Y nr ynr i t 1 A Innovation In Telephone Bate. IHE New York Telephone company has entered upon an Interesting experiment. It is placing fiCO tele phones in as many dwelling house and private apartment in the residence section Just above and below Harlem river. No charge is mnde for put ting In or taking out. The citizen who has ordered the telephone guarantees nothing. He simply pays 10 cent for each time ho makes use of tho name. The novel feature Is found in the method of payment. Mr. A wishes to speak to Mr. H. He drops 10 cents in a slut In the machine and calls central. If central con nects i.im with Mr. B the dime drops in'.o nolher receptacle, and becomes the prop erty of the telephone company. If central cannot make the connection with B the dime rolls out, Mr. A puts it in his pocket and reserves It for a later chance. At stated periods an agent of the company comes around, collects the money and lo ks the box up for future ue. The company experts by this device not only to increase the use of the telephone, but also to save commission paid to the drug stores and other places used as pay citation. The citizen in whose house th automatic collecting machine is placed 1.4 provided with a package of postal cards, with which to request his friends to come In and use his 'phone. The more service It sees the more chance of Its being left In on these advantageous terms. Automobile With rower riant. One of the great electric manufacturing companies has recently finished and tested a novel automobile. The car. which is of the Tonneau type. Is propelled by electri city, but instead of having storage batteries It carries its own power plant. A gasoline motor directly connected with an electric generator is arranged in front of the car, the generator being wired to an electric motor on the rear axle. The use of cams or cogs is eliminated, and the car has repeatedly been stopped and started on very steep grade, or stiff mud roads, which would Inevitably have stalled the gasoline or steam motors of like power. Electricity on the Farm. The large farmers of the west are taking a deep Interest In power to supersede horses or oxen. Steam tractors are being used, open, however, to the risk of fire among dry crops. On one of the large wheat farms of Da kota an experimental installation has been made which may lead to the development of the use of electricity In farming opera tions. Power is generated at a mill site three miles from the farm, and trans mitted in the usual way to a power mast forty feet high, set in open ground. At the top of this mast is connected a double conducting cable 600 feet long, this In turn is connected to the tractor mo bile, which consists of a twenty-five-horse power motor on a heavy carriage. A spar ten feet high is carried on the carriage, with a universal joint pulley on top, over which the cable is led to a drum on the carriage, which automatically takes up the slack cable as the tractor approaches the power mast, the current being taken by slutable connections through the drum to the motor. In operation the tractor is hitched to a gang plow, cultivator or harvester, the cable being kept by the action of the drum from sagging to the ground. With this length of cable twenty-five acres can be worked, and the results are so satisfactory that it is proposed to extend the system to cover 600 acres, which will require twenty-four masts at suitable intervals. Furthermore, in spring wheat operations every day's delay in seeding after the (round can be worked is detrimental to the future crop, and the owners of this farm are considering the proposition of installing arc lamps on these masts and carrying on their operations day and night at such seasons. A dinner was given at the Waldorf-Astoria last week in honor of the twenty lifth anniversary of the introduction of the incandescent electric light and tho fifty seventh anniversary of the birth of Thomas A. Kdison. Mr. Kdison was the guest of honor. One end of the Commercial Cable com pany's cable was taken Into the grand ball room of the hotel, and connected to the table at which tho Inventor w;a sented. By means of the old quadruplex Instrument which Mr. KdUon used many years ago when he was a telegraph operator, and which ha Ixen In the museum of the Western I'nlon Telegraph company for a long time, he sent a message across the ocean to Marconi. Missages to all of the great scientists in tioth America and Ku rope were sent from tho room where the dinner was held. The deed of trust of the Kdison Medal association Was presented at the dinner. The asoclation has raised a fund, the income of which will be applied annually to the striking of a medal to be presented to the student In electrical engineering lu the United States or Canada whose thesis or recorded research shall lie deemed most worthy. The Institute of Klectrical engi neers will net as trustee. K.le-.Mrlrlt y IJIrVrt From Knet. In a recent Issue of Klectrlclty there ap peared an article taken from oi of tre dally papers describing an Invention for generating electricity direct from fuel. Th Invento', a resident of Newark, N. J., Is elated, as he deems his invention perfected. This problem of obtaining power direct from coal and doing away with expensive and cumbrous machinery, is one that in ventors and scientists the world over have been for years endeavoring to solve. Who ever accomplishes it successfully and de signs an apparatus that is practical will be the means of revolutionising the exist ing methods of generating motive power. But unless this Newark genius has finally hit upon the proper combination of ele ments the problem is far from solved. Thermopiles have been brought out In Ihe past, for which great things were hoped and which to all appearances accomplished striking results in a small way. When, however, more was required of them than the operation of an electric- fan or a door bell, fatal defects made their appearance. The Internal resistance was too great and the alloys made use of became oxidized. The Newark Inventor claims that the effi ciency of his apparatus, which he calls a dynelectron, is 45 per cent as compared to 8'4 per cent when electric current Is gen erated hy means of the steam engine. It Is to be hoped that the dynelectron will be able to accomplish what the steam engine and dynamo now does, but until such is actually proven to be tho case we are In clined to be rather sceptical of the ability of this new device. Kiprraa Traffic On Trolley Lines. By far the most Important feature of the proposed consolidation of the express com panies of Boston and Its suburbs is that which proposes to use the electric railway lines for express traffic. Seventeen of the smaller electric roads of Massachusetts are at present availing themselves of the priv ilege granted by the general act of last year and are using freight cars for tho carrying of merchandise and baggage. "One great obstacle at present stands In the way of the general adoption of the system," says the Boston Transcript. "That is that 'the streets of the large cities are already so crowded with cars for the transportation of passengers and mail that It Is feared that the running of express cars would bo a Berlous Inconvenience to the general trav eling public. The claim of street railway managers that the general public would be benefited by- the admission of electric cars for carrying freight, because the revenues derived from this soune would le In part applied to the improvement of the railroad service. Is offset with the probability thit worse congestion of cars limn at present would result in the Important routed of a Ian) city like lioston. It Is of no use to argue that the express car3 would ran less congestion and interruption to traffic than mail cars, for the reason that the latter must lie run anyway. The exprtss cars would cause a purely additional bur den. "There is, hnwevcr, a great opportunity before the electric line running into the large cities In the transportation of mar ket gardening products during the night and early morning hour. Before S o'clock there would Ih no great Interference with passenger tratnc, and the rule Is for tho markctmen to have their product In Bos ton before that hour. Such a Hystem would be of great benefit to the market gardener, and the car could he warmed In winter or kept co il In summer, as might be desired. Harden products would arrive In Boston quicker and in betetr condition than at present, and. with storage facili ties for cars In lioston, there would be no necessity of running r us at other hours of the day when Ihe streets are needed for paatienger tramV, There seem to be little doubt that a system of express ears, ope rated by night, would be of great benefit to Boston and the street railroads, and this new step forward In modern Improve ments, with the restrictions outlined alove, seems entirely feasible." fttallonary Power from A atom while. A Wisconsin firm has recently introduced nn appliance by means of which any auto mobile may be readily used for stationary power development. A small platform Is set on n level with the floor of the shed or shop, and ihe auto is backed upon It, until the driving wheels rest upon two small, wide faced wheels with slightly cor rugated surfaces. The carriage Is then clamped, by a simple device. In this posi tion. The shaft which carries these wheels also carries a pulley on Its outer end, and on starting up the motor the motion Is communicated to the small wheel on which It rests, and thu the pulley, which can be belted to any apparatus as desired. It Is asserted that a Very efficient lighting plant for a residence can be operated In this way and the nuto can be placed In position, or taken therefrom, a readily as going into, or out of, a carriage house. Frofected Third Hull. A protected third rail, w7ilch has so often been advocated for the elevated system in New York City, but has as often been judged a practical impossibility by engi neers of the Manhattan Klevated com pany, is permanently Installed for seven teen miles on the electric road In Switzer land, between Le Fa yet and Chamounix. This protected system Is entirely success ful, and has been beset by none of the difficulties put forward by those opposed to Its local adoption. The protection Is af forded by an Isolated box of paraffined beech, which makes contact with the rail impossible except through the narrow silt, at (he side towsrd the car, through which the metal connection with the motor of the car is established. The top of the box is fixed with Iron distance pieces which sup port it only nn the off side of the box, thus allowing the above mentioned opening. No connection would be established, there fore, with the live rail unless something was forced In through this slit. Anyone could walk over the rail by stepping on the box with perfect saferty. Although It might naturally be supposed that such a support would not possess sufficiently high Insulating qualities for the pressure em ployed to prevent considerable leakage. It Is computed that Ihe maximum los in this system Is less than one ampere or yard. However, the leakage, it Is asserted, de crease with a fall of rain or snow, owing to this action washing off the dust and ac cumulation that have taken from Ihe strength of current. Hallway Train T-lhony. Though the activity of inventor in peek ing a way to establish electric communi cation between stations nud moving trains ha not yet led to the adoption of any such system, the Klectrle llevlew still con aiders it a possibility. in its last Ihsuo that periodical remarks editorially that Kdison and other expert have shown a preference for Induction rather Hum con tact for leading the necessary Impulse Into the instrument on car or engine. Tho opinion Is expressed, nevertheless, that the tralley wheel nd overhead wire or trans mission from rails to car wheel may yet be found equally feasible. Another development of the near future, to which mir contemporary makes no allu sion, will doubtless have some hearing on this question. The substitution of elec tricity fur steam on many railroads in America and Kurope within the next live or ten year may he looked upon as a prac tical certainty. Whether Ihe current be conveyed lo the trains from the power station by the third rail or by overhead wires, the track proper will undoubtedly be used as a mean of returning it. With the right sort of apparatus and with a special control of voltages, the same con ductor can be used for more than one cur rent. Kdison' quadruplex system of telegraphy i a familiar illustration of tho facl. Whether so light a current as I needed for telegraphy or telephony can be conveniently handled In direct association with one powerful enough to drive a rail way train is another question. The neces sity for employing a scpurate route for tho electric currents of a block Blgnul system, where electricity Is used for motive pur pose, has already been foreseen. In like manner an independent conductor would be required to light a red signal la tho englniHir's cab to warn hJm of danger ahead If that method of protection were adopted on electric roads. It Is obvious, therefore, that If communication Is going to ho maintained with moving trains by telegraph or telephone, track circuits can not he utilized on the railways of thu fu ture. Ho deafening is the din In a steam locomo tive cab that a telephone there would seerh to be useless. The motorman's apartment on an electric train on one of the ele vated roads, for Instance la less noisy; but even In that a signal appealing to the eye would probably be more effective. A con ductor might be able to hear telephonic orders, especially if his instrument were placed in a booth whose walls had been rendered partially sound proof. That plan of issuing orders from a central point would, of course. Involve drawbacks not experienced hitherto. Some of thie ran be foreseen. A he would not know pre cisely when to expect orders, the con ductor would be obliged to rely upon an other employe an, operator, for Instance for Indications that ho was wanted, and It might take a minute or two to find him. Again, if half a dozen trains were con trolled by telephones connected trolley wise with the same wire, misunderstand ings might arise us to the particular con ductor who was called. New York Tribune. Busy Kleetrlo l.lnea. The electric railroads last year carried three times the population of the world. The cur ran eleven times the distance be tween the earth and sun. The capital in vested is twice as much as the 1'nlted States bonded debt, and the gross earnings are $'SiO,0nO,iH). Taxes were paid amount ing to $i:i,oao,(jo. i