ac Sfrom cience ec aniCSand nven on Be Sent to M ars How Radio Signals Now May Ultra Short Waves of the Beam Type to Penetrate Outer Space and Explore the Heavens. A Lemon 4 11 That Is Pink . THK discovery of a striking fruit ^ with rotor character!Stic* that are apparently new and that have a startling appearance is a matter of ' genera) interest. An illustration of j this fact is presented in the Journal . , of Heredity by A^D. Shaniel, physio ; logist of the United States Department j of Agriculture, who describee a pink fruited lemon ; . | These pink lemona are oblong in k shape, of medium «tie, rough or ridged v j INTERPLANETARY communication, long a dream of scientists, now appears to be a possibility. Radio apparatus has been developed to trans mit ultra short waves that will penc trate the earth’s atmosphere and reach into outer spaces. Research engineers already have demonstrated that forty two centimeter radio waves of the beam type of sufficient power to be heard from a loud-speaker can be economically transmitted. In giving this idea practical applica tion, I. E. Mouromsteff, who was in charge of the development work done in the laboratories of the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, points out that the difference between radio waves and light waves is quanti tative, not qualitative. In other words, they are identical in every character istic except wave length. Mr. Mouromt seff says that there is more difference between long and short radio waves than there is between short radio waves and long light waves. To illus trate this, he explains that the longest radio wave in use is 100,000,000 times as long as the shortest radio wave ever produced, whereas the shortest radio wave is only 1,000 times as long as The Smallest Real House A Complete Three-Story House oi Si* Rooms Built on ■ Lot Only Ten Feet Wide. THE house shown in the accom panying illustration may not be the most diminutive dwelling in the world, but it bases its claim to fame on being, according to the own ers, the smallest real and most com plete home in the world for its size. This three-story house of six rooms which was recently built in Long Beach, California, stands on a. lot 10 feet wide and 5(T feet long. The living room, which is nine feet wide and 19 feet long, occupies the lower floor of the house. This room has elaborately decorated walls and a paneled ceiling. A stairway at the rear of the living room leads to a hall which opens into a completely equipped kitchen nine feet wide and 11 feet long. On the second floor there is also a bedroom, nine by 13 feet, a full-size bathroom and a nursery. I From the second floor another flight 1 of stain leads to the laundryroom and i a sunroom. There is also space on the ; third floor for a little roof garden and < the clotheslines. 1 The Device for Producing an Ultra Short Radio ^ nve of the Beam Type Only 42 Centimeters Long and Believed lo Be Capable of Piercing the Earth's Atmosphere and Shooting Through Above: Enjoying a Dance to the Music Picked Up by the Ultra Short M ave Radio Device tor Interplanetary Communication. The Drawing Relow at the loft Shows flow a Radio Ream May Penetrate the Earth’s Atmosphere and Travel to the Planet Mara. in texture and have thin rindi. Th« rug is tender, and the juice if abund ant, but usually lacking somewhat in acidity. The lemons have a striped appear once, usually with alternate green and white areas. This appearance is corre lated with a ridged condition, the ridges being usually green In color while the depressed spaces are white. The very thin rinde and rough ap pearance of the fruit# as well as the relatively ftrw yields of the trees makes this strain of very doubtful commercial value, but It is rather widely planted in some citrus growing areas of the Southwest solely for ornamental pur poses. T I vuirr .-pare 09 million Mile* to Mar*. the longest visible light ray. Hence he concludes, radio waves are merely "dark light.” Visible light waves, those between the long red and the short violet, con stitute a very small percentage of the total range, just as audible sounds are a small fraction of all existing noises. Many of these have wave lengths or frequencies much too high or too low to set up corresponding vibrations in in the human ear drum, the scientist explains. "Nature has been kind to impose these limitations on our eyes and ears,” says Mr. Mouromtseff. "Cer tainly all would be chaos and con fusion if we could see and hear every thing. On the other hand, science would be seriously handicapped if it had not perfected instruments and ap paratus to detect the invisible and in audible. “At different times certain people have interested themselves in the possi bilities of communication with possible inhabitants of Mars. If anything of this sort is ever to be accomplished, it will probably have to be done by means of ultra short radio waves.” Some 25 years ago certain known facts of radio communication con vinced Dr. A. E. Kennelly, professor of electrical engineering at Harvard, and Professor Oliver Heaviside, Eng lish scientist, that there must be a 6ort of cushion or atmospheric layer 100 or more miles from the earth’s surface. This has since been known as the Ken nelly-Heaviside layer. "Of course, it is a theory just as atoms and electrons were created by theory to explain certain phenomena,” resumes Mr. Mouromtseff, "but we are certain that not only heat and light waves can penetrate something like the Heaviside layer, but that all radio. Alcohol as a Cure for Poison Ivy RELIEF of poison-ivy irritations i may be had from an easy and simple method which is described ! in Popular- Mechanics by a scientist of , Johns Hopkins University. j Ivy poison, it is explained, is in the < form of an oil and that the dissolving j and removal of the oil before it can j be absorbed into the skin is the most effective cure. , Tire method is to prepare a hundred i or so pinches of absorbent cotton; fill ( a saucer with alcohol, of seventy-five t per cent or greater strength; dip the cotton into the alcohol and sop up the j poisonous oil, throwing each pinch ( away as soon as used and being care- t ful not to allow the alcohol to dry i on the skin. The alcohol should be frequently r changed. About fifty applications are i usually sufficient for a small patch of n poison. t The first thirty applications should t not be rubbed, merely sopped. After f that, it is well to rub with the wet t cotton each time. At last, rub vigor- f ousiy to bring the dissolved poison out e of the pores, and to break any small s blisters that already may have formed. a The more extensive the poison patch, t] the more swabs will be needed, and si the more treatments with relatively varying degrees of pressure are neces- is sary. Fifty swabs are sufficient for a V patch the size of a silver dollar. ii A Spray Gun for Painting Fenders Aariuu gun ror use oy car owners in retouching scratches and worn spots on automobile enders uses the tire as a source of lir pressure. It is made especially for ise with a retouching enamel sold in a mall can equipped with an unusual ype of nozzle. The gun is equipped rifch a cap that exactly fits this nozzle Taking it possible to attach the gun nd spray directly from the can. The name! requires no thinning or other reatment, and dries with a glossy n r DiacK uman which does not require polishing. The gun it simple, inexpensive and easy to use. After removing the cap on the can and attaching the gun in its place, the hose is connected to the tire, and one starts spraying by press ing^ the little gun-trigger. Spraying does not reduce the tire pressure very much. If the car owner inflates the tire a little more than usual before using the gun, he is likely to have the average tire pressure vhen the job is finished. , c King Futures Sy engineering laboratory, more than a mile away, where a para bolic metal mirror gathers the waves and passes them through a special detector tube to an or dinary little radio receiving set where they are amplified and made audible. Radio beams are identical with light beams except that they are of different frequencies or wave meter* long will penetrate that layer and leave the earth. "It is conceivable that the power we have succeeded in getting into our 42 centimeter beam is sufficient to pierce the Heaviside layer and travel the 35, 000,000 miles to Mara. It is possible that auch email power may carry to such great distances, because of the fact that practically all of the inter vening space is really a high vacuum and doe* not, therefore, absorb the waves, once they get through the earth’s atmosphere.” Today Westinghouse engineers are talking on euch a beam from a radio station on top of the company’s re search building, to the roof of the lending ana mvisioie, according to the engineers. In actual service, com munication on the radio-optical waves is dependable and almost immune to theft, interruption and interfer ence.’ Its operation cannot easily be “jammed” or crippled by an enemy, the beam must be found before its mr< sage can be detected and by means of reflecting surfaces, it can be sent long distances. In a searchlight, the rays originate at one point, reflect from a parabolic surface and pass out in a narrow beam. In the newest achievement, the waves reverse this process by striking the parabolic mirror where they are re fleeted to a short antenna and detector tube located at the focal point corre sponding to the source or light in a searchlight. Since intervening hills or Making Music by Electricity HE realm of musical productioi is now being entered by new in struments which are dependen »n electricity for their tonal effects Herman inventors seem to have takei :he lead in this field. Among these electrical instrument lor promicing music is a device per ’ected by Dr. Trautwein, the Berlii icientist. It resembles no existing in itrument and can produce only on< one at a time, but the possibility! ire held to be considerable. It cai >Iay by electric production and mega >hone any desired tone or interval, am tesides can evolve new timbres thai liffer from those of any known instru went Moreover, it can imitate existing nstruments Another electric instrument pro luces sounds of more novel, curious nd grotesque character. The octave is ivided into ten parts, and etrange in ervals arise. Two systems of electric pianoforte' Iso have been devised. The plan of )skar Vierling is to transform the eu? omary tone-production of a pianofortf ito an electric production. To accomplish this Mr. Vierling has emoved the heavy metal resounding oard of the pianoforte and placed lagneta near the strings, designed to ransform the mechanical vibrations of le strings into electric vibrations, rom which the modified and purified >ne reaches the megaphone, which inally makes it audible. This system cables the inventor to give new pos bilities to the instrument. He can iso assimilate the pianoforte tone to lat of the organ, string, or wind-in xuments. Another type of electric pianoforte represented by two systems, the lerling and the Nemst, the latter be g the invention of the celebrated i physicist of the University of Kerlin. The new instrument adds to the ■ t, tonal effect of the pianoforte the faculty of prolonging a tone and of making a crescendo or diminuendo 1 Moreover, the instrument can at the >ame time perform the service* of H phonograph and of a radio, and the effect is extraordinary and surprising i Doubts, however, have arisen whethci the Nemst pianoforte would be equally fit for playing music that depended upon color effects, refinement of touch and pedal work. rine Feathers for /Pajnting,/ ' c-auibk painting; is a very 5 aHcient art. still pursued in Mexico, where the early Spanish conquerors found it in use and much to be admired. An application of the idea is the sub ject of an invention newly patented by Frederick M. Harrison, of Far Rock r For this purpose the quill of each feather is thrust in and out through the meshes of the netting, somewhat in the manner of a needle. Thereby the feather is held fu'inly in position, resting flat against the work sheet. The feathers, as they are thus woven into the netting, are so ar ranged as to conceal the quills- Large and -lil'f ones are used for the- bird's tail. The feathers, natural or dyed, may be supplied to the children In bunches, sorted for colon. To represent the beek end fee* of' the bird, es well as th« perch on which it steads, cut-outs” of suitably-col ored fabric may be glued upon the netting. The eye may be the blade head'of a large pin, which, thrust back and forth through the work sheet, will hold itself in place, the stem of the pin beins hidden by feathers. Figure 3. Figure 1. • way. New York, and is He signed for the instruction and amusement of children. They are provided with a picture 0f a bird, printed in colors on a sheet of paper, and are required to copv it by weaving feathers of suitable tint into a “work sheet” of fine-mesh mo quito netting, the latter having marked on it the outlines of the bird. • ndicits. Inc., 1S3U. The Drawing Show* the Three Step* in ‘‘Painting" Picture* with Feather*, figure I I* the Pirture to Be Copied. Figure 2 I* the Work Sheet Into Which the leather* 4re Woven. Figure 3 I* the Corepietrtl Picture. building!! absorb both types of beam*, the engineers found a way to reflect the ultra short radio wave* so this han dieap could be overcome. It is believed that the ultra short wave will be adapted to many practical usee in the neat few years and that it will prove of commercial value by sup elementing radio and other present forms of communication. • *sea»*x»wi uuMvmi ■ typical variegated lemon among a col lection of citrus fruit sports that was presented as a feature of a general exhibit of California fruits. Upon ex amination this variegated lemon was found to have a pink-appearing rind and flesh. , , The parent tree from which this* pink lemon was ptoked was located In J a small planting of citrus treee in the grounds of the Winter home of Mr. T>. W, Field, at Burbank, California. The Fad for Match Labels / QU E EREST of nil re cent fads is the newest hobby of collecting: the labels of match boxes This pas time is now being followed as seri ously by some persons us that of collecting postage stamps. The label por tion of the match box desired by a collector is first immersed in boil ing water to re move the wood and paper adher ing to the back. When dry. the label is hinged, like a postage stamp, an d mounted in an a! bum, on a card, or on a loose sheet, either a! pbabetically or according to subject or country. Some labels now fetch as much as twenty-five cents apiece and prices are rising. These labels, despite the fact that i he legends on them are mostly printed in English, cotne from all over the world. , One of the rarest sets is the Swedish ' anety known to collectors as the ‘‘Nurseryland” series. Each of these labels bears the verses (translated), and an illustration of some popular English nursery rhyme. A Swedish A Grotesque f-abel Taken from the Top of a Japanese Match Boa. The Hobby of Collecting Match Boa Labels Is New Being Followed Very Seriously. t ista, who are constantly inventing new designs for these labels, to attract match buyers and label collectors. One of the first match-label ea change clubs to be organised is at rland. Today it has a % and it circulates . year. The largest collection in tits world. • it is claimed, is {hat; of a British manu facturing company, who possess ip their about 15,000 specimens, jh# uige utna museum auout id.vuo specim largest private collection, the -.. — r-r’V"*"** of *n enthusiast at Brighton. match company employs a staff of art numbers about 12,000 labels. for*'