The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, June 04, 1922, SECTION FOUR, Page 9, Image 65

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    THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JUNE .4, 1923
9
MARGOT ASQUITH SAYS BAN ON SMOKING
IS MEDDLING WITH INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY
American Domestic Difficulties Said to Be Caused by Men's Refusal to Let Wires Take Part in Careers.
Short Skirts Are Found to Be Moral Issue Women Declared to Be Showing Deep Interest in Trimls.
Chlvatrons, tnong-ntfal, generous, polite to his wife, the American mai seldom regards mer an Intellectual eqnal.
. . . He and ahe do not share their work. ... The wife seeks recreation and expression elsewhere, often
ontslde her home life. . . The husband frequently pavea the way to an alien intimacy by business associa
tion with another woman. " y "
BY MARGOT ASQUITH.
Wife of ex-Prime Minister of Great
Britain.
ARTICLE NO. 9.
IF I WERE asked now, as I was
often when I first reached Amer
ica, what I thought of American
women, I should at first comment
on their wonderful beauty and the
next on their capacity for procuring
and wearing exquisite clothes.
But in discussing the subject at this
time I feel that I have observed some-i
thing that may not be so obvious to
the Americans themselves and to
other foreigners paying, as I did, a
flying visit. That something is the
tendency of American women to take
desperate interest in trivial things
to make questions out of matters that
are really economio or hygienic.
In every oity that I visited there
are "clubs," both male and female,
to forbid or promote some harmless
trivialities and, until these are ridi
culed out of existence, they, will pre
vent the United States from ever be
coming what we should call a free
country.
The Americans, while the most
friendly people in the world, are too
much concerned about each other;
ana, though not personally, are na
tionally vain. They would rather hear
themselves abused than' undiscussed;
which inclines one to imagine that
they are suffering from the uneasl
ess of the "nouveau riche."
"What do you think of us?" "How
do you compare our men and women
and their clothes and customs with
yovr own 7" was the substance of
every question that was put to me.
There are things of surpassing in
terest in this country,, but have any
of us heard an English man or woman
ask as a foreigner what he thought
of us? Or, if they were silly enough
to do so, who would be interested in
the reply?
Some will say that this comes from
ur pride, or insularity; but they will
be wrong. We are not obsessed by
the desire to interfere with our neigh
bor that is noticeable all over Amer
ica. I was told, and I have the evidence
f my own experience to support that
statement, that the women were
largely, if indirectly, responsible for
the passage of the prohibition con
stitutional amendment and the Vol
stead and other laws, designed to in
terpret the amendment.
I have already discussed the work
ings of prohibition, as it is enforced
(if one can truthfully say "enforced").
I have written my disappointment, as
a strong believer in temperance and
regulation, that the extreme measure
in America is not satisfactory.
It is to be regretted that the women
if they did bring about the harsh
restriction acted before they were
fully aware of what its consequences
would be.
Someone (to whom I am grateful)
took up the cudgels for me on my
stand on prohibition and in a letter
to a New York paper wrote:
"I am a busy man and hav nut
much time to write letters, but I can't
stand the sneering, cheap remarks of
certain papers in their accounts of
Mrs. Asquith's summing up of prohi
bition. "Mrs. Asquith did not give stories
of a vulgar nature,' 'depicting an in
dividual half-stupid with drink.'
(.Note the hard, Pharasaical way in
which they gloat over the word
drink.' Reminds me of the cheap,
old-fashioned 'temperance' poems).
She quite properly and honestly called
attention to the farce of prohibition
laws, merely voiced the opilnon of 80
per cent of all honest people when
she decried the unjust and unconsti
tutional 'blue laws' which the bigoted
and ignorant minority of the Cana
dian and American people are trying
to ehaM and enforce on the unwilling
majorities the real taxpayers.
"Would to goodness we had more
such women, fearlessly candid, broad-
minded and unhypocritical, like the
same aiargot Asquith. England, with
all her faults, will never pander to
the few fanatics who are the real op
pressors, depressors and joy-killers."
I was told that similar measures
are ' being considered, especially In
the women's "clubs," to prevent the
smoking of cigarettes. In fact, one
or two states already have antl-clgar-
eue laws.
The strange part is that such things
are considered, as they are called in
the United States, "moral issues." The
final passage of the prohibition
amendment was celebrated with serv
ices in some of the denominational
churches as though some great vie
tory for Christianity had been
achieved. Fancy making the eton
page of cigarette selling an object
of as great import as the Crusaders
considered the ransom of the holy
sepuicner.
In my opinion and I am a cigar
ette smoker the prohibition of smok
ing would be a silly and perilous med
dling With Individual liberty.
It Is apparent that mills of Amer
lean women consider smoking an evil
in itself; they think It morally wrong;
they regard it as virtually a sin.
Yet it is not such. Excessive smok
ing, like excessive eating, excessive
tea-drinking or excessive sleeping. Is
an evil any intemperance that un
dermines the health 1b an evil.
As a matter of fact, one sees every
day, not only In Europe but in Amer
ica, and I must confess among
American women, more victims of
over-eating and over-sleeping than
victims of either too much drink or
too much tobacco.
Some women of America, if one may
Judge from their newspapers and the
letters I received, are even consider
ing the lengths of their daughters'
skirts a moral Issue.
It Is safe to say, however, that the
majority of them" regard the short
skirt, if not too extreme, as a prac
tical blessing. .
For my part, asked a thousand
times about "flappers" and their
eklrtg, I could only answer: "What
on earth difference does it make?"
Flappers and their mothers Amer
ican women, all are tastefully, eco
nomically and sensibly dressed. The
best dressed American woman Is
probably the best dressed woman on
earth. The average American woman
is better dressed than any other
woman.
So, why should some of you strive
to make a moral lBsne out of a pass
ing vogue a fashion based on a
world movement for economy?
Surely, the women of the nation,
which produced Julia Ward Howe and
Jane Addams will notwaste their tre
mendous f ore tot,t good on trival
things like cigarettes and short skirts!
In no small "measure, parol Kennl
cott, heroine of fine novel "Main
Street" represents a great many
American women I-"have seen. I mean
those .American women who, deeply
in Wve with their husbands, still have
no part In their husband's careers.
No doubt a ponderable amount of
so-called "domestic trouble" in the
United States is caused by that fact.
Tha woman exists merely for the
man's entertainment outside his busi
ness life, and. In America his business
life is much greater proportion of his
whole existence than with us at home.
Chivalrous, thoughtful of her com
fort, generous and polite to his wife,
the American man seldom regards
her as his intellectual equal. He has
no' wish to let her help him with his
problems. He and she do not share
their work. But unless the partner
ship takes in every phase of life, I
do not think It turns out well.
Denied participation in his career
the wife seeks recreation ana means
of expression elsewhere often out
side her home life. And the husband,
thoueh he himself has, in 99 cases
out of 10-0, deliberately barred her
from participation In his career on
the ground that she could'not grasp
the intricacies of business, and that
her "place is in the home," neverthe
less frequently paves the way to a
fatal alien intimacy by business as
sociation with another woman!
English women have this advantage
over the American women or at least
a large number of the wealthier class;
they find more interest in their
homes, their gardens, their chil
dren than Americans, they read more
deeply; their knowledge of politics is
real and practical. It is thus that they
are able to achieve a closer intimacy
with their husbands. .
I hold Dr. Kennicott greatly to
blame for Carol's restlessness and the
failure of her life. He should have
charged her with certain responsi
bilities. He should have directed her
to visit his sick to help him in effect
ing their cures.
It is a boast of mine a fact of
which I am prouder than ever sinoe I
visited America that I walked step
by step with my husband, following
urerv event of politics, every detail
of career, for the 26 years of his
public life.
My husband's day lasted from 10 in
the morning to after midnight, would
follow him, whenever I could, to the
law courts In the morning, and
I listened to hour after hour of de
bate in the house of commons In the
afternoon and evening. Had I not
done that T would not have been able
to share his life. -
Kennicott was responsible for an
other lack In Carol's life and typifies,
to a large extent, the American man.
in his attitude toward the raising of a
family. The doctor of "Main Street"
decided to wait until he could afford
children much as though he would
put off buying a more expensive make
of motorcar.
There is unquestionably a tendency
among American women, inspired. I
am sure, by their husbands, to limit
the siie of their families. This is an
old subject, handled from the side
of the public weal by no less a per
sonage than the late Mr. Roosevelt.
On this side of the matter I need only
say I believe that the world Is gov
erned by the races of unrestricted
rrorenv.
Bat Carol would have found life
t &XT ChickaSiPDY
TO A CONCERT
fuller and more Interesting had she
had a large family. She expended
much love upon herself; her children,
had she been allowed an average fam
ily, would have absorbed that love
and sanctified it; they would have
satisfied the yearning which she and
Kennicott so little understood. ,
"Main Street" la said to be typical
of a certain stratum of life in the
United States. Let me say, however,
on behalf of the smaller, Isolated
cities that I visited, that there was
a more genuine knowledge and Inter
est in world-wide affairs in such
communities than you could find in
similar communities in England; and
(I fancy I am repeating myself here)
I am positive that there is much more
knowledge of English politics, Eng
lish history and English affairs gen
erally in the American 'XSopher
RADIO QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
(Continued From Page 8.)
minum plates be that are used in con
structing electrolytto receivers?
5. What is the address of the company
that manufactures the Myers vacuum
tube?
8. May the eld-style audltren vacuum
tubes be used in transmitting the voice as
well as receiving?
7. Would the Vocaloua loua-speaiung
device when used with a detector and two
or three-stage amplifier unit, give -sufficient
volume to be beard over a moder-ate-sised
stone building?
DONALD SKEBN, Monmouth, Or.
1 and 2. It is unlikely that you
will be bothered by induction if the
aerial" i at-right angles to the power
lines.
8. With a two-stage amplifier,
which is necessary when a magnavox
is used, up to 100 volts of B battery is
usually required. '
. 4. One-slxtenth of an Inch plates
wfll do excellent work.
5. - Write to the advertisers in the
radio section of The Oregonian for
the Information.
S. Any three-element vacuum tube
as is used for receiving can also be
used for transmitting short distances.
7. The volume will depend greatly
on the distance away and power of
the broadcasting station. If close by,
the volumne will be considerably
greater than if the station is several
rhundred miles away.
Editor Radio News: 1. What Is meant
by the "cut and try" procedure telling
about tha adjustment r the eleciyuc ae
lector in Fig. SI 70 of Hawkins' Electrical
Guide?
3. Is the electrolytic detector as de
scribed In that book as good as a Galena
or silicon detector?
a Is it better to hook the phones up in
aeries or In parallel?
- 4. Will the electrolytic detector work
tf you use the copper catwhisker, or does
It have to be olatinum?
5. How do you connect a battery to an
eltctrolytie detector?
A FAN, Vancouver, Wash. .
1. The "cut-and-try" method means
experimenting until you get the best
results.
2. The electrolytic detector is not
as practical for radio work as the
galena or silicon types.
3. The phones should always be
connected up in series.
4. The wire in an electrolytic de
tector must be platinum, as the acid
will eat a copper wire away to quick
ly for any good results.
8. The battery la connected around
the detector with a high-resistance
pontlentometer in series. ,
Editor Radio News: 1. Does the length
of the ground wire make any difference in
receiving?
2. What kind of wire is beat to use for
a "catwhisker"?
8. Should thia wire be flue or coarse?
H. D., Hlllsboro. Or.-
1. The length of the ground wire
makes no difference in the receiving
except that it adds wave length to
your aerial circuit
3. A very fine steel or phosphorus-
bronze spring wire will-make the best
catwnisKer.
S. The finer wire used, the better
result you will get ,.
Editor Radio News: 1. How much far
ther would one and two steps of amplifi
cations Increase the receiving; radius of 1
regenerative receiver made as per instruc-
Complete High-Grade
Radio Sets ..
OUR EXPERT SERVICE
DEPARTMENT
will install sets for
FARMS AND INSTITimOJiS
and guarantee satisfactory results
or you pay us nothing.-
Ont-of-Town Business
Given Special Attention.
Radio Service Bureau
Portland, Or.
710 Gases Blag. Main 4538
Prairies"than of American things in
English towns.
It Is little enough I know of do
mestic life in America. Dashing hither
and thither on rocking trains, travel
ing Incredible distances between my
lecture halls by night and day, I saw
little of the life of the great ma
jority. Of the homes I did see, I have spoken
briefly previously, emphasising the
generous hospitality and the taste and
comfort that, to many Europeans, al
ways proves surprising.
What would most surprise people
of the Old World on their first visit
In the extraordinary conveniences and
arrangements for physical comfort in
American homes. The men of America
manifestly have vied in providing so
many labor saving devices, so many
meohanlcal means of amusing their
wives and families, that their women
and children, one would think, have
little to do by themselves, either at
work or play!
Baths . In number and elegance
hardly to be imagined by the British
housewife, electric cleaning machines,
telephones almost universal, motor
ears almost one to every three or four
households, gramophones and finally
the radio (wireless connections by
which private residences are fur
nished with daily "programmes" of
opera and readings) all contribute to
making the American home something
never dreamed of hitherto!'
It Is always dangerous to general
lie, but the American people, are a
hardy and strong race, and but for
the few cemeteries I have seen, I am
Inclined to think they never die. They
thrive in rooms as hot as conservato
ries, can sit up all night, eat candy
and ice cream all day, and live to a
great age upon either social or com
mercial excitement without leisure.
They are Just beginning to get away
from their old habit of devoting all
their time to business. With pros
perity so easily attainable in their
Immensely rich land, and so much
more room- for play than any other
country enjoys one would think that
outdoor, recreation would always have
been a more important aim.
The American business man, up to
a few years ago, found all his recrea
tion, his pleasure and ihis ambition in
his work. Not until our old Scotch
game of golf intrigued him did he
consent to tear himself away from
the desk to revel in the air land sun
shine. And bo far as the women are
concerned, old has not brought them
nearer their husbands; the "golf
widow" is an object of pity not al
together humorous I
Whether It is from the difficulties
of the climate, and the overheated
rooms, the voices of even the nicest
people in the United States appeared
to me to be loud, and however gen
erously vou may have been enter
tained, you are left with a sense of
suffocation which It would be .aii
ficult to explain. .-
The excuse of being a young coun
try will not continue to cover the rush
and noise and lack ot privacy mat
prevail: and the amount of small chil
dren that I have seen in hotels, ships
and restaurants, that go to bed at
midnight after sucking candy between
enormous meals, is not promising for
a nation which is always growing up.
Of course as far as devotion goes
the American mother has no superior
mothers are pretty much alike in
so far as love Is concerned. But moth
erhood is an art that needs cultiva
tion to attain perfection; it should be
more than Instinctive In its applies A
tion. The American woman must make
a study of its many requirements that
her children shall enjoy the best of
their unequaled heritage.
(Copyrlsrht, 1922, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.)
(Copyrigbt In Great Britain by Thornton
t tlone In The Oregonian radio section?
one step? D. R. L., MoMInnvlUe, Or.
1. The addition of one or two
stages of amplification often in
creases the receiving range of a set
several hundred per cent.
2. If you use a power tube instead
of. the ordinary amplifying tube and
use as much as 200 volts in the B
battery, you will get excellent re
sults with a loud speaker.
May 29 Recalled as Day
. Patriot Was Born.
Patrick Henry's Immortal Speeches
Brought to Mind.
RICHMONDi Va., June 8. May 29
was the 186th anniversary of the
bisth of Patrick Henry in Studley,
Hanover County, Virginia, and -the
157th anniversary of his submission
to the Virginia house of burgesses
here of a series of resolutions which
inflamed the public mind against the
stamp-act and made him leader of
the -colony. He offered the resolu
tions nine days after taking his seat
in, the house, and they were opposed
by all the members who had been
leaders of the body up to that time.
." The resolutions proposed by Henry
on May 29, 1765. defined the rights of
the colony and pronounced the stamp
act unconstitutional and subversive
of British and American liberty.
Henry advocated the resolutions in a
speech which Thomas Jefferson de
scribed as surpassing any he had
heard. Five of them were carried,
the last by a majority of one. All of
them were published, and Inspired
open antagonism to the existing Brit
ish rule.
Henry, acclaimed by John Ran
dolph of Roanoke as Shakespeare and
Garrick combined, was born in 1736,
son of John Henry, a Scotsman, and
Sarah Winston, who was of . English
descent. His paternal grandmother
was a cousin of a historian, William
Robertson, and of the mother of Lord
Brougham.
Henry contributed to the opening of
the regions west of the 13 original
states by sending out, as governor of
Virginia In 1777, the expedition under
George Rogers Clarke which won
from the British the territory north
west of the Ohio river. He was a
persistent advocate of the American
right to free navigation of the Mis
sissippi, the mouth of which was held
by the Spanish.
- The Virginian foretold the abolition
of slavery In an' address delivered
June, lt88, before the state conven
tion that ratified the federal con
stitution. In this connection he said,
"Slavery Is detested. We feel its fatal
effects; we deplore it with the pity of
humanity."
Radio Books
How to Make Wireless Ap
paratus ....3of
Radio Hook-Ups.. ''S
Radio Design Data . v ...... . 75-
How to .Make Commercial
Apparatus . . . ....:..".... . 750
Radio Made Plain... ........ 250
A-B-C of Radio...... 250
A-B-C of Vacuum Tubes. .$1.00
"Wireless Telegraphy and
Telephony $1.50
A.W. Schmale Book Shop
290 Morrison St. -
YELLOWSTONE PARK PIONEER .
GETS REPUTATION AS LIAR
Washburn Expedition. Credited With Origin of Idea of National Con
servation of Nature's Wonderland.
A
BlXVf, iUBDU) JUiiC tf. 111
the '50b, when there was not
even a- trail between hem and
Salt Lake, a man arrived at a spot
not far from this place, slipped off
his horse and looked around. He saw
boiling water shooting up out of the
earth. When he got back to the other
side of the Teton range and told the
folks about it he established, for his
lifetime at any rate, a reputation of
being "the biggest ,liar west of St
Joe." ' '" . -
The man was Jim Bridger. and he
had discovered Yellowstone park. v
Few believed his tales , of sky-
mounting smokes and egg-boiling
geysers. "Loco" was the term ap
plied to Jim. That was long ago.
Yellowstone will in June celebrate
its semi-centennial as a national
park, for on May 1, 1872, congress
passed the bill creating It.. The open
ing day is June 18. Last year 81,651
people "made", the park. Officials
hope to see the 100,000 maVk reached
this season.
Park Idea Started. )
In 1869 Bridgets stories had result
ed In C. W. Cook and David Folsom
making the trip. They saw all that
Bridger had said and more. They
were, followed by the -Washburn ex
pedition. These army men got the
idea of a national park. In this party
were General H. D. Washbnrn, Lieu
tenant G. C. Doane and several civil
ians. "" .
The sky over Yellowstone National
park is not shell pink,!' says a mono;
graph of the American Forestry asso
ciation, "the trees are not blue, the
waters of the great lake In no wiee re
semble red Ink and the geysers do not
spout streams of molten metal, as
some have been led to believe. It is
possible to traverse the woodland
trails and pass many, trees without
seeing a grizzly bear. The buffaloes
and antelopes do not crowd the tour
ists and stages from the highways.
tt is quite possible to spend a week
In the park without being molested
by "denizens," as some nature lovers
delight in calling the hapless bears
and other animals of the park.
Everything; on Giant Scale. .
"Buffalo, antelope and bear abound
in this largest of national parks, and
they may be seen without difficult,
but that they are so numerous as to
interrupt one in the pursuit of pleas
ure is purely a figment of the Imag
ination.
"There are more natural phenomena
to be seen in Tellowstone National
park than .in any. other equal area In
the United States. Add to this the
fact that there is a great lake 15
miles wide at its widest point and 20
miles long, the placid surface of which
is 7800 feet above taw sea level; a
great gorge of rainbow hues through
which a mighty river roars on its
way to the sea; hundreds of square
miles of great forests, and broken,
HSLW-trtnthAn RrAsta. a.nri von have
combinati0n which will inspire even
a cowboy. Everything Is on a giant
scale. Distances are great, canyons
are of terrifying depth, mountain
peaks raise their lofty crests to in
conceivable heights.
"The northern and western en
trances are most used. In the early
history of the park most of the travel
came in by the northern entrance,
which is but a few miles from Fort
Tellowstone, where at one time was
stationed a very considerable force
of cavalry.
Mod Geysers Called Paint Pots.
"From Tellowstone the road fol
lows the Madison river to its junction
with the Flrehole river, where iti
branches. One road follows' the Gib
bon river to the north, while the other
follows up the valley of the Firehole.
The road along the Flrehole is par
ticularly beautiful, as It . clings for
miles to the very edge of the river
until It reaches what Is known as the
Lower Geyser baiin. In this basin
are the famous mammoth paint pots.
NOW IN STOCK
Install one in your
home; take it with
you on your vaca
tion. What is more
wonderful than to
have all of the
broadcasting right
in your home. .:
Crystal Sets.
Bulb Sets . . .
$18 Up
$69 Up
ELECTRIC CO
"Selling radio instru
ments for ten years.
75 Sixth St, Portland
Lectro Crystal Detectors
Host efficient,
easily adjusted
detector on
market glass
enclosed. -
Price $2 each.
Ask your
dealerT .
- TRADE HARK REC
Lectro Mfg. & Sales Co.
331 Oak St Portland, Or.
Manufacturers and Jobbers
Radio gopplies
which are really nothing but mud
geysers, Hhe contents of which look
and act like nothing so much as1
vividly colored mush that is being
boiled and tossed by escaping steam.
"Old Faithful geyser may be een
to spout, with its never Interrupted
regularity, at Intervals of one hour
and five minutes. . From the veranda
may also be seen many ot the geysers
across the road on the western border
of the basin, and the entire sur
rounding has the appearance of a
manufacturing town with the Innum
erable jets of steam rising from un
seen escapes. , i ......
" Falls Finest in World.
"There la no doubt that the fa'lls of
the Tellowstone river in the canyon
are among the finest in the world.
At the upper falls the entire river
passes over a drop of 109 feet. The
lower falls is a drop of 808 feet. The
canyon is approximately 1000 feet
deep, and Its walls and sloping sides
are of the most varied hues Imag
inable. "Fort Tellowstone has oulte an air
of romance surrounding it It -has
housed some of the most distinguished
soldiers in the army, many of whom
received their medals of distinction
in the Indian fights In the northwest.
Now, the soldiers, like the real cow
boys, are gone. One of the most In
teresting natural phenomena in the
park is the mammoth hot . springs,
which is built of a number of ter
races formed by depositing salts from
solution in the hot - water of the
springs. The colors of these terraces
change from' day to day and ofier a
never-ending source of interest arid
wonderment to the visitors.--'
Two Million Acres In Park.
"The. park is the largest of the na
tional system and -contains over 2 .000.
000 acres. There are hundreds of miles
of trails, innumerable lakes, streams
and wonderful mountain peaks, to
gether with an infinite variety of
natural phenomena, ail of which offer
sufficient Interest to entertain the
most exacting for a period of several
months.
- "That the number of visitors Is
Increasing every year prove:; Jim
Bridger was right."
Farmers Indorse Ships.
YWSHINGTON, D. C. "A million
and a quarter American farmers,
grouped in 2000 organizations, are
strongly back of the legislation to
aid American shipping pending in
congress," declared Senator Ransdell,
Louisiana, president of the National
Merchant Marine association. "This
is shown by the action of the Ameri
can farm bureau federation, whose
president, J. K. Howard, has informed
President Harding that the federation
approves government aid until the
American flag can be established on
the high seas."
RADIO
Monday and Tuesday
SPECIALS
Tuning Coils, mounted or un
mountedfrom 900 to $3.80
Crystal Detectors, complete
with Golena. Good EA
ones for. ...... OXeiJU
Filament Rheostats $1.50
Contact Switches, each... 600
Aerial Wire, 100 ft..-. 450
Aerial Insulators, each... 100
Binding Posts, each..
...80
2'j0
Contact Points, each.
Radiotron Detector (Pf? (TA
and Amplifier, each DJ.JU
Sliders, Rods, Asbestos Board,
Etc, in Stock '
ELECTRIC FANS AT
CUT PRICES!
-American and Hotpoint Elec
tric Irons regular prices $7.50
and $6.75; my price Friday
and Saturday spe- (PEJ (?A
cial, each &0,0J
Hundreds of Fine Lighting
Fixtures at Reduced, Prices.
' OPEN SATURDAY -EVENING
THIS WEEK
STANLEY LUTZ
203-5-7 Chamber of Commerce
: Bldg Second Floor -
THIRD AND STARK STS.
Broadway 4253.
RADIO APPARATUS
OF QUALITY
At Last Immediate delivery on
the famous Northwestern Vario
meters and Variocouplers.
HALLOCK & WATSON
RADIO SERVICE.
122 Park Street. Portland, Or.
RADIO PHONOGRAPHS
PORTLAND INVENTION
The Symcoe radio phonograph is now being used with wonderful
success by The Oregonian broadcasting station.
ar. 1. 0. KrbM.
81S 72M Street S .
Portland, Oregon.,"
Dear Ul- v
fa, the anearelgnad, aho ara connected alia ,
Um ladlo Wlrslaaa hare in Portland and alseahere, '
bee had opportunity to glva your new Sjraooa-aaaladlatllts.
PbOBOgrapbLo ladlo Tone togaiktlng Modulator and aodXfy
: Ins AapUfler a severe teat, and fcara found It to
vary aapaotatloa of eura. Too entire elialaetian ot
Ifte aoratoh and aurfaea no lee is aepaoUUy ooaaanda- -ble.
The rloh full, natural ton that this laetraMst
roeeoesos, toeaUwr with iva a oil Xty to dUiatead any
and all forced toel eaarcaooies, free frea dlatortlo
and bleat, aaaaalt an Inatruoent highly daalrahle la lbs
eeadlai aad receiving ot aasaaiaa, oral, 'tooel er ejualoele,
Tha e It rape eensltlreneaa sake lta aaa epeolaXl
adaptable for tha radio alreleaa, and a iljhij raooanaad
your loTentlOD as tha iaatruaant that nil fill a auoh
needed eent. Tha entire abseaoa of aegaphoaa ef foot
aad the aurfaoe aolaaa that era Vo be found ta all dlffei.
eat aef-ee of phonographs aekea tha uea of your apaolellf
oonetruotiva ioatruaeat laceretlve aad oompuleory If a- '
good reeulte are to be had for huaea : ear ooaauftaoae i
Slehiag re aoooeee, aad boelea that jtoa-aea-eka
than gaateeoef to fill the on) ere 4btt are seata
la, X aa, ' " . . .,
Toareepct rattr.
BV
1
Recent tests made by the Ship Owners' Radio Service prove
the new type Symcoe to greatly improve trarisirdtting' or
receiving with a magnavox. Made in all sizes, so sensitiva
may be used -with crystal or tube sets as amplifying horn
These rcachines may be procured for the next 30 days from tha
inventor, W. 0. Erhes, 4813 Seventy-second street S. E. Phone
620-86. After this time the phonograph will be sold by a corpora
tion -on a royalty basis. , .,
BARRETT'S, Inc.
154 Fourth SU, Just North of Morrison St
Phone
COMPLETE
RADIO SETS
Westinghouse and Other High-Grade Receiving Sets
Radio Supplies
M. J. WALSH ELECTRIC CO.
: - V 106 FOURTH STREET -
For Your ;
Westinghouse Tube and
Crystal Radio Sets
See Mr. Nunn with
PIKE & O'NEILL
Installation If Desired
- Mail orders Filled
jHOWN HARDWARE CO.
147 Fourth Street
RADIO
Complete stpek of Radio auppllea
and head phone.
Immediate delivery on
Audion Tube Seta withy -
MAGNAVOX
Complete installation If desired.
, Call us for demonstration.
E. L. Knight & Co. '
448 Washington St.
Broadnay 146
'Knight Make Day the Electric Way."
Complete X'
Line 's&Zr V
1 r
1
tana'n; iov
"a
Stock situation much im
proved. We can make im
mediate delivery on practi
cally all radio equipment.
Complete Installation tf Dealred.
(Installers of
Oregonian Radiophone)
Ship-Owners Radio
Service
' . .,
J. B. WEED, Manager
810 Oak St. Broadway 1931 -
Main 5131
STOCK OF
343Vi Washington St.
Beautiful- finish panels.
Black, brown and mahog
anite. Best insulation for
radio, resists warping.
Standard Dials 3 in. and
in., knobs, sockets, bases,
etc.
Dealers write '
. GOODYEAR RUBBER CO,
Pacific Coast Agents
Portland - - 61 Koorth St.
American Hard Rubber Co.
Radio Parts
Variocouplers
Latest Variometers
Grid Condensors
Aluminum Sockets $1
SPECIAL' PARTS BUILT FOR
ANY SET
H. M. H. Electric Co.
31 North First Street
Broadway 1045 - Portland, Oregon
4