Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / July 11, 1924, edition 1 / Page 2
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DIES OF POISON BATTLE AGAINST POISON IN CURRED FROM INJURY PLAY ING TENNIS. Washington.—Calvin Coolldge, Jr., son of the President, died Monday at Walter Reed hospital of blood poison, ing. The end came after the boy had battled with the utmost bravery and fortictude for five days against a dis ease which had racked his body with pain and sapped the reserve strength of his frail constitution. President and Mrs. Coolidge, who had maintained constant vigil at the hospital were at his bedside, hopeful and cheering and comforting their son to the last. Three sinking spells Sunday night brought him to the point of death A slight rally Monday gave slight hope, but soon thereafter he began again to lose ground and he neveT ral lied again. A sinking spell, the fourth he had suffered in 24 hours, brought death notwithstanding the use of oxygen and other restortatives the courage which had withstood crisis after crisis and had beaten death off repeatedly, was unable to meet the final attack. The collapse began at 6:30 o'clock and he gradually sank into eternity. He died at 10:30 o'clock. The infection developed from a broken blister on the right foot incur red during a tennis match with his brother John on the White House courts. The poison, however, once started had spread so rapidly that medical skill was without avail. A numbei of specialists were called to act with White House physicians on the case and a desperate fight for life was made %by the boy, who struggled in great pain and with high fever. White Indians of Panama Arrive. New York.—Richard Marsh, civi engineer and explorer, arrived on the liner Calamares with three “white In dians" whom he discovered in the San Bias wilderness of Panamak. His charges, together with five copper-col ored members of the San Bias tribe of Indians, who also accompanied him were detained aboard the ship by the immigration authorities. The “whit^ Indians” are Alo, 16 Chepu, 10, and Marguerite, 14. They have white skin, burned pink by the tropical sun, pale blue eyes, goldeE hair and white eye lashes and brows Marguerite’s hair is bobbed, the work of an American barber in Colon. Hei hands and face are covered with brown splotches resembling enlarged freck les. The children showed extreme nervousness in facing the motion pic ture and still cameras. Gaston Farmers Lose By Flood. Gastonia.—Gaston county farmers face one of the most dismal crop out looks since the famous flood year oi 1916, unless conditions change mater ially and at once, according to a digest of opinions reported by a score oi more of farmers from every section of Gaston county. As a general rule, farmers during the past two weeks on account oi the heavy rains, have not been able to plow a furrow. In many instances there has been no plowing done in three week or longer. For instance. Mr. Jackson, of the New Hope section, reports 3 1-2 days plowing in the past four weeks, and J. O. Armstrong, of Belmont, four days in the past five weeks. Cotton and corn are both suffering. In some sections corn is the worst hit; in others, cotton. In thee sectionr of the county, chiefly in the southern and eastern where late planting oi corn is the rule, there is a dismal prospect for corn. Half the crop has not even been planted and there is small hope of getting it in the ground within the next two weeks. MacDonald Mystifies English Leaders London. — Prime Minister Mac Donald surprised the house of com mens by the announcement that mis understandings which had arisen with the French government over the invi tation to the inter allied conference at London, had decided him to accept the suggestion of Premieh Herriot, of France, to pay a hurried visit to France to smooth out the difficulties. The members of the house were evidently uneasy and mystified. Both former Premier Herbert H. Asquith and former Premier Stanley Baldwin, leaders respectively of the liberals and conservatories confessed them selves perplexed by Mr. Mac-Donald’s statement. Mr. Asquith declaring lrm self “bewildered regarding what has happened and what is going to hap pen.” Many Nations To Join London Meet London.—Prime Minister MacDon ald, of Great Britain told the House of Commons that it was hoped that the allied states, represented at the inter allied conference at London July 16 would be the British empire, France. Italy, Japan, Belgium, Greece. Portu gal, Rummania, Czecho, Slovakia and Jugo. Slavia. The United States am bassador, Frank B. Kellogg, would also attend, as had already been announced by the American Government. Mr. Mac Donald sad. CARRIERS ELECT OFFICERS important Resolutions Adopted and Other Business Transacted at Closing Session. Greensboro.—:G V. Hawkins, of Shelby, was elected president of the North Carolina Rural Letter Carriers association at the closing session of the two-day convention here. Other officers for the ensuing year are: Vice president. O. W. Hines, Me Leansville; secretary, J. P. Turner, Burlington (re-elected): treasurer, \V. P. Cook, Asheville. Officers were installed just before the session ended. Delegates chosen to attend the na tional convention are: Carl H. Howard, St. Pauls: John Norwood, Norwood; Neal Thompson. Vineland; J. S. Devinney, Julian: A. S. Barnes, Wilson. The convention voted to meet next year at Salisbury. The convention went through a busy day. Committees made their reports, routine business was handled and res olutions adopted. Chief among the latter was one asking senators and congressmen to give united support in behalf of the equipment bill, asking that it be brought up at the next session of Con gress, parsed and made retroactive from July 1, 1924. The equipment bill proposes that rural carriers be allowed six cents per mile for equipment. It is not a salary bill, but the carriers think they should have some compensation for epuipment. Another resolution put the associa tion on record as desiring all roads used by carriers in discharge of their duties be made public roads; another that carriers be paid by postmaster; another that rural carriers be free from license tax on automobiles used for carrying mail exclusively. Two Drown Due To Tilting of Boat. Kinston.—Evidence to the coroner here indicates that Daniel Dickerson and Clarence Grant, who lost their lives in Gray's millpond, near Insti tute, were drowned as the result of an accident. Dickerson and Grant are reported to have been members of a fishing party. Four men were in a small boat on the mill run. One of them, said to have been Dickerson, in moving tilted the boat until it came near capsizing. Efforts "were made to get the craft, back on an even keel. It foundered, and the occu pants found themselves struggling in deep water. Linwood Suggs and Ro land Sheppard swam ashore. To Reconstruct Catawba Power Plant. Charlotte.—Another step in the wa terpower development program of the Southern Power company was as sured when announcement was made at the offices of this com pany of plans for the immediate re construction of the old Catawba hy dro-electric plant located 20 miles south of Charlotte. The new plant will have a generating capacity of 80, 000 horsepower, being of the same size as the Mountain Island plant, 12 miles from Charlotte, which was com pleted seven months ago, and almost twice the size of the new Rhodhiss plant, development of which was started a few months ago. The first step in the actual con struction of the new Catawba plant was the letting of a contract for the building of a railway track from a point near Fort Mill, S. C., to the site of the plant, a distance of five miles. This contract was let the McDowell Contracting company of Marion. Work on this railway is to begin im mediately, and will be pushed vigor ously until the road is ready for traf lc. Taxes Increase Twenty Per Cent. Raleigh.—Commissioner of Revenue R. A. Doughton announced that col lections of taxes for the first six months of 1924 total $4,498,044.66 as against $3,697,165.97 for the same period last year, an increase of more than 20 per cent. For the calendar year 1923, total collections by the Department of Rev enue amounted to $5,750,067.73 and this sum is expected to be exceeded materially this year. The collections to date are divided as follows: income taxes, $3,901,973. 88; inheritance taxes, $253,256.08; li cense taxes, $259,976.89; franchise taxes, $85,771.70; interest on bank balances, $6,066.09. The principal taxes to be collected during the re mainder of the year are from fran chises and licenses. Negroes Escape From Gang. Greensboro.—Nine negro convicts escaped from the city’s stockade at a reservoir under construction seven miles from here. One has been re captured. They were all serving short terms. First Tobacco Harvested. Kinston—First harvesting of tobac co has been reported from a number of farms in this section during the past three days. Barns have been “fired” in the Moseley Hall, Tower Hill road and Aldridge communities and elsewhere. In most instances growers declared the first curings were of unusually good quality. In this part of the belt curing will be in full swing before July 15, the earliest date at which harvesting was antici pated by observers here a month ago. DEMOCRATIC BALLOT FOR NOMINEE TOTAL VOTE 1098. NECESSARY TO ELECT 732. re m u ■a c O First Second Third Fourth Fifth Sixth Seventh Eighth Ninth Tenth 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th 20th 21st 22nd 23rd 24th 25th 26th 27th 28 th 29th 30th 31st 32nd 33d 34th 35th 36th 37th 38th 39th 40th 41st 42d 43rd 44th 45th 46th 47th 48th 49th 50th 51st 52nd 53rd 54th 55th 56th 57th 5Sth 59th 60 th 61st 62nd 63rd 64th 65th 66th 67th 68th 69th 70th 71st 72nd 73rd 74th 75th 76th 77th 78th 79 th 80th 81st 82d 83d 84th 85th 86th 87th 42% 43 42 41 Mi 41% 42% 42% 48 45% 44 42 41% 40% 40% 39% 41% 42 39% 39% 45% 45% 45% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 39% 38% 39% 39% 39% 40 39 38 37% 37% 38% 42 42% 43 39% 42% 40 40 39% 39% 39 40 42 42 40 40 39% 40 39% 46% 46% 38 37% 37% 37% 38% 47 46% 46% 47% 49 50 46% 48 49 5S% 40% 40% 38 38 o o T3 < > re D ja o DC 431% 431 437 443% 443 443 443 444% 444% 471% 476 478% 477 475% 479 478 471% 470% 474 432 430 438% 438% 43S% 436% 415% 413 412 415 415% 415% 415% 404% 445 439% 438% 444 444 499% 505% 509% 503% 483% 4S4% 4S3% 4S7 484% 483% 462% 461% 442% 412% 423% 427 426% 430 430 495 473% 469% 469% 4S9 466% 488% 492 495 490 488% 530 528% 528% 527% 528 510 513 513 513 511 507% 454 433 413% 418 388% 380% 353% 333% 41 31 41 42 41 34 IS 34 19 34% 19 58% 19 55 21 57 21 63 20 57% 20 59 19 60 19 64% 19 64% 20 61 46 63 2S 64 99 66 22 84% 21 122 22 125 22 123% 23 129% 22 129% 23 126 23 125 23 128% 24 126 23 124% 23 126% 23 127% 24 12S 23 121 24 107% 24 107 24 107 24 107 24 106 23 71 24 70% 24 70 24 67 44 71 44 71 44 73 44 72 45 70% 44 70% 45 64% 44 64 43 67% 42 59 43 63 43 62 43 62% 43 58% 43 58% 23 89% 23 60 23 60 23 60 23 60% 22 63 24 61% 23 71% 21 74% 21 75% 21 72% 21 64 21 67 21 68 21 65 21 66 E 23 78% 25 78% 25 76% 2 4 76% 28% 71 29% 73% 29%70% 28%71 27% 72% 25 66 27%6S 25 65% 23% 85% 240% 251% 255% 260 261 258% 261% 273% 278 299% 303 301 303% 306% 305% 305% 312% 312% 311% 307% 307% 307% 30S 308 30S% 311% 316% 316% 321 323% 332% 322 318% 311 323% 323 321 321 321 317% 317% 318% 319 319 319 319 320 321 320% 320% 328 320% 320% 320% 320% 320% 320% 331 331% 330% 335% ?3S% 315 325% 336% 338% 336% 336% 335 334% 333% 334 335 364 366 368 367 363% 366% 367% 365 366 365 365 363 360 361% 3 re (f) 7 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 12 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 60 61 60 59 59 59 59 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 60 59 59 59 59 59 57 57 57 49 54 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 55 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 50 48 54 1 c o X o o 0£ 22% 21% 21% 21% 43 23 21 20 17% 17% 17% 17% 17% 17% 17% 17% 17% 18% 17% 17% 17% O re CC re c o 17% 17% 17% 17% 18% 18 17% 17% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 17% 17% 18% 17% 17% 17% 17% 17% 17% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 17% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16 % 16% 166% 16% 16% 16% 16 Vi 16% 16% 161/2 16% 16% 23% 25 25 29 45 25 25 25 26 25 25 25 26 25 24 25 25 44 30 30 25 24 25 30 29 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 2 8 8 8% 8 9 29 16 24 4 29 25 25 24 24 24 7 7 1% 1% 2% 3% 32 20% 24 1% 24 24 24 24 25 24 24 % % % 1% 1 0 0 28% 0 24 24 24 24 24 25 24 24 25 24 25 24 24 25 25 26 25 25 25 26 26 25 25 25 25 26 25 25 25 25 25 28 28 28 27 21 17 68 73 78 76 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2% 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 3 3 3 3 2% 3 3 2 1 0 0 1 2 2 4% 2 2 2 6 6 4 8 4 4 72% 1% 67% 3 72% 5 71 4 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30% 304% 32 311/2 311/2 31 31 31 30 30 31 30 30 32 32 33 31 32 32 34 34 33 33 32 32 31 33 33% 32 32 32 31 30 30 31 31 31 31 31 31 57 58 63 93 94 92 97 97 97 40i/2 42% 42% 37% 37% 56 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3% 41/2 4% 6% 5 4 5 4 24 24 86 87 92 93 20 23 20 29 28 27 30 29 32% 12 11 13% 11 11 11 11 10 10 9 10 5 5 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 3 3 3 4 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 $ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Scattered Votes. Harrison 20*4. Ferris 6*4, Silzer 28, Thompson 1, W. J. Bryan 1. Thirty-fourth ballot: Ferris 30, Owen 5. Thirty-fifth ballot: Owen 25, J. W. Gerard 1. Thitry-sixth ballot: Owen 25, Dohey 1, Gerard 1. Thirty-seventh ballot: Owen 24. Thitry-eighth ballot: Owen 24. Thirty-ninth ballot: Owen 4, Jackson 1. Fortieth ballot: Owen 4. Forty-first ballot: Owen 4, Cummings 1, Spellacy 1. Forty-Second ballot. Owen 4, Spel lacy 1. Fifty-second ballot. Bryan 6, Owen 4, Battle 20. Fifty-third ballot: Owen 4, Bryan 6. Forty-third ballot: Owen 4. Forty-fourth ballot: Owen 4, Edwards 1. Fifty-fourth ballot. Owen 3, Roosevelt 1, Bryan 7. Forty, fifth. 46th, 47th, 48th, 49th, 50th and 51st: Owen 4. Fifty-fifth ballot: Owen 4, Bryan 3. Fifty-sixth ballot: Owen 4, Bryan 3. Fifty-seventh ballot: Owen 4, Bryan 3. Fifty-eighth ballot: Owen 4, Bahrman 20, Bryan 2. Fifty-ninth ballot: Owen 24, Bryan 2. Sixtieth ballot: Owen 24, Bryan 2. Sixty-first ballot. Owen 24, Bryan 2. Sixty-Second ballot: Owen 24, Bryan 2. Sixty-third ballot: Owen 24, Ferris 28, Bryan 2. Sixty-fourth ballot: Owen 24, Farris 2%, Bryan 2. Sixty,fifth ballot: Owen 24, Bryan 3, Baker 48, Wheeler 3, Ferris 6J/2. Sixty-sixth ballot: • Owen 62, Baker 55, Bryan 3. _ _, Sixty-eighth ballot: Owen 22, Bryan 3, Rogers 1, M. A. Coolidge Va, Baker 57. Sixty-ninth ballot: Owen 2, Bryan 2, Baker 56, Daniels 2\'z. Seventieth ballot: Owen 2, Baker 56, Bryan 3. Seventh-first ballot: Owen 2, Baker, 56, Bryan 2. Seventy-second ballot: Owen 2, Bak er 57Y2. Bryan 2. Seventy-third ballot: Owen 2, Baker 54, Bryan 2. Seventy-fourth ballot: Owen 2, Baker 5, Bryan 4, Kevin 1. Seventy-fifth ballot. Owen 4, Baker 2, Bryan 4. Seventy-sixth ballot: Owen 4, Baker 2, Bryan 4. Seventy-seventh ballot: Owen 4 Baker 2, Bryan 4. Seventy-seventh ballot: 'Owen 4, Baker 1, Bryan 4, Roosevelt 1. Seventh-eighth ballot: Ferris 17, Bry an 3, Gerard 1, Roosevelt 1. Seventy-ninth ballot: Ferris 18, Gerard ^ 1, Roosevelt 1, Bryan 3. Eighieth ballot: Ferris 17y2, Daniels 1, Bryan 4V2, Roosevelt 1. Eighty-first ballot: Owen 21, Ferris 16, Daniels 1, Bryan 4%, Roosevelt 1, Barnet 1. Eighty-second ballot: Owen 21, Fer ris 12, Daniels 1, Bryan 4V6, Roose velt 1, Eighty-third ballot: Owen 20, Wheel er 1, Ferris 7%, Bryan 5%, Roose velt 1. Eighty-fourth ballot. Owen 20, Bryan 6*4, Roosevelt 1, Coyne 1. Eighty-fifth ballot: Owen 20, Bryan 9%, Roosevelt 1, Baker 6. Eighty-sixth ballot: Owen 20, Mere dith 26, Malony 1, Bryan 7, Roose velt 1. Eighty-seventh ballot: Owen 20, Meredith 2, Bryan 7, Roosevelt 1, Mrs. Miller 1. OILMEAL AND CORN FAVORED BY SHEEP Some sheep feeders have been re porting excellent result* from feed ing a quarter of a pound of linseed meal a day to lambs In the qorn field. Losses have been small and giains very satisfactory so far as they could be estimated. Similar reports have been made by others feeding lambs in the dry lot, though not under circum stances that allow a fair comparison. Some who have tried linseed meal feeding in the field have reported dif ficulty in getting the lambs to take it, says Chas. I. Bray, animal hus bandry department, Colorado Agricul tural college. An explanation of the value of lin sbed meal with corn lies in the pro tein balance of the two feeds. A sug gested reason for feed-lot losses from heavy corn feeding is that unused or. unbalanced proteins miiy act as poi sons in the body. Proteins are com plex compounds of simple substances called amino-acids, some of these be ing highly necessary. Feeds vary con siderably in the proportions of amiivo acids, contained, some proteins being entirely lacking In one or more of these necessary amino-acids. When this Is the case, another protein must be added containin';!, an extra supply of the missing amino-acids. Now linseed meal proteins and corn proteins appear to supplement each other in this way. At the Wisconsin experiment station tests with young pigs in regard to utilization of pro teins showed that linseed meal pro teins used alone were only 17 per cent available and the proteins of corn and barley were only 22 per cent avail able. But when a protein mixture was made up of three-quarters com protein and one-quarter linseed meal protein, the mixed proteins were 37 per cent available, shewing the value of each in supplehienting the other. Alfalfa probably supplies most of the amino-acids needed to balance corn, which is one reason why alfalfa and corn makes such a good combina tion in lamb feeding. However, in lamb feeding trials by E. J. Maynard at the Colorado experiment station last winter lambs getting linseed oil meal in addition to corn and alfalfa, gained three pounds more per head, brought 40 cents per hundred more on the market and made 38 cents per head more profit than those on alfalfa and corn only. Tankage Good for Pigs on Rape and Blue Grass During the summer of 1920, they found at the Iowa station that it paid to feed tankage in connection with corn to pigs on either rape or blue grass pasture. The pigs getting corn alone on rape pasture gained only two thirds of a pound per head daily and required for 100 pounds of gain 623 pounds of corn, whereas the pigs getting tankage as well as corn gained 1.42 pounds per head daily and re spired for 100 pounds of gain 355 pounds of corn and 29 pounds of tank age. Each pound of tankage saved t pounds of corn. On blue grass, the results were almost identical with the results on rape, a pound of tankage saving T pounds of corn. Earlier experiments at the Iowa sta tion did not indicate such a decided ad vantage for tankage. It would seem, however, that even under the most un favorable conditions a pound of tank age should replace 3 pounds of corn on rape pasture or about 4 or 5 pounds on blue grass pasture. Market Through Sheep Sheep not only afford a good mar ket for salable feeds but for unsal able material, such ns the forage around fences and ditch banks, tlie pick-up on meadows and stubble fields and other odds and ends of pasture not of sufficient acreage to use for cattle. Live Stock Squibs Scrubs lead—Straight to failure. • * * Pure bred cattle figure out 49 per cent more efficient in production than scrubs. * * * An important thing is to provide cleun dry shelters for the sows and their pigs. • * * Alfalfa and clover pastures are our best hog pastures and these can be used as soon as growth starts In the spring. • • • When the farmer buys stock he might better make It lite stock than stock In a concern he knows nothing about. • * * Timothy hay is very undesirable as a feed for fattening cattle and clover or some other legume hay should be used if obtainable. * * * Tuberculosis is a menace to the hog business. In districts where skim milk, whey and other dairy products are fed to the hogs, contagion is likely. * * * With average prices for wool, a breeding ewe almost pays with her fleece for her upkeep daring the year. And every little lamb means just bo miirh nrorfit MOTHER! Watch Child’s Bowels "California Fig Syrup" is Children's Harmless Laxative M 1 When your child Is constipated, bil ious, has colic, feverish breath, coat ed tongue, or diarrhea, a teaspoonful of genuine “California Fig Syrup” sweetens the stomach and promptly cleans the bowels of poisons, gases, bile, souring food and waste. Never cramps or overacts. Contains no nar cotics or soothing drugs. Children love its delicious taste. Ask your druggist for genuine “Cal ifornia Fig Syrup” which has full di rections for babies nnd children of all ages plainly printed on bottle. Moth er! You must say "California” or you may get an imitation fig syrup. Grafted New Eyelids A remarkable feat in surgery was recently performed in Liverpool, Eng land, when eyelids were grafted on an American chemist, the skin be®g taken from his arm. A chemical explosion in a laboratory during the war cost the patient the loss of his eyelids and sight. Now, however, he can see and even eyelashes are growing across his new lids. DreIt br..r-v. with .00 h . / \”W out .ore 1 ^ ten. he.Uni- .ev«.> tbro.t* take ^ ^ t.,tele.«. od° titne. « o.V- barode»«. tod *b*ol»‘«W„ „*T,.C( CBESE EBBOUGHMt^ Be« .Vaseline »&sell V«5S5s;w;«aJ® r;S‘t^,jVa; *SS5gS& p*u>fcafl« taction. .3s®?r“ Uncle Sam’s Health Good The last year lias been the health iest year on record in the Uftited States, according to statistics (X the United States public health service and leading Insurance companies. Tu berculosis, heart disease, apoplexy, Bright’s disease, influenza, pneumonia and diabetes all showed a substantial decrease from the year before.—Pop ular Science Monthly. For bloated feeling and distressed breath ing due to Indigestion you need a medicine as well as a purgative. Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills are both. Adv. Says Horses Talk Joseph C. Drum, a writer of west ern stories, who Is a graduate of Bos ton college and of Georgetown univer sity, maintains in some of his writings that horses have a form of language that Is not only understood among themselves, but by a good horseman. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS 254 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE nnAnou treated one DROPSY"™* free •I ww., Htpi. C ATLANTA, GEORGIA. (Established 1895— 28 ymarm of muccrnmm in trmating Dropsy, } on your eyes. MITCHELL EYE SALVE heals Inflamed eyes, granulated lids, styes, etc. Bar*. Safe. Speedy. 25o at »11 druggists. Hall A Ruckel, N. T a
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
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July 11, 1924, edition 1
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