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Show Ul 0 rG UJ I ~ 0 Ul Ul (/l The Western Union Telegraph Company . HIE LARGEST Ul£GRAPHIC SYSTEM IN THE WORLD~ OV£R ON£ M!lUON MI([S Of WIRE IN THE UNITED STAT£S AND CANADA. •. It has over 24,000 Tel Offices, including Branch It bas also Direct Cor. fil by T e!egraph or Telephone "".: as many more remote and. s .1aller stations9 making a total I st of over 50,000 in the United S· ates, Canada and Mexico~ and this num· ber is rapidly increasing. Seven Atlantic Cabl~s, Connecting North Amedca with aH points in Europe and beyond, includh1{~ Two Cables of the American' T elegra.~h and . Cable Company, Four Cables ofihei.AngloAm~ rican Te1egraph Company, a dOne Cable of the Direct United States C'lble Co. Direct Wires to Galveston, T e:fs, con- . necting at that place with the Cabl·i" of the Mexican,, the Central a.nd South A erican Telegraph Companies for aU pd nts In ' Mexico and Central and South A medea. Direct Wires and Cables to I-·avana, Cuba, connectin2: at that place v. ith the Cuba Submarine and West India a d Pan- · ama Telegraph Companies for aJ points in the West Indies. Connects at San Fta11clsco wttb Pacific Cables to the Sandwich Llaods, H, nolulu, Guam, the Philippines, China, Jap: n, etc., and at Victoria, B. C., with Pa.clft. Cable to Australia and New Zealand. } Connects at Seattle, Wash., w ith U. S. Government Lines I and Cables to and in Alaska. w. u. T. co. oTHER cos ' Exclusive COtU"lection with the Qrreat 24 , 6~4 4,868 ;;;:;;·:; ;::;~:;e; F:·by·~:;;;raph an;·~:~;e 0 ~ I m ;u 1J 0 :u · , |