Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Winona Republican-Herald from Winona, Minnesota • Page 9

Location:
Winona, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1953 THI WINONA REPUBLICAN-HERALD, WINONA, MINNESOTA Red Tape Ties Up Russian Jet Held by Panes COPENHAGEN, mark Iffl- i lomatic complications multiplied today among Denmark, Poland, Britain and NATO over the Russian-built MIG-15 jet fighter landed by a Polish Air Force lieutenant on the Danish Baltic island of Boraholm. While the pilot, claiming to be a political refugee seeking asylum, was being grilled at Copenhagen police headquarters, Polish Minister Dr. Stanislaw Kelles-Krauz delivered his second stiff note to the Foreign Office demanding that the plane and pilot be handed' back to Poland immediately. However, U. S.

Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway's Supreme Allied Headquarters was reported trying to persuade the Danish government to hold the plane, the first MIG-15 to fan undamaged into Western hands. Danish military authorities said they were "shocked and surprised" to learn that Wing Comdr. F.

R. Jeffs, the British air attache here, had flown to Bornholm in a private plane to examine the MIG. Some sources said the Danes had confiscated photographs the British officer made of the plane's interior. Jeffs said he "went to Born- les. holm with the sole intention of assisting the Danish experts.

I turned over my film to them." The disputed jet still sat at Bornholm's tiny Roenne Airport, where the Pole made his hazardous landing Thursday after streaking at 600 miles an hour from the Polish coast, 60 miles away. Danish Air Force specialists continued to arrive from Copenhagen to scrutinize the fighter. It was learned the MIG would be dis-assembled today and put on a ship for Copenhagen. To prevent' The Daily At Winona General Hospital (Visiting hours: 2 to 4, 7-8 p. FRIDAY Admissions Miss Sharon Heaser, 1610 W.

5th St. Miss Elaine Heaser, 1610 W. 5th St. Mrs.Carl Singer, 120 E. Howard St.

Mrs. Elizabeth Callahan, Minne- iska. Gus Wildgrube, 464 Howard St. 0. J.

Fawcett, 379 W. Broadway. Mrs. J. M.

Henry, Homer. Mrs. Lloyd Daniel, Rollingstone. Births Mr. and Mrs.

William King, 515 Olmstead a son. Dr. and Mrs. John Tweedy, 503 W. Broadway, a daughter.

Discharges Mrs. Joseph Helgerson and baby, 616 W. 4th St. Saturday, March 7, 1953 Two-State Deaths Kermit Hanson BLACK HIVER FALLS, Wis. (Special) Kermit Hanson, 42, director of the Jackson County public welfare department, treasurer of the Jackson County Fair Association and prominent throughout the county in Red Cross and March of Dimes work, died suddenly early today of a heart attack.

Hanson had been in apparently good health. He was not known to have a heart condition. He suffered the heart attack early this morning and died before he could be transferred to a hospital. Hanson became deputy county clerk under his father, Hans K. Hanson, more than 20 years ago.

He later became a case worker in the welfare department and was promoted to director of the department when that position was created Dec. 1, 1947. He was president of Group 2 of the Wiscon- Glen Mullen, West End Cab-1 sin Association of Pension Depart- Mrs. "George Jasnoch and baby, 657 Olmstead St. Mrs.

Frank Stolpa and baby, 107 Chatfield St. Mrs. Charles Lueck, 425 S. Baker St. Herman Richter, 617 W.

Howard St. Mrs. Charles Krause, St. Char- Miss Elaine Heaser, 1610 W. 5th ments and vice president of the state organization at the time of bis death.

Born at York March 3, 1911, and raised at Northfield in the Taylor- Hixton area, he helped his father Wjnona Deaths Amanda Mrs. Amanda Nuerenberg, 52, former Winona resident, died Thursday in Minneapolis after an illness of several months. A native of St. Cloud, she lived in. Winona during a portion of the 30s while her husband, Karl, was a federal agent here.

He is now head of the division of investigation in the state public examiner's office. A daughter also survives. Funeral services will be Monday. Burial will be in Ft. Snelling National Cemetery.

Mrs. Joseph Grain Funeral services for Mrs. Joseph Grain, Pacific Grove, formerly of Winona, were conducted at 10 a. today at the Borzyskowski Mortuary, the Rt. Rev.

J. Grabowski officiating. Church services were conducted at Pacific Grove. Burial was in St. Mary's Cemetery.

Pallbearers were Raymond and Ralph Wendt, Sylvester Allaire, Everett Laak, Edward Wieczorek and Harold Atwood. Mrs. Maud Baum Mrs. Maud Gage Baum, aunt of operate a store in Northfield un- i a Winonan and wife of the late L. til the father became county clerk, Frank of The family moved to Black River Falls, and he was graduated from Calif.

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS Raymond DuBois 476 Belleview 8. Municipal Court Parking deposits of $1 were for- Black Falls High School in 1929. He took business courses at the University of Wisconsin and was employed for a time by the Jackson County Bank at Alma Center before he was employed by the i county. I He was vice president of the Jackson County Chapter, National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis; vice chairman of the Jackson County'Red Cross drive, and county chairman of the county youth committee prior to organization of interception by Polish or Russian feited by Charles Hafner, 516 W. ships a Danish naval vessel Joseph Nation, 1276 W.

i Broadway (on two counts); Joseph Hair Styling Clinic Slated for Sunday Hair styling and other phases of beauty culture will be, discussed and demonstrated at the Style body clinic to be sponsored here Sunday by the Winona Hairdressers and Cosmetologists Association. Sessions "will open in the Sky- room at the Hotel Winona at 10 a.m. Sunday. An afternoon meeting is planned to follow a noon luncheon. The clinic is one of a series of four being presented in Minnesota this winter by the Hair Styling Body of the Minnesota Hairdressers and Cosmetologists Association.

Members of the body who will be here to demonstrate and talk on various phases of the work include Robert Howard, and Oliver Thein, Minneapolis; Frances Hart, St. Paul, and George Krasean, South St. Paul. Hair styling, scalp treatments, permanent waving, and hair tinting as well as beauty treatments are to be demonstrated during the day. THOUSANDS (Continued from Page One.) can be seen almost staggering under gigantic wreaths.

There's a shuffle, shuffle, shuffle of thousands of people's died Friday in feet. And a great hush. Then that She would have been 92 sound that comes from thousands March 27. Four sons survive. Miss Elsie Gage, 328 W.

5th is a niece. Recital Scheduled For Church Fund MINNEAPOLIS UFT-Antal Dorati, Minneapolis Symphony orchestra conductor, and two colleagues today scheduled a recital as the opening move to raise funds for the provide an escort. Official sources refused to say Gallagher, 411 Sioux and Carl- what will happen to the fighter, ton Neville, Winona Rt. 2, for me but it was learned that Denmark's ter violations; Mrs. Earl Chedes- top metallurgical experts have been ter, 4160 6th Goodview; James asked to stand ready to analyze i Buswell, Minnesota City, and Sei the secret alloys used in it.

Collapses at Behrens John Sadowski, 70, Reception Ho-1 tel, was taken in an ambulance to (fert-Baldwin Motor 121 W. 4th for overtime parking. AFL UNION MEETINGS the Winona General Hospital early Local 231, International Brother- years an had been ill one month. the county community council. recently fire-razed St.

Olaf's Catho- Survivors include bis wife, the lie church here former Louise Hinch; two children, Jane, 13, and Ronald, 11; his parents, living at Black River Falls, and two sisters, Agnes, Wisconsin Rapids, and Mrs. Helen Hagen, Black River Falls. Funeral arrangements are incomplete. The Ness Funeral Home, Black River Falls, has charge. Mrs.

KofhrinB Honey FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. --Mrs. Kathrine Haney died at 9:15 p.m. Friday at St. Joseph's Hospital, Arcadia.

She had lived there two upon thousands talking in whispers in open places. I reached the open double doors of the building and walked in beneath a tremendous portrait of the generalissimo the portrait four I or five times bigger than the doors themselves. Inside, uniformed men indicate the way. People come in two abreast, or three abreast. The line keeps moving into a high hallway, up some stairs.

To another corridor. Into still another corridor. We turn to the left and hear the soft muted music of a multi- Soil Conservation Service personnel and district supervisors from Winona County prominent in plans to combine the county's three SCS districts conferred at Lewiston City Hall Friday afternoon where the plan was deferred until November. Seated, left to right, are C. P.

Crawford, secretary of the combined organization of supervisors; Clinton W. Dabelstein, chairman, and Marion'Roberts, Rochester, area conservationist. Standing, left to right, are: George Hass, president of the Winona County Fire Fighters Association; William Sillman, Winona County farm planner; John F. Daley, chairman of a three-man committee reporting on the consolidation, and John Bergler, a member of the committee with. Hass and Daley.

(Republican-Herald photo) Tschaikovsky melody. Spotlights Rev. Leonard F. Cowley, pastor, stringed orchestra playing on an said the offer wa made in a phone elevated stage. I recognize a sad call by Dorati.

It will mark the first time the conductor has performed on the piano in Minneapolis. He will appear with Rafael Druian, concertmaster, on the violin, and Robert Jamieson, first cellist. The concert, set for March 21. will be played in the Hotel Radisspn ballroom. It is open to the public.

Rep. Judd Visits Ike WASHINGTON UB Rep. Judd SCS Postpones Dissolution Of Districts to Next Fall LEWISTON, Dissolution of Winona Icy Blast Whirls Into Central Area By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A blast of icy air from Central Canada sent temperatures tumbling County's three soil toe North Central states today, from the corners of the room bear I report of a special supervisors' down upon the wreathed bier in committee appointed a month ago the middle of the room. to study the consolidation. Pre- There is a perfume of massed siding was C.

'W. Dabelstein, Wmo- conservation districts and formation of one district for the county with readings as low as 23 below as a whole was approved in principle here Friday afternoon, but 2ero some areas, formal action was delayed until late next fall after farmers' field work is completed. Thirteen of the county's 15 soil conservation district supervisors met at the City Hall to hear the Friday afternoon when he became hood of Bookbinders, ill and collapsed while visiting Labor Temple. the Mfg. West 3rd Winona Building Construction (R-Minn) called on President Ei-1 building.

spring flowers. The shuffle, shuffle, sound of feet. The heavy silence of people in the presence of the dead. Literally thousands of wreaths were in the room and in the corridors adjoining it. I don't see how they can get ma'ay more into the UDeral services will be Wednes- senhower today but refused after- and Grand streets.

He was released from the hospital and returnee 1 to his home after examinations revealed that he apparently was not seriously ill Trades Council, p. Labor Temple. Local 183, International Union Laundry Dry Cleaners, Wednesday 8 p. Labor Temple. Winona Trades Labor Council, When the United States bought Wednesday 8 p.

Labor Temple. Alaska from Russia in 1867, it i estimated that there were abou 30,000 people in the area, abou two-thirds of whom were Eskimo and Indians. Your favorite NEWS commentators are on KWNO AM-FM Drew Pearson 5 p. m. Sundays Walter Winchell 8 p.

m. Sundays Taylor Grant 8:15 p. m. Sundays Martin Agronsky m. Mon.

thru Sat. Paul Harvey 12 Noon Mon. thru Fri. all on KWNO end KWNO-FM over Tha American Broadcasting Co, Local 86, Sheetmetal Workers Union, Thursday 8 p. Labor Temple.

Local 799, General i Union, Thursday 8 Labor Temple. TEMPERATURES ELSEWHERE High Low Prec. Duluth 4 -27 Intl. Falls 4 -27 Paul 13 4 Chicago 29 18 Denver 58 29 Des Moines 25 16 Kansas City 36 22 Los Angeles 74 46 Miami 84 68 New Orleans 70 5 New York 43 28 Phoenix 79 48 Washington 67 33 Winnipeg 3 -13 on DON McNEILL'S BREAKFAST Friday 8:15 nil on KWNO 7230 on Your Standard Dial KWNO-FM 97.5 on Your FM Radio Dial at 9 a.m. at St.

Mary's Church. will be said at 4 p.m. the Sanctuary Society at the Florin Funeral Home. William Gaskin EYOTA, Minn. --Funeral services for William Gaskin, 88, will be Sunday at 2:30 p.m., not Monday at 2 p.m.

a's previously announced, at the Methodist Church. Friends may call at the home after 5 p.m. today. OTHER BIRTHS WHITEHALL, to Mr. and Mrs.

Tracy Briggs, Skokie, 111., a daughter Feb. 7. Briggs is the son of H. D. Briggs, Whitehall.

PLAINVIEW, report in this column March 4 that a son was born to Pvt. and Mrs. Floyd Lewis, Ft. Lewis, March 1 at St. Eli2abeth's Hospital, Wabasha, was incorrect.

FIRE CALLS Firemen were called to the Lester Harris residence, 377 West King at 11:50 a. m. today when a chimney fire caused a blaze to I break out in the roof. Damage was confined to the roof. ALSOPS (Continued from 1) les is all the more significant, when taken in conjunction with the Justice Department's handling of the case of that other silly fellow who has been transformed into a national bugaboo, Owen Lattimore.

In the Lattimore case, there was the same proposition as in the Vincent case. Either Budenz was untruthful in accusing Lattimore of being a Communist, or Lattimore was untruthful in denying Budenz's charge. If Lattimore committed perjury at all, this was certainly his most flagrant and positive perjury. Yet the Justice Department apparently preferred to spare Budenz from hostile cross- examination. At any rate, the department left out the main charge and based the Lattimore indict- Sp6akulg STALIN (Continutd from and the state buried near the, Kremlin wall are to be transferred I la where only a few nours ago Malenkov, Beria, Molotov and others of Stalin's closest associates I noticed one in particular -from President Peron of Argentina.

Many foreign embassies and legations brought wreaths with them or sent them along in advance. Stalin's bier, with the lights upon it, is in the very center of every- Every eye is on it. Here is na Rt. veteran SCS supervisor from the Burns-Homer-Pleasant Pleasant district The meeting is scheduled at 1 p. Johnson said, adding an estimated 50 persons from all ma- The cold air extended into the Ohio Valley as far as Kentucky and Tennessee.

But the mid-winter- like weather centered to parts at Minnesota and Wisconsin. It was -23 early today in Bemidji, -22 in Grantsburg, -21 in International Falls, and -11 to it. "The Pantheon will be open to the people." The announcement did not say where the Pantheon would be located, but probably it also will be in Red Square. The miles-long queue of mourners was the chief sign of activity in the black draped city. All theaters, movie houses and other places of entertainment were.

shut down. Solemn music-- Chopin's funeral march and somber works of Tsch- aikowsky, Beethoven, Schubert and Schumann-- swelled from the Moscow radio. Trucks parked bumper to bumper blocked off entrances to most of the city's central streets. Near the Hall of Columns were blockades of soldier's. A huge portrait of Stalin, in marshal's uniform and edged in black, hirhg above the main doors to the Hall of Columns.

It a decked with a bough of evergreen to symbolize that his memory would live. Thousands Body Beneath it, two by two men, grouped around the dead leader's bier for photographs. Just ahead of me in line is the British ambassador, Sir Alvary Gascoigne, in a cutaway coat and morning trousers. There is the Italian ambassador, Mario de Stefano. The American Charge d'af- faires, Jacob Beam, the French ambassador, Louis Joxe.

Chinese diplomats and other Chinese. Stalin's head is away from you. His feet toward you. You move up to the foot of the coffin and look up at the face of the man who led the Russian people for so many years. This man who became one of the best known in history.

Look at the dead face, known in every corner-of the world. The face is stern. The hair is brushed the way you always saw him. His mustache full and neat. His chin a'nd jaw as resolute in death as Strong Face A strong face.

Like the name Stalin, which means "steel." month to be chairman of the combined meeting. Reporting to the supervisors were John F. Daley, for the Whitewater SCS district; John Bergler, Rollingstone Stockton Gilmore Creek, and George Hass, Burnside-Homer-Pleasant. Marion Roberts, Rochester, area conservationist, attended the meeting as an observer. Don't Move 'Too Fast' Daley told the supervisors, "In studying this question we came up with the conclusion that the advantages of consolidation will out-weigh the disadvantages," but he cautioned his fellow supervisors against "moving too fa'st." Roberts assured the men that the Soil Conservation Service remains "neutral." He said, "This is a decision for you and the people of your district to make." C.

P. Crawford, supervisor from the Burns-Homer-Pleasant district and secretary of the combined meeting, observed, "The cost is almost three times as much for three districts as it would be for one. It's a matter of paying the expenses of 15 supervisors compared with paying five." George Hass, chairman of the Winona County Fire Fighters Association and a. supervisor from the Burns-Homer-Pleasant district, said, "If a technician has to work three districts on any one day, he has to make out three separate reports. This is a lot of unnecessary paper work, and it takes up ime the technicians could use to letter advantage elsewhere." Daley made the point: "It's im- jor farming organizations in the in Duluth, Minn.

The twin cities to send of Minneapolis-St. Paul shivered in near zero weather. Some warming was in prospect representatives. At Friday Meeting Attending the meeting Friday were Alvin Herber, Rollingstone; John Schell, Minneiska; Glenn Schultz, Houston Rt. Herbert Speltz, Rollingstone; Bergler; Taylor; Daley; Hass; Crawford; Da- for the mid-continent by Sunday.

Chinese Paper Has Stalin 'Murdered' belstein; Lindley'Smith Dakota; HONQ KONG A Chinese E. J. Steuernagel, Utica and Matt Monarch, Altura, all district supervisors. Alex Siebenaler, Stockton, and Herman Rahn, Lewiston, Winona County SCS technicians; Roberts; i Johnson, and William Sillman, Winona County farm planner. District supervisors unable to attend the meeting were Stockton, and Charles.

Ben John Wachholz, Weics St extra--without naming any source that Russia's- Prime Minister Stalin had been assassinated. Chinese readers, accustomed to extras based on sensational rumors, bought the paper, "New Daily" for only a short while. Alaska is nearly one-fifth as large as continental United States. women and children-- the endless i a choked sob. It came from a wo- Somewhere in possible for the county agent to throng filed slowly and soberly past the bier.

"The dear features of the face, which death had not altered, were familiar to the whole world," said a description of the lying-in-state, broadcast by Tass, the Soviet news agency. In the vast ball, which features 28 white Corinthian style columns and can accommodate at least 2,000 persons, the red velvet- draped coffin rested on a high platform, surrounded by palms and mountains of flowers and wreaths. Black crepe covered the hall's glittering decorations. The marble columns were hung with red ban- ment on a series of wholly subsi-1 ners showing the crests of the 16 diary and relatively trivial state-' ments contained in Lattimore's rambling testimony. Any show of lack of faith in Louis Budenz is a flagrant affront to Sens.

McCarthy and McCarran man. She is crying. The line moves past the bier. I look over my left shoulder and see Stalin in profile. The face seems to show some of the stress of those last days when he lay dying in the Kremlin hospital.

Still, it's as if you might have seen him as you walked quietly into his office and fouad him napping on his couch. 'Notes from the strings swell up again. The woman sobs. The atmosphere abounds in grief. Keeping in line, we move into another corridor, through two more doors and out into the open and cold again.

"Uncle," says a small boy all small boys call older men uncle attend all meetings of all the district supervisors. Under a consolidated setup he could do so, however." Passes Unanimously The chairman of the three-man committee put a motion that the proposed action to dissolve the three districts and consolidate them into one "be deferred until next November when the field season will be over." The motion was seconded by Charles Taylor, St. Charles. It passed unanimously. Dabelstein told the members of the committee they are to "stay active and keep informed on soil conservation sentiment in the county." He indicated the supervisors will be called together again who have used Budenz as the chie) witness in their prosecutions.

From every standpoint, therefore, the settlement of the Vincent case indicates that Secretary Dulles is entirely prepared to stand up to Sen. McCarthy, when he feels his feet on firm ground and knows justice is on his side. The opposite impression lias been created. But this was only because the State Department had never been tightly administered, and had reached a condition close to chaos in the period of transition. Beyond any doubt at all, the department files were in disorder; the security system was all too lax; and the Voice of America had been much mismanaged.

Because of these prevailing bad conditions, Dulles and Under Secretary of State Donold Lurie very definitely did not feel their feet on firm ground when the McCarthy hearings began. They made tactical concessions which were misin- as surrenders to McCarthy. But both the Vincent case and the simultaneous frustration of McCarthy's grab for the loyalty lies more than hint that a new day is dawning. Soviet republics. Above the coffin was a great red banner, edged with black and bearing the words: Proletarians of all countries unite.

An honor guard of Soviet leaders was changed every five minutes. It was opened, Tass said, by a group of nine top greats, listed by the news agency in the usual Soviet order of importance Stalin's successor Maleakov, L. P. Peria, V. M.

Molotov, K. E. Voro- shilov, N. S. Krushschev, N.

Bulganin, L. M. Kaganovich, A. I. Mikoyan and N.

M. Shvernik "At the foot of the bier," Tass continued, "the gold stars of a hero of the Soviet Union and hero of Socialist labor, as well as the orders and medals awarded to J. V. Stalin by the Soviet country, reposed on red satin. "A mass of wreaths -surrounded the bier.

The inscription on a red sash on one of them read: 'To the great leader-teacher of the Communist party and Soviet people, J. V. Stalin from the Central Committee of the Communist Stalin's flag draped coffin had been brought to the hall afternoon by motor hearses' from lie Kremlin hospital where he died. Sorrowing thousands, assembling outside the Kremlin's gate'in the piercing wind, watched. in Russia "did you see Stalin?" to take up the question next fall, "Yes, I did.

Did you?" E. V. Johnson, Winona County "Yes, and I'm going to see him extension agent, requested that again." each district appoint members of its board to serve at a county- He'd better hurry. There mus be more than a million people who have yet to go through tha Hall of Columns as a million must have already gone through. Joseph Stalin's funeral wiK be on Monday.

He will be laid to rest in Old Red Square beside Lenin The same Red Square where I remember seeing Stalin help carry the coffin of his friend, Andrei Zhdanov. The Ainu of Northern Japan are believed to be descendants of the primitive Neolithic inhabitants of the country. IOTTER EAST END COAL CO. I I vor MOKI: iif.vr AT i.nvf:K ro-T wide planning meeting at the nona YMCA March 13 to lay out the county extension program for the year. Appointed to the committee were Taylor and Daley from the Whitewater district; Herbert Speltz, Rollingstone, and John Bergler, Winona Rt.

3, irom the Rolling- ston-Stockton-GUmore district, and Crawford; Lindley Smith, Dakota, and Hass from tie Burns-Homer- SPRINTER Apprevtd lor Training All Clctws cf Count Hand Composition Linotype and Prcsswork Fot FurtfcH InfemillM Write ft GRAPHIC ARTS Technical School 1104 Mlnnupofli I PAID ADVERTISEMENT Prepared and Inserted by Robert Ehaller. Route 1, Cmalaska, Wisconsin, In his own behalf, for wnlch regular political vertlsoment rate is paid, VOTE FOR ROBERT -HOB" SCHALLER REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR State Senator 32nd Senatorial District La and Jackson A Rural Man-Who Will Keep the Rural Problems in Mind. BECAUSE and intelligent representation of 32nd senatorial district demands that tnis pott filled by a man who can correlate of various groups farmers, laborers and businessmen for good of the whole district. To The Farmer-From the time of my first 4-H meeting as a small boy, BOB SCHALLER through the years as a laborer and farm tenant, until my present status as a successful owner-operator of my own farm, I have been intensely interested in bettering the conditions of Wisconsin's rural area. As a lifelong farm resident I have done all in my power to better conditions, through 4-H leadership, sound conservation practices, in the fight for better roads in promoting better conditions in our public schools.

As a school board member, as a legislative committeeman of the Wisconsin Farm Bureau, a member of R.E.A. and several other farm groups, and as a practical farmer, I know first hand the problems of the farmer, TO THE LABORER-As an employee for several years myself. I am acquainted with many of yeur problems; I know your hopes, ambitions, fears and possible current anxieties. As a farm employer, and as an official who helps formulate the policy of personal relations of a sizeable business firm, I take pride in my reputation for sympathetic understanding in handling of employees' problems. TO THE BUSINESSMAN-For the past eight years, I have been associated with a successfully growing business firm in an executive capacity.

As an investor and director I am well acquainted with the tax problem, hazards and difficulties facing you today. If elected to the State Senate, I assure you of intelligent representation. TO ALL- At final word, I feel that I am fortunate to diversified background that enables me to know something of problems of all these various groups. If elected I myself to this knowledge to the advantage of all..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Winona Republican-Herald Archive

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