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The Hays Daily News from Hays, Kansas • Page 4

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Hays, Kansas
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SOCIETY AND CLUBS HAYS DAILY NEWS. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER IMS Christinas Dinner Mr. and Mrs. Robert C.

Richards entertained with a Christmas dinner at their home on Woodrow Court. Guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Steel and Sally, Mr. and Mrs.

Edgar Fitzgerald. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fuller and Sandy, Mr. and Mrs.

Henry Keller. Mrs. Fred Fuller 'Mrs. Lucille all of Ellis, Mrs. William Gleue, Michael and Pamela of St.

Louis, Mr. and Mrs. Don Rowland and Douglas. Jon and Nancy Richards. t't Sunday Supper Mr.

and Mrs. Fred L. Koerner and family entertained with a supper Sunday evening for Mr. and Mrs. Prentice of Great Bend and Mr.

and Mrs. Dennis Walters. Barry. Mark Stacey of Garden City. Christmas Supper Mr.

and Mrs. Linus Wiesner entertained with a Christmas supper at their home in Prairie Acres. Guests were: Mr. and Mrs. John Honas Mr.

and Mrs. William Wiesner and Lorretta. Mr. and Mrs. John J.

Gnad. Mike and David. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Honas.

Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Honas. Andrea and Jeffery, all of Ellis, Mr. and Mrs.

Herman Honas of Cnanute, Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Wiesner and family of Manhattan, Mr. and Mrs. Johnny J.

Honas of Council Grove, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schoenberger and Alma, John Robert, Mary and Emily Wies- ANN LANDERS ANSWERS YOUR PROBLEMS ner. 't Christmas Dinner Mrs. Clarence Clark had a Christmas dinner for Mr.

and Mrs: Paul Clark of Scottsbluff, and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Toepfer, Billy, Tommy, Philip, Kathy, John and Mark. Recreation Meeting The recreation committee of Winner's 4-H Club, which consists of chairman, Dave Wann, Karma Ruder, Patricia and Calvin Kenney, Steve Kraus, Donna Gassner, Danny Binder and Renee Moore, will meet at 9:30 Thursday morning at the home of Mrs. Edgar Dies.

The committee will make a yearly recreation program plan. Winner's 4-H The Winner's 4-H Club will meet at 11 o'clock Friday in the basement of the Messiah Lutheran Church. This will be the regular meeting for January and will also be the local achievement day program. It will consist of initiation, of new members, recognition of project leaders, presentation of bronze pins to 4-H members who have completed their first year of 4-H work and distribution of new 4-H project material. Program Committee The program committee of Winners 4-H Club will meet at 8:30 a.m.

Friday in the basement to complete 4-H program books. The program committee, under the chairmanship of Keith Holste, consists of all junior and senior officers, pianists, song leaders and recreation leaders. Dear Ann Landers: Every college student away from home will thank you if you print this letter. Mail is very important to us. and we know it- is important to our parents, too.

But what do they write about? Here is a sample of a letter received yesterday: "Aunt Edna had a pain in her side last She thought it was appendicitis but it passed over. Uncle Gordie brought us six dozen fresh eggs from his farm this morning. The eggs he brings us are very small and rather brownish in'color. I like the white best but Tie never brinsis us those. The bulb in the street light by our house burned out.

I wonder how long it will the city to notice it?" This is news? We anpreciate any sunnort you can eive Tired Of Reading Nothing. Dear Nnth'ng: So what do you want? The inside word from the Pentagon, the State Department and the White House? A letter from home lets you know your folks are thinking, about YOU. If your mother happens to be a Willa Gather. you're lucky, but most mothers are just ordinary people who write as best they can. So be grateful and quit beefing.

Dear Ann Landers: A neighbor had surgery six weeks ago. It was nothing serious but she made a big thing of it. This woman's doctor is a family man and well thought of in the community. His car has been parked in front of her house about three times a week ever since the operation. wOn- der if this sort of attention "is necessary.

Most patients go to the doctor's office for post-operative checkups, don't they? I am not saying that anything is going on but I have discussed this with a few friends and it seems to us that are letting themselves in for a lot of unnecessary gossip. Should I talk to my neighbor and tell her she is injuring the doctor's reputation as well as her Person Who Means Well. Dear Person: I'm all for cutting down on gossip and I suggest you staYt with yourself. Mind your own business and get your jollies some other way. Dear Ann Landers: My husband and I have not gone anywhere by ourselves since 1961.

We were married seven years before our twin sons were born and of course we were thrilled. But when a mother stays home with two active boys, night and day for three years, she gets over the thrill. At least I did. My husband will not allow me to hire a sitter. He says people who have children should stay home or take their children with them.

He is forever showing me articles about kids who are delinquent because their parents didn't pay enough attention to them. Please give me a hand before I wind up on the funny On The Edge. Dear Edge: Parents need an occasional evening away from their children and the kids need it, too. (Once every two weeks is not too often). If your boys don't learn to adjust to people outside the family they'll have difficulty when they start school.

Tell your husband for me that one extreme is as bad as the other. When necking becomes petting, watch put! To learn how the smart girl keeps both her dignity and her boy friend, send for Ann Landers' booklet "Necking and How Far To Go," enclosing with your request 25 cents in coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope. Ann Landers will be glad to, help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of this newspaper enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Mullcn-Lujin Engagement Mr.

and Mrs. Fred Mullen of Hays announce the of their daughter, Katherine Ann, to Arthur William Lujin, son of Mr. and Richard T. Lujin of Independence, Mo. Miss Mullen attended Fort Hays State College where she was a member of the Delta Zeta social sorority.

Mr. Lujin is a graduate of the University of Missouri at Columbia where he was a member of the Eta Kappa Nu honorary electrical engineering fraternity. He is doing graduate work at the university and will receive his Master's degree in January. The wedding will take place Jan. 29 at the First Lutheran Church in Mission Hills.

of Gorham and Don Sander of Victoria visited Mrs. Irene Vonfeldt and Carol on Christmas. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Froelich' were Christmas midnight luncheon guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Alvin Robben. Mr. and tors. Herbert Wagner entertained with a Christmas dinner for Mr.

Fight Fakery Is Exposed By Two Hollywood Huskies By Harold Heffernan and Mrs. B. J. Wagner of. Gorham, Mr.

andi Jerry Hale of Leoti, Mary Make-believers at work: Cobb of Bunker Hill and Billy A couple of the boys HOLLYWOOD (N A A) Wagner of Russell. Mrs. Laura Wasinger of Lo-iof a cl gan spent Christmas with Mr. Paramount's were whooping it up in the back room doubling up, crashed back (Travels just about, six inches against the plastic wall (forti-' fied against just such abuse). but look out." "Yeah," said Mitchum coming and Mrs.

Alvin Robben Wayne and Stage 16. John Robert Mitchum se on Mrs. Ralph Crawford and Mr. were doing their key fight scene the Duke ulc W144M 4.TXAt,V<t<Ulll VLJJlJJJIC "Good, good," nodded Howard over to the conference, "but in Hawks, the tall, rugged, white- i the movies a six-inch punch doesn't look like anything. It's those round-housers the people out front really like to watch." "That's right," agreed Wayne, Old Tricks and Mrs.

Ted Crawford of Hays! for the big Western movie, "El know Wa ne cut in "I' uTh ats ri agreed Wayne, spent' Wednesday with John i Dorado," and obviously having! do this and nj back still got to see the blow 3 a against the wall, he kicked out'travel or they think you're fak trinistttalir AMM IHCT it A nH Crawford at Stafford hospital, i the time of their lives. Wilbert Leiker of Hutchinson "I'll come at you like this," spent Christmas with his par- Wayne said as they stood figur- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Leik- ing out the next shot. He bared el 'J? nd sons i Ws teeth and let fly a piston- The Walker grade school held like right that stopped a whis- its ty- bum, a wiiio Christmas play Thursday ker short of Mitchum's square evening at Walker school.

chin, saying "pow" Mitchum and Mrs. Harold O'Mal-! whipped his head back as sud- ley of Manhattan spent Christ-1 denly as if he'd been rammed Yn OC iirifh I i A mas with Mr. and Mrs. John! by a truck. Brown and Mr.

and Mrs. Jerry' The two Riedel. Mr. and behemoths were spending a whole morning Mrs. Louis Schulte throwing make-believe punches, and family of Norton and Mr.

feinting, grimacing, falling, turn- and Mrs. Elmer Schulte and bling-the idea being to miss lamiiy were Sunday guests of i each blow the narrowest pos- Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dauber of; sible margin. They are old Bunker Hill.

hands at this game, but there's Mr. and Mrs. Herb Wagner, no place for error. One mistake Mr. and Mrs.

Francis Polcyn, and somebody'd get hurt. Dou- Mrs. Charles Cobb and Mr. and bles were strictly out since -11 Mrs. Kalvin Smejskal of Me- of the action is in closeup.

Leansboro, 111., and Mrs. Fred They resumed after a short Anderson were supper guests of breather. "Now, then, how about iwn Mrs Wagner; this? Mitch said squaring off 'menacingly. He hooked a right: and Mrs. Dwayne Klein then a left: "Wham!" viciously 'with one cowboy boot.

"Yes, but Bob," said Hawks, the creator of SO or more similar brawls, "if you'd followed through with that left you'd i mcu have been leaning over him so out this kind of fighting we're he could catch, you right under doing?" he asked. "It was Yaki- ing it." And here he demonstrated a long one from the shoulder. Master trickster "You know who it was figured the chin. Too obvious. Let's try it that way." ma Canutt (an all-time great stunt man now staging most of So they did, and Mitch, Hollywood's action scenes) ing backward across the room, We got tired beating each landed on a cot, which collapsed, i other up, so we doped out how "You all right, Bob?" Hawks i to miss each other and make it asked as Wayne rushed to the took right." aid of his fallen adversary.

The talk got around, as it I'm all right," Mitch ways does in such situations, to grimaced, "just, get me a tough- er cot Among the spectators U1 Wayne's big trainer, Ralph Vol- i "The Spoilers," the battle which kie, who has been with him for old-time fans still insist remains many years. He has also trained i "the greatest and the one by five ring champions Mickey I which all others in movies have At A the memorable match between William Farnum and Tom Santschi in the silent version of terday for their home in Man-i hattan after spending Christmas with Mrs. Dunne's parents, Mr. i and Mrs. Lowell Hogue.

I Mr. and Mrs. Dan J. Keary' and children of Annandale, are holiday guests of Keary's parents, Mr. and A.

L. Hammersmith. The Kearys will leave Thursday for Kansas City to visit with Mr. Keary's parents, Mr. and Mrs.

E. Dan Keary. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Hammersmith and Cinday of Dodge' City are visiting with Mr.

and Mrs. A. L. Hammersmith ot Hays and Dan Goetz of Victoria. and Sunday.

Mr. of Great Bend, Mr. and Mrs. to within a button-width of Linus Schmeidler, Mr. and Mrs.

Wayne's midriff, and the seen, Marvin Stromel and family of Hays and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Froelich and family were sup- Walker, Barney Ross, Mushy Callahan, Bud Taylor and Jackie Fields. "That Duke," he said, been measured ever Mitchum cocked his head and considered for a moment. "You uMauf J1J VSJ A VIU "he's got the hardest right-hand! know something, Duke?" he punch of any man I've ever; said.

"I like our way Especially and I've seen 'em all. i when I'm fighting you." per guests on Christmas of Mrs Joe Stromel. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Brungardt and daughters of Hays visited Mr.

and Mrs. Ralph Crawford and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Crawford on Christmas day. 4 Mr.

and Mrs. Alfred Gerstner of Hays visited Mrs. Irene Vonfeldt and Carol Monday. INTENSE (Continued from Page 1) aid I DEATHS Alma V. Stultz Mrs.

Alma V. Stultz of died Monday night at ley Memorial Hospital at the age of 76. Her husband, Eber, died in 1957. Survivors include three daugh North, the air war in the South continued unabated. U.S.

Air Force B52s from Government Has vj.o. mi ruiue oats irom Guam hit two suspected Viet'v. nance 10 Get Cong concentrations in Quang Tri Province, 400 miles north of Back Millions Saigon. The raid Tuesday night ended speculation that which had South Viet Nam ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) Dur dent Andrew Jackson the fedei four days, had joined the air moratorium.

There was also no relief for the Beds from tactical air strikes in the South. U.S. carrier planes and South Vietnamese Now, 127 years later, the state wants to know if it can keep the money. State Comptroller Arthur Lev- PERSONALS HADLEY HOSPITAL Medical- Mrs. Johanna Wahl, McCracken Mrs.

Katherine Erbert, Ellis Mrs. Luella Burton, Plainville Mrs. Mary Rice, Hays Mrs. Mary Baumann, Ellis Mrs. Ellen Strang, Natoma Mrs.

Rosa Baker, Hays Mrs. Angeline Denning, Victoria Mrs. LoRee Cooley, Bison Patricia Chrisler, Gorham Carol Stramel, Hays Patrick Leiker, Hays Mrs. Lizzie Rothe, Otis Mrs. Bertha Meistrell, Plainville Surgical- Jacqueline Lamer, Hays Mst.

Peter Pfannenstiel, Hays Dugan, Alton Shick, Norcatur Mrs. Veva Adams, Hoxie Mrs; Edith Sharp, Leoti Billy Kahle, Hoxie Mrs. Elgerine Gross, Hays Bodney Brunson, Stockton Mrs. Patricia Pierce, Hays Julie Ann Gansel, Hill City Martha Uhrich, Oakley Mrs. Jessamine Shields, Hays Mrs.

Ruth Boyer, Hays Diana Harrison, Plainville Mst. Richard Allen, Hays Robin Brown, Hays Mrs. Cheryl Irvin, Hays Mrs. Rosa Jones, Hays Mst. Peter Pfannenstiel, Hays True, Plainville Mrs.

Veva Adams, Hoxie Dennis Dugan, Alton John King, Ellis Lamer, Hays Mrs. Patricia Logan, Hays George Neely, Dighton Mrs. Teresa Parris, Hays Lester Webster, Hays Ants are the oldest city- dwellers. While man's urban civilization is scarcely 7,000 or so years old, the insects have been living in miniature cities for more than 80 million yean. Weekend guests at the home of Mr.

and Mrs. Jack Buchheister were: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tindall, Pueblo, Mr. and Mrs.

E. E. Bruegel and Bob Bruegel of Los Animas, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Bruegel and Ted Bruegel Garden City; Frank Bruegel of Verona, Mrs.

Aethel Homburg of Ellis; Mrs. Don Betthauser and Dave of Derby; Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Bowyer and family of Pawnee Rock; Miss Helen Schrader of Great Bend; and Mr. and Mrs.

Ken Solomon of Hays. They attended the funeral of Emanuel Bruegel Tuesday in Ellis. Jack Jill Clearance on boys and girls winter coats now in progress. 35-llt Mr. and Mrs.

H. E. George spent the Christmas holidays with their son, Capt. and Mrs. Richard George and family in Denison, Tex.

Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Stecklein, Ronnie and Mary Kay and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Schmidt, Glen, Diane and Renee of Denver left Monday after spending Christmas with Mrs.

Stecklein's and Mrs. Schmidt's mother, Mrs. Louise Geist and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs.

W. E. Mecken- stock and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Judy are spending a vacation in Mexico.

Garden Grill closed until January 4, 6:00 p.m. 41-2t Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Swenson and Mike of Kansas City left for their home after visiting with Mrs. Swenson's mother, Mrs.

Joe O'Loughlin. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Coffelt, Charles and Joseph of Jackson, are visiting for the holidays at the home of Mrs. Coffelt's mother, Mrs.

Joe O'Loughlin. Mrs. Al Schlyer is visiting in Denver with her brothers, Dr. Jack Wasinger, Mrs. Wasinger and family, and Dr.

Les Wasinger, Mrs. Wasinger and family- Dan's Cafe will reopen 7:00 a.m. January 3. 40-6t Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Berland, Bobby and Ann Marie have returned from Coffeyville where they spent Christmas with her mother, Mrs. Frances Cox. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Dies, Carmen, Dixie and Barry and Gerenarda Ratliff of Honduras i returned last night after spend- ing Christmas with relatives and friends in Kingman, Wichita, Harper and Cheney.

Mr. and Mrs. Joel and Gretchen of Topeka were holiday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. I Mike Billinger and family.

Mrs. Gunnels is the Billingers daughter. While they last all Philco merchandise at dealer's cost. Home Furniture Company. 41-5t Mr.

and Mrs. John Schultz of Ness City visited today with a brother of Mr. Schultz who is a patient at Hadley Memorial Hospital. Mr. and Mrs.

Larry Dreiling returned to their home at Mankato today after having spent Christmas in Hays with relatives. Cpl. Ralph Gribben is spending a 10-day furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gribben.

Cpl. Bribben just returned from a Caribbean cruise and is presently stationed at Camp Lejuene, N.C., at the Marine base. Garden Grill closed until January 4, 6:00 p.m. 41-2t Gerenarda Ratliff of Honduras, Central America, is vacationing at the home of Mr. and Edgar Dies.

Miss Ratliff, who teaches at a girls' school in Honduras, was an Interna- i tional Farm Youth Exchange three years ago at which time i she stayed at the Dies home. Holiday guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Clark are Mr. and Mrs.

Paul Clark of Scottsbluff, and Mr. and Mrs. James Clark, David and Jeffery of Abilene. Mr. and Mrs.

Levi Bedard were in Wichita Tuesday where they met their son, Mr. and Mrs. I Dale Bedard and family, who I came from Germany to attend i the wedding of his brother, ard, to Janelle Lorbeer tomorrow. While they last all Philco merchandise at dealer's cost. Home Furniture Company.

41-5t Mr. and Mrs. Pat Dunne, Mike, Pat and Karen left yes- WALKER Mrs. Herbert Wagner I Mr. and Mrs.

Elmer Schulte and family and Mrs. Frank Schulte entertained with a supper on Christmas for Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schulte and girls, Mr. and Mrs.

Otto Schulte, Tom and Gary of Vincent, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Schulte of Victoria, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Brull and family of Hays, Ralph Schulte and daughter of Russell, Wanda Karlin of Hays and Norman I Schulte of Russell.

1 Mr. and Mrs. Al Braun and i family were Christmas dinner guests of Mr. Andrew Braun and Mary at Victoria. Mr.

and Mrs. Kalvin Smejskal i of McLeansboro, 111., and Mrs. i Frances Polcyn of Gorham vis- ited Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Wag- Iner Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gassmen of Wyoming spent the week with Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Robi ben.

Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Riedel of Brewster spent the Christmas holidays with Mr. and Mrs. John Riedel and girls and Mr.

i Mrs. Loren Truan and Ricky at i Gorham. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hale and Yolanda of Leoti, Billy Wagner and Mary Cobb of Russell visited Mr.

and Mrs. B. J. Wagner on Christmas day. Mr.

and Mrs. Francis Polcyn were Christmas dinner guests of i Mr. and Mrs. Dan Brauu in 1 Vincent. Mr.

and Mrs. Ted Crawford and family of Hays, and Mrs. Lee Crawford 'and family i of Holyrood and Mr. and Mrs. i La Vern Dreiling and family of Victoria were Christmas supper guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Ralph I Crawford. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Brungardt i the U.S.

standpoint, to sugg peaceful the wiser way out of the Nam State wr mt mm, M1CIIICO CTilU OlIUVH JCUI JI COC ters, Mrs. Laura Kollman, Wood- i m-opeller-d i Skvraiders ltt told Sen Robert F. Kennedy, Winch ter, a 7hed Viet Cong pbSSnTta! D-N-V- In a letter Tuesday that Long An Province to help small Congress should decide whether government positions 25 miles to demand repayment or re- Mrs. Virginia Alt two sons, Kent, ston; stepmother, Mrs. Viet Scott, Evansville, four sis offi- Bob Wood- outhwest of gon.

U.S. and Vietnamese air force "on to repay. new 280 combat sorties lease the state from any obliga- wv vjiitscct, ovri it to ters, Mrs. Nora Johnson, Madi-; against Viet Cong river ship- clined word Vietnamese and U.S. leaders are expected to accept the Viet Cong offer of a four-day truce i Viet Nam New Year 'i Memorlal Chapel, Stockton.

Funeral services will be at 2 p. m. Friday at the Smith In 1836, Congress voted to dis- tribute a federal surplus of $28 ping, encampments, storage; million among the states as and supply areas, and dropped; loans, payable on demand. Levitt said that only York and two or three other states had kept the funds intact I in the event of such a demand. over the holidays, Jan.

20-23. Similar i Herbert Iwi EU Church lulls in the guerrilla war have i Woodston, will officiate, occurred in past years. Burial will be in the ston cemetery. Friends may ofi Services Meld For Emanuel Bruegel Services were Held at 10 a. m.

Wood- Tuesday at St. John's Lutheran RESTRICTIONS (Continued from Page 1) i Of greater interest now was what reaction might come from the Reds to the halt in U.S.- South Vietnamese bombing of targets in the North which began with the Christmas truce. A five-day pause in the air' raids last May produced denun- seven ciations from call at the neral home until service time. president Johnson in AIRLIFT (Continued from Page 1) North Vietnamese regi- Hanoi-Peking ments reported operating in the alleging U.S. deception to cover! mountains.

The brigade is tak- aggressiye designs. Critics of i ing over an area through which U.S. policy contended a longer Communist supplies are be- suspension of the air strikes! lieved coming from North Viet would have given North Viet Nam. Nam a better chance to put out Some of the men served as a peace feeler. (volunteers in Viet Nam before The White House, State De- as machine gunners on helicop- partment and Pentagon have! ters.

The division won its nick- masked in secrecy the U.S.! name and lightning armpatch strategy at this juncture. Secre- for its jungle fight against the tary of State Dean Rusk was Japanese in the Solomon Islands reliably reported to have asked in 1943. through Hhungarian diplomatic U.S. officials did not say- Church in Ellis for Emanuel iic iuc uuuuou.i fu- Bru eg el Swink, a form- speech at the Smithsonian Insti- er kins resident who died Sat- tution expressed the desire of urday at the age of 57. the United States to increase the The Rev.

Norman K. Nelson free flow of ideas and of the officiated. Burial was in the works of science and imagina- church cemetery. tion. Survivors include his mother, On Nov.

4, Rusk told a White Mrs. Anna Bruegel, Swink; two House conference on medicine Aethel Homburg, and public health that the prob- Charles (Adelheid) lems in these fields were "not Pueblo, and three problems which ought to be gov- rs, E. Los Animos, erned by political process, but Otto, Garden City; Frank, ought to be governed by the el- ve na ementary interest of man in his His father, the Rev. Ernest health." Bruegel, preceded him in McClbskey noted that the de- Pallbearers were E. Otto, partment has validated the Frank, Ted and Bob Bruegel passports of approximately 80 ana JacK channels for a Hanoi response but the State Department refused to confirm this publicly.

U.S. informants also denied that Moscow had been promised no resumption of bombings while Shelepin is in Hanoi. Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin was there when the U.S. raids on North Viet Nam began on February.

President Johnson also has been keeping congressmen in the dark about the strategy in- whether the rest of the division would be moved in from Hawaii. Twenty-one Americans were killed in combat last week compared with 10 in the previous IRS To Provide Help To Taxpayers The schedule of Internal Revenue assistance days for January has been announced. mnj La tlcI6J IR agents will be available to men, and others demonstrating assistance to individuals interest in Cuba, were permit newsmen for travel to Communist China although few have been admitted there. On occasions, the relatives of American prisoners held in communist China have had passports validated for travel there. In the case of Cuba, newsmen, businessmen, lawyers, clergy- Sunday to Saturday reporting a U.S.

spokesman an- nounced. There were 95 Ameri- i al tax von 10 14 17 oi Hays office at 1010 wh( require help with their fed- ted to travel there. can wounded. Government casualties were listed as 227 dead, 499 wounded and 104 either wounded or captured, while the Communist toll East 17th St. Subscribe to the Hays Daily News.

volved in the bombing lull, a I was given as 937 killed and 137 check of available members wounded or captured. Despite the air lull in the indicated today. Quitting Business SALE The Designer's Fabric Shop 121 Kinui ANN'S AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE of Coats Suits Car Coats On Main Floor Starts 9:30 Thursday, December 30 Winter Coats $36,00 to $140.00 Suits $35.00 to 5100,00 Car Coats $26.00 to $46,00 Ski Jackets $16.00 to $25.00 Now $25.00 to $100.00 Now $25.00 to $70.00 Now $20.00 to $32.50 Now $12,00 to 19.00 All Sales Final No Exchanges No Phone Orders Winter Millinery Pries Main at 13th LADIES NOTICE! Ready-to-Wear CLEARANCE Ski Jiokttt Off i Off Slacks i Off SwtaUrs i Off Skirts 3 Off SlMpwur i Off ATTEND OUR NIGHT OWL SALE Thursday, December 30th ARNIE'S For The Fashion Rebel Centennial Shopping Center.

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About The Hays Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
97,651
Years Available:
1950-2009