Newspapers / Tabor City Tribune (Tabor … / May 28, 1952, edition 1 / Page 1
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74e 7< H<U&u*te voi* VLNUMBER 44 "Tabor City — TÄe Town With A City Future'* X TABOR CITY, N. C., WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1952 5c A COPY; $2:00 A YEAB IClanKingAirested; ConspiraeyXhMgSgd, Legion Baseball Starts Next Week ς „ -.natives of teams in Area Legion Junior base Whiteville last Satur ,.:;d drew up a schedule the season which be - Τ entered in the league in ::u> year are Laurinburg. i;' ·.. ··>. kinston. Warsaw and < County. It was decided \ , - iting to play each team r,;e once at home and ;; t. A ν jri order to cut down 'Γ-·-- vel as much as possible. V. . are scattered so widely "· vvas believed unwise to ;V;v "r. ;e than a home and a schedule during regular «jjer. p''.y. V special called meeting of -h- etie committees of the · He and Tabor City posts ;·. ..Uht. it was decided to j ci that only one team be ;·. Columbus County this · Both Whiteville and Tabor .jV-v-C'-i-tcibouni had planned to - this season. However, ι ." . ;ty of creditable legion! : > made it an impossi-; loth localities to field Τ now team if approved by η Posts will be known C . .bus County American ..scball team. Chadbourn. v.. l:: ;:f. Whiteville and Tabor C::· η posts will be asked to | : -o in making this a strong; tea-.: will be able to compete' .vi:.: :r.er aggregations in the J Half the home games this I irai ould be played at Tabor C.:; The other half at Whiteville. 3*:. · ■ r.s will furnish two cars ::: tra.-.sportation for games away t'r.r. ν ^rr.e and all posts in the county ill be asked to give as-, tv transporting players to, ::a.:..e sessions. Practice sessions will be split · r. Tabor City and White- ! ville. j Ξ.' Pu.tteree. coach of the Tab- j o: C.:;·· team last year will be j :.ea - oach of the new county -.τ. lit· will be assisted by Bob by Hic.-.man. of Wadesboro. However. the top four teams in :he team league will enter a ' play ;f to determine who repre sent ···..' district against the win-' ner ·:" -one other area. Team ( r.-.r.one and team number! meet in a two out of j1 three ;: ies and team number two! and team number three will meet j a two out of three series. The· •v:r.r.r> .r. these rounds will then! play a series for the championship, I the number of games to be de cided by mutual consent of the t'A'o teams involved. Th.s playoff of the four top ; teearr.j will begin on July 7. It was also decided that the I ^rr.e club will notify the area :o.r..r.:. ioner immediately follow ing each contest of the results of -acr. and that the official starring 0f teams in the league »:.! be available at the commis- ' sioners office. ι The schedule for the regular season'^ play· is as follows: June 3—Wilmington at Laurin ourg. June 5—Kinston at Wilmington June 6—Warsaw at Tabor City June 9—Wilmington at Warsaw June 3—Laurinburg at Kinston -j une 11—Columbus County at Wilmington June !3—Laurinburg at Warsaw Juno 13—Wilmington at White viUe June 16—Warsaw at Kinston June 15—Columbus County at ^urinburg ^ '[Une 13—Wilmington at Tabor June 20—Kinston at Tabor City June 20—Laurinburg at Wil mington June 23—Columbus County at «arsaw "iine 2^—Kinston at Warsaw jUne 2:5"—Wilmington at Kinston viiv '0 —I^aurinburg at White June 28—Tabor City-Chad, at wruteviUe ^—Warsaw at Wilmington 2—Columbus County at wumingtoa July· 2—Kinston at Laurinburg Uiy ^ Warsaw at Laurinburg üi which either team start trlvei a lon2 distance will at ' 30 unless decided other oy two teams involved, di,. e$ Ia which relatively short tance 0f travel are required, ^ °*gm at 8:00. LEGION MEETING Ali important meeting of the Tabor City American Legion Post 101 will be held at Blackburn's Barbecue dining room at 7:30 Thursday night. Every member of the post who is interested in this year's baseball program is urged to attend. CANCER TAGS RAISE MONEY FOR SOCIETY Tag Day for the local fund, American Cancer Society, will be! held here again Saturday, local officials announced today. Nancy Spivey, Judy Norris and Ramona Spivey will be in charge of the solication and the distribu tion of educational material. The girls raised $53.20 for the local fund this past Saturday—Tag Day. DEMOCRATS WILL VOTE SATDBOAT Democrats in Columbus county ! and throughout North Carolina j will go to the polls in droves Sat- ! urday, May 31, to cast their vote; for public officials who will virtu- ! ally be elected at the primary. j On a statewide level, the race for governor between Hubert Olive ond William Umstead has ►he flight Columbus c^^ty and Tabor City have witnessed "ά , - rather hot campaign in this parti cular fight and how the results.ί in this area will be in this parti- j < :ular bout is anyone's guess. λ Also of considerable interest to |' local people is the race between ι < Representative F. Ertel Carlyle, )f Lumberton, and his opposition Toe Tally, of Fayetteville. Ernest Mayhan, of Wilmington, is a can iidate m this race but the big ir-ote is believed to favor Tally and Darlyle. The results will be in ioubt even in the minds of the candidates until the votes are counted. In the county, considerable in terest has been shown in the bounty Commissioners bout with a host of candidates out for all :he votes they can get. Bill Floyd is opposing Homer kvant for State House of Reprer »entatives. Loris Sergeant 3n Korean Front With the 7th Inf. Div. in Korea —Sgt. Jessie M. Jones, whose svife, Mildred, lives on Route 1, Loris, is now serving with the rth Infantry Division in the west :entral sector of the front in North Korea. Despite a halt in large-scale actions, men of the division move jut daily in raiding and recon naissance patrols against enemy nstallations. Sergeant Jones, a cook in Co. 1, 17th Infantry Regiment, ar rived in Korea April 2, 1952. He entered the Army in 1944 and has seen awarded the European Cam paign Medal with two campaign itars, tfce Good Conduct Medal s ind the World War II Victory \ Viedal. His mother, Mrs. Emma B. iones, lives on Route 3, Gali rants Ferry. 3EATH CLAIMS Γ. C. CLEMONS Funeral rites for John Creigh on Clemons, 47, were held from he Graveside at Long Cemetery, Tabor City, route 3, Saturday af eraoon at 4 o'clock. Mr. Clemons, ι farmer of Tabor City, route 3, lied in the James Walker Mem orial hospital, Wilmington, Fri lay afternoon at 6:30 following everal months illness. He is survived by his wife; two ods, J. C. Clemons, Jr., and Julius V. demons, and a daughter, Barbara Ann Clemons, all of the tome. Mrs. Bill Clemons was the din nr guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Sore in Bolton Wednesday eve ling. TALLY SPEAKS IN WHITEVILLE THURSDAY Joe Tally, Candidate for Cong gress, will speak at a mass meet ing in the Court House at White ville Thursday night, May 29th at 8:15 P. M. Mr. Tally will discuss his Congressional program and answer any questions presented from the floor. Mr. Tally has trav elled Columbus County extensive ly and has spoken to a large number of civic and farm groups. Mr. Tally has campaigned against corruption in Washington, against waste and high taxes, and against seizure of power by Washington. He has cited the great need for integrity and economy in govern ment and for better represeenta tion of the people in the Seventh Congressional District. Mr. Tally will discuss the farm program and present his views on how to protect our farm program from the affects that have been mde , against it. In addition to the farm program he will discuss the many other problems that confront us at this time. Pvt. Robert Hewett Completes Training Camp Pickett, Va. — May 26— Pvt. Robert D. Hewett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hewett, Rt. 1, Tabor City, completed basic training recently at the Medical Replacement Training Center lere. At MRTC, the Army's basic iraining school for medical en isted men, he has received eight -veeks of basic infantry training md eight weeks of medical train ing. The infar.try training covered subjects given to ail new soldiers. tfediAi. cu'ojects studied im.;.uded < Vnatomy, physiology, military , sanitation, method of evacuation, idministration of medicines, ; vard management, bandaging, ; lypodermic injection, phychology >f nursing, and operating room ■ echnique. MUSICAL PROGRAM »ET FOR BAPTIST i 2HURCH SUNDAY 1 Mrs. Nell R. Fowler and Miss ] Margaret Jo Jernigan will render 1 ι program of music at the Mount < ?abor Baptist church worship ι tour Sunday evening at 8 o'clock ; lev. P. C. Gantt, pastor, announ- ] ed. Mrs. Fowler is church or- - janist and Miss Jernigan is ; hurch pianist. 1 The program will include Crown Him with Many Crowns" |j >y Hopkins; "The Lost Chord"!ι >y Sullivan; "Largo From The ; iew World Symphony" by Dvo ak; "In A Monastery Garden" ι >y Cronham; and "The Lord's ] 1 rayer" by Malotte. ; The program is open to the ] »ublic and will be given during . he sermon period. 1 Poppy Day To Be j Dbserved Saturday Poppy Day will be observed | lere Satimiay, Memorial Day, ' roe Spivey, commander of the · ,'arlton M. Fonvielle Post, Vet- . rans of Foreign Wars, announ ed. Local girls will be in charge , f the sales. ! The poppies are made by dis bled veterans of both World V&rs and the Korean conflict and he money will be used for vet rans And their needy children. J j Ii WADE FOWLER ΓΟ SPEAK HERE »UNDAY A.M. Wade Fowler, ministerial stu ent who graduated from Mars Oil college this week, will de ver the sermon for the 11 o'clock worship hour Sunday morning at tie Mount Tabor Baptist church, :ev. P. C. Gantt, pastor an ounced. Mr. end Mrs. F. C. Wood and Hiss Marjorie Wood spent the weekend with friends in Kinston. )n Sunday, they attended the Oth anniversary ol Atlantic ,'hristian College in Wilson. Mrs. Vood is an alumnae of A .C. C. Mrs. Η. K. Gause and children, Marlene and Ronnie, left last zeek for Fort Knox, Ky. to be t home with Sgt Gause. COHMBSIONEBS Ο Κ PLANS FOB AGRICULTURAL BUILD! Columbus County moved a step nearer toward the erection of a new agricultural building Friday when the Board of County Com missioners authorized architects to draw up contracts for the sig natures of low bidders. Although original bids were ov er the $100,000 approved in the bond election, alterations and eli minations were made in plans in order to bring the total cost with in the authorized sum. Under the plans approved Fri day, the agricultural building will cost $98,500 for contingencies. Constructors are East Carolina Construction Company, Fayette ville, general construction; Wac camaw Electric Company, White ville, wiring; McGirt's Heating and Electric Company, Maxton, heating; and Thomas Stanley, Whiteville, plumbing. The Board of Commissioners will mt.et again on the first Mon day in June" to sign contracts. The First National Bank of Whiteville was designated as the official depository for agricultural building funds and the waccamaw Bank and Trust Company was designated as the depository for hospital bond funds. The agreement on contract pri ces at Friday's meeting had the effect '>i making certain that the agricultural building will be erect ed as planned. Perfect Attendance Roster Announced For T.C. School The pei-fect attendance roster! for the Tabor City school for the year 1952-53 was released this week by Principal C. H. Pinner. By hone rooms the list in cludes: Earle Floyd, Sammy Jacobs and Dian Faulk; Miss Ro Derta McCulloch — Wanda Lou Fowler, Patricia Norris, and Eliz ibeth Ann Nealey; Mrs. Leon W. Bullard—Frances Watts and De 'on Spivey; Mrs. C. H. Pinner— iayford Smalll; Miss Kate Jones | -Lenore Beck, Judy Buffkin, Mary Jo Fowler, and Linda ^ood; Miss Anne Brooks Mc-j ?ougan — Ronald Ray, Shirley Vnn Duncan, Brenda Gale Nor-1 •is; Betty Jo Stanley, Ann Ward,' Sdith Williams, Lessie Jane bright and Shirley Duncan; Mrs. λ V. Hicks—Linda Wright, Judy; Srainger, Hilda Gray Spivey;' Miss Myrtle Bailey — Nancy ?aulk; Mrs. Margurete C. Smith —Eldon Russ, Arthur Tompkins, Linda Long and Gwendolyn bright. Mrs. Laura F. Sarvis—Richard Hills, I. S. Wright, Kay Frances 5ore, Phyllis Norris, Geraldine ioswell, Princess Watts and Harold Norris; Mrs. Geraldine Caruso — Betty Jo McDaniels, Douglas Beck, Gary Wayne Gore; kfiss Lois Summerford — Clay >urn Coleman; Miss Hazel Todd —Vernon Stephens, Judy Norris,! Bobbie Jean Shepherd; Mrs. 31an E. Hufham—Harry Strick and and Carolyn Beck; Miss Eva Mills—Toby Fowler,.Faye Norris, Pinitta Grainger, Peggy Wright, ind Doris Ward; Mrs. W. H. ihelley, Jr.—Jimmy Spivey (five rears). Miss Helen Butler—Mabel Tur-j >eville and Frances Norris; Mrs. j Nettie Hammond — Lollie Jane Spivey; Miss Janet Tomlinson— jinwood Spivey and Virginia Jore; Miss Sarah Britt—Gayle Celley and Alene Nobles; Worth >alton—Joan "ox, Willaree Nor is, Billy Worth Spivey; Sanford 3ittman—Jane Smith and Bar >ara Spivey; F. F. Thompson— Bernard Norris and James Willi· ims; Miss Carolyn Todd, Mitchell Vray, Billy Spivey and Gail i'owler. High School — Mrs. Frances taynor—Dock Fowler, Jr., Est Bne Nobles and Janet Watts; Irs. S. L. Jackson — Mary j Janady; S. W. Caruso—Lou Floy Vatts; Bill Ratteree—Evangline Stheridge; Mrs W. W. Woody— larold Jordan. URS. JOE TALLY VISITS HERE On behalf of her husband's andidacy for congress of the Sev inth District, Mrs. Joe Tally of "ayetteville visited shere yester lay. She was accompanied by riends from Fayetteville and they rere dinner guests of Mrs. R. C. iairelson, Jr. Mrs. Bessie W, Byrd Claimed By Death Mrs. Bessie Ward Byrd, died at her home in Conway, C., Wednesday afternoon,. May 21, at 5 o'clock. Although she, had been in declining health £Öq a long period she was confinw | to her bed only for several daj^j^ prior to her death. , Μ Funeral rites were held frr^·'^ the chapel of the Inman Funev ι home in Tabor City Friday after noon at 4 o'clock with the G. W. Crutchfield, pastor of Γ Saint Paul Methodist church o: ciating. He was assisted by Rev. P. C. Gantt, pastor of Mount Tabor Baptist church, the Rev. A. F. Ragan, pastor, the Conway, S. C., Metho" church. Interment followed in family plot at Myrtle G: Cemetery. Pallbearers were nephews _ ray Ward and Jack B. Hyman^fef \ Florence, S. C., Dr. W. K. RogÄÖ \ and Norman M. Rogers of Lortöf & S. C„ Α. V. Elliot, Jr., and Eug&sft? § Ward of Tabor City. ~ ^ A daughter of the late Elia Hamilton Ward and the late J. C. Ward of Dillon, S. C., Tabor City she was the wife! the late W. W. Byrd. She was.^ |1 charter member of the Saint P^Um^ Methodist church and resided. Tabor City from 1907 until abr""" ' one year ago. She was born, Dillon county September 5, 32 She is survived by on soar Hoyt Byrd of Loris, S. C.; daughters, Mrs. C. L. Che^tMtj and Miss Kate Howard B; the home; three brothers, Μ F. Ward of Savannah, Ga.;* A. Ward of Whiteville; and Vi C. Ward of Tabor City; five"; ters, Mrs. Ν. M. Rogers, Sr, Loris, S. C., Mrs. Maye W. venson of Florence, S. C., Mrsij * A J. Walsh of Brentwood, Md.il ι Mrs. Α. V. Elliott, Sr., and Mijf I Blanche W. Hyman of Tabor Ci and one granddaughter, Sa Gayle Chestnut of the home NEW EMPLOYEE WITH LOCAL WESTERN UNION Miss Edna Stroud has accepte a position with the local Westei Union and bus station. A 19" graduate of the Tabor City Hif School, she is the daughter Mrs. R. B. McKee and the laf John Stroud. 'A# The new employee will assume I the duties of Mrs. Pricy Fowlde<j who has resigned. Her resignaltj tion will be effective about June7! 1 at which time she will retunJ«j to Raleigh, her former home. J Jn Schedule Announced Η For Baptist School ijj The annual Daily VacatioÄj Bible School of the Mount Tabof^ Baptist church will get underwaj Friday with preparation d— Mrs. C. C. Leggette, princij announced. Students will rep to the church Friday afternc at 4 o'clock for registration af which a parade will be stage Following the parade student! will return to the church for a social period and refreshments. The school will open Monday morning with classes in all de· p partments — Nursery, Primary, ^ Beginner, Junior and Intermedi ate. The hours 8:30 to 11:30 will jj ae observed Monday through Fri- « lay for a two week period and b the school is open to all the cMi- η Iren in the community. Seniors Eentertainei With Party Here Mrs. W. W. Woody and Nell R. Fowler entertained members of the Tabor City High) school graduating class with .r outdoor weiner roast at the hq· of the former Monday evema. May 19. About 53 attended. 101 Mrs. Lewis Gore, Mrs. M. F. Morris, and Mrs. James Brice et-J tended the final commenc< exercises at Coker college at which time Miss Cricket B1 burn graduated. They were companied by Cricket's pari Mr. and Mrs. Guy Blackburn Loris. Thomas of^the'/Kn ΚΙΰχ KIän Carolinas, returned to Co us County Monday through φβ persuasive powers of the law. sharp contrast to the 5,000 ns who attended his initial rally last August, less than ople were on hand to catch pse of him as he appeared ;.€£he courthouse about 10:30 k to accept service on war charging him with conspira 6 kidnap and conspiracy to as in connection with two Co us floggings. Dressed in a natty navy blue Hamilton made bond of 0 in each of the two cases, bonds were signed by Mrs. r Bullock of Fair Bluff who in the Spring Branch sec of Horry County. e former Grand Dragon, who oted himself to Imperial rd followihg the Klan inva of this county /last year, is uled to appear in Recorder's t on June 10. j Hamilton, accompanied by one *nis lawyers, Waldo Hyman of :nce, had nothing to say dur his brief sojourn in Whiteville shook hands with a couple of ty officials but made no com t pertinent to the charges for ι faich he was arrested Saturday. Unrobed and without any white wed "Imperial Guard," Hamil >n looked like an average, un Mctacular businessman. #he 44 - year - old Hamilton, and bespectacled, surrend red in the office of his lawyer ι Florence, S. C. about 2:30 'ftbck Saturday afternoon, some ^jjiours after warrants had been worn out against him by North larolina officers. Ähe surrender was made sever iJiours after George Keels of Krence revealed that the Klan Sfcftain would give himself up hat point. e ex-grocer posted $10,000 fiediately after his arrest and mediately in a friend's car refused to tell newsmen he was going. 'milton waived extradition agreed to appear here this ming to post the appearance d. ' bond, $5,000 in each of the i charges against him, was ed at Florence by Mrs .Waldo an, Sr., mother of Waldo Hy who is a member of the law of Keels and Hyman, Ha mil 's lawyers. Is has been in the spotlight previous occasions as counsel South Carolina Klansmen. He resented Hamilton when the ial Wizard was indicted and icted in Federal Court for g a scurrilous card through mails. More recently, Keels is in Columbus Superior Court counsel for Harvey Barfield, chols, S. C. Klansman, who was ttvicted and given two years in s Johnson flogging. State Bureau of Investigation ents took the warrants to Co mbia on Friday. A fugtiive war st was signed at Lexington and e hunt for Hamilton was on. it he had left his home at Lees tte when officers went there to Best him. Despite his later statement that ίκ,went to Augusta, Ga. "on busi es" there was a strong suspicion Μ he had gotten wind of deve ents and had flown the coop rately. I Chief James A. Powell had Iven the go-ahead signal to Jfents James F. Bradshaw and W. Lowdermilk about 5 dock Friday afternoon. They Kfl been waiting for word to pro sed. Sheriff H. Hugh Nance accom them and remained there the long vigil. ilicitor Clifton L. Moore of ;aw prepared his warrants rtreral days before they were to ϊ served on Hamilton. One war nt charges the KICK chieftain a consipirator in the flogging Evergreen Flowers, a Negro η who lives near Chadbourn who was beaten with sticks the night of January 18, 1951. 'We didn't know there was a lansman within miles," at the fne of that flogging, Solicitor Coore said. Gradually, as the evi {Dce unravelled, it became ap irent that the downfall of the ■rth Carolina branch of the Klan rd be traced to the beeating of Flowers woman. She was beaten by a mob "of I or 50 men" and was struck once jfth the butt of a gun. He'r hus-1 md was believed to have been ■ intended victim, but he escap fby fleeing out a back door, e Flowers family moved to Gordo after the incident, tenant home they occupied destroyed by fire 33 days lU»tt9MUtan.of the tire mains a mystery. Solicitor Moore also linked Hamilton with the flogging of Woodrow Jackson, the Whiteville mechanic, who was beaten in a cemetery for excessive drinking. And the solicitor intimated strong ly he may be able40 connect the grand dragon with at least one other flogging case, in the role of conspirator. Evidently, Hamilton knew the heat was on before the SBI ag ents and Sheriff Nance confirmed lis suspicions. The grand dragon lad scheduled a rally and cross 3urning at Darlington, S. C., last week, Suddenly he sent word over the Klan grapevine that the rally ivas off. Klan activities, the boss klans nan added, were suspended until farther notice. Hamilton has been arrested on three occasions since he assumed the leadership of the Ku Klux [Clan in 1949. Charged with conspiracy to in äte to mob violence in Horry bounty in 1950, he escaped trial when the grand jury refused to return indictments against him und several of his klan associates. This case grew out of a Myrtle Beach demonstration by the Klan it a Negro night club. A Conway policeman in the traditional robe jf the Klan was slain in an ex :hange of gunfire. The Klan's Imperial Wizard al so faced a similar charge two rears ago at Camden after a iTMCA worker at Sumter was beaten by the Klan. A Federal grand jury indicted Hamilton last June for violating he postal laws after he had been iccused of mailing a postal card containing statements "obviously ntended to reflect injuriously up >n the character and conduct" of Vilton E. Hall, a newspaper pub isher at Anderson. To escape a prison term of one rear, Hamilton chose to pay a il,000 fine. Since the first flogging began η Columbus County late last year, •fficers had been anxious to grab iamilton. They got their chance ifter several admitted Klansmen trere put on the witness stands in Vhiteville and Wilmington, and iter the KKK members had been [rilled privately by State and Fed ral investigators. Kev uonnor, au-year-οια iarmer { Cerro Gordo, Route 1, who »leaded no contest to charges that Le helped flog Woodrow Johnson, Vhiteville mechanic, first intro [uced the name of Hamilton in Columbus Superior Court. Early Brooks, exalted cyclops f the Fair Bluff Klavern, read a etter from Hamilton at one of the Uan meetings, Connor remem iered. The letter, Connor added, said that some Eair Bluff women ad written him (Hamilton) that horse trader would have this woman's husband arrested and lien go cut with her." Hamilton said "he wanted it aken care of immediately," Con or quoted the letter as saying. Steve Edmund, the 25-year-old oly poly Columbus farmer who /as a star witness for the prose ution in both the State and Fed ral trials, said he filled out his üan membership blank "and gave ; to Hamilton." Along with the blank, Edmund aid he gave the KKK grand ragon $10 as an initiation fee, 6 for a robe and hood, and $2 >r the quarter's dues. Another link in the evidence gainst Hamilton was forged by falter A. Murphy, who is in large of the Charlotte FBI of ce. In the Federal trial, Murphy istified that after Early Brooks as arrested, Brooks said Hamil >n promised him (Brooks) $4 it of each $10 collected from new lan members. Swayed By Speech Like Edmund, another former Jansman, Frank Lewis of Fair luff, said he was swayed by amilton's vitriolic speech at the rst Klan cross-burning in Co imbus in August, 1951. Lewis, former Fair Bluff police iter repented and helped impli ite other Klansmen. Referring to the cross-burning hen Hamilton, surrounded by ooded figures, stood on an im rovised platform to deliver hll seeches of hate, Lewis said true illy: "I wish I'd took a rock and nocked him (Hamilton) off that and." Hamilton always has contended tat the only beatings the Enan >ndone are those which occur it the ballot boxes.' He had kradjr proclaimed that "disgrun ed persons," non-Klan nmnbef*. ive carried out floggings (Continued On Page 10)
Tabor City Tribune (Tabor City, N.C.)
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May 28, 1952, edition 1
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