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FORECAST: WILMINGTON AND VICINITY: Con siderable cloudiness with moderate tem peratures today followed by showers and warmer tonight; Tuesday, cloudy with moderate temperatures. VOL. 81. NO. 69._ WILMINGTON, N. C., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1947 “ ESTABLISHED 186* Hughes Probe May End Soon plane Builder Expected To Tell His Side Of Tax Story Today * WASHINGTON, Nov. 9. — (U.R) __ Millionaire plane-maker How Hughes is expected to teH Senate investigators to morrow his story about the $5, 91&,9Cx in wartime tax deficien cies "allegedly discovered in his aircraft companies’ accounts by government tax inspectors. 6 The reported deficiencies were turned up by Sen. John J. Wil-j ,iams R. Del , during a session { the Senate War Investigating | committee which is inquiring in to Hughes’ $40,000,000 of war-, tlme plane contracts. j Williams said the Internal! Revenue Bureau had gone over, the books of the Hughes Tool; company and its subsidiaries for j the years 1942-46 at the com mitteV request and found de ficiencies amounting to $3,501, 000 The tax inspectors had al ready discovered alleged defici encies amounting to $2,418,921 fnr 1940-41. Williams and other suocom mittee members made it clear; that no “fraud” or deliberate; evasion was envolved. The de ficiencies were based on Hughes’ undistributed profits. ; A Hughes associate said tonight the plane-maker would prove he i had made no profits on war con- ^ tracts. Hughes’ appearance tomorrow, his first formal testimony in the; second round of his tussle with the Senators over his contracts for photo - reconnaissance and , supper-cargo planes, was ex-1 pectedto lack much of the ex- J plosive quality of his appearance in August. For one thing the Hollywood movie magnate was not expected to renew his volatile, name-call ing feud with Sen. Owen Brew ster, R., Me., chairman of the full war investigating committee. Last August, before Hughes even came to Washingtno, he splashed black headlines across the nation with a charge that Brewster offered to call off the inquiry if Hughes would merge his Trans World Airpla ne with Pan American Airways. Brewster denied this under oath and furthermore testified that he had nothing to do with See Hughes on Page Two TEXTILE TnS ASKW. BOOST Workers In Northern Mills Seek 15 Cents Per Hour Raise ■ BOSTON, Nov. 9 —UR—A gen eral wage increase of 15 cents an hour for 100,000 workers in Northern cotton and rayon mills was asked today by the CIO Textile Workers Union — —24 hours after voting to seek a 20 cent boost for 880,000 woolen worsted employes. Emile Rive, genreal presi dent of the union, said the cot ton-rayon proposal would cover members employed in 125 mills in New England and the Mid dle Atlantic states and would establish a minimum of $1.03 an hour compared with 88 cents at present. Average hourly earn ings, now $1.07, would rise to S1.22, he said. The new wage hike proposal coincided with a TWUA an nouncement in New York that the union has negotiated a nine per cent wage increase amount-: ing to*$19,000,000 a year for 125, 000 Southern cotton textile workers — about one-fifth of all cotton mill workers in the South. The Southern minimum thus rises to 87 cents an hour. Four Increases TWUA' has negotiated four wage increases in the Northern cotton-rayon industry since VJ day, the most recent a five cents-an-hour hike Aug. 1, 1947. Other boosts were 10 cents an hour Jan. 1, 1947, eight cents in August, 1946, and eight cents in November, 1945. The new wage proposal, notice of which must be given to employers at least 30 days before Jan. 1, when the present contract expires, was an nounced after a conference of •100 delegates from union locals at a downtown hotel. The Weather South Carolina and North Carolina— •answerable cloudiness with moderate “temperatures Monday and Tuesday, farmer Monday night, showers Monday .'SM and Tuesday and In mountain sec |rm- Monday afternoon. Y'nosological data for the 24 hours 7:30 p.m. yesterday. TEMPERATURES ..i* 4m 46, 7:30 am 43, 1:30 pm 59. ■/' Pm 52. Maximum 60. Minimum 41. 50. Normal 58. , HUMIDTY pi;30 4m 79, 7:30 am 75, 1:30 pm SI, 130 Pm 69. - PRECIPITATION for "“0 24 hours ending 7:30 0 23 inches. | Oji0\al since the first of the month ’*> inches. U - TIDES FOR TODAY r ~oast and Geodetic Survey.) from the Tide Tab!<,. published by Wi]min_ Hlsh Low "“"Pon __ 7:48 am 2.18 am Ha,, 8:08 pm 2:46 pm !°nboro Inlet __ 5:46 am 11:53 am Sll. 5:56 pm 11:50 pm unrise 6:40. Sunset 5:12. Moonrise ; ' ,n' Moonset 6:09. Ho'* HEATHER %n Page Iwi Marshall T o Present Aid Program Today Secretary Of State Will Appear Before Joint Session Of House-Senate Com mittees On Foreign Affairs WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 _ Secretary of State George C. Marshall goes before a joint ses sion of the Senate and House Foreign Affairs committees to morrow to present the admini-rf tration’s first official propr for emergency and lonr ' A aid for Europe. v" A week later, on Ml q<£ 17 Congress will convei cial session and hea* •sftum President Truman, either m per son or by message, a plea that no time be lost in putting the emergency program into opera tion At the outset Marshall is ex jpected to recommend that $42, 000,000 of relief be supplied im mediately to France, Italy, and Austvv o help barricade them agxjf* • inroads of Commun ^ expected to outline terms his long-ranje <Sery plan which on Satur fiby the Harriman committee es timated would cost $5,750,000,000 in 1948 or a total of $12,000,000, 000 to $17,000,000,000 in the next four years. Battle Brews A survey today tended to show that the secretary will find general agreement among com See MARSHALL on Page Two California City Donates FoodOnFriendshipT rain ! - FIRST REPORT The first “dutch treat” report luncheon of the Com munity Chest campaign will be held today at 1 p. m. in the Community Center, Sec ond and Orange streets. Chairman Charles Harring ton urges all campaign vol unteers to be there on time, and to turn in their report envelopes at the door. RUSSIA EXTRACTS BILLION IN GOODS American Military Econo mists Place Total Figure At $1,500,000,000 BERLIN, Nov. 9—(U.P.)—Russia has extracted approximately $1, 500,000,000 in reparations from current German productions :n the Soviet occupation zone since war’s end, American military government economists estimatt ed today. A 40,000-word, illustrated re port indicated that the Soviet zone is in better economic shape than the three Western zones. It also indicated: 1. The giganic export pro gram of the Anglo-American ! combined zone, designed to i make exports pay for imports, is failing badly. 2. The Russian and American zones both are making substan i tial progress toward reaching pre-war normalcy. 3. The british zone, including the Ruhr, described as the industrial heart of Europe had attained only 37 per cent of 1936 production up to Sep. 1, while the French zone had reached only 35 per cent. Based on Production American otticiais saia may based their estimate of repara tions taken by Russia on the known total production of the Soviet zone in 1946, information given by the Soviets to the Al lied Control authority prior o the Moscow Foreign Ministers conference, the industrial capa city of the zone and the amount of materials being produced by Russian-zone plants. The report said that during ; the past three months of 1946 “total deliveries to the Soviet : Union may have exceeded one I half the total net production.” It attributed the Soviet zone’s more enviable economic position to the fact that Eastern Ger many, which includes the Soviet zone, is Germany’s “breadbas ket.” “It does not, therefore, have to develop exports of anything like the magnitude which the bizonal area must provide to achieve self-support,” the re port said. v Aired Offically The admission that the export program is proving a great dis appointment to the British and American military governments marked the first time such a view has been aired officially. Heretofore, Anglo-American of ficials had maintained an im port-export balance could be reached by 1950. “Exports for the first six monht of 1947 were only $66,-000, See RUSSIA on Page Two Seven Thousand Watch As Two Carloads Of Milk, Sugar Hook On SACRAMENTO, Nov. 9 —(f)— Seven thousand persons turned out today to see two more box cars of food added to the Friendship Train in ceremonies at which Governor Warren turned over the throttle to Gov ernor Vail Pittman of Nevada. This was the last stop in Cali fornia for the ever-lengthening freight train and Governor Pitt man promised that the resi dents of his state would do their share in seeing that the hun gry of France and Italy were fed through the generosity of the people of America. Governor Warren, who board ed the train at its inception in Los Angeles, declared: “the most thrilling part of the ride up the state has been the idea behind it. In every city where we have stopped, the looks on the faces of the crowds have attested to the world that we want to be friends with all oth ers who want to be friends with us. Cash Donations “I am sure that this seeing off here will be duplicated many times over as the train crosses the nation and when the food stuffs reach the needy over seas.” Sacramentans kept up their giving—their two boxcars were stuffed with evaporated milk and sugar — until the train pulled out for Reno. The crowd stood in line to fill a box on the speakers stand with green backs, dimes, nickels and pen nies. As the wheels of the train started grinding toward the Si See CALIFORNIA on Page Two PAPER HEADLINES CREEK ATROCITIES London Daily Mirror Prints Pictures Of Troops Carry ing Heads LONDON, Monday, Nov. 10— '■'f’1—The mass-circulation Daily Mirror devoted nearly its entire front page today to two photo graphs of horsemen it said were Greek Government troops car rying guerrillas’ heads by t h e hair. The paper said British troops were standing by in Greece while “gestapo methods are be ing used against the guer rillas.” “What are we British doing here?” a headline asked. From the word, “here,” an arrow pointed to a head identified as that of a “young Greek . . paraded through a village street. The Mirror said the pictures had been taken by Cpl. Harry Starr, 32, who served in Greece two years and was released from the Army in August. The paper said it had checked the facts indicated and was “fully satisfied they are a fiar, even moderate statement about a terrible situation.” In an eidtoria! headed, “Get Out Of It,” the paper urged early withdrawal of the report ed 5,000 to 6,000 British troops still in Greece. Parents Refuse Child Medical Care; She Dies GREYBULL ,Wyo„ Nov. 9 — —Frances June Baker, 4, died last night after a ten-day illness during which her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Baker, refused to permit doctors to treat the child and declared they would rely on the Lord to cure her. Dr. L. F. Allison, acting pub lic health officer, examined the child shortly before midnight and pronounced her dead of soinal meningitis. The Baker home, in which there are two other children,! was placed under quarantine I yesterday by Dr. S. L. Myre, county health officer, who diag nosed the child’s illness as spinal meningitis but added that the parents did not permit him to make a complete exam ination. Baker, a Naval veteran, told reporters yesterday “we’re looking to the Lord to cure Frances June.” He said he and his wife did not belong to any church but believed in “the Lord’s promises in the Bible.” The 26-year-old Mrs. Baker ad ded that “God will heal her.” America May I Reject Plans U. S., Russia Disagreement Over Palestine Hardening Hourly LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Nov. 9 -American-Russian disa greement over Palestine parti tion hardened tonight with a re port that the United States would reject a Canadian com promise plan. The report was not officially confirmed, but American offi cials were known to feel that the Canadian plan ranged too far from the original American suggestions for keeping the Pal estine problem out of the UN Security Council barring active international aggression, while Britain terminates its mandate and two independent states take shape. American officials disclosed, meanwhile, they would await a official verdict from the British cabinet on the American pro posals before sitting down with the Russians for an eleventh hour try at compromising the conflicting American and Rus sian proposals. American dele gates asked British delegates on Thursday to cable to London for the cabinet’s “yes” or “no” to the American plan, with its pro vision that Great Britain bear responsibility for transforming Palestine into two states. The decision to wait for a re See AMERICA on Page Two NATIONAL GUARD DEFENDS CAPITAL Radar Spots On-Coming “Enemy” Bombers Mak ing Simulated Strike WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 - The National Guard rallied to the defense of the capital today against a simulated strike of “enemy” bombers in the Guard’s most ambitious postwar demonstration of its air and an ti-aircraft arm. The attacking fleet also was a National Guard force. It was made up of two bomb groups, rising from bases in Alabama and Ohio. They bored in on the capital at midafternoon while the 20th battalion group, man ning a mobile radar station in the heart of Washington and three fixed radar stations which compose part of the capital’s warning network, tracked them. The A-26 light bombers came from the 112th group at Cleve land and the 106th at Birming ham. Within five minutes after the 113th Fighter group, operating from nearby Andrews Field Md., had been ordered to “scramble” pilots were out of the field ready room, in their P47 airplanes and at 4,000 feet over the city, heading on the “enemy force.” Over White House Although the point of inter ception of the fighter force with the bombers would, in actual combat, have been made at some distance from the capital, the attack occurred for demons tration purposes almost directly over the White House. The fight ers, flying high as the bombers moved in across Southeast Washington, peeled off from their formation and dived on the bomber squadrons—perhaps by coincidence—as they droned across the headquarters of the Atomic Energy Commission. The 113th Fighter group is made up of three squadrons— the 149th of Richmond, 104th of Baltimore and 121st of Washing ton. Officers said this was the first time the guard had used the radar interception system in an exercise of this order. The demonstration was staged in connection with the National Guard’s current three-month re cruiting campaign. Along The Cape Fear INS—IUTION OF THE CHAIN GANG — An interesting development of the Cape Fear valley, while not differing materially from that of the rest of the state, nor from that of several other Southern states, is the treatment of prisoners. The establishment of county convict road work, which popularly was designated as the “chain gang” system never was widely used ior penal treatment in the Northern and Western states. In the South, however, factors of climate as well as the econo mic situation caused convict road work to increase in popular favor until it became one of the major methods of punishing criminals. In contrast, large in dustrial prisons behind massive prison walls became the estab lished solution of the penal pro blem elsewhere in the nation. Along the Cape Fear as in the rest of the state the only prisons prior to the Civil war were the common jails of the counties. As a matter of fact there were comparatively few prisoners. In 1846 the people of Carolina voted against a state prison. From the days of the first settlers in the Cape Fear valley until the War between the states, prisons were 3,000 Hindu Troops Face Annihilation By Rebels; Reds Try New Power Plan Foreign Offices Control New Goal Communists Find Growing Difficulty In Making Con suls Hew To Line LONDON, Nov. 9 —(U.R)—Com munist parties behind the iron curtain apparently are follow ing a new plan to take over the foreign ministries of their countries as well as the police and propaganda posts, on which they concentrated before, Brit ish Balkan experts said today. These sources said that one of the reasons behind the new plan was the difficulty the Com munists have found in making diplomatic and consular person nel abroad hew to the party line. Once content to permit non Communist allies to administer foreign offices, the Communists now apparently fear their coun tries’ representatives abroad are not to be trnsted, the ex perts said. They stressed that Mrs. Ana Pauker, who assumed control of the Romanian foreign office Friday, was the third Commu nist foreign secretary to be ap pointed during the past nine months. Refuse To Return Romanian Uom munist sources in London admitted last week alone three Romanian dip lomats who had been recalled by the government refused to return to Bucharest. These sources said Mrs. Pau ker planned to prepare material for the trial of high Romanian foreign office officials who will be charged with “directly par ticipating in the organization of Romanian government of train ers abroad.” Communists now control the foreign offices of Hungary, Po land, Yugoslavia and Bulgaria as well as Romania. In Febru ary, Communist Zygmunt Mod zelewski took over the Polish foreign office from Wladyslaw Ryzmonski, a member of the Democratic party. In Septem ber, Communist Erik Molnar was appointed Hungarian frr See FOREIGN on Page Two COL. COLE TAKES ENGINEER OFFICE Former MacArthur Staff Officer Takes District Charge Here Today Colonel Heston R. Cole takes office today as district engineer of the Wilmington district. A general staff officer in Gen. MacArthur’s headquarters through the Australia, New Guinea, and Philippine Islands campaigns, Col. Cole was trans ferred here from Duluth, Minn., where he was district engineer. A graduate of Lafayette col lege, Easton, Pennsylvania, Col. Cole is also a veteran of World War I, having served with the AEF as a first lieu tenant in the 78th division in the St. Mihiel, Meuse, and Ar gonne sectors. He served as Director of the Fixed Installations division of the foreign Liquidation com mission of the State department in Australia from October, 1945 to April 1946. His son is a West Point graduate who served in the CBI theater as a fighter [pilot in 1943 and 1944. superseded by the pillory, the whipping post, and the branding iron. The death penalty was in flicted in those days for many offenses now punishable by pri son sentences. The Revised Code of 1855, last codification of laws prior to the Civil war, en umerates 17 offenses punishable by death. Bigamy was punished by branding with a hot iron the let ter “B” upon the cheek. For manslaughter, if the first of fense, an “M” was burned upon the “brawn of the left thumb.” When a witness was convicted of perjury in connection with the trial of a capital offense, the law required that “the of fender shall, instead of public whipping, have his right ear cut off and severed entirely from his head, and nailed to the pil lory by the sheriff, there to re main until sundown.” , The disillusioned present aay court reporter will tell you that this latter law is better abolish ed as its strict enforcement to day would be not only unsani tary, but would seriously handi cap the hearing of a consider able proportion of the adult population. DISTRICT ENGINEER—Col. Heston R. Cole has arrived from Duluth, Minn., to take over as district engineer of the Wilming ton district. A veteran of both world wars, Col. Cole served on Gen. MacArthur’s general staff in Australia, New Guinea, and the Philippine Islands. Hillman Appointed As Glenn Succesor NEW APPOINTMENTS IN THIS DISTRICT Dr. E. L. Hillman was named district superintend ent of the Wilmington dis trict, succeeding Dr. J. C. Glenn, former superintendent who was transferred to West Palm Beach, Fla. The Rev. J. R. Edwards, pastor of the Fifth avenue Methodist church here, was transferred to Roanoke Rap ids. He will be succeeded by the Rev. B. C. Reavis. At Wesley Memorial church in Winter Park the Rev. P. H. Fields was named as pastor to succeed the Rev. Kermit Wheeler, who has been trans ferred to Roseboro. The Rev. R. H. Caudill, former secretary of boys worked at the YMCA here, comes into the Wilmington conference as pastor at Town Creek. The Rev. A. C. Edens, Jr., was appointed to the Methodist Youth Center at Wrightsville church, Harbor VIQ1 E TAKES NINE N. C. LIVES Motorcycle Accident At High Point Races Account For One Death By The Associated Press Violence took at least nine lives in North Carolina during the weekend. A motorcycle plunged out of control into a crowd of specta tors at races near High Point, killing Harold S. Thompson, 12, of High Point instantly and in juring six other persons. Winfred Terry Hunsucker, 26, of Conover, route one, was found dead in a field near Con over Sunday. Coroner Rex Rey nolds said Hunsucker had been shot through the heart and chest with a 12-gauge shotgun and had bled to death. Hector McNeill, 75, of near Fayetteville, was shot and killed as he was at work repairing chairs at his home Saturday afternoon. Nick Schmidt, 30, of Charles ton, S. C., was killed Friday when the automobile he was driving struck a bridge railing near Rockingham. Worth Cribb, 45, carpenter foreman for the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, was struck and killed instantly by an automo See VIOLENCE on Page Two Bishop Peels Names New Superintendent For Wil mington District ELIZABETH CITY, Nov.9—W5) —The reading of ministrial ap pointments for 1948 by Bishop W. W. Peele of Richmond closed the annual North Carolina Methodist Conference at Elizabeth City late this afternoon. Principal changes in the ap poinments were the assignments of Rev. A. J. Hobbs, pastor of the Edenton Street church of Raleigh, to the post of superintendent of Complete List Of Appointments On Page Eight the Rocky Mount District, and Rev. E. L. Hillman, pastor of the First Church of Rocky Mount, as superintendent of the Wil mington district. Rev. Hobbs succeeds Rev. T. M. Grant, who has been assigned as pastor of the First Church of Rocky Mount, and Reverend Hill man succeeds Rev. John L.‘, Glenn, who has been transferred to the Florida conference of the Methodist church. Ray H. Short, Editor of the Methodist, publication, “The Up per Room”, delivered today’s ser mon. The program for today al so was featured by a “Love Feast, of the ministers this morn ing. Memorial services were held this afternoon for ministers who died during the year. The delegates selected Jarvis Memorial church in Greenville as the site for the 1948 conference The conference convened Wed nesday with more than 600 cler ical and lay delegates attending. BABY’S WAILING RILES BIG CROWD Front Street Pedestrians Angered By Apparent Parental Neglect There were angry mutterings coming from members of a crowd congregated around a new model automobile with a which was parked in the 300 block of Front street here last night. Passersby, had been attracted by the wails of an infant child locked in the car and helplessly screaming to tell the news of its plight. Dire threats against the owner of the car could be heard coming from several marines and a like number of civilians in the gathering. As the infant continued to scream and there was no sign of any appearance of the ab See BABY on Page Two “War Psychosis” Rules America, Britisher Saysi LONDON, Nov. 9 — W)—John Haire, Laborite member of par liament, who returned recently from a two months’ visit in the United States and Canada, said tonight that “war psychosis such as Roosevelt never knew before Pearl Harbor’’ had de scended upon North America. “Nobody wants it, but every body from the shoeshine boy to the general believes another war is inevitable,’* Haire said in an interview. He added that the “fear of war, apart from the rising cost of living, is the one subject that dominates con versation and the press in the United States.” He said he believed Congress would vote for the Marshall plan “after a stiff fight” and that the plan would have no political conditions attached, al though “their proposal by cer tain Congressmen is considered inevitable.” Dynasty Of Singh Hangs In Balance Organized Moslem Military Rebellion Seeks Union Of Kashmir BY JAMMES MICHALES United Press Staff Writer PALANDARI, Kashmir, Nov. 7-Three thousand troops of the Hindu Maharajah of Kash mir are bottled up in the moun tains and face almost certain annihilation, rebel leaders said today in this primitive mountain town which is their headquar ters. With the Maharajah’s Hindu troops are an unknown number of Sikh irregulars, the rebels as serted. The rebels said they now had control of more than half of Kashmir’s 85,000 square miles and had wiped out or bottled up most of the 12,000 Kashmire state troops. One of the first outsiders to visit this headquarters, high in the Kashmir mountains, I reached here over mule paths from Rawalpindi, Pakistan. I found Palandari the center of an organied Moslem mili tary and political rebellion aim ed at driving out the 100-year old dynasty of Sir Hari Singh, the Maharajahm and join ing Kashmir to Pakistan, rom Palandari is directed the uprising which began soon after the British handed over power Aug. 15 against the local garrison of the Maharajah’s army. Rebels say that the 3,000 troops and the Sikhs are con tained in four pockets—one of them, with 1,200 men surround ed, only 15 miles from here in another mountain town. The rebels who surround them are patiently awaiting their sur render. The success of the revolt in See DYNASTY on Page Two MARINES TO CUT BIRTHDAY CAKE Gen. Vandergrift To Speak Today At Camp Lejune Honoring Corps WASHINGTON, Nox. 9—<U.R)_ 1 Marine Corps Commandant Gen. A. A. Vandergrift today heralded , the 172nd birthday of the Leather necks with the reminder that : Marines must remain prepared in war and peace “since we have . found that the peace must often . be enforced.” The General, due to retire Jan. 1, said the corps is “actively re vising” its battle tactics in am phibious warfare to take advant age of new atomic age weapons. , He recalled that since the Ma rines were organized by the “em battled citizenry” in 1775, the United States has participated in seven major wars. “But the United States has cal led on the Marines almost every year since then,” he said. He issued his statement as re gular and reserve Marine de tachments at installations in the United States, South Africa and China prepared to cut their tradi tional birthday cake tomorrow. Vandergrift is scheduled to make a “birthday” speech at Camp LeJeune, N. C., tomorrow. Maj. Gen. Lemuel Shepherd, as sistant commandant who has been mentioned as his possible succes sor, is scheduled to be host at a birthday ball here. The corps will use the oeea sioon to start a drive for 100,000 reserves, an increase of about 75 per cent over present reserve strength. And So To Bed A Duke alumnus saw his alma mater play Missouri Saturday and took the un satisfactory outcome of the classic in his stride. In Raleigh he met up with an old friend of former col lege days, gave the old col lege pal a ticket to the game and loaned him an overcoat, feeling generous and warm hearted with the glow of revival of old col lege times. Back in Wilmington Sun day he met his old college chum. Where is my ovecraoat, old pal?” he asked. “I’m sorry,” said the old chum, “I had to pawn the overcoat, I borrowed $2.50 on it from a bell hop to buy a bus ticket to get home. I had to get back here or I might lose my job.” “I’ll have to go see your boss,” said the first alumnus. “I shouldn’t he surprised If you have lost your job. It gets my goat when you hock my coat,”
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 10, 1947, edition 1
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