charlese wrote:My favorite phone was one with no dial. When we picked it up and found no one else was using the line, we got an "Operator". She always asked "Number please". We'd give her the 4 digit number we wanted to call and we were then connected.
If I had to call my dad's office that actually had an exchange, I'd say to the Operator, Haymarket 4234. When the rotary phones came along, had to dial, HAY 4234.
My grandparents had one with no dial. They lived in Somerset, PA. The lumber Mill was in Berlin about 9 miles away. I spent the summers with them when I was 5-7 years old. Grandpa used to take me to work every day but sometimes I would not get up. I remember grandma calling Berlin by picking up the phone and saying "Berlin xxxx".
So Charlese here is what I don't understand (bear with me). My grandfather bought the H. F Ball planing mill somewhere around 1950. It had been there a very long time. He gave me a rosewood square in the early '50s that had owners marks on the brass and the rosewood "H. F. Ball".
My cousin still owns the company but when my uncle died in 2013 at 92 I wanted to do something special. I had the square. I Googled H. F. Ball and found an almost new advertising thermometer for the H. F. Ball Planing Mill in an antique shop in Bedford PA. She wanted $75. I called her and she was the most nice person in the world. I explained my connection to the thermometer hoping she would come down in price. I did not ask and she did not come down. OK, the item was priceless to me.
So I built a shadow box with the H. F. Ball original square and the original thermometer that commemorates my uncle that I worked for before I enlisted in the USAF.
The last picture is of the plaque hanging in the customer service area of the current Berlin Lumber Company.
After all that here is the question. The phone number on the thermometer is 4-J. I can not find any history of that type of phone number. Any ideas?