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Show Strange as It Seems byJohn lltae FIT ffontJrf4IM UH6TH OF A FURROW' V- "tut SKtRT; N -V faodJnJ yj Al firmrfiorr fintrj S' $- II V i) Frtnk Dunrt, i. (, , X If HfirMojtve, is UMUKfliaycJ6HrftDeRW.ftJNW Jl. . fol!CW5fW1i,ull'lA -J J? lPeM.hfTERflMWOPHope, J"' ,J , fir rJh6RWfltD itO.OOO Qj If .)jJif THtUiirtWortTtsewoHf rj 'Mirch 3,w I tS s. - -V is' MORSE TELEGRAPH Returning to America from three years' Intensive art study In the capitals of Europe, Samuel Morse. In 1832, met Charles T. Jackson, Jack-son, who told him of recent experiments in which electricity had been sent long distances, and suggested the possibility of sending news in such a manner. Impressed, Morse turned with enthusiasm to the problem and by 1837 considered his telrftraph suited to commercial purposes. He pleaded plead-ed with congress in 3838 to build a line from Washington to Baltimore Balti-more but it took him more than five years to obtain the necessary $30,000 from congress, and then only at midnight of the last day of the expiring session, by a vote of 90 to 82. Tomorrow Horse Race That Closed the U. S. Congress! |