Evening Star Newspaper, March 2, 1925, Page 23

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wof Waihemo, New Zealand Y 0.8.9.0.2.9.9.0.90.9.2.0.9.9.0.0.0.9 0.9 ¢ 0902 0.0.2.2.2.0.0.0.0.9.2.2-8 .1 WORLD PALESTINE AGENCY LAUNCHED Move Started to Unite Zion- ists and Non-Zionists in Advnsory Body. the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March t to unite Zionists and non-Zion- ist8 in a Jewish agency to act as an advisory bod in the admin under the Briti eived the unanimous in- of a meeting of prominent United States, provides for the estab- council of 150 persons of whom 2.—A move- Jews in the "he plan ng a resolution accept- the meeting authorized Marshall to appoint com- cc with Jews of organizing the Provision for Credit. Announcel the P an ent of the formation of les Economic Corporation. American enterprise, which will end credit to the new industries was made by who has 1 Flexner dent t $3,000,000, which will be build up the non-Zionis sald well have agreed t with the 2 The propos Palestine Koren Jewish hoi as rope. n and have = initiative should lie ican non-Zionists, allowing administer fund the the | (the which £ the ation. couy the Jews of the istration of Palestine, nn said, it will transfer the new agency when world | this over to is organized, Coast Gets Anhpodes During the trans-Pacific tests ar- ) an Radio Relay League, W. Magner of San, Pedro, California, succeeded in establishing communication with Frank D. Bell This work | a new world record for as Lhc distance by air line dro and Waihemo Is The previors record was | arlos Braggio of Berna nd Ivan O'Meara of Gi Zealand, who communi- a distance of 6,400 miles. | constitutes amateurs, cated over Radio Booms Sales. Radio has brought about a marked increase in the sale of musical instru- | ments, according to Rudoiph H. Wur- | litzer, internationally known manu- | facturer of mu struments Will Tell of Ions. The func forms of lated by of and other | will be re- | nolds ions One Stage Amlifier PR £6.95 0. 0.9.0.9.0.2.0.0.0.8.0.9 ¢ ¢ ¢ ok k Neulroyne Type Wonderful Volume $32.50 List Price ~ 2 15, Y (7] - =2, wn (5] — Loud and Clear * R “ o S *List Price | that | current | the wave | ether by THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, FIFTEEN MINUTES OF RADIO EACH DAY BY JOSEPH CALCATERRA, Noted Authority on Radio. i e n All Rights Beserved. Reproduction Prohibited. * Oscillations. Part I. Usually when a radio fan talks of oscillations what he refers to are the noises which take place in a receiver when the tuning of the circuits are <0 adjutsed that a high-pitched squeal issues forth from the phones or loud- speaker of his receiving set This, however, is only one form taken by the various types of oscilla- tions which take place in a radio re- ceiver or transmitter. In some cases oscillations are desirable; in other cases they are anything but desirable. In some cases they cause trouble to other receivers in the neighborhood, while in other cases a receiver can howl its head off without causing any trouble to any one except those with- in hearing distance of the loudspeaker of the howling receiver. Figl AVAVAV VS Fg2 To begin with it is 2 good idea to know something about the character of oscillations, what they are, how they are prodyged and what they are good for. Electrical oscillations form basis of a considerable number of electrical phenomena and are the principle things .that must be de: with in a study of radio transmis on and reception. Any movement which has as basis a backward and forward, or a to and fro motion, alternately, going from one extreme to the other Is con- sidered as an oscillatory motion. There are various types or forms of the | oscillatory motion, some of these be- ing very regular and othets being more or less irregular. Flow of Current. It is generally known to the lay- man that current in an electrical cir- cuit is said to flow from one end of the circuit to the other. The average layman also in an alternating current, the flows first in one direction nd then reverses itself and flows in knows | the opposite direction, alternating its | direction of flow a certain number of times per second and being called alternating current of a frequency depending on the number of times that the current returns to its orig- inal direction in a second. The terms 60-cycle alternating cur- rent {s a familiar one to the man who has tried to buy an electric fan, vacuum sweeper or other electrical appliance and who has had to find out what kind of current is being supplied to h house. An electrical wave of which radio re one form is produced by 1 oscillations In a circuit and correspondents in its va- riations and characteristics with the electrical oscillatidns which produce it so that In general we can speak of both of them interchangably if we remember that while they are rep- resented in the same way on paper, the electrical oscillation is the elec- trical vibratory motion that takes place in the circuit while the wave is the vibratory motion produced in the the electrical oscillation in ult. Oscillations or waves consist of two n forms; damped and undamped illations or waves. The latter un- damped, a often referred to as tinued oscillations or waves. Figure 1 shows an oscillation of the damped type in Reflex’ its | at once, 50 a call w on- | dies down as the energy of the elec- v which produces them be- nt. ;jhows an oscillation of the undamped or continuous wave type in which by special arrangements and apparatus, the amplitude of the osci lations is kept constant. The first corresponds to the osci lations of a pendulum swinging free- 13, in which case the swing becomes less and less as friction spends the original energy imparted to the mass when it was started, while the sec- ond corresponds to the motlon of a pendulum in a clock, in which case the clock spring imparts a certain amount of energy at each stroke, which makes up for the energy loi through friction, so that the Swing of the pendulum is always the same. R At “Maud Mason” to Play. Madelyn Marshall Simon, pianist, is another star of the concert world who will appear regularly at WAHG. Be- fore her advent at the Long Island broadcasting station Mrs. Simon was the accompanist for Leopold Auer, world-famous violin teacher, who numbers among his pupils Heifitz, Zimbalist and Mischa Elman. Mrs. Simon is the wife of Robert Simon, the novelist, and her nom-de-mike at the Grebe Studio is “Maud Mason.” - Radio Recalls Fire Chief: When the assistant fire chief of Hartford, Conn., died recently, the chief of the fire department, John C. Moran, was deep in the Canadlan woods on, a hunting trip. It was necessary ‘that the chief be recalled broadcast from WBZ. The messa reached M. Moran by way of an Indian guide— and he hurried back to duty in Hartford 69th ANNIVERSARY It is now sixty-nine years since the original prescription of [Father John's Medicine was written for Father John O’Brien at Lowe]l, Massa- chusetts. has continued to be of great- est value in treating coughs and colds and as a body builder. It soothes and heals the breathing passages, drives off impurities and actually rebuilds wasted strength. No ‘dangerous drugs. ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥4¥M¥¥¥¥%¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥M¥¥¥¥¥t STAR % RADIO 403 11th St. NW. Co. t'wo Stage Radio Only Member of Radio Merchants’ Association $17.00 reg. $99 $6 000 Worth Kodel Sets to Be: Sold Less Than Wholesale Prices Every Set in Factory-Sealed Guaranteed Cartons The Sensation of the Season! Kodel 4-Tube Set| Kodel 3-Tube Set |K°delz ~Tube Set $28.00 Reg. Price ~ -5 o, g | -] = ] g 2175 1895 10 95 Operates Loud Speaker Kodel 1-Tube Set CAPITAL AMATEUR GETS ENGLAND AND AUSTRALIA Robert W. Burten, Western Grad- uate, Uses Set Embodying Low Loss Principles. ng a hastily-constructed receiv-" ing set embodying the low-loss prin- ciples, Robert W. Burton, Western High School graduate, now a student at the University of Virginia, re- ported hearing last Sunday night and Monday morning amateur stations in Australia and England and other foreign points. Foreign stations logged by Burton and one of his classmat John Durant of Phoenix, Ariz, include OTK, SELB, 9BYL, LOR, 62 , 3MV and 3MB. All were heard around 75 meters, on a detector and two stages of audio frequency amplification. The set consists of a fixed coupler, which the students made, a tickler, and s 23-plate .0005 conder h the cut to reduce losses. A UV-201 tube was used for the de- tector and UV-199s for the amplifiers. U WNYC to Extend Programs. More extensive programs and longer broadcasting hours are planned by WNYC, the municipal station of New York City, beginning March 15. et Twenty-eight thousand people are employed in making jewelry at Wert. temburg and Baden, Germany, the in- dustry having a boom. Sore Throat Prudence Your medicine shelf is not well stocked without a bottle of Tonsiline, for you don’t know what moment it may be nezded to_relieve a sudden case of Sore Throat. Relieving Sore Throat is Ton- siline’s special mission, It is made for that—advertised for that—sold for that one purpoge. Tonsiline is the Nat- every State in_the Union. You will Tonsiline one _of gk these da)s, ar some night when the dru%wstore is closed—better keep a bottle handy at home. TONSILINE s../iezmts L. H E about | ional Sore Throat Remedy. It is sold in | D. C., MONDAY, New Coffee Champ Says 24 Cups Daily Keeps Doctor Away By the Associated Press. NEWARK, N. J., February 28— Twenty-four cups of goffee a day keeps the doctor away, says Joseph Peclet, 72, who today laid cleim to the coffee drinking championship recently claimed by a Bradley Beach man with a record of 15 cups a day Peclet says he daily drinks six quarts of coffee, the equivalent of 24 cups. He drinks four quarts during his night's work as watch- man in an automobile battery shop and declared he would get sick if he did not have it He claims it ke; his nerves alive and keeps him awake during his long shift. Pec- let admitted he did not sleep much in the day time either, as the other two quarts of coffee keeps him awake, but he has the reputation of excellent health for his years. his mind clear, Total area of Italy, including the ARCH 2, 1925 2,000 POLICEMEN GUARD MILLERAND ON PLATFORM By the Associated Press, MARSEILLE, France, March One thousand policémen and a similar number of so-called “secret service men,” the latter of whom, notwith- standing they were in plain clothes, were as conspicuous as the uniformed men, yesterday were stationed about the hall where former President Millerand delivered a speech #nd pre- vented the Communists from inter- ferring with the banquet. M. Mille- rand spoke without the:slightest in- terruption. Counter demonstrations organized by the Left groups were held in another part of the city. These also were carried out without inter- ference. M. Millerand’s address was devoted to detailed criticism of the Herriot Before You Buy—See STUDEBAKER . new territories ceded by Austria, s 17,982 for your pocketbook’s sake '8 MEN'S SUITS .. \gl LADIES’ SUITS PINDLER 801 11th N.W. Main 2704 LEAN and PRESS.. ALL and DELIVER e government’s policies. The speaker scored the financial management of the affairs of the treasury by the Left groups in Parllament, spoke in opposition to rocognition by the gov- ernment of the Russian Soviet gov- ernment and characterized as unjusti- fled the rupture of relations with the Vatican. He failed, however, to sug- gest any constructive idea by which | |the financial crisis might be reme- died. A gold ring was found inside a cod | by a fish dealer’s assistant at King- ston, England, recently. i We ipecialize in two things—the exsmining for glasses and flling oculists’ pre- ction _assur ELARLINOPTICAL. CO. 1314 G i 922 14th orporation oal o R’ mw anyching so efficacious for the back 1n my life s Tyrees and Hyoscyames 1t 1 8 wonderful med cine Urn, Parairs Brava, Hyowy Acetate of Potams, Aechereal Spirit of Nitre and Hexsmethylen You do not Tee ke you we takimg medicws It ot vaae ik mecicin a1 48 There w otk = 1§ it rhat burts you m the least 9L 0T TEASPOORPAAS e WKTER PouR TINES A BAY 504 J.5 TYREE CiemisT momonn.sc. 50¢ Many of these world-famous Brunswick artists (and others) will broadcast during the March Music Memory Contest 54 BIG CASH PRIZES EVERY MONTH ‘W)Z .On Stations Bk H WRC WGY KDKA KYW [Washington Schenectady Pittsburgh Chicago 9m10p.m.,Eastemnme—8m9p.m.,Cenq~anime % ’ | 65 25¢ These special low this clipping ONLY. QUALITY SHOE REPAIR 415Y; 11th St. N.W. prices with for that skin eruption You don't have to wait to know that Resinol Ointment is going to overcome your skin trouble. It gives suchquick relief from the itching and burning and 50 generally succeeds in clearing away the eruption that, with Resinol Soap, it is the standard skin treatment in thousands of homes. Resinol products 50ld by all druggists. MU S L C $5000 in Cash Prizes Hear this wonderful concert and these famous Brunswick artists, by radio Tuesday Evenings, March 3rd, 10th, 17th, 24th, 31st Full Particulars at all Brunswick Dealers Ask for FREE Contest Blanks or write for one to The Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company, Chicago , ) ® Now—the Radiola in The Brunswick Radio and Phonograph in One Remarkable Instrument Half the Space OW bring to your home the finest enter- tainment the world offers—versatile pro- grams of the air from a score of distant stations, then at a turn of a lever the music of your No Outside Wires No Wet Batteries operate effectively. * * choice on favorite Brunswick Records. This new instrument — the Brunswick Radiola — _ makes all this Through the famous Brunswick Method of Reproduction, the. Radiola has new musical charm, new clearness—superlative tone quality in both phonograph and radio. Combined with this is the distinguished beauty of Brunswick PHONOG possible. . The Sign of Musical Prestige 3 [ RAPHS - RECORDS No Exposed Horn cabinet design. All apparatus is concealed. It is a simple instrument which anyone can * For the convenience of those without radio sefs, special Tuesday night receiving of the contest program will be featured by Brunswick dealers in music shops and school halls, etc., in practically every city in America, over this the newest and most remarkable of all musical instruments—the Brunswick Radiola. GET READY! Tune in Tomorrow Night, March 3rd. RADIOLAS

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