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Show PAGE TWO THE BINGHAM PRESS BULLETIN (Edited hr a. DeuaUs Wardrop, Editor of lUdlo Mrehndlln.) WL .LOW RATIO tlWWSWlWKMj AWN --' ( ' -l ' I I .1 lljS.liTJi I Sehematlo Diagram f Three-Tu- b U lvr Which Works Well ad I Vry Easily Constructed. Fan who would Ilk to experiment with receiver that will tun 1b the very low wv-lengt- h so that they may listen to th broadcasting relay tatlona which operata oo thl lower band, will find orh a receiver bare described. Fans who arc contemplating learn-ing the code ahonld find sucb a t useful because on trans-Atlanti- c sta-tion at Tuckerton operating on a low wave, near 100 meter, lend alowly and give th code learner a chance to try hi skill. The new code fan will alio find hundred of amateur station m tending, the reception of which should " give him practice. should be mounted oo th aubpanel la th position shown. arid Cen1nr Mounting. - Mount th grid condenser directly on the grid terminal of the detector tube socket To facilitate the wiring, all possible connections to the Instru-ment on th aubpanel should be made before attaching the aubpanel to the main or control panel. The connec-tion are aa follow i Tbe poaltlv fila-ment connection to all tube socket ; all connections to th first audio-frequenc-y transformer (or detector Jack If one Is nsed), and the secondary ter-minals of second audio transformer. The drilling of the main control panel la next In order. Tbe distance between the center shaft of the tuner and tbe center ahaft of the secondary condenser la approximately five and one-hal- f lnche. Th center bol for th detector filament control la three nd three-quartor- e lnche from th shaft hoi of the variable condenser. Inasmuch drilling tempiatea are supplied with all the Instruments, It Is a almpl matter to tocat the mount-ing hole. When the control panel ha been drilled and th various Instruments mounted In place, It should be fastened to the subpanel. Be sure that you have carefully followed the factory In- - The accompanying diagram ahows a receiver of very neat appearance which works well and Is also very easily constrncttd. The following material la necessary to build the act: Instrument Needed. On panel, 7 by 18 by 8 18 Inches. One Globe low-los- s tuner (short-wave type). One low loss variable condenser, mas nifd. capacity. One Midget variable condenser. Two sudlo transformers, ratio 8 to L One grid condenser, .00023 mfd. Three sockets, standard base. Three rheostat. On subpanel. One double-circu- it Jack. One single-circu- Jack. Two four-inc-h dials. Seven binding posts. Three tubes. One grid lesk, two megohm. The filament and plate battery lead may be embedded In a special subpanel, and this greatly simplifies th wiring of tae receiver. J The transformer and tub socket structlons for connecting the detector filament control. The small black bushing must be placed over the small-er of the two mounting screws so as to Insulate the soldering lug, to which the battery lead la connected, from the metal end-plat- e of the filament con-trol. Make all leads as short and direct a possible and prevent them from paralleling one another, particularly the plate and grid leads. Philadelphia Public Ledger. - mm 'after every meal ' . Parents- - tnetmnto the children heart for their tetik Give them h remove fooWd rJgleyfc. particle from the teeth. Strengthen the ftoaas. Combats add mouth. Brfreshlng sd beneficial 1 " STALE) f rWaX TIGHT HVSlrtA 111Pf'7 SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST! , Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Colds Headache yS! Toothache Lumbago &&Cj&j Neuritis Rheumatism Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions; Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablet Alao bottle of 24 and 100 Drug gist. JlrU la tt truW urt ( Bejer MteafMtwe tt kfoeMeetleecMMter f BailerUeM TaCuro a Cold Lk in T7r Ono fLM V ; The First and Original -v Cold and Grip Tablet Proven Safe for more than a Quarter of a Century as an effective remedy for , COLDS, GRIP, INFLU-ENZA and as a Preventive. Th box bear this slgnatur Price 80c. " ' - Children Cry Fon ll MOTHER-:- Fletcher's VVf-- - Castoria is especially pre-- x-- Vy " pared to relieve Infants in wC verms' and Children all ages ' - '. ' ' ' of Constipation, Flatulency, , ... Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising there-from, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep, . - To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Absolutely Harmless -- No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it f Performanc-e-is theSestTest Have you ever made thia test ol MomMotoi 1 Do it today. More mile, smoother miles, faster miles, with lest leu" of oil will show you hpw de-cisively MonsMotoy excels. MoniMotgf will sell you on perform ance. Stick to MoBaMotor- - Youll be satis, fied with MonaMotor performance. Yout motor will liver1 longer. Buy oil al the aign. Mnrtr fja gmpaaw Saa Francisco, Cal. Los Angeles, Cal MonaMotor Oil & Greases Lift OffNo Pain! Doesn't hurt one bit I Drop a little Freeaone" on aa aching corn. Instant ly that corn stop hurting, then short 7 too lift It right off with fingers. . Tour druggist sella a tiny bottle of j , Freetone'' for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot . calluses, without soreness or Irritation, 1K "nl! FH OVEIl 200 YEARG liaarlem oil has been a world-- . wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism,. lumbago and uric acid conditions. srj2jj?j22jrj eatTect internal trouble, stimulate vital . Oigans. Three sixes. All druggists. Insist ' ' v. r on the original genuine Gold Msdai. teaooiitlil) lof many other I IhrandB-lAdtswA- yl TBE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDIQ I Goes farther I lasts longer (ordinary 5ff& zstbtt tit times those ether brand I WHEN you are constipated, poisons in the accumulated food waste and are carried to all porta of the body. Headaches-follow- . Biliousness, in t somnia, lack of energy, all result from con-stipation, which if unchecked will lead to , - serious results.. Avoid Laxatives -- Say Doctors A noted authority says that laxative ' and cathartics do not overcome conatipa- - ' tion, but by their continued use tend only , to aggravate the condition. Medical science has found in lubrica-tion a means of overcoming constipation. , The gentle lubricant, Nujol, penetrates s and softens the hard food waste and thus hastens its passage through and out of the body. Thus, Nujol brings internal cleanliness. Nujol is used In leading hospitals and is prescribed by physicians throughout the world. Nujol is not a medicine or laxative, and cannot gripe. Like purs " water, it is harmless. Take Nujol regularly and adopt this habit of interna cleanliness. For sale by all druggists. ., -- For Internal Cleanliness I Try Joint-- E as o for Rheumatism . , When rheumatism settles In any of your Joints and causes agony, distress r misery, please remember that Joint-Eas- e Is the one remedy that brings julck and lasting relief. It matters not how chronic or aggra- -' fated a case may be rub on Joint : Ease and relief la sure to follow. . Joint-Eas- e Is for Joint trouble only and Is a clean, penetrating preparation , that druggists everywhere are recom Bending. . Always remember, when Joint-Eas- e ,'' gets In Joint agony gets out quick. ; ICJearYourSkin . 'Of Disfiguring1 Blemishes '.. ; Use Cuticura C-- TmhIi Sm Ohtant, Nana Atfna: W. N. U, 8alt Lake City, No. 25. j ALONG LIFE'S TRAIL Br THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Daae of Mea, Uaivareity af llliaols. llllllllLlhllllllll Iffffl 1111, Wwwa Mwilr t'aioe.) VIRTUE FOR VIRTUE'S SAKE T HAVE often wondered to Just how great an extent wa are Influenced In our conduct and In our daily ac-tion by tli Impression we make upon our friend or upon other who look on from th ildeline. Are we honest or virtuous or courageous or mielfln from principle, largely, or because we court th applanaa or the approval of the crowd, or fear the criticism or the unimpularity which come to ua from any untoward action T For myelf I do not know. Doe the organisation which keep It act and It membership cret, and there are many uvh of which w have soma knowledge, do o because of cowardice and fear of public cen-sure of what I done In the dark, or from modesty and from a dealre not to let It right hand know what Ita left I doing, a It were? Again 1 have not always been cure. I went to a big football game last month with the bleacher on each side of I lie gridiron reaching skyward Oiled with great Held of colorful shouting undergraduates. I have no doubt but t tin t If the struggling players on the Held had been asked, they would have said that they were putting forth their best physical efforts for the glory of Alma Mater and for the love of and skill In the game Itself. I wondered If the bleachers had been bare, and the coach gone, and no chance of seeing their names or their pictures in the city papers the next morning how gamely they would have struggled throughout those strenu-ous half hours. Would the reward of physical contest been In Itself ? Little Leon was a hufrky young ath-lete who often took with fortitude the physical punishments which came his way as part of the fortunes of war In the games he played. He never whim-pered at any hard knock, but only laughed at his bruises and tossed his heud In superior disdain when anyone asked hlin If he were hurt. He liked the applause that ciuue to him from belug brave. Hut one day th results were more serious, and he came out of the scrim mage with a compound fracture of bis arm. The doctor came quickly and all his mutes gathered round with awe-struck faces to watch the Avces of setting the splintered bones. Like Lincoln's boy who hud stubbed his toe Leon felt too old to cry and the arm hurt too badly for him to laugh. He atood It as long as he could, and then turning to the surgeon said as he tried bravely to keep buck the tears, "Doc-tor, don't you think we could hare a little privacy about this?" When he was nlone he gave himself over to weeping. Kven applause could not quite bolster up his courage. HEROISM IT WAS tbe old question that present-ed Itself to Jane Withers, "Wilt tliou be a hero or a coward?" and she answered it courageously. As a young girl she was wonderful. She had physical beauty that attracted attention everywhere she went; she was surprisingly athletic and could swim and ride horseback, and hold her own on the tennis court with the best of them. She had remarkable musical talent, and when It came to books, she lead everyone In her 'class. When she got to college It waa the same way. Socially she was the most popular girl on the campus, and she won all the scholastic prlsses In sight. And then something happened to Jane. In the midst of all her glorious youth disease seized her and twisted her limbs and racked her body with puln and left her a helpless cripple for life. She consulted the best physicians In this country and Kurope, but they all shook their heads hopelessly. Tbe best she could do was to be wheeled about in a chair, her feet useless, her hands swollen and twisted. But strangely, through all the suffer-ing that tortured her beauty of face and of character for twenty years, she sat In her wheel chair never uttering a word of complaint, never referring to her blasted ambitions, hut smiling, cheerful, her cheeks as fresh and" rosy, her hnlr as full of gold as when she was a school girl. "Y.ou'11 have to do all the big things In the world and tell me about them," she would say when we visited her. "I'll never be able to do anything, but must he satisfied with what my friends do." How much courage she put into us I What ambition she stirred! She was in fact still the best of us all, her spirit unconquered by physical disaster and disappointment. When at last she died, bravely and heroically as she had lived, the people whom she had cheered and stimulated by her heroism came to do her honor. We knew that she had succeeded better than any of us, and had helped us to succeed. "She has been a living example of heroism," one of her friends said, "to all of us. I know that many times , when I've thought of her, I've braced op and tried to act like a man In-stead of slumping out of the game. The fact that she has lived tins made living easier and more worth while to tbe rest of ua" j Altogether Different A lawyer wa examining a witness whom he had reuson to suspect of d tlberate perjury. At length, becoming Impatient, he asked, very Impressively: "Do you know the nature of an oath?" "I do." "Are you aware that you are com-manded In the Bible not to bear fain witness against your neighbor?" "I am; but I'm not bear In' false, wit-ness agin him. I'm bearur false wit-ness for hlin." t Shake Hand With Mr. Yi It you should happen to be on the rote d'Azur nnd should chance to meet a young man who signs himself Henry I'u XI, know that you have en-countered the erstwhile emperor of China who la touring Europe because he has nothing else . to do. Paris Figaro. Traveling Librariee More than 000,000 book were cir-culated last year In Saskatchewan by the traveling libraries that reach th - - . settlers and the smaller municipalities. There are more than 1,000 of these II-- braries. It Is said that each book la read by 17 families In the course of the year. If the extravagant try to be nig-gardly, they will be Just moderately economical. They ought to try It. , Must Diecard Clothing , Europeans and Americans who want to travel or study In the tropic must get over the bashfulnes of going without clothes, according to I'rof. P. F. Fyson of Berhampore, Henitul. The tropica will never be colonized by Americans or Europeans until they de-cide to live with the native dress. Clothing, he maintains. Interfere with the natural regulating action of th akin and makes It Impossible for the ' northerner to stand th climate ' Decline in Diphtheria . . Between 1013 and 1023 the death rate In diphtheria declined 10.3 per 'cent. At this rute deaths from dlph-- 1 therla will be negligible by 10,'Hl. Timber hatted Well Believed to be the lust old timber bridge to be used for heavy tratllc In Kngland, the bridge at North Sen ton, Northumberland, over tbe Hiver Wans-bec-has been In use for well over half a century. It Is to be replaced by a new steel viaduct f,04l feet long. " y Mined Hie Offspring ' A fanner sent the following letter ' to the admiralty: "My youngest son has gone away and enlisted In the navy. I can't get hlin out. Won't you help pie7 He I a good boy and I was bringing him up for my own use." " I Good Ground Connection la of Great Importance A good ground connection Is vital to the best operation of the radio re-ceiver. On crystal sets, where the amount of energy employed Is small, the additional volume resulting from the use of a good ground or several good grounds Is readily noticeable. Tbe Increase In volume with tube sets Is not so pronounced, but the rsnge of the receiver Improves as the effi-ciency of the ground connection I In-creased. t. The best ground connection Is made by connecting to the cold water pipes, or to a pipe or Iron rod driven Into the ground until It reaches moist soil. In either esse the connection between the ground wire from the set snd the metal of the pipe la of utmost Importance. Simply wrapping the wire around the pipe la a makeshift It la difficult to solder a wire to a pipe, especially If the pipe contains water. Scrape or file the surface of the pipe until all paint and rust have Clamp Supplied With Winged Nut for Tightening. been removed. Place a ground clamp around the prepared spot tighten the clamp and then solder the ground wire to the clamp. In this way a good con-nection la assured. Inasmuch as the ground clamp Is usually located In some place, to be forgotten after It Is In-stalled, It is most Important that It be constructed of good material that will not rust or corrode. W'heh buying a ground clamp try to secure one that Is eonstrueted of copper. Is rugged and substantial, that has a wide band, so that a good surface contact can be se-cured all around the pipe Instead of In one or two points, and can be easily installed. of water buffaloes are being shipped from China to the United States for 'manufacture Into suitcases. A "pick-up- " motor sweeper, with gutter broom, for cleaning streets,. r ;1 quires, only one man for operation." - f I IH 1 1 I I I I I I I I 1 1 I 1 1 I II I I :; HERE'S THE WAY TO :: CARE FOR BATTERY ; ; !! T"EEP th battery charged. !! ; Never lay tool on top of ! a battery or they may cause a '. ; complete discharge by abort- - ) ; ! ! circuiting It '. Add nothing except distilled;; . . wster. II ; ; Acid should never be added ; ; unless some has been spilled ; ; from the cells accidentally. ; Boiled water Is not distilled ; ; water. ; ; ; A discharged bsttery will ; freeze easily, while a folly ; charged one will not freeze In ; ; I ! this climate. I ! To find the positive and nega- - ; ! ! ttve poles of a battery when no I ; marks are visible fill a glass ; ; I vessel half full of salt and cover ; with water. Run a wire from ', each terminal of the battery and ; ; hold them about one Inch apart ; In the solution. Bubbles will ; ; rise from the negstlve wire.' '. ', Also, there Is usually more ; ; greenish corrosion around the ! ! ' positive terminal than the nega- - ! ! tive. Never light a match and took ; ; ! I in the vent cups. The hydrogen I ; ; gas In the battery is liable to ; ; '. '. explode and cause serious In-- ; ; jury to the eyes. , ; ; Keep the battery charged and ; ; don't let It get "thirsty."- - --Chi- ; ; cago Evening Post Ti 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 it When Necessary Amount of Power Is Lacking Many good sets fall to deliver suffi-cient volume on the loud speaker be-cause they are not supplied with th necessary power to do so. Forty-fiv- e volts on the plates of the amplifiers will not deliver enough current to th magnets of the loud speaker to pro-duce loud signals. Ninety volt will give much better results, and la cer-tainly worth th additional cost An extra grid bias is sometimes necessary with higher voltage, and this la sup-plied with a 4H volt C battery, which Is connected between the F post of th transformer and the filament Th negative terminal of the battery con nects to F and the positive terminal to th filament Brass Angle Brackets Are Cheap and Useful Short brass strips bent In the form of a right angle and with screw holes bored near each end are now In stock In most radio supply stores. Such bracket can be made at home by the radio fan but the' stores sell them so cheaply that home construction 1 not worth while. They are useful for mounting a subpanel on the front panel or for mounting the panel In a vertical position on the basehoard. - Care of Headphones Never emsve the caps from bend phones. This is decidedly harmful tf the receiver; that Is, it Impairs th efficiency of the units for tbe follow-ing reason : When the phones are test-ed to the factory the receiver caps are tightened ucttl the pressure upon the diaphragm is Just right This test Is made With delicate instruments. |