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Show 'S' THB JOURNAL, TTTO fctTHlrht line, the K, or so long as THE JOURNAL PUBLISHED BY KARL AND ENGLAND PUBLISHING Son of Late Rail King Fast Taking Dominate Place in , . Ocean Shipping COMPART Poet Office Every Day In the Week, Except Sunday, it the at' . . , Logan, Utah, ae Second Claee Matter. SlIiSCKJlTlON RATH 0c -BT MAIL, PER MONTH, In Advance..-B- T .70c CARRIER, PER MONTH, in Advance- A Diacount at f 1.00 Per Year WIU Be Given tor Advaaee . Paymenta tor a Pull Year. ' father Was In the railroad A biographer of the great railroad builder tells the story that when Edward H. Harriman was asked what Interested him most in life, he replied, Well, I think It Is to plan tome big piece of helpful work that every body tayt cant be done and then jump in with both feet. . How successful the late Harriman was in doing big ieces of work in the railroad world , of course, well known. Now comes the son into the field of ships, doing what he believes is the best and most important work he can perform, namely, helping to build up ocean transportation under the American flag. In this, W. A. Harriman, who is oiily thirty years old, is showing such success that both state and national, seep, to regard that LEGISLATORS, which they do not create some new law. As a matter of fact, it might be better for the country if each legislative candidate were pledged in advance not to vote for the pass-ag-e ot any nfew law as choosing (he lesser evil. Jstuice George II. Sutherland, who has served Utah in both tranches of Congress and who has now become a member of the Supreme court bench has written in this connection : small or moderate-size- d forty-eig' "'There are," he said a good leal of the States United engaged in bodies the legislative national overtime legislature one working time and very large ht . cross-examin- v, yy vy .f-- a- tf tsee ,; , ar .-- - - - -- jDont worry over the cost good sized room with Russian cost of one smoke. of wall paper. You can paper a rubles and German marks at the Heres a case of hard luck. ,A young man who biffed ball a bu.t failed notpnefy, $ itt 4-- "J f ' ' bottle me his victim a lot of sympathetic to get his own name in the newspapers. , ?.6 C0Jege graduate is fortunate only when capable of .hl3 educational knowledge to practical use. " 4 , V .1 put-:.F- r? should feel complimented when pie peopj they are treated Mfist dogs are fairly intelligent gs., -- lA M-- ! r--r, 79ZZ w long In duration, due to the simple fact that the mountains cut oft the flood of Ulflit from the west after the setting of the amt, but tonight there seemed mme at all. The reason was merely that heavy banks of clouds swept up from the southeast Just after sunset. They came with rather startling rapidity and almost Immediately completely fillet) the sky. Young Bill hud many things on his mind as he rode beneath them, yet he found time to gaze at frr VouuJ i'll be a TtToon. fttlil 'Though- - ITwouTi give much lighten will .hjnrttfiieir tduuicea of success, llesidethejve found tUftt tliejn other plot bill, you from , anilmvh-rNi- rt A't'h1)., to work. Ih uce nodded and got up to examine' the sliuiters''tle,vvaiited) itot rey of1 . !) lit ,,,v Hgltt fo tetrl out Into' tlie growing iouse darkness ami make ,a target. Itiwu through .tlie jestgte-lh- e. hoget by Simons brothers .and cousins a sigmhi top, tact that the rltle tlltj not' and tiieir respective families. . He ok ttpj its usimj place liepiml the desk. knocked on each door nnd he only Bruce kept it jji hts blinds as he made ittopei Uou.f(.Linla liud he) empty ?ae one little message. Simon wants the pistol', kmm mg tiuit it might In the you at the house, he said, and come ntajlmp of elreunistniice be 'of aid tn heeled." He would turn td go, but always a frightening hn assailant. Old- Elinlra sat beside the tire, her Stiff fingers busy resingular quiet, athl'hteaflilessiipsi at a pits e of sewing. inuined In the homes after hie deYou know Bruce said to her. a would There be curious parture. vve are exppiUig an attack tothat exchange of glances nnd certain signifi icant sounds. One of them was the night Tlie woman nodded, hut didn't miss metallic click of cartridges being a Milt It. No gleuin of interest curne slipped Into the magazine of a rifle Into her eyes. Bruce's gaze fell to Another was the buckling on of spurs, her basket, and something glitand perl laps (lie rattle of a pistol In teredwork its holster. Before the night fell n hail from Its depth. Evidently Elmira regained her knile. reality, the clan came riding strange, He went back to his chair beside tall figures In the Linda, and the two sat listening. They straight for Simon's house. had never known a more quiet night. His horse was saddled, too, nnd he listened in vain for the Uttle met them in front of his door. And Iq They sounds that usually come stealnight '&Svery few words lie made all things ing, so hushed and tremulous, from the phrit to them. forest. And they both started, ever so Wh(,ftmnd Dave, he told them slightly, vvlien they heard a distant Most of you already know it. rumble of thunder. simply. Weve decided there isnt any use of "It's going to storm," Linds told wuitiug any more. We're going to the hi in. Folger house tonight. Yes. A thunderstorm rather unThe men stood silent, breathing usual In the fait, Isnt It? hard. Simon spoke very quietly, yet Alinn-- t unknown. Its growing cold, his voice carried far. In their growing too. , . excitement they did not observe the They waited a breathless minute, reason, that a puzzling, deep calm had tien the thunder spoke again. It was come over the whole wilderness world. imtitetisurnhly nearer. It was as If it lit the quietest night there is us hud leaped toward them, through the utilly a faint background of winds in darkness, With Incredible speed in the the mountain realms troubled breaths minute that Intervened. The lust echo that whisper In the thickets and rustle of the sound was not dead when they the dead leaves hut tonight the heavy heard It a third time. air had no breath of life. Tlie storm swept. toward them and "Tonight Bruce- - Folger la going to increased in fury. On a distant hillHe side the strange file that was the Turnnay the price, just a I said. spoke rather boastlngly perhaps mots ers halted, then gathered around Sito impress his followers than from Immon, Already the lightning made vivid, pulse. Indeed, the passion that he white gushes in the sky and illumined felt left no room for Ills usual arfor a breathless Instant the long rogance. "Fire on sight. Bill and 1 sw eep of the ridge above them. Well will come from the rear, and we will make good targets In the lightning," be ready to push through the back door Old Bill said. the minute you break through the "Ride on. Simon ordered. Tou front. The rest of you surround the know a nut it can't find a target In the house on three sides. And remember hundredth of a second of a lightning no man is to 'touch Linda. flash. Were not going to turn back They nodded grimly; then the file now. of horsemen started toward the ridge. heard They rode on. Far away Far distant they beard a sound such' the whine and roar of wind,they nnd In a as had reached them often In summer, moment It was upon them. The forest but was unfamiliar In fall. It was was no longer silent. Tbe peal of the Ahe faint ruiittde of tlljttnntjlijinder. thunder- was almost continuous, Tilt? fact - , , ( ' how far away they are. Optimism is our creed, because it is to the optimists we must look for restoring the worldand our particular portion thereof to , - - A something near stability of pre-wday This old globe is in a sad state of confusion, bordering almost upon collapse, but there is comfort in the fact that it might be worse. There is even encouragement in ,the fact that conditions generally are steadily improving. ' . Something good ahead i Let us make that a slogan, and labor uqjtedly and unceasingly until we can triumphantly announce that "something good is - , here. ; Our numerous strikes and idle trains and ghut down mines and all of the other annoyances have a tendency to create a spirit of pessicism in even the stoutest hearts. But pessimism does no good and it does & lot of harm, A strong heart surmounts many' difficulties before it accomplishes its purpose, but in the end it prevails where the weak heart falls by the wayside. . . Yes, there is something good ahead. T t ' Lets get it w - yr&l pass-maid- t , - , td the prediction of financial writers and prophets WE ACCEPT better times are ahead; :lxit we (Woutls like! toi'know :: ... g, r, SOMETHING GOOD AHEAD v- ? W. A. Harriman, Chairman of the United American Line, and the Luxurious Transatlantic liner TReaohite One of the Thirty-tw- o Ship in the United American Fleet Only two years ago the first steam- - among the finest of modern ships, eifle coast A total of thirty-two- 1 er of the United American Lines, of are running their first season between ships now fly the United American which Mr. Harriman is Chairman, New York and Eorope. Recently Lines house-flaand the assembling tailed from New York for Europe, the new inotorsbipe Californian and of so large and fine a fleet In so short ,U wis j a Small freighter. Today, Missourian, representing the most a time has brought about the con- -, .these line operate pile of the largest advanced type A)f cargo Ship eon- - vietton In New York business circles ' vessels under flsetx of ocean-goin- g struetlon, were dispatched on their that this generation, aa yrell as the Arnrrttauflag,. The great voyages from New York; last," has a Harriman Among the Reliance, Boston ana Philadelphia to the Pa- - leader . of American transportation. . . i ,.L. s Ine , , that, theie i beno: niopii, tonight vvij tio ImtgtT 1mpirtunT. The clottds tvourdjhflve nt1 ik any Tifeht (hat (nigltl illtiiidne thy ufc ttvifli of the ' Tuudrai Thtid .vfould. Uo ,be even the dlyw mist ft ro flight, tell-tttl- ; ' r ' jxx-a-oie- Ieif Bruce and Linda sat In the front room of the Folger house, quiet nnd watchful and unafraid. It was not Then 8tmn Hesitated and Loolced that they did not realize their danger. Again With Reddening Eyes Toward They had simply taken all possible measures of defense; and they were the Gliding Buzzards, svalttng-for'Whthe" Bight Wotl!d them with some curiosity. They were forth. of singular greenish hue, and the? bring 1 know theyll come tonlghL" L!nda bung bo tow Hurt the tops of nearby had said. TotnotTow Jilght there will mouQtaios. Mere -- Grief ttf e -rfaf cal variations of grid potential can be made to produce symmetrical variation in plate current, which are K times the amplitude of the plate circuit variations of a similar value with the same applied grid potential This means that If a value be .used Jp, the proper circuits In f) tftdlo. receiver. ti signals can be made to' appear aa though jthe received pfenar Is It times as strong as It' actually la. If two tubea are used' wlth'Thelr proper circuits In conjunction wit!r a" rtrdio receiver the, received signals wlU appear to be K times as strong as they actually are and so the apparent1 strength of the Incoming 8l&k Is multiplied by K Tor each additional tube added to the receiver circuit A yiuuum tube t sed In conjunction with a circuit that will cause the plate current to vary in exact proportion to the applied grid voltage, but apparently caused by K times the actual grid voltage variation, la called an amplifier. If the tube functioning as aa amplifier la used to amplify the Incoming signal at radio frequency before It Is rectified by the detector. It Is termed a radio frequency amplifier. If the tube functioning as an amplifier Is used after the Incoming radio frequency has been rectified by the detector, It Is termed an audio frequency amplifier. Returning again to the charactervacistic curve of tjie uum tube, iihown In Figure 23, notice Its shape. Suppose that a positive potential was applied to the grid by means of a "tT battery so that the tube would, function at a by "A on the point represented characteristic curve. If now the applied grid potential from the "C batreduced by an amount reptery In Figure 23 the resented by corresponding reduction in plate curOn rent will be represented by B-tiut other hand If the grid potential be Increased by an amount reprewhere A-- equals B-sented bj JL-!the corresponding increase In plat - current la C-three-electrod- , three-electrod- e ' A-- B In Ireland, after considerable argument, theyve at last agreed to argue some more. L In buying liquor, its wise to believe everything the - bootleg-ge- r doesnt say about' it. 'A 2zur i portion of the characteristic Is a curve In the region of lf the ft I i A ' ftti'ft - vy y , , ji pi HtUUitlHM Discussing laws- that provided severe panighTtthntaforpefS'dhd merely possessing liquor, .and nqt engaged jp liquor, traffic, he.sajd thal wws'of Aim chirae-tjeIt does not 'require a prophet Reacting penalities so, juttely ,disjyoportionat to, ie offence ' can never be generally' enforced, and to write them into' the .statutes, to be fcuiraixigiy evedd contemptuously ignored iprijl have a strong tendency to bring just and wholesome laws dealing ' Tuii riUv,.iV.1 with the liquor question into tTisiWtitd. . 1 "It must not be .forgottep, f hpt democracy ftp after, ail, .but a whose justification must be established in , form1 of government Marshall $ the.sanw way the justification of any other form of government H By Edison r H of Author is established; namely,, by, what it does rather than by what "Ths Vole of Bto Pick $ it claims to do. The errors of a democracy, and the errors of an ' Va A foolish C; autocracy will be followed by similar consequences. Illustrations by Irwin Myers law does not become a wise law because ft Is approved by a great many people. The successful enforcement of the law in a demoCopyright kf Uttte. Bmn A Co cracy must alawys rest primarily in the fact that on the whole - 'it commends itself to a universal justice, shared even by those CHAPTER XXVI who' violate it. ' The twilight at Trails End la never - : hi , people, --- Hi iin-- ed : e three-electrod- - - - , nt thr4e-eleetrod- lwdy.gW.3tantl, - to be. "Unfortunately, governmental excursions into new territory are being extended beyond the limits of necessity and even beyond the bounds of expediency into the domain of doubtful experiment. ive author! tjve direc"There in an increaflipg disposition tion to the cours eo4 personal, ehaviir-4a- n effort to rould (the. eenduct of indiviuals 'irrespective' &t thpir differing .vlewj.hafyfts and tastes, to the patter whicn i 'f,rir ; time being,' has received' the approval of the TpiajorU)Hl3prthji;w&sf We ahe logihgouf! sense of perspective We hav deVelhpfed ft rhahia ioli regutatW? Starting today we shall give a detailed description of tbe vacuum tube w hen used us an amplifier. Tills series, as in the past. Is continuous and if cllpied out and jtavvd will be convenient for reference. e vacuum When the tube was used as a detector, the circuits associated with It were such that where a symmetrical alternating difference was applied to the grid, a symmetrical change In plate current resulted.' That is ,o say, the vacuum tube acted as a re tiller. Ifl addition to root if) Ing, the. tube also amplified The variation in plate circuit whs K," where K is the amplification constant of the tube, times what It would have been in a tube, for the pame potential Impressed Nta the grj dv..,; . C By properly adjusting the electrical constants of the circuits associated e with a tube, symmetrt- - In American shipping. from 15.000 statutes a year. . "The'prevailing obsession seems to be that statutes, like the ' crops, enrich the country in proportion to their volume.. Unfortunately for this notion, however, the average legislator does not always kndw what he is sowing and the harvest which frequently results is mae up of strange and, unexpected. plants whose ap- ' pearance is as astonishing to the legislator as ft is disconcerting id his constituents. I H, 'Vj.v of our Js that mdeh the with legislator legislation , ;t The trpuble . mistaken eiuotion.for wisdom, impulse for knowledge, and has ' good intentiarf for sound judgmet. lie means weir may save the legislator from the afflictions of an accusing conscience, but it does not protect the community from the affliction of mischievous and meddlesome statutes. "Progress is not a state of mind. It is a' fact, or set of facts, - capable of observation and analysis a condition of affairs which to ascertin it is what it intends .whether maybe will not cause symmetrical changes Stuce the plate current variation In such ca- - would bear only slight relation to the grid variation , in potential, the output of tbe tube would he distorted, x v -- In opplying amplifiers to receiving sets used to pick radiophone stations, distortion is one of the greatest dlf-f)-( Too strong ul ties to overcome. signals will result In deercssed tin- In Figure Zi, if the apphfleation. plied .variation in grid potential were 10 times tliMt shown in tlie example. change he plate, current' would 10 times ' as uuiirli. bemuse of the Itends In (he curve, due t saturatlbn. , Finally, a condition can be reached where the use of an amplifier tube will decrease the 'signal strength of the saturation of the tube. The rectified Incoming signals would he louder without th'e use of the amplifier tube, because of the inability of the plate current of tlie tube caused by saturation to Increase In proportion to the signal strength. Titere are, In general, two factors that, Mug. bv., tritkon teristlc curve and the second 'a the length of the straight portion of the, curve. The slope of the straight por-- Frequency. 1 hit question is already being askrd In shipping and financial circles in New York, although William Averell Harriman, the ion, has been in the shipping busings but a few year. MULTIPLICITY OF LAWS B-- ( xyumieUliriLl?SSiJl UliLK&MtpL In It WilLFunction Thus for Other ' Radio Frequency or Audio, A hit uworld? will es.Ji.l plate current. the MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Preea la exclusively entitled to the nee for m thli paper of all newt dispatches credited to n or not otherwise credited and also the local news published herein. - herein are euo reeerveo.. ah right of republication of epecial dispatcher Advertising Rates Furnished on Application. . USEO-ASAMPHFI- ion of B. H. become a dominant WILL in the maritime world figure , TUBE WHEN VACUUM C-- the working range, falls within straight line portion of' the characteristic curve, ymmerlcal changes In grid potential wilt Va.se ejiametriial changes In plate cmre..r, From rids It can be seen that if the A be selected near" w irking point the bend of the characteristic carve, Another Harriman Rises in T ransportation Entered , Thursday, Ott. 5. 1922 E03AJI CITY. CACHE COUNTY, UTAH 't !i"! tlon of the curve determines the amplification of tlie . tube. The more nearly vertical the straight portion of the curve is, the greater wTU be the change in plate current for a given change In grid potential, or In other words, tlie louder will be the response n the telephone receivers to a given received corresponding signal.. The length of the straight portion of the curve determines the maximum variation in grid potential that will 'cause the tube to" function properly without distortion. ' &. -- -- i . 1 Tip$ TO RAOIOISTS v ( 1 a - C it r. At Muncle, Ind.,' bacon was fried by means of a radio' current. At last, an explanation for that frying" noise. Gifford PInchot, 'nominated for governor of Pennsylvania by the vote of the people, acknowledges hts great Indebtedness to the radio, A primary coll no doubt played an Important port. , An Inventor of Chicago claims to have Invented radio apparatus that permits of successful communication with the spirits. We hope that the will not misinterpret . this dafak The police department of Portland, Ore., has, asked for an i appropriation for radio receivstations ing and broadcasting and to equip the police automobiles kvitb radio apparatus. Copper wire. It Is needless to say, will be used. Lord Northclilfe, famous English editor. In speaking of the future of journalism, recently predicted that radio would have an effect 'upon the publication of newspapers that will equal the Invention of the linotype d and press. He said that radto would undoubtedly, corns Into general nse of news, papers and newsgathering agencies. high-spee- o |