Word: radiotelegraph
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...have been and are engaging in systematic espionage which has cost the United Nations ships and lives. Vicious propaganda aimed at the United Nations appears in publications which are supported by subsidies from Axis sources. . . . Argentina is the only one of the 21 American republics now permitting radiotelephone and radiotelegraph communications with Japan, Germany and Italy...
...First the profit-&-loss account omitted all income from American Cable & Radio, two-thirds owned since 1940 by I.T. & T. Yet in the first nine months of last year American earned $611,000 and this year should do better. With U.S. Government help, American has broken R.C.A.'s radiotelegraph monopoly in Russia, Algeria and the British Empire. Second, I.T. & T. listed no income that was not "received or available in U.S. dollars...
Today, Transradio news goes by teletype and radiotelegraph to 288 radio stations. It boasts an impressive list of beats, such as the Italian invasion of Ethiopia. In 1936, it began serving newspapers, today sells to 46, including the London Daily Telegraph, the Portland Oregonian, the Honolulu Advertiser and the Johannesburg (South Africa) Daily Express. Its 20-hour-a-day teletype circuit distributes 40,000 words of spot news. An editorial staff of 40 works in its main office in a Manhattan penthouse. Its 34 U. S. and foreign bureaus are operated by 132 editorial workers...
...growing increasingly fond of the wired black devil. I. T. & T. finished the year with 4.4% more telephones than it had in 1931. Plainly Sosthenes Behn had a solid footing for his Ericsson deal. And last week came another evidence of I. T. & T.'s vitality: a new radiotelegraph circuit between San Francisco and China...
This telegram, like thousands of others in modern business today, was sent by Radiotelegraph and not by Cable; hence, the designation ''cablegram'' is a misnomer...