Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 26, Number 201, Decatur, Adams County, 25 August 1925 — Page 3

I S&are I iifflS * IN I jfIIEML CITIES I »s:»? ‘ 9 Frini is Revived I "DOPF." 1S iU.AMEI) I Police R^ rves l T S,,ed | P mto Chinatowns io I preserve Order 9Bg — i ■ — • I Aug. wftrfftrß B .hl.* out m '‘‘‘ Rh ‘ rn 9 fjll H overnight- rblf «° IB urlf toJ»> . B where the B So« ,ong9 is Mi T d ,o B originated several weeks ago B *" B e ’“ Jdpnly quM Wl '. h r '“ P ? r '" 9 the raet that several murders IB kJ been committed. 9 fibers Os the Chinese Opera 9 inninv obtain..! police guards as 9 J other prominent members of 9 ithtnngs shos ere away front th.-.r 9 home, when .1- warfare was re- ■ ‘"shortly before dawn came the only B reM l evidence of open feud when an B Mldrttlfled Chinese was slain by a ■ bllßft front behind. Ills slayer was B ifkly e»ptnred as police had rushB , d serves into the district several B hours earlier. B -Dope" is believed to have started B the present outbreak of vengeance. B Rvery place raided by government B gents in th» recent narcotic ‘'clean B ap " here happened to be owned by B umbers of the On Leong tong. AcB Erding to uninterested Chinese, the ■ on Leong members believed they ■ bad been reported to the police by ■\ the rival Hip Sing. H Every precaution was ordered by B e the police department against furthH I « slayings today. ■ New York, Aug. 25—Once more | .it of the tpngs has biased forth in | New York's Chinatown. Half an hour after a telephone call had reached the lantern swung section last night that a Hip Sing man had heen shot down in Boston. Ho Kee, a cook, was shot to death in the basement of a restaurant. A police cordon has been thrown about the tangled district of Pelt and L j Mott streets ami a score of detec- ' tires along with members of the narcotic squad have been detailed to th« trouble area. St. Louis, Aug. 25—Tong guns spoke in St.. Louis early today as a fresh outbreak of the tong war was felt in eastern cities. Leon Choey, restaurant man. was shot down and dangerously wounded in a dark street just off "Hop Alley”

tor Steady ‘'Nerves/ * Riding a girder is not a job for a nervous man. DVT no one is nervous by choice. " There is away that you may so itrenctnen your body that the nervous will be cushioned on sound Buicles and flesh. But this condition "in not come about unless you have m red-blood-cells. Red-blood-cells th! the ,? 08t Important thing in all M^T 0r . d . to each ot us - More re d-Mood-eells! That’s what .you need . y ° Ur nerves Bi"e way and you ca ® D^ t control yourself. and “wkJ.! 11 prove t 0 you ,ts "Why" ha» * eason - Since 1826 S.S.S. do!, hS oUßan ds. Because S.S.S. «oes build blood-power, it builds you mum , y TJ are roa-down, clears the , cili»T °L b,ood impurities; routs sorh.nm.Mk B disorders—and stops rß ’“®»tlßm, too. the StS’J* F ce P ted « UooJVniM 1 “J 1 b ' o6d Purifiers, eners <Bl d ?! ?P d B J stem strengthXtSt? ta h ingr S.S.S. today. Its UM. v inrredlents «re purely vegestan„.Y ®" r ?«F» will become »iUi n itv r ina 0U * 1 ba ) e nsore ene rgy. apXSe. ‘ “° re Up ■■“““’'veeonomlcaL C Jjfakea You Fed I **** Oke Youndf Again ' ' i

. T j I I ■ ! WW * 1 ysw* ' ajiaßßtßr Ifc 199 V. < - \ i V • W?.* '? • <■ '■ A* •A. "'- a* , Ju, '**'■ ■ ONT, OF THE. DE./)D TW OF ’TI-UF, T3/-YDTA" J*>UTB.KTKV (LIST THE.- BoiXKt-2. KYPW.W.GKr ONT THE STEAI*CEX? off jwrtjßr.R.i rM - xrrFncjr 504 ico mro — ' ■--»= * T-Xa 1 ir"T ■ i ■ —-■ ■

by five assailants. The five men had been waiting for Chooy, police learned. Choey at the hospital named three of the men who attacked him. but re-' fused to say what the shooting wasj about. None of the gunmen have been captured. Pittsburgh. Pa.. Aug. 25 —Resumption of Chinese tong war here is blamed for the death of Shing Sun 34, who was shot and killed by two nattily dressed Chinese in his iaun dry today. Sim. was a prominent member of the On I-eong tong. His employe, Ni Tung, who is not a tong member, was not. harmed. The assailants rushed from th? laundry, brandishing their revolvers and menacing persons who sought to stop them. Indiana Has Surplus Os School Teachers Indianapolis, Aug. 25. — (United Press) —An exodus of hundreds of sur plus school teachers from Indiana tc adjoining states within the next lew weeks was predicted today by member, of the state department of public in struction. Nearly all teaching vacancies in Indiana have already been filled ami nearly 1400 applications for jolts are still on fill) with the department. The fourteen hundred surplus teachers must either turn to other work or seek employment as teachers in other states. The chief reason for the surplus in Indiana this year is business depression, according to members of the department. The list of teachers in nearly every teounty includes persons who had abandoned teaching for other work hut were forced to return to their original profession because of idleness in othetlines of employment. . In some casese teachers who had been out of the schools as long as fifteen years took the training necessary to meet' the stricter requirements of today and will he back in the class rooms this fall, it was said. Another reason for the abundance of teachers is the small number'of changes made this year in supervisory positions with a consequent smaller number of vacancies to fill. Over-specialization is given as another reaon for the present large waiting list. Most of die smaller schools need teachers who can instruct in several subjects. Many teachers have specialized in one subject and cannot meet the requirements. The average salary of high school teachers in the state is -2,000 a year? That of grade teachers averages $1,40(1 a year. —oWANT ADS EARN—S- s—s $ - I—I—WANT ADS EARN—• 1

SHTLY SEMQQMT, TUWAY,

College Stars Fail With Big League Teams] I (By Henry L Farrell, United Press Sports Editor) i Ni w Yotk. Aug. 24 Even with the ■ more advanced coaching systems that are betng established in the big colleges, the college payer does not . seem to be any better equipped for a i quick trip to the major leagues than | lie was years ago.' * , With mcfmi demand for good young players managers run inclined to have more patience with a college > player ami give him a better chance than lie would have done in the days when ball players were cheap and when coKege boys were known as . rah-rahs. ■ Yet under auspicious conditions, , very few of the players who have the advantage of four years* instinct ion and coaching from a former major league player are able to hold down a big league job without going through the mHI in the bushes. The outstanding college players <it the year were lite two Holy Cross

Beautify Your Home Attractive lighting fixtures can- You’ll find them very reasonably not tail to enhance tin (harm <il priced and we invite you to call any home. Artistic and charm- . . . . ~ Y at our store and look them over, mg fixtures make a room alive, | and give it mellowness and A I INDIANA Beauty, as well as utility, is a || characteristic feature of all our T T? IIT TT D ¥ fixtures and we now have on dis- y4k H/L/H/> IXI vJ plav a new line from which you ▼ 7 surance that it rep- || 5 resents not only the 2 nd St, hi.-Ju-st grade of || workmanship a n d Phone 40.» material, but also the latest ideas in WtFggfl “Look For beauty, color and K. design. The Si » n ”

j Eddie Farrell, the Pennsylvania I diortstop and Charley Caldwell, the Princeton fontbaJl and baseball star Carroll was ranked as the greatest co lege pitcher ever developed. He lost only two games in the four years that he pitched for Holy Cross anil many major league scouts said il there ever was a. pitcher that was ready for fast company, it was Car i roll. But he failed to make good Witt the Detroit Tigers a big scoring clul II that llould be < <>» iparatividy easy t< pilch for. Carroll said it wiA just th. difference between the amateur gam ami the professional game and thai he had been bothered by the signa' system He has a chance to mak< good eventually, however, unless In bec< nies discouraged. (lautreati. second baseman. wat rated next, to Carroll as the hig stat at Holv Cross. He went to the Phil adelphia Athletics when he graduat ed but he had very 'little chance be cause Connie Mack could not affon to i xpei iiueui in a hot pennant raet i w.th a minor leaguer on first hast

ahd a college player on Vv’alv4rs were asked on him un.Vthe Boston Braves hldi He has been used regularly and Dave Ban croft thinks he will develop into a major league star Eddie Farrell had all the major ( league scouts looking over him for two years when he was playing with the Pennsylvania University nine and the New York Giants landed him He reported’to the club just when it was a'most wrecked by injuries and he was ordered to play shortstop hiS| first day with the club and he has been used more or less as a regular ever since. He Is a capable fielder but he can't, bit up to McGraw’s demands. Caldwell also was recommended by several major league coaches and the New York Yankees signed him Miller Huggins took a few looks at him and said he wouldn't do. He turned out to b« a rather expensive experiment as he cracked Wally Pipp on the head with a wild pitch during hatting practice one day and sent him to the hospital for two Weeks. . * o ■-■ Marcel Wave For Men Claimed Growing Fad St. l/iuls. (United Press I —Marcel waves for men are on the way. Ix> cal beauty doctors, that is some of them, say man is gradually approach ing the time when ho will spend hours with electric curlers on his hair. Otto DeGonato, one of the le-auty Culturista of the city says; “Certainly men are taking to mar cel waves, in fact only last week I put a marcel in the hair of an elderly gray haired man. Marcelling for men has been the fad in Europe for some time. Our male ancestors back in 177 C wore their hair curled. J expect the fad to increase rapidly.” Some Dissent But there are a few of the beauty doctors who remember when "men were men? and a beauty shop nienat a “shave and haircut”. S. A. Sperber is' one of these and his erse comment on permanent waves for men Is:

"It isn't right. If thee cake eaters come, to me I’il tell them to go roll their socks What a fine fellow a man would be with a marcel wave". But despite Sperber other beauty doctors say that fall iwll see many men wandering in for a weekly mar cel or six monthly permanent. o SHIRKVILLE — Only women ano children were left, when Federal agents raided the town for booze. Men folks all fled, officers said. immbmmm• Instant Relief From Bunions—Soft Corns No sensible person will continue tu suffer from thine Intense, agonizing, throbbing bunion pains when the new powerful penetrating yet harmless antiseptic Emerald Oil can readily be obtained at any well stocked drug store. Apply a few drops over the inflamed swol'en joint and see how speed Hy the pain disappears. A few more applications and the swollen joint is reduced to normal. So marvelously powerful is Enter aid Oil that soft corns seem to shrive) right up and drop off. Smith, Yager il Falk guarantees it and is dispensing il to many tout stiff erers

ißßaraij ii fTiiduted Ry Sudden Storm* ' Ixtndon. Aug ”6—(United Press)— The sudden < hange of hatometh pre* sure accompanying a sudden etotm 'changes a per ops puls* rate and oc (■assioiuiTy drives him Insane. Captain J ft Muir of the Royal Naval Hospital at Haslar advanced this startilbi theory in coneition with the detyth ot a patient at Hie hospital who jumped to hr, death from a window during a recent storm “Impulses to do odd things are at centuated or brought about by sud den changes In atmosphere pressure'’ declared (’apt. Muir in testifying ut the patient's Inquest. "When those changes are very marked and sudden the difficulty is to keep pecplo sane. A midden fall in the barometer pro duces Impulses to jump or otherwise act rashly." The patient, who wan in the hospital for treatment of an injured toe, Capt Muir said, had probably,been upset by the barometric change caused by th» storm and had jumped from the w>o 1

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dor quit* J tincnasclnu’ily ■’ra* 'jtir'.‘ rendered verdict of snldid* •'ff”’ temporarily ipran* _ —o 1 : ~ SUMMrRSVn.I.F*Mfs stere King bids fur tarn* with a snowball bush, bearing thirty blows, it D the second time the bunch has flourished this season, |__ HU ■(!■ ■■■■ -hi ■■■ Backache? Pains? May Be Your Kidneys If pains are making life inherable, etop waiting time on little ways of getting luinporar.v relief. Sometblnr in rudieuHy m rofig, Hum** organ isn't doing it* work. Vinua strengthens weak khineyn, lazy lifer, nluggisb bowels. The blood Murt» getting purer, appetite begin* to ciatnor, digestion get# right, and eonstip.itlon leaves. You feel Its benefit promptly, and boon you're walking with a n*wr stride, energetic, strong, able to enjoy life. It Las lifted thousands out of bed* of pain. Will you give It a chancer VIUNA The vegetable regulator SOLD BY ( ALLOW & KOHNE