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<h2> CHAPTER XX </h2>
<h3> EDISON PORTLAND CEMENT </h3>
<p>NEW developments in recent years have been more striking than the general
adoption of cement for structural purposes of all kinds in the United
States; or than the increase in its manufacture here. As a material for
the construction of office buildings, factories, and dwellings, it has
lately enjoyed an extraordinary vogue; yet every indication is
confirmatory of the belief that such use has barely begun. Various reasons
may be cited, such as the growing scarcity of wood, once the favorite
building material in many parts of the country, and the increasing
dearness of brick and stone. The fact remains, indisputable, and
demonstrated flatly by the statistics of production. In 1902 the American
output of cement was placed at about 21,000,000 barrels, valued at over
$17,000,000. In 1907 the production is given as nearly 49,000,000 barrels.
Here then is an industry that doubled in five years. The average rate of
industrial growth in the United States is 10 per cent. a year, or doubling
every ten years. It is a singular fact that electricity also so far
exceeds the normal rate as to double in value and quantity of output and
investment every five years. There is perhaps more than ordinary
coincidence in the association of Edison with two such active departments
of progress.</p>
<p>As a purely manufacturing business the general cement industry is one of
even remote antiquity, and if Edison had entered into it merely as a
commercial enterprise by following paths already so well trodden, the fact
would hardly have been worthy of even passing notice. It is not in his
nature, however, to follow a beaten track except in regard to the
recognition of basic principles; so that while the manufacture of Edison
Portland cement embraces the main essentials and familiar processes of
cement-making, such as crushing, drying, mixing, roasting, and grinding,
his versatility and originality, as exemplified in the conception and
introduction of some bold and revolutionary methods and devices, have
resulted in raising his plant from the position of an outsider to the rank
of the fifth largest producer in the United States, in the short space of
five years after starting to manufacture.</p>
<p>Long before his advent in cement production, Edison had held very
pronounced views on the value of that material as the one which would
obtain largely for future building purposes on account of its stability.
More than twenty-five years ago one of the writers of this narrative heard
him remark during a discussion on ancient buildings: "Wood will rot, stone
will chip and crumble, bricks disintegrate, but a cement and iron
structure is apparently indestructible. Look at some of the old Roman
baths. They are as solid as when they were built." With such convictions,
and the vast fund of practical knowledge and experience he had gained at
Edison in the crushing and manipulation of large masses of magnetic iron
ore during the preceding nine years, it is not surprising that on that
homeward railway journey, mentioned at the close of the preceding chapter,
he should have decided to go into the manufacture of cement, especially in
view of the enormous growth of its use for structural purposes during
recent times.</p>
<p>The field being a new one to him, Edison followed his usual course of
reading up every page of authoritative literature on the subject, and
seeking information from all quarters. In the mean time, while he was busy
also with his new storage battery, Mr. Mallory, who had been hard at work
on the cement plan, announced that he had completed arrangements for
organizing a company with sufficient financial backing to carry on the
business; concluding with the remark that it was now time to engage
engineers to lay out the plant. Edison replied that he intended to do that
himself, and invited Mr. Mallory to go with him to one of the
draughting-rooms on an upper floor of the laboratory.</p>
<p>Here he placed a large sheet of paper on a draughting-table, and
immediately began to draw out a plan of the proposed works, continuing all
day and away into the evening, when he finished; thus completing within
the twenty-four hours the full lay-out of the entire plant as it was
subsequently installed, and as it has substantially remained in practical
use to this time. It will be granted that this was a remarkable
engineering feat, especially in view of the fact that Edison was then a
new-comer in the cement business, and also that if the plant were to be
rebuilt to-day, no vital change would be desirable or necessary. In that
one day's planning every part was considered and provided for, from the
crusher to the packing-house. From one end to the other, the distance over
which the plant stretches in length is about half a mile, and through the
various buildings spread over this space there passes, automatically, in
course of treatment, a vast quantity of material resulting in the
production of upward of two and a quarter million pounds of finished
cement every twenty-four hours, seven days in the week.</p>
<p>In that one day's designing provision was made not only for all important
parts, but minor details, such, for instance, as the carrying of all
steam, water, and air pipes, and electrical conductors in a large subway
running from one end of the plant to the other; and, an oiling system for
the entire works. This latter deserves special mention, not only because
of its arrangement for thorough lubrication, but also on account of the
resultant economy affecting the cost of manufacture.</p>
<p>Edison has strong convictions on the liberal use of lubricants, but argued
that in the ordinary oiling of machinery there is great waste, while much
dirt is conveyed into the bearings. He therefore planned a system by which
the ten thousand bearings in the plant are oiled automatically; requiring
the services of only two men for the entire work. This is accomplished by
a central pumping and filtering plant and the return of the oil from all
parts of the works by gravity. Every bearing is made dust-proof, and is
provided with two interior pipes. One is above and the other below the
bearing. The oil flows in through the upper pipe, and, after lubricating
the shaft, flows out through the lower pipe back to the pumping station,
where any dirt is filtered out and the oil returned to circulation. While
this system of oiling is not unique, it was the first instance of its
adaptation on so large and complete a scale, and illustrates the
far-sightedness of his plans.</p>
<p>In connection with the adoption of this lubricating system there occurred
another instance of his knowledge of materials and intuitive insight into
the nature of things. He thought that too frequent circulation of a
comparatively small quantity of oil would, to some extent, impair its
lubricating qualities, and requested his assistants to verify this opinion
by consultation with competent authorities. On making inquiry of the
engineers of the Standard Oil Company, his theory was fully sustained.
Hence, provision was made for carrying a large stock of oil, and for
giving a certain period of rest to that already used.</p>
<p>A keen appreciation of ultimate success in the production of a fine
quality of cement led Edison to provide very carefully in his original
scheme for those details that he foresaw would become requisite—such,
for instance, as ample stock capacity for raw materials and their
automatic delivery in the various stages of manufacture, as well as
mixing, weighing, and frequent sampling and analyzing during the progress
through the mills. This provision even included the details of the
packing-house, and his perspicacity in this case is well sustained from
the fact that nine years afterward, in anticipation of building an
additional packing-house, the company sent a representative to different
parts of the country to examine the systems used by manufacturers in the
packing of large quantities of various staple commodities involving
somewhat similar problems, and found that there was none better than that
devised before the cement plant was started. Hence, the order was given to
build the new packing-house on lines similar to those of the old one.</p>
<p>Among the many innovations appearing in this plant are two that stand out
in bold relief as indicating the large scale by which Edison measures his
ideas. One of these consists of the crushing and grinding machinery, and
the other of the long kilns. In the preceding chapter there has been given
a description of the giant rolls, by means of which great masses of rock,
of which individual pieces may weigh eight or more tons, are broken and
reduced to about a fourteen-inch size. The economy of this is apparent
when it is considered that in other cement plants the limit of crushing
ability is "one-man size"—that is, pieces not too large for one man
to lift.</p>
<p>The story of the kiln, as told by Mr. Mallory, is illustrative of Edison's
tendency to upset tradition and make a radical departure from generally
accepted ideas. "When Mr. Edison first decided to go into the cement
business, it was on the basis of his crushing-rolls and air separation,
and he had every expectation of installing duplicates of the kilns which
were then in common use for burning cement. These kilns were usually made
of boiler iron, riveted, and were about sixty feet long and six feet in
diameter, and had a capacity of about two hundred barrels of cement
clinker in twenty-four hours.</p>
<p>"When the detail plans for our plant were being drawn, Mr. Edison and I
figured over the coal capacity and coal economy of the sixty-foot kiln,
and each time thought that both could he materially bettered. After having
gone over this matter several times, he said: 'I believe I can make a kiln
which will give an output of one thousand barrels in twenty-four hours.'
Although I had then been closely associated with him for ten years and was
accustomed to see him accomplish great things, I could not help feeling
the improbability of his being able to jump into an old-established
industry—as a novice—and start by improving the 'heart' of the
production so as to increase its capacity 400 per cent. When I pressed him
for an explanation, he was unable to give any definite reasons, except
that he felt positive it could be done. In this connection let me say that
very many times I have heard Mr. Edison make predictions as to what a
certain mechanical device ought to do in the way of output and costs, when
his statements did not seem to be even among the possibilities.
Subsequently, after more or less experience, these predictions have been
verified, and I cannot help coming to the conclusion that he has a
faculty, not possessed by the average mortal, of intuitively and correctly
sizing up mechanical and commercial possibilities.</p>
<p>"But, returning to the kiln, Mr. Edison went to work immediately and very
soon completed the design of a new type which was to be one hundred and
fifty feet long and nine feet in diameter, made up in ten-foot sections of
cast iron bolted together and arranged to be revolved on fifteen bearings.
He had a wooden model made and studied it very carefully, through a series
of experiments. These resulted so satisfactorily that this form was
finally decided upon, and ultimately installed as part of the plant.</p>
<p>"Well, for a year or so the kiln problem was a nightmare to me. When we
started up the plant experimentally, and the long kiln was first put in
operation, an output of about four hundred barrels in twenty-four hours
was obtained. Mr. Edison was more than disappointed at this result. His
terse comment on my report was: 'Rotten. Try it again.' When we became a
little more familiar with the operation of the kiln we were able to get
the output up to about five hundred and fifty barrels, and a little later
to six hundred and fifty barrels per day. I would go down to Orange and
report with a great deal of satisfaction the increase in output, but Mr.
Edison would apparently be very much disappointed, and often said to me
that the trouble was not with the kiln, but with our method of operating
it; and he would reiterate his first statement that it would make one
thousand barrels in twenty-four hours.</p>
<p>"Each time I would return to the plant with the determination to increase
the output if possible, and we did increase it to seven hundred and fifty,
then to eight hundred and fifty barrels. Every time I reported these
increases Mr. Edison would still be disappointed. I said to him several
times that if he was so sure the kiln could turn out one thousand barrels
in twenty-four hours we would be very glad to have him tell us how to do
it, and that we would run it in any way he directed. He replied that he
did not know what it was that kept the output down, but he was just as
confident as ever that the kiln would make one thousand barrels per day,
and that if he had time to work with and watch the kiln it would not take
him long to find out the reasons why. He had made a number of suggestions
throughout these various trials, however, and, as we continued to operate,
we learned additional points in handling, and were able to get the output
up to nine hundred barrels, then one thousand, and finally to over eleven
hundred barrels per day, thus more than realizing the prediction made by
Mr. Edison before even the plans were drawn. It is only fair to say,
however, that prolonged experience has led us to the conclusion that the
maximum economy in continuous operation of these kilns is obtained by
working them at a little less than their maximum capacity.</p>
<p>"It is interesting to note, in connection with the Edison type of kiln,
that when the older cement manufacturers first learned of it, they
ridiculed the idea universally, and were not slow to predict our early
'finish' as cement manufacturers. The ultimate success of the kiln,
however, proved their criticisms to be unwarranted. Once aware of its
possibility, some of the cement manufacturers proceeded to avail
themselves of the innovation (at first without Mr. Edison's consent), and
to-day more than one-half of the Portland cement produced in this country
is made in kilns of the Edison type. Old plants are lengthening their
kilns wherever practicable, and no wide-awake manufacturer building a
modern plant could afford to install other than these long kilns. This
invention of Mr. Edison has been recognized by the larger cement
manufacturers, and there is every prospect now that the entire trade will
take licenses under his kiln patents."</p>
<p>When he decided to go into the cement business, Edison was thoroughly
awake to the fact that he was proposing to "butt into" an old-established
industry, in which the principal manufacturers were concerns of long
standing. He appreciated fully its inherent difficulties, not only in
manufacture, but also in the marketing of the product. These
considerations, together with his long-settled principle of striving
always to make the best, induced him at the outset to study methods of
producing the highest quality of product. Thus he was led to originate
innovations in processes, some of which have been preserved as trade
secrets; but of the others there are two deserving special notice—namely,
the accuracy of mixing and the fineness of grinding.</p>
<p>In cement-making, generally speaking, cement rock and limestone in the
rough are mixed together in such relative quantities as may be determined
upon in advance by chemical analysis. In many plants this mixture is made
by barrow or load units, and may be more or less accurate. Rule-of-thumb
methods are never acceptable to Edison, and he devised therefore a system
of weighing each part of the mixture, so that it would be correct to a
pound, and, even at that, made the device "fool-proof," for as he observed
to one of his associates: "The man at the scales might get to thinking of
the other fellow's best girl, so fifty or a hundred pounds of rock, more
or less, wouldn't make much difference to him." The Edison checking plan
embraces two hoppers suspended above two platform scales whose beams are
electrically connected with a hopper-closing device by means of needles
dipping into mercury cups. The scales are set according to the chemist's
weighing orders, and the material is fed into the scales from the hoppers.
The instant the beam tips, the connection is broken and the feed stops
instantly, thus rendering it impossible to introduce any more material
until the charge has been unloaded.</p>
<p>The fine grinding of cement clinker is distinctively Edisonian in both
origin and application. As has been already intimated, its author followed
a thorough course of reading on the subject long before reaching the
actual projection or installation of a plant, and he had found all
authorities to agree on one important point—namely, that the value
of cement depends upon the fineness to which it is ground. [16] He also
ascertained that in the trade the standard of fineness was that 75 per
cent. of the whole mass would pass through a 200-mesh screen. Having made
some improvements in his grinding and screening apparatus, and believing
that in the future engineers, builders, and contractors would eventually
require a higher degree of fineness, he determined, in advance of
manufacturing, to raise the standard ten points, so that at least 85 per
cent. of his product should pass through a 200-mesh screen. This was a
bold step to be taken by a new-comer, but his judgment, backed by a full
confidence in ability to live up to this standard, has been fully
justified in its continued maintenance, despite the early incredulity of
older manufacturers as to the possibility of attaining such a high degree
of fineness.</p>
<p>[Footnote 16: For a proper understanding and full<br/>
appreciation of the importance of fine grinding, it may be<br/>
explained that Portland cement (as manufactured in the<br/>
Lehigh Valley) is made from what is commonly spoken of as<br/>
"cement rock," with the addition of sufficient limestone to<br/>
give the necessary amount of lime. The rock is broken down<br/>
and then ground to a fineness of 80 to 90 per cent. through<br/>
a 200-mesh screen. This ground material passes through kilns<br/>
and comes out in "clinker." This is ground and that part of<br/>
this finely ground clinker that will pass a 200-mesh screen<br/>
is cement; the residue is still clinker. These coarse<br/>
particles, or clinkers, absorb water very slowly, are<br/>
practically inert, and have very feeble cementing<br/>
properties. The residue on a 200-mesh screen is useless.]<br/></p>
<p>If Edison measured his happiness, as men often do, by merely commercial or
pecuniary rewards of success, it would seem almost redundant to state that
he has continued to manifest an intense interest in the cement plant.
Ordinarily, his interest as an inventor wanes in proportion to the
approach to mere commercialism—in other words, the keenness of his
pleasure is in overcoming difficulties rather than the mere piling up of a
bank account. He is entirely sensible of the advantages arising from a
good balance at the banker's, but that has not been the goal of his
ambition. Hence, although his cement enterprise reached the commercial
stage a long time ago, he has been firmly convinced of his own ability to
devise still further improvements and economical processes of greater or
less fundamental importance, and has, therefore, made a constant study of
the problem as a whole and in all its parts. By means of frequent reports,
aided by his remarkable memory, he keeps in as close touch with the plant
as if he were there in person every day, and is thus enabled to suggest
improvement in any particular detail. The engineering force has a great
respect for the accuracy of his knowledge of every part of the plant, for
he remembers the dimensions and details of each item of machinery,
sometimes to the discomfiture of those who are around it every day.</p>
<p>A noteworthy instance of Edison's memory occurred in connection with this
cement plant. Some years ago, as its installation was nearing completion,
he went up to look it over and satisfy himself as to what needed to be
done. On the arrival of the train at 10.40 in the morning, he went to the
mill, and, with Mr. Mason, the general superintendent, started at the
crusher at one end, and examined every detail all the way through to the
packing-house at the other end. He made neither notes nor memoranda, but
the examination required all the day, which happened to be a Saturday. He
took a train for home at 5.30 in the afternoon, and on arriving at his
residence at Orange, got out some note-books and began to write entirely
from memory each item consecutively. He continued at this task all through
Saturday night, and worked steadily on until Sunday afternoon, when he
completed a list of nearly six hundred items. The nature of this feat is
more appreciable from the fact that a large number of changes included all
the figures of new dimensions he had decided upon for some of the
machinery throughout the plant.</p>
<p>As the reader may have a natural curiosity to learn whether or not the
list so made was practical, it may be stated that it was copied and sent
up to the general superintendent with instructions to make the
modifications suggested, and report by numbers as they were attended to.
This was faithfully done, all the changes being made before the plant was
put into operation. Subsequent experience has amply proven the value of
Edison's prescience at this time.</p>
<p>Although Edison's achievements in the way of improved processes and
machinery have already made a deep impression in the cement industry, it
is probable that this impression will become still more profoundly stamped
upon it in the near future with the exploitation of his "Poured Cement
House." The broad problem which he set himself was to provide handsome and
practically indestructible detached houses, which could be taken by
wage-earners at very moderate monthly rentals. He turned this question
over in his mind for several years, and arrived at the conclusion that a
house cast in one piece would be the answer. To produce such a house
involved the overcoming of many engineering and other technical
difficulties. These he attacked vigorously and disposed of patiently one
by one.</p>
<p>In this connection a short anecdote may be quoted from Edison as
indicative of one of the influences turning his thoughts in this
direction. In the story of the ore-milling work, it has been noted that
the plant was shut down owing to the competition of the cheap ore from the
Mesaba Range. Edison says: "When I shut down, the insurance companies
cancelled my insurance. I asked the reason why. 'Oh,' they said, 'this
thing is a failure. The moral risk is too great.' 'All right; I am glad to
hear it. I will now construct buildings that won't have any moral risk.' I
determined to go into the Portland cement business. I organized a company
and started cement-works which have now been running successfully for
several years. I had so perfected the machinery in trying to get my ore
costs down that the making of cheap cement was an easy matter to me. I
built these works entirely of concrete and steel, so that there is not a
wagon-load of lumber in them; and so that the insurance companies would
not have any possibility of having any 'moral risk.' Since that time I
have put up numerous factory buildings all of steel and concrete, without
any combustible whatever about them—to avoid this 'moral risk.' I am
carrying further the application of this idea in building private houses
for poor people, in which there will be no 'moral risk' at all—nothing
whatever to burn, not even by lightning."</p>
<p>As a casting necessitates a mold, together with a mixture sufficiently
fluid in its nature to fill all the interstices completely, Edison devoted
much attention to an extensive series of experiments for producing a
free-flowing combination of necessary materials. His proposition was
against all precedent. All expert testimony pointed to the fact that a
mixture of concrete (cement, sand, crushed stone, and water) could not be
made to flow freely to the smallest parts of an intricate set of molds;
that the heavy parts of the mixture could not be held in suspension, but
would separate out by gravity and make an unevenly balanced structure;
that the surface would be full of imperfections, etc.</p>
<p>Undeterred by the unanimity of adverse opinions, however, he pursued his
investigations with the thorough minuteness that characterizes all his
laboratory work, and in due time produced a mixture which on elaborate
test overcame all objections and answered the complex requirements
perfectly, including the making of a surface smooth, even, and entirely
waterproof. All the other engineering problems have received study in like
manner, and have been overcome, until at the present writing the whole
question is practically solved and has been reduced to actual practice.
The Edison poured or cast cement house may be reckoned as a reality.</p>
<p>The general scheme, briefly outlined, is to prepare a model and plans of
the house to be cast, and then to design a set of molds in sections of
convenient size. When all is ready, these molds, which are of cast iron
with smooth interior surfaces, are taken to the place where the house is
to be erected. Here there has been provided a solid concrete cellar floor,
technically called "footing." The molds are then locked together so that
they rest on this footing. Hundreds of pieces are necessary for the
complete set. When they have been completely assembled, there will be a
hollow space in the interior, representing the shape of the house.
Reinforcing rods are also placed in the molds, to be left behind in the
finished house.</p>
<p>Next comes the pouring of the concrete mixture into this form. Large
mechanical mixers are used, and, as it is made, the mixture is dumped into
tanks, from which it is conveyed to a distributing tank on the top, or
roof, of the form. From this tank a large number of open troughs or pipes
lead the mixture to various openings in the roof, whence it flows down and
fills all parts of the mold from the footing in the basement until it
overflows at the tip of the roof.</p>
<p>The pouring of the entire house is accomplished in about six hours, and
then the molds are left undisturbed for six days, in order that the
concrete may set and harden. After that time the work of taking away the
molds is begun. This requires three or four days. When the molds are taken
away an entire house is disclosed, cast in one piece, from cellar to tip
of roof, complete with floors, interior walls, stairways, bath and laundry
tubs, electric-wire conduits, gas, water, and heating pipes. No plaster is
used anywhere; but the exterior and interior walls are smooth and may be
painted or tinted, if desired. All that is now necessary is to put in the
windows, doors, heater, and lighting fixtures, and to connect up the
plumbing and heating arrangements, thus making the house ready for
occupancy.</p>
<p>As these iron molds are not ephemeral like the wooden framing now used in
cement construction, but of practically illimitable life, it is obvious
that they can be used a great number of times. A complete set of molds
will cost approximately $25,000, while the necessary plant will cost about
$15,000 more. It is proposed to work as a unit plant for successful
operation at least six sets of molds, to keep the men busy and the
machinery going. Any one, with a sheet of paper, can ascertain the yearly
interest on the investment as a fixed charge to be assessed against each
house, on the basis that one hundred and forty-four houses can be built in
a year with the battery of six sets of molds. Putting the sum at $175,000,
and the interest at 6 per cent. on the cost of the molds and 4 per cent.
for breakage, together with 6 per cent. interest and 15 per cent.
depreciation on machinery, the plant charge is approximately $140 per
house. It does not require a particularly acute prophetic vision to see
"Flower Towns" of "Poured Houses" going up in whole suburbs outside all
our chief centres of population.</p>
<p>Edison's conception of the workingman's ideal house has been a broad one
from the very start. He was not content merely to provide a roomy,
moderately priced house that should be fireproof, waterproof, and
vermin-proof, and practically indestructible, but has been solicitous to
get away from the idea of a plain "packing-box" type. He has also provided
for ornamentation of a high class in designing the details of the
structure. As he expressed it: "We will give the workingman and his family
ornamentation in their house. They deserve it, and besides, it costs no
more after the pattern is made to give decorative effects than it would to
make everything plain." The plans have provided for a type of house that
would cost not far from $30,000 if built of cut stone. He gave to Messrs.
Mann & McNaillie, architects, New York, his idea of the type of house
he wanted. On receiving these plans he changed them considerably, and
built a model. After making many more changes in this while in the pattern
shop, he produced a house satisfactory to himself.</p>
<p>This one-family house has a floor plan twenty-five by thirty feet, and is
three stories high. The first floor is divided off into two large rooms—parlor
and living-room—and the upper floors contain four large bedrooms, a
roomy bath-room, and wide halls. The front porch extends eight feet, and
the back porch three feet. A cellar seven and a half feet high extends
under the whole house, and will contain the boiler, wash-tubs, and
coal-bunker. It is intended that the house shall be built on lots forty by
sixty feet, giving a lawn and a small garden.</p>
<p>It is contemplated that these houses shall be built in industrial
communities, where they can be put up in groups of several hundred. If
erected in this manner, and by an operator buying his materials in large
quantities, Edison believes that these houses can be erected complete,
including heating apparatus and plumbing, for $1200 each. This figure
would also rest on the basis of using in the mixture the gravel excavated
on the site. Comment has been made by persons of artistic taste on the
monotony of a cluster of houses exactly alike in appearance, but this
criticism has been anticipated, and the molds are so made as to be capable
of permutations of arrangement. Thus it will be possible to introduce
almost endless changes in the style of house by variation of the same set
of molds.</p>
<p>For more than forty years Edison was avowedly an inventor for purely
commercial purposes; but within the last two years he decided to retire
from that field so far as new inventions were concerned, and to devote
himself to scientific research and experiment in the leisure hours that
might remain after continuing to improve his existing devices. But
although the poured cement house was planned during the commercial period,
the spirit in which it was conceived arose out of an earnest desire to
place within the reach of the wage-earner an opportunity to better his
physical, pecuniary, and mental conditions in so far as that could be done
through the medium of hygienic and beautiful homes at moderate rentals.
From the first Edison has declared that it was not his intention to
benefit pecuniarily through the exploitation of this project. Having
actually demonstrated the practicability and feasibility of his plans, he
will allow responsible concerns to carry them into practice under such
limitations as may be necessary to sustain the basic object, but without
any payment to him except for the actual expense incurred. The
hypercritical may cavil and say that, as a manufacturer of cement, Edison
will be benefited. True, but as ANY good Portland cement can be used, and
no restrictions as to source of supply are enforced, he, or rather his
company, will be merely one of many possible purveyors.</p>
<p>This invention is practically a gift to the workingmen of the world and
their families. The net result will be that those who care to avail
themselves of the privilege may, sooner or later, forsake the crowded
apartment or tenement and be comfortably housed in sanitary, substantial,
and roomy homes fitted with modern conveniences, and beautified by
artistic decorations, with no outlay for insurance or repairs; no dread of
fire, and all at a rental which Edison believes will be not more, but
probably less than, $10 per month in any city of the United States. While
his achievement in its present status will bring about substantial and
immediate benefits to wage-earners, his thoughts have already travelled
some years ahead in the formulation of a still further beneficial project
looking toward the individual ownership of these houses on a basis
startling in its practical possibilities.</p>
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