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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE, UTAH - -- - Well for All at This Time to Remember! the Occasion of Thanksgiving Day By REV. i THANKSGIVING wzco. 5 C. : 7 7 is O 40 M J 40 . HAU 1W 140 VCHTJ Copyright, 2 FIG. JJatfto Brcadccut, How to Calculate Tube Constants. 1926. Plate Impedance It Ascertained With a Simple of means That It la not beyond the the average radio fan to calculate the constants of his own tubes Is amply proved by the enlightening article on this subject by Keith Henney, laboratory expert, In the "Special Shows Number" of Radio Broadcast magazine. The only apparatus necessary,.besldes the tube socket, rheostat, batteries, and perhaps, a potentiometer to control grid bias, consists of two meters a double-rang- e voltmeter and a milliani-- , meter. The former should have ranges of from 0 to 10 and 0 to 100 volts, while the milliammeter should red up to 10 mils., and, as higher readings may be required of It, a shunt will be necessary. The object of a shunt Is to enable higher readings v than the maximum figure marked on the dial face to be read. In his Radio Broadcast article Mr. Henney explains how the amplification factor, plaie Impedance, mutual conductance, and d. c. and a. c. resistances may be found. Here It is Intended briefly to outline his method of arriving at the plate Impedance. Suppose It Is desired to obtain the above characteristic of a standard 201-tube. We first of all set up our apparatus as shown In the accompanying Fig. 1. Here a voltmeter Is shown connected across each of the three sets of batteries, but, of course, our one dcuble-rang- e meter Is all that is nec- essary, for only one reading Is taken y at a time. The grid battery should consist of a storage battery or several batteries, so that variations are possible. or l4-voA potentiometer is not shown in the diagram but one may be used to nd- -' vantage for varying the grid bias. "How to Proceed. ', The set-u- p complete,' we place our voltmeter across the filament posts of the socket and adjust the rheostat until the meter rends 5 volts. For our first curve, that shown as Eg0 on the chart, we shall omit the grid battery. Eg represents grid bas. Having obtuined a piece of graph paper and marked it off similarly to the chart shjjwn herewith, we are t ready to proceed. We adjust the "B" steps and battery voltage In read the plate current for each step. Thus we are able to plot a curve such as that one marked Eg0 on the ac- ' eompanjing chart. To get the plate Impedance at zero volts grid bias then, welitilize the following formula. In which Rp represents the plate Impedance: Chanse In Plate Voltage Rp Change In i'late Current Referring to our chart, we read that, with a zero blast a plate voltage of 120 volts gives us a plate current and, a plate voltage gives us 3 mllliamps. plate current. We put down that information thus: Plate Voltage Plate Current Apparatus. densers In this circuit were matched with the others. The reason for this is simple. While the circuits controlled by the second and third condensers by virtue of the fact that they are both fed from the plate of a preceding tube, the circuit tuned by the first condenser is being energized by the antenna and ground system, and Is therefore unlike the diagram Is shown which makes possible the ganging (tandem tuning) of the three circuits by means of the addition of an extra tube ahead of resistance, Its grid circuit being untuned. To the output of the new tube Is connected 'the former Input of the Thus, the previous first r. f. stage. Input of the two r. f. stages and the detector circuit are all connected to the plate circuit of a preceding tube 1 pref-eiabl- lt 0- - 10 Volts -l-llf - C It r o -- 100 Volts 0 - of Iowa. ; The most important age of childhood is from birth to six years. It during this period that the majority of the problems of adolescence first manifest themselves to the child psychologist. The study of the young girl is furnishing the basis data for a science of parent training which is rapidly becoming a now profession in L America. The personality of a child is a changing, complex unity. The new psychology of childhood studies this personality as an integration of the mental, moral, social, emotional and physical aspects of development. We have found that personalities of little children can be tremendously modified and improved through modern methods of observation and "A large mash consumption Is necessary for the maximum number of eggs," says K E. Cray, extension specialist in poultry at the Ohio State university. Therefore, it will pay to Induce the hus to eat as much mash as possible. One suggestion that Mr. Cray makes Is that the grain be fed only in the evening, which will cause the hens to eat more of the mash than they otherwise would.. Plenty of space at the mash hoppers Is also recommended as another means of bringing about larger consumption of mash. Timid hens will be crowded away If the space around the hoppers is small. One foot of hopper space Is suggested for every five, B 22-vo- lt 48-vo- lt 120 48 13 3 Radio Broadcatt, By KATHERINE and, providing the coils and condensers are matched, they may be tuned by one three-gan- g condenser. It would be possible to gang the three condensers without adding the tube, but this would require extremely accurate cutting of the condenser plates so as to compensate for any effect of the antenna circuit This is a difficult Job, and it is preferable to' either retain two controls or to use single-contran extra tube. Many receivers are equipped with some compensating device which permits exact tuning of each circuit to resonance. In some cases this device consists of a small midget condenser connected In parallel with one of the main tuning elements; sometimes the stationary plates of one of the condensers are mounted on a pivot so as to permit more accurate tuning. Rut no receiver that has such an adjustable feature can be called a single-contrset. ol ol 10 Mils. Change 78 Volts Chnnge We must use volts, ohms, and amperes In our formula above, and so we convert our 10 mil. to .010 amps., and substitute In the formula: 78 7,800 ohms Rp .010 Therefore, the plate impedance at zero volts grid bias Is 7,800 ohms. Further curves may be drawn to obtain t tie plate Impedance at various grid biases, and these are shown in Fig. 2 . ns Eg4, Eg-4- . Eg-8- , and Tandem Tuning Condensers. Tandem tuning of condensers, to the number of separate controls, has become quite common. There are some fundamental facts concerning tandem tuning which must be considered if satisftctory results are to be obtained, and these are Interestingly outlined iu a short article In the Radio Broadcast magazine. The output and input characteristics in which the tuned circuits work must be exactly similar In each stage before the condensers may be (successIn a standard circuit fully ganged. with two stages of tuned radio frequency amplification, it is not a difficult matter to gang the condensers across the secondary coils of the transformers in the grid circuit of the second radio frequency and detector the colls are stages, proid!ng It would not be possible, matched. lowever, to control the condenser tuning the grid circuit of the first radio frequency tube by 'he same knob which control the other two condensers, even though the colls and con Eg-10- se GLOVER, National Health Council. hens. 1926. Diagram Showing How to Set Up the Apparatus. Signals Stronger in Dark, Scientist Says If the mash is moistened with milk occasionally, the hens will appreciate the variety and will eat large quantities. , The physical examination of school children has become an accepted thing in most classrooms. Weighing and measuring at regular intervals as an index of development, protection of the teeth and eyes, some form of health education, all these things the schools along Main street report. One of the great general gains which may be counted in this progress is the recognition of health as one of the primary objectives of education. One of the most interesting phases of one survey was an inquiry ino the habits of 33,000 school children of the fifth grades of schools in 86 cities. The composite which this habit picture gives is hopeful. It shows d an who gets ten hours' sleep, who averages a fraction over two glasses of milk a day (not enough, of course, and with h of the 35,000 drinking no milk at all), it shows him familiar at least tfitli the Saturday night bath, given to brushing his teeth and visiting the dentist. lie goes to school in a building which is, in most cases, clean; tfhere the common drinking cup is a thing of the past, where the vacuum Jeaner is beginning to displace the duster and the broom, and the radi .ttor is displacing the open stove. Main street, in a word, is awake to health. Late Molters Best Layers In culling a flock. It is first necessary that something be known about the kind and regularity of the feed, the housing conditions and the care the birds have received. It is well known that Improper feed, housing or care can easily throw a flock into an early molt The time that a hen goes through her molt will be a good Indication of her ability as an egg producer. Those that molt late in the fall are usually the best layers. eleven-year-ol- one-fift- " Poultry Hints Dirty eggs cost the farmers millions of dollars a year. What Is Called "Badness" in Most Boys . Turkeys of good breeding that la, stock are always In good demand for breeding. Usually Merely Misdirected Energy By CHARLES pure-bre- d Even when ducks and geese have a sand run it is well to put about 1 per cent In the mash once aday. W. BEECHING, St. Louis. There is no such thing as a bad boy. Most of the badness Proof of the theory that shadow of ,s misdirected energy. "opaqueness" rather than ether Is the conductor of radio waves was obWe all know the type of boy called a "bully." Many persons feel tained at a test made at the govern- that a bully is headed straight for a criminal career, but this is nol ment air mail field at Maywood, 111., necessarily so. according to A. J. Mussulman, originator of the "opaqueness" theory, who is really a form of leadership. The Hulking, bully of a gam-iconducted the test with the its lender. Bullying is a natural tendency easily developed "by the m of A. Krietag, government radio of and the if it exercise boys, and jority others. they usually they can get awav with it operator, Another tendency possessed by all boys before the The nntenna of a government age of "twelve is transmitter and the aerial of a lying. Boys of early age will usually lie to escape punishment. A bov will ... receiving set were placed In the path, ni-.,-tie to those ne not generally loves, likes, respects or admires, his friends. of a searchlight, 1,000 yards apart. Frletag then Therefore, if a boy is made to feel he is surrounded by friends, that he is sent the Morse alphabet, white Mussel-main a lnendly world, the apparent necessity for lying will disappear. and others were stationed at the receiving set witk- an audibility meter. Signals came through stronger, according to Musselman, when the great beams of light through which the waves were made to pass were turned off. The scientist said that the lack of difference in the strength of the By DR. EUGENE LYMAN FISK, New York. sigr.sil when the light beam was merely switched away from the antenna and The wxjraan who conceals her age is a public beneactor. was aerial, but not turned off, Through her favorably to the theory. determination to stay young in face and finre. she sets nn k..ut. standards for herself and those about her. The modern woman instead of Start Drill in Dent solely on disguising evidences of age through superficial beautv Never try (o drill a hole in a hake-lit- e relying or inrd rubber panel without first culture, is beginning, to concern herself with the root causes of ,t?e !UV ill providing a starting dent for the drill health which she realizes must be sought for and eradicated if she is to ev with a center punch, without Kuch a tend her span of health and youth. punch mark the drill will "walk" all Xo home can be happy unless its neonie are healthv.- '!,.. over the jmnej. i;o matter how ctxe-fui- lj iv.i .i;,. yui u: 'hreates look up a doctor, not a lawyer. you hold the drill itsel?. ugar-coate- Do not keep longer the old hens which have ceased to lay and have With very few gone Into a molt. exceptions, they are not high producers. s d g long-Lutin- "Albert stands for Better Breakfasts' L Flapjacks and syrup! What shiny start for the day! And a sun- there i one thing sure about Flapjacks they're always tender, never soggy, ! At your grocer's in the handy round carton with the replaceat le lid! always light and 44 Book Is. City. M Justice for GoldenroA as Cuticura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retiring In the nots of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub In R Kemove sorp" tlcura Olutment. Ointment with tissue paper. This only one of the things Cuticura will a if Soap, Ointment and Talcum are Advertises --'or all toilet purposes. Canada's Fish "Crop" Fish caught around Canada's waff and in inland' waters last year tu tor nearly $50,000,000. It was largest catch since 1020 and excew the five-yeaverage by 13 per cent tKj The Morse code has been found slow for telegrams in France an government owned system will use "teletype," similar to the ticker. Keep Fit! Good Health Requires Elimination Good k be well, jon must B blood stream free lmnnritiL If the kidneys allowing body poisons to TO ated. One is apt to feel and acny. languid, . tiredi - : ,nt!ffie ging DacKacne w production the feeder should never fill the trough with more feed than will be consumed before the next feeding period. Ground chess and wheat screenings feed, and care must be taken not to feed too much of it Pound for pound, It will take the place of most other grains. j: mill uiurvub. -ii..,o r.rttlS r- - ' Stimulant Diuretic to th Kub? n..ir.lA.ItI Fotter MIIburn Co.,Mfc.Chemlt.u" HURT? ge, I ! i ! i the United &" throughout Ask your neighbor! In order to succeed with turkeys It Is necessary to start with strong, vigorous birds. The best turkeys for breeding are those two years old" or older, as a turkey is never at her best until that j aches and dizzy spells. T pw kidneys are not functioning oy stiown is often erly or scanfy passage of If you have reason to suspe roper kidney functioninft; W tean'e Pills a tested Is heavy Woman a Benefactor in Determination to Stay Young in Fac and Figure Deseret The goldenrod was once popul, and loved by the poets, but was laa b;i fined because of the accusation tfc it was the cause of hay fever. K rumors indicate that Justice is abfii to be done and the goldenrod resto? to its old place in popular favor. T ragweed, and not the goldenrod, now thought to be the offender. Ttef are 37 varieties of the goldenrod some of these .varieties may be fwri in nearly every state In thenw Thus goldenrod lovers will welwe its restoration. For profitable and effective poultry n Any book you ms -- by mail, C 0.1 East So. Temple, bait Lake The late hatched chicks neither add to your average egg production nor Increase the vitality of the flock. ik easy-to-e- BOOMS low-wav- e 4.K),000.000-cundle-pow- d for Production of Eggs , Copyright, A treat In the Peppenniat.fljJ jacket' and another die Peppermint-flavoregum it&A unnost value in d Mash Feed Is Important Health Education in Childhood Is Now Recognized as of Primary Importance Hlllh well-mator- ed enj-phas- - is that Is commonly believed pullets will produce more hens a year older. How than eggs much more has been studied by the Maine department station. The result! of this study add strength to the on pullets as egg producers. The records covering several yean and a considerable number of flocks show that pullets produced about 40 per cent more rggs than they did In their second year pt laying.- Not only was the production larger but the greater per cent were laid during the period of high prices. That is, properly handled, maturea pullets will produce more of the eggs during the winter months the first year than they will the second year of egg production. Another factor in favor of keeping as high a per cent as possible of pullet producers in the egg factory Is the higher death rate that comes with each added year of age. Aside from contagious diseases that are no of age, the deaths among mature birds mount rapidly , after the first year; more rapidly among the American breeds than the Mediterranean, probably. These three reasons should boost close culling of the farm flock during the summer and fall. Keeping any hen after the close of the second layuning year Is generally poor policy less she Is of proved value as a member of the breeding pen. Conditions on most farms favor the disposal of a high per cent of the hens in order to give the pullets adequate room for development. More pullets and hens kept than the houses and facilities warrant are ten times more frequent than a small flock that the housing and equipment Justifies. From Birth to Six Years of Age Most Important Period in- Life of a Child By PROF. BIRD T. BALDWIN, University mm PULLETS VERSUS HENS FOR EGGS development. New and permanent interests can be awakened, undesirable temperaments changed, fear complexes eliminated, social aversion and extreme shyness overcome, language habits modified, motor control improved and physical growth accelerated or retarded. Nature furnishes us the basis for education, but environment, nature and training are the determining factors of the final product. There is too much at stake to take the schools lightly or to intrust the children to untrained teachers. The teachers must understand psychology and, in fact, a little bit of everything. A , is observed by all good Americans, without belief. bread. By the word "bread" is included all the daj years man would utterly perish from oft the face of the earth. The Pilgrim Fathers learned this truth through bitter experience. So it was not difficult for them to give thanks. If we realize how all our inventions and discoveries do not alter the facts of our dependence on Providence, it should not be difficult for us to express thanks to God. Few of us possess all the'good things we desire. We arc inclined to think only of the things we lack. "Our daily bread" is accepted as a matter of course. Let us stop to think. Let us remember the occasion of Thanksgiving day. A changed mental attitude will bring sunshine in place of gloom. Let us give thanks. others In characteristics. In the Radio Broadcast article, a FIG. ACTS JOHN RICHELSEN. Buffalo. necessaries of bodily subsistence. The source of man's bread sup-pi-? is in hands other than his own. Man may devise and create the equipments of highly organized so rial life, yet the continuing usefulness of the world's gigantic and complicated industrial developments is dependent on the sufficiency of crops. There is no substitute for the sun and the rain. Man needs bread to live, yet he cannot control the temperature and the other conditions of a harvest, except in a temporary and limited way. Man remains at the mercy of total crop failures and of Providence for his existence. A few . Bw POlJffRY For a flock that Is kept penned up, this Is an excellent g feed to give two or three times a week: chopped or ground alfalfa steamed until soft, and mixed with cornmeal wheat middlings and brio. For trorrurf rnd tkn. L W N. U.. 1M Stt (II to "'jjjtHi! Hoothln. bel'"- rlr rio Lake City, Ne - ". 46- -1 |