Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 January 1939 — Page 11
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which she submerged herself 27 | Side tenement district. She main-
USE Ll orp a b CG tho ad tained it until her death, eiress Haunted by Girlhood ® [| seem seo after her sance, me | SEH SEERA
em. at the Y. W. C. A Richeson left Kansas City in | Where she stayed, her body partly 1909 and became pastor w = submerged in the tub. She died, . ai | church at Hyannis on Cape Cod. | and police said she had committed ) ICHESON, a real-life “Elmer | It wasn’t long before he was slip- | suleide. «~~ = = \. Gantry,” was a tall, dark- | ping the diamond ring returned | Richeson’s visits came to light,
EVERY MODERN IMPROVEMENT
No. impravement in service to
| for the people of our comson and ‘Miss Edmands were to [| munity. .
[Lie 758 LOLI
DIRECTORS §
I AE TALBOT RLY] Bait SEES
5
% Drinkers Mo Apt to Die Of Disease, Medical ~ Journal| Says.
3 . : CALLE 1 PERIL : Rev. Clarence V. T. Richeson, { UALLLY I'L Tragedy Dies After 27 Years i TT The daughter of wealthy As & student in ‘William Jewell 2 IANECr ; aM s Sb : with Mv Il : vn ‘Will ear-old choir singer. an expectant. mother.' =. the living or dead is too good Brookline, Mass, parents, Miss | College at Liberty, Mo. he won | a On Oct. 31, 1911; the day Riche- ’ gf tion developed, and the preacher WR : : : ‘Massachusetts heiress, who spent half a lifetime trying to forget | return here, the story of her past | . Later, he took over the pulpit | went to Oped Ymmanuel. Baptist Mm y the horrors of her girlnood engagement to a Baptist preacher, a | forgotten except by a few rela- | of the Budd Park Baptist'Church | Church in Cambridge. So : i : confessed murderer, was en route to her mother’s home in Pasadena, | tives and close friends, she estab- | in as City, and one Sunday | The ring finally found its ili | ;
was put to death in MassachuTot 4 gi n 3 ot "gir. ‘to: him by the school teache however, and an autopsy showed : , : er of a 17-year-o 0. . | haired, me odie thie ‘school. teacner on | - Nem : IN PN : UM ONI A ¥ haired, magnetic Virginian. ‘the finger of Avis Linnell, 17- | She had been poisoned and was I ¥a . ° ° < el : I Lived Life of Service Trying to Forget Betrothal Bdmands began her, weitere WOTk | ‘orci, ot Liberty, Mo. He won | “TT” ow To Preacher Who Killed Singer. in St. Barnabas House, hard by | from whom he borrowed $700 with R Wioss got around that : hot Wha Riley ou and she went 1o Japan, where | They became. cnaassd, ‘and ps | cous ios Besokins nevest Tue. | GALOSHES . . 77 : : s came engaged, 1 Bre ; ress. - EW YORK, Jan. 20 (U. P).~The body of Violet Edmands, | she founded & mission. On her | gave her a diamond ring. kn Lore xis : Bw. {{O Cal, today for burial. Miss Edmands died Monday. She was 54. | lished with her own money the | three women arose at the end of | to Miss Edmands’ finger. ; Her death ended a career of social service and mission work ! 110th Street Neighborhood Club | his sermon and announced that ! = Two weeks before the wedding 133 E. WASHINGTON St.
Af ' CHICAGO, Janri{ 20 (U. P.).—The Journal of the American Medical Association said || editorially today that the man iho is addicted to al
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~ alcohol is less likely to survive pneumonia than abs 0 mers from alcohol. ' The Journal said a survey at the
Cook County Ho J ital, Chicago, had
shown that the|| pneumonia mortality rate among excessive drinkers was 49.87 percent, 34.4 per cent . among moderate [drinkers and 22.45 ‘per cent among decasional drinkers. " Dr. Edward Clay Mitchell, Memphis, reporting on|the control of infections of the uses said heredity plays a definite role in the structure of the sinuges; that the child tends to acquire| ones similar to those of the ancestar whom it resembles in facial |appearanee. “Sinus infection need no longer be a permanent affliction, if recognized early and |treated properly,” he said. \ He said factors (which affect general growth and |development, such
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influence. becomes adverse their growth is interrupted or arrested. He
said infections and allergy separ-|}
ately or together, are chiefly re- . sponsible for sinusitis. “Probably one !lof the most important phases of} the treatment of sinusitis is prophylaxis,” he said. “This consists, throughout life, of proper hygiene, a well balanced diet, vitamins and sunshine.” The Journal, in|its second annual survey of - fireworks casualties, said 25 persons were killed and 7,933 injured in the Independence Day celebration of 1038. || There were 7,205 injuries io 1937.
Doctor Puts hisky In Anticold Remedy
NEW YORK, dan. 20 (U. P)— Dr. Ralph Almoul of the New York Polyclinic Medic 2] School, writing in the current issue of the State Medical Journal, vouches for this remedy to check 8 common cold: “Mix four ounces of rye whisky with: the juice of one and one-half lemans. Chill thoroughly without using ice. With poth feet in a hot mustard bath, sip one-half of the mixture over a 15-minute period. Then swallow| five grains of Dover's powder (you'll have to get . a prescription for this) and in the next 10 minutes|/drink the rest of the rye and lempn. Go to bed and gover up.
LOUIS BROMFIELD BUYS FARM IN OHIO
OBERLIN, O./|Jan. 20 (U. P.).— Louis Bromfield) Pulitzer -prizewinning novelist who returned rdecently to America to live after _ "14 years in Eurgpe, has found and bought a farm to his liking 10 miles from his native Mansfield, O., it was learned today. . Mr. Bromfield,|it was understood, expects to move|/to the tract with Mrs. Bromgeld|| and his three daughters in March or April. , The Bromfields have been living in - Oberlin since coning from Europe. The novelist, upgn his return, critcized European ||dictatorships and said he wanted tp finish his lifé on a farm. |
~ BOY, 6, READS 50 BOOKS
RITTMAN, O.[|Jan. 20 (U. P.).— Six-year-old Ben Rodager, starting - to school for the|first time, appears a little bored while his classmates strugglé with elementary reading. Ben, a veteran, has béen reading ever since he was 4, and in th€ past year has averaged one book a week.
‘ : Our SKIN frequently reflects how we feel. In business and social contacts we like our friends to tell us how well we look.. ~The laity now recognizes—as physicians and scientists have for years—the | wital importance of rich, red blood, & _ the foundation of strength, energy, and a dear healthy skin. : for that tired-let-down feeling | It is well known how worry, overwork and undue strain take their toll of the precious red cells of the blood. 8.8.5. Tonic brings you new strength and vitality by restoring your blood to _# healthy state; and its benefits are cumulative and enduring in the absence ©of an organic trouble. :
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