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Winona State University OpenRiver Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers 2-8-1962 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News Follow this and additional works at: hps://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1962). Winona Daily News. 245. hps://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/245

Transcript of Winona Daily News - OpenRiver

Winona State UniversityOpenRiver

Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

2-8-1962

Winona Daily NewsWinona Daily News

Follow this and additional works at: https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in WinonaDaily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationWinona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1962). Winona Daily News. 245.https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/245

Jayne Mans^InW

By BEN FUNKNASSAU," Bahamas . (API—Ac-

tress Jayne Mansfield , her mus-cular husband and- a ' companionreturned safely to Nassau todaywith a story7 of a: harrowing ex-perience at sea and a night on atiny coral atoll. :

Shivering and weeping, thebuxom blonde, 28, who skied gailyout , of Nassau Wednesday, wastaken to a hospital for treatmentof shock, exposure and coral rockcuts.

Mickey Hargitay, 32, , her

weight-lifting husband , related atale of an overturned boat , afainting and panicking Jayne , anda night perched on the tip of acoral rock just jutting above hightide. * ".'- 7'

Miss: Mansfield, Hargitay, anda Florida friend were found safethis morning on a beach at RoseIsland after a night long searchtouched off when they failed toreturn from the water ski trip.

Hargitay was taken to the hos-pital for treatment of a cut leg.

He was released after treatment.Hotel publicist Jack Drury of

Fort Laud erdale, Fla., the tnirdmember of the partx was unin-jured. .

The group returned ' to - 'Nassauaboard the 65-foot charter yacht"Blades," which picked them offthe . beach of isolated! Rose Islandafter a pl ane spotted them.

Jayne and Mickey were on skisand Drury piloted the 17-foot-white-hulled outboard boat theyhad rented, v Photographers fol-lowed them for about a mile , thenturned back.

Hargitay ' said the party con-tinued on until they got about amile and a ha lf lrpm Rose Is-land , some five miles fromNassau.

Jayne fell off her skis, 'he- said .He tried to help and fell off him-self. She complained of a hurt leg.

Drury, in the boat , said be

ROSE ISLANDWhere Trio Was Found

thought he saw sharks and calleda warning. Jayne . jpanicked , Har-gitay said.

The Nassau Yacht Club saidsharks have not boon teen inthose waters for years.

Hargitay lost his gri p on Jnyneand she went under I he boat , hesaid, ln trying to get her into Iheboat, the boat overturned , thenJnyne fainted , her husband said.

They drifte d perhaps an houratop Ihe boat , near a littl e coralisland. As the tid e came in watercovered most of (lie atoll wherethey perched throughout theni ght.

This morning, Hargitay recount-ed , the tide dropped and iheywaded and swam to Rose Island.A hunling Nassau DevelopmentHoard plane had spotted theirskjs , then the trio. The yacht tookthem from the beach .

Temperatures in tho area haddropped to 6*1 deg rees during thenight,r Tho actress—and -her— husbandhad been vacationing in Floridannd went lo Nassau earlier thisweek, Both are water sports en-thusiasts,

They weren 't missed unt i lJayne failed to show up for anews (inference in Nassaual (i p. in.

300 ReservistsReleased by 32nd

FT: LEWIS, Wash. Wl — Almost 30O reservists mistakenly calledto active duty last fall — most of them "with Wisconsin's 32nd Division— have been released, the Army said Wednesday.

A spokesman said most of the men were "fillers" from raid-west-ern states called back into service to raise the 32nd to authorized full

strength of 13,748 officers and menafter it was mobilized last October.

Others were fr om southwesternstates, called up to' .. bolster 29smaller units , also ordered to ac-tive duty last October at the timeof the Berlin crisis.

The Army said In WashingtonTuesday the men mistakenly call-ed up had beer kept in the readyreserve when they should havebeen assigned to the inactive re-serve. '

The spokesman said first an-nouncement of the release pro-gram came last December whenorders called for the screening ofreservists to determine how manywere on duty because of the mis-take in classification.

The spokesman said the screen-ing turned up 28 officers and 339enlisted men eligible for release.Of that number , 12 officers andnine enlisted men indicated theywanted to remain on active duty ,according to the spokesman.

Supreme CourtTo Hear TowerCase in March

MADISON, Wis. Ifl—Th e Wiscon-sin Supreme Court will hear ar-guments next month on a case in-volving the Chippewa Falls tele-vision tower that figured in aplane crash which killed five men.

Assistant State Atty. Gen. JohnBowers said Wednesday night Ihecase will be before the court onMarch il. The question before thecourt , he said , could be whetherIhe state has jurisdiction over tnetower.

The action was started befo'fethe crash last month which took thelives of five Madison men whentheir light plane struck the lower.The State Aeronautics Commissioncontends the tower was illegal andnever issued a permit for its con-struct ion.

Commission director Tom Jor-dan said the company was noti-fied in September , 19(10 that thetower was too high , that it wasn hazard to flight and interferedwilh navigation aids , in the area,

The itate has based its claimfor jurisdiction on . a state law giv-ing it rcgulalory authority overstructures more than 500 feet abovethe., ground ..or water....surlacc...inthe area.

The aeronautics agency says Ihelaw means* il can ban a towerextending more than R0O , feetabove the lowest point within aradius of one mile of the tower.The company says the law moansSOD feet ebove the highest po int ,Bowers said.

Wisconsin Goods,Services No){Subject to Tax

MADISON , Wis. iff—The Wis-consin Depart ment of Taxation re-versed its field Wednesday and list-ed the general categories of goodsand services not subject to thestate 's new three percent sales tax,

The list of non-taxable itemscame after t he department hadcounted off hundreds of- items coh-ered by the tax. The non-taxablecategories are ;

Groceries and meals , clothing,medicines , cosmetics , gasoline andoil and buildin g materials.

Personal services provided byph ysicians , dentists , lawyers , ac-countants , barbers , beauticians ,cleaners and dyers , landscapegardners are not taxable.

Nol taxable are:11ansporlation lares; real estate

sales; newspapers, lhiiRn/.ines andbooks; monl lily rent of businessplaces and living ' , quarters; safedeposit boxes , nnd parking spaces.

Cleaning materials, such «ssoaps , detergents , cleansers andwaxes; repair service charges ,household ut ilities , such as heal ,light , water and telephone; andfarm business purchases , such asfeed , seed, fertilizer , tools and ma-chinery, except motor (rucks ,

Household fixlures , such ns kitch-en cabinets , bathroom fixture ^ ,electrical fixtures , and furnace ,industrial machines , and plantsand nursery stock.

New WeatherSatellitePut in Orbit

By HOWARD BENEDICTCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla, <AP>

—The United : States put a newweather satellite. Tiros IV, intoorbit today, and its cameras andelectronic equipment , promptlybegan sending back photographsof the earth's cloud cover.

A 90-foot 7 Thpr-Delta locket ,blasting off from this base at7;44 a.m., put up. the 285-poundsatellite.

fa Washington, the NationalAeronautics and Space Adminis-tration announced shortl y before11 a.m. that pictures , of cloudcover had been received, and that"indications are that these aregood."

A spokesman for the spaceagency said pictures were re-ceived at 9:32 a.m , at the WallopsIsland , Va. •-monitoring staEion.

Officials of Radio Corp. ofAmerica said pictures from thesatellite were also received attheir ,:¦¦' Princeton , N.J. station.

A spokesman for NA"A saidthese- ' pictures ,- were mac duringthe satellite's first whirl aroundthe earth. In this initial Dibit ,' . hesaid , the satellite was slightly

would hot be expected to- be asgood as those received duringlater orbits.

The job of putting up the satel-lite , went smoothly.

At a news , conference later ,project official Robert Gray gavethe report that all looked well.He said that radio signals fromthe rocket indicated all threestages performed - normally. Hesaid signals were picked tip fromthe payload by a station in Wink-field , England.

Bob KennedyGiven FriendlyJap Greeting

By CONRAD FIN KOSAKA, Japan (API-Robert F.

Kennedy took his rneet-tle-peoplecampaign to the Japanese coun-tryside today, waving and smilingin good humor both at the thou-sands who cheered him and thefew hundred mustered by theCommunists to jeer him.

"Aren't they a frien-dly peo-ple?" the U.S. attorney generalsaid to a newsman several timesduring the day as farmers, house-wives,- .- . workers and childrenmobbed him enthusiastically.

His enthusiasm was undamp-ened by ' several leftist demonstra-tions that dogged his trail as hecriss - crossed the countrysidefrom Kyoto to Osaka beforeboarding a plane for Tokyo.

He ran into one group of 30Oshouting Communists : outside, atext ile mill in Kyoto. Waving ban-ners and shouting "Kennedy gohome ," the demonstrators surgedtoward the Kennedy- bus , but po-lice swiftly moved in and pushedthem back

Showing his usual calm , the at-torney general got off the bus andwaved to the demonstrators. In-furiated , they closed ranks acrossIhe street and kept up theirchants as Kennedy and his wife ,Ethel , and U.S. Ambassador Ed-win 0. Rcischaticr and his .Japa-nese-born wife spent an hour tour-ing the mill.

On leaving, Kennedy againsm iled and waved as the buspulled away. At this , I tie demon-strators sang: the Communist Internationale.

New Plea Before N-Tests

West UrgesRussia toReconsider

WASHINGTON (TAP) ¦'— ' Th«United States and Britain an-nounced today agreement -onChristmas . Island in the Pacificas a site foi U.S. nuclear atmos-pheric test programs. They alsocalled for an EastAVest foreignministers meeting on disarma-ment.

'. The proposal for 3 foreign min-isters , meeting was made byPresident Kennedy and BritishPrime Minister Harold Macmil-lan to Soviet Premier Khrush-chev.

A joint U.S.-Brirish statementsaid that foreign ministers of thethree powers should meet in ad-vance of the proposed 18-haliondisarmament confe rence openingat Geneva March 14 and shouldalso be ready to participate per-sonally m tlie negotiations.

The aim of this foreign min-isters effort would be to generatea "supreme effort" to bring tli«nuclear arms race under . control ,the joint statement said.

On the military side the twoWestern governments . ' declaredthat the existing state of nucleardevelopment would "justify theWest in v making such furtherseries of nuclear tests as may benecessary for purely nuV'aryreasons. "

An Important factor In the pres-ent state of nuclear develop-rentthe statement said, is the "recentmassive Soviet tests ,"

"The United States and UnitedKingdom governments" the statement then said , "have thereforedecided that preparations shouldbe made in various places nndas part of these the United . King-dom government are makingavailable to the United Statesgovernment the facilities atChristmas Island."

The nsland , wh ich is a hu«eatoll , li«s more than 1,000 milessout h of Hawaii. It is in a lonelysection of the .Pacific.

U.S. officials said that the pro-posal l-o raise the disarmamentmeeting: at Geneva March 14 tothe foreign ministers level wasnot a barrier to g;oing ahead withU.S. nuclear weapons expl osionsin the atmosphere.

President Kennedy indicated ata news conference that he wouldorder such tests before the endof the month.

The Soviet Union concluded »series of about 50 nuclear tests in(Continued on Page 14, Column 4.)

KENNEDY

U.S. Set for BlastsOn Christmas Isle

Kennedy Backs McNamaraIn Dispute Over Censors

WASHINGTON (AP> - Presi-dent Kennedy invoked the doc-trine of executive privilege todayto forbid Pentagon personnel totell a Senate subcommittee thenames of -censors Who alteredtexts of specific anti-Communistspeeches. The chairman promptlyupheld the plea.

"I am convinced this executiveplea applies and the chair sus-tains it ," said Chairman JohnStennis , D-Miss.

Up to the time of the presi-

dential intervention Stennis hadbeen one of those attempting toelicit answers on the point.

Tha only subcommittee mem-ber objecting to the chair 's rulingwas Sen. Strom Thurmond , D-S.C, whose charges that themilitary had been muzzledagainst anti-Communist state-ments set off the . subcommittee 'sstudy.

Thurmond did not appeal Sten-nis ' ruling immediately to (he

subcommittee membership, ncourse which would have beenopen to him.

Secretary of Defense Robert S.McNamara read to the subcom-mittee a letter from the Presidentinvoking the executive privilegeand directing Defense Depart-ment personnel from top . tobottom not to disclose the in-formation about any individualchanges in texts.

The President held it would notbe "in (lie public interest" topermit the subcommittee to ques-tion the censors, and on thisbasis Stennis sustained the chiefexecutive 's right to invoke execu-tive privilege.

Since the days ' of George Wash-ington , Slennis said , neither thecourts nor Ihe Congress ever hasoverriden pleas of executive pri-vilege by a president under theconstitutional system of checksand balances which , he said , pre-vents one branch of government"from imposing its will on theothers. "

Over objections from Thur-mond that the talking should bedone by W ill is D. Lawrence , chiefPentagon censor who was on thest and , McNamara interrupted thequestioning: to read the presiden-tial letter.

Previousl y Stonnis had orderedLawrence ' to answer a questionabout ind iv idua l censorship ac-tions .

The specific question was:Which ' censor made changes intestimony prepared by Army Lt.(Jen. Arthur : G. Trudeau, researchchief , for a House Space Com-mittee hearing.

Embassy ChildrenVisit White House

Guests at Special Opera

By FRANCES LEWINEWASHINGTON i. AP> - Jacque-

line Kenned y wanted to give em-bassy children in Washingtonsomething American to rcmenfberwhen they go back to their home-lands.

They got something no teen-ager could forget,

They saw the While HouseWednesday in party style , sawa special opera performed in theglit tering east ballroom , motPresident and Mrs. Kennedy andeven got a glimpse of CarolineKennedy.

Resides , there was unexpectedexcit ement when the huge feather

headdress of one of the singerstipped info a lighted candle and ;caught fire in Ihe State Dining !Room, where everyone was hav- 1ing refreshments. ,

The occasion was the second in 'a series ' of concerts for young ;people which Mrs. Kennedy is |sponsoring at the While House.

The First Lady invited 2.-J4 leen- :agers froni <!7 embassies'to. see aspeciaL performance of Mozart' scomic opera "Cosi Fan Tutle " bythe Metropoli tan-Opera Studio ofNew York.

•Besides - giving Ihe embassyyoungsters a treat , it was a spe-cial opportunity for t he studiogroup, which includes youngAmerican singers hopin g for :opera careers, j

One of tho performers , Nolan !Van Way of F-vansville, Ind , bada lew anxious moment s, though ,;when his three-foot-high feather- jtopped turban , part of his opera 'cosliinie, ignited on a caudle ' 'as 'he wns leaning over a side table jin the dining room signing auto-graph s, , I

"Quickly "coiiimg lo Hie '"rescue 'was Rudolf Hin g, general man- ,ager of Ihe Metropolitan Opera 'Comp-any, who was serving asm a s t e r of ceremonies , lie.snatched off the turban and thefire was put out . Hut t h e odor of ;burning feathers lingered on. I

Mother Who WonSwimming PoolWill Receive Aid-'ST -f'A'Ut CAP)" — A mother of

in children who won n $1,000 swim-ming pool in a "Queen (or a Day "television program , today won hercase for re insta tement of welfareaid.

Morris l lurs l i , stale commission-er of public welfare , ordered (heKainscy County Well arc Hoard tomake grants of aid lo dependentchildren -again '« Mrs. Klna Sa-wicki nl St. Paul.

She was cut off f rom aid pay-ments of $:i7'J a month last sum-mer after she won the swimmingpool. Cnii nly welfare officials saidIbis lund e her ineligible becauseshe possessed real properly worthmore than $7, .">d( l . She appealedto the Sl ate Welfare Department.

llursli announced his decisionfavoring the mother af ter lie re-ceived iij ipraisals this week fromfour real estate .men.

Tlie highest placed present mar-ket value of her property al $1-1,-0O0, llursli said , but there is in-debtedne ss of about. $11,000 againsti t , Consei n ienlly, lie said , Mrs ,Sawickl ' s equity Is $ti ,(Mio .

Big Communist| Troop MoveIn E. Germany

. R E R U N 'AD—West Berlin po-lice reported a big Communisttroop movement in Knst Ger-many today on the western out-skirls of Ihe city.

The police said t hey saw - B0 to100 army vehicles in a convoymoving from the neighborhood ofthe (l l ienicke Bridge , on the west-ern.. .lLp.-_oL. tbc_Ai .ueric.itL_ sector,along the main road to Potsdam.

The police could not tell wheth-er the troops were Sovi et or East(ierman.

At another pari of the border,guari^ Iron ) West Berlin andKnst Germany faced each otheralmost - toe to lix" wi th loadedweapo ns Wednesday night butfinally executed a mutual with-drawal .

A s pokesman for the West Ber-lin police gave th i s account:

An Kast Gen- ian holder guardat Chau .ssecstrnsse . in the Frenchsector of Berlin , shouted "Na/.iswine !" at (he guard on the Westside.

The East guard then »wurig akick at the West guard , whopunched him in the chest andsent him sprawling The Eastguards rushed up with .subma-chine guns and the West guardslaced them wi th their St. MI guns .

AfttT glaring at each other forseveral minutes , Ihe two groupswithdrew.

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JAYNE AND MICKEY AFTER RESCUE . . .Actress Jayne Mansfield is helped to the dock to-day by her husband Mickey Hargitay after theirrescue from Rose island near Nassau, Bahamas.They spent the night on a tiny coral rock atoll

¦»! ¦¦ »¦¦:.;¦ ¦- ¦ •' :"- - --i-m^i ¦¦¦*mmmws-'' '- *~ :after their speedboat overturned , . then swam ashort distance this morning to the Rose Islandbeach where they were spotted by a Coast Guardplane, Miss Mansfield was hospitalized for treat-ment of shock and exposure. <AP Photofax )

SUPEHIOK , Wis. lift - The man-ager of the Superior airpor t and anairmail stationed at Ihe DuluthAir Force Base were* killed todayin (he crash of a light plane nearHie edge of a runway at RichardJ. Bong; Field.

Killed were Itnl ph K. Ford , 31 ,Superior airport manager , andAirman 2-C Theodore Mcenls , 22 ,stationed at the Duluth Air I'orceBase.

2 Men KilledIn Plane CrashCAPK CANAVERAL , Fla , <AP )

—The at tempt to launch astronautJohn H, Glenn Jr. into orbit.around the earth has been de-layed at. least another day, untilFeb. 14. to allow more time toget his Atlas .booster rocketready,

No further problem developedin the big booster , but official sdecided lo take an extra day toprepare Ihe Atlas for the new at-tempt, This included a ful l scale¦fueling test for 'the vehicle Tues-day.

Orbital FlightSet for Feb. 14

SIGNS GUEST BOOK . . . U . S, Attorney General Robert Ken-nedy is shown on his knees as he s'gneri the guest book nt (heKawashima Silk Weaving plant in Kyoto , Japan. He is using aJapanese brush. Dark , object on table is an ink bowl. Kennedy spenttwo days visiting Osa ka , Nara and Kyoto , the Industrial and cultur-al center of Japan. < AP PholcUx via radio from Tokyo)

COUNTERFEITERS' WORK ... Secrest Serv-ice agents arrested ' fiVe persons and broke $500,-000 counterfeiting ring operatin g from a ram-shackle house in Dickinson , N. D. Shown aboveare uncut bogus bills, box of rejects sitting on

homemade camera used for copying and off-set printing plates used on $3,500 stolen printingpress. Arrests were made in .four states. (APPhotofax)

FEDERAL FORECAST 'WINONA AN I) VICINITY—Vari -

able cloudiness and warmer lo- -.night and Friday. Low tonight I0 I7.,high Friday 20','.r> .

LOCAL WEATHEROffic ia l (ihsei 'vntnins fur the 2-1

hours ending al 12 in. today;Maximum , li ) : m in imum , —;) ;

noon , H; precipitation, trace.AIRPOR T WEATHER

(Nort h Contral Observations)Max. temp. M at 2 p i n , Wed-

nesdny ; min. -7 at ft am . today;Id a t noon today, Other luionrcndiiu-is— Overcast skies ' at H .lHii ) -feel; vis ibi l i ty 12 miles , wind froniIhe vast at six miles per hour;barometer 30 . 00 and fal l ing; hu-midity 67 percent.

WEATHER

¦'¦¦ ¦;/ Cloudy andWarmer tonight

Arid Friday

West ririgspofBabiejTo AdulthoodBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Thf: growing ' safety of '« baby'slife; the quest ion of whether hu-man birth is oDly 'n half-way pointto readiness fpr. ) ife ;: and: a studyof blood, for 7.1000 ¦:' mothers-art•ubjects for focus on health: :

For the ionxious, ' prospectivemother and father, the birth ofa first child is probably the mostimportant, exciting milestone inlife,- - v : - : ' ,".7 ¦ ' - .¦;• 7- . . ^ '- ' . . ' :'> ". :• :: They might - calm th«rnselyeswith ."this : Since man'¦'• first ap-peared , on (he earth some . 600,000years or more ago. , some.' 77 bil-lion babies have . been r born 7 .

"Until rteer*Hy, •» Irtst • halfof aU babies ' born died beforereach ing maturity, '' says the Pop-ulation Reference Bureau., - 'Man 's, quest : for some?7formulato avert death included magic, in-cantations and prayers, but noneof th ese had shown any efficacyagainst the major killers. Then,with the .advance of modern sci-ence, the. mortality pattern of amillion years was broken ;"

Now, the bureau points out * . 95out of every loo babies born InWestern, industrial society live tobecome adults:.

For some scientists, the ideathat the gestation period for manis 267 days is only half the story.Dr.'- ' ".'Ashley. - Montagu , PrincetonUniversity anthropologist , says thehuman baby is ushered into , the¦world before he . is really readyfor it. In fact , birth may be thehalfway point ;

White ) t tokei thm inf ant stmtS67 days to develop In the womb,it-s about 267 days after birth be-fore the -child learns to craw!, :. Montagu , feels that ' the humanInfant has tf>: be born when be is,or he would hot be able to beborn .at . all. The infant ' s brainneeds only increase slightly tomake passage through the birth,canal impossible; '7' 7 v

In fact the baby 's "growth ; rate-is such that , it .'jtist . can 't contititteiriside the womb It must continueoutside. ;

This natura l progression^ Mon-tagu says, is 7 reflected in therhotTier, too. At birth , the motherneeds to care and support herchild; Her whole body is ready to>minister, to the infant's needs.

Yet mother and child are. Iso-lated from each other in manjrmodern hospitals, just when theyneed each other most.

Comments Montagu: "Wt liv»In the logical denouncertient of themachine age when no>t only burthiagsvare made by machine, buthuman bein gs are turned out tobe as machihe:like as we. camiriaJie them.": Are there secret viruses in aneitpcctaht mother 's blood . thatcause mental retardation or someother brain or nerve disorder Inher yet unborn child?

To find the answer , scientistj atthe. National Institutes of Healthhave begun a study to sample th«blood of more ihon 75 .000 expectvant mothers . The study will cove*15 . medical centers across theUnited States. Pregnant womenend their babies will be studied.It -will last some 10 years.

Samples ; will be checked f»iviruses that range in effect fromthe common' cold ' to polio anddeath,

Fargo TaxiDriver Robbed

-FARGO , N ,D. (AP ) - A Fargoca b driver was robbed and fofcedto drive to Alexandria , Minn.,Tuesday night .

Fargo police said K arl Branner-man answered a call at a tavernand picked ¦ iip a man , about 40.

The man asked lo be taken , toRabin . ' 'Minn ' ., - about nine milessoutheast , of here. HranneirrianM»id when the cab entered Sabsn ,the man Wild htm he was nrni ednnd Braonerman would have todrive him- ' to' Minnea polis. - . ;

He then took ' ' the . ' company mon-ey, from lirannerman . but left 1 hedriver 's -money untouched .

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DKTliOtT i .v— Gern-RC Romneylndicnted Wednesday if he runs for ¦Uie Hc|iul )licaii nominatio n forpiQvernor of . MiclVi R aii he will re- 'f-i fj n ai rH)th~prFS1dent and chair- 1man of American Motors Corp. j

Speaking lo AMC' s annual stock-holders rncelir.R Ilonmey said alone point ;

"Tlie only reason I have serious-ly enlerliiineil Uie stiHH eslion tl iatI miRli t devote my ful l time " to ;public service is thai I know jAmerican Motors is in Kovnd ;shape." ¦ , i¦ !

Wisconsin has nenrl y lO mil lion j<'0i 'fls of sound wood in the sU-ms \o\ cnll trees now growing in the . 1

¦lorests. I

Romney Will LeaveAmerican Motors IfHe Runs for Governor

Schwinn BicyclesSALES & SERVICE

~njsIiF~Bl CYCLES

ALL SIZES I

IKOL.TE.lf 5 STORE402 Mankato Ave. Phon* StUS

Mrs. Eastman611111Lawyer $6,666

ROCHESTER, Minri.—Insurancepayments totaling $ab,0Od havebeen, approved in Olrftsted CountyDistrict Court- in settlement ofclaims arising from an automo-bile accident -in which the ¦ Rev.John Eastman, Lewiston Presby-terian Ch«rch pastor, and his sixchildren Were killed near DoverNov . 18, i960. , 'v ' ' ; .

The pastor's widow, Mrs, DonnaEastman, now a istudeht at WinonaState College, will receive ;$13ilOGof , the settlement with MutualService Casualty Co., St. Paul,which issued the liability policy onthe car..

HER ATTORNEYS — that ii theattorneys for the trust — will re-ceiyev $6,666. They are Frank S.Newhouse and Richard Plunkett ofRochester. 7 . ¦'.. . '¦¦'¦

The attdrn% for the insurancecompany was William Hull of Wi-nona, He does not participate, in 'theapproved-settlement: 7

The balance of $228 — after thepayment to Mrs, Eastman and theattorneys — represents other courtcosts. -:¦¦':¦. 7 ' -- > ¦ • ' . 77

Mrs. Eastman had sought.dam-ages totaling $150,000 in six suitsbrought in District Court in Roch-ester. - ¦,'"'vTtie suits, all filed l>y the trustee

for Mrs, Eastman; ' were settledshortly after trial . before a jurybegan last month, The payrnentof the $20,000 by the insurancecompany was approved this weekby; District Judge Arnold Hatfieldin Rochester. ¦¦ '

MRS. EASTMAN still has aclaim pending before the Marine^sota lridustrjaT Commission. In thisaction "she says that her husbandwas engaged : in his .duties as aminister when the accident .oc-curred; The;widow states that Rev.Eastman: and the children weredriving to another rninister's.hometo discuss church matters when theaccident happened: Mrs. Eastmanwas attending a school play thatevening." Mrs. Eastman and adaughter born after the accidentlive at Lewiston. ..7 A: breakdown , of the .settlementallowed $4,500 for 7 the death ofPamela, $3,000 for Thomas, $3,-000" for Carol , $3,000 for James,$3,500 for Mary, and $3,000 7 forJohn.. Attorneys for the plaintiff took

one-third of the settlement in each

Leaders NamedFor TfrGouniyHospital Drive¦:' WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) -The fund campaign for Tri-County,Memorial Hospital. Whitehall, hasprogressed with the appointment ofsection chairmen -, and divisionleaders, a kickoff meeting of the"pattern gifts" committee, and ameeting with 18 area clergymen.7 Section chairmen: for generalsolicitation arer Knut Amble,Whitehall; '. Reynolds Tomter andRobert Hanson , Pigeon Falls; Le-land Chenoweth, Blair, and JtobertOfsdahl , Ettrick.

Division leaders who are .enlist-ing team captains, with a goal of400 volunteer workers in the hos-pital service area ',. so far. includeArnold Hanson, Howard Ackley,Roger Back , Ervin Hamisch, Don-ald Ackley, Rayder Amundsori,Ben Erickson, E. O. Runnestrand ,J. Arthur Johnson , Roy Carlson ,Keil Blank , Edmund Woychik, CarlNordhagen , Donald S. Johnson ,Willie A. Johnson, Stanley Tro-vatten and Dr. L. L. Patterson , inthe Whitehall , Pigeon Falls andEttrick areas.

E, J. Colliton and C. AndrewKuhn; . Whitehall , are chairmanand associate chairman respective-ly of the "pattern , gifts" committee,which is putting on an advancecampaign for larger gifts , designedto set a pattern ". for the generalcampaign. The comrhit'tce has be-gun soliciting some 100 prospects.

Whiteh all committee membersare Kenneth D. Berdan , H. D.Briggs, Harold Everson, NormanFriske, Robert Gauger, John Q.Gilbertson , Robert G-uinn, HiramHegge, Dan Hendcrleitcr , Dr. S.B. Ivers, . William A. Johnson , P.M. Paulson , Lyle Pavek , EyvindPeterson , Tracy O, Rice, Dr. N. SiSimons, Kenneth Swenson ahd Dr.E. O. Wilbcrg.

Thurman Fremstnd is chairmanof this group at Pigeon Falls,with assistance from Arthur Dahl ,Ray Hagen , Henry Paulson , Wen-dell Hageiii Richard Hoff , HarryGnlstad and Wil helm Ringlien.

Organization elsewhere in the.area is tinder way. ~\-/

Pastors were •n 'skefl " by '~FrcdGardner , Whitehall , general chair-man, to acquaint their congrega-tions with the proposed $550,000hospital plans , The present hos-pital , which will be vised for con-valescents, draws patients fromTrempealeau , Buffalo and Jacksoncounties.

Steori^^CANTON, Mum (Special) -- The HeV, and Mrs, James Bruton ,

who adopted an abandoned Korean' child last year, are flying toKorea next week to aiiopt anbtiier orte^

They've been trying to adopt this abandoned child T-- a boy —since last November through the Minnesota Department of PublicWelfare. Unsuccessful; they now; are going to Korea to adopt: thechild abroad. '7 - '7 .»:- ¦::¦¦

Canton and Scotland Presbyterian churches have gnanted theminister a vacation. He and. his wife-wilHeave irom the Rochesterairport Monday and make overseas stops at Honolulu and Tokyo;.They'll arrive in Korea Thursday, Korean tune:

The baby which they >wish , to adopt has been given the nameRobert Scott He'll be one year old ^esday. He was abandonedon the steps of Seoul City Hail last September and taken to theHolt orphanage where he has been cared for since. 7

Their- daughter, :Deborah Kay, was av year old Jan; , 18.She too was abandoned in Seoul and taken to. the Holt orphanage.The Brutons adopted her by proxy under a : federal . 1 aw whichexpired June 30. A second law was passed placing alien childrenunder state welfare and few children have entered the countrysince: ;- -; ' '¦- '-. •: "¦:. ¦ .'•'¦""¦¦ '¦¦' ¦"'" .-

Debbie arrived iri Portland, Ore.,. June 3 on an airplanevcarrying 97 Korean babies; The Brutons met her there.

While they are in Korea, Debbie will be cared for by friends.

Triple Tax onWistonsinites inMinnesota Jobs

Wiscbnsinites who work in Min-nesota are'.- going to puffer a newblow to their.paychecks.

The . state of Wisconsin wantsa chunk of their weekly earnings.That's oh top of the bite takenby Minnesota and the portion goingto the federal government.: The7 Wisconsin resident probab^

ly will 'get at, least a portion ofhis Wisconsin tax Contributionsback—but it's going as an invol-untary loan, to; the state,, extend-ing over a period of about a yearwith no interest, , under, the pro-gram set up by the 1961 Wiscon-sin legislature:' .;¦

A Wisconsin iax department of-ficial in Madison said Wednesdaythat Minnesota employers. -. shouldwithhold Wisconsin: income taxesfrom the 'checks of their ..employeswho live in Wisconsin , even thoughthe checks are earned in Minne-sota and already subject to bothMinnesota and federal withholdingtaxes.;- '¦¦-• .'..'¦¦ ' ¦¦- •:

The .' /withholding.' schedule thatwent into effect in Wisconsin Feb.1 is stiffer than that of Minne-sota, which , has been in force sincelast Oct: 71. '

Using a Wisconsin man with awife and two children—or a totalof four exemptions—as an exam-pie, the amounts : to be withheldby his Minnesota: employer are: ;

At $100 a -week, $1.70 for- Min-nesota, $2 for Wisconsin ano! $12:48for the federal government.

•At $200 a week, $6.50 for Min-nesota, $7.40 for Wisconsin and$33.05. for the federal government.

The tax bitej are much moresevere for people who claim noexemptions—married women, forinstance, who live in Superior butwork in Duluth stores, hospitalsor. offices. Such an individualwould pay 80 cents to Minnesota;$1.10" to Wisconsin and $10:69 toUncle Sarri from . a weekly salaryof $50, leaving $37.41 in her payenvelope, It's possible that shecould draw upwards of $35 a week,tax free, in unemployment com-pensation if she had enough workcredits piled up, besides saving adollar or two , on transportation.

The Wisconsin tax official point-ed out a path—marked by redtape—around the double withhold-ing, problem. A Wisconsinite whoworks in . Minnesota can write aletter to the Wisconsin tax com-missioner, John Grohouski , a skfor exemption from Wisconsinwithholding taxes on the groundtliat the salary from -which thetaxes are withheld is earned en-tirely in Minnesota and alreadysubject to Minnesota withholdingtaxes. ' •

A letter of .verification from theMinnesota employer should ac-company th*> request. The Wiscon-sin. tax official said action prob-ably could be taken on the requestwithin 30 days. • -. . -

But, he cautioned , there prob-ably would be some investigationto determine whether the Wiscon-sinite is . delinquent in any paststate income taxes. If so, the ex-emption from withholding probab-ly* would be turned down , he said.

In any case, the Minnesota em-ployer is expected to continue towithhold the Wisconsin employe'stax payments until the exemptionauthorization is received. Further-more, tho Wisconsin tax officialsaid , there is machinery in Wis-consin law under which the statecan proceed against the Minne-sota employer if he does any bus-iness in Wisconsin , or even in Min-nesota courts , if need be, to col-lect? withheld taxes."Both 'Wisconsin and" Minnesotalegislatures wrote into their 196LinVome tax lows provisions thatallow residents of one state tocharge off against the income taxesof their home states any taxes Im-posed on their earnings in the oth-er state.

A large display wlndoy afKalmes Tire Service, 116 W.2nd St., was cracked Wednes-day night, apparently as th«result of a loud sonic boom

:-.':&¦ -ur 7;40 D.LBernard T. Kalrrrts, owner,

said the shock wave biew openseveral windows and doors in-the building, besides cracking .

7 * display window :on the westside. Ameninr ofrdamage wasnot estimated this morning.

Kalmes called firemen be-cause at first he thought itsounded li!<e an explosion.

The Wine House at Bluff :Siding, W is., also reported a

' damaged window, one of thethree weakened by . gunshot .holes through it several weeksago. the:unsolved shooting leftholes in three .windows. Be-cause of the size and difficul-ty of replacing the windows,the holes' were temporarilytaped over. One was crackedadditionally by Hie.. boom.

Softie fjoorn CracksWindows iri Stores

Pressure onSenators forTaconite Aid

-DULUTH, Minn. (AP)-Minne-sota's two DFL senators, visitingthe Iron Range today, faced ademand that , they either supportthe taconite . amendment or urgeCongress to control imports of for-eign iron ore.: '. ' :- :.:..:.

The challenge was. laid downWednesday night by RepublicanGov. Elmer L. Andersen in 'ai talkto: the West Duluth IndustrialClub. - ¦. '.: .' .

."It is too much to ask that theunemployed people of .northeast-ern Minnesota support senatorsand congressmen: who oppose thetaconite amendment but keep on¦voting to let iron ore come iiithat keeps jobs . from their ownpeople," said Andersen.

His address came as Sens. Hu-bert Humphrey and Eugene Mc-Carthy, with Rep, John Blatnik;D-Minn., moved into the range toexplain to the 'jobless there whatthe government was:doing t° bet-ter conditions in the mining cen-ter. ¦ .

The governor said there wereonly two choices ..— the taconitemeasure or import quotas. Hesaid he favored , the: amendmentbecause it would bring moreplants into the state and boostemployment.

In his talk , Andersen listed fourpoints:

Fast tax writeoffs for taconitefacilities ; state law changes toprod firms into developing unusedtaconite reserves; demanding im-mediate payment of federal in-come taxes on forei gn branches ofAmerican steel firms , and denialof depletion allowances on foreignoperations where firms neglect do-mestic developments.

Even as Andersen spoke, Hum-phrey announced that he had in-troduced legislation to providespeedy tax writeoffs for industrialfirms which locate plants hi areasof chronic unemployment , ''.such asnortheastern Minnesota.

The bill would permit manufac-turers to amortize for tax needsthe cost of any new plant andequipment in five years instoadof the longer period now required.Humphrey said Blatnik was intro-ducing similar legislation- in theHouse.

Man Chargedil lillHart Creamery

A Winona man charged with sec*ond degree grand larceny in thetheft of $86 from Hart CreameryAssociation Monday waived brell-miliary examination in municipalcourt this morning ahd was bounddver~t» District -Court..under $500bail. ' ,;/,- '"'V. ' 7 . '; '

Robert Vick, $6. 423; E.-.- 3rd St.,was taken to county jail to awakappearance it? District Court. :'

VICK WAS arretted as the re-sult of a two-day investigation con-ducted , by Sheriff George Fort aft-er he was infornied Tuesday morn-ing that someone* had stolen somemoney from the association's cashregister between: Jan. 30 and Tues-day...

¦' .- ':- ¦. ¦•' ¦ " ' ..; .. .777 ; 77 .7Sheriff Fort saidf Vick has sign-

ed a statement in .which he admitstaking the $86. Also missing fromthe' .:':. 'cash.:; register ' were threeChecks , one for. $3,000 and othersfor $52^50 and 514.63. Vick admit-ted , talcing these checks with theintention of cashing" therri,, but hesaid he later, fore them up alongHighway 43 between .Hart and Wi-nona. :. ' v '.*¦' ¦. '' " '

Vick left quite a few other checksin the cash register , Sheriff : Fortsaid , in addition to $364.51 in cash.Vick . told the: sheriff he , left therest of the money so no one: wouldnotice some was missing.; ;

FORT REP&ftTED that accord-ing to Vick's Statement, Vick enrtered the creariiery building Mon-.day between 2:30 and 3 p.m. whenno . oh^ else was around , pried openthe cash: register with a screw -driver and took• ¦: the money andchecks. . ' 7 . ' •'- ' . .. '

Vici was at the creamery be-cause his business is hauling milkthere Mr area farmers. .SheriffFort recognized his name-amongthe persons'who had been at •thacreamery, he said, because Vicihad served time before in countyjail for- a smaller, theft .

The sheriff arrested Vick at hishome about 10 :30 a.m. :\Vednesda;yand questioned him several, hoursuntil Vick admitted the theft .

Pf izer andWatkins-AWM mpPens Nom

Impending formal acquisition otWatkins Products; by Chas: SPfizcrtt Co.—joined no\y only by. a gch-Ueman's agreement: by teleplioii^has spurred some wild rumorsabout Winona 's . . internationallyknown firm and;other local con-cerns.: ' - -/-

¦ ; ; . ' • .7. '# For example, does this meantbe end of the Watkins, man? .OneoffiCial' replied , "Of course not ,why do: you suppose they 're buy-ing lis?" There are about . 15;000of? them. ¦•'. ¦' .•• What will the new name .be?

Same, answer: :' ::. ¦• What about VVinona National& Savings Bank and Owl Motor

Co.? What's going to happen to7thcrn? Nothing, as a result of thissale to Pfizer. Although controlled \by "the^King family, they're; nn- 1related to ; Watkins ; Products. Inc. 1

IF PFIZER follows Its; pan- m •iri; other, recent acquisition? in the jWatkins purchase, Watkins Prod- 'uc'tSi . Inc.,will become a division jof Pfizer , whose ; headquarters re- ;cently were moved from Brooklyn"to New ' York City. " ' 7;

Pfizer; has the J: fi. Jloerig Di-¦'jvision , for -example; for. manufac- jtore of vitamins and tranquilizers, iiWnong other things, and Mprton-Withcrs Chemical Division, for pe- itroleum products. • ' i

Watktn s, as proposed in theagreement, will be acquired by- ahexchange of stock helwcen Pfizerand; Watkins. This is typical . -cor-porate procedure for acquisitions.

ALMOST ALL of the VVariclnsstock is held by Mrs: Grace W.King, secretary, her son , ,E. L.Iving Jr., the president, and herdauRhter, Mrs: Mari<>l King, a -vieepresident. : Minority stockholdersare Mrs. ; D.; C. Alexander of tliiscity.;the former Maude King, andher daughter , Mrs. Marth a Alexan-der Bradley of Palm "Beach, Fla.. ' WTiether all of the stock wil I beexchanged ¦ is ' riot' known, althoughthis would be the normal procc-.dure. .7v; ' .7.7.v ' ¦'¦" :'' : . -7 :'

. The; Watkins stock has neverbeen offered publicly,, arid there-fore, little is known about th« fi-nancial affairs of this direct sell-ing company. '

Chemical Week ; ah industrialpublication,. last August estimatedits annual: sales at $60 to $65 mil-lion a year. Estimated Pfizer salesfor 1961 were $280 million up from$26a million in i960.

Some of the financial affairs ofthe- company will become knowi-edge when Pfizer meets reportingrcquirem<enfs of the Securities Ex-change Commission .following: for-mal exchange of the stock.

MRS. KING is the Widow of thelate E., L. King Sr„. second ;presi-dent of trie company and daughterof the late J. R. . Watkins , founderof the company.; Late last month -, when , she con-firmed rumors of possible sale ofthe company to Pfizer , Mrs. Kingsaid that "there is '.absolutely ¦'¦ nointention : on our part or Pfizer !sto move operations Of the companyout of Winona. The sale willmerely involve an exchange of$tock and have nb effect on per-sonnel or employment in the com-munity. Indeed , Pfizer: is actuallyplanning ;an expansion of: opera-tions in Winona;..

We feel sure that this actionwould be in the best interests ofthe community, and: the King fam-ily expects to remain closely as-sociated ; with each:" • ". • :

ALTHOUGH employment mightnot be. affected, soirie^ executive;changes might occur , alth ough spe-culation on that seemed prematuresince the transaction has not beenformally consummated. .:

Mrs.. King said yesterday "thatagreement had been reached forsale of company to. Chas. PfizerCo., Inc., subject to necessary ap^provals by boards of directors ofboth.companies," ,v; John E. McKeen , president andchairman of the, Pfizer board , andother principal officers haire beenhere twice,.the week of Jan. 22ndand last week. They are expectedhere again next week. In:: therneantirne other Pfizerv staff peo-ple have been here and were dueagain^foday.;: ¦¦' •,

PFIZER STOCK closed at AV/aon the New York Stock ExchangeWednesday, up:l?4- on 10,200 shares.Announcement of the Watkins ac-quisition was made af ter , the close.

: Pfizer has 60,000 shareholdersand 18,000 employes. -

Joseph F. Rhoderick , managerof the TvVinona Industrial Devel-opment Association, was not in thecity today to comment on the ad-ven t Of Pfizer. 7

AAefcur^y to GlinriblQver 20 Friday

The . weather word:V • V a r i a b i ''e. .'- cloudiness andwarmer : tonighi and Friday.'- ¦'-.:. -• Southwest winds; with a max-

imum ¦ velocity of 10-20 miles anhour. ' •. -.¦ ' .¦¦- . ' ,•i,- :' -A: temperature low of 10-15tonight and a high Friday of 20:25.

For Saturday the prediction in-dicated temperaturesv would be alittle ; above, no.rrnal with ..little ifany precipitation. ; ' ;'

AFTER REACHING a hish of19 Wednesday afteriioon , the ther-riionieter dropped . to —3 duringthe night but was tip to 8 at nobri•today: -"'7'. A Jight snowfell shortly, afternoon Wednesday - djd little riiorethan cover the ground but it wasthe 25th7 snowfall of the ^ year andbrought "the total to 29 inches.. 7 .

Three snowfalls were recordedin November when 6.5 inches fell;8 in;December with the total meas-uring 20.4, 10 in. January but theamount Was only . 2 inches and 3in February with the amount onlyan inch ,- ' ¦¦''

A YEAR,AGO today Wirvona hada high of 42 and a low of 10. All-time high for Feb. 8 was 48 in1925 'and ' the'low —26 in 1899. Meanfor the past ¦'24 ' " hours', was 8. Nor-mal for. this- day is 18,,

The . highway departments inMinnesota and Wisconsin reportedall ;highvvays in .good winter driv-ing condition .with the exceptionof icy spots .iii shaded areas andori. some hills.; v .¦ i2xtrerncly cold weather clamped

its' grip on Northern Minnesotawith International Falls registering33 below and Bemidji —3i). It was—22 at Duluth and —16 at St.Cloud: ';

Sdiitheni sections of the statefared better with Rochester havingonly —3 after , a: high , of 14 Wed-nesday. It was —5 at La Crosseafter a , Wednesday peak of 17.Most reporting stations had; cloudyweather although ¦oniy vEdmonton ,Canada , reported snow.

Below , zero temperatures contin-ued to. be the rule in WISCONSIt*Wednesday as Park Falls report -ed a nighttime; low of —25. •

Other 7 minimums were E n .uClaire —23,. VVallsau and Supcrior-Puluth ' —22, , Green Bay ;> 11.Madison and Lone Rock —A,,Be-loit-Rocklord zero, Milwaukee ; 3above and Racine 5 above.

DAYTIME HIGHS varied from22 -at Lone Rock to 3" below atSuperior - Duluth . Bcloit - Rockfordbad 20, Racine 18, Madison aridMilwaukee ; 15, Eau Claire: '"llvGreen. Bay. 10, \Vausau 9 and ParkFalls ' 7; ' ' ¦•::¦ - .¦

Very light snow feir over thesouthern sector but g e n er a 1amoiints : were negligible. ."¦. . .'¦¦"¦

Temperatures at midmorning to-day ranged from —21 at Wausaii to6. above at Beloit-Rockford!. Homestead; Fla., had Wednes-:

day 's national high of 81; while In-ternational , Falls, Minn., was thismornings' coldest spot with 33 be-

•' lOW'v '.: -': . • . -• " ";' '."'- :"?,

IN THE : NORTHEAST; the frig-id air; dropped readings to nearly30 below in Maine. Coldest spotswere Millinocket, w-ith —26 andOld Town, with a --14. reading.Temperatures in upstate; NewYork were mostly, zero to 10 abov e.Four inches of fresh snow fell inWatertown. 7

It was —29 in Marquette , Mich;;—25 in Peilstpn ; Mich: , arid —20in Eau Claire: Wis.. Outside the cold belt , increas-ingly mild and moist air .from theWest arid Southwest brought warm:er weather arid caused widespreadprecipitation during the night inmany areas. 7

Woman CeisDrop Wilh RifleOn getting Tom

MIL-WAUKEE im-Mrs, VirginiaWolfe :, who said she' had bunted inCanada and "AVOH some moneyaround shooting galleries ," pickedup her. .22 caliber rifle and got thedrop on. a Peeping . Torn.

When Patrolman Richard Red-man arrived, he asked Mrs.' Wol feto put away the rifle: She did , aridrelated that the , window-peeper"went flying over, a snowbank ariddisappeared. ''" .'- .

Working from :a description , of-ficers picked up Richard Schraven ,25, who appeared , before ; JudgeChrist Seraphim Wednesday on adisorderly ' conduct charge. Tliecase "was continued while Schravenunderwent- a cOurt-ordered mentalexamination.

"The : neighborhood v had beenalerted about a peeper and we'dbeen trying to nail him for a longtime," said Mrs. Wolfe , a 38-year-:old divorcee who is employed inan industrial plant: "I -work lateand I didn 't want to meet him irithe alley without my rifle,"

Mrs. Wolfe said she looked outof her window Tuesday night andsaw a man looking in the first-floor window of the .house nextdoor. "She grabbed her gun andwent into action after telling herroommate. Miss Patti Palmer , 311,to call police,

Mrs. Wolfe said she went to thealley and waited for a bus t> pass,iisinp the noise it made to coverher approach on the iinan.

"I flashed a light iii his face andthen on the gun just so he didn 'tthinK it was some broom pole ,"she said. Then she herded himdown the alley to Officer Redman.

Search Continues forPigeon Falls Youth

PIGEON FALLS. Wis.-Thc 19-year-old Pigeon Falls farm ^ boywho was involved in an auto ac-cident east of Blair Oct. 13 stillis ¦ missing ;

Search is continuing for ItobertNelson , . 8 foot ,.!, 150 pounds , sonof Mr . chid Mm, Palmer Nelson ,Osseo Ilf . 3. . They live alum t nmile north of Pigeon Falls, Hob-,ert went lo town that night andhasn 't been seen pincc.

THE ACCIDENT In which heapparently was involved happen-ed on County Trunk S near thellcriniin Znstrow farm. A 1!H!>auto with Wyoming license pl ateswont out. of control and plungedinto a di lch full of water.

.lames LnLuna , I'J, reportedlyfrom New York , crawled from thevehicle , stopped n passerby, andnski'd for help. He was take n tothe Whitehall hospital. He was re-leased the following morning liftertelling authorities that ono oC bis

companions was Robert Nelson ,Pigeon Falls. He did not identifythe other,

Later it was learned that thethird .person iii the car was '.EdRlckert of Trump Couloc nearBlair. He told authorities th at hehad been in the car (rom Taylorbut left it nt the intersection eastof the ernsh scene.

The Wyoming , cur was registeredin Nelson 's name. He ha d workedout west Inst summer and return-ed only three or four weeks be-fore . Beyond that almos t nothingis known about the boy ' s connec-tion with the accident, ,

SEARCH HAS continued by hisparents ; Ed Brudos , representingan insurance company having apolicy on his life , ami the ' sher-iff ' s department. His father thinkshe may have been inju red , wan-dered from the scene , ¦and madehis way elsewhere , u victim ofamnesin. No clues were found ntthe water hole.

Barn, Silo BurnAl Independence

; INDEPENDENCE. Wis. (Spe-cial)—A barn and silo Were: de-stroyed in a fire Wednesday noonon the Clarence Prokop farm abouteight miles northwest of Indepen -dence. A second silo under con-struction also burned,

Nine of the 17 head of. •¦cattleand about half of the estimated160 young pigs and sows that werehoused in the barn were rescued.

; Mr. and Mrs. Prokop were notat "home when fire broke out. Mrs..fohn liolslad , who lives on <in ad-joining farm , saw smoke . comingfrom the hayloft at 11 a.m. Shecalled Mrs. Prokop, who was ata neighbor 's, and Independencefiremen were notified. .

The upper part of the 110- hy ;'.0-fo 'ot barn and its walls had burn-ed through when firemen arrive 1.The Whitehall tank trunk aided infighting the fire ,

Cause of the blaze has not beendetermined. An estimat e of theloss was not available,

Lincoln DayDinner Monday;Woman to talk

Mrs," " ' ¦.John :• -W. '. •• ..- .Monty,. 'Edina ,Minn ,, :3rd •¦District . ..Reptibiicanchairw oman., wilt address . -th e an-nual • 'Vinona County- RepublicanCorn.mj tt^e 's Lincoln Day dinner. at7 p.pi. ' ¦M (inday ':'a'f HW H -VVinona: : . .,. •-¦Fred¦¦.Schilling . is '¦¦dinner- chair-man.7. H- Tt,.' Hnrd " w'jIK 'bc ioast-

JTIavt:c'£7 Steve Ed-stfoiri will playthe| organ. T'. h eColl,ejie , .. of SaintTeresa 'sT r'i p i eTrio wili . sing un-der the,, directionbf Si.ster Marie,Q,S;F:'VV

¦¦.'•¦¦¦ - ' ¦ ¦ '

7 The public 'i$7 in-vited. Tickets.areavailable f r o 'miho : Winon a Coun-¦

«¦' •¦ ¦ ":»i- ».¦• ¦' ' ty R c P u b t . i-, Mrs-W* .-" c - a7n Committea

members and. at the door. 'Mrs.wMooty w-a?. ' graduated in

1940 , from Washburn .Hi^h :-School,M'in'neapolis .- where she was a val-edict 'prJiiriy .ln; . lfW .3 the was grad-uated siimma curiv iaiidc at; 19 fromthe, University of Minnesota whereshe received a bachelor- of -sciencedegree. The . fp' llo .wing . year , shewas gracli'.ate<r frrj ni •'. KatherineGibbs - School ,• ¦'Chicago , wherie :sherecei-ved a .certificate of 'merit' .'oncofripletion of a business course;

From : 19-14-457 she was secre-tary :to : ; the . .president, - . MutualTrust Life;.-insurance ' Co,,-Chicago;was .; in; the advertising and homeservice departments , ; G e li. e r a lMills , Minneapolis , :. ii) 15-4fi; wassercretary. to president , Gariible-Robinson Cq^VMinneapplis ,- 1946-49,and fro m .1949-52 headed tlie whole-sa'e department of Augsburg . Pubrlishitig . . House, 'Minneapolis, ' -- thefirst woman to hold siich ,a postin the religious publishing field , v

Her husband , is first vice chair-rnan of the: Minnesota RepublicanParty. She has been 3rd Districtchai rworiian since 1959. In 1958 shewas chairman ; of the district Re-publ ican 'convention, tlie first wpmran of. either party in Minnesota topreside at' .a district pol itical cori-ventiori. She and her husband bivathieve young sons. •'.

Minnesota BlueShield ExecutiveExplains Program

ST. PAUL . CAP): — The execu-tive director , of .Minnesota: BlueShield said today his organizationalready has a medical - surgicalplan for . the aged in effect thatclosely; resembles a proposal out-lined .-recently- . . . 'by a; nationalgroup!

Thomas . Pato n said MinnesotaBhae Shield's plan provides medi-cal-surgical . coverage fair/personsoyer 65r at a rate of $2.95 permonth — if the indivirlual ' s in-cprne . is less than . S2.40O and thafamily's below .$3,6fl07 :

The proposal for a national metf-Ica 1-su'rgicai'- plan to cover seniorcitizens was outlined recently bythe National Association of BlueShield Plans , a trad e organizationfor alt Blue Shield plans,'- and re-ceived approval of tlie AmericanMedical Association , Paton said.

Neither plan includes hospitalcare costs, Paton said .

Putting the national plan intooperation now will be up/to theboard of directors of the variousstate Blue Shield plans.;

"Historically," Paton said, "Min-nesota Blue Shield has cooperatedwith national programs. Whetherthis will he another - instance ofcooperation 7 wil l be u p . to ourboard. ".

3Ie noted the national ; proposalwould give care to elderly personswith an income ' -of ?2 ,40O or lessand . -to couples with an income ofunder $4 ,000 for ahout $3: permonth.

Fines and CostsSet at Whitehall

WHITEHALL , Wis. i Special > -Trempealeau ' 'County court caseshoard by Jtidgt? A. ,' L; TwesmeWednesday were:

Pyrl Storsyen, F.l lr ick' . chargedw it Ii ' d r i v i n g j ifter revocatiiiii .pleaded gui l ty ami was; sentciicedto n $50 f ine or . 20 <l:iys in jail.

K . r n e s t Sura , Independents ,pleaded gu i l ty to ' dr iv ing with ahi gh degree . of ii(' ;'li»enci * and n ,usentenced, to a ?25 line or 15 d. iysin -jn i l r , : ¦: ,¦- . .- ¦..

Alvin Kin i re i i e . .Mondovi , p|e;id-etl gui l ty lo drivin; ! too fast forconditions nnd was sentenced to a$10 fine or ' 10 clavs in the countypil. . '¦' ' ¦ ' ¦

The tlirei ; 'p - i id their fines .pais$n costs e.'n.-li .

Korfeitures: l lclnier M. lverson ,Whitehall , il r i v ing wi l l .out a dr iv-er 's license , ? |ii

. .kimes lv Anni s . 'iVirona, fa i lureto re 'xirt ;m acculen '., $2,"\ umloperating wi th i 'mi a dr iver 's l i-cense , $10 ,

Harold U7 dot ,', InilopciKleiu' e.Richard 0. N o l s n n , ChippewaFalls , and .los. ph Alu ' l , Kt tnek.disorderly i.-onjluct , .Ji n each.

Roger Kokus aiul S. W, Hranow-pki . Wisconsin Hapids , DonaldKrug, Galesville , and Keilh Has-kins, Holira.'ii , . xanie violations .Rokus ami lli- .nuiwski paid S20each and Kin.: . - ami l laskins , $l.ieach.

I.loyd iMsvlo .'i' , WhlU 'h . i l t . operat-ing loo hist . for . conditio ns , $H> ,

Knch fi>ifeitun ; iiicliHleil iicosts.

PRESTON , Minn. - Root RiverExplorer Scouts will hold theirthird annual bowling tournamentat Prcsj on's Olympic Lanes Sat-urday at 10:30 a.m.

The winning team will competolater this month nt the Garnehavcncouncil tourrioy at Rochester.

Explorers from Preston , Chn(-ficld. Spring Vnl ley,, Harmony, Ma-bel and Rushford are cxjiccled toenter the tournam ent , here. DistrictExplorer Coordinator Phil Rogers ,Clint-field , will conduct tho tourna-ment.

Root River ScoutBowling Meet Set TAYLOR, Wis, (Special )-Tay-

lor Boy Scouts are planning a part-cake nuppe r Monday. Serving willstart at 5 p.m. nt the church por-lors.

- ¦CHAMBER DIRECTORS

The Winona Chamber of Com-merce board of directors will hoWa luncheon meeting at 12:15 p.m.Monday at Hotel VVinona,

¦ETTRICK PATIENT

KTTMCK , Wis. (S p e c i a 1) .—Wayne Erickson who recently haulsurgery for a ruptured appendixis ill ngtiin and hns returned toa La Crosse hospital

Supper at Taylor

REGIONAL WINNERS .' . . These St. Charles High School de-baters , winning'at Zumbrot a Tuesday with n record of six winsnnd no losses, will compete in the state tournament. Feb. lfi-17with the other top seven teams of the slntfi. Left to right , JohnVandcrau , .lean Lnudon, Coach Warren Magnuson holding thet rophy, Joanne Daniel and Mary Hymcs. They competed withteams from Winonn , Hoehcstcr. Zumbrota , Waseca , Northfieldanil Spring Valley. Winona placed second , 51 , and Rochesterthird , 4-2. tMrs . Frank Jvoch photo)

RUSHFORD, Minn . (Special) -Fillmore County Republican pre:einct caucuses will he held onMonday, County Chairman C a r 1Kohlmeyer , Wykoff , and Chair-woman Mrs. Elton Redalen, Foun-tain , announced.

The caucus at Rushford will beheld in the basement of the Tri-County Electric office at 8 p.m.The five precincts meeting thereare: City of Rushford , village olRushford , Town of Norway, Townof Arendnhl and village of Peter-son,

In addition to discussing variousaspects of political activity, eachprecinct will elect officers , dele-gates and alternates to the coun-ty convention at Preston March

5 GOP CaucusesSet at Rushford

Explorer ScoutsExploring Caves•'- Adventures ¦ of Explorer Scoutsin the Hiawatha Valley—such ascave exploring, camping on a Mis--sissippi sandbar ..or being a guestof tlie Air Force in Rlinneapolis- ¦were related by LaVerrie DeVries,' adviser to the PlainviewExplorer , Scout ; post, to ' the Ro-tary

¦'.C.lub: - -at'-;--Hptet AVinona ; Wed-nesday, ¦¦ : ;.

It was .a part of the club's ScoutWeek activities. Nearly half . ofthe club's rrtembers; are engagedin some Scouting activity. "¦' ' '" .. -¦;"We have discovered manyfascinating.\caves in the White-water area in the past 18 montlVs,"De Vries said.: "Cave exploringand study of life within the caveshave become one of the pos t'smajor activities.":". '- .' ¦.,. , "We held a "sunburn camp": ona Mississippi River sandbar lastsummer devoted to fishing, swim-ming and other water activities;The boys want; fo go" back for an-other, week this year."

There are roughly 9O0 Scouts inthe 41 units in the Sugar LoafDistrict of the Gamehaven area ,Ferris C. Booth said in a-brieftalk. 7 7

Colored movies taken during theCanoe Derby, last summer fr orinRed Wing to Winona were shown.

Richard Husmari, Cotter; HighSchool, and David Nelson , WinonaHigh School .were introduced asstudent guests for the month. •

BURLINGTON, Wis.: M-Somenod-persons ,., including 250 uniform^cil officers from as far away , asGreen Bay and Fond du Lac, fill-ed St. Mary's Roman CatholicChurch to capacity , today for thefuneral ; services of a slain com-rade. ' v .7 Sgt. Anthon y Ellers was shot lodeath early Monday as he grap-pled with one of two brothers hehad intercepted in their flightfrom a burglary.

The HI. Hc'v. Msgr. Joseph J.Ilcin , celebrant of the RequiemMass , Called in his sermon 4"orintensified efforts on the part ofhomo , school nnd church to"teach young people respect andobedience. "

"It could he that by the provi-dence of God , this life may hav'ibeen sacrificed to save others intlie future by educating our youthId respect and obey the ' )avv ,"Msgr, I loin said.

"Let us not have n man l ikeSgt. Eilers die in vain ,"

800 at Funeral forSlain Policeman

CANTON , Ohio (AIM _ Therewas a ' 10-roon 'i , two-sl ory, bi'lckhouse with ;*tt:ichcd'double pa-rage on Ohi o 43 today — rightsmack across the. h ighway.

The bouse slipped off movingoruiipment Wednesday night whileT. J. Cloonan . president of a-house -moving—(iun-and owner—oLtho building, was moving it to anew site.

' ¦

House Sli ps OffMoving Equipment

KTTRICIC , Wis. (Special i-Er-nest . Twesme is re'mndeling andexpanding his building on MainSt., to araimmodnto his groceryunci locker business. .A wall, h.-isbeen >-omiived ' t rom Ihe lockerspace and.new shelvin g and moreeiiuipment have been added for thegrocery business.

Ettrick Remodeling

MIAMI , Via. (API—Poet Rob-ert Frost , 117, is a hospital patientas a result of lung congestion aft-er several clays illness at hisSouth Miami winter home.

. F*rost was termed in- ', satisfac-tory condition. I l l s physician re-ported he had been running afever of 102.

Poet Robert FrostIn Miami Hosp ital

Nelson Remembersface of Voter

M c?6m&n^

By EARL WILSONNEW YORK — Good-looking, young Gov. Gaylord Nelson of Wis-

consin — who has been tagged for bigger things by President Ken-nedy ' ¦— he ¦¦might .even be vice presidential or presidential timbersometime — has been getting the VIP treatment here from such VIPses Adlai . Stevenson. ' .

All: the handshaking here reminded Gov. Nelson of visiting asmall Wisconsin town where his campaign managers persuaded himto visit a local bar , and shakehands.

One man 's face was extremelyfamiliar . . Gov: .. . Nelson couldn'tthink of the name:

!Tm. Gov: Nelson — haven 't wemet before?" he said in his mostcharming manner.

"I don 't know." the man mum-bled. "I meet so many people. 1can 't remember them . all. "

Beautiful , statuesque Marthe Er-rolle (who 's now in the PierreCotillion Room shoiv ) had a dateto audition for the- Sid . Caesar"Little Me" musical—nnd thatvery day she got laryngitis andcouldn 't sing. "So it wouldn 't, be¦ total loss," she says , "I tookoff my dress and showed Produc-er Cy Feuer my body," When Is a i d "HUH? " sli e explained,"Meaning how I look in a Leo-tard." .'¦ ( Which she had on underthe dress.) She . hopes she'll beinvited back—without laryngitisand with leotard. •

GEOR.GE JESSEL was reportedIn Chicago; to be marrying a youngsecretary there—but he quickl ydenied it. "In the future," he toldus, "I will love lightly, in selfdefense" .. . Juliet Prowse nowgets equal billing; with DebbieReynolds in Times Sq. moviehouses . .' . The rumors ; aboutdrama critic resignations evident-ly aren 't true . , . Bern ice Parkstook complete charge of RubyFoo's since her nipther 's death ,but she'll :be back :.in the shows. .;¦'.. Donald O'Connor went to bedafter he bacame a father again—with the flu—so Kay Starr tookover for him at the Las VegasSahara. He'd been flying daily toSanta Monica to Visit his wife. . . Sidney Kingsley's finishing upa play—three years and two weeksafter he "Started ,' Plays, he says,take longer than elephants to givebirth.

Peggy Cass was approached bya fan at a party given by play,wright Howard Teichmann whosaid, ; "You know,- .you're muchprettier LIVE?"¦ - .' . . Merv Griffin

boosters are stirring, up a greatcampaign to get Merv to take, overthe Jack Paar show before John-Ay Carson assumes command . . .Janet Leigh , Laurence Harvey, et.al., of the "Manchurian Candi-date" troupe were having a grandlime at Luchow's till a local judge,a Show Business square : Whomeant no harm wigwagged to herto bring Larry Harvey over. Janetflipped and boiled over. The guymeant no harm ; in fact , he latersaid . "Is that Janet Leigh or Vi-vian Leigh and does she know who1 am?" . . - -.. Harvey, Janet , etc.,will shoot scenes at Madison Sq.Garden , and in one in Centralpit,, Harvey dives into a reserv-oir . .' ' ; Frank Sinatra and MikeRomanoff dined at El Morocco 'sChampagne Room—solo.

THE B.W. THINKS I shouldprint this to show how witty sheis. Anyway, it was Goose Feasttime at Luchow 's, and after I or-dered the goose, the B.W. leanedover and cooed , "You're verygame." ;

Eddie Fisher may nab a cameorole in "The Longest Day" inFrance (meaning he'd have toleave Liz alone doing "Cleopatra"in Rome for a few days ) . . .IJerb Shriner's planning to do his"Wonderful People" TVer here.'-..' . Morris Levy (of Roulette Re-cords and The Roundtable) wil lmarry Norn . "'Crla 'sseil in Miami;she's the ex-wife of Houston sports-man Alfred C. Glassell J r . . . .Lauren Bacall and Greer Garsoninvested inv "A Thousand Clowns- '(which 'll star Jason Robards) .¦.;¦' .Roy Cohn 's style note at the Voi-sin : A scarlet doeskin Jacket .Pretty Angela Martin sings in theCopa show.

TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Menwho found their way through thetrackless . wilderness now havegreat-grandsons who get lost in asupermarket.—Pic Larmour.

WISH I'D SAID THAT: In theold days people made their shirtson spinning wheels. Today theylose 'em the same way.

EARL'S PEARLS: A suggestion ,via Rhonda Fleming, for the wo-man who has everything : Anothercloset to put it in.

Definition . of a grandmother(from Art RyoriV: "A nice, gentle,gray-haired lady who keeps akid's mother from killing him.".:.- . That's earl , brother.

SATURDAY at 'Jk1:15 and 3:00 p.m. IB

COLOR CARTOONS B

COMIC BOOKS P

Voice of theOutdoors

Wlicotisln P«8r«*s«Annual reports of conservation

commissioners are normally prettydry reading, but Jim Taylor, aformer .Madison outdoor writer,now Wisconsin News service di-rector for that state 's Conserva-tion Department, give s : Wisconsinresidents an excellent summary ofConservation Director L, P. Voigt's1961 report ju st released in thefollowing article:

::Ih7 assessing. ' gains' ' :macle' inthe past year Voight said ,"Our citizens discovered : thatconservation means more thanjust hunting: and fishing andthey enthusiastically backedthat discovery with hard cashin the form of a cigarette taxand parka sticker," \- '

Voight said the new broad ac-ceptance off financial responsibili-ty "will stand us in good steadas the population squeeze inexor-ably tightens down oil the state'snatural resources. "

He. also praised . Sportsmenwhom he" said continued to ac-cept their share of the conser-vation burden by ence againagreeing to license fee 7 in-creases. .

"All in all the WisconsinLegislature, Gov. G aylord Nel-son and the Conservation Com-mission made a terrific impactoYi Conse rvation in: 1961 thatwill be; Celt nationwide duringthe next few years," Voightpredicted!.The director said none of the

gains would have been possiblewithout .the Conservation Commis-sion 's steadfast rcsol ve that everyaction affecting the state's naturalresources, legislative or otherwise,measure up to a firm standard ofpolicy, v

He said the department wasengaged in battles during 1961that ranged over its wholefield of responsibility "and ihv . ¦most cases emerged victori-ous." In enumerating them , hesaid 1961 produced attacksagainst public rights in troutstreams and county forests.He cited an attempt to wrestcontrol of water developmentaway from the departmentthrough legislation . He pointedout that although the fight toprevent damming the PoppleRiver in Florence County waswon before tho Public Serv-ice Commission , a case involv-ing another dam on the UpperWolf River near Pearson isstill undecided and has been

. carried to the Supreme Court.He said it had required "con-

stant vigilance" to screen thenumerous requests for water di-version , dredging and sand blan-kets which might injure wildlifevalues, Many of these were suc-cessfully opposed in 1961,

Referring to tho recent at-tempt by Vilas Co unty to with-draw from its forest crop law

contract , Voight said the de-partment would vigorously op-pose any move to dissolvecounty forests , but woul d"work diligently toward a solu-tion to the financial problemswhich have caused dissatisfac-tion with the law." The Vilas'County challenge is currentlybeing fought out in the courts,

Voight said the 1961 deer sea-son vindicated the departme nt'smanagement policies and demon-strated the . wisdom of the Legis-lature's enactment of the ' variablequota plan for 1963. He pointedout that 1961 in general saw anupswing in populations of smallgame animals " with consequentbetter results for hunters. WTiileexpressing concern over effects ofthe current severe winter on srnallgame, Voight reminded sportsmenthat ultimately land use controlsgame abundance because it deter-mines how much and what 3dndof habitat is available. He .saidthe public can look for more andmore intensive management in thefuture o»n the state's rapidly ex-panding public hunting groundsalong with a stepped-up programdirected toward encouraging g amemanagement practices on privatelands.

voigt expressed pleasure atgeneral fishing su ccess during1961 which he said was "pro-bably one of the banner yearsin the last two decades.;' Be6aid the start roade on lakeclassification in 1361 would beexpan ded in 1962 in the hopethat information secured hi the":' .program would eventually leadto legislative authority for z on-ing and regulation of statewaters. . 7 ¦

Steps toward control of the sealamprey in the Great Lakes duringthe past year according to Voigtindicate great promise; for revivalof the lake trout fishery. He saidefforts toward this end would beintensified during the coming year.

Voigt pointed to the largenumber of gifts received dur-ing 1961 as an . indication ofpublic faith in department prorgrams. He said cash giftsamounted to $142,000 and some200 acres of land was donated.Summing up, the director said,

"The year 1961 was crucial forconservation in Wisconsin. We pas-sed a crossroads and are h eadedtoward solid goals in nearly everyphase of our operation.- I t is nowincumbent upon us to see that wereach them."

COUNTRY MUSICCARAVAN

llarrlna from the» Ortni Olt OprySTONE WALL JACKSON

I'll tur Inn i

• Bobby D«an• Jurti Harrild• Cltnn Morttand• Toppar• Tim Country PlayboyiAnd radlo't own DAV H JAYB ai M.C

Sunday, Feb. II6:00 p.m. at th»

Red Men's WigwamIn Winona

¦Admin ion $1.25

Gov. Nelson SaysTime Needed foDetermine Income

EAU CLAIBE, Wis, WV—It willbe three months before the stateknows whether the new selectivesales tax will produce the expect-ed $50 million for real estate prop-erty tax relief, Gov. Gaylord Nel-son said Wednesday.'¦ Failure of the Legislature to ap-prove a $6 million tax on financialinstitutions, Nelson said* made itdifficult to know immediatelywhether other tax sources willraise enough to permit the full in-come of the sales tax to be devot-ed to property tax relief.

ThY governor was questioned ata news conference as he camehere to address the N orthwesternWisconsin Schoolmasters Club.

He took part in the city promo-tion, "Milk City, UiS.A.," whichis aimed at helping reduce thedairy surplus , and made four ap-pearances, including one onv tele-vision.

Nelson said he was not cam-paigning, and told the newsmen hesaw no urgency in announcing hisfuture plans. He has repeatedly de-clined to say whether he will seekanother term as governor or runfor the U. S. Senate.

In his date with tha schoolmas-ters, Nelson reviewed his proposalfor a three-semester program instate colleges. He said that by.1864the schools , will be turning awayqualified students because of alack of facilities,

State aids to schools, Nelson said,have increased from 18 to 25 per-cent of educational spending since1955.. He said the formula must b-erevised because even with the in-crease the state participation is notenough.

OFFICIAL NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETINGOF THE STOCKHOLDERS OF THE

Tri-County CooperativeOil Association

• DATE: Saturday, February 24, 1962• PLACE: Rushford School Auditorium• HOUR: Ten O'clock A.M.

Notice is- hereby given that the Annual Meeting of the- stockholders of theTri-CoUnry Cooperative Oil Association of Rushford, Min nesota, will be heldin the School Auditorium in Rushford, Minnesota, al ten o'clock a.m. onSaturday, February 24, 1962, for the following purposes:

1. To receive the report of officers of the Association.

2. To ol«t members toJhaJJoard of Directors,

3. To transact such other business as may properly comabefore this annual meeting.

Respectfully,RALPH JOHNSTON, Secretary

Dated a1 Rushford , Minnesota , this 8th day of February , 1962.

• NOON LUNCHEON . ENTERTAINMENT . REPORTS• SHOW FOR THE CHILDREN . PRIZE DRAWING

Tri-County Cooperative Oil Ass nRUSHFORD WINONA HOUSTON

Phono Phona PhoneUM 4-7722 4185 or 9345 TW 4-3755

CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) —Three members of the CaledoniaCornrnunity Hospital Association,Inc., were , re-elected at the , an-nual meeting Wednesday after-noon. They are O. J. Strand, J.C. Driscoll and Herbert Fruechte.

Two were elected to succeedGeorge Schauble and John rtippe.They are B. A. Quady and LeoSchouble.

According to the financial xe^jj ort, total income last year was$161,138 iand total expenses were$144,476, leaving a net of $16,561.The 1961 payroll was $77,388.

Total number of patient days forthe year was 7,186. The 24-bedhospital averaged 19.69 patientsper day. In addition, 786 out-pa-tients were admitted. There were213 births.

A total of $121,256 has been paidfrom hospital earnings and pledg-es more than make up the differ-ence of $119,000 required over thevillage bond issue $300,000 andapproximately $315,000 allocated tothe new . 37-bed hospital from fed-eral Hill-Burton funds.

tlie building project , well underway, also provides for convertingthe present hospital to a nursinghome. The two buildings' are ad-jacent. • >

Directors NamedFar CaledoniaHospital Board

SPECIAL -.MONDAY TO FRIDAYGRILL ROOM Cfl' - CABUFFET DINNER . ONLY $XwU

5 to 10 p.m.LUNCHEON— Tenderloin Steak on Toasts French Fries,Slaw, Beverage. #1 <jANoon to Midnite. . . . «pAiVVSPECIAL FRIDAYS— <£1 EABUFFET SHORE DINNER . . . , , $Ai9V

Shrimp, Pike, Scallops, Perch, Baked Halibut,Seafood, Safod, Potatoes, Beverage

DANCING EVERY SATURDAY NITESpecial Sunday Dinner 12 to 8 p.m.

UNCLE WAVCCARL'S QAK5

DANCEAltura

Southeastern Minnesota'sFun Spot

Friday, Feb. 9EMIL GUENTHER

Area's Finest Dance Band

f DOMTDtlAY-&eiTNOHrr

THE CENTURYTHEATRE WILL

CLOSE MARCH 11thYOUR UST CHANCE

TO SEE!

frt,rfl,lIlWaiTHOIIASoriou«-noira«'>>» »«lfl(1l,ll i»i,miil»i»ll» n« «¦»<¦"¦ nm*

e*-*t* *. CP«MM h, gvra w««

SPJCtAl RAWS TO GROUPSWatch for Opening of the

- beautiful N ew Cooper-Cinerama Theatre this

Sirmmer with the Premier*of "HOW THE WEST

WAS WON" in

PLAAAMBallroom — Rochester

Friday, Feb. fMixed

BOBBIE HAWKINS

:- .. Saturday, Feb;. 10" -7:Old Time

JOLLY BOHEMIANS

Sunday. Feb. HMixed

POLKA CARAVAN

They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo_ ' -^— - - ' , : - ¦ " ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' —¦—I — '" 'iiM—i—ii' iii i i i i'i i li ' '

Jack BennyIn RochesterFor Checkup

ROCHESTER , Minn. (AT—JackBenny said Wednesday he's feelingfine , has lied himself into ^believ-ing he's young, and came to theMayo Clinic only for a routine ex:amination. v

"The only time I have a checkupIs when I'm feeling good ,", the co-median told a news conference inhis hotel suite.

Photographers sang " H a p p yBirthday " to Benny768 next week,and Benny offered cigars. '— "cheapones," he said .THe played his vio-lin for the reporters and photogra-phers.

"It 's 50 years in show business,but the age is 39,''.. the entertainersaid. He added that he has ho in»tention of retiring.

"Why should I retire?" he asked"One maintains his youth , by ly-ing. After a while you get to be-lieve it yourself."

He said his success in showbusiness was all luck, that .gim-micks about his : age, stinginessand violin playing caught on withhis audiences.

Benny said he has been discus-sing possible dates for an appear-ance with the Minneapolis Sym-phony Orchestra but that no defi-nite commitments have beenmade. :

KEY WEST, Fla. (AP )-MaryHemingway, widow¦ ' • ¦•.of . authorErnest Hemingway, has been ex-amining a storeroom of memen-tos he cached with a fishing cronyin a barroom nearly 30 years ago .

So far, Mrs. Hemingway hasturned up parts of manuscripts ,including "To Have and Hay«Not" (which he wrote in KeyWest) , photographs of fishingtrips In the Atlantic Ocean andCaribbean Sea, letters , telegrams,and printers' proofs of stories.

The items were stored in therear of Sloppy Joe's Bar. The barwas owned , by the late Joe Rus-sell . Hemingway 's fishin g crony.

Mrs. Hemingway and the es-tate attorney will decide what todo wtih the papers and otheritem's.

Mrs. HemingwayStudies Momenfbs

VIENNA , Austria (AP) - Con-ductor Herbert Von Knraja n hasresigned as artistic director ol theVienna State Opera amidst a con-troversy between opera mnnago-ment and the government , theeducation ministry announcedWednesday.

Von Knrajan , world-famed con-ductor of lending European or-chestras , .snld i n - a letter to theministry that lie wns dissatisfiedwith a recent compromise whichended two months of passive rc-sistancc by stage hands.

Director of ViennaOpera Resigns

ENDS T O N I T E

¦ • . - . . - - ' ¦ CILJBUJCB JIJLM3I

B

W Jennif er

f W~m r

vj y_ t/oan

- «* > Cf - ' .j.

m^ r

£¦ yMkr ^^ '*r^VA ':Pz'mil DANOVA • JILL SI JOHN • Will. LUKAS" "7, P.P'-'"" nfrHfWRy i mmiuH ¦ mm ma ¦ m uomi • COLOR by 0E LUXE 1

ifTfTnTTri' ENDS T0NIGHTM i Ai^AjTwAl T,1

° "Curry On Nurs.»" GangWAmmy JMM.m ' in their "TOP" Comedy Hit

STARTS "A WEEK END WITH LULU"

FRIDAY Showi:7:15 -?:10 • 25*-50*-75*P-:-Vr-:::r;":,.: : SH;.;7.r.\>.v^^^

I; TALKED' j y " -.jjlllJB.] SHOCKED rWy f ^^ mWmj ABOUT £\) W'r ' w ) Em'4 PICTURE LtfM . >;; .| t' riAlH'\\ OF OUR . [$& pi lL H)[;, YEARS !

^ j\t ¦« H|

LiXia,.s:,,-,:.JL'-J i ¦ x.xXJ&K^dmmm - ~- ¦ j" ^^Two P«rformnnce» Dally at 7i00 and KiOO p.m, / *£ IAdult* $1.00 • Juniori 7$t f- LJ

Positively No Children's Admiialwu Wi II B« Sold

SPECIAL MATINEE SATURDAY .O TM."ABBOTT i% COSTELLO MEET THE KEYSTOWE COPS"

Also: 3 5rooQ«i and 3 CartoonsSat. Mat, at 1:00 and 3:00 p.m. • 25t-40c-65c

FREE MOVIE TICKETS AT RANDALL'S SUPER VALU

CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special)-Mrs. Susan Lovett is a patient atCaledonia Hospital. She fell on theice Sunday fracturing her right hip.

Mary Ellen Klu^, daughter ofMr . and Mrs. LeLand Klug, frac-tured her leg between the knee andthe ankle Saturday when she ffelTon the ice near her home.

¦

2 Caledonians BreakBones in FalJs on Ice

ST. PETERSBURG! Fin. <AP)—A rnan who can 't writ e hasbeen charged with forgery.

Detective W illiam Carlislesaid Lcroy Curry, 27, admittedWednesday that l»o stole two pay-roll checks from fellow construc-tion company workers.

Curry took tho checks to differ-ent stores , Carlisle said , signedthem with an "X" and cashedthem.

Can't Write, ManCharged as Forger

ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -"Don'tput a sex tag on that pay check."a high government official urgesbusinessmen. 7:

"If a rrian and a woman doidentical work they should receivethe same pay."

The speaker was Esther Peter-son, assistant secretary - of-Tab6>r.She was in Atlanta Wednesdayfor a meeting with, governmentand labor officials to discuss theemployment situation.

' ¦""No other duck hasTio wide a dis-

tribution as the gadwall. Of thelarger regions of the world , it ismissing from only S outh Americaand Australia.

Don't Put SexTag on Pay Check

Lewis H. Prigge, 65,. 514 E.' KingSt., retiring after more than 19years as a jani tor for North West-ern Bell Telephone Co., will behonored by his employes today at6:30 p.m. at the Oaks.

Prigge, whose son, Kenneth , 84547th Ave., Goodview, alsp worksfor the telephone company, will re-ceive a gift from his fellow em-ployes.

He woTked previously at Griesel'swholesale grocery, now out ofbusiness, and , at City Hall.

CALEDONIA CAFE SOLOCALEOONIA, Minn. (Special)—

The Schfoeder Cafe, operated byMr. and Mrs. Cart Schroeder , hasbeen sold to Junic-r Koenig whohas taken over the operation andmanagement of the cafe on Mon-day. The name of tlie cafe will bechanged to Koenig Cafe and will beopen every day and evening. 7

North Western BellEmploye to Retire

WASHINGTON W>-Overheard nta White House reception Wednes-day for children of diplomats wasthis conversation between a youngguest and Caroline Kennedy, 4-year-old daughter of President andMrs. Kennedy :

"What do you do around here?"asked the visitor.

"I walk my dadd y to the officeevery rhorning."

"Then what do you do?""I walk back again."

Caroline Has BigJob at White House

WINONA pAILY NEWSTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY », 1961

¦;• ¦ VOLUM E~)W," NO. t7~^~ ~"

Published dally except Saturday anil holl-daya by Republican and Horald Publish ingCompany, <0l Franklin St., Winona. Mtnn,

SUBSCRIPTION RATES__^0l«j:opyj-JI0c^anyJl5rSun(lay-Oellvered by carrier - P «r week 50 cent*26 vveeks $12.75

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By- mall atrlctly In «dvane«Fpaoer~ wop-ped on expiration date.In Fillmore, Houston, Olmsrea, Winona,Waba»ha, Buffalo, Jackson, Pepin andTrempealsau counties:1 year . . S12.0O 3 rnontm ' ¦' ¦.' 13.JO« montha .__ J6.M 1 rnonm ¦ . . »1.3i

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Technical BooksMore Pop iilar

BUSINESS MIRROR

By SAM DAWSONAP Business New s Analyst

NEW YORK (AP) - Weekendwriters among . , - the nation 's900,000 scientists and engineersare making a good thing out ofA.mericans' growing appetite fortechnical books. .

Publishers are printing some2.000 new technical and scientificb ooks each year . Textbooksaren 't included in this.

If the book sells at least 10,000copies within ; five years, .the goalol all publishers , and 7 bears aprice tag of $10 or more—andsome sell for more than $25— theauthor stands lo collect betweenS12.000 and $15,000.

But very , few technical authorswrite a second book. One pub-l isher estimates repeaters at onein 100.

"It' s hard work ," lie says, "andanyway, most people can 't learnenough in: a . lifetime ' . to fill upmore than one comprehensivebook." .

¦'¦- .Partly because so few repeat ,

and partly because the demandfor the books is so. good , anothermajor technical publ ishing househas 30 scouts looking for quali-fied persons 'willing '.to invest thetime and energy of putting downon paper in their off-job hourswhat they have learned as anengineer or scientist . -

The technical book market isexpected Lo be around $20 millionthis year. This ,is only a small

part of the billion dollars Ameri-cans spend annually for books ofall kinds , including textbooks andpaperbacks. JBul publishers findtheir technical book , businessgrowing and lucrative.

In the last five years sales oftechnical and scientific bookshave r isen nearly 40 per cent.Out of the 18,060 new book titlesissued by U.S. ." publishers lastyear, technical books—includingnew edition s of earlier volumes—came to 2,275, or 13 per cent ofthe total. /

Space research is the hottesttopic 7 currently, A few years agoelectronics domin ated the field.

In mid-1957 v Carsbie Adams ofAtlanta , Ga., offered a manu-script on space : Elight wliich pub-lishers termed unbelievable. ThenSputnik I reversed editorial think-ing fast. The Adams manuscript ,once forlorn , was snapped up. Ithas sold nearly 20,000 copies. Inthe field of technical books , that 'sa red-hot best seller.

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CHATTANOOGA , Teiiii . (APl-After Hugh Gates, 52, was robbedof ' ?28 last month while workingat a servicev station , he wastransferred to another stationthree.miles away.

Wednesday, police said, a manwith a silk stocking mask robbedGates of about $75. -

Oil Station WorkerRobbed Second Time

Kennedy BarbsMay Be UnitingGOP Factions

By JACK BELLWASHINGTON (AP) . — Drawn

closer together by barbs fired atthem, by President Kennedy," Re-publicans today begin an effort tooutline a broad manifesto of partyprinciples. , :

Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., 'predicted in advance of a SenateRepublican : 7 Policy Committeemeeting called to sketch a pre-liminary draft that GOP mem-bers of both houses will be ableto agree - on;-some general state-ments charting their course.as aparty.

Goldwater , chairman of the Re-publican Senatorial Campaigncommittee and a spokesman f orparty conservatives , concluded inan interview that this- . wouldn" beeasy.

But he said ne thought he andSen. Jacob K,¦• Javits , R-N.Y., aliberal spokesman , could get to-gether , on such things as ''fiscalrespon sibility by the government ,freedom of the individual andsome statement on civil rights."

"What . 1 would like to see wouldbe a statement of basic principlesfrom which individual .memberscan go, -where-they/ want ,'' Gold-wa er said.

Goldwater and another promi-nent Mepubl ican Gov , Nelson A.Rockefeller of New- York , werethe subjects of Kennedy 's politicalbarbs at Welnesday 's news con-ference. .

Rockefeller has accused thePresident of indulging in ' "politi-cal fak-ery " 7 by announcing hewould appoint housing adminis-trator Robert C Weaver; a Ne-gro, 7o- head the proposed new ur-ban affairs department'.

Kennedy said he had read -withinterest that radio commentatorFulton Lewis had told a meetingof conservatives "nobody couldget to the right of Goldwater. "Kennedy added with a . broadsmile: "Now I am not so sure."

To this , Goldwate#replied : "Ifgetting to the right ,of Barry Gold-water means pointing up the po-litical connivance of PresidentKennedy. Gov . Rockefeller madea very proper and long overduemove/'

Russiatr 'U.S^Cr/s/s £ds/nq

The World Today

By JAMES MARLOW "/ " '• ' 'WASHINGTON i/D ~ There are times,, and this is one of them , 1

when President Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev look very consider-ate of each other, . |

They're like two hea vyweighls determined to go the disltince but jso full of respect for each other 's Sunday punch they feel th ings are itough enough without getting personal about it.

About this time last vear. when Kennedv was new in his iob andup to his neck in problems withCongress , Khrushchev caused himpractically no trouble at all. Atleast , no extra trouble. ¦;

This changed later , about thetime Kennedy was finishing upwith Congress.. Khrushchev 7 sud-denly began ; building a crisis onBerlin. He began talking tough. Sodid Kennedy. This lasted all sum-mer. .

Khrushchev climaxed his tem-porary unpleasant less , by buildinga wall around East Berlin andabruptly cutting off talks on ban-ning nuclear tests in order to startSoviet 'nuclear tests.

All through this period Kennedyand. Khrushchev batted the ballback and forth. It was a tenseand unhappy period for everybody 'including.7'them'. It turned out tobe their climax for the year with

West were st ill locking hornsaround the world: in Berlin , Laos,South Viet Nam , "the United Na- :|tioiis . Latin America. |

That was par for the course and :had been for years. It -was just ithe .Kennedy-Khrushchev ¦ relation- ¦ship which had become more gen- jtlcmanly. . ' • • ¦;. . j

Gradually Khrushchev , as h'i's'jdifferences with the Red Chinese]deepened into what the West !hoped would be a fervent split , italked less and less on foreign -af- .jfairs. In fact , he talked ;so little !it caused speculation he might be Iill; 7 One Paris newspaper •even !

i guessed he might have suffered i' a stroke. , . li Kennedy did nothing in his pub- i1 lie statements : to embarrass !i Khrushchev at a time when em- 1{ harassment mi ght have strength- ;1 ehed his enemies in Red China or 1[at home. 7 :

eacn ouier.Came •' mid-autumn and there

was a change in Khrushchev. Itwas his turn to get up to his neckin -problems with a congress, inhis ' case the Communist partycongress. He said a settlement . onBerlin could wait.

He denounced Stalin and histactics and , in so doing, rammedheads' with the old Stalinists andso irked the Red Chinese thatthey quit the congress meeting.To: the . hard ' ¦-- ¦ nosed Chinese ,Khrushchev was too soft . ^

He wasn 't being completely soft ,of course. It was in this periodthat he set off Russia 's super-super bomb and put the heat onFinland to soften her up and per-haps , through Finland, all Scan-dinavia.

But at least he had pulled backa bit . from the Berlin furnace ,like a man who figured he hadmade some progress, and didn 'twant to push his luck.

Meanwhile,.communism and the

Khrushchev even sent his news-paperman son-in-law over here tointerview Kennedy—an interviewwhich was published in Russia—and let his soti-ih-law come backlast week : for lunch with the Pres-ident.

Now once again , because it' sthat time of year , Kennedy isfully busy with Congress. Khrush-chev ., jus t as last year , isn 't add-ing anything extra to his prob-lems . -

All the problems remain1, ofcourse. Nothing has heen solved.Neither Berlin , nor Laos , nor VietNam , nor nuclear testing. Notanything.It seems reasonable to believe

that the two heavyweights, nowback in their corners trying tocatch their breath between roundswill start belting again as soonas the bell rings. The only ques-tion is when. '

'.:• ' . - . - " .

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¦ST.- PAUL l/P—A rural Stillwatergirl di«d in a St. Paul hospital Wed-nesday of injuries suffered whenshe was struck by a car on High-way vol , near . her home.

Darlene Schiefelbejn , 3, was in-jurcd Tuesday afternoon.

The death raises Minnesota 's19G2 traffic tol l to 50, comparedwith . 72- through this date last year.

Stillwater GirlDies in St. Paul

ST, -PETERSBURG; Fla. (AP)—Reports of a crashed airplanein the Gul f of Mexico sent CoastGuard rescue craft to the sceneonly to find the wreckage ap-parently was from a. drone air-craft used for antiaircraft targetpractice.

Crew members of two shrimpboats' in ' the area radioed that aplane had crashed, about 75 mileswest northwest of St. Petersburg.

The . Coast '/Guard reportedWednesday night that the wreck-age appeared to he from a droneairplane , Used by the military totest air-to-air a nd ground-to-airrockets.

Repo rt of WreckedPlane Proves False

Big Stakes /nCongo Program

Washington Calling

By MARQUIS CHILDSWASHINGTON—The high-wire act that has

been going on in, the Congo now seems likelyto come off. While the spectators with the biggeststake iu ¦ its- success still wait with bated breathcertain developments have given new encourage-nienl . •

One is the visit here of Cyrille Adoula , pre-mier of the Congolese government , as the guesto/ President Kennedy. Adoulacomes from the summit meetingof 20 African nations in Lagos,Nigeria , wher e he made a strongimpression of Tcasoh and conKmon sense.

Out of the welter of violenceand confusion Adoul a h a semerged as a responsible lead-er. If anyone is capable of hold-ing together, the , unstable ele-ments in the Congo long enoughto insure a beginnin g of state-hood , it is this 38-year-old for-mer head, under the Belgian

Child*

regime , of the Congolese trade unions. This wasone of , the very few fields in which there wassome-opening for native leadership.

At the same time that Adoula is showing hiscapacity to govern in Leopoldville, the chancesof Moise Tshornbe joining up with the centralgovernment have greatly improved. That is byno means certain and the volatile Tshombe couldovernight do an about- face. But he has askedthe United Nations to supply him with a legaladviser who can : give hirn guidance on his ownvstatus in a unitary Congolese governmentand on the problem of the mercenaries which theCommunist bloc in the United Nations wants toexploit. The IL";N. Will send a top-ranking man -to Elisabethville ,

THIS IS a long way from the furious clamorof three months ago when Tshombe seemed thewilling tool of those who wanted to separate mir-tral-rich Katanga from the Congo and in theprocess deal the U; N. a body blow. Certainsenators, ' Conspicuously Sen. Thomas Dodd • ofConnecticut who injected himself into the Congosituation , appeared only too ready to play ,thatgame; .

The revelation of plot and counterplot arid theextent to which Tshombe , with the hacking of atleast some of the rich mineral' interests in Ka-tanga , was. willing to go , have taken the steamout of rumored investigations which had been de-signed to show the I) . N. as villain! The SlateDepart ment put an - official ' , stamp on the'-disclos-ure that the Katan ga bureau ¦' ¦ in - New York ,headed by ALichael Sfruclens , bad large fundsavailable to buy reco gnition for the secessionistprovince. .

THAT EFFORT directed at Costa Rica -fail-ed ' when the reported offer of $1 ,O«OVO0O was in-dignan tly rejected. Undisclosed machinations in-volving some oddly assorted characters whomight have come out of an international spystory were a inied at Honduras: The State ; De-partment is in possession of full details of theseplots , but timid counsel prevailed over those whoWanted to bring, the whole sordid story inlo thelight-

No nation grunted recognition to Tshombe,whose actual writ runs over only about 500 ,000tribesmen out of Katan ga 's population of 2,000,000.It is greatly to the credit of the Belgian govern-ment that despite what must . 'have been formid-able pressures ' serious-.'¦consideration was nevergiven ;to recognition.

The image of Tshombe , for .-which Struelehsas -a resourceful propagandist gets most of thecredit , is at variance with the real picture , ac-cording to .American officials closest to thescene. For one thing he has been actively spread-ing an anti-American line that might have beenfabricated" in the Kremlin , charging that theUnited Slates is full >, of racists who .kill -everytenth Negro,

IN YEARS GONE BY

Ten Years Ago . . . 1952A, J. (resell hits ' been "re-elected , president ,

Joh n Ambroscn , vice president , and Stanley J.I'ettcrscn , secretary, of the Athletic Board.

Miss Dorothy //cider , Phelps School fa cultymember , has been elected vice president andMiss Arvilla I.uthvilzk o ,". secrelary-troastirer , ofthe Winonn Count y Educ ation Association.

Twenty-Five Years Ago . . . 1937City Attorne y Harold K. Urchmer has drafted

nn ordinance for the collection anil disposal ofcity garbage.

A. C. Solcm will represent the Association . ofCommerce merchants at the ' sti i te conventi on inSI. rani.

Fifty Years Ago .,., . 1912Vinci ' Schneider will manufacture , self-design-

ed river motor luiiits at the Winona Motor Co.of which lie has taken possession.

Teams are crossing Ih e river ¦ on the thickin> , leavin g the high wagon bridge with lighttraffic.

Seventy-Five Yea rs Ago . . . 1887The new cable ferry will he rendy for use

nt the opening of the navi gntion season. ,An nmeiidiue iu. to elect an aklcrinaii-at-h'ir go

was draw n up hy the City Council.

One Hundred Years Ago . .-., 1862The St ale Agricultural Society, nt its meet-

ing in St. Paul , votod to hold the ncxl fair inSeptember of litis year . Several from "WinonaCounty were present.

Ldbby Stages Partyin Senate Caucus Room

THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND

By DREW PEARSONWASHINGTON — Lobbyists '

on Capitol Hill are getting-bolder and bolder . They now :throw their parties right in-side government buildings and .serve liquor in ,areas where , it 7 .is ' drbidden.

Last week , the National De-fense Transportation Associa-tion , which is the high-falutin 'name for tneairline, rail-r o a d , an ds. t e a m-s h i p lobby,backed a liq-uor truck upto the Senateoffice build-ing- and tookover the Sen-ate c a u c u sroom , ; all ofit owned bythe taxpayer s, Pearsonto throw a party to influencelegislation affecting the tax-payers.

This particular lobby special-izes in plying members of Con-gress with free food and liq-uor , also negotiates plane tic-ket home for senators or con-gressmen when reservationsare filled. In return , the NDTAexpects the legislators to votethe way the NDTA wants themto vote on bills affeding t rans-portation.

The big parly in Ihe Senateoffice buildin g, however , wasa flop. A number of Senateadministrative aides and sten-ographers showed up, but nosenators. Rep. Grade Pfost ,'the attractive lady from Ida-ho , put in a brief appearancewithout sampling a cocktail.Other House members at theshindig included ' Reps. Knl ph ¦Harding of Idaho , AV. II. Hullof Missouri , and Richard . Toffof Vir ginia.

CHARLES KRAFT , a vicepresident of the United StatesLines , was thn chief greet er ,nided by two pretty hoste ssesfrom tho Combined Airl ines'Picket. Office. Kraft may havehad some misg ivings about Ihecapacity of his guests. Wheniho parly broke up, there were3 cases of whisk y and other

alcoholic potables left over.T h e reputation o f Sen .

Wayne Morse 7 of Oregon as,,the Senate 's No. 1 liberal hadpreceded ; him to Punta . DelKste where he was a delegateto the OAS meeting oh Castro;And the fact that TMorse , theliberal , took one of the tougheststands against Castro had aprofound effect on Latin Amer-icans.

..This was emphasized by asmall incident that occurredafter Brazilian - 'Foreign' - Minis-ter Santiago Dantas made aspeech opposing the UnitedStates. The Brazilian delega-tion had scheduled a cocktailparty that afternoon and Morsefailed to turn up.

FINALLY NEWSMEN cor-nered the senator from Oregonand asked him whether he wasgoing to attend the Brazilianparty. 7 ;;*v : . -

"When I -go "id-a reception ,"Morse replied , "I want to bea polite guest. In this case Ifear I might be rude to ihehost." :

In an unusually frank discus-sion behind closed, doors , Sec-retary of the Army Elvis J.Stahr complained that theArmy was still play ing a s.ep-child role in our defense set-up and that it still lacked es-sential weapons and equip-ment for modern warfare.

"Speaking plainly, those arethe facts and 1 hope Congresswill do something about it ,"S ahr told the House ArmedServices Committee. "We donot have a single division Oftroops anywhere in the worldthat is presently equipped as Ithink it should be."

THE ARMY spokesman saidthis applied to all 14 of theArmy 's mobilized divisions , in-cluding five ir Europe andthree in the Fur East. Theeight overseas divisions , Stahradded , are in much bettershape than those stationed inthe United Slates , and theirequipment , problems could beovercome.

'Rut there is plent y of roomfor improvement at home andabroad. " he emphasized .

Chief proble m is a shortage:of modern rifles and M-60tanks. Stahr said the latterwere superior to Russian tanks ,but that they weren 't beingproduced fast enough to meetthe needs of even our Armydivisions in Germany.

''Have you asked for enoughmoney in the current budgetto answer the need?" inquiredRep. Carl VLnson of Georgia ,chairman of the Hoiis-e com-mittee. .Vr'WELL, WE have asked forall the budget will bear ," re-plied Sta-hr. "The way thingsare now, the Army must cater:to the needs of the budget ra-ther than the budget ca;eringto the needs of the Army . Themore money we provide formissiles and other top priorityrequirements ; the more wehave had to cut down on de-fense funds for the Army."

"Vinson promised that hiscommittee would get busy ''atonce" to remedy the situation.

There was one moment dur-ing the recent foreign minis-ters conference in Uruguaywhen Cong. Armis cad Seldenof Alabama got into a hotbackstage hassle with RichardGoodwin , Kennedy 's No. 1 ad-viser on Latin-American af-fairs, now a member of theState Department.

G O O D W I N HAD- accusedCong. Selden of trying toblackjack Latin leaders in lo atougher policy toward Cuba ,and the Alabama congressmanresented it. He in turn accus-ed Goodwin of telling the Ar-gentines that the United S ateswould be satisfi ed with a reso-lution merely condemning Cu-ba. : . '

Selden has traveled exten-sively in Latin America , knowsits leaders , and hnd been tell-ing them quite frankly thatCongress was not likely to votemoney for tiny countr y whichrefused lo take a definite standagainst Castro,

When White House adviserGoodwin clnimod that Seldenonly offended La in loaders andmade il more diflicu lt to dobusiness wit '., them , the con-gressman suggested that Good-win , onetime payola prober forthe Harris committee , was stillwe: behind the ems.

The two finally made u|>when Goodwin brou ght Argen-tine delegate Dr. Oscar Canii-lion lo Consrcssmnu Selden to«e:. him to vouch for the factDial he hnd not sni d the USAwould bo sat isfied with n re-solution merely, condemningCuba.

WAUL GETS IN FEE

ROSTON W-Joo ( Plunger VWaul—no w no yours old—snwhis first major leugue baseballunmo In Boston for free nt theage of li.

Since then Joe h;is .attendednil hut four Boston Nationa l orAmerican League season open-ers without cost,

lie managed to get intogames hy doing such odd jobsas picking up littoi' on a spikedslick or vend ing peaittils , pup-corn , sod a pop and; even oper-ating concessions himself.

He Is s ure his health will begood eiHUi Rh to attend tho t'.iti2Red Sox opencr-mul it will boon the house, .loo holds n per-manent season 's puss fro mowner Tom Vuwkey for liis de-viit iuii lo» Ihe club ,

Joe in -inured his nickname ,1'lunger , hy taking n cold hnthevery morning. There 's noth-ing like it for £oo<l health , hosays. '

Bobby: RepresentsPresident of US*

TODAY IN NATIONAL AFFAIRS

By QAVIO LAWRENCEWASHINGTON — It's strange what a difference just a few

months make. The country was being told, for instance, in Jan-uary 1961, that Robert F, Kennedy was being appointed attorneygeneral , \not just because he was the President's brother but be-cause he was skilled in matters of law and the art of investi-gation. It was denied that any favoritism for a relative' or nepotismwas involved. .

But today the 36-year-oldattorney general has becomea ' 'good-will ambassador forthe President of the UnitedStates, who just happens to behis brother. There certainly,is no need for the attorney gen-eral to take a 26-day journeyaround the world just to getinformation on how better torun the Department of Justice,He will learn little abroad thatwill enable him to deal withantitrust suits.

The fact that Bobert Ken-nedy referred to familiarly asa rule in Washington as "Bob-by "—will in a sense representhis brother and will be giventhe equivalent of a royal wel-come everywhere may be asatisfying errand or vacationfor him , but it "will be obvi-ous that it is his relationshipto the President and not his-status as; amere cabinetofficer whichwarrants at-tention. H i sitinerary in-cludes Tokyo,Hong K o n g ,Jakarta in In-d o n e s i a,B a n g k o k .in Thailand,Rome, Berlin ,Bonn , T rr eHague, Paris ; Lawrenceand possibly London. VVherev-......er he meets with the top menin: foreign governments , he will ,be looked upon as a spokes-man for the President of -the ¦United States. The prime min-isters in turn will hope thatwhat they say to him will betransmitted to the White . '.House. It' s a strange way toconduct the diplomacy- of theUnited States, which suppos- :edly relies oh the secretary of ¦state and the American am-bassadors abroad to carry ona system of communication onforeign policy.

IF HE WER E not the Pres-ident 's brother , the a torneygeneral's trip , wouldn 't attra ct.much attention abroad. Hemade a similar trip to Asiain 1955 accompanying JusticeDouglas of the Supreme Court.His comments then show hisacuteness of observation. Forhe is; indeed , ar alert-mind-ed young man about whomWashingtordans are often foundquipping Nowaday s that hehopes to succeed JFK in 1969,and then ; Ted Kennedy willcome along as the third of the"dynasty " -in - 1977. 77

This is admittedly ¦ a longtime ahead to speculate , butBobby Kennedy, likeable , am-bitious , and a good politician ,certainly realizes that just tomake his mark , as attorneygeneral is not enough and that ,if he is to train himself to bea presidential candidate lateron , he must learn some'hlngabout the world and engagein wider fields of publicitythan the Department of Justiceoffers.

BOBBY Kennedy was re-ported to have received a fewweeks ago an informal bid tovisit the Soviet Union. The re-port was subsequently deniedin Moscow . Maybe the Krem-lin had second thoughts aftergoing back to the files andrereading the interview pub-lished on Oct. 21, 1955, in U. S,News & World Report , just aft-er Bobby Kennedy returnedfrom a visit teTlhe Soviet Un-ion. He said then:

"I've had enough of if. Weare dealing with a govern-ment to whom God and thefamily or the individual meansnothing, and whose practice ithas been in the past to makepromises and treaties to servetheir purpose and to breakthem when it has been to theiradvantage , It can only besuicidal for us , . . on the bas-is of smiles to strong hen Rus-sia and weaken ourselves,

"Communism retains ils bas-ic evils whether it Is OreKhrushchev type or tho moreoppressive Slnlin style. "

Declaring that the Russiansdo not really permit freedomof 'ravel and will not let vis-itors sec all of their countryor "Ihlnfis that are touchy, "he mentioned some slnve laborcamps that the R u s s i a n swouldn 't allow him to see. Hespoke -nlso-of . their ¦ ¦"seg regnt-rd" ' system ' of schools. Whenhe wns asked whnt this meant ,he said:

"THE EXPLANAT ION theofficials gave us is that peo-ple like their own ¦schools.

"In every city that we vis-ited in Central Asia the schools¦wore segregated—the Russianschool children ' in one school ,the local children in another , "

"Is thcro a difference In col-or ," he was asked, "betweenIhe IiJisslans and the na-tives? "

"Oh , yes." lie replied. "Theyare completely different , "

"I mean In color—""Oh , yes , the Russians ' arc

European , white, Tho nativesaro Mongoli an—a durk tact "

So maybe if Bobby Kennedydoes visit Russia on this or asubsequent trip, he enn toll theRussian people about tho "free-dom rides " in America andwhat all this can accomplish ,though It ' s conceivable IheS.otc Department might advisehim that this is a "touchy"subject on both side?.

THE PROBLEM of automobile) parkingIn the Winona SUte College area is a seri-ous one—but not nearly as serious as atMankato and St, Cloud where enrollmentsare considerably larger. As enrollmentsincrease—St. Cloud , according to predic-tions will have 6,000 students in 1970 com-pared with 3,500 now—it will become evenmore serious.

Studies are under way but as usual ,the most acceptable solution would be themost Costly. That would be to acquireadditional ; campus space for off-streetparking and the construction , not too farinv the future , of a multi-level parkingramp to accommodate at least a thousand¦automobiles. It would be, a costly under-taking/ not only to acquire another squareb3ock , but also to construct and main-tain the famp, but it may become a neces-sity unless other solutions to the problemcan be found. At the University of Minne-sota underground ramps are being builtin connection with some of the new struc-tures on the campus.

To restrict student parking within cer-tain limits of the .college area is not theanswer since it will only drive the parkersto; other streets in the general vicinity.

ONE OF the biggest jokes of 196V, aswe reflect on the events of the past year,was the visit by a so-called expert fromSt. Paul brought here by the WinonaCounty Historical Society to look oversome of our old buildings; The buildinghousing the Hurry Back Billiard Parlors,103 W. 3rd St., was, in his opinion , hesaid, the most "charming" in the down-town business district.

In our opinion , it is one of the shabbiest—and certainl y needs a face-lifting ormodernization if we expect our. downtownarea to .be attracti ve to shoppers. The entireblock is shabby, for that matter, and mostof the.- . -structures, are soot-stained to thepoint where they have a filthy appear-ance.. '¦-" : - ..L • . - •-.'

: :'* ; • ¦. • . - ' ¦.'¦¥ ¦. .- . .7- 7 * :

IN CASE yoo are interested, the U. S.Treasury has just issued a new $50,000bill. It bears the likeness of the late Sen.Carter Glass of Virginia , the "father" ofthe Federa l Reserve System and the sena-torial symbol of fiscal integrity.

In.; order to prevent : anyone from mis-taking it for other bills in his wallet andpassing, it for . one of the lesser value , thegovernment has thoughtfully made t h i sone three times as large, and well it might.It is also black and white — nothing greenabout this baby. '

Ordinary citizens may wonder just whatpurpose it will serve. Might it be to goshopping for the man who has everything?

WHAT WILL the world be like in 2002?The average family income, in terms

of today's purchasing power, will increaseto about $15,000. Victory over the commoncold will then be history. About 35 millionAmericans —one out of every ten— willlive in California. These are some of theforecasts made by Reader 's Digest on theoccasion of its. fortieth anniversary.

Machines will maintain the nation 'sproductivity. Average worker will put ina 28-hour week. He 'll take: three-day week-ends , four-week vacations/ Telephones willhave picture screens to show who is call-ing. You won 't dial numbers, you'll justsay them aloud and the phone will do therest.

Orbiting the earth will be large, man-ned space centers; research centers ,w e a t h e r stations, orbital '' maintenanceshops , space terminals for voyages to themoon and planets. Trucks may be muse-u m - p ieces; supplies and freigh t may crossthe nation through pneumatic pipelines ,with electronic sensing devices to guideshipments through the systems.

* ' .' • ; •IN THIS age of juvenile delinquen*/

.somebody is always coming up with a newidea for keeping tabs on night-roamingteenagers. A district welfare official sug-gested this idea , and Kau Claire beganH iving it a t ry last month. Here it is:

Whenever a cily . county, or state t raf-fic officer stops a car for speeding, care-less dr iving, or some: oilier violat ion , notonly is ihe driver booked but a letter goesmil t o the. parents of all his teenage pas-sengers. Those passengers .have commit-ted no offense , of course , but Kau Claireai i lhor i t ios believe there may be sonicvalue In hav ing parents receive a politepersonal note advising (hat "your son TomT > f " d a u g h t e r Mary "Avlrs a' irasscnge r in- acar driven hy .lim So-and-So , age 17 , whowas arrested for speeding.on Highway 12at 2 a.m. last Sunday, "

This should hel p wake up some parentswho don ' t know jus I wlial (heir lee/ia^er.sare doing out late at night . And maybet h e r e wi l l he some teenage pressure onthe driver to take it easy anil lie carefulwhen a v io la t ion wil l bring off ic ia l notil 'ieu-tu in to the parents of the occupants of thecar.

"Mule birds don 'L f ight over females butmerel y for lerr i tona ) righls . .says n scien-tist . Someone 's always taking tho romanceout of life.

M

Social peeurily pensions Increased 22Bpercent iri 20 years. Not so much , consid-ering the 10 congressional vote drives dur-ing that lime.

¦

But th» talvatlon of tha righteout li ol thaLord; ha ii their strength In tha time ef trouble.Pialm 37:39.

Thoughts at Random---From Editor's Notebook

An Ir i i l rpM 'ndeut Nne.'-pnprr —• K.s-t nh/is l i fil t SUS

\V K.Wiiitt ; C ,R. Ci.osww C K, L INHKNPii/ ) li.vh« ;r Ex ec. Director Uiisinrs.i Alor ,

<md Editor it Adv. /JireclorW. .1. COI .K Apot.ru nniEMW 11. G. l lYMtS

Mfinajjiiirj Editor City Editor Cirenintion Myr.11. II . ItMir.cK 1' '. I I , Ki.Aiaa ; R..! , I.OSINSKI

(. 'OII I / I I ISIH J ; .S'lipt. Press S u p t , Em iravii m Supt ,M", f!i.i-:K Giiiswoi.n (loit miN II OI .TKChief Accountant .Siuidni/ Ed ilii r

MKMiir.n or TUB ASSOCIATED TIIKRS

«fl®l»The Assoi ' iatcil Press Is enti t led exclusively

to the use for republ ication of nil tlio localnews printed in th is newspaper as well us allA.l', news dispatches ,

I TJiuralny, I'>hriiary J), l!)fi2

WINONA DAILY NEWS

"I' m surprised you have n 't the imported caviar. Myhusband said you 've got everythij ig. "

JhSL $l)lltL

'ON YOUR MARK! GET SET!

(Editor 's Note: lettersmust be temperate, ofreasonable length andsigned , by the writer. ..Eoni fid e names , of allletter-writers toil!,, bep ublished. No religious,medical or personal con-troversies arc accept- •¦'able.)

Herlottg.Baker BillDisregards Principles

To the Editor;Io regard to the editorial

"Why Not Apply Income TaxCut; Now,1' of Jan. 24, I mustdisagree with W.F.W, and theviews he presented .

First W.F.W. stated that allcorporations regardless of sizehave the same tax rate; thisis true only if they have thesame incomes. There is a taxrate schedule for various in-comes (Financing Govern-ment , 5th edition- p. 158, byHarold;-Af; Groves; therefore ,corporate tax is based on in-come arid , not size. ' ' ¦•

W.F.W. refers to the pro-gressive income tax as stif-ling. We respectfully point outthat the progressive incometax is based on ability to payaj id higher income groupsshould pay a larger percentageof their income in taxes thanlower income groups. If . thisis stifling, then the Americansystem is stifling. .

It is obvious that as incomeincreases , the ability to payis increased . The economic lawOf diminishing utilky testifiesto this fact. This law statesthat as income increases , util-ity , of each additional dollarearned decreases. For exam-ple, if a person' with $iob aweek income would spend $50on necessities, his next $50would have , less udlity value tohim. He could spend , the re-maining $50 for his own whimsand these purchases would notproduce the satisfaction thatthe $50 worth of necessities do,

Other examples: Owning twocars is nice, hut .the secondcar gives less satisfaction thanthe first . Having three is nic-er , but the third car gives lesssati sfaction than the second,and so on. It is bn these , re-lationshi ps that the law ofdiminishing utili ty operateis:

W.F.W. also states that thegovernment can be financedwithout deficit spending a n dstill have income tax reduction .He bases this assumption onthe fact that if people haveless taxes they will have high -er take-home pay and they willspend this inuoase in income ,thus put ting more money intothe economy causing it to grow.This would be true if the gov-ernment svere not spending allof the taxes it collects , t \Vedon 't have to worry aboutthat. ) Government spending oftax money stimulates the econ-omy equally as much as con-sumer spending Giving theconsumer more to spend wouldnot increase total spending,therefore the economy wouldgrow the same under eithertax setup contrary to the DailyNews' proposal.

If tax reductions are given ,part of this increased con-sumer income wou ld be saved,based on the consumers pro-pensity to save and consume.He would not , however , save orinvest nil the income increaseas W.F W. proposed ,' only pin tof it.

In lime of an expan dingeconomy increased investmentwould 'be good—direct invest-ment causes more economicgrowth , tinder the multiplierprincip le , tha n c o n s n mci -spending bid no more th.-ingovernment spending , Duri ngperiods of recession , however ,the effect would be bad. Trndi-tionally , during rccessionnryperiod s banks adopt tight mon-ey policies , restric t loans anddevelop an excess of cash inthe bank. People also savemore and consume less dur in gthese periods, thus money i'swithdr awn from the cconomvcausing even more ¦ recession -ary panes. •

The basi c problem w i t hW.F.Wr prog 'niiii 7s Ihat lCi 'sdependent on natu ral econom-ic fluc tuation and docs not con-sider governmental spendin «as havi n g any influence on theeconomy.

Economically the propo salsare unsoun d because they donot consider the individ ual spropensity lo consume of «nv<!,and ignore the multiplier prin-ciple and its relationship withgovern menial and consumerspending.

T h e Herlons-Baker Bill ,which is recommended hy IheDaily News , is designed togive tremendous tax 'bclfcfitsto tho upper income group, byreducing the progression of thoincome tax , lowering tho deathtax , decreasing tho corpornlotax ond modifying the capitalgains tax. I disagree with thobasic Ideas of the Hcrlnng-Baker Hill and its complou;disregard of the law of di-mini shing uti l i ty and the ,<\ m t«r-icon idcnl of taxation based «\\tho ability to pay.

Gorald F. Swans on555' Huff St.

Letters to TheEditor

The Dally RecordAt Winona

General HospitalVHitlAf ' hoiiru Medical and - tursle'tipitlcnU: S to 4 and 7 to t:30 p.m.- (no

children under 12). .Maternity patlentt; 3 to 1:30 ind J to»:30 p.m. ' - -(adult* - only) :- . . ' . - -

WEDNESDAYAdmissions

Mrs. John G. Diedrich , 464 E.Srd;St. .

Ralph A. Scharmer, 571 W. Willst. . , ¦;

Mrs. Florence A. Millar , 251Washington St.

Mrs. Joseph Ostrowski , Trem-pealeau,. Wis. 7

Mrs. Donald R. Morgan, 5(XH4Center St. ,

"-¦ ' ' Birth - ' •

Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Meyer,Boilings tone/ , Minn., a daughter.

DischargesBaby Victor C' Massaglia, 6i6'A

W, 5th St. 7Mrs. Lowell L. Doenier and baby,

Independence, Wis.Mrs. Elsie KoeWer, 709 E. 3rd

st.v .; - ' ¦.' . -¦ , . " "7 . .MissTDianne M. Patnode, College

of Saint Teresa.John J. Meyers, Morgan Block.

OTHER BIRTHS

CALEDONIA, Minn. (SpeciaD-At Caledonia Community Hospital:

Mr. and Mrs, Edwin ' Ferking-stad, a daughter Jan. 30. - ."- . ' ¦¦

Mr: and Mrs. Wilton . Duffy, Ho-kah , a daughter Jan.'731.¦ "- .

Mr, and Mrs. Glenn Biinge , adaughter last Thursday.

Mr. and Mrs. Kay Bachrnann,Mabel , a daughter last- Thursday .

Mr, and Mrs. Mormari Meyer , adaught er Saturday at Fall River ,Mass. . '

WOODLAND , iVlinn. (Special ) -Mr. and Mrs. Franklin It . Ell ing-huysen, a son Saturday at St.Elizabeth Hospital, Wabasha . Mrs.Ellinghuysen is the former Berna-dine Kronebusch . daughter of Mr.and Mrs7 Sylvester Kronebusch ,Woodland.

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS

Itoncy Kay Scow, Arcadia , Wis.,2-- '.'

Municipal CourtWINONA

Donald W. Vetsch , : 23, 1755 W.Waba sha St., who pleaded inno-cent Jan. 29 to a charge of speed-ing .40 miles per hour in a 30-mile zone on East 3rd . Street fromHigh Forest to Carimona streets,forfeited a deposit of $25 this morn-ing in municipal court , where hewas scheduled for trial. AssistantCity Attorney Roger P. Brosnahanmoved that Vetscli 's bail be de-clared forfeited. Municipal JudgeS. D. J. " Brtiski . granted the mo-tion. Vetsch was arrested by po-lice Jan. 27 at 3:40 p:m, oh East3rd. .

Larry D. Cu.mmins, 23, WinonaRt. 3, pleaded guilty to a chargeof failure to display current ve-hicle license plates." He was sen-tenced to a fine-of $5 or two daysin city jail. Cummins said he mov-ed here from Iowa about Dec; 1and was usin g 1961 Iowa plateson his car.' Police said Minnesotaplates - must be obtained as soonas residence is established in thisstate7 Cummins was arrested bypolice Wednesday at 6:50 ' .-p.m.- - onHighway 43 in Winona , He paidthe fine.

Forfeits were:Audrey Jean C. Ranzenberger ,

24, La Crosse , Wis., S25. chargedwith speeding 70 miles per hourin a 55-mile zone on Highway 61.She was arrested by the HighwayPatrol .Wednesday at 9:45 p.m. . onHighway 61 at Winona,

Ardeth J, G utzmann , 617 E. Wa-basha St.. $10, charged -with fail-ing to stop for a stoplight at . 4thand Main streets. She was ar-rested by police Wednesday at10:30 a.m. on Main Street,

Winona DeathsMrs. Elizatoth Gernes

Mrs. Elizabeth Gernes, 94.' Wi-nona RL 1, died at l-l a.m. Wed-nesday at home after a two-monthij lness.

The former Elizabeth Koenig,she was born at Wilson , Minn.,Jan. 9, 1868", daughter of Michaeland Anna Koenjg7 She was a life-long resident of Wilson Township.She was married to Frank GernesOct. 29, 1895, at Immaculate Con-ception Catholic Church, Wilson.He died June 24, 1942. She wasa member of the church' s St.Ann 's Society and Ladies Aid ,..So-ciety. ' ' • ¦¦ '

Surviving are : Two sons, Arn-old, Winona , and Albert, WinonaRt, l; one daughter , Mrs. Leon(Grace) Kramer, Pontiac,. Mich.,11 grandchildren and . 19 great-grandchildren. , One daughter hasdied. Mrs. Gernes was the lastsurviving member of a family of10 chi dren.

Funeral : services will be? 9:15a.m. Saturday at Burke FuneralHome and 10 a.m. at ImmaculateConception Catholic Church , theRev . Joseph LaPlahte officiating-Burial will be in the church cem-etery. Ftjend s -may call at themortuary Friday afternoon andevening. The Rosary will be saidthere: Friday at 3 p.m. : by St:Ann 's Society and 8:30 p.m. byFather LaPlarite. v

Mrs. Johanna SchettlerMrs. Johanna Schettler. 86, for-

mer Winona resident , died thismorning at the Buena Vista RestHome, Wabasha.

Arrangements are being com-pleted by Fawcett-Abraham Cha-pel. : : - -:

THURSDAYFEBRUARY 8, 1962

Two-State DeathsMichael J. Welsh

CALEDONIA. . Minn. (SpeciaD-Funeral services for Michael J.Welsh, 77, St, Paul , a former Cal-edonia resident, who served; as su-perintendeiit of three divisions ofGreat Northern Railway Co., wereheld Wednesday morning at Im-maculate Heart of Mary Church ,St. Paul. . He died Sunday at hishome after a long illness.

Mr. : Welsh was born in Free-burg Township March 17, 1884,son of iMr. and Mrs. ' ThomasWelsh. He graduated from Cale-donia High School.

He worked for James McCor-mick here in a funeral home andon the narrow guage railroad forsometime, v

In 1904 :he went to Havre, Mont.,starting as a clerk for Great North-ern. From 1950 until his retirementhe was a special representativefor labor relations , working out ofthe company 's general headquar-ters at St. Paul. V

Survivors are: His wife ; foursons, fou r daughters , a brotherand two sisters ; :

Julius W. LemkeCALEDONIA. Minn; (Special ) -

Funeral services for Julius W.-Lemke, Menomonie , Wis., a form-er- resident of .Caledonia , wereheld Monday at St, Joseph's Cath-olic Church , Menomonie. . Burialwas in a Menomonie cemetery.

His son, the Rev , John Lemke,pastor of St. James ¦ CatholicChurch , La Crosse, was celebrantof the solemn requiem Mass,. as-sisted by the Rev. J. F; McKannaas deacon, the Rev. CharlesBlecha, . subdeacon , and the Rev.Arthur Redmond , master of cere-monies.

-Beside s his son , Mr. Lemke issurvived by: His wife ; two daugh-ters, Mrs. Ray Schiltz and Mrs.Bernard W'ieser, Caledonia , and 11grandchildren.:.

Wealthy BloomM O K D O V I Wis; ( Special )-

Wealthy Bioom. 56, Elk Mound Rt.3. Wis., died Wednesday morningat Luther Hospital , Eau Claire, aft-er a three-^eek illness.

She was born Jan. 22 . 1906, inrural Mondovi , daughter nf thelate Mr. and Mrs . Emil Bloom.She lived tn the Mondovi area allher life until moving to Elk Moundfive years ago where she livedwith her daughter; She had been acook eight years at Mondovi' Clin-ic '- Hospital. :

Surviving are : One daughter ,Mrs. Ronald < Burden) . Deardorff ,Elk Mound ; . six grandchildren andthree brothers , Evere.t and Henry,Mondovi , and Eslev; Melrose Park ,111-,' -. ' . ' ': ¦ »;- ' - .

A funeral service will be at 2p.m. Saturday at the Church of theBrethren. Mondovi ,; the Rev. Wal-ter A! Miller officiating. Burial :willbe in .Giirhanton Cemetery. Friendsmay call from Friday afternoon un-til tl . am Saturday" at Colby Fu-neral Home, Mondoyi , and then atthe church.

Perry Messerall ,CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special)-!

Perry Messerall , 71. Caledonia,died tliis morning at Veterans Hos-7pital , Minneapolis , after a long ill- 1ness. ' - . . -¦ ]

He -was horn here Nov. 17, 1890c, |son of Mr. and Mrs: George Mes- ;seral l, and was a lifetime area .res-ident. ;¦ ' •" V

He was employed as a carpenterand a railway worker and by Tri-State" Telephone Co. here many jyears ago. A veteran of World War iI , he was a member of Loveless- ';Eikens American Legion Post 131, !Caled onia. j

Survivors are: Two brothers , IDewey and Cleveland , Caledon ia , Iand two sisters, Mrs, Georgina lStone, Caledonia , and Mrs. W. E. ICarrol , Atlanta, Ga. j

Funeral services will be Satur-• ';day at-2 p.m. at Polter -Ilaugcn Fu- ;neral Home there, the Rev , M. A. IBraatcn , Stone Lutheran Church ,Houston , officiating, Burial will bein Ihe church cemetery ,

Friends may call at the funeralhome Friday afternoon and - eve-"jning and Saturday until the time of ¦services. I

Mrs. Elizabeth RedmondLANESBORO , Minn. i Special)—

Mrs. Elizabeth Redmond, 87. a :former resident of Lanesboro, diedWednesday morning at the homo 'of her daughter . Miss Mary Red-mon d, Washington, D. C, Whereshe had lived 11 years.

The former Elizabeth . Bolan , shewas born near Wykoff - . Sept . 14 ,11174.

She was married to George Red-mond Sept . li , 15)04. They fannedon Irish Ridge northwest of boreuntil .' 1944 , when |.|ioy retired andmoved .to . Lanesboro. He dierl inNov ember lUIVi .

Survivors are: Two sons , Ed-ward , La Crosse, and George , Clin-ton , Iowa; three daughters , Mary;Mrs. A. .) . (Elizabeth ) Caygill ,Mat I I K on , Wis., and Mrs. . J . L.(Teresa/ I' tiajj e, Seattle , Wash.,and f ive gnmdchildr on.

Erineival. sex"v:iccs w ill .be Mo ndaynt to «( .m . at Johnson (MineralHome , Lanesboro , and al 10:30a.m. at St. Patrick' s CatholicChurch , the Rt , Rev. Msgr. Ray-mond Cialligan , ( irand Meadow .Minn. , offici.-iti/ig. Burin) will heIn the cliurcii cemet ery.

The Hosnry wil l be said Satur-day find Sunday at II p.in , a t thefunera l homo.

Francis E. IbachPRESTON. Wis. i Special ) — |

I/rancls E, I bach, fid , lifelon g resi- ,dent of Preston, 'died of a heart Ia t t ack at !l;.'l(i p.m. Wednesday athis home here.

Born .Inly Ml , l!tl) l , .he was theson of I'Vank J . and Berthn Lunge. 'lie married Tlielma Dnnnuin June30, I !);)), iAfter spending one year in Min- :iicapolis , soon after his niarriuge , iIn- returned to Preston where liespout the rest of his lile , \\v was jcashier of Ihe Farmers k Mer-rhtints SUdA- f lunk al one time . ,Recently lie worked as a printer i

at tne- Preston Republican news-paper, .'¦' ¦:. 7 ,7 t - ,

He was a member of the Lodge36. AF ti AM.

Survivors are: His wife , one \brother > Carl, Vancouver, Wash., Iand one sister , Evelyn Ibach, Pres-ton.

Funeral services will be held at2 p.m. Saturday at TJaauwald Fu-neral Home, the Rev. Obed J. :Nesheim: officiating. Burial willbe in Crown Hill Cemetery.

Friends may call at- the funeralhome all day Friday and until thetime of service Saturday. j' - . ' . ' Thomas E. Crawford i

WAUMAWDKE, Wis. — Thomas ;E. Crawford , 87, Waurnandee, diedat 6:30 a.m; today at St. Joseph'sHospital , Arcadia; Wis ., after a 10- ;day illness.

He was born at WaurnandeeMareh 24. 1874, son of Mr. and j¦Mrs. Patrick: Crawford . He was a' -jlifelong resident of the Waurnan-dee area. He was a fa rmer, amember of St.. Boniface CatholicChurch at Waurnandee, and of theCatholic Foresters and the HolyName Society.

Surviving are: Six sons, C. P.Crawford , Winona Rt. 3; Ornerand Ambrose, \\lil\v.aukee: JohnH;, Portage, Wis.; Edward Wino-na , and Marcus; Racine , Wis.;Uvo daughters. Mrs; Herbert (Mar-garet) Lettner , Trempealeau , Wis. ,and Mrs. Arthur (Catherine) Jel-en , Ellsworth. Wis.; 45 grandchil-dren ; 50 great-grandchildren , andone brother , Martin , Ft. Smith,Ark. Two sons have died.. Funeral services w ill . be 10 .a.rn ."Saturday at Burke Funeral Home,Winona , with Mass at 11 a.m. atSt. Boniface Catholic Church , theRev. Augustine Baro officiating.Burial will be in the church cem-etery. ; Friends may call at themortuary Friday afternoon; andevening;. The Rosary will be saidthere at .8 p.m. Friday!

Mrs. Betty HellerALMA, . Wis. (Special) — Mrs. .;

Betty Heller , 78, died Wednesday ;in an ambulance enroute to St, :Elizabeth' s Hospital , Wabasha. She jhad been a resident of Biver Vue jRest Home, Alma, -two years. I

She was born SepU 14, 1883, in |Town of Montana , daughter ofLeonard and Mary Florin . She :lived there until two years ago !when she came to Alma.

She was married to Peter Flury. ;Following-his '..death, she was mar-ried to Henry Heller. He also hasdied. • ' ;•

Survivors are: Two sons, Walter;Flury, Alma, and ' Lester Heller , ;Milwaukee ; one daughter , Mrs;-Albert (Hazel ) Benesch, Milwau-kee: six grandchildren , and onesister , Anna Riescb , Winona.

: A funeral service will ' be heldSaturday at 2 p.m. at MontanaEvangelical Church , the Rev. E,E. Drager , Cochrane , officiating.Burial will be in the MontanaChurch cemetery. ;

Friends may call at Stohr Fu-neral Home, 7 Alma , Friday and

; until noon Saturday .

Mrs. Orville Lindberg; . ; GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special\ |~ Mrs. Orville Lhndberg, 41, life- 1long resident of the Galesville !area, died of lulemia Tuesday jevening at a La Crosse hospital

1 after an illness of several months.' The former Elaine Bortle, she ;was the daughter o f ; Mr. andj Mrs. Arthur Bortle. born July 10,! 1920. She was married Oct. 10, '1 1940. '.' . . jj A member of the Tamarack ;i Lutheran Church, she taught' Sun- ;day School , sane in the choir and

belonged to several women 'sgroups in the congregation.

She is survived by her hus-band; parents; two daughters,Shirley and Carolyn; one brother ,Nerval, Galesville , and six sisters,Mrs. Norman (Margaret) Zie<jlei\Mrs. Howard , (Delorcs) Willia m-son, Mrs. John (Vivianl .Salsnianand Janice, all of Galesville, Mrs.Edward (Laura Tieplcman , St.Louis, Mo., and Mrs. Hohcrt (Eu-nice) Mcitzel, Cochrane.

Funeral services wi|J he at 2p.m. Satvtrday at Tamarack Luth-eran Church, the Rev. Odean Tie-man officiatin g. Burial will be inEvergreen Cemetery, Center-•ville. .,;' Friends may call at Smith Mor-

tuary from 7 to 9 p.m, Friday 'andafter 1 p.m. Saturday at thechurch. A prayer service will beheld at 8 p.m. Friday.

Leo A. KalmesALTURA , Minn. —Leo A. Kalmes,

65, Altura, lifetime area resident ,died this morning at .St. Mary'sHospital , Rochester , -where he hadbeen 'taken Wednesday night aftersuffering a ¦ stroke. '

Mr. Kalmes was born Feb; 20,1896, at Rolllngstone.'

He married the former Ernia C.Kramer , Elba , who survives.

He was in the hardware busirness at Altura . with his . brothersuntil he retired. He was a memberof St. Aloysius Society, Elba,.

Survivors are: Two sons; Curtisand LeRoy, Rochester * and adaughter , Mrs. Thomas (Arlene)Burns , Rochester; three brothers ,Henry. John and Joseph , Altura;five sisters, Mrs. J; M. Moiling,Thiensville , Wis.: Mrs. AndrewSpeltz , Minneapolis: Mrs. v Kath-erine Zenker , W'inona; Mrs. EarlZenker , Rochester , and Miss Eliza-beth Kalmes. Minneapolis , and fivegrandchildren.

Funeral services will be Satur-day at 9:30 a.m. at St. - Anthony 'sCatholic Church , Altura , the Rev.John Bergman officiating. Otherarrangements have not been com-pleted.

Friends may calL at Sellner-Gedde Funeral Home, St. Charles,Friday afternoon and evening andat the church Saturday morning ,where a funeral Mass will be saidat 9 a,m. The: Rosary will be : saidat the funeral home Friday at 8p.m. -".

WEATHER FORECAST . . . R a i n is expect-' sylvania and northern Maine. It will be warmered tonight in the Pacific coast states with snow in the northern Plains and the eastern . .half ofand rain forecast for the states to the east. Snow the nation. <AP Photofax Map) -Hurries are expected in Michigan , western Penn-

WEATHEROTHER TEMPERATURES

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

High Low Pr.Albany, cloudy .. 1H- ¦ « - , .01AlbiiC|uerc|iie, cloudy .. fill 44Atlanta , cloudy 44 211Bismarck , snow 12 !i TBoise, cloudy :i!i 34 .1(1Boston , cloudy 22 17Chicago , clenr : i!ll 11 .01Denver , clour .'>l 30Des Moines , clear . .. 22 0Detroit , clear 17 12 .00Fairbanks , snow . . . . . . u r> .tiriFori Worth , clear - . . , , 07 47 ,.Helen;) , cloudy 30 :>i> ..Honolulu 113 70 , .liKiUiniipolls. cloudy . 32 '»7Juneau , snow 31 31 .00Kansas City, clear . , , . 43 2!) ,Los Angeles , rain .... .17 51 .711Memphis , I' iiin 4"> 311 .05M iami , cloudy 7(> 70 ,05M ihvaukce , clear 15 4 ,.M pLs., Si. Paul , cloudy II -13 ..New Qrlemuv .cloudy ., 53..' .53.. .,„..New ^'orl( , cloudy V . 2(5 2 1 ..O kUthomu City, cloudy 55 30 ..Omaha , cloudy 31 ]i > ,.Philadelp hia , cloudy . 24 lit , .Phoenix , cloudy . . . , ' ,. 7( 1 53 ,13:Portland , Ale., clear , . 1-1 2rortland , Ore., rain .. 4(i 40 ,40Rapid City, cloudy . . . 8«> IdSI. Louis , cloudy 44 31S uit Lake Cily, 'clear . 4(i 33 ,()'.)San Fi aiici-sco, rain .. 02 54 .14Seattle , nun , 57 45 ,11Tampa , cloudy 05 51 ..Washington., cloudy ,. 30 23 ,.

( T-Trnce ) .

IMPOUNDED DOGS

No. l4."i,'l--.Male, black nnd white ,fol iar , no license, fourth day.

No. 1451—Male, black , " collar , nol icense , fourth day,

No . 1455—Female , white , blacknnd hrott 'lJ , no license , secondday,

Available for good liomoi:Fi ve males and f emales, large

and small , including a golden pup.

New WarningSystem Set UpAt Baudette

BAUDETTE, Minn. (AP ) - A10-ton mass of interlaced steelwill rotate high above this Minne-sota community this week cement-ing yet another link in the ,chainof defense over the northernborder. :.

Nearly completed; and alreadytested is the latest in search radarthe AN FPS-24 -a nearly $9million complex of ultra-modernelectronics poi sed on an 75800,000cement and steel building.

Turned by a 3 300 horsepowerelectric motor the giant screen iscapable of separating minute tar-gets at undisclosed ranges as wellas avoiding possible enemy .j am-ming by changing frequencies tooperating requirements.

Th» n«w radar It th» first of itstype to go into operation in the30th Air Division which stretchesfrom Minnesota to Michigan andsouth through Indiana.

"There is only one other surularunit in the division ," said . Lt. Col.Carl A. Lindberg, the base com-mander , and the Baudette unitwill be the first in operation—like-ly by the- end of , the week." So' new is the electronic marvelthat there is no training facilityelsewnere in the nation . Some 15full time civilian and 15 or morecontract civilians from the con-tracting firm will act as technicaladv isers and operate the equip-ment for training and mainte-nance lor about four months.

Th« base comploiri'eitt is approx-imately 135 airmen and six offi-cers, who also operate the moreconventional type pf radar withwhich the base was originallyequipped .

The new system is entirely - . .au-tomatic. The 5,000.000 watts ofpower provide information whichis computed in a massive concretebuilding and fed to semi-automaticground environment computers atDuluth for analysis and possibleaction; It has the ability to elimi-nate weather "blips" as well , asperforming other so-called "highcapability " function s , Lindberg in-dicated.

Presently on a t rial basis , theunit is slated to be purchased hyIhe Air Force.

*3 TIMIS THE HEAT -- """NA.^J^ C/ 'PP '

| ! HEATING UNIT R^WPB-El 1 Hffi Hlft' H£Ar— WH£K£ AND WHIM j ] I HM *ffiB jj SC if_ , jBg li^

\ " SS 0 ^' Designed f or those cold-spo ts«%

^T „o votrs m HOME, GARAGE, FACTOR^ or: CANs S «S. OmCi. . .onywnere./nside or out

jg^y? p F A R M E R Slv j & p f f m\AW^ kf ^ £

\dea\ for

Farrowing Pens,M^^f I \Ptr LmmmAmmw* \ Wi,k Houses, etc jllftJHfe^ V -J**' mwTm m^mP ^^^ ! COME IN AND SEE iI WJ^mK THEM DEMONSTRATED

MEMPHIS, TeDn . fAP )— Con-tinuing a quiet shift away fromrigid racial bars , Memphis hasdesegregated 30 downtown res-taurants, lunch -.counters . andsnack bars.

The policy change , accom-plished ' without incident Tuesday,involved eating facilities . in de-partment stores, variety storesand two drugstor e chains. Otherrestaurants were not affected. •

A*

30 Bars DeseqregatedIn Memphis Program

ATLANTA <AP) ;-- A South j

Georgia lawmaker wants the' .;state to place a statue of a mule jon the .. 'Capitol lawn - 'so that fii'- j .ture generations will be ab'e to jview the mode of travel and mo-. itive power of their : forebears.'.' ' . ; j

"the resolution introducetl Tues- jday by Rep. VVilliam Kininions , j72 , said in .this Jet and space age :"it is only right th;i t we inake: Ithis contribution to the memory ;of the Georgia mule."

7 ¦

Georgian WantsSfa tue of Mule

XENIA, Ohio (AP>—City com-missioners planned to- take stepstonight to correct an ordinancecovering city administrative of-'fices. . ,

Under a section of; theordinance; passed last fall and ' ef-fective since Nov. 12. three days'leave of absence with pay was tobe granted any city employe whosubmitted proper proof of hisdeath.. .

Asjk Gity Emp loyes toSubmit P rdof of Death

MIAMI , Fla,; (AP )—A U.S. offi- jcial will conduct a course in.Spanish today for Cuban refugeeswho chose life in democracy rathter than the dictatorship underPrime Minister Fidel Castro . Thesubject: U.S. income tax laws.

- i

Cuban Refugees to |Learn About Taxes i

MARTINSVILLE , Va ; . (AP ) pPvt. Marion Hargrove finally is ,getting along all right with the 'Army. j

But he is hot the same Marion Ij Hargrove who wrote the World !I War II best seller about his jj troubles with the Army in "See •J Here , Private Hargrove. " ¦!i The , new Hargrove is Pfc. j! Marion Hargrove of a Martins- ;

ville National Guard imit. He has !been named honor guardsman of |the month. - 7 j

' . ¦¦- ;'; . ¦ '¦ " ¦• ' - . i

i -

j New Pvt. HargroveDoing Well in Army

BIRD SALE OF THE YEAR!

RTCEEjS FREE CAGE' BB IH I R^R BB BBK mmm ^m^mm^^^^^^^mWAmm ^^ mWAm ^mmmm ^m^m^m^W AmwD99 ' W^wA mW\wW^ mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm\^H

^^ ^^m^^Ji SI^SlZl^m^mm^^^^ with the purchase of a bird during this

Just m Time for VALENTINE S DAY!ZH / ; %

"earty Male I Healthy Mixed

- J ) CANARIES PARAKEETS

h J, <% G"ai"ant<!cd Singers! j Regular $3.98 Value!

I / / n H II^H ^ m I i. i f l mW^ V -*M

Genuine ^BT plliS FREE 8 I plus FREE - | l$6.55 Value! *** CAGE! | H CAGE! ' v " - |

HURRY-HURRY ! Don't Miss Out On This Tremendous SALE!Shop and Save each week at 51 West Third Street in Winona

NKW YORK i^—C h a l i e s(Lucky ) Luciano , New York vicelord a soncrnlion ;iy<> . hn.s beenburied in his liimilv's $30,000 mau-soleum i« 'SI, .John 's Cemetery,Qiicen.s,

The body of the (M-yoar-oWl exilearrived by plane Wednesday fromItaly wlierc he died ol a heartat tack .Jan. 2fi ,

lit had been deported In his na-t ive l ln ly Hi years HK II idler scrv-infi 11) years in prison on prosti tu-tion racket charges. There wereonly two mourners nt the mauso-leum—his brothers'Bwto lo :uul Jo-seph,

You can count on a piaiind ofpoi h-saiisuiie links yielding irom12 lo 16.

Luciano BuriedIn New York

HOUSTON, Tex. 'AP ) - Thenew ${i0-rnillion manned space re-search lnlioratory hero sonn wil lbecome n center of astronaut ac-tivities.

Lt. Col. John Powers , public af-fairs director for the NationalAeronautics and Space Arlanini s-(ration, said Wednesday thatsome of the seven 17S. astro-nauts may arr ive in four to sixweeks, 'lile exact dale dependson results of Ihe scheduled Vcb.iT orli'ilnrnfp !.' ' ":

Space ResearchLabora tory Set

V ::^:- . ' : :: - | '

\j Aisle t Weekend Specials IW M \% Lines / / \,I // // ST0P BAD WEATIIER MESS AT THE D00R! \I J^ Multi-Use Boot Valet

J% - : .,N 5uil fr' 15x24!/2" Easy-Clean Plastic Tray'$ ¦ ¦ ' : ¦ : ¦ - ¦ . ' : "¦ ¦

' H

I MERCURY ALBUM SPE- Piir CIALS . .. . and this truly raMM| ^p. fj

I famous recording artists - J f n, |

j of only .99^ each. There 0n '/ : ^^B*S" ^5 aro albums in both mono "l'' :/^/S ¦ L * '

> and stereo . . . with orig- I \ j \ J eac "j inal values up to 4.98.

¦ •• %a#.V# ^

\ Come in soon and find . f7 your fa-vorites among this Protect every entrance with a hoot valet. . .v holds ii; terrific record bonanza. the entire family 's hoots and rubbers neatly. *:¦) COLD N I G H T S ARE Made of rigid hJ-j mpact plastic , it has a high wall ^

i PUZZL E NIGHT S .. . and to confine water . . ; -wipes clean with a damp cloth l\no pastime i.s more in-

.; tri guinjj and more relax- Packed in Poly hag Grey only A,-j • ing. In response to num- », . , , , ' , ^\ emus request s, ¦ we now Also ,<k "al for flowcr Iwl U" — f,ot 's betl ~ ,aundr y I*i h a v e a collection of tvay ' I

puzzles in a range ofup lo 500 interlocking llOMli FUR.MSlllNC.S DK1T. fpiec es , and priced from r

; ':2. [) ( to 2.00. Make a — ;: select ion of these puzzles k •- ¦ -for your own amusement— 7--- — - iPFCIAI ~^ . . . or as a thoughtful J rt^l M L m

gi lt to shut-ins. In our |Af k\ f t MM E W% *$Toy Aisles. . WAU N t K

^l I

R E M E M B E R YOUR /O^l /? *-/_ Yl '' wLSWEETHEART S '

0 f l /j d l t T / ll /j / O \ fl7 whether they be six or v ' \AAA4' / LAAJCAA JO %;j»lsixty. And nothing will v^^y Nplease <ne young miss 12xl2Vi" GRIDDLE * I"

7 more than a gift from |*7 our "Barbie " Collection No .slic.kiim _ < _ n() ,,ol ls, wilh w. Ma gnalilc v, ; of purses wallets , doll , , _ „R, m()s( lu, :ultini, of alI ( , ()() ki | 1( , uU,nsi ]Si 0nce ,:; cases , hat boxes, cosmc- you - V(! lricil it . you .„ lu, ., AInj , liaU lc fnn for the fA lie cases , diaries , etc., to ri,sl of yo,„. ]il (1 < |. he found in our Toy Lf Aisles, In shiny simulat- j r mf \ mm Vi ed pate nt leather , they rcg. d.%. r\ \mf

w'i arc decorated with Bar- V*#« 7 •**.

^hie designs and come in k;. ' a wide range of prices. I IOl 'SKW'AHRS DEPT. k, . , ; . ,, : .. TOTOW. .,, . , ,, j

#*%M .-4 w rf iv******** » ^vy v f t****.*' t '^7' ^ . s > c- ' - ^ > & < ^-c ^ ¦• ' ¦ "¦K' ' * ^ < v ;

f

fflalentiiifi 'V/

Cupid shops here . . . and so should/ou, to gift her to her heart 's content,with all the important little extras that '

<$ mean so much. f

| Handkerchiefs A \ - | »f 1s< Lovely Swiss sheer initial P * ^^ K^^T^ISL ' ' 'I handkerchiefs ¦with colorful / ^G^^fM^»>I petit point embroidery. - %(j|w TU£^. .

I Swiss jheers with embroidered LinOeTIG 1 I-;' Valentine motif. ^ I

J yz G Spring-touched linger ie , . so gay ff |iValentine print handkerchiefs . ¦ in floral print , so dainty with 1 | |

50c and 59c ^ ]acf' a,nd T care-free in soft ¦ \ I, fV. nylon tricot. ?

' Valentine mailing folders. | V\ i:7

I ' 15c W^>V Half Slips. -. . , on i7^

Tuck-in Sachet Packets, \V^ Sizes 24 th lu 3(1- ^ -vU s;>

'j 10c tO j .OO \^. Waltz Gowns . . . . - . 0 nn |I

¦ \V " Sizes 32 to 38. y.UU 7

p Hosiery ¦ V^

1 %i' / seamless stockings >y [7

*¦•« tha t seamless excitement V' ¦'¦ s ^S H^* v, '$ that seamless smooth fit \ ' \ \ ~^===:

^^N\ :-|| that wonderfully long wear V - -M / \ ^W

| RRINFOItCED SHEKRS ^' I j k\ ||

1 . 1.50 pr. I 3W- v I

&3ssm«Ea5*»ffltis ^

i fiwjPRE-INVENTORY

FINAL REDUCTIONSSENSATIONAL MARKDOWNS

FABULOUS SAVINGSThe prices toll the story of Furs by Francis ' great Inventorysale of the FINEST FASHION FURS. Hiuidieds of fine FurGoats, Jackets , Capes, Stoics and Scarfs at reductions upto 509o. Choose your fur from the very finest in fashion ,quality and fit at the LOWEST FUR PRICES IN YOURMEMORY. Furs by Francis' years of Fur Leadership is yourassurance of complete satisfaction!

P A R T I A L L I S T I N GSubject to prior sale.

-FUR COATS —Dyed Mouton Processed Lamb $100Natural Ranch Mink Front Paws . 199Natural Mink Gill Coat 199Natural Grey Mink Paw, % length 299Natura l Grey Persian Lamb 349Tip Dyed Sheared Raccoon. Flanks 179Brown Persian Sides, Mink Collare d 249Natural Dark Mink Sides (Pencil striped) . . . 349Natural Ranch Mink Paw Coat , full length . . . 299Black Dyed Persian Lamb 349Dyed Muskrat Backs Coat 199Grey Persian Lam"b, Sapphire Mink trimmed . . 399Natural Grey Mink Heads Coat 249Dyed Mouton Processed Lamb 12?Natural Sapphire Mink Sides, full length . . . 599Natural Gun-metal Mink Sides , full length . . . 499

— FUR JACKETS —Charcoal Dyed Mouton-Processed Lamb . . . . 49Natural Dark Brown Mink Paws . . . . . . . . 199AUTUMN HAZE* Mink Jacket , . . . . . . .' . 995Black Dyed Persian Lamb . . . . . ¦' . . . . . . . 199Black Dyed Persian Lamb Paws . ¦' . . . .-.- . .. - '."¦ 149Natural Mink Gills, Pastel . . . . . . . . . . 149Grey Persian Lamb, Cerulean * Mink trimmed 299Brown Dyed vSquirrel Jacket . . . . . . . . . . 299Natural Grey Persian La mb .. . . ... - .. . . . . . 269Sepia Brown Dyed Persian Jacket ,

Lutetia * Mink Collar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 499Pastel Mink Paw Jacket . . . . . 199Brown Dyed Persian Laml) Sides . 169Black Dyed Persian Lamb Mink Collar . , . ". . 329Logwood Dyed Mouton«Processed Lamb ,., ' . . , 59Natural Ranch Mink Paw Jacket . . . . . . . . 259Natural Light Pastel Mink Sides . , . . . . . - . . 299

— FUR SCARF SETS —Dyed Mink Contours , 2 SMns . . . , . . . . . . . $ 25 .Natural Pastel Mink Contours , 2 Skins . . . . . 69Natural Stone Marten Scarfs, 3 Skins 129Natural Pastel Mink Scaris , 4 Skins . . . . . . ".. 129Natural Sapphire Mink Scarfs , 4 Skins ' . . . . . 129Natural Fox Slmvl Collars . . . . . . . . . . . . 35Black Dyed Persian Lamb Tier Scarf 49Dyed White Fox 2 Row Cape 139Dyed Squirrel Cape-Jacket 189Natural Mink Shoulder Shrug . . . . . . . . . . 100Natural Norwegian Blue Fox 2 Row Cape . . . 139Natural Fox Shoulder Stole 50Dyed Mink 4 Skin Scarf 50Natural Sable— 4 Skin 199Natural 4 Skin Canadian Wild Miak 239

-NATURAL MINK STOLES —Natural Royal Pastel Mink Suit Stole . . . . . $249Natural Sapphire Mink E-ldorado Stole . . . . . 399Natural Sapphire Mink Suit Stole . 249Natural AUTUMN HAZE*- Letotit Mink Stole . . 429Natural Ranch Letout Mink Stole 399Natural AUTUMN HAZE" Letout Eldorado

Mink Stole 549Natural CERULEAN* Letout Classic Stole . . . 549Natural TOURMALINE* Letout Mink Stole . . 529Natural Ranch Mink Stole 249Natural Light CERULEAN"1 Pocket Stole . . . . 499Natural Mink Paw Classic Stoics 149Natural Grey Mink Sides Suit Stole 89

2—Only Ladies Hats—Wink Tnal Circlets . . . $9Plui 1(K', recteral Tax

p~~~~~~ CONVENIENT TERMS ~~ ~~~~~~.>0 D»y Accounlil > BudQer Accounlil t 18 Monllilv lo PayPay \'» Monthly { Tokl Up lo J on Our Lay-Away

No Exlr» Charm J } Full r»or« lo Pay ( BudDT Plan

l-'ur producls Inbalod lo show country ol origin ol Iniporlod (gri•TM, EMDA, Mutation Mink llroed erj Aisoclatlon

FURS BY FRANCIS, 57 W. 4th St.

Kellogg CoupleObserves GoldenAnniversary

KELLOGG , Minn. (Special)-The golden wedding anniversary ofMr. and Mrs. George Passe Sr.,Kellogg, was observed Jan. 31 withan anniversary high Mass ofThanksgiving offered by the Rt.Rev. Msgr. B, A. Kramer , pastorat St. Agnes Catholic Church ,where they are members. The cou-ple repeated their marriage vows.

Mrs. Passe, the former MissElizabeth Angelbeck , Plainview ,and George Passe, Wabasha, weremarried Jan. . 31, 1912, at St.Joachim Catholic Church , Plain-view, by the late Rev. D. J. Lav-ery. Their attendants were thelate Miss Theresa Angelbeck, sis-ter of the bride and the late Wil-liam Passe, brother , of the bride-groom, best man.

MR. AND MRS. Passe have sixchildren , Lawrence, Mrs. Arnold(Loretta) Hoffman and Mrs. Fran-cis (Elaine ) Sullivan , Kellogg ;Walter , Chilicothe . Ill.; George Jr.,St. Paul , and . -Mrs.; . Eugene- < Cath-erine) Wiley, Lake City, and 23grandchildren , all of whom werepresent at the . celebration. •

A reception was held from 1:30to 4 p.m. Sunday, at the farm homeof thei r son-in-law and daughter ,Mr. and Mrs; Francis Sullivan ,Kellogg, with 150 present. Ch ildrenof the couple arranged the cele-bration.

THE ANNIVERSARY cake wasmade by Mrs. Francis Kottschadeand served by the couple's niece,Miss 'Mary "Angelbeck , . Wabasha.Another niece, Mrs. John Ahlers.

Wabasha, poured. Miss M a r yPasse, granddaughter of. the cou-ple, presided at the guest book*Serving at the reception were theMm«s. Francis Sullivan, ArnoldHoffman , and Eugene W i 1 ey,daughters of the couple, and Mrs.Lawrence Passe and Mrs. GeorgePasse Jr., daughters-in-law" of thecoupie.

Decorations in the home were ingold and white and included flow-ers, candles and ' wedding bells.A cream pitcher and sugar bow)received as a wedding gift 50 yearsago was used on the serving table.

AFTER THK IR MARRIAGE thecouple lived" at Brainerd , Ham-mond, Wabasha ' and Kellogg. Mr.Passe was engaged in farming andcarpehter woric.

They - operated s-'farm here until1947 When they retired and movedto Kellogg where they reside. Mr.'and Mrs, Passe are both very ac:live. His hobbj is fishing and hunt-ing and Mrs* Passe enjoys garden-ing and flowers, Mr. Passe is jan-itor of . 'St. -Agnes. Church, Kellogg,and cemetery caretaker. Mrs, Pas:se takes care of the sanctuary andsacristy of . the church.

TAYLOR. Wis. (Special)—Circlemeetings for the Taylor LutheranALCW have been scheduled for theweek as follows: Ruth CircJe willmeet . Tuesday at 2 p.rn. at thechurch with Mrs Helga Lindfoo andMrs. Alma Joten hostesses. Tues-day evening at 8 p.m. Rebecca Cir-cle will meet at the home of Mrs.John Clipper with assistant host-ess Mrs. G, Husebpe; Mary Circlemeets Tuesday at 8 p.m. with Mrs.Morris Casper and assistan t host-ess Mrs. Lee Casper; Martha Cir-cle will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday atthe home of Mrs. Albi n Overby.Mrs. Lloyd Nchring will be host-ess to Rachel Circle at her homeat 2 p.nv. Monday. Sarah Circlewill meet Monday at 8 p.m. at thehome of Mrs. Jirnmie Siefert . Na-omi Circle will meet Friday at 2p.m. at: the home of Mrs. Ori nKoxlien.

The annual smorgasbord givenby members of the ALCW of Tay-lor Lutheran Church has beenscheduled for March 6 ' in thechurch parlors.

: .¦ ". . .

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MISSIONARY COUNCILThe Women's Missionary Coun-

cil 'of the Church of Christ willmeet at the home of . Mrs. HarryMcMillen , 1104 Gilmore Ave., Fri-day at 7:30 p.m; Mrs. Russell Can-trell will lead the lesson.

25TH ANNIVERSARYMr, and Mrs. Florian Beck, 721

E. 3rd St., will observe their 25thwedding anniversary Friday. Theywere honored at a party at Jack'sPlace Saturday evening. All oftheir 15 children were present ex-cept Pvt. Jerome Beck.

Taylor. ALCWCircjes Set Dates

BLAIR , Wis: (Speci al)—DavidMolstad, son of Mr. and Mrs. RoyMolstad , Blair, and Miss GeraldineA«n Jessie/ daughter of . Mr. andMrs. Glenn Jessei, West ' . Allls,were married Jan. 27 at the Flor-ist Avenue Lutheran Church, NorthMilwaukee. The Rev. B. E. Acker-man performed the ceremony at 3p.m.

Attendants were Mr. and Mrs.Gerald S t e n d a h I. ArlingtonHeights , '. III..' The birde wore anaqua wool suit and a corsage ofgardenias. Mrs. Stendahl wore abeige wool suit with a corsage ofpink carnations.

THE COUPLE will b« at homeat 2103 S. 71st St., Apt. 104, WestAllis. - ' .

Mr. Molstad is employed atShoreline Supply, Inc. , Hales Cor-ners, The bride is a beautician.

Mr. and Mrs. Molstad were hon-ored at a reception Sunday after-noon at Blair First LutheranChurch by 60 relatives and friends.Hostesses were the Mmes. DeVereDahl, James Dahl , Lester MoenJr., and Ray Nereng, Mrs! Dahland Mrs. Terrehce Beaty assistedwith the opening of the gifts. Mrs.Dahl also poured. The Mmes. Os-car Hovre , Helmer Strand and Ed-win Nanstad assisted in the kitch-en.

The bride 's parents and herbrother , Roger , were guests at thereception.

Ever serve hot rnealy freshly-boiled potatoes with a topping of*our crearii and chopped chives?

David MolstadTakes BrideIn Milwaukee

BLAIR ,1'' . Wis. (Special)—Yellowacacias , white snapdragons andlighted tapers in candelabra form-ed the background in Zion Luther-an Church for the marriage ofMiss Roseanne Kaye Borreson andRoger .Victor Anderson nt 8 p.m.Saturday.

The bride is the daughter of Mr.and TMrs. Ernest Borreson , Blair,and the bridegroom is the son ofMr. and Mrs. Norman Anderson ,runi! Blair.

THE REV. E. E. Olson perform-ed- .the. double-ring- ceremony. Mrs.Roger Dahl , sister, ; of the bride-groom , sang "O Perfect Love" and"The Lord's Prayer. " Mrs, Law-rence Holven was accompanist andplayed the 7 traditional weddingmarches, v v

Miss Nancy Borreson was hersister 's maid oi honor and MissNorma Anderson, sister of thebridegroom , was bridesmaid.

David Quarne and Roger Wan-gen , ¦ at tended ¦ the bridegroom.Thomas Borreson and Dennis An-derson , brothers of the coupl e,ushered.

THE BRIDE 'S STREET-Ungthwhite lace dress over blue taffetawas made with short sleeves andworn with matching lace gauntlets.The V back neckline , was trim-med with rhinestones. Her circularveil was held by a tiara of rhine-stones. She carried a cascade ofred roses. .

The dresses of the maid of honorand the bridesmaid were styled oftaffeta with portrait necklines andshort sleeves. The maid of honorNvorc sapphire blue and the brides-maid, sky blue. Small round hatsheld .(heir circular .veils and theycarried cascade bourjuets of whitechrysanthemums.

Tlie bride 's mother in brownwith beige accessories and thebridegroom 's iriotlier in black withpurple accessories; wore corsagesof yellow; chrysanthemums. Mr.and Mrs. Thomas Gunderson, Mr.and Mrs. Erick Anderson and Mrs.Charles Borreson , Blair , grandpar-ents of the couple, were honoredguests. The grandmothers worecorsages of white chrysanthe-mums.

A RECEPTION FOR 200 washeld in the church dining room.Mr. and Mrs 7 Roger Fanevoldserved as host and hostess. MissDiane Anderson , sister of the

MR. AND MRS. Roger V. Anderson arc pictured leaving ZionLutheran Church Saturday following their marriage. The brideis the daughter of Mr . and. Mrs..- Ernest Borreson , Blair , Wis., andthe bridegroom is the son of Mr. and ..Mrs . Norman Anderson ,rural Blair. They will make their home in Blair where the bride-groom is employed. (Haefncr Studio)

bridegroom , was in charge of theguest book. Mrs. Ralph Anderson ,sister-in-law of the bridegroom ,poured: Mr* Ralph Wood , sisterof the bride , served the weddingcake and Mrs. Philip Johnsonserved the ice cream Miss MaryKnutson , Milwaukee , and MissNancy Nelson, Blair , displayed thegifts

Serving were the Misses Tolar-age Johnson , J<idith Linb-erg, Di-ane Stenberg, Marilyn Schroeder,Helen Hoff and Anita Thompson.In charge of the kitchen were theMmes. Alvin Olson , Robert Syvcr-son , Harris Hanson and HarveySolberg.

For travel the bride wore orangeberry tweed wool dress with blackaccessories.

BOTH THE BRlDE and bridegroom are graduates of Blair HighSchool. The bride was a typist andfile clerk at Pillsbury Co., Minne-

apolis. The couple will make theirhome here where the bridegroomis employed by the Preston Coop-erative Creamery.STUDY CLUB

The Saturday Study Club willmeet Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at theriome of Mrs. W. L. Hodgins , 123V Mark St. Mrs Henry Umbrcit-will present the lesson.MABEL BAND CONCERT

MABEL . Minn (SocciaD—Mabel"high school band will give its an-imal winter concert In the schoolauditorium at 8 p m, under thedirection of Mel Ruehmann. In-cluded in the concert will be se-lections as a special' tribute to thecentennial of the Civil War. Tlieflute section will feature a LatinAmerican number by members,Jiilianne - Wold , Robert K r u s e ,Mark Simonsen. Brenda Thingvoldand Mary Redwing.

Roger AndersGnsAt Home in Blair

MR. AND MRS. Raymond Benter , above, are at hom& at 462E. King St., after their marriage Jan. 27 at St. Casimir's CatholicChurch. The bride is the former. M5ss Frances Bambenek, daugh-vtcr of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bambenek , 740-44tfii Ave. Mr, Benteris tlie son of Mr. and Mrs7 Chris Benter, Sugar Loaf. (EdstromStudio) . - ' , , ;' . ' .- ¦¦ 7 '¦:

A Chantilly lace bridal gown wasworn by Miss Frances Bambenek ,daughter ' of- .'Mr . and Mrs. FrankBambenek , 740-44th Ave., for hermarriage to Raymond Benter , sonof Mr. and .Mrs. Chris Benter ,Sugar Loaf , at St. Casimir 's Cath-olic . Church Jan . 27. .

The Rev. Robert Stamchro r per-formed the. ceremony. Miss .. Shar-on -Gallagher , Minnesota ' C i t y ,was maid of honor and MelvinBenter , Sugar Loaf , was best man.

THE BRIDE'S ballerina-lengthgown was designed with a fittedbodice , square neckline arid three-quarter length ' sleeves. A pearltrimmed crown held her silk il-lusion veil. ,

The maid of honor wore a greensatin dress made with a fittedbodice , round neckline and three-quarter length sleeves, and f u l lballerina-length skirt.

A reception was held at theTeamsters Club.from 1 to 5 p.m.Mrs. Vernon Gallagher ,: MinnesotaCity, made the wedding cake cutby Mrs. Eugene . Monohon , Dil-worth , Minn., and Mrs. Clark Luh-mann , Minneapolis. In charge ofthe . gifts were Sherry Greseth andLou Kay Maronde , Rochester, incharge of . the guest book , JaniceThrune , Roch ester.

THE COUPLE is at homo at462 E. King St. Both are grad-uates of Winona 7 Senior HighSchool and the bride is employedas a clerk typ ist at the MayoClinic, Rochester , Minn ,

Bridal showers were given byMrs. Rose Bambenek Jan. 137 by

Miss Sharon Gallagher , Miss Sher-ry ; Greseth , Miss Lou Kay Ma-ronde and IMiss Janny Thrune ,Jan. 10 in Rochester.SOCIAL CLUB. The Pleasa-tit Valley S-ocial Clubwill meet as the home '. of Mrs .William - Krage, 408 Gra nd St., at2:15 p.m. Saturday. .BETHLEHEM WOMEN

LANESBOEO, Minn, ^Special)—"American Missions" !!.'ill be pre-sented as the program topic whenWomen of Bethleh em meet Feb.14 at .the Bethlehem Parish House.Hostesses w:ill include the . Mmes.Edward Redalen Jr., Sam Oisori,Don Allen, O. G. Bradley and MissMinnie Quanrud . }EAGLES AUXILIARY

Members of the Eagles Auxil-iary met MTonday everting at theEagles HalH .v A Valentine party"was held following the businessmeeting. Games

^were vplayed and

"Valentines exchanged by the 35membersvamd guests, TMrs.. Theodore ; Kline , ' ; .chairman , '¦. and Mrs,Harold O'D ea were on the lunchcommittee . The attendance prizewent to Mrs. John Kozlowski.

Miss Bambenek,Raymond BenterExchange Vows

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i

;¦:' ;: SPECIAL'S' Pp$P)> \; :,. - for «Hjl, II Valentine's. - ' VR^ iP ' - . :^'- ; ' : \- *f v ^:, \!' Friday and Saturday Only ;

I 20% Discount? •

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' ¦• - .

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[ on all merchandise ;

i Sara's Gift Shoppe jI . " ¦ ; ' ;' - ." .- 103 E. Third j

Advertisihg' Ma n TermsOur Era 'Age of Noise'

"Historians may very well-tenmour era the 'Age of Noise.' Adver-tising contributes to this, noise. Thevolume of advertising has enhanc-ed the importance of the advertis-ing agency and the ad-man," saidDr. William . Mindak speaking on"The Ad Man and She" Wednes-day at the AAU W general meet-.ing- ¦ . '" '• .

The dinner meeting was held atthe Hotel AVinona at 6:30 p.m. with85 attending. Frank Haas introduc-ed Dr . Mindak , professor in . theSchool of Journalism at the Univer-sity of Minnesot a and research con-sultant for Knox-Reeves Advertis-ing Agency. 7

"ADVERTIS ING 3$ - a. means ofcommunication which can be usedfor good or evil ," Dx. Mindak stat-ed. "The medium reflects, rai-herthan shapes , the values of our cul-ture. When our economy changedfrom , an economy of needs to aneconomy of wants , the consumerbecame 'queen ' and ' .has' '-dictator :ial power over what will beproduced. 7 •

"Detecting the buyer 's motiva-tion is the job of the ad-man.People do not always expose tiheir

real motive for buying, and arcnot always rationa l. Women havean increased role in determiningconsumption in our society. There-fore , the conflicts in women 's mo-tivation are important to the ad-vertiser. With more education , mo-bility and desire for expression ,women have changed our econom-ic society.". Dr . Mindak showed slides illus-trating consumer motives. "Statusoften is the force which controlsbuying," he explained. ¦ "Negativeappear is another factors The ad-vertiser ' must contend with con-flicts between the traditional andmodern conception of homemakerand mother . : The romance ordream ideal -of modern woman isinclud ed in many advert isiiig cam-paigns. Consumer areas, such asbeer and tobacco ads , once gear-ed to the male buyer , are feminiz-ing their appeal."

HE CONCLUDED his talk-withthe point that advertising mediaare sensitive to the wishes of thepeople. Complaints should be maideto those responsible. The audiencequestioned. Dr. Mindak followinghis talk , ; .

Mrs. Frank Haas, president of

,the Winon a branch of the AAUW,conducted a short business meet-ing'precedtng the talk. Mrs.- CurtisJohnson , fellowships chairman , in-troduced Misses Kathy Stork andJudith Brom . local recipients ofAAUW fellowships .

V Vy^F She'll fall in love at first sight, with % i IfgL and «*¦ f «H ^P FJ*rtPX y°ur choice'of glamorous Valentine ¦ \ S'EfJ1

- I ^SPT" (/WV / \\\ ' ~ > '""A . r . < • . r , M , ' X. A, ion fabrics. <£ ii \\'- .JP~AF

/ fes- M&I gifts from our delightful array. We '*&>&.> <K1 95 %? <K ^l av ^ * *m r A W{,, ! H id a y 7 ' &rV> ' A< *Vi& ± Ar

*>\ ' W \!- ;J * have everything pretty and ' ^k'SV^s* - $ " fe ^r

P i>S*2 \ \ fashionable for her and there's a price ifo ' "" 2j JH^

mr. -'fnlM t0 please every bLjdget - ** A' ^%$* ^w$w

/fi /^/lu - -.«v* § NEW SPRING BLOUSES 1: Jfc/ . ' \ I ' ~ l r t k - vf r. ^^^^iM., <j f % -*k.J$> '* #« wardrobe. All now stylos n np . *r nn I t y ^ <'* T \

f ' W / "'il %>#™ #L & *& t vilh shorl or roll Meovcs. $2.95 tO $5.98 A l^g fr 1%/ / '.!- ,'" / :V ' .y '^

^%% $ %- Sizes 30-38 in while and /l!» ' P" %^^\L.

f^ "M* Lov L-v gf SPRING JEWELRY % DAINTY HANKIES Al^M / /% I NYLON GOWNS If A„ cnchanting soledion ^rj ,^^. wuh lace , embroidery, 2Sc f V mHM J% \\ and L I N G E R I E 3f"K «' spring-perfect car- &HM Ji>TlS

and all sorts of fine dc- *"»- J JflHBH. Jf

fl* \ \ uinvat rx s ri necklaceS ) brace_ m^ ip£.Wm\ taila Tuck SCVCral lnt° ZA f ^^H^^tf /

I . Dicamy lmgerie for your J %

] c[ s < j ) ins in new (jesj gns «L«3ffl i ^HM* $a.*

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Sp/j I fllm V 8mvns' Peignoirs , jj '•* ^^feSi^ f* ' j jj f f i i X - *M ^^< I/ ( lacy slips , glamourous pa- £f lL \\ and up /> - ^*r t^ '2t* ^^L <« J^^^^^ -t t • Pius i«x

-M jamas. A delightful Valen- grf %k 4 #

' $* ¦«? ' " - I - T>

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lg$J&? < P P %0h

Phone 2876 ¦

Military order of Lady Bugs,Gnats Circle 13, met at the VFWClubroonr Tuesday evening. Mrs,Harold Wooden and Mrs. JohnKozlowski were appointed to go tothe rest horhes and Winona Gen-eral Hospita] with Valentine favorsand tray cards.

The attendance prize furnishedby Mrs. Ed; Modjes ki went to MissLillian .Ziegler. Hostesses wereMrs. Nigel Stoneburg and Mrs.Harry Wigant.

The next meeting March:6 willbe held at 8 p.m. at the WilliamsAnnex. A 7. p.m. banquet will pre-cede the meeting ; -Mrs. AmbroseMaddigan will donate a special at-tendance prize at his meeting.

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CARD PARTIESHomer PTA will spo nsor a series

of card partie s beginning Sundayat 8 p.m. at the Homer- Hall. A.film on artafical respiration will beshown at the next meeting Feb.15 at 8 p.m. at . the Homer school.

Lady Bugs MakeValentine Payors

Soroptimists SetVforkshop Session

Plans for a" "workshop meetingof the Soroptimist Club of Winonaon Feb. 2l at Richards Hall , Wi- .nona State College , with Mrs. FaeGriffith as hostess were made atthe luncheon meeting of the clubWednesday in the Huntsman 'sRoom of the .Steak Shop.

President Evelyn Taraldson pre-sided at the short business session.Preliminary plans for ticket salefor the Honnel Boutique on March25 at Richards Hall were made.Tickets wiLl be given to the mem-bers and to the part icipating storesat the next meeting of the club.

The membership tea planned If rthe Venture Club members will hepostponed until the return of MissHarriet Kelley, lieutenant-govern -or of the !North central Region ofSoroptimist Clubs. M iss Kelley isattending the regionaL board meet-ing at Sioux City, Iowa , Fridayand Saturday.

Miss Taraldson reminded mem-bers pf the invitation from the .AI-trusa Club for their Feb. 28 din-ner meeting at the Hotel Winonaat which Dr. Margaret Schiizyer ,a meriiher of MEDICO , will bequest speaker. She has been work-ing in ; .Haiti; and will also discusscommunism. .

[ CHICK EN DINNER . - . " ¦!ALMA , \Vis:-American Legion j1 Post 224 will sponsor a John Har- J

mon chicken dinner from 6:30 toT-.30 p.m, .' ¦Tuesday; at the . LegionClubrooiiis. . . ". • ¦. . ; .

ThUriday; F«bru«ry i, 1961 WlNOMA DAILY NEWS: *

Forever Feminine¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ _ . *

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t> JW imin.*«»>-». fc. - L~m t f . 7 f r \ ^. i a S \ ^-I suppose now ^ you're going to tet! me you

cort hqrdlyTWai t to start puttering}r» the garden!

' ¦/ ¦ ¦ 'j f*0 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY!

^—^—^—^—^—^—^m—^—^—^L ¦ .

1 GIVE-AWAY SALE OF ™

| 180 FALL & WINTER DRESSESEvery dress on sale at far less than half of the original price

• EXTHA SPACE • EXTRA SALES PEOPLE • STORE OPENS TOMORROW AT 8A.M.

40 dresses 46 dresses 58 dresses 36 dressesformerly formerly formerly formerly (

10.95 to 14.95 14.95 to 17.95 17.95 to 22.95 22.95 to 29.95

now now now now$5 $7 $9 $n. . . . ^ M^ i«^ ^ ^ ^»« Y~r-rT-T*B --*-,,~J*rr~rJ* '~**'" |MHV<^HwaiMIWMnMaMMWHWaHHnamMNM i M|WMMHMaMaM ^WMM'MM mmammmwmamiamama*mm»mmmammwmmMmmiamimmAttmmammmmam^mamamm m MMMaaMiMMaHiHMMMMaMwiHwWHt ^^

¦Girl Scout Board OrientsMembers, Hears Trends

Nov members of the Winonaflirl Scout board of directors re-ceived orientation for the ir jobs ingirl scouting and a briej ing orthe new program trends for th eyear ahead at the home of Mrs.Laird Lucas, second vice pres-ident , Tuesday 'morning.

Newly-elected officer s of theboard are Mrs . Lawrence Santei-man , pres ident ; Mrs, Harris Kal ;.brcher . first vice pres ident ; Mrs.\\. II. Lauer , secretary, and Mrs.C. '31, Opsahl. trensurcr7 Boardmembers who were appointed tocommittee . chairmanships includ-ed 7 Mrs; A , W. Sturges , train-ing committee; Mrs . Addison Kh-lers, Juliet te Low committee ,Mike Bambenrk , committee onemployed personnel ; Mrs. -A.Grant Burleigh , . membership-nomi-nating commit tee , and Ray Oor-such , financ e conimittcc. :

MRS. DONA.LD Schneider wasintroduced us the new ' neighbor-hood chairman for Sunset Neigh-borhood, Miss Leona Kbcl , exec-utive-director , presented a filmstrip on the program trends inthe years.ahead. In her commentsMiss Ebel pointed out the fourbasic ; beliefs of program trends ,discussed the kinds of materialswhich will be developed by the

national .organization - to supportthe beliefs and made suggestionsfor ways in which' the WinonaCouncil can prepare for the newprogram which will bo initiatedin W37

The new proRrnm plans outlinedby Miss Ehel .included -investing agirl only onc e, ' with .1 icdedica-tion at each program level. MissF.bel discussed th e new foti r- .' .age-level program for girls 7 through17 . a two-year piio grani tor 7 andR .vear-olds ; a . thr ee-ye ar programfpT nine , ten . and II year olds: athree-year program for girls aged12 ,: 13, and 1-4 : a three year pro-gram for l;V 16 and 17 year-olds. -:

. Miss . ¦ Ebij l - slated , "We believethat all Girl ' Scout programs mustinclude , not only the promise andlaws and other fundamentalsst ated in the constitution v but alsoa- concerted push on citizenshipeducation a"d related inl c'rnationalfriendship pt 'rmentin K all troopand camp programs , greater stresson health and safety in all- pro-grams , greater emphasis on theout-of-doors , the home , and 7 thearts. We bel ieve that rmicli morespecific lielp must be providedour troop ' leaders!" - . ' -7 i

Miss Ebel closed her presenta- ;tion by listing suggestions of pre-\paration for the new fourtevcl pro- !

gram, Her . suggestions ' included :Organize troops for 7-year-olds:select , train , and retain troop lead-ers, increase the age range hi theexisting troops , increase the -sizeof the troops , build strong neigh-borhood service teams, use troopconsultants more ' effectivel y andincrease opportunities : for serviceprojects . and challengin g citizen-ship trainin g.

Additional members of the 19G2board include Mrs . L. E. -Rry n 'rs-lad , field vice-president; Mrs. fc.W. Goldberg, chairman of urogramcommittee; Mrs. Geor ge Forster ,chairman of camp committee:Mrs, It. W. Miller , chairman ofcommunity relations committee;Mrs. Robert Henry, registrar ; Mrs.Brandy Chappel l , chairma n ofpublic relations committee , andMrs. Arvel Allred , Mrs , WilliamHeise and Mrs, Art Anderson,neighborhood chairmen . Membersal large are Mrs. C. K. Heberling,Mrs , John Tearse , Mrs. LutherMcCown ,.Mrs . James 'Schaim andMrs , John Carroll.

HOT SPRINGS VACATION

ir II Zeches. Fred ShermanJoseph Dettle and Herbert J. Honer have left for a two -w eeksvacation at Hot Spnngs , Aik

Mrs. c, Waiter . Ekma 'n, . Minnc-j 'ap'olis , grand guardian of the, Grand Guardian Council ;-of . .' Min-j nesota . International Order of- Job' s Daughters, made her offi-| cial visit Monday night at the¦ Masonic Temple. Accompanyingj her was the .Associate Grand Guar-! dinn , Mr. Ektfian.j Senior princess Kathy Boyum

presided. She introduced Mr . andMrs. .:. C:¦- ¦•Av'altc'r . Ekman; Mrs.Carl W. Frank , ! grand guide andpust guardian ; Mrs. Lee Ayers.past grand first messenger andpast guardian; Mrs , ]T, S. John-

! son Jr., guardian ; Carl VV. Frank ,associate guardian , and all othercouncil members.

! MRS. EKMAN presented the hon-I ored queen with a gavel ,Which1 belonged to her daughtci when( she was honored queen , to use forfie evening She has been taking

, this gavel to all chapters she hasvisited during her year m officeThe Winona honored q ueen was the1.)id There aie 7fi C hapteis in

Minnesota and a membership of7,000 girls.

Acting honored queen Kathy Boy- •urn installed Wendy VVeimer .jun-ior. - ..custodian .-, and- Jane KahT achoir member. Al l work was ex-emplified and Sandra Dublin and.Gretcheri Mayan acted as candi-dates during the initiatory work.

Barbara Carlson reported that75 Valentine tray favors were madeand delivered to Winona GeneralHospital All petitions foi imtia- ltion March 5 must be turned inat the next meeting

Seners for Blue Lodge Tuesdayevening were Kay Anderson , Bar-bara C arlson , Bonnie Odegaard ,and Jackie Opsahl.

Grand Guardian[Makes OfficialChapter Visit

:St..Paul 's Episcopal Churchwom-en were reminded by their presi-dent , . Mrs. Myles Petersen 1, attheir meeting Wednesday in theparish house that Feb. 28 will beone of special interest to them.

A Chuck Wagon dinner , , to beserved by the men of. the parish ,is set for that day, . • ' ¦ ¦¦

The dinner will follow a quietday for the . Hiawatha DeaneryEpiscopal ehurchwomeri to beheld at St. Mark' s Church , LakeCity, Feb. 28. beginning at 10:30a.m. with Holy Communion. Eachwoman attending is asked to bringher own sandwiches. No reserva-tions are needed.

MRSV RICHARD Deeren led thedevotions. She used the EpiscopalChurclwomaj is ' prayer and thecollect for the day . Mrs, N. A.lioettigcr, hospital representative,reported on the . annual HospitalAuxiliary meeting. Mrs. Luis Gal-v'cz reported that scrapbooks werebeing made by the church period-ical club committee and that therewas a need for prayer books andBibles for distribution by the com-mittee , ¦ ¦ - ¦¦ .

The spring rummage sale will beheld April .12 and the HiawathaDeanery meeting April 26. Otherdates announced \vere the organrecital by John Schueler on Feb.25, and the Salad Lunchon on May17. , " ¦. .

FOLLOWING the business meet-ing at wliich Mrs. Petersen , pre-sided, the Rev . George Goodreidgave the . second in his series oftalks on Christian Ethics. Mem-bers ol Ruth Guild were hostessesat the social hour which followed.

RNA MEETING CHANGERiverside Magnolias , R o y a l

Neighbors of America decided . attheir meeting Tuesday evening atthe Red Men 's Wigwam to meetin the afternoon at 2 p.m. insteadof holding evening meetings. Thefirst afternoon meeting will beFeb. 20. Cards will be played andlunch served. Mrs. Arthur Heck jpresided at the meeting. Lunchwas served by Mrs; L. M. Kings-ley and Mrs. Rose Bambenek.

ChurchwomenMan QuietDay, Dinner

Oxygen therapy will be discuss-ed by Dr. Arnold Fcnske at , 7:3dp.m. today at Winona GeneralHospital in the second of a seriesof lectures on disaster proceduresfor registered nurses , sponsoredby the Winona County Red CrossChapter. ;

The meeting will be on the sixthfloor of the hospital. Miss DeloresSchiller , hospital director of nurs-ing, will assist Dr. Fcnske. All re-gistered nurses , practicing andnon-practicing, are invited.

FOUNTAIN CITY PTAFOUNTAIN CITY. Wis . ( Spe-

cial ) -- Fountain City PTA willmeet Wednesday at the band hallof the Elementary School at 8 p.m.with the executive "board meetingat 7:30. Miss Evelyn Nappe , Buf-falo County nurse , will be theguest speaker on the subject ,"Health in our Schools." She willpresent a film strip "Help forYoung Hearts." Serving will beMr. and Mrs. William Krause, Mr.and Mrs. Charles Pressing, Mr .and Mrs. Lee; Brommerich and Mr .and Mrs. Norman Ralz. ¦

'-— :. . . - ..- . .

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Nurses to ReceiveInstruction inOxygen Therapy

I Slmtrm wmam -.J**..- ' " ' ¦« ¦ ' ' AA ALTURA DRESSED 7

J?!i lT TISSUE * "*33c TURKEYSWHIT E BREAD ^I3c 7 ' *r°B° (

f f lG ¦ ' ' ! - . ' . ¦¦?.. :v ; ,b *B Q« ( ¦-

\MlMP +~: * 3mV Ay1 MIRACLE WHIP LEAN, TENDER ¦

. = . ¦".- -7 /

j SALAD DRESSING - ° 49c Pork Chops* 59c)) LARGE SIZE . HOME-MADE I

i HEAD LETTUCE ¦ ^IQc | PorkXinks t 65c)

STAN'S "Pik-QuiI 928 East 8th St. FORMERLY WIECZORiK'S MARKET Phone 8-3061 f

COCHRANE, Wis. -The RoseValley Watershed meeting, sched-uled for Friday at Cochrane SchoolAnnex, has been postponed untilthe following Friday,: Feb. 16, at1:30 p.m. ¦« ' ¦"«

¦¦

This was announced by ArchieBroyold , Buffalo Cqjjntragent. Themeeting was postponed because ofthe funeral this, Friday of water-shed member Robert Bollinger ,Cochrane.

DURAND PTADURAND, Wis.: (Special) — The

Durand-Parent Teacher Associationwill present a panel discussion onTelevision and the Child Mondayat- 8 p.m. at Durand High School.Three differen t view points wil! begiven on how television affects thestudent. Dr. Joesph Springer willpresent the medical aspect of thediscussion; Richard Duesterbachwill present the teachers view-point . Two students from the highschool speech class will be chos-en to present the student's Views.Byron Dale will act as modera-tor. Refreshments will be servedafter the business meeting..

Rdse Valley ShedMeeting Postponed

MONDOVI , Wis. (Special ) — TheCity Council heard an explanation vof the proposed bond ordinance andlease agreement with Buffalo, Me<mo-rial Hospital Association fromCity Attorney J. Vi Whelan Tues-day evening,; ¦ ¦ ' -, . '

A meeting of the council withthe hospital board and bondingcompany representative will boheld Feb. 19 at 8 p.m. in thecouncil chambers to work out thedetails for constructing the .propos-ed 48-bed hospital , estimated tocost- $500,000 omplete.

The council placed an order fora new police radio which will beon the same frequency, as the sher-iff' s department . It will be placed ¦- -.in the city police car. Purchasewas made in accordance with acontract signed with the BuffaloCounty Board.

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STRUM FIREMEN'S DANCESTRUM, Wis.—Tlie; Strum: Vol-

unteer Fire Department will haveits annual dance Feb. 17. TheRhythm Playboys will furnish the •music and proceeds will go tothe fire department.

Mondovi MeetingOn Hospital BondsSet for Feb. 19

. " ~ Iii . . . ; i'S

" Your 'King of Hearts' v ^ ^iV^ W-Rates a Gift From fit ^ ^ ^MShow him you reolly care with a lovety clothing fe| 'y *h ' I %s«> Agift on Valentine's Day from ST. CLAIRS. \ % " |#-!- ' & ;1 ^*\ - zIf ****y m~*\ t

.^^^IM^*"^^J ARROW DRESS SHIRT S §

^fc " >V V^*,** *£&L.JF \ V* •" i 'i-* . *M ^" r>r,lMI ,•, 1 collar Myles in a complete size range &»>rV^^K&^ >

: ?f: *, 5 ai .nl tble roi the A Zt\ St QZ $

m^ ^mf :. *y: :} 1 - ^ w - ¦ 4»5o - 8.95 j

"K yC^ - y MEN'S

SPORT

sHiRTsk > V/ i@i J * ^^N '^' " IT Ahi .i}'. a w(Iconic gift choice — especially when p\? ^1 <> ' WB

the > ie m.ule hy ARROW — ' McORKGOR - $

\ I »" / IW l)0\i:(,AI , er O QC 1QC I\ 1 f / ¦ JJr URKni U) ..... O.V3 - O.V3 0

._; GREAT TIE SELECTION ^ /I | ...,,|. |- _ l-I-Sj I,

to +>a3\A \ Kg* w || ' ' -!; HR Ws [v i

MEN'S ACCESS ORIES ^H 1 i N 11 W |

Toilet . Kits , . . or pprhnps you 'll find Iho * JiwP '¦'¦¦'%. * P7 right iicm on our .Novelty Ct»i ii ) lci ' i Jimr ^Lv%x>^:: l iru shp s , lint pj ilclicr s, I 'lothcs brushes , t in ^NsS^^1 ImldiM's , etc. Cliimsi ' one of (he.se Ihnugli l f ul

{jifts tins vvi 'i 'lu'iiil Inr your "Kiny of JU ' iii Is, " ' (

mmmW5AmWF9Bm ^Bm\Wkmmmm \Wm\Wmm mmT jA ^ ^m m m m m m m W 7 m m m m m \ A '¦ ^^^K mm ^H 'WtfHH ¦ mmmYimmWUBIKV MftR P/7KxBlfTTJM&

.vS}r ¦ MmX ^mmmmmmmmmmmSi^lmWjAmmmW^Mum\ Wmn m ***** , Wme mmmmmmm ^ W mmmtll BA -Hlar4 [<3iFr WRAPPING *-• ¦ ^ ^BOa ^ m"Where Quali ty Clothing }s Nol K.Ypcn <iH \-" |!|

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(OEI LINGS

f y f mWiW &FRI. and SAT. ¦- FEB. 9-10

We will bt open Saturday afternoon 'til 5 o'clock

Largest selection of celling! In town — pick out your favorite jright In our heated ttorag* roeml

• 5 smart, new Decorator Ules• 8 different CusMontone acoustical

tiles that soak tip noise• 2 White Temlok tiles

Armstrong ceilings are easy to Install . . . you can dort yourself in a weekend or we'll do it for you.

WHITE |f |/"c- AGOUSTICAL-rt,TILE« *« 11/2., TILE „».„ 19 .v

PRE FIINISHED OAK & BIRCH V GROOVED BACKSEALED

r ANtLIINHj l v4 '„4 „8' only, sq. «. i^CMasonite V-Grooved Paneling, 'i"x4' x8' , sq, ft/ . .19^

POURING WOOL /^ "Nv

INSULATION P^W/(Coverage 35 sq. ft., 4" f liicd) 1 / / fJ j f

BAG $1 15 imMm£ •*AV Jm B tm*aW * -- KtiSl baL?

t

Do n't Forget

¦ W« fimve a new display of |~| \ \ \ \p] r*^pt**- ' | l " I—I

KITCHEN yruJjyil ILLCABINETS, sjs pl pp

IVCNL/fcLL COM PANYCall the Lumber Number 8-3667

573 Eajf 4th Street Duane JockoU, Mgr.

¦ Mrs Clynton Olson , loft , and Mrs. Bernard Campbell , right ,are fitting old-fashioned \v«(iding gowns for the ' Stru m, 'Wis '.jWomen 's t'ivic Club style show, and bridal re\'ue to be held at

. thev-Kleva-S trum Central Hi^h ; School Monday evening. Mrs. Ol-son will model her mother 's ' .-i'Mrs. John Olson, Strum) u'eddinggown, : Mrs. Olsun wore the white batiste with eyelet insertionfor her wedding at the West Beef Synod Church in .June. 11)05,Mrs. Bernard Campb ellvwill wear the gown of Mrs . T.-M. Ol.son , Strum , who- was married at her home .Christmas day, 190.(1,It is a pale brocaded silk . Mrs. Conrad Johnstad will model a

7-gqwn worn- by. Mrs. Hugh Sharp 's great grandmother as Sundaybest in 1806. It is black-sat«en lined wilh a bustle . .

i "GOOD FOOD ACTUALLY | j m 11 COSTS YOU LESS" flWH 1I TUSHNER'S •»"» I1 501 E. Third St. MARKET B

I Complete MEAT-GROCERY-PRODUCE Depts. [i

K&H SUGAR 39 19 SUNSHINE B¦ Honey Grahams " 37c Folger's Coffee 2 ,7v1" I¦ Fresh Produce -..,. MEL_ II .wm~...~m. -- Chili Con Carne ¦| LETTUCE H 10c 2 il 69c I—V^M .¦¦¦¦¦ "" ¦¦¦ ¦•''' •• ¦•¦^"¦¦¦ ¦¦"••• ¦•¦¦•¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ •¦w ' mB SNQBOY NO. 1 IDAHO RUSSET PLANTER'S

""" " ¦

I POTATOES Cocktail Peanuts 3Sc §

I 10 59C Miracle Whip ^~49c IH QUICK or REGULAR OLD DUTCH Bj

I Quaker Oats Potato Chips 1I '3 39c Twir49c . -|I Hunt s Fruit Cocktail 2 69 1H FRESH DRESSED-WHITE ROCK FRESH DRESSED—WHITE ROCK H

I Roasting HENS Lb 33c Stewing HENS Lb 27c 1V FRESH-FRYING- CHICKEN ALTURA TURKEYS H¦ GIBLETS -- u. 39c 12T r; TT*! 29c ' ' iH ' " -"" - •¦- - 10-14 Lb. Average-"(tstrnited Supply) -- BB--¦ CHOIC E BEEF-WELL TRIMMED DECKER'S IOWANA-3-lb . Size H¦ RIB STEAKS - u 79c Canned HAM Each $2.49 IH ~ WELL TRIMMED BLADE CUT |U LEAN MEATY COUNTRY STYLE OCmOU rUADt AA I

I PORK RIBS - u 49c P0WK CH0PS " 49c I¦ _,

FRESH SLICED I

I wrl. urA^e ,n P0RK LIVER u- 25fe I¦ VEAL HEARTS Lb 39c PORK HOCKS Lb 25c II Our Own Make Delicious Corned Beef — Fresh Side Pork — Fresh I8 and Salted Beef Tongues — Select Calves Liver — Beef Tenderloins II Long Island Duck lings — Rex Turkeys — Capons H

I MR. AND MRS. FARM OPERATOR — Bring Us Your Beef and Pork ifI To Be Cut Up, Ground or Made Into Sausage. ||

Signs of SpringIn SouthernSupermarkets

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSSigns of the eventual arrival of

spring are showing ' up in South-ern supermarkets.

Supplies of fresh Florida straw-berries are building up in Southseastern groceries. 7 7 . ;.7 In the Southwest, shoppers canfind watermelon and cantaloupfrom Mexico and limes andstrawberries ' from California.

At nvea4 courrters, the popularspringtime fare , smoked hams,are a best buy in almost all re-gions of the country.

In addition to hams, pork loinsare budget attractions in most ofthe nation's markets while chops,spare ribs and bacon are alsolower in the Southeast.-

Best beef buys once again areroasts—Rib , chuck arid round —but in the Northeast and Mid-west, they are joined for a changeby steaks. ¦ ' .

Turkeys continued to lead thepoultry parade , but the real bar-gain prices of the last severalweeks are getting harder to find .

Egg . prices are lower in manymarkets. v

Among vegetables, potatoes arecheaper in most markets. Alsoplentiful almost everywhere aretomatoes, carrots, sweet potatoes ,cabbages, celery and lettuce.

The best buys among fruits in-clude oranges, grapefruit , lemons,apples and bananas. 7

Sighs SeXLosing BoxQffke Appedl

Boyl e's Col limn

By HAL BOYLENEW YORK (AP)—Is sex los-

ing its box office, appeal?There are some signs that it is.Doom-criers who believe that

America is heading for the fate ofdecadent Babylon, Sodom and Go-morrah may now take heart .

"There seems to be a ' definiteslump in the sin market.

Moralists cUng to, the theorythat anyone can get rich ' quick bymaking a. dirty film- or writing adirty book. W«ll, it just ain 't so,

Its bedrock tradition of puritan-ism- still has a strong hold? onAmerica. It is easier to make afast buck in this country selling anew detergent , filter cigarette, orheadache cure than in the leeringportrayal of sex.

You can probably even , makemore money by. starting a one-daydiaper, laundering service,: It is true that the country hasbeen flooded with lurid-coveredpaperback novels dealing with theracier aspects of sex, as well asforeign and .homemade moviesthat bring a blush to the cheeksof old maid censors.

But their market is still limited.The golden harvest is reaped bywriters and producers -who dealiii the wholesome themes thathave , always appealed most to thehopeful and normal nature of themajority of mankind—adventure ,religion, family life, comedy andromantic love,

Here are a few pro«fs:A headline in the- anniversary

edition of Variety, the bible of

snow business, reads: "Sex notWhammo in 1961."

The six biggest-drawing films oflast year were: - Guns of NaVa-rone;*' "Exodus," "Parent Trap.""Absent-minded Professor" "Ala-mo," and "Swiss Family Robin-son-

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The top foreign Import of 1961,"La Dolce Vita ," criticized widelyfor its suggestive scenes Ofsociety orgies in modern Rome,placed 12th in box office appeal.

Variety in the same issue listedthe top cinema box office hits olall time. Here they are :

"Birch of a Nation ,'\ "Gonewith the Wind ,'' "Ben-Hur ," "toCommandments," "Around theWorld in 80 Days," "The Robe,""South Pacific ," "Bridge on theRiver Kwai ," "Greatest Show onEarth ," "Guns of Navarone,""This is Cinerama ," and "FromHere to Eternity."

Six of theta donrt films dealwith either historical or religiousthemes. Only the 12th, "FromHere fo Eternity," had scenes olquestionable taste even for achild's eyes. 7

Now7let's take;a look at theliterary scene. The two fictionbooks that have been longest, onthe best seller list of the NewYork Times are "To Kill a Moefc-ing Bird ," by Harper Lee, 79weeks; and "The Agony and theEcstasy," by Irving Stone, 45weeks;.

The first is a picture of life ina small Southern town as seen bya* child; the second is a novelabout Michelangelo, the artist. ,

¦ ¦ ¦-. ,'

When apple slices . are beingadded to a stuffing for duck orchicken, some cooks hike to cookthe fruit briefly before putting itin the dressing. This pre-cookirigassures that the apple will betender by the time the bird iscooked. .,'

j HERfS A BREAD IMPROVEMENT YOU CAN ACTUALLY SEE!

I NEW WONDER "SOFT WHIRLED"I. - . ' -

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¦ IHliy^k WHAT A DIFFERENCEI ^ ^ ^ ¦BI|L-''' lit. Between Conventional Bread and New Wonder "Soft Whirled"

M der, so creamy-smooth in texture that it has no ^ 1 mmmmmmmmu>^* mmmmmtMm- - ^m ^mw ^^^m. K. .Jm mw mMmmMg -iM. o^

A sus just srea,, ^TEXTURE A SOFTNES S & FLAVOR

(4 Th© secret's m tho way it's made. By a special ^process, Wonder's ingredients aro whirled and I ; ^ r lWfe' '*^ - t - — ... . ' - ..... . . '—- I

i

spun and blended into silky smoothness . . . the / *W mW M% ** 'fl >f ik P >r^way a master baker makes cake. The result: a \±mm. m, ^WmAm Wp * P -' :^<-~-bread with smooth texture -no holes! And that ¦kjtt UaMa^ J^1 ' Mj»-i- . v—^

mmmmmmmmWM ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .- '¦ ¦v/BWHll >'"* - , , '%'?. *¦•'*¦''** J' '" J V .' "'l V'|>i|K ' '• <

weans no jolly, jam &nd catsup drips on table- W LmW^ ^R 'Wm ' ''''" ' " ** ' ""- '-:" ¦VI *lLlW» ''*,,* •

clothB or chfldren'p clothes. ¦ ¦ i Kii|il6liw'?Wiiy ; w. . mm«! **''Wr~**mm 'x ''.¦,-. Wmvmw?iih. *¦- . >• ' ".* |«# &J KM n'- s'sSlm.G«» a loof of New Wonder "Soft Whirled" Bread. AHMfV 7 '<: ' 1*11^ ^ ' - SfiYour first taste will tell you it's the best bread V B?|]3^K> P |K > WMIJSBTJI^WI111! 3you've ever eaten! Wonder "Soft Whirled" Bread ¦

kl ffitpjHW ' #J, , . with vitamins, minerals and proteins helps B I^ ^ ^ M 1 : ¦jK>ll f ^§ m mp S %

01962, CONTINENTAL BAKING COMPANY, Incorporated ' f ^m W BJrWmm mW%m ^

GREAT N UTRITIONJOO-Helps Build Strong Bodies 12 Ways!.

, j i nurioay, f-»Dru*ry », IT« i winunft UAIIT nenj 11."*•¦ ' " " ———:— ";" . ' ¦¦ .' - . ¦ 7 . '77 . -1—' ¦ "" :. ':" ' . ¦ ' : .""

V JP dU V i ¦ M 1 HiF llnKf i- t- '-^B''m;' 5: ^W\ I iA \ y^^^v

I Fully Cooked Ham J¦ A&P Super-Right ,L « ^

J#i |¦ Shank Portion i ' 9\W^': ' '

¦

I Turkey W^^^I Skinless l enere|,Swordfish Steaks ^

Temple dranges^^ iWhite^ ^^P^Head lettuce ^i^p ^^p•M««iHMMaMMMa pWM«MiMa*M«MHaM pHMM«M^NHa^MaM*M«MM ' MIMHMMaM«HNHHtoMHPHMiMM WiMaiaMHh

Spaciol Sale—Save 10c Per Pkg. Special Prlet This W««k

Johnston's WonderfoilCookies Aluminum

Muliew Rich Puffi ' ¦ ^

_*m ¦"¦

-it%m\"- ' * - 'M ' d9tk "'choeoirt/ Almond 1-Lb. JO^i R«g. Price # 2S.Pt, / I D«M/KST... ^X7C 29C X»* I|TC

I«^»MMI^««««»»IB««M »»IM «M «W» ««M"«««"J ¦ Va-aBvaaBna MOWBMrtMi a aB V

Dog Food :jsssst 25^ s158

Ice Cream ^^ -^Whole Potatoes-10^i°°Green Beans a 10 - $t 00

Golden Corn ^^.^6- i0O

Brandywln* Pieces CHILDREN'Sand Stems mm. mm

Mushrooms btorinette Boots¦ -c .35.c .. — _ CM AO - ¦ - — Assi. siiesi qp m m*9WHunt's A" CQ,orsl

|

Tomato SauceMORTON'S ASST.

-^=£- MEAT DINNERSCatsup 11OI ^A(2 'iS43c |[ """ . +mmf

mwm±\ ritl on*' *.iiANtic i >»cinc ti» cowfAMY . ine.Jp fl j^ jHIBHBYjHnpVPV Prices

X +LMLELUL^ Thru

Ftb s lOth

p J w t n s^M ^¦¦*** . |Hom« M«df16S E«*t Third Strut Ption* 4450 I Sausage

FRESH DRESSED' 'WHITE ROCK-J to* Lb. Average

ROASTING CHICKENS u. 33cFRESH DRESSED WHITE ROCK-S Lb. Average

HEAVY HENS - - - - u 25cMORRELL'S to 8 Lb. Average

Fully Cooked PICNICS u 29c- ¦ • ' '

.; ' • • i i • i — - ' - - - '—~ - - ¦

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

RIB STEAKS - > - - u 79c, - . ,a, ' ,7 - ,7, —- ' ; • ' ,." ———-. . . '

¦' ; - '. .j . i i ." - ' ¦¦¦ 7-SWIFT'S PREMIUM

SLAB BACON ¦ y- ; - — 7 ;>.h. 45c |

WABASHA. Minn. (Special)-Da-vid Stegemaiin, son of Mr. andMrs. Werner Stegemann, won the

FFA public speaking conte.it ¦!Wabasha public school.

David, a sophomore at Walbasha,was winner over WilUarh' Brueg-gef , Wabasha junior, and JohnMeNalian. and Charles Lindgen,freshman and sophomore at St;Felix respectively. V

Dean Plank awarded merchan-dise prizes to the top three speak-ers.: . '.'

David represented , Wabasha 3na regional speech contest at Ken-yon today.

- ..¦.-¦'

. .-¦

UNDERGOES SURGERYMrs. Harry Eaton, 933 W. Wa

basha St., underwent surgery lastThursday at St. Francis Hospital ,La Crosse.

Stegemann WinnerOf Wabasha Contest

EYOtA, Minn. (Speciol)—GrantKarlstad, technician for the UpperSoil Conservation District, will beguest speaker at the annual din*net and meeting of the FarmersCo^op Creamery at 11:30 a-.rn. Sat-urday at Dovcr-Fyota High Schoolcafeteria.¦ * ¦'. ' - '¦ ¦ - ' 7 -

Creamery MeetingAt Eyota Saturday

farm ProgramHeeded, ViewOf Freeman

WASHINGTON CAP ) — Secre-tary of Agriculture Orville Free-man said Wednesday Congress

"- and , the "-people' must recognize a"supremely important ¦ '• -¦.truth" .—that the new . Kennedy farm pro-gram is demanded "nol by the

' administra tion but . by the situation'. . : -that .- exists.."

In essence . Freeman told theHouse Agriculture Committee , thesituation "requires that we reducethe farm out put below needs forseveral . years and then allow it

'¦to increase ' -' over the long run ita rate equal to the growth in dc-

'- . m aml. ' -, . '

The administration proposes todo this by strict acreage -and pro -duction controls on most crops insurplus , while continuing presentprice supports and payment's for

' putting the retired land to . conser-vation use-s If farmers vol*against the strict ".controls .- ' thejwould ge» no pnee support at all.

Freeman s a i d the choiceamounted to this:

"On the on2 hand , there is a. return to no' farm program at all

- ¦. ' .. . . but further drift and indeci-sion , further piecemeal programs

; that avoid commodities most in7 trouble . :. . will inevitably lead

to an abandonment of farm pro-grams. This choice would resultir such a drop in farm incomethat a searing (arm depressionwould result. "

"The Other course is Hie onethis administration has chosen to.recommend to the Congress, in thepublic interest and in the interestof the farmers of thi s nation."

Freeman spoke , to a standingroom only audience in the hearingroom, drawing a round of applause 'from spectators as he came in.

Armed Forces

. . Marcolek ServvaThree men enlisted this week in

the U. S. Army for three yearsthrougrTthe VVinona recruiting sta-tion and are now taking basictrainin g at Ft.Carson , C o 1 o.They are. GER-A L D MARSOL.EK, son of Mrs.Martha Marsolek ,619 E. King St. ;STANLEY S E R -WA , . .' son of Mr.and Mrs. MichaelP. •¦¦Servva , 208 NBaker St; , a n dW I L L I A .M--F ,HOPKINS , A StM a- ' r .y 's Colleg e Hopkinsstudent , son of Mr. and Airs. Wil-liam 'A ,- ' Hopkins, Chicago. Afterbasic , the men will be. -trained inthe "tieid ' .:of their choice , as guar-anteed before enlistment. . Marsol-ek will go to an electronics school ,Se'r.wa will enter the administra-tion field and Hopkins will under-go airborne training.

. . -7- ' ;' ""- '- ' ' ¦¦

• ¦ -: ¦ '

FOUNTAtN C I T Y, Will— ABDonald Ft. Jewell, whose - -.wife,

Marilyn, l i v e s

j Jewel lcial weapons technician school.

The 120-day delay. - - program- isbeing offered to high school .sen-iors again this year , M. Sgt , P:D.Sparks, La Crosse, noncommis-sioned officer in charge of MA-RINE CORPS RECRUITING inthe area has reminded young men.This program , tailored for thegraduating high school senior , al-:lows the recruit to undergo men-tal and physical, examinations andbe sworn into the Marine Corps"J" program. He then returnshome and completes his education

before reporting for duty. 7Other enlistment programs avail-,

able to qualified young- '-men . . arcthree-year enlistments , aviationduty only and the . buddy program,Young men wishing further infor-mation should contact their localrecruiter or write to Marino CorpsRecruiting Office , Post Officebuildin g. La Crosse,- Wis. 7

A seminar program to informm e m b e r s of the NAT IONALGUARD about the menace of in-ternational communism and Amer-ica 's responsibilities to the freeworld 'will get under way Sunday,Bri g. Gen. Cheste r J. Moeglein ,Minnesota 's adjutant general , an-nounced -Mond ay. - Titled "A Worldin Conflict ,'.' the program- .is de-signed to reach all 10,000 membersof thn - Guard during the next fourmonths.

Col. Leon H I lage.n ', ;- - assistantstate adj utant general , is in chargeof the program , which is sponsor-ed jointl y by the National GuardAssociation of Minnesota , the ad-j utant general and the command-ers of the 47th ' 1 nfantry Divisionand 148th Fighter Group. Col. Ha-gen is a recent graduate of th eDefense Strategy Seminar at theNational War " College , Washin gton ,D, C. .

¦The :. program .will be conductedin two phases , Gol. llagen said , Inphase I,' -. 'ir trave ling ' faculty .will ,conduct seminars for Guard offi-cers "at eight locations in the state.Each seminar will he of four

hours' duration and will be con-ducted on successive Sunday aft-ernoon in February and March.Phase If will consist of a t wo-,hour course of instruction to hegiven to enlisted , men at theirhome armories by their unit offi-cers, . using" material provided ; atthe officer seminars.

Faculty, members are Nati onalGuard officers selected (or theirspecial qualifications in this area.Included are three attorneys , threechaplains , five educators, and twojournalists. Chairmen of the threefaculty committees are : Lt. Col.Robert G. Rupp. editor of the mag-azine "The Farmer ," St , Paul;Maj. Oliver S. Perry, Minneapolisattorney; and Lt , Col. Robert Ma-hownld . a membr of the statelegislature fro m St. Cloud.

The program of instruction willcover the following subj ects; Fun-damentals o( communist theoryand ideology, communist obj ec-tive s, communist tactics and tech-ni que , the nature of the conflict ,critical areas of the world , theweaknesses of communism , Amer-ica and its allies and a positiveprogram for America.

One of the officer seminars willbe conducted Feb. 718 at-Owatorina.¦

here , has enlistedin the Air Forcefor four years. Heis formerly, of- 'Wi-nona .;. "Jewell . - . 'hascompleted basictraining at Lack-land AFB , . S a nAntonio , Tex., andis being transfer-red to LowrvAFB , D e n . v.e-r ,Colo, , where hewill attend a spe-

LANESBORO , Minn. (Special)—Twenty-three high school studentswill participate in the speech fes-tival at the Community Hall Feb.14 at 7:30 p:m:, it was announcedby Sydney Roppe, instructor .

Students receiving superior willbe eligible to participate ¦ in thesubdistrict festival at Houston onFeb. 21,

those participating in tlie localcontest* are Katharine Johnson ,Margaret Kocher , Gary Haugen ,Mario lloltan , Peter Rein , PaulHanson , John Westrup. DonnaThompson , Michael Drake, Bar-bara Egge, Wesley Bue , DavidBornfleth , Katharine Bell , LarryDanielson , Linda Kiich.nast , LindaShanahaii , Pam Kocher, SherryZeller and Sonja Flaby.

Members of the cast of the one-act humorous play, "The Flatter-

ing 'Word , are David Ask, TedRedalen, Diane Haugen , MargaretKocher and Verna Hareldson.

Students participating in discus-sion vvho will go directly to thesubdistrict contest- .without' appear-ing locally, are Elaine Vigness andLinda Thompson with paroldBothun , alternate.

The public is invited to attendthis event. . . ' ." ' '

¦ .;¦¦

23 Will CompeteItr Speech FestivalAt Lanesbo ro Hi g li

WASHINGTON (AP) -The na-tion 's schools and colleges havean enrollment of 47.7 million forthe current academic year , theCensus Bureau estimated Wednes-day . -

The enrollment total/ coveringall persons between the ages of.5 and 34, compares with 39.4million five years ago.

The estimate was based on asurvey made last October .

School EnrollmentTotals 47.7 Million

OTTAWA t AP) — A top U.S. "imoon mapper said Wednesday de-tailed maps of the moon are be-ing prepared in anticipation of alunar landing within perhaps adecade.

Albert L. Nowicki, chief of thecartography ' department of theU.S. Army Corps of Engineers,said in an interview American as-tronauts chosen for a trip to the

moon will have the most detailedmaps possible.

tyowicki , here to attend the an-nual meeting of the Canadian In-stitute of Surveying, will delivera technical paper oh an expeditedprogram to map the visible sur-face pf the moon and later thehidden surface. .

. . ' * ' 7Sturgeon spearing will : be ^pen

on .Lakes Winnebago and'- LittleButte des Morts from Feb. 10 toMarch 1, inclusive: Lakes Winne-conne, Poygan and Butte des Mortswill have only a two-day slash,Feb. 17 and 18.

New Moorr Maps 'Being Prepared

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COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP)-Cath-erine Woodruff received a nies-ssage from President KennedyWednesday congratulating her onher 100th birthday anniversary.

Her comment: "Good Lord, Iwonder if he thinks I'm a Demo-

¦ crat." : • ' . - . ' ."¦

Woman, 100; GetsKennedy's Greetings

EGL1N AIR FORCE BASE ,Kla . (AP )— Gov. Karris Bryant ofFlpricla , long a flying enthusiast ,finally has .cracked - the soundbarrier.

He piloted an F1Q4B -starfighterj et at a speed close to 1,200 milesan hour Wednesday, ¦

Governor pf FloridaCracks Sound Barrier

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1 WARNKEN'S BANTAM \I SUPER MARKET i? AND LOCKER PLANT |I 477 W. 5th S-t., Winona, Minn. Phone 3151 |

DEAR ABBY;

By ABIGAIL VAN BURENDEAR ABBY: We are not young folks. We have married

children. Three years ago my husband learned that a 'school-time sweetheart, whom he never ceased to love, was living inan eastern city. While on a business trip, he drove some distanceto spend the week-end at her home. He told me all about it.

They have corresponded ever since. Now her husband recent-ly passed on and she wrote that she would like to move to our

city because she has "no one." My husband

Abby

thinks we should ask her to live with us fora while. To me, this is ridiculous. What shall Isay? WORRIED

DEAR WORRIED: Say, "Nothing do-ing '." If she wants to move to your city, youcan't stop her but, under the circumstances,you 'd be foolish to share your home with her— even for a while.

DEA ABBY: What do you think of a fatherwho pushes the button down on. the telephoneright in the middle of his daughter 's conversa-tion? "ON THE PHONE 30 MINUTES"

DEAR ON: He probably knew you were only "in the middleof your conversation" and didn 't want to wait another 30 min-utes. ¦¦¦ . - . ' • - . . " '

DEAR ABBY: My problem is too much advice. I, work with awonderful, middle-aged man with whom I have fallen in love. Hehas been married twice/ and has four children. He is presentlyfree, and. has asked me to be his third wife. I am 20, and twoof his children are elder than I. The other two are very bratty,and have made it plain that they don't like me. He has custodyof all his children.

My clergyman , family -and friends have advised me againstthis marriage. I love this man , and know what I am up against,but I am willing to take the" chance. Shouldn 't this decision bemine? / WILLING TO GAMBLE

DEAR WILLING : The decision . IS yours, but don't ignorethe advice of those who have only your best interests at heart.Marriage, is forever, not something on which you "gamble."Your letter indicates that you are still seeking advice. I saythe chances for a happy, lasting marriage with this man are¦poor. ¦ -.¦ .. -.-

CONTIDENTIAL TO "DINO FROM ENCINO": Just thethought of getting Mo hot water keeps some people clean.

This One IsFor the Books

COLUMBUS. Ga. (AP )—A 12-year-old boy who suffered abroken arm when he waswhacked by a carie-svyinging 93-year-old man received a verdict

for $1,500 damages from a juryWednesday. .

Dorsey A. Williamson, father ofDwain Williamson , filed a dam-age suit charging Jarnes' M.Turner with wilfully and malici-ously attacking bis son ,while theboy was riding a bicycle pastTurner's residence.

Boy Gets $1,500for Broken Arm

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UAW Agree onNew Contract

ftudebaker

By WALTER R. WEARSWASHINGTON ' '¦ Uft-St'udebaker -

Packard Corp. and the United AutoWorkers came . to terms early to-day on a new contract aimed atputting 6,200 striking employesback on . the job next Monday.

UAW President Walter P. Ren-ther said the agreement to end asix-week walkout at the firm 'splant in South Bend , Ind., will beput before the workers for a rati-fication vote over the . weekend .

Terms of the settlement werehot revealed; Reuthcr said: ;bothsides had agreed' it "Would "be. '-'thebetter art of wisdom to withholdthe details for direct presentation "to members of UAW Local 5 irSouth Bend.

Reurhor and the company pres.1den t , Sherwood II. Egbert , woundup a marathon negotiatin g ' sessionwith a joint statement saying: "up-on ratification of the agreement ,it is hoped that normal operation smay be resumed on Monday. "

The union and managementchiefs said they- , had 7. ' reachedagreement "on all the issues indispute. " -

A key issue was a company bidto cut the amount of wash-up timegranted employes. Other strike- is-sues had included shift premiums ,vacation computation and rep-resentation and m a n a g e m e n trights.: Picket line bitterness, and the ar-rest of: Egbert after a row with astriker , marked the South Bendwalkout. Egbert was charged withdisorderly conduct Jan. 17 after astriker corhplained the compa nypresident challenged him to physi-cal violence.

MOVES TO LA CROSSE HOMEETTIUCK. Wis. (SpeciaD-Alrs.

Hannah Anderson , formerly of Et-trick , has moved to the BethanyHome for .the Aged in .La Crosse.Unti l the recent death of her hus-band , E. C. Anderson , Mrs. vAn-derson made her home with herson-in-law and daughter , Mr. : andMrs. Harry Eckert , Winona.STOCKTON COUNCIL MEETS

STOCKTON, Minn. (Special) >-The Village Council Monday eve-ning voted to have Neil Danielrepair the fire - . ' ¦'pumps/ Membersvoted to pay $5 for attendance atthe annual weed control meeting.The clerk's, financial report wasapproved. 7 7

KENNEDY(Continued From Past 1) .

the-atmosphere last'fall, after athree-year moratorium. The Unit-ed States has only tested under-ground since the moratorium wasbroken. But Kennedy started pre-:paration a month ago for atmos-heric explosions, :.:

He said he ivould not hesitateto give the final go-ahead if hedetermines after all studies arecomplete that the step is neces-sary, to preserve the U.S. nuclearpower position in the. world. Othercomments he made left littledoubt that he feels how that U.S.security , does require furthertesting. . :

At his news conference Wednes-day the President in effect addeda new condition for any futuretest ban treaty with the SovietUnion—measures to prevent se-cret preparations for testing. Thiswould be in addition to measuresto prevent sneak tests.

Kennedy said that in view ofthe "secretly prepared and mas-sive series of 40 to 50 tests con-ducted by the Soviet Union lastfall ," final " studies on resumedU.S. air tests should be completed ,"within the month." His decisionon testing then will be made.

Pointing out that he already hasinitiated preparations for testing,Kennedy declared: "I .shall nothesitate to order the tests them-selves if it is decided that . theyare necessary to maintain the ef-fective deterrent strength of theUnited Stales."

He repeatedly emphasized hehas not reached a final decision.But the weight of his commentsindicated his trend of thinking isalong the line that further U.S.testing will be shown to be neces-sary when studies , involving theState and Defense Departments,the Atomic Energy Commission ,the Central . Intelligence Agencyand the White House staff , arecompleted.

At another point he spoke of therisk to the U.S. nuclear powerposition and the possibility ofsome new series of Soviet tests.

The implication that Kennedy ismoving steadily toward ah orderfor air tests was borne out pri-vately by well-informed officials.They said this is. now the trendOf thinkin g-in the administrationgenerally/ .

In Japan , Atty. Gen. Robert F.Kennedy, the President' s brotherwho is on a world tour , saidtoday the United States may re-sume nuclear tests in the atmos-phere. • ¦ ' ¦. - .

Noting that atom bombs weredropped on Japan . in World WarII, the attorney general siaid:

"I can understand your per-

sonal concerh .' having suffered inthe war as you did. Unfortunatelywe do not live in a world whereyou can disarm unil aterally andexpect to survive."

He sa id the Soviet Union secret-ly prepared nuclear tests while itsdiplomats pretended to 7negotiatea test ban treaty in Geneva.

Oh thj s. matter , President Ken-nedy said at his news conference;

"Unless we had adequate pro-tection against a repetition ofthat incident (secret Soviet testpreparations) ,- . . any ' such , testagreement obviously would ba ex-tremely ; vulnerable." ' .' •-'- 7-

The President also declared"there is no inconsistency" .be-tween going ahead with weaponsdevelopment _ and seeking at thesame time to put an end to thearms race.

Sup r Grb PlansTo Sell LimitedPartnerships

¦ -V ¦ .. .

A plan to provide Investorswith a $70,000 . interest in SuperGro Products Go. which producesa soil builder and pen condition-er, will b-e discussed at a meetingat 7:3Q-P-m. Friday at the North-ern Field Seed Co. . 115 E. 2ndSt., John B. LeVeille, president,announced. *

He said the state SecuritiesCommission had granted permis-sion to sell limited partnershipsto promote sale of Super Groproducts. A prospectus is avail-able. . .

"Limited partnerships pay no30-52 percent corporation . reve-nue- taxes, allowing better re-turns to the owners of partner-ship units ," LeVeille said.

Super Gro pnMructs and thepen conditioner have been mark-eted in 12 states 10 years.

LA CRESCENT GIVESLA CRESCENT, Minn. (Special )

—Mrs. Wayne Lottes, chairman ofthe Mother 's March of Dimes, in.the village announced that $302.32was collected in the can-vas Jan.28, Following the drive , womenmet in the Legion clubroorns wherecoffee and cake was served byGittens ;Xeidel Unit 595, AmericanLegion Auxiliary, which sponsor-ed the drive. Mrs". Lottes is com-munity, chairman of the La Cres-cent unit.

Teachers HeardAt St. Charles• ST. CHABLES. Minn. (Special)—Five members of the St. CharlesSchool teaching staff attended ameeting of the Boaixl of EducationTuesday night to discuss possiblechanges in the salary schedule fornext year.

There appeared to be someagreement to attempt a plan us-ing the index system. John Hynesand Cyril Persons, the board's com-mittee on teachers, -were appointedby Chairman Alton E. Bergh tomeet with the. faculty committeeto work , out several plans for pres-sentation to the board. .

The responsibilities of SurgeHammond* and Larry Beckley,high school and elementary prin-cipals, were discussed by the boardwith them, individually.. The board approved payroll de-

ductions for sheltered annuitiesand suggested that the administra-tion and faculty propose severalacceptable plans.

The board , voted unanimouslythat insurance . policies coveringfire and extended coverage onbuildings and equipment be madeconcurrent, and that one agent ,St. Charles Insuran ce Agency, han-dle and coordinate this coverage.

The salary of Osmund Gilbert-son, agriculture teacher; . was re-duced $150 by mutual consentsince tlie responsibility for theadult program has been turnedover to the full-time adult teacher.

The board voted to install a tele-phone in the adult agriculture of-fice and an extension in the guid-ance c-ffice. Memhers also votedto . install a telepho ne intercom keysystem-

The tooard heard a report fromSuperintendent R. MV Belsaas onattendance by school personnel atsurvival training classes and paidbills totaling $8,220;77. v

Jackson ElectricGo-ofv Gets Loan

BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. —A $156,000 loan for Jackson Elec-tric CoKip has been approved bythe Rural Electrification Adminis-tration;.. ' '

Part of the money will financeconstruction of six miles of dis-tribution line to serve 66 new ru ralconsumers. The balance .of thefunds are to be used for generalsystem improvements, includingconversion of 23 miles of existingline. 7

Jackson Electric Co-op currentlyis serving 2,763 consumer-memberson 941 miles of lire. Donald J.Peasley, Black River Falls, Rt, 4,is. president of the cooperative, andArthur Larson. Black River Fallsis manager.

Preston ScoulsWin Citations

PRESTON, Minn. (Special ) — 'Preston' Scout Troop 67 began itsparticipation . in national Boy ScoutWeek by holding a court of honorat the elementary schbol here Feb.6; ¦:

Twenty-two 'hoys and their par-ents attended. Troop CommitteeChairman Orval Amdahl was in.charge of arrangements. He in-troduced . the court of honor.

County Probate Judge GeorgeM u r r a y , Gamehaven CouncilFoundation member, spoke on thesignificant role Scoutin g plays - inthe overall development of boys,He also presented a Life Scoutaward to Ronald Amdahl and , apin to his mother, Mrs. OrvalAmdahl. : . . - .

The program included a talk andfilms on" the summer camp pro-gram at Camp Hok-Si-La, nearLake City, by District, Scout Ex-ecutive Bruce Foster, SpringValley.

Scoutmaster Claience QuanrudJr. presented Tenderfoot awardsto Terry Bestor , Joe Hahn , Stev-en Corson , Steven . Trende, ArlynOlson, Roger Gross, Gary Burro-son , David Adkins and Alan Vos-hell.

Root River District ChairmanWilliam Marx awarded secondclass badges to Scouts Duane Ho-berg, Richard Pugh , Jeffrey Thaii-wald, James Amdahl , David Gart-ner ,. Richard Purvis , Kenneth He-witt and Brian Patterson. .,'. . - . ' ¦

First class badges were present-ed by Troop Activities ChairmanJohn Rydberg to Robert Mars,Bruce Fishbaugher; Richard Hal-weg, and Steven Hall.

Troop Camping Chairman Man-ford Corson presented meritbadges for citizenship in commun-ity, citizenship in borne, personalfitness and fishing to Ronald Am-dahl. 7"

•?rWi\ NEW FACE OtiMJ OO,MllM?*

DENNIS THE MENACE

¦ 'No , it happened in our room. He slipped7 / on his ski wax." v

BIO CEORGEI

APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kotzky

REX MORGAN, M.D. 7 By Dal Curtis

NANCY By Ernie Bushmiller

MARY WORTH By Saunders and Ernst

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BAMBENEK'SCORNER NINTH AND MANKATO AVENUE OPEN EVENINGS

LANESBORO, Mum. (Special)—Postmaster Harold Thoen anno'tuc-ed: Tuesday that applications vwillbe received to Feb. 27 for substi-tute, clerk-carrier positions in thepost office here. Starting pay is$2.16 an hour.

Applicants7 must be 18, U. S.citizens , and residents of the areaserved by the Lanesboro Post Of-fice. Both, men and women mayapply. As full- or part-time vacan-cies occur, they will, be filled fromthe list to be prepared after theexamination.

Application forms may be secur-ed from the local post office. Ap-plicants will be notified by leuerwhen and where the examinationwill be given. •' - . ' .

' • ' - ¦

'¦'•¦ '

ARCADIA BUSINESSMENARCADIA, Wis. (Special )-Busi-

nessmen's Association of Arcadiawill hold a. meeting at Club 93, nearArcadia, Monday at-8 p.m.

Postel Examination ,Planned at Lanesboro

Kittleson, jPi|terii€M^;¥K t«WINONA TEAM SECOND AT ROCHESTER

ROCHESTER. Minn. (Spe-cial)—Mike Kittleson and RonPuterbaugh' pnce again will ref>fresent Winona and this sectionin the Upper-Midwest GoldenGlove Tournament at Minneap-olis. .- ' ':Kittleson scored a TKO viclory

over Joel Mack iri the thirdround of their middleweight boutto win the title in the finalsWednesday night,

Puterbaugh got his , win on adecision over Skip Painter ofLanesboro , fighting for Chat-field.

It was a wild bout with Paint-er going; to the caayas twice in

the first round. He didn't _ giveup, however, and the Winonaheavyweight settled for the de-cision.

The other Winona . fightersdidn't do as well.

After leading in the pointstandings after the first night ofthe tourney Winona coach ChuckPuterbaugh had high hopesbut Rochester Police walked offwith the title ' on 37.points.

Winona finished second with18 followed by the RochesterTire team with 13, Caledonia 11,Chatfield 4 and Austin 0.

Duane Huwald won the sports-manship award although he lost

to Mickey Davitt of the Policeteam in the finals. He pulledthe upset of the night in his firstmatch, d«cisioning Kay Davy ofCaledonia , the 1961 champion , inthe semifinals:

Larry DuBois , featherweight ,lost a decision to Wally Ulrichof the Police team. Tom VanHoof was decisioned by Cale-donia's Dick Leary in a light-weight fight,

Puterbaugh said this morn-ing that there is some questionabout the' .-lightweight round.

Jim Coffin , Rochester Police,who decisioned Gary Knauf tand then went on to win the ti-

tle, can not represent tliis sec-tion at the Upper Midwest Tour-nament. He is riot eligUble, hav-ing made the maximum numberof trips. Leary may not acceptthe trip and in this case VanHoof would get the nod.

Ed Stoltenberg, light heavy-weight , decisioned Jerry Puter-baugh.

"We didn 't win as . many cham-pionships as we were gunningfor , but we came back with alot of valuable experience ,"coach Puterbaugh said thismomng. "We are going to betough to beat at tournamenttime next year."

Hamline Tips Redmen 72-61To Stay on Heels of Duluth

ST. PAUL, Minn. (Special ) -Once again a St. Mary 's rally fellshort . as the Redmen dropp ed a72-61 decision to Hamline hereWednesday night. It w?s anotherfrustrating experience for . St.Mary's which has rim into almostevery kind of bad luck possiblethis season.

After trailing 61-48 with fourminutes to play in the game AlWilliams ,, Denny Burgman , EobJansen and Marty ¦ LilUg made adetermined bid to bring St. Mary 'sback. Behind these four the Red-men trailed by only 62-56. ThePipers took advantage of free

throws to run up the final mar-gin. -. .¦

AFTER A so-so first half- 'thatended with Hamline on the long:end - of a 34-26 count things brokeloose :in the second 20 minutes.

It was ihdividu'al heroics lor bothteams after intermission. Williamsscored L5 of his 21 points , Burg-man all 10 of his and Jansen eightof his 12 to account for .33 of the35 points. St. Mary 's gannered.

Things were no different on thePipers' half of the court. FredSchmiesing fired in 14 of his 21after intermission and Bill Nelson12 of 19 for 26 of the 38 pointsHamline managed.

"The thing that killed us themost was the lack of scoring fromthe center spot ," Coach Ken Wilt-gen said after the game. "In thefirst half Tom Ruddy and Burg-man hit only three points betweenthem. : We have the scoring fromcenter if we want to Win." ;

RUDDY FINISHED with flirtspoints for the night , the same num-ber' he scored in the first 20 min-utes; :. .

St. Mary 's led only-once in thegame. A j ump shot by. Tom Hallmade it 2-0 but Hamline went infront at 3-2 with 18:15 left in thehalf and never trailed again.

The loss dropped St. Mary 's intoa three-way tie for the bottom ofthe MI AC Conference, The Red-men, Macalester and St. John 'sall own 2-8 loop records.

The win kept Hamline withintwo games of league leading Du-luth. . The Pipers stand 8-2 whileDuluth is 10-0.

IN OTHER actien last night St.John's escaped the humiliation ofbeing alone in the cellar by tip-ping St. Thomas 67-53.

The JVIIAC now has a three-waytie for third place after the Tom-mies loss. Augsburg, Concordia andSt. Thomas stand 5-4.

Craig Muyres scored 27 pointsfor St. John's while Dave Palecekpaced the Tommies^ attack wilh12.- ¦• .. - .., ¦¦- • "¦

Nex t action for St. Mary 's, whichstands 6-13 for the season, will beSaturday when Macalester invadesTerrace Heights at 8 p.m.

St. Mary's Ml).' Hamline (71)(9 It PI tp fg It at tp

Hall 3 1 4 8 B.Nelson 7 S litBurgman 1 4 310 Kault 4 1 1 11Ruddy 1 1 l J Sehmleslnu * 3 321Jansen 5 2 3 11 Johnson o 0 0 0T.Stallln-gt 0 0 0 0 Hutton 4 2 310Lllllg 4 0 2 1 T.Nelson 0 I i iWilliams 7 « 120 Frldell, 3 1 2 1

, Totals 13 15 1(41 Totals 19 14 1172ST. MARY'S . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 35-61HAMLINE 34 38-72

Redmen SextetBows to Auggies

GUSTIES HERE SATURDAY

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. ( Special )—A goal by Wayne Johnson with39 seconds gone in a 7',2-miruteovertime period gave Augsburg a5-4 victory over St. Mary 's Collegeof "Winona here Wednesday after-noon.

Augsburg came from behind totie at the 8:06 mark in the thirdperiod to force the extra sessionand win its fourth MIAC gameugaiinst two defeats. '

AUGSBURG IS 8-4-1 for the tea-ton. and St. - Mary 's 8-3, with a1-2 league mark.

LeRoy Lee pushed in the t ying

goal against goalie Dick Caldwelland assisted on the winning marker.7

The Redmen , who were weak inclearing the pjn; and failed . loback check as well as usual , hadtwo scoring chances in the earlysecond of the overtime."it's ho excuse, but we were

tired," said Redmen Coach MaxMcicck. "I hate to "th:nk - of - play-ing Bemidji and Hamline or suc-cessive days Monday and Tues-day. '' 7'

ThE REDM EN first, however ,entertain Gustavus Adolphus at. 2p m. Saturday at Terrace Heights

Bob Trytek scored twice for St.Mary 's, both in the first penod ,and Ed Tierney made it 3-1 wit h21 seconds gone in the second. DanHanka matched Tierney's goal ' at10-lM and Roger Johnson tied it at3-3 at 2:38 in the third.

Sob Magnusson put St. Mary 'sin fr ont at 5:50 on an assist byAndre Beauiieu , hsi tlvrj of - thegame, to set the stage for tr>eAuggies' finish .St. Mary'lM) Pat, Augsburg (51Caldwell .' ..: O .' ¦'. . ; . . KuehnaMagnuison - '..': . . . . :' :.' D . . . . . . . . . Ham marBeauiieu :.- D . RussDick MtCormlck ... C . . . . ; . . PriggeTryrek . .; w . , - W. JohnsonTierney W .... Lee

ST. MARY'S SPARES: Berrlgan, An-derson. Frontier.

AUGSBURG SPARES: R. Johnson, Han-ka, Ostby, Hoseth.

FIRST ,PERIOD: scoring, Augsburg—w.Johnson (Prigge) -.lis St. Mary's—Trytek(McCormlcK, Beauiieu) 4:0S; Trytek (Beau-lieu} 11:40. Penalties—Ruts (slashing),Beauiieu (holding), Prigge (high slicking).

SECOND PERIOD: Scoring, St. Mary's—Tierney (unassisted) :3I; Augsburg-Hank* (Ostby, Russ) 10:00. Penalties—Ker-rigan (high sticking).

THIRD PERIOD: Scoring, Aygsburg-R.Johnson (Ostby, Hanka) 2:31; St. Mary's—Magnusson (Beauiieu) 5:50; Augsburg—Leo(Russ) t-.li. Penalties—W. Johnson (Illegalchecking).

OVERTIME: Scoring, Augsburg—W. John-son (Lee) sj».

STpPS: Caldwell ($M) .. I * 7 0—24Kuehna (Al « 4 5 1—13

Claim Monopoly on Bubble Gum CardsGOOD NEWS FOR KID BASEBALL FANS

WASHINGTON (AP)-A Brooklyn bubble gum mnmifnc tur crwas accused today of illegallymonopolizing a growin g industry—tho distribution of picture cardsportraying major league baseballstnrs.

The Federal Trade Commissioncharged that the manufacturer,Topps Chewing Uunv lnc! , had ex-clusive picture ' card contractswith all but neven of the -421 ma-jor league players.

Alltfltng a violation of tht FTC

Act , the ' commission said Toppshas created a monopoly Contraryto the public policy of the UnitedStates and in detriment of freeand open competition in (he bub-ble gum nnd picture card indus-tries."

The complaint said that collect-ing baseball picture curds is nnincreasin gly popular hohby wilhyoung boys and that Ihey willonly buy bubble gum which inpackaged with a baseball card .

According to the FTC, Topps

has lied up bi( j league stnrs bysigniii|> them lo contract s beforethey leave the minor leagues, It;said some 1,500 minor leagueplayers have signed contractswith Topps for "a nominal con-sideration of $5. "

Tho complaint said that thoiecont racts give Topps picture cardrights for live major league sea-sons ,'iiul provide that tho playermay never grant these rights tothe Iliooklyn firm 's competitors ,

even nf ter the contract expires.The commission ' anid Topps

WtfHy"~«3bT.s not .give copies of(lie contracts lo the players andrent they are nol aware of thefull terms.

In addition , tho commissioncharged , Topps has threatenedlawsuits and made secret pay-ments to agents employed byplnysrs in order to block compet-itors fro m using the names, pic-tures and biographies of baseballplayers on cards,

Lawyer ClaimsMays if GiantsWon't Pay Up

SAN . FRANCISCO (AP) — Thetroubles of the San FranciscoGiants range from coast to coastand a little farther .

At home, attorney Melvin Belliobtained a court writ Wednesdaylaying claim to Willie Mays unlessthe Giants pay a judgment of$1,880.96. Later the Giants posteda $3,760 bond and won a stay ofexecution pending appeal.

In Puerto Rico, Orlando Cepeda,who ouMiit Mays for the Giantslast year, still isn 't satisfied withcontract terms. 7 Since Williesigned recently for a reported$90,000, Orlando supposedly looksfor something in the $50,000 neigh-borhood or nearly twice what hereceived a year ago. : •

Belli won . his-court .judg ment onJan. 23 from a Municipal Courtjury which . ordered the baseballchub to repay him for a I960season box in Candlestick Park.Belli charged the place hadproved too chilly for him to ' -.Use.because an , advertised radiantheating system failed to work .

Belli asked a writ of jxecutionbecause the club's attorneys hadfailed to file a .motion for a hewtrial before the legal deadline.

Listed at' the top of propertieswhich Belli listed for attach mentwas: "Located at 3444 Spruce St..San Francisco/ Willie Mays, aprime asset of the San FranciscoGiants."

Cepeda , : rwho led the NationalLeague in homers with 46 lastseason and also in runs-batted-inwith 142, received an estimated$27,500 for his 1962 endeavors.

H« was offered a raise of about53 1-3 per cent and sent back tliecontract.

Also unsigned are such Giantsas Stu Miller , the ace rel iefpitcher , Jack Sanford , , and theCaribbean eontigent of JuanWarich al, Jose Pagan, and Felipeand Matty Alou. Marichal and theAlous hail from the troubled Do-minican Republic while Pagan isfrom Puerto Rico.

" ¦: .' ¦' ' 7

Nat'l Hockey LeagueBoston J, Toronto } (tit).New York 2, Detroit 3 i l ia) .

EXHIBITIONMontreal t, H«JI-0»awa 1.7

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'

MICHIGAN WINS 12-4COLORADO SPRINGS , Colo.W-

First place Michigan trounced lastplace Colorado College 12-4 in aWestern Collegiate Hockey Associ-ation match Wednesday night. RedBerenson led the Wolverine on-slaught with five goals.

Unbeaten Heavy weights GoIn Winona-Albert Lea Clash

It will be a big weekend on thewrestling and swimming fronts inWinona Friday arid Saturday. BothWinona High and Winona State,have crucial tests set.

The biggest match of the week,end will come when VVinhawk MikeGerlach meets Jell Brooke of Al-bert Lea in the heavyweight finalof the dual wrestling meet betweenthe two schools.

Brooke is the defending statechampion and is undefeate d thisseason . Gerlach , also undefeated,st ands 12-0. Coach Ron White says"Brooke may have a' little moreexperience but I wouldn 't want tobet any money either .way,"Winona 's wrestling team stands

4-6-1 ¦ for the season after losingthree matches in the past twoweeks. This marks ihe last dual

meet on the schedule.The Albert Lea mectCwill begin

with a "B" squad match at 6:30p.m. at Winona High.STATE WRESTLINGNew Coach Bob Keister has his

work cut out for him, ' this week-end when his Warriors tike partin two dual meets. Friday at 3pirn. Winona State meets Michi *gan Tech and Saturday at approxi-mately 3 p.m. they will go againstSouth Dakota State, ¦ -. .

Keister assumed the coachin gduties at State after the resigna-tion of Bob Jones.

The meet with Michigan Techwill go along way in determingthe strength of the Warrior squadin the NSCC Conference. T h-u .sfar the Huskies stand 0-3 in dual

meets. They have lost to SuperiorState . twice and Bemid;i once." '

Earlier in the season SuperiorState was a 21-10 victor but Ina second meeting last weeken d "theYellowjackets managed to pull itout by only 17-15.

South Dakota State '.sill he thebig test as it stands 7-2 this sea-son and will be going for victoryNo. 5 in a ro.v ."The only two losses the Jack-rabbits have sustained came atthe hands of the Univers ities ofIowa and .Minnesota ,

They have beaten three B i gEight repres entatives in Nebras-ka, Missouri and Kansa s Slate.

Keister will be going.wi th GordyMarchionds, 123; '. -La .rry Willi s , 130;Jerry Wilharm , 137; Don? Mor-ford , 147; Stan . Gridley, 157; ¦ PStFlaherty, 167; Al Maussn er , 177,and. Jerry Wedemeier , heavy-

Weight.¦¦ South Dakota State , will counterwith Tom Tomashek . 123, DeaBrainerd , 130, Jim Perkins , 137,Jim. Kain , 147, Zelmier , 157, JohnSterner! 167, Mike ' S'erner , 177and:R6g Eischens or Dave -'Wood-brock at --hea vyweight.¦ There will be a ju n ior varsit ypreliminary Saturday as the LittleWarriors test North Dakota Uni-versity at 2 o clock , .

Betty SchoonoverNotches 595 Count

265 BY BRAD JOHNSON

Betty Schoonover, rolling as asubstitute for Winona Tool-ettes inthe Sunsetters League , at West-gate Bowl, rocketed a 595 seriesWednesday night , fifth highest¦woman 's series posted in the citythis year. ¦

The veteran bowler , owner of atleast three 600s oyer ber long ca-reer , shot a consistent 203, 192 and200. She doubled iri the 10th of herlast game, but lost her chance fora 600 in the ninth • ¦frame. . " . Overthe distance she had only two er-rors.

Mrs. Schoonover led the Tool-ettes. who were \vinle3s in. thesecond round , to a 3-0 victory overHome Furniture which was spark-ed by the 580 'marksmanship ofHelen Englerth and 556 count ofBetty Englerth . The Tool-ettes shot912-2,592.

High game of Ihe night was a226 effort by Mankato Bar 's DianheHardtke who finished with a s.65total. Joyce Harders taggpd 532and Ruth Hopf 503;

HAL-ROD LANES: Retail -BillGates rapped 620 for Behren 'sMetalware and tcammaie VinceSuchomel had a 235 game to fea:ture their 2,917 series, but it wnsn 'tenough as Bub's Beer captured thesecond r o u n d crown by threepoints. Joe Grease turned in a608 for BTF' s arid Mahlke 's Do-nuts posted 1,008. Sherry Wrolfe ofW & S HOPTO shot a 128 tripli-cate. ¦ ¦:¦ , . ."¦

WESTGATE: Men 's League -Brad Johnson rocked 620 with a265 game, the seventh highes inthe city . this year, for Mohan 'sBuilding Products. Mohan 's had a999 game and Nash's a 2 ,660 ser-ies.

Bay State Women—Janet Wiec-rorek of BSMCO-ettes banged 524with a 193 game. Her mates wenton to a 974 in a 2.654 series. ElaineThode posted n 502,

RED MEN: Class A-Don Kna-pik of Winona Boxcraft leveled Cll

with a 236 single. His mates total-ed 1 .MS with a -2,895 series.

ST. MARTIN'S: W i d n • i d a yLeague—Bruce Reed notched 544for Western Koal Kids and AndrewGesell. spilled a 217 game for Wi-nona Boiler and Steel which click-ed for 935-2,768.

KEGLERS LANES: Merchants—Rod Klagge bfTWeavei and Sonsrapped 212-579 and Weavers total-ed 951-2,800. Norman; Ebner ofRushford Bottling also had a 212:

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STATE SWIMMINGThe Winona State C oilege swim

team plays host to Grinneli at 3:30p.m. Friday Coach J im Voorheesexpects this to be his team 's tough-est remaining test oa the sched-ule. ¦

"What 1 know about . Grinnellleaves every indicat ion that thiswill be the closest meet that hasever been swum in our pool."Voorhees said . ¦ "The fans ; havenever seen a real close meet;we've either been beaten by gi-gantic margins or otherwise wonby large scores."

The Stale swimmers, accordingto. Voorhees, are in top shape.After last Saturday 's victory overUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee ,a win would push the Statesmenabove the 50O mark at 4-3.

Following the meet with Grin-nell , State meets Gustavus hereon Tuesday and then travels toLa Crosse on Saturday.

WIN HAWKSWIMMING

The Winon a ¦:¦ High tank teamtakes- Friday off before tra velingto St. Louis Park Saturday for a2 p.m. meet. 7

Lloyd Luke 's team stands 2-8for the season. The record . is noindication of the squad' s perfor-mance. Last Friday it was a lastsecond disqualification that costthem a win over A ustin.

This will be the last dual . meet/or the swimmers. The . Big Ninemeet will be held in Winona Fri-day. After that it is the StateMeet at Minneapolis Feb. 23-24.

Blair Ice FishingContest Sunday

B L A 2 R , Wis. (Special) - TheBlair Lions Club will hold its icefishing contest Sunday, Feb. 11,from 1:30 lo 4:30 p.m. on LakeHenry.

The lake has been freshly stock-ed with Northern Pike.

A tot^l . Df ?500 in prizes will beawarded lo anglers catching fish.youngest and oldest fishermen andperson traveling greatest distance.

¦¦" '

¦¦ ¦¦¦

General fishing Seasons on bass,walleyes and northerns in Wiscon-sin will close Feb. 15.

Detroit 1U, Clncliimtl 107.NBA— , ' -ABL—

N«w York 130, ' Pittsburgh "111.'Clevelind 144, San Francisco III.

MAJOR COLLEGEJ-Vlllanov* 82, Duquisni 61.W«st Vlrglnlt 00, Pitt 7«.SI. Joitph'sv (Pa.) IU Gtorgstown (D.C.)

. - ¦ 70.Army 70, Colgate (I.Ls Sails »I , 'BiicKnell ,-7§,Ufayettt «!, Lehigh St.Rutgers 103/ Muhlenberg tl.Niagara W, Syracuse 58.Holy Cross 111, Seton Hall t4.Noiiheaitern 86, Boston u. it.N.C. Stale 18, Virginia 48.Richmond 87, VMI 81 (OT).DePaul 79, Louisville 78 (3 OT).

. Navy ' 7(, - ' Penn ..Military .'40.Loyola (La.) <7, William a Miry il.Centenary 11, Miss, Southern 79.

- Loyola (Md.) eo, John Hopkins S3.Kansas Stata 91, Kansas 72.Toledo 70, Bowling Green. 59.Iowa State 75,- Oklatioma ii.Xavler (Ohio) 77, Dayton 71.Loyola (III.) 102, Western Mich. 71.Ohio Univ. 87, Morehead (Ky.) 73,Air Force (2, New Mexico 36.

UPPER MIDWEST COLLEGES-Oen. Beadle . 94, Sioux Falls 82.

. SI. John's (Minn,) IT. St. Thomas CMInn.)33.

Hamline 77, SI. Mary's (Minn,) (1.

PRESTON . Minn. (Special)-Itwas a big night for- the Prestonhigh school grapplers here Wednes-day as they trounced Rushford 56-0.

P r e s t o n won all 12 of thematches , five by pins and four onforfeits to account for 45 pointsto Ro with three decisions worththree points each.

The winning Blue Jays were:John Arnold , Jim Little , Don Arn-old , Dennis Dornink , David Wiss-ing. Steve Wcndt, Chuck Palmer ,Rog ScheeveJ. Terry Eckholrn , BillMangnn , Darrell BUrgcss andSteve Miller.

95—J. Arnold (P) pinned Heublln (R)1:54; 103—Little (P) dec. Dale Volkman(R) JO; 112—Don Arnold <P) won on lor-(elf; 120—Dornink (P) dec. Dave Volkman40; 127^Wlsslng (P) pinned B. Hovland(It ) :45i 131—Wendt (P) pinned Laumb(R > l;52;

138—Palmer (p) pinned Dan Volkman(P.) J:54; 143-Scheevel (P) pinned O.Hovland (U) JiOH »J4-Eckholm (P) pin.njd Jonsgaard (R) 3i00; 1(5—Mangan IP)won on forfeit; 1)5—Burgess (P) won onforfeit; heavyweight—Miller (P) won onforfeit.

BADGER CURL ERS WINCHICAGO W) — Three Wisconsin

rinks posted victories and two werodefeated Wednesday night in the'Women 's International Invitation-al Bonsplel.

Pr eston MatmenCrush Rushford

WIN AT SPRING LAKE . . . These six icefishermen won top prizes Sunday in the fishingcontest at Spring Lake, sponsored by the Foun-tnirr~l'ity American Legion; Left—to Tight , areLawrence Merles , third biggest siinfisb , i 'mhhouse stove; George Schneider , Fountain City,third biggest crappie, fish house stove; Jim Kubf-cck , Fountain City, largest crappie , S50; FloydItinn , Winona , largest .sunfish, $f)0; Ol io Lowon-

hagen , Alma , largest bass, popcorn popper ; andJimmy Keller (foreground ! , Cochrane/ secondplace crappie , ice auger. Attendance prize .win-

-ners were: F.lnicr Blnnl^, Cochrane , and Bob -ILmspi). Alma , quarters of beef; William Knaiib ,Fountain City, half a hog; and Uernard Kubi.s,Arcadia , half a hog. About 1.000 persons wereon hand. (LnCroix Johnson Photo )

' " " " "" . I

TECH ACE , . . Roger Het-tinger , 191-pounder, is theleading wrestler for MichiganTech • which ' meets Winon aState at 8 p.m. Friday at ]Mem-orial Hall. Hettinger won theDean Frank Kerekcs awardlast year for compiling themost team points .

SANTA CRU2, Calif. f#^-Th«7visiting Watsonville, Calif.,high .- ichool . 'basketball-' . Imammade an unscheduled appear-ance before the 700 fans Wed-nesday night.V While the team changed

frbrn street clo-fhes to uniformibefore the game, osing theCivic Auditorium itage as adressing room, tomeone open-ed the curtain. .

If it was psychological war-fare, it wo rked. Santa CruzHigh won 45-4-4.

CUR TAIN GOES UP[ —BI T TOO EARLY

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSThe Cincinnati Royals' hold on

second place in the Western Divi-sion of : the National BasketballAssociation was in j eopardy to:day as the Detroit Pistonsclimbed to within three games , ofthem. ' •¦. . ' •¦' ' . ¦'

The Pistons knocked off theRoyals 113-107 in Detroit Wednes-day night in the only NBA gamescheduled . It was Detroit's secondvictory in as many nights overfading Cincinnati.

The Royals have lost six in arow while the Pistons boast afourrgame winning streak—theirlongest of the season.

Royals' GripOn 2nd Slips

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSPrairie View 's Panthers contin-

ued to be rank ed at the top of thenation 's small college basketballteams today and if would be hardto find a case to dispute the honor.

Prairie View got five of the sev-en first place Votes in - th e weeklyAssociated Press poll after Satur-day 's night viclory over then^sec-ond ranked Grambling (La.) .Grambling was tied for the ruri-nerup spot this week by fast-ris-ing Tennessee State , and receivedone firsl place vote , despite the92-88 loss.

The top 10, with their won-Iostrecords :

1. Prairie View 14-11. «Tle l Tennessee Stale M

Orambllng 14-5A. Weslmlnsler (Pa.) 1315. Hofjfra 15-ti. Kentucky UVtilcyan li-)7. Wittenberg 10-4I. Southern Illinois 144?. Georgetown (Ky.) , . . . 17 -4

10. Mf. SI. Mary's 11-4Otheri receiving votci Included Minne-

sota Duluth and South Dakota Stale.

Prairie ViewTop Cage Pick

Friday's ScheduleLOCAL—

Winona High at Albert Lea.Rochester Lourdes at Colter.

BIO NINE-Red Wing at Rochester. ,Mankato at Northfield.Austin at Owatonna.

ROOT RIV6R-Calodonla at Peterson.Mabol at Canton.

-Ruihlord at-Kouslon. MAPLE LBAP-

frtaton al Chatllald.Harmony at Wykoff.Lanetboro al Spring Valley.

HIAWATHA VALLEY-Plalnvlew al Zumbrota.SI. Charles at Kenyon.Cannon Palis at Kaston-Mantorv llle,Slewarlvllle at Lake Clly.

BI-STATB-St, Felix at BolllnqUone Holy Trinity.

MlfSISSIPPI VALLEY-Arcadla at Mondovi.Chippewa Fall* at Black River Falls.CocHrana-FC »1 Durand,

COULEB-Mlndoro at OnsUike.Melrosi at Bangor.Weal Salem al Holmen,Trempealeau at Oale-Ellrlck,

OAIRYLAND-Augusta al E«ev«.strumAlma Center nt Independence.Ojjeo at WhITohall.

WE»T CENTRA I—Taylor al Pepin.Alma al Ollmanton.

NON-CONFBROaNCB-Lanslng (Iowa.) at Caledonlt Loretlo.

Saturday'* SchteJuULOC*L-

Bertildll Hate at Winona Halt.Mncalester at St, Mary 's.St, Charles vs. Lewlston al Wlno-ns

State Collegte, 7ilS p.m,NON-CONFERE NCE-

Mlnneapolls South al Austin,Zumbrota at Ooodhue.Onalaska LutDtr at Onalaska,Blair al Alm-e Center.Taylor at Melrose.

Area Basketball

New Rule SlowsJunior Recruiting

MILWAUKEE , Wis, f/rV-Rumorsof the recruiting of promising ju-nior high school athletes led tothe adoption Wednesday of a newrule by the Athletic Council , thegovernin g body for the Milwau-kee City Conference.

The new rule provides that anyjunior high school student trans-fering to a high school outside ofhis district will be ineligible fororganized practice and interscho-lastic competition until he hascompleted two semesters of at-tendance in the 10th grade.

Under old rules; a Junior highstudent would become eligible im-mediately for interscholastic ath-lelics at theTschool of his choos-ing, provided he obtained permis-sion from the superintendent ofeducation to attend a school oth-er- than the one located in the dis-trict in which he resides.

. . . . - . - - ¦ ¦

SIGN BULLDOGWINNIPEG WV-The Winnipeg

Blue Bombers of the CanadianFootball League today announcedIhe signing of tackle Ron Kostellzof the University of Minnesota , Du-luth. .

¦sna aw^paj^ ^ r ^wa'¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ - w^ '— . - -¦ ¦ » — - . ^ — -w - _ -— - — — — T „ - ¦_

_ - — — —. ¦ —T

UJitwncL (Daily , TIZWA.

Page 15 Thursday, February 8, \H27 7 '" ¦ '. .¦/ - v . ' ", ¦ ' : ' . ' ' ¦¦ '¦¦ ' . - . '

• • " - — * • — - -a ¦ i*M~a~M*M**a~ i ~n~T "~r-*V*»l~>i~>r~ir*ir>i»l ¦ - - - - - . _ _ ^ . - -

Gentile BoostedUp to $30,000

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSWhile Roger Marls was pro-

ducing his 61 home runs last sea-son, Jim Gentile 's heroics for Bal-timore didn 't exactly go unnoticedby the Orioles' front office.

The slugging first baseman re-ceived a 100 per cent salary hikewhen he sighed his 1962 ContractWednesday calling for $30,000.Gentile 's pact a year ago was for$15,000.

The 27-year-old Gentile drove in141 funs last season and belted 46home runs—five of them grand-slammers. He placed third in theballoting for v t h e AmericanLeague's most valuable playeraward behind .Maris and MickeyMantle of the Yankees.' "' -.

Other players signed Wednesdayincluded : pitchers Frank Bati-mann , Cal.McLish and Mike De-rrick and catcher Sherm Lollarof the Chicago White Sox; pitch-er Ken Hunt and outfielder JoeGaines of the Cincinnati Reds;Phil Ortega and Jack Smith , firstbaseman Tim Harkness , infieldersKen McMullen and Dick Tracew-ski and outfielder Dick Smith ofthe . Los Angeles Dodgers ; infield-er Leo Burke , outfielder Ken Wal-ters and pitcher Don Ferrarese ofthe Philadelphia Phils; pitcherJim -Kaat of the Minnesota Twins.

Also pitcher Bill . Stafford andoutfielder Bob Cerv of the NewYork Yankees; pitcher ShermanJones and first baseman.Ed Bou-chee of the New York Mcts, firstbaseman Larry Osborne of theDetroit Tigers and inficldcr . Tom-my Aaron of -the MilwaukeeBraves. ".

Regan Leads Hoi may sTo f/fr/i^

Holm ay Nash Motors got intoa pleasant rut Wednesday nigh tbut parlayed it into a 2,957 totaland fift h place in the Winon aMen's City bowling tournamentat the VVinona Athletic Club:

The team fired games of. 781,881. and 981, with their big gamesandwiched in the middle.

Holmay was Ihe only team todent the first 10 leaders in lastnight 's action .

Gene Regan , leadoff man , wasthe pace-setter with a 610 series.After a 160 opener , he splashed240-21O, Biitoh Wicczorek tagged237-559.

The Holm ay team Is out of theHal-Rod Four City League.

Next best team effort was a

TOURNEY LEADERSMayan Srocery - Legion, HR ,. 3,0)1Himm'i Beer - CUnlc, AC . . . . . . 3,017Seven-Up - Claulc, AC .. XtnBub's Beer - Claulc, AC . . . . . . . . J,WHolmay Motora - 4-Clty, HR ,. J,«7Robb Bret. Stora ¦ Clastic, WO.. 3,924Old Doc's - Bay -State, WG J.ttoHot Fish Shop '- Classic, AC . . . . . 1,903Central Motor ¦ 4-Clty, HR . 3,900KeWpte Lunch - Classic, AC .... IMS

2,860 by TV Signal of the Hal-RodEagles League-

Marty Wntik of Kewppe Lunchof the same loop belted 591 witha 232 starter.

Team competition runs throughFeb.7 16. Singles and doublesstart Feb. 17. The v- completeschedule for minor events vviilbe announced Sunday, Feb. U,

Niagara TopsLittle Sixteen

MADISON , Wis . tin—MilwaukeeLincoln .and Niagara continue toset a fast pace in Wisconsin Highschool basketball circles.

Milwaukee Lincol n, which nowboasts a 37-game winning streak ,including 14 straight this season ,retain first place in the Big Six-teen ratings announced Wednes-day by - the Wisconsin Iriterscho-lastic Athletic Association.

Holding the top spot on the LittleSixteen weekly ratings is .Niagara ,winner of 17 straight games thisseason—the longest string in thestale.

Neenah and Aniigo conitnued tohold second and third place re-spectively in tlie Big Sixteen andAubunidale and Waunakce againwere rated second and third inthe Little Sixteen.

Ratings with won-lost records:BIO SIXTJEEN

1. Milwaukee Lincoln (14-0); 2. Neenah(HI); 3, Antlgo (14-0); 4. Eau Claire(10 3); 4. Milwaukee North (13-1); *. LaCrosse Central (131); 7. Lancaster O5-0);I. West Milwaukee (13-1); 9. Manitowoc(tl-2>; 10. Baraboo (13-1); 11. Hudson (14-0)1 13. Kewaunee (13-0); 13. Whltollsh Bay(11-1); 14. Hurley (12-3); 15. Oconomowoe(11-1); '14. Salem Central (15-0),

LITTLE SIXTEEN1. Niagara (17-01; 3. Auburndale (16-0);

3. Waunakce (13-3); 4. Randolph ( 14.1); 5.Crlvlti (14-1); 6. Al*oona (13-1); 7. ShellLake (130); 8. Bloomlngton (14-1); 9.Brodhead (15-0); 10. Random Lake (15-1);1). Wnbeno (IS O); 13. Oaklleld (15-0); 13.Drummond (14-1); 14. Woyauwega (13-3);13, Gay Mills (13-3); 14. Weyerhauser(11-1).

¦- . ¦¦' ¦¦'¦

City MeetBowling

HOLMAy NASH MOTORS4-Clty—Hal Rod

Gene Regan . V . . ... UO 240 510—610Tom Holmay . . . . . . . . 154 159 1S7—-472Jerry Schultr :. ' 133 315 139—(8iButch Wleciorek . .. 153 337 170—5S»Joe (Pinky) Holmay 181 130 205—516

7«! 981 811— 314— 2957TV SIGNAL

Eagles—Hal-RodDale Kaulfman ' . . . ; '. 134 160 135—«2»Par Peterson ....... 133 133 141—406Gary Nelson . 145 162 151—458Joe Plalsance ....... 196 198 143—537Mel Becker . . . : . . . . . 171 180 191—542

779 632 761—488-^3860RUPPliRT GROCERY

Clastic—WestjoteBUI Haack 130 185 172—507Al Ruppert .,' 192 153 177— 523Jim Ruppert . . . . . . . I« 160 182—535Ray Ruppert . . . . . . . 167 158 187—513Olck Niemeyer . . . , . 181 182 202—565

883 838 920—194—2835VIC'S BAR

Victory—KKEd Mroiek . ... 188 164 196—548Frank Dobberphi/l .. 131 165 144—460Ray Kohner .. . . . . 149 301 162—513VIC Pellowski . . . . . . 170 189 167—526Don Goslomskl . . . ; . 161 223 175—5S9¦ ' • - . ¦ • ¦

799 962 844—218—2823KEWPEE LUNCH

Eagles- Hal-RodMarty Wnuk . . . 3 3 2 167 )92—591Don Brokaw '., 165 171 157—493Lou Martin . . . . . . . 126 172 181—479Geo. . Draikowskl . . . 1 7 9 157 144—480Mike Sonsalla . ... . 153 159 17^—488

855 826 B50-.272—2803SWIFT PREMIUM

American—Westgala :Archie Davis 141 119 94—354Ken Kinowskl . . . . . . ; 156 159 202—517David McNeel .- , . . . 181 213 178—572Bill Jones •; '.' . : . . 151 205 180—536Box Cox V 181 138 171—480

810 824 825—330—2789WINONA INSURANCE AGENCY"

Eagles— Hal-Roo3Ken Vaughn . , . . ; . : . 1*1 138 200—499Mylej Vaughn 139 144 139—422John Sandstedt ...:- . - 156 135 147—438Marv Schultz ... .... .. 190 159 166—515Joe Draikowskl 192 191 175—558

838 767 827—352838 767 827—352—2784MAIN TAVERN

Elks—WestgateJerry Fakler. '. . 154 200 181—537Jerry Glemlnskl . , . . 196 203 13S— 534George Modfeskl . . . 149 171 144—464Huey Curran . . . . . . 138 147:121—406Hugo Blttner .. . . . . . 171 169 15?—499

810 890 74»—344—2784SE.VEN UP BOTTLING CO.

VFW—Hal-ROdJerry Larsen 164 166 193 -533Kcr Meinke , 177 164 I tr—478Jim Mullana . . . . . . . . 143 130 14S—407John ' Theis " '. ... . . . . . 116 114 141—371David Wnuk . . . . . . . . 163 167 137—467 -

763 731 753—482—2728BAUER ELECTRIC

Lakeside—WestgalaRonald Czaplewski . 140 103 183—426Bob Brandes . : . . . . . . 109 144 127—380Jerry Johnson ...... 133 194 123-450Arnold Gady . . . . . . . . 150 134 175-449Don Oooney . . . 202 179 108-489

734 744 71*^488—268!NSP—BLUE FLAME

Anherican-WestgaleChas Brown . . . 105 151 153—409Gale Hunn . . . . . .. . 169 161 164-498Phil Newman .. . . . . . 136 140 131-407Ted Bobsalis 138 134 )22-394Jim Sweaiey . . . . . . . 192 177 170-S39

. 740 763 74-4-;456—2703OWL MOTOR CO.

Eagles—Hal-RodGeorge Kramer . . . . 85 110 105— 300Cary Luedtke . . . . 136 130 148—434Bernla Blggerstall .. 151 199 151—501Daryl Oales . . . . . . . . 100 136 130—366Ches Lilla . . . . . . . . . . 169 165 115-449

641 740 669^572—2622

Youmans Tells ofChange in Name ofInvestment Firm

The partners of Cruttenden , Po-desta & Co. have approved achange of name, to Crutten den ,Pode.sta & Miller , Addison B. You-mans, the linn 's resident mana-ger in Winona , announced today,

Glenn R. Miller , who joined tliecoast-to-coast investment firm in1!)51, is the partner in charge ofunderwritin g activities.

The new name is subject to ap-proval of the various administra-tive and regulatory authorities. Itwil l hecoin e elloctive wilh thetirni s move of itsli e a d o f f i . e eq u a r t e r sf i' o in Chicago 'sfamous old Rook-ery Building tothe f o u r t h andfif th floors of thejust- completed LaS a i l e- .l a c k-son Huilriiri R , Themove is schedul-ed for (he firstweek in March.

"T h e iicnd-of- Glc-<™ Millorfice .move into sii l islanlially lar-UW.,-xompLetely. ue\v quar ters un-derscores nur orgapiz ;it ion 's strongexpansion in recent yc-ars ," You-mans said . "Much of that expan-sion lias been in our underuri l ingarm. In the past , five years alone ,we have managed ' or eo-innna gwl•1,"i offerings of securities , totalingwell over $lfl(l million . The addi-tion of ( ilciin Miller to the firmname i.s formal reco gnition of h i ^direct responsibility for the (level-opnient and personal supervisionof this all-important phase of ourac t iv i ty , nnd the partner 's' eonl i-deuce tha t our role .as a majorunderwriter will cent imie to ex-pand, "

Miller , a nat ive of Klgin , III ,and ,» graduate of NorthwesternUniversi ty, was exe cutive vicepresident of the Cleveland invest-ment firm of Ot is & Co., beforejoining Cruttenden , Podostn. Ac-live in int.lii.slry nf fairs , lie i.s alsoa director of Needhnm PackingCo,, Inc., Richmond Homes . Inc.,l.lndlierg Steel Treating Co,, Inc.and Coiisulidnted Leas ing Corp. ofAmerica , anil liiiiincinl vice |> ie.videal o/ .American (Ins Co,

(.'nitleiiden, I'wlesta k t'o. 's 2fl

Stocks ResumeClimb, RallyIn Eighth Day

NTEW YORK (AP) — . The . stockmarket resumed its climb, despitefurther resistance, bringing therally into its eighth straight ses-sion with trading active early thisafternoon .

The . Associated Press averageof 60 stocks at noon was up .20 at261.50 with industrials up ,20 , railsoff .20 and utilities up .50. ,

Gains of fraction s to about apoint butiiutnbered . losers in fhesame range , but the upside mar-gin . was slender. :" .

¦Steels, rubbers, oils, electrical

equipments ".' - and '- . - utilities weremostly higher. Rails eased a bit.Chemicals and motors werje-mixed . Aerospace issues were un-changed to a little higher .

The flashiest piece of corporatenews was ' Hershey Cliocolate'sproposal for a 5-for-l stock splitand dividend boost. Delayed by aninflux of buy orders,7 the stockrose 15 V* points to.' - 19714 on a de-layed opening, th«n trimmedabout 4 points from the rise.

Union Carbide added more: thana point, American Telephonemade a similar gain. ,

Some of the airlines improved.Pari American gained about apoint and American a fraction.United was down about a point ,. -Small ' gains , were made by U.S.

Steel, Youngstown Sheet, AlliedChemical , New York Central,American Smelting and PhelpsDodge.;'

The Dow Jones industrial aver-age at . noon was up .37 at 715.10.

Prices moved generally highe ron the American Stock Exchange.

Corporate bonds were mixed,U.S.. government bonds were unchanged to slightly higher.

1 P.M. New YorkStock Prices

Abbott L 72>/2 Kennecott 821aAllied Ch 54Vi - Lorillard 62'/4Allis Chal . 211- - Mpls Hon 124%Amerada 251!* Minn MM 70Am Can: 453 s Mi an P&L ' 4114Am MOFy . 3(j ;8 MOri Chm 3HSAAm Mot 16:!i Mon Dk U . 361iAT&T .' "'-13314 Mon Ward 323,i"Anaconda 50Vi Nat Dairy . 65VsArch Dan 36% No Am Av 69Annco St. . 67^8 Nor Pac . 435,«Armour 54% No St Pw 34VsAvco Corp 2814 Nwst Airl 34%Beth Steel 42V4 Penney 48V4Boeing Air 55 Pepsi Cola 54%Brunswick 38Vs Phil Pet 56%Chi MSPP 171V Pillsbury 6HiChi & NW — Polaroid 198Chrysler 551-s Pure Oil 35%Cities Svc 58Vi RCA 54%Comw Ed 4514 Rep Steel 58V*Cont Can 46'/s Rex Drug 51Cont Oil 543i Rey Tob 78Deere 5C% Sears Roe . 81%Douglas 3434 Shell Oil 3!)y«Dbw Chern 7114 Sinclair 39du Pont 243 Socony 54V2East Kod : 106% Sp Rand 23%Ford Mot 109Vij St Brands 73VsGen Elec ¦ -75Vi St Oil Cal 57'/sGen Foods 8714 St Oil Ind 56%Gen Mills 29% St Oil NJ 54%Gen Mot 56> 2 Swift & Co 46%Gen Tel 2714 Texaco ' ShVaGoodrich 67 • 3 Texas Ins 106 .Goodyear 44 :?s Tmax Tra 43Gould Bat 53 Un Pac 34Gf -No 'Ry 45% Un Air Lin" 37Greyhound 2914 U S Rub 59%llomestk 47 • U S Steel 74IB Mach 554. West Un 38%Int Harv 54% Westg El 37*8Int Paper 34% Wlworth 85^Jones & L 69>i ' Yng S & T 1027/j

PRODUCECHICAGO (A P )— Chicago Mer-

cantile Exchange — Butter steadywholesale ' .' b' iry i' n g' prices un-changed'; . 93 score AA 59%; 92 A59%; 90 B 5814 ; 89 C 56%; cars90 B 58% ; 89 C 5714.

Eggs steady, wholesale buyingprices unchanged ; 70 per cent orbetter grade A whites 36; mixed3514 ; mediums 34*;.' ; standards 34;dirties 30; checks 29.

NEW YORK (AP ) - (USDA ) ' -Butter offerings ample; demandsteady to slightly improved ; priceunchanged.

Cheese steady; prices un-changed.

Wholesale egg offerings of largeand mediums short of needs; de-mand aclive , especially on largeand medium whites.

(\\'liolesnle .selling, prices basedon exchange and other volumeslaes. )

New York spot quotationsfollow ; mixed colors: extras (47lbs. min. ) 311-39; extras medium(40 lbs. average) 30-37; smalls (35lbs. average) 31-32; standards 36-31) ; checks 32-33.

Whites: extras (47 lbs. min. )Wi-W; extras medium (40 lhs .average) 3fi >< !-37'^ ; top quality (47lbs , min.) 39',i-43v, mediums (41ll)s,v iiveragoi- 36'i,.:tllVi-; suwlls (36lbs. average) 33-34.

Browns: extras (47 lhs. riiin. )311'j. -3!) '-^ ; lop qunl i ty (47 lbs. , min. )39-41; mediums (-1 1 lbs . average)3d 1 a-311 la ; smalls (36 lbs . average )32-33.

CHICAGO (APi - No wheat ,oats or soybean sales. Corn No 5yellow 1.07.

Soybean oil H i ' i h - ' na.Barley: in a i l i n g choice 1.3.1-

1.62 n; feed l.lHi-1.20 11.

NKW YORK ( A P ) - (USDA ) -Dressed poultry : Turkeys — grade"A", and U .S. grade "A ," ready-(ci-cook . frozen ; carlo! and truck-lot t rading limited. Olferings re-ported : turns .22 lbs and under 30,22-24 lhs :121;J ; liens (l -lfi His 33!a;fryer-roiislcrs 4-it lbs 33,

CANADIAN DOLLARNKW YOlfK (AP I - Cniiadinn

dollar in N .V . today ,9537, pre -vious day .9539.

olflces from New York to SunFrancisco include branches in Wi-noun , SI. Paul , Milwaukee , Madi-son , Janesville nnd La Crosse.

St. Felix EyesTitle ClincherAgainst Trinity

One of the most important- areaclashes Friday night will send thetwo top teams in . . the. Bi-StateConference against each otherwhen ¦ Wab'aslia St. Felix journeysto Rollinpstonc Holy Trinity.

The Yellowjackets are on topwith an 8-0 record whije. HolyTrinitv stands .7-2. 'Even if St. Fe-lix should lose, it is assured ofat least a first place, tie. A winwould cinch the title.

IN THE Hiawatha Valley Ken-yon '8-1 > plays host to St. Char-les "(2-9 '. LaftC" City - '(9-2) . hostsStewartville (2-9 ) and Kasson-Man-torville < 1.0-1) ,' which last weekhanded Kcnyon its only loss, en-tertains Cannon Falls ( 1-8) .

Tlie top (est in Root River takesplace at Peterson7(6-3) when Cal-edonia (7-3) comes to town. Ma-bel , the league leader with a 9-0record , isn 't expected to get muchof a test froni Cantoii (1-9) .

Harmony (6-D the MaplevLeafleader could get a shock at Wykoff(4-3) but if ' thin gs go accordingto plan .the Cardinals should chalkup win No. 7. Spring Valley (5-2 )eniertains Lanesboro U-6J . andPreston (1-5) plays at Chatfield'(4-3) .

IN Wisconsin thingtTare muchthe same. Several games pittingtraditional rivals against each oth-er arc scheduled but here againit will be . first place teamsagainst second division squads.

The big game may ce playedat Galesville when the Gale-Et-trick Redmen (8-4) tangle witharch rival Trempealeau (9-3). TheGales are still smarting from a54-52 overtime loss earlier thisseason. Gene Mason 's club is pro-mising revenge.

Bangor , Coulee leader with a10 2 mark , hosts Melrose 4-8.

Dai ryland action finds Eleva-Strurn" (.8-1) playing host to Augus-ta (4-5) . Alma Center (6-3) travelsto Independence (6-3 > for the con-test which will determine who willhold down second place.

DURAND, WHICH turfered Itifirst loss in, the Mississippi ValleyConference Tuesday, will attemptto get back on the win trail whenCochrane-Fountain City (1-8) in-vades. The Panthers are 7-1.

Chippewa Falls ( 5-4) <mi. freshfrom its overtime win over Du-rand hopes to knock Black RiverFalls (7-2) 6 ut of con tentlon atBlack River.

In West Central Taylor (6-0)will play at Pepin , (5-2 ) and Gil-manton (3-3) hosts Alrna (2-4 ) .

The only non-conference clash ofthe evening finds Lansing, Iowa ,at Caledonia Lorctlo.

New York TiesRed Wings 2-2By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSThe head-o n clash of New York

and Detroit for the last NationalHockey League playoff spot wasadvertised -as a "four point"game, but it turned out to be aone-pointer.

The two teams skated to a 2-2tie in New York Wednesday nightthat left their positions in thestandings unchanged , the fourth-place Rangers holding a onetpoin tlead over the Red Wings.

Boston and Toronto also tied 2-2in a . mild Rame al Toronto thatproduced only one penalty, late inthe final period.

The two games followed muchthe same pattern. Toronto camefrom behind twice to tie theBruins , and New York came frombehind twice to tic the Red Wings.

RETAILHalRod W. L. Poinll

Bub' j ' Bccr 1J II 31ViB«hron> Mct«lwar« 1» U 38W » S Shop J0'' i I J i ' i ?4ViOMlnbell Beer 71 I t tiLincoln Insurance . . , . , . It 14 35Sf . Cluln W , It' i j;Fcnske Auto Body H 17 -31B T F U'i 1»'^ l»i »Fedfrnl Cnktii - ,- . . . 14> I IB' ] IB '-IMiihlkc 's 13 30 11VV 8, S Hopto . 11 31 15Mdln Tuvlrn 1) 31 li

CLASS "A"Red Men W . L.

Ounn 'i UUcktop 11 5Wlnnno Boxcrjt l , . , . , . » 1Winonn Milk Co. . . . ' 1Kalmes Tire- Srr.- lct . 5 11

WEDNESDAY51. Mjrlm 'i W. L,

NortHwnil Co op . 11 7W(' !.ter- n Kn.il Kid* * 1Wcnoii* Boilrr Co. * »Aid Aii'n lor Lulh 7 II

MDHCHANTJKfi l lrr i L«no-, V/ . L.

W*n*,t'i' -A-..Son\ . H 4-Ruitilnrd Ooll l ing Co. . , , . , II 1Hurry flatV 14 1JCoiy Cnrnfr B.ir 13 1(HBrni-rnlk s bur , . . . . '. , . . . 13 14Silvrr Dollar Bar 13 14Hoi P. mi, . . . » IIPont' l Tlvern . » II

SUHS ET TF - RSWfU1«l»r W. I ,

Jordan i R.;ady lo W(«r 7 1W,inl(.)l(i nur . . . . . A 1^ir ^l K»t ion«l Bank A IMirn( f .jrnilufif ., 5 A'.untHrfrr- S-Afl-ls , , 4 5¦JrrrmrJt'l Bc ^r 4 5vl ,,->on * loo\tUe ^ , . . 3 4Com PHrm»c» I a

BfcY S T A T E WOMENVit '. i tl i i t W. L. Poinll

H'i 'f Cc - ' Mt j 14 1 13<,r.« l „ ,nnr r - , 13 S II>f . !Mi ,ar r . t r \ IB • IJKirnM-KriicKtri , . . 7 II »y/r , f l « lm4i , 5 13 AbrMt i 'Un 1 15 A

V/CSTOATE MENVVttlq tle Poinll

M.K W C II Houic Colltt 31Si-wt 'n Up I»Altura 5i«1f Bank . IB 'O'Luuflhlln Plumbcri MNmh'i 13Hanm 'j Dckiilt) 11Molmn'i Dulldln!! Producli ttVinom County Aliilrsd Co I¦III India , water fowl hunters I KIVC

been warned agninsl slifiotinj; wi-j in iliii K wal erf owl i'roin .Sil)i-ri;i<< iid CVii l rn l Asia bmnise of theirhigh ividioacl / i i ly ;is a result ofSoviel. nuclear tests.

SportsCalendar

BASKETBALLFtt, »—Winonn Hloh .11 Albert Lea,

Rochcil«r Lourdoi nl Cotter.ttt>. 10 — rjfiriIdrl Slntt at Wlnoni

Jldlr, M»c»leitcr al 51. Msry 'i.SWIMMING

Ft*. »--Orlniiflt »! Wlnont Sltllt.Pel), 10—Winona Hloh nl SI. L011I1

Pirk .WRESTLING

ft* . l-Albfil L»« tl Wlnont High)Mlrhlgtn Tech tt Wlnont Slate,

rt*. 10—South Dakolt Sttlt <l Wl-nont Stale.

MINNEAPOLIS UV-t'liuek Lam-son , f-t ar quarterback for Ihe Uni-versity of Wyoming who played introt h' 1 hr-"llutri ABwl imd the l^wt-U'est Shrine game , Wednesdaysigned with the Minnesota Vikings.

Drafted in the fourth round ofHH50 selections while Mill a junior ,Lnmson will he groomed ns adefens ive back by lite Vikings , Hei.s il feet , weighs Ul.r> pounds.

During his years at Wyoming,Lnmson twice made All SkylineConference quarterbac k, lie wasa standout on the we.M team thatUpset Iho east in Hawaii.

Wyoming StarIn Viking Fold

The Standard Oilers of the CityLeague picked up their second winin a rc«w over the Winona StateAl l -S ta r s S0-B7 - ' behind MerleGrothe 'ti 28 points.

Standard rolled ahead .">7-3l athallime and then had to f ight oftan all-star rally in the second half .

Kvery Standard player bit indouble figures , L;mce .Johnson ( ¦<> (10 . Hon Ekker in , Tenold Milbraudtand Hank Maly 14 eaeli and JonKosidowskl 10. Gary Pah l Rot 2:i ,Gavin Grob 22 and Fred Heck 211for the All-Sars,

Oilers NudgeStars 90-87

Blues ToppleJefferson 60-51

. JUNIOR HIGH LEAGUEHeivyvwlfjhf LlBhlwtlshl

W L IV LCcntnl Gold .. I 1 Central Gold .. » 0Central Bin* . 7 2 Central Blue .. 7 )Jttlerson .' . 5 5 Jelforson . . . . , . s 5Phelpt ,. J 7 Wash.-K. : ; . . . . 7 IWaih.-K. . . . . . . 1 a. ' PAslpi. 0 10

In Junior High League Heavy-weight action Tuesday CentralBlues nipped Jefferson 60-51 andPhelps trounced Washington-Kosci-usko 39-20.

Tony Kreu2er hit 20 points, JohnDurfey 11 arid Bob Urness 10 forthe Blues which stand 7-2. Thewin brought them within one gameof league leading Central Gold.

John AJirens hit 16, Todd Spencer14 and Tim Stanford 13 for Jeffer-son . • ¦'

Bob Seeling got 18 and DonHazelton 14 for Phelps \yliich nowstands 3-7. Larry Balk hit 10 forW-K .

In Lightweight play Centra l Bluenipped Jefferson 36-28 while Wash-ington-Kosciusko handed Phelps its10th straight loss 36-27.

Douglas Emanuel fired in 12and Barry Johnson 10 for the Blueswhich trail the Golds by twogames. Larry Nozlock got eightfor Jefferson.

Howard Bicker netted 17 forW-Kand Mike Hahn and Earlc Flemingeight each for Phelps.

¦

DISTRICT 1 HOLDSMEETI NG FEB . 1 7

LANESBORO, Minn. (Spe-cial)—Pairing* for tha DistrictOne high school basketballtoumamMit will ba drawnFeb. 17 .at Spring Valley highschool.

Coaches and n>p*rinjendent$will meet at 10 a.m.".to for-mulate tournament plans.

CATHOLIC REC JUNIOR. .- ' . . - '7 . , W L VI LBlue RaMert . . . . .J 0 Stomperi . . . . . . I 4Unkncvimi ' '. . . . . . ' 4 j Twisters ' . ;.- . . . -. e 4

The Blue Raiders used balancedscoring to edge the Unknowns 44-41 and remain unbeaten in theCatholic Recreation Junior Basket-ball League Wednesday. John Kos-cianski and Dave Lilla each drop-ped in 11 points to lead the Stamp-ers past the Twisters 32-27.

Jim V Vickery and Bill \Verh.zScored 14 points each in the Raid-er victory. Gerard Janikowskipoured in 17 for fhe losers. .

Tim Jenkins netted 13 points forthe ' winless Twisters.

The Blue Raiders will meet theTwisters in tlie first game of theplayoffs next "Wednesday night.The Unknowns face the Stompersin the nightcap.

Blue RaidersNip Unknowns

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Wheatreceipts Wednesday 100; year ago75; trading basis unchanged to 1lower; prices^ 7.- *-ll * lower; cashspring wheat basis', • No 1 darknorthern 2.31r:«. . -- 2.33:,«; springwheat one rent premium each lbover 58 - (it ' lbs ; spring wheatone cent discount each !j- . lb under58 lhs; protein premium 11 - 17per cent 2.31 ;'H -2.S1-',».

No 1 hard Montana winter2, 27 :-«-2.4() ':H . ,

Minn. - S.I) . No 1 hard winte r2:2I -V2.44V

.Na T hard - amber durum 3.f>0-3.55; discounts , amber 1-2; durum4-6,

c:urn No 2 yellow Wi-LOO^.pats No 2 while CO-VM-'I H ; N O .1

white .')!)• '«-Iii ' » ; No 2 heavy ' whiteM :lk-C>n:'»; No 3 heavy white (i2:,H -t;.viK.

Barley, brig hi color 1.17-1.50st ruw color 1.17-1.50; stained i.i;1.46; Iced 1.115-1.17.

Kye No 2 l . ^ i ^- l l lO^ .Flax No 1 .1.35.Soybeans No 1 yellow 2,:i'.i' a.

GRAIN

SOUTH ST. PAUL. Minn , 1,4-- ( USDAV -C.illli; ^,500; cnlvi.'s l,';«l; 7l,iugliti'r stecisflitrt hclli 'r s lluwi.-r, rji'ni' r .jlly sto.Kly; cowslully stfut/y; hull'. 50 conK hlohcr; coupltlo.ioi. «ver«o« -cholct l,U0 «nJ 1, 160 lbitaugrittv itcerl 7A.iO; bulk choice VM-l,?S0lbs J5.25-36.00 i oood JI.7S-25.00 ; cliolce 850-1.0M) II) atauaiuo h' -lli-rs J5.0OJ6.0O; ooodlb.O«,)6,00 ; c«nner .Hid culler )J,50-15,00 ,-22.WI-2475; utility .nut commcrclnl cowsutility bulls Iwflely I».00-J000 ,- camnirrcl.iland oood-.Ul.50-I9.50j VLMIIUJ. ...iltMlv... 1a11,00 hlflher; fclouohter Crtlvos ntendy; yooctnnc» cholco voalors JD .OO JJ .OO; oood nndcholco slnuoltlcr cnlvcs JJ.00-J6.00 .

Uofli 10,000; tinrrowV And gllti under UCIlb\ we«k to JS ccnii lowirr; lienvlvi wrrl nlrtsfully r.lemly; sowi slendyi 1-2 I90-5-IO II)bnrrowi, i\m\ ullts I7.J5-U.50; 1-3 190-J40lbs 14,75,17.00; 7-3 340-270 lln 16 .35-U.7J;2 /0--30O lbs 15 ,75- 16.50; ) nnd medium IftO-ITO 11)3 1625-16 75 ; I 1 J/0 330 II) iows 15.25-15 75,' 330-360 |hi 15.00-15. 50; ?-3 400-170 III*14.3S- I5 .00,- ctiolrt IJO-150 ll> leirdfr plg>15.5016,00.25 rents lildher, ewrs nnd tecotr lamb*

Sheep 2,000; •vlau Nhter l;iml)\ .stronn losleadv; cholcn nnd prime 05-110 lb wooledslmigliler l.imlis 17 ,50 IB. OOi oood nnd cholco15.5017.34; c.liolcn .out pi Inn? 101 Iti shoinMiotis with No. I pi;lls 16 .'.0; poml nndchoke woolrd slniiiilrlur I'wos 4 50-5.50;ijoocl (feder limtii 15. 40 15, 75.

CHICAGOOIICAGO iffi (USDAI- Moo > 6.100;

»)u li hers stonil y lo JS cents h Irjlw ; mostly1-2 IWVJJ5 It) ()uf(.licrs 17 .50 17 , 65; V hi' .idIs 3JO lbs 16 O0j mixed l-:i 1VO 240 lbs17 00 17.40; 310-260 ll)S 16.50- 1 7.00; 3-3 J40-JM lbs 16,J) 16.75; mUnl l- .l 310 400 II)sows I4.25-15.J5, - 2 . 1 400 600 lbs 13,00-14.50.

(nttlo 1, 000; rnlvM ?.\i slni'Ohtnr sleorsstt'tidy to wc«K; two londs clinlce 1,135-1 ,300II) iMugritur ftMlr^ 26.25 ?4.M>< lew loud:mined flood mxl choke 25, 0035.40; (|oodJ2 50 25.00; lo,n» rl|olru 1,000 It) Mollers,J6.00; tiood J2 J5 24 .40; ullllly «nd com-mtri lnl rows I.I.50-I6.00;. util ity nnd com-mercia l tr.ills 19.00 21 CO, lew stnnil.ird .unitoood vomers 30.00-27 00 .

Slieep |,2M; il.mnhter Inmhs itcndy;throe decks cliolctr nnd ptlmo 9V-low It;ted wuslorn wooled Inmhs te„40," cholcn6nd prime n»llvo wcolT'd ilnuohlur InmbsIB.00 ; oood And iholce 16 00 17.50) culllo good woolKl ilnuulilt'r «w»i i.OO-4.50 ,

LIVESTOCK

Reported bySwift & Company

Buying hours are trom 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.Monday through Friday. These quotationsapply as ol noon today.

AH; livestock arrived after closing limewill lie properly cured lor, weighed andpriced the following morning.

HOGSTho hog market Is stcady-Strlctly meat typo addltion.il 20-40 cent«;

lal hogs discounted 20-40 cents per hun-drecJwelohl.Oood hogs, barrowi and gilts—

16O-I80 15.25-14.0016O-200 16.00-16.50J0O-220 ..,: M.50220-240 16.20-16.50240-270 15.75.16.20 .270-300 -. ., ,• ._ 15.25-15.753O0-330 14.50-15.25330-360 14.O0-U.50

Good sowi—¦270-m 14.75-15.00

' 300:330 14.50-14.75330-3(50 .., 14 ,00-14.50360-400' 13.50-14.OC4O0-450 13.O0-13.5O450-500 - 12.75-13.Qtt

SI35S—4S0 down 9.254S0-up 8.25- 9.25Thin and unfinished hogs , dlscounlcd

CALVESThe veal market Is steady to strong.Prime 32.00Top choice .. 31 .00Choice 27.00-30.00Good 23.00-27,00Commercial to good - 17.00-21.00Ullllly 15.00-16.00Boners and culls 14.00-down

' CATTLETha cattle market Is »teady In all

cla ssej,Orytod itceri and yearlings—

Choice lo prlmo 22.50-24 ,50Good lo choice 20. 50-22.2 5Comm. to oood 15:50-20.00Utility 1.4.00-do\6/n

Drylcd hollers—Choice to prime 22.25-23.75Good lo choice 18.5O-22.O0Comm. to .good 15.001B.25Utility . . - . 14.25-down

Cowi—Commercial 12.50-14.SOUllllly 11.50,1.1,50Canners antl cutters 12.00-down

Bulls- ¦ - —

Boloona , .15.00-m.OOCommercial 13, 00-14.25l_lQhl thin 13.00down

Winona Egg Market(Winona Produce, Zlutiell Produce)

Or Ado A llunibo) H4<3rflde A <large ) 2CCrnde A (m«dlum) 34C,m<le fl . , , , ,24Grade C , ,- . .20

Bay Stat* Milling Compnnyfjlev.i»0r ''A" Gr.ilii Pricestlours ,- fl n.D). lo J - .10 p.m.

(Closed .Siihirrlfiys)No. 1 norlh«fn sprlno whent $1 IINo. 1 norlh«rn spring wheat 2.0?No. 3 north-em spring whe.it 7 0 SNo. A norlhorn spring wheat 2.0)No. 1 hnrd winter whe.il 2.01No. 2 hard winter whent , , , 1.99No. 3 Imrtl winter WI KM I 1.04No. 4 hard winter wheflt I 91No. 1 rye 1 11No. 2 rye I I I

(First Pufc> . Wednesday , Teh, 7, 1942 ) ~"

N O T I C EI will not M r«spon-',ll)|a Inr any

debls contr acted withou t my slgnalure ,1:1 HE TURNER,229 7tt> Ave . S.Clinton. Iowa.

Subscribed and sworn to betoro methis 6th day ot February, 1962.

(SeallROIICRT G. HULLNotary Public,Wlnoiia County, Minnesota,

(My Commission Expires Nov. 30, 1964)

WINONA MARKETS

Want AdsStart Here

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'

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'¦ ¦ -\ . . - ¦¦ ¦ ¦

•'

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BLIND A.DJ UNCALIED FOR

C—21, 29", - 43, 52, SS. il, tt, . t1, 71, 72,74, 75, II, 82, 13, 86

NOTICB

This newspaper will be responsible foronly <wie Incorrect Insertion ot anyclassltied advertisement published Inthe Want Ad section. Check , your ad-and. call 3321 II ¦ correction must bemade.

Card of Thank*FENDER ~ ' ~ ~~^

We wish to expresss our sincere thanksto the many friends, relatives andneighbors who assisted us In any wayduring our recent bereavement, wewish to thank Rev. Father S. E. Mul-caby for his comforllnd Words, Diechblr, those who sent flowers and mem-orials and the . pallbearers.___ - Quayo Fender Family

'NIENOVU .. ¦ ¦ ;'I slnc-crely wish to thank friends andrelatives for the cards, flowers, gifts,visits and other acts of kindness re-ceived during my recent stay at thehospital. Special thanks to Rev. Gelsl-fled for his messages and words olconsolation on the loss of our baby; alsofor Ihe kindness and consideration shownby Iht nurses on 4th floor.

_ -V: ' ¦ Mr. &.Mrs. Joe Nlenow

Personals 7WHAT VALENTINE wouldn't cherish a

b'eautWul jewelry box from RAINBOWJEWELERS, neict to the post officeon 4th. St. Stop In and let Frank showyou Ms large assortment.

TRY WUINCHIN' a luncheon at RUTH'SRESTAURANT, 326 E. 3rd. St. You'llmake it a regular stop, we prom-ise. Open 24 hours a day, 7 days Iweek.

DON'T STOP EATING but loje weightsalely with Dex-A-Diet tablets. Only 98c.

- FORD HOPKINS, ¦ .ARE YOU A PROBLEM DRINKER?—Man

or woman, your drlnklna. creates numer-ous problems. I t . you need and wanthelp, contact Alcoholics Anonymous, Pio-neer Group, Box 122, Winona, Minn.

WHEEL CHAIRS—tor every price range!adjustable walkers. For rent or sale.First two months renfal credited to-

. wards purchase , price. Crutches, woodor adlustable aluminum TED MAIERDRUGS; '¦;.- . ' ¦ ' - ..

LOOK AT YOURSELF, others do. Havethose suits altered by WARREN. BET-SINGER. Tailor, 66V2 W. 3rd, V . ¦

: . . . - . "T 'sPRiNG? 'No, not quite y«t, but it's not far off.Time to. be thinking now of your screen

: repair : work. Take advantage of our.. . HOM.E CARE SERVICE, We'll , do your

work or equip you to 'do-it-yourself. -Free pickup and delivery. Free esti-mates. ROBB SROS. STORE, 576 E.4th. Tel , 4007, ¦ . . 7 - . .

OUR PRESCRIPT ION for you for a hap-pier Valentine's Day can be filled by adelicious box 61 Parigburn's -Almond-fill-llonarles from GOLTZ DRUGS, 274 E.Ird .-¦ - ¦ .

MANY A dumb blonde Is really a smartbrunette! RAY /AEYER, INN KEEPER,WILLIAMS HOTEL- 7 . .: . ,

Auto Service , Repairing 10

MECHANICAL FAILURES - ' can cause: freak accidents . . . before you have

this happen tp you bring your carto RUSTY & BILL'S AUTO REPAIRSHOP at 62 Chatfield St. Rusty andBill have had years ol practical ex-perience and know-how. Tel. 5623.

Business Services 14

JOBS LARGE and small, wel take themall. Carpentry our specialty . LEO PRO-CHOWI TZ, Bldg. Contractor; Tel. 7641.

-SIT BACK and Sake It easy and let us: solve your rug cleaning problems. Our

expert technicians : will revive Ihe . colorsIn your, rug and add years to its life-time by thoroughly cleaning every fi-ber. Call today. WINONA RUG CLEAN-ING SERVICE , 116 E. 3rd. Tel . 3722.

Plumbing, Roofing 21ELECTRIC ROTO HOOTER

For clogged sewers and drains.TeL 9509 or 643S 1 year guaranteeCALL SYL KUKOWSKl

IF BIG LEAKS or little drips are makingyou quite miserable . . . call on Us lorplumbing help, we always give top ser»-

' Ice. '

FRANK O'LAUGHLINPLUMBING & HEATING : , ;

207 E. 3rd Tel. 3703

JERRY'S PLUMBING827 E. 4th St. Tel. 9394

H«!p Wantid—F«m«U 26SlCR ETARV"h"hi"MafiaB«r who ten

take dictation at 155 and tyct 60 w.p.m.Wlmeograph experience hel pful but we .can leach this. Prefer girl under 35years of ago, Applications held confi-dential. Contact Ray GorsuOi, Credit Bu-rea of Winona. -6BVi E.' 4th St, .

RECEPTIONIST 'CASHIERApply in person.

Qualify Chevrolet •105 Johnson Winona, Minn.

Receptionist ,Typist

Local FirmMinimum Experience

2 YearsStarting salary to $275monthly, depending onqualifications.Liberal fringe benefits.Submit written resumeto C-86, Daily News. . ' ¦:

ExcellentOpportunity

For well groomed young lady.Steady and interest ing work.Must be high school graduate.Able to take shorthand and

type accurately.

Paid vacations, hospitalizationand other liberal benefits.

5 day week.

Teh-tm Trust DepartmentMR. NEIL SAWYER V 7

First, National Bank

Hefp Wanted—Mala 27EXPERIENCED Stained Glass Repair

Wan to work in the Greater Nevy YorkArea. Excel lent working conditions; TopPay.. Westminister studios, 3242 WhitePlains Road, Bronx, New York, or callOLinville 4- 7500 Collect. . ' ¦

i SINGLE MAN FOR general farm work.; Starting March 1. Write <-8S Daily Newsj sfa fing wages "and experience.

EXPERIENCED MAN to manage and op-¦- .- . erate dairy farm. Contact Allyn J. Tews,Rt. 1, Wlnorta, Minn. Tel . 2796, Lewlston.

EXPERIENCED married couple for yearround farm work. Start in ' March. LiJIleor no milking. Separate modern house.Write relerences, experience, age, wagesexpected, or see John C. Llsowskl, Alma,Wis. Tel. 535-R-10.

FARM OPERATOR—Ages 30-50. Capable. of operajlng farm^ All new modern ma-

chinery. Salary depending on quallfica-lions. No milking: Wlckett Livestock Co.,Harmony, Minn. Tel. 88 6-2771 days,88 6-2791 nights: '

' . :?? ' CONSTRUCTION ??WE ARE looking for special type person

who Is tired of . seasonal work and threat-ened layoffs. America's most respectedSales Organization oilers you an inde-pendent business of you r own at- ho .' In-

vestment.. Persons considered must bemarried, 21 to A0, . and have a pleasingpersonalily. For details, write to C-84Dally News.

YOUNG MANTo learn automotive

parts business.

Excellent opportunity for some-one interested in cars and will-ing to work.

Prefer man with military obli-gation completed or in reserveprogram . For further informa-tion write:

P.O. Box 419, Winona , Minn.

Situations Wanted—Male 30FARM

-W0RiT~VWNt~ED

~by

~the day o7

week. Eld erly man, former farmer. Tel.6323 or Inquire 520 Garfield.

Correspondence Courses 32"HIGlTSCHOOir-

YES, you can. be a high school graduate.Finish at home In your spare time. Newtexts furnished. Diploma awa rded. Bul-letin free. Our 65th year. Write AmericanSchool. Dist. Office, PO Box 3255, St. Pa'Jl

.1. Minn.

Business Opportunities 37

GoodWisconsin TavernHard liquor. Living quarters.Good equipment. Completewith building. Price $17,000.

G. L. AUTII , REALTOR_ 300 \V, Main Durand , Wis,Money to Loan 40

"BOND" FINANCE CO.S2J-J4O0 on your furniture, car orsignature. Tel, 8-3403, 129 E. 3rd St.

LOANS SfPLAIN NOTE-AUTO-FURNITURE

170 E. 3rd St. Tel, J91SHr>' * 'lrnLt0-Lp,f"" 5al- 9 fl - m- ,0 n0011

Qu ic k Money . . .ore any article ol value . . ,

NEUMANN'S BARGAIN STOPE_ V\ E. 2nd St. _ . Tel.,B.J133

Loans — Insurance —Real Estate

FRANK WEST AGENCY175 Lnlnyctle St. Tel. S2«0

(Nevt lo Telephone Office)

Dogs, Pets, Supplies ~

42JJORDE"R

~COLLJE >UPS- I0

~w"cckT"nld.

Tho bust cattle doo, «o. W, A, Fin-ner, Arcadia, Wis ,

Horses, Cattle, Stock 43JERSEY COW~comln<] freVb tn Mny]

Guernse-y hull, a year old In April,Mry Nell Oellock, Rushford, Minn.

r-EfiuER PIGS 36--VaccinateJldr~«ryj ip-nfh, Harold Framwn, Rt. I, FountainCity, Wis.

HOLSTEIN BULLS'-'-S,"" purebred."aoTlro'rn)0 lo M months wilh bultertitt up to iSUIPs.,- nlso young bull calves, DouolnsKopp, Whlfi 'hall, ,Wls.

LANDHACE HOAR'"

RIISMIT-

Persons,""

SI.Clmrlcs. Minn. Tel. 454-W-2.

FEEDER "CATTLE-lF'head.'" Ave"ragt"~M0lb'.. Contact, MHvIn Zlefller, £J, City,Wis. or Tel. B-MU 7-3BB8.

HOI.S TEI N""mil.L••¦«' "

monlht " "oi(l '~wr'CRoedcr, Dover. Minn.

HERETORD -20 iioad springer cows", bredlo registered hull. JUS each, GcoroeStiiviir, F'fllrlleld, Iowa. Tol. 472-34)4 .

DUIV TO a slroke, must soli 12 bredwtillolnte hellers , Wi nn S. Foss, 2 milesN. ol Centorvlllo, Wis. Tel. Winona8-3519 ,

HOLSTEtN llui.L "-purehr"edT~also~

4rieed'.er plris, Arnle Agrlmson, Peterson,Minn. Tel. . 875-5341.

In|-xllblc Vderlrwlan Penlcllin,10 r,c VlAl

Cln. ol 10, SI.50(Offor explrea Feb. IWh.)

TED MAIER DRUGSANIMAL HEALTH CENTER

Hories, Cattle, Stock 43"" "WANTEDHI-CALI BER FARMERSTo raise feeder pigs. We havea large number of sows avail-able for lease on a feeder pigcontract. Lowest lease rate*possible. This is not a feedcontract.

NO CASH OUTLAY.Write to .

Svvine Improvement Co.Box 224, Harmony, Minnesota

Give Telephone Number,Farm Location in Reply. ';- , '•;

Still have a f ew head of

RegisteredPolled Herefords

6—Bred cows to calf beginningMarch 26tH.

1—5-year-old herd bull.Several yearling heifers and

bulls.CMR. EER. ALF. andDOMINO BREEDING.

These animals would improveanyone's herd. Triple and poll-ed Herefords. "' • .

John W. MarsolekBLUFF SIDING, WISCONSIN"

WESTERNSTOCKER &

FEEDER vP CAME '

v -FOR 7PRIVATE SALE

Calves, yearling and two-year-olds, in our yards at all times.These cattle are shipped directto our yard from the westernranges. For further informa-tion call

MCDONALDSALES CO.¦' :. -. '.' SUMNER , -IOWA

Tel. 170 or 370

Poultry, Eggs, Supplies 44SP E

"LTZ CHTCK HAfCHERY-DsKaib¦ Chicks-Standard Breeds. Winona Oltice

now open, corner 2nd and Center. Tel.3910. Send for free price list and fold-er. SPELTZ CHICK HATCHERY, Roll-Ingstohe, ' Minn. Tel. 2349.

Wanted—Livestock 46ANGUS BULL—registered, 3 yeirs or

over. Henry Ostrem, -Lanesboro, Minn.Te l. 7-2186, ¦ ; " . . ' - ;

HAMPSHIRE BOAR-Around 2J0 (6$, Os-vld E. Olson. Tel. 8-1240,

WANTED LIVESTOCK-!)! all kind*. Tel.

Lewlston Sales Barn collect. Tel. ?6»7.Sales every Thursday afternoon. W« buyhogs every day of the week.

HORSES WANTED-We can pay morethan anyone else, we pick-up. -WALTERMARG, Black . River Falls, Wis. Tel.7-F-14.

Top prices for all livestockCREMELSBACH STOCK .YARDS

Lewiston, Minn.Dally Hog Market

Tel. «16l on spring ing • ccws-helferi.

Farm, Implements/ Harness 48KELLY DUPLEX FEED mixer. Va ton,

complete w i th .2 h.p. motor. Like. new.Ray . H l l k e - & Son Altura, Minn,

LET US CHANGE over your old mllklnj, system, We have new and used pumps

and . are equipped to . put In Iho newlarger pipelines. Call us for free esti-mates. Oak Ridgr Sales V S-ervict,

. Minneiska, Minn.HOMELITE CHAIN SAWSPARTS, SERVICE, SALES .Chain . saw rental service .

AUTO ELECTRIC SERVICE '2nd 6. Johnson Tel. . 5455 .

HI FOLKS!Spring is just aPound

the corner.Just received a large selectionof saddles, bridles , halters , allsizes; saddle blankets , stablesheets, lariats. Anything insaddle .horse ' equipment.

We need used saddles in trade-in on new saddles.

We buy, sell and trade saddles.

Kloe tzkeSaddle Shop

117 Walnut

For

Sales & Serviceon

John Deere Machinery, NewIdea equipment , McCullochCiiain saws, Mayrath eleva tors,Oregon chain and

USEDFARM MACHINERY

- SEE -

DURAND: IMPLEMENT CO., INC.

Durand , Wisconsin

FARMERSNow is the time that you willwant to overhaul your trac-tors , balers , combines and

i other machinery.i

We have the mechanics—W'e liave Hie p;irts—•We have Ihe time N0W-

i lo dp the job right. For lh«month of February we willpick iij ) and deliver your Irac-tor or machine at no cliargoon any repair charge mriount-inR lo $100 or more.Come in anil .see Kenny for nflat rate figure on your tractoroverhaul jolt, Financing can hoarranged if necessary, Conic

. on in , the weather 's fine.

F. A. KRAUSE CO."BREEZY ACRES"South, on New Highway H-fll.

LAUB <HXlce<J announce br»«klna thiprice MtrlK tor imairmd medium lit-'«d built milk coelen. Now you can profit-ably own * Van Velter bulk milk cool arwith only TO cow», Roctsnoular tn design,ell tttlnlitt ileal construction, lullyw»rranMd, 3* approvM, PHCM »»*rl alonly llrifS completely installed, withbrushes, soap and cilltratlon. Areittimpl. Co.i Xillogo, Mjfsa . Tal. lil-aii,

Hay, Or»int FW SOOAT STRAl/V^-KViare bjlesi hom«arov»n

red '•lovtr »nd. Alfred Mueller, Wlloki.EAR CORN—feed oafu bj|»d h»y »nd

ctilves. Pdjsehl Trucking Service, Tel.Wltoka 1114, . . .

Articlet for S»le 57FREEZERS tin to "ii»- . Used relrtae-

raton «S. Ul«* TVt ."• '*». PRANKLILLA A tON5,r W E . 8th.

INTERNATIONAL ^Library of Wuflcl 13volumes. Very good condition, somestill in Wrappers. Tel. Fountain City8MU7-315J. 7- - - .

¦ - • ¦ , - .tEE OUR LARGE selection of used re-

frigerators, electric rang«s and TV sets.All reconditioned. B & B " ELECTR IC,155 E, 3rd. "; V

SEE OUR STOCK of goopl used furniture.Hundreds of other Item s. Come In andlook arou nd. OK USED FURNITURE,273 e. 3rd. T«l. B-3701 .

ZENITH TV - at reduced prices. SeeFRANK , LILLA V SONS, 74) E; . 8th.

GET 'EM FAST, while thay ; last. Slidingsaucers Reo- SA.9), now $2.98. BAM-BENEK'S, O^JAankato Ave.

CLOTHiNO WANTED ~ BACK~lmir~be

picked up by Feb. 15IH. . Used Clottilng& Furnltura Shop, . 253 E. 3rd. . . -

WINONA'S COMPLETE^Sc'o'tl'j ' -Lawri andGarden Center is ROBB BROS. STORE,576 E. ;. '«th, - TeL jlOO?1.- .

SHOES, OVERSHOES, Insula led: ' boots]. new ani used. Nylon casuals $1.50. Swap

Shop, 318 E. 3rd . St., Winona, Minn. -ESPECIALLY for vinyl. .-7th'e

"~

niw~~siai

Gloss acrylic finish for all floors Is dif-ferent, . ' paint Depot.

CANDY IS DANDY "on Vaientlrtel Day.Express your affection with a card andgift ol J>aneburn's delicious chocolatesfrom GOLTZ DRUGS, 274 E. 3rd.

BASEMENT SALE—doub3e aiumlnum tubs!single tubs, floor larnps, table .lamps,mirrors; pull down lamps, laundry carts,pole lamp and V knick-knacks. 256 Jef-ferson, east end of Bdwy . Come any-time,

~~ 7~ME bTc IN E C A BTN ETS¦tr. Slldlnp door type¦.'ir Plate glass mirrors 'it Includes fluorescent Uohl

SANITARYPLUMBING & HEATING

HR E. 3rd St. Tel. 2737

DAILY NEWSMAIL

SUBSCRIPTIONSMay Be Paid at

TED MAIER DRUGS

NO DOWN PAYMENTOn carpet , tile or linoleum ,ceramic or plastic . wall tile.Wards will . make complete in-stallation . by tra ined experts.Satisfaction guaranteed or yourmoney back. Write or call forfree Estimates. .

WARDS!¦* it » « * u n t f | *•¦' . » * * ( ) 1 '

For VourFeathered Friends 7

BULKBIRD FEED

Nutritious , appealing mixtureSunflower Seeds, Millet andSaffron Seeds.

' . .' Now at7. : j-VVINONA FARAA

& GARDENSUPPLY STOREART SCHAFFNER , MG-R.

116' Walnut . ' .¦ Tel, 8-3769

2 Free Loading Zones

InteriorRemodeling

Ceramicor

Plastic TileDo-it-yourself , we have thetools available or will arrangeinstallation and financing,

CALL THE LUMBERNO. 8-3667

KEN DELLLUMBER CO.

573 East 4th , Winona

Business Equi pment 6260OD

~sY EEiT' BUSINESS

-siToT" Size-

30x2*x44 In. high. Only S6S. T«l. 52*0 or4400 evenlnrjs.

CoaClWoodrdther^Fue"638C0CK

~W0Ob*- "Any~

lenolh.'~ dry." Tel.J-4289. .

DRY" " BIRCH FIR EPLACE wood,"lB-Tnchor ?4-lnch length's, 41B.50 pt;r cord de-livered. Write To Apolltwry Kanirow-skl, Arcadia, Wis.

Slabs.& LumberFor oood qucillly tlobwood end

lumber cell

Dave Brunkow & SonTrempc.ile.au, Wis. Tel. 14

BULLETIN to FarmersFor three years Moline has offered the 4 Plow JetStar Tractor for only $2047.00.

The inevitable has now arrived , and due to increasedfactory costs the list price of this famous Tractormust be su bst antially raised,

This is t-0 advise that we may take orders for thefabulous Moline 4 Plow Jet Star Tractor at the oldprice until March 2nd , 1962.

We predict that never ' again ' will a 4 Plow Tractorbe offered for $2047.00., Stop in righ t away a.s thewinter production is limited. . Ik sure of this low,low price while d elivery is stilt assured.

ARENS IMPL! CO.Phone 707-4972Kellogg, Minn.

" ¦ ¦DID YOU KNOW A,B..iY II, 7

li the •mount et httt It tak«i to reinthe temptra.turii of OM pound ol w»terone tiaart*. One - ten ot CommendirLump coal cqnutfl* 1* minion ewm.Thar* li no other coal like It.

East Efid Coal &G-ement Products Co.

Ml e, ith v Tel. MM"Wher< you get mart

heat at lower cost."Furnltur«rRu{|», Unqltum B*tSPECUL—i piece corner sectlenel. Oreen

nylon frieze- Foam and efacron cushlon.s,proNctlve arm p*d». Reoular $M9.«TOW JIW.M. eORJYSKOMKl PURN-I.TURE, JM ManKato Ave. Open even-ing*,

CHAIR CLEARANCE(too many Small

Chairs and Rockers): $64.50 KROEHLER Memory

Swiyel Rocker.Foam Back and Seat,

$49,00 w.t. ;BURKE'S

FURNITURE MART3rd and Franklin

Good Things to Eat ©5GOOD "COOK \HO

~ and

~fca>l'ng7 Wisconsin

Russet potatoes. tt.50 per 100. WINONAPOTATO MARK ET , lie Market.

APPLES—a variety ol hopiegrown applesat the lowe-st prices In 20 years. Farm8. Garden Store, 116 Walnut St., orF.- "A. Krause Co., So. on New Hg:wy.1*-61 . • ' .¦ " ¦ " ¦ .

POTATOES -KENEBEC -Choice while. .

$2.50 per 1O0 lbs. .'.'Less than 100 lbs.

3c* per lb.Free city delivery

Saturdays on 100 lbs.orders,

j . N. SQUIRES9€9 Gilmore Ave.

'.'. Tel., 4848 ."'

Household Articles 67USE - our carpet shampooer tree villi pur-

chase oLB liie Lustre carpet shampoo-. De-posit .rtqirired. - H., Choate & Co.

Musical Merchandise 70JJSE^sTEREOancI Hl-prcoiisoles. Several

models to choose from at

Hardt's Music Store119 E. 3rd . ; ¦ ¦ ¦ 7 . . . Wlivona

Radios, Television 71Winona TV & Radio Service

78 E. 2nd. Bob Nogosek. T«l. 3834

Don Ehmann TV ServiceWlnona'e Finest Electronic Repair

tor . AII >Aak:e««80 W. Fifth . . . ¦¦ Tel. 4J03

. • Authorized dealer forAOMIRAL-MUNTZ^-ZENITH

USED TELEVISION SETS-ai| alia picturetubes. Gel mat second set at

Hardt's Music Store119 £. 3rd Wlinona

Refrigerators 72Ed's Refrigeration & Supply

Commercial : and Domestic .W E. «tn Tel. SSX

Sewing Machines 73PORTABLE HOMEMAKER SEWING ma-

Chine, Very flood condition. Can be ' ieeTTat Red Top Motor Court, Lot 36.

Specials at the Stores 74CLOSE-OUTS—1941 . Phlico~oYyers, choice

of 3. Prices starting ; at S124.M. FIRE-STONE STORE, 2O0 W. 3rd.

UsedAppliance Sale17" Airline Portable TV,

like new . . . . .7. . . . . . . . . $7521" Console TV . . : . . . . . . . . $10521" Zenith Table Model

TV $40Kelvinator Apartment

Size Refrigerator .. - $552 Used Refrigerators .. $20 ea.Westinghouse 38" Electric

Range .. . . . . . . - . ; . .' ; . ., . ' . . $20Kelvinator Automatic

Washer ¦' . , ; $175Kelvinator Automatic

Dryer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $125Wringer Washer ........... $30Wringer Washer . . "$10

j WA RDS]"Stoves, Furnaces, Parts 75USED

-DUO

~THERAA—oil burn»r~

wffh. fan.Inquire 502 E, King,

GAS STOVE—Very " oood "coiTdiflon. Tei.9100. .'

ELECTRIC and oos ranges, waiter heat-ers. Hl<jh trade-ins. Insta ll-Servlce.RANGE OIL BURNER CO., 907 E, 5thM, Tel , 7479 Adolph Mlchalo-wskl.

IF"Y6UR"VALEN 'TI NE~|'

J" soelnn 'red be-

cause a faulty kitchen stove Is ruiningcostly lood preparations, treat her to afully automatic KELVINATOR ; simplercontrols for surfac e cooklnrj, perfect ovenb.iklnq nnd ends oven cleaning forever .See them al WINONA FIRE & POW-ER, 76 E. 2nd. Tel. 5045 ,

typewriters 17ROYAL ™ PORT ABLE TYPEW RI TER—J75.

Excellent condition. Tel. 1992 alter 9p.m.

Typewriter. 77t'v'pl'iSSirBki »p<)"» dTna mitfiiwir tiw

tale or rent. , Wawnabla uie*. t>K¦ d.llvery. See gs for all vour . ottlctluRpllMj desks, lile* or otllce chalreLund Typewriter Xn, Tei, sm. ¦ ,

Q'UA'RANTCEO TO *=IT Voor "\yv* olbuilnetj or profci'lofl, We hava an of-live machlrie calculated to phre youthe but service available at tM low:•it u0ke«p. We tell Ihcm new or serv-ice the ones presently In uie-. Calltoday. WINONA TYPEWRITER SERV,ICE , 'lei £ ¦ 3rd, T»l. >__. ,

W_*hin _ , ¦ronin8'iM»chln»i 79I TAO"ANDHrRIGT^7R_ - Fast,

expert Mrvlce. Complete stock of partiH. Choatii_ . .fc Ce. Tal. 2171. ;.-¦ _

^nt«*--To Bu

y 81LADIES BOWLFN O BALL—wanted. Tel".V Wis alter i. ___ _CORNET OR TRUMPET, used, In good

condition. Call . Altur-a 75?l, ;USED TABLE SAW—8, 9. or 10 Inch, with

or without motor, Tel, 8-2B24,

WM7~MTLLER WAP IRON & METALCO. pays Mghest prices for scrap iron,

" - rnetali, hides, wool and raw lur.232 W. 2nd: Tel. 2047

Closed Saturday*HIGHEST JUNK PRICES

M. -il . W. IRON AND METAL. CQ.207 W. 2nd, across Roya*! Gas Station

HIGHEST^^CES'PATD-~~

for scrap iron, metals, rags, hldrs, rawfurs and wool I

Sam Weismon & SonsINCORPORATED

.450 W, 3rd Tel. 5847 .

RoomrWrth^qaYs 85F_LrRTH~~E~2!l—PHvate .room with

meals lor elderly men. Tel. 7033, . .Rpoms

~Without Meals" 86

ROOMS"~FO (f GE NT_ EMEN--VVl1h orwithout light hpusekeoplng privileges.¦ Private entrance and bath. Tel, 4859.

Apartments, Flats 905TH E. AiOVi—5-room, 2-bedroom. apt. Pri-

vate bath; newly redecorated: AvailableImmediately,

§T>WYryy7lT2' uSt7irIr3-"r'oonT Tpi., heatand not water furnished. $70.,Tel. 9121. •

4TH E. 320Vi 5-room-

upiFalrs apt. withbath. . Available at once. Heated roomr..Owner: wil l be at home, from 1 . to 6p.m. Sat.

CLOSE-IN 3 rooms and : prTvole bath.Stove, " refrigerator and hot water fur-nished. Automatic heatV Ideal for l o r 2

. adults , Tel, 9964. or 5376 . or write C-88. Daily News.'

Apartments Furnished 91l~~

R0OM~

w|fH -Jcltchen'ette. Centlemen. preterred. Tel. 92) 1. ¦ ¦» ¦ .¦ ¦ ' ; . ¦

Houses for Rent 95FRONT . E. 507—4 room house, enclosed

porch > large Closet , TV signal. Inquire503 E. Front . . ; . .

EAST LOCAflON—2 bedroom home. Llv-lhg . room, dining room, kitchen andbath. Enclosed, front porch. Full base-ment. Oil heat. . .185 month. Write C-B7

. Dally News. ;

WMtecTtcTRent 96LEASE WIJH OPTfoN to buy. 3

~b'«f-

roorrt home' with garage, Winona . orvicinity . Cities Service Oil Supervisor,

_R, F . Bowers, Tel. 2341, 9 1o 5.WANTED — 3-room furnished apartment.

Tel.. 2U3 alter 4 p.m. y . _Bust ness Property f or Sale 97IN-

STOCXTON—apartment bulidlng forsale. Desirable investment property. In-quire Merchants - National Bank, Trust

. 'Dept. ¦; ¦ ¦ , ' : ¦ " ' " "

Farms, Land for Sale 98U0"~AC R E~FARM^Aintillabe. 3'/i miles

S. E. of ElBin. Contact' Forrest Wal-. ters.. Elgin, Minn. .Houses for Sale 99WIS. HIGHWAY 35—All modem 2-bed7oom

home, combination living and . diningroom; downstairs carpeted, araperies in-cluded, forced air. oil heat, drive-in ga-rage. 2 miles Irom downtown Winona.Ro/ Lord, across Interstate Bridge, 5thhou se W. of "Y."Tet. Fountain City8-MU 7-3258. .

WEST LOCATION—By owner, Modern Iroam house, garage. Kitchen with birchcupboards. Carpated living room auto-malic oil heat . Combination metal

rstorms. ¦' ¦ and " screens, Ample gardenxnace and lawn. 2 blocks frbm busifrTOr- Ter. 8-3530. ¦

EAST KHNG ST—3 bedroom home. Byowner. Tel. 8-1408.

DL. NEARLY NEW, most modern, 2-bedroom and den. Full basement, biglot. Every wanted feature. Located Inan exclusive area of new homes, withincity limits. Owner leaving city. " Pricedlor quick sale under $18,000. ABTSAGENCY, INC., Realtors, 159 WalnutSt. Tel, 4242 or after hours: . E. R.Clay 8-2737, Wm. R. Pagel 4501, E. A.Abl» 3184, - . : . • . - ¦ ¦

. ' .MODERN HOME—2 ¦ bedroonv oil heat,

west location. Can . be bought : for Con-tract for Deed. Price under ia.OOO.Write C-83 Da iiy News

^ 7 \

D.2-BEDROOM HOME^on bus line. 1 block

to St, Stans. Full lot. Under , $10,000,ABTS AGENCY, INC., Realtors, 159Walnut St. Tel. 4242 or alter hours:E. R. Clay 8-2737, Wm. R. Pagel 4501,E. A. Abts 3184.

I, I NCOME~

PROPERTY. Located In Iheheart of town, ideal set for college "orworking girls. Gas heat. Priced belowllii.KM. call us for particulars. ABTSAGENCY. INC., Realtors, 159 WalnutSr. Tel. 4242 or alter hours: E. R. ciav8-2737, Wm. R. Paget . 4501 , E. A. Abts3184.

WEST LOCATiON-Modern 2 bedroomhouse. New oil furnace, attached ga-rage, large corner lot. 16,350, See:Chester Shank,

HOMEMAKER'S EXCHANGE• S22 E.v 3rd.

E. NEAR ST. MARTINS. J-bedroom home,lorge garage. AH set lo move into.Basement, oil forced air furnace. Beau-tiful southern exposure glassed In porch.Excellent buy for a family who desirespleasant economical living. . ABTIiAGENCY, INC., Realtors, 159 WalnulSt. Tel. 4242 or after hours: E. RClay S-2737, Wm, R. Pagel 4501, E. /.,Abts 3184,

NEAR WESTGATE Shopping Center. Thisis a beauty. Most attractive 3-bedroommodern home. Dip doluxe kitchen wilddining area, built-in range and oven, ex-haust fen, lovely living room wilh wall towall carpeting, oak floors, exceptionallyrice basement with recreation room. Im-mediate possession. Priced at only $19,500.See

W. STAHR_374 W. Mark __Tel - *"S ¦

Paying More Rent?Enjoying it Less?

Then loofc Into buying » home ofyour own.

See this almost naw 2-bodroom home.Includes a sun parlor which could heo 3rd bedroom. Oil heat end air-condi-tioning. Expansion area on 2nd floor.Located 3 miles wist of city. H7.500.

An unusual good value- In two-doorhome, In good west neighborhood. 3bedroom!, V,*, crrnmlc tile baths, liv-ing, dining rooms and downstairs bud-room nro carpeted, I / i lea l kltcho'n UuJII- .Ins, New gas hot wnhr lurnace. $15,V».

You may fhave been looking lor thisparticular arrangement. Two-bedroomhome with store-space In Iront. Fullbmement, now Lenox oil lurnncc. Idehlfor nmall buslnoss. East location,SI 2,500,

'Here I* nn opportunity to buy a 2-bed-room home m Goodviiw tor S4.850.Electric l>ot watur healer, ' private!pump, clly sewers In house. Nice dnep>lot, Mrty b-e purchased on contract fordeed, small down payment, balance Ilkarent,

RHSIPrNCE PHONES:t". J. Hnrt.Tl . , . 397.1

Philip A. Qaumanm . . . 9540Jerry Derlhe . , . 8-2377

fy zi Wi^tt Z^ W'f sW '¦ - '¦• '^ 'iM^BkiWi\?:Mhf lMSmMmtmh?m/^i ,m601 Moln St. Tel. 284-9

WEST~

FIFTH — Another nice 3-bedro-onimodorn home, hardwooct floors , new carpetlng, now oil lurnace. Right on bus line,tll.000. Sc«

W. STAHR374 W. M»rk Tel. 692:5

' . YOUR MIND.,'¦: |-jfe '\^J v- 77 ;

Buy One Of Our GuaranteedUsed Cars

' \tm CHEVROLET Biseoyne \m FORD V-R Cu.-vtn mUiio A-4-door.'' Radio , heater and' door; . Radio , .heater and ,iuto-st'andnrd transmission. Beau- matic transmission. This carLi'ful - , 'lcaf- erecti . A car joti in excel lent conditio n and. - ' .would be proud to own. would make an ideal second ' '¦".- ¦ ¦;- 7 '.^^PP- ." .

' ¦'=

'-.¦:'"'¦ .¦"

" iV95.oo--7- 7-' -^': ass ?'SJ: L 50»«E !*?r,s;«,„ii„ t\.„.,I-w,ici^« onri ™wr.r Radio , licater and automatic

^HL8

r^nn »nH fvh in - 'transmfsslbh. Charcoal andsteerinR. Greeiv and _ white „ cCome in and drive this car . ' , .before you buy, ' Soc AA

$1695:00 ^y^.uu7 '• ' ' • . ' 1958 CHEVROLET 7 Noragd

1955 DODGE Coronet 4-door Stati on . Wagon. - Radio, -'heater .Sedan. Radio , heater and auto- automatic transmission , pow-matic transmission . Rose and er brakes and power steering.white. Local one owner. This Many miles of carefree driv-is.the finest '55 in Winona. ing.

$645.00 7 $1395-001952 RAMBLER Custom Sta-

I960 RAMBLER Six Super 4- tion Wagon. Radio , heater anddoor. Radio, heater and over- overdrive. 2-door. BrigM. reddrive. Rich deep blue color: color. If you want economyLocal one owner car. "This Is The Car. "

$1795.00 $295.00

7 "Exclusive Bank Rate Financing"No payments until

7 April 8, 1962

EVERSOLE-ROGERS165 E. 2nd ST.

: Houses for Sale 991GOdDViEVV

~830

~ 17TH AVE.-By owner ,

3-bedroom rambler, 2Vj years old. -At-tached garage. Extra large kitchen,

. built-in stove and ' oven. Oil heat, <ullbath, wit h shower. Tel, 7030.

1962 SpecialsOutlying Rambler

Smldqm 4o we have a Dome wilh" such :large /opms and so much storage area.Vou ' will . be . pleased with ihe atlrac- ,live kitchen .with-bulll-lnj, living roomand fireplace end picture window,

CentralJ3,JM buyj three-bedroom home, lullbath, oarage and fenced-in backyard,ftcrojs Irom -. school. ' - '

Contempora ryh i t - on one- floor home with screenedporch, newly carpeted living room,Vltctien with breakfast nook, two bed-rooms, corner lot.

Westgate AreaNice rambler with breeieway. oarage;big kitchen . with birch cabinets, carpel- .ed living room, double closets.

Walk DowntownFive-bedroom home with new kitchen,batti on first floor; stool second floor ,oil furnace, gas - water heater, onlyS8.9M. .. "

¦¦ - ¦

v Glen MaryT.wo-berfroom home, sadd : . condition, .' . .big rooms, large lot; bath with tub

. and shower, enly $11,900.

• ' - i ' i .

IBOB '";¦'/ ' _: DI ctiiOV-E^ - .1 D t.. V . - ¦¦- . v Tel. 23191 110 Exchange Bldg.mmmmwmmm^kwm^m^ammim^

AFTER HOURS CALL:. ¦ Dave Knopp 8-2809.W. L. (Wlb) Helier B-J181

John Hendrlcikson 7441 7Laura Fismili

Wanted—Real Estate 102~

WILL PAY HIGHEST CASH PRICES-"

FOR YOUR CITY PROPFRTY

"HANKfj EZEWSKI(Wlnont 's Only1 Real Eslate Buyer)

Tel. 5992 . .Vi - . P .O. Box 345

Accessories/ tires, Parts 104

" ~ 1RES~NEW AND USED. :

We recap, retread and repair;also repair endless belts.

Winona Tire & Retread 71261 East 8th Tel. 8-1925

Motorcycles, Bicycles 107YOU CAN

~SAVE

~S7S

~o<\ra New frlurnp

Cub if you make your selection now.Just a small deposit required and smallmonthly, payments. See Altyn Morgan,Lake Blvd . ¦ ' .. - ¦ ¦¦

__ ;___

Trucks, Tractors, Trailers 108FORD lMl—1 ton .truck, daul wheels,

combination grain box and stock: rack.Good tires. ' John TQfte, Peterson, AAinn.

TRU 'CK~BODr_S and-plallo'rrn~buTir orrepaired. BERG'S TRAILER , 3M0 W.4th , Tel. 4933. .

RED TOP-

TRAILERS—New 10 wlaei~

andsome good buys on used ' & wldes. Seeus about the rtntal purctnie plan. 1845W. 5th.

BARGAINS'59 Chov, 2-ton c * c,

2 speed axto. . . : . . . ' ...,. . .,.J169I•59 Chev. 1'.-4-ton C «, C ,. . , .$1598•J6.Ford. ti-ton panel . . . , '- . . . . , . . . .$698 .'56 Ford 1-ton C & C, duals $898'49 Ford %-lon# -grain tigh t box ...S69t,Willys l-lon p,u„ -4-wheel drive ; . , $1098'47 Int, tt-ton pickup . . . . . . . . . . . ,.»49B

No Cash:Needed.- ¦ ' . .- ¦Up to -36, Months to PayNo payments 'tll S-prlng. "

Quality Chevrolet Co.. 105 Johnson Tel . 2396 .

Open Mon. ¦ Frl. Ev«e. Till 1

f

REDUCED IN PRICE. 19491NTERNATIOMAL %• '• tonpickup. Good motor, goodtires, solid csb. This oldermodel still Ms » lot of get-up-and-go Irtt. (tOQC:Reduced to . . . «PA.7J

"C" VENABLES75 W. 2nd - Tel, 8-2711

Open Mon. - Fri Eve.Wanted Automobiles

LOW IN CASH? v. •fo Will buy your car or truck.^r Will trade down.¦j Will consign.

QUALITY CHEVROLET CO.105 Johnson Tel. 2306

Open Won. - Fri. Eve. Till 9.7L^ed"Ca^~ 109

¦ \ 7 ' / '»3 FORD -<-door. Radio,V # . hea|er, V-8 motor, straightY. m transmission, excellent 'tori.-\ I ditlon throughout. , A sure\# starter (or "XAJI1

^y winter 'weal-tier. . T - "

"C". VENABLES75.W, 2nd Tel. 8-2711' Open Mon. -Fri. Eve.

; GUESS WHOI_

UM4 - 'ttati _ ^ 10«' 'iM'ST^lfT:

Corvjilr AedatV. ' 'tlr»lglit ' nt lck . Td :o.ior.nl rnr. t)K In «li re<p«cts ¦ iU» voo . - -J T : Wo Advertise Our Prices w

^6ESRC>S)' ^» 17 Y«an in Winona \mwt-Tncoln-^-Mercury—Palcon:-Come-I

Open Won. J, Frl. Eve.¦ i. Sat. p.rn.

V'

I»5J CADILLAC Coupn Ot-'Vllle, tu-tone finish, whllt-wall tires, rtdlt heater, au-tomatic .transmission , -tintedglass. New car. condition,!

'. . A-l . mechanically, Positively i

-rir hed ,$495"C" VENABLES

75 W. 2nd Tel . 8-2711. 7.:' Open Man. - Fri. Eve.

YES WE HAVE IT! -If you 're looking for a

good used car.40 to choose- from at

WALZBuick • Oldsroobile - .G.MG \

BONANZABUYS7 ;

'62 Cliev. Super Sport ftupnlnCoupe, 2.50 engi ne, A s peedtrans. Bucket seats! Ro-man Red wilh - .¦ matching ',intorior. 5.000 actual iniies.

- .' Bonanz a; Buy .¦„ ' Save 5800'61 Ford Fairlaiie 4-dr. , radio ,

wsw,, "G ," ' straight shift.¦¦Immaculate , throughout- .-.Bonanza Buy ., ^1908

'60 Pontiac Bonneville <G«\ipe.loaded ivith accessories:power steering, p o w e rbrakes; radio , wsw. , Er-

. mine White, blue inter ior .29,000 actual niUcs. Own-er 's name on request.Bonanza Buy-:.. ., -. . . $2f<98

¦it No Casli Needed!: f o Up to 36 months Io pay!.f o No .payments 'till . Sprin g.!

*59 Ford Galaxie 4-dr., fullyequipped. A black beauty.Locally owned.Bonanza Buy . $L">987

. '58 Chev. 4 clr., radio ,- .wsw;,-. 6cyl. and economy stickshift , Surf Green.Bonanza Buy ,. $1198

' '55 Chev. 2-dr. Custom j ub! V-8; floor box trans , Imma-culate in every respect.Looks and runs like new.Must see.Bonanza Buy . . . . . . . 7 $998

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM.

Salesman Instructed toSubmit Any Offer.

/^f^v^^^ifeV ei c H i VR o tn o; j

105 Johnson Tel. 2396Open Tonight 'Til 8

Telephone Your Want Adsto The Winona Daily NewsDial 3322 for an A_ Taker.

7 NYSTROM MOTORS¦ p

...,;, ...,,.,. A N NOU NCES ™

V J \ "" YEARI W N L GUARANTEE! ,;L~~~^~~^~~~~ ON ALL USED CARS ~~ ~~~* ^~~

Now You Can Buy a Used Car With Absolute Confidence,Secure In the,Knowledge That Your Car Is Protected UnderNystrom's "Full Year" Guarantee . Yes, We Will GuaranteeYour Car for One Full Year F rom Date of Purchase.

Select Your Car ' f ntYlp Our SelectionIn LQme Has Never

The Comfort |n Been Better!Of Our —

Heated , Indoor Now ! PricesShowroom! \ ' . Never l^ower

^7 ¦'¦ '•X'X^¦^;-( '-¦ ¦>' >y':•'-r^¦: -^^x¦ -^7^7 >lv-¦.^1 ' «. - ,- -¦¦.¦• - ¦: • : ><¦:<•/,¦.¦y-/.v/.l <- ,-A ¦.- . ¦:-i.wiy,-y,v--y-- --:^:.-y f... .M ¦ .

WEEK-END SPECIALS.s s -s- -^^v-/- -. -ui>^-tru-u-ur.- ..--r

HtlM FORD^xTeVdo^n HITVoU^n^^^ HMO V^^^, radio, healer , automatic ' , , ¦ ¦ > 4-door , economy h , 1'inv-

!: transmission , attracti ve ! ; ; U.vipc , while with tin - ; j : ,.,r _ li (le , fii'ey finish . . Test ¦; ' dnrk grecii finish with con- '. ; ; ' fitioi.se interior , full jmwer , > < drive it and you 'll buy it. '; trasting whitewall tires. > ; A -l throu Rliotit , '¦[ ] - -5l7!i.r<j $1495 J $2r)9;. J >~~~J~~*~~~~~~~~ ,—J

~ f Z ^ Z ^ Z ^ Z ^ Z ^ Zj ^ ^ P.;,.._ .'.Tr:\.'.-vfV^—;. ..r.P pwPp tl^MVW^ —;. 1957 CHEV ROLKT Bel Air ! ; ; dcie Omwtiule , "H ," ;; 2-door Hnrdlap, red arid i ; !^ ""' ~^ ' j ! spotless inside and out , eye-' while tu-tone . contrasting ' ! n U ' entchiii fj iun iuoise wi thv i e d and block interior , ra- ; s K6m6imD6r \ \ lik ( ' "««' white lop, radin ,1 dio, hea l er, V-B engine, ; i S ; ' > heater , ;mtomatic t rans- - ,' Powerglide transm ission. V \ Your Car Is > mission, power sleerin; .: :

Low mileace. One owner. < „ ' . . » , ' ' '. '< 'It1(l l'nil<es. A liemit y. -; ¦ Like new. \ Guaranteed 1' or 7 j mm^ 12f>s > i i— ii zoz^^oozi^^z^zPC^~~-S~~N~~~^-~-~~~-~-~¦ J < I I— i t i l Y pa r , •NA^ —~^—~w»~~

j | i ' un i ici i ; , ,,,rjri oi,i)SMoi)U,i': "»«" ;¦ : 1054 CHEVROLET , "(l .'' 2 - ¦ \ ..,., v n ; ' : Holiday ^'-door H ardt op, ¦

door , straight sh ift , in i t io , \ W U C l i Y 0U UUy , lurquoiso and whit e, newheater , one local owner , > j t. Pronn > ' tires , locnl low mileagereally sharp throughout . < ' ; ! car. Spick and .span,

* NYSTROM MOTORS *1(54 West Second St.

Your Locall y Owned and OperatedUSED CAR SALES CENTER

|.; ¦¦¦¦ ¦^>#7- +$Mds ls. pW i-^ 4j ^P/ y 7 jI DAVID AGRIMSON AUCTION 1' LOCATED : 9 miles sou th of Utlca , or 13 miles east and 2 |,' miles north of Ohatficld, or il- miles north of Lanesboro or : '{: 10 miles west and 2 miles north of Rush ford. Watch for |¦s auction arrows. I

:.Wednesday,". February 14: |I Time: 11:00 A.N. Lunch by the Lydia ' - \¦i and Rachel Circles of the Arendahl Lutheran Church. -;i 58 HEAD OF HOLSTEIN CATTLE - Including ?R head |i>| of milk cows ; 2S Milch cows, 435 pound average. 5 cows are ",.i| close sprinKers , and the balance , cexcept a few , are bred to;| fres^ien in ' early fall, PHIA records will be up to date. 5 ;£j heifers , 2 years old , calfhood vaccinated , arti ficially bred; 13 ',% yearling heifers , calfhood vaccinated , open; 7 bull calves , up ¦;;:| to 4 months of age; 5 heifer calves. This is an outstanding •S herd of Holstein cows. Lots of size and mostly young cows , \77 all are artificially bred , and nearly all artificially, sired. All% but a few are calfhood vaccinated. State Lab. T.B. and Bangs% tested. No reactors or suspects.% lfiO ACRE FARM — The 1(10 acre farm is for s:ile at ;7; private treaty . 115 acres of tillable land , and the balance is '?,; permanent open pasture. Has 3 .bedroom home with hath. 30S;y sttiiichioii txisement ham wilJi barn cleaner and drinking cups.\'¦:¦' Good location. See David Agrimson or Bert Agrimson , Peterson ,¦>} Minnesota.

HOG EQUIPMENT — 1 hofi oiler ; 19 good wood farrowins\*. crates ; 2 A-type individual farrowing houses; 2 nearly new% Pride of the Farm (il) bushel IIOR feeders; 3 I IOJI feeders , lo-i;. hole; 4 small round ho .i; feeders; L steel hoc trough.7 C i R A l N AND KEKD — Approxim ately l . 'aOti bushels of|s good car corn; about 2, MO bales of mixed hay, mostly a l fa l fa ,7 sfon.'d inside , crimped , very good ; 200 bales .straw.

MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT - 19M) In te rna t ion a l!i; M tractor , in excellen t condition , has been completely over-¦•; hau led with oversized pistons installed . R ood tiros; WW Cock-7 shult 30 tract or -with oversized pi stons; VXH Intor na tion.nl t '<"'n'. '\ euitivator , 2-row; \'.lx> Oliver tractor plow , 3-liottoin. J-l uu'li ,

on rubber; single disc, 15-foot; fntornat iniui l tandem trai 'tor;,; disc , |()-ft. , li/57 John Deere , No. 5 tractor mower , semi-

mounted: 1052 New Idea trac tor mower , sf mi-mounted , T t l . .,: ; on rubber; .John Deere dra«, mil New Idea No . 1!) lOO-husl wl: niiinure spreader: John Deere 10-ft. dril l wil h seed a t tach-

ment ; mounted I'TO seeder; Rri l l io j i seeder , useil 2 -<o ;isiius;p i.] .> Oliver corn , planter , •l-iowJ w i th fertilizer a l tachinen i ;¦ LundeU I'.l.T!) forage T 'liopjier; 1'ii.Vl" John Deere PTO' 'corn 'shel l - '

. .¦

er , wi th cob stacker and corn thrower; HUM ) New Idea ~) - ' \\v':. N ' i. -KXI side delivery rake , on ,rubber ; 1055 New Hol land hay¦' ' biih.'i' , complcu 'ly over hauled with new heads ; ' lil.iV John Dreie

• hay conditioner .D A I K V Kt iDH'MKNT — SurRC 3-unit milker , t!n ;i ) in- i . lc l ;

3 Surge milker pail.s ; I!)57 Sunset 400 fiallon hulk milk cuol er;V< pipeline for 30 cows.

MOTIVE EQUIPM ENT - New Holland rublif r ' t i re i i ^ . i ' ;on 'V wil h hydraulic tractor hoist , ami good tires , wi th ii\ 11 com7 hi nation box . rubber t ired wagon.

MISCELLANEOUS - Crappie fork ; approximately !:.! i- se. l-V wood-lined steel stanchions; Colli I'TO hamniormil l ; r,as bar-¦ : rcl ., 27.') gallon; 2 'harre ls , 55 gallon; steel cable , 3 ti-fV ; ehr-

.; t r ie motor , l' s H.P .; manure carrier with chain Im,7 . ;• ( ed, - 1,'O'p. ll>x) 't /!.; lumniei'niill he-It; cow ))*of dippe; , sniiie' ¦¦ - .u.sed lumber ; about 40 electric caw trainers : 1 brooder I I O I I M \v; Eleelrie t i re pump; wheelbarrow , on rubber; MII ;.;!I' adieu

3 inch hydraulic cylinder; Malco , 2-1-ft. hay mower , uthi .-r' 'j miscellaneous small i tems .\ TERMS - Alt siuna under $15, 00 cash . Over tha t o i iu iun t ' i

: down and tho balance In , monthly installme nts to suit your7j neeils.

Kohner h Sehroeder , AuctioneersHertrain noyiiin , R ushford, M innesota , re iuesoii t i iv; Kai 'ni-

• Auction S;ilcs Co., srib. ( oiiiinunity Loan tSi Kinaiice Co.. Laj i Crosse, Wisconsin, Clerk. -

Uted Csri 109 jCHtrv^oi.-ni- . i«</i ni>i ' Mr '"¦ ' v » '¦ '. Y<i' ., ¦

^t,3n<lftrd , lrftn\mu^iort 1*1. 7131 joi-n: 5 or Sal ,' ¦ jje,Ef' -H-wh»ei d<\vi *\ll\ tnow piiw. Mf ;

Inrt *.v*. N,W , pijIhvH* . Minn ,iMERCURY "' I«5J7 J door , . utriljh* Vtlr -V V

Or w/OI IrlKl* ' ftv ' -Mc^o^y m«(1» m\r- .con*vrcnat. ' HnijulreV IIS E. -' ¦ i 'l . ,

Auction Salai !. ALVIN KOHNER

AUCTIONEER Clly «na C4ti llcin*«ain* bonded: ^51 LiMrtv St. ICornfrE. 5lh and Liberty). Tei. . «80.

FEB. . ?-• Frl. . 13 N oon . ' 1 ml|« .' N. ol :Wc^l . S«Hm on Hgwy. 108. Psrry w. VAndcrtpn , owner; Kohntr 4 Millar , t *ic- '.tloneerij Community Loan »nd Fin. Co.,( lefk: ¦

FEB 16—Jat. 1 ptn . f fnllti NE, olOnalaska in Sand Lflke Coulct Ever-ott !Skoloi, own*r; Rustell Schroeder, auc- jtioncsri Comrnunlly to»n S7Fln. Co.,clerk- , . . - . ¦

. , . ' . - ' \ : " 7 I

Auction Sulet "

Minnesota ~"~" ~~"Land & Auction Sales

EverOI j K ohnerHI yvaimjl ' 6-3710. all«r t\ tn>i\ H \ A

l-'Efl I" ¦ .Mon. I om . V i . mllft *¦ >l1 Alm» -Center on u (d Cour'y . T njr«• A , " inen j mi.'ei .w, .tn ro,«n .' »<ni,llien 5 <-nil«v NW. Rjymnorl E Am*icnr owner. ' Ko*ner t, Ensmn. *>;•:¦linntirt; Nort1*rn ir.v. v n , clerk ,

FE0. ~ l. i—Tu« . . . li'':10'.'"'~U~ milfTrN7~'ii¦ . Alma. - . 'A/ii. .on . Mqwy . 57 ,,'.< ,ir«Mt'l . .$ * '. .wcy, . n-we.r '. Hiiike &; i_o*r «u<tV ^e«rH. Chippewe Vjllev Firi V . r. t . -:ior«

FEB. U W«J. 1! roon ¦ 3 rni ':>v N. . .¦;'Mabel on H: Q» */ i y « i ,-.on J n:i>'(W. We^fon S'oskOut , J*n« <-,<><i '... nErickson , au:';on»jr( . Thr,r p saiei . r . i

. clark', ¦

FEB, U. Wd 1.1 , . ' » m, ? rn!!s, S -;UllC^. ' V'nn OivtrJ AQ.-r-,<-,n -i-^-i»fKofiner A Scnro*Hlpr. " j cr^r.^r . r , - r - ,r:.

. munlry Lonn K Fm.'. r ico-C- • O-'K .

FIRST TIME EVER! SEALY BREAKS THENATIONALLY ADVERTISED* *5995 PRICE..

r----- F0R TlfE F,*ST T,ME FAM0U$

1 «» n FLEX GUARD QUALITY IS OFFERED

\ Kr«K \3§# *|L) BEl0W NATIONALLY ADVERTISED' ¦J ^ g^ |

PRICE.. .YOU SAVE DURING

Qj 81ST

ANNIVERSARY SALE!

.i5l SgP " "* * / Z V: W $CQ95 [

lifortpL, l wW^si , ^ ^ n Von «•.. ^B — ' ¦

af^ fe ^^M *2Q°<> I$51 •....w.«.M.>,.T.k .. JL *0p*" ^n.rLJiaHS3 * * % Y OAflv* I'> "77 r«.iiui.i»i« »i( • •>•• ! ». V, ! <* i^? J <JfflfmBFZjjfP / j[ '^^ m m «V ¦ H

¦V fr £ £ aS„ ^^&7: v- ,;,..;; i ^ ^ P I . Ful1" T»ln su, ali0 $39.9% IH,.i„iMl T..|. ^ ^&'7 ' ''; -*5>i iH^ l

"AIVS ft)c# Aftllltl.. ¦c.ii. . i-™n...* , ^ ^''*- .:r^??^OTr I °'*r AW Nl Vf PCADV r mI.M ml,,.,,! Iii,» "tn,,«p| &V "",''"" - »™P' / '"'If I JALJF/ H

BORZYSKOWSKI Furniture StoreOpon Evening * 3O0-3Q2 , Manka»o Avenue Easy Tamil

BUI IKWYrt ty K«y Crow* ;7" ' ' ;77l~—. ' ' . /. '' ..• ' „¦ t - ,.,.1 "«v " 'l - ' ¦J ll ' '.' .»J,.>''.',"'"l''..il ;^ 'll '*ll'«" '1 M'i ' ''M'WW »»ii«<pw»BW ' .J ''jm"'."l - 'l .. 7.-..> .-.'.'¦ '¦if " :

STEVE CANYON By Milton Cdnniff

BLONDIE ¦ ' - '- .7 By Chic Young

THE FUNTSTONES , By Hanria-Barbera . . - . .

DICK TRACY By¦ C.h»tfef Gould

BEETLE BAILEY 7 By Mprt Walker

RIP KI RBY By John Prentice and Fred Dickenson

LI'L A BNER By Al Capp

/THE ELECTRONIC COMPUTER AT 7T { [PpPYPmlmW^ ' \ \ FCET THIS PIG, AND LOVE )/ 1 \' I. . M.IX CAME UP WITH-TWE MOST I f Air J ^< ' \ \

IT-OR YOU'LL GO ALL. J WAs >T' V ' jVTTi LOVABLE CREATURE \ I r\VS'"r^ . \ \ ROTTEN INSIDE- T— / TO \\C | ^-<

>'\-OM EARTH'.1 y k Ps AA. I \\ ""- AMD DlE/M { LIVEr- j

y AJt-—P f~N(/\/Y\/\ y- -s , ^K /'- / \ ' "'¦ ' / ¦¦ /O ^--_>>S<r' V''N^/'\t^ X^S" --"<£ ' 7^ 7\. \( f y<Z— >< \^\/ v\/V^ \/ ; f ' -A" r-—"¦"~~ "" x-'' s.'' <v, v/ \ -''

s - ::"< "*~—*-- \ ' \ ' \

-T I r-—--7 > ' S< V -N ' /^ j—-LA '\ V^O- / ' (Sr > ' S P P^>PS*PP P\ A J : h-PP*S^~'l. V > / rs'CS7V r ^- ^^H' V^S'' ^^ — \ /^ 7—^ \ P\~~\ " N.7 /r ->c-T*>s/ l\K l » r V-"""'' -C >«< X- v ' ' ^ ""--—-J— P~P \ A \ \ '- 'P\ ^¦ 'wiik^x^ : i^ ^ a. jco^^f .' - ' ' ^' ¦ ^

ew ^-ove ¦ "Ky- V^^^lmfe or Old Love... ¦ ¦ : ':NC K(OT u - i ¦ (/P^\YDXA/ V , she wil treasure ' -.J x ^Vip\M ^ a DIAMOND gift ^OxxK/! Py yp rJ kif % ' \j /v\vA\ ^M Ky ) ^* ab°ye all others (wwp/ /"">>\ - '\ Valentine Gifts wit h Diamonds, from SI 9.50 /Sc^TT l i

U W at f V7 - 'If Wmr 7'J ;,.< ¦ ;'"". / . . JE .WE .LE R S s^X SINCE 1B61 -V ^^—

* J- ^5~">/ 7" : . 'j \ /—p *'P~pS\~th\—X^I ^ W^ 'k. 7\ *W REGISTERED J EWELER . A MEKICAN CKM SOCIE TY / ¦-TiW//?) Iv.7®M _; • . /RmP-J '

MiH : y—-/ Pk ¦ 4f n(#&j /^_____ (V*ifefc rr VQ<X5 PSXS=- PP) fer

(^M^MVS)