11 4)( TTTE SUNDAY OTIEGOXIAX. PORTLAND. OCTOBER 1. 1922 mm mi Br SAUL EMANUEL. THAT "radio". is becoming: a per manent fixture of the Amer ican newspaper has been proved by the fact that many of them are discarding their low-power "home made" stations and replacing them with highly efficient and powerful apparatus. There is a strong probability that this improved service will soon be part of the American social life in all parts of the country. Already several newspaper Btations in the middle west are reaching: homes v khin a radius of 1000 miles with a widely varied daily programme. There Is a radical difference in the service given by the latest high power stations and that of the ol'ler and smaller ones. One thing is that with a strong impulse to start with, the receiving set need not include many amplifier unitB and aquawky horns to get a good reception. A single tube with perhaps one stage of amplification and- a wooden sound chamber will bring in the RADIO POWER TRANSMISSION EXPERIMENTS ARE COSTLY Inventor of Alternating Current Motor Spends Years and Fortune in Research and Then Drops Broken in Spirit, a v ADIO transmission of power has l-c been a matter of discussion w among our loremost eiecirica-i engineers for many years. During the early days of wireless telegraphy several scientists experimental along such lines but were forced to aban don their attempts. Nickola Tesla. Inventor of the alternating current motor, spent several years and a fortune on this phase of the wire lets science and then dropped out of the ranks, nearly broken in spirit and mind. The recent successful develop ments in radio telephony brings the question of the possibility of radio power transmission agaro to the e t u .-, .-1. .inn. hv lMaiioni and others in the directing of radio waves has given scientists a fresh outlook on the subject. "In some respects, radio trans mission of power exists today, for the message you receive by radio has been carried by the power of the electro-magnetic wave from the sending to the receiving station," Dr. Charles P. Steinmetjs, one of the greatest electrical authorities in the WVriU, 1 1 1 I H I I LI in , irn lil oh v. u to the radio congress at Chicago. Dr. Steinmetz' address in abstract follows: While the sending station sends out the electro-magnetic waves of power of several kilowatts or even .hundreds of kilowatts, this power scatters In all directions and it may be only a fraction of a milliwatt which we receive, that Is. less than a millionth of the power sent out. But this small power is sufficient, v.hen amplified, to give us the mes SRtce. "The problem of power transmis sion essentially differs from that of tl:e transmission for communication, tnat. in power transmission most, it at least a large part of the power sent out by the generating station, must arrive at the receiving station, to make it economical to transmit the power. "Hence. the problem of radio transmission is that of directing the radio waves so closely that a large pirt of their power remains together so as to be picked up by the receiv ing station. Much successful work has been done in directing radio waves, and for instance our trans Allantic stations send out most of their power eastwards. But still, even as directed, the power scatters over the coasts of Europe from Nor way to Spain, so that it is impossible . to pick up any appreciable part of It. The limits of impossibility of concentrating a beam of radio waves may be illustrated by comparison w.th a beam of light. Light is an electro-magnetic wave, differing from the radio wave merely by hav ing a wave length many million Mmfta ihnrtsr Wh!U iisnnlli. Hvht scatters , in all directions, like the wireless wave, we can direct it in a concentrated beam by the search light. "But there is Inevitably a scat tering of light In the searchlight beam, and when the beam starts perhaps with a square yard section at the searchlight mirror, at 10 miles distance It has at the very best scattered to a diameter of 2000 feet, and at 100 miles distance the beams rover a section of 16 square miles. If it were a beam of radio power. It would thus require at 100 miles distance a receiving station covering 16 square miles about four miles wide and. what la still more diffi cult, four miles high, to pick up a larar nar. of the power. The cause of this scattering Is two-fold. First, the inevitable Imperfections of any apparatus. No matter how perfect a reflector, there are slight Imper fections and at 100 miles distance they seriously count. Furthermore, even with an absolutely perfect re flector, the beam of light would stay together only if the light oame from a mathematical point. As it must, howtfver, come from a small area. tKis causes an Inevitable scattering, wnlch at best gives an angle of scattering of about two degrees. This is about 100 times as much as w uld be permissible to economically transmit power 100 miles by a di rect radio beam. "Theoretically, this is an Inter cstirg speculation, but whether it cculd ever become a possibility, would depend on the question, whether a radio wave of such length could be found .as to make the losses tf owe r by absorption, etc., eco nomically permissible, and whether Ktations for such wave length and power would be economically fea sitle. Furthermore, It would have tc be an international development. Therefore, even if such radio trans mission by a stationary electro magnetic wave sheet was possible. Its realisation at best Is rather dis tant, so that the present outlook for radif power transmission is very it-muic i iiiuuKiii u 1,1 interest now- ever to bring this before you as an interesting speculation of future possibilities." x Nearby metal roots, eave spouts, fir escapes and other masse of music from a properly installed 500-watt station with perfect mod- ulatlon and clearness. I In most of the smaller stations operating at present, but little at tention haa been paid to the ac coustic properties of the music room from which the entertainment is sent to the apparatus. Horns and other devices allow a fair trans mission of the entertainment, but recent improvements have made possible radio stations that send out music and addresses with per fect clearness. With the type' of broadcasting station recently built by the West ern Electric company and Installed by the Detroit News, the Atlanta News, St. Louis Post-Dispatch and other newspapers, 'a "studio" in which all reverberating sounds or echos are entirely eliminated, is an important feature. The apparatus Is In a different room. Special microphones, the most Important factor in the set. lead from the "studio" to the apparatus and send out into the air a perfect transmis sion of the music or voice. A considerable range is being reached by these stations. A con cert broadcast from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch station recently was heard distinctly in 47 states. A score of fans near the vicinity of Portland enjoyed many of the num bers from the distant station. The government recently issued a new class of license, in which per mission is given to high-power sta tions broadcasting a highly effi cient service to the public to work on a wave length of 400 meters This will allow the big stations to work without . any interference from the smaller one sending on 360 meters. The radio fan will be able to pick his station as he desires in the future. metal may be absorbing some of the radio wave that otherwise would increase the current flowing in the antenna and the sound vibrating in the phones. Get the antenna away from them as far as possible. To let a radio wave pass a good elec trical coductor on its way to your antenna is like sending a boy to Sunday school past a baseball dia mond. It may get there, but the chances are against It. Changing the direction of the an tenna may Increase the sound at the receiver. If it is built like a "T," the ends should point toward the stations that the operator most wants to hear. If it is like an In verted "L." the elbow where the flat-top and the lead-in wire join should point toward the sending station for the loudest results. There seems to be a funny bone in such a joint as sensitive as the one In the operator's elbow. A tickle there gets more action than a slap on the free end. Golden Rule Commended to R&dio Patrons. Co-nperatloa iVeeeniiary for De velopment of Great Indawtry. EVERT industry that grows to large proportions soon or late develops controversies between those engaged In it. Keen business men naturally fence for advan tageous positions, and friction and hard feeling are the result. This is especially true in radio broadcast ing, where the present limitation in the number of available wave lengths makes for Interference, and Interference In radio transmission is not only irritating, but is harm ful to the growtn of the industry. First impressions go a. long way with most people, and one who has heard broadcasting where there was "radio hash" is not liable to become a purchaser of radio equipment at an early date or to become an en thusiast in the art. As an industry grows older, .espe cially if it grows to the magnitude of the radio industry, the causes of discord are thrashed out' and regu latory measures bring about order and a system of operation more or less satisfactory to all. To get the best results, however, something more than regulation is necessary, and that is co-operation. The wise one realizes that he is but a unit. In a huge community of Interests and that what Is for the good of the industry as a whole is for his individual benefit, and be readily agrees not only to conform to the formal rules and regulations, but voluntarily extends courtesies. A code of ethics Is automatically brought into being and becomes of general usage. The time will come, probably in the near future, when, through im proved apparatus and improved methods, th available wave lengths will be greatly Increased in number. In the meantime radio enthusiasts and those in radio for profit would do well to apply the golden rule to their methods. Otherwise radio de velopment will receive a setback. - Simple Condensers Very Easy to Make. Tw Conductors Separated by Dielectric Suffice. HOW often you've wished for some simple makeshift vari able condenser to experiment with. What could be easier to make? Almost any two conductors sepa rated by a dielectric so that more or less surface may be brought into relation to form capacity will do the trick. Such common things as tin cans may be utilized the insulation being provided by using paper, or even a coat of shellac or asp hal turn. A can painted in this manner and suspended so that its heishth in a Ji.r of salt water can be altered will make a fair variable. Connections are made to the can and to a plate inserted In the solu tion. However, every part of the exposed surface of the can must be covered by the insulation varnish. otherwise the condenser will be short-circuited. Two tin cans having: diameters so that one just slides inside of the other after a layer of shellacked paper has been placed on the inner can will give you a satisfactory w ork. Other arrangements will doubt less suggest themselves to the reader and if carried out carefully will serve very well. When using a variable condenser in series with the aerial, the capacity should be comparatively large. This can be best obtained by using a fixed and & variable capacity in parallel. RADIO FAN AT OAK GROVE INSTALLS NEW APPARATUS Ben F. Lills Able to Use Handsome Phonographic Cabinet Either for Playing Records or Picking Up Tunes. frT"V ' i Av r . If ;. ' ? ... ,JJV , ft t'snRDfll reeelvlna: net owwed by Ben V. 1.1111a of Oak Grove, Or., which can bwusfd either as phoaocrsph or radio by ftnaklnn; n slight change. Concerts from all o-er the Pacific eoast are heard with thia set. BEX F. L1LLIS of Oak Grove, Or., is an enthusiastic radio fan of several months. And no won der., with a receiving set like his. who wouldn't be an ardent devotee of the radio art, after he'had listened to a perfect reproduction of a con cert broadcast from a station way down In California? Mr. Lillis' set is unusual In several ways. In a handsome phonographic cabinet has been assembled three stages of audio and one of radio fre- quency amplifiers with all the va rious tuning and battery units. Only three controls are necessary to ad just the receiver to its best opera tion. One cdntrol does the tuning. The other two take care of the radio frequency potentiometer and tube filament current, respectively. Another particular feature of the set is the arrangement whereby either the phonograph or the radio RADIO QUERIES Editor Radio Waves and Ripples: 1. Do you think it very good for & "peanut" tube set that has received music from Salt Lake City, Great Falls, Mont., and Los Altos. Cal. ? a. What is the highest voltage which can be used as a n battery? 3. Whfrs is the bent place to put a potentiometer and a voltmeter, and are they necewwry to be used on account of the filaments in the bulb? R. F. Q Portland, Or. . 1. v Yes. 2. Would not advise the use of more than 224 volts for a detector tube and 4jj volts for an amplifier. 3. A potentiometer is placed across the filament battery circuit with the pointer connected to the grid circuit through the secondary of the vario-coupler. A voltmeter is also placed across the battery cir cuit. Both of these units are not necessary but if used will give you a finer adjustment of the filament current and will protect your tube from crowding too much battery voltage. Editor Radio Waves and Ripples: Can you sive me any information whereby we can locate the source of telephone con versations which we heard through a mall radio set at our home ? As we have not heard of a radio picking up telephone calls we would tike to know if this is a common occurrence or It, it a freak condition? We have been heaiJnc these phone conversations for several nights. B. M., lorn. Or. Picking up telephone conversation on a radio set is not unusual. Such cases have often been reported by experimenters. It is usually due to the antenna or lead-in wires being in close proximity and run ning parallel to the phone wires. The fluctuating currents set up by the speech traveling through the wire induces a current In the radio antenna which is reproduced in your telephone receivers. Editor Radio Waves and Ripples: Please tell me through your columns what sending elation. thoTe are in the vicinity of Glendive. Mont., and how expensive an equipment would be necessary to hear them from near Glendive? v AN AMATEUR. Portland. Or. The only stations near Glendive, Mont, ara KDYS at Great Falls, Mont, and WD AY at Fargo, N. D. It will be very difficult to say what equipment is necessary to pick up these stations from Glendive as re ception will depend on many things such as atmospheric conditions, typography of the country, ground conditions, etc. Would suggest, however, the use of the standard type receiver with two stages of audio amplification which will cost in the neighborhood of 1150. Editor Radio Waves and Ripples: 1. If a No. IS enameled wire is used for a primary of a loose coupler would it be proper to use a No 21 for the secondary? If k, what sixe tubes should I use? 2. I have a crystal set and would like to know if it is feaaible to use a loud ; speaker. Up to a distance of 12 feet I can .hear music plainly, but beyond that I can only .hear faintly from the re ceivers. G. Portland, Or. 1. A No. 20 wire should be used for the secondary where the primary ' 20- can be used as desired. The change from one to the other is simple and can be done in a minute's time. For radio work, a special "loud-speak Ing" Western Electric phone is at tached in place of the regular phon ographic diaphragm. When there 13 nothing in the "air," and someone wants to play a record or two, the phone- is 'taken off and. the diaphragm is returned to its "usual place. With this set the Lillis family gets a good deal of music one way or the other. Nearly all the Pacific coast stations' are heard clearly and Vith perfect modulation. Concerts from The Oregonian tower and other Portland stations roll in with con siderable volume-; declared the Oak Grove fan. The receiving set was installed for Mr. Lillis by a Portland radio con cern, which is making a speciality of assembling such apparatus in cabinets of that kind. AND ANSWERS is of No. 18, because the larger wire will afford much sharper timing. Best results can be obtained with a four-inch tube as the primary and a 3 Vx -inch tube for the secondary. 2. A loud speaker is hardly feas ible with a crystal detector as the signals received have not power enough to operate the loud speaker. If you connect two stages of ampli fication to th detector, you will be able to get good results with a loud speaker. Editor Radio Waves and Ripples. 1. Will a home-made grrid leak made of a lead of a pencil mounted between two brass screws serve the purpose as well as the kind you buy in the stores? 2. Are dry celis a food substitute for a storage battery m lighting the fila ments of a vacuum tube? 3. I am using a detector tube In place of an amplifier tube, but am having con siderable .trouble. When in operation th tubes light -up with a blue glow. Does this denote anything? R. &., Salem, Or. 1. No. Such a device will not have enough resistance by far for use as a grid leak. A pencil mark on a piece of paper between two binding posts will suffice as a grid leak. 2. The use of dry cells would re quire replacement so often that it would prove much more costly in the end than if you had purchased a storage battery to start with, 3. The blue glow is a sure sign that your tube is being pushed be yond its capacity and the plate volt age should be lowered immediately. The detector tube will not stand as much plate voltage as the amplifier and therefore will not give as good results. Editor Radio Waves and Rippuies: Could a small generator be used In stead of a storage battery to light the filaments of my three tubes? I have a generator which I drive with a water motor. It has an output of from six to eight volta and gives a direct current. S. K.. Portland. Or. Even though the generator gives you sufficient current to light the filament of your three tubes, the current would not be steady enough because the speed of the water mo tor fluctuates greatly with the change in pressure of the water. Using the generator, your tubes misrht burn dim one moment and so bright the next moment that they would burn out. The storage bat tery is the only practical source of current to use on the tubes. Editor Radio Waves and Ripples: 1. ... in nuo new irRuuauce wvtj con That I am reading about? -. 1 nave a vacuum tube detector set What can I add to increase my rcrtvintT range ? S. T., Walla Walla, Wash. 1. - The resonance wave coll is a coil of wire which is resonant on j the wave length you wish to receive. J This coil therefore will tune to at narrow band of frequencies. Such a coil must be built very accurately and with the use of a wave meter. The wire is wound until the resonant point of the coil is on the proper wave length. The point of the coil depends on the inductance , of th wire and the method of wind . Ing which controls the natural ca j pacity of the coil itself. z. x ov can aaa two smgn wi radio frequency and your range will be Increased considerably. Also if two stages of audio are also added, the signals will come in much louder. Editor Rmdio Waves and Ripples: 1. I am uains a ground consisting of a pipe 6 i-i feet tons driven into tha ground. Is this a good ground or can you suggest a better one?- 2. I imfiini a two-slide tuner with a crystal eet. Would a loose coupler give me better results for receiving radio music? K. V., Porand, Or. 1. Your ground is not a very good one. Cannot see why you don't use the nearest water pipe which is the best ground that can be found in the city. Solder a large a wire as you can to the water pipe and you will get much better results than the pipe driven into the ground. 2. The use of a loose coupler will allow you to tune muh sharper to the incoming waves and therefore increase the receiving abilities of your set. Wireless Waves Are in Many Different Sizes. Marconi Gets Impulse Kstlmated at 03 Miles Long. IN the family of wireless wave there are many different sizes. The most common of these are the waves ranging from 100 meters to 10.000 meters. Those of the 93-mile length, or of 130.000 meters, are only conjectural. Marconi recently reported having received an Impulse from a radio wave which he estimated to be 150.000 meters long. Outside of his report, nothing is known of this giant. At the other extreme In the radio brotherhood is the 12-inch wave, the smallest scientists have so far been able to measure. Hanging down the line from these midget radio waves come the heat, light, violet-ray. X-ray and gamma ray waves. They become so tiny that scientists have had to devise a special method of denoting their measurements. Meters and fractions of meter are too cumbersome, rio the meter has been divided into ten billion parts, each of which la called an Ansstrom unit, after the man who invented the system. In Angstrom units, therefore, the smallest radio wave of 12 inches, or three-hundredths of a meter, is 300.000.000 units long. From this It is easier to comprehend the size of the smaller brothers. Thus, scientists have measured heat waves to range from 3,000.000 down to 7750 units. Light waves measure between this and 3900 unlts Then come violet rays, down to 600 units. And so on down to the tiniest of all the gamma rayB, measuring one-twentieth of an Angstrom unit, or one ten-billionth of a meter! Two brothers In this marvelous family of wireless -waves are miss ing. Scientists are still searching for them. The only Identification they can give is their sizes. One of these missing brothers stands between the smallest radio wave and the largest heat wave. The other's place is between the smallest violet-ray wave and the largest X-ray wave. What they are. or what functions they might hav in the general scheme of things, scientists have still t discover. Radio Notes. SHALL, we be able to see radio? That is not impossible, accord ing to Professor Dayton C Miller of the Case School of Applied Sci ences in Cleveland. In fact says Miller, an instru ment could easily be devised by which the smallest and largest waves may be caught and photo graphed as they flash by at the . rfte of 186.000 miles a second. ' Professor Miller has been work- i ing on a machine which photo graphs sound waves. It is called an oscillograph. The sound sent into an extremely sensitive receiver is made to vibrate a needle of light whose oscillations are photographed as they form. Along the same manner, it -is be lieved, the radio waves may be con verted into sound waves which in turn can be photographed by his oscillograph. By means of a new radio receiv ing instrument, distress calls from ships at sea can be detected auto matically. The new signal takes the place of the famous CDQ and SOS calls. It consists of four dashes of one second each, repeated three times at regular intervals. When this code is received by a vessel equipped with automatic Instruments, the im pulses pass through a tuning coll and then to four vacuum tube am plifiers, where they are enormously magnified. After amplification the dashes pass through an electrically oper ated mechanism with ratchet wheels and lever arms. The latter termin ate in dash pots for the purpose of giving the correct intervals between signals. The ratchet wheels com prise the "selector" and operate after the manner of .the striking mechanism of clocks. An electric bell in the circuit rings when the distress signal Is properly sent and received. When the operator on a ship sup plied with the device goes off duty for the night, he switches off his regular equipment and connects the automatic receiving set with the antenna. The famous long-distance radio station. Nauen, in Germany, is to be altered so as to increase its range and to meet the increasing traffic in the United States and Argentine Republic. Twenty-five million marks addi tional capital Is being raised by the Trans-Radio company and a begin ning has already been made with the constructive work. The plans include the erection of seven new masts, each 689 feet high, and the dismantling of four of the existing masts. 'As the number of radio listeners increases so does the chance of profit for the dispenser of patent devices to- improve radio reception. By this time the radio public knows much more about static and its in terfering effects than it did In April. And after having an inter esting lecture or well-executed mu sical selection spoiled by the cracks and hisses of the atmosphere, the radio enthusiast is psychologic ally in the proper status for the operations of the vendor of a static eliminator. At the time of this writing such a thing does not ex ist nor is there any immediate prom ise of such a device; there has not yet been put forth anything of the kind which is worth the trouble of installation. The United States pat-1 ent office is full of descriptions of hopes , and aspirations along this line, but nape of the patented pro jects does what the inventor hoped it would do. So. unless you have some money yoi -want to lose. It will be wise not to invest it in some cartridge-shaped affair (or any other shape) which draws static out of your receiving set and dis poses of It in a way you can't tinder stand. A British medical journal recently published an article that has caused much discussion, regarding the pos sible aid that may be afforded by radio to the deaf. It is generally known that persons who are unable to hear direct, ordinary conversa tional tones, can carry -on telephonic conversations with ease. This is due to the fact that sound wave, recreated in the telephone receiver, and sent directly into the ear of the deaf person, are much stronger than the sound waves as originally cre ated by vocal organs. The possibility of giving mechan ical aid to a deaf person depends upon the physical conditions respon sible for the deafness of the af flicted person. When the auditory nerve is paralysed, sound waves, no matter how strong, strike upon the ear drum without effect. The aud itory nerve is the interpreter that translates waves into sound for the brain. - j If the deafness Is due to trouble! of a less! nature, stronger waves may be effective, and it has been found that in some cases, hitherto j considered beyond help, radio waves i have been helpful. A man of 50 ! who had been so deaf for years that he could only hear shouted sounds, by increasing the number of thermi onic valves in the radio receiver, was able to hear conversations in Paris. By experimentation it was found that five thermionic valves produced the best results in his case. - . The' prospectus which has just been issued of the Chicago, radio show to be held at the Coliseum Oc tober 14 to 21, inclusive, indicates that the show will be one of the biggest and most Important radio exhibitions yet held in the United States and, if the prospectus is a criterion, one of class as well as im portance. The selection of the Coliseum, probably the biggest and best-known exposition center, gives the show an adequate setting and the prestige of the very many successful trade shows that have preceded It. It is planned as a "get-together week" for the manufacturer, offering him an opportunity of meeting the job her, the dealer and the general pub lic, and plans to make it appealing to each faction are being perfected. The arrangements for the show are the product of the study of prac tically every other radio exposition that has been staged in this country during the past year and a half, as Its projector, U. J. Herrmann, him self a showman of -long experience, has visited practically all of them to learn what not to do. An outstanding feature of thl show Is that over 60 per cent of the floor space has been devoted to aisle space for the comfort of the crowds that will come at a season when the buying public will show keen In terest in the developments of radio during the summer months and at a time when they are looking for some diversion for the winter months. It has been announced by the manage ment that several foreign countries have considerable exhibit space un der option, which will assure an in ternational Interest The New General Electric Tunner Detector Amplifier A Complete Radio Receiving Station This compact and highly efficient receiver is of the sin gle circuit type with a continuously variable air conden sor for tuning. Provided with a regenerative coil for amplification and oscillation. Suitable for reception of voice and all signals. Come in Let Us Demonstrate 1TT3 Broadway 1696 Tf eiL Cl E.LECTRIC CQ SPECIAL WE WILL BROADCAST MONDA Y ROSE'S FAMOUS ORCHESTRA BET. 6 AND 7P.T' Going Out of Business? J Should Say Not! Merely overstocked in certain articles and must "clean house" of odds and ends. Our sale advertised in last Sunday's Oregonian will be continued for another week with additions, a few of which are listed below : Price Original. Sales. Elite 43-plate Condensers $4.75 $1.5 Triple SoAets, Elite $3.30 $1.00 Fada Rheostats $1.00 .73 Arkay Phonograph Attachment .' $1.50 .80 Paragon Crystal Detectors $1.75 .00 Arkay Vernier Adjusters $1.00 JTM Firco Bulldog Grip Plugs $2.50 91.00 Tuska Variocoupleis $8.00 f 1.40 Fada Detector and Two-Step Amplifier with filament control jacks in oak cabinet $65.00 $35.75 The J. B. WEED, Mgr. (The Oldest Exclusive Radio Store in Portland) Mail Order Service Write for Catalog 310 OAK STREET (Installers KGW) Portland, Oregon COMBINATION CIRCUIT NOVEL AND EFFICIENT IMPROVEMENT One Stage of Radio Frequency Amplification and Crvntal Rectifier Being Used in East With Excellent Rcnulta. One ta:e ef radio freqaeary. ewMMnee. mith m rrytsl deteetAr, makes mm efficient receiver for radlosbane. In anek-iip, V nrlmeer. 1 By pa ron demur of .O02 mfd., I Potentiometer of UOO ohmm, .tstorase battery, B Plate ballery, 1 R Bndln frewurncy transformer, I Crys tal deteetor, t'Ifr Phone condenser, .OOl mfd. A COMBINATION of one stage of radio frequency amplifi cation and a crystal detector is being used by many eastern ex perimenters with very good re sults. Such a circuit is quite simple and easy to operate. It has been Mng known that as a rectifier the cyrstil detector is quite on a par with the vacuum tube. It has advantages not enjoyed by the vacuum tube. In that it Is practically nolseloss lit action. Mu sical reproduction in the telephone receiver with a crystal detector is usually sweet and clear. In a radio frequency combination with a crystal detector.' the crystal should be of a more rugged type than galena. Silicon or iron pyrites are recommended, as these reduce the necessity of frequent adjust ments, i Units necessary for such a set are ai follows: One standard short-- vave variometer, one vacuum tube of the amplifier type, a tube socket, filament rheostat, one 200-ohm po tentiometer, a fixed condenser of .002 microfarads capacity, one 6-volt storage battery, a "B" battery of 4b volts, a radio-frequency transform er, crystal detector and telephone receivers. . Connect up the units as in the diagram. A little attention must be given to ret the correct setting of the potentiometer. After this is done, a slight adjustment of the vario meter wilt tune the aerial circuit to the different stations. The tube will operate best when lighted at a little more brilliancy than is usual with the ordinary tube set. The best results are obtained with the potentiometer pointer al INC Store 1 P most completely over to the neg ative side. The crystal detector 1 operated in the usual manner. It will be found that not so much attention is needed to find the most sensitive spots. . Kxperlmenters who have used uth a set dec is re that It t tines quite sharply. Interference from the spark stations Is rut down al most to a minimum with a small variation of the variometer. The rnost powerful broadcasting station in the United States will soon be Instslld In Washington, I. P., accord in!1 to an announcement made recently by the Had to Cor poration of America. The station will be Iocs ted In a new build Ins; now being erected In the highest section of the city. The finet "concert studio" ever bull for radio broadcasting Is being planned. A practically all -day st-rvlce will be arranged by the company. leading entertaipers, speakers and educators of the country will feature the pro Kramnion of this station, whi-b. are expected to b heard In almost everv nort Inn of t'e t'nttfn Htt. Radioize Your Phonograph We will gladly convert your phonograph into a Combination Outfit so you can enjoy concerts Either Way Hear the radio when it is being broadcasted or hear your own records whenever you choose. Radio Service Bureau Gasco Bldg. Main 4533 NOTICE TO EASTERN OREGOSI Wo Inntallr tha "POHD CARAVAN" KAUIO. WATCH FOR ITt HALLOCK & WATSON RADIO SERVICE IM PAHK MTHKffr, Port lm ad, OrrBoa. Rroadfastlne; fitatlnn KOQ Expertmtnlal tuition 7X1. One-Stagre Radio - Frequency adds greater distance to your set. Complete stock of Transformers Potentiometers Vernier Rheostats, Etc M. J. WALSH ELECTRIC CO. 106 Fourth Street BKT. WASHlNtiTO!" AND STARK E. L. KNIGHT & CO. 449 Whliwtm .. r 12th HroadsrST OM. CALL 1 lor IIKWONTRATIO NO OBI.K.A 1 11 Radio Krta aad I'arta "DIBIT HUES OAT THE ELECTRIC WIT" RADIO SETS of all klnriH. rnxAt to yonr order. Complete ta In Mtorlc Uarga aupply of parta. SMITH-McCOY ELECTRIC CO. Zt Alder St. Mala ftOl I. RADIO rlK AD THKORT l I HI I IO NORTH PACIFIC RADIO SCHOOL Opening- about Oct. 5. Pnjr anil nlrht clAHneN. Special attention to cctta instruction for the radio fan. Approved progressive method. R. T. atyea C. I. fialreaa ItUaesi 2XMI5 or Uallaek Wataaa