Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Nov. 13, 1958, edition 1 / Page 1
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Population Greater Kings Mountain 10,320 City Limits 7,206 The figure for Greater Sings Mountain Is derived from the 1955 Kings Mountain city directory census. The city limits figure Is lrom the United States census of 1960. p Pages 10 Today VOL. 69 No. 46 Established 1899 Kings Mountain, N. C., Thursday, November 13, 1958 Sixty-Ninth Year PRICE TEN CENTS Mayor Will Make Philadelphia Trip Local News Bulletins MERCHANTS Kings Mountain merchants will be open all day Wednes day prior to Thanksgiving Day but will be closed all day on that holiday, Mrs. Ida Joy, sec retary, has announced. METER RECEIPTS Parking meter receipts for the week ending Wednesday at noon totaled $122.92, including $20.24 from off-street meters and $102.58 from on-street me ters, City Clerk Joe McDaniel reported. TICKETS ON SALE Tickets for the Lions Bowl football game in Forest City are now on sale at all local drug stores at $1.50 for adults and $1 for students. The Kings Mountain Lions Club will re ceive 60-percent of the pro ceeds from the sale of tickets here. Coach John Gamble is one of the mentors for the game, and six Mountaineers will play in the contest. KIWANIS PROGRAM Tom Rankin, assistant Pied mont Council Scout Executive will show a color film on the new Explorer Scout program to members of the Kings Mountain Kiwanis club at their meeting Thursday night The club will convene at 6:45 at the Woman’s Club. EAST SCHOOL East School P-TA holds its regular meeting Tuesday af ternoon at 3:30 p. m. in the school auditorium. NORTH P-TA North School P-TA will hold Back to School night for par ents at their Tuesday night meeting at 7:30 p. an. in the school auditorium. Principal W. R. George will speak on “This is Your School” and re freshments will be served. BARBECUE West School P-TA will serve barbecue supper the evening of Nov. 24th from 5 until 9 p. m. at the school. Free enter tainment is being planned. Plates are $1.25, adults, and 50 cents, children. BUILDING PERMIT City Inspector J. W. Web ster issued a permit Friday to David Burton to make a car port addition to his home on Bennett Drive at the estimated cost of $500. COURT OF HONOR Regular Court of Honor for Kings Mountain district Boy Scouts will be held at City Hall courtroom Thursday night at 7:45. CENTRAL P-TA Central P-TA will hold its regular meeting Monday night at 7:30 p. m. in the school aud itorium, with Bruce Thorbum to present a safety program. Plans for the fall festival to be held November 21st are also to ! be completed. Craftspun fops Blood Donois Craftspun Mills topped all other industries in supplying donors at the bloodmobile visit Monday. Some 124 citizens visited the bloodmobile and from this group only 37 were not industrial work ers. Mrs. J. N. Gamble, Ked Cross executive secretary, listed these donations from Industries: Craftspun Yams, 18. Lithium Corporation, 16. Burlington, 14. Manuey Hosiery, 11. Foote Mineral, 10. Sadie Mills, 9. Minette Mills, 3. Mauney Mills, 3. Kings Mountain Manufactur ing Co., 2. Elmer Lumber Co., L Bonnie Mill, 1. Lambeth Roping, 1. Mar grace Plant, L Bridges Member Of Hodges Team Inviting Industry Mayor Glee A. Bridges will join about 100 representatives of other North Carolina communi ties, Department of Conservation and other state officials on Gov ernor Luther Hodges’ industry seeking junket to Philadelphia on Monday. Mayor Bridges will join a group of the emissaries at Char lotte Airport for a non-stop flight to the Pennsylvania city. Frank of the venture is to ac quaint Pennsylvania industrial ists with the “climate” of North Carolina 'as a home for industry. North Carolina officials regard her “climate” as favorable in many directions, including not only weather, but to community facilities, natural resources, la bor relations, transportation, and recreational facilities. The trip is an expanded ver sion of Governor Hodges’ "in vasion ’ of the Chicago area sev eral months ago. Governor Hodges said in Ba leigh recently he was highly pleased with the response from North Carolina communities to his invitation to join the Phila delphia venture. Mayor Bridges said the North Carolinians will make headquar ters at Hotel Sheraton, with a briefing session scheduled for Monday evening at 7 o’clock. On Tuesday mjorning, the communi ty representatives will be group ed for special assignments. It will be a four-day trip. The Rings Mountain Chamber of Commerce will defray a por tion of the Mayor’s travel ex penses. Ml Beaver To Give Recital Gordon Beaver, director of mu sic at Ebenezer Lutheran church in Columbia, S. C„ will be pre sented in a recital of early organ music Sunday afternoon at 4 p. m. at Columbia’s Trinity Episco pal church. Mr. Beaver, former minister of music at Kings Mountain’s St. Matthew’s Lutheran church, re cently received the degree of mas ter of sacred music from Union Theological Seminary, New York, where he was an organ pupil of Ernest White, director of music i at the Church of St. Mary the' Virgin. The organ at Trinity church is a four manual Moller designed by Mr. White and installed at the South Carolina church in 1957. Mr. Beaver’s program will in clude: Dialogue and Muzete — Jean Francois Dandrieu. Chorale Partita on "What God Does is Surely Right”—Johann Pachelbel. Offertoire Sur Les Grands Jeux —Francois Couperin. Aria con Varazione — Gianbat tista Martini. Prelude and Fugue in C Major —Georg Boemb. Chorale Prelude on "Praise to the Lord’’—Johann Walther. Chorale Prelude on “By the Waters of Babvlon’Wohann S. Bach. Fantasia in G Major- Bach. 900 Yule Club Members To Get About $80,000 Thrifty savers who are mem bers of the First National Bank’s 1958 Christmas Club can look forward to payday on November 26. Mrs. Helen R. Blanton, assist ant cashier, said this week that some 900 members will receive checks totaling approximately $80,000. The total compares favorably with last year’s result and is heavily above some former Christmas club payments. Mrs. Blanton said the 1958 club will close Saturday and she ur ged that all members complete their payments by the weekend in order that full checks may be mailed on schedule. “We feel this result is very good, particularly considering the short-time work schedules for many citizens during the first half of the year,’’ Mrs. Blanton commented. • It will be several weeks before the 1959 Christmas club is open ed by the bank officially, Mrs. Blanton said, but numerous memberships for 1959 have al ready been opened. “Next year we’d like to hit the 1,000-mark on members and cross the $100,000 figure in pay ments,” she concluded. Teachers Tour Foote Plant Kings Mountain teachers tour ed Foote Mineral Company’s plant Monday. Included in the tour was show ing to the visitors a number of graphs which explained lithium ore locations, research, and weight of lithium metal. These charts revealed the fact that the Kings Mountain area has the richest deposit of lithium ore thus far found in the nation. After giving an informational talk in connection with the graph. Manager Neil Johnson showed a film demonstarting the open pit method of separating lithium ore from other ores, iso lation process of lithium metal, and some of the many commer cial uses of of lithium. The group boarded the school activity bus, driven by Princi pal Lawson Brown, and, with Ro bert Roseberg as guide, toured a large part of the mining area. They noted the open pit forma tion or rock, veins, and much of the industrial process of obtain ing the desired ore. A question-answer period led by Ben H. Goforth concluded the 1 tour. Mr. Goforth, assisted by Mrs. Gene Steffy, welcomed the group of teachers and served dough nuts and coffee in Foote’s recep tion center. Falls Is Winner In Charity Drawing Luther (Sonny) Falls, con tractor, didn’t know when he sold charity tickets at $50 each that he’d hold the winning one —good for a new car. Illinois businessmen were sel ling tickets to raise funds for the needy at Christmas. Mr. Falls purchased a ticket. His ticket was drawn from the box. The Urbania, Illinois, resident is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Clar ence Falls of Kings Mountain. ROTARY MEETING Dr. A. C. Current, Gastonia dentist, will speak to members of the Kings Mountain Rotary club Thursday at 12:15 p. m. at La Royale Restaurant. Dr. Cur rent is a past president of the Gastonia Rotary club. Television History Teacher Pays Call On Her Kings Mountain Fans BY MARTIN HARMON A television “star” to about 7,000 North Carolina high school youngsters appeared in person before her 102 Kings Mountain fans Wednesday. Miss Lois Edinger, who teach es the T-V American history class beamed from WUNC-TV each morning, paid call to the Kings Mountain class of Fred Withers, high school faculty member, who is assisted by Dean Westmoreland, practice teacher from Grover and Appalachian State Teachers college. In spite of employing regular ly a medium “a” in her speech and conversation, Miss Edinger says she had no prior television acting or speech training and took the experimental television teaching job “cold". Previously, the Thomasville native, a grad uate «f Meredith college, was a history teaching member of the Whiteville schools faculty. "I was petrified,” she remem bers when starting the television lectures. Television teaching, Miss Ed inger says, proves quite differ ent from classroom teaching. In stead of being free and easy the classroom master of 30 or more youngsters, Miss Edinger found she had to consider the technical director of the studio. But the broadcasts are still extemporan eous, with only an abbreviated cue sheet. The cues increase in direct ration to the total of vis ual aides used in the telecast The highly sensitive cameras sometimes force on-broadcast change of plan. If a camera rolls over a match-stick, it’s likely to cut out Thus studio rules in cluding “no smoking’’ and "no eating’’. A total of 38 classes with 4,000 students are enrolled for Miss Edinger’s history lessons through the jointly-sponsored project oi the North Carolina school system and the Ford Foundation. In ad (Continued on Page Eight) Jobless Pay Claims Show Large Drop WINS WINGS — Second Lieuten ant Bobby P. Huskey received his silver wings as a rated jet pilot in the USAF in ceremonies re cently. Huskey Gets Silver Wings Second Lieutenant Bobby P. Huskey received his silver wings as a rated jet pilot in the United States Air Force at Craig Air Force Base, Alabama October 14. During his training at Craig, he flew the Air Force’s T-33 jet single.- engine training air-craft and completed extensive class room studies in aeronautical en gineering, radio communication, navigation, weather, and related subjects. Lt. Huskey is now at Stead Air Force Zase, Nevada for three weeks of Survial Training. He will then be stationed at McCon nell Air Force Base, Kansas, fot sixteen weeks before being as signed to his permanent statioi at Little Rock Air Force Base Arkansas. Lt Huskey, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Huskey of Covington, Ten nessee, formerly of Kings Moun tain, is a graduate of Bethware high school and North Carolina State College. He is married to the former Laura Laine Morris. School For Dance Bid Renewed The Order of DeMolay, through its adult advisor Bruce Thorburn, has renewed its plea to the city board of education to use the North school auditorium for a Christmas dance. Mr. Thorburn renewed the re quest for the Mason-sponsored youth organization in a letter addressed Tuesday to Supt. B. N. Barnes, secretary to the board of education, with information cop ies to school board members. It was considered likely that the board will discuss the mat ter again in Its forthcoming Monday meeting. At last month’s meeting, the board took no action on chan ging a 1938 policy on use of the school gymnasium for non school functions. During the dis cussion, Members J. W. Webster and Dr. P. G. Padgett expressed themselves in favor of making school facilities available for such functions and/or the par ticular function requested. Mr. Thorburn wrote: . . . As long as I have lived in this community I have en deavored to conduct my activi ties so that the youth of this com munity might be better prepared for good citizenship. This com munity being of comparatively small size unfortunately does not have the facilities that some larger communities may have and. therefore, it appears to me that it is necessary for us to u tilize all existing facilities to see that our youth are given the op portunities that they should be given. On many occasions, the fact has been brought to my at tention that I have been in favor of some activity while other cit izens disapprove and vice versa However, if we refrain from do ing these activities that there are objections to by some citi zens then we would do absolute ly nothing at all. I am firmly convinced that a well-supervised and conducted activity is much better than doing nothing at all. I, therefore, ask that you pre sen* this request to the School Board for decision, that the Kings Mountain Chapter Order of De Molay be allowed to use the auditorium at North school for the purpose of holding a Christ mas dance on December 22, 19 58 ... ” Kings Mountain lob Situation Is Improving Claims for unemployment compensation by jobless citizens dropped to 1387 for the month ending October 25—an average of 348 per week and well below the 1841 of the previous four week reporting period. Meantime job orders continued to be placed in healthy amount with the employment service of fice, Manager Franklin L. Ware, Jr., reported. During the month, the office handled 76 job orders and placed workers on 53 of them. In addi tion, the office filled 12 out-of town job orders and placed thre persons on farm jobs. A total of 104 new applicants for work were recorded during the month. At October 25, the active file of job-seekers totaled 565. Mr. Ware said the jobless pay claims total was swelled slight ly by temporary shutdowns at a few points occasioned by short supply of production materials. __ 124 Donate To Blood Bank Some 124 citizens visited the Bloodmobiie at the Woman’s club Monday. Donors include: Albert J. Head: Winslow Spurling; Her man T. Cash; Grayson T. Pan ther; James W. Wells; James Hannah; Grady K. Howard; Co len Huffstetler; Mrs. A. J. Head; Dargin E. Childers; Bobby G. Moore; Leonard Smith; Damn Moss; Joe Lee Farris; J. Earl Seism; Millard L. Metcalf; Mar ion W. Johnson; James L. Ben nett; Clinton E. Jolly; Sam H. Stallings; Charles G. Propst; J. D. Bridges; George H. Mauney;! Edgar E. Blackburn; Robert L. Campbell: and Thomas E. Darby. Also: John H. Beam, Marvin B. McDaniel: James D. Jackson; Mrs. Margaret Dellinger; Ralph Hayes; J. H. Patterson; Dr. P. G. Padgett; Lawrence Lovell; Mrs W. P. Gerberding; Robert H Gantt; Ray W. Cline; Clarence T. Dixon; Dr. D. F. Hord; Iloov- j er H. Hilliard; Wayne H. Ander- ; son; Burlie Peeler, Jr.; William W. Black; James M. Bridges; j Paul D. Bell; Yates C. Harbison; Mrs. Yates Harbison; John M. j Blanton; William B. Dorsey; Charlie Sims; Mrs. Paul Whitley; Mrs. Albert McMurry; Mrs. Mary Lee Adams, and Boyce Patterson. Also: Thomas H. Davison; Charlie Ballard; Mrs. Juahita Steffy; Jack Martin; Mrs. Julia Plonk; Jack E. Hardin; Conie Lee Hooper; C. J. Gault, Jr.; Fred E. Southards; M. L. Bridges; Bob Bagwell: Janie Boheler; Marion P. Sexton: Arthur Hardin; Mrs. Dorothy Bennett; Robert L. Pay ne; Roger Stowe; William K. Lovelace; and Mrs. Ruth Smith. Also: Mrs. W. C. Wood; Roy Lee Huffstickler; James Dover; Eugene Medford; Jack Deaton; Paul Cole; Mrs. Thelma Dellin ger; Bill Caldwell; Fred O. Tho mas; Rueben Gentry; Garrison Goforth; Dr. Kenneth McGill; Charles Neisler; Bobby F. Maner; Jasper E. Wilson; Arnold Bell; William Hord; A. R. Hawkins, Dennis L. Goforth' Wesley J. Bush; Paul L. Bridges; Gurney Legan; John P. Lackey; Howard Smlith; Horace Brown, Charles Randall; David Smith; William Adams; Mrs. P. O. Howell; Mrs. Cora Hartsoe; and Mearl D. Va lentine. Also Donald E. Kiser; Troy Wright; Mrs. Mell Whitley; Jes se Martin; Elmer Martin; Hill iard Black, W. E. Rosenstengel; Mrs. William Hord; Harold Dean Spears; James Williams, Clyde Huffstetler; Peggy Tucker; Rus sell Owensby; Ray G. Alexander; Baxter M. Hayes, Furman Wilson and John Howell. Lions Selling Fiuit Cakes Kings Mountain Lions are con ducting their annual Thanksgiv ing Christmas fruit cake sale— with a better value, Chairman Gene Timms says. This year the Lions have a new product, a Bost Bakery fruit cake, rather than the brand sold last year. It’s good, Lions agreed, as they sampled it at Tuesday night’s meeting. ' In addition, says Mr. Timms, the cake’s a bargain. At $3.25, it’s a half-dollar under the reg ular market price. Rose's To Open New Self-Service Store On Friday Rose's now Kings Mountain store, modern-style, self-service variety store, will hold its offi cial opening this week end, be ginning Friday morning at 9 a. m. Manager P. H. Wilson, associa ted with Rose’s for 22 years, an nounced details this week of the store-opening celebration. Mr. Wilson said the new store will be operated like the grocery supermarket, with self-service push carts and shopping baskets for customers and with front-of store check-out counters. The Kings Mountain store thus becomes the 65th in the 148-store unit Rose chain to be designed for self service operation, S. L. Clary, Rose’s eighth district sup erintendent, said Wednesday. Mr. Clary, along with a size able crew of Rose store managers from nearby cities, plus carpen ters from Rose’s building and fixture plant at Henderson, have been working night and day this week to ready the new store for Friday’s opening. The new store is located in the Herndon building on S. Battle ground avenue, adjacent to the building it occupied since open ing in Kings Mountain in 1939. Mr. Clary said that the new store will double the counter space in each department, with the result that inventory has been increased in both breadth and depth. The new building has been completely redecorated, with new front and window display facilities, central heating and air-conditioning, and with mod ern fixtures throughout. Mr. Clary also noted that Ro se’s has set up an employee pro fit-sharing trust to provide re tirement for long-term employ ees. The trust fund is company paid and now totals $3,000,000. Rose'S units are located in six southern states. Home offices are located at Henderson. Rev. Gregory Died Wednesday Rev. John Gregory, Kings Mountain heart patient who un derwent heart surgery at Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem Tues day, October 29 to close a hole he had there since birth died Wednesday evening abotot 7 o’ clock after being on the critical list for several days. The heart operation was re- J ported by friends and relatives; as a success. The critical period would have been over 72 hours j after surgery had not complica tions occurred in the form of a lung infection and kidney block. Rev. Gregory was the former pastor of Park Grace Nazarene Church here and First Nazarene Church in Gastonia. He is survived by his wife, the former Ruth Millen of Kings Mountain, two daughters, Phyllis Ruth and Glenda Joyce, both of the home, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Gregory of the Park Yarn community. Funeral arrangements are in complete. STUDY COURSE Mrs. Howard Ware will teach the WMS study course at Westover Baptist church Satur day afternoon from 4 until 7 o’clock. A covered dish supper will be spread at the church and all members are invited. Board Amending Current Budget sssmsmmss PRESIDENT — Richard Barnett has assumed the presidency ot the Kings Mountain Lions club, succeeding Rev. R. Douglas Fritz. Mr. Barnett was lirst vice-presi dent. R. E. Barnett Is Lions President Richard Barnett assumed the presidency of the Kings Moun tain Lions club Tuesday night, succeeding "Rev. R. Douglas Fritz who leaves next week to become pastor of a Memphis, Tenn., Lu theran mission church. Mr. Barnett was first vice president. He announced that W. Lawson Brown had been named j by the directors as third vice- [ president and that Wesley Bush has been named to succeed to Brown’s director vacancy. Martin Hannon becomes second vice- j president and Edwin Moore first vice-president. At the Tuesday meeting, the' club heard an address by Manly I. Clark, Lawndale druggist and governor of Lions district 31-C. Mr. Clark declared that the foremost aim of any Lion should be service to his community and mankind. He noted that the work of the Lions club transcends the bounds of the several city limits and labeled Lions International j as an effective organization working for international peace j all the way around the globe. “The world is now quite j small” he commented, adding, j “Lionism is one of the world’s great peace movements of to-! day.” Mr. Clark highly commended J. W. Webster, Kings Mountain past president, for his work as zone chairman. Paul Walker welcomed Robert Hall as a new member and John Caveny as a re-instated member. Dwayne Caldwell and Graeme Reeves were guests of the club as high school “students-of-the month”. Manet Named By Red Ctoss B. F. Maner, Kings Mountain insurance mian, has been ap pointed chairman of the Red Cross blood program, J. Ollie Harris, chapter chairman, has announced. Mr. Maner succeeds Rev. R. Douglas Fritz, who is moving from Kings Mountain to accept a new pastorate. Santa Claus Will Pay Lone Visit, But Yule Lighting Will Be Bettei <^uy electricians were worKingi this week on a project indicating! that Santa Claus is again coming; to town. However, plans ol the Kings; Mountain Merchants association j are that only one visit — the night-before-Christmas jaunt will be the lone Santa Claus stop at Kings Mountain this year. The reason: Kings Mountain merchants, who usually spend $1, 000 or more on a Christmas open ing parade, are investing this amount into street lights this year in order to give the business sec tion a better Christmas • season appearance. In fact, the outlay involves not only the cash, but other prime considerations of value, includ ing hard work and time. Glee E. Bridges and J. T. Mc Ginnis were in charge of the Merchants association’s commit tee on improving Christmas sea son decorations. First, Mr. Bridg es reports, the Garden Club coun cil had a lighting blue-print drawn oy a representative oi General Electric company. Sub sequently, he and his corps of aides began salvaging the usable portions of the aged Christmas street decorations, which is Merchants association property. The salvaged light system was then built-to. In general design, the Kings Mountain’s new lights are simi lar to those used by Gastonia when completed. Mr. Bridges says the merchants indicated in a poll last spring they want to invest exclusively in Christmas lights until the system is complete. “Then we'll return to pa rades," Mr. Bridges commented, He said numerous citizens, in cluding members of the Cleve land County Life-Saving crew, have volunteered their aid in the tedious task of salvage and re pair. This week city electricians were stringing the canopy of lights or Battleground avenue, and will al so string a sequence on Moun tain street. New Figure For 1958-59 To Be $620,000 The City of Kings Mountain’s 1958-59 budget was expected to increase about $30,000 Wednes day night, as the board of com missioners considered a budget ordinance amendment. Specifically, City Clerk Joe Mc Daniel said, the capital fund would be increased by $23,033.54 —amount of the June 30 cash surplus in the capital account —and the debt service budget item will be upped $0,301.07. The latter is a purely technical change, as the debt service fund also had a cash surplus and the tax levy anticipated the deficit against the year’s debt payment requirements of $51,265. In fact, the $23,000 escalation of the capital fund is to provide funds for capital improvements already fact or in process. The original budget was $590, 675. The increases will raise the budget to $620,009.61. Mr. McDaniel listed the major unbudgeted capital aditions as 1) Additional street paving; 2) Additional sewer facilities; 3) Additional cost of an elec trical department truck; 4) City Stadium seat addi tions; and 5) Purchase of a calculator. Other business scheduled for Wednesday night regular meet ing included a public hearing on street improvements for Monroe, Chestnut and Gantt streets, and calling of a public hearing for December on an aditional group of street improvements assess ments. Band Fund Gilts Near 52700-Mark Contributions to the Kings Mountain school band uniform fund grew toward the $2700 mark this week, as members readied a ticket sales drive for a benefit film promotion at Joy Theatre. In addition to the $2681 cash in-hand as reported by Director Charles Ballance, the band can expect a $$100 boost from the KlKwanis club’s benefit turkey shoot held last Saturday. Goal of the uniform fund drive —to purchase uniforms to re place the current models pur chased in 1938—is $4,000. Mr. Ballance said several com mittee solicitation reports are still ineomiplete and expressed hope these reports, plus the mo vie promotion, would bring the campaign to successful conclu sion. The film promotion will be on November 20 and 21. Joy Theatre has scheduled “Andy Hardy Comes Home", starring Mickey Rooney, for a two-day showing. Band members will vend tickets at slightly inflated prices in re turn for a share of the gate re cepits. “We've printed 2500 tickets", Mr. Ballance commented, “and I hope we have to re-order.” The uniforms currently in use are in sad repair, with patch-on patch, and the fabric deteriora ted to a point band members must move with caution or haz ard split-outs. Sometimes the split-outs occur in spite of pre cautions. Tom Davison In Gallon Club Thomas H. Davison, manager of A & P Food Store joined the ranks of the three gallon club at the recent visit of the Red Cross bloodmobile. Yates Harbison, manager of Winn Dixie Stores, and Troy Lee Wright, of Mauney Hosiery, were three gallon donors contributing again. City Ordinance Bans Grass Burning A city ordinance prohibits the willful setting of grass fires, Fire Chief Pat Tignor said this week. However, the Chief noted, the prohibition won’t amount to penalties if weed-cluttered lot owners will alert the fire chief and obtain instructions. Big danger, Chief Tignor said, is that the grass fires can get out of hand, endangering residences and out-buildings in the neighborhood. And leaves, the Chief added, make good fertilizer for gar dens and flower gardens.
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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Nov. 13, 1958, edition 1
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