Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 129, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1924 — Page 7

TUESDAY, OCT. 7,1924

RADIO PUTS END TO DREARINESS OF ARCTIC RED! McMillan Tells of Hearing Voices of Folk at Home. By XFA Service WISCASSET, Maine, Oct. 7.—Radio has added another scalp to its belt. It has conquered the monotony of a winter on an iceberg. During the long winter months when their eighty-five-foot schooner, the Bowdoin. lay trapped in frozen waters, the crew of Donald B. McMillan, arctic explorer, had plenty of time to reflect over their lives. The Bowdoin has just put back into this port after fourteen months in the North regions. "I can tell you this, that the faces and talk of six other men, closely quartered, get mighty monotonous," MacMillan says goodnaturedly. "But v/e had plenty to think about this time. The radio gave us that. ’ “We heard concerts from Chicago, Omaha, Los Angeles, Catalina, San Francisco and Prince Rupert Island. Every day our radio operator, Donald Mix, posted a news bulletin, for he was able to hear press reports from stations in England and Germany, particularly FOZ in Germany. Coast Interferes “It is interesting to note that we were never able to get stations along the Atlantic, probably because their broadcasting would have to come to us along a seaboard. Scientists say radio doesn’t travel along a coast line. ‘I can tell you,” MacMillan adds, “it was a real thrill for us, isolated in the seemingly endless ice regions, to hear our relatives’ voices when they were broadcast from Chicago. ’’ During the summer months, when there is no darkness of night. MacMillan explained that there was little or no satisfaction in the radio. “Just as it is here at home, the radio is more effective at night than during the sunny days," he says. "But during the winter we depended on the radio to divert us and to give us something to talk about.” Natives Unmoved The Eskimos didn’t get nearly as excited over the Bowdoin's radio as they did over its movies. “Not being acquainted with other parts of the world it did not strike the Eskimo as much of a marvel to hear voices and music and noises come through a lc-ud-speaKer h 'rn. But when we set our mainsail for a movie screen and projected news weeklies, comedies and feature picture they were driven to convulsed laughter “Whtn we shewed them pictures of Eskimos, which we had taken on our previous trip, they were dumbfounded. for among the pictured men

AN EVENING AT HOME WITH THE LISTENER IN (CsrtM; of and Copyright 1924 By Radio Digest Publishing Co-1 Statue scd t~n, j Vri Meajay Tcps.v '.v-vt'-- lav TVj.-*ria* . Friday Saturday J Seaday AT 9, Fori Bra N C 436 S.irar ’ 7:00- S'V-, Silttt 7 00- -55 Silret ! 7-00- S Ssi 7-00- *OO CFCN. Caigary. A'ta '4O Si'eat 1 2-!:3C Si-eci Sliest -. -at lloo* lOC SiSrot CHTC.Mostreai.QM .Hi Stirat Silent i 7-30- - X -.-at Siieot :-:.rat ’ S.-0O- vOO CKAC MastraaL Qua O SUmi i 10- X 1 Si Vr.- 9 JO-9 30 Silent 5:30- 93C J 30- 130 CICCD. Vaccoeer- 2 C I!<7 '? 7. -11 30‘OT0-!7 33. if, 70-1: 30,1 C 30-11 3C 10 30-11 30 1 10:30-11 36 Silent CJCT. Wiamr-eg. Maa 450 .'l ent - 13-iJGC ~ !e-t 9:1-9-10CO: 6 15-1000: Sti-ot 7:00-8 00 OWtO.Cttm. 0t .*V -r*n -'eat 8 -J.lt 3f Silent -i.-eo' 9:30-1130 Silent CTB, Mexico City. Maa ,370. - rot , 9:30 00C >..rot 9 00-1100' Silent 8 30- 9 00: Silent CTL Meues Che, Met ]5! ti'ftit 1000-I1 lent Silent iOoO-ll 70 Silent Silent CTL Maxu City. 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The Voice From -WFI-

— ■ r:„

When Ednyfed Lewis, director of broadcasting and announcer at WFI. Philadelphia, isn’t at the studio he’ll very likely be found singing in a church choir somewhere about the city. Lewis even sings his announcements, he’s so full of music. He’s tenor soloist and member of the male quartette and chorus of Strawbridge A Clothier, who own the broadcasting station. some had died. Seeing a dead man m_>ve around on the screen was quite more than tne Eskimo could comprehend. •‘But if the radio did not particularly impress the Eskimo, it did impress us, and we go hack to the north next June iiappy' with the knowledge of what it can do for 11s while we are there,” MacMillan declares. No Tube Blowouts A use has been manufactured for the prevention of tube blowouts. It slips over the filament terminals of any standard vacuum tube.

On Air Broadcasting stations throughout the country are laying plans to broadcast important football games direct from the fields. The important Eastern games will be broadcast from Station WEAF. New York. Those played away from the city will have a direct line running from the field to the transmitting room. Graham MeNamee. who made himself famous with his announcements from the political conventions, will describe each game

CITIES CANT LIMIT RADIO, IS OPINION Government Says This Is Right of Congress, By XFA Service WASHINGTON, Oct. 7.—Attempts of various cities to regulate the use of radio within their limits have been construed as unconstitutional by Government officials in the capital. This opinion, which was anticipated by Secretary of Commerce Hoover at the radio conference in this city in March of 1923, when he stated specifioilly that “the Government owns the ether," is the outcome of a peculiar legal entanglement that threatened at one time to set local city and State authorities at variance with the Federal Government. Ii was finally made clear to those int rested that no lower regulatory body can govern any subject already regulated by Congress. Last year, when the radio season was in full swing, one State was on the point of creating the office of “State radio inspector,” and a number of cities were giving serious consideration to the matter of prescribing how and when the ether should be used. Their only authority for so doing was the so-called “police power,” which State charters confer on them for the abatement of nuisances that endanger the health, morals or prosperity of a community. That this special authority should be interpreted as covering the subject of radio communication was regarded by the legally informed as being little short of humorous, and practically all cities where sum agitation had cropped out hastily pulled in their horns and ruled out proposed ordinances of this nature.

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The Times Pink for Late Sport News

I j Electric Light and Power /SERVICE! ■ MERCHANTS I I Heat and Light Company L \ The Daylight Corner I* l_ The Company Service Built

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Indianapolis is forging ahead. Its car system must keep abreast of this growth. Ride the cars —it’s cheaper—and help keep Indianapolis to the front.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

LOW LOSS COILS AND ONE CONTROL FOR DETECTOR

i~7 TBS!} , r UT c, 4% # m R r_4 i— .— I 4? -I +77- +1 22* v A BATTERY a BATTERY

HOOK-UP OF ONE-CONTROL DETECTOR.

By ISRAEL KLEIN NEA Service Radio Editor PON the low-loss coil depends much of the success in construction of a simple detector. The tapped inductance, the va-rio-coupler or variometer has given way to the honey comb primary end secondary, the basket weave, diamond weave, spiderweb or similar type of winding. For it has >een definitely established that there is a minimum of loss in reception by means of such coils. A simple detector circuit with such coils has only one control, that of the variable condenser. Once the primary and secondary low-loss tuners are fixed, there is no longer need of tampering with them to tune in a station. The condenser does that.

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A good type of coil for the set considered here is a simple spiderweb. Both the primary, A, and the secondary, B, are wound similarly around a two and a half inch inner circle. Thp best way to do this is to set an odd number of spikes, nine or eleven preferably, evenly around a thick wood hub, 2 inches in diameter, and wind the wire in and out about these, going under two spikes, over the next, two, under the next two and so on. Condenser Important Coil A gets six windings of No, 166 DCC wire, while coil B is wound with about 48 turns of No. 18 wire The exact number of windings depends on the condenser. Different condensers give varying results, therefore the best

WEEKLY Business and Industrial NEWS

TIME DRAWS NEAR WREN CHRISTMAS SAVINGS ‘MATURE’ Marion County State Bank Will Soon Be Writing Club Checks, 1 Wise persons who have been putting aside a few dollars a week for the past fifty or so weeks are settling back with pleasure to think that alone about the first week in December they will receive a check that will make their Christmas buying a perfect jubilee. The Marion County State Bank has had paid into its Christmas saving club about $40,000 up to date. About the first of December they will begin sending out to about 900 folks checks that average about SSO or-more, which will represent their weekly savings for the past year plus 4 per cent which, by the way, amounts to about one, additional weekly payment a year. There will be some of these checks which will be for $250, some about SIOO and a few that won’t be more than about $25. But whatever the size of the check. It will give the club member decided sense of satisfaction to realize that he has actually saved his money consistently and systematically for a purpose. “At the recent savings convention in Chicago." says C. E. Robinson, president of the bank, “the point was made that it has always been the custom of savings banks to urge folks to ‘save their money.’ The urge now is to ‘save your money for something.’ Tt is a lot easier and a lot more fun for the average person.” Says one member of the Marion County State Xmas Savings Club. “A Christmas savings account soon becomes a profitable habit. It’s teal value is not realized until the holiday season, when money is much needed, comes around. “Each weekly deposit is small enough not to affect any one.” Patterson Engraving Cos. rOBMEBLV INDIANA ELCC.TOOTYPB CO. tWI 1, ■iri 1 . xu. jg.?. iwi . —CTLV. a T—re rrr -rny *23 West Street Indianapolis Ind.

MARION COUNTY STATE BANK 139 Ffifct Market Street Home of the ClirlKtmnti Savin nr* Clnb

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way to learn the exact number of turns needed is to experiment as follows: Wind about 55 turns on the secondary, and when you are finished with the set and ready to listen in, decide on a definite station with a wavelength of, say, 360 meters. Turn the condenser dial until,this station comes in strongly and note the reading. If the reading is at 30 on the dial, the number of windings is correct. Otherwise, strip off one turn at a time until the dial reaches 30 for a 360-meter station. This will enable you to cover all broadcasting wavelengths. The two coils, A and B, are set alongside each other, with the centers coinciding, about an inch apart. Two or three pieces of wood an inch long may be set between them for this purpose, and nails hammered into the ends through the coils, to keep them together. Other Parts A piece of doweling about %- inch thick can be used to hold the coils upright. Bore a %-inch hole in the baseboard, where the coils are to go, put the dowel into one of the openings of the larger coil, leaving enough to be glued into the hole in the base. The variable condenser should be of the best low-loss type available. A 23-plate type is called for. Os course, i> should be verniercontrolled. The fixed condenser. C 2, should be of .091 mfd. capacity, and the grid condenser, C3, should have a capacity of .00025 mfd.. with a variable grid leak of from 1 to 2 megohms. The phone jack, .1. Is of the open circuit type if no audio amplifier is to be added to the detector. But it should be of the closed circuit type if an amplifier is attached. The tube, depending on the use of dry or wet batteries for filament current, may be either UV-199, UV-200 or any other detector of reputable make.

EXTRA SERVICE MARKS BONDS OF FOSTER-MESSICK Road Contractors Benefit by Equipment Exchange in Two States, The bond department of Foster & Messick exercises a service depart , merit for contractors which is a con stant source of assistance to road j building and construction contractors of Indiana and Illinois. This department sends out printed lists of the equipment every contractor in | two States has to sell, and a j list of the equipment that every 1 contractor who will will list his j needs with the company will buy. The equipment for radio construction is tremendously expensive and i often is needed to complete only one ! job and then is excess baggage. If it cannot be sold for a good price it j soon eats up the contractor's profits, i An average of five inquiries a day j come into the offices of Foster & j Messick for such transfer of equipment. Fidelity bonds are bought by just j about every kind of employer that j employs, says Howe S. Landers, counsellor of the company. Last year, h*> said, there were $200,000,000 stolen 1 by employes, only a part of which was covered by insurance. A fidelity bond guarantees the honesty of employes who are in a position to take money or merchandise from the employer. There are judicial bnods and Fed- | eral ltonds sold by Foster & Messick, j too. in each department this company has a little extra service to offer its clients. MIKE O’BRIEN Transfer and Storage I More Furniture, rianos. Baggage, Freight, Safes aud Machinery. 121 NORTH ALABAMA STREET. Telephone: MA In 1307 Safe Deposit Boxes Bankers Trust Company

Modern Classics Station WEAF, New York, has started broadcasting new musical selections for a half hour every Friday night. These selections will include the best from American composers and are intended to introduce the radio public to the more ciassic music of the day. Radio Concert Hall A large hall has been opened in Geneva, Switzerland, for the public reception of European radio con-

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If It’s for Your Office , We Have It HILLER Office Supply Cos. 28 S. Penna. St. Just Phone Cl rcle 0611

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TOURS STEAMSHIP TICKETS LETTERS OF CREDIT FOREIGN EXCHANGE TOURS TRAVELERS’ CHECKS Richard A. Kurtz, Manager, Foreign Dept. The Union Trust Cos. 120 East Market Street MA in 1576, 2853

Smith-Hassler-Sturm Cos. 219*221 Mass. Ave. “A Real Sporting Gooda Store”

certs. The admission fee is 50 centimes a person, about 10 cents. Army Recruiting Resumed Enlistment of men without service records has been resumed by Sergt. Harlie C-. Sylvester, Army recruiting officer for Indianapolis. A limited number of men will be accepted for infantry and artillery units at Ft. Sam Houston, Texas, Sylvester said. Capt. Harold W. Webb, who has been on duty with the signal corps at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan., has reported for duty in the Indianapolis district.

drug store, then if you or one of your family should eat something which upsets the stomach with gases, sour fermentations, acids or causes distress you can, like millions of others, get prompt stomach relief and correction.—Advertisement.

Foster and Messick Telephone MA in 6100 Surety Bonds and Casualty Insurance FLETCHER TRUST BUILDING

The Times Pink for Late Sport News

Automobile Glas* Replaced While You Wait Building Glass of All Kinds Indianapolis Glass Cos. 1002 Kentucky Ave. Cir. 7727

Phone MA in 3057 THE WHITAKER PRESS Inc. Printers to the Advertiser Fifth Floor Print Craft Building, 223-25 North New Jersey Street

DON HERR GARAGE RIGHT DOWNTOWN Kentucky Ave. and Maryland St. Auto Laundry Greasing Station Free Crank Case Service Day and Night Parking Everything for Your Automobile.

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