When a new subscriber is handed his telephone, there is given over to his use a share in the pole lines, underground conduits and cables, switchboards, exchange buildings, and in every other part of the complex mechanism of the telephone plant. It is obvious that this equipment could not be installed for each new connection. It would mean constantly rebuilding the plant, with enormous expense and delay. Therefore, practically everything but the telephone instrument must be in place at the time service is demanded. Consider what this involves. The telephone company must forecast the needs of the public. It must calculate increases in population in city and country. It must figure the growth of business districts. It must estimate the number of possible telephone users and their approximate location everywhere. The plant must be so designed that it may be added to in order to meet the estimated requirements of five, ten and even twenty years. And these additions must be ready in advance of the demand for them-as far in advance as it is economical to make them. Thus, by constantly planning for the future and making expenditures for far-ahead requirements when they can be most advantageously made, the Bell System conserves the economic interest of the whole country while furnishing a telephone service which in its perfection is the model for all the world. One Policy One System Universal Service A Winter Visit to the Big Tree Groves in the High Sierras A Forest Ranger Crew on an Inspection trip to the Big Tree Groves Redwood Grove Within 30 Miles of San Francisco One Tree Proved more than a load for nine long cars. It was 16 feet in diameter The Lily of Poverty Flat, from a Recent dramatization of Bret Harte's story NOTICE.-Contributions to the Overland Monthly should be typewritten, accompanied by full return postage and with the author's name and address plainly written in upper corner of first The publisher of the Overland Monthly will not be responsible for the preservation of unso- Hcited contributions and photographs. Issued Monthly. $1.20 per year in advance. Ten cents per copy Copyrighted, 1914, by the Overland Monthly Company. Entered at the San Francisco, Cal., Postoffice as second-class mail matter. Published by the OVERLAND MONTHLY COMPANY, San Francisco, California. |