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Reading Times from Reading, Pennsylvania • Page 8

Publication:
Reading Timesi
Location:
Reading, Pennsylvania
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Page:
8
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Eight YOUR HEALTH Physicians know that there are many varieties of, rheumatic disease and therefore that self treatment may lead to difficulties. Patients with chronic inflammation of the Joints are seen at all sorts of resort undertaking special baths and similar treatments which in their cases may not be warranted because of the acute inflammatory condition of the disturbance. Investigators in one large clinic of thia country endeavored to find out how most of their patients with chronic disturbances were being treated before coming to the clinic. It was found that 75 percent of them had consulted non medical practitioners, masseurs and similar healers, as well as various physicians, without successful results. Today proper treatment of rheumatic inflammation involves the use cf drugs which diminish pain; the removal of foci of Infection in the teeth, tonsils and other parts of the body; the use of physical therapy in the form of hot baths, electric development of heat in the tissues, and finally a controlled diet.

Unfortunately most patients with rheumatic inflammations do not undertake' a regular course of treatment under competent care. They experiment with ore method or another without realizing that the attack on this disease must be a profound and complete attack. TIMES PHOJfE 6101 "A I I EVS A I A UR DAY I A I L' 9 3 TIMES PHONE 6101 OLDEST NEWSPAPER IN READING. Published continuously since 1858. Readlrj Times Publishing Owner and Publisher.

A John H. Perry Newspaper. John H. Perry, President. E.

A. Kettel, Secretary Treasurer. I. Joe Hornstein, General Manager. Abe Hurwitz.

Managing Editor. Published every morninjr except Sunday. Entered as Second Claw matter at the Reading Post Office. Member of The Associated Press. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not credited in the paper and also the local news published herein.

NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES. E. KATZ SPECIAL ADVERTISING AGENCY, 58 West 40th N. Y. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 1 Week .10 6 Months 1.30 1 6.00 Bell 'Phone 6101 THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1932 He that nbserveth the wind shall not sow: and he that regardeth the clouds shall not reap.

Eccleslastes 11:4. That destructive siren, sloth, is ever to be avoided. Horace. DIFFICULTIES AT GENEVA When Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson gets down to work at the Geneva disarmament conference, he will find three new problems confronting the delegates, all of which have developed new complications since, the conference recessed for the Easter holidays.

First and most important of these is the situation in the Orient, where Japan and China are still sitting on powder kegs. Fighting in Manchuria was followed by a definite Japanese threat to withdraw from the League of Nations and this, naturally, will have a dampening effect on efforts to disarm. The second disturbing element is the in military appropriations proposed by the French. Unless something definite is done at Geneva, Fiance will embark on a program of military preparation unequalled there since the World War. This has had a disquieting effect on England, Italy and other European nations.

Third, the French delegates themselves know that their plans must be subject to the outcome of the elections in France in May. The second of these three is the most surprising in view of France's continued protestations of eagerness to disarm. The new French army budget calls for the expenditure of approximately $25,000,000 more than last year. This fact is hardly in line with the French proposal to turn armed, forces over to the League of Nations and to make that body a police, power for keeping peace in the world. French naval appropriations also would include $70,000,000 for construction of new ships, chief of which is a $25,000,000 battle cruiser, which would be one of the most efficient fighting vessels afloat.

Plans for construction of this battle giant arc going forward as French delegates to the Geneva conference are' still talking excitedly about giving all the battleships to the League of Nations. French submarines, already numerous, are to be augmented under the new construction program by eight new and modern undersea boats. France also proposes to turn all big submarines over to the League of Nations. England frankly views this situation with misgivings. The British naval and military appropriations have been cut to the bone and Great Britain is apparently perfectly 'willing to consent to a further reduction in armaments.

But more and more Eritish newspapers and statesmen are coming to the conclusion that France says one thing and means another, and that the only sort of disarmament France favors Is disarmament for everybody but France. This attitude of jealousy and mistrust is one of the principal obstacles of the conference. THE MORAL SIDE When Dr. William Oxley Thompson, president emeritus of Ohio State University, told an audience cf college men the other day that the real issues facing th? country today are not economic but moral, a good many of his hearers probably treated themselves to a skeptical "Oh, yeah?" Industry is stagnant, agriculture is on the rocks, millions of men are out of work and there are breadlines in every city and the main issues are rot economic? It is easy to be skeptical about that statement And yet there is a whole lot of truth in it. We are reaping, just now, that which we sowed during the decade following the Armistice; and we did the sowing with both eyes fixed on the main chance, with economic issues uppermost in our minds, with all moral issues utterly forgotten and look what it brought us! In a material way, civilization took a long step forward during those years.

Men learned how to produce more things than ever before. They learned how to sell things more quickly and more widely. They learned how to let machines do the hard work that human muscles used to have to do, they learned how to move from place to place faster than ever befoi, they learned how to increase profits beyond anything dreamed of before. But no one took the time to wonder just what the spiritual implications of all of this might be. Production, sales, profits these became ends in themselves.

We never asked ourselves where our absorption in economic issues was leading us. Now we are paying for it all. We are discovering that schemes which boost profits can be horribly wrong if they do not make allowances for the intangible human values. If we are told, now, that it is time for us to give cur attention chiefly to moral issues, we ought not to be surprised. It is probable that the country will never again be as completely absorbed in material things as it was during the past 10 years.

That attitude, Inevitably, leads to a blind tumble into a ditch. WHERE THE HAZARDS LIE The accident to Captain Hawks emphasized one of the most peculiar nspecfa of modern aviation the fact that the moments of greatest danger usually come, not when a plane is high In th ir, but when It is Just leaving or just reaching the soild earth. Too much can happen in a fraction of a at such times. When things go wrong while the plane is In flight, the pilot ha.s time to tMke action to meet the emergency; all else failing, he can take to hi parachute. But V.hen an emergency develops during the takeoff or the landing there Is nothing to do but cut the switch and breathe a prayer If lie has time.

The next great advance in aviation will probably come In some ay of making the beginning and the ending of a flight less hazardous. By Dr. Morris Fishbcin Forty percent of patients treated for rheumatic Inflammations were found to have experimented at one time or another with all sorts of rheumatic cures offered In bottles in drug stores. It is stated that there are 6,000 different rheumatic cures sold in Germany, and a brief investigation in this country revealed at least 550 patented rheumatism, gout and neuritis remedies now being sold in American drug stores. These remedies usually contain, as is pointed out by Drs.

Edward H. Rynearson and Philip S. Hench, some product of salicylic acid, or of pheno barbital, a mild cathartic and usually some alkaline preparation. There are. of course, cases In which the administration of one or all of these drugs may be inadvisable, yet time and again patients experiment with these methods on their bodies who would not think for a moment of experimenting with a substitute for gasoline In their cars.

It Is well known that persons with rheumatic conditions occasionally get better and again relapse without any certain understanding for the reasons of either the Improvement or relapse. Unfortunately each Improvement may be tskpn as evidence or the value of some new treatment and not, as a natural Improvement in the course of the disease. Walter Portrait of a Man Talking to Himself That isn't quite dear to me, at ail I mean the listing of those serial digits on that ransom' coin Lord, they'll be arresting too many people and all that energy will be wasted Imagine a shopkeeper finding the time to go over that lone of numbers before making chaige of a nve, ten or double sawhuck Nobody, I'm afraid, is going to rLsk offending a customer these days, anyhow I'd like to be the fortunaf publisher of the "official" book thito going to be written on that story Even if it is never solved the jotting down of what has gone on all this time, the bickerings of the officials, the clues that weren't and all the other angles that the papers didn't gather will'make a spellbinding tome S. S. Van Dine, perhaps, could prepare the best, account even though his cook was poisoned the other day, and when he was questioned by the bluecoats about the affair, Van Dine confessed that he had no idea who did it I Time heals the bruises of the sensitive Broadway groups The one producer who testified against he critics during the recent brawl at Washington managed to gather some of the blackballed for a cocktail party And all had a good cry Even Mr.

Slrovich, who became ill from Hie feud, was among the invitedbut he arrived too tardy to reconcile with the oracles who made him so unhappy for a while Wonder if Walter C. Kelly will ever forgive Bobby Clark for Clark's not so gentle comments at the Friar's the other Sabbath morn? Miss Velez Is now the idol of the "Hot Cha" troupe after that raffle she promoted the other night She had more fur coats than she could use, it appears And she gave one of them away in a novel manner She told all the chorus girls to jot down their name on sJips of paper which were collected in a hat The lucky winner got the costly coat free! A refreshing gesture considering that too many of us treat each other like a distant relative. Wonder if Ida May Chadwick's husband has any legal right to halt the joshing of his real name which Is Joe Zilch? Funny how that clowning began Ida was part of a show in which Frank Tinney starred And the Zilchs honeymooned with the troune And one 'dull matinee Tinney found the audience very difficult to amuse and for want of something funnier to say to cover up a flop quip vhe spied the groom sitting in a box and exclaimed: "Ah! My friend Joe Zilch is with us!" This enticed a wow response, they say And the comedian "kept it in" getting roars with the name wherever he appeared Today the teg is among the glorified with one humor maganize cashing In most heavily with it Wonder what those pickets think about who parade up and down before that, nickelodeon in Lincoln Square From 9.30 in the morning until 11 post meridian they have worn out their boots and nerves, I suppose, picketing the In rain and snow since March a year ago It would be a better world if more of us squared things with our enemies instead of evening matters. Interesting observation by Capt. Fawcett that age means nothing in Hollywood Marie Dressier, at 60.

enjoys greater popularity than any ingenue at 18 John Barrymore, at 50. still plays romantic young lovers with realism On the other hand. Chic Sale, who is in his early 30s, scores in roles of aged, white haired men. and Dorothy Peterson, who is 24. is usually assigned to mother roles Reminds me of the late Robert Ames, before the chln emas embraced him When he starred in "Seed" here, one reviewer complained that the chief fault with Ames was that he "wasn't the type" Horoscope "The Stars Incline, But Do Not Compel" THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1932 According to astrology this is an uncertain day that may cause discouragement to persons sensitive to planetary influences.

Adverse assets are strong. Women may be changeable and uncertain under this direction of the stars which is supposed to encourage temperamental mocds. is not an auspicious rule for iuitors or even for husbands who desire to win fi minine approval. As the day advances Venus is read us reaching an aspect more favorable women than that of the morning and afternoon huspitulitir.s be Women's In Us come under a sway making for changes in policy and novel alignment among members. The seers long have declared that organizations anion women had their inspiration in a higher force than is generally recognized, for they who read the stars declare that supreme public service is to be given by the great army of club women.

At this time there may be a strike or other labor trouble in an Industry which employs many women, astrologers foretell. There Is a sign today which seems to presage for agriculture an extraordinary problem that may cause discontent among farmers. Fruit, growers should benefit this jear, it Is forecast, for there will be Increased demands for exportation. Canada and the United States are under a sway believed to presage closer trade relations and wider commercial co operation. The Prince of Wales is to serve successfully In a diplomatic mission, it is prophesied, but he should safeguard his health.

Appointment of many new official representatives of the United States is prognosticated within the next few months. Persons whose blrthdate it Is have the augury of a year of Important events. There may be a tendency toward impulsive action which should r.ot. be Indulged. Children born on this day prob rbly will be exceedingly serious In their ambitions.

Subjects of this slun msy be a ff options te. enthusiastic and Inclined toward action. Horace Burhnll. rioted clergyman, was born on this day (Copyright, 1P32) Winchell On Broadway (Trade Mark Registered). Copyright, 1932, Daily Minor.

Inc. to play the part of a father of a grown son The next night, in a cafe, Ames introduced the critic to his 20 year old boy Always get a kick out of Bert Lytell and his sketch, "The Valiant" Wonder why Equity interfered with that planned for The Actors' Dinner Club considering it was strictly to feed the distressed members of the profession? The most amusing of the quips at the Monastery the other night, I thought, was J. Cunningham's that the reason the wolf was no longer at the Friar's door was that they served it that night with beans. Well, the last of the nicer ren dezvous, the Mansion, has been seized by the enemy and it is something to be mournful about Those costly fixtures are now the property of the raiders and the impresario, whose luok has been painful, has a sound reason to order a straitjacket peaceful citizen he is, too catering to diversion seekers but name ana now the law has wined him out Hardly a reward for one who was the nrst to invite the hungry, wno came in 'droves to feast on chops and steaks that rate a high tariff from the regular customers This he did in the daytime spending what ever profits there were to make others less miserable and now Andy voi stead's statute makes him a probable candidate for the breadlines he tried to melt It makes me mad Then, by way of comfort, there is the reminder that a drug emporium on Eighth Avenue in the theatrical sec tor offers the ailing poor, free medi cines providing they come with a doctor recommendation wonder why Pol Negri always sleeps with a revolver under her pillow I don't get the connection of Vin cent Lopez and the "epigram" that he has forwarded to this desk and nrobablv that one "Talkinc De pression," he proverbs, "Won't Help Matters Try working Harder Wonder who writes his mcvaarial? Funny how legends are magnified Conrad Nagel or the inciters, is recorded as a high mogul in a Pacific Coast church where he is really an usher Ripley probably has in eluded the fact that in Baltimore Wm. C.

Bocz sells malt and hope The newcomer to Broadway must be amused, if not startled at that placard in the cafeteria near 50th Street which says: "Breakfast served until 4 p. The Will Havs office, which monitors the conduct of the movies, has an Interesting crew of girls one being a double for Norma Shearer, another for Lupe Velez. one for Joan Bennett and a ringer for Betty Bronson Leslie Howard imagines that the Theatre has been "run down" bv the plavers them selves "for being too friendly with the public on stage iuy. Wonder If the real reason behind that one Legion Post's opposition to the bonus payment is that the outnt is made up cf lads "in the money?" They are saying so. at any rate Be Just iny luck to have to niL the premiere of the "Grand Hotel" flicker The advance talk had it that La Craw lord runs off with the honors If this Is true, then they have toved with vlckl Buuius oris inal, for in the version that medal went to a male member or the cast Things for me to worry about What confuses me about the political argument is that, nearly everywhere you go town tne sympathy is with Mr.

Hoover No one seems to be able to explain why but the average person will tell you that Hoover isn't to. blame for this or that But I knew that! I am confused because for years now every harsh quip and most every editorial page has used the President for a target Personally I'd like to see a Democrat win just to see wnat happens Times may be tough, and all that sorta thing, but thank heaven I'm not one of the poor guys who have to read proof on those pages of serial numbers! Turning Back the Pages FIFTY YEARS ACO April 14, 1882 Laborers are being paid twelve and one hall cents per hour to work on the Berks and Dauphin turnpike. The ornamental Hones for Dives, Pomeroy and Stewart's new dry goods establishment are being prepared at Christian Eben's works at Sixth and Spruce. The members cf the Reading Literary society debate at their meeting this question, "Resolved, that theology has done more to elevate society than science." Joseph Borneman, druggist and dentist, moves from hi farm and drug store at Clayton. Berks county, to his new place of biusincsH on Heading Uoyertown.

TWENTY FIVE YEARS ACO April 14, 1U07 The National Arbitration and Peac Congress of America hold its first deliberative meeting at Carnegie hall, New York. T. A. WilLson company, manufacturing opticians, bring suit in U.S. circuit court in Chicago against three wholesale frms, charging them with substituting inferior goods of other manufacturers and selling them as Wilbon products.

Hope Lutheran church celebrates the twentieth anniversary of its organization. Andrew Schwelmler. a Civil War veteran, with an excellent record as a soldier, dies at his home, 128 Button wood st. F. Schelrer.

32. well known conductor on the Eleventh street trolley line, dies suddenly at his home. TEN YEARS AGO April 14, 1922 County echool directors re elect Ell M. Rapp, county superintendent and lncrea.se his salary $500, making it $4,500 per annum. O.

J. Specker, Reading. Is elected vice president of the State Dental society In session at Pittsburgh. While Mrs. Henry Derr, near Grim vllle.

Is prepsrln dinner, the chimney takes fire, and the house and all the furniture Is destroyed. Consistory of St. Thomas Reformed church elects Henry 8. Haller as assistant to the piwtor, Rev. Lee M.

Erdman. Richard Treverthlrk. of England, generally gets credit for devising tn 1R02 the first, motor vehicle which rould be nnerated. Improvement. were marie in his invention and by 1R24 several steam vehicles wer In operation between the Fnellsh cities of Cheltenham and Gloucester, Day by Day In New York By O.

M'INTYRE NEW YORK, April 13. In those frenzied hieroglyphics, distracted peo pie often pencil on tablecloths, psy choloeists are reported to find an swers to many hidden perplexities. So I wonder about one left on a cafe table last night reading: "The Great White Way! Bah, Hooey!" A waiter, questioned, revealed his last patron was a pale customer who ate but little, and sat staring with chin cupped in his hands. Thus the scrawl may have been an inarticulate version of Arthur James' elegiac: "Broadway is a bowl of champagne with roses on top and thorns The Broadway heartlessness was hideously stressed during the economic pandemonium. A policeman was forced to scatter a group of curb comedians who were fashioning puns at the expense of the forlorn breadline shuffling toward the evening dole of sandwiches and coffee.

Many of the victims once tasted the warmth of the street's pseudo cordiality. Their unhappy plight symbolized the philosopher's line "Going up take Broadway down Sixth ave nue." The famous thoroughfare is interested only in the success of the eternal now. Broadway Has Them Nowhere does the failure so feel the withering scorn of his defeat. The hand that once bestowed the friendly open palm may sheath the knife. Yet few who have mussed up their lives among the tungstens can tear them selves away from the brilliant sham They remain hoping for that illu sory quality "the breaK, preiemng the dubious Recognition accorded the "has been" to the utter anonymity that shrouds the patron of.

the Bow ery lodging house. I know one man who has been out of work three years. He has had three fairly good positions offered him two in smaller cities in the middle west and one in South America. But he prefers to maintain himself In a Second avenue hall room and strut, in the razzle dazzle. In other words, "Broadway has him." In the same cafe of.

the hieroglyphics a big shot among bootleggers sat with a bright blond and several others. He is one of the reputed quick on the gat boysi who shaves with a blow Suddenly the blond, pointing, cried: "Look, he's blushing." And the mug was. A great American magazine editor turned down William McFee's famous novel "Casuals of the Sea" with this curt rubrication: "Without form but not void; an able, unpleasant, shapeless book, of interest perhaps to a few. I would not publish it." All of which may comfort a few moaners over rejection slips. One of the brisk humors of another editor was to submit his own fiction effort to the magazine he edited.

It was done anonymously. Every associate gave it a thumbs down comment. It was tried out on other magazines with the same result. Finally it was sent to a book publisher under his real name, was accepted and commanded a whopping sale. A stage comedian sneers at a rival for "running around town wear I iif a poiueraiiian in his button hole." In the white of the asphalted esplanade back of the Central Park museum, society continues a moonlight roller skating craze.

Among skaters are innumerable debutantes and divers social hieh ups. It has the happy quality cf being cheap and lor the moment exclusive, aside from not being bad If: the arnica business. One haughty lady was making her way about with short and quick tickety tack strokes, gazing condescendingly at the world through a lorgnette. Being a low minded dolt. I found myself feverishly rooting for ner to go pss st into a sudden split.

My spiteful reaction to the lorgnette dates to mv first wppIc tn th city when I accompanied H. T. Webster to a seat down front at the Globe, wearing a high white attached collar zebra triped in passionate purple. The conceit utterly fascinated a dowager who singled me out with her lorgnette for constant staring. Webster excused himself at intermission obtensiulv to smoke, bur never returned, the cur.

Nor did I muff the inquisitive murmur or a nearby seat holder: "What's the collar gag iCopyrlght, 1932) Book Reviews MEN OF THE HORIZON by Gay Murchie, Jr. (Houghton, Mifflin Guv Murchie's storv reminds one of Richard Halliburton's first book The Royal Road to Romance." Hal liburton left Princeton to adventure around the world in quest of Marco Polo exix ricnce.s and the story of his travels one of the most fascinating travel volumes ever writ leu. Guy Murchie graduated from Harvard at ti and moved by a some what similar thirst for adventure, a desire to see what the rst of the world was like and an ure to experience, life In the rouah. started out ou a trip that eclipse for human interest ami excitement even the most fa sctnating adventures of Murchie shipped as an A. B.

sea man on an army transport ship bound for His shipmates Included gobs from al! over the world. From the very beginning he recounts his Impressions of the things that happened in an encaging manner which makes the book fasclnatine rcadlne. Murchie's travel diary takes voi. to Alaska where he traveled 800 miles down the Yukon alone in sn open rowboat with a can of baked beans, a fish line and a to Japan where he lived as an honor brother to a frlenniy Japanese fam to China where he was enter tained bv government officials. Russia here he was able to intelligently observe 8oviet operations first hand and where he slept in a room with more than two hundred shoring peasants.

The author has a fine sene of humor and a grand way of reporting what he has seen or heard. In Alaska while riding in a box car, a fellow passenger who had been prospecting up in the mountains told him "When Pa was up here he was drunk half the drunk for six Pa had four never had more'n one mvself. but then I'm not rich like Pa was." And in China GLASSES I as low as $1.50 FOR Al l. EYES ril'fd. wrlllr in irrHral flltln DR.

J. SASSAMAN orTOMrTaisT amihfui m4 i PHff 232 NINTH ST. I St IS MM 1:11 It Mi It S.M OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMS ZZV VSJE. GOT ONt BCr se.vA.BoT AbOtslOr 1 tsieve AOVAKTAG.TtAO 0 "BOOT JjW.VYHE.tsl C0U FiGCtEP, FEWJBRS NHO HAFTA MOO STlU GoTA "Tt jf DOkjT WEAR OUR PAWS COAT Olsl'AN'CAisrr COT SOME SPi3 PATS CoT DOW TAwfe IT OFF TH" "TOP AS i FK. TAKE.

OFF OUR tTS PAftTONOUR JL OFF 1 vESTS 'H' PANTS vsiHW Q'Xr0 Wt SNEATRS AlOTS WjEXL ThATS VMrtV i AuUtH EARUER ikI fV SPRiOr OOwT mimD Th" CuT iT JtST OFF sr sLs. 'coueATorr BORNt TrtiWV SOON. c) wtA svlct, mc a missionary friend who had witnessed some of the fighting told him that when Chinese battle, the opposing armies remain a mile apart and excitedly blaze away at each other "with guns that have an effective range of perhaps half a mile." The book is rich in this sort of anecdote. hilariously funny. The author has also drawn many pen sketches which are all very clever and often very humorous to Illustrate his thoroughly enjoyabie book.

WHAT I REALLY WROTE ABOUT THE WAR by Bernard Shaw (Bren tano's). Even the title of this book reeks of the author's egotism. The sage of socialism has collected his war time articles and published them along with rather lengthy comments which represent his present views. The writing is in Mr. Shaw's usual brilliant style and he continues to reveal the same fine satire for which he is so famed, but one cannot read this new book without being angered by the writer's omniscient manner, his damnably bad taste and the merciless way in which he continues to treat respected men as children.

It is an old trick with Mr. Shaw to discredit important people like ex Premier Asquith with patronizing remarks which seem grossly unfair and which are so difficult to answer without sacrifice to sslf respect. But perhaps books like the present one can do some good. The last war was a war to end all wars. The peace which followed seems to have been a peace to create many wars and Shaw is powerful in his denunciation of war.

He suggests that "if soldiers were wise they would shoot their officers that there should be annual war sports on Salisbury Plain for satisfaction of blood lust and cultivation of the alleged virtues produced by war and that citizens should refuse to pay for wars." He becomes his usual flippant self with such remarks as "Why not kill all the German women? The Monroe Doctrine is balderdash He calls the execution of Edith Cavell technically correct but psychologically idiotic The institution of compulsory military service in 1916 put an end to recruiting, and, incidentally, to the superstitution that Englishmen are free." This book will undoubtedly draw comment from many outraged readers who must find it antagonizing but who also will find it thought provoking. Perhaps it is Mr. Shaw's purpose to get the world mad enoueh to do something to end war. If only he weren't a mountebank, his brilliant pen. could do much to foster the cause of peace because no matter how much one feels like denouncing Shaw, no one can deny his genius.

S'lWI 1 LV Men are unfair. They always want more than you can give, if some women have become "chiselers" that's a natural compensation. Georgette Carneal, novelist. South Africa does not know th' Boer war is over. The British and Dutch still conduct a lively feud.

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218,986
Years Available:
1859-1939