Automatic Telephones.
Much self-acting machinery employs electricity. By virtue of this wonderful agent the Automatic Electric Company of Chicago instals telephonic systems which enable a subscriber to connect himself directly with any other subscriber, without the intervention of an operator at the central station. As exemplified in large exchanges such as those of Dayton, Ohio, and Grand Rapids, Michigan, the apparatus is complex in its detail. If we take a small exchange, such as that of a village with 100 instruments, we may readily understand the main principles of the method. Let us suppose that No. 1 of our instruments is at the Post Office, where the Postmaster wishes to call 58. With a finger he moves hole 5 in the dial plate of his [calling instrument] (see the page opposite 336) until it touches a protruding stud. Then he lets go, when the dial returns to its original position. In returning it sends five impulses to the central office where a vertical rod is lifted five notches (see [illustration], page 336.) He next moves hole 8 to the stud and lets go. This time the rod turns through a considerable part of its semicircle of motion. The instant its journey is at an end a tiny metallic arm flies out and connection is completed with a wire running to 58, ringing his bell. In case he is busy, a buzzing noise will be heard in telephone No. 1. The switch mechanism which comes into play in all this is simple. There are ten rows of switches, ten in each row: the lowest row runs from 1 to 10, the next from 11 to 20, and so on. The upward motion of the vertical rod in our example brought it to the fifties; the turning motion decided that out of these fifties switch 58 should be connected with No. 1. When a conversation ends, hanging up the receiver sends a current over both wires of the circuit so as to release the selector rod, which returns to its original position.
If instead of a village we have a fairly large town, with an exchange of 1000 subscribers, a call for let us say 829 will involve taking to the stud first hole 8, then hole 2, and lastly hole 9. And so on for exchanges still larger. The pioneer inventor in automatic telephony was the late Mr. Almon B. Strowger.