Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 21, Number 259, Decatur, Adams County, 1 November 1923 — Page 5

missing at low speed. Wlum engines had fewer cylinders mid ran at slower speeds and were l^ sß effectively silenced than they are today, a missing; cylinder was quickly

Special Sale For Tills Week Only High Grade Bolivia Coats All fur trimmed at prices below manufacturers cost. These coats Just received this morning. Mrs. M. Moyer 131 N. Bth street

Save Money On Your Shoes We have in our stock a number of pairs of the Famous FLORSHEIM SHOES for Men, in broken sizes, and which we will offer at a big reduction in price. Regular .$lO value, good quality, Black and Brown, mostly all sizes at, Special $6.85 ELZEY SHOE STORE .\' ’I // Wrist Watches, "w. _/> n, ' White Gold; ~~ * 2- ■V •— new shapes, sio to sr.o M«|H hwji Diamond' Silverware, , v , H ! n ß s ,’ 11 fpfißSL many new mointilm 1 P al . lcins 1,11(1 11 V.- t ” 19 designs. $2.) up. . Our display of Gift Diamond Rings, Wrist Watches end Silverware will firovc irresistible when you see them. A gift in either would he highly appreciated by the receiver. Our “Gift Line” is most complete and affords a wonderful selection at prices that will surprise yhu. Come in any time. We will lay aside any article you may choose until called for.

Saturday Another Big Day - Our Fall Sale Is Bigger And Better Than Ever Attend our Fall Sale, and buy your winter wants and save money. We are giving you the benefit of our purchase on the low market. You cannot afford to miss this money saving sale. Van. Wide Heavy Unbleached Green Window Shades.'* ft long. Yard Wide Standard Quality Per- S*. 2* V.,, o.„v,s Muslin, will be 16c a yard; 1A- regular width, IQp cale. dark or l. R ht a large 10 shoe * uU sizes to <£l4o Ckm-ralls. all sues J, £ all si/.., 83.90 ' Yard lUC Special price *«'«■' assortment ot patterns, yd, lOt ( ~0 „ 0 out Palr $1.43 " t 0 b V q, i Anrnn nn r~ — - — — Crib Blankets, Plain Wfrto w ith Isln HOSE—HOSE SAVE U MONEY V On” YOUR made of good Percale 89C .Mens Gun Metal Blueher Dress Shoe, Mens Outing Work Shoes, a good v-'i h' "”"' l "' 39C M'"'- Pdaek or Drown tins.- I||„ Ladies Bleached Vests and Pants, Bloomers, Special Price.. 93c SLKMT' $2.98 r" ,E,n ” rl $2.25 | - S lon IT alppvp *inklr» lnmrtli F* .... ( ’ l-> DUinkHs, ■ it li. i i«i ..... itlv 3« to 44, each 59C SPECIAL IN Mcms Brown or IMack blueher or Heavy Brown Work Sh#-. a Heavy Fancy Crib Blankets QO j.-db-s Fine Li-la Hose. Black Ladies Fleeced Union Suits, long (YENS FURNISHINGS nJhhav S $3.9d Good Wearing Shoe, <J»9 HZ F.ach •'&<- < r Brown, pair ... . sleeves, short sleeves, no sleeves, . ‘ " ' „ _ A ” sizl ‘ s {| t 0 11 £*•**■ (A World Heater) l-irgc Size Fancy l.aclu s 1 ~;u koi Brown SHU /IQf* ankle length, Qfi/* Mens Blue Work Shirts, IPs Mc " s '" : K " ’ .83 Qi) Indies Dress Shoe, all solid, medium Plaid Wool Finish Blanket in all col- 11 -All sizes «6 to 44 VOC 17, Fall Sale OJt Dross Shoe. Rubber heel &O.UO () ,. s V | s |«nk.-t that cannot h- heal; Fade He., v > Klee, ed 1 lose nr Mens Heavy Fleeced Uniondj-J OC Mens Khaki Heavy Outing <J»I -| r Growing Girls Black or Brown Shoes, Ul|))bor hee , tp£.JO $4 r.o Blanket <£Q yIC 1 " ........ rUL Suits, all sins UK to 4t'.... Shirts, size 14% to 17.... t?lt ID Low Rubber Heel, a good wearing special Free 1 s I-me l„aek (ashmere Mens Heavv Bibbed Union £»-| OK Mens Wool Flannel Shirts, (PI AO school shoe, (£0 OQ & CO /IK Lad’cs Fine Kid Black Dress Shoe, I,osl ‘- /V ' Sn its All sizes 3C to 46.. «pI.OO Sue 14 V- to 17 all sizes SO.4D Buhher llcel. All New Fall Lin- "IT u," t" , 82 98 SWEATERS—SWEATERS Mens Khaki Pants, (£1 /»Q Girls Brown School Shoo »n nr All sizes <j»Q \K & t£o ‘ ~tUm ' " ' " Mens li ■ Sweater d*-| nr WHILE THEY LAST AU dl.OJf Sizes SV4 to 1114 $6.60 «P 0.40 st>. i O Special: A Good Sir..- H< av . Cotton „ 81.2-5 Just reemved 48 pair Mens IB.i\’. Mens Corduroy Pants, <£o /IK Misses Brown School Shoe <£s) A K S) e.dal! Dr. Charles Cushion Solo Blanket, In. fancy 82 25 i! ‘ •’ v > s ' vl ' ilU ' r (£1 1 K S ~ UAb $3.95 r:;;:,sr ~.w ' v "" , “ e $1.95 ssr». $4.45 $1.49 4 $1.75 PRICES THAT ARE ATTRACTIVE Mens Fine Black or Brown Dress ’ .' rS.J.Vk) M.l/i) i .a.,,, comforts nr •'" «* s l"' r ' Sweaters, £»<> /IK Ladies Heavy Weight Outing Gowns. Ladies or Growing Girls l.nwn )\- Shoe in Blueher or English Style: ‘ “ 82.75 Ml •• will l,e much higher in priece, QQ„ fords. Kubbor heels, «9 «U . All new Full line; <£/| QK -lust received Ladies or Growing Girls ' ' s „i„.,;V,o,l' Size Blank s Mens Wool Sweaters in <£o QK Special . yoC nil sizes A |, K j Zofl Brown l.ow Rubber Heel Oxfords. ... 1 . : Navy or Maroon, all sues Ladies Dark Outing CKt* J-adies Fine Kid Oxfords, <£o AK Mens Mule Skin Work Sltoi (£4 QQ Perforated Tip; all sizes :i QO ‘ '‘"' u ' ' I toys sli,m.v< r Swaters in a sorted Petticoats Dot Rubber heel, all sizes.... «PU» a jj B jze» 6to 11, special.. tpl.Ol/ to X: worth $3.75; special Fi-eecl Fancv Border; d» 4AQ eolo £» inr k d»<l OP Ladies Heavy Knit C(L. * CPCo Ladies Black, Suteen a Bargain. p.Tir ®L.VO s&.£iD Petticoats 59C 0-)C SHppers, $5.00 value..... QQ.VO l SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL Heavy Weight Dark or Light Out- -*.•«■**. VA rP jny* •JR—« W m V A Uadb Slipover Sweat.t>. all RUQBER FOOTWEAR j»~ ****** £OC OL O j\j W | Ll|\ / 'l3"" """ ' 14C SI .98 •M > knlly"un«n'.B9c yA.I W'M. Flowered C'lialllc. lit » / l\, j, xj OJL .1 H I .nuiurl, lor I: riooi.oi 9bC i. Mr,. All Wool ’ Kin,hi Army . Bleached Outing. 1 /*., Blailkef, <£Q DC Mens One Buckle £»-| IJJT special price, 1 S(* Yard IW. , . h ... Arctics tPl«lw Yard luv

recognized and the fault was usually corrected, because It was so disagreeably evident. But given the wellsilenced high-speed six, eight or twelve-t yllndcr engine of the modern car, and the failure of u single cylinder is neither so obvious nor so easily detected. A miss, in such a car, asserts itself chiefly at low speeds—a slight tendency toward jerky operation when the clutch Is engaged or when pulling hard, and sometimes by a slight knock. Both,-however, quickly die out as the car speeds up.—Automobile Digest. L.

ARE YOU THE MAN ? I To the right man our propogition mean# independence, the establishing ofa business that can be one of the best paying in your community. A permanent, ever growing business. It is only a matter of industry and proper presentation. We show you how. Write briefly your qualifications to Underwriters Company of Indiana,lnc. noi Roosevelt Bldg., Indianapolis,lnd.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT.FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 192;).

“Frying Sound” In Radio lias Practically Passed The statement recently attributed i to Thomas A. Edison at tin 1 Now Vo- ; Electrical Show that radio will die out unless the frying sounds of Hi > , music are eliminated was quickly Irl- . longed by radio fans who are daily i receiving radio program without "fry- . ing" features, and by mauiifacturei-s of reliable radio apparatus who m e > reduced static interference to u in! ti imum. The statement by the Electrical i Wizard is misleading, they deehu, as tremendous prograss lias dean niHde in the urt in the*last two years. Even If this were not true, iln,y point out, it hardly seems likely liiu something which is already brlujii..; education, entertainment and hup piness to a million homes in tl»>* United States will or could die out. "Frying sounds" is one way to describe the peculiar noise which static causes in a receiving net. But wit!) the advance in konwledge of the in and the tremendous amounts of r* ■ search done recently by engineers and manufacturers, this trouble ha i been practically eliminated. Who knows? Mwybe radio has grown and improved too rapidly for even the Wizard to keep up with it; Interference is another term for ."frying sounds" and interference lias (been practically controlled by the be velopment of better parts for raid', set. For instance, the public is just beginning to realize that the variabl ■ I condenser which was considered a very satisfactory article a year ago would not be satisfactory today. Manufacturers have developed v.brt IF RUPTURED TRY THIS FREE Apply it to Any Rupture, Old 01 Recent, Large or Small and You are on the Road That Has Convinced Thousands — Sent Free to Prove This Anyone ruptured, man. woman o ‘child, should write a once to W. S i Hire. I(MU’ Main St., Adams, X. Y.. for At free trial of his wonderful stlmulatI iiiL; - application. Just put it on the* 1 rupture »»nd the muscles begin i j tighten; they begin to bind together s"» ; that the opening closes naturally and the need of a support or truss or appliance is then done away with. Pon t ’neglect to send for this free trial. | Keen if your impure doesn’t bother you what is the use of wearing- supI ports aH ’ Why suffer this j nuisance? Why run the risk of ganjgrene and sdicli dangers from ;t small | and innocent 1 i 1 11« rupture, the kind j tha has thrown thousands on the nj»jeratin# table? A host of men and; j women are daily running such risk I iust because their ruptures do not hurt nor prevent them from getting around. Write at once for this fre** j trial, as it is cerainly a wonderful thing' and has aided in the cure of 1 ruptures that were as bit? as a man’s two fists. Try and write at once, using- the coupon below. Free for Itupi lire W. i-v nice. Inc., 100 fT Main St.. Adams. X’. Y. You may send me entirely free* ( stimulating applicaion for Rupture. Name Address State • ■ —

lx called a low condenser, that Is one | In which the dielectric resistance is very low. It la absolutely necessary to have such a condenser when atari a radio frequently amplification, or with , the laziest development of the art, tv lilex circuits. "Keflex" means using the amplifying tube twice, first using the vacuum tube to amplify at radio fr< quencles and then at adillble tiv quoneies. This type of set, which Is very simple to construct, us it uses no complicated tuning equipment, will bring In stations 1.000 miles away using a loop us un antenna or using a few turns of wire around the molding of a room (the so-called In dde antenna). One manufacturer has had Its engineering and research d" purtments working on such clrc ti's for nearly two years, and has > rfueled circuits which eliminate Interferene or the so-called "frying sounds." BUFFALO AGAIN TO LIVE WHERE FIRST DISCOVERED The recent gift of three buffalo to the government of Mexico recalls the discovery and early history of these big game animals. The gift will be sent from the herd maintained by the United States Department of Agriculture on the Wichita Game Preserve, Oklahoma, to the zoological park in the City of Mexico, almost on the very spot where the buffalo was ilrst discovered by Europeans. The Biological Survey points out that 400 years ago, when Cortez entered Montezuma's capital, on the present site of the City of Mexico, white men had their first view of buffalo, a herd of which was maintained in the menagerie of the emperor. This was in 1321, when buffalo roamed in millions over the tablelands of northern Mexico and the Great plains of the present western United States. An early writer Antonio De Solis, who first described Montezuma's menagerie, declared that the greatest rarity in the collection was the "Mexican bull," which had crooked shoulders, a bunch on its hack like the camel and its neck covered with hair like the lion. It was in these terms that he characterized the American buffalo or bison. As a manifestation of good will io- j ward our southern neighbor, a gift of I three buffalo was tendered the Mexi-i can government by the United States Department of Agriculture and the New York Zoological Society. Details of shipment are being arranged between Dr. W. T. Hornaday, director of the New York Zoological Park, and Prof. A. L. Herrera, in charge of the zoological work of the Mexican government. SCARE CROWS OUT OF A JOB Just recently the hunters of Antelope and Madison counties. Nebraska organized a crow-killing contest. Tlie time was one month and the losing group was to entertain the winner. We do not know who won, but that matters little for our purpose here. The big fact is that thirty-five thousand crows were killed in that i one month. —Sportsman’s Digest.

MINK RAISING 19 PROFITABLE Large number of mink can bn raised in a moderate sized enclosure Some years ago tho writer visited some of tho ferret raisers near New London, Ohio, and was surprised to learn tlmt as many us one thousand ferrets were raised on a single “ranch" und In a building only about If. feet wide and 100 feet long. Each female ferret and her young occupy-J ing only about 2 by 4 feet. Some of the methods used by the ferret rutsers could no doubt bo taken advantage of by the mink, marten and other fur animal raiser.—Sportsman’s Digest. IMPORTANCE OF STEERING MAINTENANCE I The steering gear Is only a part of the steering mechanism of u motor car and, though it may appear to be at rest When the car is moving in a straight line, it is constantly in motion, because of its sensitiveness to even the smaller depressions and irregularities of the road. When a car is traveling along what appears to be a perfectly smoot h course, the steering gear and all of the steering linkage which control the front this being the case, it can lie readily wheels of the car is in motion and, understood that this unit is one of the most vital control elements of j tlie car. —Automobile Digest. CHECKING VALVE TIMING. As improper meshing of the timing gears will cause improper timing of the valves, the application of tlie following rule will readily indicate whether they are at fault: If the valve opens late and closes early, the clearance is too great; if the valve opens early and closes early, or opens i late and closes late, the timing gears! are incorrectly meshed. —Automobile ■ Digest. TO TELL 'GATOR'S AGE. j Ocklawaha, tlie largest alligator in captivity, is thought to be several bun-! dred vyars old. weighs 1.400 pounds. l and is thirteen and a half feet long, says Nature Magazine. Experts de-j terniine the age of the alligator by i the width of his nose between his eye I teeth. After the reptile is ten feet, long, the nose widens one-quarter of an inch for each fifty years the alliga- J tor lives. "

MOVED We have moved from our old office building on South Second street into our new quarters located on Madison street and are now open and • ready for business. Come In and Visit Us. Graham & Waiters

DEMOCRAT WANT ADS RET RESULTS —• 11 ' ■ * - 11 1 ““ 1

TONIGHT ONLY “Youthful Cheaters” A Hi# Special Production, with Glenn Hunter A (Inim i of Hit' sot'ial whirl with many beautiful and interesting scents. Also—The 10th chapter of the serial “TIIE EAGLES TALONS” 10c —25i* Gel tickets every night litis week for the drawing on lilt 1 silverware Io he held Monday evening. Something new every week. mwiiiiii t i t urn r nn tn itti^tititub 11 Every Day Special In Tin Ware We just received a large assortment of Tinware that we are going to sell at 10c each, as long as it lasts. In this assortment are Dish Fans. Milk Strainers, (juart Measures, Dippers, Graters, Large Fudding Fans, Tube Cake Fans, Six and Eight Hole Muffin Pans, Pot Lids, all sizes, and other smaller items. See them in our window. i /A Remember only, each AvFU Axe Handels Q \ ~ W all Lamps. QG/» Complete Granite Combined AO „ 10 quart size aches Heather Plain White Cups OQ p I!oS1 '' I nur £ * iaUl ‘V , ' s ' V ' l ol Plain While Napkin r „ ruble Spoons * r»0 f«»r OC (i for Oil Cloth, best »)Q Glass (’.reamer & 1 A., grade, vard Uw v Sugar, each XvFU ~ CANDY SPECIAL SATURDAY ONLY Chocolate Peanut (. lusters. Pound v> Candy Kisses, „ 1 rtr* Pound J.vFv> SST*?* 10c We furnish a carrier to hike them home in. We Buy For Less—We Sell For Less Morris 5 & 10c Store