Show WIRElESS DESTROYED GERMAN LOSS HEAVY Correspondence Correspond nee Associated Press Pres LO LONDON DON Feb l. l The I.-The Tho Wireless ss World has bas received from Berlin a copy of oC a a. recently published by the German Gennan Colonial office describing the loss suffered by through the destruction of or her hN chain of or wireless stations The says soya Soon after aUer tho outbreak of the war all communication with the colonies by sea was broken an and all German trans transmarine marino cables were Tere cut by tho the English co so O that even en tel telegraphic gT communication with the whole of ot our colonies was rendered Im possible Tho only remaining means of oC communication was v wireless i telegraphy but the first warlike measures of or the English were directed to depriving ln us of or orthis this m means ns also aleo On August Augu t 12 fell tell tho the wireless station Yap Tap and soon oon afterwards s the station Naru Nant Samoa fell tell fellon fellon on August 29 29 and In New Now on September 12 During tho the night of August 2 24 21 the great station of or ICamina I In Togo had to be destroyed byus by byus byus us In order to prevent Us its capture So 80 vanished all pos possibility of ot further direct communication with the African protectorates which hitherto had been bech able ablo to communicate via Namina na As js a a matter of fact tact thero there had been heM from tho the Or beginning a disturbance of ot the very ery system tem which pre prevented us Ul from receiving an any reports from Crom the governor of East Africa after the tho outbreak of or the war And so eo tho the material which v o havo hao here bore collected collect and which In tho main reached Berlin b by circuitous routs routes and v very cry ry late and Is mostly tb- tb derived from private letters Jetters or from enemy newspapers must necessarily remain fragmentary and some of or It must t also be regarded as untrustworthy orthy i |