The Freeman

On this Day... August 10

- Lee Duncan and Rin Tin Tin

In 1932, superdog Rin Tin Tin died at age 14 in the arms of his master, Lee Duncan, attended by neighbor Jean Harlow. Nicknamed "the mortgage" because his films had been the salvation of Warner Brothers in the 1920s, his name came from the goodluck dolls carried by French soldiers in World War I. Duncan had found the dog as a puppy, along with four other pups and their half-starved mother, in a shell-hole beside an abandoned German dog station in Lorraine, France, on September 15, 1918. In his Hollywood days, Rin Tin Tin was insured for $100,000, had his own valet, chef, limousine, and chauffeur - and earned much of his living by racing up walls aided by hidden cleats and jumping through windowpane­s made of translucen­t candy!

In 1921, tragedy struck Franklin Delano Roosevelt when, after fighting a forest fire, he took a dip in the icy water of Fundy Bay. He came out without the glow he expected, and was soon complainin­g of aches in his legs. The first doctor to attend to him made a wrong diagnosis and advised vigorous massage, which, as it turned out, was worse than useless - for the 39-year-old future president had poliomyeli­tis, and within two days he was paralyzed from the waist down. He afterwards said that "if you spent two years in bed trying to wiggle your toes, then anything else seems easy."

- from Today's the Day! By Jeremy Beadle

In Christian history -

In 1933, Wycliffe Bible Translator­s (WBT) got its tarts at the Day of Prayer for the Tribes of Latin America in Keswick, New Jersey. Founders W. Cameron Townsend and Leonard L. Legters incorporat­ed WBT in 1942, and it has since grown into one of the largest interdenom­inational missionary agencies in the world.

- from This Day in Christian History

By William D. Blake

In the Philippine­s -

In 1898, Lorenzo Martinez Tañada, the longestser­ving senator in Philippine history, was born in Gumaca, Quezon. He served as a Philippine senator for 24 years. Tañada, often called as the "grand old man of the Philippine politics," dedicated his life to the untiring struggle for nationalis­m, independen­ce and sovereignt­y in the country. Notably, he was at the forefront of several battles that shaped the history of the nation, including the fight against the Marcos dictatorsh­ip and the dismantlin­g of Subic Naval base in 1991, which was the last American military installati­on in the Philippine­s. He earned his college diploma and law degrees from the University of the Philippine­s and proceeded with his masteral degree at Harvard University. He also got his doctorate for Civil Law from the University of Santo Tomas. On his birthday in 1986, Tañada received the Philippine Legion of Honor, the country's highest award, from President Corazon Aquino for opposing the presence of American troops in the country. Lorenzo married Expedita Zaballero Ebarle in .In 1927 with whom he had 9 children. He died on August 9, 1992 at the age of 93.

- www.kahimyang.info

In Cebu -

In 1858, a Bishop's decree confirmed the establishm­ent of Daan Bantayan as a parish. Its patroness is Santa Rosa de Santa Maria.

In 1903, Florentino Rallos was suspended as municipal president of Cebu. The vice-president (vicemayor), Filemon Sotto, took over but he, too, was suspended for disobedien­ce on Dec. 23, 1903. - from Cebuano Studies Center,

University of San Carlos

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