Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 177, Decatur, Adams County, 28 July 1925 — Page 6
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WINS ANOTHER GOLF TOURNEY Frederick Schafer Captures Title In Open Tournament At Leland, Mich. Word lias been received In this elty that Frederick Schafer, son of (’. Schafer of this city, and recently crowned boy's champion golf player of Leland, Michigan, has won the open golf tourney held each year at that place. Frederick recently won the boy's title and entered the tournament open to all players in Michigan which he won. Persons who have seen Frederick play say that he is one of the best young golf players in the country and expect that in a few years he will Inone of the leading amateur player < of Indiana. The Schafers and Mrs. Emma Daniel are spending the sun. mer at Leland.' ■ —o— . Dempsey Must Answer To Wills’ Challenge Soon (By Henry I- Farrell. United Press Staff Correspondent I New York. July 28—Jack Dempsey's heavyweight championship title will be declared vacant by the New York boxing commission and Harrv Wills and Gene Tunney will be asked to fight it out to decide the successor if the champion ignores the commission again. Dempsey has been given until August 4 to return before the commission or to notify the board members what, plans he has ade to accept the Wills challenge. This period of grace was granted by the commi - slon in response to the plea of the champion that he had to go to California to protect some business interests that were endangered by his rupture with Jack Kearns, his manager. Since then, it was learned, the commission has heard from reliable sources that Dempsey does not intend to return to New York in the near future; that he does not intend to fight any dangerous opponent, and that there is some bunk in the verbal bout he has been staging with Kearns. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ + ♦♦♦♦♦ + ♦ WATCHING THE SCOREBOARD + ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Yesterday’s hero — Jack Quinn, the antique Boston cast-off. won another game for the Athletics when he heat the Red Sox, 2 to 1. With a two-run ra/lly in the tenth inning the Pirates beat the Braves. 6 to 5. and increased their lead over the Giants to a game and a half. Behind the pitching of two south paws. Benton and May. the Reds cop ped a duoble header from the CaTdInals at 4 to 2. and 3 to 0, ami went into third place. _ — o Robert Aurand made a business trip to Fort Wayne tliis morning. Pimples OBI You will be startled how quickly and thoroughly you can stop skin eruptions and beautify your complexion with S. S. S, PIMPLES are the first thing one notices in another person’s face. It is too often cruel in its misjudgment. It judges from what it sees on the outside. Pimples are easy to get rid of. More red-cells! That is what you need when you see pimples staring at you in the mirror. Red-cells mean clear, pure, rich blood. They mean clear, ruddy, lovable complexions. They mean nerve power, because all your nerves are fed by your blood. They mean freedom forever from pimples, from blackhead pest, from boils, from eczema and skin eruptions; from that tired, exhausted, run-down feeling. Red-blood-cells are the most important thing in the world to each of us. S.S.S. will aid Nature in building them for you! S.S.S. has been known since 1826 as one of the greatest blood-builders, blood-cleansers and system strengthened ever produced. Start taking S.S.S. today. Its medicinal ingredients are purely vegetable. S.S.S. is sold at nil good drug stores in two sizes. The larger size xdnm, is more economical. O Dhe Worlds Best /Hood Medicine.
> BASEBALL STANDING + ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ + ♦♦♦ . National League ' W. L. Pct. Pittsburgh 54 35 .607 Now Yolk 54 38 .587 Cincinnati 47 44 .516 Brooklyn 44 43 .566 4 Philadelphia 43 44 .494 'St. Louis 44 49 .473 Chicago 39 52 .420 Huston 38 54 .413 American League . Philadelphia • 6" 31 ■•>.'9 Washington 59 32 .648 • Chicago 51 45 .531 St. Louis 48 47 .505 r Detroit 48 47 .568 . Cleveland 43 45 .489 . New York 38 54 .413 ‘ Boston 28 66 .298 American Association Louisville 66 34 .860 ( St. Paul 51 46 .526 Kansas City .. . .51 47 .520 Indianapolis 51 48 .515 : Minneapolis 51 50 .505 Toledo 44 54 .449 I Milwaukee 43 . 7 .430 Columbus 37 58 .889 ——- ——o— — — >♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ YESTERDAY’S RESULTS + >♦♦♦♦♦♦ + + + ♦ + ♦♦♦ National League St. Lillis, 2-10; Cincinnati, 4 3. Boston, 4; Pittsburgh, 6. American League [I Boston. 1; Philadelphia, 2. American Association Minneapolis, 2; Kansas City. 9. Indianapolis. 2; Columbus, 1. Louisville, 9; Toledo, 3. o * + + + + + + -fr + + + + + + ’ ! ' + HOME RUN LEADERS + j. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4- ♦<• •£• ++ 4 . Hornsby. Cardinals, 25. Williams, Browns, 24. . Hartnett. Cubs. 22. Meusel, Yankees, 21. I Simmons. Athletics, 16. Kelly, Giants, 15. Hottomley? Cardinals. 15. o JAPAN AWAITS EABE Tokoyo, July 24—The report that reached Japan recently from the*Unit- ' ed States that "Babe" Huth has been offered $15,000 to tour this country next fall has created quite a bit of interest here. The Japanese are great baseball fans, and take to it naturally us teams from their universitties that have toured America prove. A tour ( by the King of Swat in Nippon ought I to get over big. 1 0- . ADAMS COUNTY FARMER DIES ,| (Continued From Page One) 1 Freeman and Amos, of Adams county: Mrs. I.atisha Schnepp. of Adams county. Charles Watlers, of Cleveland. Ohio, is a half brother. Funeral services will be held from the home at 2o'clock and from the Union Chapel church at 2:30 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. Burial will be made in the Decatur cemetery. — o— — —■ STRIKE OF COAL MINERS APPEARS CERTAIN TODAY Continued from Page one mining their demands. With Lewis on hand, it is expected the miners will press their claim that, the operators have delegated subordinates to negotiate with the miners, in an effort to have, the miners place their cards on the table, before those actually empowered to act for the operators show their hands. The conference is expected to be concluded within ten days. Need Little Red School Houses In Indianapolis Indianapolis, July 28. — (United Press.)--The little red school house of 25 years ago wis a Paradise compared with some of tho class rooms In Indianapolis public schools, Fred Bates Johnson, school board member, declared today. More than 7,560 Indianapolis school children are improperly housed in badly ventilated and insufficiently heated rooms. Johnson declared in a luncheon club address. — ——; —— O Prominent Democrat In Randolph County Dies Winchester, Ind., July 28 —Funeral services will be held here tomorrow for E. S. Edger, 81, former leader of the democratic party in Randolph county, who died at. the home of a' relative in Versailles, Ky. o U. S. Marshall Appointed vmcm — * Swampscott. Mass., July 28.—(Unit--1 ed Press.) —President Coolidge today appointed Irwin W. Mieser, Des Moines, fa., to be United States marshal In the Panama Canal Zone, suc- > ceeding Horde H. Kibenour, resigned.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY JULY 2S. 192a
BRYAN EULOGIZED BY REV. BUXTON Former Decatur Minister Delivers Glowing Tribute To The Commoner Speaking before a large audience at 4he First Christian church here last night, the Rev, A. G. A. Buxton, of Deliver. Colorado, delivered a wonderful eulogy to the late William Jenninfcs Bryan. Rev. Buxton was pastor and his message last night was well received. Rev. Buxton, in his address lest night, emphasized the fact that .Mr. Bryan was a tritely Christian gentleman and a bitter foe of evolution. He praised the commoner for his valiant figt against evolution, which, he said, tends toward things not religious. The speaker declared that evolution tends to destroy the deep religious upon which our country was founded, that Rev. Huvton's address was a glowing tribute to the great comoner. He "which made our country possible, spoke for an hour. - o CONSIDER MOVE AS MEMORIAL TO GREAT COMMONER 1 Continued From Page One) yesterday were permitted to view the body, but many who had wanted to, pay their last respects were not ap- ( nrised of the opportunity. So this afternoon, while members of the American Legion standing guard with rifles reversed, a long line of Ten j nesseeans, mountainers, farmers. 1 business mer and women, will tile; slowly past the temporary, outdoor bier. Mrs. Ruth Owens of Marietta. O„ Bryan's daughter, arrived today to issist in planning the funeral. The body will be taken from the cottage here early tomorrow mornlag and placed aboard a private car at 8.30 am The train which will •onvey it to Washington will arrive at the capital at < 30 a.m. Thursday. Washington, July 28—High up on "Dewey KIIOH ’ in Arlington cemetery, overlooking ihe Potomac and W ashington, the Icily of William Jennings Bryan, cpostle of peace will •>■'> interred Friday afternocn among the nation's warriors. Only tlie simplest services will to rea'!. in keeping with the desire? of the departed leader and his widow, who Jias avowed ‘ v<> are simple folk." Not all plans for the funeral of the commoner have been completed, but such as have been tentatively approved ignore all military and other ceremonial display. Upon the arrival of the funeral train here Thursday morning the body will be removed quietly to a mortuary chapel to await the assemblage of the far flung fami’,y. Wiliam J|:m\ings Bryan. Jr . the commoner's son, is not due until c Friday. Services, probably at the New York Avenue Presbyterian church, where.j Lime'll worshipped, I'ollt.vv .-<1 I,"'"’.!funeral cortage to Arlington and interment there of the body will end the last journey Friday. The final resting place of the com-
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/ ■" ■' ' ~~ moner is one of th/ most beautiful ’spots in the cemetery. Nearby Is thej ■ Dewey Memorial where, until recent-j l’ ly rested the naval comniandet- ot t the war in which Bryan served. Not I far away Is the tomb of the unknown' IsoidlJr All around lie the heroes of, I the war with Spain. Behind the, ’ knoll march endless rows of crosses marking the graves "ot world sat dead. Loncoln. Neb . July 28—Charles W Bryan, brother of William Jennings Bryan, arrived here at 12:30 a.tn from Loveland, Col., and today joined his wife and his sister, Mrs. L. B • Allen, who arrived here last Wight from Minnesota. Together, with Mrs. Francis Baird, eldest sister of the commoner, the former governor, his wife and two sisters planned to leave here, today| to proced eastward where they will Join Mrs. William Jennings Bryan on her trip to Arlington National ceme tery where the body of the common-1 er will be given its last resting place | A large delegation of intimate friends of the Bryan family gathered, at the railroad station here last night, to meet the brother of the great com-j moner. Bryan was in profound sorrow. He hurriedly entered a waiting, automobile and was taken to his home here. o Scopes Views Remains Os His Prosecutor Dayton. Tenn. July 28 — John T. Scopes, the younthful defendant in the recent evolution trial, stood with bowed head today at the bier of his pro 1 secutor the late William J. Bryan. 1 The young professor gazed for a last time at the features of the vet eran crusader of fundamentalism and jthen with a few words of respect for 'his lat oponent Scopes turned away. I There followed a stream of simple mountain folk of the kind the common . er loved and championed.
' ABBfc& ]H? w®Wr .!■&■ -2-' •> ’;. «■ • ~„ > ?x t' < !'■ ’w > W IF* <1 - ; • ,o ' *- > F/ I \ Mw. <u-X b ■SSW-'- <- ilk a // bBL > - zy •Bmßx '/'A- / f * ■ w Jllh ' * < Chesterfield’s popularity is securely founded on the bed rock of quality SUCH • POPULARITY -MUS T-BE-DESERVE Liccitt & Myehs Tobacco Co. * —— Jt * > v _~_
State Undecided As To Moves In Stephenson ( ase ’! Indianapolis, July 28. - William 1 Remy prosecutor of Marion county, / remained In doubt today us to what I steps the state will take to check 'efforts of defense attorneys to reopen ‘■the bail hearing of D C. Stephenson. Earl Klenk and Earl Gentry, under Indictment for tin- murder of Miss Madge Oberholtter. 1 Judge Hines will rule in Hamilton county court at Noblesville tomorrow ■ on the defense plea to reopen the ball hearing in an effort to recure release of the three men from the county jail there. Remy takes the attitude that when 1 Judge Hines adjourned court on July 1 6 until October further consideration lof the case was derred until then. | Remy was undecided whether he 'would go to Noblesville to hear the I ruling. The defense it attempting to get the I case taken up at the vacation session of court which is now in progress. I i Received Stolen Goods I Indianapolis. July 28—Mrs. Lucille 1 Hoddleston, 20, was taken to Terre Haute today to face a charge of receiving stolen goods. The woman and her husband, Hen- ■ ry Huddleston. 21. were arrested in a pawnshop here while trying to dispose of jewelry and silverware. Mrs. Huddleston said the articles had been given her by a former sweetheart. o Gould’s Widow Remarries Montreal, Que., Jul y2B Mrs. Guinevere Gould, widow of tlie late George J. Gould, was married here today to Viscount Duniford, son and heir of the Earl of Midleton.
Short Change Scheme | Anderson. Ind.. Wf 28-Ch.rged, with working a scheme ahort | . hallgt tilling station attendants, „ ve men were tn custody here today. Th ev were Henry Brown, St Louis. George Halen. Beaumont. Tex.. E<tWlir d Watson. Riverdom, N- OWichael Knoff. Beaumont. Tex., and George Nichols, Goshen. Ind. | Inc htl For Intoxication Nate Haley was grested last night and arraigned this afternoon in Mayor's court on charge of public Intoxication. He entered a plea of not guilty and his trial was set for Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Haley was released on his own recognizance. s_s—WAN T ADS EARN—B—2—B
GENERAL ACCOUNT SPECIAL ACCOUNT SAVINGS ACCOUNT WE HAVF some depositors who have all three accounts. Their “GENERAL ACCOUNT” is used to check upon for household and every day expense. Their “SPECIAL ACCOUNT” is used to put money awav for some special purpose. Their “SAVINGS ACCOUNT” is their RAINY DAY FUND —their OLD AGE FUND. Whatever you need in the way of an account we can fix it up for you. ‘ THE PEOPLES LOAN & TRUST CO. Bank of Service J t
Ford Coupe, fine shape ‘ Ford Sedan, extra good shape Maxwell Sport Roadster, runs fine. 1917 Ford Touring. Winter inclosure. Motlel 90 Overland. These curs are all in good running order and can Im- bought at a real bargain. Hileman Garage, Ci. R. Hileman, Phone ~63 Decatur. Ind
