The Cedarville Herald, Volume 46, Numbers 1-26
r 'f Th* adrmiriatg s f today, a rt «aly iw«dw:*s m a lt s * f its own, but it wVfiMNi and bring* to final eulrainatjoB tb* advartiflpg of Uvt yesterdays* 'Cedarville Xerald. A NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL MEW* AND THE INTERJWTS OF c e d a r v il l e a n d v ic in it y . FORTY-SIXTH YEAR NO. 15. CEDARVILLE. OHIO, FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1923 Business On j TheUpGrade The return* from the income tax this year indicates that we had more prosperity last year than moat per sona thought, Reports from all sour ces indicate that this year will he a much better one for business. There are many reasons for this prosperity. One thing is we are in one o f the greatest building booms the country has had for years. Prices of farm. products are better than a year ago. Land yalues have increas ed. People have more confidence in the future and business is more set tled. There is no one any closer in touch with business conditions than W. W. Galloway, General Manager of the Hagai- Straw Board & Paper Co. Mr. Galloway has been in a num ber o f states of late in the interest oft his company and he finds business on the up-grade for all lines. His com pany has many orders ahead and the demand for paper continues to in crease. Mr, Galloway reports the February and March; business of the company to be greater than for many years back; The company now hds sfx pieces of costly machinery on hand ready to be installed. This wprk will be done on 'Saturdays. * Another optimist from the busi ness point of view is President Car ter N. Abel of the Abel Magnesia Co, Mr, - Abel reports an .unprecedented demand for crushed stone and lime. The company is installing at this time two immense kilns to care for the lime business and two more to be erected later. The building boom has caused a great demand for all kinds ,o f lime, Cincinnati and Colum bus supply companies are bidders for the entire output of lime. The ' road work means a demand for the stone while the steel mills are want ing the grade of stone that can' bfe supplied here and known as dolomite. The company is not in operation at this time but is pushing the new con struction work with, all the force pos sible, Mr. Ansel Wright o f the Cedaryille Lumber Co. tells us the company has a number o f inquiries for bills of lumber fo r construction purposes this summer. While this i$ Mr. Wright’s first year, in business here his com pany is connected with, the Jefferson ville Company, The latter concern has its own planning mill and enab les the local company to supply all finish for building. The local company ' lias added several new lines and is branching opt for other business as .. can be noticed by the announcement in' this issue. The “weigh” o f the Progressive 'x*, \NBLL I DO B E L IE V E P M < SA (AM M 6 S O / A E / CONDENSED OHIO NEWS News Items Picked at Random and Roiled Down for the Busy Reader PRICE,;*! .50 A YEAR Gasoline Tax MeasureLost •vV HIGH SCHOOL NOTES. OFFICERS ELECTED FOR DAIRY ORGANIZATION The various dairy organizations in the county held meetings at the Farm Bureau in Xenia Friday and Satur day last. Manager N. P. Ewbank of the local company reported that the station opened in May 1922 and dur ing the ten months handled 28,423 pounds o f butter fat which sold for $17,433,61, with a gross profit of $1,669.99. The expense for operat ing the station during the ten months was $1,409,61. The station now has a membership of 78 having started with 43, which is one o f the best in the county. At the election o f officers the fol lowing were elected! J. E. Kyle, pres ident; Burton McElwain vice presi dent; Cash Gordon, treasurer; and E. E. Finney and A. J. Pitstick, advis ory councilman. Both the local and Xenia stations reported a rebate of two cents per pound on butter fat. R. S. ANDERSON OF SANTA, ANA COMES EAST ON TOUR H. S. Anderson of Santa Ana, Cal, •pent a several days here this week. Mr. Anderson came East with a party Of 60 orange growers of that state and they visited orange growers in Florida as Well as the packing plants Oil a tour o f inspection. Last year the Florida growers sent a delegation to California on the same kind of a trip. The party, or most o f them, went as far East as New York City, Mr. An derson formerly resided m this see tion and he reports a very pleasant and profitable trip. He says they have had unusually dry weather in his Section o f California this winter which may have some effect on the coming orange crop as well as that of the lemons. • PROPERTY CHANGES HANDS George Barlow last week sold his property on Church street to David Strobridge. The consideration was $2,609, There has been a wonderful increase In residence property here within the bast five years. Property on' some o f the Side streets that at one time was a drag on the market is now much in demand. Property on the North side o f town has been much in demand lately. That section will continue to grow due largely to tli# naw school building and ths col Much interest was shown by the students in the inter-class tournament held at the High School, In the girls preliminaries, the Juniors defeated the Seniors 13 to 3. In the final game Hackett kept the Sophomores in the running with her foul shooting dur ing the first half, the score at the end of the period being 6-4. In the second period the Juniors showed a faster at tack, the finai being 14 to 5. In the hoys preliminaries the Sophomores defeated the Freshmen 13 to 8 and in the best played and most interesting game of the. tournament the Juniors handed, the Seniors the short-end o f a 5 to 8 score. In the deciding game the Juniors easily defeated the So phomores 19 to, 2, the Sophomore’s points coming .b y the free throw route. & * # * * There are rumors'of a Junior ana Senior banquet flying around which vve earnestly hope will come to earth I and materialize in the pear future. * • . * * • The Seniors celebrated St. Patricks day with a party at the home of Mary; Townsley where a “ good time was had; by all," Desiring to honor St, Patrick With some kind of a clean-up campaign they could not find snakes but did a •mod job of removing the cobwebs be fore the refreshments were served. * ■ * • * Wanted:- A man with a wooden leg to mash potatoes. Apply t o ----------Oh, hey-ve taken the line. (Mashed pota toes have been known to relievo vio lent cases o f choking.) • Last Semester while the Sopho more class was studying Physiology under the direction of Mrs. Wilson, they decided to equip a medicine cab inet for the rest room and raised the necessary funds. This led to the^pur chase of the Red Cross emergency cases which will soon be put up in each rest room. * * 4 Mr. Parker (in 1933*—“ Did you tell that young man that I’m going to have the lights turned o ff at 10:00 P, M. in the future?” Mildred—“ Yes, father.” Mr. Parker— “Well” ? Mildred—He says he is coming at 10:00 after this.” • * * The Junior Class will present the New Co-Ed, a comedy in four acts, at the opera house, Friday evening, April 6. The cast o f characters is as follows: Letty Willis—Helen IHff. • Mage Stevens—Ruth Bums. Estlle Doolittle—Eleanor Johnson, Miss Rice—Mary Webster. May, Rose and Grace, College chums, Ruth Collins, Margaret Tar- box, Lois Estle. Dick Bradley—Kenneth Little. Punch Doolittle—Lester Shepherd, Jim Young—Mac Harris. George Washington Watts—Harvey Auld. . Students, members of the Glee Club members of the Junior class. Plat opens April 4 at 4 P. M. TEILS HOW HOOSIERS RAISED TON-LITTERS IN SIX MONTHS J . , '. ’ ' • COLLEGE NOTES The, members o f > the Rangers Club presented their program, to. the schools at South Charleston, South Solon and Selma last Friday after noon and evening. . . . Miss Frances, McKibben of Rush- . ville, Ind., spent Friday with1friends. ■ (She, ist a student at Muskingum and A hundred and forty-nine Ohio far mers have entered in a contest to rear ■from a spring litter of pigs a ton or more of pork in six months. Thirty- six Indiaria farmers accomplished this last year, and one raised 3,040 pounds j of pork in six months, : i The contest, new in Ohio, has been . run a number of years in Indiana. C* j was on her way home for Spring va- M. Hubbard, extension specialist in, cation, animal husbandry at Purdue, tells how the 36 farmers who made the club there last year did so;. “ Every litter was sired by a pure bred boar, and 28 of tbe 36 sows were purehreds. All sows were profilic and themselves came o f large litters. Feed ing included protein supplements and legume and other pasturage as well as the grain: Pregnant sows were ex ercised, •and all farrowing quartets were disinfected and cleaned. All ran on clean lots. Shade and clean drink ing water w6re furnished, and careful attention was given to details during, the farrowing and suckling season. Parasites were kept downtliroughout the season.” To stand much of a chance to make the club, a litter of at least nine pigs is needed to start, specialists say, and even then the hogs must be developed at about twice the ushal .rate of gain, The newly organized Ohio Federation of Swine Breeders has promised med als to all of the 149 contestants who weigh in with litters o f a ton or more six months from b ow . SPRING PLOWING NOW ON; TRACTORS AND TEAMS BUSY Met t any direction that you go you now find teams and tractors all busy breaking ground ready for the oat and corn crops. There has not been as much winter plowing as usual and the spring plowing is somewhat late, Fred Wrimer on the George Little farjm how has about eighty acres broken. He is using two teams and a tractor to break ground for a 200 aero com OH *:.- HIGH SCHOOL STILL ON THE ACCREDITED LIST Prof. L. D. Parker has received a letter from Vernon M. Riegel, super intendent of Public Instruction, that, the local high school has once more passed the required tests for stand ard'rating. This^rating was given by the North Central Association at the meeting held March 16-17 in Chicago. The following is a part of the let ter: “ You have at present a ratio of thirty-two pupils per teacher based upon the average attendance. The North Central Association recom mends twenty-five for a maximum. This is rather a serious violation and indicates that you should employ an additional teacher for the coming year. Otherwise your school passed a good inspection.” Prof. Parker states that the objec tion of thirty-two pupils per teacher has been ovei’come in that the attend ance now is less than when the in spection was made. Also that the in spector did not take into considera tion that he (Parker) was teaching on a half time basis. CANDY SHOP HAS FINE EASTER CANDY DISPLAY If there is one place that Cedar- villahs are proud of it is Kerr’s Can dy Shop. No town of this size in this section of the state can boast of as fine a display of candles as can be found there, Mr, Kerr is an expert candy maker and for some time has been working part time in the leading candy shop o f a neighboring city. You can find the same quality of goods here that be found elsewhere, all fresh and all home-made. The Easter display cannot be excelled elsewhere. V, II. CROUSE JOINS THE RITENOUR EXCHANGE Miss Elizabeth Lackey o f James town spent Thursday with friends in Cedarville.. . i ■ « • • ’ • h Te new cabinets for the following year of the Y. W. C, A. and the Y. M, -G. A. were elected last Wednes- * * * were elects od. For the Y. Wi C. A., president, Christina Kyle; vice president, Lu cinda Caskey; secretary and treasur er, June Thompson; undergraduate superintendent, Paulline Collins. For the Y. M. C. A,; president, Fred Wills, v)co president, Kenneth Mouisan; sec retary, Charles Townsley; treasurer, Morston Hunt. Mr. Harold •Myers, a student of the College, who has been seriously ill with pneumonia, is able to be out again. ■*** < * * # ■ ■Miss Bee Walton, a former student of the College, visited. in Cedarville last Sunday. * ■ * Coach Warner is confined to his bed vith measles. • • • The students of Cedarville College are looking forward to the spring va cation Which begins Thursday at noon SECOND SUIT FILED AGAES&T FOR SHERIFF FUNDERBURG J, A. Middleton, father of Warren Middleton, 17, has filed suit gainst Lincoln Funderburg, former sheriff, asking $25,000 damages as the result of the shooting last September when bullits from the sheriff’s posses struck and injured the lad. The shooting was the result of a supposed hold ' up on the Wilmington pike south o f Xenia. The first suit was that o f the estate of Voh ey Nichols, who was killed and damages to the amount o f $25,000 was asked. Charles Darlington repre- resents each of the plaintiffs in the action brought. Darlington represent ed the state in the criminal action against Funderburg when the jury disagreed. The commissioners allowed the attorneys $400 each. Because the commissioners would not pay a $1000 fee, Mr. Darlington declined to ac cept the $400 and the voucher re mains unpaid, C. II. Grouse, who recently sold his farm stock and is moving to town, JUDGE SPRIGG SA^S STORY OF KING TUT IS ALL BUNK Judge Carroll Sprigg o f Dayton, “Glob trotter” in ah address before the Xenia Rotary Club says that that the stories o f fabulous wealth found in the tomb of King Tut is "all bunk” . The articles found are interesting but of no value, Ho says that Tut was not a Pliaroah but an illegitimate child who married the daughter o f a PhaToah, succeeding to the crown when he was eight and died when he was 17, The tomb was but 3000 years old as compared with .5009 for other tombs. The Judge was at one time U. S, Minister to .Egypt WILL OPEN RESTAURANT Sherman Jones has purchased the Charles Smith property, known as the has taken A position with the R ite-, Moss Bird building, on South Main nour Exchange. Mr, Crouse was for Street, and will op«n A,' restaurAnt. many yaajr* in the retail meat busi*}Possession will b* Riven About the ness here, W o re going on tbe f m . ; first o f the month, Bandits at Toledo field UP nanici lvn,.iuii, blinded film by throwing per- in fiis face and escaped alter robbing b ln / o f $50. * Fire at Budcland, Auglaize county, desLoyed tbe Lake Erie and Western railroad depot, tbe William Brorein store building and severely damaged adjoining structures. Loss $10,900. Trevor R, Roberts, vice president and general manager of the Industrial Service company of Pittsburgh, was , round guilty of manslaughter at Steu benville in connection with the death at Elmer Cost, shot during labor trou* f file at Yorkvllle in February, 1922. Ten Warren merchants were fined $10 and costs each on charges of sell ing tobacco" to minors. Farmers of Marion county, report that wheat has been greatly damaged because o f an open winter, After being without a local news paper for two years, Genoa, Ottawa tounty,(Sa town of J.OOO population, has two. haul Kuesthardt of Port Clinton . introduced the Genoa Times and William Schooler of Gib- sopburg the Genoa Gazette. Fire destroyed $15,000 worth of furs at tlie Fertel Fur company, Cleveland. Ohio Products company’s plant at Niles, which has never been operated, though erected, two years, was sold at sheriffs sale.' ’ Northwestern Ohio"high schools will hold their annual oratorical contest at Kenton'May 11. Harry Clark, 60, Middletown,., was killed by an auto. Clark Dix, 83, brick manufacturer and Civil war veteran, died at Marlon. ■ Moving picture show theater owners at Findlay will, exhibit ‘ films bn Sun days, having apparently won their five-year fight against the “ blue laws;'' which had been evoked against them, Robert Davis, 34, father of two chil dren, was sentenced to die In the elec tric chair July 6 by Judge William P. Stephenson when motion for a new. trial was overruled at West Union- Canton police and firemen have pe titioned council for a 10 per cent in crease in salary. Under the proposed schedule a patrolman would receive $165 a. month. Logan Kiwauians have underwritten a guaranty to provide $3,500 for equip ment for the city playgrounds. Mrs. Stella Moans Lewis, 24, Cin cinnati, Whq sold her baby tor $33.0 was fined $100 for disorderly conduct. Nine hundred m iners. at Sugar Creek, near Athens have returned to work, ending their five days’ strike, which was caused by alleged unfair division of work-days among the three mines, there, owned by the Ohio Col: lierles Company. Vital .statistics show that the num ber of deaths in Highland county, dur ing February exceeded the number of births by 20, the deaths being 50 and biftbs 30. Wlllian Albert Rich, alleged Clev- land burglar, who confessed to kHHn6 two men in Omaha, has been returned to Cleveland after Omaha offlcialq were satisfied that his confession was a hoax. Sergeant George . E. Reid, quarter master corps, Is being held by Ports mouth. pdlice for federal authorities on charge of embezzling $2,500. Free will' offerings of citizens are being used to endow rooms in the City hospital, Marion, Charles Price of Eaton reports hs has a hen which has laid an Easter egg, already decorated. It is slightly larger than the average egg. Each tip is white and in the center la a choco late colored band two Inches wide. Governor DonAhey ordered Mayor John W. Post of Salem to discharge Police Chief T. W. Thompson within 20 days, under penalty of being him self removed as mayor. Complaints as to law enforcement conditions were made to the governor some time ago by citizens of Salem. Pressley Combs, 38, suspended post- office clerk, committed suicide at his home in Springfield by shooting, Albert O. Woodward, 75, and his wife, Sarah, 65, were asphyxiated by gas fumes at their home in Toledo. Mm John Deuchlor, 72, was fatally injured, and her husband, 70, severely hurt, when a train crashed Into their buggy at Attica. James Brooker, 39j Akron, died fol lowing an attack in which he was •tabbed by an unidentified man, who eeoaped, John Murphy, 46, and Henry Kla- bunda, 34, were*run down and killed at Cleveland by automobiles. William Priver, 23, was shot and killed by his father, Martin Priver, Sr., during a scuffle at their home in Cleveland, The father claims the fo o t in g was accidental. ■Frank Woods, 50, farmer near Marysville, ended his life by hanging himsolf. His body was found by hie daughter. Six miners narrowly escaped death from, asphyxiation wfieii they tapped ah abandoned gas well while they were cutting coal in Doiittle mine, near Dennison, Winifred Stroup, 8, Norwalk, was killed 1H the schoolyard when a 300 pound wooden door frame for the new high school fell on her. Twenty-five children from the Fay ette county children's home escaped eerloue ipjury when the hue In which they were riding skidded from the road near Washington C. ID Albert Unit was killed instantly and his bride of a week was probably ftp tally injured when the automobile in which they were traveling to Urtir home to Chicago overturned Thi bride’ JtirMMit w mm mm ** ctototoiij Cart Steasper of Lorain, who ebot and killed his wife after she had filed &..it for divorce,, was found guilty of first degree murder, with recommen dation for mercy. Four Trumbull county chiropractors have been released from Canton work house. Their wives went before a justice of the peace at Warren and paid fines of $500 and costs each for their husbands. Fifteen years in the state reforma tory was the sentence meted out to Clay Mershon, 20, who pleaded guilty in criminal court to the payroll- rob bery at the B. H, Meyer Packing com pany at Cincinnati. W. M. Cortner, kleagle of Spring- field. Ku Klux Klan, filed suit in com mon pleas court' for $51X000 alleged damages against RicharcFE, O'Brien, chief of police of Sprtngfieldr Chief O’Brien led a raid on the klan head quarters in that city Feb. 14, arrest ing Cortner ^on a charge of riotous conspiracy and confiscating klan robes and records,. Cortner.was acquitted. Alonzo Souslim 65, sitting - in a poker game at Dayton, held a queen and another card and drew three cards. Looking at his hand he beheld four queens and dropped dead. His opponent, Virgil Burhridge, held four aceg. Heart disease was given as the cause of death. Governor Donahey, in a special mes sage, called upon the legislature to act upon some of his earlier recom mendations. The governor asked par ticularly that the legislature act on bills to re-establish a state board of clemency, to" transfer the auto regis tration bureau to the Ohio peniten tiary, to make an appropriation, for an additional state brick plant and to re store a nonpartisan board to control charitable, penal and correctional in stitutions. Jury In the .case of former Auditor C. L -’ Chute of Perry county, tried at New Lexington on an: indictment charging embezzlement' of county fundee was discharged when it report-' ed a disagreement. Disapproval of the Ku Klux Klan was announced officially at Columbus by the social service commission of the Qhfo conference of. the Methodist Episcopal church, Ohillicothe now has an “ automobile pound." Peter Devino, merchant; Youngs town, was *slain by unknown parties. State treasury officials announced tb^h bids just opened on $28,600,000 worth o f state depository funds are somewhat lower than proposals of two years ago. Bids averaged 4.25 per cent, A. J. Reading of Columbus has been re-employed as superintendent of the light plant at Mt. Sterling. In the reorganization of * the Na tional bank of Logan, Herbert R, Har rington was selected president: John W. Jones and F. M. Bowen, vice presi dents, and Charles G. Bowen, cashier. J. E. Stoughton, for 12 years pro bate judge in Hocking county, has beau made an inspector in the state prohibtion department. John Stuckman, 34, former Craw ford county, sheriff and for 16 years president of the Crawford: County Agricultural society, died at Bucyrus. Thomas Talbot claims the honor ox having the largest parsnip ever grown in the vicinity of Crooksville. It measures. 27 inches in length ana weighs three pounds. Doris McElroy is the champion speller in the grade schools o f Marion and Mrs. Fred Shirk is the premier speller of the grownups, according to the verdict of the Glenwood Com munity club, which conducted an old- fashioned spelling bee at Marion. Petitions containing 1,690 signatures of Richwood and Marysville persons was presented to the county commis sioners asking the board-to use its influence’ towards having the two chi ropractors, Charles H. Lazelle, Marys ville, and Martin Langhough, Rich- wood, released from the Dayton work house, to which they were sentenced for refusing to pay fine for practicing without A state medical license. Mrs. Narclssa Jackson, 92, East Liv erpool, died of burns. Fire damaged the F. J. Lewis plant at Dover. Benjamin Reed, 50, farmer near Cleveland, committed suicide. Lehman Brothers’ clothing store at Portsmouth turned. Loss $100,000, Joseph Ferry, 20, who killed Mrs. Elizabeth Rich and her baby son in a fit o f jealous rage at Canton, surprised his lawyers by pleading guilty to first degree murder and throwing himselt on the" mercy of the court. Judge Kirchbanm gave him the alternatives o f death or life imprisonment. He chose the latter. William B. Jones of Westmoreland county, Pa., informed the Cincinnati police he had been robbed o f $50,000 In cash by a gang of confidence men, who used the prospective sale of 200 cases o! bonded whisky as the bait. As she sat down to a banquet at tbe Odd Fellows* hall, Fostoria, Mrs. Wil liam King, 56, fell dead from a heart attack. Henry Evans, baker, is suffering from wounds received when he was held up in his hake Shop at Lima, rob bed of $19 and shot by a bandit. The alleged bandit, Virgil Daekin, 19, of Toledo, was captured later by officers after a chase. Officials of the Indiana, Columbus and Eastern Railway xjompany have made \ new proposal 1ft which they offer to stubsiitute an auto bus for the trolley In Bellefonta'.ne. Rat. b . J. Brinkemaa, ptotor of ths First FmWtlriatt church, Middle* tovra, to* t#to*tod A toJ lto*. to 1U- Thc proposed gasoline tax of two cents a gallon that has been under lire in the legislature was amended to one cent when it was seen that such a bill was gbing to be lost, The one cent proposition was tabled Tues day by a vote o f 56 to 53 which, in dicates that the gasoline tax is dead. The measure was proposed as a rev- enue for road improvement and .was to be divided between counties, town ships and municipalities. The auto mobile associations fought the pro posed tax and it is said that if it had become a Jaw Governor Donahey was. infavor of giving it the veto axe, One of the arguments of the auto mobile associations was that motor :ar owners now were paying more tax tha*n other property, Also that this tax meantt improved roads along land that would not pay its just share when the increased value o f the lar.d' was taken into consideration. The truck interests opposed the bill be cause they are big users of gasoline. Here is- one example o f the users of riie roads not being willing to pay for the cost of up keep. It also looks, 'ike the automobile owners in the future will determine just what tax is to be levied. Representative "Brown of Champaign county, champion of ’ the bill predicts a measure at a not listant date. The" medsure had the endorsement of the Farm Bureau, the Ohio Grange, the Com Stalk Club and various organizations hut all of -,hem couki nqt offset the influence if the automobile interests. And in :he face of all these endorsements^ of agricultural interests, the farming in- •' terests arc in the majority in the House. "ONDED DEBT IN COUNTY IS $70.78 PER CAPITA According to Auditor of State Jo-' eph Tracey, the bonded debt of the ounty is $70.78 per capita for 193 /hile back In 1910 it was $20.09, This epresents bonds for schools, roads, ridges. Cedarville is in good, position lot having a heavy bonded indebted- iess. The per capita tax in the County s $32.98 While in 1910 it Was $17.42, To some this may appear a freight- < *ul thing* No one will deny hut that ve have some wasted public funds hut' >n the other hand when we consider he advantages o f good roads, paved .treets, modem schools, this rate of lebt increase is not alarming, f o r the .ounty. A.s a comparison how many families would go hack to the old way if individual transportation o f school children? This is one of the greatest ixpenditures in the operation of the schools, The day laborer could not af ford to transport his children to school rcr could the farm owner keep up ;an mtomobile or horse and .buggy fdr What it now costs him in taxes for ill school purposes. If the national m d . state government, received as lear a dollar in return for each tax lollar expended, our taxes would not )e what they are* We would venture hat we get 95 cents in return of the school tax dollar but no one will even /enture the statement that the State )t federal government get as much as fifty, cents. e igh teen c a r s in tw o WEEKS AND WANTING MORE One of the busiest places around .own at the present time is the R. A. Murdock Ford agency. A week ago Mr. Murdock secured six cars from he distributing plant at Columbus, ast Monday, six more and on Satur day he will isecure an additional six. More than that he still needs addition al cars to care for his business. In the tractor line Mr* Murdock reports that he has already sold 28 tractors md is having trouble along with other Pordson agents o f being able to fill orders. Mr. Murrdock probably sells more cars than anyother dealer in this section of the state, other than the large city agencies. Hoaxed Doctora "With Hot Water Bottle — Evelyn ?,yons, o f EscsrtAbs, Jfictu; star tied the medical world with letnpevsture of 114 to 190 i Wri w tAposed Ato Admitted the ttormsmster «**is*t* t " \i ^ -•♦’ 'At " \ * "tew
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