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I No Government Controls On New Cars Except On Prices By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON. Nov. 8— UP) — Dealers can sell the new unra ttoned cars on a first-come-first served basis or any way they please. There’ll be no government con trols except for the celling prices which OPA will announce in a few days. Evasion of price ceilings are a violation of the law. Once the sales start, OPA will keep watch to see that the price ceilings are not being ; evaded. Assuming that the majority of dealers will play fair, this story j will speak of those who might not. , Ceilings can be evaded with the connivance of a customer or by j a dealer taking advantage of a' customer's desire for a new car. It could work like this: 1. By side payments or bon uses. In addition to the reg ular celling price, the custom er would pay the dealer for the privilege of getting a new car. 1. Unreasonable trade-in al lowances. A dealer could give a customer far too little on a used car traded in for a new one and then sell the used car at a big profit 3. Upgrading. A dealer could charge a more expensive car price for a cheaper car. For instance: by calling a coupe a cabriolet and charging a cab riolet price. Already a lot of people have Inade down payments on the new ears which haven’t reached the dealers yet. Harvey Diamond, chief of OPA’s ' automotive enforcement branch.' Bays it is useless before sales are ,completed to try to learn whether ' Ihese down-payments are really gide-payments or bonuses. But Diamond says OPA will move in when the sales start and begin checking on dealers. Asked why anyone should tell OPA he had given a bonus to a ealer for a new car or connived any other way to evade ceil gs, Diamond said: “They do, just the same. If ten people did It, we’d probably be pure to find one of them who Would tell about it because he was •ore at being forced to pay extra or for some other reason.” The OPA, Diamond said, is fil ling charges against 300 to 400 Used car dealers a month for vio lating ceilings on used cars. The National Automobile Deal ers Association says this: Any violations by dealers will be far outnumbered by the viola tions occurring between individ uals in private sales of new cars. NAZI Starts On Page One of Germany again. He said he had no intention of committing sa botage. ; Birger had served 17 months in a concentration camp for criticiz-j ing the Nazi party. He told FBI agents that he and Dasch had agreed to desert the sabotage as . signment. The saboteurs were sentenced to death in August, 1942, but the Jate President Roosevelt commut ed Dasch's sentence to 30 years imprisonment and Berger’s to life imprisonment. RECORDER'S COURT JUDGE WILSON. —<A>)— Robert L. Brin kley, local attorney, has been elect ed judge of the Wilson county Rec order’s court by the board of county commissioners. He fills the post left vacant last week by the death of Judge P. O. Dickenson. The foresighted citizen who owns and hlods a large number of Victory | Loan Bonds will fc- prepared to take advantage of the new modern equipment industry has promised for the future. I DOWNDRAFT WOOD BURNING HEATER ■ 1 ★ OUOY COHTiUOUS 24-1011COMTKOLLES HEAT. it BUILD IVT ONE ME A SEASDN—Na Fire Ti Build Oi CiM Marmp. ★ BEHOVE ASKS ON AYEIACE Of ONLY 3 TIMES MONTHLY. Insist on the (low-burning Downdraft Ashley—it’» PATENTED, therefore it’i I different Thi« thermostatically controlled wood burning heater uses small worthless hardwood trees, or even scrap wood. Many users write thst they save 50% and more on fuel costa, yet still enjoy more heat 24 hours a day. The Ashley hss been used and proven In all sections of the United States in our 15th year. Less Soot—Leu Smoke; For Service— j Economy—Cleanliness Ashleys are truly | one War Prisoners For 60 Days Available For Discharge WASHINGTON Nov. 8 —(JP>— Rep. Biemiller (D-Wis) told the. house today that hereafter all sol diers who have been war prisoners for 60 or more days will be eligible for immediate discharge from the army. Biemiller said ‘‘an appropriate official” at the war department; had informed him of the policy. He added that it would apply to| such men "regardless of their points.” Beulaville School Destroyed By Fire BEULAVILLE, Nov. 8. — (JP) — Fire of undetermined origin com pletely destroyed the two-story brick consolidated school building here Tuesday night. O. P. Johnson, Duplin county su perintendent of schools, said the damage would amount to approxi mately $65,000, of which $55,000 was covered by insurance. Volunteer ; firemen from nearby towns and military camps saved the adjacent teacherage, Johnson said. Johnson said classes would be resumed on November 19 in the school’s gymnasium and auditorium, which were saved from the blaze. The school has an enrollment of approximately 1,000. Housing Authority Representatives Meet CHICAGO — (JP) — Mrs. Helen ' , Centers got a place to live, but she had to do it the hard way. She bought a lot in suburban ■ Harvey and a vacant five-room , house on a farm two miles away. She obtained permission from the j state and county to transport the , structure, arranged with the utili- j ;ies companies to raise telephone ; »nd electric wires along the route, j called in the house movers and n due time her home-hunting . worries were ended. Cambridge Police ‘Playing Dominoes' CAMBRIDGE, MASS., Nov. 8— ' UP)—Cambridge police were under 1 orders today to “stop playing do- i minoes.” The directive was issued by > Chief Timothy P. Leahy after he said he had received reports that police vehicles had been slow in responding' to calls. He said an investigation de-! 1 termined that "they (the police-1 men) are rambling around the 1 building, playing dominoes or ' listening to the radio.” 1 NO WAGE i i Starts On Page One : l to act on anti-strike legislation already approved by the mili tary committee. The bill would j deny collective bargaining rights i to unions violating no-strike 1 clauses, and make offending unions liable for civil damages. ] An expenditures subcommittee j began planning a compromise ver- t sion of the so-called full employ- ] ment bill. j , But the 38 management-labor j ] delegates found a riper topic in; ] last night’s clash between CIO Chief i < Murray and President Ira Mosher \ 3f the National Association of j Manufacturers. The issue was whether to bring wage discussions mto the conference floor. WAGE RESOLUTION Murray succeeded in getting a forro rDCAlllflAn Knf Avn tUn My-tmov tul executive committee, the first step. But Mosher Issued a public statement last night declaring his tlat opposition. Mosher’s reaction, taken to typi fy that of the management dele gates generally, was regarded as i probable death-blow to Murray’s effort to have the national wage Issue considered by the meeting. AFFL President William Green al ready had declared against its dis cussion, leaving the CIO apparent ly outvoted in the executive com mittee and on the floor. LIMITS EXTENDED WILMINGTON. —UP)— Wilming ton voters have approved an exten sion of the city limits to include 4.3 square miles of suburban area and in additional 11,000 people. In a heated municipal election Tuesday, voters balloted two to one in favor of the extension. WEATHER CHARLOTTE, Nov. 8—(IP)—Of ficial weather bureau records of he temperature and rainfall for he 24 hours ending at 8:30 am. Rain Station H. fVsheville _ 75 Atlanta _ ..75 Birmingham ....86 Boston _ 62 Charleston .... _63 Charlotte _ 76 Chicago _ 74 Columbia .... _78 Oalveston _ 80 Greensboro .. _75 Lo6 Angeles .62 Memphis .... _78 L. fall 43 50 57 50 57 46 62 44 Miami Mt. Mitchell iJew Orleans ew York .. leigh Vashington Wilmington . .75 .65 -- _70 .62 .74 . _73 .77 40 46 64 74 45 63 54 45 55 53 Kale On Board Of Managers Of N. C. Pastors* School DURHAM, Nov. 8. — At a meet ing of the Board of Managers of the North Carolina Pastors School of the Methodist Church last week, Duke University, elections were held to determine the officers for the coming year. Elected to fill in executive capa cities were Dr. M. T. Plyler, presi dent; Dr. W. A. Stanbury, vice president; Rev. W. A. Kale, secre tary; Rev. W. R. Bradshaw, treas urer, and Dr. J. M. Ormond, Dean. The executive committee will be composed of the above officers and j Rev. Paul Hardin, Jr. The organisation is sponsored by the two annual conferences of North Carolina, and the General Board of Education at Nashville,1 Tenn. The meeting was held to for-1 mulate plans for the 1946 session I Df the Pastors’ School. For 24 years, sessions of this group were held at Duke University, where they re ;urned this year. As a wartime measure, tne sessions for tne years L943 and 1944 were held at Greens >oro College, Greensboro. The 1945 session was eliminated entirely in -ompliance with the government mposed restrictions on travel. The Pastors’ School is attended jy pastors of the Methodist Church ind interested laymen. Enrollment .otals have reached a high of 585. AUTO Starts On Page One The newest flareup in the motor ndustry labor fight came as the United States Steel Corporation declined Secretary of Labor Schwellenbach’s proposal to re open wae negotiations with CIO- j steelworkers under a special con ciliator. CIO President Philip Murray :arlier had accepted the labor sec retary's suggestion that the col ective bargaining conference be esumed “in the sy.’it” of Presi lent Truman's rec lit wage-price ;peech. The union had asked a 82 l day wage increase. A strike vote tmong some 500,000 steel com-1 >any employes * scheduled Nov. >5. iat n •T»rp\Ttr¥Av The automobile an£ steel dis-, jutes held the center of attention ilong the nati>Vs labor front. Vork stoppages across the coun ry kept idle some 275,000 workers.1 Street car and bus service in Vashington, tied up for nearly two lays because of a walkout of 4,-1 100 AFL employes of the Capital [Transit Co., was back to normal oday as negotia'/ons on wages got mder way. Picketing at one of the two plants )f Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., n Akron, O., was rejxirted ended md some of the 10,000 workers nade idle by a work stoppage yes erday returned to their Jobe. PLEDGED SUPPORT On the Pacific coast, an AFL inionist, criticizing CIO Lumber workers for compromise wage de nands with operators, said the: inancial resources of the nation’s 50,000 AFL carpenters had been iledged in support of the 60,000 1FL Lumber and Sawmill Workers, low in the seventh week of a trike for a $1,10 hourly minimum vage. Meanwhile, there was prospect of l tieup in the Pacific Coast pulp ind paper industry after two AFL mions called for a strike vote in i wage dispute. Ballots will be nailed Friday to Oregon, Califor lia and Washington members of he AFL International Brother - lood of pulp, sulphite and paper nill workers and the International Irotherhood of Paper Makers. The •allots will be counted ov. 24. A trike in the industry would be the irst in 10 years of successful col ective bargaining. 25,000 Starts On Pass On* “When my time came, about 300 lready had jumped and after I imped at least another 100 ‘ fol )wed me.” Before Japanese soldiers covered le well with native bamboo sheets imall said, they throw in some acks, “dropped a sewing ma rine,” and fired in many shots. IBERATORS CAPTURED Sometime after midnight, the itness continued, some Filipino omen sneaked to the well and >wered ropes up which six men scaped. Many of the women lib rators were captured and never :en again. Another Filipino, Victor Man uiat, said he was trussed up and larched off with 300 to another ell. The one Umali had been in as filled with bodies by that me. Enroute, Manquiat dashed to reedom but was hit by two of ;ven bullets Japanese soldiers fir d after him. He returned to the 'ell a few days later and found ie bodies of many men and wo len with whom he started the larch. Manquiat said that none of the larchere was seen alive again. The defense announced it would ttempt to show that the killing f more than 13,000 civilians in be rich old Batangas province awn of Lipa was in retaliation for onstant night attacks on Japan se communications lines by Fl ipino guerillas. tEV. GRADY FLETCHER iIOVES TO GREENVILLE The Rev. and Mrs. Grady Fletch r and children moved from Gaff ley this week to Greenville, where ifr. Fletcher is a ministerial stu-; lent at Furman University. Mr. letcher served as pastor of sev ral rural churches while attend ng Gardner-Webb College at Boil ng Springs, N. C. i Schools To Reopen Within Two Weeks As cotton fields throughout the county are beginning to show bare spots, with some farmers having completed their season’s picking, county school officials this week began making plans for the re opening of schools within the next two weeks. At a meeting of the county board of education this week, two optional dates for the re-opening of schools were set, November 12 and November 19. As to which time individual schools will begin, the principal and school committee were authorized to decide. According to announcements re ceived here today, the following schools will re-open on Monday, November 12: Lattimore, Bethware, Mooresboro. Definitely scheduled to begin on November 19 are Polk ville and Fallston. Lincoln Man Dies In Truck Accident LINCOLNTON — O. P. Howard was struck and fatally injured by a motor truck on the highway in front of his home, one mile south of Denver, Lincoln county, around 5 o’clock Tuesday afternoon. De tails were not immediately avail able, although he was reported to have been walking across the road. Mr. Howard was a prominent citizen of the Denvef area and was chairman of the Rock Springs Camp Meeting board. He leaves his widow, three daughters, three sons and two sisters. NEGOTIATIONS Starts Ob Page One energy becomes more acute between the two countries, in the opinion of diplomatic authorities, as the time approaches for conferences among President Truman and Prime Ministers Attlee of Britain and MacKenzie King of Canada. The talks will open Sunday aboard the presidential yacht Potomac. Byrnes declined at an afternoon news conference yesterday to com ment on Molotov’s speech in Mos cow Tuesday saying that Russia would have atomic energy and that WV »VVt vv hilb VVUiM UVb be kept. But the subject evidently was very much on Byrnes’ mind be cause he went directly from the news conference to the White House to discuss with Mr. Truman pre parations for the week-end talks. 4-POWER COUNCIL In the case of Japan, Russia is reported by allied diplomatic au thorities here to be standing firm on her contention that Japan should be administered by a four power council in which the United States would have, according to Byrnes, a dominant voice. The United States on the other hand is reported by informed Am erican officials to be holding out for an agency in Tokyo with about the powers which Russia suggests but subordinate to the Par Eastern advisory commission already in ses sion here .despite Russia’s failure to send a representative, TREATY REVISION On the question of Turkey Byrnes gave his news conference the sub stance of a message he said had been sent to Ankara last week after it was reviewed by President Tru man. This proposed a four-point revision of the Montreux conven tion, a treaty which controls the Dardenelles. Under the revision Turkey would make some concessions to Russia and the United Nations organiza tion. The secretary sharply denied dis patches from Ankara last Sunday that the United States was taking a definite position along side Tur key to prevent any future action which might Jeopardize Turkish in dependence or sovereignty. Byrnes said the four point pro gram he outlined is the limit of American interest with Turkey at the present time on this question. aumutfli Start* Ob Pact Ob* sorted extremely uneasy as armed Nationalists gathered in threaten ng hordes from outlying areas, British authorities said. President Soekarno of the un ecognized Indonesian Republic prepared to leave tomorrow to con fer with other Nationalist leaders tt Jogjakarta, ancient capital of he Indies, where the Nationalists ire said to have 100,000 troops rheir commander in chief, Gen. Supryadi, has broadcast a call for ill former Netherlands East In lies training instructors to report o the Indonesians training _cen er there. An official report'said Bandoeng, the summer capital, vas beleived to be the headquar ters of six divisions of Indones ans now in the process of forma tion. For the first time British re ports referred to the Indonesian army in military terms. Previously reports referred to the forces as armed extremists or “members of the so-called peaoe preservation corps." Shooting was reported again last night near the Hotel Des Indes in Batavia, where U. S. Consul General Walter A. Foote resides. Several guests in the hotel had narrow escapes. Troopships which left Holland several weeks ago also are just off-shore now. While the Dutch smiled over the long-range prospect, Soekamo’s cabinet met in an emerency ses sion to tackle what one member described as a “grave sluation.” ' A spokesman said the Soekarno government had reason to fear British forces at Soerabaja were about to attempt a deep„ penetra tion into eastern Java for the pur pose of disarming Indonesians. Furnished By J Robert Lindsey and Company Webb Building Shelby N. O. N. Y. COTTON AT 2:00 Today Pre. Day March _ _24.04 May .24.04 July .23.90 October _ _23.51 December . ..._23.96 23.90 23.90 23.76 23.36 23.78 CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT December.1.80% May .1.78% July .1.73% 1.80% 1.78% 1.73% CORN December . _1.18% Mfty . ..1.18% July .1.18% 1.18% 1.18% 1.18% RYE December . _ 1.76% May .1.69% July .1.44% 1.73% 1.67% 1.44% STOCKS AT 2:00 Amn Rolling Mill.27 American Loco . _ 35 American Tob B.90 American Tel and Tel .. Anaconda Copper.39 Assoc Dry Goods . . Beth Steel . 95 Chrysler _ 131 Curtiss-Wright . _ 20 74 35 30 Elec Boat Gen Motors . Pepsi Cola . .. Greyhound Corp International Paper . _ 44 Nash Kelv. 24 Newport Ind _ _ N Y Central . ... Penn R R _ . 42 Radio Corp . . 16 Reynolds Tob B . ... Stand Oil N J.68 Sperry Corp . .. 34 U S Rubber . U 8 Steel . 80 Youngstown S and T ... 63 7-8 1-2 3-4 196 3-4 36 3-4 5-8 . 8 1-4 3-8 3-4 1-4 3-4 1-8 33 30 7-8 3-8 39 1-2 7-8 70 3-4 1-2 INVESTMENT SUPPORT NEW YORK, Nov. 8—(P)—In vestment funds continued to sup port scattered favorites in today's stock market although mo6t rails, steels and motors suffered from light profit cashing. Strong spots included Interna tional Telephone, Westinghouse, Standard Oil <NJ) and Standard Gas $4 preferred. Ahead at in tervals were American Telephone, Consolidated Edison. Anaconda, fwfWlrirh ftlunn Martin anrf Montgomery Ward. Backward were N. Y. Central, Great Northern, Southern Pacific, Southern Rail way. Bethlehem, Chrysler, General Motors, Du Pont and Western Union "A.” BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO. Nov. 8—UPt— Butter, firm; receipts 160,938. Eggs, receipts 5,977, firm. N. C. HOGS RALEIGH, Nov. 8—(/P)—(NCDA) —Hog markets active and steady with tops of 14.55 at Clinton and Rocky Mount and 14.90 at Rich mond. N. C. EGGS, POULTRY RALEIGH, Nov. 8—OF)—(NCDA) —Egg and poultry markets steady to firm. Raleigh—U. 8. Grade AA extra large 59; hens, 25.3. Washington—U. S. Grade A ex tra large 60; broilers and fryers 33 1-2 to 34. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Nov. 8—OP)—(USDA) —Salable hogs 5,000, total 17,000; active and fully steady; good and choice barrows and gilts at 140 lbs. up at the 14.85 ceiling; good and choice sows at 14.10; complete clearance. Salable cattle 4,500, total 5,500; salable calves 800, total 1,000; fed steers and yearlings, including yearling heifers, steady; strictly good and choice kinds active, oth ers on peddling basis; yet rela tively high compared with choice cattle; several loads steers and yearlings including mixed steers and heifers 18.00; bulk 15.00-17.75, best heifers 17.00; medium heif ers scarce, firm; medium and good cows strong at 11.50 up. but com mon beef cows and canners weak to 15 cents lower; bulla and veal ers steady; vealers 15.50 down; week's supply stock cattle well cleaned up at steady strong pric es. THINKS Starts On Page One the constitution looking at Europe, fearful of military dictation and military influence, and they made the great mistake of trying to keep the military Isolated.” Discussing MacArthur’s sugges tion with a reported today, Sena tor Edwin C. Johnson (D-Colo), acting chairman of the military committee said “I disagree heartily with that plan. I think our fore fathers were pretty wise. We have got to continue civilian control of the military agencies.” MacArthur noted that although the President is commander-in chief his decisions are “nonprofes sional” and “influenced to some extent by the political outlook of the United States because the Pres ident of the United States, whoever he may be, has been, and always wil be our system of government, a servant of politics. “He depends upon the suffrage of the people, and to survive he has to yield to some extent to the suf frage of the people, x x x” The general said military depart ment leaders “have suffered fright fully in the past" because they did not know what went on in the cabinet sessions. The general said he saw no “dan ger” in his suggestion because “no man can be a conspirator against the government of the United States in any way shape or form if he sat in at cabinet meetings with him having responsibility for the military forces, x x x" CHINESE Start* On Par* One tionalist troops to cease firing. The worried looking communist representative told newsmen of the Yenan reply to Chiang Kai-Shek’s i offer and said he would dellve. it to nationalist government officials j later today. “The situation,” he added, “ap pears dangerous.” The communist New China Daily News said that in letter addressed to the “chief of the American mi- i litary mission in Yenan” Chu Teh charged American planes “straf- | ed our populace and soldiers in Antseh and attacked our liberated areas.” j ASK DAMAGES The communists, Chu asserted, ! reserve the right to ask for dam ages if investigation ascertains ac tual losses suffered by the peo ple. About 30 American officers and soldiers, on Oct. 18, surrounded the communists’ Tientsin office and arrested five staff workers, “by this action interferring with China’s internal affairs,” he said adding: “These actions have harmed the traditional friendship of the Amer icans and Chinese. I seriously re quest that adequate measures be adopted to assure there be no re occurrence of them.” No reply from the Americans J was reported. WANT ADS FOR SALE: ONE TWELVE horse power flueless steam boil er. See Blue Ridge Products Company. 4t 8c FARM FOR SALE: 40 ACRES OF land, pasture, woodland, house and barn. On Casar highway, mail route and school bus route Marshall Ivester, Route 1, Lawn dale, N. C. 3t 8p JUST RECEIVED A~NEW shipment of baby blankets (untrimmed) priced from 39c to 69c. The Gift Shop. lt-8c FOR SALE: SIMMONS BABY bed, in good condition. Mrs. J M. Darby. Telephone 315-M. It Be THE EVERREE BEAUTY SHOPPE is now open for business. Mrs. Violet Smith, owner and opera tor invites the public to call by any time for appointments. All work guaranteed. All kinds of permanents at reasonable prices Let her serve you and she will try to give you the best satis factory care for your hair. Route 74, near Kings Mountain, N. C. It 8p LADY DRIVING TO ATLANTA early Friday can take three pas sengers. Patterson Flowers. Phone 700. It 8c LET US PUT YOUR TRACTOR on rubber. See us now for quo tation. Lutz-Yelton Co. 4t 8c WE HAVE ON THE FLOOR ONE 20 hammer mill and one 24-lnc'n corn mill. Luta-Yelton Co. 4t 8c LOST: NECKLACE, YELLOW gold with ruby stone, on way to high school. Reward. 703 West! Blanton St. Betty Frances Smith. It 8p WANTED TO BUY: OIL STOVE in good condition. Call 1174. j 3t 8c WANTED: A COOK. APPLY 609 E. Graham St., or call Telephone 424-M. 3t 8c WANTED: HOUSEKEEPER. Must stay in. 213 Dover Street,1 Shelby, N. C. 2t 8p FOR SALE: 119 ACRES. 9 MILES south of Shelby on No. 18 High way, J. L Morehead place. See us for price and terms. J. B Nolan Co. 2t 8c JUST ARRIVED: FHOTO Master Candid Type Cam era. Complete with case— only $4.73. Blantons Va riety Store, South Shelby. 2t-8c FOR SALE: 41 1-2 ACRES JUST, south of Shelby, about one and one-half mile from city limits, has 4 room house with lightg. See J. B. Nolan Co. 2t 8c mothers7you~can1^ow gat the new Vitallo Nursing Bottles complete for only 20c at Blanton’s Variety Store, South Shelby. 2t-8c , FOR SALE: PAIR OF MULES, 2- j horse wagon, corn and a quan tity of lespedeza hay, mowing machine and rake, small grain drill, drag harrow, drag pan, 13 Oliver turning plow, middle bus ter, cultivators, side harrows, Gee Whiz and other tools too numerous to mention. For in formation see J. B. Nolan Co. 2t 8c SPECIAL NOTICE: WILLIS Studio will be open Wed nesday afternoons to fill appointments for Christ mas Photographs. Call 1137. tf-eod-8c ......... i NEW GULF SERVICE STATION just opened for business—at 204 West Marion street. Gulf gas and motor oils, complete car service. We specialize In lubri cation on Model A Fords. Tele phone 1114. J. F. Black, owner. Odus Cash, manager. Give us a trial. 3t 8c i $2-98 to $7-95 C ‘ The handbags you’ve been Waiting for. Beautifully de signed pouches in kid, reptile and fabric. Comple tely equipped. GLOVES Handsewn gloves, distinctive ly designed and toasty warm. Choose your favorite style in suede or fabrics. ( Whether leathers or fab rics our gloves are tops in style, quality and workmanship. Fabrics $1.00 - Suedes $1.98 - $3.95 Kids —$ 1.98 $4.95 4 Costume Jewelry Lapel and Dress Pins $1.00 to $7.95 Necklaces $1.98 to $9.95 COMPACTS $1.00 to $4.95 EARRINGS $1.00 to $1.98 Wit l e y -s snoppino c t n t t r
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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Nov. 8, 1945, edition 1
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