Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1939 — Page 2
PAGE 2
Indiana Politics —
TOWNSEND PLAN LOOMS AS NO. 1, ISSUE IN STATE
McNutt Staff Were Jubilant Over Gain in Newest Capital Poll.
By NOBLE REED
Of rll the issues destined for the 1940 campaign fronts in Indiana, the Townsend Recovery Plan is expected to complicate the picture most even to the point of crossing partisan lines Identified definitely with several Republican candidates in the 1938 elections, the Townsendites now are reported flirting with the Democrats and getting some measure of svmpathy. At a Republican rally at Marion this week, some party leaders predicted that Lieut. Gov. Henrv PF. Schricker would include a Townsend plank in his campaign platform for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. Sees Necessity for Change “That's news to me.” Mr. Schricker said today when told of the G O. P. Statement, “1 have no connection with Townsend leaders.’
However, the Lieutenant Gover-
Girls 16 to 18 State's Best Di oers,
Says 1 Examiner and He Should Know! CHART COURSE
y're More Serious in
Ying Tests, Too, Boyd Declares.
By LEO DAUGHERTY
Paul R. ridden with as many goofy and efficient automobile drivers &s an) man in Indiana. It's Pete's job to take a spin with every Tom. Dick snd Harry who never has had &n Indiana driver's license to learn if they're sufficiently qualified to sit behind & steering wheel. And after riding with more than 5000 drivers of both sexes from the
(Pete) Boyd probably has
age of 16 up he's convinced that]
the best are girl: between 16 and 18. First Comes a Quix
Pete, who uses the formhl Paul R. only in signing official documents, is one of the State Auto License Department’s examiners. If you've never had an Indiana license, want to drive and Pete is the examiner you're assigned to at the license department, he'll start out with sn office quis. Hell ask you 10 questions on highway laws, and there's no way of finding out the questions before hand. He'll want to know the mean-
ing of Indiana's standard road signs RNR 1aw requires and whether vou said.
Charles William Dirr, | Bova .
Et 'some of the
a RR RC Times Photo.
“But I've been luckv. I've had
and markings. Then he'll stand vou NUR the curb and signal 100 feet be- close shaves but never an accident
nor asserted that “there seems to be back 20 feet from & card bearing [Or® turning right.
some logic in part of the Townsend plan according to the limited information 1 have on it." He said the present Indiana oldREE assistance program is getting too expensive and something will have to be done to relieve the presSure on property taxes T don’t know where the money is coming from il the old-age assistance costs go anv higher.” he said Recalls His Activily “1 understand that the Townsend leaders advocate taking all persons over 60 out of gainful employment and opening jobs to younger persnos, thus reducing the cost of work relief projects “Paying benefits to aged persons and eliminating work relief projiects might be cheaper in the long run, 1 don't know. “I have noting to sav at this time regarding my stand on any oldage relief plans.” Mr. Schricker said that he might align himself with the Townsendites ‘probably grew out of the fact that 1 arranged for them to use Fair Ground buildings for their convention by paving electric light costs and the fact that I brought to a vote in the State Senate last February their resolution urging Congress to pass their legislative program.”
the report
» » * McNutt-tor-President, hesdquarters staffers were jubilant today over the results of 8 new poll taken among Washington political writ ers by Newsweek manazine on Presidential possibilities The poll showed that Mr. McNutt Is running a strong second to President Roosevelt for the Democratic nomination. It showed 25 favoring the President, 12 for Mr. McNutt, for Secretary of State Cordell Hull, 6 for Vice President Garner and none for Postmaster General James A. Farley or Senator Burton K Wheeler The report showed that Newsweek's poll last April gave the edge to Mr. Garner and no votes for Mr. McNutt, »
» »
The first formal Democratic announcements for the gubernatorial nomination are expected to be made about Jan. 1 or a few days later, according to party observers. The Republicans have beaten the Democrats to the gun on that score by a wide margin with four candidates on record. Omer 8. Jackson. Aitornev General, indicated he would announce his candidacy soon after Christmas. Lieut. Gov. Schricker said “there's plenty of time vet for campaign announcements,” R. Earl Peters, another Democratic gubernatorial candidate. can't announce his candidacy until he resigns his post as Indiana FHA director, because of the Hatch Law that prevents Federal officials from active participation in polities.
HOOSIER HONORED AT CARNEGIE TECH
Timer Specinl PITTSBURGH, Dec. 2 —Margaret Emily Bacmeister, daughter of Mrs. Rhoda N. Bacmeister, 2952 Ruckle St., Indianapolis, won a scholarship at Carnegie Institute of Technology, it was announced here today. Miss Bacmeister is enrolled in the Department of Architecture for a five-year course.
MAN WHO WANTED MATCH LIGHTS out
Timex Special WHITING, Ind. have been unable who approached Whiting PostofTice 8. m. vesterday and match Instead of producing one, Kovach produced a revolver and fired into the air. The man ran
LAWYERS TO DEBATE HIRING SECRETARY
Local lawyers Wednesday will discuss the feasibility of obtaining a full-time executive secretary for the Indianapolis Bar Association. The group will meet at 7 p. m. at the
o “
Dee. Police to trace 8 man John Kovach, Janitor, at §
asked for =a
Columbia Club, for its annual din-|
ner and election. Principal speaker at the meeting will Stephens of Springfield, Ill, tive secretary of the Illinois State
Bar Association.
be R. Allan | execu- |
letters of all sizes and ask vou to read them off. And &Il the time. without your knowledge. he's been finding out whether vour hearing's good or bad. Climb Tn!
Then vou'll be taken outside for an actusl driving test on | “proving grounds,” t route of which has never been definitely laid out so that applicants can't practice in advance. “Before getting into the car I examine the lights and emergency brake,” he said. “Then we start out. me having only the word of the ap- | plicant that he's ever driven before and not knowing whether he's going to do a perfect job or wreck us.” The test is of every faculty needed for either city or country driving. You must make three left and three right turns. The examiner observes whether vou go to the center of the street and give & hand signal 150 feet before turning left as Indi-
~
You must back into a parking Space, stop and start on a grade, drive past a safety vone and exhibit vour judgment when approaching a railroad crossing. To see if you would know what to do when encountering & washed out bridge on a country highway, vou're asked to make a complete turn. The curb on each side of the street considered ® ditch and the turn should be made without bumping either curb For ‘everything vou do wrong points are deducted from the pos- | sible 100 grade. If the examiner shaves more than 30 points from vour scoreboard, vou've flunked.
is
Records kept by Judge Roberts C. | license court
I'Hill of the drivers’ show that 11.641 of the 130.6% who took the tests in 11 months this vear failed, 1562 because of faulty evesight. “I can tell when we pull awav from the curb whether it's going to be & scary ride or a safe one,” Pete
[in & year on this job. “The voungsters as a rule seem more sure of themselves®han adults “Most bovs think they're good drivers right off the reel, but they aren't. Now the girls. Give them a highway law manual to study and when they come back to report they'll know it by heart more serious taking driving tests, too “Some adults get the jitters. I've seen men who have said thev've driven for 25 years shake at the knees on the trial run. Some experienced drivers from out of state don't see why thev should have to take a test. They say they know the | rules, “Well, there was the woman from California who argued about taking it for twice as long as it would have taken. Then she made a right turn on & red light. That was legal in California, but not here. That's just one of the reasons state driver's tests are needed until all states have aniform rules.”
HOOSIERS IN WASHINGTON
M. Kidney
WASHINGTON, Dec. 2 — Take President Roosevelt out of the Democratic Presidential picture and it leaves Paul V. McNutt—when, as and of this week, in Washington at least. The News-Week poll putting the fair-haired Hoosier second to FP. D in the 1940 Democratic race is well borne out hy the epidemic of attention the Federal Security Administrator is receiving here. In fact, he is so far out in front now that many of the press pundits are taking pot-shots at him. The usually friendly Time magazine coined the term “Oomph Paul” as his latest title. having the double connotation of Oom Paul, the Boer war leader, and Hollywoodss latest word for “It.
In fact, it is this “Tt” business which may prove a definite handicap, as does his exceedingly goed looks, some of the Washington writers of so-called “think pieces” say. Charles G. Ross wrote a column in the Washington Star, for instance, which carried this headline: “Security Chief May Have Too Much Political ‘It’ for His Own Good.” Raymond I. Brandt of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, writing about the possibility of Mr. McNutt receiving the Roosevelt blessing, called him the “Heir Presumptious.”
Yet Mr. Brandt wound up several columns on this subject bv reporting also the possibility of & Mec-Nutt-Farley ticket if F. D. R. does
not run. This came after a detailed |
accounting of the long-standing and cea animosity of Jim Farlev for McNutt and his presidential ig “Preposterous?” Mr. and then answers: “No more so than the deal that made Herbert Hoover the Republican nominee in Kansas City in 1928 with the late Charles Curtis as his running mate. | “That bitter Republican fight was in the open, vet the ‘Stop Hoover’ bloc of Senators swung right into line after the ballots had been tallied.”
Brandt asks,
While Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen continue to give Mr. MecNutt a not too riotous ride on their “Washington Merry Go-Round.” (wo of the leading tail-coat type of non-legman political soothsavers here took cracks at his candidacy this week, Arthur Krock of The New York Times looked down his nose at the whole business and stuck by his own candidate—Wendell L. Willkie -while Frank R. Kent came out in the Baltimore Sun with such columns as “McNutt Splits the Circle” and “The McNutt Gamble.”
» » »
The first Kent piece was designed to show that some of the New Deal inner circle have swung around to supporting the McNutt boom and others continue to sulk and dislike it. The second installment pointed | out the fact that the whole MecNutt campaign is predicated upon getting the President's blessing. Short of that nothing will come of it in Mr. Kent's opinion. » x
=
He wrote: “When Mr. Paul Mec- | Nutt's eastern manager asserts that
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his candidate will have more than 100 of the 350 delegates from the Eastern States on the first convention ballot, he, of course, is talking through his hat. “Mr. McNutt will have nothing like that many on the first ballot and, unless Mr. Roosevelt him his own particular choice to the point of indicating that ne other can expect as much support from him in the campaign. Mr. McNutt
will not have 100 delegates on an:
ballot. “Tt is true that in the last week | the McNutt candidacy has been bathed in a flood of publicity, and
that ‘progress’ has been made in the | become better |
sense that he has known. He himself made several speeches and the wheels of his preconvention machine have been turning more rapidlv. But to the
{question of what does all that mean |
in delegates, the answer is nothing. “The McNutt candidacy is growing more colorful and the candidate more active all the time, but essential facts remain the same. “One of these is that there does not exist anywhere outside of his |
own state a trace of public senti- |
ment for Mr. McNutt. Another is that without complete Roosevelt support Mr. McNutt will go into the convention as Indiana's favérite son and come out that wav. “That is the McNutt situation and no one knows it better than Mr McNutt, who is said to be exceptionally
makes |
the
None of the contacts made for him, or spent for him, or the friends in and out of the inner circle being cultivated for him, amount to as much as one delegate without the Roosevelt support. » » » Frank M. McHale i= on tour again, however, and he will do all he can te prove that Mr. Kent, an argent New Deal critic, is ne great political prophet. Parker LaMoore of the ScrippsHoward Ohio papers, writing about the recent visit to that state of Mr. McNutt and his campaign manager, said: “Paul McNutt wants to he President, and he isn't at all coy about it. He was accompanied on the Cleveland visit by his campaign manager, Frank McHale, Indiana's | national committeeman. “Mr. McHale, a heavyweight Irshman, talks turkey and spent most of his evening putting in a crop looking toward next year's | harvest. to see a sick relative.” » » » While Mr. McHale is out fishing for delegates, some real fishing is being done in Indiana by the true followers of Isaac Walton, a Bureau of Fisheries report revelled.
|
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
1239 Temple Ave, takes a test from Pete a year. « « SOON they N go for | a _ Tide,
They're | URS, clocks, ash trays and all mov- |
—RBy Daniel bers in amounts depending on the
now being campaign of advertising to be oarthe money being yjeq on by the national association.
He didn't try to pretend | | he was in Ohi
|
[eyelist did not stop.
Coming from the Interior Depart-|
ment, it was estimated that anglers spent a total of $1,500,000 in the State this vear. No figures are avail-
Clear ~headed in _ Politics. able on the McHale fishing trip
Lad Who Bolted School Attends Regularly Now
This will bring you up to date! on the lad who, reported several weeks ago, could not bear to stay in school and had about the w record in town for truancy.
He wasn't a bad boy in other wavs, or perhaps not at all. He had no record of any kind in Juvenile Court. His trouble was simply that, when carted off to school by a social
(worker, he would sit in the class-
room and brood for a while and then, whe na chance came, rush outdoors agin. His mother worked and had to leave the house before it was time for the boy to go to school so she had no opportunity to see that he obeved. His truancy record had extended over two vears and Judge Wilfred Bradshaw was unwilling to send him to an institution until | every other possibility had been exhausted. About this time the State Welfare their co-operative psychiatric examinations of certain cases in the Court and this bov was one of the | first to be assigned to the clinic. He was before a board of State psychiatrists and individual State psychiatrists two or three
the Court and |
| icence, lincident, distasteful
They learnéd that extremely
some | dramatic and
times. | Gradually they broke down his ret- |
early in his experience at the particular building he was attending.
longer was in that particular room,
{& coin purse containing $3 on the They learned that although he no sidewalk.
DROPS PURSE AND
orst he could not resist the keenest and other
STATE HOTELS ~ ATCONVENTION
Advertising and “Disappear ing’ Linen Are Among Association Topics.
——
Mrs. Sidney Chandler, says she's 99,
| daughter, | stone Ave.
| But, anyway, : There'll be a quiet Advertising, increased dues and the ‘daughter's home with a birthday old insoluble problem of the dis- ake to adorn the dinner table. Her Appearing linen are being discussed q1q friends will visit with her. at the Indiana Hotel Association's Born in Lexington, Ky, she and 45th annual convention here. Opening yesterday at the Hotel Lincoln the conference will adjourn | tonight following a banquet at the Claypool Hotel, Much of the convention's time is (being taken up with the complica(tions arising from the hotels’ duty
trekked across country hy covered 1" at Taylorsville, Tl.
(Indians on that trip. She had to {wait until she moved to Indianap|olis more than 40 years ago to see
Mrs. to
able objects are placed in the rooms as souvenirs and it is their duty to pack them when they leave.
Pues Are Discussed
» »
ALTHOUGH SHE HAS NO memories of Indian fighting, Mrs. Wright recalled the rigors of pioneer life in Kentucky and Illinois. “I could spin and knit and make | my own clothes when I was just al little girl,” she said. “One winter my mother, brothers and sisters and I wove 800 yards of cloth, she recalled proudly. Sithce her sight and hearing are failing, Mrs. Wright spends most {of her time seated in the living room | of her granddaughter's home, iecalling memories of her early life. She cannot enjoy the radio and newspapers. But don't for a moment think her mind is failing. Just try to recite the alphabet backwards as fast as she can, Besides two other
to provide food and rest to the yo fire Indian, That was at a Towels Are Problem > % w P. E. Rupprecht, president of the AND SHE SAYS SHE never saw Hotel Lincoln, who is conducting about him in newspapers when she the business sessions today, outlined | was a young woman, Which most of us don't know. second husband, Henry C. Wright, For instance, a 400-room hotel has who died a number of years ago, Guest soap costs approxi-| (wo sons and three daughters, all mately $1000 a year and cleaning or whom she has outlived. $2500 annually, race,” she said. Linen sheets have an average life ing.” Her granddaughter SIX months. Towels also have an [gil was good, 100. average life of six months, that| «yr 1 don't watch her,” “if they're not stolen.’ For years hotels have been the cooking. She's still spry and gets they rent a room that the linen, a cane.” Although her sight is failing and a keen mind, Just to prove it, she recited the hitch. She also recited a long poem Asked if the problem had lessened oo had heard as & girl. The poem said that “nowadays hotels provide . . o.oo hanged for his wrongdomore conveniences and in all probHotels still are “irritated at times” | with a check that means nothing | But bad checks are not as frequent as they used to be, Mr. Rupprecht lished through reputable agencies more and more, things discussed at the present convention is the proposed raising
traveler at a moment's notice, church revival service, organization and manager of the] {Abraham Lincoln, but she read things about hotels| Both her first husband and her a linen replacement bill of $16,000 were Civil War veterans. She had soap and other material votals Sie of about 150 to 170 washings or posed that is, Mr. Rupprecht, pointed out, Chandler said, “Mother will try victims of these who believe when aysund quite easily with the help of she is nearly deaf, Mrs, Wright has alphabet backwards with only one in the past decade, Mr. Rupprecht yp 4 heen written by a young man ability there is more being taken.” more than the paper it's written on. | said, because credit is being estabOne of the most important of dues. Dues are paid by mem-
number of rooms they have in their hotels. The Association is raised rate in dues
proposing a to finance a
Urge Liquor Control
The group is alse interested in having the State advertising appropriation increased so that travel in Tndiana can be advertised to the hotel industry's advantage, The organization alse favors jn. Bumb and creased enforcement of the liquor Charles Bumb Jr. and laws in regards to taverns, Mr. Schwinn, all of Indianapolis.
Rupprecht said, RR Te li
While hotels do not expect to RIDE MOTORCYCLES
make a great deal ~f profit on their food because of the large overhead, | ouT OF NORTHLAND they do receive a good income from | their bars, and it is te their in-| terest that taverns and “honky tonks” do not bring back talk of local option and Pr ORIGIN.
MAN, 77, 1S INJURED BY HIT-RUN BICYCLE
Joseph Souer, 77, of 2845 McPherson St, was injured last night when struck by a bicvele at Park and Massachusetts Ave. He was treated at City Hospital. Police said the boy |
Mrs, Chandler, she granddaughters,
William |
SEATTLE, Dee. 2 (U, P) —Two bearded, tanned motorcyclists]
la 2350-mile, | Fairbanks, Alaska, feasibility of a (national highway. Riding one-cylinder,
to prove proposed Mo -
Williams of Fairbanks and | John T. Logan of Rochester, Minn., were accompanied by their dog, | Blizzard, who rode on a platform between the two cycles, welded together in tandem. Williams and Logan will end their trip in Washington, D. ©.
(Slim)
18 MIDGETS COLLECT JOBLESS INSURANCE
Miss Ge®rgia Hastings, 45, of 2840 Forest Manor Ave, was injurad in an automobile collision at Lee and | Lambert Sts. She was riding with |
Luther D. Thompson, New Castle, | SAN FRANCISCO, Dee. 2 (U. P). Ind. The other car was driven by |
| —Fighteen midgets, thrown out of 3 » bs Na e. sv, ua al i work when the Golden Gate International Exposition closed, began collecting $18 a week unemWOMAN GRABS IT ployment benefits, With a farfare of trumpets, their se | press agent explained that the little Standing on the corner of 25k St. people had a job in Australia, but | and Central Ave. last night Barbara pecause nearly all of them were Griffith, 2403 Central Ave. dropped German, the trip was canceled in [Te fear they ight be Interned.
FALLS ON ENGINE, DIES
Before she could pick it up, an- | lady about middle-aged,
|cruelest memories of that incident snatched it and ran west of 25th St. |
{whenever
Whn the memory became unbear- |
able, he ran. Thus, his truancy. The solution was simple. The boy | was transferred to another school building and his attendance record has been perfect since then. He is good at his studies, too. Unless something unforseen happens, that youth's problem is solved, the Court's problem is solved and community is richer by one orderly and pro ORY essing youth.
NAB SLOT MACHINE
|
he entered the building. she told police.
IN DOWNTOWN RAID
Police last night
and confiscated a punchboard and slot. machine. Almet Shepard. 31, was charged with advertising a lottery and gift
‘enterprise and violation of the 1085 |
slot machine act. Nine men and three women were charged with the violation of the 1935 beverage act last night after a raid at a home in the 500 block
to him, had EE a Belle Vieu Place.
| al Bre pe |
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December Sth and 9th JUNIOR LEAGUE NEXT-TO-3418 N, ILL TEL. TALBOT 4831
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rafded a place Board began in the 100 block N. New Jersey St.
VINCENNES, gS, nd., D Dec. 2 (U.P).
JEAN PARKER SUES HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 2 (U. P).— Railroad, was killed yesterday when | Jean Parker, brunet screen actress, he fell against a locomotive, Trainfiled suit for divorce yesterday | men said he was standing next to against George E. MacDonald, New | (the erigne when it blew off steam York mnewspaperman, whom she and that he fell, hitting his head on married three years ago. She the engine, when he moved hurcharged cruelty. | riedly.
How we finance the largest part of one’s
accumulate your down payment, too? Tlelping folks like you to obtain their own fundamental object of our business.
Why not ask one of our officers to explain our system?
C ° ETT 1 3
198-99 or 100, Mrs. Wr Cuts s Birthday Cake Today
Recalls Pioneer Life in Kentucky and Illinois; Crossed Indiana in Cover red Wagon.
MRS. MABEL WRIGHT'S neighbors sav with whom she lives at 3220 § Mrs. Wright says only she Was 20 years oltt in 1861, which would make her 98. today is her birthday, celebration for
her Tirst husband, Smith Rousey, |
[wagon for 15 days and nights to set-|
ing, warning others not to follow his |
| chugged into town yesterday after | six-months trip hom
%00-pourd | a English motorcycles, Clyde Charles
today |
— Carl Foster, 38, a rack layer for [the Chicago & Eastern Illinois
homes the surest and easiest way is a
ight
she's 100. Her Keyremembers
that she
Mrs, Wright
al her
grand-
| |
No, she says she didn't see any,
“John D. Rockefeller and IT ran &| “And I'm still live] inter- | Mrs, Wright's appetite
get out in the kitchen and do the |
~. b
Mrs. Mabel Wright | hers 1861.
, remem-
GRADES AT BUTLER AIRED IN THESIS
Dr. Amos B. Carlile of the Butler
University College of Education has put.
[to belittle reporis fiom Oxford
SATURDAY, DEC. 2, 1939
DOUBT BRITISH
CALL HOOSIER
i a —
Parents of Australian-Born Student Belittle Reports Of Navy Draft.
Mr. and Mrs. Odin L. 3764 Park Ave,
Remington, today were inclined 0, that their son, Odin Jr, had been ordered to report Jan. 5 in Canada for assignment in the British Naval Enlistment Department as an Aus tralian citizen, “He's an American citizen.” father said. “He was born in Australia, but he returned to the United States with us when he was 16 on an American passport. Tt all sounds like the kind of story college boys might cook up.”
Attended Howe School Odin Jr,
his
. is a sophomore at ami University at Oxford. be 21 years old next February. at which time he must declare his citizenship either as that of his par
Mi« He will
ents or of the mation in which he {was born. Until then he is cone
E (sidered an American citizen.
His only military training, Mr, [Odin said, was in Howe Military [Academy in Indiana shortly after [the family returned from Australia, | where Mr, Odin had been a saless man for American products. | The Rev, Theodore Fisher, prac (uate theology student at Butler Un versity, pointed out that it is in (possible for Australia to invoke an: [tre of compulsory Army or Nan enlistment program without refers {endum. The Rev. Mr. Fisher is (native of Australia,
Goes to Australia
Ariss \v
Britain has notified (tralia that she doesn't want (men, just machines and airplanes Ihe said, “Only by referendum would lit be possible anyway to force a [draft in Australia, since any enrols ment now must be on a purely ve [untary basis. And the Prime Mine [ister of Australia has guaranteed (the country that there shall be no such move to approve a draft.” Richard Todd, who was graduated | three weeks ago from the Lincoln College of Chiropractic here has left for the “down under” country, A native of Australia, he had been worried about possibility of enliste ment for war service before he left, reassured, said he was just gon
“Great
a Al
»
set some sort of a record in pre-|ing back home vo set up practice,
“A Survey of a Uni-
paring a thesis on DRecde of Grades at Butler versity.’
HEARST ANT QU ES SOLD
| CHICAGO, Dec. 2 (U, P) Thirty-five hundred pieces from
-
Aided by NYA students, he probed | William Randolph Heart's $25.000 «
into 162,837 grades at the University | 000 antique
collection, including
from 1925 to 1035 to prepare the George Washington's orderly hook (work, which contains 2150 pages of [and Abraham Lincoln's geography
| tables and graphs.
included in the work.
A total of 280 text, Butler faculty members’ grades are here Dec,
will go on exhibition and sale 5, it was announced toe
day,
Frances Bergman and Mrs. Charles) SRR two great-garndsons, |
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