Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / Jan. 12, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
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TWO EfiBINGHAUS IS CALLED BLUCHE8 BY HIS FRIENDS \cw (lik-f Incentive Comes fro: Away Poxvn East. Is Member u Family Lon? Prominent In Mix1 marlo Section. legislator at 23. Ifa Throe Childmk ami Is Meinltor c E|?i>oopnl (huii'li. Raleigh, N. O.?HI? wife and in.i mate friends call him "Blucher. North Carolina's new governor?Jell Chri.sio:>h Blu< her lihrixifjiiaui*. H- comes of a family long pron? neat in the life v?f the AlToemarie see tion?those counties 5r the extrem northeastern part of North Carolim Of sturdy German stock, the firs Ehringhaus?John Christoph?cam t?? America in lsu and shortlyther< Ir.er setxJeci in Elizabeth City. Sim. then the name of Ehringliaus?whic in literal German means "house c honor"?has been one that carrie prestige in the Albemarle. Three members of the family eac have served two terms in the sta' house of representatives. John Ohri: toph. founder of the family, starte the legislative trek in and w?i re-elected in 182". 'Governor Tlnringhau.-' gTaaidfathe: John Chris&oph Blueher. the first, fo lowed the path ot li;s father an represented Pasquotank County in th State assembly for two tonus begin ning in 1S42. Governor Ehiuiighaus was born i Elizabeth City 51 years ago the no of Ersldn. Ehrlnghaus, who i.:-. sti' actively engaged in the banking busi xicss in the Pasquotank capital at th ago of Su. bike his grandfather. Gbverno Bhringhaus went to the University c North Carolina, where he was grad uated with honors in 1901 and re ceived his law degrees two veai later. By 1905. when he was 23. Ebritqj hatis was a member of the Genoa Assembly The first bill he-introduce provided for the establishment of teachers' raining school in J3ast.er North Carolina. He was. re-elected t represent Pasquotank Cour.ty in th 1907 house, but that session brough an end to his legislative career. Turning i?> the practice of his pro fession, Governor JShringhaus In 191 was named solicitor of the first ju dicial d.ist-icT and held this post tin *il 1922. His eyes were steered to ward thv governorship. Ten years la tor the gf|al was reached. Mrs. Ehvinghaus. who before he marriage to th Gov-rnor in 19 1. v:a Miss Matilda ITaughtoh o? Washing ton. is considered o-\. of the lovelies women In Eastern North Carolina. Three Children There a e three children in th cher Jr., \v n.. is 1 !s a >t\i b a - tS*1' .C!!a rrtiina rl> third Hhringhaus to matriculate ther The other two?Matilda and Ha ugh on?named after tiheir mother?ai rwins. They are 16. .Miss Eli ring ha us is a studeiiit ' Sr. Mary's School for Gi'. ls here, whether mother was educated. Her twl brother attends VyoodtseiTy Fores Academy at Orange. Va. Twins wro rrnt^ tmcommo" <?:? ~~~rh Ghringhaus family. The governor' boys. and his sister, Mrs. \V. P. Dul of Elizabeth- City, has twin boys. Er skine and Mark. The Ehringlxauses are members <j the Episcopal Church. Mr. Ehring haus' father was the Rev. Thoma ilenbury Haught an, Episcopal minis ter and chaplain in the Confederal army. As North Carolina's ~>4th chief ex ecu live s:::o> independence. Governo ETTiria^haus is. M;e first man to h elevated to the State's highest offic from rhe Albemarle section of th state in more than one hundred year: The last was James Iredell of Oho wan County, governor from 1S27 t IS2S?about the time the first Ehr ingbaus was establishing himself i the Albemarle. TAXES "Taxes." sighed Mose, "hab got to be A 'possum up a 'summon tree. It se tan' grin?Vse on de groun'? But burn its skin! It don' come dowi "Seein' dat I caint reach St dere, It all fuzz up. dat possum hair. All* snurl, "Sow, Mwic, -sli*/ you grvvine do? You caiitc git me. So I'll git you'." *T durino what I is gwine do? I>at possum grins de whole year the Looks !ak I gwine hab take ray ax. -"v,. yvr? ii wd.?. utt. u.?i shjn aai iJtx. ?Km ma Moretz Coffey. Kufus. Xbr*h Carolina. Sev^rteen flocks containing mor than 2.000 birds .verc Mood-tesre E&j for baeiliary white diarrhea in Cnld v/cll C'ct:*.r.fy dhrincr pas* sreek. ISLMHii '(Mr SP&ECKLES " " a mam of few 1wo?j>5 evem if he is single mlJMI , jffi- - - *j s?lr - V'v I I Career of Cal ; Traced in Bi Born and reared in the humble furroundlngs of a Vermont farm, .Calvir Cooli'.ljro was destined to ?o by successive steps to the highest, and migh (j-j ties* office of .. ^reat nation to ad minister its affairs for six years am to terminate his presidential careei \ir?u.illy of hi- own volition. To the vie-presidency and to th* n i/ r< sudor, vy. he sought a shrewd coin :: sense. a t j venality in vlv ; id rurast with some oi his i>ivic *_ ce.-^ors. a keen native \v?t and man; "[ft homely likes and dislikes retained t froth >iis New England boyhood. ,* Atr.onc his supporters he Inspire* ^ anat\ietil admiration utwl from his po litic.il opponents he often received th? bitterest <?: renunciations. But then n were, nevertheless, many iu iho lat lor group who valued him friendshi] l(j ami liked to smoke a cigar anil tall things over, jj K-aching the presidency upon th : of Warren i*. Harding in J 02" ' Mr. Ceolidge was confronted wit] problems of rehabilitation arising from the World War and the depres si on of 1021, and almost by the scan da's which were revealed in the uava oi ises, the Justice .Department an< tin* office of the custodian of ali< i e property. With serenity and calmness h rod* n s.itutod a policy of govecnmenlai,I ee n bn'omy and H?lpjulne8s in assisting j Europe to work out its po^t-war prob Joins. Such was the success of th(: e program that when he ran for Pre si den*, in 11)24 he was returned to of .. fit-e by a popular plurality of 7,000, 000. the greatest that had been ac corded a candidate for. the presi dency up to that nme. The manner of his leaving the pros fdency aroused a national inter.es comparable with that of his inductioi tl iiK?j that office by his father In ti lamp-lit room ol' the latter*s Vermon farm hoine. ,. Return Home 0 Mr. and Mrs. I'ooiidg'- on the at e i riifori of the Inauguration Her lt hen HooV'T. bis successor, left IVash in; ton for their old home in North ampton. .\l.isy . ioccujty the sum modest house who ? 4hcy started Hfi . in 1905i, when Mr. Cbolidrve com _ nienced his public .never as city so . 'dehor of thai municipality. As early as the spring of 1927 Then .. ifloxnr/.o.l ..HinTf., iMtll 5,* \5i< r j f ooiulgje wished io he rc?cl'.'cted h< s j had only to inoicat c ?t. By his owi _ confession, this view was shared b] Mr. Cooli.lgo himself. regardless of thi popular tradition that a Preside n must retire after his second tern;. 0 In a maga^M alN&elc published ai tcj his f T i i*? 11; ::.. M v CooUdfr"? die Lt "e:iifu" hir-?vV. r. tl reasons which he proceeded to -nu ? merato. First of all. there was his owi health and that of Mrs. Coolidgo. "ft is hazardous." h*? wrote. "i< tl attempt what wo feel is beye.rid on, p strength." n In addition he considered it impos ,t sihie for one man to .serve success fully in tin- presidency for more thai y ?ss a rrview of the carefr s of those who iiau arTVJ-d -V?o I;;i terms had shown him that the la tie: ._ part of his office was devoid of con strucuvt accomplishments. ,f Famous Statement The nation was startled when 01 jj August 2. 1027. the President lssue< his famous statement. e "I do not choose to run for I'resl dent In 1928." It was interpreted variously thru j. out the country. Many saw in it : 0 sincere wish for retirement, hut >?i| t. ?? iuiiia?irs> iu .jwrjn nit: uuu:u!<i e lion should an Insistent demand Arise . Oihers looked upon-it as a fl'hi\I d? eision that he would not be a enndi 0 date- lor r?f-el?:eiion. The.\ wen many. too. who regarded it. sis j n shrewd attempt to avoid the thin term Issue by hating himself "draft ed for office." This confusion was clarified by Mi Coolidge in an address before the Re publican national committee the fol lowing December. In six crisp sen ^ tences which were added at the las minute to a prepared speech. tb< President declared that he had elim inated" himself entirely from lb' presidential race ar.d advised the par ty to continue "the serious task of se lectins another candidate/' Tills decision, he asserted, "must bi respected. , But Mr. Goolitlge did not stop there When the Republican national con v veni I oil met at Khnsas City in June ii>2S. he dispatched his secretary. Everett Sanders, to the session with in stractions to "notify several leaders o the state delegations not to vote" fo 2 him. il "Had I not done so," he said ii his magazine writings. "J am told should have been nominal ed-"' Mr. Cooiidge is on record as having said that he had never forma iaicd in gas* w'AT? raind. what his at titude would have been had he heei nominated. "But I was deT.ermined," he addc^ "not to have that contingency arise. !..? lcCTW. One of the major issues of tha v>nnr?nHnTi bnd been ? principal sat ject of contention during the latf'e years of the Coolidge administrate and one that the President had tosse squarely into the center of the presj dential campaign. It was farm relie: Signs of unrest in ,the farming sec tions of the Middle West were ap parent when Mr. Coolidge tofck of fice. The farmers of that section wer confronted with a serious depressio and called upon the federal govern ment for help in finding a way ou1 Their spokesmen in congress clamors for legislation and the passage of measure which Mr. Coolidge felt h could not support. That was the orig inal Haugen-McNary bill, containin the famous and much discussed equa lization fee provision. Urging the development of co-op erative marketing organizations as th best solution for the depression, ?u WsBSUffiBaBsffi: WATAUGA DEMOCRAT?EVERY vin Coolidge ief Biography ' ile?. Io: c?l he must oppose any I > form of price fixinu. either direct o.*i indirect. and called for the measure's"j - defeat. . was passed twice by Con-1 - .cress and on each occasion it received . '? a presidential veto- With the secondI t* veto With the second veto the tores-1 ideal .-em to Cpngre - a scttthlott incs-| - sage in which he termed th?i moos;:'*' j - "economic folly.** The Coolidp* itdmiiiJtttration wis] -j h a ra ci c- ri r ed by ypncAfih relations i 7 with the rest of the world and a:i tempts hy the President to make thai pence a testing one. Early in ll?2T. li -J i asked .the principal naval pdwers to - meet for h discussion oT the limitak . tion oi auxiliary vessels of war. te ^ supplant the Washington treaty of IH2L which : only to " xpMn l> ships. Japan and Great Ftritain ac copied and representatives of the three nations gathered at Geneva. e It has been said that the confer . ence was n?>t preceded by a svtffihjciehi amount of preliminary consider j oration of technical methods of iJ< - armament, but at any rate, irecon c?i?al?:e -lit fere rides of opinion arlsiae I from the \videl> vat i d needs of tin ' I'mtod Stales and llnginnd on used tlx.* i conference to end in a deadlock that continued to the end of the Coolidge - ! administration. -f Preserver of Peace - j Mr. Gfirnlioge also sought to pro?; serve peace through the Kellogg mul-[ iilateral trva*y for the renunciation s J of war, which ho declared the m?s: -! important subject to be discussed by - the Senate during his time in the - White House. Tn spite of determined - opposition from a group of senators - who regarded the act as an "entangliu;; alliance," and one destined - to - lead eventually to membership in the I League of Nations, the pact was forr. maliy ratified by an overwhelming n vote. The President also was of the jbplri :ch that peace could be preserved jthrough the maintenance of a strong - i national defense and he was a con j sistont advocate of a largo, bus nort-I convMilllvc navy. I.-, the last year of -1 his administration he vigorously eu 'dorsed a measure authorizing the c-on| struclion <>f fifteen new 10,000-ton - cruisers ami a lG.ooil-ton aircraft car :u:r. Although rhe sbiK encountered! stern opposition it finally was par | proved by Congress. Another major Coolidsre -policy war > j'that of reduction of the high tax Vjseiudiiies thai came with the war. ' IThroe cuts were effected''"during his - administration, which relieved thout sands of citizens x?:" the burden of a Federal levy, in addition to sharply - dee reading the amounts paid into the - government by the surge corporations j r.otiir before he retired from of-: i numeioui i offers to make professional an01 business connections at the expiration of. 0 his term, hut consistently declined t?? ' miter lain any of them. After ho returned to Northampton he cng.t-red - in literary work teiiipbrarily. writing - for magazine,s the story of his admin1 isi; aiiot: and an autobiography-; About s two months after leaving the White 1 HI miiJt first ::w i- -n r noction When he accepted election as - a member of the hoard of directors of the New York Life Insurance company. He was chosen to fill the vai* canty caused by the death of My ran 1 T. Herriok. American ambassador to France. Mi-. Birthright t'alvin Coolidge was bom on Ih-; dependence Day, July 4, 1872, in Plya| mouth, a country village in the Veri ir.ont hills, the son of John C. and - Victoria Moor CooUdge. lie was de scended from John and Mavy Cool idg?-, who had settled in Watentown. - Mass., about 1630. and his ancestry e ran through a long line of farmers who Jived in Massachusetts until his d great-grea-t grandfather moved into - Vermont. His father was the village storekeeper as well as a farmer, and *- so the son had a double training un der his father's cars, plowing and dig ging in the fields and selling and fig - until? behind the counter. Here were i developed in him the industry, frugally itv and Self-relia.nee which shaped the. - course of. his life. His mother died e when he v.as 13 and four years later - he lost his only si.ster, /but a warm - i oond of sympathy developed between 1 him and his step-mother. ? Between "chores" on the farm and in the store, the future President attended the ungraded school at Ply mouth, a single room with "a wood stove. Afterward he attended the - Blaclc River Academy at Dud low nad - the academy at St. Johnsburg before i going to Amherst College. He was a F keen student, but only In a modest way did he enter into the activiti.-r \ of college life. I During his senior year, in open competition with students of all Amer_ ican colleges, he won the first pn/.--. _ a gold medal, for the best essay on rht _ causes of the Revolutionary War. H*? n was graduated in IbSo. witn the degree -of A. B. and at the commencemer.t was Grove Orator. Had he had money enough to go through law school that fact might have changed t his whole carere. As it was he moved across the Connecticut River to the r ncaiLy-- i-^v.'TL_cf Northampton. Mass.. n and found a position in the law of^ flee of Hammond and Field. Within 20 months he was admitted to the bar - and began practice. Mr. Coolldge never had time to pnove to the world whether he would w have made a great lawyer for he was e drawn almost immediately into polin tics and with few intervals that thereafter was his life work, t. On October 4. 1905, Mr. Coolidge d married Miss Grace A. Goodhue, of a Burlington, Vermont, making a home e for his bride In a two-family house - in Northampton. They continued to S occupy that until Mr. Coolidge became president and returned to it at the conclusion of his services as Preei> dent. e They had two sons. John and CaJ c-| vin Jr. whfch oe-l i i THURSDAY?ROOXK. N. C. Bones 1 > Thai ?Id saving -iw.u.iy is only skin-deep and ugliness goes 10 the x-ue" is as umrue as it is trite. Realty, beauty radiates from the bone just is doe? ugliness. The grace and symmetry "f the hum an body depends More upon well-formed bony structure :!i:ui >n anything else. One has only to :?hser\e the linos of the chin. ucse. heek. brow aud beautifully turned M'klos and v.risrs to know that the oidafioii of their beauty is perfectly formed bones. And everyone appreciates the beauty that tlnii. shapely teern nuu> t? the fnee. The reasmi why some individuals have shapely teeth, and bones and the possessions that go with them and others do not. cannot he attributed to accident or special blessing, but to the food that the body consumes. Shapely Teeth and Bones. The food that wo eat must supply the substances thai the body requires for natural development. And this supply must be adequate from the very beginning of life. Bones and teeth are not only designed hut are developed to a considerable extent before birth. If mothers eat foods that arc rich in the substances of which teeth and bones are made Nature will do its best in building. If the proper foods are hot supplied, the cltllcl is nhuost sure to suffer some handicap. The chief materials needed for building of bone and teeth are calcium and phosphorus. A pregnant or lac tatlng mother needs three limes as much of these substances as she would if she were not n mother. The child from infancy on through adolescence needs twice as much as an adult. Phosphorous and calcium, the minerals so important In tooth and bone structure, are the ones liable to be lacking ?n many American dietaries, which include large amounts of sugar and starchy food :. It is nece^'M-y, therefore, that mothers watch to see that their diets provide the necessary calcium and phosphorous foods If the building of good teeth and bones Is the COOLIDGE AT REST IM Vt?DMAMT ISII T C. t IjltiTlViX 1 UlLfLitf, DIED ON THURSDAY (Continued from Page 1) Dvorak's New World Symphony drift mir over . t ho concrrcgAtion tror y)itt -rr<r.re was one sain*- selection w liieh \va playea &t irisfftmraiv of cv;t. Idge dr.. youngest son of the forme Pijcsideivt, who (lied during his fn thor'a teriri in the White Roiise. Tim Rev. Albert J. I'eimor. youth fui and deep-voiced, who has bee pastor here only four months, bit enjoyed the intimate uequahitanoe o both Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge. de)iv?ne -tlnvlnvociv?ion. a prayer for light. fo com passio n, ~ for solace." He stood above the casket, on ci ther side of which two standui d.s bor the flags of the nation and ihe churol As the minister finished, a Quaru softly began the hymn "Lehd, Kind! Light. ' a favorite of Xtr. Cooltdg. The plain.- varnished walls of the rec tangular auditorium, in the ha Icon of u hieh were crowded townspcopl wVio had known the former presider as a neighbor, echoed back the fi-u: word. The Scripture reading. selection from the Psnirns. front Romans, Co: inthians, and John, followed. "Peace 1 lixtvo with you; my peac I give unto you: not as the world git ei?h you ' unto you. L-e.j. not yon heart be troubled, neither let it h fearful." The Rev. Penoer paused an bowed his he-id. He began to pray. The quart'began a refrain. Love That Wilt Not Let Me go." Th: song was selection of Mrs. Grac -WUIIUpV . The minister pronounced the bene diction? "Unto God's gracious mere and -protection wo commit you. Th Lord bless you aasd keep you. Th Lord make His face to shine upo you and be gracious unto you. Th Lord lift up his countenance upo you, and give you peace, both r^^o^ and foreverinore. Amen." The organ played a soft postlud and Mrs. Ccoiidge's neighbors ros and walked quietly out of the churcl Coolidpe Mrs. Coolidge had entered th church on the .irra of her daughter in-law. Mrs John Ccolidge. As sh passed the casket, and the ccngregs lion rose to honor her. she force a brave little smile to h^r 1i?r. Bt she never raised her eyes, and ss with bowed head through the opei ing prayer and the first bars of "Leu Kindly Light." In the second row at the right, si Vice-President Charles Curtis an Chief Justice Charles Evans Kughe Beside them was Clifford Lyman. Xorthampton book store proprleto long-time friend of the last Presidei ?_-i? Konorarv Dall beaver. The pastor. giving his benedi^tlo: raised both hands dramatically ov< his congregation. Tliere was a bri< pause as the gathering sat with hea<! bowed. 'men .Mrs. Coolidge. assisted on e ther side by her son. John, and h wife, rose and slowly walked to tb rear door through which she had er tered half an hour previously. Thei curred after a brief illness durin the summer of 1924 was the first < two bereavements in Mr. C'ooHdge family during his occupancy of tt White House. Karly in 1926 his father died z his Vermont Lome while his son v/s speeding from Waohington to his bed foundation, oi |?|f i s-/~. ' /\ ) / \ /' "Shapely Teeth and Bo goal. Dcfi&feticia* in these minerals may be met by consuming foods thai are rich in these substances. Milk and vegetables are usually thought of as the only .sources for calcium, and milk, fish; meat and eggs and vegetables for phosphorus. But n very rich source of both these elements may I be found in a desirable form in selfj rising iiour. Made From Softest Wheat. This is line flour milled from the j softest of wheat which is so desirable 1 for making pastries, cake and quick i breads < : ali kinds. To this Hour is I added salt and baking soda and monocal' ium : ko-phato in a proportion | that produces the correct amount of {was another brief interlude, while the i organist played 'Wearer .My Clod to Tine," and then President and Mrs: ( J Hoover, with their party, walked to ]the front entrance. As the president I t emerged from the church, a mild patr tcr ,>f applause could !? > heard from the crowd outside. The President gave no indication that he- heard a sou mi. As i he throng pressed closely - around him. however, two women, - caught in the jam. fainted and wore II assisted to safety by t<k- ' police. Sev sljfflrfoot. raised loud outcries. A man -4 ivt?r> n ,i"1t~*r~,*Vww he. un a.?inrnhMlk rj The main street were -| ikied with other crowds tvyinu io ig'invhse the celebrities. -1 Ijtrjre Crowd n Three minutes after the presirlenit tial party's departure, the doors were ?f flung: open, and the congregation was d permitted to leave. r! Mr.- CooUdge and her family . si corted by th.- farmer pi-raidcr.? > .^-ci retary, Harry Ross, went to the Beeche es to rest a moment before undert. taking the long eold ride to Plymouth, 't President and Mrs. Hoover weie y driven speedily to The Beeches, after a. the church service, for a personal vis's it of half an hour with Mrs. CooMdge. y The presidential special train was on I- its siding at the station, ready to leave It Northampton at 11:S0. Overcast skies began to let down a rniid ruin aiui the merchants' flags if drooped gloomily .vt hali staff. President Hoover's train pulled away from the station at 11:45. e The funeral cortege proctceded to Plymouth at noon. ir & J&. i c iV Iwffy : FOR QUICK ^^ ^is ?rt^ * 7551 ONE L1 * 2.98 I SPAINHC vs "Boone's She t JANUARY 12. l?JJ Beauty men . . . No Accident." leaven for the making o? high Quality Unl-orl nr/ii1.io?e 'IM.? - inonocnicium phosphate present Is sufj fieient to make a considerable, contribution of phosphorus and calcium to the diet. For example, two cups of I his flour made into biscuits, mutllns or any other baked product furnish about stxsevenths of the daily uduit require- j merit of calcium and about two-thirds of the daily adult requirement of phosphorus. Therefore, a serving once or twice a day of a food made of self rising flour will go a long way to making up calcium ami phosphorous deficiencies in not only the diet of mothers hut also that of the whole family. IE. T. & VV. N. C. MOTOR TRANS- J PORTATION COMPANY (Schedule Effective Sept. 30, 1932) j Leave Boone for?Vulle Cruris, Banner F,!k, Elk Park, Bonn Mountain, Hampton, Elizabcthton, Johnson City, GreSncville, Morristofvn. KrioxviHc, Chattanooga and West i at 11:50 a. ni., 8:10 p. . 'Blowing Rock, Lenoir, Hickory, Charlotte, Statesvillc, Salisbury, High Point, Greensboro, Durham, tta| leigh, Norfolk, at 9:15 a. m., and ! b -mp p. ?T?,' (Asncviiie, (.rrecnvtlle, i>. COiiimoia ana twltariestun, S. C., Aufuwi and Atlanta, Ga., Jacksonville, Fla. and South at 9:15 a. m., 11:50 a. m. and 5:30 p. m. FAKES FROM BOONE. Valle Cruris, N. C. S 0.50 Banner Elk, N. C 0.75 Elk l'ark. N. C 1.15 Eliznbcthton. Tenn. 2.00 Johnson City. Tenn 2 2>'GreeneviUe, Tenn. 3.25 Morristown. Tenn. 4.15 KnoxviUe, Tenn. 5.25 Chattanooga, Tenn. 7.75 Kingsport, Tenn. 2,85 Blowing Reck, N. C 0.40 Hickory, N. O 2.25 Charlotte, N. C 4.00 Greensboro, N. C '5.00 Ashoville, N. C 4.15 i Augusta, Ga. S.Jo | Jacksonville. Fla. 13.90 ' Low. ,t Fair* Everywhere Best Highways?No Dust. INQUIRE OF TICKET AGENT FOE FARES AND SCHEDULES _ TO OTHER POINTS. 9i??neo! )N GOATS CLEARANCE! MBMBBMMHiMHi fare in need of a Coat, to take advantage of at saving: ;0ATS-NOW 10.95 MTS>Now 7.95 X)ATS.n?w 6.95 j !0ATS,Now 4.95 I DT OTHER LADIES' lTS REDUCED TO I 3.95 4.95 )URS' Inc. ?pping Center"
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
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Jan. 12, 1933, edition 1
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