OCR Text |
Show 7 THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH Cups and saucers are the first to break! So we've put a dainty Hue and white china cup and saucer in every When Power Unit Fails to Deliver Trouble Shooting ;in 3 Device by Process of Elimination. Cy CHARLES In Radio News. L, B inthe- shooting unit should he h systematic process of elimination but with nothing eliminated until it lias been checked up. In other words, take nothing for granted; because things taken fqr granted are often tiie very . tilings causing the trouble. We all recall tiie cluip who took the auto mobile half apart, looking for tremble when some one' reminded him that Ids gas tank was empty. Radio trouble shooting ean he very much the same. The first step In trouble-shootinthe B.devlce is to make sure tbnt the current Is turned on and that ' It Is reaching (he transformer pri Is next Tiie device. of the step insiry to. lie sure that the fault lies with the and not with the associated radio receiver. With the. trouble narrowed down to Is the the to. start with the resistance hank a.nd then work backward through the (liter, rectifier tube, und finally the Trouble socket-powe- r g Prepared the Carnation Oats are precooked to improve the Albers flavor. Democracy Born of Old Nordic Customs? is derived American democracy from the social and governmental Institutions of the ancient Scandinavians, the original Nordics, declares in Charles J. McGulrk American Institutions are Liberty. Nordic," the writer asserts. "Congress is an echo of the Scandinavian Thing, an assembly of the people about the mounds of their dead at which they listened to the advice of the Old Man of the tribe. Our state 'transformer. legislatures follow the Tleraldthlng, Defective Resistor. a local assembly. A common trouble... when trouble Democracy was not born In AmerIt had Its does occur. Is the absence of voltage.. ica." the wrltpr continues. birth 'u Norway when narald Fair-hai- r a given tap. Tills is generally . at or traceable to an destroyed the power of the 'her-sirburnt-ou- t resistor. Thus if tiie "I"-uni- t (kings) and placed the leaderbecomes open, the detector voltship of the people among the jarls, local chiefs who had won age will immediately increase; so high-borreto leadership of the host and certain that, In the tuned ceiver, the signal strength will he districts by their warlike qualities." greatly diminished, while in the regenerative receiver there will he constant oscillation. A physician who reaches out to A defective resistor may be located benefit humanity leaves a record voltby means of a behind him that is worth while. Such meter connected to each tap In turn. a man was Dr. ' The reading obtained at each tap R. V. Pierce. should he approximately that called' His study along medical lines, for by the designation on the tap. In voltand his knowl-edg- e the absence of a of the incandescent meter, a remedial qualiIt ''uild he employed. lamp may ties of herbs glow- a dull red on the full output and plants led and on the intermediate tap of the to the discovIf It lights to equal unit. ery of his wonderful herbal brightness on the detector tap. it Is remedy, Doctor an Indication of an open or defective.. Pierces Favor 10.000-olifixed resistor. ite Prescription. It is just the tonic reA satisfactory temporary repair can quired if a woman is borne down by generally lie made by' means of a varipain and sufferings at regular or irthe able resistor connected between regular intervals, by nervousness or plus binding post nnd the terminal dizzy spells, headache or backache. Favorite Prescription can be had in which gives no voltage. The resistablet form as well as liquid at your tance- is adjusted until the proper neighborhood store. voltage is obtained, and this saves the trouble of seeking the correct value The Prettiest Bird for a fixed resistor, while. at the same Twenty-nindifferent kinds of birds time providing ample current-handlinwere selected by the rural school chilcapacity. dren of San Diego county, Calif., If the voltage taps are found satisfactory, yet tiie receiver still falls to in the prize contest for essays on The Prettiest Bird in Sun DlejJb operate properly, the trouble may be s condenser. A County and Why I Think So, says due to an apei. s condenser will Nature Magazine. The hummingbird d act in the same manner as a family received 15 votes, the meadowresistor. lark 12 and the oriole family 1L Tracing Circuits. Marriages may be made In heaven If there Is no voltage at any of the but a lot of them end In the other terminals, the trouble may he traced to an open circuit In the wiring, or In place. windthe transformer or choke-coi- l fo- a broken-dowcon or again ings. denser. Tiie wiring should be checked over for broken or laid connections The transformer secondary nnd choke-coi- l windings 'can be tested by mentis of a telephone receiver and a Filter con dry cell, for continuity. densers can he tested by the same means, with a loud click at the time contact, niid a weaker click successive tapping of t he termiupon nals, to Indicate a good condenser. If tiie successive clicks nre equally loud, the condenser is After tiffs, tiie rectifier tube should be considered. Tiie test method Is to try a new tube or a tube known to be good.-iilt.ee of the existing tube This is esecla!!y true with tiie gaseous type of lube, which .gives nf SAY other Indicnthn of Its' operation than . n slight warmth. i erCblor 110-vo- discontent and In his mind the seed of protest against" tyranny, began to grow. Later he went to France where military engineering, especially fortifications, a study which was to bring him fame. At the age oftwer-ty-eig!i- t lie returned to Poland to find the family fortunes in the hands of a spendthrift older brother and rapidly In the meantime the disappearing. first partition of Poland had taken place and Polish estate were being confiscated by the Russians, who were vie country. Having overrunning heard of .the rebellion of t lie American colonies agains' the British king. Kosciuszko resolved to cast his lot- - with them. He arrived In Philadelphia soon after the signing of the Declaration of Independence, having mort-gagehis patrimony and borrowed 450 ducats to get there."He seems fo have made the acquaintance of Franklin: either in France or nfter his arrival in Philadelphia, for we next hear of him presenting himself and a letter of introduction from Franklin to Ilis Excellency, .George Washington, in Oc. tober, 1776. What can you do? asked Washington, according to the familiar story. Try me and we shall see, was Kosciuszkos. response. So Washington made him a colonel of engineers and from October, 177G, to April 1777, he was busy fortifying Philadelphia, continuing the work there that he had undertaken before" his services had been accepted. Then he joined Gates army In the North and performed the services at Saratoga and West Point already referred to. Later he was of invaluable assistance to General Greene. ns chief engineer in the southern campaign, and it is said that Greene's escape from Cornwallis during his memorable. retreat was due largely to the work of the Polish officer in constructing' pontoon bridges which allowed Greenes army to cross rivers before the British could over take it. At the close of the Revolution Kosciuszko returned to his nntive land and had a prominent part In the stormy times which preceded the second partition of that unhappy country. In his fight for the liberty of his country lie was finally wounded in battle and captured by the Russians, who held him prisoner for two years. Then lie was released upon his request to visit America once more. .After.lijs second vjsit here he settled down In Paris and then removed to Switzer l'and, where he was living at the time of the fatal fall from his horse. As lie lay dying. at Solnthurn, Switzerland, he requested that his heart should not he taken hack to his country until the day when Poland was free'." So ii was removed from his body (which was taken to Cracow and buried in tiie 'cathedral there), embalmed and placed- In a bronze urn which was at Zugwils. . It remained there . kept until some thirty years ago. Then removed to the little chapel of Chateau Rnppor.-wvil- , near Zurich. During nil these years Poland had been a political football for the pmv crs.e.f Europe. Rut the end 'of tie World war found it an state jit last. So- the heart of Kos ciuszko has gone hack lo his native land to he placed in the cathedral ni Cracow, there to lie honored by hV countrymen for his struggles in tlieii behalf. And In America, where leal.so fought for freedom. uionuniert in Washington. D. C.. at West Point in Humboldt park m Cb'cbgo. and one in 'Boston stand as con stunt 'reminders of the debt we ow-tthis great champion of hum it liberty." d ZZgimTS' J1ATLO? cyjCOJClL&ZIZ? ty??zx 'jujftesIGtfon T SCOTT WATSON F ALL the events in 1027 By ELMO j . which have marked the one hundred fiftieth an- -' niyersary of the critical year, of the Revolution, few have commemorated more appropriately the world-wid- e significance of the' American struggle for freedom than those in which the name of Thaddeus Kosciuszko has figured. Ilis name and fame were revived .last summer when press dispatches carried the news tiiat the bronze urn containing the heart of this Polish patriot and friend of American freedom had been reclaimed by his native land. They were revived at the Saratoga celebration, in New York last ' month when honors were paid, among others, to this youth whose organizing work won for him the title of Fattier of American Artillery, and who selected and .planned the fortification of Bemis Heights, which had such an important part in Burgoynes defeat. It was at the Saratoga celebration, too, that there was launched a nationwide campaign .among ' teachers and school children of America to raise funds for the endowment of a scholarship, to be known as The George Washington Scholarship of thtf.Kosci-uszk- o Foundation, which will provide $0,000 .for tiie education alternately of a student from Poland at an Amer lean university and of an American student at a Polish university. Thus will he perpetuated not only the wisli of Kosciuszko. Let us give our children a good education with the virtues of justice and honor. ' but also the memory of the splendid friendship between him and the lead er of the Continental army, who once declared to his care and sedulous appreciation, the American people are. indebted' for the defenses of Wesi Point." .For it was Kosciuszko who planned the fortifications on the Hudson and wtio, when it was later de- cided to .found a training school American officers, urged that West Point be chosen as the site. But most impressive of ail the events which have served to recall the name of Kosciuszko was tile celebration on October 1G when a new statue of Idin was unveiled in the Public garden in Boston. The statue was the ift--to Boston of tile Polish people of New England, who raised a fund of $2.7,000 for that purpose, and on that day more than 15.000 Americans -g- Ags No Help Tke prospective tenant hail inspected the bathroom, electric bell, coal cellar, and nil the other conveniences of the flat, and expressed himself satisfied. Have you any children? asked the porter. 1 have. Then you can't have the flat." "Rut you don't understand. My thirty years old. JoLngst chili of Polish ancestry . marched in the parade, at the head of which were carried both the Stars and Stripes and the national colors of Poland, to the site of the statue where tlie veiling and dedication took place in the presence of many distinguished guests. . This memorial Is the work of Mrs. Tlioo. A. Buggies Kitsou of Framingham, Mass., noted for her own sculptured pieces, including The Volunteer at Newburyport, Mass., another at Vicksburg, Miss., the Spanish war students at Minneapolis, Minn., and Schenectady, N. Y and the Bickerdyke statue at Galesburg, 111., as well as for the fact that she Is the wife of Henry H. Kitson, creator of the Lexington Minute. Men and the Robert Burns statue in the' Fenway. The date (Sunday,- October 10) of the unveiling of this statue was especially significant.' It was on October 17, 1S17, that the Polish champion, then at the age of seventy-on- e years, met his death by a fall from his horse, an event which the poet Campbell has made historic with his . Hope for a- season bade the world farewell And Freedom shriek'd as Kosciuszko fell! The date, however, was selected particularly because it was on. October IS,' 177G, that Kosciuszkp landed in New York with the French, expedition to aid the colonies. So the one hundred fifty-firs- t anniversary of his beginning a' now fight for freedom' and the one hundred tenth anniversary of the end. of ids long struggle in the cause of liberty saw a great patriotic gathering to honor him. The whole carper of Kosciuszko was dedicated to the single purpose .of luiinhn liberty. Like .Kossuili, the Hungarian. Lafayette, the Frenchman,, and others,, lie was far in advance of his time. lie. was Jmrn February 12 (t.he birthday of another, great exponent of freedom), in the year 174G. in a remote part of. Lithuania. It was at-time when Poland was. exhausted, by wars, not wars for the betterment of the peoples of Europe, but conflicts between ambitious- sovereigns.. His father was a mail of. noble birth and large estates. The young 'Kosciuszko attended the deni it college in his hoine town and in 17.B entered tin corps of cadets in the Royal School of Warsaw. Haring his vacations at home lie talked with the on his father's estate, learned of their more, cer-ant'- married and lives In Australia, and the other two are in America. "That makes no difference.' said I have orders not to let the pnrier. this flat to anyone with children." Til Hits. Beliefs About Moon The Creeks regarded a full moon ns This favorable for great enterprises. of physiological belief 1ms a now known that trnth. because it the nervous system Is influenced by the lunar cycle. Hence there are pe . ' logical-procedur- n radio-frequenc- y A Benefactor e 220-vo- g Heavily Charged Wires High powey electric cables on po, .i:.es carry electricity at pressure Up io 220,000 o!ts and engineers are e perimenting with even higher train mission voltages, bat the largest un derground cable in the world unde-current six mil part of Chicago e short-circuite- short-circuite- spends onYOU Dont blame the feed or the con- dition of your stock if market men grade you low and customers complain on account of the color of your butter. You can keep your butter always that golden June color which brings top prices by using Dandelion Butter Color. Its purely vege-a- ll State and table and meets National Pure Food Laws-use- d by all large creameries for years. It's harmless, tasteless and doesnt color buttermilk. Large bottles, 35c at all drug and grocery stores. Write for FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE WcDi & Ridurdioe C., lac Bcrlington, Vermont For Women who need effective douche powder, use astringent, soothing. safe. Send for circular. $1 bx. C. O. D. Laboratory.Box. m, Bta.C, Los Angeletf.Callf. HOT FLUSHES and other symptoms of High Blood pressure are quickly relieved by MENU IDS. $1 for trial. Cleve, Them. Co., SOI Flood lildg., Ban Francisco, Calif, S Wo-Ne- Bring Out That Girlish Beauty. Positively and permanently removes wrinkles and all blemishes. Absolutely harmless, details free. The ltensora Co., 8561 Fins St., St. Louis, Mo. riNON M)T& Bend 880 and we will mall you 1 pound postpaid. Write for particulars on Navajo Hugs. MATCH1N & AMBROSE, Indian Traders, Crownpoint, N. Mex. DON'T BE BALD' Baldness easily cured, unheard of results, old Indian formula works wonders, sent postpaid on receipt of $1. H. Warren, 710 Lakeside 80., Seattle, Wash. Dunions Quick relief from pain. Prevent shoe pressure. A all drug and shot Hons DlScholl's inopadjg W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 47-19- 27. Had the Courage of Them Magistrate Im told that yon have been convicted a dozen times for the same offense. Aren't you ashamed of such a record? Prisoner No, your honor. I dont think any man ought to be ashamed of his convictions. Fortunately, stupid people seldom realize that they are stupid. n short-circuite- . BAYER ASPIRIN and INSIST! Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Uce cf Copper Sulphate cn Some Soldering Jobs J j j J Sometimes It is desired to solder to p'eee of iron such ns a diaphragm. used in i receiver. As you may lone doubtless found out. this cannot bt done directly, for the solder will not 'eke, no matter how much, fins is used If however, a few grains rubbed over the clean sulphate lire first ' bright metal and then the soldering nppled. it will be found that 'lie ndder will read. ly ndh if io the Iron as ihe (hire will lime to copper placed on the iron by is ,!t best only n thin lilai and comes off quite readily Also remom her that copper sulpha :e Is very poisonous. ..Colds Neuritis Toothache Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART pci thi-late- rinds of vital energy when the pliysi cal und menial capacity is at Its height, and It is then tint success nmy reward our undertakings. s open-circuite- d - vay for quick j i ' ; Ccnircl of Cper.kcr Volurr.e Do not try to ontroi loud spool. oi volume bj burning the lube lihnocnts Such control Is brighter or dimmer A erroneous anil ruins tone quality variable high re: across the secondary of Hie first an die transformer, or iiga'n across i tie terminals of the loud speaker, nets na an excellent volume control. re-M- or Bayer .Accept only package which contains proven directions.! Aspirin u Handy Bayer boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. the trade mark of Barer Manufacture of MosoeceUcaddester Cuticura Comforts Tender Aching Irritated Feet Eathe the feet for several minutes with Cuticura Soap and warm water, then follow with a light application of Cuticura Ointment, gently rubbed in. This treatment is most successful in relieving and comforting tired, hot, aching, burning feet. T. Sold everywhere. Bonp 25c. Ointment 25 ani 5ftc. Tr Wm Simp ? each tree. Address; CuUcura Laboratories, Dept. B3, Maldea, Mm" Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c. of BaUcyltcadd |