TELEPHONE AND THE PUBLIC Borne Fiott About th Growth of Thii Meaci of O.anmaica'.ion. Engineering problems of service Grad nates of Tecfanoloalrat Irhoali Are Sow Devotlas; Tline to Tkla Branfta of A p ' ailed Eleetrlcs. BOSTON, Feb. t7.-(8peclal.)-'Whfn a persons says "hello" In Boston and another hrarii and echoes the word In Chicaco er New Orleans, the process, simple a It twniK to the modern man of business, has Involved several hundred other people, eacli with a specially trained Intelliirence. The greatest marvel of thn modern telephone la not that telephony ia possible but that the thousand and one details of operating can be looked after ko successfully. To accomplish all this enormous tank, to keep the line open, and the apparatus In order, and to meet the endless problems that arise In the Installation of new services, the last two decides have seen the development of an entirely new profession Into which hun dreds of young Americans have entered, that of the telephone engineer. The complexity of all work that has to do with electricity and the rapidity with which the use of the mysterious and Mem Insrly miraculous current has become part and parcel of modem Industrial and municipal life baa made a thorough pre liminary training the first necessity to the young man who enters any of the various department of electrical engineering. At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, for example, there were two graduates In electrical engineering In MH while today there are some 200 young men studying this one general subject and among them at least one in every six Is especially Inter ested In telephony. Yet these students, of course, 'represent only a fraction of the number of future telephone engineers now training at the various schools and colleges that have followed the Institute's example In establishing courses In what Is perhaps the most important of the modern "com mercial professions." Growth of Telephony, The subject of telephony has grown to uch proportions In the past decade that the Idea of devoting a departments study entirely to telephone engineering has been more or lee discussed In some quarters, but such an Independent department could hardly be conducted satisfactorily, owing to the unavoidable close connection be tween the telephone and several branches of applied science. As a prominent tele phone man has put It, "A good telephone engineer is practically all kinds of an en gineer." In other words, the man who plans the Installation of a telephone serv ice encounters problems that belong to the mechanical engineer as well as others that embrace every branch of electrical engin eering. , The basis of the telephone engineers' training Is such a knowledge of the high est mathematics as will enable him to maJce the endless computations necessary to (he production of any plan, whether for a mall Induction coll or for the wires of a transcontinental system. He must know the Itogth and breadth of theoretical elec tricity; ha must understand the general phenomena and laws of sound, especially as they relate to speeob and hearing; and of course he must be expertly familiar with the various details of telephonlo communi cation and the Installation and manage ment of great systems. These things the technical school teaches "him In lecture rooms and laboratories, by endless experi ments, by observation and finally by aotual working experience. As he advances, his work assumes much the character of pro fessional talks with electrical experts, for men who are closely associated with the practical branches of applied science lecture at the Institute on the latest developments of their special subject, and the labora tory equipment Includes a miniature tele phone system complete to the most minute detail. No Llsait to Service. The engineer foresees the time when telephone communication will be a matter of course In every community; when not only will telephones be used more- fre quently than the maila or the telegraph, but when people will carry on long-dlstanoe conversations as naturally and with as lit tle effort as they wuld talk face to face. In the light of progress In the last quartor century It Is not difficult to Imagine such things, but the average telephone user of today has no more Idea what the build ing up of suoh a universal system In volves than he has of the tremendous en gineering accomplishment which Is placed at . his service every time he talks over the wire. There are now something like 0,000,000 people In the United States who have access to u. telephone and from their own locality they can talk over two-thirds f this country. But telephone develop ment, although Involving a problem of con stantly Increasing difficulty, has proceeded along the lines of least resistance; the first exchanges have been established In the larger cities and towns because here the demand was most imperative. The link ing together of theee tenters of population and the saturation of the Intermediate country districts by means of telephone connections has been gradually going on at the aame time with the steady Improve ment of the service offered by the great controlling Bell company; so two distinct sets of problems have required simultane ous solution. The telephone receiver used today with all Its Increased efficiency Is practically as Simple as the one Alexander Graham Bell exhibited at the Centennial exhibition In rhlladelphla In 1K7; but In the transmitter that stsnda on the twentieth century man's desk or hangs on the well In bis house a wonderful Improvement has been mad and In the development of the present well-nigh perfect mechenlsm millions of Instruments have been thrown away to make room for better ones. Cost of Arrommodat leg easterners. Today the current Is sent out on a wire of copper Instead of a wire of Iron and Is brought back on a duplicate copper wire Instead of finding its way through the earth, which Is generally charged with other electric currents. A wonderful econ omy of space has been secured by Inclos ing the Insulated copper wires In cables, whether the lines are Intended for overhead or underground structures, and the extent to which this economy has been carried appears In the fact that It Is usual to have ino pairs of wires In one lead-encased cable. The hanging of thousands of tons of copper In the form of thousands of miles of wire year after year Is compara tively easy to understand, but In the ex changethe clearing house where the cop per nerves reaching thousands of different points are under Instant control a multi tude of Intricate and absorbing problems has been worked out. As telephony has progressed and the use of telephones Increased many fold the cost of the instruments themselves has decreased, but the Investment required for the "central" plant has grown tremen dously larger. Few people realize that the switchboard through which their dally communications are made costs many hun dred thousand dollars, or even, In city like New York, several millions. They do not realize that It Is a very elaborate piece of mechanism made up of millions of small mechanical parts all of which must be ad justed with the most painstaking exactness, nor that In talking 1,500 miles, say from Boston to jCansas City, they are given the exclusive use of property which has cost probably 1500,000. and the assistance of twenty-flve operators and that no one else can use Sot the time being the 8,000 miles of wire which If melted into one Ingot would weigh over 600 tons. All the work of the engineer and me rhanlo which Is at the Immediate service of anybody anywhere merely for the ring ing of a bell, costs enormously. The hun dreds of millions of poles must be fre quently renewed at great expense and the switchboards costing fortunes are hardly Installed before they must be remodeled to Include some new Invention or thrown on the scrap heap to make way for a more perfect and efficient system. No price Is too high to pay for the best possible service and the best possible service Is demanded quite as vigorously by the Bell company, which has already covered so large an area with its wires and which leases Its appara tus rather than sell It, so as to make sure that It shall be properly maintained nnd kept up to the standard, as by the cue tomer. Competing companies organised on the theory that wires and equipment would be unaffected by storms or accident, that a switchboard once Installed would become a permanent source of revenue, have often come to grief because they have not cor rectly gauged the requirements of the tele phone using public or the expense of main taining and developing a satisfactory eys tern. The problem of charges In Itself Is one which has been worked out only by slow degrees. When telephones were In an ex perlmental stags a flat charge for the use of an Instrument was made, but as the business has Increased such a charge has come to appear almost as unfair and Im practicable as if a flat charge were made by. a milkman for all bis customers with' out regard to the quantity of milk de livered. Trend of the Progress. All this time the Inevitable progress of telephone engineering has been toward unl versal service. The public has not seen It, but the telephone engineer and the tele phone manager have seen It and have been working with this great problem constantly In view. There are greater mountains to be crossed with pole lines, greater perfec tion of apparatus to be achieved, and a bet ter organization of various systems to be established before a universal telephone system can become a reality. The financial problem connected with a telephone system perfectly adapted to the purpoees of the 90.000,000 American people is a weighty one. When that condition approaches there will be no question of competing lines or of opposition companies. Every user of a telephone will want to be in touch with every other user of a telephone through a single system which will be adequate and complete. When such a system Is realised. and it will be, the engineers say, before another generation. It will be the most comprehensive business utility the country has ever seen, and for Its completion the force of telephone engineers, trained by the most careful and thorough methods of modern technical education, must be largely Increased year by year. Glimpses Into Mythology. Stentor was being ridiculed about his loud voice. "I know it's fierce," he bellowed. "I wonder if I couldn't sell It to the hair breeds." Grabbing his fountain pen he wrote a letter to Madison. Terpsichore was sulking In a corner of th ballroom. "How do you like the party, Cora?" asked Mercury. , "Pretty punk," she declared. "I can't see no sense In having so many of them there quadrilles." Unable to comfort her. Mercury ordered her carriage. Milwaukee Sentinel, PBATTI.K OP THK YOl JOSTERS. Effie Papa, what goe around a biittln'? Papa That Is easy lit tie girl a button hole, of course. Efllo No, that Is not the answer. Papa Well, I give It up; what Is ltT Effle A billy goat. Alice's little playmate was taken down with scsrlct fever and the home was quarantined, a card being tacked onto the house giving the nature, of the disease. A day or two later Alice came running Into the house and exclaimed: "Mamma, Bessie Is getting better; the sign Is nearly all gono.". "Why, Freddie," exclaimed the excited mother. "What did you drop the baby for?" "Because," answered Freddie, "grandma aid he was a bouncing baby and 1 wanted to see him bounce." "Come, now," said mamma, who had taken the children for a walk thrown" '.ho soo, "let's go home and see papa." "Oh! no," protested Elsie, "let's see these other monkeys first." Johnny Grandpa, have you any teeth? Grandpa No, my child, they have all gone. Johnny Then I think I'll let you hold my candy while I run an errand. "Where does your brother go to school?" asked the teacher of the fourth grade school girl. "Oh, my brother goes to the high school!" answered the maid proudly. "He's a salt more now, for he was a freshman lust year." The street car conductor, uncertain as to whether she was old enough to demand a fare from, asked: "Little girl, how old are you?" "Ask that of Ann," replied the little miss. "Keep your statistics to yourself and accept this 5 cents from me." The kindergarten teacher had been giving her class a little talk about the moon. . "And now," she asked In concluding, can anyone tell me why we can't see the moon when there Is a storm?" It had rained the preceding night. Young Eddy had a reply. "Why, "cause," said he, "If the moon came out the rain would put out his light." "Moral courage," said the teacher, ad dressing the juvenile class, "makes one do what he thinks Is right, regardless of the jeers of his companions. Now, Johnny, can you give me an Illustration?" "Yes, ma'am," answered Johnny. "If a feller has candy an' eats It all hlsself an' ain't afraid of th' other kids callln' him stingy that's moral courage." ''''' v -. . J SEE 'YOUR. Hatter none BETTER MADE OUT OF THE! ORDINARY. Port Arthur and Cincinnati are in the same latitude. There are seventeen metals which are more valuable than gold. A bushel of wheat, by actual count, has been found to contain 809,730 grains. A deputy In the Parliament of France receives 11,800 a year, free transportation and free lunch. Every year more than 600,000 Japanese youths qualify by age for regular military service, and 200,000 begin to serve either with the colors or as supernumeraries. One of the largest forests in the world stands on Ice. It is situated between Ural and the Okhotsk sea. Sometime ago a well was dug in this region, when it was found that at a depth of 390 feet the ground was still frozen, Emll Kuehnel of Manchester, N. H., has a clock which, it Is believed, was used in the days of Columbus. On the upper part of the wooden face Is carved a picture of the great discoverer, while on the lower part is neatly carved "Anno, 149?." The highest altitude ever reached by hu man beings is six and a half ml lee. At that height the breathing of yxygen from tubes la necessary to life. A baloon, un occupied, has reached a height of thirteen and a half miles, as shown by self-registering instruments attached to It. Cleanliness Is not understood In Thibet. What serves as clothing by day serves as bedding by night; the bathrobe, which con stitutes a man's suit of clothes, is simply unglrded when he lies down to sleep. It is neither changod nor washed until it goes to pieces. The man inside the bathrobe fares no better. Mount McKlnley Is known to be the steepest of all the great mountains of the world, and It la unlike most other great peaks from the fact that arctic conditions begin at Its very base. The prospective conqueror of this immense uplift must pick bis path over broken stones. Icy slopes, sharp cliffs, and an average slope of 46 degrees for at least 14,000 feet. A sarcophagus, by the use of which one may evade the sentence, "dust to dust" has been patented. The remains are first surroundd with a coating of sodium sili cate, or water glass, which Is allowed to dry. When the water has been sufficiently evaporated, the subject Is placed In a mold which Is to determine the size of the glass block, and the molten glass poured until the mold or flask is filled! The use of suoh transparencies In the hall of fame would be a national economy. Representative Maddox of Georgia, who Is soon to retire from congress, has re ceived this letter from a constituent: "Deer Mister Kongresman: Sum time ago I writ you asking If there were anny thing the guvment could do to make a flghtln wife behave herself. I alnt heard from you and things Is no better. Will you flease let me know how I can get one of hem big plsen snakes from Afrlcky. I have always voted for you and this is mlty lit tle to ask of you, specially when a man's wife Is always a plckin' on him." In one of his more recent hysterical bursts Kev. Dr. Parkhurst said, In discuss ing Abraham Lincoln: "As to his mother, Nancy Hanks, the kindest treatment we can give her Is to write her with an In terrogation point and let her go." Consid erable Indignation has been aroused by this remark, regarding wnicn several pro tests have appeared In the papers. One writer says that Dr. Parkhurst Is most effectively answered bv Abraham Lincoln's own statement; made In mature life: "All that I am or hope to be I owe to my angel mother." .i LABOR AKU INDUSTRY. The center of the country's cotton grow ing is near Jackson. Miss. An elctrlcsl bootblack, which Is more rapid and effective than the street Arab, is In use In Chicago. The Pennsylvania railway east of Pitts burg handles 75.000 tons of freight dally for each mile of Its length, its annual earnings being 1165.000 a mile. The center of the production of the moat Important cereals corn, wheat, oats, bar ley, rye and buckwheat taken in the ag gregate, is In Illinois, a few miles north of Qulncy. From one factory in the United States goes each day to every part of the globe inenhlnerv to nroduce more than g.ooO horse-power, making this dally addi tion to tne worxing power ui mo wunu. Th anno miles of transslberian railway cost MM.M4,41&. or $81,000 per mile, for sixty- pound rail, single traca. ine ministry i ways ana means of communication has found it necessary to enlarge the rolling stock of the fourth-class service to 7,uX cars, to be used for transportation of la borers, emigrants and recruits. British India had In 1881 sixty-two cotton factories, with l.fcM.ouO apiudlos aud lo.ooo looms. Now the number of factories Is 2ol, of spindles 6,184 CM), of looms nearly 44, OuO The capital Invested in these estab lishments is tut.OuO.uuO, and the number of persons employed lu the Industry Is over I.OtO.OW). Statistics compiled by the Zemtvos of forty-nine provinces of European Russia showed that 8H.i peasant families, repre senting a population of perhaiw 7,uuu.00u, had only nine acres of land per family; and that 1.219,444 peasant households, repre senting a population of about ls.OOO.OOU, had only twenty-one acres each, although hun dreds of thousand of such households con sisted of from eight to twenty-flve members. A London paper, speaking of the "Ameri can invasion," relates that an enterprising Yankee cauie over to England and decided to open a shop in Birmingham. He ob tained premise next door to a man who also kept a shop of the same description, but was not very pushing In his business methods. The methods of the Yankee, how ever, caused the older-trader tu wake up, and with the spirit uf originality strong upon him be affixed a notice over bio nhup with the words. "Established fifty years.'" painted in large letters. Next day the Yankee replied to this with a notice over bis store to this effect: "Established yea Urdajr; E3 t14 atficJu - n zO. nnfl March I to April 30. That long-looked-for California opportunity is here at last. March 1 to April 30, the Rock Island System will sell "colonist" tickets to principal points in California at these low rates: 333.00 from Chicago S25.00 from Omaha. Nob. Correspondingly low rates from other points. Tickets are good in Tourist Sleepers, which the Rock Island runs daily, Chicago and Kansas City to Los Angeles and San Francisco by way of El Paso; daily also via Colorado Springs and Salt Lake City. ' Tickets, berths and descriptive literature at principal ticket offices in the United States and Canada, or can be had by addressing the undersigned. If you live out of town, use the accompanying coupon. Cut this out and send to F. P. Rutherford. D. P. A.. 1323 Farnam Street, Omaha, Neb. i Please quote I expect to leave fur California about- Hm-nnd " lium. .to. .. Send me literature likely to be of interest. MB READ IN THE DARK SIGNS, NUMBERS AND NAMES S.H.BROWN stsk tiwfmr g-:'itv-a. iB.:i.iirr mm., m ft r. v-L.rv ; 'i "NSt.-. if Ik 3. '4 1 tmmiwmww DR. GORDON I H! iBTOII A.M.-aT0 5P.M Office of THE WHEELER A WILSON MFG. CO., Bridgeport, Conn. Gentlemen: The door plate, with street number, furnished by you for my residence has been a source of satisfaction ever since it was put in position. The figures show plainly during the night, and often save us from being disturbed by people who want some other number.. THOMAS CAMPBELL. From JAS. F. NOBLE, Frest. Long Distance Tel. Co., Shawnee, Okli. Gents: My door plate just received, it is certainly a marvel. I predict very extensive sale for your goods. A Wonderful invention m SAMPLE FREE s mm name plain written on a postal. doriss AGENTS WANTED WRIGHT MFG. CO. Englewood, III. m fm LE ooteCER I II til Btrlctly pure, A good blood purifier. Made from the beet se lected bops. Save doctors' bills, and If tried once we will not have to ask for the second order. Delivered to any part of Omaha, Council Bluffs or Ssuth Omaha. Order a cno from JETTER BREWING CO. r HUGO F. IILZ, IJ24 Dooflas Street, Omaha. Telephone 1542 or LEE MICHELL, Wholesale Dealer, Council Bluffs. Tel. I .-jiS W....N---N M r ti rt WVPAWAVQg COBPBCT ANSWERS OP THREI1 . . . . B n . . . . . t n Ibvi. 1tla In th. n.llut ofct locsud In Nabruus sod ous la Ohio. TU c.aior pac 1 Uft blank (or a lalra Ex-rroatUsut, unow asm nnrHnti a promlncut city, mtlod la Us Isitara, nd th nnlr e'tr In ths V. R. tbe twopl Sr swt Vw vovotT U 70a ota OITK TUB NAMES OF THE THREB CTTTFS, will U es witn roar asms sn4 sJ Jrau pUlnlr WTUMD. II tfasr r eorrwt, YOU WILt, KECEITK a Utu tnm at, wbich mtr sntltls yoa to th whole or pert of Us s)704MM, for Uis eorroet solution e( above asans see stew mlnntM of yonr time. Yon r not el1 n ffr ono aont of wrmr mono? to b psrtlslpaat la tea AWARD OF 7SO.OO. WK DO NOT WANT TOUB MONET. Bhonla nore th oa savs e rout nw.r, $7ao.U0 will b ptld )ut ths wm pro rt, WS adTortlM oortslTM In this lltorsl unsns M i 1 1 w.nt mmA mm win mmIv iw aw OTWl co HmMos vftluola nmsfinli thoro on no r'fcnki. Sana Tnt rmo ood omwor ttonro. A, J.KSH.IK pws ftftii m m flWO Poht-1 pt N, T. ff BUSINESS STIMUlATORh BBB WANT ADS ,-lf" -V 1 .-..., -1,. , T f a .' - .eg.-' -o.iw-- V. , nr A- ' 1 7-- " ' " -' ""--- IMJ1EM ST 'j it i SI . Kit Bonth Second BU, Sbattlsi, Wasa., Jolv 14, IK. Last Bprinc I found that I was all run down from overwork and weakness, and soon found that I would bars to uke a vocation or find sometutnf to brace ma ap. Each month I would have very had paiua, with lick beadacbs and backavbe, sua t Mnn to look careworn and sallow. A friend who was visiting ma from ths East advised ms to try Wins of Csrdul, aud I took part of a bottlo which shs had with her aud then purchased two more buttles. I soon found that was ail that I needed to restore my Rtrenfth and I did not have to discontinue my work. I now take a few doeea every time I feel worn out aud tired, and it is aU I need. fHQBhetooi of Whit rows rooneu, Be. HI, UefTe of rohnniss 0MEOPCA08EQJ0 THOSE business women and working girls who know what it is to feel "all run down," nervous and exhausted, can appreciate the meaning of Miss Peters' words. In regulating the menstrual function Wine of Cardui relieves women's backaches and sick headaches. It drives away the "all worn out" feeling and fits a woman for every duty of life without having to make allowance for sickness for several days out of every month. Wine of Cardui renews the nerves of tired out women. Increasing bodily and mental vigor results. Wine of Cardui will cure all the pains of female weakness bearing down pains, menstrual pains, ovarian pains. It will banish leucorrhoea. It is the medicine for you to take whether your days are spent in home, office, store or factory. All druggists sell $1.00 bottles of Wine of Cardui. I l Miss Marjory LanePetcrs 2011 So.SecbacLStf Seattle. Wash. j.