Word: telegraphically
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...Daily Mail's Don Iddon called Stevenson "dazzling and delightful," adding: "His manner is more British than American, and this could be a handicap [in the U.S.]. Already his harassed enemies are suggesting that Stevenson has an English accent-a most shameful sin." Reported the Daily Telegraph's Malcolm Muggeridge: "He derives from the tradition of Henry Adams, and a century ago might well have preferred to transfer himself across the Atlantic to survey the New World from the Old." Said the Sunday Times: Stevenson "already has much of the clean-cut loneliness of the great...
Some telephones will probably not be installed in the College until next January or February, a representative of the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company's business office said yesterday...
...England Telephone and Telegraph Company, beseiged with applications for instruments has put many students on a waiting list due to a lack of installation facilities...
...Parsons success may be attributed to a combination of circumstances. She wrote her first movie column for the Chicago Record-Herald in 1914. She enriched her experience by working for three years on the Morning Telegraph, a New York racing and theater sheet, and then, starting in 1922, for Hearst's New York American. Her husband had died, and she was supporting their young daughter Harriet, who is now a producer in Hollywood. Her first big break came when she fell ill of tuberculosis and Hearst shipped her to recuperate, on full salary, to an unknown California town called...
...Celanese Corp. dropped 2⅛ points to 42⅞ when the company reported that its second-quarter profits, hard hit by the textile slump, were down 95% to $215,327, not even enough to cover the dividend on the preferred stock. Western Union, which reported that the seven-week telegraph strike caused a $3,902,125 half-year loss v. a $4,246,672 net in 1951, was knocked down nearly two points...