The keen interest taken by the people of the United
States in all that concerns wireless is shown by the amount of space devoted to " Radio " subjects in the American Press. The New York Evening Mail describes a new development of "Radio" enterprise. The guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles William Taussig in their house on Riverside Drive danced to music " borrowed from Chicago—a thousand miles away—by radio." We read: " The music came, not spasmodically, as is frequently the case in long-distance reception with low-power stations, but was con• tinuously loud more than two hours,' said the radio-dance host Mr. Taussig is experimenting with apparatus to receive music trod Europe loud enough for dancing and other entertainment."
There is apparently no limit to the developments by Radio," and there appears to be no reason why dancers in a London ballroom should not dance, say, to the refrains of the gipsy orchestra at the Hotel Hungaria, Budapest, or of a Turkish band on the Bosphorus. -