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<h2> INTRODUCTION TO THE APPENDIX </h2>
<p>THE reader who has followed the foregoing narrative may feel that inasmuch
as it is intended to be an historical document, an appropriate addendum
thereto would be a digest of all the inventions of Edison. The
desirability of such a digest is not to be denied, but as there are some
twenty-five hundred or more inventions to be considered (including those
covered by caveats), the task of its preparation would be stupendous.
Besides, the resultant data would extend this book into several additional
volumes, thereby rendering it of value chiefly to the technical student,
but taking it beyond the bounds of biography.</p>
<p>We should, however, deem our presentation of Mr. Edison's work to be
imperfectly executed if we neglected to include an intelligible exposition
of the broader theoretical principles of his more important inventions. In
the following Appendix we have therefore endeavored to present a few brief
statements regarding Mr. Edison's principal inventions, classified as to
subject-matter and explained in language as free from technicalities as is
possible. No attempt has been made to conform with strictly scientific
terminology, but, for the benefit of the general reader, well-understood
conventional expressions, such as "flow of current," etc., have been
employed. It should be borne in mind that each of the following items has
been treated as a whole or class, generally speaking, and not as a digest
of all the individual patents relating to it. Any one who is sufficiently
interested can obtain copies of any of the patents referred to for five
cents each by addressing the Commissioner of Patents, Washington, D. C.</p>
<h2> APPENDIX </h2>
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