Evening Star Newspaper, March 4, 1940, Page 2

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~ Individual Pacts Upheld as Justices Ban 'Company Union’ High Court to Review Appalachian Power License Case By J. A. FOX. The Supreme Court today out- lawed another “company union,” but said that rights that employes had obtained under individual con- tracts negotiated through the or- ganization were not foreclosed. The case involved the National Licorice Co., which had appealed from a ruling of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit afirming a board order. The Supreme Court, however, modified the order to protect the rights of the employes who had not been Joined in the proceedings. The court also agreed today to|. review the 15-year-old case center- ing around the efforts of the Fed- eral Power Commission to require the Appalachian Electric Power Co. to take out a license for its $11,000,000 hydro-electric develop- ment on the New River at Radford, Va. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals had denied the Govern- ment the right to require this license which gives the Federal Power Commission authority to pre- ‘- gcribe rates and charges for the power development and gives the Government the privilege of taking over the projects after 50 years. Stone Reads Decision. The decision in the National Licorice Co. case was read by Justice Stone. In a separate opinion Jus- tice Douglas and Justice Black said the Labor Board order should not have been modified. Justice Murphy did not participate in the case. The case rose in August, 1937, when an A. F. L. local, the Bakery and Confectionery Workers’ Interna- tional Union of America, flled charges of unfair practices against the company, which has plants in Brooklyn and elsewhere. The union charged the company with interfer- ence with its collective bargaining operations and with attempting to form a company union. The board later issued & com- plaint against the concern and in the following May ordered the com- pany to cease dominating or inter- fering with its Collective Bargaining Committee as the representative of its employes and to completely dis- establish it. The board said also that the company should not give effect to wage contracts that the committee and individual employes had made with the company. Refusal to bargain collectively with the union and to interfere with the right of the employes for self organ- ization also was barred. Order Modified. The Second Circuit Court then reafirmed the order but modified it to the extent of providing that bar- gaining with the union would de- pend on whether the labor group was certified as the proper bargain- ing agency by the board after an | election. ‘While these proceedings were in progress the employes of the Brook- 1yn plant suruck, but later came back to work. They obtained a five per cent wage increase and other em- ployment benefits which were agreed to under the controverted contracts. When the board order was afirmed by the Circuit Court, the company appealed. For its appeal the com- pany raised the question of whether the employes had not beeft necessary parties to the board order to abro- | gate these contracts. Oakwood Man Is Killed At Fairfax Crossing George Thomas Mason, 27, father of three children, was killed today when a Southern Railway express train struck his automobile af a crossing less than half a mile from his home, at Oakwood, in Fairfax County, Va. Mr. Mason, a painter, had left his home for work only a few minutes before the mishap, which occurred at Cameron crossing. The train was an Atlanta-Washington express, with L. M. Watkins of Alexandria, Va., as the engineer. Fairfax County Policemen James Mahoney and Grafton Wells said their investigation disclosed the front of Mr. Mason's automobile had cleared the track and that the rear of the car was struck by the train. * The machine was demolished. The body was removed to the Cunningham funeral home, in Alex- andria. Mr, Mason's survivors in- clude his widow and three children. Movie Makers to Meet ‘The Washington Society of Ama- teur Cinematographers will meet to- night at 8 o'clock in the lecture room of the Mount Pleasant Li- brary, Sixteenth and Lamont streets N.W, Congress in Brief . TODAY. Senate: Considers extending Hatch law to cover State employes paid in part from PFederal funds. Noon. Commerce Subcommittee votes on resolution designed to eliminate per- sonal income questions in census. 10:30 Am. Finance Committee resumes hear- ings”on reciprocal trade program. 10:30 am. Considers minor bills. Noon. j Appropriations Committee con- siders Interior Department bill. 10 am. Judiciary Subcommittee continues hearing on amendments to Walsh- Healey Government Contracts Act. 10am. TOMORROW. BSenate: \ Probably will continue debate on Hatch bill. Commerce Committee, executive meeting at 10:30 a.m.; may take up Tobey census resolution. Conferees on transportation 10 am. \ House: Continues debate on Interior De- partment appropriation bill. nicipal government reorganization plans, 10:30 a.m. . Special Subcommittee of District Committes resumes investigation of ?@\ situation, 10 a.m. \ q A REZONING COMPLAINT—MTrs. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Leo;mrd L. Tucker, vice presi- dent of the Parent-Teacher Association at the Janney School, protested before the House District Committee today against rezoning to permit construction of the Sears, Roebuck & Co. ‘Barkley Places Roosevelf Actions High in History Lauds Attainments In Senate Speech Marking Anniversary | By G. GOULD LINCOLN. Declaring that the Roosevelt ad- ministration had “accepted the gen- | eral welfare clause of the Consti- | tution as a solemn obligation,” Sen- ator Barkley of Kentucky, Demo- cratic leader of the Senate, said to- day that it had “proceeded by swift and enlightened legislation to cor- irect, as far as possible, the {lls which bedeviled our people.” | Taking the floor of the Senate jon the seventh anniversary of the | Roosevelt administration, the Ken- | tucky Senator reviewed its accom- plishments. | “Today I feel that we are justified in pausing here a brief period,” he | said, “to pay tribute to a man who | will be honored by countless gener- ations of Americans yet unborn and | to a record made by him and those | Who have labored in behalf of the American people.” | Stresses Labor Benefits. While stressing what had been done for the people as a whole, Sen- ator Barkley called attention to | what the administration has done | especially ‘for labor. He predicted | that eventually the machinery for | orderly collective hargaining, estab- | lished under the Roosevelt admin- istration, as time moves on “will undoubtedly be perfected so as to function more adequately and effec- tively.” He made n6 reference, however, to any proposed amend- ment of the Wagner Labor Re- lations Act. | “It is probable .that Roosevelt’s continued demand for the consid- eration of the rights of-labor has brought upon him more violent criticism than any of his other poli- cles,” Senator Barkley said. “In President has been a pioneer and has not only been compelled but has been willing to take the conse- quences. “That he did not receive as com- plete co-operation as might have heen desired from the groups whose rights he championed is regrettable. But it should not be forgotten by us; and will not be overlooked by later students of this period, that labor has gone through a particularly dif- ficult phase of its development.” He compared the period through which labor has been going to the reconstruction era after the Civil ‘War, “when the righting of old wrongs through emancipation led to a period of turmoil before the ulti- mate adjustment was under our American way of life.” The Democratic leader was re- ferring to the conflicts which have arisen not only between labor and employer, but also between the A. F. of L. and the C. L. O. Asserting that “no President since, | or save, Lincoln has faced so grave Science For the Layman The booklet EVERYDAY SCIENCE answers in the lan- guage of the layman hun- dreds of questions about the stars, the weather, animals, plants, the natural features of flaenemh and the study of the mind—the things the average reader wants to know about the world in which he lives. You will find in this helpful 48-page booklet many fasci- nating facts whose existence you have probably never sus- pected. And, too, there is a real pleasure in knowing the how and why of so many ordi- nary things. Send for your copy of this informative book- let today. Inclose 10 cents to cover cost and handling. USE THIS COUPON. The Washington Evening Star Information Bureau, Frederic J. Haskin, Director, ‘Washington, D. C. 1 inclose h(en'il-h TEN cm? in coin (carefully ' wrapped) for a copy of EVERYDAY 8CI- ENCE. this great program, however, the| a crisis in our political life as did President Roosevelt” on March 4, 1933, sanqor Barkley pictured the chaotic conditions then existing, with banks closing all over the country, and the progress which has been made since that day. Less than a month after the President had taken office, the Congress, at his request, had appropriated $3,300,- 000,000—the first emergency relief act. He gave in detail the various steps taken to bring relief to the unemployed, who, he said, num- bered between 13 and 15 million when the Roosevelt administration took over the Government. Under the stimulus of the Na- tional Industrial Recovery Act, even though it was later knocked down by the Supreme Court, Senator Barkley said American business started on its way to recovery. The Agricultural Adjustment Act was described as another great step, limiting production and causing farm prices to rise. Senator Bark- ley also signaled out for especial praise the creation of the Securities and Exchange Commission, to pro- tect the people from “worthless papers called securities,” and the enactment of - the Social Security | Act, contributing to the good of a vast number of citizens. Cites Bond Value Increase. He cited the fact that in 1932 the average price of American bonds of industrial corporations had been 69.5 per cent of normal, whereas in 1939 it had been 81.6 per cent; that in 1932 the average price of common stock of industrial corporations was 48.6 per cent of normal and in 1938 | it was 89.2 per cent. “It is & regrettable fact,” continued Senator Barkley, “that in spite of all the efforts we have made, there are still too many millions of our people on the unemployed rolls. But I have searched in vain among any of our critics, including presidential candidates, whose common theme song is now the alleged failure of the New Deal, to find any constructive suggestions.” Nobody, he said, has yet the last word in the solution of the unem- ployment problem, with from seven to nine million on the umemploy- ment rolls. < “But,” said Senator Barkley, “if our industrial and social and eco- nomic system- could improve over the next four years at the same rate at which it has improved dur- Jng the last seven years unemploy- ment would be almost completely eliminated in the United States” Defends Common Interest. ‘The Democratic leader defended the greatly increased interest which the Federal Government is now taking in theyaffairs of the people. He said: “For nearly a century before 1933, the citizens of the Nation, partly by precept and partly by their own ‘smugness, had come to regard the Government of the United States as something aloof and apart from ed | remote agency, which could have no their daily lives, a sort of abstract, copcern over their personal affairs beyond the collection of taxes and the drawing of salaries by those who held public office. The people had become so accustomed to being told that they -were rugged individuals, that it was a matter of the survival of the fittest, that when they lost their savings in bank failures or were oppressed by usurious rates of interest or were thrown out of their Speaker of the House and . Bankhead are shown entering 8t. John’s Church for services marking the arniversary of Presie . dent Roosevelt's first inauguration.’ . N store near the school. 1 D. C, MONDAY, Representative D’Alesandro (left) and Representative Kennedy, both of Maryland, heard the protest. —Star Staff Photo (Story on Page A-1.) Jobs arbitrarily to suffer hunger and privation, that they accepted with resignation their condition as the common fate of man.” ‘The Roosevelt administration, he sald, had corrected this, and no ad- ministration in the future will bhe able to “find an alibi in the doctrine of laissez faire.” Not even Dr. Glenn Frank and the committee of 200 Republicans in their report recently submitted have recommended the repeal or substantial modification of a single major legislative act which has been passed under the Roosevelt admin- istration, Senator Barkley insisted. ‘I say that the past seven years will go down in history as a great humanitarian contribution, when a great leader, endowed with the pas- sionate and patriotic resolve to sal- vage the Nation, pulled us out of despair and set us on the road to national rehabilitation, renewing our faith in the American way of life and our own spiritual resources,” he concluded. $110,000 Estate Left By J. W. Holcombe An estate valued at some $110,000, ' mostly in securities, was left by John Walker Holcombe, who died February 9, District Court was ad- vised today. Through Attorney Erskin Gordon, the court was told in a petition for probate of the will that Mr. Hol- combe owned no real estate. Under the will, drawn August 17, 1937, the estate was left to members of Mr. Holcombe's family. The widow, Mrs. Effie M. Hol- combe, 2127 Bancroft place N.W,, is executor of the will. Signing the petition wes Col. William Henry Holcombe, her son, who is an Arm; officer stationed at Milwaukee, Wis A daughter, Mrs. Eugenia Holcombe Baker of Hartford, Conn., also shares in the estate. Insurance Agents Here' 1 To Yote on Affiliation The National Labor Relations days among the approximate 60 in. surance agents of the two Washing-| ;) dering mattress on which he ton offices of the Equitable Life In- surance Co. to determine whether American Federation of Labor in- surance workers union. Bargaining rights for company employes were requested by the union last October, according to the board, but the company later refused the union's request. 67 Auto Tickets Fixed, . ) ’ One a Representative’s Representative C. Arthur Ander- son of Missouri was one of the 67 persons to have tickets adjusted for the week emding March 3. _Accord- ing to police reports, Mr. Anderson parked in violation of a 4-to-6 pm. regulation and was warned, by the orders of Maj. Ernest W. Brown, at the request of Representative An. derson. Of the 67 fixed tickets, 12 were eanceled and 55 warned, these in- cluding four members of the diplo- matic corps. Mrs. Willialn B. | 000 Barkley Commends McNary Assails, New Deal Record Rise in Income and Tax Increase Are Cited by Rival Speakers The seven years of the Roosevelt administration were reviewed last night by spokesmen for both major parties. ‘They didn’t agree. Senate Majority Leader Barkley and Minority Leader McNary ex- pounded their views before a Na- tional Press Club audience in the American Forum of the Air which was broadcast over Station WOL. This led up to an informal panel discussion in which the participants were Senators Mead, Democrat, of New York; Tobey, Republican, of New Hampshire, and Representa- tives Jones, Democrat, of Texas, and Dirksen Republican, of Illinois. Senator Barkiey contended that: Total income of the American people has increased more than $18,000,000,000. * * * Farmers' cash income, without benefit payments, has increased from $4,682,000,000 to $7,712,000,000. * * * Despite a net in- crease of 5,000,000 employables, un- employment was cut from 13 or 15 million persons in 1932 to seven or nine million now. [ Senator McNary replied that: With “the greatest tax burden in the Nation’s history,” annual per capita income has been cut from an average of $570 for the seven pre- Roosevelt years to $460 for the seven New Deal years. * * * Cash farm income averaged $9,046,000,000 for the seven pre-Roosevelt years; $7.247,000000 for the seven Roose- velt years. * * * “More than 9,000.- unemployed disconsolately tramp our streets.” Board today announced a kcreth"emen Rescue Man ballot election will be held within 30 | Overcome by Smoke Overcome by smoke from = was lying, a 28-year-old man was | ital aff they o ibe v ted by an | taken to Emergency Hospital after being’ rescued by firemen from a basement room at 909 Thirteenth street N.W., shortly after noon today. The man, Eugene Mothershead, 809 North Capitol street, was said to be visiting a friend, L. P. Phillips, who rooms at the house. Hospital attaches said his condition was not serious. Firemen stated the mat- tress evidently had been fired by a lighted cigarette. Other residents of the rooming house, operated by Mrs. M. Hocker, noticed the smoke as it rose to the upper floor and called the Fire De- partment. Goodwill Services g ‘The Rev. H. A. Kester of Congress Street Methodist Church will be the speaker at chapel services at the Goodwill Industries auditorium, 1218 New Hampshire avenue N.W, to- morrow at 8:15 am. The Rev. Gerald L. Clore of St. Paul, Minn., will speak at Thursday’s services. Chainnon Reveals ‘Demand’ for Probe; Conference Adjourns chnm-nnumamyn;:e American Foreign Born, No decision has been reached, he added, to summon members of the organization which closed its fourth annual conference yesterday. President Roosevelt sent a mes- sage to the conference Saturday which declared “every American wishes it success.” Similar messages were sent by Secretary of State Hull, Secretary of Interior Ickes, Justice Murphy, Secretary of Agriculture Wallace and other officials. Anti-Alien Bills Deplored. “Recurring waves of anti-alienism” a3 exemplified in bills now pending before Congress was deplored before the conference yesterday. Representative Tenerowicz, Demo- erat, of Michigan.said more than 50 bills aimed at non-citizens have been introduced. Ironic, he said, “is the fact that a goodly percentage of these anti-alien bills originated with sponsors from the so-called 100 per cent American sections of the country—sponsors who have so little contact with the alien whom they profess to dispise, that they would hardly recognize an alien it they saw one.” Tatalitarianism Debated. A resolution condemning totalitar- ianism, which was defeated, precipi- tated stormy debate in the closing session at the Annapolis Hotel. Pro- posed by the Rev. Herman F. Reis- sig of New York, it declared that the committee “regards itself as an American organization devoted to the cause of pure democracy and op- posed to forces of totalitarianism of all kinds as being essentially un- democratic.” Only a few of the 271 delegates voted for it. Opponents held it was not within the scope of the confer- ence and that the issue should not be raised. Edwin H. Klaus of New York, president of the Roland German- American Society, withdrew his name from nomination to the board of directors after the resolution had been defeated. Resolutions Passed. A resolution was adopted oppos- ing “growing discrimination against German-Americans strikingly sim- ilar to the anti-German sentiment which existed in the United States prior to its entry into the World War.” Another urged that “Amer- icans who have returned from serv- ice in the recent Spanish War and are being denied admission to the United States for technical reasons be granted the right of repatriation.” The conference also urged that unnaturalized residents should not be discriminated against in unem- ployment and that none be de- ported because of social, religious or economic views or affiliations, The committee announced that 240 organizations from 30 States partici- pated in the conference. There were representatives from 53 trade unions, 85 language and fraternal organiza- tions, 30 neighborhood organizations, 2 youth organizations and 27 de- fense, cultural and progressive or- ganizations among the delegates. Archduke Otto Boards Clipper for Unifed Sfates BY the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, March 4.—Travel- ing “incognito,” Archduke Otto von Hapsburg, pretender to the non- existent throne of Austria, was en route here from Europe today aboard Pan-American Airways’ American Clipper. The 27-year-old prince, who has never relinquished his claim to the crown, obtained an American visa u;‘ Paris ntweek 2g0 and boarded the clipper at Lisbon, Por es- terday. — Accompanying the archduke was his secretary, Count Trautt-Mans- dorff. Some observers believed Otto's visit involved enlistment of aid from American Catholics in his claims to the throne. Seventeen other passengers were aboard the plane, due here today. William Lightfoot Dies LOUISVILLE, Ky, March 4 (#.— Willlam I. Lightfoot, 63, general passenger agent of the Loyisville & Nashville Raflroad for 10 years, died yesterday at his home after a brief | maian: illness. Federal Security Administrator and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt were among - those attending. (Btary on Page A-L; othet pictre on Pase A-4) —Star Staff Photos. . o 4 ¥ \Food Stamp Plan Resets Itself the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, March 4—A path s00on may be beaten to the door of Bert C. Chappelle of Kansas City because he has designed what l';mm calis & “better mouse- D. 2 Mr. Chappelle’s trap automatically Tesets itself every time it catches & mouse, A revolving door arrange- ment pushes each mouse farther back in the trap. ‘The device will be shown at the convention of the Inventors of America March 12-18. Jones fo Oppose Guffey in Fight For Senate Seat Oil Man Enters Keystone Race; McNair Files Nominating Petition By the Associated Press. HARRISBURG, Pa, March 4— Walter A. Jones, wealthy Pittsburgh oil man and road builder, announced today he will oppose United States Senator Guffey, Democrat, of Penn- sylvania in the Pennsylvania pri- mary April 23. Mr. Jones will have support of many Democrats who blame Sen- ator Guffey for the 1938 Pennsyl- vania party fight. Senator Guffey bucked a State committee primary slate. The Republicans then tri- umphed overwhelmingly in the gen- eral election. Mr. Jones is chairman of the Pennsylvania' Turnpike Commission building a $70,000,000 all-weather highway from Harrisburg to Pitts- burgh. Meanwhile Willlam N. McNair, wisecracking former Mayor of Pitts- burgh, filed nominating petitions as a Democratic candidate for the Senate. John A. Derenzo, Altoona publisher, filed for the same office on the Republican ticket. Mr. Jones had announced that the Democratic State Committee had prepared nominating petitions for him from 35 counties containing natures as are needed.” State Representative Herbert B. Cohen said virtually all of the Dem- ocratic leaders and chairmen of 36 counties canvassed during a meet- ing last night pledged their sup- port to Mr. Jones. Last day filings were expected to swell the number seeking nomination for offices at stake this year well past the estimated 720 whose peti- tions were received by closing time Saturday. Counting nominations by both parties, approximately 1,000 places are to be filled at the primary, including nominees for United States Representative, State treasurer and auditor general, and State Senate and House. Sixty-seven cbntenders already have filed for 32 of Pennsylvania's 34 congressional seats. The missing seats are in the 2d congressional dis- trict, Philadelphia, and the 10th, representing Lancaster and Chester counties. J. Roland Kinzer, Republican in- cumbent, and George M. May, Democrat, both Lancaster residents, have announced their candidacies for the 10th district seat. Repre- sentative James P. McGranery has 2een slated by the Democratic organ- ization for the Philadelphia seat and Augustus T. Ashton by the Repub- licans Of the 67 who already have filed, 24 are incumbents. Indiana Alumni Elect The Washington Chapter of the University of Indiana Alumni As- sociation yesterday held its annual election of officers at a breakfast at the Kennedy-Warren. Those named were John J. Reinhard, president; Lt. Col. Paul E. Tombaugh, Mrs. Willard Givens and Delbert W. Cor- bin; first, second and third vice presidents, respectively; Miss Helen Greeley, secretary; Jerome Shay, » and James L. Fieser, chairman of publicity. “two or three times as many sifi-‘ May Be Extended on Nafion-Wide Scale System’s Future Hinges On Congress’ Action In Providing Funds By the Associated Press, Administration farm officials are thinking of extending the stamp plan for distributing surplus farm products among the needy on & Nation-wide scale. Although the plan's future de- pends on action by Congress, about 1,950,000 persons in 53 cities soon will be eligible, and arrangements are being made to adopt the system in some other cities and county areas by July 1. Under the plan, families on relief purchase designated surplus food products at regular grocery stores with Government-issued stamps. ‘The Government buys the stamps back from the grocers with funds appropriated for disposal of agri- cultural surpluses. The system’'s future depends largely, officials said, on what action Congress takes on a presidential recommendation that $72,000,000 be appropriated for surplus disposal besides $100,000,000 of customs re- ceipts authorized for that purpose. The House did not attach this item to the Agriculture Department ap- propriation bill for the next year, but officials were hopeful that the Senate would tack it on and that the House then would approve. They said their hope was based largely on the reception given the stamp plan by members of both major parties. If the $72,000,000 were provided, of= ficials said, the plan could be exe tended to several hundred more cities and counties. Before operation could be placed on a national scale, an annual appropriation of between $350,000,000 and $400,000,000 would be needed. The department soon will inaugu= rate an experimental cotton stamp plan in two or three cities. It will be similar in principle to the food stamp plan. Relief families will re- ceive stamps good for purchase of cotton goods and clothing at stores. Edison Says Navy Program Won't Slight East Coast | By the Asgociated Press. NORFOLK, Va., March 4—Sec- retary of the Navy Edison, speak- ing vesterday in a downpour at the dedication of Norfolk's $400,000 Mu- nicipal Airport, said the Atlantic Seaboard would not be slighted in the naval expansion program. “We believe that there should be a reasonable sea force in the At- 1llntlc. We are pushing the work | on all our bases,” he said. “I have | recommended that both coasts re- ceive definite protection.” The Municipal Airport, Mr. Edi- son said, “has a great potential naval and military value in the event of a national emergency.” Mrs. Edison, carrying a corgage of roses, stepped up a ladder to the nose of a new 2l-passenger airliner and by dotting an “I” and cross- ing a “T” with a paint brush, christ- ened it the City of Norfolk. | “It is the first time I ever christe | ened a ship this way,” Mrs. Edison said asyshe descended the ladded, “usually it's with champagne.” The City of Norfolk will be placed in the Washington-Norfolk service of Pennsylvania Central Airlines in a few weeks. Two German Lifeboats, Empty, Found by Navy ‘The Navy ofl tanker Salinas today reported the finding of two empty lifeboats, bearing the Germane owned Hamburg-American Line trade name, HAPAG, in the Caribe bean Sea, off the coast of the Dominican Republic. The boats, one of which was capsized and the other partly filled with water when found about 5 p.m. yesterday, are believed to have come from one of the German ships scuttled by crew members when trapped in Latin American waters by the outbreak of war. Weather Report (Purnished by the United States Weather Bureau.) District of Columbia—Mostly cloudy tonight; tomorrow fair; little change in temperature; lowest tonight about 35 d ees; n moderate northwest or north winds. = gl Maryland and Virginia—Mostly cloudy and slightly colder with light rain in extreme west portions West Virginia—Mostly extreme east portion tonight; sligh Weather Conditions Last 24 Hours. tral over ly estern New_ York sylvania, 1003.7 millibars D wal the ith diminishife intensity. 0.5 millibars (20.84 inehes). aing low over Western and South- bor, 988.2 millibars faliing _thence 0 t] w! Tex, 101 sure s Jotiand millibars (30.17 over oo ‘pesieraes o Doontoday. bt e P A 40 oot Tomperatures This Your. tonight; tomorrow fair. cloudy tonight and tomorrow; light rain in tly colder tonight. River Report. Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers m: at H; g & Harpers Pen;y. Potomac muddy et " Precipitation, Monthly Drecipitati Capital (current ml!olg ‘t: lnflhe’ o i Loy, i 33 6 44 Rain. 1all. Weather, 2, joar 0.3 in Cloudy. Rain Cloug u H e 40 37 43 23 3z | 8228 2ats =3 1 O 9993993, 99, | O 8 3

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