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The Winona Daily News from Winona, Minnesota • 17

Location:
Winona, Minnesota
Issue Date:
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17
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Daily Record At Community Two-State Deaths Memorial Hospital Visiting hours: Medical and surgical patients: 2 to 4 and 7 to 8.30 p.m. children under 12.) Maternity patients: 2 to 3:30 and 1 8:30 p.m. (Adults only.) FRIDAY ADMISSIONS Robert Murphy, 174 E. 5th St. Fritz Colbenson, Rushford, Minn.

Tami Roach, 710 1 W. Wabasha St. Mrs. Marvin Hammer, Cochrane, Wis. DISCHARGES Leah Rhoden, 271 E.

Howard St. Mrs. Ervin Romine, 714 Wilson St. Harry Vick, 119 Zumbro St. Gerald Rinn, 511 Garfield St.

Debra Schossow, Rushford, Minn. Nancy Stark, Altura, Minn. Mrs. William Rall and baby, Galesville, Wis. Olson, Utica, Minn.

Mrs. Robert Ramer, 112 Chatfield St. Ervin Kleist, Rushford, Minn. Owen Gaasedelen, Rushford, Minn. BIRTHS Mr.

and Mrs. Norman Toulou, 921 1 E. Sanborn a son. Mr. and Mrs.

Kent Dzurick. 403 W. Wabasha a daughter. Mr. and Mrs.

Donald Fort, 660 E. Mark a son. Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Nelson, 352 E.

5th a son. SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Mrs. Leslie Balcome, St. Charles, Minn. Vergin, 466 High Forest St.

Mrs. Herman Smith, Lamoille, Minn. DISCHARGES Tami Roach, 1710 W. Wabasha St. Mrs.

Henry Quarve and baby, Rushford Rt. 1, Minn. Warren Hill, Altura, Minn. Mrs. Helmut Lueck, 1497 W.

4th St. BIRTHS ELSEWHERE ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) At St. Joseph's Hospital: Mr. and Mrs.

Allen Ackley, a daughter June 9. Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Kennebeck, Fountain City, a son June 10. SHEFFIELD, Ohio Mr.

and Mrs. Bernard J. Lauer, a son, born Friday. Mrs. J.

B. Lauer, 1212 W. Wabasha is the paternal grandmother. MARRIAGE LICENSES Rodney L. Hansen, 411 W.

Sanborn and Rita Ramona Gensmer, Rollingstone, Minn. Steven Heiting, 462 Main and Ellen Casper, 1550 W. King St. Richard W. Flatten, 853 E.

Mark and Sharon K. Buege, 853 E. Mark St. Michael B. Thill, Rt.

1, Wi. nona, and Janice B. Sobeck, Rt. 1. Verlyn J.

Raaen, 769 W. King and Kay M. Leslie, 642 ry Lane. Dennis L. Rivers, 721 E.

Wabasha and Suzanne K. Erdmann, Rt. 19, Winona. William C. Gray, Westbury, N.Y., and Jennifer A.

Sheets, 422 W. King St. Louis R. Milavickas, W. 4th and Patricia K.

Collignon, Woonsocket, S.D. Thomas R. Enerson, 1171 Wesminister, St. Paul, and Jayne L. Perkins, 523 W.

Sanborn St. Gilbert A. Moe, Richland Center, a and Beth M. Ritchie, Plum City, Wis. James W.

Schaub, Alma, and Carole M. Becker, 607 W. King St. Stephen J. Mracheck, 620 Lafayette and Judith K.

Swigart, 125 E. Broadway. Weather DAILY RIVER BULLETIN Flood Stage 24-hr. Stage Today Chg. Red Wing 14 6.8 .6 Lake City 9.8 .5 Wabasha 12 8.7 .2 Alma Dam 6.9 .4 Whitman Dam 5.5 .3 Winona Dam 6.5 .2 WINONA 13 7.9 .1 Tremp.

Pool 9.3 Dakota 9.5 Dresb'ch Pool 9.4 Dresb'ch Dam 6.7 La Crosse 12 8.4 Tributary Streams Chippewa at Durand 7.5 Zumbro at Theilman 3.8 Tremp. at Dodge 5.8 .7 Black at Galesville 6.2 .2 La Crosse at W. Sal. 9,3 Root Houston 9.4 Root at Hokah 44.5 RIVER FORECAST (From Hastings to Guttenberg) Red Wing: 7.4 Sunday, 8.3 Monday, 8.9 Tuesday and crest 9.5 Wednesday. WINONA: 8.2 Sunday, 8.6 Monday, 9.0 Tuesday and crest at 9.2 feet Wednesday.

La Crosse: 8.6 Sunday, 8.8 Monday, 8.9 Tuesday, crest at 9,0 Wednesday. A 9.5 crest is expected at Durand. Monday. The Root crested at Hokah at 49.2, 2.2 feet over flood stage, Friday night. SATURDAY BIRTHDAY Kelly Marie Schlueter, 845 38th Goodview, 7.

Action Council Told of Rural Program Future RUSHFORD, Minn. Robert "Bob" Carlson, director of the governor's Office of Economic Opportunity, told the second quarterly meeting of the Southeastern Minnesota Citizens Action Council here Wednesday night that Community Action programs in rural Minnesota have a chance to create opportunities. Two new members were elected to the council to fill cancies: Dean Calish, Mabel, and Jean Olson, Chatfield. Mrs. Mary Jo Peterson, Mabel, was elected to the board of directors to succeed the Rev.

Bruce Boyce, Mabel, who resigned to take a church at White Bear Lake, Minn. CARLSON said rural areas, with no visible ghetto or downtrodden minority groups, have widely scattered but definite groups to serve. "We have few starving poor but many opportunity poor," he stated. Programs operating work with specific segments of society will be of real value to all people of the state, he declared. Carlson emphasized that local involvement through volunteer help in carrying on these programs and donations of space and utilities are the most effective way to prevent the tion" "long from arm of reaching federal into direc- local communities.

He praised members and staff for willingness to channel their talents and activities into the struggle to combat, through democratic action, forms of poverty long ignored. Arne Boyum, director of the Neighborhood Youth Corps, reported 90 young people working for non-profit organizations Fillmoreworksites in the Houston- county area. Warren Galbus. director of Head Start, reported 130 children 4 and 5 years old attending classes at five centers. JOHN MANAHAN said about 100 boys and girls are involved in the summer enrichment program for teen-agers in the Thurley Housing Project in Winona, a youth project program.

Donald Stapf, deputy director of the council, discussed two programs for senior citizens. Two centers have been funded in Winona through the Department of Health, Educaand Welfare and 13 centers for older adults the more rural areas of the three counties have been approved verbally for funding by the 0EO. Dr. Lawrence Poston, Cale. donia, president of the council, reported on the proposed rural health teams program.

Halvor Lacher, director of the council, discussed cooperation between the council and Upward Bound proiect at the College of Saint Teresa and highlighted the total project funding. The board held a short business meeting after the council session at Tew Memorial Library, Rushford. Area Agency Buys Microfilm Camera LA CROSSE, Wis. A microfilming camera has been purchased by Cooperative Educational Service Agency 11 serving parts of Trempealeau and Buffalo counties, announces R. B.

Tremain, coordinator. It is available for use by school districts. Agency schools are asking for therapists. Qualified persons should notify the agency, which has an office in the La Crosse County courthouse. William Hossick, psychologist who has been working with the agency since March, has tested 115 students.

"OF THIS number," he said, "I would estimate that 10 percent were incapable of handling learning problems of their age and grade level due to lack of native ability. reading and inadequate motivation and study skills are believed to be the primary causes of difficulty among those who are unable "He handle will their continue work in testing school." during August and September. The annual meeting of this and other agencies will be held Aug. 14 at 2 p.m., with delegates attending from each school district. Tremain is asking for maps of each school district not yet sent to him for use by the agency school committee.

Camp Cancels Visitors Day A visitors' day, scheduled for this afternoon at We-No-Nah Day Camp, has been called off, according to Larry Schiller, YMCA youth work secretary. Schiller said muddy conditions at the camp site and lack of parking space had prompted the cancellation. Visitors' days also have been cancelled for the season and will not be re-sched(uled, Schiller said. Sunday, Jane 18, 1947 WINONA SUNDAY NEWS 17 Garrity (No CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) -Miss Helen Garrity, 82, died to Saturday at 5 a.m.

at Evergreen Rest Home where she had Miss Helen Garrity Claus Lee MONDOVI, Wis. Claus Lee, 86, died about noon Friday at Luther Hospital, Eau Claire, where he had been a patient three weeks. He was born July 28, 1880, in the Town of Dover, Buffalo County. He farmed in that area all his life. He was a member of the East Bennett Valley Lutheran Church, His wife has died.

Survivors are: One brotherin-law: one sister-in-law, and nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be Monday at 1:30 p.m. at Kjentvet Son Funeral Home, Mondovi, the Rev. Alton Hillesland officiating. Burial will be in the East Bennett Valley Cemetery.

Friends may call at funeral home from 5 p.m. today to time of services. Karl A. Ramsin PEPIN. "lied Karl Axel Ramsin, 82, Friday at St.

Benedict's Community Hospital, Durand. He was born March 9, 1885, in Varlend, Sweden. Since coming to this country in 1919 he had worked as a laborer in the Pepin area. He was a resident of the Lake Pepin Manor Rest Home, Pepin, before being taken to the hospital. Survivors are: Two sisters, Mrs.

Inez Holtman, Winnipeg, Manitoba, and Mrs. Sara Hedberg, Washington, D.C. Funeral will be Tuesday at the Pepin Methodist Church, the Rev. Robert Vars officiating. Burial will be in Oakwood Cemetery, Pepin.

Friends may call at the church Tuesday from 9:30 a.m. Goodrich Funeral Home, Durand, is in charge. been a resident several years. was born Nov. 7, 1884 in Hokah to Mr.

and Mrs. Edd Garrity, Survivors are one brother, Lawrence, and one sister, Mrs. Ed Collier, La Crosse. Private services will be committal, p.m. at the Mount Hope Cemetery, Hokah, Rev.

Thaddeus Derezinski, St. Catholic Church, Caledonia, officiating. Steffen Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. There will be no visitation. Claus Lee Mrs.

Cora Hoover MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) Mrs. Cora Hoover, 82, Rock Falls Rt. 2, died early Saturday morning at Luther Hospital, Eau Claire, where she had been a patient six hours. The former Cora Isham, she was born Nov.

30, 1884 to Ira and Clara Isham in the Town of Albany. She was married to Joseph Hoover Oct. 9, 1900. They farmed in the Town of Albany until 1944. They then moved to Rock Falls.

She a member of the Royal Neighbors of America. Survivors are: Four sons, Wallace, Cudahy: Russell, Eau Claire: Gale. Phoenix. and Willie, Rock Falls: three daughters, Miss Eva, Minneapolis: Mrs. Robert (Bessie) Norrish.

Mondovi, and Mrs. Mildred Shaken, Eau Claire: 22 grandchildren; 34 great grandchildren; one brother, George, Mondovi, and five sisters. Mrs. Stella Peden and Mrs. Landis (Florence) Mikesell.

ie: Mrs. Etta Lawrence and Mrs. Ruth Ehlert, Mondovi and Mrs. George (Pearl) Mikesell, Eau Claire. Her husband died Aug.

17, 1958. Funeral services will be Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at the Mondovi Congregational Church, the Revs. Donald Aisenbrey and Clarence Johnson ting. Burial will be in East Pepin Cemetery.

Friends may call at Kientvet Son Funeral Home Monday after 4 p.m., Tuesday until 10:30 a.m., and after that at the church. A devotional service will be held at the funeral home Monday at 8 p.m. WINONA DAM LOCKAGE Flow 54,300 cubic feet per second at 8 a.m. Saturday. FRIDAY 11:55 -Dan 9 barges, "Small craft 10.

SATURDAY 10:10 a.m. L. Wade Childress, 13 barges, down. 10:45 a.m. Minnesota, 7 barges, up.

12:20 p.m. Baxter Southern, 2 barges, up. COMING MEETINGS OF GOVERNMENTAL BOARDS Monday City Council, 7:30 p.m., City Hall. Tuesday Housing and Redevelopment Authority, 7 p.m., Arthur C. Thurley Homes community room.

Thursday Board of Zoning Appeals, 7:30 City Hall. City Planning Commission, 7:30 p.m., City Hall. VIETNAM VICTIM WASHINGTON (AP) Army Spec. 4 Richard G. Brown, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Leland Brown of rural Clearwater, has been killed in action in Vietnam, the Defense Department reported Friday. SUNDAY JUNE 18, 1967 Winona Funerals Mrs. Gertrude Schuminski Funeral services for Mrs. Gertrude Schuminski, Arlington Heights, formerly of Winona, will be Monday at 9:30 a.m.

at Watkowski Funeral Home and at St. Casimir's Church at 10, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. J.

W. Haun officiating. Burial will be in St. Mary's Cemetery, Friends may call at the funeral home after 2 today. Rosary will be said at 8, Two-State Funerals Mrs.

William H. Melby BLAIR, Wis. (Special) Fu. neral services for Mrs. William H.

Melby were conducted Saturday at Zion Lutheran Church, the Revs. L. H. Jacobson and K. M.

Urberg officiating. Burial was in Lincoln Cemetery, Whitehall. Pallbearers were Hillerd Elland, Harry Paul, Francis Herreid, Melvin Hjerleid, Donald Johnson and Jerome Mattison. Funeral Home Changes Hands BLAIR, Wis. (Special) The Frederixon Furniture and Funeral Home is under new management.

Effective Thursday, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Jack, Portage. became owners, purchasing the business from Mr. and Mrs.

James Frederixon. Charles J. Gibson, who died at 83 in June 1956, owned and operated it 60 years. He had been associated with his sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.

Milton Frederixon, 40 years. The Frederixons purchased it when Gibson died. James Frederixon and wife purchased the business July 1, 1962. Milton Frederixon died March 1962. Mrs.

Milton Frederixon, a licensed mortician, continued to assist her son. Leslie Voight, Wilton, was employed by the Frederixons last year as a licensed mortician. Voight has moved to Pigeon Falls, where he will be employed by Johnson Furniture and Funeral Service of Whitehall. Jack is a native of Cassville, where he graduated from high school in 1960. He has been a licensed mortician three years, working the last year at Portage.

He is married and has a daughter, Jennifer, Jack reported the funeral home is being remodeled. He also plans to do some remodeling at the rear of the furniture store. Frederixon has not announced plans for the future. Independence Lumber Under New Ownership INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Special) Sprecher Lumber has been sold to Joseph Wozney, Clarence Smieja and Zig Glaunert and will be known as the Independence Lumber Co.

Joseph Wozney is yard manager. Myron Olson, retired manager, began working for March the Sprecher Lumber 1, 1919, and became manager in 1927. At that time there, was one lumber storage building and a small office. The office was enlarged in 1927 when a woodworking department was added. Now there are two additional storage buildings plus a building for cement and roofing products.

Olson married Gladys Lockway in 1918. Mrs. Olson has been bookkeeper at the yard. The Olsons will continue to live in Independence but plan to do some traveling. They have two daughters, Mrs.

Robert McDermott, Denver, and Mrs. Don Gjerdrum, Spring Grove, Minn. Wozney, Smieja and Glaunert have been in business together operating the Starwood Products for five years, specializing in the manufacture of laminated wood rafters. They will continue to operate this plant in addition to their new venture. Wozney has been employed by the Green Bay Western Railroad but will now devote full time to the lumber yard.

Glauner will continue his present job as a depot agent for the G.B. W. at Arcadia and Smieja as technician for TriState Breeders Cooperative. Electric Shock Kills Minneapolis Girl, 9 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Sherry Solberg, 9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Duane Solberg, Minneapolis, died Friday while play. ing with her sister Jalie 8, at the home of a neighbor, Richard Corbett. Police said Sherry hung upside down by her knees from a pipe near the basement ceiling and put a long chain from an electric light switch into her mouth. The girl apparently was jolted by an electric shock and fell to the floor, officers said. 30 DAY PRECIPITATION OUTLOOK 000 0 0 ABOVE ABOVE! NEAR NORMAL BELOW BELOW ABOVE BELOW ABOVE 30 TEMPERATURE OUTLOOK NEAR NORMAL ABOVE MUCH NORMAL BELOW MUCH ABOVE BELOW 1 BELOW Sourer U.S.

WEATHER BUREAU 30-DAY OUTLOOK These maps, based on those released in Washington Saturday by the Weather Bureau, shows the precipitation and temperature outlook for the nation over the next 30 days. (AP Photofax Map) Arab Leaders Discuss Action Against Israel KUWAIT (AP)--The foreign ministers of the Arab nations gathered here Saturday for a two day emergency session to plan joint action against Israel and its supposed allies. The meeting was called by the Emir of Kuwait, Sheikh Sabah at Salem al Sabah, to seek agreement on how to carry out an oil embargo and other boycott measures against Britain and the United States. Several Arab leaders have demanded these moves in retaliation for alleged U.S. and British aid to Israel.

Qualified sources said the closed-door meeting will also Deed Given For New Park Site STRUM, Wis, (Special) Trempealeau County and area residents interested in enjoying natural beauty soon will be able to relax in a new county park. In a ceremony at Strum Wednesday night H. Ray Nereng, Blair, chairman of the Trempealeau County Board of Supervisors, accepted the deed to 21.8 acres of land along Crystal Lake here which was presented to the county by the village of Strum for a park. Present at the program were Gerald Bergerson, James Larson, Maurice Hanson and Glenn Haukeness, members of the Strum park committee: chairman Joe Roskos, Independence, of the county park commission, Nic Jensen, Arcadia, Charles Rongstad, Osseo, and Thurman Fremstad, Pigeon Falls, members of 'the commission; Henry Anderson, Whitehall, county forester, and William Mattka, Blair, district attorney. Dr.

L. R. Svoma, Strum, and Lloyd Anderson, Trempealeau, members of the park commission, were unable to The men were shown the park area. John Schoefgen, Eau Claire, who is with R. C.

Greaves Associates planners, showed them the detailed site plan. The county is in process of submitting a project proposal for federal Land and Water Conservation funds for development. The cost will be $36,000, of which the county will supply 50 percent. It's Certain: Nothing Perturbs An Englishman LONDON (A) The British have produced two fresh examples to support the widely held belief that nothing perturbs them, not even a man dressed as a lion subway. John McAdams, a 20-year-old insurance broker, traveled home from the office that way Friday to win a $14 bet.

He sat there, lion's head and all, reading his newspaper and minding his own business, and none of his fellow travelers had a word to say. Jack Chance, a 31-year-old bricklayer, won a $72 bet for an hour-long ride on the train from Sevenoaks to London Friday wearing a fur hat, sunglasses, bow tie, swimming trunks, boots and socks and a wristwatch. He also carried a tightly furled umbrella. The only reaction to his garb came from one businessman in his first-class coach who remarked: "Chilly, isn't it." Council Slates Rezoning Hearings City Council business appears relatively light at Monday's meeting, according to the official agenda issued by City Recorder John Carter. Puble hearings on three petitions to rezone land, previous.

ly approved the City Planning Commission, will be held. No objections to any of the requests are anticipated. Resolutions authorizing repair of lighting systems at the municipal airport and for payment of additional flood expense vouchers will be up for action. Ald. David Johnston will speak briefly on the matter of a possible special election to license Sunday sales of liquor by certain restaurants, hotels and motels in the city.

Arcadia Carrier Examinations Set ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) Arcadia Postmaster Burton Sauer has been notified by the Service Commission, Washington, D.C., announcing that an examination for rural carrier here will be open for applications until July 11. A carrier is neeed for Route 3 to fill the vacancy left by the death last July 10 of George Glanzer, who died by electrocution. Applicants must take a written test; reside within delivery of the office for one year immediately before closing date of examination, and must have reached his 18th birthday by July 11. There is no age limit except that persons age 70 will be considered only for temporary appointment limited to one year.

Further information may be obtained by contacting the local post office. Mondovi Summer School Starting MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) The summer school program for students enrolled in grades 1 through 8 last year the Mondovi public and the Sacred Heart schools, will start Tuesday and continue six weeks. A workshop will be held Monday for conducting the classes. teachers, will be Mrs.

James Lundquist, Mrs. Charles Accola, Mrs. Brodus Girtman and Merlin Mikelson. Classes will be conducted at Mondovi public school from 8 a.m. to 12 noon.

Subjects will be enriched and remedial reading and math and enriched seience. Rural school students should be at their outlying school at 7:40 and will be brought in by bus. They will be returned to their school at 11:20. Martha Ford Gets Social Introduction BELOW consider a proposal their that Arab bank nations withdraw deposits Britain--a and step investments they believe could seriously affect Britain's currency reserves. Kuwait alone--the world's second-largest oil exporter--is ceding $1.6 billion reported to have deposits, exThe foreign ministers' recommendations on an oil embargo and other economic sanctions against the two Western powers are to be submitted to an Arab summit conference, expected to convene in Khartoum, Sudan.

Informed sources said the Arab governments were almost certain to declare their unanimous determination to continue the struggle against Israel to final victory at any cost. They were also expected to agree to keep the Suez Canal and their own ports closed to British and American shipping and ban direct exports to the two Western powers, until Western pressure forces Israel to withdraw from occupied Arab territory." Arab unanimity appeared more doubtful, at the foreign minister or summit level, on such measures as a total embargo on oil shipments to Western nations demanded by some of the more revolutionary Arab governments. Leading oil exporters such as Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Kuwait would find their economies stifled by such a measure. Saudi Arabia and Kuwait at present are continuing oil exports to destinations other than Britain and the United States in tankers not flying the British or American flag. Leftist labor unions in Kuwait staged a strike at the Kuwait oil installations last week to halt all oil exports.

TORNADO DAMAGE ST. CHARLES, Minn. A tornado early Thursday morning damaged buildings on the James McDougall farm west of St. Charles and south of Dover i instead of on the Henry McDougall place, as stated in Friday's newspaper. The Henry McDougalls are the parents of James and live farther south.

GOETZ TO REPORT Lt. Gov. James B. Goetz, Winona, will discuss the accomplishments of the State Legislature at its recent session at meeting of Winona County Republicans Thursday at 7:30 in the Sky Room of Hotel Winona. County Chairman Jerry Kenney said reports will be received on the Neighbor-to-Neighbor fund drive currently going on in the county.

turns you loose lasts. So you'll House Paint less lasts often, and Live a little, instead. Resists blistering, fading, cracking, mildewing far longer than leading oilbase paints! Paints over damp surfaces! Soap and water cleanup! Flows on easily! Use on wood, stucco, masonry, almost anything! POND LATEX base Paint 8000 MASONRY OH Williams GLASS HOUSE 71-73 East Second St. Phone 2513 D-A-N-G-E-R OVERLOADED CIRCUITS The electrical capacity built into many homes of comparatively recent construction (and certainly ALL older style homes) is proving ances. All this adds D-A-N-G-E-R in inadequate for today's multiplicity, of appliyour home or business of fire.

Bring your wiring up-to-date and live safer. KLINE ELECTRIC 122. West 2nd St. Phone 5512 DETROIT (AP) Eighteenyear-old Martha Parke Ford, of the Ford and Firestone families, was introduced into society Friday night at a dance and breakfast for 900 guests. The lavish debut took place at the rambling, red-brick Georgian mansion of the debutante's parents, Mr.

and Mrs. William Clay. St. Ford, Clair on the in shores suburban of Grosse Pointe Shores. Miss Ford floated down staircase into an 18th-century Venetian garden created for the party.

Heavy winds and rains had lashed Detroit but failed to mar the party or disturb the solidly built pavilions, Miss Ford's father is the youngest of auto pioneer Henry Ford's grandsons, largest individual stockholder in the Ford Motor sole owner of the Detroit Lions football team and one of the owners of the Detroit Cougars soccer club. Her mother is the former Martha Parke Firestone, daughter of rubber magnate Harvey S. Firestone and Mrs. Firestone of Akron, Ohio. Both were at the party.

Rochester Man to Head Postmasters DULUTH, Minn. (AP)-Stanley Drips, Rochester, has been elected president of the Minne sota Chapter of the National sociation of Postmasters. Other officers are Dennis Kil. martin, Zimmerman, first vice president; Irvin Yeiter, La Crescent, second vice president; Larry Niehoff, New Ulm, third vice president, and Mrs. Lily Nelstrom, Salol, fourth vice president.

RETARDED CHILDREN The Winona Association for Retarded Children will meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Red Cross headquarters. There will be a general discussion period after the business meeting of Camp Winnebago and the opportunities for camping it will afford Winona County retarded children. This will be the last meeting until September. RETIREMENT AGE BUENOS AIRES (AP) The Argentine government has raised the retirement age to 60 from 55 as part of a plan to reshape the old Peronist social security system..

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