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The Winona Republican-Herald from Winona, Minnesota • Page 12

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Winona, Minnesota
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12
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Fagg 1 2 THE WlNONA REPUBMCAN-HBRALP. WINONA. MINNESOTA. MONDAY, OCTOBER 20. An Independent Newspaper Established in M.

OORDOH R. CLOSWAT Publisher Executive Editor itEMBm of ASSOCIATED PRtas The Associated Press Li exclusively to the use for republlcation of all the locnl news printed In thU newspaper. well as all AP newi dispatches. Official Newspaper County ana City of Winona Poitwar Program tor Winona 1. Civic auditorium.

2. New state highway 76 from Winona to itate line. 3. Modernization of district. Outdoor municipal gwlmmlnj pool facilities.

5. Municipal athletic stadium and recreation field. ft. Controlled, steady Industrial expansion. 7.

Completion of Lake Winona Improvement prorrmm. 8. Completion of municipal airport. 0. Adequate parking facilitlei for business dUtrict.

10. River terminal and xmall-boat harbor. Going Hunting? Going hunting? If you arc, take a minute now to refresh your memory on the following commonsense safety rules for hunters. They've been prepared by an officer of a big Insurance company which keeps pretty close tabs on how and why people die. If this year Is anything like former years, about 1,000 persons will meet death through hunting accidents, says the Insurance man.

He thinks, however, that the ton could be reduced If more hunters would carefully observe the rules he has prepared. Here they arc: 1. Know your gun thoroughly you KO hunting with It. Shoot "dry runs" until Jts operation Is second nature. Know, especially, the "safety," and keep In mind the reason why It has been placed on your gun.

2. Wear shoes or boots which will minimize the danger of slipping or falling and, In doing JK, accidentally firing your weapon. 3. Keep your gun unloaded except when you are using it. Transport only empty guns in your automobile, and be sure to remove the ammunition when you get back to your camp or home, after a day's hunting.

4. Never--oh, a' gun muzzle first from a vehicle or when climbing through or over fences. 5. Never shoot at a moving object until you arc "dead" sure that It Is game and not one of your companions or another hunger. Wear some distinctive clothing yourself.

6. Decide upon definite positions for each person In your party, so that nobody will be In the line of fire of another hunter's gun. 7. Guard against fouling the gun muzzle with snow, mud, or any foreign material, and clean It well before and after It Is used, 8- Don't use your gun to club or flush game out of the brush. It's bad for the gun, and for life expectancy of yourself and your companions.

9. Never forget for even an instant such common-sense rules as: Point the muzzle toward the ground while passing under low trees or through brush: carry the gun on your with the muzzle pointed up while walking with others In the open; never point cither a. loaded or "unloaded" gun playfully at another person: and never shoot at flat, hard surfaces or the surface of water-which might cause a ricochet. 10. Don't confuse a hunting party with a cocktail party; alcohol Is bad medicine for a person using a weapon which might be lethal at far greater distances than you may think.

What Others Think Summer We woncfer how many Red Wing people are aware of the proposed extension of the high school athletic program Into a year-round affair. In Wednesday's Republican Eagle an account of Impending action by the school board on the subject was given. The Big Nine conference to which Rod Wing belongs--Albert Lea, Austin. Falrlbault, Mankato, Northfierd, Owatonna. Red Wing, Rochester, and Winona--has decided to continue baseball, tennis, and golf right through the summer season.

Games would be played during the summer months, events culminating In conference tournaments followed by district and state meets sponsored by the High School league. The Red Wing High school does not have to adopt this program if the school authorities decide against It. But the Inference is that if we don't, we will be left The Issue Is an Important one for the people of this city. Not only will If cost the school to hire athletic Instructors to coach the summer program--an Hem not to be passed over lightly In these times--but In many another way the carrying on of a summer athletic program would have far-reaching repercussions. First.

It Is Inconceivable that the regular city recreation program would not be affected adversely. An effort would be made to dovetail Recreational Director Forrest Brlggs and his assistants In with the high school coaches, but emphasis on turning out winning teams carrying the Red Wing banner could hardly be resisted. Secondly, a summer athletic program would conflict with family-holiday plans. Can't a kid get away from the old routine for at least a couple of months during the year? Let him forget Red Wing High for a few weeks each summer--It would be good thing both for the youngsters and the school people. In summing, up objections to the program, Irt us consider what a good athletic program for the high school should be.

It should bring equal benefits to all members of the student body, build each and every one up physically, give each and every one valuable experience In team play and coordination, stimulate In cve-ry student an Interest in participating in healthful, body-building recreation that will continue long after graduation. It would seem that an all-year round high school athletic program Is unnecessary towards attaining these objectives. Furthermore, tt directly conflicts with something that Is closely geared to the community needs--the summer city recreation program which places emphasis where It belongs--on participation by one and all In Informal but organized activities that cover all Wing Republican Eagle. As Pegler Sees It rejler Slams Roosevelt For Russian Deal By Wexlbrook Peeler New York-- The story or this nation's surrender. to Soviet Russia a surrender ol national prestige and the moral leadership of the world-- Is not rcnlly new revelation.

The Ignominious memoirs add up and the Idolatrous members of Franklin D. Roosevelt's cult can hardly deny now that a smart fat-head took our all to the poker-party and had to borrow a barrel to come home In. His own son. Elliott, who nevertheless was given the rank of general and the lives and the dignity of thousands of better citizens to play with, has revealed what drunkenness and roaring ribaldry passed for statesmanship when his pampered father got off the apron string for a few nights among the worldly stags at Teheran. Hardly more silly and conceited than the old man himself.

Elliott wrote boastful record, which never will be expunged, of stupidity and crassness in a man whose followers have labored to raise him up as a moment of hope, morality and compassion. The confessions of James F. Byrnes In the most terrible of the New Deal memories to date, "Speaking Frankly," are national humiliation. The Amerl- ican people elected this mischievous faker four times. Yet the man who made fools ot so many millions ol a breed who think themselves the shrewdest and most civilized on earth, himself was played for a fool for more than a decade by Josef Stalin.

Account' Mr. Byrnes gives a poor account of himself. Like Jim Parley and some other penitents, he took too long to wake up. Here It is, October, 1947, and we are hearing for the first time that Stalin traded 'Fauntleroy a bag of something base for his bag of candy, pulled the big sissy's curls and kicked him in the bloomers. Roosevelt gave Stalin possessions in the Far East which weren't his to give, a dandy precedent for the Inext gang of conquerors who would like to divide up the Uijlted States, and the price of all this was a few I days' nominal participation in a war that the Amerl- icans alone already had won.

Beyond the normal traffic killings of his fatalistic Orientals who would rather die than take the trouble to drive around, this war with Japan didn't cost Stalin a split lip. But the smart Yankee trader, who had qualified for enormous feats of business by helping. his son to frisk a handcuffed sucker, thought this was statesmanship. There are Idiots still who think the same, but they get fewer day by day. All experience shrieked that Stalin wns no better than Hitler, that the Muscovites had Roosevelt pegged for a silly snob and that they laughed at his confidence in their word.

When did he get these warnings? Years ago. 1930, the DIes'committee brought proof that the Russian government was our enemy and DO more to be trusted than the Nazis. 'Can't He Blamed' The American citizens can't be blamed not knowing. The Dies committee elicited thousands of pages of testimony. But the proof tended to make Roosevelt ridiculous and his wife and his mud-gun soldiers smeared the committee.

Witnesses were smeared and discredited who were appearing at risk of their lives and with no prospect of gain or even of Jobs for the New Deal was ruthless in its hounding. On September 23, 1939, Dr. D. H. Dombrowsky testified before the Dies committee.

He was a Ukrainian exile who returned to Russia after the explosion of Aon. He was an old friend of Trotsky and Lenin and of many murdering Muscovites who later were butchered by Stalin. He was an employe of the unofficial embassy established here in the '20's and a pioneer American communist: You. couldn't have asked for better authority on the secrets of the Moscow conspiracy against the United States. Frequently at the mention of this or that bloody- handed old barbarian Dombrowsky would say "he was shot" or "Stalin shot him." On a night In Petrograd In 1020 after an attack had been beaten off, he sat with Gregory Zlnovlev, and "Bill Shatov, in charge of the O.O.P.U..

brought in the names of 130 people who were to be executed, that night." "Our friend, Zlnovlev, with a squeaky, unpleasant voice, said: 'It is too much to read. Is It all right to sign said Doctor Dombrowsky. "And he signed it and they were shot that night. So I had no anxiety when I heard that Joe (Stalin) shot him (Zinovlev)." Roosevelt knew this was the quaUty of the people he was trusting when he resumed diplomatic relations with Russia in 1033. Yet he thought he, the country gentleman who never could earn his own living and laid an egg In promoting a vending machine, could outsmart Stalin.

"The day recognition was granted," Dombrowsky Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo THE VILLAGE BAND. DOES IT HAVE FIFTEEN DRUMMERS UP AND WANT TO GET INTO THE ACT These COMES IT THE DAY OF THE PARADE- JUST TfiV AND FIND A THE 1 HAD TO DRAFT A BOY SCOUT more of them will Soknlck? be around to cat the grain. Perhaps Mr. Luckman can explain all that. So far, his silence has indicated that he knows Tnorc about Rlnso white than about the egg.

And how about cake? On a Thurs- BAND MANA6ER. INTERNATIONAL FALLS, IO-2O MINNESOTA In The Washington Merry-Go Round Reputed Nazi Document Cites Plan for Jewish Extermination By Drew Pearson Washington One of the most Important treasures of war Information in existence are the Nazi files seized by the U. S. after It entered Germany. The Nazis were methodical keepers of records and almost everything they ranging from conferences with Hitler to actions by deputy fuehrers, was faithfully recorded and filed away.

In the opinion of Secretary of thc Army Kenneth Royal), these papers, which throw significant light on how we can avoid war In the future, should be made available to the American people. American soldiers gave their blood to capture them, and. Roynll has tried to persuade the State de a to open thc files to the public. However, a Street Banker Bob Lovelt, a i secretary of state, otherwise. And following his usual vealing ret.

This Pearson Boyle's Column Two-Bit Hairctst Days Mourned By Hal Boyle New like an unshorn sheep, Alphcus Ronald Thistlethwaite plumped wearily down oiiffi Wash- ington a in the east, the reichsfueher-SS and ci the chief of the German police had, a bench be- forbldden the emigrating of the jdc i a Jews. "3. The emigration program has now been replaced by evacuation of f.he Jews to the east as a poet of Patchen place. "I have been Roundelay, patch-pants further solution possibility, in a cordance with previous authoriza-'squirrel in a nuf. said.

"I happened to be In Washington and three of us were anxiously awaiting the arrival of LltvinoIT i i I from the White House. Some details had to be ironed out. I believe that was one of the last conferences! that was had at thc State department and the White 1 House. Lltvlnoff came In, all smiles, and said: It's all in thc bag: we have Smiling and rubbing hands, he says, 'they wanted us to recognize the debts that we owed them and 1 promised that tlon by the fuehrer. "These actions nre of course to be regarded only as a temporary substitute; nonetheless here already the practical experience has been acquired which In view of the coming final solution of the Jewish problem is of great importance.

"In the course of this final solution of the European Jewish problem approximately 11,000,000 Jews are involved. They are distributed hurti-hush" policy, these re-1 among the individual countries as papers have been kept sec- follows: (Then follows a list or all European countries and their Jewish column however, has been I population, even including England, able to obtam one sensational Nazi Ireland. Switzerland and Scandbm- document giving thc minutes of i a countries not occupied by Hit- meeting at Which Hitler's The fact thai, these countries plotted the master-plan for the together with Russia were incudecl 1 Jews In Nazi tabulations, would indicate Jan-'that Hitler planned to take all the 20 1042 And while history of Europe and exterminate now shown what happened jail Jews. At the time of this con- since the public does not know thc January 20, 1942, Pearl Har- names ol 1 the men who planned thisibor had Just crippled the American mass extermination nnd the detail- fleet, the Japs were rushing toward cd 'way in which they worked itiIndia and thc Germans still figured ut. despite the long- drawn-out war crimes trials at Nuernberg, these, men have not yet been indicted.

Minutes or this Berlin conference record in cold type the plan to put Jews In work camps and literally work them to death, or ns the Nazi "fall out through extermination The meeting uary has now finally Is able ia the con- u.t be since S.IIH.B they UK.J. might become "the germ cell of a new Jewish movement, shpuld they I114C tllC MCUIO i i vrt 4 i i' we were going to negotiate. But they did not know be allowed to go -ice we were oin to negotiate until (Russia; Pertinent parts of the minutes of we were going to negotiate until never paid a dollar, net.) And then he said. 'The this conference to decide the fate of next one was a corker: They wanted me to them European Jewry follow: freedom of religion, in Russia. And I gave it to them.

I was very much prompted to offer that I will collect all the Bibles and ship them out to "1, The following persons took part in the conference on the final solution of the Jewish problem hold He was very much amused at that," Dombrowsky! on 20 January, 1942, in Berlin, Am said, "because that was thc culmination of the slm- Gro.sscn Wannsce No. pllclty of Dombrowsky was mistaken. That was not the eral agencies. Mr. and Mrs, culmination, No human being could have foreseen that Roosevelt, who certainly heard the gist of this testimony, would one day go to Teheran and, just for the pleasure of taunting Churchill and twisting the lion's tall, would deliver all of the Balkans, Poland, the Baltic countries, Finland and probably all the rest of European Christendom to Stalin Just for the pompous pleasure of agreeing with a tough IN YEARS GONE BY Ten Years Ago 1937 Five watersheds in southeastern Minnesota are to be studied for flood control, according to survey program put into effect this week by cooperating fed- H.

C. Williams and daughter Geneva and granddaughter. Mary Ann Bruskl, will spend the winter with Mr. Williams' sister In Ventura, Calif. An all activities program was held at the Wlnonn Junior High school auditorium Tuesday morning with various activities at thc school being presented by the students.

Bob Stevenson made the general announcements and Richard Kropp served ELS stage manager. Twenty-five Ago 1922 Two Indian ladies of many winters went about their business of selling baskets today, refreshed after night's lodging as guests of the Winona police department. The Marquettes and thc Baltlmorcs, present leaders In the Knights of Columbus league, each registered complete victories in their contests at thc Gate City alleys last night. Many tulips are being planted at the present time for bcautlflcatlon next spring of the grounds mir- roundlng many Winona homes. Many of thc bulbs have been Imported directly from Holland.

on taking Stalingrad.) "In the Jewish population figures given for the various foreign countries, however, only those of Jewish faith are included, as the stipulations for defining Jews along racial lines still are in part lacking there. The treatment of the problem as regards the general attitude and viewpoint will with certain difficulties in the various countries, especially in Hungary and Rumania. It Is still possible today in Rumania, for example, for thc Jew to acquire for money the right documents to give him official proof of a 'foreign nationality. "The influence of the Jews in all territories In the USSR is known In the European part of Russia there are perhaps 5,000,000 Jews, in a haircut, Asiatic Russia hardly one-fourth bits, thc million. a "Broken down according to occupations, the Jews living in the European part of the USSR were cure, about as follows: samtslcltcr Dr.

Lei brands, Reich ministry for the occupied eastern territories; State Secretary Dr. Stuckart, Reich ministry of the interior: State Secretary Naumann, commissioner for the four-year plan; State Secretary Dr. Frclsler, Reich ministtjc-of justice; State Secretary Dr. Buehler, office of the governor general; Under State Secretary Luther, foreign office; SS- Oberruehrer Klopper, party chancellery; Mhiisteririldlrektcr Kritzln- Reich chancellery; SS- Boyle shop," announced Alpheus, Greenwich i 11 a 's leading crusader for lost causes. "So busy you haven't had time 'for a haircut?" asked Pythias jealously.

"What arc you trying to do --cut in on my poetry racket? You look like a refugee from a barber's chair." "I am," said Thistlethwaite importantly. "It's a matter or principle--pure principle. I am. currently conducting a one-man boycott against thc modern barbershop. It's my very latest campaign." "What brought on nil this hairy inquired Pythias.

"Your aunt left you enough money to buy haircuts three times a day if you to go on a binge of that Night Club Prices "Not In a modern barbershop," said Thistlethwaite. "Since yoy. grew up they've started imitating night clubs and night club prices. "The old-fashioned barber earned his living by the sweat of. his hand clippers.

I haven't seen one for kind." Higher Prices Feared From Luckman Drive By George E. Sokolsky Washington So I take a look at the record and it would seem that the eggless Thursday and poultryless Thursday are Just thrown In for nothing. This country Is astonishingly full of egss and poultry and there is no shortage and not eating eggs will add nothing to the food we wish to send the Europeans. However, by not distilling liquor and not brewing beer. the quantity of mash available for Iced is reduced.

poultry will have to be fed grain, which will reduce the quantity of grain available for export to Europe. Also, If chickens and Turkeys are killed, Advice on Health Pain Doesn't Always Show- Trouble Spot By Herman X. Bundesen. MJJ. If you hit your thumb with a hammer, you expect your thumb to hurt and would be amazed If.

instead, you suddenly got a pain in your head. Yet that is almost exactly what happens in certain other conditions, where a disturbance in one part of thc body, through its effects on day I go into a restaurant and ncrvcSi cause pain somewhere else. hear a child ask for a sliced egSi Tnere is for instance, a whole groua sandwich. No go! It is such 'headaches. They arc called The child eats a tomato and bacon rcflex hcadacnes and may be due sandwich.

But they sell her choco-, to dlsordcrs ln nearly any organ. late layer cake. There are eggs in Cause of Pain that cake or is the yellow in the Dlsturbanccs ln the nose are a dough flat wall paint? Also. I note! fl cqucnt cause of rront a rice pudding on the menu, not the old-fashioned "poor man's rice pud- part of the head which may be cr of a shooting or a boring charac- dinK" but the stiff kind taken out ter infection of the air of the pot with a scoop like Jce I chambcrs or sinuses, bending of cream. And so help me--it has yellow in it.

Is the yellow not an egg on a Thursday? Also, they sold spaghetti and chicken livers. Whence came those chicken livers on Thursday? Oil! Luckman, Oh! Luckman, cartilage which divides the two chambcrs of the nose or Inflammation and thickening of Its lir.inr- membrane may all be responsible for reflex headaches of this sort. They frequently begin during the mom- Al A tliUUJ WJ they not tell you at the Kansas jng and somct imes last all day. -City Junior college and thc Unla ls somc blocking at versity of Illinois that the liver ofj passn cs and an increase In chicken should come out of al the nasa i secretions. uijw chicken even on a Thursday? I these conditions are easily dias- What's Drive About? nosed.

Once discovered, they may So one asks, what is this cam-i ovcrcome proper treatment and pnign all about? 'when -Ufcy are, thc headache van- Suppose we look at these shes Farm prices on September 15 Cer tnln cve disorders, such aa reached an all-time high, 1C7 per' cent over thc 1935-193D average. glaucoma in which there Is increased pressure of the fluid in When related to the commodities eyebn and eyestrnln, also may farmers have to buy, farm prices. producc rcncx headaches. These almost doubled the increase nendncllcs i so nrc ln the frt prices for goods farmers bought.I, The farmer received for Uw eight months of 1D47, $17.400,000,000 of Ulc hcad arc usuat front part scvcrlty nl dull pRtn Contlnuow AtUck. tinuous, that is, they last all day.

farmer his prosperity, but the facts ls hcadac he of tils need to be stated. tl ont part of the headi Farm prices are supported by the government in spite of this amazing gStJisVte adrisSSe prosperity. Parity is a ratio based sp diseases as on the average relation of prices ar nfiddlJpart the farmer receives to Ul rlc pains on thc side of the head, he pays labor costs) as "1 compared with the August, 1909-July, 19M, average. This parity ratio rose to 121, or 21 per cent above parity, on September 15. Beef, hogs, and corn were 58 per cent above parity: wheat 18 per cent above parity.

In fact. the. whole concept of parity disappears in these figures. The government support of prices, at not less than 90 per cent of parity, remain in force through December, 1948. Thrce- fll'ths of the value of farm production grown for sale Is thus supported.

But an even greater support has been government buying years. You go into a barber shop Ule armed forces and for 4 niir) 4 JIT-rt'lT IT All IIP 1 IVfl Ir.inO' I A A today and there's a hireling waiting to wrestle you for your coat and hat. II you don't give him a dime his sneer stabs you all the way to thc chair. "It used to cost a dime to get a abroad. As long as lend-leasc was available, government buying was assured.

The UNRRA nnd army feeding continued government buy- 'ing. Price Support Plan shoe shine. If you fork over ess; Mj Luckman program than two bits now youre anothei than two bits now, you're anomer, outt John Wllkcs Booth. You climb the chuir. The barber doesn't hllvc a rs hall (16 to 1) Minn -n rr'vp VOU the government reduced.

Js buying If the a a any time to give you the gossip congress, government buying He's become an lectric He will continue on a large scale. At busy plugging in badgets and government buyers notor- things to sel you he doesnt alld maintain Iarm I'ficf-o M-nrHs nn world aliairs. aste woras or. mi i li sv prices at their present inflationary "He doesn't even want to bothei ffnV to shave you at all unless you take a haircut, too. The shave is four- values.

It has been government buying, more than any other factor, n. dollar Thel that has scnt tne prloe of sta icut a dollar, ine foodstuffs and that has rodu ced i I nf 75 TtaSc costs anything you shortages In big city, markets. wm stand "orLnud 5 a manl" is not possible that the Luck- vaii stano. .01 mm cnmpajgn is tllC desire on the dramatisation thc In per cent. As urban per cent.

In commerce--20 per cent. Employed ns government per cent. In private professions--medicine. fl lmr "barber nearlyigovernment to maintain current or if you tipped him a dlmcVen higher prices for farm prod- Nowadays I wouldn't even dare be'ucts to keep the farmer prosperous I shaved again by the same barber if and cheerful in a campaign year? Mm lesl than a quarter on Why, the side. I wouldn't feel safe, got to de-glamorize the press, theater, per cent.

"We've Under proper direction the barber business. back the two-bit and start picketing some modern barber should now, in the course of thc final solution, be brought to the east in a suitable way for use, as labor. In big labor gangs, with separation of the sexes, die Jews capable of work brought to these ureas and tlcment main office. "2. At the beginning of the meeting the chief of the security police and the SD, SS-Obergr'uppenfuehrer employed In rondb'ulkling.

in which task undoubtedly a great part will fall out through natural diminution. "The remnant that finally is able to survive all this-- since this is undoubtedly the part with the strong- Jewish problem and he pointed out eje ish problem the govcrn then that the officials had been in- ment gener They a re primarily viced to this conference in order to res 0ns mty of the chief of thc clear up' the fundamental problems. i security po icc and the SD and The reichsmarschall's request was supportcd the agen have a draft submitted to him eovc rnmcnt general. He thi tcrial organizational, physical.and one rcqu cst, that requirements with respect to I pro olcm in th is territo) thc final solution of thc European I qulckly as possible his gencics had thc Jewish I'itory be solved Fifty Ago 1897 The Northwestern Telephone Company has placed a new long distance cabinet in the New Jewel hotel, The Burlington Railway company is building o-iTM, i platform enst of the Minneapolis Brewing Company's lush oi problem previous general consultation by the central ol'flccs directly concerned. In order that there should bo coordination In the policy.

The primary responsibility for the administrative handling of the final solution of the Jewish problem will 'rest centrally with the rcichsfuehrer-SS and the German police the chief of the se- boundaries boundai es warehousc for use by the Cudahy Packing Company. Among the recent appointments of postmasters i a a Lnc thcreartor gave a brier mcieaiLLr K-ivi. unci this vicinity arc those of Mary L. Blumentrltt at New Hartford and'R, W. Bondy at Dover.

Seventy-five Years Ago 1872 There are fancy paper holders, inlaid and other ornamental pieces of furniture in the show window of Winkle's establishment. There is another place to weigh hay now. Charles Miller, grocer, has put a scale in front or his store in Erpcldlng block. The old St. Cecillans, and other musicians of thc city, have organized for a nings.

number of pleasant eve- review of the battle conducted up to now against these enemies. The most important phases arc: Forcing the Jews out of the various phases of thc community life of the German people. Forcing the Jews out of the Lebonsraum of the German people, "Meanwhile, I i of the dangers of an emigration during the war and In view of the possibilities "In conclusion thc various kinds of solutions were discussed, and here both Gauleiter Dr. Meyer and also State Secretary Dr. Beuhler advocated that certain preparatory tasks in thc course of thc final solution be performed immediately in the territories concerned; in this, however, any disturbing of thc population must be avoided, "With the request of the chief of the security police and thc SD to those participating in the conference to afford him their support in the carrying out of thc tasks in connection with the solution, the conference was concluded." shops." Pythias Roudelay had been listening to his friend's oration with growing uneasiness.

"Alpheus, I wish you would drop this whole campaign," he said. "Why?" asked the surprised reformer, "Well, my wife uses a bowl to give me a haircut," said the poefplain- tively. If your economy program succeeds everybody may start doing the same thing. You'll Just innate the price of bowls and cost rr.e money in the long run." by his gallant rescue of two men. neither of whom wanted to be rescued.

The first, Livingston, in 1870, is the one for which lie Is more generally remembered; the second, nearly two decades later, resulted In the return to civilization of Dr. Emin Pnsha, a lieutenant of General "Chinese" Gordon's. Emin's rescue was almost a kidnaping; and Miss Manning has made the most of it in this dramatic account. When in the 1880's thc fanatical forces of Mohammed Ahmet, the self-proclaimed Mahdi, began to rise against Egyptians and English along the Upper NUc, Emin, a German-born scientist, linguist, meatless, poultryless, eggless day when there is an excess of meat, poultry and eggs in this country? Why would Luckman's dramatization be involked to reduce the fat of cattle and fowl when the world is crying for more fat? Answer that one, Charlie? to Equatoria, where thc natives slit his throat. They were strange men, these adventurers in dangerous dark which are shooting or boring in character.

Headache is often associated with ringing In the cars, poor hearing, and sometimes attacks of dimness. Pntn In Tooth disorders may cause pain in one temple. When a headache of this type occurs, X-ray examination of the teeth should be carried out. Reflex headaches.may be caused by indigestion or dyspepsia, as well as by constipation. The head pain in such cases is generally dull and spreads over thc entire head.

Frequently, pain is less after a bowel movement. Similar In women, disorders affecting womb may produce headaches of similar nature to those caused by digestive dlsordcrs. From these facts, it may be seen that to determine thc cause for headache, a complete and careful examination is necessary. Only after thc cause of thc headache is found, can any effective treatment to get rid of It be carried out. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS R.

What can a person do to get rid of freckles? Answer: Freckles are due to excessive pigmentation of spots in skin. There is not mucb that can done to get rid of freckles. bleaches have been used, but pain and irritation that they arc far more troublesome than the freckles themselves. I suggest that you forget about thc matter. Los Angeles Driver Wins Midget Race Chicago Ronnie Householder of Los Angeles won the 200- lap championship race yesterday which concluded the midget automobile outdoor racing season Soldier fleld before 18,000 fans, Householder's time for the lone grind was 56:56:22.

Wisconsin U. Third in Judging Contest City --)-- The Univer- Afrlca, and Uhls story about them sity of Wisconsin team placed third A 1 rfvoH is as fascinating ns the best fiction, in the annual Intercollegiate llve- and more gruesome than many stock judging contest held yester- novcls. Our fathers, who will- re-1day in connection with the Amert- member the headlines, will be particularly interested in the book. can Royal Livestock show. State won the contest.

doctor, pianist, midcentury romantic nnd friend and admirer of'Gor- don's. was governor of Equatoria. Thc English public, incensed at the English government for being 48 hours too late to save Gordon; at Khartoum, demanded action, and Stanley was asked to give up a well paying lecture tour in this I country, where he had fought on sides in the Civil war. to head the relief expedition. FACILITIES Many people are unaware ol the numerous service features available at the Borzyskowskl Mortuary at no additional cost features which add immeasurably to the beauty and dignity of a Borzyskowskl service.

Friendly, homelike, atmosphere, air conditioned, personalized service, convenient park- liig facilities available. READING and WRITING By W. G. Rogers Reluctant. Rescue, by Olivia.

They sot their man who how- Manning fDoutlcday; Henry Morton Stanley, a Welsh- ever in his first night out of danger expressed the wish never to see man. made a fabulous reputation Stanley again. Emin later returned JOHN t. BORZYSKOWSKJ Licensed Embalmrr and Funeral Director in Minnesota and Wisconsin Corner Broadway and Mankato AYCQUC Phone 3001 WINONA. MINNESOTA.

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About The Winona Republican-Herald Archive

Pages Available:
38,838
Years Available:
1947-1954