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The Minneapolis Star from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 25
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The Minneapolis Star from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 25

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Minneapolis, Minnesota
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25
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0 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, DEATHS Services for MRS. JULIA M. ANDERSON, 56, former Minneapolis resident who died May at Tucson, will be Monday, 1 p.m. in the Enger funeral home, Park Av. Grant St.

Burial will be in Fort Snelling National cemetery. Survivors include her husband. Walter; two sons, Thomas L. Allstopp and Robert L. Allstop, both Minneapolis; four grondchildren; three sisters, Helen Stenson, Rochester, Mrs.

Oscar Quam, Hammer, N. and Mrs. Clarence Halpheide, Phoenix, and trobrothere, Oliver. Meyers, De- Services for EDWARD A. BEAN, 19, 7338 S.

Queen Richfield, who drowned Tuesday in the Minnesota river while, Monday swimming, at will Richfield be Meth- 2:30 odist church. Burial will be in Fort Snelling National cemetery. A graduate of Richfield high school, he had enlisted in the Marine Corps and awaiting call to active dutyas Surviving are his parents, Mr. and a Mrs. Fred Bean; a brother, Wayne; a sister, Cheryl; his grandparents, Mr.

and Mrs. Albert Hardy, Hager City, and Mrs. C. S. Jameson, Chicago, Ill.

Services for CARL A. BICKING, 63, 3639 N. Knox who died Thursday, will be 2 p.m. Monday at Malone mortuary, with burial in Crystal lake cemetery. Mr.

Bicking was a dental technician at Booth laboratories, Minneapolis, for 25 years. He was a lifelong resident of the "Survivors include his wife, Hildegarde; sons, Robert and Charles, both Minneapolis, and a sister, Mrs. Ann Dietrich, Minneapolis. Services for HENRY L. DOLS, 35, 4217 S.

30th will be 9 a.m. at St. Helena Catholic with Saturday, burial in Fort Snelling cemetery. A rosary will be said 8:15 p.m. Friday, at Gill Brothers south chapel.

Mr. Dols died Thursday. A lifelong resident of Minneapolis, he was a member of Knights of Columbus and the American Survivors Legionude his wife, Margaret; two sons, Killian and Timothy; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry L.

Minnetonka; two brothers, Jerry, Minneapolis, and Killian, Oakland, and two sisters, Mary Dols, Minnetonka, and Mrs. George Kenney, Van Nuys, Calif. Services for WILLIAM S. EZAKI, 52, 4117 Park will be 8 p.m. Saturday at WelanderQuist West chapel with burial in Fort Snelling cemetery.

Mr. Ezaki died Thursday. A native of Summerland, he had lived 15 years in Minneapolis, where he was employed by Waldron Cleaners. He was a veteran of World War II. Survivors include his wife, Sue; two sons, William Jr.

and Edward; mother, Mrs. Iwa Ezaki; sister, Mrs. Teiko Uejima; and brother, Ben, all of Minneapolis, and brother, James, Chicago. ALBERT H. STERN, 53, 5305 N.

Bryant died Thursday. Mr. Stern was an employe of J. R. Clark Co.

He was a veteran of World War II. Surviving are his wife, Agnes; a sister, Mrs. Ethel Pool, Chaska; and two brothers, Eric and Julius, Minneapolis. Services will be 1:30 p.m. Saturday at Sundseth-Anderson mortuary, with burial in Crystal Lake cemetery.

ANDREW A. THORBERSON, 75, died Sunday at Long Beach, it was learned here today. Mr. Thorberson was formerly Minneapolise district traffic Gulf Mobile Ohio railroad for which he worked 42 years. He moved to Long Beach four years ago.

Survivors include his wife, Ella and a son, John P. ELSEWHERE ELSEWHERE HOLLYWOOD, Calif. ANITA STEWART, 65, a star of the silent films and former wife of George Peabody Converse, New York millionaire and socialite. Boys Set $5,000 St. Paul Home Fire Two boys, 7 and 5, admitted setting a fire Thursday that caused $5,000 damage to a vacant house at 400 Iglehart St.

Paul, arson investigators said. The boys had been seen near the house before the blaze and admitted they had been playing with matches in the empty house. Minnesota TWIN CITIES: Cloudy with occasional light rain or drizzle tonight and Saturday. Little temperature change Saturday. Low tonight 48, high Saturday 55.

ALL OTHER ZONES: Cloudy with occasional light rain or drizzle tonight and Saturday. Little temperature change Saturday. Low tonight 40 to 45. Upper Midwest WISCONSIN: Cloudy with occasional rain likely tonight and Saturday, northern A little warmer in the portion tonight. Little temperature change Saturday.

IOWA: Occasional rain mixed with thunderstorms tonight. Warmer in the eastern portion May 5, 1961 THE MINNEAPOLIS STAR 15 LIGHT RAIN Pressure Is Just an Arm of Politics By WALLACE MITCHELL Minneapolis Star Staff Writer A political fact of life got an unusual public airing Thursday. Rep. Ernest Beedle, St. Paul Liberal, aired it on the house floor.

He charged he had had been subjected to the threat of re-election campaign troubles if he failed to hold his place in the Liberal ranks on the vote for their revenueraising package. Beedle had bolted the first time the bill was voted on by the house. The Liberals mustered the bare 66 votes needed on the tally. Maintaining discipline within 'legislative or political party groups is done in a variety of ways. Rep.

Fred A. Cina, Liberal house leader, conceded this earlier in the year on a nationally televised interview. "We have ways," he said with a slow smile when asked how it's done. Sometimes it 1s an outright swap. A member who wants a pet bill important to him in his home district may round up support in exchange for his vote on something he would otherwise buck.

A member want an appointment on an interim commission he thinks will give him additional prestige at home. The majority leader may parlay that ambition with a promise of the member's vote on a bill that the controlling faction may be having a tough time rounding up support for. Sen. Alf Bergerud, Edina Conservative, during the regular session, confided his persistence in behalf of the county commissioner re-districting measure had caused one of his colleagues to threaten to block some other legislation Bergerud wanted passed. In political parties, too, there are ways of pressuring reluctant members into staying in line on an election of officers or convention delegates.

These are accepted political facts of life and thus there was considerable surprise when Beedle made his public complaint. Minnesota Young Republicans are firming up arrangements for the national Young Republican federation convention in Minneapolis in June. Latest GOP figures accepting invitations to appear are Senators Goldwater Ariz.) and Morton the party's national chairman. Gov. F.

Ray Keyser of Vermont also has agreed to speak. Two Shoppers City Expansions Rejected Faced with protests from a neighborhood group, the Brooklyn Center planning commission Thursday denied two of three requests by Shoppers City supermarket for expanded facilities. Mel Roth, owner of supermarket at 6300 Osseo road, asked for a service station, a BROOKLYN CENTER drive- in ice BROOKLYN. cream shop CENTER and a foot CRYSTAL square DALE addition to his store. service station Only the GOLDEN VALLEY MINNEAPOLIS permit on the corner of N.

63rd Av. and Osseo road was granted. The Rev. Richard Fowler led a group that charged Roth failed to live up to buffer zone requirements agreed-to when he opened his store. Residents also claim the supermarket failed to control dust and waste.

The commission asked Mrs. Warren Dies; Was Wife of Auto Dealer Warren Mrs. Helen Warren, 59, wife of the president of Warren-Cadillac, died Thursday in their Phoenix, winter home. Services will be at 2 p.m. Monday at the House of Hope Presbyterian church, St.

Paul, with burial in RoseMrs. Warren lawn cemetery, St. Paul. A native of Great Falls, she once operated a women's clothing shop in St. Paul.

Her husband, H. E. Warren, was public safety commissioner in St. Paul at the of their marriage in 1935. They lived at 1819 S.

James Av. Other survivors are her mother, Mrs. Tena J. Ross; a sister, Mrs. Hazel Robertson, and two brothers, Donald R.

and John D. Ross, all Train Derailed BUFFALO, N. Y. -(P)- Three tracks of the four-track New York Central line south of Buffalo were blocked today when six cars of a Buf-1 falo-bound freight train from Cleveland, Ohio, left the tracks at Hamburg, Y. The cause of the wreck was not immediately determined.

Date from U.S. WEATHER BUREAU Dept. of Commone 30 LOW 30 HIGH COoL 30.36 LOW 29.56 HIGH 30.06 50 LOW .50 WARM 8 60 Snow 70 FORECAST MAP Friday Night Figures Show Low Temperatures Expected tonight. Partly with rain in the tion Saturday. NORTH DAKOTA: with occasional western and today and state tonight OFFICIAL TEMPERATURES (U.S.

Weather Bureau official readings) First column, highest temperature ond, lowest temperature 12 hours, 6:00 a.m.; third, precipitation last 24 at 6:00 a.m. MINNESOTAMinneapolis 67 48 Int. Falls 36 Duluth 39 Bemidji 8878 36 Alexandria 43 Redwd Falls 68 42 Rochester 44 St. Cloud 65 44 WISCONSINEau Claire 67 45 Green Bay 61 37 La Crosse 66 49 Madison 63 45 Wausau 65 39 IOWADes Moines 61 45 SOUTH DAKOTAAberdeen 61 42 Huron 60 42 Lemmon 43 33 Rapid City 38 36 Watertown NORTH DAKOTABismarck 53 42 Devils Lake 65 46 Fargo 68 50 Grand Forks 70 49 Minot 57 41 Williston 51 41 MONTANAT Glasgow Havre Miles City CANADACalgary .20 Edmonton .04 Winnipeg OTHER U.S. Albuquerque Atlanta Boise Boston Buffalo Charleston Chicago .40 Cincinnati Cleveland .20 Denver .15 Detroit .62 Fort Worth .38 Kansas City .09 Los Angeles Louisville .18 Memphis Miami New Orleans New York .10 Okla.

City .06 Omaha THE DAY'S RECORDS MINNEAPOLIS MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Evald E. Maki, 32, 3316 N. Louisiana June L. Buelow, 30, 112 E. 27th St.

John C. Lundstrom, 22, 4514. N. Adair Robbinsdale; Patricia R. Honey, 21, 4016 Utica St.

Louis Park. Donald M. Koellen, 21, 2820 S. Bryant Mildred A. Fulkerson, 20, 3727 N.

Lee Av. Roger N. Lee, 27, 2014 N. 44th Marlys Sathermyr, 25, 2701 Meridian Robbinsdale. James R.

Lehmann, 21, 3837 S. Thomas Carol A. Ragen, 20, 1216 Powderhorn Terrace. Douglas G. Brown, 23, 2151 Pleasant Gail A.

Schneiderhan, 19, 613 E. Minnehaha Pkwy. Francis E. Seifert, 29, 567 Stryker St. Paul; Dorothy S.

Vukad, 29, 3636 S. 20th Av. Douglas J. Barkley, 22, 2100 N. Toledo Elaine Pearson, 22, 2705 S.

Dupont Av. Lyle Marvin C. Peterson, 27, Bruce, Shirley A. Sathermyr, 23, 2701 Meridian Robbinsdale. Dale Ronald L.

Stovern, 22, 2925 sPort, Dixie R. Klante, 22, 914 S. Arthur, Youngquist, legal, 12800 Melody Lane, Hopkins; Ingeborg M. Magnusson, legal, 6020 S. 12th Av.

Carl E. Anderson, legal, Long Judith Kropp, legal, Long Lake, Minn. James H. Cooper, 46, 51 Merriam Jean V. Boone, 33, Fletcher, N.

C. Wayne T. LaBeau. 21, 8308 W. 82nd Lee Hopkins; Sheila G.

Nyman, 21, 3945 Paul Xenwood Louis Park, Rudolph A. Globokar, 23, 3213 Holmes L. Talus, 21, 76 SE. 27th Av. DEATHS Clem Benz, 69.

Sauk Centre, Minn. Frieda Borth, 48, New Rockford, Mamie A. Cherveny, 50. 4031 N. Washington Av.

Harriet L. Davis, 87, Paris, Tenn. Sarah G. Davis, 29, 1207 W. 25th St.

Ephrem DeMars, 92, 215 NE. Broadway, Joseph Fredricks. 73, 4109 Longfellow Av. Doris Gehrke, 35, 7610 South St. Louis Park.

William Gilroy, 84, 213 Nicollet Av. Fritza Grambart, 82. Osseo. Minn. Frank Gross, 97, 1920 La Salle Av.

J. Harmon, 34, 6838 S. 12th Beverly Richfield. Marie Helmanovsky, 62. 909 SE.

Fulton St. Erland Jensen, 52, 6129 Westridge Edina. Alfred O. Johnson, 50, 907 Centennial Pl. Mary Johnson, 86, 3153 S.

34th Av. Sam Margulis, 74, 1316 N. Thomas Av. Edward Mau, 80. Mankato, Minn.

Jane E. O'Brien, 73, 1404 W. Broadway. William 0. Osman, 79, Wayzata, Minn.

Myrtle Pakola, 41, Virginia, Minn. Bert Porter, 73, Alexandria, Minn. Berenice Riordan 72, 17 E. Lake St. Isador J.

Rudnick, 40, 510 W. 28th St. Ray Savelkaul, 55, Chaska. Douglas Schneider, 4, Henderson, Minn. Barbara A.

Stanley, 3, 706 Olson Hwy, Weatherill, 69. 5030 Chowen Av. Cedric S. COMMUNICABLE DISEASES NEW THIS YEAR Cases Deaths Cases Deaths Diphtheria 0 2 Inf Hepatitis 143 Measles 00 0 255 Influenza Scolp Ringworm. 5 Meningitis 75 Scarlet Fever Tuberculosis 76 Inactive 43 33 Active Whooping Cough 0 S.

1st rug. ond 37th false. S. 41st emergency. and death, DIVORCES GRANTED Mary K.

Meixner from Theodore H. Meixner. Edward E. Johnston from Rita B. Johnston.

Mildred C. Olson from Leroy H. Olson. FIRE CALLS FRIDAY A.M. Chicago Av.

auto. INSTRUCTION CLASSES in the teachings of the CATHOLIC CHURCH ST. OLAF'S CHURCH Downtown 805 South 2nd Avenue After Work Mondays and Series Wednesdays Tues. Thurs. at 5:10 P.M.

7:30 P.M. Beginning Beginning May 2 May 8 No Obligation of Any Kind For More Information Call ST. OLAF'S CHURCH FE 2-7471 Kaoune's 2-PANT SUITS cloudy to western por- Cloudy light rain in the central portions spreading over the and Saturday. Phoenix 83 St. Louis 65 Salt L.

City 66 San Antonio 89 San Fran. 59 Warmer in the extreme western portion Saturday. SOUTH DAKOTA: Cloudy with occasional light rain tonight and continuing in the eastern portion Saturday. Warmer in the western portion Saturday. 54 S.

St. Marie 56 30 46 .60 Seattle 47 39 .68 30 Spokane 49 37 75 Tampa 87 70 50 Washington 65 42 CITY DATA (Readings today) High year ago: 57. Low: 47. Precipitation from midnight to 6 a.m. trace.

6 a.m, humidity Sunrise: 4:54 a.m. Sunset: 7:23 p.m. Moonrise: 11:34 p.m. Moonset: 8:17 a.m. Moon phase: full.

Minneapolis hourly temperature on page IA (Readings from midnight to midnight) Highest temperature 67, lowest temperature 39. Highest humidity at 8:00 a.m. humidity at 4:00 p.m. Precipitation none. Total month 0, departure from normal Total for year 6.37, departure from normal Heating Degree Days (The number of degrees the daily average temperature falls below 65, the point at which artificial heat is generally considered necessary.) (Since July 1) May 4, 1961, 12 degree days; year ago, 11.

Normal 12. Total this heating season: 7861. Last sea- son: 7900, Normal: 7563. RADIATION COUNT Beta Ray radiation, as measured in Minneapolis by the Minnesota health department and reported daily (any measurement under 1,000 microcuries per cubic meter is considered safe): Thursday micro-microcuries per cubic meter. Highest on record, 103, on Sept.

3, 1957. ST. PAUL MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS yesterday; secending at hours ending 52 38 .01 58 41 48 36 .11 52 35 55 30 66 STATIONS 76 77 57 50 29 63 35 55 36 70 63 52 45 64 48 54 34 51 39 59 37 85 73 58 48 66 53 65 53 66 56 82 76 83 67 64 47 74 64 54 44 James Hart, 1589 Laurel Gloria J. Weiss, 225 E. Winona St.

Arnold W. Ackerman. 1612. Hollywood court, Falcon Heights; Michaline G. Schifsky, 1385 E.

county road White Bear Lake. Robert G. Mayer, 707 Ashland Lynne D. Pickard, 2011 Itasca Av. Ronald J.

Lindstrom, 2001 Nortonia Unatte K. Weigum, 777 Hazelwood St. BIRTHS GIRLS Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick Ball, 1105 Pacific St.

Donald Dorholt, 1023 Dionne Roseville, Bernard Fletcher, 2190 Waukon Av. Robert Glendenning, 423 Charles Av. Darrell Griffin, 1664 Barclay St. Robert Hopper, 22 North road, Circle Pines. Gerald Jungmann, 2666 E.

8th North St. Paul, Robert Junker, 1875 Flandrou Maplewood. Ralph Kellerman, 305 S. 11th South St. Paul.

William Kirchner, 290 E. lex St. Paul Park. Larson, 2264 Hazel Maplewood. Lawrence Marble, 4307 Amber Eagan.

James Mulcahy, Lake Elmo. Nelson, 2681 N. Gerald North St. Paul. Norman Nelson, 1794 Flandrau Maplewood Joseph Orlando.

1813 VanBuren Av. Richard Peterson, 511 E. Hoyt Av. Henry Rollins, 453 S. 11th South St.

Paul, Peter Sajevic, 1665 Darlene St. Robert Sistermon, 2557 E. 4th White Bear Loke. Stewart, 767 Hague Av. Testa, 398 E.

Lawson Av. Dennis Twedt, 1393 Hewitt Av. BOYS Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Andersen, 1089 Humboldt West St.

Paul. James Arnal, 3106 Medford Oakdale. Gerald Bierwerth, 57 Litchfield St. Robert Brown, 109 Sims Av. Clifford Cournoyer, 1380 Clarence St.

Richard Dillon, 1176 Hague Av. John Entenmann, 2328 E. South North St. Paul. Lester Heggernes, 2694 4th North St.

Paul. Wallace Hexum, 429 Cresent lane. Rose ville. William Koch, 2225 Fremont Av. Paul Krey, 52 Hickory Mahtomedi.

John Nagan, 699 W. Jessamine Av. Donald Olson, 563 Hiawatha Mendota Heights Ronald Peltier, 3874 line, White Bear Lake. Kenneth Rauschnot. 1465 Klainert St.

Darvin Ringeisen, 145 S. 12th South St. Paul. Howard Rose, 1728 Simpson Falcon Heights, Donald Schmitz, 8847 S. Highway New Brighton.

Gerald Shear, 1829 Munster Av. Alvin Smith, S. Concord South St Pout FIVE-DAY FORECASTS Twin Cities Through Wednesday temperatures will average near the seasonal normals with highs of 66 and lows of 45. There'll be .50 to .75 of an inch precipitation Saturday and Monday or Tuesday. Minnesota Temperatures will be about normal in the south and slightly above normal in the north.

Precipitation patterns will be the same as In the Twin Cities. Francis Stachowiak, 722 Wilson Av. Robert Staeheli, 527 Hall Av. Morris Wagenknecht, 9 Joanne South St. Poul.

Robert Williamson, 403 Karen White Bear Lake, DEATHS Florence Bartz, 54, 478 W. Maryland Av. Walter Burke, 66, 2046 Niles Av. Anna Cardinal, 65, Hugo, Minn. Chris Christensen, 74, 1862 E.

Maryland Av. Bessie Ekhaml, 67, 514 S. Saratoga St, Esther Fredstrom, 77, 221 Mt. Rose Pl. Katherine Grabowski, 65.

311 NE. BroadWaY, Minneapolis. Joseph Grady, 88, 90 Wilkin St. Margaret Kalaher, 91, 1661 Laurel Av. Joseph Krongard, 76, Lake Elmo.

Mary McCarthy, 77, 107 Virginia St. Jeanette Mayer, 75, 903 Front Av. George Melzer, 81, 3900 Linden White Bear. Georgia Palmer, 71, 891 Carroll Av. Mary Patrick, 76.

554 Aurora Av. Anna Priebe, 83, 932 E. 6th St. Nicholas Puglesea, 78, 393 E. 7th St.

Harriet Same, 91, 961 Portland Av. Edward Warner, 46. 1879 Cose Av. Cuba Committee Member to Speak Edward Shaw, representative of the left-wing Fair Play for Cuba committee, will speak Saturday on "Why the Cuban Invasion failed." Shaw, who has organized chapters of the committee in the Twin Cities and other midwestern cities, will speak at 8 p.m. in room 211 of the Labor temple, 117 SE.

4th St. Dresses for a Prettier You at a Tiny Price! Imagine Only $095 No Money Down Sizes for Everyone Misses', Juniors' Women Our buyers are "dollar-wise" when it comes to your budget. They have managed to come up with this packed collection of dresses. Jast "Charge it" 526 HENNEPIN FREE PARKING NEXT DOOR COOL WOOL WORSTED AND TROPICALS-BETTER VALUE PRICED! Save up to $10 More .02 .01 1.02 .14 .85 4985 The extra pair of pants is your bonus at Brown's Buy a smart new all wool year 'round or tropical 2- pant suit now, while selections are at their best! Choose from not just a few, but hundreds of smartly styled garments in every pattern, every color, every popular new style! And behind every Brown's suit is a 44- year -old policy of guaranteed satisfaction. All proportions including x-longs and portlys, in sizes up to 50! ONE HOUR FREE PARKING We'll refund your first hour parking charge in any downtown parking facility with a purchase at Brown's! Roth to create a buffer on his north boundary, next to school property.

Roth met other protests with a promise to build a chain-link fence on his Beard Av. boundary, Al Kattar, commission chairman, said. Lexington Will Study Water Plan Lexington decided Thursday to explore neighboring Circle Pines' offer to sell water. Lexington Mayor Arthur Otte said planning commission chairman Leo Ryan would meet with Circle Pines officials Thursday. Last fall a survey found few Lexington residents in favor of a municipal water LEXINGTON LEXINGTON system.

A state health department test of village wells showed 56.2 per cent had some degree of contaminatio ANOKA CIRCLE MINNEAPOLIS but only two wells were above the danger point. Circle Pines has also offered to pipe its water to Lino Lakes. In another action, Lexington agreed to give the North Suburban Hospital committee $500 to finance a fund campaign if other suburbs in the group do the same. Jay W. Craig, a Minneapolis street contracting firm, has offered to repair without cost seven miles of bituminous streets it finished last September, Otte said.

The village had threatened to sue the firm on grounds of a sub-standard job. Burglar Routed by Pistol Shot A pistol shot fired by an apartment building caretaker scared off a burglary suspect Thursday night at Clausen's Sinclair service station, 22 E. Franklin Av. At 11:45 p.m., Betty Gentry, 14 E. Franklin watched from her apartment window as a man broke a side window of the service station.

She called the apartment building superintendent, Edward W. Mosier, who armed himself with a pistol and ran to the station. Mosier saw the suspect flee and fired one shot that missed. The suspect scurried away, across a nearby parkling lot. SHOES Slim, sleek lines, fast pace ing a miracle of fit comfort.

You'll find them in the new Wesboros for Spring. Sizes 6 to 13, to 4F. styl- SLIP-ONS and DRESS TIES CONTINENTALS all 085 SPORT COATS all incl. sizes extra proportions 36-48 longs 2285 Wash and wear dacron and cotton blends that assure you light and cool comfort with press retaining fabrics for warm weather. The Northwest's largest selection.

Golfer Slacks Your favorites for choice of 7 colors. are self belted in a leisure wear, these 785 rayon for automatic wash and wear. 2 for 15.00 Sizes 29-42. JACKET SPECIAL BETTER VALUE 185 PRICED to 1485 Short, tall, big, small, Brown's fits them all! Choose from laminates, poplins, cotton twill, lined or unlined sizes to 60 -we have the Northwest's largest selection of jackets! Boys' graduation suits in all wool and wool blends. Ivy styles, new olive, charcoal and gold solids, fancies and plaids, sizes 13 to 20 including huskies.

Reg. to 24.85 1985 Student Suits in olive, black, charcoal and other popular colors. Ivy and continental models in all wool worsteds, flannels and dacron worsteds. Sizes 35 to longs. to 42, regulars 2985 3985 All Weather Coats in wash and wear, water repellent fabrics.

Split raglan models, popular natural Regular shade. 12.85, Sizes 10 to Special 20. 990 Sport coats in all wool and wool and orlon blends in latest pattern and shades. Also solid Reg. 19.85, now only blazers.

Sizes 13 to 20. 1488 "Your Friendly Store Better Values Built" Cash, Charge, BON-ART CLOTHES 4-Pay Plan Same Lower Prices 522 NICOLLET AVENUE.

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