We aro glad to state that arrangements, such as we suggested a week ago, have been made, whereby Europoan telegrams despatched from the Australian end of the cable will become available the same night for publication. The New Zealand public will thus generally be in possession of news as early as the Australian colonists, and this concession, made by the Telegraph department, which involves keeping the Wakapuaka office open till half-past nine, will, we are sure, be duly appreciated. The first telegram thus sent through after ordinary hours appears in another issue, and its tenor renders even more faint the already faint hope that the horrors of war may be averted. ■ ' 't
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New Zealand Times, Volume XXXII, Issue 5018, 24 April 1877, Page 2
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112Untitled New Zealand Times, Volume XXXII, Issue 5018, 24 April 1877, Page 2
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