Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / March 25, 1949, edition 1 / Page 1
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w;vi!-vfi-f-i-r'fti"!carw-jb'" -iTrtKxjtxfTmmrufpt in ?nnrnr7 NEWS-TIMES OFFICES Beaufort . 120 Crn St. Phona 4481 Morehead City 04 Arandall St. Phona 861 1 10c UVJ Eight Page Colored Comic A Merger of THE BEAUFORT NEWS (Established 1912) and THE TWIN CITY TIMES (Established 1936) 38th YEAR NO. 22 SIXTEEN PAGES MOREHEAD CITY A.ND BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1949 PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS Two Towns Will Be Represented At Winston-Salem Work Nears Completion on Cannady Canal Authorities Hold Ben Rogers On Attempted Murder Charge iiiiiil n wm Southern Chamber of Com merce Execuiives Will Meel Sunday Small lead sinkers, molded and plated by Woolard Metal Finish ing company will be Beaufort's sample of a manufacturing prod uct at the annual conference of the Southern Chamber Executive association meeting at Winston Salem Sunday, Monday and Tues day. Dan Walker, manager of the Beaufort Chamben of Commerce and Bob Lowe, secretary of the Morehead City Chamber of Com merce will attend. Each of the state delegates (16 states will be represented) will contribute souvenirs at the con vention. Four hundred lead sinkers are going from Beaufort and shirts will go from Morehead City. The lead sinkers, each weighing 3-8 of an ounce, are attached to a card which can be sent through the mail. On this card are printed the fol lowing words: "Vacationists and Fishermen's Luck Piece from Beaufort, North Carolina, third oldest town in North Carolina, mid-way point on the North-South Inland Waterway, Boundaries plotted 1713, incorpor ated 1723, world capital of the menhaden industry, pioneer in agar processing. "The nickel-plated sinker was made from lead salvaged from an ill-fated ship, which belonged to a Confederate Captain who tried to run the Yankee Blockade at Fort Macon on Beaufort Inlet in '65. Legend would also ive it that this lead carries the blessing of a Golden-Haired Mermaid who set up housekeeping in the old schoon er. "We are unable to vouch for the visitors attribute the fair tides and visitors attribute the fairtides and winds and their bountiful catches of fish in Beaufort's waters to this luck piece. For farther InfwESoiton write) Beaufort Chamber of Commerce, Beaufort, North Carolina." States to be represented at the meeting are Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, South Carolina, Kentucky Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Vir ginia, , West Virginia, Maryland, Arkansas, and North Carolina. Beaufort Makes Recreation Survey Beaufort school children will receive soon a questionnaire on recreation compiled by the Beau . fort Chamber pf Commerce in co operation with the recreation com mittee of Beaufort oRtary club. Answers on this survey' will help determine the type of community recreation to plan for children, R. M. Willjams, chairman of the Ro tary committee stated. Such a recreation program will probably not be put into effect this year, Mr. Williams explained, and the survey is being taken mainly to plan on a long-range program. Principals T. G. Leary and Ran dolph Johnson are cooperating with the Rotary club and Cham ber of Commerce. ' It is requested that the parents help their children fill out the questionnaire and see tha.t it is ( returned ,to school. That mother's occupation and father's occupation is asked so that it caii be determined how many children are from families where both parents are away dur ing the day. Church affiliation is asked also, in order to determine whether churches might be used as recre ation centers. Beanfor! JCs Eniertain Ladies at Bine Ribbon Club Beaufort Jaycees and their la dies enjoyed an evening of dining and dancing Monday niht at the Blue Ribbon club, west of More head City. The occasion was a vLadies Night program. , Fifteen', couples and seven .guests attended: Following a roast beef dinner, dancing took place , and the group gathered around the piano to sing to the music of Mrs. Grayden Paul, one of the guests. Later in the evening the , couples square danced. 11 James Greenleaf Whittles was V.'irst inspired to write verse when, ."as a boy, his teacher lAsned bin V' copy ct &ohaft Burns' vetse. - .-jii; C. T. Cannon, Newport, surveys above the recently dug Cannady canal which runs through his and neighboring farmers' land, drain ing approximately 400 acres of swampy fields. Work on the canal began the latter part of last month. The ditch was first cut wiih scoops and spades and later a dragline was used. Cost of removing dirt was 21 cents per cubic yard with the federal government paying 10 cents per yard. Farmers cooperat ing on the drainage project, in ad dition to Mr. Cannon, are Clyde Garner, Carlyle Garner, Artis State Grants Extension Of Time for X-Ray Units An extension of the mass x ray program has been granted to Car teret county in order to give an other opportunity to those per sens who failed to get x rays pre viously. This unit will serve all who apply, both new and retake cases. The schedule for this unit is as follows : tomorrow Front street in Beaufort, Saturday, April 2 Arendell street in downtown Jlorehead City, and . Saturday, AfV -FroDjt-etreet in Beaurort. nours ior rne unit will be from 11 in the morning until 5 in the afternoon. A schedule has been set up for those persons who have received a special request by ma'l to re turn. This clinic will be held in the health department offices in the Beaufort court house exten sion on the Friday preceding each Saturday on the street clinic. X-rays- will be taken in the sec ond clinic today, on Friday, April 1, and Friday, April 8. Its hours will be from 9 :30 to 12 in the morning and from 1 to 4 in the afternoon. Residents of the Merrimon and Core Creek sections did not have an x-ray unit in their areas dur ing the regular x-ray campaign and consequently only a small percentage of them had pictures made, They have been especially requested by the health depart ment to avail themselves of the opportunity to have an x-ray dur ing one of the next three Satur days. Newport Principal Names Honor Roll R. L. Pruit, principal of New port school, has announced the ho nor roll for the past term. Pupils listed are as follows: first grade Joe Allen Mann, Linda Lou Edwards, Linda Garner, Elizabeth Gould, Cecilia Henderson, Shelva Jean Mann, Martha Pollard, Flori da Simmons,- Lauretta Summons, Judy Hardesty, Richard Garner and Sherrill Garner. .Second grade Virginia Whaley, Franklin Oglesby, Charles Wheel er, Johnny Mason, Peggy Ann Can non, Grace Fodrie, Mary Fukhcr, Clyde Mann, Kajherine Sanford and Peggy Jo Wallace. Third grade Larry Wallace, Brenda Kelly, Reuben Lilly, Pat ricia Riggs, Allen Gray, Ellen Gray, See PRINCIPAL Page 8 Tide Table HIGH LOW Friday, March 25 . m. 11:56 a.m. m. 12 midnight Saturday, March 26 m. ' 12:11 a.m. m. 12:38 p.m. Sundayv March 27 m. 12:56 a.m. m. 1:16 p.m. Monday, March 28 , m. ; :35 a.m. m. ', i :50 p.m. Tuetiay, March 29 m. 212 a.m. L . 2:22. PJ. 5:36 a 5:57 p 6:22 a 6:42 p 7:03 7:21 7:40 7:57 ils 131 - '"Jxfj:'- "',(Nls;:t, Garner, Roy Garner, -Lem dibble, Charles T. Pringle, L. Lewis, Jun ius Bell, Quickman Cannon, Dan icl Simmons, Carl Cannon and Mr. Radford. A survey of the farmland ami plans for the cliuh were made by Roy Berk, county soil eonscrva tionist of the Lower Neuse Soil Conservation district. Mr. Cannon, surveying the fields through which the ditch runs, commented that he wished his father, Tom Cannon, who has been dead many years, could see the improvements being made t" ihe land which he left his chil Shriners Pnl Oysters On Tomorrow's Diet An oyster roast sponsored by the Sudan Temple and the Car teret County Shrine clubwill be' held tomorrow night at t o'clock at Willis Brothers clam house, Williston. All S.'iriners, regardless to what temple they .belong, . and ( their todies are invito ' All are rrqiK'sted to' brJmT their own oyster knives and to wear their fezzes. Past Potentate' Wil liam J. Bundy, of Greenville, will speak and other high offi cials are expected to be present. All Shriners desiring trans portation and all cars having room for passengers should meet at 7:30 in front of the S and W Drug store, Morehead City or at Joe House Drug store, Beau fort. Dr. N. T. Ennett Heads Rotary Club Dr. N. T. Nnnett was elected president of the Beaufort Rotary club for next year at the regular meeting Tuesday night at the In let Inn. He will take office on the first Tuesday in July and will hold the position for one year. Other officers elected to serve with Dr. Ennett are B. J. May, retiring president, as vice presi dent; Dr. W. L. Woodard, secretary-treasurer; and Dr. Ennett, Mr. May, W. Y. Stewart, H. D. Paul, D. F. Merrill, and T. R. Jenkins as the board of directors. The district conference of the 188th district of the Rotary Inter national is to be held in Kinston May 5 and fi, Mr. May has an nounced. Delegates from' Beau fort and Morehead City will at tend. Power oi Classifieds Catches Persian Kitten More than a month ago a clauified ad in the column of THE NEWS-TIMES read "Lot while pertian kitten, one green eye and one blue. If found, phone M72I1." Mr. Julius Lewi who Uvea near Camp Glenn phoned ihe newspaper office Thursday night asking who placed the ad. A white persian kitten had turn ed up at her house and she felt sure it was the one described in the classified. Sure enough, the Kirsch lid dies, Darlene and Sonny, aged 4 and '2 years, ialer identified the kitten as their "Sniff" who wandered away five weeks ago. Mrs. O. H. Kirsch, their mother, said that they were at the Lewis home five minutes after they received Mrs. Lewis' phone call. The puss evidently had been well-fed but now that he's back home again at 3203 Evens street, he still has hankering to ream- - The fruits of freedom tasted sweet asd the diet of itay-at-bom doesn't please bin- 00 dren. "My father farmed this land," explained Mr. Cannon proudly, "raising rice ami corn. He was the first man in this county to put in tobacco, cultivating with a yoke of oxen and two horses. In those days rice sold for tiO cents a bushel and laborers clear ed land for 40 and T0 cents a day." Building of the Cannady branch community canal is the second ma jor drainage project in the Nine Foot road section. The first was the Ham's Horn canal which was completed laM year. Jaycees Nominate Bernard Leary For District Job Bernard Leary, past president of the Morehead City Jaycees, once again received their unanimous en dorsement for district vice-president at the meeting Monday night, Fort Macon hotel. Mr. Leary re quested that someone else be no minated r the office jjiace duties of 6usirlpsa and ohef responsibili ties were overbearing at present. His objeetion was overridden, how ever, and he finally accepted the nomination. Other business discussed at the Monday meeting was the formation of a soflball league for play this spring and summer. The More head Jaycees have also received an invitation from the New Bern Jaycees to participate in a donkey baseball game with them at some future date. The invitation was taken under consideration. It was suggested that an investi gation be made into the plan of holding a dance and the "Miss Morehead City" contest on Sat urday night before Easter. Mr. Leary was appointed to check on the price of obtaining an orchestra for the occasion. It was also announced that Hic kory is Ihe first town that has accepted the invitation of the Jay cees to stage a contest for choos ing an entrant in the "Miss North Carolina" pageant here in July. Following the business meeting, a moving picture on Pike's Peak and Colorado Springs, site of this summer's national Jaycee meeting, was shown. Farmers to Attend s- Carteret county farmers have been invited to atte corn production meetings schedul ed throughout the county the lat ter part of this week and the first of next. At these meetings a dis cussion will be presented regard ing the steps involved and the im portance ot increasing the yield of corn per acre in the county. An outstanding moving picture in color entitled "More Corn Per Acre" will be shown. This picture was produced here in North Caro lina bv Dr. L. S. Bennett, visual aid specialist with the State Col lege extension service, under the supervision of Dr. R. E. Collin. who is in charge of agronomy at oiaic college. Countv Acrent R. M. William., has said that the improvement and expansion of a livestock program m me county snould first be pre ceded by an expansion of the food program. He urecs that all farm. ers attend the program in their respective communities. The first nifietino- who hU in-t night at Newport. The schedule of suDsequent meetings is as follows: tonight at 7:30. Unitarian C.hurrU at Pelletier; tomorrow night at i:ou, tne court house in Beaufort; Monday night at 7:30, Lionel Con nor's ttore at Harlnwa- anl'Tnaa. day night at 7:30, Cleve Gillikirt's store m tne xsetue community. j:B . Corn Meeting Woman Gets One Year in Prison Nora Wilson Alias Ediih Piner Found Guilly on Vagrancy Charge Nora Wilson alias Edith Piner pleaded guilty to charges of va grancy and was sentenced to one year in the stale pris' ii for women in Tuesday's session of recorder's court at the court house in Beau fort. The failure of court to meet for two weeks resulted in numerous cases coming up in Tuesday's ses sion. Court adjourned at 5 o'clock Tuesday afternoon but only be cause many of the cases were con tinued. Irvin Willis and Tookie Willis were found guilty of assault and damage to personal property to the extent of $15. They were given a M) day sentence supsend ed on condition thai they repay the $15 and costs ot the court. Kmma liesl Simpson was found not guilty of reckless and careless driving and damage to property and her ease was dismissed. William Kultord. charged with assault on a female, pleaded guil ty and was sentenced to one year on the reads. The sentence was suspended on condition that (he defendant remains sober and on good behavior for five years and pay the costs of court. The ease of Donnie Lewis, charg ed with assault with a deadly wea pon, was dismissed. The case of Ezel Martin, who was charged with employing a taxi to take him to New Bern and refusing to pay the fare, was not prosecuted. Marion Best pleaded guilty to charges of trespass. Sentence was suspended on piyment of costs. A bench warrant was issued in the case of Delmas Graham, charg 't'a with larceny of an outboard motor and breaking and entering. Herbert Gaskins was found guilty of assault with a deadly weapon and abuse. Judgment was suspend ed on payment of costs. The bond of James Harold Wade, charged with peeping and trespass, was for feited when he failed to appear. Fred Garner pleaded guilty to See WOMAN Page 8 Principal Names Honor Students G. T. Winds!:, principal of Morehead City school, has named the following students on the honor roll for the fourth term: First grade Wayne Nichols, Jimmic Lawrence, Vance Thomas, Carl Ball, Jr., David Ballou, John Baker, Robert Dennis. Larry Jones, Marun Mualem, John Phillips, Jewell Smith, George Wallace, Bob Willis. Suzanne Beck. Sarita Bedsworth, Kathy Chalk, Quinnic Guthrie, Andrea Mc Knight, Evelyn Morris, Sylvia Pe terson, Joan Quinn. Greta Rice, Julia Brinson, An nette Cooper, Sarah Goodwin, Nan cy Laughton, Ruth Marshall, Marie Piner, Geraldinc Rtid, Jo Ann Whitley. Second grade Cynthia Davis. Mary Louise Davis, Patricia Forest, James Guthrie. Wendy Lowe, Jim my McElroy, Rebecca Stiles. Patsy Robinson, Judy Smith, Tex Styron, Douglas Ann West, Bren da Wcthcrington, Danny Swindell, Emmy Lou Chalk. Edward Lancaster, Judith Coo per, Barbara Jean Saratowski, Jackie Dudley, Betsy Lec Willis, Barry Ward Willi-, Peggy Ann Willis. Lloyd Colclmrn, Dixie Lee Par ker, Brtte Marie Hedsworth, Joyce Ann Styron. Janice Lovick, Joyce Hall. Pot King, Barbara Ann Wil lis, Walter Morris. Third grade Leroy Blanchard. Dardcn Eure, Jr., Paul Garner, Da vid Webb Nelson, Ted Phillips, Martha Ann Wade, Carroll Willis. Lillian Merrill, Fanclla Cooper, Margaret Guthrie, Jessie Ruth Kirkman, Virginia Morris, Peggy Paggett, Anna Faye Willis, Edith Willis. Vollie Bell, Guy Brinson, Her bert Griffin, Russell Guthrie, Ray Jones, Shirley Midgette. Paul Mitchell, Rodney Nelson, Barbara Reid, Anne Reynolds, Frank Sanderson, Jackie Simpson. Fourth grade Natalie Bell, Bil ly Rich, James Phillips, Ruth Brin son, Francis Swan&on, Joyce Robin son, Judith Willis, Watson Morris. Fifth grade-rttarle Wade, Cof rena Smith, tarfel Eaeders, Beti See teTUENTjS Page S Beginning Today! Comment On International Sunday School Lesson, Church Page As a special service to Sunday School teachers, ministers, and our readers in general, THE NEWS-TIMES begins in this is sue, a commentary on the Inter national Sunday School lesson by William Sputhern, Jr. This feature will appear every Friday on the church news page. The selection of this Sunday school lesson was made after consultation with a committee from the Coastal Ministerial association whose membership consists of county pastors. The columns of THE NEWS TIMES are open at all times for announcement of church services and meetings. For the Tuesday paper these announcements must be in our office no later than 10 a. m. Monday and for the Friday paper the deadline is) noon Wednesday. Phone Company To Lay Conduit Beaufort Town Board Ap point F. L. King, Sr., Registrar for Election Beaufort towi. :uard pave Caro lina Telephone and Telegraph com pany permission to lay an un derground conduit on Turner street, when they met in special session Monday night. They also appointed F. L. King, Sr., as registrar for the election May ,'t. Judges named were W. VV. Chadwiek and G. V. Woolard. A request by AI Philips, rep resenting the VFW. to ell beer at their club in the Lipman build ing was deferred until their regu lar session Monday night, April 4. F. V. Thompson, representative of the telephone company, Raid that work on the conduit would probably start this month. One hundred fifty aditional lines are being put into the Beaufort office which will take care of 150 to H00 more phones, Mr. Thompson ex plained. Cost of laying the conduit has been estimated at $6,000. The work will require from a week to 10 days and during that time traf fic wil probably move one way only. The phone company will be held responsible for any and all dam ages which may result from the work. It was erroneously stated in the last report on a Beaufort town hoard meeting that water hydrant rental is $:t0 a month. The charge is $30 a year. NEWS BRIEFS H. L. Joslyn, county superinten dent of schools, will attend the annual meeting of the American Association of School Administra tors to be held in Philadelphia to morrow through next Wednesday. Among prominent speakers at the meeting will be General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Roy E. Larsen, president of Time, Inc., and Dr. Clyde A. Erwin, state superinten dent of public instruct ion, who will speak on "Federal, State, and Local Relationships in Education." The annual business meeting of the Morehead City Chamber of Commerce will be held on April 5 in the auditorium of the muni cipal building. At that time, new officers will be elected and a dis cussion of last year's accomplish ments and next year's .plans will take place. Our New Telephone Numbers In Morehead City Are 8611 and 8621 THE CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES OUR NUMBER IN BEAUFORT REMAINS THE SAME B-4481 Ben Vadcn Rogers, 27, of 5004 Edward Street, Norfolk, Va., hus band of Lorna May Rogers, New port route 1, is being held on a charge of attempting to kill his wife by wrecking the automobile in which they were riding. The incident occurred at noon Sunday three miles cast of Bogue field on route 24, according to Highway Patrolman R. II. Brown who investigated. Rogers, travel ing west at approximately 90 miles an hour, deliberately turned the car over, according to his wife's report. He received a scratch on his head and she was confined to Morehead City hospital four days before being discharged yes terday. The car, a 40 Chevrolet coupe, was demolished. Rogers is in the county jail, unable to pay his $500 bond for release. His case was to come up Tuesday but was' con tinued. Mrs. Rogers reported that she and her husband arc separated and thai he came here from Norfolk over the weekend and asked her to come back to him. Mrs. Rogers further told author ities that she refused, saying she didin't love him any more He then sked her to get in the car and go with him to sec their children, that then he would leave, and it was during this drive that he swerved from one side of the road to the other at high speed, saying that he would turn the car over, kill her and himself, too, Mrs. Rogers stated. . The charges against Rogers are "unlawfully and willfully operating a motor vehicle on the highways See ROGERS Page 8 Beaufort FHA Chapter Lends A Hand to Girls in England "Hands across the sea" is no meaning-lens phrase to members of the Beaufort chapter of the Future Homemakers of Amrica. spurred by the needs of hoine economics students in ration ridden England, they have adopted a class there and are supplying them with many of the necessities that are taken for granted in this country. Two packages of assorted house keeping supplies soap, thread, needles, pins, books, and maga zines have been despatched al ready. Another package of ma gazines will be sent this week and a fourth is plannd to be sent be fore school closes for the summer. Members contribute the contents of the boxes and the club pays postage from its treasury. Acknowledging the packages, Miss Marlon Reeves, one of the secretaries of the "Association of Teachers of Domestic Subjects", expressed appreciation, especially, for the soap as it "is one of the rationed goods that we find so dif ficult to make do with". She also gave the girls informa tion as to the ultimate destina tion of their gifts. The pieces of "material" (yard goods) she term ed "a very real blessing" and says they will be used for prac ticing needlework stitches. Some of the contents so im pressed the English instructor that she took them to a London com mittee meeting, at which a mem ber from one' of the teacher training colleges asked if they "could possibly" and some of the clothing to Germany "as their needs in the way of clothing seems so much greater than ours." (And this from a country where the ration tickets allow 'one .carefully-chosen outfit a year!) This same training teacher, Miss Reaves writes "went off with great delight with the beautiful file which you sent 'Kitchen Equipment', She has taken it for her students to study. We have nothing like it in this country to compete with it in quality and interest." The magazines, too, are 'ex claimed over in the correspon 20 Enter Contest At Newport High Two School Groups Win Honors; Search Goes To Beaufort Tonight About 125 people showed up at the Newport auditorium Tuesday night for the third in this year's Talent Search programs. Heavy rain and a mild measles epidemic were blamed for the small audi ence. Stiff competition among the 9.0 contestants made the job of the judges even harder but they fin alyl announced the winners. Laura Mac Hanlison sang "Galway Bay" and won the honors in the vocal class for contestants under 16. Rachel Mundine gave the "Twelfth Street Rag" as a piano solo and was winner in the instrumental group under 16. The Roy's Quartet of Newport high school, composed of Stancil Hardison, Clayton Cannon, Eddie Gray, and J. W. Hardison, won the prize in the vocal group over 16 by singing "Passing By." The singing of "Make Believe" gave the Newport High school glee club Ihe honors in the glee club or chorus competition. The next in the Lions Cluh Tal ent search programs will be held in the Beaufort high school audi torium tonight at 7:15. Finals will be held in the Beaufort auditorium a week from tonight, Friday, April 1. deuce, for English magazines are so restricted in size and quality. Of - the Englwh publications being sent in return, the English teach er says "I hope you won't think too badly of them in contrast." The Beaufort club's fifty-three members are not solely concern ed with needs in other places, however, and have just finished supplying curtains, paint, and pieces of equipment to the home economics department of Beaufort high school. During the year they have bought a scrapbook and gavel for the club itself, planted rose bushes on the school grounds, do nated money to the Junior Red Cross and tuberculosis drives, con tributed food to the C.R.O.P., and sold seals and made caps for the Tuberculosis association. At Thanksgiving they made up a fifteen-dollar box of food for a needy family. Nor have the Future Homemak cra neglected to leave their pro gram with purely social functions. At Christmas they entertained parents, faculty members, and the county superintendent with an "open house" in the home econ omics department; Thanksgiving they invited parents to a Thanks giving program at the Methodist Recreation building and at the be ginning of the year they followed up their membership drive with a cruise on the state boat "Hat teras'" Officers of the Beaufort F. II. A. chapter are Shirley Lipman', president; Ltivcnia Mason, vice president; Lctty Eudy, secretary; Christine Hansen, treasurer; Jane Mason, historian; Vera Lu Loftin, reporter; Anna Lou Laughton, par liamentarian; Lorna Smith, song leader, and Nancy Russell, pianist. The chapter mothers are Mrs. N. H. Russell and Mrs. L. G. Hardes ty. Mrs. David Bevcridge is fa culty advisor. Marshallberg Enters Tidewater Baseball League The Tidewater League obtained its eighth and final team this week when Marshallberg entered the league. With the entry of Marshallberg, the work of organizing and mak ing plans for this year's games can go forward. The first game of the year is scheduled for Satur day, April 23, and the final game before playoffs will come on Sun day. August 21. A complete sche dule of games will appear in the NEWS-TIMES when it is released. ' The complete rotter of teams in the Tidewate? league is as fol lows: Havelock, Morehead City, eksonViUe; Midway Park, Beio fort, Newport, Max eballberg and tha ( Afpreritica Association of CheJry Point ''I
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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March 25, 1949, edition 1
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