New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 25, 1922, Page 9

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wJA L, OvaCOUR wly sV MAYNARD LEADS IN — INEWVACUUM TUBE RUSSHIN LEAGUE) = 7==7 G\ Y/RNERL & | | TOHURLTHE vOiE (Continued from Preceding Page) E G fm] O = = =] O Globe Clothing House One Big Feature in Our SHOE DEPARTMENT Is The Genuine DANIEL GREEN COMFY SLIPPERS For Men, Women and Children $1.25 to $3.00 No Other Practical Moccasin is so com- fortable as the Indian Moccasin Made of Elk— $1.50 to $4.00 Orv Shoe Department Must be Seen to be Appreciated. Fuller . 102 80 85— 257 E. Supernant ... 80 114 111— 314 o b i e & \ }/ v Tones Across the Ocean S 92 82 91— 265 447 434 420—1310 it i / y i i g S Saws, P . ¢ G | Schenectady, Oct. 26.—A. 1,000,000~ Bchwtz .vvvev. 78 T4 84— 231 5 4 1 4 watt vacuum tube has been developed Draper . 2 84 Bl 237 e e / 9 ’ i in the General Electric research labor- Bart ... 79 86 73— 238 3 b7 | 4 5 % ! 4 atory here by J, H. Payne Jr. The. Whittaker 81 67 87— 285 A A /L 3 p 3 huge capacity tube is a magnetron, in- Btotts .. 91 108 97— 204 \ b 1 i ; volving the principle of magnetic con- | —_—— — —— ] 4 G A 5 7 trol as developed by Dr. Albert W. | 306 417 422—1236 § gl Hull of the laboratory, Screw Drivers, % . e u 1 bS5 : The tube is expected to be of much Rancor . 80 81 77— 238 T g2 2 Al oo 4 importance hoth in radio work and Lawles 96 76 76— 248 f A e %3 A | long distance power transmission. Its Kovell 86 87 82— 265 g - J vk output is about 40 amperes at 26,000 | Kilduft . 89 89 88— 266 ¥ B 1. 4y i |volts, and serves as a rectifier to Kolodney ...... 87 82 1056— 284 b 4 i i ' |change alternating to direct currert, —_——— — i g Ty » S \ |and also to change direct to alter- | 448 415 428—1201 i i | nating current of amy frequency or to Bit Braces. e convert low frequency alternating cur- Walthers v 91 84 86— 261 A £ Tai 4 . g § i rent to high frequency. Johnson 68 101 88— 257 5 i . g ! VPR It is thought that one tube will he Rockwell , 82 85 03— 260 y oy Vima o 1. |sufficlent to carry radio telephone six- Rund .... 20 88 85— 263 i Z & 2 4 . B |nals across the Atlantic. This tube McBriarty ..... 83 95 116— 204 F% - |consiats essentially of a water-conled e |eylindrical anode 80 inches long and 461 422 420—1293 |1 per cent inches in diameter. In' Planes. b |the axis of the anode is a tungsten Fanion .. . 90 90 98— 275 ' 2 ¥ 3 » b i cadn B § | filament four-tenths of an inch in Blagkenburg ,. 105 91 90— 286 ¥ b “ N K ¢ z | diameter and 22 inches long. This| Glover .... .. 83 85 70— 238 p " “ B > " A i fllament is excited by current of 1,- - — - e 800 amperes at 10,000 cyeles, the fii- WRAD oo osnnae 18007000 81— 904 - Strom ........ 100 77 83— 260 The schooner C. S, Holmes, a sailing vessel which carried supplies to Captain Amundsen, Are- ;;“'“' excitation requiring about 20 | kilowatts, —— —— —— ——ltic explorer, stuck fast in the frozen waters of the Arctic Ocean. Amundsen today is living in a —1335 4 ¢ B les o L 5 ! Th to feld prod by t 414 458 468—1335 | hyt on the icy banks of the Arctic Ocean awaiting his opportunity for a dash to the Pole, R aaitel ipreduesc oy thy i "'rut off" the electrical current from BAGK To BALTIMORE |the e¢athode to the anode during a| ARRESTED FOR FLYING LOW | portion of each half oycle of the eur- ArCtiC Denizens Aid Amundsen o2 S Irent passing through the eathode, this Clonooooooooc oo E: > action taking the place of that of the - B 1 Two Chicagoans Face Trial For An- 2 | grid in the three-electrode tube. The bers of Famous Orioles Join in Big : i i | noying .slfe«-mlnrs at Football Game |clectron current to the ‘tcathode fs Chircago, Oct. Celebration in Maryland City. —Two aerial tres. |thus interrupted 20,000 times per sec- | passers who annoved 25,000 persons at | Ond. Baltimore, Md,, Oct. 25.—A Recol- . Y 1 s . [the Chicago-Purdue football game 0 e Ut In Hu se O : : Saturday by fiying low over the field cuits this can be used for the produc- [H] . Tohi SEhL TR By the use of properly tuned cir- ection o e famous o riole buebnllb team we\;ct:’ndullgrvd ;n yes; 4 % were arrested yesterday. They are|tion of high frequency power radio ) terday by some o e older fans of # James A. Kelly, a pitot, and Bertram or any other purpose. | the city when John McGraw and ; h Burley, owner of a drug store, who| g —— .@EE@E@@@@@EE@@E@@@EE@.@ Hughey Jennings returned to the| | tossed advertising matter from the| TO AID OF “BUDDY" i scene of thelr early triumphs. The ‘ ! Fiag ! |airplane so that it fell on the crowd.| New York, Oct. 25.—When Private ! T — magnet was the parade featuring ¢ . » p Y . In court tomorrow they will be|David Stein, stationed at Governor's! ped to the bar and told Judge George | not occupled in civilian employment. Baltimore week. The once famous charged with flying at a height of 500 | Island, was called in the Kings county | W, Martin that he and Stein had gone | "I will give you my check, sir, if in third baseman and shortstop, now | feet, which 1s 1,600 feet under the | court yesterday to znswer to an in-| over the top together and had been|(hat way Stein can be cleared of the gray-haired veterans of the sport and minimum ievel prescribed by the|dictment charging him with obtaining | wounded at the same time. Both re- | charge ;galns! him.” part owner and coach, respectively, of aviation ordinance, and distributing| $30 from the state compensation com- |ceived the Croix de Guerre. “I will be glad to dismiss the in. the world’s champion Giants, were advertising matter in violation of the | mission by stating that he was with- Iieutenant Raymond said that|dictment, if restitution is m@de,’” re. given a rousing reception when they law. out employment when he had re-en- | Sfein was acting under a mistaken | plied Judge Martin. The prosecuting took their places at the ‘‘home plate” This is the first arrest under the |listed as a member of the regular | idea when he said that he was out |officers agreed and Stein walked out at a joint funcheon of the Real Es- minimum Flying Level law, army, Lieutenant J. E. Raymond, also | of work and meant to say that he was | of court a free man. tate board and Rotary and Lions' \ % o ; g clubs at the Hotel Rennerd. Other 4 ~ — - — - members of the Baltimore team that won pennants in '04, '95 and '96 on hand were Ned Hanlon, Wilbert Rob- inson, now manager of the Dodgers; Joe Kelly, scout for one of the big league teams; Steve Brodie, John J. McMahon and Willlam Clarke. EXPECTS TO DRINK 90 BBLS. OF BOOZE | McGraw, Jennings and Other Mem- Whiskey Croesus Wants It Within Elbow Reach, as It Shrinks In Warchouse.® ‘Washington, Oct. 25.—Daniel Pol- leck of New York applied to the Dis- trict Supreme Court here yesterday for a writ of mandamus to compel Internal Revenue Commissioner Blair to sanction the removal of ninety | barrels of whiskel from a Baltimore | warehouse to the Pollock home in New York, and thereby stop a steady leak that has reduced the hoard from what was 4,680 gallons some twenty | years ago to but 550 gallons at pres- | ent. | Numerous appeals to Blair met only L R P e A party of Eskimos, dwellers in the frozen wastes on the plained, and since the prized liquid B X : diminishes mysterously but regu-| margin of the Arctic ocean, reach the schooner C. S. Holmes af- larly in quantity and since it costs' ter aiding Amundsen in loading his vessel, the Maud. Amundsen him $86 a year for storage in ”"‘i now is practically marooned on the banks of the Arctic ocean h e, he decided to seek court i i 3 ity 1o move it to nis own wer. | While he awaits a favorable chance to move on to the Pole. lar. He bought it in December, 1919, L g e 5 : he said. Pollock described himself in his ir sentences last night. Mrs. [for State's Attorney Crowe, was sen- suit as "a young man in his thirties Thornton and Mrs. Lulu M. {tenced to jail for contempt by Chief and in easy financial circumstances, | former triste paid fines [Justice MecKinley of the criminal who devotes most of his time to th ivBly, anl|courtyafter he had refused to answer handling of a large estate, he being| 2 4 t °, pald a|questions by the grand jury investi- | one of the executors thereof,” and 0 fine and e d sentences. |gating school board affairs, i added “that in view of his age and| The arrests were the result of a| — condition in life he anticipates the [contempt action tried hefore Judge | FRENCH SUB SA consumptiop of all the said whis-|Seanlan in 1919 when the school| Cherbourg, Oct. 25.—The French | lighted by small electric plants get their current key in his house during his lifetime | bcard was charged with viol ubmarine Roland Merillot, andon- 1 : and in a perfectly legal manner."” injunction by stripping the ¢ r |ed by her crew in the F h vhxn-k from EdeC Battenes. Ne.'arly C\'Jery message sent tendent of Schools Charles Chadsley, | nel, is safe i the harbor of Guernsey | over the telephone system is carried by the current of his powers and forcing him to re- | island. She will be towed here this 4 ; : |slgn. A recent supreme court de- afternoon. The crew arrived here on ¢ I from an Exide Battery' \{ 4 cision upheld sentences imposed by oard a French merchantman yes- w4 ¢ . .y " ARE NOW IN JAIL 5555 i and ruled Governor | terday. y ] i The same rugged reliability that makes Exide : 4 F H Batteries dominant in every industry where bat- |Small exceeded hid authority in par- | teries are used is built into the Exide made for R {doning the ten men and women in- | " Chicago Women, However, Escape |volved. | C f P l \ = 3 7 3 v i e \ ; i your automobile. With Fines in Reversal of Par- | Others to be tuken e ey ause o Hes ; ; | dons in 1919 Contempt Case. ::oa;‘vl“urlmin(t-.\'. sentenced fo five dayt | Dr. Leonhardt found the ¢ ; S e 8 Exide Serv:cle Stations are equipped to be useful n jail and to pay $600 fine; Albert Piles to be internal. The chy y 0 you, not only in putti: i i Chicago, Oct. James Rezny, [A. Severinghaus, bresent member of | salves and operations fail to give last- | 2 O yoglr C‘ar but ir}; givliangttsi{glf;};eaag:;tfig:t::;}\’v::to i ) - former school board trustee, Hart [the board, sentenced to three days in |‘fng relief. Iis harmie prescription, Hanson and Dr. B. Klarkowski, pres- | jail and to p 00 fine, HEM-ROID, removed the cause, / te ever make of battery you are now using, ent trustees, sentenced to jail in the| Robert Cochrane, partner of Ben | Money back if it fails, Clark & DBrain- ) ¥ school board contempt case, started to|Newmark, former chief investigator crd Company. | Inquiriss about batteries other than auto- | ) j ) mobile batteries should be addressed to e ’ ) The Electric Storage Battery Co., Philadelphia > Sending your words through space If shipwreck or accident damaged the eiectric generator that sends a wireless message, and were no other power available, many lives might pay the penalty. For this reason wireless stations on land and sea have storage batteries for reserve power, A N TS . AT, b 3 Most of the government and commercial wireless stations are equipped with Exides. A majority of the farms and country homes —— ~H - 1) (] confident of skilful Broken Sizes $45 and § Rroken Sizes 5 and ©50 | IRy vork e hices, And e 1 : ! ’ sible advice at th ~ . BIIERUVME (0 ride Service ‘Station. $35.00 $30.00 DO e, | J88\T i FASHION PARK and HIC K£Y-FREEMAN — g " e Ry Sizes Regular—Shoits—Stouts and Longs HATS 12 Dozen ed~Srete $3 50 PADIO YW, UV and . Get an vvide Radio battery Jor your radio set FITCH-JONES CO. R L Nt DRI — CITY HALL — ! Visit the Nearest Exide Service Ntation CONNECTICOUTY ‘ » New Britain, A. G. Hamker, 53 Elm Street. Plainville, James J. Murphy

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