#pp' •• »t? \*'/ * ' v ^f^-1 Thursday, November 26, 1942 ?v± THX MeHKNRY PLAINDKALE& \ PagtThrcft Entomologists Compare Wars of Insects, Men 1 Entomologists at the Pennsylvania State college are taking a leading part in the fight to control insect pests which annually cost apple growers $30,000,000. "War against insects," according to Dr. Stuart W. Frost, professor of economic entomology, "are similar to wars between men. They are always expensive, and the winner sometimes loses." Our ...; Washington Letter -Br- National Editorial Association Washington, November 25. -- Imr »_ tt. * • . ^ ! Portant public service suffers these r«n* ! because of political, personal " ~ ~ an(j 0ther considerations. Legislative •*nd administrative officials are at odds over policy-making in connection with wartime regulations. High administraton officials and lawmakers are, at the same tme, importuned to use their influence to keep govern- ! ment employees intact in their jobs. ferent insects attack apple trees, and despite all that is done to combat them, the pests damage trees and fruit to the extent of $13,000,000 annually. In addition, he said, cost of control ranges at least $17,000,- 000. Losses May Ron Higher. Honey Pumpkin Pie Inspires a Harvest Sapper •hp , (See Recipes Below.) Harvest Supper Social :VrJ&iJe of the nicest-things about fall are those harvest supper socials when folks throughout the land gather together with the fruits of their summer labors and heap high the table with steaming chicken fricassee or beefsteak pies, fruits and vegetables, and pies, anything good to eat!. It's partially the food that makes these suppers unforgettable and partially, too, the way it brings old friends together before the long winter pulls in. Whether it's the local grange who sponsors the affair or the ladies' aid, groups, the affair will b£ a tremendous success. Remember the chicken fricassee? 1 "; "Chicken Fricassee. 1 ?• / "V (Serves 8-10) S 3-pOtmd chickens Salt, pepper, ginger . S quarts boiling water 96 cup each, onion, cat rot, celery - 1 bay leaf I tablespoons chicken fat 4 tablespoons flour Juice of H lemon 5 tablespoons minced parsley 1 can mushrooms Clean chickens, cut into pieces for serving. Sprinkle with salt, pepper few grains of ginger. Cover with boiling water and took slowly lor one hour. Add vegetables and bay leaf and continue cooking until tender. Drain aff liquid and surplus fat. Add flour to melted fat and cook until brown. Gradually add 3 cups chicken broth er 1% cups chicken broth and 1% eups rich milk. Season and cook until smooth. Add lemon juice and mushrooms. Place chicken in gravy With minced parsley and heat. *Baking Powder Dumplings 2 enps floor 4 teaspoons baking powder ; H teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons batter 2 eggs, well beaten • : Milk Sift dry ingredients, and chop m batter. Add eggs with enough milk to form a heavy drop batter. Drop qprfrkly by spoonfuls into chicken broth. Cover closely and cook 10 minutes without removing lid. *Cabbage and Apple Coleslaw. (Serves 6) t enps crisped, dried, shredded cabbage Bait 1 cup diced apple ~ $4 cup cooked salad dressing Mix cabbage and apple with salad dressing and salt. Chill thoroughly and serve from a large bowl. A highly prized and cherished favorite for these fall harvest suppers is Steak and Kidney pie, the meat floating in delicious gravy, topped with a flaky, crisp and golden crust: Steak and Kidney Pie. (Serves 6) 2 pounds beef steak (cat X inch thick) 2 pork kidneys ; 2 small onions, minced : 1 teaspoon salt H teaspoon pepper LYNN SAYS: Sudsy Facts: Higher industrial activity and consumer income contribute to larger soap consumption, according to a Department of Agriculture report, making last year's soap consumption the largest on record. Domestic oils and inedible tallow will take the place of imported and tropical oils for this year's soap supply. Healthfulness dictates cleanliness, and that means not only in clothing and personal hygiene but in clean surroundings in the home, especially in the kitchen where food is prepared. Light or white floors insure cleanliness. You can restore freshness by laundering draperies, wal.s, rugs and upholstery by using a soap jelly made by dissolving 1 part soap to 5 parts hot water, letting cool, then whipping to a fluff with p beater. This Week's Me** u * ; > •Q1ic}ten Fricassee •Baking'Powder Dumplings •Cabbage and Apple Coleslaw Spiced Crabapules Bread-Butter Pickles •Sauteed Coin and Green Pepper •Honey Pumpkin Pies Coffee Milk •Recipes Gi^n - ^ Average loss in commercial or- Cancellation of draft deferments of i chards is around 12 per cent of several thousand Federal workers has the fruit crop, but when nothing is provoked a scramble for political done to attack the insects, losses help to establish the prospective semay run as high as 100 per cent. i lectees as necessary government "ex- Penn State entomologists point out perts." The fact that these civilian that other fruits are attacked in a employees can only obtain deferment. manner similar to apples, but grow- by establishing to the satisfaction of ers are often unable to recognize the the President that they are acutally msec causing the damage. irreplaceable has produced chaos II a spraying schedule is some- among Unc'e Sam's nephews not in what ineffective, injuries made by uniform. Their sponsors among the insects to trusts early in the season so'ons are petitioned to help hold may be pretty well healed by pick- their positions in the civilian agencies. "J6* t !fgh fruit is likely Meanwhile, the quality and quantity to be deformed. of their work is lowered by the un- _ In -an effort to aid fruit growers certainty oftheir rating in the manm recognizing the causes of insect power picture. ?aS P,r?£ared Personal feuds develoning in the h P t ^ Senate are likely to exercise a fari^ ct y PennSylVama frUlt reaching influence on the trend of leg- ™ islation. The impact will probably be 1 eup flour H cup fat 2 teaspoons Worcestershire _ sauce Cut steak into 1%-inch pieces. Dredge with flour, salt and pepper. Saute with onion until brown in heavy kettle. Add sufficient water to cover meat well. Add sauce and seasoning. Place on heat to simer. - - -- Remove every trace -of-- white tubes from kidneys and cut into cubes. Place in kettle, cover with cold water, bring to a boil and drain, and repeat a second time. Add kidneys to meat in kettle and simmer together until tender, about two hours. Continue to add a little liquid and stir from time to time to keep meat from sticking. Remove meat to a casserole, add enough liquid to cover, and set aside to cool. Cover with a crust of plain pastiy and bake in a hot (450-degree) oven 12-15 minutes. There are so many good foods at this autumn banquet lhat unless your vegetables are pointed up, their consumption may lag. There's no danger of that if you have either of these combinations: •Sauteed Corn With Green Pepper. (Serves •) S tablespoons batter V; S cups corn, cooked 2 tablespoons green pepper 8alt, pepper it cup cream Melt butter in a frying pan. Add vegetables and seasonings with cream. Cover and cook slowly until liquid evaporates. Savory Cabbage. (Serves 6) f I head cabbage I tablespoon chicken fat i tablespoon flour Salt, pepper . •-- Hard-cooked egg Cook cabbage in boiling salted water until tender but cfisp. Drain and chop. Brown flour in melted fat, add stock, cabbage and seasonings. Cook slowly for 10 minutes. Garnish; with egg. •Honey Pumpkin JPfftt,..-. (Serves 8) • teggs 1 cup milk v_ Vt cup cream 1H cups pumpkin^" ^ cup honey ; • - Vi teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon Vi teaspoon ginger 1 recipe all-bran pastry shells Prepare pastry shells. Beat eggs Slightly, add remaining ingredients and mix thoroughly. Pour into individual, unbaked pie shells and bake in a hot oven (450 degrees) for 15 minutes. Reduce heat to moderate (350 degrees) and continue baking 45 minutes or until knife inserted comes out clean. Pastry Shells. . (Makes 8) % eup kll-bran 1V» cups flour V& teaspoon salt Yi cup shortening 4 tablespoons cold water (more or less) Roll cereal fine. Combine with flour and salt. Cut in shortening. Add water, little at a time, until dough is moist enough to hold together. Roll out on a lightly floured board to about cne-eighth inch thickness. Place in individual pie tins. Trim edges, leaving one-half inch beyond rim of pan. Fold under and flute. Fill with pumpkin filling as directed above. Cake Making? Bread Makingt Cookie Baking? Budeet Fixing? Housekeeping? You name the problem and explain it. Miss Lynn Chambers will be glad to give you expert advice if you write to her, enclosing a self-addressed, stamped envelope for your reply, at U estern Newspaper L nion, 210 South Desplaines Street, Chicago, IlL \ . Released by western Newspaper Union In Modern Home Every inch in the modern home goes to work. Attics and basements can be inexpensively made into music rooms, game rooms, art studios, club meeting rooms b;- paneling the walls with colorkote insulating boards. Members of busy families need rooms where they can pursue their interests without interference from the rest of the family. felt more in the new term beginning January 3. The filibuster on the proposed bill prohibiting the imposition of •\ poll tax bids fair to break down the highly-touted "gentlemen's club" as the United States Senate considered itself in bui'ding a tradition of superiority. The technical ' arrests" of several members to secure a quorum brought the wrath of the truant Sen- ! stors upon Majority Leader Barkley. | The ensuing bitterness, publicly and i rivately expressed, undermined the ; Barkley leadership to such an extent • that it may seriously impair the Adminisration's legislative programs. If Democratic Senators refuse to reelect the Kentucky solon to the majority post ^at the next session, the recenly augmented Republican gains in the upper chamber may provide a practical coalition which would make I hard sledding for White House pro- The undersigned will sell at public j posals on a purely partisan basis, auction on the farm formerly known ; A few Senators resented being as the Mason farm, located 5 miles piaced in a category of school-cboy Subscribe for The Plaindealer! Another Thorp Sale AUCTION CHARLES LEONARD, Auctioneer east of Woodstock, 3% miles north of Ridgefleld. 6 miles southwest of Mc- Henry, cn MONDAY, NOV. 30 Commencing at 10:30 a. m. sharp, the fololwing described property, "towit * 84 HEAD LIVESTOCK - Consisting of 21 registered Holstein cows ; IS registered Holstein heifers; one regisnbscntees brought to roll call by war rants. Senate filibusters are not unusual as a means of wasting time and blocking votes cn pending measures. It is a parliamentary and dilatory device which only invoking the> cloture rule by a two-thirds vote can overcome. Somehow the forced attendance of men who pride themselves on dignity struck a raw spot. The controversy for a time overshadowed the legislation. Advocates claim the | tered Holstein bull, 7 mos. old; one ™ea8.ur? "intended to offset alleged registered Holstein bull calf, 2 mos. discriminations aqd disfranchisement old. This dairy is all home raised of l*r«* of the population and CTA records will be furnished on ,n e,*ht So"*1*™ states. Opponents the day of sale. Prospective purchas-, ers are invited to inspect this dairy before date of sale. 5 Head Horses < Bay "mare, 10 years old, wt. 1700 lbs.; bay mare, 4 years old, wt. 1600 lbs.; steel grav mare, 3 years old,, . , , „ , , . wt. 1400; pair bUck m«r„. 10 ye.r, assert the fundamental issues, such as the right of the Federal government to dictate the qualifications of a state's voters and the constitutional question are overlooked in the flurry of argument. As people look forward to the payrld, wt. 3000 lbs. 36 feeding pigs, average wt. 100 lbs. each; 5 bred sows, due to farrow about December 15. -- 100 White Rock chickens. Hay, Grain and Machinery 20 acres shock corn; 500 bu. oats; next March on their 1942 revenue, few realize where the government money is spent in the war effort. Latest reports show monthly war expenditures are now hovering around six billion. At the present rate Government war expenditures are nearly equal to the total consumer outlay 25 ft. silage in 14 ft. silo; 1500 bales for an(j services, and all Govof mixed hay; 200 bales of stra^; 5 ernment expenditures account for tons of loose mixed hay; one ton of one-half of the value of the linseed oil meal. entire finished output of the country's McCormick Deenng F-20 tractor; j economy. It is also revealed that in- McCormick Deering combine, No. 42- come from investments which supple- B; McCormick Deering tractor plow, ment the earnings of many persons 16-in-cn; McCormick i-ft. tandem disc; fall off sharply. Cash dividend pay- McCormick Deering tractor, cultiva- mcnts durin? {he first ten months of tor; McCormick Deering 8-ft. drill, > were 8.6 percent lower than durwith grass seed attachment; McCor- incr the same period of last year. Most ; mick Deering 6-ft. mower; McCormick of this dec'ine was due to the drop in Deering corn ^bindery McCormick dividends paid by the manufacturing heat, light and power groups. Recent Gallup poll found only one One-Man Production Drive The ' labor-management committee of ,the Four Wheel Drive company, Clintonville, Wis., reported to War Production Drive headquarters: "Earl Ruchdashel submitted a suggestion on a new method of tool grinding which allowed him to increase his machine from 129 r.p.m. to 237 r.p.m., which allowed him to increase his production 50 per cent Not only does the new tool cut faster and more accurately but whereas the old one had to be ground every three pieces, the new tool will stand up for half a ddy of work." AUCTION L. H. FREEMAN & SON, Tel. 118 or - 122, Hebron, 111., Auctioneers On account of the loss of his house by fire, the undersigned will sell at public auction on the farm known as the Horace Redding farm, located 3% miles southeast of Richmond, 111., 1 mile northwest of Solon Mills, 111., % mile east of Route 12. on w u MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30 1942, commencing at 12:30 sharp,'the f'ellowin? described propertv: 81 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK 24 HEAD OF HEREFORD HEIFERS--- These wei^h about 750 lbs. They are in the pink of condition and about two-thirds fed out. This is an opportunity for Mfcfrpe wishing to buy a bunch of beePelttle which will give quick returns for the feed they consume.; or for anyone wishing to buy some of these heifers for beef for their own use. 1 - This opportunity will not "be afforded again this year, anywhere in this locality, so be here and take advantage of this fine bunch of heifers. 1 Guernsey family cow. FEED--30 tons gcod hard ear corn, 600 bushels good cats, Columbia and Marion, 6 tons baled mixed hay in barn, 25 tons good corn silage in 12 foot silo. 75 heavy hens, New Hampshire and White Reeks, 2 chicken feeders, 10x14 chicken house on skids. HOGS--3 brood sows, 15 Chester • White bred gilts, 32 g.ood feeding shoats, weight from 60 to 140 lbs., 6 young Chester White boars. GOOD PAIR WORK HORSES-- weight 2.600 lbs. MACHINERY--Massey Harris 101 senior tractor on rubber, power lift and power take off, with power lift cultivator; Massey Harris two bot- ! torn 16-inch tra-ctor plow, with spring hitch; John Deere 7-ft. tractor disc; Massey Harris clipper combine, 6 ft., on rubber, A-l condition; three section ; drag; 2 endgate seeders; co^n planter, with fertilizer attachment; one horse cultivator; one 5 ft. mower; Massey Harris Side delivery rake; McCormick Deering corn binder; McCormick Deering gang plow; manure spreader; 2 rubber tired farm wagons; steel wheel truck wagon; set bob sleighs; 90 bu. Lindsay wagon grain box; hay rake; set harness; 12-inch double hog self-feeder; 70 gallon heated hog water trough; 4 hog troughs; 3 rolls 36 inch wiiven wire, heavy (new); 2 rolls 54 inch woven wire (new); 2 rolls hi inch mesh hardware cloth; quantity of barbed wire; quantity of small tools, forks and shovels, baskets, etc. 1934 Buick coach, g"od condition. 16- mch tires, good; Packard rihuilt into I pick-up truck. TERMS: All sums of $25 and under that amount cash, over that amount a credit of six months at 7 per cent will be exended on notes approved by the clerk. Any ne desiring credit, kindly make arrangements before purchase is made. No property to be removed until settled for. L. J. HEUVELMAN STATE BANK OF RICHMOND, Clerking. 183,0M Casualties Pdr two years, British troops have been fighting on a world-wide front, mostly alongside troops from other parts of the empire. By Septem"- ber, 1941, total empire casualties were over 183,000. Up to January, 1942, 71 per cent of all British empire casualties suffered on land were merffrom the United Kingdom. -Puppies' Closed Eyelids ^ Xtt some animals, as dogs, the eyelids remain closed for several days after birth to protect the delicate organs against possible injury or infection, according to the Better Vision institute. In human beings tl»e eyelids are closed during prenatal development, but open soon after birth. Stoker Firing ! l!|ls an unprecedented national emergency, and every effort must be made to conserve coal. Automatic coal stoker firing reduces the amount of coal burned, because it provides better combustion. There is no waste pf coal from handling when new coal flow bin fe£d models are installed. . t Sensitive 'Mike' |* ' Contrary to the general imprt* •ten, a microphone is not just a little tin gadget shoved in front of a speaker so he'll have something to talk or sing to. It's a very sensitive and very temperamental piece at mechanism. So much so that it shows up vocal defects that your own mother wouldn't recognize. Put a silver-tongued orator before a mike and he's just as apt as not to sound like a bronchial billy-goat; and a stellar soprano may give as perfect an imitation of the Europa backing into midstream as you ever heard. It's all very confusing; but still, it is a fact that a microphone can do strange things to presumably first class vocal cords. Some persons are naturals for radio. Others have defects which can be corrected with a few lessons in microphone technique. But the - great majority of those hopefuls who seek auditions are doomed to disappointment. They forget that that little mechanical box in front of them picks up every sound, however slight. r. :">V ' V.Titiniam Dioxide Whitest l^pie whitest substance known to |Lmari is titanium dioxide used in paints. Curiously enough, it is made from limenite, a mibersl blacker . than:coal. . > Osteopaths' School > ' via 1884, when three of the chfldrtflk of Andrew Taylor Still died of spinal meningitis, he devised the treatment known as osteopathy. In 1887 he settled in Kirksville, Mo., and devet oped a large practice. Five years later he opened the American School of Osteopathy at Kirksviil#v AUCTION L. H. IREEMAN & SON, TeL 118 or 122, Hebron. IlL, Auctioneers Having decided to quit farming, the undersigned will sell at public auction on the farm known as the J. W. Smith farm, located 4 miles east of Hebron, 111., 2H miles we$t of Richmond on Hi Way 173 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1 1942, commencing at 10:00 o'clock A. M., the following described personal property: .• : . 30 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK 27 HOLSTEIN DAIRY COWS--One-third of this herd is springing. Several are new milkers, and the balance are milking good. This is a chance to buy good high preducing cows at auction. 1 HOLSTEIN PURE BRED STOCK BULL. 2 years old. 2 HORSES--1 gray team geldings, 9 and 10 years old. wt. 3,000 lbs. 100 CHICKENS--50 white leghorn hens, 1 year eld; 50 white reck hens, 1 year old. FEED AND GRAIN--15 tons cf mixed timothy and .clover hay in barn, 18 tons of mixed timothy and clover baled, 30 ton^ ear com in crib 30 feet silage in a 12 foot silo, 15 feet silage in a )12 fo t silo. MACHINERY--Allis Chalmers W. C. tractor on rubber with cultivator attachment, new Ideal 6 roll shredder on rubber (new) Allis Chalmers 4 section steel beam drag, 14-inch Case tractor plrw (new>. 999 John Deere corn planter with pole trucks and 80 rods of wire (new), Dane hay loader, McCormick Deering side delivery rak?, McCormick Deerina: field cultivator (new), McCormick Deering rotary hoe (new), McCormick Deering one row cultivator, 16 wheel Case tandem disc, Gehl silo filler, John Deere manure spreadeh rubber tire wagon, wood wheel wagon, steel wheel wagon, McCormiek mo""er, triple wagon box, hay rack, 1935 m t>~n Ford milk truck; 2 bob sleighs, 1 walking plow, potato digger, fanning mill, 500 lb. scales, Stewart cow clipper. Electric Stewart sow clipper, 1 set back pad harness, 6 horse collars. 200 ft. hay rope, fork and mi'levs. 500 chick brooder stoVe, blacksmith forge, set of taps and dies, 14x20 canvas, blacksmith vise, 40 ft. drive belt, 2 hole corn sheller. 3 cl ieken crates, 30 grain bags, 8 chicken coops, Magnetic DeLaval milk'nqr machine, with 2 single units, complete with motor, pump and pipe line for 26 cows. DeLaval cream separator. Losee elcctric water heater, 2 wash tanks, 15 8-gallon milk cans, pails and strainers, ail forks, shovels and small tools on farm. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE -- Kitchen range (new), 1 new joll heater, large circulating heater, 1 kitchen set, 4 rockers, dininf room set, 4 chairs and buffet, 1 overstuffed parlor suite (like new), player piano with 50 rolls. 1 man's fur coat. TERMS --All sums of *25 and under cash. Over that amount a credit of 6 months time will be give on bankable notes, approved by clerk bearing 7r'> interest. No property to be removed until settledfor. » ROBERT POPENHAGEN HEBRON STATE BANK. aerUa, Lutheran Ladies Aid will serve lunch all day Deering wagon loader for com binder; McCormick Deering 7-ft. cultipacker; McCormick Deering side de- ouj Qf four taxpayers were, saving tq livery rake McCormick Deering porn planter with fertilizer attachment and tongue truck; McCormick Deering single row cultivator; McCormick Deering manure spreader; Mc,Cormick Deering milker outfit, 2 single units; McCormick Deering roller bearing wagon and rack. meet the^first installment !due ^ --J March 15; Though a powerful House bloc representing oil-producing states is waging a campaign a?ainst gasoline rationing, the Federal enforcement agencies are proceding with their plans. O. P. A. Administrator Henderson stated specifically this week r *rblrfi red • y ^ ^ A ^al extension of rationing Gehl silo filler and 40 ft. of pipe; wood :?overir|. many. commodities is in the wheel wagon and gram box; Stover bookg for next The simplificatractormouilted buss saw;_3-section tjon anJ stahdardiEation pr0gram wood ^am harrow; fanning mill; win ptdbabl wi e out distinctive hay roj* and fork; bob sled; stone brands and tlade.mark8 of nationallyboat; Stewart.electric clipper. known articie8 0f everyday use. 15 gallon drum of oil; 150 stee Meat rationi will be speeded ^ fence posts; 6 rolls barb wire; 1 roll Lend.lefae. shipment8 drain the food 7; 7P W,"e:J I lSnOW supply for civilians in this country. 14x16 portable hog house; 12x16 AA major headache is the price control over scarce articles. Henderson predicts prices will rise in many instances despite the fact that both materials and labor have been stabilized. He figures that with less labor available; the new crop of workers „ T , . . will add to production costs because 16 milk cans; Losee electric water ^ are fir and kgs efficifent. heater; 2 wash tanks; pails and ^ officiaJ hintg that thg strainers;- kitchen range; kerosene stove. portable chicken house: 10x12 portable chicken house; breeching harness; set back pad harness; electric brooder stove; kerosene brooder stove; chick feeders and waterers; 12 tons rock phosphate; ojie ton barn lime; 30 sacks of 2-8-16 fertilizer. ^ . Taking party-line telephone service may not seem to be a contribution to Victory .. . but it is! Telephone lines take copper-- , lots of it -- and there's no substitute we can use. Fighting equipment to win this war takes copper, too. That's why we have not been building more telephone lines for civilian use and why existing facilities must be stretched and shared as far as possible. Party lines instead of individual lines release thousands of tons of vital materials for war uses. Blue Hase Ihe Great Smoky mountains ara so called because of an ever-present blue haze. Plenty Trout Streams •There are 600 miles of trout Streams in the Great Smoky MoQntilttns National park; i". Some Musi Watch 'Though the most be plaiyers, some must be spectators."--£eo Johnson. 4,000 Varieties More than 4,000 varieties of plants are found in the Great Smoky Mouatains National park. The Highest Peak in East The End for 50 Nazis lit. Mitchell, North Carolina, ia i Fifty Nazi police agents were he highest peak east of the Mia- 1 killed in Poland last June, including alpsippir, 6,884 feet. [{he Gestapo chief at LubHm government may be forced to resort to sub- ... , . 1T , - sidies to solve the problem of ,in- As this is a large sale, all machin- crea8ed costs nnder a' rigid control ery will be sold before noon. All svstem machinery is in A-l condition and " used very little. ' TERMS: We have made arrangements with the Thorp Finance Corporation to manage this sale. Their terms are suir.S of ?25 and under, cash; over that amount, one-fourth cash, balance in six monthly paymerts v ith 7% simple,interest on the unpaid'balance. No additional signers are needed. Just sign for yourself. ADELAIDE M. WOODS Administratrix Of the Estate of'Edward G. Woods. Thorp Finance Corp., Clerking; ' W, JP. Powers, Representative Phone Woodstock S9I Read the Want Ads! ITS PATRWVK TO KA PAITY-UNE "GOOD NBGHBOf 1. Answer your calls promptly. 2. Make rare the line is not iat : ' use before dialing or signal* , ing operator. S. Avoid interrupting the other party's conversation. 4. Replace receiver promptly alter a call. 5. Try not to monopolise the line with long conversations. ,6. If you have several calk te make, allow the other party time to make or receive calls between yours. 7. Be neighborly--be brief--and f you'll find the other party 0m M.VAI BONOS That's why on a party line it is patriotic to be a good "telephone neighbor*' to others on the line. vm:.% UUNOtS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY WAM tOHDS * tur NOW.' MUY MOftff