Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 21, Number 16, Decatur, Adams County, 18 January 1923 — Page 3
color SCHEME FOR THE CHILD’S BEDROOM m I TIH-l hFHRWTI n • □ ft LJL ,/ .Jib o (to 0 1 ' *'*i* 1 i > | ° ? o /x4cs~-<v - Ex* — 1 ® : nT*^- IB- — ■ , - ■ ■■* * ' ■ — "■ ' 'VcoioFicheme at alata gray and cherry ml Is veryVt tractive nTwell us tieal for a child’s bedroom. The tiny chest of drawers is painted gray .. .i painted cherries decorating each drawer and the gray painted mirror Is "‘ 1 i>v red cords. Gray sateen piped with cherry red and apple green with *' l iicrrles makes the window seat cushion, the window draperies and the for the red painted single bed. The drawers under the window seat are fi r toy*black seems to be the prevailing color [ 1 i Sand color and black striped velours combined with plain black velours is used for the chair coverings in this very unusual room. The rug is solid black and the only color notes are supplied by a brilliant blue flower bowl, a handpainted fire screen and the orange-shaded lights. this will solve the bay-window problem nn i’wi 1 1IIH U IT7MII ' •• BjMwAw w L II Y T.ir.,b!. — A bay window —how many of you are perplexed by this problem in refurnishing an old home? Why not make a tiny sun parlor? A few pieces of wicker, some cretonne cushions and white ruffled curtains and perhaps a small table or sewing cabinet will make a comfortable little room that anyone would enjoy. PANTRY CAN BE USED AS BREAKFAST ALCOVE r T yHnnft fttoeel-MS ' ' IjOf ° i r ° i .. ~ < 1 J A large pantry converted Into a bieakfast alcove is a -abor-saver in more ways than one. Not only does one save the steps required to serve meals in the dining room, but one’s cooking utensils and materials are close at hand on shelves built above the kitchen table. Tin cans of various sizes, painted white and labeled, hold various staples.
QUAINT DOORWAYS ARE FASHIONABLE r ' a i_3 C 3 o -> r FjC ' □so A I, - --X feSiib Quaint looking old doorways of this are becoming more fashionable J" 1 the time for both brick and frame pauses. The two little trees set In 'teen-painted tubs and the flag-stone "’alk give the proper touch for a colon*al house. The fan-shaped transom leaded glass furnishes a pleasing ' vp rhead Illumination for the reception or corridor.
ADDS COLOR NOTE TO THE KITCHEN . » ]g|j Mill 1W”B fe** ‘**‘**o f 1 'i, - i The tile-patterned linoleum used in this kitchen and Its breakfast corner gives the color note to the room. It may be blue and white, or black and white, or any other combination of color with white. The white muslincurtains have a narrow band of color’, to match that In the linoleum. The white enamel furniture!* <l ulte ; practical, as it can be- uM.WWWeasily.:
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1923
. IF KIDNEYS ACT BAD TAKE SALTS I Says Backache Often Means You Have Not Been Drinking Enough Water Wlmn you wake up with bachache and <lu)l misery in the kidney region it mny mean you have been eating foods which create acids, says a wellknown authority. An excess of such acids overwork the, kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and . loggy. When your kidneys get slug- < pish and clog you must relieve them, r like you relieve your bowels, reinovi ing all the body’s urinary waste, else , you have backache, sick headache, p dizzy spells; your stomach sours, > tongue ig coated, and when the weather ■ is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds, and you are obliged to seek relief • two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physician at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of ,Jad Salts; take a tabiespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act : fine. This famous salts is made from ! the acid of grapes and lemon juice, j combined with lithla, and has been i used for years to help clean and stimulate, sluggish kidneys, also to 1 neutralize acids in the system, so they no longer irritate, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Sait is inexpensive, cannot injure and makes a delightful, effervescent lithia water drink. Drink lots of soft water. By all means hav e your physician examine your kidneys at least twice a year. — o ’ The average weight of cork is ' 15 pounds a cubic foot. [ STOP RHEUMATISM I WITH RED PEPPER i When you are suffering with rheui matism so you can hardly get around just try Red Pepper Rub and you will I have the quickest relief known. Nothing has such concentrated, | penetrating heat as red peppers. In- ' stant relief. Just a s soon as you ap-' I ply Red Pepper Rub you feel the tingling heat. In three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Frees the blood circulation, breaks up the congestion—and the 1 old rheumatism torture is gone. Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made ! from red peppers, costs little at any ' drug store. Get a jar at once. Use ■ it for lumbago, neuritis, backache, j stiff neck, sore muscles, colds in . chest. Almost instant relief awaits i you. Be sure to get the genuine, I with the name Rowles on each 1 package. o DAYS OF DIZZINESS Come to Hundreds of Decatur People There are days of dizziness Spells of headache, languor, backache Sometimes rheumatic pains Often urinary disorders. Doan's Kidney Pills are especially : for kidney ills Endorsed in Decatur by grateful friends and neighbors. Ask youi neighbor! Mrs. A. A. Ackers, prop, grocery 927 N. 2nd St.. Decatur, says: “Doan's . Kidney Pills have done me more I i good than any kidney remedy I have ! , ever used My kidneys were weak , and I often had severe backaches that made me miserable. I also had | I frequent dizzy spells and would al- . most fall if 1 attempted to stoop. My kidneys didn’t act right, either 1 used Doan's Kidney Pills as directed ' ! and they helped me right away, relieving the backache and putting my kidneys in good order.” 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfra., Buffalo, N. Y. o SAGE TEA KEEPS YOUR HAIR DARK When Mixed With Sulphur It Brings Back Its Beautiful Lustre At Once Gray hair, however handsome, denotes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful appearance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks streaked, just a few applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundred-fold. Don't stay gray! Look young! Either prepare the recipe at home or get from any drug store a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound,” which is merely the old-time recipe improved by the addition of ’ other ingredients. Thousands of folks i recommend this ready-to-use preparai tion, because it darkens the hair beau- . tifully, besides no one can possibly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft . brush with it, drawing this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, its natural color is re- ' stored and it becomes thick, glossy and lustrous, and you appear years younger.
REGENERATIVE SET COSTLY BUT USEFUL Methods for Converting the Simple Vacuum Tube Receiver Into That Type. There are a great many amateurs who own and operate radio receiving vets ualng vacuum tube detectors who would like to have regenerative receivers. Regenerative receivers, however, are relatively expensive because } of the high royalty the companies 11- | censed to manufacture these sets pay for the use of the Armstrong patent. | The regenerative circuit is desirable In spite of these difficulties, because I by converting his vacuum tube de- , lector into a regenerative receiver, an | amateur cannot only then pick up undamped or continuous-wave signals but ids incoming signals wiU be greatly amplified. A regenerative receiver will produce for the same incoming signal a much stronger response tn the headphones than a non-regenerative receiver in connection with a onestage amplifier. Then, too, the addition of the amplifier necessitates extra tubes, amplifying transformers, etc., as a first cost and more power to operate as a maintenance cost. The simple vacuum tube receiver using a tuning coll only for varying wave length can be recommended as
|4P T /v & frf (f~j) ' I rgfj r_l t * i .— • | 3 db p) i xJXz 3 ■ X r*a 2 • t pi”- ■ ■ > — Ji
shown In Figure I, to form a regenerative circuit. When the two-point switch Is on contact No. 1, the set Is' non-regeneratlve. Turning the switch to point No. 2 makes the set regenerative. The circuit arrangement for regenerative is known as the ultra audion circuit. It Is difficult to control the amount of regeneration In a circuit of this T,, rnl .zi J E HF— — 13 — J~I type and close adjustment of the filament current and plate potentials is necessary to avoid distortion. When an antenna series condenser is used in conjunction with the tuning coil *for controlling the wave
length, a better etrvuit arrangement can be had for regeneration. Figure J shows the circuit connected fer regeneration. This la also the ultraaudivn circuit. By the use of the ultrauudlon circuit the simple loose coupler eon also be converted into a regenerative circuit with a vacuum tube. One of the beat methods for converting a loose coupler Into a regenerative circuit receiver, provided the primary of the loose coupler la equipped with two aides, is shewn in Figure L. Here the primary of the loose coupler is used not only as a part of the antenna oscillating circuit, but also as the plate Inductance coil RFxri J AR ■ —— ■ llllllll>>-J for feeding energy back to the grid circuit from the plate circuit. The best method of adapting a loose coupler to a regenerative circuit arrangement is shown In Figure M. The primary of the loose coupler is used for tuning as In a single circuit tuner employing a tuning coil. The secondary of the tuning coil is not connected in the grid circuit as It normally is. but Is In the plate circuit. By connecting the secondary In the plate circuit, the amount of inductance in the plate circuit ‘-an be varied and the coupling of the plate
circuit back to the antenna and the grid circuit can be controlled. This will allow any desired result in regenerating that can be used to obtain excellent results. For those who wish to retain the selective tuning properties of a loose coupler, the feed back arrangement shown in Figure Nls suggested. In this circuit a third coil called a ‘‘tickler’ is connected in the plate circuit and used to feed back the plate circuit energy into the grid circuit. The tickler coll Is similar In physical dimensions to the secondary of the loose coupler though it need have only approximately 75 per cent as many turns. It should be mounted on rods to slide back and forth Inside of the primary of the loose coupler, entering the primary from the opposite side as does the loose coupler; that is, a loose coupler equipped with two secondaries, one sliding in one side of the primary, and the other sliding in the other side of the primary. It is desirable to have more taps on the tickler coil than there usually are on the secondary so as to permit a closer adjustment of the plate circuit Inductance. Radio Fans Blamed In Paris. The opening of the station at Eiffel tower for broadcasting purposes brought much joy to the continent and England, but not to the French department of communications which controls the wire systems there. lu Paris alone it is reported that more than 200 telephone receivers are “lift ed” every day and never returned The radio fans are blamed.
I Niblick & Co. | I BIG | !JANUARY CLEARANCE I SALE I I j Closes Saturday, Jan. 20. i I 1 I Only Three More Days Left and the Big Sale Closes. v • ® There are still plenty good values to be g found throughout the store and it will | more than pay you to buy as the markets | m show higher prices on most lines of S | merchandise. j This Gives You Your J I Choice of Our En- I ! I tire Stock of | COATS & DRESSES | $35.00 Coats, Sale j i $22.50 | $25-00 Coats, sale A\ I $14.75 . ; ra 1 t . \ I g $45.00 Dresses, sale $25.00 f J W I a $35.00 Dresses, sale -Z /IfT i 'S I $19.75 I I i W'. n L i ? s $25.00 Dresses, sale >1 $ I $15.00 ";J j|| I | j $19.75 Dresses, sale 'V $12.75 I $15.00 to $17.50 Dresses, sale ' •> \ * ' h I $9.75 O Q | I Dress Goods & Silks j 42 in. Fine All Wool One Lot Odd Corsets French Serge, yard $1.50 to $2.00 values | SI.BB 58c i One Lot 36 in. 58 in Bleached | Percale, sale Damask, sale, yard | 17c 48c g ? One Lot 40 in. Wool French Cotton Blankets Serge, sale, yard I B SI.BB $1.28 I | 42 in. All Canton Crepe One Lot Outing Gowns, ■ 1 Extra Value, yard Sale $1.98 88c I One Lot Ginghams ,y. 5 sale, yard I 19c !
