Radio mirror (Jan-Oct 1923)

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m 24 1923 5SH47 How to Build Five Tube Neutrodyne —This Issue Radio Di EVERY I TEN CENTS REG. U S. PAT. OFF. & DOM. OF CANADA Vol. VI Copyright, 1923 R. D. P. Co. Inc. SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 1923 No. 7 FINDS BURIED TREASURE SCORES VICTORY IN WESTINGHOUSE SUIT CUTTING AND WASHINGTON GIVES BIG FIRM JOLT Buyer of Armstrong Patent Starts New • Suit Attempting to Entangle Klitzen Radio Corporation (Special to RADIO DIGEST) NEW YORK.— Hardly had the ink dried on the decision of Judge Learned Hand of the United States District Court here in his decision favorable to the defendants, handed down in the suit of the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company versus the Cutting and Washington Radio Corporation, until the "Westinghouse Company entered a suit in the Eastern District Federal Court of Wisconsin, asking for a preliminary injunction against the Klitzen Radio Corporation of Racine, Wisconsin, one of the Armstrong licensees, restraining them from selling their products through channels of distribution not named in the original Armstrong license agreement. The Westinghouse bill of complaint against the Klitzen Corporation follows closely that filed against the Cutting and Washington Company, for which only a temporary injunction was granted by Judge Hand on July 29, pending a six months' period in which the Cutting and Washington Company will have time to prepare itself to manufacture its sets under the Court's interpretation of the conditions of the Armstrong license. Westinghouse Bill of Complaint The complaint bill of the Westinghouse Company alleges that the Klitzen Radio Corporation sells through jobbers and dealers and has manufacturing agents to make the Klitzen sets. It also alleges a conspiracy with the Alladin Sales Corporation. The case comes up for hearing August 29 in Milwaukee. The Westinghouse Company is represented by Quarels, Spence & Quarels, attorneys of Milwaukee. The Klitzen Company by Thompson, Myers & Kearney, of Racine. With the new Klitzen suit the Radio Corporation and Westinghouse Company now have suits pending agai.ist four of the independent Radio manufacturers making sets under the license granted them by Armstrong prior (Continued on page 5) NEW DEVICE BARES WAY TO WEALTH Louisiana Inventor Declares Machine Reveals Secreted Riches by Buzzing Tests Bring $59,700 Experiments Indicate Contrivance Locates Various Metals by Varying Sound Volume By R. A. Sullivan BATON EOUGE, LA.— All things in time may be known to Radio, even the secrets of the ages and the mysteries hidden deep in the earth and its waters — this is the prediction of most of those who saw recently the operation of the Eadio treasurefinder invented, after many troublous years, by Emmett Green of this city. By means of his machine Green is reported to have found an urn, secreted by a Frenchman more than sixty years ago, containing bonds worth now more than $58,000. It is considered fitting that what is likely to rank soon among the wonders of the world should be tried and found not wanting in the mystic swamps and baffling bayous of the Father of Waters. Romance and tragedy, the days of buccaneers and the Spanish Main, of proud Dons and langorous Creoles, of swashbucklers and fair women, of cringing slaves, cruel men and wily, of the clash of blue and gray — all these may be recalled by a machine that looks like the wrecked half of a toy wagon. When the treasure-finder is perfected and marketed, hidden treasures are likely to be as safe as a bootlegger at a camp(Continued on page 2) FORT WORTH, TEX. — No more musical programs will be broadcast by WBAP, Star-Telegram station here, until September 17. Then it is planned to resume the concerts ordinarily given daily from 7:30 to 9:30 p. m.. Central Standard time. Noted Writer's Songs Form Fine Program Sent by WOR NEWARK, N. J. — D. Wolfe Gilbert, one of America's favorite song writers, was an unusually interesting feature on the program of Station WOR, L. Bamberger and company, here recently. He gave a program entirely of his own work.