Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 143, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1930 — Page 24

PAGE 24

DEVICE MAKES NEW ROOM FOR RADIOSTATIONS Hundreds of New Plants May Be Allowed to Go on Air. BV WILLIAM E. HALLRERG Exited Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO. Oct. 24 A revolutionary radio principle to create room in the air for hundreds of additional broadcasting stations in the United States, was demonstrated successfully here Thursday night. The inventor was Dr. James Robinson, noted British scientist, presenting the first full public explanation of his stenode radiostate. Prom the principle which he first hinted one year ago. he has developed a series of inventions upset not only theories in the field of radio broadcasting, but ideas that have been accepted as facts in the realm of television, land communication and sound. Double Present Stations The radio broadcast receiving application, however, was the only one he demonstrated, because his audience was limited to experts. For one hour, Dr. Robinson demonstrated and explained how he proposes to create blank spaces between existing radio broadcasting channels into which can be fitted to at least double the present number of stations, perhaps nine times as many. Dr. Robinson’s principle that there is a basic error in the time-worn idea that a separation of ten kilocycles is required between the wave lengths of radio stations to prevent one from interfering with another. His theory Is carried out in the stenode radio station at the ultimate perfection of which he contends will give radios a selectivity ten times as great as at present. Narrow Broadcast Band The heart of his principle is the quartz crystal, the same mineral that made radio receivers widely possible before the vacuum tube. This he uses in such a way as to

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Defies Husband

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While her husband seeks the aid of the American government In gaining the custody of his 2-year-old daughter, Irma, Mrs. James E. Welsh, pictured above, is reported to be keeping the child in Venezuela. Welsh, a Louisianian, charged before state department officials in a visit to Washington that he himself was imprisoned unjustly in Venezuela and held in irons. He has accused his wife of indiscretions. admit a broadcasting band onethird as .wide as that which other engineers hold necessary to maintain the quality of the reproduced sound. Those who attended his demonstration could not detect any difference in the quality of the music that came through his radiostat. Dr. Robinson contends further that the sensitivity of a radio is not impaired by use of his method.

DEATH CLAIMS R. W. CHANLER. NOTEDJRTIST Heart Ailment Is Fatal to Ex-Husband of Opera Star, Cavalieri. Hu United Prres WOODSTOCK, N. Y„ Oct. 24. Robert Winthrop Chanler, 68, noted decorative artist and former husband of Lina Cavalieri, died at his home here early today of a heart ailment. Chanler had been suffering from

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

heart disease for the last two and one-half years. Blood of half a dozen of the east's most aristocratic families flowed in the veins of Mr. Chanler, but he was unimpressed by his lineage. Destined for a career at the law by family decree, he disregarded his relatives to become one of the most picturesque figures in American art. Mr. Chanler was born in 1872. He was a great-grandson of John Jacob Astor and shared in the vast Astor estate. He also was a descendant of Peter Stuyvesant, last of the Dutch Governors of New York, and of Governor John Winthrop, Roger Williams and the Chanlers, the Eeefemans, the Livingstons and the Schuyiers. The artist was the youngest of fom - brothers. One, William Astor Chanler, was an African explorer and membqr of congress. Another, Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler, was Lieutenant Governor of

New York and a prominent attorney. A third was John Armstrong Chaloner, who, at the artist's expense, contributed to the American slang expression, “Who’s looney now?" This brother had been committed to an insane asylum in New York by members of his family, but escaped, changed his name to Chaloner, and settled down in Virginia to become a writer of some prominence. His famous inquiry was contained in a cablegram he sent Robert Chanler when the latter married Lina Cavalieri, operatic soprano. It was his second matrimonial venture, Mrs. Julie Chamberlain Chanler having divorced him in 1907. The marriage was preceded by lengthy legal negotiations by which he was reported to have agreed to

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turn over all his Income to the singer. The romance lasted only a year, Paris courts granting a divorce after Chanler had given Cavalieri some SBO,OOO to relinquish her claims on his estate.

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OCX. 24, 1930