Dominion Wireless Telegraph Company, Limited.

PRINCIPAL OFFICE: 160 ST. JAMES STREET, MONTREAL. CAPITAL STOCK, $1,200,000. PAR VALUE, $5.

This company proposes to build and operate stations at all important points in the Dominion of Canada and do a general telegraphic business between stations in the United States or elsewhere, owned or controlled by the American DeForest Wireless Telegraph Company or any of their subsidiary companies. It will also build and operate stations on both the Atlantic and Pacific Coasts for transmission of messages abroad, and will work in harmony with like stations built by foreign DeForest companies, will erect and operate stations along all of the important rivers, gulfs and lakes, as well as on the sea coast, and will equip vessels with Wireless Telegraph instruments, keeping them in touch with their home office until their destination has been reached.

This company proposes to erect and operate stations as follows:

ONTARIO.

Barrie
Belleville
Berlin
Brantford
Brockville
Chatham
Cobourg
Collingwood
Cornwall
Fort William
Galt
Guelph
Hamilton
Ingersoll
Kingston
Lindsay
London
Niagara Falls
Orillia
Ottawa
Owen Sound
Peterboro
Port Arthur
Port Hope
Rat Portage
Sault Ste. Marie
Smith’s Falls
St. Catharines
St. Thomas
Stratford
Toronto
Windsor
Woodstock

QUEBEC.

Farnham
Fraserville
Granby
Hull
Lachine
Levis
Montreal
Perce
Quebec
Richmond
Rimouski
Sherbrooke
Sorel
St. Hyacinthe
St. Jerome
St. Johns
St. Pi’re Montmagny
Three Rivers
Valleyfield

NEW BRUNSWICK.

Chatham
Fredericton
Moncton
St. John

NOVA SCOTIA.

Amherst
Halifax
Dartmouth
Lunenburg
New Glasgow
Truro
Sydney
Yarmouth

PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND.

Charlottetown
Summerside

MANITOBA.

Brandon
Portage La Prairie
West Selkirk
Winnipeg

NORTHWEST TERRITORIES.

Calgary
Regina
Edmonton
Moose Jaw
Medicine Hat

BRITISH COLUMBIA.

Grand Forks
Rossland
Kamloops
Vancouver
Nelson
Victoria
New Westminster
Fernie

YUKON

Dawson

Thus bringing not only every important point in the Dominion of Canada in touch by wireless telegraphy, but also Europe, through the station to be erected at Halifax, and Asia from stations on Vancouver Island.

All doubts of the practicability of wireless telegraphy may now be abandoned.

These new competitors must be somewhat disconcerting to managers and shareholders of the older systems of telegraphy, but they will no doubt prove equal to the problems confronting them and maintain their ascendency as heretofore.