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A ROMANCE OF THE TELEGRAPH LINE.

AN ETERNAL FAREWELL. A book has just been published in London, entitled, "Australian Pictures, Drawn with Ten and Pencil. By Howard Willoughby, of the Melbourne Argus." The following story is told :—At the Barrow Creek station a party ot the employes were surprised in 1575 by the blacks, when they had left the building to indulge in a bathe. They had to run for their lives through a volley of spears to regain the shelter of their loop-holed home. Mr. Stapleton and a line repairer were mortally wounded, and two othere were very badly hurt. Mr. Stapleton was found to be sinking rapidly. The news was flashed to Adelaide. In one room of the city stood the doctor and Mrs. Stapleton, listening to the " click, click" of the messages : a thousand milea away in the desert, in a lonely hut beleagured by the blacks, lay the dying man, with an instrument brought to his bedside. Uβ received the doctor's message that his c»se wai hopeless. He heard his wife's adieux, and he telegraphed an eternal farewell. It is easy to believe that the affecting spectacle moved those around the group in Adelaide to tears.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH18861218.2.83

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume XXIII, Issue 7824, 18 December 1886, Page 2 (Supplement)

Word Count
200

A ROMANCE OF THE TELEGRAPH LINE. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXIII, Issue 7824, 18 December 1886, Page 2 (Supplement)

A ROMANCE OF THE TELEGRAPH LINE. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXIII, Issue 7824, 18 December 1886, Page 2 (Supplement)