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The Hutchinson News from Hutchinson, Kansas • Page 3

Location:
Hutchinson, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

CIO To Seek Fourth Round Wage Boosts Washington CIO Saturday called for (1) "substantial" fourth round wage increases, (2) a slash in corporation profits, and (3) an expanded security program for workers. "If the country fails to take these corrective steps, a serious depression condition is almost certain to develop," said the CIO News. The labor organizoion's weekly newspaper summarized the thinking of CIO economists and researchers. The CIO said that prices arc not dropping, so wages muni be Odds And Ends Of Day's News lifted. It didn't call it a fourth round Increase (there have been three since the war ended).

But it spoke in general terms, saying: "Substantial wajje Increases will provide a great reservoir of buy- 1 Cessn employes wore treated ing power. They will help relieve 1 rt.ow SaKy he piling up of merchandise and; iht at BR clmrdson auditorium. the drop jobs" in thc consumer Thb Grfiat and hig wifc goods industries. prc scntcd the prgram. The Corporation profit "must rimmed for the common good, 'i 1912 Nobrlh walnut, presi- f.n.u' a l.

'dent of thc Huchinson prestidigi- The high rate of profit Is talorg a i ei ht of hand artists). throwing thc economy out of kil-: ler. It has led to cutting of pro-i Kenneth Schrocdcr, navy sca- duction, and to limitation of ex- man apprentice son of Mr. and pandrd production the jMra Ernnst Schrocdcrj 528 East I )a cr ald Sixth, has left for a month's cruise The three-pronged program "is to Pear arbor. Kenneth had just obviously called for," the CIO said, rcturned the United States after IT'S A Webb, operator, at his test at No.

1 Mary Jones, of a mile north- cast of Burrton, as it spouted mud and gas Saturday. a 0 tne umlea ataies aner i swith a radar unit Ellmwood To Have Pool the war. Buy To Help Hutchinson Grow An additional list of subscribers who have bought stock in Hutchinson's proposed new metropolitan hotel was released by campaign headquarters Saturday. Earlier lists were published Wednesday and Friday. PlanShowdown On New Rent Control Bill Allene; more major changes.

Os But there may be a couple more John R. Alden, Rebe I. H. Kcefer, T. A.

Kerr, son, Angelo Electric W. Keith Ira L. King, John Knightly Motor; Washington, (AP) Adminis- Armstrong, Stuart Awbrey. Co. tration forces scurried around Sat- Dr.

R. Barnes, Barritt Clean- Myrle A. Lane, Robert E. rallying house Democrats ers Fred Beeman H. C.

McClintock, Berl C. Me- for a showdown on rent controls sch'eidt, T. John I. McKown, Leo Me-; next Tuesday. Biggs Wm.

K. Bock, Book ArtiNerney, Main Cleaners, Cecil By Sa urt i av night it looked as Store, Ralph I. Brown, Raymond Midwestern Typewriter Co. if tney mign he able to ram a W. Brown, Lois E.

Burroughs, Es- Miller Wilson Radiator Service, i contro bill through without any ther M. Bush. hn Missildinc J. C. Cadwell, Caldwell Green-: er Ni.i«nn house, W.

B. Caldwell, Mr. iUakcr Edward fights-to turn over controls T. R. Campbell, Harry Cartsonls, Pence Co Dan to Iocal authorities and to extend S.

Hale (Dairy Queen) Catlin, Fred anm "f' A i controls for only 90 days. H. Caywood, Rachel Coberly, ittman Prairie Dunes Golf Club i Democratic leaders agreed with Frank Cook, J. B. Crockett.

rodu cers Cooperative Dairy As-i Republicans that the scraps will L. E. Darlnnd, James A. Davis, sn Py)c Paint Body works. be hard and close Charles V.

Dillon, Ray E. Dillon Harold Rauckman, Charles E. Dixie Cream Donut, W. H.iR aU Lcvi H. Rayl, Dr.

Louise; ent co tr ls I 3 fn 'J 1 thc Drydcn. John R. Rimmer, Package of bills docketed for a. C. E.

Eagle, Kenneth Eisimin-iRounkle's Radio Service. i house vote during the Other ger, J. D. Elder, English, Miller, Salt City Federal Savings 4 Hockett, A. W.

Estes. 'Loan Charles D. Schmuc- Al Fineman, F. M. Fink, R.

W. T. V. Schroll, Jack Shear, teIe hone con Irota 1950, m- "010 economists that thc A tnree is neither in a state of meeting at Kansas City starting: serious illness nor of complete tofla attracted five from Hutch good the News said. mson Included are Mary "It is displaying symptons of Mr f- Obcra Ford, Mrs Bon basic weaknesses which if not ml Mr aml Mrs William N.

chf'cked soon can lead to serious linger. Organizations participating) of a municipal swimming pool complications'" in tne seventh district four stale i passed by four ballots here me conference are the Associated Cre-; I Fleischmann, Mrs. Lucy L. Shurtz Produce Delos V.I, Herbert Friedenberger, Roy M. Smith, Delos V.

Smith Floyd wun WOU1Q Frost. P. Smith, Marie G. Stead, M. Lawrence S.

Gabrielson, John'Stcphenson, Gene Stevens, Jack gTTcU'Sr Granel Grain SUPly ViCe measure was Jesse Hahn, Elma Hamill, Ham-! Olga Blanke Teeter, J. N. ul ilton Theatrical Attractions, G. C. ler Alfred J.

(Plantation Grill)! 0 llc Harris, Joseph H. Helfrey, HJTrent, J. W. Vandaveer, Claude i Shorty Vandyke OI oy one Holland, Mr. Mrs.

Lester Fred'H. Waile, W. J. Wakeficld on 'y Hoover, Hutchinson Floral Warner-Johnson Studio, J.j nublican man- pany, Hutchinson Softwater Ser-'E. Washburn, Robert G.

Wash-! That was on a Republican man want didnt want to take i jniiLljIllIlOUll OUlt WCLLCL Otl'lii. U3J ltji.ll II iituiii Hutchinson Supply burn, Trimming Supply euver or 90-day ex tension past LONGEST Roy R. Showalter, Maj. Joseph A. Brown, Maj.

John D. Bartlett and Capt. Earl N. Yaden check log on their flight at Fort Worth, completed Saturday in a B-36 bomber. It was the longest flight to date for world's largest bomber.

31 GOP Bomber Makes Record Flight Fort Worth, Tex. A crip- try B-36 So-callert spots" develop- comercnce are me Associated ore-; P- in mnnv inrlllutrins am rnnllv BUrCaUS Of the MldWCSt, thC: Ellin vote to issue Hutchinson Water Co. Wclborn 0 in bonds for the construction! Isham Furniture Dr. shoes, Ralph H. Wells, Ralph P.

Jarrolt, C.D. Wesley Earl White. Perry S. ning gtance record for these mlnlstep gaid gatur C. Jennings UU Company, ivvnue, j.

wiiocri, noss wil tn thn I Edward S. Yauk, Oscar E. Young, "is 1 1 planes. landed at Saturday with Pacifists To Protest Paying "Taxes For War" New York (AP) A pacifist industries arc really for workers, the publication said, because they are in industries making products for the ordinary consumer. They were described as textiles, appliances, furniture.

On the other hand there was Sam Kaplan, Karmelkorn Young Paint Wallpaper Co. the Credit Manager's group. 238 for, 234 against. werr Mayor Ed Isern said that local: I ft I FlITI were Tlle nE f( (ic artment children were almost homo nf Bflthc! AME chui ch WI for getting mllsical program at the church: back jn th jm The young-j Ki 11 1 i Sunday afternoon at 4. Rev.

A. st ho explained i nitiat ed the! DlirCalltl dt Simpson is pastor. banking committee under orders ito limit it to 90 days. Key Demo- "icrats figure they can beat back the time they were married until jthe Republican drive. lile UUIt: 1.1IV.J wult: JMCJ1.1JCTJ Uiltl' nUMUIJUUtlll UIIVV.

1941 when they moved, to Wash- Speaker Rayburn says that's the "on-stop ng over day 150 members of a peace-seek- The great silver ship, with two i group had decided they would of its six pusher-type engines dead, i federal income A.i*itv\ i to be used for financing "war touched earth after a i swimming pool project last spring ington, D. C. They later he sizes things up. to Detroit. Mrs.

Johnson is survived by: The. control bill would give her widower, Dale, of the Truman some, but not ithe nation. For 5,000 miles, the'preparations." B-36 had carried 10,000 pounds of bombs. little unemployment noted in sev-j Convention hall Is receiving circulating petitions among; pral durable poods industries, such 1 annual dolling up in prepaartion) 1 as steel, aluminum and heavy in-; for the state Class Present plans call for a 'two daughters, Madeline Sue the power he asked to combat Washington (AP)-Clipping the Sheila, both of the home; her par- i what Rent Director Tighe Woods as i wings of some of the nine inde- 1 ents Ml and hnson ihas called a growing black mar' The Rev. A.

J. Muste, national secretary of the Peacemaker said Saturday he himself was one er came in 15" members of the oral 7:57 a. aniza tj on the New York City It had been airborne 43 hours and 1 arca who have Bunched the tax Two propellers were motionless, dustry. Can't Locale Women Who Found Wallet Wanted a happy ending to lost and found story. Wednesday.

Ernie Dobbins, Bisontc lost a tournament this week, and the na-1 measuring 50 by 100 feet, to next week. Custodian Curly Mil-': town's northwest section. Mayor it commissions thrce brotherSi Robert ket in rents. 3r rUrine aw-iy arca who have laUnC bT the Ho Ra and Henry a of Mt ne ftWn is "onTcarswen movement. oy me sister Donna Mae Johnson 'vision, for fines and sentences! -tTtrtln tnfc nf tVio vpnt It CtHTlSQ 1LS ulfa D01TID lOuU 'Hil'it'pitH i vioitiLoro nfiiHtn ucscrincu tni functions tooj 1 wil hp in thp but there are measures for coping 2 4 hours and 55 minutes.

crew aaiuruay gave me i.uur lser said surveying ol the prop- frequently have been entrusted to I T'l n-nnVv with mass evictions, and authority The sensational flight topped by;" a glossy, varnishlike finish and crty will probably start Tuesday, jthesc independent regulatory com- an anpUst near Ben the government to sue for tri- 687 miles the former B-36 record traffic will be kept from the hall Actual construction should begin 'missions," the Hoover group said! at 2 3 Wednesday. Rev. dam for rent overcharges, distance night last Dec. 6-7. That a until the class boys move vithin the next thrce weeks, andU us 12th report on how the obl rt Means, Kmgman will 1 a section say was a drama tic hop from Fortr jit is hoped the pool will be 1 contained more than a $100.

Another form Hulchonian i the cured living quarters and led July 4. report administrative structure and burial will be Mt. might be improved. i Hope cemetery. Ellinwood has never had a mu- "The consequences have not) I Ella Ahrenbeck pool.

The past few years to happy," the report Ella J. Ahrenbeck, 83, a resident return on the Mor- 't lias leased one from the J. I. for a plural executive is not the; of Hutchinson for 25 years, died atjth eir property. put ing that as far as practicable, rent ceilings shall be set high enough to assure landlords a reasonable reasonable value of mia.muu mum umii u.

soon Jack Mor it has leased one from the J. I. Ior a piuiai CABI.UIIVO ia UUL 0 Hutchinson for 25 years, died at Some honest woman found the: movcd to ottawa bv elDuBray family, but drainage device for the performance 2 30 am SatU rday at Grace! object and turned it in to the ll Telephone have become too operational duties." I mti nrtP-nmnnf whn in turn favp it 1 1 1 11 i management who in turn gave olt hjs home at 22 East 2 7th toj to permit its use another then Dobbins has been Lo (le Sa rday Cf $65 00 nd JSSUe wil1 be trvmg to find out who the honest and their Uiree children will used or more than the pool Woman was so he can rcward go to Ottawa 1. ju will also go into the building! Mrs Minnie Thompson her. He's been trying now for three days.

to "She must be as shy as she is honest for she hasn't been around a here since Wednesday," Dobbins Kcilh rctz asked Proctor what said. "The management says it brand jgaret is named for theiSlppL knows her but doesn't know her man who introtiuced smoking in hospital. Only survivor here is a cousin, Mrs. F. J.

Haberkorn, 216 West 12th, with whom Miss Ah- irenbeck made her home. ibody will be sent to Hempstid, I for funeral and burial. II. Ul 2nd Tragedy Worth ing on Pearl Harbor Day. The flight failed by 1,636 miles Muste described the Peacemak- ers as a "non-violent revolutionary RPP pacifist group engaged in a cam- simi iar to that of the ma Gandhi in India." UU rn end-' has about bers, he said.

The 150 persons throughout in D-iid of er dressing rooms, SeMwer; Mrs Minnie L. Thompson died L- UL iu, Proctor, a ld the ur chase of ump-j in tne home of her daughter, on the KIMV-FM Noon'i ng ec water purifying; Stewart, 410 East Ninth, at. r't Saturday. Announcer installations and servicing tools. p.m.

Saturday. She had been i in ill health since suffering a I Mrs. Stella May Roach to equal the non-refueling; distance re a gtance movome nt, Must, record or miles, inis lcc -i said mve either decided "to with- tralia to Columbus, Ohio, Oct. 1, woultl to war preparations. 1D46- Meanwhile, in Yellow Springs, Carttwcll base announced the 0., a 75-year old Quaker widow uitsr) uiiiiiiuiicuu LI it; i plane had two hours of fuel left deducted 32.2 percent from th.

i Favetteville Ark (AP) Sena- when it landed. Maj. John st installment of her income to? McClenan TD Ark) who wit- Bartlett, project ofiiccr for becauBe a said and inessed the burial of one son Fri- training for the 7th bombardment Preparation foi the atomlo (day made plans here Saturday wing of the 8th air force, is a dime against humam- jbroken leg in a fall seven Hutchinson friends have receiv-i (or the unera i another. plane down because two y- ago. She became critically illied word that funeral services were; John McClellan 2S-year-gines had failed Saturday and Mrs.

Caroline Urie failed last (our days ago. at Emporia Thursday rj olcl second year i aw student at the weather was closing in on the year in a similar protest. She MJ Mrs. Thompson was born in Stella May Roach, a formeri University o( Arkansas, died deducted 34.6 percent of her es- I Kansas Citv (AP) An aoclica- i Iowa Jan 18 shc moved president here. Mrs.

Roach died. the Veteran3 hospital shortly be-i The route of the bomber took itjtimated tax for the year, but, at- i Effective Mar. 15 postage of habeas corpus to Chase from West Union Ia at a 1 3 0 tore 9 a Saturday. He was! orthward over taxes in her bracket were re- gift parcels for Austria, French; sent Kansas moving to Hutchinton in The, family wn iinjured in an automoblle accident to Great Falls, Bdont.iduced. she had st.ll paid mora Saturday by attorneys fori ms she operated a millinery to 1932, moving to where Fayetteville Wednesday I and southeastward across thc was called for and at the yearold 1945 A son tion to Key West, where year's end the government owed name.

So we'll have to wait un- Europe ln casc you haven't gues- mnni tn A Ynillll til she shows up." JT nriw -Raleieh." lOUIR by now, it's Civic Work Has Its Drawbacks Being a hotel booster has its Trieste will be reduced four headaches, including a mild bit of a pound. Effective immediately the. marital rift. Take the case of Wil-lamount of meat that can be m-j chareed ith cnargea wim An active helper with the "Lit- Newton is Young McClellan died as his tie Old Ladies Dressed in Orchid agent for the Railway Express ini was flying to Fayetteville and Lace" program during the week Mrs Thomnson was a liam team has beenicludcd in all overseas gift parcelsi The youth is scheduled to.go' on News-Herald's farm and home setting the subscription records. has been reduced to three in district court next week Mrs Thomnsnn was a Mrs.

Kirk went to a piano recital Friday evening to hear her sister, Julie Rayl. She left Friend Husband in charge of the andotte coun jail. The boy was He, in turn, received a frantic! -TV. an escapee from the boys mdus- call from Salesman Lee Landnian to visit a prospect. this territory.

Mrs. Ed O'Connor in an airforce C-47 to visit his President Truman is vacationing. her money The B-36, big as three five-room! The percentages deducted by houses, dropped its tremendous son in the hospital. The senator load in the Gulf of Mexico Fri Sheridan, a Mr. and Mrs.

Carl Shira school at Topeka. iHoisington have purchased thej His attorneys, Thomas H. Pini- So'KiPk'Tngaged his brother, i Jackrene hotel, 114 East and Lee Vaughan contend PC hnhv.oiHo^ Ho tniri a i Hutchinson and moved to Hutch- the youth can be tried onlv Bob, as baby-sitter. He sold share of stock, all right, but whenj Friday. Shira has been co-puvenile court In a hearing six Mrs.

Kirk returned home to find! owner of the Shira Drilling Co. weeks ago Judge Russell C. Barher husband absent without leave 1 and has operated out of Hoismg- dy held that the district court she was more than a little puti ton several years. nllt had jurisdiction to try In 'their application the attorneys held plaining Saturday. It was all in the civic good, Commerce query de Kirk explained.

He was still ex- partment A young man who 1 fi jidcntifies himself as a Great Bend boy now going to school in Brooklyn, N. asks for information about Kansas retail liquor license Herc is thc laU st from that the youth was being held Ji- Some Clear Weather In Western Kansas regulations. He wants to open a liquor store here to "get him- Weather was varied in Western se if established." Manager Bert and Central Kansas Saturday. iSnyder's answer directs him to lega i lv Charge Hit-Run F. V.

Pargeter, Pretty Prairie, was arrested on a charge of leaving an intersection crash at Second and Walnut Saturday. Virgil Wood, city car marker, said he arrested Pargeter after he saw him drive away from the accident. Garden City and Liberal Attorney John Fontron ed clear skies by evening, it was. partly cloudy in Pratt, Dodge City.i One boy and one girl was Sat- A taxi driven by Myrtle Brown Lamed, and Kinsley, but mist was: urday afternoon's birth 704 North Lincoln, was the falling in Hutchinson, Great boy was born to Mr. and Mrs.

other car. Pargeter was booked St. John, and Lyons. Tempera-1 Paul Raya, 217 West at St. for hit-and-run driving at the po- tures were generally the same all Elizabeth's.

The girl to Mr. andilice station, and released on 510 East Fifth, and four grandchildren. jial will bt itery here. Farmmgton ce were held who died McClellan was inform- Mrs. Urie are her own estimates.

In Washington, a treasury the of John a Davie I. Davis I. Davis, about 56, Decatur, died of a heart attack here at 5:56 p.m. Saturday. Mr.

Davis, a laborer with the Rock Island steel gang which is now laying heavy new rails from Turon to Hutchinson, died as he was entering a railroad dining car for supper. Joe Margestich, gang foreman, said Mr. Davis joined his gang Mar. 2. Coroner G.

A. Checkering and Sheriff Walt Dixon who investigated the death, said personal belongings indicated that Mr, Davis had a family In Alabama. A. J. Bagley Stafford A.

J. (Bert) Bagley, of Staf- Fri- Operate On King George London (AP) A grayhaired Scottish surgeon operated on King George VI Saturday in the hope of relieving his serious leg ailment. The nine royal doctors who gathered around an operating table set up in a Buckingham palace bedroom reported later the King's condition was "entirely satisfactory." A later bulletin Saturday night said the king "had a restful day" and his recovery from the opera-! I tion is "proceeding smoothly." James nerve near a.m. He was visibly shaken when! informed of the news but soon regained his composure and in-j formed his wife and a Rpil who accompanied him on the trip Heard About Town Mrs. Susie Marrs, 548 East First, has returned from Monrovia, Calif, where she spent the past three months with her daughter, Alverna Marrs, former army ndurse now in the Monrovia sanitarium.

She also visited her sisters, Mmes. Irene Scott and C. S. Wood, in Park. Mrs.

M. Z. Quinn, 515 East On Feb 26 Carswell field sent spokesman declined comment con- a 50 bo mbe 6 on non-stop rni the Peacemaker organic the world. Tho Lucky tlons tax reslstance ove II was refueled four times! Commenting generally, he said, theair and flew more than law requires the treasury 'axes and we will collect them. Wherever there is nonpayment of taxes, the law provides means for forcing payment, such as attachment of salaries, seizure of property and other means.

The treasury will carry out the law concerning col- New York (AP) Fowler Ham- lections." ilton, New York attorney and for mer Missourian, Saturday was named counsel for Valentine Gub- itchev, Russian engineer accused of espionage. Federal Judge Simon H. Rifkind appointed Hamilton after Gub- itchev declined counsel and claimed diplomatic immunity at his arraignment. Gubitchev and Judith Coplon, 27-year old employe of the U. S.

department of justice, were ar- Porter Store To New Location On May 1 Porter store, which has occupied the building at 120 North Main. for 11 years, will open in a location at 6 North Main May 1, Manager Jerry Lowenstein announced Saturday. The store will continue to over the district with most readings about the mid 30s. Mrs. John F.

Clark, 104 West Fourth, at Grace. $10 bond to appear at 4 p. m. Tuesday. N-H PIC EDITORIAL picture editor who's been seeing: air-minded bovines where- goes these days of Grady and Hot Shot, the cows, saw these Bunyanesque critters practlc- tmt tumbling on top of The News-Herald building- Saturday.

this put an end to boviue airmindnessH Church of Christ, north- 1 of the mam artery the Attic" Mr JHo opes was fford, at 2:30 p.m. Tues- king's right leg a i of Attica day night. The funeral will the Bethel ast of Stafford day. Mr. Floyd E.

Mitten will officiate, and burial will be in Peace Jreek cemetery. Mr. Bagley is survived by: his widow, Georgia, ot the home; a son, DeWitt, Texaco, N. a daughter, Mra. Delia McCully, also of Texaco, N.

a granddaughter; and a great grandson. H. C. Knudson Colby (AP) H. C.

(Chris) Knudson, clerk of court in Thomas county the last 20 years, died Saturday in a Denver hospital at ter an illness of several weeks. Funeral services will be held in the Presbyterian church here of which he was an elder for many years. Mrs. Albert Moeckel Albert Moeckel, 86, long time resident of the Peace Creek community, died in Staf ford hospital about noon Saturday She was born in Saxony, Germany, May 5, 1862. Mrs.

Moeckel is survived by. two sons, Herman and Ben, both of Sylvia; two daughters, Mis Henry Wendflburg, Stafford, and Mrs. Ray Hornbaker, also of Staf ford; 17 grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren. The funeral will be at 2:30 p.m Monday in Pleasant Hill Nazarene church, north of Sylvia. Mrs.

Dale Johnson Mt. Sydney Roberta Johnson, 31, Detroit, a Mt. Hope native, died in a Detroit hospital Saturday after an illness of two years. Mrs. Johnson was bora here Aug.

27, 1917 and attended Mt. Hope schools. She married Dale Johnson in Bentley in 1938. The Johnsons lived in Burrton from spine which controls the ten- mother, Mrs Attic" Third, attended the funeral of her rested last week by FBI agents.il opes was For five months King George has suffered from faulty blood circulation in the legs that might lave caused gangrene and loss of the leet. ill six months.

Leo Espinosa, 512 East Fourth, left this week for a 3-month vacation in Mexico City. He will visit with relatives. After his appointment Hamilton i nc ce by the Woolworth conferred for nearly two hours iu Md in th with Gubitchev. At the conclu-j fulurc Tne Woo i wortn store sion of the meeting, the attorney said the Russian had "not yet made a decision whether or not he is going to accept my assignment as his counselor." is located immediately south of Porter. The new location will give firm the same amount of spacw as at the former site.

It is being completely re-decorated in light pastel colors and fluorescent lighting will be installed. The new location was formerly the of the Marshall Auto store. Hurt In Fall Ben Moss, 511 West Morton Salt Co. employe, suffer- ed a back injury and body Saturday when he fell 15 feet from a ladder while at work. He taken by ambulance to Grace hospital for treatment.

LIVE of Troop 25 demonstrate their activities in downtown business window on Girl Scout Birthday. They are (I. to Marcla Casey, Karen Kirk, Barbara Froistad, Dee Ann Showalter, Dixie Uayei, and Marilyn Belgner Page 3 The Newa-HeraW Sunday, March 13, 1949 fhe Hutchinson Newt-Herald f'oiKiiinimion ol Hutiiuned dally Sunday it Second and Walnut Strteta and Host In Utltchlnion, for irunamisslon throufib Ids maiu dins Matter. Hy THK rilHI.IMIINO OU. John llnrrlt, Editor HEMUKH OF THIS ASSOCIATED rKKtW Tht ITen tntltwd clutlvely to Iht uto lor rtpuDllcatlon ot all ttii local printed In tnii Pftper, as we!) all AP aewa TKItMS Uf Hutcftlneon Territory (Inclualng soutiw.es! copy Ac dally; I2c Sunday.

By carrier per week rural aiall. ona year. SU OU; eU SS Ou. three mo J'J 00; one month, M.21. mall, one Hi.of; months.

SHOO; Uiree months. montrt, jl.oo. (In where carrlei It tatned, mall eubecrlptloru will accepted, rejulat carrier ntu.i.

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About The Hutchinson News Archive

Pages Available:
193,108
Years Available:
1872-1973