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Show TFIE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH This Years Style in Locomotives OUlE O 1mm X LEGION Supplied by tbs American Lesion News Service ) g' BOY SCOUT TROOPS IN LEGION POSTS e Set That Was Completed Within One Hour. Three-Tub- By CHESTER CHARLTON In Radio World. Tlie one-hoset Is not one that simply lasts an hour, but one that It takes only one hour to make. It will last for many years and will reader excellent service. The radio side of the circuit consists of the Justly famous three-circui- t tuner. The audio channel comprises two stages of transformer Hence the coupled amplification. All three sockets are a three tubes. unit. part of the detector-amplifie- r Only the radio bide need be wired. The only change I mude was to cut the lead that comes from the F posts o the two audio transformers to Insert a C battery (as shown In diagram). Coll Information. commercial three-circuof the , Any tuning colls may be used In this circuit .The one shown tunes with a .0005 mfd. variable condenser. It has a pancake tickler. However, some other sort of tickler will do as well. For Instance, If you wind your own diameter coll, you may use a tubing for the stator, 4 Inches high,, placing 10 turns of No. 24 double wire near the top (LI). Terminate. Leave spuce and wind 45 turns of wire In the same direction for the secondary (L2). The tickler would consist of as many turns of the same kind of wire as you can put on any tubing that will rotate Inside the Remember that a shaft secondary. has to pass through the secondary, hence wind the tickler coll so as to leave anchorage room thereon for the shaft where It must be Joined to the tickler form. A stralghtllne capacity tuning condenser was used. This has plates. The fact that the condenser has an Insulation does not mean that the condenser Is not low-losIt Is. To make the tuning more one-inc- h it d h semi-circul- end-plat- e s. Standard Type of Tuned Radio-Frequenc- Outfit y The growing tendency to use high voltages In audio frequency amplifiers often results In the application of the same voltages to the radio frequency tubes, due to the fact that separate binding posts for the radio frequency and audio frequency I? positive taps are not provided for In many sets. The accompanying Illustration shows a convenient end practical method of varying the voltage on the tubes, by the use of a high resistance. The circuit shown Is not new, but Is a standard type of tuned outfit, Illustrated to show where the high resistance should be radio-frequenc- y radio-frequenc- convenient on the .lower waves, and yet avoid crowding on any part of the dial, a converted diul was used. The Parts Needed. You need get only a 7 by panel, a .005 mfd. variable condenser, a dial vernier, If you use frequency condensers, or a converter, a 7 by baseboard, a grid leak, and a knob. The layout of the parts is very simple. As the condenser Is the only real tuning element, It alone has a dial. The tickler coll Is turned by means of a knob, even a rheostat knob, or, If dedial may he used here. sirable, a' The rheostats, Jack, and even the fixed condensers, Including the grid condenser, are part of the detector-amplifie- r unit. lficlude The wiring precautions these: Connect the rotor plates of the variable coudenser to the glid return side of (he coll L2, the coil, If you make your own. This Is the connection made to "A" plus. Connect the aerial coll so that the groundjind."A" plus connections adjoin. This accounts for two terminals, one each of primary and secondary, and the other connect tlons of these windings go to aerial and grid condenser, respectively. The tickler or movable coll inay be Joined to the plate of the detector tube In either manner, that Is, either terminal to plate. Actual Time, 57 Minutes. h The first radical change in railroad engines brought out In fifteen years Is, evident In the New Union Pacific type. It has 3 cylinders Instead of 2, has 12 drivers, G on each side; Is 102i feet long, 16 feet l1 Inches high, and 11 feet 2 Inches wide. This new type will haul 125 carloads of freight at passenger speed of 50 miles per hour. It will be used between Cheyenne. Wyo., and Ogden, Utah. Session Will Finish Varies h in The usual preadjournment legislative Jam Is piling up in Estimates as to the date congress. on which the session will end rang'a from .May 29 to July 15, with ultimate selection depending entirely on how many pieces of legislation are to be enacted. With the adjournment question still hanging in the' air, the house will resume during this week Its work on farm relief bills the Haugen, and Tincher measures. On Tuesday the house will debate the highly controverted point of the major crop equalization fee contained in the Haugen bill, With discussion expected to run over Thursday and Friday, making it possible to reach a vote by the week-end- . The senate will resume consideration of the migratory bird reservation bill which has been under attack on the ground that it will dlscrinimate in favor of wealthy hunters. The senate commerce committee will meet tomorrow to decide whether it has power to advise the shipping board to set aside the sale of five president type mall liners out of Seattle to the Dollar interests for Washington. VOTE STRESSED . PRIMARY RESULT MAY EFFECT PRESIDENT, MELLON OF PROHIBITION ISSUE Fight Bitter Between George Pepper and Gcw. Pinchot, With Vare as Leading Wet; It Also Secretary Mellon ts Washington. With one exception, the Pennsylvania primary on Tuesday is the most Important single event of the present political year. The exception Is the case of Senator Butler of Massachusetts, and the only reason for the Massachusetts elections greater Importance lies In the fact that Senator Butler's personal and geographiThe set shown In the photographs was completed In 57 minutes, but we cal Intimacy with President Caolidge will coll It an hour. This Included will cause the senators fate to be in- ?4, 500,000 and reopen negotiations for the drilling of the panel and the terpreted as having a direct bearing disposal of the ships. mounting of the dial, two Items that on the prestige and power of the presWarsaw Is Now Normal require a little care and hence took a ident himself. For the Importance of Pennsylvangood fraction of the time. There are only about a dozen connections to ia primaries on 'Tuesday, there are Warsaw. Warsaw has settled down make. The leads are brought out to many reasons. It constitutes the best to Its accustomed calm under the conbinding posts on the unit, and a oportunity the wets have to register trol of Marshal Piludski, with M. Rad-jmarked battery cable should be used a striking advance in any of this as acting president, and- - a ministry for convenience In establishing con- year's pending thirty three senatorial under Professor Charles functioning tacts at the batteries. primaries and elections. Bartel, until the national assembly It determines the fate of so distin- meets 'sometime during the. present connected In series with the supply guished a senator as George W. Pep- week to elect a president. The former to the radio frequency tubes only, the per. It effects Secretary Mellon close- president, M. Wojciechowski, has been tap in the Illustration connect- ly because he has deliberately solicit- given a passport and lermitted to reing to the audio frequency tubes di- ed the people of Pennsylvania to iden- tire to the presidential summer resitify Pepper's fate with his own. This dence at Spala. Some of the minisrectly. Any variable resistance of suitable Pcnsylvania primary will either close ters of his former cabinet are still under guard at Wilanow, but the minvalue may be used In this manner to the politica'l career of Governor or else give him a powerful isters of railways has boon allowed nis control voltage on It. F. tubes. The Illustration shows the Centralab re- shove toward a greater career than he liberty. Among the members of The. sistance. The Brndleyohm and the has yet had. It will measurably ousted government who are in the whether the prohibition Issue custody of Pilduski are M. Zdziechow-ski- , Clnrohtat are others which should serve satisfactorily. Cleveland News.- Is to figure in the 1928 presidential Senator Smuslia, General Malcze-wsk- l and Generals Rovadowri, Anders, primaries and elections. If the "wet candidate should win it will reveal Zogorski, Kessler and Zunzynski. Why Your Radio Tubes in the Pennsylvania as a "wet Need Filament Light Republican party almost asspotconspicuBill To Provide U. S. Building The fact that a radio bulb does emit ously as the Democrats have In New light is entirely an Incidental feature York. Salt Lake City. Appropriation of of Its operation. What Is desired in a Persons outside Pennsylvania can $925,000 for the construction of a new tube Is a flow of little particles of best be given an understanding of the federal building in Salt Lake will be electricity called "electrons, ntul the situation by a brief chronological included in the appropriation bill of easiest way to obtain It Is to burn statement. George W. Pepper was ap- the next, or seventieth session of concertain kinds of wires In glass bulbs pointed to the senate four years ago and members of the Utah from which the air has been ex as the successor of Senator Penrose gress, delegation are confident that hausted. and by roughly the same political or- a lands bill, assuring western public The temperature must be quite hlgo ganization of which Penrose was the states title to school lands granted In order to make the flow copious, and head. The selection of Pepper exthe government, and a bill to reby white-hot most wires must be heated the comparatively steady imburse Salt Lake donors of $20,000 pressed by the current from the A buttery for though sometimes interrupted tradi- for construction of ail mail hangars at proper operation. Of course, the Intion of Pennsylvania that its senators Woodward field, will be enacted by candescent wire, or filament, ns It at should be men of a the present session. Washington Is correctly called, emits considerable higher type of intellect and character light, but this phenomenon has that it was the custom to put in ordinAmundsens Party Arrives Safe ' connection with the funcary office. By a similar Pennsylvania tube from of the the radio tioning tradition, Pepper shauld now be reNome, Alaska. Captain Roald Amstandpoint. It Is quite possible to obtain a turned for a second term without op- undsen, Lincoln Ellsworth, Captain That, in fact, was the pro- Oscar stream of the minute electrons In a position. Wisting and Lieutenant Oskar tube by the use of 'certain substances gram that remains of the old Penn- Omdahl of the crew of eighteen of the known as "radioactive materials, but sylvania Republican organization as dirigible Norge arrived here from Teltheir expense and rarity make their now captained loosely by Secretary ler, sevenlv-fivmiles northwest, lq practical application extremely- limit- Mellon and Senator David Reed. the launch Pippin at 5 oclock thfs ed. Iludlum and radium compounds morning. The Norge reached Teller' are foremost In this radioactive Report Shows Farm Products Rise from Spitzbergen via the north pole group, so the cost of tubes equipped Washington. Farm products and at 8 oclock Thursday night- - The Pipwith filaments of this precious ele- foods were slightly higher at whole- pin was dragged fourteen miles to ment can easily be Imagined. No A sale in April as compared with March open water over the frozen bay of rebattery Incidentally,, would be but nearly all other oomomditles Port Clarence at TOlu-- before It quired for such tubes, as the flow of showed a narrow decline the depart- could put off for the trip down the electrons from radioactive compounds ment of labor The bureaus coast of the Bering sea. It was a reported. Is automatic and continuous. a 90-vo- lt Pin-cho- t, - . nbso-lutelyT- e Plans Falling for the sponsoring of a boy scout troop by each of the 10,000 American Legion posts of the nation, training of Legion scout masters to conduct the troops and the formation of a national Legion boy scout organization to expand further the Legions with the Boy Seout of America, were launched recently. A national committee to carry out the plans Is being formed with II. D. McBride of St. Louis, scout commissioner, as chairman. The Legions scout organization will consist of post, state, regional and national committees. Every Legion post will be encouraged to organize a boy scout troop. The committees will place definite emphasis on the camping out and outdoor activities of scouting. Where practicable, Legionnaires will attend scout training courses before assuming positions of active scout leadership. Posts of, the Legion will promote, provide or conduct permanent and temporary boy scout camps in every rommunlty, according to established -- standards. They will assist In organizing and conducting week-en- d hikes, rallies, athletic exhibitions and field events. The Legion during the past three years has formed or sponsored 1,000 scout troops In the country. A special effort will be made to d reach boys, or those who ordinarily have no opportunity to Join troops affiliated with churches, schools, etc., declared Mr. McBride. e e Reed-Johnso- n ice officials in Washington. Approximately 30,000 of the 55,000 persons benefiting under the law had never before received compensation from the government in any form, and the others profited on account of increased payments. Hundreds of thousands of cases that were lying untouched In the Veterans bureau owing to the inadequacy of the law previous to the passage of the bill on June 7, 1924, are now being reviewed. Veterans or their dependents have already benefited as follows: 12,000 tubercular veterans were awarded $13,000,000 in compensation: mentally incompetent veterans were compensated at a cost of $7,500,000 ; dependents of disabled veterans numbering 4,330 received $300497 additional allowances and 12,344 dependents of dead veterans received increased allowances amounting to $1,154,280 for the care of 994 veterans and nearly a million dollars in compensation was awarded to 800 veterans suffering from wilful misconduct diseases. Reed-Jolinso- n Award Legion Medals to School Graduates Grammar school boys of the nation who best exemplify the qualities of courage, scholarship, leadership, service and honor will be awarded American Legion medals upon graduation. The national executive committee of the Legion has authorized posts throughout the nation to award the medals In connection With the Legions national program of cultivating good citizenship. The American Legion Auxiliary has authorized a medal to be presented to girls under conditions similar to those which govern the Legion award to boys. Posts may secure the Legion school medals through the Emblem division, national headquarters, Indianapolis, Ind. - r Method of Varying Voltage an Radio-Frequen- Tubes. connected In such a set. The same Idea Is explicable to intermediate stages of a superheterodyne or to other forms of amplification. Whore the amplification voltage Is beton 00 and 135 the resistance may be '('00,000 ohms maximum, although much lower values usually will give the desired results. The principal point to b considered In choosing such a Is Its ability to go down to low values of resistance. fairly Jfote that the variable resistance Is radio-frequenc- y less expensive chemical Certain compounds of high electron emitting have been successfully properties employed In radio tubes. The wire which ordinarily must be burned at white beat Is coated with a layer of one of these compounds, and the tube is then operated at a mere dull cherry-red heat. In many of the modern tubes, of both the coated and uncoated varieties, 11 file or no light is visible through the glass, because of the Inner coating of mercury which lines the bulbs. The heaviness of this coating varies considerably, as will, therefore, the amount of light that penetrates through It, so no slgniti cance can be attached to the brU Uance of the Illumination. weighed index numberTwhich includes (Of comomdities or price series with 151.5 for April compared With 151.5 for March. For A pul 1925 the Index number was 156.2. gloomy voyage. Captain Peterson piloted the little launch In which the quartet left to complete the voyage originally planned for the airship from Spitzbergen to Nome. Passenger Air Service Starts Sevier County Fights Pest Utah. The white top Richfield, control campaign, recently initiated by the Sevier County Farm bureau, Is going forward, extensively, according to announcement by S. R. Boswell, county agent. The Sevier county commissioners have been called on to cut all the weens on the county and state highways. The railroad company has initiated a movement to measure the areas on the right of way in order to determine the cost of salting the same. May 23 passen- Los Angeles, Calif. Daily ger service over the Los Angelc Lake City airway will be Inaugurated May 23. Harris M. Hansae, president of the Western Ah 'Express announced The passenger traffic will Sunday. bo handled by the company? planes operating under coi.tract with the government for carrying air mail between the two points. Each plane will accommodate two passengers and that number can be carried each way every day. cold and Reasonable Explanation laborer had just fallen from the heights of a tall building being constructed. Head first and like a projectile he crashed downward and disappeared through an opening In the sidewalk connecting with the basement. The foreman rushed down, exA negro pecting to find a mangled corpse, but instead discovered Jazzbo reposing in a mass of waste paper. "Man ! did you killed? how the foreman, manage to escape being gasped Boss, Ah dunno," groaned Jazzbo, rubbing his head. "Optin' dat cement sidewalk must of broke mah fall. The American Legion Weekly. Built an Airport When it was pointed out that Boise, Idaho, needed an airport and the grounds for the port had been donated but no funds were available to build It, the local post of the American Legion said: Well build it. They did build it and now Boises airport is receiving the fleets of the air. ill in bait Lake Condition of the sheep and cattle of th6 state is excellent and is nearly 15 per cent improved over the corresponding period lcs year, giving evidence that the livestocks men of the state will have a -- prosperous year, providing they re- ceive fair prices, George A. Scott, livestock statistician for the seven Western states, announced in his report.-Myton The following facts have been assembled, relative to reclaimed land in Duchesne and Uintah counties. The total acreage is placed at 284,478. The two largest irrigation projects are the Dry Gulch Irrigation company of Roosevelt, containing 53,000 acres, and the Uintah and Ouray agency project, containing 80,583 acres. Salt Lake Plans for the annual convention of the district school superintendents of the state have been completed and,t,ne program of the convention arranged, according to announcement from the office of Dr. C. N. Jensen, state superintendent of The convention public instruction. is to be held at the University of Utah on June 21 and 22, and copies of the program planned have been sent to each of the district superintendentsr Salt Lake Increases in average milk and butterfat production for April over the preceding month, March, are reported by two of the association mainfour tained by dairymen in the Cache valley. The association whose cows bettered their March average during April were the Riehmond-Lewistowarn associaand Wellsville-Collegcow-testin- " thousand World war veterans and their dependents had received additional benefits approximating twenty-ninmillions of dollars under the provisions of the bill, sponsored by the American Legion, and its amendments up to the beginning of the year 1926, according to advices from Legion servFifty-fiv- Prii)iltrm fn Yankee, 1. under-prlvilige- Millions of Dollars for Disabled Veterans j Eureka Mines of the Tintic district shipped 167 carloads of ore during the week that just ended. Following are the mines and their shipments Tintic Standard, (in carload lots): 65; Chief Consolidate!!, 32; American Smelting and Refining (dump ore), ?6; Bingham Mines, 19; Mammoth, 14; Plutus, 10; Iron King, 8; Colorado, i; (Copy for This Dep&rtmont The Circuit Diagram of the News Notes I It n g n e tions. Salt Lake City. Distribution of the waters of the Sevier river system as between the Sevier Bridge reservoir and the Piute reservoir interests will be made in accordance with the engineers proposed determination until such time as instructions to do otherwise are received from the court, according to a letter written by George M. Bacon, state engineer, to Brice McBride, water commission on the system. Salt Lake City. Early opening dates have been announced for both Zion and Yellowstone National parks, due to expected heavy tourist travel, D. S. Spencer, general passenger agent for the Union Pacific railroad, said. Zion park will open May 15, fifteen days before the usual opening date, and Yellowstone will open June 30, while special parties will be permitted to enter the park June 16. Salt Lake City Heavy showers, especially in the middle and northern counties of the state, greatly improved water supplies for farms and towns but lower temperatures and deficient sunshine retarded crop growth to a certain extent, according to the weekly crop and weather report issued by J. Cecil Alter, in charge of the local office of the weather bureau. Brigham City. Superintendent C. H. Skidmore returned during the Week from a trip to the western part of the country, where he inspected the various schools. The superintendent says that the recent rainstorm extended all over the county, and that there was from two to four inches of rainfall. The dry farm grain and other crops are looking better than ever before, and this last storm has made certain the maturing of these crops. h the Amalgamated shared the unfavorcompany Sugar able sales conditions writh other sugar manufacturing companies, the annual report of President Henry H. Rolapp, given to the stockholders at their annual meeting shows the company to be in excellent condition. Ogden.--Althoug- Price. At a public hearing in Price on June 7 the Carbon county board of commissioners will consider applications for additional allowances of about $55,000 in the county road department and $50 In the recorders of- fice. Logan. Director William Peterson of the Utah experiment station discussed at the weekly Kiwanis luncheon this afternoon the' proposed further reclamation of Cache Valley through the development of supple-mentwater supplies with which to 0 Insure full irrigation rights to the acres of irrigatable land. al 60,-00- Brigham City. Following work in the elimination of the scrub dairy bull and its replacement by purebred sires. County Agricultural Agent R. H. Stewcircle art announces that a has been formed in Mantua and Ferrj Each of these circles will contain on an average each month from 75 to 125 cows on test. A plan has been worked out by the county agent and his committees which promises to be successful, and, at the same timi. cost the owner of the cow but little cow-testin- g money. . |