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Show o Assistants Arrive For A.T1T. Plant With the arrival recently of R. W. Aeheson from Holbrook, Arizona, Ari-zona, and H. B. Gilliam from Phoenix, the Milford relay station for the transcontinental lines of the American Telephone and Telegraph Tele-graph company has its promised corps of assistants under A. E. Clark, who has been doing double duty at the station since last fall, when N. E. Hoblit left for the east to take up a dental course. The increased personnel at the station, while understood for some time to be forthcoming, is a pretty pret-ty good sign of the expected growth of business which the local plant was intended to accomodate but which has been delayed somewhat some-what in materializing. The approach ap-proach of a presidential campaign which promises to be one of the hottest in history, also means an augmentation of country-wide Jiookupsi, of radio stations, with the lines passing through Milford attaining a new importance in this field. Both Mr. Aeheson and Mr. Gilliam Gil-liam are accompanied here by their wives and young sons four months old in the case of the Achesons and five years old in the case of the Gilliams. |