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Miami News-Record from Miami, Oklahoma • 4

Publication:
Miami News-Recordi
Location:
Miami, Oklahoma
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

202J945 TrumanMWeigl Be elt In Pacific Decision 7TT HI H' 1 4 SMB con ill MARKETS was with the nations top com 1 Three aM Mbioig operations in manders He has kept constant fte Phili ines touch since seeing Gen George ure of the 44th and645th glandg Marshall Army chief of staff yes and id extension nf th Amari the terday it 1 oned the break but the pur ignoring the fact1' that chases were not large XX 4 finish whest 'was higher to 1 lower than yester day dose May $172 Vi is a ti i Plants' sgft exercise from the raising and lowering of tempera ture and alternating drying out and watering periods Banfield Market (Subject to market changes) Hogs: Good to choice 180 270 lbs $1415 top Cattle: Good to choice heifers and steers $1000 11400 common to indium $750 $1100 good to choice cows $850 $1050 common to medium $500 $850 bulla all weights $750 $9M 1 St uu uiue extension or me Ameri can hold on Mindanao The 41st division captured Ba labac island 45 miles north of Borneo which is already threaten ed by the hold on the Sulu Archipelago reaching to within 30 miles east of Borneo Bombers blasted Tarakan oil de velopments and Gen Douglas MacArthur said oil supply from' this area has ceas Carabao island at the mouth of Manila was seized by the 38th division which sealed the Nippon ese garrison of perhaps 500 in their underground caves Carabao is ort rank the last of the old fortresses guarding Manila bay to be recaptured lydIntfoduc i I Spain has broken relations with Japan in protest against attacks on Spanish civilians in the Philip pines BURNS ATAL TO WIE AND 2 CHILDREN (Continued rom Page One) Kinney is survived by her parents Mr and Mrs Richard Hillouse Pontiac Mo four brothers and listers uneral services will be conduct ed at 10 Saturday morning at the Sycamore chapel The Rev erend Goodnight will officiate Burial will be in Seneca cemetery under direction of the Buzzard neral home LOWER PRICES OR CLOTHING (Continued rom Page One) crease in rates above the mini mum Since the minimum' in gen eral has been 50 cents this amounts to an average across the board boost of five cents an hour Davis also gave a go ahead to negotiations through collective bar gaining for a balanced and properly aligned wage rate struc WLB had recommended this to provide reasonable differ entials for key skills above the minimum rate Any adjustments WLB subse quently may approve along those lines will require an QPA price determination with a decision up to Davis if price increases would result new order affecting clothing manufacturers was de scribed by Price Administrator Chester Bowles as "one of the last major in the govern program to increase pro duction of moderate and low priced clothing while simultan eously reducing retail prices In effect it requires producers of cotton wool and rayon garments and accessories to go back to their average price lines of 1943 Known as the maximum aver age price regulation the order will become operative in June By late summer it should bring a better supply of inexpensive clothing Bowles said YANKS MOPPING UP NUERNBERG (Continued rom Page One) of disaster In happier years Hitler would have spoken to the' Nazi faithful in Nuernberg on this his 55 birth day anniversary The Americans candles in the grimmest and perhaps birthday that Hit der ever' spent Halle (pop 220 862) fell yesterday and it was the 40th German city of more than 100600 persons already captured or all practical purposes or ganized German resistance on a well defined front had ceased and the war had become a battle of pockets The main weight of Gen Eisen nine army command was hurled south against the national redoubt in the Bavarian Alps and north against another redoubt en closing the north German ports Berlin and Denmark Geni Omar American 12th army group was halted vol untarily on the line of the Elbe and Mulde rivers but the Sixth army group 'of Gen Jacob Devers was pushing forward in the south and the 21st army group of ield Marshal Montgomery was beseig ing or imperilling all the North sea ports The siege of Bremen (342306) was 'intensified from three sides The British were a mile from Harburg (118193) west of the Elbe and a southern suburb of Hamburg (1682220) greatest port on the continent and second' city of Germany The boat base Of Emden was within light artillery range Luebeck was 35 miles away and Kiel was but 57 The Third army fought into the outskirts of Chemnitz Saxony irail and industrial center of 334563 The irst army beseiged Dessau (120000) 52 miles southwest of Berlin5 Ninth army slightly larged its Elbe river bridgehead five miles beyond Barby and in the words pf Gen1 com munique th situation under control" on 1 its northern flank where 1000 or so Nazistried to break through' Ninth army lines? to join the main German fprces Already '400 of the Nazis who broke into the northern tlank haye'Jieeir captured numer ous tanks (and armored vehicles have been destroyed The Ninth army wag erasing' the others swiftly while 'the rest of its front remained quiet The last' Nazis' perhaps 20000 of them including skilled fighters of the 17tli S3 division' were com pressed into a square mile of the heart of iNuernberg whose 431000 persons made it the second larg est Bavarian'city "Already 18000 been captured and half that? remained wege actually fight ing a battle" to the for the moment 'at Evett civilians joined the battle with 'pickaxes shovels and ths like The Rainbow (42nd) Thunderbird (45th) and Third divisions closed in relent JAPS DENY LONDON April OBZ The Tokyo radio today quoted Sadao Iguchi A government information bureaiX spokesman denying Al lied charges of Japanese "atrocities in' Manila? Igucht dismissed the as propaganda cam A little native 'girl bn' Okinawa pauses to give the photographer i a big smile as she totes a baby i pijjoose style along a road lead ing to safety behind Amerii can lines A YANKS ADVANCE IN PACIIC WAR (Continued qpm Page One) however had captured his vast stadium where he used to rouse 500000 listeners and were beating down on Nuernberg within 70 miles of Munich and 132 of mountain home at Berchtesgaden Moreover many of the 18 ma jor cities of Germany' which Hit ler still rules were ablaze like rooftop level They also wrecked RITES HELD OR GREAT REPORTER (Continued rom Page One) vision lost a buddy Ernie Pyle 18 April A white cross was painted on the casket and near it rested a floral piece made of local green ery and a sheaf of grain which was fashioned by Sgt Irvin Stei fel of Camden One of dogtags was nailed to the top end of the casket The chaplain spoke simply of the cheer the little reporter had given those at home and that "we pray God will bless him doubly our comrade Ernie It seemed that Ernie was stay ing as close in death as he did in life to doughboy for the small wooden casket was lowered into a row containing 14 other graves hearings gave no Indication of the significance of the name "cheat but it evidently applies to modificatiou'of the old style steam turbine propulsiqm 'vxt' Such is found in the fact that existing naval establish ments' equipped to reassemble those underwater missiles after: they have been in firing tests will do the same work on the new type Torpedoes probably are 'the' most' complex delicately assem bled and' hence costly wholly expendable instruments of' destraction in the whole field of ordnance Prewar costs ranged' up to $15000 each although war: time mass production has brought their cost down to about $9000 a unit The old style torpedo in addi tion to its of several hundred pounds of TNT has its own built in propulsivd mechanism put into operation by atrip kver released when the torpedo is fired 'About one third of the tube consists of a flask of air under high pressure: When the torpedo is fired the air escapes through email pipe lines into a combus tion chamber where it is mixed with jets of alcohol and water The alcohol is ignited and re sultant steam and gas under high pressure is forced against turbines which rotate the pro peller snatts Other built in mechanisms trol its course and depth Chicago Grain CHICAGO April (M May July and September barley broke the five cent limit todaytand other grain futures markets were heavy with losses ranging from fractions to more than a cent a bushel Profit cashing and hedging were evident from the start and bearish sentiment was given a boost by in creased grain arrivals at terminal markets and favorable crop re ports t''' JS' J1 accounting for the losses was the easier tone of coarse grains in the cash markets Pet "traders' were" credited with heavv' sales of July wheat during the final hour and prices dropped shiftily'' Some mill buying devel 4 JI A Attorneys Will1 Seek New Trial In Suit LOS ANGELES April LTT in quickly to familiarize himself with carg0 ghi contributi a the military situation all sec total of 18 destr damaged tions of the world One of his first bgtl philippines based bomb conferences after he was sworn in erg VMM nAW I up Th OWaH(m in Strategyof Big Not Expected To Be Diihirbed By fDR'e Successor JACK BELL WASHINGTON April 20 President" Truman is moving can' tiously into ranklin seat on the council of highest Al lied military strategy His weight Is likely to be felt in Pacific deci aionh i Even before day comes Mr Truman may be called upon to re view the strategy for defeating Japan that undoubtedly was dis? eussed at Yalta by his predecessor and Prime Minister Churchill if not with Premier Stalin In this connection it would not be surprising to Washington ob servers if the new President sum mons leet Admiral Chester Nimitz and Gen Douglas MacAr thur home for personal conferences before the final assault on Japan President Roosevelt arranged i for Nimitz and MacArthur to i share command for (the on to Tokyo drive There are no indica tions Mr Truman plans to dis turb this setup Consequently he may want to have the views of the field leaders as well as those of the Allied high command members Here Generally two schools of thought frequently are heard in Washing ton about the quickest and best way of subduing the Japanese One of these favors a direct all out assault on the Japanese islands The other plan apparently calls for a landing on the China coast starving Japan by blockade and reducing the cities and plants to shambles by bombing The high command will have to decide: iit has not ajready done so what method is to be used It is in such a decision that Mr Tru man is likely to play a part This does not mean the Presi dent's friends said that he ever will overrule a decision that might be reached unanimously or nearly so by the military leaders But if they disagree over methods Mr Truman will have to make the choice The chief executive has moved THROUGH OUTERS CITY DEENSES (Cbntinuedrom Page One) fe porary confusionin Reports of Russian successes Pne is seven miles: north northeast of the capi tal but the context" of the Ger man communique indicated other Buchholz was meant Southeast of I the capital Mari shal Ivan irst Ukraine fan 'armyscored a similar success pushing forward 16 miles from Cottbugon the Spree and break ingdhto Calau 43 miles from Ber lin and 59miles from 'American irst army siege lines at Wurt en arther' south German: broad casts grid forces 'rolled even deeper toward the American lines reaching Hoyerswerda 55 miles or less frdhi a union with Gen forces' The wedge driven to Protezel menaced' Bernau four miles northeast of the capital as wellas' Werneuchen eight miles northeast 1 and Strausberg 10 miles east of the city camjiaigii' southeast of Berlin broke through the Spree river defenses as well as Spree Wald' a'regien of lake's and for ests along the Spree jvhich had promised to be the most formidable defenses of the capital irithat di rection At Gala "the Russians were only abodt four miles from Adolf last north south the one running from Berlin to Dresden and the moun tain strongholds of Bohemia and and only miles northeast of insterwalde: a junction bn one of the last two main railways running sbuth from Berlin However this line' veering south east' through Hoyerswerda and Bautzzen may already have been cut The second line running through Jueterbog Elsterwerda and Dres den is 15 miles farther west Virtually turning their backs on the American forces poised along the Elbe 45 miles west of Berlin the Germanssaid they were throw ing remaining forces conserved for dire emergency into the of fire steel and blood" raging along the Vuter defenses of Eastern Berlin Spree river defenses southeast of Berlin also were cracked Ger man broadcasts said a few hours after Premier Marshal Stalin had confirmed that Soviet bridgeheads had been established on the west side of the Oder and Neisse rivers decisive battle of this war is being fought in an inferno of flames searchlights and the most hellish noise ever German broadcast said in describ ing the battle' German" troops have 'started counter attacks mainly1 south of rapkfurt and onboth sides of Seelow and below Wriezen the ac count added? The Germans previ ously had reported the two latter on an arc within 20 miles of in' Russian hands The Russian' high command without disclosing details of the PAGEeOUR SuicidTactics Qf JapiJIaJtmg? Victory Costly By GRANT MACDONALD IE SHIMA April (Delayed) anatical Japanese suicide tactics which haveiincluded futile one man charges by 'h a uf making? fighting on little Is more bitter by the hour Enemy soldiers with satchels pf explosives scrappea wuem ire quentiy have rushed headlong! to our' lines' blowing themselves to bits and counter attacks have been made by Jhpaneke armed only with rocks and pieces of glass There even have been instances of Japanese throwing mortar shells with their hands It is cave to cave pillbox to pillbox warfaxfi for men of the 77th division as Japanese are root ed out Many of the enemy hide in well camouflaged strong points un til American troops have passed Then they rush out attacking from the rear in screaming banzai charges Snipers who have waited as long as 48 hours in hiding places open up after the Yanks go by and fire steadily until destroyed At 5:15 this morning about 30 Japanese Infiltrated or came out of hiding to an artillery area behind our lines an area which was secured April 16 Sgt Bob Allen Army correspondent and a former Associated Press and Reuters correspondent during the Spanish war got the story from the men attacked "The Japs sneaked into the artil lery position" Allen said crept around trying to stao tne men sleeping in foxholes Most of the Japs carried knives grenades and satchel charges strapped to their bodies They apparently plan ned to destroy the guns but could not locate them in the dark In a few minutes everything was con fusion as ouy men and the Japs mixed it Our men were afraid to fire for fear of hitting their buddies even got into a command post where Lieut Col Elbett Tuttle commanding officer of the 304th infantry battalion1 roriner Atlanta Ga attorney wu: sleep ing in'a tent covered foxhole They beat him with clubs but he fought them off and ran away in straggly said' the Red army forces had crossed the Oder east Berlin and had ciiried 'the Neisse twith' the capture of orst' Muskau and Weisswasser 58 tod72 miles southeast of the qapital The Germans said greatest tank battle of all time was in'prog ress on' the approaches to their and asserted 1074 Red afmjr tanks had' been destroyed in thefirst three the battle which they announced had begun last' Monda is our fanatical will not ply to maintain the 'present of Russfamlosses but to Increase them td'such an extent that the Russians onceiand for all will losethe desire to take a German broad cast said this morning Despite the boast it admitted the Germans were falling back in the greatibattle 'which it iridj wa reaching a climax Still another great Soviet drive was' threatening the naval base of Stettin at" the ipouth of the Oder the Germans said''?" Marshal Rodion Se'tond meanwhile rushed within 10 miles of Laa key railroad "hub on Toad to Prague was sweeping up the river valley in Czecho ft 'H Senators Doubt Trmhingg JtPIIge Jeoj(ded Senators disputed today whether the War department 'ever 'prbfti isedthat soldiers under 22 would i not be sent into combat without 12 months training wf' 4 i Senator (D Tex) 'con tended that was "the impressidif given" the 1942 when the draft age was' lowered to in clude 18 and 19 year olds has urged that the Senate write an amendment to'tha effect into pending iegisla tion to extend the draft act now t'1 1 due expire May 15 f'f 'f Taking issue "with the Texan Senator Austin (R Vt) read a let ter he said the War departipent sent to military committee ton Oct 23 1942 opposing a requirei menb for 12months of The letter Said numerous cases could be cited where this would result in men waiting the iin this country' when' they were needed in combat to the extension act restricting the use of men un der 19? in combat service also are sought 1 Kansas City Livestock KANSAS CITY April Cattle: 500 1700 calves 150 200 around 200 cattle offered about half of these cows load of medium slaughter steers and odd head of beef cows sold steady only two loads of good fed steers shown Hogs: 1200 active fully steady good and choice 140 lbs and up $1450 sows $1375 Sheep: 3000 receipts include 12 cars lambs in addition to 3 cars carried over from Thursday mod erately active medium and good 105 lb wheat pasture Jambs $1500 Kansas City Produce KANSAS CITY April Produce: All prices unchanged Chicago Produce CHICAGO April UP) (WA) Live poultry firm re ceipts 2 trucks no cars job prices market unchanged Butter firm receipts 385455 market unchanged Eggs receipts 24309 firm market unchanged Okinawa 'Taxi' Along the Western ront a II I 1 II A ffc IBT THZ ASSOCIATED BESS) army Canadians 10 miles from Utrecht nearing Emden and Wilhelmshaven British closed in on Bremen from three sides (battered to outskirts of Harburg big Hamburg suburb 12th army Third army wheeled southeast of Bayreuth in 'advance toward Czechoslovak bonier battered to outskirts of 1 'i Chemnitz irst army mopped up in Halle after capture of Leipzig isrNurthranny massed1 at the EibeSwii wwijsi iiwrLajiwwwwwewsyr Sixth army Americans battled fanatical remnants Nuernberg drove within 70 miles of Munich rench threatened PRESIDENT MAY 1 REVIEW fr Powerful German Silent LONPON April Ger? powerful Deutschlandsender is believed located ip the Berlin suburb of" Koenigswusterhausen" 12 miles southeast the capital? had not been heard for hours up to early afteriioon today SON DEADi5'r I AKRON April I irst Lieur John SS Knight son of "(John Knight president of the American Society of Newspa per Editors 'and of the Knight newspapers killed March 29 in German ambush near Muenster i i SWISS BORDERS CLOSED LONDON 'April 20 said today that federal' council had: ordered Jr the eastern and northern frontiers of Switzerland close'd t5 prevent lible mass attjnpts of fgermsp refugees' to' enter the country fl Mam adjudged winner of $30000 4 i the recent Grapette prize eon lest announced in this and othes newspapers'! An estimated thirty thouaand people submitted hosed on completing the sentence "Thirsty or not I enjoy Grapette Sergeant and Mrs Lederer plan to apply the $30000 on a home after the war NEW YORK April 20 CB Buying uf rail? touched off selected recoveries in today's' stock market' although many leaders failed to get far out in front and assorted losers were in evidence near the ctosajf Best gainsran toafound'2 points after mixed opening These eventually were seduced' op can celled In numerous cases' Dealings active for a brief interval: soon slowed and transfers for the full proceedings jwere: in the neighbor hood of 1100000 shares smallest for a hour aeMion ln more than A week avored most of the time were Santa Pere Marquette common and preferred CJ (Southern Southern Pacific Standard Oil (NJ) Hudson Motors Dow Chem ical Du Pont SaVage Arms Cater pillar tractor Sears RoebuckEn gineers Publie Service and Good rich Weston Electrical Instrument usually inactive on cut dividend Laggers induded Steel American Telephone Amer ican Can Westinghouse Allied Chemical and General Motors i dose: American Airlines SIM AmericanTel Tel I 164 Anaconda Copper 83 Beech Aircraft 10 Bethlehem Steel 75 Chrysler Corporation 104 Curtiss Wright 5 Douglas Aircraft 70 General Motors 68 Mid Continent Petroleum '20 Montgomery Ward 60 A Aviation 10 Packard Motors Pan American Airways 17 Penney (J C) 110 Radio Corporation 11 Standard Oil Cal 42 Standard Oil Ind 37 Standard Oil 61 Studebaker 26 United Airlines 34 United Aircraft 28 Steel 66 Western Union Tel 46 Wqolworth 45 the comedian was named as the father of her 18 months old daugh ter Carol Ann and If denied will appeal to have the verdict Mt aside Loyd Wright and 1 Charles 'Mil likan counsel for Chaplin said they would tak no action how ever until 1 they had full oppor': tunity to study the transcripts of the trial vc On the tother side' ofthe fenc" Mias lawyer Joseph Scott1 said he considered Superior Judge Clarence award of $75 a week for the support? wholly inadequate' and' that he might ask the court for a rehear 5 ing on money award' Scott also said he considered $5000' legal ifees allowed for him and his associates i inadequate view of the 14 work' and that he wantedare hearing on this issue bill of Tny investiga tor alonef' "was $3000tY" Scott enwiped Although officially disclosed? requests for further d4 tails on the weapon brought no information from except that the subject is "secret Such Information as was ideas 1 Connally Prepares1 Policy Statement WASHINGTON April 20 LTL Chairman Connally (D Tex) of the Senate relations' commit tee today prepared a foreign policy statement after conferring with President Truman at the White House sg The Texan who' leaves tonight for the United Nations meeting at San rancisco saw the President' shortly after Mr Truman had re viewed Russian questions with Am bassadorW Averell Harriman Harriman declined to disclose the nature of their discussion other than to sayit was But Connally 'hiinyihg through the executive offices to a waiting automobile told reporters: I i am going have' something to say floor of the Senate very shortly 1 think I will wait until talk to the Senate before saying eotho lattening vw jin Kansas ABSONS Kas Ann! in The swollen Neosho pyer was flattening put' 'in the Parsons cinity toejay 'I A nine inch rise here since yes terday "put the stream '20 feet inches abqve normal but six feet below last record The rise was 'continuous i Twelve hundredfeetof Katy track on the St Louis division was washed out near St Paul by the Neofcho St Paul area were broken by flood waters Highway K57 west of St Paul was blocked bpen to truck traffic tjf ACKERMAN IN PACIIC 's EIGHTH HEADQUAR TERS P' I Aprilil9 Dean Ackerman de'al jourhalisni university1 the Philippines today on a tour of world fighting fronts He was the guest'of Lieut Gen Robert': 12 Eichelberger commander of the Eighth tarmy and a jlong time per PYLe HONORED "AGAIN CHICAGO April Ernie Pyle the war reporter killed ton Ip Shima Tuesdayhad been' des ignated for the second successive year receive? "the Raymond Clapper memorial award for war correspondence national headquar ters of Sigma Delta Chi profes sional journalistic fraternity an nounced today armies in the west: Canadian Drove within 10 miles ofUtrechtedgedtoward Emden and Wilhelmshaven 4 I 'ir British Reached outskirts' of isuburb closed in on Bremen from theree sides fz? X'5' Massed at Elbe 1 r'XU irst Mopped up in 'j 1 'J Battled In Nuernberg "advanced 'to 70 miles of Munich if "aV iJ rencq irst Threatened atuttgaiy with OCCUPY REICHW rz (Continued rom Page One) parted for' they held alt key' jobs The Getmans leftbehirid often (try tq solve the: problem of law and order as tdid jtheir by force unless Allied troops are at hand to keep them And troops cannot be 'spared for 'thia job or instance one combat dlvlslonXoverran 43" small towns in one dsy If It "hadt left four men in each town? to preserve order a battalion of fighting men would have been tied up Besides few doughboys speak iGerman' Russian on Po virtually a prerequisite if lf administration problems 'art 'to a be i handled intelligently inding it impossible do everything' the combat troops have done their best and moved pn It may be days lafer'hefore military government teams arrive 'Much' difficulty has' been ex perienced because of the lack of sufficient machinery' to ef fectively with the millions of re leased slave laborers and pris toners of war "There is wide spread looting (Bit only by the slave laborers but also by Ger mans trying to get their hands on extra food and clothing for? the dark days ahead? The aim hat been to try to keep these millions in 'camps until they dan be Jdealt with properly But there is not enough food to feed them: So forage and wander up and down the highways Life is worth nothing People die bn the road in bams in the fields in jails abandoned ware houses everywhere No one both ers to bury them' Noone knows who they are' Every type of disease particu larly typhus is being: carried by these nomads All wanderers by no means are men There are thousands of wo men mostly girls brought into Germany as Workers Gloria Vanderbilt Is Given Divorce RENO Nev April 20 LB Gloria Vanderbilt De jCicco today obtained a quick divorce at a pri vate trial from Pasquale (Pat) De Cicco Hollywood agent but declined to say whether she would marry orchestra conductor Leopold Stokowski A dozen red roses were received by the 21 year old heiress just be fore she entered the courtroom With the roses was a message signed of Atlanta Ga say ing consunungjcuriosity and best The heiress charged De Cicco with unprovoked "actauf They were married at Santa Bar bara Calif Dec 28 1941 A prop erty settlement waa made and the complaint termedit just and SlowerstheA GraduateiWiUi WLong Remember resh 1usnflowers'crtist Jg Icolly arranged bou quete 'that t'will toke 4 itsjj ploce jnem A cries 'this' glorious jdayJJPloce" your order withVus fj now 'Phone? orders' give prompt attention 3 Bite 121 23 North Main HEAVY DAMAGE TO STATE SOIL (Continued rom Page One) pending an estimate of permanent reconstruction Thirty Wewoka cit izens agreed to underwrite temporary impairs which probably will cost $10000 Wewoka is receiving water from a clear well at the water works one pump being in action from wells on Magnolia Oil com pany property to which pipes were laid from the city and from Wewoka creek a fire depart ment pumper forcing the water from the creek through the fil tration system All water is boiled before being used acilities of the ederal Hous ing administration have been of fered to property owners wnose homes were damaged or destroyed in last tornadoes Ship Worker Waits 67 Years or Pay NEW YORK April Un Charles Dougherty 91 learned to day he would receive $13562 owed him by Uncle Sam for 67 years but commented skeptically: "I got it yet and I ))lan ning on how to spend it I President Truman signed authorizing payment of the 67 year old owed Dougherty fol overtime work the Brooklyn Navy yard back in 78 waited 67 'years' Dougherty said waited so long know how: going to spend it And 'still wait he added firmly always thought it would come along some every thing V' By 1940 thee were more than 12000000 oil producing tung trees in the United States STOCKTEADERS ALTER TODAY XXX Earljr Gains Reduced During kAIHI 'r fojt iw I Cfcse of Sezslon sRflilsumi JUEkS orgd Ahead BV JK '3pi hi 4 I I I 3 I 3 A i I irn Tlmir 4 ilaM Sheep and veal: No market Please do not firing in GRAIN Wheat $135 Corn L05 Oats No 3 70 Cream 46 Eggs 30 Heavy hens 22 Leghorn hens 20 Roosters 12 Cowhides 09.

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About Miami News-Record Archive

Pages Available:
150,656
Years Available:
1923-1969