Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Oct. 17, 1930, edition 1 / Page 1
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Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday Afternoons. .-.. "". 12 PAGES TODAY »•---- - -. „ , „ j B; Mail, per »ur. (la adranea) _ **.*> Carrier, err jaar, (in adeaaee)_U.II VOL. XXXVI, No. 125 SHELBY, N. C. FRIDAY, OGT. 17. 193U LATE NEWS THE MARKET. Cotton, per pound-J1‘c Cotton Seed, per bushel.30c Cloudy And Colder. Today’s North Carolina Weather Report: Cloudy preceded by showers tonight. Colder tonight. Saturday cloudy and colder. ( Winter Weather. Denver, Colo., Oct. 16.—Snow Tanging In depth from a trace to seven Inches was general In the Northern Rocky and Cascade Moun tain regions yesterday. Storms Wed nesday night, extending from Mon tana Into the northern part of Col orado, left a white blanket and de scending temperature. A trace of snow fell in Denver near midnight. Working Oat Mail Schedule; Train Off Soon Star Mail Service Likely To Be In aururated Between Gastonia And Ruthrefordton. With the discontinuance of Sea board passenger train No. 21 west of Shelby on Monday of next week, * Mr. Honeycutt, clerk for the railway mail service, is trying to work out a schedule to get this mail west of Shelby to the oostofflces in Cleve land and Rutherford counties. This train which now operates to Rutli erfordton will stop in Shelby at noon and returning leave here for Charlotte, Monroe and Hamlet about 5 p. m. A freight train will operate west of Shelby to Rutherfordton but its schedule is six hours between ' these two stations, so mail service will be of little value. Schedules Proposed. A petition has gone in to the postoffice department asking for a star mail route leaving Shelby each afternoon about 4 o’clock and going to Marion, serving the intermediate postoffices. It was asked that this route leave Marion each morning and arrive in Shelby about noon. When the railway mail official Mr. Honeycutt arrived a few days ago it was his opinion that -the star route should operate between Gas tonia and Rutherfordton, instead of Shelby and Marion. One of the mails from the north comes on the Crescent limited due at Gastonia at 12:32. He would establish a star route to pick up this , mail at Gas tonia, come direct to Shelby where it would receive mail from the dis continued Seaboard No. 21 and pro ceed to Rutherfordton. There is a train from the south, Piedmont limited No. 34 arriving at Gastonia at 2:32 p. m. and the hope in Shel by and at postoffices in Cleveland county west, is that the new star route leave upon the arrival of this mail from the south, so that two heivy mails from north and south can be received each afternoon as far west as Rutherfordton. Just what schedule and what points will be served by this pro posed new route, depends upon the ■report of the inspector. Honor Roll Of High School iRlghty High School Pupils on Honor Roll for First Month of School Herr. ■ , eighty students in the Shelby high school made the honor roll I during the first month of school ihere. Their names are as follows: Seniors—John Ccrbett, John -r vln, James Shepard, Helen Bess, An nie Mae Bobbitt, Elizabeth Blanton, Lena Hamrick, Hessentine Border , Frances Carver, Matilda Jenks, Mae ,Lattimore, Louise Miller, Milla Put nam, Helen Robert!1; Sara Thompson Alleen Vaughn. Mildred Weaver, Doyle Webb, Ormi Lee White, Pal mer Me Swain, Jessie Humphries,, Beverly Jones, Evelyn Short, Felix Gee. Juniors: Paul Wray, Isabel Ar mour. Ida Mae Bridges, Vera Con nor, Kathleen Hamrick. Bernice Houser. Mildred Laughridge, Evelyn Smalley, Nancy Sperling, Mary Sue Thompson, Ethel White, Elizabeth ' Campbell. Ninth grade: ii’izabeth Carver. Rachel Connor, Maxine Costner, Margaret Ford, Aiieen Jones, Annie Ray Jones, Dorothy Leonard, Kath ryn Maxwell, Bernice Miller, Helen Miller, Hazel Putnam, Edith Saun ders. Jean Thompson, Elizabeth Wallace. Lucille Whlsnant, Loris Dover, Griffin Holland. Richard Lo ■ Grand. Colbert McKnight, Ed Post Jr., Robert Wilson, Charles McBrayer Bessie Lee Spake. Beatrice Whl> nant. Eighth grade :Paul Bullington. Walter Fanning. Kiffln Hayes, Stuart James, Dudley Maxwell, Veva Armour. Louise Austell, Edna Earle Grigg, Margaret Lte Liles, Cather ine McMurry, Matgaret Louis Mc Neely. Esther Ann Quinn. Mary Lil lian Speck. Mara a re* 'rsompson, Mary Wells, Carl Gladden, Sarah Williams, Alma Rost. Faye Weathers Ehringhaas To Be Speaker For Rally Monday Democrats To Stage ] Great Gathering County-Wide Rally To Open At 7:15 In Court House. County Leaders Speak Also. The biggest Democratic gathering of the year, a county-wide rally, is to be held in the court house in Shelby on Monday night, October 20. beginning at 7:15 o’clock. The chief speaker will be Hon. .T, C. B. Ehringhaus, of Elizabeth City, but several short talks will be made i prior to his address which begins at -i 8 o’clock. Mr. Ehringhaus, consider ed one of the outstanding candidates for the next governor of the state, is one of North Carolina's most elo quent and popular orators. His pop ularity alone will draw a large crowd, but Democratic officials have several other attractions planned for the rally. Among out-of-town visitors who will attend and make a ■ few brief remarks will be Hon. Hamilton C. Jones, Judge J. M. Currie, and Mr Joe Garibaldi, all of Charlotte. Short talks on local politics will also be made by Capt. Peyton McSwain, candidate for the state senate, and Attorney J. C. Newton. Democratic nominee for county solicitor. Other Andresses. There will be several other Dem ocratic speakings over the county during the week. On Tuesday night, October 21, Major A. L. Bui winkle, nominee for congress, will speak at Lawndale. He will be introduced by Attorney J. C. Newton, and short talks will also be made by Capt. McSwain and County Commissioner A. E. Cline. On Thursday night, Oct. 23. Congressman McSwain of South Carolina, will speak at Polkville. On the following night, Friday, the! 24th, Congressman McSwain will speak again at the South Shelby school house. Both of these meet ings will be attended by all lite Dem ocratie county candidates, and good crowds are expected to hear Con gressman McSwain, a forceful ora tor who is*in close toCich with.gov ernmental affairs. Meeting Tonight. Tonight in the Gardner building, across the street from the Hotel Charles, more than 200 Democratic precinct officials are expected to at tend a dinner meeting which will organize the entire county for the coming election. County Chairman Oliver Anthony says that practically' every precinct committeeman in the county has accepted the invitation1 to attend. 10,000 Bales In Cotton Association Ten thousand bales of cotton from ! Cleveland and Rutherford counties have been turned over to the North Carolina Cotton Growers associa tion. according to a statement made yesterday by C. C. Horn, district agent. These figures are up to last Saturday. In the meantime, hun dreds of bales are being received j daily and the local bonded ware house is about filled to its capacity. Much of the cotton is now being shipped to Charlotte for storage. The association is advancing eight cents per pound on cotton at the time of delivery with a further set tlement after grading. Morrow Sees Hoover Motor'32 Disclaiming all thought of seek- " ing the Presidency in 1932, Dwight W. Morrow came out unequivocally for the rpnomi nation and re-election of Prcsi * dent Hoover as he made the for mal opening speech of his cam paign for election to the United States Senate at Newark, N. J. | (!M«'0»!ion»l Ntwifitl) ! Junior College Grid Elevens Will Clash Here On Saturday Lees-McRae Coach Shifts Line-up For Game With Victors Over Mars Hill Shelby's first college football game of the season will be staged at the city park here Saturday afternoon with the Boiling Springs junior col lege playing the strong eleven from the Lees-MeRae Institute at Ban ner Elk. Coach Rackley's junior Baptists, have been handicapped nearly all season with injuries but supporters of the school believe that the Bull dogs will continue their winning streak which got going good with last week’s 15-0 victory over Mars Hill. Stroud, big fullback, is expected to, return to the lineup after being out a week with injuries, and Zeno Wall, quarterback, may be in con dition to play Saturday although out of practice several days this week due to injuries received in the Mars Hill clash. The Baptist eleven will be chosen from the following play ers: Forney, Gooch and Miillinax. ends; Falkenberg and Harrison, tackles; Moore and Vaughn, guards: Jolly, center; Wall, quarterback, Boney, Scarborough. Hendrick and Harris, halfbacks; Stroud and Hunt, fullbacks. Pointing For Game. Banner Elk. Oct. 17.—The football I squad of Lees-McRae is preparing fhis week for the battle with Boil ing Springs at Shelby, SaturdayJ The team has been showing greRt improvement in their work since the game with Weaver college two weeks ago. Coach has shifted Mack Crum from tackle to guard and he is taking to it as if it were a natural gift. Jack Chambers, also a guard, is Improving. while Moody Morris, another guard who has been out on account of a bad ankle, is back on the gridiron filled with lots of fight and is pushing some of the guards hard for the position. John Saylor and Lefty Flinn. tackles, arc' showing up pretty well. S. C. Prison Would Like Rate King To Be Returned To Chester; \ And Shelby Man Would Be Glad Williams Elected Over 1. S. McElroy At the meeting of the Presbyter ian synod of North Carolina at Wil mington this week Rev, R Murphy Williams, of Greensboro, was elected moderator over Rev. I. S. McElroy, well known minister of Kings Moun tain. One of the features of the Wednesday meeting of the synod was the report of the work commit tee made by Rev. H. N McDiarmid, of Shelby. who is the committee chairman. Merging Of Counties Discussed; Would Join Rutherford And Polk Consolidation Plan For State Brings On Suggested Mergers. i Special to The Star s Raleigh, Oct. 17.—Sentiment to ward consolidating several North Carolina counties, two small, a large and small, or three small counties, for a reduction to 70 or 75 counties in the state, has come to the point that some of the state officials have been asked to work out suggested combinations, as suit able according to kinds and inter ests of people, lack of natural bar* riers such as mountain ranges cr sounds and rivers, locations of county seats and other factors. Excellent roads and automobiles, except in isolated cases, have brought the people closer together, so even with suggested combinations no citizen would be more titan two hours from his county seat. One of ficial, not wishing his name an nounced, because of objection to the plan from counties or seats that will or might lose their identity, has worked out a set of combinations and given probable county seats, along with populations, property valuations and school populations of the proposed combinations His plan follows: Mountain area: Cherokee grid Clay, Murphy as county seat; Macon and Jackson, Sylva as seat; Graham and Swain, Bryson as seat; Hen derson and Transylvania, Hender sonville as seat; Rutherford and -Polk, Rutherfordton as seat; Mit chell and Yancey, Burnsville as seat: Alleghany and Ashe. • Jefferson as seat. Piedmont section: Iredell * and Alexander, Statesville as seat; Sur ry and Yadkin, Dobson as seat; Foryth and Stokes, Winston-Salem 'as seat; Orange and Alamance, Burlington as seat; Caswell and Person, Roxboro as seat. Central section; Scotland and Hoke, Laurinburg as seat: Moore and Lee, Carthage as seat; Wilson and Greene, Wilson as seat; Nash and Edgecombe, Rocky Mount as seat; Vance and Warren, Hender son as seat ; Halifax and Northamp ton. Weldon as seat. Coastal area Currituck. Camden tCOJKTINVBJJ Oil rAC'Jt TWELVE ‘ , Has Been Star Boarder But County Hasn't Thanked State For Keeping. Columbia, Oct, 17.—Although the 1 table manners he displays in his'cell ate genteel, according to prison standards, and he .says "good morn - ing'' to guards. Rate King of York j county. Indicted slayer of Mrs. Faye , Wilson King, his wife, has nearly worn the "welcome ’ from the atate' penitentiary doormat. King as a prisoner is not object ionable, but conditions attendant to hts captivity of more than a year are beginning to irk penitentiary offi cials. For King has been accorded the j treatment of a star boarder since July 20, 1929, and no one has even! so much as thanked the peniten tiary during that time. King was indicted in York county, where he made his home with Mrs. King at Sharon. He was tried in the i • Continued on page twelve > j O’Possum Season On In Cleveland County j t Fossuin gravy is now one of the delicacies of the season. On Wed nesday, October 15, the opossum hunting season opened in this sec tion and will remain open until February 15, it is announced by H C Jjong, county game warden. There has been some discussion ar to the date and the game warden makes the announcement for the benefit of hunters. The season for quail, turkey, rabbit, and doves opens on November 20 and runs to February 15. The buck deer seasun opens in counties west of Scotland on November 1 and- holds through December 31. There is no open sea son for does. Playing Today. The Shelby highs and the Lin rointon highs arc engaging in their annual football clash at the city park in Shelby^ this afternoon, 4 Marriages Show Decrease Here; No Divorce Gain 52 Less Marriages Last Year Divorce* And Annulment# For 1929 S#me A* In 1928. 191 County Marriage*. Fifty-two more couple# were married In Cleveland county in 1928 than in 1929. but divorce# and annulment# for the two years were the same, according to the preliminary report Issued by the census department. Itr 1928 there were 153 marriages In Cleveland county, while in 1929 thd total dropped to 101, In 1928' there were 20 divorces granted In) the county as compared with 19 divorces and one annulment in 1929. The decrease of 52 marriages doag not mean, however, that matri mony is on the decline in the coun ty as it is estimated that consider abl| more than 50 Cleveland coun ty couples were married in South Carolina during the year. Barkt Marriages. Among the neighboring counties Burke leads the way in a gain in marriages, having 171 marriages in 1929. or 42 more than the 129 In 1928. But in the meantime there were 11 divorces in the county as compared with only six in 1928. Claston county had 139 marriages in 1929 and 187 in 1928. A decrease in Gaston divorces was shown as only 71 couples were divorced in 1929 as compared with 89 in 1928. Lincoln county had 99 marriages last year and only 84 in 1938. Five divorces were granted in 1929 and seven in 1928 Rutherford county showed a de crease in marriages ancl a gain in divorces. One hundred and thirteen couples were married there in 1929 and 121 in 1928 Twenty divorces were granted in 1939 and 18 In 1828. Schools To Open Week From Monday Plan To Resume Work on 37th Aft-1 er Aiding In Cotton Picking. Practically all of the long term schools in Cleveland county will open on Monday. October 27, after having been closed for several weeks to permit the school children to aid In picking the cotton crop. The Mooresboro school, it is re-, ported, may open the coming Mon-1 day. but If not will open with the others on the 27th. Among those planning to resume work on the 27th are Lattimore, Casar. Piedmont, Waco. Grover, No. 3 and No. II. Fa 11ston is to open, it was said to- ; day. On Tuesday. October 21. Coal Office Prize Winners Announced Building Contains 48 Tons and JS5 Pounds of Coal. Miss Enilfy Win* First. Nearly 2,000 guesses were made on the amount of block coal requir ed to build the office of the Nat Bowman Coal company on West Graham street for which three prizes were offered to those guess ing the nearest amount of coal re quired for the structure. It required 48 tons and 355 pounds to erect the: building and Miss Eugenia Ensley of the Cleveland cloth mill won first prize, two and a half tons of coal. Her guess was 48 tons 500 pounds M. M. O'Shields of Shelby guessed 48 tons 520 pounds and won the sec ond prize of one and a half tons of coal. D. A. Whisonant guess 48 tons 550 pouftds and was awarded the third prize of one ton of coal. Delivers Bootleg To A Prison Cell; Draws Fine Of $10 -II' F,. R Gamble, Star N>w,% Bureau* Kings Mountain. Oct 17;— Kings Mountain was a dry. mighty dry town when Presi dent Hoover came down for a visit. At least scores of visitors said so. But it now develops that the i town has at least one bootlegger, although he may be a bit ama teur, who renders a service that must surely please his patrons. In county court here yester day, Judge Horace Kennedy fin ed Roy McCllnton. negro youth. SIO and the costs for delivering a pint of whiskey to two white prisoners who were at that time in the town lockup. Bring Remains Of DurhamsTo City Cemetery Father Of Famous Fam ily Once Rode Horse back To New York To Hear Jenny Lind Sing. (By RENN DRUM.) On • new granite monument be ing erected in Sunset cemetery hete is an Inscription which tells an in teresting incident in the life of a family whose history is closely con nected with outstanding events of bygone years in this section and the entire south. About the monument will be gathered the remains of the family —the fanious Durham family— which are buried in this section of North Carolina. Tha granite iombstone is being erected at the instigation of Prof. Robert Lee Durham, of Virginia a grandson of Micajah Durham, and a son of Capt. Plato Durham, about whose career some of the most in teresting events in this section aie recorded. The monument is being erected in the new section of Sun set, on the east side. To that point will be moved, it is understood, the remains of Capt. Durham who is now buried in the old section of the cemetery, on the western edge. The space is crowded there and the re mains will be moved to the new lo cation along with the remains of several brothers and sisters buried here and in Rutherford cemeteries, according to reports. Only two of the Durham boys are living. They are Prof. Durham, of Virginia, and Attorney Stonewall Durham, of Bessemer City. The other son. Plato Durham. Jr., noted Southern orator and educator, died a year or so ago in Atlanta. Father Not There. The remains of Micajah Durham, head of the famous line and father of the Capt. Plato, who led a com pany of Cleveland county soldiers behind Lee and Jackson in the Con federacy wflf Ttof he brought here £ because it is not known where he was buried • And at that point begins the in teresting. and heretofore generally unknown. Information about hint which is related on the monument On the south side of the granite is the name of Capt. Plato Durham. (ConTtsoan on paoe twelve DownleY Circus Coming October 28 Downl* Brother three ring wild animal circus is booked to show m Shelby on Tuesday October 28th on the Hamrick show ground. West Warren street. The circus advertises as a three ring affair with a fine col lection of trained animals. clowns and Hodgini troupe of horseback riders, featuring Joe the riding com edian. A street parade will be given according to the advertisement. SERVICES ON METHODIST CIRCUIT FOR THIS SUNDAY Preaching services on the Meth odist circuit for Sunday are an nounced as follows by Rev. R. L. Forbis: Salem. 9:4S in the morning; El Bethel at 11; Pine Grove at 3 in the afternoon. Missing Grover Girl I Found In Athens, Ga. I Left At Home Of Aunt There By Wilson, Who “Headed On South/’ Report Say*. Father Goes After Young College Girl. Begins Revival Rev. Wilbur H Wall. Shelby evan gelist will begin a aeries of revival meetings on S. l.aFayelle street to night at 7:15. A large tent has been erected and much good is an ticlpltated from these services, A special Sunday service will be held at 3 p. in. Mr. Wall has just closed two successful campaigns at Marlon and Henrietta, Get 2 Men In Cotton Theft i'otlnn Brought From ( romr To Wilson Gin Near .Shelby On Wednesday. Wednesday morning two young men brougfit 1130 pounds of oottdii to Will Wilson's cotton gin just east of Shelby, had the cotton ginned and sold it to Wilson for $48.66. Something aboul their actions aroused Wilson's suspicions and he called the officers Some Dodgin'*. A short time later Sheriff Irvin M. Alien and Police Chief McBride Patton had the two young men. Their names were given as Robert Dodgin alias Earl Morris, and Earl Dodgln alias W L Bright, the cot ton being sold in the latter’s name. After being apprehended they ad mitted, officers say, that the cotton was stolen from W L. Black, of the Crouse section, which is also the home section of the two men. They were taken to the Lincoln county jail at Lincolnlon by local officers and are to be tried there. New Store Opens In Gardner Building The Outlet Store is the name of a new mercantile establishment which opened this morning in the Gardner building store room for merly occupied by Ingram-Liles Co. |It is a department store owned by S. Shapiro who comes to Shelby from Gaffney, S. C where he op erated the Gaffney Mercantile Co. Income From Farm Products In Country Was 11 Million In 1929 Estimate Show* Increase In Fig nres Over Precedrttg Y«r. Washington. Oct. 17.—A gross in come from farm production of about $11,851,000,000 for the calen dar year 1029. compared with $11. 741,000,000 in 1928, is the estimate by the bureau of agricultural econo mics of the United. States depart ment of agriculture The gross income from crops last year is estimated at $5,603,000,000. and the gross income from livestock products at $6,249,000,000. Crop in come declined $73,000,000, as com pared with 1928, but the gross in come from livestock and livestock products, increased $183,000,000 The decrease in crop income, the bureau said, was accounted for largely by decreases in income from grains and cotton, which more than offset an increase of nearly $200 - 000,000 in the gross income from vegetables. Wool was the only com modity in the livestock and live stock products group to show a de creased income as vOmpared with the preceding year. The operating costs oi farming tc( 1929 were about the same as in 1928, and after deducting operating costs, wages to hired labor, taxes, inter est on debts and rent paid to non operating owners, the balance avail able for capital, labor and manage ment was $5,578,000,000, compaerd with $5,478,000,000 for 1928. an in crease of about $100,000,000. On a per farm family basis this income available for capital, labor and management was $882 for 1929, compared with $864 for 1928 and I $898 in 1925. which was the best year since 1921. The figures do not represent income derived1 from sources other than agricultural pro duction. Reports from 12.00Q farmers who reported income and expenses in dividually to the bureau last year show that receipts less expenses in 1929 averaged $1,097, in adition to which eacli farmer used home grown products valued at an aver age of $262 These farms are better | than the average, however, being | 270 acres in size and having a total average investment of $15,242, For the year 1928, 11,851 farms reported an average in receipts less expenses of $1,090; and in 1927. 13.859 farms reported an average of $1,048. ^ Esther Furcron, fJ-year-old daughter of Rev. W. E. Furcron. Grover minister, who disappear* ed from the Anderson, S. C.. college campus a week ago this afternoon, was located last night at the home of an aunt in Athens. Georgia, according to information received here today Last night, It was said at Grover Rev. Mr. Furcron received a tele phone call from relatives at Athens stating that they had some Import ant news for him and he left about 3 this morning. It Is understood, for Georgia. later in the day an As sociated Press dispatch from Athens informed that the girt, who disap peared with Wilson, 35-year-old married man of the Bethlehem sec tion and was thought, to have been kidnapped. wgs at the home of an. ,aunt there Very Nervous. About noon today, it was learned, that the minister had sent a mes sage back to Grover stating that he had arrived in Athens and that his daughter was there. She was de scribed as being “very nervous,'’ but ho other details wore given con cerning what has happened to her since she left the college ■ week ago with the married man. Wilson Not There. Wilson, the first report said, had left the girl in Athens and had headed on South ” Later messages said nothing concerning him other than that he was not in Athens now, and it is not definitely known that he parted from the girl there. He was wanted in this county for automobile stealing and on other charges, while a kidnapping, war rant had been sworn out for him in South Carotins . Looking in Illinois The search for the missing couple was centered about Marlon. Illinois, when the unexpected news came that the young college girl was in Georgia Attention was directed to the Illinois city. It is said, because of a telegram purporting to have been sent by Miss Fureron on Tuesday to a friend in Washington was dis patched from that place. The tele gram, it is understood, was sent to a young man friend, to whom one report had it that the girl had been engaged at one time. In it he was asked to forward her some money so that she might go there. He did not notice, it Is said, but what the message came from Anderson ind wrote a letter to her there want ing to know why she had wired for the money. Shortly later the young man received a letter from Miss Furcron's mother informing him of the girl’s disappearance. It was then, reports say, that he examined the telegram and noticed that it came from Illinois instead of South Carolina. He then got in commun ication with Mrs. Fureron and told her about the telegram. South Caro lina detectives immediately began instituting a search there, but al though hotels were watched noth ing had been seen of the couple up until the information came that she was in Georgia. Mr. Fureron will probably return from Athens today and details of the girl's disappearance and Wil son’s connection with It may not be known until then. Anniversary Program At Second Baptist Rev. Rush Padgett and Rev. W A. Elam To Preach. Revival Begins Monday. Services at the Second Baptist church next Sunday will be as fol lows : 9:45—Rally day in the Sunday school, R. H. Wilson, Supt. 11:00 a. m—Preaching by Rev. Rush Padgett of Lowell. 3:30 p. m.—Program for anniver sary celebration: 1. Special muaic under direction of Mr. Horace Ea soni. 2. Reading of church history. 3. Greetings from First Baptist church. 4. Talk by representatives of Bostic family. 5. Talk by Mr. John R. Dover. 6. Sermon by Rev. John W. Suttle. 6:30 p. in —Meeting Of B Y P. V. general organization, Floyd Single ton, director. 7:30 p. in.—Sermou by Rev. W. A. Elam. The revival meeting will begin on Monday night with Rev, George v: Davis of Gastonia doing the preach ing Services every night at
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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Oct. 17, 1930, edition 1
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