In about 1910, he moved to Northern England, where he started work in a factory. He then went into journalism and travelled to Russia, being present in
Petrograd the day the Bolshevik Revolution broke out. Farson returned to Britain, joined the RAF and learned to fly. He was posted to Egypt, where his aeroplane crashed, and his leg was badly damaged - an injury that troubled him for the rest of his life. In the third quarter of 1920, in
St. Martin, London, Farson married Enid Eveleen née Stoker (known as Eve, 1893–1961), a nurse who had served during
World War I. She accompanied Farson on many (but by no means all) of his international excursions. Farson returned to the United States, and became a salesman for a Chicago company making heavy trucks. After a couple of years he moved to British Columbia, Canada, where he lived "part of the floathouse community that existed on
Cowichan Lake. The attraction of such a life was fishing in 'a paradise' - Vancouver Island's
Cowichan River." He then moved to New York, and then became a newspaper correspondent again. Cowichan Lake would later become the setting of Farson's novel
The Story of a Lake (1938). In 1924, Farson became a foreign correspondent for the
Chicago Daily News, until 1935. He served in India, Egypt and throughout Europe and went on to become one of the most renowned foreign correspondents of his day, interviewing
Gandhi in India, witnessing (January 1932) Gandhi's arrest in
Poona, witnessing (July 1934) bankrobber
John Dillinger's naked body (in the morgue just after he had been shot down by Hoover's men), and meeting Hitler, who described Farson's blond son,
Daniel, as a "good
Aryan boy". During Hitler's rise to power, Farson was in Germany, but by this time he had become an alcoholic, and checked himself into the Clinic of Dr. Bumke. After discharging himself, Farson went to
South West Africa (now
Namibia) and spent some time in the wilderness of
Etosha Pan before moving to
Cape Town. in
Georgeham in
Devon ==Death==