HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1921-4-21, Page 4P ,GE O'*
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'GPO ER AGI
BAKING
POWDER
u
„rile Clinton. ni New
'Ix;harstlBy, April 21st, 1'931
-� nteautitiie while this lovely weather last-
,
ed, a morning wrapper was suitable
enough,
Peggy -Jane must be scoldIng the
herd -boy; her voice was unusualily
e- shrill. eAs Maggie stepped forward to
bit the picture a little to the left there
Tim • Donnelly spat on his sovereign was a quick clatter down the flagged
for luck and put It in his pocloet, passage, end, to her herror, strangers
"Well; yet. welcome home from stood in the doorway—two women,
MAGGIE MOOR '
America every day of the week! Ay.
an' twice Ln the wan day at the price{"
be.deciared,
They departed in high good humor,
"Ye'll have what clothes will do' ye
all yer .life in them boxes,". said Peggy-
-Jane proundly. "John was right when
ba said it was more like the Queen of
SCsoba ye are than poor owld Peter
Moore's niece. America must he the They're fitter nor you to be servintsl
queer rich land if all the girls does be "Peggy -Jane, be quiett"said Maggie
wearin' clothes like them." imperiously.
"I'm not poor, Peggy -Jane. We She stood by the fireplace, one hand
shall be able to live comfortably cn resting on the mantlepiece, looking ex
-
what I have got," explained, Maggie, to cjuisitely lovely in her white wrapper,e
ave the way for the chaff ges she wish- her brown hair bound by thread pp
ed to make at Tailack.
looking hot Jane Imo eiindign nt still, ,
thele Peggy -ane, ,
'"Miss Maggie, are ye there?" asked
the evoinan, "Here's itnpidence for yel
1 tould them it was a lady ye were, an'
all the grand trunkfuls of clothes ye
had hone wi' ye, but they tvbuidn t
heed me• Wantin' to know if ye'lt go
down to Ross an' be a servant indeed!
font, glaring at her, "Lind Rossford
has returned to an elinost empty house,
and before he can entertain, Pie friends
he must have servan S."
"Naturailyl" agreed Maggie.
'Continued Next Week
°'t could tell that by the look of ye,"
said Peggy -Jane. "Now we'll be able to
'build a new byre. Ay, an' to ebb! ,put a
t forby."
able
fto
the
mew roof s
CHAPTER 10
A weeketad passed since Magpie's ar-
rival at Tellack. She had been so
Busy that' tate days had flown. The
.girl had not once been beyond the bor-
ders of her own home. Each day she
had unpacked had arranged and re -
blue satin ribbon. •
"Ah, I seal The Miss Crawfords of
"White House"I she inirmured, "For-
give ate, i did not recognise you at
e
to have,
ut
aCC
ustom d
first
l am o
visitors cuter unannounced 'rto me,
sitting -room.,'.'
flaw .
i1}111'
WITH BEES IN SPRING
Managing the Wee 'Workers' at
the Crucial Time,
First See That %Meer Aro Well' Eyed,•--
Examine Wives Carefully for Foul
Brood—011e the Queen's Wings ---
.Making and Controlling Increase.
(Contributed by Ontn,rto Department of
Agrloulture, Toronto.)
Unless the bee)ceeper gave each
colony an abundance of feed in the
fall, not less than fifty pounds per
colony, the first manipulation in
early April should be to feed all col-
onies which do not have at least
'.twenty -flue pounds of storms left In
the hive. Many colonies starve in the
spring and many others remain weak
because there is not sufficient food in
The eldest Miss Crawford snorted.
She was not dismayed by this vision of
loveliness.
"Your aunt is an extremely rude old
a
woman, and "she began angrily.
arranged her things, wandering all over But Peggy -Jane interrupted in shrill
the house and unearthing treasures from tones.
the }nest unlikely places. In one room "Aunt! Will ye howld yer tongue,
she had found an old oak chest, and had Sarah Crawford, you that knows me
21 moved at once to the parlour. In right well these forty yearsl" she cried.
another room a set of wboden chairs "Peggy -Jane McOuck, servint to ould
. delighted her, and they without delay Peter Moore 1 was, and servtnt to his
ehanegd places with the despised horse- niece—Miss Moore— after him 1 am"!
hair suite. 'Then a black -and -red • rag "Not servant, Peggy -Jane; you are
hearrhrug was just the right thing for my friend," said Maggie quietly. "But
'the parlour floor, and some old chintz wilt you leave ane for a few minutes a-
y'curtains covered with strange birds and lone with these ladies, whose business
laded Bowers that she found stowed is so urgent that they have forced their
way into my private room uninvited?"
Peggy -Jane withdrew, muttering all
the way down the passage and Maggie
heard her banging about in the kitchen
as though she were treating the pots
and pans to the remarks she had meant
for Miss Crawford, '
Maggie turned to the intruders.
"Won't you sit down." she asked,
and motioned to an oak settee.
The Misses'Crawford sat down side
by side.
"And now perhaps you will tell me
your business!" said Maggie.
She could see by the expression on
the younger Miss Crawford's face that'
she was a little awed by her manner.
But the elder Miss Crawford was not
so easily cowed. Maggie's dignity only
annoyed her.,
We had Lord Rossford to dinner with
us last night----" she begain in her
away in the linen cupboard were so
exactly what she wanted for the same
room that the Nottingham lace curtains
carne down in a trice.
Peggy -Jane was delighted with all
These things. She had lived thirty years
with the furniture always one way, and
the novelty of the new arrangement
would last her for another thirty, she
declared. From her trunks Maggie
'- produced some beautiful colored prints
of Italian pictures that gave . the last
touch of charm to the room. She had
east finished hanging them end had
placed a. row of old cut -glass tumblers
filled • with pink roses on the black
mantlepiece and was standing under her
favourite picture in the doorway admir-
ing the effect when she heard Peggy -
Jane's shrill voice raised outside the
house.
it was stilt early in the morning, and
allaggie was clad in a white muslin strident voice,
"Indeed?" interposed Maggie, with
a little smile. "How pleasant for yout
He is a charming young mart"
"If you will kindly alllow me to finish
the hive te allow the queen to lay to
capacity. One frame of honey is re-
quired to produce one frame of brood
and to be In condition to give a good
surplus honey erop there should be
not less than ten frames o4 brood by.
June 15•th. The syrup tor spring
feeding should be two parts ,water
and one part sugar. Care must be
taken against robbing when feeding
the syrup.
The entrances, of all colonies
should be reduced so tlrationlY a few
bees can enter the colony at one time.
Thravent weak colonies
frotm being robs tends to bed and also keepe the
colonies warmer, which permits an
expanded brood -nest.
Queenless colonies and colonies
which do not cover two frames thick-
ly, should be united with strong col-
o unit-
ing The simplest lest me
thad f
cater P
edlonies in early spring is. to
Place the very weak or queenless col-
onies on top of strong queen -right
colonies, with one sheet of newspaper
between the two brood chambers.
This should be completed in the
evening. The bees will quickly gnaw
through the newspaper and unite
peacefully. If. American foul -brood is
Present in the apiary, colonies must
not he united unless to other colonies
having American foul -brood.
When the colonies have been unit-
ed and have sufficient food', they ueed
no further manipulation until the
period when dandelions and fruit
trees bloom. This Is a very important
time and a little attentlo,f given to
the bees will result in increased profit
later. The three manipulations whicb
should be completed during the dan-
elelion'and fruit bloom period are (1)
Clip the wings of queens; (2) Exam-
ine every colony for foul -brood; (3)
Give all strong colonies .exera room.
Wo clip queens' wings to control
the swarm, also that the age of the
queen may be known, A part of the
two wings on one side are removed
with the aid of a small pair of scis-
sors. The reasons for clipping the
wings of the queens during this per-
iod are as follows: (1) Queens are
easily found; (2) There is little like-
lihood of clipping virgin queen; (3)
During a honey flow queens are less
liable to be killed; (4) The operation
Is completed before the swarming
season oommencee.
The brood -chamber of every colony
is examined for American and Euro -
cameinfected ean dthef previous fthe all be-
came
secured, infected honey through rob-
bing or otherwise in early spring,
American foul -brood will most likely
be found at this examination and
preparations can be made for treat-
ing the diseased colonies either at
once or at the beginning o1 the main
'dew in June.
If European foul -brood is present
it can be easily detected at this time
and preparations completed so that
It cannot do serious damage. While
American foul -brood is apparently
only contagious, European foul -brood
is highly infectious and endemic,
where black or bybrid bees are kept.
Resistant strains of Italian bees,
strong colonies and an abundaaae of
stores will rob European foul -brood
of its menace to beekeeping.
The third =stipulation at this
time is to add an extra brood -
chamber to every reasonably strong
colony. No queen -excluder is used
and the queen has the tree of the
double brood-ahainbhr until the clo-
ver honey flow has nicely commenced.
In some aeaeons when the weather is
favorable the stronger colonies may
even need a third hive -body above an
excluder, les a super for surplus honey
from fruit blossoms and dandelions.
While swarming does not usually
occur until late June and early July,
the swarming fever ' commences in
many colonies during the fruit bloom
and dandelion period because they
'are crowded and have not sufficient
room to store surplus honey and en-
large the broad -nest.
When the clovers begin to yield,
it is time for the beekeeper to crowd
the queen into the lower brood- �
chamber. Take enough frames of the
youngest brood, unsealed and eggs,
and place these in the upper brood -
chamber. Then plane the remaining
combs and queen in the bottom
brood -chamber and place a queen-
excluder on top. Next place on an
empty super and the full hive -body of
breed on top of the euper,
If the beekeeper wishes to make
increase, this body of brood can be
removed to a new stand ten days af-
ter it was placed on top of the super.
Unless tate honey flow has stopped,
ripe queen -cells will be found and all
the brood wilt be healed so that when
the field -bees have returned to the
parent hive, there will be little dan-
ger of chilling the brood. The in-
crease should be examined in three
weeks to bemire the queen Is laying.
If the' beekeeper .does not wish to
make increase, all queen cells should
be destroyed within a week after the
brood was placed on top and the bees
will fill the combs with honey as the
bees emerge,
.1Vfuch honey Is lost fo the bee-
keeper b!'eatise o1' lack til' 1'00111 14.118
• ((1(1 a anoui,3 `,e ( xsimined at lona(
mink fluting a 1ioney flow nlirl
,in i „d,.(n iihc -1svt.1' take last 0115
n,S ,d Is one -hint to two-thirds 13135(1,
1 tlrie Mlilen, Provincial Apiarist,
tiollcgo, Guelph, •
mrappe trimmed with frills of soft
lace. Not many of her clothes suited
Tallack, she had discovered, and when
she had done arranging the house she
meant to turn her attention to the what 1 was going to say, you will under -
question of her wardrobe, But in the stand my business," said Miss Craw -
T
"You Are Working
Tpo Hard, John"
j ELL, T cannot help
that. I ani trying
to figure out how
the business is going to pull
through and meet the liabil-
ities with prices falling the
Way they have been lately."
"But, John, if anything
happens to the business your
health will be more neces-
sary to you than ever, and
you cannot afford to take
chances of putting sucha
strain on your nerves.
are looking so worried end
nervous, and you do not half
'sleet."
!`What am I to do? You
know 1 have got to keep
plugging along and try to see
things thronge.au can flu is
"One thing y
to bice;- ',• •"talent of Dr,
Food, Yov
me around when my nerves
gave out and I was so miser-
able,
Mr. Charles E. How, R. R.
No. 5, Aylmer, Ont., writes :
"My system became gen-
erally run down, and I -suffer-
ed from dull, heavy head-
aches. 1 was nervous, could
not sleep at night, and my
muscles used to twitch. My
appetite became poor. I h&d
indigestion and weak spell's.
I consulted a doctor, who
gave me a tonic, but it did no
good. I used other remedies,
too, before finally trying Dr.
Chase's Nerve Food. I found
that this 'did me more good
than allytlli)1'.e I lied ever
taken."
Dr. tibese's Nerve 'Food,
50 ca'
r ,
AUGUSTA VICTORIA. -
former Empress of Germany, who died'
Monday morning at ,Doors, Holland.
COULD CLINTON
FURNISH A CLASS?
Nowadays the cost of a pupil liv-
ing in the city while he obtains his
University 'education is so high that
many a bright pupil has had to
forego the opportunity of taking up
college work. Others too, who are
permanently empleyed, have had
ambition' to,fit themselves for a Un-
iversity degree but have to keep on
earning their living, In an effort to
meet such needs, and place the
highest and best university training
within - the reach of everyone, the
University of Toronto has formulat-
ed a scheme. which would appear to
I'll a long -felt want, In any com-
munity where as maim as twenty
candidates will present theins
etas
'
the University will undertake, so far
as its finances will allow, to provide
the class with instruction by mem-
bers of its regular staff and permit
the candidates to write on the reg-
ular examinations of the University.
it is not i oposed in any way to low-
er the prevent htglt standard of Un-
tversitly requirements but merely to
place the opportunity of University
instruction before every earnest stu-
dent. The University only made
this important decision at the March
meeting of the Senate, and will car-
ry it out up to the limit of its pow-
ers, as determined by its finances
and the size of its staff. It therefore
behooves those who are interested in
this announcement to act at the earl-
iest possible moment.
for 14 years, died at lleon, . LETTER o
11. Costanza, [ian7iltoil, awarded p3,- LETTER 1100.
200 damages eganist Canadian OIlnners,'
100 pounds dynamite and 200 elee•
trio caps stolen from quarry at Pundits 1
Twelve -year -aid and fetidly scalded,
baht by grandmother at Montreal,
fu
1 les °°"'N. to f
MY P1,4s ! Rockliffe aero dronte Is to be Opened
1 by April 25,
'Isuft''eredseverelyfrompileseiwrites I W, J. Woodlgnd was kited by a Toronto Ont,—"I suffered greatly
from wealtrresa; e0 the time, and had no
ambition to do any
thing or go any place.
My nerves were in
bad shape, I could
not sleep at night,
and then came a
breakdown. I read
of Lydia F. Pink -
ham's Vegetable
Compound in the
newspapers and sev-
eral of my friends
advised mete use it,
ar♦,-tt,pure y put new life into me. Now
I ant quite able to do,all my own work,
and I would strongly advise every suf-
fering woman to glue Lydia E. Pink-
ham'e Vegetable Compound a trial.' —
Banished Mrs, A. J Cornwell, Ml Tells Re�arkable Story
v ;Ill
MRS. WI KEI IN
fatally burned by 5041 heater igniting' Sickne s and Recovery.
gr. James Ruddy, of Killa►oe, Ont.,
'the pain at times was unbearable, i had
tried one after another of the so-called
'pile-remedies,but continued every bit
w bad as evor until I commenced the
Zane -Beit treatment. To my joy this
herbal healing balm 4peedily relieved the
beeline irritation. Perseverance ban-
lobed the piles completely' ht and
Per piles apply Zam-Buk at
lei it act wink you sleep, ' ZRallisttles
relined herbal essences speedily soothe
and heal the inflamed tissues --take away
'the burning pain and awful itching like
nothing else can. Earn-Buk is also the
bnist ppesible remedy for eczema, ulcers,
risemorm, poisoned -sores, burns, scalds,
and boils, rashes and other spring Aintroubles. Soc, boz3 for 11.25. Atldealers
or (tons. Zara -Buie Co., Toronto. .
quatry blast neer Cornwall,
W. L. Jepson appointed City Engi-
neer of Ntagnra Tails, Ontario,
invalid Windsor girl with revolver in
van tries to foil. robbers,
Regina City Council refuses use of
City Hall to Lindsay Crawford.
St. John, N. -B, Chinese protest to
Legisiatu're against'aesti-stall bili,
'Pussyfoot" Johnson hooted off plat-
form at Windsor Armories,
Edmonton's high school teachers, 75
In number, are on strike,
Squadron Leader Keith 'Failyour A, F,
C., C. A. F„ of Edmonton, killed.
' Third attack within year made on for -
Mrs. Thos. Marks,mother of the eignets' bakery in St, Catharines.
Marks brothers, theabrisai managers,, is Brant county's last toll road, the
dead.' Cockshutt road, taken over by county.
J, Smythe Kerr, prominent Ingersoil Boy made $21,1 profit per acre grow -
manufacturer, died suddenly Saturday. ing potatoes 111 Careten-Russell contest.
Few places in Province where !ironies BRITISH AND FOREIGN
allowed registration,
Windsor Citizens Liberty League wile
publish a daily newsp'aYer.
Geo. Bayne, Chief Inspector hi. B.
'Co., at Winnipeg, died suddenly.
A SPLENDID MEDICINE
FOR THE CHILDREN
Davit Balasco, the actor, is ill in New
York with pneumonia.
Negotiations over 'the miner's strike
situation in Britain are still on.
The U. S. Congress re -assembled yes-
terday. Harding reads message to -day.
Henry Brubacher Kitchener dies soon
After returning from funeral. , Roy Harris, who claimed to have
eilirdered Elwell, was released yester-
Milton"s new high school was for
mdlly opened, ' - day
Ex-Postinester King of Calgary given
trip to Edrspe.
Telespherre Gauthier drops dead at
Mowat Hospital, Kingston.
Frank Plain killed by train striking
g
his motor car treat St. Thomas.
Sheriff Samuel Armstrong, of Parry
Sound dies suddenly, aged 77.
W. W. Rutherford, for 36 years Prin-
cipal Alymer High School, is dead..
Toronto's appeal against express: rate
increase presented to Federal Cabinet,
Board of Control strikes 33 mills as a
tax sate.
Reorganized 48th Highlanders (told
first route march.
Knox College graduates receive dip-
lomas and prizes.
Toronto World has been absorbed
by Mail and Empire.
Toronto's Mayor blames Raney for
unworkable Fair Rent Bill,
Roscoe Leigh killed by work train at
Hydro canal,
Dr. A. W, Nixon, M. P. P., for Halton
Baby's Own Tablets are the best
medicine a mother can give a her little
ones. They are a mild laxative which
quickly regulate the bowels and stom-
ach and are guaranteed to be entirely
free from any injurious drugs. Con-
cerning them Mrs, A, D. West, Lore -
burn, Saskatchewan, writes:—Baby's
Own Tablets have given me more satis-
faction than anything else I have ever
given my children. They are easily
taken; always work well and though 1
have given quite a few to nay baby they
seem to \mark as well now as at hest,
which is something other laxatives sel-
dom do." The Tablets are sold by ail
medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents
box, from The Dr, Williams' Medicine
Co., Il4rockville, Ont. .
WORLD WIDE NEWS
IN TABLOID FORM
Happenings Concerning the Small
and Great From Far and
Near.
THE DOMINION
Cabinet Ministers fail to bring pack-
ers and strikers together,
Steel cargo steamer Idejord launched
at Montreal.
Wheat sowing well under way in
Peterboro district.
Some sixty Stmcoe young men or-
ganize Canadian Club. '
kid,eys Troubled Her.
BACK ACHE SO BAD
COULD NOT SLEEP. i
• The epidemic of ",Flu" ham a great deal
to be responsible for. In neatly every
case it has left some „bad after effects,
and in a great many cases it is the
kidneys that have suffered.
When the kidneys have been left id a
weakened state, very often some serious
kidney trouble will follow if not attended
to. Doan's Kidney .Pills} ,will prove to
be just the remedy yousegture to strength-
od them.
Miss Florence Earnshaw, Apsley, Ont.!
writest—"Last winter, after I had the
".Flu" I was troitblod wish my kidneys.
My bask ached sox could not sleep and
my Ankles were so ravelled I could not
Willi:, A neighbor told mo about Doan's
Kidney Pills, I got two boxers, and
itofore I hrd rho feat ono lateen I telt
a change 1 cannot recommend your
medicine enough.'
Be sum and get Doan's Yfiduey Pills
when you astc for diem, An oblong gray.
box' a maple leaf rho trade mark, price
li„n„line, Jiarniltori, appointed gds; a box at all. &cater, or e'^i1^
Aired on redeipt of
Ad '4nre'
4
{
Former Kaiser will accompany the ex-
Kaiserises body to the German frontier.
The N. Y. Legislature wants duty on
removed.
remo
a cs lumber
Ca
Canadian
The strike ordered by the Triple
Alliance has been delayed.
Marshal Foch has made plans for fur-
ther advance into Germany,
Mrs. CHARLES WAKELIN, 272 Christie
St., Toronto, Ont.'
The makers of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound have thousands of ,
such letters as that above—they tell the
truth, else they could not have been ob-
tained for love or money. This medicine
is no stranger—it has stood' the test for
more than forty years.
If there are any complications you do
not understand write to Lydia E. Pink -
ham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn,
)tiAea.
Allied levy on German goods will be.
gin April
Sir Arthur Griffiths Boscawen has
been elected for Taunton. '
Germany will make another offer to
France yefore May 1.
British coal mine leaders will meet
Premier again today,
The British Admiralty denies ships
for Japan being buil . in 13 itain,
President Harding delivered hi, first
message to Congress yest( eday.
Coal miners have refused to leapt
LI. George's basis of negotiation.
Lloyd George may mediate dispute
I over island of Yap.
Former King Karl of Hungary is back
in Switzerland.
The League of Notions Commission is
meeting in Geneva.
i Chicago has lost its whole supply of
radium,
Premier Hughes says Anglo -Jap pact Cron I Forces setae rebel arsenal in
must satisfy the U. S. Cork.
Crown Prince Rupprecht has wedded
Princess Antoie te of Luxembourg.
.
The Pope's Swiss guard are in a fer-
ment over their leader's resignation,
Archbishop Walsh of Dublin, Ireland,
is dead.
London is beginning to look like an
armed camp,
t920 was a record year for marriages
in Great Britain.
Unions in United States plan trust
company to fight Capital.
F'a'ther negotiations on coal situa-
tion in Britain will, take place to-dp,
Independent companies in the U. S.
have advanced prices of steel goods.
The British Government will entire-
ly ignore charges by the Committee
of 100.
re
Long Distance Service
Is Now Classified
rlr HE Classifications on long distance telephone calls in effect from midnight,
I April 20th, are of interest to all users of that service. It is possible, by a study of
your long distance requirements, to effect savings in your long distance bills that are
well worth while.
Station -to -Station Service
Station -to -Station ee vice should 'to used when you are willing to talk 'to
ANYONE at a distant telephone —
that is, when you do not need to get a
'particular parson on the line.
Station -to -Station service is not only
cheaper, but more rapid and accurate
than Person -to -Person service. On'Sta-
tion-to-Station service the call can be
completed as soon as the distant tele-
phone is answered, while on a Person -to -
Person call the particular party wanted
must be located and sum nosed to the
telephone.
The charge for a Station -to -Station
call cannot be reversed — that is, it can-
not be charged to the telephone called,
for in that case the telephone operator
would have to locate a particular person
to approve the charge, which would make
it a Person -to -Person call.
Person -to -Person Service
When you make a call specifying that
conversation is desired with a particular
person at a }liven number, Person -to -
Person service is used.
As this service requires greater oper- Evening and Night Rates
ating labor and circuit time than a
Station -to -Station call, the rate is about The EVENING rate, between 8.30
25 per cent greater. p.m. and 12 midnight, on station-to-
iatt o calls,
a lThe NIGH rate between the
day
station -to -
Examples of Different Rates night and 4.30 a.m., is;about tee -fourth
Following are examples showing the the day station -to -station rate.
station -to -station and person -to -persons However, no evening or night rates
rates for distances up to sixty-four miles: are quoted on station -to -station calls
where the day rate is less than 25 cents.
On such short -haul calls the day rate
I .....$0.10 $0,15 - evepnin and night rates are quoted.
12-24 .15 .2() Because ft is diliicult to reach particu-
24-24 .2t) .25 lar persons at night, when many are
2A•-32 . O away from their homes and places of
32-40 . . . . . ....... . 30 .40 business, there are no special evening or
40-43 .35 .45 night rates quoted for person-to-person
4(3'56 ' .40 .50 calls. They apply only on station -to-
5,",•, , . , .... , 45 .55 station calls.
Decry' Dell Telephone is a Zona Distance Station
The, ell Tele h'.„ne Company
OF CANADA
Appointment and Messenger
Service
Appointment calls and Messenger
calls are special kinds -of person-to-per-
son calls.
An APPOINTMENT CALL rate,
which is about 50 per cent higher than
the station -to -station rate, is quoted for
service when an appointment is made by
the calling party to talk at a particular
time.
When a person who does not have a
telephone is called over long distance and
a messenger must be sent to summon the
party to the telephone; the MESSEN-
GER CALL rate, which is about 50 per
cent higher than the station -to -station
rate, is charged, and to this is added the
necessary messenger charges.
The Report Charge
When you place a call for a particular
person or persons anal for any reason they
cannot be reached the same day at the
address given, or will not talk, or if you
make a call and you are not ready to
talk when the other person is ready with-
in an hour, a REPORT CHARGE is
made. The report charge is about one-
fourth the station -to -station rate. It is
intended to cover part of our expense of
handling the ,uncompleted call.
Station -to- Person -to -
Station Rate Person Trate sa a lies. For longer distances special
tt,