Reliable Radio Offerings

RELIABLE radio equipment is the only kind worth having in ■ the home. And in these days this is entirely possible.

A careful censorship is maintained over all radio announcements appearing in this magazine in conjunction with the five other wellknown magazines named below.

The primary aim is to see that only thoroughly dependable manufacturers—the kind who are in the business to stay—are allowed the use of these pages.

Such manufacturers realize the importance of giving the public a true picture of the merits and distinguishing points of their products, whether they be complete receiving sets, loud speakers, batteries, tubes, or other accessories.

Wherever located in this magazine you will find their various interesting announcements worthy of special consideration. And we trust you will find the answer to your own requirements however exacting they may be.

In former years there were reasons for the discerning public to hesitate in the purchase of a radio receiver for the home. But those reasons no longer exist.

There is no comparison between 1926 and 1922 when basic improvements were being made almost over night, when equipment was being sold that could not stand the test of usage and when broadcasting had nowhere near reached its present high plane.

Today the better receivers that are on the market can be relied upon by the purchaser as coming close to a permanent investment. And with receivers to choose from that give genuine tonal reproductions and that are built by dependable manufacturers in a manner that insures ease of operation and permanence of value, no home can afford to be without one.

If your own home is not equipped, this may be the time to give the matter special consideration. Radio is here to stay and its cost is small compared with the benefits and pleasures it affords.

A special censorship which admits to its pages only announcements of dependable radio equipment is maintained by Atlantic Monthly in conjunction with Golden Book Magazine, Harper’s Magazine, , > Review of Reviews, Scribner’s Magazine, and World’s Work, and ' | Radio Broadcast Magazine Laboratories.