- rm $8KTm ' TO&rf tndat; October a? 312 I : l mm f J 0a3M3 Pi' V PI 11 LIT- nbkK. fa Rail ti x,tv Si 4. 7 3e rl 3? - ' ii KM ' it? I ! 0 S VIA 1 I I LI tr Jt- I t hi - y mi WM&3m trirfr,: . " l -vf . . -v- ' - s Www " !S1' i - -ajttm5jLwA.-.. r. v ii ii ii "- -" 1 1 - - . i s &HOTCXS This is to be as logical a study, bilpflv related, of Edison the man. as epace will allow. I desire to trace the combi nation of strategy, Inspiration and hu- man snrewaness that have been neglect ed in any general survey of the inventor who has placed America in the foremost ran or tne scientific world, among such fr?,? aRoeat Koch. Haeckel, Loeb and others searching and achieving L luc wona. Js.nown to the entire world as a great inventor, there has-been a tendency among the few writers who x- met. nim personally to flavor their description of him with a literary touch that is-as fictitious as the stage picture M Shakespeare's apothecary: Through 11 the Information which has been given to the public of Edison's personality I eem to have traced this literary innc-cnracy-an emphasis of the stooping ehoulders, the negligee attire, the ab stracted manner, the nntrlmmed hair, the sudden flash of genius in the eye t,iraT05. m.ysterl0- dd. on his . een Pushed to the cen- ZZl theWOrM'S 8tae V a dramatic character, the wizard of that most in comprehensible chamber of magic to the scientific eye, a laboratory. I confess that I approached Edison with something akin to the feeling a child has for a conjuror. - Would he be so enraged at an Inter ruption of his communings with a fluid secret In a tiny bottle before him, and accidentally hurl -explosive chemicals at ns or would he be in 'some pleasant ex- .uieuuu-mooa tnat would Induce him to exhibit a few harmless laboratory tricks for our amusement? Or would he wave us aside and send us away with only deeper reverence for the mysterious secrets of his son!, t ashamed to confess to this wondering timidity, adult though I am. It Isn't anything to approach Imagina tive idlers like great painters, or Seat novelists, or great statesmen, but when It comes to tracing an imagination that has oiade ghostly traditions,, commercial com monplace facts there Is no telling what luch a man may do at any moment Say ivhat you will. Edison has harnessed his imagination to supernatural imps, and driving them In through one uoor of his labratory has sent them out again at the Other nrt litniv j ......j-icm ana even amusing demons. No doubt there are scientists and chem ists, mechanics and mathematicians in the Edison works that by the very force of their uncompromising training consider the great Inventor as a dreamer, but that Is exactly the amazing wonder of him which no knowledge of exact science can -Take the dreamer out of -man and you destroy the divining instlnct of life that unseen, unknown land between man and his maker. The miracles of Edison's dis coveries are to the scientist desperately teasonable, and to label his exact experi ments as mere vnpor.ings from dreamland nrages him. Still say. what he will the tception of almost any new in-Antion has' ppeared first to the Inventor 'in a- most Isionary stage of development. I Take Edison's own story of .the new torage battery which he has Just com peted, and of which he told me much In Mail, It was based upon the Inventor's gb esteem for the'prollflc promises there re In nature, for as he said, he couM not acelve that nature so generous In all W favors had been mean enough to limit us frequently by accident, but It Is still one of the secrets of nature. We are experimenting "constantly to get perfect tone. There is nothing' now, however, that we cannot record. We had trouble at first with soprano voices, and late with violin and 'cello solos. We only put 'cello solos on the market about four months ago. No day Is exactly like ani other. There is a constant though mi nute atmospheric change going on about us, so we try .everything, no matter how absurd It may seem at the time, In $a effort to catch nature In a sclenttftc trap." What I heard will not be on the market for a year. Edison's policy; Is to mistrust a merely .friendly aspect of nature till he has acquired her assur ance of its practical truth. ' We found Edison In the chemical de- problem solved Is this: We halve the traffic for vehicles In crowded streets because we cut their length in two when we do away with the horse; then w halve It . again by greater speed, which prevents congestion." it was clear' that he was a bit sensitive ' about the cri. clsm of the delay, because it revealed aa unfair lack of confidence In a "man -who had done things. "I don't . usually talk much. I pWfe, i yruuuce, ana wnen I do so my wo wilKhold good. Why, I've been exr-r!. menting and perfecting this, Just at I have any Invention intended for the rcar. ket. Mind you, an Inventor can make a beautiful . thing- to. show much .quicker' than he can perfect a thing that vust wort. We're very commercial roi here," he added, with a shrewd glint of nor.mn t,i- ii . I Dride and K.itlfDf i m h... ism .u.xrui. ui ma lauuruiury. oonierning J " --w.J.v.UiV,i1 m iijh uiue eve, bj In a copper dish was steaming over a he stamped his two feet squarely on tbs Dine name on a work-bench In front of sruunu m emphatic assurance of ttla mm. ana ne lay rar down In his chair iact. apparently watching ? it. " Some young men in shirt sleeves were quietly occu pied In the same room, mixing and meas uring chemicals. There is a theory, probably suDDorted by data, that there are times when to approach Edison when In one of these seemingly abstract silences is n breach Once Edison has transformed a dream into a tangible reality he is all business, for he added: "What we wanted this battery to do it is now doing in tha New York streets that Is, a minimum space, reduced weight, a 40-mlle run with a truck capacity of one ton and one that a New Yorker has to. work hard for, it is the dignity of power .n restraint There Is no word that exactly measures the difference between the wave that laps tne shore and the ware that Is in the mid ocean. One tells of the shallows at glance, the other of the unfathomable pos- ei Din ties. Inn . "fc, "u!b Edison is an Inexhaustible working baftery himself. "Well, when I get one of these spells I general! v go Into things pretty thoroughly, and although 1 was sure that a storage battery ' could be made (because I didn't think that Naiure could be so mean as to confine herself to a storage battery to lead and acids. Mav. .:f Decause ne had always been so punctiliously chivalrous and Just to her in his laboratory, that nature has rewarded him by lifting her veil to him so often. Afe rtelEgraphy had been confided to him by nature 20 years ago, he told me when the Lehigh Valley road suc cessfully used It In their freight' depart ment service. At that time he flashed a message from earth to a kite two miles In the air above. Just at that time he i tr emenaous favor with Dame Na ture, she gave him an idea for the incan uZe amP' Wh,Ch ob!1terated for a After ,3'ntfrest ln wfeless telegraphy. After the lamp came experimental im provements In automatic telegraphy oper IJa? "? mature' d?ew rtn rr lu e auaibie sounds pro duced by the vjbration of a stylus he was ? vnnect,on wlta the instruments, U Je "PPlle'.Ws knowledge of acous tics and the telephone mechanics, with sraprUAndhat "e Prduced the Phon- hi f, 8? " Seems to have beei with him 1 along the line. Instead of feeling as wizards of old have donethat rbTwTth f drger0DS' -esomrsVct: ner Lr St0d aDd feared' he bas seen her beauties, approached her with confl dence, and found that she holds only the antlargeei:dearlDg tor humanity Edison Is .not a wizard, he Is a sturdy sunny souled, hard headed son of Ohio' the great Buckeye State. He has what all great Americans of the present day reveal especially, the temperament of youth. He may some times, because it has been forced upon mm- Iau IDTO an outward semblance- of the fictional scientist, the man of ab straction and silent mystery, but get him among old friends, and he will tell better stories and listen to old ones as generous ly and with as keen ' a pleasure as or dinary hearty human beings. Because Edison is a prophet, chosen to advance the power of his fellow men over mnuerlng exactitudes, scarcely warrants that we picture him with any theatrical exaggerations. However, this dramatic flavor has been so liberally mixed with the solid commercial results of the Edi son factory at( Orange, N. J., that it is as a pretty tinsel veil adorning the busi ness aspect of everything there. Liter ally, perhaps. It Is inevitable, because the main force, the impelling power, the indefinite magic of definite outcomes and Incomes at th Edison works, takes source in the prophetic Imagination of Thomas A. Edison, the inventor of Its marvels. ' It Is a place of magical things, achieved by Imaginative prescience. In spite of the many clever assistants I met at the works, in spite of their exact reasoning, their; scientific experi ence and even thCir experimental cau tion, tafee. Edison away and there would be no more wonderwork forthcoming there. Edison himself expressed the idea this way: "No man of a mathematical habit of mind ever invented anything that amounted to much, tic hasnV the im agination to do it,' I don't know anything about mathematics can't even do propor tion but I can hire all the good mathe maticians I BMd." And he might have added, "but I can't hire men with logi cal imagination." 0 Edison will be exactly 59 years old next' February, he is still a young man, in spite of the pressure at which he ha played his life. - In the laboratory buildings, where all experimental labor Is done exclusively there are only n little over a hundred men employed; In the adjoining factorv where the phonograph and the moving picture machines are made, there are over 2,500 employes In the season. It is in the laboratorv that th Edison's imagination is' over aK Ve the secrets are open to any technical oh server, because there Is really no scien tiflc question about them'. Edison . W not fearlessly answer, since It L noT th rr:Lrun-a?XnS acter and a certain audacity of ill where for him in the varion? y t. of his laboratory one knows how many secret anting in his brain nV:Ue fer- their develonmon Be1ence of we W6rks in the plain brick bulTdSgsoTT laboratory. wer dialogs of the where he snatched 1 7 , tV absorbed to go home. P hea to His head mechanic, Fred n't the man who is closer to th ' probabIy Edison's achievements that taagle ot technical man. spoke of th? a?r othep the phonograph was evo v ng When left th,8 room, mm or da'y. till it was done" i,. were sent in n , " nr meals "AfMM il e slept bere-" Afraid the whole thing would in smoke?" I asketL WouId So up "No. We were n . . wanted to get throughlt0" lt''' ' Now FrM n - - ao Kv , h. s:. to keep it UP S date torlDV tne virus of newlv' ,?Tlate !t 'wltl vear in and Z L t M dlsco not merelyT bi Vst Tn Progressive energy alito ' but a Edison himslf caSed all th miDate constantly ImPendin! faI L WeISht 0f Phant praet, n faI1"es to a trlum- scold him or coax him yU can't ne reaches for a th, 'Gt go' fiefore around" thorou-hlv tn " he "smeI1s while, and. whetver hri. f rtl, ntenaed result, he dor,, " to et the ral Mns 7 ne des not blam yj UtU- Edison is the sort mt ... J,.'"! important question 1 could ride a scheme till it a-" , . uw.w JUSI e: Vi i vi j . . ' I "-i"" mai Datrerv. So I tad uuu ""u iose neart of nltimoi, n MmnUt J ... that wouldn't dron. n. . Ke :To7v '. T. . . m' ne KeDS rlSflt ou Z tse battery could be made there iccuug.uw way oy uttle things tin tW "uum e use for it." and he nn,,svi vrith grow big enough for him to see, because ? wnIms!caI smile. "Of course, the que what he believes, 'generally will be X , educInS weight disposed of 'tha Kaison has the habit' of mental rnnMn- rnmwZ. Knew tnat some Dew tration of clearneW p. taLnce.n- mbiuatl?a oC. chemistry eliminating lead s talklngyou know that it Is"ln 1 fo7a loti iiffS sharn or TT punct"ates with ,tnere came just a nibble, "just a sharp, or loud, or softer tone f nttle bit of somethini?- thn th. voice. He Is colloquial in his language he: Feredi?d for a loaS time I got -roth-has no ttoIi nr,A 6 ' "e lne. Still T bonf . ,.i...j . ., luuuucu Beurpnops n no.!- . : " u. ii l Lie uy ti affectations of technical for " .7 T.oaf1D u al0. but no result. V iAi doesn't hear you at once he pounces on you with a virile "what?" tnat permits no misunderstanding on either side He is only slightly deaf, and the tail about his necessity to watch-the 11DS of another to understand him is fictional nonsense. never to be forgiven. I had heard about cnare at "ttle more than one-half it tnis, and so Induced Mr. Wangeman to ,-uolB io jceep a horse vehicle runnier advance with me. - now.. - I ve done it, and next snrins on? c He may have heard us aDDroach his factory here will be maklner them." v chair, and he may not, but he did not 1 Then ne returned to the impatience of" ' turnaround. Mr. Wangeman is a scien- ' the public again: "They cannot exrect i tist of the physically Independent tvne. me to finh Ji, ."peci so he told him what he wanted. a bit oT.C 'J " Wera " I was nem more Impressed with the mntirB -"..V-J eyen a 10C nnnconc T ,oi i i. . " "aa -uuuury StreaKS. and that la f .j .j v 4i . v. uau ituu UUOUL CIS meiO- I nlaf . ' ' b dramatic mannerisms, his wizard dignity 7. steam' not a complicated chemical and his resemblance to Shskesnenrn action like a battery. That's whv it hut l apothecaries than when he jumped from tnken time to make sure." And he was- I his chair and we met cordially. I have BUre- There was no mistake in the shake t met much more assumption of greatness of his head, the nervous clasp of-"tha I In celebrities of equal fame, hut with hands stretrhoH , . i fewer practical achievements. - It. Confident that I . T w ?Z Edison Is not a dandified man. he Is not at liberty to recall thZ dr ' t ' stoop-shouldered, he Is not slow or non! , fF, t0 reca11 the dream stage of ; derous. or technically mysterious. His T-v' f V, -invention. . hair Is only just-turned gray, and though ... u Know n happens sometimes when his trousers were not creased, nor his things get slow around here that tlpr shoes patent leather, he had that inde- from ennui." he said THt, I scrlbable dignity one finds In a Westerner regret In his voice, which bp . n iU. - t--.v.i.ij. sure inat TVntnro hoM ihc co. nffV Tand; tnat it wasn't her fault. 'If me, i said to myself." wrong.' And so it was, focIt last I get it, negative and nnoit4 . unt after that so delicate and mysterious is cnemical action thot akfer and make everything unreliable. We I asked him what h- . . -1" some. trouble with them after the new storage batterr w. T?. 1 T.m nt In New York. , ConWa t . ne tossed his "uersiana It, till we found out that, la- '"finises or bad it Isn't nature I'll keen -..r""8 wrong; lfn v . tf- . tuDatu neafl lmn.ntipnti vm. . . v' vruue ine tolerant smile of a patient man contradicted the first impression, and he b.-gan. to talk, c, Jh ..e,1WS out;West don't seem to caus th0' k6 began crls- "Jnst be LfniL balter,eS are DOt a11 0ver the haven't a '8 D0W they to think I navent done it. I'll show 'em next Snhg:n' be on the market then. Im building a new., factory out here to make 'em in, but I didn't want to pTt em on the market till t tr, p?: j .u. vv cut: v wnn m uo tne work." He paused, staring straight a'6ad: and 1 ta"ed,. for, as 'thoSSr!. ! wus aajusang to, make clear Wf h I have nroven thot . A. , .UBin distilled water, the drlr- s ore onT t0 find had 0Qe to drus -ases of ndwfthased carbonic water, tho tion o? t7hICU partlir destroyed the ac Xt the jest. There is no knowJas Tn n ri, nufl W,tn "- I've no -doubt I I?s RS,e lt to lts Present size, but U.Vh a" enough now for all porposes.:- I sTLestherffraPh; at ,CaSt' ta aple- he was adjusting to, make clear in hla exper my storage are being used In workmanship; he just" keep at It says: me. There Is , "t' " 1111 I know , oratory deed T oi the phonograph. A n ,nlprovement man, who bears a BZ' Wange to Edison himself "rILlns 8eremblance monies here. He ha- maSter of cere. be wishes, tU30 ?t I heard one ot tJ" tQ Pledge of secr f oft them under definite about sound W nothing hare prove- tn.i m Z"!""'uls- aod aB r" " '"""tor,, the work nrt . Z Tey can do crowZk -53- of the cities." Another pause caml an"d newed the talk with more vVr he re" People seem to forget th make a battery that i Zl 4 yoa c' right as you Sn a 4 t0 WOrk a thing of chemical ayctar'lt altery 18 thins ilh& Phoo&raph is a useful : Dleafure u h t S ,wonderfl to see hft mntlc lit HS gIven: " i3the pom- na'sf proving hXX, We are experimenting ia- tC Sf 'it-poverlns new tbla a!i tba Sutcels-hhe n 3U8t thft cret of EdIS-n , of SScTerV Hir,eaCj1?8 the finaI lurlnir him i Hi8 lmPatlon Is always pects Tm ,Di, fayPatbs that no one patent, Jl addjtion to his better-kr., deve?onm!lt e- ,n CODIectIon with i telegSV,0116 e,ectric lamp, th, chSSrP - elePhone' tQe ore-milling Ea tlons TnM Bt!age batterles, his Id-ch- -eSie L de "l0te "orders, lypewrit 1a, mSinesP m8;iTCal enina' a SltSSn'. T01 of Preserving fr r.t, trtc locornmta,nU!actnre' drawing, i the !SSS?V JJ-Plcture mach. -s. hard-headed h. aclty a Poe ac - PENDENS!.. y' i X