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Show ,T V PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION, UTAH i News Notes;: in ft's a PriviUg CABINET Vitim (.Go111.forth Niviptpir 1 sonable In price. When selecting, the greatest volume and satisfactory In congested areas an selectivity. aerial as short as 50 or 75 feet. Including lead-in- , gives better selectivity and ample volume from local stations. Many radio fans have two aerials, a long one for distance stations and a short one for tuning out troublesome near-bstations. take the tender pic k 1 e d tripe, wash In cold water and cut Into uniform slices. Dry in a cloth, then put in sifted cornmeal. Have ready a hot pan with two or three tablespoonfuls ot hot fat. Lay In the tripe and cook until lightly browmed on one side, then turn and brown in the other side. Serve with boiled buttered onions. Apricot Sponge. Soften a tableh of spoonful of gelatin in a cupful of water and dissolve In one cupful of apricot Juice and pulp, heath ed hot Add of a cupful of sugar, stir until dissolved, then when the mixture begins to thicken, add two stiffly beaten egg whites. Serve In glass cups with sweetened whipped cream. Prunes may be used In place of apricots for variety. Baked Ham. Take a two-inc- h slice of ham from the center of the ham. Place in a baking pan and parboil with water to cover. Drain, spread with brown sugar and mustard, using a teaspoonful of mustard to two tablespoonfuls of brown sugar. Cover with the mixture, add the water from the pan and bake, basting often until the ham is tender. Scalloped Potatoes With Meat. Prepare a dish of scalloped potatoes, using plenty of butter and milk, cover with a layer of chopped meat, any leftover, and bake for an hour or more until the potatoes are thoroughly done. Serve from the baking dish. Another way of using such leftover meat is to slice the potatoes, adding a fine sprinkling of onion; add a cupful of tomato and the meat, either ground or left in neat pieces. Have the tomatoes on top to keep the moisture in the meat With seasonings and slow baking this is a very tasty dish. Serve sprinkled with a few cooked peas for a garnish. Serve from the baking dish. Such dishes are nice for a busy day, as they form the main dish. Good Things. The following cakes and cookies are good as long as they last. Doughnuts made with honey keep well and are moist much longer than those prepared with sugar. Dough, Honey nuts. Take two eggs, one and one-hacup f u 1 s of strained honey, one cupful of sour milk, three tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one teaspoonful of soda, two teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar, and add a little salt. Roll as soft as possible and fry In deep fat. d of Spice Cookies. Cream a cupful of butter, add one-ha- lf cupful of sugar, and one cupful of molasses in which one teaspoonful of soda has been dissolved. Add three and one-hal- f cupfuls of flour, cloves, cinnamon and nutmeg to taste, with one-hato a whole cupful of chopped raisins. Add a few chopped nuts if liked. When well mixed drop by spoonfuls on greased baking sheets. Sprinkle with sugar and bake. Orange Cake. Beat well the yolks of five eggs, add half of a cupful of water, two cupfuls of sugar, beating until well blended. Add two and one-hacupfuls of flour sifted with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, add the Juice and grated rind of one orange and fold in the well beaten whites of three eggs. Bake in layers, and ice with the following: To the two re maining whites, beaten stiff, add powdered sugar together with orange Juice and the grated rind until the icing is of the right consistency to spread. s Chocolate Potato Cake. Blend of a cupful of shortening with s two cupfuls of sugar; add of a cupful of grated chocolate and one cupful of warm mashed potatoes, one cupful each of seeded raisins and f cupful of milk chopped nuts, and two and one-hacupfuls of flour sifted with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Add four eggs, whites and yolks benten separately, one-haeach of cloves and nutmeg If and a teaspoonful of cinnamon. baked in a loaf In a slow oven in a paper lined pan for one hour, It will keep a month. Tongue and Eggs Tartar. Cut the desired number of slices of cold boiled tongue into rounds, and on top of each slice of tomato. Cut place a half-inchard cooked eggs crosswise and place a half with the yolk side down on each round. Top the egg with one tablespoonful of sauce tartare and garnish with watercress. When tomatoes are unavailable use tomato catsup spread over the tongue. Chocolate Cookies. Take one cupful cupful of shortening, of sugar, one-haone-hal- f cupful of sour milk, one and cupone-hal- f cupfuls of flour, one-haful of walnuts, one egg, one-haof soda and two squares of grated chocolate. one-fourt- one-fourt- lf one-thir- lf y Obviates Necessity of Excessive B Battery Questions are frequently asked regarding the use of tubes with a high The outdoor aerial is conceded to be amplification constant. These tubes the most efficient in that It transmits are primarily designed for use In reto the set a stronger signal than either sistance and Impedance amplifiers. We an indoor aerial or a loop under equal quote a few lines from one of Keith conditions. Henneys tube articles in the Radio The ideal outdoor aerial for receiv- Broadcast magazine. He writes as foltube will not load ing is a single wire from 50 to 150 lows: A low-m- u feet long, including lead-in- , installed up a power amplifier unless coupled to It by means of a transformer. For 10 to 20 feet higher than surrounding example, the average amplifier to debuildings. The aerial should be erected so that one end comes near a win- liver .00 watts power requires at least 9 volts variation on its grid. A tube dow, to provide a short, direct lead-in- . should not be near trees, with a mu of 8 coupled by means of The aerial n wires. resistance impedance to the amplifier telephone wires or When necessary to pass a telephone cannot produce a variation of voltage wire the aerial wire should cross as greater than 8 volts and probably not near at right angles as possible. The over 0, so that the amplifier will not aerial wire should, never cross either deliver its rated quota of power. On above or beneath a power line. When the other hand, a tube with a mu of near a power line erect the aerial at 20, or a tube with a mu of 5 coupled right angles to avoid inductance by means of a 2:1 transformer, can easily produce the desired change in noises. High-mtubes can be Supporting wires for the aerial input voltage. should extend several feet from the used as detectors and hence are useful in vacuum tube voltmeters. Their supports. use In resistance and impedance amLarge porcelain insulators, prefermake the latter practical withably of the corrugated type, should be plifiers out increasing the B battery voltage used. The lead-ishould be as direct as possible, but should be kept from beyond reason. It must be said here mu of such tubes is not the the building a distance of several that the constant. The plate only important Inches up to the point where It enters Impedance must be considered and, the window. like all other tubes, the usefulness of The Important features of the out- high-mtubes increases as their imdoor aerial as shown in the diagram decreases. pedance are: In this question it must be remarked that tubes of 1920 differ from A Aerial wire. those of 1925 in the fact that their B Tension insulator. C Tension Insulator. plate impedance Is less. This is due to the use of better filament wire D Supporting wire. which has a higher electron efficiency. E Supporting wire. This low impedance, while it makes F Screw eye. G Screw eye. good amplifiers, causes trouble when the tubes are used in sets thnt have H Continuation of A. been neutralized for high Impedance I Lead-ibushing. tubes. It is well known that less inJ Lightning arrester. ductance is required in the plate cirK Ground wire. cuit of low impedance tubes to make L Ground clamp. them oscillate than is the case with At a distance greater than 50 miles high impedance tubes. On the other from the nearest powerful broadcast- hand, once these newer tubes are neuing station an aerial of 150 feet, in- tralized, the voltage amplification and will be found to give power output are Increased. cluding lead-in- , How to Erect ait Outdoor Aerial. j I u laboratories and proving ground in the world. V- - 2 COMBINED PURCHASING POWER OF MANY COMPANIES. Insuring the best materials at the lowest price 3 VOLUME PRODUCTION. 120.000 skilled workers made more than 835.000 Qeneral Motors passenger cars and trucks in 1925. 4 QUALITY BODY WORK. Fisher Body Corporation is a part of Qeneral Motors . 5 WORLD-WID- E MARKETS. Sales and service in 144 countries. 6 FAIR PRICE POLICY. Standard prices, with General Motors saving! passed on to the buyer. 7 GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION. A finance company owned by Qeneral Motors, and assuring sound terms and low rates to time purchasers. All these factors mean that General Motors has every facility and every incentive for maintaining quality in the product and value for the price. n commission, Knowlton, maintenance engineer, left on a tour of inspection of the highways in southwestern Utah. Zion national park and St. George will be visited. FOREFATHERS OF RADIO By GEORGE LEWIS of Tke Croiley Radio Corporation While wireless telegraphy soon became quite well established, communication across the Atlantic ocean being proved practical as early as 1901, it remained for an American to make the developments which made radio telephony possible. Lee DeForest was that American. He developed the audion ! j Utah Holstein Friesian Breeders' audio-frequenc- Noise and distortion are inexcusable faults, but it is well to remember it isnt always the fault of the receiving set. Background noise which can be heard under the voice, as well as certain classes of distortion, are sometimes actually transmitted and there is little you can do to get away from it. This can be checked up by listening in to one or two other stations. If the signals come through clean-cu- t and free from noise, rest assured your set is O. K. and the broadcasting station at fault. one-hal- lf Lee DeForest. lf radio tube, now in almost universal use as a detector and amplifier of radio signals, and as a generator of oscillations at the transmitting station. Due to certain technical difficulties, It was impossible to send voice by radio from transmitting stations using the old Marconi equipment. The radio tube as developed for power purposes, Door Makes Good Frame for Your Loop Aerial A door makes an excellent frame for a loop aerial and it can also be turned to obtain the directional effect of a loop. This type of loop works well, even on distant signals, when use receiver. ing an ordinary About six turns, spaced one-hal- f inch, will give broadcast wave range when tuned with a .0005 condenser. A smaller capacity condenser will require more turns. Insulated wire of No. 18 or 10 gauge works well. five-tub- Radio Popular in Russia Radio Tubes That Are Used Modern Sets. In the lf supplied a current, however, which could be used as a carrier for voice and music. As developed for receiving purposes, the radio tube may be used as a detector, replacing the crystal of Picard and the coherer of Marconis apparatus as a means of making the Radio is becoming popular among the Russian masses. Abont 1,000,000 home dwellers now have amateur wireless sets. The government charges a license fee of 50 cents a year for a crystal set and $1 a year for a tube set. Amateurs are allowed to use transmitting apparatus as well as receiving sets. Importation of radio equipment is prohibited, all apparatus being of Russian manufacture. Part of the appropriaWashingion. tion for tie Salt Lake basin irrigation project carried in the interior department bill, on which a conference committee reached an agreement, can be spent on Utah lake control if the surveys of that unit show it to bo wholly feasible, and the secretary of the interior can come to a complete understanding with the land owners as to payment of the costs. Ogden. The Ogden high school won the Ogden division debating championship by defeating Davis high school. The local school won from Boelder high school and will now meet a team from another division to qualify for the finals. head of choice Ogden. Twenty-twHolstein cattle are en route to Utah from Fond du Lac, Wis., where they were purchased for Utah breeders by Gilbert Thatcher, secretary of the o radio-frequenc- y How to Tell Whether Receiver Is at Fault GENERAL MOTORS Moab. J. II. Young, highway engineer for the bureau of public roads, and II. S. Kerr, chief assistant state road engineer passed through Moab last Wednesday on their return from San Juan county, where they made an in vestigation and definite location of the highway from Monticello to the state line. n received current capable of operating headphones. Additional tubes may be used as amplifiers, their action being that of relays, releasing current from local batteries when acted upon by the signal. Thus the typical radio set of today employs a detector tube, together with one or more additional tubes as amplifiers. It is customary to distinguish between tubes used to amplify the current before it passes through the detector and those used to amplify it after it passes through the detector by calling the former y amplifiers and the latter amplifiers." ! The state road accompanied by C. E. Salt Lake City. u two-third- lf 1 SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND TEST. Centring in the largest automotive Myton. The Uintah Telephone company, J. R. Bullock, president, has begun a work of reconstruction, which is progressing in a satisfactory manner. The company is stringing a new copper toll line from Vernal, by the way of Roosevelt and Myton, to Duchesne. It is following the old line as nearly as possible. Salt Lake City. Grazing lands in acreage, 55,000, in Emerey county, will be offered for sale by the executive secretary of the state land board, the offer to be made at Castle Dale. The lands are appraised at $2.50 to $3 per acre. high-tensio- two-third- lf Cars? Price. A showing of gas and oil in the well drilled here by the Price Petroleum company which has been in evidence since the drill first struck the solid formation, is an indication of possibilities of the Price structure, according to John C. Crapo, geologist, who worked out the geology of the structure in detail last summer. ' lf if value in General Motors and Orson P. Madsen, county agricultural agent for Carbon and Emery counties, returned to Price from Emery, where they tested a shipment of thirty-eigh- t purebred cows for tuberculosis. The cows, all high-grad- e Jersey stock, were shipped in from Iowa. The tests were made recently and observations showed there were no reactors among the herd. Salt Lake City. A sheep and dairy calf club has been organized at luanti for the boys and girls of that community interested in practical agricultural and livestock studies, reports C. O. Stott, county agricultural agent. Each club member will commence the project with at least three bred ewes or one dairy calf, and will keep a complete record of expenses and receipts. Each boy will be expected to show his best animal at the Sanpete county fair this fall. If you enjoy tripe, you know that It la without waste, easily digested and rea- it What makes the Price. Dr. C. L. Jones of the United States bureau of animal industry SEASONABLE FOODS. t to Lice Utah Union.) thta day with tho amalleat expectatlona, hut with tha Urgant patianca, with a kaan rel-la- h for and appreciation of nvery. thine beautiful, grant and food, but with a temper ao cental that the friction of the world ahall not bear upon your aenalbllltlea. k ' j PONTIAC ' BUICK OLDSMOB1LE - OAKLAND CADILLAC ' GMC TRUCKS CHEVROLET A car for every purse atul purpose Really Was Not Much Conductor Could Do A Kentucky clubwoman, who Is a frequent visito- - In Indianapolis, tells the following story with some pride. One time when she was In a very small Kentucky town and was wishing to make an engagement to speak before a club in Lexington, Ky., she arrived at the station Just in time to see her train pull out the last train of the day. Acting quickly, she handed half a dollar to a little colored boy nearby, and told him to run after the train, which had stopped farther up the track for water, and to tell the con ductor to hold the train for the President. The darky ran down the track quick as a flush.1 When the clubwoman reached the train, and it dawned on the conductor that she was the person for whom the train iad been held, lie was enraged and for a minute almost forgot that he was la the presence of a lady. Purple with it all. I was rage he blurted out: told that tiie President had missed the train. Calmly she answered: Well, sir, am I not the president of the situation? Indianapolis! JJeyvg. . Truth never dodges, no matter who throws mud at it. as-- , sociation. The purchases were made at the Clark classis, which is reputed to be the greatest sale of purebred cattle in the United States. Ogden. Morrison & Knudsen, contractors of Boise, Idaho, were low bidders on three large road projects in northeastern Idaho when bide were opened at the district office of the United States bureau of public roads. The three bids aggregate $370,147 !7, and recommendation was made by B. J. Finch, district engineer, to the bureaus office in Washington, D. C., that the low bidder be awarded the contracts. Manti. Mayor A. Judd and members of the city council have recently accepted plans submitted by Professor Emil Hansen, landscape gardener, for the beautifying of the Manti city park. Spanish Fork. With the awarding of more than $300 in prize money and the settlement of all sales accounts, one of the most successful exhibitions of livestock ever held in this section came to a close. Despite the handicap stormy weather put upon the efforts or the management of the Second Annual Utah County Livestock show and exhibitors, the show was pronounced a success. Richfield. The Richfield Commercial club held a largely attended luncheon at the clubrooms recently. The club determined to initiate and foster a cleanup program to make Richfield one of the cleanest and most sightly cities in the state. Myton. The flour mill of Myton, which is owned by the Light & Power company, and was managed this year by Lionel Babcock, has finished its season's run. More than 8000 bushels of wheat was handled during the year. Look-f- oi the Cross and Circle Printed in Red on Every Package of Genuine Aiabastine Instead of Kalsomine or Wall Paper Became only genuine Aiabastine will give you those soft delicate, artisic Aiabastine colon, which add to much to the beauty of your home. Good decorator use Aiabastine. Nearly all stores selling pamts carry it in stock. Ask your dealer or decorator to show you samples and explain the Aiabastine. the newest and most beautiful method of interior decoration. Opaline Process 4 The Aiabastine Company. Orand Rapids. Mich. ' : X |