Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Aug. 5, 1952, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO BULLETINS , (Continued from page II paleolithic man 25,000 years before Christ were reported discovered in grotto near here today. Four young amateur archeologists found the outlines of a bison and a horse chiseled into a stone wall in the Tarn River area. WALNEY, Eng. (IPi —Joan Hornby, her sight restored after being blind for 17 V* of her 18 years, found the world a frightening place today. “The first horse 1 saw terrified me,” she confessed. “And aren’t houses big' Doctors be lieve the shock of a boiling hot bath into which Joan stepped during a visit to her sister’s home here last week restored her sight. WASHINGTON, (IP) —Price Stabilizer Ellis Arnall plans to resign by Sept. I and may discuss the matter with Presi dent Truman tomorrow, informed sources said today. WASHINGTON, (IP> —Economic Stabilizer Roger L. Putnam said today the nation has “an excellent Wage Stabilization Board . . . but not an excellent law to start off the new wage program. SEOUL, Korea, (IB —United Nations jet planes, flying protective cover for fighter-bombers attacking targets across North Korea, shot down four Communist Mig-15 jets and damaged six others today for their biggest' toll of enemy planes in a month. WACO, Tex. (IP)—lnvestigators checked a theory today that an unidentified automobile caused the worst bus accident in history, a flaming catastrophe that killed at least 28 persons. CAIRO ,Egypt, UP)— The Wafd party. Egypt’s largest purged 12 members of Parliament from its ranks today in a cleanup campaign. SEOUL, Korea. UP) —The United Nations announced today it has warned North Korea civilians to clear out of 78 towns marked for attack by its warplanes. WASHINGTON, UP) —The FBI today added Leonard Joseph Bad Eye” Zalutsky, a half-blind convicted murder er with a weird sense of humor, to its list of “ten most wanted” criminals. MIAMI, UP)—A private C-46 cargo pltone crippled by jammed controls crashed and exploded at Miami In ternational Airport late last night, instantly killing the four persons aboard. PANMUNJOM. Korea, UP)— The United Nations called the Communists’ bluff today. Maj. Gen. William K. Har rison, chief Allied tiuce delegate, asked the Reds to let Allied war prisoners in North Korean camps receive par cels of food, medicine and clothing. CHICAGO, UP) —Sigmund Fabisiak, Polish Concul Gen eral here, revealed today that he has resigned from his post and appealed to the U. S. State Department for asylum in this country. PANMUNJOM, (IP)— Korean truce talks came to a temporary full stop after the United Nations challenged the Reds to prove they are sincere about the Geneva con vention. ST LOUIS, UP) —A heavy turnout of voters, including l the state s No. 1 citizen. President Truman, went to the noL's under fair skies today in Missouri’s primary election. Contestants for the Democratic Senate nomination were State Atty. Gen. J. E. Taylor, the President’s favorite, and Stuart Symington, Baltimore-born industrialist who en tered politics on the local level after seven years in top Washington posts. WASHINGTON, (IP)—'The State Department rejected today as “sheer nonsense” official soviet charges that this government banned publication of the USSR Information Bulletin in this country to prevent “truthful information about the Soviet Union.” Chicago Rackateer Slain By Mobsters CHICAGO (IP Theodore Teddy Roe, king of Chicago s /policy racket, apparently was slain by syndicate mobsters who wanted to take over his rich gambling em pire and, incidentally, gain re venge for a gunman Roe killed last year, police said today. Roe was shot down in the gutter in front of his home last night by * assassins who lay in ambush be hind a billboard and riddled him with slugs from sawed off shot-; guns. .. . Police said the Capone syndicate has looked with longing for many years upon the annual “take made by the 54-year old millionaire Ne gro. " ,l * l Thousands of Negroes in Chi cago's South Side tossed nickles, dimes and dollars to Roe every day In hopes that his wheels would re turn them a big payoff that seldom came. KIDNAP FAILED In June of 1951. three men tried to kidnap Roe as he drove his automobile down South Park Way. Roe drew a pistol and in the en suing gunfight one man was slain. He was Leonard Fat Lenny Cai fano, a minor syndicate hoodlum Who, police believed, had been as signed the Job of getting rid of Roe the bigtime mobsters could move into the policy racket. . Homicide detectives said today ttie syndicate apparently took ven geance for Caifano last night and cleared the way for the criminal heirs of A1 Scarf ace Capone to over policy gambling. Policy is the only king of bigtime gynhung still thriving in Chicago Ohee the Kffauver Senate Crime hivastigaUon and the institution of the federal gambling stamp law. Roe was the last of several “policy kings’’ who have been slain or driven out of town by the syndi cate in its drive to expand into the | policy field. Zack Is Named Citadel Coach CHARLESTON, S. C. HP' Leo Zack, former three letter athlete at Lafayette university, was nam ed head basketball coach at the Citadel today, succeeding B. M. (Bunzy) O’Neil, who resigned yesterday. Zack, who was graduated from Lafayette University in 1939 after i lettering in football, baseball and basketball, will also serve as an assistant football coach. He coached at Riverside Mili i tary Academy In Georgia for five years was at Eastern Military ( Academy at Cold Harbor Springs, 11 N. Y. ) i . PANTIE RAID HERE 1 A pantie raid in Dunn has been ! reported to the police department here. Mrs. Hattie Thaggard. colored, ! told officers that eight pairs* of nylon panties, white and pink, had i disappeared from her clothesline. iI * AT BLOWING ROCK ' | Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Aldredge and children, Emmett, Jr., and 1 Ann of Dunn and Mr. and Mrs. I j Malcolm Davis of Miami, Fla., 1 : spent the weekend at Blowing Rock. II —— ' | Two hundred pigs and 310,000 > hatching eggs have been shipped ! through the United Nations to Ko ■ rea for relief in farm areas. City Council (Continued From Page i Frank Porter and see if an arrange i ment could be worked out with him. ARMORY QUESTION Commissioner L. L. Coats re ported on the results of his con ference with Major General John : Hall Manning with reference to . j the taking over of the Armory pro- ; : perty on a long term lease by the I National Guard. i | Some of the questions Coats had , been directed to ask by the board . had been answered, he said ana j others would be answered by letter j The General had promised to check • on the insurance problem. j The Highway Patrol and License j Examiner's office space can be worked out all right. Coats was told, and he was assured that the contract with the Board of Edu cation could be extended if need ed. However, no janitor service would be provided and the school would be required to clean up af ter using the premises. General Manning suggested a conference with the board and the ' board set a tentative date for this _ meeting for August 25. and instruc- - ted Commissioner Coats to get in J touch with the General and at tempt to arrange for the meeting. ' General Manning revealed that * the Dunn Guard unit will receive some new equipment, but told the commissioners that it would not ( require additional space and that “ he felt the four stalls now’ ir. use by the town could be left available. “The Guard Commander will co operate with the community.” Coats quoted the General as saying. City Clerk Charles Storey pre- ‘ sented the board with its first vie- J tim of the resolution adopted which ( bars the tapping of water and sew- * age facilities for those outside the corporate limits. REQUEST TURNED DOWN A request for a meter had been j received from L. C. Dupree, whose ‘ home is about a mile from Dunn on the Newton Grove Highway. ( The Clerk had turned down his request and the board affirmed this decision. Dupree had pleaded that jury I duty had made it impossible for him to make application before the I resolution was passed but the board felt that making one excep tion would nullify the resolution ’ by encouraging others. J It was pointed out, however, that * this ruling does not apply to the j Erwin Sanitary District, where the town is already committed to sup- 1 ply the water at the wholesale rate of 17Vi cents. When the bond 1 issue on this project goes through, • the town will supply the water. A request has been received for , information relative to the size cf j the site of the old water tank by .Clerk Storey from a prospective purchaser. The Clerk told the in- * quirer to check the records at Lil- ’ lington. Attorney Max McLeod asked the i board what, if anything, had been done with regard to rezoning the Evander Strickland property from residential to business. He was in formed that the request must be advertised and the public hearing held, before any action could be ‘ taken by the board. Mayor Ralph Hanna presided and ' the full board, Commissioners L. L. Coats, B. A. Bracey, R. G. Tart and J. V. Bass were present. Ike Tells (Continued From Page One) ahead of him in his presidential campaign. A group of Negro leaders headed by Bishop D. Ward Nichols of the : first district of the African Metho- ] dist Episcopal Church of New York, came here to discuss civil rights problems with Eisenhower. AGAINST FEPC The Gop nominee refused to put himself on record as favoring a compulsory federal Fair Employ ment Practices Commission. He had 1 taken that same position prior to his presidential nomination. | Despite this fact, Nichols and the other five members of the Negro group said they were “convinced I that the election of General Eisen- I | hower in November will greatly I ! advance civil rights progress in j i America.” “We found General Eisenhow’er to be a sincere and honest man, with deep convictions on the quality , of every American citizen," Nichols said. “He stated that he would be i a “soldier, fighting in the ranks of civil progress” and we have every ; reason to believe him.” Nichols said Eisenhower told the group of Negro leaders that “dis criminatory practices” in Washing ton were “disgraceful” and that, if elected, he would take immed i iate steps to end them. I Services Today For Lillington Man ( Needham Vann, 56, of Lillington, Route 1, died Monday at 2 p. m. ) after a heart attack. Funeral ser j vices were held today at 3:30 p. , | m. at Neils Creek Baptist Church , j near the home, conducted by the ’ pastor, the Rev. G. Goff Turner, l assisted by the Rev. Charles B. Howard of Buies ~ Creek. Burial was in Harnett Memorial Ceme i tery at Lillington. The body lay in state an hour before the ser vice. Surviving are his wife, the former Miss Betty Mae Guy of Angler; five daughters, Mrs. Clyde Adams of Angler, Route 2, Mrs. Reed Johnson of Lillington Route 1, Mrs. Wilton Fish of Angler, Reute I J, and Miss Betty Jean Vann of l the home; three sons, William R. , Billy Shaw, and Percy Frank Vann all of the home. ... THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C. Road Petitions Approved By Harnett Board Cpunty commissioners, starting a new fiscal year, yesterday were fac ed with road requests but had no roads to give. Chairman L. A. Tart told peti tioners that so far Harnett has not received its allocation of mile age from the state highway and public works commission, but that! it was expected si.orth’. Last month Tart had said he expected the al- j lotment by the first Monday in] August. Meantime commiss —f's filed for consideration four petitions for road improvements and one dc- j mand for a new road. Requests for all surface or black | top treatment came from the fol lowing: 1. 3.7 mile of road in Anderson Creek township running from Lay ton Road to Pendergraph road: 2. 3 miles, Anderson Creek town ship. runnine from wire road near Reeves Bridge to Lucas Store. 3. a i of a mile of road. Lilling- j ton township in Shawtown exten ding from Baptist Moore store to i the Ft. Bragg road, 4. 3.1 mile in Anderson Creek j township running from NC 210' Southeast to Blaylock’s store. The request for 1% miles of new road was made by Black River township residents. It would run from Angier to Fish’s Cross Roads. Most of the morning was con sumed with the drawing of four jury lists of 36 members each. They will serve courts starting either September 1, 15 and 29. The list will be exclusive of jurors called for August who were excused last week by Judge Sharp after prom ising they woulld serve in Sep tember. Two Taken At Liquor Outfit Two residents of Godwin Route 1. today were facing trial in U. S. District Court following their ar rest in a raid on a whiskey still in Black River Township, near Dunn, by Federal ATU officers and Cum berland County ABC officers. Two stills were captured, two men were arrested and 18 gallons of whiskey and 250 gai ons of mash were confiscated in the raid. Arrested were Clayton Godwin. 34, and Colin Norris, 26, both of Godwin, Route 1. They were ar raigned before Mrs. Mallie Adams Jackson, local United State Com missioner, oh charges of violating the liquor laws. Godwin, a three time violator, was released under SI,OOO bond, and Norris’ bond was set at $750. One still, a 200-gallon unit, was in operation at the time of the raid, officers said. Participating in the raid with ATU agents and Deputies C. A. Dees, and E. J. Horne nod Con stable Albert Jackson of jhmpson County. Richards Joins S. C. Leaders Backing Ticket LANCASTER, S. C. (IPI Rep. James P. Richards of the Fifth Congressional District today join ed the growing list of South Carolina political leaders who fa vor the state Democratic party sticking with the national party nominees in the November elec tion. \ Richards urged the endorse ment of Gov. Adlai Stevenson of 'lllinois for president by the state Democratic convention which re convenes in Columbia tomorrow. “Such endorsement could in no ! way be considered as abandon ment of this state’s Democratic I principles,” Richards said. Richards joins Sen. Burnet R. | Maybank, Sen. Olin B. Johnston, i Rep. Joseph R. Bryson, State , Treasurer Jeff Bates, and others who have urged endorsement of the national ticket. - , *■ s ’ ‘.J* '■ MASS BAPTISM ADMINISTERED The Sacrament of Baptism was administered recently at the Sacred Heart Church here ta four . one. month old infants all residents of Dnnn. Reading from left to right are the happy and prond Mothen of the infants. Mrs. Joseph- Kotlas, Mrs. T. C- Hyhmn, Jr., - Mrs, Mlchal Williams and Mrs. Msdelyn Surles. Father Frauds A. McCarthy, pastor who administered the Holy Sacrament of Baptism loqlts with admiration upon his four new saintly parishioners. Defense Pact (Continued From Page One) Pacific Mutual Treaty Conferences opened at Kaneohe Marine Air Station on a unified note. An Am erican spokesman said no points of disagreement had arisen. Secretary of State Dean Acheson, Australian External Affairs Minis- j ter Richard G. Casey, and New 1 Zealand’s T. Clifton Webb hurried into discussions on organization of art council. The speed with which the' dip lomats progressed was indicated When they unexpectedly jumped i agenda items and discussed point I three—“a survey df situations of j common interest." Truman Votes (Continued From Page One) fo’ded ballots to George Wallace. Mrs. Truman’s brother and a Democratic election judge. They poted briefly for pictures at the ballot box. WOULDN’T TELL A photographer asked Mr. Tru man if he would tell how he voted. I “No. The ballot is secret,” the ( President said. i The President and Mrs. Tru walked back to the Liftle White I House slowly to accomodate the* 1 photographers professional and amateur. Committee (/Continued From Page One) Rev. R. R. Gammon, Thad Pope, i Jeff Denny. Benhaven, J. Knox Harrington and Alex Cameron. Angier, A. C. Barefoot and Carl Young. | Erwin, W. H. Milcy and Mrs. D. Woodall. Coats, Carson Gregory and Dr. W. C. Moore. Lafayette, Miss Hazel Matthews and Mrs. W. J. Cotton. Jr. Lillington, Miss Vara Lee Thorn ton. Herbert Carson, Jr., W. A. Johnson, G. T. Proffit, Bqaman Kelley and Henderson Steele: Buie's Creek, B. F. McLeod and Dr. P. B Marshbanks, Jr. Boone Trail, Sidney G. Thomas and Kyle Harrnigton. Among the Negro schools com mittees will be as follows; Harnett County Training School, Dunn, Mrs. C. D. Coddrington and the Rev. Ed McNeil. Gentry School, Erwin, W. N. Porter. Shawtown, Lillington, J. S. Spii vey, Ida P. Hinnant, and Willa M. Jeffries. Johnsonville. Selden Murchinson. Long range objectives, improve ment of instruction, will come first in committee study: physical' plant improvements later, Proffit 1 said, At the same board meeting mem bers voted to buy one 150 foot lot west of Dunn High School in the firs of a long range plan to assure the school sufficient ground foro school activities. The lot was bought from Dr C. L. Corbett. The board also issued an order hat number and length of Harnett school days must conform to he request of the state deparment of public instrucion. No school may have over 20 half-day terms. S. G. Thomas p.eslded at the meeting held at the education i building in Lillingon. Others at tending were Bob Baggett, W. E. Nichols, A. C. Barefoot, and W. E. j Skinner and Superintendent Prof j fit. Erwin School I To Be Named For Gentry The new Erwin Negro school will be named the Gentry School in honor of the late B. P. Gen try of Lillington who served as Superintendent of Harnett Coun ty Schools from 1915 to 1941. And the man who served the county schools for nearly thirty years could scarcely ask for a more suitable memorial. It truly sprang from the heart. Patrons of the school were giv en a list of six or eight names of prominent Harnett County citizens frofn which to select a N. C. Bank Robber Flees From Guard GREENVILLE, 5. C., (IP)—Greenville police today were on the lookout for a slippery North Carolina safe cracker who escaped Sunday from a speeding train between Gain esville, Ga., and Greenville. North Carolina fugitive officer C. L. Miller said James Wilson made his getaway from the train between 3 and 5 a. m. Suivday while Miller was returning the wily fugitive from Dallas, Texas, where he was arrested several days ago. Wilson had slipped off his hahd cuffs and fled from a train in Bir mingham, Ala., nearly two years ago. HANDCUFFED AND CHAINED Because of the previous escape, | Miller said he handcuffed the 32-vear-old prisoner's hands to gether, put a chain around his legs, then tucked him in an up per berth in the train compart ment they shared. When he awoke, Miller said he tugged at the chain, but Wilson was gone. vyilson, a Beckley, W. Va„ car penter, drew a seven to ten year sentence in 1949 on ,a charge of safe robbery and possession of bur glary tools. In dtaleigh, Miller said that Wil | son has slim, snakelike wrists with ; out prominent wrist bones. When you slip handcuffs on Wilson, Miller said, it's like tying ] a noose on an eel. “He just wiggles out,” Miller j said. ; Wilson, alias Glenn S. Orren, was j sentenced to from seven to 10 [ years for breaking and entering, Priest Visitors (Continued From Page One, in the Catholic Diocese of Raleigh expressed the opinion of the visit ing priests when he started that the warmth of the people of Dunn that he met is true and sincere and greatly appreciated the friend liness of the Town of. Dunn. EDITOR PRESENT Also present was the Editor of the North Carolina Catholic, a weekly diocesan newspaper, Father Frederick A. Koch of Wake Forest. Father Michael O’Keefe, of St. Therese’s Church Wilson and pre sent for the special supper, was intensely interested in the new golf course for the Dunn area as golf is one of his side hobbie. He recently shot a par on the Wilson course. Following a visit to the new Dunn course, Father O’Keefe main tained that” the course will do much to attract more followers to I a wonderful sport.” Other priests present were: .Father I Timothy Sullivan, A Redemptorist j Father of Newton Grove; Father Charles Trotter of Sanford; Father Thomas Kerin of the Cathedral i Parish, Raleigh; and Father Thom as Tapp a Redemptorist Father of Rocky Mount. Adlai Going (Continued From Page One) list as the present chairman, Frank E, McKinney, who said last week that he wanter to retire, and Wal ter F. Lynch, former congressman and one time Democratic nominee for governor of New York. He would not identify others. Lewis Ready (Continued From Page One) erators provide a substantial wage boost for his 475,000 miners. The United Mine Workers president served notice on an thracite producers and Southern coal operators yesterday that he is terminating their present wage contracts on that date. He pre viously had fiXpd the same dead line for Northern soft coal com panies. name for the handsome new structure. Ballots taken home by school pupils were returned mar ked overwhelmingly for Gentry. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 5, 1952 safe robbery and possessing bur glary tools in Fayetteville. He escaped from the Orange County orison camp Xn August, 1950. He was picked up in Texas and Miller went after him. They got as far as Birmingham, Ala. The next thing Miller knew Wilson was gone. HAD CADILLAC, GIRL, MONEY When Texas federal authorities found him at Dallas last week, Wilson had a big Cadillac, a girl friend and $2,600. Enroute to North Carolina, Mil ler said he took no chances. At Memphis between trains, Wilson was locked up in jail. From Memphis they went to At lanta, with Miller keeping a close eye on his prisoner. He tucked Wilson, well-chained, into an up per berth In a sleeping compart ment. At Gainesville, Ga., Wilson was sleeping. “I .said to myself, well, boy, I’ve got £ou,” Miller related. Somewhere near Greenville, Mill er tugged at the chain. “When I pulled that chain down, I said ‘oh, my.’” Miller said he believes Wilson got a key in the Memphis jail. “How he got out of that lead chain, I’ll never know.” The ‘ handcuffs, he said, were no problem for Wilson. But anyway, the fugitive took them with him. Markets iContiriued from page one) Eggs: Steady, supplies short, de mand good. Prices paid producers and handlers FOB local grading stations: A large 60, A medium 53, B large 52, current collections 35. HOGS RALEIGH (VP) Hog markets: Slightly weaker on good and choice 180-240 lb barrows and gilts at 22.25. Rocky Mount, Woodland: Slightly weaker at 22.00. Siler CCity, Elizabethtown, Tar boro, Hamilton, Mount Olive, Dunn: Weaker at 22.00. Warsaw, New Bern, Goldsboro, Wilson, Washington, Wilmington, Jacksonville, Kinston, Smithfield: Weaker at 21.75. Circle No. 1 Serves Refreshments To Bible School Circle No. 1 of the Hood Mem orial Christian Church served re freshments to the children at Bible School on Monday morning at 10:30. They held their meeting aft 9:30 at the church. Mrs. Bill Carroll presented the ! program using as her Subject, the 1 new study course book, “These Rights We Hold.” This book will be studied by the group during the Fall. Routine business matters were discussed. Those present were Mrs. Bill Carroll, Mrs. Harry Phipps, Mrs. Houston Jernigan, Mrs. John Riley, Mrs. Wilson Stanley, and Mrs. Wil ma Massengill. Rain Starved (Continued From Page One) tion. A department spokesman said “we can move pretty fast” if the President grants the request. Meanwhile, forecasts of milk shortages and a report of mounting food prices were added to the pic ture of economic disruption in the drought-stricken South. Farm leaders of 10 states were revising upward the, estimate of $800,000,000 direct damage to crops by the drought. Prices of fresh fruits and vege tables had skyrocketed during ear ly stages of the drought, climbing 17.6 per cent in Atlanta and 14.7 per cent in Richmond. Va., it was revealed. The Bureau of Labor Statistics added to this toll the report of drastic overall increases in retail food prices in two representative Southern cities as a result of two months of virtual rainlessness. MILK SHORTAGE Farm experts predicted a 45 per cent milk shortage in Georgia by the time schools open and Mississ ippi officials forecast an even more drastic and Immediate drop in milk supplies unless they get early rains. But the biggest problem was find ing new sources of feed to save livestock losing weight from lack of pasturage or already being sold prematurely. Fall’ hogs were al ready on sale in Georgia! DR. GORDON L. TOWNSEND Announces the reopening of his office for the general practice of dentistry. y AUGUST 4, 1952 > / ' ' \ TURLINGTON BLDG. Phone 4370 v Dunn, N. C. 1 ' ■■■ ' ' ■ - ' ' -/•■ T* Union Deposits Big Dues Check A check for $5,749, dues collected by the Erwin Mills Company, was deposited Monday to the account of the Textile Work- \ ers Union of America’s Local Union 250, in the Dunn First-Citizens Bank. Hardy Johnson, vice-president of the Local, deposited the check, which represents dues collected by the company for the Union. It is the first such check that has been forwarded to the TWUA-CTO since a group of Ej-win workers left tf*J CIO in an attempt to change to UTW-AFL. A Union spokesman declared that the money collected in dues and deposited to the Local Union’s account would be left intact dur ing the period in which it is nec essary to have an administrator for the Local. Scott Hoyman, the administra tor, said, “This check will rebuild the account of the Local, in spite of the money which the AFL groig took in May.” “We can promise,” he continued,” that this money will stay where it is supposed to remain, and will be used for the benefit of the mem bers of Local Union 250, to whom it belongs,” HENRY ALUREDGE HERE Henry Aldredge of Bradenton, Fla , is visiting in Dunn with his grandmother, Mrs. A. P. AdcoijJ and with Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Ald redge. RETURN FROM BOSTON Mr. and Mrs. David Adams and children Kathy and Phillip have returned to their home here after a stay in Boston, Mass., with her family. t Feeds —:— Seeds ? t Fertilizers X Idunn fcx service! { R. H. GODWIN, Manager 4 Gifts & Greetings for You through WELCOME WAGON from Your Friendly Business Neighbors and Civic and Social Welfare Leaders On the occasion of: „ The Birth of a Baby Sixteenth Birthdays Engagement Announcements • Change of residence Arrivals of Newcomers to rnjf 3221 (No cott or obligation) WHO CAM DENY ENVY IS A KIND Os A PRAISE ? 0 Take Ching Chow's ad* vice and open a Savings Account with us today. FIRST CITIZENS BANK 1 * & TRUST CO. DUNN. N. C HING m
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Aug. 5, 1952, edition 1
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