Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 February 1940 — Page 1
The
FORECAST: Light snow and colder tonight ‘with lowest temperature 20t0;25; tomorrow mostly cloudy.
VOLUME 51—-NUMBER 287
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CITIES TO PUT TAXDISPUTEUP TO TOWNSEND
Fight Against Payment of Gross Levy Consolidated At Parley Here.
(Photo, Page Four)
A committee of Indiana municipal officials moved today to arrange a joint conference with Gov-
ernor M. Clifford Townsend and State Gross Income Tax Director Gilbert K. Hewit to. protest the "levy of the gross income tax on Hoosier cities. This action was voted at a special meeting of the Indiana Municipal League at the Claypool Hotel vesterday. More than 150 officials from 60 cities and towns went on record as opposing the imposition of the tax con municipal nontax revenues. Pending the outcome of the conference, League cities will not pay the gross tax, it was decided.
Beals to Name Committee
Voicing strong opposition to the attempt of the Gross Tax division to collect the tax from cities for the first time since 1933, officials agreed they would take the matter to the courts if a satisfactory solution cannot be reached. The choice of committee members was left to Mayor Harry Beals of Ft. Wayne, League president. He said he would appoint Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan of Indianapolis, Col. Louis Roberts, Evansville City attorney, and Walter Helmke, Ft. Wayne City attorney, as a part of the committee. Other members will be named later, he said. Mayor Sullivan, Col. Roberts and Mr. Helmke were previously named to a committee to draft a brief to Mr. Hewit outlining reasons why cities opposed the gross tax payment. Urging the officials to oppose the tax collection, Mr. Helmke said that every city in the state owes the Gross Tax Division three years’ taxes pius penalty charges totaling 38 per cent.
Feel Tax Is Unjust
“T'o pay this tax, which we feel is unjust. would recessitate increasing the tax levy in each of our cities,” he sa.1, “This is agezinct the eatire purpose of the gross income iaX, whici was devised to reduce property taxes in the first place. Mayor Beals assa’lec the tax on rcunicipalities as “discriminatory ” “They don’t attempt to tax the county, the township or the State on revenues,” he said. “Yet they would tax us.” Question of the payment of the gross tax by cities became acute when the tax division issued a bulletin in December advising municipalities they would be liable for payment. ‘The bulletin was issued after the . division's legal department construed a 1937 amendment to the law as applying to the nontax revenue collected by cities.
City Delays Action
Under this construction, the municipalities could be taxed on airport, golf course, concession and licensing revenues which in Indianapolis amount to several hundrec¢ thousand dollars a year. Mayor Sullivan and Corporation Counsel Edward H. Knight have agreed the City is liable for the tax, but are withholding action until the Governor's conference. If the City did decide ‘to pay, there would be difficulty in allocating the money since no provision is made for the fax payment in the City’s 1940 budget.
SNOW AND COLDER, TONIGHT’S FORECAST
LOCAL TEMPERATURES 6a m....3 11am ...38 Tam... 35 12 (noon)... 39 8am ...36 1pm. 38 9a. m. ... 36 2p. m ... 37 10a. m. ... 36
Colder temperatures tonight will bring a light snow, the Weather - Bureau forecast today. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy. _- The Bureau said that the lowest . temperature in the next 24 hours will be 20 to 25. Snow followed by rain and a quick freeze last night covered streets and highways with a coat of ice north of Fowler, Logansport and Marion. Roads were reported clear south of this area.
'God Bless America’ —
Three thousand Boy Scouts introduced a new song to Indianapolis at Cadle Tabernacle last night. And Indianapolis liked it. It was Irving Berlin's “God Bless America.” The Scouts didn’t, know it, but the song was written especially for them. Nevertheless, they didn’t sing it as just another song. They put their hearts and souls into ft and the melody carried them away. Even the parents joined in at the second verse. Col. Theodore Roosevelt disclosed today he had been named a trustee of a fund established by Mr. Berlin for the song. Every cent received from “God Bless America” is going into the trust fund. It is to be used to bless America—by enabling under-
privileged boys to become part of the Scout movement,
Static, Officer? Naw, Only Chief And Dick Powell
(Photo, Page Five)
If there was any interference on the police radio system this morning it was merely one Michael F. Morrissey demonstrating to a Mr. Dick Powell the intricacies of his two-way radio set. Mr. Morrissey is,connected with the Police Force. Mr. Powell comes from Hollywood and, naturally enough,-is not intimately acquainted with the scientific marvels of the civilized settlements this far East. Mr. Powell was duly impressed. He said so. But radios were secondary to the arrival here of the Hollywood gentleman. © It was a home-coming. Dick Powell was back in Indianapolis after a 12-year absence. He shook more hands than he ever has at Grauman’s Chinese Theater. Among them was his old friend (Continued on Page Four)
STUDY PLANNED ON NIGHT COURT
Police Chief, Municipal Judges to Investigate Practicability.
The practicability of a night traffic court in Indianapolis will be thoroughly investigated by Police Chief Michael F. Morrissey, Judge John L. McNelis and Judge Charles J. Karabell when the latter returns from a Florida vacation next month. Chief Morrissey said today that “as far as the Department is concerned, the judges set their own hours. Whenever they meet is all right with us. We are here 24 hours a day.” The night court idea was proposed by Judge McNelis yesterday as “an economic saving to hundreds of persons.” It would, he said, make it unnecessary for workers to leave their jobs to appear in court, and it would rid the employers of inconvenience of doing without their services while they are in court. While no plans can be made without Judge Karabell’s participation, Judge McNelis today proposed that one court could be a night traffic court, handling all traffic cases, while the other court meeting in the daytime would handle only criminal cases. Under the present arrangement, one court handles traffic and the other criminal. cases for a month. The following month this is alternated. Judge McNelis said he had talked with lawyers and the president of the local bar association and that all were favorable to the night court plan. His court clerks also do not object to working at night, he said.
JOE 203; GODOY 202 FOR TITLE TUSSLE
Louis 8-to-1 Favorite to Crush Contender. -
(Another Story, Page 22)
NEW YORK, Feb Feb. 9 (U. P).— Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis held a one-pound weight advantage today when he was examined for his 15-round title fight tonight against Arturo Godoy of Chile in Madison Square Garden. 2 aus weighed 203 pounds; Godoy 02. It was the most Louis had weighed in any of his eight title defenses since he won the crown from James J. Braddock in Chicago in" 1937. The wagering is 8 to 1 on Louis.
30 Golden Gloves Bouts: Scheduled for Tonight
A full evening of leather tossing —at least 30 bouts—awaits Indianapolis boxing fans at the Armory tonight in Golden Gloves competition. Survivors of the first three elimination shows will battle over the three-round route for the right to compete in next Friday's championship battles for novice and open class crowns.
p. m. Reserve seat tickets will remain on sale at Haag's .Claypool drugstore until 6 o'clock tonight and then will be placed on sale at the Armory.
TECHNICAL FACTORS BRING STOCK RISE
ing from fractions to more than $2 in afternoon trading today. Trading was fairly heavy. Wall Street experts attributed the recovery to technical factors rather than cheerful business news. Wheat rallied above $1 at Chicago and other grains followed the trend. At Indianapolis, light hog receipts of 5500 head forced all prices 15 cents upward. Vealers were unchanged.
SCHOOLS ARE CLOSED BY FLU EPIDEMIC
ANDERSON, Ind., Feb. 9 (U. P.). —Superintendent of Schools Arthur Campbell ordered all public schools closed at noon today because of the large number of children who are ill with influenza.
Approximately 2000 Anderson
'school, children are on sick leave at presen:
Tonight's action starts at 7:15]
New York stocks held gains rang-
FARMERS RAP TRADE PACTS
DENOUNCE AMA
Wasiars Back New Marketing Bill as G. 0. P. Takes estimony Here.
By NOBLE REED Indiana farmers assailed reciprocal trade treaties and denounced the AAA as “a failure” while testifying before the National Republican Agriculture Study Committee at the Claypool Hotel here today. Attending the two-day hearing were alll of Indiana’s Republican delegation in Congress, two of whom are members of the Study Committee.
Although many Democratic farm |
leaders ig present at the meeting, none spoke at the opening session.
Most of {those attending were Re-|
publicans, ‘Presiding at the sessions was Rep. Clifford R. Hope (R. Kas.), committee chairman, who asserted that the farm economic situation is “the biggest question confronting the nation today.”
.. Oppose Competition
Farmers who testified at the opening hearing demanded abolition of the AAA and urged passage of the new Farm Cost-of-Production Bill, which they said would stabilize prices and enable farmers to make a living. They attacked the reciprocal trade treaties as depriving American farmers of their rightful market by permitting South American products to compete with local products. Clarence: Schlagel of Clay - City,
Ind., demanded a high tariff on|
farm products, urged a halt in Government spending and demanded that industry be encouraged and “not penalized.” . Robert Spencer of Monticello, Indiana Farmers Guild president, said the Cost-of-Production Bill will stop importation of cheap products and raise farm prices. He said farm imports increased from 20 to 400 per cent during 1939.
Hundreds at Session
A. W. Lovelace of Sullivan, said “partiality is being shown in the administration of the AAA.” He said some farmers near Sullivan were getting greater benefits than others. Between 500 and 1000 Indiana farmers converged upon the city to tell the world and Congressmen in particular ust what they think is wrong with [the industry of the soil and what Congress should do about it. The event, which reverses the usual order: of things by letting the farmers do all the talking instead of the Congressmen, was the start of more than a week of Republican “field day” activities in Indiana. The Congressmen will confer with Indiana party leaders on the 1940 campaign strategies next week. Several meetings will be held. Climaxing| the week of G. O. P. activities will be the Columbia Club's 21st annual Beefsteak Dinner, Feb. 19, when Rep. Joseph W. Martin Jr. (R. Mass.) will be the principal speaker. Rep. Martin was the instigator of the Agricultural Study Committee.
Program Is Outlined
Reps. George W. Gillie of Ft. Wayne and Gerald W. Landis of Linton are the Indiana members of the committee. Reps. Charles A. Halleck, = Robert Grant, Forrest Harness, Noble Johnson and Raymond S. Springer, other Hoosier Republicans | in Congress, all were here for the meeting. Rep. Landis said the problems to be discussed include: 1. “What parts of the AAA program have been helpful to agriculture? 2. “The objectives of a sound farm program. : “Reciprocal trade agreements. 4. “Do we need a farm program or ‘will the farmer fare better unaided by special legislation. . 5. “Has agriculture had its fair share of the national income?
or Other Iavu Jonigns expected to be
heard were Hassil E. Schenck, Indiana Farm Bureau president; Herschel D. Newsom of Columbus, master of the Indiana State Grange; L. M. Vogler, of Lafayette, chairman of the |Indiana Agricultural Conservation Committee, and members of the Farm Management Department of Purdue University.
. 8
They Can't Pacify Albert: Today
Albert: Ogden Jr. . he’s not erying for-1 of ‘lost sleép.
es Phos,
but “becaiise
‘gree gr
is lost pacifier,
Ee
That's s the Whole Story— Where Is His Pacifier?
1 may have been pure coincidence that Mrs. Albert. Ogden was reading a detective story today at her home, 602 Beecher st, oe the
fact Jomains, Ahat is" one
ory that \Re. BectiGr_N oy
celtlofd ring—it fc Or EE TE ay ‘Ogden Jr. This. theory 18” “hei
the parents, Who have turned She
929 MUSIC ALBUMS
SOLD ON FIRST DAY
Appreciation Drive: Gains |
Momentum in State.
>
Indian a ig music appreciation tie er.
movement is: Tapidly - gaining momentum throughout ‘the State, ‘the executive committee of the Indiana group of the ‘National Committee for Music: Appreciation reported today.. . Yesterday, the first for: distribution of the National Committee's record albums, hundreds of men and women—many of them prominent in‘civic and educational. circles—streamed into the distribution |. office at: 245 N.. Pennsylvania St. A total of 922 albums of ‘Schu-
bert’s . “Unfinished” Symphony No. 8 in B Minor were issued.
At intervals of ‘approximately |
every 10 days, the famous symphonies of such masters as Bee-
.thoven, Mozart, Bach and. Wagner
will be : available to thousands of Hoosier families at low cost. ‘An entire symphony of three doublefaced ‘twelve-inch" records—such as Schubert’s—may ‘be obtained for
less than" the ordinary cost of one
single .: commercial symphonic rec-
d. “This is, indeed, an auspicious occasion for Indiana;” William H,
Ball, state chairman of the Nation-
al Committee, said. “It marks the opening of an unprecedented program in the cultural and education-
al field for the State.”
Edward T. Ingle, national director of the National Committee," was elated bythe enthusiastic response to the campaign opening.’
house upsiderilown. since .the Ms
disappeared yesterday’ at about 4:30 o’clock. . Albert Jr, last seen ‘with ‘the: pacifier. "in his ‘mouth-and ‘bent on some
mysterious “child , ‘project, ‘wandered
into the sitting Toom, nest the base burner.
Everyone = Rrows: \hat' the, child is- quicker than. the . eye. Before Mrs. Ogden scould hunt him up, Albert Jr. had (1) caught his fingers "|in a Hoof sorhe way .soithey were
‘| hurt; €2)¢ ‘cried : and then- choked
(3) thorouglly, Misplaced: the paci-
“Three yearzold. Shirley AGH Otieh. Wwho' allows nothing to ecdpe her at-
tention, helped her mother minister
to Albert and after he:had stopped choking, they put him to" bed. ne ‘Then, as" Shirley . Ann. chattered, the two of ‘them hunted. all-over the house..for the pacifier. : They continued the search after Mr. Ogden came homeiand at 9 p. m. gave up and called City Hospital. They were, by. then,. certain that the pacifier was: in Albert's stomach. But X-rays at City. Hospital failed to reveal its ‘presence, although doc-
‘tors told Mr. Ogden that it might
go undetected by X-ray. So at midnight they, brought Albert home. Albert ‘then indicated to his father : (Continued on’ Page: Three)
21 STUDENTS "HURT IN SCHOOL BLAST
As CITY, Mo. Mo. Feb. 9 (U. P.) —Twenty-one. students. were burned and+cut today. when “a’ gas explosion occurred in a. basement room at the Rockhurst. College ‘High School ‘building. ‘The blast rocked the three-story building. : .None was, believed tp have: been hutt seriously, although two or three will remain in hospitals for a few
‘daysi iThe explosion occurred : dur-
ing a, recess and centered : in“ the
‘bookstore rdom and’ cafeteria, where
a large number of boys were lounging on: benches or: gating lunch.
Indiana s 'Man Behind the Plow Has
Indiana. farmers’ views on national problems Study Committee opened a “grass roots”
F. Hardy, Scottsburg; County; W. J
district direc Eel
Clark Dellinger, Jeffersonville; re director of the Indiana G. 0.
Hi $ Sa y
s Photo.
were heard today as the ‘National Republican Thss, hoe hearing here. Among those attending (left to" right) were Bruce John Shearer, Marion County; Verne ‘Sparks, DeKalb P.. Fam Division, and Lon 'R. JENing, okoms,
fitth
1 1
NAZI BOMBER SHOT DOWN I SHIPPING RAID
Royal Air Force Fighters Drive Away Second Craft On British “Coast.
BULLETIN LONDON, Feb. 9 (U. P.).—The British steamer Chagres, 5406 tons, was sunk by enemy action off the northwest coast of England today. Two members of the crew were listed as missing,
LONDON, Feb. 9 (U. P.)—Reinforced British fighting plane patrols struck at German aerial raiders along the eastern coast of the British Isles today, brought down one bomber and drove off another enemy craft attacking coastal ships with bombs and machine guns. Resuming aerial raids on an extensive scale for the first time since last Saturday, the German planes concentrated on the northeast coast where crowds on shore saw a number of vessels attacked by swiftly diving craft. A Heinkel bomber was brought down near the Firth of Porth. Crashes in Field
The Air Ministry first heard that the bomber crashed in the sea, but later messages told of it crashing in a field near North Berwick. Messages from the northeast coast said that a big black German plane had been forced down and that it barely missed telephone wires as it landed in a pasture, struck a fence and halted. Whether it was the same plane the Air Ministry announced had been downed was not known immediately. About noon, a German plane y | bombed and machine-gunned ships off the eastern coast of England. Damage was not reported extensive. Ten minutes later three British fighting planes arrived but the German craft had disappeared.
Several Ships Attacked
A number of ships were attacked, mostly off the Scottish Coast but British fighting planes, reinforced in the last week, counter-attacked with regularity. The German planes came out of the clouds to make the attacks and then dodge back over the North Sea before the British planes could reach the scene in many cases. Messages from coastal towns said that one vessel en route from Scotland to South England was bombed by German planes that dived from a great height, another sent out a distress call and several small fishing boats were reported attacked. One reached port safely without being hit by the German bombs,
Claims R. A, F. Stronger
In the raids Saturday the Germans claimed 14 British and neutral ships were sunk. ; Since then, Air Minister Sir Kingsley Wood told the House of Commons, “considerable increase” has been made in the effective strength of Royal Air Force fighting squadrons to stand off the German attacks.
Nazi Machine Gunners
Fire on French Positions
PARIS, Feb. 9 (U. P.).—German machine gunners, apparently angered by a French bombardment of loud speaker messages across the Rhine, opened violent fire ‘today against pill boxes on the French side of the river. There was increased patrol activity elsewhere on the front, chiefly west of the Vosges Mountains and west of the Saar River. French airplanes obtained several strategic photographs in flights over the German lines.
BERLIN, Feb. 8 (U. 1 (U.P.).—A German patrol operating in the Forbach sector of the Western Front encountered an enemy patrol and took several prisoners, the German High Command’s communique announced today. The clash of patrols in the Forbach sector was followed by an artillery duel, the official German news agency DNB said. DNB said that six Frenchmen were killed, several wounded and four were captured. The German patrol, it was said, lost one killed.
FRENCH CHAMBER MEETS IN SECRET
PARIS, Feb. 9 (U. P.).—Premier Edouard Daladier, vainly opposing a demand by the Chamber of Deputies for an immediate secret session, asserted today that German and Russian secret agents were in France sounding public opinion on five vital questions. The questions which the agents were asking, he said, were: 1. The extent of M. Daladier’s popularity. 2. The popularity and strength of his opponents. . 3. The public attitude Great Britain. 4. Italy’s role in the situation. 5.The strength of
toward ‘European
rance’ 8 -posi-
tion in the Arab wop
XS WITH NEUTRALS;
WASHINGTON, Feb. 9
with several neut
isting in those countries.
liner Rex.
OUST NALIS IN TURK SHIPYARD
Marines Put in Control; Allies Massing Troops In Near East.
LONDON; Feb. 9 (U. P.).—Turkey has put a marine guard over shipyards at which German naval engineers have been fitting engines in two submarines for the Turkish Nayy, British naval circles said to- | day. The Turkish Government, in alliance with Britain and France, had made it known that it is not neutral
It quietly took over the yards, teld the 30 German engineers that their services were no longer needed and put marines in charge of the yards. . A Daily Mail dispatch from Ankara, the Turkish capital, said that there was a steady flow out of Turkey of German, residents, particularly the wealthy commercial representatives of German firms who before the European war had almost a monopoly of key Turkish markets. ; The shipyard seizure came as Gen. Maxime Weygand, French generalissimo of the Allied forces in the Near East, reviewed an impressive concentration of the British and Egyptian , armies, including troops from British India, -outside Cairo yesterday. The review was regarded as an explicit: admonition to Germany and Russia to keep hands off the Near East. It is admitted that France has (Continued on Page Three)
CATHOLIC BISHOPS URGE SOCIAL REFORM
Guilds for Employers and Workers Advocated.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (U. P.) — The Administrative Board of the National Catholic Welfare Conference said today that in modern governnient “economic power must be subordinated to human welfare, both individual and social.” The board, comprising the leading figures of tne Roman Catholic hierarchy in the United States, called for the restoration of a Christian social order in which “ruthless competition must give way to just and reasonable state regulation and sordid selfishness must be superseded bv social justice and charity.” “Social incoherence and class conflict,” it said, “must be replaced by (Continued on Page Three)
ACQUIT 2 ON CHARGES OF THEATER LOTTERY
Orvin J. Moore, manager of the Ohio Theater, and James Kenny, an usher, were found not guilty of charges of operating a lottery and gift enterprise by a Municipal Court jury last night, The jury which had heard evidence during a week of night sessions, deliberated for 30 minutes.
HITLER LEAVES BERLIN BERLIN, Feb, 9 (U. P.).—Fuehrer Adolf Hitler left Berlin today to spend severdl days at Obersalzberg, it was reported reliably. Mr. Hitler's mountain retreat at Berchtesgaden, the “Eagle's Nest,” is near Obersalzberg.
TWEEDSMUIR GRAVELY ILL OTTAWA, Feb. 9 (U. P.).—Gov-
ernor-General Lord da pr Iremained gravely ill today. 5
in the war but is’a non-belligerent. |-
| Books
Curious World
Undersecretary Welles Will Make Survey of Conditions in 4 European Countries; Taylor Sails Soon for Vatican.
(U. P.).—Secretary of State Cordell Hull snnonced today that conversations have begun 1 Governments with a view.to “the events ual restoration of world peace on a sound and lasting basis.” Mr. Hull said the conversations, being conducted through diplomatic channels, probably will be broadened to include talks with all neutral governments. Mr. Hull's announcement followed disclosure by President Roosevelt that Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles will leave shortly on a tour of Italy, Germany, Britain and . France to obtain first-hand information on conditions exe
State Department officials declared, however, that Mr, Welles’ tour of the European capitals had “no connec . {tion” with the peace talks which have already: b been inaugurated with several neutral countries. Sails Feb. 17 on Italian Liner Mr. Welles plans to sail on Feb. 17 aboard the Italian Also on that ship ‘will be Myron C. Taylor, who is going to the Vatican as President Roosevelt's personal envoy to work with His Holiness Pope Pius XII in formulating a program to assist eventual restoration of peace. Disclosing the beginning of peace talks with neutral countries, Mr. Hull said in a formal statement: “It is announced by the Secretary of State that in view
of existing hostilities in many parts of the world, in view of the effect of such hostilities on the neutral nations of the world, and in view of the evident desire of all neutral nations for the eventual re-
storation of world peace on
a sound and lasting basis for all nations, diplomatic conversations of an informal character have been commenced with neutral governe
ments and will probably be cone tinued with all neutral governments,
LONDON, Feb. 9 (U. P.).—First’ unofficial British comment today" on Washington dispatches re--porting United States conversations with neutrals on peace moves minimized prospects of early peace arising from the move.
“It should be emphasized ' that these conversations involve no plan or plans but are in the nature of preliminary inquiries relating to a sound international economic Sys« tem and, at the same time, worlde wide reduction of armaments. “Matters involving present was conditions are not a part of these preliminary conversations. These conversations can, of course, be ex= tended to belligerent nations insoe {far as they involve these two come mon problems, of future peace.” In response to press conference questions, Mr. Hull indicated that ‘the governments of Italy, Germany, France and Great Britain have been informed in advance of Mr. Welles’ proposed visit and the purposes for which his tour is being made. Mr, Hull indicated that the arrangements for Mr. Welles’ reception in each country have been completed, © Welles to Visit Italy First Mr. Welles will go first to Italy, then probably to Germany and from there to France and Britain. President Roosevelt said that Mr. Welles’ sole mission would be to obain confidential information on conditions in the four countries. The President added that Mr, Welles would not be authorized to make any proposals or commitments on behalf of the United States. It was presumed, however, that the information gathered by Mr.
Welles would be used by the Presi- :
dent and Secretary Hull to ‘help them determine whether the time is approaching when this country might be in a position to help formulate peace proposals. A full statement issued by Mr, Roosevelt said: “At the request of the President, the Undersecretary of State, Sum= ner Welles, will proceed shortly to Europe to visit Italy, France, Ger-~ many and Great Britain. This visit is solely for the purpose of advising the President and the Secretary of State as to present conditions in Europe. Reporters Cautioned
“Mr. Welles will, of course, be authorized to make no proposals or commitments in the name ‘of the Government of the United States.” The President cautioned reporters at’ his press conference against en= larging upon or amplifying the offi cial statement. The President, in his Christmas letter to His Holiness Pope Pius (Continued on Page Three)
TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES
18 Movies 17 Mrs. Ferguson :18 27 Obituari S . 26 Pegler 27 Pyle .... . 18 Questions .... 1" + 15 Radio 15 15 Real Estate .. 8
CRORE
Clapper Comics
Editorials . Financial . Flynn Forum . Grin, Bear It. In Indpls. Inside Indpls. Jane Jordan. .
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27 |Scherrer ... 3 Serial Story. . a 5 Souisy . 20, 21 2 23
1 Spo! .22, Johnson: is state eaths . 15
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