English: Section of telephone line in western Montana
Identifier: belltelephonemag13amerrich (find matches)
Title: Bell telephone magazine
Year: 1922 (1920s)
Authors: American Telephone and Telegraph Company American Telephone and Telegraph Company. Information Dept
Subjects: Telephone
Publisher: (New York, American Telephone and Telegraph Co., etc.)
Contributing Library: Prelinger Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive
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(now Bell Telephone Company of Pennsyl-vania), 1904-1906. Engineer, Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company,1906-1910. Chief Engineer, British Columbia Telephone Co., 1910-1912.American Telephone and Telegraph Company, General Engineering Depart-ment, 1912-1919; Department of Development and Research, engineer andAssistant Outside Plant Development Engineer, 1919-1932, Outside PlantDevelopment Engineer, 193 2-. JOHN MILLS University of Chicago, BA., 1901; Massachusetts Institute of Technology,B.S., 1909. American Telephone and Telegraph Company, General Engi-neering Department, 1911-1915. Western Electric Company, ResearchDepartment, 1915-1921; Engineering Department, 1921-1925. Bell TelephoneLaboratories, Director of Publication, 192S-. ROBERT L. TOMBLEN Bates College, B.A., 1914; Worcester Polytechnic Institute, B.S., 1917.American Telephone and Telegraph Company, Department of Operationand Engineering, Commercial Engineers Division, 1919-1929; Chief Statis-ticians Division, 1929-.
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SECTION OF TELEPHONE LINE IN WESTERN MONTANAThis is Part of a Line from Mixneapoi.is to Seattle, Which is One Link inTHE System of Long Telephone Routes in the United States Described in theArticle Systems of Long Telephone Lines in This Issue. Exhibiting Telephone Progress at theWorlds Fair THROUGHOUT the entire period of the Worlds Fair, thetelephone exhibit proved to be one of the most popularand most talked of features at A Century of Progress Exposi-tion in Chicago. Judging from the large crowds which theexhibit attracted, the animated interest which the visitors dis-played, and the widespread favorable comment which thedemonstrations stimulated, there can be little doubt that thetelephone exhibit was a highly successful public relations un-dertaking, both for the Bell System and for the telephone in-dustry as a whole. Millions of people throughout the countryhave a better understanding of the telephone service whichthey take so much as a matter of course, and a new realizationof
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