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Show Modern Policeman, 'Wired for Sound Makes Atlantic City Bad Town for Crooks T x I 111 hrr A It - i K - Jz? f ; ' Hi -j,? -4' . l ill - 4h . y r;1 I h ' :' . -d I C hhhiS ss. L. .s. wfe 'xvLjl k Lawrence H Smith (left), Atlantic City patrolman, who has devised new police radio system. Center, SLT 1 v'Ch 5te lnsude ca,se and wei?hs less than two Pounds. Right, police officer with cas clipped to his belt and earphone (arrows) which comprise entire equipment. A MOTORIST parks his car by the curb, returns to discover it is stolen. He telephones the police. Within two minutes and five miles away his car is recovered. recov-ered. A pickpocket, busy in a group waiting at a bus stop, is spotted by a storekeeper who telephones Police Headquarters. The nearest near-est policeman is six blocks distant dis-tant at the moment, but he races up and nabs the thief within a minute. The Mayor and some official guests are making a tour of the city, preceded by a motorcycle escort. es-cort. With no advance knowl-. edge of the route to be taken, the motorcycle squad turns to right or left, in one street and out another, an-other, in perfect response to the wishes of the official party. Radio? Yes, but a new kind. Not automobile radio, or motorcycle motor-cycle radio. It is personal radio and really personal. Policemen in Atlantic City, N. J., are wired for sound. And they are setting a record for efficiency that is beginning be-ginning to attract attention throughout the country. Police communication in the famous New Jersey resort is so personalized that practically the only way one of the "human radio ra-dio stations" can be recognized is by the fact that he wears tiny head phones, sometimes only one. Attached to the officer's belt is a small black leather case, so small it could not contain a radio set. Yet that is just what it does contain. con-tain. A concealed wire connects the Lilliputian set with the head phones. This personalized system is the product of the genius of a radio-minded radio-minded Atlantic City patrolman, Lawrence H. Smith. As a wireless wire-less enthusiast, he had a vision of a policeman who would be worth ten officers because he .vould be constantly in contact with headquarters, head-quarters, whether afoot, in a car, or on a motorcycle. Smith went to work on the problem and the present system is the result. The set consists of a compact "B" battery, a small flashlight battery, and a tiny 3-tube 3-tube radio amplifier. Its total weight is less than two pounds. The sets are worn at present only by motorcycle officers. The next step will be the extension of the system to include patrolmen. If the scheme works half as well as it has to date, Atlantic City is going to be a very tough Summer or Winter resort for crooks. Smith is now sitting up nights trying to figure out ways to make the set still smaller, lighter, more powerful. As to power, the present pres-ent range is pretty good. Occ; sional signals have come from a parts of the United States, eve as far away as California. |