Newspapers / The Alamance gleaner. / March 14, 1929, edition 1 / Page 1
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The Alamance Gleaner ! VOL. LV. ' GRAHAM, N, C., THURSDAY MARCH 14, 1929. NO. 6 mmmmmmmm^Mmmm*, .:fiW HAPPENNINGS OF THE WEEK\ NEWS REVIEW OF GURRENTEVENTS Hoover's Cabinet Accepted by the Senate?Serious Rebellion in Mexico. By EDWARD W. PICKARD DRESIDENT HOOVERS first offl * clal act of consequence was to submit to the senate the names of eight men whom he had selected for his cabinet Radical senators were all Bet to make a fight against con firmation of Andrew Mellon for secre tary of the treasury, but, as was ex plained In these columns some time ago. It was not necessary for Mr. Hoover to send In Mr. Mellon's name, since he Is a holdover, so the radi cals were circumvented. Making no Invidious distinction, the President also omitted from the list Secretary of Labor James J. Davis, the other member of the Coolidge cabinet who was retained. The senate without hesitation con firmed the eight names submitted. Tbey are: Henry Lewis Stlmson of New York, aecretary of state. James William Good of Illinois, sec retary of war. William Dewltt Mitchell of Minne sota, attorney general. Walter Folger Brown of Ohio, post master general. Charles Francis Adams of Massa chusetts, secretary of the navy. Ray Lyman Wilbur of California, aecretary of the Interior. Arthur M. Hyde of Missouri, secre tary of agriculture. Robert Patterson Lamont of Rlinols, aecretary of commerce. After a sharp debate the senate adopted a resolution offered by Mc Kellur of Tennessee ordering the Ju diciary committee to investigate Sec retary Mellon's right to continue In the cabinet without reappointment and to determine If he has violated an old law that prohibits treasury officials from engaging in any busi aess. It was not believed In Wash ington that this action would bring about results adverse to Mr. Mellon. The secretary of the treasury, it was reported, intended to hold the office for not more than two years. , Since Mr. Stlmson Is on his way home from the Philippines, where he has been governor general. Secretary of State Kellogg consented to remain In office until his successor arrives In Washington and qualifies. In general the President's cabinet selections met with warm approval. On Thursday President Hoover Is sued the call for the extraordinary session of congress, to open April 15. He said In the proclamation that the purpose Is "to effect further agricul tural relief and legislation for limited changes of the tariff." During his first days in the White House Mr. Hoover received throngs of congratulating callers from all parts of the country, and also he set tled down to the business of conduct ing the affairs of the nation. He told the newspaper correspondents he de sired to continue the periodical press conferences and to develop them in di rections that would assist both the press and the President. He con ferred with Senator Smoot and Rep resentative Tilson concerning the call ing of the extraordinary session of congress for farm relief and tariff re vision, and with Attorney General Mitchell concerning the appointment of the commission to Investigate the administration of justice and especial ly the enforcement of prohibition. His emphatic, wotfs concerning law en forcement In his Inaugural address were especially' pleasing to all the churoh and dry organizations, and they presented him with their felici tations band Illumined on parchment and hound In tooled leather gold em bossed. Mr. Hoover desires to place the entire prohibition enforcement machinery under the attorney general. This may require legislation, and the dry leaders In congress are not all In favor of this course. MR. AND MRS. COOLIDGE, re turning to their home In Nor thampton. Mass., were given an Im promptu loving welcome by tbelr neighbors that affected them deeply. Both of them were sincerely glad to resume their unpretentious home life, and Mrs. Coolidge especially seemed gay and happy. To the reporters Mr. Coolidge said. Interviewing himself, that he Is cot going to practice law In Northampton or anywhere else at present: that the several contracts he has made for magazine articles are all he contemplates now In that line; that he will not write a book and will not make any speeches. He will not trav el In foreign countries this summer, believing there are plenty of interesting places in the United States to be seen. Gen. Charles G. Dawes, late Vice President, hastened back to Chicago and at once resumed work 111 the bank with which he was long connected. He was made chairman of the board. He declined to talk politics but ve hemently denied that he Intended to run for senator to succeed Charles S. Deneen. On March 28 General Dawes leaves for Santo Domingo as head of a commission of his own choosing to advise the Dominican government on financial problems. D EBELLION broke out In several states In Mexico and speedily reached alarming proportions. A num ber of governors and military chief tains Joined In the movement, directed at the government of President Portes Gil and aimed particularly at what they called "Calles domination." They immediately ordered opened all the churches that had been closed by the Catholic authorities In protest against the religious laws which Calles, while President, put Into effect. At first the rebels under General Agulrre gained possession of Vera Cruz and other Im portant cities. Gen. Gonzalo Escobar was sent by the government to Mon terey to combat the revolutionaries, bub on arrival there he Joined the reb els and was made military chief of the movement President Portes Gil appointed Calles secretary of war, and under vigorous direction the federal troops regained possession of Mon terey, Orizaba, and other strategic points. Agulrre in Vera Cruz state was deserted by most of his men, and Escobar was said to be- surrounded by three strong armies. The government Issued a bulletin predicting the earl} collapse of the entire rebellion, and dispatches from Ambassador Morrow Indicated the same belief. It was stated at the White House In Washington that the new administra tion would continue to Inforce the em bargo on arms shipments to Mexican rebels tha.t was maintained by Presi dent Coolidge, but that licensed arms shlpmeuts would be permitted to go forward to Mexico City If requested by the Mexican government The State department said every effort was being made to prevent the smuggling of arms across the border. THAT fuss over an alleged secret Kranco-Belgian military treaty came to an end when the man who sold the document to a Utrecht newspaper waa arrested and confessed that It was a forgery. He was set free by a Bel gian Jndge and declared he was really an agent provacateur of the Belgian government The Dotch Journalists [iassed a motion of censure on the Utrecht editor who published the forged paper. TREATMENT of racial minorities in Europe was the topic the council of the League of Nations took np when it met In Genevs last week, bnt there was no prospect of action, for the council felt the problem was too big to be settled now and should be studied by a subcommittee. Sir Aus ten Chamberlain, British secretary for foreign affairs, said: "The rights of the minorities cannot be separated from their obligations, and they hare to show that they hare behaved loyal ly to the country of which they are part and given true allegiance to the country to which they are subject." INSTEAD of whitewashing Gen. Dm berto Nohile for the disaster of the dirigible Italia In the Arctic regions, the Italian court of Inquiry censured him severely. The report of the court Is divided Into three sections. The first deals with the causes of the acci dent. the second with the behavior of the survivors, and the third with the relief efforts. After stating that the loss of the dirigible waa due to error In handling made at the moment of the accident, for which the commander of the expedition must take responsi bility. the report passes to a consider I atlon of the charges of cannibalism In connection with the disappearance of Dr. Finn Malmgreen, the Swedish scientist, and the third man with Capts. Alberto Mariano and Flllppl Zappl on the Arctic Ice. Regarding General Mobile's action In allowing himself to be rescued first, the report says: "It cannot find plausible Justification and It can only be explained, not Justified, by condi tions of physical or moral depression In which be was fonnd which did not permit him to estimate the Just value of his action, even though It was de termined by the pressing Invitation of Lundborg." Lieut. Elnar-I'aal Lund borg was the Swedish airman who took off Mobile. COMDITIOMS In Shantung province were so serious that the National ist government of China was reported fearful of defeat at the hands of Gen eral Chang's rebels and therefore try ing hard to arrange a compromise by which further hostilities might be avoided. Meanwhile large numbers of government troops were being mobil ised. The commander at Chefoo re Iterated the charge that the Japanese were financing Chang. JOHN1 D. ROCKEFELLER, JR., was the victor in the dramstlc "war of the proxies" which reached Its climax Thursday In Whiting, Ind. The final battle ground was the annnal meet ing of stockholders of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana and the man who went down to defeat was Col. Robert W. Stewart, chairman of the board of directors. With about twice as many shares as Stewart could con trol, the Rockefeller forces ousted the colonel from the hoard, replacing him with Dr. W. M. Burton, inventor of the famous cracking process; and Stewart's close friend, L. L. Steph ens, general counsel and director, also was put out Stewal had proxies from 81.330 stockholders, the "little fellows"; but the Rockefeller proxies, though only half that number, were from the rich men and corporations and easily controlled the situation. Stewart had the satisfaction of pre sentlngvi report that showed the com pony had Just rinsed the most pros perous year In Its history and he was uproariously applauded by his sup porters. THOMAS TAGGERT. for many years the leader of the Democrats of Indiana, passed away at his home In Indianapolis at the age of seventy three years after a long Illness. Start ing business life In a lunch room In Xenla, he became a very wealthy man gnd a power In his party both In the state and In the nation. He was given the credit for making Wood row Wi: son President, and Thomaa R. Mar shall, twice Vice President, said his success in politics was due to Taggart Moses Edwin Clapp. farmer United States senator from Minnesota, died In Washington where he had practiced law since leaving the senate In 1917 Among other recent deaths were those of Haley Flske, president of the Met ropolitan Life Insurance company, In New York; and of David D. Bulck of Detroit, a pioneer In the automobile Industry. JUST before he left office, Attorney General Sargent granted freedom on parole to Thomaa W. Miller, former alien property custodian, who was serving a term of eighteen months In Atlanta penitentiary for conspiring to defraud the government In the han dling of German property during the World war. Miller was convicted In 1927 and began serving his sentence last April. IN SUMMING up the work of the late Seventieth congress It la found that It authorized new expenditures total ing more than a billion dollars during the next decade. The chief authorisa tions Included the following: Mississippi flood control project. 1325.000.000. The 15 cruiser construction bill, $274,000,000. The Boulder dam project, $165,000. 000. Public buildings and army struc tures. $175,000,000. Compensation for German ships, pat enta, and radio stations. $100,000,000 River and harbor projects, $72,000. 000. Increased capital for Mississippi barge line, $10,000,000. Illustrious Dead in Great Church Edifice Illustrious American dead continue to find a last renting place In Wash ington cathedral, commanding Mount Saint Alban'a heights, at the National Chpltal. For more than 22 rears the great edifice has been under construction bg the Episcopal church. Today It Is a beautiful fragment?an apse, three chapels and some choir walls. Amd jut yearly lOftOOO visiters sad worshipers rt?lt It erery year. Some come only to admire. Other* make the journey that they may ataod for a time before the laat resting place of some of the country"* great dead. For In crypt* of the cathedral now repoae the bodies of the World war President. Wood row Wilson, and one of America's foremost admirals. George Dewey. The first bishop coo serrated la America. Rl-Rct. Thomas John CUggett finds aepolcher there, also the distinguished patriot and am bassador. Henry White. The Interest and cariosity of mtny bu been sroased by the suggestior of making of the structure so Amer lean Westminster abbey. Rt-Res. James E. Freeman, bishop of Washington, believes that while the Cborcb of England differs from thai In America In that It la a state church, this does not preclude the possibility of making the Washington cathedral all that the abbey Is In England. Shrewdness Is almost a suhstltot' for knowledge. tLA r 01^ HAND J ! I IN THE i! 1 \ HOPPER itbiD J ViUh l J KAN M'AI.IB'I Kh leaned close to the screen, widening her eyes to the darkness. The 21X1 feet of her own lot lay between her and the car In the alley, yet she could see the human flgure3 that hurried from the shelter of the dim maple to meet It Back In the old four-pouter from which the strange hoot of an owl had roused her, Jean recalled the talk that ha! been going the rounds be fore she had gone away. Adding .o that the gossip she had heard after 1 she had taken the valley train home. 1 her slim Angers touched off twelve ' names that might he connected with the car. 1 The business day of Morgansburg ' began at seven. The last stroke of the town clock was still resounding ' when Jean walked Into the store of ' George Slayman. George was not only a merchant he was one of the town fnthera as well. His surprise at see ing her shewed plainly "Good morning. Miss McAllister ' After New York our town will seem very quiet to you." "Yes, bu. It's nice to be quiet some times, and to get a good sleep." "Yon must 'a' been tired." cut :n a sharp voice, "to sleep In this town. What with them cars slgnolln', row dies Aghfn' and wonderln' If your own men folks Is gettln' mixed np In It. I ain't slept a bit for a good while back." "Why, Maria," exclaimed Jean smiling ai the bulky ttgure and going over to shake her work-worn hand, "here I was thinking I would gel you to help me to gel the dust out of my house, and now I Jusl know you will be lying down on the flrst sofa you see to take a nap." "La. Miss Jean." a smile breaking through the gloom, "of course III help yon and he glad, but you know how It Is with no police In a town like this. There's no order and there's great carrying on." "You're Joking I Isn't she, Mr Stay man? Surely we still hare a police man." "The last one we had proved a problem," said the counrllmiin suave ly. "and wi like to be careful about the taxpayers' money." It was on Jean's tongue to speak of her alley whe she was checked by Maria's "Humph I" Her soft voice went on ordering her supplies: "The coffee ground medium, please, fan you deliver the order right away? Thank you. And Maria." turning to her. "can yon come up when you are through at home?" "I'll come now and help you get your oreakfast." As they walked along the street Maria conAded: "Old George Stnyman makes It sound pretty slick about j why they don't have no pollre hut I guess he knows all about tbe real reason" Later on In the day she went m without missing a s'mke on Hie win dow panes. "Old Deacon Mowhray could have stop[>ed the whole works but they tricked his boy Into driving a truck one night, an he never knew what he was hauling until they start ed to sing that old song they use as a signal." wnen inf- (inn gone jenn eat n> { the window and run over the far'* I ahe had gathered There wna no one to do It. Even Rev John Manatletd leader of the Law and Order incletv bad had hla hands tied hernuae a minister of the gospel has no civic authority. Til do It myself." she mattered "If I am a woman. I'm a McAllister one." With elbows on the sill, chin In net hands, she thought ami studied Sud denly there came the hlg Idea?the fad she had had some time ago for amateur photography She soon had everything In readiness Through the gathering dusk she slipped down Into the garden and set up her tripod In the shelter of the bean vines, looked In the finder to see If she had focused on the right stretch of alley, then got hack to the bouse without being seen . The time dragged till the midnight hour. At the last stroke of twelve S slim black-coated figure crept out of the McAllster house and made Its way to the grape arbor. Jean was not afraid, but she kept off the flag stones, for she did not wsnt to ei plain if any one why she had gone out so late at night. Safe between the rows of grapevines, a long breath relieved ber lungs Half-way down aha stopped. Perhai* she was fool lab to do this alone. perha|>s they wonld not come tonight. She started oo the: silent as death, sank down to the ground?a boot sounded, so close that aba might have toucl.ed Its sources. She edged her length under the overhanging leaves of the vines turned ber fnoe down, tucked her bands under tlx folds of ber coot, ?ecame one with the earth and the I ark new. aa stealthy rootatepa passed I ier, brushing the leaves that covered ler. The leaves swished again, and there ?ame the sound of a heel on the flag tone nt the end of the walk. "He lliln't see me." Jean exnlted. "Now ie'11 walk down ta the street and go 1ght on " In another Instant a dull thud was leard as he Jumped the picket fence. I hoot followed. Terhaps the feel of he pavement went to his feet There vas a son of shuttle and Instead of tummlng he snng the words softly: "One hand In the hopper, the other In the sack. Ladles step forward, and the gents step hack." "Not tonight, my friend." whis kered Jean, getting on her feet. "Just this once we are all going the same say." Four more steps, three?and now the knelt beside the camera. Crouch Ing low she opened her pocket for her matches. Headlights of a car shone down the street, slower, lights off, and It stood not ten feet away. IVere her hands paralysed with her heart pounding so hard? Could she? Indeed she could! The very heavens took up the hlate of light that hurst from the flnshptin and lighted tip the alley with the brilliancy of day. White-faced men ran. too. late, hut far. Class crashed, a raw smell filled the sir and a car broke the state limit on speed Safe behind bolted d< ora, Jenn shiv ered and shook with great waves of goose-flesh and chattering teeth. "If I had some of 'heir old stiff." she muttered. "It might help to warm me up." After a hot-water bottle and s wool ly blanket hud done their work, she reconstructed the scene. "Of course." she exclaimed, every now and then, "that's Just who It was. and I had not thought of him." Two days later. Jenn McAllister. Rev. John Mansfield and the two state motor cops walked Into the store of George Stnyman. Looking up. he saw her advanrlng with ber stalwart hack ground and ran harried fingers through his hair. "You can All this lady's order. Stnyman." said one of the cops non chnlantly, "and If she wants any thing you think yon can't supply you can say so right now." With trembling hand he took the slip of paper and checked the Items: Better lighting of the town, espe dally the alleys. Employment of a trained police man. hy the support 01 the council. Loaf of bread. Five pounds of sugar. "Yes." he stammered. "1 will see that this Is filled Immediately " While he was gelling the mnletial part ready, Mr Mansfle'd hummed easily: "One hand In the hopper, the other In the sack . . Gents step forward and ladles step hack." Aa they went np the street with the state co|ts ranking a noisy start on their motor cycles. Jean said quiet ly. iut with triumph. "I cnulu hnve paved this town w'th silver?If that Aim had turned out well." Honoring Naturalist Transforming of an unsightly hol low surrounding the home of the great naturalist. Audubon at West One Hundred and Flfty-Afth street and Riverside drive, Ne- York city, the purchase of the residence Itself and the creation of the whole Into a park adequately honoring the memory of the naturalist. Is proponed hy the Women's l-engue for the Protection of Riverside Park, according to an an nouncement of a division chairman Mrs. Manila Tensdale Wheless. The tract, purchusc of which It sought, lies In s hollow many feel lielow the level of Riverside drive, and presents an unattractive ap|ienr ance. The establishing of he park Is rei-omn.ended In line with the pinna of the city for s great estenslon of the park and playground system, and the beautifying of Riverside drive Gotham's famous waterfront boule vard. Prolactin Not eo rcr> i.init ago two well kunwn ft I in editor* look * trip op to the Kern river country They rnmiied in their enr and next day Ed re marked: "I'm. how cornea It yoo don't break youraelt ot anorlng? Ton acared away all the flan within a mile." "Sure now. I'm aorry about that. I'al declared, "hut yoo aee. It'a like thla: If I hreak myeelt ot enuring my wife will make me go to church. Kaaw the Raaamblaaco Loolae had frequently aeen bet mother, when aewlng. taking the haat Ing thrende nut of garment* one day when corn wne aerved on the cob for dinner. I^mlae got a atlk off the corn In her teeth and aald: "Mn?her. why don't the conk take all the heating thrende out of the corn before (he give* li to na to eat." Spain's Capital, The Royal Palace, Madrid. (Prepared by the National Geographic Society. Washington. D. C.) MADRID, the capital of Spain Is a thoroughly modem city with very little of the tru ditional flavor of old Spain and with nearly all the luxuries and conveniences of other European and American capitals. It has a back ground of flne buildings, wide streets theaters, educational and scientific In stitutions. and automobile roads and railways reaching to every part of the kingdom. Visitors who go by the fnst direct trains from I'arls to Madrid, und ex pect to see the colorful costumes and striking architecture one usually as sociates with the life of the country are disappointed In Spain's capital city. Madrid's streets swarm with motor trucks and pleasure cars. Un derground are subways, connecting the rullroad stations and the prlncl pal suburbs of tbe city. The boule vards resemble those of Paris and Berlin, with their bordering trees and Imposing hotels, public buildings shops and monuments. In place of the poncho and som brero the visitor will find the tailored suit and the felt or straw hat of a hustling business man of the New Vork stamp. The latest Paris cre ations make It difficult to distinguish the Spnnish senora and scnorlta from their Latin sisters In Paris. Rome Havana and Buenos Aires. The Ian guorous strumming of the guitar and the click of the castanets. If they could he found off the stage In Madrid would today be drowned by the Inces sant "whank. whank" of Its impor tunate taxis. Toledo. Granada and Seville and other Spanish cities, with their nar row. tortuous streets, hemmed In by blank walls of residence facing In closed gardens, appear as if they were In another world when compared with the modern capital with Its wide tree lined boulevards, and spacious parks and public squares. Madrid Is the youngest of the great cities of Spain. It owes Its present Importance to politico? creation. While I it was not "made from the whole cloth" as Canberra, the new capital of Australia Is being fashioned. In a way It Is as truly an artificial capital | Until the middle of the Sixteenth cen tury It was an obscure little village of I son baked adobe houses, clustering I around the former Moorish outpost j called MudJrIL Politic* Created th? City. The rather bleak table land had lit tle to commend It as a site for s ' capital or a great city save the fact ; that It Is almost the exact gengraph leal center of Spain. But It was po j Iltlral pressure that really pushed the ! Spanish court to the former Moorish village of Madjrlt; because the Jeal ousy of each other felt by the t'astll Inns, the Aragonese. the people of To ledo and Seville, and all the other groups would not permit the selection of an existing city of Importance when Spain became united. I'lilllp 11. seek Ing a capital for his newly united Spain, rejected one by one the Ara gonese city of Snragossa. the Castll Ian Burgos the Vlslgothlc Toledo and the Moorish Cordova and Seville Madjrlt. besides being In almost the exact geographic renter of the king dom, had no sectional ties, so Philip declared It the "Unlca Corte." or Boy al residence. Castlllanlxlng Its name to Madrid. With hardly any of the natural ad vantages that contribute to rapid growth. Madrid's early days ss a capl tal were as troublous and uncertain as those of onr own national capital Excepting Its central location Madrid was denied by oature almost every suitable condition for a metropolis It perches on an elevated steppe In the midst of a vast rolling pln eau. bleak and treeless about a half mile above sea level. Two hundred feet below It winds the Insignificant river Manxsnares while the surrounding districts are unproductive. The smallness of Madrid when Phil Ip tl made It the Spanish capital brought about the Institution of a queer tax from which Sowed queer results. It was decreed that ail per sons possessing houses above a cer tain size must take in as guests cour tiers and nohles who utteuded the court The canny Spaniards who car ried on any building operations took care to build houses Just short of the * mark. They were termed "spite houses" by the courtiers, and the Ma drid of a few hundred years ago be came full of them. The small houses naturally did not bring beauty to old Madrid Id ad dition the town was poorly cleaned und even In the middle of the Right e^nth century had the reputation of being one of the dirtiest capitals to Europe. The Bourbons early In the eighteenth century began to build palaces and public buildings, however, und the French, during the brief bold which they had In Madrid at the height of Napoleon's power, started a number of Improvements. Climats Is Freakish. Another element to be reckoned with In Mudrld Is the climate. Sud den changes of weather often bring great extremes of temperature within a short time. In summer the heat la almost unbearable. People keep In the shade (bullfight tickets cost fwlcw as much on the shady side of the ring), for the sun's rays strike the skin-like little red-hot needles. The air Is then so keen and subtle that, according to a popular couplet. "It will kill a man. while it will not blow out t candle." Madrid's real prosperity and nation al Importance dates from the construc tion of Spain's railroad systems. It Is now the greatest railroad center lo the country, and would probably figure as a greater international crossroad If the Spanish lines bad the same gauge as those of the rest of Europe. Wealth. Industries, and population have come In the wake of the rail roads. Madrid, with more than 800. 000 residents. Is the largest city in Spain. Fine parks have been laid out over barren hills, wide tree-lined streets have pushed Into the suburbs to take care of additional homes and buildings. Madrid's "center of everything" la the I'uerta del Sol, a large public squure la the renter of the city. It la a sort of hub for a dozen streets wblcn, like spokes of a wheel, lead In all directions through the city. Here It la that seller meets buyer, bean meets belle, the loafers loaf, the street renders ply thelrctrnde and the beggars beg. Mingling with the city folk are stocky basques from the Py renees country, ruddy-skinned gypsies from the south and olive-complexloned individuals from other portions of Spain as well as Frenchmen. English men. Italians, and a few represent atives of all other European countries. Royal Palace la Imposing. One of the I'uerta del Sol spoke* leads to the S1A.OU0.0U0 royal palace, one of the principal show places of the Spanish capital. It Is an Impos ing structure of granite The spa cious yards surrounding It are usually thronged wltb men and women saun tering on the walks, leaning against the palace wall or sitting on the royal steps. As In the Puerta del Sol the venders and newsboys are heard above the din of chatter, and the ever-pres ent beggar makes life miserable for the stranger. Boys and girls playing games remind one of the south lawn of the White House on Easter Monday when the gates of the President's "back yard" are thrown open for youthful egg rollers. In the public squares and along the boulevards American automobiles vie with foreign makes and even the Spnnlsh made cars of which the Span lards are extremely proud. One can hall anything from an ancient flivver to America's largest automobile In which to, make a tour of the city. Less than balf a mile to the east Is the famous Prado and the "paseos," or promenades, tbat extend It to tb* northward and the southward. These great wide spaces and boulevards, wltb rows of from Ore to eight trees In their renter, form ooe of the most handsome promenades and "sbew streets" la tb* world. -
March 14, 1929, edition 1
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