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Prattsburg Independent Wednesday ,April 28, 1943 Edith Donley, Local Representative Miss Dorothy Jean Kennedy of Candor, spent her Easter vaca tion with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kennedy. Mrs. George Simmons enter tained in honor of the fourth birthday anniversary of her small son Gene, Wednesday. Mrs. Lula Brownell and son of Hammondsport, were guests at the home of Mrs. Augustus Peterson. NEW ADC RAID INSTRUCTIONS Miss Martha McConnell is Manure that contains much spending her Easter recess with straw is best not. applied to the her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W a r - garden as the decay of the straw ren McConnell. Miss McConnell will temporarily prevent the Vs ordered by will graduate from Keuka Col- garden crops from getting much 1 defense command, lege this year, she has accepted of the nitrogen- in the soil, a position as teacher in Elmira. Miss June Angliss spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Angliss. Miss Angliss is a student at the M o r-i risville Technical School and hasi accepted a position this summer in a Rochester hospital. ‘H e llo/ I t ’s Icela n d Pirivate Robert McConnell of Camp Chaffee, Ark., has been spending a ten day furlough with his mother, Mrs. Della M c C o n nell and other relatives here and in Pulteney. Mr. and Mrs. R o - Sundav'bert Cowan and daughter, D e l- Mr. and ores of Pulteney, were Sunday, guests of her mother, Mrs Della McConnell. Mrs. Augustus Peterson was the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Ed ward Cartwright at her home in Bath, part o f last week. Mr. and M rs Arthur Ayers have purchased the Elizabeth LaShure home on Penn Yan St., | and will take possession May 15 j ‘G e t m e s ’ A r e G e t t i n g I t B u t N o t as T h e y ’ d W i s h A public telephone Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hatch and Mr. and Mrs. Otto W e aver andv small son John, were recent1 guests of Mrs. Bessie Erway in Watkins Glen. Mrs. Ethel Brown of Naples, is Rome patriotic ribbing is the lot these days of members of what haR 1 \public” Is this one being used by been called the \Unexalted Order of ' Telephone Getmes ” A “getme” is de scribed as anjone who, telling an assis tant to \get so-and-so on the telephone for me,” is not waiting at his own tele phone or at least instantly available when the other person answers. Patriotism enters the picture because telephone lines, particularly those to and from war activity centers, m u s t be the guest o f her son, Cliffdrd and ke» t a« tr* e « possible nowadays for •7 ^ <-< * j • - ' calls vital to the war effort. W h e n Mr. family. On Saturday evening they entertained' Rev. ward Rodisch for and Mrs. dinner. Ed- Miss Yvonne Jeanroy of Ro chester, spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Aug ustus Jeanroy, they all with lit tle Bernice Jeanroy were busi ness callers m Rochester, day Qetme slows up the service he m a y be delaying the making of a bomb for Hitler besides being discourteous to the person at the other end of the line. Deploring the “getme habit,” a news paper editor commented recently: \By the time you are permitted to listen to the person who is calling you about his own business, you are in the hum o r to hang up or to bellow ‘No’ to any request he makes. Quite often you find | you are being asked to do a favor for I a stranger! As you put the instrum e n t s m a ll ( back ypu ask yourself, ‘W h y does a with| man do it that way”'” the eastern U. S. A rm y and the N e w York State Director of Civilian Protection, changes in the procedure of conducting blackouts and air raid drills w ill now be observed as follows: (a ) One steady blast of the siren for a two-minute period will, denote ‘Caution’- planes are in your vicinity, you may be attacked. - - / 1. Turn out your lights and ^ e A-VE THEM OUT until the street lights are again on. 2. Traffic w ill continue move ment using the low beam head light, and pedestrians may con tinue movement* (b ) A series of short blasts of the siren for a like period o f time denote- ‘Planes are over head’ you w ill be attacked. 1. Traffic w ill stop at the side of the highway and turn out its lights, - seek shelter. (c) Following the total black out period your siren will again few of'-the U. S. Army soldiers sta - l s o u n d o n e steady b last lo r t w o tloned “somewhere in Iceland.\ The minutes. This w ill1 mean you are Acme Photo that Is really a booth, which looks like a cross be- tween a pagbda and a show case, is located at the city’s busiest intersec tion. GUARD THE YO U N G EYES OF TODAY FOR THE TASKS OF TOMORROW WITH A PERIODIC EYE-EXAMINATIOfcl Morris C. V eit Optometrist 162 Liberty Street Bath, N. Y. Telephone 672 Opposite Post O ffice i \ n v n u STAGING ‘ARMY HOUR’ , ' IS REAL GLOBAL JOB Broadcasts from \Ends oi Earth' Bring Battlefronts Near M o n -. Mrs. Oliver Jensen and daughter, spent last week her mother, Mrs. Floyd Jones and family in Rochester. Mrs. Lyman Towner spent the week here with; Nervousness, worry and fatigue the Jensen family. Mr. and Mrs. ■ are enemies of fat. A wholesale Jones and Charles Cinsebox outlook on life helps a person ‘ brought Mrs. Jensen home and to gain weight more easily and spent the weekend here. I to be a better person to live with. Mr. and M rs. K irk Carpenter,, Mr. and M rs. A lb e r t SchonherJ Mr. and M r s Ward M c C o n n e ll, and M r and Airs. H o w a r d Don-j ley w e re dinner guests Wednes-1 day, A p r il 28 at the National! Hotel in Bath Th e y celebrated ] the w e d d in g anniversary o f both1 M r and M rs. D o n ley and Mr. and Mrs C a rpenter _ I I Oar Job Is to Save Dollars War Bonds \\ Every Pay Day Miss Eunice Stum iiler enter tained a number of ladies at h e r i home on Sunday afternoon, in honor o f h e r sister in law, Mrs. Theodore S tum iiler, w h o with Mrr. S tu m iiler and their small daughter, Susan o f B u ffalo, were weekend guests at the Stumiiler home ' L o s t a n d foun d c o lu m n s o f T o k io n e w s p a p e rs a r e c r o w d e d these d a y s . E v e r y tim e a n A m e r ic a n buys a W a r B o n d , th e Ja p s lose face . B u y y o u r 10% ev e ry p a y d a y . Read our Want Column page 7. on page 7. “Army Hour,” official program of the U. S. Army, rounding out in A p r il its first year of broadcasts by N BC from New York, in as ‘‘global’’ as the war itself. It follows the soldiers of .Uncle Sam and h is allies to the, ends of the earth. On more than sixty occasions “A rm y Hour” has gone overseas and to points in every cQntinent for pick-ups, broad casting reports from battlefronts and messages from privates and generals. It has broadcast from more than 200 places in this country — from camps, training schools, depotfe, air fields, war plants, and maneuver a r e i^. The problem of organizing and pro ducing each program is a huge vne. Each remote broadcast within vthe United States (there have been as many as fifteen op one program) re quires an announcer, ^a production director, an engineer, at least one microphone, a “remote” outfit, a field telephone direct to Radio City, plus detailed advance arrangements so that the soldiers and equipment needed will be at the right place at the’ r ig h t time. At the New York end an orches tra, choir and actors as well as an nouncers and engineers must also be on hand. In arranging these programs w ith in the United States, the production di rector and the writer representing the Army have made 2,000 or more long distance telephone calls, excluding overseas conversations, and sent about the same number of teletype messages, alone with numerous other w ritten messages. NBC’b assistant manager of news and special events, arranging a broadcast from overseas, calls London or Cairo as casually as one calls a neighbor. During a broadcast he m a y be speaking to Australia while E g y p t is on the air— g iving cues, orders, and cuts. (back on ‘Caution’- planes have passed over but are in the .vicinity and may again come back. 1. Building lights and street lights w ill R EM AIN OUT.. 2. Traffic and .pedestrians; may again resume movement. (d ) The ‘AH Clear’ when con ditions revert to normal w ill NOT be sounded by your siren, but w ill be given in the follow ing manner. 1. The street lights will be turned on. • 2. The air raid wardens w ill sound their whistles. S e r v i c e s I n O u r C h u r c h e s ^ * Methodist Episcopal Church Bev. Harry Stokes, Pastor Fraitsfcwrf Preabytaran Church B . W. Pastor PoHosey M tdM Ait Church Kcv. Harry Stoke^ PiMtor A dim* out of avaiy dollar wa Mrn IS OUR QUOTA for VICTORY with U.S. WAR BONDS >4 ^4 ^ ' Farm Poetinf Sign* ibis office. <5. . , <a — Use our Want Column! J f « U . S . W A R B O N D S Y O U R S K I N l ! « H avi « « looked « yobi cooplexio* fcpelr? gealty W m m it? . . . I* H toft, smoddi and .-dm? Or is k a little oswfe a Ut& rough?-,,-,? \ Whwerdays p ty havoc w h h tout Oom. ' Dry asrand harsh winds exhaust‘in na*- « n l «ib. O u s e your face «o bacom Jitcd Mid old-lookin*. Begin today to M t O utdoor G im . Face- Poor oct its unique O l i t * O i l base Jim - t^f A in the moisture it needs to remans ••oft, farm and youthful* Vet OuTOop*' Gnaisfluffy-dry.lt doesn't d o g the pofo. •*ln 7 until shades to blend with an? eomjWa- ion. In lira* economy-tue* at-1 tiding 4ns *»• Apartment (ton* — 50 c. 2X Mail coupon 10* generous free samples, O U T D O O R G I R L o l i v e o i l f a c e p o w d e r CRYSTAL CORPORATION, DEPT. N, * w llLIS AVENUE, NEW YO R K CITY send me Flee Ttiil Package* of 5 slcin- it shades ot OuTOOOft Giai OUrrOH owder. i a Please H Mfadint flact-ron yAddn hl City ___ JStati . N O O flE likes to lie awake; yet am y night toss and tumble, count abeep, worry an4 **•*» be cause they can’t get to sleep. Next day many feel Iftoll, logy, headacbey and irritable* ' « • Has this ever happened to you? When it does, i h y lon*t you do as many other people do when Nervee ' threaten to spoil their rest, w&rk, enjoyment, and good •exrrper — try D r . M i l e s E ffervescen t N e r v i n e T a b l e t s f * D r. Miles Effervescent Nervine Tablets are a comblna- Bon o£ soild sedatives proven Useful for generations as aa • aid in quieting jumpy, over-strained nerves. f c 8 £ f * ctions Y o u r dr IkVMbn. Effervescent __________________ , econom ical large packages. W h y n o t get a packag* an d be prepared 'when over-taxed nerves threaten to Interfere -with, yo u r w o rk o r sp o il y o u r pleasure. S m a ll Package 35# k 400 W.ITNESS T H E FIRST W I L L DICTATED OVER TELEPHONE Heir to a small fortune but near death in his native land, a Persian youth recently became the first person to dictate his w ill by telephone direct to a courtroom. No lawyer would visit the lad nor accept documents from his hand be cause he was a leper A judge agreed that the necessary procedure could be bandied by telephone. He called for witnesses. Four hundred crowded into the courtroom. They listened by loud speaker to the conversation between the judge and the testator and then all signed a record of the proceedings. .gist w ill be, glad to Sell yon Dr. MOaa Nervine Tablets i n convenient small or L a rge Package - 75# DR. MILES NERVINE New 9 x at Bolles. 12 Gold Seal Rugs TABLETS f t A i d t o E n e m y “ Any Am erican who wilfully neglefcts to pay his taxes on time ox to .invest every cent he can in War Bonds is surely giv ing aid and comfort to1 the enemy . . . W e have a job to do and we are all called fo r service to our country. Our dollars are called to service too. Let us all ask ourselves, ‘Shall we be m ore -tender w ith our dollars than with the lives' of our sons?’ ” — Secretary Morgenthau. e s c a p e s p * i s ° * cA M P _ Mrs.Gv,endo-1 line Priesthood. Ne* , York. City. vnie oi an RAF pilol, claims to be Prsl woman in this war to escape i r 8 \\ o W , sho escaped, to C \ ci* -^gk‘ng: ,O I~ Mr*, n &9l9ht coi. in thi r ° g W e im p ing to I “CLEANLINESS ‘IS NEXT TO IMPOSSIBLE\— IfXliis Leatherneck (and they're leather all fhe ^<4 way* down)^enjoys hard-won ptac% and I as be shares ksee*deep in a Guadalcanal • _ j.. _ ______ i^_-- (