CHAPTER III AT THE WIRELESS STATION CHAPTER XI LIGHT OUT OF DARKNESS CHAPTER XII A GLAD ANNOUNCEMENT CHAPTER XIV AN IMPROMPTU FEAST CHAPTER XVII VAULTING AMBITION CHAPTER XX THE WONDERFUL SCIENCE CHAPTER XXI THE VANISHING CROOKS CHAPTER XXII BROADCASTING MARVELS CHAPTER XXIII THE FIRST VENTURE CHAPTER XXV SOLVING THE MYSTERY Title: The Radio Boys at the Sending Station Making Good in the Wireless Room Author: Allen Chapman Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 THE RADIO BOYS SERIES (Trademark Registered) THE RADIO BOYS AT THE SENDING STATION OR MAKING GOOD IN THE WIRELESS ROOM BY ALLEN CHAPMAN AUTHOR OF THE RADIO BOYS’ FIRST WIRELESS THE RADIO BOYS AT OCEAN POINT RALPH OF THE ROUNDHOUSE RALPH ON THE ARMY TRAIN WITH FOREWORD BY JACK BINNS ILLUSTRATED NEW YORK GROSSET & DUNLAP PUBLISHERS Made in the United States of America
COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY The Radio Boys at the Sending Station FOREWORD By Jack Binns Since this volume was written an epoch making invention has been announced to the radio world. It is the super-regenerative system developed by E. H. Armstrong, the wizard of Columbia University. This system is bound to revolutionize the art of wireless communication in every branch, and is in itself the most important discovery since Marconi put into operation the first crude form of wireless apparatus. I am mentioning this fact because there is the romance of youth overcoming every obstacle placed before it tied up in the history of Armstrong’s remarkable achievements, and the story of this romance should stand forward as an incentive to American boyhood. Fifteen years ago when radio amateurs first began to send out wireless telegraph messages, the federal authorities in Washington were at a loss to devise some means that would regulate them. It was then that a bright official conversant with radio said: “Put ’em down below 200 meters, and they’ll soon die out.” He knew perfectly well that it was almost impossible to operate on those low wave-lengths with the apparatus in existence at that time—hence his sardonic proposal. The amateurs, however, refused to “die out.” Faced with the inexorable regulation, they set to work to devise apparatus which would operate successfully. Among them was E. H. Armstrong, a youth who at that time was attending Columbia. It was a really lucky thing for the world that the official in Washington thought of his clever scheme to kill the amateurs, because it provided just the incentive needed to set Armstrong to work. The result has been that within ten years he has produced three epoch-making inventions, any one of which would have been a remarkable life achievement in itself. Such, briefly is the story of one radio boy overcoming difficulties, but of course in this case it is a real story. It emphasizes the fact that even in these highly developed and organized times there is always an opportunity for boys to improve upon existing conditions, and since this is the theme of the adventures of “The Radio Boys,” I am very glad to write the foreword to the series. CONTENTS
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