Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 157, Decatur, Adams County, 5 July 1922 — Page 2

11l cigarettes ' WoWr I Vr r w They are GOOD! IF SKIN BREAKS " OUT AND ITCHES APPLY SULPHUR Just the moment you apply Rowles Meatho-Sulphur to an itching, burning or broken out. skin, the itching stops and healing beyins, says a noted skin specialist. This sulphur preparation, made into a pleasant cold cream, gives such a quick relief, even to fiery eczema, that nothing has evei ; been found to take its place. Because of its germ destroying properties. it quickly subdues the itching, cools the irritation and heals the eczema right up, leaving a clear, smooth skin in place of ugly eruptions, rash, pimples or roughness. You do not have to wait for improvement, It quickly shows. You ■ can get a litte jar of Rowles MenthoSulphur at any drug store. — —* “How I Cleared the Mill of Rats," By J. Tucker, R. I. “As night watchman beieve I have seen more rats than any man. Dogs wouldn’t dare go near them. Got $1 pkg. of RAT-SNAP, inside of 6 weeks cleared them all out. Killed them by the score every night. Guess the rest were scared aw’ay. I’ll never be without RAT-SNAP." Three sizes. 25c, 50. SI.OO. Sold and guaranteed by Holthouse Drug Co., Lee Hardware Co. LET CONTRACTS FOR BUILDING MACADAM ROADS (Continued from page one) The above roads will be constructed this summer and when completed will add approximately three miles more to Adams County’s highway system. 0 - August Werllng of Kirkland township was a business visitor in Decatur today. — — o — August Bussick who lives in Root township was in this city today on business. —■■in,,. Q— L. A. Brown of near Pleasant Mills was a business visitor in Decatur today.

/JIM jy F Jgj lAlfiAklNi |WjJffi J^r'x J fiLjiT' 'J .Of* "Try tt Today W 1 ■ Whnlfxait ]yistr 'i>utor »L I Lxcelsior Fruit and Oyster Ce. W W 2028 S. Clinton St. ft. W«ync. lad. f j I THECRYSTKI I Last—Time—Tot/ ight I “SHAMV,” ® A Will. Fox sp</ cial pro . | O duction i'<y, luring t: John V iibert II A spcciaj film produc- I ll lo . n as^°’ Jfiding in theme | 11 extra-or n .|ry in con- | '1 structe Jn- (|r anil ilic I ■ story / o |- a nu(n w ] lo , I ■ alter /] K . ] UIS married in- I ■ *" ’/?.! old family is told I ■ *J ( ‘ is a halt-caste. A I I ‘'Vania of the north. B / II Added Attraction: E ‘Don’t Blame the Stork’ I F j A good two-reel Chris- I A tie comedy, ■ Admission 10c and 25c. I

CIRCUIT WITH GRID LEAK RESISTANCE Takes Place of “C” BatteryHow Impedance of Flow Is Determined. — ' U.bi Fig. 13 shows a set of curves for a three-electrode vacuum tube circuit containing a grid leak resistance as shown In Fig. 11 Instead of a ‘‘O' battery with the same symmetrical alternating difference of potential applied to the grid circuit There being bo “0" battery potemtiai applied to the grid, the grid in Fig. 11 is normally at zero potential with respect to the filament. Afi the positive half of the first cycle of the alternating difference of potential Is Impressed upon the gold circuit—see Fig. 13—the grid is made positive l

• GR.IO POTENTIAL Z \4cKo • U ! * GRID POTENTIAL. j e « “ /TV -7 l-CHMotw /•/• \ S»' ;•-/ . CHARGE ON GRID i \ LCAkO»»«hO QU \/> •/ -A WITH RESPECT ? 'Vv. To Filament/ 4 „ . ... ■’<* — • • - *•/- O REDUCTION IN b-s, I l. wlate Current | 4 . v o Motion of [1 r I O Receiver I \ C V Dl A PHR AM V , ... ■■ ■ ■ * - .. . JZq.JLIS

with respect to the iilameHt. Being positive with respect to the filament, causes a certain number of electrons, which are negative charger, to be attracted and caused to give up ttjalr negative charges to the grid. Curing the next or negative half of ths cycle of the applied grid potential the sTltl is made negative with respect to the* filament but does not Iqpe the elec-' trons again. Thus a negattvo charge; Is built up on a grid during tho positive portion of each cycle, iha cumulative effect of which is to prcduce a decrease of the plate current, during; the period that the altenye.ting difference of potential called, fe wave tmfn Is applied to the grid. After the alternating; difference of potential applied to The grid has ceased, tiie grid does iiot immediately lose Its negative chnrge. The grid leak forms a high resistance path for the negative charge of the grid to leak off down to tire filament slowly. If no grid leak vA-re used, the grid.

NEW RADIO FILTER A.MARVEL

Campbell Device That Separate® and Telegraph > Messages. Although much has bee® eald and? written alMiut the remarkable filters employed 'by the telephone Hues and by advanced radio workers for the separation of telephone and telegraph message/;, says the Scientific American, if. remained for Dr. Frank B. Jewett, chief engineer of the Western Electric company, to demonstrate how the filter permits of transmitting radif, telephone and telegraph messages simultaneously, and of separating these messages at the receiving end, at, a meeting of the American Instltgite of Electrical Engineers. The present electrical filter is the invention of Dr. G. A. Campbell, a telephone engineer, and makes it possible to separate the various frequencies at which the individual telephone and telegraph messages are carried. The detected electrical current in a radio receiving set is passed through the filter which separates the frequencies of the telegraph message from those of the telephone. The filter differs materially from the ordinary tuned circuits familiar to the radio enthusiast, since ft separates not single frequencies but bands of frequencies of any predetermined width. The filter makes it possible to separate the band of frequencies comprising the telephone message from the band comprising the telegraph message. It can also separate one telephone message from another. “Ground Antennae." Some relief from bothersome radio “strays” in summertime can be obtained with sets having good amplifiers by using a “ground antennae.” This is a long Insulated wire run in u shallow trench or on the surface of the ground. The ground wire should be run in the direction of the station from which the most signals are to be received, and should preferably be several hundred feet long. —; ; To Regulate Wave Lengths. A variable condenser when properly connected in the antenna circuit may be used either to lengthen or shorten the wave length range. Besides this, the degree of regulation is much finer, for at best the loading coll can tune in only to within a single turn, if a loading coil of the tunirjg coll type’is used.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, .ll’l-Y 5. IKH

would soon collect a sufficient negative charge to reduce the pin e cur rent to zero and the tube would cease to function. A grid leak having too low res.stunee will not allow a sufficiently high negative charge to collect on the grid, resulting, In a very small plat* cur-t-bug reduction and weak response In the telephone receivers. On the other bund. If the grid leak is of too high resistance, too high negative charge will collect on the grid and the condition of no grid leak wfli be apitroaclied. In any 'electrical circuit that has e difference »f potential applied to It. the cortent that will flow depends upon the •’inipedauce” of that circuit; just as ifi the flow of water through n pipe, the . quantity of water that wfll flow when any given pressure is applied depends upon how much the flow through the pipe Is Impeded by the friction of the particles of witter against the sides of the pipe uqd against one another. Tn the electrical circuit, the relation between these three quantities Is, that the current which will flow Ist equal to the applied differences of potential divided by the impedance, where the current is In amperes, the applied difference of potential Is In volts and the Impedance in ohms. On

transposing this equation the Impedance Is equal to the applied voltage divided by the current. The imperial ce of a vacuum tube plate circuit. ; jinte~n tfiy between the filament and ths pia ?. when the grid is at zero potential. Is an important constant of »a vacuum tube and is called the Internal plate impedance. Tua Internal grid impedance of a ’vu mum tube used in a radio set as •a detc-'rr determines the impedance «o? ths telephones that will give best r- .uitu when connected in the plate kef? :it o' that particular tube. It Is th n not only the resistance of tn prlr of telephones, but also the Iniklu lance and rhe distributed capacity of tbs f-ding that cause the maximira current to flow in the telephones f ;l»<i : cYutge in grid potential. Ths ij'.rral plate Impedance of a tube varies only slightly with difi rent plato voltage. It is more an Inhc-.T -f characteristic of the tube which Is determined by the design.

SPARKS When our concerts coine over the “wired-wireless” and we plug Into the lamp socket, light music will be given added popv!aritv. The railroads recently broadcasted a safety message from stations in I’lttsburgh, Chicago, Newark and Springfield, Mass., calling attention to the fact that 84,009 people have been killed or injured the last year in this country while trespassing on railroad property. If you do not know the code and wish to receive messages, there is a device on the market at the present time which records the incoming signals on a piece of paper. The paper may be then read at the will of the operator. This method gives the person unacquainted with the code the privilege of hearing from stations which would otherwise pass over in the usual “buzz, buzz,” style so unintelligible to the radiophone fans. While lying in the harbor of Iqulque, Chile, on the west coast of South America, the radio operator of the steamship Santa Luisa clearly heard the entire broadcast program of Station WJZ. The distance separating Newark's station from the steamship in an air line was 4,000. miles. As a result of the widespread interest in wireless telephony one manufacturer has brought out n set of six double-faced records for teaching the telegraph code. Many persons, after listening to the radio-tele-phone concerns, have tuned in and heard the familiar, “buzz, buzz” of the wireless telegraph messages being sent. Curious to know the meaning of the Bounds they have cast about for some means of learning the code phonograph records. The Canadian government is considering the question of the amateur radio field. Present plans are to allow the amateur using spark transmission a wave length up to 200 meters, while those using continuous wave transmission would be permitted a wave length up to 250 meters.

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ DOINGS IN SOCIETY ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ CLUB CALENDAR Wednesday Tri Kappas—Mrs. Albert Sellemeyer. Delta Theta Tau - Special Meeting. Psi lota Xi—Mrs. Gertrude Hile. Thursday. Presbyterian Home and Foreign Missionary society, Mrs. Clyde Noble. Mount Pleasant L. A. S. with Mrs. Jesse Singleton. IJve Wire Club— Evangelical church, home of Ernst Foreman, S2S Russell street, 7:30. Concord Aid and Missionary Society with Mrs. Bernice Magley. Presbyterian Womens Home and Foreign Missionary society — Mrs. Clyde Noble. . * Pot luck supper at Ben Hur Hall. Friday A special meeting of the Delta Theta Tau will be held this evening at seven o’clock at the home oi Miss Florence Bremerkamp. Members please be present. ♦ The Live Wire club of the Evangelical church will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernst Foreman, 828 Russell street, Thursday evening at 7:30. Every member should be present. ♦ Mr. Henry Hite and daughters had as their guests for dinner Monday evening, Mrs. Christena Niblick and Mr. Jesse G. Niblick. ♦ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Breiner and Mr. and Mrs. Roma Breiner entertained a number of guests Sunday in honor of the third birthday of little Virginia Breiner, daughter/ of Mr. and Mrs. Roma Breiner. A delicious dinner was served at the noon hour, the afternoon was spent in playing tennis and music. A number of pictures of the little ones were taken. Those present were, Mr. and Mrs. Milo Hilyard. Miss Julia Deßruler and Mr. Fred Ewig, of Ft. Wayne; Miss Mabie M. Breiner of Pittsburg. Mrs. Win. Martin and daughters, Marcia and Mary Maxine and Mr. Charles Breiner of this city. A lunch was served in the evening, the main feature being a birthday cake with three candles and the color scheme of white and pink prevailed. ♦ The Aid society and Missionary society of the Concord church will meet with Mrs. Bernice Magley on Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Fannie Kunkle is the leader for the meeting.

The Adams County Telephone people held their annual picnic at the popular Berne swimming pool last Sunday. Peggy Frank and P. It. Early were the champion swimmers, while Alva Baker made a few fancy dives. Ail camo with well tilled baskets and at 6:00 enjoyed the gorgeous picnic supper. After supper another swim was enjoyed, then ail left in trucks for their various homes. + The Presbyterian Womens Home and Foreign Missionary society will meet tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Clyde Noble on South Third street. A good pregram has been arranged and all members and their friends are requested to be present. The program to be given is as follows: 1 lymn. Business period. Ifywn. Devotion exercises by Mr... Roy Runyon. Life of Adeniran Judson by Mrs. Jesse Sutton. Special Music. Round Table of Missionary Events. Offering. Mizpah Benediction and social hour.

The Psi I<jla Xi sorority will meet this evening at 7:30 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Gertrude Hite. All members are urged to be present. * Members of the local Hen Hur lodge will give a pot luck supper in the lodge hall on Friday night for the Ben Hur children and the Junion Ben Hur. All members of the lodge are requested to attend and bring their children and a lunch. | JOHNSON AND MOYER DID NOT MAKE FLIGHT IN BALLOON AT BLUFFTON Curt Johnson and Huph Moyer, local young men who were scheduled to make a balloon ascension in Bluffton yesterday did not make the ascension. Johnson stated today that he and Moyer took their Balloon to Bluffton to make the flight but that the management at that city had failed to provide Hie polls and other necessary apparatus which they had agreed to furnish. He said they waited there until 3 o clock and then returned home. — WANT ADS EARN—

FARM RESIDENCE burnedtuesday House on George Brown Farm Occupied by Lewis Stump Burned A large farm house on the fain' 01 Mrs. George Browq, three and onehalf miles southeast of this city, was destroyed by Ere about 11 oihxk last night. The building was occupied by Lewis Stump, who has the farm rented. The origin of the fire has not been determined. R. J. Harting of this city, who wa. passing the house about 11 o’clock, noticed the building on fire and hurried to the door to awaken the mem bers of the Stump family who were asleep in the building. It was several minutes before all of them were awakened and out of the house. The fire had gained so great headway before it was discovered that efforts to extinguish the blaze were futile. Only a few pieces of furniture were carried out of the house before the roof and walls collapsed. The house was a story and a half frame building. Mrs. Brown car Tied SSOO worth of insurance on the building but it is not known whether or not Mr. Stump carried insurance on the contents. However the SSOO insurance is only a small per cent of the amount the building was worth. No one can offer any idea as to how the fire originated. ELKS MEETING TONIGHT The regular monthly meeting of the Elks lodge will be held at the hall this evening, business of importance relative to the new home will come up and all members are urged to be present. FIFTY YEARS AGO a woman in Lynn, Mass., was steeping herbs in her kitchen stove according to a recipe of her own. to furnish medicine for the women of the neighborhood. Today, a stone’s throw from the little house where she lived, there is a four-story laboratory, making the same medicine for the women of the world. During the last year almost 500 tons of carefully selected herbs were used in the manufacture of Lydia E. Pinkham’s-Vegetable Compound. • A woman’s medicine for woman's ailments. Have you tried it? You Guard Against Burglars, But What About Rats? Rats steal millions of dollars' worth of grain, chickens, eggs. etc. Destroy properly and are a menace to health. If you arc trouble with rats, try RAT-SNAP. It will surely kill them —prevent odors. Cats or dogs won’t touch it. Comes in cakes. Three sizes. 25c, 50c. SI.OO. Sold and guaranteed by Holthouse Drug Co., Lee Hardware Co.

Tiie alert business man dealing with present day conditions knows that the big word today is “Turnover.” Whether he be a merchant, manufacturer, jobber, or banker, he sees that one thing with a clear vision unbiased by the limits of his own business. It is in the air, and on the tip of every tongue. And yet many of them—entirely 100 many—arc thinking on only one side of Turnover. They think of it as meaning rapid sel-ling-putting money in and getting it out quickly and at a profit, lhey realize that they must put greatly increased efforts back of all their plans for selling and distribution. the other half of Turnover is the consumer. All selling plans and efforts fail if the consumer doesn’t want to buy. His desire for the product must be created. He must meet the seller half way. He must be in a mood to buy before the salesman meets him across the counter. 1 hat is the function of Advertising to create consumer de-

—NO. 6— HANK STATEMENT ocooßT OF THE FINANC.AL CONDITION OF THE OLD ADAMS COUNTY BANK = President E. X. EHINGER C. s. NIBL CK_ y _ r ■; „ ident A. D. SUTTLES Au't, J on F. m. schirmeye; scheumann Aee’t, ca.hie, ~ ™ LIABILITIES of RESOURCES , 9Siil9 s wl: Ixians and Discounts~|’i)«6.»l Capital Stock—paid 1n.,.. ba Overdrafts 26,973.40 Surplus 3o -- u. S. Bonds 10,244.95 Undivided Profits ,’’’ Other Bonds and securities 95 275 3;? change, Discounts and " . Banking Furniutre and l ixtmes.. Dividends Unpaid Due fro" 1 Banks and 76 137.11 Demand DoTrust Companies posits $433,300.54 Cash on Hand 4 078.85 Demand CerCash Items 1L460.47 tlflcates .... 633.039.72 1,06«5u. I Current Expenses 2 517 gg Due to Banks and Trust Taxes Paid “ 15,808.84 Companies M . Interest Paid 94 93 Bills Payable 95 ,: Profits and Loss 308.54 Notes, etc., Rediscounted iji « Trust Securities 39.93 Other Liabilities ’? Other Assets, Rev. btainj* —I-< «i 425 227.11 Total Liabilities $1425,. Total Resources si,4-a.>-< <>f Indiana, County of Adams, ss: K X Ehinger, Cashier of the Old Adams County Bank, do 80 o 4hat the above statement i» tiuc« li swear that the aoo f x EHINGER , Cughte A Subscribed and sworn to before me, this sth day of July, 1922. ‘ o My commission expires Xei ->• T MERRYMAIf , Notary L C ■ ' ■■ — ' C R The Directors 0 f" 7 Are large stock-holders s 48 and recognize their re- f sponsibility to depositors I J YE4RS making personal examinations and have an accurate knowledge of J the affairs of the bank. I SAFE t W. J. Vesey G. T. Burk John Niblick L. G. Ellinghai dAlilx- f. Schirmeyer E. X. Ehinger C. J. Voglewede C. S. Niblick ING L. C. Waring I —/ t We invite accounts of ALL desiring / superior service of a bank equipped to transact any banking business. Old Adams County Baii • The iriendly Bank New Bank Bui!®

Two Sides of Turnover

with Ti ,lsh * ed the Dai,y Democrat, in co-oueration with The American Aviation »f Adverting Agineies.

mand and consumer preference. With this demand as a fact all selling plans have a chance to succeed. Without it lhey fail. The only chance for salesmanship lo succeed without an existing demand is for salesmanship to assume the task that belongs to advertising—the task of creating demand. If the present efforts that are being put into selling were amply supported by a corresponding effort to create consumer demand through Advertising, the business conditions of this country would be rapidly changed into an era of great prosperity—in spite of Old World conditions and everything else. lhe proof of this is in the fad that right now, under these very conditions, the manufacturers who are putting proper emphasis on creating a demand for their product, as well as selling it, are doing a big business and arc actually getting the high turnover that others are trying so strenuously to gel through intensive selling.