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Show TIIE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH News of the death of Willinm Jen Bryan at Dayton, Tenn., came TALES nings to Washington with stunning suddenness-. and at-time when his name was in headlines much as it blazing IE did at the height of his political career twenty years ago. His efforts at A RESUME -- OF THE WEEKS Dayton, where he. had fought with DOINGS IN THIS AND OTHEA great spirit over the question of evoCOUNTRIES lution, had given friends here the im-- . pression that he was in vigorous Important Events of the Last Seven health, and it had been freely predicted that his voice, would ring out when Days Reported by Wire and Prethe next Congress assembled in a pared for the Benefit of. ' Reader movement to throw into senate and house debate the cause for which he had fought in Tennessee. WESTERN EPITOME The sew $60,000,000 Chicago Union Turgatee, Oregon and vicinity were covered with a sheet of water a foot station, covering thirty five acres and deep, which swept over the lowland, used by four railroads has been forwashing out the tracks, of the Oregon mally opened six weeks after some-oWashington Railroad and Navigation its facilities began to function. Rank-company to the" aggregate of about ing with the Grand. Central and Pennone and a half miles. The greatest sylvania stations in New York, as the damage was done at Nelson and largest railway depots in the country, No loss of life has :been re- the .station has accommodations for 300 trains daily, for 50,000 passengers ported. and 400 tons of baggage. - BBaiBIBfiaiBIBrfilCTigiiilMlfilj3ISlll3IPIP!i3!l IELEHM News Notes From All Part of UTAH J. a OILS WHILE ASLEEP the-Bua- f William D. Brown, COIL 1ST t!9COtL FORM i WlOt mwuGht wfvtnv' CTMf(Jr-- ct - Caliold- in-th- Federal legislation abolfshing all at radio .broadcasting of advertising will Berkely, Calif. He was born in Char- be sought at. the next session of conlottesville, Va... and would have gress, Sol Bloom of New York reached his one hundredth birthday a trip to sailing. "' bn 'Uecejmher 4 of this year. England and France COILS SELF-SUPPORTI- - 1 iCs . Applicants for licenses to drive automobiles in California must submit . evidence of their mental and physical fitness under the terms of the law .passed by the last legislature which became effective July 24th. The new automobile law also fobids the use of "speed traps as a mean of determining the rate at which a machine is traveling. The "trap, used for niany years, vas a method o(- timing the speed 'of a machine bejween two arbitrary points on the state highw.ay. The petition of seventyjhree. western railroads for an 11 per cent' increase in freight rates will meet the of American organized opposition farm bureau federation. Officers of the organization who conferred at Chicago announced- farm bureaus in twenty-twstates affected by the increase jvill be mobilized to fight the . . petitjon. K. FINAL - o - During a freak thunder and lightning storm tank No. 4 on the underground reservoir, of the Pacific Oil company near. Bakersfield, Calif., was struck by lightning and the stored oil ignited. The tank had a- capacity of 750,000 barrels. The loss is estimated at 1450,000. Employes of the Pacific Associatedand Standard Oil companies cooperated In' preventing any spread of the flames t'o surround- ing tanks and refinery property. - Funeral services were. held at St. IgitAtlus church, San Francisco, for Pancho Villa, world's flyweight boxing champion, who died in a hospital here recently while undergoing an operation on his throat. Ten members of the Catholic Filipino club acted-apall bearers.' The Rev. Father Pius More than 1600 persons, occupying 40 railway coaches left Shenandoah, Iowa; on a 'tour, sponsored ly The Wiwanis-dub- , as that will take-thefar east as Niagara Falls. The hail from six states: Iowa, Kan :as, '1tf4eooUrT,'Dina: Nebraska, hotna and Indiana? They are to travel In four special trains, each drawn by two locomotives, over the Wabash lines through Moberly, Springfield, 111., Fort Wayne and Detroit. The tour is the second community undertaking of the kind within a year.' Columbia university will not reject educational credentials from Tennessee schools, as advocated by Dr. Henry H. Rushby.'.dean of the .college of pharmacy at Columbia, Adam L. Jones, director of admission, has announced. s . ' FOREIGN Moore delivered an eulogy'.. Men and The budget for the fiscal .year 1926, women representing many national-- , as submitted to the legislature at . ities and from all walks of life filled Manila,, places the governments exthe church to overflowing. penditure at $34,500,000, while the income is estimated at $35,000,000., leavMrs. Virginia Cookson, Orange county, California, farmerette for ing a surplus of approximately half a whom the sheriff's posses have been million. The largest single Item of Is for education, amounting, searching for several days on the expense.' to . $9,000,000. . approximately theory that she had been murder.ed or abducted, appeared .at police hel-quarter- s The second phase of the evacuation at Calexico, Calif., and told of the Ruhr, which has been ' occupied of being kidnapped by three ni.en In - store allied by troops January 11, an automobile. 1923, began with the . departure of Park rangers and guides recovered troops garrisoned at Essen. Complete-evacuatioof the-- Ruhr is to be conthe body of J.' L. Cartwright, an eastcluded 31, when the Ruhr will by July' ern news writer, who was killed by be handed back to the Gerdefinitely t fall, from a shale rock to a man authorities accordance with glacier about Twin lakes, not far front the London agreement. . . Sperry' Glacier,. Mont. Rangers and guides said Cartwright left' Sperry to" Fifteen persons' were killed and .traverse a portion of the park that has hundreds reported injured when the against the advice Of official packed Melbourne, Australia, veranda guides. The scene of the mishap o.f a moving picture theatre collapsed. was within a few miles of where the The a paspectators were Whitehead brothers of 'Chicago were rade on Bourke street..watching last seen last fall. The 'World Federation- - of . Educa' GENERAL i tional Associations took Initial steps Nat Edenburgh, Scotland to put into Fifteen hundred prohibition agents the organization's plan for will lose their jobs not later than Oc- operation world peace and understanding future tober 15, in the biggest shake-uin adopting' a .series of resolutions the enforcement service since the en- by courses of study that recommending actment .of the Volstead act. A vast will to students a full conpresent state admajority of the forty-eigh- t of internationalism. : . . ministrators will be among those to ception more No 900 than be will go. A special dispatch.' to Berlin' from appointed to the new force with which it Is Bucharest states that the Rumanian hoped to make the nation completely government has consented to the' exdry. port of 60,000 carloads of wheat hi view of 'the fine harvest. . A reduction . Less than four hours before he whs in the tax also is granted be-- ' to he executed Russell Scott was sav--- . cause ofexport the prevalent low prices of ed from the for. the second .. . wheat in the world markets. time within a week when Judge JosEleven miners were killed when a eph B. David convened a special session of court at Chicago shaft rope parted, sending their cage a writ of habeas corpus staying the to destruction at the bottom of the execution until time had been given pit in the Cinco Minas mine in Jalto inquire Into the condemned mans isco, Mexico. The general confederation of workers made demands for . sanity. Indemnities for the victims families, Hundreds were and a but these were refused by the mine whole north section of Chicago was that a strike operators. It is shaken when a gasoline barge of the is contemplated.. reported Texas company, on which were 90,-- . 000 gallons, exploded with a. terrific The Tribuna- of Rome says special and terrifying blast and A roar of ecclesiastical arrangements for the flames which leaped 400 feet Into the religious marriage of Princess Mat-aldsecond daughter of the king and air. The barge, known as the Reliable, was moored at the time in the queen, to Prince Phillip of Greece, north branch of the river just ofT the have been completed by Monsignor oil companys north side plant and Ceccuria, major-chaplaiof. the Ballon court chapel. storage property. Drouth In some sections of Texas France is faced with the possibility has become so acute, the state labor of a general bank strike by the end commissioned has sent an appeal to of next week. Taking advantage of the increased business caused by new employers asking them to supply 4 per cent guaranteed loan, the emwork for unemployed farm hands. He ployees of one of the largest Paris has urged municipalities and ounties banks have gone on strike because to start public improvements to re- the refused to grant inmanagement lieve the situation. creases in pay, and the employees of President jCoolidge will take a hand other banks have called meetins-- to In the anthracite coal strike if the decide whether to join the movement. controversy should not be settled and Bank employees in Marseilles are alIf an actual strike should take effect ready on strike and the movement on the ending of the present agree- shows signs of gaining in Alvignon, Toulon and other cities. ment, September k 300-foo- : . p ancL-tesue- ' d . palc-stricke- n . n apple-bearin- g - Wea-therb- fornla piopeer and said to be the est Shriner In the world, died Vernal. E. A. Manker, Vernal real estate dealer has on display in his ofbranch taken fice an from a tree in the orchard of William Neal ef Maeser ward, which has esThe branch is World Mourns Passing of Msn Whoss tablished a record. six feet in length and carried ninety-nin- e End Csms While Appsrently In apples, four of which fell off Best of Heelth; Nurse bits while being taken to Vernal. The covers Desth apples, while not ripe, are all perfectly formed and a close examination failed to discover a single blemish Dayton, Tenn. Wllllnm Jennings among the entire number. The tree Bryan died here Sunday July 26th. from which the branch was taken is The'Tnkn who had- Won and held twelve years old. A California fruit the title of "The Great Commoner," grower who visited the orchard with Sni whom many predicted would Mr. Manker, stated that when fully the .number ot apples again emerge Into the political lime- developed on this one branch would fill grown light as a candidate for the presi- a standard size apple b9X. dency on the religious Issues raised Salt Lake City. Most points by the Dayton evolution trial, passed case of the United States against the out by peacefully, apparently worn, Inthe strain of the recent dramatic Grand Canyon Cattle company, of to defendant the the volving right events here. . and to build pipe lines over- a fence The Commoner was sleeping when of the public domain fn the the end came. No one was with him: portion Arizona strip and also to use the. Dr. A. C. Broyles .and Dr.. W. F. water of certain springs set apart by Thomason stated that death was caus- executive order for the use of the ed by a hemorrhage of the brain, public, were decided in favor of the causing apoplexy, . government .at the trial recently held Mrs. Bryan was seated on the porch in the Arizona federal court, accord-- , looking through the screen door dur- ing to information received "here at ing the entire .time Mr. Bryan was field, division headquarters of the loasleep. She said she thought, the cal lands office. Commoner was .sleeping longer than Salt Lake City. Premium lists for usual and did not want to disturb him. . the 1925 fair, October 1 to 7; now are. . Mr. Bryan,- who had come here being distributed. It is officially anthree weeks ago to. attend the scopes nounced in the booklet by Governor trial, had spent Saturday at Winches-ts- r Dern, the fair ' association believes exhibition; will and Chattanooga, coming here by this, the At 11 oclock July 26th from all angles be the finest in the automobile. he attended services at the Methodist history of the organization. Episcopal church, South. He led In Weakened through parprayer. ..and. after the benediction tialBingham. the Copper Field hotel colrazing went to the home of Mrs. Richard Louis Ozanson, driving here. lapsed Rogers, .where he and Mrs. Bryan a Studebaker touring car was slightly have been making their home since by the flying debris of the injured coming to Dayton. structure and Sofia Tombar-goufalling The dinner hour wns spent with 4, who was driving with him, Mrs. .Bryan. There were no- guests also suffered cuts and a scalp at dinner.. Mr. Bryan ate with relish, Those In the building when it colthen retired to his room to rest. The with. . bruisea .and escaped lapsed exact hour when death, came is not shocks. slight known. Mrs. Stevens, the nurse who is constantly with Mrs. Bryan, who Provo. The hnnual catalog for for years has been an invalid, passed 1925-2of the Brigham Young univerthrough Mr. Bryans room at four sity has just been mailed to about .She noticed a strange pallor 5000 prospective students. It marks on the face. . Shq bent over him. He the beginning of the fiftieth year of was dead. of the university, the Mrs. Bryan was when which, will be celebrated on October . told that the end had come for her 16th. . illustrious husband. A sob, a tear Lehi Mrs. Isaac Clark of this city then she took charge ot the situation. She addressed messages to their son received burns on the arms and body and daughter, telling of their fathers as a result of a bolt of lightning which struck her home.. Mrs. Clark was. death. apThe news spread over the village, curling her hair with an electric struck-hewhen the lightning pliance and countryside; the people of Day-tohouse and burnt out the meter loved Bryan. He stood as the and a charge through. the curler sent, champion of .their cause, for most of which burnt Mrs. Clark. Her.injur-'iethese people are Democrats and.jn.osJL are painful but not serious. Her of the men of the older generation son, Boyd, 4, was standing near the had voted Yor Mr. Bryan In his free, door and was knocked down, by the silver campaign for the presidency. was uninjured. but belt, Mr. Bryan hdd gone 'to Chattanooga Saturday to have printed the address Brigham City The Brigham City he had expected to make before the Rotary club is of a plan to secure for this city a jury in the scopes trial. He had not been able to make the address be- modern community .hospital. The cause of the sudden termination of need of such an institution here is the trial. The address was a defense evidenced by the number of patients of the fundamentalists. of this community taken to the hosSaturday, before- - going to Chatta- pitals at Salt Lake and Ogden. We nooga, Mr. Bryan had delivered an have two good private hospitals here, address at Winchester, Tenn. He that are giving splendid service, but. spent the night of July 25th with A. it is felt that the community can be W. Lesley, owner and manager of the better served by uniting local medi' Ross hotel, and they motored to Day-to- cal forces In one large hospital. next morning.' Mr. Bryan was Vernal Dates for the Uintah couii- cheerful and enthusiastic over the fair have been set for September 16 ty prospect of his latest lecture, which to one week ahead of any previous 18, he was scheduled to deliver July 27th. It was entitled, "What Can I Do With dates. The excellence of the fair last year sets some high standards,, Jesus? but the people of the basin declare "Mr. Bryan prayed fervently at this is their, year to Inake a( big church Sunday morning said F. E. This fair is' not to be consplash. Robertson, who attended church with fused with the Uintah.-BasiIndus-ria- l Mr. Bryan. He appeared to enjoy which is in August. convention, the services and went home saying The industrial convention brings tohe would hgye dinner with his wife of the b.asln and all the gether and spend the afternoon resting is an event of people far greater scope than quietly. a county fair. Mr. Bryan's final' act before detir-into his room was to call over long Logan The special electric light distance George F. Milton, Chattan- plant committee oil the chamber- of ooga publisher, asking him to com- commerce has recommended to the plete arrangements for the printing board of directors of the chamber of of the speech which was to have been commerce that the municipal light delivered at the Scopes trial, but plant be disposed; of and that. steps he which was prevented by its unexpect- taken at- once to submit the proposied termination. tion of disposing of to the . He. also informed Mr. Milton that people of the. city. he had declined the request of a synry Hamilton, 30. years of dicate to write a series of articles In at the Kenilworth mine age, employed reply to one to be written by Clarence No-- 1 of the Coal and Independent Darrow on the subject of evolution. a broken Coke company suffered is the modernists with "My fight in the church and not with agnostics, back when'rtrn over by a loaded jear of coal. He was taken to the cam' Mr. Bryan told Mr. Milton. Mrs. Bryan was the only member hospital for Immediate attention and later sent to St. Mark's hospital in. of the family in Dayton when His daughter and was was in other Salt Lake.- Jle is accorded an to recover. ; cities. The rapidly increasing fire Ogden hazard in Idaho forests' frhich are Dawes Voices Loss Denver, Colo. Vice President Daw- said to be as dry as tinder has es, on being informed of the death of caused District Forester R. H. RutWilliam Jennings Bryan issued the ledge to draft officers from Utah forfollowing statement to the Associated ests, where the hazard is not so great, Press: "I have been a friend of Mr. or duty directing the fighting ot Idat Bryan for years, since we ho forest blazes. started as young lawyers In Lincoln Salt Lake Milton D. Joseph, Salt Neb. Throughout all these years of Lake stock broker, who embezzled the 0 work and strenuous public service Continental National bank out of there shone resplendent a high perten years ago and was not appresonal character. In all he did. Mr hended until 1921, has been paroled Bryan was in earnest and in it all hr by the, board of pardons at its regular .tried to do good." monthly meeting. GREAT COMMONER PA83E8 AWAY PEACEFULLY DURING AFTERNOON NAP CARDBOARD FORMS - WIRES HELD TOGETHER. WITH ORDINARY STRING. ' ' forty-sevent- Method of Winding to Produce the Doughnut - .. Most Satisfactory improvements By FRANK REICHMANN, B. S., E. M. Improvement than new and revolutionary circuits, "is .responsible for the rapid Increase In efficiency of our radio receivers. This Is accomplished, by the' elimination of losses, balancing up of .cir- Constructio- n- together with string proved to bd too for- - practical use, sola form .was designed.. to bold the winding, made of a material that did not add to the capacity .of the coll. Now that the Indentations' In the winding for allowing string to be threaded through to' lihld the wires together were no longer necesshry, it was found that they were responsible for the low distributed- - capacity losses and the high performance, of the coils. Without indenting ' the It was necessary to sepawindings, rate the wires furttrei' apart, resulting in a larger and more Impractical coll, with magnetic field losses. The final coil developed, the Tow-los- s doughnut coil, has the wires Indented all around. . Special- - complicates machines had to be developed nnd perfected to accomplish this. The coll is 'rigidly held In an attractive holder. Comparative tests were run with every other type of coil obtainable on the market, for measuring tosses. It was .found that the doughnut coll had tower losses ii) every measurement than any . other coil, and when built into a receiver had more volume and signal strength, tube for tube, and coil for coil, than had ever been known before. . .' apparatus, rather flimsy In Coil, One of the Latest and in Radio - cuits, and the confining of straying capacities, Improvements that are the result of months-- , of experimentation and practical test work on the part of radio engineers, and very rarely stumbled upod or accidentally discovered. . . 'The latest radio Improvement, the Relchmann ' .doughnut coil, .may at first glance seem . to be the result of- a few mLmtes' pinying with a coil of wire and a broomstick. The real facts of the case, are that the coil is- - the product of. six months intensive work on the part of three radio engineers seeking a new type of that would be free from the drawback's commonly associated with 'colls. Pioneering in a new field, without the successes or failures of previous experimenters to guide them, the pttfalls and blind alleys-alonthe way were thoroughly investigated while slow progress was being made toward the ultimate coil.. ' . . Corrects Loss, of Energy. ' In ordinary layer-wouncolls a considerable loss of energy takes place, due to the fact that, through a con- Loop Aerial Mounting. denser action,' the current tends to Saves Space on Table travel between adjacent wires as well My set is of the type that- requires fifLthrough. the conductor Itself. This a' loop aerial, but I found when ready Is to seif" 'due condenser action the to connect up everything that I did not or distributed capacity of the coil, room on the table for the loop, have concaused by the paralleling .of the a correspondent In Radio Diwrites s In the and honeycoductors. I fixed It up as shown In th gest. mb-coil type .of- windings, this is remedied to a certain extent by running the wires at right angles to each other and crossing at intervals. The first experimental coil form was made by. cutting out. a circle of cardboard with little protruding tabs on ' the inside ajnd outside edges. A narrow strip of pasteboard was bent around' in the form of a. circle and pasted on each side of the flat circle. The. original idea was to wind t.he it over wire around the the tabs at Interval?. When tills coil was constructed and tested, it was found to be no .better thnfl present coils, due to the fact that the wires ran parallel to quite an extent, making the dlgtdtmJ.ed capacity of the . coil high. Loop Aerial That Can Bo Swung Close The next attempt was made by windto Wall, ing the wire around the form, disregarding the protruding tabs, so as to sketch herewith. The loop wns mountmake a .closed coil, .supported by the ed base up to one end of a stick. I a bird-cag- e swivel four edges of the enrdboard strips. then obtained it to the other end and secured an so coll was hanger This improvement, lurger forms were tried and it was of this stick. However, a strap hinge will work just as good If Tandy. decided to . continue ' to experiment The swivel hanger or hinge Is., of with this type of coll. Winding the wire over and over the course, screwed to .the wail or window circular form by hand became rather frame. The loop, when out from the laborious, so one of the engineers waU, can be turned in the desired directried winding the coll on a straight tion at will. When not In use it is form, then removing and bending the turned parallel to the wall and then swung against, it. The idea is to have coil In a circle to form a toroid coil. It was difficult to keep the wires In it out of the way when not using the place with this method, so he tried set ; this Idea should prove welcome to pushing the wire in at every other many loop aerial users. Alvor K. face of the winding form with hia Olson, I 'or i l a nd. Ore. thumb nail, so that a string could he threaded through the indentations Fixed Crystal Best and so hold the coll together when for Portable Reflex the form was removed. Measurements of this coll showed a decided improveFor a portable reflex set which rement over other types, as the greater quires a crystal detector it is advisshare of the losses, due to the dis- able to use one of the fixed variety. tributed capacity and coll support Ordinary crystal detectors are difficult losses, had been eliminated to adjust when miles from a powerful The Final Coll Developed. broadcasting station, because a steady Over two hundred colls were built loud signal is required to find the most up In tills manner In search of the sensitive point on the crystnl. Fixed proper diameter, size of wire, and crystals require no adjusting after tlie general over-al- l jllmenslons of the set is once built They are not, howcoil, consistent with tow losses and ever, quite as sensitive, but are excelefficient inductance. The colls held lent for portable use. g . - d low-los- - form,--hookin- h ". s, - wou-nd.- . 6 - semi-centenni- . n - s ba-c- -- n . . . g - - the-plant- . Prlce-r-Har- . . he-died. - even-chanc- , thirty-eigh- $55,-90- e |