the several divisions 
strong in proportion to the resistance encountered upon these divisions, 
one engine only is employed upon each; our mileage becomes, 
B. to W. 44 by 1 or 44 W. to S. 541/2 by 1 or 541/2 S. to P. 52 by 1 or 
52 P. to A. 49 by 1 or 491/2 _____ And the sum, 200 miles. 
And the saving of miles run is therefore 660 less 200, or 460; and if 
500 tons pass over the road daily, the annual saving of mileage 
becomes 460 by 313, or 143,980, or 70 per cent. of the whole. The 
actual cost for freight-locomotives per ton, per mile run, during the year 
ending Sept. 30, 1855, was 384/1000 of a cent; and the above 143,980 
miles saved, multiplied by this fraction, amounts to $55,288 per annum. 
The actual expense of working the power will not of course show the
whole 70 per cent. of saving, as heavy and strong engines cost more at 
first, and cost more to operate, than lighter ones; but the figures show 
the effect of correct adaptation. If we call the saving 50 per cent. only 
of the mileage, we have then (as the locomotive power consumes 
30/100 of the whole cost of operating) 50/100 of 30/100, or 15/100, of 
the whole cost of working the road, and this by simply knowing how to 
adapt the machinery to the requirement. 
So very slight are the points of difference between a good and a bad 
engine, that they often escape the eye of those whose business it is to 
deal with such works. It is not the brass and steel and bright metal and 
elaborate painting that make the really good and serviceable 
engine,--but the length, breadth, and depth of its furnace, the 
knowledge of proportion shown in its design, and the mechanical skill 
exhibited in the fitting of its parts. The apparently complex portions are 
really very simple in action, while the apparently simple parts are those 
where the greatest knowledge is required. Any man of ordinary 
mechanical acquirements can design and arrange the general form,--the 
whole mass of cranks, pistons, connecting-rods, pumps, and the various 
levers for working the engine; but to find the correct dimensions of the 
inner parts of the boiler, and of the valve-gearing, by which the 
movements of the steam are governed, requires a very considerable 
knowledge of the chemistry of combustion, of practical geometry, and 
of the physical properties of steam. So nice, indeed, is the 
valve-adjustment of the locomotive, as depending upon the work it has 
to do, whether fast or slow, light or heavy, that a single eighth of an 
inch too much or too little will so affect its power as to entirely unfit it 
for doing its duty with any degree of economy. 
When a single man takes the general charge of five hundred miles of 
railroad, upon which the annual pay-roll is a million of dollars, and 
which employs over two hundred locomotives and three thousand cars, 
earning five million dollars a year,--a road which cost thirty-three 
million, has five miles in length of bridges, and over four hundred 
buildings,--it is plain that the system of operation must be somewhat 
elaborate. And so it is. Indeed, so complete is the organization and 
management of employees upon the New York and Erie Railroad, that
the General Superintendent at his office can at any moment tell within a 
mile where each car or engine is, what it is doing, the contents of the 
car, the consignor and consignee, the time at which it arrives and leaves 
each station, (the actual time, not the time when it should arrive,) and is 
thus able to correct all errors almost at the moment of commission, and 
in reality to completely control the road. 
The great regulator upon long lines of railroad is the electric telegraph, 
which connects all parts of the road, and enables one person to keep, as 
it were, his eye on the whole road at once. 
A single-track railroad, says Mr. McCallum, may be rendered more 
safe and efficient by a proper use of the telegraph than a double-track 
railroad without,--as the double-tracks commonly obviate collisions 
which occur between trains moving in opposite directions, whilst the 
telegraph may be used effectually in preventing them between trains 
moving either in opposite directions or in the same direction; and it is a 
well-established fact, deduced from the history of railroads both in 
Europe and in this country, that collisions from trains moving in the 
same direction have proved by far the most fatal and disastrous, and 
should be the most carefully guarded against. 
From the admirable report of Mr. McCallum, above referred to, we take 
the following:--Collisions between fast and slow trains moving in the 
same direction are prevented    
    
		
	
	
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