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Show ... ' ' - " ' '" ' ECTy . ;-';- ", :.,.- - '. the bingham press bulletin ', Protecting Men't Righte The habeas corpus act was passed la 1079, and provided Hint a prisoner or witness must be. presented In per-o- n before the judge or tribunal. I ' (Edited by a Douglas Wrdrop. Editor of Radio MerahandUlnf.) to the ground shown as 01 tn diagram. How Distortion Is Eliminated. It will be apparent from the forego-ing description and accompanying drawing that high frequency current entering the circuit through the tuning elements will pass Into the grid O, I t . A t' I J f "" . f" I x. 1 r I , Application of Above Method of Tuning the Grid Provides Tonal Quality That i Equals the Crystal, Its Inventor Claims. and as the circuit provides no grid, re-turn, aucb as la usually connected from the filament F to the resistance or variometer VI, no rectified or low fre-quency current will pass Into the grid. This arrangement will eliminate ob-jectionable noises commonly found In closed receiving circuits, will provide A tuned, open grid circuit, arranged so that high frequency current may pass Into the grid and thus eliminate objectionable noises occasioned when low frequency or rectified current passes Into the grid, Is claimed by Charles Kosnlck, of New York city, In an application for a patent Benefits said to be derived from the arrange-ment Include a set that la sensitive, selective and remark' ably free from distortion. An added advantage Is the low cost of construc-tion. Description of Circuit. Mr. Kosnlck's patent description of his circuit follows! Referring specifically to the drawing, the vacuum tube which is shown at V Is of the three electrode type, the plate being Indicated at P, the filament at F and the grid at O. The plate P Is connected In circuit with the usual battery, and connected In this tlrcult are phones or receivers PI, while lhe fixed condenser C2 Is con-nected across the circuit from one side of the phones PI to the minus of the B battery. Increased sensitiveness, strong and clear signals and will eliminate radia-tion. AU of these advantages are due to the fact that there Is no electric con-nection between the grid and plate. While the tuning elements In the cir-cuit are shrown as a variometer and variable condenser, It la obvious that other turning elements may be sub-stituted. Right to Make Changes. The Invention Is susceptible of vari-ous changes' In Its form, proportions and minor details of construction and the right Is herein reserved to make such changes as properly fall within the scope of the appended claims, end the patent description. . The principal advantage of this clr- - cnlt lira In Its tone quality equaling that of a crystal detector. The tuning is fair and the excellent reception com-pensates for the lack of sharp tuning. Local stations, however, ae easily separated. Parts needed Include the following: Variometer 600 meters capacity. Variable condenser five plate. , Tubes 201 A or TJ. V. 199 are suit-able. Grid leak Is unnecessary. Fixed Condenser capacity .001 makes circuit but rednces the slfmnl strength, therefore Is conditional, Kadlatlon Is alight without con-denser. Amplifier of any type may be added to this circuit. New York Mall. The filament ! Is connected In cir-cuit with an A battery and Included In this circuit Is a rheostat It, by means of which current to the filament may be controlled. The filnraent and plate thus receive low frequency current. The grid C Is connected In an open circuit with tuning elements, herein shown as a variometer VI, with a variable condenser C connected across the plate, tl.e grid of the tube.V, one side of the variometer being connected to the aerial Al. The opposite side of the variometer Is connected with the grid O and Included tn this connection Is a fixed condenser CI and a grid leak L. The plate circuit Is connected i The Pythian Game. On of the four sreat festival! of ancient Greece, celebrated every fifth year, In honor of Apollo, In the Oris-an- n plain near IMpht was the Pythian game. They were Instituted, according to tradition," by Apollo, In commemoration of hi victory over the serpent Pythonwhenr tim f name. Thpse festivals were at first limited to singing, with cithern acronipiiiiiinent ; hwr afterward they 'came to Include athletics, horse racing and contexts In poetry and art. The vletore were crowned with a laurel wreath, or pre-sented with a palra branch. The Pyth. Ian games were continued until 8M A. l. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ; v ' -- v... ", When You Want the : VERY BEST in ' CLEANING AND DYEING You can't go wrong by calling 96 Regal Cleaning & Dyeing Co. We Solicit Your I Savings and Checking Accounts I The first national Bank " - Bingham Canyon Read Fress-Bullet- in Advertisements.! WIllittlilliBttllJIBIM BINGHAM a GARFIELD railway Company Through Daily Package Car Service from Salt Lake I I City in connection with the Union Pacific System. I Semi-weekl- y iced refrigerator cars' in summer and heat-- m ed refrigerator cars in winter are operated for the con- - 1 venience of patrons receiving shipments of perishaWe, freight; ' ; ' . I " IT. H. PERLEYWITS, ,.. A. W. MALY. j Gen. Freight Agent Agent 1 MllMllll Lake City, Utah 3 .Bingham, Utah . """ .un,t,f ,., .., j OUR LABEL is your parantee ! ' That ROYAL BREAD is absolutely t pure and clean; J I That it is made by expert bakers in a 1 ' modern shop ; - J t I That it is made and handled in a san- - t I itary way; f "' Vly That ' " the be8t food obtainable any- - X . ... where in the world. f y I I The bread that made tetl I SJ mother quit baking X , BREAD is your best food ' X eat more of it I t imiWHiifUJi hjinun iiiit an nni h iiHimiif uitn tm hihh utiimuttitniiHirmf lit ti tmrrt nirmtii itniuiitHuiiMrjiiiniitam UHtmiuimiiii uuui stiinsmtimrHiu tutmumnnutnnutfHnriUii taaauu iw ra ' I HICKS TAILORING I I GENT'S and LADIES' CLOTHING MADE 1 FRENCH CLEANING AND DYEING 1 I PRESSING ALTERATIONS 1 1 Out Work is Guaranteed 1 Try Us 1 I 520 Main St. Bingham Canyon. 1 Wi m mimniiiH ii ii hii rim nmniatuituam imiiuwim jwh h iitrtwi Htmi mi wi mt tin ihhj iniHimmiHi lutHiiiBUHiuciiHmjinjiHitnimiHHnnuiiiiiifun mmHutmtiniHHatmuftHf m wigmfliwiffl iiHm 1 B The Royal Candy Co. I 1 LIGHT LUNCHES TAMALES j I CHILI .... I I ' . g j HOME MADE CANDY S 1 - , V S 1 . 1 Store No. 1 - Store No. 2 Phone 13 V Phone 189 ! O'Donnell Company J ! - : ... : x 1 FUNERAL DIRECTORS X - Bingham Canyon V" ' J X :..: ; - X Phone 17 t iiiiMiiiiiii Cannon Garage I STORAGE SERVICE ! "y AND REPAIRING: " : OF THE BETTER KIND I j . Main at Markham ; Phone 333 !iiHii!iiiii!iiii((nifiHi: is Get Your Lesson 1 j ... From the Squirrels! I We all see them in uS iaiU- - l the fall busily stor- - j KEt'? ing their food for j JiLyia--; the winter months. : PbT? Perccntage- - ofjvmen ' 1 IH.I ii. ' have the foresight to I ,f . be as provident as the squirrels. V ,1 . The men who are wise make regular de- - 1 posits in this bank during their earning j years. We'll be glad to show you several ! .i plans. v j : BjflGHAM STATE BANK y f Oldest Bank in Bingham Canyon E'iallM I - A Berger's I! 1 THE HOME OF THE ONLY I ! I BILLIARD TABLE II ! IN BINGHAM CANYON 1 MAH JONGG HEADQUARTERS j "Whie the Live Ones Meet" - II ' - : i ' . . - . ;" 4 ,x Bread for France. f The principal food ' of the French people Is bread. In au exceptional year France raises nearly enough wheat to supply Its needs, but after a mediocre harvest like ti'iiut of 1022 It has to Import lurge quantities from abroad. On account of the rate of France In 1922 had to pay TO francs abroad for an amount of wheat worth only 25 franca at home.'' An ag-- ricultural congress at Paris recently or-ganised a campaign to enable France and Its colonies to raise all the wheat It will need In 1024. The campaign will urge not so much Increased acre- - age as better methods, better seed and better fertlllrer. .... " " "- J-;- Cans of Petrifaction' This process Is cull ml petrifaction. When wood or the enronss of an anl-mu- l apparently turns to atone we say It petrifies. The word 4'petrlfy" Itself menus turning to or making Into stone. It la from the Latin "pcirn' a rock or stone, and "facto, to wake; w to do. Hut the fact Is, orguule mutter does nut actually turn Into stone. This la what really occurs: Vater contain-ing dissolved minerals, audi as cal-cium carbonate and allien, Intlltrates through the organic matter. Particle by particle, as time passes by. the cal-cium carbonate or silica takes the place of the organic flatter. After many years, perhaps, hundreds or thousands. It seems that the wood or animal bas turned , to stone, for often the original form and structure are retained In the process. The organic matter really only acta as a mold while ttie stone is being formed from the minerals In the Infiltrating water. Bringing Aerial Through Window . 'fV' Lead-i- n Strap Will Aid in Making More Efficient Installation. Radio has shown that many of ui are far from being mechanical geniuses. In the early daya of radio, back when rery one built his own apparatus from socket to variometer, the problem of an aerial was an eaay matter.. The hard-est Job was convincing the landlord It would not Invite disastrous calamity In the shape of lightning or flood. The radio fan of yesterday was a mechanic from necessity. To Install radio set one needed to be an expert electrician. Where the lead-I- came through the window and side of the house, for example, It was necessary to drill hole and Insert a long porcelain tube. Ordinary drills were too short for this purpose. It needed an exten-sion bit, such as electricians use to lrlll through floors. The Inventive minds of the radio world have been busily training to ease the troublesome task of Installing a radio set. One of the kinks along tills , line of progress that has come to no-- tlce Is the lead-i- n strap that solves the particular problem of bringing the aerial through the aide of the house .Into the room where the set Is to be used. '., J The strap consists of a strip of heav- - Ily tinned copper which has a phane-stoc- k clip soldered to each end. Heavy Insulation Is wrapped around the center of the strap and under this Is placed a strip of stout .webbing. The strap Is placed on the window sill, aa shown In the Illustration, and the win-dow Is closed, the Bill resting on the Insulated part. It la a difficult matter to solder con-nections In an aerial system and, un-less the joints are soldered or well- - 8hbwlng How 8trap Is Placed on the Window Sill. made, they soon corrode when exposed to the atmosphere. The lead-i- n wire may be fastened directly to the phane-stoc- k clip; the wire to the set Is fastened on the other end. It Is often better to place a lead-I- n at the top of the window, where It will he out of the way and there will be no danger of disturbing it by opening the window. It Is better protected from the window In this manner and the lead-i- n does not show in front of the window. This labor-save-r lightens the task of erecting an aerial and makes a more efficient installation. It has gained the favor of the landlords be-cause Its use does not In any way spoil the' appearance of the woodwork of the building. Take Rett Occationally Don't work so long and so hard that your muscles become drawn and your brain fugged. Loosen 'up a bit and break the tension. That's the only way to rest sometimes. Charleston News. In Legal Language "Mebbe some o' deshere lawyers," said Uncle Eben. "would place mo' 'sponsiblllty on de Ten Commandments If Mosea had put In sumpln' 'bout whereas' and 'be It , resolved.'-- " Washington Star. Important Improvement in Headphone for Radio The radio headphone, though retain-ing many of the original principles, la being constantly Improved to Increase Its sensitivity and electrical efficiency. Mechanical Improvements are con-stantly being made to get the receiver as light as possible and to Increase Its strength and durability. The whole secret of good head-phones lies in the accuracy to which screws. This added considerably to the weight of the receiver. An Improvement has been designed by MaJ. Herbert H. Frost, JJnlted States signal corps reserve, tn the method of mounting the magnets and the pole pieces which eliminates the uncertainty of the diaphragm adjust-ment and permits the use of a much lighter receiver shell. The magnets and the pole pieces are mounted on a strong aluminum stamp-ing that has a flange for supporting and seating the diaphragm. .In this manner the distance between the dia-phragm and the tip of the pole pieces Is always the same, within a very slight variation either way. The tips of the pole pieces can then be slight-ly ground down so that the distance la practically Identical In every receiver. The ends of the phone corda are then attached directly" to the colls and the whole thing Inserted In the receiver case, much like the assembly of a watch. The earpiece screws Into the case and the magnet assembly and dia-phragm are securely held In place. The troublesome nuta and connections for the headphones on the back of the case are eliminated and the chance for leakage of energy across the bush-ings, where the connections are brought through from the Inside of the case, are done away with. the air gap between the tip of the pole pieces and the diaphragm la adjusted. The distance between the diaphragm and each of the pole-piec- e tips must be the same and of the correct propor-tion so that the maximum volume may be had without distortion. In the earlier type of headphone the magnets and colls were assembled on the Inside of the back of the receiver case. The outside edgea of the dia- - Showing the Various Parts of he Receiver. phragm then rested on the edge of the receiver case, and the distance of the diaphragm from the pole-piec- e tips depended. on the triteness of the re-ceiver shell. With the best of ma-chinery and manufacturing methods the receiver shell cannot be made ac-curate enough to Insure that the dis-tance of the air gap will be uniform. Another disadvantage of this meth-od of construction was, that the case bad to be made extra (trong to hold lhe weight of the magnets and colls. The Inner surface of the case had to be absolutely true and each aide of the magnet dran dowa evenly to the Inside of the can with the mounting Try Switching Tubes to Increase Efficiency Tou may be able to get an increase In efficiency equal to as much As 60 to 75 per cent by merely switching the tubes around In the different sockets In your set. i First tune in a signal, and then take ( two of the tubes from the sockets and reverse them, putting them each In the 1 other's socket 1 Keep on doing tills in various com- - I blnatlons until you hit on the partlc- - 1 ular combination that gives you the 1 beat results. I RADIO RHYMES t v By Robert Stewart Sutliffe. 5 1 TWO BUGS g g YOUNG SLIM JONES was ou I K . for radio, witli beurt as well 2 ' S as head; It had him In a demon g S grip, the smiling neighbors said ; 2 5 he read It, talked it, wrote It, g 5 dreamed It, morning, noon and S X night; the old barn where he g 6 tinkered with It surely was a 5 g sight. . 5 g ., With, odds and ends and g X things he'd purchase, he niude g v many a set, and then he'd try g g out some to recep- - S g tlon get; he'd take It down and g X reassemble, rebuHd thlsl or that, 3 g and when outdoors, he used an g X outfit built within his hat.. 5 - g He had antennae on the house- - x 5 top, loops he moved about; he o X even tried to get Alaska on a X 8 water spout; but the paramount g x ambition that was In his head, X o was how to get some good trans-- g 5 mission, through springs upon S g his bed. X X But this was where young 5 Slim was bested, It somehow g X wouldn't go, although he tried a S g lot of tricks he'd learned 'bout X S radio; he tested out his whole g X equipment, tried a hundred X g things, but no signal, voice or g X music e'er came through the X 5 springs. g 5 i.Tl'en one day he told his 5 , g problem to an engineer; told g X him how he had adjusted all his 5 g bedstead gear; how he'd tried X ' S out all the jim-crac- of his Al g f g set; but the springs had always X 5 failed him, not a sound he'd get. g X Patiently the fellow listened; X g then said with a shrug: "Young- - g X ster. In your batad circuit, 5 PI have found a "bug. g X S Scl.nc. ad lanatloa. ) ft SHMHHH(NHM0lKHOm Long Aerial Necessary j for Your Crystal Set A crystal detector set should have a long aerial, for the crystal detector re-- 1 Ilea exclusively on the strength of the Incoming signal for its operation, as It has no local battery to assist It The sounds heard In the telephone are the I strength of the actual signals coming 1 through after rectification by the crys-- I tal The longer the aerial la within certain limits, the better the results I should be on the crystal detectoc " 1 |