Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Aug. 31, 1932, edition 1 / Page 1
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.-— 8 PAGES TODAY j *.___ A M*il per year, c.n artvancei - »3.n6 Carrier otr ri-ar. cip art aoeai 13 CWr VOL. XXXVIII, No. 105 SHELBY, N. C. WEDNESD’Y, AlC. 31, 1932 (Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday Afternoons) Late News THE MARKET Cotton, Spot____9'f.c Cotton Seed, per ton in rar Lot*. F. O. B. .. *12.00 D Showers Likely Today's North Carolina Weather Report: Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday, probably followed by showers in west portion Thursday. To Help Cotton Washington, Aug. SI.—The gov ernment has put $50,000,000 more in cotton, it developed from a speech made by Jesse H. Jones, of Texas, (director of the Reconstruction Fi nance corporation,) who said that amount had been advanced to the cotton ro-operatives and the cotton stabilisation corporation, to permit holding off the market about 2.000, 000 bales until next year. Eton Mill Co. NameOfFormer Eastside Plant Jack Dover Is President And Fred R. Morgan Vice President And Secretary. Eton Mill company Is the new name lor the .Eastside Manufac turing Go. A charter was Issued Monday in Raleigh when the bank ruptcy court confirmed the sale ol the Eastside Manufacturing Co. to the six creditors who placed the highest bid of $260,000 for the plant and its equipment. " "■ A meeting of the new stockhold ers was held Monday night after (he confirmation of the sale Mon day morning and a re-oymnization was perfected. J. R. Dover, jr. was elected president. Fred R. Morgan vice president and secretary, Chat D. Thoms, treasurer, and R, G. Taney, assistant treasurer. It will be recalled that the East side Manufacturing Co. took vol untary bankruptcy in July, there being an indebtedness of a little more than $260,000 to Wilson and Bradbury, the commission house in New York which sells the products of the mill and to five directors who signed notes to tide the mil through financial troubles. Unable to be financed further, voluntary bank ruptcy was taken and the property was sold in the office of R. M. Ross. referee in bankruptcy in Charlotte on Monday to Fred R Morgan who put in a bid of $260,000 for the six creditors. The mill was operated while In bankruptcy b'’ j. r. Dover as trustee, and con tinued operating without interrup tion. The officials of the new organ tzation were busy yesterday having the insurance changed and other details attended to. Eastside was built about twelve years ago and the name has become so firmly em bedded in the minds of the public that it wall require sometime before the name ‘‘Eton” will take the place of Eastside. In fact. Miss Elizabeth Alexander who does most of the telephone answering in the mill of fice. is prone to answer in her courteous way "Eastside Mill when calls come in Mrs. Holland Is Bariedln County Her Husband Was Native Of Cleve land. Buried At Boiling Springs. At noon today the remains of Mrs. Oliver Franklin Holland were buried at Bolling Springs Baptist church cemetery, the funeral be ing conducted by Rev. L. R. Pruett of Charlotte and Dr, Zeno Wall of Shelby. Mrs. Holland died in Charlotte Monday afternoon at the home of her son, J. Rush Holland, 515 North Pine street, where she was stricken with paralysis Monday morning She was 76 years old. Her husband died several years ago and was a brother of the late Mrs. M. N. Ham rick of Shelby and of Mrs. John F. Moore of Boiling Springs. Before marriage she was Janie Wall, of Rutherford county, a daughter of the late James Webb Wall and Mrs. Irene Queen Wall. She is survived by her son whose home she died in and three daughters, Mrs. M. E. Ross. Mrs. E. C. Boyette and Mrs. J. Whitman Neal. Two sisters, Mrs. Ma«ie Trout of Forest City and Mrs. J. K. Moore of Caroleen also survive. After a brief funeral service at the home in Charlotte her remains were brought to Boiling Springs for interment. Will Present Picture Of J. Clint Newton Appropriate exercises will be held Sunday morning at the First Bap tist church Sunday school when a portrait of the late J. Clint New ton WiH be presented to the Newton Bible class. Mr. Newton taught a class of young men for a nuipber of years at this church and the class now bears his name in honor of his memory and faithful work Contract For Polkville Road Will Be Let Sept. 10, Raleigh Reports Highway Chairman Assures That Link Will Be Constructed During Present Building Program. Route Not Definitely Selected. The Shelby-Polkville highway link will be constructed this year and contract for the project is expected to be let on September 10. Definite assurance that'the road will be built comes from E. B. Jeffress, chairman of the State Highway Commission, and information from other sources [has it that the contract will be let 10 days from now. i Surveying on the proposed road has been going on at intervals. Off and on, for months. Recently some controversy developed as to the routing and engineers returned to Shelby Worried Some The fact that a-routing had not been selected and approved cause a worry on the part of some citizens anxious to see the road constructed. They feared that with a controversy developing over the routing the matter might be retarded so long that the federal road building fund to aid unemployed would be used up on other projects and the road here not built. "The main idea," as one citizen stated it, "is to get the road. If we keep the matter hanging fire by our inability to decide what route pleases us most, we may not get any road.” Up until today, so far as is pub licly known, the routing is not def- ! initely known. Jeffress Latter In a letter to The Star, however. Chairman Jeffress makes it clear that, the road will be built. He says "I assure you that we intend to include the link of road from Shel by to Polkville in the present pro gram and get it under contract as early as possible." Although the highway chairman sets no date for letting the contract, it has been learned from other sources that the contract will be let September 10, and that construc tion work will start soon thereafter. Two Fires Tuesday In City; Furniture Cotton Damaged Firemen* Have Most Active Day In i Several Weeks. Cotton Samples Burn. Shelby firemen had more action yesterday than they have had in a month or two, one fire taking place in the morning and another in the afternoon. The first blaze was in the furni ture storage room of John M. Best on Trade street. Considerable dam age was done to the furniture stor ed there. The afternoon call was to the Honeycutt-Campbell cotton office in the second floor of the Lire berger office building, West Mar- ! ion street. A blaze had started in I some manner in the sample room of the cotton office and had made | pretty good headway when firemen I ani' ed. The floor was filled with smoke and firemen had a difficult j time getting to the smoldering | samples to throw them out the j window. Wreck Victim Shows Much Improvement Cicero Patterson, travelling sales man, who was seriously injured in an automobile-ambulance crash Monday night week ago, was said to be "doing fine" at the Shelby hospital. Mr. Patterson had a leg and an arm broken and was other wise injured in the crash, his con dition being considered critical for several days. Federal Court Jurors Selected For Term Here Twenty-Two Of 54 Juror* Picked In Cleveland. Other* From Neighboring Counties. The fall term of United Slates district court will convene in Shel by on Monday, Sept. 26. Jurors for the term, totalling 54 have been selected. Of that num ber 22 are from Cleveland county, 14 from Rutherford, 11 from Lin coln and seven from Gastonia The jury list follows: W. W. Glenn, R-2, Lawndale; W. C. Barnes, Rutherfordton; W. A. Gladden, Patterson Springs; H. A. Bell, Unions Mills; B. A. Parker, Casar; J. H. Dellinger, ’Cherryville; T. T. Derr, Iron Station; J. D. El liott, R-2, Shelby; Seth Morehead. R-3, Shelby; Floyd McSwain, Earl; C. G. Rhyne, R-2, Kings Mountain; M. C. Whitworth, Waco; J. C. By num, Lincolnton; R. A. Harris, Harris; Fred Craig, Lattimore; Bev ly Shldle, Vale; O. L. Goodson, R-3, Lincolnton; Lector Ledford, Lln cplnton; C. S. Hendricks, Belmont; Earl Sigmon, Vale; H. W. McKin ney, R-l, Mooresboro; R. A. Hand. Belmont; Jack Dover Shelby; Hugh P. Mauney, 814 w. Walnut St., Gastonia; John H. Falls, R-l, Gas tonia; H. L. Toms, Shelby; Oscar C. CooJrrR'-T.'CKSa.f; Wins CaldwelT,' Iron Station; C. C. Higgins, Caro leen; S. S. Carpenter, Lincolnton; Ernest Mauney, Kings Mountain: J. M. Underwood, 414 S. Marietta St„ Gastonia; A. L. Rucker, Ruth erfordton; R. M. Lockman, Lin colnton; George Biggerstaff, Ruth erfordton; John O. Rankin, South Broad St„ Gastonia; A. A. Edwards. R. 3, Ellenboro; J. J. Edwards, El lenboro. W. C. Hamrick, Boiling Springs; Jeff Hamrick, Lattimore; Oscar Powell, R-5, Shelby; Will Sain, Vale: J. S. Borders, Shelby; J. B. Ewing, Lincolnton; J, A. McCraw R-2, Gaffney, 8, C.; Dr. R. L. Hunt, Lattimore; H. P. Devinney, Ruth erfordton; Claude Nanny, Union Mills; Addle Sorrels, Gilkey; W. H, Payne, Ellenboro; James Morris. Chimney Rock; J. W. Lee, R-l, Lawndale; Esper White, R-l, Bel wood; Charles White, R-3, Ruth erfordton. Farmers Joining Grange In County Two Meetings Already Held And Three More Scheduled In The County. Many farmers in Cleveland coun ty have signified their desire to join the Grange which is being or ganized by R. C. Adams and R, W. Shoffner, county agent. Already meetings have been held at Polk ville and Lattimore and keen in terest was manifested in the prin ciples for which the Grange stands. Tonight there will be a meeting of farmers at No. 3 township con solidated school and appointments have been made for Mooresboro on Thursday night and Fallston on Friday nights of this week. House Says North Carolina Farmers “One Crop Gamblers”; Need Food 19,000 Farms In State Without Gar-! dens. Send Thousands Away Raleigh. Aug. 31.—North Carolina farmers are "one crop gamblers.” Dr, R. B. House, executive secretary of the University of North Carolina, declared here Monday night at an informal meeting opening the thir tieth annual state farmers' con vention at State college. "Thousands of farmers live out of grocery stores.” be declared. "We spent, $160,000,000 for food bought outside of the state. There are 19, 000 farms in North Carolina with out gardens. "We don't know the difference j between a cow and a milk bottle. | North Carolina cows don’t furnish ! our a pint a day per person for population.’ ’ Diagnoses Trouble. A man lives by religion, by edu cation and by vital association with his fellow man,” the speaker de clared, ' in opening his remarks to examine the “center to see what we live by, whom we live with and how we live.” The depression, he said, has made it necessary to examine the "center of our life” when “in a country like this, an honest man cannot get honest work to do and cannot eat the bread of honest worth.” Registration of visitors to the con vention began Monday afternoon and by nightfall had reached more than fion Gardner Names Frank Hill For Place On Bench This afternoon it was learned that Governor Gardner just be fore leaving Shelby for Raleigh had derided to appoint Frank S. Hill, of Murphy, as special Superior court Judge. Mr. Hill will fill one of the vacancies, of which there was four. Infant Swallows Kerosene, Dies In Hospital Here Only Child Of Mr. And Mr*. Guy CarUn Buried Herr Tuesday Afternoon. Little William Neil Carlin, 17* months-old son of Mr and Mrs. Guy Carlin, Palmer street, died Monday afternoon late in the Shel* I by hospital as the result of drink ling kerosene. The Information is that the little boy managed to get near a kero sene container Saturday, placed the tube in his mouth and sucked tn and swallowed a quantity of the kerosene. Just how much kerosene the youngster swallowed is not known. A physician was called im mediately after the boy swallowed the kerosene and his stomach was pumped out. For a time he seemed to be better, but grew worse later and was carried to the hospital, where he died. Presumably he swal lowed quite a bit of kerosene and it soaked into his system despite the effort to remove the fluid with a pump. Funeral services were conducted Tuesday afternoon at 5 o’clock at the residence of Mrs. Ruth Husky, an aunt, and interment followed in Sunset cemetery. The service was conducted by Dr. Zeno Wall, pastor of the First Baptist church. No Money, No Free Clinic In County, Doctors Willing To Give Vaccine Clinic, But County Declines To Heljf. At the monthly meeting of the Cleveland County Medical society held Monday evening at the Shelby hospital, a paper was read by Dr W. J. Lackey of Falla ton on a medi cal topic. The physicians decided that a statement should be made in the press as to why thertf was not a vaccine clinic in the county this year. Campaigns are conducted in many counties of the state wherein the physicians administer vaccnv free to the people to prevent ty phoid, diphtheria and smallpox. The cost is 25 cents per person vaccin ated and the cost is shared equally by the state board of health and by the county. This year the county commissioners in their retrench ment program did not see fit to share their half of the expense, hence no campaign was held in the county. The doctors say they were perfectly willing to co-operate in the campaign for the sake of the health of the citizens, and it was not their fault that the free clinic was not held. Father Of Mrs. Davis Passes In Gaffney Mitt Nicholson, Age 71 Died In Gaffney. Father Of Shelby Woman. Mr. Mitt Nicholson, age 71 years, and a prominent merchant in Gaffney, S. C. died Sunday at his home In Gaffney and was buried Monday. He was stricken with paralysis a week before he died. Mr. Nicholson was the father of Mrs. Eileen N. Davis of Shelby who holds a position as manager of the Citizens Finance company. Her father had lived in Gaffney for 15 year* and had done much toward the upbuilding of the community. Western Union On Former Schedule Beginning tomorrow, Thursday, the local Western Union office will resume its former time schedule, opening at 7:45 in the morning and remaining open until 9 at night The announcement is made by Manager R. E. Blackwelder, who says that the indicated business upturn has brought in the resump tion of the former schedule. To-! morrow also Dick Branton, Black welder's assistant, who has been on part, time since May, will go back on full-time duty. Eastern Star Meet. A meeting of the Eastern Star chapter will be held Thursday evening at B o’clock at, the temple. Shelby Teachers I GatherThursday For School Plans Little Change In City Faculty Ml I hlldren I r*cd To Enroll Open in* Diy Monday. Other An nouncements Made, I Thr Shelby city school teachers j will meet Thursday morning at » o'clock to make plans for the open ing of the schools on Monday, Sep tember 5 Therp will be little change iri the personnel of the school force, text books used, and methods fol lowed. During the summer the ' school board has had erected a two j room building for the negro race In | the Zoar section. The school tsnow j *n progress there. An addition ol I four rooms has been made to the j negro school In Freedmon. This will J relieve a badly crowded condition that has existed in the school, ! Further information about the i opening plans are Issued as follows j from the office of Supt. B. I, Smith; The negro girls for this year will be given courses In home econo mics. This course Is, without doubt, one of the most valuable that, can be taken by white or colored girts for persona! reasons. There Is thr added value to the advantages of the colored girls that it better fits them for r vocation that many of them will follow Attention Is called to the fact that the history text of the ninth grade should be Robinson and Beard's History of Europe— Ancient and Medieval, and for the tenth grade. Robinson and Beard's His tory of Europe—Our Own Times, Instead of the way In which the ‘CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT l Falls Speaker At Meeting Of Lions S»yi Court Dockets Are Cluttered t'p With Many Trivial Cases. ' Our court dockets today are cluttered up with too many petty cases." Judge B. T. Fails declared last night In a law enforcement ad dress before the Shelby Lions club. Our law's were based upon the idea of protecting the weak from the strong and thereby giving equal rights and privileges to all, he said, but continued manufacture of many laws has had a tendency to under mine the intention. The average citizen, ne declared, does not respect any law which he believes to be Infringing upon his personal rights, and many present day laws are labelled in that cate gory. "The original common laws which have weathered the years are the only ones," the speaker said, "which are really respected. Many of the laws our legislatures make each year serve only to lessen respect for these other laws." Miss Mabel Hord, with Miss Mary Helen Lattimore at the piano, ren dered a vocal selection as a part of the club program with Miss Latti more also giving a piano solo. A. L. Shepherd and James Webb; Gardner were taken in as new members of the club Try Answering These Can you answer 14 of these test questions? Turn to page two for the answers. 1. When was Kentucky admitted to the Union? 2. What is a coalition govern ment? 3. What is the official language of Honduras? 4. What is a peon? 5. What are trees that spring up naturally after forest cutting, fire or other forest removal called? 8. How many children has A1 Capone? 7. What is the annual salary of the chief justice, U. S. supreme court? 8. How old is Vice-President Cur tis? 9. What does the Spanish phrase "Que Tal" mean? 10. Where is the state university of Chile? 11. Who was Electra? 12. What does the word carat mean? 13. What are the colors of the Creek flag? 14. Who was "Calamity'' Jane Burke? 15. What is the simplified spell ing of night? 16. Which presidents entered the White House as bachelors? 17. What is osmlridium? 18. In what river are the Palls >f Minnehaha? 19. What is the masculine of "fi ancee?” 20 What does Ran It Ste 'Marie mean' With Iowa Farm Strikers Here is a scene from the Iowa “Farmers’ Holiday" front. A picket of striking agrarians is shown as it; stopped Holland Ruse, a truck operator of Tabor, who was on his way to Council Bluffs to sell his produce in defiance of the farmers’ pact. Pleading that it would mean his ruin if his fleet of corn-laden trucks were turned hack. Ruse (right i was finally allowed to proceed Four men were injured here in a fracas between farmers and deputies. Sweltering Section Hopes For Rain To Break Torried Wave And Drought The Shelby .section, blistering for four days under unusually torrid weather for late August, was today hoping lor showers to break the re lentless heat and a dought which Is playing havoc with gardens and crops in this section For four days mercury in local thermometers has climbed high in the 90's, nearing 100 yesterday, and due to the humidity the Shelby area for several days ha* suffered more from heat than during the record heat wave in July. Yesterday heat records fell all over North Carolina. Durham had 105 in the afternoon. Greensboro 104. Raleigh 102.6, and Charlotte and Winston-Salem 101. The tern perature In Raleigh was the high est in 45 years, and' the highest ail over tlie State for late August. Hits Cotton. The heat and the continued dry spell has cut down the Cleveland -county cotton crop by near 10,000 bales, it was predicted heer today. Such lias been the extreme heat that cotton Is Just "curling up" as one farmer expressed it Gardens and other crops are suffering In a like manner, many saying their gardens are practically ruined. The weatherman promises showers for Thursday, and in this section it is hoped that the needed rain will come as an aftermath of the eclipse today. Sun Dial Erected At Central School Placed On High School Campus By Last Graduating ( lass There. The gift of the class of 1932. a sun dial, was erected on Central high school campus. West Marion street, this week. The attractive dial is set upon a nice granite base and the lettering tells what class presented It and bears the follow ing Inscription from Shakespeare "Every man is master of his own time.” Pastors And Church Clerks To Meet Here Pastors of the churches o£* the i Kings Mountain Baptist associa j tion and the clerks of the various churches, will meet at the First Baptist church here Monday morn ing at 10 o'clock. Rev. J. V. Deven- - ny, associationai clerk, wants to meet all church clerks at this time Three Couples Get License 80 Marry Three couples have secured mar riage license recently at the Cleve land county court house. They were: H. L. Ellerbee and Evelyn Crater, both of Mecklenburg; and Grady Newton and Texie Lail, both of Cleveland. The other couple was colored: J B Moronev and Evon Miller. M. E. Parsonage, Fallston, Burns (n Blaze Monday Home Of Rev. E. E. Snow Com pletely Destroyed. Some Furni ture Is Saved. The Methodist parsonage at Fall ston, occupied by Rev E. E. Snow and family, was completely de stroyed bv fire Monday afternoon about 4 o'clock. A portion of the furniture, ap proximately half it is said, was sav ed. There was, it was stated at Fallston today, $3,000 insurance on the building and $500 on the fur nishings. Caught From Flue. The blaze caught, it is believed, on the roof from the stove flue. Mrs. Snow was away on a visit to her mother, and Rev, Mr. Snow and Mr. Williams, who are conducting services at St. Peter’s were in the home. The minister, it was said, started a fire in the stove and went to his study for a short time. Go ing back ’to the stove he found that the fire was out and about that time he heard the roar of the flam es on the roof. , Third Degree Work. A called communication of Cleve land Lodge M2 A. F. & A. M. will be held Friday night for work in the third degree Two-Thirds Of American Legion’s Membership Favors Cash Bonus Now I Thirty-Five States Instructed To Vote For It At Convention In Sept. Washington. Aug 31—A gener ous two-thirds of the voting strength of the American Legion's national convention is shown by headquar ters records to be pledged for cash payment of the Soldiers' bonus. Of the 35 state and territorial or ganizations which have instructed their delegates to vote for cash pay ment at the Portland. Ore. convert- - tion next month, 21 reversed post- j tions taken last year. As a majority rule will govern, heado,uarters officials regard it cer tain that the national meeting be ginning Sept 12 will change its i' stand of a year ago opposin'? eashj payment. This action was taken at Detroit after President Hoover per sonally appealed to the delegates to do so. Calculated on the basis of 1931 voting strength at the national con vention. 1.083 of the 1,415 vote to tal. favor cash payment. Only three departments have gone on record against it. On the 1931 basis they would have 61 votes. Although thr voting strength of delegations a> Portland, will not be determined until the credentials committee acts, officers said it would be proportionately the same is a year ago. Seven departments have held cor ientious without acting on the b tCONTI.Ni’ED ON PAGE lion i t J. Frank Jenkins Died This Mom; Funeral Friday Well Known Citizen Died At 10:30 Had lived lien- Over 30 Years An) Was Well Known Throughout Tlie Section. t apt. James Franklin Jen kins. prominent Shelby citizen and Spanish-American war vet eran, died at his home on South Washington street this morning about 10:30 o'clock, death re sulting from heart trouble ( apt. Jenkins had been sick for almost two weeks and was con sidered in a critical condition but his death ranie as a shock to hl.s hundreds of rrlends in the city and over the county Funeral service* will he conduct cd at the residence Friday morn mi «1 10 o'clock with Rev. H. N. Mr Diarmtd, pastor of the Presbytariar church, and Dr. Zeno Wall, of the First Baptist church, hi charge Interment will be in Sunset e«me lery here Popular rittren Cnpt Jenkins, wlio was ,3» year ol one in May, was ope of Shelby’; , most popular and most, public spir ited citizens, He had made his hom« here for 32 years, coming here twt years after his marriage to Mis: Julia Brice, of South Carolina He was born In Eastern Nortt Carolina, near Tarboro. and livec In that section until he eame here with the Southern Cotton Oil company. For years he has beer manager of the local oil plant and in that, capacity came in contacl with and came to be known by I hundreds of citizens of rural Cleve land In addition to his associates here During the Spanish-American war ho volunteered and served with the Tarboro company. After com ing to Shelby he was an officer and later captain of the company K national guard unit. He had served as commander of the local camp of war veterans and was also sn offi cer and active in the state organ ization of Spanish-American vet erans. He was a member of the Presby terian church here, Masonic order and of the Kiwanis club and the Cleveland Springs Country club Five Children Surviving in addition to Mrs, Jenkins are the following children - Mrs, Dale Laughinghouse, of Oreenville; Misses Sara Barton. Virginia and Mary Jenkins, and Frank, Jr. Also surviving are three brothers and one sister: Will Jen kins, of Richmond, Jack and Char lie and Miss Losle Jenkins, of Tar boro. Since coming to Shelby Mr. Jen kins, known to hi* friends as "Capt. J. Frank," has been an active booster of the city and section and has joined in the support of every progressive movement. Of a modest nature, but possessing a cheerful and optimistic disposition he was loved by all who knew him. He will be missed by the entire community of which he had come to be an in tegral part and his family has the sympathy of a wide circle of friends. Active pallbearers for the funeral services will be Willie Doggett, Robert Barnett and Robert Crow der, all of whom worked with him; and Jack Hartlgan. Ben Eley Hen drick, Felix Gee, jr., Hugh Miller, Jr., and Jack Jolley. Honorary pali bearers will be officials of the South ern Cotton Oil company and close friends. No Kiwanis Meeting Because Of A Death There will be no Kiwanis meet ing this week because of the death of Capt'. J. Prank Jenkins, a mem ber of the club. Johnny McKnight. | Associated Press representative In Cuba, who is here on a visit to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John S. Mc Knight was scheduled to speak, but it is thought he will be here next Week and be on the program Moves Back To City Ten Years After He * First Came To Town Ten years ago yesterday G. W Neely moved to Shelby to become manager of the Efird store. Later he was transferred to Charlotte where he lived for a number of years. Some weeks ago Mr. Neely again came to the Efird store in Shelby, and yesterday, 10 years to the day from his first move to the city, he moved his family back here to live They are making their home in the Pendleton apartments. Injured In Fall VV. E. Fox, of Lawndale, is a pa lent in the Shelby hospital, suf 'i-ing with an arm injured in a fall last night.
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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Aug. 31, 1932, edition 1
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