Electricity has no instrument more useful in daily life, or in pure research, than the telephone. Now follows a narration by its creator, Professor Bell, of his photophone which transmits speech by a beam of light. This recital shows us how an inventor of the first rank proceeds from one attempt to another, until his toil is crowned with success. Next we hear the story of the Bessemer process from the lips of Sir Henry Bessemer himself, affording us an insight into the methods and characteristics of a mind ingenious, versatile and bold in the highest degree. An inventor of quite other type is next introduced,—Nobel, who gave dynamite to the quarryman and miner, smokeless powder to the gunner and sportsman. His unfaltering heart, beset as he was by constant peril, marks him a hero as brave as ever fought hazardous and dreary campaigns to a victorious close.
Many advances in mechanical and structural art have been won rather through a succession of attacks by one leader after another, than by a single decisive blow from a Watt or an Edison. A great band of inventors, improvers, adapters, have accomplished notable tasks with no record of such a feat as Bessemer with his converter, or Abbe with Jena glass. A brief chapter deals with some of the principal uses of compressed air, an agent of steadily increasing range. As useful, in a totally different sphere—that of building material—is concrete, especially as reinforced with steel. A sketch of its applications is offered. Then follows the theme of using fuels with economy, of obtaining from them motive powers with the least possible loss. This field is to-day attracting inventors of eminent ability, with the prospect that soon motive powers will be much cheapened, with incidental abridgment of drudgery, a new expansion of cities into the country, and the production of light at perhaps as little as one-third its present cost. A page or two are next given to a few social aspects of invention, its new aid and comfort to craftsmen, farmers, householders comparatively poor. It will appear that forces working against the undue centralization of industry grow stronger every day.
A closing word gives the reader, especially the young reader, a hint or two in case he wishes to pursue paths of study the first steps of which are taken in this book.
In 1900 was published the author’s “Flame, Electricity and the Camera,” in which are treated some of the principal applications of heat, electricity and photography as exemplified at the time of writing. That volume may supplement the book now in the reader’s hands.
CHAPTER II
FORM
Form as important as substance . . . Why a joist is stiffer than a plank . . . The girder is developed from a joist . . . Railroad rails are girders of great efficiency as designed and tested by Mr. P. H. Dudley.
A lens of ice focussing a sunbeam.