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The Winona Daily News from Winona, Minnesota • 20

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Winona, Minnesota
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20
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July 8, 1966 WINONA SUNDAY NEWS The Daily Record At Community Memorial Hospital Visiting hours: Medical and surgical patients: 2 to and 7 to 8:30 p.m. (No children under 12.) Maternity patients: 3 to 3:30 and 7 to 8:30 p.m. (Adults only.) FRIDAY Admissions Randy Northouse, Winona Rt. 1. Percy Giles, Lewiston, Minn.

Margaret Cusey, 1078 W. St. Melissa Merchlewitz, Utica, Minn, Jacqueline Zeches, Cochrane, Wis, Discharges Mrs. Raymond Kulas, 4325 7th, Goodview. Karen Angst, 414 39th Goodview.

Mrs. Theodore Stinson and baby, Fountain City, Wis, Theodore Kruse, 219 Grand St. Herbert Nichols, 33 Fairfax St. Mrs. LeRoy Johnson and baby, Fountain City, Wis, Mrs.

Christina Schroeder, 478 W. Howard St. Joseph G. Plinski, 425 63rd Goodview. Suzanne Smith, 1276 W.

Broadway. Kevin Scattum, Rushford, Minn, Michael Lombardo, 4450 8th Goodview. Births Mr. and Mrs, Carroll Kjos, Rushford, a son. Mr.

and Mrs. Donald Borck, Lewiston, a son, SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Mrs. Roger Coon, St. Paul, Minn. DISCHARGES Mrs.

Margaret Cusey, 1078 W. King St. Mrs. James Byrne and baby, 186 E. Howard St.

Barbara Ellinghuysen, Lewiston, Minn. Theresa Flanigan, Houston, Minn. Miss Diane Palubicki, 519 E. End St. Kendall Lee Wiskow, St.

Charles Rt. 2. Mrs. Gerald Sorenson and baby, 860 E. 2nd St.

Mrs. Arnold Sather, Hotel Winona. Mrs. Eugene Ciszak and baby, W. 5th St.

Mrs. Gerald Daley and baby, Eyota, Minn. SATURDAY'S BIRTHDAYS Deann Hermanson, 4. SUNDAY'S BIRTHDAY Archie I. Welch, Charles 4.

MONDAY'S BIRTHDAYS Becke Ann Hansen, Cochrane, 8. Marriage Licenses Donald J. Bauer, 653 W. Sarnia and Kay C. Holtz, 502 E.

Mark St. Philip A. Uhl, Galesville, and Joan S. Brokaw, 656 Grand St. Robert E.

Formolo, Mequon, and Rachel R. Speltz, Milwaukee. Charles C. Young, Hibbing, and Marleen S. Young, E.

3rd St. Edward W. Eversman, Rochester, A and Blanche N. Hennessy, St. Charles, Minn.

WINONA DAM LOCKAGE Flow 27,600 cubic feet per second at 4 p.m. Saturday. Friday 11:20 a.m. Cayuga, 7 barges, down. 12:15 p.m.

-Nelson M. Broadfoot, 4 barges, up. 6 p.m, Stanton K. Smith, 12 barges, down. 7:45 p.m.

Dan Luckett, 12 barges, down. 8:15 p.m. Jack Estes, 2 barges, down, 8:35 p.m. Invader, 3 bargdown. p.m.

Badger, 7 barges, up. 10:20 p.m. Wayne 4 barges, up. Small craft 52. Saturday Small craft 65.

ONLY MAY FLOWER HAS Accredited MOVING MEN For your protection, sock man must meet rigid quirements and pass a strict national test. EATER DIFFERENCE SERVICE MAKES HODGINS MAYFLOWER Winona Rochester Red Wing Guantanamo Runs Smoothly Despite Peril EDITOR'S NOTE Whenever Fidel Castro wants to create a little crisis, there's a natural target the U.S. Naval Base on Guantanamo Bay. There the Navy sits, and there it means to stay, and the result is a strange mixture of peacetime living and wariness. An AP military affairs writer, fresh from a visit, provides an intriguing close-up.

By FRED S. HOFFMAN AP Military Writer and suburbia. Out on the fence line, riflebearing Marines stand roundthe -clock vigil, studying the silent Cuban hills and fortifications for signs of trouble. Batteries of howitzers point their muzzles toward Fidel Castro's Cuba. A couple of miles inside the zigzagging entrenchments wives of Navy men park their babies in a play pen while they shop a at the commissary.

Women do their chores in comfortable, one story. frame homes set among and purple flowers and palm trees. The 8,000 inhabitants of this great naval base are aware of hostile Cubans on the other side of the 17.4-mile fence. There are occasional incimuch worried that the Cuban dents, but nobody seems a very a Communists will try to take over the base. The relaxed atmosphere can be summed up in a remark to visiting newsmen by Rear Adm.

Earl R. Crawford, who commands Guantanamo: "We certainly sanction no acts that are going to antagonize the people on the other side of the fence. (AP) This American enclave is a peculiar mixture of fortress "I think we'd be a little silly if we tried to break out and take this end of Cuba." And conversely, Navy Capt. Ray Gossom, Crawford's chief of staff, said of the Cubans: "We do not think they intend to attack." Nonetheless, the United States has been strengthening the base perimeter, not with a any urgency but as a gradual improvement, A battalion of Marines, plus the artillery and tanks, has the main responsibility for guarding the base. There was a rash of attempted infiltrations from the Cuban side earlier this year.

Floodlights were removed from a golf driving range and erected along the six-foot-tall chain-link fence to discourage any more incursions. Officers say it has worked, and they are hoping to ring the entire 45-square-miles with such lights. The young Marines, who spend about four months on perimeter duty, are worked hard SO hard and so long that, their officers say, they are too tired at the end of the day to worry about a lack of girls. Somewhat typical of the Navy wives living here is Shirley Kelton, wife of a lieutenant. Mrs.

Kelton said she never had had the feeling of being under siege "I've never even thought about it." The Keltons and their two children, a boy, 17, and a girl, 12, are being reassigned to Cecil Field, and Mrs. Kelton i is sorry to go. The Keltons have been stationed at Guantanamo for three years, a year 1 longer than normal. Movies are the main evening entertainment, for the attached and unattached. About a half a dozen flicks are available at various places on the base any evening.

There's beer and conversation at various service clubs. Some 2,500 Cubans used to file SUNDAY JULY 3, 1966 Winona Deaths Richard J. Zieman Richard J. Zeman, 10 months, 255 W. 2nd died suddenly his home Friday at 8:20 p.m.

He was born here Aug 15, 1965, to Henry and Diane Sveum Zieman. Survivors are: His parents; two brothers, Arlen, 5, and Gordon, Mins. maternal grandmother, Laura Sveum, "Graveside services will be at Woodlawn Cemetery Tuesday at 2 p.m., the Rev. A. U.

Deye of St. Martin's Evangelical Lutheran Church officiating. Friends may call at the funeral home until noon Tuesday. Gustave F. Stoehr Gustave Frederick Stoehr, 78, Gilmore died at 7:35 a.m.

Saturday at Community Memorial Hospital. He had been in failing health the last several years. He had been a carpenter, retiring about 20 years ago. He was born Jan. 3, 1888, in New Hartford Township, Winona County, to Frederick and Bertha Retzlaf Stoehr, He lived his lifetime in this area.

He married Helen Burley here Aug. 20, 1914. Survivors are: His wife; three daughters, Mrs. James (Ruth) Thompson and Miss Esther M. Stoehr, both of Kettering, Ohio, and Mrs.

Marlin (Betty) Klingerman, Rochester; 4 grandsons; three brothers, Herbert and Emil, both of Winona, and Ernest, Elgin, and three sisters, Mrs. John (Alma) Celius and Mrs. Frieda Cummings, both of Winona, and Mrs. Robert (Selma) Rott, rural Winona. His parents and a brother, Frank, have died.

Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday at Fawcett Funeral Home, Rev. Murray W. Deming, Kettering Seventh Day Adventist Church, Kettering, Ohio, officiating. Burial will Li be in Woodlawn Cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral home Monday from 7 to 9 p.m. A memorial is being arranged. Winona Funerals Mrs. Minnie Kroner Funeral services for Mrs. Minnie Kroner, Chicago, a former Winona resident, were held Saturday at Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, the Rt.

Rev. Msgr. Harold J. Dittman officiating. Burial was in St.

Mary's Cemetery. Pallbearers were James Kroner, Carl Lang, in Thomas Pierce Tubbs, Elmer Schuh and Fred Thurley. Weather OTHER TEMPERATURES By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS High Low Pr. Albany, clear 88 58 Albuquerque, clear 88 61 Atlanta, rain 78 68 .48 Bismarck, cloudy 86 66 1.21 Boise, cloudy 92 58 Boston, clear 78 69 Chicago, clear 80 73 Cleveland, clear 88 62 Denver, clear 86 56 Des Moines, clear 90 72 Detroit, clear 87 61 Fairbanks, cloudy 83 61 Helena, cloudy 82 58 Honolulu, cloudy 87 75 .01 Indianapolis, cloudy 94 69 Jacksonville, cloudy 85 74 .31 Kansas City, clear 89 76 Louisville, cloudy 95 72 Los Angeles, cloudy 80 64 Memphis, cloudy 92 70 .45 Miami, cloudy 82 78 .30 Milwaukee, clear 87 64 clear 94 73 New Orleans, cloudy 89 68 .03 New York, clear 87 72 Okla. City, clear 101 68 Omaha, clear 86 71 Philadelphia, clear 90 63 Phoenix, clear 106 74 Ptind, cloudy 66 64 Rapid City, clear 87 59 .48 St.

Louis, cloudy 94 71 .15 Salt Lk. City, clear 87 64 .24 San clear 61 53 Seattle, cloudy 55 52 .02 Washington, cloudy 92 75 Winnipeg, rain 77 65 .15 TWISTED BRIDGE Intense heat warped a Columbus, Ohio, steel bridge carrying Cleveland Avenue over Interstate 71 after it was struck by a gasoline tank truck (left) which exploded and burned Tuesday Schools Problem For U.S. Baptists By BILL RAWLINS NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Southern Baptists, torn between a need for money for their schools and keeping church and state a apart, have reached the midway point of a two-year study on the question of federal aid. The conclusion so far: No conclusion.

It boils down to "how far separated you want church and state to be," said Franklin Owen of Lexington, president of the Kentucky Baptist Convention. As a Baptist newspaper editor put it: "We came with the answers and left with the questions." The observations came during the first national conference of the Baptist Education Study Task. Federal aid was not the only question studied, but it de- PRESS AGENT NEW YORK (P) The Rolling Stones have announced that they can't get hotel rooms here because of their enthusiastic fans, so they will stay aboard 8 rented yacht while in the area for concerts this summer. Their American manager has contacted the New York City Department of Marine and Aviation, requesting permission to put a net around the yacht. Purpose is said to be to foil teen-agers who might try to swim out and board the yacht.

TREASURE ISLAND NEWCASTLE, Wyo. (P) The Newcastle city library suspended the overdue fines of any book returned to the library during library week recently. One Newcastle man took advantage of the offer and returned a novel by Robert Louis Stevenson, The book was 40 years overdue. If assessed, the overdue fine would have amounted to about $292. through the gate every day to work at various industrial and housekeeping tasks.

This force of "commuters" has withered to about 500, and they are subject to harassment at home. Until only a few weeks ago, the main gate from Cuba was just a few yards from the northeast gate of the base, and Castro's soldiers were in clear sight as they checked--and sometimes searched--the Cubans who hold jobs on the base. Recently, however, the Castro government moved its "search house" back about half a mile behind a hill, There are 375 Cubans who are permanent residents of the base, refugees who dare not go home. PASSING OF THE ASTOR The Ho- 62 years. The last 150 guests will check out tel Astor, located in New York's Times to make way for the wreckers and a proSquare, has called it quits after nearly posed 40-story office building.

(AP Photofax) JOHNSON (Continued from Page One) Two-State Deaths Joseph Brake GALESVILLE, Wis. Joseph Brake, 75, Galesville, died Friday evening at La Crosse Hospital after a prolonged illness. He was born Feb. 11, 1891 at Potosi, to Henry and Elizabeth Gerhardts Brake, and had lived in Galesville nine years, Married to the former Anna Ackermann in 1913, he was a member of St. Mary's Catholic Church, Galesville, and the Catholic Knights of Wisconsin.

Surviving are: His wife; two sons, the Rev. Joseph L. Brake, pastor of St. Mary's Church, and Norbert, La Crosse; a daughter, Mrs. Maynard (Marie) Hagen, Sparta, and eight grandchildren.

A brother and a sister have died. Funeral services will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Thomas Church, Potosi, Wis, Burial will be in St. Andrew Cemetery, Tennyson, Wis, A special funera Mass will be said at 10 a.m.

Tuesday at St. Mary's Church, Galesville, Friends may call after 7 p.m. Monday at Smith Mortuary, Galesville. Michael E. Leonard WABASHA, Minn.

(Special)Michael Eugene 7, died Friday at 8:30 p.m, at St. Elizabeth's Hospital of complications resulting from 1 measles. He was admitted to the hospital Tuesday. He was born Feb, 16, 1959, at Wabasha to Mr. and Mrs.

Engene Leonard, Survivors are: His parents; three sisters, Deborah, Kathryn and Patricia, and one brother, Gregory, all of Wabasha, and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Leonard, Reads Landing, and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pearson, Braham.

Funeral services will be Monday at 9 a.m, at Abbott-Wise Funeral Home, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. John Gengler officiating. Burial will be in St.

Felix Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m, today. Roy Vetsch CALEDONIA, Minn, (Special) Roy, Vetsch, 70, died suddenly at his home at 1 a.m. Saturday. He was born Dec.

15, 1895, Houston to Mr. and Mrs. John Vetsch, He married Lillian Rudisuhle June 17, 1920, They lived on a farm at Mound Prairie until moving to Caledonia seven years ago. He was a veteran of World War 1, serving overseas. Survivors are: His wife; three sons, Edward, Caledonia; Leland, Houston, and Allen, Rochester; nine grandchildren; three brothers, Andrew, La Crosse, and Gilbert and John, Caledonia, and two sisters, Eva, Rochester, and Mrs.

George Doering, Caledonia. Funeral services will be Monday at 10 a.m. at the Presbyterian Church, the Rev. Glen Pearson officiating. Burial will be in Union Ridge Cemetery.

Friends may call at PotterHaugen Funeral Home this afternoon and evening and at the church after 9 a.m. Monday. Carl Wineland LAKE CITY, Minn. Carl Wineland, 75, died Saturday morning at St. Marys Hospital Rochester, after a week's illness.

He was born Jan. 17, 1891 in Pioneer, Ohio, the son of Mr. and Mrs. George Wineland. He married Ethel Nelson, Jan.

11, 1915 in Minneapolis and they came to Lake City 17 years ago when he became owner and operator of Lake City Machine Shop. Before coming to Lake City he worked for Minneapolis Honeywell. He's survived by his wife; a son, Orville Lindstrom, Minnesota; a daughter, Mrs. Virginia Bower, Minneapolis; six grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. Lula Lister, Hillsdale, Mrs.

Victor Van Aken, Jackson, and Mrs. Marian Jordan, Detroit, Mich. A daughter and three brothers are dead. Funeral services will be at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at First Congregational Church, Lake City.

Burial will be at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at Lakewood Ceme tery, Minneapolis. Friends may call at PetersonSheehan Chapel here Tuesday and until time of services Wed- nesday. AWAY FROM PRODUCT LOUISVILLE -Among the tourists marooned in hotels by a recent snowfall was Walter Immel of Streator, Ill, Immel is president of a firm which manufactures snow plows and salt spreaders. PENCIL DOT PORTLAND, Ore.

(R--A scale so sensitive it can weigh a pencil dot is used by Omark Industries, here to measure industrial diamonds for the diamondimpregnated blades and blades and drills it manufactures for use in cutting concrete, masonry and stone. the Marine Corps; and Kingman Brewster, president of Yale University, Three of the commission members are Negroes. Moyers told newsmen at White House press headquarters in San Antonio: "The President is charging the commission with the responsibility of considering the past, present, and, Selective future Service functioning System in the light of the following face tors: "1. Fairness to all citizens. 442.

The nation's military manpower requirements. "3. Reducing uncertainty and Interference with individual careers and education. "4. Social, economic and employment conditions and goals.

"5. Any other factors deemed relevant by the commission." Moyers said the commission's recommendations would cover the following: "1. Methods of classification and selection of registrants. "2, Their qualifications for military service. "3.

Grounds for deferment and exemption. 44. Procedures for appeal and the protection of individual rights. Organization and administration of the Selective Service System at the national, state and local level." truck driver, Harry Reynolds, 56, of suburban Lockbourne escaped with minor injuries. Officials say it will be about two days before the area is opened to traffic.

(AP Photofax) BILL MERRIL'S veloped the only real controversy. The 275 Baptist leaders at the conference agreed to wait until a similar meeting next June for any decision on federal aid. Even then, the decision will not be binding on any school. Six of 22 study groups at the convention agreed to let each educational institution make its own decision. This, however, apparently will fall short of effecting a solution, for several reasons: 1.

Most of the 73 educational institutions, including 54 colleges and universities, which Southern Baptists own, are controlled by separate boards of trustees and owned by state baptist conventions. The state conventions allow the co colleges varying degrees of autonomy, but many Baptist college officials have complained that their state conventions exercise veto rights particularly where federal aid is concerned. 2. The Southern Baptist Convention itself, which owns only its theological seminaries, voted at its recent national convention to oppose federal aid. 3.

Where federal aid has been accepted by Baptist schools, it is no problem. Where it has not been and is desired it almost always has been because of opposition from the Southern or state conventions. Dr. Felix Robb, who soon steps from his post of president of George Peabody College, a non-Baptist school, in Nashville to head of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, opened the conference with a plea for federal aid. "If Baptists really believe in Christian higher education," he said, "they must double, triple and even quadruple financial support to their During the next year, this report will be discussed by nearly 10,000 Baptists meeting in 200 churches throughout the nation; in 24 regional seminars across the nation next January through March and, without doubt, on college campuses and in church congregations throughout the country.

The Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant denomination in America, has 11.7 million members. INTERNATIONAL MOSAIC FLEET, England (P) A 19-foot-high mosaic, originally intended for an Ethiopian cathedral but rejected because it was judged too Western in style, is being adapted to fit the new Roman Catholic Church of Our Lady at Fleet in Hampshire. The mosaic, depicting the Madonna and Child, had been designed for Addis Ababa by Dr. J. Bajo, a Hungarian artist living in England.

HOLDING BACK NEW YORK (P) Pope Paul's visit to New York produced a record-breaking number of blockades. The Police Department reports that a record 000 barriers, gray-painted wooden structures, were placed at strategic locations for the Pope's historic visit Oct. 4. SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS Can pay for all your insurance for Business Home Car Life when it's Federated INSURANCE Call Jerry Anderson Box 444 Phone 2552 Winona, Minn. If at once you do not succeed, it has been suggested that you try, try again.

But what is to be said of those that won't try at all? The defeatist is whipped at the starting line and there's no fulfillment in that. But give a worthy cause a try and life takes on a keen edge filled with accomplishments. I expect I give as much rise to the subject of zest as I do to effort. The spirit behind a good effort is so closely knit with even trying, that to separate effort and zeal is difficult. A good and purposeful try embodies spirit and drive, while a feeble try is just that for the lack of zeal.

Being a defeatist must be miserable life. To such a one opportunities are not looked upon with anticipation, but rather as reminders of one's lack of confidence. "No use applying for a new job offer," the defeatist reasons. "I wouldn't get it anyway." By not applying, it's for sure he won't get it. Even the most menial task is sometimes avoided for the lack of courage though there would be considerable advantage and satisfaction in accomplishment.

I READ of a man whose little child came on the scene with a broken and bent toy that to the child meant a great deal. "Fix it, daddy," came the request. "Daddy can't fix it," came the terse reply. "You can try," said the child. Even a small child saw merit in a simple but honest try.

The man being so challenged took the toy and to his own amazement, he could and did fix it. If he hadn't have tried he couldn't have had this satisfaction. There is a rule that will prove itself to those that at least try. The rule is, "If you believe you can do a thing, you can do it." So accurate is this rule that it is amazing. Its simplicity is marked in the opposite if you don't believe you can do a thing, thus you don't try, and the end result is that you won't do it.

BEFORE I GET into hot Moyers said changes of regulation or the law might lead to young men in similar circumstances being treated the same way throughout the country. Also to be considered, Moyers said, are the desirability of drafting men right after high school or college, steps to reduce the rate of rejections for service, evaluation college student deferment practices, and the most appropriate way of selecting college-trained men for the armed forces. FIRE CALLS Friday 1:57 p.m. 414 Dacota Richard H. Darby garage, children ignited blankets in garage attic, fire out on arrival, West End station responded to the call, Friday 1:57 p.m.

414 Dacota garage owned by Richard Darby, children had ignited blankets in attic of garage, out on arrival. AID TO THOUSANDS DALLAS (P) Health and welfare programs carried on by the Methodist Church served a record 1,921,055 persons during 1965, the denomination's Board of Hospitals and Homes reports, 137,000 more than the year before. a person has tried and failed, but failure itself is not a sure sign that a thing can't be done. It may better be an indication as to whether or not you really believed in your ability in the first place. Too often we approach a task like many young people approach marriage.

They allow that if it doesn't work, they can always get a divorce. They build in a weak line and then wonder why their marriage failed. I admit there are some things I can't do, and so I will never try. But when I look back on my own past, I can see whatever I tried and failed at, was mostly a case of giving up-not a case of not being capable of doing whatever it was. Most of us know our limitations.

It's only that we often dampen our ability by not first trying. If it's worth the effort, give it a whirl. If you believe you can do whatever it is, all things being equal, it's BEFORE I GET into hot is, all things being equal, water, I had better admit many la fact you can. Are You asking for trouble? Overload home wiring and you may end up with an electrical fire. Be safe! Let our trained electrical perts stop trouble before it starts.

CALL 5512 FOR FREE SURVEY KLINE DICING "Serving Winona For Over Half a Century" 122 West Second St. Phone 5512.

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