" • \f"'.J'< 1uk .... jW^'fcJ'J-.,, " " .-r-.i'aV- "Yowr Skin is So Fragrant' and Smooth Itch cake of Cashmere Bouquet Soap holds theperfume of a thousand in* grantpctsb. For Arte generations, lovely women have enjoyed its parity. A sensible recipe for lovely complexions l« rain water fnd this pure soap. Cashmere Bouquet ! 5e site . «5C • turn «ae, toe;, Luxuriota l2dM|^ I"-.' •hmerc} que?, ss w/a ; ^ $M Chieago to London. i.. , ; v' , A special train will carry freight V froro Chicago to New Tor* In 48 - Boars, observes Capper's Weekly. This - ' freight will be rushed aboard the great Ship Majestic, the world's largest boat, t%ullt by the Germans and now oper- ; eted by an English company, and If iS :,|11 goes well seven days after the freight Is loaded In Chicago It will be unloaded In England. What would Co- H - iumbns think If he could see this mod- « ; *irn ship, says W. D. Boyce, according 5 fo Capper's Weekly. The Majestic * erosses the Atlantic In aboat one-sev- - r-#nth of the time. It could carry the *•"! ' three ships Columbus used, his entire £V-;i'.*£jtrew and 2,000 other passengers, to ? iay nothing of the tons and tons of !>,• '• freight. Four hundred years hence they may read about our trying to f Send freight from Chicago to England % |n seven days, and wonder why we if %ere so slow. Probably airships as 5 * %lg as the Majestic will be making the Iv ^ iphlcago-Londoo trip In ana seventh of I*rt./t||odajr,B time. - Free Country. Lord Lee of Fareham aald "St • ilnner In Washington: V "Prohibition, strictly enforced, la a Jrood thing. Of courae It la a bit bard 4>n those who like a glass of beer or Wine with their dinner occasionally. An American of that sort, a dear friend of mine, aald to me the other day: "I am thirsting--thirsting--to visit old England again." That Stretch They are GOODI PROFITS are being made by Dealers in Jtedlo through the extra-ordin- ••/-lary demand, and consequent ' •-£" ijufck turn-over, of the apparatus which be handles. RADIO fSfia'sri Saras: v>imaat would inpravc your jeaflytelaDoe sheet? aaiw m%» MlnlKBoHig The Semi-Monthly Magmzme of At VfuUo Industry will answer aO ' One dollar joa for fcar doUs^t a year. Rib Pdfisfag Cttpn&i Inoorpoimked Depk.23w342 iAa AteJkwYt^0f WHY UBRARIAIIS UKE JOB Get Amusement Out of Singular Transformation of Book Titles In Memoriae of Readers. The scholastic hush ef the public library Is seldom broken by a titter, but the librarlanettes In the central circulation department have a steady refuge from hard work in the compilation of the singular transformations of book titles that take place in the memories of seekers for literary sweetness and light. Herewith la the latest unofficial bulletin, acoordlng to a New York Sun writer: "Have you got Jack London's "The Shout In the Woods'?" Inquired a wistful young thing. " "The Shoqt In the Woods'T" echoed the experienced librarlanette. "Let me see. I'm sure I can find oat which of his novels yon mean. Oh, yee-Mmt it 'The Call of the Wild'?" "That's what I said," nnmnpred the wistful young thing--" The Call of the Wild.'" Of course It's a pardonable slip to ask for Galsworthy's "For Rent** when you really want his "To Let." Hie difference is hardly worth mentioning. But it's really almost profane to demand : "The Autograph on the Breakfast Table." A Lady of Distinction Is recognized by the delicate fascinating Influence of the perfume she uses. A bath with Cutlcura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the poree followed by a dusting with Cutlcura Talcum powder usually means a dear* sweet, healthy skin.--Advertisement. Sear Huntlnfl. Newfoundland seal hunters for generations have wasted most of their time In the actual location of seal herds. It was like spending an hour looking for a berry bush that could be "picked clean" In ten minutes. This appealed to the Imagination ol Alan S. Butler, young English flyer, out gunning for opportunity Instead ol waiting foe her. He contracted to locate the seal herds at ten cents a head, by airplanes. Now his Aerial Surveying company is doing a Iand-offlce business and Butler la on the road to riches at twenty-three. It'a a humbug, that opportunity knocks onee at every man's door. Op portunlty does peuse at every man'f front gate, but aha usually has to be dragged to the door by a constant watcfean Oysters Forever. The New York conservation commission has been successful at the Cold Spring harbor. Long Island, In the effort to produce oyster sets from artificially fertilized eggs, an achievement which bus been striven for in one place or another for 40 yeais. This means that there will be little danger of exhausting the oyster supply, for by this method the oyster beds may be kept properly populated with growing oysters. Finally Got Results. "Was that anti-fat treatment year wife took any good?" "No. it was a fake." "But your wife looks thinner." "She Is. She worried so over losing her money that she lost flesh." --Judge TO KILL RATS and MICE Always use the genuine STEARNS' ELECTRIC PASTE It foroM Umm rMUlo m fitNB th» bvMdiag ft* wmtoraoatTMliair. B*tt,njc» qp«fcrMi cfc--, irtutand MM destroy too* ul pappanr Hi m r ROD USE--Mm* TMAM TMH OUMttoos in u to •*•*» baa. IOLDHSO. Uom. DMTL W. MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS 16799 DIED LOOK OLD? Oator »Wnit wlH Mif a "ckJjr--stops dandruff. At tK Mt lbtHI , or dlrtet fro» M-Ok CWateh Clean Cistern Water--uur Common Filter catches leaven, dirt, soot and varmtB that otherwise enter yo*r cistern. Bully »tttchetl and cleaned, tiMOtpaaatve, everlasting. JPree elrcJlar. C, W Uetsr Jiff. Co., Henry, In. in Mew York City alone ney trouble last year. Don't allow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Guard against thin trouble by taking GOLD MEDAL The weald* standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid trouble* HoDanA Rational Remedy since 1696. AH druggists^ three aiaas. for tbe *mm (UM Mo4al w «nqr kw Hov lo Mak« «ad Use it "'455MLYSK"- REGENERATIVE RECEIVING SET II. ft- A mmnttre aet la one in which the wire* leas waves or oscillations entering from tut aerial are regenerated and Increased by raeana of the vacuum bulb and for this reason, as well as on account of othera, it is far superior to any style of crystal set Roughly, a vacuum bulb or tube detector la about thirty times as efficient as the best crystal detector and moreover, with such sets, one or more steps of amplification may be used, thus increasing the sounds to almoet any exteAt. One of tie great advantages of regenerative sets la that they will permit Of tuning ont Interferences F" and the better the aet and the more efficient the various units, the clearer and belter the results obtained. I have already described how to set up a small regenerative set under "colls," but there are various other methods ef arranging or assembling regenerative sets. One of the best Is the set used with a varlo-coupler and variometers which is illustrated in Fig. 96. By ualng two variometers and a varlo-coupler aa shown, greet selectivity of the circuit Is obtained and by hooking on amplifiers and using a loud speaker phone, music, songs, speeches, etc., may be reproduced as loudly as a good phonograph. The only objection to such a set la that there are several adjustments to be made In tuning as there are the three knobs to^ look after. In making this set It Is not advisable to attempt to make either the varlocoupler or the variometers, for while these Instruments look simple, special tools and long practice and skill are required to construct them properly. Also, when purchasing these, select those in which the coils are not varnished or shellacked as these coverings Invariably decrease the efficiency of a coll. The other parts required, aside from ordinary Insulated electric bell wire, binding posts and a panel or base, are the vacuum bulb or tube detector; the socket for the tube, a grid-leak and condenser (which you can readily make yourself if desired), the rheostat, a variable condenser of .0005 mfd.; the Six volt storage battery ; B-hattery and a pair of 2000 ohm receivers. By studying the diagram, you will easily see how the set should be ari^ sr- .. A > 4 '.«• %• Ai ' •£ 1|*T ranged and hooked up, but, if you desire. the wires may be altered to run at other angles or directions, the main thing being to keep them as short and direct as possible and to avoid running them parallel or crossing them: The aerial A is led In and connected to the primary of the varlo-coupler B, the other terminal of the varlo-coupler being connected with the variablecondenser C, and the latter being connected with the ground-wire D. From the secondary coll of the varlo-coupler E, one wire Is led to the phone or receivers. F, a connection being made at Q, with the atorage battery H and the rheostat L The other wire from E, is led to the grid-variometer J, thence to the grid-leak and condenser K. then' to the vacuum-tube grid L. The plate-connection of the tube M, Is wired to the plate-variometer N, and from here the wire runs to the Bbattery O, the, other terminal of which leads to the phone-receivers, F. The whole affair, when finally connected and mounted on a neat bakellte or fibre base, ahould be enclosed in a neat case with a hinged cover. In order to protect the Instruments from dust and disturbance and yet allow Inspection or adjustment. Of course the adjusting or tuning knobs and the outside connections for aerial, ground and batteries should be led through the case or box to binding posts on the exterior. If the whole set is arranged compactly and neatly and you make an attractive, well finished case, the set will be the equal in appearance, as well as Id efllcieticy, of any readymade tec coating aeveral timea aa much. TRANSMISSION OR SENDING I have already described the difference between interrupted waves and continuous waves and how the human voice, or other sounds, if transmitted by the ordinary Interrupted waves of • wireless telegraph sender, would be broken up and unintelligible. I have also explained how continuous waves are capable of carrying such sounds without breaking them up; but while sounds of voices, music, etc., cannot be properly transmitted over an interrupted wave yet code signala or alternate dots and dashes may be transmitted over continuous waves by means of instruments which break or Interrupt such waves, so that a radiophone may be used to send both tele- .graphic and telephonic messages and a radio telephone receiver will receive both. The principal Mess and stoat eaaan> tial part of the aending or transmission apparatus, known as the radiophone, Is the device by which the continuous waves are produced. The Instrument which was first devised for this purpose was an ordinary arclight but this has now given place to a device known as a vacuum-tube oscillator which Is similar to an ordinary incandescent light with specially prepared filament and other devices. The operation of the arc-light was as follows: If a condenser and Inductance coil are shunted across the current to •uch a light, the current Is lessened as the condenser is charged and the potential difference across the arc Increased. This still further charges the Condenser wblch discharges through the coil and again becomes charged in the reverse direction, the whole operation being repeated over and over again with extreme rapidity--as many as one million discharges a second being nsual. Diagrammatically this arrangement is shown in Fig. 56, in which A represents the aerial, B the ground, C the coil, D the telephone receiver, E the condenser, F the light, O the dynamo or other source of electricity. The vacuum-tube on the other hand, acts In a very different manner. When this is charged with electricity the filament discharges an immense number of electrons upon a plate with incalculable rapidity Fig. 67, and this, by means of various sppllances, produces the oscillating cur\ rents of extremely high frequency, or continuous waves. Unlike the arc light, moreover, the vacuum tube is employed in receiving, the incoming waves varying the current through the filament and so altering the flow of electrons, thus transforming the vacuum-tube from an oscillator to a detector. It must not be supposed, however, that an oscillator, a condenser, a coil and an aerial and ground are all When Baby Complains. THERE ABE MANY WATS a baby has of expemng any pain oi * or ddtiagTrMmBoonn from its normal condition (/health ana nappm abaro cry, % vrokmced irritatod cry. RestieKnefe, a constant ttifaing ef the hoe& or of the whole body, fretfal. In these and other ways a baby tells yon there kr wrong. Most mothers know that a disordered stomach, or bowels thai do not act naturally are the cause of most of baby's sufferings. A call for the doctor is the first thought, but in the event of any delay there should be ready at hancK % safe remedy such as Fletcher's Castoria. Oastona has been used for bairns ailments for over 80 years and h« mer«| ited the good will of the family physioian in a measure not equaled by any othe^P baby's medicine because of its harmlessness and the good results achieved. And remember this: Oastoria is essentially a baby's remedy and not a core- * CoaaUyK! aa* LoSo®? Children v; 'v?! •m ^*4 Let's Think It Oven There Is eoch a thine aa Baying too much on any subject, aai tb» Mgrand-«tand" talker sooner or Inter becomes a bore. The tretfc is always welcomed, and the truth reiterated and eoaflnMd k mm' than welcome--it reaches ytrar innermost so«L Fletcher's Castoria is all its advertising has claimed for It 8crutinixed y the microscope of public opinion and uaed for over thirty yearc it stands without a peer in the hearts ef thoughtful, laalle--. discerning If othera. And once used, mother lore--there is no for mother lore--will acorn to try a Maabetitute" or a **jnst aa gooi**. Masquerading under many names drags that are injvrfcma ta tk» tender babe have found their way into some households, but the Ugfctrf experience soon casts them out. Are they cast out before it is tee lalai MTWtt MOULD HAD mSOOOJTmTB A ROURO EVERT •OTTUerniiaartCMNto ttCNUINK CASTORIA ALWAYS £eu* the Signatnre of VHB OINTAUR ••MMMV, HI* VM* WTV. 10 Gents BRIGHTENS, REFRESHES, ADDS HEW DEU6HT TO OLD PUTNAM FADELESS DYES--dyes or tints as yoa «M that are nerenctary in order to send wireless telephone messages. In addition, there are nmneroas appliances for tuning or adjusting wave lengths, modulating, amplifying and other purposes and In a large station these are very complicated and powerful. For example, the Westlnghouse sta tlon at Newark uses five 250 watt tubes--two being used as oscillators and three as modulators--and which work In conjunction with two fifty watt speech amplifiers. The current used In lighting Is ten volt A. C. with five amperes of radiation. For sending the sounds, microphones are used and to maintain an even cool temperature on the tubes s rotary fan Is employed. In this ststlon the coll or Inductance Is a flat or pancake helix wound with half-Inch copper ribbon while a special motor generator furnishes a 2,000 volt current for the plate. The aerial is of the multipletuned type of six 150-foot wires at a height of 210 feet above the ground with a counterpoise of twelve wireet on thirty foot spreaders twenty feet: above the roof and below the aerlaLi As a lead-in, a ten wire cage on hoope two inches in diameter is used. This, however. Is one of the largest and most powerful stations In the world and for amateurs nothing so complete, so large or so powerful Is ever required. For ordinary purposes, a very small sending set is all that Is^ necessary and even for the smallest a license Is required, for while there Is no objection to any one operating a receiving set and listening-in to anything that is in the air, a multitude of signals and sounds being sent is a great nuisance and Interferes with every legitimate sending station by ^confusing the sounds and creating in-; terferences. In fact, the greatest trouble in receiving is interference' and it is far more difficult to tune out the weak waves from nearby amateur sending Instruments than to tune to the desired signals from, the large stations. Also, it is far more difficult to construct and set up a transmitting set than a receiving set and hence I advise all amateurs to leave the sending alone, or else make no attempt to install or use a transmitting set until thoroughly familiar with the subject and no longer an amateur. But as no, book on wireless telephony would be considered complete without s description and instructions as to rigging up sending sets, a few simple <tasg» tloas and figures are given. A Word ef Warning. De not run your antenna acrotp the street, as you will be violating a city ordinance, and mate yeuieelf subject to a fine. NO GROUND WITH LOOP ANTENNA When tho loop antenna la used It takes the plate of the nsual aerial and ground, radio experts agree. A loop only three feet in diameter Is able to pick up radiophone stations s few miles distant and transatlantic reception is effected by means of a much larger loop aerial. Some amateurs have hooked up aerials using the regular ground conaalliums bat sradt better results can be obtained if one end of the wire on the loop is attached to the aerial binding post and the other end is fastened to the ground binding pos^. \ Certain Warning. Whui you see a bine glow In pans tubes, it's a sure sign that you are using too much plate or **Bn batteries AA M|K teals. The big fur-seal herd, numbering In the millions, now is migrating from the South Pacific to the Prlbllof Islands, near Alaska. They make the trip each spring. > How do they know whei ta start and where to go? Man's belief that seals have no brains Is based on his ability to conquer, kill and turn them into expensive fur coats. If an animal appeered that man could not conquer. It would speedily be credited with intelligence. The intellect appears to be a matter of vanity, measured by the ability to / ' A Compound Preetwrei - **80 her heart was broken?" Tee; In two.places. Southampton and Newport--Life. Asleop for Four Years. In certain parts of the African desert, where it Is too hot for any planta to grow, the ground Is in placee thickly covered with white snails; In 1918 a naturalist traveling through this region collected some of the shells from a spot on which It was believed no rain had fallen for five years. These snails' shells were packed away and left untouched until this year, 1022, when the naturalist, at home once more, rnpacked his shell! and placed them In a basin of water to be cleaned. To his amazement, a quantity of healthy living snails were found on the following morning crawling all over hla study table I Gene to the Dog* - •' '-"'A Headline--"Hermits Bat Grass and Bark." We should rather expect them to moo or whinny. Cellar Is 8afe. Accident statistics show that the safest place to be to avoid the possibility of accident is In a bed in the : ^ cellar of your home. Next to that the ^ "i? safest place Is a Pullman or other steel * c a r on a r a i l r o a d t r a i n . So s a y t h e ^> j accident Insurance companies. A pas- . senger In an ordinary railroad car 1a f much safer than at home, becauae he Is sitting still and few things can happen to him. If he is in a and there Is a collision, other cara a be smashed, but his own vehicle, being of steel and enormously heayy, wH likely escape serious Injury. : Hard to Csteh Upi Wayback--The clock only ntfMaas ' rf one dollar and you want two. Taxi Driver--That clock is slow, aad I have been driving very fasi-J«4«k „v i •M Which Is Larger The Sun or a Cent The sun is the largest but you can hold the cent so close to your eye that you'll lose sight $ the sun, l)oa*t iet a dfeeap price or a Mg caa balt^ng powder auks yon lose sight of quality »»• u V • ' " *.*j ..Us ,'v;# k # ,'T The Economy BAKING POWDER ~r; Is the quality leavener --for real economy in the kitchen, always use Calumet, one trial will convince you. The World's Greatest Baiting Powder IJ '• J**;. 4