . Minn, Education 1 11:35 Movie ;- . in Friday editions of the Min- . -—Two proposals" by the DNR sade proposal has the highest ' 10, :W0VI ¦ ¦ 12:00 Ml m»h . . ; to determine whether the cash tors indicatied to him that they , . VDSS^S Trail : 87 , W0-13 . neapolis Tribune, also recom- for tailings . disposal at- Lax potential for environmental been a yprornise to continue Merv CrUllri V . 11 «e W"? ' - went .untouched or '5prhe was suspect the cash returned by.; • ¦' . ;Masterpiece" ". ; . .. New'Jw, ' • " 1 , , ' Some' aspects of -the work begun - . ¦. Beverry Hiimillles U . . . . . I mends that. certain . Reserve Lake. ;; Eighteen miles of the degradation" of the four consid- used and -replaced Robert A, ¦ • '. • l? Theatre . . 31 , 7 , ¦ ,. Rebozo . did not consist of the : To Tell the Truth, ¦ ¦ ^ ' .„n - ¦ • - •„» processing facilities at Silver stream would be lost under the ered. It said the Weston, plan on . those issues by his predeces- ' Seminar .. 81 . 81M Art .. :. -7 . » , - Religion . . . sor, Elliot L. ; Richardson, and Majieu testified iri U.S..District same bills he received. . Bay be shifted to the Babbitt first proposal; 17 under the seer ; would .result ' in, . an yimpact Court Thursday; Maheu has testified that v ' y; hints thatVhe will abandon other . . ¦ ¦area, .:.. ond. 7- "nearl as severe as that of the C;G. V'^Bebe" Rebbzo, Presi- $50,000 ef the cash-came from a . ¦¦ In its report, the DNR state* Palisade plan."; , Richardson projects. , ¦ ¦ 1 In addition, the report states : dent Nixon's close friend, has Hughes: personal account in tho The Saxbe approach resem-¦ testified before the committee Bank of America here ; PWBi ^^^^^^^^^ S' that disposal of the ': wastes on bles that of several recent -.[at- , and thus j^& that , the; $100,000 in; cash from might be traceablei V ¦ ¦;.. .. -yy . . :- : M^^ land near Silver Bay—as pro? torneys general in some .rer 7:80 Cartoons Electric Co .11 The Cowboy. . -1» . Howard Hughes,, meatit for ¦¦ ¦ . ¦¦¦ ¦»- posed by Reserve in private ne- • '..' 3-4-5-4-8-9-10-lJ-W j-oo Wally'. Workshop « ' - ' Advocates ., ¦¦ spects.y but differs sharply from ; He has testified that the other Farm Forum 11 7 n 4:30 Black Journal ? gotiations to -, settle a suit j^l Nixon, . remained.- in . a safe 7:30 Ndva - .. . Richardson's in style and sub- $50,000 was taken frond the tasb?, ' 8:80 1-31 j;»" North Star Report 4 7 Focus deposit box . at his . Florida bank ¦ ¦' ' ' ¦ • ^. brought by the Justice Depart- ^^lpin V . Survival stance. The juxtajwsition qf 77-(r!wli " . - . . M-8-V sioo Bach Mass . ' . I 7.7 ¦ ¦;J the for three years before on hand at the Hughes-owned U..of Minn. 11 Where Hava Bowling . *» . ment and . other , plaintiffs- , being ; ; ' ¦ ¦ two men in the office brings ¦ Silver Slipper Casino in Las 8:80 Story Time ll 7 . - People Genet " . ' - ' I- Documentary ;. " JJ would have a significant ad- returned " ". to Hughes.. .. The f :M ElfKtrlc Ce. 1-31 Dahlel Boone : "11 Oirte's"...GIrli 1» their differences into; stark " ¦¦ ¦• . President did Vnot know about : Vegas; and presumably there ; Cartoons 7Cnosumer '31 7;00 All In the . ¦. -7 _ verse impact, oh . the. environ- plairitiffs in focus. .. would be no record, of the serial ,3-4-5-«*M0-13 lt ,. ' .;¦ 34-1 7 Family . M-* . 7 7 - ¦ : M the, Master. ment/ '" : y " the money and no use was ever Prohe. 7 - . 11. Easter 7 4. Emerfseney 5-1M3 :Xy ' delivering. ' the .'. $100,000 V lo l:307»/r. Rogera 8-31 7 Partridge -x- Saxbe was spawned In the iriade of it, both. Rebbzo and Apart From' the ¦ The plaintiffs have. accuse:d ¦ Mawiaglmo . ' 11 • Crowd 31 Family 4-M» . earthiex climate of Ohio : poli- ' "- numbers available. Street 2-31 ' ' 31 Reserve of polluting Lkke Supe- Nixon have said: 1t:(0 Sesame . . ^oj Mayberry. .- * Interface tics. - His only, administrative Maheu has: sued Hughes for . Random Awes* 11 Wide World i»f 7:34 Much Ado About 7 rior with , its daily discharge bf . However; there have been 18:30 Lano of Giant* 11 7 :sporri M Nothing experience was as the state's ; saying that Malieu was fired in ¦ 3-4-1* taconite tailings. The case has unconfirmed . news reports this tixOO Electric Co. 2-31 . Movie 7 '1 :. ' MASH. 7 , 1970 because ;"he' stolen me . ¦ Movie . . . . -, 4-M» attorney 7 general. His only month that Nixon's personal - Movia - «-l» saint " ¦ ¦ been on trial in U.S. District DULUTH, Minn. GAP)," — The council's intent is to file ¦ '• . ¦ ' .• ' - .World - Evangelism 1, . Fishing 7 » " ' ' : ¦|J«e V V X" Washington experience was in attorney, Herbert V W. blind." Hughes' attorneys are . 31 il*£. 3« ; Court since Aug.; 1. Private ne- Kalm- IliM sesame Street 2-31 7 Mr, Roger* . Cham»l«n» . Members of the DuUith City on behalf , of y the plaintiffs, but the Senate, where he was retir- trying; to ' prove that Hughes V Go ¦ s-tO-13 4:3t> Easter 7 . 5 8:00 Mary 1 yler ; gotiations among parties to the Councl have taieh. initial steps to; request the : court to- decide bach, has : secretly revealed- to '¦ ' 7H Takes a Thief 11 survival - . 13 7:. "• . - : ing after one term when Presi- told the truth and' MaheU kept . . . _ . Movie"°^- .. .- . . -. wo-ia. ?^i5 case have been in progress for the - Senate committee and the Wide World af . ¦ ¦ to .join the plaintiffs in the fed- which party .or parties in the ,. A-ffirnaon soorts 1» 8:30 Bob Nevvhart 3-4-8- ¦;. '¦' ¦ dent Nixon | summoned him as Watergate special prosecutor's spine of the money entrusted to Atternopn »i champions several weeks.'V er-d DMrict Court case against litigation should be liable for eSSJS ci. Council Eriembers by majority ernihient; State of Minnesota S-4-5-M-10-1J conscious of the image he Wish- trying: to V show "that the V Bandstand . 7 « . 5:3e strai.ht Talk 2 . 10:00 News nite waste on land at ,Palisade agreement Thursday asked City and its Pollution Control Agen- Donald Nixon, for their person- Roller Game 10 NeWs 3-4-8-1013 Movie *" ,, E)inan es to create and the probable al use, funds which would have designated politicians actually .. Di ck Rodger. . 1» Wild Kingdom » . Perry Mason 11 Greek, about three miles north- Atty. William to- take, im- cy sus plaintiffs. The states of , ¦••¦» n Inrtf 6 0 V«^ ¦ : impact of his words. took; .the, cash, is . proof he did 12:10 NBA . 7. 1-44 plasoner " " ¦ west of the Silver Bay plant. -. •' mediate steps to/Intervene, on Wisconsin arid Michigan ,: and had to have been replaced Chmlelewskl 5 n^rt . §-Hf 10:30 °'^Sussklnd . • . . *' , Saxbe,. acknowledging•'. his before the money was returned not steal it. Western ;- 7 7; 11 j ^Tim* . ,, 64 " That proposal and three oth- behalf of the . plaintiffs; in the several privately funded envi- ; . Dick. Rodgers 13 * 10:3510 "^Nam« 0* ' . reputation of "shooting from :Maheu , former head of the Game 3 ers,, including two by the DNEfc, trial now nearing conclusion in ronmental VV groups also are . Winona Daily Newt C Agriculture !• EveninaEVenii.9 : - the hip," blurts but: ' what's-', on ¦ Electric Co. 31 Pro Track 7 H0-13 for bn-land disposal near Silver Minneapolis. "'.-. plaintiff intervenors. . Hughes Nevada operations, has] Winona, Mirnesota V .- 1:M Baseball I-10-1S . 4:0* Roundhouse 8- 10:50 Movia .. 4-tT his nriind, apparently oblivious testified that he was ' - Bay were discussed in the re- Involved in FRIDAY; APRIL 12, 1974 .. . ..- Lassie 4 . • "• Surylval ? . . 3 11:30 News - ».» Dinau said he will advise St. Louis County, In which to the hkely consequences. He Community 1» . . Wewi 4-5-10' 12.00. Movia . - SY8J - port. ' Judge . Miles - lord and Min- and North Zoom 31 Lawrence Welk t-B-t Prisoner 1' ' ' ' Duluth is: located, cares Uttle. about , building a In each "caste, the state agen- nesota Atty. Gen. V Warren Shore communities are among cy found certain environmental- . personal; image, readily, admits Spannaus Friday, that Duluth several intervenors: who have .' ' - - ; ly-unsound features. " ¦„ '¦. V . and tries. ' tiB y. (*prrect'.' '-his - .'hiun : , will submit the necessary legal entered the trial - oh; behalf of ders. , v ;V' : : 3 DAYS ONlY! - R^SiSS^^^^fe^r iS I''- . The proposals.: . . - v- 7" ¦ ^^i motions and documents after Reserve. : Saxbe : slowly y assumes Al.-:. . "'. -' - . ¦ '. . ' Young Issues 7» Llfeslyle^^ . —Reserve's Palisade Creek 7As fUESDAf, APRIL 16 ; - , / * the council takes official, action Other defendant . intervenors JYlOrnifig , U.4J New, t Wild Kingdom TO plan, estimated b command of the 47,0Q0-employe StiOO Rex Humhard . I ... Movie 11 y the com- at its meeting Monday , night. include the Duluth Area Cham- WEDNESDAY, APRIL IT Cartoons 4-8 . 7 ATl6rnn Untamed World T3 pany to cost $195 million. The .department, lesser officials ;are Oral-Robert. ; 5 ,. v "1 ' The nine-member Coun cil ber of Commerce; Northeastern M N . . wjj .g «-ass" V. * moving ' into stroriger positions , Revival Fires 4 , "; . | 4 :30 Nova Ml DNR report said use of this site reached consensus — with sev- Minnesota .Development Associ- THURSDAY" APRIL 18 {£* , w„ : of potential influence over pol- 7 7: K.lhryn Kuhlnan 9 - " \ - .: . . The - Walton.- .- . 3-4W : for tailings disposal; would com- Gospel Hour^ ¦"¦' - ' ¦ ¦ S c. en votes in an informal poll — ation, the villages of Babbitt; ¦ ¦ niS!!i ™« » World of pletely cover two lakes—Mic- at an agenda session Thursday. Beaver Bay and Silver Bay, the icy-:; :> • ¦¦¦ : Deputy Atty. Gen. Laurence sz Jinir " ssssrDick Rodge r. , « l*r * s%%«*1 Mac and Tetagouche. The site :¦ The maneuver to bring the towns of Beaver Bay; and Two " Kr .if - IM' : . ^ gio„ , *;,; Silverman, who took office a llM Cartoons 4-8 12:18 Family Hour « McMillan 8, also would cover a stretch of city into the case as a plaintiff Harbors, Lake County, Silver Day of Discovery 8 , | . .,j!30 Audubon : $ wife 7 7 5-lO-H month ago, will play a vital Sears BIHy . James . Palisade Creek, a trout stream, intervener was : felt by most Bay Chamber of. Commerce, I .. Directions 7 «. Movie 4-M». .Hargla role, in part because of his; past J Echoes from ' ¦ : Andy Grlflith 11 and reduce water flow so that councir members the best ap- Range : League of Municipalities . New Casey Jones » Calvary ¦¦ 13 seamanship ^31 six miles of the creek "would proach to be in position to col- and Civic Association aiid the experience in the Washington ' Stanley CUP 5-10-13 ,8:00 Mas1erpli«. .;' , ^ ^ SXIl ^rU 111. ' "i:» , '¦¦ bureaucracy, Saxbe, has as- 5 no longer be trout water " - lect damages should Lord rule Lax Lake Property Owners As- <*y***ji < tiM Oral Robert. : 3 l ' Know, * " • ¦ signed him the No. 2 man 4 - 90 F»Jhe,^?r Knov • ii..*!?"'ittT "11¦ —The Lax Lake Weston pro- for such awards. sociation; 's tra- ^ : Sunday School 4: , " ¦ ™,- " * ^&>W **^ A. zMf Easter 5 B" 8:30 First Woman dition al responsibilities for the Life That Wins 4 1:30 American " . President 3-4-8 s B ] routine functioning of the liti- . Feast of LHe 8 7„?^r1 "* "' »:00 Firi ng Line » Cartoon, Ml-lt H r m . ,N1k. gating divisions, but also may VllBn<1 ° . " „ . NBC News I-I O-U Rex Humbara 11 . „ u " . Alternatives 11, In Hearst k idnaping lean heavily on his advice on 1:10 Day ot Discovery -1 i.M Howard KupTshS. 11 «I «I »•?• Impeachment. 4 „ t .jo Treasure Hunt 3 policies Concerning the other 7 Hour ol Power 5 3:30 Tennis • r»J MoorB on sundty ^ agencies under the department Osmonds 4-M9 . . „ M»v'• - , -i' . - - . Mooi Squad "i 3:00 The M«sl«": »• .-- insight . 10 ¦ . . untamed World 8 umbrella. 10:00 Easter M-10. VThe Master.t 3« ,. J-10-13 . - Great Mysteries ..» In addition to the divisions Movie 4 3:10 Tennis . . . H . Negoti at ion in foreign , Rox Humbard 4 Wide World . „ Rlfh, ]} Sports 4-»-i7 ^ that: investigate and prosecute Cartoons Mt ' °' ,0,M How u .s.s.9.i 0.\ 3-7». Wonderamt, 11 4:00 .. Movie 11 Mlsilon crimes and file lawsuits, the Chmlolcwskl 13 5:00 Ledure . _ 2 Impossible 11 department includes the FBI, 10:30 Mormon Choir 10 *J Minutes '¦*-« 10:30 Paul Helm 5 a,,er the Law Enforcement Assist- Treehousa Club 11 p. _J,X. 1 Rock Concert 4 . suggestecl Humperdlnck T country being 11:00 Face the Moment, of Truth 8 ance Administration, the Immi- Nation 1-4-8 Outdoors _ . 1» Mowle MO-13 High School Bowl 5 SpeaVing) '"ee 'V '1 "This whole thing is a cruel i«-«barge of the investigation, gration and Naturalization f. it's " Your¦; Life It By ROBERT B. GUNNISON , . Focal . Point 4 5:10 Untamed World 5 Targ6, jl hoax being played on her," the said the escape proposal had Service the Drug Enforcement Senior Clliien 9 Rookies 10:35 Perspective 8 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - , ,. 3' quite a bit, Organ Initruellon 10 News .10-1 Outdoors it The fiance of Patricia Hearst blond , mustachioed graduate been discussed " Administration , the Bureau , of Insight 13 Adventure 1? |0:« 100 Day. 3 student said. "Either she's actually," by the Hearst Prisons, the U.S. Parole Board, Roller Derby : It Euonind 10:50 Move 4 proposed Thursday night that 11:15 Answer I. Love 10 -*.»*r i«"!f 11 too Hlgjh Chaparral 11 the Symbionese Liberation dead or will be soon ." family. "But I 'can't say too U.S. attorneys and marshals, llilO NBA 3 4:0V Zoom 1-31. 11:05 Eclioes From Weed, 26 is a philosophy mu-ch about it . right now 4 Army be allowed to fly her : to a , Upon taking office, Saxfie 's Aviation Haiel 1 Calvary . » student at the University of because it's not really our A FULL COLOR PORTRAIT! Meet the News ' Direction It foreign country and there immediate dilemma was a de- Press 5-10-13 Treasure Hunt 5 11:00 Henry Wolf t California in Berkeley, where decision. The SLA has to decide Consultation i High Qui: Bowl I News 4 negotiate her release. partment-wide reorganizatio n Insight « American It Takes a Thief 11 he and Miss Hearst l ived before how they want to get out of plan imposed by Richardson 8x10 only 99* «;;*»• "I would, like to see them , *• demand a plane out of the she was abducted Feb. 4. this All we can do is try to two days before his resignation Age Limit 12 and Under or Senior Citizens Charles Bates, the FBI agent cover the possibilities." • engineer country, take some money with and never implemented. The • Additional ChiUh'en (under 12) in Family $1.99 . District gets new assistant them ... and set up a line ot plan was designed to give Richr or 2 Children Posed Together $2,49 / Th<3 Minnesota Highway De- the last seven years. He re- communication in some other ardson and his top personal ad- • Additional Prints arid Reorders Available at country," said Steven Weed in visers more control over every Reasonable Prices partment district that includes places Lawrence J\ McNamava , mo-ved an interview on KQED, a San aspect of the department. Choose from finished Portrait not Proofs , as- who up to a post in the Three Hortonviile Sntisfnelion Guaranteed "Your Money Back the Winona area has a new central office in St. Paul, Francisco television station. Saxbe and Silberman have 'r sista nt . district engineer for R. J. McDonald remains dist- He said he had been working concluded that some parts of on the plan for several weeks, the plan don 't work well for construction. rict engineer for District 6, the ed OCdlO Winn. . Phone 454-43"'0 Anderson resi- but he did not spell out the teachers arrest them and for Saxbe's personal Winona, He is Louis , Southeastern Minnesota district HOETONVILLE, Wis. (UPI)~ diction in the injunction re- dent engineer at Albert Lea for headquartered Jn Rochester. details. The FBI acknowledged advisers, brought with him last week the Hearst family A circuit judge Thursday night quest case .because it -was a due was considering such a plan. turned down an injunction re- process action, NOTICE ¦JI^B^B^Baa^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BHB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BI ^¦¦SaTMBB aaSHHBHkVWeed also said Miss Hearst quest by striking Hortonvillo In another development, ne- "is being set up in some cruel teachers, three of whom were gotiators from both sides met For Your Convenience way." . arrested on the picket line earl- here again Thursday with all • * "The SLA, if not planning to ier in the day. three members of the Wiscon- kill her themselves ... then Judge Allan Deehr of Mani- sin Employment Relations Com- We Will Be Open... they're planning to get her in a towoc, sitting in Appleton, de- mission present at the sugges- situation with the FBI where nied the striking teachers' re- tion of Gov . Patrick J. Lucey. she might r*et killed." quest for a temporary Injunc- The arrests — tho first in the Miss Hearst said in a tape tion to forbid the school board heated 25-day strike — came EASTE*? SUNDAY recorded message received from hiring permanent replace- when strikers picketed the Hor- April 3 that she was joining the ments and to have fired tench- , tonviile High School as nowly- underground terrorist group. ers reinstated hi red substitute teachers arriv- 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Weed said he was "suspicious" Doclir snid in his denial oi ed before tlie start of classes, and "stunned." the request that strikes by pub- lic employes were prohibite d by The arrests enme an about 70 stato law ami tho teachers did pi ckets stood outside the school not show they suffered irrepar- and pushing and shoving erupt- 1 Convenient Location* teach- able damage by being out of ed each time a substitute EAST CENTRAL WEST WKBT-TV -work. er drove through tho picket "Tlie court concludes the limes, About 20 police officers j - -WINONA 1 plaintiff caused his own predica- w ere on the scene, * ment and he stands before the Arrested for obstructing po- *1$Z& ^W *0&0*£ Sales/Service court with unclean hands," tho lice wero Morris D, Andrew, CUanort & Uunderari Cloinors A Uunderers Cloaners & Launderert ruliJig said. , Monona; Robert West ,U , an Division Division L OFFICE -J Deehr did not rule whether the R-ice Lake, and Eugene Dege- Dlvlilon stride was Illegal nor did ho n«r, 31, Bloomer. They identi- 400 E.st 2nd 66 West 4th 1405 Gil mort Avt. rule on tho legality of tho firing fied t|icmfielvD8 ns members of o( the teachers by the Horton- teacher associations. All wero ... or Call 452-2222 or 452-7683 for Free Pickup and Delivery 452-8912 viile School Board, freed after posting $500 bond He, did rulo that he had juris- eaach. Is university

¦ NEW . YORK.im^MmK^ii^^^ — It must, have been " . ' ' ^ « ^ ^ * » ! ^ Wal * ^ '¦ workhorse words of bureaucratesej a relief to not to be also used the occasion: of the Paris j ^i^^XXXX. heckled : as . he has , been recently in Torn Wicker exchanges to say to . reporters that some . American appearances, by "a viable presidency is a corner- the street crowds in Paris; and it the; ; visit to Paris originally intend- stone of world security." This com- brivaite school? rhustv have been almost like old ed to be only for the funer*ki of pletely eliminates the distinction We've been reading effusive welcome-tp-the-new- times to have .oth- Georges Pompidou concluded: between man and oiffice. Did the president editorials in newspapers where tie Uni- er world leaders "It was very evident that European general Vmeari that tlie institutional versity of Minnesota has a Campus-expression coming by. to pay leaders and world leaders' with functioning. of the ofEice over many which we regard as appropriate for . their circum- their respects,. - and whom the President met continue to years, and. all administrations was stances — but we think , the editor in'Qwatonha to make plans with look to the United States , and Presi- such a cornerstone? Or was the spe- has something more realistic to say. them for .exchanges dent Nixon as. an essential factor cific presidency of Nixon - of visits. : in the realization of the , continuing stone he: actually had in mind? Or i^^ssagf .. ;: :: ; this ' Editor Gerald Ringhofer is chairman y of the The understandable efforts to . develop a structure for both?-;:// 77. -y ' /, v' . /-7' ' . ;/; sore? Did you. ever , hear of Enrico Minnesota Newspaper Association freedoirh of inforr . gratification: felt by stabje international environment." (If it was Dixon's presidency 1 to Caruso getting Sore? That's the end ' rnation committee. He says that the University Nixon and his-staff , This , suggests' . that . "the .United which Haig referred, "' viable'^ may of class; you're talking . about;' when" - .' board of regents has flagrantly violated the state's Russell Baker however, V and . the States and President Nixon" as; one, good bureaucratese but a you're trying to took the Congress. have been open meeting law in selecting the president. Names '' terms in which; they are at least in the conduct of di- political gaffe ; in ;the dictionary,; ' ¦ - ,- ¦• ' "So why did they drbp the razor- 7 Wicker y of the final candidates . for university president sur- WASHINGTON r-:, The ' y burning expressed , it,, make plomacy, and there, is something to viable" means- "able to, survive," , yblade , 'tieal?^-: V ' -- ' -; ': ' - / . again to draw a dis- " faced only , late last week. . .The selection ,. Ring- questions about impeachment- are:: /' it timely once . be said for that view. American his-- which is ju st, about all anybody out- • "No class, baby. . It was strictly between Nixon himself and hofer .charges,1 -was V made Friday during a, three- will it be televised,; and ,y if .so, who' . tinction ¦ tory, .particularly; in the i 20th Cen- side the White House expects Nixon ¦ - no class," said Whipple. ''Haying theV Institutional .'' presidency of the ¦¦' ¦:;¦ ' ¦ '¦\ hour closed-door session of . the regents. :'.. will the sponsor be? Rollo 'Whipple * ./. turyj7 has amply ^demonstrated that to'; do.) - " :.: - .• .. '• > . the President, shaye on filrn. right United States, this is a distinction agent for both the House of Repre- in the field of: foreign .policy at of course, other world lead- , in the middle of the day's impeach- that frequently eludes high White And» ;He ; adds, .- 'It would 'not only have been legal, sentatives and the Senate, says con- President has no peer; the: nation's " still . showed respect : ment doings y:-- that's nekulturny, House occupants in any adminis- ers in Paris it would , have been - wise; for the regents to let the tracts have hot been signed de- foreign policy is largely . the Presi- as White House staff men which is Russian, kid,, meaning tration and the Nixon White House for Nixon, public V taipw more about qualifications for presi- spite rumors . Of a Vmulti-million^dol- , dent's foreign policy, Since the : United States; it's got no ctilture." 7 . . . ¦ has been particularly blind to it. ' '¦. claimed. . dent of the university before It . took its final ac- la .r deal with a razor-blade com- * economically and militarily, is at pany. ' - ' ' '7y " v ZX -y- ]. ;¦' Several Ibig beer .companies' want THUS, Gen. : Haig, reflecting on HAIG, falling back Qri one of tha tion." - 7 - . least ', one of the two strongest na- In fact ) Whipple insists the razor- the impeachment contract so desper- . , . tions in the world, arid is probably blade sponsor has been "definitely ately they have 'already shown Whip- . V Contrast this with what Mankato State; College the strongest, no other head; of gov- ruled Out." Is this: because Congress pie sampel comtrnercials of the sort V and the State College Board did last winter in select- . ¦ ernment is; likely to show disrespect was offended by the company's de- ' ¦.. that Congressmen might easily ' fit •, . ing a new president, .The - final halfrdqzeri candid- ' " '¦- ' ' ' ' "¦ ' ' :¦ ' ¦" " -y ' for its statutory leader, or to re- rriand ' that, as -part - of the- deal ,7 it' .. - ¦into, .;. . . : , ; ;.. . • 7 77. aites were interviewed in 'public; they were open , to deal with him, or id dis- be allowed to film: eoommercials of , In one, . several ; congressmen fuse meetings. The board session :'. on; the appointment regard altogether his leadership; and 50; selected V congressmen shaving - ;have an ecstatic afternoon impeach- y Was also,' of course, open to: the public. 7 initiatives, with the sporisor's blade? ing a Presideht, then rush to a bar for . the sponsor's beer while telling V BUT THE QUESTION Is wheth- the public interview 'WHAT KIND of crazy taflk is We are not *all certain that each other, " Since you only impeach er all this means that Nixori is in- policy is the best One, but we are: convinced that that?" asked Whipple. "You ..think . . a ' President cnce m .life> you've got /. separable frorri the. .presidency. If to. the regents' attitude that the congressmen can't shave on tele- it is far superior . to grab for all the beer you can Nixon were suddenly; riot in office, university business is their business and not the vision just as smooth : as; soime kid . ¦v : v ' . get;'' -yVVV .7, -: .; -V would the presidency rip longer be : ¦ ' ¦ ¦ " ' that throws a , football , for a /liv- ¦public's..- " ' ' ;. ' • ' ' - ' ' ' ¦7. - ':. - .- v ". . . *' — that is, 'Svoui'd ;the' office ing?! Congress can shave ' rings "THE CONGRESS will bring the 'Viable 7 unable - to: survive? Would the around 99 percent V of ythe shavers , v class, whatever . the sponsor is sell- : be .. Arid . we. wish the chairman Vof the university . States and- President Nixon ' you see ¦ in your average TW com- V ing" said Whipple, "but I see some- "United journdism school would say 7 what he thinks about . ¦ ¦ essential factor- ' have been re- mercial today." ¦ ' ., ' thing : with more elegance. I see , as ah. freedom . of information and the,, open :' ih'eeting law nioved from the search for- "a "stable The trouble, Whipple , said, arose one . of Detroit's groovy new ; small as they relate to; the UriiversityVof Minnesota. —A.B. iriternatiqiial environment"? or just when the razor people insisted on cars,, and T see a congressman driv- ; . Nixim : himself?': -: ' using filmed spots of President Nix-'• . - ,;. ; ing up to the. Capitol in it for the ¦¦ ¦ : The answers are self-evident. Nix- on getting his best shave ever from . '' iimpeachmenl, and : vat the same . on's long experience in world af- the .sponsoring blade. "IfVCongress , time the Presideht is arriving in fairs, his intellectual grasp of the agreed to . ttiatj" Whipple ,explained, : his great, huge limousine;, if you get : Representation ' ' ' subject, the. expertise y obtained in "it Vwould set a dangerous prece- ¦:.the picture, Vkiddp.'•' .•..-. . .• Learned. students of the city, charter commission five years as President, and his ' dent , that would gravely V weaken the • .; "It's got class;" I said^7 argue, that it makes , sense to have the entire city ; cordial relations with oth- power, of the congressidericy." ¦ ' ' generally elect at-large cpuncilmen although. one must . live ¦ in , " :"What I . see," ysaid iVhipple,; ''is / undoubtedly be ''You mean , Congress Vwas v sore ' er leaders, - vvould . the 1st or 2nd wards and the other , in the 3rdVor 4th. ¦ : hundreds of beautiful starlets. Wait- missed if he left : office. But every about giving .Nixort Va share of tte '.' VCapitoLv . Thus, - they argue, an at-large candidate is/ less likely ing for the VPresident on the 7 President leaves V .office. sooner or whisker-commercial exposure on itsO 's;; to make . a . selfish -debisi<)n -benefitting only one Voir steps, but when; the congressman , and the possibility of any Pres- own yshow, " .I- suggested. . later j two,;wards ... Which, it seems to us, is a logical car.arrives they run frbmV the hmou- ident s death is always with yus; v "Sore?" Whipple's: voice dripped ' ' "' " argument not to have any single ward couriciimeri. sine , and fall . on the: congressman s No- such abrupt charige at the top scorn. ''You're talking about a: big 7 -car ahd stroke it lascivipusly along V — A.B. —7 whether by death; resignation, body or big .men/ kiddo. Two : big . the fenders and seat y cushions. ; ; or removal .: —; would: be easy : or bodies of big:men. The. upper house That, kid, is impeachment sponsor- and the lower chamber. These, wen , : happy; but the nation Vand the Pres- ed with cla ss,'' " Everi . would are "too big to get sore. Did you ever . idency would survive. . .. f iiMay to get hear of Lunt and V Fontaine getting ¦¦ New York times News Service peace, such as it is, might turn OinTA THE^ WPiiV* put to beyviable;. 'Al^-THE fME^ENCi^ QV£ft ---31T tH<\T.TlR C/SN ; a-tWo-dayyXXx ' :' SHpuld v/e seal New York Times News Service election holiclaV Arv i^ipichiTfiehf ¦ The controversial bill to provide, taxpayer finan- past recorct$ cing -for federal - election campaigns— in its Sen- ate version —¦ includes a half-million dollar ; fine and a year ihV jail for disclosing any. presidential votes of a criminai? Requires ienife bafl^ before, midnight of election day. 7 ' By CONGRESSIONAL til they are able to get steady, jobs WASHINGTON—-. You can hardly fully defined by generations that arid put down . the. roots which take ; The restriction has appeal , on the assumption, QUARTERLY pick up a paper these days without have gone before / them put of the criminal class." ; THIS OATH is a rebuke to mem- that- late West Coast voters will : be. influenced ; by WASHINGTON — Does the . per- reading about some riipve or coun- James Reston ''Society , will genuinely forgive • ' ¦ pi' ' 1 ¦ " i ---i. — ¦¦¦¦ . bers of the House or Seriate who tell ' the tube forecasts son who commits a crime forfeit his . _ / East Coast results and also by only when - it undertakes to forget," terrnove in .the .-White House or Con- personal privacy forever? Or . should . the press and television that they made on the basis of early returns. As Sen. Hu- contends Charles Lister, a consult- to influence whether 34 members of the Senate adhere, more closely to pur / gress that is supposed have . made up their minds that the bert H, Humphrey put it: we ant on privacy to the federally fund- the outcome of the will finally save him. ideal of "a. fresh start" and . seal President should. resign or , be con- ed System for Electronic Analysis impeachment p r ; 0- Nobody can blame the President victed or . exonerated. It tells them be done so the 'Solomons'' off criminai records of those who "Something : ought to . arid Retrieval of Criminal Historie s c e e d i n. g;-s for trying to save his political life, that they are expected under a new tell the people what, is have paid their penalty arid behaved ¦ " ' , cannot just sit around and : (SEARCH). . .' . . against V Pr e s i- for demonstrating his personal , en- Oath ,, to swear that in all things election ,, particularly when as law-abiding citizens for an ex- going to happen in the "We appear more committed to the derit Nixon, ergy, his political support , for ap-, pertaining to the case , they will ' a difference of* tended period of time? . the election is close, and where platitude (of rehabilitation) than to Usually these are pealing to public opinion in his tele- "do impartial justice according to each precinct will make the differ- jn unusual unison, the Nixon ad- 1 percent in its achievement. Rehabilitation is an side issues, having vision meetings with selected and the Constitution and laws," so help going, to be president ." ministration and several key Demo- ence of who is extraordinarily elusive goal, but . .. ;' very little, if any- sympathefc audiences, even for them God. In short , that they should crats in Congress have . - ' answered . it will be iachieved only If . . . we : thing, to do with trying to turn the judicial impeach- riot vote in accordance with ideology . ¦ Our reservations: "yes" to the latter alternative. are prepared to llrmit the time peri- the . evidence for or ment process into a partisan split, Over the vigorous opposition of or party, or . be influenced by per- ods during which, in the absence of a gainst im- which, if successful, would assure sonal sympathy ' or dramatic side the FBI the . justice: Department 1. Senator Humphrey's assertion is just that ; , . new offenses, criminal recoords are peachment and con- enough votes to blcck conviction in has sent to Congress a bill authoriz- shows, but should render judgment ft remains to be verified. made available — even to criminal Reston viction , but thev the Senate, if not impeachment in on the evidence as jurors in a Sen- ing the sealing of criminal records are justice agencies," says Lister. important tactical moves that the House. ate trial , according to .the Constitu- five or seven years after the indi- could be influential or 2. Even the threat of the death penalty couldn 't even decisive But the Senate has a different tion and laws. 1 vidual has completed his sentence on the final judgm ent. obligation , namely to act as a iury keep all of the results secret for say as much and probation or parole without com- Con: need to know The case for reading the rules ; ITEM: on the evidence, without regard to as three hours after the polls close. mitting another offense, For example, the White and the Constitution again in these THE PRIVATE right is outweigh- House demanded that the Presi- these side issues, and that obliga- tragic times is very strong. For These sealing provisions are part ed by the public need, according to dent's lawyer , James St. Clair tion was written out in the Senate somehow the past has anticipated 3. Whenever there is a delay in reporting of of a larger measure setting up safe- , be law enforcement officials and others allowed to sit with tht House Judici- manual on the "-Standing Rules, Or- the present even better than we election returns, the suspicion of fraud multiplies, protect against the inva- guards to who feel a need for continued access ary Committee's staff to argue the ders, Laws and Resolutions Affecting have understood it .ourselves. sion of personal privacy through to criminal justice records , President's case, this was not nor- the Business of the United Stales 4. Better to have a uniform closing hour for the misuse of criiminal j ustice in- "I am completely opposed to seal- mal procedure, but seemed reason- Senate." New York Times News Service polls despite the inconvenience. formation , particularly that informa- ing any criminal justice informa- able to the Republicans. The Dem- THESE were defined long before tion stored In automated data tion against criminal justice agen- ocrats agreed, to avoid an ar- there was any question of impeach- virtual simultaneous reporting of elec- cies " states FBI Director Clarence Take dive now 5. Still , banks. , gument that, would have split the ing President Nixon and even before tion returns would creajjii a horrendous problem In both the Senate and House, sim- M, Kelley. "There is a continuous committee along partisan lines and his spectacular election victory in Ultimately man will have to occ- for the cornp i]er^>»Hlie unofficial returns — the ilar bills have been introduced by need for criminal justice agencies to 1972 , and- they spelled out in the upy , the sea , say o'ur oceanograph- ¦ diverted attention from the evi- media. -——"^ Democrats, among them Sen. Sam have unfettered access to prior dence. most careful detail the ways in ers. No doubt about it — he can J. Ervin Jr. of North Carolina and criiminal records for subsequent in- which an impeachment and trial ITEM: Sen. Jacob Javits barely keep his head above water Rep, Don Edwards of California. vestigations." , R-N.Y., should be conducted , even to the fi. And consider what post-midnight reporting recently took note of what he now. — Mason Clfy Globa-Gazette. Subcommittees chaired by Ervin "The majority of criminal recidi- called point of insisting on not onl would do (0 creating a sleepless night for most "rumors" and "indications y what ancl Edwards already have held vism occurs within a time frame " that senators coiild and could not do in a Americans. President Nixon was trying hearings on the proposals. short -of the (five-to-seven-year) pe- to tai- trial, but on what language should lor administration policy to Any assessment of the proposal re- riods enumerated in some of the woo the be used in notifying an official that 7, They talk about declaring election day a support of a "conservative quires weighing at least two major bills; all criminal recidivism docs bios" of he was called upon to answer arti- holiday; if the midnight rule is adopted, the next senators large enough to societal values: the personal fight not, If only 10 murderers or kidnap- forestall cles of impeachment. day will be one too, official or not. — A.B. his conviction, that is, one-third to privacy versus the public interest ers rcpeaLed their crime outside the plus More important the rules for Im- ¦ one of the Senate's 100 , in law enforcement. statutory time frame, is 'his not members. peachment trials in the Senate man- And there builded he an altar unto the Lord, enough to- warrant criminal justice "It would be very tragic, " Jav- ual , recognizing that this is a wholly its said who appeared unto him.—Genesis 12:7. Pro: a fresh start agencies . access to offender rec- , "if the President began to different and extraordinary proced- ords which may provide leads In play 'impeachment politics' with do- ure in the Senate, insist that each SEEING THE public interest a« subsequent murder or mestic legislation and foreign pol- 1 kidnaping in- member take a new oath before reinforced by the right to privacy, vestigations?" he asks. icy, and I feel there are enough in- hearing the evidence and casting SERVICES FOR those who support the sealing of "It seems clear that to deny banks dications of this to cause concern." his vote. MRS. GEORGE (ELSIE) Winona Daily News records argue that no one whose information about a 10-year-old con- ITEM: The President is mounting The section reads as follows: are dogged by a known crim- viction for embezzlement a very active campaign WAITHER steps relating to , by his In- "Form of oath to be administered Funeral Held Today inal record can truly make a new an applicant for employment in a tecvention in the Michigan congres- to the member of the Senate sitting An Independent Newspaper — Established Ifl55 start — and so he remniiis a crim- bank . . . would be unwise," ar- sional election campaign and by his in the trial of impeachments: I MRS. FREDERICK MK.MHKfl OP 7 UK ASSOCIATED I'HKSS inal. gues MnLthew Hale, general coun- recent diplomatic and personal acti- solemnly swear (or affirm , as tho "How can we seriously hope to sel for the American Bankers As- vities at the memorial services ih case may be) that in all things (AMANDA) GRIMM Wn.i.iAM F. WHITE , Publisher reduce crime If we disseminate sociation, Paris for the late President Pompidou 9:00 a.m,, Saturday C. E, iinmiN ..... Bus . Mgr., Adv. Director appertaining to the trial of the im- St. Matthpw s Ev records which have the- unintended And the Civil Servico of France ' . Lutherfln A DOI .PII BHKMEB Editor-in-Chief Comimlssieon , to persuade public opin- peachment of — — -—-, now of making; it Impossible for would need access to these ion thnt, G AKY W EVANS ZVeios Editor effect records* he is an effective campnign- pending, I . will do impartial justice le to stop being criminals'?" too, according to the ' er at. home MISS ALMA RIEDEL M, SUB RORTHEI .E Asst, News Kditor peop commission s and an indispensable according to the Constitution and 1:00 p,m ¦ Aryeh executive direc- general counsel '' ,, Saturday C. GoimoN HOUTE .' Sunday Editor asks Neier , , Anthony L, Mon- campaigner for peace abroad, laws, so help me God." Rosolnwn C-emotory Chapel, Wii/UAM H. ENGLISH ...... Controllet tor of the American Civi l Liberties dcllo: "It takos little Imagination to WELL, ALL thla is very interest. Tliis brings w back to tlie cen- St. Paul, Minn. IEKBUSCH Circulation Mgr, envision the relevancy Ing and A. J. K ...>... Union. of a person understandable. The idea is tral question and puts the side is- mftpvTi L. S. BKONK ...».•,... Com-posinn Supt. "'Arrest and conviction records of- with a history of child molesting growing here, and apparently even sues in their place. It is also a re- C n ^ L. V, ALSTON . Engraving Supt. ten create social lepors ," he ar- for any position in close and unat- within tlie White House, that tho minder that, when wc get into trou- Fu.7iEft.fiL. Home. RoisrcrtT VOOBI.SANO ....Press Superintendent Forme»l|f gues. "Dissemination of their past tended contact with children , or of House Judiciary Committee, and ble in this country and begin to di- Braltlow-Martln Funeral Homi records . . . Insures Ihn I many of u person with driig-rekilcrl prob- maybe even the Mouse Itself The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to , will vide on personal or emotional issues, 376 Eut S.rnla these branded persons will not es- lems for a position in a hospital or vote out articles of Impeachment we aro not without tradition that • Winona tho use for republication ol all tho local news printed , , Phono¦ Day or Night 454-1940¦ In this newspaper as well as all A.P. news dispatcher cape ... It may take years un- clialc." and . that the issue will finally bo tiiero are rules to guide us. care- v I , „ ,.v FRIDAY Th^ >A^athejr The daily record APRIL 12/ 1974 Polite teporf porter claimi Burg laries Main street and was apparent*: At Cornmunity V/inona Deaths "two-State Deaths ' ' ' ' ¦)xy .' 'x-x-ch:Y-X 'y ly . struck by McFarlin truck, moving west on West Broadway; Memorial Hospital Mrs. Frederick Grimm ;H. O, Thomas Lake Center Model Shop, 374 E. 2nd St.,: .entry through door Ingram car apparently then ; ' ¦ '" Mrs. Frederick (Amanda). GALESVILLE Wis. - H; Oi ' he learned not ; . -THUBSDAY . -' ;¦ : Thomas, about 70^ , died Tuesday window, found by. police patrol- skidded and hit Bambenek car V Grimm, 88, .952 W. Mark St., , Admissions died, at her home' Thursday at at . Arlington, ; Tex;, where. 7 he men 2:29 a.m.: today; vending moving west on West Broadway: 7 Mrs. Rex Grable, Cochrane, was vacationing. He was . the machines ;.entered,>oQ estimate v 2:06 p:m. — West 5th 1:15 p.m. after an illness of sev- :,y ; .and ! yji$yx--x/-¦ eral; bioritbs.y . former' owner of .Tommy's Trail- of loss, , . lo follow learn ' Christopher Lbth, 635 45th Ave. WINONA .COUNTY ' ; Gould Streets,.turning collision; •; The ; former Amanda E. .Mar- er Sailes on . Highway 53 about By WESLEY G. PIPPERT Goodview. 'X- ' . X ' y Xy' ' . - . alesville, Richard J. Brink, 1173 W. - ,4th ¦ ¦ ¦ - . quardt ,. she was, born at Gibbon, two miles south of G Garage . belonging' to Robert. WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Her ' " " ' Discharges 7 retiring two years' ago. He had Williams, Lewiston ; Rt. 1, en- St.j 1964 4

Winona Bailor •& Steel Co. Mariyolcl Dnlrios.ancl toko Center Switch Co. Pqrk Plaxa Hotel Rollingstone Lumber Yard Hauser Art Glass Co, Polls Riljih CKmlitiKi and Smployaa ' Miadowavpairyfoods MiniBinilPt «nu Employes Managimenl and Stair HolllriBilone, Mlnmiola Management and Hmployu - ' * " Tyyy ^ Gltirf (EDITOR'S NO TE : y The., house of -another rabbi, Simon, have known who and what . sort me. ; .In pouring this ointment eyes , dimmed with tears, the foIZourfng . article, fifth ' and^ y one of the learned class of Pha- , for my body she has done it to of woman . is touching him on mist heavy/ in the shadows of last of a. five-part Easter '".' risees, a rash .young woman she is/a sinner." . . prepare me for my burial. Tru- the trees, and supposed he was' Series about Jesus' liberat- suddenly disrupted their dis- Jesus, hbvyever, resorted to a ly, I say to yoUi whenever this the gardener. "Sir, if . ybu have ing attitude about womeny cussion. :'- . parable . about: two people ih gospel is preached' in the whole carried : him away, V tell .me ¦ : ¦ dealsywith their- rote at Jii s' ; Standing: behind Jesus, she ' debt , one owing much aiid an- wbrid, what ; she' has - done will where you have laid him, and I resurrection as the original .." . opened a flask , of spikenard, an other, -a little, both forgiven by be told in memory of her.'Vy . -will take him away," message-bearers.) expensive aromatic oil: im- their creditor, , and asked: However flirnsy the., implica- ¦"MaiyX-yry . . . ' : ported from India and anointed :".Now:::.vir'hkh' '.of- 'them--^yri.li." 'l6ye tions . linking Mary Magdalene The reality burst on lier then. By GEO-RGE W. CORNELL his. hair and feet ^with it. Reck- [with the incident, it is specified AP Religion Writer V him. more?" She knew it' was; hey. at the' fa- lessly , then, she .unbound her said, j that she did emerge from a ^The basic, . rihguig -wprd of Simon hesitated and miliar speaking: of her7 name. . own hair, something a.discreet ,1 suppose, to whom troubled life toy follow Jesus, , sudden ¦the j ospel tie "good news'" "The one, , Swept-with a boundless — woman would never do in pub- he forgave the most." ' • and h«r, actions show she Was py, she cried , "Rabb'orii,' - - ' «f Christianity V— initially, was ¦ irrepressibly- devoted to him ' . lic, and wiped his feet with it,V.;. "You have judged . rightly," j . . 7 ¦ :' ' yVshe disclosed to and communicated kissing them i ' She and several other- women '. For:: - -a ,", split/ instant, , ¦ sobbing with af- •i Jesus said, ; and added . of the then she Tjy wpmeiiy a sex: which in later fection.V -'V - " '. . '¦ '¦ had gone to the tomb to anoint couldn't move and ' . . . "- .j- woman, ''Therefore I tell you, j rushed to embrace him in utter times the church' traditionally The male, disciples were in- : her sins which are many, . are j his body with , fragrant oils -of Ms kept out of its ministry or- ¦ 1 , adoratien and thankfulness. . // dignant, . ..'"Whyv. this waste?" forgiven,' for she loves much." ! cassia arid -aloes, not counting dained for. conveying that very j on any reversal of his death, ''Do not hold:me," he told - ' The ointment was worth 300y de- ,j Turning to her, he said softly, her gently, "for. . T have- not yet messagei . ' -. .'. , yet aware that his work had naru a year's wages for¦ an: ay- ji "-Your -sins are; forgiven." . . ascended to the Father ; but go Yet at . the ' outset, they were erage , workman. The " ¦' host, Si- . Then,: ' as Vher heart quickened been marked by amazing re- ' j coveries -' • to. .my . . brethren arid V say . . to the first.tp . become aware of mon, remarked that if Jesus :Ihe told , the others," "'She .. my 1 ^as V Three- times previously, per- them, .1 am asceridirig: to that: central ,/ heartbeat happen- were a prophet , he " would ' done , a beautiful thins to Father and your Father;, to my ing of the faith , .and sons considered dead ; had : been the first to God and your God." . proclaim .it to others; And. they revived and every one of these ¦¦ most phenomenal: . reanimatiqns - She . / could - hardly, bear to had a divine mandate for doing ^hbujghiL £$XBL dju\qj 0m^ went, " rac- ¦' 77/ either were women or . were in leave him , but she. SO. : y ing, a..' song : in her' , heart.: -reipjnse /to pleas from, women, ¦ "I "Goyrjuickly and tell hisVdls- including : have 'seen -the Lord!" . ciples .that he has risen from The raising bf Jairus' daugh- The men didn't .: believe if , Liike 24: 11 relates, considering theydead," . a luminous, angelic ter , related in. Mark 5:35-43 and 7 figure, told the women when elsewhere; the; raising for the it ari:''idle .tale ' H until the re- lasf0rv:i<>| surrected Jesus confronted they came to the empty tomb widow of VNais of Her. only, son, 1 them face-to-face.: . where/Jesus had been-buried, ' . related in Luke 7:11-17, and the ' ¦ The women ; ' But . it was to the women , that j running, Vy-their raising for Martha and Mary of ; gowns whipping: in their, brother : , in he .first made known , that ..won- the wind , , related John ' -' their faces flashing with jubi- . il:l-44. V . . drous;. . . central ..truth of y Chris- lant wonder When the tianity, , the7women who / first , originally carried group, of women ' - those' glad Easter/ reached the tomb of Jesus oh announced it ,. who first: saw tidings./ The PATRICK J. CLINTON Pastor mien, adhering to society's- min- By THE REV. , that . . first Easter mprning,. through they glocrn . of . death fo imizing estimate of Pleasant Valley Evangelical Free Church seeing the empty crypt reveal . the light bf life renewed. women , yJesus''' - follow- y and wouldn't , ' Despair: , had gripped the hearts of all of hearing -the- - '" ' ' And they did so at the direction take their word for it. enemies ¦ angelic .: message; And the: church ers, \v-hile relief finally came to the spirits of His 'He is not here, for he is ris- of their risen Lord. . , in Various after Jesus had been piit tp death and:His body/sealed in a ways, also lirxiits their part in en," they went flying to tell it. So often, in a \yorld : of/ male ' tomb behind a iiiige stdne and ah armed detadhment of ' dominion, he had singled but disseminating ¦ that crowning ¦' ¦¦- But for some reason not -ex- revelation. "'., ¦ Roman soldiers^ . . . p.l a ine d , women for particularly- impor- . . , to come: that wpuld . Mary Magdalene ¦ Yet women But /something revolutionary . was. . stayed: there . alone tant, tasks. . ,-X ' specifically .were turn, cpwafdly common, folks intb bpld martyrs, and ; b6ld Ro- , the differ- " cpmmissipned by. Jesus -as- the ent accounts catching variable . That : characteristic shows man - •soldiers"' . - into running .cowards;, that : ,yli.: ..;/,„ : through even though the gospel primary . witnesses for -ft , par- impressions.: of that astonishing ¦ would change;Jesus'; disciples' ; song .of des- morning. " accounts, , in line .- with pro- ticularly one of them , Mary pair jpybus sdng ef coMiderice./The The variations . . would _ Magdalene. She . ' . into a . seem almost inevitable in au- prieties of the day, w ere writ- had lingered .at cenfidence that Jesus of Nazareth is the - the torrib after the others : thentic reports . ef such strangey ten solely by men, who them- left; Christ,, that He is Gpd in the flesh. This , selves the prevailing sensing some further need fbr shocking and swift events. . /shared . among leaders of the -world's of humanity was so , devoted ' to much rejoicing-. He said Gc-dy hr sprang from the . absolute, assurance that Jes- view of y /women's . subsidiary lier, aware of some bidding ; In any case; she ; remained 1 major, religions, including Con- the . feminine half of mankind ," his loving search for : each un- us did what He had repeatedly. claimed He ¦place. .':' ' presence,, waiting, V : uneasy-; ' ' ' - there outside the garden tomb fucius,; Buddha ,'. Mohammed .writes a British scholar:, of ari- Vis like - that -' ' ¦"" would db-rr'I .wiU .'l -be/..kiUedr. '-b'-ut- after.ythriee; . in the; . . Yet ' simply .'in. - reciting the ¦ '¦ committed:/person- , yearning. '• ¦ - ' (See Mark half-light: of a-foggy and the avatars of Hinduism, cient/ history, .Charles Seltrhan. ' ' days Tise 'agairi'.- from the dead.' dawn waiting, - facts, y the incidents," the words ¦ I likening even God to a woman. 7 ' Probably she sat down on a 8:31; 9:31; 10:33, 34) - . ,.. . distraught, on ' all of whom assumed the lesser . . Jesus - not-pnly .included .wom- 1 fallen :log or in . ¦ edge, the. teajs rolling down her of Jesus, they make clear his value; of women in; the human en /at; decisive/moments, but in Yet the church, in adapting aVgrassy clear- .-.' .- But many modern readers object, 'That's :¦ ,om m i tmenVt women ¦ . ¦ ing, ; of simply y walked to cheeks. ; V; c . v'to 's order-of life. • ' ';/• . his ¦/ exalting' images. In a to the ways: of cultures, tradi- arid a good spiritual story,. .butV it isn't literally ¦;¦ matching importance and stat- fro among the: eucalyptus trees, Woman; why are you weep- /. In all/ the chronicles 6f reli- parable; he told pf a woman Vtionally has: reserved its chief . true. Dead men just don't come back . to phy- ing ure.. ' ' held there by that intuitive tug 's ' ; Rev- Clinton ?" .The voice came from be- gious, origins, no other "prpph-: who lost a cbin and searched | positions for men,; including its sical life again. It's impossible. Sure: there ./ hind her He did ' 'more to liberate and ¦' ¦ ' ' " • ¦ • ' ' • '¦ of purpose, >varting for' its . real- hope : for all men . beyond the grave, but to believe Jesus and without bothering et, seer - or woiild-be: redeemer diligently until she found it;with iclergy.. . ' - .' - . -.. . - • ' • . ' ization. 7 to look, she murmured, '.'Be- redeem womanhood from ser- came back to physical life after, being dead for three: days , ' ' vility, inferiority and injustice She wac' one of many women ' cause . they have: tafceri away that's foolish!!' :; my; lord : than any otheryin history," says who/ became. attached to Jesus ¦ ¦:.' although it seems impossible , althou gh it ap- , and I do not know . However, where they have laid theologian Etarold Phillips. . in his ministry and to Whom he pears unscientific, yet what the Old .Testament, prophets pre- him.¦"- had brought a new. "Whom,do you seek?" ' ' . . -. '¦' .// In; an era when his /native Lake Gity Chu rch lo sense of dicted, what the ] New Testaraeht writers declare,..what the Judaism, . regarded women: . as Pnesses worth, self-resprect and capabil- "believing is that the unbelievable, . Sheiglanced about - then/ lier . . firstened—Jesus rose from the , nated world. "V; - : rule of men arid when , suf- - deadl The tomb was empty, the angels proclaimed His re- rpundiiig :Greek and Roman pa- •dedicafion Before she encountered him, surrection, Jesus Himself appeared alive to his fpllp-wers , and ' ' holds atfentlffleef ihe had fallen into an erratic Area church gan. . cultures-: had an -evenymore LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) — -Dedication services , then He ascended bodily into heaven. Glory be to : V . Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.) U . a.mc - ¦ ¦ Bible and Tract Society of an undeterminable / cause. Her 7 I have not seen Jesus with my physical eyes, I know I ¦.. • ' . ELEVA inner ; problems apparently will someday. But today I and thousands of others do believe E leva • Luthera n Church, worship ser- New. York, Inc., - the . assembly vices: 9 and J0:30 a.m.; church school, provides Bible instruction and were -multiple . that .He did cbme alive from the dead , , that He did bodily ? and 10:30 a.m.; ' nursery; . 10:20. a.m. But . she had means,' being Tuesday — Cherub , choir, 3:30 p,m;l ministerial training; enables . ascend into heaven, that He is preparing an. eternal home Junior Choir, 3:30 p^m.; chapel prayers, named with the women who fi- for those, who love Him, and that He is soon to return to re- 8 p.m: Thursday —7 Nordic .Bellrlngers, participants to more fully ap- 4 p.m.; Hh and . trth . grade catechism, 7 preciate the heed for applying nanced Jesus' ministry. Like ceive His own unto Himself. Him whom we have.not seen we p.m.; Senior Choir, 7 p.nV: him , she was a Galilean , /and love. Truly believing God at His word is seeing! As Peter HOKAH Bible . principles in everyday ' ' ¦ ' ¦ United., Methodist ; Church, services, f living, and arranges , for bome- became one of the itinerant wrote: - . a .m. ' - 7 . party traveling with him. The " , . . though you have not seen Him , you love Him , HOMER to-home visitations in the area. . Homer United Methodlsf Church, serv- record also portrays her as and though you do not see Him now, but believe in ice, sermon . by .the Rev. David B, Ach- The . opening session will be- energet i ' c resourceful and , you greatly rejoice with joy inexpressible and ful l terklrcti, 11 a.m. ' held at .9.a.m. April 27, with . , Him LANESBORO uninhibited . . of glory." CI Peter 1:8) : Elstad Xutheran Church, Easier worship the final session at 2 p.m. April h the clues for it are humbly seek Jesus service, .9:30 a.m. Althoug May you diligently, honestly and LEWISTON 28. Jack E. Roberts, district unsubstantial and . conjectural , Christ. Receive if you have not already, Easter joy and Church of ttie Brethren, church school overseer , will speak on "Be death of Christ for your classes , lor all ages, ,10 a.m;; mornina early church tradition identified hopes through faith alone iii the worship service, sermon: "Hey, Man: Confident of Divine Victory " at her as having been the im- sins and the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.. Re- Jesus Loves Ya!" Phil. 2:5-11, |$a . 4S:I7- the final session; truthfulness of ?5, wllh Special offering: for pre-crusade petuous prostitute involved in member, the resurrection of Christ proves the financing.of the Greater Winona Area ah episode recounted in Luke not only His woro> of forgiveness, but His words of judg- Lundstrom crusade, 11 a.m.; . coffee hall, neon, DEDICATION CEREMONY . . the debts have been paid . The congregation W tnotifl Daily News ft 7:36-4S, Matthew 26:&-13 and ment to all who ignore or reject Him . The emp ty tomb is hour In church fellowship - Wednesday — Study of Scriptures In Lake City , Minn., United Methodist Church moved into the church on Palm Sunday 1961. Winona, Minnes ota , ** Mark 14.-3-9; ' also reason to fear Him into whose hands the Pather has parsonage, James 1 , 7:30 p;m. LOONEY VALLEY was dedicated Palm Sunday. AU building (Meta Corlcus photo) While Jesus was dining at the placed all authority to punish the wicked. Looney Valley Lutheran Church, wor- FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1974 ship, 9:30 a.m.) Sunday school, 10:30 a.m. SALVATION ARMY MINNESOTA CITY tlH'. W ' . : 3r v 11343 Homer Road) vices, the Sunday school class will sing, ^. y ; ; Patrick J. Clinton, " VJV O Welcome Glad Easter ," 10:30 a.m, f B™M - OAK RIDGE- ..:. " WO RSHIP -> 9:45 a.m. Pastor • Teacher Immaculate Conception Catholic cc-clo' ' ¦ ' OVERSIGHT Rev. Glenn Quam Ctiurch, Saturday Mass, 8 p,rn. CHURCH sin cnllcd .out LORD'S SUPPER 1 Corinthians 11:20 PETERSON Instituted—Matthew 26:2B-30 ¦•Difforotit torms , describing some »i30 a.m.—School ot Ihe Bible for all ) . . Hlohland Prairie Lutheran Churchf ¦ Mnrk 14:22-25 rosponsihility . afles worship service, Easier, ll ' a.m, • '1. L'nlversa!-MnUhcw ¦ 10:A5 a.m.—Service o-f worship and In- . l6:H: ' "The Victory of love" PICKWICK Luke 22:10 , 20 „. „ ... . . struction. Ministry ol Music by Neal h n ncl m > St. , Luke 's i Lutheran Church, sunrise Gnlalians 1:13 Examples and Instructions—Acts ';'¦"f " ™ rJ. i !!> ' ' _... , . ¦ Rocttlor; messntia by Mr, Clinton en- services , sermon: "What Are You Look- ) Acts %\l11:30: \\'14:23: 20:l,~Tilusr 1:5 — Sanctuary Choir tilled: "Jesus Christ — My Lite, My ing for Here?" Luke !-4;l-7, tS.-M a.m.i 2:42 - 20:7 (wcpkly Hope." brenKfaiti 7:30-10:30 a.m.) second ser- 2. Lncal-Acl s 13:1; 14:23: ir, . ¦ 1 Corinthians 11:20-34 BISHOPS 'Ovprsens i : — Eastar Lily Parad* 7:30 p.ni .—Evonlno, Fellowship Hour, vice, sermon: "Ou r Sure Contldertce," '5 ¦,. ., ., ¦ ' . 9 p.m.—Junior Hloh FCYF al.tha Dav- / Cor. .15:19-20, 1) a.m, Monday — Pio- ..,,o,^ .., \. „. Acts 20:211 ; Phillppians 1:1 " i id .Skill homo . neers, >7 p.m. Tuesdsy — Sunday school ¦Romans 16:10;'1 Corinthians 1:2 MUSIC Matthew 25:30;^ Murk 11:26 i Timothy 3:1, 2; Titus 1:7 — Service of Baptism teachers', 7 p.m, Thursday — Bible Nursery provided (or all Sunday aerv- 1 Corinthians 14:15; , , study, -):30 , 6:30 and B;30 p.m. Saturday ( p) — Nursery Provld«d lens, . —Field trip lo Lulher High, 10 a.m. LpnesmnFnlioslntvi 5 li PASTORS Shcphord relationshi Thgrsday, 6:30 p.m.—Choir rehearsal, RIDOEWAY Kphesians 4:11 Plonoor Girls, , . Grace Lutheran Church, services , ser- KINGDOM Colossians 3:15-17; ' . ' men : "Our Sure Confidence, " I Cor. 6:45 p.m.—Christian , Service Brtfjada, ,, , ,„ ,„ ,„¦ ] OTHER SKRVANTS CHURCH SCHOO L 10:45 AM. 15:19-20, 9:30 a.m. Tuesday — Sunday MnUhcw. .a.».„ , - 10; 1. Corinthiansr. «J««Hebrews 13 15 7:30 p.m. — Praye r Support Group, school leachers ' meellno, l p.m. Wed- ]R o Youth insight Group, Building Commit: nesday — Pioneers, 7:30 p.m.; choir, t ^XX^XvS^^Acls 0:1-3 , Ph llppians l'l;VV tee. p.m. Friday — Bible study c|un »l Rob- 15:2*1; Colosslnns 1:13: RcvelnlJnn 1:P erl Newland home, 2 cm, Saturday - I nnotliy 3:8-13 a p .m.—Noma Bible Study (call JacK- PRAYING k PREACHING Field Irlp to Luther Hloh, 10 a.m. ¦ ¦ son Herr), ROLLINGSTONE ' - . • Acts 2:42; 20'7 KVANGF:T.ISTS , MINISTERS , Saturday, 9 a.m.—"Trusleea meet at Trinity Lutheran Church, Wisconsin r ¦ Florin' s Roslauranl, Synod, Sunday school, P:D0 a.m ./ wor- llOUSK W GOD 1 Timothy 3: 15 2 Timothy 4:l- .> PRMACHKI1S ship, 10:30 a.m Kphesinns 4:11, 12: 1 Timothy 1:« STOCKTON GIVING Matthew 5:20; 23:23 CHURCH CONCERT Grace Lutheran Chur -: ; -v-,; :; .. }. ': y' X 'x. y Henderson who presented a went unsold, and he turned . study of the life of Ruskin at more frequently to public lec- the meeting of the Ruskin Study tures, But his - physical and ,men- Club. The group gathered Moif tal health were declining/ He day 7 afternoon at the . home bf became more bitter under the Mrs. , Robert Selpver, assisted attacks of his critics, and des- by Mrs. N. J. Fischer. • paired of any . major govern- A love of natural beauty and mental reforms .He finally M- cided, she V reported,' ; that .-.¦.•so- S h m;m^ m art is the "lilies" side of his ' ciety ;-would - hot change, personality, said tlie speaker. ¦ until His ability to see clearly, ana- the. , hearts of men were lyze what tie: saw and communi- changed. : . . ^ cate it effectively was unique. Ruskin, the . speaker noted, in- This gift poured out in a series fluenced , many of the seminal thinkers of his own and . Jater DEAR ABBY: I'm- 211 consid ered attractive with, a good, of books on his travels and en . embarrassing, but J art and helped turn the;' inter: generations;- ; George Bernard personality. My problem is rather- Shaw t, and Mao tse-tung is. soiriething wrbilg with me. ests of Victorian; England . to- , VProus. think there ward the arts. were all strongly affected by When I meet -a guy I like, right away I get. sexually in- ' ' In fact, going to bed with hjlm is the only hisy .-wpris.. Ghaiidi . considered volved with him.. ¦ HE HAS been called "tlie one of Ruskin's books, "Unto ' Ob DORN-ADANK NUPTIALS . . . Miss Shirley KajryDorti, ; .- ', ',- , , '¦ ' ¦ .. '.; . : :WED AT COCHRANE;.> .. Christ Lutheran Chuich^ ch- thing oh my mind : - earliest and perhaps: the only, This Last," a .turning point in daughter of Mr.. :and Mrs. Edgar . Dorn, Lewistoii,. Minn., ' : Naturally, no guy is going to turn anything down,.but my English writer of first-rate in- rane, .Wis,,;was the:setting for the April 6 weddingVof Miss .: :' - Dallas Adank, 166 neyer seems to acconiplish what I hope his liie. And his followers . Vih- Judies GVotjahti daughter of. Mr. y and Mrs. Orrin yGrqtjahn, : . V and David . A. Adank, son of Mi. :andVMrs. sexuaf involvement . tellectual : power . ta . devote him- mod- , Harvester Ave., 'exchanged nuptiial vows in a March 30 cere- it will. The longest a guy has ever, gone with me is two cluded the: founders of the Alrtia*, Wis:, and Ronald Loewenhagen, son of Mr. and . Mrs. . . . then they self mainly ; to tha visual arts," iern Labor; Party iri England, y mony, at St. John's Evangelical . Lutheran Church, tiev/Lston.' months. They all give me a big rush: at first and she said. .He taught a society .Otto Lcewenhagen, Alma. Miss Kathy Dieriger was maidV pf quit calling; Is it possible they get tired of sex? . - ' Many of the programs he s ug- Miss Sue Dorn, sister of the bride* was maid of honor and whose. : interests were mainly gested. are ." now an accepted . honor iand Boger Lpewenhagen "was best man, The bridegrooni : I know I'm too¦ forward, but 1 just can't¦ ¦help: it. I don't literary to see and value visual Richard Cichosz was best man. The bride is a graduate of ;. ;;. -7 ' y " . . " ; . : ' ¦¦¦, " : - - - ' ' ' : ¦ -¦ ' ¦ ¦: think;I'm a part of responsible government. V is employed by La Crosse -Milling,; Cochrane. The couple will Ltawistoh High VSchool and is employed, by United Building ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦¦¦ ' beauty. And, she .continued, he Others, such as town planning, jive at Buffalo City- Wis. (La Croix Johnson photo). . .. • .- ' . •:- "- • - ' yy . :- ." - . " -'-"j-nymph*. became the deari of art critics . Center. . The bridegroom^ .^^a graduate of. \Vihona Seftior High greenV belts , . and smokeless : DeaivAbb^^^ fbr his generation.. zones , are : still in the arena of School and Winona. Area Vocational-technical Institute, is . . The "sesame side of his life, re xX : employed by Midwest Mold and Engineering inc., Winona, : public debate, she . said. ^GPS Officers a insta led : ^^^y^^ j his .concern for. social : and. eco- I ; v ythe couple will live at 650 Winona St. (Dick Lano photo) xx. ¦ ' ¦ : nomic reform," she said, : result- "THOUiGH we Vfind soine of ' -— " . ; . ' .— . .. - . . - -- . - . ' Mrs. Walker Woodworth was- i pointed weight recorder and will , , . . . ;. . . .,: . - . . . .. out . ; of **&«. - ed from his perceptive. . .: eye his rhetoric top florid,, at V its Could I.be oversexed? : "V.. .; which saw things that were not best V his prose style-, is exciting installed as leader - of TOPS 263 be : assisted by: VMrsV Henry How can I keep from falling head ^over heels in^^. love with so .lovely, .y and colorful. And the liveliness I at the-. ; meeting held W6dnes-. Glaunert. Other chairmen are: guys I barely know? I. can't seem to help myself. I'm. al- The slums of. London ¦ ' r: : ; ' : , the in- of his ideas, both on art arid My y ' .x- ¦ ¦:¦ ' ' ' . :y x Mrs. Edwin Hostettler, photog- Program #fi antiC];u^s ways getting hurt. . ,; .v . j . . . .y- .V - .- . -, . x dustrial ypioilution that was de- oh: society makes ,reading Vhim ! Otfie-r officers installeil were: raphy; Mrs. Clarence Miller, problem?t And how do I solve it! - . . ¦:¦: Do I have¦ :¦ a ¦¦ stroying, the Scottish and Swiss a rewarding Vexperiehce," : she Mrs! jerry Schueler, co-leader; measuring;, Mrs. Harry McCar- . ,; y.- . ' • y . y . .-." - 7 PUSHOVER countryside; and tlie misery of concluded, Mrs, ¦¦;' JKeiineth Wooden, treasur- thy, publicity and history, : and a. problem, and ybu. V the, 'working; 'classes- ', shocked Mrs. . Peter Roehl and. Miss er, an«d Mrs. Charles. Anderson, • Mrs, Norton Cocker, .pledges. 7 - DEAR PUSHOVER- You . have ' ¦ I&MOT can solve it by getting to -know yourself and under-: . and disturbed Ruskin. Rebecca Rau assisted at the secretary. ' .; -' |- -Mrs; Lewis...'.Sasink-,' . state .' . SU-. standing why you y behave as you do. You're TLnsecure .Through his art and architec- tea . following V the meeting. V i Mrs. Ralph Hubbard was ap- i .pervisor, was installing officer. que is an object 10Q for and you believe tural : studies; particularly stud- "Ah anti . as; one searches arid learns ^ searching a lasting relationship, V ¦ years old or dating prior- to tbe more bf the history or the au- that the way to keep a guy coming back7 is by giving lies of • Gothic cathedrals, , he had become convinced that .industrial revolution," said Mrs. thenticity: of a particular ob- ^im . sex. Wrong. .(Obviously.) A good therapist is the " John Pendleton, local antique answer. Ask your family, doctor to recommend one. Or the arts reflected . the societies dealer, when: she V spoke7 at the ject,'' she continued:. call your Family Service Association. :.; : : which nurtured them. y She. advised beginners tp deal And he. was convinced: that recent Portia Club meeting at ' stopped' at a gasoline her home. with reputable dealers to. make DEAJFt ABBY: My mother and I the spreading physical and mor- -/ .statlon^ .She told the attendant . she wanted $2¦¦ ¦ worth of gas: al ugliness he saw in England "In this part of the country," certain they acquire sales slips and she ; held up two fingers'. 7 . -~~~:~r.-~ . was the product cf a corrupt she continued, "that definition and to take pictures of the pur^ ':'. .' Tlie attendant left, and for some reason,another . man and immoral political and eco- Safefartion Guaranteed • Replacement is flexible , : simply becauseV oi chases for insurance reasons. . came out and put the gas ih my mother's tank. He said: nomic system, she continued. or Money Refunded the age of the settlement. ; .." Antiques or collectibles might ' "That will be $3." Increasingly, he interjected My mother said she asked for only. $2. worth so the sec-, his economic ahd social theor- /'PEOPLE collect antiques for include: tin advertising pieces, another dollar? Besides many, reasons," she said. An- ohd man said:. "Look, lady, what's ies into his writings on art and bottles,. V posfc ' cards, buttons, with this gas shortage, you're lucky." . ' ' . eventually his focus became an tiques are an investment for ¦¦ •' , ' but she lived only a some; since the; value V is con- wood primitives, kitchen uten- ' .My mother said all she had. was $2, attack on the prevailing econom- sils and railroad accessories, few blocks away (which,¦ was trite) so she would go home ic dogmas that accepted exploi- stantly increasing, often as " ' mtich as 25 percent annually, she said. : For many, these col- and-get another dollar; . V- tation of the poor as a natural, My mother didn't have, any more money at-home so sne healthy economic necessity. and for others it is simply fun. lectibles have: appeal . because never ; went back because what could she have given, him? : ""ybllecting adds spice to life they are' -, relatively small and What shouldyshe have done? - ' .','. . V WONDERING HE DECRIED the unchristian attitudes of the affluent middle are becoming rare; for others V the items relate .a past history .7 DEAR WONDERING: She, should hiave told the , mail class. He urged reform of the Family Leader or bring back fond memories, she would bring him the. dollar as isoon; as she had . it. schools, prison, the welfare sys- she continued. And. then she should: have, kept her word. tem, and the relationships be- named tween management and labor. iP af local DISPLAYING A collection of V . DEAR ABBY:. My husband and I are both dieting. We were invited to spend the weekend with some, close relatives He rejected competition as a sm/^jjoA china and glassware, the speak- high jschobJ v of . mine, When 'I accepted, I expressly asked my aunt to basis for a healthy society, and er- explained the history and au- because we urged a cooperative, communal objects please keep - the food simple, and hot to bake : . John David Hinds, son of Sir. thenticity of the , includ- were dieting. She agreed. system. and Mrs. Walter Hinds, Pleas- ing early-'--- American pressed : fudge brown- He called himself a commu- ant Valley, When we got there she had pumpkin bread , . has been named the and art glass, depression . and ieSj. cheesecake and all the things we love andVcouJdn't resist; nist, though he had not perused Family Leader of Tomorrow' at carnival glass and. fine china spoke up and said I wished any readings in the new politi- Winona 7 Because we; are good friends, I ¦ Senior High School. V pieces. Also included in the dis- she hadn't done all that, especially since I had asled her not cal theories Marx and Engels He is a member of the senior play were a. collection of silver were creating. His programs wropped hi ¦ ' to. It caused hurt feelings. 7 y gh: school choir and -a '. ''high- piece's. - ' • ' Now the family says that it's up to the dieters to resist could best be characterized as f^^^J^w A school vocal en- The speaker noted the V hew •without. a paternalist socialism , Mrs. semble, , temptation because Mothers should not have to go We He is a interest in early American say when houseguests . ask Vthe hostess ; not to serve :high Henderson said. member of' the wooden chairs, tables and other calorie foods she should comply. What do you think? The newly rich middle class- ad mi -n;i $r furniture as a- growing; appreci- V 7 CALORIE COUNTER trative board of ation of a craft almost extinct. . Centraly -United DEAR COUNTER: Your aunt agreed to comply with M e t ho d i s t your wishes, and she broke her promise. Shame on auntie. Church and the Annua l Easter If she felt you were being unfair to theyother guests by School Minnesota an- requesting she limit her menu to low-calorie food, sne nual conference hunt set should have said so. y '. ¦' - .. , of youth 'minis- egg perfect. We've "been lunch try. He is also ST. CHARLES, Minn . - The DEAR ABBY : My husband is almost a re p r e- St. Charles annual Easter egg married for three years and get along fine; but there is one sehtative f 0 r Hinds problem. When we are with people Norton is very quiet. I hunt ,, sponsored by the St. Char- like, "Oh , Norton is - menus the legislative affairs project of les Chamber of Commerce and am forever making up excuses for him, National United Methodist tired tonight," or, "Norton isn!t feeling very well." the the Moose Lodge, will be held , but when : Youth . Ministry. ' Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. When he and. I are alone together he is fine ( WINONA PUBLIC SCHOOLS) we're in company , he clams, up. People keep asking nfe: if His interests include horses, The hunt will be divided into ' Tuesday — Hot dog on a but- camping, photography and ski- three age groups with separate he's mad. : . tered bun, catsup, potato chips, ing. He plans to attend Wi- Have you any suggestions for him? Or for me? green beans milk , hunt areas for each group. Chil- / NORTON'S WIFE buttered , nona State College. dren are asked to meet at the fruit cocktail, First National Bank parking lot DEAR WIFE : Tell Norton that silence is sometimes Wednesday — Swiss steak , for transportation to the hunt mistaken for unfriendliness, so to please try to be more mashed potatoes and vegetable Cancer detection area-V sociable. But don 't nag him about it . He's probably shy, gravy, cabbage salad , milk , All participants are asked to ' and too much pushing on your part will make him even bread and butter, fudgsicle. meeting set bririg their own sacks and par- more self conscious. Thursday — Orange" juiee, ents are invited to accompany chicken in gravy on steamed , BLUFF SPITNG , Wis. - A small children , Members of the rice, - celery crescents, milk , cervical cancer detection meet- Moose Lodge will supervise the bread and butter ,' apple sauce, ing will be held: at 7:45 p.m. hunts. Your horoscope —Jeane Dixon Friday. — Orange "$Tce, fisli Tuesday at the Euffalo Town At the conclusion of the steak and tartar sauces mashed Hall , Bluff Siding. hunts, buses will return the potoates and light gravy, let- The program , which will in- For SATURDAY, APRIL 13 formal gatherings are good la arrange, tuce salad , chc-colate cak-c. children to the American Le- offer subtle benellls. clude the film "Time and Two Yogr birthday today: F»vorab|a ad. Junior and senior high school gion Club where prizes will be luslment . character-lies ill ol your ac- Libra (Sept. . 23-Ocr. 221: Be consist- Women " and a talk on signs distributed and lunch served. tions tills comlns year. Personal econ. ent, go on through to finish what you only, hamburger and frencli and symptoms of cervical can- omy becomes natural/ leaves betler re- started sortie time ago. Neglected mat- fries, 10 cents extra. sources for Important ventures still In ters become more urgent — set them cer, is a statewide educational their earlier stages ot dovclopmont. So- over with. and screening effort of the Di- cial movement Is fluent, sub|ect to either Scorpio (Oct , 53-No-v . 2l)i Family re- F.C. TOPS whim or plani It's up to ypu. Today's unions are the favo red sort or social vision of Health , co-sponsored natives often suffer wanderlust, tend to action today. Take the time to tidy up Kindergarten by the Buffalo County Public pursue Independent courses v/h»loV«r the correspondence and left-over details of installs officers price, wherever they lead, weekend routines. Health Nursing Service and en- Arlet (March 71-April It)i Business Is Sailtlarlui (Nov, IZ-Dtc. llll Postpone registration dorsed by the Buffalo County FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. (Spe- minimal but easily negotiated within financial moves, Concentrate sn tha ex- special limits. Be alert and busy to Im- changes going on near you; bo a part of MONDOVI, "Wis. (Special) - Unit , American Cancer Society. prove your public Image, Reconcile dif- O POTTED MUMS . cial) — Mrs. Ellsworth Korte your local or family group In spirit as Registration for kindergarten ...... $3.99 Do-it-yourself ,Pap test . ,' kits , was installed as leader of the ferences, woll as tachnicalhy. deisnged so women can take Taurus fApril JO-Mey 20):/Today you Capricorn (Dec, 22-Jan. l»)i Continue will be held Thursday from 9 TOPS 474 Chapter at the recent can balance out any conirtcts, settle with old plans and their further elabora- to 11:30 a.m. and from l to POTTED TULIPS ;... .. screening specimens at homo , meeting held at the auditorium. things peacefully without taking sldos. tion rather than plunge ahead Into new \ • ... $4.4/ j ! will . be available to eligible Serious- Ideas encounter a meeting of ventures. Cater te the hopes of thosa 3:30 p.m. at the elementary Mrs. Russell Turton was in- the minds. you love, school gymnasium. women attending the meeting. stalled as co-leader Mrs, Oemlni (May J1-Juna 10): Full consul- Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. H)t Por once, , ' ¦ , with tations yield rewards beyond expeelatlons lot all ncllvlly flow at minimum. Thera Children are eligible for kin- ;J • POTTED HYDRANGEAS ...... $4.47 ! Et han Kochenrlerfer , secretary; where you have rcasonablo prospects to aro many annlns to think about, much j and personal dergarten if they will be five Mrs. Roy Brewer , treasurer , begin v/ilh. Trim family to learn by watching nnd listening whlla ¦ ' Forensics contest budgets, remrilninrt quiet. years old on or before Dec, 1, POTTED AZALEAS ...... and Mrs. Adrian Morchi nek , Cancer (June 31-July J5): Make Pisces (Fob. 19-March 20)! Malta this • . $4.47 | | weight recorder amend s wherever appropriate; exert a personal holiday, keeping routines 1974- Pnrents are asked to bring MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) - . yourself to gel your show on the road. simple while leaving nothing lo chance. the child's birth certificate when Award for the month went to It's a lengthy day offering a variety of It's lust as woll you grant others Iho PASSION FLOWER Several Mondovi students will activity, Handle personal aflalrs. freedom lo pursue their own Piths. registering. 'J • $2.29 3 participate in the Mondov i Jun- Mrs. Boyd Becker, KOPS. Reg- Leo (July ll.Aug. 22): Attend any ior Hi gh Invitational Forensics ular meetings will resume Wed- health care problems promptly. Tha *¦ ¦$ course «! least reslslanco once you're , POTTED AFRICAN VIOLETS ...... $2.99 Contest April 20. Eleven area nesday at 7 p.m. through your normal Saturday chorea Is • likely Ihe best. ' ¦ ¦ schools will participat e. The Vlrve (Aug, 23-Sept, 22): Leaving all K< i public is invited to attend a mater ill considerations aside, turn your presentation. of attention to the quality of your relation- selections Tues- Central PTSA ships, what you share, Qulol, somewhat Dr. R. G. McGill m m EV£RYONE S FA VOMTE* day at 7 p.m. in the schoo l caf- t " ' > > eteria. installs officers ANNOUNCES HIS Jolly seniors ' ' . f Mrs. Dennis Nielsen was ia RE-OPENING AND IS NOW f : >^5^ ' stalled as president of the Cen- The Winona Jolly Seniors host- i CHIDBOXED FRESH tral Elementary PTSA at a re- ed a party Tuesday afternoon IN FULL OPERATION AT HIS | ^ f ^ r ©I" cent meeting held at the sc hool, at the La bor Temple for 29 vet- OR CORSAGES Also installed wore : Mrs , Sey- eran 8 from the Pnnorama Vet- NEW LOCATION AT [. /§^^$MSf mour Byman, vice-president; erans Home, Dresbach , Minn. Mrs. Paul Rokfitar], .secretary, Tho afternoon's program .includ- and Mrs. Robert Larson , trea- ed games, prizes and lunch. 1 $ surer. ¦ 157 Lafayette St. W§ W^ 2 47 QUALITY! A panel discussion by par- Bridge winners ents, fitudj cnU and teachers Bridge winners at. the Thurs- OLD NSP BUILDING helped provide an evaluation of day luncheon and bridge meet- ¦ i.t^ k^fc^fa^J^ujAAj^-^v^,^ PLAN, the 'inrj ividualize d learn- Westfield Women ^"•WWir mnVirvllWiVrfrt ? 'MVf • > «..H*,W«*iiHt,t J-^-. :.*^y..,Aw,^,-.V./„*.| ^y., ..^U*i.mih ^^.b^^^ t^U < ~ > VALUE! ing of tho •" ™i<1r"'- <'X -f,)- ,\l.i, i.-,?** ing program in use at tho wero Mrs , Glen Fischer , Mrs. PHONE 452 2.072 school during tho past year. M, J, Owen and Mrs. Van Kahl. Hawk thinclads Colbert s 67 catches ripped by Tigers The conditions , were worse the triple jump with a jump of ' and the. competition, was better 38-4 apd finished second in both The Did Lady asleep " for "Winona the: high hurdlesVand long jump, — much better—- AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP):- "The Entering today's second 18, He putted- .sensationally, thanks High's second home track meet . Dave Walden, Mike Aelihg with : a: 30 . per cent chance of les- season Thursday afterv salvaged Old V Lady was asleep," said to an imprompted upsetting of the; and Ken Trautmann afternoon. : thundershowers fore- son ; from ; Australian : Bruce noon at Jefferson Field. the only other. firsts for Coach stubby Jim Colbert , refusing to cast, . Colbert had a one; stroke Crampton," and rang iai six bird- ; Forced to compete . during a j ini Flirn's squad. . gloat over his 67 that led . a sub- : lead over a tfio ol . 20-i or high- ies.- - steady downpour for practically . Waldeii; .who tied a 40-year- par charge into today's second er longshots, Iverson : Kale , of nursing : meet Don , "I had a tendency the entire arid unable to old school .record with a 10.2 round of the Masters Golf Tour- Irwin and Hubert' Green;; everything to the right,"- Col- copf with Albert . Lea's: overall clocking, in the. 100-yard d-ash . . 7 nament,- "but you better not get Arnold Palmer, like . Nicklaus bert said.- "Bruce helped adjust strength and . balance, the ' Win- Tuesday , won the event Thurs- shooting for : ¦ day in 10.8 Albert lea s prqnhis- cocky and over confident; She'll his fifth : Masters my right hand." : hawks wound up on the short , ' title, was; uncomfortably placed FIRST:ROUND LEADERS end of a 10I-4«3 scpre in. their ing sophomore, M ark Simunds, •wake up and snap, back at Jlrn Colbert 33-34-67- in danger of missing the ' initial Big Nine Conference en- false started twice" and was. •dis- at 76, Don Iverson ...... ',,....,, 35-3i^-6S. . yon'X S^hole cut.;: Hale - Irwin ..:.X,...ii....:37-yi-6B- ' counter.: ;.; :¦: • . - qualified. . ' Hubert Gret>n - .£.V:.V - 34-34—68 - Ihe Old Lady is the Augusta . "I am sick," the 44-year-old : ' ¦¦¦ ' The ever-powerful Tigers took AfeUng won the ; 880-yard; rUn . Jack NicKlaus ...... ,. .^. 7;. 35-34^9 Arnie, unable to- recapture his Ban. Sikos ' .:..;: ...... 36-33—6i> first -place in 14 of - with a time of 72:07.1 some National course, spoken of in ¦ . . the¦ . 19 , , old putting magicV said of his Ray Floyd ....-.....i..7...... 36:33-49- eventsV iricJiidiiigy all foui -. relay three seconds slo-wer than .his personal: . terms since the: day ¦; Gene -Littler .,..;....:.w. ... 3S-34-r. opening round score. • . " ' ';' ' Frank Beard : ..,..„,,.., - .- ,- . • 37-32-49 events, ; swept the discus and best career effort and Traut- ' ¦ ' , the vbroad and demanding lay- Colbert , is ;a 3S-year-old 7 for- Babe Hlskey . - . . .. . 36^34-70 took first and second , in the mann, only a freshman, took Chl'Chl.Rodriguez ; ...... : 35-35-70 . out came::out of the head . -of the : . ' mer ; Kansasy State . Freshman ¦ Billy Casper .7,.7...... 7;.. 33-37-70 . shot put. - VV . the ,two-mife run with a slow late Bob Jones, - .: Bruce ..Drjv|!n - ...... i ,,. - 37-33r-70 " football player who is entering . 7 Glen Brown, - , who won four time, of 10:54.7. It was Jones who labeled his 7 Art-V/all ...... ;.....:..... 32-38-70 his ninth year as a touring.pro. 7 Jerry Heard 36-34-7.0 7 events in Winona's first home Simunds, Jerry Brandt and greeh-garlahded brainchild "a . mtet of the season Tuesday Reid Katzung were double 'win- ¦¦ : MASTERS LEIADER .:V. X Jini Colbert, . Augusta National Golf Club, Ctolbert has an 7 ¦¦ fickle lady"' against Wabasla and Sty.Char- ners, for the Tigers. - of, a trap to : early lead with .;"-a'. five-under-par"' . 67. (AP Overland. Park, Kans., blasts .flut . ; . "She has to be petted and ca- les,, was the Winhawks .top . Shuttle.. .Hurdle. Relay -. . 1. Albert Lea ' ' ¦ ' ' {Ludtke, . Olson, GllbeHsori, Katiung); : the 18th green , in the opening, round of the Photofax);. V- . joled," '. said the immortal ' point-getter again, He took the T^-6:5S.i. . - , . ' • , • - Masters Golf Toui-namentV Thursday at the Grand: Slam king. "If you try- 1<> Distance Medley Relay 7— .l. Albert . off high jump with a leap of 5-10, ¦ Miliar attack . her, if you treat her p^ce L«a (Dorgen, Phillips, Hellerman, An- derson};. T— 71:51.1. , rough;-she will devour you.v" Shot Put l. 'Jerry- . Brandt - (AU); 3. ¦ -^. ¦ " . Shei •; merely purred . in the Fames (AU - 3. Peltlt (Wj ; D-49-9V... - . 100-Yd, Dash — .1. Dave Walden ' (VV); opening round Thursday when 2. Kleinpaste (AU; 3: Lwftke (AUi T- ; ¦¦ - - - a crazy quilt collection.;¦ of , fa- btit not dovvncasf Hawk, Rambaer 0:,10.8, .. . Ga, (AP) you know v.'iat I 120-Yd. High Hurdles — 1. Re|d .Kat- vorites turned Augusta's par 72 AUGUSTA, . V-v He play--if wns (AL); 1. BroWn CW); 3. Gllbertson - ' ¦'¦ into. a. sham, Twenty-onev broke lyas. five .strokes , off .the, pace, ihean^-I . could : shoot . three 72s (AUV T—0:16.2. .- '¦:. sufferingy. from : heavy ; cold 880-Yd. Run — 1. /Wke Aelins (W); it. six others tied it. a and still win ," he said., : 2. Walter (AU; 3. - Stlehl (At); T~ . "The golf: course was not its and fi ghting a - suddenly, stubr baseball games 2:07.1. -. .' ,.'.balking- . ; f he comment was an obvious . $print -Medley -Relay — 1. Albert- Lea most . difficult," . said the 3-1 fa- horn putter ,^ . (Cochlln, Olson, McNames, Godtland); vorite and four-time "winner , But ; Johnny, Miller • was far reference to Ids history.;of sud- T-3:55.3. - . . : Pole Vault 'l. Jack Nicklaus, registering a 89 from discouraged or downcast denly putting . :together an ex- ¦ ¦ -r Rory Larson VAL); H-9-6, ¦ • ' ¦ despite .- , a bogey on the final going into today's second round tremely low 7 round ,, firing a Mile Run — 1. Rich Wendorjf i fii ;^ postponed raifi . DETROir (AP) — ''When the ifinal playoff series at 3-3 head- both Eastern Conference semy hole. . 7 in the 38th Masters- ' Golf- ,Tour- : 2, Thurley- .(W); -3. , Knopick¦ ¦ (W); T- ¦ score that is . good enough to ¦ ' : . ¦' ' •:; Wihoha High . golfers played 4:5 High Junrip ^- 1, Glen Brown CW); 2. Association tonight, the San An- / "They - say : rain; is ' .coming," Golf Club course; well back of McCamy (AU; 3. Avers (AL); H—5-10. scratched to a 92:88 victory be- fered the most with injuries to VMiller, ranked, the .No, 2 fa- inscn had 43. Wayne Jensen 46 ' tonio Spurs arid : defending said Nicklaus. ^That y could the leading 67 posted by Jim . Mile Relay —. 1..Albert Lea (Walker, fore a Cobo -Arena crowd of center : Cliff V Ray and guards . vorite behind .Jack -Nicklaus by arid Greg Wiltenger 47. Godi'.and,- EU'mghuy'sen. - . McNamee); ¦ ¦ ¦ Colbert: : . T— i'34' .' .'¦ •'¦ •' " ' . ¦'" ;; V- ' champion Indiana Pacers will change .things. If , on. the. other ¦ London's.Vlegal 7 bookies going V':' 'rhe-':golfers ,' will travel to the 3:40:9. - lii. .::.:. . . . - . Jerry Sloan and .Norm Van it ' • He paused moment . Triple Jump — 1. Brown (W); 2, Mc- meet at Indiana in the seventh hand, the greens get fast , • . for a , ' Coulee Golf Course Wednesday The triumph tied the best-of 'Lieri - - . intc-• . the start of this tourna- Donald' (AU; .3. . AftcCamy. (AL>; D-^ : and final game of their Wesit will:help the better playerr. and then amended ..the statement; . .. ' 33-4: 7 . ¦¦ ¦:.' . . seven Western Conference sem Ray, who helped, hold Lanier ment, simply never got uri- for their next meet with La . . Division semifinal series, : more sharply divide the fieW." "The kind of tournaments: I ; Crosse,Logan.; . to just four Joints in the first tracked in his first round Winona vHigh and Central half , injured a knee,' Sloan in- "3 could have shot in the 60s ¦¦ real easy," he said. '.'I had a played' '3% iiwiings .of their base- jured > a foot and Van Lier ball game before it was: called sprained ah . ankle. lot of trouble; with the wind .,It with Vthe : score ¦ knotted' 5-5. The BuJIs surged to - an 18-5 seemed that every time I made Greg Scarborough' s/ two-run Leafs tbach fed lead ; in the first eight minutes Redrnerr salvage first AA^i^n a decision, it turned out to be - V homer helped WHS to a 5-0 lead before Detroit began rallying.: ¦ the wrphg one." befpre Central rallied. ; The Pistons outseored Chi- But :the putts ; that wouldn't VNo make-up game has ;been fall were his big problem; 7 cago 25-19 in the second quarter "1 wias stroking scheduled . yet. The Hawks - are and pulled within 41-40 :by half- in spiif the ball pret- . V/it^ ty, good," he said. "I'm hitting next scheduled to host Still- with Bruirisl tactics time. V 7 TER.RE HALUTE, Ind. - St. innings allowing five hits, .and The Redmen managed to tie the hole and lipping out, or water in ai 11 a.m. contest , Then . Lanier, the 6-fo'ot-11 it 7-7 in the. top of the seventh here Saturday, v V said. Mary'Vs baseball team salvaged Macarol held : the host team hit- . missing by a half inch or leav- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS keep giving-it to us," he center, came alive after inter- with : a ' •'; pair of runs, but the ing The . 7 WHS-Central B-squad 3ruins ' , its first win of the season here less for the last two innings. ; it dead; in the hole arid an The big, bad Boston Yvan Cournoyer was the big mission He Mt 10 points in the The Redmen pounded out 24 Sycamores responded with the inicli short. • . -.;. ' ' ''i V baseball game was also rained have been throwing . their third; period . and 14 in the Thursday afternoon by whipping deciding run in the bottom of out. The two teams were ' tied gun for . Montreal with three hits in the twin bill with fresh- "I; think it. was just that I weight around again, and To- fourth, finishing with 28 before Indiana State University 8-1 in man Bob Heiderscheit going 5- the frame. The loss was charged was trying too hard; S-3 , in theV top of the fifth in- - Kelly. -"iis'-'get- goals, two . of them on break- . " : V V ronto : Coach Red ¦ snapped a. 1- fouling out . with 1:06 left. the second game - of a double- for-9 at the plate and driving to freshman righthander Jeff ning when it was called; V ting fed up with it. . •- ' " aways. Cournoyer Black., • 1 tie - late in the second ; period Chet Walker led Chicago with header. in four rurts. Macarol collected The WHS-Central tennis match V "They're the best ; hookers St. Matfy's scored three quick and 7 the . Canadiens coasted 33Vpoints, ;- The Redmen, 1-3, lost the open- four hits as the team's desig- Charity cage game was also postponed , .with - no and fakers, that's all,'' said an Dave Bing tallied 22 points nated hitter and catcher - Marc runs in the top of the first in- • v home. New York's Bruce Mac- er. 8-7 on Paul Cappa's two-out . ning of the second game, added make-up firmly set. angry Kelly7 Thursday night for the Pistons; '. '¦ " .¦;¦ Weiseriberg was 3-for-67 with . a ARCADIA, Wis. — The Arca- The Hawks are next scheduled Gregor. and Montreal's . Steve ; biobp single to right in the bot- : two runs in both the fifth and after his Maple Leafs dropped V Chicago, which never has got- pair of doubles. .. 'V. V dia High School faculty basket- to host Eau Claire: Memorial at Shutt got the other goals7 . . tom of the seventh inning. Stan Zielbnski was on the sixth and got a single run in ball team, will entertain the ' a 6-3 decision to the IJruins to scored three ten past the first round of the Sopiiomore Jerry Hoffman and the seyentb. 6 p.m. -Tuesday. .-'. - fall behind 2-0 in their National Rick MacLeish mound for St. Mary's forV the faculty team from Osseo-Fair- The Cptter-Plainview : base- goals for Philadelphia , V all of playoffs in. six previous tries, junior Marc Macarol ,. both of first five innings of the opener The only run off Hoffman was child Tuesday in a 7:30 p.mV Hockey League playoff series. . period. The outrebounded Detroit over-all whom complained of sore arms by. unearned. ball game also fell victim to "Elbowing, slashing, every- them in the : second ; and was victimized two mis- charity classic here to raise tlie, wet weather and again no tight-checking Flyers held At- 50-42. . 7 . . after' the game, combined for a judged fly balls ih the first in- Coach Max Molbck's squad funds for , a uni-versal weight thing goes for; that team- There shots over the y Th ere will be - two playoff five-hitter in the nightcap. ning when pushed across (Continued on next page) machine for the Arcadia High make-up has been firmly set. isn t a team that gets away lanta to just four ISU ¦ ¦ ' first 20 minutes. - ' games tonight in the : NBA— Hoffman , went the first five four runs, '' ' .' . SM€ ' • ' School athletic department. . The Ramblers are scheduled with more than those : guys," to travel to Durand for a 3 p m added Kelly, " The referee (Bob game Monday. Myers) was intimidated from the word go." In other Stranley Gup action , the Montreal Canadiens evened Brevyers return home their series at one gamie apiece with New York by beating the SPORT |;^^1|Rangers 4-1; the Philadelphia Flyers whipped the Atlanta SHOTS Flames 54 to go ahead 2-0; and riding winning streak ' ¦Xt x ' f*MtsS the Chicago ¦ Black' Hawks ^EX^ By DOSH f '\}S^r CLEVELAND (UPI)-The Mil- second victory for the Brewers doubles by Charley Spikes and dumped the Los Angeles Kings waukee Brewers returned home while Dave McNally (0-1) ./ill Frank Duffy . 4-1 to lead that series 2-0 ¦ . triumphantly Friday; riding a hurl for the Orioles as Milwau- Milwaukee (7) , 7 Cleveland I (»> ' . ' ' ' There were no games in the abr hbl ; ' - . abrhbl Hie -Sneat Unknown . . three-game winning streak and kee and Baltimore open a three- ' ' World Hockey Association play- AAone-y. ^b 4 0 0.1 Lowenstn.lf 40 7 0 XX- '^w holding second place in the game series. Mllch olWh -5 0 I V Gamble,dh 4 0 0 0 TRACK QUIZ : Everyone offs Thursday action night but American League East with a May.rl 4 2 1 0 Hendrlck.cf 4 110 knows that Roger Biinnister resumes tonight. Chicago visits Briggs singled home a run in Scott.lb 3T 2 0 Ellls.c -4122 IntHe safely cf ran the first siih-foiii'-mimite New England with the series 3-1 mark. the first and belted a , two-run Brlossjf 5 12 3 Heidcmn.ss 0 1 0 0 6 !).r)4 John Briggs with three runs Porle-r. c 2 0 0 0 Torrcs.ph 0 0 0 0 mile,.3;59 .4 on May ,, l at tied at 2-2; Toronto, leading" 2-0, homer in the fifth , but he wasn't Colucclo,cf 3 12 1 Chmblss,lb 3 110 , 2b 4 22 1. Splkcs.rl 3 111 Oxford , England But who was is at Cleveland; and Minnesota, batted in was the offensive hero the only hero. Garcia, the first (o .'¦ run under four and Jerry Bell turned in a spar- Yount,ss 3O0 0 BBoll,3b 4 12 2 ymrown heme. on top 3-0, can wrap it up at Dave May made the defensive Colborap oooo Duff/,3! 30 1 1 minutes indoors? kling performance in relief of JBell .p 0O00 Lee.ph 1 O 6 0 ¦ Edmonton. Houston , leading play of the game with a diving ? ?. ? ? ' ? starter Jini Colborn in Milwau- Murpliy,p 0OO0 Duncan,c 00 0 0 Winnipeg 2-0, gets back in ac- catch of a drive in the fourth Rodrlguez.P'0 O 0 0 ¦ Het7noso,2b 2 OOO Ahplhur juro'it lrac-k allikile of tion Saturday night in Houston. kee's 7-6 win over the Cleveland inning, Pedro Garcia had two — — Brohamr,2b 2 0 0 0 vcsloryoar w.-is known ns Hie Phil Esposito scored once and Indians . Th u rsday.; Totals 33 7 10 7 , l}ostni\n,p 0 0 0 0 "Flying Dulclinuin ." Il« was hits—including his second hom- Tlmmrmn.p 0 o o 0 set up teammates Ken Hodge Colborn '.s failure , for the sec- er of the year—to raise his Av- W|lcox,p 0 0 p 0 Corneliufi 'WanncrUii m , Ihn son ond time in a row , to resemble Sandccs.p 0 0 0 0 ;>f an Ainoricim immigrant and Wayne Cashman with a erage to .417 and Bob Coluccio the pitcher wns a year ago Totals 24 6 10 4 from llollmii l who beenme Ihe goal apiece for Boston. Bobby lie singled home what proved to be ( Sehmautz also had a goal and was disturbing. But there -were MILWAUKEE ...... , 110 550 100—7 world's tii'fiil i'st polo 'miller. : the winning run in the seventh CLEVELAND S00 000 010—1 His vault of ir> fcol , one inch , two assists for the winners . plenty of bright spots to make off reliever Ken Sanders , a for- ' Ed Johnston up for it am) the Brewers wi!J DP-Mllwnukce 2, Cleveland 1. LOB— ut . - Fresno. CiilU -. •'till '? 29, , the Leafs back- mer Brewer, Milwaukee 7, Clovnland 6, 5B—Splkos, display their talents before their HR—Ellis I, Gnrclfl 2, Brlags 1940 , wns'lho lii'sl Ifi-iont vault up goalie nnd a formev Bruin , The game started out as if Dullv. 2, pvor mrttlc , and Warmcrclnm said his teammates let Boston home fans tonight in Coun- SB—Lowenslcln. S--Mono/. Cleveland was on its way to its PITCHING SUMMARY ovchlulilly raised *he record to push them around. ty Stadium. IP H R ER BB SO first victory of the season, The ' ]fi foot VA int'hos. Ho was ' •If we keep taking it, they'll Jim Slaton.will go after his Colborn . - . , ' .t 4 4 4 2 0 so.fnr nlin-id of his tima Ihnt Indians chased Coiborn with a J.B(-II (W, 1-0 ) ... 6>,i 5 11 2 1 Mur ph/ ' .i 1 O 0 2 0 no ono else mnnf ifiod to vault fivo-run outburst Ln the first in- Rotlr-loiioz 1 0 0 O 1 0 oven IS feel until !s BLOOMINGTON , Minn. (UPI) Chicago (4) Minmsoti (Al , Angeles, he wns limed hi —The Minnesota Twins and the ab r h bl abrhbl over for Colborn with two out in Your ,1) Kelly.rl 3 110 Ferrnr.ss J 0 1 0 the first: and blanked tho 3? 50 , Chicago Whi te Sox played to a Wlny.ll 3 1IO Tlinmpin.st 1 O I 0 '^^r!ll Allen,Ih 3 0 I) O Cnmw.JI) 3 110 Indians on five hits until the ^ 4-4 tio Thursday in n game de- ¦ Earn- What' s your pleasure - slcnk , Mollon.dll 5 00 O Hlsle.ct 3 110 eighth when Tom Murphy came X ^ml fried diUil^n? It 's nil layed 311 minutes hy rain and S/»nlo,3l» 13 13 Lls,)l) 110 0 scnlood . unplay- Honclor.sn,cl 3 0 2 1 Dfirwltv! 3 12 3 in to put down a Cleveland SHOR'r V.S thon called becauso of Oi-tn,2b ings wni(ln« for you :il 3 0 0 1 KlllobrvMlh 3 0 10 Innings, Hi)rrmnn,e 3 0 0 0 Drye.cf rnlly. ,aM x able ground s after six 2 0 0 0 "whtirt* oxcollnnl- food i« " * With a Guaranteed portly Kflvved , ' And , we offer Tho game will go into the rec- Dont.ss 2 0 (I 0 nrnun.ll 0 0 0 0 Pedro Garcia homered for K«nl,p . 0 0 0 0 Hundlcy.c 3 0 0 0 the Brewers in the second and Income quick Uilw-nii s«?rvin' , Inol ord books but will lie replayed Gos5ii0B,|> 0 0 0 0 Torr»ll,.1b 3 0 0 0 FOR THE BEST at n later elate , Dotk(T,T) 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee chased Cleveland SHORTY'S RESTAURANT TotflU 21 4 ! 4 .starter Dick In QUALITY and SERVICE Hobby Darwin tripled, nnd sin- ToUI» 23 4 7 3 Bosmnn in the in DISABILITY and m .1 4 «l 1 1 'lil 1 :00 A. m. 0/i||y Go"„M|«i 31 j 2 0 O 1 ) oil n two-run 'homer hy John INS. GO. Dorkcr 6 5 4 -4 3 4 ISIlls , n run-Hcorlng single by Midnloht oi» Sunday HUP - hy Knit (Lit), by Gosf.noe 63Va W. 4th St. (Qraun), WP-Knat, T—I:J8. A^«,li», Buddy Boll and run-scoring T Seaver Gibsoii f6cked in the inning. Aaron has , three By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS nightcap 4-3 with¦ a pair of runs Hutton s two-run pinch homer zero!in on any one man so you Tom Seaver and Bob Gibson in the ninth. .. ' ., in the ninth. San Francisco and have to hear down V all the home runs for the year—His j^aKaATi; ^riirtnsttiiWwtiiV.: *'i.rli •£«¦£JXiMrSr-iJ SMC ^ ' used to . mowing down opposing . Meanwhile, . Rogers, base- Cincinhati had the day off. time." . ,. only hits. He isy batting; only. : : . utside; sources .,. few rules: frame dip nets up to eight feet in McCallum). LO'B^-St. Mary ":s. 8, ISU 7. rinn?t know. - ' - Toronto at Cleveland, Toronto leads PITCHING SUMMARY is- also Lewiston's head ketball ' job was why T mo'ved ¦' .' 2-C- ' A NEW JERSEt SUPERIOR COURT judge has^ ordered diameter or eight feet square can be used, IP HR ER BB SO Rader WEST DIVISION 0 0 2 from La Crescent in :' the first : Little League Baseball Inc., to comply with the ''the letter while'' : seines of up to 75 feet long and six feet Hoffman (W, 1-0) S S 1 . baseball coach and Stiles is also ¦ Min nesofa al Edmonton, -Minnesota ' MaCarol : ...... 2 . 07 .8 . 0 11 the Cardinals', head .. wrestling place." ' .'' le-ads 3-0 . " • .- '. and spirit" of a State Division on Civil Rights ruling that deep are legal in outl Mansfield ' (LP> ' •.. .., 2: .4;-. S 3 2 2 . . : ying y/aters. : V ¦»¦ SATURDAY'S. GAMES ^^ Drlnkard .;. ; 4 . - .' 4 . 4 O 1 coach. According to Dr. Camp- 7 EAST, DIVISION . permits girls to play on-league teams ... ' Rader was an assistant bas- . •Hayworth- i:. 1 . ' .1-1 . 1 2 1 offered those Toronto , at Cleveland .-: ' No fishing license is required of Wjscotv bell both will be ' WILLIE STARGELL of the Pittsburgh Pirates is the 1974 HBP—Wheat ; (by Hoffman). Balks - — ketbali coach at La Crescent WEST DIVISION' ' ¦: •, : - positions again , for next sea- sin residents who dispose of their surplus fish Hayworth,- . . for ' two: years before , taking: the Winnipeg at Houston, Houston leads recipient of the . Roberto Clemente Award Trophy, which goes 2^0 ' to the player who "best exemplifies the game of baseball on for, as the rules say; : "friendship, favors or Lewiston job; ...¦:.; SUNDAY'S GAMES 7 EAST DIVISION ; and off the field , - v... • -, cash." But a nonresident angler must have a . "Ihe oixly real reason I y can " . . of New . England at:.Chlcaao .7 from the Uiiiversity Cincinnati, nonresident fishing license bef«re he fakes any come, up with," Flader contin- WEST DIVISION REPJ^ENtATlVES ¦ ' snielt from Wisconsin waters and he cannot ued, ''is, that they (the. board) Winnipeg at Houston . .- Cincinnati Xavier, St. Louis, Creighton, Detroit,.Dayton , Mar- ' ¦Edmonton : at /yiinnesota. 7 ., .:. quette, Oklahoma City;;. Oral Roberts, Loyola andyDe Paid sell , trade or barter what he catches. were, cusappdinted in the' isea- . Bi| Ten son. They weren't satisfied with Pro Basketball Playoffs met in Chicago to discuss formation of a new college .basket- Idpers ' ¦ ' • 7 . Minnesota smelters are subject to some similar rules: a winning season. They thought V ;:; yv -NBA:"" - . - .. ball conference .. . . dip nets may be. used and minnow seines not more than 25 we had a. lot better material " Conference Semifinals. . / JENNI FRANKS broke Shane Gould's American 400ryard feet in length and four, THURSDAY'S . RESULTS . feet deep : may be used in the St. than that. - : WESTERN CONFERENCE individual medley, record with a 4:26.22 clocking in¦ the AAU Louis River and outlying waters. Seines are illegal in any "1 felty we had the best ball De-troit 92, Chicago '88; series tied 3-3, Indbor Shortcourse swimming .championships . ;¦.;- other streamV or TODAY'S GAMES . -within 100 . feet of the mouth of any other teaiia coming back next year EASTERN CONFERENCE : IMTABV MONTGOMERY, starting left tackle for the: Den- stream. Smelt: may be taken without limit and can be bought Saturday and; probably even a better one "Boston, at Buffalo; Boston , leads series r J opene ver Broncos, signed a multi-year coritract with the NFT ' ahd sold at . any time. in ' .two years." - '7 3-2 ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' ASSOCIATED PRESS catcher John Lonchar whom . Capital at New York; series tied 3-3 ; team- ' .>. .; ' • -:¦ V " ' Minnesota smelters must have a valid fishing license By THE , . Coach. Moby Benedict describes . Although no replacements SATURDAY'S (JAMES GRANT GUTHRIE, former Florida State University " -. Wiscpnsinites along the Lake Michigan shores will be Minnesota's V Gophiers will have been officially named for .. -: . - WESTERN CONFERENCE , . as one of the nation^ best all- Detroit a; Chicago "' place-Wcker who played ; with the Buffalo - Bills of the NFL getting the first smelt action soon, but North Shore smelters have to defend their Big Ten the; ¦ ¦ around collegiate catchers. • Rader, Winona Daily News . SUNDAY'S . GAMES sighed with the Jacksonville Sharks of tbe WFL. won't have too long to wait. without has learned that Richard Lor- EASTERN. CONFERENCE baseball championship Dave Burnett, who. led ;the Buffalo at Boston, if necessary enz will relinguish his head the services of Dave Winfield, league in batting last . season ¦' ABA Register purses; football coaching , duties to be- shoes ai ri'A Animal products include hair, feathers, skin or any other THURSDAY'S . RESULTS KwC^gj earned run average of 0.37 was Milwaukee 7, Cleveland 6 90OQ ;part of the body — including mounted trophies. Detroit 4,. New York 1 The law was aimed at the large-scale importers in the tops in the Big Ten last season. 1 055-3 103 count Baltimore 7, Boston 6 state, Also retu rning are Ken Herbst Chicago at Minnesota ,, game called, but also applies to anyone with a pair of alligator Paced by Gary Saab's 633 ies — Pat Repinski carded a. 194 rain ' shoes or a rare hunting trophy. . and Dennis Allar, effort, West End Greenhouses —486, Laura Yusten also liad a California 11, Texas 8 Since^ the law Michigan also will be long on TODAY'S GAMES was enacted, 1,100 - permits have been is- combined for the fourth highest 486, Winona Agency managed Detroit (LaGrow 00) at Boston (Lea sued by the state. pitching and could very well team series of the season Thurs- an 898 team game and Koehler 0-1) Kansas Clly. (Paltln O-O) al Minnesota have the best staff in Ihe ¦¦ ¦ day night at Mapleleaf L.anes. Auto Body compiled a 2,491. (Woodson.0-6 or Corbln-T-0) ' league, Back again are Ace The current leader in the ACTION Baltimore (McNally 0-1 ) at Mlhvauket Arcadia banquet Adams, Chuck Rogers and Westgal* w. I,. (Slalon 1-0), ' night Equipment donated Eagles . League, West End Bay Stale Chokjfj ,.....,. « 18 New York (Dobson 1-0) ' at Cleveland Craig Forham. Greenhouses recorded a 1,055 Foul Liners . ,..;... 35 35 (G. Perry 0-1); night HOUSTON r ' PlumMriD Barn ...... 3)< ,s ARCADJA, Wis - The annual , Minn. - Tom Van Adams led the Wolverines teami game and finished with a zeti Chlcsgn (Wood fl-2) at Celllom lm Hoof, a Winona native who be- Bay Slate Boxers .,,.,,.,.. 30V3 J9'A (Ryan M), ninht Father-S o n , Father-Daughter with six victories a year ago 3,103 count. Winona Agency Lodge No. 1030 ...,,...... ,59 31 NATIONAL LEAGUE came a professional Unknown ;,. ' ,..:. 26 34 Athletic Banquet will be held boxer, do- while Rogers . had an ERA of wasn't far behind with a. 3,060; EAST nated his Bay State Old Doc 'l 14 36 W. L. Pet. OB boxing ring and some Merchants Bank ...52 38 at the Arcadia High 2.25 and Forhan 2.26. Steve Styba, Phil Bambenek JWonlreal 2 o 1.000 'A School gym training equipment to the Hous- ¦ ' ' The Wolverines also have and Baab each carded a 225, KEOLERETTi SI. Louis ,. 4 1 - . BOO . here Thursday at 7;30 p.m. ton Area Boxing Club. Woslgafa W. L. Chicago 2 1 ,M7 1 Bambenek would up with an er- Golden Brand .,,, 10 2 New York ....' ..,.,. 2 3 .400 1 rorless 622, Charlie Kramer Karasch Realtori 7 5 Philadelphia : ...... 2 3 .400 2 came in with a 612 Wesl End Liquor ..' 7 JS. Pittsburgh ...... 0 4 .000 Vh , Jim Staak Town & Country State Bank 6 6 WEST Iia'd a 609, Don Peshon managed Olson's Formal Wear .... S 7 San Frnpclsco ,. -... 5 1 .853" Hunter safety a 604 and Harold Skroch finish- Winona Truck Leasing .... S 7 Los Angnles S 2 ,714 '/fc Zleboll's Produce ' ',, s Cincinnati ,., 3 3. .500 . ,. 7 1 2 ed with an errorless 525. Plfjoly Wlfjflly ,.. ' , - 3 t ¦ Houston 3 3 .500 2 Out in the Classic League at A.C, LADIES Atlanta 3 4 .42?. 2W % San Diego ,. .,. .,. 0 SAVE « ,000 5 20% Athletic Club W. L. the Westgate Bowl, Gordie Fak- THURSDAY'S Hot Fish Shop .,26 RESULTS 13 St. Louis 8-4, — ON YOUR scheduled ler was rolling 234—657 for the Leo s Bar . „ 20 New York 7.3 class ' 19 Philadelphia 4, Chlcano 3 Winona Knitters 20 19 Wine House. Montreal 5, Pltlsburoh) TREMPEALEAU, Wis. — Area Lantern Cafe .,,.,,..,.,.., 19 30 1 Mike 7ahnke's 603, Bill Glow- Atlanta 4, Los Angolas 4 youngsters planning to take Winona Agency ,19 20 Houston Golfing czewski's 590 and Bob Kosi- Kaehlor Auto Body 13 36 9, San Dleno 1 Membership part in a hunter safety class TODAY'S GAMES dowski's 567 were each error- CLASSIC — THIS YEAR AT;- sponsored by the Trempealeau Weilgala Points College Baseball must pre- less and team honors w«nt to Wlno House ,,. ..,,.,,312 LOCAL SCHOOL- Sportsmen's Club Rollingstone Lumber Ruppert's Grocery 375 Indlana St. 0-1, SI, night at. 7 p.m. will. 1,008 Rupport' Mary's 7-« register Monday s Grocery ...256 TODAY'S GAMES and the Wine House with 2,848, Hot Fish Shop 2431/, Cady's Golf & Recreation in the Trempealeau Village St. Mary's at Eastern Illinois Golden Frog WESTGATE: Action -Ted ....,, 334 Bemld|| st, at Winona st„ 3 p.m. OFFER Hall. Economy" NIC — • GOOIT APRIL 15-MAY 15 • Block toppled a 217 Plumblno 222 The class, which will begin , Bob Dennis Wostoate Bow l 207'A Moorhead SI, at UM-Morrls Thursday at 7 p.m., will include carded a 599 and the Plumb- Schultz Transit ..,, ...; 179 St, Cloud SI. nl Southwest St. in Bam worked for 999—2 PIN DROP SATURDAY'S GAMES four two-hour sessions and is c ,882. Weilgale points LOCAL SCHOOLS— FACILITIES AVAILABLE ARE... Pin Drop — Mary Lou Hazel- Sporlsmon Tap , ,. 37 St. MarySl' s at FasternWl ln SlIllinois (2) expected to wind up May 9, KAGE "' (!) * tor turned In 209—560 Dianne 35 ' '" '' ,10M, • 9-Hole Regulation Golf Cmmt Any youngster who is now , Oasis , 3|'/i •NfC^T ' ' Huff had a 519, Wumlerllch Insurance Moorhead St, at ¦ • 9-Hol» Par 3 Cotirs* 12 or will he 12 ; ears old be- Rita Tropple 31 UM-Morrli (2) waL next with a 515, Rosemary Ray's Trading Po st 30 St, Cloud st, af . Southwest St, ) Eagle* No. 2 ... ,,,,,., 19 LAWN BOY • C/IA Cisowski turned in a 501, Kar- People ' s Exchange ' Discount Price . *?J Discount Price ,.., ¦4> Utica. . . . bUrf Ellliiflhuysen. Tel.; Leyvistbn-' 5602. Charles 932-4168, ' ' ¦ areas at a low cost; Call for appoint- .wllJl papers, 30.. black cows calving new, N\iz.cy\^ Merchandis*; ;. . , "' . 70 ment 9f Information. Free -brochure 7W: Charolals . Ranch, Nelson, . Wis. DIANA SEED oats, , earl/ maturity, ' TWENTY-EIGHT- Ion gear press;, solid ^ mailed upon, request. Newburg Butdlns, : T.ei. 715-673-484S. : : /;; cleaned, $2 per.ton. Loren Flmian. Wau- ' .antfque idlnlng table, 4 chairs- and 2 LOWRY:ELECTRIC brBati.-IIke new e»n- - giierf speaker ' ¦ ¦" : . man dee; lei. 626-2781; . rt Here . 421 Main. La Crosse. Tel. 7M-10W. ' ^-:/DEUTr /-V ' hostess x - "XX ¦ flu«- . .only one Incorrect insertion - Tel. 454-4410, ALCOHOLICS ANONY- Sate thurs, at I p.rn. ' Tel. Lewlsforl . . : ; bujbs, onions, all fertilizers, pbfasfi, CUSTOM BUILT, frailer hitches fns-falfed tars, amplifiers -microphones, -accord. tinguished lecture series on the classified advertisement published In " ' . MOUS,, for yourself, or , a ' relative. . . 2667 evenings. St. Charles 932-3062. Call superphosphate, blood, meal, acme and In our shop. All tnodei. cars and .truck's. lans, -violins, stands, BargalnsI All . ' ' the Want Ads section. Check yuor ad . Bicentennial; . ." .. . cot leet Lee Ploelz. ' science - orlho products,.. peat moss, All.: work- ' guaranteed. Call for appoint- guaranteed. A. WeUch, Fountain City, and call 452-3321 . If a correction must INCOME: TAX PREPARATION i 9 years Arens Implement 7 redi-earth,pe«t pots, |iffy pellets : ¦ ' ' . Farm- ment and quotation, MLC Company, Tel. Wis. Clark,' : Nev? York University V bo .' rnade; experience wllh National Tax Services- PUKEBRED DUROC boars. Clifford Ho-ff, ers; Exchange -Garden Center "' , 58 Main 452-7114.7 ' ¦y ' . psychology professor and schol- Betty Bergler Rublelri Tax Service, IK . Lanesboro, AAln n, Tel,.Peterson .875-2564. Showroom ; ..St. . . ' .. . .W.74th. Tel. 452-7355 .Appointment pre. ¦ SPRAY TEXTURING of ceilings or -walls. will discuss "The American ferred : ' WIS. FEEDER pigs, '30 lbs. S2B, '.40 lbs, ', ' ' ' Minn ; . : BUUK GARDEN ¦ , ¦ ar, Card .of Thanks ¦. .but not necessary. Farm-Bust- . ;: . Kellogg, seed; seed' potatoes; New , -and. old. Painting and Interior Revolution: Democratic politics nessypersonal returns. ' 7 • (33, 50-60 lbs. S37. Erysipelas vacclnsN " fertilizer; tlme, bona', meal;- insecli-. remodeling. Brooks & Associates. Tef. ' 'Area's; Leading ; tij castrated, delivered. C. Acker, Mid- . tides. Kupleli Feed-8.'Seed. Sales, 120 454-5382. - . ' ' - ¦ and Popular Education", at .8 STORSVEEN — V GOT A PROBLEM? Need Information or dleton, Wis. Tel. . 608-836-8764.. . y. 7 E. -jnd. , : ' : 50 : " p.m; "at the Performing , With deepest - flratitiide we extend, 'thli lust want fo "rap"? Call YES evenings Hay, Grain, Feed - , . - HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS Arts ; ' ' ' ¦' '. ' •. ' ' • ' ' Band Instrument word . of thanks for the: many kind and 452-5590.. - , . . : . ,.; FEEDER PIGS — -it. Dan Stellpllug; - See the new fAodel 350 how for " conditioned., Solomon Antiques, Coins Auditorium . oi Winona ^tate sympathetic acts that came - ta. -us at . Trempealeau, Wis. Tel; 534-6138. BALED . HAY—all , Stampt 56 Frorn the No 1 chain saw people— GET YOUR Wedding. Invitations at Jones . Stuber. .Fountain ,: City, Wis., (Eagle Val- College. . the time bf our recent bereaverrient, . ¦ POWER MAINTENANCE & SUPPLY CO. ' . . . ' : . ' ' - WANTED TO BUY—U.S. ¦ Special thanks to Rev Deye, Dr. .'AM. . & Kroeae.r. Large selection.¦ Free Quill PROFESSIONAL - horseshoeing done, Call y ley)., - " ' 7. ;. 7 ; ", yy - . sliver cbins to 207 E. 3rd-St- ... Tel: '4S2-2S71 7 JHeadquarters' - Earlier that- , ' ' - . Will pay. lOdli ; day, Clark's ad- , nurses af the hospital, .all - . pen . witb $4o order.. . . anytime ' alter 74:30 Mon. through' F rl, I76-*. or more. Tel. Wa- ropney, the. milling.end lor bosha-565-4659 dress Will be filmed before , those who-brousht food and assisted us '.orsd all. day Sat. Cai '' Scoffield, Tci;.4i2- WANTED—buckwheat tor , . REMODELING YOUR kitchen? Let us a ¦ ¦ Buckwheat, hulls for : organic Name brand . In any .way. ."•.. 75627. . . • 7 . seed. . give you an estlmale; Custom-buil-t Cab- •^ instruments private . audience at the .. Transportation 8 . \ mulching.for sale.. Stockton Roller Mills, SCRAPBOOKS, . ' . Little The Family of Mrs. Esther Sforsveen . rrietronomer hail iree; inets by Plato 8. . Hager; Top" q|)alily ' ' ' Slocklon, Minn. ' Tel. 689-2943. trunks, hanging lamp, old souvenir . -cabinets Red Schoplhouse: in St. Charles SAW.-rleavIng monthly, 12-14 days with LIVESTOCK. WANTED — market co-ws ¦ at moderate prices. GAIL'S iavailable on a. trial rental . Items , from.area. Buying, post cards'. APpLlAN'CE,,-2i5 6 senior people,.. . everthlng' furnished feeder .. cattle, Holsteln- springing cov/s E.,3rd. Tel. 4S2-4210. for use in the bicentennial . cele- Lost and Found A ' MR. . DAIRYMAN —' Have you tried our :' AAary' Twyce, .Antiques.:f» Books, ,920 W. v; ' including meals, , S425,, . For more'-infor- ' and- heifers'; .Trucking tr> . Spring-Grove 7 plan. X; . Sales . -Barn, . Tues.' • Hubert-' Volkmsh, • Milk Balancer supplement? . Mix It in 5th. TWO N EW , 40-gai; el edrlc water heaters, bration. The lecture as one bf mation Tel. - Fountain:-.City W-4762. ' . ' . . ' Lewiston, Minn. Tel. '416-1. ' libe ration or top feed it. Call Stan at , never used,..still:lrt box;.-Tel. 454--4612. ' 19 in the bicentennial series and AS A PUBLIC SERVICE to our , readers, Garden Valley Co-op, 162 E. 2nd. Tel. ¦ ¦ CALIFORNIA BOUND May: 7. Will share Articles for Sale i(. Complete Prbfessional V- the only one to he filmed free found ads . :WII be published when PUREBRED YORKSHIRE ahd Chester ". 452-5232. : 57 SOLID - CHERRY -Grandmothers clock , west ' , calls the . expenses/and driving, yo.ur car, Tel. 454- ' : ¦¦ a person . flndliig an article . : ¦ - ¦ White boars,- , available .year around new. 7 Echo chimes. 618 Larch Ave., ' repair our• ' ' bf Chicago, according to Classl- 2i7«. . . . ,. : , •: . - ;. service in . . . . Dr. Wlhoha ' Dally & Sunday News Brucellosis-free herd. rAerlln Johnson; HAY for sale; large bales. Tel. Arcadia SIMPUICITY power.. .tiller. - - te). 454-4132 . La Crescent. Tel. .*95-4803.7. fled ' . Dept.' . 452-3331.. : An 18-word notice . 323-3291. ' '' - " ' Lewis. Younger, executive di- D-ura nd Wis. Ttl. 672-571 1. . ' ". or 454-5983. ; ¦:. ; shop. ' ': rector of the Winona will be -published- -free.-for ..a days In Business Services 14 :¦ County an: effort to brlno finder and - loser •AE NDY WOODWORTH Is now- accepting FOUR HUNDRED large bales of hay. MUSHROOM COMPOST-ltleal , for gar- ;: NEEDLEvS . ' ¦ Historical Society. , together. VJNYL, LEATHER and artificial leather horses for breaking and training .7 In Ponald Woodard, Rt. 1/ Houston, Minn; dens and potting. Delivered In Winona, • : . For All Makes : • '- . ' . ¦¦ furniture, car seats, . car: tops repaired ;Western, English or lumping at' Circle ' ' 2-yard rnlnlmum, $6 per yard; Tefi 454- . ' of Record .Players.' Hsa l Leonard Music The lecture is spodrsored by BALED HAY—no rein. Stored In barn, 50c - " ¦ ' - ' : and restored. Prompt' service.. "Reason- R. Ranch' In-Wiscoy.Valley. Also Instruc- ¦ ' 4566. .;¦ ; 7' . ; . . . .' ' ' the American Enterprise LOST—smalt white Pood le, . 10 years old; able, tei, 743-8411. 7 ti ons for beg inners, Intermediate -and ' bale, you haul It. Marcel J. and Robert Hardt s Music Sto re 64 E.V2ria .;• . Tel. 454-29201 Insti- children's • pet, ' ' • Franklin and 8thi area, / advanced show,rlng ' rlde-rs. Proven.suc- . Rothering, Fountain. Clly.. Tel. 687.-7288. NEW REFRIGERATORS/at: big -savings, " .. ' 116-118 Plaza E. ; , tute in cooperation with the col- " the name of Fanny, Tel. ¦ ; answers to HOUSE PAINTING, Inlerlor, exterior,:ex- cess 1n-.7 years , of. show winnings for ' check these prices. FRANK L.ILLA & . " ¦ "¦ ¦' ' ¦ ¦ •' ¦ ¦ ' ' "We Service What We Sell" " lege and the historical society. 45438)8;;. .y. ". . ' . . . 7 ' . .. . : ¦; '. " pert, workmanship, 15 years experience. herself, studer>ts and horses. Modern fa- STRAW for saleV Herbert Gehsmer, Tel. SONS, 761 . E. 8th.. 7 FULL SIZE . pool tab'ie, 8'. Tel; 452-1591 • , Tel. 454^808.¦;- .'- . , , 7. cilities, '¦ Indoor . arena, spacious, .box Lewiston'- 2769. . 7 . aflerM. . Quie plans to attend, but ' nearly grown, . . • FOUND — . female kitten, stalls, metal- corrals,. ! rails. Tel. -. 452- ¦ ¦ black and white button , nose,. Blue col- ' ' events in Congress, could force , TRASH REMOVAL-prompt service. TeL 1731' or 454-.10B6. MIXED HAY for horses, large bales, v , y. . v THREE ROOMS furniture, J289 In- " Tel. 452-5244. . ¦ ' On; ANTIQUE; • 0* . , Sewing Machines y 73 a last-minute cancellation, Jiis , lar. Goodview, . . -454-318?,- ' ' y-y y ...... $!} large straw bales, $T. L. C. AND' newer furniture stripping, chair cludes sofa-arid matching chair,. 4-piece nen, 4 miles . S. H IV, atyAllora.y canfng;and 5eaf. .opholsferJng. Free pick- • bedroom .set and. '.5-piece dlnet-te set. CLEAN' USED sewing maciitnes, straight office . reported. Personals 7 SNOWBLOWER, tliler/ power mower and , ; up and delivery. Tel; Fountain City Houston Furniture,: Houston, Mlrh., on ' For sale or lease - FEED, OATS . for saie, suitable for seed, ¦ • ' stitch and rig zag; $15 arid up. WiNO-- ', .: other smalt engine repairs; sales'and ¦ 687-9751. Hwy. I6. 7 ' . ' •,; ' . Roderick Bfeyer, Dakota Minn.,. 2 . NA 'SEWING CO., ' 915- W.: -5tlV. . SPECIAL MENU lust for Easter -featuring service. Howard La rson, Old i\Alnnesota ' , : ' JERSEY BUU v .miles E.;of R idgeway. - cornlsh 'game hen, roast duck a la .. or- .City Road, Tel.. 454-1482. - GARDEN TILLER RENTAL—also lawn HI NE IGHBORl' fried Blua.Lustre for :"' thatchers-and vaccums. -WINONA FIRE . Markets closed ange, roast prime ribs of beef, baked TRISTRAM-MILESTONE. ' . cleaning- carpels? '.It's super! Rent, etec CUSTOM ROTO tilling wlfii a troy, belt ¦ HAY , — 1,000 plus , bales, first and sec- - ¦Si . POWER EQUIPMENT CO., 54 E. ' ' Typewriters V 77 ham with Beaulolals. sauce. Serving 11 , " Cross- " ¦ . trie shampooer sly $2 and. J3." Robb any size garden,, reasonable ' rate. Tel. ond , crop. Stored - .Inside, -easy - load- 2nd. Tel. 452-5065, - " .- - • to 4. Still time to call for your , reserve- - - . . Bros. Store . - .,: Because of the observance 452-4990. ' :. . ' •: . Born Apr. 25, 1972. :-- ing. - No '"k(cker bales... 5, miles S.E; TYPEWRITERS and. '. adding machines ' ¦ . tion . ... D.C., The ' Annex...... , . . ' Fremont.. . Wayae. West, . - .Lewiston.. Tel. RU7WAAGE. SALE—560 W. ' Mill, on back tor rent.or sale.' LOw. rates. Try 'us ' - '. of yGoid Friday, -. stock ex- Sire—Mailu IWilestbrie. Ex ¦ FOR a Job well done . feeling clean . ERV'S FIX-IT Service,' home and houses ' 5765. . ' porch, children's summer, .clothing;- slta '' " ¦ for all ' your- -office supplies, desKs, FOR YOUR bowling banquet or party, We ' carpets, .with Blue; Lustre. Rent changes and most domestic hold : repairs, rerriodeling and paintlna Dam-^-Pixys Tristram Twylla 5-10, : spring cpats and rriiscellaneoui electric : tiles or office chairs LUND OFF ICE hive fhe hall. Also fhe receptions, wed- ...... ' shampooer Jl Tel. 454-401 ii. 7 " ' : 7,305 y DAIRY arid beef hay, delivered. Eugene ¦ , $2 and }3. H. Choate ¦ ' 452-5222. '¦ ¦' and foreign markets were dings or ' other get-togelh'ess. V.F.W .' ... 3-5 . . yliW 664 ¦t, Co. . . ' • •SUPPLY . CO. . . 128 E. 3rd. Tel, . ¦ Lehnertz -Tel. . 507-534-3763. - BIRD FEEDERS ' ind'Martin--Houses; POST 1287. ¦-, - . , 7, 52 closed today.' ¦ - :• - .:.¦ . . ¦ ' ¦ ' " " ' '¦ .' Lalrd-' St. .. ..^ ..; ,.. , ' .' . • • ¦ ¦ ' " . . Dressmaking, Sewing Tor details Tel, 608-248-238^ TWO PIECE whits curved ' sectional, 6 ¦'' ' y . . , . . . 16 ; Wanted to Buy ' y XSt POST DINNER-MEETING ISinext TUfcS., Logs, : piece bedrom/s'et, birch, • dr-write - - . - Posts, Lumber '52 COAAING SOON —' famous Speed . room divider APRIL TO. Pick up your tickets early Queen with . book, shelves DRESSMAKING, sewing or mending, wl. washers and -dryers, featuring stainless . , GE electric stove, WM. WILLER; SCRAP IRON J. METAL . ' at the LEGION CLUB. - 20" reel type power X \X:X &^\XX;X . . make children's clothes, dresses-short APPROXIMATELY 400 whltfe Oak fence steel ' tubs and drum. WINONA. FIRE & mower. AU in. ex- CO. pays hlghset prices, tor scrap Iron* . • ' HAEUSER J ERSEYS cellent, or :|ong; summer outfits. Will do In. my posts. Tel. Fountain City 687-4763 oft- POWER;EQUIPMENT -condition. . 21" Motorola - TV, metal.and raw, fur. - .. ¦ " NEXT, wedding, anniversary ' ¦ CO,, 54. E. 2nd, - ' .MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. " (API - Wieat FOR YOUR .'home. 316 Vine, . Tel. 452-8485 anytime. R.R.1 BOX27 ..er 5. - . ' ¦' . ' 7 Te' ,-bla.ck arid white. In oood condition. 'Tel. ' Closed Saturdays ttie-' facilities of the .l 452-5065. . ¦ ¦<' ' ¦ receipts Thursday, 177| year ego 189; or. party, rent' tine . 1454-3868 after . 6. - ,. ' . - ' Drive-Tel " '452-4716,, Cochrane, Wis. 54622 , .:• 1252 Trempealeau . 45W08T.;;; . Spring wheat cash trading basis un- Wlnona.Elks- .U-odgo. Tel. changed , to down i cehtsj prices up 2 Painting, Decorating 7 20 TORO GARDEN tillers frt ifock tor Irnme- ¦ • • PRICES. PAID , . but nest eggs . ' HIGHEST to 4 cents.-. EASTER EGGS ore fine, ¦ ' ' dlate delivery, timlfed.7quantities, re- for scrap- Iron, metals, , rags, hides, • .. are more.durable . . . and when even ' -:.' ' No. 1. dark , northern 11-17 protein 4.3?- " 7- INTERICR PAINTIN& . . . serve yourj now. WINONA- FIRE S. ¦raw ', fur and wool,. . ¦ ¦ ¦ tha old nest egg -Is scrambled take Smooth or textured walls, - ' . 4.58. ' . . " . . . POWER . COMPANY, 54 E; 2nd. Tel. your money problems to MERCHANTS . large or small lobs. GATTLE IS QUR^ Test weight, premiums: ona .cenr each : HILP WANTED 452-5065. . "The Business That Service Sqrri Weismah .&>Sohs-- . NATIONAL BANK Installment Loan " Experienced. 7 - pound $8 to '61' ibs; one cent dlsdbunt Bullh" , . . '. INCORPORATED V Dept. They will lend you - money , for - Tel .-45>i4459 or 452-7355. ;; ¦ ' ' ; each Vi lb under .58. lbs. ¦ ¦ ' ySPEGIALTY -; . - 7*50 ;W. 3rd . . . . . Tel «2 J84T . .. ' ' any worthwhile- endeavor .at a .moder- JOB OPPORTUNITY for young woman USED - Protein prices: U per cent 4.39; 12, ¦ YOUNG MAN—Interested in cabinet mak- . . REFRiGERATORS, electric ate - cost, . It's *asy, 7 confidential,, con- Interested. In exciting Important posi- • Ing. . work, ' - must - ranges 4.39; 13, 4.42; 14, 4.47; 15, 4.52; lis,' 4.56; ' P/umbing, Roofing 21 . . .have knowledge . of , dryers, black and whHe TV's, WOOD SWAP ER and drill presi' or welifcr . - yventent. Have a: Happy .. Day! Beef or Dairy tion with International '.;B ' 17; - 4.58.7.7 . - flair. Must have. workshop; machines. Send resume to: y-'B & ELECTRIC, ,155 E, 3re|. . " wanled. Tel. . X54-3230. . • ¦ : . prior : experience In ' bookkeeping, be Meisch Cabinets, Box 444, Minnesota No. 1 hard Montana winter 4.43-4.M. CARRIAGE HOUSE Cleaners for altera- ROSSITE—lust; a- little bit betterl Solves ¦ ' Tel. . Collect 467-2192. 7 able to type: and deal with customers. ' Clly/ Minn. . ;. ' BULK , ECONOMY dry cleaning, 8 lbs. TREADLE SEWING raachlnes, $M1S de- . Mlnn. -S.O. No.- 1 hard winter 4.43-4.53. tions, repairs, sewing, pocket rippers, sink drainage problems, quickly, easily, 7 , Excellent salary opportunity arid bene- : J2.50, also , try -bur, - new ' pchds on ;styi e and condition. Tel. 408- No. 1 hard amber durum, : 6.0O-7.50; lining, general sewing. Gilmore Ave. - .neatly!. Never turns to ¦ "cement'.' In perma-press . , 7 fits. Can- start immediately, inquire at WELDERS NEEDED-^-young men needed . washers Norge Village,' Tues. throughi discounts, amber 20 to 80 cents; .' at- ' Miracle' Mall- entrance. ¦your pipes..' . , 601 HUff.- . <8S-4929i 4 p.m.-?. p>m.,. ¦ durum Vila St., Lariesbarp Marangonl USA, 4640 Service Drive, .Wl- . for |obs In the mechanical field. No 1 70 to 1.50. • Sales Frl.,. Apr. 9-12 or write. Box »1, Alma, : ¦ ;nona. 'Tel. 454-3400. - '' ¦" : experience needed. Wl II train (with WATER SOFTENERS' ' - ' ¦ : Corn No. 1 ' '. ' ' Frank O'Laughlin . oh saie at .Sears, 1 .',: - 'V ¦ yellow 3.47W-!.S0Vi. . . ¦ ; pay), furnish room and board, provide . .free water analysis. $50 '• V ** . - ' . ¦ ' . (First; Pub. Friday, April- 12,. . W4» ' . PLUMBING & HEATIMG Gomrnissioji; Jhc. off 60E regular . Oats No. 2. extra heavy white- .1.20. . : NURSES. WANTED - RN's and LPN' free medical, and dental care price. Tel. 454-4370 today, '¦ 761 E.. :6th: •. ." ' • " . Tet 452-6340 ' s- , 30 days .ask for ; Ken. Barley, cars 108, year ago 82; Lorker State of Minnesota ) . - .' .:- . y . . . Auction Every Pxi. 12 Noon for progressive' 101 bed skilled care . paid vacation' per year. Good advance. Rooms Without Meals 86 y ' . ' . 1.74-3.00; . Blue . Malting 1.74-2.90; Dickson County of Winona ) ss. . - , . nursing home. Fringe benefit program, rnent opportunities.. Tel.- collect 507-452- WANTED—steel pc,.( ¦ • GET YOUR- free estimate on those leak- ¦ ;¦ ¦ ¦ bends. Tel. 452. 1.74-2.95; Feed 1 .60-1.73., • •' IN COUNTY COURT ' continuing education and stimulating 7952. ¦;• ' :• 7 ' - ' .• - 2697. CENTRALLY LOCATED sleeping room . ing roofs now 1 Tel 452.14T4, . Jerry's - r>r Contact: ...... ¦ . Rye No. 1 arid 2 2.0S-2.I5. . . . " ' PROBATE-DIVISION Working conditions. Salary competitive - for gentleman,, separate entrance close . '• " ¦ ' Rofolng and.Roof Repair, Jerry Thatch- V ¦ , . Flax No. 1 9.75.7 ' . ' . . File " No! 17,930 ¦ ;¦: ¦ Paul E\erisbn — 467-2190 with .area. 45 rhl nutes from La Crosse, OUTDOOR TYPE, person to work a to S/ilSC. Tel. ' ¦ er.: 7 , *52-W7?. '. 'Soybeans No. 1 yellow 3.22. "- .- In Re Estate of Eau Claire/ Wlho'na and Black River twelve . county area selling member- Vern Papenlust •;•Walter Ode, --467-3759 VV Verhon Pipenfuis . «ka Falls. , '- .Contact Grand View ' Home, ships for a regional tourism brganlza- FURNISHED SLEEPIWO room, . J15. E. . Decedent 7 ' ' IT'S NEW! Virgil.Bothuh 467-3407 ¦: : Blair, -Wis, ' .Tel.7989-2081v .. ,. . lion. ' Must, own- car' 'and be willing to ' fo downtown. Hearing on Electric Roto Rooter . — . . . 3rd, . close . Order lor .7 ' ¦ ' ¦ . travel/ Base bf J6O0 plus ' commlsslno; Petition fer.:Administration,. , For clogged sewers and . drains • -¦ ' ITS y ¦ Winona markets . Luther Olson — 467-2295 BEAUTiCIAN " .Opportunity ..for;.' the right person to DIRFERErsjtl for young-linan. . -' ¦ Limiting Time to File Clairris WANTED — full :.or pafl- ; CLEAN, SHARED room ¦ . time, J-.& .R Beauty Shop, 20| N. Elm, learn - public r relations. Send - resume . Cooking' area' end TV available; Tel. . Bay -State Milling Co. • end for Hearing Thereon. ' B ro wns Roto Roots r Freddie Frlckson-X- 643-6143 . ¦ ' ¦ ¦ or : La Crescent, to. Box HL, '212 First Avenue S. ir THE SALVATION -452-7700. .v . , - ¦ ' • :. ' -.;' No. 'l -N.;Spring Wheat ..,,..' .. 4.20 Helen C. Papenfuss havlna filed herein • . Tel. . 452^509 452-4315, 1 year . . Minn. W ARJilY . . .;: .. . ,2' ¦ ¦ . Rochester, Winn. ' ¦ No. ,N. Spring Wheat- ...... ^.18 a - petition for. general . administration : guarantee against root stoppage only. . ;: FAMILY STORE , No.- . 3 N. Spring Wheat ..,;..;. 4.14 staling that salei decedent died Intestate HOUSEWIVES—riapplness . Is high earn- No. 4 N. Spring Wheat '.;,..,.. .4. 10 Nogosek be Poultry, Eggs, Supplies 44 ings, free WANTED , EXPERIENCED stain glass Apartments, Flat* 7 ; 90 V and praying tlwt Charles. WE HAVE formica'kitchen and vanity wardrobe, no Investments, , no ¦: Come in and browse around. No. 1 Hard Winter- Wheat ...... 4.22 .administrator; 'tops In-stock;, collections ' craftsman, full-tlme,7 *or- Twin City appointed bathroorn , rnedl- , Tel. 454-208O today. : v V v No. :2 Hard Winter Wheat- ,..;.. -.4,20 IT IS .'ORDERED, . That the hearlns ¦ cine cabinets; plumbing, fixtures and HATCH DATES on Babcocks, XU-9. 3CL-10 Studio. Write E-95.Daily- News. : •: il2VV? iJrd . ".;:- AVAILABLE IMAAEDIATELY for family,. No. 3 Hard Vi/inter . Wheat...... 4.16 the reof be had on.May 4, 1974 , at 10:00 water heaters; pipe and fittings. : . meat-type cf-iicks: April.12, 16; 19, 23, 26 ¦ '¦ ' -W. location. 5 rooms, bathroom, fire- . , No." ' in the ¦ . 6-week.old WANTED person, for part-time work frorri WANTED—farm; couple to wgrk full-time .-. Vdothing, Dlshes Books . : 4 Hard. VVinter Wheat ..... 4.12 o'clock A.M.i. betor e . this . Court, ' • .' PLUMBING BARN " &' 30. capbnlzed . birds, duck- . . . plac*;-Partially remodeled. Utilities (ur- ¦ No. .1 Rye.;...... 7,'.' .:...... 1.95 county court ' room In the court, house In . lings, goslings available .now. Watch the. home, earn from $100 to 51,000. - end , live: on separate farm. .Richard -Garage .with- electric . garage '• ¦ . 154 High Forest . Tel. 454-4244 ' V: 1(M:30 Mon. thru Sat. ".' ;: nlshed. ¦ No. 2 Rye v.,...... I..:....;. 1.93 Wlhoria, ' Minnesota ; that the tlhne within our TV; commercials ofl Channel 8, Apr. Send name, address end: phone number. Criapel,. Houston, .Minn. Tel. 507-856-3704. ¦ 'ren and pets welcomed. Tel. - ¦ ' door. Chi Id . which creditors of .said..decedent .m«V 2? at .9 p.m., April 11 at 6:30 pm. See . .Write . E-93 Dally News. - - . -. 45444111'. '' . V . . .(First Pub; Friday, April 12, . 1974) ' tile their . claims:be limited, to sixty (601 Situations Wanted—Fehi. 29 us for Dutchman cases or automatic WANTED—Full-time . salesman,, tales ex- ' and that the ' : days from the date hereof, ch Icken or hog feeding equipment. Bob's WAITRESS for II a.m. to 5 p.rh. shift. ; perienee helpful, we.wll ltraln, work. In- Guns, Sporting Goods State of Minnesota V claJms so filed be heard .on - June- 17, ¦ manager: 66 SPACIOUS v WILL. DO babysitting In my ttonrie; ' Chick Sales, Alice Goede, A/lgK, 150 W. Apply In person, Garden Gate Restau- to position, . liberal -benefits,. Cognry.of¦ ¦ Winona ) :ss. .7- W4, - at 10:00 o'clock .'A.M., before, this . , Noi ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦ IN COUNTY.COURT T-Mille Lacs, Lake Village Trailer 2nd, - Winona,. .Minn. Te). 507-454-1092, . rant. No phone calls,. above average commission rate.. Apply 7APARTMENTS Court. Iri the. county, cpurt room In the ¦ ¦ - . SAVE J20 . on etaridard bunk bed wllh' 7V 7 .7 . 7. PROBATE DIVISION. . - horn* 454-37.55.' ¦At In person at Goodview Mobile. .Home . court house , In Winona, Minnesota , and Court. .Tel. 454-5268 after ,6. ' ' : ladder and foam mattresses. Only SU9, ' ; File No. 17,928 • ¦' • ¦ ; . . Sales, Hwy. 61- and 4^th Ave.,, Qood- • 2 Bedrooms • 1 Bedrcwm hereof be given, by publica- COMBINATION BARTENDER and wait- .. ' BURKE'S FURNITURE MART, 3rd & • ' 'IN" that notice . ' BABY CHIC*><> be taken against you for the rc lloi* Exlcnsion 212 *. A,>,i A A +¦ - *¦' -*- -^^, A «>V, ^.A ntfc- A ' A .A ¦ admlnl- Tel. 784-6633 * . A-^, decedent has been proved nor . demanded In Iho complaint. SMALL TERRI-POO PROMPT SERVICE on all maker. ' ormitod, In this , While, 10 monlhs •t rallcn' of his cslslo This acllcn Involves, altecls, or brings old. Tol, 453-5841. oi bulk 1nr,ks. State, and praylnn that Iho Inst , will ol In question real property situated In Ed's Rofrloornllon & Dnlry Supplies SINGLE MAN to work on modern dairy SCHNEIDER said decedent presented and filed wllh tho County of Winona, State of Minne- "»1?7 and TEN RABBITS, 2 enges with stands , «0 Mnnkalo Tel, 452-5532 farm, automatic leedlno end milking laid petition be admitted to probate sota, described as follows , to-wll: lor all, Tel. ' -454-5813, USED TRACTORS , property be de- parlor, only 1 man hired. Leroy Tlbe- TRANSPORT that the descant ot said That part of the Northeast nunrlor DISC SHAR PENING by rolling. Diamond termined and asslaned to Iho persons en- sar, Mlnnelska, Minn. Tel, 609-2545, of the Southeast quarte r (NE'/i ot AKC BLACK Lnb pups. C, Wilbur, Nelson, K Enlorprlscs, on-Iho farm sorvice any. Allis Chalmers 180 diesel wide front titled thereto i SEW) of Section Thirty (30), Town- "An Equal Opportunity petition Wis. Tel. 685-4990. whoro, Tel, St. Charles 932-3033. DRIVER for sprlno work, ,...... $7250 IT IS ORDERED, Thnt said ship Ono Hundred Seven (107) North, TRACTOR ' "' three point . be hoard on May 13, 1974, nl 9:45 o'clock Range Seven (7), Wost ol Ihe Fltth older man preferred . Curtis .Porsoni, Employer 4 of JAWESWAY* silo unloader, . 24', In good A.M., before this Courl, In the County Principal Meridian, Winonn Counly, SI, Chnrlcs, Minn, Tol. 932-4378, condlllon, Norbcrl diesel wide Courl Room, In tlio Court House, In Minnesota, doscribed as follows: Elllnnhuysen, Tol, mm ; International Harvester 1206 Lewlslon 5602. miaammmmmmmmmmimammammBm » '*—~^~'mm lm~'^~~m Winona, Mlnnesola , and that ob|ecllon» Cornmenclno at the Norlhcasl corner ~ '^^^~ front three point new rubber 9950 to Ihe allowonco ol said will, If any, bo of tho NEW of the SEV* ot said filed before said lime ot liear|no, and Section 30; thonce south along Ihe LINDSAY lovor drag, 5-4' sccilons, rigid publica- LIVE or riexlblo, wllh slcel evoner, Jnmos 4950 that notice hereof be-. olvon by east line of said Section 30, a dis- 1 Allis Chalmers 170 gas row crop tion of this order In the Winona Dally tance of 281.80 feet/ thenco at a Flt'oorald, Wabash a, Minn, Tel, 565- Nows and by mailed notice as provided deflection angle , to the right ol 31* 4303. i John Deere 402O Diesel wide front ». by law. : 54' a dlstanco oj 447.84 fee) to a point Dated April 10, 1974. on tha center of County , Stale Aid WANTED, I953-I954 Ford traclor, Ger- ' " three point 7950 , (County courl Seal) Hlohway No, 21; which Is Iho point EASTER ald Scmllnn, Fouratnln City, (Marsh- <@> S.' A, SAWYER . of beginning o| the land to bo. des- Innd), Tel. 607.3854. Association ' ¦• Judge Of Count/ Court cribed; thence al a deflection angle Minnesota Slate Automobile John Deere 402O gas row crop three HAROLD J. LII1ERA to Ihe right of 71* 02' and - Westerly FITZGERALD SURGE Allornoy for Pollllcner a distance of 410,60 foet; thenco nt Sales t\ Service 7 Membership Enrollment Representative " point cab 6250 - a dollecllon anolo to the loll of 70* BUNNIES Tol, Lewiston «20t or SI. Charles 932-3733 , ' (Isl Pub, Dale Friday, March 29, 1V74) 37' 0 dlstanco of 179,35 fool; 'thence Duo to our rapid growth and expansion , wo need nclcli- Allis Chalmers D 17 wide front . 2350 ' af a deflection anole lo Iho left of ROCHESTER SILOS— feed-easy depend- •¦ tho ¦ Stato of Minnesota ) 91* 21' n dlstanco of 386,97 loot to able Icedlng systems Evorcll tional Membership Enrollment representatives in County ot Winonn I sr,. . Rup- tho conler ot County Stato Aid Hloh- proclil, Lewiston, Minn, Tel. 2720. Southeastern Minnesota area. < International Harvester 460 gas row crop IN COUNTY COURT way No, 21) thonce al 0 deflection > DIVISION IN PROBATE STOCK anule to the loll ot 87" 12' nnd north- Tills is an excellent opportunity to jo in a world-wide fast hitch ;...... 2550 No. 17,919 easterly along tho conler ol County ^ in Ro Eslale Ol Stale AW Hlohway No, 21 a dis- organization that offers a career position. AAA has excel* Dennis, Decedent Custom Plowing front 1050 ? Ellsworiri M. tance ol 309 foet lo Ihe point of be- lent prestige and is one of the largest and fastest growing V Allis Chalmers WD 45 wide Order lor Hen ring on Petition lor ginning; subject to the right-of-way Llmllfn» Tlmo lo Flli Administration, of said Counly State Aid Highway . «iNOW ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦¦¦ 1 1 1 ¦> organizations of its kind in the world. Claims and lor Hearing Thareon No, 21, Duane Wilson Charles D. Dennis having filed n pe- of this ncllon Wo offer above-average earnings , a good chance for slating The ob|ect Is to ex- tition for oenerai administration clude tho delendanls from nny Inter- • end advancement, a liberal frlnflo benefit program , including : USED EQUIPMENT that said dtcodcnl died tnleststa est or lien claimed by thorn, or nny praying lhat chnrlos D, Donnla bo »p- Houston, Minn. life insurance, health insurance, paid vacations, sick pay, ol Ihom, In Iho abovo doscrlbod roal • Also Rabbit Pellels • spring trip ....$1150 ,. tiolnted odmlnlslnilor' . , properly. retirement, * Massoy 4-10 stoerable plow , IT IS OR0EREP, Ttiftt Ihe hearing Tel, (if*G-235l. . disability income protection and at No perionnl claim Is made against thereof ha had on April n 1974, any ol tho defendants herein. in-offico training IB provided in our Burnsville headquar- Oliver 4-16 steerable plow spring trip .... 1275 > 10:00 o'clock A.M., before this Court In WILLIAM A. LINDQUIST FOR SALE—Arlswny orlndor-ml xer wllh Regional Managers. the probate court room In Ihn temporary Attorney lor Plaintiffs shellor, Tol. 452-5232, 0-5. ters and field trninljig by our court house In Urn Clly ol Winona, Min- i!3'/i West Fourth Stroet 4 John Doere 13' tandem disc . ; U50 nesota/ thnt lite llmo within which , Winonn, Minnesota 55907 WHEEL PlSCS-John peere I1W IJ', Oli- dncndonl may Hie TO ARRANGE FOR AN INTERVIEW , CALL THE ^ creditors ot sold Tulophono; (507) 452-4M4 ver I0' < snnled hearings; Kowoneo 14" , 4 lirilr cltilms DO limited In 60 dnys from \ Good Cloan Used Tractors & Equi pment ? icoled'b«arlnor)' tCowaunoo 0', IIIC No. SEN D tho dale lie-mol, nnd that Iho dnlm*; " WJNONA AAA OFFICE , 507-454-5933 OR (First Pub. Thursday, April 1171974) a^^,™]N 37 10', r»lnnfors, John Deere 494 A nnd on May 30, 1974, at SJ IIled be hoard "" OP WWONA 495, 2-4 90'a ' tioloro thlt Courl , 3'P0lnl 2-row John Denro , TO: 10:110 o'clock A.M,, NOTI CE: 2-row IHC nil RESUME room the lent- Icr llll/or, somo Insecli- In Iho probata court In cldo and horblcldo. John pr-rnry court house In the Clly ot Wi- I will not be responsible for any dobti Pot & Hobby Center Doom 60 Irnc contracted tor, power steering PTO, A-l ; RUSHFORD IMPLEMENT nona , iVI'inasfa, and Ihnl nollca Iwreof except llioso by myself, nnd I. Mr. S. J. Hiltncr be nlven by publication ol llils order Lawrence A, Flerke 159 E, 3rd — Downtown condlllon, 31 D John Deoro , Plows , Rushford , Minn. by Joh n Deere and Oliver 3-14 and 3-14 va. Asst. to the Director of Field Operations In Iho wi'ionn Dally Niswa nnd 1 mailed notice at provided by l«w. Lawrence A, Florke rloty of drags, 0 «ind 10' - • . loom, with .raised , hearth fireplace is adjacent to appli- ed. - Come '.see them, 10% down. Financ- THREE BEDROOM house located at 121' . legal. Bruta Cycle Sales, 510 ; Minne- ' dan; Maroon - . with a black . Interior, :ahced kitchen; central air. On a view lot in choice resi- ing available. Tel. .454- 1.059. Winona St .. $7500 cash.7 TeV . 452-2214. sota St. Tel, 452-2266.; V-8, automatic, powei". steering, radio. Priced to jell. J400. Wall. BulcR-Oldi. : ...Jentia^sectioni7 -V . " ¦ " ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ^ CYCLE INSURANCE-Complela ceveraga . ;,OMC-Ope|: : v ; '7 . ' • '; . ; - 7 ., . - BUY IT you way; But see this 2-3 be* . v TRI-STATE . : for all makes and models. Low rates. ¦ ' : roofp - home, .Eait'location, Irnmedlate .Winona . Agency, Tel. 452-33&S, FORD—1966 4^door, 6-cyllnder, staodarol. r :::>y possession, newly , redone, stove• and X MODULAR HOMES transmission. Good condition. Like new ^ refrigerator Included. $13,000. Riverside . ' . - . Hwy. 61 S; Breezy Acres tires. Reasonable. 368 Liberty St. • ¦ ' :. IN this brand new three bedroom home in Sunset. Three . V Realtors. Tel. 452-4934. ' -. Tel, 452-4276 or 454-3741. BR l DGESTONE, 175CC, 3,00b miles. Runs - ; , Your area Holly and Galaxie Moldu- good, best offer. 41» Harriet, between - VOLKSWAGEN—l f647Btg, 375. 32« Chat* . ¦ bedrooms large:dining area with sliding glass doors to- ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ . 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. , ¦¦ ¦ • - ' ' • ¦ -patio, bath with tub and shower, appliancerj kitchen. Beau- , lar Home Dealer. Check with Roger • field. - " -. ,. 7.v . - - . . . . - ; ' ¦ ' . or Mark. Many plans to choose from, ; 'tiftdly carpetied. -. . . ranch or split foyer, • . ' . . VOLKSWAGEN—1966 Karmann Gliia/ In perlect mechanical condition, 4 new ' ' ¦ N-EW HOMES ready lor occupancy, 2-5 '74 KAWASAKIS; tires. . $500. ;3550 Service .Drive. . ' . - . . : bedrooms. Financing available. V/llmer >IA^ ¦x- y - - LBrson Construction. Tel. 452-6533 or COUGAR—1970 XR7. regular gas V-8, aur - \Xi$to&' mmXy :-;. ' TO see this four bedro-om two bath ' charnier . in conven- . 452-3801. tomatic, power, .steering,- factory ; air, ., ient west location ; Family room, with fireplace, plus bil- BOB'S MARINE' sharp inside and out, excellent condl- . CUSTOM HOMES for sale In Meadow •¦ lion, $1,895. See at 767!* W. .:5th. Tel. liard room and billiard table; two car garage with auto- .- - "Ft or Laird ". - ¦ M^ Acres. Distinctive designs, still flnie to ", 452-8573.. - .. . ' niatic door. do your own decorating In some. Tel. ; i^lS : V Tel. V452-2697.: 7 REAITOR i 454-1723 or 454-1832. RAMBLER-^1969 American, i-owner, eco- ¦¦ nomical, standard 6-cylinder straight- ¦ " ' ¦ : : BEAUTIFUL VIEW, private location, on transmission. Tel. Fountain City 687- ¦ ¦^"¦ : r ¦? ' - , : ¦ "^' -: : - ^v .N¦E1|^;i:li Ti - ;;/ . v; :;^ ;> blacktop road, split level/ 2 targe bed- 6404. ' FOtJR;^ bedroom, two ceramic bath home in choice area 'Mm MMmWW 'ftlRTY GOOD, HOH?WS- .. rooms, big living, room, dining' area, ¦ ¦ .' } kitchen witfn. appliances, ,1% bath, : i-car SUPER FORD—1973 LTD . 2-do6r hardtop; . air, . has formal dining room, kitchen with appliances' and ^1972 LTD, , air'Condltlonlng,-povyer. ORGANIC GARDEN plots.tor 1974. Or- ; ;Its FiRST ^FIDELITY-. SAVINGS V&V LOAN ' ¦ steering/ power brakes, 4-door . hardtop, . ' -ily . of TODAY. . creative ;• '. .. ' . MX 175 ' ' '; ^sy : ganically :fertilized and tilled. .12 '. rrilles. 1 is emphasized by not only gives you a penny for your Tel. 452-1310 alter, 6.. ; .. y7. . ;: '¦' from Winona. Please reserve a plot design thoughts but. dollars for your dreams. 120y Center St. - .77. Tel. 452-5351 ; List:V$lv129 y : Tel. 534 3795. . the surroundings. 3 patio VEGA GT—1972, ^speed, AM-FW radio; Apartments, Fiirhished 91 early, : ' ' " ¦ areas,vstream bordering the FOUR-BEDROOM. lVi-StOry. wtih closets y ¦ Tel. ' 715-538-4955. - ; . ;. galore, lovely kitchen with many extras. ; SAL.E PRICE : TWO-BEDROOM apartment, prefer .mar- Houses for Rent V 95 , wildlife : all 1974, green, a ulomatlc back yard .2 baths, formal dining room, double-gar ¦ ¦' ¦ GREMLIN X, : ried couple, or 2 working boys, abso-. ¦ around ! ;MLS 1058.7 rage, larg« lot. Close to schools. 1016 : ' transmission, power steering, 7,500- ec- ' Mel/ iio dpgs. 'Tel. 454-2S7*; FIVE-ROOM house, 'stove and refrigera- Cedar Drive, La Craescent, Tel .:, .:$895 . . . ;v : tual miles, good mileage. Tel. 687-8259. , 895- ^. .; ¦ tor, married couple, no dogs. Tel. 454- ' .brand new 2116. after ,5;>" ONE. . BEDROOM—all utilities turnished, - . 2574. ... MOM! Need a . ' close to WSC and business district. 26i - ¦' , ¦ . home with a big kitchen, 3 MUSTANG^-1969, 302,7 Fasfback, FW-AM W. 4th. Fpr appointment Tel. 454-5023.. ONE-BEDROOM home overlook! rig Missis- bedrooms', 2 baths air .con- Lots for Sale v; y toti QUALITY SPORT stereo. Tel. 454-4174. • sippi, 10 miles S. on Hwy. 61. No dons: * ; " GENTLEMAN tn share - furnished apart- Tel. ' 452-7612. ditioning and oak interior? - .1966 .Excellent condition, ' Mags. ' ' COUNTRY . LIVING lust 7 miles from C GTO — merit . with pilot, all utilities paid,', sep- FULLY-' carpeted too. RE- X'Xx ENTER:' XX ": . Tel. 452-5868 after 5:307 -. '¦ ' very, Wlhoha. 5-acre -wooded hillside lots. Un. ¦ 7 arate kitchen, reasonable, W; loca- FIRST . FLOOR, duplex,. 2 , . bedrooms, ' ¦ '¦ ¦ ';¦ VVLAX! It's • ". waiting: for der $5,000. Tel. - 454-1723 or 454-1832. . 3rd & Harriet' Tel. 452-2399y. -tion, ,Te(. ..452-70M, porch, garage. .'Available May 1st. No P.INT0^1973, 6,000. miles, excellent cdridl- . ' '452-2288,. family. MLS 1 • ' , single " students or. pets.-Tel. YOUR . .123. - . LOT FOR:SALE—130' .frontage, ' plenty ot : Mon: Easy on gas,7 sun . rooi* arid many TWO-BEDROOM first: floor , apartment, ' ' . , ' . 11-6 :fqr appointment,- . room for your house, garage and a more options Tel. . 452-6804 after' 5. . 7 hear- lake, nice -yard, couple only,.452. DO - IT - . YOURSELTERS! large garden, Lovely view ot Minn, and Trucks, Tract's, Trailers Main, Tel. 452-4036; ' ' pine-panelled 108 ' auto- y VERY' SPECIAL 2-bedrobm Wis; bluffs. Country living with city ad- MONTE CARLO—1973; : small V-8, ¦ Duplex for under 20! A good ., bungalow overlooking Mississippi, Heal- vantages; Fire protection,; police pro- matic,, air, less than. 10,000 mli .s. Tel., PANELLED and carpeted bedroom,'.- .Ilv- .' - , -beautiful FORD—1970 Ranger, .Vjrton, - 360,' V,8, ' auv ' ' '¦¦ ed garage, pool- privileges, . investment for the slirewd 454- : 454-3036, • 7y " . . ' ; ins ' " room,' kitchen, porch arid garage. ' ' : feet Ioni clly water and sewer,-TeL . 7 tdmatlc, radio, new tires, :only>$l,895; - grouhdsi' Available May 1st. No pets . or buyer. " " :- 7' Lots " of storage. AvailablB how. S125. This home has been 7 4738r: - 7 r-.y . . ' 1965 Chevrolet, '^-fon pickup, 263, V-8, children. References and:. lease, Tet. 452- : GREMLIN X-1973, excellent condition, ¦ ; Tei.. '.'452-3778 ;. partiially remodeled and isV 3-speed, radio, perfect enolne, 1st S500 : ¦ . 9035 until ;noon or after 6 p.m. GREAT LOCATION. " — frees already wlll take other car in trade. Tel. 454- in good shape! But—there's . sets 'it.. Fenske AOto Sales, 460.-E. 2nd.. ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ' planted, 148x183.;' Tel. .' 452-7965. ' .5893. . " ,;. y FURNISHED APARTMENT-3 rooms and AVAILABLE ' IMMEDIATELY , new 2- bath,' carpeted. ..Prefer married, couple; room for the- clever fix-it ' -' One Story Income Prpperty . bedrobm Townhouse, . carpeted, appli- LOTS In: convenient Meadow Acres, all CATERPILLAR D-6, -6-S dozer, Na 25 PLYWOUTH'7 - ' 1968 Sports-. Suburban; Rent. Includes heat and water. Immedi- ' ' ' . manl . MLS .1099 -' ,..; : ¦ ances.' garage .swimming pool,.- $250 . assessments paid. Starting at $3700. Tei; . power control; unit, 10-yd. scraper. Tel. Wagon; sharp » passenger. Very, good' , ranch, type. home.; Seelri^ . Three units with living ate occupancy.; TM. 452-MBA . monthly. Deposit lease, Tel. 454-1059. :. ¦ 5th. we ¦ : ¦" 454-1723 or 454-1832. . .408-617-7239; : '. , . ' condition. No rust. 1« . *£., . roora; . . ' : After Hotirs ;Cail: : '. • ' . . is - believing; V Here^ kitchen, bath and FURNISHED efficiency -room for tiian. BEAUTIFUL BUILDING site, . about 4 FOR 0^1968 Galaseie; 302, good condition. : ' Utilities paid. Tel. 452-3141. • Wanted to Rent V 96 F j^^ ^all Story barn. Good;6-room modern home. plus : HAVE TO BE. EXPENSIVE! extra set of . ' buildings; Barri cleaner, SEARS 14' ,. flat bottom boat, 54" wide, " home yours. It's cute; This ¦ . frame home. Start here lh Corns and: see .for yourself. You'll new Olson hay conveyor, distributer ori 18": sides, and 1,500-lb. trailer, asking 1970 : ' Chevrolet 1972 Ford home sits;on a largelot. LiV-7 this cute Wtle . home. Living find -bne^bedroom apartments with :sllo conveyor. -.- 239 acres,. ,with 90' to 95 S295. Tel. 454-4B42. • , . ' . ¦ ing tastefully coordinated furniture; shas . ' acres .-of cropland,,50:55 acres timber, ' _^oprn,. C | I bath and room, dining room, kitchen, . : .;. Impala Torino n r carpeting, and drapes; all electrical balance pasture. . In the Independence Bj Niy*| »\rn^T^nTi M "j IT*] I m.J i GLASTRON 18' runabout with T35 h.p. . TWO - B ^O"0 IS. The bath, , ' **M ' Tel. . and ONE BEDROOM^ . appliances Including, heat , and air area. $89,000. F-700. Hoeschler. Realty Mercury outboard. 454-485<. 2-door hardtop. Can't he told '4-dobr sedan. Small V-8 en- price? . Just right for what plus a utility rooni.- MLS- conditioning, private balcony and Farm and Land Dept., 224 No. 6th St., ¦ laundry. Tel. 454-4909. ': JOHNSON OUTBOARD — . 40 ti p;; ex- from hew . with its spotless" gine using regular gas, auto- Vyou get. W-7916 ...... 1086 . . . La Crosse; Wis. Tel. 784-5958. ' .1752 W. Broadway cellent condition.' Tel. . 452«7'8 after beautiful red exterior, its all made drive, power steering, PRIVATE PARTY has 4,070 acrej highly ¦ ; ' : ; . « p.m. 7 d KEV;AP>ARTM ENTSi productive beef ranch In Wjscoy Valley, ':tW;l N:b N;A '/v ; 1 13 Al iSchroeder.,...... 4&6022 Office Phone .. .77, 452-1344 . 12 miles S of Winona , with -7 ; , I ;y1 7 MERCURY—1970 motor, 35 h.p., manual yS5" • ¦ Mlnri./. . ¦¦ • S^SStSf - N PRICE NOW, ^ TIRED OF CHOOSING between exbrbl- sets' of newly, remodeled buildings and . shift, $275; 1972 Chrysler motor, 35 h.p., be proud to own this f* S^^ : ' little . HarbldVErath .. x...: 454-5646 y;Office Hours ..; 8:30 to; 5:00; - . iant rent , and pe'ople^.crowded . apart- - .complete ' cattle handling facilities. Will ¦¦ electric start, shift box ahd cables, not ¦;.,: ' ' ' .T S I I t '• ¦ cutie for : , . ". " , : " ments? 2 girls 7 needed, to share apart- sell all or -in parcels' as small as 3CO 3^^Uaf ' . Included,. $375, Tel. ,452-56» after 4. , $2395 " -- '' v . ' ments within a large apartment. Tel. - .' acres Abundant . springs, -creeks and ; - ' . 9 - ' : v- 4S2-2f5«. 7 . , 7 ;, " ponds. Excellent owner financing avall- '^^BE^aaaaaaawLaaaaaaaaaaaaa* BOAT INSURANCE-property and ilabll- .;v;v- : :$T795v ;;,:V:-;t: : ' able. tei. Houston.896-2308 or SP4-20J5. . |ty. coverage oh. all types of boats. Low X:' Business Places for Rent 92 . rates. Winona ' Agency, Tel;. 452-3366. . 1970 Pontiac IF YOU ARE Iri the- market for a farm rr^-i - Comet ' WANTED TO BUY — aluminum pontoon vl^3 OFFIC E VSPACE for rent or lease, .13,000 or home or are planning to sell real ¦; ; LIST EN TO THIS ' X- estate of any type contact NORTHERN . ' boat, good condition. Tel. 687-4949. . 7 ^ Catalina sq. ft. Prime E. location. Inquire. Mer- . ' ' chants Barik . Trust Department, Tel. .. I NVESTMENT COMPANY , Real Estate - TWO V STORY .;•: t Brokers, Independence, Wis., or Eldon ,. . RUNABOUT BOAT^14', windshield, built- - 4S4-S160. in 12-gal. gas tank. Like new 50. h.p. SS?iiTSSg&^ "^> W. Berg, Real Elate- Salesman, , First floor features living . omy car. Small V-8 engine, 11 u ,r Arcadia, Wis." Tel. 328-7350; Evlnrude 1972 motor. . All electric Less f' fJL ^extra nice4 , Farms, Land for Renl 93 room; dining room, family- than 25 hours running time. Lots of all new whitewall tires, Air £9^ ^low; A WISE INVESTMENT, 480-acre farm, sized kitchen, bath and bed- 7 extras.7 Delbert Mueller, Tel. Fountain conditioning, power steering, ""leage. j IXJZJAL1 I CORE 225 ACRES valley tillable land, located set up for. Grade A: dairy. Would also City 687-4890 after 4. (Indian Creek)/ power brakes, 21, SUPER SALE PRICE I In. ' Wlscoy • ¦yalie' y." 2(l07 lbs.- - per acre, make Ideal farm for beef operation; Pb- room..V: Second floor has 495 miles; LONE STAR—14' aluminum runabout. Tel. anhydrous knifed In last fall. 550 per tenllal Is endless. 80'x36', 44-48 stan- two bedrooms; plus % bath. , ' acre cash rent. Tel Houston 896-2308 or chion barn with cleaner, machine shed; 452-9079. . . .-: . Now $2995 ' ' East location. $1995 Serving Mi nnesota & V/isconsin 7 B-96-2095; . - ." . ' . . . . ' corn crib and silo plus unloader. Large 4-bedroom house. MLS 1083. Rlchter RIVER QUEEN Houseboat; 36', twin 160 , ; ,;, h.p. Ford I/O, sleeps. 6, full galley, y 75 ACRES ol good cropland. Located 5 Really,-Tel, 452-1550. All for $25 000 . . , ' OFFICES .IN: . rnlles S.W. of Lamoille on Homer Towh- mohomatlc head, CB '/• FM radio tele- Eau •' phone, 1.5 KW generator, deplt) finder. For A New Car or A Used Car v La -ft '. ship Road No. 7. Tel. 454-2813. LAND LISTING & SELLING - Farms, ;-& Winona '^ Crosse Onalaska Glaire Hobby Farms, Small Acreage Our Owners moving, must sell; Tel. 715- -^ ;. mx&ms. v - ' APPROXIMATEi-Y 600 acres top quality SSpectalty. Free. Appraisals. SUGAR 284-4810. Call "Bud" Nystrom or ''Pete'' Wolfe I I alfalfa hay lar»d located In Wlscoy Val- : LOAF., Tel. 454-2367 or 454-33fS8 EASTER BUNNY ley Some has been fertilized. 135 per evenings. ' USED BOATS, boat trailers arvd motors ywwvwwvwwwiwwa vvw . acre cash rent. Tel. Houston 896-2308 or Get those Easter Eggs in . of all sIzes. 'Tel. 452-1366 , .anytlme.'. ,' 896-2095. FARMS—bee , dairy, hobby and acreage your baskets and hop but to without buildings, . Twallen Really, Hous- Motorcycles, Bicycles 107 PASTURE FOR rent, rural route 3, -Wi- ton, Minn. Tel. -896-3500. see this 2 bedroom home. nona. Tel. 452-6.100. , Central location, , natural Nystrom ^ 240-ACRE crop farm, buildings-are good. brick fireplace in V living 2nd & Washington^^ M^^ .. '. Tel. 452-4080 ' I ¦ APPROXIMATE LY 1500 acres valley pas- Modern 4-bedroom house wi|h full base- ^ 'TdW^< 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. I ture land with abundant running water. ment and big kitchen. Barn Includes 2 room, front & rear porch- HONDA 1 \K^mlimSmr- grazing, Open Fri. Evenings and Any Evening by ': ' ' ! Top notch land: Available at silos and unloader. Set up for Grade B es, $20,000. , SALES & SERVICE Appointment ' ' ' ;' -'' '^WwV^P^FrQ- 435 per .unit for the season. Tel, Hous- dairy now. Option to buy machinery, PARTS * ton 896-2308 or 896-2095 MLS R Rlchter Realty, T-el. 452-1551. 1 .\ L_JB?^• ' . . * Jv5i? Monday-Saturday ] , Hurry Let our Factory Trained . Technicians Tune up your & by. Appointnie.ii t A SINCERE DEPENDABLE Honda now, I I i«3 w. Broads . COMPANY • ¦ | . From Mighty to Mini ,. •'¦: . I AFTER HOURS CALL: y . . j Office: 165 Walnut St; 454-4585 Honda has It all, . Pat Magin : 452-4934 I Judie Sobeck 454-1808 Miko Rivers ;,...... 454-4427 | ¦ GTC Motor Parts y^G^^ Rick Hill :. ... 454-1605 If^^^le^; . .' Rod Hansen : 454-4R12 , Elain e G...... 452-5798 ' ' " ' ' " ! | | j ' ¦ : ' ; ¦ ¦ ¦ i,a m ¦ Marc Sierri ...... -452-8435 John D. Davis ...... 452-7253 V . . . .:. . . ¦;. ' , " , . ; ¦ . . - . $ & Equipment I l*lft 5®'' - r " | | J ;' " , : ^ : 5 . Sally Hoeft —..... -152-5312 Ivan Siem 454-5786 I Whitehall Wis. \i# ' 7 the greatest How Green Was My Valley ... V Tel. 715-538-4309 '» £ John Holbrook ..... 452-9215 Mike Gilchrist ...... 452-4734 I | vm Sale w7 \ YOURS can be, too, with this multi-bed- | XW | | Marie Karasch 452-4932 Carol Dingfelder.... 689-2206 2 ^ >^ deals. Charles Kellslrom . 89C-3373 5 J roomed home on four and one-half acres y < y with baths, full basement, attached double *$> H y -r •i garage, patios, family room, closets every- s, . ffl i: where, kitchen with double-entry cupboards, a 72 Fury III 4-door *~ I I Pick a Site For Your New Home j ? wrought-iron fencing, much rnore! Few y / air 77: .7Z $1995 v> miles from Winona , LOW thirties : move & 6t^£/to#tisL ^c«Z6t^ & into MLS iOCO, and watch Spring saunter ,c '68 Galaxie 4-door ...... $ 795 • -f over the bluffs, Make MLS 10C mine O " "! ^ 70 Valiant 4-door, 6-cylinder .. ". $1495 The Sting .,, . . | 173 East 2nd Tel. 454-5141 I I OF can BEE I H 72 Dodge 1-ton Maxivan .... .T. $2695 renting troublesome. BUZZ ? R€ALTOn * 5^ over to this NEW LISTING and see three § , 71 Chrysler Newport 4-door . "/. § bedrooms V/. attached garage, kitchen §, BALL FOUR! $2195 § with bulit-lns, work area in 90% basement. ? paneled walls, closets, cupboards, and $ Walk thru this spneious split-foyer home. Upper level has 71 Jeep CJ5 with snowplow . .7. $3195 5^ storage everywhere, permanent siding. living and dining room , bath , 2 bedrooms, lower level has -^ , Also double garage. ¦S Two blocks from Madison School , mid- £. bath , one bedroom and family room ~ t teens, MLS 1136 is a hummer! j MLS# 1108 , 70 Oldsmobile Toronado . r.. $2095 ¦I of DON'T DREAM TOO LONG 73 Volkswagen Supe r Beatle ".T. $2795 A Touch Class ... -i This bit o( Paradise may not last long. New Rambler fea- turing living and dining room, l'A baths, 3 bedrooms and i^ . 3S this elegant homo in quiet neighborhood. $^ 71 Matador Station Wagon . .^ $1695 ? • Textured living room coiling, chandeliered garage. MLS # 1107 dining ^ area, modern kitchen with built-ins, ? The jewels aro on tho inside. Located double garage with door openers proximately one acre. Charming 4 bedroom homo with '66 Chevelle 4-door sedan 7. $ 695 ^ , terraced § dining room, family room 6 sardens. An award winning home—UNDER, & bath in upper level, living and ' & % batliJn lower level. MLS# 1109 ,? PORTYl MLS 1129. | 72 Coronet 4-door, facto ry air 7. $2295 DON'T STREAK BY. STOP! So Dear to And look at this 3 bedroom home in excellent condition. 71 Dodge D-100 Vi-ton pickup.. $2095 of My Heart ... | I I THIS lhmb home! Thrco Features living room , dining room, 2 bnths & garage. a hcdrooms, full | 977 '60 ^? basement, largo kitchen with pantry, car- V MLS# Jeep, meta l cab & plow .... . $1295 "$ peted living room , fenced back yard , now *§ YOURS FOR JHE ASKING & furnace with attached humidifier , new A 72 Impala 4-door hardtop . 7.T7. $2495 i centra air , And all wo aro asking Is for you to see this homo located l now roof on extra-long double 7 teens. Includes "j? parage, Few blocks from , Lincoln School , \ near the Lnko & priced in tlie mid •^ tinder twenty! "Wool" you como in today 4. screened porch, Jiving and dining room, 3 bedrooms and . ~"ewo" like MLS 1100! . . ? pjarngo . MLS# mi) I wl" > Call for the Details . . .Mention j | 4) Paul Beiiglson .... 462-1030 Ed Bolt 454-3507 IUI ,lUUUUUUUUUllllUUkA«J iUOi ._ ¦ . _ _¦ . . . .. __ . - .. /^** : . .MMKME ¦¦ ¦ ¦ W^ W T U /r^ w iw'^v^>«i i "*>VJy,L Used Car* 109 Used Cars 109 Used Car* 109 Mobile Ham«s, Trailers US ^ ^ ^ ^'^" ^ , ^^ ^^i^^^ / ' 'iimaBBt

FORD—1967 whits, 4 door, 240 cu. In, PONTIAC l»4*f, 2 door hardtop, pow«r hardtop, 6 cylinder, automatic, radio, COACHMEN TRAVEL TRAILERS & ¦:— 6 cylinder, 3 speed, very good gas brakes, power steering, black vinyl top new tires, gas saver, 45 OOO guaranteed PICKUP CAMPERS STARCRAFT mileage, miko offer. Tel. 443-6183. very good condlllon throughout. Tel miles, $895; 1969 Buick Skylark, 2-door CAMPERS. 454-2165, hardtop, 350, V 8, 2 barrel, automatic, SALES-SERVICE-RENTALS DICK'S SPORTING GOODS, Durand, Wis; GRAN . TORINO—1973 waaon, metallic power steering, factory air; -43,CM milos, ANOTHE THORP /AUCTION , Tol 715 472 8873 or 672 5199. R/ blue, 302, B cylinder, 7,000 miles, only (1,495, 1969 Ford station wagon | »3,200. Leaving country, rrtust sell. Tel, FORD 1967, 4-door, automatic transmls / door, 10 passenger, 302, V8, automa- AWARD—14x70, 3 bedroom luxury home 454 2176 sion, radio, good condition, $200. John tic, power steering, power brakes, Vinyl , ,—. , Arteisch, Altura, Minn. Tec 796-6519. Interior, new tires, gas saver, only 51,- Must see lo appreciate' Possibly take | i —^ over payments Tel -154 4138 ml 295, 1965 pontiac, Catalina, 4 door, V B, i^^ PI^^CO. ) automatic, power steering, power " ~ f^ORTHERN INVESTMENT ml , ' Saturday, April 20 brakes, radio, looks good, uses little oil, SPRING CLEARANCE SALE | Offering 1973 1 974 CHEVROLET J295 ; 1962 Pontiac, 4-door; V-8, . auto- Special Discount Prices on the Follow- malic, power steering, excellent runner, ing • Mobile Homes Now Through %ir Sales, il l Caprice Classic 1st S150 gets it. Fenske Auto Easter: A ^#^# I l i 1 460 E. 2nd. Reg. Sale Intermediates Price Price Located at Pine Creek, Wis. on County Trunk "G" 9=30 A. M. 197 bus, 7-passenger, - I Coupe VOLKSWAGEN — 1 1974 Tlten 14x70 SALE SITE Located % mile North of Houston, MN on \ deluxe belts, tinted glass, 8,000 miles on new engine. $2 595. Tel 3 bedroms *>8295 $7 995 : Counly Road 76, then Vi miles Northeast on Cty Rd. 9. 452 6763 • '1 1974 Titan 14x70 Wedxiesdayp A ril 17 Follow the Thoip auction ^ 1973 Buick power steering, 6 way pow-. front Kitchen ;.,.,.. $8,295 : $7,995 p arrows. Lunch on giounds. fe er seat, door edge guards, CHEVROLET-1973 Vega hatchback, 24 000 1974 Titan 14x70 Sale will start at 12 30 P M i **< miles, GT package custom Interior, 26- M. balhs 58 895 $3 695 REMARKS- Having sold the faim owner will dispose of , rear window defogger, air 1974 cost is »3,- Century 350 32 miles per gal New 974 Revero 14x70 j Lunch by Pme Creek Rosary Society > all peisonal property Cattle have all been Bangs tested . conditioning, remote mir- 210 Buy this one lor $2,700 Tel Lew separate dining area $9 295 $8,995 \ through Sun The Holstein dairy herd has < 4-door. Midnight Blue with roi , speed and ciuise con- Istort 3531 alter 6 Fri 1974 Roya l 14x70 - ^ 70 HEAD BEEF AND DAIRY CATTLE 70 - 13 Charolais been on Owner Sampler , blue vinyl top, "blue cloth trol, tilt wheel, radial tires ansle kitchen ...... $9,495 $8,9?5 heifers, 1 fresh with calf at side, remainder close spung- DHIA for several years, as of last lactahon average < <' 454 V-8, New Cart 1970 Homeric 12x50 ers, some may be fresh by sale date, % Angus heifers, pi oduction records were 15,281 lbs of milk , 3 9 BF , 592 / interior V-8 engine, auto- and suspension , front kitchen . $3,995 $3 795 lb vinyl roof cover, wire wheel 1971 Buddy .12x50 ' 6 Hereford cross heifers, close spungers; 2 Beef ci oss ' . herd average. Individual recoids Will be posted r matic transmission, power Repossession . . . .,...; ,. $4,595 $3,995 on sale date & covers, deluxe bumpers. r cows with 3 calves at side; 1 Holstein heifer , btod , l steering, power brakes, ra- Always a 30 o or Adore Discount At NEW PRICE $5918 75 SUGAR LOAF TOWN & Holstein-Angus heifer, bred , 18 Holstein heifers , (500 to dio and white sidewall tires, COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES 800 lbs , 20 Holstein steers, 60Q to 800 lbs ; l Guernsey HOLSTEIN DAIRY HERD SAVE % ON THIS DEMO Hwv 43 & old Homer Road heifer, 3 months old , 1 Charolais-Hereford bull , \ one owner automobile, pur- Winona, " Minn - . . Tel. 454-5287 2 vrs Cays In A chased originally at our NOW $4558 Open 7 Days a Week - old , 1 Holstein bull , 800 lbs. GOOD QUALITY CATl'LE Cow No. Hoist. Age # Milk Test Butlerfat Milk , ISs^lf "Number V Service " From 14 " 10 121, 070 3-8 458 200 dealership ONLY 8,S0O Number I Dealer" FEED—1200 bu. good ear com. * miles. IMMACULATE. SALE ^ 16 " 9 15,180 3 8 574 256 * LEWISTON ATLANTIC—1971 14x70, 3 bedrooms, Pi PAYLOADER—Massey Ferguson Model 1001 Payloadei ' 22 " 7 2S,1<)0 4 2 1182 488 ./ balh, fully carpeted except kitchen Will " with front wheel drive and 6' 4" bucket 2i "7 22, 150 3 7 812 343 $ $2995 This An sacrifice for balance of contract. Set up 20 " , AUTO CO. Make West End Trailer . Court. Inquire 770 Gil- SNOWMOBILE—197S Roll-o-fle-x 433 snowmobile. ( ' 7 24 360 4.0 969 389 ' • more or Tel. 452-9668. 11 " 6 20,350 3 7 718 418 .'» OLDSMOBILE - HOGS AND EQUIPMENT—2 bi ood sows, close; Fio-Mas- 10 " 7 5,0% 4 6 2 \">, 79 * 1973 Oldsmobile MOBILE HOME ' ter "12" hog feeder with cast bottom , steel hog troughs , 12 " 7 5,080 4 9 293 100 ,'< EASTER 2 farrowing crates. 25 , Lewiston, Minn. Tel 2511 TRANSPORTING '' 5 12 040 4 0 479 211 ' Cutlass Supreme Minn and Wis. ICC license. MACHINERY—Fordson Power Major diesel ti actor with 4 " 5 5 160 4 0 203 81 Colonaide hardtop coupe. 1974 Delta 88 DALE BTJBLITZ power steering, 3 pt.( wide front, 18 4-30 rubbei , live hyd 17 " 5 5,600 4 3 2") 79 30 " 5 2B 050 4 0 1035 389 A Chestnut with a white vuiyl 64 Lenox and PTO ; Faimall M tractor; Ferguson 3 pt diggei , * top, white vinyl interior, DAYLIGHT Town Sedan Winona , Minn. Faimland loader with dnt plate, fits "H" or M ' , trailer 33 " 5 6,050 S8 277 102 V-8 engine, automatic trans- 4-dooi Sage Green with a Tel 452-9418. type weed sprayer with 6 row boom , 210 gdl tank and 15 " 5 4,730 4 7 222 78 vinyl top green cloth boom control ; McD 45T baler ; McD No 14 ti a ctor rake , 26 " 5 2,760 3 6 93 53 , mission, power steering, green ,29 power brakes, AM-FM ra- DRIVING TIME! interior. Standard V-8 en- McD 3 bar rake, McD 33 hay cumper , Scliutz PTO . " 3 31,160 3 5 1096 683 , , automatic trasmission, spreader , Spreadmaster PTO spieader McD T field 32 " 3 5, 180 3 7 193 99 < dio, FACTORY AIR, sport 6 cylin- gine TRI-STATE wheels, sport mirrors, 1973 AMC Gremlin power steering, power digger, McD -8' double disc , puller for "H" or "M" , McD 7 " 15 5,050 4 2 214 98 ; der engine, automatic trans- picker 1 " 2 3,880 3 0 117 86 , dome reading lamp and biakes, radio, FACTORY MOBILE/MODULAR mounted with grease banks , for parts, green feed •" sport steering wheel, local mission, power steering ra- AIR, clock, tilt steering rack 2 1 3,570 41 146 84 < dio. Factory Air. f Yellow). , HOMES 18 " 2 4,170 4 0 165 86 °°, one owner car. LIKE NEW, wheel and whitewall tires , MISC. EQUIPMENT—10T floor model lack, good pies- 1973 AMC Gremlin 6 cylin- only 5,900 miles. Hwy 61 S Breezy Acies 5 " 2 -4,020 4 5 130 87 * suie air greaser ; 2 sections of parts bins, 2-10T hyd. J 8 " 2 1,870 3 7 69 35 \ $3595 der engine, automatic trans- "Winona , Minn. lacks ; acetylene torch, complete with cart , poitable gas mission, power steering, ra- List at $5163.55 19 " 2 1,630 5 7 93 35 , Tel. 452-4267. heater with thermostat , Wis 4 cyl air cooled motor ; 6 " 2 1,070 3 6 39 22 dio, factory air. ( Beige) stationary model air conditioner \ Sale Price $4125 , Lincoln 189 amp arc 4 Holstein co«s close springers Records will be posted ' 1973 AMC Javeline 2-door NOW OPEN MORE HOURS welder, new * . ] on sale dale, 3 1st calf Hoi heifers, springing close.- 8 < hardtop ,V-8 engine, auto- TO SERVE YOU BETTER CARS AND TRUCKS—1969 Buick Skylark custom Hoi bred heifers, ,-a- Delta 88 sport , A 5 Hoi heifers, open , 3 Hoi bain 5 mabcr'power steering, 1974 Mon.-Fn. 8-9 Sat 8-5 coupe, 1968 Buick Skylark convertible with p s , p b , auto , calves, 4 Hoi steers, wei ght 650 lbs ; 17 Black White 1 dio( Mag wheels (Blue) trans., 1967 Chev, Impala , 1W33 Dodge v- ton pickup with face barn calves Open Friday Nights Hawk-o p Sedan Sun. 12-5 ^ 1972 JEfcP Commando V-8 4-door. Wedgewood, blue 4 speed and V-8; 1963 Buick Riviera; 1963 Chev 4 dr , engine, automatic, power with blue vmyl top, elegant s;< with 6 cyl and straight trans 19S1 IHC panel truck , 1961 , BEEF CATTLE ] steering, radio, air condi- blue interior Standard V8 HAPPY EASTER Chev- % ton pickup . 1953 GMC pickup; 1948 Foid pickup , 7 Angus cows; 3 Angus heifers; 6 Herefoid cows , 2 Black- \ (low mileage). 1948 Ford pickup with 283 Chev motor and dnve train i Come In tioning engine, automatic transmis- White Face heifei s, bred; 6 beef heifers, open 9 beef \ 1973 CAPRI 2-dooi V-fi en- sion, power steering, power SPECIALS OF THE HOUSEHOLD ITEMS—Kcnmore automatic washer , Ken- " steei s, 600 lbs. 11 beef feeders, 400 lbs REMARKS Bull < gine, 4-speed transmission, brakes, FACTORY AIR tilt WEEK more electric clothes dryer , 2 oil heaters, 2 rotary mow- was turned m with beef herd on August 1st, 1973 Beef j And See Our radio (only 12,000 miles). steenng wheel, clock and ers; other misc items cows and heifers are pasture bred ' H MANY MORE FEATURES. 14\70 Rosewood 3 bedroom MISC ITEMS—2 12 calf feeders, , 1973 FURY III 4-door V-8 6,100 miles. spacious home for couple new and us-ed lumber t HOGS & EQUIPMENT Easter Bea uties... motor, automatic, power approx 2000' home sawed soft lumber , used tin , 2 steel II ] with children , washer and -wood , 7 sows, bied for summer fa rrowing 40 feeders, ave. ' steering, power brakes, Fac- Sticker Price dryer. tanks; SO walnut posts; some used pipe , 2 12' cattle tory Air (Sharp!) feeders; usual small items ¦weight 10O lbs steel 79 gal hog wateiei , 2 new elect. < All Dressed Up and : heated hog waterers; 7 Big Bear farrowing crates, No 5 ' 1972 MONTEGO Brougham $5263.05 $8200 ANTIQUE—Dishes — Depression glass, Mary Giegory Caswell farrowing crates; 30 bu round steel hog feed- < Ready to Go — 4 door hardtop . V-8, auto- Save $800 this week glass, cut glass er; misc hog equipment; 2 stock hogs 1 matic, power steering, ra- SALE PRICE TERMS-NORTHERN ON THE SPOT CREDIT 1973 CHEVROLET Impala dio (only 16,000 miles ' 14x60 Wickcraft 2 bedioom 4-door sedan , air condi- $4200 A real beauty for small DAVID KUJAK. OWNER DAIRY EQUIPMENT 1 , 1969 FORD Falcon station Muellei 300 gal. bulk milk tank; 3 Surge milkers with ; tioning, 19 000 miles family. Front kitchen, Auctioneer — Alvin Kohner ' j wagon 6 cylinder ongme, blue interior DeLaval magnetic pulsators , David Bradley 4 unit milk- - 1973 CHEVROLET Impala standard tiansmission. Northern Investment Co , Lester Senty Clerk | * , er pump ; DeLaval magnetic converter : 1VV pipeline 4 door sedan air condi- (HURRY") $7900 Repr by Eldon W. Berg, Arcadia, Wis | with magnetic stall cocks for 30 cows,, S S double com- tioning, 35,000 miles ' 1967 CHRYSLER Newport Save $1,000 this week partment wash tank , 2 SS stiainers 50 gal elect hot . 1972 CHEVROLET Impala 2-door hardtop. Full power, water heater , Stewart cow clipper; 3 16 ft feed bunks , I Open Friday lights ¦*•. <** } .« \ i r s f .-T . 4-door hardtop , air condi- radio. (Priced Right). 14x70 Rosewood 2 bedroom, ^ misc shotgun cans, calf pails, and etc , elearic cow *< tioning. shag caipeting, den and trainers. * 1972 CHEVROLET Bel Air ' Auto Leasing bar, tastefully finished, >: 4-door sedan, aii condition- ft TRUCKS <# washer and diyer This MACHINERY ing. 1973 CHEVROLET C-10 %- home is above standard. 2 f ¦^hnpi,#% l i , l I MF 1100 diesel tractor with 1450 hrs , 18 4x38 rear ; from; [NORTHERN INVESTMENT CO.! i | |l tires, 6 ply, ll 00x16 front tires, wide front , power ; 1971 BUICK Custom Le- ton pickup V-8 motor stand- LEASING colors to choose [ radio, low NEW steering, 3 pt hitch , dual aux hyd system, power ad]ust " Sabre 4 door sedan, air ard transmission, $9800 rear wheels, tilt steering wheel, multi-power , J D 720 " conditioning, loaded. profile mirrors, rear step BY A diesel tractor, narrow fron t, power steering, 3 pt hitch ; *• PROGRAM > bumper, disc brakes. Save $700 this week. i 1970 BUICK Custom Le- W D. "C" tractor, narrow front; J D 227 2-row mounted " 1971 FORD F-100 »4 ton pick- Located 6 miles north of Eleva , Wis. or 10 miles south | corn picker, brackets for 720 J D , 456 IHC 4 row corn %J Sabre 4-door sedan, fac- (Specials Good Wed to Wed ) of Eau Claire, Wis. on Hwy 93. tory air, loaded. up V-8 engine, automatic, O & J MOTOR All prices include delivery planter with fertilizer & insecticide attachment, real - power steering, power and setup. ¦ good , IHC 2 row rear mount corn planter with big fert. , 1969 -PONTIAC Catalina 4- brakes, radio, LOW MILE- CO. box ; JD 2 row cultivator; A C. 2 row cultivator; 4 row ; door hardtop, air condi- AGE. No reasonable offer or lA^edmesdlay, April 17 rotary speed cultivator; Ford rear mounted - tioning, vinyl top. 2 low culti- THE NEW PURCHASE trade l efused I Sale will start at 10 A M. , vator , Pord 2 bott 16" plow, AC 2 bott. 16" pull type J 1969 FORD Ranchei o V-8 A 1969 FORD Galaxie 4-door engine, standaid transmis- LEASE PROGRAM Lunch wiU be served plow , IHC 4 bott. 14" plow on rubber; M F No 86 6 bott p sedan, tactory an , red hot We Will Be Closed Good 16" plow, semi-mounted, trip beams, cover boards & land : sion, ladio, extra sharp. Built for Friday 1-3 and All Day 52 HEAD HI-GRADE HOLSTEIN CATTLE 52 - 33 COWS special, $395. Hurry on this one. wheel, like new; IHC 10 ft. mobile tandem disk; 12 ft. coi poial'on , professional Easter Sunday. —2 Holstein cows, springers; 5 Holstein cows, fi esh calf Minn Moline grain drill with fert attach , all steel , J D. ' 1969 CHEVROLET Bel Air 1959 CHEVROLET % ton and all business men who at aide; 11 Holstein cows, fresh 7 weeks; 2 Holstein ' 4-door , 8 ft field digger, on steel ; Gehl 600 forage harvester with ¦ ¦ . sedan new paint. Pickup. 6 cylinder engine, use their auto for business § cows, fresh fall and bred back; 5 Holstein cows, ; fre-sh . js l corn and hay heads, used 1 season, like new; N.H ' ' ' '¦ HAPPY EASTER . 9 ft. $ 196a MUSTANG ; 2-door y 6 standard transmission, ra- purpose. . ;. . I Dec. and bred back; 8 Holstein cows, fresh Jan. and bred | haybine, pull type, real good; Kosch tractor mower, V % dio. Lots of work left in this Q ; springers Holstein heifers ; : ' cylinder, automatic. ¦ ; Under our program you can . UALITY SERVICE [X 1 bad; 5 Holstein heifers, ; 6 , 1 f| j brackets for WD Allis; N.I.' ." 4-bar rake; real good; N.I. ' % .' • '¦one; . - sell your lease car at a prof- 1 yr^; Holstein calf , 3 mos.; 1 Holstein steer, 2 mos.; 1 Hoi- g 205 flail manure spreader; N.I. 504 hvy. . duty, manure |j 1972 CHEVROLET Vi ton. : ''We Service . What- We Sell" ; pickup, V-8, automatic it anytime you want during |, stein bull; 1 yr. A young herd of home raised milky cows. |; loader, hyd. bucket, manure bucket & show bucket , like : | , ; ' 29,000 miles. \ the lease. . It DAIRY EQUIPMENT—DeLaval No; 75 pump with 2',h.p. 1 i new; Kewanee 56 ft. galv. . elevator;, PTO drive; Farm- % i hand tnixer mill with sheiler; N.H. 53 green chopper; - . .% We give you protection front Auction Sales I motor ; 4 DeLaval magnetic buckets ; 300 gallon Sunset : § ]¦ depreciation | ; bulk tank ; 30 gak electric hot water heater ; doubleVWash ¦¦¦§, N.H; . 67/ baler with PTO bale thrower; .Farmhand 200 % ¦ v power box D. wide tread: wagon P & J AVe give you protection from Minnesota Land ;& | tanks. . ' ' . . .Vy , : . - . . ' fI . on H. " with flotation \ heavy maintenance cost. y tires; Farmhand 200 power box on Win Power wagon ; ;S Auction Service ' I FEED — 900 bushels ear corn ; 700 bushels oats;:. 2000 £ 2 Forage Master 2 beater forage boxes with roof on J.D. % MOTORS/ ING. deduct full Everett j. "Kohner7' silo, And you can ' | . bales mixed alfalfa hay; 35' corn silage in 12x41 V yy | wagons; green chop feeder rack on R.T.> wagon ; 2.7x14 lease pavment on. your tax Winona, Tel; 452-7814 % Rushford , Minn. His^HHHI^i^HKiHHHHBSflH Jim Papenfuss, Dakota Tel. 643-6152 | TRACTORS AND MACHINERY-IHC 450 tractor ; IHC MV I :i bale racks, on R.T. wagons. bill _ . , - I; tractor ; J,D "A" tractor; J,D, tractor; 2 J.D. tractor I ^ service to FOR. "YOUR AUCTION use the Boyum . And we have the System. BERTRAM BOYUM Auction- fi; cultivators ; J.D. 3-14" tractor plow; Case 3-14" tractor il MISCELLANEOUS EQUJPMENT keep you- happy eer, Rushford, Minn. Tel. 864-9381. , f i plo-w ; J.D. 2-14" tractor plow ; Ridgid Wheel tractor disc; |: \. Emmert plow mulcher attach, for 4 bott. plow; 3 ptXn And a percent of your pay- FREDDY FRKKSON I J.D, 10' field cultivator ; J.D, No, 33 PTO manure spread- js :¦; cement mixer; 4 section steel drag ; 3 pt. scraper blade; I? ment will be guaranteed Auctioneer ,. er; J.D. No, 9 power mower with PTO extension ; Nixon I y: . 300 " gal, gas barrel on steel stand ; A.C, manure W/ill handle all sizes and kinds ol I loader; % Headqua rters against . purchase of unit. ' If: wheel rake ; M.F. No. 10 hay baler with ejector ; J.D. 7: ;i pitcher pumps ; leg vise ; oil . drums and pumps; hand i> Small Car auctions, Te-]. Dakota 643-6143, , If you want to save money, |; No. 30 combine with auger feed; Gehl chop-a|l chopper Vf ;i winch; rolls of new netting; barb wire; Sears space heat- !J ALVIN KOHNER Claffy unloading unit with rno- i; V large AUCTIONEER-Cily and state licensed I? with corn and hay head; er; underground fuel tank; PTO wire roller ; 4"xJ6' fS see us! and bonded. Rt, 3, Winona. Tel 452- :C' tor ; Gehl Hi-throw blower with pipe ; J,D. 494 tractor corn if K auger; alum, lfi' elevator with electric : motor; 100 ft." il 4980. 237 corn CHEVYTOWN All at: i planter; IHC power corn binder; J.D. No^ pick- %\; drive belt; used stanchions; 12 12-ft , sheets new galv. I QUALITY , 10' double disc grain drill with roofing; used APR. .1»-Sat. 1 D.m. Furnilure Auction, I er with grease banks ; J.D i| steel roofing; Dearborn-Wood bros. l row | . 4145 Bin St„ Goodview. Dwlnht Roe, ;| grass seed ; J.D. No, 21 hay conditioner; tractor . saw § corn picker; 265 gal. fuel oil barrel : dump rnko; 2 horse % NOVA-VEGA - CAMARO owner;.Alvin Kohner, auctioneer) Ev- rig; 3 sets tractor chains ; IHC liyd . loadefr with snow if cultivators.; large amt. of junk machinery ; ' 10 35' treated l*j O & J MOTO R . erott j. Kohner, clerk. I I; bucket ; snowplow blade for J.D. A; D.B. trailer: lime ;i| i" polos ; 13 20' treated poles ; 9 12' treated poles ; 3 1«' % "Ford Dealer " APR . 13—Sat. 1 p.m. 6.miles N. of Spring i spreader ; Kewaunee No. 500 4ft' . elevator with down i;i I treated poles; 5 10' treated poles; 50 fi' treated poles; >| 1974 NOVA COUPE - Golden brown metallic. Tinted ' ' Grove, Minn, on Cty. Rd; Mo. 4, then iiiil spout; 50' bale elevator with transport nnd Ms h.p mo- >t\ \ eltc. fence posts; misc. assorted lumber; misc. tools and . . St .Charles , Minn. . 2VJ miles E On Cty. Rd. No. 11 on. conditioner; 4 sec. Flex steol drag; ¦;¦;:; equipment too f^ i glass,, body side mouldings, floor mounted shift lever, . blacktop Rd. Mr. 8, Mrs, Jean Vflstorse, $ tor; J.D. No. .33 hay numerous to mention. owners; Bonlloy 8, uontley, auctioneers) iri du mp rake; bale bay fork; J.D, No. 1003 rubber tired t! white stripe tires, radio, vinyl trim. IN STOCK READY Onsgard Slate Bank, clork, fy Wanted—Automobiles 110 |' wagon with endgate chopper box ; B.B. rubber tired wag- ¦ AUTOMOTIVE 1 FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY, I; on with endgate chopper box ; Sears rubber tired wagon iii -j APR, 13—Sat. 12:30 3 mllos S. nnd 1 Ford F0350 1 ton truck with dual wheels and stock rack; | CAMPBELL'S AUTO Snlv.iac. Wanted , mile w. end Vi mile N. of Dover on Is with endgate Chopper box ; 2 wbccl trailer; exception- j * 1963 Pontiac Catalinc V8 4 door , aulo. trans. , power i* AS LOW AS $2999 |unk enrs. Any condition, any .'.Impo. Cty. Rd. 10, Herman & Emma Ebert, I ally well kept line of mach inery; sleering; l DO r Ford . 'Galaxie 6 cyl. , .straight stick , needs Will pick Ihem up. Tol. «4-5769 any- owners; Roy Montoonicr , auctioneer; v , ^ time. Roo f River Stofo Bank, cierK I HOUSEHOLD ITEMS-Kcnmore •electric st ove ; Admiral X repairs ; lSfi;i Rambler , junker ; misc junk cars, \\ S M refrigerator; Frigidaire refrigerator; Maytag wringer >$ ? FRED; 4flo bu, ear corn ; ]0 ft. corn and hay silage $ MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE PROM Mobile Homes, Trailers 111 APR. 13 — Sat. 12:30. 4'/a miles N. of Coldspot 15' cubic ft. cbest yd Acorn Ballroom at ConterVllle, Wis, on b washer; 2 tubs and stand ; i in 18 ft . silo. | | 6 Cylinder and 8 Cylinder Models Cly. Trunk F. Wm. Rnta| miles E. ol : Silvcrlono . T.V, -, blonde 'console ' rnixlel; mntnl cabinet ; iv; ¦glass: occasional chair; rocking . chair:, coffee grinder; ;t fy power steering, power brakes, vinyl roof AND MAN Y, Tnylor, Wli. on Kol/y Road, then '/j 77 2 hJmj fJo ond tnhlcH and matching coffee¦ hiblo .-- nietj il ROYAL COACHMAN 1970, 24' travel milo N, Ralph Breska, owner/ Alvin iiV butler mold; kraut cutter; crocks; .lnnlern: bowls; coffee ash trny; meat, grinder; mific. dishes, pots and pans. • ^i* MANY EXTRAS. YOU CAN'T BUY ONE FOR LESS. Irflllor, completely sftK-conlnlnc cI , ' now Kohner, auclloncor; Northern Inv. Co., U table ; m eunlp jack; 3 electric fencers; some sloe f«nce ; ¦ : [ npplldiKO 14 :i oak flower stand ; 2 sq. oak library stands; Gaines Bros, j, 5 MOVE IN TOMORROW! All ' || posls; some electric fence posts; 40' . oxU-nsion lnddcr; i x 70' Awnrd ninlilln liomn on landscaped l APR. 16-Tuos 9:30 a.m. 5 miles N. ol i pimin; bedroom sol; large wood wa rdrobe; wnll type - f '3 MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM llonorl ; 1 drive boll; ;^ Int. 2 berlronmj, Dcnl Air condl . Harmony on Hwy, 52 , Ihon 3 miles E , :\ .some gniiii sacks ; 2 eleclric motors ondlfts.s coffe e grinder; butter cliiirn; leather ' lined cherry or £ IN OUR GREAT FAMILY CAR LINE UP Hurryl MLS 101)2. Rlchlor Renlly, Tel, Gordon 8, .Cnthnrlno Tlo^.Kollor , ownorsi 2 steel tanks; cement mixer wit h niolor ; some lum her; 1 | 452.1550, Montflnmcry fc Olt.on, auctioneers; I walnut rocker; old console radio , police , -shortwave , ffl i>j ! ¦ 1 bug alfalfa seed ; 1 bag seed corn; some wire: 110(1 pnl. 1 \. Thorp Sales Corp,, clork, compressor; | ¦' slandiini ; 2. kei'o.sene lamps; 2 bcii iil ffiil horsehkle lap i^ IT'S IIEREI ;li gas tank with stand; 100 Rnl, gns bnrrel; air : ¦¦¦ ,' rol)«K and driving gloves ; nielal al.-inn clock; DeLaval i£ Wl CHEVROLET '/Hon PICKUP, fi cylinder , straight THE NEW COACHMEN 22 It. Mini-Homo, APR. 16—Tnos , 12 noon, 3 miins N. of ii bench vise: emerv and motor; anvil ; table saw mid mo- \ ¦ slick, '«' Flcetside box, Ratifies , 678x15 tiros. Soo || nlnn.0 Willi our bin cholco of Banner, Wis,, 1 milo N. oil U. S. l* on s nnd wheels; 7 ; creiim separator; mink stole; picture frames; more misc. j- COACHMEN VohldOii, F. A. KPAUSE Cty, Trunk E Hllbflrl Nlorllolcit, owner) i| tnr; 200' electric cord ; socket sol ; some lor>!. nnli'iucs, CO., llroozy Aeros , Hwy. M-61 6, Wi- Dnrol l.lnso, .aucllonoor;. Northern Inv, iS il oms loo numerous to moil ion. : | | . / AS LOW AS $2778 nonn, Co ., clork. |i:j Elect ric brooder; some waternrs ; some steel fonrloru; i - . j i For fui'llier information contact the Thorp office in Rocli- ;^ " : ¦ i ! informnuon con- UHERTY~1»M, 12x50 mobile homo, ex- APR. 17 - Wed/ 10 a.m, k miles N, i>\ garano — a good productive farm. For \\ i MN Phone; 507-400-5407, Auction eers ; Beckinnn Brolh- &j cnllont condlllon,, 2 bedrooms, furnMwd, nf Eleva, Win, Earl Rucl Eslalci Han. |V tsict Lennie Nysven, Per-s, Rep, \ j ;; I ers , Lester and Victor , Houston , MN, H Son by appolnlnmnl, Tel. 45J-1S5B or 489- son 8, HnIM, auctioneers , Nonliern V 2589, Inv, Co., clork, \ , TERRTS - on Pei-sonnl Properfy \ [ , 2 txidrnomn, APR, 17 - Wed, 12:30 p.m, Located NORTHERN ON Till*: SPOT CREDIT |; ! JACK DEVER¦ ¦ , Owner | C^ualihL tfMvjyj bwji CENTURIAN-W2 1 4x60' |y) . ¦ . f all cnrpoHd, nlr condlllonor, lurnlilted al Pine Creek, Wis, on Cly, Trunk , OWNER ¦i I and tklrloil, 10x10' utility shed. Excol. G. , David Ku|ak , ownen Alvin Koh- \\ EARL RUD ESTATE g • m—ammmm ^mBt "In Beautiful Downtown Winona " lonl condition Oosf offer tnkos. If do no r, aucllonoer; Norlliorn Inc, Co., »lred, I will pey expenses lo mciv« to cUrk, II Lonnlo Nysven, Per, Rep, j i 452-2nnr> vour ocntlpn. Ul AS?- 1091, ' \:l /\ncl ioneors—Don Hnnseii nnd Jim Hulko R, SALFS 121 Huff Tel. APR 17 - Wed, n noon, 1 block : ' y - ! ™M - I Tunns* 1 I SEE THE WH lloinnllo nnd Medallion ol Inlersocluu ol 44 8, 16 , Moknli , i i rtopr , hy Lvman Duttpr , Osseo, Wis. Opon Moa -Wod. - Fri, Eveninfis homes at Gr'ron Terrace, .teclol lor Minn, Al Moorn, owior; Hackinnn t, rs NwtliomTnvcfilment Co,, lister Senly Clork > i | ! CORPORATIONf/*.¦ ¦ ¦¦ ^ iBHr™ ^rM !/ j-1 April, ono 197* 14x70 llomnllo, *05V5. Hcrlhen, «i»cilonour»; Tlifirp sales Te|, 454-13)7, Corp,, clerk. i¦ 1 i'il ,i' ¦• • ¦*•*¦ ¦¦*> ! »¦•* \. ^ K.}-. ^..-t"* ii 'Aiy*-^W^W^'^^^ ^>¦*¦¦W^Av^^.^'l^ »iilii»it*Ji'' i!ii i JwJiJJ.rh'i**'.• **'*.. .-> ,+**}**•<¦f-t*-''*':•• Justice Post sen was mistaken in an initial ' By JOHN LUNDCntilST among five- Justice Department Pine Ridge Reservation village Wounded ; Knee Trading , ¦ ' ; ' ' . '- V' :": . ' 7; . : by;Charlei- M. . Schul4i Associated Press Writer officials^ subpoenaed , to testify ' belief oh reviewing the wiretap PEANUTS - . last - yean y court order, - , 7 ' ; ' without a y application that material may - '. ST. , PAUL, " Minn. (AP) - in the. hearing. ' However; 'he "I think the government has ; Atty.. Gen. . Henry Peter- submitted y ah . affidavit and ¦ W;VMark Felt, who retired have been gathered from an il- Asst. . the . burden HI • this hearing to. legal wiretap.:;• '. sen won't have to testify in the asked to be excused from ap- last JUne as acting, associate Wounded Knee wiretap hearing, pearing personally and Nichol show there was no illegal moni- FBI director,./ testified Thurs- The sources of material used granted the.request. toring of a phone," said Nichol. in the wiretap application were U.S..District Judge Fred . Nichol ' day of his role 'in discussions saiid Thursday. . . ¦7.7 Nicho»l again warned govern- Russell Means and Dennis two informers, Felt said. ; ;He Banks are accused of lead- about; a . Wounded Knee wiretap However, Nicholy renewed; his ment attorneys that lie . would said . he understood one of the dismiss the case against ership roles in . the Wounded application. . informers was a: reporter, but warning that the government t^b ¦¦¦ affida- American . Indian Movement Knee occupation. 7 Charges in- - The government says, he gave no nanie^ 7 must prove its contention that the need f 6>r a it. did not illegally monitor a (AIM) leaders if the prose- clude burglary, .; theft, assault, vits supporting A report at . the U;S. . Court- cution .doesn't adequately sup- firearms violations, and con- wiretap were compiled . from - - .7 V.by.Chic Young telephone in the Sbutfc Dakota '¦ ¦ house in . St, Paul indicated the : 1LONDIE port its contention . that it did spiracy.. . ¦';;.;¦ ' /;' FBI agents arid informers but hamlet during, its occupation by monitoring. person-involved was an . Associ- dissident Indians. not illegally monitor conversa- Defense lawyers have ac- not through phone ated . Press staffer. Asst. U;S. tions out of Wounded Knee dur- cused the FBI of listening in 6a The defense disputes that. Peter- Atty. R;OV ; Hurd ,V who has ac- Pet ers e.n originally was ing a 71-day occupation of the con vers at! 6ns from the: Felt said either he or cess to informer data as a pros- ecution lawyer, declined to comnaent on ..the. report.: 7 An AP sjpokesman said, "We know nothing, about this matter Sfafc but,we are looking into it. - ' fe^ Earlier, Judge Nichol de. scribed testimony from another FBI official as "very difficult'' ^ii^v||^ to believe. ¦ '::¦¦:¦ ' • bay raise Roy Moore j head of the Jack- 7 : ' - - : '':' ' - : '' ' ¦ by.Gordon vBesi - 'REpEYE ' - - . . - . , ' ii ^:^^^ son, Miss.,. FBI office, testified By TERRY NELSON mal," he insisted. He says it reform, nb-fault auto insurance, through the elections of 1976 be- " came it a step iri the legisla-V that people who left Wounded !:: ; ST.. PAUL, . ^.yXAPHUnw creation of a istate energy agen- fore being eligible for any in- Knee ytold FBI agents the num- daunted, by last week's veto, Min- tive process where ,i* "was en- cy, and campaign reform. 7 crease ; '- . '; tirely proper -to.; offer . amend- .. . ber of people . still inside V the All • nesota legislative leaders sa^/ ments to the . bill, y were, passed .this year ¦.' Senate Republican Leader hamlet) described the yriumber the issue of a legislative pay after preliminary efforts in the and ; kind of weapons they had Rep; Anderson remains ada- Harold kriegerv- Rochester^ said andy said land mines had been raise has noT"*gone away and. is mant against a cut in the ; size first-half session of 1973.7; . : this; week that the legislature is planted around outskirts of thei of the legislature. V He says a The DFL leaders .says future sure to be takeny up iiy the 1975 ' ¦^ : : ¦haye drifting, toward fulltime status village." -.;' ¦: size cut could create etill larger 'Ie^lators¦ I . . i^ ; ^to^de'fer- session. mhie for themselves how rriuch without, any formal plan;V:Krie- FBI . reports oh- interviews rural districts, :removing rural (salaries Senate DFL Leader , Nicholas ' time is needed . in the ; second ger has said that either with those ; people, ' however , legislators still farther from must be increased or legislative Coleman, St. Paul, : said he is their.constituents: . half of each two-year . session. said nothing about laiid mines IWs . year,y work time cut; back, y ; and . Nichol said the: reports so prepared to: introduce a bill He also defepds the present . V it took nearly 12 W6eks. : if .there, i's less major Gov.. Anderson has long been seriously contradict . -. Moore's calling for Vat, least Va $15,000 system oh aririual legislative on the side of a size cut, put- " ¦ business, it may take¦ less time iii testimony ..that "it's very diffi- }¦ BUZ SAWYIR /.; -; ; .;;; '- Vby Roy..;Cran» yearly salary. sessions, with - bills carried over the future; heVsays; .'' • ting Vhini at odds with some cult for me to believe anything from odd years .to cleanup ses- DFL legislators. Mr. Moore testified to. - House¦ DFL Leader .Irvin An- , " derson, > International Falls, sions in even years. If a pay raise is adopted next ., However, the .- . governor also Moore was in . charge of FBI says he iwill continue stumping Without the . added time, V he year, it would not taie effect ; says' tie wants to; preserve as agents V at Wounded Knee for an- $18 0pi>Vsalary. ¦ ' • says, . the 7 legislature, may not until 1977.. All members of the long as possible a "citizen" leg- about a month during the occu- fbr , , , - ' j ¦ Legislators ynpiw are paid V$8,- have .gotten around;, to:probate legiBlature will have, to -.--go lislatuie. pation'. 400 a year, plus daily living; al- lowances of $25 to $33 a dray during each i (session, depending on where they live. subsidiary uviiUi ^ Gov, Wendell . Anderson , last 1 week vetoed a bill raising legis- ' -, ' '^^^^^^i*. Ptmldi , incy^HMe^em . - .' V WFPICFND. Wf' :yB.- BB ¦¦ ';^ik ¦ mmLm I -^ 1. \mm\W -- - .' - lative pay to $12,000 a year. Bit .*^^^^^ in his veto ttie gover- . ^message^ nor ' disagreed , only with the " ' •' ¦ ; PAuiip BEETLE BAJLEY . -v - ;. • •; Mprt.'V/aU^a aniff ^ agreed that legislative pay is too low. :- . ;' ..¦;- . ' ; '" '- , . ' Rep V ; Anderson ,saj?s. the.issue yui is whether Minnesota will pre- ^.^^ ^^Biiy While Supp ly Lasts -"- We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities^ serve a "citizen legislature," He says a salary bf $18,000 will STORE HOVRS J MO not produce' the "professional" ^ legislature some critics fear. Without a pay raise, the con- ¦¦ cept of citizen-iegislators is in } WE AT ' • "' ¦ ¦ ' ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦ :: : : ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦• ' ' ' 'V ' ' danger, says Rep.y Ahderson. -GIBSON'S ' WISH^-YOu:. ' • .VJkf' -. - - -1 ' ' ' ' 'T |!l ' -fc : 'IP A AM U 1# "f- ' He s-ays Miinesota will wind up with legislators under 30> over l y ' ::¦' ' 60 plus . a few in between J ^Buy at ^Owr piscpunt ^ Prices and we will saye you money to spend on No. 1 . - . .' . THE FAMILY for I MA RY by Allen Saunders and Ken Ernst wealthy enough tc augment y WORTH 7 ^ J the Hpliday Weekend: e will be closed Easter Sunday, their, legislative pay. ^^ ; ^ 7 soVour employes mqy be with their familie« f v -. ; . Rep. Anderson says the key is- \ ^on 7EqsteK . . ; "ThankV .Yc)U." ; / '¦ ' ¦ . ': ' '/' : V sue Is time, — not time spent J passing¦ bills in St. Paul, but time ;¦ the legislator can spend with -the people in Ms own dis- ¦ ¦ trict. - . . - ;. . ." - ' '-. 77 He says a salary of $18,000 ¦ __ ¦ ¦ ¦ Would give a lawmaker an op- SOLID CHOCOLATE 7 V- . _. _ : ' ' • • - -• ¦• pi- -: ' ' ^^ ' ¦ ¦¦ B ¦ ' v ¦ ' ' B^ i ^- k 3 - J«fcw " • »- tion of making it a fulltime job, e giving him time to "visit his con- EASTER stituents, especially in-sprawl- Easter Eggs | S0 OFF ¦ I ing rural districts. -. 7 ' ¦ ' '¦¦ ' " ¦ : v v ;ON ;;;¦; ' : £ "It would be big enough BO a ' '^¦'mm^L.- - KISSES-V- vll tg^" REX MOROAN, M.D. by Dal Curtii legislator could spend full time ^^. on his job but not become V iich on it," Rep. Anderson said, "and if he wanted to make more money on a second job, ¦ ; voters could judge " him on that ^ S ^ ^ ; ' . xigftsg ' x' S^ER .J basis." " 'W m ^W ^ Rep. Anderson has calculated y : ' that legislators now average . mmP^"X . •«-£, mLm X RABB ITSy li $8.81 an hour. WwU^. With additional time, now being spent on -legislative duties, he says la-ivmakers ac- tually get 13 per cent less than they were making per houi in 1971. MANCY ; by Ernie Bushmillo* Rep. Anderson says he plans ¦ ¦ >^^*¦' ¦*' ^i^^ rirP^Fr^nFnm' to keep on raising the pay issue r - ii ' / *'f ' • ' ^*^ "'" ¦ * * * ^ throughout the interim and has Chocolate Hollow A. EIKNER NURSERIES urged others to do the same, OnOkl "I still think the legislature was correct," he said in an in- EASTER N0 2 R°SE BUSH terview, "fiut I'm not critical " - of the governor ... you honor /X^sX- everyone's opinion and I honor the governor's action as part of the legislative process." The pay raise was one of the last bills passed in the 1074 ses- sion. It was attacked in the BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH by Fred J-asswell Senate as an amendment to an- other bill , triggering an ava- lanche of protest mail to the governor's office. While numerous critics called the tactic "sneaky," Rep. An- derson says it was not. "The method was not abnor- and B» H| ^Bf Give your home yard a _^ at beautiful new appearance this mW^m\mWmW Basement of Ettrick ' 'fk mW. '^mmm^mm^ Compare 49(* m M m Q ^^¦m ^^^B7 lummer. Choose from a wide ^_w AW church is re modeled selection of colors in bush RH mLW "p \ af%,«> or ^Mwr AT (Special) ^mmLW ' J climbing varieties. .. *^ ^ ' ETTRICK , Wis. - tm *t_J^ . . WIZARD OF ID by Parker and Hart The basement of Living Hope 4iV m &*w Lutheran Church is being re- JUMBO ROSE BUSH $1.77 ¦ VS modeled, — — ¦ -- ¦ The work is being doae by members of the congregation, l,VE P0TTED supervised by Ingvald Jorgen- EASTER BASKETS ' son. Old lath and plaster have *m: been removed from the walls w i^SiS^ tACTrn and replaced by concrete ^^ blocks, Tho remodeling will in- clude the construction of five Sunday school rooms and an assembly room , lS-by-3S feet, M/JM m ^^ww LILIES •MARK TRAIL by Ed Oodd In be used as an overflow room ,,uo for the auditorium. $3'S9 Vc ^A^fKW mmt£-t) *mw mw 'X$WIEffi^m>: Multl-Blosiom H )f \1/fwa ftr %mmW^Mr^^rr- ' OFFICERS ELE CTED NELSO N , Wis. (Special) -- $3.49 Officers elected Tuesday at the S^^^OT r vaiui. *^ . 97 ¦ ' ' t^Sfflfe^' TF- a nnual meeting of the Nelson »F 1 it ^^ A ^^XXy i Jl jVii Cemetery Association are : Les- »l\ . ^l^^^ f ter Bander, \W__r-^fl w^m ^r m¥ * * president; Mrs. WTT\ M tlA C r^i 4\ 'mW '-^m^w^w Hazollo Mueller , vice president; L^f $2,47 Vc,l,J9 m AW Mrs, Roy Lieheranz, secretary; LP '^mj£& Mrs, Alvin Brunkow, treasur- rai^T I m m A Wmm er, ami Mrs. IUith Rolnliardt, trusteo.