Evening Star Newspaper, March 12, 1933, Page 2

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DEATH OF HOWELL Committee Named to Attend Funeral of Nebraskan in Omaha Tuesday. Senator Robert B. Howell, Republican, f Nebraska, died at Walter Reed Hos- ital yesterday afternoon from a heart attack which followed a battle against eumonia during the past two weeks. is vitality was weakened by compli- cations after it had appeared he might Fecover. ‘Word of his death was received with deep sorrow by his associates in the Senate, who paid high tribute last night to his ability as a legislator. The Ne- braskan was 69 years old and was serv- ing his second term in the Senate. His passing was announced to the Benate by his colleague, Senator Norris, Resolutions of regret were adopted, a committee was authorized to attend the funeral and as a further mark of re- ppect the Senate adjourned. flse ator Howell is survived by his idow, ham of Omaha, ney J. Cullingham, who ar night to have the body sent Omaha on a train leaving this morning. i‘umm services will be held there Tues- ay. Praised by Colleagues. Senator Borah, Republican, of Idaho, Baid Howell was a most “conscientious, dndustrious and able Senator,” and his death “is a distinct loss to the Senate &nd the country.” “I do not believe there was a more keonscientious, courageous and able man in the Senate,” said Senator Norris. Senator Norris recalled the thorough- Jess with which Senator Howell studied Qegislative problems. - Senator Copeland, Democrat, of New York, also paid tribute to Senator Howell's career, pointing out that he had known the Nebraskan for many pears before coming to the Senate. “The careful attention he gave to pommittee work and to the details of government as they relate to finances #vas remarkable,” sald Senator Copeland. The committee named by Vice Presi- Kent Garner to attend the funeral is composed of Senators Norris, Dickin- son, Republican of Iowa; Nye, Repub can of North Dakota; Vandenberg, Re: publican of Michigan; Robinson, Re- publican of Indiana , publican of California; Murphy, Demo- crat of Towa; King, Democrat of Utah; Bulow, Democrat of South Dako Pittman, Democrat of Nevada; Tram- mell, Democrat of Florida; Kean, Re- publican of New Jersey; Carey, Re- publican of Wyoming; La Follette, Re- ;\:buun of Wisconsin, and Shipstead, rmer-Laborite of Minnesota. Bratton May Head Committee. Senator Sam G. Bratton, Democrat, New Mexico, probably will suceed Howell THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, AS QUAKE START |Associated Press Pair Had SENATOR ROBERT B. HOWELL. - ROOSEVELT LEADS RELEF N QUMK Navy, .Treasury and Red Cross Heads Mobilize Aid for Death Area. By the Assoclated Press. Under alert leadership from President Roosevelt, Navy, Treasury and Red Cross heads yesterday mobilized aid for :nru‘;qu;kfidovuuud Southern Call- ornia. Because of quick work by relief forces on the spot their task was largely one of backstopping and organizing to as- sure the damaged communities and their inhabitants of adequate funds and mgpues. jut to launch these efforts President Roosevelt was out of bed and busy on the telephone in the early hours, Mrs. Roosevelt helping to relay messages, to- gether with his secretaries. After the orders the President gave, telegrams went out from the relief heads. Cash Is Authorized. By midmorning the Treasury an- nounced it had authorized Oalifornia banks to advance cash needed by vic- tims, called attention to the authority of Federal Reserve banks to make di- rect loans to individuals, and promised that if more was needed it would be forthcoming. Cross withheld financial @s chairman of the Senate’s Special | Califc Campaign Funds Committee, which ex- pects to continue its work. Bratton is the ranking Democrat on the committee, which will be headed by & Democrat now that this party has taken over control of the Government. .. Another Democrat probably will be < Bppointed to fill the vacancy, while Benators Carey, Republican, Wyoming, and Townsend, Republican, Delaware, will remain as the two minority mem- TS, B No action is e for some days, lowever, nor the committee at- pt to function soon. * Members have been awaiting for sev- eral days printed copies of the lengthy hearings in New Orleans in their in- westigation into the 1932 Louisiana torial Democratic primary before ttempting to meet to discuss a One of the fnittee will be formulating this report. Two Vacancies in Senate. Senator Howell's death leaves two Wacancies in the Senate. Gov. ] . Bryan of Nebraska, a Democrat, un- doubtedly will appoint a Democrat to Howell's seat, while another Democrat will be named by Gov. John E. Erick- son of Montana to take the place of $he late Senator Thomas J. Walsh. ‘This will give the Democrats 60 mem- Ers as against 35 Republicans and 1 rmer-Labor. Senator Howell, who seldom if ever deliberately sought the spotlight, re- cently occupied & conspicuous place in the days of the news as chairman of the special Senate committee investigating glection expenditures and contests. In the course of the investigations he took his committee to New Orleans to inquire into the election charges in- volving Representative John H. Over- ton, who defeated the veteran Senator Broussard of Louisiana.. Overton was Benator Huey P. Long’s candidate and the investigation at New Orleans cen- tered ly on the political activities of Senator Long, With subsequent Tirst actions of the com- | troling Con les | “Food charges and counter-charges. Senator Howell returned to Washington after the investigation, a short while ago. Elected in 1922. Elected to the Senate in 1922, Senator owell had identified himself with the ogressive Republican group under the Jeadership of Senator Norris, his friend &end colleague. He remained a ‘“regu- lar,” however, in the Hoover-Smith campaign as well as in the recent cam- paign, when many of the Progressives, in and out of Congress, threw their sup- port_to Roosevelt. He was also one of the Progressives under the leadership of ;‘lnlxnadnre Roosevelt, but did not bolt It was as author of the District of bition enforcement bill ‘was_probably best known His ac- tended to efforts to bring about certain changes in the bill for a merger of the gas light companies. In neither of these two efforts, however, was he suc- pessful. The flare-up on prohibition enforce- ment in Washington in 1929 probably surprised no one so much as the man who provoked it—Senator Howell. He ‘was not the kind of man to attract 80| much attention. He was rather wildered to find that he had caused so much attention. Slow and deliberate in ‘his movements and thoughts, he seldom found himself in the public limelight. His speeches were usually logical and deliberative. And that was what he was doing in the Senate on the occasion of remarks on prohibition enforcement that sud- denly focused the national spotlight on conditions in Wi A consistent “dry,” Senator Howell made a sug- gestion that President Hoover take a hand in enforcement in the District of Columbia. He declared very bluntly thas the President could call the Com- erissloners before him orders as would stop the liquor trafic in Washington. Failed to Get Vote. h:‘Howen'u en!or’zement bill mf’ormth‘gv 31: ct, designed to correspor - Ington to various enforcement acts in the States, was from the Dis- reported trict Committee once, but he could never et it to & vote in the Senate. He re- troduced it in modified form in the last Congress, but it was not acted upon. For almost as long & time, Senator Howell had tried to amend the gas com- pany merger bill. This amendment provided that if the Washington and Georgetown Gas Light Companies ac- cepted the merger proposal, they would have to agree to eliminate “going con- cern” value as a factor in future valua- tions. This amendment never was adopted and the merger bill failed of mction in the last Congress. Senator Howell had years of pro- gressive politics to his credit before he came into the Senate. But for ill health, he might have been a naval officer. From a rural home, he entered the United States Naval be! luated in, But the immediate steps. Later a decision is to be made on what money to send in. William De Kleine, director of dis- aster relief, sped West by airplane. ‘The earthquake had an echo in Con- gress, where the House directed a reso- lution of condolence to the people of the stricken area. Another reaction was at the State Department, where Ambassador Debuchi of Japan pre- sented in person the sympathy of his government, recalling Japan's great debt to the United States for the mil- lions poured into that country by Americans in 1923 when earthquakes devastated the principal Japanese cites. After the naval radio carried orders westward, Admiral Richard Leigh, com- mander in chief of the fleet, reported back that the situation was under con- trol, with landing forces ashore areas where they were n to prevent looting. Praises Co-Operation. cl his message, he said: serious problem, but ready. Wonderful spirit co-operation and volunteer help everywhere.” Senator McAdoo, Democrat, of Cali- fornia, wired offers of assistance to the mayors of Los Angeles and Long Beach. ‘The Red Cross expressed quantities of ready-made cotton clothing and bed- ding to earthquake sufferers in the Los | do; Angeles area and awaited the outcome of a survey by Gov. Rolph before taking further relief action. Several National Red~Cross workers were to be on their way West by air- plane last night, Dr. William Dekleine and Verne Moore of this city, Robert Shepard, St. Louis, and E. 8. Transue, Denver. ‘The cotton clothing was sent fi ncwrls'xi':: Pennl:’ylmh, Gveornl. Tte‘;? nessee, Texas, Michigan, and e shime R e pments to Los in- cluded 108,984 ready-made m; to Long Beach, 4,176 garments. b Prc:nu chlugo,ml‘l.m comforters and lankets were to Los Angeles, an 660 to Long B‘:lch d FATE OF STOCK PROBE TO BE DECIDED SOON Senate Banking Committee Ex- pected to Determine Future Course Early This Week. By the Associated Press. ‘The Senate Banking Committee will be called upon to determine within the next few days whether to continue its wm of the New York Stock Chairman Fletcher announced yes- the | business committee during gation, is pr quiry and cases under scrutiny of health in the drier climate of West. He returned to the lieuteriant in the Spanish-American War, although he had been f 111 health to give up the study of law the Detroit School of Law. He became an engineer instead. Stopp! temporarily in Omaha—en route fs ‘West—Howell remained to make use of the knowledge of civil and hydraulic engineering he had obtained st the Naval Academy. He received $50 a month as a laborer at the star, but in 10 years was manager of the Omaha water works at s salary of $10,000 & year. Served During War. Waited Eight Years for Disaster. BY WALTER B. CLAUSEN, LOS ANGELES, March 11.—A jolt and rocking jar that marked an earth wave of death and destruction for Southern California pulled a trigger that sent the news flashing to the world while the 20-seconds shock was pulling down the debris from torn buildings. It so happened that a team of two men who had been organized for this event for eight years were in the As- sociated Press office at the Times bufid- 1 ing here. These were Jack C. Mooney, veteran telegraph operator, and myself. 1 was writing the results of an inter- view with Prof. Albert Einstein when the jolt came. As the chair swayed, I clutched the desk mm eeruu; it was an earthquake, pl both solidly against the chair legs. But there Wwas no uncertainty. This was the mo- ment I had been snce 1926. A shout to Mooney and he sprang the 10-foot interval between an sutomatic work of the Associated Press five sec- onds after the and the THE PROFESSORS DIFFER" Cdlifornia U. Scientist Pictures Tremblors as _| of Great Magnitude, By the Associated Press. BERKELEY, Calif., March 11.—Prof. P. Byerly of the University of Cali- fornia here sald today the earthquakes night and today were the most severe recorded nnutnrt region has become 3 526 magnibuder that beine i 1657 great magnitude, 3 with its epicenter at Tejon wl“ll:e.lttuurnarmum though it fornia, I douht if any phs bulletin telli f’ollt‘ violent major | corded n telling of as a8 it remainin, shock was cleared before the 15 seconds of this first great shock. Expected It Five Weeks. Ever since the 1925 Santa Barbara earthquake, which I covered, having also gone through the San Francisco distaster of 1906, I had been preparing It was & thrill to be for this moment. on_the job. Five weeks ago I had been advised by those who study seismol that a restlessness of the great lying Southern Californis major movement soon. With the first news cleared, and knowledge that communications were still opened, it was possible for the staff to peek out the window and see the debris-sirewn street. ‘The visible bricks. half a block away, were from the old Chamber of Commerce Building. A second jolt, five minutes after the first, seem ost as heavy. The building rocked and swayed as staff members were checking all lin:s of communication. The sports editor was first to hit upon the phone contacts that revealed Long Beach was cut off from communi- cation. While death and destructicn reports were coming in from all points, it soon was apparent that the main area of havoc rested in & le, the apex of which was in Los Angeles, and the sides extending toward San Pedro and Santa Ana. Beach was in the epicenter of the Pacific off Long Then rumor reared its head, with sensational radio from quaver- ing announcers and amateurs, that “Catalina hit by tidal wave,” “500 dead at Long Beach” ‘“great tidal wave coming in on all beach towns,” “200 dead at Terminal Island.” Shocks Keep Coming. All the time the staff was finding ftself jarred each 5 or 10 minutes by another great shock. knowledge suggested the possibility of an even greater and annihilating shock to come, but the one thought on all minds of the A. P. staff wutoch::\lpmennl. pen: A bulletin went to the wire with each great shock, so should the wire fall, the latest word would be out. The tion was much on & = but later twisting wun being boats, rocking north to south, shocks changed to an unusual circular movement. The shocks continued at the rate of more than one a second, lltho\lfi:nflnly the major ones at & to 10, ti 20 minute intervals were felt sufficiently to give one pause to look up to see if the celling and walls were coming wn. It was all of Southern California getting this rocking, every portion of which was well known to e dations réport chme a8 ture flash - g in, vn}vmln"g. * = l‘l;l: scene for s eye. The homes of the wealthy, magnifi- cent estates of Beverly Hills, the can- ns and lknolls of Hollywood, San Marino, Altadena, were getting the thrill of s good shaking without much damage. So to the movies of Culver %}:y and vnl:mnlt" just & movemen! 3m attendant fears and thrills as it might engender. l‘n the vast groves from which $100,- 000,000 of citrus annually goes to the world, the orange, lemon and xnpe- fruit trees and the avocadoes an o nuts, fruit was shaken down. Oil Wells in Death Ares. These all were on the fringe. The great ofl well districts were in the re- glon of havoc, the Signal Hills and Huntington Beach, Torrance and Cot ton areas, were the scenes of death. ‘The heu‘:u ol]me&::n of the t:t; millions of peoples, thousands of bungalows in the south- western ares extending down to the seashore city of Long Beach, found furniture turned duflvyl’l.m“ and vflm MUM Perhaps & thousand motor cars were smashed to bits at the point of great- est danger, at the sidewalks of the districts, where store fronts and ity it was with His management of the Omaha water | works and gas works was interrupted periments. He had been a member of the Ne- braska State Senate and was defeated he filled as an independent and feated his Republican opponent. ot S T L p; obby was golf. was probably one of the best grounded men in Congress on the subject of public ownership of utilities. He was born at Adrian, Mich, on January 31, 1864, the son of Andrew Howell, jurist and author of lcgal text books, and Mary Adelia Beecher Tower. In 1905 he married Mrs. Alice Chase Cullingham of Omahs. He was & Pres- byterian and & Mason, REOPENING ORDERED Limited Business Expected to Be Transacted in Kansas. TOPEKA, Kans, March 11 (#).— Pt Boccevel, all banks and trusy suthorized in Kansas were today by Gov. Alf M. Landon and H. W. Koeneke, State bank commissioner, to reopen for limited bustness. They expected the order to go in force Mon- “The banks were givegfull suthartty %0 limit withdrawals, 5 i § i Third Term Ends MARCH 12 _.to Classify Shocks as “sfl)Bn.” ite.” ‘The' quake, he sald, was comparable the Santa Barbara earthquake of . mh'." years ago, but “not quite as se- ‘Classifying all quakes into four divi- sions—very light, light, moderate and severe, would be classified as ‘slightly sbove moderate’ but in no sense severe,” Dr. Newlin said. “It in no manner appr( ited the recent up- ¥ oxima heaval in Japan, which was whelly of the severe type.” Dr. Newlin said' the quake was not along the San Andrees fault, which the east of Los Angeles, but fault which dips into Los les. 1933—PART O PLAN FOR JOBLESS [Talks With Costigan, Wag- ner and La Follette About Huge Program. President Roosevelt yesterday rushed | luhudwuhmmudmdhh’ Pprojects for an estimated 500,000 work- ers neared completion at & White House ured | Sttempts _for direct AOMRAL HOFFTT SERVES 3 TERMS '|Question of Reappointment of REAR ADMIRAL WILLIAM A. MOFFETT. By the Associated Press. Tales of tragedy and terror, and of from the gon hour before the quake. The quakes falled to stop motion picture stars from &, pros- ve 50 pes cent cut in salary at llywood. The players headed for a During the serles of quakes, “Speedy”™ Dado defeated “Baby”_Palmore in a bantamweight fight at Hollywood. Several hundred Japanese residents of Tei all in San Pedro Hills, fearing a ‘wave. dreds at Long Beach camped, ““nnummotmmufmm. ‘blankets on lawns, in parks and e glare of : : i i 3 | 3 g i i i 5 513 EE.E 4 g 2 u B8 i : i g of & g 5 f £ i EY I ; E i % i ¢ ‘g r 8 ¥ ¥ i E B i i § A v i | d i B, g "B Aeronautics Chief, Soon to Retire, Raised. ‘The Navy’s first and only seronautics chief tomorrow comes to the end of his third four-year appointment to that Senator Wagner has lasting almost an hour. “We had a very satisfactory discus- slon_of the questions involved in un- ngwymznt relief,” Senator La Follette told newspaper men. “No definite con- clusions were reached and further con- ferences be held.” “But there is every indication,” inter- posed Senator Wagner, “of satisfactory conclusions. The prospect for agree- ment is very encouraging.” ‘The broad scale Roosevelt plan which contemplates jobs and not “doles” car- ries provision for s vast recruiting of y or the men now roaming the streets avail- - trate plant with con- struc of the proposed reservoir dam | at Cove Creek in the Clinch River in post. Rear Admiral William A. Mof-| than- g0 on. A native of Charleston, 8. C., Admiral Moffett graduated from the Naval Acad- emy in 1890. His career has embraced on practically evely naval, station. His nat z friends say vision and determinal 35 PUT TO DEATH IN RUSSIAN SABOTAGE Moscow Communique Says 40 Were Given 8 or 10 Years for Part in Plot. By the Associated Press. LOUDERBACK IS IDLE PENDING SENATE TRIAL Federal Judge Will Not Try Any More Cases While Facing Charges. SPEAKER RAINEY TOTALKINFORUM Problems Which Confront President and Congress Subject Tomorrow Night. S8peaker :Henry T. Rainey of the House of Representatives will discuss the problems which confront the President and the Congress in the Na- tional Radio Forum tomorrow night at 10:30 o’clock standard time. ‘The National Forum is arranged by The Washington Star and broadcast over the network of the National Broad Co, 8peaker , elected as the pre- officer of the House at the open- ing of the special session on Thurs- day, occupies a position cf vast impor- tance in the Government. His co-op- eration with the President and with t::lgu l‘l)zmocn&lc lLendm of the s:n:;f greatly in putting throug! e Democratic program of legislation, t-|ARMS CONFEREES AVIATION BOARD GROUP-MAY RETIRE Resignations. ARE PESSIMISTIC ON FATE OF PARLEY (Continued From Pirst Page.) would determine whether any concrete arms reductions could be effected. At his conferences today Mr. Mac- Donald heard discussions not only of the disarmament crisis, but also of the ‘Par Eastern arms embargo. ' POLISH CORRIDOR WATCHED. American Statesmen Note Tension With Apprehension. o|iBy the Associated Press. By the Associated Press. York 11.!:2“"’! ndnnl:l; of m"" of the Harriman-] tives from the clude W. A. Harriman of Brown Bros., of Bros. 150 ALABAMA BANKS APPLY FOR REOPENING State Superintendent Besieged ‘With Queries as to Operation of President’s Order. By the Associated Press. MONTGOMERY, Ala, March 11— Virtually all of Alabama’s 150-odd State banks have applied to H. H. Mont- OIL FIELDS TO OPEN | Harriman & Co, and Robert Lehman | » Lehman otul\n'op { da g Me 'S nger spot e Polish Corridor—held the attention of American statesmen — while they carefully refrained from any ac- tion which might add to the of the matter. Officials here noted with some appre- hension that apparent tension has arisen between Germany on one hand and Fran and dynamic PFascist A itler, rose to supreme power in the German elections. While officials were careful not to speak for 'r:buumn, it was clear they regarded situation as fraught with Discussed by Statesmen. That the American Government views the recent developments as having a definite bearing on the whole movement for limitation and reduction of arma- 7 PRESOENTRUSHES RTCHE ATTACKS | BANKING PROGRAN Declares Emergency Meas- ure Imperils State Banks of Nation. Special Dispaich to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md., March 11.—Gov. Ritchie tonight attacked the President’s emergency bank act as imperiling the savings and resources of millions of de- positors in the 7,000 State banks in the United States. In a 500-word statement, issued shortly before midnight, and person- ally dispatched by him to metropolitan newspepers throughout the country, he | asserted that the $2,000,000,000 in new Federal currency provided by the Fed- eral law is “solely for the benefit of the national banks and the Federal Reserv me.mbeén banks.” — o . Polinting out it the 52 23 200 Stat iang, 5 “To their hundreds of thousands of .c’l‘:‘y,:z;dcmmyd : itors I owe the lpel.k.tn‘ in what I be- lieve is & critical ?ule‘:lz’enq for them.” Withheld Criticism. ‘The Governor, who had made a per- sonal call on President Roosevelt bei’fu passage of the Federal emergency bank act to ask that it place State banks on equal footing with National and Fed- erl Reserve member banks, appealed yesterday to members of the State Leg- L‘.'lvht:{eg‘tg brrmg pr::s:'r: to bear at ashington for a cl in the act. He himself, however, refrained from pointed criticism of the bill until after ml“r g::ckl:mnon for the re- of , beginning Monda; had been read to him tonight. g Under that proclamation no bank in Maryland may open Monday, but Bal- timore banks may reopen Tuesday and ‘'ednesday. The county banks We re- openings on a 100 per cent basis in all zmx ':e ;l‘:b)ect en.li::r u‘f the con- sent of the Treasury, e case of national and Federal Reserve, member banks, or to the consent on the State bank of State banks and trust companies. Fui thermore, in all cases banks asking per- mission to reopen in full must satisfy the Federal or State authoritles of their ability to do so. Gov. Ritchie’s criticism of the Presi- dent’s emergency bank act included statement that: It excludes State banks from get- ting use of the new emergency cur- rency except on 90-day loans from Fed- eral Reserve Banks, secured by = ment bonds. With that exception, their only chance of access to the relief af- forded by the new currency is member- ship in the Federal Reserve system, and that, he said, would “take time, running into months.” Other Delays Feared. The alternative form of relief offered State e sale of preferred stock to the Reconstruction Finance Corpora- tion—also would take time, and in any event would not help many of the town or rural banks of the'country. Under those circumstances it will be “difficult” for the State banks that are not members of the Pederal Reserve Sys- tem to “survive in the face of the great Federal ald alloted among their competitors,” the Governor asserted. * He added that he was in “hearty ac~ cord” with President Roosevelt's efforts to relleve the banking crisis and that Federal Reserve member banks, He said he could not belleve, however, that “an administration whose brains and heart have conceived this relief for the depositors in our national and Re- serve member banks will not extend it :zot‘he depositors of the State banks, Earlier in the evening the Govern had been informed that Whfl": of a Maryland State bank had asked officials at the Federal Reserve delicqey | peg, told that they would have to wait their turn, that all Reserve examiners would bé occupied for some time to come with the affairs of the system's long-time members. HENCHMAN OF MACHADO IS KILLED BY GUNMEN Men in Auto Fire Volley at Alleged Leader of Cuban “Strong- Arm Squad.” e | By the Associated Press. tention Roose) tary of State Hull and Norman American disarmament conference dele- te, in their discussion at the White Friday night. French fears, ac: inf ition here, have apparently been aroused by the militarizing of a post on the France contends could not be so em- loyed. Uneasiness on the ficial German police force. ‘The developments have brought to the front the most potentially danger- Modified Operation to Be Allowed | Feduced in Oklahoma. OKLAHOMA CITY, March 11 )— A modified opening of the City oil field will be allowed s!vmlgu-MNMW wil- Operators be permitted to take rt of the Poles | with HAVANA, March 11.—Tervorists ‘Secre- | struck at the Machado government again vis, | today by killing Leopoldo Fernandes Ros, 45, Machado henchman, director of censorship when the interior de- partment exercised that function and ader of the government's street corner talking to Roberto Nieto, & lawyer. Nieto said three men drove by in a green automobile and fired twice hotgun. The lawyer, who was not hurt, started with Ros to an emergency hospital, but the wounded man died before they ar- rived there. Physiclans found eight buckshot wounds in the neck and face. $2,000 “DISAPPEARS” McCOMB, Miss., March 11 . —Two thousand dollars wlthdn'mm from banks by J. H. Boone, 50, “dis- appeared” during a seance today with ::,"’ le?men fortune tellers, he reported ce. Boone, a rallroad shopman, sald the women gave him a “magic” during the consultation to ward vil spirits. February Circulation Daily . .118,218 Sunday, 127,272 District of Columbta, ss.: of G AND does niy swear that the ac! of copies of the named_sold tributed dur! e month of February, A.D. 11933, was as ws: s, R H 32 5 g ui i ;-u-:--——- 3= [ (SRS it ‘Total net daily ecirculation. - verage dail . ] T for service, ete.. . 1,074 Daily average net circulation..... 118.218 |‘:;“; Less adjustments. Copies. Day . 128981 19 .. D 170319 26 .

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