Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 15, 1943, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
WAGE BOOST
AWAITS ONLY
OPA APPROVAL
(Continued from Page One)
tral Oregon and the Klamath
basin In souern Oregon and
northern California; 821 cents in
Idaho, eastern Oregon, western
Montana and the Spokane dis
trlct; 80 cents In central Wash
ington. Slightly lower minlmums were
established for stock and detail
shops, sash and door plants, tie
treating plants and box factory
operations.
Payment Varies
Kizer said payment of retroac
tive w-0es would vary with the
dates on which separate unions
demanded wage increases, but
that in no case wo -'d the rate ex
ceed 21 cents an hour prior to
September 1, 1942. He added
that payment will be made only
to those now in the industry or
to those who return to it in 60
days.
in another decision the com
mission approved an AFr, de
mand for time-and-a-half pay
ment on Saturdays for employes
who are prevented, by shut
downs or other actions by em
ployers, from wo '-lng more than
40 hours.
The commission also granted a
night shift differential of 25
cents a shift in two cases involv
ing operators and the CIO in the
Klamath basin and the Spokane
area. Equal iay for women also
was granted in the cases.
; The decisions in pine wages
announced Monday, if approved
by the OPA, will mean distribu
tion of several hundred thou
sand dollars in stamps and bonds
in this general territory, union
and employer representatives
here, said Monday.
Twenty-nine operations were
Involved in the two cases as they
applied to the area generally
covered by the Pine Industrial
Relations committee here. The
PHtC represented employers.
and the local - CIO and AFL
group were active in these cases.
, Neither the opinions of the
west coast lumber commission
or the WLB will be available
here before the end of the week,
it was learned.
A new radio-operated mech
anism transmits instantly from
an experimental airplane to lab
oratory crews on the ground a
complete picture of the strains
and flutters, characteristics, per
formance and reactions which
occur too quickly in today's air
craft lor the pilot to note and
record. . ,
This Is Red Cross
Month
March must see something
ever S125.000.000 nlarori at th
disposal of the American Red
urosj. Ana mat must is
;camtal lette
! word. How this
i i J organization can
, i j do, on that sum,
J- U j is a - problem.
"V 1"j solve ' lurt
t't -U V they sol v
') e v e r y thi
X"" I Problem they'
I A- Jr I been up again
r 1 r 'If the natii
r
ve
against.
natlnn
could run this war with just
part of Red Cross efficiency,
-mx duu couia proDaoiy be cut
in half.
That goal, $125,000,000 means
you've got to chip in consider
ably more than the usual single
dollar you have heretofore con
tributed. Dig deep and come
across with every cent you can
spare and then give a bit you
feel you can't spare, as well.
Endless supplies of dressings
for the surgical wards, sweaters
for cold days and nights, blood
plasma for the wounded, food
for our boys, no matter where
they are. Movies did you know
that the Red Cross runs the
third largest chain of movie
shows on earth? movies bring
ing the homeland they're fight
ing for closer to millions of
lonesome kids in the far places
of the earth. Magazines. Ciga
rettes. :
The Red Cross doesn't ask
where you live or what means
of support you have or "why
didn't you save some money
from your last payday?"
They just ask, "What do you
need?" That's all they want to
know. It is a privilege to as
sist in such work as they are
doing.
.-' Next Monday Mr. Whltlock
of the Earl Whltlock Funeral
Home will comment on Mul
tiple Duties.
Poiatoes
POTATOES
rHirARO. March 15 (AP-
TTSriAU-Pntatoes. arrivals 157:
on track 164; total U. S. ship-
menu Saturday line, aunaay
51; old stock, supplies light,
trading light account of lack of
carlot offerings; new stock, sup
nliix lleht. suciDlies moderate:
market slightly stronger; North
Dakota Bliss Triumphs, seed
stock $3.25-80; Wisconsin i;nip
pewas, seed stock, $3.40; Wyo
ming Bliss Triumphs, seed stock,
$4.15; Chlppewas, U. S. No. 1,
$3.62; Florida Bliss Triumphs,
U. S. No. 1, $3.10 per bushel
crate; $3.15-20 per bushel basket.
SAN FRANCISCO. March 15
(P) (USDA) Potatoes: 1 Maine,
17 Idaho, 10 California, 7 Ore
gon, 1 Florida arrived, 1 by
truck; 6 broken, 16 unbroken
cars on track; market firm;
Idaho russets No. 1, $3.18,
bakers $3.46, Idaho utility grade
$2.85-90, Klamath russets com
bination grade $3.00, U. S. No.
2s, $2.80.
LOS ANGELES. March 15 VP)
(USDA) Potatoes: 5 California,
3 Florida, 8 Idaho, 1 Maine, 3
Utah arrived, 5 by truck, 5
broken, 20 unbroken cars on
track; Idaho russets No. 2,
$2.59.
14 U. S. PAGE ONE
WASHINGTON, March 15 (IP)
A medium-sized United States
merchant vessel was torpedoed
and sunk by an enemy sub
marine late in February in the
Atlantic and survivors have ar
rived at Boston and New York,
the navy announced today.
li. S. BOMBERS HIT
(Continued from Page One)
ments on the-Medenlne plains.
Allied and enemy patrols
probed opposing positions.
RAF Spitfires defending al
lied .shipping off the Algerian
coast caught a formation of
eight Heinkel HI torpedo bomb
ers yesterday, shot down one
and damaged several others with
out loss, it was announced.
Spitfires roving over the north
ern Tunisian front, where rain
bogged ground forces, shot up
two German trucks, a staff car
and a motorcycle.
The limited activity suggested
that both sides were concentrat
ing on moving up supplies be
fore chancing the opening of an
other majjor engagement. With
allied heavy bombers grounded
by the weather, axis convoys
presumably stepped up traffic
from Sicily to Tunisian ports.
(Perhaps referring to the Hein
kel formation shot up by the
Spitfires, the Italian high com
mand communique broadcast
from Rome and recorded by the
Associated Press said axis tor
pedo planes operating off Bone
hit a large merchant ship in a
convoy.
(The communique, which also
mentioned adverse weather In
Tunisia, said anti-aircraft fire
destroyed one allied plane and
German fighters shot down an
other over the Sicilian channel).
Two enemy bombers were de
stroyed Saturday night. All the
allied air operations were car
ried out without loss.
NEWS
EDITORIALS ON
(Continued from Page One)
ing U.S. army officer to the ef
fect that this raid heralds the
coming of a "mighty spring of
fensive" in that area.
pHE raid at least provides an
interesting example of the
realistic way in which the news
must be read if we are to avoid
jumping to conclusions that will
be misleadingly optimistic.
The chances are that If you
read the headlines only you will
get a decided lift out of the
pasting the Japs took. But if
you read a little deeper you will
get a somewhat more sobering
impression.
For example:
We learn from Burns' dis
patch that the raid on Kiska was
effective because it HAD MANY
TARGETS TO WORK ON. The
Japs, we are told, have now at
Kiska a submarine base, an al
most completed runway for land
planes, a seaplane base with two
hangars and stores of ammuni
tion and fuel dumps.
The fuel dumps, it is added,
are burled deeply underground,'
and all the various installations
are well protected with elabor
ate earthworks.
TN other words, the Japs have
x been pretty busy at Kiska
during the long and foggy win
ter months.
ACAUTHUR tells us today
of Jap transports and sup
ply ships massing in the Banda
sea, northwest of Darwin in
Australia. His communique to
day adds that their ground
forces there are being rnlnfnrrerl
and new airfields are being
duiii.
The Jap, you see, ISN'T ready
to Riva up and call it quits. - -
REDS BATTLE'
AGAINST ODDS
TO HOLD CITY
(Continued From Page One)
operation to the SS and the Ger
man air force.
The Russians claimed to be
riding roughshod over German
fortified systems on the central
front, but they still vere at least
80 miles east of Smolensk, the
key position in Hitler's positions
west of Moscow, as they ad
vanced along the railroad from
captured Vyaima. The mld-dajH
communique announced the cap
ture of Semlevo, 14 miles west
of Vyazma.
To the northwest of Vyazma,
however, they apparently were
within about 65 or 75 miles of
Smolensk. Field dispatches said
they had ciossed the Vyazma
river on a broad front and forced
upper Dnieper crossings
To the southwest of Vyazma
they apparently were much
closer, as they are believed to
have held for many months the
position of Dorogobuzh, less than
50 miles southeast of Smolensk.
Dorogobuzh Is on the Dnieper,
which here was a highly impor
tant part of the defense system
of Smolensk, and the breaching
of the river line to the northeast
might have far-reaching results
in the developing Russian offen
sive.
As the Russians drove from
the north toward Smolensk from
Bely they also claimed to be top
pling German-held towns and
villages by the score and an'
nounced the over-running of one
huge concentration of 200 artil
lery batteries.
Nine hundred Germans were
reported killed in one of these
battles.
The British first army was re
ported in overnight dispatches
from the Tunisian front to be ad
vancing over hundreds of Ger
man dead found in the moun
tains of the Sedjenane area on
the sea flank of the allied line.
The British advance was of a
limited nature, however, and
succeeded in occupying only part
of the height known as Djebel
Ben Marche. Most of the German
dead apparently were the result
of previous actions when the
British stopped an enemy offen
sive by mowing down the attack
ers with their machine guns and
thinning their ranks by aerial
bombings.
The British wiped out several
machinegun posts in their ad
vance and found in one place
alone the bodies of 100 Germans.
Today's allied communique re
ported no change in the general
situation, ' with patrol activity
continuing all along the- front
and the weather restricting air
operations to bombing of the
Mareth line and an encounter
with an enemy torpedo plane
formation in which one of the
torpedo bombers was shot down
and "most of the others" dam
aged. .
A Cairo communique said
American airmen attacked Na
ples Saturday night.
The allies apparently were far
from the point of launching a
general offensive, however, and
dispatches from allied headquar
ters in North Africa suggested
that the Germans might have at
least one more offensive up their
sleeve.
The dispatches said that crack
new German units had appear
ed in the northern sector, pos
sibly for an attack on the key
position of MedJez-El-Bab, and
that fresh reserves of German
planes had reached the theatre.
Cairo dispatches disclosed a
powerful factor in the success
of the British eighth army in its
1500-mile march from Egypt
was a new type Hurricane
"tankbuster" fighter plane
equipped with cannon which
were said to have scored direct
hits on at least 74 of Marshal
Erwln Rommel's tanks in the
last few months.
London announcements said
these tankbuster squadrons were
being organized in England for
the allied invasion of Europe,
and also were being used in
Tunisia where they accounted
for 20 armored vehicles in fight
ing west of the Mareth line last
week.
Timken Bearing
Plant Closed by
Walkout of 600
CANTON, O., March 15 UP)
A walkout by 600 first shift
employes tied up operations to
day in the Timken Roller Bear
ing company's Gambrinas plant,
a company spokesman reported.
Finas Reynolds, president of
the CIO United Steel Workers
union which has a contract with
the plant, said the walkout was
unauthorized and that any CIO
members participating would be
expelled from the union. Reyn
olds and the company spokes
man, who declined to be quoted
by name, said they were In
formed the men were protesting
promotion of 27 negro workers.
If your dealer Is out for the
duration, advertise for a used
on in the want-ad.
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Lend Lease Act
Extension Gets
Congress Okay
WASHINGTON. March 15 (P)
The extension of lend lease was
approved last week in congress,
almost unanimously by the
house, and completely so by the
senate. Only two other meas.
ures were voted on March 4-11,
one a house navy bill, the other
an amendment offered In the
senate to the proposed deferment
of farm workers.
Senators from the Pacific
northwest states joined In the
82-0 vote on lend leaso after
Johnson (D-Colo) and Wheeler
(D-Mont) both preceded their
"yeas" with declarations that
lend-lease had been responsible
for involving the United States
in the war. Not voting were:
Thomas (R-Idaho) and Wallgrcn
(D-Wash.)
In the house, all northwestern
representatives supported the
lend-lease extension of one year,
approved 407-6, with White
(D-Idaho) not voting.
iT
E
(Continued From Page One)
their latest attempt to reinforce
their garrisons in northeastern
New Guinea. The two ships re
ported blasted off Wewak raised
to four the number struck by
allied airmen in a running at
tack, on an eight-ship convoy
which began Saturday in stormy
weather.
Of the vessels hit yesterday,
one was described as a large de
stroyer and the other as a 7000-
ton cargo ship. A direct hit was
scored with a 500-pound bomb
on the bow of the destroyer and
the ship was strafed from low
level, the bulletin said.
The communique also an
nounced that an 800-ton trans
port previously reported, bomb
ed had later been seen to ex
plode and when last sighted was
blazing from stem to stem.
KISKA JAPS HIT
BY U. S. BOMBERS
(Continued From Page- One)
bombs shook the ground at Guad
alcanal, then there will be fright
ened Japanese awaiting our next
raid and. . frightened Japanese
can't shoot so straight the next
time.
And those Japanese that were
alive tonight must thing: "To
day's raid was the- heaviest and
roar of. planes the greatest ever
yet experienced. The roar of
the planes was more audible to
ward the end of the raid because
our guns became silent."
Perhaps Tokyo officialdom
thought: "Today's planes are
making the sixth raid in 10 days
When good weather comes it
will be worse."- (In January the
weather permitted only two
raids).
The raid was timetabled: Ob
jective 6. By 9:20 a. m. four
fighters dropped. 300 -pounds of
demolition bombs and 24 20
pounders from 7000 feet eleva
tion. It was a difficult target
and the cagey Japanese saved
his anti-aircraft fire. Perhaps he
has little ammunition to spare,
as he lost an ammunition, ship
not far from Kiska in February,
thanks to our navy.
Two hours later, to the dot,
Klska's explosive five minutes
began. The sky was filled by
Lightnings at two levels, Mitch
ells at two levels and Liberators.
They swept In from all. direc
tions, and low.
Four Lightnings provided a
top cover to eight others which
skimmed in at the rooftops with
chattering .45 caliber machine-
guns and 20 millimeter cannons,
punishing two essential installa
tions and adjacent anti-aircraft
batteries. That punishment must
have killed some Japanese, be
cause several guns failed.
Behind the low flying and
strafing Lightnings roared four
twin-engined Mitchells. The
sweep was full-powered. They
dropped their 8000 pound cargo
where it would do the most dam
age. These planes bounced from
NOW! 2 BIO FEATURES!
lijJJIU'j'jJJi1
Action! Thrlllslk
"Raiders 1
1250 MEMBERS
SIGN UP FOR
CONCERT GHOUP
With a membership of 1250
assured, tho Klamath Commun
ity Concert association conclud
ed its membership campaign Sat
urday and made plans for an
outstanding concert scries here
next winter.
The membership is consider
ably larger than lust year, but
not quite so large as two years
ago.
Arranged for next year's pro
gram are three evonts.
They are the Columbia quar
tet, composed of Igor Gorln, Jo
sephine Tuminia, Helen Olhelm,
and Nino Martini; Paul Draper
and Larry Adler, tap dancer and
harmonica player, and Patricia
Travers, 15-year-old girl violin
1st who has made a sensation In
movies and with symphony or
chestras. Dr. F. C. Adams, president of
the association, said that soldiers
will be invited to fill extra seats
at the concerts next year, fol
lowing a plan adopted this year.
WASHINGTON. March 15 VP)
The interior department is ready
to Increase allotments of live
stock on the far-flung western
lands administered under the
Taylor Grazing act, but stock
men are cautioned that their
closest cooperation will be ne
cessary to make the plan suc
cessful. Secretary Ickes, acknowledg
ing a repeated suggestion of
Senator Robertson (R-Wyo), that
a relaxation of grazing regula
tions would contribute to a solu
tion of the nation's meat prob
lem, says such a program will
have his approval.
The Wyoming senator, a stock
man for 30 years, wrote Ickes
and Agriculture Secretary Wick
ard several months ago urging
an Increase of 10 to 20 per cent
in livestock allotments.
Grazing lands are administer
ed under the Interior depart
ment, forest grazing, privileges
under the agriculture depart
ment. The senator asked an in
crease from both agencies.
Secretary Ickes has replied
that he believes the carrying ca
pacity of the grazing lands "has
been so restored that they will
now permit an increase in sheep
and cattle of about 10 per cent
in order to provide additional
supplies of meat and wool.
"Of course, it is realized that,
in placing this program into ef
fect, the closest cooperation with
the western stockmen will be
necessary, as there will be many
areas where increased stocking
will not' be possible and some
areas where stocking will be
possible beyond 10 per cent."
Ohio Schools Close
As Employes Strike
DAYTON, O., March 15 (JP)
All of Dayton's 49 public schools
close today as 140 non-teaching
employes struck to enforce de
mands for a pay increase.
Supt. Emerson Landls ordered
the closing an hour after
classes opened "to protect the
health of the children." He said
temperatures in class rooms
averaged 54 degrees, 18 below
normal.
Charles J. Bauer, business
agent for the AFL municipal
employes' union, said he had
been ordered to "win the strike
and I am going to win it."
Opium comes from the white
poppy.
the concussion of their own
bombs they were flying at near
ground level, just missing tele
phone poles which the Japanese
had brought all the way from
Japan.
RIGHT
NOW!
It's Dramatic '
Dynamite! With
4 Groat Favorites
At Their
Best!
Disney Cartoon Novelty News
mEfflM
Hoover Says War's Purpose
Is Jo Make Lasting Peace
DES MOINES, la., March 15
W) Former President Herbert
Hoovor told a Joint session of the
Iowa legislature today that "the
purpose of this war, the most
terrible of three centuries, Is to
make a lasting peace."
The native Iowan said In his
prepared address that Ameri
cans, regardless of past views or
political groups, are united In a
single purpose to win the war
and build a "world where we
can hope to live In peace."
' Declaring that military victory
alone will not give peace, Hoovor
said that "if we are to do a bol
ter Job of peace making this
tlmo It will bo because of a bet
tor publlo understanding of the
problems and a better prepared
ness to meet them."
Then he added, "and we must
begin to think of these problems
on a far larger frame than ever
before." ,
Pointing out the failure to
reach lasting peace throughout
the centuries, the former presi
dent suggostcd that "we need a
new approncrt," and then offered
WASHINGTON. March 15 UP)
Vice President Wallace gave his
support today to a resolution
culling for closer welding of Uie
United Nations for immediato
and post-war collaboration, but
considerable editing Is due on
tho proposal before It reaches
a vote in the senate.
Wallace told a press confer
ence the resolution seems "like
a very constructive proposal."
Asked if he thought it could be
considered in congress "without
bitter debate, tho vice presi
dent responded:
"I'd answer that by saying"
then hesitated and resumed: "I
hope it could be considered."
President Roosevelt was re
ported to have given tentative
endorsement to the proposal's
Broad objectives at a White
House conference with six sena
tors yesterday, but Chairman
Connally (D-Tex.) of the foreign
relations committee left no
doubt there would hae to be
some changes.
Connally was reported to
have Insisted at the meeting
that the time is not ripe to at
tempt to commit the United Na
tions to any Joint economic, re
lief or rehabilitation programs,
as tho resolution would do in
a general way.
The committee chairman told
reporters he was in favor of
stating now that the United
States wanted to agree with its
allies that all would Join In
maintaining world peace and se
curity after the war, but Indi
cated he was prepared to go
no further at this time.
Enlisted Men's
Children To Get
Government Care
WASHINGTON, March 15 (P)
A $1,200,000 appropriation for
the care of babies born to wives
of enlisted men in the armed
forces was approved today by a
senate-house conference commit
tee on a $6,280,000,000 defi
ciency bill.
Tho measure, which first
passed the house, was revised by
the senate Friday to Include .pro
vision for tho "war babies."
Final action is due tomorrow.
Gen. Giraud Offers
To Meet De Gaulle
(Continued from Page One)
will speed negotiations to join
the two French groups.
(Fighting French reaction to
Giraud s speech was reserved. A
spokesman in London expressed
disappointment that Giraud did
not specifically state his Inten
tion of ousting Bergeret, Nogues
and Marcel Peyrouton, Algerian
governor. At tho same time the
spokesman suggested the Giraud
declaration had brought the two
groups closer together.) '
NOW! Doors Open 1:30 it 8:45
TTT:T,',Trci
- Ill - MVM.
fJ.
-,7 1
km
his conception of the new ap
proaches. "I bcllovo the now approach
lies In a icuoli into tho dynamic
forces which havo built these
crises, These destructive forces
can be grouped Into six cate
gories. ,
"These nre Ideologies, eco
nomic pressures, excessive na
tionalism, militarism, Imperial
Ism and tho complexes of fear,
hate and revenge. Tho destruc
tion of peaeo from those sources
must be stopped or allayed in the
first part of treaty making.
That is by tho sultlunient of po
litical, territorial, economic and
ideological questions."
Hoovor said that If ''those dy
namic forces are successfully
met it menus peuce. If there Is
failure to meat them it means
renewed war,"
"No superstructure of leagues,
councils, federations or whatnot
can endure unless these founda
tions are first built," he said.
Declaring the treaty of Ver
sailles stimulated excessive mili
tarism, tho former president said
the one answer to militarism is
disarmament.
Nazis Search Houses
For French Labor
(Continued from Page One)
had shot down throe Gorman
planes In the lluuto Suvole
region. The broadcast was re
corded by thu Associated Press
In London.)
The Tribune said French no-
Ilea commanded by nazl offi
cers already had been conduct
ing massive night raids In tho
Lyon area, blocking off areas
and checking houses floor by
floor. Any male declared physi
cally able wus reported dis
patched without further ado to
Germany. The sume tactics wore
declared employed In the fac
tories of Vlllourbanne and other
towns of tho region..
The Geneva newspaper Lb
Suisse said axis occupation
authorities had threatened to
send German and Italian troops
into the Hauto Savoie moun
tains unless the Frenchmen In
concealment there, already
sought by Vichy s mobile
guards, surrendered.
Hull, Eden Warn
Public About War
(Continued From Page One)
with Eden's visit. Ho replied
he thought all would agree on
the absolute necessity of main
talning ccmplcto understanding
among the Important govern
ments connected with thu prose
cution of the war, at every stage
of the war.
That also applied, he said to
tho important problems of post
war reconstruction.
Hull asserted that tho main
tenance of this cornpleto under
standing between governments
meant a full and elaborate ex
change of Information, and men
tioned in this rrnard exchonge
of Information w.iii the soviet
union and China.
Hull, freshly relumed from
a vacation In Florida, appeared
to be in the best of health.
Onlv about four and one-half
seconds are required for the
average baseball double play.
HELD OVER
Including Tuesday
-PLUS-
2nd Big Hit
,if, aiwnui sumoo
jrSHILL MAKE! THI
fm uiinwiftT uiiiniBi
mm
WOODWORM
MMrMM
ttMHKsnr.x.
Starrs Wednesday
BIG DOUBLE
HORROR SHOW
'
Of
March' IB. 1143
Stettinius Lend,
Lease Report Eyed I O
By Russian Paper
MOSCOW, March 15 UP)
Pravdn, communist party organ,
dovotcd half Its foreign news
section today to a report made
by Loud-Lease Administrator
Edward li. Slulllulus Jr., March
7 on weapons and materials
.nut in Russia under the lend-
lease agreement. Tho account
wus contained in a Teas nows
exchange dispatch from Wash.
Ington and was dated March 11.
A digest or me repon was
first printed In Moscow on
Mnrrh 12. Prominent display
also was given to the press con
ference ol uriusn rorewn ooc
rotary Anthony Edon In Wash.
Ington and to mo laicsi riyini
Fortross raid on western France.
Approximately one-nan 01 we
pool of' new passenger automo- fag?
biles existing wnon iui"i
n,,.. vnhlees bi'Uun hovo been
released to purchasers. '
TOO LATE TO
CLASSIFY
OIL TO BURN For Union
heating oils phono 8404, Mam
uth Oil Co., 015 Klomath Ave, r
3 -31m
OIL BURNERS Chimneys
Furnaces. Cornpleto service.
Phone 7140. 3-"
WANTED 2-bedroom, furnish
ed houso with chicken homo.
Suburban, near bus line and
school. Permanent tenants.
521 N. 10th. 3-18
FURNISHED HOUSE Close In,
East Main. Gas ncai ana
range, 530. Drew's Manslore.
317
ELECTRIC RANGE $130 ch.
Model 41. Phono 7035. 3-17
LOST Ration book A belong
ing to Carl Anderson. Phone
72H6. 3-17
FOR SALE City directory. Call
82q2. 315
WANTED Coshlcr. Inquire
Wolgrcen Drug. 1043U
CLEAN FURNISHED HOUSE
Utilities furnished. Inquire
2000 Blchn. 3-20
FOR SALE 720-acre ranch
northwest Sprogue River. 115
acres In cultivation, balance
meadow and pu.ituro. Emlle
Exert, lilldebrund. 3-20
WANTED TO RENT OR LEASE
Acreage wllh house and out
buildings. Phone 5331. 3-20
FOR-SALE '33 Intcrnatlonol O
pick-up. 020 Front.
319
FOR RENT Small Irrlguted
ronch near Malln. Will share
crop. Suitable for potatoes.
P. O. Box 86, Malln. Phone
140, Malln. 3-18
Hans Norland, Insurance.
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