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THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER FINAL EDITION TODAY'S WEATHER CINCINNATI AND VICINITY: Partly Cloudy And Mild Today And Tonight. Low 68. High 85. Copyright, 1948, the Cincinnati Enquirer 108th YEAR NO. 128 DAILY Enter td Mcon-cIut Matter Au.

1S78, it th Fort OKict, Cincinnati, Ohio, Act cl 187 SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 15, 1948 134 rages 6 Sections 15 CENTS ID 1CJ wxmsm OFFENSIVE SPY HUNT blackwell and bride red GUARD GOP STUMP Prying Put Stalin Is Denied Permit To Be Mounted On Path Of Rebel, Is Taken By GOP Leads To Talk He Tells Ludwig ByVandenbergShortly, He Tells Reporter. Party's Foreign Policy To Be Outlined In Speech By Senate Expert. Washington, Aug. 14 (AP) Sen. Arthur H.

Vandenberg, Republican, Michigan, may make a foreign policy broadcast soon to help lay the groundwork for Gov. Thomas TEACHERS TOO NOSY So Impoverished Boy Became Iconoclast, Biography Reveals One man has had the entire world in an almost con-sfant state of jitters unparalleled since the heyday of Adolf Hitler. That man is Josef Stalin. What makes Stalin behave the way he doesT What manner of man is this who holds within his hands more power than Caesar did and whose designs stir such fear in the hearts of his fellowmenf Herewith is the first chapter of the most remarkable and penetrating study of Josef Stalin ever- written. Fa-' os the world over for his biographical masterpieces on Napoleon, Bismarck and Roosevelt, Emit Ludwig now turns his searchlight on the personality and mental makeup of Stalin.

'E. Dewey's vigorous discussion of that issue in the presidential election campaign. Before he left Washington for a vacation, Vandenberg, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, told a reporter be hoped to outline on a nationwide hookup his view that Republicans have every right to talk about the "historical aspects" of foreign policy in the campaign. As the chief congressional architect of the bipartisan international policy, Vandenberg is in agreement with Dewey and John Foster Dulles that nothing shall be said which might make other nations think this country talks with two Voices on current foreign affairs. But the Michigan Senator made It plain the Republicans had no intention of keeping complete silence on an issue they regard as Vital to the nation's future.

DEWEY SPEECH RECALLED. Dewey said a month ago that the Democratic platform contained "extremely partisan and provocative assertions concerning foreign affairs." He didn't go then into the de BY EMIL LUDWIG. (Coprrlrht 1948 by International Ncwi Service. All ri(hti rwrl. Reproduction in whole or part itrictly prohibited.) First of all you must imagine a strong-looking, but rather thick-set man about whom everything seems heavy and slow: his carriage, his his gestures and his speech.

Against Truman's Blast At Economic Policy. Huge Tax Saving Is Cited, But President Is To Predict Deficit, Washington, Aug. 14 (AP) Firing first to meet President Truman's expected two-gun blast at their fiscal and living cost policies, Republicans asserted today that they had saved American taxpay- ers nearly $6,350,000,000 by slashing Administration spending plans in the last two years. The GOP boast was issued in a formal statement by Rep. John Tabor, Republican, New York, Chairman of the House Appropia-tions Committee.

It came as Mr. Truman was re- ported to be planning: (1) To charge, in a mid-year budget review tomorrow, that Republican tax-cutting has thrown the government back into red ink after two years of budget surpluses. Some government officials indicated the President would predict a Treasury deficit of about $2,000,000,000 for the year ending next, June 30. (2) A second blast on Monday, when the President will act on the GOP substitute anti-inflation bill turned out the last day of the extra session of Congress. This measure restores government curbs on installment buying and tightens up on bank credit.

HITS SPENDING CLAIM. Meanwhile, a Democrat leveled a charge of "statistical sleight-of-hand" at Republican claims of congressional cuts in Federal spending. Rep. John O. Dingell, Democrat, Michigan, House Ways and Means Committee member, issued a statement saying GOP leaders were trying to cover up the true budget situation.

Taber promised, when Republicans took control of Congress in' January, 1847, to use a "meat ax" on what he called the Democratic administration's "spending spree." He issued a formal, brief report today on what he contends the meat ax hacked away. Declaring that "people have been misinformed as to the amount' of appropriations made by ihe: 80th Congress," he said these reductions had been made in budgets submitted by Mr. Truman: In fiscal 1947 (ending June 3, 1947) a $3,600,000,000 saving. In fiscal 1048 (ending June 3, 1948) a $2,741,481,291 saving. Total saved in two years 000,000.

Government expenditures now are $40,000,000,000 a year. TAX REFUND NOTED. Dingell said Taber's $2,741,481,291 figure for the last fiscal year was padded by more than $1,600,000,000. He contended that the correct ought to be reduced by $687,000,000 ought to be reduced by $687,00,000 to cover expected tax refunds. Mr.

Truman told Congress last January he expected a budget surplus of for the fiscal year which began July 1, 1948. Now he is reported as ready to predict, in his budget review tomorrow, a deficit of close to $2,000,000,000. Indications are that he will put most of the blame on the income tax cut which was enacted over his veto. Enquirer (Cochrane) Photo. Ewell Blackwell, lanky Cincinnati Reds' pitching star, and his bride smile happily last night at their wedding reception, shortly after they were married at the home of a friend, Ben Schmeing, Fifth and Garrard Covington.

The Rev. John Huss, pastor of Latonia Baptist Church, performed the ceremony. The only Cincinnati Reds ballplayer present was Grady Hatton, third baseman, who was Blackwell's best man. George Shirey, a friend, gave the bride away, and Mrs. James Walker, the bride's mother, was matron of honor.

About 20 friends gathered at Oelsner's Tavern, Dixie Highway, for the reception and wedding supper. Meat At 60 Cents A Pound! Thousands Storm Big Suburban Market, Upsetting Counters, Snarling Traffic, Everything about him seems stand-offish, coldly calculating, cautious and most of It has a somber effect en his visitors. The impression which Josef Stalin makes on all Europeans who meet him including all Russians (to whom racially, does not belong) is that of outland-ishness. Americans feel that, of course, ever, more strongly. I talked to Stalin for three solid hours, sitting 'opposite him, and he did not look at me once.

He seems to be a man without nerves or, at any rate, a man able to control- his nerves to a degree alto- tails he is expected to provide in at least one campaign speech. Vandenberg's observation that the "historical aspects" cculd be aired was regarded as significant Of Lie Detectors And Missing Servants. Confirmation Of Testimony-Is Sought Subpoena Served On Teacher. Washington, 14 (AP) -Missing servants and lie detector machines entered into the congressional spy hunt today as investigators sought backing for testimony of a key witness. The 52-year-old Russian school-ma'am who jumped from a window of the Soviet consulate in New York, where she said she was imprisoned, got into the case officially.

An operative of the House Committee on Un-American Activities served a subpoena upon her in a New York hospital. Members of the committee, convinced that one or another of the witnesses already questioned has committed perjury, devoted a week end recess in the hearings to trying to run down the culprit None of the committeemen would talk for publication, but most of them expressed concern over the likelihood that somebody has lied to them under oath. Whittaker Chambers, an editor of Time Magazine, who said he used to be a Communist courier, has testified that a Communist underground operated In wartime Washington, dealing with some important government figures. Among those he named under oath were Donald Hiss and Alger Hiss. Both of them, he said, were leaders of small cells in the underground movement.

WAIVE THEIR RIGHTS. Of those named by Chambers, the Hiss brothers asked for a prompt hearing, waived their constitutional rights and denied the charges categorically. They testified they didn't even know Chambers. Unlike some of the other witnesses, Alger and' Donald Hiss did not decline to answer questions on constitutional grounds. Donald Hiss, a former State Department official now a Washington attorney, told the committee either he or Chambers should be put in jail for lying under oath.

Alger Hiss, now President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said he had "never laid eyes" on Chambers. The Justice Department is studying the transcript of the testimony and committee members have demanded perjury action against someone. Since Chambers has been one of the star witnesses for the committee, members said privately that "half our case rests on the integrity of his testimony." "Frankly," one of them told reporters, "I can't figure out who is telling the truth. The testimony has been convincing on both sides." Chambers has been questioned secretly by members since he first testified. The questioners said they have been unable to find a flaw in his story.

On the other hand, they added, they have not been able to find a thin spot in the testimony of Alger Hiss or his brother. TEST MIGHT HELP. Some members think a He detector test might help. They said Chambers has offered to submit to such a test. They declined, however, that the results of a lie detector test are not conclusive.

Since the case hangs largely on Chambers's testimony, as far as the committee is concerned, members and investigators are seeking additional backing for it. They have sought, without success, to locate servants employed in the Alger Hiss home at the time Chambers claimed Hiss was working with the Communists. They still are looking for the domestics who might be able to tell them whether Chambers ever visited Hiss or whether Hiss ever talked to or about Chambers in his home. In the light of a July 24 statement made by Dewey, after the GOP nominee had conferred with the Senator and Dulles, his foreign affairs adviser. LUDWIG.

At that time Dewey said the Rus gether uncanny. He is taciturn and patient. sian blockade of Berlin had become To Watch Woman Hurt In Leap To Escape. Russian Teacher Accepts Summons To Attend Hearing On Spies. Washington, August 14 (AP) The United States rejected Russian demands today to put Mrs.

Oksana Stepanovna Kosenkina under 24-hour Soviet guard and remove her from the New York hospital where she now has the protection of American police. In a dramatic 100-mlnute meeting at the State Department, Robert A. Lovett Undersecretary of State, Alexander S. Panyushkin that the American Government had no right forcibly to require the Injured refugee school teacher to see anybody or to place herself under the control of anybody against her will. The meeting between Lovett and Panyushkin, with its grave International implications, capped a series of developments woven into the background of uneasy Soviet-American relations: (1) Mrs.

Kosenkina was served with a subpoena from the House Committee on Un-American Activities. This put her under the full protection of the United States Government. PERJURY IS SUSPECTED. (2) Members of the House Committee expressed deep concern that perjured testimony may have been given by some of the witnesses the Committee has heard in its investigation of an alleged Soviet spy ring in wartime Washington. Some of the Committeemen want to use lie detectors to check on the con-.

flicting stories about involvement of high Government officials. (3) The Russian press accused American police and Intelligence servicemen of a "crude violation''' of the immunity of the Soviet Consulate in New York In the Kosenkina incident Tass, the Soviet press agency, declared that Mrs. Kosenkina "fell" from the Consu-' late window last Thursday. She ays she was kept a prisoner In the Consulate before her leap to liberty. Panyushkin, at the outset of the conference at the State Department, had presented to Lovett Moscow's fourth note of protest and demands concerning the cases of Mrs.

Kosenkina and two other school teacher refugees who also want to stay in this country, Mr. and Mrs. Mikhail Ivanovitch Samaria DEMANDS SOVIET CONTROL. Today the note was concerned as was the lengthy discussion which followed its presentation, exclusively with Mrs. Kosenkina.

Panyushkin demanded that the American Government allow the Soviets to take four steps which would result In placing Mrs. Kosen--kina completely under their control once more. Disregarding the fact, that she is reported to have declared she wants nothing more to do with Soviet officials. According to the State Department account Lovett told Panyushkin that Mrs. Kosenkina had been permitted at the hospital to see anybody she cared to receive.

He reminded the Ambassador that Zot Chepurnykh, Soviet Vice Consul, had been allowed to see her, even though she had not requested the visit and had told unepurnyKft when he entered her room that she did not want to talk to him. OBJECTS TO SEARCH. Moreover, Lovett continued, Mrs. Kosenkina would continue to be allowed to see anybody she wanted to, but officials of the American Government did not have the right forcibly to require her to see anyone or place herself under the control of anyone against her will. Panyushkin then told Lovett that he did not regard press reports of Chepurnykh's interview as accurate and said he would obtain another report from the Vice Consul himself.

Panyushkin protested against what he said was the action of the New York police in entering the Soviet Consulate and searching the injured woman's room. Panyushkin also argued that the alleged entry of the consulate by the police had violated the extra-terriorial status of the consulate and furthermore that the actions of American officials were preventing Lomakin from carrying out his duties. critical largely because the administration had neglected "elemental principles" in the original occupation agreement "Our representatives at London, Portland, Aug. 14 (AP) Several thousand bargain-hunting shoppers stormed a large suburban market today to get at meat priced 60 cents or less a pound. Traffic was snarled for blocks.

Inside the store, counters were upset in the crush. Six Multnomah County Deputy Sheriffs were called in to keep order. They estimated 1,700 cars were in the area during the forenoon. T. F.

Staley, market owner, said his crew of butchers had sold 77 beef carcasses by noon and 6,000 pounds of bacon. Staley offered T-bone, sirloin, round and rib steaks, pork loin chops, sliced bacon and beef roasts at 60 cents a pound. Pork roasts were offered at 49 cents and beef pot roasts at 48. Staley expected to move 85 tons of beef. He explained he was bidding for the patronage of housewives who have called for a boycott of meat priced over 60 cents.

Yalta and Potsdam unfortunately relied on assumptions rather than pecific inter-governmental agreements to define our rights in Berlin," he said. He referred to the lack of a writ ten agreement giving the United States, as a partner in the occupation of the German capital, a cor ridor into Berlin under its own control. O.K. On Wire-Tapping? Spy Law Is Sported GOP PLEADS INNOCENT. Dewey's reference to the London, Yalta and Potsdam meetings Is in line with assertions of other Republicans that a large share of the world's present ills can be laid at 'the door of agreements made by Democratic Presidents in which the GOP did not share at the time.

Alone with Dewey and Dulles, Vandenberg was said to feel that there was plenty of room for criticism of the Democratic policies of the past, without upsetting current International negotiations. Both Dewey and Vandenberg have pointed out that the bipartisan foreign policy has not covered the whole field of the administration's international activities. wires, and another that would require written authorizations from their department heads. Stalin Was Sorry For Election Deal At Yalta, Aid Says Washington, Aug. 15 (AP) Philip E.

Mosely, Columbia University professor, stated today that Premier Josef Stalin expressed regret at the Potsdam meeting for the concession he had made at the Yalta conference to permit free elections in Eastern Europe. Mosely quoted Stalin as saying at Potsdam, "a freely elected government in any of these countries (the Balkan States) would be anti-Soviet, and that we cannot allow." Mosely, who was an adviser to the U. S. delegation at Potsdam and teaches international relations at Columbia's Russian Institute, told of the remark in a survey of American-Soviet relation, entitled "face to face with Russia." New York, Aug. 14 (AP) The New York Herald Tribune says the administration has drafted a new antiespionage law that, among other things, permits wire-tapping of private telephone conversations.

The paper says the proposals are now the subject of a "behind-the-scenes fight anion cabinet members," with the wire-tapping provision the main issue. In Washington a top aid of James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense, said that if such a bill were being drafted, it was "at strict cabinet level and hasn't got into the national defense operating office at all." White House and other cabinet sources were not available tonight for comment The Department of Justice, which with the Army and Navy sponsored the original draft, the Herald Tribune said, is opposing attempts by other government agencies to amend this part of the bill. Among the proposed amendments, according to the Herald Tribune, is one that would require investigating agents to get a. Federal Court order before tapping telephone Orglnally, it governed only mat ters concerning the United Nations.

Then it was broadened to take in Of Three Drowns. international conferences when James F. Byrnes was Secretary of State. Later Secretary of State Marshall widened it even further by consultations on the European Recovery Program and other aspects of foreign affairs. While today it covers most of the Were his character as a whole different those characteristics could have made him a statesman and popular leader of the stature of the late Thomas Masaryk (founder of the Czechoslovak Republic after World War I).

But unlike Masaryk, Stalin is no philosopher. Stalin is a man filled to the brim with hidden passions; therefore, his life has taken a course quite different from that of the Czech statesman. When you recall the most remarkable man you've ever met in your own life, you may find one who had both patience and a passionate disposition and you will remember that the very combination of those two traits was bound to put that man into conflict with his surroundings. We Tcnow from hundreds of studies that such reticent and slow men, who may nevertheless "explode" at any moment, are nowhere as' frequent as among Asiatics. Stalin is an Asiatic.

Imagine, then, such a buttoned-up, lonely figure, usually in a gray tunic without any ribbon or medal and never carry a weapon; imagine his low forehead, the Mongol cut of his gray eyes, his tight-lipped mouth, which sometimes holds a pipe burning about as slowly as he talks, and his hollow, never loud voice, and you'll have a pretty accurate picture of what Stalin looks like. Now, the seminary Stalin attended in Tiflls was not exactly a monastic place offering idyllic peace. Actually, students' revolts had occurred time and again there. For about 100 years a spirit of rebellion had been alive In the classes from which the students came in that region. When 14-year-old Stalin stepped over the threshold of the seminary, that spirit was to assume the stature of a world-shaking movement.

Whenever I met a statesman who also was a revolutionary, I would ask him what early experiences may have prompted him to break away from his own class. When I asked Stalin the same question, he made a startling answer. "It was not the lowly station of my parents which made me a Socialist," he said. "I had no such feelings when I was six, or, for that matter, even when I reached the age of 12. "AROUSED MY INDIGNATION." "I became a Socialist only when the discipline of the seminary aroused my indignation.

That place teemed with spies and there was no end to deceitful tricks. "While we had our morning tea, the tutors would rummage about in our drawers and papers in the dormitories. And quite similarly they would, in. their never-ending suspicions, rummage about in our souls. "That was the thing I couldn't stand.

It turned me into a rebel. "When the first illegal Socialist agents came to the Caucasus and I happened to Ret hold of one of their leaflets, I said to myself, 'I want to know the man who has written this "One of the students managed to get a copy of Karl Marx's Capital, and secretly we all read it" No wonder that Stalin was expelled from the seminary when he was 18 years old. After having left the seminary, Stalin left his parents' house and the province. He started on his conspirator's life. -While everywhere else in Europe Socialist parties came into being parties which could send their elected representatives to the various parliaments to be accepted and listened to there the life of a Russian Socialist was still that of a criminal.

He had to elude the police, again and again change his name, his domicile and the town in which he lived. For more than 15 years Stalin led that kind of life, interrupted only by exile in Siberia. He seems to have served 3ix different stretches in Siberia, every time managing, as incidentally did all his comrades, to escape. He also came to know well over a dozen regular Russian prisons. Thus he his youth and early manhood from his 18th to his 38th year.

When, as a man of 25, he first met the 35-year-old Lenin in Finland, It was a great moment In Stalin's life. "I am nothing but a disciple of Lenin and don't want to be regarded as anything else," he said to me many years after Lenin's death. But Stalin on his part also made a great impression on Lenin. In an early letter to Gorki, Lenin calls Stalin 'an extraordinary Georgian." In the ensuing Soviet struggles he never parted company with him and that is, as we know, the main reason why Stalin came into power and Trotsky met his death. Again we realize the invalidity of the Marxist theory according to which economic conditions, and not men, make history.

For the last 30 years we have been watching with our own eyes history being made by men. (Tomorrow: In the second chapter of this series Emil Ludwig tells of the struggle between Stalin and Trotsky and how they became bitter personal as well as political enemies.) major international activities, some Republicans still are complaining that they have not been made fully aware of dealings with China and Latin-American nations. Holdup Suspect Is Shot Down In Indiana After Forced Strip Tease In Lovers' Lane OHIO LAWMAKER RESIGNS. Pomerov. Ohio.

Ausr. 14 (UP) Rn. Beniamin P. Turner. Repub lican, Meigs, today announced his resignation from the Ohio General Assembly, effective immediately.

Turner, wno has servea iour terms in the Legislature, said he had accepted a position as railway insnector with the State Public Utilities Commission. He will be assistant radio repair man. Police said inability to identify himself for social security records had prevented Dicken from keeping steady employment. The ambush was arranged after several reports of holdups In wooded sections around Evansville. Sheriff Bert Martin of Vanden-burgh County, who did not participate in the ambush, said deputies had attempted to set traps before but that none had been successful.

INSIDE THE ENQUIRER: SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 1948. Evansville police records show that Dicken, a Purple Heart veteran of Germany and Italy, has been arrested twice for being AWOL since he reenlisted as a private first class two years ago. Dicken, who first enlisted when he was 18, was discharged in 1946 and returned to Evansville, where he was married. Robertson said his daughter was 15 at the time of the marriage. Dicken had been working at odd jobs for the last year, mostly as an gin his new job Monday.

THE WEATHER: News Section. Page Slews Section. I Page! Father, Mother, Adopted Child la Car Which Mysteriously Plunges Into Scioto. Columbus, Ohio, Aug. 14 (AP) An automobile suddenly swerved off a picnic ground into the Scioto River today and a family of three drowned.

Two hours later rescuers dragged the car from 20 feet of water and removed the bodies of Burl F. Beck, 43, a post office clerk; his wife, Freda, 44, and their adopted daughter, Marilyn, 3. Police began an intensive investigation of the puzzling circumstances of the tragedy. Accounts of witnesses and tire marks indicated the car made a deliberate, right-angle turn before crossing a 25-foot stretch of grass and rocks and dropping into the river, in the Griggs Dam Park area. Police Capt.

Frank Harrison said Beck left his job 10 days ago because of a nervous breakdown. In his pockets was a deed, turning ever all his property to his wife. O. T. Asbury, the park caretaker, saw the car plunge into the river.

"I heard someone scream," he related, "and I looked toward the sound. Then I saw this automobile going in off the bank. I could see that its back end was lodged on big rocks of the bank. "It kind of hesitated a moment on those rocks, then went on down." Emergency cars of the Ohio Highway Patrol, police and fire departments rushed to the but it was nearly two hours before Fireman Richard Reldling could attach a cable to the submerged vehicle. Beck's body was in the front seat of the sedan; the bodies of the woman and child were in the rear seat Beck'a body was turned.

toward the rear, as if he might have attempted to help his family Vacations at home may become the Stamp Newa 31 Star Gaser 23 rule, Provided the weather stays line. Section Tw, and cool. Class Ads 4-17 Fix It Garretson 20 rincinnfltl and Vlclnitv: Partly cloudy and mild today and tonight. Evansville, Aug. 14 (AP) Four car-loads of sheriff's deputies emptied shotguns and revolvers from a lovers' 'ane ambush early today, and the blasts killed 23-year-old Donald Dicken, believed to be the man responsible for several Vanderburgh County rural holdups.

Chief Deputy Sheriff Carson Peva said Dicken was shot a few minutes after he had stuck a revolver into a car owned by Ed Klueg of Evansville and forced him to give up $39 he was carrying In his wallet Klueg also said his girl companion, near whose home the ambush was laid, was forced to remove her. clothes while held at gun point Caraon said Dicken then moved on to one of four cars that had been filled' with deputy sheriffs. When he reached the car, deputies called to him to halt and drop his gun. Dicken tried to flee, but gunfire by the deputies who had spread through the underbrush brought him down before he had run 100 feet. James Robertson, Dlcken's father-in-law, said the young man had been absent without official leave from Fort Knox, for more than a year, Peva reported.

He said Dicken and his 18-year-old wife, the former Rosalie Robertson, had been living in an Evansville apartment as "Mr. and Mrs. Donald Larison." Low 68. High 85. STATE FORECASTS Ohio: Fair and moderately cool Sunday.

Amus'ments 45-47 Auto News 44 Bromf ield Camera, News. 42 City Mirror 14 Class. Ads 39 Court News Crossword 23 Danny Dumm 33 Dogs Editorials 6 Garden News 43 Horse Sense 30 Journey's End 39 La It 44 Luke McLuke 6 Markets 38 Maslowskl 42 Pearson 6 Portraits 6 Readers' Views 6 Sunday partly clouay and less humid. Indiana: General! fair, with lit tle change in temperature Sunday. Hessler 20 News Review 2B Radio 18-19 Real Estate 1-3 Thompson 29 Section Three.

Arrangements 4 Art Circles 1 Cruzan 5 Engagements 3 Food News 11 Glendale Notes 4 Society Newa 1-9 Suzanne 8 Travel Talk 10-11 ft'omen's News 8 To Our Readers: Effective today, August 15, the price of the Sunday Enquirer will be 15 cents per copy. This change 1 has been made necessary by greatly increased costs of newsprint, larger pay rolls and higher printing and distribution costs. Your carrier and street seller will share in this increase. Cincinnati Weather Bureau Of fice Record for Aug. 14, 1948.

Temp. Hum. Pren 7:30. a. 70 7:30 p.

78 1948 52 .02 53 0 47 '46 Nl S3 82 84 71 56 64 20 0 m. Sun- Rod and Gun 36 Sports 33-37 Highest temperature Lowest temperature Precipitation Today Sunrise 5:51 a. Comics IS pages Pictorial Magazine 20 pages This Week (Tabloid) 24 pages get p. m. WEATHER OBSERVATIONS ON fAGK tt..

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