The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 19, 1922, Page 2

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initials biel 2 ie shat ~ ap hit econ etme i ttn te “MEMBER AMERICAN HOMES BUREAU” details of our amateur radio contest $23 —our announcement of this contest has created widespread interest among the many thousands of Amateur Radio Set Makers and Operators— it is the first contest of its kind to be held in America and all Radio Amateurs are invited to enter. IN CASH PRIZES —this contest represents the awarding of $235 in cash prizes in recognition of the skill and efforts of Radio Amateurs. No entry fee or cost is involved—all amateurs are welcome to enter this very unusual and novel contest. these cash prizes to be awarded: CLASS I. CLASS II. —tor Twhe Detector and = —tor Tube Detector Beta Two - stage = Amplifier entered by any Radio Sets entered by any Amateur. Radio Amateur. FIRST PRIZE %5¢— FIRST PRIZE $25— SECOND PRIZE $35— SECOND PRIZE $is— description of classifications: CLASS 1—Tube Detector and Two-Stage Amplifier Sets —the sats entered in this classification should be constructed for operation between the wave lengths of one hundred and five hundred meters, particular attention being given to the apocess fal reception of radio broadensting rather than radio telegraph signals, The set can be built in two cabinets tf preferred. Com, pieteness and a minimum of parts is important. Sets consisting of miscellaneous collection of parts and batteries not definitely built into any compact form will not be regarded with favor. CLASS 2—Vacuum Tube Detector Sets —entry in this claswfication must consist of a single detector ret without any amplifying arrangements. Wave length range, 100 to 500 meters. Sets consisting of a collection of parts will not be considered favarabily. Completeness and simplicity are con- sidered important. CLASS 3—Crystal Receiving Sets * —entry in this classification must have wave length range, 190 to 500 meters. Sets consisting of a collection of parts will not be regarded favorably. Completeness and simplicity are considered important Sets CLASS —entries In this classification are for boys or girls under fourteen years of age. Birth cprtificate or other definite proof of age should be furnished at the time entry is made. CLASS 5—Smallest Crystal Receiving Sets —capable of satisfactory operation. Entry in this classification must have wave length range from 200 to 400 meters. Complete ness, appearance and smaliness of size will be important features. tor Bets —a CERTIFICATE OF ENTRY wit! be given each contestant at time of entry specifying date of entry, name, address and classification. Bach entry will be scheduled im ite clas sification by its number. Names of contestants will not be announced until decisions are Contest Now Open A. KALIN Instructor In Electrical Engineering, University of Washington rendered. JUDGES OF CONTEST: L. T. TURNER Instructor in Industrial Arta, High School Department CLASS OI. Crystal Receiving entered by any Radio Amateur, FIRST PRIZE $23— SECOND PRIZE §16— CLASS V. —for Amallest Crystal Reta entered by any Radio Amateur. FinsT PRIZE BEOCOND PRIZE CLASS IV. —for Orystel Receiving Bets entered by boys or girls under 14 years of exe. FIRST PRIZR $3 BSEROOND PRIZE $15-— Tules of the contest: performance and operation will be judged by testing all entries on the same antenna, this antenna being installed in the Standard Furniture Company's building. The transmitting station used for the teste will be that known the KFC broadcasting station, operated by the Seattic Post-Inteliigencer. Teets will be made with KFC operating at « uniform power tnput to the antenna. Standard 2000 ohm head telephones of like mAke and sensitivity will be used for texting all entries, For judging tube sets, detector and ampli flier tubes will be supplied by the Standard Furniture Company, the fame tubes to be used for testing all entries Three seta of tubes of similar and equal characterisation will be kept on hand to avoid burnouts occurring during the judging of the entries, Should any dispute ares as to the equality of the tubes used for tenting, they may be submitted to the engineering department of the Kilbourne & Clarke Mfm. Co. for report. This will insure condition of tests being alike in all entries w-the entries will be ju@ged and credited on these potnta which are to be the basin for decision of contest judges, which shall be 2 40% for satintactory operation and performance; 30% for ship and finish; 29% for originality of design. —CLOSING DATE OF CONTEST: The contest will close af 6 p m. Saturday, May ¢, and all Ratio Bets gust be in Department of the Standard Furniture Company on o: time and date. So that the judges will hgve ample time fully judge and schedule testa, all entries Will be retained cloning date of contest. Winning entries are to announcement of awarta —tach contest entry will be offictally tagged, showing number of try, classification and date of entry, $28 Hb THE SEATTLE Se ee STAR vere ee ne Why Business HAZEL Women Favor Mrs. Landes ‘This ie her article by « ‘oman telling why Mrs, Landes elected to the ely Clubs) It In not so much A question of why @ woman should be on the city counell as why a w n le not al ready there that Interests business women, The holding of a publle of- fice is an obligation and not in itself an honor, The majority of women running for public offices today are not Interested In the office from a political point of view, but de render a service to thelr con whieh only women ean Women have received the franchise and It i» Incumbent upon them to nexume full rewponsibilides in the performance of their civic duties, nat only by voUng,/but by holding public offices There can be no question as to a woman being better qualified to per- t ertaln ¢ ork th Many city ordinances aii women, children, young people and the family, and a woman on the olty council could present the feminine point of view in these matters and give the women voters of the com munity, thru her, proper representa, tion. Women, who comprise at leant 50 per cent of our population, have No voles on the city council, so what could be more logical than to elect & woman to this plave? ‘The management of our city, an compared with other cities, is costly, if not extravagant. A woman by jtraining is more economical than & man, and a step toward the reduc jon of taxes would be made by elect ing women, She who has success |fully held the family puree strings |would quite likely be careful in au-| |thorizing the expenditure of public \funds. There has been too much bax: | lity by our officials in mpending other | [people's money, and a wornan would | Offer something more constructive to, the community than the construction | lof @ personal, political machine |which, as everybody knows, hag too | joften been the practice of our elected | \officiala, Buxiness women are vital lly Interested in ® business adminis | \tration that means better business | for our city. oe Radio Institute of America) | in. coly City” at the | The National Federation of Buat- ‘ness and Professional Women urges of citixenship. Women have a defi-|get busy on the variometer. | nite community service to render. | Get a cardboard tube five inches ee eee ate a be lntlocneas |i" tameter and another four inches. | lby @ sense of justice and the accom iplishment of the general good. In jinches. [Justice and fairness alone ean we! Heat as you 4id the vario coupler find @ solution of the dissension |ang wind with No. 24 double eotton- [which is now dividing Beattie ngminst) ee litmelf, and bring about the revival of /°OYST™? Copper wir \the olf “Seattle Spirit.” which) Leave « space of about one-fourth [brought as prosperity in the past. - =I and which will make us tn the future jthe leading metropolis of the Pacific coast ® A, stator; B, rotor; C, lead off; D, RUSH TO GETIN WAYFARER CAST cen xcx-comczs Chorus to Have First Re- cf an tach tn the msiddie of the wind. hearsal Monday eM thru later. Use the same number of turns— tmore displays her ability as an emotional actreas. acting as Mary Magdalene is splendid, Mysteries of Radio Explained by Expert By R. L. Duncan pater fheliac to hold them in place more firmly. Having completed the varlo COUP | attached to the rotor so that jt may women to accept full responsibilities |r for the regencrative receiving wet, be turned about inside the stator. cotls, When varied, the rotor should | move freely. Cut them down to s height of two (stator to the rotor, punch @ small | transmission. he aie ~~ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1922. (COriscu ANITA Se Kay « Saturday “THe BKM Ss PLAY" SHRI BELOMD WEAR BEmtLn Until Pridny Night Bou PA'I DJF OR} ‘The Vamous Melodrama Also OnAKEN MOO! “COME ON OV Coming Sundor—-Vatsatine “FRIVOLOUS WIVES” in Woodward this week, Her hole in the tube of the stator |push a free wire thru. Connect |the wire from the rotor, (enough slack for rotation. Put a drops of glue in the hole to hold | wire firm. Leave enough slack in the wire build ax explained ip previous cles. ‘This set should tune tn to a mately 560-meter lengths, which receive all amateur and b A brane rod is used to support both To make the connection from the ( Beveral thousand Seattleites are | expected to appear at the First Meth otiet chureh Monday evening, for the first rehearsal this year of “The Wayfarer.” According to Darwin Meteneat, ex- ecutive secretary of “The Wayfarer” committer, scores of tast your's chor- [us and cast already have registered lat the headquarters, 1200 Fourth ave. and seores more are expected to register at the church Monday. | Because of the response already made to the call for “6,000 singers Contest Now Open ©. R REDFERN United States Government Radio Inspector, Seventh Radio District about 23—on each of the tubes and | copnect a in the dlagram—one end of the wire on the movable coll go ling to one end of the wire on the fixed coll. The other ends of the wires are brought to binding post ‘The fixed cotl ts called the stator and the movable coll the rotor, After the coils are wound they may be given © very Nght coat of ARCHER NOW STANDARD FURNITURE CO. L. SCHOENFELD & SONS SEATTLE | | Int piaveta ses excectingty impor:| PENN WARDEN tant, «ays Melenest, that all wishing! \to obtain places tn this year’s chorus register at the first rehearsal, when munic books will be distributed free | Succeeding Thomas Maloney, re Beattie, signed, F. KR. Archer, 366 24th ave. has been named warden at _— istant to Fire AeMurchal Wins Suit By order of Presiding Superior r Judge Calving Hall, Harry L. Netf is! BY LAURENCE M. BENEDICT feappointed assistant fire marshal, a| WASHINGTON, April 19. — E Position abolished in 1918, and the| Mont Reilly, of Kansas City, will be éity is directed to pay Neff $1,065.76| removed as governor of Porto Rico back wages. | in the near future, it was learned to. The court held that Neff had| day from a source close to President wrongfully been reduced to a clerk | Harding. when the position of assistant fire) ‘rhe president, It was said today by marshal was abolished. and is €0-| one of his confidantes on Porte Rican titled to his pay differential. matters, is “convinced” that Reilly —— | 1s not the man to govern the island, FEDERAL JUDGE JEREMIAH | and has decided it would be unwise NETERER Tuesday approved the re-| to leave him there much longer. port of Clarke P. Bissett, receiver for| It wax also said that the president Frank Waterhouse & Co. has abandoned any thought he may ‘PORTO RICAN CHIEF TO G By an overwhelming majority, as the most corrupt and villainous charucter that ever strutted across a screen—-Eric Von Stroheim — the man you will love to hate, in “Foolish Wives,’ Carl Laemmle’s crowning achievement at the Columbia. have had of transferring Retlly to a | high government post in Washing. ton, as membership on the | Anance board, | A place on this board would have been given Reilly, it was said, had he been able, since his return to the ts- land, after a visit to Washington, re- | cently, to settle his differences. In stead, officials here believe, matters } © become worwe. UPON REQUEST from residents lof the section, the county commis sioners were taking steps Wednesday to investigate seepage conditions at Endolyne, where a slide last week resulted in the death of Mr, and Mrs, | Charles Hobenstreit. ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY Knights Templar and their wives left | Seattle Tuesday night in nine special New Orleans, in the interest of bringing the Knights Templar con clave to Seattle in 1925. Twenty-eight nationalities are rep. resented in the student body at Val- | paraino (Ind.) university, MATTHEWS DECIDES NOT TO STAY IN CITY FOR FINAL ELECTION Rev. M. A thews, pastor of the First yyterian church, and co-partner with Judge R. A. Ballinger in the Washington Union League club, watched the returns Tuesday night as long ar there seemed to be any chance for his candidate for mayor, Walter ¥. Meier When it became apparent that Walter was running third and wouldn't get thru the primaries, the doctor left for New Orleans, He said he wouldn't be back in time for the final election. | Northern Pacific coaches en route to| PLANS CHANGED FOR CAMPUS DAY Committee Preparing for Friday Celebration Campus day, the annual field day at the University of Washingto: will be held Friday of this w k. | After faculty protest on the conduct of past campus been revised for the event this year jand the committee has been allowed to comphte its arrangements. Claiming little actual work is done on improvement of the campus in jcomparison to the time necessary to j Make preliminary arrangeirentas, the faculty insisted that much of the en inment on the pr 4 thia year, Political apeeches of the candidates for student office and Ur baseball games have dropped from the ist, | The morning will be given to | Cleaning the campus, improvement of the golf links, clearing brush from | the lower part of the camps and the construction of new paths and roads. Work ts now under way on © road from the northeast corner of the campus to the Stadium, which will relieve traffic congestion when crowds of cars are at the Stadium. The annual California-Washing |ton crew regatta at 4:30 p. m. will be the big feature of the Campus day |program, The crews will row over the estuary between Lesch! park and Madison park. Bonts wil! leave the | university canoe house at 8:90 and . pans have m be elim. ina been |stands will be provided at the finish |” of the race. | ‘The university women wit have charge of a lunch, which will be! served to all workers at noon. Pledges to Oval and Tolo clubs, ‘men's and women's honorary uppercuss s0- cieties, will be announced, These books, be the credentials for admission to re hearsals and performances. According to the committee, “Phe vayfarer” this year will be larger ctacular than before. nizations co-operating yfarer™ management ts the Rainier-Noble post of the Amer- tean Legion, which has pledged {t- wolf to agaist in every way poxaible, to make “The Wayfarer” a euccess, Stricken at Wheel, Drives Car Up Bank EVERETT, April 19—Heart fail ure is the cause assigned of the death of Samuel O'Dea, who suc cumbed while driving bis auto on the Pacific highway Monday night O'Dea muddenly fell over and the ear ran up an embankment and came to 2 atop, Mrs. O'Dea, the only pas senger, said. O'Dea was employed by the Everett Logging company at Tulalip. “A BUNDLE 0° BONES” will be | the subject of a talk by Dr. Donald V. Trueblood before the Gyro club, Thursday noon. If you value your wateh, let Haynes repair it, Next Liberty theatre.—Adv. DR. #1. T. HARVEY (Ex-President Michigan State Board Dental Examiners) Dental Surgeon Diagnostician Pyorrhea Specialist X-Ray Laboratory Highest Order of Restoration Work Done Examination and Estimate Freo 504-12 Eitel Building SECOND AND PIKE SEATTLE The Great after-u Tonio. HEAMOTONE Makes red blood, builds up the nerves and restores strength quickly, $1.00 and $2.00 at all drug store sent, p. p. by Joyner Drug Co., Spo kane.—Advertis properly indorsed, will) MeNeil island federal penitentiary. Maloney’s term of four years ts practionly up. He resigned about the time Roy Gardner, mail train bandit, made his sensational escape from MoNeil island last Labor Day. | Archer has been prominent in re | publican politics for the last 20 years. He has held several government and county offices, including allotting agent for the Quinault Indian agency and county assessor of Gray's Harbor county, METROPOLITAN \‘‘The Unioved Wife” ATINEIS DANY -LADIES ONLY Matinee Prices, All Seats She Night Prices, S5c, Be, \<l SHATS NOW & ING NOT A MOVING PICTURE || —— nes |{NEXT SUNDAY NIGHT | AND ALL WEEK Wednesday « Saturday Mats. Protect Your Reservation by Mail Order Now Box Office Sale of Seats Opens oA. M, “Te MUSICA COMEDY j “qwill add from its cost to the selling your home” HE MAN pictured above is JOSEPH P. DAY, the nationally known real estate expert. He has sold more real estate at auction than any man in the world. He knows that a house heated with American Radiators sells or rents for much more than a house heated by a hot- air furnace or stoves. Read his letter: “One of the first things the buyer of a house asks about is the heating. An ARCOLA hot-water heating outfit can eas- ily add from three to five times its cost to the selling value of the house.” 3 to 5 times value of Make a profit on your foresight. ARCOLA costs less this month, NOW, than ever before. Don't wait for Fall. Telephone your Steamfitter or Plumber for an estimate today—NOW., IDEAL Boilers and AMERICAN Rediaters for every heating need 1219 Fourth Avenue Telephone your Plumber or Steamfitter for an estimate; it costs nothing. And drop a card to the address above for an ARCOLA bookiet. It is also free. y a Saeed ie deemed dd ae ee eee eee a io

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