Word: telegraphers
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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...lynching party stood him up on a box, roped him to a telegraph pole and told him to jump. He refused. They kicked the box out from under him and the rope parted. They grabbed him, put a ladder against the pole, forced him up, strung him up again and yanked the ladder away. George wrapped his arms & legs around the pole and hung on. But George eventually got tired, and the lynching was a success...
...national association of florists, candy merchants, and bed jacket vendors in executive session in New York City. Mother's Day, an American Institution, was born. A public which proved to be the greatest market in the world for "cards for all occasions," embroidered pillow-slips, and cut-rate telegraph plaudits has taken Mother's Day to its soft, fatuous heart...
...depends on whether or not local bookies have access to the Capone-controlled "wire services," vital to the continued operations of gambling syndicates on an interstate, regional, or national basis. In the Citizens Committee report it is stated as axiomatic that, "without control of 'wire services' or other related telegraph and telephone service, syndicated gambling would break down into local 'small business'" which could be dealt with by local police if the police were so inclined to act. Before a Senate Investigating Committee last week, magnate Frank Costello admitted that outlawing of the "wire service" would halve bookmaking business...
...gainer was American Telephone & Telegraph Co., which reported a net of $64,400,000 (up 20% from the same period of 1949). When A.T. & T. held its annual stockholders' meeting in Manhattan a few days later, one stockholder said he was worried lest the good earnings and the $9 dividend rate become a target for government regulatory bodies. Why didn't A.T. & T. split its stock three for one, he asked, and thus change the dividend to $3 a share...
Over the years, the Telegraph has boasted some notable bylines, including Teddy Roosevelt, David Lloyd George, Thomas Masaryk and T. E. Lawrence (whose Seven Pillars of Wisdom was first serialized in the Telegraph). As deputy editor, Colin Coote himself promoted the Telegraph's biggest prize, the Churchill wartime memoirs, a project shared also by LIFE and the New York Times. New Editor Coote plans no major changes in the Telegraph's impartial news coverage or its Conservative editorial policy. Says he: "We have succeeded to some extent in being serious without being dull. I hope we shall never...