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L2 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., JANUARY 25, 1925—PART 5. Powerful Flephant Herd Is Routed by a Vicious Swarm of Bees T : Famous Hunter Tells of Big Animals’ Fear of Dogs and Helplessness Under Some Circumstances. Twenty-four vears in Indla llkes being disturbed. Some human K quickeand or bog, but cases of this|mugger meat. He replied, “Sahib, r have brought to Col. Faunthorpe beings are like this, especlally In the : ::\;‘n“v hn::: :(gna\\"’n \‘ ’(Jxv‘fl, g;gur:ed er l’;\e“hlg:fl’r(nx e men knew how many hair-breadth escapes from | mornir 3 Y. yves & in Sibpal | Thisalec)) 800 % we poor mullahs would i e T L e e i “PHE BEES GOT ,UP WITH |phant refused to make any further|Zet any.- The mullah or boatma beasts of the jungle. At close |which I was in charge there was a - ANRECUBARSWROAR ~ ANI [ elfcnts andiwas)sinking desyer: and | oaste in. of courss, & low ons. ‘1 have range as met with leopards, very big tusker which used to frighten SEEMED TO BE IN MILLIONS.” | deeper shot numbers of hoth muggers and tigers, sloth bears, wild boars, the forest guards and other men o M The party got some elephant chains | £aridls since or saw any wolves and wild dogs. working in the forest by trumpeting N &~ & and put them around the elephant's|inclination on any part to take In preceding articles he re- |and threatening to charge them, but X e, neck and several other elephants | the flesh for food counted his experiences with the only time he ever killed any one " g pulled him out of the bog with great| These reptiles are quite saey to ki1 these animals, and gave inter- was one evening when he picked up o Py o ) diffieulty. The rescued elephant then | If hit in the right place. Tt i% no nse esting side lights of their habits |two native women and threw them ] s > sat down and died on the bank shooting them behind the shoulder and the customs of the natives against trees, killing both > (AR SR | as they will invariably get into the tarly vivid were his tales As far as could be ascertained by - LY ) \ | water. The deadly shot is at the he savagery of the sloth |inquiry, the old tusker was standing \ 2 i “ R i AN animal in India which has a bad | point where tho #cad joins tha body, ar and the bravery of the |on a na path which led through \ reputation as a man-eater is the | It the shot is a road one, or it boar, t two animals |heavy forest on the hillside. The two | snub-nosed crocodile, or mugger. An- | you are above them on a higt the natives fear most | women h been cutting grass up other variuty of crocodile is the long- | You can aim for the and Known throughout the Brit ibove, and were coming down the nosed one, or garial. The latter lives | of the skull. wire as a daring hunter, | path with bundles of grass on their | mainly on fish, but I suspect him of i onbie Thuthan paily ved ol horpe’s ability as a | heads. Moving nc sly with bare eating the bodies of dead men and|it Is as well to put In one or tw crack shot was further recog- |feet and with the wind blowing fi animals when he can find them. How- | more good shots, as a good deal of nized last vear, when he was the elephant toward them, they ran ever, I know of mo finstance of &|muscular ene mains even aftar selected as captain of the right into the huge animal before they \ X ) = (2 garial attacking a human being in|a shot through the e e British rifle team for moving were aware of his presence, and he NG < ’ the way the mugger do s for this reason advisable to stand targets at the Olympic games simply picked them up and threw Z ' Tné theaaily - Ass of Iy shivléor T | clear of & Big crocodile’s tail for somae | them " aside. He did not, however, was stationed at Allahabad. About|time after deat 1 have seen or BY LIEUT. COL. J. C. FAUNTHORPE, )\N"»nr'h or otherwise mutilate the the end of the hot weather the police | l1ash his tail vigorously after he had C. B. E. A. D. C. | bodies. officer told me that he was gett been brought into the camp and wa LEPHANTS st rvive in sev- | s p frequent reports that villagers, espe- | being N eral parts large | FHE wild elephant is a most inter- 3 3 \ cially women bathing or washir I rememb. a sma numbers. They are protected esting study. I have had a good @, Z 4 clothes, were being carried off by |one in a rat st of co by strict laws, and only those {deal to do with the roving kind, as /) ' 74 ; g - muggers on one of the rivers some | try—whers ti v pla which are proclaimed as rogues | in one district in which I spent three 5 way that villagers may be shot, except under exceptional | years there was a large herd, num- X R € smunad to xp ank othe piace, | waa EEs fonting i r. 1w circumstances, as on expedition | being about 75, at one end of the 7 a here was no doubt, hat | in camp near this place, and, having bt sl el i S e d i sl e e S 2 4 the villagers said on our arrival, that | heard these compiaints, T went along myself last vear fc ction of [ was the Nepal border, with other wild g Z 7 ¢ a number of persons had been taken. | the river and shot as many muggers Indian specimens t American |elaphants, probably aggregating about / 4 7 ) s f Unfortunately, there had been some | az % Museum of Natura |20, in the heavy forests on the lower ¢ rain up north and the river had risen| 1 bangles T overnmen dras gave us|range of the Himalayas, some 50 : 5 / 5 enough to cover the sandbanis where | ank b speclal permissior ot one tusker | miles farther to the west g /55 2 Z 4 the muggers came out in the morning | two which 1 t for the Amer-| A railway ran north and south 7,7 5 , and evening. stomach rese country we | through the middle of the district up 7 b zan Hills, |to the base of the Himalayas, but the | do not come out much in the heat of | leather. adras presi- [ elephant herds never crossed the rail- ) ; the day, although in the cold weather | 1S large re State,{way line, although the big eastern i & ; 7 ; 5 2 they like Iving in the sun. W herd during the cold weather split up . * 3 ceeded in shooting four or d wandered about in small parties s ! v /) ones as they swam all through the jungles between the { A 3 Y water exposing their Sarda River and th lway,. fre- 4 v urface, but, of co et e When the weather is very hot thay | Very thick, sc ntly staying for daye at a time "} g / I;vm\»v:—r we did not hear any 0 BAR TO RADIO ENTHUSIASM. IT IS ESTIMATED THAT THERE ARE 370.000 RECEIVING .\},1.\' IN THE PARMHOUSES OF THE UNITED STATES. In the natlon-wide survey, 862 |farmer hroug 1 them to cotnty agents reported 110,905 radio | take proper'r n protecting sets in use, which is an average of | thelr crops an 128 sets per county. This average, | pending storms | extended “to the 2,850 agricultural | flashed out from |counties in the United States, is the | that cover en {basis for the Department of Agri-|also been ar ed to broad; | culture estimate that there are be- rent crops reports, so that | ers may know conditions in the eign markets which buy their pri ts capable of he uts and of crop and live st 'R |ing stations some distance away #iond fo lconniries thit conit ike the man in the city, the farm Sha Onfted States: i wo is always located at greater or 1ess | These report dered o STUNTZ of Charles County, Md., |distances from the broadcasting sta- | oial yalne in . connection wic railway lin During the rainy sea- at that place. . | son this big herd concentrated on the The old boatman in whose d t | the porc ik of the Sarda River, where there we crossed the river appeared | disso re extensive bamboo jungles, the strangely disappointed that the river | n two or three|November, they moved eastward, and | ndian bee—a l“"‘\'h'““‘r"']"“»‘] ang TR sound ground is a considerable dis-[force him to centinue his efforts. | L remarked that [ had been under ¢ ughnes Whero we shat 4 |one of their routes was over a very |Vicious insect. Readers of Kipling's| . % *** = tance away, and I have once or twice| I have never lost an clephant in al rican Mu- | steep and almost precipitous range of [ ;Jungle Book" will remember a thrill- A h elephant | hille into a big valles inside the Him. |ing description of what happened | * hereditary one, and the mahou uld have thought it impossible for [are among the most dangerous and [SIEC ReTie alon parr s & | t feet high walking along with a large Soohhe - animals to get over It |annoving things one meets with when | fect high walking along with Inrge I once climbed this hill in the | tiger shooting with ele v“.l'\(‘ as ('h» ¥ | control Trithe alaphant ddes not lms track of these elephants In most |are particularly fond of c structing | hactia tolviioh ‘s word of cothmans Ap} L v Wil | to keep the animal in order. IT rattlin® n pans, Ma, rved, as everywhere in India. There |follow him literally for miles. RS CunOls LantLwlnae I've got China | served, as everywhere dia. There | follow hi 5 - phants when being noosed by men on “If you don’t put up is a prevailing Idea that elephants| J was once in a line of 20 elephants Ae won) danit dput fup ) spot—a kind of elephant cemetery. I|1 was managing a shoot f Tohn | 433 O moves otk { 3 Sacol o€ h 1 John | gy ever attempt to pull off the| Uncle Sam smiled as he peeked % Bt ,'w,.'".‘;'v:‘f' iy gl ; wett, then governor o nited I men who are driving the tame ele- | through the window. It was the| 3 tiia (nlo B0 WAg St fur 05 Uil | Presinond. 004 & 4 ating for|phants, nor does a tame elephant,|same story everywhere. He had been | oncerned |a tiger in some very e e|even when in difficulties, in quicksand | counting radio antennae on farm-| One. a large tusker, which must have | the consistency of quicks bogged w t tiger shooting, gen- | proceeded to fill a couple of snote- |been dead for several months, was| The bees got up with a regular roar |erally in 1 stream or nullah, f books. This is what he found hd, in{Aensesrorest ob the oufsr |and see millions. I was | where on going down the steep bank | Your true genus o bug” is a he steep range of hills men- | in the m line, and by the | the animal gets into the bog or quick- | Maryland product. Back in 1920, ng dead in the water of the|hands. fuse to go forward | demonstrated that it- could be done. r River itself. Fortunatel P s with wet sand are found oc- | These young men—Roger Clipp, Ro- a fortunte thing that he|me, so was able t d t nly effi- 1 in river ds or the back |land Lynn and S. W, Piper af Hagers- it while quite fresh, and was [cient “anti-bee s » ich is to hich move up and|town—received the daily agriculture can cross ca ed t g at neighborhood, strikes a beit of |perature is about 110 degrees in the|as dangerous as they look, and by | several hundred farmers in their im- his = ¢ W moraine formation on reaching level |shade the remedy is not a pleasant |makin clephants cross them as | mediate territory elepha e mor p ground and flows “undergrou for | one | rapi possi and in different ¥From that small beginning there bungalos e d a several miles untif on reaching the | (uriously, one of the things of|P e can generally get across|has been built up a nation-wide agri- of moraine formation is|a \ytle dog jumps around yapping at|SAnds. They know perfectly well | minutes after ths news is available h, 3 lay of rich .soil|yy " ang ‘when c By a dog wil e more rapidly they go the| Whereas formerly they had to wait grows excellent rice’ and other | ¢'oqiantly run aw s they are, days, and in some parts of the country ops, but the only water available is | But in the Tarai country, the|weeks, for reports on market condi- n In captivity, an elephant bogged in a nullah or|file of the Department of Agriculture A = it rcaches the flat country. Had this | Vatlely—mever bread in captivity, al-| 4 row stream. There are some par. |at Washington tell of thousands of Eranfont Oonnty Teported that the|things of life. up- clophant been allowed to decomp! vl Delive snaTinde: ntly, | ticularly bad nullahs of the kind in|dollars saved or additional profits| tfuck: Erain llve stock and dairy|knowledge of world happen b O or I Ay e R owiver, & Tendla. wildj @) "t 1s | the north of the Kheri dictrict, in the | made through having prompt market Ly re using radio to obtain the | marketing and weather information ¢ ople iy pleasant for the villagers lower down, | howev emale wild elephant is 1 ~ gation It is always maint. d by ma-|for the banks of the nullah or stream, | periment. Radio telephony had mnot :{,‘-:;e;u:v;l V:lfil'lf ::ay.“nrd;(m is con- t outstanding addition to agri-|one or a few avajlable to the city are gen-| There was nothing to show what|houts, or elephant drivers thal anbut when he raises his forelegs to|Yet been perfected, and It was neces- | sidered of value to the farmers in|culture calculated to make farm life man. The nearness of large statlons iskers it|had caused the death of either of|elephant born in captivity invariably | sound ground on the bank his hind |8ary to rely upon amateur radio opera- [E(VINE them some o s s eant e e profitable and more enjoyable. | interferes with long-distance could [ these elephants. They certainly had [grows up a bad character, disobe legs and body sink deeper into the |tions for reception of the radio tele- . b alks, music anc said that radio was already of | ception be held to have died of natural|[never imbibed the fear of and respect| front of the elephant to glve him | broadcasts. Tests for accuracy in re- | One virginia fb‘*)f'"’)"‘:‘“i:""'l e de 1uses. for man which the capture and sub-| some foothold and persuade him toception were made, and the three [ZETMIRT thad bY keeping in | ek roll and struggle along the nullah to | Hagerstown boys demonstrated that - e b & e o |ing of an impending snowstorm er The Biggest Cheeses. Do Tt SrTa Df these | abled him to house his cows in time £ s S, s ©|to prevent a loss of $5 He said M. 5 VWHAT is said to be the largest extended its broadcast service across | .00 0, Sy D59, 00 YO0 S e S8 [tween 360,000 and 370,000 sets on |in widely separated parts of th cer service. | * 12,000 pounds of curds, 330 pounds of | Tolled in the volunteer e "md | shipment a week, when “prices went | “The replles from the county agents THE broadcasting of foreign agr alt and 31 pounds of rennet, but not an ’U'”f_;‘_ b ,"'","S',‘; o poR Stry 15 |UP aEain, and I doubled my money.” | this year. *. Gilbert, De- cultural news is ounce of coloring, and required the serv- | TAEIEES B a1 BAEUE OF Lhe CONRTEY. 10 | Another 'correspondent writes that | partment of Agriculture official at |addition Lo the sery ices of 40 expert cheesemakers to make | B€t ™ AR San < | “radio has solved the problem of Washington, who made the surv ble that ame o R er tale Cthe | ed. and the department was soon hav- chance again of trying to turn out a ing 1its reports flashed _",’_‘ regular IOUNTY AGENT GEORGE R. i cheese of 'this sise. schedula from upward of 75 private . b i | and public ca g stations. : To manufacture successfully this [ R4 public broadcasting station: reported that he believes that “radio | tion, and this makes it necessary for [ £f ¢ \chea” cotton and. corn crope within' quite a_short distince of the green shoots of which at this season} Among Jjungle creaturgs that are|jugation of a grown wild elephant| plece of sound and level ground, onto | seen the poor elephant ready to give | had risen in this untimely way. He|are very form their favorite food. harmful to man and beast is the |inspires in it in a very short space of | which he can get out. up the struggle. In this case the|had been looking forward, it seemed, | penatrated : lea h o ¢ when Mowgli disturbed the bees when | family grows up among the tame ° ° ain, before he | alayas, down which flowed the Nan- | & 0 G GPgT - AMECE frd SIED | elephants; which are extracrdinarily e e | S B b R, e San, L G ek e i S e e Oy ndition sble. iills that one unacquainted with | ha o g . njure the children. It is an amusing places the ground was much too steep | their comb on low or fallen trees in |Mediately obey a word of comn | to ‘walic over, and one frequent | the damp, cool covers where the tiger | the small boy bangs him on the foot e tame elephants, either after being run that radio and fetch in en 11l and about to die make their | which fled all over the country when | qouS € SRERREE €LREF AT0EE BOInE FR P | 1 know of two cases where ele- (brake. in which there were numerous| ..,z ever try to pull off his driver | houses, When he got to Maryla phants belonging to the big herd 1| Willow trees grow # or the his back lina Viegtnte: took off his | bove by an officer of the Sth |time n hed firm ground [sand before he knows where he is.|when people scoffed the idea of Hussars, who was out shooting. The|and I could him [ had|Elephants coming to dangerous bog |farmers plcking agriculture reports to have it cut up and taken out |scrape up some dry grass or [down and quake in an alarming man- | dispatches broadecast from the Wash- the water." This river. like others | bushes, set fire to them, and put your | ner under the weight of an elephant. | ington radio station of the Bureau of square y t formation farther south, it rises|ypich an elephant is most afraid is|W! . cultural broadcasting service that dug : k the surface and continues its|a ymall dog. Even the steadiest ele: | o brings daily market and crop news to led by a small stone-lined | In India proper elephants, as far|swampy tract below the Himalayan |tions, they now get the news while Wl with its distributaries, which |85 my experience goes—an s k : markets, and the fruit and tomato|All the county agents extolled in cit roadcasting 1 Ry = Lucknow division, of which I was|advices e vl e a0 SOUDLY ABENGE extoilec it ' CABING wlakio who depend entlrely on these canals |¢aptursd and subsequently gives birth | [JCPRY SVGER, OF TR B BeR | B0y roadeast service from the Bu- |6TOWers to et the weather reports.” | advantages of radlo on the farm are opera because can he or drinking water as well as for Irri- [0 & culf. 16¢ Degii ADat and SHlseE W AIoNE| it i hreliEtie e e losx graph reports and their delivery to | 55TMOnS and information of practical | sufficient practical value to- farmers | The daily broadcasting of weather theory that they had been | that, having been accustomed to man-| The only thing to do Is to cut down | local farm A 200-mile radlus of | ¥2! > the business side of farm-|to justify them in having purchased | forecasts by the depar is re his potatoes for 50 cents to 51 a sack the nearest spot where there is a|radio could be depended upon in get- M!S D iorl oo O $1iw sac - —————2= | ting the agricultural news to farm- |T°r¢ than other growers received cheese ever made was not long | the country, using the radio stations | ;0 &/ #QSTICT J0E When e Wo | farms. “A similar survey a vear ago [try may know prompily the ago exhibited in Chicago. This cheese [Of the Air Mail Service. Thousands |{ € [0 BB (0 earloads of cattle | Lesuited In an estimate of 145,000 | the Natlon's important. crops. it. The cost of “building” the cheese [ that business was traneacted on the|yoeping the girls and boys at home | “Indicate that farmers are supp was between $5,500 and $6,000, and as | Various leading markets. nights. themselves with mammoth cheese it was necessary for o TS adnaing o is of greatest value to farmers by [him to have a radio set employing |ang live stock products, which are 1,200 model dairies to do the milking of HIS broadcast service now covers | giving them some of the higher |two, three or more tubes for the de- Silciad fiaa the Uit e : reports of villagers being carried off | Harly in the cold weather, about time. Sometimes the nearest piece of |only thing to do is to beat him and | to some good meals of mugger flesh | ach, which e imbing abilities of the elephant |ing stung to death bees, and ight to see a small boy about two : 0 ] . . n Maryland and Virginia 2 | to climb, using hands as well as feet, |takes up his abode in the hot weather with a stick, which is quite enough Way to some special and secluded|attacked by bees in large numbers.|in joged in the palisade of a “khed- |ir's Hades. Giti" have mentioned were found dead.|SWamp, portions of wh p One o gets an elephant | hiked up his striped trousers |other one was found by the forest offi- | about 350 stings o face and [or quicksand on level ground will re- | out of the air, thr. Maryland boys width o 1 v o h flow out of the-Himalayas in|head in the smoke. When the tem-|These sands are as a rule not nearly | Standards, and furnished the news to | phant will be greatly disturbed wher s scuttling over these quaking |upward of 1,000,000 farmers a few At S C R T s i A tame | Tange, one not infrequently does get|it is hot. Hundreds of letters in the could extricate himself all right but|reau of Standards was purely an ex- | COUNY Agent C. Z. Keller of Som- |declared that radio was probably the | many station as compared with o { bitten by poisonous snakes they must |kind from birth, the clephant has| trees and branches and place them in| Washington was covered by the |InE” | radio equipment garded as importance o Another farmer declares that warn- weighed 12,631 pounde and contained | Of amateur operators were S00n en- |, ooy were falling: he delayed the |S€tS at that time. * the risk of loss was great It is improba- | [Radio telephony was then perfect- 8,000 registered Holstein and Guernsey the entire country, and has made cows at the same hour. The mllk had tc possible considerable improvement in be cooled to the same temperature and , marketing methods. A recent survey the 32 sanitary cheese factories which manufactured the curd had to follow the eame process to insure uniformity of the curd. Every tool or implement which came into contact with the curd was sterilized. There were required 144.- 100 pounds (72 tons) or 18,000 gallons made by the Department of Agricul- ture showed that there are now ap- proximately 370,000 radio receiving sets on farms, ranging in cost from a few dollars to over $500 each. This is more than twice the number of sets | on farms a year ago, and it is pre- of milk to produce the 12,000 pounds of | dicted that another vear will see curd, which was delivered in cans, each containing from 125 to-130 pounds of curd. The different fots of curd were | mixed in two troughs. each 10 feet long 4 feet wide and .3 feet deep, and the entire mixture then poured into a mam- moth cask 5 feet jn diameter and § feet long, which was braced with iron hoops. A team of six horses was re- quired to draw the cheese to the railroad for ehipment, and a huge derrick was nearly 1,000,000 sets in use. This pre- diction is based upon the fact that at the recent national radio conference at Washington the paramount note was the value of radio to rural peo- ple, as an economic, educational and amusement agency Many Maryland counties run far above the average for the country in | the number of sets in use on farms. Approximately 9,000 Virginia farms large quantities. A special phase t vice is the broadcasting 1 agrio grams,” a word coined Secreta of Agriculture W e, which of agricultural subjects in a popular way. One feature of these broadcasts is the dispatch of news on home eco- | nomics that is of interest to both city land country housewives. This amounts virtually to a home eco- nomics .course by radio, in which the latest discoveries in home manage ment and cookery are flashed over th country. The replies to the survey just com pleted indicated that radlo on the farm is valued as much for its enter tainment features as for its practical aspects in the farm business. It has used to get it on board a flat car. have radio equipment. A quick count ¢ i brought the advantages of the city to — — in Montgomery County, Md. showed i g the country, figuratively parading the AED IANEAROIISmE. & 18 INIY S0 DR 5 o : world In front of the farm door. You Nehalem Wax. b gbte: (Washington Cennty,. 200 bt farmer of today knows what is hap- 3ol at curious product | sets, and Dorchester County, 150 sets. = L hentng Insthe wide world as: quickly g b g bl g | g o S g asing in the wide world e auicki mouth of the Nehalem River, in Ore- | more County, due to the fact:that the s ] 3 to be effectively breaking down t Eon.: VIt wan' notibed. by {hetelxiy | fArmers inkhld floodiily arel sum- | (g barriers of farm isolation explorers ‘of that coast and later con- | ciently near to Baltimore to receive 0 < . . hate Siderable deposits were found in the | their entertainment and news first- 5 3 S g 1 sand of the beach. In 1846 several|hand. 3 % e : Finding Ambergris. tons of this waxlike substance were| County Agent S. R. Newell of Cal- e e shipped to Hawali and since then|vert County reported that many farm- ¥ o ’ B e RAMPING over Nantucket with many tons of it have been sent to|ers there are using radio because it ¢ dog, Edward Davis skirted the Northwestern markets. brings them in touch with current| L 3 = g e 7 G = shore. Wedged hetween two rocks Opinion has been divided concern-|events. He proposed the establish- SR v > washed now and then by the waves. ing its nature and origin, some hold- | ment of a “university of the air, X . % ST . was a sticky, waxy mass. Mr. Da ing that it is beeswex and others|which would broadcast talks of para- = X vis did not pay ch attention to it that it is a mineral substance called |mount Interest in specific localities: g > - but the hunting dog knew his busi ozocerite. It is usually found in large | for example, a series of talks on to- | 5 % ness and persisted in calling his at- rectangular blocks, It has a honey- | bacco and marketing conditions in a “ : 3 tention to it. Mr. Davis scraped t like aroma when fresh cut. Exami- | tobacco-growing section; dairying in o s ] substance together and took it home, nation by Government experts shows | a dairy section, and so on. < 5 » ¢ He later brought it to New Bedfor: that the substance closely approaches| The best method of bringing. the 3 i . 4 o and_submitted it to Capt. Benjamin beeswax in composition and does not | use of radio to the attention of farm- : BN e Ay 7 D. Cleveland, a retired whaling mus- accord with the properties = of | ers, he said, Is to “advertise the ma- : v ter, who pronounced it ambergr oszocerite. This conclusion is con- | terlal to be broadcast in such man- e i If ko, the hunting trip nets Mr, Da fonant with an Tndian legend of the | ner that farmers will know the bene- ; L 2 % vis $1,792 G - / wreck of a ship at the mouth of the [ fits to be derived. Institute a regu- : 4 ¢ 3 b iy ‘A TUSKER CHARGED AT HIM . i E Nehalem be!or’: the coming of the|lar course or series of lectures to be £ : * e ¥ 2 Tmpossible. | % WITH A SCREAM.” il white man. A Spanish ship with sup- | sent out at a definite time on certain < § e X 3 L " el 7 . plies for the Catholic missions in the | nights. The next problem is to show : é ; e 3 Motorman (to man smoking ciga north sailed trom Lower California in | farmers that radio is not complicated T OF AGRICULTURE | L0} have to smokce on the other vi afterward heard|and not expensive to maintain.” > E Pt o eunty Awent B B Derrick of VITH THE WIRELESS STATION AT ARLINGTON. Fassenges—t_cantts it e, , 4