Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 22, Number 253, Decatur, Adams County, 23 October 1924 — Page 6

DEMOCRAT WANT ADS GET RESULTS Special For SATURDAY ONLY for fords n Buarnii jsm 2F £■■■■■■ per plug Mars Spark Plugs are especially adapted to high compression and excessive heat, and are— GUARANTEED for one year against defective material and workmanship. Adams County Auto Co ‘ INSIST ON GENUINE FORD PARTS” Madison Street. Phone 80 Exclusive Ford Dealers j I Mrs. M. Moyer Women’s Ready To Wear 131 No. Eigth St. Choice Os Saturday’s I Drawing Day Sale DRESSES in 3 Groups GROUP NO. 1 GROUP NO. 2 $4.75 and $5.75 $8.75 to $12.75 Plaids—Pin Stripes Pin Stripes—Charmeen Checks and Plain Canton Crepe—Crepe Materials. Pretty Dresses Back Satin—Chiffon Velfor Every Day. vette—Plain. Fur Trim’ed. I Group No. 3 1 f $16.75 and Up to $24.75 Dresses of the highest type in the most fashionable styles, made in F. & H. Charmeen, Crepe Back Satin and Bengaline. Plain and Fur Trimmed. ' COATS ■ Just unpacked, about sixty-five Coats, in all the wanted materials and shades. $9.75, $12.75, $14.75, $17.75, $21.75, $24.75 and Up to $69.50 —■ - ■ - -WW,— ■» ■—SS Special For Saturday Only Any Hat in Colors $3.00 Hats .... Z.’ 43.50 Have You Seen Our New HOSIERY? — —- mmiiiiiiiw mhhim

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 23, 1924.

w LASTFOOTBALL CONTEST FRIDAY 1). H. S. Yellow Jackets To Plav Last Home Game With Hicksville I Decatur high school’s Yellow Jackets will meet the Hicksville, 0.. high school eleven on Ahr’s Field here Friday afternoon. at 3 o'clock, in the las: football game of the season in this city. These two teams played a hard-fought game here last year, the locals winning. 20-0. and another close contest is expected Friday. The officials for the game will be Geller, referee; Bauerle; umpire; Meyers, head linesman; and Brown, field judge. Although this will be the last home game of the season the Yellow Jackets have three more out-of-town games. Principal Walter Krick announced today that a game has just been scheduled with the Columbia City team to be played in Columbia City on November S. On November 1. the Yellow Jackets will go to Muncie to meet the Central Bearcats, and on November 15, will go to Garrett for the final game of the season. Coach Marshall is working the locals hard in preparation for the last four games on the schedule and considerable improvement is shown. o The Fourth Down • By Willie Punt

Keep on fighting. Yellow Jackets. Just fight as hard against Central and keep your eye on the ball and by sundown tomorrow evening you will have another victory tucked away. Our little squib in which we accused Sidelines of Huntington of thinking that Huntington has the worlld with a barbed wire fence around it since beating gSouth Side, was the spark that caused a huge explosion from Sport Comment, of Wabash. Sport enlarged upon that squib and devoted his whole column yesterday to challenging Huntington’s claim to superiority, demanding that Sidelines tell him what difference there is between 1000 per cent and 1000 per cent, which both teams .now hold in the Wabash Valley Conference. Sic ’em. Sport. Columbia City has been added to the Yellow Jacket schedule, a game being booked for that city on November Bth. The Yellow Jackets football players will not be asked to turn out for basketball practice any more until after the Muncie game. November 1. There are several other aspirants to the basketball team that will carry on with the net practice in the meanfl time. I Tomorrow’s game with Hicksville I will be the last game on Ahr’s Field I this season, neither the YellowJackets nor Catholic High having any more contests schedule for the home lot. Lets leave a good taste in the mouths of the local fans, Yellow Jackets. BEAT HICKSVILLE. I -o I. U. Varsity To Play Freshmen Practice Game I Bloomington, Ind., Oct. 23.—A practice game, with a picked freshman eleven will complete this week’s drill for the Indiana university fbotball squad. Coach Navy Bill Ingram announced yesterday. As no regular game was scheduled for this Saturday the varsity mentor has allowed his men to ease up in their daily practice and has not sent them against the freshman teapi in scrimmage each afternoon. 1 Coaches Hayes and Dean have utilized the week in instructing their green-jerseyed proteges in the style of play used by Northwestern, which is met Saturday. More than four freshman elevens are still out for practice daily and have been working on Northwestern formations. These plays will be used against the varsity for the first time in the practice game Saturday. i The Crimson pigskin artists came out of the Indiana-Chicago game in physical condition and have been

1 learning several new plays them 1 selves during the week's respite from lengthy scrimmage sessions. Coach Ingram has made several shifts in both backfield and the line since the . Maroon fracas and the new combinations will be tried out for the first time tn Saturday's practice game. G. E. Athletic Association Has Been Re-organized re-organization of the Athletic Association of the General Electric I was held and officers were elected. J .Mva Buffenbarger was elected president. William Heims, vice-president; Clyde Beery. Ethel Tttmbleson. Chester Kleinknight, board of directors, at’d Ben Hoagland, sec'ty and treasurer. A boys' and girls’ basketball team lias also been chosen and a bowling team will be organized during the next few days. 0 — Purdue Captain Starred In Northwestern Game Lafayette. Ind., Oct. 23.—Conversations on the campus at Purdue University here today centers around the work of Captain Ralph Claypool of the university eleven in the game with Northwestern last Saturday. His work will not only make him one of the greatest Boilermaker pivot men. but one who will rank high in the middle west against Northwestern's defense, but perhaps his most brilliant exploit came in the first half. 1 The Purdue leader snapped the ball back to Worth, who punted 45 yards to Baker, the Northwestern safety 1 man. Claypool raced down the field 1 under the punt and tackled the Pur- ' due star in his tracks. Claypool is playing his third year as a member of the varsity squad. This year is his second consecutive ' jrear as captain.

\\l > . jigssr t h J S’ Ml J-—* 7 fWM’ ilf M Mwi OT hiJO § ' ' Ml 1 .ilowas IL wfw. Paul Whiteman * and his famous Sy Concert Orchestra Such popularity must be deserved I’O convert critics into enthu> swift rise, look to the cigarette JL siasts,whether for a new school itself, its tobaccos, its blending—of music or for a cigarette, re- in short, its taste. This one thing quires something more than luck. alone — its decidedly better taste There s sound reason fcr every — explains why thousands of big swing in popular taste. smokers are changing from other So, to account for Chesterfield’s cigarettes to Chesterfield. Chesterfield Copyright 1924, Liggett & Myras Tobacco Co.

Persons under the age of IS may not be admitted to opium dens iu Java.

Overcoats for the boys who will be running like X Coolidge and Davis in v 1959 W A / —>> \ v Fit for the White House—and priced reasonably7 enough to he worn to the little red school house—we y ° Pen ° Ur B °’ VS ()vercoal Convention tomorrow. And ,est vou forget—don’t forget that a Decatur bov niav have his na,ne on the ticket one of these years— JjjyJ tj[Cj\ these coats are for this type of son. Iw’wig ‘ nals ionger—new turns to the lapels—surprises in hKa 'Moi LJy be,ls —eye opening patterns—sale closing prices. •11l V N L would be good to see these coats now! ■ ■■WKb Yes ’ ,here are lots of them—but remember there are B|JB VBbB lots of beys in Decatur, too. BOYS’ COATS 56.50 AND UP ‘ISSS2S ' ** Boys’ Mufflers—Boys’ Stockings 1 ’ —n» Boys’ School Waists—Boys’ Caps 3 jefuL'T'Myext) Go J BETTER CLOTHES FOR LESS J MONEY-ALWAYS- • DECATUR • INDIANA•• e

The offspring of one pair of cotton boll weevils uiuy approximate 12,700,000.

Popples eaten with delectable desert f or oM Roman ‘ Illes.