Showing posts with label Bavarian Etiquette History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bavarian Etiquette History. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Insulting Operators is Rude

   


The chief operator and the central-office girls of a telephone company went on strike because the company refused to take out the telephone in the residence of a prominent society woman who persisted in using abusive language toward the telephone girls, although requested and warned not to do so. – Image of Female Telephone Operator Wearing Earphones And A Mouth Piece. Circa 1911 from Pinterest

Prince Insults “Central,” is Given a Fine
Over in Wurzburg they have a proper and wholesome code of ethics with reference to correct treatment of telephone girls. Prince Charles, of Wrede, had the temerity to tell a telephone girl what he thought of the telephone service at Ansbach. For his indiscretion he was fined seven dollars by a court-martial. The Prince admitted he said that the Ansbach telephone office was a hog pen and that the girls evidently were reading novels between the switches. His only plea in extenuation was that he was exasperated over the bad service. 
It was conceded in the court-martial proceedings that the telephone service at Ansbach was superlatively bad. Even so, it was found that the Prince's telephone manners were superlatively bad in directing insulting remarks to the telephone girls. It were well if the same correct code of telephone manners were in vogue in this country. Even though the service at times may be exasperatingly bad, and even though the telephone girl apparently may be neglectful of her duty at times, these things do not excuse insulting, abusive language. 
Over in Wheeling, W. Va., a few days ago, the chief operator and the central-office girls of a telephone company went on strike because the company refused to take out the telephone in the residence of a prominent society woman who persisted in using abusive language toward the telephone girls, although requested and warned not to do so. Merely because a young woman is employed in a telephone exchange, where the public may talk to her in the course of telephone service, does not make it proper, gentlemanly or lady-like for patrons of the telephone to insult or abuse her. She is just as much entitled to considerate treatment as the exclusive Young lady in fine apparel in the most aristocratic home. -Morning Union, 1913



 🍽Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Dinner with a Sleeping Prince


 Luitpold Karl Joseph Wilhelm Ludwig, Prince Regent of Bavaria. He was the regency ruler from 1886 to 1912, due to the incapacity of his nephews, King Ludwig II (for 3 days) and King Otto (for 26 years.) –
 Public domain image, of Prinzregent Luitpold (or Prince Leopold


He Served a Fine Dinner 
This Prince Enjoyed It, and the Famished Guests Politely Smiled

Prince Leopold, the late-Regent of Bavaria, was extremely hospitable, receiving many guests and keeping open house, to which came in turn officers, scientists, artists, manufacturers —all the best society in Munich. Himself, the wielder of an excellent knife and fork, he took the pleasures of the table seriously and desired that all his guests should do the same.

Some weeks before his last illness he fell asleep at a dinner party immediately after the first course. His guests were restrained by respect for etiquette from waking him, but continued their conversation in low tones. The servants did not dare to continue serving the dinner. The Prince continued to sleep and soon began to snore. The guests continued their conversation in somewhat louder tones, but the Prince slept for two hours, during which time, no one left his place The guests sat famished in the same room with a marvelously appointed dinner. 

At length, Prince Leopold awoke. He gave a hurried glance round the table and saw only a number of well-mannered guests, successfully pretending to have noticed nothing. Persuaded that his doze had passed completely unobserved, he said. “Now let us go and take coffee.” The guests rose accordingly and proceeded to the drawing room. They were served with coffee, liqueurs and cigars. The Prince, thoroughly refreshed by his sleep, indulged in a great deal of excellent conversation which lasted till midnight. The party then broke up. and the guests departed, famished with hunger, with an official smile upon their lips. – Blue Lake Advocate, 1913


Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia