Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 29, 1925 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cimarron Valley Clipper and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Oklahoma Lower Bgdy Refuses To
Ratify Proposed Twentieth Con-
stitutional Amendment. •
Oklahoma City.—Rutiflentinn of the
proposed twentieth amendment to the
constitution, the so-called "child labor"
amendment, was voted .down in the
house of representatives, 81 to 24, witli
two members absent.
Six states have taken final action
on ttie child labor amendment. 'Ark-
ansas and California have rutided it.
South Carolina, Georgia and Louisiana I
have rejected it. The lower house in
Kansas has rejected it, while the South
Dakota senate acted likewise. Arkan-
sas was the first to ratify.
House members engaged in acrimo-
nious debate over passage of Gralmm-
George bill requiring the teaching of
the constitution in schools. Cussed
overwhelmingly on roll call vote with
llroadbent, Davis of Pittsburg, Davi-
son, Fawlk. Green, Hanger, Hill, Hines,
Laskey, Morgan, Keinwand, Simpler,
Strickland and Sullivan voting no. The
bill now is up to the senate.
A bill introduced by Singletary, of
Oklahoma, Frank I’.oyer and John Mil-
ler of Tulsa, created the district “fam-
ily court.” The bill provides the court
Khali handle till juvenile delinquency
and divorce cases. A district judge
named by bis colleagues shall preside
over the court.
ltill on preferential primary was in-
troduced in senate by Looney of We-
woka.
State regulation of building and loan
companies is proposed in a bill by Sen-
ator Tom C. Waldrep of Shawnee.
Kaeli house passed two bills, the first
•general bills passed outside of .the leg-
islative appropriation bill. The house*
passed bills by Thomas 11. Wren, of
Okemuh to control issuance of fund-
ing bonds and validity of judgments
against municipalities, while the sen-
ate passed a measure making it a fel-
ony to buy off competing bidders for
municipal contracts and another auth-
orising the separate taxation of undi-
vided interests in land.
The ltill also would establish boards
of tax appraisers in each county com-
missioner's district who would assess
taxes in the district instead of the
county tax assessor.
Tlie senate voted final passage
of a bill to make lhe burning of any
property, such as threshing macliim*s,
a felony aittiough not covered by the
law on arson, and to a bill to authorize
separate taxation of undivided inter-
ests in real estate.
The judiciary committee reported
out the Gulager bill requiring ten days
notice for issuance of marriage li-
censes, recommending that it pass as
amended. ,
Among bills Introduced was one by
L. R. llugbey of Alva, chairman of the
committee on listi and game, to forbid
any person to tiave in his possession
more than the daily bag limit of game
The first revenue producing ltill
passed by the senate is the bill intro-
New Potentate of India Temple, Ok-
lahoma City, the largest Shrine organ-
ization in the state.
Diagram Showing the Kompentrol Connections. Note the Use of Six-Turn
Primary to Prevent Resonance.
A move to curb the powers of the
corporation commission was seen In
I lie introduction of a bill in the house
by D. L. Faulk, which would fix the
price of cotton ginning in the state
and repeal till laws and acts or orders
of tlie corporation commission conflict-
ing therewith.
The rate tlie bill would set Is 25
cents a 100 pounds for picked cotton
and 50 cents a 100 pounds for “bolly”
cotton. Ttie proposed rate would lie
present rate is 35 cents a 100 pounds
for picked cotton and 50 cents a 100
pounds ffir ‘bolly” cotton.
Ten dollars a day instead of the
present $0 per diem, $6 a day to be
paid also after tlie 120 days of tlie
session have elapsed, would be paid to
members of the Oklahoma legislature
and the size of ttie two chambers
would be reduced to seventy-seven
members in the bouse and thirty mem-
bers in the senate under proposals con-
tained in two resolutions introduced
by Mrs. Lamar Looney, senator from
liollis.
Ttie resolutions would submit two
amendments to the Oklahoma constitu-
tion to the voters pf tlie state, one
question being on the size of tlie legis-
lature and the other on the pay of tlie
legislators.
Ttie bill for separate assessment and
taxing of undivided interests in real
estate passed only after vigorous de-
fense by Karl Brown of Marietta, co-
author with Floyd Calvert of Nowata.
Products Valued at $1,340,220.00
Going up! The Oklahoma State
Board of Agriculture, in a com-
pilation just made, shows the total
value of the state products for 1924 to
be if 1,340,220,000. This Includes agri-
cultural, livestock, mineral and manu-
factured products. The latest statis-
tical abstract shows the total wealth
of Oklahoma in tangible property, ex-
clusive of livestock, as .$3,307,100,000 in
1922. The value of all resources pro-
duced in 1924 would mean a per cap-
By ROBERT LA MAR
Day by day engineers of the various
radio manufacturing corporations are
making improvements in circuits that
have been standard for many years.
Occasionally one of them stands out so
prominently that It becomes an Im-
portant factor In the Industry. The
Kompentrol, the trade name of a new
tuned radio frequency receiver, comes
under this heading.
The performance of the receiver, one
that employs five tubes. Is very much
superior to muny others In this cate-
gory. Tilts Is a broad statement which
unquestionably will arouse some dis-
sension, but it Is based on rigid com-
parative tests conducted by the writer
in various localities, some of them the
so-called dead spots of New York city.
Most of the competing sets were “put
under the table” when It came to dis-
tant reception.
The new set consists of two stages
of tuned radio, a detector and two
stages of audio. Admittedly, this Is
no cause for amazement, but the actual
performance of the set Is.
Where the Set Differs.
Tlie basic difference between the
Kompentrol set and tlie ordinary
radio frequency amplifying set of ttie
tuned type is shown in Fig. 2. It will
be seen that In the conventional radio
amplifier the low potential sides of
both radio frequency primaries are
years.
passed by the senate is let,, in n - ^ $OGOOO for each
din ed by Harry^ B. C ordell, Matfitou-i i i n W(Mllun aI1(1 child in Oklahoma.
cotton gins and a 3-cent tax on each
bale ginned. The revenue from the
bill is expected to exceed $100,000.
Oklahoma City will get $10,087 witli
the passage of a bill introduced in the
house by Dave Stovall of Hugo and
AI lou Street of Oklahoma City. The
bill, ealling for the distribution of
$224,534.58 in all, represents fire insttr
does not inelude suelt tangible prop-
erly as real property, farm implement!
and machinery, railroads and equip-
ment, etc. Ineluding the value of live-
stock in tangible property, the per cap-
ita wealth stands at $1,804.00.
State expenditures exceeded the col-
lections for the last six months by
nearly $1,000,000 according to report
$224,oJ4..>8 In a*t’ repr^ents lire iiisui j ()j. S(au, Treasurer Slmw, just cum-
anee tax collected In 1022 and l.t-3 as
fund for pensions and disability !
claims.
The slate collected $7,041,027.23 and
lims' • . . „„„ I spent $3,000,354.34. The added expen-
Leg station to prevent conspiracy for , ,
1 1,1 1 1 . .......... til., .tan reOlleoit the hal-
fruudulent conduct against the state,
county or any division of the state in
tlie letting of contruets or other pub-
lic business was passed by the senate.
The net is designed to eliminate graft
In public affairs. The bill was intro-
duced by the committee on municipal
corporations.
ditures of the state reduced tlie bal-
ance on hand July 1 from $3,532,732.07
to $2,.507,404.95 on Dec. 31.
Ail valorem,taxes totaled $253,059,77.
Receipts from state departments for li
censes and fees, and interest on tlie
public- money deposited in banks net-
ted $3. i2,2. >8.01.
.COOS’
<
AMP.
Church to Ask for $155,000
Knld.—Oklahoma Kpiscopallnns soon
will be asked to contribute si55,000 for
erection of combined church and par-
ish house at Norman, to accommodate
students attending the state university.
A drive to raise this sum will be start-
ed February 7. under supervision of
Bruce McClellan, Jr., Oklahoma City
attorney. Si. Matthew's congregation
ut Knld, already lias been requested
to appoint a campaign manager. A
similar plan will be followed through-
out tlie slate.
Third Payment for Wheat Raisers
Knid. Members of the Oklahoma
and Texas Wheat Growers’ associa-
tions will receive another payment
soon, it was announced here. The
payment will lie completed in bVbru-,
ary, if possible, and will amount to
approximately $2,000,000. This is the
third payment to be made this year
and will bring the total to $8,500,000.
Another payment will lie made, in ad-
dition to a separate payment for stor-
age to growers who held their wheat
on their own farms.
Farm Club Program PIXKrttd.
Anndnrko.—A farm club program for
pi-jr, including a study of terracing hor-
ticulture, fruit growing and more eco-
nomical stock raising for men, and .se-
lection of first year club program of
food preparation for woiia-n, was
adopted tor <Jaddo coutitj wna* . ..
dull members met ut the city hull. 1.
K. Nutter, county agent. Miss IOva
Beatty, county home detminjuration,
agent. I>an Iilehl. dlstrht i.<np *
Stillwater, and Mrs. Lul* S. Green, di.s
trict home de’nonstratior, Stillwater,
nrt with the committee.
.0003
H F a
j—A
$500,000 Loaned in 1924.
Ttie farm loan division, state land
office, negotiated 2.231 loans Involving
tin* sum of $5,027,550 during 1924. The
total expenses of operating tlie divi-
sion during the year was $51,778, ac-
eording to the annual report. During
that period tlie division collected in
applicant fens SiO.OOO. The total cost
.. t operating the dlv Islon was approxi-
mately one tiftli of 1 p-r cent of the
total amount of money* lent for tlie
year. For tlie same period of time thi
collections and earnings on louns is
force totaled $17,500,000.
too
own
.0003
HFL
.0003
UFO.
r
, C. i MF O
-nnnrs
I .
__A
Fig. 1—Showing the Kompentrol, Hav-
ing Variable Plate Resistor. .
“II” battery plus am-
connected to tlie
pllfler post.
lu tills receiver, however, they go to
ono end of a variable lOO-olim rheo-
stat, while tlie other end goes to the
• it battery amplifier. In other words,
a variable resistor is Inserted In series
with tlie primaries of the radio fre-
quency transformers. *
The first thought the technical rndlo
fun Is likely to get Is that the resist-
ance is put Into the circuit to Introduce'
losses and suppress oscillations. This
is not true. In fact, It is the reverse,
Actual operation shows that the more
resistance one introduces into tlie .pri-
mary circuit tlie more tlie set oscillates.
In other words, we have a common re-
generation control for tlie two stages
of radio frequency.
Tlie action of the variable 100-ohm
resistance may seem uncanny to many
guilders, but a study of the underlying
theory will take all tlie mystery out of
it. The radio amplifier Is built so that
It is highly improbable that any res-
onance can take place, making tlie
amplifier Itself non-oscillnting. The
resistance may be more properly
termed a reactance of variable choke
It is a conceded fact that a choke coll
'Introduced in tlie plate circuit will re
tard tlie radio frequency currents and
therefore throw the set into oscillation.
Consequently, If the reactor, or choke,
be,variable, the oscillation point of the
amplifier can be adjusted to accommo-
date all wave lengths.
Actual Results.
Selectivity and sensitivity go band
In hand. A receiver cannot be really
efficient and not be selective'; the re-
verse is true, also. The sensitivity of
the set may be accounted for by the
ability to keep the receiver on tlie hiss-
ing point at all wave lengths by a sim-
ple control. The selectivity is fur bet-
ter than a neutrodyne because of the
lower coupling employed. This is im-
perative because of ttie fact thut tlie
radio frequency primaries must have
six turns so that resonance cannot be
obtained.
If you are desirous of constructing a
set of this type, tlie circuit diagram of
Fig. 1 should lead you on the right
track.
A list of the necessary parts used by
the writer follows:
Three spiderweb colls for usual
tuped It. F. amplifiers.
Three 17-plate (.0003) variable con-
densers.
One (i-ojim Amsco rheostat for four
tubes.
One 20-ohm rheostat for detector.
One 100-ohm rheostat or 200-olim
potentiometer (Amsco).
One double circuit jack.
One single circuit jack.
One 7 by 18 bukellte panel (black or
mahoganite).
One 0% by 17 bakelite baseboard.
Three 4-inch Freshman dials.
One .0005 fixed condenser.
One .00025 grid condenser with 2-
niegolim leak.
One .000 mfd. Dubilier condenser.
One .01 mfd. fixed condenser.
Two audio transformers.
One battery switch.
Seven binding posts (preferably
marked).
Twelve lengths bus-bar.
Sundries such us screws, nuts, an
gles, etc.
A little confusion might arise about
the spiderweb coils. They may lie ob-
tained from your radio dealer if you
know what to ask for. They are called
tuned radio frequency coils of the non-
oscillating type. Usually the primaries
have 15 turns—but no matter how
many turns on tlie primary they will be
all right.
Make sure that tlie secondary has 05
turns, for a greater ^>r lesser number
of turns will not cover the band of
wave lengths on the usual coil and con-
denser; of course a turn or two out of
the way matters but 'little. Remove
sufficient turns from the primaries of
two of the coils so that only six turns
will remain on each, tlie third one re-
mafnlng usf purchased.
Coil Supports.
The colis should lie fastened with
little, pieces of rubber so that the fiat
urea Is nt right angles to ttie panel, It
being preferable that tlie coils be
mounted on top of tlie condense?, to
make them the highest unit In the set.
The unhampered coll having a 15-turn
primary is fastened to tlie first con-
denser, I. e„ ttie one on the extreme
left of the set facing from t lie front,
The other two colls should be mounted
In a similar manner, tlie order ot
mounting making no difference since
they are similar.—New York Telegram.
25 OUNCIS-/<v-2 5 CENTS
Cabbage Plants
“Frostproof." All leading varieties. 1,000
■ * 000'
r IliaipiUOl. /XII I' r, ■ -.......
to 4,000 at $1.25 per 1.000? 6,000 ami over
at $1 00 per 1.000. Pay postage or express
charges on arrival. Prices postpaid: 250,
60c; 600. $1.10. Nice htgh-gradi- plants.
Prompt shipment. Safe arrival guaranteed.
"Horv to Care for Plants” sent with order
Agents wanted. REINHARDT PI-ANT
COMPANY, Box W. A8HBURN, GEORGIA.
Get Your Suit Free
to men who^seU their frien^^d n^ghbors^ARNCj.D
Price—$&f.76iffi to$M values—Money-
Back Guarantee - Free Pocket Size Sample Book
fit* pocket —take order* anywhere, day or night
ARNOLD SWIFT & CO.
Dept. W, 1018 1024 S. Wabash Avs., Chicago
Fisherman’s Pet Seal
Mr. R. Sharpe, a Lowestoft (Kng-
land) beach fisherman, lias made
friends with a seal, which swims
after his boat whenever lie launches it.
DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN
Take Tablets Without Fear If You
See the Safety “Bayer Cross.”
Warning! Unless you see the name
“Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting the genuine Bayer
Aspirin proved safe by millions and
prescribed by physicians for 23 years.
Say “Bayer" when you buy Aspirin.
Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv.
Waterfalls more than 800 feet high
in India are .being harnessed by en-
gineers near Bombay to furnish hydro-
electric power.
JUjff
A safe and soothing
^remedy for cuts,
burns, or skin trou-
bles. Protects, re-
lie vesand heals.Take
internally forcougha
and sore throats.
Vaseline
mtr. n a bat mi
WO u L VAT Off.
PETROLEUM JELLY
Chesebrough Mfg. Co..Cons'd.
Sutc St. New York
vftsenne'
RESINOL
Soolhinq And HeAlinq
.St o p s Itc h i n q
Harmless, purely vegetable. Infants’ and
Children's Regulator, formula on every label
Guaranteed non-narcotic, non-alcoholic.
MBS. WINSLOW'S SYRUP
The Infants’ and Children's Regnlatar
Children grow healthy ami free
from colic, diarrhoea, flatulency,
constipation and other trouble if
given it at teething time.
8afe, pleasant—always brings re-
markable and gratifying result*.
At All
Druggitt•
ft
7
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 5-1925.
%
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 29, 1925, newspaper, January 29, 1925; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc913052/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.