Or was.
People in old movies are always sending their telegrams straight wire. The term comes up, for instance, in the opening scene of Executive Suite (dir. Robert Wise, 1954), which must be the greatest telegram scene in film, with a clerk counting the words and making change. Neither Webster’s Second nor Third has a definition. Nor does Wikipedia’s article on telegrams. But look:
[Click for a larger explanation.]
This explanation appears in a handbook of questions and answers about third-class mail, created by Harry J. Maginnis, Executive Manager, Associated Third Class Mail Users. It formed part of Maginnis’s testimony before a Senate subcommittee (Postal Policy: Hearings Before a Senate Subcommittee of the Committee on the Post Office and Civil Service, 85th Congress, 1st session, 1957).
Once again, it’s Google Books FTW.
A related post
How to send telegrams
[$2.70 in 1957 = $26.36 in 2021. Mighty expensive words.]
Thursday, October 14, 2021
What is a straight wire?
By Michael Leddy at 9:30 AM
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comments: 2
Yes! The good old days when you could depend on Western Union to get the word out without fail! One of my favorite sceans from "EXECUTIVE SUITE". Perhaps the other one that sticks with me is from the film "THE NARROW MARGIN". Charles McGraw as Det. Sgt. Walter Brown, at the La Junta, CO, railroad station stop. Cheers, and best of luck.
Thanks for writing, William.
I could have sworn that I have a post somewhere with the telegram from The Narrow Margin, but searching for it turns up nothing.
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