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The Winona Republican-Herald from Winona, Minnesota • Page 11

Location:
Winona, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
11
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MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1954 THE WINONA REPUBLICAN-HERALD, WINONA, MINNESOTA Iron-On Designs In 3 Colors Johnson Makes Maiden Speech To Congress WASHINGTON, D. C. Freshman Cong, Lester R. Johnson, Democrat of Black River Falls, made his maiden speech on th8. floor of the House of Representatives this morning asking action by the -House Agriculture Committee on his bill to extend 90-per-cent-of-parity dairy supports beyond April 1.

That's the date when price supports will be allowed to settle to 75 per cent parity under an order by Secretary of Agriculture Benson. Cong. Johnson submitted his bill, HR 8388, last week to block Benson's action and give the Congress 120 days' "grace" in which to study the dairy price situation. "It is only 10 days until April 1," Johnson told fellow congressmen this morning, "when Secretary of Agriculture Benson's program to lower dairy products to 75 per cent goes into effect. "I wish to state that I have written to all of my colleagues on the House Committee of Agriculture urging them to give this matter their immediate attention.

I hope that the committee does take action, because the econmoic situation in the dairy industry has become critical. I "It is my understanding," he I luncheon cloths!" aprons, continued, "that no other bill has pillowcases! Dip 'em in suds--the been introduced to take care of this pressing problem facing the dajry industry as of April 1. I wish to state that I do not care if my color designs; bill or some other bill urging the same action is reported out by the committee. But something should be done." 11 The Daily Record At Winona General Hospital SATURDAY Admiuiont Mrs. Sylvester Duane, Lewiston James Schneider, 523 E.

Frpn Man Kills Wife, Wounds Children, lakes Own Life Kan. (ft--A 7-year-old girl telephoned police yesterday and said: "Daddy has shot Mother hUrt himself." (Officers who responded to Stroke of your iron presto! Linens bloom with tea roses! They're butter yellow and tawny orange with leaves of vivid green. They look hand-painted on towels, color STAYS! Make gifts galore, be-'t sellers for your bazaar booth. Pattern 7095 has twelve iron-on four 4Vix4V4 to eight, I 3 to Jiffy! Iron-on! 3'4x8Vi inches; inches. Washable! Send twenty-five cents in coins for this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing.

Send to The Winona Republican-Herald, HOUSEHOLD ARTS P.O. BOX 168, OLD CKEL- SEA STATION, NEW IT, N. Y. Print plainly name, address, zone and pattern number. BRAND-NEW and beautiful -it's the 1954 Alice Brooks Needlecraft Catalog.

Four patterns St, Mrs. Louis Drussell, 318 McBrid St. Hugo Boelter, 4245 7th Good view. Joseph Considine, Knights of Col umbus Club. Birth Mr.

and Mrs. Lyle Krachow, St Charles, a daughter. Diichirgtf Anna Strange, 1011 E. 4th St. Ross Robinson, Cochrane, Wis.

Mrs. Ralph Burdoin, 1168 W. 5th St. Mrs. Gerald Virnig, St.

Charles. SUNDAY Admisiiont Mrs. Gustav Danielson, Dover. Mrs. Severine Paulson, Rushford.

Ernest Shepard, 251 Walnut St. Mrs. Clem Cysewski, 514 E. 3rd St. Mrs.

John Schloegel, Lewiston. Births Mr. and Mrs. Harold Spalding, 609 E. Sanborn a son.

Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Duane, Lewiston, a daughter. Discharges Mrs, Rollins Rasmussen and baby, Rushford. Jerome Wineski, 875 E.

5th St. James Schneider, 523 E. Front St. Christian Holmes, 306 E. Mark St.

Albert Braatz, 429 E. King St. Sylvester Field, 618 Howard St. Mrs. M.

C. Froiland, Winona Rt. Monday, March 22, 1954 Two-State Deaths Mrs. J. H.

Baab UTICA, J. H. Baab, 78, lifelong Utica died Saturday evening at the Mattson Nursing Home, Eyota. Mrs. Baab was born here March 6,1876.

She was an active member of the Utica Presbyterian Church and was Sunday School superintendent there for many years. Survivors are her husband; two daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth G. Conaughty, Winona, and Mrs. W.

J. Midler, Utica; four grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; four brothers, Frank, Utica; Otto, Lewiston; William, St. Charles, and Herman, Winona, and two sisters. Mrs. Minnie Richardson, Galesville, and Mrs.

Anna Thiede, Rochester. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Utica Pres- Dyterian Church, the Rev. S. Frank Moss, Winona, officiating.

Burial will be in the Oakwood Cemetery here. Pallbearers will be her neph- Fpley Johnson Funeral Home, Plainview, is in charge of arrange- meats. Fred C. Husi and rinted insjde- Plus the most pppu- i lar embroidery, crochet, sewing, color transfer designs to send for call found John Leidy, 38, and I id or g(iftsf bazaars fashions. wife Rosemary, 35, dead and I Send 2 cents fo ur now! their two children wounded.

The two children--7-year-old Linda; Sue and John Scott 2. Baby boy Smelser, Harmony. Mrs. Mary Huck, Laird St. Carole Millam, 1215 W.

Broadway. Mrs. Harold Bergler and baby, Winona Rt. 1. GALESVILLE, Wis.

(Special) C. Huss, a resident of Gales- ille since 1925, died at the Veterans Hospital at Wood, Saturday on his 75th birthday. He had been is. ill health for six nonths and had been taken to a Hadison hospital in December, ater transferring to the Veterans Hospital. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m.

Tuesday at the Farley Funeral Home; the Rev. Harold Wisner officiating. Burial will be in H. L. McNallan officiating; Burial will be in the Calvary Cemetery.

The Rosary was said at 3 o'clock this afternoon and will be said at 8 o'clock tonight at the Sellner Funeral Home. Friends may call at the funeral home until the time of service. She was born Aug. 8, 1865, at Rollingstone, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Peter Reiland. She was married to Peter Zeches May 12, 1884, at Rollingstone. The couple lived on a farm near St. Charles for five years before moving to the city. Zeches died in 1930.

Surviving are two sons, Edward, St. Charles, and Ernest, Morris, two daughters, Miss Delia Zeches, St. Charles, and Mrs. G. G.

Baer, New Ulm; a sister, Mrs. Mary Miller, Arcadia, 11 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren, La Roy Bjorge ARCADIA, Wis. CSpecial)--Den- nis LaRoy Bjorge, born Feb. 7 to Mr. and Mrs.

La Verne Bjorge, died Sunday morning at his home after an illness of two days. He is survived by his parents; one brother, La Verne three sisters, Jowayne, Delane and Arlene, and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Urbick, Arcadia, and Mr. and Mrs.

Olaf Bjorge, Blair. Funeral services will be at 9 a.m. Wednesday at St. Michael's Catholic Church, North Creek, the Rev. Jerome Kamla officiating.

Friends may call at the Killian Funeral Home tonight and Tuesday afternoon and evening. Galen MINNESOTA E. Blair CITY, Minn. -Galen E. Blair, 63, Minnesota City, PEPIN AUDIT BOARD PEPIN, Wis.

(Special) The --were shot while they sat in the i board of audit of the Town of Pepin bathtub. will meet at the village hall and Scotty were in the bath-: day at 10 a. m. Members of the stone. tub and I was washing Scotty when town board include: BoJand John- Ijheard three loud noises in the i son, chairman; Dallas Milliren and kitchen," Linda Sue told officers Herman Sunclquist, supervisors, and VA few minutes later.

Daddy; Arthur Sundberg, clerk, opened the door and pointed the i giin at us and it went boom boom A I ROCK CAUCUS --then I went to sleep." MAIDEN ROCK, Wis, (Special) OTHER BIRTHS PHILADELPHIA, to Lt. Cmdr. and Mrs. Henry G. Hirschfield, a son March 9 at the U.

S. Naval Hospital here, Hirschfield is the son of Mrs. Henry Hirschfield, 210 E. Wabasha St. ROLLINGSTONE, Minn.

(Special)--Born to Mr. and Mrs, Charles Schell, Minneiska, a son March 18 at St. Mary's Hospital, Rochester. Mrs. SchelT is the former Miss Rita Guenther, Rolling- the Pine Cliff Cemetery.

Friends (died Friday evening at a i apolis hospital after an illness of night and Tuesday until the time i a vear of service. Members of the Rowles- i 1, McBride American Legion Post! Blair a farmer was born in Iowa, will serve as pallbearers and con-1 nd had lved at Hayward, be- duct military services at graveside fore coming here in 1950. He was Born March 20, 1879, at Rock the child At the village caucus in the the gion Hall Tuesday evening Russell Police remained unconscious from time she was wounded until she Julian was chosen chairman of' telephoned them. Detective Charles Prowse said meeting with Wilbert Julian as clerk. Louis Miller was nominated Leidy, an electrical engineer, shot; to succeed himself as a member of his, wife and children and then the village board at the April 6 election.

The caucus committee for next year is composed of Raymond committed suicide, apparently aft- erj'an argument with his wife over a dress alteration she was making, L.YanVand R. The children were reported re covering. Pepin Village Caucus Nominates Candidates PEPIN, Wis. (Special)--Thiity- nine votes were cast at the village caucus Thursday evening. Jack Thorp opened the meeting.

Walter Hartman was elected chairman and Richard 0. Hem clerk. In trustee balloting, incumbent Vincent Samuelson will be opposed by Julius F. Jahnke; George Goble, incumbent, by George Schruth, and Harry Valine, incumbent, by Arthur Purdy. Gus Fink received a majority of volts for assessor, but declined the nomination.

WYKOFF ACCIDENT WYKOFF, Minn. (Special) -Cars driven by two Iowa men were slightly damaged but Jhe drivers escaped injury Sunday at 2 a.m. when one machine sideswiped the other, which was parked on Highway 80, 4 miles east of here. Fillmore County Deputy Sheriff Walter Kruegel said a driven by MARRIAGE LICENSES William D. Ostergren, St.

Paul and Phyllis G. Rohre'r, 459 Broadway. Lorin H. Kilstofte, 272 Bierce and Carol J. Ask, 626 Olmstead St Municipal Court Selmer Julson, St, Paul, forfeit' ed a $15 deposit for nonappearance on a charge of driving 60 miles an hour on Highway 61 from its junction with Highway 14 west to the city limits.

The arrest was made by the Minnesota Highway Patrol at 12:40 a.m. Monday. Donald Brugger, 915 40th Goodview, forfeited a $10 deposit on a charge of operating a motor vehicle with ao driver's license. He was arrested by police on West Mark street at 12:20 a.m. today.

Parking deposits of $1 were for- "eited by James Beeman, N. J. Lemar J. Erdahal, 20, Cresco, Fischer, J. B.

McMartin'and Iowa, came around a corner and meter vio i a ti ons EU- sideswiped the parked car of Orel Engelhardt, 24, Chester. Damage to each was estimated at $35. In 1940, about one U. S. civilian jobholder in 13 worked for a federal, state or local government, compared to one in 9 today.

Television Schedules received from Uit TV statiom ana are published paper li not responsible (or Incorrect listings. a publlt TONIGHT Ryan Newi Should Know Murray -Camel uaravap THal Tune of Firestone Day Prwen 714 Headline! Weather Sports at Large Theater TCESDAT Urlm Grim TONIGHT Adams News 6: IS-- Rollie Johnson Sports Tower Edwards News Perry Como and Allen Godfrey Love Lucy Buttons One Squad Newt Tower Theater Roundup Owl Playhouse Slim Off TUESDAT News Morning Show News Morclng Show TONIGHT Capers Rabbitt Closeups Going Places Snoppe ll the Life Dcy Mnnctomery Said That KSTP-TV -CHANNEL I Grim Grim Dong Scnool Man's Family Lee Show Lee Show Doody Jr. Jamboree PhOtoquli Three Steps to Heaven Stan and Groom Falls or Pay Robert! in Sight Road 5 Trie for Vour Money Ber Baxter Smith Smith Kale Smith Travelers Your Account WCCO-TV-CHANNEL 4 Morning Show Godfrey Time Godfrey Time Godfrey Time It Rich Lady of Life for Tomorrow Guiding Light at Noon Window Program Moore Show Moore Show Garry Moore Show Llnkletter Llnkletter Bis Payoff Crosby Crosby the Town KEOC-TV CHANNEL 10 O'clock Edition on Music Miracle Theater TUESDAI PM Pattern Smith Show Local Light on Music Tales Lee Howdy-Doody WEAC-TV-CHANNEL II of the News Ryan News You Should Know Shore News Berle Theater Theater for Yourself Led Three Lives Headllr.es 10-15-- Hawf's Weathei comer TV Theater Theatei Playhouse School Show Hall Adams News With Johnson Weather Edwards News Stafford Show F. J. Sheen Skclton Millie Wrestling News Tower Playhouse Roundup Owl Playhouse Off 6M5 Cartoon Capers Weather News Whatever the Weatter Berle MO-VDAI Patern 5-00--Someone's in Kitchen 15--Take a Break Wonderful the News Whatever the Weather Klernan's Kaleidoscope a Break Rider for the Show Melodies the News Eight the Weather Crusader Rabbitt Milton Berle Show Life Is Worth Uvtaf The Vlsitoi ScoUand Yard Novelty Time Pathe Hi-LJtes Ten O'clock Edition Weather Theater of Stars Troubleshooter Parade Thirteen Off TUESDAY Pattern Sheen of the News the Weather Parade Thirteen Off gene Meyers and Duane Mathias, for i parking; Frank Spooner, for parking in a no-parking zone, LaVerne Hornberg, for double parking; E.

J. Condon, for overtime parking, and Roy Kulas, for alley parking. TEMPERATURES ELSEWHERE High Low Prtc, Duluth 40 29 .03 Int'l FaDs 35 28 .03 Paul 42 33 ,15 Chicago 42 27 Denver 51 30 Des Moines 51 37 Kansas City 50 43 Los Angeles 67 52 .33 Miami 82 60 .08 New Orleans 71 45 New York 44 29 Phoenix 72 57 ,08 Seattle 53 29 Washington 44 28 Winnipeg 38 21 DAILY RIVER BULLETIN Flood 24-hr. Sragt Today Chg. Island, 111., Huss came to Gales ville in 1925 as a flour miller.

He was employed at the feed mill after flour milling was discontinued. Huss served with the Army in France during World War I and was discharged with the rank oj corporal. Surviving are his wife, the former Miss Phyl M. Smith, whom he married May 28, 1920, at St. Paul, and their daughter, Mrs, David Collier, Milwaukee.

Two sons by an earlier marriage, Lawrence, Adair, Iowa, and Albert, Atlantic, Iowa; a brother, William, Adair, Iowa, and four grandchildren also survive. John P. Quickstad PETERSON, Minn. (Special!) Peter Quickstad, 78, a lifelong resident, died at his home here Sunday night following a heart attack. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.

Born here April 16, 1875, the soil of Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Quickstad, he worked with his father making wagons and sleighs as a boy and entered a partnership with his father to 1900 in the operation of an implement and blacksmith shop.

He continued to operate the business after his father's death in 1913 and purchased his mother's interest in 1919. For the past several years he had operated a service station at the same location. He married Miss Hilda Thompson April 15, 1917. She survives as do a son, Wilbur, Grand Rapids, a sister, Mrs. Andrew Boyum, Peterson; a brother, Manvel, Hettinger, N.

three grand- several nieces and 14 12 13 4.0 7.3 4.3 5.5 3.4 4.5 6.0 8.9 5.9 8.3 9.8 4.Z 6.0 Red Wing Lake City Reads Landing Dam 4, T.W. Dam 5, T.W. Dam 5-A, T.W. WINONA Dam 6, Pool Dam 6, T.W Dakota Dam 7, Pool Dam 7, T.W La Crosse 12 Tributary Strumi Chippewa at Durand 3.2 Zumbro at Theilman 6.0 Trempealeau at Dodge 2.8 Black at Neillsville 5.5 Black at Galesville 3.5 La Crosse at W. Salem 1.8 Root at Houston 6.2 "Root at Hokah 40.5 RIVER FORECAST (From to Gutttnbtrg) During the next two days the streamflow will increase in the Mississippi with greatest increases of .5 to .7 of a foot at the tailwaters of dams in the lower end of the district.

WINONA DAM LOCKAGE Sunday 11:45 a.m.--Ceree, light, down- tream. 12:55 p.m.--U. S. Fern and ice- ireaker, downstream. 9 p.m.

Ceree and one -barge, ownstream. children and nephews. Benjamin Brown HOKAH, Minn. (Special) Benjamin Brown, Sri, died at his home Saturday morning after an illness of several Brown, known as "Butler," was a lifelong resident of Hokah. He was born Oct.

30, 1869, to Christopher and Margaret Brown in the home where he died. In his early life he worked on the railroad out of Ashland, and in later years he operated a nearby farm until his retirement. He is survived by two nieces, Mrs. Owen Miller, Chicago, and Mrs. Helen Reck, Gary, a nephew, Charles Archibald, Pittsburgh, and a cousin, Miss Mary Welch, who has been with him ents a member of the Masonic lodge at Hayward.

Survivors are his wife; one daughter, Mrs. A. L. Haddad, Winona, and one grandson, Rocky Haddad. Funeral services will be Tuesday at 1 p.

m. at the Weilander-Quist Funeral Home, Minneapolis. Mrs. Augusta Bohri FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. Mrs.

Augusta Bohri, 82, whose husband was the late Fred J. Bohri, local banker, died at her home Saturday. She had been ill since last June. She was born here Nov. 16, 1871, the daughter of Adam and Elizabeth Schuster.

She was married Sept. 14, 1897. Her husband died in 1934. She was a member of the Sanctuary Society of Mary's Catholic Church here. She is survived by one son, Waldemar, Fountain City; two daughters, Ethel, Fountain City, and Olivia, Madison, and two jrandchildren, Ann and Jean Bohri.

Four brothers and two sis- are dead. Funeral services will be at St Mary's Catholic Church here Wed nesday at 9 a.m., the Rev. L. iang officiating. Friends call at the Bohri borne after 2 p.m Tuesday.

Father Lang wiU lead the Rosary at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at the home, and at 7:15 p.m. members of the Sanctuary Society will recite the Rosary. Burial wi! be in the Fountain City Cemetery. Mrs.

Brian Carroll CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) -Mrs. Brian Carroll, 71, died suddenly at her home here this morn- A Huge Cloud of smoke rose from a burning building in the 1200 block of West Madison street in Chicago, Sunday, in the heart of the "skid row" district. The blaze started in the Elroy Manufacturing and spread to a four-story apartment building and a six-story factory building. Alex Koot, 70-year-old pensioner, lost his life, The damage was estimated at $75,000.

(AP Wire- photo) Firemen End Up Reviving 3 in Mill City Family MINNEAPOLIS The fire department rescue squad wound up by reviving three members of the family when it was called to use a resuscitator on Mrs. Frank Bielke, after an asthma attack caused her to lose consciousness Saturday. Assessor Nominated By Whitehall Council WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) -The Whitehall City Council held a special session Friday evening to nominate a candidate for assessor. Norman Anderson, who served ID the office last year, was nominated and his name will appear on the spring election ballot April 6.

Alfred Olson, nominated at the regular meeting of tie council March 8, declined because of busi- When the squad arrived, 11-year-1 Dess plans old Shirley Bielke was in front of Nomination papers on behalf of the house crying, Upon seeing the I Anderson were filed in January, but ing. Funeral services will be held at 8:30 a. m. Thursday at the Blaschke Funeral Home "and at 9 since the death of his par- in 1900. Three sisters, Mrs.

Nellie Archibald, Katie and.Anna, are dead. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 1:30 p. m. at the home and at 2 p. m.

at the Methodist Church, the Rev. Lee Workman officiating. Burial will be in Mount Hope Cemetery. Relatives and friends may call at the home this afternoon and evening. Charlas A.

Pfaligraf LEWISTON, Minn. (Special) -Charles A. Pfalzgraf, 79, died Sunday morning at the Winona General Hospital after a'short illness. Pfalzgraf was a retired carpenter and a former businessman of both Lewiston and Winona. He was a member of St John's Evangelical and Reformed Church, Lewiston.

Survivors are two brothers, Jake and William, Lewiston; a niece, Mrs. D. J. McOormick, St. Peters- a.

m. at St. Peter's Catholic Church, the Rev. A. E.

Werners- kirchen officiating. Burial will be in the Calvary Cemetery. I The Rosary will be said at the funeral home at 8 p. m. Wednesday.

Friends may call there at 7 p. m. Tuesday. Surviving are a son, George, 472 W. Wabasha Winona; three daughters, Mrs.

Howard Towey, Stewartville, and Mrs. Harold Leary and Mrs. Marie Hoffman, both of Caledonia; a brother Henry, Caledonia; a sister, Mrs. Peter Ernster, Caledonia, and nine grandchildren. STOLEN PROPERTY Radio Clem Mertes, 561 E.

4th from his car while it was parked at the Nick Mertes home, near Fountain City, Saturday night. The report was made to Buffalo County authorities, Winona police and Sheriff Georga Fort. TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS Gary Lynn Winona Rt. 3, firemen, she fainted. One fireman helped Shirley while the others applied the resuscitator to her mother.

While seeing the firemen work on Mrs. Bielke, her husband collapsed of a heart attack. He also was revived. Houston County Farm Bureau Groups Plan Mill City Police Seek'Getaway Car' Driven by Woman MINNEAPOLIS UK Authoritiei Sunday were on the lookout for a "getaway car" driven by a woman that outdistanced pursuers Saturday afternoon following a holdup. Two holdup men forced grocer Oscar Langer, his wife and a clerk to lie on the floor of the store while they rifled the cash register.

The bandits then took $15 from the clerk's wallet and $20 from. Mrs. Langer's purse. CALEDONIA, Minn, --Monthly meeting plans of Houston County Farm Bureau units were announ ed today by Farm Bureau officer of the county association. Mee ings scheduled during April fo which plans are complete are April 1 The Black Hamme Farm Bureau unit will meet a the town hall with Harold Poesch county SCS farm planner, speak ing on "What's New in- Soil Con servation?" L.

A. Holm, Alber Holm and Melvin Ike are the program and lunch commi 1 e. April 8 The Hokah Five Sta Farm Bureau unit will meet a Hokah Auditorium with Mis Harriet Pratt, 'county home agen: discussing "Findings in Foo Freezing." John Fokeman will als speak. His subject will be "Th Trends in Hokah Township members havi charge of the program, am Brownsville members will furnish unch. Members of the family tour com.

mittee to be sponsored by the coun Farm Bureau are Donald Carl on, Wesley Happel, Wayne Han on, Ed Luehr, Clarence Eikens Jnus Ernster and Fokema. he declined. Officials, however, were able to prevail upon him to ct money, the run for the office unm dashed into a car, driven The council voted to allow $600 I ODe of two women waiting it it. to the assessor elected April 6 to Danger ran from the store and hire assistance in making up the assessment roll. This will be in addition to the regular $400 salary TREATED FOR CUT B-ert Benedict, 75, 82 was treated at tl E.

Front a facial cut suffered ped and fell on a sidewalk at East 3rd and Carimona streets. See EDSTROM'S Show on 1C ROC Channel tO Mondays 7:15 P. M. burg, and several cousins. Funeral arrangements are incom-1 plete pending arrival of out-of-town relatives.

The body is at the Werner Funeral Home. Mrs. Anna Zechef ST. (Special)-Mrs. Anna Zeches, 88, died Saturday afternoon at St.

Mary's Hospi- taJ, Rochester, where she -was taken following a fall in her home here Saturday morning. Mrs. Zeches, who had been in failing health for several years, suffered a fractured hip in the fall. Funeral services will be held at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday at the St.

Charles Catholic Church, the Rev. C-E TV 7 fo 4 Winner of Nationwide JL Picture Comparisons G-E Voted Best 7 to 1 Nationwide WE SERVICE EVERYTHING WE SELL BB ELECTRIC 116 Center Street Phone 4245 for the assessor, Joe Wilczek, superintendent of the water department, was authorized to attend a school for such officials at Madison April 23-24. Two-Headed Baby's Condition Critical INDIANAPOLIS Ufl The two- headed Hartley baby remained in fair but critical condition today for the fifth straight day with pneumonia on the left side. The 3-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs.

Cecil Hartley of Petersburg, was brought to James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children here after oxygen treatment at home to the left head failed to relieve a breathing difficulty. hailed a taxi. The bandits' car outdistanced the taxi after a four- block chase. Langer told police he didn't know exactly how much money the pair took from the till, but said it was a large amount. Chinese Assembly Re-elects Chiang TAIPEH, Formosa (B-- Nationalist China's Assembly today re- ilected President Chiang Kai-shek as expected by an overwhelming majority of 1,507 to 48.

The 67- year-old soldier-statesman i serve a six-year term. His opponent was Democratic Socialist eader Hsu Fulin. People who live on farms make up about 15 per cent of the popula- ion of the United States and have about 5 per cent of U. S. income.

that costs less WHEtf YSU BUY IT! Today's bigger, heavier Ford Tractor has ample power for the great majority of jobs on the great majority of farms. And you get this power at lower cost. You pay less as a direct result of the Ford Motor Company's resources, mass production efficiency and engineering skill. AS YOU USE IT! You get plenty of power and real operating economy, too! For Ford's big bore, low friction engine saves fuel, oil and upkeep expense. AS A LONG TERM INVESTMENT! Quality parts, the kind of service you need and higher resale value make your Ford Tractor a better long term investment in low cost tractor power.

Get Proof of Ford Tractor economy. Find out how many jobs you can do with matched Dearborn Equipment. Stop in soon and see what makes the Ford Tractor today's outstanding power value 1 REITER-MURPHY, Inc. Plainview, Minn..

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About The Winona Republican-Herald Archive

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