. Bell telephone magazine . y as well as Army —to study the service problems whicharise there. Starting with the South-western Bell Telephone Company in1910, he held traffic assignmentsthere, with the Long Lines Depart-ment, and with the New York Tele-phone Company before joining thetraffic results section of the A. T. &T. Companys O. & E. Departmentin 1922. For the past 13 years hehas had to do chiefly with activitieswhich help pbx customers in theoperation of their switchboards. Secretary of the Telephone Pio-neers of America since 1939, when hewas appointed a staff assistant in thePersonnel


. Bell telephone magazine . y as well as Army —to study the service problems whicharise there. Starting with the South-western Bell Telephone Company in1910, he held traffic assignmentsthere, with the Long Lines Depart-ment, and with the New York Tele-phone Company before joining thetraffic results section of the A. T. &T. Companys O. & E. Departmentin 1922. For the past 13 years hehas had to do chiefly with activitieswhich help pbx customers in theoperation of their switchboards. Secretary of the Telephone Pio-neers of America since 1939, when hewas appointed a staff assistant in thePersonnel Relations Department ofthe A. T. & T. Co., Samuel traces the development ofthe Association during a third of acentury from small beginnings to itspresent position of importance. Inplant work with the New EnglandTelephone and Telegraph Companyfrom 1906 to 1927, he was on thestaff of the plant operation resultsengineer of the A. T. & T. Companyfor the next dozen years until hispresent In this shipyard, portable telephones which can be clamped to a ships rail,and which connect by means of marine jacks installed on outfitting docks, ex-pedite the work after a vessel has been launched by bringing needed tools, parts,and men to the spot much more quickly than the messenger service formerlyused. Said one yard official, Your installation of telephones on board ships. . has speeded up the outfitting activity ... While this picture relatesparticularly to Telephone Service for War Industries, beginning on page 91,it is also illustrative of war-time use of the telephone which is the topic of other articles in this issue With Additions to Plant Severely Curtailed^ Increasing Numbers of Calls Make It Progressively More Difficult to Maintain Service Performance at Its Usual Level The Impact of War onLong Distance Service Mark R. Sullivan The following article gives in narrative form the sub-stance of much of Vice President Sullivans testimonyconcerning toll board se


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Keywords: ., bookauthoramerican, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookyear1922