Business: Free Love
Last week the 75th anniversary of the opening of the first transcontinental telegraph line in the U. S. was dutifully observed by Western Union Telegraph Co. While replicas of the old Morse instruments clacked before a microphone, while historians recounted the wire-stringing from Sacramento to Omaha that finally joined East and West in 1861, Western
Union announced a sentimental addition to its service. To keep the word "telegraphically alive," LOVE may henceforth be added free to any of Western Union's 554 ready-written messages.
Like most other Western Union epistolary innovations in the past...
Email, Password or Region is incorrect
A required form parameter was missing.
The System is currently down. Please try again in a few minutes.
Email Address is invalid
Password is blank
Most Popular »
- The 2012 World Press Photo of the Year
- Icelanders Avoid Inbreeding Through Online Incest Database
- Top 10 Celebrity Restaurants
- Jimmy Stewart: A Hero Home From the War
- A Cancer Drug Reverses Alzheimer's Disease in Mice
- Why Is Your Boss Moving to Brazil?
- Who Qualifies for the $26 Billion Foreclosure Settlement?
- The Foreclosure Deal: Obama and the Banks Win Big While Homeowners See Modest Reward
- Why American Kids Are Brats
- A Record of China’s Changing Coastlines
- Why Is Your Boss Moving to Brazil?
- The Upside Of Being An Introvert (And Why Extroverts Are Overrated)
- The Second Coming of Warren Jeffs: The Jailed Polygamist Leader Prepares His Flock for Doomsday
- Why Mario Monti Is the Most Important Man in Europe
- Lessons Unlearned: Why Another Gigantic Famine Looms in Africa
- Companies Are the New Countries
- The Brain: How The Brain Rewires Itself
- Seoul Searching
- I Hope I Die Before I Have to Live with Old People
- Warren Buffett Is on a Radical Track




