The evening world. Newspaper, March 1, 1922, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

HOGI $20 BLLS MADE AT AATH ST. AND BROADWAY al Secrét Service Men Raid Plant in Operation in Heart of City. The discovery of a counterfeiting Plant in the heart of New York City at 44th Street and Broadway—was one of the Secret Service's greatest Surprises, and as a result of a tecord breaking round up, five men will be arraigned to-day. Agents confiscated $65,000 worth of the counterfeits. ‘ On Saturday night several hundred dollars! worth of counterfeit $20 -notes of the Federal Reserve Bank were passed in small business places o *Ninth Avenue between 23d and 40th Streets. It was not a well executed counterfeit, but was good enough to deceive the ordinary shop keeper. When an attempt was made to pass one in a Delancey, Street haber- dashery Monday Secret Service men, who had been without a clue to Saturday's operators, were tipped off. The dealer had no change and took the bill to the Public National Ba in Orchard Street, where its character was discovered. The man who tried to pass it was known and was arrested by Capt. John S: Tucker of the Secret Service. When the prisoner's wife visited him she was followed to the Putnam | Building, 44th Street and Broadway, where two other men wero arrested | in Room 315. From information re- peated from them the other two were The prisoners thus de- a SAE tpeccsct ves: Sassanoff, engraver, of No. oi Daly Avenue, Bronx, who said he a@.singer in the Metropolitan former soloist at under the name Harry Sandler, No. 1237 Brook Avenue, » said to be Sassanoff's as 3; Peter Garbardi, No. 190 Heste to have financed the job; Philip ‘ @ celdi No. 128 Thompson Strect, : tc have been the ‘‘shover,”” a first one arrested, and Jack Mehl of Opera chorus and a An- fest Hoboken, said to have been the printer. The Secret Service agents say they found in the Putnam Building room the press, the plates from which the bills, were made, which had been utilated at the last minute, and the | $65,Q00 in counterfeits. They say the had been at work on the spurious noted two months, but did ‘not start passing them until Saturday. Sedan, $1,555 Lat) treet, said | risqners have confessed, saying they ; Panel Business Car, $1,050 STRATTON-BLISS COMPANY 1847 Broadway, New York 4 BONNELL MOTOR CAR CO. ¢ ‘MUNICIPAL POWER PLANT INS. | URGED BY GROVER WHALEN 12,060 Kilowatt Plant for City’s Needs Would | Cost $1,235,000, Grover A, Whalen, Commissioner of Plant and Structures, recom- mended to the Board of Estimate the erection by the city of a 12,000 kilo- has Island to supply current for the opera- tion of municipal piers, trolley lines, tragkless trolley routes and ferries, The estimated cost of the plant is $1,- 235,000. He recommends the site of the garbage reduction plant. In his report advocating municipal manufac- ture of, electricity Commissioner Whalen says: “The location will be convenient for tieing up ferryboats for repairs and for the placing of a dry dock in which to overhaul the municipal ferryboats and other floating equip- ment of the city. The plant can also be made available as general repair shops for trolley cars, buses and other municipal vehicles, and as a construction equipment and fabricat- plant. “The urgency for the establishment of a municipal electric power plant this department's power requirements jwill amount to 2,000 K, W, i _GUSSIE HUMANN TRIAL | IS SET FOR APRIL 3 | Preea cused of Perjury. Gussie Humann, charged with impli- ration in the killing of Harry Garbe, of Chester Avenue, Woodhaven, on Oct |was brought from Liackwell’s Island to |the Queens County Supreme Court to- day. Jostice Leander B. Faber set the date of the girl's trial for April 3, no| ‘ tfvo indictments charging hre with per- jury and being an accessory after y cris Mirs Humann, who Is twenty-two ears old and lives at No, $26 -Hateh Avenue, Ozone Park, was irled on a charge of frst degreé murder, but ac- quitted at the direction of County Judge Burt J. Humphrey Joseph Libasci of No, 72 Trout- man Street, Brooklyn, was tried on an ndictment charging him wth first de- | gree murder in connection with the Filling of Garbe, but the jury disagreed A week Inter the aded guilty me Court en to Sing Sing for 3 #9 life. Done BROTHERS edan Coupe, $1,390 DELIVERED, 562 Broad Street, Newark Electri| | watt electric power plant on Staten on Staten Island is the fact that the} Dock Department will require current to the extent of 4,000 K. W. and Touring Car, $965 Screen Business Car, $950 velopments, Musical By Capt. Robt. Scofield Wood (D. F.C, M. ©, Croix de Guerre with four palms; formerly Command- er 167th Squadron, Royal Air Force.) NOTES ON THE STORAGE BAT- TERY. ~ The following will serve to answer one hundred and ninety letters on the subject of the storage battery and its adaptability for use with the radio, vacuum tube, recelyer. Most people are particularly interested in the use of the regular six volt auto storage battery with which the market is am- ply supplied. Any six volt storage battery will serve as an “A” battery for a while, but to have efficiency and economy must use a battery particularly adapted for the work in the radio field. The average automobile starting battery is purposely made up with tlun plates and thin separators be- tween the plates in order to secure high ge for short periods, The use of the thin plates una thin separators allows more plates which means high capacity. battery when in use is being tantly charged there is no objec- to the thin plates and thin sepa- one rates of disc! j per cell, As the |t words the automo- starting battery when in normal use is only partly discharged at any |time. Hence, the plites and separators is satisfactory |for the service for which it was de lis wholly disci lrators. In other | bile r, a storage battery then perhaps idle for d before being re- char and cycle is repeated time after time, we have a condition | which requires plates | twice as thick as the auto battery. ‘The thie! | stands d in the plafes are 5 us A dood name Roadster, $935 BISHOP, McCORMICK & BISHOP 1221 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn , = use of the thin} nd separators | ‘ News of Wireless Talking Activities and De- and Other Programmes of Broadcasting Stations and Answers to Queries Will Be Found in These Columns. necessary in order to stand the cycle of complete discharge. During the idle periods the thick separators lessen the chance of internal discharge. The Breat advantage of the thick plate battery over the thin plate battery for radio use is the steady voltage which is more or less controlled by the thick plates reacting under the slow rate of ach type of battery is designed to meet some certain definite require- ments and while the automobile bat- tery can be used for radio work it will not prove efficient or economical. The size of battery best suited for radio use is one for the user to decide. As the battery must be continually recharged, necessitating considerable handling and transportation, the weight plays an important part. Two small batteries are more cdnvenient to handle than one large one and one always has a good battery in reserve for emergency or while the other is being recharged. The sixty-hour type weighs in the neighborhood of thirty pounds and is conveniently handled. ‘there is a lighter battery which has forty hours of energy stored. It also serves the purpose admirably. RADIO RUMOR.. The only ray of hope that we have been able to glean in the present | vacuum tube shortage is from the rumor that the customs authorities |are going to .release for sale some | hundred thousand foreign made tubes. let us hope it is very soon because there is surely great need for them. |THE EVENING WORLD RADIO CLUB. The Evening World Rado Club is owing in leaps and bounds. If you are a radio bug, fan or ham you can't afford to stay out of this organ- zation, Get in and enjoy all the privileges and service of the greatest amateur radio organization in exist- 1 in the accompanying member- lank and forward ship To measure, 1 | Don’t Care What Your Shape Ist j All-Wool Worsted Suit TOY b measurem English Cheviots. absolutely all wool cheviots, conservative shades. Genuine English Cheviots. i { No other tailor in the country advertises these fabrics under $50. MITCHEL 1431 Broadway it to the Radio Editor, No. 63 Park Row; New York City. Nomenclatare of Radio Copyrighted by Wireless Press. The following is published for the benefit of all radio enthusiasts. Save these definitions; they will come in handy In the future. Aerial Circuit consists of aerial and earth, Including all coils and con- densers which may be between these and forming a direct path to earth and aerial, Aerial Insulation. Insulation between aerial and its supports, Does not refer to any covering of the aerial wire, which is generally bare. Aerial R ance. This refers to its actual ohmic resistance and in- cludes that part of the “earth” under the aerial on which the oscillations act. Aerial resistance multiplied by square of the current in the aerial gives amount of lost energy. Aerial Switch. A switch used to change over from transmission to reception. Takes the place of the earth arrester. Aerial Tuning Condenser. Variable condenser in aerial circuit. Used to vary oscilation constant of re- ceiver. Aerial Wire, Wire forming the aerial. Aeriform. Term denoting a gaseous body; airlike. A. F. Abbreviation for audi-fre- quency. Agglomerate Lechanche. A type of Lechanche cell in which the MnO is mixed with powdered carbon and formed into blocks by hydraulic pressure. These blocks are held in place around the carbon plate. ‘This procedure increases the durability and decreases the internal resist- ance of the cell. Air Choke. Air core choke. Hollow coils of wire which att as protec- tore in the secondary circuit of, transformer, permitting the low frequency currents to pass into condenser, but preventing the high frequency currents of closed osefl- lating circuits from returning, due to fact that high frequency currents produce a greater back &. M. F. in a boll by self-induction than a low frequency current, W J Z (Newark) 360 Metres Daily features. Hourly news service and music from 11 A. M, to 8 P. M. Agricultural reports, 12 M. and 6] P. M. Arlington official time, 11.55 A. M. to 12 M, and 9.52 P. M. to 10.01 P. M Shipping news, 2.05 P. M. Weather reports, 11 P. M | , 12 M,, P, M. and 10.01 P. M. 7.45 P. M.—"Scenario Writing ana| the Movi by John Emerson, | author of “Red Hot Romance,"* also | writer of the wild and wooly photo- | plays for Douglas Fairbanks, om ORDER. . | High Shoulders Sloping Fiat Chest Stooping Corpulent CEE MeN wat Large Form — Short Very Broat Back Shoulders ‘Round Shoulders best and Hollow welt Butt Body Short Neck Long Neck Back ey ‘Thick Set In order to keep my help going until the opening of the Spring sea~ son, | have taken a range of all virgin wool Brightwood worsted suitings, made by the Brightwood Mfg. Co., of Lawrence, Mass., bought by me to make to order into suits at a price of $35, and will make irrespective of size or shape, suit PR } an unlimited range of styles and will "send samp ent on receipt of 2c stamp, to any section of the country, } guarantee same to be absolutely all wool worsted. ‘Ss I have these goods in all staple colors, grays, dark brown, and quiet two-tone effects. aud I make They weigh better than same in any style Thousands of pairs of pants, all sizes, made up during the dull season, as low as $2.75. 11 | Asbury Orchestra, Tt. HH. 3 dark herringbone, THE EVENING WORLD RADIO CLUB Application For Membership Names «2... cevrerererere 0:0 siorere orerererepa-e Address . . ...teras-erere STREET, TOWN, STATE. Receiving Set.,.:... Type press voe'e Call Lrotters « «sie srarecrsrees Ate stoic orotate eretere ovetere ote ove eT rns PRINTED—SURNAME FIRST. OOOO Og Coe nar aacere 0 ots ROCHON cnmes vies ssthe neon s TELEPHONE APPARATUS Outfits, $15 to $246 Free Demonstrations Installations by Experts Just Received Extra Headpigces he previously directed. Courtesy, | Selection, “Serenade” Gounod Association First National Pictures, | «5.05 goto aoe. 15 Cortlandt St., near Broadway Inc. | Nea, Martha Do 28 John Street, near Nossau St. 8.15 P. M.—"Il Traviata,” two arias| trumpet solo,“ 831 Broadway, tear lth Street from “Faust,” &c., solos bY Harriet | a uion, wSlift 111 B. 42nd St., commodore Hotel Van Emden, soprano, who recently made her debut {n Aeolian Hall. Cour- tesy, Aeolian Company. * 9.15 P. M elections by the West- inghouge ployees’ Association Band, fourteen pieces, conducted by Lewis Morrell. column ning World, WGI (Medford Hillside, 360 Metres City of Boston police reports. Popular musicat concert. Humorous Diversion, by Jack Ice- berg, the great Eskimo Pie-Eater. Mass.) ‘Taormina, Celtte, Lit Matoppo, Varconta, KDK A (Pittsburgh) 340 Mefres to 10.15 A. M.; A Morro Castle, Music—10 A. My ports and a report of the New York ponden, 877 7th Avenue (at 56th St.), N. Y. Stock Exchange. wtobal 8 P. M.—"The Bank Check,"" by Due Saturda; W. O. Phillips, Cashier of the Di&-| sount Carrot! ; “ mond National Bank, Pittsburgh, Esperanza, Ha Message from the National Safety Council. 9 P, M.—News. 8.30 P. M.—Musle selections. Selection, “Daughters of the American Revolution Arable, hall, Dir + Albers Selection, “Basket of Ros Asbury Orchestra, “Summer—Cycle of Lite’ Ronald Mrs. Martha D. Morgen, Soprano Sololat | Violin Duet, Angels’ Voices Janet Turner and John Fe | setection, “Niagara Overture’ Asbury Orchestra, Soprano Solo, ] Homerte, So Metapan, Satarita, United Bt hagen ; Mayar Soprano Solo- a. T Love You Truly: b: Rose in the Bud Mra, Selection, Lo’ Asbury Orchestra, The Evening World wilt conduct a devoted to Phone Service and will answer quea- tions concerning the grammes of the different broadca: stations will be printed in The Eve Address Radio Phone Editor, New Yor Evening World. SHIP NEWS INFORMATION | Pipestone County, Roti Minnekahda, Hamburg London Cornish City, - Shields, Due To-Morrow. Penhandle State, London. E r, Oristobal Fort. Victoria, Bermud igeria, Glasgow Uavi Araguaya, Bermuda Hamburg. Liverpool. ‘Monaco ., Sail To-Day. Malis Close, M. pI Kingston . Cornelia, San Juan 125 W, 125th St., neat Lenox Ave. 125th St. Store Open Evenings the new Radio service. Pro-|, OUR REPUTATION by the UF hind the Marv telephone recetving outfit, $15.00 Complete 10 pie. If your dealer ts from our stock. illustrated catalog. DS poze N N N N N N N N N N WITHERBEE RADIO A BATTERIES 12.30 to 1 P. Mis 2 P. M. to 2.20 | Araguayn, Bérmuda Bail HER P. M,, and 4 P. M, to 4.20 P. M. jan ampton uilt Right Since 1903 7.30 P. M.—Music and Uncle Wig- Due Friday. ck Your Di t : by Colon, Chistobal . Ask Your Dealer owSee' Our Expert gily’s Bedtime Story. Bourdonnals, Havre .. wa 7.45 P. M.—Government market re- | Arabic oibraltar Witherbee Storage Battery Co: 2B “ TEL. BARCLAY 5653, on an EXCHANGE BASIS 140147 East 2d Street Tetween The Sportsman's Paradisé FIVE NEW YORK STORES | Ax denlgners of radio apparatus used 8. placed be- complete wireless Freed-Elsemann Radio Corporation, Manufacturers of High and Low Power one ppl Send a0 conte Yor :/ FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED 30 Westinghouse R.C. Sets... . .$130 >= Aeriola Sr.“ 2... . $65 ROBIN, 47 Warren St., City —___—_—_—_—_—_—— ED Dry Batteries equipped with new patent MARKO STORAGE ‘BATTERIES Special Sale of Battery Pocket Meters, CORUBIA ELECTRIC HOUSE ame to your to ore $17.7 I offer you and simple system of and 14-02. of all wool to the yard, Order, ‘17.75 Suit to Order 3 STORES 9-121 Nassau St. OPEN EVENINGS TILL 9 O’CLOCK Irish T weeds, hand woven in Donegal, Ireland. Suit to Order, 94 4-29 Donegal Irish Tweeds. tailor in the country advertises genu- ine Donegal hand woven Irish home- spun, under three times this price. Harris Tweeds. made by Lewis & Harris. These are genuine, hand woven fabrics, weigh- ing 20 oz., and would make a won- derful_ topcoat. Suit or Topcoat No other The finest goods $17.0 to Order No other tailor in the country adver- tises to mak I woven homespun, under $60. »a genuine Harris hand I have a range of twenty-five styles of genuine English, 14-0z. small quiet “patterns, fine checks $17.5 THE TAILOR 2 Columbus Circle in ak Bowes RRA RLHE &

Other pages from this issue: