Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 22, Number 176, Decatur, Adams County, 24 July 1924 — Page 5
™liM Wiff ■ _J jtc/es/ It Opens Tomorrow Morning! I UNLOADING SALE lias been a backward season. Butthat I lines that we brought in plenty of bust- |i " ... S I stocks; fall goods are on the way, and |fe | Lto operate a store economically is to S/Wfe: ■:" ! '• | Is more important than profit; that’s IwO,' 5 7/51 if I lues of the year. ll\wZv^ ; - lock of Men’s and Young Men’s | \ I ■ .-■—i ’ BN I / If' || ■ ■■' 'IV ••■Ja’i A IDI ip I |,-» I vK. jX ar HI I / / o- X .w < ii T aU j-*jT_..__i ‘ lUlul I I ’ I ’ il I 1 II J 'MI '• I ■ taf ■ 1 •■- IS a ■ ■ rtr=sEsie«Ev- i j A 4 ' \ W ! I $39 Value Suits N0W521.50 ■ 8~0 | ■MI I I | $35 Value Suits N0W524,75 Bl® I «■ I I $42,50 Value Suits N0W529.75 H«U ZHilm I ■ mSpi I w hi®sßt b ■ig offered at this radical reduction I ||l|| H \l®yS‘w| | ■alm Beaches, - the Best Available B |Uk I I I I from H Rill l3®jfeWw I B llW||| I I $17,50 Suits at ~,, $13.75 ■ II | I | ■M Suits at , , $21,50 I||!hi | |||l I iii'i Beach and Keep Cool -Trousers * - , -. * _____ * X iwm* x 1 ■»-* r w t -n > Irtment l 7 i l l I l~^~ — I ' 1-3 Off & | IhILDREN’S wash suits |r I ' allies to c'ose at Q 9 AQ $5.00 • Bathing Suits at $3.75 i slip Dress Shirts sx=:s_®) I <■ Values to close at Cl IG .... . $3.00 Bathing Suits at $2.00 I .tp I e 4t/ II $3.50, $3.00 and $2.50 Special Lot $1.50 Bathing Suits at SI.OO - . t SL29 sl- 89 I B Values t» 4 ‘ ~ W $ 2,00 and sl-75 Special Lot I ” l $1.19 $1.29 . neckwear ! SB H in 1, 'alues Imported Cut Silks and Knits $1.19 "■ H e?o- Bargain Lot Lot of M ’ * L2i> numberß </OV • s l.oo va | ues Cut silk and Knit Silks ft9c BREN’S WASH SUITS U*/C 111 "5c values Cut Silk and Knit Silks49c »,E| ; | 50c values Cut Silk and Knit Silks39c I ALL OTHER DRESS TDOITQI7DQ i EXTRA ffl SHIRTS REDUCED -> a □riLViM.L. II ' SPECIAL UNION MADE KHAKI £T* 1 K ... I -25 0 TROUSERS, $2.00 values at 5)1.0" I ", ages 2'/a to 8 years. Made ’ I $2.75 Very Best Values— (Uq qq I iri w,,h ,'y a hash Stripe Deniril and nicely fl Special at ■ mnied in red." Regular SI.OO values at * ||| . ■ B rQ 111 Straw and Panama EXTRA TROUSER BARGAINS HA 1 O Va,u « B M-50 >Y’S UNION UNDERWEAR - E £ S I i "'' l B»lbriggan £Q„ OVERALL BARGAINS o j Q OOT | Weight Bib Overalls with east olf 44c AB Felt and Fur Hats "h.le they iast ■: 25% off , — ■■■PMWII.WIIII..J
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. THURSDAY, JULY 24. 1921.
Huntil Puzzled Over Scent My tier) Wo one should write of hunting without ulhidiug to the iinportunt of scent. To Ignore the subject Is <ruvely unconventional, If not worse. That at least Is the excuse which Miss E. " Homerville offers for quoting ’!'!• If, tnprehensible incident In her mi i' - ' tof Trb>h life; 'v<» ver huiut'ig in the hills. It tvus u bright iiml sonny day with a light end vunlt lilng i itch of frost. The hounds were druuing along the south, ern side of u high bill covered with short rough grass and heather, with furze brakes here and there uniong the rocks. We hud not “found,” but the hounds were busy "feathering” , and were obviously sure that a fox i bad been about. Then one of the field | rode up to me and said with the ley , calm that so often musks the fullness , of pride; “Tilers’* your fox, muster I" He i pointed with bls whip to something | that looked like a rusty can lying under a furze bush. A fox! Not us I first feared dead, ! i but very much alive, I cracked my whip at him, nnd he slid away over J the hill, crossing after half a dozen bards or so a wide blackened patch i I where furze had been burnt. In an I Instant we brought the hounds to the ' place where he had lain. They made no outcry. They were interested, but no more than that. We took them on ■ and crossed the burnt patch, and sud- i denly on its farther verge they all put their heads down and went away with , a shout, and we had a brilliant forty j minutes, till tlie fox beat us on the ' edge of the sea and got safe Into a slit In the cliffs. i Why should the bed of the fox have been less Odorous than bls light feet, and why did the hounds not acknowledge him until he had crossed the burnt bit of hill? These things are a mystery.—Youth’s Companion, American Indian May Have Come From Egypt It is probable. If not certain, tlmt the American Indian did not come from Egypt but that in centuries following the glacial era, or even Inter, tribes started to migrate. It Is also vojy possible that at that particular time Asia and America were not separated by a body of water in the northern part—that Is, between Kamchatka and Alaska by the Behring sea. Then why would it be improbable that a few tribes started on their migration In a northeast direction us Utsr migrations started In a northwest direction? Furthermore, one of the oldest symbols of the world cun be found from Siberia to Ceylon and from Alaska to the Tierra del Fuego, If not In its entirety. always In a recognizable form. I am speaking of the swastika and we know that the swastika Is Aslan In its >.rigin. says Dr. P. Anther In Adventure Magazine. The features of the Indians tire not Mongolian but Asian. There Is no doubt there and In the eyes of some you S:;d the same characteristics and • Iso the cheekbones in both are prominent, but not like the Mongolian race. Learn From Lazy Man Managers of u department store were asked to pick out their best salesman, writes Fred Kelly in the | Nation’s Business, that others might study his methode. They looked ng , their records and picked a man, but an Investigation of bls methods quickly showed that he was only a mediocre salesman. True, he hud sold more than anybody else In bls department, but this was because he had the heavy expense of a sick wife and consequently unusual Incentive to work hard for more commissions. While be sold a lot of goods, he did It with ' wasteful expenditure of his energies. 1 Several other salesmen sold almost as ' much as ho did with only about half 1 the effort. Ab Frank Gilbreth says, , "The Ideal man to learn methods from Is one so lazy that he works barely hard enough to avoid being ■red." There Is Much to See Often as I work I stop to see, really see, see everything, or to listen, and it | is the wonder of wonders how much ! there is In this old world which we I never dreamed of, bow many beuutl--1 ful, curious, Interesting sights nnd , sounds there are which ordinarily make no Impression upon our clogged, overfed and preoccupied minds. I have alsn had the feeling—lt may be unsclen- j title, but It Is comforting that any | man might see like an Indian or smell like u hound if he gave to the senses I the brains which the Indian nnd the, hound apply to them. And 1 m pretty | sure shout the Indian! It Is marvel-, ous what a man can do when be puts his entire mind upon one faculty and bears down iinrd.—David Grayson. , What Are We Coming To? The other day in this city an operatic tenor offered as evidence of bls r affection for his wife the plea that he ’always washed the dishes, says the , N»< York Evening Post. Such stories as these offer a fine opportunity for novelists to portray the wifely sturdy oaks and the husbandly clinging vines. The tired business woman coming home, finding the easy chair near tfle Ore. her slippers w arm, while the husband sits on the arm of her chair, 1 lights her cigarette and prattles about h!s household cares—a very pretty plc- ! hire. And tlie husbands need not ,1 mind, so long as their wives don’t l| *eat them,
GIVES BOND
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i EDWARD L. DOHENY Los Angeles, ('al. — Edward L. Doheny, oil magnate, indicted on a charge of conspiracy to defraud the Vnited States, apeared in the United States commissioner’s office in Dose Aiige.es on July 18 and gave bond tor his appearance in the federal I (,i rial i r.ci of Columbia. Doheny s trial is expected to occur sometime in October. The case is one of the outcomes of tL« incut naval oil lease investigat.oiis in connection with the Teapot Dome and Elk Hills leases. ALL OVER INDIANA I’utnainville Josepn Lucas, guard at the Indiana State Farm had to stand out in the hot sun for hours when a swarm of bees adopted his hut for a permanent home. Edinburg It Is the eia of “bobs.” Will Paris, mar here reported three of a litter of dogs burn with bob tails. Ganet —Mrs. A. E. Andrews, of i Hamilton. () . drove to this town to visit h i bro>li<r. Henry L. Wehrley. prcmimnl J weand found him 1 Lead l-.ifftcn Eli Miller, night watchman l.eie. arre ted li s son-in-law for failure to bavt nn lor lights and insisted that his son in-law be prosecuted. Urn tisbiilg -Two dogs, pest of the I Aiiieii un Express company, here, tecognize the whistles of only two of i tin train that pass through here and tun to meet them, when they arrive to get the scraps from the diners. J B’.ciwniugioii - Coeds clothed in : nighties and even briefer costumes. ■ blushed and scurried to shelter when firemen, responding to an alarm fail1 ed to find the fire at Residence Hall, 1 Indiana University. i Indiainipolis—Measles was in the , lead for diseases reported in the state ( last week with sixty-five cases ret ported. -; Terre Haute —State Senator Charles t Batt and other ardent Democrats re- ‘ eeived a shock when an invitation to 1 a KiWanis dinner said that “We will bear Honorable Charles Stacy Batt, t RepuiLiean senator.'’ i | Dei ker—Peaches and tomatoes are s ripening i.n farms here with peach s growers expecting larger crops than 4 wer< predicted early in the spring. | Lawrenci vilh —A rare pullet is "doing his stuff” at Bridgeport, 111., I'aeethdiug to J. H. Goff. here, who re- (. ported that the pullet was hatched in t January, laid its first egg June 3, and i after laying thirty-live eggs began ' setting July 7. ruceviile Leander Utt. began his forty-seventh year of wheat threshing career this week. Utt started his career with an "ox-power” machine. ALL OUT OF, SORTS? So Wav This Liecarar NVcman Who Tells Her Experience All too often wotneit accept their pains ;>n 1 aches as natural to their mx. They fait to realize that, weak kidneys are often to blame for that backache, those headaches, dizzy | sp< "s and that tired, depressed feel-- ' ing. Thousands have found new ihi tilth and strength by helping the weakened kidneys with Doan’s Pills —a stimulant diuretic. This Decatur case Is one of many: ( Mrs. Ema Parr, 329 North Otti St, says: "There were bearing down pains in the small of my back. Sharp pains took me when 1 bent and it was ’ hard for me to straighten. Mornings . my batk was lame and stiff. Back » ache troubled me go badly day after , day I soon felt tired and weak. Little specks blurred my sight and I had 'lape’.ls of dizziness, too. My kidneys ’• were as sluggish and the secretion * didn't pass often enough. Doan's Pills tiom the Holthouee Drug Co. t drove away the kidney trouble ” t 60c. at all dealers. Foster Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
