PAGE SIX. ASTORIA, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1901. TELEPHONE ENGINEERS FACE GREAT PROBLEMS 50,000,000 People In United States ! Now Have Access to This Modern Convenience Story of Progress. Boston. Nov. IS. When a pereouj tricitte and absorbing ..-!!., i n.tn ...ntwrloeen worked out. prcbloms hit bears and echoes the word tn Chicago or New Orleans, the process, simple as It seems to the modern man of bust ness. has Involved several hundred other people, each with specially trained Intelligence. The greatest marvel of the modern telephone is not that telephony Is possible but that the thousand and one details of operating can be looked after so successfully. To accomplish all this enormous task, to keep the lines open, and the appara tus In order, and to meet the endless problems that arise In the installation of new services, the last two decades have seen the development of an en tirely new profession Into which hun dreds of young Americans have en tered, 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 seemingly miraculous current has become part and parcel of modern In dustrial and municipal life has made a thorough preliminary training the first necessity to the young man who enters electrical engineering. At the Massa chusetts institute of Technology, for example, there were two graduates in electrical engineering in 1884, while today there are some 200 young men studlng this one general subject and among them at least one in every six Is especially Interested In telephony. Tet these students, of course, repre sent only a fraction of the number of future telephone engineers now train ing at the various schools and colleges that have followed the Institute's ex ample in establishing courses in what is perhaps the most important of the modern "commercial professions." The basis of the telephone engineer's training is such a knowledge of the highest mathematice as will enable him to make the endless computations necessary to the production of any plan, whether for a small Induction of coll or for the wires of a transconti nental system. He must know the length and breadth of theoretical elec tricity; he must understand the gen eral phenomena and laws of sound, especially as they relate to speech and hearing; and of course he must be ex pertly familiar with the various de tails of telephonic communication and the Installation and management of great systems. There are now something like 50. 000,000 people in the United States who have access to a telephone and from . their own locality they can talk over two-thirds of this country. But tele phone development, although involving a problem of constantly Increasing difficulty, has proceeded along the lines of least resistance; the first ex changes have been established In , the larger cities and towns because here the demand was most imperative. The linking together of these centres of popluation and the saturation of the Intermediate country districts by means of telephone connections has been gradually going on at the same time with the steady improvement of the sen-Ice offered by the great con trolling Bell company; so two distinct sets of problems have required llmul taheous solution. The telephone receiver used today with all its Increased efficiency Is prac tically as simple as the one Alexander Graham Bell exhibited at the Centen nial exhibition in Philadelphia in 1878; but In the transmitter that stands on the 20th-century man's desk or hangs on the wall In his bouse a wonderful Improvement has been made and in the development of the present well-nigh perfect mechanism millions of Instru ments have been thrown away to make room for better ones. , Today the current Is sent out on a wire of copper instead of a wire of Iron and is brought back on a dupll cat copper wire Instead of finding its way through the earth, which Is gen erally charged with other electric cur rents. A wonderful economy of space has been secured Ty enclosing the in sulated copper wires in cables, whether the lines are Intended for overhead or underground structure, and the' ex tent to which this economy has been carried appears In the fact that it is usual to have 400 pairs of wires tn one lead-enclosed cable. The hanging of thousands of miles of wire year af ter year is comparatively easy to un derstand, but In the exchange the clearing house where the copper nerves reaching thousands of different points are under control a multitude of In- As telephony has progressed and the use of telephones Increased many fold the cost of the Instruments them selves has decreased, but the invest ment required for the "central" plant has grown tremendously larger. Few people realise that the switchboard through which their dally communica tion are made costs many hundred thousand dollars, or even. In a city Ilk New Tork, several millions. They do not realise that it ia a very elabo rate piece of mechanism made up of millions of small mechanical parts all of which must be adjusted with the most painstaking exactness, nor that in talking 1,600 miles, say from Boston to Kansas City, they are given the ex clusive use of property which has cost probably half a million and the as sistance of 25 operators, and that no one else can use for the time being the S.000 miles or wire which if melted in to Ingot would weigh over 600 tons. All the work of the engineer and me chanic which is at the immediate ser vice of anybody anywhere merely for the ringing of a bell, costs enormously. The hundreds of millions of poles must be frequently renewed at great ex pense 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 quits as vigorously by the Bell company which has already covered so large an area with its wltvs and which leases Its apparatus rather than sell It so as to make sure that It shall be properly maintained and kept up to the standard, as by the customer, Competing companies organised on the theory that wires and equipment would be unaffected by storms or no cldent, that a switchboard once In stalled would become a permanent source of revenue, have often come to grief because they have not correctly gauged the requirements of the tele' phone using public or the expense of maintaining and developing a satis factory system. The problem of charges In Itself one which hus been worked out only by slow degrees. When telephones were In an experimental stage a flat charge for the use of an Instrument was made, but as the business has In creased such a charge has com to ap pear almost as unfair and Impracllca ble as If a flat charge were made by milkman for all his customers without regard to the quantity of milk de' live red. A Runaway Bleyote, Terminated with an ugly cut on the leg of J. B. Orner, Franklin Grove, III It developed a stubborn ulcer, unyleld Ing to doctors and remedies tor four years. Then Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured. It's Just a good for Burns, Scalds. Skin Eruptions and Flies. J 5c, at Chas. Rogers' Drug Store. Orders taken for Brown Bros.' nur serv stock at New Cash Grocery, Al derbrook. 'HHtHttlffiR When you buy canned elsmt ask tor RAZOR BRAND Clean and wholesome and a borne product For sale by all leading grocers. Warrcntioo Clam Com pany, Warrenton, Or, FREE! FREE! Extraordinary Offer TO HOLIDAY SHOPPERS , To nuke their Holiday Purchases in the Month of November Free wtih $25.00 Purchus t7 rn worth of g-ooda 4 3U your own choice Free Sr $jo.oo : $3.00 ;ss. fs $5.00 n - $1.50 Free . .ire? $2.50 75c. Z ' " "SSL Free Free with Free with your own choice . t r . 95 wormoteooos p We want you to see our Grand Holiday Display of Beautiful and Newest Creations Elite Chinaware, Limoges China, French China, Dinner Sets, Salad Sets, Chocolate Sets, Rich Cut Glass Ornaments, Vases, Bric-a-Brac, Lamps, English Porcelain Ware, Novelties, and Dolls. Fancy Articles of Every Description. Prettiest, Daintiest and Newest Things made, Collected from the Markets of the World. Top Quality Teas, Coffees, Spices, Extracts, Baking Powder, Cocoa, Chocolates. We want you to see our very reasonable prices. We want you to come just to look. Take adranUg-e of this Terr liberal offer. CUT HEKE CUT HfcKB CUT OUT THIS COUPON, bring it to any of our stores before December JO, 1904, and receive with each pure hue lists abas a rery handsome present of your own selection. ASTOItf AN. NOVEMBER 17, 1904 Come fust to look. Bring thl Coupon with you to sny of our stores, not oood arrcn otecMBia to, isoa CUT HERE CUT HKRB Great American Importing Tea Co. 571 COHMERCIAL ST., ASTORIA I AN ADVERTISEMENT An advertisement in the MORNING ASTORIAN is the test business investment you can make for the money. Wanted: Lmly or gentW'inm of flr education to travel for s firm of 1250, voo.00 capital. Btilury 11,073.00 r year and expenses; salary jntld weekly and expenses advanced. Address with stamp J. A. Alexander Astoria Oregon. Circular and sample distributors wanted elsewhere. No eanvesslng. Good pay. Cooperative Advertising Co., N. T. M. Egger has opened a flower store In the Astor house building, where he has for sale choice cut owers, grow Ing plants, ferns and shrubs. Floral designs furnished. The original Jno. A. Moler has opened one of his famous barber col leges at tH Clay street, San Fran cisco. Special Inducements this month; positions guaranteed; tuition earned while learning. Write correct num ber, (44 Clay street, San Francisco. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. FREDERICK V. MOHN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Office and residence, over Feterson A Brown's. ORlce hours; 9 to 11:10 a. m., and I to 4:30 p. m.; evenings, to S. Sundays By Appointment. DR. J. A. REGAN Dentist Office over A. V. Allen's Store, Offlce hours, to 12 and 1 to 6. MISCELLANEOUS.. 0. J. THENCIIARD Insurance, Commission and Shipping CUSTOMS H0USI BR0KIR. Agent Wella-rargo and Northern Pacific- Expressj Companies. Oor. ELEVENTH and BOND ITS. A o. n O D n. ot o. i. i. TIMRCAPD. EFFECTIVE SEPT. 4, 1904. A KILUJLEN, Merchant Tailor. Occident Building. JAPANESE GOODS New stock of fancy goods just arrived at Yokohama Jlaznar. Call and see tho latest novelties from Japan. BEST 15 CENT MEAL. You can always find the best 15-cent meal in the city ut the Rising Sun Kestnuruiit. CI 2 Commercial St F1KST-CLASS MEAL for lflc; nice coke, coffee, pie, or doughnuts, 5c, at U. S. Restaur ant. 434 Bond St JAY TITTLE, M. D. HIISIC1AN AND 8UHQE0N Acting AwUtant Burgeon U.S. Marine HonplUI 8rvlee. Office hours: 10 to 11 am. 1 to 4: SO p.m 477 Commercial Street, tnd Floor. Dr. KIIGDA 0. HICKS OSTEOrATIIIST Mansell Bldg. 671 Commercial Bt rnoNK ruck aim. C. W. BARR, D. D. 8. Has Opened Dentsl Parlors in Rooms 817-818, Ths Dekum. PORTLAND, OREGON. Where he will be plesssd to meet Friends and Pstrens. Leave PORTLAND Arrive a.m I )p.m J 7,00 p. Leave 7.45 am 6 10 p.m i'ortlniid Union nVpoHor Astoria ll.io.m 9,40 p.m A8TOIUA rtE Arrive Tor rortlani and way pointa II. SO a.m 10.30 pm SEASIDE DIVISION Leave ASTOIUA Arrive Leave tTOTuT ASTORIA. Arrive 6. f0 p.m for Warrenton. , Hammond, Ft Stevens, Mtwaiile lOeHk.n'i 7:40a,m Leave SEASIDE Arrive 4::u") p.m ( Tor AntnrTTUTrwt I'Qup.m WOOD! WOOD! WOOD! I Cord weed, mill wood, box weed, any kind of wood at lowest prices. Kelly, j Qoble and O. II N, Co., via. Portland. J. C. Mayo, 0. p. A. Leave SEASIDE. Arrive ClS a. m ( for Warrvnlon PtY 0A am iBtowne, Ham mond, Astoria ) 7.20 p.m. Additional train leaves Astoriadaliy at 11:10 a. m. for all nolnta on Ft. Stevens branch, arriving Ft. Stevens 11:10 p. m., returning, leaves Ft. Stev ens at 8:00 p. m., arriving Astoria 1:45 P. m. Sunday only. , Through tickets and close connec tion via. N. P. Ry. at Portland an,1 the transfer men. 'Phone 2211 Blaek, Barn en Twelfth, opposite opera house. BAY VIEW HOTEL E. G LASER, Trop. Home Cooklnj, Comfortable Scdi, Rcaion sblt Rtti tnd Nice Treatment. THE NEW NEHALEM HOUSE Cor. Fourteenth and Rn-hatuf Hta. One blork back of Koard a MokM Hinrr. J. II. ANKOS, I'rop., - Alrl, On, Board ind Lodilitf $1 00 and tin Cleaneit Bdt In the City. Fine Tsblt Board, New KuriilUmi Tlirouii lion t. Hnlin iiihiIii to ati'uily Thculrlcnl Troupe Dr. VAUGIIAN, Dentist FytLian Building, Astoria, Oregon. Dr. T. L. JJALL Dr. F. I. Friedrich, DENTISTS 624 Commercial street. Astoria Ore. Dr. W. 0. LOGAN DENTIST 678 Commercial 8t-, Shanahan Building Phone 2176 Red. Open Day and.NIgliU The Astoria Restaurant MAN MING, Proprietor. Fine meals served at all hours. Oysters served in any style. Game in season. tW Bond Street, Cor, tth, AitorU,Ore. ASTORIA HOTEL Comer Seventeenth tnd Dusne Su. 75 cents a day nud up. MeaU 20 cents. Hoard and lodging per week. PARKER HOUSE H. B. PARKER, Proprietor Free Coach Large Sample Rooms on Ground Floor. Roams 50c, 75c, $1.00 and $1.50 per Day. Pool of Ninth Street ASTORIA. OREGON BOaoaaananaaaonoonaaoaannatta Ik Palace HiUS Palace Catering Company daaoaaaattaaaaaaaaaaaaBBaaaaaaaaaaaa The Best Restaurant Fefular Meals, 25 Cents Sunday Dinners s Specislty Everytfalnf the Market Affords TTTTITIIXTITTTITITTTTTTTTW - .. M KAMONA BALE. I have plaeed en ssle at a re duced prioe my select etook of home-made Wrsppers and Ka monaa. 420 Commercial 8t Astoria. J. Y. KWONQ CO. FOR THE BUSY HOUSEWIFE Every Woman . M itttmsMa anil ifrrwio irww MARVEL Whirling Spray tmimi nrff. Iran- A. V 3A Vyis VV. C-N MM... V. . v . J - flit Most t;oiiTilnf V4a Vlfj! IU toou.ll,. the i -m7 r If h mnnutaiipplf PSHIKIi, aw:i no ottvr. but sMtnd sjttamn for UlustTflUMl tioo-iiV4. ItfflTtM it&nirtilAra and 1)rwllo!ta In. fMlimbettni.uli MARVlVXCOef mm rseaiw w wrm 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 H IU Hi MENU THURSDAY The chaw e of a man's self Is a verr laborious undertaking. Thomas a Kempls. brbakfabtT Cracked Wheat. Broiled Bacon. Egfs. Creamed Potatue. Rolla. Coffee. DINNER. . ConaummA. Broiled 8teak. Fried Bananaa Uashrd Potatoes, Carrots. . Huckleberry Pie. Coffee. SUPPER. Chicken Fried in Cream. .Tea Biscuit. Balad. ChocoleteCake. Tea. CHICKEN FRIED IN CREAM -Put a pint of rich cream In a frying nan over a moderate fire till It be gins to color; dip the different parts 1 of the ehloken In flour, season with 1 a teaspoon of salt, fry In the cream on each side till It Is a delicate brown. When done put It on naif another hot pint of platter, pour minute, add a saltepoonful of salt, a cream Into the pan, let It boll one dash of pepper, then pour It over the j chicken, atave tarnished with (price 1 oi parsiey ana a ojaa et tunea poiaie Siloe. I II 1 1 II 1 1 1 H I IIMI II II 1 1 NORTHERN PACIFIC rime Card 1 Trains PORTLAND. Imwm Arrives) suget Sound Limited.! ; am : m Kansas Clty-SL Louis Bp'lat u:l am l:tt pnj North Coast Limited l:M p m T:M a Tacoma and Meatus Night Kiprees U: r m l;HH Tak fuget Sound Limited, or Norta Coast Umlted for Grays Harbor point Take Puget Sound Limited (or Olyax Cla direct Take Puget Sound Limited or Km. sas Clty-Bt. Louis Bpeclal for polata on South Bend branch. Double dally train service oa O ray's Harbor branch. Four trains dally between Portland. Taooma and BaatU .HeV 1 OREGON Short hint and UnionPacific San Francisco and Portland S. S. Co. 70 hours from Portland to Chicago. No change of ears. Depart Chicago I'orlUud rtiwolal :Me. m. via Hunt ington 'Haliuke, Denver, Ft Worth. Uinalia. Van- tClt,Ht lx.li l, i;nicgo aud the East Atlantic Kmreaa 1:15 P. m. vlaliuutr ing ion 8 1. Paul Kant Mall S lop. m. via Hpo-kaue TiMEnnriKDCJLiaj From PORTLAND JJlt uke, Denver rd " rui, umena Kan lUhloagoaud theliast Walla Walla, fewls. aiK.ll..Htl-,ul .DulutlJ Milwaukee, at 1 andait ' Arrive ttMpm 7 ill am 1:00 p m OCEAN AND RIVER SCHEDULE)" From Astoria All sailing dates subject to change. For iSan FranrUn every five dav. Dally es. copt Hun duy atraui Columbia Klvnrto rururina ana Way I-endlnge ' 4 am Daily es oept Mou Steamer Nahcotta leaves Astoria on the tide DAILT EXCEPT SUNDAT, FOR ILWACO, connecUng there with trains for Long Beach, Tioga and North Beach pointa Returning ar rives at Astoria same evening. Through tickets to and from afl prin cipal European cities, O. W. ROBERTS, Agent, Astoria, ore.