Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1949 — Page 28

antic Pact

‘UN “Delegate ~ Scores Soviet For Obstruction .

By United Press

Warten R. Austin said today]!

the Atlantic Pact will provide the United Nations with a “shield” against Russia's, “deliberate and

{0 the United Nations, asked the Benate Foreign Relations Committee to speed ratification of the 12-nation anti-aggression treaty, He sald Soviet abuse of the _ big-power veto has made “Ime

British Force ¢

Singer Margaret Whiting disclosed in Los Angeles today she has separated from Vice President Hubbell Robinson of the Columbia Broadcasting System, her husband of. five months.

possible” United Nations’ functiont “Tt Was a matter of Aureers”

of-assuring world peace. Rejecting arguments that the Atlantic Treaty would undermine United Nations, Mr. Austin said it would strengthen the world or-|, ganfzation by checking the “fear

about the pact. Sen. Robert A. Taft (R. 0.) and Senate Republican Leader Kenneth 8. Wherry of Nebraska declared that Secretary of State Dean 8. Acheson has made it clear that senators! - ‘backing the Atlantic Pact must vote to help rearm Europe, ‘I Don’t Know’ Mr. Taft said “I don’t know how I'll vote on the whole business.” Mr. Austin, a former Senator, “Hnce was a member of the committee before which he testified today. He joined Mr. Acheson in roundly criticizing Russia. “We did not expect the drastic deterioration in relations between the East and the West which has occurred,” Austin sald. “We certainly did not’ conceive that the Soviet Union would so brazenly violate the solemn charter pledge

.. Hog Prices Drop-

she sald. “My work is here, and Hub’s is in New York. I'm going to get a divorce.” They married last December in Las Vegas, Nev.

25 to 50 Cents

Trade Moderately Active Here

Hog prices dropped 25 to 50 cents below yesterday's figures in moderately active trade in the Indianapolis Stockyards today, Good and choice 170- to 240pound barrows and gilts sold at $17.50 to $18, the top price. Prices from $17 to $17.75 were paid for 240 to 280 pounders. eights from 270 to 325 pounds moved at $16.50 to $17.25. Odd lightweights from 100 to 160 pounds brought $16 to $16.25. » Sow Prices Drop Sow prices dropped slightly in trade with bidding 25 cents lower. Bulk sold at $13.50 to $15.50 as stags moved at $11 to $12.50 and $13. Steer and heifer sales showed steady prices in slow opening trade in the cattle market, albidding on some medium-

Russ to Yield

8 Seized Locks

Soviets Attempt To Block Traffic On Berlin Canal

BERLIN, Apr. 28 (UP) ~~ Squadrons of armed British mill

|tary police seized canal control

locks in West Berlin today from Russian troops who had halted barges plying the waterways with supplies brought in by: the| airlift. The British police later. released

Zovernment sérved an ultimatum on the Soviet commander that the Rypsians would lose control the locks if they again interfered with their traffic. After the ultimatum the Russians withdrew from the locks. The brush came as all Berlin istirred with rumors that the [blockade was about to be re-

moved. gnabling the eastern and maxed. occupation forces to re-

store some measure of economic | stability to Germany. Under long standing agreement among the four occupation powers the Soviets were given administrative control of various transportation systems such as the canals and elevated railways in Berlin, Today for the second straight day Russians exercising that control at the canal locks stopped barges at the Spandau, Ploetzensee and Charlottenburg locks. Won't Submit British officials said brusquely that they would not submit to the Russian control of the canals in their zone. They sald the agreements in no way gave the Soviets the right to restrict traffic within the western sectors. The British dispatched military police in some force to the locks. The commanders of the details served notice-on the Russians that they would have to get out or be put out, After the British took over the Charlottenburg lock, a launch flying the red flag of the Soviets dashed through the canal toward the lock with the word from the

Sep as Atomic New Method of Preserving Red Celis

Wi ill Permit Storage in Special Bottles "By JANE STAFFORD

Science Service opyright, 1949, bY

Wilber

Science Service WASHINGTON, “Apr. 28 Red 8 Blond cells from millions of pints

er blood, stockpiled at strategic poin {on any American city.

meat, vegetable and pie reserves, ready for emergency

transfusions. —Extracts of the blood chemical, thromboplastin, that starts the clotting process will be available in sufficient supply for victims of {some bleeding diseases. These are the possibilities for the not too distant future, say

the 1>cks, but the British miltary go vears or so from now. Con-

servative scientists are not publicly making such - predictions.

of But the research they are report-

ing and the pilot plant studies now under Way point to these goals. Live Longer Isolated All. these possibilities, and maybe more, depend on the discovery 'of a way to separate the red blood cells, white blood cells land other formed elements of the iblood from each other and from the liquid part of the . blood quickly and gently. The quick and gentle features of the new method. insure that the various kinds of blood cells come through the separation process intact and alive. Red blood cells in blood, for example, die 30 days after the blood has been drawn from a donor's arm, even with the best of present preservatives. Even in the blood circulating in the body their life span is limited to about four months. But if they can be separated from the white blood cells before these disintegrate, and before various enzyme chemicals in the blood can act, the red cells might live almost indefinitely.. And red blood cells are as good as, and in about a third of the cases better, than whole blood for transfusion. The way to separate them before they are damaged has been discovered by Dr. John G. Gibson II and associafés of Harvard Medical School; following leads reported’ earlier by Drs, Allen H. Minor and Lee Burnett of New

|

ts throughout the nation, will be ready for use to save lives If an atomic bomb attack is launched Individual Bottles of rod culls, typed for tach member of tha

feguard Possible Es z For a Tre rice |

family, will be kept in the deep freeze locker along with the family’s] strawberry

FBI Bares ‘Plant On Miss Coplon U. S. Attorney Tells Of Fabricated - Report pom ies ta that G-girl Judith Coplon was

carrying more than 30 stolen FBI reports, or notes on such reports.

‘|=including one that had been

“planted” by FBI men-—when she was arrested in New York last month. Prosecutor Raymond P, Whearty made that charge in his opening statement to the jury of eight men and four women who are trying the 27-year-old Barnard College honor graduate _ for espionage. He began the government's case after Federal Judge Alfred L. Reeves denied two defense motions to throw the charges out of court. Miss Coplon, a suspended Justice Department analyst, is accused of stealing for Russia “top secret FEI reports” on espionage and counter-espionage activities. Deliberate Error Mr, Whearty told the jury that when Mis# Coplon was arrested her purse was crammed with information taken from FBI files. One. item was a handwritten memorandum based on a “planted” FBI report she had seen the morning before her arrest, he said. . . He sald the FBI report named an officiai of Amtorg, Russian purchasing agency, and another individual as FBI informants. This was “deliberately incorrect,” he said. The second part of the report concerned Amtorg's attempt to get geophone instruments which

i Foes Cite

Toward nd Before House So

United Pros | Pr Admit an forces appeared ready today to sccept some amendments to the Taft-Hartley' repeal bill in an effort to pick up) enough votes to assure its pase. age. Chairman John Lesinski (D. Mich.) of the House Labor Com\mittee disclosed the administration position as the House wound up two of general debate on the and prepared to consider amendments, “There may be some amend-| ments to which I would have no objections,” Mr. Lesinski said, “but I-will absolutely refuse to accept injunctions.” He referred to efforts to retain the injunction provisions of the Taft-Hartley law in any new legis-lation-that is passed. Amendments which the administration was reported as tending to accept include strengthening a provision to set up 30-day “cooling off” periods in national emergency strikes, " “free - speech” guarantee for Dt a requirement that both employers and employees bargain in good faith, and a requirement that both employers and union officers take “loyalty oaths” before bringing a case before the National Labor Relations Board.

Foreign Aid

Sen. Robert A. Taft ( R. 0.) and Senate GOP Floor. Leader Kenneth 8. Wherry of Nebraska, sald Secretary of State Dean Acheson showed that the Atlantic Pact and the arms for Europe are definitely tied together. Mr. Taft said Mr. cheson “made it perfectly clear that a vote for the pact is an obligation to vote for arms for Europe.” Wherry said the secre-

that the two issues are “sep. arable,”

8 “Crawl in and sit down.”

tary gave “convincing evidence”|.

Thrice-married movie star

evo ia id bes 4 RS ree 8! oe

head and the other wore a red handkerchief covering the lower half of his face. 3 : - Forced to Go Along “Stay in the pit,” they ordered. One man left the room and the other remained as guard. A haif hour later the first man returned |and the pair forced Mr. Kershner

{to accompany them outside along

h

a railroad switch. There they found a large tile and ordered Mr. Kershner to: ‘They kept him cramped in the tile with one man on guard for a short while, then they forced him to stand alongside the company garage while ane broke into

‘the garage and backed out a two-

ton truck.

Take $30 from Drawer’ Police said they believed the

bandits planned to use the truck

ta carry -away-the safe in which company money was kept. However, there were three safes in the office and the bandits could not learn from the night watchman which-held the company's cash. They failed in an attempt to bat~ ter the combination off one safe, but took $30 from a desk drawer. The pair finally - escorted the watchman to a washroom inside

hough steers was 25 to 50 cents| Soviet transportation officer to re- York and Dr. Seymour Gray of|are used at Alamogordo, N. M, The statement apparently sig- Joan Crawford top) i s "the the building and ordered him to

Chicago. to test blast pressures. naled trouble ahead ‘for the ad- remain there. The watchman told affic, t+ eligible RD ionel in Radian and guod grate” lle wate. said their mii:| The method consists in adding] Mr. Whearty said the Inforiia- eng pO a wat 2 the ahead of |Police he waited about 15 minutes. yearlings sold at $23 to Fry tary police also wepe ordering the|['Prinogen, a blood . protein in-|tion concerning the Amtorg geo- a > we a BE be pac M tT vs the |then returned to the office to call Small loads of medium 1000-1200-| Russians out of the Spandau and|Y0!ved in the clotting process, to[phone activities was accurate. He Senat son 8 Rentic ro e| Margar ruman, says police. ~~ pound steers brought $23 to $23.25. Ploetzenses locks the blood as it is drawn from the|said this information was ‘re-| CGAL TIoRelEn Relations Com-| American Ba ‘Bachelor Congress, |" Mr. Kershner told officers that A part load of high-good steers . . donor’s arm. This makes the red|stricted” but would be “unimport- m he nan om ih ihe opening! ..tional fraternal rgavization, he was watchman at the firm 14 remained unsold, ‘sellers asking cells pile up face to face like a/ant if it fell into unauthorized 8 which picked Joanfor the No, | [months ago when burglars broke =

50. stack of coins and settle out to-/hands.” " VL because ™ in and tied him up while they 4. short - load of high - good Truman Hopeful gether within an hour. Mr. Whearty said the govern- Oleo use ‘she has the most battered open a safe and took heifers of 650-pound average :

The fibrinogen used is one of Ment would prove that the hand-| Sen. Alexander Wiley (R. Wis.)| exciting face in the world with

¥ ! the blood fr written memorandum was based|said dairy state Senators will] a figure fo match.” Margaret : £ pact al- ty pi heifers sold at $72 te ons. 9 "Dr. Bawi on the report which Miss Coplon|fight the oleo tax repealer with a| was runnerup. " Local Prod | Chamber of Deputies forelgn af.|!0 $24. Common and medium J. Cohn, also of Harvard, and[$3% the morning of Mar. 4, be- barrage of excise tax amendments ® f9ques T° fairs rtaacT oie oreign ¢ Hight weight yearlings moved at his Sollagues during the war. yore she vant a Va When the measure reaches theil] § Statement out —Fowls, 41s The and over, Je. = Bu 3 322. : Believes Russians Tis A srndoy In Jacksonville, |Gubitchev. She and Mr. Gubit-| One such amendment would lift| WASHINGTON. Avr 28. (UP Govern. Rm fc, an 4 ce €ow Prices Steady Acting in ‘Good Faith’ a, Dr. Cohn told members ofic).. were arrested t Aber federal gasoline taxes and makel™ Sind receipts Tar the cur:|Ne 3 Boulbry Se lass an No 1. ; 4 BULGARIAN Protestant Cow prices remained steady. ng in ith’ |the American Pharmaceutical As- a heuer, Aa gasoline (338 i resent|V! Eg real ou, oi Cush AD, I CODA rier rade A MISe. Th Coad A Sroditin: churches, in their first meetings Odd head good beef cows sold at, WASHINGTON, Apr. 28 (UP) sociation about this newest PPI He said her purse contained |excise taxes P wh Year | Laster (fi Grade B lofse, fie Gree &"emall since their leaders were tor|$19 to $20. Common and medium|. President Truman's “newsless” | Cation of fibrinogen. . Bastertat—No. 1. 3c;

1} and medium another packet, offenses against the state, sent aj8rades brought 316.50 to $18.75\news conferences of the past few In Boston, Dr. Charles P. scotch tape,

ations|as prices from $14 to $16.50. were| yoy ended abruptly today. He Emerson at Massachusetts Me-

2.901.078 8 418,581 sealed with| The strategy of dairy state Sen- Receipts Ha Hi a3, ol Apa Flew + aboly when Yaeliverea at of more than 30|ators is to saddle the margarine ih"; Fn ob aii Hu loc Dian 31

paid-for canners and cutters, Odd

eR eR

spoke of many matters, ranging

from political patronage to the

morial Hospitals is running pilot plant’ studies on collection of the

FBI reports on internal security.

summaries of quotations from bill with so many tasting pro-|Eublic Dept 30:338.488, 268.49 ai dd 167, Hi 8.8 Truman|

visions that

would have no pi BE, but to]

ns Mr. Whearty said such reports INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE freedom,” it was announced today. y Berlin blockade peace alk, The|Plood and the new separationino longer are prepared, but that|veto the measure. The House has CIAHINE xi osmucensseaastes ; Medium and good sausage buils highlights: method, Results of his studies|many were prepared on embassies already approved a bill to lift fedWest Germany brought steady prices of $19.50 "Com 0 encouraged by the|Will be applied, perhaps within|and consulates during the war.- eral levies on colored oleo. X CE iI LR iE U. 8. Army announced to-|t0 $21. Good beef bulls sold at $18 U. 8.-Russian talks on ending the 2n0ther six months, at Red Cross| The prosecutor said her. pocket- ; — | ov © day that a German girl would be|to_520. Berlin blockade. He thinks the Pational blood program donor hook also yielded a note telling to call the i stealing of Ameri-| Vealer prices remained steady.| t0 0 DCH acting in “good "tations. of the defendant's “unsuccess- Wo Tuc Ir ms . It pays to . can documents and handing them Sond od hatce so XM 324 So faith.” Would Use Special Bottles [ful effort to procure” from one ' loved | : » hy o 3 . » a ¢ | © over to “foreign agents. 5, ths fresivipui_} op Brice; "20; He Is shitting Maj. Gen] ‘The hope is that perhaps one- Foley, presumably Willlam E.| : Companies employed | £ MiShe had been om.|$16 to $23.50, and culls from $10/Philip R Fleming to the chair-|tenth of the blood now being|Forcy; ® tOP via) report on last month || Pred oy the mata Sreamatlio $15. manship of the U, 8. Maritime collected will in future be drawn; i otal activities fn the dace lax rone us fst mont 3 . i info special, silicone-coated bot- ! @ t Munich for more than a year. The trend and sales on available Commission. Gen. Fleming 18 ' The evidence will sow, Mr. : | : {She will be tried there beginning|supply showed prices steady to|DOW Federal Works Administra-i/ 7S, With, Special tubes and|wnearty said, that “on severail Fleming Hints | - Grain Dealers dvi Hl HR In hee] (rade arson, present War. Asati aa Liried peice down. at once, ana ccousions Miss Coven approuched wide ole (Ve LL | Mutual Agency, Inc. % Japan y 0} a oF, Out as head of the Within an hour the separated red er superior, William Foley, chief | : §¥ pa : mostly low-good Shon 83-yound mluiathator, | Out J ead of the cells drawn from the bottom layer |°f the foreign agents’ registration] Secretary of State Charles 1740 North Meridian St. & - - PRIME MINISTER. Shirgeru average native lambs of No, section, and asked for the re- Fleming t be investiga- 3 J Yoshida today told & diet com-|Pelts sold at $26.50, while a small| Adm. W. W. Smith, can be rushed to thelr storage. . ming Jody began luvesiga i WiAbaik 2436

mittee that Japan hopes to get permission from Russia $0 Japanese Sea, ut that negoti. __ ations on the subject had not been held as yet. »

Philippines - THE Philippine House of Rep-

lot of good 81-pound clipped lambs with No. 2 pelts reached $27. Odd Jots medium to good wooled natives sold at $24.50 to $28. Common grades dropped to $21. Good and choice slaughter ewes

{moved at $9 to $11. Comparable

shorn ewes sold at §7 to 89. Bulk! common and mediums brought $5!

THREE: Congressional Democrats will get political patronage proportionate to the support they give to the Democratic platform. That, he said, goes for the way Democrats vote on the adminis-tration-backed bill to repeal the Taft-Hartley law. FOUR: He was aroused over-

place, while the white cells and plasma are rushed to processing centers. The tinal details of the red cell storage and preservation have not yet been worked out. Pushing the studies on this phase of

of Sharpe & Dohme, now on loan to the Red Cross for this

Mother at Side Earlier, Mr. Whearty detailed FBI shadowing of Miss -Coplon [during three visits to New York when she met Mr. Gubitchev. Through most of Mr. Whearty's

the work is Dr, Robert B. Pennell statement, Miss Coplon’ scribbled!

notes at the counsel table. Oc-

tion of two major trucking concerns suspected of operating interstate without paying property taxes either in Indiana or elsewhere. At the same time, he asked the attorney general's office for ‘an opinion to verify the law

which requires that a property

reséntatives today passed an im- [oasienally, she amiled and clapped tax receipt must be shown before % migration bill aimed at the to $6.50. {reports that the UU, 8. Navy had research. 3 a hand over her mouth to concealla car or truck license can be ob-i “White Australia” policy. The bill] Estimates of receipts were hogs, run out on American eivilans|— — —- ew|her obvious amusement, as Mr.itained. Mr, Fleming said there would prohibit the admission of 10,025; cattle, 1175; calves, 525Tn Shanghai, He said this was ‘Local Issues ©. Whearty told of FBI efforts towere several instances where aliens to the Philippine Islands|and sheep, 75. {not so. keep track of the pair. trucking firms buy a large numunless his country permitted the - FIVE: Mr. Truman still hopes! — AB The defendant's mother, Mrs.ber of truck licenses for vehicles i {Curtis Calder, New York utill-|american hate pid a

Watch Repairing

Accurate — Depsadabie Quick Service = i

%* Wolf $

BISHOP FURS

Prices n, Inc.

admission of Filipinos. ‘ . ’ 8 oT Ae Rebecca Coplon, wearing mourn- on which no property tax has : : y | ‘Two-Bit Millionaires {ties magnate, ean be persuaded American States bf A........ he nh ing because of the recent deathipeen paid and ps operate the 2319 W. Washington St. £ 2nd Floor—1 N. Meridian India Flourish in Zurich to take the job of Army Secre- | L 8 Are An td sa “ant ovo her Husbana, sa Dent her vehicles from some out-of-state] ra sy SEVEN persons including four| ZURICH, Switzerland, Apr. 28 'ATY: Mr, Calder said last night|Belt R ‘& Hix Was com |) j154 14 |daughter. Most of the time, Mrs.\noint, | = Co women were killed last night|_The post-war boom has made N® hadn't accepted the post. Rooke Mert ofa aa 1 {iit 18 |Coplon stared without expression” Yesterday, Mr. Fleming gave| —— LARGEST SELEOTION §. When police fired into a demon-|Zurich, Switzerland's leading bus- | Jonathan Daniels, North Caro-|chuiiiiells, con: 8% 24/1 tho Gor, but occasionally sheithe O. K. Equipment Co. of East | | \0 (ngtans stration After a women’s meeting iness city, a metropolis of “two- | lina: publisher, is one of several Snsolidaina Fro “ota 8%... 08 0 P es. » Bs St/Chicago 10 days in whith 10 get from $2.39 yes RU te to express sympathy for 300|bit millionaires.” {persons under consideration for Cont Cur-N . J 13 | an estimated $100,000 worth of ne pare «ith the oi vod) § hunger - striking Communist] A Swiss franc is worth almost the Navy secretaryship. Summits for ‘con akin dll iy, trucks and trailers on the Lakell Lem tm

qd: . a % risoners. The demonstration was exactly 25 «cents in American| SIX: He still thinks he should Consolidated Ind com... 7° 2 Reid despite an ordinance pro-| money. {have inflation control ‘authority, |De De Ey Electric com D 3 i Convicted Slayer hibiting the assembly of more| And Zurich has no less than|He said his position is the same ays Corp ackion RR we. 8 : Asks New Trial than five persons. 404 “millionaires”-in quarters, [now as in January. Her.

{County tax duplicates. No Record Found

te HOOSIER * PAINT & LINOLEUM co.

Mr. Fleming said the company || 211 & Washington. had purchased licenses for the

DEAL DIRECTLY WITH THESE

Indiana's Oldest Credit Jewelers 108 N. lines $6

__y vy { Hoo! OC {Ind Asso rel 2 ord

i: ; D Se a Negto joqay asia the In-iyehicles in Lake County but that : — Saked ‘ { nd Gas Wat com... 1713 | dlana Supreme Or & NeWino township trustee in the’ coun- | | : . Today’ ’s Weather Fotocast EE pf BH betes hl Rey which con we an record hat ror BROKEN [| ARS nom sive 1 5 {ndois ga t {& Bd #8i2| victed him foc murdering his wife/tax had been paid on them. The | LENSES ALUMINU 4 : ndpls Water cl A Gh 16% 17% was separated ‘for a meal while/company purchased the licenses! | immediate Application ‘ ndpis Wa or fae ie 183:, | deliberating his fate. as he a but the Lake J REPLACED | INDIAN ROOFING & Jefferson” National Life ‘oom: 33 gal Jewell Fletcher, 36, Evansville, County clerk had no record of "me a SING Oo: : Kingan & Cp 0 Bld a an convicteu las’ January in thesuch partnership ever having | DR. JOS J0S. E, | E. RERNEL || 605 8. Capitol RL 1389 phincoin Nat Life ine a Va nderburgh Circuit Court, heen filed, Mr. Fleming said. 1 { ET armon- errnelo Eoin Me shh charged in his appeal that Strat-| He estimated that thousands, 4 - -* astic As he nm aN esas. Easter, the only Negro on of property tax on trucks and TUXEDOS TO RENT \ 4 at Homes Vo 98 00 | ury, was taken to the kitchenitrucks and other equipment mov- ps 8 : @ 0 N Ind Pa "ry o od... 18 11, [Of an Evansville restaurant while/ing in interstate commerce are SLIPCOVERS FOR EVERY OCCASION ) / 48). = N fod Pub Serv 4la% v4, |8ir|the 11 white members of the jury|lost by failure to enforce rigidly AbD Satardan § ar 8AM. te 8 PR] - /\ © ot* (Pp Srees Laundry 0.000 3 ate in the restaurant's diningithe law requiring property tax and DRAPERIES | LEON TAILORING co - Tae a Ah Bub serv of In ge te. 415 room, [receipts to be shown at the time! MADE TO ORDER | TU pW CAM a Ho md GAR 48 ola. ‘| Jewell was found guilty of the of the purchase of licenses. MILL-END SHOP 1 235 Mass. Ave. "i ries Bises Ae 7340 wot? Sloxely-van' Cs second degree murder of his wife, In some instances it appeared pennsylvania 11.1158 teen es ree hi s po E alr-vin & {Dorthy Mae Fletcher, lastithat property tax had been paid ; yl ag er VERRY, - SVT ales 1" imprisonment in the." Indianalment Hoenmg Per °F the equlp- - DENY AN " : {imprisonment in e indiana ment licensed. - n | \ LT Lous, Jr = - ¥ Giion Title C. Sigle Prison: t shows “be is One of the two companies now Guaranteed WATCH rt : pe ¢ defendant shows “he is a under investigation operates , a 3 n FA oe -, nf ee Ce -——— ery rn 415s 60 .:..|Negro and that by reason of the/major part is Deir out of REPAIRIN Tok Aen Trew z Bi or Foot :!:|foregoing his substantial rights Louisville, Ky. and only a few amagearian “ter “Names

a Tn

Ch ‘af Com Bldg 4 the: (have been prejudiced,” the appealitrom an Indiana branch. The {Gites Im Ing Yel de s 0

#o rou: | 1 8 Jo “Ananth $3 ve ~~ 5 . : 3 wamraly if Vk

Jae

ntlsaid. \ a werner w KL A Guna od Ga i 21" he new tial plan was refusal other is a Chicago concern. \ ST rN. — : rE ya} ee rae Cg | Lant. Tenth by the Vanderburgh . ans CLOUDY AND — ~ 7 A : {odols rats & Aig da 0008 Court. : \ ALSCO ious Axia fa, rie te 38 ® w Local Truck Grain Prices w MIAME ff Safors: Teton 3 61 & . 2 os, AIDE -ComMatiiey emiuasilia ForOCAST N pees: LR Sve vi] Bod dane mh : Jo DOWN PATMENT! i146 [Taino {Pager are Ca. ba 84... i pte EE yellow ‘corm. ol Monthly Payment = AREA Pub rel eine 2 ollie 3 Shliwtorbeans. 4200 Cail MA 584 Rr A .- Wp}

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