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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 3

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 3

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I Rich Oil Man's Son Seized in Death Mystery Arrest Follows Suicide of Youth Linked to Hold 'Em, New Dealers! Coughlin Raps Cardinal for Ignoring Poor O'Connell Notorious for '10 Years on Social Justice, Priest Insists Quintuplets9 Doctor Satisfies Say SchultzHid In Vanderbilt's Former Hiiwe Relieve Public Luemy Leased Oakdale iluu-e While Police Huafel I Quintuple Ambition in Bis City Slaying of Student BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1934 1 1 While local detectives and Federal agents were searching for him, Arthur (Dutch Schultz) Flegen-heimer, arch racketeer, is believed to have spent many hours of carefree leisure in the comparative safety of a luxurious Long Island estate. Police are of the opinion that Schultz may have owned and occupied one of the buildings on the former estate of William K. bilt in Oakdale, Suffolk. una, tmmmtmw iWnrW -MnnrntuMmnr- mm Expressions of gladness, surprise and curiosity followed on the countenance of Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe, physician to the famous Dionne quintuplets of Canada, as he began a sight-seeing tour of New York on his first visit here.

The camera recorded the above expressions (1) as he visited Capt. James J. Scott in the pilot house of a Staten Island ferryboat; (2) as he greeted his brother, here from Toronto; (3) when he got the right change and passed through a subway turnstile. Detroit. Dec.

10 IA) Father Charles E. Coughlin today had replied over the air waves to the criticism directed at him by William Cardinal O'Connell, Archbishop of Boston, in a radio address on the furtherance of social justice. Declaring that his written and uttered words have al 1 received the approval of his own Bishop "who for years has been famed in Michigan for his defense of the poor and for his opposition to the pampered evils that have been so rampant in the textile industries of New England," Father Coughlin charged that Cardinal O'Connell had "accused a brother Bishop." Had Lon( Opportunity "If he spoke as an individual, his utterances carry no more weight than they justly deserve," Father Coughlin added. "For 40 years." the radio priest went on, "Cardinal O'Connell has had the opportunity to preach and practice social justice, and, in fact, has been commanded to do this according to the letters received by him and by every other bishop from Pope Leo XIII. Notoriously Silent "For 40 years Cardinal O'Connell has been more notorious in his silence on social justice than for any contribution which he may have given either in practice or in doctrine toward the decentralization of wealth and toward the elimination of those glaring Injustices which permitted the plutocrats of this nation to wax fat at the expense of the poor.

Now he castigates me for doing what he was ordered to do." Father Coughlin urged as a means of ending the depression issuance of $10,000,000,000 currency "created by Congress and independent of any banker" for the construction of roads, reforestation, power development and slum elimination. Associated Press Photo. John Garner may be a good Vice President, but Fielding Yost would never stand for the unorthodox pass he is shown making from center on the field at Washington. The picture was made just before the Alabama All-Stars met a picked District of Columbia eleven. The crouching quarterback is Representative William B.

Bankhead of Alabama, who played quarter for University of Alabama back in the Gay Nineties. $7 Tax on $2 Jug Of Rum Is Protested Tulsa, Dec. 10 (P) Homer F. Wilcox 17, son of a wealthy Tulsa oil man, was arrested by city officers today after he and his father appeared at police headquarters for a conference in connection with the slaying of John Gorrell. He was booked on a charge of "malicious mischief." Asked what would constitute malicious mischief in this instance, Police Chief Charles Carr said, "Well, shooting out street lights in the vicinity of the spot where Gorrell was slain by Phil Kennamer would be it." Kennamer, 19, son of United States District Judge Franklin E.

Kennamer, is held in jail charged with the murder of Gorrell, 23-year-old dental student. Holly Anderson, county attorney, said Kennamer confessed he killed Gorrell In self-defense Nov. 29. New Death Adds Mystery The sudden death of young Sidney Born police call it suicide has plunged the Gorrell case into new and deeper mystery. The youth was found dead yesterday afternoon under the steering wheel of his father's automobile, a bullet through his head and his lather's pistol lying in his lap.

Born, who was 19 years old, had previously told police that he had driven young Kennanmer to the place where Kennamer and Gorrell met and where Gorrell was shot and killed by Kennamer. Born was found shot yesterday less than 15 minutes after he had tried unsuccessfully to reach young Kennamer by telephone. Calling from a drug store pay station, Born asked the jailer to let Kennamer come to the phone. The jailer refused. "Oh, hell," Born was heard to say as he hung up.

The place where Born was found (hot to death was about a mile from the spot where Gorrell was killed. Suicide Disputed "It's suicide," declared Sgt. Henry B. Maddux, in charge of the investigation of the Correll slaying. "My son would never have done such a thing," asserted Prof.

Sidney Born, prominent engineer and member of the University of Tulsa faculty. "He was too level headed." "Isn't that awful?" exclaimed young Kennamer. Ex-Convict Tried On Ten-Year-Old Murder Charge Driver of the Death Auto Turns State's Evidence in Bellmore Bank Case each other in quick succession gered between consciousness and unconsciousness for two days before he won her back to life. Then Dr. Dafoe in the French patois which he has picked up in a lifetime among the French Canadians, told her that she had not one child but five.

"Holy Mary," she said. That was all. The gentle white-haired physician expressed himself as well pleased with the progress of his quintuplets. Physically, he said, they are normal for their age, and mentally they are above normal. Their total weight has increased from nine pounds 12 ounces at birth to between 58 and 59 pounds.

Laugh to See Him Nor was his attitude that of the detached scientist as he discussed these things. He thinks and the crows feet at the corners of his eyes deepen at the recollection, that the quintuplets already recognize him, because five pairs of eyes turn toward him when he approaches the crib, and sometimes they laugh. "They're healthy, handsome, happy babies," he said, with deep, sentimental, wholly unscientific pride. "I think they know me, all right." Healthiest Race Dr. Dafoe stressed the fact that it was the rugged vitality of the French-Canadians which accounted in large measure for the survival of the five little Dionnes.

"They are probably the healthiest race in North America," he said. "They don't have much tuberculosis, and very little blood disease. Indeed they don't have much but babies." But how they have babies! Dr. Dafoe thinks in his modest way that he has delivered some 1,600 children in his Parry Sound District in the past 24 years; and friends who traveled with him said that an average of two a week, or almost 3,000, during the past quarter century, would be a more accurate estimate. The average family in his district has from 10 to 12 children, and the largest family there has 22 living children in it.

"And the mother is only 45," he observed, "so she may have some more." In the little of Callander where he lives, 400 of the 1.000 residents are children of school age. Why All the Fuss In view of these facts, the doctor said, Callander and Parry Sound have taken the quintuplets pretty calmly, FROZEN ASSETS LIQUIDATED St. Louis, Dec. 10 UP) When icy blasts froze tight the engine of his truck, Bill Jones, a Negro, built a fire under it to thaw it out. Firemen saved the wheels and axles.

Dr. Dafoe Sees All the Sights Dear to Heart of Visitor-Tells of Dionne Miracle Birth By ISABELLE KEATING New York turned out its gaping multitudes, its screaming police escorts, its greeters, its lionizers and its celebrity hunters today on be half of a little white-haired coun try doctor, who, to his own amaze ment and the world's, has keep alive the only set of quintuplets that ever lived more than 50 minutes. The fuss and furore was, of course, for Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe of Callander, who last May 28, assisted In the delivery of the five Dionne babies, and who has since directed their care with such suc cess that today, at the ripe old age of six months, they have the normal life expectancy of any single-birth babies of their age. His First Visit Dr.

Dafoe arrived in New York early yesterday morning on the first visit he has ever made to the city and the first trip he has taken away from his Ontario homeland for 20 years. But while his reputation as the Dionne doctor has identified him with the miraculous, he came here longing to see only the sights that any visiting Rotarian from Aurora might yearn for, namely: the Statue of Liberty, the skyline, the subways, the Bronx zoo and a night club. And he went at his sightseeing as promptly and systematically as he cared for the quintuplets. Before he had been in town four hours he had established himself in one of the gity's smartest hotels, the Ritz-Carlton; had been whisked from mldtown Manhattan to the'l Battery in the wake of a screaming police escort which made the deserted canyons of lower Manhattan reverberate. He had traveled across the bay to Staten Island on the Ferry Knickerbocker, and posed with Capt.

James J. Scott in the wheel-house. He had stood on the craft's upper desk, smiling his bemused, puckish little smile into the teeth of an icy wind that lashed at him unavail-ingly while his shivering companions pointed out the sights. Rides the Subway Finally he had ridden the T. subway from City Hall to Times Square and gone back to the Ritz in an unescorted taxicab.

And at the end of this frantic junket he was as serenely superior to it all as though it were a daily occurrence. New York, he said, looked exactly as he thought it would look, al though the skyline was slightly dis appointing. Meets AI Smith On this, his second day in the city, the doctor was driven down Manhattan's 5th Ave. behind a shrieking police escort, to the Empire State Building, where, satisfying one of his expressed wishes, he met former Governor Smith. Later, amid the same cacophony, he was returned to the Ritz-Carlton Hotel where, behind closed doors, he plans to spend the afternoon explaining to 45 gynecologists and pediatricians the medical details of the quintiplet's birth.

Tonight to Carnegie Hall he will tell the general public about the event which has focussed the attention of the entire world, although he can't understand why so many people are interested. "I guess they just want to get a look at me," he said. Later, after the lecture, he is go- Several residents have been found w'10 'ns's'; they could identify the racketeer as a recent resident In that vicinity. There is good reason to believe that he leased the main grounds of the estate, now known as Idle Hour, under the name of Lawrence Carney, who is said to be his chauffeur. Trip to Honolulu Schultz, it is reliably reported, went into "hiding" on Long Island after a gay trip to Honolulu and Havana, during which he was followed by New York police whom successfully dodged.

Reports that he was given refuge while in Suffolk County by a well-known actress have not been proven, although an ex-stage woman, who inherited wealth from a former husband, is said to have leased the Vanderbilt home at one time. One report states that Schultz hid in the actress' home while his own Long Island refuge was being prepared. The grand jury will investigate this angle next week. To Post Bond Today It is expected that James M. Noonan, his attorney, will post a bond of $75,000 today and that the gangster will be released.

He has been in jail since he surrendered at Albany to Federal authorities on Nov. 28 to answer charges of Income tax evasions. Bail had originally been set at $100,000, but it was reduced last Friday. A hearing has also been set for Wednesday, at which time his attorney will attempt to prove that the two-year-old indictment against him is invalid. Details of the hide and seek game which Schultz played with detectives were partially disclosed yesterday.

It seems that Schultz fled to Honolulu when the indictment was returned against him in New York and from there went to Cuba. Detectives followed, but he caught a plane a few hours before they landed by steamer. Conboy Investigating United States Attorney Martin Conboy was curt in his reply to questions about the Schultz matter. "I am investigating what there is to investigate," he said, "but I am not saving whom I am investigating." Attaches of Mr. Conboy's office estimated that Schultz might escape trial for at least two years in the event he carries the question of Jurisdiction to the Circuit Court of Appeals and the United States Supreme Court.

Manufacturer Faces Trial as Murderer Lebanon, Pa Dec. 10 (P) County Detective George Tucker plans to charge Byron A. Laudermilch, Lebanon manufacturer, with murder today as a result of the death of Emma Miller, 28-year-old factory hand. Tucker said Miss Miller made a statement that she "believed" Laudermilch suspected her of reporting him for NRA violations. Taney, member of the prominent DuPont family, prepared the will a month before she died in a hospital here.

Miss Perot left the city almost immediately afterward vacation-bent for an unannounced destination, but before she went she showed plainly she fears the possible results of the bequest to her husband-to-be. The only one available to speak on the subject, Russell Duane, the family attorney, said that as far as he knew, there was "no one imme diately in line for Miss Perot's fa- vors HOUSEWIFE: "I never knew how much a cigarette could mean until I smoked Camels," says Mrs. Robert Savlcs. "I was attracted to Camels because they have such a mild flavor. And I find that when I smoke a Camel, I have more energy." Open Split Looms Over Democratic Vacancy on Bench Jamaica Boss to Demand Sheridan Recommend Marvin for the Post A wide-open split in the Queens Democracy loomed today over the County Court bench job to be left vacant when Judge Thomas C.

Ka-dien Jr. ascends the Supreme Court bench Jan. 1. John P. O'Connell, State committeeman from the Jamaica district, said today he will demand that County Leader James C.

Sheridan recommend Magistrate Benjamin Marvin to the Governor for the appointment either tomorrow or Wednesday. Ranking Magistrate If Judge Marvin is turned down in favor of District Attorney Charles S. Colden, the reported choice of the Sheridan group, Connell will back him in a primary fight for the Democratic nomination for the job next Fall, the Jamaica boss said. Judge Marvin is senior ranking magistrate in Queens. Sheridan announced that he Is giving his official approval to the selection of William J.

Mahoney of Rockaway Park as Democratic leader of the Rockaways. i 11 orman Anseii Oil 11 Gets Nobel Prize Oslo, Norway, Dec. 10 The Nobel Peace Prize for 1933 was awarded today to Sir Norman An- gell, author and lecturer. The prize for 1934 was conferred upon Author Henderson, president of the World Disarmament Confer, ence. Sir Norman will be 60 years old Dec.

26. After an education in England and France, he went to the Far West of the United States, first as a rancher and prospector and later as a newspaperman. In 1898 he went to Europe to serve as correspondent for American newspapers. Tax on Machinery Studied by Chamber A plan to tax savings brought about by the use of machinery will be considered by the committee on taxation of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York as a possible new source of revenue. The plan was referred to the com mittee by Frederick J.

Lisman, investment banker, who says it orig inated with Charles N. Edge. Slain Recluse's Will Gives Mere Pittance to 2 Kin Sister-in-Law and Niece Receive $100 and $10 Bequests, Respectively Two relatives were treated with scant courtesy in the will of Damian Tabinski, which was f.led for probate today. He was found strangled to death in his home at 245 Central Ave. last Thursday.

A petition accompanying the will placed the value of his estate at $35,000, confuting former reports that Tabinski was a man of vast wealth. A sister-in-law, Bessie Tabinski, of 134 Cornelia was left $100 because "she always treated me A niece, Josephine Cossack, 878 Jefferson was willed $10, because, Tabinski stated in his testament, "she has never shown any regard for me, nor has she ever inquired about my welfare." Tabinski left the bulk of his estate to two brothers and a sister living in Poland. Sorority Shares The sumof $500 was left to the King's Daughters, a sorority, under terms of the will of Mrs. Effie Powell Clark of 50 Plaza who died on Nov. 30.

Her estate was valued at more than $10,000. Cleon Clark, her husband, was bequeathed $300 "to purchase some article of jewelry to keep as a memento of my love and affection." No other provision was made for him by his own wish. Residue of the estate is left as follows: One- half to Emma H. Powell, a sister, of the Plaza St. address; one-quarter each to two nephews, Abbott Powell of Oldwick, N.

and Elbridge Powell of 121 Bank Manhattan. Kin Get Cohen Estate The estate of Hyman Cohen, of 139 Union who died on June 28, was valued at more than $10,000, of which $3,000 was left to each of three daughters, Eva Rubin and Sarah Hashkes, of the Union St. address, and Ray Rosenbluth, of 109 Springfield Rye, N. Y. The widow, Rose Cohen, is left all the remaining cash on hand.

Under terms of the will of William Thomas Sissons, who died on Nev. 29 after being struck down by a bus, all of the $5,200 estate is left to his wife, Carrie, of 274 61st St. ing to a night club. He can't be bothered about visiting hospitals. "We have hospitals in the North country," he explained.

Fluent almost garrulous when the quintuplets are mentioned, th eround-eyed litUe country doctor sought with more enthusiasm than success to stir former Governor Smith's enthusiasm over his charges. Mr. Smith asked polite questions which the physician answered in detail. But when, repeatedly, he urged the former Governor to visit the babies, Mr. Smith hedged.

"I never was in Canada but once." he said. "That was in 1927. when I opened the Peace Bridge at Buffalo. The Prince of Wales came over from his side and I went over from our side and we met in the middle of the bridge. Then I went on over with the Prince to Canada and made a speech and the Prince came back on our side and made a speech.

That's all I ever saw of Canada." Poses for Talkies "Well, you'll have to come up and see the babies," the little doctor smilingly persisted. An ingenuous, completely beguil ing little man, this Dr. Dafoe. Were it not for the intrusion of sponsors and publicity men, to whom he has lent himself for the sake of the quintuplets, he and his medical epic would seem as unrelated to reality as a Lewis Carroll fantasy. Indeed he refers to the quintuplets as "a medical fairy tale." "That's what It is, isn't it?" he said at the Ritz.

"Here are five babies born into the world at once and living; and here am be cause of them, an obscure country doctor 'ne waved his hand about the elegantly-appointed drawing room and sought vainly for words to finish the sentence. Expected Trouble He had sunk into a richly up holstered Louis Quinze chair, crossed one foot over the other knee, filled his pipe from an old pouch and was pulling on it. His twinkly eyes squinted musingly from behind round silver-rimmed glasses and his lips beneath a snubby white mus tache curled frequently upward. Presently, he was off on the most amazing subject in the world, the quintuplets, and he needed little prompting. He had no idea, he said, that the call which brought him hurrying to tne Dionne home at 4:30 a.m.

last May 28 presaged world fame for himself and the Dionnes. Indeed he feared only that Mrs. Dionnes life was in the balance at that time. She had been very ill; complications had set in, and she had been bedridden for some time. Further, the baby he expected only one birth was not due for two months.

He had delivered one woman that night, and gone wearily home to bed when the knock came summoning him to the Dionne s. two and one-half miles away. Dr. Dafoe anticipated unmitigated trouble and nothing more. "When I got there," he recalled, "one baby had been born and taken care of by a neighbor woman.

Another had also been born. The third was being born. I finished up with them. "I was surprised over the five children. I thought I'd had a bad dream.

I was amazed." Baptized All There was no time to pause, however. Himself a Methodist, he baptized the little red mites with the Latin words which a friendly Catholic priest had taught him long before, and then set to work to resuscitate Mrs. Dionne. She lin TRANSPORT PILOT. Maurice Marts, United Air Lines pilot, sayj: "When I notice that 'all in' feeling, I pull nut a Camel and light up.

My natural energy flows back. Tiredness is quickly relieved. I smoke Camels steadily. They never upset my nerves." is Executive of L. I.

R. Back From a Cruise, Calls It Discriminatory and Unlawful The first recorded challenge to the legality of the government levy on imported liquor was offered today by George LeBoutellier, vice president of the Long Island Railroad, who was forced to pay $7 a gallon in duty and taxes when he brought home a gallon jug and a case of rum from a Caribbean cruise. Mr. LeBoutellier, who paid only $2 a gallon for the rum, wrote on his declaration a formal protest against the tax of more than 300 percent and announced he would appeal to Henry Morgenthau Secretary of the Treasury, for abatement of the levy. Calls It Discriminatory He argued that travelers are permitted to bring into the country $100 worth of ordinary goods duty free and that the tax on small quantities of liquor is discriminatory and unjust.

"Tariffs are supposed to be levied," he said, "on articles which compete with American-made products. Rum is not competitive because no rum is made in the United States. This tax, out of all proportion, cuts off your trade with the West Indies, prevents establishment of a trade balance which would be favorable to us and keeps out tourists from the islands who would spend money hero." Tax Aids Bootleggers "I believe this heavy tax on imported liquor is absolutely illegal and I know it makes it possible for bootleggers to undersell legitimate businessmen. I am going to use every avenue I know in order to change this condition." Mr. LeBoutellier arrived on the steamship Haiti of the Colombian line.

Also aboard was Albert Blan-chet, Haitian Minister to Washington. Mr. Blanchet announced that Haiti, an important rum-producing country, will seek a trade pact with the United States which would include a slash of 50 percent in the existing duty on rum. Prosecutor Moves To Rush Mail Case Early action in the Government's prosecution of alleged use of the mails to defraud in the guaranteed mortgage business was indicated today when Special Assistant Attorney General Walter Brower, who Is investteating the mortgage situa tion, moved his office from the Federal Building to 341 9th Ave Manhattan. There he will have a staff of 25 assistants, Instead of the three he has had heretofore.

He is expected to present his evidence to the January grand jury and ask for indictments. Coney Medical Group Elects First Officers Members of the recently formed Coney Island Medical Society, it was announced today, have elected Dr. Philip I. Nash as the organization's first president. Dr.

Nash, who is Medical Assistant to the Kings Couty District Attorney, has long been prominent in Borough medical, political, and civic circles. Others elected were Dr. Harry Diamond, vice president, and Dr. Moses A. Bluestone, secretary-treasurer.

According to Dr. Bluestone, the Coney Island Medical Society will survey the problems of illness among the needy on Home Relief rolls. Steps are now being taken for better co-operation with the district Home Relief Bureau. BKAKEMAN CRUSHED TO DEAT1 Frederick A. Phillips, 32, of 382 111th Corona, a brakeman for the New York Central Railroad, was crushed to death at 4:30 this morning when he fell between a freight car and engine which he was uncoupling on the railroad's tracks along the Hudson River at Mate-it Any to Get $5,000 A Year in Bequest to Heiress Prank (Chinky) Kiekart, ex-convict and desperado, went on trial today before Nassau County Judge Courtland Johnson and a jury at Mineola, on a charge of first-degree murder arising from a killing during the sensational $9,000 robbery of the Bellmore First National Bank ten years ago.

Chief witness against iKekart was Benjamin Haas, self-confessed accomplice, who has turned State's evidence, it was announced this morning in a surprise move by District Attorney Elvin N. Edwards. The announcement was the State's answer to the action of defense counsel, Edward J. Neary and Harry W. Moore, in securing a warrant last week for Haas' arrest on a murder charge.

At the time Mr. Edwards characterized this as "laughable," since Haas was then being held in jail as a material witness. It was Haas' confession that he had been driver of the car in which the six Bellmore bank robbers made their getaway, which led authorities to bring Kiekart from Leavenworth Penitentiary when Kiekart finished a term for the 1927 Elizabeth, N. bank robbery. Pastor Crossland Honored by Flock A surprise dinner honoring the Rev.

Fred Crossland, pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Advent, Avenue and E. 12th and Mrs. Crossland on the occasion of the minister's tenth anniversary with the congregation was attended by more than 175 parishioners in the church hall recently. The Rev. Dr.

Ellis B. Burgess, president of the United Lutheran Synod of New York, was the principal speaker. W. I. Evans, president of the church council, acted as toastmas-ter.

The Rev. and Mrs. Crossland were presented with many attractive gifts. During the Rev. Mr.

Cross-land's pastorate a new church edifice and parsonage have been built. First Barter Bride Requires No Cash Berkeley, Dec. 10 (P) When 18-year-old Jessie F. Barley walks to the tune of "The Wedding March" and promises "I do" tonight she will become the first barter bride in Berkeley's first no-cash, all-barter wedding. The bride's trousseau, the flowers, the minister, the musicians, the reception refreshments, the Berkeley Veterans' Memorial Hall, where the wedding will be held, will be paid for, but not a cent of cash will change hands.

Everything will be paid for in credits accumulated by the bride-to-be and her future husband, Roy G. MacDonald, 24, with the Berkeley Self-Hclp Co-operative, where they are employed. Philadelphia, Dec. 10 (iP) To Miss Justine C. Perot, the income waiting for the man she marries is a matter of considerable annoyance.

She foresees a flood of proposals from cranks, and even kidnap threats as a result of the stipulation in her mother's will directing the trustees of the $300,000 estate to pay, on Miss Perot's marriage, "$5,000 per annum to her husband, so long as he and the said daughter are living together in marriage re lationship. The mother, Mrs. Eleanor DuPont FOOTBALL REFEREE. Tom Thorp says: "The 'lift' that you get from a Camel sure a mighty valuable thing toanyone whose job requires fast action. And I know I can smoke them any time I like.

they will a ever alike me 'edgy' or nervous." THE BROOKLYN SAVINGS BANK CHARTERED 1827 OLDEST SAVINGS BANK ON LONG ISLAND Resources over 110 Million Dollars i CORNER OF CLINTON AND PIERREPONT STREETS. IN TBS BOROUGH. HALL DISTRICT i-H- Hjti Manhattan, i.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1841-1963