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Judge, 1923-01-06 · page 25 of 36

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Judge — January 6, 1923 — page 25: Judge, 1923-01-06

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the majority of leading makes of auto- mobiles is truly remarkable. An auto- mobile is a highly refined piece of mechan- ism which will give satisfactory service under normal conditions when properly handled. Accidents will happen, how- ever. The ge motorist is not ai too familiar with the operation of his car, and in consequence the ability of the dealer to furnish the right kind of servic from friendly advice to labor and spare parts, frequently becomes the dominating factor in the sele« ber that your local dea sentative of your car in your territor: and his ability and willingness to give the proper kind of service can help to make your motoring all that it should be or may transform it into a nightmare annoyance and accidents. of trouble, DO YOU KNOW questions will be found in the + Department 3 TO QUESTIONS IN. THE MOTOR DEPARTMENT LAS’ engine « on will be New Boarder—I wouldn’t stay in this place. I looked into a closet, and there was the family skeleton! “You're wrong! That's our oldest boarder, and that closet is his room!” tae DMIRAL HUGH RODMAN, commander of the American Battleship Division with the British Grand Fleet, attended a reception given by Admiral and Lady Beatt: was presented to an elde Mary Ann E| Somebody’ else. ring of names and the en said: r name is too long. You call me Hugh and ii call you Mary.” | Linking city, village and farm, crossing mountain and wilderness, the telephone system challenges Nature in her strong- | holds and battles her fiercest moods. Out on his lonely ““‘beat” the telephone trouble-hunter braves the blizzard on snow-shoes, body bent against the wind, but eyes intent upon the wires. North, south, east, west—in winter and summer, in forest and desert—the telephone workers guard the highways of com- munication. Traveling afoot where there are no roads, crawl- ing sometimes on hands and knees, riding on burros, or motor- toward Better Service Whatever else may fail cycles, or trucks, they “get there” as they can. When Nature rages to that point where few things can stand against her, when property is destroyed and towns cut off, the telephone is needed more than ever. No cost is too much, no sacrifice too great, to keep the wires open. If telephone poles come down with the storm, no matter how distant they may be, no matter how difficult to reach, somehow a way is found, some- how—in blizzard, hurricane, or flood—the service is restored. Whatever else may fail, the telephone service must not fail, if human effort can prevent it. This is the spirit of the Bell System. ° “BELL SYSTEM” AND ASSOCIATED COMPANIES One Policy, One System, Universal Service, and all directed aepace The $14-4/14 C2, eerfetiv ext dimond, pepe. ne fioods: Thegeands Baton hast sel NON Why Pay Full Prices go abehaobend costs fee sSaatenty Free exartala ican vale, Bxplalad a ete eee. Jes, De Roy & Cultivate Your Musical “Bump’ Hap Qa Tune in One four