May, 1925 A Giant Sentinel MARINE REVIEW 23 This is the highest radio station tower in the world. It is 860 feet high. Itis a part of the sending plant of the im- portant marine station at Tuckerton, New Jersey, owned and operated by the Radio Corporation of America. of the Adlantic Ocean SHIP in distress! The S O S message comes in staccato code to the receiving room of ‘‘WSC,” the Radio Corporation’s great marine station at Tuckerton, New Jer- sey. A moment later the Tuckerton sending station broadcasts this crisp call of distress out over the Atlantic. Ships near the stricken vessel hear and speed to the rescue. And lives on the stricken ship are saved. Just a part of the day’s work at Tuckerton. Whether it is S O S, the weather report, or a “bon voyage” to a honeymoon couple aboard aneastboundliner, Tuckerton’s code can be picked up by ships in mid-ocean. This great sending station is ‘equipped, for emergency current, with a 60-cell Exide Battery. In hie = Exide BATTERIES FOR MARINE RADIO the receiving station is another faithful Exide Battery, always ready for instant service. Aboard many of the ships that talk through the air with Tuckerton are Exide Batteries for emergency radio service. On many lines, entire fleets de- pend on Exide Batteries for this important work. The Exide is the rugged, reliable, economical marine radio battery, built for the toughest kind of sea-going battery job. There are seven-, eight- and nine-year-old Exides still going strong atop radio cabins all over the world. At practically every impor- tant coast or inland port is an Exide branch or representative always on call to see that Exide Batteries pass inspection before sailing time. ELECTRIC STORAGE BATTERY COMPANY, Philadelphia In Canada, Exide Batteries of Canada, Limited, 153 Dufferin Street, Toronto Please mention Martine Review when writing to Advertisers