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UNELE SA BEATS AL CREATION WN WIRELESS CAE Government Tests Made by the Salem Records in Day Transmission. RADIO OF 1,000 MILES. Aftfington Station Flashes Read as Far Distant as 2,400 ‘ Miles. A mort, lean man, very light as to hei and eyebrows, whose clean shaven ep revealed fully the tenso muscles « Jaw, slowly unwrapped his lege Grom about the supports of a steel table, pated from his head a bonnet of wire @n@ rubber, very much like the receiver ‘whieh & teleptione girl uses, and, streteh~ tng his Kmbs, mped by thelr long- afan't. 1 Statle’s a blame e they ald Bothering us to-day and it’ Yong distance.” ‘Then he lighted a cigarette and tried ‘We Stroll to the deck of the United States eeowt cruiser Salem, Hu got to the eek, but he didn’t stroll, The 4-oad feat steel! cruiser was watlowing In a Se@- which threw her » mes as much ab @ Gegrees off the vertical and walk- not easy. ‘ waa the morning of last Feb. 18, y Bén a5 tho short, lean young man arose as quite @ bit leaner nd with real red alae as young, quite’ as sho: perhaps as to face and Detr and complexion in hemestly proclainied jise! frem a steel table, this ‘Usited States Government at Arlington, from Washington, GE CARRIED A THOU. SAND MILES. "WSs" second young man didn't r: Ror 41d he stretch his tired limbs, he left bis chair with a rapidity Motion which made the move practic- and he brought his right down on the shoulder of a » eertous visaged and very wi wasted in striking the congratula- quarrelied almost at the tory blow, so anzlous was he to tearn| long-distance sending by comparatively ‘the news, It was only @ second that he| weak instruments. Aboard the Salem E. D, Forbes wireless engineer, Wallace and Pollock were an enthusiastic as “4 hore, for cable messages told them jhad to wait, however, Then the first the jyoun man fairly bellowed In his eager- in It. 1 i ‘hat's the Salem. she's t us jot the succera of the texts dnd assured | | St that the comparatively smali | | ‘ 1 had accompli something fh no other boat afloat had ever done. And the feat was appreciated, for ite ace) complishment had not beon easy. From the time she sailed from here the Salem ran into bad weather and frequent storms, So badly did ste roll that It was almost impossible for Wallace ty) atick to his key and to do #0 he hadt,! almost alwayr, to «rip his legs about the table braces and hang on with all atrength with the hand which was operating the Key. For several) he worked with his head wrapped otton bandage, for in the heavy he had been hurled from his d hie head amas eninet the steel hull of the vessel. There was sea ess, too, to cons tend with and scarce a man except the hardened seamen of the Salem's crew es but was overcome once or more. Yet J, Jt was proot that the frst half of the | dagpite these hardahipe Wallace had to test demanded by the Government had ! gona receive, as did Lee at the been fulfilled, proof that a warship shore stations, messages which were equipped with an instrument necessarily | composed purposely to test the accuracy much less strong than those erected on} of the instruments and their ability shore, had been able to communitate| Clearly to send their messages over with ‘the navy's central station. trom | les of space. ' 1,000 miles at sea, proof that were © | QOUTLANDIGH Ne t W. Lee, the had listened pleasant sounding ‘whistling note which was clipped avvuiy now, ant again was allowed to play through tie rpceivers for the fraction of a second, F. i. Kroger, a hrother @hxineer, grabbed Lee's re- cctver to catch ound, Imagine your small qon or your young |brother whistling somewhero in the neighborhood of the second C above | ' You can't do i jcompany and cheer from youth Who later rove f NAMES SENT AS A war to be declared to-morrow Une! TEeT. Sa battleships and cru! Mi an re half the distance across the a. Se unusual mau names, a8 well pact es, 00 despatches telling of the Mexi- A WIRELESS | cen and Belkan were, in which not a place was mentioned but what employed RECORD FOR TRANSMIBSION. half the consonants of the language in It wan a record for wireless trangmis- aes he tanta ua on ; sae seta vate 5 C 10 Kou ae sialon be seallead ty aie request for a repetition of a certain part ted that. w! travels much | Which an operator might have missod. > ‘That was the Government's rule, and it |farther by night th: does by 48Y.| nea to be adhered to, though the Gov- | Radio experts themeeives can't explain | senment oMelala made the messages as this with any degree of clearness, | taxing as they could. j {though they know that solar absorption! From the Salem Capt. Pollock aelected jg to blame for the lows of carrying | phrases from various nautical books, power in daylight. By night radio, or/and when these fatied him fell back on Wireless, will carry them four to seven | poetry, daffydtis, which his officers and | times as far. It was only a week or #0 | crew and the radio experts aboard made eo wireless station at Cairo, | Up, and every variety of nonsense cal- ed up a night message sent quiates —- the fal penne ee est, Fi utmost. was from Gibral West, Fla, The distance te] urmost. Irs ee eee migat Mea te alge end, he that | waa at nig an meant @ record, and for &/ ihe Government's station might well the radio experts &t) have heen ashore, a few hundred yards eo satisfled withe it, | from the Salem, ao celar did the radio at 6 in the morning and | message eound. But that was only at! in the afternoon, they! night. By day no better record than Were sending messages into the alr for 2,400 miles from shore to ship, or 1,000 jan hour at g time, | milew from ahip to shore could be made. Througuodt that time the Salem, ever| Bach, however, exceeded anything ever nearing aliar, its destination, was| before done in wir ous of touch with the main station at Ar-| Jit took the f ° March 2% to m the round trip and {initon, Dut at last came the cabled word carry out the teste, Hundreds of tons | ton’s Hashes had beow of coal was used, and the cost of the! read as far off as 2,400 miles. It was experiment was high, but by it the other record and the staff at Arling-| tnited States established a record for nm congratulated t selves and the radio service, that strange service which Lieut. E. B. Woodworth and enables a man safe ashore to press a slectrictans Scaniin and Katon,| key and send into the heavens waves of s: pbeteas theses teateyOnoael sien "away. catcher, noten down and Berean ay etary at | frunaiates Tato the lesible expression of samen hla thought, into messges which befare now pave saved the lives of those endangere! at sea and which may yet determine the doubles the strength of the usual re- outcome of armed confilet between na! ceiving instruments and makes possible tions. from ahip to shore aleve. m from Feb. 15 to ;Vincent Steede Ran Away to! her worry over him he srodatly would hurry home. The Steeden live at Xo. on MOTHER GOING: BLIND IN HUNT FOR BOY WHO LEFT HOME WITH $5 ‘132 Weat- er avenue, the Bronx, end to-day the mother asked the police to help her find the missing boy. She said that Yincent, 4 studious and ambitious boy, had been Working in @ religious goods house in} fev Or March 12 he left, ostensibly for work, with ® In hie pocket, and has never Come back. The next day she received this postal c: Don't worry about for Staten Island, Ki for me. | At the place where he was employed ‘Mre. Steede was told her son was pop- ular, and that one of the customers Nked him and his energy s0 well ho contemplated taking him to Washing- ton to work for him. Before he coult make Vineent an offer the boy hal taken his sudden notion to leave, He ts the second of seven chittren, and although his mother has many other things to do she has spent days and days looking for him. When she sees an account in a news boy killed or hurt she alw the hospital or the Morgue to see that :itis"not her son,” The father, Ray- | Mond Stegde, Is a hard working men, but after his day's duties finds time to - long ang | wept so often her eyes aro falling and [hie Sees ee ee Bhe be- Hevea Vincent haa fallen in with older See the World and Parents \re Distracted. weg hee brown hair and Nght CALLS JUDGE “DARLING” | AS SHE GETS A DIVORCE. “Oh, what @ darling you are, Judge ried Mrs. Vivienne Mae Nicholay to preme Court Justice Glegerich yes- terday, when he whnounced he would gtant her an interlocutory decnee of orce from David 8, Nicholay. If Vincent A. Steede, who at the age the Nesnee with Gin gave: to auiet inane the world on 8, knew that his mother| gt ia in danger of going blind because of | Mri APPEALS TO ALL WHO CAN APPRECIATE ITS UNRIVALED PURITY AND EXCELLENCE, of fifteen started out March 12 te Aa Whiskey rT ~ ITS UNEQUALED QUALITY AND FLAVOR tat! wee jon Yoru, BX ea .|NOT WED IN SYRIAN CHURCH. began at nights she put de- 1. One night they to an uptown hotel, Turk and have been chureh In an erp peoples it i# a great m Moslem to be m: ner n, Corrects a Mistake m New York Turke. In an article on the Turks of New York, published in The Evening World of April 5, an account was given of the marriage of Abdul Fateh, who already had three Syrian wives, to an American girl whom he met in thie city while selling Inces. The mariage was sald to have occurred in the Syrian church on Washington street. This wae an error which a representative of the chureh has asked The World to co The church in question is a Catholto! churol? Mary O'rien was not a Syrian and oven If sho were allowed to marry Rh In church would have to be married in RADWATS Hy re. 5, Westerrelt ‘mist tell you your PUSESAISER CME EERE Look in W, L. bet ded store ‘windows and you will see shoes $3.50, 44.00 and $4.50 that are it and wear as 00 to 00, Ty F » if you could visit W. L. Douglas 7 aa'as ries Rt Brockton, Mass., and ace for yourself how carefully W. L.. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why nted to tit hett better, hot ape and wear than any other make for the price. rene ie 1, pTAKE NO usSTITUTE. Shatnard Me enerfeney IE DOUGLAS, Mreckion, Muse, IN GREATER NEW YOR BROOKLYN Qy oAL JERSKY CITY—96 Newark Avenee, NEWARK—8S1 Broad Mreet, PATKRSON—102 Market Mt.,cor.Clarts TRENTON —101 E. state Mt..cor. Hroed The Immense, Cut-out “Bull” Durham Sign is a familiar sight in the outfield of Baseball Parks Hitting this “Bull” Sign with a fairly-batted fly-ball for a $50.00 prize is a feature of the National Game ithe cu il] dle Hitting = Baseball Players Won $10,550 for “Hitting the Bull” Last Season! are: Chick Gandil Hans Lobert, Gabby Cravath and Ben sacks of ‘‘Bull” Durham is awarded for every home-run made in regular league HE famous cut-out ‘Bull’ Dyrham sign is erected in the outfield of le ague baseball parks throughout the United States. Eve who hits this giant ‘‘Bull” sign with a fol eenet fly-ball in a eigcit uled game, is presented with a check for $50, Durham Ti obacco. Last season these cut-out ‘‘Bull” Durham si 211 times in league games for a grand total of $10,550. famous baseball players who received $50.00 checks for “hitting the Bull” GENUINE 00 by the manufacturers of ‘‘Bull” Walter Johnson, Pin player sched- genes in parks where these ‘‘Bull” ns were hit jome of the 3575 home runs! Making agra by the manufacturers of Bull” . ‘BULL DURHAM | SMOKING TOBACCO (FORTY “ROLLINGS” IN EACH 5-CENT MUSLIN SACK ) Baseball and ‘‘Bull’’ Durham have been the nation’s two Baseball, the good, clean, honest game—and ‘‘Bull’’ Durham, the good, clean, honest smoke~have both earned the loyal support of the millions of ‘‘fans'’ throughout the United States, in Panama, of the world, Neither favorite forms of enjoyment since 1859! Hawaii, the Philippines and other nas 8 rival. Every real base! fan" considers “Bull” Durham, or « cigarette rolled from thi: tobacco, essential to his enjeyment of the game. No matter where you are, you can ham, and get it fresh. {t is sold by more dealers thro: the world than any other single article of commerce. S-cent muslin sac vir over 352,000,000 of these sacks were sold last ne 8 pipeful of is grand old Bodie, Jack Murray, Hal Maggart, louser. An additional prize of 72 urham signs are erected, Last year, base- all players won 257,400 sacks ($12,870 worth) of ‘‘Bull” Durham by batting out nd total of $23,420 awarded to baseball players Durham Tobacco during the season of 1912. A book of ‘‘papers’’ free with each §-cent muslin sack. “Bull” Durham has been the standard smoking tobacco of the world for three generations—smoked by more millions of men than all other high-grade smoking tobaccos combined/ always get ‘Bull’ Der out at the nearest dealer's today, and learn year own church. Abdul Fateh, being & Mohammedan, could not ted in a Syrian Catholic _ Adjusted $ Watches 1 SO ircsdway. how Yor Ease That Sore, Tight Chest MUSTEROLE Bees it! sate Rub MUSTER: oa you blessed you will feel I preweate ¢ USTE! is a clea, white ment made oll of mustard. tubitea. No fon pare bat than mustard plaster not blister. Thousands who use MU ERO will tell what relief it gives from Throat, Bronchitis, iff Nock, Asthma, Licclers sed times ‘Sabaly joctors nurses men: MUSTBROLE as 6 sebeti the old messy mustard plaster. . Mie year mean In aie end oat your dru, 'e aad o sportal large vise for M0... # Accept no substitute. If your congot sappy 70. oond 86¢ or 58a tol Muaterole ompany, Cleveland, Obie, and we will mail you a jar, pestage ges ry y guste. oli, / GRAND RAP FURNITURE Chased Leat -er | Ceuch with Every | Purchase of $60 3 wy i tome 50 47.40 bese 5 Sr 75 [0° FISHER Bros COLUMBUS Av ET. 103 & 104 S' oi ear