Newspapers / The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.) / July 17, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
- -I- — ®hr Simra-Nrma ^ Hw|wy>r% New* EiUbliiked la 1**4 r Hendersonville Time* Established in 1881 Published every afternoon except Sunday at 227 North Main street Hendersonwille, N. C., by The Timea-News Co.t Inc., Owner and Publisher. TELEPHONE 87 J. T. FAIN_Editor C. M. OGLE_Managing Editor HENRY ATKIN_City Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Times-News Carrier, in Hendersonville, or else where, per week-*0® Ry Mail In Hendersonville, per year—_____$5.00 Due to high postage rates, the subscription price of The Timea-News in Zones above No. 2 will do based on the cost of postage. Entered aa Second Class Matter at the Post Office in Hendersonville, N. C. MONDAY, JULY 17, 1933 BIBLE THOUGHT “NOT I BUT CHRIST.” (GaL 2:20 “That in *11 thing* HE might have the preemi nence.” (Col. 1:18. ♦ * * Someone has pointed out that usually the young Christian worker starts out with the prayer, “Lord help me to do my work.” Later on he learns to pray,. “Lord help ns to do Thy work. Still later he learns the lesson of absolute consecration and human helpfulness, then his prayer is. “LORD, DO THY WORK THROUGH ME.” Christian Observer. WHY WE NEED A NAVY OF TREATY STRENGTH (By BRUCE CATTON) A few years ago a great many Ameri cans would have been seriously disturbed by an announcement that their navy was to be built up forthwith to treaty strength and made literally second to none. Today the news that this is to be done bothers hardly anyone; and this change of attitude measures the failure of American efforts to get the other nations of the world to agree on an effective disarmament pro gram. No peace-loving American need be ashamed of his country’s record in respect to disarmament. Shortly after the close of the W orld war the United States fleet, counting vessels al ready built, vessels laid down and vessels definitely appropriated for, was by far the most powerful fleet ever dreamed of. If the program then in effect had been completed, no other navy on earth could have hoped to cope with. American sea strength. The Washington conference saw this country voluntarily throwing away the finest fighting ships ever built. Of our own free will we scrapped our newest and strongest warships, accepted parity with England and pledged ourselves not to seek naval superiority. That was a magnificent beginning. But it was not followed up; and the fault for that failure does not rest on the Amreican government. Repeatedly during the next decade Washington sought to extend the arms reduction treaty and scale down world navies, and repeatedly other powers refused to go along. Sometimes it was England that stood in the way, sometimes France, sometimes Japan. As a result, it has been made very ap parent that world sentiment has not yet reached the point at which any genuine, far:reaching naval disarmament program is possible. We have tried, we have made sacrifices, but it is no go. We have what is left of the Washington treaty, but there is no likelihood that anything better can be obtained.for years to come. That being the case, what is there left to do hot build up to treaty strength? The time has not yet come in which we can discard our defenses. If w'e continue to maintain any navy at all, it has to be a good pne; and since no one else is willing to go with us on a new reduction program, we can hardly do anything else than make our navy the best navy that the existing treaty permits. Hollywood story says no sooner do new ly-married movie stars begin to get really acquainted with each other than they want a divorce. Probably that explains it. Upon.,reading the statement of Elyria, Ohio, \>ank tellers that 75 per cent of wom en dep|OSjtol*s carry their money in their stockings, one naturally reaches a conclu sion. The conclusion is that Elyria bank tellers should pay more attention to bank ing. \ \ _________ Husbands who complain they never gel a kick out of life might try making a tact less remark while sitting opposite the wife at a dinner table when guests are present AT> ' - — “Five^ Thousand Pocketbook Makers Strike in New York”—headline. Too bac that this should happen just as a lot o1 people are finding use for them again. We haven't yet heard the details of that strike called by microphone technicians at a Hollywood studio, but doubtless there were sound reasons behind it. [ NEWSPAPERS’ OPINIONS 1 O -—---* HOW ABOUT YOUR STATE? Morgan T. Ryan, registrar of motor vehicles in Massachusetts, is troubled about a 10 per cent in crease in auto accidents this year, though there is a decrease of 8 per cent in the number of cars registered. Has beer anything to do with the in crease? A “wet” Boston daily suggests not, but a correspondent, J. G. Oster, of Islington, presents this interesting comment, and some incisive facts and comparisons. He says: “It may not be beer alone that is the cause of the increase of accidents, but the general let-down regarding strong drink that followed the agitation for beer. But here are some facts that beer lovers and ‘repealers’ might think about. In this country we have almost eight times as many motor vehicles, according to population, as they have in England. It is a known fact that the hazard increases out of proportion as the number of cars is increased. In other words, a thousand cars on a certain road will produce a certain hazard. But double the number of cars and the hazard becomes not double, but i several times as great. , “In spite of this fact, England, where there is no prohibition, and with eight times less cars, pro duces almost three times as many motor vehicle deaths in proportion to the number of cars. If in toxicants come back to our country, and leaving out the increased hazard of the greater number of cars, but figuring only on the number in England, we will have over 72,600 poeple killed every year by automobiles. And that would equal the wiping out of a city the size of Salem (Mass.) every year. I am speaking of automobile deaths only. Automo bile accidents that resulted in maiming and in juries only would run up into the millions.”—The Presbyterian Advance. DRY FIGURES Before prohibition there were 176,000 open sa loons in the United States; now there are 350,000 gasoline stations. The open saloon paid an annual revenue to the government of 363 million dollars; the annual tax of automobiles and gasoline is 779 million dollars. Since prohibition the drinking of liquor has de creased 64 per cent, and the drinking of milk has increased 28 per cent, while infant mortality has decreased 30 per cent. Since prohibition 30 million new savings accounts have been opened up. Since prohibition 400,000 new homes have been built annually. Since prohibition there has been an increase of 68 billion dollars in life insurance. Since prohibition there has been 150 per cent increase in high school attendance, and 300 per cent increase in college attendance. Since prohibition all but ten of the 250 institu tions for the treatment of inebriates have been closed, and eight of these have no patients. Since prohibition there has actually accrued to the United States in fines and confiscated property of liquor captives a profit of about 25 million dol lars a year over the cost of enforcement. Automobile fatalities in England, a wide-open beer country, are almost three times more frequent per thousand car registrations than in the United States.—Rutherfordton News. WHERE ARE ANTI-TRUST LAWS? What becomes of the anti-trust laws under the | new national recovery act? Are they to be abro gated or suspended during the emergency or will 'they continue to have their original force and ef fect? These are pertinent and natural queries in con nection with the business of adopting codes among businesses ard industries relating to prices to be charged and to other vital factors in the manage ment of these enterprises. While the act was under consideration in the ’.senate, Senator Wagner accepted for the adminis tration, and the senate adopted, an amendment by Senator Borah providing that codes under the act “shall not permit combinations in restraint of trade, price fixing, or other monopolistic practices. As the bill emerged from conference and was pass ed by congress, the Borah amendment read only: “Such code or codes shall not permit monopolies or monopolistic practices.” Senatr W agner ex plained that the change had been made because broad court interpretations of the phrases “re straint of trade” and “price fixing” might frustrate the purposes of the act. In signing the industrial recovery bill, President Roosevelt stated: “We are relaxing some of the safeguards of the anti-trust laws. . . . We are putting in place of old principles of unchecked competition some new gov ernment controls . . . (but) the anti-trust laws still stand firmly against monopolies that restrain trade and price fixing which allows inordinate profits or unfairly high prices.” General Johnson, the administrator of the act, announced that codes submitted might properly contain agreements not to sell at less than produc tion costs. Nevertheless, the first code on which public hearings have been held, that of the cotton textile industry, makes no direct mention of prices. It merely cites among the subjects on which amend ments of the code may later be asked, “the naming and reporting of prices which may be appropriate.” The farm relief act provides that marketing agreements between the secretary of agriculture and producers, processors, and handlers of agri cultural products shall not be held in violation of the anti-trust laws. This exemption follows similar exemptions from the anti-trust laws for farm as sociations contained in farm relief legislation of the last 20 years—particularly the Clayton act of 1914, the Capper-Volstead act of 1922, the co-op erative marketing act of 192G, and the agricultural marketing act of 1929. The farm relief act, unlike i the recovery act, directly aims at establishing I prices—not at specified levels, but so as to main t (tain the pre-war relationship between agricultural ' and non-agricultural commodities.—The Charlotte 'Observer. " i letters to THE EDITOR Editor. The Times-News, Hendersonville, N. C. Dear Sir: In Saturday’s paper my name was listed as being among those to participate in a local golf tour nament advertised as beginning on Sunday, the Christian Sabbath, j or Lord’s Day. Let me say that this was an error on somebody’s part. Should 1 take part in a tour nament, it certainly will not be in one, any part of which is played on the Lord’s Day. 1 hose who ar range such events should consider those who play this fine game for lecreation and pleasure but who do not do so on Sunday. I under stand very well that the qualify ing might be done on Monday as well as on Sunday. Hut when a tournament is arranged and ad vertised to begin on Sunday, that bars out those who disapprove of Sunday athletic contests, who see no difference in principle between Sunday golfing and Sunday base ball fishing, movies, and the like. A city golf tournament was re cently held in Columbia, S. C., in which there were a hundred par ticipants; but the Lord’s Day was respected—it was from Monday through Saturday. Those who indulge in such con tests on Sunday are rarely found to be supporters of the church and of religion; and if all Christians followed their example, we would have a churchless and a religion less community. God makes prom ises of rich blessings to observers of His Day. May I quote one of them. “If thou turn away thy feet from the Sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on My holy day; and call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honorable; and shall honor him, not doing thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleas ure ' nor speaking thine own words; then shalt thou delight thy self in the Lord; and I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth, and feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy father: for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.” (Isa. 58:13,14). Yours respectfully, L. T. WILDS. OAVATION AT CHICAGO ITALIAN FLIERS GIVEN -- (Continued from page one) revealed when he landed at 1 em pelhof airdrome here at 11:5G a. m. (6:56 a. m. EDT). The robot pilot worked perfect ly, he said, and his speed was in creased by tailwinds over most of his course after leaving the coast of Newfoundland. Post met murky weather over ' part of his course. Headwinds re- ! tarded him slightly between New York and Newfoundland. Post flew so high and the mists I were so thick that he did not sight j iand after leaving Newfoundland ; until he zoomed to low altitude j them. Wednesday the squadron is | scheduled to lift again from Lake | Michigan and return to Italy. Balbo had pleaded before ar rival that his crew be given as much freedom from ceremony as possible but the welcome Satur day night lasted far into the morning and Sunday was com pletely occupied. DEMPSEY WILL WED IN NEVADA TODAY SAN FRANCISCO, July 17— j (UP).—Jack Dempsey and Miss' Hannah Williams, New York ac-l tress and former wife of Roger! Wolfe Kahn, will be married quietly by a justice of the peace | somewhere in Nevada today, An-j cil Hoffman, manager of Max Baer, the fighter, said here yes terday. Hoffman said he left Dempsey and Miss Williams at Salt Lake1 City, where the ex-heavy chain- i pion was visiting his mother. Dempsey and Miss Williams were to start thi smorning on their leisurely motor trip through Nevada, said Hoffman, and the time and place of their marriage had not been decided. ALTON BANKER IS HOME AGAIN (Continued from page one) lished to his wife, who suffered a deep gash in the head while de fending her husband when the kidnapers attacked him, Leur cried, “Oh, mom, oh, mom. It’s all right. Turned me loose. Tell somebody to come and get me.” A Collinsville telephone opera tor listening in on the conversa tion notified the sheriff’s office and Paul Taylor drove to the xoadhouse. How to Relieve Headaches In Three Minutes When you have one of those violent, nerve-racking headaches, from inorganic causes, you can get soothing relief in three min utes with “B. C.”, a reliable, pleasant-to-take remedy. “B. C.” is prepared by a registered phar macist, compounded on a differ ent principle from most relief giving agencies in that it contains several ingredients so blended and porportioned as to accomplish, in a few minutes what we believe no one drug formula can do in so short a time.“B. C. ” should also be used for the relief of muscular aches and pains, common colds and neuralgia; for reducing fever and quieting a distressed nervous system without opiates, narcotics or such habit forming drugs. Get “B. C.,” in 10c and &5c packages,! wherever drugs are sold. (adv.) IS HEADED FOR MALF WAY PAUSE ON TRIP (Continued from page one) over Northwestern Germany, the aviator explained to newspaper men while mechanics refilled tne gasoline tanks of the Winnie Mae. The impatient flier at first re jected offers of food and an op portunity to take a showex bath at the field but when he learned that his gasoline would have to be loaded aboard by hand pumps, a tedious process, he decided to re fresh himself under a shower. Meanwhile a bundle of sandwiches and three oranges were placed in the pilot’s cockpit of the Winnie Mae. Post’s arrival was witnessed by a small crowd of Lufthansa air plane employes, newspapermen, and spectators. , , A hand played Deuchland Uber A lies” and the Star Span gled Banner waved from a stall on the administration building of the field as the white and purple plane glided down to a smoota landing. , Spectators shouted * Heil! and gave the Nazi salute as Post climbed nimbly from his cockpit. He did not appear particularly tired, considering the fact that he had just flown the Atlantic. Colonel Jacob Wuest, L. S. military attache here, stepped for ward and greeted Post. “It is a very fine sensation to be able to greet you,” ho said, gripping the flier’s hand. “I’m anxious to get my sr p gassed and ready to go,” Post re 1 The Oklahoman stood somewhat impatiently while photographers snapped his picture. Then he (iashed off to arrange refueling of the plane. Finally mechanics completed the refueling and Post hastily climbed aboard, tested his motor for a few minutes and then swept down the field to take off at 2:11 p. m. (9:11 a. m. EDT) toward Novosibirsk. He had estimated he could reach the Siberian point m 22 hours before he was forced down at Koeningsberg. He had hoped to pick up time by avoiding Moscow, where James Mattern, his unlucky predecessor, paused on his recent attempt at the world record which ended in a crash in Siberian wilds. CROWDS GROWING AT COMMUNITY SINGS Public attendance of twice the size of the first marked the sec ond community sing held Sunday afternoon at 4:30 o’clock at the high school auditorium, R. W. Brickert conducting. Words of the various hymns in which the people joined were projected on the screen, making hymnals un necessary. *• Miss Esther Minott in a piano solo, Mrs. H. R. Bobst in a vocal solo, “Abide With Me” and the Gibson orchestra in two selec tions on Hawiian stringed instru ments were the added features of the program. SHAWS CREEK SUPPER A benefit supper will be given Tuesday evening at Davis station for the benefit of the Shaws Creek Baptist church. JUNIOR ORDER TO MEET Initiation of several candidates into the local lodge of the Jr. O. U. A. M., is scheduled for the weeklv meeting which will he held Tuesday night at 8 o’clock at Woodman Hall on Main street. Summer Music Events Continue [ Many Hear Program at First Baptist Church A large number of local peo ple and visitors attended a musi cal program at the First Baptist church Friday night. The pro gram was under the auspices of the Chamber of Commerce and was the second of a series of summer entertainments. On the program word Miss Mary Brooks, .organist. Miss Em ily Sargent, violinist Mrs W. C. T Bates, pianist and Mrs. H. • i li'obst, MW. O. A. Meyer and Airs. J. C. Morrow, Jr. ‘ A highlight of the program was the rendition of Shumann s Con certo in A minor by Miss Brooks at the organ and Mrs. Bates at the piano. __ Presbyterian Men Defer Meeting Announcement is made by Pres ident H. F. Stoneciphcr of the .Men of the Church organization that the men’s meeting of the Presbyterian church, scheduled for Tuesday evening of this week, will be postponed until next Tues day evening, on account "f con flicting meetings set for tomorrow evening. CHANGE IN TAX ON SALES TO BE EFFECTED (Continued from page one) now finding that they are not working out satisfactorily. As a ! result, after conferences with I different groups of merchants within the next week or so, we are planning to work out a sin gle composite schedule that will apply to all sales and all mer chants alike, to become effective August 1.” The ruling requiring merchants to collect the tax on each in dividual sale, rather than on the aggregate cumulatives sales of several articles, has also not worked out as was expected, Mr. Maxwell said. This ruling was made with the idea of helping the merchants collect enough tax on taxable items to make up for those not taxed. But many of the merchants now say they would rather be permitted to charge the straight tax on the to tal sales of a number of articles rather than on each sale, both from the standpoint of greater convenience and better satisfac tion to the public. As a result, this regulation will be changed, after August 1, Mr. Maxwell in dicated. MAY CREATE LAUREL PARK CIVIC GROUP Camp Happiness will he the scene of a meeting Tuesday at 3 p. m., to which any property own ers of Laurel Park are invited. Announcement of the meeting was made by E. H. Carpenter, Laurel Parkfl resident, who indi cated that the meeting will be so cial in nature and that there is a possibility a civic club for Laurel Park will be the outcome of the gathering. ^ fttVY Ll UAL COCHRAN Cultures b SEOQGE SCAQPQ -n (READ THE STORY, THEN COLOR THE PICTURE) THE Tinies did as they were j told. Thought Coppy, "Gee, the water’s cold.” And then he started swimming so that he oouhl reach the top. "Hey, there, where arc you go ing, son?” cried Shrimpy. "Stay and have some fun. If all of you lads leave me now, my plans will be a flop. "Although I don’t amount to much, I have a very magic touch, and I have touched each one of you to fix you for the sea. "You’ll find that you can breathe down here, so there is not a thing to fear. Just act like you are on the shore. Oh, please, lads, don’t leave me!” * * • COON Scouty sa!d, "Our friend ^ is right. I just now breathed with all my might. The breath ing didn’t choke me, so I’m go ing to stay with him.” .The others joined right in to say, "We alio broathed, so we will stay. Gee, won’t it bo real fiin, ’cause we can either walk or sNvim.” | .1 Then Dotty said, "That fish niAM maaa to as Mr nur ikiuly uuh marine. I think it should be pun ished. Look! It still is hanging ’round.” ‘'Come here,” cried out the deep-sea man. “Explain youi mean trick, if you can. Say, swordfish, if I catch you, I will spank you good and sound ” * * * I will catch it,” Cop VJ said “Just watch! I’ll get it by the heard.” Two other Tinies, helped him and the fish soon was held tight.” It tried real hard to get away, but Coppy said, “You’re here to stay. You’re going to get some punishment and it will serve yew right.” Then Shrimpy said, "What 1 will do will hurt me worse than it will you.” He took hold of the swordfish ana then spread il ’cross his knee. The spanking was a funnj sight. When it was o’er, one Tinyrnite said, “Well, I guess that swordfish is as sorry as can be.'* (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.l N ______ (The TlnJes meet Kins Neptune in the mat kliirvJ BY RODNEY DI TCHER Vj; V ^crvii'i" rii<*r WASHINGTON. - Perhaps we’re Wgoing to have a “rubber dollar , iml perhaps nut. That’s what Roosevelt has been talking about lately, lK'ginnmg kvitli bis assertion that the l mted States sought “the kind of dullai kvhicli a generation hence will have the same purcliasing and dre paying power as the dollar value kve hope to attain in the near ra lure.” Such a dollar—often called a "commodity dollar" or "compcnsa*, tory dollar”—might not buy the I same amount of bread or shoes in 1943 as in 1935, but it would have the same purchasing power when applied to a general list of com modities. Some economists and currency experts here think the . rubber dollar” is highly impractical unless other countries become willing to operate on the same basis, which is doObtful. * * * Nevertheless, the man to whom Roosevelt is supposed to have listened most intently ol late in his money deliberations is Prof. G. F. Warren of Cornell, the foremost present-day advocate ot a ctftlar whose gold value would be jtased on the prevailing piice e'm)Scssor Warren is considered radical by many economists, but the record shows that Roosevelts various recent currency mo'os at home and abroad have closely paralleled the professor’s theories. Professor Warren’s theory con seauently becomes of much cui rent interest, H<. ,,,, levels can't ’re i • ,. money’s value , prices as a wind.. |!;. .! it I'rum great f!u<tu:;t. " '•’! live values of • M | ‘ \ i ics by printi! • * * pROFKSSCm WAiUiK”'. to say about ii.,« lar”: “The < oiitjn m a) t; _ proposal to est currency red* • t!it weight of gold dollar would with the index sale prices of , .. / that is, if prices r«. -•, the vt ight of ! iM 1 f .( ; dollar M’ould ex* one per e. nt. if p2j , *V per edit, th" doll r v.„.|; change for <#n'* pep (, ;!t j, "The dollar lias r«, . either as to weight i ;. It cannot have a fi\. ,j v‘ and also have a fixed This proposal would •.uv-'d fixed value and a ruM. r •< | “A scientil a constant buying j.. .• ».r . commodities ratio r ilu.. j ' weight of one c.,:niui,.;i-v_ • whole tax and uebt s:: .■•ttr on commodity pri-' I; if. lure is to be kc.it '■-.•ji.,1 ^ for tile creditor or the *!• • • is commodity i»ri< • tht be kept stable, not ;]> | gold for which a dollar vj, I change.” i fOutivrlKlit. 1023 Ni'.A - THIS CURIOUS WORLD - WILLIM WI, TK£ ENGL'SH STATS//AN DEMANDED THAT hiS MEALS BE PLACED ON , THE TABLE INSTANTLY THE MOMENTHE DESIRED TO EAX &T THERE WAS NO CERTAWiy AS TO WHAT HOUR OF THE DAV OR NIGHT HE WOULD CALL FCR FOOD./ THEREFORE, CHICKENS WERE KEPT BOILING AND G04STNS AT EVER/ ✓ f ENEPAL SHEPiDAN IPCOE FCR. THQEE Q4YS THROUGH r ONE S/NOLE BUFFALO HEQO. r -1868- ' p A BOTTLE SET ADRIFT ON THE EASTERN COAST OF THE U S. IN APRIL, 1931, WAS RECOVERED NEAR HAM.'AERFEST, NORWA/... A RECORD OF 4550 MILES IN <565 DAVS. ^ the BUREAU OF FISHERIES, in Washington, D. C., rtlew hundreds of bottles every year for the purpose of testing thfe drm of (Jig ocean currents, and their relationship to the n;ovem<s of schools of fish and masses of fish eggs. Each »'Atie contaia a post card addressed to the Fisheries Bureau, and anyone « returns one of these cards is rewarded by a check for -» ceS,!' irawn c.n the United States Treasury. FORMER PRESIDENT HORIZONTAL 1 Who la the man In the plc tore? 13 Melancholy., 14 Strong ku -§>'7 vegetable* Hi Above. 15 Ready. 19 To done 20 l>a«l. 21 Ood of war (Ilaby Ion). 23 Practical unit of electrical rcalKtnnce. 14 The political nlagnn for election In the aeceod term of the pletnred man wnt “He kept utt out of -“f 25 three (prefix) IXTo expand. 28 Hebraic vowel point*. 30 FlnUhea. 31 For fear that 22 t'ompnny. 32 Third note. 34 Tableland. 3K Seed bag*. 40 In time (innate). rni B»|UJ ulana ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 44 Don er prop* erty. 4.1 Writing fluid. 411 War flyer. 47 Unit. 48 Variant of “a.** 40 Female fowl. 50 Upper human limb. 52 Seventh note. 53 Clan nymbol. 53 I.nrge bright eonntellatlon. 57 The man In the pletore helped draft n —— ——- at the World Wort VERTICAL 2 Natural power producing hyp* notlam. 2 Kngllah coin. 4 Hallway ata* lion. 5 Somewhat. it Either, 7 Grief. SInbred. 0 Falalflers. 10 Anything given to pacify. 11 Upon. 12 A person Kkt lands. 15 D«dl,v women* it of "ha;„ ,m v*-rnl[) S4.? jtrenir*' /'J, «« “TT f r. S. r-J 22 Alde*)dr Huanro. f, 25 Ilnpld hiK rfM*'* tlon of «•* 27 Like. of ronrlHb . 35 Form ot 30 A vcr»*t 37 Thr *W' „ «llf«h the **“rr|dl»» 3S l>o*Jn,r,IB tnbbr.b 39 Herr >r 41 moom,M 43 S& 9* *■ 4®G«rdr« «•* 51 HnOIr b* 63 Trnn*>P°*f fnbbr.O 55 »*rrpo**''%. 50 Norlb * * Hum l*6K
The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 17, 1933, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75