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+Project Gutenberg's Scientific American Supplement No. 275, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Scientific American Supplement No. 275
+
+Author: Various
+
+Posting Date: October 10, 2012 [EBook #8195]
+Release Date: May, 2005
+First Posted: June 30, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPL., NO. 275 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Olaf Voss, Don Kretz, Juliet Sutherland, Charles
+Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 275
+
+
+
+
+NEW YORK, APRIL 9, 1881
+
+Scientific American Supplement. Vol. XI, No. 275.
+
+Scientific American established 1845
+
+Scientific American Supplement, $5 a year.
+
+Scientific American and Supplement, $7 a year.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS.
+
+I. ENGINEERING AND MECHANICS.--The Various Modes of
+ Transmitting Power to a Distance. (Continued from No. 274.)
+ By ARTHUR ARCHARD. of Geneva.--II. Compressed Air.--III.
+ Transmission by Pressure Water.--IV. Transmission by
+ Electricity.--General Results
+
+ The Hotchkiss Revolving Gun
+
+ Floating Pontoon Dock. 2 figures.--Improved floating pontoon dock
+
+II. TECHNOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY.--Wheat and Wheat Bread. By H. MEGE
+ MOURIES.--Color in bread.--Anatomical structure and chemical
+ composition of wheat.--Embryo and coating of the embryo.--
+ Cerealine--Phosphate of calcium.--1 figure, section of a grain
+ of wheat, magnified.
+
+ Origin of New Process Milling.--Special report to the Census
+ Bureau. By ALBERT HOPPIN.--Present status of milling structures
+ and machinery in Minneapolis by Special Census Agent C. W.
+ JOHNSON.--Communication from GEORGE T. SMITH.
+
+ Tap for Effervescing Liquids. 1 figure.
+
+ London Chemical Society.--Notes.--Pentathionic acid, Mr.
+ VIVIAN LEWES.--Hydrocarbons from Rosin Spirit. Dr.
+ ARMSTRONG.--On the Determination of the Relative Weight of Single
+ Molecules. E. VOGEL.--On the Synthetical Production of Ammonia
+ by the Combination of Hydrogen and Nitrogen in the Presence of
+ Heated Spongy Platinum, G. S. JOHNSON.--On the Oxidation of
+ Organic Matter in Water, A. DOWNS.
+
+ Rose Oil, or Otto of Roses. By CHAS. G. WARNFORD LOCK.--Sources
+ of rose oil.--History--Where rose gardens are now cultivated
+ for oil.--Methods of cultivation.--Processes of
+ distillation.--Adulterations
+
+ A New Method of Preparing Metatoluidine. By OSCAR WIDMAN.
+
+III. AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, ETC.--The Guenon Milk Mirror. 1 figure.
+ Escutcheon of the Jersey Bull Calf, Grand Mirror.
+
+ Two Good Lawn Trees
+
+ Cutting Sods for Lawns
+
+ Horticultural Notes: New apples, pears, grapes, etc.--Discussion
+ on Grapes. Western New York Society.--New peaches.--Insects
+ affecting horticulture.--Insect destroyers.
+
+ Observations on the Salmon of the Pacific. By DAVID S. JORDAN
+ and CHARLES B. GILBERT. Valuable census report.
+
+IV. LIGHT, ELECTRICITY ETC.--Relation between Electricity
+ and Light. Dr. O. T. Lodge's lecture before the London Institute.
+
+ Interesting Electrical Researches by Dr. Warren de La Rue and
+ Dr. Hugo Miller.
+
+ Telephony by Thermic Currents
+
+ The Telectroscope. By Moxs. SENLECQ. 5 figures. A successful
+ apparatus for transmitting and reproducing camera pictures by
+ electricity.
+
+V. HYGIENE, MEDICINE, ETC.--Rapid Breathing as a Pain Obtunde in
+ Minor Surgery, Obstetrics, the General Practice of Medicine, and
+ of Dentistry. Dr. W. G. A. Bonwill's paper before the
+ Philadelphia County Medical Society. 8 figures. Sphygmographic
+ tracings.
+
+VI. ARCHITECTURE, ART, ETC.--Artist's Homes. No. 11. "Weirleigh."
+ Residence of Harrison Weir. Perspective and plans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WHEAT AND WHEAT BREAD.
+
+By H. MÈGE-MOURIÈS.
+
+
+In consequence of the interest that has been recently excited on the
+subject of bread reform, we have, says the London _Miller_, translated the
+interesting contribution of H. Mège-Mouriès to the Imperial and Central
+Society of Agriculture of France, and subsequently published in a separate
+form in 1860, on "Wheat and Wheat Bread," with the illustration prepared
+by the author for the contribution. The author says: "I repeat in this
+pamphlet the principal facts put forth in the notes issued by me, and in
+the reports furnished by Mr. Chevreul to the Academy of Science, from 1853
+up to 1860."
+
+The study of the structure of the wheat berry, its chemical composition,
+its alimentary value, its preservation, etc., is not alone of interest to
+science, agriculture, and industry, but it is worthy of attracting the
+attention of governments, for this study, in its connection to political
+economy, is bound up with the fate and the prosperity of nations. Wheat has
+been cultivated from time immemorial. At first it was roughly crushed and
+consumed in the form of a thick soup, or in cakes baked on an ordinary
+hearth. Many centuries before the Christian era the Egyptians were
+acquainted with the means of making fermented or leavened bread; afterwards
+this practice spread into Greece, and it is found in esteem at Rome two
+centuries B.C.; from Rome the new method was introduced among the Gauls,
+and it is found to-day to exist almost the same as it was practiced at that
+period, with the exception, of course, of the considerable improvements
+introduced in the baking and grinding.
+
+Since the fortunate idea was formed of transforming the wheat into bread,
+this grain has always produced white bread, and dark or brown bread, from
+which the conclusion was drawn that it must necessarily make white bread
+and brown bread; on the other hand, the flours, mixed with bran, made a
+brownish, doughy, and badly risen bread, and it was therefore concluded
+that the bran, by its color, produced this inferior bread. From this error,
+accepted as a truth, the most contradictory opinions of the most opposite
+processes have arisen, which are repeated at the present day in the art of
+separating as completely as possible all the tissues of the wheat, and of
+extracting from the grain only 70 per cent of flour fit for making white
+bread. It is, however, difficult for the observer to admit that a small
+quantity of the thin yellow envelope can, by a simple mingling with the
+crumb of the loaf, color it brown, and it is still more difficult to admit
+that the actual presence of these envelopes can without decomposition
+render bread doughy, badly raised, sticky, and incapable of swelling in
+water. On the other hand, although some distinguished chemists deny or
+exalt the nutritive properties of bran, agriculturists, taking practical
+observation as proof, attribute to that portion of the grain a
+physiological action which has nothing in common with plastic alimentation,
+and prove that animals weakened by a too long usage of dry fodder, are
+restored to health by the use of bran, which only seems to act by its
+presence, since the greater portion of it, as already demonstrated by Mr.
+Poggiale, is passed through with the excrement.
+
+With these opinions, apparently so opposed, it evidently results that there
+is an unknown factor at the bottom of the question; it is the nature of
+this factor I wish to find out, and it was after the discovery that I
+was able to explain the nature of brown bread, and its _role_ in the
+alimentation of animals. We have then to examine the causes of the
+production of brown bread, to state why white bread kills animals fed
+exclusively on it, while bread mixed with bran makes them live. We have to
+explain the phenomena of panification, the operations of grinding, and to
+explain the means of preparing a bread more economical and more favorable
+to health. To explain this question clearly and briefly we must first be
+acquainted with the various substances forming the berry, their nature,
+their position, and their properties. This we shall do with the aid of the
+illustration given.
+
+[Illustration: SECTION OF A GRAIN OF WHEAT MAGNIFIED.]
+
+EXPLANATION OF DIAGRAM.
+
+1.--Superficial Coating of the Epidermis, severed at the Crease of
+ the Kernel.
+2.--Section of Epidermis, Averages of the Weight of the Whole Grain, ½ %.
+3.--Epicarp, do. do. do. 1 %.
+4.--Endocarp, do. do. do. 1 ½ %.
+5.--Testa or Episperm, do. do. do. 2 %.
+6.--Embryo Membrane (with imaginary spaces in white on both sides
+ to make it distinct).
+7.\ / Glutonous Cells \
+8. > Endosperm < containing > do. do. 90 %.
+9./ \ Farinaccous Matter /
+
+
+ANATOMICAL STRUCTURE AND CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF WHEAT.
+
+The figure represents the longitudinal cut of a grain of wheat; it was made
+by taking, with the aid of the microscope and of photography, the drawing
+of a large quantity of fragments, which, joined together at last, produced
+the figure of the entire cut. These multiplied results were necessary to
+appreciate the insertion of the teguments and their nature in every part
+of the berry; in this long and difficult work I have been aided by the
+co-operation of Mr. Bertsch, who, as is known, has discovered a means of
+fixing rapidly by photography any image from the microscope. I must state,
+in the first place, that even in 1837 Mr. Payen studied and published the
+structure and the composition of a fragment of a grain of wheat; that
+this learned chemist, whose authority in such matters is known, perfectly
+described the envelopes or coverings, and indicated the presence of various
+immediate principles (especially of azote, fatty and mineral substances
+which fill up the range of contiguous cells between them and the periphery
+of the perisperm, to the exclusion of the gluten and the starchy granules),
+as well as to the mode of insertion of the granules of starch in the gluten
+contained in the cells, with narrow divisions from the perisperm, and in
+such a manner that up to the point of working indicated by the figure 1
+this study was complete. However, I have been obliged to recommence it, to
+study the special facts bearing on the alimentary question, and I must say
+that all the results obtained by Mr. Bertsch, Mr. Trécul, and myself agree
+with those given by Mr. Payen.
+
+
+ENVELOPES OF THE BERRY.
+
+No. 1 represents a superficial side of the crease.
+
+No. 2 indicates the epidermis or cuticle. This covering is extremely light,
+and offers nothing remarkable; 100 lb. of wheat contain ½ lb. of it.
+
+No. 3 indicates the epicarp. This envelope is distinguished by a double
+row of long and pointed vessels; it is, like the first one, very light and
+without action; 100 lb. of wheat contain 1 lb. of it.
+
+No. 4 represents the endocarp, or last tegument of the berry; the
+sarcocarp, which should be found between the numbers 2 and 3, no longer
+exists, having been absorbed. The endocarp is remarkable by its row of
+round and regular cells, which appear in the cut like a continuous string
+of beads; 100 lb. of wheat contain 1½ lb. of it.
+
+These three envelopes are colorless, light, and spongy; their elementary
+composition is that of straw; they are easily removed besides with the aid
+of damp and friction. This property has given rise to an operation called
+decortication, the results of which we shall examine later on from an
+industrial point of view. The whole of the envelopes of the berry of wheat
+amount to 3 lb. in 100 lb. of wheat.
+
+
+ENVELOPES AND TISSUES OF THE BERRY PROPER.
+
+No. 5 indicates the testa or episperm. This external tegument of the berry
+is closer than the preceding ones; it contains in the very small cells
+two coloring matters, the one of a palish yellow, the other of an orange
+yellow, and according as the one or the other matter predominates, the
+wheat is of a more or less intense yellow color; hence come all the
+varieties of wheat known in commerce as white, reddish, or red wheats.
+Under this tegument is found a very thin, colorless membrane, which, with
+the testa or episperm, forms two per cent. of the weight of the wheat.
+
+No. 6 indicates the embryous membrane, which is only an expansion of the
+germ or embryo No. 10. This membrane is seen purposely removed from its
+contiguous parts, so as to render more visible its form and insertions.
+Under this tissue is found with the Nos. 7, 8, and 9, the endosperm or
+perisperm, containing the gluten and the starch; soluble and insoluble
+albuminoids, that is to say, the flour.
+
+The endosperm and the embryous membrane are the most interesting parts of
+the berry; the first is one of the depots of the plastic aliments, the
+second contains agents capable of dissolving these aliments during the
+germination, of determining their absorption in the digestive organs of
+animals, and of producing in the dough a decomposition strong enough to
+make dark bread. We shall proceed to examine separately these two parts of
+the berry.
+
+
+ENDOSPERM OR FLOURY PORTION, NOS. 7, 8, 9.
+
+This portion is composed of large glutinous cells, in which the granules
+of starch are found. The composition of these different layers offers a
+particular interest; the center, No. 9, is the softest part; it contains
+the least gluten and the most starch; it is the part which first pulverizes
+under the stone, and gives, after the first bolting, the fine flour. As
+this flour is poorest in gluten, it makes a dough with little consistency,
+and incapable of making an open bread, well raised. The first layer, No.
+8, which surrounds the center, produces small white middlings, harder and
+richer in gluten than the center; it bakes very well, and weighs 20 lb. in
+100, and it is these 20 parts in 100 which, when mixed with the 50 parts in
+the center, form the finest quality flour, used for making white bread.
+
+The layer No. 7, which surrounds the preceding one, is still harder and
+richer in gluten; unfortunately in the reduction it becomes mixed with some
+hundredth parts of the bran, which render it unsuitable for making bread
+of the finest quality; it produces in the regrinding lower grade and
+dark flours, together weighing 7 per cent. The external layer, naturally
+adhering to the membrane, No. 6, becomes mixed in the grinding with bran,
+to the extent of about 20 per cent., which renders it unsuitable even
+for making brown bread; it serves to form the regrindings and the offals
+destined for the nourishment of animals; this layer is, however, the
+hardest, and contains the largest quantity of gluten, and it is by
+consequence the most nutritive. We now see the endosperm increasing from
+the center, formed of floury layers, which augment in richness in gluten,
+in proportion as they are removed from the center. Now, as the flours make
+more bread in proportion to the quantity of gluten they contain, and the
+gluten gives more bread in proportion to its being more developed, or
+having more consistence, it follows that the flour belonging to the parts
+of the berry nearest the envelopes or coverings should produce the greatest
+portion of bread, and this is what takes place in effect. The product of
+the different layers of the endosperm is given below, and it will be seen
+that the quantity of bread increases in a proportion relatively greater
+than that of the gluten, which proves once more that the gluten of the
+center or last formation has less consistence than that of the other layers
+of older formation.
+
+The following are the results obtained from the same wheat:
+
+ Gluten. Bread.
+100 parts of flour in center contain.. 8 and produce 128
+ " " first layer " .. 9,2 " 136
+ " " second " " .. 11 " 140
+ " " external " " .. 13 " 145
+
+On the whole, it is seen, according to the composition of the floury part
+of the grain, that the berry contains on an average 90 parts in 100 of
+flour fit for making bread of the first quality, and that the inevitable
+mixing in of a small quantity of bran reduces these 90 to 70 parts with
+the ordinary processes; but the loss is not alone there, for the foregoing
+table shows that the best portion of the grain is rejected from the food
+of man that brown or dark bread is made of flour of very good quality, and
+that the first quality bread is made from the portion of the endosperm
+containing the gluten in the smallest quantity and in the least developed
+form.
+
+This is a consideration not to be passed over lightly; assuredly the gluten
+of the center contains as much azote as the gluten of the circumference,
+but it must not be admitted in a general way that the alimentary power of
+a body is in connection with the amount of azote it contains, and without
+entering into considerations which would carry us too wide of the subject,
+we shall simply state that if the flesh of young animals, as, for instance,
+the calf, has a debilitating action, while the developed flesh of
+full-grown animals--of a heifer, for example--has really nourishing
+properties, although the flesh of each animal contains the same quantity of
+azote, we must conclude that the proportion of elements is not everything,
+and that the azotic or nitrogenous elements are more nourishing in
+proportion as they are more developed. This is why the gluten of the layers
+nearest the bran is of quite a special interest from the point of view of
+alimentation and in the preparation of bread.
+
+
+THE EMBRYO AND THE COATING OF THE EMBRYO.
+
+To be intelligible, I must commence by some very brief remarks on the
+tissues of vegetables. There are two sorts distinguished among plants;
+some seem of no importance in the phenomena of nutrition; others, on the
+contrary, tend to the assimilation of the organic or inorganic components
+which should nourish and develop all the parts of the plant. The latter
+have a striking analogy with ferments; their composition is almost similar,
+and their action is increased or diminished by the same causes.
+
+These tissues, formed in a state of repose in vegetables as in grain, have
+special properties; thus the berry possesses a pericarp whose tissues
+should remain foreign to the phenomena of germination, and these tissues
+show no particularity worthy of remark, but the coating of the embryo,
+which should play an active part, possesses, on the contrary, properties
+that may be compared to those of ferments. With regard to these ferments,
+I must further remark that I have not been able, nor am I yet able, to
+express in formula my opinion of the nature of these bodies, but little
+known as yet; I have only made use of the language mostly employed, without
+wishing to touch on questions raised by the effects of the presence, and
+by the more complex effects of living bodies, which exercise analogous
+actions.
+
+With these reservations I shall proceed to examine the tissues in the berry
+which help toward the germination.
+
+THE EMBRYO (10, see woodcut) is composed of the root of the plant, with
+which we have nothing to do here. This root of the plant which is to grow
+is embedded in a mass of cells full of fatty bodies. These bodies present
+this remarkable particularity, that they contain among their elements
+sulphur and phosphorus. When you dehydrate by alcohol 100 grammes of the
+embryo of wheat, obtained by the same means as the membrane (a process
+indicated later on), this embryo, treated with ether, produces 20 grammes
+of oils composed elementarily of hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, azote, sulphur,
+and phosphorus. This analysis, made according to the means indicated by M.
+Fremy, shows that the fatty bodies of the embryo are composed like those of
+the germ of an egg, like those of the brain and of the nervous system of
+animals. It is necessary for us to stop an instant at this fact: in the
+first place, because it proves that vegetables are designed to form the
+phosphoric as well as the nitrogenous and ternary aliments, and finally,
+because it indicates how important it is to mix the embryo and its
+dependents with the bread in the most complete manner possible, seeing that
+a large portion of these phosphoric bodies always become decomposed during
+the baking.
+
+COATING OF THE EMBRYO.--This membrane (6), which is only an expansion of
+the embryo, surrounds the endosperm; it is composed of beautiful irregular
+cubic cells, diminishing according as they come nearer to the embryo. These
+cells are composed, first, of the insoluble cellular tissue; second,
+of phosphate of chalk and fatty phosphoric bodies; third, of soluble
+cerealine. In order to study the composition and the nature of this
+tissue, it must be completely isolated, and this result is obtained in the
+following manner.
+
+The wheat should be damped with water containing 10 parts in 100 of
+alcoholized caustic soda; at the expiration of one hour the envelopes of
+the pericarp, and of the testa Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, should be separated by
+friction in a coarse cloth, having been reduced by the action of the alkali
+to a pulpy state; each berry should then be opened separately to remove the
+portion of the envelope held in the fold of the crease, and then all the
+berries divided in two are put into three parts of water charged with
+one-hundredth of caustic potash. This liquid dissolves the gluten, divides
+the starch, and at the expiration of twenty-four hours the parts of the
+berries are kneaded between the fingers, collected in pure water, and
+washed until the water issues clear; these membranes with their embryos,
+which are often detached by this operation, are cast into water acidulated
+with one-hundredth of hydrochloric acid, and at the end of several hours
+they should be completely washed. The product obtained consists of
+beautiful white membranes, insoluble in alkalies and diluted acids, which
+show under the microscope beautiful cells joined in a tissue following the
+embryo, with which it has indeed a striking analogy in its properties and
+composition. This membrane, exhausted by the alcohol and ether, gives, by
+an elementary analysis, hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and azote. Unfortunately,
+under the action of the tests this membrane has been killed, and it no
+longer possesses the special properties of active tissues. Among these
+properties three may be especially mentioned:
+
+1st. Its resistance to water charged with a mineral salt, such as sea salt
+for instance
+
+2d. Its action through its presence.
+
+3d. Its action as a ferment.
+
+The action of saltwater is explained as follows: When the berry is plunged
+into pure water it will be observed that the water penetrates in the course
+of a few hours to the very center of the endosperm, but if water charged
+or saturated with sea salt be used, it will be seen that the liquid
+immediately passes through the teguments Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5, and stops
+abruptly before the embryo membrane No. 6, which will remain quite dry and
+brittle for several days, the berry remaining all the time in the
+water. Should the water penetrate further after several days, it can be
+ascertained that the entrance was gained through the part No 10 free of
+this tissue, and this notwithstanding the cells are full of fatty bodies.
+This membrane alone produces this action, for if the coatings Nos. 2, 3, 4,
+and 5 be removed, the resistance to the liquid remains the same, while if
+the whole, or a portion of it, be divided, either by friction between two
+millstones or by simple incisions, the liquid penetrates the berry within
+a few hours. This property is analogous to that of the radicules of roots,
+which take up the bodies most suitable for the nourishment of the plant. It
+proves, besides, that this membrane, like all those endowed with life, does
+not obey more the ordinary laws of permeability than those of chemical
+affinity, and this property can be turned to advantage in the preservation
+of grain in decortication and grinding.
+
+To determine the action of this tissue through its presence, take 100
+grammes of wheat, wash it and remove the first coating by decortication;
+then immerse it for several hours in lukewarm water, and dry afterwards in
+an ordinary temperature. It should then be reduced in a small coffee mill,
+the flour and middlings separated by sifting and the bran repassed through
+a machine that will crush it without breaking it; then dress it again, and
+repeat the operation six times at least. The bran now obtained is composed
+of the embryous membrane, a little flour adhering to it, and some traces
+of the teguments Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5. This coarse tissue-weighs about 14
+grammes, and to determine its action through its presence, place it in 200
+grammes of water at a temperature of 86°; afterwards press it. The liquid
+that escapes contains chiefly the flour and cerealine. Filter this liquid,
+and put it in a test glass marked No. 1, which will serve to determine the
+action of the cerealine.
+
+The bran should now be washed until the water issues pure, and until it
+shows no bluish color when iodized water and sulphuric acid are added; when
+the washing is finished the bran swollen by the water is placed under a
+press, and the liquid extracted is placed, after being filtered, in a test
+tube. This test tube serves to show that all cerealine has been removed
+from the blades of the tissue. Finally, these small blades of bran, washed
+and pressed, are cast, with 50 grammes of lukewarm water, into a test tube,
+marked No. 3; 100 grammes of diluted starch to one-tenth of dry starch
+are then added in each test tube, and they are put into a water bath at
+a temperature of 104° Fahrenheit, being stirred lightly every fifteen
+minutes. At the expiration of an hour, or at the most an hour and a half,
+No. 1 glass no longer contains any starch, as it has been converted into
+dextrine and glucose by the cerealine, and the iodized water only produces
+a purple color. No. 2 glass, with the same addition, produces a bluish
+color, and preserves the starch intact, which proves that the bran was well
+freed from the cerealine contained. No. 3 glass, like No. 1, shows a purple
+coloring, and the liquid only contains, in place of the starch, dextrine
+and glucose, _i. e_, the tissue has had the same action as the cerealine
+deprived of the tissue, and the cerealine as the tissue freed from
+cerealine. The same membrane rewashed can again transform the diluted
+starch several times. This action is due to the presence of the embryous
+membrane, for after four consecutive operations it still preserves its
+original weight. As regards the remains of the other segments, they have
+no influence on this phenomenon, for the coating Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5,
+separated by the water and friction, have no action whatever on the diluted
+starch. Besides its action through its presence, which is immediate,
+the embryous membrane may also act as a ferment, active only after a
+development, varying in duration according to the conditions of temperature
+and the presence or absence of ferments in acting.
+
+I make a distinction here as is seen, between the action through being
+present, and the action of real ferments, but it is not my intention to
+approve or disapprove of the different opinions expressed on this subject.
+I make use of these expressions only to explain more clearly the phenomena
+I have to speak of, for it is our duty to bear in mind that the real
+ferments only act after a longer or shorter period of development, while,
+on the other hand, the effects through presence are immediate.
+
+I now return to the embryous membrane. Various causes increase or decrease
+the action of this tissue, but it may be said in general that all the
+agents that kill the embryous membrane will also kill the cerealine. This
+was the reason why I at first attributed the production of dark bread
+exclusively to the latter ferment, but it was easy to observe that during
+the baking, decompositions resulted at over 158° Fah., while the cerealine
+was still coagulated, and that bread containing bran, submitted to 212° of
+heat, became liquefied in water at 104°. It was now easy to determine
+that dark flours, from which the cerealine had been removed by repeated
+washings, still produced dark bread. It was at this time, in remembering
+my experiences with organic bodies, I determined the properties of the
+insoluble tissue, deprived of the soluble cerealine, with analogous
+properties, but distinguished not alone by its solid organization and state
+of insolubility, but also by its resistance to heat, which acts as on
+yeast. There exists, in reality, I repeat, a resemblance between the
+embryous membrane and the yeast; they have the same immediate composition;
+they are destroyed by the same poisons, deadened by the same temperatures,
+annihilated by the same agents, propagated in an analogous manner, and
+it might be said that the organic tissues endowed with life are only an
+agglomeration of fixed cells of ferments. At all events, when the blades of
+the embryous membrane, prepared as already stated, are exposed to a water
+bath at 212°, this tissue, in contact with the diluted starch, produces
+the same decomposition; the contact, however, should continue two or three
+hours in place of one. If, instead of placing these membranes in the water
+bath, they are enveloped in two pounds of dough, and this dough put in the
+oven, after the baking the washed membranes produce the same results, which
+especially proves that this membrane can support a temperature of 212° Fah.
+without disorganization. We shall refer to this property in speaking of the
+phenomena of panification.
+
+CEREALINE.--The cells composing the embryous membrane contain, as already
+stated, the cerealine, but after the germination they contain cerealine and
+diastase, that is to say, a portion of the cerealine changed into diastase,
+with which it has the greatest analogy. It is known how difficult it is to
+isolate and study albuminous substances. The following is the method of
+obtaining and studying cerealine. Take the raw embryous membrane, prepared
+as stated, steep it for an hour in spirits of wine diluted with twice its
+volume of water, and renew this liquid several times until the dextrine,
+glucose, coloring matters, etc., have been completely removed. The
+membranes should now be pressed and cast into a quantity of water
+sufficient to make a fluid paste of them, squeeze out the mixture,
+filter the liquid obtained, and this liquid will contain the cerealine
+sufficiently pure to be studied in its effects. Its principal properties
+are: The liquid evaporated at a low temperature produces an amorphous,
+rough mass nearly colorless, and almost entirely soluble in distilled
+water; this solution coagulates between 158° and 167° Fah., and the
+coagulum is insoluble in acids and weak alkalies; the solution is
+precipitated by all diluted acids, by phosphoric acid at all the degrees of
+hydration, and even by a current of carbonic acid. All these precipitates
+redissolve with an excess of acid, sulphuric acid excepted. Concentrated
+sulphuric acid forms an insoluble downy white precipitate, and the
+concentrated vegetable acids, with the exception of tannic acid, do not
+determine any precipitate. Cerealine coagulated by an acid redissolves in
+an excess of the same acid, but it has become dead and has no more action
+on the starch. The alkalies do not form any precipitate, but they kill the
+cerealine as if it had been precipitated The neutral rennet does not make
+any precipitate in a solution of cerealine--5 centigrammes of dry cerealine
+transform in twenty-five minutes 10 grammes of starch, reduced to a paste
+by 100 grammes of water at 113° Fah. It will be seen that cerealine has a
+grand analogy with albumen and legumine, but it is distinguished from them
+by the action of the rennet, of the heat of acids, alcohol, and above all
+by its property of transforming the starch into glucose and dextrine.
+
+It may be said that some albuminous substances have this property, but it
+must be borne in mind that these bodies, like gluten, for example, only
+possess it after the commencement of the decomposition. The albuminous
+matter approaching nearest to cerealine is the diastase, for it is only a
+transformation of the cerealine during the germination, the proof of which
+may be had in analyzing the embryous membrane, which shows more diastase
+and less cerealine in proportion to the advancement of the germination: it
+differs, however, from the diastase by the action of heat, alcohol, etc.
+It is seen that in every case the cerealine and the embryous membrane
+act together, and in an analogous manner; we shall shortly examine their
+effects on the digestion and in the phenomena of panification.
+
+PHOSPHATE OF CALCIUM.--Mr. Payen was the first to make the observation
+that the greatest amount of phosphate of chalk is found in the teguments
+adjoining the farinaceous or floury mass. This observation is important
+from two points of view; in the first place, it shows us that this mineral
+aliment, necessary to the life of animals, is rejected from ordinary bread;
+and in the next place, it brings a new proof that phosphate of chalk is
+found, and ought to be found, in everyplace where there are membranes
+susceptible of exercising vital functions among animals as well as
+vegetables.
+
+Phosphate of chalk is not in reality (as I wished to prove in another work)
+a plastic matter suitable for forming bones, for the bones of infants are
+three times more solid than those of old men, which contain three times
+as much of it. The quantity of phosphate of chalk necessary to the
+constitution of animals is in proportion to the temperature of those
+animals, and often in the inverse ratio of the weight of their bones, for
+vegetables, although they have no bones, require phosphate of chalk. This
+is because this salt is the natural stimulant of living membranes, and the
+bony tissue is only a depot of phosphate of chalk, analogous to the adipose
+tissue, the fat of which is absorbed when the alimentation coming from the
+exterior becomes insufficient. Now, as we know all the parts constituting
+the berry of wheat, it will be easy to explain the phenomena of
+panification, and to conclude from the present moment that it is not
+indifferent to reject from the bread this embryous membrane where the
+agents of digestion are found, viz., the phosphoric bodies and the
+phosphate of chalk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE ORIGIN OF NEW PROCESS MILLING.
+
+
+The following article was written by Albert Hoppin, editor of the
+_Northwestern Miller_, at the request of Special Agent Chas. W. Johnson,
+and forms a part of his report to the census bureau on the manufacturing
+industries of Minneapolis.
+
+"The development of the milling industry in this city has been so
+intimately connected with the growth and prosperity of the city itself,
+that the steps by which the art of milling has reached its present high
+state of perfection are worthy of note, especially as Minneapolis may
+rightly claim the honor of having brought the improvements, which have
+within the last decade so thoroughly revolutionized the art of making
+flour, first into public notice, and of having contributed the largest
+share of capital and inventive skill to their full development. So much is
+this the case that the cluster of mills around the Falls of St. Anthony is
+to-day looked upon as the head-center of the milling industry not only of
+this country, but of the world. An exception to this broad statement may
+possibly be made in favor of the city of Buda Pest, in Austro-Hungary, from
+the leading mills in which the millers in this country have obtained many
+valuable ideas. To the credit of American millers and millwrights it must,
+however, be said that they have in all cases improved upon the information
+they have thus obtained.
+
+"To rightly understand the change that has taken place in milling methods
+during the last ten years, it is necessary to compare the old way with the
+new, and to observe wherein they differ. From the days of Oliver Evans, the
+first American mechanic to make any improvement in milling machinery, until
+1870, there was, if we may except some grain cleaning or smut machines,
+no very strongly marked advance in milling machinery or in the methods of
+manufacturing flour. It is true that the reel covered with finely-woven
+silk bolting cloth had taken the place of the muslin or woolen covered hand
+sieve, and that the old granite millstones have given place to the French
+burr; but these did not affect the essential parts of the _modus operandi_,
+although the quality of the product was, no doubt, materially improved. The
+processes employed in all the mills in the United States ten years ago were
+identical, or very nearly so, with those in use in the Brandywine Mills in
+Evans's day. They were very simple, and may be divided into two distinct
+operations.
+
+"First. Grinding (literally) the wheat.
+
+"Second. Bolting or separating the flour or interior portion of the berry
+from the outer husk, or bran. It may seem to some a rash assertion, but
+this primitive way of making flour is still in vogue in over one-half of
+the mills of the United States. This does not, however, affect the truth of
+the statement that the greater part of the flour now made in this country
+is made on an entirely different and vastly-improved system, which has come
+to be known to the trade as the new process.
+
+"In looking for a reason for the sudden activity and spirit of progress
+which had its culmination in the new process, the character of the
+wheat raised in the different sections of the Union must be taken into
+consideration. Wheat may be divided into two classes, spring and winter,
+the latter generally being more starchy and easily pulverized, and at the
+same time having a very tough bran or husk, which does not readily crumble
+or cut to pieces in the process of grinding. It was with this wheat that
+the mills of the country had chiefly to do, and the defects of the old
+system of milling were not then so apparent. With the settlement of
+Minnesota, and the development of its capacities as a wheat-growing State,
+a new factor in the milling problem was introduced, which for a time bid
+fair to ruin every miller who undertook to solve it. The wheat raised in
+this State was, from the climatic conditions, a spring wheat, hard in
+structure and having a thin, tender, and friable bran. In milling this
+wheat, if an attempt was made to grind it as fine as was then customary to
+grind winter wheat, the bran was ground almost as fine as the flour, and
+passed as readily through the meshes of the bolting reels or sieves,
+rendering the flour dark, specky, and altogether unfit to enter the Eastern
+markets in competition with flour from the winter wheat sections. On the
+other hand, if the grinding was not so fine as to break up the bran,
+the interior of the berry being harder to pulverize, was not rendered
+sufficiently fine, and there remained after the flour was bolted out a
+large percentage of shorts or middlings, which, while containing the
+strongest and best flour in the berry, were so full of dirt and impurities
+as to render them unfit for any further grinding except for the very lowest
+grade of flour, technically known as 'red dog.' The flour produced from
+the first grinding was also more or less specky and discolored, and, in
+everything but strength, inferior to that made from winter wheat, while the
+'yield' was so small, or, in other words, the amount of wheat which it took
+to make a barrel of flour was so large, that milling in Minnesota and other
+spring wheat sections was anything but profitable.
+
+"The problem which ten years since confronted the millers of this city was
+how to obtain from the wheat which they had to grind a white, clear flour,
+and to so increase the yield as to leave some margin for profit. The first
+step in the solution of this problem was the invention by E. N. La Croix
+of the machine which has since been called the purifier, which removed the
+dirt and light impurities from the refuse middlings in the same manner that
+dust and chaff are removed from wheat by a fanning mill. The middlings thus
+purified were then reground, and the result was a much whiter and cleaner
+flour than it had been possible to obtain under the old process of low
+close grinding. This flour was called 'patent' or 'fancy,' and at once took
+a high position in the market. The first machine built by La Croix was
+immediately improved by George T. Smith, and has since then been the
+subject of numberless variations, changes, and improvements; and over the
+principles embodied in its construction there has been fought one of the
+longest and most bitter battles recorded in the annals of patent litigation
+in this country. The purifier is to-day the most important machine in use
+in the manufacture of flour in this country, and may with propriety be
+called the corner-stone of new process milling. The earliest experiments in
+its use in this country were made in what was then known as the 'big mill'
+in this city, owned by Washburn, Stephens & Co., and now known as the
+Washburn Mill B.
+
+"The next step in the development of the new process, also originating
+in Minneapolis, was the abandonment of the old system of cracking the
+millstone, and substituting in its stead the use of smooth surfaces on the
+millstones, thus in a large measure doing away with the abrasion of the
+bran, and raising the quality of the flour produced at the first grinding.
+So far as we know, Mr. E. R. Stephens, a Minneapolis miller, then employed
+in the mill owned by Messrs. Pillsbury, Crocker & Fish, and now a member of
+the prominent milling firm of Freeman & Stephens, River Falls, Wisconsin,
+was the first to venture on this innovation. He also first practiced the
+widening of the furrows in the millstones and increasing their number, thus
+adding largely to the amount of middlings made at the first grinding, and
+raising the percentage of patent flour. He was warmly supported by Amasa K.
+Ostrander, since deceased, the founder and for a number of years the editor
+of the _North-Western Miller_, a trade newspaper. The new ideas were for a
+time vigorously combated by the millers, but their worth was so plain that
+they were soon adopted, not only in Minneapolis, but by progressive millers
+throughout the country. The truth was the 'new process' in its entirety,
+which may be summarized in four steps--first, grinding or, more properly,
+granulating the berry; second, bolting or separating the 'chop' or meal
+into first flour, middlings, and bran; third, purifying the middlings,
+fourth, regrinding and rebolting the middlings to produce the higher grade,
+or 'patent' flour. This higher grade flour drove the best winter wheat
+flours out of the Eastern markets, and placed milling in Minnesota upon a
+firm basis. The development of the 'new process' cannot be claimed by any
+one man. Hundreds of millers all over the country have contributed to its
+advance, but the millers of Minneapolis have always taken the lead.
+
+"Within the past two or three years what may be distinctively called the
+'new process' has, in the mills of Minneapolis and some few other leading
+mills in the country, been giving place to a new system, or rather, a
+refinement of the processes above described. This latest system is known to
+the trade as the 'gradual reduction' or high-grinding system, as the 'new
+process' is the medium high-grinding system, and the old way is the low or
+close grinding system. In using the gradual reduction in making flour the
+millstones are abandoned, except for finishing some of the inferior grades
+of flour, and the work is done by means of grooved and plain rollers, made
+of chilled iron or porcelain. In some cases disks of chilled iron, suitably
+furrowed, are used, and in others concave mills, consisting of a cylinder
+running against a concave plate. In Minneapolis the chilled iron rolls take
+the precedence of all other means.
+
+"The system of gradual reduction is much more complicated than either of
+those which preceded it; but the results obtained are a marked advance over
+the 'new process.' The percentage of high-grade flour is increased, several
+grades of different degrees of excellence being produced, and the yield
+is also greater from a given quantity of wheat. The system consists in
+reducing the wheat to flour, not at one operation, as in the old system,
+nor in two grindings, as in the 'new process,' but in several successive
+reductions, four, five, or six, as the case may be. The wheat is first
+passed through a pair of corrugated chilled iron rollers, which merely
+split it open along the crease of the berry, liberating the dirt which lies
+in the crease so that it can be removed by bolting. A very small percentage
+of low-grade flour is also made in this reduction. After passing through
+what is technically called a 'scalping reel' to remove the dirt and flour,
+the broken wheat is passed through a second set of corrugated rollers, by
+which it is further broken up, and then passes through a second separating
+reel, which removes the flour and middlings. This operation is repeated
+successively until the flour portion of the berry is entirely removed from
+the bran, the necessary separation being made after each reduction. The
+middlings from the several reductions are passed through the purifiers,
+and, after being purified, are reduced to flour by successive reductions
+on smooth iron or porcelain rollers. In some cases, as stated above, iron
+disks and concave mills are substituted for the roller mill, but the
+operation is substantially the same. One of the principal objects sought to
+be attained by this high-grinding system is to avoid all abrasion of the
+bran, another is to take out the dirt in the crease of the berry at the
+beginning of the process, and still another to thoroughly free the bran
+from flour, so as to obtain as large a yield as possible. Incidental to the
+improved methods of milling, as now practiced in this country, is a marked
+improvement in the cleaning of the grain and preparing it for flouring. The
+earliest grain-cleaning machine was the 'smutter,' the office of which was
+to break the smut balls, and scour the outside of the bran to remove any
+adhering dust, the scouring machine being too harsh in its action, breaking
+the kernels of wheat, and so scratching and weakening the bran that it
+broke up readily in the grinding. The scouring process was therefore
+lessened, and was followed by brush machines, which brushed the dirt,
+loosened up and left by the scourer, from the berry. Other machines for
+removing the fuzzy and germ ends of the berry have also been introduced,
+and everything possible is done to free the grain from extraneous
+impurities before the process of reduction is commenced. In all the minor
+details of the mill there has been the same marked change, until the modern
+merchant mill of to-day no more resembles that of twenty-five years ago
+than does the modern cotton mill the old-fashioned distaff. The change has
+extended into the winter wheat sections, and no mill in the United States
+can hope to hold its place in the markets unless it is provided with the
+many improvements in machinery and processes which have resulted from the
+experiments begun in this city only ten years since, and which have
+made the name of Minneapolis and the products of her many mills famous
+throughout the world. The relative merits of the flour made by the new
+process and the old have been warmly discussed, but the general verdict
+of the great body of consumers is that the patent or new process flour is
+better in every way for bread making purposes, being clearer, whiter, more
+evenly granulated, and possessing more strength. Careful chemical analysis
+has confirmed this. As between winter and spring wheat flours made by the
+new process and gradual reduction systems, it maybe remarked that the
+former contain more starch and are whiter in color, while the latter,
+having more gluten, excel in strength. In milling all varieties of wheat,
+whether winter or spring, the new processes are in every way superior to
+the old, and, in aiding their inception and development, the millers of
+Minneapolis have conferred a lasting benefit on the country.
+
+"Minneapolis, Minn., December 1, 1880."
+
+
+THE MILLING STRUCTURES AND MACHINERY.
+
+
+Mr. Johnson added the following, showing the present status of the milling
+industry in Minneapolis:
+
+"The description of the process of the manufacture of flour so well
+given above, conveys no idea of the extent and magnitude of the milling
+structures, machinery, and buildings employed in the business. Many of the
+leading millers and millwrights have personally visited and studied the
+best mills in England, France, Hungary, and Germany, and are as familiar
+with their theory, methods, and construction as of their own, and no
+expense or labor has been spared in introducing the most approved features
+of the improvements in the foreign mills. Experimenting is constantly going
+on, and the path behind the successful millers is strewn with the wrecks of
+failures. A very large proportion of the machinery is imported, though the
+American machinists are fast outstripping their European rivals in the
+quality and efficiency of the machinery needed for the new mills constantly
+going up.
+
+"There are twenty-eight of these mills now constructed and at work,
+operating an equivalent of 412 runs of stone, consuming over sixteen
+million bushels of wheat, and manufacturing over three million barrels of
+flour annually. Their capacities range from 250 to 1,500 barrels of flour
+per day. Great as these capacities are, there is now one in process of
+construction, the Pillsbury A Mill, which at the beginning of the harvest
+of 1881 will have a capacity of 4,000 barrels daily. The Washburn A Mill,
+whose capacity is now 1,500 barrels, is being enlarged to make 8,500
+barrels a day, and the Crown Roller Mill, owned by Christian Bros. & Co.,
+is also being enlarged to produce 3,000 barrels a day. The largest mill in
+Europe has a daily capacity of but 2,800 barrels, and no European mill is
+fitted with the exquisite perfection of machinery and apparatus to be found
+in the mills of this city.
+
+"The buildings are mainly built of blue limestone, found so abundant in the
+quarries of this city, range and line work, and rest on the solid ledge.
+The earlier built mills are severely plain, but the newer ones are greatly
+improved by the taste of the architect, and are imposing and beautiful in
+appearance."
+
+
+DIRECT FOREIGN TRADE.
+
+The flour of Minneapolis, holding so high a rank in the markets of the
+world, is always in active demand, especially the best grades, and brings
+from $1.00 to $1.60 per barrel more than flour of the best qualities of
+southern, eastern, or foreign wheat. During the year nearly a million
+barrels were shipped direct to European and other foreign ports, on through
+bills of lading, and drawn for by banks here having special foreign
+exchange arrangements, at sight, on the day of shipment. This trade
+is constantly increasing, and the amount of flour handled by eastern
+commission men is decreasing in proportion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Referring to the foregoing, the following letter from Mr. Geo. T. Smith to
+the editor of the _London Miller_ is of interest:
+
+SIR: I find published in the _North-western Miller_ of December 24, 1880,
+extracts from an article on the origin of new process milling, prepared by
+Albert Hoppin, Esq., editor of the above-named journal, for the use of one
+of the statistical divisions of the United States census, which is so at
+variance, in at least one important particular, with the facts set forth in
+the paper read by me before the British and Irish millers, at their meeting
+in May last, that I think I ought to take notice of its statements, more
+especially as the _North-Western Miller_ has quite a circulation on this
+side of the water.
+
+As stated in the paper read by me above-mentioned, I was engaged in
+February, 1871, by Mr. Christian, who was then operating the "big," or
+Washburn Mill at Minneapolis, to take charge of the stones in that mill. At
+this time Mr. Christian was very much interested in the improvement of the
+quality of his flour, which in common with the flour of Minneapolis mills,
+without exception, was very poor indeed. For some time previous to this I
+had insisted to him most strenuously that the beginning of any improvement
+must be found in smooth, true, and well balanced stones, and it was because
+he was at last convinced that my ideas were at least worthy of a practical
+test I was placed in charge of his mill. Nearly two months were consumed in
+truing and smoothing the stone, as all millers in the mill had struck
+at once when they became acquainted with the character of the changes I
+proposed to make.
+
+I remained with Mr. Christian until the latter part of 1871, in all about
+eight months. During this time the flour from the Washburn Mill attained a
+celebrity that made it known and sought after all over the United States.
+It commanded attention as an event of the very greatest importance, from
+the fact that it was justly felt that if a mill grinding spring wheat
+exclusively was capable of producing a flour infinitely superior in every
+way to the best that could be made from the finest varieties of winter
+wheats, the new North Western territory, with its peculiar adaptation to
+the growing of spring grain, and its boundless capacity for production,
+must at once become one of the most important sections of the country.
+
+Mr. Christian's appreciation of the improvements I had made in his mill
+was attested by doubly-locked and guarded entrances, and by the stringent
+regulations which were adopted to prevent any of his employes carrying
+information with regard to the process to his competitors.
+
+All this time other Minneapolis mills were doing such work and only such as
+they had done previously. Ought not the writer of an article on the origin
+of new process milling--which article is intended to become historical, and
+to have its authenticity indorsed by the government--to have known whether
+Mr. Christian, in the Washburn Mill, did or did not make a grade of
+flour which has hardly been excelled since for months before any other
+Minneapolis mill approached his product in any degree? And should he not
+be well enough acquainted with the milling of that period--1871-2--to know
+that such results as were obtained in the Washburn Mill could only be
+secured by the use of _smooth_ and _true_ stones? Mr. Stephens--whom I
+shall mention again presently--did _not_ work in the Washburn Mill while I
+was in charge of it.
+
+In the fall of 1871 I entered into a contract with Mr. C. A. Pillsbury,
+owner of the Taylor Mill and senior partner in the firm by whom the
+Minneapolis Mill was operated, to put both those mills into condition to
+make the same grade of flour as Mr. Christian was making. The consideration
+in the contract was 5,000 dols. At the above mills I met to some extent the
+same obstruction in regard to millers striking as had greeted me at Mr.
+Christian's mill earlier in the year; but among those who did not strike at
+the Minneapolis Mill I saw, for the first time, Mr. Stephens--then still
+in his apprenticeship--whom Mr. Hoppin declares to have been, "so far as I
+know," the first miller to use smooth stones. If Mr. Hoppin is right in his
+assertion, perhaps he will explain why, during the eight months I was at
+the Washburn Mill, Mr. Stephens did not make a corresponding improvement
+in the product of the Minneapolis Mill. That he did not do this is amply
+proved by the fact of Mr. Pillsbury giving me 5,000 dols. to introduce
+improvements into his mills, when, supposing Mr. Hoppin's statement to
+be correct, he might have had the same alterations carried out under Mr.
+Stephens' direction at a mere nominal cost. As a matter of fact, the stones
+in both the Taylor and Minneapolis Mills were as rough as any in the
+Washburn Mill when I took charge of them.
+
+Thus it appears (1) that the flour made by the mill in which Stephens was
+employed was not improved in quality, while that of the Washburn Mill,
+where he was not employed, became the finest that had ever been made in the
+United States at that time. That (2) the owner of the mill in which Mr.
+Stephens was employed, as he was not making good flour, engaged me at a
+large cost to introduce into his mills the alterations by which only, both
+Mr. Hoppin and myself agree, could any material improvement in the milling
+of that period be effected, .viz., smooth, true, and well-balanced
+stones.--GEO. T. SMITH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For breachy animals do not use barbed fences. To see the lacerations that
+these fences have produced upon the innocent animals should be sufficient
+testimony against them. Many use pokes and blinders on cattle and goats,
+but as a rule such things fail. The better way is to separate breachy
+animals from the lot, as others will imitate their habits sooner or later,
+and then, if not curable, _sell them_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GUENON MILK-MIRROR.
+
+
+The name of the simple Bordeaux peasant is, and should be, permanently
+associated with his discovery that the milking qualities of cows were, to a
+considerable extent, indicated by certain external marks easily observed.
+We had long known that capacious udders and large milk veins, combined with
+good digestive capacity and a general preponderance of the alimentary over
+the locomotive system, were indications that rarely misled in regard to the
+ability of a cow to give much milk; but to judge of the amount of milk a
+cow would yield, and the length of time she would hold out in her flow, two
+or three years before she could be called a cow--this was Guenon's great
+accomplishment, and the one for which he was awarded a gold medal by the
+Agricultural Society of his native district. This was the first of many
+honors with which he was rewarded, and it is much to say that no committee
+of agriculturists who have ever investigated the merits of the system
+have ever spoken disparagingly of it. Those who most closely study it,
+especially following Guenon's original system, which has never been
+essentially improved upon, are most positive in regard to its truth,
+enthusiastic in regard to its value.
+
+The fine, soft hair upon the hinder part of a cow's udder for the most part
+turns upward. This upward-growing hair extends in most cases all over that
+part of the udder visible between the hind legs, but is occasionally marked
+by spots or mere lines, usually slender ovals, in which the hair grows
+down. This tendency of the hair to grow upward is not confined to the udder
+proper; but extends out upon the thighs and upward to the tail. The edges
+of this space over which the hair turns up are usually distinctly marked,
+and, as a rule, the larger the area of this space, which is called the
+"mirror" or "escutcheon," the more milk the cow will give, and the longer
+she will continue in milk.
+
+[Illustration: ESCUTCHEON OF THE JERSEY BULL-CALF, GRAND MIRROR, 4,904.]
+
+That portion of the escutcheon which covers the udder and extends out on
+the inside of each thigh, has been designated as the udder or mammary
+mirror; that which runs upward towards the setting on of the tail, the
+rising or placental mirror. The mammary mirror is of the greater value,
+yet the rising mirror is not to be disregarded. It is regarded of especial
+moment that the mirror, taken as a whole, be symmetrical, and especially
+that the mammary mirror be so; yet it often occurs that it is far
+otherwise, its outline being often very fantastical--exhibiting deep
+_bays_, so to speak, and islands of downward growing hair. There are also
+certain "ovals," never very large, yet distinct, which do not detract from
+the estimated value of an escutcheon; notably those occurring on the lobes
+of the udder just above the hind teats. These are supposed to be points of
+value, though for what reason it would be hard to tell, yet they do occur
+upon some of the very best milch cows, and those whose mirrors correspond
+most closely to their performances.
+
+Mr. Guenon's discovery enables breeders to determine which of their calves
+are most promising, and in purchasing young stock it affords indications
+which rarely fail as to their comparative milk yield. These indications
+occasionally prove utterly fallacious, and Mr. Guenon gives rules for
+determining this class, which he calls "bastards," without waiting for them
+to fail in their milk. The signs are, however, rarely so distinct that one
+would be willing to sell a twenty-quart cow, whose yield confirmed the
+prediction of her mirror at first calving, because of the possibility of
+the going dry in two months, or so, as indicated by her bastardy marks.
+
+It is an interesting fact that the mirrors of bulls (which are much like
+those of cows, but less extensive in every direction) are reflected in
+their daughters. This gives rise to the dangerous custom of breeding for
+mirrors, rather than for milk. What the results may be after a few years it
+is easy to see. The mirror, being valued for its own sake--that is, because
+it sells the heifers--will be likely to lose its practical significance and
+value as a _milk_ mirror.
+
+We have a striking photograph of a young Jersey bull, the property of Mr.
+John L. Hopkins, of Atlanta, Ga., and called "Grand Mirror." This we have
+caused to be engraved and the mirror is clearly shown. A larger mirror is
+rarely seen upon a bull. We hope in a future number to exhibit some cows'
+mirrors of different forms and degrees of excellence.--_Rural New Yorker_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TWO GOOD LAWN TREES.
+
+
+The negundo, or ash-leaved maple, as it is called in the Eastern States,
+better known at the West as a box elder, is a tree that is not known as
+extensively as it deserves. It is a hard maple, that grows as rapidly as
+the soft maple; is hardy, possesses a beautiful foliage of black green
+leaves, and is symmetrical in shape. Through eastern Iowa I found it
+growing wild, and a favorite tree with the early settlers, who wanted
+something that gave shade and protection to their homes quickly on their
+prairie farms. Brought east, its growth is rapid, and it loses none of the
+characteristics it possessed in its western home. Those who have planted it
+are well pleased with it. It is a tree that transplants easily, and I know
+of no reason why it should not be more popular.
+
+For ornamental lawn planting, I give pre-eminence to the cut-leaf weeping
+birch. Possessing all the good qualities of the white birch, it combines
+with them a beauty and delicate grace yielded by no other tree. It is an
+upright grower, with slender, drooping branches, adorned with leaves of
+deep rich green, each leaf being delicately cut, as with a knife, into
+semi-skeletons. It holds its foliage and color till quite late in the fall.
+The bark, with age, becomes white, resembling the white birch, and the
+beauty of the tree increases with its age. It is a free grower, and
+requires no trimming. Nature has given it a symmetry which art cannot
+improve.
+
+H.T.J.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CUTTING SODS FOR LAWNS.
+
+
+I am a very good sod layer, and used to lay very large lawns--half to
+three-quarters of an acre. I cut the sods as follows: Take a board eight to
+nine inches wide, four, five, or six feet long, and cut downward all around
+the board, then turn the board over and cut again alongside the edge of the
+board, and so on as many sods as needed. Then cut the turf with a sharp
+spade, all the same lengths. Begin on one end, and roll together. Eight
+inches by five feet is about as much as a man can handle conveniently. It
+is very easy to load them on a wagon, cart, or barrow, and they can be
+quickly laid. After laying a good piece, sprinkle a little with a watering
+pot, if the sods are dry; then use the back of the spade to smooth them a
+little. If a very fine effect is wanted, throw a shovelful or two of good
+earth over each square yard, and smooth it with the back of a steel rake.
+
+F.H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+[COUNTRY GENTLEMAN.]
+
+HORTICULTURAL NOTES.
+
+
+The Western New York Society met at Rochester, January 26.
+
+_New Apples, Pears, Grapes, etc._--Wm. C Barry, secretary of the committee
+on native fruits, read a full report. Among the older varieties of the
+apple, he strongly recommended Button Beauty, which had proved so excellent
+in Massachusetts, and which had been equally successful at the Mount
+Hope Nurseries at Rochester; the fine growth of the tree and its great
+productiveness being strongly in its favor. The Wagener and Northern Spy
+are among the finer sorts. The Melon is one of the best among the older
+sorts; the fruit being quite tender will not bear long shipment, but it
+possesses great value for home use, and being a poor grower, it had been
+thrown aside by nurserymen and orchardists. It should be top-grafted on
+more vigorous sorts. The Jonathan is another fine sort of slender growth,
+which should be top-grafted.
+
+Among new pears, Hoosic and Frederic Clapp were highly commended for their
+excellence. Some of the older peaches of fine quality had of late been
+neglected, and among them Druid Hill and Brevoort.
+
+Among the many new peaches highly recommended for their early ripening,
+there was great resemblance to each other, and some had proved earlier than
+Alexander.
+
+Of the new grapes, Lady Washington was the most promising. The Secretary
+was a failure. The Jefferson was a fine sort, of high promise.
+
+Among the new white grapes, Niagara, Prentiss, and Duchess stood
+pre-eminent, and were worthy of the attention of cultivators. The
+Vergennes, from Vermont, a light amber colored sort, was also highly
+commended. The Elvira, so highly valued in Missouri, does not succeed well
+here. Several facts were stated in relation to the Delaware grape, showing
+its reliability and excellence.
+
+Several new varieties of the raspberry were named, but few of them were
+found equal to the best old sorts. If Brinckle's Orange were taken as a
+standard for quality, it would show that none had proved its equal in fine
+quality. The Caroline was like it in color, but inferior in flavor. The New
+Rochelle was of second quality. Turner was a good berry, but too soft for
+distant carriage.
+
+Of the many new strawberries named, each seemed to have some special
+drawback. The Bidwell, however, was a new sort of particular excellence,
+and Charles Downing thinks it the most promising of the new berries.
+
+_Discussion on Grapes._--C. W. Beadle, of Ontario, in allusion to Moore's
+Early grape, finds it much earlier than the Concord, and equal to it in
+quality, ripening even before the Hartford. S. D. Willard, of Geneva,
+thought it inferior to the Concord, and not nearly so good as the Worden.
+The last named was both earlier and better than the Concord, and sold for
+seven cents per pound when the Concord brought only four cents. C. A.
+Green, of Monroe County, said the Lady Washington proved to be a very fine
+grape, slightly later than Concord. P. L. Perry, of Canandaigua, said
+that the Vergennes ripens with Hartford, and possesses remarkable keeping
+qualities, and is of excellent quality and free from pulp. He presented
+specimens which had been kept in good condition. He added, in relation to
+the Worden grape, that some years ago it brought 18 cents per pound in New
+York when the Concord sold three days later for only 8 cents. [In such
+comparisons, however, it should be borne in mind that new varieties usually
+receive more attention and better culture, giving them an additional
+advantage.]
+
+The Niagara grape received special attention from members. A. C. Younglove,
+of Yates County, thought it superior to any other white grape for its many
+good qualities. It was a vigorous and healthy grower, and the clusters were
+full and handsome. W. J. Fowler, of Monroe County, saw the vine in October,
+with the leaves still hanging well, a great bearer and the grape of fine
+quality. C. L. Hoag, of Lockport, said he began to pick the Niagara on the
+26th of August, but its quality improved by hanging on the vine. J. Harris,
+of Niagara County, was well acquainted with the Niagara, and indorsed all
+the commendation which had been uttered in its favor. T. C. Maxwell said
+there was one fault--we could not get it, as it was not in market. W. C.
+Barry, of Rochester, spoke highly of the Niagara, and its slight foxiness
+would be no objection to those who like that peculiarity. C. L. Hoag
+thought this was the same quality that Col. Wilder described as "a little
+aromatic." A. C. Younglove found the Niagara to ripen with the Delaware.
+Inquiry being made relative to the Pockington grape, H. E. Hooker said it
+ripened as early as the Concord. C. A. Green was surprised that it had not
+attracted more attention, as he regarded it as a very promising grape. J.
+Charlton, of Rochester, said that the fruit had been cut for market on the
+29th of August, and on the 6th of September it was fully ripe; but he has
+known it to hang as late as November. J. S. Stone had found that when it
+hung as late as November it became sweet and very rich in flavor.
+
+_New Peaches._--A. C. Younglove had found such very early sorts as
+Alexander and Amsden excellent for home use, but not profitable for market.
+The insects and birds made heavy depredations on them. While nearly all
+very early and high-colored sorts suffer largely from the birds, the
+Rivers, a white peach, does not attract them, and hence it may be
+profitable for market if skillfully packed; rough and careless handling
+will spoil the fruit. He added that the Wheatland peach sustains its high
+reputation, and he thought it the best of all sorts for market, ripening
+with Late Crawford. It is a great bearer, but carries a crop of remarkably
+uniform size, so that it is not often necessary to throw out a bad
+specimen. This is the result of experience with it by Mr. Rogers at
+Wheatland, in Monroe County, and at his own residence in Vine Valley. S. D.
+Willard confirmed all that Mr. Younglove had said of the excellence of the
+Rivers peach. He had ripened the Amsden for several years, and found it
+about two weeks earlier than the Rivers, and he thought if the Amsden were
+properly thinned, it would prevent the common trouble of its rotting; such
+had been his experience. E. A. Bronson, of Geneva, objected to making very
+early peaches prominent for marketing, as purchasers would prefer waiting
+a few days to paying high prices for the earliest, and he would caution
+people against planting the Amsden too largely, and its free recommendation
+might mislead. May's Choice was named by H. E. Hooker as a beautiful yellow
+peach, having no superior in quality, but perhaps it may not be found
+to have more general value than Early and Late Crawford. It is scarcely
+distinguishable in appearance from fine specimens of Early Crawford. W. C.
+Barry was called on for the most recent experience with the Waterloo,
+but said he was not at home when it ripened, but he learned that it had
+sustained its reputation. A. C. Younglove said that the Salway is the best
+late peach, ripening eight or ten days after the Smock. S. D. Willard
+mentioned an orchard near Geneva, consisting of 25 Salway trees, which for
+four years had ripened their crop and had sold for $4 per bushel in the
+Philadelphia market, or for $3 at Geneva--a higher price than for any other
+sort--and the owner intends to plant 200 more trees. W. C. Barry said the
+Salway will not ripen at Rochester. Hill's Chili was named by some members
+as a good peach for canning and drying, some stating that it ripens before
+and others after Late Crawford. It requires thinning on the tree, or
+the fruit will be poor. The Allen was pronounced by Mr. Younglove as an
+excellent, intensely high-colored late peach.
+
+_Insects Affecting Horticulture_.--Mr. Zimmerman spoke of the importance
+of all cultivators knowing so much of insects and their habits as to
+distinguish their friends from their enemies. When unchecked they increase
+in an immense ratio, and he mentioned as an instance that the green fly
+(_Aphis_) in five generations may become the parent of six thousand million
+descendants. It is necessary, then, to know what other insects are employed
+in holding them in check, by feeding on them. Some of our most formidable
+insects have been accidentally imported from Europe, such as the codling
+moth, asparagus beetle, cabbage butterfly, currant worm and borer, elm-tree
+beetle, hessian fly, etc.; but in nearly every instance these have come
+over without bringing their insect enemies with them, and in consequence
+they have spread more extensively here than in Europe. It was therefore
+urged that the Agricultural Department at Washington be requested to
+import, as far as practicable, such parasites as are positively known to
+prey on noxious insects. The cabbage fly eluded our keen custom-house
+officials in 1866, and has enjoyed free citizenship ever since. By
+accident, one of its insect enemies (a small black fly) was brought over
+with it, and is now doing excellent work by keeping the cabbage fly in
+check.
+
+The codling moth, one of the most formidable fruit destroyers, may be
+reduced in number by the well-known paper bands; but a more efficient
+remedy is to shower them early in the season with Paris green, mixed in
+water at the rate of only one pound to one hundred gallons of water, with
+a forcing pump, soon after blossoming. After all the experiments made and
+repellents used for the plum curculio, the jarring method is found the most
+efficient and reliable, if properly performed. Various remedies for insects
+sometimes have the credit of doing the work, if used in those seasons
+when the insects happen to be few. With some insects, the use of oil is
+advantageous, as it always closes up their breathing holes and suffocates
+them. The oil should be mixed with milk, and then diluted as required, as
+the oil alone cannot be mixed with the water. As a general remedy,
+Paris green is the strongest that can be applied. A teaspoonful to a
+tablespoonful, in a barrel of water, is enough. Hot water is the best
+remedy for house plants. Place one hand over the soil, invert the pot, and
+plunge the foliage for a second only at a time in water heated to from 150°
+to 200°F, according to the plants; or apply with a fine rose. The yeast
+remedy has not proved successful in all cases.
+
+Among beneficial insects, there are about one hundred species of lady bugs,
+and, so far as known, all are beneficial. Cultivators should know them.
+They destroy vast quantities of plant lice. The ground beetles are mostly
+cannibals, and should not be destroyed. The large black beetle, with
+coppery dots, makes short work with the Colorado potato beetles; and
+a bright green beetle will climb trees to get a meal of canker worms.
+Ichneumon flies are among our most useful insects. The much-abused dragon
+flies are perfectly harmless to us, but destroy many mosquitoes and flies.
+
+Among insects that attack large fruits is the codling moth, to be destroyed
+by paper bands, or with Paris green showered in water. The round-headed
+apple-tree borer is to be cut out, and the eggs excluded with a sheet of
+tarred paper around the stem, and slightly sunk in the earth. For the
+oyster-shell bark louse, apply linseed oil. Paris green, in water,
+will kill the canker worm. Tobacco water does the work for plant lice.
+Peach-tree borers are excluded with tarred or felt paper, and cut out with
+a knife. Jar the grape flea beetle on an inverted umbrella early in the
+morning. Among small-fruit insects, the strawberry worms are readily
+destroyed with hellebore, an ounce to a gallon of warm water. The same
+remedy destroys the imported currant worm.
+
+_Insect Destroyers_.--Prof. W. Saunders, of the Province of Ontario,
+followed Mr. Zimmerman with a paper on other departments of the same
+general subject, which contained much information and many suggestions of
+great value to cultivators. He had found Paris green an efficient remedy
+for the bud-moth on pear and other trees. He also recommends Paris green
+for the grapevine flea beetle. Hellebore is much better for the pear slug
+than dusting with sand, as these slugs, as soon as their skin is spoiled
+by being sanded, cast it off and go on with their work of destruction as
+freely as ever, and this they repeat. He remarked that it is a common error
+that all insects are pests to the cultivator. There are many parasites,
+or useful ones, which prey on our insect enemies. Out of 7,000 described
+insects in this country, only about 50 have proved destructive to our
+crops. Parasites are much more numerous. Among lepidopterous insects
+(butterflies, etc.), there are very few noxious species; many active
+friends are found among the Hymenoptera (wasps, etc.), the ichneumon flies
+pre-eminently so; and in the order Hemiptera (bugs proper) are several that
+destroy our enemies. Hence the very common error that birds which destroy
+insects are beneficial to us, as they are more likely to destroy our insect
+friends than the fewer enemies. Those known as _flycatchers_ may do neither
+harm nor good; so far as they eat the wheat-midge and Hessian fly they
+confer a positive benefit; in other instances they destroy both friends and
+enemies. Birds that are only partly insectivorous, and which eat grain and
+fruit, may need further inquiry. Prof. S. had examined the stomachs of many
+such birds, and particularly of the American robin, and the only curculio
+he ever found in any of these was a single one in a whole cherry which the
+bird had bolted entire. Robins had proved very destructive to his grapes,
+but had not assisted at all in protecting his cabbages growing alongside
+his fruit garden. These vegetables were nearly destroyed by the larvae of
+the cabbage fly, which would have afforded the birds many fine, rich meals.
+This comparatively feeble insect has been allowed by the throngs of birds
+to spread over the whole continent. A naturalist in one of the Western
+States had examined several species of the thrush, and found they had eaten
+mostly that class of insects known as our friends.
+
+Prof. S. spoke of the remedies for root lice, among which were hot water
+and bisulphide of carbon. Hot water will get cold before it can reach the
+smaller roots, however efficient it may be showered on leaves. Bisulphide
+of carbon is very volatile, inflammable, and sometimes explosive, and must
+be handled with great care. It permeates the soil, and if in sufficient
+quantity may be effective in destroying the phylloxera; but its cost and
+dangerous character prevent it from being generally recommended.
+
+Paris green is most generally useful for destroying insects. As sold to
+purchasers, it is of various grades of purity. The highest in price is
+commonly the purest, and really the cheapest. A difficulty with this
+variable quality is that it cannot be properly diluted with water, and
+those who buy and use a poor article and try its efficacy, will burn or
+kill their plants when they happen to use a stronger, purer, and more
+efficient one. Or, if the reverse is done, they may pronounce it a humbug
+from the resulting failure. One teaspoonful, if pure, is enough for a large
+pail of water; or if mixed with flour, there should be forty or fifty times
+as much. Water is best, as the operator will not inhale the dust. London
+purple is another form of the arsenic, and has very variable qualities
+of the poison, being merely refuse matter from manufactories. It is more
+soluble than Paris green, and hence more likely to scorch plants. On the
+whole, Paris green is much the best and most reliable for common use.
+
+At the close of Prof. Saunders' remarks some objections were made by
+members present to the use of Paris green on fruit soon after blossoming,
+and Prof. S. sustained the objection, in that the knowledge that the fruit
+had been showered with it would deter purchasers from receiving it, even if
+no poison could remain on it from spring to autumn. A man had brought to
+him potatoes to analyze for arsenic, on which Paris green had been used,
+and although it was shown to him that the poison did not reach the roots
+beneath the soil, and if it did it was insoluble and could not enter them,
+he was not satisfied until a careful analysis was made and no arsenic at
+all found in them. A member said that in mixing with plaster there should
+be 100 or 150 pounds of plaster to one of the Paris green, and that a
+smaller quantity, by weight, of flour would answer, as that is a more bulky
+article for the same weight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS ON THE SALMON OF THE PACIFIC.
+
+By DAVID S. JORDAN and CHAS. H. GILBERT.
+
+
+During the most of the present year, the writers have been engaged in the
+study of the fishes of the Pacific coast of the United States, in the
+interest of the U.S. Fish Commission and the U.S. Census Bureau. The
+following pages contain the principal facts ascertained concerning the
+salmon of the Pacific coast. It is condensed from our report to the U.S.
+Census Bureau, by permission of Professor Goode, assistant in charge of
+fishery investigations.
+
+There are five species of salmon (Oncorhynchus) in the waters of the North
+Pacific. We have at present no evidence of the existence of any more on
+either the American or the Asiatic side.
+
+These species may be called the quinnat or king salmon, the blue-back
+salmon or red-fish, the silver salmon, the dog salmon, and the hump-back
+salmon, or _Oncorhynchus chouicha, nerka, kisutch, keta_, and _gorbuscha_.
+All these species are now known to occur in the waters of Kamtschatka as
+well as in those of Alaska and Oregon.
+
+As vernacular names of definite application, the following are on record:
+
+a. Quinnat--Chouicha, king salmon, e'quinna, saw-kwey, Chinnook salmon,
+Columbia River salmon, Sacramento salmon, tyee salmon, Monterey salmon,
+deep-water salmon, spring salmon, ek-ul-ba ("ekewan") (fall run).
+
+b. Blue-bock--krasnaya ryba, Alaska red-fish, Idaho red fish, sukkegh,
+Frazer's River salmon, rascal, oo-chooy-ha.
+
+c. Silver salmon--kisutch, winter salmon, hoopid, skowitz, coho, bielaya
+ryba, o-o-wun.
+
+d. Dog salmon--kayko, lekai, ktlawhy, qualoch, fall salmon, o-le-a-rah. The
+males of _all_ the species in the fall are usually known as dog salmon, or
+fall salmon.
+
+e. Hump-back--gorbuscha, haddo, hone, holia, lost salmon, Puget Sound
+salmon, dog salmon (of Alaska).
+
+Of these species, the blue-back predominates in Frazer's River, the silver
+salmon in Puget Sound, the quinnat in the Columbia and the Sacramento, and
+the silver salmon in most of the small streams along the coast. All the
+species have been seen by us in the Columbia and in Frazer's River; all
+but the blue-back in the Sacramento, and all but the blue-back in waters
+tributary to Puget Sound. Only the quinnat has been noticed south of San
+Francisco, and its range has been traced as far as Ventura River, which is
+the southernmost stream in California which is not muddy and alkaline at
+its mouth.
+
+Of these species, the quinnat and blue-back salmon habitually "run" in the
+spring, the others in the fall. The usual order of running in the rivers is
+as follows: _nerka, chouicha, kisutch, gorbuscha, keta_.
+
+The economic value of the spring running salmon is far greater than that of
+the other species, because they can be captured in numbers when at their
+best, while the others are usually taken only after deterioration.
+
+The habits of the salmon in the ocean are not easily studied. Quinnat and
+silver salmon of every size are taken with the seine at almost any season
+in Puget Sound. The quinnat takes the hook freely in Monterey bay, both
+near the shore and at a distance of six or eight miles out. We have reason
+to believe that these two species do not necessarily seek great depths, but
+probably remain not very far from the mouth of the rivers in which they
+were spawned.
+
+The blue-back and the dog salmon probably seek deeper water, as the former
+is seldom or never taken with the seine in the ocean, and the latter is
+known to enter the Straits of Fuca at the spawning season.
+
+The great majority of the quinnat salmon and nearly all blue-back salmon
+enter the rivers in the spring. The run of both begins generally the last
+of March; it lasts, with various modifications and interruptions, until
+the actual spawning season in November; the time of running and the
+proportionate amount of each of the subordinate runs, varying with each
+different river. In general, the runs are slack in the summer and increase
+with the first high water of autumn. By the last of August only straggling
+blue-backs can be found in the lower course of any stream, but both in the
+Columbia and the Sacramento the quinnat runs in considerable numbers till
+October at least. In the Sacramento the run is greatest in the fall, and
+more run in the summer than in spring. In the Sacramento and the smaller
+rivers southward, there is a winter run, beginning in December.
+
+The spring salmon ascend only those rivers which are fed by the melting
+snows from the mountains, and which have sufficient volume to send their
+waters well out to sea. Such rivers are the Sacramento, Rogue, Klamath,
+Columbia, and Frazer's rivers.
+
+Those salmon which run in the spring are chiefly adults (supposed to be at
+least three years old). Their milt and spawn are no more developed than at
+the same time in others of the same species which will not enter the rivers
+until fall. It would appear that the contact with cold fresh water, when in
+the ocean, in some way caused them to turn toward it and to "run," before
+there is any special influence to that end exerted by the development of
+the organs of generation.
+
+High water on any of these rivers in the spring is always followed by an
+increased run of salmon. The canners think, and this is probably true, that
+salmon which would not have run till later are brought up by the contact
+with the cold water. The cause of this effect of cold fresh water is not
+understood. We may call it an instinct of the salmon, which is another way
+of expressing our ignorance. In general, it seems to be true that in those
+rivers and during those years when the spring run is greatest, the fall run
+is least to be depended on.
+
+As the season advances, smaller and younger salmon of these two species
+(quinnat and blue-back) enter the rivers to spawn, and in the fall these
+young specimens are very numerous. We have thus far failed to notice any
+gradations in size or appearance of these young fish by which their ages
+could be ascertained. It is, however, probable that some of both sexes
+reproduce at the age of one year. In Frazer's River, in the fall, quinnat
+male grilse of every size, from eight inches upward, were running, the milt
+fully developed, but usually not showing the hooked jaws and dark colors
+of the older males. Females less than eighteen inches in length were rare.
+All, large and small, then in the river, of either sex, had the ovaries or
+milt well developed.
+
+Little blue-backs of every size down to six inches are also found in
+the Upper Columbia in the fall, with their organs of generation fully
+developed. Nineteen twentieths of these young fish are males, and some of
+them have the hooked jaws and red color of the old males.
+
+The average weight of the quinnat in the Columbia in the spring is
+twenty-two pounds; in the Sacramento about sixteen. Individuals weighing
+from forty to sixty pounds are frequently found in both rivers, and some as
+high as eighty pounds are reported. It is questioned whether these large
+fishes are:
+
+(_a_.) Those which, of the same age, have grown more rapidly;
+
+(_b_.) Those which are older but have, for some reason, failed to spawn;
+or,
+
+(_c_.) Those which have survived one or more spawning seasons.
+
+All of these origins may be possible in individual cases; we are, however,
+of the opinion that the majority of these large fish are those which have
+hitherto run in the fall and so may have survived the spawning season
+previous.
+
+Those fish which enter the rivers in the spring continue their ascent until
+death or the spawning season overtakes them. Probably none of them ever
+return to the ocean, and a large proportion fail to spawn. They are known
+to ascend the Sacramento as far as the base of Mount Shasta, or to its
+extreme head-waters, about four hundred miles. In the Columbia they are
+known to ascend as far as the Bitter Root Mountains, and as far as the
+Spokan Falls, and their extreme limit is not known. This is a distance of
+six to eight hundred miles.
+
+At these great distances, when the fish have reached the spawning grounds,
+besides the usual changes of the breeding season, their bodies are covered
+with bruises on which patches of white fungus develop. The fins become
+mutilated, their eyes are often injured or destroyed; parasitic worms
+gather in their gills, they become extremely emaciated, their flesh
+becomes white from the loss of the oil, and as soon as the spawning act
+is accomplished, and sometimes before, all of them die. The ascent of the
+Cascades and the Dalles probably causes the injury or death of a great many
+salmon.
+
+When the salmon enter the river they refuse bait, and their stomachs are
+always found empty and contracted. In the rivers they do not feed, and when
+they reach the spawning grounds their stomachs, pyloric coeca and all, are
+said to be no larger than one's finger. They will sometimes take the
+fly, or a hook baited with salmon roe, in the clear waters of the upper
+tributaries, but there is no other evidence known to us that they feed when
+there. Only the quinnat and blue-back (then called red-fish) have been
+found in the fall at any great distance from the sea.
+
+The spawning season is probably about the same for all the species. It
+varies for all in different rivers and in different parts of the same
+river, and doubtless extends from July to December.
+
+The manner of spawning is probably similar for all the species, but we have
+no data for any except the quinnat. In this species the fish pair off, the
+male, with tail and snout, excavates a broad shallow "nest" in the gravelly
+bed of the stream, in rapid water, at a depth of one to four feet; the
+female deposits her eggs in it, and after the exclusion of the milt, they
+cover them with stones and gravel. They then float down the stream tail
+foremost. A great majority of them die. In the head-waters of the large
+streams all die, unquestionably. In the small streams, and near the sea, an
+unknown percentage probably survive. The young hatch in about sixty days,
+and most of them return to the ocean during the high water of the spring.
+
+The salmon of all kinds in the spring are silvery, spotted or not according
+to the species, and with the mouth about equally symmetrical in both sexes.
+
+As the spawning season approaches the female loses her silvery color,
+becomes more slimy, the scales on the back partly sink into the skin, and
+the flesh changes from salmon red and becomes variously paler, from the
+loss of the oil, the degree of paleness varying much with individuals and
+with inhabitants of different rivers.
+
+In the lower Sacramento the flesh of the quinnat in either spring or fall
+is rarely pale. In the Columbia, a few with pale flesh are sometimes taken
+in spring, and a good many in the fall. In Frazer's River the fall run of
+the quinnat is nearly worthless for canning purposes, because so many are
+white meated. In the spring very few are white meated, but the number
+increases towards fall, when there is every variation, some having red
+streaks running through them, others being red toward the head and pale
+toward the tail. The red and pale ones cannot be distinguished externally,
+and the color is dependent neither on age nor sex. There is said to be no
+difference in the taste, but there is no market for canned salmon not of
+the conventional orange color.
+
+As the season advances, the differences between the males and the females
+become more and more marked, and keep pace with the development of the
+milt, as is shown by dissection.
+
+The males have: (_a_.) The premaxillaries and the tip of the lower jaw
+more and more prolonged; both of them becoming finally strongly and often
+extravagantly hooked, so that either they shut by the side of each other
+like shears, or else the mouth cannot be closed. (_b_.) The front teeth
+become very long and canine-like, their growth proceeding very rapidly,
+until they are often half an inch long. (_c_.) The teeth on the vomer and
+tongue often disappear. (_d_.) The body grows more compressed and deeper
+at the shoulders, so that a very distinct hump is formed; this is more
+developed in _0. gorbuscha_, but is found in all. (_e_.) The scales
+disappear, especially on the back, by the growth of spongy skin. (_f_.) The
+color changes from silvery to various shades of black and red or blotchy,
+according to the species. The blue-back turns rosy red, the dog salmon a
+dull, blotchy red, and the quiunat generally blackish.
+
+These distorted males are commonly considered worthless, rejected by the
+canners and salmon-salters, but preserved by the Indians. These changes are
+due solely to influences connected with the growth of the testes. They are
+not in any way due to the action of fresh water. They take place at about
+the same time in the adult males of all species, whether in the ocean or
+in the rivers. At the time of the spring runs all are symmetrical. In the
+fall, all males of whatever species are more or less distorted. Among the
+dog salmon, which run only in the fall, the males are hooked-jawed and
+red-blotched when they first enter the Straits of Fuca from the outside.
+The hump-back, taken in salt water about Seattle, shows the same
+peculiarities. The male is slab-sided, hook-billed, and distorted, and is
+rejected by the canners. No hook-jawed _females_ of any species have been
+seen.
+
+It is not positively known that any hook-jawed male survives the
+reproductive act. If any do, their jaws must resume the normal form.
+
+On first entering a stream the salmon swim about as if playing: they always
+head toward the current, and this "playing" may be simply due to facing the
+flood tide. Afterwards they enter the deepest parts of the stream and swim
+straight up, with few interruptions. Their rate of travel on the Sacramento
+is estimated by Stone at about two miles per day; on the Columbia at about
+three miles per day.
+
+As already stated, the economic value of any species depends in great part
+on its being a "spring salmon." It is not generally possible to capture
+salmon of any species in large numbers until they have entered the rivers,
+and the spring salmon enter the rivers long before the growth of the organs
+of reproduction has reduced the richness of the flesh. The fall salmon
+cannot be taken in quantity until their flesh has deteriorated: hence the
+"dog salmon" is practically almost worthless, except to the Indians, and
+the hump-back salmon is little better. The silver salmon, with the same
+breeding habits as the dog salmon, is more valuable, as it is found in
+Puget Sound for a considerable time before the fall rains cause the fall
+runs, and it may be taken in large numbers with seines before the season
+for entering the rivers. The quinnat salmon, from its great size and
+abundance, is more valuable than all other fishes on our Pacific coast
+together. The blue back, similar in flesh but much smaller and less
+abundant, is worth much more than the combined value of the three remaining
+species.
+
+The fall salmon of all species, but especially the dog salmon, ascend
+streams but a short distance before spawning. They seem to be in great
+anxiety to find fresh water, and many of them work their way up little
+brooks only a few inches deep, where they soon perish miserably,
+floundering about on the stones. Every stream, of whatever kind, has more
+or less of these fall salmon.
+
+It is the prevailing impression that the salmon have some special instinct
+which leads them to return to spawn in the same spawning grounds where they
+were originally hatched. We fail to find any evidence of this in the case
+of the Pacific coast salmon, and we do not believe it to be true. It seems
+more probable that the young salmon, hatched in any river, mostly remain in
+the ocean within a radius of twenty, thirty, or forty miles of its mouth.
+These, in their movements about in the ocean, may come into contact with
+the cold waters of their parent rivers, or perhaps of any other river, at
+a considerable distance from the shore. In the case of the quinnat and the
+blue-back, their "instinct" leads them to ascend these fresh waters, and
+in a majority of cases these waters will be those in which the fishes in
+question were originally spawned. Later in the season the growth of the
+reproductive organs leads them to approach the shore and to search for
+fresh waters, and still the chances are that they may find the original
+stream. But undoubtedly many fall salmon ascend, or try to ascend, streams
+in which no salmon was ever hatched.
+
+It is said of the Russian River and other California rivers, that their
+mouths in the time of low water in summer generally become entirely closed
+by sand bars, and that the salmon, in their eagerness to ascend them,
+frequently fling themselves entirely out of water on the beach. But this
+does not prove that the salmon are guided by a marvelous geographical
+instinct which leads them to their parent river. The waters of Russian
+River soak through these sand bars, and the salmon "instinct," we think,
+leads them merely to search for fresh waters.
+
+This matter is much in need of further investigation; at present, however,
+we find no reason to believe that the salmon enter the Rogue River simply
+because they were spawned there, or that a salmon hatched in the Clackamas
+River is any the more likely on that account to return to the Clackamas
+than to go up the Cowlitz or the Deschutes.
+
+"At the hatchery on Rogue River, the fish are stripped, marked and set
+free, and every year since the hatchery has been in operation some of the
+marked fish have been re-caught. The young fry are also marked, but none of
+them have been recaught."
+
+This year the run of silver salmon in Frazer's River was very light, while
+on Puget Sound the run was said by the Indians to be greater than ever
+known before. Both these cases may be due to the same cause, the dry
+summer, low water, and consequent failure of the salmon to find the rivers.
+The run in the Sound is much more irregular than in the large rivers. One
+year they will abound in one bay and its tributary stream and hardly be
+seen in another, while the next year the condition will be reversed. At
+Cape Flattery the run of silver salmon for the present year was very small,
+which fact was generally attributed by the Indians to the birth of twins at
+Neah Bay.
+
+In regard to the diminution of the number of salmon on the coast. In
+Puget's Sound, Frazer's River, and the smaller streams, there appears to be
+little or no evidence of this. In the Columbia River the evidence appears
+somewhat conflicting; the catch during the present year (1880) has been
+considerably greater than ever before (nearly 540,000 cases of 48 lb. each
+having been packed), although the fishing for three or four years has been
+very extensive. On the other hand, the high water of the present spring has
+undoubtedly caused many fish to become spring salmon which would otherwise
+have run in the fall. Moreover, it is urged that a few years ago, when the
+number caught was about half as great as now, the amount of netting used
+was perhaps one-eighth as much. With a comparatively small outfit the
+canners caught half the fish, now with nets much larger and more numerous,
+they catch them all, scarcely any escaping during the fishing season (April
+1 to August 1). Whether an actual reduction in the number of fish running
+can be proven or not, there can be no question that the present rate of
+destruction of the salmon will deplete the river before many years. A
+considerable number of quinnat salmon run in August and September, and some
+stragglers even later; these now are all which keep up the supply of
+fish in the river. The non-molestation of this fall run, therefore, does
+something to atone for the almost total destruction of the spring run.
+
+This, however, is insufficient. A well-ordered salmon hatchery is the only
+means by which the destruction of the salmon in the river can be prevented.
+This hatchery should be under the control of Oregon and Washington, and
+should be supported by a tax levied on the canned fish. It should be placed
+on a stream where the quinnat salmon actually come to spawn.
+
+It has been questioned whether the present hatchery on the Clackamas River
+actually receives the quinnat salmon in any numbers. It is asserted, in
+fact, that the eggs of the silver salmon and dog salmon, with scattering
+quinnat, are hatched there. We have no exact information as to the truth of
+these reports, but the matter should be taken into serious consideration.
+
+On the Sacramento there is no doubt of the reduction of the number of
+salmon; this is doubtless mainly attributable to over-fishing, but in part
+it may be due to the destruction of spawning beds by mining operations and
+other causes.
+
+As to the superiority of the Columbia River salmon, there is no doubt that
+the quinnat salmon average larger and fatter in the Columbia than in the
+Sacramento and in Puget Sound. The difference in the canned fish is,
+however, probably hardly appreciable. The canned salmon from the Columbia,
+however, bring a better price in the market than those from elsewhere. The
+canners there generally have had a high regard for the reputation of
+the river, and have avoided canning fall fish or species other than the
+quinnat. In the Frazer's River the blue-back is largely canned, and its
+flesh being a little more watery and perhaps paler, is graded below the
+quinnat. On Puget Sound various species are canned; in fact, everything
+with red flesh. The best canners on the Sacramento apparently take equal
+care with their product with those of the Columbia, but they depend largely
+on the somewhat inferior fall run. There are, however, sometimes salmon
+canned in San Francisco, which have been in the city markets, and for some
+reason remaining unsold, have been sent to the canners; such salmon are
+unfit for food, and canning them should be prohibited.
+
+The fact that the hump-back salmon runs only on alternate years in Puget
+Sound (1875, 1877, 1879, etc.) is well attested and at present unexplained.
+Stray individuals only are taken in other years. This species has a
+distinct "run," in the United States, only in Puget Sound, although
+individuals (called "lost salmon") are occasionally taken in the Columbia
+and in the Sacramento.--_American Naturalist._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE RELATION BETWEEN ELECTRICITY AND LIGHT.
+
+[Footnote: A lecture by Dr. O. J. Lodge, delivered at the London
+Institution on December 16, 1880.]
+
+
+Ever since the subject on which I have the honor to speak to you to-night
+was arranged, I have been astonished at my own audacity in proposing to
+deal in the course of sixty minutes with a subject so gigantic and so
+profound that a course of sixty lectures would be quite inadequate for its
+thorough and exhaustive treatment.
+
+I must indeed confine myself carefully to some few of the typical and most
+salient points in the relation between electricity and light, and I must
+economize time by plunging at once into the middle of the matter without
+further preliminaries.
+
+Now, when a person is setting off to discuss the relation between
+electricity and light, it is very natural and very proper to pull him up
+short with the two questions: What do you mean by electricity? and What do
+you mean by light? These two questions I intend to try briefly to answer.
+And here let me observe that in answering these fundamental questions, I do
+not necessarily assume a fundamental ignorance on your part of these two
+agents, but rather the contrary; and must beg you to remember that if I
+repeat well-known and simple experiments before you, it is for the purpose
+of directing attention to their real meaning and significance, not to their
+obvious and superficial characteristics; in the same way that I might
+repeat the exceedingly familiar experiment of dropping a stone to the earth
+if we were going to define what we meant by gravitation.
+
+Now, then, we will ask first, What is electricity? and the simple answer
+must be, We don't know. Well, but this need not necessarily be depressing.
+If the same question were asked about matter, or about energy, we should
+have likewise to reply, No one knows.
+
+But then the term Matter is a very general one, and so is the term Energy.
+They are heads, in fact, under which we classify more special phenomena.
+
+Thus, if we were asked, What is sulphur? or what is selenium? we should at
+least be able to reply, A form of matter; and then proceed to describe its
+properties, _i. e._, how it affected our bodies and other bodies.
+
+Again, to the question, What is heat? we can reply, A form of energy; and
+proceed to describe the peculiarities which distinguish it from other forms
+of energy.
+
+But to the question. What is electricity? we have no answer pat like this.
+We can not assert that it is a form of matter, neither can we deny it; on
+the other hand, we certainly can not assert that it is a form of energy,
+and I should be disposed to deny it. It may be that electricity is an
+entity _per se_, just as matter is an entity _per se_.
+
+Nevertheless, I can tell you what I mean by electricity by appealing to its
+known behavior.
+
+Here is a battery, that is, an electricity pump; it will drive electricity
+along. Prof. Ayrtou is going, I am afraid, to tell you, on the 20th of
+January next, that it _produces_ electricity; but if he does, I hope you
+will remember that that is exactly what neither it nor anything else can
+do. It is as impossible to generate electricity in the sense I am trying to
+give the word, as it is to produce matter. Of course I need hardly say that
+Prof. Ayrton knows this perfectly well; it is merely a question of words,
+_i. e._, of what you understand by the word electricity.
+
+I want you, then, to regard this battery and all electrical machines and
+batteries as kinds of electricity pumps, which drive the electricity along
+through the wire very much as a water-pump can drive water along pipes.
+While this is going on the wire manifests a whole series of properties,
+which are called the properties of the current.
+
+[Here were shown an ignited platinum wire, the electric arc between two
+carbons, an electric machine spark, an induction coil spark, and a vacuum
+tube glow. Also a large nail was magnetized by being wrapped in the
+current, and two helices were suspended and seen to direct and attract each
+other.]
+
+To make a magnet, then, we only need a current of electricity flowing round
+and round in a whirl. A vortex or whirlpool of electricity is in fact a
+magnet; and _vice versa_. And these whirls have the power of directing and
+attracting other previously existing whirls according to certain laws,
+called the laws of magnetism. And, moreover, they have the power of
+exciting fresh whirls in neighboring conductors, and of repelling them
+according to the laws of diamagnetism. The theory of the actions is known,
+though the nature of the whirls, as of the simple stream of electricity, is
+at present unknown.
+
+[Here was shown a large electro-magnet and an induction-coil vacuum
+discharge spinning round and round when placed in its field.]
+
+So much for what happens when electricity is made to travel along
+conductors, _i. e._, when it travels along like a stream of water in a
+pipe, or spins round and round like a whirlpool.
+
+But there is another set of phenomena, usually regarded as distinct and of
+another order, but which are not so distinct as they appear, which
+manifest themselves when you join the pump to a piece of glass, or any
+non-conductor, and try to force the electricity through that. You succeed
+in driving some through, but the flow is no longer like that of water in an
+open pipe; it is as if the pipe were completely obstructed by a number of
+elastic partitions or diaphragms. The water can not move without straining
+and bending these diaphragms, and if you allow it, these strained
+partitions will recover themselves, and drive the water back again. [Here
+was explained the process of charging a Leyden jar.] The essential thing to
+remember is that we may have electrical energy in two forms, the static
+and the kinetic; and it is, therefore, also possible to have the rapid
+alternation from one of these forms to the other, called vibration.
+
+Now we will pass to the second question: What do you mean by light? And the
+first and obvious answer is, Everybody knows. And everybody that is not
+blind does know to a certain extent. We have a special sense organ for
+appreciating light, whereas we have none for electricity. Nevertheless, we
+must admit that we really know very little about the intimate nature of
+light--very little more than about electricity. But we do know this,
+that light is a form of energy, and, moreover, that it is energy rapidly
+alternating between the static and the kinetic forms--that it is, in fact,
+a special kind of energy of vibration. We are absolutely certain that light
+is a periodic disturbance in some medium, periodic both in space and time;
+that is to say, the same appearances regularly recur at certain equal
+intervals of distance at the same time, and also present themselves at
+equal intervals of time at the same place; that in fact it belongs to the
+class of motions called by mathematicians undulatory or wave motions. The
+wave motion in this model (Powell's wave apparatus) results from the simple
+up and down motion popularly associated with the term wave. But when
+a mathematician calls a thing a wave he means that the disturbance is
+represented by a certain general type of formula, not that it is an
+up-and-down motion, or that it looks at all like those things on the top of
+the sea. The motion of the surface of the sea falls within that formula,
+and hence is a special variety of wave motion, and the term wave has
+acquired in popular use this signification and nothing else. So that when
+one speaks ordinarily of a wave or undulatory motion, one immediately
+thinks of something heaving up and down, or even perhaps of something
+breaking on the shore. But when we assert that the form of energy called
+light is undulatory, we by no means intend to assert that anything whatever
+is moving up and down, or that the motion, if we could see it, would be
+anything at all like what we are accustomed to in the ocean. The kind of
+motion is unknown; we are not even sure that there is anything like motion
+in the ordinary sense of the word at all.
+
+Now, how much connection between electricity and light have we perceived in
+this glance into their natures? Not much, truly. It amounts to about
+this: That on the one hand electrical energy may exist in either of two
+forms--the static form, when insulators are electrically strained by having
+had electricity driven partially through them (as in the Leyden jar), which
+strain is a form of energy because of the tendency to discharge and do
+work; and the kinetic form, where electricity is moving bodily along
+through conductors or whirling round and round inside them, which motion
+of electricity is a form of energy, because the conductors and whirls can
+attract or repel each other and thereby do work.
+
+And, on the other hand, that light is the rapid alternation of energy
+from one of these forms to the other--the static form where the medium is
+strained, to the kinetic form when it moves. It is just conceivable, then,
+that the static form of the energy of light is _electro_ static, that is,
+that the medium is _electrically_ strained, and that the kinetic form of
+the energy of light is _electro_-kinetic, that is, that the motion is
+not ordinary motion, but electrical motion--in fact, that light is an
+electrical vibration, not a material one.
+
+On November 5, last year, there died at Cambridge a man in the full
+vigor of his faculties--such faculties as do not appear many times in a
+century--whose chief work has been the establishment of this very fact, the
+discovery of the link connecting light and electricity; and the proof--for
+I believe it amounts to a proof--that they are different manifestations
+of one and the same class of phenomena--that light is, in fact, an
+electro-magnetic disturbance. The premature death of James Clerk-Maxwell is
+a loss to science which appears at present utterly irreparable, for he was
+engaged in researches that no other man can hope as yet adequately to grasp
+and follow out; but fortunately it did not occur till he had published his
+book on "Electricity and Magnetism," one of those immortal productions
+which exalt one's idea of the mind of man, and which has been mentioned by
+competent critics in the same breath as the "Principia" itself.
+
+But it is not perfect like the "Principia;" much of it is rough-hewn, and
+requires to be thoroughly worked out. It contains numerous misprints and
+errata, and part of the second volume is so difficult as to be almost
+unintelligible. Some, in fact, consists of notes written for private use
+and not intended for publication. It seems next to impossible now to mature
+a work silently for twenty or thirty years, as was done by Newton two and a
+half centuries ago. But a second edition was preparing, and much might have
+been improved in form if life had been spared to the illustrious author.
+
+The main proof of the electro-magnetic theory of light is this: The rate at
+which light travels has been measured many times, and is pretty well known.
+The rate at which an electro-magnetic wave disturbance would travel if such
+could be generated (and Mr. Fitzgerald, of Dublin, thinks he has proved
+that it can not be generated directly by any known electrical means) can
+be also determined by calculation from electrical measurements. The two
+velocities agree exactly. This is the great physical constant known as the
+ratio V, which so many physicists have been measuring, and are likely to be
+measuring for some time to come.
+
+Many and brilliant as were Maxwell's discoveries, not only in electricity,
+but also in the theory of the nature of gases, and in molecular science
+generally, I can not help thinking that if one of them is more striking and
+more full of future significance than the rest, it is the one I have just
+mentioned--the theory that light is an electrical phenomenon.
+
+The first glimpse of this splendid generalization was caught in 1845, five
+and thirty years ago, by that prince of pure experimentalists, Michael
+Faraday. His reasons for suspecting some connection between electricity and
+light are not clear to us--in fact, they could not have been clear to him;
+but he seems to have felt a conviction that if he only tried long enough
+and sent all kinds of rays of light in all possible directions across
+electric and magnetic fields in all sorts of media, he must ultimately
+hit upon something. Well, this is very nearly what he did. With a sublime
+patience and perseverance which remind one of the way Kepler hunted down
+guess after guess in a different field of research, Faraday combined
+electricity, or magnetism, and light in all manner of ways, and at last he
+was rewarded with a result. And a most out-of-the-way result it seemed.
+First, you have to get a most powerful magnet and very strongly excite it;
+then you have to pierce its two poles with holes, in order that a beam of
+light may travel from one to the other along the lines of force; then, as
+ordinary light is no good, you must get a beam of plane polarized light,
+and send it between the poles. But still no result is obtained until,
+finally, you interpose a piece of a rare and out-of-the-way material, which
+Faraday had himself discovered and made--a kind of glass which contains
+borate of lead, and which is very heavy, or dense, and which must be
+perfectly annealed.
+
+And now, when all these arrangements are completed, what is seen is simply
+this, that if an analyzer is arranged to stop the light and make the field
+quite dark before the magnet is excited, then directly the battery is
+connected and the magnet called into action, a faint and barely perceptible
+brightening of the field occurs, which will disappear if the analyzer be
+slightly rotated. [The experiment was then shown.] Now, no wonder that no
+one understood this result. Faraday himself did not understand it at all.
+He seems to have thought that the magnetic lines of force were rendered
+luminous, or that the light was magnetized; in fact, he was in a fog,
+and had no idea of its real significance. Nor had any one. Continental
+philosophers experienced some difficulty and several failures before they
+were able to repeat the experiment. It was, in fact, discovered too soon,
+and before the scientific world was ready to receive it, and it was
+reserved for Sir William Thomson briefly, but very clearly, to point
+out, and for Clerk-Maxwell more fully to develop, its most important
+consequences. [The principle of the experiment was then illustrated by the
+aid of a mechanical model.]
+
+This is the fundamental experiment on which Clerk-Maxwell's theory of
+light is based; but of late years many fresh facts and relations between
+electricity and light have been discovered, and at the present time they
+are tumbling in in great numbers.
+
+It was found by Faraday that many other transparent media besides heavy
+glass would show the phenomenon if placed between the poles, only in a less
+degree; and the very important observation that air itself exhibits the
+same phenomenon, though to an exceedingly small extent, has just been made
+by Kundt and Rontgen in Germany.
+
+Dr. Kerr, of Glasgow, has extended the result to opaque bodies, and has
+shown that if light be passed through magnetized _iron_ its plane is
+rotated. The film of iron must be exceedingly thin, because of its opacity,
+and hence, though the intrinsic rotating power of iron is undoubtedly very
+great, the observed rotation is exceedingly small and difficult to observe;
+and it is only by a very remarkable patience and care and ingenuity that
+Dr. Kerr has obtained his result. Mr. Fitzgerald, of Dublin, has examined
+the question mathematically, and has shown that Maxwell's theory would have
+enabled Dr. Kerr's result to be predicted.
+
+Another requirement of the theory is that bodies which are transparent
+to light must be insulators or non-conductors of electricity, and that
+conductors of electricity are necessarily opaque to light. Simple
+observation amply confirms this; metals are the best conductors, and are
+the most opaque bodies known. Insulators such as glass and crystals are
+transparent whenever they are sufficiently homogeneous, and the very
+remarkable researches of Prof. Graham Bell in the last few months have
+shown that even _ebonite_, one of the most opaque insulators to ordinary
+vision, is certainly transparent to some kinds of radiation, and
+transparent to no small degree.
+
+[The reason why transparent bodies must insulate, and why conductors must
+be opaque, was here illustrated by mechanical models.]
+
+A further consequence of the theory is that the velocity of light in a
+transparent medium will be affected by its electrical strain constant; in
+other words, that its refractive index will bear some close but not yet
+quite ascertained relation to its specific inductive capacity. Experiment
+has partially confirmed this, but the confirmation is as yet very
+incomplete. But there are a number of results not predicted by theory, and
+whose connection with the theory is not clearly made out. We have the fact
+that light falling on the platinum electrode of a voltameter generates a
+current, first observed, I think, by Sir W. R. Grove--at any rate, it is
+mentioned in his "Correlation of Forces"--extended by Becquerel and Robert
+Sabine to other substances, and now being extended to fluorescent and other
+bodies by Prof. Minchin. And finally--for I must be brief--we have
+the remarkable action of light on selenium. This fact was discovered
+accidentally by an assistant in the laboratory of Mr. Willoughby Smith, who
+noticed that a piece of selenium conducted electricity very much better
+when light was falling upon it than when it was in the dark. The light of
+a candle is sufficient, and instantaneously brings down the resistance to
+something like one-fifth of its original value.
+
+I could show you these effects, but there is not much to see; it is an
+intensely interesting phenomenon, but its external manifestation is not
+striking--any more than Faraday's heavy glass experiment was.
+
+This is the phenomenon which, as you know, has been utilized by Prof.
+Graham Bell in that most ingenious and striking invention, the photophone.
+By the kindness of Prof. Silvanus Thompson, I have a few slides to show the
+principle of the invention, and Mr. Shelford Bidwell has been kind enough
+to lend me his home-made photophone, which answers exceedingly well for
+short distances.
+
+I have now trespassed long enough upon your patience, but I must just
+allude to what may very likely be the next striking popular discovery; and
+that is the transmission of light by electricity; I mean the transmission
+of such things as views and pictures by means of the electric wire. It has
+not yet been done, but it seems already theoretically possible, and it may
+very soon be practically accomplished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+INTERESTING ELECTRICAL RESEARCHES.
+
+
+During the last six years Dr. Warren de la Rue has been investigating,
+in conjunction with Dr. Hugo Muller, the various and highly interesting
+phenomena which accompany the electric discharge. From time to time the
+results of their researches were communicated to the Royal Society, and
+appeared in its Proceedings. Early last year Dr. De la Rue being requested
+to bring the subject before the members of the Royal Institution, acceded
+to the pressing invitation of his colleagues and scientific friends.
+The discourse, which was necessarily long postponed on account of the
+preparations that had to be made, was finally given on Friday, the 21st of
+January, and was one of the most remarkable, from the elaborate nature of
+the experiments, ever delivered in the theater of that deservedly famous
+institution.
+
+Owing to the great inconvenience of removing the battery from his
+laboratory, Dr. de la Rue, despite the great expenditure, directed Mr. S.
+Tisley to prepare, expressly for the lecture, a second series of 14,400
+cells, and fit it up in the basement of the Royal Institution. The
+construction of this new battery occupied Mr. Tisley a whole year, while
+the charging of it extended over a fortnight.
+
+The "de la Rue cell," if we may so call one of these elements, consists of
+a zinc rod, the lower portion of which is embedded in a solid electrolyte,
+viz., chloride of silver, with which are connected two flattened silver
+wires to serve as electrodes. When these are united and the silver chloride
+moistened, chemical action begins, and a weak but constant current is
+generated.
+
+The electromotive force of such a cell is 1.03 volts, and a current
+equivalent to one volt passing through a resistance of one ohm was found to
+decompose 0.00146 grain of water in one second. The battery is divided
+into "cabinets," which hold from 1,200 to 2,160 small elements each. This
+facilitates removal, and also the detection of any fault that may occur.
+
+It will be remembered that in 1808 Sir Humphry Davy constructed his battery
+of 2,000 cells, and thus succeeded in exalting the tiny spark obtained in
+closing the circuit into the luminous sheaf of the voltaic arc. He also
+observed that the spark passed even when the poles were separated by a
+distance varying from 1/40 to 1/30 of an inch. This appears to have been
+subsequently forgotten, as we find later physicists questioning the
+possibility of the spark leaping over any interpolar distance. Mr. J.
+P. Gassiot, of Clapham, demonstrated the inaccuracy of this opinion by
+constructing a battery of 3,000 Leclanché cells, which gave a spark of
+0.025 inch; a similar number of "de la Rue" cells gives an 0.0564 inch
+spark. This considerable increase in potential is chiefly due to better
+insulation.
+
+The great energy of this battery was illustrated by a variety of
+experiments. Thus, a large condenser, specially constructed by Messrs.
+Varley, and having a capacity equal to that of 6,485 large Leyden jars,
+was almost immediately charged by the current from 10,000 cells. Wires of
+various kinds, and from 9 inches to 29 inches in length, were instantly
+volatilized by the passage of the electricity thus stored up. The current
+induced in the secondary wire of a coil by the discharge of the condenser
+through the primary, was also sufficiently intense to deflagrate wires of
+considerable length and thickness.
+
+It was with such power at his command that Dr. De la Rue proceeded to
+investigate several important electrical laws. He has found, for example,
+that the positive discharge is more intermittent than the negative,
+that the arc is always preceded by a streamer-like discharge, that its
+temperature is about 16,000 deg., and its length at the ordinary pressure
+of the atmosphere, when taken between two points, varies as the square
+of the number of cells. Thus, with a battery of 1,000 cells, the arc was
+0.0051 inch, with 11,000 cells it increased to 0.62 inch. The same law was
+found to hold when the discharge took place between a point and a disk; it
+failed entirely, however, when the terminals were two disks.
+
+It was also shown that the voltaic arc is not a phenomenon of conduction,
+but is essentially a disruptive discharge, the intervals between the
+passage of two successive static sparks being the time required for the
+battery to collect sufficient power to leap over the interposed resistance.
+This was further confirmed by the introduction of a condenser, when the
+intervals were perceptibly larger.
+
+Faraday proved that the quantity of electricity necessary to produce a
+strong flash of lightning would result from the decomposition of a single
+grain of water, and Dr. de la Rue's experiments confirm this extraordinary
+statement. He has calculated that this quantity of electricity would be
+5,000 times as great as the charge of his large condenser, and that a
+lightning flash a mile long would require the potential of 3,500,000 cells,
+that is to say, of 243 of his powerful batteries.
+
+In experimenting with "vacuum" tubes, he has found that the discharge is
+also invariably disruptive. This is an important point, as many physicists
+speak and write of the phenomenon as one of conduction. Air, in every
+degree of tenuity, refuses to act as a conductor of electricity. These
+experiments show that the resistance of gaseous media diminishes with the
+pressure only up to a certain point, beyond which it rapidly increases.
+Thus, in the case of hydrogen, it diminishes up to 0.642 mm., 845
+millionths; it then rises as the exhaustion proceeds, and at 0.00065 mm.,
+8.6 millionths, it requires as high a potential as at 21.7 mm., 28.553
+millionths. At 0.00137 mm., 1.8 millionth, the current from 11,000 cells
+would not pass through a tube for which 430 cells sufficed at the pressure
+of minimum resistance. At a pressure of 0.0055 mm., 0.066 millionth, the
+highest exhaust obtained in any of the experiments, even a one-inch spark
+from an induction coil refused to pass. It was also ascertained that there
+is neither condensacian nor dilatation of the gas in contact with the
+terminals prior to the passage of the discharge.
+
+These researches naturally led to some speculation about the conditions
+under which auroral phenomena may occur. Observers have variously stated
+the height at which the aurora borealis attains its greatest brilliancy
+as ranging between 124 and 281 miles. Dr. de la Rue's conclusions fix
+the upper limit at 124 miles, and that of maximum display at 37 miles,
+admitting also that the aurora may sometimes occur at an altitude of a few
+thousand feet.
+
+The aurora was beautifully illustrated by a very large tube, in which the
+theoretical pressure was carefully maintained, the characteristic roseate
+tinge being readily produced and maintained.
+
+In studying the stratifications observed in vacuum tubes, Dr. de la Rue
+finds that they originate at the positive pole, and that their steadiness
+may be regulated by the resistance in circuit, and that even when the least
+tremor cannot be detected by the eye, they are still produced by rapid
+pulsations which may be as frequent as ten millions per second.
+
+Dr. de la Rue concluded his interesting discourse by exhibiting some of the
+finest tubes of his numerous and unsurpassed collection.--_Engineering_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+MEASURING ELECTROMOTIVE FORCE.
+
+
+Coulomb's torsion balance has been adapted by M. Baille to the measurement
+of low electromotive forces in a very successful manner, and has been found
+preferable by him to the delicate electrometers of Sir W. Thomson. It
+is necessary to guard it from disturbances due to extraneous electric
+influences and the trembling of the ground. These can be eliminated
+completely by encircling the instrument in a metal case connected to
+earth, and mounting it on solid pillars in a still place. Heat also has a
+disturbing effect, and makes itself felt in the torsion of the fiber and
+the cage surrounding the lever. These effects are warded off by inclosing
+the instrument in a non-conducting jacket of wood shavings.
+
+The apparatus of M. Baille consists of an annealed silver torsion wire of
+2.70 meters long, and a lever 0.50 meter long, carrying at each extremity
+a ball of copper, gilded, and three centimeters in diameter. Similar balls
+are fixed at the corners of a square 20.5 meters in the side, and connected
+in diagonal pairs by fine wire. The lever placed at equal distances from
+the fixed balls communicates, by the medium of the torsion wire, with the
+positive pole of a battery, P, the other pole being to earth.
+
+Owing to some unaccountable variations in the change of the lever or
+needle, M. Baille was obliged to measure the change at each observation.
+This was done by joining the + pole of the battery to the needle, and one
+pair of the fixed balls, and observing the deflection; then the deflection
+produced by the other balls was observed. This operation was repeated
+several times.
+
+The battery, X, to be measured consisted of ten similar elements, and one
+pole of it was connected to the fixed balls, while the other pole was
+connected to the earth. The needle, of course, remained in contact with the
++ pole of the charging battery, P.
+
+The deflections were read from a clear glass scale, placed at a distance
+of 3.30 meters from the needle, and the results worked out from Coulomb's
+static formula,
+
+C a = (4 m m')/d², with
+
+ ______________
+ / sum((p/g) r²)
+ O = / -------------
+ \/ C
+
+[TEX: O = \sqrt{\frac{\sum \frac{p}{g} r^2}{C}}]
+
+In M. Baillie's experiments, O = 437³, and sum(pr²)= 32171.6 (centimeter
+grammes), the needle having been constructed of a geometrical form.
+
+The following numbers represent the potential of an element of the
+battery--that is to say, the quantity of electricity that the pole of that
+battery spreads upon a sphere of one centimeter radius. They are expressed
+in units of electricity, the unit being the quantity of electricity which,
+acting upon a similar unit at a distance of one centimeter, produces a
+repulsion equal to one gramme:
+
+Volta pile 0.03415 open circuit.
+Zinc, sulphate of copper, copper 0.02997 "
+Zinc, acidulated water, copper, sulphate of copper 0.03709 "
+Zinc, salt water, carbon peroxide of manganese 0.05282 "
+Zinc, salt water, platinum, chloride of platinum 0.05027 "
+Zinc, acidulated water, carbon nitric acid 0.06285 "
+
+These results were obtained just upon charging the batteries, and are,
+therefore, slightly higher than the potentials given after the batteries
+became older. The sulphate of copper cells kept about their maximum value
+longest, but they showed variations of about 10 per cent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TELEPHONY BY THERMIC CURRENTS.
+
+
+While in telephonic arrangements, based upon the principle of magnetic
+induction, a relatively considerable expenditure of force is required in
+order to set the tightly stretched membrane in vibration, in the so-called
+carbon telephones only a very feeble impulse is required to produce the
+differences in the current necessary for the transmission of sounds. In
+order to produce relatively strong currents, even in case of sound-action
+of a minimum strength, Franz Kröttlinger, of Vienna, has made an
+interesting experiment to use thermo electric currents for the transmission
+of sound to a distance. The apparatus which he has constructed is
+exceedingly simple. A current of hot air flowing from below upward is
+deflected more or less from its direction by the human voice. By its action
+an adjacent thermo-battery is excited, whose current passes through the
+spiral of an ordinary telephone, which serves as the receiving instrument.
+As a source of heat the inventor uses a common stearine candle, the flame
+of which is kept at one and the same level by means of a spring similar to
+those used in carriage lamps. On one side of the candle is a sheet metal
+voice funnel fixed upon a support, its mouth being covered with a movable
+sliding disk, fitted with a suitable number of small apertures. On the
+other side a similar support holds a funnel-shaped thermo-battery. The
+single bars of metal forming this battery are very thin, and of such a
+shape that they may cool as quickly as possible. Both the speaking-funnel
+and the battery can be made to approach, at will, to the stream of warm air
+rising up from the flame. The entire apparatus is inclosed in a tin case
+in such a manner that only the aperture of the voice-funnel and the polar
+clamps for securing the conducting wires appear on the outside. The inside
+of the case is suitably stayed to prevent vibration. On speaking into the
+mouth-piece of the funnel, the sound-waves occasion undulations in the
+column of hot air which are communicated to the thermo-battery, and in this
+manner corresponding differences are produced in the currents in the wires
+leading to the receiving instrument.--_Oesterreichische-Ungarische Post._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE TELECTROSCOPE.
+
+By MONS. SENLECQ, of Ardres.
+
+
+This apparatus, which is intended to transmit to a distance through a
+telegraphic wire pictures taken on the plate of a camera, was invented in
+the early part of 1877 by M. Senlecq, of Ardres. A description of the first
+specification submitted by M. Senlecq to M. du Moncel, member of the
+Paris Academy of Sciences, appeared in all the continental and American
+scientific journals. Since then the apparatus has everywhere occupied the
+attention of prominent electricians, who have striven to improve on it.
+Among these we may mention MM. Ayrton, Perry, Sawyer (of New York),
+Sargent (of Philadelphia), Brown (of London), Carey (of Boston), Tighe (of
+Pittsburg), and Graham Bell himself. Some experimenters have used many
+wires, bound together cable-wise, others one wire only. The result has
+been, on the one hand, confusion of conductors beyond a certain distance,
+with the absolute impossibility of obtaining perfect insulation; and,
+on the other hand, an utter want of synchronism. The unequal and slow
+sensitiveness of the selenium likewise obstructed the proper working of the
+apparatus. Now, without a relative simplicity in the arrangement of the
+conducting wires intended to convey to a distance the electric current with
+its variations of intensity, without a perfect and rapid synchronism
+acting concurrently with the luminous impressions, so as to insure the
+simultaneous action of transmitter and receiver, without, in fine, an
+increased sensitiveness in the selenium, the idea of the telectroscope
+could not be realized. M. Senlecq has fortunately surmounted most of these
+main obstacles, and we give to-day a description of the latest apparatus he
+has contrived.
+
+
+TRANSMITTER.
+
+A brass plate, A, whereon the rays of light impinge inside a camera, in
+their various forms and colors, from the external objects placed before the
+lens, the said plate being coated with selenium on the side intended to
+face the dark portion of the camera This brass plate has its entire surface
+perforated with small holes as near to one another as practicable. These
+holes are filled with selenium, heated, and then cooled very slowly, so as
+to obtain the maximum sensitiveness. A small brass wire passes through the
+selenium in each hole, without, however, touching the plate, on to the
+rectangular and vertical ebonite plate, B, Fig. 1, from under this plate
+at point, C. Thus, every wire passing through plate, A, has its point
+of contact above the plate, B, lengthwise. With this view the wires are
+clustered together when leaving the camera, and thence stretch to their
+corresponding points of contact on plate, B, along line, C C. The surface
+of brass, A, is in permanent contact with the positive pole of the battery
+(selenium). On each side of plate, B, are let in two brass rails, D and E,
+whereon the slide hereinafter described works.
+
+[Illustration: Fig. 1]
+
+Rail, E, communicates with the line wire intended to conduct the various
+light and shade vibrations. Rail, D, is connected with the battery wire.
+Along F are a number of points of contact corresponding with those along
+C C. These contacts help to work the apparatus, and to insure the perfect
+isochronism of the transmitter and receiver. These points of contact,
+though insulated one from the other on the surface of the plate, are all
+connected underneath with a wire coming from the positive pole of a special
+battery. This apparatus requires two batteries, as, in fact, do all
+autographic telegraphs--one for sending the current through the selenium,
+and one for working the receiver, etc. The different features of this
+important plate may, therefore, be summed up thus:
+
+FIGURE 1.
+
+D. Brass rail, grooved and connected with the line wire working the
+receiver.
+
+F. Contacts connected underneath with a wire permanently connected with
+battery.
+
+C. Contacts connected to insulated wires from selenium.
+
+E. Brass rail, grooved, etc., like D.
+
+
+RECEIVER.
+
+A small slide, Fig. 2, having at one of its angles a very narrow piece of
+brass, separated in the middle by an insulating surface, used for setting
+the apparatus in rapid motion. This small slide has at the points, D D, a
+small groove fitting into the brass rails of plate, B, Fig. 1, whereby it
+can keep parallel on the two brass rails, D and E. Its insulator, B, Fig.
+2, corresponds to the insulating interval between F and C, Fig. 1.
+
+A, Fig. 3, circular disk, suspended vertically (made of ebonite or other
+insulating material). This disk is fixed. All round the inside of its
+circumference are contacts, connected underneath with the corresponding
+wires of the receiving apparatus. The wires coming from the seleniumized
+plate correspond symmetrically, one after the other, with the contacts of
+transmitter. They are connected in the like order with those of disk, A,
+and with those of receiver, so that the wire bearing the No. 5 from the
+selenium will correspond identically with like contact No. 5 of receiver.
+
+D, Fig. 4, gutta percha or vulcanite insulating plate, through which pass
+numerous very fine platinum wires, each corresponding at its point of
+contact with those on the circular disk, A.
+
+The receptive plate must be smaller than the plate whereon the light
+impinges. The design being thus reduced will be the more perfect from the
+dots formed by the passing currents being closer together.
+
+B, zinc or iron or brass plate connected to earth. It comes in contact with
+chemically prepared paper, C, where the impression is to take place. It
+contributes to the impression by its contact with the chemically prepared
+paper.
+
+In E, Fig. 3, at the center of the above described fixed plate is a
+metallic axis with small handle. On this axis revolves brass wheel, F, Fig.
+5.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 2]
+
+On handle, E, presses continuously the spring, H, Fig. 3, bringing the
+current coming from the selenium line. The cogged wheel in Fig. 5 has at a
+certain point of its circumference the sliding spring, O, Fig. 5, intended
+to slide as the wheel revolves over the different contacts of disk, A, Fig.
+3.
+
+This cogged wheel, Fig. 5, is turned, as in the dial telegraphs, by a rod
+working in and out under the successive movements of the electro-magnet,
+H, and of the counter spring. By means of this rod (which must be of a
+non-metallic material, so as not to divert the motive current), and of an
+elbow lever, this alternating movement is transmitted to a catch, G, which
+works up and down between the cogs, and answers the same purpose as the
+ordinary clock anchor.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 3]
+
+This cogged wheel is worked by clockwork inclosed between two disks, and
+would rotate continuously were it not for the catch, G, working in and out
+of the cogs. Through this catch, G, the wheel is dependent on the movement
+of electro-magnet. This cogged wheel is a double one, consisting of two
+wheels coupled together, exactly similar one with the other, and so fixed
+that the cogs of the one correspond with the void between the cogs of the
+others. As the catch, G, moves down it frees a cog in first wheel, and both
+wheels begin to turn, but the second wheel is immediately checked by catch,
+G, and the movement ceases. A catch again works the two wheels, turn half a
+cog, and so on. Each wheel contains as many cogs as there are contacts on
+transmitter disk, consequently as many as on circular disk, A, Fig. 3, and
+on brass disk within camera.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 4]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 5]
+
+Having now described the several parts of the apparatus, let us see how it
+works. All the contacts correspond one with the other, both on the side of
+selenium current and that of the motive current. Let us suppose that the
+slide of transmitter is on contact No. 10 for instance; the selenium
+current starting from No. 10 reaches contact 10 of rectangular transmitter,
+half the slide bearing on this point, as also on the parallel rail,
+communicates the current to said rail, thence to line, from the line to
+axis of cogged wheel, from axis to contact 10 of circular fixed disk,
+and thence to contact 10 of receiver. At each selenium contact of the
+rectangular disk there is a corresponding contact to the battery and
+electro-magnet. Now, on reaching contact 10 the intermission of the current
+has turned the wheel 10 cogs, and so brought the small contact, O, Fig. 5,
+on No. 10 of the fixed circular disk.
+
+As may be seen, the synchronism of the apparatus could not be obtained in
+a more simple and complete mode--the rectangular transmitter being placed
+vertically, and the slide being of a certain weight to its fall from the
+first point of contact sufficient to carry it rapidly over the whole length
+of this transmitter.
+
+The picture is, therefore, reproduced almost instantaneously; indeed, by
+using platinum wires on the receiver connected with the negative pole, by
+the incandescence of these wires according to the different degrees of
+electricity we can obtain a picture, of a fugitive kind, it is true, but
+yet so vivid that the impression on the retina does not fade during the
+relatively very brief space of time the slide occupies in traveling over
+all the contacts. A Ruhmkorff coil may also be employed for obtaining
+sparks in proportion to the current emitted. The apparatus is regulated
+in precisely the same way as dial telegraphs, starting always from first
+contact. The slide should, therefore, never be removed from the rectangular
+disk, whereon it is held by the grooves in the brass rails, into which it
+fits with but slight friction, without communicating any current to the
+line wires when not placed on points of contact.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Continued from SUPPLEMENT No. 274, page 4368.]
+
+
+
+
+THE VARIOUS MODES OF TRANSMITTING POWER TO A DISTANCE.
+
+[Footnote: A paper lately read before the Institution of Mechanical
+Engineers.]
+
+By ARTHUR ACHARD, of Geneva.
+
+
+But allowing that the figure of 22 H. P., assumed for this power (the
+result in calculating the work with compressed air being 19 H. P.) may be
+somewhat incorrect, it is unlikely that this error can be so large that its
+correction could reduce the efficiency below 80 per cent. Messrs. Sautter
+and Lemonnier, who construct a number of compressors, on being consulted
+by the author, have written to say that they always confined themselves in
+estimating the power stored in the compressed air, and had never measured
+the gross power expended. Compressed air in passing along the pipe, assumed
+to be horizontal, which conveys it from the place of production to the
+place where it is to be used, experiences by friction a diminution of
+pressure, which represents a reduction in the mechanical power stored up,
+and consequently a loss of efficiency.
+
+The loss of pressure in question can only be calculated conveniently on the
+hypothesis that it is very small, and the general formula,
+
+ p1 - p 4L
+ ------- = ---- f(u),
+ [Delta] D
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{4L}{D}f(u)]
+
+is employed for the purpose, where D is the diameter of the pipe, assumed
+to be uniform, L the length of the pipe, p1 the pressure at the entrance, p
+the pressure at the farther end, u the velocity at which the compressed air
+travels, [Delta] its specific weight, and f(u) the friction per unit of
+length. In proportion as the air loses pressure its speed increases, while
+its specific weight diminishes; but the variations in pressure are assumed
+to be so small that u and [Delta] may be considered constant. As regards
+the quantity f(u), or the friction per unit of length, the natural law
+which regulates it is not known, audit can only be expressed by some
+empirical formula, which, while according sufficiently nearly with the
+facts, is suited for calculation. For this purpose the binomial formula, au
++ bu², or the simple formula, b1 u², is generally adopted; a b and b1 being
+coefficients deduced from experiment. The values, however, which are to
+be given to these coefficients are not constant, for they vary with the
+diameter of the pipe, and in particular, contrary to formerly received
+ideas, they vary according to its internal surface. The uncertainty in this
+respect is so great that it is not worth while, with a view to accuracy, to
+relinquish the great convenience which the simple formula, b1 u², offers.
+It would be better from this point of view to endeavor, as has been
+suggested, to render this formula more exact by the substitution of a
+fractional power in the place of the square, rather than to go through
+the long calculations necessitated by the use of the binomial au + bu².
+Accordingly, making use of the formula b1 u², the above equation becomes,
+
+ p1 - p 4L
+ ------- = ---- b1 u²;
+ [Delta] D
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{4L}{D} b_1 u^2]
+
+or, introducing the discharge per second, Q, which is the usual figure
+supplied, and which is connected with the velocity by the relation, Q =
+([pi] D² u)/4, we have
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q².
+ [Delta] [pi]² D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2]
+
+Generally the pressure, p1, at the entrance is known, and the pressure, p,
+has to be found; it is then from p1 that the values of Q and [Delta] are
+calculated. In experiments where p1 and p are measured directly, in order
+to arrive at the value of the coefficient b1, Q and [Delta] would be
+calculated for the mean pressure ½(p1 + p). The values given to the
+coefficient b1 vary considerably, because, as stated above, it varies with
+the diameter, and also with the nature of the material of the pipe. It
+is generally admitted that it is independent of the pressure, and it is
+probable that within certain limits of pressure this hypothesis is in
+accordance with the truth.
+
+D'Aubuisson gives for this case, in his _Traité d'Hydraulique_, a rather
+complicated formula, containing a constant deduced from experiment, whose
+value, according to a calculation made by the author, is approximately b1 =
+0.0003. This constant was determined by taking the mean of experiments made
+with tin tubes of 0.0235 meter (15/16 in.), 0.05 meter (2 in.), and 0.10
+meter (4 in.) diameter; and it was erroneously assumed that it was correct
+for all diameters and all substances.
+
+M. Arson, engineer to the Paris Gas Company, published in 1867, in the
+_Mémoires de la Société des Ingénieurs Civils de France_, the results of
+some experiments on the loss of pressure in gas when passing through pipes.
+He employed cast-iron pipes of the ordinary type. He has represented the
+results of his experiments by the binomial formula, au + bu², and gives
+values for the coefficients a and b, which diminish with an increase in
+diameter, but would indicate greater losses of pressure than D'Aubuisson's
+formula. M. Deviller, in his _Rapport sur les travaux de percement du
+tunnel sous les Alpes_, states that the losses of pressure observed in the
+air pipe at the Mont Cenis Tunnel confirm the correctness of D'Aubuisson's
+formula; but his reasoning applies to too complicated a formula to be
+absolutely convincing.
+
+Quite recently M. E. Stockalper, engineer-in-chief at the northern end of
+the St. Gothard Tunnel, has made some experiments on the air conduit of
+this tunnel, the results of which he has kindly furnished to the author.
+These lead to values for the coefficient b1 appreciably less than that
+which is contained implicitly in D'Aubuisson's formula. As he experimented
+on a rising pipe, it is necessary to introduce into the formula the
+difference of level, h, between the two ends; it then becomes
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q² + h.
+ [Delta] [pi]² D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2 + h]
+
+The following are the details of the experiments: First series of
+experiments: Conduit consisting of cast or wrought iron pipes, joined by
+means of flanges, bolts, and gutta percha rings. D = 0.20 m. (8 in.); L =
+4,600 m. (15,100 ft,); h= 26.77 m. (87 ft. 10 in.). 1st experiment: Q =
+0.1860 cubic meter (6.57 cubic feet), at a pressure of ½(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 22° Cent. (72° Fahr.); p1 = 5.60 atm., p =5.24 atm. Hence p1
+- p = 0.36 atm.= 0.36 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2.116 lb. per
+square foot), whence we obtain b1=0.0001697. D'Aubuisson's formula would
+have given p1 - p = 0.626 atm.; and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p =
+0.9316 atm. 2d experiment: Q = 0.1566 cubic meter (5.53 cubic feet), at a
+pressure of ½(p1 + p), and a temperature of 22° Cent. (72° Fahr.); p1
+= 4.35 atm., p = 4.13 atm. Hence p1 - p = 0.22 atm. = 0.22 X 10,334
+kilogrammes per square meter (2,116 lb. per square foot); whence we obtain
+b1 = 0.0001816. D'Aubuisson's formula would have given p1 - p = 0.347 atm;
+and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p = 0.5382 atm. 3d experiment: Q =
+0.1495 cubic meter (5.28 cubic feet) at a pressure of ½(p1 + p) and a
+temperature 22° Cent. (72° Fahr.); p1 = 3.84 atm., p = 3.65 atm. Hence p1 -
+p = 0.19 atm. = 0.19 X 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2.116 lb. per
+square foot); whence we obtain B1 = 0.0001966. D'Aubuisson's formula would
+have given p1 - p = 0.284 atm., and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p =
+0.4329 atm. Second series of experiments: Conduit composed of wrought-iron
+pipes, with joints as in the first experiments. D = 0.15 meter (6 in.), L
+- 0.522 meters (1,712 ft.), h = 3.04 meters (10 ft.) 1st experiments: Q =
+0.2005 cubic meter (7.08 cubic feet), at a pressure of ½(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 26.5° Cent. (80° Fahr.); p1 = 5.24 atm., p = 5.00 atm. Hence
+p1 - p = 0.24 atm. =0.24 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2,116 lb.
+per square foot); whence we obtain b1 = 0.3002275. 2nd experiment: Q =
+0.1586 cubic meter (5.6 cubic feet), at a pressure of ½(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 26.5° Cent. (80° Fahr.); p1 = 3.650 atm., p = 3.545 atm.
+Hence p1 - p = 0.105 atm. = 0.105 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter
+(2,116 lb. per square foot); whence we obtain b1 = 0.0002255. It is clear
+that these experiments give very small values for the coefficient. The
+divergence from the results which D'Aubuisson's formula would give is due
+to the fact that his formula was determined with very small pipes. It is
+probable that the coefficients corresponding to diameters of 0.15 meter
+(6 in.) and 0.20 meter (8 in.) for a substance as smooth as tin, would be
+still smaller respectively than the figures obtained above.
+
+The divergence from the results obtained by M. Arson's formula does not
+arise from a difference in size, as this is taken into account. The author
+considers that it may be attributed to the fact that the pipes for the St.
+Gothard Tunnel were cast with much greater care than ordinary pipes, which
+rendered their surface smoother, and also to the fact that flanged joints
+produce much less irregularity in the internal surface than the ordinary
+spigot and faucet joints.
+
+Lastly, the difference in the methods of observation and the errors which
+belong to them, must be taken into account. M. Stockalper, who experimented
+on great pressures, used metallic gauges, which are instruments on whose
+sensibility and correctness complete reliance cannot be placed; and
+moreover the standard manometer with which they were compared was one of
+the same kind. The author is not of opinion that the divergence is owing to
+the fact that M. Stockalper made his observations on an air conduit, where
+the pressure was much higher than in gas pipes. Indeed, it may be assumed
+that gases and liquids act in the same manner; and, as will be [1]
+explained later on, there is reason to believe that with the latter a rise
+of pressure increases the losses of pressure instead of diminishing them.
+
+[Transcribers note 1: corrected from 'as will we explained']
+
+All the pipes for supplying compressed air in tunnels and in headings of
+mines are left uncovered, and have flanged joints; which are advantages not
+merely as regards prevention of leakage, but also for facility of laying
+and of inspection. If a compressed air pipe had to be buried in the ground
+the flanged joint would lose a part of its advantages; but, nevertheless,
+the author considers that it would still be preferable to the ordinary
+joint.
+
+It only remains to refer to the motors fed with the compressed air.
+This subject is still in its infancy from a practical point of view. In
+proportion as the air becomes hot by compression, so it cools by expansion,
+if the vessel containing it is impermeable to heat. Under these conditions
+it gives out in expanding a power appreciably less than if it retained its
+original temperature; besides which the fall of temperature may impede the
+working of the machine by freezing the vapor of water contained in the air.
+
+If it is desired to utilize to the utmost the force stored up in the
+compressed air it is necessary to endeavor to supply heat to the air during
+expansion so as to keep its temperature constant. It would be possible
+to attain this object by the same means which prevent heating from
+compression, namely, by the circulation and injection of water. It would
+perhaps be necessary to employ a little larger quantity of water for
+injection, as the water, instead of acting by virtue both of its heat of
+vaporization and of its specific heat, can in this case act only by virtue
+of the latter. These methods might be employed without difficulty for air
+machines of some size. It would be more difficult to apply them to small
+household machines, in which simplicity is an essential element; and we
+must rest satisfied with imperfect methods, such as proximity to a stove,
+or the immersion of the cylinder in a tank of water. Consequently loss of
+power by cooling and by incomplete expansion cannot be avoided. The only
+way to diminish the relative amount of this loss is to employ compressed
+air at a pressure not exceeding three or four atmospheres.
+
+The only real practical advance made in this matter is M. Mékarski's
+compressed air engine for tramways. In this engine the air is made to pass
+through a small boiler containing water at a temperature of about 120°
+Cent. (248° Fahr.), before entering the cylinder of the engine. It must
+be observed that in order to reduce the size of the reservoirs, which
+are carried on the locomotive, the air inside them must be very highly
+compressed; and that in going from the reservoir into the cylinder it
+passes through a reducing valve or expander, which keeps the pressure of
+admission at a definite figure, so that the locomotive can continue working
+so long as the supply of air contained in the reservoir has not come down
+to this limiting pressure. The air does not pass the expander until after
+it has gone through the boiler already mentioned. Therefore, if the
+temperature which it assumes in the boiler is 100° Cent. (212° Fahr.), and
+if the limiting pressure is 5 atm., the gas which enters the engine will be
+a mixture of air and water vapor at 100° Cent.; and of its total pressure
+the vapor of water will contribute I atm. and the air 4 atm. Thus this
+contrivance, by a small expenditure of fuel, enables the air to act
+expansively without injurious cooling, and even reduces the consumption of
+compressed air to an extent which compensates for part of the loss of power
+arising from the preliminary expansion which the air experiences before its
+admission into the engine. It is clear that this same contrivance, or what
+amounts to the same thing, a direct injection of steam, at a sufficient
+pressure, for the purpose of maintaining the expanding air at a constant
+temperature, might be tried in a fixed engine worked by compressed air with
+some chance of success.
+
+Whatever method is adopted it would be advantageous that the losses of
+pressure in the pipes connecting the compressors with the motors should be
+reduced as much as possible, for in this case that loss would represent
+a loss of efficiency. If, on the other hand, owing to defective means of
+reheating, it is necessary to remain satisfied with a small amount of
+expansion, the loss of pressure in the pipe is unimportant, and has only
+the effect of transferring the limited expansion to a point a little lower
+on the scale of pressures. If W is the net disposable force on the shaft
+of the engine which works the compressor, v1 the volume of air at the
+compressor, p1. given by the compressor, and at the temperature of the
+surrounding air, and p0 the atmospheric pressure, the efficiency of the
+compressor, assuming the air to expand according to Boyle's law, is given
+by the well-known formula--
+
+ p1 v1 log (p1 / p0)
+ -------------------.
+ W
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 v_1 \log \frac{p_1}{p_0}}{W}]
+
+Let p2 be the value to which the pressure is reduced by the loss of
+pressure at the end of the conduit, and v2 the volume which the air
+occupies at this pressure and at the same temperature; the force stored
+up in the air at the end of its course through the conduit is p2 v2
+log(p2/p0); consequently, the efficiency of the conduit is
+
+ p2 v2 log(p2/p0)
+ ----------------
+ p1 v1 log(p1/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_2 v_2 \log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}{p_2 v_2 \log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+a fraction that may be reduced to the simple form
+
+ log(p2/p0)
+ ----------,
+ log(p1/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{\log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}{\log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+if there is no leakage during the passage of the air, because in that cause
+p2 v2 = p1 v1. Lastly, if W1 is the net disposable force on the shaft of
+the compressed air motor, the efficiency of this engine will be,
+
+ W1
+ ----------------
+ p2 v2 log(p2/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{W_1}{p_2 v_2 \log \frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+and the product of these three partial efficiencies is equal to W1/W, the
+general efficiency of the transmission.
+
+III. _Transmission by Pressure Water_.--As transmission of power by
+compressed air has been specially applied to the driving of tunnels, so
+transmission by pressure water has been specially resorted to for lifting
+heavy loads, or for work of a similar nature, such as the operations
+connected with the manufacture of Bessemer steel or of cast-iron pipes.
+The author does not propose to treat of transmissions established for this
+special purpose, and depending on the use of accumulators at high pressure,
+as he has no fresh matter to impart on this subject, and as he believes
+that the remarkable invention of Sir William Armstrong was described for
+the first time, in the "Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical
+Engineers." His object is to refer to transmissions applicable to general
+purposes.
+
+The transmission of power by water may occur in another form. The motive
+force to be transmitted may be employed for working pumps which raise the
+water, not to a fictitious height in an accumulator, but to a real height
+in a reservoir, with a channel from this reservoir to distribute the water
+so raised among several motors arranged for utilizing the pressure. The
+author is not aware that works have been carried out for this purpose.
+However, in many towns a part of the water from the public mains serves to
+supply small motors--consequently, if the water, instead of being brought
+by a natural fall, has been previously lifted artificially, it might be
+said that a transmission of power is here grafted on to the ordinary
+distribution of water.
+
+Unless a positive or negative force of gravity is introduced into the
+problem, independently of the force to be transmitted, the receivers of
+the water pressure must be assumed to be at the same level as the forcing
+pumps, or more correctly, the water discharged from the receivers to be at
+the same level as the surface of the water from which the pumps draw their
+supply. In this case the general efficiency of transmission is the product
+of three partial efficiencies, which correspond exactly to those mentioned
+with regard to compressed air. The height of lift, contained in the
+numerator of the fraction which expresses the efficiency of the pumps, is
+not to be taken as the difference in level between the surface of the water
+in the reservoir and the surface of the water whence the pumps draw their
+supply; but as this difference in level, plus the loss of pressure in the
+suction pipe, which is usually very short, and plus the loss in the channel
+to the reservoir, which may be very long. A similar loss of initial
+pressure affects the efficiency of the discharge channel. The reservoir, if
+of sufficient capacity, may become an important store of power, while the
+compressed air reservoir can only do so to a very limited extent.
+
+Omitting the subject of the pumps, and passing on at once to the discharge
+main, the author may first point out that the distinction between the
+ascending and descending mains of the system is of no importance, for two
+reasons: first, that nothing prevents the motors being supplied direct from
+the first alone; and second, that the one is not always distinct from the
+other. In fact, the reservoir may be connected by a single branch pipe with
+the system which goes from the pumps to the motors; it may even be placed
+at the extreme end of this system beyond the motors, provided always that
+the supply pipe is taken into it at the bottom. The same formula may be
+adopted for the loss of initial pressure in water pipes as for compressed
+air pipes, viz.,
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q² ± h;
+ [Delta] [pi]² D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2 \pm h]
+
+h being the difference of level between the two ends of the portion of
+conduit of length, L, and the sign + or - being used according as the
+conduit rises or falls. The specific weight, [delta], is constant, and the
+quotients, p1/[delta] and p/[delta], represent the heights, z and z1, to
+which the water could rise above the pipes, in vertical tubes branching
+from it, at the beginning and end of the transit. The values assigned to
+the coefficient b1 in France, are those determined by D'Arcy. For new
+cast-iron pipes he gives b1 - 0.0002535 + 1/D 0.000000647; and recommends
+that this value should be doubled, to allow for the rust and incrustation
+which more or less form inside the pipes during use. The determination of
+this coefficient has been made from experiments where the pressure has
+not exceeded four atmospheres; within these limits the value of the
+coefficient, as is generally admitted, is independent of the pressure. The
+experiments made by M. Barret, on the pressure pipes of the accumulator at
+the Marseilles docks, seem to indicate that the loss of pressure would be
+greater for high pressures, everything else being equal. This pipe, having
+a diameter of 0.127 m. (5 in.), was subjected to an initial pressure of 52
+atmospheres. The author gives below the results obtained for a straight
+length 320 m. (1050 ft) long; and has placed beside them the results which
+D'Arcy's formula would give.
+
+ Loss of head, in meters or ft. respectively
+ per 100 meters or ft. run of pipes.
+ +-----------------^-------------------+
+ | |
+ Calculated loss.
+ +-----------^-----------+
+ | |
+Velocity of flow Actual loss
+ per second. observed. Old pipes. New pipes.
+Meters. Feet. Met. or Ft. Met. or Ft. Met. or Ft.
+0.25 0.82 1.5 0.12 0.06
+0.50 1.64 2.5 0.48 0.24
+0.75 2.46 3.7 1.08 0.54
+1.00 3.28 5.5 1.92 0.96
+1.25 4.10 6.1 3.00 1.50
+1.50 4.92 7.3 4.32 2.16
+1.75 5.74 8.0 5.88 2.94
+2.00 6.56 10.2 7.68 3.84
+2.25 7.38 11.7 9.72 4.86
+2.50 8.20 14.0 12.00 6.00
+
+Moreover, these results would appear to indicate a different law from that
+which is expressed by the formula b1 u², as is easy to see by representing
+them graphically. It would be very desirable that fresh experiments should
+be made on water pipes at high pressure, and of various diameters. Of
+machines worked by water pressure the author proposes to refer only to two
+which appear to him in every respect the most practical and advantageous.
+One is the piston machine of M. Albert Schmid, engineer at Zurich. The
+cylinder is oscillating, and the distribution is effected, without an
+eccentric, by the relative motion of two spherical surfaces fitted one
+against the other, and having the axis of oscillation for a common axis.
+The convex surface, which is movable and forms part of the cylinder, serves
+as a port face, and has two ports in it communicating with the two ends of
+the cylinder. The concave surface, which is fixed and plays the part of a
+slide valve, contains three openings, the two outer ones serving to admit
+the pressure water, and the middle one to discharge the water after it has
+exerted its pressure. The piston has no packing. Its surface of contact has
+two circumferential grooves, which produce a sort of water packing acting
+by adhesion. A small air chamber is connected with the inlet pipe, and
+serves to deaden the shocks. This engine is often made with two cylinders,
+having their cranks at right angles.
+
+The other engine, which is much less used, is a turbine on Girard's system,
+with a horizontal axis and partial admission, exactly resembling in
+miniature those which work in the hydraulic factory of St. Maur, near
+Paris. The water is introduced by means of a distributer, which is fitted
+in the interior of the turbine chamber, and occupies a certain portion
+of its circumference. This turbine has a lower efficiency than Schmid's
+machine, and is less suitable for high pressures; but it possesses this
+advantage over it, that by regulating the amount of opening of the
+distributer, and consequently the quantity of water admitted, the force can
+be altered without altering the velocity of rotation. As it admits of great
+speeds, it could be usefully employed direct, without the interposition of
+spur wheels or belts for driving magneto-electric machines employed for the
+production of light, for electrotyping, etc.
+
+In compressed air machines the losses of pressure due to incomplete
+expansion, cooling, and waste spaces, play an important part. In water
+pressure machines loss does not occur from these causes, on account of the
+incompressibility of the liquid, but the frictions of the parts are the
+principal causes of loss of power. It would be advisable to ascertain
+whether, as regards this point, high or low pressures are the most
+advantageous. Theoretical considerations would lead the author to imagine
+that for a piston machine low pressures are preferable. In conclusion, the
+following table gives the efficiencies of a Girard turbine, constructed by
+Messrs. Escher Wyss & Co., of Zurich, and of a Schmid machine, as measured
+by Professor Fliegnor, in 1871:
+
+ ESCHER WYSS & CO'S TURBINE.
+
+Effective Head of Water. Revolutions Efficiency.
+ per minute.
+Meters. Feet. Revs. Per cent.
+ 20.7 67.9 628 68.5
+ 20.7 67.9 847 47.4
+ 24.1 79.0 645 68.5
+ 27.6 90.5 612 65.7
+ 27.6 90.5 756 68.0
+ 31.0 101.7 935 56.9
+ 31.0 101.7 1,130 35.1
+
+ SCHMID MOTOR.
+
+ 8.3 27.2 226 37.4
+ 11.4 37.4 182 67.4
+ 14.5 47.6 254 53.4
+ 17.9 58.7 157 86.2
+ 20.7 67.9 166 89.6
+ 20.7 67.9 225 74.6
+ 24.1 79.0 238 76.7
+ 24.1 79.0 389 64.0
+ 27.6 90.5 207 83.9
+
+It will be observed that these experiments relate to low pressures; it
+would be desirable to extend them to higher pressures.
+
+IV. _Transmission by Electricity._--However high the efficiency of an
+electric motor may be, in relation to the chemical work of the electric
+battery which feeds it, force generated by an electric battery is too
+expensive, on account of the nature of the materials consumed, for a
+machine of this kind ever to be employed for industrial purposes. If,
+however, the electric current, instead of being developed by chemical
+work in a battery, is produced by ordinary mechanical power in a
+magneto-electric or dynamo-electric machine, the case is different; and
+the double transformation, first of the mechanical force into an electric
+current, and then of that current into mechanical force, furnishes a means
+for effecting the conveyance of the power to a distance.
+
+It is this last method of transmission which remains to be discussed. The
+author, however, feels himself obliged to restrict himself in this matter
+to a mere summary; and, indeed, it is English physicists and engineers who
+have taken the technology of electricity out of the region of empiricism
+and have placed it on a scientific and rational basis. Moreover, they are
+also taking the lead in the progress which is being accomplished in this
+branch of knowledge, and are best qualified to determine its true bearings.
+When an electric current, with an intensity, i, is produced, either by
+chemical or mechanical work, in a circuit having a total resistance, R, a
+quantity of heat is developed in the circuit, and this heat is the exact
+equivalent of the force expended, so long as the current is not made use of
+for doing any external work. The expression for this quantity of heat, per
+unit of time, is Ai²R; A being the thermal equivalent of the unit of power
+corresponding to the units of current and resistance, in which i and R are
+respectively expressed. The product, i²R, is a certain quantity of power,
+which the author proposes to call _power transformed into electricity_.
+When mechanical power is employed for producing a current by means of
+a magneto-electric or dynamo-electric machine--or, to use a better
+expression, by means of a _mechanical generator of electricity_--it is
+necessary in reality to expend a greater quantity of power than i²R in
+order to make up for losses which result either from ordinary friction
+or from certain electro magnetic reactions which occur. The ratio of the
+quantity, i²R, to the power, W, actually expended per unit of time is
+called the efficiency of the generator. Designating it by K, we obtain, W
+= i²R/K. It is very important to ascertain the value of this efficiency,
+considering that it necessarily enters as a factor into the evaluation of
+all the effects to be produced by help of the generator in question. The
+following table gives the results of certain experiments made early in
+1879, with a Gramme machine, by an able physicist, M Hagenbach, Professor
+at the University at Basle, and kindly furnished by him to the author:
+
+Revolutions per minute 935 919.5 900.5 893
+
+Total resistance in Siemens' units 2.55 3.82 4.94 6.06
+
+Total resistance in absolute units 2.435 3.648 4.718 5.787
+ x10^9 x10^9 x10^9 x10^9
+
+Intensity in chemical units 17.67 10.99 8.09 6.28
+
+Intensity in absolute units 2.828 1.759 1.295 1.005
+
+Work done i²R in absolute units 1948.6 1129.2 791.3 584.9
+ x10^7 x10^7 x10^7 x10^7
+
+Work done i²R in kilogrammes 198.6 115.1 80.66 59.62
+
+Power expended in kilogrammes 301.5 141.0 86.25 83.25
+
+Efficiency, per cent. 65.9 81.6 93.5 71.6
+
+M. Hagenbach's dynamometric measurements were made by the aid of a brake.
+After each experiment on the electric machine, he applied the brake to the
+engine which he employed, taking care to make it run at precisely the same
+speed, with the same pressure of steam, and with the same expansion as
+during experiment. It would certainly be better to measure the force
+expended during and not after the experiment, by means of a registering
+dynamometer. Moreover, M. Hagenbach writes that his measurements by means
+of the brake were very much prejudiced by external circumstances; doubtless
+this is the reason of the divergences between the results obtained.
+
+About the same time Dr. Hopkinson communicated to this institution the
+results of some very careful experiments made on a Siemens machine. He
+measured the force expended by means of a registering dynamometer, and
+obtained very high coefficients of efficiency, amounting to nearly 90 per
+cent. M. Hagenbach also obtained from one machine a result only a little
+less than unity. Mechanical generators of electricity are certainly
+capable of being improved in several respects, especially as regards their
+adaptation to certain definite classes of work. But there appears to
+remain hardly any margin for further progress as regards efficiency. Force
+transformed into electricity in a generator may be expressed by i [omega] M
+C; [omega] being the angular velocity of rotation; M the magnetism of one
+of the poles, inducing or induced, which intervenes; and C a constant
+specially belonging to each apparatus, and which is independent of
+the units adopted. This constant could not be determined except by
+an integration practically impossible; and the product, M C, must be
+considered indivisible. Even in a magneto-electric machine (with permanent
+inducing magnets), and much more in a dynamo-electric machine (inducing by
+means of electro-magnets excited by the very current produced) the product,
+M C, is a function of the intensity. From the identity of the expressions,
+i²R and i [omega] M C we obtain the relation M C = IR/[omega] which
+indicates the course to be pursued to determine experimentally the law
+which connects the variations of M C with those of i. Some experiments made
+in 1876, by M. Hagenbach, on a Gramme dynamo-electric machine, appear to
+indicate that the magnetism, M C, does not increase indefinitely with the
+intensity, but that there is some maximum value for this quantity. If,
+instead of working a generator by an external motive force, a current is
+passed through its circuit in a certain given direction, the movable part
+of the machine will begin to turn in an opposite direction to that in which
+it would have been necessary to turn it in order to obtain a current in the
+aforesaid direction. In virtue of this motion the electro-magnetic forces
+which are generated may be used to overcome a resisting force. The machine
+will then work as a motor or receiver. Let i be the intensity of the
+external current which works the motor, when the motor is kept at rest. If
+it is now allowed to move, its motion produces, in virtue of the laws of
+induction, a current in the circuit of intensity, i1, in the opposite
+direction to the external current; the effective intensity of the current
+traversing the circuit is thus reduced to i - i1. The intensity of the
+counter current is given, like that of the generating current, by the
+equation, i1²R = i1 [omega]1 M1 C1, or i1R = [omega]1 M1 C1, the index, 1,
+denoting the quantities relating to the motor. Here M1 C1 is a function of
+i - i1, not of i. As in a generator the force transformed into electricity
+has a value, i [omega] M C, so in a motor the force developed by
+electricity is (i - i1) [omega]1 M1 C1. On account, however, of the losses
+which occur, the effective power, that is the disposable power on the shaft
+of the motor, will have a smaller value, and in order to arrive at it a
+coefficient of efficiency, K1, must be added. We shall then have W1 = K1
+(i-i1) [omega]1 M1 C1. The author has no knowledge of any experiments
+having been made for obtaining this efficiency, K1. Next let us suppose
+that the current feeding the motor is furnished by a generator, so that
+actual transmission by electricity is taking place. The circuit, whose
+resistance is R, comprises the coils, both fixed and movable, of the
+generator and motor, and of the conductors which connect them. The
+intensity of the current which traverses the circuit had the value, i, when
+the motor was at rest; by the working of the motor it is reduced to i - i1.
+The power applied to the generator is itself reduced to W-[(i-i1)[omega]
+M C]/K. The prime mover is relieved by the action of the counter current,
+precisely as the consumption of zinc in the battery would be reduced by the
+same cause, if the battery was the source of the current. The efficiency
+of the transmission is W1/W. Calculation shows that it is expressed by the
+following equations:W1/W = K K1 [([omega]11 M1 C1)/([omega]1 M C)], or = K
+K1 [([omega]11 M1 C)/([omega]11 M1 C1 + (i-i1) R)]; expressions in which
+it must be remembered M C and M1 C1 are really functions of (i-i1). This
+efficiency is, then, the product of three distinct factors, each evidently
+less than unity, namely, the efficiency belonging to the generator, the
+efficiency belonging to the motor, and a third factor depending on the rate
+of rotation of the motor and the resistance of the circuit. The influence
+which these elements exert on the value of the third factor cannot be
+estimated, unless the law is first known according to which the magnetisms,
+M C, M1 C C1, vary with the intensity of the current.
+
+
+GENERAL RESULTS.
+
+Casting a retrospective glance at the four methods of transmission of power
+which have been examined, it would appear that transmission by ropes forms
+a class by itself, while the three other methods combine into a natural
+group, because they possess a character in common of the greatest
+importance. It may be said that all three involve a temporary
+transformation of the mechanical power to be utilized into potential
+energy. Also in each of these methods the efficiency of transmission is
+the product of three factors or partial efficiencies, which correspond
+exactly--namely, first, the efficiency of the instrument which converts
+the actual energy of the prime mover into potential energy; second, the
+efficiency of the instrument which reconverts this potential energy into
+actual energy, that is, into motion, and delivers it up in this shape
+for the actual operations which accomplish industrial work; third, the
+efficiency of the intermediate agency which serves for the conveyance of
+potential energy from the first instrument to the second.
+
+This last factor has just been given for transmission by electricity. It
+is the exact correlative of the efficiency of the pipe in the case of
+compressed air or of pressure water. It is as useful in the case of
+electric transmission, as of any other method, to be able, in studying the
+system, to estimate beforehand what results it is able to furnish, and for
+this purpose it is necessary to calculate exactly the factors which compose
+the efficiency.
+
+In order to obtain this desirable knowledge, the author considers that the
+three following points should form the aim of experimentalists: First,
+the determination of the efficiency, K, of the principal kinds of
+magneto-electric, or dynamo-electric machines working as generators;
+second, the determination of the efficiency, K1, of the same machines
+working as motors; third, the determination of the law according to which
+the magnetism of the cores of these machines varies with the intensity of
+the current. The author is of opinion that experiments made with these
+objects in view would be more useful than those conducted for determining
+the general efficiency of transmission, for the latter give results only
+available under precisely similar conditions. However, it is clear that
+they have their value and must not be neglected.
+
+There are, moreover, many other questions requiring to be elucidated by
+experiment, especially as regards the arrangement of the conducting wires:
+but it is needless to dwell further upon this subject, which has been ably
+treated by many English men of science--for instance, Dr. Siemens and
+Professor Ayrton. Nevertheless, for further information the author would
+refer to the able articles published at Paris, by M. Mascart, in the
+_Journal de Physique_, in 1877 and 1878. The author would gladly have
+concluded this paper with a comparison of the efficiencies of the four
+systems which have been examined, or what amounts to the same thing--with a
+comparison of the losses of power which they occasion. Unfortunately, such
+a comparison has never been made experimentally, because hitherto the
+opportunity of doing it in a demonstrative manner has been wanting, for the
+transmission of power to a distance belongs rather to the future than to
+the present time. Transmission by electricity is still in its infancy; it
+has only been applied on a small scale and experimentally.
+
+Of the three other systems, transmission by means of ropes is the only one
+that has been employed for general industrial purposes, while compressed
+air and water under pressure have been applied only to special purposes,
+and their use has been due much more to their special suitableness for
+these purposes than from any considerations relative to loss of power.
+Thus the effective work of the compressed air used in driving the
+tunnels through the Alps, assuming its determination to be possible, was
+undoubtedly very low; nevertheless, in the present state of our appliances
+it is the only process by which such operations can be accomplished. The
+author believes that transmission by ropes furnishes the highest proportion
+of useful work, but that as regards a wide distribution of the transmitted
+power the other two methods, by air and water, might merit a preference.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE HOTCHKISS REVOLVING GUN.
+
+
+The Hotchkiss revolving gun, already adopted in the French navy and by
+other leading European nations, has been ordered for use in the German navy
+by the following decree of the German Emperor, dated January 11 last: "On
+the report made to me, I approve the adoption of the Hotchkiss revolving
+cannon as a part of the artillery of my navy; and each of my ships,
+according to their classification, shall in general be armed with this
+weapon in such a manner that every point surrounding the vessel may be
+protected by the fire of at least two guns at a minimum range of 200
+meters."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THALLIUM PAPERS AS OZONOMETERS.
+
+
+Schoene has given the results of an extended series of experiments on the
+use of thallium paper for estimating approximately the oxidizing material
+in the atmosphere, whether it be hydrogen peroxide alone, or mixed with
+ozone, or perhaps also with other constituents hitherto unknown. The
+objection to Schönbein's ozonometer (potassium iodide on starch paper) and
+to Houzeau's ozonometer (potassium iodide on red litmus paper) lies in
+the fact that their materials are hygroscopic, and their indications vary
+widely with the moisture of the air. Since dry ozone does not act on these
+papers, they must be moistened; and then the amount of moisture varies the
+result quite as much as the amount of ozone. Indeed, attention has been
+called to the larger amount of ozone near salt works and waterfalls, and
+the erroneous opinion advanced that ozone is formed when water is finely
+divided. And Böttger has stated that ozone is formed when ether is
+atomized; the fact being that the reaction he observed was due to the
+H_2O_2 always present in ether. Direct experiments with the Schönbein
+ozonometer and the psychrometer gave parallel curves; whence the author
+regards the former as only a crude hygrometer. These objections do not lie
+against the thallium paper, the oxidation to brown oxide by either ozone or
+hydrogen peroxide not requiring the presence of moisture, and the color,
+therefore, being independent of the hygrometric state of the air. Moreover,
+when well cared for, the papers undergo no farther change of color and may
+be preserved indefinitely. The author prepares the thallium paper a few
+days before use, by dipping strips of Swedish filtering paper in a solution
+of thallous hydrate, and drying. The solution is prepared by pouring a
+solution of thallous sulphate into a boiling solution of barium hydrate,
+equivalent quantities being taken, the resulting solution of thallous
+hydrate being concentrated in vacuo until 100 c.c. contains 10 grammes
+Tl(OH). For use the strips are hung in the free air in a close vessel,
+preferably over caustic lime, for twelve hours. Other papers are used, made
+with a two per cent. solution. These are exposed for thirty-six hours. The
+coloration is determined by comparison with a scale having eleven degrees
+of intensity upon it. Compared with Schönbein's ozonometer, the results are
+in general directly opposite. The thallium papers show that the greatest
+effect is in the daytime, the iodide papers that it is at night. Yearly
+curves show that the former generally indicate a rise when the latter give
+a fall. The iodide curve follows closely that of relative humidity, clouds,
+and rain; the thallium curve stands in no relation to it. A table of
+results for the year 1879 is given in monthly means, of the two thallium
+papers, the ozonometer, the relative humidity, cloudiness, rain, and
+velocity of wind.--_G. F. B., in Ber. Berl. Chem. Ces._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE AUDIPHONE IN ENGLAND.
+
+
+The audiphone has been recently tried in the Board School for Deaf and
+Dumb at Turin street, Bethnal Green, with very satisfactory results--so
+satisfactory that the report will recommend its adoption in the four
+schools which the London Board have erected for the education of the deaf
+and dumb. Some 20 per cent. of the pupils in deaf and dumb schools have
+sufficient power of hearing when assisted by the audiphone to enable them
+to take their places in the classes of the ordinary schools.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONDUCTIVITY OF MOIST AIR.
+
+
+Many physical treatises still assert that moist air conducts electricity,
+though Silberman and others have proved the contrary. An interesting
+experiment bearing on this has been described lately by Prof. Marangoni.
+Over a flame is heated some water in a glass jar, through the stopper of
+which passes a bent tube to bell-jar (held obliquely), which thus gets
+filled with aqueous vapor. The upper half of a thin Leyden jar charged is
+brought into the bell-jar, and held there four or five seconds; it is
+then found entirely discharged. That the real cause of this, however, is
+condensation of the vapor on the part of the glass that is not coated with
+tin foil (the liquid layer acting by conduction) can be proved; for if that
+part of the jar be passed several times rapidly through the flame, so as
+to heat it to near 100° C., before inserting in the bell-jar, a different
+effect will be had; the Leyden jar will give out long sparks after
+withdrawal. This is because the glass being heated no longer condenses the
+vapor on its surface, and there is no superficial conduction, as in the
+previous case.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+FLOATING PONTOON DOCK.
+
+
+Considerable attention has been given for some years past to the subject of
+floating pontoon docks by Mr. Robert Turnbull, naval architect, of South
+Shields, Eng., who has devised the ingenious arrangement which forms the
+subject of the annexed illustration. The end aimed at and now achieved by
+Mr. Turnbull was so to construct floating docks or pontoons that they may
+rise and fall in a berth, and be swung round at one end upon a center post
+or cylinder--nautically known as a dolphin--projecting from the ground at
+a slight distance from the berth. The cylinder is in deep water, and,
+when the pontoon is swung and sunk to the desired depth by letting in the
+necessary amount of water, a vessel can be floated in and then secured. The
+pontoon, with the vessel on it, is then raised by pumping out the contained
+water until she is a little above the level of the berth. The whole is then
+swung round over the berth, the vessel then being high and dry to enable
+repairs or other operations to be conducted. For this purpose, one end of
+the pontoon is so formed as to enable it to fit around the cylinder, and
+to be held to it as to a center or fulcrum, about which the pontoon can be
+swung. The pontoon is of special construction, and has air-chambers at the
+sides placed near the center, so as to balance it. It also has chambers at
+the ends, which are divided horizontally in order that the operation of
+submerging within a berth or in shallow water may be conducted without
+risk, the upper chambers being afterwards supplied with water to sink the
+pontoon to the full depth before a vessel is hauled in. When the ship is in
+place, the pontoon with her is then lifted above the level of the berth in
+which it has to be placed, and then swung round into the berth. In some
+cases, the pontoon is provided with a cradle, so that, when in berth, the
+vessel on the cradle can be hauled up a slip with rails arranged as
+a continuation of the cradle-rails of the pontoon, which can be then
+furnished with another cradle, and another vessel lifted.
+
+It is this latter arrangement which forms the subject of our illustration,
+the vessel represented being of the following dimensions: Length between
+perpendiculars, 350 feet; breadth, moulded, 40 feet; depth, moulded, 32
+feet; tons, B. M., 2,600; tons net, 2,000. At A, in fig. 1, is shown in
+dotted lines a portion of the vessel and pontoon, the ship having just been
+hauled in and centered over the keel blocks. At B, is shown the pontoon
+with the ship raised and swung round on to a low level quay. Going a step
+further in the operation, we see at C, the vessel hauled on to the slipways
+on the high-level quay. In this case the cylinder is arranged so that
+the vessel may be delivered on to the rails or slips, which are arranged
+radially, taking the cylinder as the center. There may be any number of
+slips so arranged, and one pontoon may be made available for several
+cylinders at the deep water parts of neighboring repairing or building
+yards, in which case the recessed portion of the pontoon, when arranged
+around the cylinder, has stays or retaining bars fitted to prevent it
+leaving the cylinder when the swinging is taking place, such as might
+happen in a tideway.
+
+[Illustration: Fig. 1. IMPROVED FLOATING PONTOON DRY DOCK.]
+
+The arrangements for delivering vessels on radial slips is seen in plan at
+fig. 2, where A represents the river or deep water; B is the pontoon with
+the vessel; C being the cylinder or turning center; D is the low-level
+quay on to which the pontoon carrying the ship is first swung; E is the
+high-level quay with the slip-ways; F is an engine running on rails around
+the radial slips for drawing the vessels with the cradle off the pontoon,
+and hauling them up on to the high-level quay; and G shows the repairing
+shops, stores, and sheds. A pontoon attached to a cylinder may be fitted
+with an ordinary wet dock; and then the pontoon, before or after the vessel
+is upon it, can be slewed round to suit the slips up which the vessel has
+to be moved, supposing the slips are arranged radially. In this case, the
+pivot end of the pontoon would be a fixture, so to speak, to the cylinder.
+
+The pontoon may also be made available for lifting heavy weights, by
+fitting a pair of compound levers or other apparatus at one end, the
+lifting power being in the pontoon itself. In some cases, in order to
+lengthen the pontoon, twenty-five or fifty foot lengths are added at
+the after end. When not thus engaged, those lengths form short pontoons
+suitable for small vessels.--_Iron_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WEIRLEIGH, BRENCHLEY, KENT.
+
+
+Some few years since, Mr. Harrison Weir (whose drawings of natural history
+are known probably to a wider circle of the general public than the works
+of most artists), wishing to pursue his favorite study of animals and
+horticulture, erected on the steep hillside of the road leading from
+Paddock Wood to Brenchley, a small "cottage ornée" with detached studio.
+Afterward desiring more accommodation, he carried out the buildings shown
+in our illustrations. Advantage has been taken of the slope of the hill on
+one side, and the rising ground in the rear on the other, to increase the
+effect of the buildings and meet the difficulty of the levels. The two
+portions--old, etched, and new, shown as black--are connected together by a
+handsome staircase, which is carried up in the tower, and affords access to
+the various levels. The materials are red brick, with Bathstone dressings,
+and weather-tiling on the upper floors. Black walnut, pitch pine, and
+sequoias have been used in the staircase, and joiner's work to the
+principal rooms. The principal stoves are of Godstone stone only, no iron
+or metal work being used. The architects are Messrs. Wadmore & Baker, of 35
+Great St. Helens, E.C.; the builders, Messrs. Penn Brothers, of Pembury,
+Kent.--_Building News_.
+
+[Illustration: ARTISTS HOMES NO 11 "WEIRLEIGH" BRENCHLEY, KENT. THE
+RESIDENCE OF HARRISON WEIR ESQ'RE WADMORE & BAKER ARCHITECTS]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RAPID BREATHING AS A PAIN OBTUNDER IN MINOR SURGERY, OBSTETRICS, THE
+GENERAL PRACTICE OF MEDICINE AND OF DENTISTRY.
+
+[Footnote: Read before the Philadelphia County Medical Society, May 12,
+1880, by W. G. A. Bonwill, M.D., D.D.S., Philadelphia.]
+
+
+Through the kind invitation of your directors, I am present to give you
+the history of "rapid breathing" as an analgesic agent, as well as my
+experience therein since I first discovered it. It is with no little
+feeling of modesty that I appear before such a learned and honorable
+body of physicians and surgeons, and I accept the privilege as a high
+compliment. I trust the same liberal spirit which prompted you to call this
+subject to the light of investigation will not forsake you when you have
+heard all I have to say and you sit in judgment thereon. Sufficient time
+has now elapsed since the first promulgation of the subject for the shafts
+of ridicule to be well nigh spent (which is the common logic used to crush
+out all new ideas), and it is to be expected that gentlemen will look upon
+it with all the charity of a learned body, and not be too hasty to condemn
+what they have had but little chance to investigate; and, of course, have
+not practiced with that success which can only come from an intelligent
+understanding of its application and _modus operandi_.
+
+Knowing the history of past discoveries, I was well prepared for the
+crucible. I could not hope to be an exception. But, so far, the medical
+profession have extended me more favor than I have received at the hands of
+the dental profession.
+
+My first conception of the analgesic property of a pain obtunder in
+contradistinction to its anaesthetic effect, which finally led to the
+discovery of the inhalation of common air by "rapid breathing," was in 1855
+or 1856, while performing upon my own teeth certain operations which gave
+me intense pain (and I could not afford to hurt myself) without a resort to
+ether and chloroform. These agents had been known so short a time that no
+one was specially familiar with their action. Without knowing whether I
+could take chloroform administered by myself, and at the same time perform
+with skill the excavation of extremely sensitive dentine or tooth-bone, as
+if no anaesthetic had been taken, and not be conscious of pain, was more
+than the experience of medical men at that time could assure me. But,
+having a love for investigation of the unknown, I prepared myself for the
+ordeal. By degrees I took the chloroform until I began to feel very plainly
+its primary effects, and knowing that I must soon be unconscious, I applied
+the excavator to the carious tooth, and, to my surprise, found no pain
+whatever, but the sense of touch and hearing were marvelously intensified.
+The small cavity seemed as large as a half bushel; the excavator more the
+size of an ax; and the sound was equally magnified. That I might not be
+mistaken, I repeated the operation until I was confident that anaesthetics
+possessed a power not hitherto known--that of analgesia. To be doubly
+certain, I gave it in my practice, in many cases with the same happy
+results, which saved me from the risks incident to the secondary effects of
+anaesthetics, and which answered for all the purposes of extracting from
+one to four teeth. Not satisfied with any advance longer than I could find
+a better plan, I experimented with the galvanic current (to and fro) by so
+applying the poles that I substituted a stronger impression by electricity
+from the nerve centers or ganglia to the peripheries than was made from the
+periphery to the brain. This was so much of a success that I threw
+aside chloroform and ether in removing the living nerve of a tooth with
+instruments instead of using arsenic; and for excavating sensitive caries
+in teeth, preparatory to filling, as well as many teeth extracted by it.
+But this was short-lived, for it led to another step. Sometimes I would
+inflict severe pain in cases of congested pulps or from its hasty
+application, or pushing it to do too much, when my patient invariably would
+draw or inhale the breath _very forcibly and rapidly_. I was struck with
+the repeated coincidence, and was led to exclaim: "Nature's anaesthetic."
+This then reminded me of boyhood's bruises. The involuntary action of every
+one who has a finger hurt is to place it to the mouth and draw violently in
+the air and hold it for an instant, and again repeat it until the pain is
+subdued. The same action of the lungs occurs, except more powerfully,
+in young children who take to crying when hurt. It will be noticed they
+breathe very rapidly while furiously crying, which soon allays the
+irritation, and sleep comes as the sequel. Witness also when one is
+suddenly startled, how violently the breath is taken, which gives relief.
+The same thing occurs in the lower animals when pain is being inflicted at
+the hand of man.
+
+This was advance No. 3, and so sure was I of this new discovery, that I at
+once made an application while removing decay from an extremely sensitive
+tooth. To be successful, I found I must make the patient take the start,
+and I would follow with a thrust from the excavator, which move would be
+accomplished before the lungs could be inflated. This was repeated for
+at least a minute, until the operation was completed, I always following
+immediately or synchronously with the inhalation.
+
+This led to step No. 4, which resulted in its application to the extracting
+of teeth and other operations in minor surgery.
+
+Up to this time I had believed the sole effect of the rapid inhalation was
+due to mere diversion of the will, and this was the only way nature could
+so violently exert herself--that of controlling the involuntary action of
+the lungs to her uses by the _safety valve_, or the voluntary movement.
+
+The constant breathing of the patient for thirty seconds to a minute left
+him in a condition of body and mind resembling the effects of ether and
+chloroform in their primary stages. I could but argue that the prolonged
+breathing each time had done it; and, if so, then there must be some
+specific effect over and above the mere diversion by the will. To what
+could it be due? To the air alone, which went in excess into the lungs in
+the course of a minute! Why did I not then immediately grasp the idea of
+its broader application as now claimed for it? It was too much, gentlemen,
+for that hour. Enough had been done in this fourth step of conception to
+rest in the womb of time, until by evolution a higher step could be made at
+the maturity of the child. Being self-satisfied with my own baby, I watched
+and caressed it until it could take care of itself, and my mind was again
+free for another conception.
+
+The births at first seemed to come at very short intervals; but see how
+long it was between the fourth and the fifth birth. It was soon after that
+my mind became involved in inventions--a hereditary outgrowth--and the
+electric mallet and then the dental engine, the parent of your surgical
+engine, to be found in the principal hospitals of this city, took such
+possession of my whole soul, that my air analgesic was left slumbering. It
+was not until August, 1875--nineteen years after--that it again came up in
+full force, without any previous warning.
+
+This time it was no law of association that revived it; but it seemed
+the whispering of some one in the air--some ethereal spirit, if you
+please--which instituted it, and advanced the following problem: "Nitrous
+oxide gas is composed of the same elements as ordinary air, with a larger
+equivalent of oxygen, except it is a chemical compound, not a mechanical
+mixture, and its anaesthetic effects are said to be due to the excess of
+oxygen. If this be a fact, then why can you not produce a similar effect by
+rapid breathing for a minute, more or less, by which a larger quantity of
+oxygen is presented in the lungs for absorption by the blood?"
+
+This query was soon answered by asking myself another: "If the rapid
+inhalation of air into the lungs does not increase the heart's action and
+cause it to drive the blood in exact ratio to the inhalations, then _I can_
+produce partial anaesthesia from this excess of oxygen brought about by the
+voluntary movements over their ordinary involuntary action of the lungs."
+The next question was: Will my heart be affected by this excess of air in
+the lungs to such an extent that there will be a full reciprocity between
+them? Without making any trial of it, I argued that, while there is no
+other muscular movement than that of the chest as under the control of the
+will, and as nature has given to the will the perfect control over the
+lungs to supply more or less air, as is demanded by the pneumogastric nerve
+for the immediate wants of the economy, when the _involuntary action_ is
+not sufficient; and the heart not being under the control of the will, and
+its action never accelerated or diminished except by a specific poison, or
+from the general activity of the person in violent running or working, the
+blood is forced into the heart faster and must get rid of it, when a larger
+supply of oxygen is demanded and rapid breathing must occur, or asphyxia
+result. I was not long in deciding that the heart _would not be
+accelerated_ but a trifle--say a tenth--and, under the circumstances, I
+said: "The air _is_ an anaesthetic."
+
+From this rapid course of argument, I was so profoundly convinced of its
+truth, that without having first tried it upon my own person, I would have
+sat where I was, upon the curbstone, and had a tooth removed with the
+perfect expectation of absence of pain and of still being conscious of
+touch. While yet walking with my children, I commenced to breathe as
+rapidly as possible, and, as anticipated, found my steps growing shorter
+and shorter, until I came to a stand, showing to my mind clearly that my
+argument in advance was right, so far as locomotion was concerned; and,
+upon referring to my pulse, I found but little acceleration.
+
+To what other conclusion could I arrive from this argument, with the
+foundation laid nineteen years before, when I established on my own person
+by experiment the fact of analgesia as induced from chloroform, with the
+many experiments in rapid respiration on tooth bone?
+
+From this moment until its first application to the extraction of a tooth
+you can well imagine my suspense. That I might not fail in the very first
+attempt, I compelled myself and others in my household to breathe rapidly
+to investigate the phenomenon. This gave me some idea as to the proper
+method of proceeding in its administering.
+
+The first case soon appeared, and was a perfect success, going far beyond
+my anticipations, for the effect was such as to produce a partial paralysis
+of the hands and arms to the elbow. Again and again I tried it in every
+case of extraction and many other experiments, doubting my own senses for
+a long time at a result so anomalous and paradoxical. I was reminded just
+here of a phenomenon which gave me additional proof--that of blowing a
+dull fire to revive it. For a minute or so one blows and blows in rapid
+succession until, rising from the effort, a sense of giddiness for a
+few moments so overcomes that the upright position is with difficulty
+maintained. In this condition you are fitted for having a tooth extracted
+or an abscess lanced.
+
+Believing that I had something new to offer which might be of use to
+suffering humanity, I read the first article upon it Nov. 17, 1875, before
+the Franklin Institute. Shortly after I was invited before the Northern
+Medical Society of this city to address them thereon. A number of medical
+gentlemen have been using it in their practice, while the bulk of them have
+spurned it as "negative" and preposterous, without an effort at trying it,
+which I can _now_ very well understand.
+
+Unless one is aware of the fact that in the use of any agent which has the
+power to suspend the volition, it can be taken to that point where he is
+still conscious of _touch and hearing_, and at the same time not cognizant
+of pain inflicted, the action of rapid breathing could not be understood.
+And I regret to say that of three-fourths of the medical men I have talked
+with on the subject they had not been aware of such a possibility from
+ether and chloroform. Until this analgesic state could be established in
+their minds it was impossible to convince them that the excess of oxygen,
+as obtained by rapid breathing, could be made to produce a similar effect.
+_I_ should have been as reluctant as any one to believe it, had I not
+personally experienced the effect while performing an operation which would
+otherwise have been very painful. Such a result could not well be reached
+by any course of reasoning.
+
+Has it proven in my practice what has been claimed for it--a substitute
+for the powerful anaesthetics in minor operations in surgery? Most
+emphatically, yes! So completely has it fulfilled its humble mission in
+my office, that I can safely assert there has not been more than five per
+cent. of failures. I have given it under all circumstances of diseased
+organs, and have seen no other than the happiest results in its after
+effects. It may well be asked just here: Why has it not been more generally
+and widely used by the dental profession as well as the medical, if it is
+really what is claimed for it? The most satisfactory and charitable answer
+to be given is, the failure upon their part to comprehend the _fact_ as
+existing in chloroform and ether that there is such a state as analgesia;
+or, in other words, that the animal economy is so organized, while the
+sense of touch is not destroyed, but rather increased, the mind of the
+subject fails to perceive a sense of pain when anaesthetics are given, and
+the effects are manifested in the primary stage. As I before intimated,
+such is the knowledge possessed by most of those who administer ether and
+chloroform. This was enough to cause nearly every one to look upon it as a
+bubble or air castle. Many gentlemen told me they tried it upon themselves,
+and, while it affected them very seriously by giddiness, they still
+_retained consciousness_; and, such being the case, no effect could be
+produced for obtunding pain. Others told me they were afraid to continue
+the breathing alarmed at the vertigo induced. And the practitioner who has
+adopted it more effectively than any other laughed at me when I first told
+him of the discovery; but his intimate association with me changed his
+views after much explanation and argument between us.
+
+It was hardly to be expected that without this knowledge of analgesia,
+and without any explanation from me as to the _modus operandi_ of rapid
+breathing, other than a few suggestions or directions as to how the effect
+was induced, even the most liberal of medical men should be able to make
+it effective, or have the least disposition to give it a preliminary trial
+upon themselves, and, of course, would not attempt it upon a patient.
+Notwithstanding, it found a few adherents, but only among my personal
+_medical_ friends, with whom I had an opportunity to explain what I
+believed its physiological action, and the cases of success in my own
+practice. To this I have submitted as among the inevitable in the calendar
+of discoveries of all grades.
+
+My own profession have attempted to _ridicule_ it out of its birthright
+and possible existence, which style of argument is not resorted to by true
+logicians.
+
+To all this I can truly say I have not for one moment faltered. I could
+afford to wait. The liberality of this society alone fully compensates for
+the seeming indisposition of the past, believing that it is proper that
+every advance should be confronted, and, if in time found worthy, give it
+God speed.
+
+From its first conception I have diligently labored to solve its _modus
+operandi_, and the doubt in my own mind as to whether I could be mistaken
+in my observations. I asked the opinion of our best chemical teachers if
+air could have such effect. One attributed it to oxygen stimulation, and
+the other to nitrogen. Another gentleman told me the medical profession had
+come to the conclusion that it was possible for me to thus extract teeth,
+but it was due solely to my strong _personal magnetism_ (which power I was
+not before aware I possessed).
+
+Now, from what I have related of the successive and natural steps which
+finally culminated in this process or plan of analgesia induced by an
+excess of ordinary air taken forcibly into the lungs above what is
+necessary for life, and from what I shall state as to the apparently
+anomalous or paradoxical effects, with its physiological action, and the
+simple tests made upon each of my patients, I shall trust to so convince
+you of its plausibility and possibility that it will be made use of in
+hundreds of minor operations where ether and chloroform are now used.
+
+Aside from my assertion and that of its friends, that the effects can be
+produced by air alone, you must have some light shed upon the causes of its
+physiological action, which will appeal to your _medical_ reason.
+
+To assign an action to any drug is difficult, and in the cases of ether and
+the other anaesthetics a quarter of a century still finds many conflicting
+opinions. This being true, you will deal leniently with me for the opinion
+I hold as to their analgesic action. Of course it will be objected to,
+for the unseen is, to a great extent, unknowable. Enough for my argument,
+however; it seems to suit the case very well without looking for another;
+and while it was based on the phenomenon resulting from many trials, and
+not the trials upon it as a previous theory, I shall be content with it
+until a better one can be found.
+
+What is it I claim as a new discovery, and the facts and its philosophy?
+
+I have asserted that I can produce, from rapidly breathing common air at
+the rate of a hundred respirations a minute, a similar effect to that from
+ether, chloroform, and nitrous oxide gas, in their primary stages; and I
+can in this way render patients sufficiently insensible to acute pain from
+any operation where the time consumed is not over twenty to thirty seconds.
+While the special senses are in partial action, the sense of pain is
+obtunded, and in many cases completely annulled, consciousness and general
+sensibility being preserved.
+
+To accomplish this, each patient must be instructed how to act and what to
+expect. As simple as it may seem, there is a proper and consistent plan to
+enable you to reach full success. Before the patient commences to inhale he
+is informed of the fact that, while he will be unconscious of pain, he
+will know full, or partially well, every touch upon the person; that the
+inhalation must be vigorously kept up during the whole operation without
+for an instant stopping; that the more energetically and steadily he
+breathes, the more perfect the effect, and that if he cease breathing
+during the operation, pain will be felt. Fully impress them with this
+idea, for the very good reason that they may stop when in the midst of an
+operation, and the fullest effects be lost. It is obligatory to do so on
+account of its evanescent effects, which demand that the patient be pushed
+by the operator's own energetic appeals to "go on." It is very difficult
+for any person to respire more than one hundred times to the minute, as he
+will become by that time so exhausted as not to be able to breathe at all,
+as is evidenced by all who have thus followed my directions. For the next
+minute following the completion of the operation the subject will not
+breathe more than once or twice. Very few have force enough left to raise
+hand or foot. The voluntary muscles have nearly all been subjugated and
+overcome by the undue effort at forced inhalation of one hundred over
+seventeen, the normal standard. It will be more fully understood further on
+in my argument why I force patients, and am constantly speaking to them to
+go on.
+
+I further claim that for the past four years, so satisfactory has been the
+result of this system in the extracting of teeth and deadening extremely
+sensitive dentine, there was no longer any necessity for chloroform,
+ether, or nitrous oxide in the dental office. That such teeth as cannot be
+extracted by its aid can well be preserved and made useful, except in a
+very few cases, who will not be forced to breathe.
+
+The anaesthetics, when used in major operations, where time is needed for
+the operation, can be made more effective by a lesser quantity when given
+in conjunction with "rapid breathing." Drs. Garrettson and Hews, who have
+thus tried it, tell me it takes one-half to three-fourths less, and the
+after effects are far less nauseating and unpleasant.
+
+As an agent in labor where an anaesthetic is indicated, it is claimed by
+one who has employed it (Dr. Hews) in nearly every case for three years, he
+has used "rapid breathing" solely, and to the exclusion of chloroform and
+ether. For this I have his assertion, and have no doubt of it whatever, for
+if any agent could break down the action of the voluntary muscles of the
+parts involved, which prevent the involuntary muscles of the uterus from
+having their fullest effect, it is this. The very act of rapid breathing so
+affects the muscles of the abdomen as to force the contents of the uterus
+downward or outward, while the specific effect of the air at the end of a
+minute's breathing leaves the subject in a semi-prostrate condition, giving
+the uterus full chance to act in the interim, because free of the will to
+make any attempt at withholding the involuntary muscles of the uterus from
+doing their natural work. It is self evident; and in this agent we claim
+here a boon of inestimable value. And not least in such cases is, there is
+no danger of hemorrhage, since the cause of the effect is soon removed.
+
+In attestation of many cases where it has been tried, I have asked the
+mother, and, in some cases, the attendants, whether anything else had been
+given, and whether the time was very materially lessened, there has been
+but one response, and that in its favor.
+
+Gentlemen, if we are not mistaken in this, you will agree with me in saying
+that it is no mean thing, and should be investigated by intelligent men and
+reported upon. From my own knowledge of its effects in my practice, I am
+bound to believe this gentleman's record.
+
+I further claim for it a special application in dislocations. It has
+certainly peculiar merits here, as the will is so nearly subjugated by
+it as to render the patient quite powerless to resist your effort at
+replacing, and at the same time the pain is subdued.
+
+It is not necessary I should further continue special applications; when
+its _modus operandi_ is understood, its adaptation to many contingencies
+will of a sequence follow.
+
+It is well just here, before passing to the next point of consideration, to
+answer a query which may arise at this juncture:
+
+What are the successive stages of effects upon the economy from its
+commencement until the full effect is observed, and what proof have I that
+it was due to the amount of air inhaled?
+
+The heart's action is not increased more than from seventy (the average) to
+eighty and sometimes ninety, but is much enfeebled, or throwing a lesser
+quantity of blood. The face becomes suffused, as in blowing a fire or in
+stooping, which continues until the breathing is suspended, when the
+face becomes paler. (Have not noticed any purple as from asphyxia by a
+deprivation of oxygen.) The vision becomes darkened, and a giddiness soon
+appears. The voluntary muscles furthest from the heart seem first to be
+affected, and the feet and hands, particularly the latter, have a numbness
+at their ends, which increases, until in many cases there is partial
+paralysis as far as the elbow, while the limbs become fixed. The hands are
+so thoroughly affected that, when open, the patient is powerless to close
+them and _vice versa_. There is a vacant gaze from the eyes and looking
+into space without blinking of the eyelids for a half minute or more. The
+head seems incapable of being held erect, and there is no movement of the
+arms or legs as is usual when in great pain. There is no disposition on the
+part of the patient to take hold of the operator's hand or interfere with
+the operation.
+
+Many go on breathing mechanically after the tooth is removed, as if nothing
+had occurred. Some are aware that the tooth has been extracted, and say
+they felt it; others could not tell what had been accomplished. The
+majority of cases have an idea of what is being done, but are powerless to
+resist.
+
+With the very intelligent, or those who stop to reason, I have to teach
+them the peculiarities of being sensible of touch and not of pain.
+
+One very interesting case I will state. In extracting seven teeth for a
+lady who was very _unwilling_ to believe my statement as to touch and no
+pain, I first removed three teeth after having inhaled for one minute, and
+when fully herself, she stated that she could not understand why there was
+no pain while she was conscious of each one extracted; it was preposterous
+to believe such an effect could be possible, as her reason told her that
+there is connected with tooth extracting pain in the part, and of severe
+character, admitting, though, she felt no pain. She allowed one to be
+removed without anything, and she could easily distinguish the change, and
+exclaimed, "It is all the difference imaginable!" When the other three were
+extracted, there was perfect success again as with the first three.
+
+One of the most marked proofs of the effects of rapid breathing was that of
+a boy of eleven years of age for whom I had to extract the upper and lower
+first permanent molars on each side. He breathed for nearly a minute, when
+I removed in about twenty seconds all four of the teeth, without a moment's
+intermission or the stopping the vigorous breathing; and not a murmur,
+sigh, or tear afterward.
+
+He declared there was no pain, and we needed no such assertion, for there
+was not the first manifestation from him that he was undergoing such a
+severe operation.
+
+Another case, the same day, when I had to extract the superior wisdom teeth
+on both sides for an intelligent young lady of eighteen years, where I had
+to use two pairs of forceps on each tooth (equivalent to extraction of four
+teeth), and she was so profoundly affected afterward that she could; not
+tell me what had been done other than that I had touched her four times.
+She was overcome from its effects for at least a minute afterward. She was
+delighted.
+
+With such severe tests I fear very little the result in any case I can have
+them do as I bid.
+
+There can be no mistake that there is a _specific action_ from something.
+It cannot be personal magnetism or mesmeric influence exerted by me, for
+such cases are rare, averaging about 10 per cent, only of all classes.
+Besides, in mesmeric influence the time has nothing to do with it; whereas,
+in my cases, it cannot last over a half minute or minute at most. It cannot
+be fear, as such cases are generally more apt to get hurt the worse. It is
+not diversion of mind alone, as we have an effect above it.
+
+There is no better way of testing whether pain has been felt than by taking
+the lacerated or contused gums of the patient between the index finger
+and thumb and making a gentle pressure to collapse the alveolar borders;
+invariably, they will cry out lustily, _that is pain_! This gives undoubted
+proof of a specific agent. There is no attempt upon my _own_ part to exert
+any influence over my patients in any way other than that they shall
+believe what I say in regard to _giving_ them _no pain_ and in the
+following of my orders. Any one who knows how persons become mesmerized can
+attest that it was not the _operator who forces them under it against
+their will_, but it is a peculiar state into which any one who has within
+themselves this temperament can _place_ themselves where any one who knows
+how can have control. It is not the will of the operator. I therefore
+dismiss this as unworthy of consideration in connection with rapid
+breathing.
+
+Then you may now ask, To what do I attribute this very singular phenomenon?
+
+Any one who followed, in the earlier part of this paper, the course of
+the argument in my soliloquy, after twenty years had elapsed from my
+observation upon myself of the analgesic effects of chloroform, can almost
+give something of an answer.
+
+That you may the more easily grasp what I shall say, I will ask you, If it
+be possible for any human being to make one hundred inhalations in a minute
+and the heart's action is not increased more than ten or twenty pulsations
+over the normal, what should be the effect upon the brain and nerve
+centers?
+
+If the function of oxygen in common air is to set free in the blood,
+either in the capillaries alone, or throughout the whole of the arterial
+circulation, carbonic acid gas; and that it cannot escape from the system
+unless it do so in the lungs as it passes in the general current--except
+a trace that is removed by the skin and kidneys--and that the quantity of
+carbonic acid gas set free is in exact relation to the amount of oxygen
+taken into the blood, what effect _must be_ manifested where one hundred
+respirations in one minute are made--five or six times the normal
+number--while the heart is only propelling the blood a very little faster
+through the lungs, and _more feebly_--say 90 pulsations at most, when to
+be in proportion it should be 400 to 100 respirations to sustain life any
+length of time?
+
+You cannot deny the fact that a definite amount of oxygen can be absorbed
+and is absorbed as fast as it is carried into the lungs, even if there be
+one hundred respirations to the minute, while the pulsations of the heart
+are only ninety! Nature has _made it_ possible to breathe so rapidly to
+meet any emergency; and we can well see its beautiful application in the
+normal action of both the heart and lungs while one is violently running.
+
+What would result, and that very speedily, were the act of respiration to
+remain at the standard--say 18 or 20--when the heart is in violent action
+from this running? Asphyxia would surely end the matter! And why? The
+excessive exercise of the whole body is setting free from the tissues such
+an amount of excretive matter, and carbon more largely than all the others,
+that, without a relative action of the lungs to admit the air that oxygen
+may be absorbed, carbonic acid gas cannot be liberated through the lungs
+as fast as the waste carbon of the overworked tissues is being made by
+disassimilation from this excess of respiration.
+
+You are already aware how small a quantity of carbonic acid in excess in
+the air will seriously affect life. Even 2 to 3 per cent, in a short time
+will prove fatal. In ordinary respiration of 20 to the minute the average
+of carbonic acid exhaled is 4.35.
+
+From experiments long ago made by Vierordt--see Carpenter, p. 524--you will
+see the relative per cent, of carbonic acid exhaled from a given number of
+respirations. When he was breathing six times per minute, 5.5 per cent of
+the exhaled air was carbonic acid; twelve times, 4.2; twenty-four times,
+3.3; forty-eight times, 3; ninety-six times, 2.6.
+
+Remember this is based upon the whole number of respirations in the minute
+and not each exhalation--which latter could not be measured by the most
+minute method.
+
+Let us deduct the minimum amount, 2.6 per cent, of carbonic acid when
+breathing ninety-six times per minute, from the average, at twenty per
+minute, or the normal standard, which is recorded in Carpenter, p. 524, as
+4.35 per minute, and we have retained in the circulation nearly 2 per cent.
+of carbonic acid; that, at the average, would have passed off through the
+lungs without any obstruction, and life equalized; but it not having been
+thrown off as fast as it should have been, must, of necessity, be left to
+prey upon the brain and nerve centers; and as 2 to 3 per cent., we are
+told, will so poison the blood, life is imperiled and that speedily.
+
+It is not necessary we should argue the point as to whether oxygen
+displaces carbonic acid in the tissues proper or the capillaries. The
+theory of Lavoisier on this point has been accepted.
+
+We know furthermore, as more positive, that tissues placed in an atmosphere
+of oxygen will set free carbonic acid, and that carbonic acid has a
+paralyzing effect upon the human hand held in it for a short time. The
+direct and speedy effects of this acid upon the delicate nervous element of
+the brain is so well known that it must be accepted as law. One of the most
+marked effects is the suspension of locomotion of the legs and arms,
+and the direct loss of will power which must supervene before voluntary
+muscular inactivity, which amounts to partial paralysis in the hands or
+feet, or peripheral extremities of the same.
+
+Now that we have sufficient evidence from the authorities that carbonic
+acid can be retained in the blood by excessive breathing, and enough to
+seriously affect the brain, and what its effects are when taken directly
+into the lungs in excess, we can enter upon what I have held as the most
+reasonable theory of the phenomenon produced by rapid breathing for
+analgesic purposes; which _theory_ was not _first_ conceived and the
+process made to yield to it, but the phenomenon was long observed, and
+from the repetition of the effects and their close relationship to that
+of carbonic acid on the economy, with the many experiments performed
+upon myself, I am convinced that what I shall now state will be found to
+substantiate my discovery. Should it not be found to coincide with what
+some may say is physiological truth, it will not invalidate the discovery
+itself; for of that I am far more positive than Harvey was of the discovery
+of the circulation of the blood; or of Galileo of the spherical shape of
+the earth. And I ask that it shall not be judged by my theory, but from the
+practice.
+
+It should have as much chance for investigation as the theory of
+Julius Robert Mayer, upon which he founded, or which gave rise to the
+establishment of one of the most important scientific truths--"the
+conservation of energy," and finally the "correlation of forces," which
+theory I am not quite sure was correct, although it was accepted, and as
+yet, I have not seen it questioned.
+
+In all due respect to him I quote it from the sketch of that remarkable
+man, as given in the _Popular Science Monthly_, as specially bearing on my
+discovery:
+
+"Mayer observed while living in Java, that the _venous blood_ of some of
+his patients had a singularly bright red color. The observation riveted
+his attention; he reasoned upon it, and came to the conclusion that the
+brightness of the color was due to the fact that a less amount of oxidation
+was sufficient to keep up the temperature of the body in a hot climate than
+a cold one. The darkness of the venous blood he regarded as the visible
+sign of the energy of the oxidation."
+
+My observation leads me to the contrary, that the higher the temperature
+the more rapid the breathing to get clear of the excess of carbon, and
+hence more oxygenation of the blood which will arterialize the venous
+blood, unless there is a large amount of carbonized matter from the tissues
+to be taken up.
+
+Nor must it be denied because of the reasoning as presented to my mind by
+some outside influence in my soliloquy when I first exclaimed, "Nature's
+anaesthetic," where the argument as to the effects of nitrous oxide gas
+being due to an excess of oxygen was urged, and that common air breathed in
+excess would do the same thing.
+
+I am not sure that _it_ was correct, for the effects of nitrous oxide is,
+perhaps, due to a deprivation of mechanically mixed air.
+
+Knowing what I do of theory and practice, I can say with assurance that
+there is not a medical practitioner who would long ponder in any urgent
+case as to the thousand and one theories of the action of remedies; but
+would resort to the _practical_ experience of others and his own finally.
+(What surgeon ever stops to ask how narcotics effect their influence?)
+After nearly thirty years of association with ether and chloroform, who can
+positively answer as to their _modus operandi?_ It is thus with nearly the
+whole domain of medicine. It is not yet, by far, among the sciences, with
+immutable laws, such as we have in chemistry. Experimentation is giving us
+more specific knowledge, and "practice alone has tended to make perfect."
+(Then, gentlemen will not set at naught my assertion and practical results.
+When I have stated my case in full it is for _you_ to disprove both the
+theory and practice annunciated. So far as I am concerned I am responsible
+for both.)
+
+You will please bear with me for a few minutes in my attempt at theory.
+
+The annulling of pain, and, in some cases, its complete annihilation,
+can be accomplished in many ways. Narcotics, anaesthetics--local and
+internal--direct action of cold, and mesmeric or physiological influence,
+have all their advocates, and each _will surely_ do its work. There is one
+thing about which, I think, we can all agree, as to these agencies; unless
+the _will_ is partially and in some cases completely subjugated there can
+be no primary or secondary effect. The voluntary muscles must become wholly
+or partially paralyzed for the time. Telegraphic communication must be cut
+off from the brain, that there be no reflex action. It is not necessary
+there should be separate nerves to convey pleasure and pain any more than
+there should be two telegraphic wires to convey two messages.
+
+If, then, we are certain of this, it matters little as to whether it was
+done by corpuscular poisoning and anaemia as from chloroform or hyperaemia
+from ether.
+
+I think we are now prepared to show clearly the causes which effect the
+phenomena in "rapid breathing."
+
+The first thing enlisted is the _diversion of the will force_ in the act of
+forced respiration at a moment when the heart and lungs have been in normal
+reciprocal action (20 respirations to 80 pulsations), which act could
+not be made and carried up to 100 respirations per minute without such
+concentrated effort that ordinary pain could make no impression upon the
+brain while this abstraction is kept up.
+
+Second. There is a specific effect resulting from enforced respiration of
+100 to the minute, due to the _excess of carbonic acid gas set free from
+the tissues_, generated by this enforced normal act of throwing into the
+lungs _five times_ the normal amount of oxygen in one minute demanded, when
+the heart has not been aroused to exalted action, which comes from violent
+exercise in running or where one is suddenly startled, which excess of
+carbonic acid cannot escape in the same ratio from the lungs, since the
+heart does not respond to the proportionate overaction of the lungs.
+
+Third.--Hyperaemia is the last in this chain of effects, which is due to
+the excessive amount of air passing into the lungs preventing but little
+more than the normal quantity of blood from passing from the heart into
+the arterial circulation, but draws it up in the brain with its excess of
+carbonic acid gas to act also directly upon the brain as well as throughout
+the capillary and venous system, and as well upon the heart, the same as if
+it were suspended in that gas outside the body.
+
+These are evident to the senses of any liberal observer who can witness a
+subject rapidly breathing.
+
+Some ask why is not this same thing produced when one has been running
+rapidly for a few minutes? For a very good reason: in this case the rapid
+inhalations are preceded by the violent throes of the heart to propel the
+carbonized blood from the overworked tissues and have them set free at the
+lungs where the air is rushing in at the normal ratio of four to one. This
+is not an abnormal action, but is of necessity, or asphyxia would instantly
+result and the runner would drop. Such sometimes occurs where the runner
+exerts himself too violently at the very outset; and to do so he is
+compelled to hold his breath for this undue effort, and the heart cannot
+carry the blood fast enough. In this instance there is an approach to
+analgesia as from rapid breathing.
+
+Let me take up the first factor--_diversion of will_--and show that nature
+invariably resorts to a sudden inhalation to prevent severe infliction of
+pain being felt. It is the panacea to childhood's frequent bruises and
+cuts, and every one will remember how when a finger has been hurt it is
+thrust into the mouth and a violent number of efforts at rapid inhalation
+is effected until ease comes. By others it is subdued by a fit of crying,
+which if you will but imitate the sobs, will find how frequently the
+respirations are made.
+
+One is startled, and the heart would seem to jump out of the chest; in
+quick obedience to nature the person is found making a number of quick
+inhalations, which subdue the heart and pacify the will by diversion from
+the cause.
+
+The same thing is observed in the lower animals. I will relate a case:
+
+An elephant had been operated upon for a diseased eye which gave him great
+pain, for which he was unprepared, and he was wrathy at the keeper and
+surgeon. It soon passed off, and the result of the application was so
+beneficial to the animal that when brought out in a few days after, to have
+another touch of caustic to the part, he was prepared for them; and, just
+before the touch, he inflated the lungs to their fullest extent, which
+occupied more time than the effect of the caustic, when he made no effort
+at resistance and showed no manifestation of having been pained.
+
+In many cases of extraction of the temporary teeth of children, I make them
+at the instant I grasp the tooth take _one_ very violent inhalation, which
+is sufficient. Mesmeric anaesthesia can well be classified under diversion
+or subjugation of the will, but can be effected in but a small percentage
+of the cases. To rely upon this first or primary effect, except in
+instantaneous cases, would be failure.
+
+The second factor is the one upon which I can rely in such of the cases as
+come into my care, save when I cannot induce them to make such a number of
+respirations as is absolutely necessary. The _whole secret of success lies_
+in the greatest number of respirations that can be effected in from 60 to
+90 seconds, and that without any intermission. If the heart, by the _alow
+method of respiration_, is pulsating in ratio of four to one respiration,
+_no effect can be induced_.
+
+When the respirations are, say, 100 to the minute, and made with all the
+energy the patient can muster, and are kept up while the operation is going
+on, there can hardly be a failure in the minor operations.
+
+It is upon this point many of you may question the facts. Before I tried
+it for the first time upon my own person, I arrived at the same conclusion
+from a course of argument, that rapid breathing would control the heart's
+action and pacify it, and even reduce it below the normal standard under my
+urgent respirations.
+
+In view of the many applications made I feel quite sure in my belief that,
+inasmuch as the heart's action is but slightly accelerated, though with
+less force from rapid breathing at the rate of 100 to the minute, there is
+such an excess of carbonic acid gas set free and crowding upon the heart
+and capillaries of the brain, without a chance to escape by the lungs, that
+it is the same to all intents as were carbonic acid breathed through the
+lungs in common air. Look at the result after this has been kept up for a
+minute or more? During the next minute the respirations are not more than
+one or two, and the heart has fallen really below, in some cases, the
+standard beat, showing most conclusively that once oxygenation has taken
+place and that the free carbonic acid gas has been so completely consumed,
+that there is no involuntary call through the pneumogastric nerve for a
+supply of oxygen.
+
+If any physiological facts can be proven at all, then I feel quite sure of
+your verdict upon my side.
+
+There is no one thing that goes so far to prove the theory of Lavoisier
+regarding the action of oxygen in the tissues and capillaries for
+converting carbon into carbonic acid gas instead of the lungs, as held
+prior to that time, and still held by many who are not posted in late
+experiments. At the time I commenced this practice I must confess I knew
+nothing of it. The study of my cases soon led me to the same theory of
+Lavoisier, as I could not make the phenomena agree with the old theory of
+carbonic acid generated only in the lungs.
+
+When Vierordt was performing his experiments upon himself in rapid
+breathing from six times per minute to ninety-six, I cannot understand
+why he failed to observe and record what did certainly result--an extreme
+giddiness with muscular prostration and numbness in the peripheries of the
+hands and feet, with suffusion of the face, and such a loss of locomotion
+as to prevent standing erect without desiring support. Besides, the very
+great difference he found in the amount of carbonic acid retained in the
+circulation, the very cause of the phenomena just spoken of.
+
+One thing comes in just here to account for the lack of respiration the
+minute after the violent effort. The residual air, which in a normal state
+is largely charged with carbonic acid, has been so completely exhausted
+that some moments are consumed before there is sufficient again to call
+upon the will for its discharge.
+
+As to hyperaemia you will also assent, now that my second factor is
+explained; but it is so nearly allied to the direct effect of excessive
+respiration that we can well permit it to pass without argument. If
+hyperaemia _is present_, we have a more certain and rather more lasting
+effect.
+
+In conclusion, I will attempt to prognosticate the application of this
+principle to the cure of many diseases of chronic nature, and especially
+tuberculosis; where from a diminished amount of air going into the lungs
+for want of capacity, and particularly for want of energy and inclination
+to breathe in full or excess, the tissues cannot get clear of their
+excrementitious material, and particularly the carbon, which must go to the
+lungs, this voluntary effort can be made frequently during the day to
+free the tissues and enable them to take nutritious material for their
+restoration to their standard of health.
+
+Air will be found of far more value than ever before as one of the greatest
+of factors in nutrition, and which is as necessary as proper food, and
+without which every organization must become diseased, and no true
+assimilation can take place without a due amount of oxygen is hourly
+and daily supplied by this extra aid of volition which has been so long
+overlooked.
+
+The pure oxygen treatment has certainly performed many cures; yet, when
+compared to the mechanical mixture and under the direct control of
+the will, at all times and seasons, there is no danger from excessive
+oxygenation as while oxygen is given. When every patient can be taught to
+rely upon this great safety valve of nature, there will be less need for
+medication, and the longevity of our race be increased with but little
+dread by mankind for that terrible monster consumption, which seems to have
+now unbounded control.
+
+When this theory I have here given you to-night is fully comprehended by
+the medical world and taught the public, together with the kind of foods
+necessary for every one in their respective occupation, location, and
+climate, we may expect a vast change in their physical condition and a hope
+for the future which will brighten as time advances.
+
+I herewith attach the sphygmographic tracings made upon myself by another,
+showing the state of the pulse as compared with the progress of the
+respiration.
+
+
+ADDENDA.
+
+Sphygmographic tracings of the pulse of the essayist. Normal pulse 60
+to the minute. Ten seconds necessary for the slip to pass under the
+instrument.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+A, A¹, normal pulse.
+
+B, pulse taken after breathing rapidly for 15 seconds when
+20 respirations had been taken.
+
+C, rapid breathing for 30 seconds, 43 respirations.
+
+D, " " 45 " 76 "
+
+E, " " 60 " 96 "
+F, pulse taken after rapid breathing for one minute, as in E, where no
+respiration had as yet been taken after the essayist had kept it up for
+that one minute. This was after 10 seconds had intervened.
+
+G, the same taken 50 seconds after, and still no respiration had been
+taken, the subject having no disposition to inhale, the blood having been
+over oxygenated.
+
+The pulse in E shows after 96 respirations but 14, or 84 per minute, and
+the force nearly as in the normal at A, A1.
+
+The record in B shows the force more markedly, but still normal in number.
+
+F and G show very marked diminution in the force, but the number of
+pulsations not over 72 per minute; G particularly so, the heart needing the
+stimulus of the oxygen for full power.
+
+The following incident which has but very recently been made known, gives
+most conclusive evidence of the truth of the theory and practice of rapid
+breathing.
+
+A Mexican went into the office of a dentist in one of the Mexican cities to
+have a tooth extracted by nitrous oxide gas.
+
+The dentist was not in, and the assistant was about to permit the patient
+to leave without removing the tooth, when the wife of the proprietor
+exclaimed that she had often assisted her husband in giving the gas, and
+that she would do so in this instance if the assistant would agree to
+extract the tooth. It was agreed. All being in readiness, the lady turned
+on as she supposed the gas, and the Mexican patient was ordered to breathe
+as fast as possible to make sure of the full effect and no doubt of the
+final success. The assistant was about to extract, but the wife insisted on
+his breathing more rapidly, whereupon the patient was observed to become
+very dark or purple in the face, which satisfied the lady that the
+full effect was manifested, and the tooth was extracted, to the great
+satisfaction of all concerned. While the gas was being taken by the Mexican
+the gasometer was noticed to rise higher and higher as the patient breathed
+faster, and not to sink as was usual when the gas had been previously
+administered. This led to an investigation of the reason of such an
+anomalous result, when to their utter surprise they found the valve was so
+turned by the wife that the Mexican had been breathing nothing but common
+air, and instead of exhaling into the surrounding air he violently forced
+it into the gasometer with the nitrous oxide gas, causing it to rise and
+not sink, which it should have done had the valve been properly turned by
+the passage of gas into the lungs of the patient.
+
+No more beautiful and positive trial could happen, and might not again by
+accident or inadvertence happen again in a lifetime.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.
+
+
+When a bottle of any liquor charged with carbonic acid under strong
+pressure, such as champagne, sparkling cider, seltzer water, etc., is
+uncorked, the contents often escape with considerable force, flow out, and
+are nearly all lost. Besides this, the noise made by the popping of the
+cork is not agreeable to most persons. To remedy these inconveniences
+there has been devised the simple apparatus which we represent in the
+accompanying cut, taken from _La Nature_. The device consists of a hollow,
+sharp-pointed tube, having one or two apertures in its upper extremity
+which are kept closed by a hollow piston fitting in the interior of the
+tube. This tube, or "tap," as it may be called, is supported on a firm base
+to which is attached a draught tube, and a small lever for actuating the
+piston. After the tap has been thrust through the cork of the bottle of
+liquor the contents may be drawn in any quantity and as often as wanted by
+simply pressing down the lever with the finger; this operation raises the
+piston so that its apertures correspond with those in the sides of the top,
+and the liquid thus finds access to the draught tube through the interior
+of the piston. By removing the pressure the piston descends and thus closes
+the vents. By means of this apparatus, then, the contents of any bottle of
+effervescing liquids may be as easily drawn off as are those contained in
+the ordinary siphon bottles in use.
+
+[Illustration: TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHEMICAL SOCIETY, LONDON, JAN. 20, 1881.
+
+PROF. H.E. ROSCOE, President, in the Chair.
+
+
+Mr. Vivian Lewes read a paper on "_Pentathionic Acid_." In March last the
+author, at the suggestion of Dr. Debus, undertook an investigation of
+pentathionic acid, the existence of which has been denied. The analyses
+of the liquid obtained by Wackenroder and others, by passing sulphureted
+hydrogen and sulphur dioxide through water, are based on the assumption
+that only one acid is present in the solution, and consequently do not
+establish the existence of pentathionic acid; as, for example, a mixture of
+one molecule of H_2S_4O_6 and one molecule of H_2S_6O_6 would give the same
+analytical results as H_2S_5O_6. Moreover, no salt of pentathionic acid has
+been prepared in a pure state. The author has succeeded in preparing barium
+pentathionate thus: A Wackenroder solution was about half neutralized with
+barium hydrate, filtered, and the clear solution evaporated _in vacuo_ over
+sulphuric acid. After eighteen days crystals, which proved to be barium
+pentathionate + 3 molecules of water, formed. These crystals were
+separated, and the liquid further evaporated, when a second crop was
+obtained intermediate in composition between the tetra and pentathionate.
+These were separated, and the mother-liquor on standing deposited some
+oblong rectangular crystals. These on analysis proved to consist of baric
+pentathionate with three molecules of water. This salt dissolves readily in
+cold water; the solution is decomposed by strong potassic hydrate, baric
+sulphite, hyposulphites, and sulphur being formed. By a similar method of
+procedure the author obtained potassium pentathionate, anhydrous, and with
+one or two molecules of water. The author promises some further results
+with some other salts of the higher thionates.
+
+The president said that the society had to thank the author for a very
+complete research on the subject of pentathionic acid. He, however, begged
+to differ from him as to his statements concerning the researches of
+Messrs. Takamatsu and Smith; in his opinion these authors had proved the
+existence of pentathionic acid. He hoped that the crystals (which were very
+fine) would be measured.
+
+Dr. Debus said that no one had previously been able to make the salts of
+pentathionic acid, and expressed his sense of the great merit due to the
+author for his perseverance and success. The paper opened up some highly
+interesting theoretical speculations as to the existence of hexathionic
+acid. If potassium tetrathionate was dissolved in water it could be
+re-crystallized, but potassium pentathionate under similar circumstances
+splits into sulphur and tetrathionate; but a mixture of tetrathionate and
+pentathionate can be re-crystallized. It seemed as if the sulphur when
+eliminated from the pentathionate combined with the tetrathionate.
+
+Dr. Dupré asked Dr. Debus how it was that a molecule of pentathionate could
+be re-crystallized, whereas two molecules of pentathionate, which should,
+when half decomposed, furnish a molecule of tetra and a molecule of
+pentathionate, could not.
+
+Dr. Armstrong then read a _"Preliminary Note on some Hydrocarbons from
+Rosin Spirit."_ After giving an account of our knowledge of rosin spirit,
+the author described the result of the examination of the mixture of
+hydrocarbons remaining after heating it with sulphuric acid and diluting
+with half its volume of water and steam distilling. Thus treated rosin
+spirit furnishes about one-fourth of its volume of a colorless mobile
+liquid, which after long-continued fractional distillation is resolved into
+a variety of fractions boiling at temperatures from 95° to over 180°. Each
+of the fractions was treated with concentrated sulphuric acid, and the
+undissolved portions were then re-fractionated. The hydrocarbons dissolved
+by the acid were recovered by heating under pressure with hydrochloric
+acid. Besides a cymene and a toluene, which have already been shown to
+exist in rosin spirit, metaxylene was found to be present. The hydrocarbons
+insoluble in sulphuric acid are, apparently, all members of the C_nH_{2n}
+series; they are not, however, true homologues of ethylene, but hexhydrides
+of hydrocarbons of the benzene series. Hexhydro-toluene and probably
+hex-hydrometaxylene are present besides the hydrocarbon, C_10H_20, but it
+is doubtful if an intermediate term is also present. It is by no means
+improbable, however, that these hydrocarbons are, at least in part,
+products of the action of the sulphuric acid. Cahours and Kraemer's and
+Godzki's observations on the higher fractions of crude wood spirit, in
+fact, furnish a precedent for this view. Referring to the results obtained
+by Anderson, Tilden, and Renard, the author suggests that rosin spirit
+perhaps contains hydrides intermediate in composition between those of
+the C_nH_{2n-6} and C_nH_{2n} series, also derived like the latter from
+hydrocarbons of the benzene series. Finally, Dr Armstrong mentioned that
+the volatile portion of the distillate from the non-volatile product of the
+oxidation of oil of turpentine in moist air furnishes ordinary cymene when
+treated in the manner above described. The fact that rosin spirit yields a
+different cymene is, he considers, an argument against the view which
+has more than once been put forward, that rosin is directly derived from
+terpene. Probably resin and turpentine, though genetically related, are
+products of distinct processes.
+
+The next paper was _"On the Determination of the Relative Weight of Single
+Molecules,"_ by E. Vogel, of San Francisco. This paper, which was taken as
+read, consists of a lengthy theoretical disquisition, in which the author
+maintains the following propositions: That the combining weights of all
+elements are one third of their present values; the assumption that equal
+volumes of gases contain equal numbers of molecules does not hold good;
+that the present theory of valency is not supported by chemical facts, and
+that its elimination would be no small gain for chemistry in freeing it
+of an element full of mystery, uncertainty, and complication; that the
+distinction between atoms and molecules will no longer be necessary;
+that the facts of specific heat do not lend any support to the theory of
+valency. The paper concludes as follows: "The cause of chemical action is
+undoubtedly atmospheric pressure, which under ordinary conditions is equal
+to the weight of 76 cubic centimeters of mercury, one of which equals 6.145
+mercury molecules, so that the whole pressure equals 467 mercury molecules.
+This force--which with regard to its chemical effect on molecules can be
+multiplied by means of heat--is amply sufficient to bring about the highest
+degree of molecular specific gravity by the reduction of the molecular
+volumes. To it all molecules are exposed and subjected unalterably, and
+if not accepted as the cause of chemical action, its influence has to be
+eliminated to allow the introduction and display of other forces."
+
+The next communication was _"On the Synthetical Production of Ammonia,
+by the Combination of Hydrogen and Nitrogen in Presence of Heated Spongy
+Platinum (Preliminary Notice),"_ by G. S. Johnson. Some experiments, in
+which pure nitrogen was passed over heated copper containing occluded
+hydrogen, suggested to the author the possibility of the formation of
+ammonia; only minute traces were formed. On passing, however, a mixture of
+pure nitrogen (from ammonium nitrite) and hydrogen over spongy platinum at
+a low red heat, abundant evidence was obtained of the synthesis of ammonia.
+The gases were passed, before entering the tube containing the platinum,
+through a potash bulb containing Nessler reagent, which remained colorless.
+On the contrary, the gas issuing from the platinum rapidly turned Nessler
+reagent brown, and in a few minutes turned faintly acid litmus solution
+blue; the odor of NH_3 was also perceptible. In one experiment 0.0144
+gramme of ammonia was formed in two hours and a half. The author promises
+further experiment as to the effect of temperature, rate of the gaseous
+current, and substitution of palladium for platinum. The author synthesized
+some ammonia before the Society with complete success.
+
+The President referred to the synthesis of ammonia from its elements
+recently effected by Donkin, and remarked that apparently the ammonia was
+formed in much larger quantities by the process proposed by the author of
+the present paper.
+
+Mr. Warington suggested that some HCl gas should be simultaneously passed
+with the nitrogen and hydrogen, and that the temperature of the spongy
+platinum should be kept just below the temperature at which NH_3
+dissociates, in order to improve the yield of NH_3.
+
+_"On the Oxidation of Organic Matter in Water"_ by A. Downes. The author
+considers that the mere presence of oxygen in contact with the organic
+matter has but little oxidizing action unless lowly organisms, as bacteria,
+etc. be simultaneously present. Sunlight has apparently considerable
+effect in promoting the oxidation of organic matter. The author quotes the
+following experiment: A sample of river water was filtered through paper.
+It required per 10,000 parts 0.236 oxygen as permanganate. A second portion
+was placed in a flask plugged with cotton wool, and exposed to sunlight for
+a week; it then required 0.200. A third portion after a week, but excluded
+from light, required 0.231. A fourth was boiled for five minutes, plugged,
+and then exposed to sunlight for a week; required 0.198. In a second
+experiment with well water a similar result was obtained; more organic
+matter was oxidized when the organisms had been killed by the addition of
+sulphuric acid than when the original water was allowed to stand for an
+equal length of time. The author also discusses the statement made by Dr.
+Frankland that there is less ground for assuming that the organized and
+living matter of sewage is oxidized in a flow of twelve miles of a river
+than for assuming that dead organic matter is oxidized in a similar
+flow.--_Chem. News._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ROSE OIL, OR OTTO OF ROSES.
+
+By CHARLES G. WARNFORD LOCK.
+
+
+This celebrated perfume is the volatile essential oil distilled from the
+flowers of some varieties of rose. The botany of roses appears to be in a
+transition and somewhat unsatisfactory state. Thus the otto-yielding rose
+is variously styled _Rosa damascena, R. sempervirens, R. moschata, R.
+gallica, R. centifolia, R. provincialis_. It is pretty generally agreed
+that the kind grown for its otto in Bulgaria in the damask rose (_R.
+damascena_), a variety induced by long cultivation, as it is not to be
+found wild. It forms a bush, usually three to four feet, but sometimes six
+feet high; its flowers are of moderate size, semi-double, and arranged
+several on a branch, though not in clusters or bunches. In color, they are
+mostly light-red; some few are white, and said to be less productive of
+otto.
+
+The utilization of the delicious perfume of the rose was attempted, with
+more or less success, long prior to the comparatively modern process of
+distilling its essential oil. The early methods chiefly in vogue were the
+distillation of rose-water, and the infusion of roses in olive oil, the
+latter flourishing in Europe generally down to the last century, and
+surviving at the present day in the South of France. The butyraceous oil
+produced by the distillation of roses for making rose-water in this country
+is valueless as a perfume; and the real otto was scarcely known in British
+commerce before the present century.
+
+The profitable cultivation of roses for the preparation of otto is limited
+chiefly by climatic conditions. The odoriferous constitutent of the otto
+is a liquid containing oxygen, the solid hydrocarbon or stearoptene, with
+which it is combined, being absolutely devoid of perfume. The proportion
+which this inodorous solid constituents bears to the liquid perfume
+increases with the unsuitability of the climate, varying from about 18 per
+cent. in Bulgarian oil, to 35 and even 68 per cent. in rose oils distilled
+in France and England. This increase in the proportion of stearoptene is
+also shown by the progressively heightened fusing-point of rose oils from
+different sources: thus, while Bulgarian oil fuses at about 61° to 64°
+Fahr., an Indian sample required 68° Fahr.; one from the South of France,
+70° to 73° Fahr.; one from Paris, 84° Fahr.; and one obtained in making
+rose-water in London, 86° to 89½° Fahr. Even in the Bulgarian oil, a
+notable difference is observed between that produced on the hills and that
+from the lowlands.
+
+It is, therefore, not surprising that the culture of roses, and extraction
+of their perfume, should have originated in the East. Persia produced
+rose-water at an early date, and the town of Nisibin, north-west of Mosul,
+was famous for it in the 14th century. Shiraz, in the 17th century,
+prepared both rose water and otto, for export to other parts of Persia, as
+well as all over India. The Perso-Indian trade in rose oil, which continued
+to possess considerable importance in the third quarter of the 18th
+century, is declining, and has nearly disappeared; but the shipments of
+rose-water still maintain a respectable figure. The value, in rupees, of
+the exports of rose-water from Bushire in 1879, were--4,000 to India, 1,500
+to Java, 200 to Aden and the Red Sea, 1,000 to Muscat and dependencies, 200
+to Arab coast of Persian Gulf and Bahrein, 200 to Persian coast and Mekran,
+and 1,000 to Zanzibar. Similar statistics relating to Lingah, in the same
+year, show--Otto: 400 to Arab coast of Persian Gulf, and Bahrein; and 250
+to Persian coast and Mekran. And Bahrein--Persian Otto: 2,200 to Koweit,
+Busrah, and Bagdad. Rose-water: 200 to Arab coast of Persian Gulf, and
+1,000 to Koweit, Busrah, and Bagdad.
+
+India itself has a considerable area devoted to rose-gardens, as at
+Ghazipur, Lahore, Amritzur, and other places, the kind of rose being _R.
+damascena_, according to Brandis. Both rose-water and otto are produced.
+The flowers are distilled with double their weight of water in clay stills;
+the rose-water (_goolabi pani_) thus obtained is placed in shallow vessels,
+covered with moist muslin to keep out dust and flies, and exposed all night
+to the cool air, or fanned. In the morning, the film of oil, which has
+collected on the top, is skimmed off by a feather, and transferred to a
+small phial. This is repeated for several nights, till almost the whole of
+the oil has separated. The quantity of the product varies much, and three
+different authorities give the following figures: (_a_) 20,000 roses to
+make 1 rupee's weight (176 gr.) of otto; (_b_) 200,000 to make the same
+weight; (_c_) 1,000 roses afford less than 2 gr. of otto. The color ranges
+from green to bright-amber, and reddish. The oil (otto) is the most
+carefully bottled; the receptacles are hermetically sealed with wax, and
+exposed to the full glare of the sun for several days. Rose water deprived
+of otto is esteemed much inferior to that which has not been so treated.
+When bottled, it is also exposed to the sun for a fortnight at least.
+
+The Mediterranean countries of Africa enter but feebly into this industry,
+and it is a little remarkable that the French have not cultivated it in
+Algeria. Egypt's demand for rose-water and rose-vinegar is supplied from
+Medinet Fayum, south-west of Cairo. Tunis has also some local reputation
+for similar products. Von Maltzan says that the rose there grown for otto
+is the dog-rose (_R. canina_), and that it is extremely fragrant, 20 lb.
+of the flower yielding about 1 dr. of otto. Genoa occasionally imports a
+little of this product, which is of excellent quality. In the south of
+France rose gardens occupy a large share of attention, about Grasse,
+Cannes, and Nice; they chiefly produce rose-water, much of which is
+exported to England. The essence (otto) obtained by the distillation of the
+Provence rose (_R. provincialis_) has a characteristic perfume, arising, it
+is believed, from the bees transporting the pollen of the orange flowers
+into the petals of the roses. The French otto is richer in stearoptene than
+the Turkish, nine grammes crystallizing in a liter (1¾ pint) of alcohol at
+the same temperature as 18 grammes of the Turkish. The best preparations
+are made at Cannes and Grasse. The flowers are not there treated for the
+otto, but are submitted to a process of maceration in fat or oil, ten
+kilos. of roses being required to impregnate one kilo. of fat. The price of
+the roses varies from 50c. to 1 fr. 25c. per kilo.
+
+But the one commercially important source of otto of roses is a
+circumscribed patch of ancient Thrace or modern Bulgaria, stretching along
+the southern slopes of the central Balkans, and approximately included
+between the 25th and 26th degrees of east longitude, and the 42d and 43d of
+north latitude. The chief rose-growing districts are Philippopoli, Chirpan,
+Giopcu, Karadshah-Dagh, Kojun-Tepe, Eski-Sara, Jeni-Sara, Bazardshik, and
+the center and headquarters of the industry, Kazanlik (Kisanlik),
+situated in a beautiful undulating plain, in the valley of the Tunja. The
+productiveness of the last-mentioned district may be judged from the fact
+that, of the 123 Thracian localities carrying on the preparation of otto in
+1877--they numbered 140 in 1859--42 belong to it. The only place affording
+otto on the northern side of the Balkans is Travina. The geological
+formation throughout is syenite, the decomposition of which has provided a
+soil so fertile as to need but little manuring. The vegetation, according
+to Baur, indicates a climate differing but slightly from that of the Black
+Forest, the average summer temperatures being stated at 82° Fahr. at noon,
+and 68° Fahr. in the evening. The rose-bushes nourish best and live longest
+on sandy, sun-exposed (south and south-east aspect) slopes. The flowers
+produced by those growing on inclined ground are dearer and more esteemed
+than any raised on level land, being 50 per cent. richer in oil, and that
+of a stronger quality. This proves the advantage of thorough drainage. On
+the other hand, plantations at high altitudes yield less oil, which is of a
+character that readily congeals, from an insufficiency of summer heat. The
+districts lying adjacent to and in the mountains are sometimes visited
+by hard frosts, which destroy or greatly reduce the crop. Floods also
+occasionally do considerable damage. The bushes are attacked at intervals
+and in patches by a blight similar to that which injures the vines of the
+country.
+
+The bushes are planted in hedge-like rows in gardens and fields, at
+convenient distances apart, for the gathering of the crop. They are seldom
+manured. The planting takes place in spring and autumn; the flowers attain
+perfection in April and May, and the harvest lasts from May till the
+beginning of June. The expanded flowers are gathered before sunrise,
+often with the calyx attached; such as are not required for immediate
+distillation are spread out in cellars, but all are treated within the day
+on which they are plucked. Baur states that, if the buds develop slowly,
+by reason of cool damp weather, and are not much exposed to sun-heat, when
+about to be collected, a rich yield of otto, having a low solidifying
+point, is the result, whereas, should the sky be clear and the temperature
+high at or shortly before the time of gathering, the product is diminished
+and is more easily congealable. Hanbury, on the contrary, when distilling
+roses in London, noticed that when they had been collected on fine dry
+days the rose-water had most volatile oil floating upon it, and that, when
+gathered in cool rainy weather, little or no volatile oil separated.
+
+The flowers are not salted, nor subjected to any other treatment, before
+being conveyed in baskets, on the heads of men and women and backs of
+animals, to the distilling apparatus. This consists of a tinned-copper
+still, erected on a semicircle of bricks, and heated by a wood fire; from
+the top passes a straight tin pipe, which obliquely traverses a tub kept
+constantly filled with cold water, by a spout, from some convenient
+rivulet, and constitutes the condenser. Several such stills are usually
+placed together, often beneath the shade of a large tree. The still is
+charged with 25 to 50 lb. of roses, not previously deprived of their
+calyces, and double the volume of spring water. The distillation is carried
+on for about l½ hours, the result being simply a very oily rose-water
+(_ghyul suyu_). The exhausted flowers are removed from the still, and the
+decoction is used for the next distillation, instead of fresh water.
+The first distillates from each apparatus are mixed and distilled by
+themselves, one-sixth being drawn off; the residue replaces spring water
+for subsequent operations. The distillate is received in long-necked
+bottles, holding about 1¼ gallon. It is kept in them for a day or two, at a
+temperature exceeding 59° Fahr., by which time most of the oil, fluid
+and bright, will have reached the surface. It is skimmed off by a small,
+long-handled, fine-orificed tin funnel, and is then ready for sale. The
+last-run rose-water is extremely fragrant, and is much prized locally for
+culinary and medicinal purposes. The quantity and quality of the otto are
+much influenced by the character of the water used in distilling. When
+hard spring water is employed, the otto is rich in stearoptene, but less
+transparent and fragrant. The average quantity of the product is estimated
+by Baur at 0.037 to 0.040 per cent.; another authority says that 3,200
+kilos. of roses give 1 kilo. of oil.
+
+Pure otto, carefully distilled, is at first colorless, but speedily becomes
+yellowish; its specific gravity is 0.87 at 72.5° Fahr.; its boiling-point
+is 444° Fahr.; it solidifies at 51.8° to 60.8° Fahr., or still higher; it
+is soluble in absolute alcohol, and in acetic acid. The most usual and
+reliable tests of the quality of an otto are (1) its odor, (2) its
+congealing point, (3) its crystallization. The odor can be judged only
+after long experience. A good oil should congeal well in five minutes at
+a temperature of 54.5° Fahr.; fraudulent additions lower the congealing
+point. The crystals of rose-stearoptene are light, feathery, shining
+plates, filling the whole liquid. Almost the only material used for
+artificially heightening the apparent proportion of stearoptene is said to
+be spermaceti, which is easily recognizable from its liability to settle
+down in a solid cake, and from its melting at 122° Fahr., whereas
+stearoptene fuses at 91.4° Fahr. Possibly paraffin wax would more easily
+escape detection.
+
+The adulterations by means of other essential oils are much more difficult
+of discovery, and much more general; in fact, it is said that none of the
+Bulgarian otto is completely free from this kind of sophistication. The
+oils employed for the purpose are certain of the grass oils (_Andropogon_
+and _Cymbopogon spp._) notably that afforded by _Andropogon, Schoenanthus_
+called _idris-yaghi_ by the Turks, and commonly known to Europeans as
+"geranium oil," though quite distinct from true geranium oil. The addition
+is generally made by sprinkling it upon the rose-leaves before distilling.
+It is largely produced in the neighborhood of Delhi, and exported to
+Turkey by way of Arabia. It is sold by Arabs in Constantinople in large
+bladder-shaped tinned-copper vessels, holding about 120 lb. As it is
+usually itself adulterated with some fatty oil, it needs to undergo
+purification before use. This is effected in the following manner: The
+crude oil is repeatedly shaken up with water acidulated with lemon-juice,
+from which it is poured off after standing for a day. The washed oil
+is placed in shallow saucers, well exposed to sun and air, by which it
+gradually loses its objectionable odor. Spring and early summer are the
+best seasons for the operation, which occupies two to four weeks, according
+to the state of the weather and the quality of the oil. The general
+characters of this oil are so similar to those of otto of roses--even the
+odor bearing a distant resemblance--that their discrimination when mixed is
+a matter of practical impossibility. The ratio of the adulteration varies
+from a small figure up to 80 or 90 per cent. The only safeguard against
+deception is to pay a fair price, and to deal with firms of good repute,
+such as Messrs. Papasoglu, Manoglu & Son, Ihmsen & Co., and Holstein & Co.
+in Constantinople.
+
+The otto is put up in squat-shaped flasks of tinned copper, called
+_kunkumas_, holding from 1 to 10 lb., and sewn up in white woolen cloths.
+Usually their contents are transferred at Constantinople into small gilded
+bottles of German manufacture for export. The Bulgarian otto harvest,
+during the five years 1867-71, was reckoned to average somewhat below
+400,000 _meticals, miskals_, or _midkals_ (of about 3 dwt. troy), or 4,226
+lb. av.; that of 1873, which was good, was estimated at 500,000, value
+about £700,000. The harvest of 1880 realized more than £1,000,000, though
+the roses themselves were not so valuable as in 1876. About 300,000
+_meticals_ of otto, valued at £932,077, were exported in 1876 from
+Philippopolis, chiefly to France, Australia, America, and Germany.
+
+--_Jour. Soc. of Arts._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+A NEW METHOD OF PREPARING METATOLUIDINE.
+
+By OSKAR WIDMAN.
+
+
+The author adds in small portions five parts metanitro-benzaldehyd to nine
+parts of phosphorus pentachloride, avoiding a great rise of temperature.
+When the reaction is over, the whole is poured into excess of cold water,
+quickly washed a few times with cold water, and dissolved in alcohol. After
+the first crystallization the compound melts at 65°, and is perfectly pure.
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Scientific American Supplement No. 275, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Scientific American Supplement No. 275
+
+Author: Various
+
+Posting Date: October 10, 2012 [EBook #8195]
+Release Date: May, 2005
+First Posted: June 30, 2003
+
+Language: English
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPL., NO. 275 ***
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+Produced by Olaf Voss, Don Kretz, Juliet Sutherland, Charles
+Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
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+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/1a.png"><img src=
+"images/1a_th.png" alt=""></a></p>
+
+
+
+<h1>SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 275</h1>
+
+<h2>NEW YORK, APRIL 9, 1881</h2>
+
+<h4>Scientific American Supplement. Vol. XI, No. 275.</h4>
+
+<h4>Scientific American established 1845</h4>
+
+<h4>Scientific American Supplement, $5 a year.</h4>
+
+<h4>Scientific American and Supplement, $7 a year.</h4>
+
+<hr>
+<table summary="Contents" border="0" cellspacing="5">
+<tr>
+<th colspan="2">TABLE OF CONTENTS.</th>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td valign="top">I.</td>
+<td><a href="#1">ENGINEERING AND MECHANICS.--The Various Modes of
+Transmitting Power to a Distance. (Continued from No. 274.) By
+ARTHUR ARCHARD. of Geneva.--II. Compressed Air.--III. Transmission
+by Pressure Water.--IV. Transmission by Electricity.--General
+Results</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#2">The Hotchkiss Revolving Gun</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#3">Floating Pontoon Dock. 2 figures.--Improved
+floating pontoon dock</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td valign="top">II.</td>
+<td><a href="#4">TECHNOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY.--Wheat and Wheat Bread.
+By H. MEGE MOURIES.--Color in bread.--Anatomical structure and
+chemical composition of wheat.--Embryo and coating of the embryo.--
+Cerealine--Phosphate of calcium.--1 figure, section of a grain of
+wheat, magnified.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#5">Origin of New Process Milling.--Special report to
+the Census Bureau. By ALBERT HOPPIN.--Present status of milling
+structures and machinery in Minneapolis by Special Census Agent C.
+W. JOHNSON.--Communication from GEORGE T. SMITH.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#6">Tap for Effervescing Liquids. 1 figure.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#7">London Chemical Society.--Notes.--Pentathionic
+acid, Mr. VIVIAN LEWES.--Hydrocarbons from Rosin Spirit. Dr.
+ARMSTRONG.--On the Determination of the Relative Weight of Single
+Molecules. E. VOGEL.--On the Synthetical Production of Ammonia by
+the Combination of Hydrogen and Nitrogen in the Presence of Heated
+Spongy Platinum, G. S. JOHNSON.--On the Oxidation of Organic Matter
+in Water, A. DOWNS.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#8">Rose Oil, or Otto of Roses. By CHAS. G. WARNFORD
+LOCK.--Sources of rose oil.--History--Where rose gardens are now
+cultivated for oil.--Methods of cultivation.--Processes of
+distillation.--Adulterations</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#9">A New Method of Preparing Metatoluidine. By OSCAR
+WIDMAN.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td valign="top">III.</td>
+<td><a href="#10">AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, ETC.--The Guenon Milk
+Mirror. 1 figure. Escutcheon of the Jersey Bull Calf, Grand
+Mirror.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#11">Two Good Lawn Trees</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#12">Cutting Sods for Lawns</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#13">Horticultural Notes: New apples, pears, grapes,
+etc.--Discussion on Grapes. Western New York Society.--New
+peaches.--Insects affecting horticulture.--Insect
+destroyers.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#14">Observations on the Salmon of the Pacific. By
+DAVID S. JORDAN and CHARLES B. GILBERT. Valuable census
+report.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td valign="top">IV.</td>
+<td><a href="#15">LIGHT, ELECTRICITY ETC.--Relation between
+Electricity and Light. Dr. O. T. Lodge's lecture before the London
+Institute.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#16">Interesting Electrical Researches by Dr. Warren
+de La Rue and Dr. Hugo Miller.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#17">Telephony by Thermic Currents</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><a href="#18">The Telectroscope. By Moxs. SENLECQ. 5 figures. A
+successful apparatus for transmitting and reproducing camera
+pictures by electricity.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td valign="top">V.</td>
+<td><a href="#19">HYGIENE, MEDICINE, ETC.--Rapid Breathing as a
+Pain Obtunde in Minor Surgery, Obstetrics, the General Practice of
+Medicine, and of Dentistry. Dr. W. G. A. Bonwill's paper before the
+Philadelphia County Medical Society. 8 figures. Sphygmographic
+tracings.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td valign="top">VI.</td>
+<td><a href="#20">ARCHITECTURE, ART, ETC.--Artist's Homes. No. 11.
+"Weirleigh." Residence of Harrison Weir. Perspective and
+plans.</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="4"></a></p>
+
+<h2>WHEAT AND WHEAT BREAD.</h2>
+
+<h3>By H. M&Egrave;GE-MOURI&Egrave;S.</h3>
+
+<p>In consequence of the interest that has been recently excited on
+the subject of bread reform, we have, says the London
+<i>Miller</i>, translated the interesting contribution of H.
+M&egrave;ge-Mouri&egrave;s to the Imperial and Central Society of
+Agriculture of France, and subsequently published in a separate
+form in 1860, on "Wheat and Wheat Bread," with the illustration
+prepared by the author for the contribution. The author says: "I
+repeat in this pamphlet the principal facts put forth in the notes
+issued by me, and in the reports furnished by Mr. Chevreul to the
+Academy of Science, from 1853 up to 1860."</p>
+
+<p>The study of the structure of the wheat berry, its chemical
+composition, its alimentary value, its preservation, etc., is not
+alone of interest to science, agriculture, and industry, but it is
+worthy of attracting the attention of governments, for this study,
+in its connection to political economy, is bound up with the fate
+and the prosperity of nations. Wheat has been cultivated from time
+immemorial. At first it was roughly crushed and consumed in the
+form of a thick soup, or in cakes baked on an ordinary hearth. Many
+centuries before the Christian era the Egyptians were acquainted
+with the means of making fermented or leavened bread; afterwards
+this practice spread into Greece, and it is found in esteem at Rome
+two centuries B.C.; from Rome the new method was introduced among
+the Gauls, and it is found to-day to exist almost the same as it
+was practiced at that period, with the exception, of course, of the
+considerable improvements introduced in the baking and
+grinding.</p>
+
+<p>Since the fortunate idea was formed of transforming the wheat
+into bread, this grain has always produced white bread, and dark or
+brown bread, from which the conclusion was drawn that it must
+necessarily make white bread and brown bread; on the other hand,
+the flours, mixed with bran, made a brownish, doughy, and badly
+risen bread, and it was therefore concluded that the bran, by its
+color, produced this inferior bread. From this error, accepted as a
+truth, the most contradictory opinions of the most opposite
+processes have arisen, which are repeated at the present day in the
+art of separating as completely as possible all the tissues of the
+wheat, and of extracting from the grain only 70 per cent of flour
+fit for making white bread. It is, however, difficult for the
+observer to admit that a small quantity of the thin yellow envelope
+can, by a simple mingling with the crumb of the loaf, color it
+brown, and it is still more difficult to admit that the actual
+presence of these envelopes can without decomposition render bread
+doughy, badly raised, sticky, and incapable of swelling in water.
+On the other hand, although some distinguished chemists deny or
+exalt the nutritive properties of bran, agriculturists, taking
+practical observation as proof, attribute to that portion of the
+grain a physiological action which has nothing in common with
+plastic alimentation, and prove that animals weakened by a too long
+usage of dry fodder, are restored to health by the use of bran,
+which only seems to act by its presence, since the greater portion
+of it, as already demonstrated by Mr. Poggiale, is passed through
+with the excrement.</p>
+
+<p>With these opinions, apparently so opposed, it evidently results
+that there is an unknown factor at the bottom of the question; it
+is the nature of this factor I wish to find out, and it was after
+the discovery that I was able to explain the nature of brown bread,
+and its <i>role</i> in the alimentation of animals. We have then to
+examine the causes of the production of brown bread, to state why
+white bread kills animals fed exclusively on it, while bread mixed
+with bran makes them live. We have to explain the phenomena of
+panification, the operations of grinding, and to explain the means
+of preparing a bread more economical and more favorable to health.
+To explain this question clearly and briefly we must first be
+acquainted with the various substances forming the berry, their
+nature, their position, and their properties. This we shall do with
+the aid of the illustration given.</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/1b.png"><img src=
+"images/1b_th.png" alt=
+"SECTION OF A GRAIN OF WHEAT MAGNIFIED."></a></p>
+
+<p class="ctr">SECTION OF A GRAIN OF WHEAT MAGNIFIED.</p>
+
+<p>EXPLANATION OF DIAGRAM.</p>
+
+<pre>
+1.--Superficial Coating of the Epidermis, severed at the Crease of the Kernel.
+2.--Section of Epidermis, Averages of the Weight of the Whole Grain, &frac12; %.
+3.--Epicarp, do. do. do. 1 %.
+4.--Endocarp, do. do. do. 1 &frac12; %.
+5.--Testa or Episperm, do. do. do. 2 %.
+6.--Embryo Membrane (with imaginary spaces in white on both sides to make it distinct).
+7.\ / Glutonous Cells \
+8. &gt; Endosperm &lt; containing &gt; do. do. 90 %.
+9./ \ Farinaccous Matter /
+</pre>
+
+<h3>ANATOMICAL STRUCTURE AND CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF WHEAT.</h3>
+
+<p>The figure represents the longitudinal cut of a grain of wheat;
+it was made by taking, with the aid of the microscope and of
+photography, the drawing of a large quantity of fragments, which,
+joined together at last, produced the figure of the entire cut.
+These multiplied results were necessary to appreciate the insertion
+of the teguments and their nature in every part of the berry; in
+this long and difficult work I have been aided by the co-operation
+of Mr. Bertsch, who, as is known, has discovered a means of fixing
+rapidly by photography any image from the microscope. I must state,
+in the first place, that even in 1837 Mr. Payen studied and
+published the structure and the composition of a fragment of a
+grain of wheat; that this learned chemist, whose authority in such
+matters is known, perfectly described the envelopes or coverings,
+and indicated the presence of various immediate principles
+(especially of azote, fatty and mineral substances which fill up
+the range of contiguous cells between them and the periphery of the
+perisperm, to the exclusion of the gluten and the starchy
+granules), as well as to the mode of insertion of the granules of
+starch in the gluten contained in the cells, with narrow divisions
+from the perisperm, and in such a manner that up to the point of
+working indicated by the figure 1 this study was complete. However,
+I have been obliged to recommence it, to study the special facts
+bearing on the alimentary question, and I must say that all the
+results obtained by Mr. Bertsch, Mr. Tr&eacute;cul, and myself
+agree with those given by Mr. Payen.</p>
+
+<h3>ENVELOPES OF THE BERRY.</h3>
+
+<p>No. 1 represents a superficial side of the crease.</p>
+
+<p>No. 2 indicates the epidermis or cuticle. This covering is
+extremely light, and offers nothing remarkable; 100 lb. of wheat
+contain &frac12; lb. of it.</p>
+
+<p>No. 3 indicates the epicarp. This envelope is distinguished by a
+double row of long and pointed vessels; it is, like the first one,
+very light and without action; 100 lb. of wheat contain 1 lb. of
+it.</p>
+
+<p>No. 4 represents the endocarp, or last tegument of the berry;
+the sarcocarp, which should be found between the numbers 2 and 3,
+no longer exists, having been absorbed. The endocarp is remarkable
+by its row of round and regular cells, which appear in the cut like
+a continuous string of beads; 100 lb. of wheat contain 1&frac12;
+lb. of it.</p>
+
+<p>These three envelopes are colorless, light, and spongy; their
+elementary composition is that of straw; they are easily removed
+besides with the aid of damp and friction. This property has given
+rise to an operation called decortication, the results of which we
+shall examine later on from an industrial point of view. The whole
+of the envelopes of the berry of wheat amount to 3 lb. in 100 lb.
+of wheat.</p>
+
+<h3>ENVELOPES AND TISSUES OF THE BERRY PROPER.</h3>
+
+<p>No. 5 indicates the testa or episperm. This external tegument of
+the berry is closer than the preceding ones; it contains in the
+very small cells two coloring matters, the one of a palish yellow,
+the other of an orange yellow, and according as the one or the
+other matter predominates, the wheat is of a more or less intense
+yellow color; hence come all the varieties of wheat known in
+commerce as white, reddish, or red wheats. Under this tegument is
+found a very thin, colorless membrane, which, with the testa or
+episperm, forms two per cent. of the weight of the wheat.</p>
+
+<p>No. 6 indicates the embryous membrane, which is only an
+expansion of the germ or embryo No. 10. This membrane is seen
+purposely removed from its contiguous parts, so as to render more
+visible its form and insertions. Under this tissue is found with
+the Nos. 7, 8, and 9, the endosperm or perisperm, containing the
+gluten and the starch; soluble and insoluble albuminoids, that is
+to say, the flour.</p>
+
+<p>The endosperm and the embryous membrane are the most interesting
+parts of the berry; the first is one of the depots of the plastic
+aliments, the second contains agents capable of dissolving these
+aliments during the germination, of determining their absorption in
+the digestive organs of animals, and of producing in the dough a
+decomposition strong enough to make dark bread. We shall proceed to
+examine separately these two parts of the berry.</p>
+
+<h3>ENDOSPERM OR FLOURY PORTION, NOS. 7, 8, 9.</h3>
+
+<p>This portion is composed of large glutinous cells, in which the
+granules of starch are found. The composition of these different
+layers offers a particular interest; the center, No. 9, is the
+softest part; it contains the least gluten and the most starch; it
+is the part which first pulverizes under the stone, and gives,
+after the first bolting, the fine flour. As this flour is poorest
+in gluten, it makes a dough with little consistency, and incapable
+of making an open bread, well raised. The first layer, No. 8, which
+surrounds the center, produces small white middlings, harder and
+richer in gluten than the center; it bakes very well, and weighs 20
+lb. in 100, and it is these 20 parts in 100 which, when mixed with
+the 50 parts in the center, form the finest quality flour, used for
+making white bread.</p>
+
+<p>The layer No. 7, which surrounds the preceding one, is still
+harder and richer in gluten; unfortunately in the reduction it
+becomes mixed with some hundredth parts of the bran, which render
+it unsuitable for making bread of the finest quality; it produces
+in the regrinding lower grade and dark flours, together weighing 7
+per cent. The external layer, naturally adhering to the membrane,
+No. 6, becomes mixed in the grinding with bran, to the extent of
+about 20 per cent., which renders it unsuitable even for making
+brown bread; it serves to form the regrindings and the offals
+destined for the nourishment of animals; this layer is, however,
+the hardest, and contains the largest quantity of gluten, and it is
+by consequence the most nutritive. We now see the endosperm
+increasing from the center, formed of floury layers, which augment
+in richness in gluten, in proportion as they are removed from the
+center. Now, as the flours make more bread in proportion to the
+quantity of gluten they contain, and the gluten gives more bread in
+proportion to its being more developed, or having more consistence,
+it follows that the flour belonging to the parts of the berry
+nearest the envelopes or coverings should produce the greatest
+portion of bread, and this is what takes place in effect. The
+product of the different layers of the endosperm is given below,
+and it will be seen that the quantity of bread increases in a
+proportion relatively greater than that of the gluten, which proves
+once more that the gluten of the center or last formation has less
+consistence than that of the other layers of older formation.</p>
+
+<p>The following are the results obtained from the same wheat:</p>
+
+<pre>
+ Gluten. Bread.
+100 parts of flour in center contain.. 8 and produce 128
+ " " first layer " .. 9,2 " 136
+ " " second " " .. 11 " 140
+ " " external " " .. 13 " 145
+</pre>
+
+<p>On the whole, it is seen, according to the composition of the
+floury part of the grain, that the berry contains on an average 90
+parts in 100 of flour fit for making bread of the first quality,
+and that the inevitable mixing in of a small quantity of bran
+reduces these 90 to 70 parts with the ordinary processes; but the
+loss is not alone there, for the foregoing table shows that the
+best portion of the grain is rejected from the food of man that
+brown or dark bread is made of flour of very good quality, and that
+the first quality bread is made from the portion of the endosperm
+containing the gluten in the smallest quantity and in the least
+developed form.</p>
+
+<p>This is a consideration not to be passed over lightly; assuredly
+the gluten of the center contains as much azote as the gluten of
+the circumference, but it must not be admitted in a general way
+that the alimentary power of a body is in connection with the
+amount of azote it contains, and without entering into
+considerations which would carry us too wide of the subject, we
+shall simply state that if the flesh of young animals, as, for
+instance, the calf, has a debilitating action, while the developed
+flesh of full-grown animals--of a heifer, for example--has really
+nourishing properties, although the flesh of each animal contains
+the same quantity of azote, we must conclude that the proportion of
+elements is not everything, and that the azotic or nitrogenous
+elements are more nourishing in proportion as they are more
+developed. This is why the gluten of the layers nearest the bran is
+of quite a special interest from the point of view of alimentation
+and in the preparation of bread.</p>
+
+<h3>THE EMBRYO AND THE COATING OF THE EMBRYO.</h3>
+
+<p>To be intelligible, I must commence by some very brief remarks
+on the tissues of vegetables. There are two sorts distinguished
+among plants; some seem of no importance in the phenomena of
+nutrition; others, on the contrary, tend to the assimilation of the
+organic or inorganic components which should nourish and develop
+all the parts of the plant. The latter have a striking analogy with
+ferments; their composition is almost similar, and their action is
+increased or diminished by the same causes.</p>
+
+<p>These tissues, formed in a state of repose in vegetables as in
+grain, have special properties; thus the berry possesses a pericarp
+whose tissues should remain foreign to the phenomena of
+germination, and these tissues show no particularity worthy of
+remark, but the coating of the embryo, which should play an active
+part, possesses, on the contrary, properties that may be compared
+to those of ferments. With regard to these ferments, I must further
+remark that I have not been able, nor am I yet able, to express in
+formula my opinion of the nature of these bodies, but little known
+as yet; I have only made use of the language mostly employed,
+without wishing to touch on questions raised by the effects of the
+presence, and by the more complex effects of living bodies, which
+exercise analogous actions.</p>
+
+<p>With these reservations I shall proceed to examine the tissues
+in the berry which help toward the germination.</p>
+
+<p>THE EMBRYO (10, see woodcut) is composed of the root of the
+plant, with which we have nothing to do here. This root of the
+plant which is to grow is embedded in a mass of cells full of fatty
+bodies. These bodies present this remarkable particularity, that
+they contain among their elements sulphur and phosphorus. When you
+dehydrate by alcohol 100 grammes of the embryo of wheat, obtained
+by the same means as the membrane (a process indicated later on),
+this embryo, treated with ether, produces 20 grammes of oils
+composed elementarily of hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, azote, sulphur,
+and phosphorus. This analysis, made according to the means
+indicated by M. Fremy, shows that the fatty bodies of the embryo
+are composed like those of the germ of an egg, like those of the
+brain and of the nervous system of animals. It is necessary for us
+to stop an instant at this fact: in the first place, because it
+proves that vegetables are designed to form the phosphoric as well
+as the nitrogenous and ternary aliments, and finally, because it
+indicates how important it is to mix the embryo and its dependents
+with the bread in the most complete manner possible, seeing that a
+large portion of these phosphoric bodies always become decomposed
+during the baking.</p>
+
+<p>COATING OF THE EMBRYO.--This membrane (6), which is only an
+expansion of the embryo, surrounds the endosperm; it is composed of
+beautiful irregular cubic cells, diminishing according as they come
+nearer to the embryo. These cells are composed, first, of the
+insoluble cellular tissue; second, of phosphate of chalk and fatty
+phosphoric bodies; third, of soluble cerealine. In order to study
+the composition and the nature of this tissue, it must be
+completely isolated, and this result is obtained in the following
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>The wheat should be damped with water containing 10 parts in 100
+of alcoholized caustic soda; at the expiration of one hour the
+envelopes of the pericarp, and of the testa Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, should
+be separated by friction in a coarse cloth, having been reduced by
+the action of the alkali to a pulpy state; each berry should then
+be opened separately to remove the portion of the envelope held in
+the fold of the crease, and then all the berries divided in two are
+put into three parts of water charged with one-hundredth of caustic
+potash. This liquid dissolves the gluten, divides the starch, and
+at the expiration of twenty-four hours the parts of the berries are
+kneaded between the fingers, collected in pure water, and washed
+until the water issues clear; these membranes with their embryos,
+which are often detached by this operation, are cast into water
+acidulated with one-hundredth of hydrochloric acid, and at the end
+of several hours they should be completely washed. The product
+obtained consists of beautiful white membranes, insoluble in
+alkalies and diluted acids, which show under the microscope
+beautiful cells joined in a tissue following the embryo, with which
+it has indeed a striking analogy in its properties and composition.
+This membrane, exhausted by the alcohol and ether, gives, by an
+elementary analysis, hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and azote.
+Unfortunately, under the action of the tests this membrane has been
+killed, and it no longer possesses the special properties of active
+tissues. Among these properties three may be especially
+mentioned:</p>
+
+<p>1st. Its resistance to water charged with a mineral salt, such
+as sea salt for instance</p>
+
+<p>2d. Its action through its presence.</p>
+
+<p>3d. Its action as a ferment.</p>
+
+<p>The action of saltwater is explained as follows: When the berry
+is plunged into pure water it will be observed that the water
+penetrates in the course of a few hours to the very center of the
+endosperm, but if water charged or saturated with sea salt be used,
+it will be seen that the liquid immediately passes through the
+teguments Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5, and stops abruptly before the embryo
+membrane No. 6, which will remain quite dry and brittle for several
+days, the berry remaining all the time in the water. Should the
+water penetrate further after several days, it can be ascertained
+that the entrance was gained through the part No 10 free of this
+tissue, and this notwithstanding the cells are full of fatty
+bodies. This membrane alone produces this action, for if the
+coatings Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5 be removed, the resistance to the
+liquid remains the same, while if the whole, or a portion of it, be
+divided, either by friction between two millstones or by simple
+incisions, the liquid penetrates the berry within a few hours. This
+property is analogous to that of the radicules of roots, which take
+up the bodies most suitable for the nourishment of the plant. It
+proves, besides, that this membrane, like all those endowed with
+life, does not obey more the ordinary laws of permeability than
+those of chemical affinity, and this property can be turned to
+advantage in the preservation of grain in decortication and
+grinding.</p>
+
+<p>To determine the action of this tissue through its presence,
+take 100 grammes of wheat, wash it and remove the first coating by
+decortication; then immerse it for several hours in lukewarm water,
+and dry afterwards in an ordinary temperature. It should then be
+reduced in a small coffee mill, the flour and middlings separated
+by sifting and the bran repassed through a machine that will crush
+it without breaking it; then dress it again, and repeat the
+operation six times at least. The bran now obtained is composed of
+the embryous membrane, a little flour adhering to it, and some
+traces of the teguments Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5. This coarse
+tissue-weighs about 14 grammes, and to determine its action through
+its presence, place it in 200 grammes of water at a temperature of
+86&deg;; afterwards press it. The liquid that escapes contains
+chiefly the flour and cerealine. Filter this liquid, and put it in
+a test glass marked No. 1, which will serve to determine the action
+of the cerealine.</p>
+
+<p>The bran should now be washed until the water issues pure, and
+until it shows no bluish color when iodized water and sulphuric
+acid are added; when the washing is finished the bran swollen by
+the water is placed under a press, and the liquid extracted is
+placed, after being filtered, in a test tube. This test tube serves
+to show that all cerealine has been removed from the blades of the
+tissue. Finally, these small blades of bran, washed and pressed,
+are cast, with 50 grammes of lukewarm water, into a test tube,
+marked No. 3; 100 grammes of diluted starch to one-tenth of dry
+starch are then added in each test tube, and they are put into a
+water bath at a temperature of 104&deg; Fahrenheit, being stirred
+lightly every fifteen minutes. At the expiration of an hour, or at
+the most an hour and a half, No. 1 glass no longer contains any
+starch, as it has been converted into dextrine and glucose by the
+cerealine, and the iodized water only produces a purple color. No.
+2 glass, with the same addition, produces a bluish color, and
+preserves the starch intact, which proves that the bran was well
+freed from the cerealine contained. No. 3 glass, like No. 1, shows
+a purple coloring, and the liquid only contains, in place of the
+starch, dextrine and glucose, <i>i. e</i>, the tissue has had the
+same action as the cerealine deprived of the tissue, and the
+cerealine as the tissue freed from cerealine. The same membrane
+rewashed can again transform the diluted starch several times. This
+action is due to the presence of the embryous membrane, for after
+four consecutive operations it still preserves its original weight.
+As regards the remains of the other segments, they have no
+influence on this phenomenon, for the coating Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5,
+separated by the water and friction, have no action whatever on the
+diluted starch. Besides its action through its presence, which is
+immediate, the embryous membrane may also act as a ferment, active
+only after a development, varying in duration according to the
+conditions of temperature and the presence or absence of ferments
+in acting.</p>
+
+<p>I make a distinction here as is seen, between the action through
+being present, and the action of real ferments, but it is not my
+intention to approve or disapprove of the different opinions
+expressed on this subject. I make use of these expressions only to
+explain more clearly the phenomena I have to speak of, for it is
+our duty to bear in mind that the real ferments only act after a
+longer or shorter period of development, while, on the other hand,
+the effects through presence are immediate.</p>
+
+<p>I now return to the embryous membrane. Various causes increase
+or decrease the action of this tissue, but it may be said in
+general that all the agents that kill the embryous membrane will
+also kill the cerealine. This was the reason why I at first
+attributed the production of dark bread exclusively to the latter
+ferment, but it was easy to observe that during the baking,
+decompositions resulted at over 158&deg; Fah., while the cerealine
+was still coagulated, and that bread containing bran, submitted to
+212&deg; of heat, became liquefied in water at 104&deg;. It was now
+easy to determine that dark flours, from which the cerealine had
+been removed by repeated washings, still produced dark bread. It
+was at this time, in remembering my experiences with organic
+bodies, I determined the properties of the insoluble tissue,
+deprived of the soluble cerealine, with analogous properties, but
+distinguished not alone by its solid organization and state of
+insolubility, but also by its resistance to heat, which acts as on
+yeast. There exists, in reality, I repeat, a resemblance between
+the embryous membrane and the yeast; they have the same immediate
+composition; they are destroyed by the same poisons, deadened by
+the same temperatures, annihilated by the same agents, propagated
+in an analogous manner, and it might be said that the organic
+tissues endowed with life are only an agglomeration of fixed cells
+of ferments. At all events, when the blades of the embryous
+membrane, prepared as already stated, are exposed to a water bath
+at 212&deg;, this tissue, in contact with the diluted starch,
+produces the same decomposition; the contact, however, should
+continue two or three hours in place of one. If, instead of placing
+these membranes in the water bath, they are enveloped in two pounds
+of dough, and this dough put in the oven, after the baking the
+washed membranes produce the same results, which especially proves
+that this membrane can support a temperature of 212&deg; Fah.
+without disorganization. We shall refer to this property in
+speaking of the phenomena of panification.</p>
+
+<p>CEREALINE.--The cells composing the embryous membrane contain,
+as already stated, the cerealine, but after the germination they
+contain cerealine and diastase, that is to say, a portion of the
+cerealine changed into diastase, with which it has the greatest
+analogy. It is known how difficult it is to isolate and study
+albuminous substances. The following is the method of obtaining and
+studying cerealine. Take the raw embryous membrane, prepared as
+stated, steep it for an hour in spirits of wine diluted with twice
+its volume of water, and renew this liquid several times until the
+dextrine, glucose, coloring matters, etc., have been completely
+removed. The membranes should now be pressed and cast into a
+quantity of water sufficient to make a fluid paste of them, squeeze
+out the mixture, filter the liquid obtained, and this liquid will
+contain the cerealine sufficiently pure to be studied in its
+effects. Its principal properties are: The liquid evaporated at a
+low temperature produces an amorphous, rough mass nearly colorless,
+and almost entirely soluble in distilled water; this solution
+coagulates between 158&deg; and 167&deg; Fah., and the coagulum is
+insoluble in acids and weak alkalies; the solution is precipitated
+by all diluted acids, by phosphoric acid at all the degrees of
+hydration, and even by a current of carbonic acid. All these
+precipitates redissolve with an excess of acid, sulphuric acid
+excepted. Concentrated sulphuric acid forms an insoluble downy
+white precipitate, and the concentrated vegetable acids, with the
+exception of tannic acid, do not determine any precipitate.
+Cerealine coagulated by an acid redissolves in an excess of the
+same acid, but it has become dead and has no more action on the
+starch. The alkalies do not form any precipitate, but they kill the
+cerealine as if it had been precipitated The neutral rennet does
+not make any precipitate in a solution of cerealine--5 centigrammes
+of dry cerealine transform in twenty-five minutes 10 grammes of
+starch, reduced to a paste by 100 grammes of water at 113&deg; Fah.
+It will be seen that cerealine has a grand analogy with albumen and
+legumine, but it is distinguished from them by the action of the
+rennet, of the heat of acids, alcohol, and above all by its
+property of transforming the starch into glucose and dextrine.</p>
+
+<p>It may be said that some albuminous substances have this
+property, but it must be borne in mind that these bodies, like
+gluten, for example, only possess it after the commencement of the
+decomposition. The albuminous matter approaching nearest to
+cerealine is the diastase, for it is only a transformation of the
+cerealine during the germination, the proof of which may be had in
+analyzing the embryous membrane, which shows more diastase and less
+cerealine in proportion to the advancement of the germination: it
+differs, however, from the diastase by the action of heat, alcohol,
+etc. It is seen that in every case the cerealine and the embryous
+membrane act together, and in an analogous manner; we shall shortly
+examine their effects on the digestion and in the phenomena of
+panification.</p>
+
+<p>PHOSPHATE OF CALCIUM.--Mr. Payen was the first to make the
+observation that the greatest amount of phosphate of chalk is found
+in the teguments adjoining the farinaceous or floury mass. This
+observation is important from two points of view; in the first
+place, it shows us that this mineral aliment, necessary to the life
+of animals, is rejected from ordinary bread; and in the next place,
+it brings a new proof that phosphate of chalk is found, and ought
+to be found, in everyplace where there are membranes susceptible of
+exercising vital functions among animals as well as vegetables.</p>
+
+<p>Phosphate of chalk is not in reality (as I wished to prove in
+another work) a plastic matter suitable for forming bones, for the
+bones of infants are three times more solid than those of old men,
+which contain three times as much of it. The quantity of phosphate
+of chalk necessary to the constitution of animals is in proportion
+to the temperature of those animals, and often in the inverse ratio
+of the weight of their bones, for vegetables, although they have no
+bones, require phosphate of chalk. This is because this salt is the
+natural stimulant of living membranes, and the bony tissue is only
+a depot of phosphate of chalk, analogous to the adipose tissue, the
+fat of which is absorbed when the alimentation coming from the
+exterior becomes insufficient. Now, as we know all the parts
+constituting the berry of wheat, it will be easy to explain the
+phenomena of panification, and to conclude from the present moment
+that it is not indifferent to reject from the bread this embryous
+membrane where the agents of digestion are found, viz., the
+phosphoric bodies and the phosphate of chalk.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="5"></a></p>
+
+<h2>THE ORIGIN OF NEW PROCESS MILLING.</h2>
+
+<p>The following article was written by Albert Hoppin, editor of
+the <i>Northwestern Miller</i>, at the request of Special Agent
+Chas. W. Johnson, and forms a part of his report to the census
+bureau on the manufacturing industries of Minneapolis.</p>
+
+<p>"The development of the milling industry in this city has been
+so intimately connected with the growth and prosperity of the city
+itself, that the steps by which the art of milling has reached its
+present high state of perfection are worthy of note, especially as
+Minneapolis may rightly claim the honor of having brought the
+improvements, which have within the last decade so thoroughly
+revolutionized the art of making flour, first into public notice,
+and of having contributed the largest share of capital and
+inventive skill to their full development. So much is this the case
+that the cluster of mills around the Falls of St. Anthony is to-day
+looked upon as the head-center of the milling industry not only of
+this country, but of the world. An exception to this broad
+statement may possibly be made in favor of the city of Buda Pest,
+in Austro-Hungary, from the leading mills in which the millers in
+this country have obtained many valuable ideas. To the credit of
+American millers and millwrights it must, however, be said that
+they have in all cases improved upon the information they have thus
+obtained.</p>
+
+<p>"To rightly understand the change that has taken place in
+milling methods during the last ten years, it is necessary to
+compare the old way with the new, and to observe wherein they
+differ. From the days of Oliver Evans, the first American mechanic
+to make any improvement in milling machinery, until 1870, there
+was, if we may except some grain cleaning or smut machines, no very
+strongly marked advance in milling machinery or in the methods of
+manufacturing flour. It is true that the reel covered with
+finely-woven silk bolting cloth had taken the place of the muslin
+or woolen covered hand sieve, and that the old granite millstones
+have given place to the French burr; but these did not affect the
+essential parts of the <i>modus operandi</i>, although the quality
+of the product was, no doubt, materially improved. The processes
+employed in all the mills in the United States ten years ago were
+identical, or very nearly so, with those in use in the Brandywine
+Mills in Evans's day. They were very simple, and may be divided
+into two distinct operations.</p>
+
+<p>"First. Grinding (literally) the wheat.</p>
+
+<p>"Second. Bolting or separating the flour or interior portion of
+the berry from the outer husk, or bran. It may seem to some a rash
+assertion, but this primitive way of making flour is still in vogue
+in over one-half of the mills of the United States. This does not,
+however, affect the truth of the statement that the greater part of
+the flour now made in this country is made on an entirely different
+and vastly-improved system, which has come to be known to the trade
+as the new process.</p>
+
+<p>"In looking for a reason for the sudden activity and spirit of
+progress which had its culmination in the new process, the
+character of the wheat raised in the different sections of the
+Union must be taken into consideration. Wheat may be divided into
+two classes, spring and winter, the latter generally being more
+starchy and easily pulverized, and at the same time having a very
+tough bran or husk, which does not readily crumble or cut to pieces
+in the process of grinding. It was with this wheat that the mills
+of the country had chiefly to do, and the defects of the old system
+of milling were not then so apparent. With the settlement of
+Minnesota, and the development of its capacities as a wheat-growing
+State, a new factor in the milling problem was introduced, which
+for a time bid fair to ruin every miller who undertook to solve it.
+The wheat raised in this State was, from the climatic conditions, a
+spring wheat, hard in structure and having a thin, tender, and
+friable bran. In milling this wheat, if an attempt was made to
+grind it as fine as was then customary to grind winter wheat, the
+bran was ground almost as fine as the flour, and passed as readily
+through the meshes of the bolting reels or sieves, rendering the
+flour dark, specky, and altogether unfit to enter the Eastern
+markets in competition with flour from the winter wheat sections.
+On the other hand, if the grinding was not so fine as to break up
+the bran, the interior of the berry being harder to pulverize, was
+not rendered sufficiently fine, and there remained after the flour
+was bolted out a large percentage of shorts or middlings, which,
+while containing the strongest and best flour in the berry, were so
+full of dirt and impurities as to render them unfit for any further
+grinding except for the very lowest grade of flour, technically
+known as 'red dog.' The flour produced from the first grinding was
+also more or less specky and discolored, and, in everything but
+strength, inferior to that made from winter wheat, while the
+'yield' was so small, or, in other words, the amount of wheat which
+it took to make a barrel of flour was so large, that milling in
+Minnesota and other spring wheat sections was anything but
+profitable.</p>
+
+<p>"The problem which ten years since confronted the millers of
+this city was how to obtain from the wheat which they had to grind
+a white, clear flour, and to so increase the yield as to leave some
+margin for profit. The first step in the solution of this problem
+was the invention by E. N. La Croix of the machine which has since
+been called the purifier, which removed the dirt and light
+impurities from the refuse middlings in the same manner that dust
+and chaff are removed from wheat by a fanning mill. The middlings
+thus purified were then reground, and the result was a much whiter
+and cleaner flour than it had been possible to obtain under the old
+process of low close grinding. This flour was called 'patent' or
+'fancy,' and at once took a high position in the market. The first
+machine built by La Croix was immediately improved by George T.
+Smith, and has since then been the subject of numberless
+variations, changes, and improvements; and over the principles
+embodied in its construction there has been fought one of the
+longest and most bitter battles recorded in the annals of patent
+litigation in this country. The purifier is to-day the most
+important machine in use in the manufacture of flour in this
+country, and may with propriety be called the corner-stone of new
+process milling. The earliest experiments in its use in this
+country were made in what was then known as the 'big mill' in this
+city, owned by Washburn, Stephens &amp; Co., and now known as the
+Washburn Mill B.</p>
+
+<p>"The next step in the development of the new process, also
+originating in Minneapolis, was the abandonment of the old system
+of cracking the millstone, and substituting in its stead the use of
+smooth surfaces on the millstones, thus in a large measure doing
+away with the abrasion of the bran, and raising the quality of the
+flour produced at the first grinding. So far as we know, Mr. E. R.
+Stephens, a Minneapolis miller, then employed in the mill owned by
+Messrs. Pillsbury, Crocker &amp; Fish, and now a member of the
+prominent milling firm of Freeman &amp; Stephens, River Falls,
+Wisconsin, was the first to venture on this innovation. He also
+first practiced the widening of the furrows in the millstones and
+increasing their number, thus adding largely to the amount of
+middlings made at the first grinding, and raising the percentage of
+patent flour. He was warmly supported by Amasa K. Ostrander, since
+deceased, the founder and for a number of years the editor of the
+<i>North-Western Miller</i>, a trade newspaper. The new ideas were
+for a time vigorously combated by the millers, but their worth was
+so plain that they were soon adopted, not only in Minneapolis, but
+by progressive millers throughout the country. The truth was the
+'new process' in its entirety, which may be summarized in four
+steps--first, grinding or, more properly, granulating the berry;
+second, bolting or separating the 'chop' or meal into first flour,
+middlings, and bran; third, purifying the middlings, fourth,
+regrinding and rebolting the middlings to produce the higher grade,
+or 'patent' flour. This higher grade flour drove the best winter
+wheat flours out of the Eastern markets, and placed milling in
+Minnesota upon a firm basis. The development of the 'new process'
+cannot be claimed by any one man. Hundreds of millers all over the
+country have contributed to its advance, but the millers of
+Minneapolis have always taken the lead.</p>
+
+<p>"Within the past two or three years what may be distinctively
+called the 'new process' has, in the mills of Minneapolis and some
+few other leading mills in the country, been giving place to a new
+system, or rather, a refinement of the processes above described.
+This latest system is known to the trade as the 'gradual reduction'
+or high-grinding system, as the 'new process' is the medium
+high-grinding system, and the old way is the low or close grinding
+system. In using the gradual reduction in making flour the
+millstones are abandoned, except for finishing some of the inferior
+grades of flour, and the work is done by means of grooved and plain
+rollers, made of chilled iron or porcelain. In some cases disks of
+chilled iron, suitably furrowed, are used, and in others concave
+mills, consisting of a cylinder running against a concave plate. In
+Minneapolis the chilled iron rolls take the precedence of all other
+means.</p>
+
+<p>"The system of gradual reduction is much more complicated than
+either of those which preceded it; but the results obtained are a
+marked advance over the 'new process.' The percentage of high-grade
+flour is increased, several grades of different degrees of
+excellence being produced, and the yield is also greater from a
+given quantity of wheat. The system consists in reducing the wheat
+to flour, not at one operation, as in the old system, nor in two
+grindings, as in the 'new process,' but in several successive
+reductions, four, five, or six, as the case may be. The wheat is
+first passed through a pair of corrugated chilled iron rollers,
+which merely split it open along the crease of the berry,
+liberating the dirt which lies in the crease so that it can be
+removed by bolting. A very small percentage of low-grade flour is
+also made in this reduction. After passing through what is
+technically called a 'scalping reel' to remove the dirt and flour,
+the broken wheat is passed through a second set of corrugated
+rollers, by which it is further broken up, and then passes through
+a second separating reel, which removes the flour and middlings.
+This operation is repeated successively until the flour portion of
+the berry is entirely removed from the bran, the necessary
+separation being made after each reduction. The middlings from the
+several reductions are passed through the purifiers, and, after
+being purified, are reduced to flour by successive reductions on
+smooth iron or porcelain rollers. In some cases, as stated above,
+iron disks and concave mills are substituted for the roller mill,
+but the operation is substantially the same. One of the principal
+objects sought to be attained by this high-grinding system is to
+avoid all abrasion of the bran, another is to take out the dirt in
+the crease of the berry at the beginning of the process, and still
+another to thoroughly free the bran from flour, so as to obtain as
+large a yield as possible. Incidental to the improved methods of
+milling, as now practiced in this country, is a marked improvement
+in the cleaning of the grain and preparing it for flouring. The
+earliest grain-cleaning machine was the 'smutter,' the office of
+which was to break the smut balls, and scour the outside of the
+bran to remove any adhering dust, the scouring machine being too
+harsh in its action, breaking the kernels of wheat, and so
+scratching and weakening the bran that it broke up readily in the
+grinding. The scouring process was therefore lessened, and was
+followed by brush machines, which brushed the dirt, loosened up and
+left by the scourer, from the berry. Other machines for removing
+the fuzzy and germ ends of the berry have also been introduced, and
+everything possible is done to free the grain from extraneous
+impurities before the process of reduction is commenced. In all the
+minor details of the mill there has been the same marked change,
+until the modern merchant mill of to-day no more resembles that of
+twenty-five years ago than does the modern cotton mill the
+old-fashioned distaff. The change has extended into the winter
+wheat sections, and no mill in the United States can hope to hold
+its place in the markets unless it is provided with the many
+improvements in machinery and processes which have resulted from
+the experiments begun in this city only ten years since, and which
+have made the name of Minneapolis and the products of her many
+mills famous throughout the world. The relative merits of the flour
+made by the new process and the old have been warmly discussed, but
+the general verdict of the great body of consumers is that the
+patent or new process flour is better in every way for bread making
+purposes, being clearer, whiter, more evenly granulated, and
+possessing more strength. Careful chemical analysis has confirmed
+this. As between winter and spring wheat flours made by the new
+process and gradual reduction systems, it maybe remarked that the
+former contain more starch and are whiter in color, while the
+latter, having more gluten, excel in strength. In milling all
+varieties of wheat, whether winter or spring, the new processes are
+in every way superior to the old, and, in aiding their inception
+and development, the millers of Minneapolis have conferred a
+lasting benefit on the country.</p>
+
+<p>"Minneapolis, Minn., December 1, 1880."</p>
+
+<h3>THE MILLING STRUCTURES AND MACHINERY.</h3>
+
+<p>Mr. Johnson added the following, showing the present status of
+the milling industry in Minneapolis:</p>
+
+<p>"The description of the process of the manufacture of flour so
+well given above, conveys no idea of the extent and magnitude of
+the milling structures, machinery, and buildings employed in the
+business. Many of the leading millers and millwrights have
+personally visited and studied the best mills in England, France,
+Hungary, and Germany, and are as familiar with their theory,
+methods, and construction as of their own, and no expense or labor
+has been spared in introducing the most approved features of the
+improvements in the foreign mills. Experimenting is constantly
+going on, and the path behind the successful millers is strewn with
+the wrecks of failures. A very large proportion of the machinery is
+imported, though the American machinists are fast outstripping
+their European rivals in the quality and efficiency of the
+machinery needed for the new mills constantly going up.</p>
+
+<p>"There are twenty-eight of these mills now constructed and at
+work, operating an equivalent of 412 runs of stone, consuming over
+sixteen million bushels of wheat, and manufacturing over three
+million barrels of flour annually. Their capacities range from 250
+to 1,500 barrels of flour per day. Great as these capacities are,
+there is now one in process of construction, the Pillsbury A Mill,
+which at the beginning of the harvest of 1881 will have a capacity
+of 4,000 barrels daily. The Washburn A Mill, whose capacity is now
+1,500 barrels, is being enlarged to make 8,500 barrels a day, and
+the Crown Roller Mill, owned by Christian Bros. &amp; Co., is also
+being enlarged to produce 3,000 barrels a day. The largest mill in
+Europe has a daily capacity of but 2,800 barrels, and no European
+mill is fitted with the exquisite perfection of machinery and
+apparatus to be found in the mills of this city.</p>
+
+<p>"The buildings are mainly built of blue limestone, found so
+abundant in the quarries of this city, range and line work, and
+rest on the solid ledge. The earlier built mills are severely
+plain, but the newer ones are greatly improved by the taste of the
+architect, and are imposing and beautiful in appearance."</p>
+
+<h3>DIRECT FOREIGN TRADE.</h3>
+
+<p>The flour of Minneapolis, holding so high a rank in the markets
+of the world, is always in active demand, especially the best
+grades, and brings from $1.00 to $1.60 per barrel more than flour
+of the best qualities of southern, eastern, or foreign wheat.
+During the year nearly a million barrels were shipped direct to
+European and other foreign ports, on through bills of lading, and
+drawn for by banks here having special foreign exchange
+arrangements, at sight, on the day of shipment. This trade is
+constantly increasing, and the amount of flour handled by eastern
+commission men is decreasing in proportion.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p>Referring to the foregoing, the following letter from Mr. Geo.
+T. Smith to the editor of the <i>London Miller</i> is of
+interest:</p>
+
+<p>SIR: I find published in the <i>North-western Miller</i> of
+December 24, 1880, extracts from an article on the origin of new
+process milling, prepared by Albert Hoppin, Esq., editor of the
+above-named journal, for the use of one of the statistical
+divisions of the United States census, which is so at variance, in
+at least one important particular, with the facts set forth in the
+paper read by me before the British and Irish millers, at their
+meeting in May last, that I think I ought to take notice of its
+statements, more especially as the <i>North-Western Miller</i> has
+quite a circulation on this side of the water.</p>
+
+<p>As stated in the paper read by me above-mentioned, I was engaged
+in February, 1871, by Mr. Christian, who was then operating the
+"big," or Washburn Mill at Minneapolis, to take charge of the
+stones in that mill. At this time Mr. Christian was very much
+interested in the improvement of the quality of his flour, which in
+common with the flour of Minneapolis mills, without exception, was
+very poor indeed. For some time previous to this I had insisted to
+him most strenuously that the beginning of any improvement must be
+found in smooth, true, and well balanced stones, and it was because
+he was at last convinced that my ideas were at least worthy of a
+practical test I was placed in charge of his mill. Nearly two
+months were consumed in truing and smoothing the stone, as all
+millers in the mill had struck at once when they became acquainted
+with the character of the changes I proposed to make.</p>
+
+<p>I remained with Mr. Christian until the latter part of 1871, in
+all about eight months. During this time the flour from the
+Washburn Mill attained a celebrity that made it known and sought
+after all over the United States. It commanded attention as an
+event of the very greatest importance, from the fact that it was
+justly felt that if a mill grinding spring wheat exclusively was
+capable of producing a flour infinitely superior in every way to
+the best that could be made from the finest varieties of winter
+wheats, the new North Western territory, with its peculiar
+adaptation to the growing of spring grain, and its boundless
+capacity for production, must at once become one of the most
+important sections of the country.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Christian's appreciation of the improvements I had made in
+his mill was attested by doubly-locked and guarded entrances, and
+by the stringent regulations which were adopted to prevent any of
+his employes carrying information with regard to the process to his
+competitors.</p>
+
+<p>All this time other Minneapolis mills were doing such work and
+only such as they had done previously. Ought not the writer of an
+article on the origin of new process milling--which article is
+intended to become historical, and to have its authenticity
+indorsed by the government--to have known whether Mr. Christian, in
+the Washburn Mill, did or did not make a grade of flour which has
+hardly been excelled since for months before any other Minneapolis
+mill approached his product in any degree? And should he not be
+well enough acquainted with the milling of that period--1871-2--to
+know that such results as were obtained in the Washburn Mill could
+only be secured by the use of <i>smooth</i> and <i>true</i> stones?
+Mr. Stephens--whom I shall mention again presently--did <i>not</i>
+work in the Washburn Mill while I was in charge of it.</p>
+
+<p>In the fall of 1871 I entered into a contract with Mr. C. A.
+Pillsbury, owner of the Taylor Mill and senior partner in the firm
+by whom the Minneapolis Mill was operated, to put both those mills
+into condition to make the same grade of flour as Mr. Christian was
+making. The consideration in the contract was 5,000 dols. At the
+above mills I met to some extent the same obstruction in regard to
+millers striking as had greeted me at Mr. Christian's mill earlier
+in the year; but among those who did not strike at the Minneapolis
+Mill I saw, for the first time, Mr. Stephens--then still in his
+apprenticeship--whom Mr. Hoppin declares to have been, "so far as I
+know," the first miller to use smooth stones. If Mr. Hoppin is
+right in his assertion, perhaps he will explain why, during the
+eight months I was at the Washburn Mill, Mr. Stephens did not make
+a corresponding improvement in the product of the Minneapolis Mill.
+That he did not do this is amply proved by the fact of Mr.
+Pillsbury giving me 5,000 dols. to introduce improvements into his
+mills, when, supposing Mr. Hoppin's statement to be correct, he
+might have had the same alterations carried out under Mr. Stephens'
+direction at a mere nominal cost. As a matter of fact, the stones
+in both the Taylor and Minneapolis Mills were as rough as any in
+the Washburn Mill when I took charge of them.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it appears (1) that the flour made by the mill in which
+Stephens was employed was not improved in quality, while that of
+the Washburn Mill, where he was not employed, became the finest
+that had ever been made in the United States at that time. That (2)
+the owner of the mill in which Mr. Stephens was employed, as he was
+not making good flour, engaged me at a large cost to introduce into
+his mills the alterations by which only, both Mr. Hoppin and myself
+agree, could any material improvement in the milling of that period
+be effected, .viz., smooth, true, and well-balanced stones.--GEO.
+T. SMITH.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p>For breachy animals do not use barbed fences. To see the
+lacerations that these fences have produced upon the innocent
+animals should be sufficient testimony against them. Many use pokes
+and blinders on cattle and goats, but as a rule such things fail.
+The better way is to separate breachy animals from the lot, as
+others will imitate their habits sooner or later, and then, if not
+curable, <i>sell them</i>.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="10"></a></p>
+
+<h2>THE GUENON MILK-MIRROR.</h2>
+
+<p>The name of the simple Bordeaux peasant is, and should be,
+permanently associated with his discovery that the milking
+qualities of cows were, to a considerable extent, indicated by
+certain external marks easily observed. We had long known that
+capacious udders and large milk veins, combined with good digestive
+capacity and a general preponderance of the alimentary over the
+locomotive system, were indications that rarely misled in regard to
+the ability of a cow to give much milk; but to judge of the amount
+of milk a cow would yield, and the length of time she would hold
+out in her flow, two or three years before she could be called a
+cow--this was Guenon's great accomplishment, and the one for which
+he was awarded a gold medal by the Agricultural Society of his
+native district. This was the first of many honors with which he
+was rewarded, and it is much to say that no committee of
+agriculturists who have ever investigated the merits of the system
+have ever spoken disparagingly of it. Those who most closely study
+it, especially following Guenon's original system, which has never
+been essentially improved upon, are most positive in regard to its
+truth, enthusiastic in regard to its value.</p>
+
+<p>The fine, soft hair upon the hinder part of a cow's udder for
+the most part turns upward. This upward-growing hair extends in
+most cases all over that part of the udder visible between the hind
+legs, but is occasionally marked by spots or mere lines, usually
+slender ovals, in which the hair grows down. This tendency of the
+hair to grow upward is not confined to the udder proper; but
+extends out upon the thighs and upward to the tail. The edges of
+this space over which the hair turns up are usually distinctly
+marked, and, as a rule, the larger the area of this space, which is
+called the "mirror" or "escutcheon," the more milk the cow will
+give, and the longer she will continue in milk.</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/4a.png"><img src=
+"images/4a_th.png" alt=
+"ESCUTCHEON OF THE JERSEY BULL-CALF, GRAND MIRROR, 4,904."></a></p>
+
+<p class="ctr">ESCUTCHEON OF THE JERSEY BULL-CALF, GRAND MIRROR,
+4,904.</p>
+
+<p>That portion of the escutcheon which covers the udder and
+extends out on the inside of each thigh, has been designated as the
+udder or mammary mirror; that which runs upward towards the setting
+on of the tail, the rising or placental mirror. The mammary mirror
+is of the greater value, yet the rising mirror is not to be
+disregarded. It is regarded of especial moment that the mirror,
+taken as a whole, be symmetrical, and especially that the mammary
+mirror be so; yet it often occurs that it is far otherwise, its
+outline being often very fantastical--exhibiting deep <i>bays</i>,
+so to speak, and islands of downward growing hair. There are also
+certain "ovals," never very large, yet distinct, which do not
+detract from the estimated value of an escutcheon; notably those
+occurring on the lobes of the udder just above the hind teats.
+These are supposed to be points of value, though for what reason it
+would be hard to tell, yet they do occur upon some of the very best
+milch cows, and those whose mirrors correspond most closely to
+their performances.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Guenon's discovery enables breeders to determine which of
+their calves are most promising, and in purchasing young stock it
+affords indications which rarely fail as to their comparative milk
+yield. These indications occasionally prove utterly fallacious, and
+Mr. Guenon gives rules for determining this class, which he calls
+"bastards," without waiting for them to fail in their milk. The
+signs are, however, rarely so distinct that one would be willing to
+sell a twenty-quart cow, whose yield confirmed the prediction of
+her mirror at first calving, because of the possibility of the
+going dry in two months, or so, as indicated by her bastardy
+marks.</p>
+
+<p>It is an interesting fact that the mirrors of bulls (which are
+much like those of cows, but less extensive in every direction) are
+reflected in their daughters. This gives rise to the dangerous
+custom of breeding for mirrors, rather than for milk. What the
+results may be after a few years it is easy to see. The mirror,
+being valued for its own sake--that is, because it sells the
+heifers--will be likely to lose its practical significance and
+value as a <i>milk</i> mirror.</p>
+
+<p>We have a striking photograph of a young Jersey bull, the
+property of Mr. John L. Hopkins, of Atlanta, Ga., and called "Grand
+Mirror." This we have caused to be engraved and the mirror is
+clearly shown. A larger mirror is rarely seen upon a bull. We hope
+in a future number to exhibit some cows' mirrors of different forms
+and degrees of excellence.--<i>Rural New Yorker</i>.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="11"></a></p>
+
+<h2>TWO GOOD LAWN TREES.</h2>
+
+<p>The negundo, or ash-leaved maple, as it is called in the Eastern
+States, better known at the West as a box elder, is a tree that is
+not known as extensively as it deserves. It is a hard maple, that
+grows as rapidly as the soft maple; is hardy, possesses a beautiful
+foliage of black green leaves, and is symmetrical in shape. Through
+eastern Iowa I found it growing wild, and a favorite tree with the
+early settlers, who wanted something that gave shade and protection
+to their homes quickly on their prairie farms. Brought east, its
+growth is rapid, and it loses none of the characteristics it
+possessed in its western home. Those who have planted it are well
+pleased with it. It is a tree that transplants easily, and I know
+of no reason why it should not be more popular.</p>
+
+<p>For ornamental lawn planting, I give pre-eminence to the
+cut-leaf weeping birch. Possessing all the good qualities of the
+white birch, it combines with them a beauty and delicate grace
+yielded by no other tree. It is an upright grower, with slender,
+drooping branches, adorned with leaves of deep rich green, each
+leaf being delicately cut, as with a knife, into semi-skeletons. It
+holds its foliage and color till quite late in the fall. The bark,
+with age, becomes white, resembling the white birch, and the beauty
+of the tree increases with its age. It is a free grower, and
+requires no trimming. Nature has given it a symmetry which art
+cannot improve.</p>
+
+<p>H.T.J.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="12"></a></p>
+
+<h2>CUTTING SODS FOR LAWNS.</h2>
+
+<p>I am a very good sod layer, and used to lay very large
+lawns--half to three-quarters of an acre. I cut the sods as
+follows: Take a board eight to nine inches wide, four, five, or six
+feet long, and cut downward all around the board, then turn the
+board over and cut again alongside the edge of the board, and so on
+as many sods as needed. Then cut the turf with a sharp spade, all
+the same lengths. Begin on one end, and roll together. Eight inches
+by five feet is about as much as a man can handle conveniently. It
+is very easy to load them on a wagon, cart, or barrow, and they can
+be quickly laid. After laying a good piece, sprinkle a little with
+a watering pot, if the sods are dry; then use the back of the spade
+to smooth them a little. If a very fine effect is wanted, throw a
+shovelful or two of good earth over each square yard, and smooth it
+with the back of a steel rake.</p>
+
+<p>F.H.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p>[COUNTRY GENTLEMAN.]</p>
+
+<p><a name="13"></a></p>
+
+<h2>HORTICULTURAL NOTES.</h2>
+
+<p>The Western New York Society met at Rochester, January 26.</p>
+
+<p><i>New Apples, Pears, Grapes, etc.</i>--Wm. C Barry, secretary
+of the committee on native fruits, read a full report. Among the
+older varieties of the apple, he strongly recommended Button
+Beauty, which had proved so excellent in Massachusetts, and which
+had been equally successful at the Mount Hope Nurseries at
+Rochester; the fine growth of the tree and its great productiveness
+being strongly in its favor. The Wagener and Northern Spy are among
+the finer sorts. The Melon is one of the best among the older
+sorts; the fruit being quite tender will not bear long shipment,
+but it possesses great value for home use, and being a poor grower,
+it had been thrown aside by nurserymen and orchardists. It should
+be top-grafted on more vigorous sorts. The Jonathan is another fine
+sort of slender growth, which should be top-grafted.</p>
+
+<p>Among new pears, Hoosic and Frederic Clapp were highly commended
+for their excellence. Some of the older peaches of fine quality had
+of late been neglected, and among them Druid Hill and Brevoort.</p>
+
+<p>Among the many new peaches highly recommended for their early
+ripening, there was great resemblance to each other, and some had
+proved earlier than Alexander.</p>
+
+<p>Of the new grapes, Lady Washington was the most promising. The
+Secretary was a failure. The Jefferson was a fine sort, of high
+promise.</p>
+
+<p>Among the new white grapes, Niagara, Prentiss, and Duchess stood
+pre-eminent, and were worthy of the attention of cultivators. The
+Vergennes, from Vermont, a light amber colored sort, was also
+highly commended. The Elvira, so highly valued in Missouri, does
+not succeed well here. Several facts were stated in relation to the
+Delaware grape, showing its reliability and excellence.</p>
+
+<p>Several new varieties of the raspberry were named, but few of
+them were found equal to the best old sorts. If Brinckle's Orange
+were taken as a standard for quality, it would show that none had
+proved its equal in fine quality. The Caroline was like it in
+color, but inferior in flavor. The New Rochelle was of second
+quality. Turner was a good berry, but too soft for distant
+carriage.</p>
+
+<p>Of the many new strawberries named, each seemed to have some
+special drawback. The Bidwell, however, was a new sort of
+particular excellence, and Charles Downing thinks it the most
+promising of the new berries.</p>
+
+<p><i>Discussion on Grapes.</i>--C. W. Beadle, of Ontario, in
+allusion to Moore's Early grape, finds it much earlier than the
+Concord, and equal to it in quality, ripening even before the
+Hartford. S. D. Willard, of Geneva, thought it inferior to the
+Concord, and not nearly so good as the Worden. The last named was
+both earlier and better than the Concord, and sold for seven cents
+per pound when the Concord brought only four cents. C. A. Green, of
+Monroe County, said the Lady Washington proved to be a very fine
+grape, slightly later than Concord. P. L. Perry, of Canandaigua,
+said that the Vergennes ripens with Hartford, and possesses
+remarkable keeping qualities, and is of excellent quality and free
+from pulp. He presented specimens which had been kept in good
+condition. He added, in relation to the Worden grape, that some
+years ago it brought 18 cents per pound in New York when the
+Concord sold three days later for only 8 cents. [In such
+comparisons, however, it should be borne in mind that new varieties
+usually receive more attention and better culture, giving them an
+additional advantage.]</p>
+
+<p>The Niagara grape received special attention from members. A. C.
+Younglove, of Yates County, thought it superior to any other white
+grape for its many good qualities. It was a vigorous and healthy
+grower, and the clusters were full and handsome. W. J. Fowler, of
+Monroe County, saw the vine in October, with the leaves still
+hanging well, a great bearer and the grape of fine quality. C. L.
+Hoag, of Lockport, said he began to pick the Niagara on the 26th of
+August, but its quality improved by hanging on the vine. J. Harris,
+of Niagara County, was well acquainted with the Niagara, and
+indorsed all the commendation which had been uttered in its favor.
+T. C. Maxwell said there was one fault--we could not get it, as it
+was not in market. W. C. Barry, of Rochester, spoke highly of the
+Niagara, and its slight foxiness would be no objection to those who
+like that peculiarity. C. L. Hoag thought this was the same quality
+that Col. Wilder described as "a little aromatic." A. C. Younglove
+found the Niagara to ripen with the Delaware. Inquiry being made
+relative to the Pockington grape, H. E. Hooker said it ripened as
+early as the Concord. C. A. Green was surprised that it had not
+attracted more attention, as he regarded it as a very promising
+grape. J. Charlton, of Rochester, said that the fruit had been cut
+for market on the 29th of August, and on the 6th of September it
+was fully ripe; but he has known it to hang as late as November. J.
+S. Stone had found that when it hung as late as November it became
+sweet and very rich in flavor.</p>
+
+<p><i>New Peaches.</i>--A. C. Younglove had found such very early
+sorts as Alexander and Amsden excellent for home use, but not
+profitable for market. The insects and birds made heavy
+depredations on them. While nearly all very early and high-colored
+sorts suffer largely from the birds, the Rivers, a white peach,
+does not attract them, and hence it may be profitable for market if
+skillfully packed; rough and careless handling will spoil the
+fruit. He added that the Wheatland peach sustains its high
+reputation, and he thought it the best of all sorts for market,
+ripening with Late Crawford. It is a great bearer, but carries a
+crop of remarkably uniform size, so that it is not often necessary
+to throw out a bad specimen. This is the result of experience with
+it by Mr. Rogers at Wheatland, in Monroe County, and at his own
+residence in Vine Valley. S. D. Willard confirmed all that Mr.
+Younglove had said of the excellence of the Rivers peach. He had
+ripened the Amsden for several years, and found it about two weeks
+earlier than the Rivers, and he thought if the Amsden were properly
+thinned, it would prevent the common trouble of its rotting; such
+had been his experience. E. A. Bronson, of Geneva, objected to
+making very early peaches prominent for marketing, as purchasers
+would prefer waiting a few days to paying high prices for the
+earliest, and he would caution people against planting the Amsden
+too largely, and its free recommendation might mislead. May's
+Choice was named by H. E. Hooker as a beautiful yellow peach,
+having no superior in quality, but perhaps it may not be found to
+have more general value than Early and Late Crawford. It is
+scarcely distinguishable in appearance from fine specimens of Early
+Crawford. W. C. Barry was called on for the most recent experience
+with the Waterloo, but said he was not at home when it ripened, but
+he learned that it had sustained its reputation. A. C. Younglove
+said that the Salway is the best late peach, ripening eight or ten
+days after the Smock. S. D. Willard mentioned an orchard near
+Geneva, consisting of 25 Salway trees, which for four years had
+ripened their crop and had sold for $4 per bushel in the
+Philadelphia market, or for $3 at Geneva--a higher price than for
+any other sort--and the owner intends to plant 200 more trees. W.
+C. Barry said the Salway will not ripen at Rochester. Hill's Chili
+was named by some members as a good peach for canning and drying,
+some stating that it ripens before and others after Late Crawford.
+It requires thinning on the tree, or the fruit will be poor. The
+Allen was pronounced by Mr. Younglove as an excellent, intensely
+high-colored late peach.</p>
+
+<p><i>Insects Affecting Horticulture</i>.--Mr. Zimmerman spoke of
+the importance of all cultivators knowing so much of insects and
+their habits as to distinguish their friends from their enemies.
+When unchecked they increase in an immense ratio, and he mentioned
+as an instance that the green fly (<i>Aphis</i>) in five
+generations may become the parent of six thousand million
+descendants. It is necessary, then, to know what other insects are
+employed in holding them in check, by feeding on them. Some of our
+most formidable insects have been accidentally imported from
+Europe, such as the codling moth, asparagus beetle, cabbage
+butterfly, currant worm and borer, elm-tree beetle, hessian fly,
+etc.; but in nearly every instance these have come over without
+bringing their insect enemies with them, and in consequence they
+have spread more extensively here than in Europe. It was therefore
+urged that the Agricultural Department at Washington be requested
+to import, as far as practicable, such parasites as are positively
+known to prey on noxious insects. The cabbage fly eluded our keen
+custom-house officials in 1866, and has enjoyed free citizenship
+ever since. By accident, one of its insect enemies (a small black
+fly) was brought over with it, and is now doing excellent work by
+keeping the cabbage fly in check.</p>
+
+<p>The codling moth, one of the most formidable fruit destroyers,
+may be reduced in number by the well-known paper bands; but a more
+efficient remedy is to shower them early in the season with Paris
+green, mixed in water at the rate of only one pound to one hundred
+gallons of water, with a forcing pump, soon after blossoming. After
+all the experiments made and repellents used for the plum curculio,
+the jarring method is found the most efficient and reliable, if
+properly performed. Various remedies for insects sometimes have the
+credit of doing the work, if used in those seasons when the insects
+happen to be few. With some insects, the use of oil is
+advantageous, as it always closes up their breathing holes and
+suffocates them. The oil should be mixed with milk, and then
+diluted as required, as the oil alone cannot be mixed with the
+water. As a general remedy, Paris green is the strongest that can
+be applied. A teaspoonful to a tablespoonful, in a barrel of water,
+is enough. Hot water is the best remedy for house plants. Place one
+hand over the soil, invert the pot, and plunge the foliage for a
+second only at a time in water heated to from 150&deg; to
+200&deg;F, according to the plants; or apply with a fine rose. The
+yeast remedy has not proved successful in all cases.</p>
+
+<p>Among beneficial insects, there are about one hundred species of
+lady bugs, and, so far as known, all are beneficial. Cultivators
+should know them. They destroy vast quantities of plant lice. The
+ground beetles are mostly cannibals, and should not be destroyed.
+The large black beetle, with coppery dots, makes short work with
+the Colorado potato beetles; and a bright green beetle will climb
+trees to get a meal of canker worms. Ichneumon flies are among our
+most useful insects. The much-abused dragon flies are perfectly
+harmless to us, but destroy many mosquitoes and flies.</p>
+
+<p>Among insects that attack large fruits is the codling moth, to
+be destroyed by paper bands, or with Paris green showered in water.
+The round-headed apple-tree borer is to be cut out, and the eggs
+excluded with a sheet of tarred paper around the stem, and slightly
+sunk in the earth. For the oyster-shell bark louse, apply linseed
+oil. Paris green, in water, will kill the canker worm. Tobacco
+water does the work for plant lice. Peach-tree borers are excluded
+with tarred or felt paper, and cut out with a knife. Jar the grape
+flea beetle on an inverted umbrella early in the morning. Among
+small-fruit insects, the strawberry worms are readily destroyed
+with hellebore, an ounce to a gallon of warm water. The same remedy
+destroys the imported currant worm.</p>
+
+<p><i>Insect Destroyers</i>.--Prof. W. Saunders, of the Province of
+Ontario, followed Mr. Zimmerman with a paper on other departments
+of the same general subject, which contained much information and
+many suggestions of great value to cultivators. He had found Paris
+green an efficient remedy for the bud-moth on pear and other trees.
+He also recommends Paris green for the grapevine flea beetle.
+Hellebore is much better for the pear slug than dusting with sand,
+as these slugs, as soon as their skin is spoiled by being sanded,
+cast it off and go on with their work of destruction as freely as
+ever, and this they repeat. He remarked that it is a common error
+that all insects are pests to the cultivator. There are many
+parasites, or useful ones, which prey on our insect enemies. Out of
+7,000 described insects in this country, only about 50 have proved
+destructive to our crops. Parasites are much more numerous. Among
+lepidopterous insects (butterflies, etc.), there are very few
+noxious species; many active friends are found among the
+Hymenoptera (wasps, etc.), the ichneumon flies pre-eminently so;
+and in the order Hemiptera (bugs proper) are several that destroy
+our enemies. Hence the very common error that birds which destroy
+insects are beneficial to us, as they are more likely to destroy
+our insect friends than the fewer enemies. Those known as
+<i>flycatchers</i> may do neither harm nor good; so far as they eat
+the wheat-midge and Hessian fly they confer a positive benefit; in
+other instances they destroy both friends and enemies. Birds that
+are only partly insectivorous, and which eat grain and fruit, may
+need further inquiry. Prof. S. had examined the stomachs of many
+such birds, and particularly of the American robin, and the only
+curculio he ever found in any of these was a single one in a whole
+cherry which the bird had bolted entire. Robins had proved very
+destructive to his grapes, but had not assisted at all in
+protecting his cabbages growing alongside his fruit garden. These
+vegetables were nearly destroyed by the larvae of the cabbage fly,
+which would have afforded the birds many fine, rich meals. This
+comparatively feeble insect has been allowed by the throngs of
+birds to spread over the whole continent. A naturalist in one of
+the Western States had examined several species of the thrush, and
+found they had eaten mostly that class of insects known as our
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>Prof. S. spoke of the remedies for root lice, among which were
+hot water and bisulphide of carbon. Hot water will get cold before
+it can reach the smaller roots, however efficient it may be
+showered on leaves. Bisulphide of carbon is very volatile,
+inflammable, and sometimes explosive, and must be handled with
+great care. It permeates the soil, and if in sufficient quantity
+may be effective in destroying the phylloxera; but its cost and
+dangerous character prevent it from being generally
+recommended.</p>
+
+<p>Paris green is most generally useful for destroying insects. As
+sold to purchasers, it is of various grades of purity. The highest
+in price is commonly the purest, and really the cheapest. A
+difficulty with this variable quality is that it cannot be properly
+diluted with water, and those who buy and use a poor article and
+try its efficacy, will burn or kill their plants when they happen
+to use a stronger, purer, and more efficient one. Or, if the
+reverse is done, they may pronounce it a humbug from the resulting
+failure. One teaspoonful, if pure, is enough for a large pail of
+water; or if mixed with flour, there should be forty or fifty times
+as much. Water is best, as the operator will not inhale the dust.
+London purple is another form of the arsenic, and has very variable
+qualities of the poison, being merely refuse matter from
+manufactories. It is more soluble than Paris green, and hence more
+likely to scorch plants. On the whole, Paris green is much the best
+and most reliable for common use.</p>
+
+<p>At the close of Prof. Saunders' remarks some objections were
+made by members present to the use of Paris green on fruit soon
+after blossoming, and Prof. S. sustained the objection, in that the
+knowledge that the fruit had been showered with it would deter
+purchasers from receiving it, even if no poison could remain on it
+from spring to autumn. A man had brought to him potatoes to analyze
+for arsenic, on which Paris green had been used, and although it
+was shown to him that the poison did not reach the roots beneath
+the soil, and if it did it was insoluble and could not enter them,
+he was not satisfied until a careful analysis was made and no
+arsenic at all found in them. A member said that in mixing with
+plaster there should be 100 or 150 pounds of plaster to one of the
+Paris green, and that a smaller quantity, by weight, of flour would
+answer, as that is a more bulky article for the same weight.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="14"></a></p>
+
+<h2>OBSERVATIONS ON THE SALMON OF THE PACIFIC.</h2>
+
+<h3>By DAVID S. JORDAN and CHAS. H. GILBERT.</h3>
+
+<p>During the most of the present year, the writers have been
+engaged in the study of the fishes of the Pacific coast of the
+United States, in the interest of the U.S. Fish Commission and the
+U.S. Census Bureau. The following pages contain the principal facts
+ascertained concerning the salmon of the Pacific coast. It is
+condensed from our report to the U.S. Census Bureau, by permission
+of Professor Goode, assistant in charge of fishery
+investigations.</p>
+
+<p>There are five species of salmon (Oncorhynchus) in the waters of
+the North Pacific. We have at present no evidence of the existence
+of any more on either the American or the Asiatic side.</p>
+
+<p>These species may be called the quinnat or king salmon, the
+blue-back salmon or red-fish, the silver salmon, the dog salmon,
+and the hump-back salmon, or <i>Oncorhynchus chouicha, nerka,
+kisutch, keta</i>, and <i>gorbuscha</i>. All these species are now
+known to occur in the waters of Kamtschatka as well as in those of
+Alaska and Oregon.</p>
+
+<p>As vernacular names of definite application, the following are
+on record:</p>
+
+<p>a. Quinnat--Chouicha, king salmon, e'quinna, saw-kwey, Chinnook
+salmon, Columbia River salmon, Sacramento salmon, tyee salmon,
+Monterey salmon, deep-water salmon, spring salmon, ek-ul-ba
+("ekewan") (fall run).</p>
+
+<p>b. Blue-bock--krasnaya ryba, Alaska red-fish, Idaho red fish,
+sukkegh, Frazer's River salmon, rascal, oo-chooy-ha.</p>
+
+<p>c. Silver salmon--kisutch, winter salmon, hoopid, skowitz, coho,
+bielaya ryba, o-o-wun.</p>
+
+<p>d. Dog salmon--kayko, lekai, ktlawhy, qualoch, fall salmon,
+o-le-a-rah. The males of <i>all</i> the species in the fall are
+usually known as dog salmon, or fall salmon.</p>
+
+<p>e. Hump-back--gorbuscha, haddo, hone, holia, lost salmon, Puget
+Sound salmon, dog salmon (of Alaska).</p>
+
+<p>Of these species, the blue-back predominates in Frazer's River,
+the silver salmon in Puget Sound, the quinnat in the Columbia and
+the Sacramento, and the silver salmon in most of the small streams
+along the coast. All the species have been seen by us in the
+Columbia and in Frazer's River; all but the blue-back in the
+Sacramento, and all but the blue-back in waters tributary to Puget
+Sound. Only the quinnat has been noticed south of San Francisco,
+and its range has been traced as far as Ventura River, which is the
+southernmost stream in California which is not muddy and alkaline
+at its mouth.</p>
+
+<p>Of these species, the quinnat and blue-back salmon habitually
+"run" in the spring, the others in the fall. The usual order of
+running in the rivers is as follows: <i>nerka, chouicha, kisutch,
+gorbuscha, keta</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The economic value of the spring running salmon is far greater
+than that of the other species, because they can be captured in
+numbers when at their best, while the others are usually taken only
+after deterioration.</p>
+
+<p>The habits of the salmon in the ocean are not easily studied.
+Quinnat and silver salmon of every size are taken with the seine at
+almost any season in Puget Sound. The quinnat takes the hook freely
+in Monterey bay, both near the shore and at a distance of six or
+eight miles out. We have reason to believe that these two species
+do not necessarily seek great depths, but probably remain not very
+far from the mouth of the rivers in which they were spawned.</p>
+
+<p>The blue-back and the dog salmon probably seek deeper water, as
+the former is seldom or never taken with the seine in the ocean,
+and the latter is known to enter the Straits of Fuca at the
+spawning season.</p>
+
+<p>The great majority of the quinnat salmon and nearly all
+blue-back salmon enter the rivers in the spring. The run of both
+begins generally the last of March; it lasts, with various
+modifications and interruptions, until the actual spawning season
+in November; the time of running and the proportionate amount of
+each of the subordinate runs, varying with each different river. In
+general, the runs are slack in the summer and increase with the
+first high water of autumn. By the last of August only straggling
+blue-backs can be found in the lower course of any stream, but both
+in the Columbia and the Sacramento the quinnat runs in considerable
+numbers till October at least. In the Sacramento the run is
+greatest in the fall, and more run in the summer than in spring. In
+the Sacramento and the smaller rivers southward, there is a winter
+run, beginning in December.</p>
+
+<p>The spring salmon ascend only those rivers which are fed by the
+melting snows from the mountains, and which have sufficient volume
+to send their waters well out to sea. Such rivers are the
+Sacramento, Rogue, Klamath, Columbia, and Frazer's rivers.</p>
+
+<p>Those salmon which run in the spring are chiefly adults
+(supposed to be at least three years old). Their milt and spawn are
+no more developed than at the same time in others of the same
+species which will not enter the rivers until fall. It would appear
+that the contact with cold fresh water, when in the ocean, in some
+way caused them to turn toward it and to "run," before there is any
+special influence to that end exerted by the development of the
+organs of generation.</p>
+
+<p>High water on any of these rivers in the spring is always
+followed by an increased run of salmon. The canners think, and this
+is probably true, that salmon which would not have run till later
+are brought up by the contact with the cold water. The cause of
+this effect of cold fresh water is not understood. We may call it
+an instinct of the salmon, which is another way of expressing our
+ignorance. In general, it seems to be true that in those rivers and
+during those years when the spring run is greatest, the fall run is
+least to be depended on.</p>
+
+<p>As the season advances, smaller and younger salmon of these two
+species (quinnat and blue-back) enter the rivers to spawn, and in
+the fall these young specimens are very numerous. We have thus far
+failed to notice any gradations in size or appearance of these
+young fish by which their ages could be ascertained. It is,
+however, probable that some of both sexes reproduce at the age of
+one year. In Frazer's River, in the fall, quinnat male grilse of
+every size, from eight inches upward, were running, the milt fully
+developed, but usually not showing the hooked jaws and dark colors
+of the older males. Females less than eighteen inches in length
+were rare. All, large and small, then in the river, of either sex,
+had the ovaries or milt well developed.</p>
+
+<p>Little blue-backs of every size down to six inches are also
+found in the Upper Columbia in the fall, with their organs of
+generation fully developed. Nineteen twentieths of these young fish
+are males, and some of them have the hooked jaws and red color of
+the old males.</p>
+
+<p>The average weight of the quinnat in the Columbia in the spring
+is twenty-two pounds; in the Sacramento about sixteen. Individuals
+weighing from forty to sixty pounds are frequently found in both
+rivers, and some as high as eighty pounds are reported. It is
+questioned whether these large fishes are:</p>
+
+<p>(<i>a</i>.) Those which, of the same age, have grown more
+rapidly;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>b</i>.) Those which are older but have, for some reason,
+failed to spawn; or,</p>
+
+<p>(<i>c</i>.) Those which have survived one or more spawning
+seasons.</p>
+
+<p>All of these origins may be possible in individual cases; we
+are, however, of the opinion that the majority of these large fish
+are those which have hitherto run in the fall and so may have
+survived the spawning season previous.</p>
+
+<p>Those fish which enter the rivers in the spring continue their
+ascent until death or the spawning season overtakes them. Probably
+none of them ever return to the ocean, and a large proportion fail
+to spawn. They are known to ascend the Sacramento as far as the
+base of Mount Shasta, or to its extreme head-waters, about four
+hundred miles. In the Columbia they are known to ascend as far as
+the Bitter Root Mountains, and as far as the Spokan Falls, and
+their extreme limit is not known. This is a distance of six to
+eight hundred miles.</p>
+
+<p>At these great distances, when the fish have reached the
+spawning grounds, besides the usual changes of the breeding season,
+their bodies are covered with bruises on which patches of white
+fungus develop. The fins become mutilated, their eyes are often
+injured or destroyed; parasitic worms gather in their gills, they
+become extremely emaciated, their flesh becomes white from the loss
+of the oil, and as soon as the spawning act is accomplished, and
+sometimes before, all of them die. The ascent of the Cascades and
+the Dalles probably causes the injury or death of a great many
+salmon.</p>
+
+<p>When the salmon enter the river they refuse bait, and their
+stomachs are always found empty and contracted. In the rivers they
+do not feed, and when they reach the spawning grounds their
+stomachs, pyloric coeca and all, are said to be no larger than
+one's finger. They will sometimes take the fly, or a hook baited
+with salmon roe, in the clear waters of the upper tributaries, but
+there is no other evidence known to us that they feed when there.
+Only the quinnat and blue-back (then called red-fish) have been
+found in the fall at any great distance from the sea.</p>
+
+<p>The spawning season is probably about the same for all the
+species. It varies for all in different rivers and in different
+parts of the same river, and doubtless extends from July to
+December.</p>
+
+<p>The manner of spawning is probably similar for all the species,
+but we have no data for any except the quinnat. In this species the
+fish pair off, the male, with tail and snout, excavates a broad
+shallow "nest" in the gravelly bed of the stream, in rapid water,
+at a depth of one to four feet; the female deposits her eggs in it,
+and after the exclusion of the milt, they cover them with stones
+and gravel. They then float down the stream tail foremost. A great
+majority of them die. In the head-waters of the large streams all
+die, unquestionably. In the small streams, and near the sea, an
+unknown percentage probably survive. The young hatch in about sixty
+days, and most of them return to the ocean during the high water of
+the spring.</p>
+
+<p>The salmon of all kinds in the spring are silvery, spotted or
+not according to the species, and with the mouth about equally
+symmetrical in both sexes.</p>
+
+<p>As the spawning season approaches the female loses her silvery
+color, becomes more slimy, the scales on the back partly sink into
+the skin, and the flesh changes from salmon red and becomes
+variously paler, from the loss of the oil, the degree of paleness
+varying much with individuals and with inhabitants of different
+rivers.</p>
+
+<p>In the lower Sacramento the flesh of the quinnat in either
+spring or fall is rarely pale. In the Columbia, a few with pale
+flesh are sometimes taken in spring, and a good many in the fall.
+In Frazer's River the fall run of the quinnat is nearly worthless
+for canning purposes, because so many are white meated. In the
+spring very few are white meated, but the number increases towards
+fall, when there is every variation, some having red streaks
+running through them, others being red toward the head and pale
+toward the tail. The red and pale ones cannot be distinguished
+externally, and the color is dependent neither on age nor sex.
+There is said to be no difference in the taste, but there is no
+market for canned salmon not of the conventional orange color.</p>
+
+<p>As the season advances, the differences between the males and
+the females become more and more marked, and keep pace with the
+development of the milt, as is shown by dissection.</p>
+
+<p>The males have: (<i>a</i>.) The premaxillaries and the tip of
+the lower jaw more and more prolonged; both of them becoming
+finally strongly and often extravagantly hooked, so that either
+they shut by the side of each other like shears, or else the mouth
+cannot be closed. (<i>b</i>.) The front teeth become very long and
+canine-like, their growth proceeding very rapidly, until they are
+often half an inch long. (<i>c</i>.) The teeth on the vomer and
+tongue often disappear. (<i>d</i>.) The body grows more compressed
+and deeper at the shoulders, so that a very distinct hump is
+formed; this is more developed in <i>0. gorbuscha</i>, but is found
+in all. (<i>e</i>.) The scales disappear, especially on the back,
+by the growth of spongy skin. (<i>f</i>.) The color changes from
+silvery to various shades of black and red or blotchy, according to
+the species. The blue-back turns rosy red, the dog salmon a dull,
+blotchy red, and the quiunat generally blackish.</p>
+
+<p>These distorted males are commonly considered worthless,
+rejected by the canners and salmon-salters, but preserved by the
+Indians. These changes are due solely to influences connected with
+the growth of the testes. They are not in any way due to the action
+of fresh water. They take place at about the same time in the adult
+males of all species, whether in the ocean or in the rivers. At the
+time of the spring runs all are symmetrical. In the fall, all males
+of whatever species are more or less distorted. Among the dog
+salmon, which run only in the fall, the males are hooked-jawed and
+red-blotched when they first enter the Straits of Fuca from the
+outside. The hump-back, taken in salt water about Seattle, shows
+the same peculiarities. The male is slab-sided, hook-billed, and
+distorted, and is rejected by the canners. No hook-jawed
+<i>females</i> of any species have been seen.</p>
+
+<p>It is not positively known that any hook-jawed male survives the
+reproductive act. If any do, their jaws must resume the normal
+form.</p>
+
+<p>On first entering a stream the salmon swim about as if playing:
+they always head toward the current, and this "playing" may be
+simply due to facing the flood tide. Afterwards they enter the
+deepest parts of the stream and swim straight up, with few
+interruptions. Their rate of travel on the Sacramento is estimated
+by Stone at about two miles per day; on the Columbia at about three
+miles per day.</p>
+
+<p>As already stated, the economic value of any species depends in
+great part on its being a "spring salmon." It is not generally
+possible to capture salmon of any species in large numbers until
+they have entered the rivers, and the spring salmon enter the
+rivers long before the growth of the organs of reproduction has
+reduced the richness of the flesh. The fall salmon cannot be taken
+in quantity until their flesh has deteriorated: hence the "dog
+salmon" is practically almost worthless, except to the Indians, and
+the hump-back salmon is little better. The silver salmon, with the
+same breeding habits as the dog salmon, is more valuable, as it is
+found in Puget Sound for a considerable time before the fall rains
+cause the fall runs, and it may be taken in large numbers with
+seines before the season for entering the rivers. The quinnat
+salmon, from its great size and abundance, is more valuable than
+all other fishes on our Pacific coast together. The blue back,
+similar in flesh but much smaller and less abundant, is worth much
+more than the combined value of the three remaining species.</p>
+
+<p>The fall salmon of all species, but especially the dog salmon,
+ascend streams but a short distance before spawning. They seem to
+be in great anxiety to find fresh water, and many of them work
+their way up little brooks only a few inches deep, where they soon
+perish miserably, floundering about on the stones. Every stream, of
+whatever kind, has more or less of these fall salmon.</p>
+
+<p>It is the prevailing impression that the salmon have some
+special instinct which leads them to return to spawn in the same
+spawning grounds where they were originally hatched. We fail to
+find any evidence of this in the case of the Pacific coast salmon,
+and we do not believe it to be true. It seems more probable that
+the young salmon, hatched in any river, mostly remain in the ocean
+within a radius of twenty, thirty, or forty miles of its mouth.
+These, in their movements about in the ocean, may come into contact
+with the cold waters of their parent rivers, or perhaps of any
+other river, at a considerable distance from the shore. In the case
+of the quinnat and the blue-back, their "instinct" leads them to
+ascend these fresh waters, and in a majority of cases these waters
+will be those in which the fishes in question were originally
+spawned. Later in the season the growth of the reproductive organs
+leads them to approach the shore and to search for fresh waters,
+and still the chances are that they may find the original stream.
+But undoubtedly many fall salmon ascend, or try to ascend, streams
+in which no salmon was ever hatched.</p>
+
+<p>It is said of the Russian River and other California rivers,
+that their mouths in the time of low water in summer generally
+become entirely closed by sand bars, and that the salmon, in their
+eagerness to ascend them, frequently fling themselves entirely out
+of water on the beach. But this does not prove that the salmon are
+guided by a marvelous geographical instinct which leads them to
+their parent river. The waters of Russian River soak through these
+sand bars, and the salmon "instinct," we think, leads them merely
+to search for fresh waters.</p>
+
+<p>This matter is much in need of further investigation; at
+present, however, we find no reason to believe that the salmon
+enter the Rogue River simply because they were spawned there, or
+that a salmon hatched in the Clackamas River is any the more likely
+on that account to return to the Clackamas than to go up the
+Cowlitz or the Deschutes.</p>
+
+<p>"At the hatchery on Rogue River, the fish are stripped, marked
+and set free, and every year since the hatchery has been in
+operation some of the marked fish have been re-caught. The young
+fry are also marked, but none of them have been recaught."</p>
+
+<p>This year the run of silver salmon in Frazer's River was very
+light, while on Puget Sound the run was said by the Indians to be
+greater than ever known before. Both these cases may be due to the
+same cause, the dry summer, low water, and consequent failure of
+the salmon to find the rivers. The run in the Sound is much more
+irregular than in the large rivers. One year they will abound in
+one bay and its tributary stream and hardly be seen in another,
+while the next year the condition will be reversed. At Cape
+Flattery the run of silver salmon for the present year was very
+small, which fact was generally attributed by the Indians to the
+birth of twins at Neah Bay.</p>
+
+<p>In regard to the diminution of the number of salmon on the
+coast. In Puget's Sound, Frazer's River, and the smaller streams,
+there appears to be little or no evidence of this. In the Columbia
+River the evidence appears somewhat conflicting; the catch during
+the present year (1880) has been considerably greater than ever
+before (nearly 540,000 cases of 48 lb. each having been packed),
+although the fishing for three or four years has been very
+extensive. On the other hand, the high water of the present spring
+has undoubtedly caused many fish to become spring salmon which
+would otherwise have run in the fall. Moreover, it is urged that a
+few years ago, when the number caught was about half as great as
+now, the amount of netting used was perhaps one-eighth as much.
+With a comparatively small outfit the canners caught half the fish,
+now with nets much larger and more numerous, they catch them all,
+scarcely any escaping during the fishing season (April 1 to August
+1). Whether an actual reduction in the number of fish running can
+be proven or not, there can be no question that the present rate of
+destruction of the salmon will deplete the river before many years.
+A considerable number of quinnat salmon run in August and
+September, and some stragglers even later; these now are all which
+keep up the supply of fish in the river. The non-molestation of
+this fall run, therefore, does something to atone for the almost
+total destruction of the spring run.</p>
+
+<p>This, however, is insufficient. A well-ordered salmon hatchery
+is the only means by which the destruction of the salmon in the
+river can be prevented. This hatchery should be under the control
+of Oregon and Washington, and should be supported by a tax levied
+on the canned fish. It should be placed on a stream where the
+quinnat salmon actually come to spawn.</p>
+
+<p>It has been questioned whether the present hatchery on the
+Clackamas River actually receives the quinnat salmon in any
+numbers. It is asserted, in fact, that the eggs of the silver
+salmon and dog salmon, with scattering quinnat, are hatched there.
+We have no exact information as to the truth of these reports, but
+the matter should be taken into serious consideration.</p>
+
+<p>On the Sacramento there is no doubt of the reduction of the
+number of salmon; this is doubtless mainly attributable to
+over-fishing, but in part it may be due to the destruction of
+spawning beds by mining operations and other causes.</p>
+
+<p>As to the superiority of the Columbia River salmon, there is no
+doubt that the quinnat salmon average larger and fatter in the
+Columbia than in the Sacramento and in Puget Sound. The difference
+in the canned fish is, however, probably hardly appreciable. The
+canned salmon from the Columbia, however, bring a better price in
+the market than those from elsewhere. The canners there generally
+have had a high regard for the reputation of the river, and have
+avoided canning fall fish or species other than the quinnat. In the
+Frazer's River the blue-back is largely canned, and its flesh being
+a little more watery and perhaps paler, is graded below the
+quinnat. On Puget Sound various species are canned; in fact,
+everything with red flesh. The best canners on the Sacramento
+apparently take equal care with their product with those of the
+Columbia, but they depend largely on the somewhat inferior fall
+run. There are, however, sometimes salmon canned in San Francisco,
+which have been in the city markets, and for some reason remaining
+unsold, have been sent to the canners; such salmon are unfit for
+food, and canning them should be prohibited.</p>
+
+<p>The fact that the hump-back salmon runs only on alternate years
+in Puget Sound (1875, 1877, 1879, etc.) is well attested and at
+present unexplained. Stray individuals only are taken in other
+years. This species has a distinct "run," in the United States,
+only in Puget Sound, although individuals (called "lost salmon")
+are occasionally taken in the Columbia and in the
+Sacramento.--<i>American Naturalist.</i></p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="15"></a></p>
+
+<h2>THE RELATION BETWEEN ELECTRICITY AND LIGHT.</h2>
+
+<p>[Footnote: A lecture by Dr. O. J. Lodge, delivered at the London
+Institution on December 16, 1880.]</p>
+
+<p>Ever since the subject on which I have the honor to speak to you
+to-night was arranged, I have been astonished at my own audacity in
+proposing to deal in the course of sixty minutes with a subject so
+gigantic and so profound that a course of sixty lectures would be
+quite inadequate for its thorough and exhaustive treatment.</p>
+
+<p>I must indeed confine myself carefully to some few of the
+typical and most salient points in the relation between electricity
+and light, and I must economize time by plunging at once into the
+middle of the matter without further preliminaries.</p>
+
+<p>Now, when a person is setting off to discuss the relation
+between electricity and light, it is very natural and very proper
+to pull him up short with the two questions: What do you mean by
+electricity? and What do you mean by light? These two questions I
+intend to try briefly to answer. And here let me observe that in
+answering these fundamental questions, I do not necessarily assume
+a fundamental ignorance on your part of these two agents, but
+rather the contrary; and must beg you to remember that if I repeat
+well-known and simple experiments before you, it is for the purpose
+of directing attention to their real meaning and significance, not
+to their obvious and superficial characteristics; in the same way
+that I might repeat the exceedingly familiar experiment of dropping
+a stone to the earth if we were going to define what we meant by
+gravitation.</p>
+
+<p>Now, then, we will ask first, What is electricity? and the
+simple answer must be, We don't know. Well, but this need not
+necessarily be depressing. If the same question were asked about
+matter, or about energy, we should have likewise to reply, No one
+knows.</p>
+
+<p>But then the term Matter is a very general one, and so is the
+term Energy. They are heads, in fact, under which we classify more
+special phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, if we were asked, What is sulphur? or what is selenium? we
+should at least be able to reply, A form of matter; and then
+proceed to describe its properties, <i>i. e.</i>, how it affected
+our bodies and other bodies.</p>
+
+<p>Again, to the question, What is heat? we can reply, A form of
+energy; and proceed to describe the peculiarities which distinguish
+it from other forms of energy.</p>
+
+<p>But to the question. What is electricity? we have no answer pat
+like this. We can not assert that it is a form of matter, neither
+can we deny it; on the other hand, we certainly can not assert that
+it is a form of energy, and I should be disposed to deny it. It may
+be that electricity is an entity <i>per se</i>, just as matter is
+an entity <i>per se</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, I can tell you what I mean by electricity by
+appealing to its known behavior.</p>
+
+<p>Here is a battery, that is, an electricity pump; it will drive
+electricity along. Prof. Ayrtou is going, I am afraid, to tell you,
+on the 20th of January next, that it <i>produces</i> electricity;
+but if he does, I hope you will remember that that is exactly what
+neither it nor anything else can do. It is as impossible to
+generate electricity in the sense I am trying to give the word, as
+it is to produce matter. Of course I need hardly say that Prof.
+Ayrton knows this perfectly well; it is merely a question of words,
+<i>i. e.</i>, of what you understand by the word electricity.</p>
+
+<p>I want you, then, to regard this battery and all electrical
+machines and batteries as kinds of electricity pumps, which drive
+the electricity along through the wire very much as a water-pump
+can drive water along pipes. While this is going on the wire
+manifests a whole series of properties, which are called the
+properties of the current.</p>
+
+<p>[Here were shown an ignited platinum wire, the electric arc
+between two carbons, an electric machine spark, an induction coil
+spark, and a vacuum tube glow. Also a large nail was magnetized by
+being wrapped in the current, and two helices were suspended and
+seen to direct and attract each other.]</p>
+
+<p>To make a magnet, then, we only need a current of electricity
+flowing round and round in a whirl. A vortex or whirlpool of
+electricity is in fact a magnet; and <i>vice versa</i>. And these
+whirls have the power of directing and attracting other previously
+existing whirls according to certain laws, called the laws of
+magnetism. And, moreover, they have the power of exciting fresh
+whirls in neighboring conductors, and of repelling them according
+to the laws of diamagnetism. The theory of the actions is known,
+though the nature of the whirls, as of the simple stream of
+electricity, is at present unknown.</p>
+
+<p>[Here was shown a large electro-magnet and an induction-coil
+vacuum discharge spinning round and round when placed in its
+field.]</p>
+
+<p>So much for what happens when electricity is made to travel
+along conductors, <i>i. e.</i>, when it travels along like a stream
+of water in a pipe, or spins round and round like a whirlpool.</p>
+
+<p>But there is another set of phenomena, usually regarded as
+distinct and of another order, but which are not so distinct as
+they appear, which manifest themselves when you join the pump to a
+piece of glass, or any non-conductor, and try to force the
+electricity through that. You succeed in driving some through, but
+the flow is no longer like that of water in an open pipe; it is as
+if the pipe were completely obstructed by a number of elastic
+partitions or diaphragms. The water can not move without straining
+and bending these diaphragms, and if you allow it, these strained
+partitions will recover themselves, and drive the water back again.
+[Here was explained the process of charging a Leyden jar.] The
+essential thing to remember is that we may have electrical energy
+in two forms, the static and the kinetic; and it is, therefore,
+also possible to have the rapid alternation from one of these forms
+to the other, called vibration.</p>
+
+<p>Now we will pass to the second question: What do you mean by
+light? And the first and obvious answer is, Everybody knows. And
+everybody that is not blind does know to a certain extent. We have
+a special sense organ for appreciating light, whereas we have none
+for electricity. Nevertheless, we must admit that we really know
+very little about the intimate nature of light--very little more
+than about electricity. But we do know this, that light is a form
+of energy, and, moreover, that it is energy rapidly alternating
+between the static and the kinetic forms--that it is, in fact, a
+special kind of energy of vibration. We are absolutely certain that
+light is a periodic disturbance in some medium, periodic both in
+space and time; that is to say, the same appearances regularly
+recur at certain equal intervals of distance at the same time, and
+also present themselves at equal intervals of time at the same
+place; that in fact it belongs to the class of motions called by
+mathematicians undulatory or wave motions. The wave motion in this
+model (Powell's wave apparatus) results from the simple up and down
+motion popularly associated with the term wave. But when a
+mathematician calls a thing a wave he means that the disturbance is
+represented by a certain general type of formula, not that it is an
+up-and-down motion, or that it looks at all like those things on
+the top of the sea. The motion of the surface of the sea falls
+within that formula, and hence is a special variety of wave motion,
+and the term wave has acquired in popular use this signification
+and nothing else. So that when one speaks ordinarily of a wave or
+undulatory motion, one immediately thinks of something heaving up
+and down, or even perhaps of something breaking on the shore. But
+when we assert that the form of energy called light is undulatory,
+we by no means intend to assert that anything whatever is moving up
+and down, or that the motion, if we could see it, would be anything
+at all like what we are accustomed to in the ocean. The kind of
+motion is unknown; we are not even sure that there is anything like
+motion in the ordinary sense of the word at all.</p>
+
+<p>Now, how much connection between electricity and light have we
+perceived in this glance into their natures? Not much, truly. It
+amounts to about this: That on the one hand electrical energy may
+exist in either of two forms--the static form, when insulators are
+electrically strained by having had electricity driven partially
+through them (as in the Leyden jar), which strain is a form of
+energy because of the tendency to discharge and do work; and the
+kinetic form, where electricity is moving bodily along through
+conductors or whirling round and round inside them, which motion of
+electricity is a form of energy, because the conductors and whirls
+can attract or repel each other and thereby do work.</p>
+
+<p>And, on the other hand, that light is the rapid alternation of
+energy from one of these forms to the other--the static form where
+the medium is strained, to the kinetic form when it moves. It is
+just conceivable, then, that the static form of the energy of light
+is <i>electro</i> static, that is, that the medium is
+<i>electrically</i> strained, and that the kinetic form of the
+energy of light is <i>electro</i>-kinetic, that is, that the motion
+is not ordinary motion, but electrical motion--in fact, that light
+is an electrical vibration, not a material one.</p>
+
+<p>On November 5, last year, there died at Cambridge a man in the
+full vigor of his faculties--such faculties as do not appear many
+times in a century--whose chief work has been the establishment of
+this very fact, the discovery of the link connecting light and
+electricity; and the proof--for I believe it amounts to a
+proof--that they are different manifestations of one and the same
+class of phenomena--that light is, in fact, an electro-magnetic
+disturbance. The premature death of James Clerk-Maxwell is a loss
+to science which appears at present utterly irreparable, for he was
+engaged in researches that no other man can hope as yet adequately
+to grasp and follow out; but fortunately it did not occur till he
+had published his book on "Electricity and Magnetism," one of those
+immortal productions which exalt one's idea of the mind of man, and
+which has been mentioned by competent critics in the same breath as
+the "Principia" itself.</p>
+
+<p>But it is not perfect like the "Principia;" much of it is
+rough-hewn, and requires to be thoroughly worked out. It contains
+numerous misprints and errata, and part of the second volume is so
+difficult as to be almost unintelligible. Some, in fact, consists
+of notes written for private use and not intended for publication.
+It seems next to impossible now to mature a work silently for
+twenty or thirty years, as was done by Newton two and a half
+centuries ago. But a second edition was preparing, and much might
+have been improved in form if life had been spared to the
+illustrious author.</p>
+
+<p>The main proof of the electro-magnetic theory of light is this:
+The rate at which light travels has been measured many times, and
+is pretty well known. The rate at which an electro-magnetic wave
+disturbance would travel if such could be generated (and Mr.
+Fitzgerald, of Dublin, thinks he has proved that it can not be
+generated directly by any known electrical means) can be also
+determined by calculation from electrical measurements. The two
+velocities agree exactly. This is the great physical constant known
+as the ratio V, which so many physicists have been measuring, and
+are likely to be measuring for some time to come.</p>
+
+<p>Many and brilliant as were Maxwell's discoveries, not only in
+electricity, but also in the theory of the nature of gases, and in
+molecular science generally, I can not help thinking that if one of
+them is more striking and more full of future significance than the
+rest, it is the one I have just mentioned--the theory that light is
+an electrical phenomenon.</p>
+
+<p>The first glimpse of this splendid generalization was caught in
+1845, five and thirty years ago, by that prince of pure
+experimentalists, Michael Faraday. His reasons for suspecting some
+connection between electricity and light are not clear to us--in
+fact, they could not have been clear to him; but he seems to have
+felt a conviction that if he only tried long enough and sent all
+kinds of rays of light in all possible directions across electric
+and magnetic fields in all sorts of media, he must ultimately hit
+upon something. Well, this is very nearly what he did. With a
+sublime patience and perseverance which remind one of the way
+Kepler hunted down guess after guess in a different field of
+research, Faraday combined electricity, or magnetism, and light in
+all manner of ways, and at last he was rewarded with a result. And
+a most out-of-the-way result it seemed. First, you have to get a
+most powerful magnet and very strongly excite it; then you have to
+pierce its two poles with holes, in order that a beam of light may
+travel from one to the other along the lines of force; then, as
+ordinary light is no good, you must get a beam of plane polarized
+light, and send it between the poles. But still no result is
+obtained until, finally, you interpose a piece of a rare and
+out-of-the-way material, which Faraday had himself discovered and
+made--a kind of glass which contains borate of lead, and which is
+very heavy, or dense, and which must be perfectly annealed.</p>
+
+<p>And now, when all these arrangements are completed, what is seen
+is simply this, that if an analyzer is arranged to stop the light
+and make the field quite dark before the magnet is excited, then
+directly the battery is connected and the magnet called into
+action, a faint and barely perceptible brightening of the field
+occurs, which will disappear if the analyzer be slightly rotated.
+[The experiment was then shown.] Now, no wonder that no one
+understood this result. Faraday himself did not understand it at
+all. He seems to have thought that the magnetic lines of force were
+rendered luminous, or that the light was magnetized; in fact, he
+was in a fog, and had no idea of its real significance. Nor had any
+one. Continental philosophers experienced some difficulty and
+several failures before they were able to repeat the experiment. It
+was, in fact, discovered too soon, and before the scientific world
+was ready to receive it, and it was reserved for Sir William
+Thomson briefly, but very clearly, to point out, and for
+Clerk-Maxwell more fully to develop, its most important
+consequences. [The principle of the experiment was then illustrated
+by the aid of a mechanical model.]</p>
+
+<p>This is the fundamental experiment on which Clerk-Maxwell's
+theory of light is based; but of late years many fresh facts and
+relations between electricity and light have been discovered, and
+at the present time they are tumbling in in great numbers.</p>
+
+<p>It was found by Faraday that many other transparent media
+besides heavy glass would show the phenomenon if placed between the
+poles, only in a less degree; and the very important observation
+that air itself exhibits the same phenomenon, though to an
+exceedingly small extent, has just been made by Kundt and Rontgen
+in Germany.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kerr, of Glasgow, has extended the result to opaque bodies,
+and has shown that if light be passed through magnetized
+<i>iron</i> its plane is rotated. The film of iron must be
+exceedingly thin, because of its opacity, and hence, though the
+intrinsic rotating power of iron is undoubtedly very great, the
+observed rotation is exceedingly small and difficult to observe;
+and it is only by a very remarkable patience and care and ingenuity
+that Dr. Kerr has obtained his result. Mr. Fitzgerald, of Dublin,
+has examined the question mathematically, and has shown that
+Maxwell's theory would have enabled Dr. Kerr's result to be
+predicted.</p>
+
+<p>Another requirement of the theory is that bodies which are
+transparent to light must be insulators or non-conductors of
+electricity, and that conductors of electricity are necessarily
+opaque to light. Simple observation amply confirms this; metals are
+the best conductors, and are the most opaque bodies known.
+Insulators such as glass and crystals are transparent whenever they
+are sufficiently homogeneous, and the very remarkable researches of
+Prof. Graham Bell in the last few months have shown that even
+<i>ebonite</i>, one of the most opaque insulators to ordinary
+vision, is certainly transparent to some kinds of radiation, and
+transparent to no small degree.</p>
+
+<p>[The reason why transparent bodies must insulate, and why
+conductors must be opaque, was here illustrated by mechanical
+models.]</p>
+
+<p>A further consequence of the theory is that the velocity of
+light in a transparent medium will be affected by its electrical
+strain constant; in other words, that its refractive index will
+bear some close but not yet quite ascertained relation to its
+specific inductive capacity. Experiment has partially confirmed
+this, but the confirmation is as yet very incomplete. But there are
+a number of results not predicted by theory, and whose connection
+with the theory is not clearly made out. We have the fact that
+light falling on the platinum electrode of a voltameter generates a
+current, first observed, I think, by Sir W. R. Grove--at any rate,
+it is mentioned in his "Correlation of Forces"--extended by
+Becquerel and Robert Sabine to other substances, and now being
+extended to fluorescent and other bodies by Prof. Minchin. And
+finally--for I must be brief--we have the remarkable action of
+light on selenium. This fact was discovered accidentally by an
+assistant in the laboratory of Mr. Willoughby Smith, who noticed
+that a piece of selenium conducted electricity very much better
+when light was falling upon it than when it was in the dark. The
+light of a candle is sufficient, and instantaneously brings down
+the resistance to something like one-fifth of its original
+value.</p>
+
+<p>I could show you these effects, but there is not much to see; it
+is an intensely interesting phenomenon, but its external
+manifestation is not striking--any more than Faraday's heavy glass
+experiment was.</p>
+
+<p>This is the phenomenon which, as you know, has been utilized by
+Prof. Graham Bell in that most ingenious and striking invention,
+the photophone. By the kindness of Prof. Silvanus Thompson, I have
+a few slides to show the principle of the invention, and Mr.
+Shelford Bidwell has been kind enough to lend me his home-made
+photophone, which answers exceedingly well for short distances.</p>
+
+<p>I have now trespassed long enough upon your patience, but I must
+just allude to what may very likely be the next striking popular
+discovery; and that is the transmission of light by electricity; I
+mean the transmission of such things as views and pictures by means
+of the electric wire. It has not yet been done, but it seems
+already theoretically possible, and it may very soon be practically
+accomplished.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="16"></a></p>
+
+<h2>INTERESTING ELECTRICAL RESEARCHES.</h2>
+
+<p>During the last six years Dr. Warren de la Rue has been
+investigating, in conjunction with Dr. Hugo Muller, the various and
+highly interesting phenomena which accompany the electric
+discharge. From time to time the results of their researches were
+communicated to the Royal Society, and appeared in its Proceedings.
+Early last year Dr. De la Rue being requested to bring the subject
+before the members of the Royal Institution, acceded to the
+pressing invitation of his colleagues and scientific friends. The
+discourse, which was necessarily long postponed on account of the
+preparations that had to be made, was finally given on Friday, the
+21st of January, and was one of the most remarkable, from the
+elaborate nature of the experiments, ever delivered in the theater
+of that deservedly famous institution.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to the great inconvenience of removing the battery from
+his laboratory, Dr. de la Rue, despite the great expenditure,
+directed Mr. S. Tisley to prepare, expressly for the lecture, a
+second series of 14,400 cells, and fit it up in the basement of the
+Royal Institution. The construction of this new battery occupied
+Mr. Tisley a whole year, while the charging of it extended over a
+fortnight.</p>
+
+<p>The "de la Rue cell," if we may so call one of these elements,
+consists of a zinc rod, the lower portion of which is embedded in a
+solid electrolyte, viz., chloride of silver, with which are
+connected two flattened silver wires to serve as electrodes. When
+these are united and the silver chloride moistened, chemical action
+begins, and a weak but constant current is generated.</p>
+
+<p>The electromotive force of such a cell is 1.03 volts, and a
+current equivalent to one volt passing through a resistance of one
+ohm was found to decompose 0.00146 grain of water in one second.
+The battery is divided into "cabinets," which hold from 1,200 to
+2,160 small elements each. This facilitates removal, and also the
+detection of any fault that may occur.</p>
+
+<p>It will be remembered that in 1808 Sir Humphry Davy constructed
+his battery of 2,000 cells, and thus succeeded in exalting the tiny
+spark obtained in closing the circuit into the luminous sheaf of
+the voltaic arc. He also observed that the spark passed even when
+the poles were separated by a distance varying from 1/40 to 1/30 of
+an inch. This appears to have been subsequently forgotten, as we
+find later physicists questioning the possibility of the spark
+leaping over any interpolar distance. Mr. J. P. Gassiot, of
+Clapham, demonstrated the inaccuracy of this opinion by
+constructing a battery of 3,000 Leclanch&eacute; cells, which gave
+a spark of 0.025 inch; a similar number of "de la Rue" cells gives
+an 0.0564 inch spark. This considerable increase in potential is
+chiefly due to better insulation.</p>
+
+<p>The great energy of this battery was illustrated by a variety of
+experiments. Thus, a large condenser, specially constructed by
+Messrs. Varley, and having a capacity equal to that of 6,485 large
+Leyden jars, was almost immediately charged by the current from
+10,000 cells. Wires of various kinds, and from 9 inches to 29
+inches in length, were instantly volatilized by the passage of the
+electricity thus stored up. The current induced in the secondary
+wire of a coil by the discharge of the condenser through the
+primary, was also sufficiently intense to deflagrate wires of
+considerable length and thickness.</p>
+
+<p>It was with such power at his command that Dr. De la Rue
+proceeded to investigate several important electrical laws. He has
+found, for example, that the positive discharge is more
+intermittent than the negative, that the arc is always preceded by
+a streamer-like discharge, that its temperature is about 16,000
+deg., and its length at the ordinary pressure of the atmosphere,
+when taken between two points, varies as the square of the number
+of cells. Thus, with a battery of 1,000 cells, the arc was 0.0051
+inch, with 11,000 cells it increased to 0.62 inch. The same law was
+found to hold when the discharge took place between a point and a
+disk; it failed entirely, however, when the terminals were two
+disks.</p>
+
+<p>It was also shown that the voltaic arc is not a phenomenon of
+conduction, but is essentially a disruptive discharge, the
+intervals between the passage of two successive static sparks being
+the time required for the battery to collect sufficient power to
+leap over the interposed resistance. This was further confirmed by
+the introduction of a condenser, when the intervals were
+perceptibly larger.</p>
+
+<p>Faraday proved that the quantity of electricity necessary to
+produce a strong flash of lightning would result from the
+decomposition of a single grain of water, and Dr. de la Rue's
+experiments confirm this extraordinary statement. He has calculated
+that this quantity of electricity would be 5,000 times as great as
+the charge of his large condenser, and that a lightning flash a
+mile long would require the potential of 3,500,000 cells, that is
+to say, of 243 of his powerful batteries.</p>
+
+<p>In experimenting with "vacuum" tubes, he has found that the
+discharge is also invariably disruptive. This is an important
+point, as many physicists speak and write of the phenomenon as one
+of conduction. Air, in every degree of tenuity, refuses to act as a
+conductor of electricity. These experiments show that the
+resistance of gaseous media diminishes with the pressure only up to
+a certain point, beyond which it rapidly increases. Thus, in the
+case of hydrogen, it diminishes up to 0.642 mm., 845 millionths; it
+then rises as the exhaustion proceeds, and at 0.00065 mm., 8.6
+millionths, it requires as high a potential as at 21.7 mm., 28.553
+millionths. At 0.00137 mm., 1.8 millionth, the current from 11,000
+cells would not pass through a tube for which 430 cells sufficed at
+the pressure of minimum resistance. At a pressure of 0.0055 mm.,
+0.066 millionth, the highest exhaust obtained in any of the
+experiments, even a one-inch spark from an induction coil refused
+to pass. It was also ascertained that there is neither condensacian
+nor dilatation of the gas in contact with the terminals prior to
+the passage of the discharge.</p>
+
+<p>These researches naturally led to some speculation about the
+conditions under which auroral phenomena may occur. Observers have
+variously stated the height at which the aurora borealis attains
+its greatest brilliancy as ranging between 124 and 281 miles. Dr.
+de la Rue's conclusions fix the upper limit at 124 miles, and that
+of maximum display at 37 miles, admitting also that the aurora may
+sometimes occur at an altitude of a few thousand feet.</p>
+
+<p>The aurora was beautifully illustrated by a very large tube, in
+which the theoretical pressure was carefully maintained, the
+characteristic roseate tinge being readily produced and
+maintained.</p>
+
+<p>In studying the stratifications observed in vacuum tubes, Dr. de
+la Rue finds that they originate at the positive pole, and that
+their steadiness may be regulated by the resistance in circuit, and
+that even when the least tremor cannot be detected by the eye, they
+are still produced by rapid pulsations which may be as frequent as
+ten millions per second.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. de la Rue concluded his interesting discourse by exhibiting
+some of the finest tubes of his numerous and unsurpassed
+collection.--<i>Engineering</i></p>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>MEASURING ELECTROMOTIVE FORCE.</h2>
+
+<p>Coulomb's torsion balance has been adapted by M. Baille to the
+measurement of low electromotive forces in a very successful
+manner, and has been found preferable by him to the delicate
+electrometers of Sir W. Thomson. It is necessary to guard it from
+disturbances due to extraneous electric influences and the
+trembling of the ground. These can be eliminated completely by
+encircling the instrument in a metal case connected to earth, and
+mounting it on solid pillars in a still place. Heat also has a
+disturbing effect, and makes itself felt in the torsion of the
+fiber and the cage surrounding the lever. These effects are warded
+off by inclosing the instrument in a non-conducting jacket of wood
+shavings.</p>
+
+<p>The apparatus of M. Baille consists of an annealed silver
+torsion wire of 2.70 meters long, and a lever 0.50 meter long,
+carrying at each extremity a ball of copper, gilded, and three
+centimeters in diameter. Similar balls are fixed at the corners of
+a square 20.5 meters in the side, and connected in diagonal pairs
+by fine wire. The lever placed at equal distances from the fixed
+balls communicates, by the medium of the torsion wire, with the
+positive pole of a battery, P, the other pole being to earth.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to some unaccountable variations in the change of the
+lever or needle, M. Baille was obliged to measure the change at
+each observation. This was done by joining the + pole of the
+battery to the needle, and one pair of the fixed balls, and
+observing the deflection; then the deflection produced by the other
+balls was observed. This operation was repeated several times.</p>
+
+<p>The battery, X, to be measured consisted of ten similar
+elements, and one pole of it was connected to the fixed balls,
+while the other pole was connected to the earth. The needle, of
+course, remained in contact with the + pole of the charging
+battery, P.</p>
+
+<p>The deflections were read from a clear glass scale, placed at a
+distance of 3.30 meters from the needle, and the results worked out
+from Coulomb's static formula,</p>
+
+<p><img src="images/tex1.png" align="middle" alt=
+"C a = \frac{4 m m'}{d^2}">, with <img src=
+"images/tex2.png" align="middle" alt=
+"O = \sqrt{\frac{\sum \frac{p}{g} r^2}{C}}"></p>
+
+<p>In M. Baillie's experiments, O = 437&sup3;, and &Sigma;pr&sup2;=
+32171.6 (centimeter grammes), the needle having been constructed of
+a geometrical form.</p>
+
+<p>The following numbers represent the potential of an element of
+the battery--that is to say, the quantity of electricity that the
+pole of that battery spreads upon a sphere of one centimeter
+radius. They are expressed in units of electricity, the unit being
+the quantity of electricity which, acting upon a similar unit at a
+distance of one centimeter, produces a repulsion equal to one
+gramme:</p>
+
+<pre>
+Volta pile 0.03415 open circuit.
+Zinc, sulphate of copper, copper 0.02997 "
+Zinc, acidulated water, copper, sulphate of copper 0.03709 "
+Zinc, salt water, carbon peroxide of manganese 0.05282 "
+Zinc, salt water, platinum, chloride of platinum 0.05027 "
+Zinc, acidulated water, carbon nitric acid 0.06285 "
+</pre>
+
+<p>These results were obtained just upon charging the batteries,
+and are, therefore, slightly higher than the potentials given after
+the batteries became older. The sulphate of copper cells kept about
+their maximum value longest, but they showed variations of about 10
+per cent.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="17"></a></p>
+
+<h2>TELEPHONY BY THERMIC CURRENTS.</h2>
+
+<p>While in telephonic arrangements, based upon the principle of
+magnetic induction, a relatively considerable expenditure of force
+is required in order to set the tightly stretched membrane in
+vibration, in the so-called carbon telephones only a very feeble
+impulse is required to produce the differences in the current
+necessary for the transmission of sounds. In order to produce
+relatively strong currents, even in case of sound-action of a
+minimum strength, Franz Kr&ouml;ttlinger, of Vienna, has made an
+interesting experiment to use thermo electric currents for the
+transmission of sound to a distance. The apparatus which he has
+constructed is exceedingly simple. A current of hot air flowing
+from below upward is deflected more or less from its direction by
+the human voice. By its action an adjacent thermo-battery is
+excited, whose current passes through the spiral of an ordinary
+telephone, which serves as the receiving instrument. As a source of
+heat the inventor uses a common stearine candle, the flame of which
+is kept at one and the same level by means of a spring similar to
+those used in carriage lamps. On one side of the candle is a sheet
+metal voice funnel fixed upon a support, its mouth being covered
+with a movable sliding disk, fitted with a suitable number of small
+apertures. On the other side a similar support holds a
+funnel-shaped thermo-battery. The single bars of metal forming this
+battery are very thin, and of such a shape that they may cool as
+quickly as possible. Both the speaking-funnel and the battery can
+be made to approach, at will, to the stream of warm air rising up
+from the flame. The entire apparatus is inclosed in a tin case in
+such a manner that only the aperture of the voice-funnel and the
+polar clamps for securing the conducting wires appear on the
+outside. The inside of the case is suitably stayed to prevent
+vibration. On speaking into the mouth-piece of the funnel, the
+sound-waves occasion undulations in the column of hot air which are
+communicated to the thermo-battery, and in this manner
+corresponding differences are produced in the currents in the wires
+leading to the receiving
+instrument.--<i>Oesterreichische-Ungarische Post.</i></p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="18"></a></p>
+
+<h2>THE TELECTROSCOPE.</h2>
+
+<h3>By MONS. SENLECQ, of Ardres.</h3>
+
+<p>This apparatus, which is intended to transmit to a distance
+through a telegraphic wire pictures taken on the plate of a camera,
+was invented in the early part of 1877 by M. Senlecq, of Ardres. A
+description of the first specification submitted by M. Senlecq to
+M. du Moncel, member of the Paris Academy of Sciences, appeared in
+all the continental and American scientific journals. Since then
+the apparatus has everywhere occupied the attention of prominent
+electricians, who have striven to improve on it. Among these we may
+mention MM. Ayrton, Perry, Sawyer (of New York), Sargent (of
+Philadelphia), Brown (of London), Carey (of Boston), Tighe (of
+Pittsburg), and Graham Bell himself. Some experimenters have used
+many wires, bound together cable-wise, others one wire only. The
+result has been, on the one hand, confusion of conductors beyond a
+certain distance, with the absolute impossibility of obtaining
+perfect insulation; and, on the other hand, an utter want of
+synchronism. The unequal and slow sensitiveness of the selenium
+likewise obstructed the proper working of the apparatus. Now,
+without a relative simplicity in the arrangement of the conducting
+wires intended to convey to a distance the electric current with
+its variations of intensity, without a perfect and rapid
+synchronism acting concurrently with the luminous impressions, so
+as to insure the simultaneous action of transmitter and receiver,
+without, in fine, an increased sensitiveness in the selenium, the
+idea of the telectroscope could not be realized. M. Senlecq has
+fortunately surmounted most of these main obstacles, and we give
+to-day a description of the latest apparatus he has contrived.</p>
+
+<h3>TRANSMITTER.</h3>
+
+<p>A brass plate, A, whereon the rays of light impinge inside a
+camera, in their various forms and colors, from the external
+objects placed before the lens, the said plate being coated with
+selenium on the side intended to face the dark portion of the
+camera This brass plate has its entire surface perforated with
+small holes as near to one another as practicable. These holes are
+filled with selenium, heated, and then cooled very slowly, so as to
+obtain the maximum sensitiveness. A small brass wire passes through
+the selenium in each hole, without, however, touching the plate, on
+to the rectangular and vertical ebonite plate, B, Fig. 1, from
+under this plate at point, C. Thus, every wire passing through
+plate, A, has its point of contact above the plate, B, lengthwise.
+With this view the wires are clustered together when leaving the
+camera, and thence stretch to their corresponding points of contact
+on plate, B, along line, C C. The surface of brass, A, is in
+permanent contact with the positive pole of the battery (selenium).
+On each side of plate, B, are let in two brass rails, D and E,
+whereon the slide hereinafter described works.</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/8a.png"><img src=
+"images/8a_th.png" alt="Fig. 1"></a></p>
+
+<p class="ctr">Fig. 1</p>
+
+<p>Rail, E, communicates with the line wire intended to conduct the
+various light and shade vibrations. Rail, D, is connected with the
+battery wire. Along F are a number of points of contact
+corresponding with those along C C. These contacts help to work the
+apparatus, and to insure the perfect isochronism of the transmitter
+and receiver. These points of contact, though insulated one from
+the other on the surface of the plate, are all connected underneath
+with a wire coming from the positive pole of a special battery.
+This apparatus requires two batteries, as, in fact, do all
+autographic telegraphs--one for sending the current through the
+selenium, and one for working the receiver, etc. The different
+features of this important plate may, therefore, be summed up
+thus:</p>
+
+<p>FIGURE 1.</p>
+
+<p>D. Brass rail, grooved and connected with the line wire working
+the receiver.</p>
+
+<p>F. Contacts connected underneath with a wire permanently
+connected with battery.</p>
+
+<p>C. Contacts connected to insulated wires from selenium.</p>
+
+<p>E. Brass rail, grooved, etc., like D.</p>
+
+<h3>RECEIVER.</h3>
+
+<p>A small slide, Fig. 2, having at one of its angles a very narrow
+piece of brass, separated in the middle by an insulating surface,
+used for setting the apparatus in rapid motion. This small slide
+has at the points, D D, a small groove fitting into the brass rails
+of plate, B, Fig. 1, whereby it can keep parallel on the two brass
+rails, D and E. Its insulator, B, Fig. 2, corresponds to the
+insulating interval between F and C, Fig. 1.</p>
+
+<p>A, Fig. 3, circular disk, suspended vertically (made of ebonite
+or other insulating material). This disk is fixed. All round the
+inside of its circumference are contacts, connected underneath with
+the corresponding wires of the receiving apparatus. The wires
+coming from the seleniumized plate correspond symmetrically, one
+after the other, with the contacts of transmitter. They are
+connected in the like order with those of disk, A, and with those
+of receiver, so that the wire bearing the No. 5 from the selenium
+will correspond identically with like contact No. 5 of
+receiver.</p>
+
+<p>D, Fig. 4, gutta percha or vulcanite insulating plate, through
+which pass numerous very fine platinum wires, each corresponding at
+its point of contact with those on the circular disk, A.</p>
+
+<p>The receptive plate must be smaller than the plate whereon the
+light impinges. The design being thus reduced will be the more
+perfect from the dots formed by the passing currents being closer
+together.</p>
+
+<p>B, zinc or iron or brass plate connected to earth. It comes in
+contact with chemically prepared paper, C, where the impression is
+to take place. It contributes to the impression by its contact with
+the chemically prepared paper.</p>
+
+<p>In E, Fig. 3, at the center of the above described fixed plate
+is a metallic axis with small handle. On this axis revolves brass
+wheel, F, Fig. 5.</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><img src="images/8b.png" alt="FIG. 2"></p>
+
+<p class="ctr">FIG. 2</p>
+
+<p>On handle, E, presses continuously the spring, H, Fig. 3,
+bringing the current coming from the selenium line. The cogged
+wheel in Fig. 5 has at a certain point of its circumference the
+sliding spring, O, Fig. 5, intended to slide as the wheel revolves
+over the different contacts of disk, A, Fig. 3.</p>
+
+<p>This cogged wheel, Fig. 5, is turned, as in the dial telegraphs,
+by a rod working in and out under the successive movements of the
+electro-magnet, H, and of the counter spring. By means of this rod
+(which must be of a non-metallic material, so as not to divert the
+motive current), and of an elbow lever, this alternating movement
+is transmitted to a catch, G, which works up and down between the
+cogs, and answers the same purpose as the ordinary clock
+anchor.</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/8c.png"><img src=
+"images/8c_th.png" alt="FIG. 3"></a></p>
+
+<p class="ctr">FIG. 3</p>
+
+<p>This cogged wheel is worked by clockwork inclosed between two
+disks, and would rotate continuously were it not for the catch, G,
+working in and out of the cogs. Through this catch, G, the wheel is
+dependent on the movement of electro-magnet. This cogged wheel is a
+double one, consisting of two wheels coupled together, exactly
+similar one with the other, and so fixed that the cogs of the one
+correspond with the void between the cogs of the others. As the
+catch, G, moves down it frees a cog in first wheel, and both wheels
+begin to turn, but the second wheel is immediately checked by
+catch, G, and the movement ceases. A catch again works the two
+wheels, turn half a cog, and so on. Each wheel contains as many
+cogs as there are contacts on transmitter disk, consequently as
+many as on circular disk, A, Fig. 3, and on brass disk within
+camera.</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/8d.png"><img src=
+"images/8d_th.png" alt="FIG. 4"></a></p>
+
+<p class="ctr">FIG. 4</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/8e.png"><img src=
+"images/8e_th.png" alt="FIG. 5"></a></p>
+
+<p class="ctr">FIG. 5</p>
+
+<p>Having now described the several parts of the apparatus, let us
+see how it works. All the contacts correspond one with the other,
+both on the side of selenium current and that of the motive
+current. Let us suppose that the slide of transmitter is on contact
+No. 10 for instance; the selenium current starting from No. 10
+reaches contact 10 of rectangular transmitter, half the slide
+bearing on this point, as also on the parallel rail, communicates
+the current to said rail, thence to line, from the line to axis of
+cogged wheel, from axis to contact 10 of circular fixed disk, and
+thence to contact 10 of receiver. At each selenium contact of the
+rectangular disk there is a corresponding contact to the battery
+and electro-magnet. Now, on reaching contact 10 the intermission of
+the current has turned the wheel 10 cogs, and so brought the small
+contact, O, Fig. 5, on No. 10 of the fixed circular disk.</p>
+
+<p>As may be seen, the synchronism of the apparatus could not be
+obtained in a more simple and complete mode--the rectangular
+transmitter being placed vertically, and the slide being of a
+certain weight to its fall from the first point of contact
+sufficient to carry it rapidly over the whole length of this
+transmitter.</p>
+
+<p>The picture is, therefore, reproduced almost instantaneously;
+indeed, by using platinum wires on the receiver connected with the
+negative pole, by the incandescence of these wires according to the
+different degrees of electricity we can obtain a picture, of a
+fugitive kind, it is true, but yet so vivid that the impression on
+the retina does not fade during the relatively very brief space of
+time the slide occupies in traveling over all the contacts. A
+Ruhmkorff coil may also be employed for obtaining sparks in
+proportion to the current emitted. The apparatus is regulated in
+precisely the same way as dial telegraphs, starting always from
+first contact. The slide should, therefore, never be removed from
+the rectangular disk, whereon it is held by the grooves in the
+brass rails, into which it fits with but slight friction, without
+communicating any current to the line wires when not placed on
+points of contact.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p>[Continued from SUPPLEMENT No. 274, page 4368.]</p>
+
+<p><a name="1"></a></p>
+
+<h2>THE VARIOUS MODES OF TRANSMITTING POWER TO A DISTANCE.</h2>
+
+<p>[Footnote: A paper lately read before the Institution of
+Mechanical Engineers.]</p>
+
+<h3>By ARTHUR ACHARD, of Geneva.</h3>
+
+<p>But allowing that the figure of 22 H. P., assumed for this power
+(the result in calculating the work with compressed air being 19 H.
+P.) may be somewhat incorrect, it is unlikely that this error can
+be so large that its correction could reduce the efficiency below
+80 per cent. Messrs. Sautter and Lemonnier, who construct a number
+of compressors, on being consulted by the author, have written to
+say that they always confined themselves in estimating the power
+stored in the compressed air, and had never measured the gross
+power expended. Compressed air in passing along the pipe, assumed
+to be horizontal, which conveys it from the place of production to
+the place where it is to be used, experiences by friction a
+diminution of pressure, which represents a reduction in the
+mechanical power stored up, and consequently a loss of
+efficiency.</p>
+
+<p>The loss of pressure in question can only be calculated
+conveniently on the hypothesis that it is very small, and the
+general formula, <img src="images/tex3.png" align="middle"
+alt="\frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{4L}{D}f(u)">, is employed for
+the purpose, where D is the diameter of the pipe, assumed to be
+uniform, L the length of the pipe, p<sub>1</sub> the pressure at
+the entrance, p the pressure at the farther end, u the velocity at
+which the compressed air travels, &Delta; its specific weight, and
+f(u) the friction per unit of length. In proportion as the air
+loses pressure its speed increases, while its specific weight
+diminishes; but the variations in pressure are assumed to be so
+small that u and &Delta; may be considered constant. As regards the
+quantity f(u), or the friction per unit of length, the natural law
+which regulates it is not known, audit can only be expressed by
+some empirical formula, which, while according sufficiently nearly
+with the facts, is suited for calculation. For this purpose the
+binomial formula, au + bu&sup2;, or the simple formula,
+b<sub>1</sub> u&sup2;, is generally adopted; a b and b<sub>1</sub>
+being coefficients deduced from experiment. The values, however,
+which are to be given to these coefficients are not constant, for
+they vary with the diameter of the pipe, and in particular,
+contrary to formerly received ideas, they vary according to its
+internal surface. The uncertainty in this respect is so great that
+it is not worth while, with a view to accuracy, to relinquish the
+great convenience which the simple formula, b<sub>1</sub> u&sup2;,
+offers. It would be better from this point of view to endeavor, as
+has been suggested, to render this formula more exact by the
+substitution of a fractional power in the place of the square,
+rather than to go through the long calculations necessitated by the
+use of the binomial au + bu&sup2;. Accordingly, making use of the
+formula b<sub>1</sub> u&sup2;, the above equation becomes, <img
+src="images/tex4.png" align="middle" alt=
+"\frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{4L}{D} b_1 u^2">; or, introducing
+the discharge per second, Q, which is the usual figure supplied,
+and which is connected with the velocity by the relation, <img src=
+"images/tex5.png" align="middle" alt=
+"Q = \frac{\pi D^2 u}{4}">, we have <img src=
+"images/tex6.png" align="middle" alt=
+"\frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2">.
+Generally the pressure, p<sub>1</sub>, at the entrance is known,
+and the pressure, p, has to be found; it is then from p<sub>1</sub>
+that the values of Q and &Delta; are calculated. In experiments
+where p<sub>1</sub> and p are measured directly, in order to arrive
+at the value of the coefficient b<sub>1</sub>, Q and &Delta; would
+be calculated for the mean pressure &frac12;(p<sub>1</sub> + p).
+The values given to the coefficient b<sub>1</sub> vary
+considerably, because, as stated above, it varies with the
+diameter, and also with the nature of the material of the pipe. It
+is generally admitted that it is independent of the pressure, and
+it is probable that within certain limits of pressure this
+hypothesis is in accordance with the truth.</p>
+
+<p>D'Aubuisson gives for this case, in his <i>Trait&eacute;
+d'Hydraulique</i>, a rather complicated formula, containing a
+constant deduced from experiment, whose value, according to a
+calculation made by the author, is approximately b<sub>1</sub> =
+0.0003. This constant was determined by taking the mean of
+experiments made with tin tubes of 0.0235 meter (15/16 in.), 0.05
+meter (2 in.), and 0.10 meter (4 in.) diameter; and it was
+erroneously assumed that it was correct for all diameters and all
+substances.</p>
+
+<p>M. Arson, engineer to the Paris Gas Company, published in 1867,
+in the <i>M&eacute;moires de la Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des
+Ing&eacute;nieurs Civils de France</i>, the results of some
+experiments on the loss of pressure in gas when passing through
+pipes. He employed cast-iron pipes of the ordinary type. He has
+represented the results of his experiments by the binomial formula,
+au + bu&sup2;, and gives values for the coefficients a and b, which
+diminish with an increase in diameter, but would indicate greater
+losses of pressure than D'Aubuisson's formula. M. Deviller, in his
+<i>Rapport sur les travaux de percement du tunnel sous les
+Alpes</i>, states that the losses of pressure observed in the air
+pipe at the Mont Cenis Tunnel confirm the correctness of
+D'Aubuisson's formula; but his reasoning applies to too complicated
+a formula to be absolutely convincing.</p>
+
+<p>Quite recently M. E. Stockalper, engineer-in-chief at the
+northern end of the St. Gothard Tunnel, has made some experiments
+on the air conduit of this tunnel, the results of which he has
+kindly furnished to the author. These lead to values for the
+coefficient b<sub>1</sub> appreciably less than that which is
+contained implicitly in D'Aubuisson's formula. As he experimented
+on a rising pipe, it is necessary to introduce into the formula the
+difference of level, h, between the two ends; it then becomes <img
+src="images/tex7.png" align="middle" alt=
+"\frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2 + h"> .
+The following are the details of the experiments: First series of
+experiments: Conduit consisting of cast or wrought iron pipes,
+joined by means of flanges, bolts, and gutta percha rings. D = 0.20
+m. (8 in.); L = 4,600 m. (15,100 ft,); h= 26.77 m. (87 ft. 10 in.).
+1st experiment: Q = 0.1860 cubic meter (6.57 cubic feet), at a
+pressure of &frac12;(p<sub>1</sub> + p), and a temperature of
+22&deg; Cent. (72&deg; Fahr.); p<sub>1</sub> = 5.60 atm., p =5.24
+atm. Hence p<sub>1</sub> - p = 0.36 atm.= 0.36 x 10,334 kilogrammes
+per square meter (2.116 lb. per square foot), whence we obtain
+b<sub>1</sub>=0.0001697. D'Aubuisson's formula would have given
+p<sub>1</sub> - p = 0.626 atm.; and M. Arson's would have given
+p<sub>1</sub> - p = 0.9316 atm. 2d experiment: Q = 0.1566 cubic
+meter (5.53 cubic feet), at a pressure of &frac12;(p<sub>1</sub> +
+p), and a temperature of 22&deg; Cent. (72&deg; Fahr.);
+p<sub>1</sub> = 4.35 atm., p = 4.13 atm. Hence p<sub>1</sub> - p =
+0.22 atm. = 0.22 X 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2,116 lb.
+per square foot); whence we obtain b<sub>1</sub> = 0.0001816.
+D'Aubuisson's formula would have given p<sub>1</sub> - p = 0.347
+atm; and M. Arson's would have given p<sub>1</sub> - p = 0.5382
+atm. 3d experiment: Q = 0.1495 cubic meter (5.28 cubic feet) at a
+pressure of &frac12;(p<sub>1</sub> + p) and a temperature 22&deg;
+Cent. (72&ordm; Fahr.); p<sub>1</sub> = 3.84 atm., p = 3.65 atm.
+Hence p<sub>1</sub> - p = 0.19 atm. = 0.19 X 10,334 kilogrammes per
+square meter (2.116 lb. per square foot); whence we obtain
+B<sub>1</sub> = 0.0001966. D'Aubuisson's formula would have given
+p<sub>1</sub> - p = 0.284 atm., and M. Arson's would have given
+p<sub>1</sub> - p = 0.4329 atm. Second series of experiments:
+Conduit composed of wrought-iron pipes, with joints as in the first
+experiments. D = 0.15 meter (6 in.), L - 0.522 meters (1,712 ft.),
+h = 3.04 meters (10 ft.) 1st experiments: Q = 0.2005 cubic meter
+(7.08 cubic feet), at a pressure of &frac12;(p<sub>1</sub> + p),
+and a temperature of 26.5&deg; Cent. (80&deg; Fahr.); p<sub>1</sub>
+= 5.24 atm., p = 5.00 atm. Hence p<sub>1</sub> - p = 0.24 atm.
+=0.24 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2,116 lb. per square
+foot); whence we obtain b<sub>1</sub> = 0.3002275. 2nd experiment:
+Q = 0.1586 cubic meter (5.6 cubic feet), at a pressure of
+&frac12;(p<sub>1</sub> + p), and a temperature of 26.5&deg; Cent.
+(80&deg; Fahr.); p<sub>1</sub> = 3.650 atm., p = 3.545 atm. Hence
+p<sub>1</sub> - p = 0.105 atm. = 0.105 x 10,334 kilogrammes per
+square meter (2,116 lb. per square foot); whence we obtain
+b<sub>1</sub> = 0.0002255. It is clear that these experiments give
+very small values for the coefficient. The divergence from the
+results which D'Aubuisson's formula would give is due to the fact
+that his formula was determined with very small pipes. It is
+probable that the coefficients corresponding to diameters of 0.15
+meter (6 in.) and 0.20 meter (8 in.) for a substance as smooth as
+tin, would be still smaller respectively than the figures obtained
+above.</p>
+
+<p>The divergence from the results obtained by M. Arson's formula
+does not arise from a difference in size, as this is taken into
+account. The author considers that it may be attributed to the fact
+that the pipes for the St. Gothard Tunnel were cast with much
+greater care than ordinary pipes, which rendered their surface
+smoother, and also to the fact that flanged joints produce much
+less irregularity in the internal surface than the ordinary spigot
+and faucet joints.</p>
+
+<p>Lastly, the difference in the methods of observation and the
+errors which belong to them, must be taken into account. M.
+Stockalper, who experimented on great pressures, used metallic
+gauges, which are instruments on whose sensibility and correctness
+complete reliance cannot be placed; and moreover the standard
+manometer with which they were compared was one of the same kind.
+The author is not of opinion that the divergence is owing to the
+fact that M. Stockalper made his observations on an air conduit,
+where the pressure was much higher than in gas pipes. Indeed, it
+may be assumed that gases and liquids act in the same manner; and,
+as will be [1] explained later on, there is reason to believe that
+with the latter a rise of pressure increases the losses of pressure
+instead of diminishing them.</p>
+
+<p>[Transcribers note 1: corrected from 'as will we explained']</p>
+
+<p>All the pipes for supplying compressed air in tunnels and in
+headings of mines are left uncovered, and have flanged joints;
+which are advantages not merely as regards prevention of leakage,
+but also for facility of laying and of inspection. If a compressed
+air pipe had to be buried in the ground the flanged joint would
+lose a part of its advantages; but, nevertheless, the author
+considers that it would still be preferable to the ordinary
+joint.</p>
+
+<p>It only remains to refer to the motors fed with the compressed
+air. This subject is still in its infancy from a practical point of
+view. In proportion as the air becomes hot by compression, so it
+cools by expansion, if the vessel containing it is impermeable to
+heat. Under these conditions it gives out in expanding a power
+appreciably less than if it retained its original temperature;
+besides which the fall of temperature may impede the working of the
+machine by freezing the vapor of water contained in the air.</p>
+
+<p>If it is desired to utilize to the utmost the force stored up in
+the compressed air it is necessary to endeavor to supply heat to
+the air during expansion so as to keep its temperature constant. It
+would be possible to attain this object by the same means which
+prevent heating from compression, namely, by the circulation and
+injection of water. It would perhaps be necessary to employ a
+little larger quantity of water for injection, as the water,
+instead of acting by virtue both of its heat of vaporization and of
+its specific heat, can in this case act only by virtue of the
+latter. These methods might be employed without difficulty for air
+machines of some size. It would be more difficult to apply them to
+small household machines, in which simplicity is an essential
+element; and we must rest satisfied with imperfect methods, such as
+proximity to a stove, or the immersion of the cylinder in a tank of
+water. Consequently loss of power by cooling and by incomplete
+expansion cannot be avoided. The only way to diminish the relative
+amount of this loss is to employ compressed air at a pressure not
+exceeding three or four atmospheres.</p>
+
+<p>The only real practical advance made in this matter is M.
+M&eacute;karski's compressed air engine for tramways. In this
+engine the air is made to pass through a small boiler containing
+water at a temperature of about 120&deg; Cent. (248&deg; Fahr.),
+before entering the cylinder of the engine. It must be observed
+that in order to reduce the size of the reservoirs, which are
+carried on the locomotive, the air inside them must be very highly
+compressed; and that in going from the reservoir into the cylinder
+it passes through a reducing valve or expander, which keeps the
+pressure of admission at a definite figure, so that the locomotive
+can continue working so long as the supply of air contained in the
+reservoir has not come down to this limiting pressure. The air does
+not pass the expander until after it has gone through the boiler
+already mentioned. Therefore, if the temperature which it assumes
+in the boiler is 100&deg; Cent. (212&deg; Fahr.), and if the
+limiting pressure is 5 atm., the gas which enters the engine will
+be a mixture of air and water vapor at 100&deg; Cent.; and of its
+total pressure the vapor of water will contribute I atm. and the
+air 4 atm. Thus this contrivance, by a small expenditure of fuel,
+enables the air to act expansively without injurious cooling, and
+even reduces the consumption of compressed air to an extent which
+compensates for part of the loss of power arising from the
+preliminary expansion which the air experiences before its
+admission into the engine. It is clear that this same contrivance,
+or what amounts to the same thing, a direct injection of steam, at
+a sufficient pressure, for the purpose of maintaining the expanding
+air at a constant temperature, might be tried in a fixed engine
+worked by compressed air with some chance of success.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever method is adopted it would be advantageous that the
+losses of pressure in the pipes connecting the compressors with the
+motors should be reduced as much as possible, for in this case that
+loss would represent a loss of efficiency. If, on the other hand,
+owing to defective means of reheating, it is necessary to remain
+satisfied with a small amount of expansion, the loss of pressure in
+the pipe is unimportant, and has only the effect of transferring
+the limited expansion to a point a little lower on the scale of
+pressures. If W is the net disposable force on the shaft of the
+engine which works the compressor, v<sub>1</sub> the volume of air
+at the compressor, p<sub>1</sub>. given by the compressor, and at
+the temperature of the surrounding air, and p<sub>0</sub> the
+atmospheric pressure, the efficiency of the compressor, assuming
+the air to expand according to Boyle's law, is given by the
+well-known formula--<img src="images/tex8.png" align=
+"middle" alt="\frac{p_1 v_1 \log \frac{p_1}{p_0}}{W}"> . Let
+p<sub>2</sub> be the value to which the pressure is reduced by the
+loss of pressure at the end of the conduit, and v<sub>2</sub> the
+volume which the air occupies at this pressure and at the same
+temperature; the force stored up in the air at the end of its
+course through the conduit is p<sub>2</sub> v<sub>2</sub>
+log(p<sub>2</sub>/p<sub>0</sub>); consequently, the efficiency of
+the conduit is<img src="images/tex9.png" align="middle"
+alt=
+"\frac{p_2 v_2 \log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}{p_2 v_2 \log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}">
+, a fraction that may be reduced to the simple form<img src=
+"images/tex10.png" align="middle" alt=
+"\frac{\log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}{\log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}">, if there is no
+leakage during the passage of the air, because in that cause
+p<sub>2</sub> v<sub>2</sub> = p<sub>1</sub> v<sub>1</sub>. Lastly,
+if W<sub>1</sub> is the net disposable force on the shaft of the
+compressed air motor, the efficiency of this engine will be, <img
+src="images/tex11.png" align="middle" alt=
+"\frac{W_1}{p_2 v_2 \log \frac{p_2}{p_0}}"> and the product of
+these three partial efficiencies is equal to W<sub>1</sub>/W, the
+general efficiency of the transmission.</p>
+
+<p>III. <i>Transmission by Pressure Water</i>.--As transmission of
+power by compressed air has been specially applied to the driving
+of tunnels, so transmission by pressure water has been specially
+resorted to for lifting heavy loads, or for work of a similar
+nature, such as the operations connected with the manufacture of
+Bessemer steel or of cast-iron pipes. The author does not propose
+to treat of transmissions established for this special purpose, and
+depending on the use of accumulators at high pressure, as he has no
+fresh matter to impart on this subject, and as he believes that the
+remarkable invention of Sir William Armstrong was described for the
+first time, in the "Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical
+Engineers." His object is to refer to transmissions applicable to
+general purposes.</p>
+
+<p>The transmission of power by water may occur in another form.
+The motive force to be transmitted may be employed for working
+pumps which raise the water, not to a fictitious height in an
+accumulator, but to a real height in a reservoir, with a channel
+from this reservoir to distribute the water so raised among several
+motors arranged for utilizing the pressure. The author is not aware
+that works have been carried out for this purpose. However, in many
+towns a part of the water from the public mains serves to supply
+small motors--consequently, if the water, instead of being brought
+by a natural fall, has been previously lifted artificially, it
+might be said that a transmission of power is here grafted on to
+the ordinary distribution of water.</p>
+
+<p>Unless a positive or negative force of gravity is introduced
+into the problem, independently of the force to be transmitted, the
+receivers of the water pressure must be assumed to be at the same
+level as the forcing pumps, or more correctly, the water discharged
+from the receivers to be at the same level as the surface of the
+water from which the pumps draw their supply. In this case the
+general efficiency of transmission is the product of three partial
+efficiencies, which correspond exactly to those mentioned with
+regard to compressed air. The height of lift, contained in the
+numerator of the fraction which expresses the efficiency of the
+pumps, is not to be taken as the difference in level between the
+surface of the water in the reservoir and the surface of the water
+whence the pumps draw their supply; but as this difference in
+level, plus the loss of pressure in the suction pipe, which is
+usually very short, and plus the loss in the channel to the
+reservoir, which may be very long. A similar loss of initial
+pressure affects the efficiency of the discharge channel. The
+reservoir, if of sufficient capacity, may become an important store
+of power, while the compressed air reservoir can only do so to a
+very limited extent.</p>
+
+<p>Omitting the subject of the pumps, and passing on at once to the
+discharge main, the author may first point out that the distinction
+between the ascending and descending mains of the system is of no
+importance, for two reasons: first, that nothing prevents the
+motors being supplied direct from the first alone; and second, that
+the one is not always distinct from the other. In fact, the
+reservoir may be connected by a single branch pipe with the system
+which goes from the pumps to the motors; it may even be placed at
+the extreme end of this system beyond the motors, provided always
+that the supply pipe is taken into it at the bottom. The same
+formula may be adopted for the loss of initial pressure in water
+pipes as for compressed air pipes, viz.,<img src=
+"images/tex12.png" align="middle" alt=
+"\frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2 \pm h"> ;
+h being the difference of level between the two ends of the portion
+of conduit of length, L, and the sign + or - being used according
+as the conduit rises or falls. The specific weight, &delta;, is
+constant, and the quotients, p<sub>1</sub>/&delta; and p/&delta;,
+represent the heights, z and z<sub>1</sub>, to which the water
+could rise above the pipes, in vertical tubes branching from it, at
+the beginning and end of the transit. The values assigned to the
+coefficient b<sub>1</sub> in France, are those determined by
+D'Arcy. For new cast-iron pipes he gives b<sub>1</sub> - 0.0002535
++ 1/D 0.000000647; and recommends that this value should be
+doubled, to allow for the rust and incrustation which more or less
+form inside the pipes during use. The determination of this
+coefficient has been made from experiments where the pressure has
+not exceeded four atmospheres; within these limits the value of the
+coefficient, as is generally admitted, is independent of the
+pressure. The experiments made by M. Barret, on the pressure pipes
+of the accumulator at the Marseilles docks, seem to indicate that
+the loss of pressure would be greater for high pressures,
+everything else being equal. This pipe, having a diameter of 0.127
+m. (5 in.), was subjected to an initial pressure of 52 atmospheres.
+The author gives below the results obtained for a straight length
+320 m. (1050 ft) long; and has placed beside them the results which
+D'Arcy's formula would give.</p>
+
+<pre>
+ Loss of head, in meters or ft. respectively
+ per 100 meters or ft. run of pipes.
+ +-----------------^-------------------+
+ | |
+ Calculated loss.
+ +-----------^-----------+
+ | |
+Velocity of flow Actual loss
+ per second. observed. Old pipes. New pipes.
+Meters. Feet. Met. or Ft. Met. or Ft. Met. or Ft.
+0.25 0.82 1.5 0.12 0.06
+0.50 1.64 2.5 0.48 0.24
+0.75 2.46 3.7 1.08 0.54
+1.00 3.28 5.5 1.92 0.96
+1.25 4.10 6.1 3.00 1.50
+1.50 4.92 7.3 4.32 2.16
+1.75 5.74 8.0 5.88 2.94
+2.00 6.56 10.2 7.68 3.84
+2.25 7.38 11.7 9.72 4.86
+2.50 8.20 14.0 12.00 6.00
+</pre>
+
+<p>Moreover, these results would appear to indicate a different law
+from that which is expressed by the formula b<sub>1</sub>
+u<sup>2</sup>, as is easy to see by representing them graphically.
+It would be very desirable that fresh experiments should be made on
+water pipes at high pressure, and of various diameters. Of machines
+worked by water pressure the author proposes to refer only to two
+which appear to him in every respect the most practical and
+advantageous. One is the piston machine of M. Albert Schmid,
+engineer at Zurich. The cylinder is oscillating, and the
+distribution is effected, without an eccentric, by the relative
+motion of two spherical surfaces fitted one against the other, and
+having the axis of oscillation for a common axis. The convex
+surface, which is movable and forms part of the cylinder, serves as
+a port face, and has two ports in it communicating with the two
+ends of the cylinder. The concave surface, which is fixed and plays
+the part of a slide valve, contains three openings, the two outer
+ones serving to admit the pressure water, and the middle one to
+discharge the water after it has exerted its pressure. The piston
+has no packing. Its surface of contact has two circumferential
+grooves, which produce a sort of water packing acting by adhesion.
+A small air chamber is connected with the inlet pipe, and serves to
+deaden the shocks. This engine is often made with two cylinders,
+having their cranks at right angles.</p>
+
+<p>The other engine, which is much less used, is a turbine on
+Girard's system, with a horizontal axis and partial admission,
+exactly resembling in miniature those which work in the hydraulic
+factory of St. Maur, near Paris. The water is introduced by means
+of a distributer, which is fitted in the interior of the turbine
+chamber, and occupies a certain portion of its circumference. This
+turbine has a lower efficiency than Schmid's machine, and is less
+suitable for high pressures; but it possesses this advantage over
+it, that by regulating the amount of opening of the distributer,
+and consequently the quantity of water admitted, the force can be
+altered without altering the velocity of rotation. As it admits of
+great speeds, it could be usefully employed direct, without the
+interposition of spur wheels or belts for driving magneto-electric
+machines employed for the production of light, for electrotyping,
+etc.</p>
+
+<p>In compressed air machines the losses of pressure due to
+incomplete expansion, cooling, and waste spaces, play an important
+part. In water pressure machines loss does not occur from these
+causes, on account of the incompressibility of the liquid, but the
+frictions of the parts are the principal causes of loss of power.
+It would be advisable to ascertain whether, as regards this point,
+high or low pressures are the most advantageous. Theoretical
+considerations would lead the author to imagine that for a piston
+machine low pressures are preferable. In conclusion, the following
+table gives the efficiencies of a Girard turbine, constructed by
+Messrs. Escher Wyss &amp; Co., of Zurich, and of a Schmid machine,
+as measured by Professor Fliegnor, in 1871:</p>
+
+<pre>
+ ESCHER WYSS &amp; CO'S TURBINE.
+<br>
+Effective Head of Water. Revolutions Efficiency.
+ per minute.
+Meters. Feet. Revs. Per cent.
+ 20.7 67.9 628 68.5
+ 20.7 67.9 847 47.4
+ 24.1 79.0 645 68.5
+ 27.6 90.5 612 65.7
+ 27.6 90.5 756 68.0
+ 31.0 101.7 935 56.9
+ 31.0 101.7 1,130 35.1
+<br>
+ SCHMID MOTOR.
+<br>
+ 8.3 27.2 226 37.4
+ 11.4 37.4 182 67.4
+ 14.5 47.6 254 53.4
+ 17.9 58.7 157 86.2
+ 20.7 67.9 166 89.6
+ 20.7 67.9 225 74.6
+ 24.1 79.0 238 76.7
+ 24.1 79.0 389 64.0
+ 27.6 90.5 207 83.9
+</pre>
+
+<p>It will be observed that these experiments relate to low
+pressures; it would be desirable to extend them to higher
+pressures.</p>
+
+<p>IV. <i>Transmission by Electricity.</i>--However high the
+efficiency of an electric motor may be, in relation to the chemical
+work of the electric battery which feeds it, force generated by an
+electric battery is too expensive, on account of the nature of the
+materials consumed, for a machine of this kind ever to be employed
+for industrial purposes. If, however, the electric current, instead
+of being developed by chemical work in a battery, is produced by
+ordinary mechanical power in a magneto-electric or dynamo-electric
+machine, the case is different; and the double transformation,
+first of the mechanical force into an electric current, and then of
+that current into mechanical force, furnishes a means for effecting
+the conveyance of the power to a distance.</p>
+
+<p>It is this last method of transmission which remains to be
+discussed. The author, however, feels himself obliged to restrict
+himself in this matter to a mere summary; and, indeed, it is
+English physicists and engineers who have taken the technology of
+electricity out of the region of empiricism and have placed it on a
+scientific and rational basis. Moreover, they are also taking the
+lead in the progress which is being accomplished in this branch of
+knowledge, and are best qualified to determine its true bearings.
+When an electric current, with an intensity, i, is produced, either
+by chemical or mechanical work, in a circuit having a total
+resistance, R, a quantity of heat is developed in the circuit, and
+this heat is the exact equivalent of the force expended, so long as
+the current is not made use of for doing any external work. The
+expression for this quantity of heat, per unit of time, is
+Ai&sup2;R; A being the thermal equivalent of the unit of power
+corresponding to the units of current and resistance, in which i
+and R are respectively expressed. The product, i&sup2;R, is a
+certain quantity of power, which the author proposes to call
+<i>power transformed into electricity</i>. When mechanical power is
+employed for producing a current by means of a magneto-electric or
+dynamo-electric machine--or, to use a better expression, by means
+of a <i>mechanical generator of electricity</i>--it is necessary in
+reality to expend a greater quantity of power than i&sup2;R in
+order to make up for losses which result either from ordinary
+friction or from certain electro magnetic reactions which occur.
+The ratio of the quantity, i&sup2;R, to the power, W, actually
+expended per unit of time is called the efficiency of the
+generator. Designating it by K, we obtain, W = i&sup2;R/K. It is
+very important to ascertain the value of this efficiency,
+considering that it necessarily enters as a factor into the
+evaluation of all the effects to be produced by help of the
+generator in question. The following table gives the results of
+certain experiments made early in 1879, with a Gramme machine, by
+an able physicist, M Hagenbach, Professor at the University at
+Basle, and kindly furnished by him to the author:</p>
+
+<pre>
+Revolutions per minute 935 919.5 900.5 893
+<br>
+Total resistance in Siemens' units 2.55 3.82 4.94 6.06
+<br>
+Total resistance in absolute units 2.435 3.648 4.718 5.787
+ x10^9 x10^9 x10^9 x10^9
+<br>
+Intensity in chemical units 17.67 10.99 8.09 6.28
+<br>
+Intensity in absolute units 2.828 1.759 1.295 1.005
+<br>
+Work done i&sup2;R in absolute units 1948.6 1129.2 791.3 584.9
+ x10^7 x10^7 x10^7 x10^7
+<br>
+Work done i&sup2;R in kilogrammes 198.6 115.1 80.66 59.62
+<br>
+Power expended in kilogrammes 301.5 141.0 86.25 83.25
+<br>
+Efficiency, per cent. 65.9 81.6 93.5 71.6
+</pre>
+
+<p>M. Hagenbach's dynamometric measurements were made by the aid of
+a brake. After each experiment on the electric machine, he applied
+the brake to the engine which he employed, taking care to make it
+run at precisely the same speed, with the same pressure of steam,
+and with the same expansion as during experiment. It would
+certainly be better to measure the force expended during and not
+after the experiment, by means of a registering dynamometer.
+Moreover, M. Hagenbach writes that his measurements by means of the
+brake were very much prejudiced by external circumstances;
+doubtless this is the reason of the divergences between the results
+obtained.</p>
+
+<p>About the same time Dr. Hopkinson communicated to this
+institution the results of some very careful experiments made on a
+Siemens machine. He measured the force expended by means of a
+registering dynamometer, and obtained very high coefficients of
+efficiency, amounting to nearly 90 per cent. M. Hagenbach also
+obtained from one machine a result only a little less than unity.
+Mechanical generators of electricity are certainly capable of being
+improved in several respects, especially as regards their
+adaptation to certain definite classes of work. But there appears
+to remain hardly any margin for further progress as regards
+efficiency. Force transformed into electricity in a generator may
+be expressed by i &omega; M C; &omega; being the angular velocity
+of rotation; M the magnetism of one of the poles, inducing or
+induced, which intervenes; and C a constant specially belonging to
+each apparatus, and which is independent of the units adopted. This
+constant could not be determined except by an integration
+practically impossible; and the product, M C, must be considered
+indivisible. Even in a magneto-electric machine (with permanent
+inducing magnets), and much more in a dynamo-electric machine
+(inducing by means of electro-magnets excited by the very current
+produced) the product, M C, is a function of the intensity. From
+the identity of the expressions, i&sup2;R and i &omega; M C we
+obtain the relation M C = IR/&omega; which indicates the course to
+be pursued to determine experimentally the law which connects the
+variations of M C with those of i. Some experiments made in 1876,
+by M. Hagenbach, on a Gramme dynamo-electric machine, appear to
+indicate that the magnetism, M C, does not increase indefinitely
+with the intensity, but that there is some maximum value for this
+quantity. If, instead of working a generator by an external motive
+force, a current is passed through its circuit in a certain given
+direction, the movable part of the machine will begin to turn in an
+opposite direction to that in which it would have been necessary to
+turn it in order to obtain a current in the aforesaid direction. In
+virtue of this motion the electro-magnetic forces which are
+generated may be used to overcome a resisting force. The machine
+will then work as a motor or receiver. Let i be the intensity of
+the external current which works the motor, when the motor is kept
+at rest. If it is now allowed to move, its motion produces, in
+virtue of the laws of induction, a current in the circuit of
+intensity, i<sub>1</sub>, in the opposite direction to the external
+current; the effective intensity of the current traversing the
+circuit is thus reduced to i - i<sub>1</sub>. The intensity of the
+counter current is given, like that of the generating current, by
+the equation, i<sub>1</sub><sup>2</sup>R = i<sub>1</sub>
+&omega;<sub>1</sub> M<sub>1</sub> C<sub>1</sub>, or i<sub>1</sub>R
+= &omega;<sub>1</sub> M<sub>1</sub> C<sub>1</sub>, the index,
+<sub>1</sub>, denoting the quantities relating to the motor. Here
+M<sub>1</sub> C<sub>1</sub> is a function of i - i<sub>1</sub>, not
+of i. As in a generator the force transformed into electricity has
+a value, i &omega; M C, so in a motor the force developed by
+electricity is (i - i<sub>1</sub>) &omega;<sub>1</sub>
+M<sub>1</sub> C<sub>1</sub>. On account, however, of the losses
+which occur, the effective power, that is the disposable power on
+the shaft of the motor, will have a smaller value, and in order to
+arrive at it a coefficient of efficiency, K<sub>1</sub>, must be
+added. We shall then have W<sub>1</sub> = K<sub>1</sub>
+(i-i<sub>1</sub>) &omega;<sub>1</sub> M<sub>1</sub> C<sub>1</sub>.
+The author has no knowledge of any experiments having been made for
+obtaining this efficiency, K<sub>1</sub>. Next let us suppose that
+the current feeding the motor is furnished by a generator, so that
+actual transmission by electricity is taking place. The circuit,
+whose resistance is R, comprises the coils, both fixed and movable,
+of the generator and motor, and of the conductors which connect
+them. The intensity of the current which traverses the circuit had
+the value, i, when the motor was at rest; by the working of the
+motor it is reduced to i - i<sub>1</sub>. The power applied to the
+generator is itself reduced to W-[(i-i<sub>1</sub>)&omega; M C]/K.
+The prime mover is relieved by the action of the counter current,
+precisely as the consumption of zinc in the battery would be
+reduced by the same cause, if the battery was the source of the
+current. The efficiency of the transmission is W<sub>1</sub>/W.
+Calculation shows that it is expressed by the following
+equations:W<sub>1</sub>/W = K K<sub>1</sub>
+[(&omega;<sub>1</sub><sub>1</sub> M<sub>1</sub>
+C<sub>1</sub>)/(&omega;<sub>1</sub> M C)], or = K K<sub>1</sub>
+[(&omega;<sub>1</sub><sub>1</sub> M<sub>1</sub>
+C)/(&omega;<sub>1</sub><sub>1</sub> M<sub>1</sub> C<sub>1</sub> +
+(i-i<sub>1</sub>) R)]; expressions in which it must be remembered M
+C and M<sub>1</sub> C<sub>1</sub> are really functions of
+(i-i<sub>1</sub>). This efficiency is, then, the product of three
+distinct factors, each evidently less than unity, namely, the
+efficiency belonging to the generator, the efficiency belonging to
+the motor, and a third factor depending on the rate of rotation of
+the motor and the resistance of the circuit. The influence which
+these elements exert on the value of the third factor cannot be
+estimated, unless the law is first known according to which the
+magnetisms, M C, M<sub>1</sub> C C<sub>1</sub>, vary with the
+intensity of the current.</p>
+
+<h3>GENERAL RESULTS.</h3>
+
+<p>Casting a retrospective glance at the four methods of
+transmission of power which have been examined, it would appear
+that transmission by ropes forms a class by itself, while the three
+other methods combine into a natural group, because they possess a
+character in common of the greatest importance. It may be said that
+all three involve a temporary transformation of the mechanical
+power to be utilized into potential energy. Also in each of these
+methods the efficiency of transmission is the product of three
+factors or partial efficiencies, which correspond exactly--namely,
+first, the efficiency of the instrument which converts the actual
+energy of the prime mover into potential energy; second, the
+efficiency of the instrument which reconverts this potential energy
+into actual energy, that is, into motion, and delivers it up in
+this shape for the actual operations which accomplish industrial
+work; third, the efficiency of the intermediate agency which serves
+for the conveyance of potential energy from the first instrument to
+the second.</p>
+
+<p>This last factor has just been given for transmission by
+electricity. It is the exact correlative of the efficiency of the
+pipe in the case of compressed air or of pressure water. It is as
+useful in the case of electric transmission, as of any other
+method, to be able, in studying the system, to estimate beforehand
+what results it is able to furnish, and for this purpose it is
+necessary to calculate exactly the factors which compose the
+efficiency.</p>
+
+<p>In order to obtain this desirable knowledge, the author
+considers that the three following points should form the aim of
+experimentalists: First, the determination of the efficiency, K, of
+the principal kinds of magneto-electric, or dynamo-electric
+machines working as generators; second, the determination of the
+efficiency, K<sub>1</sub>, of the same machines working as motors;
+third, the determination of the law according to which the
+magnetism of the cores of these machines varies with the intensity
+of the current. The author is of opinion that experiments made with
+these objects in view would be more useful than those conducted for
+determining the general efficiency of transmission, for the latter
+give results only available under precisely similar conditions.
+However, it is clear that they have their value and must not be
+neglected.</p>
+
+<p>There are, moreover, many other questions requiring to be
+elucidated by experiment, especially as regards the arrangement of
+the conducting wires: but it is needless to dwell further upon this
+subject, which has been ably treated by many English men of
+science--for instance, Dr. Siemens and Professor Ayrton.
+Nevertheless, for further information the author would refer to the
+able articles published at Paris, by M. Mascart, in the <i>Journal
+de Physique</i>, in 1877 and 1878. The author would gladly have
+concluded this paper with a comparison of the efficiencies of the
+four systems which have been examined, or what amounts to the same
+thing--with a comparison of the losses of power which they
+occasion. Unfortunately, such a comparison has never been made
+experimentally, because hitherto the opportunity of doing it in a
+demonstrative manner has been wanting, for the transmission of
+power to a distance belongs rather to the future than to the
+present time. Transmission by electricity is still in its infancy;
+it has only been applied on a small scale and experimentally.</p>
+
+<p>Of the three other systems, transmission by means of ropes is
+the only one that has been employed for general industrial
+purposes, while compressed air and water under pressure have been
+applied only to special purposes, and their use has been due much
+more to their special suitableness for these purposes than from any
+considerations relative to loss of power. Thus the effective work
+of the compressed air used in driving the tunnels through the Alps,
+assuming its determination to be possible, was undoubtedly very
+low; nevertheless, in the present state of our appliances it is the
+only process by which such operations can be accomplished. The
+author believes that transmission by ropes furnishes the highest
+proportion of useful work, but that as regards a wide distribution
+of the transmitted power the other two methods, by air and water,
+might merit a preference.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="2"></a></p>
+
+<h2>THE HOTCHKISS REVOLVING GUN.</h2>
+
+<p>The Hotchkiss revolving gun, already adopted in the French navy
+and by other leading European nations, has been ordered for use in
+the German navy by the following decree of the German Emperor,
+dated January 11 last: "On the report made to me, I approve the
+adoption of the Hotchkiss revolving cannon as a part of the
+artillery of my navy; and each of my ships, according to their
+classification, shall in general be armed with this weapon in such
+a manner that every point surrounding the vessel may be protected
+by the fire of at least two guns at a minimum range of 200
+meters."</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>THALLIUM PAPERS AS OZONOMETERS.</h2>
+
+<p>Schoene has given the results of an extended series of
+experiments on the use of thallium paper for estimating
+approximately the oxidizing material in the atmosphere, whether it
+be hydrogen peroxide alone, or mixed with ozone, or perhaps also
+with other constituents hitherto unknown. The objection to
+Sch&ouml;nbein's ozonometer (potassium iodide on starch paper) and
+to Houzeau's ozonometer (potassium iodide on red litmus paper) lies
+in the fact that their materials are hygroscopic, and their
+indications vary widely with the moisture of the air. Since dry
+ozone does not act on these papers, they must be moistened; and
+then the amount of moisture varies the result quite as much as the
+amount of ozone. Indeed, attention has been called to the larger
+amount of ozone near salt works and waterfalls, and the erroneous
+opinion advanced that ozone is formed when water is finely divided.
+And B&ouml;ttger has stated that ozone is formed when ether is
+atomized; the fact being that the reaction he observed was due to
+the H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> always present in ether. Direct
+experiments with the Sch&ouml;nbein ozonometer and the psychrometer
+gave parallel curves; whence the author regards the former as only
+a crude hygrometer. These objections do not lie against the
+thallium paper, the oxidation to brown oxide by either ozone or
+hydrogen peroxide not requiring the presence of moisture, and the
+color, therefore, being independent of the hygrometric state of the
+air. Moreover, when well cared for, the papers undergo no farther
+change of color and may be preserved indefinitely. The author
+prepares the thallium paper a few days before use, by dipping
+strips of Swedish filtering paper in a solution of thallous
+hydrate, and drying. The solution is prepared by pouring a solution
+of thallous sulphate into a boiling solution of barium hydrate,
+equivalent quantities being taken, the resulting solution of
+thallous hydrate being concentrated in vacuo until 100 c.c.
+contains 10 grammes Tl(OH). For use the strips are hung in the free
+air in a close vessel, preferably over caustic lime, for twelve
+hours. Other papers are used, made with a two per cent. solution.
+These are exposed for thirty-six hours. The coloration is
+determined by comparison with a scale having eleven degrees of
+intensity upon it. Compared with Sch&ouml;nbein's ozonometer, the
+results are in general directly opposite. The thallium papers show
+that the greatest effect is in the daytime, the iodide papers that
+it is at night. Yearly curves show that the former generally
+indicate a rise when the latter give a fall. The iodide curve
+follows closely that of relative humidity, clouds, and rain; the
+thallium curve stands in no relation to it. A table of results for
+the year 1879 is given in monthly means, of the two thallium
+papers, the ozonometer, the relative humidity, cloudiness, rain,
+and velocity of wind.--<i>G. F. B., in Ber. Berl. Chem.
+Ces.</i></p>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>THE AUDIPHONE IN ENGLAND.</h2>
+
+<p>The audiphone has been recently tried in the Board School for
+Deaf and Dumb at Turin street, Bethnal Green, with very
+satisfactory results--so satisfactory that the report will
+recommend its adoption in the four schools which the London Board
+have erected for the education of the deaf and dumb. Some 20 per
+cent. of the pupils in deaf and dumb schools have sufficient power
+of hearing when assisted by the audiphone to enable them to take
+their places in the classes of the ordinary schools.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>CONDUCTIVITY OF MOIST AIR.</h2>
+
+<p>Many physical treatises still assert that moist air conducts
+electricity, though Silberman and others have proved the contrary.
+An interesting experiment bearing on this has been described lately
+by Prof. Marangoni. Over a flame is heated some water in a glass
+jar, through the stopper of which passes a bent tube to bell-jar
+(held obliquely), which thus gets filled with aqueous vapor. The
+upper half of a thin Leyden jar charged is brought into the
+bell-jar, and held there four or five seconds; it is then found
+entirely discharged. That the real cause of this, however, is
+condensation of the vapor on the part of the glass that is not
+coated with tin foil (the liquid layer acting by conduction) can be
+proved; for if that part of the jar be passed several times rapidly
+through the flame, so as to heat it to near 100&deg; C., before
+inserting in the bell-jar, a different effect will be had; the
+Leyden jar will give out long sparks after withdrawal. This is
+because the glass being heated no longer condenses the vapor on its
+surface, and there is no superficial conduction, as in the previous
+case.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="3"></a></p>
+
+<h2>FLOATING PONTOON DOCK.</h2>
+
+<p>Considerable attention has been given for some years past to the
+subject of floating pontoon docks by Mr. Robert Turnbull, naval
+architect, of South Shields, Eng., who has devised the ingenious
+arrangement which forms the subject of the annexed illustration.
+The end aimed at and now achieved by Mr. Turnbull was so to
+construct floating docks or pontoons that they may rise and fall in
+a berth, and be swung round at one end upon a center post or
+cylinder--nautically known as a dolphin--projecting from the ground
+at a slight distance from the berth. The cylinder is in deep water,
+and, when the pontoon is swung and sunk to the desired depth by
+letting in the necessary amount of water, a vessel can be floated
+in and then secured. The pontoon, with the vessel on it, is then
+raised by pumping out the contained water until she is a little
+above the level of the berth. The whole is then swung round over
+the berth, the vessel then being high and dry to enable repairs or
+other operations to be conducted. For this purpose, one end of the
+pontoon is so formed as to enable it to fit around the cylinder,
+and to be held to it as to a center or fulcrum, about which the
+pontoon can be swung. The pontoon is of special construction, and
+has air-chambers at the sides placed near the center, so as to
+balance it. It also has chambers at the ends, which are divided
+horizontally in order that the operation of submerging within a
+berth or in shallow water may be conducted without risk, the upper
+chambers being afterwards supplied with water to sink the pontoon
+to the full depth before a vessel is hauled in. When the ship is in
+place, the pontoon with her is then lifted above the level of the
+berth in which it has to be placed, and then swung round into the
+berth. In some cases, the pontoon is provided with a cradle, so
+that, when in berth, the vessel on the cradle can be hauled up a
+slip with rails arranged as a continuation of the cradle-rails of
+the pontoon, which can be then furnished with another cradle, and
+another vessel lifted.</p>
+
+<p>It is this latter arrangement which forms the subject of our
+illustration, the vessel represented being of the following
+dimensions: Length between perpendiculars, 350 feet; breadth,
+moulded, 40 feet; depth, moulded, 32 feet; tons, B. M., 2,600; tons
+net, 2,000. At A, in fig. 1, is shown in dotted lines a portion of
+the vessel and pontoon, the ship having just been hauled in and
+centered over the keel blocks. At B, is shown the pontoon with the
+ship raised and swung round on to a low level quay. Going a step
+further in the operation, we see at C, the vessel hauled on to the
+slipways on the high-level quay. In this case the cylinder is
+arranged so that the vessel may be delivered on to the rails or
+slips, which are arranged radially, taking the cylinder as the
+center. There may be any number of slips so arranged, and one
+pontoon may be made available for several cylinders at the deep
+water parts of neighboring repairing or building yards, in which
+case the recessed portion of the pontoon, when arranged around the
+cylinder, has stays or retaining bars fitted to prevent it leaving
+the cylinder when the swinging is taking place, such as might
+happen in a tideway.</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/11a.png"><img src=
+"images/11a_th.png" alt=
+"Fig. 1. IMPROVED FLOATING PONTOON DRY DOCK."></a></p>
+
+<p class="ctr">Fig. 1. IMPROVED FLOATING PONTOON DRY DOCK.</p>
+
+<p>The arrangements for delivering vessels on radial slips is seen
+in plan at fig. 2, where A represents the river or deep water; B is
+the pontoon with the vessel; C being the cylinder or turning
+center; D is the low-level quay on to which the pontoon carrying
+the ship is first swung; E is the high-level quay with the
+slip-ways; F is an engine running on rails around the radial slips
+for drawing the vessels with the cradle off the pontoon, and
+hauling them up on to the high-level quay; and G shows the
+repairing shops, stores, and sheds. A pontoon attached to a
+cylinder may be fitted with an ordinary wet dock; and then the
+pontoon, before or after the vessel is upon it, can be slewed round
+to suit the slips up which the vessel has to be moved, supposing
+the slips are arranged radially. In this case, the pivot end of the
+pontoon would be a fixture, so to speak, to the cylinder.</p>
+
+<p>The pontoon may also be made available for lifting heavy
+weights, by fitting a pair of compound levers or other apparatus at
+one end, the lifting power being in the pontoon itself. In some
+cases, in order to lengthen the pontoon, twenty-five or fifty foot
+lengths are added at the after end. When not thus engaged, those
+lengths form short pontoons suitable for small
+vessels.--<i>Iron</i>.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="20"></a></p>
+
+<h2>WEIRLEIGH, BRENCHLEY, KENT.</h2>
+
+<p>Some few years since, Mr. Harrison Weir (whose drawings of
+natural history are known probably to a wider circle of the general
+public than the works of most artists), wishing to pursue his
+favorite study of animals and horticulture, erected on the steep
+hillside of the road leading from Paddock Wood to Brenchley, a
+small "cottage orn&eacute;e" with detached studio. Afterward
+desiring more accommodation, he carried out the buildings shown in
+our illustrations. Advantage has been taken of the slope of the
+hill on one side, and the rising ground in the rear on the other,
+to increase the effect of the buildings and meet the difficulty of
+the levels. The two portions--old, etched, and new, shown as
+black--are connected together by a handsome staircase, which is
+carried up in the tower, and affords access to the various levels.
+The materials are red brick, with Bathstone dressings, and
+weather-tiling on the upper floors. Black walnut, pitch pine, and
+sequoias have been used in the staircase, and joiner's work to the
+principal rooms. The principal stoves are of Godstone stone only,
+no iron or metal work being used. The architects are Messrs.
+Wadmore &amp; Baker, of 35 Great St. Helens, E.C.; the builders,
+Messrs. Penn Brothers, of Pembury, Kent.--<i>Building News</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/12a.png"><img src=
+"images/12a_th.png" alt=""></a></p>
+
+<p class="ctr">ARTISTS HOMES<br>
+NO 11<br>
+"WEIRLEIGH"<br>
+BRENCHLEY, KENT.<br>
+THE RESIDENCE OF<br>
+HARRISON WEIR ESQ'RE<br>
+WADMORE &amp; BAKER<br>
+ARCHITECTS</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="19"></a></p>
+
+<h2>RAPID BREATHING AS A PAIN OBTUNDER IN MINOR SURGERY,
+OBSTETRICS, THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF MEDICINE AND OF DENTISTRY.</h2>
+
+<p>[Footnote: Read before the Philadelphia County Medical Society,
+May 12, 1880, by W. G. A. Bonwill, M.D., D.D.S., Philadelphia.]</p>
+
+<p>Through the kind invitation of your directors, I am present to
+give you the history of "rapid breathing" as an analgesic agent, as
+well as my experience therein since I first discovered it. It is
+with no little feeling of modesty that I appear before such a
+learned and honorable body of physicians and surgeons, and I accept
+the privilege as a high compliment. I trust the same liberal spirit
+which prompted you to call this subject to the light of
+investigation will not forsake you when you have heard all I have
+to say and you sit in judgment thereon. Sufficient time has now
+elapsed since the first promulgation of the subject for the shafts
+of ridicule to be well nigh spent (which is the common logic used
+to crush out all new ideas), and it is to be expected that
+gentlemen will look upon it with all the charity of a learned body,
+and not be too hasty to condemn what they have had but little
+chance to investigate; and, of course, have not practiced with that
+success which can only come from an intelligent understanding of
+its application and <i>modus operandi</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing the history of past discoveries, I was well prepared for
+the crucible. I could not hope to be an exception. But, so far, the
+medical profession have extended me more favor than I have received
+at the hands of the dental profession.</p>
+
+<p>My first conception of the analgesic property of a pain obtunder
+in contradistinction to its anaesthetic effect, which finally led
+to the discovery of the inhalation of common air by "rapid
+breathing," was in 1855 or 1856, while performing upon my own teeth
+certain operations which gave me intense pain (and I could not
+afford to hurt myself) without a resort to ether and chloroform.
+These agents had been known so short a time that no one was
+specially familiar with their action. Without knowing whether I
+could take chloroform administered by myself, and at the same time
+perform with skill the excavation of extremely sensitive dentine or
+tooth-bone, as if no anaesthetic had been taken, and not be
+conscious of pain, was more than the experience of medical men at
+that time could assure me. But, having a love for investigation of
+the unknown, I prepared myself for the ordeal. By degrees I took
+the chloroform until I began to feel very plainly its primary
+effects, and knowing that I must soon be unconscious, I applied the
+excavator to the carious tooth, and, to my surprise, found no pain
+whatever, but the sense of touch and hearing were marvelously
+intensified. The small cavity seemed as large as a half bushel; the
+excavator more the size of an ax; and the sound was equally
+magnified. That I might not be mistaken, I repeated the operation
+until I was confident that anaesthetics possessed a power not
+hitherto known--that of analgesia. To be doubly certain, I gave it
+in my practice, in many cases with the same happy results, which
+saved me from the risks incident to the secondary effects of
+anaesthetics, and which answered for all the purposes of extracting
+from one to four teeth. Not satisfied with any advance longer than
+I could find a better plan, I experimented with the galvanic
+current (to and fro) by so applying the poles that I substituted a
+stronger impression by electricity from the nerve centers or
+ganglia to the peripheries than was made from the periphery to the
+brain. This was so much of a success that I threw aside chloroform
+and ether in removing the living nerve of a tooth with instruments
+instead of using arsenic; and for excavating sensitive caries in
+teeth, preparatory to filling, as well as many teeth extracted by
+it. But this was short-lived, for it led to another step. Sometimes
+I would inflict severe pain in cases of congested pulps or from its
+hasty application, or pushing it to do too much, when my patient
+invariably would draw or inhale the breath <i>very forcibly and
+rapidly</i>. I was struck with the repeated coincidence, and was
+led to exclaim: "Nature's anaesthetic." This then reminded me of
+boyhood's bruises. The involuntary action of every one who has a
+finger hurt is to place it to the mouth and draw violently in the
+air and hold it for an instant, and again repeat it until the pain
+is subdued. The same action of the lungs occurs, except more
+powerfully, in young children who take to crying when hurt. It will
+be noticed they breathe very rapidly while furiously crying, which
+soon allays the irritation, and sleep comes as the sequel. Witness
+also when one is suddenly startled, how violently the breath is
+taken, which gives relief. The same thing occurs in the lower
+animals when pain is being inflicted at the hand of man.</p>
+
+<p>This was advance No. 3, and so sure was I of this new discovery,
+that I at once made an application while removing decay from an
+extremely sensitive tooth. To be successful, I found I must make
+the patient take the start, and I would follow with a thrust from
+the excavator, which move would be accomplished before the lungs
+could be inflated. This was repeated for at least a minute, until
+the operation was completed, I always following immediately or
+synchronously with the inhalation.</p>
+
+<p>This led to step No. 4, which resulted in its application to the
+extracting of teeth and other operations in minor surgery.</p>
+
+<p>Up to this time I had believed the sole effect of the rapid
+inhalation was due to mere diversion of the will, and this was the
+only way nature could so violently exert herself--that of
+controlling the involuntary action of the lungs to her uses by the
+<i>safety valve</i>, or the voluntary movement.</p>
+
+<p>The constant breathing of the patient for thirty seconds to a
+minute left him in a condition of body and mind resembling the
+effects of ether and chloroform in their primary stages. I could
+but argue that the prolonged breathing each time had done it; and,
+if so, then there must be some specific effect over and above the
+mere diversion by the will. To what could it be due? To the air
+alone, which went in excess into the lungs in the course of a
+minute! Why did I not then immediately grasp the idea of its
+broader application as now claimed for it? It was too much,
+gentlemen, for that hour. Enough had been done in this fourth step
+of conception to rest in the womb of time, until by evolution a
+higher step could be made at the maturity of the child. Being
+self-satisfied with my own baby, I watched and caressed it until it
+could take care of itself, and my mind was again free for another
+conception.</p>
+
+<p>The births at first seemed to come at very short intervals; but
+see how long it was between the fourth and the fifth birth. It was
+soon after that my mind became involved in inventions--a hereditary
+outgrowth--and the electric mallet and then the dental engine, the
+parent of your surgical engine, to be found in the principal
+hospitals of this city, took such possession of my whole soul, that
+my air analgesic was left slumbering. It was not until August,
+1875--nineteen years after--that it again came up in full force,
+without any previous warning.</p>
+
+<p>This time it was no law of association that revived it; but it
+seemed the whispering of some one in the air--some ethereal spirit,
+if you please--which instituted it, and advanced the following
+problem: "Nitrous oxide gas is composed of the same elements as
+ordinary air, with a larger equivalent of oxygen, except it is a
+chemical compound, not a mechanical mixture, and its anaesthetic
+effects are said to be due to the excess of oxygen. If this be a
+fact, then why can you not produce a similar effect by rapid
+breathing for a minute, more or less, by which a larger quantity of
+oxygen is presented in the lungs for absorption by the blood?"</p>
+
+<p>This query was soon answered by asking myself another: "If the
+rapid inhalation of air into the lungs does not increase the
+heart's action and cause it to drive the blood in exact ratio to
+the inhalations, then <i>I can</i> produce partial anaesthesia from
+this excess of oxygen brought about by the voluntary movements over
+their ordinary involuntary action of the lungs." The next question
+was: Will my heart be affected by this excess of air in the lungs
+to such an extent that there will be a full reciprocity between
+them? Without making any trial of it, I argued that, while there is
+no other muscular movement than that of the chest as under the
+control of the will, and as nature has given to the will the
+perfect control over the lungs to supply more or less air, as is
+demanded by the pneumogastric nerve for the immediate wants of the
+economy, when the <i>involuntary action</i> is not sufficient; and
+the heart not being under the control of the will, and its action
+never accelerated or diminished except by a specific poison, or
+from the general activity of the person in violent running or
+working, the blood is forced into the heart faster and must get rid
+of it, when a larger supply of oxygen is demanded and rapid
+breathing must occur, or asphyxia result. I was not long in
+deciding that the heart <i>would not be accelerated</i> but a
+trifle--say a tenth--and, under the circumstances, I said: "The air
+<i>is</i> an anaesthetic."</p>
+
+<p>From this rapid course of argument, I was so profoundly
+convinced of its truth, that without having first tried it upon my
+own person, I would have sat where I was, upon the curbstone, and
+had a tooth removed with the perfect expectation of absence of pain
+and of still being conscious of touch. While yet walking with my
+children, I commenced to breathe as rapidly as possible, and, as
+anticipated, found my steps growing shorter and shorter, until I
+came to a stand, showing to my mind clearly that my argument in
+advance was right, so far as locomotion was concerned; and, upon
+referring to my pulse, I found but little acceleration.</p>
+
+<p>To what other conclusion could I arrive from this argument, with
+the foundation laid nineteen years before, when I established on my
+own person by experiment the fact of analgesia as induced from
+chloroform, with the many experiments in rapid respiration on tooth
+bone?</p>
+
+<p>From this moment until its first application to the extraction
+of a tooth you can well imagine my suspense. That I might not fail
+in the very first attempt, I compelled myself and others in my
+household to breathe rapidly to investigate the phenomenon. This
+gave me some idea as to the proper method of proceeding in its
+administering.</p>
+
+<p>The first case soon appeared, and was a perfect success, going
+far beyond my anticipations, for the effect was such as to produce
+a partial paralysis of the hands and arms to the elbow. Again and
+again I tried it in every case of extraction and many other
+experiments, doubting my own senses for a long time at a result so
+anomalous and paradoxical. I was reminded just here of a phenomenon
+which gave me additional proof--that of blowing a dull fire to
+revive it. For a minute or so one blows and blows in rapid
+succession until, rising from the effort, a sense of giddiness for
+a few moments so overcomes that the upright position is with
+difficulty maintained. In this condition you are fitted for having
+a tooth extracted or an abscess lanced.</p>
+
+<p>Believing that I had something new to offer which might be of
+use to suffering humanity, I read the first article upon it Nov.
+17, 1875, before the Franklin Institute. Shortly after I was
+invited before the Northern Medical Society of this city to address
+them thereon. A number of medical gentlemen have been using it in
+their practice, while the bulk of them have spurned it as
+"negative" and preposterous, without an effort at trying it, which
+I can <i>now</i> very well understand.</p>
+
+<p>Unless one is aware of the fact that in the use of any agent
+which has the power to suspend the volition, it can be taken to
+that point where he is still conscious of <i>touch and hearing</i>,
+and at the same time not cognizant of pain inflicted, the action of
+rapid breathing could not be understood. And I regret to say that
+of three-fourths of the medical men I have talked with on the
+subject they had not been aware of such a possibility from ether
+and chloroform. Until this analgesic state could be established in
+their minds it was impossible to convince them that the excess of
+oxygen, as obtained by rapid breathing, could be made to produce a
+similar effect. <i>I</i> should have been as reluctant as any one
+to believe it, had I not personally experienced the effect while
+performing an operation which would otherwise have been very
+painful. Such a result could not well be reached by any course of
+reasoning.</p>
+
+<p>Has it proven in my practice what has been claimed for it--a
+substitute for the powerful anaesthetics in minor operations in
+surgery? Most emphatically, yes! So completely has it fulfilled its
+humble mission in my office, that I can safely assert there has not
+been more than five per cent. of failures. I have given it under
+all circumstances of diseased organs, and have seen no other than
+the happiest results in its after effects. It may well be asked
+just here: Why has it not been more generally and widely used by
+the dental profession as well as the medical, if it is really what
+is claimed for it? The most satisfactory and charitable answer to
+be given is, the failure upon their part to comprehend the
+<i>fact</i> as existing in chloroform and ether that there is such
+a state as analgesia; or, in other words, that the animal economy
+is so organized, while the sense of touch is not destroyed, but
+rather increased, the mind of the subject fails to perceive a sense
+of pain when anaesthetics are given, and the effects are manifested
+in the primary stage. As I before intimated, such is the knowledge
+possessed by most of those who administer ether and chloroform.
+This was enough to cause nearly every one to look upon it as a
+bubble or air castle. Many gentlemen told me they tried it upon
+themselves, and, while it affected them very seriously by
+giddiness, they still <i>retained consciousness</i>; and, such
+being the case, no effect could be produced for obtunding pain.
+Others told me they were afraid to continue the breathing alarmed
+at the vertigo induced. And the practitioner who has adopted it
+more effectively than any other laughed at me when I first told him
+of the discovery; but his intimate association with me changed his
+views after much explanation and argument between us.</p>
+
+<p>It was hardly to be expected that without this knowledge of
+analgesia, and without any explanation from me as to the <i>modus
+operandi</i> of rapid breathing, other than a few suggestions or
+directions as to how the effect was induced, even the most liberal
+of medical men should be able to make it effective, or have the
+least disposition to give it a preliminary trial upon themselves,
+and, of course, would not attempt it upon a patient.
+Notwithstanding, it found a few adherents, but only among my
+personal <i>medical</i> friends, with whom I had an opportunity to
+explain what I believed its physiological action, and the cases of
+success in my own practice. To this I have submitted as among the
+inevitable in the calendar of discoveries of all grades.</p>
+
+<p>My own profession have attempted to <i>ridicule</i> it out of
+its birthright and possible existence, which style of argument is
+not resorted to by true logicians.</p>
+
+<p>To all this I can truly say I have not for one moment faltered.
+I could afford to wait. The liberality of this society alone fully
+compensates for the seeming indisposition of the past, believing
+that it is proper that every advance should be confronted, and, if
+in time found worthy, give it God speed.</p>
+
+<p>From its first conception I have diligently labored to solve its
+<i>modus operandi</i>, and the doubt in my own mind as to whether I
+could be mistaken in my observations. I asked the opinion of our
+best chemical teachers if air could have such effect. One
+attributed it to oxygen stimulation, and the other to nitrogen.
+Another gentleman told me the medical profession had come to the
+conclusion that it was possible for me to thus extract teeth, but
+it was due solely to my strong <i>personal magnetism</i> (which
+power I was not before aware I possessed).</p>
+
+<p>Now, from what I have related of the successive and natural
+steps which finally culminated in this process or plan of analgesia
+induced by an excess of ordinary air taken forcibly into the lungs
+above what is necessary for life, and from what I shall state as to
+the apparently anomalous or paradoxical effects, with its
+physiological action, and the simple tests made upon each of my
+patients, I shall trust to so convince you of its plausibility and
+possibility that it will be made use of in hundreds of minor
+operations where ether and chloroform are now used.</p>
+
+<p>Aside from my assertion and that of its friends, that the
+effects can be produced by air alone, you must have some light shed
+upon the causes of its physiological action, which will appeal to
+your <i>medical</i> reason.</p>
+
+<p>To assign an action to any drug is difficult, and in the cases
+of ether and the other anaesthetics a quarter of a century still
+finds many conflicting opinions. This being true, you will deal
+leniently with me for the opinion I hold as to their analgesic
+action. Of course it will be objected to, for the unseen is, to a
+great extent, unknowable. Enough for my argument, however; it seems
+to suit the case very well without looking for another; and while
+it was based on the phenomenon resulting from many trials, and not
+the trials upon it as a previous theory, I shall be content with it
+until a better one can be found.</p>
+
+<p>What is it I claim as a new discovery, and the facts and its
+philosophy?</p>
+
+<p>I have asserted that I can produce, from rapidly breathing
+common air at the rate of a hundred respirations a minute, a
+similar effect to that from ether, chloroform, and nitrous oxide
+gas, in their primary stages; and I can in this way render patients
+sufficiently insensible to acute pain from any operation where the
+time consumed is not over twenty to thirty seconds. While the
+special senses are in partial action, the sense of pain is
+obtunded, and in many cases completely annulled, consciousness and
+general sensibility being preserved.</p>
+
+<p>To accomplish this, each patient must be instructed how to act
+and what to expect. As simple as it may seem, there is a proper and
+consistent plan to enable you to reach full success. Before the
+patient commences to inhale he is informed of the fact that, while
+he will be unconscious of pain, he will know full, or partially
+well, every touch upon the person; that the inhalation must be
+vigorously kept up during the whole operation without for an
+instant stopping; that the more energetically and steadily he
+breathes, the more perfect the effect, and that if he cease
+breathing during the operation, pain will be felt. Fully impress
+them with this idea, for the very good reason that they may stop
+when in the midst of an operation, and the fullest effects be lost.
+It is obligatory to do so on account of its evanescent effects,
+which demand that the patient be pushed by the operator's own
+energetic appeals to "go on." It is very difficult for any person
+to respire more than one hundred times to the minute, as he will
+become by that time so exhausted as not to be able to breathe at
+all, as is evidenced by all who have thus followed my directions.
+For the next minute following the completion of the operation the
+subject will not breathe more than once or twice. Very few have
+force enough left to raise hand or foot. The voluntary muscles have
+nearly all been subjugated and overcome by the undue effort at
+forced inhalation of one hundred over seventeen, the normal
+standard. It will be more fully understood further on in my
+argument why I force patients, and am constantly speaking to them
+to go on.</p>
+
+<p>I further claim that for the past four years, so satisfactory
+has been the result of this system in the extracting of teeth and
+deadening extremely sensitive dentine, there was no longer any
+necessity for chloroform, ether, or nitrous oxide in the dental
+office. That such teeth as cannot be extracted by its aid can well
+be preserved and made useful, except in a very few cases, who will
+not be forced to breathe.</p>
+
+<p>The anaesthetics, when used in major operations, where time is
+needed for the operation, can be made more effective by a lesser
+quantity when given in conjunction with "rapid breathing." Drs.
+Garrettson and Hews, who have thus tried it, tell me it takes
+one-half to three-fourths less, and the after effects are far less
+nauseating and unpleasant.</p>
+
+<p>As an agent in labor where an anaesthetic is indicated, it is
+claimed by one who has employed it (Dr. Hews) in nearly every case
+for three years, he has used "rapid breathing" solely, and to the
+exclusion of chloroform and ether. For this I have his assertion,
+and have no doubt of it whatever, for if any agent could break down
+the action of the voluntary muscles of the parts involved, which
+prevent the involuntary muscles of the uterus from having their
+fullest effect, it is this. The very act of rapid breathing so
+affects the muscles of the abdomen as to force the contents of the
+uterus downward or outward, while the specific effect of the air at
+the end of a minute's breathing leaves the subject in a
+semi-prostrate condition, giving the uterus full chance to act in
+the interim, because free of the will to make any attempt at
+withholding the involuntary muscles of the uterus from doing their
+natural work. It is self evident; and in this agent we claim here a
+boon of inestimable value. And not least in such cases is, there is
+no danger of hemorrhage, since the cause of the effect is soon
+removed.</p>
+
+<p>In attestation of many cases where it has been tried, I have
+asked the mother, and, in some cases, the attendants, whether
+anything else had been given, and whether the time was very
+materially lessened, there has been but one response, and that in
+its favor.</p>
+
+<p>Gentlemen, if we are not mistaken in this, you will agree with
+me in saying that it is no mean thing, and should be investigated
+by intelligent men and reported upon. From my own knowledge of its
+effects in my practice, I am bound to believe this gentleman's
+record.</p>
+
+<p>I further claim for it a special application in dislocations. It
+has certainly peculiar merits here, as the will is so nearly
+subjugated by it as to render the patient quite powerless to resist
+your effort at replacing, and at the same time the pain is
+subdued.</p>
+
+<p>It is not necessary I should further continue special
+applications; when its <i>modus operandi</i> is understood, its
+adaptation to many contingencies will of a sequence follow.</p>
+
+<p>It is well just here, before passing to the next point of
+consideration, to answer a query which may arise at this
+juncture:</p>
+
+<p>What are the successive stages of effects upon the economy from
+its commencement until the full effect is observed, and what proof
+have I that it was due to the amount of air inhaled?</p>
+
+<p>The heart's action is not increased more than from seventy (the
+average) to eighty and sometimes ninety, but is much enfeebled, or
+throwing a lesser quantity of blood. The face becomes suffused, as
+in blowing a fire or in stooping, which continues until the
+breathing is suspended, when the face becomes paler. (Have not
+noticed any purple as from asphyxia by a deprivation of oxygen.)
+The vision becomes darkened, and a giddiness soon appears. The
+voluntary muscles furthest from the heart seem first to be
+affected, and the feet and hands, particularly the latter, have a
+numbness at their ends, which increases, until in many cases there
+is partial paralysis as far as the elbow, while the limbs become
+fixed. The hands are so thoroughly affected that, when open, the
+patient is powerless to close them and <i>vice versa</i>. There is
+a vacant gaze from the eyes and looking into space without blinking
+of the eyelids for a half minute or more. The head seems incapable
+of being held erect, and there is no movement of the arms or legs
+as is usual when in great pain. There is no disposition on the part
+of the patient to take hold of the operator's hand or interfere
+with the operation.</p>
+
+<p>Many go on breathing mechanically after the tooth is removed, as
+if nothing had occurred. Some are aware that the tooth has been
+extracted, and say they felt it; others could not tell what had
+been accomplished. The majority of cases have an idea of what is
+being done, but are powerless to resist.</p>
+
+<p>With the very intelligent, or those who stop to reason, I have
+to teach them the peculiarities of being sensible of touch and not
+of pain.</p>
+
+<p>One very interesting case I will state. In extracting seven
+teeth for a lady who was very <i>unwilling</i> to believe my
+statement as to touch and no pain, I first removed three teeth
+after having inhaled for one minute, and when fully herself, she
+stated that she could not understand why there was no pain while
+she was conscious of each one extracted; it was preposterous to
+believe such an effect could be possible, as her reason told her
+that there is connected with tooth extracting pain in the part, and
+of severe character, admitting, though, she felt no pain. She
+allowed one to be removed without anything, and she could easily
+distinguish the change, and exclaimed, "It is all the difference
+imaginable!" When the other three were extracted, there was perfect
+success again as with the first three.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most marked proofs of the effects of rapid breathing
+was that of a boy of eleven years of age for whom I had to extract
+the upper and lower first permanent molars on each side. He
+breathed for nearly a minute, when I removed in about twenty
+seconds all four of the teeth, without a moment's intermission or
+the stopping the vigorous breathing; and not a murmur, sigh, or
+tear afterward.</p>
+
+<p>He declared there was no pain, and we needed no such assertion,
+for there was not the first manifestation from him that he was
+undergoing such a severe operation.</p>
+
+<p>Another case, the same day, when I had to extract the superior
+wisdom teeth on both sides for an intelligent young lady of
+eighteen years, where I had to use two pairs of forceps on each
+tooth (equivalent to extraction of four teeth), and she was so
+profoundly affected afterward that she could; not tell me what had
+been done other than that I had touched her four times. She was
+overcome from its effects for at least a minute afterward. She was
+delighted.</p>
+
+<p>With such severe tests I fear very little the result in any case
+I can have them do as I bid.</p>
+
+<p>There can be no mistake that there is a <i>specific action</i>
+from something. It cannot be personal magnetism or mesmeric
+influence exerted by me, for such cases are rare, averaging about
+10 per cent, only of all classes. Besides, in mesmeric influence
+the time has nothing to do with it; whereas, in my cases, it cannot
+last over a half minute or minute at most. It cannot be fear, as
+such cases are generally more apt to get hurt the worse. It is not
+diversion of mind alone, as we have an effect above it.</p>
+
+<p>There is no better way of testing whether pain has been felt
+than by taking the lacerated or contused gums of the patient
+between the index finger and thumb and making a gentle pressure to
+collapse the alveolar borders; invariably, they will cry out
+lustily, <i>that is pain</i>! This gives undoubted proof of a
+specific agent. There is no attempt upon my <i>own</i> part to
+exert any influence over my patients in any way other than that
+they shall believe what I say in regard to <i>giving</i> them <i>no
+pain</i> and in the following of my orders. Any one who knows how
+persons become mesmerized can attest that it was not the
+<i>operator who forces them under it against their will</i>, but it
+is a peculiar state into which any one who has within themselves
+this temperament can <i>place</i> themselves where any one who
+knows how can have control. It is not the will of the operator. I
+therefore dismiss this as unworthy of consideration in connection
+with rapid breathing.</p>
+
+<p>Then you may now ask, To what do I attribute this very singular
+phenomenon?</p>
+
+<p>Any one who followed, in the earlier part of this paper, the
+course of the argument in my soliloquy, after twenty years had
+elapsed from my observation upon myself of the analgesic effects of
+chloroform, can almost give something of an answer.</p>
+
+<p>That you may the more easily grasp what I shall say, I will ask
+you, If it be possible for any human being to make one hundred
+inhalations in a minute and the heart's action is not increased
+more than ten or twenty pulsations over the normal, what should be
+the effect upon the brain and nerve centers?</p>
+
+<p>If the function of oxygen in common air is to set free in the
+blood, either in the capillaries alone, or throughout the whole of
+the arterial circulation, carbonic acid gas; and that it cannot
+escape from the system unless it do so in the lungs as it passes in
+the general current--except a trace that is removed by the skin and
+kidneys--and that the quantity of carbonic acid gas set free is in
+exact relation to the amount of oxygen taken into the blood, what
+effect <i>must be</i> manifested where one hundred respirations in
+one minute are made--five or six times the normal number--while the
+heart is only propelling the blood a very little faster through the
+lungs, and <i>more feebly</i>--say 90 pulsations at most, when to
+be in proportion it should be 400 to 100 respirations to sustain
+life any length of time?</p>
+
+<p>You cannot deny the fact that a definite amount of oxygen can be
+absorbed and is absorbed as fast as it is carried into the lungs,
+even if there be one hundred respirations to the minute, while the
+pulsations of the heart are only ninety! Nature has <i>made it</i>
+possible to breathe so rapidly to meet any emergency; and we can
+well see its beautiful application in the normal action of both the
+heart and lungs while one is violently running.</p>
+
+<p>What would result, and that very speedily, were the act of
+respiration to remain at the standard--say 18 or 20--when the heart
+is in violent action from this running? Asphyxia would surely end
+the matter! And why? The excessive exercise of the whole body is
+setting free from the tissues such an amount of excretive matter,
+and carbon more largely than all the others, that, without a
+relative action of the lungs to admit the air that oxygen may be
+absorbed, carbonic acid gas cannot be liberated through the lungs
+as fast as the waste carbon of the overworked tissues is being made
+by disassimilation from this excess of respiration.</p>
+
+<p>You are already aware how small a quantity of carbonic acid in
+excess in the air will seriously affect life. Even 2 to 3 per cent,
+in a short time will prove fatal. In ordinary respiration of 20 to
+the minute the average of carbonic acid exhaled is 4.35.</p>
+
+<p>From experiments long ago made by Vierordt--see Carpenter, p.
+524--you will see the relative per cent, of carbonic acid exhaled
+from a given number of respirations. When he was breathing six
+times per minute, 5.5 per cent of the exhaled air was carbonic
+acid; twelve times, 4.2; twenty-four times, 3.3; forty-eight times,
+3; ninety-six times, 2.6.</p>
+
+<p>Remember this is based upon the whole number of respirations in
+the minute and not each exhalation--which latter could not be
+measured by the most minute method.</p>
+
+<p>Let us deduct the minimum amount, 2.6 per cent, of carbonic acid
+when breathing ninety-six times per minute, from the average, at
+twenty per minute, or the normal standard, which is recorded in
+Carpenter, p. 524, as 4.35 per minute, and we have retained in the
+circulation nearly 2 per cent. of carbonic acid; that, at the
+average, would have passed off through the lungs without any
+obstruction, and life equalized; but it not having been thrown off
+as fast as it should have been, must, of necessity, be left to prey
+upon the brain and nerve centers; and as 2 to 3 per cent., we are
+told, will so poison the blood, life is imperiled and that
+speedily.</p>
+
+<p>It is not necessary we should argue the point as to whether
+oxygen displaces carbonic acid in the tissues proper or the
+capillaries. The theory of Lavoisier on this point has been
+accepted.</p>
+
+<p>We know furthermore, as more positive, that tissues placed in an
+atmosphere of oxygen will set free carbonic acid, and that carbonic
+acid has a paralyzing effect upon the human hand held in it for a
+short time. The direct and speedy effects of this acid upon the
+delicate nervous element of the brain is so well known that it must
+be accepted as law. One of the most marked effects is the
+suspension of locomotion of the legs and arms, and the direct loss
+of will power which must supervene before voluntary muscular
+inactivity, which amounts to partial paralysis in the hands or
+feet, or peripheral extremities of the same.</p>
+
+<p>Now that we have sufficient evidence from the authorities that
+carbonic acid can be retained in the blood by excessive breathing,
+and enough to seriously affect the brain, and what its effects are
+when taken directly into the lungs in excess, we can enter upon
+what I have held as the most reasonable theory of the phenomenon
+produced by rapid breathing for analgesic purposes; which
+<i>theory</i> was not <i>first</i> conceived and the process made
+to yield to it, but the phenomenon was long observed, and from the
+repetition of the effects and their close relationship to that of
+carbonic acid on the economy, with the many experiments performed
+upon myself, I am convinced that what I shall now state will be
+found to substantiate my discovery. Should it not be found to
+coincide with what some may say is physiological truth, it will not
+invalidate the discovery itself; for of that I am far more positive
+than Harvey was of the discovery of the circulation of the blood;
+or of Galileo of the spherical shape of the earth. And I ask that
+it shall not be judged by my theory, but from the practice.</p>
+
+<p>It should have as much chance for investigation as the theory of
+Julius Robert Mayer, upon which he founded, or which gave rise to
+the establishment of one of the most important scientific
+truths--"the conservation of energy," and finally the "correlation
+of forces," which theory I am not quite sure was correct, although
+it was accepted, and as yet, I have not seen it questioned.</p>
+
+<p>In all due respect to him I quote it from the sketch of that
+remarkable man, as given in the <i>Popular Science Monthly</i>, as
+specially bearing on my discovery:</p>
+
+<p>"Mayer observed while living in Java, that the <i>venous
+blood</i> of some of his patients had a singularly bright red
+color. The observation riveted his attention; he reasoned upon it,
+and came to the conclusion that the brightness of the color was due
+to the fact that a less amount of oxidation was sufficient to keep
+up the temperature of the body in a hot climate than a cold one.
+The darkness of the venous blood he regarded as the visible sign of
+the energy of the oxidation."</p>
+
+<p>My observation leads me to the contrary, that the higher the
+temperature the more rapid the breathing to get clear of the excess
+of carbon, and hence more oxygenation of the blood which will
+arterialize the venous blood, unless there is a large amount of
+carbonized matter from the tissues to be taken up.</p>
+
+<p>Nor must it be denied because of the reasoning as presented to
+my mind by some outside influence in my soliloquy when I first
+exclaimed, "Nature's anaesthetic," where the argument as to the
+effects of nitrous oxide gas being due to an excess of oxygen was
+urged, and that common air breathed in excess would do the same
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>I am not sure that <i>it</i> was correct, for the effects of
+nitrous oxide is, perhaps, due to a deprivation of mechanically
+mixed air.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing what I do of theory and practice, I can say with
+assurance that there is not a medical practitioner who would long
+ponder in any urgent case as to the thousand and one theories of
+the action of remedies; but would resort to the <i>practical</i>
+experience of others and his own finally. (What surgeon ever stops
+to ask how narcotics effect their influence?) After nearly thirty
+years of association with ether and chloroform, who can positively
+answer as to their <i>modus operandi?</i> It is thus with nearly
+the whole domain of medicine. It is not yet, by far, among the
+sciences, with immutable laws, such as we have in chemistry.
+Experimentation is giving us more specific knowledge, and "practice
+alone has tended to make perfect." (Then, gentlemen will not set at
+naught my assertion and practical results. When I have stated my
+case in full it is for <i>you</i> to disprove both the theory and
+practice annunciated. So far as I am concerned I am responsible for
+both.)</p>
+
+<p>You will please bear with me for a few minutes in my attempt at
+theory.</p>
+
+<p>The annulling of pain, and, in some cases, its complete
+annihilation, can be accomplished in many ways. Narcotics,
+anaesthetics--local and internal--direct action of cold, and
+mesmeric or physiological influence, have all their advocates, and
+each <i>will surely</i> do its work. There is one thing about
+which, I think, we can all agree, as to these agencies; unless the
+<i>will</i> is partially and in some cases completely subjugated
+there can be no primary or secondary effect. The voluntary muscles
+must become wholly or partially paralyzed for the time. Telegraphic
+communication must be cut off from the brain, that there be no
+reflex action. It is not necessary there should be separate nerves
+to convey pleasure and pain any more than there should be two
+telegraphic wires to convey two messages.</p>
+
+<p>If, then, we are certain of this, it matters little as to
+whether it was done by corpuscular poisoning and anaemia as from
+chloroform or hyperaemia from ether.</p>
+
+<p>I think we are now prepared to show clearly the causes which
+effect the phenomena in "rapid breathing."</p>
+
+<p>The first thing enlisted is the <i>diversion of the will
+force</i> in the act of forced respiration at a moment when the
+heart and lungs have been in normal reciprocal action (20
+respirations to 80 pulsations), which act could not be made and
+carried up to 100 respirations per minute without such concentrated
+effort that ordinary pain could make no impression upon the brain
+while this abstraction is kept up.</p>
+
+<p>Second. There is a specific effect resulting from enforced
+respiration of 100 to the minute, due to the <i>excess of carbonic
+acid gas set free from the tissues</i>, generated by this enforced
+normal act of throwing into the lungs <i>five times</i> the normal
+amount of oxygen in one minute demanded, when the heart has not
+been aroused to exalted action, which comes from violent exercise
+in running or where one is suddenly startled, which excess of
+carbonic acid cannot escape in the same ratio from the lungs, since
+the heart does not respond to the proportionate overaction of the
+lungs.</p>
+
+<p>Third.--Hyperaemia is the last in this chain of effects, which
+is due to the excessive amount of air passing into the lungs
+preventing but little more than the normal quantity of blood from
+passing from the heart into the arterial circulation, but draws it
+up in the brain with its excess of carbonic acid gas to act also
+directly upon the brain as well as throughout the capillary and
+venous system, and as well upon the heart, the same as if it were
+suspended in that gas outside the body.</p>
+
+<p>These are evident to the senses of any liberal observer who can
+witness a subject rapidly breathing.</p>
+
+<p>Some ask why is not this same thing produced when one has been
+running rapidly for a few minutes? For a very good reason: in this
+case the rapid inhalations are preceded by the violent throes of
+the heart to propel the carbonized blood from the overworked
+tissues and have them set free at the lungs where the air is
+rushing in at the normal ratio of four to one. This is not an
+abnormal action, but is of necessity, or asphyxia would instantly
+result and the runner would drop. Such sometimes occurs where the
+runner exerts himself too violently at the very outset; and to do
+so he is compelled to hold his breath for this undue effort, and
+the heart cannot carry the blood fast enough. In this instance
+there is an approach to analgesia as from rapid breathing.</p>
+
+<p>Let me take up the first factor--<i>diversion of will</i>--and
+show that nature invariably resorts to a sudden inhalation to
+prevent severe infliction of pain being felt. It is the panacea to
+childhood's frequent bruises and cuts, and every one will remember
+how when a finger has been hurt it is thrust into the mouth and a
+violent number of efforts at rapid inhalation is effected until
+ease comes. By others it is subdued by a fit of crying, which if
+you will but imitate the sobs, will find how frequently the
+respirations are made.</p>
+
+<p>One is startled, and the heart would seem to jump out of the
+chest; in quick obedience to nature the person is found making a
+number of quick inhalations, which subdue the heart and pacify the
+will by diversion from the cause.</p>
+
+<p>The same thing is observed in the lower animals. I will relate a
+case:</p>
+
+<p>An elephant had been operated upon for a diseased eye which gave
+him great pain, for which he was unprepared, and he was wrathy at
+the keeper and surgeon. It soon passed off, and the result of the
+application was so beneficial to the animal that when brought out
+in a few days after, to have another touch of caustic to the part,
+he was prepared for them; and, just before the touch, he inflated
+the lungs to their fullest extent, which occupied more time than
+the effect of the caustic, when he made no effort at resistance and
+showed no manifestation of having been pained.</p>
+
+<p>In many cases of extraction of the temporary teeth of children,
+I make them at the instant I grasp the tooth take <i>one</i> very
+violent inhalation, which is sufficient. Mesmeric anaesthesia can
+well be classified under diversion or subjugation of the will, but
+can be effected in but a small percentage of the cases. To rely
+upon this first or primary effect, except in instantaneous cases,
+would be failure.</p>
+
+<p>The second factor is the one upon which I can rely in such of
+the cases as come into my care, save when I cannot induce them to
+make such a number of respirations as is absolutely necessary. The
+<i>whole secret of success lies</i> in the greatest number of
+respirations that can be effected in from 60 to 90 seconds, and
+that without any intermission. If the heart, by the <i>alow method
+of respiration</i>, is pulsating in ratio of four to one
+respiration, <i>no effect can be induced</i>.</p>
+
+<p>When the respirations are, say, 100 to the minute, and made with
+all the energy the patient can muster, and are kept up while the
+operation is going on, there can hardly be a failure in the minor
+operations.</p>
+
+<p>It is upon this point many of you may question the facts. Before
+I tried it for the first time upon my own person, I arrived at the
+same conclusion from a course of argument, that rapid breathing
+would control the heart's action and pacify it, and even reduce it
+below the normal standard under my urgent respirations.</p>
+
+<p>In view of the many applications made I feel quite sure in my
+belief that, inasmuch as the heart's action is but slightly
+accelerated, though with less force from rapid breathing at the
+rate of 100 to the minute, there is such an excess of carbonic acid
+gas set free and crowding upon the heart and capillaries of the
+brain, without a chance to escape by the lungs, that it is the same
+to all intents as were carbonic acid breathed through the lungs in
+common air. Look at the result after this has been kept up for a
+minute or more? During the next minute the respirations are not
+more than one or two, and the heart has fallen really below, in
+some cases, the standard beat, showing most conclusively that once
+oxygenation has taken place and that the free carbonic acid gas has
+been so completely consumed, that there is no involuntary call
+through the pneumogastric nerve for a supply of oxygen.</p>
+
+<p>If any physiological facts can be proven at all, then I feel
+quite sure of your verdict upon my side.</p>
+
+<p>There is no one thing that goes so far to prove the theory of
+Lavoisier regarding the action of oxygen in the tissues and
+capillaries for converting carbon into carbonic acid gas instead of
+the lungs, as held prior to that time, and still held by many who
+are not posted in late experiments. At the time I commenced this
+practice I must confess I knew nothing of it. The study of my cases
+soon led me to the same theory of Lavoisier, as I could not make
+the phenomena agree with the old theory of carbonic acid generated
+only in the lungs.</p>
+
+<p>When Vierordt was performing his experiments upon himself in
+rapid breathing from six times per minute to ninety-six, I cannot
+understand why he failed to observe and record what did certainly
+result--an extreme giddiness with muscular prostration and numbness
+in the peripheries of the hands and feet, with suffusion of the
+face, and such a loss of locomotion as to prevent standing erect
+without desiring support. Besides, the very great difference he
+found in the amount of carbonic acid retained in the circulation,
+the very cause of the phenomena just spoken of.</p>
+
+<p>One thing comes in just here to account for the lack of
+respiration the minute after the violent effort. The residual air,
+which in a normal state is largely charged with carbonic acid, has
+been so completely exhausted that some moments are consumed before
+there is sufficient again to call upon the will for its
+discharge.</p>
+
+<p>As to hyperaemia you will also assent, now that my second factor
+is explained; but it is so nearly allied to the direct effect of
+excessive respiration that we can well permit it to pass without
+argument. If hyperaemia <i>is present</i>, we have a more certain
+and rather more lasting effect.</p>
+
+<p>In conclusion, I will attempt to prognosticate the application
+of this principle to the cure of many diseases of chronic nature,
+and especially tuberculosis; where from a diminished amount of air
+going into the lungs for want of capacity, and particularly for
+want of energy and inclination to breathe in full or excess, the
+tissues cannot get clear of their excrementitious material, and
+particularly the carbon, which must go to the lungs, this voluntary
+effort can be made frequently during the day to free the tissues
+and enable them to take nutritious material for their restoration
+to their standard of health.</p>
+
+<p>Air will be found of far more value than ever before as one of
+the greatest of factors in nutrition, and which is as necessary as
+proper food, and without which every organization must become
+diseased, and no true assimilation can take place without a due
+amount of oxygen is hourly and daily supplied by this extra aid of
+volition which has been so long overlooked.</p>
+
+<p>The pure oxygen treatment has certainly performed many cures;
+yet, when compared to the mechanical mixture and under the direct
+control of the will, at all times and seasons, there is no danger
+from excessive oxygenation as while oxygen is given. When every
+patient can be taught to rely upon this great safety valve of
+nature, there will be less need for medication, and the longevity
+of our race be increased with but little dread by mankind for that
+terrible monster consumption, which seems to have now unbounded
+control.</p>
+
+<p>When this theory I have here given you to-night is fully
+comprehended by the medical world and taught the public, together
+with the kind of foods necessary for every one in their respective
+occupation, location, and climate, we may expect a vast change in
+their physical condition and a hope for the future which will
+brighten as time advances.</p>
+
+<p>I herewith attach the sphygmographic tracings made upon myself
+by another, showing the state of the pulse as compared with the
+progress of the respiration.</p>
+
+<h3>ADDENDA.</h3>
+
+<p>Sphygmographic tracings of the pulse of the essayist. Normal
+pulse 60 to the minute. Ten seconds necessary for the slip to pass
+under the instrument.</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/15a.png"><img src=
+"images/15a_th.png" alt=""></a></p>
+
+<pre>
+A, A&sup1;, normal pulse.
+<br>
+B, pulse taken after breathing rapidly for 15 seconds when
+20 respirations had been taken.
+<br>
+C, rapid breathing for 30 seconds, 43 respirations.
+<br>
+D, " " 45 " 76 "
+<br>
+E, " " 60 " 96 "
+</pre>
+
+F, pulse taken after rapid breathing for one minute, as in E, where
+no respiration had as yet been taken after the essayist had kept it
+up for that one minute. This was after 10 seconds had intervened.
+
+<p>G, the same taken 50 seconds after, and still no respiration had
+been taken, the subject having no disposition to inhale, the blood
+having been over oxygenated.</p>
+
+<p>The pulse in E shows after 96 respirations but 14, or 84 per
+minute, and the force nearly as in the normal at A, A1.</p>
+
+<p>The record in B shows the force more markedly, but still normal
+in number.</p>
+
+<p>F and G show very marked diminution in the force, but the number
+of pulsations not over 72 per minute; G particularly so, the heart
+needing the stimulus of the oxygen for full power.</p>
+
+<p>The following incident which has but very recently been made
+known, gives most conclusive evidence of the truth of the theory
+and practice of rapid breathing.</p>
+
+<p>A Mexican went into the office of a dentist in one of the
+Mexican cities to have a tooth extracted by nitrous oxide gas.</p>
+
+<p>The dentist was not in, and the assistant was about to permit
+the patient to leave without removing the tooth, when the wife of
+the proprietor exclaimed that she had often assisted her husband in
+giving the gas, and that she would do so in this instance if the
+assistant would agree to extract the tooth. It was agreed. All
+being in readiness, the lady turned on as she supposed the gas, and
+the Mexican patient was ordered to breathe as fast as possible to
+make sure of the full effect and no doubt of the final success. The
+assistant was about to extract, but the wife insisted on his
+breathing more rapidly, whereupon the patient was observed to
+become very dark or purple in the face, which satisfied the lady
+that the full effect was manifested, and the tooth was extracted,
+to the great satisfaction of all concerned. While the gas was being
+taken by the Mexican the gasometer was noticed to rise higher and
+higher as the patient breathed faster, and not to sink as was usual
+when the gas had been previously administered. This led to an
+investigation of the reason of such an anomalous result, when to
+their utter surprise they found the valve was so turned by the wife
+that the Mexican had been breathing nothing but common air, and
+instead of exhaling into the surrounding air he violently forced it
+into the gasometer with the nitrous oxide gas, causing it to rise
+and not sink, which it should have done had the valve been properly
+turned by the passage of gas into the lungs of the patient.</p>
+
+<p>No more beautiful and positive trial could happen, and might not
+again by accident or inadvertence happen again in a lifetime.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="6"></a></p>
+
+<h2>TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.</h2>
+
+<p>When a bottle of any liquor charged with carbonic acid under
+strong pressure, such as champagne, sparkling cider, seltzer water,
+etc., is uncorked, the contents often escape with considerable
+force, flow out, and are nearly all lost. Besides this, the noise
+made by the popping of the cork is not agreeable to most persons.
+To remedy these inconveniences there has been devised the simple
+apparatus which we represent in the accompanying cut, taken from
+<i>La Nature</i>. The device consists of a hollow, sharp-pointed
+tube, having one or two apertures in its upper extremity which are
+kept closed by a hollow piston fitting in the interior of the tube.
+This tube, or "tap," as it may be called, is supported on a firm
+base to which is attached a draught tube, and a small lever for
+actuating the piston. After the tap has been thrust through the
+cork of the bottle of liquor the contents may be drawn in any
+quantity and as often as wanted by simply pressing down the lever
+with the finger; this operation raises the piston so that its
+apertures correspond with those in the sides of the top, and the
+liquid thus finds access to the draught tube through the interior
+of the piston. By removing the pressure the piston descends and
+thus closes the vents. By means of this apparatus, then, the
+contents of any bottle of effervescing liquids may be as easily
+drawn off as are those contained in the ordinary siphon bottles in
+use.</p>
+
+<p class="ctr"><a href="images/15b.png"><img src=
+"images/15b_th.png" alt="TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.">
+</a></p>
+
+<p class="ctr">TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="7"></a></p>
+
+<h2>CHEMICAL SOCIETY, LONDON, JAN. 20, 1881.</h2>
+
+<h3>PROF. H.E. ROSCOE, President, in the Chair.</h3>
+
+<p>Mr. Vivian Lewes read a paper on "<i>Pentathionic Acid</i>." In
+March last the author, at the suggestion of Dr. Debus, undertook an
+investigation of pentathionic acid, the existence of which has been
+denied. The analyses of the liquid obtained by Wackenroder and
+others, by passing sulphureted hydrogen and sulphur dioxide through
+water, are based on the assumption that only one acid is present in
+the solution, and consequently do not establish the existence of
+pentathionic acid; as, for example, a mixture of one molecule of
+H<sub>2</sub>S<sub>4</sub>O<sub>6</sub> and one molecule of
+H<sub>2</sub>S<sub>6</sub>O<sub>6</sub> would give the same
+analytical results as H<sub>2</sub>S<sub>5</sub>O<sub>6</sub>.
+Moreover, no salt of pentathionic acid has been prepared in a pure
+state. The author has succeeded in preparing barium pentathionate
+thus: A Wackenroder solution was about half neutralized with barium
+hydrate, filtered, and the clear solution evaporated <i>in
+vacuo</i> over sulphuric acid. After eighteen days crystals, which
+proved to be barium pentathionate + 3 molecules of water, formed.
+These crystals were separated, and the liquid further evaporated,
+when a second crop was obtained intermediate in composition between
+the tetra and pentathionate. These were separated, and the
+mother-liquor on standing deposited some oblong rectangular
+crystals. These on analysis proved to consist of baric
+pentathionate with three molecules of water. This salt dissolves
+readily in cold water; the solution is decomposed by strong
+potassic hydrate, baric sulphite, hyposulphites, and sulphur being
+formed. By a similar method of procedure the author obtained
+potassium pentathionate, anhydrous, and with one or two molecules
+of water. The author promises some further results with some other
+salts of the higher thionates.</p>
+
+<p>The president said that the society had to thank the author for
+a very complete research on the subject of pentathionic acid. He,
+however, begged to differ from him as to his statements concerning
+the researches of Messrs. Takamatsu and Smith; in his opinion these
+authors had proved the existence of pentathionic acid. He hoped
+that the crystals (which were very fine) would be measured.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Debus said that no one had previously been able to make the
+salts of pentathionic acid, and expressed his sense of the great
+merit due to the author for his perseverance and success. The paper
+opened up some highly interesting theoretical speculations as to
+the existence of hexathionic acid. If potassium tetrathionate was
+dissolved in water it could be re-crystallized, but potassium
+pentathionate under similar circumstances splits into sulphur and
+tetrathionate; but a mixture of tetrathionate and pentathionate can
+be re-crystallized. It seemed as if the sulphur when eliminated
+from the pentathionate combined with the tetrathionate.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Dupr&eacute; asked Dr. Debus how it was that a molecule of
+pentathionate could be re-crystallized, whereas two molecules of
+pentathionate, which should, when half decomposed, furnish a
+molecule of tetra and a molecule of pentathionate, could not.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Armstrong then read a <i>"Preliminary Note on some
+Hydrocarbons from Rosin Spirit."</i> After giving an account of our
+knowledge of rosin spirit, the author described the result of the
+examination of the mixture of hydrocarbons remaining after heating
+it with sulphuric acid and diluting with half its volume of water
+and steam distilling. Thus treated rosin spirit furnishes about
+one-fourth of its volume of a colorless mobile liquid, which after
+long-continued fractional distillation is resolved into a variety
+of fractions boiling at temperatures from 95&deg; to over 180&deg;.
+Each of the fractions was treated with concentrated sulphuric acid,
+and the undissolved portions were then re-fractionated. The
+hydrocarbons dissolved by the acid were recovered by heating under
+pressure with hydrochloric acid. Besides a cymene and a toluene,
+which have already been shown to exist in rosin spirit, metaxylene
+was found to be present. The hydrocarbons insoluble in sulphuric
+acid are, apparently, all members of the
+C<sub>n</sub>H<sub>2n</sub> series; they are not, however, true
+homologues of ethylene, but hexhydrides of hydrocarbons of the
+benzene series. Hexhydro-toluene and probably hex-hydrometaxylene
+are present besides the hydrocarbon, C<sub>10</sub>H<sub>20</sub>,
+but it is doubtful if an intermediate term is also present. It is
+by no means improbable, however, that these hydrocarbons are, at
+least in part, products of the action of the sulphuric acid.
+Cahours and Kraemer's and Godzki's observations on the higher
+fractions of crude wood spirit, in fact, furnish a precedent for
+this view. Referring to the results obtained by Anderson, Tilden,
+and Renard, the author suggests that rosin spirit perhaps contains
+hydrides intermediate in composition between those of the
+C<sub>n</sub>H<sub>2n-6</sub> and C<sub>n</sub>H<sub>2n</sub>
+series, also derived like the latter from hydrocarbons of the
+benzene series. Finally, Dr Armstrong mentioned that the volatile
+portion of the distillate from the non-volatile product of the
+oxidation of oil of turpentine in moist air furnishes ordinary
+cymene when treated in the manner above described. The fact that
+rosin spirit yields a different cymene is, he considers, an
+argument against the view which has more than once been put
+forward, that rosin is directly derived from terpene. Probably
+resin and turpentine, though genetically related, are products of
+distinct processes.</p>
+
+<p>The next paper was <i>"On the Determination of the Relative
+Weight of Single Molecules,"</i> by E. Vogel, of San Francisco.
+This paper, which was taken as read, consists of a lengthy
+theoretical disquisition, in which the author maintains the
+following propositions: That the combining weights of all elements
+are one third of their present values; the assumption that equal
+volumes of gases contain equal numbers of molecules does not hold
+good; that the present theory of valency is not supported by
+chemical facts, and that its elimination would be no small gain for
+chemistry in freeing it of an element full of mystery, uncertainty,
+and complication; that the distinction between atoms and molecules
+will no longer be necessary; that the facts of specific heat do not
+lend any support to the theory of valency. The paper concludes as
+follows: "The cause of chemical action is undoubtedly atmospheric
+pressure, which under ordinary conditions is equal to the weight of
+76 cubic centimeters of mercury, one of which equals 6.145 mercury
+molecules, so that the whole pressure equals 467 mercury molecules.
+This force--which with regard to its chemical effect on molecules
+can be multiplied by means of heat--is amply sufficient to bring
+about the highest degree of molecular specific gravity by the
+reduction of the molecular volumes. To it all molecules are exposed
+and subjected unalterably, and if not accepted as the cause of
+chemical action, its influence has to be eliminated to allow the
+introduction and display of other forces."</p>
+
+<p>The next communication was <i>"On the Synthetical Production of
+Ammonia, by the Combination of Hydrogen and Nitrogen in Presence of
+Heated Spongy Platinum (Preliminary Notice),"</i> by G. S. Johnson.
+Some experiments, in which pure nitrogen was passed over heated
+copper containing occluded hydrogen, suggested to the author the
+possibility of the formation of ammonia; only minute traces were
+formed. On passing, however, a mixture of pure nitrogen (from
+ammonium nitrite) and hydrogen over spongy platinum at a low red
+heat, abundant evidence was obtained of the synthesis of ammonia.
+The gases were passed, before entering the tube containing the
+platinum, through a potash bulb containing Nessler reagent, which
+remained colorless. On the contrary, the gas issuing from the
+platinum rapidly turned Nessler reagent brown, and in a few minutes
+turned faintly acid litmus solution blue; the odor of
+NH<sub>3</sub> was also perceptible. In one experiment 0.0144
+gramme of ammonia was formed in two hours and a half. The author
+promises further experiment as to the effect of temperature, rate
+of the gaseous current, and substitution of palladium for platinum.
+The author synthesized some ammonia before the Society with
+complete success.</p>
+
+<p>The President referred to the synthesis of ammonia from its
+elements recently effected by Donkin, and remarked that apparently
+the ammonia was formed in much larger quantities by the process
+proposed by the author of the present paper.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Warington suggested that some HCl gas should be
+simultaneously passed with the nitrogen and hydrogen, and that the
+temperature of the spongy platinum should be kept just below the
+temperature at which NH<sub>3</sub> dissociates, in order to
+improve the yield of NH<sub>3</sub>.</p>
+
+<p><i>"On the Oxidation of Organic Matter in Water"</i> by A.
+Downes. The author considers that the mere presence of oxygen in
+contact with the organic matter has but little oxidizing action
+unless lowly organisms, as bacteria, etc. be simultaneously
+present. Sunlight has apparently considerable effect in promoting
+the oxidation of organic matter. The author quotes the following
+experiment: A sample of river water was filtered through paper. It
+required per 10,000 parts 0.236 oxygen as permanganate. A second
+portion was placed in a flask plugged with cotton wool, and exposed
+to sunlight for a week; it then required 0.200. A third portion
+after a week, but excluded from light, required 0.231. A fourth was
+boiled for five minutes, plugged, and then exposed to sunlight for
+a week; required 0.198. In a second experiment with well water a
+similar result was obtained; more organic matter was oxidized when
+the organisms had been killed by the addition of sulphuric acid
+than when the original water was allowed to stand for an equal
+length of time. The author also discusses the statement made by Dr.
+Frankland that there is less ground for assuming that the organized
+and living matter of sewage is oxidized in a flow of twelve miles
+of a river than for assuming that dead organic matter is oxidized
+in a similar flow.--<i>Chem. News.</i></p>
+
+<hr>
+<p><a name="8"></a></p>
+
+<h2>ROSE OIL, OR OTTO OF ROSES.</h2>
+
+<h3>By CHARLES G. WARNFORD LOCK.</h3>
+
+<p>This celebrated perfume is the volatile essential oil distilled
+from the flowers of some varieties of rose. The botany of roses
+appears to be in a transition and somewhat unsatisfactory state.
+Thus the otto-yielding rose is variously styled <i>Rosa damascena,
+R. sempervirens, R. moschata, R. gallica, R. centifolia, R.
+provincialis</i>. It is pretty generally agreed that the kind grown
+for its otto in Bulgaria in the damask rose (<i>R. damascena</i>),
+a variety induced by long cultivation, as it is not to be found
+wild. It forms a bush, usually three to four feet, but sometimes
+six feet high; its flowers are of moderate size, semi-double, and
+arranged several on a branch, though not in clusters or bunches. In
+color, they are mostly light-red; some few are white, and said to
+be less productive of otto.</p>
+
+<p>The utilization of the delicious perfume of the rose was
+attempted, with more or less success, long prior to the
+comparatively modern process of distilling its essential oil. The
+early methods chiefly in vogue were the distillation of rose-water,
+and the infusion of roses in olive oil, the latter flourishing in
+Europe generally down to the last century, and surviving at the
+present day in the South of France. The butyraceous oil produced by
+the distillation of roses for making rose-water in this country is
+valueless as a perfume; and the real otto was scarcely known in
+British commerce before the present century.</p>
+
+<p>The profitable cultivation of roses for the preparation of otto
+is limited chiefly by climatic conditions. The odoriferous
+constitutent of the otto is a liquid containing oxygen, the solid
+hydrocarbon or stearoptene, with which it is combined, being
+absolutely devoid of perfume. The proportion which this inodorous
+solid constituents bears to the liquid perfume increases with the
+unsuitability of the climate, varying from about 18 per cent. in
+Bulgarian oil, to 35 and even 68 per cent. in rose oils distilled
+in France and England. This increase in the proportion of
+stearoptene is also shown by the progressively heightened
+fusing-point of rose oils from different sources: thus, while
+Bulgarian oil fuses at about 61&deg; to 64&deg; Fahr., an Indian
+sample required 68&deg; Fahr.; one from the South of France,
+70&deg; to 73&deg; Fahr.; one from Paris, 84&deg; Fahr.; and one
+obtained in making rose-water in London, 86&deg; to 89&frac12;&deg;
+Fahr. Even in the Bulgarian oil, a notable difference is observed
+between that produced on the hills and that from the lowlands.</p>
+
+<p>It is, therefore, not surprising that the culture of roses, and
+extraction of their perfume, should have originated in the East.
+Persia produced rose-water at an early date, and the town of
+Nisibin, north-west of Mosul, was famous for it in the 14th
+century. Shiraz, in the 17th century, prepared both rose water and
+otto, for export to other parts of Persia, as well as all over
+India. The Perso-Indian trade in rose oil, which continued to
+possess considerable importance in the third quarter of the 18th
+century, is declining, and has nearly disappeared; but the
+shipments of rose-water still maintain a respectable figure. The
+value, in rupees, of the exports of rose-water from Bushire in
+1879, were--4,000 to India, 1,500 to Java, 200 to Aden and the Red
+Sea, 1,000 to Muscat and dependencies, 200 to Arab coast of Persian
+Gulf and Bahrein, 200 to Persian coast and Mekran, and 1,000 to
+Zanzibar. Similar statistics relating to Lingah, in the same year,
+show--Otto: 400 to Arab coast of Persian Gulf, and Bahrein; and 250
+to Persian coast and Mekran. And Bahrein--Persian Otto: 2,200 to
+Koweit, Busrah, and Bagdad. Rose-water: 200 to Arab coast of
+Persian Gulf, and 1,000 to Koweit, Busrah, and Bagdad.</p>
+
+<p>India itself has a considerable area devoted to rose-gardens, as
+at Ghazipur, Lahore, Amritzur, and other places, the kind of rose
+being <i>R. damascena</i>, according to Brandis. Both rose-water
+and otto are produced. The flowers are distilled with double their
+weight of water in clay stills; the rose-water (<i>goolabi
+pani</i>) thus obtained is placed in shallow vessels, covered with
+moist muslin to keep out dust and flies, and exposed all night to
+the cool air, or fanned. In the morning, the film of oil, which has
+collected on the top, is skimmed off by a feather, and transferred
+to a small phial. This is repeated for several nights, till almost
+the whole of the oil has separated. The quantity of the product
+varies much, and three different authorities give the following
+figures: (<i>a</i>) 20,000 roses to make 1 rupee's weight (176 gr.)
+of otto; (<i>b</i>) 200,000 to make the same weight; (<i>c</i>)
+1,000 roses afford less than 2 gr. of otto. The color ranges from
+green to bright-amber, and reddish. The oil (otto) is the most
+carefully bottled; the receptacles are hermetically sealed with
+wax, and exposed to the full glare of the sun for several days.
+Rose water deprived of otto is esteemed much inferior to that which
+has not been so treated. When bottled, it is also exposed to the
+sun for a fortnight at least.</p>
+
+<p>The Mediterranean countries of Africa enter but feebly into this
+industry, and it is a little remarkable that the French have not
+cultivated it in Algeria. Egypt's demand for rose-water and
+rose-vinegar is supplied from Medinet Fayum, south-west of Cairo.
+Tunis has also some local reputation for similar products. Von
+Maltzan says that the rose there grown for otto is the dog-rose
+(<i>R. canina</i>), and that it is extremely fragrant, 20 lb. of
+the flower yielding about 1 dr. of otto. Genoa occasionally imports
+a little of this product, which is of excellent quality. In the
+south of France rose gardens occupy a large share of attention,
+about Grasse, Cannes, and Nice; they chiefly produce rose-water,
+much of which is exported to England. The essence (otto) obtained
+by the distillation of the Provence rose (<i>R. provincialis</i>)
+has a characteristic perfume, arising, it is believed, from the
+bees transporting the pollen of the orange flowers into the petals
+of the roses. The French otto is richer in stearoptene than the
+Turkish, nine grammes crystallizing in a liter (1&frac34; pint) of
+alcohol at the same temperature as 18 grammes of the Turkish. The
+best preparations are made at Cannes and Grasse. The flowers are
+not there treated for the otto, but are submitted to a process of
+maceration in fat or oil, ten kilos. of roses being required to
+impregnate one kilo. of fat. The price of the roses varies from
+50c. to 1 fr. 25c. per kilo.</p>
+
+<p>But the one commercially important source of otto of roses is a
+circumscribed patch of ancient Thrace or modern Bulgaria,
+stretching along the southern slopes of the central Balkans, and
+approximately included between the 25th and 26th degrees of east
+longitude, and the 42d and 43d of north latitude. The chief
+rose-growing districts are Philippopoli, Chirpan, Giopcu,
+Karadshah-Dagh, Kojun-Tepe, Eski-Sara, Jeni-Sara, Bazardshik, and
+the center and headquarters of the industry, Kazanlik (Kisanlik),
+situated in a beautiful undulating plain, in the valley of the
+Tunja. The productiveness of the last-mentioned district may be
+judged from the fact that, of the 123 Thracian localities carrying
+on the preparation of otto in 1877--they numbered 140 in 1859--42
+belong to it. The only place affording otto on the northern side of
+the Balkans is Travina. The geological formation throughout is
+syenite, the decomposition of which has provided a soil so fertile
+as to need but little manuring. The vegetation, according to Baur,
+indicates a climate differing but slightly from that of the Black
+Forest, the average summer temperatures being stated at 82&deg;
+Fahr. at noon, and 68&deg; Fahr. in the evening. The rose-bushes
+nourish best and live longest on sandy, sun-exposed (south and
+south-east aspect) slopes. The flowers produced by those growing on
+inclined ground are dearer and more esteemed than any raised on
+level land, being 50 per cent. richer in oil, and that of a
+stronger quality. This proves the advantage of thorough drainage.
+On the other hand, plantations at high altitudes yield less oil,
+which is of a character that readily congeals, from an
+insufficiency of summer heat. The districts lying adjacent to and
+in the mountains are sometimes visited by hard frosts, which
+destroy or greatly reduce the crop. Floods also occasionally do
+considerable damage. The bushes are attacked at intervals and in
+patches by a blight similar to that which injures the vines of the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>The bushes are planted in hedge-like rows in gardens and fields,
+at convenient distances apart, for the gathering of the crop. They
+are seldom manured. The planting takes place in spring and autumn;
+the flowers attain perfection in April and May, and the harvest
+lasts from May till the beginning of June. The expanded flowers are
+gathered before sunrise, often with the calyx attached; such as are
+not required for immediate distillation are spread out in cellars,
+but all are treated within the day on which they are plucked. Baur
+states that, if the buds develop slowly, by reason of cool damp
+weather, and are not much exposed to sun-heat, when about to be
+collected, a rich yield of otto, having a low solidifying point, is
+the result, whereas, should the sky be clear and the temperature
+high at or shortly before the time of gathering, the product is
+diminished and is more easily congealable. Hanbury, on the
+contrary, when distilling roses in London, noticed that when they
+had been collected on fine dry days the rose-water had most
+volatile oil floating upon it, and that, when gathered in cool
+rainy weather, little or no volatile oil separated.</p>
+
+<p>The flowers are not salted, nor subjected to any other
+treatment, before being conveyed in baskets, on the heads of men
+and women and backs of animals, to the distilling apparatus. This
+consists of a tinned-copper still, erected on a semicircle of
+bricks, and heated by a wood fire; from the top passes a straight
+tin pipe, which obliquely traverses a tub kept constantly filled
+with cold water, by a spout, from some convenient rivulet, and
+constitutes the condenser. Several such stills are usually placed
+together, often beneath the shade of a large tree. The still is
+charged with 25 to 50 lb. of roses, not previously deprived of
+their calyces, and double the volume of spring water. The
+distillation is carried on for about l&frac12; hours, the result
+being simply a very oily rose-water (<i>ghyul suyu</i>). The
+exhausted flowers are removed from the still, and the decoction is
+used for the next distillation, instead of fresh water. The first
+distillates from each apparatus are mixed and distilled by
+themselves, one-sixth being drawn off; the residue replaces spring
+water for subsequent operations. The distillate is received in
+long-necked bottles, holding about 1&frac14; gallon. It is kept in
+them for a day or two, at a temperature exceeding 59&deg; Fahr., by
+which time most of the oil, fluid and bright, will have reached the
+surface. It is skimmed off by a small, long-handled, fine-orificed
+tin funnel, and is then ready for sale. The last-run rose-water is
+extremely fragrant, and is much prized locally for culinary and
+medicinal purposes. The quantity and quality of the otto are much
+influenced by the character of the water used in distilling. When
+hard spring water is employed, the otto is rich in stearoptene, but
+less transparent and fragrant. The average quantity of the product
+is estimated by Baur at 0.037 to 0.040 per cent.; another authority
+says that 3,200 kilos. of roses give 1 kilo. of oil.</p>
+
+<p>Pure otto, carefully distilled, is at first colorless, but
+speedily becomes yellowish; its specific gravity is 0.87 at
+72.5&deg; Fahr.; its boiling-point is 444&deg; Fahr.; it solidifies
+at 51.8&deg; to 60.8&deg; Fahr., or still higher; it is soluble in
+absolute alcohol, and in acetic acid. The most usual and reliable
+tests of the quality of an otto are (1) its odor, (2) its
+congealing point, (3) its crystallization. The odor can be judged
+only after long experience. A good oil should congeal well in five
+minutes at a temperature of 54.5&deg; Fahr.; fraudulent additions
+lower the congealing point. The crystals of rose-stearoptene are
+light, feathery, shining plates, filling the whole liquid. Almost
+the only material used for artificially heightening the apparent
+proportion of stearoptene is said to be spermaceti, which is easily
+recognizable from its liability to settle down in a solid cake, and
+from its melting at 122&deg; Fahr., whereas stearoptene fuses at
+91.4&deg; Fahr. Possibly paraffin wax would more easily escape
+detection.</p>
+
+<p>The adulterations by means of other essential oils are much more
+difficult of discovery, and much more general; in fact, it is said
+that none of the Bulgarian otto is completely free from this kind
+of sophistication. The oils employed for the purpose are certain of
+the grass oils (<i>Andropogon</i> and <i>Cymbopogon spp.</i>)
+notably that afforded by <i>Andropogon, Schoenanthus</i> called
+<i>idris-yaghi</i> by the Turks, and commonly known to Europeans as
+"geranium oil," though quite distinct from true geranium oil. The
+addition is generally made by sprinkling it upon the rose-leaves
+before distilling. It is largely produced in the neighborhood of
+Delhi, and exported to Turkey by way of Arabia. It is sold by Arabs
+in Constantinople in large bladder-shaped tinned-copper vessels,
+holding about 120 lb. As it is usually itself adulterated with some
+fatty oil, it needs to undergo purification before use. This is
+effected in the following manner: The crude oil is repeatedly
+shaken up with water acidulated with lemon-juice, from which it is
+poured off after standing for a day. The washed oil is placed in
+shallow saucers, well exposed to sun and air, by which it gradually
+loses its objectionable odor. Spring and early summer are the best
+seasons for the operation, which occupies two to four weeks,
+according to the state of the weather and the quality of the oil.
+The general characters of this oil are so similar to those of otto
+of roses--even the odor bearing a distant resemblance--that their
+discrimination when mixed is a matter of practical impossibility.
+The ratio of the adulteration varies from a small figure up to 80
+or 90 per cent. The only safeguard against deception is to pay a
+fair price, and to deal with firms of good repute, such as Messrs.
+Papasoglu, Manoglu &amp; Son, Ihmsen &amp; Co., and Holstein &amp;
+Co. in Constantinople.</p>
+
+<p>The otto is put up in squat-shaped flasks of tinned copper,
+called <i>kunkumas</i>, holding from 1 to 10 lb., and sewn up in
+white woolen cloths. Usually their contents are transferred at
+Constantinople into small gilded bottles of German manufacture for
+export. The Bulgarian otto harvest, during the five years 1867-71,
+was reckoned to average somewhat below 400,000 <i>meticals,
+miskals</i>, or <i>midkals</i> (of about 3 dwt. troy), or 4,226 lb.
+av.; that of 1873, which was good, was estimated at 500,000, value
+about &pound;700,000. The harvest of 1880 realized more than
+&pound;1,000,000, though the roses themselves were not so valuable
+as in 1876. About 300,000 <i>meticals</i> of otto, valued at
+&pound;932,077, were exported in 1876 from Philippopolis, chiefly
+to France, Australia, America, and Germany.</p>
+
+<p>--<i>Jour. Soc. of Arts.</i></p>
+
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+the whole is poured into excess of cold water, quickly washed a few
+times with cold water, and dissolved in alcohol. After the first
+crystallization the compound melts at 65&deg;, and is perfectly
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+Project Gutenberg's Scientific American Supplement No. 275, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Scientific American Supplement No. 275
+
+Author: Various
+
+Posting Date: October 10, 2012 [EBook #8195]
+Release Date: May, 2005
+First Posted: June 30, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPL., NO. 275 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Olaf Voss, Don Kretz, Juliet Sutherland, Charles
+Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 275
+
+
+
+
+NEW YORK, APRIL 9, 1881
+
+Scientific American Supplement. Vol. XI, No. 275.
+
+Scientific American established 1845
+
+Scientific American Supplement, $5 a year.
+
+Scientific American and Supplement, $7 a year.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS.
+
+I. ENGINEERING AND MECHANICS.--The Various Modes of
+ Transmitting Power to a Distance. (Continued from No. 274.)
+ By ARTHUR ARCHARD. of Geneva.--II. Compressed Air.--III.
+ Transmission by Pressure Water.--IV. Transmission by
+ Electricity.--General Results
+
+ The Hotchkiss Revolving Gun
+
+ Floating Pontoon Dock. 2 figures.--Improved floating pontoon dock
+
+II. TECHNOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY.--Wheat and Wheat Bread. By H. MEGE
+ MOURIES.--Color in bread.--Anatomical structure and chemical
+ composition of wheat.--Embryo and coating of the embryo.--
+ Cerealine--Phosphate of calcium.--1 figure, section of a grain
+ of wheat, magnified.
+
+ Origin of New Process Milling.--Special report to the Census
+ Bureau. By ALBERT HOPPIN.--Present status of milling structures
+ and machinery in Minneapolis by Special Census Agent C. W.
+ JOHNSON.--Communication from GEORGE T. SMITH.
+
+ Tap for Effervescing Liquids. 1 figure.
+
+ London Chemical Society.--Notes.--Pentathionic acid, Mr.
+ VIVIAN LEWES.--Hydrocarbons from Rosin Spirit. Dr.
+ ARMSTRONG.--On the Determination of the Relative Weight of Single
+ Molecules. E. VOGEL.--On the Synthetical Production of Ammonia
+ by the Combination of Hydrogen and Nitrogen in the Presence of
+ Heated Spongy Platinum, G. S. JOHNSON.--On the Oxidation of
+ Organic Matter in Water, A. DOWNS.
+
+ Rose Oil, or Otto of Roses. By CHAS. G. WARNFORD LOCK.--Sources
+ of rose oil.--History--Where rose gardens are now cultivated
+ for oil.--Methods of cultivation.--Processes of
+ distillation.--Adulterations
+
+ A New Method of Preparing Metatoluidine. By OSCAR WIDMAN.
+
+III. AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, ETC.--The Guenon Milk Mirror. 1 figure.
+ Escutcheon of the Jersey Bull Calf, Grand Mirror.
+
+ Two Good Lawn Trees
+
+ Cutting Sods for Lawns
+
+ Horticultural Notes: New apples, pears, grapes, etc.--Discussion
+ on Grapes. Western New York Society.--New peaches.--Insects
+ affecting horticulture.--Insect destroyers.
+
+ Observations on the Salmon of the Pacific. By DAVID S. JORDAN
+ and CHARLES B. GILBERT. Valuable census report.
+
+IV. LIGHT, ELECTRICITY ETC.--Relation between Electricity
+ and Light. Dr. O. T. Lodge's lecture before the London Institute.
+
+ Interesting Electrical Researches by Dr. Warren de La Rue and
+ Dr. Hugo Miller.
+
+ Telephony by Thermic Currents
+
+ The Telectroscope. By Moxs. SENLECQ. 5 figures. A successful
+ apparatus for transmitting and reproducing camera pictures by
+ electricity.
+
+V. HYGIENE, MEDICINE, ETC.--Rapid Breathing as a Pain Obtunde in
+ Minor Surgery, Obstetrics, the General Practice of Medicine, and
+ of Dentistry. Dr. W. G. A. Bonwill's paper before the
+ Philadelphia County Medical Society. 8 figures. Sphygmographic
+ tracings.
+
+VI. ARCHITECTURE, ART, ETC.--Artist's Homes. No. 11. "Weirleigh."
+ Residence of Harrison Weir. Perspective and plans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WHEAT AND WHEAT BREAD.
+
+By H. MEGE-MOURIES.
+
+
+In consequence of the interest that has been recently excited on the
+subject of bread reform, we have, says the London _Miller_, translated the
+interesting contribution of H. Mege-Mouries to the Imperial and Central
+Society of Agriculture of France, and subsequently published in a separate
+form in 1860, on "Wheat and Wheat Bread," with the illustration prepared
+by the author for the contribution. The author says: "I repeat in this
+pamphlet the principal facts put forth in the notes issued by me, and in
+the reports furnished by Mr. Chevreul to the Academy of Science, from 1853
+up to 1860."
+
+The study of the structure of the wheat berry, its chemical composition,
+its alimentary value, its preservation, etc., is not alone of interest to
+science, agriculture, and industry, but it is worthy of attracting the
+attention of governments, for this study, in its connection to political
+economy, is bound up with the fate and the prosperity of nations. Wheat has
+been cultivated from time immemorial. At first it was roughly crushed and
+consumed in the form of a thick soup, or in cakes baked on an ordinary
+hearth. Many centuries before the Christian era the Egyptians were
+acquainted with the means of making fermented or leavened bread; afterwards
+this practice spread into Greece, and it is found in esteem at Rome two
+centuries B.C.; from Rome the new method was introduced among the Gauls,
+and it is found to-day to exist almost the same as it was practiced at that
+period, with the exception, of course, of the considerable improvements
+introduced in the baking and grinding.
+
+Since the fortunate idea was formed of transforming the wheat into bread,
+this grain has always produced white bread, and dark or brown bread, from
+which the conclusion was drawn that it must necessarily make white bread
+and brown bread; on the other hand, the flours, mixed with bran, made a
+brownish, doughy, and badly risen bread, and it was therefore concluded
+that the bran, by its color, produced this inferior bread. From this error,
+accepted as a truth, the most contradictory opinions of the most opposite
+processes have arisen, which are repeated at the present day in the art of
+separating as completely as possible all the tissues of the wheat, and of
+extracting from the grain only 70 per cent of flour fit for making white
+bread. It is, however, difficult for the observer to admit that a small
+quantity of the thin yellow envelope can, by a simple mingling with the
+crumb of the loaf, color it brown, and it is still more difficult to admit
+that the actual presence of these envelopes can without decomposition
+render bread doughy, badly raised, sticky, and incapable of swelling in
+water. On the other hand, although some distinguished chemists deny or
+exalt the nutritive properties of bran, agriculturists, taking practical
+observation as proof, attribute to that portion of the grain a
+physiological action which has nothing in common with plastic alimentation,
+and prove that animals weakened by a too long usage of dry fodder, are
+restored to health by the use of bran, which only seems to act by its
+presence, since the greater portion of it, as already demonstrated by Mr.
+Poggiale, is passed through with the excrement.
+
+With these opinions, apparently so opposed, it evidently results that there
+is an unknown factor at the bottom of the question; it is the nature of
+this factor I wish to find out, and it was after the discovery that I
+was able to explain the nature of brown bread, and its _role_ in the
+alimentation of animals. We have then to examine the causes of the
+production of brown bread, to state why white bread kills animals fed
+exclusively on it, while bread mixed with bran makes them live. We have to
+explain the phenomena of panification, the operations of grinding, and to
+explain the means of preparing a bread more economical and more favorable
+to health. To explain this question clearly and briefly we must first be
+acquainted with the various substances forming the berry, their nature,
+their position, and their properties. This we shall do with the aid of the
+illustration given.
+
+[Illustration: SECTION OF A GRAIN OF WHEAT MAGNIFIED.]
+
+EXPLANATION OF DIAGRAM.
+
+1.--Superficial Coating of the Epidermis, severed at the Crease of
+ the Kernel.
+2.--Section of Epidermis, Averages of the Weight of the Whole Grain, 1/2 %.
+3.--Epicarp, do. do. do. 1 %.
+4.--Endocarp, do. do. do. 1 1/2 %.
+5.--Testa or Episperm, do. do. do. 2 %.
+6.--Embryo Membrane (with imaginary spaces in white on both sides
+ to make it distinct).
+7.\ / Glutonous Cells \
+8. > Endosperm < containing > do. do. 90 %.
+9./ \ Farinaccous Matter /
+
+
+ANATOMICAL STRUCTURE AND CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF WHEAT.
+
+The figure represents the longitudinal cut of a grain of wheat; it was made
+by taking, with the aid of the microscope and of photography, the drawing
+of a large quantity of fragments, which, joined together at last, produced
+the figure of the entire cut. These multiplied results were necessary to
+appreciate the insertion of the teguments and their nature in every part
+of the berry; in this long and difficult work I have been aided by the
+co-operation of Mr. Bertsch, who, as is known, has discovered a means of
+fixing rapidly by photography any image from the microscope. I must state,
+in the first place, that even in 1837 Mr. Payen studied and published the
+structure and the composition of a fragment of a grain of wheat; that
+this learned chemist, whose authority in such matters is known, perfectly
+described the envelopes or coverings, and indicated the presence of various
+immediate principles (especially of azote, fatty and mineral substances
+which fill up the range of contiguous cells between them and the periphery
+of the perisperm, to the exclusion of the gluten and the starchy granules),
+as well as to the mode of insertion of the granules of starch in the gluten
+contained in the cells, with narrow divisions from the perisperm, and in
+such a manner that up to the point of working indicated by the figure 1
+this study was complete. However, I have been obliged to recommence it, to
+study the special facts bearing on the alimentary question, and I must say
+that all the results obtained by Mr. Bertsch, Mr. Trecul, and myself agree
+with those given by Mr. Payen.
+
+
+ENVELOPES OF THE BERRY.
+
+No. 1 represents a superficial side of the crease.
+
+No. 2 indicates the epidermis or cuticle. This covering is extremely light,
+and offers nothing remarkable; 100 lb. of wheat contain 1/2 lb. of it.
+
+No. 3 indicates the epicarp. This envelope is distinguished by a double
+row of long and pointed vessels; it is, like the first one, very light and
+without action; 100 lb. of wheat contain 1 lb. of it.
+
+No. 4 represents the endocarp, or last tegument of the berry; the
+sarcocarp, which should be found between the numbers 2 and 3, no longer
+exists, having been absorbed. The endocarp is remarkable by its row of
+round and regular cells, which appear in the cut like a continuous string
+of beads; 100 lb. of wheat contain 11/2 lb. of it.
+
+These three envelopes are colorless, light, and spongy; their elementary
+composition is that of straw; they are easily removed besides with the aid
+of damp and friction. This property has given rise to an operation called
+decortication, the results of which we shall examine later on from an
+industrial point of view. The whole of the envelopes of the berry of wheat
+amount to 3 lb. in 100 lb. of wheat.
+
+
+ENVELOPES AND TISSUES OF THE BERRY PROPER.
+
+No. 5 indicates the testa or episperm. This external tegument of the berry
+is closer than the preceding ones; it contains in the very small cells
+two coloring matters, the one of a palish yellow, the other of an orange
+yellow, and according as the one or the other matter predominates, the
+wheat is of a more or less intense yellow color; hence come all the
+varieties of wheat known in commerce as white, reddish, or red wheats.
+Under this tegument is found a very thin, colorless membrane, which, with
+the testa or episperm, forms two per cent. of the weight of the wheat.
+
+No. 6 indicates the embryous membrane, which is only an expansion of the
+germ or embryo No. 10. This membrane is seen purposely removed from its
+contiguous parts, so as to render more visible its form and insertions.
+Under this tissue is found with the Nos. 7, 8, and 9, the endosperm or
+perisperm, containing the gluten and the starch; soluble and insoluble
+albuminoids, that is to say, the flour.
+
+The endosperm and the embryous membrane are the most interesting parts of
+the berry; the first is one of the depots of the plastic aliments, the
+second contains agents capable of dissolving these aliments during the
+germination, of determining their absorption in the digestive organs of
+animals, and of producing in the dough a decomposition strong enough to
+make dark bread. We shall proceed to examine separately these two parts of
+the berry.
+
+
+ENDOSPERM OR FLOURY PORTION, NOS. 7, 8, 9.
+
+This portion is composed of large glutinous cells, in which the granules
+of starch are found. The composition of these different layers offers a
+particular interest; the center, No. 9, is the softest part; it contains
+the least gluten and the most starch; it is the part which first pulverizes
+under the stone, and gives, after the first bolting, the fine flour. As
+this flour is poorest in gluten, it makes a dough with little consistency,
+and incapable of making an open bread, well raised. The first layer, No.
+8, which surrounds the center, produces small white middlings, harder and
+richer in gluten than the center; it bakes very well, and weighs 20 lb. in
+100, and it is these 20 parts in 100 which, when mixed with the 50 parts in
+the center, form the finest quality flour, used for making white bread.
+
+The layer No. 7, which surrounds the preceding one, is still harder and
+richer in gluten; unfortunately in the reduction it becomes mixed with some
+hundredth parts of the bran, which render it unsuitable for making bread
+of the finest quality; it produces in the regrinding lower grade and
+dark flours, together weighing 7 per cent. The external layer, naturally
+adhering to the membrane, No. 6, becomes mixed in the grinding with bran,
+to the extent of about 20 per cent., which renders it unsuitable even
+for making brown bread; it serves to form the regrindings and the offals
+destined for the nourishment of animals; this layer is, however, the
+hardest, and contains the largest quantity of gluten, and it is by
+consequence the most nutritive. We now see the endosperm increasing from
+the center, formed of floury layers, which augment in richness in gluten,
+in proportion as they are removed from the center. Now, as the flours make
+more bread in proportion to the quantity of gluten they contain, and the
+gluten gives more bread in proportion to its being more developed, or
+having more consistence, it follows that the flour belonging to the parts
+of the berry nearest the envelopes or coverings should produce the greatest
+portion of bread, and this is what takes place in effect. The product of
+the different layers of the endosperm is given below, and it will be seen
+that the quantity of bread increases in a proportion relatively greater
+than that of the gluten, which proves once more that the gluten of the
+center or last formation has less consistence than that of the other layers
+of older formation.
+
+The following are the results obtained from the same wheat:
+
+ Gluten. Bread.
+100 parts of flour in center contain.. 8 and produce 128
+ " " first layer " .. 9,2 " 136
+ " " second " " .. 11 " 140
+ " " external " " .. 13 " 145
+
+On the whole, it is seen, according to the composition of the floury part
+of the grain, that the berry contains on an average 90 parts in 100 of
+flour fit for making bread of the first quality, and that the inevitable
+mixing in of a small quantity of bran reduces these 90 to 70 parts with
+the ordinary processes; but the loss is not alone there, for the foregoing
+table shows that the best portion of the grain is rejected from the food
+of man that brown or dark bread is made of flour of very good quality, and
+that the first quality bread is made from the portion of the endosperm
+containing the gluten in the smallest quantity and in the least developed
+form.
+
+This is a consideration not to be passed over lightly; assuredly the gluten
+of the center contains as much azote as the gluten of the circumference,
+but it must not be admitted in a general way that the alimentary power of
+a body is in connection with the amount of azote it contains, and without
+entering into considerations which would carry us too wide of the subject,
+we shall simply state that if the flesh of young animals, as, for instance,
+the calf, has a debilitating action, while the developed flesh of
+full-grown animals--of a heifer, for example--has really nourishing
+properties, although the flesh of each animal contains the same quantity of
+azote, we must conclude that the proportion of elements is not everything,
+and that the azotic or nitrogenous elements are more nourishing in
+proportion as they are more developed. This is why the gluten of the layers
+nearest the bran is of quite a special interest from the point of view of
+alimentation and in the preparation of bread.
+
+
+THE EMBRYO AND THE COATING OF THE EMBRYO.
+
+To be intelligible, I must commence by some very brief remarks on the
+tissues of vegetables. There are two sorts distinguished among plants;
+some seem of no importance in the phenomena of nutrition; others, on the
+contrary, tend to the assimilation of the organic or inorganic components
+which should nourish and develop all the parts of the plant. The latter
+have a striking analogy with ferments; their composition is almost similar,
+and their action is increased or diminished by the same causes.
+
+These tissues, formed in a state of repose in vegetables as in grain, have
+special properties; thus the berry possesses a pericarp whose tissues
+should remain foreign to the phenomena of germination, and these tissues
+show no particularity worthy of remark, but the coating of the embryo,
+which should play an active part, possesses, on the contrary, properties
+that may be compared to those of ferments. With regard to these ferments,
+I must further remark that I have not been able, nor am I yet able, to
+express in formula my opinion of the nature of these bodies, but little
+known as yet; I have only made use of the language mostly employed, without
+wishing to touch on questions raised by the effects of the presence, and
+by the more complex effects of living bodies, which exercise analogous
+actions.
+
+With these reservations I shall proceed to examine the tissues in the berry
+which help toward the germination.
+
+THE EMBRYO (10, see woodcut) is composed of the root of the plant, with
+which we have nothing to do here. This root of the plant which is to grow
+is embedded in a mass of cells full of fatty bodies. These bodies present
+this remarkable particularity, that they contain among their elements
+sulphur and phosphorus. When you dehydrate by alcohol 100 grammes of the
+embryo of wheat, obtained by the same means as the membrane (a process
+indicated later on), this embryo, treated with ether, produces 20 grammes
+of oils composed elementarily of hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, azote, sulphur,
+and phosphorus. This analysis, made according to the means indicated by M.
+Fremy, shows that the fatty bodies of the embryo are composed like those of
+the germ of an egg, like those of the brain and of the nervous system of
+animals. It is necessary for us to stop an instant at this fact: in the
+first place, because it proves that vegetables are designed to form the
+phosphoric as well as the nitrogenous and ternary aliments, and finally,
+because it indicates how important it is to mix the embryo and its
+dependents with the bread in the most complete manner possible, seeing that
+a large portion of these phosphoric bodies always become decomposed during
+the baking.
+
+COATING OF THE EMBRYO.--This membrane (6), which is only an expansion of
+the embryo, surrounds the endosperm; it is composed of beautiful irregular
+cubic cells, diminishing according as they come nearer to the embryo. These
+cells are composed, first, of the insoluble cellular tissue; second,
+of phosphate of chalk and fatty phosphoric bodies; third, of soluble
+cerealine. In order to study the composition and the nature of this
+tissue, it must be completely isolated, and this result is obtained in the
+following manner.
+
+The wheat should be damped with water containing 10 parts in 100 of
+alcoholized caustic soda; at the expiration of one hour the envelopes of
+the pericarp, and of the testa Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, should be separated by
+friction in a coarse cloth, having been reduced by the action of the alkali
+to a pulpy state; each berry should then be opened separately to remove the
+portion of the envelope held in the fold of the crease, and then all the
+berries divided in two are put into three parts of water charged with
+one-hundredth of caustic potash. This liquid dissolves the gluten, divides
+the starch, and at the expiration of twenty-four hours the parts of the
+berries are kneaded between the fingers, collected in pure water, and
+washed until the water issues clear; these membranes with their embryos,
+which are often detached by this operation, are cast into water acidulated
+with one-hundredth of hydrochloric acid, and at the end of several hours
+they should be completely washed. The product obtained consists of
+beautiful white membranes, insoluble in alkalies and diluted acids, which
+show under the microscope beautiful cells joined in a tissue following the
+embryo, with which it has indeed a striking analogy in its properties and
+composition. This membrane, exhausted by the alcohol and ether, gives, by
+an elementary analysis, hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and azote. Unfortunately,
+under the action of the tests this membrane has been killed, and it no
+longer possesses the special properties of active tissues. Among these
+properties three may be especially mentioned:
+
+1st. Its resistance to water charged with a mineral salt, such as sea salt
+for instance
+
+2d. Its action through its presence.
+
+3d. Its action as a ferment.
+
+The action of saltwater is explained as follows: When the berry is plunged
+into pure water it will be observed that the water penetrates in the course
+of a few hours to the very center of the endosperm, but if water charged
+or saturated with sea salt be used, it will be seen that the liquid
+immediately passes through the teguments Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5, and stops
+abruptly before the embryo membrane No. 6, which will remain quite dry and
+brittle for several days, the berry remaining all the time in the
+water. Should the water penetrate further after several days, it can be
+ascertained that the entrance was gained through the part No 10 free of
+this tissue, and this notwithstanding the cells are full of fatty bodies.
+This membrane alone produces this action, for if the coatings Nos. 2, 3, 4,
+and 5 be removed, the resistance to the liquid remains the same, while if
+the whole, or a portion of it, be divided, either by friction between two
+millstones or by simple incisions, the liquid penetrates the berry within
+a few hours. This property is analogous to that of the radicules of roots,
+which take up the bodies most suitable for the nourishment of the plant. It
+proves, besides, that this membrane, like all those endowed with life, does
+not obey more the ordinary laws of permeability than those of chemical
+affinity, and this property can be turned to advantage in the preservation
+of grain in decortication and grinding.
+
+To determine the action of this tissue through its presence, take 100
+grammes of wheat, wash it and remove the first coating by decortication;
+then immerse it for several hours in lukewarm water, and dry afterwards in
+an ordinary temperature. It should then be reduced in a small coffee mill,
+the flour and middlings separated by sifting and the bran repassed through
+a machine that will crush it without breaking it; then dress it again, and
+repeat the operation six times at least. The bran now obtained is composed
+of the embryous membrane, a little flour adhering to it, and some traces
+of the teguments Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5. This coarse tissue-weighs about 14
+grammes, and to determine its action through its presence, place it in 200
+grammes of water at a temperature of 86 deg.; afterwards press it. The liquid
+that escapes contains chiefly the flour and cerealine. Filter this liquid,
+and put it in a test glass marked No. 1, which will serve to determine the
+action of the cerealine.
+
+The bran should now be washed until the water issues pure, and until it
+shows no bluish color when iodized water and sulphuric acid are added; when
+the washing is finished the bran swollen by the water is placed under a
+press, and the liquid extracted is placed, after being filtered, in a test
+tube. This test tube serves to show that all cerealine has been removed
+from the blades of the tissue. Finally, these small blades of bran, washed
+and pressed, are cast, with 50 grammes of lukewarm water, into a test tube,
+marked No. 3; 100 grammes of diluted starch to one-tenth of dry starch
+are then added in each test tube, and they are put into a water bath at
+a temperature of 104 deg. Fahrenheit, being stirred lightly every fifteen
+minutes. At the expiration of an hour, or at the most an hour and a half,
+No. 1 glass no longer contains any starch, as it has been converted into
+dextrine and glucose by the cerealine, and the iodized water only produces
+a purple color. No. 2 glass, with the same addition, produces a bluish
+color, and preserves the starch intact, which proves that the bran was well
+freed from the cerealine contained. No. 3 glass, like No. 1, shows a purple
+coloring, and the liquid only contains, in place of the starch, dextrine
+and glucose, _i. e_, the tissue has had the same action as the cerealine
+deprived of the tissue, and the cerealine as the tissue freed from
+cerealine. The same membrane rewashed can again transform the diluted
+starch several times. This action is due to the presence of the embryous
+membrane, for after four consecutive operations it still preserves its
+original weight. As regards the remains of the other segments, they have
+no influence on this phenomenon, for the coating Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5,
+separated by the water and friction, have no action whatever on the diluted
+starch. Besides its action through its presence, which is immediate,
+the embryous membrane may also act as a ferment, active only after a
+development, varying in duration according to the conditions of temperature
+and the presence or absence of ferments in acting.
+
+I make a distinction here as is seen, between the action through being
+present, and the action of real ferments, but it is not my intention to
+approve or disapprove of the different opinions expressed on this subject.
+I make use of these expressions only to explain more clearly the phenomena
+I have to speak of, for it is our duty to bear in mind that the real
+ferments only act after a longer or shorter period of development, while,
+on the other hand, the effects through presence are immediate.
+
+I now return to the embryous membrane. Various causes increase or decrease
+the action of this tissue, but it may be said in general that all the
+agents that kill the embryous membrane will also kill the cerealine. This
+was the reason why I at first attributed the production of dark bread
+exclusively to the latter ferment, but it was easy to observe that during
+the baking, decompositions resulted at over 158 deg. Fah., while the cerealine
+was still coagulated, and that bread containing bran, submitted to 212 deg. of
+heat, became liquefied in water at 104 deg. It was now easy to determine
+that dark flours, from which the cerealine had been removed by repeated
+washings, still produced dark bread. It was at this time, in remembering
+my experiences with organic bodies, I determined the properties of the
+insoluble tissue, deprived of the soluble cerealine, with analogous
+properties, but distinguished not alone by its solid organization and state
+of insolubility, but also by its resistance to heat, which acts as on
+yeast. There exists, in reality, I repeat, a resemblance between the
+embryous membrane and the yeast; they have the same immediate composition;
+they are destroyed by the same poisons, deadened by the same temperatures,
+annihilated by the same agents, propagated in an analogous manner, and
+it might be said that the organic tissues endowed with life are only an
+agglomeration of fixed cells of ferments. At all events, when the blades of
+the embryous membrane, prepared as already stated, are exposed to a water
+bath at 212 deg., this tissue, in contact with the diluted starch, produces
+the same decomposition; the contact, however, should continue two or three
+hours in place of one. If, instead of placing these membranes in the water
+bath, they are enveloped in two pounds of dough, and this dough put in the
+oven, after the baking the washed membranes produce the same results, which
+especially proves that this membrane can support a temperature of 212 deg. Fah.
+without disorganization. We shall refer to this property in speaking of the
+phenomena of panification.
+
+CEREALINE.--The cells composing the embryous membrane contain, as already
+stated, the cerealine, but after the germination they contain cerealine and
+diastase, that is to say, a portion of the cerealine changed into diastase,
+with which it has the greatest analogy. It is known how difficult it is to
+isolate and study albuminous substances. The following is the method of
+obtaining and studying cerealine. Take the raw embryous membrane, prepared
+as stated, steep it for an hour in spirits of wine diluted with twice its
+volume of water, and renew this liquid several times until the dextrine,
+glucose, coloring matters, etc., have been completely removed. The
+membranes should now be pressed and cast into a quantity of water
+sufficient to make a fluid paste of them, squeeze out the mixture,
+filter the liquid obtained, and this liquid will contain the cerealine
+sufficiently pure to be studied in its effects. Its principal properties
+are: The liquid evaporated at a low temperature produces an amorphous,
+rough mass nearly colorless, and almost entirely soluble in distilled
+water; this solution coagulates between 158 deg. and 167 deg. Fah., and the
+coagulum is insoluble in acids and weak alkalies; the solution is
+precipitated by all diluted acids, by phosphoric acid at all the degrees of
+hydration, and even by a current of carbonic acid. All these precipitates
+redissolve with an excess of acid, sulphuric acid excepted. Concentrated
+sulphuric acid forms an insoluble downy white precipitate, and the
+concentrated vegetable acids, with the exception of tannic acid, do not
+determine any precipitate. Cerealine coagulated by an acid redissolves in
+an excess of the same acid, but it has become dead and has no more action
+on the starch. The alkalies do not form any precipitate, but they kill the
+cerealine as if it had been precipitated The neutral rennet does not make
+any precipitate in a solution of cerealine--5 centigrammes of dry cerealine
+transform in twenty-five minutes 10 grammes of starch, reduced to a paste
+by 100 grammes of water at 113 deg. Fah. It will be seen that cerealine has a
+grand analogy with albumen and legumine, but it is distinguished from them
+by the action of the rennet, of the heat of acids, alcohol, and above all
+by its property of transforming the starch into glucose and dextrine.
+
+It may be said that some albuminous substances have this property, but it
+must be borne in mind that these bodies, like gluten, for example, only
+possess it after the commencement of the decomposition. The albuminous
+matter approaching nearest to cerealine is the diastase, for it is only a
+transformation of the cerealine during the germination, the proof of which
+may be had in analyzing the embryous membrane, which shows more diastase
+and less cerealine in proportion to the advancement of the germination: it
+differs, however, from the diastase by the action of heat, alcohol, etc.
+It is seen that in every case the cerealine and the embryous membrane
+act together, and in an analogous manner; we shall shortly examine their
+effects on the digestion and in the phenomena of panification.
+
+PHOSPHATE OF CALCIUM.--Mr. Payen was the first to make the observation
+that the greatest amount of phosphate of chalk is found in the teguments
+adjoining the farinaceous or floury mass. This observation is important
+from two points of view; in the first place, it shows us that this mineral
+aliment, necessary to the life of animals, is rejected from ordinary bread;
+and in the next place, it brings a new proof that phosphate of chalk is
+found, and ought to be found, in everyplace where there are membranes
+susceptible of exercising vital functions among animals as well as
+vegetables.
+
+Phosphate of chalk is not in reality (as I wished to prove in another work)
+a plastic matter suitable for forming bones, for the bones of infants are
+three times more solid than those of old men, which contain three times
+as much of it. The quantity of phosphate of chalk necessary to the
+constitution of animals is in proportion to the temperature of those
+animals, and often in the inverse ratio of the weight of their bones, for
+vegetables, although they have no bones, require phosphate of chalk. This
+is because this salt is the natural stimulant of living membranes, and the
+bony tissue is only a depot of phosphate of chalk, analogous to the adipose
+tissue, the fat of which is absorbed when the alimentation coming from the
+exterior becomes insufficient. Now, as we know all the parts constituting
+the berry of wheat, it will be easy to explain the phenomena of
+panification, and to conclude from the present moment that it is not
+indifferent to reject from the bread this embryous membrane where the
+agents of digestion are found, viz., the phosphoric bodies and the
+phosphate of chalk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE ORIGIN OF NEW PROCESS MILLING.
+
+
+The following article was written by Albert Hoppin, editor of the
+_Northwestern Miller_, at the request of Special Agent Chas. W. Johnson,
+and forms a part of his report to the census bureau on the manufacturing
+industries of Minneapolis.
+
+"The development of the milling industry in this city has been so
+intimately connected with the growth and prosperity of the city itself,
+that the steps by which the art of milling has reached its present high
+state of perfection are worthy of note, especially as Minneapolis may
+rightly claim the honor of having brought the improvements, which have
+within the last decade so thoroughly revolutionized the art of making
+flour, first into public notice, and of having contributed the largest
+share of capital and inventive skill to their full development. So much is
+this the case that the cluster of mills around the Falls of St. Anthony is
+to-day looked upon as the head-center of the milling industry not only of
+this country, but of the world. An exception to this broad statement may
+possibly be made in favor of the city of Buda Pest, in Austro-Hungary, from
+the leading mills in which the millers in this country have obtained many
+valuable ideas. To the credit of American millers and millwrights it must,
+however, be said that they have in all cases improved upon the information
+they have thus obtained.
+
+"To rightly understand the change that has taken place in milling methods
+during the last ten years, it is necessary to compare the old way with the
+new, and to observe wherein they differ. From the days of Oliver Evans, the
+first American mechanic to make any improvement in milling machinery, until
+1870, there was, if we may except some grain cleaning or smut machines,
+no very strongly marked advance in milling machinery or in the methods of
+manufacturing flour. It is true that the reel covered with finely-woven
+silk bolting cloth had taken the place of the muslin or woolen covered hand
+sieve, and that the old granite millstones have given place to the French
+burr; but these did not affect the essential parts of the _modus operandi_,
+although the quality of the product was, no doubt, materially improved. The
+processes employed in all the mills in the United States ten years ago were
+identical, or very nearly so, with those in use in the Brandywine Mills in
+Evans's day. They were very simple, and may be divided into two distinct
+operations.
+
+"First. Grinding (literally) the wheat.
+
+"Second. Bolting or separating the flour or interior portion of the berry
+from the outer husk, or bran. It may seem to some a rash assertion, but
+this primitive way of making flour is still in vogue in over one-half of
+the mills of the United States. This does not, however, affect the truth of
+the statement that the greater part of the flour now made in this country
+is made on an entirely different and vastly-improved system, which has come
+to be known to the trade as the new process.
+
+"In looking for a reason for the sudden activity and spirit of progress
+which had its culmination in the new process, the character of the
+wheat raised in the different sections of the Union must be taken into
+consideration. Wheat may be divided into two classes, spring and winter,
+the latter generally being more starchy and easily pulverized, and at the
+same time having a very tough bran or husk, which does not readily crumble
+or cut to pieces in the process of grinding. It was with this wheat that
+the mills of the country had chiefly to do, and the defects of the old
+system of milling were not then so apparent. With the settlement of
+Minnesota, and the development of its capacities as a wheat-growing State,
+a new factor in the milling problem was introduced, which for a time bid
+fair to ruin every miller who undertook to solve it. The wheat raised in
+this State was, from the climatic conditions, a spring wheat, hard in
+structure and having a thin, tender, and friable bran. In milling this
+wheat, if an attempt was made to grind it as fine as was then customary to
+grind winter wheat, the bran was ground almost as fine as the flour, and
+passed as readily through the meshes of the bolting reels or sieves,
+rendering the flour dark, specky, and altogether unfit to enter the Eastern
+markets in competition with flour from the winter wheat sections. On the
+other hand, if the grinding was not so fine as to break up the bran,
+the interior of the berry being harder to pulverize, was not rendered
+sufficiently fine, and there remained after the flour was bolted out a
+large percentage of shorts or middlings, which, while containing the
+strongest and best flour in the berry, were so full of dirt and impurities
+as to render them unfit for any further grinding except for the very lowest
+grade of flour, technically known as 'red dog.' The flour produced from
+the first grinding was also more or less specky and discolored, and, in
+everything but strength, inferior to that made from winter wheat, while the
+'yield' was so small, or, in other words, the amount of wheat which it took
+to make a barrel of flour was so large, that milling in Minnesota and other
+spring wheat sections was anything but profitable.
+
+"The problem which ten years since confronted the millers of this city was
+how to obtain from the wheat which they had to grind a white, clear flour,
+and to so increase the yield as to leave some margin for profit. The first
+step in the solution of this problem was the invention by E. N. La Croix
+of the machine which has since been called the purifier, which removed the
+dirt and light impurities from the refuse middlings in the same manner that
+dust and chaff are removed from wheat by a fanning mill. The middlings thus
+purified were then reground, and the result was a much whiter and cleaner
+flour than it had been possible to obtain under the old process of low
+close grinding. This flour was called 'patent' or 'fancy,' and at once took
+a high position in the market. The first machine built by La Croix was
+immediately improved by George T. Smith, and has since then been the
+subject of numberless variations, changes, and improvements; and over the
+principles embodied in its construction there has been fought one of the
+longest and most bitter battles recorded in the annals of patent litigation
+in this country. The purifier is to-day the most important machine in use
+in the manufacture of flour in this country, and may with propriety be
+called the corner-stone of new process milling. The earliest experiments in
+its use in this country were made in what was then known as the 'big mill'
+in this city, owned by Washburn, Stephens & Co., and now known as the
+Washburn Mill B.
+
+"The next step in the development of the new process, also originating
+in Minneapolis, was the abandonment of the old system of cracking the
+millstone, and substituting in its stead the use of smooth surfaces on the
+millstones, thus in a large measure doing away with the abrasion of the
+bran, and raising the quality of the flour produced at the first grinding.
+So far as we know, Mr. E. R. Stephens, a Minneapolis miller, then employed
+in the mill owned by Messrs. Pillsbury, Crocker & Fish, and now a member of
+the prominent milling firm of Freeman & Stephens, River Falls, Wisconsin,
+was the first to venture on this innovation. He also first practiced the
+widening of the furrows in the millstones and increasing their number, thus
+adding largely to the amount of middlings made at the first grinding, and
+raising the percentage of patent flour. He was warmly supported by Amasa K.
+Ostrander, since deceased, the founder and for a number of years the editor
+of the _North-Western Miller_, a trade newspaper. The new ideas were for a
+time vigorously combated by the millers, but their worth was so plain that
+they were soon adopted, not only in Minneapolis, but by progressive millers
+throughout the country. The truth was the 'new process' in its entirety,
+which may be summarized in four steps--first, grinding or, more properly,
+granulating the berry; second, bolting or separating the 'chop' or meal
+into first flour, middlings, and bran; third, purifying the middlings,
+fourth, regrinding and rebolting the middlings to produce the higher grade,
+or 'patent' flour. This higher grade flour drove the best winter wheat
+flours out of the Eastern markets, and placed milling in Minnesota upon a
+firm basis. The development of the 'new process' cannot be claimed by any
+one man. Hundreds of millers all over the country have contributed to its
+advance, but the millers of Minneapolis have always taken the lead.
+
+"Within the past two or three years what may be distinctively called the
+'new process' has, in the mills of Minneapolis and some few other leading
+mills in the country, been giving place to a new system, or rather, a
+refinement of the processes above described. This latest system is known to
+the trade as the 'gradual reduction' or high-grinding system, as the 'new
+process' is the medium high-grinding system, and the old way is the low or
+close grinding system. In using the gradual reduction in making flour the
+millstones are abandoned, except for finishing some of the inferior grades
+of flour, and the work is done by means of grooved and plain rollers, made
+of chilled iron or porcelain. In some cases disks of chilled iron, suitably
+furrowed, are used, and in others concave mills, consisting of a cylinder
+running against a concave plate. In Minneapolis the chilled iron rolls take
+the precedence of all other means.
+
+"The system of gradual reduction is much more complicated than either of
+those which preceded it; but the results obtained are a marked advance over
+the 'new process.' The percentage of high-grade flour is increased, several
+grades of different degrees of excellence being produced, and the yield
+is also greater from a given quantity of wheat. The system consists in
+reducing the wheat to flour, not at one operation, as in the old system,
+nor in two grindings, as in the 'new process,' but in several successive
+reductions, four, five, or six, as the case may be. The wheat is first
+passed through a pair of corrugated chilled iron rollers, which merely
+split it open along the crease of the berry, liberating the dirt which lies
+in the crease so that it can be removed by bolting. A very small percentage
+of low-grade flour is also made in this reduction. After passing through
+what is technically called a 'scalping reel' to remove the dirt and flour,
+the broken wheat is passed through a second set of corrugated rollers, by
+which it is further broken up, and then passes through a second separating
+reel, which removes the flour and middlings. This operation is repeated
+successively until the flour portion of the berry is entirely removed from
+the bran, the necessary separation being made after each reduction. The
+middlings from the several reductions are passed through the purifiers,
+and, after being purified, are reduced to flour by successive reductions
+on smooth iron or porcelain rollers. In some cases, as stated above, iron
+disks and concave mills are substituted for the roller mill, but the
+operation is substantially the same. One of the principal objects sought to
+be attained by this high-grinding system is to avoid all abrasion of the
+bran, another is to take out the dirt in the crease of the berry at the
+beginning of the process, and still another to thoroughly free the bran
+from flour, so as to obtain as large a yield as possible. Incidental to the
+improved methods of milling, as now practiced in this country, is a marked
+improvement in the cleaning of the grain and preparing it for flouring. The
+earliest grain-cleaning machine was the 'smutter,' the office of which was
+to break the smut balls, and scour the outside of the bran to remove any
+adhering dust, the scouring machine being too harsh in its action, breaking
+the kernels of wheat, and so scratching and weakening the bran that it
+broke up readily in the grinding. The scouring process was therefore
+lessened, and was followed by brush machines, which brushed the dirt,
+loosened up and left by the scourer, from the berry. Other machines for
+removing the fuzzy and germ ends of the berry have also been introduced,
+and everything possible is done to free the grain from extraneous
+impurities before the process of reduction is commenced. In all the minor
+details of the mill there has been the same marked change, until the modern
+merchant mill of to-day no more resembles that of twenty-five years ago
+than does the modern cotton mill the old-fashioned distaff. The change has
+extended into the winter wheat sections, and no mill in the United States
+can hope to hold its place in the markets unless it is provided with the
+many improvements in machinery and processes which have resulted from the
+experiments begun in this city only ten years since, and which have
+made the name of Minneapolis and the products of her many mills famous
+throughout the world. The relative merits of the flour made by the new
+process and the old have been warmly discussed, but the general verdict
+of the great body of consumers is that the patent or new process flour is
+better in every way for bread making purposes, being clearer, whiter, more
+evenly granulated, and possessing more strength. Careful chemical analysis
+has confirmed this. As between winter and spring wheat flours made by the
+new process and gradual reduction systems, it maybe remarked that the
+former contain more starch and are whiter in color, while the latter,
+having more gluten, excel in strength. In milling all varieties of wheat,
+whether winter or spring, the new processes are in every way superior to
+the old, and, in aiding their inception and development, the millers of
+Minneapolis have conferred a lasting benefit on the country.
+
+"Minneapolis, Minn., December 1, 1880."
+
+
+THE MILLING STRUCTURES AND MACHINERY.
+
+
+Mr. Johnson added the following, showing the present status of the milling
+industry in Minneapolis:
+
+"The description of the process of the manufacture of flour so well
+given above, conveys no idea of the extent and magnitude of the milling
+structures, machinery, and buildings employed in the business. Many of the
+leading millers and millwrights have personally visited and studied the
+best mills in England, France, Hungary, and Germany, and are as familiar
+with their theory, methods, and construction as of their own, and no
+expense or labor has been spared in introducing the most approved features
+of the improvements in the foreign mills. Experimenting is constantly going
+on, and the path behind the successful millers is strewn with the wrecks of
+failures. A very large proportion of the machinery is imported, though the
+American machinists are fast outstripping their European rivals in the
+quality and efficiency of the machinery needed for the new mills constantly
+going up.
+
+"There are twenty-eight of these mills now constructed and at work,
+operating an equivalent of 412 runs of stone, consuming over sixteen
+million bushels of wheat, and manufacturing over three million barrels of
+flour annually. Their capacities range from 250 to 1,500 barrels of flour
+per day. Great as these capacities are, there is now one in process of
+construction, the Pillsbury A Mill, which at the beginning of the harvest
+of 1881 will have a capacity of 4,000 barrels daily. The Washburn A Mill,
+whose capacity is now 1,500 barrels, is being enlarged to make 8,500
+barrels a day, and the Crown Roller Mill, owned by Christian Bros. & Co.,
+is also being enlarged to produce 3,000 barrels a day. The largest mill in
+Europe has a daily capacity of but 2,800 barrels, and no European mill is
+fitted with the exquisite perfection of machinery and apparatus to be found
+in the mills of this city.
+
+"The buildings are mainly built of blue limestone, found so abundant in the
+quarries of this city, range and line work, and rest on the solid ledge.
+The earlier built mills are severely plain, but the newer ones are greatly
+improved by the taste of the architect, and are imposing and beautiful in
+appearance."
+
+
+DIRECT FOREIGN TRADE.
+
+The flour of Minneapolis, holding so high a rank in the markets of the
+world, is always in active demand, especially the best grades, and brings
+from $1.00 to $1.60 per barrel more than flour of the best qualities of
+southern, eastern, or foreign wheat. During the year nearly a million
+barrels were shipped direct to European and other foreign ports, on through
+bills of lading, and drawn for by banks here having special foreign
+exchange arrangements, at sight, on the day of shipment. This trade
+is constantly increasing, and the amount of flour handled by eastern
+commission men is decreasing in proportion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Referring to the foregoing, the following letter from Mr. Geo. T. Smith to
+the editor of the _London Miller_ is of interest:
+
+SIR: I find published in the _North-western Miller_ of December 24, 1880,
+extracts from an article on the origin of new process milling, prepared by
+Albert Hoppin, Esq., editor of the above-named journal, for the use of one
+of the statistical divisions of the United States census, which is so at
+variance, in at least one important particular, with the facts set forth in
+the paper read by me before the British and Irish millers, at their meeting
+in May last, that I think I ought to take notice of its statements, more
+especially as the _North-Western Miller_ has quite a circulation on this
+side of the water.
+
+As stated in the paper read by me above-mentioned, I was engaged in
+February, 1871, by Mr. Christian, who was then operating the "big," or
+Washburn Mill at Minneapolis, to take charge of the stones in that mill. At
+this time Mr. Christian was very much interested in the improvement of the
+quality of his flour, which in common with the flour of Minneapolis mills,
+without exception, was very poor indeed. For some time previous to this I
+had insisted to him most strenuously that the beginning of any improvement
+must be found in smooth, true, and well balanced stones, and it was because
+he was at last convinced that my ideas were at least worthy of a practical
+test I was placed in charge of his mill. Nearly two months were consumed in
+truing and smoothing the stone, as all millers in the mill had struck
+at once when they became acquainted with the character of the changes I
+proposed to make.
+
+I remained with Mr. Christian until the latter part of 1871, in all about
+eight months. During this time the flour from the Washburn Mill attained a
+celebrity that made it known and sought after all over the United States.
+It commanded attention as an event of the very greatest importance, from
+the fact that it was justly felt that if a mill grinding spring wheat
+exclusively was capable of producing a flour infinitely superior in every
+way to the best that could be made from the finest varieties of winter
+wheats, the new North Western territory, with its peculiar adaptation to
+the growing of spring grain, and its boundless capacity for production,
+must at once become one of the most important sections of the country.
+
+Mr. Christian's appreciation of the improvements I had made in his mill
+was attested by doubly-locked and guarded entrances, and by the stringent
+regulations which were adopted to prevent any of his employes carrying
+information with regard to the process to his competitors.
+
+All this time other Minneapolis mills were doing such work and only such as
+they had done previously. Ought not the writer of an article on the origin
+of new process milling--which article is intended to become historical, and
+to have its authenticity indorsed by the government--to have known whether
+Mr. Christian, in the Washburn Mill, did or did not make a grade of
+flour which has hardly been excelled since for months before any other
+Minneapolis mill approached his product in any degree? And should he not
+be well enough acquainted with the milling of that period--1871-2--to know
+that such results as were obtained in the Washburn Mill could only be
+secured by the use of _smooth_ and _true_ stones? Mr. Stephens--whom I
+shall mention again presently--did _not_ work in the Washburn Mill while I
+was in charge of it.
+
+In the fall of 1871 I entered into a contract with Mr. C. A. Pillsbury,
+owner of the Taylor Mill and senior partner in the firm by whom the
+Minneapolis Mill was operated, to put both those mills into condition to
+make the same grade of flour as Mr. Christian was making. The consideration
+in the contract was 5,000 dols. At the above mills I met to some extent the
+same obstruction in regard to millers striking as had greeted me at Mr.
+Christian's mill earlier in the year; but among those who did not strike at
+the Minneapolis Mill I saw, for the first time, Mr. Stephens--then still
+in his apprenticeship--whom Mr. Hoppin declares to have been, "so far as I
+know," the first miller to use smooth stones. If Mr. Hoppin is right in his
+assertion, perhaps he will explain why, during the eight months I was at
+the Washburn Mill, Mr. Stephens did not make a corresponding improvement
+in the product of the Minneapolis Mill. That he did not do this is amply
+proved by the fact of Mr. Pillsbury giving me 5,000 dols. to introduce
+improvements into his mills, when, supposing Mr. Hoppin's statement to
+be correct, he might have had the same alterations carried out under Mr.
+Stephens' direction at a mere nominal cost. As a matter of fact, the stones
+in both the Taylor and Minneapolis Mills were as rough as any in the
+Washburn Mill when I took charge of them.
+
+Thus it appears (1) that the flour made by the mill in which Stephens was
+employed was not improved in quality, while that of the Washburn Mill,
+where he was not employed, became the finest that had ever been made in the
+United States at that time. That (2) the owner of the mill in which Mr.
+Stephens was employed, as he was not making good flour, engaged me at a
+large cost to introduce into his mills the alterations by which only, both
+Mr. Hoppin and myself agree, could any material improvement in the milling
+of that period be effected, .viz., smooth, true, and well-balanced
+stones.--GEO. T. SMITH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For breachy animals do not use barbed fences. To see the lacerations that
+these fences have produced upon the innocent animals should be sufficient
+testimony against them. Many use pokes and blinders on cattle and goats,
+but as a rule such things fail. The better way is to separate breachy
+animals from the lot, as others will imitate their habits sooner or later,
+and then, if not curable, _sell them_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GUENON MILK-MIRROR.
+
+
+The name of the simple Bordeaux peasant is, and should be, permanently
+associated with his discovery that the milking qualities of cows were, to a
+considerable extent, indicated by certain external marks easily observed.
+We had long known that capacious udders and large milk veins, combined with
+good digestive capacity and a general preponderance of the alimentary over
+the locomotive system, were indications that rarely misled in regard to the
+ability of a cow to give much milk; but to judge of the amount of milk a
+cow would yield, and the length of time she would hold out in her flow, two
+or three years before she could be called a cow--this was Guenon's great
+accomplishment, and the one for which he was awarded a gold medal by the
+Agricultural Society of his native district. This was the first of many
+honors with which he was rewarded, and it is much to say that no committee
+of agriculturists who have ever investigated the merits of the system
+have ever spoken disparagingly of it. Those who most closely study it,
+especially following Guenon's original system, which has never been
+essentially improved upon, are most positive in regard to its truth,
+enthusiastic in regard to its value.
+
+The fine, soft hair upon the hinder part of a cow's udder for the most part
+turns upward. This upward-growing hair extends in most cases all over that
+part of the udder visible between the hind legs, but is occasionally marked
+by spots or mere lines, usually slender ovals, in which the hair grows
+down. This tendency of the hair to grow upward is not confined to the udder
+proper; but extends out upon the thighs and upward to the tail. The edges
+of this space over which the hair turns up are usually distinctly marked,
+and, as a rule, the larger the area of this space, which is called the
+"mirror" or "escutcheon," the more milk the cow will give, and the longer
+she will continue in milk.
+
+[Illustration: ESCUTCHEON OF THE JERSEY BULL-CALF, GRAND MIRROR, 4,904.]
+
+That portion of the escutcheon which covers the udder and extends out on
+the inside of each thigh, has been designated as the udder or mammary
+mirror; that which runs upward towards the setting on of the tail, the
+rising or placental mirror. The mammary mirror is of the greater value,
+yet the rising mirror is not to be disregarded. It is regarded of especial
+moment that the mirror, taken as a whole, be symmetrical, and especially
+that the mammary mirror be so; yet it often occurs that it is far
+otherwise, its outline being often very fantastical--exhibiting deep
+_bays_, so to speak, and islands of downward growing hair. There are also
+certain "ovals," never very large, yet distinct, which do not detract from
+the estimated value of an escutcheon; notably those occurring on the lobes
+of the udder just above the hind teats. These are supposed to be points of
+value, though for what reason it would be hard to tell, yet they do occur
+upon some of the very best milch cows, and those whose mirrors correspond
+most closely to their performances.
+
+Mr. Guenon's discovery enables breeders to determine which of their calves
+are most promising, and in purchasing young stock it affords indications
+which rarely fail as to their comparative milk yield. These indications
+occasionally prove utterly fallacious, and Mr. Guenon gives rules for
+determining this class, which he calls "bastards," without waiting for them
+to fail in their milk. The signs are, however, rarely so distinct that one
+would be willing to sell a twenty-quart cow, whose yield confirmed the
+prediction of her mirror at first calving, because of the possibility of
+the going dry in two months, or so, as indicated by her bastardy marks.
+
+It is an interesting fact that the mirrors of bulls (which are much like
+those of cows, but less extensive in every direction) are reflected in
+their daughters. This gives rise to the dangerous custom of breeding for
+mirrors, rather than for milk. What the results may be after a few years it
+is easy to see. The mirror, being valued for its own sake--that is, because
+it sells the heifers--will be likely to lose its practical significance and
+value as a _milk_ mirror.
+
+We have a striking photograph of a young Jersey bull, the property of Mr.
+John L. Hopkins, of Atlanta, Ga., and called "Grand Mirror." This we have
+caused to be engraved and the mirror is clearly shown. A larger mirror is
+rarely seen upon a bull. We hope in a future number to exhibit some cows'
+mirrors of different forms and degrees of excellence.--_Rural New Yorker_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TWO GOOD LAWN TREES.
+
+
+The negundo, or ash-leaved maple, as it is called in the Eastern States,
+better known at the West as a box elder, is a tree that is not known as
+extensively as it deserves. It is a hard maple, that grows as rapidly as
+the soft maple; is hardy, possesses a beautiful foliage of black green
+leaves, and is symmetrical in shape. Through eastern Iowa I found it
+growing wild, and a favorite tree with the early settlers, who wanted
+something that gave shade and protection to their homes quickly on their
+prairie farms. Brought east, its growth is rapid, and it loses none of the
+characteristics it possessed in its western home. Those who have planted it
+are well pleased with it. It is a tree that transplants easily, and I know
+of no reason why it should not be more popular.
+
+For ornamental lawn planting, I give pre-eminence to the cut-leaf weeping
+birch. Possessing all the good qualities of the white birch, it combines
+with them a beauty and delicate grace yielded by no other tree. It is an
+upright grower, with slender, drooping branches, adorned with leaves of
+deep rich green, each leaf being delicately cut, as with a knife, into
+semi-skeletons. It holds its foliage and color till quite late in the fall.
+The bark, with age, becomes white, resembling the white birch, and the
+beauty of the tree increases with its age. It is a free grower, and
+requires no trimming. Nature has given it a symmetry which art cannot
+improve.
+
+H.T.J.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CUTTING SODS FOR LAWNS.
+
+
+I am a very good sod layer, and used to lay very large lawns--half to
+three-quarters of an acre. I cut the sods as follows: Take a board eight to
+nine inches wide, four, five, or six feet long, and cut downward all around
+the board, then turn the board over and cut again alongside the edge of the
+board, and so on as many sods as needed. Then cut the turf with a sharp
+spade, all the same lengths. Begin on one end, and roll together. Eight
+inches by five feet is about as much as a man can handle conveniently. It
+is very easy to load them on a wagon, cart, or barrow, and they can be
+quickly laid. After laying a good piece, sprinkle a little with a watering
+pot, if the sods are dry; then use the back of the spade to smooth them a
+little. If a very fine effect is wanted, throw a shovelful or two of good
+earth over each square yard, and smooth it with the back of a steel rake.
+
+F.H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+[COUNTRY GENTLEMAN.]
+
+HORTICULTURAL NOTES.
+
+
+The Western New York Society met at Rochester, January 26.
+
+_New Apples, Pears, Grapes, etc._--Wm. C Barry, secretary of the committee
+on native fruits, read a full report. Among the older varieties of the
+apple, he strongly recommended Button Beauty, which had proved so excellent
+in Massachusetts, and which had been equally successful at the Mount
+Hope Nurseries at Rochester; the fine growth of the tree and its great
+productiveness being strongly in its favor. The Wagener and Northern Spy
+are among the finer sorts. The Melon is one of the best among the older
+sorts; the fruit being quite tender will not bear long shipment, but it
+possesses great value for home use, and being a poor grower, it had been
+thrown aside by nurserymen and orchardists. It should be top-grafted on
+more vigorous sorts. The Jonathan is another fine sort of slender growth,
+which should be top-grafted.
+
+Among new pears, Hoosic and Frederic Clapp were highly commended for their
+excellence. Some of the older peaches of fine quality had of late been
+neglected, and among them Druid Hill and Brevoort.
+
+Among the many new peaches highly recommended for their early ripening,
+there was great resemblance to each other, and some had proved earlier than
+Alexander.
+
+Of the new grapes, Lady Washington was the most promising. The Secretary
+was a failure. The Jefferson was a fine sort, of high promise.
+
+Among the new white grapes, Niagara, Prentiss, and Duchess stood
+pre-eminent, and were worthy of the attention of cultivators. The
+Vergennes, from Vermont, a light amber colored sort, was also highly
+commended. The Elvira, so highly valued in Missouri, does not succeed well
+here. Several facts were stated in relation to the Delaware grape, showing
+its reliability and excellence.
+
+Several new varieties of the raspberry were named, but few of them were
+found equal to the best old sorts. If Brinckle's Orange were taken as a
+standard for quality, it would show that none had proved its equal in fine
+quality. The Caroline was like it in color, but inferior in flavor. The New
+Rochelle was of second quality. Turner was a good berry, but too soft for
+distant carriage.
+
+Of the many new strawberries named, each seemed to have some special
+drawback. The Bidwell, however, was a new sort of particular excellence,
+and Charles Downing thinks it the most promising of the new berries.
+
+_Discussion on Grapes._--C. W. Beadle, of Ontario, in allusion to Moore's
+Early grape, finds it much earlier than the Concord, and equal to it in
+quality, ripening even before the Hartford. S. D. Willard, of Geneva,
+thought it inferior to the Concord, and not nearly so good as the Worden.
+The last named was both earlier and better than the Concord, and sold for
+seven cents per pound when the Concord brought only four cents. C. A.
+Green, of Monroe County, said the Lady Washington proved to be a very fine
+grape, slightly later than Concord. P. L. Perry, of Canandaigua, said
+that the Vergennes ripens with Hartford, and possesses remarkable keeping
+qualities, and is of excellent quality and free from pulp. He presented
+specimens which had been kept in good condition. He added, in relation to
+the Worden grape, that some years ago it brought 18 cents per pound in New
+York when the Concord sold three days later for only 8 cents. [In such
+comparisons, however, it should be borne in mind that new varieties usually
+receive more attention and better culture, giving them an additional
+advantage.]
+
+The Niagara grape received special attention from members. A. C. Younglove,
+of Yates County, thought it superior to any other white grape for its many
+good qualities. It was a vigorous and healthy grower, and the clusters were
+full and handsome. W. J. Fowler, of Monroe County, saw the vine in October,
+with the leaves still hanging well, a great bearer and the grape of fine
+quality. C. L. Hoag, of Lockport, said he began to pick the Niagara on the
+26th of August, but its quality improved by hanging on the vine. J. Harris,
+of Niagara County, was well acquainted with the Niagara, and indorsed all
+the commendation which had been uttered in its favor. T. C. Maxwell said
+there was one fault--we could not get it, as it was not in market. W. C.
+Barry, of Rochester, spoke highly of the Niagara, and its slight foxiness
+would be no objection to those who like that peculiarity. C. L. Hoag
+thought this was the same quality that Col. Wilder described as "a little
+aromatic." A. C. Younglove found the Niagara to ripen with the Delaware.
+Inquiry being made relative to the Pockington grape, H. E. Hooker said it
+ripened as early as the Concord. C. A. Green was surprised that it had not
+attracted more attention, as he regarded it as a very promising grape. J.
+Charlton, of Rochester, said that the fruit had been cut for market on the
+29th of August, and on the 6th of September it was fully ripe; but he has
+known it to hang as late as November. J. S. Stone had found that when it
+hung as late as November it became sweet and very rich in flavor.
+
+_New Peaches._--A. C. Younglove had found such very early sorts as
+Alexander and Amsden excellent for home use, but not profitable for market.
+The insects and birds made heavy depredations on them. While nearly all
+very early and high-colored sorts suffer largely from the birds, the
+Rivers, a white peach, does not attract them, and hence it may be
+profitable for market if skillfully packed; rough and careless handling
+will spoil the fruit. He added that the Wheatland peach sustains its high
+reputation, and he thought it the best of all sorts for market, ripening
+with Late Crawford. It is a great bearer, but carries a crop of remarkably
+uniform size, so that it is not often necessary to throw out a bad
+specimen. This is the result of experience with it by Mr. Rogers at
+Wheatland, in Monroe County, and at his own residence in Vine Valley. S. D.
+Willard confirmed all that Mr. Younglove had said of the excellence of the
+Rivers peach. He had ripened the Amsden for several years, and found it
+about two weeks earlier than the Rivers, and he thought if the Amsden were
+properly thinned, it would prevent the common trouble of its rotting; such
+had been his experience. E. A. Bronson, of Geneva, objected to making very
+early peaches prominent for marketing, as purchasers would prefer waiting
+a few days to paying high prices for the earliest, and he would caution
+people against planting the Amsden too largely, and its free recommendation
+might mislead. May's Choice was named by H. E. Hooker as a beautiful yellow
+peach, having no superior in quality, but perhaps it may not be found
+to have more general value than Early and Late Crawford. It is scarcely
+distinguishable in appearance from fine specimens of Early Crawford. W. C.
+Barry was called on for the most recent experience with the Waterloo,
+but said he was not at home when it ripened, but he learned that it had
+sustained its reputation. A. C. Younglove said that the Salway is the best
+late peach, ripening eight or ten days after the Smock. S. D. Willard
+mentioned an orchard near Geneva, consisting of 25 Salway trees, which for
+four years had ripened their crop and had sold for $4 per bushel in the
+Philadelphia market, or for $3 at Geneva--a higher price than for any other
+sort--and the owner intends to plant 200 more trees. W. C. Barry said the
+Salway will not ripen at Rochester. Hill's Chili was named by some members
+as a good peach for canning and drying, some stating that it ripens before
+and others after Late Crawford. It requires thinning on the tree, or
+the fruit will be poor. The Allen was pronounced by Mr. Younglove as an
+excellent, intensely high-colored late peach.
+
+_Insects Affecting Horticulture_.--Mr. Zimmerman spoke of the importance
+of all cultivators knowing so much of insects and their habits as to
+distinguish their friends from their enemies. When unchecked they increase
+in an immense ratio, and he mentioned as an instance that the green fly
+(_Aphis_) in five generations may become the parent of six thousand million
+descendants. It is necessary, then, to know what other insects are employed
+in holding them in check, by feeding on them. Some of our most formidable
+insects have been accidentally imported from Europe, such as the codling
+moth, asparagus beetle, cabbage butterfly, currant worm and borer, elm-tree
+beetle, hessian fly, etc.; but in nearly every instance these have come
+over without bringing their insect enemies with them, and in consequence
+they have spread more extensively here than in Europe. It was therefore
+urged that the Agricultural Department at Washington be requested to
+import, as far as practicable, such parasites as are positively known to
+prey on noxious insects. The cabbage fly eluded our keen custom-house
+officials in 1866, and has enjoyed free citizenship ever since. By
+accident, one of its insect enemies (a small black fly) was brought over
+with it, and is now doing excellent work by keeping the cabbage fly in
+check.
+
+The codling moth, one of the most formidable fruit destroyers, may be
+reduced in number by the well-known paper bands; but a more efficient
+remedy is to shower them early in the season with Paris green, mixed in
+water at the rate of only one pound to one hundred gallons of water, with
+a forcing pump, soon after blossoming. After all the experiments made and
+repellents used for the plum curculio, the jarring method is found the most
+efficient and reliable, if properly performed. Various remedies for insects
+sometimes have the credit of doing the work, if used in those seasons
+when the insects happen to be few. With some insects, the use of oil is
+advantageous, as it always closes up their breathing holes and suffocates
+them. The oil should be mixed with milk, and then diluted as required, as
+the oil alone cannot be mixed with the water. As a general remedy,
+Paris green is the strongest that can be applied. A teaspoonful to a
+tablespoonful, in a barrel of water, is enough. Hot water is the best
+remedy for house plants. Place one hand over the soil, invert the pot, and
+plunge the foliage for a second only at a time in water heated to from 150 deg.
+to 200 deg.F, according to the plants; or apply with a fine rose. The yeast
+remedy has not proved successful in all cases.
+
+Among beneficial insects, there are about one hundred species of lady bugs,
+and, so far as known, all are beneficial. Cultivators should know them.
+They destroy vast quantities of plant lice. The ground beetles are mostly
+cannibals, and should not be destroyed. The large black beetle, with
+coppery dots, makes short work with the Colorado potato beetles; and
+a bright green beetle will climb trees to get a meal of canker worms.
+Ichneumon flies are among our most useful insects. The much-abused dragon
+flies are perfectly harmless to us, but destroy many mosquitoes and flies.
+
+Among insects that attack large fruits is the codling moth, to be destroyed
+by paper bands, or with Paris green showered in water. The round-headed
+apple-tree borer is to be cut out, and the eggs excluded with a sheet of
+tarred paper around the stem, and slightly sunk in the earth. For the
+oyster-shell bark louse, apply linseed oil. Paris green, in water,
+will kill the canker worm. Tobacco water does the work for plant lice.
+Peach-tree borers are excluded with tarred or felt paper, and cut out with
+a knife. Jar the grape flea beetle on an inverted umbrella early in the
+morning. Among small-fruit insects, the strawberry worms are readily
+destroyed with hellebore, an ounce to a gallon of warm water. The same
+remedy destroys the imported currant worm.
+
+_Insect Destroyers_.--Prof. W. Saunders, of the Province of Ontario,
+followed Mr. Zimmerman with a paper on other departments of the same
+general subject, which contained much information and many suggestions of
+great value to cultivators. He had found Paris green an efficient remedy
+for the bud-moth on pear and other trees. He also recommends Paris green
+for the grapevine flea beetle. Hellebore is much better for the pear slug
+than dusting with sand, as these slugs, as soon as their skin is spoiled
+by being sanded, cast it off and go on with their work of destruction as
+freely as ever, and this they repeat. He remarked that it is a common error
+that all insects are pests to the cultivator. There are many parasites,
+or useful ones, which prey on our insect enemies. Out of 7,000 described
+insects in this country, only about 50 have proved destructive to our
+crops. Parasites are much more numerous. Among lepidopterous insects
+(butterflies, etc.), there are very few noxious species; many active
+friends are found among the Hymenoptera (wasps, etc.), the ichneumon flies
+pre-eminently so; and in the order Hemiptera (bugs proper) are several that
+destroy our enemies. Hence the very common error that birds which destroy
+insects are beneficial to us, as they are more likely to destroy our insect
+friends than the fewer enemies. Those known as _flycatchers_ may do neither
+harm nor good; so far as they eat the wheat-midge and Hessian fly they
+confer a positive benefit; in other instances they destroy both friends and
+enemies. Birds that are only partly insectivorous, and which eat grain and
+fruit, may need further inquiry. Prof. S. had examined the stomachs of many
+such birds, and particularly of the American robin, and the only curculio
+he ever found in any of these was a single one in a whole cherry which the
+bird had bolted entire. Robins had proved very destructive to his grapes,
+but had not assisted at all in protecting his cabbages growing alongside
+his fruit garden. These vegetables were nearly destroyed by the larvae of
+the cabbage fly, which would have afforded the birds many fine, rich meals.
+This comparatively feeble insect has been allowed by the throngs of birds
+to spread over the whole continent. A naturalist in one of the Western
+States had examined several species of the thrush, and found they had eaten
+mostly that class of insects known as our friends.
+
+Prof. S. spoke of the remedies for root lice, among which were hot water
+and bisulphide of carbon. Hot water will get cold before it can reach the
+smaller roots, however efficient it may be showered on leaves. Bisulphide
+of carbon is very volatile, inflammable, and sometimes explosive, and must
+be handled with great care. It permeates the soil, and if in sufficient
+quantity may be effective in destroying the phylloxera; but its cost and
+dangerous character prevent it from being generally recommended.
+
+Paris green is most generally useful for destroying insects. As sold to
+purchasers, it is of various grades of purity. The highest in price is
+commonly the purest, and really the cheapest. A difficulty with this
+variable quality is that it cannot be properly diluted with water, and
+those who buy and use a poor article and try its efficacy, will burn or
+kill their plants when they happen to use a stronger, purer, and more
+efficient one. Or, if the reverse is done, they may pronounce it a humbug
+from the resulting failure. One teaspoonful, if pure, is enough for a large
+pail of water; or if mixed with flour, there should be forty or fifty times
+as much. Water is best, as the operator will not inhale the dust. London
+purple is another form of the arsenic, and has very variable qualities
+of the poison, being merely refuse matter from manufactories. It is more
+soluble than Paris green, and hence more likely to scorch plants. On the
+whole, Paris green is much the best and most reliable for common use.
+
+At the close of Prof. Saunders' remarks some objections were made by
+members present to the use of Paris green on fruit soon after blossoming,
+and Prof. S. sustained the objection, in that the knowledge that the fruit
+had been showered with it would deter purchasers from receiving it, even if
+no poison could remain on it from spring to autumn. A man had brought to
+him potatoes to analyze for arsenic, on which Paris green had been used,
+and although it was shown to him that the poison did not reach the roots
+beneath the soil, and if it did it was insoluble and could not enter them,
+he was not satisfied until a careful analysis was made and no arsenic at
+all found in them. A member said that in mixing with plaster there should
+be 100 or 150 pounds of plaster to one of the Paris green, and that a
+smaller quantity, by weight, of flour would answer, as that is a more bulky
+article for the same weight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS ON THE SALMON OF THE PACIFIC.
+
+By DAVID S. JORDAN and CHAS. H. GILBERT.
+
+
+During the most of the present year, the writers have been engaged in the
+study of the fishes of the Pacific coast of the United States, in the
+interest of the U.S. Fish Commission and the U.S. Census Bureau. The
+following pages contain the principal facts ascertained concerning the
+salmon of the Pacific coast. It is condensed from our report to the U.S.
+Census Bureau, by permission of Professor Goode, assistant in charge of
+fishery investigations.
+
+There are five species of salmon (Oncorhynchus) in the waters of the North
+Pacific. We have at present no evidence of the existence of any more on
+either the American or the Asiatic side.
+
+These species may be called the quinnat or king salmon, the blue-back
+salmon or red-fish, the silver salmon, the dog salmon, and the hump-back
+salmon, or _Oncorhynchus chouicha, nerka, kisutch, keta_, and _gorbuscha_.
+All these species are now known to occur in the waters of Kamtschatka as
+well as in those of Alaska and Oregon.
+
+As vernacular names of definite application, the following are on record:
+
+a. Quinnat--Chouicha, king salmon, e'quinna, saw-kwey, Chinnook salmon,
+Columbia River salmon, Sacramento salmon, tyee salmon, Monterey salmon,
+deep-water salmon, spring salmon, ek-ul-ba ("ekewan") (fall run).
+
+b. Blue-bock--krasnaya ryba, Alaska red-fish, Idaho red fish, sukkegh,
+Frazer's River salmon, rascal, oo-chooy-ha.
+
+c. Silver salmon--kisutch, winter salmon, hoopid, skowitz, coho, bielaya
+ryba, o-o-wun.
+
+d. Dog salmon--kayko, lekai, ktlawhy, qualoch, fall salmon, o-le-a-rah. The
+males of _all_ the species in the fall are usually known as dog salmon, or
+fall salmon.
+
+e. Hump-back--gorbuscha, haddo, hone, holia, lost salmon, Puget Sound
+salmon, dog salmon (of Alaska).
+
+Of these species, the blue-back predominates in Frazer's River, the silver
+salmon in Puget Sound, the quinnat in the Columbia and the Sacramento, and
+the silver salmon in most of the small streams along the coast. All the
+species have been seen by us in the Columbia and in Frazer's River; all
+but the blue-back in the Sacramento, and all but the blue-back in waters
+tributary to Puget Sound. Only the quinnat has been noticed south of San
+Francisco, and its range has been traced as far as Ventura River, which is
+the southernmost stream in California which is not muddy and alkaline at
+its mouth.
+
+Of these species, the quinnat and blue-back salmon habitually "run" in the
+spring, the others in the fall. The usual order of running in the rivers is
+as follows: _nerka, chouicha, kisutch, gorbuscha, keta_.
+
+The economic value of the spring running salmon is far greater than that of
+the other species, because they can be captured in numbers when at their
+best, while the others are usually taken only after deterioration.
+
+The habits of the salmon in the ocean are not easily studied. Quinnat and
+silver salmon of every size are taken with the seine at almost any season
+in Puget Sound. The quinnat takes the hook freely in Monterey bay, both
+near the shore and at a distance of six or eight miles out. We have reason
+to believe that these two species do not necessarily seek great depths, but
+probably remain not very far from the mouth of the rivers in which they
+were spawned.
+
+The blue-back and the dog salmon probably seek deeper water, as the former
+is seldom or never taken with the seine in the ocean, and the latter is
+known to enter the Straits of Fuca at the spawning season.
+
+The great majority of the quinnat salmon and nearly all blue-back salmon
+enter the rivers in the spring. The run of both begins generally the last
+of March; it lasts, with various modifications and interruptions, until
+the actual spawning season in November; the time of running and the
+proportionate amount of each of the subordinate runs, varying with each
+different river. In general, the runs are slack in the summer and increase
+with the first high water of autumn. By the last of August only straggling
+blue-backs can be found in the lower course of any stream, but both in the
+Columbia and the Sacramento the quinnat runs in considerable numbers till
+October at least. In the Sacramento the run is greatest in the fall, and
+more run in the summer than in spring. In the Sacramento and the smaller
+rivers southward, there is a winter run, beginning in December.
+
+The spring salmon ascend only those rivers which are fed by the melting
+snows from the mountains, and which have sufficient volume to send their
+waters well out to sea. Such rivers are the Sacramento, Rogue, Klamath,
+Columbia, and Frazer's rivers.
+
+Those salmon which run in the spring are chiefly adults (supposed to be at
+least three years old). Their milt and spawn are no more developed than at
+the same time in others of the same species which will not enter the rivers
+until fall. It would appear that the contact with cold fresh water, when in
+the ocean, in some way caused them to turn toward it and to "run," before
+there is any special influence to that end exerted by the development of
+the organs of generation.
+
+High water on any of these rivers in the spring is always followed by an
+increased run of salmon. The canners think, and this is probably true, that
+salmon which would not have run till later are brought up by the contact
+with the cold water. The cause of this effect of cold fresh water is not
+understood. We may call it an instinct of the salmon, which is another way
+of expressing our ignorance. In general, it seems to be true that in those
+rivers and during those years when the spring run is greatest, the fall run
+is least to be depended on.
+
+As the season advances, smaller and younger salmon of these two species
+(quinnat and blue-back) enter the rivers to spawn, and in the fall these
+young specimens are very numerous. We have thus far failed to notice any
+gradations in size or appearance of these young fish by which their ages
+could be ascertained. It is, however, probable that some of both sexes
+reproduce at the age of one year. In Frazer's River, in the fall, quinnat
+male grilse of every size, from eight inches upward, were running, the milt
+fully developed, but usually not showing the hooked jaws and dark colors
+of the older males. Females less than eighteen inches in length were rare.
+All, large and small, then in the river, of either sex, had the ovaries or
+milt well developed.
+
+Little blue-backs of every size down to six inches are also found in
+the Upper Columbia in the fall, with their organs of generation fully
+developed. Nineteen twentieths of these young fish are males, and some of
+them have the hooked jaws and red color of the old males.
+
+The average weight of the quinnat in the Columbia in the spring is
+twenty-two pounds; in the Sacramento about sixteen. Individuals weighing
+from forty to sixty pounds are frequently found in both rivers, and some as
+high as eighty pounds are reported. It is questioned whether these large
+fishes are:
+
+(_a_.) Those which, of the same age, have grown more rapidly;
+
+(_b_.) Those which are older but have, for some reason, failed to spawn;
+or,
+
+(_c_.) Those which have survived one or more spawning seasons.
+
+All of these origins may be possible in individual cases; we are, however,
+of the opinion that the majority of these large fish are those which have
+hitherto run in the fall and so may have survived the spawning season
+previous.
+
+Those fish which enter the rivers in the spring continue their ascent until
+death or the spawning season overtakes them. Probably none of them ever
+return to the ocean, and a large proportion fail to spawn. They are known
+to ascend the Sacramento as far as the base of Mount Shasta, or to its
+extreme head-waters, about four hundred miles. In the Columbia they are
+known to ascend as far as the Bitter Root Mountains, and as far as the
+Spokan Falls, and their extreme limit is not known. This is a distance of
+six to eight hundred miles.
+
+At these great distances, when the fish have reached the spawning grounds,
+besides the usual changes of the breeding season, their bodies are covered
+with bruises on which patches of white fungus develop. The fins become
+mutilated, their eyes are often injured or destroyed; parasitic worms
+gather in their gills, they become extremely emaciated, their flesh
+becomes white from the loss of the oil, and as soon as the spawning act
+is accomplished, and sometimes before, all of them die. The ascent of the
+Cascades and the Dalles probably causes the injury or death of a great many
+salmon.
+
+When the salmon enter the river they refuse bait, and their stomachs are
+always found empty and contracted. In the rivers they do not feed, and when
+they reach the spawning grounds their stomachs, pyloric coeca and all, are
+said to be no larger than one's finger. They will sometimes take the
+fly, or a hook baited with salmon roe, in the clear waters of the upper
+tributaries, but there is no other evidence known to us that they feed when
+there. Only the quinnat and blue-back (then called red-fish) have been
+found in the fall at any great distance from the sea.
+
+The spawning season is probably about the same for all the species. It
+varies for all in different rivers and in different parts of the same
+river, and doubtless extends from July to December.
+
+The manner of spawning is probably similar for all the species, but we have
+no data for any except the quinnat. In this species the fish pair off, the
+male, with tail and snout, excavates a broad shallow "nest" in the gravelly
+bed of the stream, in rapid water, at a depth of one to four feet; the
+female deposits her eggs in it, and after the exclusion of the milt, they
+cover them with stones and gravel. They then float down the stream tail
+foremost. A great majority of them die. In the head-waters of the large
+streams all die, unquestionably. In the small streams, and near the sea, an
+unknown percentage probably survive. The young hatch in about sixty days,
+and most of them return to the ocean during the high water of the spring.
+
+The salmon of all kinds in the spring are silvery, spotted or not according
+to the species, and with the mouth about equally symmetrical in both sexes.
+
+As the spawning season approaches the female loses her silvery color,
+becomes more slimy, the scales on the back partly sink into the skin, and
+the flesh changes from salmon red and becomes variously paler, from the
+loss of the oil, the degree of paleness varying much with individuals and
+with inhabitants of different rivers.
+
+In the lower Sacramento the flesh of the quinnat in either spring or fall
+is rarely pale. In the Columbia, a few with pale flesh are sometimes taken
+in spring, and a good many in the fall. In Frazer's River the fall run of
+the quinnat is nearly worthless for canning purposes, because so many are
+white meated. In the spring very few are white meated, but the number
+increases towards fall, when there is every variation, some having red
+streaks running through them, others being red toward the head and pale
+toward the tail. The red and pale ones cannot be distinguished externally,
+and the color is dependent neither on age nor sex. There is said to be no
+difference in the taste, but there is no market for canned salmon not of
+the conventional orange color.
+
+As the season advances, the differences between the males and the females
+become more and more marked, and keep pace with the development of the
+milt, as is shown by dissection.
+
+The males have: (_a_.) The premaxillaries and the tip of the lower jaw
+more and more prolonged; both of them becoming finally strongly and often
+extravagantly hooked, so that either they shut by the side of each other
+like shears, or else the mouth cannot be closed. (_b_.) The front teeth
+become very long and canine-like, their growth proceeding very rapidly,
+until they are often half an inch long. (_c_.) The teeth on the vomer and
+tongue often disappear. (_d_.) The body grows more compressed and deeper
+at the shoulders, so that a very distinct hump is formed; this is more
+developed in _0. gorbuscha_, but is found in all. (_e_.) The scales
+disappear, especially on the back, by the growth of spongy skin. (_f_.) The
+color changes from silvery to various shades of black and red or blotchy,
+according to the species. The blue-back turns rosy red, the dog salmon a
+dull, blotchy red, and the quiunat generally blackish.
+
+These distorted males are commonly considered worthless, rejected by the
+canners and salmon-salters, but preserved by the Indians. These changes are
+due solely to influences connected with the growth of the testes. They are
+not in any way due to the action of fresh water. They take place at about
+the same time in the adult males of all species, whether in the ocean or
+in the rivers. At the time of the spring runs all are symmetrical. In the
+fall, all males of whatever species are more or less distorted. Among the
+dog salmon, which run only in the fall, the males are hooked-jawed and
+red-blotched when they first enter the Straits of Fuca from the outside.
+The hump-back, taken in salt water about Seattle, shows the same
+peculiarities. The male is slab-sided, hook-billed, and distorted, and is
+rejected by the canners. No hook-jawed _females_ of any species have been
+seen.
+
+It is not positively known that any hook-jawed male survives the
+reproductive act. If any do, their jaws must resume the normal form.
+
+On first entering a stream the salmon swim about as if playing: they always
+head toward the current, and this "playing" may be simply due to facing the
+flood tide. Afterwards they enter the deepest parts of the stream and swim
+straight up, with few interruptions. Their rate of travel on the Sacramento
+is estimated by Stone at about two miles per day; on the Columbia at about
+three miles per day.
+
+As already stated, the economic value of any species depends in great part
+on its being a "spring salmon." It is not generally possible to capture
+salmon of any species in large numbers until they have entered the rivers,
+and the spring salmon enter the rivers long before the growth of the organs
+of reproduction has reduced the richness of the flesh. The fall salmon
+cannot be taken in quantity until their flesh has deteriorated: hence the
+"dog salmon" is practically almost worthless, except to the Indians, and
+the hump-back salmon is little better. The silver salmon, with the same
+breeding habits as the dog salmon, is more valuable, as it is found in
+Puget Sound for a considerable time before the fall rains cause the fall
+runs, and it may be taken in large numbers with seines before the season
+for entering the rivers. The quinnat salmon, from its great size and
+abundance, is more valuable than all other fishes on our Pacific coast
+together. The blue back, similar in flesh but much smaller and less
+abundant, is worth much more than the combined value of the three remaining
+species.
+
+The fall salmon of all species, but especially the dog salmon, ascend
+streams but a short distance before spawning. They seem to be in great
+anxiety to find fresh water, and many of them work their way up little
+brooks only a few inches deep, where they soon perish miserably,
+floundering about on the stones. Every stream, of whatever kind, has more
+or less of these fall salmon.
+
+It is the prevailing impression that the salmon have some special instinct
+which leads them to return to spawn in the same spawning grounds where they
+were originally hatched. We fail to find any evidence of this in the case
+of the Pacific coast salmon, and we do not believe it to be true. It seems
+more probable that the young salmon, hatched in any river, mostly remain in
+the ocean within a radius of twenty, thirty, or forty miles of its mouth.
+These, in their movements about in the ocean, may come into contact with
+the cold waters of their parent rivers, or perhaps of any other river, at
+a considerable distance from the shore. In the case of the quinnat and the
+blue-back, their "instinct" leads them to ascend these fresh waters, and
+in a majority of cases these waters will be those in which the fishes in
+question were originally spawned. Later in the season the growth of the
+reproductive organs leads them to approach the shore and to search for
+fresh waters, and still the chances are that they may find the original
+stream. But undoubtedly many fall salmon ascend, or try to ascend, streams
+in which no salmon was ever hatched.
+
+It is said of the Russian River and other California rivers, that their
+mouths in the time of low water in summer generally become entirely closed
+by sand bars, and that the salmon, in their eagerness to ascend them,
+frequently fling themselves entirely out of water on the beach. But this
+does not prove that the salmon are guided by a marvelous geographical
+instinct which leads them to their parent river. The waters of Russian
+River soak through these sand bars, and the salmon "instinct," we think,
+leads them merely to search for fresh waters.
+
+This matter is much in need of further investigation; at present, however,
+we find no reason to believe that the salmon enter the Rogue River simply
+because they were spawned there, or that a salmon hatched in the Clackamas
+River is any the more likely on that account to return to the Clackamas
+than to go up the Cowlitz or the Deschutes.
+
+"At the hatchery on Rogue River, the fish are stripped, marked and set
+free, and every year since the hatchery has been in operation some of the
+marked fish have been re-caught. The young fry are also marked, but none of
+them have been recaught."
+
+This year the run of silver salmon in Frazer's River was very light, while
+on Puget Sound the run was said by the Indians to be greater than ever
+known before. Both these cases may be due to the same cause, the dry
+summer, low water, and consequent failure of the salmon to find the rivers.
+The run in the Sound is much more irregular than in the large rivers. One
+year they will abound in one bay and its tributary stream and hardly be
+seen in another, while the next year the condition will be reversed. At
+Cape Flattery the run of silver salmon for the present year was very small,
+which fact was generally attributed by the Indians to the birth of twins at
+Neah Bay.
+
+In regard to the diminution of the number of salmon on the coast. In
+Puget's Sound, Frazer's River, and the smaller streams, there appears to be
+little or no evidence of this. In the Columbia River the evidence appears
+somewhat conflicting; the catch during the present year (1880) has been
+considerably greater than ever before (nearly 540,000 cases of 48 lb. each
+having been packed), although the fishing for three or four years has been
+very extensive. On the other hand, the high water of the present spring has
+undoubtedly caused many fish to become spring salmon which would otherwise
+have run in the fall. Moreover, it is urged that a few years ago, when the
+number caught was about half as great as now, the amount of netting used
+was perhaps one-eighth as much. With a comparatively small outfit the
+canners caught half the fish, now with nets much larger and more numerous,
+they catch them all, scarcely any escaping during the fishing season (April
+1 to August 1). Whether an actual reduction in the number of fish running
+can be proven or not, there can be no question that the present rate of
+destruction of the salmon will deplete the river before many years. A
+considerable number of quinnat salmon run in August and September, and some
+stragglers even later; these now are all which keep up the supply of
+fish in the river. The non-molestation of this fall run, therefore, does
+something to atone for the almost total destruction of the spring run.
+
+This, however, is insufficient. A well-ordered salmon hatchery is the only
+means by which the destruction of the salmon in the river can be prevented.
+This hatchery should be under the control of Oregon and Washington, and
+should be supported by a tax levied on the canned fish. It should be placed
+on a stream where the quinnat salmon actually come to spawn.
+
+It has been questioned whether the present hatchery on the Clackamas River
+actually receives the quinnat salmon in any numbers. It is asserted, in
+fact, that the eggs of the silver salmon and dog salmon, with scattering
+quinnat, are hatched there. We have no exact information as to the truth of
+these reports, but the matter should be taken into serious consideration.
+
+On the Sacramento there is no doubt of the reduction of the number of
+salmon; this is doubtless mainly attributable to over-fishing, but in part
+it may be due to the destruction of spawning beds by mining operations and
+other causes.
+
+As to the superiority of the Columbia River salmon, there is no doubt that
+the quinnat salmon average larger and fatter in the Columbia than in the
+Sacramento and in Puget Sound. The difference in the canned fish is,
+however, probably hardly appreciable. The canned salmon from the Columbia,
+however, bring a better price in the market than those from elsewhere. The
+canners there generally have had a high regard for the reputation of
+the river, and have avoided canning fall fish or species other than the
+quinnat. In the Frazer's River the blue-back is largely canned, and its
+flesh being a little more watery and perhaps paler, is graded below the
+quinnat. On Puget Sound various species are canned; in fact, everything
+with red flesh. The best canners on the Sacramento apparently take equal
+care with their product with those of the Columbia, but they depend largely
+on the somewhat inferior fall run. There are, however, sometimes salmon
+canned in San Francisco, which have been in the city markets, and for some
+reason remaining unsold, have been sent to the canners; such salmon are
+unfit for food, and canning them should be prohibited.
+
+The fact that the hump-back salmon runs only on alternate years in Puget
+Sound (1875, 1877, 1879, etc.) is well attested and at present unexplained.
+Stray individuals only are taken in other years. This species has a
+distinct "run," in the United States, only in Puget Sound, although
+individuals (called "lost salmon") are occasionally taken in the Columbia
+and in the Sacramento.--_American Naturalist._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE RELATION BETWEEN ELECTRICITY AND LIGHT.
+
+[Footnote: A lecture by Dr. O. J. Lodge, delivered at the London
+Institution on December 16, 1880.]
+
+
+Ever since the subject on which I have the honor to speak to you to-night
+was arranged, I have been astonished at my own audacity in proposing to
+deal in the course of sixty minutes with a subject so gigantic and so
+profound that a course of sixty lectures would be quite inadequate for its
+thorough and exhaustive treatment.
+
+I must indeed confine myself carefully to some few of the typical and most
+salient points in the relation between electricity and light, and I must
+economize time by plunging at once into the middle of the matter without
+further preliminaries.
+
+Now, when a person is setting off to discuss the relation between
+electricity and light, it is very natural and very proper to pull him up
+short with the two questions: What do you mean by electricity? and What do
+you mean by light? These two questions I intend to try briefly to answer.
+And here let me observe that in answering these fundamental questions, I do
+not necessarily assume a fundamental ignorance on your part of these two
+agents, but rather the contrary; and must beg you to remember that if I
+repeat well-known and simple experiments before you, it is for the purpose
+of directing attention to their real meaning and significance, not to their
+obvious and superficial characteristics; in the same way that I might
+repeat the exceedingly familiar experiment of dropping a stone to the earth
+if we were going to define what we meant by gravitation.
+
+Now, then, we will ask first, What is electricity? and the simple answer
+must be, We don't know. Well, but this need not necessarily be depressing.
+If the same question were asked about matter, or about energy, we should
+have likewise to reply, No one knows.
+
+But then the term Matter is a very general one, and so is the term Energy.
+They are heads, in fact, under which we classify more special phenomena.
+
+Thus, if we were asked, What is sulphur? or what is selenium? we should at
+least be able to reply, A form of matter; and then proceed to describe its
+properties, _i. e._, how it affected our bodies and other bodies.
+
+Again, to the question, What is heat? we can reply, A form of energy; and
+proceed to describe the peculiarities which distinguish it from other forms
+of energy.
+
+But to the question. What is electricity? we have no answer pat like this.
+We can not assert that it is a form of matter, neither can we deny it; on
+the other hand, we certainly can not assert that it is a form of energy,
+and I should be disposed to deny it. It may be that electricity is an
+entity _per se_, just as matter is an entity _per se_.
+
+Nevertheless, I can tell you what I mean by electricity by appealing to its
+known behavior.
+
+Here is a battery, that is, an electricity pump; it will drive electricity
+along. Prof. Ayrtou is going, I am afraid, to tell you, on the 20th of
+January next, that it _produces_ electricity; but if he does, I hope you
+will remember that that is exactly what neither it nor anything else can
+do. It is as impossible to generate electricity in the sense I am trying to
+give the word, as it is to produce matter. Of course I need hardly say that
+Prof. Ayrton knows this perfectly well; it is merely a question of words,
+_i. e._, of what you understand by the word electricity.
+
+I want you, then, to regard this battery and all electrical machines and
+batteries as kinds of electricity pumps, which drive the electricity along
+through the wire very much as a water-pump can drive water along pipes.
+While this is going on the wire manifests a whole series of properties,
+which are called the properties of the current.
+
+[Here were shown an ignited platinum wire, the electric arc between two
+carbons, an electric machine spark, an induction coil spark, and a vacuum
+tube glow. Also a large nail was magnetized by being wrapped in the
+current, and two helices were suspended and seen to direct and attract each
+other.]
+
+To make a magnet, then, we only need a current of electricity flowing round
+and round in a whirl. A vortex or whirlpool of electricity is in fact a
+magnet; and _vice versa_. And these whirls have the power of directing and
+attracting other previously existing whirls according to certain laws,
+called the laws of magnetism. And, moreover, they have the power of
+exciting fresh whirls in neighboring conductors, and of repelling them
+according to the laws of diamagnetism. The theory of the actions is known,
+though the nature of the whirls, as of the simple stream of electricity, is
+at present unknown.
+
+[Here was shown a large electro-magnet and an induction-coil vacuum
+discharge spinning round and round when placed in its field.]
+
+So much for what happens when electricity is made to travel along
+conductors, _i. e._, when it travels along like a stream of water in a
+pipe, or spins round and round like a whirlpool.
+
+But there is another set of phenomena, usually regarded as distinct and of
+another order, but which are not so distinct as they appear, which
+manifest themselves when you join the pump to a piece of glass, or any
+non-conductor, and try to force the electricity through that. You succeed
+in driving some through, but the flow is no longer like that of water in an
+open pipe; it is as if the pipe were completely obstructed by a number of
+elastic partitions or diaphragms. The water can not move without straining
+and bending these diaphragms, and if you allow it, these strained
+partitions will recover themselves, and drive the water back again. [Here
+was explained the process of charging a Leyden jar.] The essential thing to
+remember is that we may have electrical energy in two forms, the static
+and the kinetic; and it is, therefore, also possible to have the rapid
+alternation from one of these forms to the other, called vibration.
+
+Now we will pass to the second question: What do you mean by light? And the
+first and obvious answer is, Everybody knows. And everybody that is not
+blind does know to a certain extent. We have a special sense organ for
+appreciating light, whereas we have none for electricity. Nevertheless, we
+must admit that we really know very little about the intimate nature of
+light--very little more than about electricity. But we do know this,
+that light is a form of energy, and, moreover, that it is energy rapidly
+alternating between the static and the kinetic forms--that it is, in fact,
+a special kind of energy of vibration. We are absolutely certain that light
+is a periodic disturbance in some medium, periodic both in space and time;
+that is to say, the same appearances regularly recur at certain equal
+intervals of distance at the same time, and also present themselves at
+equal intervals of time at the same place; that in fact it belongs to the
+class of motions called by mathematicians undulatory or wave motions. The
+wave motion in this model (Powell's wave apparatus) results from the simple
+up and down motion popularly associated with the term wave. But when
+a mathematician calls a thing a wave he means that the disturbance is
+represented by a certain general type of formula, not that it is an
+up-and-down motion, or that it looks at all like those things on the top of
+the sea. The motion of the surface of the sea falls within that formula,
+and hence is a special variety of wave motion, and the term wave has
+acquired in popular use this signification and nothing else. So that when
+one speaks ordinarily of a wave or undulatory motion, one immediately
+thinks of something heaving up and down, or even perhaps of something
+breaking on the shore. But when we assert that the form of energy called
+light is undulatory, we by no means intend to assert that anything whatever
+is moving up and down, or that the motion, if we could see it, would be
+anything at all like what we are accustomed to in the ocean. The kind of
+motion is unknown; we are not even sure that there is anything like motion
+in the ordinary sense of the word at all.
+
+Now, how much connection between electricity and light have we perceived in
+this glance into their natures? Not much, truly. It amounts to about
+this: That on the one hand electrical energy may exist in either of two
+forms--the static form, when insulators are electrically strained by having
+had electricity driven partially through them (as in the Leyden jar), which
+strain is a form of energy because of the tendency to discharge and do
+work; and the kinetic form, where electricity is moving bodily along
+through conductors or whirling round and round inside them, which motion
+of electricity is a form of energy, because the conductors and whirls can
+attract or repel each other and thereby do work.
+
+And, on the other hand, that light is the rapid alternation of energy
+from one of these forms to the other--the static form where the medium is
+strained, to the kinetic form when it moves. It is just conceivable, then,
+that the static form of the energy of light is _electro_ static, that is,
+that the medium is _electrically_ strained, and that the kinetic form of
+the energy of light is _electro_-kinetic, that is, that the motion is
+not ordinary motion, but electrical motion--in fact, that light is an
+electrical vibration, not a material one.
+
+On November 5, last year, there died at Cambridge a man in the full
+vigor of his faculties--such faculties as do not appear many times in a
+century--whose chief work has been the establishment of this very fact, the
+discovery of the link connecting light and electricity; and the proof--for
+I believe it amounts to a proof--that they are different manifestations
+of one and the same class of phenomena--that light is, in fact, an
+electro-magnetic disturbance. The premature death of James Clerk-Maxwell is
+a loss to science which appears at present utterly irreparable, for he was
+engaged in researches that no other man can hope as yet adequately to grasp
+and follow out; but fortunately it did not occur till he had published his
+book on "Electricity and Magnetism," one of those immortal productions
+which exalt one's idea of the mind of man, and which has been mentioned by
+competent critics in the same breath as the "Principia" itself.
+
+But it is not perfect like the "Principia;" much of it is rough-hewn, and
+requires to be thoroughly worked out. It contains numerous misprints and
+errata, and part of the second volume is so difficult as to be almost
+unintelligible. Some, in fact, consists of notes written for private use
+and not intended for publication. It seems next to impossible now to mature
+a work silently for twenty or thirty years, as was done by Newton two and a
+half centuries ago. But a second edition was preparing, and much might have
+been improved in form if life had been spared to the illustrious author.
+
+The main proof of the electro-magnetic theory of light is this: The rate at
+which light travels has been measured many times, and is pretty well known.
+The rate at which an electro-magnetic wave disturbance would travel if such
+could be generated (and Mr. Fitzgerald, of Dublin, thinks he has proved
+that it can not be generated directly by any known electrical means) can
+be also determined by calculation from electrical measurements. The two
+velocities agree exactly. This is the great physical constant known as the
+ratio V, which so many physicists have been measuring, and are likely to be
+measuring for some time to come.
+
+Many and brilliant as were Maxwell's discoveries, not only in electricity,
+but also in the theory of the nature of gases, and in molecular science
+generally, I can not help thinking that if one of them is more striking and
+more full of future significance than the rest, it is the one I have just
+mentioned--the theory that light is an electrical phenomenon.
+
+The first glimpse of this splendid generalization was caught in 1845, five
+and thirty years ago, by that prince of pure experimentalists, Michael
+Faraday. His reasons for suspecting some connection between electricity and
+light are not clear to us--in fact, they could not have been clear to him;
+but he seems to have felt a conviction that if he only tried long enough
+and sent all kinds of rays of light in all possible directions across
+electric and magnetic fields in all sorts of media, he must ultimately
+hit upon something. Well, this is very nearly what he did. With a sublime
+patience and perseverance which remind one of the way Kepler hunted down
+guess after guess in a different field of research, Faraday combined
+electricity, or magnetism, and light in all manner of ways, and at last he
+was rewarded with a result. And a most out-of-the-way result it seemed.
+First, you have to get a most powerful magnet and very strongly excite it;
+then you have to pierce its two poles with holes, in order that a beam of
+light may travel from one to the other along the lines of force; then, as
+ordinary light is no good, you must get a beam of plane polarized light,
+and send it between the poles. But still no result is obtained until,
+finally, you interpose a piece of a rare and out-of-the-way material, which
+Faraday had himself discovered and made--a kind of glass which contains
+borate of lead, and which is very heavy, or dense, and which must be
+perfectly annealed.
+
+And now, when all these arrangements are completed, what is seen is simply
+this, that if an analyzer is arranged to stop the light and make the field
+quite dark before the magnet is excited, then directly the battery is
+connected and the magnet called into action, a faint and barely perceptible
+brightening of the field occurs, which will disappear if the analyzer be
+slightly rotated. [The experiment was then shown.] Now, no wonder that no
+one understood this result. Faraday himself did not understand it at all.
+He seems to have thought that the magnetic lines of force were rendered
+luminous, or that the light was magnetized; in fact, he was in a fog,
+and had no idea of its real significance. Nor had any one. Continental
+philosophers experienced some difficulty and several failures before they
+were able to repeat the experiment. It was, in fact, discovered too soon,
+and before the scientific world was ready to receive it, and it was
+reserved for Sir William Thomson briefly, but very clearly, to point
+out, and for Clerk-Maxwell more fully to develop, its most important
+consequences. [The principle of the experiment was then illustrated by the
+aid of a mechanical model.]
+
+This is the fundamental experiment on which Clerk-Maxwell's theory of
+light is based; but of late years many fresh facts and relations between
+electricity and light have been discovered, and at the present time they
+are tumbling in in great numbers.
+
+It was found by Faraday that many other transparent media besides heavy
+glass would show the phenomenon if placed between the poles, only in a less
+degree; and the very important observation that air itself exhibits the
+same phenomenon, though to an exceedingly small extent, has just been made
+by Kundt and Rontgen in Germany.
+
+Dr. Kerr, of Glasgow, has extended the result to opaque bodies, and has
+shown that if light be passed through magnetized _iron_ its plane is
+rotated. The film of iron must be exceedingly thin, because of its opacity,
+and hence, though the intrinsic rotating power of iron is undoubtedly very
+great, the observed rotation is exceedingly small and difficult to observe;
+and it is only by a very remarkable patience and care and ingenuity that
+Dr. Kerr has obtained his result. Mr. Fitzgerald, of Dublin, has examined
+the question mathematically, and has shown that Maxwell's theory would have
+enabled Dr. Kerr's result to be predicted.
+
+Another requirement of the theory is that bodies which are transparent
+to light must be insulators or non-conductors of electricity, and that
+conductors of electricity are necessarily opaque to light. Simple
+observation amply confirms this; metals are the best conductors, and are
+the most opaque bodies known. Insulators such as glass and crystals are
+transparent whenever they are sufficiently homogeneous, and the very
+remarkable researches of Prof. Graham Bell in the last few months have
+shown that even _ebonite_, one of the most opaque insulators to ordinary
+vision, is certainly transparent to some kinds of radiation, and
+transparent to no small degree.
+
+[The reason why transparent bodies must insulate, and why conductors must
+be opaque, was here illustrated by mechanical models.]
+
+A further consequence of the theory is that the velocity of light in a
+transparent medium will be affected by its electrical strain constant; in
+other words, that its refractive index will bear some close but not yet
+quite ascertained relation to its specific inductive capacity. Experiment
+has partially confirmed this, but the confirmation is as yet very
+incomplete. But there are a number of results not predicted by theory, and
+whose connection with the theory is not clearly made out. We have the fact
+that light falling on the platinum electrode of a voltameter generates a
+current, first observed, I think, by Sir W. R. Grove--at any rate, it is
+mentioned in his "Correlation of Forces"--extended by Becquerel and Robert
+Sabine to other substances, and now being extended to fluorescent and other
+bodies by Prof. Minchin. And finally--for I must be brief--we have
+the remarkable action of light on selenium. This fact was discovered
+accidentally by an assistant in the laboratory of Mr. Willoughby Smith, who
+noticed that a piece of selenium conducted electricity very much better
+when light was falling upon it than when it was in the dark. The light of
+a candle is sufficient, and instantaneously brings down the resistance to
+something like one-fifth of its original value.
+
+I could show you these effects, but there is not much to see; it is an
+intensely interesting phenomenon, but its external manifestation is not
+striking--any more than Faraday's heavy glass experiment was.
+
+This is the phenomenon which, as you know, has been utilized by Prof.
+Graham Bell in that most ingenious and striking invention, the photophone.
+By the kindness of Prof. Silvanus Thompson, I have a few slides to show the
+principle of the invention, and Mr. Shelford Bidwell has been kind enough
+to lend me his home-made photophone, which answers exceedingly well for
+short distances.
+
+I have now trespassed long enough upon your patience, but I must just
+allude to what may very likely be the next striking popular discovery; and
+that is the transmission of light by electricity; I mean the transmission
+of such things as views and pictures by means of the electric wire. It has
+not yet been done, but it seems already theoretically possible, and it may
+very soon be practically accomplished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+INTERESTING ELECTRICAL RESEARCHES.
+
+
+During the last six years Dr. Warren de la Rue has been investigating,
+in conjunction with Dr. Hugo Muller, the various and highly interesting
+phenomena which accompany the electric discharge. From time to time the
+results of their researches were communicated to the Royal Society, and
+appeared in its Proceedings. Early last year Dr. De la Rue being requested
+to bring the subject before the members of the Royal Institution, acceded
+to the pressing invitation of his colleagues and scientific friends.
+The discourse, which was necessarily long postponed on account of the
+preparations that had to be made, was finally given on Friday, the 21st of
+January, and was one of the most remarkable, from the elaborate nature of
+the experiments, ever delivered in the theater of that deservedly famous
+institution.
+
+Owing to the great inconvenience of removing the battery from his
+laboratory, Dr. de la Rue, despite the great expenditure, directed Mr. S.
+Tisley to prepare, expressly for the lecture, a second series of 14,400
+cells, and fit it up in the basement of the Royal Institution. The
+construction of this new battery occupied Mr. Tisley a whole year, while
+the charging of it extended over a fortnight.
+
+The "de la Rue cell," if we may so call one of these elements, consists of
+a zinc rod, the lower portion of which is embedded in a solid electrolyte,
+viz., chloride of silver, with which are connected two flattened silver
+wires to serve as electrodes. When these are united and the silver chloride
+moistened, chemical action begins, and a weak but constant current is
+generated.
+
+The electromotive force of such a cell is 1.03 volts, and a current
+equivalent to one volt passing through a resistance of one ohm was found to
+decompose 0.00146 grain of water in one second. The battery is divided
+into "cabinets," which hold from 1,200 to 2,160 small elements each. This
+facilitates removal, and also the detection of any fault that may occur.
+
+It will be remembered that in 1808 Sir Humphry Davy constructed his battery
+of 2,000 cells, and thus succeeded in exalting the tiny spark obtained in
+closing the circuit into the luminous sheaf of the voltaic arc. He also
+observed that the spark passed even when the poles were separated by a
+distance varying from 1/40 to 1/30 of an inch. This appears to have been
+subsequently forgotten, as we find later physicists questioning the
+possibility of the spark leaping over any interpolar distance. Mr. J.
+P. Gassiot, of Clapham, demonstrated the inaccuracy of this opinion by
+constructing a battery of 3,000 Leclanche cells, which gave a spark of
+0.025 inch; a similar number of "de la Rue" cells gives an 0.0564 inch
+spark. This considerable increase in potential is chiefly due to better
+insulation.
+
+The great energy of this battery was illustrated by a variety of
+experiments. Thus, a large condenser, specially constructed by Messrs.
+Varley, and having a capacity equal to that of 6,485 large Leyden jars,
+was almost immediately charged by the current from 10,000 cells. Wires of
+various kinds, and from 9 inches to 29 inches in length, were instantly
+volatilized by the passage of the electricity thus stored up. The current
+induced in the secondary wire of a coil by the discharge of the condenser
+through the primary, was also sufficiently intense to deflagrate wires of
+considerable length and thickness.
+
+It was with such power at his command that Dr. De la Rue proceeded to
+investigate several important electrical laws. He has found, for example,
+that the positive discharge is more intermittent than the negative,
+that the arc is always preceded by a streamer-like discharge, that its
+temperature is about 16,000 deg., and its length at the ordinary pressure
+of the atmosphere, when taken between two points, varies as the square
+of the number of cells. Thus, with a battery of 1,000 cells, the arc was
+0.0051 inch, with 11,000 cells it increased to 0.62 inch. The same law was
+found to hold when the discharge took place between a point and a disk; it
+failed entirely, however, when the terminals were two disks.
+
+It was also shown that the voltaic arc is not a phenomenon of conduction,
+but is essentially a disruptive discharge, the intervals between the
+passage of two successive static sparks being the time required for the
+battery to collect sufficient power to leap over the interposed resistance.
+This was further confirmed by the introduction of a condenser, when the
+intervals were perceptibly larger.
+
+Faraday proved that the quantity of electricity necessary to produce a
+strong flash of lightning would result from the decomposition of a single
+grain of water, and Dr. de la Rue's experiments confirm this extraordinary
+statement. He has calculated that this quantity of electricity would be
+5,000 times as great as the charge of his large condenser, and that a
+lightning flash a mile long would require the potential of 3,500,000 cells,
+that is to say, of 243 of his powerful batteries.
+
+In experimenting with "vacuum" tubes, he has found that the discharge is
+also invariably disruptive. This is an important point, as many physicists
+speak and write of the phenomenon as one of conduction. Air, in every
+degree of tenuity, refuses to act as a conductor of electricity. These
+experiments show that the resistance of gaseous media diminishes with the
+pressure only up to a certain point, beyond which it rapidly increases.
+Thus, in the case of hydrogen, it diminishes up to 0.642 mm., 845
+millionths; it then rises as the exhaustion proceeds, and at 0.00065 mm.,
+8.6 millionths, it requires as high a potential as at 21.7 mm., 28.553
+millionths. At 0.00137 mm., 1.8 millionth, the current from 11,000 cells
+would not pass through a tube for which 430 cells sufficed at the pressure
+of minimum resistance. At a pressure of 0.0055 mm., 0.066 millionth, the
+highest exhaust obtained in any of the experiments, even a one-inch spark
+from an induction coil refused to pass. It was also ascertained that there
+is neither condensacian nor dilatation of the gas in contact with the
+terminals prior to the passage of the discharge.
+
+These researches naturally led to some speculation about the conditions
+under which auroral phenomena may occur. Observers have variously stated
+the height at which the aurora borealis attains its greatest brilliancy
+as ranging between 124 and 281 miles. Dr. de la Rue's conclusions fix
+the upper limit at 124 miles, and that of maximum display at 37 miles,
+admitting also that the aurora may sometimes occur at an altitude of a few
+thousand feet.
+
+The aurora was beautifully illustrated by a very large tube, in which the
+theoretical pressure was carefully maintained, the characteristic roseate
+tinge being readily produced and maintained.
+
+In studying the stratifications observed in vacuum tubes, Dr. de la Rue
+finds that they originate at the positive pole, and that their steadiness
+may be regulated by the resistance in circuit, and that even when the least
+tremor cannot be detected by the eye, they are still produced by rapid
+pulsations which may be as frequent as ten millions per second.
+
+Dr. de la Rue concluded his interesting discourse by exhibiting some of the
+finest tubes of his numerous and unsurpassed collection.--_Engineering_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+MEASURING ELECTROMOTIVE FORCE.
+
+
+Coulomb's torsion balance has been adapted by M. Baille to the measurement
+of low electromotive forces in a very successful manner, and has been found
+preferable by him to the delicate electrometers of Sir W. Thomson. It
+is necessary to guard it from disturbances due to extraneous electric
+influences and the trembling of the ground. These can be eliminated
+completely by encircling the instrument in a metal case connected to
+earth, and mounting it on solid pillars in a still place. Heat also has a
+disturbing effect, and makes itself felt in the torsion of the fiber and
+the cage surrounding the lever. These effects are warded off by inclosing
+the instrument in a non-conducting jacket of wood shavings.
+
+The apparatus of M. Baille consists of an annealed silver torsion wire of
+2.70 meters long, and a lever 0.50 meter long, carrying at each extremity
+a ball of copper, gilded, and three centimeters in diameter. Similar balls
+are fixed at the corners of a square 20.5 meters in the side, and connected
+in diagonal pairs by fine wire. The lever placed at equal distances from
+the fixed balls communicates, by the medium of the torsion wire, with the
+positive pole of a battery, P, the other pole being to earth.
+
+Owing to some unaccountable variations in the change of the lever or
+needle, M. Baille was obliged to measure the change at each observation.
+This was done by joining the + pole of the battery to the needle, and one
+pair of the fixed balls, and observing the deflection; then the deflection
+produced by the other balls was observed. This operation was repeated
+several times.
+
+The battery, X, to be measured consisted of ten similar elements, and one
+pole of it was connected to the fixed balls, while the other pole was
+connected to the earth. The needle, of course, remained in contact with the
++ pole of the charging battery, P.
+
+The deflections were read from a clear glass scale, placed at a distance
+of 3.30 meters from the needle, and the results worked out from Coulomb's
+static formula,
+
+C a = (4 m m')/d squared, with
+
+ ______________
+ / sum((p/g) r squared)
+ O = / -------------
+ \/ C
+
+[TEX: O = \sqrt{\frac{\sum \frac{p}{g} r^2}{C}}]
+
+In M. Baillie's experiments, O = 437 cubed, and sum(pr squared)= 32171.6 (centimeter
+grammes), the needle having been constructed of a geometrical form.
+
+The following numbers represent the potential of an element of the
+battery--that is to say, the quantity of electricity that the pole of that
+battery spreads upon a sphere of one centimeter radius. They are expressed
+in units of electricity, the unit being the quantity of electricity which,
+acting upon a similar unit at a distance of one centimeter, produces a
+repulsion equal to one gramme:
+
+Volta pile 0.03415 open circuit.
+Zinc, sulphate of copper, copper 0.02997 "
+Zinc, acidulated water, copper, sulphate of copper 0.03709 "
+Zinc, salt water, carbon peroxide of manganese 0.05282 "
+Zinc, salt water, platinum, chloride of platinum 0.05027 "
+Zinc, acidulated water, carbon nitric acid 0.06285 "
+
+These results were obtained just upon charging the batteries, and are,
+therefore, slightly higher than the potentials given after the batteries
+became older. The sulphate of copper cells kept about their maximum value
+longest, but they showed variations of about 10 per cent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TELEPHONY BY THERMIC CURRENTS.
+
+
+While in telephonic arrangements, based upon the principle of magnetic
+induction, a relatively considerable expenditure of force is required in
+order to set the tightly stretched membrane in vibration, in the so-called
+carbon telephones only a very feeble impulse is required to produce the
+differences in the current necessary for the transmission of sounds. In
+order to produce relatively strong currents, even in case of sound-action
+of a minimum strength, Franz Kroettlinger, of Vienna, has made an
+interesting experiment to use thermo electric currents for the transmission
+of sound to a distance. The apparatus which he has constructed is
+exceedingly simple. A current of hot air flowing from below upward is
+deflected more or less from its direction by the human voice. By its action
+an adjacent thermo-battery is excited, whose current passes through the
+spiral of an ordinary telephone, which serves as the receiving instrument.
+As a source of heat the inventor uses a common stearine candle, the flame
+of which is kept at one and the same level by means of a spring similar to
+those used in carriage lamps. On one side of the candle is a sheet metal
+voice funnel fixed upon a support, its mouth being covered with a movable
+sliding disk, fitted with a suitable number of small apertures. On the
+other side a similar support holds a funnel-shaped thermo-battery. The
+single bars of metal forming this battery are very thin, and of such a
+shape that they may cool as quickly as possible. Both the speaking-funnel
+and the battery can be made to approach, at will, to the stream of warm air
+rising up from the flame. The entire apparatus is inclosed in a tin case
+in such a manner that only the aperture of the voice-funnel and the polar
+clamps for securing the conducting wires appear on the outside. The inside
+of the case is suitably stayed to prevent vibration. On speaking into the
+mouth-piece of the funnel, the sound-waves occasion undulations in the
+column of hot air which are communicated to the thermo-battery, and in this
+manner corresponding differences are produced in the currents in the wires
+leading to the receiving instrument.--_Oesterreichische-Ungarische Post._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE TELECTROSCOPE.
+
+By MONS. SENLECQ, of Ardres.
+
+
+This apparatus, which is intended to transmit to a distance through a
+telegraphic wire pictures taken on the plate of a camera, was invented in
+the early part of 1877 by M. Senlecq, of Ardres. A description of the first
+specification submitted by M. Senlecq to M. du Moncel, member of the
+Paris Academy of Sciences, appeared in all the continental and American
+scientific journals. Since then the apparatus has everywhere occupied the
+attention of prominent electricians, who have striven to improve on it.
+Among these we may mention MM. Ayrton, Perry, Sawyer (of New York),
+Sargent (of Philadelphia), Brown (of London), Carey (of Boston), Tighe (of
+Pittsburg), and Graham Bell himself. Some experimenters have used many
+wires, bound together cable-wise, others one wire only. The result has
+been, on the one hand, confusion of conductors beyond a certain distance,
+with the absolute impossibility of obtaining perfect insulation; and,
+on the other hand, an utter want of synchronism. The unequal and slow
+sensitiveness of the selenium likewise obstructed the proper working of the
+apparatus. Now, without a relative simplicity in the arrangement of the
+conducting wires intended to convey to a distance the electric current with
+its variations of intensity, without a perfect and rapid synchronism
+acting concurrently with the luminous impressions, so as to insure the
+simultaneous action of transmitter and receiver, without, in fine, an
+increased sensitiveness in the selenium, the idea of the telectroscope
+could not be realized. M. Senlecq has fortunately surmounted most of these
+main obstacles, and we give to-day a description of the latest apparatus he
+has contrived.
+
+
+TRANSMITTER.
+
+A brass plate, A, whereon the rays of light impinge inside a camera, in
+their various forms and colors, from the external objects placed before the
+lens, the said plate being coated with selenium on the side intended to
+face the dark portion of the camera This brass plate has its entire surface
+perforated with small holes as near to one another as practicable. These
+holes are filled with selenium, heated, and then cooled very slowly, so as
+to obtain the maximum sensitiveness. A small brass wire passes through the
+selenium in each hole, without, however, touching the plate, on to the
+rectangular and vertical ebonite plate, B, Fig. 1, from under this plate
+at point, C. Thus, every wire passing through plate, A, has its point
+of contact above the plate, B, lengthwise. With this view the wires are
+clustered together when leaving the camera, and thence stretch to their
+corresponding points of contact on plate, B, along line, C C. The surface
+of brass, A, is in permanent contact with the positive pole of the battery
+(selenium). On each side of plate, B, are let in two brass rails, D and E,
+whereon the slide hereinafter described works.
+
+[Illustration: Fig. 1]
+
+Rail, E, communicates with the line wire intended to conduct the various
+light and shade vibrations. Rail, D, is connected with the battery wire.
+Along F are a number of points of contact corresponding with those along
+C C. These contacts help to work the apparatus, and to insure the perfect
+isochronism of the transmitter and receiver. These points of contact,
+though insulated one from the other on the surface of the plate, are all
+connected underneath with a wire coming from the positive pole of a special
+battery. This apparatus requires two batteries, as, in fact, do all
+autographic telegraphs--one for sending the current through the selenium,
+and one for working the receiver, etc. The different features of this
+important plate may, therefore, be summed up thus:
+
+FIGURE 1.
+
+D. Brass rail, grooved and connected with the line wire working the
+receiver.
+
+F. Contacts connected underneath with a wire permanently connected with
+battery.
+
+C. Contacts connected to insulated wires from selenium.
+
+E. Brass rail, grooved, etc., like D.
+
+
+RECEIVER.
+
+A small slide, Fig. 2, having at one of its angles a very narrow piece of
+brass, separated in the middle by an insulating surface, used for setting
+the apparatus in rapid motion. This small slide has at the points, D D, a
+small groove fitting into the brass rails of plate, B, Fig. 1, whereby it
+can keep parallel on the two brass rails, D and E. Its insulator, B, Fig.
+2, corresponds to the insulating interval between F and C, Fig. 1.
+
+A, Fig. 3, circular disk, suspended vertically (made of ebonite or other
+insulating material). This disk is fixed. All round the inside of its
+circumference are contacts, connected underneath with the corresponding
+wires of the receiving apparatus. The wires coming from the seleniumized
+plate correspond symmetrically, one after the other, with the contacts of
+transmitter. They are connected in the like order with those of disk, A,
+and with those of receiver, so that the wire bearing the No. 5 from the
+selenium will correspond identically with like contact No. 5 of receiver.
+
+D, Fig. 4, gutta percha or vulcanite insulating plate, through which pass
+numerous very fine platinum wires, each corresponding at its point of
+contact with those on the circular disk, A.
+
+The receptive plate must be smaller than the plate whereon the light
+impinges. The design being thus reduced will be the more perfect from the
+dots formed by the passing currents being closer together.
+
+B, zinc or iron or brass plate connected to earth. It comes in contact with
+chemically prepared paper, C, where the impression is to take place. It
+contributes to the impression by its contact with the chemically prepared
+paper.
+
+In E, Fig. 3, at the center of the above described fixed plate is a
+metallic axis with small handle. On this axis revolves brass wheel, F, Fig.
+5.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 2]
+
+On handle, E, presses continuously the spring, H, Fig. 3, bringing the
+current coming from the selenium line. The cogged wheel in Fig. 5 has at a
+certain point of its circumference the sliding spring, O, Fig. 5, intended
+to slide as the wheel revolves over the different contacts of disk, A, Fig.
+3.
+
+This cogged wheel, Fig. 5, is turned, as in the dial telegraphs, by a rod
+working in and out under the successive movements of the electro-magnet,
+H, and of the counter spring. By means of this rod (which must be of a
+non-metallic material, so as not to divert the motive current), and of an
+elbow lever, this alternating movement is transmitted to a catch, G, which
+works up and down between the cogs, and answers the same purpose as the
+ordinary clock anchor.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 3]
+
+This cogged wheel is worked by clockwork inclosed between two disks, and
+would rotate continuously were it not for the catch, G, working in and out
+of the cogs. Through this catch, G, the wheel is dependent on the movement
+of electro-magnet. This cogged wheel is a double one, consisting of two
+wheels coupled together, exactly similar one with the other, and so fixed
+that the cogs of the one correspond with the void between the cogs of the
+others. As the catch, G, moves down it frees a cog in first wheel, and both
+wheels begin to turn, but the second wheel is immediately checked by catch,
+G, and the movement ceases. A catch again works the two wheels, turn half a
+cog, and so on. Each wheel contains as many cogs as there are contacts on
+transmitter disk, consequently as many as on circular disk, A, Fig. 3, and
+on brass disk within camera.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 4]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 5]
+
+Having now described the several parts of the apparatus, let us see how it
+works. All the contacts correspond one with the other, both on the side of
+selenium current and that of the motive current. Let us suppose that the
+slide of transmitter is on contact No. 10 for instance; the selenium
+current starting from No. 10 reaches contact 10 of rectangular transmitter,
+half the slide bearing on this point, as also on the parallel rail,
+communicates the current to said rail, thence to line, from the line to
+axis of cogged wheel, from axis to contact 10 of circular fixed disk,
+and thence to contact 10 of receiver. At each selenium contact of the
+rectangular disk there is a corresponding contact to the battery and
+electro-magnet. Now, on reaching contact 10 the intermission of the current
+has turned the wheel 10 cogs, and so brought the small contact, O, Fig. 5,
+on No. 10 of the fixed circular disk.
+
+As may be seen, the synchronism of the apparatus could not be obtained in
+a more simple and complete mode--the rectangular transmitter being placed
+vertically, and the slide being of a certain weight to its fall from the
+first point of contact sufficient to carry it rapidly over the whole length
+of this transmitter.
+
+The picture is, therefore, reproduced almost instantaneously; indeed, by
+using platinum wires on the receiver connected with the negative pole, by
+the incandescence of these wires according to the different degrees of
+electricity we can obtain a picture, of a fugitive kind, it is true, but
+yet so vivid that the impression on the retina does not fade during the
+relatively very brief space of time the slide occupies in traveling over
+all the contacts. A Ruhmkorff coil may also be employed for obtaining
+sparks in proportion to the current emitted. The apparatus is regulated
+in precisely the same way as dial telegraphs, starting always from first
+contact. The slide should, therefore, never be removed from the rectangular
+disk, whereon it is held by the grooves in the brass rails, into which it
+fits with but slight friction, without communicating any current to the
+line wires when not placed on points of contact.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Continued from SUPPLEMENT No. 274, page 4368.]
+
+
+
+
+THE VARIOUS MODES OF TRANSMITTING POWER TO A DISTANCE.
+
+[Footnote: A paper lately read before the Institution of Mechanical
+Engineers.]
+
+By ARTHUR ACHARD, of Geneva.
+
+
+But allowing that the figure of 22 H. P., assumed for this power (the
+result in calculating the work with compressed air being 19 H. P.) may be
+somewhat incorrect, it is unlikely that this error can be so large that its
+correction could reduce the efficiency below 80 per cent. Messrs. Sautter
+and Lemonnier, who construct a number of compressors, on being consulted
+by the author, have written to say that they always confined themselves in
+estimating the power stored in the compressed air, and had never measured
+the gross power expended. Compressed air in passing along the pipe, assumed
+to be horizontal, which conveys it from the place of production to the
+place where it is to be used, experiences by friction a diminution of
+pressure, which represents a reduction in the mechanical power stored up,
+and consequently a loss of efficiency.
+
+The loss of pressure in question can only be calculated conveniently on the
+hypothesis that it is very small, and the general formula,
+
+ p1 - p 4L
+ ------- = ---- f(u),
+ [Delta] D
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{4L}{D}f(u)]
+
+is employed for the purpose, where D is the diameter of the pipe, assumed
+to be uniform, L the length of the pipe, p1 the pressure at the entrance, p
+the pressure at the farther end, u the velocity at which the compressed air
+travels, [Delta] its specific weight, and f(u) the friction per unit of
+length. In proportion as the air loses pressure its speed increases, while
+its specific weight diminishes; but the variations in pressure are assumed
+to be so small that u and [Delta] may be considered constant. As regards
+the quantity f(u), or the friction per unit of length, the natural law
+which regulates it is not known, audit can only be expressed by some
+empirical formula, which, while according sufficiently nearly with the
+facts, is suited for calculation. For this purpose the binomial formula, au
++ bu squared, or the simple formula, b1 u squared, is generally adopted; a b and b1 being
+coefficients deduced from experiment. The values, however, which are to
+be given to these coefficients are not constant, for they vary with the
+diameter of the pipe, and in particular, contrary to formerly received
+ideas, they vary according to its internal surface. The uncertainty in this
+respect is so great that it is not worth while, with a view to accuracy, to
+relinquish the great convenience which the simple formula, b1 u squared, offers.
+It would be better from this point of view to endeavor, as has been
+suggested, to render this formula more exact by the substitution of a
+fractional power in the place of the square, rather than to go through
+the long calculations necessitated by the use of the binomial au + bu squared.
+Accordingly, making use of the formula b1 u squared, the above equation becomes,
+
+ p1 - p 4L
+ ------- = ---- b1 u squared;
+ [Delta] D
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{4L}{D} b_1 u^2]
+
+or, introducing the discharge per second, Q, which is the usual figure
+supplied, and which is connected with the velocity by the relation, Q =
+([pi] D squared u)/4, we have
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q squared.
+ [Delta] [pi] squared D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2]
+
+Generally the pressure, p1, at the entrance is known, and the pressure, p,
+has to be found; it is then from p1 that the values of Q and [Delta] are
+calculated. In experiments where p1 and p are measured directly, in order
+to arrive at the value of the coefficient b1, Q and [Delta] would be
+calculated for the mean pressure 1/2(p1 + p). The values given to the
+coefficient b1 vary considerably, because, as stated above, it varies with
+the diameter, and also with the nature of the material of the pipe. It
+is generally admitted that it is independent of the pressure, and it is
+probable that within certain limits of pressure this hypothesis is in
+accordance with the truth.
+
+D'Aubuisson gives for this case, in his _Traite d'Hydraulique_, a rather
+complicated formula, containing a constant deduced from experiment, whose
+value, according to a calculation made by the author, is approximately b1 =
+0.0003. This constant was determined by taking the mean of experiments made
+with tin tubes of 0.0235 meter (15/16 in.), 0.05 meter (2 in.), and 0.10
+meter (4 in.) diameter; and it was erroneously assumed that it was correct
+for all diameters and all substances.
+
+M. Arson, engineer to the Paris Gas Company, published in 1867, in the
+_Memoires de la Societe des Ingenieurs Civils de France_, the results of
+some experiments on the loss of pressure in gas when passing through pipes.
+He employed cast-iron pipes of the ordinary type. He has represented the
+results of his experiments by the binomial formula, au + bu squared, and gives
+values for the coefficients a and b, which diminish with an increase in
+diameter, but would indicate greater losses of pressure than D'Aubuisson's
+formula. M. Deviller, in his _Rapport sur les travaux de percement du
+tunnel sous les Alpes_, states that the losses of pressure observed in the
+air pipe at the Mont Cenis Tunnel confirm the correctness of D'Aubuisson's
+formula; but his reasoning applies to too complicated a formula to be
+absolutely convincing.
+
+Quite recently M. E. Stockalper, engineer-in-chief at the northern end of
+the St. Gothard Tunnel, has made some experiments on the air conduit of
+this tunnel, the results of which he has kindly furnished to the author.
+These lead to values for the coefficient b1 appreciably less than that
+which is contained implicitly in D'Aubuisson's formula. As he experimented
+on a rising pipe, it is necessary to introduce into the formula the
+difference of level, h, between the two ends; it then becomes
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q squared + h.
+ [Delta] [pi] squared D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2 + h]
+
+The following are the details of the experiments: First series of
+experiments: Conduit consisting of cast or wrought iron pipes, joined by
+means of flanges, bolts, and gutta percha rings. D = 0.20 m. (8 in.); L =
+4,600 m. (15,100 ft,); h= 26.77 m. (87 ft. 10 in.). 1st experiment: Q =
+0.1860 cubic meter (6.57 cubic feet), at a pressure of 1/2(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 22 deg. Cent. (72 deg. Fahr.); p1 = 5.60 atm., p =5.24 atm. Hence p1
+- p = 0.36 atm.= 0.36 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2.116 lb. per
+square foot), whence we obtain b1=0.0001697. D'Aubuisson's formula would
+have given p1 - p = 0.626 atm.; and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p =
+0.9316 atm. 2d experiment: Q = 0.1566 cubic meter (5.53 cubic feet), at a
+pressure of 1/2(p1 + p), and a temperature of 22 deg. Cent. (72 deg. Fahr.); p1
+= 4.35 atm., p = 4.13 atm. Hence p1 - p = 0.22 atm. = 0.22 X 10,334
+kilogrammes per square meter (2,116 lb. per square foot); whence we obtain
+b1 = 0.0001816. D'Aubuisson's formula would have given p1 - p = 0.347 atm;
+and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p = 0.5382 atm. 3d experiment: Q =
+0.1495 cubic meter (5.28 cubic feet) at a pressure of 1/2(p1 + p) and a
+temperature 22 deg. Cent. (72 deg. Fahr.); p1 = 3.84 atm., p = 3.65 atm. Hence p1 -
+p = 0.19 atm. = 0.19 X 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2.116 lb. per
+square foot); whence we obtain B1 = 0.0001966. D'Aubuisson's formula would
+have given p1 - p = 0.284 atm., and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p =
+0.4329 atm. Second series of experiments: Conduit composed of wrought-iron
+pipes, with joints as in the first experiments. D = 0.15 meter (6 in.), L
+- 0.522 meters (1,712 ft.), h = 3.04 meters (10 ft.) 1st experiments: Q =
+0.2005 cubic meter (7.08 cubic feet), at a pressure of 1/2(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 26.5 deg. Cent. (80 deg. Fahr.); p1 = 5.24 atm., p = 5.00 atm. Hence
+p1 - p = 0.24 atm. =0.24 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2,116 lb.
+per square foot); whence we obtain b1 = 0.3002275. 2nd experiment: Q =
+0.1586 cubic meter (5.6 cubic feet), at a pressure of 1/2(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 26.5 deg. Cent. (80 deg. Fahr.); p1 = 3.650 atm., p = 3.545 atm.
+Hence p1 - p = 0.105 atm. = 0.105 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter
+(2,116 lb. per square foot); whence we obtain b1 = 0.0002255. It is clear
+that these experiments give very small values for the coefficient. The
+divergence from the results which D'Aubuisson's formula would give is due
+to the fact that his formula was determined with very small pipes. It is
+probable that the coefficients corresponding to diameters of 0.15 meter
+(6 in.) and 0.20 meter (8 in.) for a substance as smooth as tin, would be
+still smaller respectively than the figures obtained above.
+
+The divergence from the results obtained by M. Arson's formula does not
+arise from a difference in size, as this is taken into account. The author
+considers that it may be attributed to the fact that the pipes for the St.
+Gothard Tunnel were cast with much greater care than ordinary pipes, which
+rendered their surface smoother, and also to the fact that flanged joints
+produce much less irregularity in the internal surface than the ordinary
+spigot and faucet joints.
+
+Lastly, the difference in the methods of observation and the errors which
+belong to them, must be taken into account. M. Stockalper, who experimented
+on great pressures, used metallic gauges, which are instruments on whose
+sensibility and correctness complete reliance cannot be placed; and
+moreover the standard manometer with which they were compared was one of
+the same kind. The author is not of opinion that the divergence is owing to
+the fact that M. Stockalper made his observations on an air conduit, where
+the pressure was much higher than in gas pipes. Indeed, it may be assumed
+that gases and liquids act in the same manner; and, as will be [1]
+explained later on, there is reason to believe that with the latter a rise
+of pressure increases the losses of pressure instead of diminishing them.
+
+[Transcribers note 1: corrected from 'as will we explained']
+
+All the pipes for supplying compressed air in tunnels and in headings of
+mines are left uncovered, and have flanged joints; which are advantages not
+merely as regards prevention of leakage, but also for facility of laying
+and of inspection. If a compressed air pipe had to be buried in the ground
+the flanged joint would lose a part of its advantages; but, nevertheless,
+the author considers that it would still be preferable to the ordinary
+joint.
+
+It only remains to refer to the motors fed with the compressed air.
+This subject is still in its infancy from a practical point of view. In
+proportion as the air becomes hot by compression, so it cools by expansion,
+if the vessel containing it is impermeable to heat. Under these conditions
+it gives out in expanding a power appreciably less than if it retained its
+original temperature; besides which the fall of temperature may impede the
+working of the machine by freezing the vapor of water contained in the air.
+
+If it is desired to utilize to the utmost the force stored up in the
+compressed air it is necessary to endeavor to supply heat to the air during
+expansion so as to keep its temperature constant. It would be possible
+to attain this object by the same means which prevent heating from
+compression, namely, by the circulation and injection of water. It would
+perhaps be necessary to employ a little larger quantity of water for
+injection, as the water, instead of acting by virtue both of its heat of
+vaporization and of its specific heat, can in this case act only by virtue
+of the latter. These methods might be employed without difficulty for air
+machines of some size. It would be more difficult to apply them to small
+household machines, in which simplicity is an essential element; and we
+must rest satisfied with imperfect methods, such as proximity to a stove,
+or the immersion of the cylinder in a tank of water. Consequently loss of
+power by cooling and by incomplete expansion cannot be avoided. The only
+way to diminish the relative amount of this loss is to employ compressed
+air at a pressure not exceeding three or four atmospheres.
+
+The only real practical advance made in this matter is M. Mekarski's
+compressed air engine for tramways. In this engine the air is made to pass
+through a small boiler containing water at a temperature of about 120 deg.
+Cent. (248 deg. Fahr.), before entering the cylinder of the engine. It must
+be observed that in order to reduce the size of the reservoirs, which
+are carried on the locomotive, the air inside them must be very highly
+compressed; and that in going from the reservoir into the cylinder it
+passes through a reducing valve or expander, which keeps the pressure of
+admission at a definite figure, so that the locomotive can continue working
+so long as the supply of air contained in the reservoir has not come down
+to this limiting pressure. The air does not pass the expander until after
+it has gone through the boiler already mentioned. Therefore, if the
+temperature which it assumes in the boiler is 100 deg. Cent. (212 deg. Fahr.), and
+if the limiting pressure is 5 atm., the gas which enters the engine will be
+a mixture of air and water vapor at 100 deg. Cent.; and of its total pressure
+the vapor of water will contribute I atm. and the air 4 atm. Thus this
+contrivance, by a small expenditure of fuel, enables the air to act
+expansively without injurious cooling, and even reduces the consumption of
+compressed air to an extent which compensates for part of the loss of power
+arising from the preliminary expansion which the air experiences before its
+admission into the engine. It is clear that this same contrivance, or what
+amounts to the same thing, a direct injection of steam, at a sufficient
+pressure, for the purpose of maintaining the expanding air at a constant
+temperature, might be tried in a fixed engine worked by compressed air with
+some chance of success.
+
+Whatever method is adopted it would be advantageous that the losses of
+pressure in the pipes connecting the compressors with the motors should be
+reduced as much as possible, for in this case that loss would represent
+a loss of efficiency. If, on the other hand, owing to defective means of
+reheating, it is necessary to remain satisfied with a small amount of
+expansion, the loss of pressure in the pipe is unimportant, and has only
+the effect of transferring the limited expansion to a point a little lower
+on the scale of pressures. If W is the net disposable force on the shaft
+of the engine which works the compressor, v1 the volume of air at the
+compressor, p1. given by the compressor, and at the temperature of the
+surrounding air, and p0 the atmospheric pressure, the efficiency of the
+compressor, assuming the air to expand according to Boyle's law, is given
+by the well-known formula--
+
+ p1 v1 log (p1 / p0)
+ -------------------.
+ W
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 v_1 \log \frac{p_1}{p_0}}{W}]
+
+Let p2 be the value to which the pressure is reduced by the loss of
+pressure at the end of the conduit, and v2 the volume which the air
+occupies at this pressure and at the same temperature; the force stored
+up in the air at the end of its course through the conduit is p2 v2
+log(p2/p0); consequently, the efficiency of the conduit is
+
+ p2 v2 log(p2/p0)
+ ----------------
+ p1 v1 log(p1/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_2 v_2 \log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}{p_2 v_2 \log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+a fraction that may be reduced to the simple form
+
+ log(p2/p0)
+ ----------,
+ log(p1/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{\log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}{\log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+if there is no leakage during the passage of the air, because in that cause
+p2 v2 = p1 v1. Lastly, if W1 is the net disposable force on the shaft of
+the compressed air motor, the efficiency of this engine will be,
+
+ W1
+ ----------------
+ p2 v2 log(p2/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{W_1}{p_2 v_2 \log \frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+and the product of these three partial efficiencies is equal to W1/W, the
+general efficiency of the transmission.
+
+III. _Transmission by Pressure Water_.--As transmission of power by
+compressed air has been specially applied to the driving of tunnels, so
+transmission by pressure water has been specially resorted to for lifting
+heavy loads, or for work of a similar nature, such as the operations
+connected with the manufacture of Bessemer steel or of cast-iron pipes.
+The author does not propose to treat of transmissions established for this
+special purpose, and depending on the use of accumulators at high pressure,
+as he has no fresh matter to impart on this subject, and as he believes
+that the remarkable invention of Sir William Armstrong was described for
+the first time, in the "Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical
+Engineers." His object is to refer to transmissions applicable to general
+purposes.
+
+The transmission of power by water may occur in another form. The motive
+force to be transmitted may be employed for working pumps which raise the
+water, not to a fictitious height in an accumulator, but to a real height
+in a reservoir, with a channel from this reservoir to distribute the water
+so raised among several motors arranged for utilizing the pressure. The
+author is not aware that works have been carried out for this purpose.
+However, in many towns a part of the water from the public mains serves to
+supply small motors--consequently, if the water, instead of being brought
+by a natural fall, has been previously lifted artificially, it might be
+said that a transmission of power is here grafted on to the ordinary
+distribution of water.
+
+Unless a positive or negative force of gravity is introduced into the
+problem, independently of the force to be transmitted, the receivers of
+the water pressure must be assumed to be at the same level as the forcing
+pumps, or more correctly, the water discharged from the receivers to be at
+the same level as the surface of the water from which the pumps draw their
+supply. In this case the general efficiency of transmission is the product
+of three partial efficiencies, which correspond exactly to those mentioned
+with regard to compressed air. The height of lift, contained in the
+numerator of the fraction which expresses the efficiency of the pumps, is
+not to be taken as the difference in level between the surface of the water
+in the reservoir and the surface of the water whence the pumps draw their
+supply; but as this difference in level, plus the loss of pressure in the
+suction pipe, which is usually very short, and plus the loss in the channel
+to the reservoir, which may be very long. A similar loss of initial
+pressure affects the efficiency of the discharge channel. The reservoir, if
+of sufficient capacity, may become an important store of power, while the
+compressed air reservoir can only do so to a very limited extent.
+
+Omitting the subject of the pumps, and passing on at once to the discharge
+main, the author may first point out that the distinction between the
+ascending and descending mains of the system is of no importance, for two
+reasons: first, that nothing prevents the motors being supplied direct from
+the first alone; and second, that the one is not always distinct from the
+other. In fact, the reservoir may be connected by a single branch pipe with
+the system which goes from the pumps to the motors; it may even be placed
+at the extreme end of this system beyond the motors, provided always that
+the supply pipe is taken into it at the bottom. The same formula may be
+adopted for the loss of initial pressure in water pipes as for compressed
+air pipes, viz.,
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q squared +- h;
+ [Delta] [pi] squared D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2 \pm h]
+
+h being the difference of level between the two ends of the portion of
+conduit of length, L, and the sign + or - being used according as the
+conduit rises or falls. The specific weight, [delta], is constant, and the
+quotients, p1/[delta] and p/[delta], represent the heights, z and z1, to
+which the water could rise above the pipes, in vertical tubes branching
+from it, at the beginning and end of the transit. The values assigned to
+the coefficient b1 in France, are those determined by D'Arcy. For new
+cast-iron pipes he gives b1 - 0.0002535 + 1/D 0.000000647; and recommends
+that this value should be doubled, to allow for the rust and incrustation
+which more or less form inside the pipes during use. The determination of
+this coefficient has been made from experiments where the pressure has
+not exceeded four atmospheres; within these limits the value of the
+coefficient, as is generally admitted, is independent of the pressure. The
+experiments made by M. Barret, on the pressure pipes of the accumulator at
+the Marseilles docks, seem to indicate that the loss of pressure would be
+greater for high pressures, everything else being equal. This pipe, having
+a diameter of 0.127 m. (5 in.), was subjected to an initial pressure of 52
+atmospheres. The author gives below the results obtained for a straight
+length 320 m. (1050 ft) long; and has placed beside them the results which
+D'Arcy's formula would give.
+
+ Loss of head, in meters or ft. respectively
+ per 100 meters or ft. run of pipes.
+ +-----------------^-------------------+
+ | |
+ Calculated loss.
+ +-----------^-----------+
+ | |
+Velocity of flow Actual loss
+ per second. observed. Old pipes. New pipes.
+Meters. Feet. Met. or Ft. Met. or Ft. Met. or Ft.
+0.25 0.82 1.5 0.12 0.06
+0.50 1.64 2.5 0.48 0.24
+0.75 2.46 3.7 1.08 0.54
+1.00 3.28 5.5 1.92 0.96
+1.25 4.10 6.1 3.00 1.50
+1.50 4.92 7.3 4.32 2.16
+1.75 5.74 8.0 5.88 2.94
+2.00 6.56 10.2 7.68 3.84
+2.25 7.38 11.7 9.72 4.86
+2.50 8.20 14.0 12.00 6.00
+
+Moreover, these results would appear to indicate a different law from that
+which is expressed by the formula b1 u squared, as is easy to see by representing
+them graphically. It would be very desirable that fresh experiments should
+be made on water pipes at high pressure, and of various diameters. Of
+machines worked by water pressure the author proposes to refer only to two
+which appear to him in every respect the most practical and advantageous.
+One is the piston machine of M. Albert Schmid, engineer at Zurich. The
+cylinder is oscillating, and the distribution is effected, without an
+eccentric, by the relative motion of two spherical surfaces fitted one
+against the other, and having the axis of oscillation for a common axis.
+The convex surface, which is movable and forms part of the cylinder, serves
+as a port face, and has two ports in it communicating with the two ends of
+the cylinder. The concave surface, which is fixed and plays the part of a
+slide valve, contains three openings, the two outer ones serving to admit
+the pressure water, and the middle one to discharge the water after it has
+exerted its pressure. The piston has no packing. Its surface of contact has
+two circumferential grooves, which produce a sort of water packing acting
+by adhesion. A small air chamber is connected with the inlet pipe, and
+serves to deaden the shocks. This engine is often made with two cylinders,
+having their cranks at right angles.
+
+The other engine, which is much less used, is a turbine on Girard's system,
+with a horizontal axis and partial admission, exactly resembling in
+miniature those which work in the hydraulic factory of St. Maur, near
+Paris. The water is introduced by means of a distributer, which is fitted
+in the interior of the turbine chamber, and occupies a certain portion
+of its circumference. This turbine has a lower efficiency than Schmid's
+machine, and is less suitable for high pressures; but it possesses this
+advantage over it, that by regulating the amount of opening of the
+distributer, and consequently the quantity of water admitted, the force can
+be altered without altering the velocity of rotation. As it admits of great
+speeds, it could be usefully employed direct, without the interposition of
+spur wheels or belts for driving magneto-electric machines employed for the
+production of light, for electrotyping, etc.
+
+In compressed air machines the losses of pressure due to incomplete
+expansion, cooling, and waste spaces, play an important part. In water
+pressure machines loss does not occur from these causes, on account of the
+incompressibility of the liquid, but the frictions of the parts are the
+principal causes of loss of power. It would be advisable to ascertain
+whether, as regards this point, high or low pressures are the most
+advantageous. Theoretical considerations would lead the author to imagine
+that for a piston machine low pressures are preferable. In conclusion, the
+following table gives the efficiencies of a Girard turbine, constructed by
+Messrs. Escher Wyss & Co., of Zurich, and of a Schmid machine, as measured
+by Professor Fliegnor, in 1871:
+
+ ESCHER WYSS & CO'S TURBINE.
+
+Effective Head of Water. Revolutions Efficiency.
+ per minute.
+Meters. Feet. Revs. Per cent.
+ 20.7 67.9 628 68.5
+ 20.7 67.9 847 47.4
+ 24.1 79.0 645 68.5
+ 27.6 90.5 612 65.7
+ 27.6 90.5 756 68.0
+ 31.0 101.7 935 56.9
+ 31.0 101.7 1,130 35.1
+
+ SCHMID MOTOR.
+
+ 8.3 27.2 226 37.4
+ 11.4 37.4 182 67.4
+ 14.5 47.6 254 53.4
+ 17.9 58.7 157 86.2
+ 20.7 67.9 166 89.6
+ 20.7 67.9 225 74.6
+ 24.1 79.0 238 76.7
+ 24.1 79.0 389 64.0
+ 27.6 90.5 207 83.9
+
+It will be observed that these experiments relate to low pressures; it
+would be desirable to extend them to higher pressures.
+
+IV. _Transmission by Electricity._--However high the efficiency of an
+electric motor may be, in relation to the chemical work of the electric
+battery which feeds it, force generated by an electric battery is too
+expensive, on account of the nature of the materials consumed, for a
+machine of this kind ever to be employed for industrial purposes. If,
+however, the electric current, instead of being developed by chemical
+work in a battery, is produced by ordinary mechanical power in a
+magneto-electric or dynamo-electric machine, the case is different; and
+the double transformation, first of the mechanical force into an electric
+current, and then of that current into mechanical force, furnishes a means
+for effecting the conveyance of the power to a distance.
+
+It is this last method of transmission which remains to be discussed. The
+author, however, feels himself obliged to restrict himself in this matter
+to a mere summary; and, indeed, it is English physicists and engineers who
+have taken the technology of electricity out of the region of empiricism
+and have placed it on a scientific and rational basis. Moreover, they are
+also taking the lead in the progress which is being accomplished in this
+branch of knowledge, and are best qualified to determine its true bearings.
+When an electric current, with an intensity, i, is produced, either by
+chemical or mechanical work, in a circuit having a total resistance, R, a
+quantity of heat is developed in the circuit, and this heat is the exact
+equivalent of the force expended, so long as the current is not made use of
+for doing any external work. The expression for this quantity of heat, per
+unit of time, is Ai squaredR; A being the thermal equivalent of the unit of power
+corresponding to the units of current and resistance, in which i and R are
+respectively expressed. The product, i squaredR, is a certain quantity of power,
+which the author proposes to call _power transformed into electricity_.
+When mechanical power is employed for producing a current by means of
+a magneto-electric or dynamo-electric machine--or, to use a better
+expression, by means of a _mechanical generator of electricity_--it is
+necessary in reality to expend a greater quantity of power than i squaredR in
+order to make up for losses which result either from ordinary friction
+or from certain electro magnetic reactions which occur. The ratio of the
+quantity, i squaredR, to the power, W, actually expended per unit of time is
+called the efficiency of the generator. Designating it by K, we obtain, W
+= i squaredR/K. It is very important to ascertain the value of this efficiency,
+considering that it necessarily enters as a factor into the evaluation of
+all the effects to be produced by help of the generator in question. The
+following table gives the results of certain experiments made early in
+1879, with a Gramme machine, by an able physicist, M Hagenbach, Professor
+at the University at Basle, and kindly furnished by him to the author:
+
+Revolutions per minute 935 919.5 900.5 893
+
+Total resistance in Siemens' units 2.55 3.82 4.94 6.06
+
+Total resistance in absolute units 2.435 3.648 4.718 5.787
+ x10^9 x10^9 x10^9 x10^9
+
+Intensity in chemical units 17.67 10.99 8.09 6.28
+
+Intensity in absolute units 2.828 1.759 1.295 1.005
+
+Work done i squaredR in absolute units 1948.6 1129.2 791.3 584.9
+ x10^7 x10^7 x10^7 x10^7
+
+Work done i squaredR in kilogrammes 198.6 115.1 80.66 59.62
+
+Power expended in kilogrammes 301.5 141.0 86.25 83.25
+
+Efficiency, per cent. 65.9 81.6 93.5 71.6
+
+M. Hagenbach's dynamometric measurements were made by the aid of a brake.
+After each experiment on the electric machine, he applied the brake to the
+engine which he employed, taking care to make it run at precisely the same
+speed, with the same pressure of steam, and with the same expansion as
+during experiment. It would certainly be better to measure the force
+expended during and not after the experiment, by means of a registering
+dynamometer. Moreover, M. Hagenbach writes that his measurements by means
+of the brake were very much prejudiced by external circumstances; doubtless
+this is the reason of the divergences between the results obtained.
+
+About the same time Dr. Hopkinson communicated to this institution the
+results of some very careful experiments made on a Siemens machine. He
+measured the force expended by means of a registering dynamometer, and
+obtained very high coefficients of efficiency, amounting to nearly 90 per
+cent. M. Hagenbach also obtained from one machine a result only a little
+less than unity. Mechanical generators of electricity are certainly
+capable of being improved in several respects, especially as regards their
+adaptation to certain definite classes of work. But there appears to
+remain hardly any margin for further progress as regards efficiency. Force
+transformed into electricity in a generator may be expressed by i [omega] M
+C; [omega] being the angular velocity of rotation; M the magnetism of one
+of the poles, inducing or induced, which intervenes; and C a constant
+specially belonging to each apparatus, and which is independent of
+the units adopted. This constant could not be determined except by
+an integration practically impossible; and the product, M C, must be
+considered indivisible. Even in a magneto-electric machine (with permanent
+inducing magnets), and much more in a dynamo-electric machine (inducing by
+means of electro-magnets excited by the very current produced) the product,
+M C, is a function of the intensity. From the identity of the expressions,
+i squaredR and i [omega] M C we obtain the relation M C = IR/[omega] which
+indicates the course to be pursued to determine experimentally the law
+which connects the variations of M C with those of i. Some experiments made
+in 1876, by M. Hagenbach, on a Gramme dynamo-electric machine, appear to
+indicate that the magnetism, M C, does not increase indefinitely with the
+intensity, but that there is some maximum value for this quantity. If,
+instead of working a generator by an external motive force, a current is
+passed through its circuit in a certain given direction, the movable part
+of the machine will begin to turn in an opposite direction to that in which
+it would have been necessary to turn it in order to obtain a current in the
+aforesaid direction. In virtue of this motion the electro-magnetic forces
+which are generated may be used to overcome a resisting force. The machine
+will then work as a motor or receiver. Let i be the intensity of the
+external current which works the motor, when the motor is kept at rest. If
+it is now allowed to move, its motion produces, in virtue of the laws of
+induction, a current in the circuit of intensity, i1, in the opposite
+direction to the external current; the effective intensity of the current
+traversing the circuit is thus reduced to i - i1. The intensity of the
+counter current is given, like that of the generating current, by the
+equation, i1 squaredR = i1 [omega]1 M1 C1, or i1R = [omega]1 M1 C1, the index, 1,
+denoting the quantities relating to the motor. Here M1 C1 is a function of
+i - i1, not of i. As in a generator the force transformed into electricity
+has a value, i [omega] M C, so in a motor the force developed by
+electricity is (i - i1) [omega]1 M1 C1. On account, however, of the losses
+which occur, the effective power, that is the disposable power on the shaft
+of the motor, will have a smaller value, and in order to arrive at it a
+coefficient of efficiency, K1, must be added. We shall then have W1 = K1
+(i-i1) [omega]1 M1 C1. The author has no knowledge of any experiments
+having been made for obtaining this efficiency, K1. Next let us suppose
+that the current feeding the motor is furnished by a generator, so that
+actual transmission by electricity is taking place. The circuit, whose
+resistance is R, comprises the coils, both fixed and movable, of the
+generator and motor, and of the conductors which connect them. The
+intensity of the current which traverses the circuit had the value, i, when
+the motor was at rest; by the working of the motor it is reduced to i - i1.
+The power applied to the generator is itself reduced to W-[(i-i1)[omega]
+M C]/K. The prime mover is relieved by the action of the counter current,
+precisely as the consumption of zinc in the battery would be reduced by the
+same cause, if the battery was the source of the current. The efficiency
+of the transmission is W1/W. Calculation shows that it is expressed by the
+following equations:W1/W = K K1 [([omega]11 M1 C1)/([omega]1 M C)], or = K
+K1 [([omega]11 M1 C)/([omega]11 M1 C1 + (i-i1) R)]; expressions in which
+it must be remembered M C and M1 C1 are really functions of (i-i1). This
+efficiency is, then, the product of three distinct factors, each evidently
+less than unity, namely, the efficiency belonging to the generator, the
+efficiency belonging to the motor, and a third factor depending on the rate
+of rotation of the motor and the resistance of the circuit. The influence
+which these elements exert on the value of the third factor cannot be
+estimated, unless the law is first known according to which the magnetisms,
+M C, M1 C C1, vary with the intensity of the current.
+
+
+GENERAL RESULTS.
+
+Casting a retrospective glance at the four methods of transmission of power
+which have been examined, it would appear that transmission by ropes forms
+a class by itself, while the three other methods combine into a natural
+group, because they possess a character in common of the greatest
+importance. It may be said that all three involve a temporary
+transformation of the mechanical power to be utilized into potential
+energy. Also in each of these methods the efficiency of transmission is
+the product of three factors or partial efficiencies, which correspond
+exactly--namely, first, the efficiency of the instrument which converts
+the actual energy of the prime mover into potential energy; second, the
+efficiency of the instrument which reconverts this potential energy into
+actual energy, that is, into motion, and delivers it up in this shape
+for the actual operations which accomplish industrial work; third, the
+efficiency of the intermediate agency which serves for the conveyance of
+potential energy from the first instrument to the second.
+
+This last factor has just been given for transmission by electricity. It
+is the exact correlative of the efficiency of the pipe in the case of
+compressed air or of pressure water. It is as useful in the case of
+electric transmission, as of any other method, to be able, in studying the
+system, to estimate beforehand what results it is able to furnish, and for
+this purpose it is necessary to calculate exactly the factors which compose
+the efficiency.
+
+In order to obtain this desirable knowledge, the author considers that the
+three following points should form the aim of experimentalists: First,
+the determination of the efficiency, K, of the principal kinds of
+magneto-electric, or dynamo-electric machines working as generators;
+second, the determination of the efficiency, K1, of the same machines
+working as motors; third, the determination of the law according to which
+the magnetism of the cores of these machines varies with the intensity of
+the current. The author is of opinion that experiments made with these
+objects in view would be more useful than those conducted for determining
+the general efficiency of transmission, for the latter give results only
+available under precisely similar conditions. However, it is clear that
+they have their value and must not be neglected.
+
+There are, moreover, many other questions requiring to be elucidated by
+experiment, especially as regards the arrangement of the conducting wires:
+but it is needless to dwell further upon this subject, which has been ably
+treated by many English men of science--for instance, Dr. Siemens and
+Professor Ayrton. Nevertheless, for further information the author would
+refer to the able articles published at Paris, by M. Mascart, in the
+_Journal de Physique_, in 1877 and 1878. The author would gladly have
+concluded this paper with a comparison of the efficiencies of the four
+systems which have been examined, or what amounts to the same thing--with a
+comparison of the losses of power which they occasion. Unfortunately, such
+a comparison has never been made experimentally, because hitherto the
+opportunity of doing it in a demonstrative manner has been wanting, for the
+transmission of power to a distance belongs rather to the future than to
+the present time. Transmission by electricity is still in its infancy; it
+has only been applied on a small scale and experimentally.
+
+Of the three other systems, transmission by means of ropes is the only one
+that has been employed for general industrial purposes, while compressed
+air and water under pressure have been applied only to special purposes,
+and their use has been due much more to their special suitableness for
+these purposes than from any considerations relative to loss of power.
+Thus the effective work of the compressed air used in driving the
+tunnels through the Alps, assuming its determination to be possible, was
+undoubtedly very low; nevertheless, in the present state of our appliances
+it is the only process by which such operations can be accomplished. The
+author believes that transmission by ropes furnishes the highest proportion
+of useful work, but that as regards a wide distribution of the transmitted
+power the other two methods, by air and water, might merit a preference.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE HOTCHKISS REVOLVING GUN.
+
+
+The Hotchkiss revolving gun, already adopted in the French navy and by
+other leading European nations, has been ordered for use in the German navy
+by the following decree of the German Emperor, dated January 11 last: "On
+the report made to me, I approve the adoption of the Hotchkiss revolving
+cannon as a part of the artillery of my navy; and each of my ships,
+according to their classification, shall in general be armed with this
+weapon in such a manner that every point surrounding the vessel may be
+protected by the fire of at least two guns at a minimum range of 200
+meters."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THALLIUM PAPERS AS OZONOMETERS.
+
+
+Schoene has given the results of an extended series of experiments on the
+use of thallium paper for estimating approximately the oxidizing material
+in the atmosphere, whether it be hydrogen peroxide alone, or mixed with
+ozone, or perhaps also with other constituents hitherto unknown. The
+objection to Schoenbein's ozonometer (potassium iodide on starch paper) and
+to Houzeau's ozonometer (potassium iodide on red litmus paper) lies in
+the fact that their materials are hygroscopic, and their indications vary
+widely with the moisture of the air. Since dry ozone does not act on these
+papers, they must be moistened; and then the amount of moisture varies the
+result quite as much as the amount of ozone. Indeed, attention has been
+called to the larger amount of ozone near salt works and waterfalls, and
+the erroneous opinion advanced that ozone is formed when water is finely
+divided. And Boettger has stated that ozone is formed when ether is
+atomized; the fact being that the reaction he observed was due to the
+H_2O_2 always present in ether. Direct experiments with the Schoenbein
+ozonometer and the psychrometer gave parallel curves; whence the author
+regards the former as only a crude hygrometer. These objections do not lie
+against the thallium paper, the oxidation to brown oxide by either ozone or
+hydrogen peroxide not requiring the presence of moisture, and the color,
+therefore, being independent of the hygrometric state of the air. Moreover,
+when well cared for, the papers undergo no farther change of color and may
+be preserved indefinitely. The author prepares the thallium paper a few
+days before use, by dipping strips of Swedish filtering paper in a solution
+of thallous hydrate, and drying. The solution is prepared by pouring a
+solution of thallous sulphate into a boiling solution of barium hydrate,
+equivalent quantities being taken, the resulting solution of thallous
+hydrate being concentrated in vacuo until 100 c.c. contains 10 grammes
+Tl(OH). For use the strips are hung in the free air in a close vessel,
+preferably over caustic lime, for twelve hours. Other papers are used, made
+with a two per cent. solution. These are exposed for thirty-six hours. The
+coloration is determined by comparison with a scale having eleven degrees
+of intensity upon it. Compared with Schoenbein's ozonometer, the results are
+in general directly opposite. The thallium papers show that the greatest
+effect is in the daytime, the iodide papers that it is at night. Yearly
+curves show that the former generally indicate a rise when the latter give
+a fall. The iodide curve follows closely that of relative humidity, clouds,
+and rain; the thallium curve stands in no relation to it. A table of
+results for the year 1879 is given in monthly means, of the two thallium
+papers, the ozonometer, the relative humidity, cloudiness, rain, and
+velocity of wind.--_G. F. B., in Ber. Berl. Chem. Ces._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE AUDIPHONE IN ENGLAND.
+
+
+The audiphone has been recently tried in the Board School for Deaf and
+Dumb at Turin street, Bethnal Green, with very satisfactory results--so
+satisfactory that the report will recommend its adoption in the four
+schools which the London Board have erected for the education of the deaf
+and dumb. Some 20 per cent. of the pupils in deaf and dumb schools have
+sufficient power of hearing when assisted by the audiphone to enable them
+to take their places in the classes of the ordinary schools.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONDUCTIVITY OF MOIST AIR.
+
+
+Many physical treatises still assert that moist air conducts electricity,
+though Silberman and others have proved the contrary. An interesting
+experiment bearing on this has been described lately by Prof. Marangoni.
+Over a flame is heated some water in a glass jar, through the stopper of
+which passes a bent tube to bell-jar (held obliquely), which thus gets
+filled with aqueous vapor. The upper half of a thin Leyden jar charged is
+brought into the bell-jar, and held there four or five seconds; it is
+then found entirely discharged. That the real cause of this, however, is
+condensation of the vapor on the part of the glass that is not coated with
+tin foil (the liquid layer acting by conduction) can be proved; for if that
+part of the jar be passed several times rapidly through the flame, so as
+to heat it to near 100 deg. C., before inserting in the bell-jar, a different
+effect will be had; the Leyden jar will give out long sparks after
+withdrawal. This is because the glass being heated no longer condenses the
+vapor on its surface, and there is no superficial conduction, as in the
+previous case.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+FLOATING PONTOON DOCK.
+
+
+Considerable attention has been given for some years past to the subject of
+floating pontoon docks by Mr. Robert Turnbull, naval architect, of South
+Shields, Eng., who has devised the ingenious arrangement which forms the
+subject of the annexed illustration. The end aimed at and now achieved by
+Mr. Turnbull was so to construct floating docks or pontoons that they may
+rise and fall in a berth, and be swung round at one end upon a center post
+or cylinder--nautically known as a dolphin--projecting from the ground at
+a slight distance from the berth. The cylinder is in deep water, and,
+when the pontoon is swung and sunk to the desired depth by letting in the
+necessary amount of water, a vessel can be floated in and then secured. The
+pontoon, with the vessel on it, is then raised by pumping out the contained
+water until she is a little above the level of the berth. The whole is then
+swung round over the berth, the vessel then being high and dry to enable
+repairs or other operations to be conducted. For this purpose, one end of
+the pontoon is so formed as to enable it to fit around the cylinder, and
+to be held to it as to a center or fulcrum, about which the pontoon can be
+swung. The pontoon is of special construction, and has air-chambers at the
+sides placed near the center, so as to balance it. It also has chambers at
+the ends, which are divided horizontally in order that the operation of
+submerging within a berth or in shallow water may be conducted without
+risk, the upper chambers being afterwards supplied with water to sink the
+pontoon to the full depth before a vessel is hauled in. When the ship is in
+place, the pontoon with her is then lifted above the level of the berth in
+which it has to be placed, and then swung round into the berth. In some
+cases, the pontoon is provided with a cradle, so that, when in berth, the
+vessel on the cradle can be hauled up a slip with rails arranged as
+a continuation of the cradle-rails of the pontoon, which can be then
+furnished with another cradle, and another vessel lifted.
+
+It is this latter arrangement which forms the subject of our illustration,
+the vessel represented being of the following dimensions: Length between
+perpendiculars, 350 feet; breadth, moulded, 40 feet; depth, moulded, 32
+feet; tons, B. M., 2,600; tons net, 2,000. At A, in fig. 1, is shown in
+dotted lines a portion of the vessel and pontoon, the ship having just been
+hauled in and centered over the keel blocks. At B, is shown the pontoon
+with the ship raised and swung round on to a low level quay. Going a step
+further in the operation, we see at C, the vessel hauled on to the slipways
+on the high-level quay. In this case the cylinder is arranged so that
+the vessel may be delivered on to the rails or slips, which are arranged
+radially, taking the cylinder as the center. There may be any number of
+slips so arranged, and one pontoon may be made available for several
+cylinders at the deep water parts of neighboring repairing or building
+yards, in which case the recessed portion of the pontoon, when arranged
+around the cylinder, has stays or retaining bars fitted to prevent it
+leaving the cylinder when the swinging is taking place, such as might
+happen in a tideway.
+
+[Illustration: Fig. 1. IMPROVED FLOATING PONTOON DRY DOCK.]
+
+The arrangements for delivering vessels on radial slips is seen in plan at
+fig. 2, where A represents the river or deep water; B is the pontoon with
+the vessel; C being the cylinder or turning center; D is the low-level
+quay on to which the pontoon carrying the ship is first swung; E is the
+high-level quay with the slip-ways; F is an engine running on rails around
+the radial slips for drawing the vessels with the cradle off the pontoon,
+and hauling them up on to the high-level quay; and G shows the repairing
+shops, stores, and sheds. A pontoon attached to a cylinder may be fitted
+with an ordinary wet dock; and then the pontoon, before or after the vessel
+is upon it, can be slewed round to suit the slips up which the vessel has
+to be moved, supposing the slips are arranged radially. In this case, the
+pivot end of the pontoon would be a fixture, so to speak, to the cylinder.
+
+The pontoon may also be made available for lifting heavy weights, by
+fitting a pair of compound levers or other apparatus at one end, the
+lifting power being in the pontoon itself. In some cases, in order to
+lengthen the pontoon, twenty-five or fifty foot lengths are added at
+the after end. When not thus engaged, those lengths form short pontoons
+suitable for small vessels.--_Iron_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WEIRLEIGH, BRENCHLEY, KENT.
+
+
+Some few years since, Mr. Harrison Weir (whose drawings of natural history
+are known probably to a wider circle of the general public than the works
+of most artists), wishing to pursue his favorite study of animals and
+horticulture, erected on the steep hillside of the road leading from
+Paddock Wood to Brenchley, a small "cottage ornee" with detached studio.
+Afterward desiring more accommodation, he carried out the buildings shown
+in our illustrations. Advantage has been taken of the slope of the hill on
+one side, and the rising ground in the rear on the other, to increase the
+effect of the buildings and meet the difficulty of the levels. The two
+portions--old, etched, and new, shown as black--are connected together by a
+handsome staircase, which is carried up in the tower, and affords access to
+the various levels. The materials are red brick, with Bathstone dressings,
+and weather-tiling on the upper floors. Black walnut, pitch pine, and
+sequoias have been used in the staircase, and joiner's work to the
+principal rooms. The principal stoves are of Godstone stone only, no iron
+or metal work being used. The architects are Messrs. Wadmore & Baker, of 35
+Great St. Helens, E.C.; the builders, Messrs. Penn Brothers, of Pembury,
+Kent.--_Building News_.
+
+[Illustration: ARTISTS HOMES NO 11 "WEIRLEIGH" BRENCHLEY, KENT. THE
+RESIDENCE OF HARRISON WEIR ESQ'RE WADMORE & BAKER ARCHITECTS]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RAPID BREATHING AS A PAIN OBTUNDER IN MINOR SURGERY, OBSTETRICS, THE
+GENERAL PRACTICE OF MEDICINE AND OF DENTISTRY.
+
+[Footnote: Read before the Philadelphia County Medical Society, May 12,
+1880, by W. G. A. Bonwill, M.D., D.D.S., Philadelphia.]
+
+
+Through the kind invitation of your directors, I am present to give you
+the history of "rapid breathing" as an analgesic agent, as well as my
+experience therein since I first discovered it. It is with no little
+feeling of modesty that I appear before such a learned and honorable
+body of physicians and surgeons, and I accept the privilege as a high
+compliment. I trust the same liberal spirit which prompted you to call this
+subject to the light of investigation will not forsake you when you have
+heard all I have to say and you sit in judgment thereon. Sufficient time
+has now elapsed since the first promulgation of the subject for the shafts
+of ridicule to be well nigh spent (which is the common logic used to crush
+out all new ideas), and it is to be expected that gentlemen will look upon
+it with all the charity of a learned body, and not be too hasty to condemn
+what they have had but little chance to investigate; and, of course, have
+not practiced with that success which can only come from an intelligent
+understanding of its application and _modus operandi_.
+
+Knowing the history of past discoveries, I was well prepared for the
+crucible. I could not hope to be an exception. But, so far, the medical
+profession have extended me more favor than I have received at the hands of
+the dental profession.
+
+My first conception of the analgesic property of a pain obtunder in
+contradistinction to its anaesthetic effect, which finally led to the
+discovery of the inhalation of common air by "rapid breathing," was in 1855
+or 1856, while performing upon my own teeth certain operations which gave
+me intense pain (and I could not afford to hurt myself) without a resort to
+ether and chloroform. These agents had been known so short a time that no
+one was specially familiar with their action. Without knowing whether I
+could take chloroform administered by myself, and at the same time perform
+with skill the excavation of extremely sensitive dentine or tooth-bone, as
+if no anaesthetic had been taken, and not be conscious of pain, was more
+than the experience of medical men at that time could assure me. But,
+having a love for investigation of the unknown, I prepared myself for the
+ordeal. By degrees I took the chloroform until I began to feel very plainly
+its primary effects, and knowing that I must soon be unconscious, I applied
+the excavator to the carious tooth, and, to my surprise, found no pain
+whatever, but the sense of touch and hearing were marvelously intensified.
+The small cavity seemed as large as a half bushel; the excavator more the
+size of an ax; and the sound was equally magnified. That I might not be
+mistaken, I repeated the operation until I was confident that anaesthetics
+possessed a power not hitherto known--that of analgesia. To be doubly
+certain, I gave it in my practice, in many cases with the same happy
+results, which saved me from the risks incident to the secondary effects of
+anaesthetics, and which answered for all the purposes of extracting from
+one to four teeth. Not satisfied with any advance longer than I could find
+a better plan, I experimented with the galvanic current (to and fro) by so
+applying the poles that I substituted a stronger impression by electricity
+from the nerve centers or ganglia to the peripheries than was made from the
+periphery to the brain. This was so much of a success that I threw
+aside chloroform and ether in removing the living nerve of a tooth with
+instruments instead of using arsenic; and for excavating sensitive caries
+in teeth, preparatory to filling, as well as many teeth extracted by it.
+But this was short-lived, for it led to another step. Sometimes I would
+inflict severe pain in cases of congested pulps or from its hasty
+application, or pushing it to do too much, when my patient invariably would
+draw or inhale the breath _very forcibly and rapidly_. I was struck with
+the repeated coincidence, and was led to exclaim: "Nature's anaesthetic."
+This then reminded me of boyhood's bruises. The involuntary action of every
+one who has a finger hurt is to place it to the mouth and draw violently in
+the air and hold it for an instant, and again repeat it until the pain is
+subdued. The same action of the lungs occurs, except more powerfully,
+in young children who take to crying when hurt. It will be noticed they
+breathe very rapidly while furiously crying, which soon allays the
+irritation, and sleep comes as the sequel. Witness also when one is
+suddenly startled, how violently the breath is taken, which gives relief.
+The same thing occurs in the lower animals when pain is being inflicted at
+the hand of man.
+
+This was advance No. 3, and so sure was I of this new discovery, that I at
+once made an application while removing decay from an extremely sensitive
+tooth. To be successful, I found I must make the patient take the start,
+and I would follow with a thrust from the excavator, which move would be
+accomplished before the lungs could be inflated. This was repeated for
+at least a minute, until the operation was completed, I always following
+immediately or synchronously with the inhalation.
+
+This led to step No. 4, which resulted in its application to the extracting
+of teeth and other operations in minor surgery.
+
+Up to this time I had believed the sole effect of the rapid inhalation was
+due to mere diversion of the will, and this was the only way nature could
+so violently exert herself--that of controlling the involuntary action of
+the lungs to her uses by the _safety valve_, or the voluntary movement.
+
+The constant breathing of the patient for thirty seconds to a minute left
+him in a condition of body and mind resembling the effects of ether and
+chloroform in their primary stages. I could but argue that the prolonged
+breathing each time had done it; and, if so, then there must be some
+specific effect over and above the mere diversion by the will. To what
+could it be due? To the air alone, which went in excess into the lungs in
+the course of a minute! Why did I not then immediately grasp the idea of
+its broader application as now claimed for it? It was too much, gentlemen,
+for that hour. Enough had been done in this fourth step of conception to
+rest in the womb of time, until by evolution a higher step could be made at
+the maturity of the child. Being self-satisfied with my own baby, I watched
+and caressed it until it could take care of itself, and my mind was again
+free for another conception.
+
+The births at first seemed to come at very short intervals; but see how
+long it was between the fourth and the fifth birth. It was soon after that
+my mind became involved in inventions--a hereditary outgrowth--and the
+electric mallet and then the dental engine, the parent of your surgical
+engine, to be found in the principal hospitals of this city, took such
+possession of my whole soul, that my air analgesic was left slumbering. It
+was not until August, 1875--nineteen years after--that it again came up in
+full force, without any previous warning.
+
+This time it was no law of association that revived it; but it seemed
+the whispering of some one in the air--some ethereal spirit, if you
+please--which instituted it, and advanced the following problem: "Nitrous
+oxide gas is composed of the same elements as ordinary air, with a larger
+equivalent of oxygen, except it is a chemical compound, not a mechanical
+mixture, and its anaesthetic effects are said to be due to the excess of
+oxygen. If this be a fact, then why can you not produce a similar effect by
+rapid breathing for a minute, more or less, by which a larger quantity of
+oxygen is presented in the lungs for absorption by the blood?"
+
+This query was soon answered by asking myself another: "If the rapid
+inhalation of air into the lungs does not increase the heart's action and
+cause it to drive the blood in exact ratio to the inhalations, then _I can_
+produce partial anaesthesia from this excess of oxygen brought about by the
+voluntary movements over their ordinary involuntary action of the lungs."
+The next question was: Will my heart be affected by this excess of air in
+the lungs to such an extent that there will be a full reciprocity between
+them? Without making any trial of it, I argued that, while there is no
+other muscular movement than that of the chest as under the control of the
+will, and as nature has given to the will the perfect control over the
+lungs to supply more or less air, as is demanded by the pneumogastric nerve
+for the immediate wants of the economy, when the _involuntary action_ is
+not sufficient; and the heart not being under the control of the will, and
+its action never accelerated or diminished except by a specific poison, or
+from the general activity of the person in violent running or working, the
+blood is forced into the heart faster and must get rid of it, when a larger
+supply of oxygen is demanded and rapid breathing must occur, or asphyxia
+result. I was not long in deciding that the heart _would not be
+accelerated_ but a trifle--say a tenth--and, under the circumstances, I
+said: "The air _is_ an anaesthetic."
+
+From this rapid course of argument, I was so profoundly convinced of its
+truth, that without having first tried it upon my own person, I would have
+sat where I was, upon the curbstone, and had a tooth removed with the
+perfect expectation of absence of pain and of still being conscious of
+touch. While yet walking with my children, I commenced to breathe as
+rapidly as possible, and, as anticipated, found my steps growing shorter
+and shorter, until I came to a stand, showing to my mind clearly that my
+argument in advance was right, so far as locomotion was concerned; and,
+upon referring to my pulse, I found but little acceleration.
+
+To what other conclusion could I arrive from this argument, with the
+foundation laid nineteen years before, when I established on my own person
+by experiment the fact of analgesia as induced from chloroform, with the
+many experiments in rapid respiration on tooth bone?
+
+From this moment until its first application to the extraction of a tooth
+you can well imagine my suspense. That I might not fail in the very first
+attempt, I compelled myself and others in my household to breathe rapidly
+to investigate the phenomenon. This gave me some idea as to the proper
+method of proceeding in its administering.
+
+The first case soon appeared, and was a perfect success, going far beyond
+my anticipations, for the effect was such as to produce a partial paralysis
+of the hands and arms to the elbow. Again and again I tried it in every
+case of extraction and many other experiments, doubting my own senses for
+a long time at a result so anomalous and paradoxical. I was reminded just
+here of a phenomenon which gave me additional proof--that of blowing a
+dull fire to revive it. For a minute or so one blows and blows in rapid
+succession until, rising from the effort, a sense of giddiness for a
+few moments so overcomes that the upright position is with difficulty
+maintained. In this condition you are fitted for having a tooth extracted
+or an abscess lanced.
+
+Believing that I had something new to offer which might be of use to
+suffering humanity, I read the first article upon it Nov. 17, 1875, before
+the Franklin Institute. Shortly after I was invited before the Northern
+Medical Society of this city to address them thereon. A number of medical
+gentlemen have been using it in their practice, while the bulk of them have
+spurned it as "negative" and preposterous, without an effort at trying it,
+which I can _now_ very well understand.
+
+Unless one is aware of the fact that in the use of any agent which has the
+power to suspend the volition, it can be taken to that point where he is
+still conscious of _touch and hearing_, and at the same time not cognizant
+of pain inflicted, the action of rapid breathing could not be understood.
+And I regret to say that of three-fourths of the medical men I have talked
+with on the subject they had not been aware of such a possibility from
+ether and chloroform. Until this analgesic state could be established in
+their minds it was impossible to convince them that the excess of oxygen,
+as obtained by rapid breathing, could be made to produce a similar effect.
+_I_ should have been as reluctant as any one to believe it, had I not
+personally experienced the effect while performing an operation which would
+otherwise have been very painful. Such a result could not well be reached
+by any course of reasoning.
+
+Has it proven in my practice what has been claimed for it--a substitute
+for the powerful anaesthetics in minor operations in surgery? Most
+emphatically, yes! So completely has it fulfilled its humble mission in
+my office, that I can safely assert there has not been more than five per
+cent. of failures. I have given it under all circumstances of diseased
+organs, and have seen no other than the happiest results in its after
+effects. It may well be asked just here: Why has it not been more generally
+and widely used by the dental profession as well as the medical, if it is
+really what is claimed for it? The most satisfactory and charitable answer
+to be given is, the failure upon their part to comprehend the _fact_ as
+existing in chloroform and ether that there is such a state as analgesia;
+or, in other words, that the animal economy is so organized, while the
+sense of touch is not destroyed, but rather increased, the mind of the
+subject fails to perceive a sense of pain when anaesthetics are given, and
+the effects are manifested in the primary stage. As I before intimated,
+such is the knowledge possessed by most of those who administer ether and
+chloroform. This was enough to cause nearly every one to look upon it as a
+bubble or air castle. Many gentlemen told me they tried it upon themselves,
+and, while it affected them very seriously by giddiness, they still
+_retained consciousness_; and, such being the case, no effect could be
+produced for obtunding pain. Others told me they were afraid to continue
+the breathing alarmed at the vertigo induced. And the practitioner who has
+adopted it more effectively than any other laughed at me when I first told
+him of the discovery; but his intimate association with me changed his
+views after much explanation and argument between us.
+
+It was hardly to be expected that without this knowledge of analgesia,
+and without any explanation from me as to the _modus operandi_ of rapid
+breathing, other than a few suggestions or directions as to how the effect
+was induced, even the most liberal of medical men should be able to make
+it effective, or have the least disposition to give it a preliminary trial
+upon themselves, and, of course, would not attempt it upon a patient.
+Notwithstanding, it found a few adherents, but only among my personal
+_medical_ friends, with whom I had an opportunity to explain what I
+believed its physiological action, and the cases of success in my own
+practice. To this I have submitted as among the inevitable in the calendar
+of discoveries of all grades.
+
+My own profession have attempted to _ridicule_ it out of its birthright
+and possible existence, which style of argument is not resorted to by true
+logicians.
+
+To all this I can truly say I have not for one moment faltered. I could
+afford to wait. The liberality of this society alone fully compensates for
+the seeming indisposition of the past, believing that it is proper that
+every advance should be confronted, and, if in time found worthy, give it
+God speed.
+
+From its first conception I have diligently labored to solve its _modus
+operandi_, and the doubt in my own mind as to whether I could be mistaken
+in my observations. I asked the opinion of our best chemical teachers if
+air could have such effect. One attributed it to oxygen stimulation, and
+the other to nitrogen. Another gentleman told me the medical profession had
+come to the conclusion that it was possible for me to thus extract teeth,
+but it was due solely to my strong _personal magnetism_ (which power I was
+not before aware I possessed).
+
+Now, from what I have related of the successive and natural steps which
+finally culminated in this process or plan of analgesia induced by an
+excess of ordinary air taken forcibly into the lungs above what is
+necessary for life, and from what I shall state as to the apparently
+anomalous or paradoxical effects, with its physiological action, and the
+simple tests made upon each of my patients, I shall trust to so convince
+you of its plausibility and possibility that it will be made use of in
+hundreds of minor operations where ether and chloroform are now used.
+
+Aside from my assertion and that of its friends, that the effects can be
+produced by air alone, you must have some light shed upon the causes of its
+physiological action, which will appeal to your _medical_ reason.
+
+To assign an action to any drug is difficult, and in the cases of ether and
+the other anaesthetics a quarter of a century still finds many conflicting
+opinions. This being true, you will deal leniently with me for the opinion
+I hold as to their analgesic action. Of course it will be objected to,
+for the unseen is, to a great extent, unknowable. Enough for my argument,
+however; it seems to suit the case very well without looking for another;
+and while it was based on the phenomenon resulting from many trials, and
+not the trials upon it as a previous theory, I shall be content with it
+until a better one can be found.
+
+What is it I claim as a new discovery, and the facts and its philosophy?
+
+I have asserted that I can produce, from rapidly breathing common air at
+the rate of a hundred respirations a minute, a similar effect to that from
+ether, chloroform, and nitrous oxide gas, in their primary stages; and I
+can in this way render patients sufficiently insensible to acute pain from
+any operation where the time consumed is not over twenty to thirty seconds.
+While the special senses are in partial action, the sense of pain is
+obtunded, and in many cases completely annulled, consciousness and general
+sensibility being preserved.
+
+To accomplish this, each patient must be instructed how to act and what to
+expect. As simple as it may seem, there is a proper and consistent plan to
+enable you to reach full success. Before the patient commences to inhale he
+is informed of the fact that, while he will be unconscious of pain, he
+will know full, or partially well, every touch upon the person; that the
+inhalation must be vigorously kept up during the whole operation without
+for an instant stopping; that the more energetically and steadily he
+breathes, the more perfect the effect, and that if he cease breathing
+during the operation, pain will be felt. Fully impress them with this
+idea, for the very good reason that they may stop when in the midst of an
+operation, and the fullest effects be lost. It is obligatory to do so on
+account of its evanescent effects, which demand that the patient be pushed
+by the operator's own energetic appeals to "go on." It is very difficult
+for any person to respire more than one hundred times to the minute, as he
+will become by that time so exhausted as not to be able to breathe at all,
+as is evidenced by all who have thus followed my directions. For the next
+minute following the completion of the operation the subject will not
+breathe more than once or twice. Very few have force enough left to raise
+hand or foot. The voluntary muscles have nearly all been subjugated and
+overcome by the undue effort at forced inhalation of one hundred over
+seventeen, the normal standard. It will be more fully understood further on
+in my argument why I force patients, and am constantly speaking to them to
+go on.
+
+I further claim that for the past four years, so satisfactory has been the
+result of this system in the extracting of teeth and deadening extremely
+sensitive dentine, there was no longer any necessity for chloroform,
+ether, or nitrous oxide in the dental office. That such teeth as cannot be
+extracted by its aid can well be preserved and made useful, except in a
+very few cases, who will not be forced to breathe.
+
+The anaesthetics, when used in major operations, where time is needed for
+the operation, can be made more effective by a lesser quantity when given
+in conjunction with "rapid breathing." Drs. Garrettson and Hews, who have
+thus tried it, tell me it takes one-half to three-fourths less, and the
+after effects are far less nauseating and unpleasant.
+
+As an agent in labor where an anaesthetic is indicated, it is claimed by
+one who has employed it (Dr. Hews) in nearly every case for three years, he
+has used "rapid breathing" solely, and to the exclusion of chloroform and
+ether. For this I have his assertion, and have no doubt of it whatever, for
+if any agent could break down the action of the voluntary muscles of the
+parts involved, which prevent the involuntary muscles of the uterus from
+having their fullest effect, it is this. The very act of rapid breathing so
+affects the muscles of the abdomen as to force the contents of the uterus
+downward or outward, while the specific effect of the air at the end of a
+minute's breathing leaves the subject in a semi-prostrate condition, giving
+the uterus full chance to act in the interim, because free of the will to
+make any attempt at withholding the involuntary muscles of the uterus from
+doing their natural work. It is self evident; and in this agent we claim
+here a boon of inestimable value. And not least in such cases is, there is
+no danger of hemorrhage, since the cause of the effect is soon removed.
+
+In attestation of many cases where it has been tried, I have asked the
+mother, and, in some cases, the attendants, whether anything else had been
+given, and whether the time was very materially lessened, there has been
+but one response, and that in its favor.
+
+Gentlemen, if we are not mistaken in this, you will agree with me in saying
+that it is no mean thing, and should be investigated by intelligent men and
+reported upon. From my own knowledge of its effects in my practice, I am
+bound to believe this gentleman's record.
+
+I further claim for it a special application in dislocations. It has
+certainly peculiar merits here, as the will is so nearly subjugated by
+it as to render the patient quite powerless to resist your effort at
+replacing, and at the same time the pain is subdued.
+
+It is not necessary I should further continue special applications; when
+its _modus operandi_ is understood, its adaptation to many contingencies
+will of a sequence follow.
+
+It is well just here, before passing to the next point of consideration, to
+answer a query which may arise at this juncture:
+
+What are the successive stages of effects upon the economy from its
+commencement until the full effect is observed, and what proof have I that
+it was due to the amount of air inhaled?
+
+The heart's action is not increased more than from seventy (the average) to
+eighty and sometimes ninety, but is much enfeebled, or throwing a lesser
+quantity of blood. The face becomes suffused, as in blowing a fire or in
+stooping, which continues until the breathing is suspended, when the
+face becomes paler. (Have not noticed any purple as from asphyxia by a
+deprivation of oxygen.) The vision becomes darkened, and a giddiness soon
+appears. The voluntary muscles furthest from the heart seem first to be
+affected, and the feet and hands, particularly the latter, have a numbness
+at their ends, which increases, until in many cases there is partial
+paralysis as far as the elbow, while the limbs become fixed. The hands are
+so thoroughly affected that, when open, the patient is powerless to close
+them and _vice versa_. There is a vacant gaze from the eyes and looking
+into space without blinking of the eyelids for a half minute or more. The
+head seems incapable of being held erect, and there is no movement of the
+arms or legs as is usual when in great pain. There is no disposition on the
+part of the patient to take hold of the operator's hand or interfere with
+the operation.
+
+Many go on breathing mechanically after the tooth is removed, as if nothing
+had occurred. Some are aware that the tooth has been extracted, and say
+they felt it; others could not tell what had been accomplished. The
+majority of cases have an idea of what is being done, but are powerless to
+resist.
+
+With the very intelligent, or those who stop to reason, I have to teach
+them the peculiarities of being sensible of touch and not of pain.
+
+One very interesting case I will state. In extracting seven teeth for a
+lady who was very _unwilling_ to believe my statement as to touch and no
+pain, I first removed three teeth after having inhaled for one minute, and
+when fully herself, she stated that she could not understand why there was
+no pain while she was conscious of each one extracted; it was preposterous
+to believe such an effect could be possible, as her reason told her that
+there is connected with tooth extracting pain in the part, and of severe
+character, admitting, though, she felt no pain. She allowed one to be
+removed without anything, and she could easily distinguish the change, and
+exclaimed, "It is all the difference imaginable!" When the other three were
+extracted, there was perfect success again as with the first three.
+
+One of the most marked proofs of the effects of rapid breathing was that of
+a boy of eleven years of age for whom I had to extract the upper and lower
+first permanent molars on each side. He breathed for nearly a minute, when
+I removed in about twenty seconds all four of the teeth, without a moment's
+intermission or the stopping the vigorous breathing; and not a murmur,
+sigh, or tear afterward.
+
+He declared there was no pain, and we needed no such assertion, for there
+was not the first manifestation from him that he was undergoing such a
+severe operation.
+
+Another case, the same day, when I had to extract the superior wisdom teeth
+on both sides for an intelligent young lady of eighteen years, where I had
+to use two pairs of forceps on each tooth (equivalent to extraction of four
+teeth), and she was so profoundly affected afterward that she could; not
+tell me what had been done other than that I had touched her four times.
+She was overcome from its effects for at least a minute afterward. She was
+delighted.
+
+With such severe tests I fear very little the result in any case I can have
+them do as I bid.
+
+There can be no mistake that there is a _specific action_ from something.
+It cannot be personal magnetism or mesmeric influence exerted by me, for
+such cases are rare, averaging about 10 per cent, only of all classes.
+Besides, in mesmeric influence the time has nothing to do with it; whereas,
+in my cases, it cannot last over a half minute or minute at most. It cannot
+be fear, as such cases are generally more apt to get hurt the worse. It is
+not diversion of mind alone, as we have an effect above it.
+
+There is no better way of testing whether pain has been felt than by taking
+the lacerated or contused gums of the patient between the index finger
+and thumb and making a gentle pressure to collapse the alveolar borders;
+invariably, they will cry out lustily, _that is pain_! This gives undoubted
+proof of a specific agent. There is no attempt upon my _own_ part to exert
+any influence over my patients in any way other than that they shall
+believe what I say in regard to _giving_ them _no pain_ and in the
+following of my orders. Any one who knows how persons become mesmerized can
+attest that it was not the _operator who forces them under it against
+their will_, but it is a peculiar state into which any one who has within
+themselves this temperament can _place_ themselves where any one who knows
+how can have control. It is not the will of the operator. I therefore
+dismiss this as unworthy of consideration in connection with rapid
+breathing.
+
+Then you may now ask, To what do I attribute this very singular phenomenon?
+
+Any one who followed, in the earlier part of this paper, the course of
+the argument in my soliloquy, after twenty years had elapsed from my
+observation upon myself of the analgesic effects of chloroform, can almost
+give something of an answer.
+
+That you may the more easily grasp what I shall say, I will ask you, If it
+be possible for any human being to make one hundred inhalations in a minute
+and the heart's action is not increased more than ten or twenty pulsations
+over the normal, what should be the effect upon the brain and nerve
+centers?
+
+If the function of oxygen in common air is to set free in the blood,
+either in the capillaries alone, or throughout the whole of the arterial
+circulation, carbonic acid gas; and that it cannot escape from the system
+unless it do so in the lungs as it passes in the general current--except
+a trace that is removed by the skin and kidneys--and that the quantity of
+carbonic acid gas set free is in exact relation to the amount of oxygen
+taken into the blood, what effect _must be_ manifested where one hundred
+respirations in one minute are made--five or six times the normal
+number--while the heart is only propelling the blood a very little faster
+through the lungs, and _more feebly_--say 90 pulsations at most, when to
+be in proportion it should be 400 to 100 respirations to sustain life any
+length of time?
+
+You cannot deny the fact that a definite amount of oxygen can be absorbed
+and is absorbed as fast as it is carried into the lungs, even if there be
+one hundred respirations to the minute, while the pulsations of the heart
+are only ninety! Nature has _made it_ possible to breathe so rapidly to
+meet any emergency; and we can well see its beautiful application in the
+normal action of both the heart and lungs while one is violently running.
+
+What would result, and that very speedily, were the act of respiration to
+remain at the standard--say 18 or 20--when the heart is in violent action
+from this running? Asphyxia would surely end the matter! And why? The
+excessive exercise of the whole body is setting free from the tissues such
+an amount of excretive matter, and carbon more largely than all the others,
+that, without a relative action of the lungs to admit the air that oxygen
+may be absorbed, carbonic acid gas cannot be liberated through the lungs
+as fast as the waste carbon of the overworked tissues is being made by
+disassimilation from this excess of respiration.
+
+You are already aware how small a quantity of carbonic acid in excess in
+the air will seriously affect life. Even 2 to 3 per cent, in a short time
+will prove fatal. In ordinary respiration of 20 to the minute the average
+of carbonic acid exhaled is 4.35.
+
+From experiments long ago made by Vierordt--see Carpenter, p. 524--you will
+see the relative per cent, of carbonic acid exhaled from a given number of
+respirations. When he was breathing six times per minute, 5.5 per cent of
+the exhaled air was carbonic acid; twelve times, 4.2; twenty-four times,
+3.3; forty-eight times, 3; ninety-six times, 2.6.
+
+Remember this is based upon the whole number of respirations in the minute
+and not each exhalation--which latter could not be measured by the most
+minute method.
+
+Let us deduct the minimum amount, 2.6 per cent, of carbonic acid when
+breathing ninety-six times per minute, from the average, at twenty per
+minute, or the normal standard, which is recorded in Carpenter, p. 524, as
+4.35 per minute, and we have retained in the circulation nearly 2 per cent.
+of carbonic acid; that, at the average, would have passed off through the
+lungs without any obstruction, and life equalized; but it not having been
+thrown off as fast as it should have been, must, of necessity, be left to
+prey upon the brain and nerve centers; and as 2 to 3 per cent., we are
+told, will so poison the blood, life is imperiled and that speedily.
+
+It is not necessary we should argue the point as to whether oxygen
+displaces carbonic acid in the tissues proper or the capillaries. The
+theory of Lavoisier on this point has been accepted.
+
+We know furthermore, as more positive, that tissues placed in an atmosphere
+of oxygen will set free carbonic acid, and that carbonic acid has a
+paralyzing effect upon the human hand held in it for a short time. The
+direct and speedy effects of this acid upon the delicate nervous element of
+the brain is so well known that it must be accepted as law. One of the most
+marked effects is the suspension of locomotion of the legs and arms,
+and the direct loss of will power which must supervene before voluntary
+muscular inactivity, which amounts to partial paralysis in the hands or
+feet, or peripheral extremities of the same.
+
+Now that we have sufficient evidence from the authorities that carbonic
+acid can be retained in the blood by excessive breathing, and enough to
+seriously affect the brain, and what its effects are when taken directly
+into the lungs in excess, we can enter upon what I have held as the most
+reasonable theory of the phenomenon produced by rapid breathing for
+analgesic purposes; which _theory_ was not _first_ conceived and the
+process made to yield to it, but the phenomenon was long observed, and
+from the repetition of the effects and their close relationship to that
+of carbonic acid on the economy, with the many experiments performed
+upon myself, I am convinced that what I shall now state will be found to
+substantiate my discovery. Should it not be found to coincide with what
+some may say is physiological truth, it will not invalidate the discovery
+itself; for of that I am far more positive than Harvey was of the discovery
+of the circulation of the blood; or of Galileo of the spherical shape of
+the earth. And I ask that it shall not be judged by my theory, but from the
+practice.
+
+It should have as much chance for investigation as the theory of
+Julius Robert Mayer, upon which he founded, or which gave rise to the
+establishment of one of the most important scientific truths--"the
+conservation of energy," and finally the "correlation of forces," which
+theory I am not quite sure was correct, although it was accepted, and as
+yet, I have not seen it questioned.
+
+In all due respect to him I quote it from the sketch of that remarkable
+man, as given in the _Popular Science Monthly_, as specially bearing on my
+discovery:
+
+"Mayer observed while living in Java, that the _venous blood_ of some of
+his patients had a singularly bright red color. The observation riveted
+his attention; he reasoned upon it, and came to the conclusion that the
+brightness of the color was due to the fact that a less amount of oxidation
+was sufficient to keep up the temperature of the body in a hot climate than
+a cold one. The darkness of the venous blood he regarded as the visible
+sign of the energy of the oxidation."
+
+My observation leads me to the contrary, that the higher the temperature
+the more rapid the breathing to get clear of the excess of carbon, and
+hence more oxygenation of the blood which will arterialize the venous
+blood, unless there is a large amount of carbonized matter from the tissues
+to be taken up.
+
+Nor must it be denied because of the reasoning as presented to my mind by
+some outside influence in my soliloquy when I first exclaimed, "Nature's
+anaesthetic," where the argument as to the effects of nitrous oxide gas
+being due to an excess of oxygen was urged, and that common air breathed in
+excess would do the same thing.
+
+I am not sure that _it_ was correct, for the effects of nitrous oxide is,
+perhaps, due to a deprivation of mechanically mixed air.
+
+Knowing what I do of theory and practice, I can say with assurance that
+there is not a medical practitioner who would long ponder in any urgent
+case as to the thousand and one theories of the action of remedies; but
+would resort to the _practical_ experience of others and his own finally.
+(What surgeon ever stops to ask how narcotics effect their influence?)
+After nearly thirty years of association with ether and chloroform, who can
+positively answer as to their _modus operandi?_ It is thus with nearly the
+whole domain of medicine. It is not yet, by far, among the sciences, with
+immutable laws, such as we have in chemistry. Experimentation is giving us
+more specific knowledge, and "practice alone has tended to make perfect."
+(Then, gentlemen will not set at naught my assertion and practical results.
+When I have stated my case in full it is for _you_ to disprove both the
+theory and practice annunciated. So far as I am concerned I am responsible
+for both.)
+
+You will please bear with me for a few minutes in my attempt at theory.
+
+The annulling of pain, and, in some cases, its complete annihilation,
+can be accomplished in many ways. Narcotics, anaesthetics--local and
+internal--direct action of cold, and mesmeric or physiological influence,
+have all their advocates, and each _will surely_ do its work. There is one
+thing about which, I think, we can all agree, as to these agencies; unless
+the _will_ is partially and in some cases completely subjugated there can
+be no primary or secondary effect. The voluntary muscles must become wholly
+or partially paralyzed for the time. Telegraphic communication must be cut
+off from the brain, that there be no reflex action. It is not necessary
+there should be separate nerves to convey pleasure and pain any more than
+there should be two telegraphic wires to convey two messages.
+
+If, then, we are certain of this, it matters little as to whether it was
+done by corpuscular poisoning and anaemia as from chloroform or hyperaemia
+from ether.
+
+I think we are now prepared to show clearly the causes which effect the
+phenomena in "rapid breathing."
+
+The first thing enlisted is the _diversion of the will force_ in the act of
+forced respiration at a moment when the heart and lungs have been in normal
+reciprocal action (20 respirations to 80 pulsations), which act could
+not be made and carried up to 100 respirations per minute without such
+concentrated effort that ordinary pain could make no impression upon the
+brain while this abstraction is kept up.
+
+Second. There is a specific effect resulting from enforced respiration of
+100 to the minute, due to the _excess of carbonic acid gas set free from
+the tissues_, generated by this enforced normal act of throwing into the
+lungs _five times_ the normal amount of oxygen in one minute demanded, when
+the heart has not been aroused to exalted action, which comes from violent
+exercise in running or where one is suddenly startled, which excess of
+carbonic acid cannot escape in the same ratio from the lungs, since the
+heart does not respond to the proportionate overaction of the lungs.
+
+Third.--Hyperaemia is the last in this chain of effects, which is due to
+the excessive amount of air passing into the lungs preventing but little
+more than the normal quantity of blood from passing from the heart into
+the arterial circulation, but draws it up in the brain with its excess of
+carbonic acid gas to act also directly upon the brain as well as throughout
+the capillary and venous system, and as well upon the heart, the same as if
+it were suspended in that gas outside the body.
+
+These are evident to the senses of any liberal observer who can witness a
+subject rapidly breathing.
+
+Some ask why is not this same thing produced when one has been running
+rapidly for a few minutes? For a very good reason: in this case the rapid
+inhalations are preceded by the violent throes of the heart to propel the
+carbonized blood from the overworked tissues and have them set free at the
+lungs where the air is rushing in at the normal ratio of four to one. This
+is not an abnormal action, but is of necessity, or asphyxia would instantly
+result and the runner would drop. Such sometimes occurs where the runner
+exerts himself too violently at the very outset; and to do so he is
+compelled to hold his breath for this undue effort, and the heart cannot
+carry the blood fast enough. In this instance there is an approach to
+analgesia as from rapid breathing.
+
+Let me take up the first factor--_diversion of will_--and show that nature
+invariably resorts to a sudden inhalation to prevent severe infliction of
+pain being felt. It is the panacea to childhood's frequent bruises and
+cuts, and every one will remember how when a finger has been hurt it is
+thrust into the mouth and a violent number of efforts at rapid inhalation
+is effected until ease comes. By others it is subdued by a fit of crying,
+which if you will but imitate the sobs, will find how frequently the
+respirations are made.
+
+One is startled, and the heart would seem to jump out of the chest; in
+quick obedience to nature the person is found making a number of quick
+inhalations, which subdue the heart and pacify the will by diversion from
+the cause.
+
+The same thing is observed in the lower animals. I will relate a case:
+
+An elephant had been operated upon for a diseased eye which gave him great
+pain, for which he was unprepared, and he was wrathy at the keeper and
+surgeon. It soon passed off, and the result of the application was so
+beneficial to the animal that when brought out in a few days after, to have
+another touch of caustic to the part, he was prepared for them; and, just
+before the touch, he inflated the lungs to their fullest extent, which
+occupied more time than the effect of the caustic, when he made no effort
+at resistance and showed no manifestation of having been pained.
+
+In many cases of extraction of the temporary teeth of children, I make them
+at the instant I grasp the tooth take _one_ very violent inhalation, which
+is sufficient. Mesmeric anaesthesia can well be classified under diversion
+or subjugation of the will, but can be effected in but a small percentage
+of the cases. To rely upon this first or primary effect, except in
+instantaneous cases, would be failure.
+
+The second factor is the one upon which I can rely in such of the cases as
+come into my care, save when I cannot induce them to make such a number of
+respirations as is absolutely necessary. The _whole secret of success lies_
+in the greatest number of respirations that can be effected in from 60 to
+90 seconds, and that without any intermission. If the heart, by the _alow
+method of respiration_, is pulsating in ratio of four to one respiration,
+_no effect can be induced_.
+
+When the respirations are, say, 100 to the minute, and made with all the
+energy the patient can muster, and are kept up while the operation is going
+on, there can hardly be a failure in the minor operations.
+
+It is upon this point many of you may question the facts. Before I tried
+it for the first time upon my own person, I arrived at the same conclusion
+from a course of argument, that rapid breathing would control the heart's
+action and pacify it, and even reduce it below the normal standard under my
+urgent respirations.
+
+In view of the many applications made I feel quite sure in my belief that,
+inasmuch as the heart's action is but slightly accelerated, though with
+less force from rapid breathing at the rate of 100 to the minute, there is
+such an excess of carbonic acid gas set free and crowding upon the heart
+and capillaries of the brain, without a chance to escape by the lungs, that
+it is the same to all intents as were carbonic acid breathed through the
+lungs in common air. Look at the result after this has been kept up for a
+minute or more? During the next minute the respirations are not more than
+one or two, and the heart has fallen really below, in some cases, the
+standard beat, showing most conclusively that once oxygenation has taken
+place and that the free carbonic acid gas has been so completely consumed,
+that there is no involuntary call through the pneumogastric nerve for a
+supply of oxygen.
+
+If any physiological facts can be proven at all, then I feel quite sure of
+your verdict upon my side.
+
+There is no one thing that goes so far to prove the theory of Lavoisier
+regarding the action of oxygen in the tissues and capillaries for
+converting carbon into carbonic acid gas instead of the lungs, as held
+prior to that time, and still held by many who are not posted in late
+experiments. At the time I commenced this practice I must confess I knew
+nothing of it. The study of my cases soon led me to the same theory of
+Lavoisier, as I could not make the phenomena agree with the old theory of
+carbonic acid generated only in the lungs.
+
+When Vierordt was performing his experiments upon himself in rapid
+breathing from six times per minute to ninety-six, I cannot understand
+why he failed to observe and record what did certainly result--an extreme
+giddiness with muscular prostration and numbness in the peripheries of the
+hands and feet, with suffusion of the face, and such a loss of locomotion
+as to prevent standing erect without desiring support. Besides, the very
+great difference he found in the amount of carbonic acid retained in the
+circulation, the very cause of the phenomena just spoken of.
+
+One thing comes in just here to account for the lack of respiration the
+minute after the violent effort. The residual air, which in a normal state
+is largely charged with carbonic acid, has been so completely exhausted
+that some moments are consumed before there is sufficient again to call
+upon the will for its discharge.
+
+As to hyperaemia you will also assent, now that my second factor is
+explained; but it is so nearly allied to the direct effect of excessive
+respiration that we can well permit it to pass without argument. If
+hyperaemia _is present_, we have a more certain and rather more lasting
+effect.
+
+In conclusion, I will attempt to prognosticate the application of this
+principle to the cure of many diseases of chronic nature, and especially
+tuberculosis; where from a diminished amount of air going into the lungs
+for want of capacity, and particularly for want of energy and inclination
+to breathe in full or excess, the tissues cannot get clear of their
+excrementitious material, and particularly the carbon, which must go to the
+lungs, this voluntary effort can be made frequently during the day to
+free the tissues and enable them to take nutritious material for their
+restoration to their standard of health.
+
+Air will be found of far more value than ever before as one of the greatest
+of factors in nutrition, and which is as necessary as proper food, and
+without which every organization must become diseased, and no true
+assimilation can take place without a due amount of oxygen is hourly
+and daily supplied by this extra aid of volition which has been so long
+overlooked.
+
+The pure oxygen treatment has certainly performed many cures; yet, when
+compared to the mechanical mixture and under the direct control of
+the will, at all times and seasons, there is no danger from excessive
+oxygenation as while oxygen is given. When every patient can be taught to
+rely upon this great safety valve of nature, there will be less need for
+medication, and the longevity of our race be increased with but little
+dread by mankind for that terrible monster consumption, which seems to have
+now unbounded control.
+
+When this theory I have here given you to-night is fully comprehended by
+the medical world and taught the public, together with the kind of foods
+necessary for every one in their respective occupation, location, and
+climate, we may expect a vast change in their physical condition and a hope
+for the future which will brighten as time advances.
+
+I herewith attach the sphygmographic tracings made upon myself by another,
+showing the state of the pulse as compared with the progress of the
+respiration.
+
+
+ADDENDA.
+
+Sphygmographic tracings of the pulse of the essayist. Normal pulse 60
+to the minute. Ten seconds necessary for the slip to pass under the
+instrument.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+A, A1, normal pulse.
+
+B, pulse taken after breathing rapidly for 15 seconds when
+20 respirations had been taken.
+
+C, rapid breathing for 30 seconds, 43 respirations.
+
+D, " " 45 " 76 "
+
+E, " " 60 " 96 "
+F, pulse taken after rapid breathing for one minute, as in E, where no
+respiration had as yet been taken after the essayist had kept it up for
+that one minute. This was after 10 seconds had intervened.
+
+G, the same taken 50 seconds after, and still no respiration had been
+taken, the subject having no disposition to inhale, the blood having been
+over oxygenated.
+
+The pulse in E shows after 96 respirations but 14, or 84 per minute, and
+the force nearly as in the normal at A, A1.
+
+The record in B shows the force more markedly, but still normal in number.
+
+F and G show very marked diminution in the force, but the number of
+pulsations not over 72 per minute; G particularly so, the heart needing the
+stimulus of the oxygen for full power.
+
+The following incident which has but very recently been made known, gives
+most conclusive evidence of the truth of the theory and practice of rapid
+breathing.
+
+A Mexican went into the office of a dentist in one of the Mexican cities to
+have a tooth extracted by nitrous oxide gas.
+
+The dentist was not in, and the assistant was about to permit the patient
+to leave without removing the tooth, when the wife of the proprietor
+exclaimed that she had often assisted her husband in giving the gas, and
+that she would do so in this instance if the assistant would agree to
+extract the tooth. It was agreed. All being in readiness, the lady turned
+on as she supposed the gas, and the Mexican patient was ordered to breathe
+as fast as possible to make sure of the full effect and no doubt of the
+final success. The assistant was about to extract, but the wife insisted on
+his breathing more rapidly, whereupon the patient was observed to become
+very dark or purple in the face, which satisfied the lady that the
+full effect was manifested, and the tooth was extracted, to the great
+satisfaction of all concerned. While the gas was being taken by the Mexican
+the gasometer was noticed to rise higher and higher as the patient breathed
+faster, and not to sink as was usual when the gas had been previously
+administered. This led to an investigation of the reason of such an
+anomalous result, when to their utter surprise they found the valve was so
+turned by the wife that the Mexican had been breathing nothing but common
+air, and instead of exhaling into the surrounding air he violently forced
+it into the gasometer with the nitrous oxide gas, causing it to rise and
+not sink, which it should have done had the valve been properly turned by
+the passage of gas into the lungs of the patient.
+
+No more beautiful and positive trial could happen, and might not again by
+accident or inadvertence happen again in a lifetime.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.
+
+
+When a bottle of any liquor charged with carbonic acid under strong
+pressure, such as champagne, sparkling cider, seltzer water, etc., is
+uncorked, the contents often escape with considerable force, flow out, and
+are nearly all lost. Besides this, the noise made by the popping of the
+cork is not agreeable to most persons. To remedy these inconveniences
+there has been devised the simple apparatus which we represent in the
+accompanying cut, taken from _La Nature_. The device consists of a hollow,
+sharp-pointed tube, having one or two apertures in its upper extremity
+which are kept closed by a hollow piston fitting in the interior of the
+tube. This tube, or "tap," as it may be called, is supported on a firm base
+to which is attached a draught tube, and a small lever for actuating the
+piston. After the tap has been thrust through the cork of the bottle of
+liquor the contents may be drawn in any quantity and as often as wanted by
+simply pressing down the lever with the finger; this operation raises the
+piston so that its apertures correspond with those in the sides of the top,
+and the liquid thus finds access to the draught tube through the interior
+of the piston. By removing the pressure the piston descends and thus closes
+the vents. By means of this apparatus, then, the contents of any bottle of
+effervescing liquids may be as easily drawn off as are those contained in
+the ordinary siphon bottles in use.
+
+[Illustration: TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHEMICAL SOCIETY, LONDON, JAN. 20, 1881.
+
+PROF. H.E. ROSCOE, President, in the Chair.
+
+
+Mr. Vivian Lewes read a paper on "_Pentathionic Acid_." In March last the
+author, at the suggestion of Dr. Debus, undertook an investigation of
+pentathionic acid, the existence of which has been denied. The analyses
+of the liquid obtained by Wackenroder and others, by passing sulphureted
+hydrogen and sulphur dioxide through water, are based on the assumption
+that only one acid is present in the solution, and consequently do not
+establish the existence of pentathionic acid; as, for example, a mixture of
+one molecule of H_2S_4O_6 and one molecule of H_2S_6O_6 would give the same
+analytical results as H_2S_5O_6. Moreover, no salt of pentathionic acid has
+been prepared in a pure state. The author has succeeded in preparing barium
+pentathionate thus: A Wackenroder solution was about half neutralized with
+barium hydrate, filtered, and the clear solution evaporated _in vacuo_ over
+sulphuric acid. After eighteen days crystals, which proved to be barium
+pentathionate + 3 molecules of water, formed. These crystals were
+separated, and the liquid further evaporated, when a second crop was
+obtained intermediate in composition between the tetra and pentathionate.
+These were separated, and the mother-liquor on standing deposited some
+oblong rectangular crystals. These on analysis proved to consist of baric
+pentathionate with three molecules of water. This salt dissolves readily in
+cold water; the solution is decomposed by strong potassic hydrate, baric
+sulphite, hyposulphites, and sulphur being formed. By a similar method of
+procedure the author obtained potassium pentathionate, anhydrous, and with
+one or two molecules of water. The author promises some further results
+with some other salts of the higher thionates.
+
+The president said that the society had to thank the author for a very
+complete research on the subject of pentathionic acid. He, however, begged
+to differ from him as to his statements concerning the researches of
+Messrs. Takamatsu and Smith; in his opinion these authors had proved the
+existence of pentathionic acid. He hoped that the crystals (which were very
+fine) would be measured.
+
+Dr. Debus said that no one had previously been able to make the salts of
+pentathionic acid, and expressed his sense of the great merit due to the
+author for his perseverance and success. The paper opened up some highly
+interesting theoretical speculations as to the existence of hexathionic
+acid. If potassium tetrathionate was dissolved in water it could be
+re-crystallized, but potassium pentathionate under similar circumstances
+splits into sulphur and tetrathionate; but a mixture of tetrathionate and
+pentathionate can be re-crystallized. It seemed as if the sulphur when
+eliminated from the pentathionate combined with the tetrathionate.
+
+Dr. Dupre asked Dr. Debus how it was that a molecule of pentathionate could
+be re-crystallized, whereas two molecules of pentathionate, which should,
+when half decomposed, furnish a molecule of tetra and a molecule of
+pentathionate, could not.
+
+Dr. Armstrong then read a _"Preliminary Note on some Hydrocarbons from
+Rosin Spirit."_ After giving an account of our knowledge of rosin spirit,
+the author described the result of the examination of the mixture of
+hydrocarbons remaining after heating it with sulphuric acid and diluting
+with half its volume of water and steam distilling. Thus treated rosin
+spirit furnishes about one-fourth of its volume of a colorless mobile
+liquid, which after long-continued fractional distillation is resolved into
+a variety of fractions boiling at temperatures from 95 deg. to over 180 deg. Each
+of the fractions was treated with concentrated sulphuric acid, and the
+undissolved portions were then re-fractionated. The hydrocarbons dissolved
+by the acid were recovered by heating under pressure with hydrochloric
+acid. Besides a cymene and a toluene, which have already been shown to
+exist in rosin spirit, metaxylene was found to be present. The hydrocarbons
+insoluble in sulphuric acid are, apparently, all members of the C_nH_{2n}
+series; they are not, however, true homologues of ethylene, but hexhydrides
+of hydrocarbons of the benzene series. Hexhydro-toluene and probably
+hex-hydrometaxylene are present besides the hydrocarbon, C_10H_20, but it
+is doubtful if an intermediate term is also present. It is by no means
+improbable, however, that these hydrocarbons are, at least in part,
+products of the action of the sulphuric acid. Cahours and Kraemer's and
+Godzki's observations on the higher fractions of crude wood spirit, in
+fact, furnish a precedent for this view. Referring to the results obtained
+by Anderson, Tilden, and Renard, the author suggests that rosin spirit
+perhaps contains hydrides intermediate in composition between those of
+the C_nH_{2n-6} and C_nH_{2n} series, also derived like the latter from
+hydrocarbons of the benzene series. Finally, Dr Armstrong mentioned that
+the volatile portion of the distillate from the non-volatile product of the
+oxidation of oil of turpentine in moist air furnishes ordinary cymene when
+treated in the manner above described. The fact that rosin spirit yields a
+different cymene is, he considers, an argument against the view which
+has more than once been put forward, that rosin is directly derived from
+terpene. Probably resin and turpentine, though genetically related, are
+products of distinct processes.
+
+The next paper was _"On the Determination of the Relative Weight of Single
+Molecules,"_ by E. Vogel, of San Francisco. This paper, which was taken as
+read, consists of a lengthy theoretical disquisition, in which the author
+maintains the following propositions: That the combining weights of all
+elements are one third of their present values; the assumption that equal
+volumes of gases contain equal numbers of molecules does not hold good;
+that the present theory of valency is not supported by chemical facts, and
+that its elimination would be no small gain for chemistry in freeing it
+of an element full of mystery, uncertainty, and complication; that the
+distinction between atoms and molecules will no longer be necessary;
+that the facts of specific heat do not lend any support to the theory of
+valency. The paper concludes as follows: "The cause of chemical action is
+undoubtedly atmospheric pressure, which under ordinary conditions is equal
+to the weight of 76 cubic centimeters of mercury, one of which equals 6.145
+mercury molecules, so that the whole pressure equals 467 mercury molecules.
+This force--which with regard to its chemical effect on molecules can be
+multiplied by means of heat--is amply sufficient to bring about the highest
+degree of molecular specific gravity by the reduction of the molecular
+volumes. To it all molecules are exposed and subjected unalterably, and
+if not accepted as the cause of chemical action, its influence has to be
+eliminated to allow the introduction and display of other forces."
+
+The next communication was _"On the Synthetical Production of Ammonia,
+by the Combination of Hydrogen and Nitrogen in Presence of Heated Spongy
+Platinum (Preliminary Notice),"_ by G. S. Johnson. Some experiments, in
+which pure nitrogen was passed over heated copper containing occluded
+hydrogen, suggested to the author the possibility of the formation of
+ammonia; only minute traces were formed. On passing, however, a mixture of
+pure nitrogen (from ammonium nitrite) and hydrogen over spongy platinum at
+a low red heat, abundant evidence was obtained of the synthesis of ammonia.
+The gases were passed, before entering the tube containing the platinum,
+through a potash bulb containing Nessler reagent, which remained colorless.
+On the contrary, the gas issuing from the platinum rapidly turned Nessler
+reagent brown, and in a few minutes turned faintly acid litmus solution
+blue; the odor of NH_3 was also perceptible. In one experiment 0.0144
+gramme of ammonia was formed in two hours and a half. The author promises
+further experiment as to the effect of temperature, rate of the gaseous
+current, and substitution of palladium for platinum. The author synthesized
+some ammonia before the Society with complete success.
+
+The President referred to the synthesis of ammonia from its elements
+recently effected by Donkin, and remarked that apparently the ammonia was
+formed in much larger quantities by the process proposed by the author of
+the present paper.
+
+Mr. Warington suggested that some HCl gas should be simultaneously passed
+with the nitrogen and hydrogen, and that the temperature of the spongy
+platinum should be kept just below the temperature at which NH_3
+dissociates, in order to improve the yield of NH_3.
+
+_"On the Oxidation of Organic Matter in Water"_ by A. Downes. The author
+considers that the mere presence of oxygen in contact with the organic
+matter has but little oxidizing action unless lowly organisms, as bacteria,
+etc. be simultaneously present. Sunlight has apparently considerable
+effect in promoting the oxidation of organic matter. The author quotes the
+following experiment: A sample of river water was filtered through paper.
+It required per 10,000 parts 0.236 oxygen as permanganate. A second portion
+was placed in a flask plugged with cotton wool, and exposed to sunlight for
+a week; it then required 0.200. A third portion after a week, but excluded
+from light, required 0.231. A fourth was boiled for five minutes, plugged,
+and then exposed to sunlight for a week; required 0.198. In a second
+experiment with well water a similar result was obtained; more organic
+matter was oxidized when the organisms had been killed by the addition of
+sulphuric acid than when the original water was allowed to stand for an
+equal length of time. The author also discusses the statement made by Dr.
+Frankland that there is less ground for assuming that the organized and
+living matter of sewage is oxidized in a flow of twelve miles of a river
+than for assuming that dead organic matter is oxidized in a similar
+flow.--_Chem. News._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ROSE OIL, OR OTTO OF ROSES.
+
+By CHARLES G. WARNFORD LOCK.
+
+
+This celebrated perfume is the volatile essential oil distilled from the
+flowers of some varieties of rose. The botany of roses appears to be in a
+transition and somewhat unsatisfactory state. Thus the otto-yielding rose
+is variously styled _Rosa damascena, R. sempervirens, R. moschata, R.
+gallica, R. centifolia, R. provincialis_. It is pretty generally agreed
+that the kind grown for its otto in Bulgaria in the damask rose (_R.
+damascena_), a variety induced by long cultivation, as it is not to be
+found wild. It forms a bush, usually three to four feet, but sometimes six
+feet high; its flowers are of moderate size, semi-double, and arranged
+several on a branch, though not in clusters or bunches. In color, they are
+mostly light-red; some few are white, and said to be less productive of
+otto.
+
+The utilization of the delicious perfume of the rose was attempted, with
+more or less success, long prior to the comparatively modern process of
+distilling its essential oil. The early methods chiefly in vogue were the
+distillation of rose-water, and the infusion of roses in olive oil, the
+latter flourishing in Europe generally down to the last century, and
+surviving at the present day in the South of France. The butyraceous oil
+produced by the distillation of roses for making rose-water in this country
+is valueless as a perfume; and the real otto was scarcely known in British
+commerce before the present century.
+
+The profitable cultivation of roses for the preparation of otto is limited
+chiefly by climatic conditions. The odoriferous constitutent of the otto
+is a liquid containing oxygen, the solid hydrocarbon or stearoptene, with
+which it is combined, being absolutely devoid of perfume. The proportion
+which this inodorous solid constituents bears to the liquid perfume
+increases with the unsuitability of the climate, varying from about 18 per
+cent. in Bulgarian oil, to 35 and even 68 per cent. in rose oils distilled
+in France and England. This increase in the proportion of stearoptene is
+also shown by the progressively heightened fusing-point of rose oils from
+different sources: thus, while Bulgarian oil fuses at about 61 deg. to 64 deg.
+Fahr., an Indian sample required 68 deg. Fahr.; one from the South of France,
+70 deg. to 73 deg. Fahr.; one from Paris, 84 deg. Fahr.; and one obtained in making
+rose-water in London, 86 deg. to 891/2 deg. Fahr. Even in the Bulgarian oil, a
+notable difference is observed between that produced on the hills and that
+from the lowlands.
+
+It is, therefore, not surprising that the culture of roses, and extraction
+of their perfume, should have originated in the East. Persia produced
+rose-water at an early date, and the town of Nisibin, north-west of Mosul,
+was famous for it in the 14th century. Shiraz, in the 17th century,
+prepared both rose water and otto, for export to other parts of Persia, as
+well as all over India. The Perso-Indian trade in rose oil, which continued
+to possess considerable importance in the third quarter of the 18th
+century, is declining, and has nearly disappeared; but the shipments of
+rose-water still maintain a respectable figure. The value, in rupees, of
+the exports of rose-water from Bushire in 1879, were--4,000 to India, 1,500
+to Java, 200 to Aden and the Red Sea, 1,000 to Muscat and dependencies, 200
+to Arab coast of Persian Gulf and Bahrein, 200 to Persian coast and Mekran,
+and 1,000 to Zanzibar. Similar statistics relating to Lingah, in the same
+year, show--Otto: 400 to Arab coast of Persian Gulf, and Bahrein; and 250
+to Persian coast and Mekran. And Bahrein--Persian Otto: 2,200 to Koweit,
+Busrah, and Bagdad. Rose-water: 200 to Arab coast of Persian Gulf, and
+1,000 to Koweit, Busrah, and Bagdad.
+
+India itself has a considerable area devoted to rose-gardens, as at
+Ghazipur, Lahore, Amritzur, and other places, the kind of rose being _R.
+damascena_, according to Brandis. Both rose-water and otto are produced.
+The flowers are distilled with double their weight of water in clay stills;
+the rose-water (_goolabi pani_) thus obtained is placed in shallow vessels,
+covered with moist muslin to keep out dust and flies, and exposed all night
+to the cool air, or fanned. In the morning, the film of oil, which has
+collected on the top, is skimmed off by a feather, and transferred to a
+small phial. This is repeated for several nights, till almost the whole of
+the oil has separated. The quantity of the product varies much, and three
+different authorities give the following figures: (_a_) 20,000 roses to
+make 1 rupee's weight (176 gr.) of otto; (_b_) 200,000 to make the same
+weight; (_c_) 1,000 roses afford less than 2 gr. of otto. The color ranges
+from green to bright-amber, and reddish. The oil (otto) is the most
+carefully bottled; the receptacles are hermetically sealed with wax, and
+exposed to the full glare of the sun for several days. Rose water deprived
+of otto is esteemed much inferior to that which has not been so treated.
+When bottled, it is also exposed to the sun for a fortnight at least.
+
+The Mediterranean countries of Africa enter but feebly into this industry,
+and it is a little remarkable that the French have not cultivated it in
+Algeria. Egypt's demand for rose-water and rose-vinegar is supplied from
+Medinet Fayum, south-west of Cairo. Tunis has also some local reputation
+for similar products. Von Maltzan says that the rose there grown for otto
+is the dog-rose (_R. canina_), and that it is extremely fragrant, 20 lb.
+of the flower yielding about 1 dr. of otto. Genoa occasionally imports a
+little of this product, which is of excellent quality. In the south of
+France rose gardens occupy a large share of attention, about Grasse,
+Cannes, and Nice; they chiefly produce rose-water, much of which is
+exported to England. The essence (otto) obtained by the distillation of the
+Provence rose (_R. provincialis_) has a characteristic perfume, arising, it
+is believed, from the bees transporting the pollen of the orange flowers
+into the petals of the roses. The French otto is richer in stearoptene than
+the Turkish, nine grammes crystallizing in a liter (13/4 pint) of alcohol at
+the same temperature as 18 grammes of the Turkish. The best preparations
+are made at Cannes and Grasse. The flowers are not there treated for the
+otto, but are submitted to a process of maceration in fat or oil, ten
+kilos. of roses being required to impregnate one kilo. of fat. The price of
+the roses varies from 50c. to 1 fr. 25c. per kilo.
+
+But the one commercially important source of otto of roses is a
+circumscribed patch of ancient Thrace or modern Bulgaria, stretching along
+the southern slopes of the central Balkans, and approximately included
+between the 25th and 26th degrees of east longitude, and the 42d and 43d of
+north latitude. The chief rose-growing districts are Philippopoli, Chirpan,
+Giopcu, Karadshah-Dagh, Kojun-Tepe, Eski-Sara, Jeni-Sara, Bazardshik, and
+the center and headquarters of the industry, Kazanlik (Kisanlik),
+situated in a beautiful undulating plain, in the valley of the Tunja. The
+productiveness of the last-mentioned district may be judged from the fact
+that, of the 123 Thracian localities carrying on the preparation of otto in
+1877--they numbered 140 in 1859--42 belong to it. The only place affording
+otto on the northern side of the Balkans is Travina. The geological
+formation throughout is syenite, the decomposition of which has provided a
+soil so fertile as to need but little manuring. The vegetation, according
+to Baur, indicates a climate differing but slightly from that of the Black
+Forest, the average summer temperatures being stated at 82 deg. Fahr. at noon,
+and 68 deg. Fahr. in the evening. The rose-bushes nourish best and live longest
+on sandy, sun-exposed (south and south-east aspect) slopes. The flowers
+produced by those growing on inclined ground are dearer and more esteemed
+than any raised on level land, being 50 per cent. richer in oil, and that
+of a stronger quality. This proves the advantage of thorough drainage. On
+the other hand, plantations at high altitudes yield less oil, which is of a
+character that readily congeals, from an insufficiency of summer heat. The
+districts lying adjacent to and in the mountains are sometimes visited
+by hard frosts, which destroy or greatly reduce the crop. Floods also
+occasionally do considerable damage. The bushes are attacked at intervals
+and in patches by a blight similar to that which injures the vines of the
+country.
+
+The bushes are planted in hedge-like rows in gardens and fields, at
+convenient distances apart, for the gathering of the crop. They are seldom
+manured. The planting takes place in spring and autumn; the flowers attain
+perfection in April and May, and the harvest lasts from May till the
+beginning of June. The expanded flowers are gathered before sunrise,
+often with the calyx attached; such as are not required for immediate
+distillation are spread out in cellars, but all are treated within the day
+on which they are plucked. Baur states that, if the buds develop slowly,
+by reason of cool damp weather, and are not much exposed to sun-heat, when
+about to be collected, a rich yield of otto, having a low solidifying
+point, is the result, whereas, should the sky be clear and the temperature
+high at or shortly before the time of gathering, the product is diminished
+and is more easily congealable. Hanbury, on the contrary, when distilling
+roses in London, noticed that when they had been collected on fine dry
+days the rose-water had most volatile oil floating upon it, and that, when
+gathered in cool rainy weather, little or no volatile oil separated.
+
+The flowers are not salted, nor subjected to any other treatment, before
+being conveyed in baskets, on the heads of men and women and backs of
+animals, to the distilling apparatus. This consists of a tinned-copper
+still, erected on a semicircle of bricks, and heated by a wood fire; from
+the top passes a straight tin pipe, which obliquely traverses a tub kept
+constantly filled with cold water, by a spout, from some convenient
+rivulet, and constitutes the condenser. Several such stills are usually
+placed together, often beneath the shade of a large tree. The still is
+charged with 25 to 50 lb. of roses, not previously deprived of their
+calyces, and double the volume of spring water. The distillation is carried
+on for about l1/2 hours, the result being simply a very oily rose-water
+(_ghyul suyu_). The exhausted flowers are removed from the still, and the
+decoction is used for the next distillation, instead of fresh water.
+The first distillates from each apparatus are mixed and distilled by
+themselves, one-sixth being drawn off; the residue replaces spring water
+for subsequent operations. The distillate is received in long-necked
+bottles, holding about 11/4 gallon. It is kept in them for a day or two, at a
+temperature exceeding 59 deg. Fahr., by which time most of the oil, fluid
+and bright, will have reached the surface. It is skimmed off by a small,
+long-handled, fine-orificed tin funnel, and is then ready for sale. The
+last-run rose-water is extremely fragrant, and is much prized locally for
+culinary and medicinal purposes. The quantity and quality of the otto are
+much influenced by the character of the water used in distilling. When
+hard spring water is employed, the otto is rich in stearoptene, but less
+transparent and fragrant. The average quantity of the product is estimated
+by Baur at 0.037 to 0.040 per cent.; another authority says that 3,200
+kilos. of roses give 1 kilo. of oil.
+
+Pure otto, carefully distilled, is at first colorless, but speedily becomes
+yellowish; its specific gravity is 0.87 at 72.5 deg. Fahr.; its boiling-point
+is 444 deg. Fahr.; it solidifies at 51.8 deg. to 60.8 deg. Fahr., or still higher; it
+is soluble in absolute alcohol, and in acetic acid. The most usual and
+reliable tests of the quality of an otto are (1) its odor, (2) its
+congealing point, (3) its crystallization. The odor can be judged only
+after long experience. A good oil should congeal well in five minutes at
+a temperature of 54.5 deg. Fahr.; fraudulent additions lower the congealing
+point. The crystals of rose-stearoptene are light, feathery, shining
+plates, filling the whole liquid. Almost the only material used for
+artificially heightening the apparent proportion of stearoptene is said to
+be spermaceti, which is easily recognizable from its liability to settle
+down in a solid cake, and from its melting at 122 deg. Fahr., whereas
+stearoptene fuses at 91.4 deg. Fahr. Possibly paraffin wax would more easily
+escape detection.
+
+The adulterations by means of other essential oils are much more difficult
+of discovery, and much more general; in fact, it is said that none of the
+Bulgarian otto is completely free from this kind of sophistication. The
+oils employed for the purpose are certain of the grass oils (_Andropogon_
+and _Cymbopogon spp._) notably that afforded by _Andropogon, Schoenanthus_
+called _idris-yaghi_ by the Turks, and commonly known to Europeans as
+"geranium oil," though quite distinct from true geranium oil. The addition
+is generally made by sprinkling it upon the rose-leaves before distilling.
+It is largely produced in the neighborhood of Delhi, and exported to
+Turkey by way of Arabia. It is sold by Arabs in Constantinople in large
+bladder-shaped tinned-copper vessels, holding about 120 lb. As it is
+usually itself adulterated with some fatty oil, it needs to undergo
+purification before use. This is effected in the following manner: The
+crude oil is repeatedly shaken up with water acidulated with lemon-juice,
+from which it is poured off after standing for a day. The washed oil
+is placed in shallow saucers, well exposed to sun and air, by which it
+gradually loses its objectionable odor. Spring and early summer are the
+best seasons for the operation, which occupies two to four weeks, according
+to the state of the weather and the quality of the oil. The general
+characters of this oil are so similar to those of otto of roses--even the
+odor bearing a distant resemblance--that their discrimination when mixed is
+a matter of practical impossibility. The ratio of the adulteration varies
+from a small figure up to 80 or 90 per cent. The only safeguard against
+deception is to pay a fair price, and to deal with firms of good repute,
+such as Messrs. Papasoglu, Manoglu & Son, Ihmsen & Co., and Holstein & Co.
+in Constantinople.
+
+The otto is put up in squat-shaped flasks of tinned copper, called
+_kunkumas_, holding from 1 to 10 lb., and sewn up in white woolen cloths.
+Usually their contents are transferred at Constantinople into small gilded
+bottles of German manufacture for export. The Bulgarian otto harvest,
+during the five years 1867-71, was reckoned to average somewhat below
+400,000 _meticals, miskals_, or _midkals_ (of about 3 dwt. troy), or 4,226
+lb. av.; that of 1873, which was good, was estimated at 500,000, value
+about L700,000. The harvest of 1880 realized more than L1,000,000, though
+the roses themselves were not so valuable as in 1876. About 300,000
+_meticals_ of otto, valued at L932,077, were exported in 1876 from
+Philippopolis, chiefly to France, Australia, America, and Germany.
+
+--_Jour. Soc. of Arts._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+A NEW METHOD OF PREPARING METATOLUIDINE.
+
+By OSKAR WIDMAN.
+
+
+The author adds in small portions five parts metanitro-benzaldehyd to nine
+parts of phosphorus pentachloride, avoiding a great rise of temperature.
+When the reaction is over, the whole is poured into excess of cold water,
+quickly washed a few times with cold water, and dissolved in alcohol. After
+the first crystallization the compound melts at 65 deg., and is perfectly pure.
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Scientific American Supplement No. 275, by Various
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+Title: Scientific American Supplement No. 275
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+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8195]
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, SUP. 275 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Olaf Voss, Don Kretz, Juliet Sutherland,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 275
+
+
+
+
+NEW YORK, APRIL 9, 1881
+
+Scientific American Supplement. Vol. XI, No. 275.
+
+Scientific American established 1845
+
+Scientific American Supplement, $5 a year.
+
+Scientific American and Supplement, $7 a year.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS.
+
+I. ENGINEERING AND MECHANICS.--The Various Modes of
+ Transmitting Power to a Distance. (Continued from No. 274.)
+ By ARTHUR ARCHARD. of Geneva.--II. Compressed Air.--III.
+ Transmission by Pressure Water.--IV. Transmission by
+ Electricity.--General Results
+
+ The Hotchkiss Revolving Gun
+
+ Floating Pontoon Dock. 2 figures.--Improved floating pontoon dock
+
+II. TECHNOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY.--Wheat and Wheat Bread. By H. MEGE
+ MOURIES.--Color in bread.--Anatomical structure and chemical
+ composition of wheat.--Embryo and coating of the embryo.--
+ Cerealine--Phosphate of calcium.--1 figure, section of a grain
+ of wheat, magnified.
+
+ Origin of New Process Milling.--Special report to the Census
+ Bureau. By ALBERT HOPPIN.--Present status of milling structures
+ and machinery in Minneapolis by Special Census Agent C. W.
+ JOHNSON.--Communication from GEORGE T. SMITH.
+
+ Tap for Effervescing Liquids. 1 figure.
+
+ London Chemical Society.--Notes.--Pentathionic acid, Mr.
+ VIVIAN LEWES.--Hydrocarbons from Rosin Spirit. Dr.
+ ARMSTRONG.--On the Determination of the Relative Weight of Single
+ Molecules. E. VOGEL.--On the Synthetical Production of Ammonia
+ by the Combination of Hydrogen and Nitrogen in the Presence of
+ Heated Spongy Platinum, G. S. JOHNSON.--On the Oxidation of
+ Organic Matter in Water, A. DOWNS.
+
+ Rose Oil, or Otto of Roses. By CHAS. G. WARNFORD LOCK.--Sources
+ of rose oil.--History--Where rose gardens are now cultivated
+ for oil.--Methods of cultivation.--Processes of
+ distillation.--Adulterations
+
+ A New Method of Preparing Metatoluidine. By OSCAR WIDMAN.
+
+III. AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, ETC.--The Guenon Milk Mirror. 1 figure.
+ Escutcheon of the Jersey Bull Calf, Grand Mirror.
+
+ Two Good Lawn Trees
+
+ Cutting Sods for Lawns
+
+ Horticultural Notes: New apples, pears, grapes, etc.--Discussion
+ on Grapes. Western New York Society.--New peaches.--Insects
+ affecting horticulture.--Insect destroyers.
+
+ Observations on the Salmon of the Pacific. By DAVID S. JORDAN
+ and CHARLES B. GILBERT. Valuable census report.
+
+IV. LIGHT, ELECTRICITY ETC.--Relation between Electricity
+ and Light. Dr. O. T. Lodge's lecture before the London Institute.
+
+ Interesting Electrical Researches by Dr. Warren de La Rue and
+ Dr. Hugo Miller.
+
+ Telephony by Thermic Currents
+
+ The Telectroscope. By Moxs. SENLECQ. 5 figures. A successful
+ apparatus for transmitting and reproducing camera pictures by
+ electricity.
+
+V. HYGIENE, MEDICINE, ETC.--Rapid Breathing as a Pain Obtunde in
+ Minor Surgery, Obstetrics, the General Practice of Medicine, and
+ of Dentistry. Dr. W. G. A. Bonwill's paper before the
+ Philadelphia County Medical Society. 8 figures. Sphygmographic
+ tracings.
+
+VI. ARCHITECTURE, ART, ETC.--Artist's Homes. No. 11. "Weirleigh."
+ Residence of Harrison Weir. Perspective and plans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WHEAT AND WHEAT BREAD.
+
+By H. MEGE-MOURIES.
+
+
+In consequence of the interest that has been recently excited on the
+subject of bread reform, we have, says the London _Miller_, translated the
+interesting contribution of H. Mege-Mouries to the Imperial and Central
+Society of Agriculture of France, and subsequently published in a separate
+form in 1860, on "Wheat and Wheat Bread," with the illustration prepared
+by the author for the contribution. The author says: "I repeat in this
+pamphlet the principal facts put forth in the notes issued by me, and in
+the reports furnished by Mr. Chevreul to the Academy of Science, from 1853
+up to 1860."
+
+The study of the structure of the wheat berry, its chemical composition,
+its alimentary value, its preservation, etc., is not alone of interest to
+science, agriculture, and industry, but it is worthy of attracting the
+attention of governments, for this study, in its connection to political
+economy, is bound up with the fate and the prosperity of nations. Wheat has
+been cultivated from time immemorial. At first it was roughly crushed and
+consumed in the form of a thick soup, or in cakes baked on an ordinary
+hearth. Many centuries before the Christian era the Egyptians were
+acquainted with the means of making fermented or leavened bread; afterwards
+this practice spread into Greece, and it is found in esteem at Rome two
+centuries B.C.; from Rome the new method was introduced among the Gauls,
+and it is found to-day to exist almost the same as it was practiced at that
+period, with the exception, of course, of the considerable improvements
+introduced in the baking and grinding.
+
+Since the fortunate idea was formed of transforming the wheat into bread,
+this grain has always produced white bread, and dark or brown bread, from
+which the conclusion was drawn that it must necessarily make white bread
+and brown bread; on the other hand, the flours, mixed with bran, made a
+brownish, doughy, and badly risen bread, and it was therefore concluded
+that the bran, by its color, produced this inferior bread. From this error,
+accepted as a truth, the most contradictory opinions of the most opposite
+processes have arisen, which are repeated at the present day in the art of
+separating as completely as possible all the tissues of the wheat, and of
+extracting from the grain only 70 per cent of flour fit for making white
+bread. It is, however, difficult for the observer to admit that a small
+quantity of the thin yellow envelope can, by a simple mingling with the
+crumb of the loaf, color it brown, and it is still more difficult to admit
+that the actual presence of these envelopes can without decomposition
+render bread doughy, badly raised, sticky, and incapable of swelling in
+water. On the other hand, although some distinguished chemists deny or
+exalt the nutritive properties of bran, agriculturists, taking practical
+observation as proof, attribute to that portion of the grain a
+physiological action which has nothing in common with plastic alimentation,
+and prove that animals weakened by a too long usage of dry fodder, are
+restored to health by the use of bran, which only seems to act by its
+presence, since the greater portion of it, as already demonstrated by Mr.
+Poggiale, is passed through with the excrement.
+
+With these opinions, apparently so opposed, it evidently results that there
+is an unknown factor at the bottom of the question; it is the nature of
+this factor I wish to find out, and it was after the discovery that I
+was able to explain the nature of brown bread, and its _role_ in the
+alimentation of animals. We have then to examine the causes of the
+production of brown bread, to state why white bread kills animals fed
+exclusively on it, while bread mixed with bran makes them live. We have to
+explain the phenomena of panification, the operations of grinding, and to
+explain the means of preparing a bread more economical and more favorable
+to health. To explain this question clearly and briefly we must first be
+acquainted with the various substances forming the berry, their nature,
+their position, and their properties. This we shall do with the aid of the
+illustration given.
+
+[Illustration: SECTION OF A GRAIN OF WHEAT MAGNIFIED.]
+
+EXPLANATION OF DIAGRAM.
+
+1.--Superficial Coating of the Epidermis, severed at the Crease of
+ the Kernel.
+2.--Section of Epidermis, Averages of the Weight of the Whole Grain, 1/2 %.
+3.--Epicarp, do. do. do. 1 %.
+4.--Endocarp, do. do. do. 1 1/2 %.
+5.--Testa or Episperm, do. do. do. 2 %.
+6.--Embryo Membrane (with imaginary spaces in white on both sides
+ to make it distinct).
+7.\ / Glutonous Cells \
+8. > Endosperm < containing > do. do. 90 %.
+9./ \ Farinaccous Matter /
+
+
+ANATOMICAL STRUCTURE AND CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF WHEAT.
+
+The figure represents the longitudinal cut of a grain of wheat; it was made
+by taking, with the aid of the microscope and of photography, the drawing
+of a large quantity of fragments, which, joined together at last, produced
+the figure of the entire cut. These multiplied results were necessary to
+appreciate the insertion of the teguments and their nature in every part
+of the berry; in this long and difficult work I have been aided by the
+co-operation of Mr. Bertsch, who, as is known, has discovered a means of
+fixing rapidly by photography any image from the microscope. I must state,
+in the first place, that even in 1837 Mr. Payen studied and published the
+structure and the composition of a fragment of a grain of wheat; that
+this learned chemist, whose authority in such matters is known, perfectly
+described the envelopes or coverings, and indicated the presence of various
+immediate principles (especially of azote, fatty and mineral substances
+which fill up the range of contiguous cells between them and the periphery
+of the perisperm, to the exclusion of the gluten and the starchy granules),
+as well as to the mode of insertion of the granules of starch in the gluten
+contained in the cells, with narrow divisions from the perisperm, and in
+such a manner that up to the point of working indicated by the figure 1
+this study was complete. However, I have been obliged to recommence it, to
+study the special facts bearing on the alimentary question, and I must say
+that all the results obtained by Mr. Bertsch, Mr. Trecul, and myself agree
+with those given by Mr. Payen.
+
+
+ENVELOPES OF THE BERRY.
+
+No. 1 represents a superficial side of the crease.
+
+No. 2 indicates the epidermis or cuticle. This covering is extremely light,
+and offers nothing remarkable; 100 lb. of wheat contain 1/2 lb. of it.
+
+No. 3 indicates the epicarp. This envelope is distinguished by a double
+row of long and pointed vessels; it is, like the first one, very light and
+without action; 100 lb. of wheat contain 1 lb. of it.
+
+No. 4 represents the endocarp, or last tegument of the berry; the
+sarcocarp, which should be found between the numbers 2 and 3, no longer
+exists, having been absorbed. The endocarp is remarkable by its row of
+round and regular cells, which appear in the cut like a continuous string
+of beads; 100 lb. of wheat contain 11/2 lb. of it.
+
+These three envelopes are colorless, light, and spongy; their elementary
+composition is that of straw; they are easily removed besides with the aid
+of damp and friction. This property has given rise to an operation called
+decortication, the results of which we shall examine later on from an
+industrial point of view. The whole of the envelopes of the berry of wheat
+amount to 3 lb. in 100 lb. of wheat.
+
+
+ENVELOPES AND TISSUES OF THE BERRY PROPER.
+
+No. 5 indicates the testa or episperm. This external tegument of the berry
+is closer than the preceding ones; it contains in the very small cells
+two coloring matters, the one of a palish yellow, the other of an orange
+yellow, and according as the one or the other matter predominates, the
+wheat is of a more or less intense yellow color; hence come all the
+varieties of wheat known in commerce as white, reddish, or red wheats.
+Under this tegument is found a very thin, colorless membrane, which, with
+the testa or episperm, forms two per cent. of the weight of the wheat.
+
+No. 6 indicates the embryous membrane, which is only an expansion of the
+germ or embryo No. 10. This membrane is seen purposely removed from its
+contiguous parts, so as to render more visible its form and insertions.
+Under this tissue is found with the Nos. 7, 8, and 9, the endosperm or
+perisperm, containing the gluten and the starch; soluble and insoluble
+albuminoids, that is to say, the flour.
+
+The endosperm and the embryous membrane are the most interesting parts of
+the berry; the first is one of the depots of the plastic aliments, the
+second contains agents capable of dissolving these aliments during the
+germination, of determining their absorption in the digestive organs of
+animals, and of producing in the dough a decomposition strong enough to
+make dark bread. We shall proceed to examine separately these two parts of
+the berry.
+
+
+ENDOSPERM OR FLOURY PORTION, NOS. 7, 8, 9.
+
+This portion is composed of large glutinous cells, in which the granules
+of starch are found. The composition of these different layers offers a
+particular interest; the center, No. 9, is the softest part; it contains
+the least gluten and the most starch; it is the part which first pulverizes
+under the stone, and gives, after the first bolting, the fine flour. As
+this flour is poorest in gluten, it makes a dough with little consistency,
+and incapable of making an open bread, well raised. The first layer, No.
+8, which surrounds the center, produces small white middlings, harder and
+richer in gluten than the center; it bakes very well, and weighs 20 lb. in
+100, and it is these 20 parts in 100 which, when mixed with the 50 parts in
+the center, form the finest quality flour, used for making white bread.
+
+The layer No. 7, which surrounds the preceding one, is still harder and
+richer in gluten; unfortunately in the reduction it becomes mixed with some
+hundredth parts of the bran, which render it unsuitable for making bread
+of the finest quality; it produces in the regrinding lower grade and
+dark flours, together weighing 7 per cent. The external layer, naturally
+adhering to the membrane, No. 6, becomes mixed in the grinding with bran,
+to the extent of about 20 per cent., which renders it unsuitable even
+for making brown bread; it serves to form the regrindings and the offals
+destined for the nourishment of animals; this layer is, however, the
+hardest, and contains the largest quantity of gluten, and it is by
+consequence the most nutritive. We now see the endosperm increasing from
+the center, formed of floury layers, which augment in richness in gluten,
+in proportion as they are removed from the center. Now, as the flours make
+more bread in proportion to the quantity of gluten they contain, and the
+gluten gives more bread in proportion to its being more developed, or
+having more consistence, it follows that the flour belonging to the parts
+of the berry nearest the envelopes or coverings should produce the greatest
+portion of bread, and this is what takes place in effect. The product of
+the different layers of the endosperm is given below, and it will be seen
+that the quantity of bread increases in a proportion relatively greater
+than that of the gluten, which proves once more that the gluten of the
+center or last formation has less consistence than that of the other layers
+of older formation.
+
+The following are the results obtained from the same wheat:
+
+ Gluten. Bread.
+100 parts of flour in center contain.. 8 and produce 128
+ " " first layer " .. 9,2 " 136
+ " " second " " .. 11 " 140
+ " " external " " .. 13 " 145
+
+On the whole, it is seen, according to the composition of the floury part
+of the grain, that the berry contains on an average 90 parts in 100 of
+flour fit for making bread of the first quality, and that the inevitable
+mixing in of a small quantity of bran reduces these 90 to 70 parts with
+the ordinary processes; but the loss is not alone there, for the foregoing
+table shows that the best portion of the grain is rejected from the food
+of man that brown or dark bread is made of flour of very good quality, and
+that the first quality bread is made from the portion of the endosperm
+containing the gluten in the smallest quantity and in the least developed
+form.
+
+This is a consideration not to be passed over lightly; assuredly the gluten
+of the center contains as much azote as the gluten of the circumference,
+but it must not be admitted in a general way that the alimentary power of
+a body is in connection with the amount of azote it contains, and without
+entering into considerations which would carry us too wide of the subject,
+we shall simply state that if the flesh of young animals, as, for instance,
+the calf, has a debilitating action, while the developed flesh of
+full-grown animals--of a heifer, for example--has really nourishing
+properties, although the flesh of each animal contains the same quantity of
+azote, we must conclude that the proportion of elements is not everything,
+and that the azotic or nitrogenous elements are more nourishing in
+proportion as they are more developed. This is why the gluten of the layers
+nearest the bran is of quite a special interest from the point of view of
+alimentation and in the preparation of bread.
+
+
+THE EMBRYO AND THE COATING OF THE EMBRYO.
+
+To be intelligible, I must commence by some very brief remarks on the
+tissues of vegetables. There are two sorts distinguished among plants;
+some seem of no importance in the phenomena of nutrition; others, on the
+contrary, tend to the assimilation of the organic or inorganic components
+which should nourish and develop all the parts of the plant. The latter
+have a striking analogy with ferments; their composition is almost similar,
+and their action is increased or diminished by the same causes.
+
+These tissues, formed in a state of repose in vegetables as in grain, have
+special properties; thus the berry possesses a pericarp whose tissues
+should remain foreign to the phenomena of germination, and these tissues
+show no particularity worthy of remark, but the coating of the embryo,
+which should play an active part, possesses, on the contrary, properties
+that may be compared to those of ferments. With regard to these ferments,
+I must further remark that I have not been able, nor am I yet able, to
+express in formula my opinion of the nature of these bodies, but little
+known as yet; I have only made use of the language mostly employed, without
+wishing to touch on questions raised by the effects of the presence, and
+by the more complex effects of living bodies, which exercise analogous
+actions.
+
+With these reservations I shall proceed to examine the tissues in the berry
+which help toward the germination.
+
+THE EMBRYO (10, see woodcut) is composed of the root of the plant, with
+which we have nothing to do here. This root of the plant which is to grow
+is embedded in a mass of cells full of fatty bodies. These bodies present
+this remarkable particularity, that they contain among their elements
+sulphur and phosphorus. When you dehydrate by alcohol 100 grammes of the
+embryo of wheat, obtained by the same means as the membrane (a process
+indicated later on), this embryo, treated with ether, produces 20 grammes
+of oils composed elementarily of hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, azote, sulphur,
+and phosphorus. This analysis, made according to the means indicated by M.
+Fremy, shows that the fatty bodies of the embryo are composed like those of
+the germ of an egg, like those of the brain and of the nervous system of
+animals. It is necessary for us to stop an instant at this fact: in the
+first place, because it proves that vegetables are designed to form the
+phosphoric as well as the nitrogenous and ternary aliments, and finally,
+because it indicates how important it is to mix the embryo and its
+dependents with the bread in the most complete manner possible, seeing that
+a large portion of these phosphoric bodies always become decomposed during
+the baking.
+
+COATING OF THE EMBRYO.--This membrane (6), which is only an expansion of
+the embryo, surrounds the endosperm; it is composed of beautiful irregular
+cubic cells, diminishing according as they come nearer to the embryo. These
+cells are composed, first, of the insoluble cellular tissue; second,
+of phosphate of chalk and fatty phosphoric bodies; third, of soluble
+cerealine. In order to study the composition and the nature of this
+tissue, it must be completely isolated, and this result is obtained in the
+following manner.
+
+The wheat should be damped with water containing 10 parts in 100 of
+alcoholized caustic soda; at the expiration of one hour the envelopes of
+the pericarp, and of the testa Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, should be separated by
+friction in a coarse cloth, having been reduced by the action of the alkali
+to a pulpy state; each berry should then be opened separately to remove the
+portion of the envelope held in the fold of the crease, and then all the
+berries divided in two are put into three parts of water charged with
+one-hundredth of caustic potash. This liquid dissolves the gluten, divides
+the starch, and at the expiration of twenty-four hours the parts of the
+berries are kneaded between the fingers, collected in pure water, and
+washed until the water issues clear; these membranes with their embryos,
+which are often detached by this operation, are cast into water acidulated
+with one-hundredth of hydrochloric acid, and at the end of several hours
+they should be completely washed. The product obtained consists of
+beautiful white membranes, insoluble in alkalies and diluted acids, which
+show under the microscope beautiful cells joined in a tissue following the
+embryo, with which it has indeed a striking analogy in its properties and
+composition. This membrane, exhausted by the alcohol and ether, gives, by
+an elementary analysis, hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and azote. Unfortunately,
+under the action of the tests this membrane has been killed, and it no
+longer possesses the special properties of active tissues. Among these
+properties three may be especially mentioned:
+
+1st. Its resistance to water charged with a mineral salt, such as sea salt
+for instance
+
+2d. Its action through its presence.
+
+3d. Its action as a ferment.
+
+The action of saltwater is explained as follows: When the berry is plunged
+into pure water it will be observed that the water penetrates in the course
+of a few hours to the very center of the endosperm, but if water charged
+or saturated with sea salt be used, it will be seen that the liquid
+immediately passes through the teguments Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5, and stops
+abruptly before the embryo membrane No. 6, which will remain quite dry and
+brittle for several days, the berry remaining all the time in the
+water. Should the water penetrate further after several days, it can be
+ascertained that the entrance was gained through the part No 10 free of
+this tissue, and this notwithstanding the cells are full of fatty bodies.
+This membrane alone produces this action, for if the coatings Nos. 2, 3, 4,
+and 5 be removed, the resistance to the liquid remains the same, while if
+the whole, or a portion of it, be divided, either by friction between two
+millstones or by simple incisions, the liquid penetrates the berry within
+a few hours. This property is analogous to that of the radicules of roots,
+which take up the bodies most suitable for the nourishment of the plant. It
+proves, besides, that this membrane, like all those endowed with life, does
+not obey more the ordinary laws of permeability than those of chemical
+affinity, and this property can be turned to advantage in the preservation
+of grain in decortication and grinding.
+
+To determine the action of this tissue through its presence, take 100
+grammes of wheat, wash it and remove the first coating by decortication;
+then immerse it for several hours in lukewarm water, and dry afterwards in
+an ordinary temperature. It should then be reduced in a small coffee mill,
+the flour and middlings separated by sifting and the bran repassed through
+a machine that will crush it without breaking it; then dress it again, and
+repeat the operation six times at least. The bran now obtained is composed
+of the embryous membrane, a little flour adhering to it, and some traces
+of the teguments Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5. This coarse tissue-weighs about 14
+grammes, and to determine its action through its presence, place it in 200
+grammes of water at a temperature of 86 deg.; afterwards press it. The liquid
+that escapes contains chiefly the flour and cerealine. Filter this liquid,
+and put it in a test glass marked No. 1, which will serve to determine the
+action of the cerealine.
+
+The bran should now be washed until the water issues pure, and until it
+shows no bluish color when iodized water and sulphuric acid are added; when
+the washing is finished the bran swollen by the water is placed under a
+press, and the liquid extracted is placed, after being filtered, in a test
+tube. This test tube serves to show that all cerealine has been removed
+from the blades of the tissue. Finally, these small blades of bran, washed
+and pressed, are cast, with 50 grammes of lukewarm water, into a test tube,
+marked No. 3; 100 grammes of diluted starch to one-tenth of dry starch
+are then added in each test tube, and they are put into a water bath at
+a temperature of 104 deg. Fahrenheit, being stirred lightly every fifteen
+minutes. At the expiration of an hour, or at the most an hour and a half,
+No. 1 glass no longer contains any starch, as it has been converted into
+dextrine and glucose by the cerealine, and the iodized water only produces
+a purple color. No. 2 glass, with the same addition, produces a bluish
+color, and preserves the starch intact, which proves that the bran was well
+freed from the cerealine contained. No. 3 glass, like No. 1, shows a purple
+coloring, and the liquid only contains, in place of the starch, dextrine
+and glucose, _i. e_, the tissue has had the same action as the cerealine
+deprived of the tissue, and the cerealine as the tissue freed from
+cerealine. The same membrane rewashed can again transform the diluted
+starch several times. This action is due to the presence of the embryous
+membrane, for after four consecutive operations it still preserves its
+original weight. As regards the remains of the other segments, they have
+no influence on this phenomenon, for the coating Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5,
+separated by the water and friction, have no action whatever on the diluted
+starch. Besides its action through its presence, which is immediate,
+the embryous membrane may also act as a ferment, active only after a
+development, varying in duration according to the conditions of temperature
+and the presence or absence of ferments in acting.
+
+I make a distinction here as is seen, between the action through being
+present, and the action of real ferments, but it is not my intention to
+approve or disapprove of the different opinions expressed on this subject.
+I make use of these expressions only to explain more clearly the phenomena
+I have to speak of, for it is our duty to bear in mind that the real
+ferments only act after a longer or shorter period of development, while,
+on the other hand, the effects through presence are immediate.
+
+I now return to the embryous membrane. Various causes increase or decrease
+the action of this tissue, but it may be said in general that all the
+agents that kill the embryous membrane will also kill the cerealine. This
+was the reason why I at first attributed the production of dark bread
+exclusively to the latter ferment, but it was easy to observe that during
+the baking, decompositions resulted at over 158 deg. Fah., while the cerealine
+was still coagulated, and that bread containing bran, submitted to 212 deg. of
+heat, became liquefied in water at 104 deg.. It was now easy to determine
+that dark flours, from which the cerealine had been removed by repeated
+washings, still produced dark bread. It was at this time, in remembering
+my experiences with organic bodies, I determined the properties of the
+insoluble tissue, deprived of the soluble cerealine, with analogous
+properties, but distinguished not alone by its solid organization and state
+of insolubility, but also by its resistance to heat, which acts as on
+yeast. There exists, in reality, I repeat, a resemblance between the
+embryous membrane and the yeast; they have the same immediate composition;
+they are destroyed by the same poisons, deadened by the same temperatures,
+annihilated by the same agents, propagated in an analogous manner, and
+it might be said that the organic tissues endowed with life are only an
+agglomeration of fixed cells of ferments. At all events, when the blades of
+the embryous membrane, prepared as already stated, are exposed to a water
+bath at 212 deg., this tissue, in contact with the diluted starch, produces
+the same decomposition; the contact, however, should continue two or three
+hours in place of one. If, instead of placing these membranes in the water
+bath, they are enveloped in two pounds of dough, and this dough put in the
+oven, after the baking the washed membranes produce the same results, which
+especially proves that this membrane can support a temperature of 212 deg. Fah.
+without disorganization. We shall refer to this property in speaking of the
+phenomena of panification.
+
+CEREALINE.--The cells composing the embryous membrane contain, as already
+stated, the cerealine, but after the germination they contain cerealine and
+diastase, that is to say, a portion of the cerealine changed into diastase,
+with which it has the greatest analogy. It is known how difficult it is to
+isolate and study albuminous substances. The following is the method of
+obtaining and studying cerealine. Take the raw embryous membrane, prepared
+as stated, steep it for an hour in spirits of wine diluted with twice its
+volume of water, and renew this liquid several times until the dextrine,
+glucose, coloring matters, etc., have been completely removed. The
+membranes should now be pressed and cast into a quantity of water
+sufficient to make a fluid paste of them, squeeze out the mixture,
+filter the liquid obtained, and this liquid will contain the cerealine
+sufficiently pure to be studied in its effects. Its principal properties
+are: The liquid evaporated at a low temperature produces an amorphous,
+rough mass nearly colorless, and almost entirely soluble in distilled
+water; this solution coagulates between 158 deg. and 167 deg. Fah., and the
+coagulum is insoluble in acids and weak alkalies; the solution is
+precipitated by all diluted acids, by phosphoric acid at all the degrees of
+hydration, and even by a current of carbonic acid. All these precipitates
+redissolve with an excess of acid, sulphuric acid excepted. Concentrated
+sulphuric acid forms an insoluble downy white precipitate, and the
+concentrated vegetable acids, with the exception of tannic acid, do not
+determine any precipitate. Cerealine coagulated by an acid redissolves in
+an excess of the same acid, but it has become dead and has no more action
+on the starch. The alkalies do not form any precipitate, but they kill the
+cerealine as if it had been precipitated The neutral rennet does not make
+any precipitate in a solution of cerealine--5 centigrammes of dry cerealine
+transform in twenty-five minutes 10 grammes of starch, reduced to a paste
+by 100 grammes of water at 113 deg. Fah. It will be seen that cerealine has a
+grand analogy with albumen and legumine, but it is distinguished from them
+by the action of the rennet, of the heat of acids, alcohol, and above all
+by its property of transforming the starch into glucose and dextrine.
+
+It may be said that some albuminous substances have this property, but it
+must be borne in mind that these bodies, like gluten, for example, only
+possess it after the commencement of the decomposition. The albuminous
+matter approaching nearest to cerealine is the diastase, for it is only a
+transformation of the cerealine during the germination, the proof of which
+may be had in analyzing the embryous membrane, which shows more diastase
+and less cerealine in proportion to the advancement of the germination: it
+differs, however, from the diastase by the action of heat, alcohol, etc.
+It is seen that in every case the cerealine and the embryous membrane
+act together, and in an analogous manner; we shall shortly examine their
+effects on the digestion and in the phenomena of panification.
+
+PHOSPHATE OF CALCIUM.--Mr. Payen was the first to make the observation
+that the greatest amount of phosphate of chalk is found in the teguments
+adjoining the farinaceous or floury mass. This observation is important
+from two points of view; in the first place, it shows us that this mineral
+aliment, necessary to the life of animals, is rejected from ordinary bread;
+and in the next place, it brings a new proof that phosphate of chalk is
+found, and ought to be found, in everyplace where there are membranes
+susceptible of exercising vital functions among animals as well as
+vegetables.
+
+Phosphate of chalk is not in reality (as I wished to prove in another work)
+a plastic matter suitable for forming bones, for the bones of infants are
+three times more solid than those of old men, which contain three times
+as much of it. The quantity of phosphate of chalk necessary to the
+constitution of animals is in proportion to the temperature of those
+animals, and often in the inverse ratio of the weight of their bones, for
+vegetables, although they have no bones, require phosphate of chalk. This
+is because this salt is the natural stimulant of living membranes, and the
+bony tissue is only a depot of phosphate of chalk, analogous to the adipose
+tissue, the fat of which is absorbed when the alimentation coming from the
+exterior becomes insufficient. Now, as we know all the parts constituting
+the berry of wheat, it will be easy to explain the phenomena of
+panification, and to conclude from the present moment that it is not
+indifferent to reject from the bread this embryous membrane where the
+agents of digestion are found, viz., the phosphoric bodies and the
+phosphate of chalk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE ORIGIN OF NEW PROCESS MILLING.
+
+
+The following article was written by Albert Hoppin, editor of the
+_Northwestern Miller_, at the request of Special Agent Chas. W. Johnson,
+and forms a part of his report to the census bureau on the manufacturing
+industries of Minneapolis.
+
+"The development of the milling industry in this city has been so
+intimately connected with the growth and prosperity of the city itself,
+that the steps by which the art of milling has reached its present high
+state of perfection are worthy of note, especially as Minneapolis may
+rightly claim the honor of having brought the improvements, which have
+within the last decade so thoroughly revolutionized the art of making
+flour, first into public notice, and of having contributed the largest
+share of capital and inventive skill to their full development. So much is
+this the case that the cluster of mills around the Falls of St. Anthony is
+to-day looked upon as the head-center of the milling industry not only of
+this country, but of the world. An exception to this broad statement may
+possibly be made in favor of the city of Buda Pest, in Austro-Hungary, from
+the leading mills in which the millers in this country have obtained many
+valuable ideas. To the credit of American millers and millwrights it must,
+however, be said that they have in all cases improved upon the information
+they have thus obtained.
+
+"To rightly understand the change that has taken place in milling methods
+during the last ten years, it is necessary to compare the old way with the
+new, and to observe wherein they differ. From the days of Oliver Evans, the
+first American mechanic to make any improvement in milling machinery, until
+1870, there was, if we may except some grain cleaning or smut machines,
+no very strongly marked advance in milling machinery or in the methods of
+manufacturing flour. It is true that the reel covered with finely-woven
+silk bolting cloth had taken the place of the muslin or woolen covered hand
+sieve, and that the old granite millstones have given place to the French
+burr; but these did not affect the essential parts of the _modus operandi_,
+although the quality of the product was, no doubt, materially improved. The
+processes employed in all the mills in the United States ten years ago were
+identical, or very nearly so, with those in use in the Brandywine Mills in
+Evans's day. They were very simple, and may be divided into two distinct
+operations.
+
+"First. Grinding (literally) the wheat.
+
+"Second. Bolting or separating the flour or interior portion of the berry
+from the outer husk, or bran. It may seem to some a rash assertion, but
+this primitive way of making flour is still in vogue in over one-half of
+the mills of the United States. This does not, however, affect the truth of
+the statement that the greater part of the flour now made in this country
+is made on an entirely different and vastly-improved system, which has come
+to be known to the trade as the new process.
+
+"In looking for a reason for the sudden activity and spirit of progress
+which had its culmination in the new process, the character of the
+wheat raised in the different sections of the Union must be taken into
+consideration. Wheat may be divided into two classes, spring and winter,
+the latter generally being more starchy and easily pulverized, and at the
+same time having a very tough bran or husk, which does not readily crumble
+or cut to pieces in the process of grinding. It was with this wheat that
+the mills of the country had chiefly to do, and the defects of the old
+system of milling were not then so apparent. With the settlement of
+Minnesota, and the development of its capacities as a wheat-growing State,
+a new factor in the milling problem was introduced, which for a time bid
+fair to ruin every miller who undertook to solve it. The wheat raised in
+this State was, from the climatic conditions, a spring wheat, hard in
+structure and having a thin, tender, and friable bran. In milling this
+wheat, if an attempt was made to grind it as fine as was then customary to
+grind winter wheat, the bran was ground almost as fine as the flour, and
+passed as readily through the meshes of the bolting reels or sieves,
+rendering the flour dark, specky, and altogether unfit to enter the Eastern
+markets in competition with flour from the winter wheat sections. On the
+other hand, if the grinding was not so fine as to break up the bran,
+the interior of the berry being harder to pulverize, was not rendered
+sufficiently fine, and there remained after the flour was bolted out a
+large percentage of shorts or middlings, which, while containing the
+strongest and best flour in the berry, were so full of dirt and impurities
+as to render them unfit for any further grinding except for the very lowest
+grade of flour, technically known as 'red dog.' The flour produced from
+the first grinding was also more or less specky and discolored, and, in
+everything but strength, inferior to that made from winter wheat, while the
+'yield' was so small, or, in other words, the amount of wheat which it took
+to make a barrel of flour was so large, that milling in Minnesota and other
+spring wheat sections was anything but profitable.
+
+"The problem which ten years since confronted the millers of this city was
+how to obtain from the wheat which they had to grind a white, clear flour,
+and to so increase the yield as to leave some margin for profit. The first
+step in the solution of this problem was the invention by E. N. La Croix
+of the machine which has since been called the purifier, which removed the
+dirt and light impurities from the refuse middlings in the same manner that
+dust and chaff are removed from wheat by a fanning mill. The middlings thus
+purified were then reground, and the result was a much whiter and cleaner
+flour than it had been possible to obtain under the old process of low
+close grinding. This flour was called 'patent' or 'fancy,' and at once took
+a high position in the market. The first machine built by La Croix was
+immediately improved by George T. Smith, and has since then been the
+subject of numberless variations, changes, and improvements; and over the
+principles embodied in its construction there has been fought one of the
+longest and most bitter battles recorded in the annals of patent litigation
+in this country. The purifier is to-day the most important machine in use
+in the manufacture of flour in this country, and may with propriety be
+called the corner-stone of new process milling. The earliest experiments in
+its use in this country were made in what was then known as the 'big mill'
+in this city, owned by Washburn, Stephens & Co., and now known as the
+Washburn Mill B.
+
+"The next step in the development of the new process, also originating
+in Minneapolis, was the abandonment of the old system of cracking the
+millstone, and substituting in its stead the use of smooth surfaces on the
+millstones, thus in a large measure doing away with the abrasion of the
+bran, and raising the quality of the flour produced at the first grinding.
+So far as we know, Mr. E. R. Stephens, a Minneapolis miller, then employed
+in the mill owned by Messrs. Pillsbury, Crocker & Fish, and now a member of
+the prominent milling firm of Freeman & Stephens, River Falls, Wisconsin,
+was the first to venture on this innovation. He also first practiced the
+widening of the furrows in the millstones and increasing their number, thus
+adding largely to the amount of middlings made at the first grinding, and
+raising the percentage of patent flour. He was warmly supported by Amasa K.
+Ostrander, since deceased, the founder and for a number of years the editor
+of the _North-Western Miller_, a trade newspaper. The new ideas were for a
+time vigorously combated by the millers, but their worth was so plain that
+they were soon adopted, not only in Minneapolis, but by progressive millers
+throughout the country. The truth was the 'new process' in its entirety,
+which may be summarized in four steps--first, grinding or, more properly,
+granulating the berry; second, bolting or separating the 'chop' or meal
+into first flour, middlings, and bran; third, purifying the middlings,
+fourth, regrinding and rebolting the middlings to produce the higher grade,
+or 'patent' flour. This higher grade flour drove the best winter wheat
+flours out of the Eastern markets, and placed milling in Minnesota upon a
+firm basis. The development of the 'new process' cannot be claimed by any
+one man. Hundreds of millers all over the country have contributed to its
+advance, but the millers of Minneapolis have always taken the lead.
+
+"Within the past two or three years what may be distinctively called the
+'new process' has, in the mills of Minneapolis and some few other leading
+mills in the country, been giving place to a new system, or rather, a
+refinement of the processes above described. This latest system is known to
+the trade as the 'gradual reduction' or high-grinding system, as the 'new
+process' is the medium high-grinding system, and the old way is the low or
+close grinding system. In using the gradual reduction in making flour the
+millstones are abandoned, except for finishing some of the inferior grades
+of flour, and the work is done by means of grooved and plain rollers, made
+of chilled iron or porcelain. In some cases disks of chilled iron, suitably
+furrowed, are used, and in others concave mills, consisting of a cylinder
+running against a concave plate. In Minneapolis the chilled iron rolls take
+the precedence of all other means.
+
+"The system of gradual reduction is much more complicated than either of
+those which preceded it; but the results obtained are a marked advance over
+the 'new process.' The percentage of high-grade flour is increased, several
+grades of different degrees of excellence being produced, and the yield
+is also greater from a given quantity of wheat. The system consists in
+reducing the wheat to flour, not at one operation, as in the old system,
+nor in two grindings, as in the 'new process,' but in several successive
+reductions, four, five, or six, as the case may be. The wheat is first
+passed through a pair of corrugated chilled iron rollers, which merely
+split it open along the crease of the berry, liberating the dirt which lies
+in the crease so that it can be removed by bolting. A very small percentage
+of low-grade flour is also made in this reduction. After passing through
+what is technically called a 'scalping reel' to remove the dirt and flour,
+the broken wheat is passed through a second set of corrugated rollers, by
+which it is further broken up, and then passes through a second separating
+reel, which removes the flour and middlings. This operation is repeated
+successively until the flour portion of the berry is entirely removed from
+the bran, the necessary separation being made after each reduction. The
+middlings from the several reductions are passed through the purifiers,
+and, after being purified, are reduced to flour by successive reductions
+on smooth iron or porcelain rollers. In some cases, as stated above, iron
+disks and concave mills are substituted for the roller mill, but the
+operation is substantially the same. One of the principal objects sought to
+be attained by this high-grinding system is to avoid all abrasion of the
+bran, another is to take out the dirt in the crease of the berry at the
+beginning of the process, and still another to thoroughly free the bran
+from flour, so as to obtain as large a yield as possible. Incidental to the
+improved methods of milling, as now practiced in this country, is a marked
+improvement in the cleaning of the grain and preparing it for flouring. The
+earliest grain-cleaning machine was the 'smutter,' the office of which was
+to break the smut balls, and scour the outside of the bran to remove any
+adhering dust, the scouring machine being too harsh in its action, breaking
+the kernels of wheat, and so scratching and weakening the bran that it
+broke up readily in the grinding. The scouring process was therefore
+lessened, and was followed by brush machines, which brushed the dirt,
+loosened up and left by the scourer, from the berry. Other machines for
+removing the fuzzy and germ ends of the berry have also been introduced,
+and everything possible is done to free the grain from extraneous
+impurities before the process of reduction is commenced. In all the minor
+details of the mill there has been the same marked change, until the modern
+merchant mill of to-day no more resembles that of twenty-five years ago
+than does the modern cotton mill the old-fashioned distaff. The change has
+extended into the winter wheat sections, and no mill in the United States
+can hope to hold its place in the markets unless it is provided with the
+many improvements in machinery and processes which have resulted from the
+experiments begun in this city only ten years since, and which have
+made the name of Minneapolis and the products of her many mills famous
+throughout the world. The relative merits of the flour made by the new
+process and the old have been warmly discussed, but the general verdict
+of the great body of consumers is that the patent or new process flour is
+better in every way for bread making purposes, being clearer, whiter, more
+evenly granulated, and possessing more strength. Careful chemical analysis
+has confirmed this. As between winter and spring wheat flours made by the
+new process and gradual reduction systems, it maybe remarked that the
+former contain more starch and are whiter in color, while the latter,
+having more gluten, excel in strength. In milling all varieties of wheat,
+whether winter or spring, the new processes are in every way superior to
+the old, and, in aiding their inception and development, the millers of
+Minneapolis have conferred a lasting benefit on the country.
+
+"Minneapolis, Minn., December 1, 1880."
+
+
+THE MILLING STRUCTURES AND MACHINERY.
+
+
+Mr. Johnson added the following, showing the present status of the milling
+industry in Minneapolis:
+
+"The description of the process of the manufacture of flour so well
+given above, conveys no idea of the extent and magnitude of the milling
+structures, machinery, and buildings employed in the business. Many of the
+leading millers and millwrights have personally visited and studied the
+best mills in England, France, Hungary, and Germany, and are as familiar
+with their theory, methods, and construction as of their own, and no
+expense or labor has been spared in introducing the most approved features
+of the improvements in the foreign mills. Experimenting is constantly going
+on, and the path behind the successful millers is strewn with the wrecks of
+failures. A very large proportion of the machinery is imported, though the
+American machinists are fast outstripping their European rivals in the
+quality and efficiency of the machinery needed for the new mills constantly
+going up.
+
+"There are twenty-eight of these mills now constructed and at work,
+operating an equivalent of 412 runs of stone, consuming over sixteen
+million bushels of wheat, and manufacturing over three million barrels of
+flour annually. Their capacities range from 250 to 1,500 barrels of flour
+per day. Great as these capacities are, there is now one in process of
+construction, the Pillsbury A Mill, which at the beginning of the harvest
+of 1881 will have a capacity of 4,000 barrels daily. The Washburn A Mill,
+whose capacity is now 1,500 barrels, is being enlarged to make 8,500
+barrels a day, and the Crown Roller Mill, owned by Christian Bros. & Co.,
+is also being enlarged to produce 3,000 barrels a day. The largest mill in
+Europe has a daily capacity of but 2,800 barrels, and no European mill is
+fitted with the exquisite perfection of machinery and apparatus to be found
+in the mills of this city.
+
+"The buildings are mainly built of blue limestone, found so abundant in the
+quarries of this city, range and line work, and rest on the solid ledge.
+The earlier built mills are severely plain, but the newer ones are greatly
+improved by the taste of the architect, and are imposing and beautiful in
+appearance."
+
+
+DIRECT FOREIGN TRADE.
+
+The flour of Minneapolis, holding so high a rank in the markets of the
+world, is always in active demand, especially the best grades, and brings
+from $1.00 to $1.60 per barrel more than flour of the best qualities of
+southern, eastern, or foreign wheat. During the year nearly a million
+barrels were shipped direct to European and other foreign ports, on through
+bills of lading, and drawn for by banks here having special foreign
+exchange arrangements, at sight, on the day of shipment. This trade
+is constantly increasing, and the amount of flour handled by eastern
+commission men is decreasing in proportion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Referring to the foregoing, the following letter from Mr. Geo. T. Smith to
+the editor of the _London Miller_ is of interest:
+
+SIR: I find published in the _North-western Miller_ of December 24, 1880,
+extracts from an article on the origin of new process milling, prepared by
+Albert Hoppin, Esq., editor of the above-named journal, for the use of one
+of the statistical divisions of the United States census, which is so at
+variance, in at least one important particular, with the facts set forth in
+the paper read by me before the British and Irish millers, at their meeting
+in May last, that I think I ought to take notice of its statements, more
+especially as the _North-Western Miller_ has quite a circulation on this
+side of the water.
+
+As stated in the paper read by me above-mentioned, I was engaged in
+February, 1871, by Mr. Christian, who was then operating the "big," or
+Washburn Mill at Minneapolis, to take charge of the stones in that mill. At
+this time Mr. Christian was very much interested in the improvement of the
+quality of his flour, which in common with the flour of Minneapolis mills,
+without exception, was very poor indeed. For some time previous to this I
+had insisted to him most strenuously that the beginning of any improvement
+must be found in smooth, true, and well balanced stones, and it was because
+he was at last convinced that my ideas were at least worthy of a practical
+test I was placed in charge of his mill. Nearly two months were consumed in
+truing and smoothing the stone, as all millers in the mill had struck
+at once when they became acquainted with the character of the changes I
+proposed to make.
+
+I remained with Mr. Christian until the latter part of 1871, in all about
+eight months. During this time the flour from the Washburn Mill attained a
+celebrity that made it known and sought after all over the United States.
+It commanded attention as an event of the very greatest importance, from
+the fact that it was justly felt that if a mill grinding spring wheat
+exclusively was capable of producing a flour infinitely superior in every
+way to the best that could be made from the finest varieties of winter
+wheats, the new North Western territory, with its peculiar adaptation to
+the growing of spring grain, and its boundless capacity for production,
+must at once become one of the most important sections of the country.
+
+Mr. Christian's appreciation of the improvements I had made in his mill
+was attested by doubly-locked and guarded entrances, and by the stringent
+regulations which were adopted to prevent any of his employes carrying
+information with regard to the process to his competitors.
+
+All this time other Minneapolis mills were doing such work and only such as
+they had done previously. Ought not the writer of an article on the origin
+of new process milling--which article is intended to become historical, and
+to have its authenticity indorsed by the government--to have known whether
+Mr. Christian, in the Washburn Mill, did or did not make a grade of
+flour which has hardly been excelled since for months before any other
+Minneapolis mill approached his product in any degree? And should he not
+be well enough acquainted with the milling of that period--1871-2--to know
+that such results as were obtained in the Washburn Mill could only be
+secured by the use of _smooth_ and _true_ stones? Mr. Stephens--whom I
+shall mention again presently--did _not_ work in the Washburn Mill while I
+was in charge of it.
+
+In the fall of 1871 I entered into a contract with Mr. C. A. Pillsbury,
+owner of the Taylor Mill and senior partner in the firm by whom the
+Minneapolis Mill was operated, to put both those mills into condition to
+make the same grade of flour as Mr. Christian was making. The consideration
+in the contract was 5,000 dols. At the above mills I met to some extent the
+same obstruction in regard to millers striking as had greeted me at Mr.
+Christian's mill earlier in the year; but among those who did not strike at
+the Minneapolis Mill I saw, for the first time, Mr. Stephens--then still
+in his apprenticeship--whom Mr. Hoppin declares to have been, "so far as I
+know," the first miller to use smooth stones. If Mr. Hoppin is right in his
+assertion, perhaps he will explain why, during the eight months I was at
+the Washburn Mill, Mr. Stephens did not make a corresponding improvement
+in the product of the Minneapolis Mill. That he did not do this is amply
+proved by the fact of Mr. Pillsbury giving me 5,000 dols. to introduce
+improvements into his mills, when, supposing Mr. Hoppin's statement to
+be correct, he might have had the same alterations carried out under Mr.
+Stephens' direction at a mere nominal cost. As a matter of fact, the stones
+in both the Taylor and Minneapolis Mills were as rough as any in the
+Washburn Mill when I took charge of them.
+
+Thus it appears (1) that the flour made by the mill in which Stephens was
+employed was not improved in quality, while that of the Washburn Mill,
+where he was not employed, became the finest that had ever been made in the
+United States at that time. That (2) the owner of the mill in which Mr.
+Stephens was employed, as he was not making good flour, engaged me at a
+large cost to introduce into his mills the alterations by which only, both
+Mr. Hoppin and myself agree, could any material improvement in the milling
+of that period be effected, .viz., smooth, true, and well-balanced
+stones.--GEO. T. SMITH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For breachy animals do not use barbed fences. To see the lacerations that
+these fences have produced upon the innocent animals should be sufficient
+testimony against them. Many use pokes and blinders on cattle and goats,
+but as a rule such things fail. The better way is to separate breachy
+animals from the lot, as others will imitate their habits sooner or later,
+and then, if not curable, _sell them_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GUENON MILK-MIRROR.
+
+
+The name of the simple Bordeaux peasant is, and should be, permanently
+associated with his discovery that the milking qualities of cows were, to a
+considerable extent, indicated by certain external marks easily observed.
+We had long known that capacious udders and large milk veins, combined with
+good digestive capacity and a general preponderance of the alimentary over
+the locomotive system, were indications that rarely misled in regard to the
+ability of a cow to give much milk; but to judge of the amount of milk a
+cow would yield, and the length of time she would hold out in her flow, two
+or three years before she could be called a cow--this was Guenon's great
+accomplishment, and the one for which he was awarded a gold medal by the
+Agricultural Society of his native district. This was the first of many
+honors with which he was rewarded, and it is much to say that no committee
+of agriculturists who have ever investigated the merits of the system
+have ever spoken disparagingly of it. Those who most closely study it,
+especially following Guenon's original system, which has never been
+essentially improved upon, are most positive in regard to its truth,
+enthusiastic in regard to its value.
+
+The fine, soft hair upon the hinder part of a cow's udder for the most part
+turns upward. This upward-growing hair extends in most cases all over that
+part of the udder visible between the hind legs, but is occasionally marked
+by spots or mere lines, usually slender ovals, in which the hair grows
+down. This tendency of the hair to grow upward is not confined to the udder
+proper; but extends out upon the thighs and upward to the tail. The edges
+of this space over which the hair turns up are usually distinctly marked,
+and, as a rule, the larger the area of this space, which is called the
+"mirror" or "escutcheon," the more milk the cow will give, and the longer
+she will continue in milk.
+
+[Illustration: ESCUTCHEON OF THE JERSEY BULL-CALF, GRAND MIRROR, 4,904.]
+
+That portion of the escutcheon which covers the udder and extends out on
+the inside of each thigh, has been designated as the udder or mammary
+mirror; that which runs upward towards the setting on of the tail, the
+rising or placental mirror. The mammary mirror is of the greater value,
+yet the rising mirror is not to be disregarded. It is regarded of especial
+moment that the mirror, taken as a whole, be symmetrical, and especially
+that the mammary mirror be so; yet it often occurs that it is far
+otherwise, its outline being often very fantastical--exhibiting deep
+_bays_, so to speak, and islands of downward growing hair. There are also
+certain "ovals," never very large, yet distinct, which do not detract from
+the estimated value of an escutcheon; notably those occurring on the lobes
+of the udder just above the hind teats. These are supposed to be points of
+value, though for what reason it would be hard to tell, yet they do occur
+upon some of the very best milch cows, and those whose mirrors correspond
+most closely to their performances.
+
+Mr. Guenon's discovery enables breeders to determine which of their calves
+are most promising, and in purchasing young stock it affords indications
+which rarely fail as to their comparative milk yield. These indications
+occasionally prove utterly fallacious, and Mr. Guenon gives rules for
+determining this class, which he calls "bastards," without waiting for them
+to fail in their milk. The signs are, however, rarely so distinct that one
+would be willing to sell a twenty-quart cow, whose yield confirmed the
+prediction of her mirror at first calving, because of the possibility of
+the going dry in two months, or so, as indicated by her bastardy marks.
+
+It is an interesting fact that the mirrors of bulls (which are much like
+those of cows, but less extensive in every direction) are reflected in
+their daughters. This gives rise to the dangerous custom of breeding for
+mirrors, rather than for milk. What the results may be after a few years it
+is easy to see. The mirror, being valued for its own sake--that is, because
+it sells the heifers--will be likely to lose its practical significance and
+value as a _milk_ mirror.
+
+We have a striking photograph of a young Jersey bull, the property of Mr.
+John L. Hopkins, of Atlanta, Ga., and called "Grand Mirror." This we have
+caused to be engraved and the mirror is clearly shown. A larger mirror is
+rarely seen upon a bull. We hope in a future number to exhibit some cows'
+mirrors of different forms and degrees of excellence.--_Rural New Yorker_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TWO GOOD LAWN TREES.
+
+
+The negundo, or ash-leaved maple, as it is called in the Eastern States,
+better known at the West as a box elder, is a tree that is not known as
+extensively as it deserves. It is a hard maple, that grows as rapidly as
+the soft maple; is hardy, possesses a beautiful foliage of black green
+leaves, and is symmetrical in shape. Through eastern Iowa I found it
+growing wild, and a favorite tree with the early settlers, who wanted
+something that gave shade and protection to their homes quickly on their
+prairie farms. Brought east, its growth is rapid, and it loses none of the
+characteristics it possessed in its western home. Those who have planted it
+are well pleased with it. It is a tree that transplants easily, and I know
+of no reason why it should not be more popular.
+
+For ornamental lawn planting, I give pre-eminence to the cut-leaf weeping
+birch. Possessing all the good qualities of the white birch, it combines
+with them a beauty and delicate grace yielded by no other tree. It is an
+upright grower, with slender, drooping branches, adorned with leaves of
+deep rich green, each leaf being delicately cut, as with a knife, into
+semi-skeletons. It holds its foliage and color till quite late in the fall.
+The bark, with age, becomes white, resembling the white birch, and the
+beauty of the tree increases with its age. It is a free grower, and
+requires no trimming. Nature has given it a symmetry which art cannot
+improve.
+
+H.T.J.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CUTTING SODS FOR LAWNS.
+
+
+I am a very good sod layer, and used to lay very large lawns--half to
+three-quarters of an acre. I cut the sods as follows: Take a board eight to
+nine inches wide, four, five, or six feet long, and cut downward all around
+the board, then turn the board over and cut again alongside the edge of the
+board, and so on as many sods as needed. Then cut the turf with a sharp
+spade, all the same lengths. Begin on one end, and roll together. Eight
+inches by five feet is about as much as a man can handle conveniently. It
+is very easy to load them on a wagon, cart, or barrow, and they can be
+quickly laid. After laying a good piece, sprinkle a little with a watering
+pot, if the sods are dry; then use the back of the spade to smooth them a
+little. If a very fine effect is wanted, throw a shovelful or two of good
+earth over each square yard, and smooth it with the back of a steel rake.
+
+F.H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+[COUNTRY GENTLEMAN.]
+
+HORTICULTURAL NOTES.
+
+
+The Western New York Society met at Rochester, January 26.
+
+_New Apples, Pears, Grapes, etc._--Wm. C Barry, secretary of the committee
+on native fruits, read a full report. Among the older varieties of the
+apple, he strongly recommended Button Beauty, which had proved so excellent
+in Massachusetts, and which had been equally successful at the Mount
+Hope Nurseries at Rochester; the fine growth of the tree and its great
+productiveness being strongly in its favor. The Wagener and Northern Spy
+are among the finer sorts. The Melon is one of the best among the older
+sorts; the fruit being quite tender will not bear long shipment, but it
+possesses great value for home use, and being a poor grower, it had been
+thrown aside by nurserymen and orchardists. It should be top-grafted on
+more vigorous sorts. The Jonathan is another fine sort of slender growth,
+which should be top-grafted.
+
+Among new pears, Hoosic and Frederic Clapp were highly commended for their
+excellence. Some of the older peaches of fine quality had of late been
+neglected, and among them Druid Hill and Brevoort.
+
+Among the many new peaches highly recommended for their early ripening,
+there was great resemblance to each other, and some had proved earlier than
+Alexander.
+
+Of the new grapes, Lady Washington was the most promising. The Secretary
+was a failure. The Jefferson was a fine sort, of high promise.
+
+Among the new white grapes, Niagara, Prentiss, and Duchess stood
+pre-eminent, and were worthy of the attention of cultivators. The
+Vergennes, from Vermont, a light amber colored sort, was also highly
+commended. The Elvira, so highly valued in Missouri, does not succeed well
+here. Several facts were stated in relation to the Delaware grape, showing
+its reliability and excellence.
+
+Several new varieties of the raspberry were named, but few of them were
+found equal to the best old sorts. If Brinckle's Orange were taken as a
+standard for quality, it would show that none had proved its equal in fine
+quality. The Caroline was like it in color, but inferior in flavor. The New
+Rochelle was of second quality. Turner was a good berry, but too soft for
+distant carriage.
+
+Of the many new strawberries named, each seemed to have some special
+drawback. The Bidwell, however, was a new sort of particular excellence,
+and Charles Downing thinks it the most promising of the new berries.
+
+_Discussion on Grapes._--C. W. Beadle, of Ontario, in allusion to Moore's
+Early grape, finds it much earlier than the Concord, and equal to it in
+quality, ripening even before the Hartford. S. D. Willard, of Geneva,
+thought it inferior to the Concord, and not nearly so good as the Worden.
+The last named was both earlier and better than the Concord, and sold for
+seven cents per pound when the Concord brought only four cents. C. A.
+Green, of Monroe County, said the Lady Washington proved to be a very fine
+grape, slightly later than Concord. P. L. Perry, of Canandaigua, said
+that the Vergennes ripens with Hartford, and possesses remarkable keeping
+qualities, and is of excellent quality and free from pulp. He presented
+specimens which had been kept in good condition. He added, in relation to
+the Worden grape, that some years ago it brought 18 cents per pound in New
+York when the Concord sold three days later for only 8 cents. [In such
+comparisons, however, it should be borne in mind that new varieties usually
+receive more attention and better culture, giving them an additional
+advantage.]
+
+The Niagara grape received special attention from members. A. C. Younglove,
+of Yates County, thought it superior to any other white grape for its many
+good qualities. It was a vigorous and healthy grower, and the clusters were
+full and handsome. W. J. Fowler, of Monroe County, saw the vine in October,
+with the leaves still hanging well, a great bearer and the grape of fine
+quality. C. L. Hoag, of Lockport, said he began to pick the Niagara on the
+26th of August, but its quality improved by hanging on the vine. J. Harris,
+of Niagara County, was well acquainted with the Niagara, and indorsed all
+the commendation which had been uttered in its favor. T. C. Maxwell said
+there was one fault--we could not get it, as it was not in market. W. C.
+Barry, of Rochester, spoke highly of the Niagara, and its slight foxiness
+would be no objection to those who like that peculiarity. C. L. Hoag
+thought this was the same quality that Col. Wilder described as "a little
+aromatic." A. C. Younglove found the Niagara to ripen with the Delaware.
+Inquiry being made relative to the Pockington grape, H. E. Hooker said it
+ripened as early as the Concord. C. A. Green was surprised that it had not
+attracted more attention, as he regarded it as a very promising grape. J.
+Charlton, of Rochester, said that the fruit had been cut for market on the
+29th of August, and on the 6th of September it was fully ripe; but he has
+known it to hang as late as November. J. S. Stone had found that when it
+hung as late as November it became sweet and very rich in flavor.
+
+_New Peaches._--A. C. Younglove had found such very early sorts as
+Alexander and Amsden excellent for home use, but not profitable for market.
+The insects and birds made heavy depredations on them. While nearly all
+very early and high-colored sorts suffer largely from the birds, the
+Rivers, a white peach, does not attract them, and hence it may be
+profitable for market if skillfully packed; rough and careless handling
+will spoil the fruit. He added that the Wheatland peach sustains its high
+reputation, and he thought it the best of all sorts for market, ripening
+with Late Crawford. It is a great bearer, but carries a crop of remarkably
+uniform size, so that it is not often necessary to throw out a bad
+specimen. This is the result of experience with it by Mr. Rogers at
+Wheatland, in Monroe County, and at his own residence in Vine Valley. S. D.
+Willard confirmed all that Mr. Younglove had said of the excellence of the
+Rivers peach. He had ripened the Amsden for several years, and found it
+about two weeks earlier than the Rivers, and he thought if the Amsden were
+properly thinned, it would prevent the common trouble of its rotting; such
+had been his experience. E. A. Bronson, of Geneva, objected to making very
+early peaches prominent for marketing, as purchasers would prefer waiting
+a few days to paying high prices for the earliest, and he would caution
+people against planting the Amsden too largely, and its free recommendation
+might mislead. May's Choice was named by H. E. Hooker as a beautiful yellow
+peach, having no superior in quality, but perhaps it may not be found
+to have more general value than Early and Late Crawford. It is scarcely
+distinguishable in appearance from fine specimens of Early Crawford. W. C.
+Barry was called on for the most recent experience with the Waterloo,
+but said he was not at home when it ripened, but he learned that it had
+sustained its reputation. A. C. Younglove said that the Salway is the best
+late peach, ripening eight or ten days after the Smock. S. D. Willard
+mentioned an orchard near Geneva, consisting of 25 Salway trees, which for
+four years had ripened their crop and had sold for $4 per bushel in the
+Philadelphia market, or for $3 at Geneva--a higher price than for any other
+sort--and the owner intends to plant 200 more trees. W. C. Barry said the
+Salway will not ripen at Rochester. Hill's Chili was named by some members
+as a good peach for canning and drying, some stating that it ripens before
+and others after Late Crawford. It requires thinning on the tree, or
+the fruit will be poor. The Allen was pronounced by Mr. Younglove as an
+excellent, intensely high-colored late peach.
+
+_Insects Affecting Horticulture_.--Mr. Zimmerman spoke of the importance
+of all cultivators knowing so much of insects and their habits as to
+distinguish their friends from their enemies. When unchecked they increase
+in an immense ratio, and he mentioned as an instance that the green fly
+(_Aphis_) in five generations may become the parent of six thousand million
+descendants. It is necessary, then, to know what other insects are employed
+in holding them in check, by feeding on them. Some of our most formidable
+insects have been accidentally imported from Europe, such as the codling
+moth, asparagus beetle, cabbage butterfly, currant worm and borer, elm-tree
+beetle, hessian fly, etc.; but in nearly every instance these have come
+over without bringing their insect enemies with them, and in consequence
+they have spread more extensively here than in Europe. It was therefore
+urged that the Agricultural Department at Washington be requested to
+import, as far as practicable, such parasites as are positively known to
+prey on noxious insects. The cabbage fly eluded our keen custom-house
+officials in 1866, and has enjoyed free citizenship ever since. By
+accident, one of its insect enemies (a small black fly) was brought over
+with it, and is now doing excellent work by keeping the cabbage fly in
+check.
+
+The codling moth, one of the most formidable fruit destroyers, may be
+reduced in number by the well-known paper bands; but a more efficient
+remedy is to shower them early in the season with Paris green, mixed in
+water at the rate of only one pound to one hundred gallons of water, with
+a forcing pump, soon after blossoming. After all the experiments made and
+repellents used for the plum curculio, the jarring method is found the most
+efficient and reliable, if properly performed. Various remedies for insects
+sometimes have the credit of doing the work, if used in those seasons
+when the insects happen to be few. With some insects, the use of oil is
+advantageous, as it always closes up their breathing holes and suffocates
+them. The oil should be mixed with milk, and then diluted as required, as
+the oil alone cannot be mixed with the water. As a general remedy,
+Paris green is the strongest that can be applied. A teaspoonful to a
+tablespoonful, in a barrel of water, is enough. Hot water is the best
+remedy for house plants. Place one hand over the soil, invert the pot, and
+plunge the foliage for a second only at a time in water heated to from 150 deg.
+to 200 deg.F, according to the plants; or apply with a fine rose. The yeast
+remedy has not proved successful in all cases.
+
+Among beneficial insects, there are about one hundred species of lady bugs,
+and, so far as known, all are beneficial. Cultivators should know them.
+They destroy vast quantities of plant lice. The ground beetles are mostly
+cannibals, and should not be destroyed. The large black beetle, with
+coppery dots, makes short work with the Colorado potato beetles; and
+a bright green beetle will climb trees to get a meal of canker worms.
+Ichneumon flies are among our most useful insects. The much-abused dragon
+flies are perfectly harmless to us, but destroy many mosquitoes and flies.
+
+Among insects that attack large fruits is the codling moth, to be destroyed
+by paper bands, or with Paris green showered in water. The round-headed
+apple-tree borer is to be cut out, and the eggs excluded with a sheet of
+tarred paper around the stem, and slightly sunk in the earth. For the
+oyster-shell bark louse, apply linseed oil. Paris green, in water,
+will kill the canker worm. Tobacco water does the work for plant lice.
+Peach-tree borers are excluded with tarred or felt paper, and cut out with
+a knife. Jar the grape flea beetle on an inverted umbrella early in the
+morning. Among small-fruit insects, the strawberry worms are readily
+destroyed with hellebore, an ounce to a gallon of warm water. The same
+remedy destroys the imported currant worm.
+
+_Insect Destroyers_.--Prof. W. Saunders, of the Province of Ontario,
+followed Mr. Zimmerman with a paper on other departments of the same
+general subject, which contained much information and many suggestions of
+great value to cultivators. He had found Paris green an efficient remedy
+for the bud-moth on pear and other trees. He also recommends Paris green
+for the grapevine flea beetle. Hellebore is much better for the pear slug
+than dusting with sand, as these slugs, as soon as their skin is spoiled
+by being sanded, cast it off and go on with their work of destruction as
+freely as ever, and this they repeat. He remarked that it is a common error
+that all insects are pests to the cultivator. There are many parasites,
+or useful ones, which prey on our insect enemies. Out of 7,000 described
+insects in this country, only about 50 have proved destructive to our
+crops. Parasites are much more numerous. Among lepidopterous insects
+(butterflies, etc.), there are very few noxious species; many active
+friends are found among the Hymenoptera (wasps, etc.), the ichneumon flies
+pre-eminently so; and in the order Hemiptera (bugs proper) are several that
+destroy our enemies. Hence the very common error that birds which destroy
+insects are beneficial to us, as they are more likely to destroy our insect
+friends than the fewer enemies. Those known as _flycatchers_ may do neither
+harm nor good; so far as they eat the wheat-midge and Hessian fly they
+confer a positive benefit; in other instances they destroy both friends and
+enemies. Birds that are only partly insectivorous, and which eat grain and
+fruit, may need further inquiry. Prof. S. had examined the stomachs of many
+such birds, and particularly of the American robin, and the only curculio
+he ever found in any of these was a single one in a whole cherry which the
+bird had bolted entire. Robins had proved very destructive to his grapes,
+but had not assisted at all in protecting his cabbages growing alongside
+his fruit garden. These vegetables were nearly destroyed by the larvae of
+the cabbage fly, which would have afforded the birds many fine, rich meals.
+This comparatively feeble insect has been allowed by the throngs of birds
+to spread over the whole continent. A naturalist in one of the Western
+States had examined several species of the thrush, and found they had eaten
+mostly that class of insects known as our friends.
+
+Prof. S. spoke of the remedies for root lice, among which were hot water
+and bisulphide of carbon. Hot water will get cold before it can reach the
+smaller roots, however efficient it may be showered on leaves. Bisulphide
+of carbon is very volatile, inflammable, and sometimes explosive, and must
+be handled with great care. It permeates the soil, and if in sufficient
+quantity may be effective in destroying the phylloxera; but its cost and
+dangerous character prevent it from being generally recommended.
+
+Paris green is most generally useful for destroying insects. As sold to
+purchasers, it is of various grades of purity. The highest in price is
+commonly the purest, and really the cheapest. A difficulty with this
+variable quality is that it cannot be properly diluted with water, and
+those who buy and use a poor article and try its efficacy, will burn or
+kill their plants when they happen to use a stronger, purer, and more
+efficient one. Or, if the reverse is done, they may pronounce it a humbug
+from the resulting failure. One teaspoonful, if pure, is enough for a large
+pail of water; or if mixed with flour, there should be forty or fifty times
+as much. Water is best, as the operator will not inhale the dust. London
+purple is another form of the arsenic, and has very variable qualities
+of the poison, being merely refuse matter from manufactories. It is more
+soluble than Paris green, and hence more likely to scorch plants. On the
+whole, Paris green is much the best and most reliable for common use.
+
+At the close of Prof. Saunders' remarks some objections were made by
+members present to the use of Paris green on fruit soon after blossoming,
+and Prof. S. sustained the objection, in that the knowledge that the fruit
+had been showered with it would deter purchasers from receiving it, even if
+no poison could remain on it from spring to autumn. A man had brought to
+him potatoes to analyze for arsenic, on which Paris green had been used,
+and although it was shown to him that the poison did not reach the roots
+beneath the soil, and if it did it was insoluble and could not enter them,
+he was not satisfied until a careful analysis was made and no arsenic at
+all found in them. A member said that in mixing with plaster there should
+be 100 or 150 pounds of plaster to one of the Paris green, and that a
+smaller quantity, by weight, of flour would answer, as that is a more bulky
+article for the same weight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS ON THE SALMON OF THE PACIFIC.
+
+By DAVID S. JORDAN and CHAS. H. GILBERT.
+
+
+During the most of the present year, the writers have been engaged in the
+study of the fishes of the Pacific coast of the United States, in the
+interest of the U.S. Fish Commission and the U.S. Census Bureau. The
+following pages contain the principal facts ascertained concerning the
+salmon of the Pacific coast. It is condensed from our report to the U.S.
+Census Bureau, by permission of Professor Goode, assistant in charge of
+fishery investigations.
+
+There are five species of salmon (Oncorhynchus) in the waters of the North
+Pacific. We have at present no evidence of the existence of any more on
+either the American or the Asiatic side.
+
+These species may be called the quinnat or king salmon, the blue-back
+salmon or red-fish, the silver salmon, the dog salmon, and the hump-back
+salmon, or _Oncorhynchus chouicha, nerka, kisutch, keta_, and _gorbuscha_.
+All these species are now known to occur in the waters of Kamtschatka as
+well as in those of Alaska and Oregon.
+
+As vernacular names of definite application, the following are on record:
+
+a. Quinnat--Chouicha, king salmon, e'quinna, saw-kwey, Chinnook salmon,
+Columbia River salmon, Sacramento salmon, tyee salmon, Monterey salmon,
+deep-water salmon, spring salmon, ek-ul-ba ("ekewan") (fall run).
+
+b. Blue-bock--krasnaya ryba, Alaska red-fish, Idaho red fish, sukkegh,
+Frazer's River salmon, rascal, oo-chooy-ha.
+
+c. Silver salmon--kisutch, winter salmon, hoopid, skowitz, coho, bielaya
+ryba, o-o-wun.
+
+d. Dog salmon--kayko, lekai, ktlawhy, qualoch, fall salmon, o-le-a-rah. The
+males of _all_ the species in the fall are usually known as dog salmon, or
+fall salmon.
+
+e. Hump-back--gorbuscha, haddo, hone, holia, lost salmon, Puget Sound
+salmon, dog salmon (of Alaska).
+
+Of these species, the blue-back predominates in Frazer's River, the silver
+salmon in Puget Sound, the quinnat in the Columbia and the Sacramento, and
+the silver salmon in most of the small streams along the coast. All the
+species have been seen by us in the Columbia and in Frazer's River; all
+but the blue-back in the Sacramento, and all but the blue-back in waters
+tributary to Puget Sound. Only the quinnat has been noticed south of San
+Francisco, and its range has been traced as far as Ventura River, which is
+the southernmost stream in California which is not muddy and alkaline at
+its mouth.
+
+Of these species, the quinnat and blue-back salmon habitually "run" in the
+spring, the others in the fall. The usual order of running in the rivers is
+as follows: _nerka, chouicha, kisutch, gorbuscha, keta_.
+
+The economic value of the spring running salmon is far greater than that of
+the other species, because they can be captured in numbers when at their
+best, while the others are usually taken only after deterioration.
+
+The habits of the salmon in the ocean are not easily studied. Quinnat and
+silver salmon of every size are taken with the seine at almost any season
+in Puget Sound. The quinnat takes the hook freely in Monterey bay, both
+near the shore and at a distance of six or eight miles out. We have reason
+to believe that these two species do not necessarily seek great depths, but
+probably remain not very far from the mouth of the rivers in which they
+were spawned.
+
+The blue-back and the dog salmon probably seek deeper water, as the former
+is seldom or never taken with the seine in the ocean, and the latter is
+known to enter the Straits of Fuca at the spawning season.
+
+The great majority of the quinnat salmon and nearly all blue-back salmon
+enter the rivers in the spring. The run of both begins generally the last
+of March; it lasts, with various modifications and interruptions, until
+the actual spawning season in November; the time of running and the
+proportionate amount of each of the subordinate runs, varying with each
+different river. In general, the runs are slack in the summer and increase
+with the first high water of autumn. By the last of August only straggling
+blue-backs can be found in the lower course of any stream, but both in the
+Columbia and the Sacramento the quinnat runs in considerable numbers till
+October at least. In the Sacramento the run is greatest in the fall, and
+more run in the summer than in spring. In the Sacramento and the smaller
+rivers southward, there is a winter run, beginning in December.
+
+The spring salmon ascend only those rivers which are fed by the melting
+snows from the mountains, and which have sufficient volume to send their
+waters well out to sea. Such rivers are the Sacramento, Rogue, Klamath,
+Columbia, and Frazer's rivers.
+
+Those salmon which run in the spring are chiefly adults (supposed to be at
+least three years old). Their milt and spawn are no more developed than at
+the same time in others of the same species which will not enter the rivers
+until fall. It would appear that the contact with cold fresh water, when in
+the ocean, in some way caused them to turn toward it and to "run," before
+there is any special influence to that end exerted by the development of
+the organs of generation.
+
+High water on any of these rivers in the spring is always followed by an
+increased run of salmon. The canners think, and this is probably true, that
+salmon which would not have run till later are brought up by the contact
+with the cold water. The cause of this effect of cold fresh water is not
+understood. We may call it an instinct of the salmon, which is another way
+of expressing our ignorance. In general, it seems to be true that in those
+rivers and during those years when the spring run is greatest, the fall run
+is least to be depended on.
+
+As the season advances, smaller and younger salmon of these two species
+(quinnat and blue-back) enter the rivers to spawn, and in the fall these
+young specimens are very numerous. We have thus far failed to notice any
+gradations in size or appearance of these young fish by which their ages
+could be ascertained. It is, however, probable that some of both sexes
+reproduce at the age of one year. In Frazer's River, in the fall, quinnat
+male grilse of every size, from eight inches upward, were running, the milt
+fully developed, but usually not showing the hooked jaws and dark colors
+of the older males. Females less than eighteen inches in length were rare.
+All, large and small, then in the river, of either sex, had the ovaries or
+milt well developed.
+
+Little blue-backs of every size down to six inches are also found in
+the Upper Columbia in the fall, with their organs of generation fully
+developed. Nineteen twentieths of these young fish are males, and some of
+them have the hooked jaws and red color of the old males.
+
+The average weight of the quinnat in the Columbia in the spring is
+twenty-two pounds; in the Sacramento about sixteen. Individuals weighing
+from forty to sixty pounds are frequently found in both rivers, and some as
+high as eighty pounds are reported. It is questioned whether these large
+fishes are:
+
+(_a_.) Those which, of the same age, have grown more rapidly;
+
+(_b_.) Those which are older but have, for some reason, failed to spawn;
+or,
+
+(_c_.) Those which have survived one or more spawning seasons.
+
+All of these origins may be possible in individual cases; we are, however,
+of the opinion that the majority of these large fish are those which have
+hitherto run in the fall and so may have survived the spawning season
+previous.
+
+Those fish which enter the rivers in the spring continue their ascent until
+death or the spawning season overtakes them. Probably none of them ever
+return to the ocean, and a large proportion fail to spawn. They are known
+to ascend the Sacramento as far as the base of Mount Shasta, or to its
+extreme head-waters, about four hundred miles. In the Columbia they are
+known to ascend as far as the Bitter Root Mountains, and as far as the
+Spokan Falls, and their extreme limit is not known. This is a distance of
+six to eight hundred miles.
+
+At these great distances, when the fish have reached the spawning grounds,
+besides the usual changes of the breeding season, their bodies are covered
+with bruises on which patches of white fungus develop. The fins become
+mutilated, their eyes are often injured or destroyed; parasitic worms
+gather in their gills, they become extremely emaciated, their flesh
+becomes white from the loss of the oil, and as soon as the spawning act
+is accomplished, and sometimes before, all of them die. The ascent of the
+Cascades and the Dalles probably causes the injury or death of a great many
+salmon.
+
+When the salmon enter the river they refuse bait, and their stomachs are
+always found empty and contracted. In the rivers they do not feed, and when
+they reach the spawning grounds their stomachs, pyloric coeca and all, are
+said to be no larger than one's finger. They will sometimes take the
+fly, or a hook baited with salmon roe, in the clear waters of the upper
+tributaries, but there is no other evidence known to us that they feed when
+there. Only the quinnat and blue-back (then called red-fish) have been
+found in the fall at any great distance from the sea.
+
+The spawning season is probably about the same for all the species. It
+varies for all in different rivers and in different parts of the same
+river, and doubtless extends from July to December.
+
+The manner of spawning is probably similar for all the species, but we have
+no data for any except the quinnat. In this species the fish pair off, the
+male, with tail and snout, excavates a broad shallow "nest" in the gravelly
+bed of the stream, in rapid water, at a depth of one to four feet; the
+female deposits her eggs in it, and after the exclusion of the milt, they
+cover them with stones and gravel. They then float down the stream tail
+foremost. A great majority of them die. In the head-waters of the large
+streams all die, unquestionably. In the small streams, and near the sea, an
+unknown percentage probably survive. The young hatch in about sixty days,
+and most of them return to the ocean during the high water of the spring.
+
+The salmon of all kinds in the spring are silvery, spotted or not according
+to the species, and with the mouth about equally symmetrical in both sexes.
+
+As the spawning season approaches the female loses her silvery color,
+becomes more slimy, the scales on the back partly sink into the skin, and
+the flesh changes from salmon red and becomes variously paler, from the
+loss of the oil, the degree of paleness varying much with individuals and
+with inhabitants of different rivers.
+
+In the lower Sacramento the flesh of the quinnat in either spring or fall
+is rarely pale. In the Columbia, a few with pale flesh are sometimes taken
+in spring, and a good many in the fall. In Frazer's River the fall run of
+the quinnat is nearly worthless for canning purposes, because so many are
+white meated. In the spring very few are white meated, but the number
+increases towards fall, when there is every variation, some having red
+streaks running through them, others being red toward the head and pale
+toward the tail. The red and pale ones cannot be distinguished externally,
+and the color is dependent neither on age nor sex. There is said to be no
+difference in the taste, but there is no market for canned salmon not of
+the conventional orange color.
+
+As the season advances, the differences between the males and the females
+become more and more marked, and keep pace with the development of the
+milt, as is shown by dissection.
+
+The males have: (_a_.) The premaxillaries and the tip of the lower jaw
+more and more prolonged; both of them becoming finally strongly and often
+extravagantly hooked, so that either they shut by the side of each other
+like shears, or else the mouth cannot be closed. (_b_.) The front teeth
+become very long and canine-like, their growth proceeding very rapidly,
+until they are often half an inch long. (_c_.) The teeth on the vomer and
+tongue often disappear. (_d_.) The body grows more compressed and deeper
+at the shoulders, so that a very distinct hump is formed; this is more
+developed in _0. gorbuscha_, but is found in all. (_e_.) The scales
+disappear, especially on the back, by the growth of spongy skin. (_f_.) The
+color changes from silvery to various shades of black and red or blotchy,
+according to the species. The blue-back turns rosy red, the dog salmon a
+dull, blotchy red, and the quiunat generally blackish.
+
+These distorted males are commonly considered worthless, rejected by the
+canners and salmon-salters, but preserved by the Indians. These changes are
+due solely to influences connected with the growth of the testes. They are
+not in any way due to the action of fresh water. They take place at about
+the same time in the adult males of all species, whether in the ocean or
+in the rivers. At the time of the spring runs all are symmetrical. In the
+fall, all males of whatever species are more or less distorted. Among the
+dog salmon, which run only in the fall, the males are hooked-jawed and
+red-blotched when they first enter the Straits of Fuca from the outside.
+The hump-back, taken in salt water about Seattle, shows the same
+peculiarities. The male is slab-sided, hook-billed, and distorted, and is
+rejected by the canners. No hook-jawed _females_ of any species have been
+seen.
+
+It is not positively known that any hook-jawed male survives the
+reproductive act. If any do, their jaws must resume the normal form.
+
+On first entering a stream the salmon swim about as if playing: they always
+head toward the current, and this "playing" may be simply due to facing the
+flood tide. Afterwards they enter the deepest parts of the stream and swim
+straight up, with few interruptions. Their rate of travel on the Sacramento
+is estimated by Stone at about two miles per day; on the Columbia at about
+three miles per day.
+
+As already stated, the economic value of any species depends in great part
+on its being a "spring salmon." It is not generally possible to capture
+salmon of any species in large numbers until they have entered the rivers,
+and the spring salmon enter the rivers long before the growth of the organs
+of reproduction has reduced the richness of the flesh. The fall salmon
+cannot be taken in quantity until their flesh has deteriorated: hence the
+"dog salmon" is practically almost worthless, except to the Indians, and
+the hump-back salmon is little better. The silver salmon, with the same
+breeding habits as the dog salmon, is more valuable, as it is found in
+Puget Sound for a considerable time before the fall rains cause the fall
+runs, and it may be taken in large numbers with seines before the season
+for entering the rivers. The quinnat salmon, from its great size and
+abundance, is more valuable than all other fishes on our Pacific coast
+together. The blue back, similar in flesh but much smaller and less
+abundant, is worth much more than the combined value of the three remaining
+species.
+
+The fall salmon of all species, but especially the dog salmon, ascend
+streams but a short distance before spawning. They seem to be in great
+anxiety to find fresh water, and many of them work their way up little
+brooks only a few inches deep, where they soon perish miserably,
+floundering about on the stones. Every stream, of whatever kind, has more
+or less of these fall salmon.
+
+It is the prevailing impression that the salmon have some special instinct
+which leads them to return to spawn in the same spawning grounds where they
+were originally hatched. We fail to find any evidence of this in the case
+of the Pacific coast salmon, and we do not believe it to be true. It seems
+more probable that the young salmon, hatched in any river, mostly remain in
+the ocean within a radius of twenty, thirty, or forty miles of its mouth.
+These, in their movements about in the ocean, may come into contact with
+the cold waters of their parent rivers, or perhaps of any other river, at
+a considerable distance from the shore. In the case of the quinnat and the
+blue-back, their "instinct" leads them to ascend these fresh waters, and
+in a majority of cases these waters will be those in which the fishes in
+question were originally spawned. Later in the season the growth of the
+reproductive organs leads them to approach the shore and to search for
+fresh waters, and still the chances are that they may find the original
+stream. But undoubtedly many fall salmon ascend, or try to ascend, streams
+in which no salmon was ever hatched.
+
+It is said of the Russian River and other California rivers, that their
+mouths in the time of low water in summer generally become entirely closed
+by sand bars, and that the salmon, in their eagerness to ascend them,
+frequently fling themselves entirely out of water on the beach. But this
+does not prove that the salmon are guided by a marvelous geographical
+instinct which leads them to their parent river. The waters of Russian
+River soak through these sand bars, and the salmon "instinct," we think,
+leads them merely to search for fresh waters.
+
+This matter is much in need of further investigation; at present, however,
+we find no reason to believe that the salmon enter the Rogue River simply
+because they were spawned there, or that a salmon hatched in the Clackamas
+River is any the more likely on that account to return to the Clackamas
+than to go up the Cowlitz or the Deschutes.
+
+"At the hatchery on Rogue River, the fish are stripped, marked and set
+free, and every year since the hatchery has been in operation some of the
+marked fish have been re-caught. The young fry are also marked, but none of
+them have been recaught."
+
+This year the run of silver salmon in Frazer's River was very light, while
+on Puget Sound the run was said by the Indians to be greater than ever
+known before. Both these cases may be due to the same cause, the dry
+summer, low water, and consequent failure of the salmon to find the rivers.
+The run in the Sound is much more irregular than in the large rivers. One
+year they will abound in one bay and its tributary stream and hardly be
+seen in another, while the next year the condition will be reversed. At
+Cape Flattery the run of silver salmon for the present year was very small,
+which fact was generally attributed by the Indians to the birth of twins at
+Neah Bay.
+
+In regard to the diminution of the number of salmon on the coast. In
+Puget's Sound, Frazer's River, and the smaller streams, there appears to be
+little or no evidence of this. In the Columbia River the evidence appears
+somewhat conflicting; the catch during the present year (1880) has been
+considerably greater than ever before (nearly 540,000 cases of 48 lb. each
+having been packed), although the fishing for three or four years has been
+very extensive. On the other hand, the high water of the present spring has
+undoubtedly caused many fish to become spring salmon which would otherwise
+have run in the fall. Moreover, it is urged that a few years ago, when the
+number caught was about half as great as now, the amount of netting used
+was perhaps one-eighth as much. With a comparatively small outfit the
+canners caught half the fish, now with nets much larger and more numerous,
+they catch them all, scarcely any escaping during the fishing season (April
+1 to August 1). Whether an actual reduction in the number of fish running
+can be proven or not, there can be no question that the present rate of
+destruction of the salmon will deplete the river before many years. A
+considerable number of quinnat salmon run in August and September, and some
+stragglers even later; these now are all which keep up the supply of
+fish in the river. The non-molestation of this fall run, therefore, does
+something to atone for the almost total destruction of the spring run.
+
+This, however, is insufficient. A well-ordered salmon hatchery is the only
+means by which the destruction of the salmon in the river can be prevented.
+This hatchery should be under the control of Oregon and Washington, and
+should be supported by a tax levied on the canned fish. It should be placed
+on a stream where the quinnat salmon actually come to spawn.
+
+It has been questioned whether the present hatchery on the Clackamas River
+actually receives the quinnat salmon in any numbers. It is asserted, in
+fact, that the eggs of the silver salmon and dog salmon, with scattering
+quinnat, are hatched there. We have no exact information as to the truth of
+these reports, but the matter should be taken into serious consideration.
+
+On the Sacramento there is no doubt of the reduction of the number of
+salmon; this is doubtless mainly attributable to over-fishing, but in part
+it may be due to the destruction of spawning beds by mining operations and
+other causes.
+
+As to the superiority of the Columbia River salmon, there is no doubt that
+the quinnat salmon average larger and fatter in the Columbia than in the
+Sacramento and in Puget Sound. The difference in the canned fish is,
+however, probably hardly appreciable. The canned salmon from the Columbia,
+however, bring a better price in the market than those from elsewhere. The
+canners there generally have had a high regard for the reputation of
+the river, and have avoided canning fall fish or species other than the
+quinnat. In the Frazer's River the blue-back is largely canned, and its
+flesh being a little more watery and perhaps paler, is graded below the
+quinnat. On Puget Sound various species are canned; in fact, everything
+with red flesh. The best canners on the Sacramento apparently take equal
+care with their product with those of the Columbia, but they depend largely
+on the somewhat inferior fall run. There are, however, sometimes salmon
+canned in San Francisco, which have been in the city markets, and for some
+reason remaining unsold, have been sent to the canners; such salmon are
+unfit for food, and canning them should be prohibited.
+
+The fact that the hump-back salmon runs only on alternate years in Puget
+Sound (1875, 1877, 1879, etc.) is well attested and at present unexplained.
+Stray individuals only are taken in other years. This species has a
+distinct "run," in the United States, only in Puget Sound, although
+individuals (called "lost salmon") are occasionally taken in the Columbia
+and in the Sacramento.--_American Naturalist._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE RELATION BETWEEN ELECTRICITY AND LIGHT.
+
+[Footnote: A lecture by Dr. O. J. Lodge, delivered at the London
+Institution on December 16, 1880.]
+
+
+Ever since the subject on which I have the honor to speak to you to-night
+was arranged, I have been astonished at my own audacity in proposing to
+deal in the course of sixty minutes with a subject so gigantic and so
+profound that a course of sixty lectures would be quite inadequate for its
+thorough and exhaustive treatment.
+
+I must indeed confine myself carefully to some few of the typical and most
+salient points in the relation between electricity and light, and I must
+economize time by plunging at once into the middle of the matter without
+further preliminaries.
+
+Now, when a person is setting off to discuss the relation between
+electricity and light, it is very natural and very proper to pull him up
+short with the two questions: What do you mean by electricity? and What do
+you mean by light? These two questions I intend to try briefly to answer.
+And here let me observe that in answering these fundamental questions, I do
+not necessarily assume a fundamental ignorance on your part of these two
+agents, but rather the contrary; and must beg you to remember that if I
+repeat well-known and simple experiments before you, it is for the purpose
+of directing attention to their real meaning and significance, not to their
+obvious and superficial characteristics; in the same way that I might
+repeat the exceedingly familiar experiment of dropping a stone to the earth
+if we were going to define what we meant by gravitation.
+
+Now, then, we will ask first, What is electricity? and the simple answer
+must be, We don't know. Well, but this need not necessarily be depressing.
+If the same question were asked about matter, or about energy, we should
+have likewise to reply, No one knows.
+
+But then the term Matter is a very general one, and so is the term Energy.
+They are heads, in fact, under which we classify more special phenomena.
+
+Thus, if we were asked, What is sulphur? or what is selenium? we should at
+least be able to reply, A form of matter; and then proceed to describe its
+properties, _i. e._, how it affected our bodies and other bodies.
+
+Again, to the question, What is heat? we can reply, A form of energy; and
+proceed to describe the peculiarities which distinguish it from other forms
+of energy.
+
+But to the question. What is electricity? we have no answer pat like this.
+We can not assert that it is a form of matter, neither can we deny it; on
+the other hand, we certainly can not assert that it is a form of energy,
+and I should be disposed to deny it. It may be that electricity is an
+entity _per se_, just as matter is an entity _per se_.
+
+Nevertheless, I can tell you what I mean by electricity by appealing to its
+known behavior.
+
+Here is a battery, that is, an electricity pump; it will drive electricity
+along. Prof. Ayrtou is going, I am afraid, to tell you, on the 20th of
+January next, that it _produces_ electricity; but if he does, I hope you
+will remember that that is exactly what neither it nor anything else can
+do. It is as impossible to generate electricity in the sense I am trying to
+give the word, as it is to produce matter. Of course I need hardly say that
+Prof. Ayrton knows this perfectly well; it is merely a question of words,
+_i. e._, of what you understand by the word electricity.
+
+I want you, then, to regard this battery and all electrical machines and
+batteries as kinds of electricity pumps, which drive the electricity along
+through the wire very much as a water-pump can drive water along pipes.
+While this is going on the wire manifests a whole series of properties,
+which are called the properties of the current.
+
+[Here were shown an ignited platinum wire, the electric arc between two
+carbons, an electric machine spark, an induction coil spark, and a vacuum
+tube glow. Also a large nail was magnetized by being wrapped in the
+current, and two helices were suspended and seen to direct and attract each
+other.]
+
+To make a magnet, then, we only need a current of electricity flowing round
+and round in a whirl. A vortex or whirlpool of electricity is in fact a
+magnet; and _vice versa_. And these whirls have the power of directing and
+attracting other previously existing whirls according to certain laws,
+called the laws of magnetism. And, moreover, they have the power of
+exciting fresh whirls in neighboring conductors, and of repelling them
+according to the laws of diamagnetism. The theory of the actions is known,
+though the nature of the whirls, as of the simple stream of electricity, is
+at present unknown.
+
+[Here was shown a large electro-magnet and an induction-coil vacuum
+discharge spinning round and round when placed in its field.]
+
+So much for what happens when electricity is made to travel along
+conductors, _i. e._, when it travels along like a stream of water in a
+pipe, or spins round and round like a whirlpool.
+
+But there is another set of phenomena, usually regarded as distinct and of
+another order, but which are not so distinct as they appear, which
+manifest themselves when you join the pump to a piece of glass, or any
+non-conductor, and try to force the electricity through that. You succeed
+in driving some through, but the flow is no longer like that of water in an
+open pipe; it is as if the pipe were completely obstructed by a number of
+elastic partitions or diaphragms. The water can not move without straining
+and bending these diaphragms, and if you allow it, these strained
+partitions will recover themselves, and drive the water back again. [Here
+was explained the process of charging a Leyden jar.] The essential thing to
+remember is that we may have electrical energy in two forms, the static
+and the kinetic; and it is, therefore, also possible to have the rapid
+alternation from one of these forms to the other, called vibration.
+
+Now we will pass to the second question: What do you mean by light? And the
+first and obvious answer is, Everybody knows. And everybody that is not
+blind does know to a certain extent. We have a special sense organ for
+appreciating light, whereas we have none for electricity. Nevertheless, we
+must admit that we really know very little about the intimate nature of
+light--very little more than about electricity. But we do know this,
+that light is a form of energy, and, moreover, that it is energy rapidly
+alternating between the static and the kinetic forms--that it is, in fact,
+a special kind of energy of vibration. We are absolutely certain that light
+is a periodic disturbance in some medium, periodic both in space and time;
+that is to say, the same appearances regularly recur at certain equal
+intervals of distance at the same time, and also present themselves at
+equal intervals of time at the same place; that in fact it belongs to the
+class of motions called by mathematicians undulatory or wave motions. The
+wave motion in this model (Powell's wave apparatus) results from the simple
+up and down motion popularly associated with the term wave. But when
+a mathematician calls a thing a wave he means that the disturbance is
+represented by a certain general type of formula, not that it is an
+up-and-down motion, or that it looks at all like those things on the top of
+the sea. The motion of the surface of the sea falls within that formula,
+and hence is a special variety of wave motion, and the term wave has
+acquired in popular use this signification and nothing else. So that when
+one speaks ordinarily of a wave or undulatory motion, one immediately
+thinks of something heaving up and down, or even perhaps of something
+breaking on the shore. But when we assert that the form of energy called
+light is undulatory, we by no means intend to assert that anything whatever
+is moving up and down, or that the motion, if we could see it, would be
+anything at all like what we are accustomed to in the ocean. The kind of
+motion is unknown; we are not even sure that there is anything like motion
+in the ordinary sense of the word at all.
+
+Now, how much connection between electricity and light have we perceived in
+this glance into their natures? Not much, truly. It amounts to about
+this: That on the one hand electrical energy may exist in either of two
+forms--the static form, when insulators are electrically strained by having
+had electricity driven partially through them (as in the Leyden jar), which
+strain is a form of energy because of the tendency to discharge and do
+work; and the kinetic form, where electricity is moving bodily along
+through conductors or whirling round and round inside them, which motion
+of electricity is a form of energy, because the conductors and whirls can
+attract or repel each other and thereby do work.
+
+And, on the other hand, that light is the rapid alternation of energy
+from one of these forms to the other--the static form where the medium is
+strained, to the kinetic form when it moves. It is just conceivable, then,
+that the static form of the energy of light is _electro_ static, that is,
+that the medium is _electrically_ strained, and that the kinetic form of
+the energy of light is _electro_-kinetic, that is, that the motion is
+not ordinary motion, but electrical motion--in fact, that light is an
+electrical vibration, not a material one.
+
+On November 5, last year, there died at Cambridge a man in the full
+vigor of his faculties--such faculties as do not appear many times in a
+century--whose chief work has been the establishment of this very fact, the
+discovery of the link connecting light and electricity; and the proof--for
+I believe it amounts to a proof--that they are different manifestations
+of one and the same class of phenomena--that light is, in fact, an
+electro-magnetic disturbance. The premature death of James Clerk-Maxwell is
+a loss to science which appears at present utterly irreparable, for he was
+engaged in researches that no other man can hope as yet adequately to grasp
+and follow out; but fortunately it did not occur till he had published his
+book on "Electricity and Magnetism," one of those immortal productions
+which exalt one's idea of the mind of man, and which has been mentioned by
+competent critics in the same breath as the "Principia" itself.
+
+But it is not perfect like the "Principia;" much of it is rough-hewn, and
+requires to be thoroughly worked out. It contains numerous misprints and
+errata, and part of the second volume is so difficult as to be almost
+unintelligible. Some, in fact, consists of notes written for private use
+and not intended for publication. It seems next to impossible now to mature
+a work silently for twenty or thirty years, as was done by Newton two and a
+half centuries ago. But a second edition was preparing, and much might have
+been improved in form if life had been spared to the illustrious author.
+
+The main proof of the electro-magnetic theory of light is this: The rate at
+which light travels has been measured many times, and is pretty well known.
+The rate at which an electro-magnetic wave disturbance would travel if such
+could be generated (and Mr. Fitzgerald, of Dublin, thinks he has proved
+that it can not be generated directly by any known electrical means) can
+be also determined by calculation from electrical measurements. The two
+velocities agree exactly. This is the great physical constant known as the
+ratio V, which so many physicists have been measuring, and are likely to be
+measuring for some time to come.
+
+Many and brilliant as were Maxwell's discoveries, not only in electricity,
+but also in the theory of the nature of gases, and in molecular science
+generally, I can not help thinking that if one of them is more striking and
+more full of future significance than the rest, it is the one I have just
+mentioned--the theory that light is an electrical phenomenon.
+
+The first glimpse of this splendid generalization was caught in 1845, five
+and thirty years ago, by that prince of pure experimentalists, Michael
+Faraday. His reasons for suspecting some connection between electricity and
+light are not clear to us--in fact, they could not have been clear to him;
+but he seems to have felt a conviction that if he only tried long enough
+and sent all kinds of rays of light in all possible directions across
+electric and magnetic fields in all sorts of media, he must ultimately
+hit upon something. Well, this is very nearly what he did. With a sublime
+patience and perseverance which remind one of the way Kepler hunted down
+guess after guess in a different field of research, Faraday combined
+electricity, or magnetism, and light in all manner of ways, and at last he
+was rewarded with a result. And a most out-of-the-way result it seemed.
+First, you have to get a most powerful magnet and very strongly excite it;
+then you have to pierce its two poles with holes, in order that a beam of
+light may travel from one to the other along the lines of force; then, as
+ordinary light is no good, you must get a beam of plane polarized light,
+and send it between the poles. But still no result is obtained until,
+finally, you interpose a piece of a rare and out-of-the-way material, which
+Faraday had himself discovered and made--a kind of glass which contains
+borate of lead, and which is very heavy, or dense, and which must be
+perfectly annealed.
+
+And now, when all these arrangements are completed, what is seen is simply
+this, that if an analyzer is arranged to stop the light and make the field
+quite dark before the magnet is excited, then directly the battery is
+connected and the magnet called into action, a faint and barely perceptible
+brightening of the field occurs, which will disappear if the analyzer be
+slightly rotated. [The experiment was then shown.] Now, no wonder that no
+one understood this result. Faraday himself did not understand it at all.
+He seems to have thought that the magnetic lines of force were rendered
+luminous, or that the light was magnetized; in fact, he was in a fog,
+and had no idea of its real significance. Nor had any one. Continental
+philosophers experienced some difficulty and several failures before they
+were able to repeat the experiment. It was, in fact, discovered too soon,
+and before the scientific world was ready to receive it, and it was
+reserved for Sir William Thomson briefly, but very clearly, to point
+out, and for Clerk-Maxwell more fully to develop, its most important
+consequences. [The principle of the experiment was then illustrated by the
+aid of a mechanical model.]
+
+This is the fundamental experiment on which Clerk-Maxwell's theory of
+light is based; but of late years many fresh facts and relations between
+electricity and light have been discovered, and at the present time they
+are tumbling in in great numbers.
+
+It was found by Faraday that many other transparent media besides heavy
+glass would show the phenomenon if placed between the poles, only in a less
+degree; and the very important observation that air itself exhibits the
+same phenomenon, though to an exceedingly small extent, has just been made
+by Kundt and Rontgen in Germany.
+
+Dr. Kerr, of Glasgow, has extended the result to opaque bodies, and has
+shown that if light be passed through magnetized _iron_ its plane is
+rotated. The film of iron must be exceedingly thin, because of its opacity,
+and hence, though the intrinsic rotating power of iron is undoubtedly very
+great, the observed rotation is exceedingly small and difficult to observe;
+and it is only by a very remarkable patience and care and ingenuity that
+Dr. Kerr has obtained his result. Mr. Fitzgerald, of Dublin, has examined
+the question mathematically, and has shown that Maxwell's theory would have
+enabled Dr. Kerr's result to be predicted.
+
+Another requirement of the theory is that bodies which are transparent
+to light must be insulators or non-conductors of electricity, and that
+conductors of electricity are necessarily opaque to light. Simple
+observation amply confirms this; metals are the best conductors, and are
+the most opaque bodies known. Insulators such as glass and crystals are
+transparent whenever they are sufficiently homogeneous, and the very
+remarkable researches of Prof. Graham Bell in the last few months have
+shown that even _ebonite_, one of the most opaque insulators to ordinary
+vision, is certainly transparent to some kinds of radiation, and
+transparent to no small degree.
+
+[The reason why transparent bodies must insulate, and why conductors must
+be opaque, was here illustrated by mechanical models.]
+
+A further consequence of the theory is that the velocity of light in a
+transparent medium will be affected by its electrical strain constant; in
+other words, that its refractive index will bear some close but not yet
+quite ascertained relation to its specific inductive capacity. Experiment
+has partially confirmed this, but the confirmation is as yet very
+incomplete. But there are a number of results not predicted by theory, and
+whose connection with the theory is not clearly made out. We have the fact
+that light falling on the platinum electrode of a voltameter generates a
+current, first observed, I think, by Sir W. R. Grove--at any rate, it is
+mentioned in his "Correlation of Forces"--extended by Becquerel and Robert
+Sabine to other substances, and now being extended to fluorescent and other
+bodies by Prof. Minchin. And finally--for I must be brief--we have
+the remarkable action of light on selenium. This fact was discovered
+accidentally by an assistant in the laboratory of Mr. Willoughby Smith, who
+noticed that a piece of selenium conducted electricity very much better
+when light was falling upon it than when it was in the dark. The light of
+a candle is sufficient, and instantaneously brings down the resistance to
+something like one-fifth of its original value.
+
+I could show you these effects, but there is not much to see; it is an
+intensely interesting phenomenon, but its external manifestation is not
+striking--any more than Faraday's heavy glass experiment was.
+
+This is the phenomenon which, as you know, has been utilized by Prof.
+Graham Bell in that most ingenious and striking invention, the photophone.
+By the kindness of Prof. Silvanus Thompson, I have a few slides to show the
+principle of the invention, and Mr. Shelford Bidwell has been kind enough
+to lend me his home-made photophone, which answers exceedingly well for
+short distances.
+
+I have now trespassed long enough upon your patience, but I must just
+allude to what may very likely be the next striking popular discovery; and
+that is the transmission of light by electricity; I mean the transmission
+of such things as views and pictures by means of the electric wire. It has
+not yet been done, but it seems already theoretically possible, and it may
+very soon be practically accomplished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+INTERESTING ELECTRICAL RESEARCHES.
+
+
+During the last six years Dr. Warren de la Rue has been investigating,
+in conjunction with Dr. Hugo Muller, the various and highly interesting
+phenomena which accompany the electric discharge. From time to time the
+results of their researches were communicated to the Royal Society, and
+appeared in its Proceedings. Early last year Dr. De la Rue being requested
+to bring the subject before the members of the Royal Institution, acceded
+to the pressing invitation of his colleagues and scientific friends.
+The discourse, which was necessarily long postponed on account of the
+preparations that had to be made, was finally given on Friday, the 21st of
+January, and was one of the most remarkable, from the elaborate nature of
+the experiments, ever delivered in the theater of that deservedly famous
+institution.
+
+Owing to the great inconvenience of removing the battery from his
+laboratory, Dr. de la Rue, despite the great expenditure, directed Mr. S.
+Tisley to prepare, expressly for the lecture, a second series of 14,400
+cells, and fit it up in the basement of the Royal Institution. The
+construction of this new battery occupied Mr. Tisley a whole year, while
+the charging of it extended over a fortnight.
+
+The "de la Rue cell," if we may so call one of these elements, consists of
+a zinc rod, the lower portion of which is embedded in a solid electrolyte,
+viz., chloride of silver, with which are connected two flattened silver
+wires to serve as electrodes. When these are united and the silver chloride
+moistened, chemical action begins, and a weak but constant current is
+generated.
+
+The electromotive force of such a cell is 1.03 volts, and a current
+equivalent to one volt passing through a resistance of one ohm was found to
+decompose 0.00146 grain of water in one second. The battery is divided
+into "cabinets," which hold from 1,200 to 2,160 small elements each. This
+facilitates removal, and also the detection of any fault that may occur.
+
+It will be remembered that in 1808 Sir Humphry Davy constructed his battery
+of 2,000 cells, and thus succeeded in exalting the tiny spark obtained in
+closing the circuit into the luminous sheaf of the voltaic arc. He also
+observed that the spark passed even when the poles were separated by a
+distance varying from 1/40 to 1/30 of an inch. This appears to have been
+subsequently forgotten, as we find later physicists questioning the
+possibility of the spark leaping over any interpolar distance. Mr. J.
+P. Gassiot, of Clapham, demonstrated the inaccuracy of this opinion by
+constructing a battery of 3,000 Leclanche cells, which gave a spark of
+0.025 inch; a similar number of "de la Rue" cells gives an 0.0564 inch
+spark. This considerable increase in potential is chiefly due to better
+insulation.
+
+The great energy of this battery was illustrated by a variety of
+experiments. Thus, a large condenser, specially constructed by Messrs.
+Varley, and having a capacity equal to that of 6,485 large Leyden jars,
+was almost immediately charged by the current from 10,000 cells. Wires of
+various kinds, and from 9 inches to 29 inches in length, were instantly
+volatilized by the passage of the electricity thus stored up. The current
+induced in the secondary wire of a coil by the discharge of the condenser
+through the primary, was also sufficiently intense to deflagrate wires of
+considerable length and thickness.
+
+It was with such power at his command that Dr. De la Rue proceeded to
+investigate several important electrical laws. He has found, for example,
+that the positive discharge is more intermittent than the negative,
+that the arc is always preceded by a streamer-like discharge, that its
+temperature is about 16,000 deg., and its length at the ordinary pressure
+of the atmosphere, when taken between two points, varies as the square
+of the number of cells. Thus, with a battery of 1,000 cells, the arc was
+0.0051 inch, with 11,000 cells it increased to 0.62 inch. The same law was
+found to hold when the discharge took place between a point and a disk; it
+failed entirely, however, when the terminals were two disks.
+
+It was also shown that the voltaic arc is not a phenomenon of conduction,
+but is essentially a disruptive discharge, the intervals between the
+passage of two successive static sparks being the time required for the
+battery to collect sufficient power to leap over the interposed resistance.
+This was further confirmed by the introduction of a condenser, when the
+intervals were perceptibly larger.
+
+Faraday proved that the quantity of electricity necessary to produce a
+strong flash of lightning would result from the decomposition of a single
+grain of water, and Dr. de la Rue's experiments confirm this extraordinary
+statement. He has calculated that this quantity of electricity would be
+5,000 times as great as the charge of his large condenser, and that a
+lightning flash a mile long would require the potential of 3,500,000 cells,
+that is to say, of 243 of his powerful batteries.
+
+In experimenting with "vacuum" tubes, he has found that the discharge is
+also invariably disruptive. This is an important point, as many physicists
+speak and write of the phenomenon as one of conduction. Air, in every
+degree of tenuity, refuses to act as a conductor of electricity. These
+experiments show that the resistance of gaseous media diminishes with the
+pressure only up to a certain point, beyond which it rapidly increases.
+Thus, in the case of hydrogen, it diminishes up to 0.642 mm., 845
+millionths; it then rises as the exhaustion proceeds, and at 0.00065 mm.,
+8.6 millionths, it requires as high a potential as at 21.7 mm., 28.553
+millionths. At 0.00137 mm., 1.8 millionth, the current from 11,000 cells
+would not pass through a tube for which 430 cells sufficed at the pressure
+of minimum resistance. At a pressure of 0.0055 mm., 0.066 millionth, the
+highest exhaust obtained in any of the experiments, even a one-inch spark
+from an induction coil refused to pass. It was also ascertained that there
+is neither condensacian nor dilatation of the gas in contact with the
+terminals prior to the passage of the discharge.
+
+These researches naturally led to some speculation about the conditions
+under which auroral phenomena may occur. Observers have variously stated
+the height at which the aurora borealis attains its greatest brilliancy
+as ranging between 124 and 281 miles. Dr. de la Rue's conclusions fix
+the upper limit at 124 miles, and that of maximum display at 37 miles,
+admitting also that the aurora may sometimes occur at an altitude of a few
+thousand feet.
+
+The aurora was beautifully illustrated by a very large tube, in which the
+theoretical pressure was carefully maintained, the characteristic roseate
+tinge being readily produced and maintained.
+
+In studying the stratifications observed in vacuum tubes, Dr. de la Rue
+finds that they originate at the positive pole, and that their steadiness
+may be regulated by the resistance in circuit, and that even when the least
+tremor cannot be detected by the eye, they are still produced by rapid
+pulsations which may be as frequent as ten millions per second.
+
+Dr. de la Rue concluded his interesting discourse by exhibiting some of the
+finest tubes of his numerous and unsurpassed collection.--_Engineering_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+MEASURING ELECTROMOTIVE FORCE.
+
+
+Coulomb's torsion balance has been adapted by M. Baille to the measurement
+of low electromotive forces in a very successful manner, and has been found
+preferable by him to the delicate electrometers of Sir W. Thomson. It
+is necessary to guard it from disturbances due to extraneous electric
+influences and the trembling of the ground. These can be eliminated
+completely by encircling the instrument in a metal case connected to
+earth, and mounting it on solid pillars in a still place. Heat also has a
+disturbing effect, and makes itself felt in the torsion of the fiber and
+the cage surrounding the lever. These effects are warded off by inclosing
+the instrument in a non-conducting jacket of wood shavings.
+
+The apparatus of M. Baille consists of an annealed silver torsion wire of
+2.70 meters long, and a lever 0.50 meter long, carrying at each extremity
+a ball of copper, gilded, and three centimeters in diameter. Similar balls
+are fixed at the corners of a square 20.5 meters in the side, and connected
+in diagonal pairs by fine wire. The lever placed at equal distances from
+the fixed balls communicates, by the medium of the torsion wire, with the
+positive pole of a battery, P, the other pole being to earth.
+
+Owing to some unaccountable variations in the change of the lever or
+needle, M. Baille was obliged to measure the change at each observation.
+This was done by joining the + pole of the battery to the needle, and one
+pair of the fixed balls, and observing the deflection; then the deflection
+produced by the other balls was observed. This operation was repeated
+several times.
+
+The battery, X, to be measured consisted of ten similar elements, and one
+pole of it was connected to the fixed balls, while the other pole was
+connected to the earth. The needle, of course, remained in contact with the
++ pole of the charging battery, P.
+
+The deflections were read from a clear glass scale, placed at a distance
+of 3.30 meters from the needle, and the results worked out from Coulomb's
+static formula,
+
+C a = (4 m m')/d squared, with
+
+ ______________
+ / sum((p/g) r squared)
+ O = / -------------
+ \/ C
+
+[TEX: O = \sqrt{\frac{\sum \frac{p}{g} r^2}{C}}]
+
+In M. Baillie's experiments, O = 437 cubed, and sum(pr squared)= 32171.6 (centimeter
+grammes), the needle having been constructed of a geometrical form.
+
+The following numbers represent the potential of an element of the
+battery--that is to say, the quantity of electricity that the pole of that
+battery spreads upon a sphere of one centimeter radius. They are expressed
+in units of electricity, the unit being the quantity of electricity which,
+acting upon a similar unit at a distance of one centimeter, produces a
+repulsion equal to one gramme:
+
+Volta pile 0.03415 open circuit.
+Zinc, sulphate of copper, copper 0.02997 "
+Zinc, acidulated water, copper, sulphate of copper 0.03709 "
+Zinc, salt water, carbon peroxide of manganese 0.05282 "
+Zinc, salt water, platinum, chloride of platinum 0.05027 "
+Zinc, acidulated water, carbon nitric acid 0.06285 "
+
+These results were obtained just upon charging the batteries, and are,
+therefore, slightly higher than the potentials given after the batteries
+became older. The sulphate of copper cells kept about their maximum value
+longest, but they showed variations of about 10 per cent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TELEPHONY BY THERMIC CURRENTS.
+
+
+While in telephonic arrangements, based upon the principle of magnetic
+induction, a relatively considerable expenditure of force is required in
+order to set the tightly stretched membrane in vibration, in the so-called
+carbon telephones only a very feeble impulse is required to produce the
+differences in the current necessary for the transmission of sounds. In
+order to produce relatively strong currents, even in case of sound-action
+of a minimum strength, Franz Kroettlinger, of Vienna, has made an
+interesting experiment to use thermo electric currents for the transmission
+of sound to a distance. The apparatus which he has constructed is
+exceedingly simple. A current of hot air flowing from below upward is
+deflected more or less from its direction by the human voice. By its action
+an adjacent thermo-battery is excited, whose current passes through the
+spiral of an ordinary telephone, which serves as the receiving instrument.
+As a source of heat the inventor uses a common stearine candle, the flame
+of which is kept at one and the same level by means of a spring similar to
+those used in carriage lamps. On one side of the candle is a sheet metal
+voice funnel fixed upon a support, its mouth being covered with a movable
+sliding disk, fitted with a suitable number of small apertures. On the
+other side a similar support holds a funnel-shaped thermo-battery. The
+single bars of metal forming this battery are very thin, and of such a
+shape that they may cool as quickly as possible. Both the speaking-funnel
+and the battery can be made to approach, at will, to the stream of warm air
+rising up from the flame. The entire apparatus is inclosed in a tin case
+in such a manner that only the aperture of the voice-funnel and the polar
+clamps for securing the conducting wires appear on the outside. The inside
+of the case is suitably stayed to prevent vibration. On speaking into the
+mouth-piece of the funnel, the sound-waves occasion undulations in the
+column of hot air which are communicated to the thermo-battery, and in this
+manner corresponding differences are produced in the currents in the wires
+leading to the receiving instrument.--_Oesterreichische-Ungarische Post._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE TELECTROSCOPE.
+
+By MONS. SENLECQ, of Ardres.
+
+
+This apparatus, which is intended to transmit to a distance through a
+telegraphic wire pictures taken on the plate of a camera, was invented in
+the early part of 1877 by M. Senlecq, of Ardres. A description of the first
+specification submitted by M. Senlecq to M. du Moncel, member of the
+Paris Academy of Sciences, appeared in all the continental and American
+scientific journals. Since then the apparatus has everywhere occupied the
+attention of prominent electricians, who have striven to improve on it.
+Among these we may mention MM. Ayrton, Perry, Sawyer (of New York),
+Sargent (of Philadelphia), Brown (of London), Carey (of Boston), Tighe (of
+Pittsburg), and Graham Bell himself. Some experimenters have used many
+wires, bound together cable-wise, others one wire only. The result has
+been, on the one hand, confusion of conductors beyond a certain distance,
+with the absolute impossibility of obtaining perfect insulation; and,
+on the other hand, an utter want of synchronism. The unequal and slow
+sensitiveness of the selenium likewise obstructed the proper working of the
+apparatus. Now, without a relative simplicity in the arrangement of the
+conducting wires intended to convey to a distance the electric current with
+its variations of intensity, without a perfect and rapid synchronism
+acting concurrently with the luminous impressions, so as to insure the
+simultaneous action of transmitter and receiver, without, in fine, an
+increased sensitiveness in the selenium, the idea of the telectroscope
+could not be realized. M. Senlecq has fortunately surmounted most of these
+main obstacles, and we give to-day a description of the latest apparatus he
+has contrived.
+
+
+TRANSMITTER.
+
+A brass plate, A, whereon the rays of light impinge inside a camera, in
+their various forms and colors, from the external objects placed before the
+lens, the said plate being coated with selenium on the side intended to
+face the dark portion of the camera This brass plate has its entire surface
+perforated with small holes as near to one another as practicable. These
+holes are filled with selenium, heated, and then cooled very slowly, so as
+to obtain the maximum sensitiveness. A small brass wire passes through the
+selenium in each hole, without, however, touching the plate, on to the
+rectangular and vertical ebonite plate, B, Fig. 1, from under this plate
+at point, C. Thus, every wire passing through plate, A, has its point
+of contact above the plate, B, lengthwise. With this view the wires are
+clustered together when leaving the camera, and thence stretch to their
+corresponding points of contact on plate, B, along line, C C. The surface
+of brass, A, is in permanent contact with the positive pole of the battery
+(selenium). On each side of plate, B, are let in two brass rails, D and E,
+whereon the slide hereinafter described works.
+
+[Illustration: Fig. 1]
+
+Rail, E, communicates with the line wire intended to conduct the various
+light and shade vibrations. Rail, D, is connected with the battery wire.
+Along F are a number of points of contact corresponding with those along
+C C. These contacts help to work the apparatus, and to insure the perfect
+isochronism of the transmitter and receiver. These points of contact,
+though insulated one from the other on the surface of the plate, are all
+connected underneath with a wire coming from the positive pole of a special
+battery. This apparatus requires two batteries, as, in fact, do all
+autographic telegraphs--one for sending the current through the selenium,
+and one for working the receiver, etc. The different features of this
+important plate may, therefore, be summed up thus:
+
+FIGURE 1.
+
+D. Brass rail, grooved and connected with the line wire working the
+receiver.
+
+F. Contacts connected underneath with a wire permanently connected with
+battery.
+
+C. Contacts connected to insulated wires from selenium.
+
+E. Brass rail, grooved, etc., like D.
+
+
+RECEIVER.
+
+A small slide, Fig. 2, having at one of its angles a very narrow piece of
+brass, separated in the middle by an insulating surface, used for setting
+the apparatus in rapid motion. This small slide has at the points, D D, a
+small groove fitting into the brass rails of plate, B, Fig. 1, whereby it
+can keep parallel on the two brass rails, D and E. Its insulator, B, Fig.
+2, corresponds to the insulating interval between F and C, Fig. 1.
+
+A, Fig. 3, circular disk, suspended vertically (made of ebonite or other
+insulating material). This disk is fixed. All round the inside of its
+circumference are contacts, connected underneath with the corresponding
+wires of the receiving apparatus. The wires coming from the seleniumized
+plate correspond symmetrically, one after the other, with the contacts of
+transmitter. They are connected in the like order with those of disk, A,
+and with those of receiver, so that the wire bearing the No. 5 from the
+selenium will correspond identically with like contact No. 5 of receiver.
+
+D, Fig. 4, gutta percha or vulcanite insulating plate, through which pass
+numerous very fine platinum wires, each corresponding at its point of
+contact with those on the circular disk, A.
+
+The receptive plate must be smaller than the plate whereon the light
+impinges. The design being thus reduced will be the more perfect from the
+dots formed by the passing currents being closer together.
+
+B, zinc or iron or brass plate connected to earth. It comes in contact with
+chemically prepared paper, C, where the impression is to take place. It
+contributes to the impression by its contact with the chemically prepared
+paper.
+
+In E, Fig. 3, at the center of the above described fixed plate is a
+metallic axis with small handle. On this axis revolves brass wheel, F, Fig.
+5.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 2]
+
+On handle, E, presses continuously the spring, H, Fig. 3, bringing the
+current coming from the selenium line. The cogged wheel in Fig. 5 has at a
+certain point of its circumference the sliding spring, O, Fig. 5, intended
+to slide as the wheel revolves over the different contacts of disk, A, Fig.
+3.
+
+This cogged wheel, Fig. 5, is turned, as in the dial telegraphs, by a rod
+working in and out under the successive movements of the electro-magnet,
+H, and of the counter spring. By means of this rod (which must be of a
+non-metallic material, so as not to divert the motive current), and of an
+elbow lever, this alternating movement is transmitted to a catch, G, which
+works up and down between the cogs, and answers the same purpose as the
+ordinary clock anchor.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 3]
+
+This cogged wheel is worked by clockwork inclosed between two disks, and
+would rotate continuously were it not for the catch, G, working in and out
+of the cogs. Through this catch, G, the wheel is dependent on the movement
+of electro-magnet. This cogged wheel is a double one, consisting of two
+wheels coupled together, exactly similar one with the other, and so fixed
+that the cogs of the one correspond with the void between the cogs of the
+others. As the catch, G, moves down it frees a cog in first wheel, and both
+wheels begin to turn, but the second wheel is immediately checked by catch,
+G, and the movement ceases. A catch again works the two wheels, turn half a
+cog, and so on. Each wheel contains as many cogs as there are contacts on
+transmitter disk, consequently as many as on circular disk, A, Fig. 3, and
+on brass disk within camera.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 4]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 5]
+
+Having now described the several parts of the apparatus, let us see how it
+works. All the contacts correspond one with the other, both on the side of
+selenium current and that of the motive current. Let us suppose that the
+slide of transmitter is on contact No. 10 for instance; the selenium
+current starting from No. 10 reaches contact 10 of rectangular transmitter,
+half the slide bearing on this point, as also on the parallel rail,
+communicates the current to said rail, thence to line, from the line to
+axis of cogged wheel, from axis to contact 10 of circular fixed disk,
+and thence to contact 10 of receiver. At each selenium contact of the
+rectangular disk there is a corresponding contact to the battery and
+electro-magnet. Now, on reaching contact 10 the intermission of the current
+has turned the wheel 10 cogs, and so brought the small contact, O, Fig. 5,
+on No. 10 of the fixed circular disk.
+
+As may be seen, the synchronism of the apparatus could not be obtained in
+a more simple and complete mode--the rectangular transmitter being placed
+vertically, and the slide being of a certain weight to its fall from the
+first point of contact sufficient to carry it rapidly over the whole length
+of this transmitter.
+
+The picture is, therefore, reproduced almost instantaneously; indeed, by
+using platinum wires on the receiver connected with the negative pole, by
+the incandescence of these wires according to the different degrees of
+electricity we can obtain a picture, of a fugitive kind, it is true, but
+yet so vivid that the impression on the retina does not fade during the
+relatively very brief space of time the slide occupies in traveling over
+all the contacts. A Ruhmkorff coil may also be employed for obtaining
+sparks in proportion to the current emitted. The apparatus is regulated
+in precisely the same way as dial telegraphs, starting always from first
+contact. The slide should, therefore, never be removed from the rectangular
+disk, whereon it is held by the grooves in the brass rails, into which it
+fits with but slight friction, without communicating any current to the
+line wires when not placed on points of contact.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Continued from SUPPLEMENT No. 274, page 4368.]
+
+
+
+
+THE VARIOUS MODES OF TRANSMITTING POWER TO A DISTANCE.
+
+[Footnote: A paper lately read before the Institution of Mechanical
+Engineers.]
+
+By ARTHUR ACHARD, of Geneva.
+
+
+But allowing that the figure of 22 H. P., assumed for this power (the
+result in calculating the work with compressed air being 19 H. P.) may be
+somewhat incorrect, it is unlikely that this error can be so large that its
+correction could reduce the efficiency below 80 per cent. Messrs. Sautter
+and Lemonnier, who construct a number of compressors, on being consulted
+by the author, have written to say that they always confined themselves in
+estimating the power stored in the compressed air, and had never measured
+the gross power expended. Compressed air in passing along the pipe, assumed
+to be horizontal, which conveys it from the place of production to the
+place where it is to be used, experiences by friction a diminution of
+pressure, which represents a reduction in the mechanical power stored up,
+and consequently a loss of efficiency.
+
+The loss of pressure in question can only be calculated conveniently on the
+hypothesis that it is very small, and the general formula,
+
+ p1 - p 4L
+ ------- = ---- f(u),
+ [Delta] D
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{4L}{D}f(u)]
+
+is employed for the purpose, where D is the diameter of the pipe, assumed
+to be uniform, L the length of the pipe, p1 the pressure at the entrance, p
+the pressure at the farther end, u the velocity at which the compressed air
+travels, [Delta] its specific weight, and f(u) the friction per unit of
+length. In proportion as the air loses pressure its speed increases, while
+its specific weight diminishes; but the variations in pressure are assumed
+to be so small that u and [Delta] may be considered constant. As regards
+the quantity f(u), or the friction per unit of length, the natural law
+which regulates it is not known, audit can only be expressed by some
+empirical formula, which, while according sufficiently nearly with the
+facts, is suited for calculation. For this purpose the binomial formula, au
++ bu squared, or the simple formula, b1 u squared, is generally adopted; a b and b1 being
+coefficients deduced from experiment. The values, however, which are to
+be given to these coefficients are not constant, for they vary with the
+diameter of the pipe, and in particular, contrary to formerly received
+ideas, they vary according to its internal surface. The uncertainty in this
+respect is so great that it is not worth while, with a view to accuracy, to
+relinquish the great convenience which the simple formula, b1 u squared, offers.
+It would be better from this point of view to endeavor, as has been
+suggested, to render this formula more exact by the substitution of a
+fractional power in the place of the square, rather than to go through
+the long calculations necessitated by the use of the binomial au + bu squared.
+Accordingly, making use of the formula b1 u squared, the above equation becomes,
+
+ p1 - p 4L
+ ------- = ---- b1 u squared;
+ [Delta] D
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{4L}{D} b_1 u^2]
+
+or, introducing the discharge per second, Q, which is the usual figure
+supplied, and which is connected with the velocity by the relation, Q =
+([pi] D squared u)/4, we have
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q squared.
+ [Delta] [pi] squared D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2]
+
+Generally the pressure, p1, at the entrance is known, and the pressure, p,
+has to be found; it is then from p1 that the values of Q and [Delta] are
+calculated. In experiments where p1 and p are measured directly, in order
+to arrive at the value of the coefficient b1, Q and [Delta] would be
+calculated for the mean pressure 1/2(p1 + p). The values given to the
+coefficient b1 vary considerably, because, as stated above, it varies with
+the diameter, and also with the nature of the material of the pipe. It
+is generally admitted that it is independent of the pressure, and it is
+probable that within certain limits of pressure this hypothesis is in
+accordance with the truth.
+
+D'Aubuisson gives for this case, in his _Traite d'Hydraulique_, a rather
+complicated formula, containing a constant deduced from experiment, whose
+value, according to a calculation made by the author, is approximately b1 =
+0.0003. This constant was determined by taking the mean of experiments made
+with tin tubes of 0.0235 meter (15/16 in.), 0.05 meter (2 in.), and 0.10
+meter (4 in.) diameter; and it was erroneously assumed that it was correct
+for all diameters and all substances.
+
+M. Arson, engineer to the Paris Gas Company, published in 1867, in the
+_Memoires de la Societe des Ingenieurs Civils de France_, the results of
+some experiments on the loss of pressure in gas when passing through pipes.
+He employed cast-iron pipes of the ordinary type. He has represented the
+results of his experiments by the binomial formula, au + bu squared, and gives
+values for the coefficients a and b, which diminish with an increase in
+diameter, but would indicate greater losses of pressure than D'Aubuisson's
+formula. M. Deviller, in his _Rapport sur les travaux de percement du
+tunnel sous les Alpes_, states that the losses of pressure observed in the
+air pipe at the Mont Cenis Tunnel confirm the correctness of D'Aubuisson's
+formula; but his reasoning applies to too complicated a formula to be
+absolutely convincing.
+
+Quite recently M. E. Stockalper, engineer-in-chief at the northern end of
+the St. Gothard Tunnel, has made some experiments on the air conduit of
+this tunnel, the results of which he has kindly furnished to the author.
+These lead to values for the coefficient b1 appreciably less than that
+which is contained implicitly in D'Aubuisson's formula. As he experimented
+on a rising pipe, it is necessary to introduce into the formula the
+difference of level, h, between the two ends; it then becomes
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q squared + h.
+ [Delta] [pi] squared D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2 + h]
+
+The following are the details of the experiments: First series of
+experiments: Conduit consisting of cast or wrought iron pipes, joined by
+means of flanges, bolts, and gutta percha rings. D = 0.20 m. (8 in.); L =
+4,600 m. (15,100 ft,); h= 26.77 m. (87 ft. 10 in.). 1st experiment: Q =
+0.1860 cubic meter (6.57 cubic feet), at a pressure of 1/2(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 22 deg. Cent. (72 deg. Fahr.); p1 = 5.60 atm., p =5.24 atm. Hence p1
+- p = 0.36 atm.= 0.36 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2.116 lb. per
+square foot), whence we obtain b1=0.0001697. D'Aubuisson's formula would
+have given p1 - p = 0.626 atm.; and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p =
+0.9316 atm. 2d experiment: Q = 0.1566 cubic meter (5.53 cubic feet), at a
+pressure of 1/2(p1 + p), and a temperature of 22 deg. Cent. (72 deg. Fahr.); p1
+= 4.35 atm., p = 4.13 atm. Hence p1 - p = 0.22 atm. = 0.22 X 10,334
+kilogrammes per square meter (2,116 lb. per square foot); whence we obtain
+b1 = 0.0001816. D'Aubuisson's formula would have given p1 - p = 0.347 atm;
+and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p = 0.5382 atm. 3d experiment: Q =
+0.1495 cubic meter (5.28 cubic feet) at a pressure of 1/2(p1 + p) and a
+temperature 22 deg. Cent. (72 Fahr.); p1 = 3.84 atm., p = 3.65 atm. Hence p1 -
+p = 0.19 atm. = 0.19 X 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2.116 lb. per
+square foot); whence we obtain B1 = 0.0001966. D'Aubuisson's formula would
+have given p1 - p = 0.284 atm., and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p =
+0.4329 atm. Second series of experiments: Conduit composed of wrought-iron
+pipes, with joints as in the first experiments. D = 0.15 meter (6 in.), L
+- 0.522 meters (1,712 ft.), h = 3.04 meters (10 ft.) 1st experiments: Q =
+0.2005 cubic meter (7.08 cubic feet), at a pressure of 1/2(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 26.5 deg. Cent. (80 deg. Fahr.); p1 = 5.24 atm., p = 5.00 atm. Hence
+p1 - p = 0.24 atm. =0.24 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2,116 lb.
+per square foot); whence we obtain b1 = 0.3002275. 2nd experiment: Q =
+0.1586 cubic meter (5.6 cubic feet), at a pressure of 1/2(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 26.5 deg. Cent. (80 deg. Fahr.); p1 = 3.650 atm., p = 3.545 atm.
+Hence p1 - p = 0.105 atm. = 0.105 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter
+(2,116 lb. per square foot); whence we obtain b1 = 0.0002255. It is clear
+that these experiments give very small values for the coefficient. The
+divergence from the results which D'Aubuisson's formula would give is due
+to the fact that his formula was determined with very small pipes. It is
+probable that the coefficients corresponding to diameters of 0.15 meter
+(6 in.) and 0.20 meter (8 in.) for a substance as smooth as tin, would be
+still smaller respectively than the figures obtained above.
+
+The divergence from the results obtained by M. Arson's formula does not
+arise from a difference in size, as this is taken into account. The author
+considers that it may be attributed to the fact that the pipes for the St.
+Gothard Tunnel were cast with much greater care than ordinary pipes, which
+rendered their surface smoother, and also to the fact that flanged joints
+produce much less irregularity in the internal surface than the ordinary
+spigot and faucet joints.
+
+Lastly, the difference in the methods of observation and the errors which
+belong to them, must be taken into account. M. Stockalper, who experimented
+on great pressures, used metallic gauges, which are instruments on whose
+sensibility and correctness complete reliance cannot be placed; and
+moreover the standard manometer with which they were compared was one of
+the same kind. The author is not of opinion that the divergence is owing to
+the fact that M. Stockalper made his observations on an air conduit, where
+the pressure was much higher than in gas pipes. Indeed, it may be assumed
+that gases and liquids act in the same manner; and, as will be [1]
+explained later on, there is reason to believe that with the latter a rise
+of pressure increases the losses of pressure instead of diminishing them.
+
+[Transcribers note 1: corrected from 'as will we explained']
+
+All the pipes for supplying compressed air in tunnels and in headings of
+mines are left uncovered, and have flanged joints; which are advantages not
+merely as regards prevention of leakage, but also for facility of laying
+and of inspection. If a compressed air pipe had to be buried in the ground
+the flanged joint would lose a part of its advantages; but, nevertheless,
+the author considers that it would still be preferable to the ordinary
+joint.
+
+It only remains to refer to the motors fed with the compressed air.
+This subject is still in its infancy from a practical point of view. In
+proportion as the air becomes hot by compression, so it cools by expansion,
+if the vessel containing it is impermeable to heat. Under these conditions
+it gives out in expanding a power appreciably less than if it retained its
+original temperature; besides which the fall of temperature may impede the
+working of the machine by freezing the vapor of water contained in the air.
+
+If it is desired to utilize to the utmost the force stored up in the
+compressed air it is necessary to endeavor to supply heat to the air during
+expansion so as to keep its temperature constant. It would be possible
+to attain this object by the same means which prevent heating from
+compression, namely, by the circulation and injection of water. It would
+perhaps be necessary to employ a little larger quantity of water for
+injection, as the water, instead of acting by virtue both of its heat of
+vaporization and of its specific heat, can in this case act only by virtue
+of the latter. These methods might be employed without difficulty for air
+machines of some size. It would be more difficult to apply them to small
+household machines, in which simplicity is an essential element; and we
+must rest satisfied with imperfect methods, such as proximity to a stove,
+or the immersion of the cylinder in a tank of water. Consequently loss of
+power by cooling and by incomplete expansion cannot be avoided. The only
+way to diminish the relative amount of this loss is to employ compressed
+air at a pressure not exceeding three or four atmospheres.
+
+The only real practical advance made in this matter is M. Mekarski's
+compressed air engine for tramways. In this engine the air is made to pass
+through a small boiler containing water at a temperature of about 120 deg.
+Cent. (248 deg. Fahr.), before entering the cylinder of the engine. It must
+be observed that in order to reduce the size of the reservoirs, which
+are carried on the locomotive, the air inside them must be very highly
+compressed; and that in going from the reservoir into the cylinder it
+passes through a reducing valve or expander, which keeps the pressure of
+admission at a definite figure, so that the locomotive can continue working
+so long as the supply of air contained in the reservoir has not come down
+to this limiting pressure. The air does not pass the expander until after
+it has gone through the boiler already mentioned. Therefore, if the
+temperature which it assumes in the boiler is 100 deg. Cent. (212 deg. Fahr.), and
+if the limiting pressure is 5 atm., the gas which enters the engine will be
+a mixture of air and water vapor at 100 deg. Cent.; and of its total pressure
+the vapor of water will contribute I atm. and the air 4 atm. Thus this
+contrivance, by a small expenditure of fuel, enables the air to act
+expansively without injurious cooling, and even reduces the consumption of
+compressed air to an extent which compensates for part of the loss of power
+arising from the preliminary expansion which the air experiences before its
+admission into the engine. It is clear that this same contrivance, or what
+amounts to the same thing, a direct injection of steam, at a sufficient
+pressure, for the purpose of maintaining the expanding air at a constant
+temperature, might be tried in a fixed engine worked by compressed air with
+some chance of success.
+
+Whatever method is adopted it would be advantageous that the losses of
+pressure in the pipes connecting the compressors with the motors should be
+reduced as much as possible, for in this case that loss would represent
+a loss of efficiency. If, on the other hand, owing to defective means of
+reheating, it is necessary to remain satisfied with a small amount of
+expansion, the loss of pressure in the pipe is unimportant, and has only
+the effect of transferring the limited expansion to a point a little lower
+on the scale of pressures. If W is the net disposable force on the shaft
+of the engine which works the compressor, v1 the volume of air at the
+compressor, p1. given by the compressor, and at the temperature of the
+surrounding air, and p0 the atmospheric pressure, the efficiency of the
+compressor, assuming the air to expand according to Boyle's law, is given
+by the well-known formula--
+
+ p1 v1 log (p1 / p0)
+ -------------------.
+ W
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 v_1 \log \frac{p_1}{p_0}}{W}]
+
+Let p2 be the value to which the pressure is reduced by the loss of
+pressure at the end of the conduit, and v2 the volume which the air
+occupies at this pressure and at the same temperature; the force stored
+up in the air at the end of its course through the conduit is p2 v2
+log(p2/p0); consequently, the efficiency of the conduit is
+
+ p2 v2 log(p2/p0)
+ ----------------
+ p1 v1 log(p1/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_2 v_2 \log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}{p_2 v_2 \log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+a fraction that may be reduced to the simple form
+
+ log(p2/p0)
+ ----------,
+ log(p1/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{\log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}{\log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+if there is no leakage during the passage of the air, because in that cause
+p2 v2 = p1 v1. Lastly, if W1 is the net disposable force on the shaft of
+the compressed air motor, the efficiency of this engine will be,
+
+ W1
+ ----------------
+ p2 v2 log(p2/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{W_1}{p_2 v_2 \log \frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+and the product of these three partial efficiencies is equal to W1/W, the
+general efficiency of the transmission.
+
+III. _Transmission by Pressure Water_.--As transmission of power by
+compressed air has been specially applied to the driving of tunnels, so
+transmission by pressure water has been specially resorted to for lifting
+heavy loads, or for work of a similar nature, such as the operations
+connected with the manufacture of Bessemer steel or of cast-iron pipes.
+The author does not propose to treat of transmissions established for this
+special purpose, and depending on the use of accumulators at high pressure,
+as he has no fresh matter to impart on this subject, and as he believes
+that the remarkable invention of Sir William Armstrong was described for
+the first time, in the "Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical
+Engineers." His object is to refer to transmissions applicable to general
+purposes.
+
+The transmission of power by water may occur in another form. The motive
+force to be transmitted may be employed for working pumps which raise the
+water, not to a fictitious height in an accumulator, but to a real height
+in a reservoir, with a channel from this reservoir to distribute the water
+so raised among several motors arranged for utilizing the pressure. The
+author is not aware that works have been carried out for this purpose.
+However, in many towns a part of the water from the public mains serves to
+supply small motors--consequently, if the water, instead of being brought
+by a natural fall, has been previously lifted artificially, it might be
+said that a transmission of power is here grafted on to the ordinary
+distribution of water.
+
+Unless a positive or negative force of gravity is introduced into the
+problem, independently of the force to be transmitted, the receivers of
+the water pressure must be assumed to be at the same level as the forcing
+pumps, or more correctly, the water discharged from the receivers to be at
+the same level as the surface of the water from which the pumps draw their
+supply. In this case the general efficiency of transmission is the product
+of three partial efficiencies, which correspond exactly to those mentioned
+with regard to compressed air. The height of lift, contained in the
+numerator of the fraction which expresses the efficiency of the pumps, is
+not to be taken as the difference in level between the surface of the water
+in the reservoir and the surface of the water whence the pumps draw their
+supply; but as this difference in level, plus the loss of pressure in the
+suction pipe, which is usually very short, and plus the loss in the channel
+to the reservoir, which may be very long. A similar loss of initial
+pressure affects the efficiency of the discharge channel. The reservoir, if
+of sufficient capacity, may become an important store of power, while the
+compressed air reservoir can only do so to a very limited extent.
+
+Omitting the subject of the pumps, and passing on at once to the discharge
+main, the author may first point out that the distinction between the
+ascending and descending mains of the system is of no importance, for two
+reasons: first, that nothing prevents the motors being supplied direct from
+the first alone; and second, that the one is not always distinct from the
+other. In fact, the reservoir may be connected by a single branch pipe with
+the system which goes from the pumps to the motors; it may even be placed
+at the extreme end of this system beyond the motors, provided always that
+the supply pipe is taken into it at the bottom. The same formula may be
+adopted for the loss of initial pressure in water pipes as for compressed
+air pipes, viz.,
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q squared +- h;
+ [Delta] [pi] squared D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2 \pm h]
+
+h being the difference of level between the two ends of the portion of
+conduit of length, L, and the sign + or - being used according as the
+conduit rises or falls. The specific weight, [delta], is constant, and the
+quotients, p1/[delta] and p/[delta], represent the heights, z and z1, to
+which the water could rise above the pipes, in vertical tubes branching
+from it, at the beginning and end of the transit. The values assigned to
+the coefficient b1 in France, are those determined by D'Arcy. For new
+cast-iron pipes he gives b1 - 0.0002535 + 1/D 0.000000647; and recommends
+that this value should be doubled, to allow for the rust and incrustation
+which more or less form inside the pipes during use. The determination of
+this coefficient has been made from experiments where the pressure has
+not exceeded four atmospheres; within these limits the value of the
+coefficient, as is generally admitted, is independent of the pressure. The
+experiments made by M. Barret, on the pressure pipes of the accumulator at
+the Marseilles docks, seem to indicate that the loss of pressure would be
+greater for high pressures, everything else being equal. This pipe, having
+a diameter of 0.127 m. (5 in.), was subjected to an initial pressure of 52
+atmospheres. The author gives below the results obtained for a straight
+length 320 m. (1050 ft) long; and has placed beside them the results which
+D'Arcy's formula would give.
+
+ Loss of head, in meters or ft. respectively
+ per 100 meters or ft. run of pipes.
+ +-----------------^-------------------+
+ | |
+ Calculated loss.
+ +-----------^-----------+
+ | |
+Velocity of flow Actual loss
+ per second. observed. Old pipes. New pipes.
+Meters. Feet. Met. or Ft. Met. or Ft. Met. or Ft.
+0.25 0.82 1.5 0.12 0.06
+0.50 1.64 2.5 0.48 0.24
+0.75 2.46 3.7 1.08 0.54
+1.00 3.28 5.5 1.92 0.96
+1.25 4.10 6.1 3.00 1.50
+1.50 4.92 7.3 4.32 2.16
+1.75 5.74 8.0 5.88 2.94
+2.00 6.56 10.2 7.68 3.84
+2.25 7.38 11.7 9.72 4.86
+2.50 8.20 14.0 12.00 6.00
+
+Moreover, these results would appear to indicate a different law from that
+which is expressed by the formula b1 u squared, as is easy to see by representing
+them graphically. It would be very desirable that fresh experiments should
+be made on water pipes at high pressure, and of various diameters. Of
+machines worked by water pressure the author proposes to refer only to two
+which appear to him in every respect the most practical and advantageous.
+One is the piston machine of M. Albert Schmid, engineer at Zurich. The
+cylinder is oscillating, and the distribution is effected, without an
+eccentric, by the relative motion of two spherical surfaces fitted one
+against the other, and having the axis of oscillation for a common axis.
+The convex surface, which is movable and forms part of the cylinder, serves
+as a port face, and has two ports in it communicating with the two ends of
+the cylinder. The concave surface, which is fixed and plays the part of a
+slide valve, contains three openings, the two outer ones serving to admit
+the pressure water, and the middle one to discharge the water after it has
+exerted its pressure. The piston has no packing. Its surface of contact has
+two circumferential grooves, which produce a sort of water packing acting
+by adhesion. A small air chamber is connected with the inlet pipe, and
+serves to deaden the shocks. This engine is often made with two cylinders,
+having their cranks at right angles.
+
+The other engine, which is much less used, is a turbine on Girard's system,
+with a horizontal axis and partial admission, exactly resembling in
+miniature those which work in the hydraulic factory of St. Maur, near
+Paris. The water is introduced by means of a distributer, which is fitted
+in the interior of the turbine chamber, and occupies a certain portion
+of its circumference. This turbine has a lower efficiency than Schmid's
+machine, and is less suitable for high pressures; but it possesses this
+advantage over it, that by regulating the amount of opening of the
+distributer, and consequently the quantity of water admitted, the force can
+be altered without altering the velocity of rotation. As it admits of great
+speeds, it could be usefully employed direct, without the interposition of
+spur wheels or belts for driving magneto-electric machines employed for the
+production of light, for electrotyping, etc.
+
+In compressed air machines the losses of pressure due to incomplete
+expansion, cooling, and waste spaces, play an important part. In water
+pressure machines loss does not occur from these causes, on account of the
+incompressibility of the liquid, but the frictions of the parts are the
+principal causes of loss of power. It would be advisable to ascertain
+whether, as regards this point, high or low pressures are the most
+advantageous. Theoretical considerations would lead the author to imagine
+that for a piston machine low pressures are preferable. In conclusion, the
+following table gives the efficiencies of a Girard turbine, constructed by
+Messrs. Escher Wyss & Co., of Zurich, and of a Schmid machine, as measured
+by Professor Fliegnor, in 1871:
+
+ ESCHER WYSS & CO'S TURBINE.
+
+Effective Head of Water. Revolutions Efficiency.
+ per minute.
+Meters. Feet. Revs. Per cent.
+ 20.7 67.9 628 68.5
+ 20.7 67.9 847 47.4
+ 24.1 79.0 645 68.5
+ 27.6 90.5 612 65.7
+ 27.6 90.5 756 68.0
+ 31.0 101.7 935 56.9
+ 31.0 101.7 1,130 35.1
+
+ SCHMID MOTOR.
+
+ 8.3 27.2 226 37.4
+ 11.4 37.4 182 67.4
+ 14.5 47.6 254 53.4
+ 17.9 58.7 157 86.2
+ 20.7 67.9 166 89.6
+ 20.7 67.9 225 74.6
+ 24.1 79.0 238 76.7
+ 24.1 79.0 389 64.0
+ 27.6 90.5 207 83.9
+
+It will be observed that these experiments relate to low pressures; it
+would be desirable to extend them to higher pressures.
+
+IV. _Transmission by Electricity._--However high the efficiency of an
+electric motor may be, in relation to the chemical work of the electric
+battery which feeds it, force generated by an electric battery is too
+expensive, on account of the nature of the materials consumed, for a
+machine of this kind ever to be employed for industrial purposes. If,
+however, the electric current, instead of being developed by chemical
+work in a battery, is produced by ordinary mechanical power in a
+magneto-electric or dynamo-electric machine, the case is different; and
+the double transformation, first of the mechanical force into an electric
+current, and then of that current into mechanical force, furnishes a means
+for effecting the conveyance of the power to a distance.
+
+It is this last method of transmission which remains to be discussed. The
+author, however, feels himself obliged to restrict himself in this matter
+to a mere summary; and, indeed, it is English physicists and engineers who
+have taken the technology of electricity out of the region of empiricism
+and have placed it on a scientific and rational basis. Moreover, they are
+also taking the lead in the progress which is being accomplished in this
+branch of knowledge, and are best qualified to determine its true bearings.
+When an electric current, with an intensity, i, is produced, either by
+chemical or mechanical work, in a circuit having a total resistance, R, a
+quantity of heat is developed in the circuit, and this heat is the exact
+equivalent of the force expended, so long as the current is not made use of
+for doing any external work. The expression for this quantity of heat, per
+unit of time, is Ai squaredR; A being the thermal equivalent of the unit of power
+corresponding to the units of current and resistance, in which i and R are
+respectively expressed. The product, i squaredR, is a certain quantity of power,
+which the author proposes to call _power transformed into electricity_.
+When mechanical power is employed for producing a current by means of
+a magneto-electric or dynamo-electric machine--or, to use a better
+expression, by means of a _mechanical generator of electricity_--it is
+necessary in reality to expend a greater quantity of power than i squaredR in
+order to make up for losses which result either from ordinary friction
+or from certain electro magnetic reactions which occur. The ratio of the
+quantity, i squaredR, to the power, W, actually expended per unit of time is
+called the efficiency of the generator. Designating it by K, we obtain, W
+= i squaredR/K. It is very important to ascertain the value of this efficiency,
+considering that it necessarily enters as a factor into the evaluation of
+all the effects to be produced by help of the generator in question. The
+following table gives the results of certain experiments made early in
+1879, with a Gramme machine, by an able physicist, M Hagenbach, Professor
+at the University at Basle, and kindly furnished by him to the author:
+
+Revolutions per minute 935 919.5 900.5 893
+
+Total resistance in Siemens' units 2.55 3.82 4.94 6.06
+
+Total resistance in absolute units 2.435 3.648 4.718 5.787
+ x10^9 x10^9 x10^9 x10^9
+
+Intensity in chemical units 17.67 10.99 8.09 6.28
+
+Intensity in absolute units 2.828 1.759 1.295 1.005
+
+Work done i squaredR in absolute units 1948.6 1129.2 791.3 584.9
+ x10^7 x10^7 x10^7 x10^7
+
+Work done i squaredR in kilogrammes 198.6 115.1 80.66 59.62
+
+Power expended in kilogrammes 301.5 141.0 86.25 83.25
+
+Efficiency, per cent. 65.9 81.6 93.5 71.6
+
+M. Hagenbach's dynamometric measurements were made by the aid of a brake.
+After each experiment on the electric machine, he applied the brake to the
+engine which he employed, taking care to make it run at precisely the same
+speed, with the same pressure of steam, and with the same expansion as
+during experiment. It would certainly be better to measure the force
+expended during and not after the experiment, by means of a registering
+dynamometer. Moreover, M. Hagenbach writes that his measurements by means
+of the brake were very much prejudiced by external circumstances; doubtless
+this is the reason of the divergences between the results obtained.
+
+About the same time Dr. Hopkinson communicated to this institution the
+results of some very careful experiments made on a Siemens machine. He
+measured the force expended by means of a registering dynamometer, and
+obtained very high coefficients of efficiency, amounting to nearly 90 per
+cent. M. Hagenbach also obtained from one machine a result only a little
+less than unity. Mechanical generators of electricity are certainly
+capable of being improved in several respects, especially as regards their
+adaptation to certain definite classes of work. But there appears to
+remain hardly any margin for further progress as regards efficiency. Force
+transformed into electricity in a generator may be expressed by i [omega] M
+C; [omega] being the angular velocity of rotation; M the magnetism of one
+of the poles, inducing or induced, which intervenes; and C a constant
+specially belonging to each apparatus, and which is independent of
+the units adopted. This constant could not be determined except by
+an integration practically impossible; and the product, M C, must be
+considered indivisible. Even in a magneto-electric machine (with permanent
+inducing magnets), and much more in a dynamo-electric machine (inducing by
+means of electro-magnets excited by the very current produced) the product,
+M C, is a function of the intensity. From the identity of the expressions,
+i squaredR and i [omega] M C we obtain the relation M C = IR/[omega] which
+indicates the course to be pursued to determine experimentally the law
+which connects the variations of M C with those of i. Some experiments made
+in 1876, by M. Hagenbach, on a Gramme dynamo-electric machine, appear to
+indicate that the magnetism, M C, does not increase indefinitely with the
+intensity, but that there is some maximum value for this quantity. If,
+instead of working a generator by an external motive force, a current is
+passed through its circuit in a certain given direction, the movable part
+of the machine will begin to turn in an opposite direction to that in which
+it would have been necessary to turn it in order to obtain a current in the
+aforesaid direction. In virtue of this motion the electro-magnetic forces
+which are generated may be used to overcome a resisting force. The machine
+will then work as a motor or receiver. Let i be the intensity of the
+external current which works the motor, when the motor is kept at rest. If
+it is now allowed to move, its motion produces, in virtue of the laws of
+induction, a current in the circuit of intensity, i1, in the opposite
+direction to the external current; the effective intensity of the current
+traversing the circuit is thus reduced to i - i1. The intensity of the
+counter current is given, like that of the generating current, by the
+equation, i1 squaredR = i1 [omega]1 M1 C1, or i1R = [omega]1 M1 C1, the index, 1,
+denoting the quantities relating to the motor. Here M1 C1 is a function of
+i - i1, not of i. As in a generator the force transformed into electricity
+has a value, i [omega] M C, so in a motor the force developed by
+electricity is (i - i1) [omega]1 M1 C1. On account, however, of the losses
+which occur, the effective power, that is the disposable power on the shaft
+of the motor, will have a smaller value, and in order to arrive at it a
+coefficient of efficiency, K1, must be added. We shall then have W1 = K1
+(i-i1) [omega]1 M1 C1. The author has no knowledge of any experiments
+having been made for obtaining this efficiency, K1. Next let us suppose
+that the current feeding the motor is furnished by a generator, so that
+actual transmission by electricity is taking place. The circuit, whose
+resistance is R, comprises the coils, both fixed and movable, of the
+generator and motor, and of the conductors which connect them. The
+intensity of the current which traverses the circuit had the value, i, when
+the motor was at rest; by the working of the motor it is reduced to i - i1.
+The power applied to the generator is itself reduced to W-[(i-i1)[omega]
+M C]/K. The prime mover is relieved by the action of the counter current,
+precisely as the consumption of zinc in the battery would be reduced by the
+same cause, if the battery was the source of the current. The efficiency
+of the transmission is W1/W. Calculation shows that it is expressed by the
+following equations:W1/W = K K1 [([omega]11 M1 C1)/([omega]1 M C)], or = K
+K1 [([omega]11 M1 C)/([omega]11 M1 C1 + (i-i1) R)]; expressions in which
+it must be remembered M C and M1 C1 are really functions of (i-i1). This
+efficiency is, then, the product of three distinct factors, each evidently
+less than unity, namely, the efficiency belonging to the generator, the
+efficiency belonging to the motor, and a third factor depending on the rate
+of rotation of the motor and the resistance of the circuit. The influence
+which these elements exert on the value of the third factor cannot be
+estimated, unless the law is first known according to which the magnetisms,
+M C, M1 C C1, vary with the intensity of the current.
+
+
+GENERAL RESULTS.
+
+Casting a retrospective glance at the four methods of transmission of power
+which have been examined, it would appear that transmission by ropes forms
+a class by itself, while the three other methods combine into a natural
+group, because they possess a character in common of the greatest
+importance. It may be said that all three involve a temporary
+transformation of the mechanical power to be utilized into potential
+energy. Also in each of these methods the efficiency of transmission is
+the product of three factors or partial efficiencies, which correspond
+exactly--namely, first, the efficiency of the instrument which converts
+the actual energy of the prime mover into potential energy; second, the
+efficiency of the instrument which reconverts this potential energy into
+actual energy, that is, into motion, and delivers it up in this shape
+for the actual operations which accomplish industrial work; third, the
+efficiency of the intermediate agency which serves for the conveyance of
+potential energy from the first instrument to the second.
+
+This last factor has just been given for transmission by electricity. It
+is the exact correlative of the efficiency of the pipe in the case of
+compressed air or of pressure water. It is as useful in the case of
+electric transmission, as of any other method, to be able, in studying the
+system, to estimate beforehand what results it is able to furnish, and for
+this purpose it is necessary to calculate exactly the factors which compose
+the efficiency.
+
+In order to obtain this desirable knowledge, the author considers that the
+three following points should form the aim of experimentalists: First,
+the determination of the efficiency, K, of the principal kinds of
+magneto-electric, or dynamo-electric machines working as generators;
+second, the determination of the efficiency, K1, of the same machines
+working as motors; third, the determination of the law according to which
+the magnetism of the cores of these machines varies with the intensity of
+the current. The author is of opinion that experiments made with these
+objects in view would be more useful than those conducted for determining
+the general efficiency of transmission, for the latter give results only
+available under precisely similar conditions. However, it is clear that
+they have their value and must not be neglected.
+
+There are, moreover, many other questions requiring to be elucidated by
+experiment, especially as regards the arrangement of the conducting wires:
+but it is needless to dwell further upon this subject, which has been ably
+treated by many English men of science--for instance, Dr. Siemens and
+Professor Ayrton. Nevertheless, for further information the author would
+refer to the able articles published at Paris, by M. Mascart, in the
+_Journal de Physique_, in 1877 and 1878. The author would gladly have
+concluded this paper with a comparison of the efficiencies of the four
+systems which have been examined, or what amounts to the same thing--with a
+comparison of the losses of power which they occasion. Unfortunately, such
+a comparison has never been made experimentally, because hitherto the
+opportunity of doing it in a demonstrative manner has been wanting, for the
+transmission of power to a distance belongs rather to the future than to
+the present time. Transmission by electricity is still in its infancy; it
+has only been applied on a small scale and experimentally.
+
+Of the three other systems, transmission by means of ropes is the only one
+that has been employed for general industrial purposes, while compressed
+air and water under pressure have been applied only to special purposes,
+and their use has been due much more to their special suitableness for
+these purposes than from any considerations relative to loss of power.
+Thus the effective work of the compressed air used in driving the
+tunnels through the Alps, assuming its determination to be possible, was
+undoubtedly very low; nevertheless, in the present state of our appliances
+it is the only process by which such operations can be accomplished. The
+author believes that transmission by ropes furnishes the highest proportion
+of useful work, but that as regards a wide distribution of the transmitted
+power the other two methods, by air and water, might merit a preference.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE HOTCHKISS REVOLVING GUN.
+
+
+The Hotchkiss revolving gun, already adopted in the French navy and by
+other leading European nations, has been ordered for use in the German navy
+by the following decree of the German Emperor, dated January 11 last: "On
+the report made to me, I approve the adoption of the Hotchkiss revolving
+cannon as a part of the artillery of my navy; and each of my ships,
+according to their classification, shall in general be armed with this
+weapon in such a manner that every point surrounding the vessel may be
+protected by the fire of at least two guns at a minimum range of 200
+meters."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THALLIUM PAPERS AS OZONOMETERS.
+
+
+Schoene has given the results of an extended series of experiments on the
+use of thallium paper for estimating approximately the oxidizing material
+in the atmosphere, whether it be hydrogen peroxide alone, or mixed with
+ozone, or perhaps also with other constituents hitherto unknown. The
+objection to Schoenbein's ozonometer (potassium iodide on starch paper) and
+to Houzeau's ozonometer (potassium iodide on red litmus paper) lies in
+the fact that their materials are hygroscopic, and their indications vary
+widely with the moisture of the air. Since dry ozone does not act on these
+papers, they must be moistened; and then the amount of moisture varies the
+result quite as much as the amount of ozone. Indeed, attention has been
+called to the larger amount of ozone near salt works and waterfalls, and
+the erroneous opinion advanced that ozone is formed when water is finely
+divided. And Boettger has stated that ozone is formed when ether is
+atomized; the fact being that the reaction he observed was due to the
+H_2O_2 always present in ether. Direct experiments with the Schoenbein
+ozonometer and the psychrometer gave parallel curves; whence the author
+regards the former as only a crude hygrometer. These objections do not lie
+against the thallium paper, the oxidation to brown oxide by either ozone or
+hydrogen peroxide not requiring the presence of moisture, and the color,
+therefore, being independent of the hygrometric state of the air. Moreover,
+when well cared for, the papers undergo no farther change of color and may
+be preserved indefinitely. The author prepares the thallium paper a few
+days before use, by dipping strips of Swedish filtering paper in a solution
+of thallous hydrate, and drying. The solution is prepared by pouring a
+solution of thallous sulphate into a boiling solution of barium hydrate,
+equivalent quantities being taken, the resulting solution of thallous
+hydrate being concentrated in vacuo until 100 c.c. contains 10 grammes
+Tl(OH). For use the strips are hung in the free air in a close vessel,
+preferably over caustic lime, for twelve hours. Other papers are used, made
+with a two per cent. solution. These are exposed for thirty-six hours. The
+coloration is determined by comparison with a scale having eleven degrees
+of intensity upon it. Compared with Schoenbein's ozonometer, the results are
+in general directly opposite. The thallium papers show that the greatest
+effect is in the daytime, the iodide papers that it is at night. Yearly
+curves show that the former generally indicate a rise when the latter give
+a fall. The iodide curve follows closely that of relative humidity, clouds,
+and rain; the thallium curve stands in no relation to it. A table of
+results for the year 1879 is given in monthly means, of the two thallium
+papers, the ozonometer, the relative humidity, cloudiness, rain, and
+velocity of wind.--_G. F. B., in Ber. Berl. Chem. Ces._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE AUDIPHONE IN ENGLAND.
+
+
+The audiphone has been recently tried in the Board School for Deaf and
+Dumb at Turin street, Bethnal Green, with very satisfactory results--so
+satisfactory that the report will recommend its adoption in the four
+schools which the London Board have erected for the education of the deaf
+and dumb. Some 20 per cent. of the pupils in deaf and dumb schools have
+sufficient power of hearing when assisted by the audiphone to enable them
+to take their places in the classes of the ordinary schools.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONDUCTIVITY OF MOIST AIR.
+
+
+Many physical treatises still assert that moist air conducts electricity,
+though Silberman and others have proved the contrary. An interesting
+experiment bearing on this has been described lately by Prof. Marangoni.
+Over a flame is heated some water in a glass jar, through the stopper of
+which passes a bent tube to bell-jar (held obliquely), which thus gets
+filled with aqueous vapor. The upper half of a thin Leyden jar charged is
+brought into the bell-jar, and held there four or five seconds; it is
+then found entirely discharged. That the real cause of this, however, is
+condensation of the vapor on the part of the glass that is not coated with
+tin foil (the liquid layer acting by conduction) can be proved; for if that
+part of the jar be passed several times rapidly through the flame, so as
+to heat it to near 100 deg. C., before inserting in the bell-jar, a different
+effect will be had; the Leyden jar will give out long sparks after
+withdrawal. This is because the glass being heated no longer condenses the
+vapor on its surface, and there is no superficial conduction, as in the
+previous case.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+FLOATING PONTOON DOCK.
+
+
+Considerable attention has been given for some years past to the subject of
+floating pontoon docks by Mr. Robert Turnbull, naval architect, of South
+Shields, Eng., who has devised the ingenious arrangement which forms the
+subject of the annexed illustration. The end aimed at and now achieved by
+Mr. Turnbull was so to construct floating docks or pontoons that they may
+rise and fall in a berth, and be swung round at one end upon a center post
+or cylinder--nautically known as a dolphin--projecting from the ground at
+a slight distance from the berth. The cylinder is in deep water, and,
+when the pontoon is swung and sunk to the desired depth by letting in the
+necessary amount of water, a vessel can be floated in and then secured. The
+pontoon, with the vessel on it, is then raised by pumping out the contained
+water until she is a little above the level of the berth. The whole is then
+swung round over the berth, the vessel then being high and dry to enable
+repairs or other operations to be conducted. For this purpose, one end of
+the pontoon is so formed as to enable it to fit around the cylinder, and
+to be held to it as to a center or fulcrum, about which the pontoon can be
+swung. The pontoon is of special construction, and has air-chambers at the
+sides placed near the center, so as to balance it. It also has chambers at
+the ends, which are divided horizontally in order that the operation of
+submerging within a berth or in shallow water may be conducted without
+risk, the upper chambers being afterwards supplied with water to sink the
+pontoon to the full depth before a vessel is hauled in. When the ship is in
+place, the pontoon with her is then lifted above the level of the berth in
+which it has to be placed, and then swung round into the berth. In some
+cases, the pontoon is provided with a cradle, so that, when in berth, the
+vessel on the cradle can be hauled up a slip with rails arranged as
+a continuation of the cradle-rails of the pontoon, which can be then
+furnished with another cradle, and another vessel lifted.
+
+It is this latter arrangement which forms the subject of our illustration,
+the vessel represented being of the following dimensions: Length between
+perpendiculars, 350 feet; breadth, moulded, 40 feet; depth, moulded, 32
+feet; tons, B. M., 2,600; tons net, 2,000. At A, in fig. 1, is shown in
+dotted lines a portion of the vessel and pontoon, the ship having just been
+hauled in and centered over the keel blocks. At B, is shown the pontoon
+with the ship raised and swung round on to a low level quay. Going a step
+further in the operation, we see at C, the vessel hauled on to the slipways
+on the high-level quay. In this case the cylinder is arranged so that
+the vessel may be delivered on to the rails or slips, which are arranged
+radially, taking the cylinder as the center. There may be any number of
+slips so arranged, and one pontoon may be made available for several
+cylinders at the deep water parts of neighboring repairing or building
+yards, in which case the recessed portion of the pontoon, when arranged
+around the cylinder, has stays or retaining bars fitted to prevent it
+leaving the cylinder when the swinging is taking place, such as might
+happen in a tideway.
+
+[Illustration: Fig. 1. IMPROVED FLOATING PONTOON DRY DOCK.]
+
+The arrangements for delivering vessels on radial slips is seen in plan at
+fig. 2, where A represents the river or deep water; B is the pontoon with
+the vessel; C being the cylinder or turning center; D is the low-level
+quay on to which the pontoon carrying the ship is first swung; E is the
+high-level quay with the slip-ways; F is an engine running on rails around
+the radial slips for drawing the vessels with the cradle off the pontoon,
+and hauling them up on to the high-level quay; and G shows the repairing
+shops, stores, and sheds. A pontoon attached to a cylinder may be fitted
+with an ordinary wet dock; and then the pontoon, before or after the vessel
+is upon it, can be slewed round to suit the slips up which the vessel has
+to be moved, supposing the slips are arranged radially. In this case, the
+pivot end of the pontoon would be a fixture, so to speak, to the cylinder.
+
+The pontoon may also be made available for lifting heavy weights, by
+fitting a pair of compound levers or other apparatus at one end, the
+lifting power being in the pontoon itself. In some cases, in order to
+lengthen the pontoon, twenty-five or fifty foot lengths are added at
+the after end. When not thus engaged, those lengths form short pontoons
+suitable for small vessels.--_Iron_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WEIRLEIGH, BRENCHLEY, KENT.
+
+
+Some few years since, Mr. Harrison Weir (whose drawings of natural history
+are known probably to a wider circle of the general public than the works
+of most artists), wishing to pursue his favorite study of animals and
+horticulture, erected on the steep hillside of the road leading from
+Paddock Wood to Brenchley, a small "cottage ornee" with detached studio.
+Afterward desiring more accommodation, he carried out the buildings shown
+in our illustrations. Advantage has been taken of the slope of the hill on
+one side, and the rising ground in the rear on the other, to increase the
+effect of the buildings and meet the difficulty of the levels. The two
+portions--old, etched, and new, shown as black--are connected together by a
+handsome staircase, which is carried up in the tower, and affords access to
+the various levels. The materials are red brick, with Bathstone dressings,
+and weather-tiling on the upper floors. Black walnut, pitch pine, and
+sequoias have been used in the staircase, and joiner's work to the
+principal rooms. The principal stoves are of Godstone stone only, no iron
+or metal work being used. The architects are Messrs. Wadmore & Baker, of 35
+Great St. Helens, E.C.; the builders, Messrs. Penn Brothers, of Pembury,
+Kent.--_Building News_.
+
+[Illustration: ARTISTS HOMES NO 11 "WEIRLEIGH" BRENCHLEY, KENT. THE
+RESIDENCE OF HARRISON WEIR ESQ'RE WADMORE & BAKER ARCHITECTS]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RAPID BREATHING AS A PAIN OBTUNDER IN MINOR SURGERY, OBSTETRICS, THE
+GENERAL PRACTICE OF MEDICINE AND OF DENTISTRY.
+
+[Footnote: Read before the Philadelphia County Medical Society, May 12,
+1880, by W. G. A. Bonwill, M.D., D.D.S., Philadelphia.]
+
+
+Through the kind invitation of your directors, I am present to give you
+the history of "rapid breathing" as an analgesic agent, as well as my
+experience therein since I first discovered it. It is with no little
+feeling of modesty that I appear before such a learned and honorable
+body of physicians and surgeons, and I accept the privilege as a high
+compliment. I trust the same liberal spirit which prompted you to call this
+subject to the light of investigation will not forsake you when you have
+heard all I have to say and you sit in judgment thereon. Sufficient time
+has now elapsed since the first promulgation of the subject for the shafts
+of ridicule to be well nigh spent (which is the common logic used to crush
+out all new ideas), and it is to be expected that gentlemen will look upon
+it with all the charity of a learned body, and not be too hasty to condemn
+what they have had but little chance to investigate; and, of course, have
+not practiced with that success which can only come from an intelligent
+understanding of its application and _modus operandi_.
+
+Knowing the history of past discoveries, I was well prepared for the
+crucible. I could not hope to be an exception. But, so far, the medical
+profession have extended me more favor than I have received at the hands of
+the dental profession.
+
+My first conception of the analgesic property of a pain obtunder in
+contradistinction to its anaesthetic effect, which finally led to the
+discovery of the inhalation of common air by "rapid breathing," was in 1855
+or 1856, while performing upon my own teeth certain operations which gave
+me intense pain (and I could not afford to hurt myself) without a resort to
+ether and chloroform. These agents had been known so short a time that no
+one was specially familiar with their action. Without knowing whether I
+could take chloroform administered by myself, and at the same time perform
+with skill the excavation of extremely sensitive dentine or tooth-bone, as
+if no anaesthetic had been taken, and not be conscious of pain, was more
+than the experience of medical men at that time could assure me. But,
+having a love for investigation of the unknown, I prepared myself for the
+ordeal. By degrees I took the chloroform until I began to feel very plainly
+its primary effects, and knowing that I must soon be unconscious, I applied
+the excavator to the carious tooth, and, to my surprise, found no pain
+whatever, but the sense of touch and hearing were marvelously intensified.
+The small cavity seemed as large as a half bushel; the excavator more the
+size of an ax; and the sound was equally magnified. That I might not be
+mistaken, I repeated the operation until I was confident that anaesthetics
+possessed a power not hitherto known--that of analgesia. To be doubly
+certain, I gave it in my practice, in many cases with the same happy
+results, which saved me from the risks incident to the secondary effects of
+anaesthetics, and which answered for all the purposes of extracting from
+one to four teeth. Not satisfied with any advance longer than I could find
+a better plan, I experimented with the galvanic current (to and fro) by so
+applying the poles that I substituted a stronger impression by electricity
+from the nerve centers or ganglia to the peripheries than was made from the
+periphery to the brain. This was so much of a success that I threw
+aside chloroform and ether in removing the living nerve of a tooth with
+instruments instead of using arsenic; and for excavating sensitive caries
+in teeth, preparatory to filling, as well as many teeth extracted by it.
+But this was short-lived, for it led to another step. Sometimes I would
+inflict severe pain in cases of congested pulps or from its hasty
+application, or pushing it to do too much, when my patient invariably would
+draw or inhale the breath _very forcibly and rapidly_. I was struck with
+the repeated coincidence, and was led to exclaim: "Nature's anaesthetic."
+This then reminded me of boyhood's bruises. The involuntary action of every
+one who has a finger hurt is to place it to the mouth and draw violently in
+the air and hold it for an instant, and again repeat it until the pain is
+subdued. The same action of the lungs occurs, except more powerfully,
+in young children who take to crying when hurt. It will be noticed they
+breathe very rapidly while furiously crying, which soon allays the
+irritation, and sleep comes as the sequel. Witness also when one is
+suddenly startled, how violently the breath is taken, which gives relief.
+The same thing occurs in the lower animals when pain is being inflicted at
+the hand of man.
+
+This was advance No. 3, and so sure was I of this new discovery, that I at
+once made an application while removing decay from an extremely sensitive
+tooth. To be successful, I found I must make the patient take the start,
+and I would follow with a thrust from the excavator, which move would be
+accomplished before the lungs could be inflated. This was repeated for
+at least a minute, until the operation was completed, I always following
+immediately or synchronously with the inhalation.
+
+This led to step No. 4, which resulted in its application to the extracting
+of teeth and other operations in minor surgery.
+
+Up to this time I had believed the sole effect of the rapid inhalation was
+due to mere diversion of the will, and this was the only way nature could
+so violently exert herself--that of controlling the involuntary action of
+the lungs to her uses by the _safety valve_, or the voluntary movement.
+
+The constant breathing of the patient for thirty seconds to a minute left
+him in a condition of body and mind resembling the effects of ether and
+chloroform in their primary stages. I could but argue that the prolonged
+breathing each time had done it; and, if so, then there must be some
+specific effect over and above the mere diversion by the will. To what
+could it be due? To the air alone, which went in excess into the lungs in
+the course of a minute! Why did I not then immediately grasp the idea of
+its broader application as now claimed for it? It was too much, gentlemen,
+for that hour. Enough had been done in this fourth step of conception to
+rest in the womb of time, until by evolution a higher step could be made at
+the maturity of the child. Being self-satisfied with my own baby, I watched
+and caressed it until it could take care of itself, and my mind was again
+free for another conception.
+
+The births at first seemed to come at very short intervals; but see how
+long it was between the fourth and the fifth birth. It was soon after that
+my mind became involved in inventions--a hereditary outgrowth--and the
+electric mallet and then the dental engine, the parent of your surgical
+engine, to be found in the principal hospitals of this city, took such
+possession of my whole soul, that my air analgesic was left slumbering. It
+was not until August, 1875--nineteen years after--that it again came up in
+full force, without any previous warning.
+
+This time it was no law of association that revived it; but it seemed
+the whispering of some one in the air--some ethereal spirit, if you
+please--which instituted it, and advanced the following problem: "Nitrous
+oxide gas is composed of the same elements as ordinary air, with a larger
+equivalent of oxygen, except it is a chemical compound, not a mechanical
+mixture, and its anaesthetic effects are said to be due to the excess of
+oxygen. If this be a fact, then why can you not produce a similar effect by
+rapid breathing for a minute, more or less, by which a larger quantity of
+oxygen is presented in the lungs for absorption by the blood?"
+
+This query was soon answered by asking myself another: "If the rapid
+inhalation of air into the lungs does not increase the heart's action and
+cause it to drive the blood in exact ratio to the inhalations, then _I can_
+produce partial anaesthesia from this excess of oxygen brought about by the
+voluntary movements over their ordinary involuntary action of the lungs."
+The next question was: Will my heart be affected by this excess of air in
+the lungs to such an extent that there will be a full reciprocity between
+them? Without making any trial of it, I argued that, while there is no
+other muscular movement than that of the chest as under the control of the
+will, and as nature has given to the will the perfect control over the
+lungs to supply more or less air, as is demanded by the pneumogastric nerve
+for the immediate wants of the economy, when the _involuntary action_ is
+not sufficient; and the heart not being under the control of the will, and
+its action never accelerated or diminished except by a specific poison, or
+from the general activity of the person in violent running or working, the
+blood is forced into the heart faster and must get rid of it, when a larger
+supply of oxygen is demanded and rapid breathing must occur, or asphyxia
+result. I was not long in deciding that the heart _would not be
+accelerated_ but a trifle--say a tenth--and, under the circumstances, I
+said: "The air _is_ an anaesthetic."
+
+From this rapid course of argument, I was so profoundly convinced of its
+truth, that without having first tried it upon my own person, I would have
+sat where I was, upon the curbstone, and had a tooth removed with the
+perfect expectation of absence of pain and of still being conscious of
+touch. While yet walking with my children, I commenced to breathe as
+rapidly as possible, and, as anticipated, found my steps growing shorter
+and shorter, until I came to a stand, showing to my mind clearly that my
+argument in advance was right, so far as locomotion was concerned; and,
+upon referring to my pulse, I found but little acceleration.
+
+To what other conclusion could I arrive from this argument, with the
+foundation laid nineteen years before, when I established on my own person
+by experiment the fact of analgesia as induced from chloroform, with the
+many experiments in rapid respiration on tooth bone?
+
+From this moment until its first application to the extraction of a tooth
+you can well imagine my suspense. That I might not fail in the very first
+attempt, I compelled myself and others in my household to breathe rapidly
+to investigate the phenomenon. This gave me some idea as to the proper
+method of proceeding in its administering.
+
+The first case soon appeared, and was a perfect success, going far beyond
+my anticipations, for the effect was such as to produce a partial paralysis
+of the hands and arms to the elbow. Again and again I tried it in every
+case of extraction and many other experiments, doubting my own senses for
+a long time at a result so anomalous and paradoxical. I was reminded just
+here of a phenomenon which gave me additional proof--that of blowing a
+dull fire to revive it. For a minute or so one blows and blows in rapid
+succession until, rising from the effort, a sense of giddiness for a
+few moments so overcomes that the upright position is with difficulty
+maintained. In this condition you are fitted for having a tooth extracted
+or an abscess lanced.
+
+Believing that I had something new to offer which might be of use to
+suffering humanity, I read the first article upon it Nov. 17, 1875, before
+the Franklin Institute. Shortly after I was invited before the Northern
+Medical Society of this city to address them thereon. A number of medical
+gentlemen have been using it in their practice, while the bulk of them have
+spurned it as "negative" and preposterous, without an effort at trying it,
+which I can _now_ very well understand.
+
+Unless one is aware of the fact that in the use of any agent which has the
+power to suspend the volition, it can be taken to that point where he is
+still conscious of _touch and hearing_, and at the same time not cognizant
+of pain inflicted, the action of rapid breathing could not be understood.
+And I regret to say that of three-fourths of the medical men I have talked
+with on the subject they had not been aware of such a possibility from
+ether and chloroform. Until this analgesic state could be established in
+their minds it was impossible to convince them that the excess of oxygen,
+as obtained by rapid breathing, could be made to produce a similar effect.
+_I_ should have been as reluctant as any one to believe it, had I not
+personally experienced the effect while performing an operation which would
+otherwise have been very painful. Such a result could not well be reached
+by any course of reasoning.
+
+Has it proven in my practice what has been claimed for it--a substitute
+for the powerful anaesthetics in minor operations in surgery? Most
+emphatically, yes! So completely has it fulfilled its humble mission in
+my office, that I can safely assert there has not been more than five per
+cent. of failures. I have given it under all circumstances of diseased
+organs, and have seen no other than the happiest results in its after
+effects. It may well be asked just here: Why has it not been more generally
+and widely used by the dental profession as well as the medical, if it is
+really what is claimed for it? The most satisfactory and charitable answer
+to be given is, the failure upon their part to comprehend the _fact_ as
+existing in chloroform and ether that there is such a state as analgesia;
+or, in other words, that the animal economy is so organized, while the
+sense of touch is not destroyed, but rather increased, the mind of the
+subject fails to perceive a sense of pain when anaesthetics are given, and
+the effects are manifested in the primary stage. As I before intimated,
+such is the knowledge possessed by most of those who administer ether and
+chloroform. This was enough to cause nearly every one to look upon it as a
+bubble or air castle. Many gentlemen told me they tried it upon themselves,
+and, while it affected them very seriously by giddiness, they still
+_retained consciousness_; and, such being the case, no effect could be
+produced for obtunding pain. Others told me they were afraid to continue
+the breathing alarmed at the vertigo induced. And the practitioner who has
+adopted it more effectively than any other laughed at me when I first told
+him of the discovery; but his intimate association with me changed his
+views after much explanation and argument between us.
+
+It was hardly to be expected that without this knowledge of analgesia,
+and without any explanation from me as to the _modus operandi_ of rapid
+breathing, other than a few suggestions or directions as to how the effect
+was induced, even the most liberal of medical men should be able to make
+it effective, or have the least disposition to give it a preliminary trial
+upon themselves, and, of course, would not attempt it upon a patient.
+Notwithstanding, it found a few adherents, but only among my personal
+_medical_ friends, with whom I had an opportunity to explain what I
+believed its physiological action, and the cases of success in my own
+practice. To this I have submitted as among the inevitable in the calendar
+of discoveries of all grades.
+
+My own profession have attempted to _ridicule_ it out of its birthright
+and possible existence, which style of argument is not resorted to by true
+logicians.
+
+To all this I can truly say I have not for one moment faltered. I could
+afford to wait. The liberality of this society alone fully compensates for
+the seeming indisposition of the past, believing that it is proper that
+every advance should be confronted, and, if in time found worthy, give it
+God speed.
+
+From its first conception I have diligently labored to solve its _modus
+operandi_, and the doubt in my own mind as to whether I could be mistaken
+in my observations. I asked the opinion of our best chemical teachers if
+air could have such effect. One attributed it to oxygen stimulation, and
+the other to nitrogen. Another gentleman told me the medical profession had
+come to the conclusion that it was possible for me to thus extract teeth,
+but it was due solely to my strong _personal magnetism_ (which power I was
+not before aware I possessed).
+
+Now, from what I have related of the successive and natural steps which
+finally culminated in this process or plan of analgesia induced by an
+excess of ordinary air taken forcibly into the lungs above what is
+necessary for life, and from what I shall state as to the apparently
+anomalous or paradoxical effects, with its physiological action, and the
+simple tests made upon each of my patients, I shall trust to so convince
+you of its plausibility and possibility that it will be made use of in
+hundreds of minor operations where ether and chloroform are now used.
+
+Aside from my assertion and that of its friends, that the effects can be
+produced by air alone, you must have some light shed upon the causes of its
+physiological action, which will appeal to your _medical_ reason.
+
+To assign an action to any drug is difficult, and in the cases of ether and
+the other anaesthetics a quarter of a century still finds many conflicting
+opinions. This being true, you will deal leniently with me for the opinion
+I hold as to their analgesic action. Of course it will be objected to,
+for the unseen is, to a great extent, unknowable. Enough for my argument,
+however; it seems to suit the case very well without looking for another;
+and while it was based on the phenomenon resulting from many trials, and
+not the trials upon it as a previous theory, I shall be content with it
+until a better one can be found.
+
+What is it I claim as a new discovery, and the facts and its philosophy?
+
+I have asserted that I can produce, from rapidly breathing common air at
+the rate of a hundred respirations a minute, a similar effect to that from
+ether, chloroform, and nitrous oxide gas, in their primary stages; and I
+can in this way render patients sufficiently insensible to acute pain from
+any operation where the time consumed is not over twenty to thirty seconds.
+While the special senses are in partial action, the sense of pain is
+obtunded, and in many cases completely annulled, consciousness and general
+sensibility being preserved.
+
+To accomplish this, each patient must be instructed how to act and what to
+expect. As simple as it may seem, there is a proper and consistent plan to
+enable you to reach full success. Before the patient commences to inhale he
+is informed of the fact that, while he will be unconscious of pain, he
+will know full, or partially well, every touch upon the person; that the
+inhalation must be vigorously kept up during the whole operation without
+for an instant stopping; that the more energetically and steadily he
+breathes, the more perfect the effect, and that if he cease breathing
+during the operation, pain will be felt. Fully impress them with this
+idea, for the very good reason that they may stop when in the midst of an
+operation, and the fullest effects be lost. It is obligatory to do so on
+account of its evanescent effects, which demand that the patient be pushed
+by the operator's own energetic appeals to "go on." It is very difficult
+for any person to respire more than one hundred times to the minute, as he
+will become by that time so exhausted as not to be able to breathe at all,
+as is evidenced by all who have thus followed my directions. For the next
+minute following the completion of the operation the subject will not
+breathe more than once or twice. Very few have force enough left to raise
+hand or foot. The voluntary muscles have nearly all been subjugated and
+overcome by the undue effort at forced inhalation of one hundred over
+seventeen, the normal standard. It will be more fully understood further on
+in my argument why I force patients, and am constantly speaking to them to
+go on.
+
+I further claim that for the past four years, so satisfactory has been the
+result of this system in the extracting of teeth and deadening extremely
+sensitive dentine, there was no longer any necessity for chloroform,
+ether, or nitrous oxide in the dental office. That such teeth as cannot be
+extracted by its aid can well be preserved and made useful, except in a
+very few cases, who will not be forced to breathe.
+
+The anaesthetics, when used in major operations, where time is needed for
+the operation, can be made more effective by a lesser quantity when given
+in conjunction with "rapid breathing." Drs. Garrettson and Hews, who have
+thus tried it, tell me it takes one-half to three-fourths less, and the
+after effects are far less nauseating and unpleasant.
+
+As an agent in labor where an anaesthetic is indicated, it is claimed by
+one who has employed it (Dr. Hews) in nearly every case for three years, he
+has used "rapid breathing" solely, and to the exclusion of chloroform and
+ether. For this I have his assertion, and have no doubt of it whatever, for
+if any agent could break down the action of the voluntary muscles of the
+parts involved, which prevent the involuntary muscles of the uterus from
+having their fullest effect, it is this. The very act of rapid breathing so
+affects the muscles of the abdomen as to force the contents of the uterus
+downward or outward, while the specific effect of the air at the end of a
+minute's breathing leaves the subject in a semi-prostrate condition, giving
+the uterus full chance to act in the interim, because free of the will to
+make any attempt at withholding the involuntary muscles of the uterus from
+doing their natural work. It is self evident; and in this agent we claim
+here a boon of inestimable value. And not least in such cases is, there is
+no danger of hemorrhage, since the cause of the effect is soon removed.
+
+In attestation of many cases where it has been tried, I have asked the
+mother, and, in some cases, the attendants, whether anything else had been
+given, and whether the time was very materially lessened, there has been
+but one response, and that in its favor.
+
+Gentlemen, if we are not mistaken in this, you will agree with me in saying
+that it is no mean thing, and should be investigated by intelligent men and
+reported upon. From my own knowledge of its effects in my practice, I am
+bound to believe this gentleman's record.
+
+I further claim for it a special application in dislocations. It has
+certainly peculiar merits here, as the will is so nearly subjugated by
+it as to render the patient quite powerless to resist your effort at
+replacing, and at the same time the pain is subdued.
+
+It is not necessary I should further continue special applications; when
+its _modus operandi_ is understood, its adaptation to many contingencies
+will of a sequence follow.
+
+It is well just here, before passing to the next point of consideration, to
+answer a query which may arise at this juncture:
+
+What are the successive stages of effects upon the economy from its
+commencement until the full effect is observed, and what proof have I that
+it was due to the amount of air inhaled?
+
+The heart's action is not increased more than from seventy (the average) to
+eighty and sometimes ninety, but is much enfeebled, or throwing a lesser
+quantity of blood. The face becomes suffused, as in blowing a fire or in
+stooping, which continues until the breathing is suspended, when the
+face becomes paler. (Have not noticed any purple as from asphyxia by a
+deprivation of oxygen.) The vision becomes darkened, and a giddiness soon
+appears. The voluntary muscles furthest from the heart seem first to be
+affected, and the feet and hands, particularly the latter, have a numbness
+at their ends, which increases, until in many cases there is partial
+paralysis as far as the elbow, while the limbs become fixed. The hands are
+so thoroughly affected that, when open, the patient is powerless to close
+them and _vice versa_. There is a vacant gaze from the eyes and looking
+into space without blinking of the eyelids for a half minute or more. The
+head seems incapable of being held erect, and there is no movement of the
+arms or legs as is usual when in great pain. There is no disposition on the
+part of the patient to take hold of the operator's hand or interfere with
+the operation.
+
+Many go on breathing mechanically after the tooth is removed, as if nothing
+had occurred. Some are aware that the tooth has been extracted, and say
+they felt it; others could not tell what had been accomplished. The
+majority of cases have an idea of what is being done, but are powerless to
+resist.
+
+With the very intelligent, or those who stop to reason, I have to teach
+them the peculiarities of being sensible of touch and not of pain.
+
+One very interesting case I will state. In extracting seven teeth for a
+lady who was very _unwilling_ to believe my statement as to touch and no
+pain, I first removed three teeth after having inhaled for one minute, and
+when fully herself, she stated that she could not understand why there was
+no pain while she was conscious of each one extracted; it was preposterous
+to believe such an effect could be possible, as her reason told her that
+there is connected with tooth extracting pain in the part, and of severe
+character, admitting, though, she felt no pain. She allowed one to be
+removed without anything, and she could easily distinguish the change, and
+exclaimed, "It is all the difference imaginable!" When the other three were
+extracted, there was perfect success again as with the first three.
+
+One of the most marked proofs of the effects of rapid breathing was that of
+a boy of eleven years of age for whom I had to extract the upper and lower
+first permanent molars on each side. He breathed for nearly a minute, when
+I removed in about twenty seconds all four of the teeth, without a moment's
+intermission or the stopping the vigorous breathing; and not a murmur,
+sigh, or tear afterward.
+
+He declared there was no pain, and we needed no such assertion, for there
+was not the first manifestation from him that he was undergoing such a
+severe operation.
+
+Another case, the same day, when I had to extract the superior wisdom teeth
+on both sides for an intelligent young lady of eighteen years, where I had
+to use two pairs of forceps on each tooth (equivalent to extraction of four
+teeth), and she was so profoundly affected afterward that she could; not
+tell me what had been done other than that I had touched her four times.
+She was overcome from its effects for at least a minute afterward. She was
+delighted.
+
+With such severe tests I fear very little the result in any case I can have
+them do as I bid.
+
+There can be no mistake that there is a _specific action_ from something.
+It cannot be personal magnetism or mesmeric influence exerted by me, for
+such cases are rare, averaging about 10 per cent, only of all classes.
+Besides, in mesmeric influence the time has nothing to do with it; whereas,
+in my cases, it cannot last over a half minute or minute at most. It cannot
+be fear, as such cases are generally more apt to get hurt the worse. It is
+not diversion of mind alone, as we have an effect above it.
+
+There is no better way of testing whether pain has been felt than by taking
+the lacerated or contused gums of the patient between the index finger
+and thumb and making a gentle pressure to collapse the alveolar borders;
+invariably, they will cry out lustily, _that is pain_! This gives undoubted
+proof of a specific agent. There is no attempt upon my _own_ part to exert
+any influence over my patients in any way other than that they shall
+believe what I say in regard to _giving_ them _no pain_ and in the
+following of my orders. Any one who knows how persons become mesmerized can
+attest that it was not the _operator who forces them under it against
+their will_, but it is a peculiar state into which any one who has within
+themselves this temperament can _place_ themselves where any one who knows
+how can have control. It is not the will of the operator. I therefore
+dismiss this as unworthy of consideration in connection with rapid
+breathing.
+
+Then you may now ask, To what do I attribute this very singular phenomenon?
+
+Any one who followed, in the earlier part of this paper, the course of
+the argument in my soliloquy, after twenty years had elapsed from my
+observation upon myself of the analgesic effects of chloroform, can almost
+give something of an answer.
+
+That you may the more easily grasp what I shall say, I will ask you, If it
+be possible for any human being to make one hundred inhalations in a minute
+and the heart's action is not increased more than ten or twenty pulsations
+over the normal, what should be the effect upon the brain and nerve
+centers?
+
+If the function of oxygen in common air is to set free in the blood,
+either in the capillaries alone, or throughout the whole of the arterial
+circulation, carbonic acid gas; and that it cannot escape from the system
+unless it do so in the lungs as it passes in the general current--except
+a trace that is removed by the skin and kidneys--and that the quantity of
+carbonic acid gas set free is in exact relation to the amount of oxygen
+taken into the blood, what effect _must be_ manifested where one hundred
+respirations in one minute are made--five or six times the normal
+number--while the heart is only propelling the blood a very little faster
+through the lungs, and _more feebly_--say 90 pulsations at most, when to
+be in proportion it should be 400 to 100 respirations to sustain life any
+length of time?
+
+You cannot deny the fact that a definite amount of oxygen can be absorbed
+and is absorbed as fast as it is carried into the lungs, even if there be
+one hundred respirations to the minute, while the pulsations of the heart
+are only ninety! Nature has _made it_ possible to breathe so rapidly to
+meet any emergency; and we can well see its beautiful application in the
+normal action of both the heart and lungs while one is violently running.
+
+What would result, and that very speedily, were the act of respiration to
+remain at the standard--say 18 or 20--when the heart is in violent action
+from this running? Asphyxia would surely end the matter! And why? The
+excessive exercise of the whole body is setting free from the tissues such
+an amount of excretive matter, and carbon more largely than all the others,
+that, without a relative action of the lungs to admit the air that oxygen
+may be absorbed, carbonic acid gas cannot be liberated through the lungs
+as fast as the waste carbon of the overworked tissues is being made by
+disassimilation from this excess of respiration.
+
+You are already aware how small a quantity of carbonic acid in excess in
+the air will seriously affect life. Even 2 to 3 per cent, in a short time
+will prove fatal. In ordinary respiration of 20 to the minute the average
+of carbonic acid exhaled is 4.35.
+
+From experiments long ago made by Vierordt--see Carpenter, p. 524--you will
+see the relative per cent, of carbonic acid exhaled from a given number of
+respirations. When he was breathing six times per minute, 5.5 per cent of
+the exhaled air was carbonic acid; twelve times, 4.2; twenty-four times,
+3.3; forty-eight times, 3; ninety-six times, 2.6.
+
+Remember this is based upon the whole number of respirations in the minute
+and not each exhalation--which latter could not be measured by the most
+minute method.
+
+Let us deduct the minimum amount, 2.6 per cent, of carbonic acid when
+breathing ninety-six times per minute, from the average, at twenty per
+minute, or the normal standard, which is recorded in Carpenter, p. 524, as
+4.35 per minute, and we have retained in the circulation nearly 2 per cent.
+of carbonic acid; that, at the average, would have passed off through the
+lungs without any obstruction, and life equalized; but it not having been
+thrown off as fast as it should have been, must, of necessity, be left to
+prey upon the brain and nerve centers; and as 2 to 3 per cent., we are
+told, will so poison the blood, life is imperiled and that speedily.
+
+It is not necessary we should argue the point as to whether oxygen
+displaces carbonic acid in the tissues proper or the capillaries. The
+theory of Lavoisier on this point has been accepted.
+
+We know furthermore, as more positive, that tissues placed in an atmosphere
+of oxygen will set free carbonic acid, and that carbonic acid has a
+paralyzing effect upon the human hand held in it for a short time. The
+direct and speedy effects of this acid upon the delicate nervous element of
+the brain is so well known that it must be accepted as law. One of the most
+marked effects is the suspension of locomotion of the legs and arms,
+and the direct loss of will power which must supervene before voluntary
+muscular inactivity, which amounts to partial paralysis in the hands or
+feet, or peripheral extremities of the same.
+
+Now that we have sufficient evidence from the authorities that carbonic
+acid can be retained in the blood by excessive breathing, and enough to
+seriously affect the brain, and what its effects are when taken directly
+into the lungs in excess, we can enter upon what I have held as the most
+reasonable theory of the phenomenon produced by rapid breathing for
+analgesic purposes; which _theory_ was not _first_ conceived and the
+process made to yield to it, but the phenomenon was long observed, and
+from the repetition of the effects and their close relationship to that
+of carbonic acid on the economy, with the many experiments performed
+upon myself, I am convinced that what I shall now state will be found to
+substantiate my discovery. Should it not be found to coincide with what
+some may say is physiological truth, it will not invalidate the discovery
+itself; for of that I am far more positive than Harvey was of the discovery
+of the circulation of the blood; or of Galileo of the spherical shape of
+the earth. And I ask that it shall not be judged by my theory, but from the
+practice.
+
+It should have as much chance for investigation as the theory of
+Julius Robert Mayer, upon which he founded, or which gave rise to the
+establishment of one of the most important scientific truths--"the
+conservation of energy," and finally the "correlation of forces," which
+theory I am not quite sure was correct, although it was accepted, and as
+yet, I have not seen it questioned.
+
+In all due respect to him I quote it from the sketch of that remarkable
+man, as given in the _Popular Science Monthly_, as specially bearing on my
+discovery:
+
+"Mayer observed while living in Java, that the _venous blood_ of some of
+his patients had a singularly bright red color. The observation riveted
+his attention; he reasoned upon it, and came to the conclusion that the
+brightness of the color was due to the fact that a less amount of oxidation
+was sufficient to keep up the temperature of the body in a hot climate than
+a cold one. The darkness of the venous blood he regarded as the visible
+sign of the energy of the oxidation."
+
+My observation leads me to the contrary, that the higher the temperature
+the more rapid the breathing to get clear of the excess of carbon, and
+hence more oxygenation of the blood which will arterialize the venous
+blood, unless there is a large amount of carbonized matter from the tissues
+to be taken up.
+
+Nor must it be denied because of the reasoning as presented to my mind by
+some outside influence in my soliloquy when I first exclaimed, "Nature's
+anaesthetic," where the argument as to the effects of nitrous oxide gas
+being due to an excess of oxygen was urged, and that common air breathed in
+excess would do the same thing.
+
+I am not sure that _it_ was correct, for the effects of nitrous oxide is,
+perhaps, due to a deprivation of mechanically mixed air.
+
+Knowing what I do of theory and practice, I can say with assurance that
+there is not a medical practitioner who would long ponder in any urgent
+case as to the thousand and one theories of the action of remedies; but
+would resort to the _practical_ experience of others and his own finally.
+(What surgeon ever stops to ask how narcotics effect their influence?)
+After nearly thirty years of association with ether and chloroform, who can
+positively answer as to their _modus operandi?_ It is thus with nearly the
+whole domain of medicine. It is not yet, by far, among the sciences, with
+immutable laws, such as we have in chemistry. Experimentation is giving us
+more specific knowledge, and "practice alone has tended to make perfect."
+(Then, gentlemen will not set at naught my assertion and practical results.
+When I have stated my case in full it is for _you_ to disprove both the
+theory and practice annunciated. So far as I am concerned I am responsible
+for both.)
+
+You will please bear with me for a few minutes in my attempt at theory.
+
+The annulling of pain, and, in some cases, its complete annihilation,
+can be accomplished in many ways. Narcotics, anaesthetics--local and
+internal--direct action of cold, and mesmeric or physiological influence,
+have all their advocates, and each _will surely_ do its work. There is one
+thing about which, I think, we can all agree, as to these agencies; unless
+the _will_ is partially and in some cases completely subjugated there can
+be no primary or secondary effect. The voluntary muscles must become wholly
+or partially paralyzed for the time. Telegraphic communication must be cut
+off from the brain, that there be no reflex action. It is not necessary
+there should be separate nerves to convey pleasure and pain any more than
+there should be two telegraphic wires to convey two messages.
+
+If, then, we are certain of this, it matters little as to whether it was
+done by corpuscular poisoning and anaemia as from chloroform or hyperaemia
+from ether.
+
+I think we are now prepared to show clearly the causes which effect the
+phenomena in "rapid breathing."
+
+The first thing enlisted is the _diversion of the will force_ in the act of
+forced respiration at a moment when the heart and lungs have been in normal
+reciprocal action (20 respirations to 80 pulsations), which act could
+not be made and carried up to 100 respirations per minute without such
+concentrated effort that ordinary pain could make no impression upon the
+brain while this abstraction is kept up.
+
+Second. There is a specific effect resulting from enforced respiration of
+100 to the minute, due to the _excess of carbonic acid gas set free from
+the tissues_, generated by this enforced normal act of throwing into the
+lungs _five times_ the normal amount of oxygen in one minute demanded, when
+the heart has not been aroused to exalted action, which comes from violent
+exercise in running or where one is suddenly startled, which excess of
+carbonic acid cannot escape in the same ratio from the lungs, since the
+heart does not respond to the proportionate overaction of the lungs.
+
+Third.--Hyperaemia is the last in this chain of effects, which is due to
+the excessive amount of air passing into the lungs preventing but little
+more than the normal quantity of blood from passing from the heart into
+the arterial circulation, but draws it up in the brain with its excess of
+carbonic acid gas to act also directly upon the brain as well as throughout
+the capillary and venous system, and as well upon the heart, the same as if
+it were suspended in that gas outside the body.
+
+These are evident to the senses of any liberal observer who can witness a
+subject rapidly breathing.
+
+Some ask why is not this same thing produced when one has been running
+rapidly for a few minutes? For a very good reason: in this case the rapid
+inhalations are preceded by the violent throes of the heart to propel the
+carbonized blood from the overworked tissues and have them set free at the
+lungs where the air is rushing in at the normal ratio of four to one. This
+is not an abnormal action, but is of necessity, or asphyxia would instantly
+result and the runner would drop. Such sometimes occurs where the runner
+exerts himself too violently at the very outset; and to do so he is
+compelled to hold his breath for this undue effort, and the heart cannot
+carry the blood fast enough. In this instance there is an approach to
+analgesia as from rapid breathing.
+
+Let me take up the first factor--_diversion of will_--and show that nature
+invariably resorts to a sudden inhalation to prevent severe infliction of
+pain being felt. It is the panacea to childhood's frequent bruises and
+cuts, and every one will remember how when a finger has been hurt it is
+thrust into the mouth and a violent number of efforts at rapid inhalation
+is effected until ease comes. By others it is subdued by a fit of crying,
+which if you will but imitate the sobs, will find how frequently the
+respirations are made.
+
+One is startled, and the heart would seem to jump out of the chest; in
+quick obedience to nature the person is found making a number of quick
+inhalations, which subdue the heart and pacify the will by diversion from
+the cause.
+
+The same thing is observed in the lower animals. I will relate a case:
+
+An elephant had been operated upon for a diseased eye which gave him great
+pain, for which he was unprepared, and he was wrathy at the keeper and
+surgeon. It soon passed off, and the result of the application was so
+beneficial to the animal that when brought out in a few days after, to have
+another touch of caustic to the part, he was prepared for them; and, just
+before the touch, he inflated the lungs to their fullest extent, which
+occupied more time than the effect of the caustic, when he made no effort
+at resistance and showed no manifestation of having been pained.
+
+In many cases of extraction of the temporary teeth of children, I make them
+at the instant I grasp the tooth take _one_ very violent inhalation, which
+is sufficient. Mesmeric anaesthesia can well be classified under diversion
+or subjugation of the will, but can be effected in but a small percentage
+of the cases. To rely upon this first or primary effect, except in
+instantaneous cases, would be failure.
+
+The second factor is the one upon which I can rely in such of the cases as
+come into my care, save when I cannot induce them to make such a number of
+respirations as is absolutely necessary. The _whole secret of success lies_
+in the greatest number of respirations that can be effected in from 60 to
+90 seconds, and that without any intermission. If the heart, by the _alow
+method of respiration_, is pulsating in ratio of four to one respiration,
+_no effect can be induced_.
+
+When the respirations are, say, 100 to the minute, and made with all the
+energy the patient can muster, and are kept up while the operation is going
+on, there can hardly be a failure in the minor operations.
+
+It is upon this point many of you may question the facts. Before I tried
+it for the first time upon my own person, I arrived at the same conclusion
+from a course of argument, that rapid breathing would control the heart's
+action and pacify it, and even reduce it below the normal standard under my
+urgent respirations.
+
+In view of the many applications made I feel quite sure in my belief that,
+inasmuch as the heart's action is but slightly accelerated, though with
+less force from rapid breathing at the rate of 100 to the minute, there is
+such an excess of carbonic acid gas set free and crowding upon the heart
+and capillaries of the brain, without a chance to escape by the lungs, that
+it is the same to all intents as were carbonic acid breathed through the
+lungs in common air. Look at the result after this has been kept up for a
+minute or more? During the next minute the respirations are not more than
+one or two, and the heart has fallen really below, in some cases, the
+standard beat, showing most conclusively that once oxygenation has taken
+place and that the free carbonic acid gas has been so completely consumed,
+that there is no involuntary call through the pneumogastric nerve for a
+supply of oxygen.
+
+If any physiological facts can be proven at all, then I feel quite sure of
+your verdict upon my side.
+
+There is no one thing that goes so far to prove the theory of Lavoisier
+regarding the action of oxygen in the tissues and capillaries for
+converting carbon into carbonic acid gas instead of the lungs, as held
+prior to that time, and still held by many who are not posted in late
+experiments. At the time I commenced this practice I must confess I knew
+nothing of it. The study of my cases soon led me to the same theory of
+Lavoisier, as I could not make the phenomena agree with the old theory of
+carbonic acid generated only in the lungs.
+
+When Vierordt was performing his experiments upon himself in rapid
+breathing from six times per minute to ninety-six, I cannot understand
+why he failed to observe and record what did certainly result--an extreme
+giddiness with muscular prostration and numbness in the peripheries of the
+hands and feet, with suffusion of the face, and such a loss of locomotion
+as to prevent standing erect without desiring support. Besides, the very
+great difference he found in the amount of carbonic acid retained in the
+circulation, the very cause of the phenomena just spoken of.
+
+One thing comes in just here to account for the lack of respiration the
+minute after the violent effort. The residual air, which in a normal state
+is largely charged with carbonic acid, has been so completely exhausted
+that some moments are consumed before there is sufficient again to call
+upon the will for its discharge.
+
+As to hyperaemia you will also assent, now that my second factor is
+explained; but it is so nearly allied to the direct effect of excessive
+respiration that we can well permit it to pass without argument. If
+hyperaemia _is present_, we have a more certain and rather more lasting
+effect.
+
+In conclusion, I will attempt to prognosticate the application of this
+principle to the cure of many diseases of chronic nature, and especially
+tuberculosis; where from a diminished amount of air going into the lungs
+for want of capacity, and particularly for want of energy and inclination
+to breathe in full or excess, the tissues cannot get clear of their
+excrementitious material, and particularly the carbon, which must go to the
+lungs, this voluntary effort can be made frequently during the day to
+free the tissues and enable them to take nutritious material for their
+restoration to their standard of health.
+
+Air will be found of far more value than ever before as one of the greatest
+of factors in nutrition, and which is as necessary as proper food, and
+without which every organization must become diseased, and no true
+assimilation can take place without a due amount of oxygen is hourly
+and daily supplied by this extra aid of volition which has been so long
+overlooked.
+
+The pure oxygen treatment has certainly performed many cures; yet, when
+compared to the mechanical mixture and under the direct control of
+the will, at all times and seasons, there is no danger from excessive
+oxygenation as while oxygen is given. When every patient can be taught to
+rely upon this great safety valve of nature, there will be less need for
+medication, and the longevity of our race be increased with but little
+dread by mankind for that terrible monster consumption, which seems to have
+now unbounded control.
+
+When this theory I have here given you to-night is fully comprehended by
+the medical world and taught the public, together with the kind of foods
+necessary for every one in their respective occupation, location, and
+climate, we may expect a vast change in their physical condition and a hope
+for the future which will brighten as time advances.
+
+I herewith attach the sphygmographic tracings made upon myself by another,
+showing the state of the pulse as compared with the progress of the
+respiration.
+
+
+ADDENDA.
+
+Sphygmographic tracings of the pulse of the essayist. Normal pulse 60
+to the minute. Ten seconds necessary for the slip to pass under the
+instrument.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+A, A, normal pulse.
+
+B, pulse taken after breathing rapidly for 15 seconds when
+20 respirations had been taken.
+
+C, rapid breathing for 30 seconds, 43 respirations.
+
+D, " " 45 " 76 "
+
+E, " " 60 " 96 "
+F, pulse taken after rapid breathing for one minute, as in E, where no
+respiration had as yet been taken after the essayist had kept it up for
+that one minute. This was after 10 seconds had intervened.
+
+G, the same taken 50 seconds after, and still no respiration had been
+taken, the subject having no disposition to inhale, the blood having been
+over oxygenated.
+
+The pulse in E shows after 96 respirations but 14, or 84 per minute, and
+the force nearly as in the normal at A, A1.
+
+The record in B shows the force more markedly, but still normal in number.
+
+F and G show very marked diminution in the force, but the number of
+pulsations not over 72 per minute; G particularly so, the heart needing the
+stimulus of the oxygen for full power.
+
+The following incident which has but very recently been made known, gives
+most conclusive evidence of the truth of the theory and practice of rapid
+breathing.
+
+A Mexican went into the office of a dentist in one of the Mexican cities to
+have a tooth extracted by nitrous oxide gas.
+
+The dentist was not in, and the assistant was about to permit the patient
+to leave without removing the tooth, when the wife of the proprietor
+exclaimed that she had often assisted her husband in giving the gas, and
+that she would do so in this instance if the assistant would agree to
+extract the tooth. It was agreed. All being in readiness, the lady turned
+on as she supposed the gas, and the Mexican patient was ordered to breathe
+as fast as possible to make sure of the full effect and no doubt of the
+final success. The assistant was about to extract, but the wife insisted on
+his breathing more rapidly, whereupon the patient was observed to become
+very dark or purple in the face, which satisfied the lady that the
+full effect was manifested, and the tooth was extracted, to the great
+satisfaction of all concerned. While the gas was being taken by the Mexican
+the gasometer was noticed to rise higher and higher as the patient breathed
+faster, and not to sink as was usual when the gas had been previously
+administered. This led to an investigation of the reason of such an
+anomalous result, when to their utter surprise they found the valve was so
+turned by the wife that the Mexican had been breathing nothing but common
+air, and instead of exhaling into the surrounding air he violently forced
+it into the gasometer with the nitrous oxide gas, causing it to rise and
+not sink, which it should have done had the valve been properly turned by
+the passage of gas into the lungs of the patient.
+
+No more beautiful and positive trial could happen, and might not again by
+accident or inadvertence happen again in a lifetime.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.
+
+
+When a bottle of any liquor charged with carbonic acid under strong
+pressure, such as champagne, sparkling cider, seltzer water, etc., is
+uncorked, the contents often escape with considerable force, flow out, and
+are nearly all lost. Besides this, the noise made by the popping of the
+cork is not agreeable to most persons. To remedy these inconveniences
+there has been devised the simple apparatus which we represent in the
+accompanying cut, taken from _La Nature_. The device consists of a hollow,
+sharp-pointed tube, having one or two apertures in its upper extremity
+which are kept closed by a hollow piston fitting in the interior of the
+tube. This tube, or "tap," as it may be called, is supported on a firm base
+to which is attached a draught tube, and a small lever for actuating the
+piston. After the tap has been thrust through the cork of the bottle of
+liquor the contents may be drawn in any quantity and as often as wanted by
+simply pressing down the lever with the finger; this operation raises the
+piston so that its apertures correspond with those in the sides of the top,
+and the liquid thus finds access to the draught tube through the interior
+of the piston. By removing the pressure the piston descends and thus closes
+the vents. By means of this apparatus, then, the contents of any bottle of
+effervescing liquids may be as easily drawn off as are those contained in
+the ordinary siphon bottles in use.
+
+[Illustration: TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHEMICAL SOCIETY, LONDON, JAN. 20, 1881.
+
+PROF. H.E. ROSCOE, President, in the Chair.
+
+
+Mr. Vivian Lewes read a paper on "_Pentathionic Acid_." In March last the
+author, at the suggestion of Dr. Debus, undertook an investigation of
+pentathionic acid, the existence of which has been denied. The analyses
+of the liquid obtained by Wackenroder and others, by passing sulphureted
+hydrogen and sulphur dioxide through water, are based on the assumption
+that only one acid is present in the solution, and consequently do not
+establish the existence of pentathionic acid; as, for example, a mixture of
+one molecule of H_2S_4O_6 and one molecule of H_2S_6O_6 would give the same
+analytical results as H_2S_5O_6. Moreover, no salt of pentathionic acid has
+been prepared in a pure state. The author has succeeded in preparing barium
+pentathionate thus: A Wackenroder solution was about half neutralized with
+barium hydrate, filtered, and the clear solution evaporated _in vacuo_ over
+sulphuric acid. After eighteen days crystals, which proved to be barium
+pentathionate + 3 molecules of water, formed. These crystals were
+separated, and the liquid further evaporated, when a second crop was
+obtained intermediate in composition between the tetra and pentathionate.
+These were separated, and the mother-liquor on standing deposited some
+oblong rectangular crystals. These on analysis proved to consist of baric
+pentathionate with three molecules of water. This salt dissolves readily in
+cold water; the solution is decomposed by strong potassic hydrate, baric
+sulphite, hyposulphites, and sulphur being formed. By a similar method of
+procedure the author obtained potassium pentathionate, anhydrous, and with
+one or two molecules of water. The author promises some further results
+with some other salts of the higher thionates.
+
+The president said that the society had to thank the author for a very
+complete research on the subject of pentathionic acid. He, however, begged
+to differ from him as to his statements concerning the researches of
+Messrs. Takamatsu and Smith; in his opinion these authors had proved the
+existence of pentathionic acid. He hoped that the crystals (which were very
+fine) would be measured.
+
+Dr. Debus said that no one had previously been able to make the salts of
+pentathionic acid, and expressed his sense of the great merit due to the
+author for his perseverance and success. The paper opened up some highly
+interesting theoretical speculations as to the existence of hexathionic
+acid. If potassium tetrathionate was dissolved in water it could be
+re-crystallized, but potassium pentathionate under similar circumstances
+splits into sulphur and tetrathionate; but a mixture of tetrathionate and
+pentathionate can be re-crystallized. It seemed as if the sulphur when
+eliminated from the pentathionate combined with the tetrathionate.
+
+Dr. Dupre asked Dr. Debus how it was that a molecule of pentathionate could
+be re-crystallized, whereas two molecules of pentathionate, which should,
+when half decomposed, furnish a molecule of tetra and a molecule of
+pentathionate, could not.
+
+Dr. Armstrong then read a _"Preliminary Note on some Hydrocarbons from
+Rosin Spirit."_ After giving an account of our knowledge of rosin spirit,
+the author described the result of the examination of the mixture of
+hydrocarbons remaining after heating it with sulphuric acid and diluting
+with half its volume of water and steam distilling. Thus treated rosin
+spirit furnishes about one-fourth of its volume of a colorless mobile
+liquid, which after long-continued fractional distillation is resolved into
+a variety of fractions boiling at temperatures from 95 deg. to over 180 deg.. Each
+of the fractions was treated with concentrated sulphuric acid, and the
+undissolved portions were then re-fractionated. The hydrocarbons dissolved
+by the acid were recovered by heating under pressure with hydrochloric
+acid. Besides a cymene and a toluene, which have already been shown to
+exist in rosin spirit, metaxylene was found to be present. The hydrocarbons
+insoluble in sulphuric acid are, apparently, all members of the C_nH_{2n}
+series; they are not, however, true homologues of ethylene, but hexhydrides
+of hydrocarbons of the benzene series. Hexhydro-toluene and probably
+hex-hydrometaxylene are present besides the hydrocarbon, C_10H_20, but it
+is doubtful if an intermediate term is also present. It is by no means
+improbable, however, that these hydrocarbons are, at least in part,
+products of the action of the sulphuric acid. Cahours and Kraemer's and
+Godzki's observations on the higher fractions of crude wood spirit, in
+fact, furnish a precedent for this view. Referring to the results obtained
+by Anderson, Tilden, and Renard, the author suggests that rosin spirit
+perhaps contains hydrides intermediate in composition between those of
+the C_nH_{2n-6} and C_nH_{2n} series, also derived like the latter from
+hydrocarbons of the benzene series. Finally, Dr Armstrong mentioned that
+the volatile portion of the distillate from the non-volatile product of the
+oxidation of oil of turpentine in moist air furnishes ordinary cymene when
+treated in the manner above described. The fact that rosin spirit yields a
+different cymene is, he considers, an argument against the view which
+has more than once been put forward, that rosin is directly derived from
+terpene. Probably resin and turpentine, though genetically related, are
+products of distinct processes.
+
+The next paper was _"On the Determination of the Relative Weight of Single
+Molecules,"_ by E. Vogel, of San Francisco. This paper, which was taken as
+read, consists of a lengthy theoretical disquisition, in which the author
+maintains the following propositions: That the combining weights of all
+elements are one third of their present values; the assumption that equal
+volumes of gases contain equal numbers of molecules does not hold good;
+that the present theory of valency is not supported by chemical facts, and
+that its elimination would be no small gain for chemistry in freeing it
+of an element full of mystery, uncertainty, and complication; that the
+distinction between atoms and molecules will no longer be necessary;
+that the facts of specific heat do not lend any support to the theory of
+valency. The paper concludes as follows: "The cause of chemical action is
+undoubtedly atmospheric pressure, which under ordinary conditions is equal
+to the weight of 76 cubic centimeters of mercury, one of which equals 6.145
+mercury molecules, so that the whole pressure equals 467 mercury molecules.
+This force--which with regard to its chemical effect on molecules can be
+multiplied by means of heat--is amply sufficient to bring about the highest
+degree of molecular specific gravity by the reduction of the molecular
+volumes. To it all molecules are exposed and subjected unalterably, and
+if not accepted as the cause of chemical action, its influence has to be
+eliminated to allow the introduction and display of other forces."
+
+The next communication was _"On the Synthetical Production of Ammonia,
+by the Combination of Hydrogen and Nitrogen in Presence of Heated Spongy
+Platinum (Preliminary Notice),"_ by G. S. Johnson. Some experiments, in
+which pure nitrogen was passed over heated copper containing occluded
+hydrogen, suggested to the author the possibility of the formation of
+ammonia; only minute traces were formed. On passing, however, a mixture of
+pure nitrogen (from ammonium nitrite) and hydrogen over spongy platinum at
+a low red heat, abundant evidence was obtained of the synthesis of ammonia.
+The gases were passed, before entering the tube containing the platinum,
+through a potash bulb containing Nessler reagent, which remained colorless.
+On the contrary, the gas issuing from the platinum rapidly turned Nessler
+reagent brown, and in a few minutes turned faintly acid litmus solution
+blue; the odor of NH_3 was also perceptible. In one experiment 0.0144
+gramme of ammonia was formed in two hours and a half. The author promises
+further experiment as to the effect of temperature, rate of the gaseous
+current, and substitution of palladium for platinum. The author synthesized
+some ammonia before the Society with complete success.
+
+The President referred to the synthesis of ammonia from its elements
+recently effected by Donkin, and remarked that apparently the ammonia was
+formed in much larger quantities by the process proposed by the author of
+the present paper.
+
+Mr. Warington suggested that some HCl gas should be simultaneously passed
+with the nitrogen and hydrogen, and that the temperature of the spongy
+platinum should be kept just below the temperature at which NH_3
+dissociates, in order to improve the yield of NH_3.
+
+_"On the Oxidation of Organic Matter in Water"_ by A. Downes. The author
+considers that the mere presence of oxygen in contact with the organic
+matter has but little oxidizing action unless lowly organisms, as bacteria,
+etc. be simultaneously present. Sunlight has apparently considerable
+effect in promoting the oxidation of organic matter. The author quotes the
+following experiment: A sample of river water was filtered through paper.
+It required per 10,000 parts 0.236 oxygen as permanganate. A second portion
+was placed in a flask plugged with cotton wool, and exposed to sunlight for
+a week; it then required 0.200. A third portion after a week, but excluded
+from light, required 0.231. A fourth was boiled for five minutes, plugged,
+and then exposed to sunlight for a week; required 0.198. In a second
+experiment with well water a similar result was obtained; more organic
+matter was oxidized when the organisms had been killed by the addition of
+sulphuric acid than when the original water was allowed to stand for an
+equal length of time. The author also discusses the statement made by Dr.
+Frankland that there is less ground for assuming that the organized and
+living matter of sewage is oxidized in a flow of twelve miles of a river
+than for assuming that dead organic matter is oxidized in a similar
+flow.--_Chem. News._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ROSE OIL, OR OTTO OF ROSES.
+
+By CHARLES G. WARNFORD LOCK.
+
+
+This celebrated perfume is the volatile essential oil distilled from the
+flowers of some varieties of rose. The botany of roses appears to be in a
+transition and somewhat unsatisfactory state. Thus the otto-yielding rose
+is variously styled _Rosa damascena, R. sempervirens, R. moschata, R.
+gallica, R. centifolia, R. provincialis_. It is pretty generally agreed
+that the kind grown for its otto in Bulgaria in the damask rose (_R.
+damascena_), a variety induced by long cultivation, as it is not to be
+found wild. It forms a bush, usually three to four feet, but sometimes six
+feet high; its flowers are of moderate size, semi-double, and arranged
+several on a branch, though not in clusters or bunches. In color, they are
+mostly light-red; some few are white, and said to be less productive of
+otto.
+
+The utilization of the delicious perfume of the rose was attempted, with
+more or less success, long prior to the comparatively modern process of
+distilling its essential oil. The early methods chiefly in vogue were the
+distillation of rose-water, and the infusion of roses in olive oil, the
+latter flourishing in Europe generally down to the last century, and
+surviving at the present day in the South of France. The butyraceous oil
+produced by the distillation of roses for making rose-water in this country
+is valueless as a perfume; and the real otto was scarcely known in British
+commerce before the present century.
+
+The profitable cultivation of roses for the preparation of otto is limited
+chiefly by climatic conditions. The odoriferous constitutent of the otto
+is a liquid containing oxygen, the solid hydrocarbon or stearoptene, with
+which it is combined, being absolutely devoid of perfume. The proportion
+which this inodorous solid constituents bears to the liquid perfume
+increases with the unsuitability of the climate, varying from about 18 per
+cent. in Bulgarian oil, to 35 and even 68 per cent. in rose oils distilled
+in France and England. This increase in the proportion of stearoptene is
+also shown by the progressively heightened fusing-point of rose oils from
+different sources: thus, while Bulgarian oil fuses at about 61 deg. to 64 deg.
+Fahr., an Indian sample required 68 deg. Fahr.; one from the South of France,
+70 deg. to 73 deg. Fahr.; one from Paris, 84 deg. Fahr.; and one obtained in making
+rose-water in London, 86 deg. to 891/2 deg. Fahr. Even in the Bulgarian oil, a
+notable difference is observed between that produced on the hills and that
+from the lowlands.
+
+It is, therefore, not surprising that the culture of roses, and extraction
+of their perfume, should have originated in the East. Persia produced
+rose-water at an early date, and the town of Nisibin, north-west of Mosul,
+was famous for it in the 14th century. Shiraz, in the 17th century,
+prepared both rose water and otto, for export to other parts of Persia, as
+well as all over India. The Perso-Indian trade in rose oil, which continued
+to possess considerable importance in the third quarter of the 18th
+century, is declining, and has nearly disappeared; but the shipments of
+rose-water still maintain a respectable figure. The value, in rupees, of
+the exports of rose-water from Bushire in 1879, were--4,000 to India, 1,500
+to Java, 200 to Aden and the Red Sea, 1,000 to Muscat and dependencies, 200
+to Arab coast of Persian Gulf and Bahrein, 200 to Persian coast and Mekran,
+and 1,000 to Zanzibar. Similar statistics relating to Lingah, in the same
+year, show--Otto: 400 to Arab coast of Persian Gulf, and Bahrein; and 250
+to Persian coast and Mekran. And Bahrein--Persian Otto: 2,200 to Koweit,
+Busrah, and Bagdad. Rose-water: 200 to Arab coast of Persian Gulf, and
+1,000 to Koweit, Busrah, and Bagdad.
+
+India itself has a considerable area devoted to rose-gardens, as at
+Ghazipur, Lahore, Amritzur, and other places, the kind of rose being _R.
+damascena_, according to Brandis. Both rose-water and otto are produced.
+The flowers are distilled with double their weight of water in clay stills;
+the rose-water (_goolabi pani_) thus obtained is placed in shallow vessels,
+covered with moist muslin to keep out dust and flies, and exposed all night
+to the cool air, or fanned. In the morning, the film of oil, which has
+collected on the top, is skimmed off by a feather, and transferred to a
+small phial. This is repeated for several nights, till almost the whole of
+the oil has separated. The quantity of the product varies much, and three
+different authorities give the following figures: (_a_) 20,000 roses to
+make 1 rupee's weight (176 gr.) of otto; (_b_) 200,000 to make the same
+weight; (_c_) 1,000 roses afford less than 2 gr. of otto. The color ranges
+from green to bright-amber, and reddish. The oil (otto) is the most
+carefully bottled; the receptacles are hermetically sealed with wax, and
+exposed to the full glare of the sun for several days. Rose water deprived
+of otto is esteemed much inferior to that which has not been so treated.
+When bottled, it is also exposed to the sun for a fortnight at least.
+
+The Mediterranean countries of Africa enter but feebly into this industry,
+and it is a little remarkable that the French have not cultivated it in
+Algeria. Egypt's demand for rose-water and rose-vinegar is supplied from
+Medinet Fayum, south-west of Cairo. Tunis has also some local reputation
+for similar products. Von Maltzan says that the rose there grown for otto
+is the dog-rose (_R. canina_), and that it is extremely fragrant, 20 lb.
+of the flower yielding about 1 dr. of otto. Genoa occasionally imports a
+little of this product, which is of excellent quality. In the south of
+France rose gardens occupy a large share of attention, about Grasse,
+Cannes, and Nice; they chiefly produce rose-water, much of which is
+exported to England. The essence (otto) obtained by the distillation of the
+Provence rose (_R. provincialis_) has a characteristic perfume, arising, it
+is believed, from the bees transporting the pollen of the orange flowers
+into the petals of the roses. The French otto is richer in stearoptene than
+the Turkish, nine grammes crystallizing in a liter (13/4 pint) of alcohol at
+the same temperature as 18 grammes of the Turkish. The best preparations
+are made at Cannes and Grasse. The flowers are not there treated for the
+otto, but are submitted to a process of maceration in fat or oil, ten
+kilos. of roses being required to impregnate one kilo. of fat. The price of
+the roses varies from 50c. to 1 fr. 25c. per kilo.
+
+But the one commercially important source of otto of roses is a
+circumscribed patch of ancient Thrace or modern Bulgaria, stretching along
+the southern slopes of the central Balkans, and approximately included
+between the 25th and 26th degrees of east longitude, and the 42d and 43d of
+north latitude. The chief rose-growing districts are Philippopoli, Chirpan,
+Giopcu, Karadshah-Dagh, Kojun-Tepe, Eski-Sara, Jeni-Sara, Bazardshik, and
+the center and headquarters of the industry, Kazanlik (Kisanlik),
+situated in a beautiful undulating plain, in the valley of the Tunja. The
+productiveness of the last-mentioned district may be judged from the fact
+that, of the 123 Thracian localities carrying on the preparation of otto in
+1877--they numbered 140 in 1859--42 belong to it. The only place affording
+otto on the northern side of the Balkans is Travina. The geological
+formation throughout is syenite, the decomposition of which has provided a
+soil so fertile as to need but little manuring. The vegetation, according
+to Baur, indicates a climate differing but slightly from that of the Black
+Forest, the average summer temperatures being stated at 82 deg. Fahr. at noon,
+and 68 deg. Fahr. in the evening. The rose-bushes nourish best and live longest
+on sandy, sun-exposed (south and south-east aspect) slopes. The flowers
+produced by those growing on inclined ground are dearer and more esteemed
+than any raised on level land, being 50 per cent. richer in oil, and that
+of a stronger quality. This proves the advantage of thorough drainage. On
+the other hand, plantations at high altitudes yield less oil, which is of a
+character that readily congeals, from an insufficiency of summer heat. The
+districts lying adjacent to and in the mountains are sometimes visited
+by hard frosts, which destroy or greatly reduce the crop. Floods also
+occasionally do considerable damage. The bushes are attacked at intervals
+and in patches by a blight similar to that which injures the vines of the
+country.
+
+The bushes are planted in hedge-like rows in gardens and fields, at
+convenient distances apart, for the gathering of the crop. They are seldom
+manured. The planting takes place in spring and autumn; the flowers attain
+perfection in April and May, and the harvest lasts from May till the
+beginning of June. The expanded flowers are gathered before sunrise,
+often with the calyx attached; such as are not required for immediate
+distillation are spread out in cellars, but all are treated within the day
+on which they are plucked. Baur states that, if the buds develop slowly,
+by reason of cool damp weather, and are not much exposed to sun-heat, when
+about to be collected, a rich yield of otto, having a low solidifying
+point, is the result, whereas, should the sky be clear and the temperature
+high at or shortly before the time of gathering, the product is diminished
+and is more easily congealable. Hanbury, on the contrary, when distilling
+roses in London, noticed that when they had been collected on fine dry
+days the rose-water had most volatile oil floating upon it, and that, when
+gathered in cool rainy weather, little or no volatile oil separated.
+
+The flowers are not salted, nor subjected to any other treatment, before
+being conveyed in baskets, on the heads of men and women and backs of
+animals, to the distilling apparatus. This consists of a tinned-copper
+still, erected on a semicircle of bricks, and heated by a wood fire; from
+the top passes a straight tin pipe, which obliquely traverses a tub kept
+constantly filled with cold water, by a spout, from some convenient
+rivulet, and constitutes the condenser. Several such stills are usually
+placed together, often beneath the shade of a large tree. The still is
+charged with 25 to 50 lb. of roses, not previously deprived of their
+calyces, and double the volume of spring water. The distillation is carried
+on for about l1/2 hours, the result being simply a very oily rose-water
+(_ghyul suyu_). The exhausted flowers are removed from the still, and the
+decoction is used for the next distillation, instead of fresh water.
+The first distillates from each apparatus are mixed and distilled by
+themselves, one-sixth being drawn off; the residue replaces spring water
+for subsequent operations. The distillate is received in long-necked
+bottles, holding about 11/4 gallon. It is kept in them for a day or two, at a
+temperature exceeding 59 deg. Fahr., by which time most of the oil, fluid
+and bright, will have reached the surface. It is skimmed off by a small,
+long-handled, fine-orificed tin funnel, and is then ready for sale. The
+last-run rose-water is extremely fragrant, and is much prized locally for
+culinary and medicinal purposes. The quantity and quality of the otto are
+much influenced by the character of the water used in distilling. When
+hard spring water is employed, the otto is rich in stearoptene, but less
+transparent and fragrant. The average quantity of the product is estimated
+by Baur at 0.037 to 0.040 per cent.; another authority says that 3,200
+kilos. of roses give 1 kilo. of oil.
+
+Pure otto, carefully distilled, is at first colorless, but speedily becomes
+yellowish; its specific gravity is 0.87 at 72.5 deg. Fahr.; its boiling-point
+is 444 deg. Fahr.; it solidifies at 51.8 deg. to 60.8 deg. Fahr., or still higher; it
+is soluble in absolute alcohol, and in acetic acid. The most usual and
+reliable tests of the quality of an otto are (1) its odor, (2) its
+congealing point, (3) its crystallization. The odor can be judged only
+after long experience. A good oil should congeal well in five minutes at
+a temperature of 54.5 deg. Fahr.; fraudulent additions lower the congealing
+point. The crystals of rose-stearoptene are light, feathery, shining
+plates, filling the whole liquid. Almost the only material used for
+artificially heightening the apparent proportion of stearoptene is said to
+be spermaceti, which is easily recognizable from its liability to settle
+down in a solid cake, and from its melting at 122 deg. Fahr., whereas
+stearoptene fuses at 91.4 deg. Fahr. Possibly paraffin wax would more easily
+escape detection.
+
+The adulterations by means of other essential oils are much more difficult
+of discovery, and much more general; in fact, it is said that none of the
+Bulgarian otto is completely free from this kind of sophistication. The
+oils employed for the purpose are certain of the grass oils (_Andropogon_
+and _Cymbopogon spp._) notably that afforded by _Andropogon, Schoenanthus_
+called _idris-yaghi_ by the Turks, and commonly known to Europeans as
+"geranium oil," though quite distinct from true geranium oil. The addition
+is generally made by sprinkling it upon the rose-leaves before distilling.
+It is largely produced in the neighborhood of Delhi, and exported to
+Turkey by way of Arabia. It is sold by Arabs in Constantinople in large
+bladder-shaped tinned-copper vessels, holding about 120 lb. As it is
+usually itself adulterated with some fatty oil, it needs to undergo
+purification before use. This is effected in the following manner: The
+crude oil is repeatedly shaken up with water acidulated with lemon-juice,
+from which it is poured off after standing for a day. The washed oil
+is placed in shallow saucers, well exposed to sun and air, by which it
+gradually loses its objectionable odor. Spring and early summer are the
+best seasons for the operation, which occupies two to four weeks, according
+to the state of the weather and the quality of the oil. The general
+characters of this oil are so similar to those of otto of roses--even the
+odor bearing a distant resemblance--that their discrimination when mixed is
+a matter of practical impossibility. The ratio of the adulteration varies
+from a small figure up to 80 or 90 per cent. The only safeguard against
+deception is to pay a fair price, and to deal with firms of good repute,
+such as Messrs. Papasoglu, Manoglu & Son, Ihmsen & Co., and Holstein & Co.
+in Constantinople.
+
+The otto is put up in squat-shaped flasks of tinned copper, called
+_kunkumas_, holding from 1 to 10 lb., and sewn up in white woolen cloths.
+Usually their contents are transferred at Constantinople into small gilded
+bottles of German manufacture for export. The Bulgarian otto harvest,
+during the five years 1867-71, was reckoned to average somewhat below
+400,000 _meticals, miskals_, or _midkals_ (of about 3 dwt. troy), or 4,226
+lb. av.; that of 1873, which was good, was estimated at 500,000, value
+about L700,000. The harvest of 1880 realized more than L1,000,000, though
+the roses themselves were not so valuable as in 1876. About 300,000
+_meticals_ of otto, valued at L932,077, were exported in 1876 from
+Philippopolis, chiefly to France, Australia, America, and Germany.
+
+--_Jour. Soc. of Arts._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+A NEW METHOD OF PREPARING METATOLUIDINE.
+
+By OSKAR WIDMAN.
+
+
+The author adds in small portions five parts metanitro-benzaldehyd to nine
+parts of phosphorus pentachloride, avoiding a great rise of temperature.
+When the reaction is over, the whole is poured into excess of cold water,
+quickly washed a few times with cold water, and dissolved in alcohol. After
+the first crystallization the compound melts at 65 deg., and is perfectly pure.
+
+ * * * * *
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+Project Gutenberg's Scientific American Supplement No. 275, by Various
+
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+Title: Scientific American Supplement No. 275
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8195]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on June 30, 2003]
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, SUP. 275 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Olaf Voss, Don Kretz, Juliet Sutherland,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
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+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 275
+
+
+
+
+NEW YORK, APRIL 9, 1881
+
+Scientific American Supplement. Vol. XI, No. 275.
+
+Scientific American established 1845
+
+Scientific American Supplement, $5 a year.
+
+Scientific American and Supplement, $7 a year.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS.
+
+I. ENGINEERING AND MECHANICS.--The Various Modes of
+ Transmitting Power to a Distance. (Continued from No. 274.)
+ By ARTHUR ARCHARD. of Geneva.--II. Compressed Air.--III.
+ Transmission by Pressure Water.--IV. Transmission by
+ Electricity.--General Results
+
+ The Hotchkiss Revolving Gun
+
+ Floating Pontoon Dock. 2 figures.--Improved floating pontoon dock
+
+II. TECHNOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY.--Wheat and Wheat Bread. By H. MEGE
+ MOURIES.--Color in bread.--Anatomical structure and chemical
+ composition of wheat.--Embryo and coating of the embryo.--
+ Cerealine--Phosphate of calcium.--1 figure, section of a grain
+ of wheat, magnified.
+
+ Origin of New Process Milling.--Special report to the Census
+ Bureau. By ALBERT HOPPIN.--Present status of milling structures
+ and machinery in Minneapolis by Special Census Agent C. W.
+ JOHNSON.--Communication from GEORGE T. SMITH.
+
+ Tap for Effervescing Liquids. 1 figure.
+
+ London Chemical Society.--Notes.--Pentathionic acid, Mr.
+ VIVIAN LEWES.--Hydrocarbons from Rosin Spirit. Dr.
+ ARMSTRONG.--On the Determination of the Relative Weight of Single
+ Molecules. E. VOGEL.--On the Synthetical Production of Ammonia
+ by the Combination of Hydrogen and Nitrogen in the Presence of
+ Heated Spongy Platinum, G. S. JOHNSON.--On the Oxidation of
+ Organic Matter in Water, A. DOWNS.
+
+ Rose Oil, or Otto of Roses. By CHAS. G. WARNFORD LOCK.--Sources
+ of rose oil.--History--Where rose gardens are now cultivated
+ for oil.--Methods of cultivation.--Processes of
+ distillation.--Adulterations
+
+ A New Method of Preparing Metatoluidine. By OSCAR WIDMAN.
+
+III. AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, ETC.--The Guenon Milk Mirror. 1 figure.
+ Escutcheon of the Jersey Bull Calf, Grand Mirror.
+
+ Two Good Lawn Trees
+
+ Cutting Sods for Lawns
+
+ Horticultural Notes: New apples, pears, grapes, etc.--Discussion
+ on Grapes. Western New York Society.--New peaches.--Insects
+ affecting horticulture.--Insect destroyers.
+
+ Observations on the Salmon of the Pacific. By DAVID S. JORDAN
+ and CHARLES B. GILBERT. Valuable census report.
+
+IV. LIGHT, ELECTRICITY ETC.--Relation between Electricity
+ and Light. Dr. O. T. Lodge's lecture before the London Institute.
+
+ Interesting Electrical Researches by Dr. Warren de La Rue and
+ Dr. Hugo Miller.
+
+ Telephony by Thermic Currents
+
+ The Telectroscope. By Moxs. SENLECQ. 5 figures. A successful
+ apparatus for transmitting and reproducing camera pictures by
+ electricity.
+
+V. HYGIENE, MEDICINE, ETC.--Rapid Breathing as a Pain Obtunde in
+ Minor Surgery, Obstetrics, the General Practice of Medicine, and
+ of Dentistry. Dr. W. G. A. Bonwill's paper before the
+ Philadelphia County Medical Society. 8 figures. Sphygmographic
+ tracings.
+
+VI. ARCHITECTURE, ART, ETC.--Artist's Homes. No. 11. "Weirleigh."
+ Residence of Harrison Weir. Perspective and plans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WHEAT AND WHEAT BREAD.
+
+By H. MÈGE-MOURIÈS.
+
+
+In consequence of the interest that has been recently excited on the
+subject of bread reform, we have, says the London _Miller_, translated the
+interesting contribution of H. Mège-Mouriès to the Imperial and Central
+Society of Agriculture of France, and subsequently published in a separate
+form in 1860, on "Wheat and Wheat Bread," with the illustration prepared
+by the author for the contribution. The author says: "I repeat in this
+pamphlet the principal facts put forth in the notes issued by me, and in
+the reports furnished by Mr. Chevreul to the Academy of Science, from 1853
+up to 1860."
+
+The study of the structure of the wheat berry, its chemical composition,
+its alimentary value, its preservation, etc., is not alone of interest to
+science, agriculture, and industry, but it is worthy of attracting the
+attention of governments, for this study, in its connection to political
+economy, is bound up with the fate and the prosperity of nations. Wheat has
+been cultivated from time immemorial. At first it was roughly crushed and
+consumed in the form of a thick soup, or in cakes baked on an ordinary
+hearth. Many centuries before the Christian era the Egyptians were
+acquainted with the means of making fermented or leavened bread; afterwards
+this practice spread into Greece, and it is found in esteem at Rome two
+centuries B.C.; from Rome the new method was introduced among the Gauls,
+and it is found to-day to exist almost the same as it was practiced at that
+period, with the exception, of course, of the considerable improvements
+introduced in the baking and grinding.
+
+Since the fortunate idea was formed of transforming the wheat into bread,
+this grain has always produced white bread, and dark or brown bread, from
+which the conclusion was drawn that it must necessarily make white bread
+and brown bread; on the other hand, the flours, mixed with bran, made a
+brownish, doughy, and badly risen bread, and it was therefore concluded
+that the bran, by its color, produced this inferior bread. From this error,
+accepted as a truth, the most contradictory opinions of the most opposite
+processes have arisen, which are repeated at the present day in the art of
+separating as completely as possible all the tissues of the wheat, and of
+extracting from the grain only 70 per cent of flour fit for making white
+bread. It is, however, difficult for the observer to admit that a small
+quantity of the thin yellow envelope can, by a simple mingling with the
+crumb of the loaf, color it brown, and it is still more difficult to admit
+that the actual presence of these envelopes can without decomposition
+render bread doughy, badly raised, sticky, and incapable of swelling in
+water. On the other hand, although some distinguished chemists deny or
+exalt the nutritive properties of bran, agriculturists, taking practical
+observation as proof, attribute to that portion of the grain a
+physiological action which has nothing in common with plastic alimentation,
+and prove that animals weakened by a too long usage of dry fodder, are
+restored to health by the use of bran, which only seems to act by its
+presence, since the greater portion of it, as already demonstrated by Mr.
+Poggiale, is passed through with the excrement.
+
+With these opinions, apparently so opposed, it evidently results that there
+is an unknown factor at the bottom of the question; it is the nature of
+this factor I wish to find out, and it was after the discovery that I
+was able to explain the nature of brown bread, and its _role_ in the
+alimentation of animals. We have then to examine the causes of the
+production of brown bread, to state why white bread kills animals fed
+exclusively on it, while bread mixed with bran makes them live. We have to
+explain the phenomena of panification, the operations of grinding, and to
+explain the means of preparing a bread more economical and more favorable
+to health. To explain this question clearly and briefly we must first be
+acquainted with the various substances forming the berry, their nature,
+their position, and their properties. This we shall do with the aid of the
+illustration given.
+
+[Illustration: SECTION OF A GRAIN OF WHEAT MAGNIFIED.]
+
+EXPLANATION OF DIAGRAM.
+
+1.--Superficial Coating of the Epidermis, severed at the Crease of
+ the Kernel.
+2.--Section of Epidermis, Averages of the Weight of the Whole Grain, ½ %.
+3.--Epicarp, do. do. do. 1 %.
+4.--Endocarp, do. do. do. 1 ½ %.
+5.--Testa or Episperm, do. do. do. 2 %.
+6.--Embryo Membrane (with imaginary spaces in white on both sides
+ to make it distinct).
+7.\ / Glutonous Cells \
+8. > Endosperm < containing > do. do. 90 %.
+9./ \ Farinaccous Matter /
+
+
+ANATOMICAL STRUCTURE AND CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF WHEAT.
+
+The figure represents the longitudinal cut of a grain of wheat; it was made
+by taking, with the aid of the microscope and of photography, the drawing
+of a large quantity of fragments, which, joined together at last, produced
+the figure of the entire cut. These multiplied results were necessary to
+appreciate the insertion of the teguments and their nature in every part
+of the berry; in this long and difficult work I have been aided by the
+co-operation of Mr. Bertsch, who, as is known, has discovered a means of
+fixing rapidly by photography any image from the microscope. I must state,
+in the first place, that even in 1837 Mr. Payen studied and published the
+structure and the composition of a fragment of a grain of wheat; that
+this learned chemist, whose authority in such matters is known, perfectly
+described the envelopes or coverings, and indicated the presence of various
+immediate principles (especially of azote, fatty and mineral substances
+which fill up the range of contiguous cells between them and the periphery
+of the perisperm, to the exclusion of the gluten and the starchy granules),
+as well as to the mode of insertion of the granules of starch in the gluten
+contained in the cells, with narrow divisions from the perisperm, and in
+such a manner that up to the point of working indicated by the figure 1
+this study was complete. However, I have been obliged to recommence it, to
+study the special facts bearing on the alimentary question, and I must say
+that all the results obtained by Mr. Bertsch, Mr. Trécul, and myself agree
+with those given by Mr. Payen.
+
+
+ENVELOPES OF THE BERRY.
+
+No. 1 represents a superficial side of the crease.
+
+No. 2 indicates the epidermis or cuticle. This covering is extremely light,
+and offers nothing remarkable; 100 lb. of wheat contain ½ lb. of it.
+
+No. 3 indicates the epicarp. This envelope is distinguished by a double
+row of long and pointed vessels; it is, like the first one, very light and
+without action; 100 lb. of wheat contain 1 lb. of it.
+
+No. 4 represents the endocarp, or last tegument of the berry; the
+sarcocarp, which should be found between the numbers 2 and 3, no longer
+exists, having been absorbed. The endocarp is remarkable by its row of
+round and regular cells, which appear in the cut like a continuous string
+of beads; 100 lb. of wheat contain 1½ lb. of it.
+
+These three envelopes are colorless, light, and spongy; their elementary
+composition is that of straw; they are easily removed besides with the aid
+of damp and friction. This property has given rise to an operation called
+decortication, the results of which we shall examine later on from an
+industrial point of view. The whole of the envelopes of the berry of wheat
+amount to 3 lb. in 100 lb. of wheat.
+
+
+ENVELOPES AND TISSUES OF THE BERRY PROPER.
+
+No. 5 indicates the testa or episperm. This external tegument of the berry
+is closer than the preceding ones; it contains in the very small cells
+two coloring matters, the one of a palish yellow, the other of an orange
+yellow, and according as the one or the other matter predominates, the
+wheat is of a more or less intense yellow color; hence come all the
+varieties of wheat known in commerce as white, reddish, or red wheats.
+Under this tegument is found a very thin, colorless membrane, which, with
+the testa or episperm, forms two per cent. of the weight of the wheat.
+
+No. 6 indicates the embryous membrane, which is only an expansion of the
+germ or embryo No. 10. This membrane is seen purposely removed from its
+contiguous parts, so as to render more visible its form and insertions.
+Under this tissue is found with the Nos. 7, 8, and 9, the endosperm or
+perisperm, containing the gluten and the starch; soluble and insoluble
+albuminoids, that is to say, the flour.
+
+The endosperm and the embryous membrane are the most interesting parts of
+the berry; the first is one of the depots of the plastic aliments, the
+second contains agents capable of dissolving these aliments during the
+germination, of determining their absorption in the digestive organs of
+animals, and of producing in the dough a decomposition strong enough to
+make dark bread. We shall proceed to examine separately these two parts of
+the berry.
+
+
+ENDOSPERM OR FLOURY PORTION, NOS. 7, 8, 9.
+
+This portion is composed of large glutinous cells, in which the granules
+of starch are found. The composition of these different layers offers a
+particular interest; the center, No. 9, is the softest part; it contains
+the least gluten and the most starch; it is the part which first pulverizes
+under the stone, and gives, after the first bolting, the fine flour. As
+this flour is poorest in gluten, it makes a dough with little consistency,
+and incapable of making an open bread, well raised. The first layer, No.
+8, which surrounds the center, produces small white middlings, harder and
+richer in gluten than the center; it bakes very well, and weighs 20 lb. in
+100, and it is these 20 parts in 100 which, when mixed with the 50 parts in
+the center, form the finest quality flour, used for making white bread.
+
+The layer No. 7, which surrounds the preceding one, is still harder and
+richer in gluten; unfortunately in the reduction it becomes mixed with some
+hundredth parts of the bran, which render it unsuitable for making bread
+of the finest quality; it produces in the regrinding lower grade and
+dark flours, together weighing 7 per cent. The external layer, naturally
+adhering to the membrane, No. 6, becomes mixed in the grinding with bran,
+to the extent of about 20 per cent., which renders it unsuitable even
+for making brown bread; it serves to form the regrindings and the offals
+destined for the nourishment of animals; this layer is, however, the
+hardest, and contains the largest quantity of gluten, and it is by
+consequence the most nutritive. We now see the endosperm increasing from
+the center, formed of floury layers, which augment in richness in gluten,
+in proportion as they are removed from the center. Now, as the flours make
+more bread in proportion to the quantity of gluten they contain, and the
+gluten gives more bread in proportion to its being more developed, or
+having more consistence, it follows that the flour belonging to the parts
+of the berry nearest the envelopes or coverings should produce the greatest
+portion of bread, and this is what takes place in effect. The product of
+the different layers of the endosperm is given below, and it will be seen
+that the quantity of bread increases in a proportion relatively greater
+than that of the gluten, which proves once more that the gluten of the
+center or last formation has less consistence than that of the other layers
+of older formation.
+
+The following are the results obtained from the same wheat:
+
+ Gluten. Bread.
+100 parts of flour in center contain.. 8 and produce 128
+ " " first layer " .. 9,2 " 136
+ " " second " " .. 11 " 140
+ " " external " " .. 13 " 145
+
+On the whole, it is seen, according to the composition of the floury part
+of the grain, that the berry contains on an average 90 parts in 100 of
+flour fit for making bread of the first quality, and that the inevitable
+mixing in of a small quantity of bran reduces these 90 to 70 parts with
+the ordinary processes; but the loss is not alone there, for the foregoing
+table shows that the best portion of the grain is rejected from the food
+of man that brown or dark bread is made of flour of very good quality, and
+that the first quality bread is made from the portion of the endosperm
+containing the gluten in the smallest quantity and in the least developed
+form.
+
+This is a consideration not to be passed over lightly; assuredly the gluten
+of the center contains as much azote as the gluten of the circumference,
+but it must not be admitted in a general way that the alimentary power of
+a body is in connection with the amount of azote it contains, and without
+entering into considerations which would carry us too wide of the subject,
+we shall simply state that if the flesh of young animals, as, for instance,
+the calf, has a debilitating action, while the developed flesh of
+full-grown animals--of a heifer, for example--has really nourishing
+properties, although the flesh of each animal contains the same quantity of
+azote, we must conclude that the proportion of elements is not everything,
+and that the azotic or nitrogenous elements are more nourishing in
+proportion as they are more developed. This is why the gluten of the layers
+nearest the bran is of quite a special interest from the point of view of
+alimentation and in the preparation of bread.
+
+
+THE EMBRYO AND THE COATING OF THE EMBRYO.
+
+To be intelligible, I must commence by some very brief remarks on the
+tissues of vegetables. There are two sorts distinguished among plants;
+some seem of no importance in the phenomena of nutrition; others, on the
+contrary, tend to the assimilation of the organic or inorganic components
+which should nourish and develop all the parts of the plant. The latter
+have a striking analogy with ferments; their composition is almost similar,
+and their action is increased or diminished by the same causes.
+
+These tissues, formed in a state of repose in vegetables as in grain, have
+special properties; thus the berry possesses a pericarp whose tissues
+should remain foreign to the phenomena of germination, and these tissues
+show no particularity worthy of remark, but the coating of the embryo,
+which should play an active part, possesses, on the contrary, properties
+that may be compared to those of ferments. With regard to these ferments,
+I must further remark that I have not been able, nor am I yet able, to
+express in formula my opinion of the nature of these bodies, but little
+known as yet; I have only made use of the language mostly employed, without
+wishing to touch on questions raised by the effects of the presence, and
+by the more complex effects of living bodies, which exercise analogous
+actions.
+
+With these reservations I shall proceed to examine the tissues in the berry
+which help toward the germination.
+
+THE EMBRYO (10, see woodcut) is composed of the root of the plant, with
+which we have nothing to do here. This root of the plant which is to grow
+is embedded in a mass of cells full of fatty bodies. These bodies present
+this remarkable particularity, that they contain among their elements
+sulphur and phosphorus. When you dehydrate by alcohol 100 grammes of the
+embryo of wheat, obtained by the same means as the membrane (a process
+indicated later on), this embryo, treated with ether, produces 20 grammes
+of oils composed elementarily of hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, azote, sulphur,
+and phosphorus. This analysis, made according to the means indicated by M.
+Fremy, shows that the fatty bodies of the embryo are composed like those of
+the germ of an egg, like those of the brain and of the nervous system of
+animals. It is necessary for us to stop an instant at this fact: in the
+first place, because it proves that vegetables are designed to form the
+phosphoric as well as the nitrogenous and ternary aliments, and finally,
+because it indicates how important it is to mix the embryo and its
+dependents with the bread in the most complete manner possible, seeing that
+a large portion of these phosphoric bodies always become decomposed during
+the baking.
+
+COATING OF THE EMBRYO.--This membrane (6), which is only an expansion of
+the embryo, surrounds the endosperm; it is composed of beautiful irregular
+cubic cells, diminishing according as they come nearer to the embryo. These
+cells are composed, first, of the insoluble cellular tissue; second,
+of phosphate of chalk and fatty phosphoric bodies; third, of soluble
+cerealine. In order to study the composition and the nature of this
+tissue, it must be completely isolated, and this result is obtained in the
+following manner.
+
+The wheat should be damped with water containing 10 parts in 100 of
+alcoholized caustic soda; at the expiration of one hour the envelopes of
+the pericarp, and of the testa Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, should be separated by
+friction in a coarse cloth, having been reduced by the action of the alkali
+to a pulpy state; each berry should then be opened separately to remove the
+portion of the envelope held in the fold of the crease, and then all the
+berries divided in two are put into three parts of water charged with
+one-hundredth of caustic potash. This liquid dissolves the gluten, divides
+the starch, and at the expiration of twenty-four hours the parts of the
+berries are kneaded between the fingers, collected in pure water, and
+washed until the water issues clear; these membranes with their embryos,
+which are often detached by this operation, are cast into water acidulated
+with one-hundredth of hydrochloric acid, and at the end of several hours
+they should be completely washed. The product obtained consists of
+beautiful white membranes, insoluble in alkalies and diluted acids, which
+show under the microscope beautiful cells joined in a tissue following the
+embryo, with which it has indeed a striking analogy in its properties and
+composition. This membrane, exhausted by the alcohol and ether, gives, by
+an elementary analysis, hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and azote. Unfortunately,
+under the action of the tests this membrane has been killed, and it no
+longer possesses the special properties of active tissues. Among these
+properties three may be especially mentioned:
+
+1st. Its resistance to water charged with a mineral salt, such as sea salt
+for instance
+
+2d. Its action through its presence.
+
+3d. Its action as a ferment.
+
+The action of saltwater is explained as follows: When the berry is plunged
+into pure water it will be observed that the water penetrates in the course
+of a few hours to the very center of the endosperm, but if water charged
+or saturated with sea salt be used, it will be seen that the liquid
+immediately passes through the teguments Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5, and stops
+abruptly before the embryo membrane No. 6, which will remain quite dry and
+brittle for several days, the berry remaining all the time in the
+water. Should the water penetrate further after several days, it can be
+ascertained that the entrance was gained through the part No 10 free of
+this tissue, and this notwithstanding the cells are full of fatty bodies.
+This membrane alone produces this action, for if the coatings Nos. 2, 3, 4,
+and 5 be removed, the resistance to the liquid remains the same, while if
+the whole, or a portion of it, be divided, either by friction between two
+millstones or by simple incisions, the liquid penetrates the berry within
+a few hours. This property is analogous to that of the radicules of roots,
+which take up the bodies most suitable for the nourishment of the plant. It
+proves, besides, that this membrane, like all those endowed with life, does
+not obey more the ordinary laws of permeability than those of chemical
+affinity, and this property can be turned to advantage in the preservation
+of grain in decortication and grinding.
+
+To determine the action of this tissue through its presence, take 100
+grammes of wheat, wash it and remove the first coating by decortication;
+then immerse it for several hours in lukewarm water, and dry afterwards in
+an ordinary temperature. It should then be reduced in a small coffee mill,
+the flour and middlings separated by sifting and the bran repassed through
+a machine that will crush it without breaking it; then dress it again, and
+repeat the operation six times at least. The bran now obtained is composed
+of the embryous membrane, a little flour adhering to it, and some traces
+of the teguments Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5. This coarse tissue-weighs about 14
+grammes, and to determine its action through its presence, place it in 200
+grammes of water at a temperature of 86°; afterwards press it. The liquid
+that escapes contains chiefly the flour and cerealine. Filter this liquid,
+and put it in a test glass marked No. 1, which will serve to determine the
+action of the cerealine.
+
+The bran should now be washed until the water issues pure, and until it
+shows no bluish color when iodized water and sulphuric acid are added; when
+the washing is finished the bran swollen by the water is placed under a
+press, and the liquid extracted is placed, after being filtered, in a test
+tube. This test tube serves to show that all cerealine has been removed
+from the blades of the tissue. Finally, these small blades of bran, washed
+and pressed, are cast, with 50 grammes of lukewarm water, into a test tube,
+marked No. 3; 100 grammes of diluted starch to one-tenth of dry starch
+are then added in each test tube, and they are put into a water bath at
+a temperature of 104° Fahrenheit, being stirred lightly every fifteen
+minutes. At the expiration of an hour, or at the most an hour and a half,
+No. 1 glass no longer contains any starch, as it has been converted into
+dextrine and glucose by the cerealine, and the iodized water only produces
+a purple color. No. 2 glass, with the same addition, produces a bluish
+color, and preserves the starch intact, which proves that the bran was well
+freed from the cerealine contained. No. 3 glass, like No. 1, shows a purple
+coloring, and the liquid only contains, in place of the starch, dextrine
+and glucose, _i. e_, the tissue has had the same action as the cerealine
+deprived of the tissue, and the cerealine as the tissue freed from
+cerealine. The same membrane rewashed can again transform the diluted
+starch several times. This action is due to the presence of the embryous
+membrane, for after four consecutive operations it still preserves its
+original weight. As regards the remains of the other segments, they have
+no influence on this phenomenon, for the coating Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5,
+separated by the water and friction, have no action whatever on the diluted
+starch. Besides its action through its presence, which is immediate,
+the embryous membrane may also act as a ferment, active only after a
+development, varying in duration according to the conditions of temperature
+and the presence or absence of ferments in acting.
+
+I make a distinction here as is seen, between the action through being
+present, and the action of real ferments, but it is not my intention to
+approve or disapprove of the different opinions expressed on this subject.
+I make use of these expressions only to explain more clearly the phenomena
+I have to speak of, for it is our duty to bear in mind that the real
+ferments only act after a longer or shorter period of development, while,
+on the other hand, the effects through presence are immediate.
+
+I now return to the embryous membrane. Various causes increase or decrease
+the action of this tissue, but it may be said in general that all the
+agents that kill the embryous membrane will also kill the cerealine. This
+was the reason why I at first attributed the production of dark bread
+exclusively to the latter ferment, but it was easy to observe that during
+the baking, decompositions resulted at over 158° Fah., while the cerealine
+was still coagulated, and that bread containing bran, submitted to 212° of
+heat, became liquefied in water at 104°. It was now easy to determine
+that dark flours, from which the cerealine had been removed by repeated
+washings, still produced dark bread. It was at this time, in remembering
+my experiences with organic bodies, I determined the properties of the
+insoluble tissue, deprived of the soluble cerealine, with analogous
+properties, but distinguished not alone by its solid organization and state
+of insolubility, but also by its resistance to heat, which acts as on
+yeast. There exists, in reality, I repeat, a resemblance between the
+embryous membrane and the yeast; they have the same immediate composition;
+they are destroyed by the same poisons, deadened by the same temperatures,
+annihilated by the same agents, propagated in an analogous manner, and
+it might be said that the organic tissues endowed with life are only an
+agglomeration of fixed cells of ferments. At all events, when the blades of
+the embryous membrane, prepared as already stated, are exposed to a water
+bath at 212°, this tissue, in contact with the diluted starch, produces
+the same decomposition; the contact, however, should continue two or three
+hours in place of one. If, instead of placing these membranes in the water
+bath, they are enveloped in two pounds of dough, and this dough put in the
+oven, after the baking the washed membranes produce the same results, which
+especially proves that this membrane can support a temperature of 212° Fah.
+without disorganization. We shall refer to this property in speaking of the
+phenomena of panification.
+
+CEREALINE.--The cells composing the embryous membrane contain, as already
+stated, the cerealine, but after the germination they contain cerealine and
+diastase, that is to say, a portion of the cerealine changed into diastase,
+with which it has the greatest analogy. It is known how difficult it is to
+isolate and study albuminous substances. The following is the method of
+obtaining and studying cerealine. Take the raw embryous membrane, prepared
+as stated, steep it for an hour in spirits of wine diluted with twice its
+volume of water, and renew this liquid several times until the dextrine,
+glucose, coloring matters, etc., have been completely removed. The
+membranes should now be pressed and cast into a quantity of water
+sufficient to make a fluid paste of them, squeeze out the mixture,
+filter the liquid obtained, and this liquid will contain the cerealine
+sufficiently pure to be studied in its effects. Its principal properties
+are: The liquid evaporated at a low temperature produces an amorphous,
+rough mass nearly colorless, and almost entirely soluble in distilled
+water; this solution coagulates between 158° and 167° Fah., and the
+coagulum is insoluble in acids and weak alkalies; the solution is
+precipitated by all diluted acids, by phosphoric acid at all the degrees of
+hydration, and even by a current of carbonic acid. All these precipitates
+redissolve with an excess of acid, sulphuric acid excepted. Concentrated
+sulphuric acid forms an insoluble downy white precipitate, and the
+concentrated vegetable acids, with the exception of tannic acid, do not
+determine any precipitate. Cerealine coagulated by an acid redissolves in
+an excess of the same acid, but it has become dead and has no more action
+on the starch. The alkalies do not form any precipitate, but they kill the
+cerealine as if it had been precipitated The neutral rennet does not make
+any precipitate in a solution of cerealine--5 centigrammes of dry cerealine
+transform in twenty-five minutes 10 grammes of starch, reduced to a paste
+by 100 grammes of water at 113° Fah. It will be seen that cerealine has a
+grand analogy with albumen and legumine, but it is distinguished from them
+by the action of the rennet, of the heat of acids, alcohol, and above all
+by its property of transforming the starch into glucose and dextrine.
+
+It may be said that some albuminous substances have this property, but it
+must be borne in mind that these bodies, like gluten, for example, only
+possess it after the commencement of the decomposition. The albuminous
+matter approaching nearest to cerealine is the diastase, for it is only a
+transformation of the cerealine during the germination, the proof of which
+may be had in analyzing the embryous membrane, which shows more diastase
+and less cerealine in proportion to the advancement of the germination: it
+differs, however, from the diastase by the action of heat, alcohol, etc.
+It is seen that in every case the cerealine and the embryous membrane
+act together, and in an analogous manner; we shall shortly examine their
+effects on the digestion and in the phenomena of panification.
+
+PHOSPHATE OF CALCIUM.--Mr. Payen was the first to make the observation
+that the greatest amount of phosphate of chalk is found in the teguments
+adjoining the farinaceous or floury mass. This observation is important
+from two points of view; in the first place, it shows us that this mineral
+aliment, necessary to the life of animals, is rejected from ordinary bread;
+and in the next place, it brings a new proof that phosphate of chalk is
+found, and ought to be found, in everyplace where there are membranes
+susceptible of exercising vital functions among animals as well as
+vegetables.
+
+Phosphate of chalk is not in reality (as I wished to prove in another work)
+a plastic matter suitable for forming bones, for the bones of infants are
+three times more solid than those of old men, which contain three times
+as much of it. The quantity of phosphate of chalk necessary to the
+constitution of animals is in proportion to the temperature of those
+animals, and often in the inverse ratio of the weight of their bones, for
+vegetables, although they have no bones, require phosphate of chalk. This
+is because this salt is the natural stimulant of living membranes, and the
+bony tissue is only a depot of phosphate of chalk, analogous to the adipose
+tissue, the fat of which is absorbed when the alimentation coming from the
+exterior becomes insufficient. Now, as we know all the parts constituting
+the berry of wheat, it will be easy to explain the phenomena of
+panification, and to conclude from the present moment that it is not
+indifferent to reject from the bread this embryous membrane where the
+agents of digestion are found, viz., the phosphoric bodies and the
+phosphate of chalk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE ORIGIN OF NEW PROCESS MILLING.
+
+
+The following article was written by Albert Hoppin, editor of the
+_Northwestern Miller_, at the request of Special Agent Chas. W. Johnson,
+and forms a part of his report to the census bureau on the manufacturing
+industries of Minneapolis.
+
+"The development of the milling industry in this city has been so
+intimately connected with the growth and prosperity of the city itself,
+that the steps by which the art of milling has reached its present high
+state of perfection are worthy of note, especially as Minneapolis may
+rightly claim the honor of having brought the improvements, which have
+within the last decade so thoroughly revolutionized the art of making
+flour, first into public notice, and of having contributed the largest
+share of capital and inventive skill to their full development. So much is
+this the case that the cluster of mills around the Falls of St. Anthony is
+to-day looked upon as the head-center of the milling industry not only of
+this country, but of the world. An exception to this broad statement may
+possibly be made in favor of the city of Buda Pest, in Austro-Hungary, from
+the leading mills in which the millers in this country have obtained many
+valuable ideas. To the credit of American millers and millwrights it must,
+however, be said that they have in all cases improved upon the information
+they have thus obtained.
+
+"To rightly understand the change that has taken place in milling methods
+during the last ten years, it is necessary to compare the old way with the
+new, and to observe wherein they differ. From the days of Oliver Evans, the
+first American mechanic to make any improvement in milling machinery, until
+1870, there was, if we may except some grain cleaning or smut machines,
+no very strongly marked advance in milling machinery or in the methods of
+manufacturing flour. It is true that the reel covered with finely-woven
+silk bolting cloth had taken the place of the muslin or woolen covered hand
+sieve, and that the old granite millstones have given place to the French
+burr; but these did not affect the essential parts of the _modus operandi_,
+although the quality of the product was, no doubt, materially improved. The
+processes employed in all the mills in the United States ten years ago were
+identical, or very nearly so, with those in use in the Brandywine Mills in
+Evans's day. They were very simple, and may be divided into two distinct
+operations.
+
+"First. Grinding (literally) the wheat.
+
+"Second. Bolting or separating the flour or interior portion of the berry
+from the outer husk, or bran. It may seem to some a rash assertion, but
+this primitive way of making flour is still in vogue in over one-half of
+the mills of the United States. This does not, however, affect the truth of
+the statement that the greater part of the flour now made in this country
+is made on an entirely different and vastly-improved system, which has come
+to be known to the trade as the new process.
+
+"In looking for a reason for the sudden activity and spirit of progress
+which had its culmination in the new process, the character of the
+wheat raised in the different sections of the Union must be taken into
+consideration. Wheat may be divided into two classes, spring and winter,
+the latter generally being more starchy and easily pulverized, and at the
+same time having a very tough bran or husk, which does not readily crumble
+or cut to pieces in the process of grinding. It was with this wheat that
+the mills of the country had chiefly to do, and the defects of the old
+system of milling were not then so apparent. With the settlement of
+Minnesota, and the development of its capacities as a wheat-growing State,
+a new factor in the milling problem was introduced, which for a time bid
+fair to ruin every miller who undertook to solve it. The wheat raised in
+this State was, from the climatic conditions, a spring wheat, hard in
+structure and having a thin, tender, and friable bran. In milling this
+wheat, if an attempt was made to grind it as fine as was then customary to
+grind winter wheat, the bran was ground almost as fine as the flour, and
+passed as readily through the meshes of the bolting reels or sieves,
+rendering the flour dark, specky, and altogether unfit to enter the Eastern
+markets in competition with flour from the winter wheat sections. On the
+other hand, if the grinding was not so fine as to break up the bran,
+the interior of the berry being harder to pulverize, was not rendered
+sufficiently fine, and there remained after the flour was bolted out a
+large percentage of shorts or middlings, which, while containing the
+strongest and best flour in the berry, were so full of dirt and impurities
+as to render them unfit for any further grinding except for the very lowest
+grade of flour, technically known as 'red dog.' The flour produced from
+the first grinding was also more or less specky and discolored, and, in
+everything but strength, inferior to that made from winter wheat, while the
+'yield' was so small, or, in other words, the amount of wheat which it took
+to make a barrel of flour was so large, that milling in Minnesota and other
+spring wheat sections was anything but profitable.
+
+"The problem which ten years since confronted the millers of this city was
+how to obtain from the wheat which they had to grind a white, clear flour,
+and to so increase the yield as to leave some margin for profit. The first
+step in the solution of this problem was the invention by E. N. La Croix
+of the machine which has since been called the purifier, which removed the
+dirt and light impurities from the refuse middlings in the same manner that
+dust and chaff are removed from wheat by a fanning mill. The middlings thus
+purified were then reground, and the result was a much whiter and cleaner
+flour than it had been possible to obtain under the old process of low
+close grinding. This flour was called 'patent' or 'fancy,' and at once took
+a high position in the market. The first machine built by La Croix was
+immediately improved by George T. Smith, and has since then been the
+subject of numberless variations, changes, and improvements; and over the
+principles embodied in its construction there has been fought one of the
+longest and most bitter battles recorded in the annals of patent litigation
+in this country. The purifier is to-day the most important machine in use
+in the manufacture of flour in this country, and may with propriety be
+called the corner-stone of new process milling. The earliest experiments in
+its use in this country were made in what was then known as the 'big mill'
+in this city, owned by Washburn, Stephens & Co., and now known as the
+Washburn Mill B.
+
+"The next step in the development of the new process, also originating
+in Minneapolis, was the abandonment of the old system of cracking the
+millstone, and substituting in its stead the use of smooth surfaces on the
+millstones, thus in a large measure doing away with the abrasion of the
+bran, and raising the quality of the flour produced at the first grinding.
+So far as we know, Mr. E. R. Stephens, a Minneapolis miller, then employed
+in the mill owned by Messrs. Pillsbury, Crocker & Fish, and now a member of
+the prominent milling firm of Freeman & Stephens, River Falls, Wisconsin,
+was the first to venture on this innovation. He also first practiced the
+widening of the furrows in the millstones and increasing their number, thus
+adding largely to the amount of middlings made at the first grinding, and
+raising the percentage of patent flour. He was warmly supported by Amasa K.
+Ostrander, since deceased, the founder and for a number of years the editor
+of the _North-Western Miller_, a trade newspaper. The new ideas were for a
+time vigorously combated by the millers, but their worth was so plain that
+they were soon adopted, not only in Minneapolis, but by progressive millers
+throughout the country. The truth was the 'new process' in its entirety,
+which may be summarized in four steps--first, grinding or, more properly,
+granulating the berry; second, bolting or separating the 'chop' or meal
+into first flour, middlings, and bran; third, purifying the middlings,
+fourth, regrinding and rebolting the middlings to produce the higher grade,
+or 'patent' flour. This higher grade flour drove the best winter wheat
+flours out of the Eastern markets, and placed milling in Minnesota upon a
+firm basis. The development of the 'new process' cannot be claimed by any
+one man. Hundreds of millers all over the country have contributed to its
+advance, but the millers of Minneapolis have always taken the lead.
+
+"Within the past two or three years what may be distinctively called the
+'new process' has, in the mills of Minneapolis and some few other leading
+mills in the country, been giving place to a new system, or rather, a
+refinement of the processes above described. This latest system is known to
+the trade as the 'gradual reduction' or high-grinding system, as the 'new
+process' is the medium high-grinding system, and the old way is the low or
+close grinding system. In using the gradual reduction in making flour the
+millstones are abandoned, except for finishing some of the inferior grades
+of flour, and the work is done by means of grooved and plain rollers, made
+of chilled iron or porcelain. In some cases disks of chilled iron, suitably
+furrowed, are used, and in others concave mills, consisting of a cylinder
+running against a concave plate. In Minneapolis the chilled iron rolls take
+the precedence of all other means.
+
+"The system of gradual reduction is much more complicated than either of
+those which preceded it; but the results obtained are a marked advance over
+the 'new process.' The percentage of high-grade flour is increased, several
+grades of different degrees of excellence being produced, and the yield
+is also greater from a given quantity of wheat. The system consists in
+reducing the wheat to flour, not at one operation, as in the old system,
+nor in two grindings, as in the 'new process,' but in several successive
+reductions, four, five, or six, as the case may be. The wheat is first
+passed through a pair of corrugated chilled iron rollers, which merely
+split it open along the crease of the berry, liberating the dirt which lies
+in the crease so that it can be removed by bolting. A very small percentage
+of low-grade flour is also made in this reduction. After passing through
+what is technically called a 'scalping reel' to remove the dirt and flour,
+the broken wheat is passed through a second set of corrugated rollers, by
+which it is further broken up, and then passes through a second separating
+reel, which removes the flour and middlings. This operation is repeated
+successively until the flour portion of the berry is entirely removed from
+the bran, the necessary separation being made after each reduction. The
+middlings from the several reductions are passed through the purifiers,
+and, after being purified, are reduced to flour by successive reductions
+on smooth iron or porcelain rollers. In some cases, as stated above, iron
+disks and concave mills are substituted for the roller mill, but the
+operation is substantially the same. One of the principal objects sought to
+be attained by this high-grinding system is to avoid all abrasion of the
+bran, another is to take out the dirt in the crease of the berry at the
+beginning of the process, and still another to thoroughly free the bran
+from flour, so as to obtain as large a yield as possible. Incidental to the
+improved methods of milling, as now practiced in this country, is a marked
+improvement in the cleaning of the grain and preparing it for flouring. The
+earliest grain-cleaning machine was the 'smutter,' the office of which was
+to break the smut balls, and scour the outside of the bran to remove any
+adhering dust, the scouring machine being too harsh in its action, breaking
+the kernels of wheat, and so scratching and weakening the bran that it
+broke up readily in the grinding. The scouring process was therefore
+lessened, and was followed by brush machines, which brushed the dirt,
+loosened up and left by the scourer, from the berry. Other machines for
+removing the fuzzy and germ ends of the berry have also been introduced,
+and everything possible is done to free the grain from extraneous
+impurities before the process of reduction is commenced. In all the minor
+details of the mill there has been the same marked change, until the modern
+merchant mill of to-day no more resembles that of twenty-five years ago
+than does the modern cotton mill the old-fashioned distaff. The change has
+extended into the winter wheat sections, and no mill in the United States
+can hope to hold its place in the markets unless it is provided with the
+many improvements in machinery and processes which have resulted from the
+experiments begun in this city only ten years since, and which have
+made the name of Minneapolis and the products of her many mills famous
+throughout the world. The relative merits of the flour made by the new
+process and the old have been warmly discussed, but the general verdict
+of the great body of consumers is that the patent or new process flour is
+better in every way for bread making purposes, being clearer, whiter, more
+evenly granulated, and possessing more strength. Careful chemical analysis
+has confirmed this. As between winter and spring wheat flours made by the
+new process and gradual reduction systems, it maybe remarked that the
+former contain more starch and are whiter in color, while the latter,
+having more gluten, excel in strength. In milling all varieties of wheat,
+whether winter or spring, the new processes are in every way superior to
+the old, and, in aiding their inception and development, the millers of
+Minneapolis have conferred a lasting benefit on the country.
+
+"Minneapolis, Minn., December 1, 1880."
+
+
+THE MILLING STRUCTURES AND MACHINERY.
+
+
+Mr. Johnson added the following, showing the present status of the milling
+industry in Minneapolis:
+
+"The description of the process of the manufacture of flour so well
+given above, conveys no idea of the extent and magnitude of the milling
+structures, machinery, and buildings employed in the business. Many of the
+leading millers and millwrights have personally visited and studied the
+best mills in England, France, Hungary, and Germany, and are as familiar
+with their theory, methods, and construction as of their own, and no
+expense or labor has been spared in introducing the most approved features
+of the improvements in the foreign mills. Experimenting is constantly going
+on, and the path behind the successful millers is strewn with the wrecks of
+failures. A very large proportion of the machinery is imported, though the
+American machinists are fast outstripping their European rivals in the
+quality and efficiency of the machinery needed for the new mills constantly
+going up.
+
+"There are twenty-eight of these mills now constructed and at work,
+operating an equivalent of 412 runs of stone, consuming over sixteen
+million bushels of wheat, and manufacturing over three million barrels of
+flour annually. Their capacities range from 250 to 1,500 barrels of flour
+per day. Great as these capacities are, there is now one in process of
+construction, the Pillsbury A Mill, which at the beginning of the harvest
+of 1881 will have a capacity of 4,000 barrels daily. The Washburn A Mill,
+whose capacity is now 1,500 barrels, is being enlarged to make 8,500
+barrels a day, and the Crown Roller Mill, owned by Christian Bros. & Co.,
+is also being enlarged to produce 3,000 barrels a day. The largest mill in
+Europe has a daily capacity of but 2,800 barrels, and no European mill is
+fitted with the exquisite perfection of machinery and apparatus to be found
+in the mills of this city.
+
+"The buildings are mainly built of blue limestone, found so abundant in the
+quarries of this city, range and line work, and rest on the solid ledge.
+The earlier built mills are severely plain, but the newer ones are greatly
+improved by the taste of the architect, and are imposing and beautiful in
+appearance."
+
+
+DIRECT FOREIGN TRADE.
+
+The flour of Minneapolis, holding so high a rank in the markets of the
+world, is always in active demand, especially the best grades, and brings
+from $1.00 to $1.60 per barrel more than flour of the best qualities of
+southern, eastern, or foreign wheat. During the year nearly a million
+barrels were shipped direct to European and other foreign ports, on through
+bills of lading, and drawn for by banks here having special foreign
+exchange arrangements, at sight, on the day of shipment. This trade
+is constantly increasing, and the amount of flour handled by eastern
+commission men is decreasing in proportion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Referring to the foregoing, the following letter from Mr. Geo. T. Smith to
+the editor of the _London Miller_ is of interest:
+
+SIR: I find published in the _North-western Miller_ of December 24, 1880,
+extracts from an article on the origin of new process milling, prepared by
+Albert Hoppin, Esq., editor of the above-named journal, for the use of one
+of the statistical divisions of the United States census, which is so at
+variance, in at least one important particular, with the facts set forth in
+the paper read by me before the British and Irish millers, at their meeting
+in May last, that I think I ought to take notice of its statements, more
+especially as the _North-Western Miller_ has quite a circulation on this
+side of the water.
+
+As stated in the paper read by me above-mentioned, I was engaged in
+February, 1871, by Mr. Christian, who was then operating the "big," or
+Washburn Mill at Minneapolis, to take charge of the stones in that mill. At
+this time Mr. Christian was very much interested in the improvement of the
+quality of his flour, which in common with the flour of Minneapolis mills,
+without exception, was very poor indeed. For some time previous to this I
+had insisted to him most strenuously that the beginning of any improvement
+must be found in smooth, true, and well balanced stones, and it was because
+he was at last convinced that my ideas were at least worthy of a practical
+test I was placed in charge of his mill. Nearly two months were consumed in
+truing and smoothing the stone, as all millers in the mill had struck
+at once when they became acquainted with the character of the changes I
+proposed to make.
+
+I remained with Mr. Christian until the latter part of 1871, in all about
+eight months. During this time the flour from the Washburn Mill attained a
+celebrity that made it known and sought after all over the United States.
+It commanded attention as an event of the very greatest importance, from
+the fact that it was justly felt that if a mill grinding spring wheat
+exclusively was capable of producing a flour infinitely superior in every
+way to the best that could be made from the finest varieties of winter
+wheats, the new North Western territory, with its peculiar adaptation to
+the growing of spring grain, and its boundless capacity for production,
+must at once become one of the most important sections of the country.
+
+Mr. Christian's appreciation of the improvements I had made in his mill
+was attested by doubly-locked and guarded entrances, and by the stringent
+regulations which were adopted to prevent any of his employes carrying
+information with regard to the process to his competitors.
+
+All this time other Minneapolis mills were doing such work and only such as
+they had done previously. Ought not the writer of an article on the origin
+of new process milling--which article is intended to become historical, and
+to have its authenticity indorsed by the government--to have known whether
+Mr. Christian, in the Washburn Mill, did or did not make a grade of
+flour which has hardly been excelled since for months before any other
+Minneapolis mill approached his product in any degree? And should he not
+be well enough acquainted with the milling of that period--1871-2--to know
+that such results as were obtained in the Washburn Mill could only be
+secured by the use of _smooth_ and _true_ stones? Mr. Stephens--whom I
+shall mention again presently--did _not_ work in the Washburn Mill while I
+was in charge of it.
+
+In the fall of 1871 I entered into a contract with Mr. C. A. Pillsbury,
+owner of the Taylor Mill and senior partner in the firm by whom the
+Minneapolis Mill was operated, to put both those mills into condition to
+make the same grade of flour as Mr. Christian was making. The consideration
+in the contract was 5,000 dols. At the above mills I met to some extent the
+same obstruction in regard to millers striking as had greeted me at Mr.
+Christian's mill earlier in the year; but among those who did not strike at
+the Minneapolis Mill I saw, for the first time, Mr. Stephens--then still
+in his apprenticeship--whom Mr. Hoppin declares to have been, "so far as I
+know," the first miller to use smooth stones. If Mr. Hoppin is right in his
+assertion, perhaps he will explain why, during the eight months I was at
+the Washburn Mill, Mr. Stephens did not make a corresponding improvement
+in the product of the Minneapolis Mill. That he did not do this is amply
+proved by the fact of Mr. Pillsbury giving me 5,000 dols. to introduce
+improvements into his mills, when, supposing Mr. Hoppin's statement to
+be correct, he might have had the same alterations carried out under Mr.
+Stephens' direction at a mere nominal cost. As a matter of fact, the stones
+in both the Taylor and Minneapolis Mills were as rough as any in the
+Washburn Mill when I took charge of them.
+
+Thus it appears (1) that the flour made by the mill in which Stephens was
+employed was not improved in quality, while that of the Washburn Mill,
+where he was not employed, became the finest that had ever been made in the
+United States at that time. That (2) the owner of the mill in which Mr.
+Stephens was employed, as he was not making good flour, engaged me at a
+large cost to introduce into his mills the alterations by which only, both
+Mr. Hoppin and myself agree, could any material improvement in the milling
+of that period be effected, .viz., smooth, true, and well-balanced
+stones.--GEO. T. SMITH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For breachy animals do not use barbed fences. To see the lacerations that
+these fences have produced upon the innocent animals should be sufficient
+testimony against them. Many use pokes and blinders on cattle and goats,
+but as a rule such things fail. The better way is to separate breachy
+animals from the lot, as others will imitate their habits sooner or later,
+and then, if not curable, _sell them_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GUENON MILK-MIRROR.
+
+
+The name of the simple Bordeaux peasant is, and should be, permanently
+associated with his discovery that the milking qualities of cows were, to a
+considerable extent, indicated by certain external marks easily observed.
+We had long known that capacious udders and large milk veins, combined with
+good digestive capacity and a general preponderance of the alimentary over
+the locomotive system, were indications that rarely misled in regard to the
+ability of a cow to give much milk; but to judge of the amount of milk a
+cow would yield, and the length of time she would hold out in her flow, two
+or three years before she could be called a cow--this was Guenon's great
+accomplishment, and the one for which he was awarded a gold medal by the
+Agricultural Society of his native district. This was the first of many
+honors with which he was rewarded, and it is much to say that no committee
+of agriculturists who have ever investigated the merits of the system
+have ever spoken disparagingly of it. Those who most closely study it,
+especially following Guenon's original system, which has never been
+essentially improved upon, are most positive in regard to its truth,
+enthusiastic in regard to its value.
+
+The fine, soft hair upon the hinder part of a cow's udder for the most part
+turns upward. This upward-growing hair extends in most cases all over that
+part of the udder visible between the hind legs, but is occasionally marked
+by spots or mere lines, usually slender ovals, in which the hair grows
+down. This tendency of the hair to grow upward is not confined to the udder
+proper; but extends out upon the thighs and upward to the tail. The edges
+of this space over which the hair turns up are usually distinctly marked,
+and, as a rule, the larger the area of this space, which is called the
+"mirror" or "escutcheon," the more milk the cow will give, and the longer
+she will continue in milk.
+
+[Illustration: ESCUTCHEON OF THE JERSEY BULL-CALF, GRAND MIRROR, 4,904.]
+
+That portion of the escutcheon which covers the udder and extends out on
+the inside of each thigh, has been designated as the udder or mammary
+mirror; that which runs upward towards the setting on of the tail, the
+rising or placental mirror. The mammary mirror is of the greater value,
+yet the rising mirror is not to be disregarded. It is regarded of especial
+moment that the mirror, taken as a whole, be symmetrical, and especially
+that the mammary mirror be so; yet it often occurs that it is far
+otherwise, its outline being often very fantastical--exhibiting deep
+_bays_, so to speak, and islands of downward growing hair. There are also
+certain "ovals," never very large, yet distinct, which do not detract from
+the estimated value of an escutcheon; notably those occurring on the lobes
+of the udder just above the hind teats. These are supposed to be points of
+value, though for what reason it would be hard to tell, yet they do occur
+upon some of the very best milch cows, and those whose mirrors correspond
+most closely to their performances.
+
+Mr. Guenon's discovery enables breeders to determine which of their calves
+are most promising, and in purchasing young stock it affords indications
+which rarely fail as to their comparative milk yield. These indications
+occasionally prove utterly fallacious, and Mr. Guenon gives rules for
+determining this class, which he calls "bastards," without waiting for them
+to fail in their milk. The signs are, however, rarely so distinct that one
+would be willing to sell a twenty-quart cow, whose yield confirmed the
+prediction of her mirror at first calving, because of the possibility of
+the going dry in two months, or so, as indicated by her bastardy marks.
+
+It is an interesting fact that the mirrors of bulls (which are much like
+those of cows, but less extensive in every direction) are reflected in
+their daughters. This gives rise to the dangerous custom of breeding for
+mirrors, rather than for milk. What the results may be after a few years it
+is easy to see. The mirror, being valued for its own sake--that is, because
+it sells the heifers--will be likely to lose its practical significance and
+value as a _milk_ mirror.
+
+We have a striking photograph of a young Jersey bull, the property of Mr.
+John L. Hopkins, of Atlanta, Ga., and called "Grand Mirror." This we have
+caused to be engraved and the mirror is clearly shown. A larger mirror is
+rarely seen upon a bull. We hope in a future number to exhibit some cows'
+mirrors of different forms and degrees of excellence.--_Rural New Yorker_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TWO GOOD LAWN TREES.
+
+
+The negundo, or ash-leaved maple, as it is called in the Eastern States,
+better known at the West as a box elder, is a tree that is not known as
+extensively as it deserves. It is a hard maple, that grows as rapidly as
+the soft maple; is hardy, possesses a beautiful foliage of black green
+leaves, and is symmetrical in shape. Through eastern Iowa I found it
+growing wild, and a favorite tree with the early settlers, who wanted
+something that gave shade and protection to their homes quickly on their
+prairie farms. Brought east, its growth is rapid, and it loses none of the
+characteristics it possessed in its western home. Those who have planted it
+are well pleased with it. It is a tree that transplants easily, and I know
+of no reason why it should not be more popular.
+
+For ornamental lawn planting, I give pre-eminence to the cut-leaf weeping
+birch. Possessing all the good qualities of the white birch, it combines
+with them a beauty and delicate grace yielded by no other tree. It is an
+upright grower, with slender, drooping branches, adorned with leaves of
+deep rich green, each leaf being delicately cut, as with a knife, into
+semi-skeletons. It holds its foliage and color till quite late in the fall.
+The bark, with age, becomes white, resembling the white birch, and the
+beauty of the tree increases with its age. It is a free grower, and
+requires no trimming. Nature has given it a symmetry which art cannot
+improve.
+
+H.T.J.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CUTTING SODS FOR LAWNS.
+
+
+I am a very good sod layer, and used to lay very large lawns--half to
+three-quarters of an acre. I cut the sods as follows: Take a board eight to
+nine inches wide, four, five, or six feet long, and cut downward all around
+the board, then turn the board over and cut again alongside the edge of the
+board, and so on as many sods as needed. Then cut the turf with a sharp
+spade, all the same lengths. Begin on one end, and roll together. Eight
+inches by five feet is about as much as a man can handle conveniently. It
+is very easy to load them on a wagon, cart, or barrow, and they can be
+quickly laid. After laying a good piece, sprinkle a little with a watering
+pot, if the sods are dry; then use the back of the spade to smooth them a
+little. If a very fine effect is wanted, throw a shovelful or two of good
+earth over each square yard, and smooth it with the back of a steel rake.
+
+F.H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+[COUNTRY GENTLEMAN.]
+
+HORTICULTURAL NOTES.
+
+
+The Western New York Society met at Rochester, January 26.
+
+_New Apples, Pears, Grapes, etc._--Wm. C Barry, secretary of the committee
+on native fruits, read a full report. Among the older varieties of the
+apple, he strongly recommended Button Beauty, which had proved so excellent
+in Massachusetts, and which had been equally successful at the Mount
+Hope Nurseries at Rochester; the fine growth of the tree and its great
+productiveness being strongly in its favor. The Wagener and Northern Spy
+are among the finer sorts. The Melon is one of the best among the older
+sorts; the fruit being quite tender will not bear long shipment, but it
+possesses great value for home use, and being a poor grower, it had been
+thrown aside by nurserymen and orchardists. It should be top-grafted on
+more vigorous sorts. The Jonathan is another fine sort of slender growth,
+which should be top-grafted.
+
+Among new pears, Hoosic and Frederic Clapp were highly commended for their
+excellence. Some of the older peaches of fine quality had of late been
+neglected, and among them Druid Hill and Brevoort.
+
+Among the many new peaches highly recommended for their early ripening,
+there was great resemblance to each other, and some had proved earlier than
+Alexander.
+
+Of the new grapes, Lady Washington was the most promising. The Secretary
+was a failure. The Jefferson was a fine sort, of high promise.
+
+Among the new white grapes, Niagara, Prentiss, and Duchess stood
+pre-eminent, and were worthy of the attention of cultivators. The
+Vergennes, from Vermont, a light amber colored sort, was also highly
+commended. The Elvira, so highly valued in Missouri, does not succeed well
+here. Several facts were stated in relation to the Delaware grape, showing
+its reliability and excellence.
+
+Several new varieties of the raspberry were named, but few of them were
+found equal to the best old sorts. If Brinckle's Orange were taken as a
+standard for quality, it would show that none had proved its equal in fine
+quality. The Caroline was like it in color, but inferior in flavor. The New
+Rochelle was of second quality. Turner was a good berry, but too soft for
+distant carriage.
+
+Of the many new strawberries named, each seemed to have some special
+drawback. The Bidwell, however, was a new sort of particular excellence,
+and Charles Downing thinks it the most promising of the new berries.
+
+_Discussion on Grapes._--C. W. Beadle, of Ontario, in allusion to Moore's
+Early grape, finds it much earlier than the Concord, and equal to it in
+quality, ripening even before the Hartford. S. D. Willard, of Geneva,
+thought it inferior to the Concord, and not nearly so good as the Worden.
+The last named was both earlier and better than the Concord, and sold for
+seven cents per pound when the Concord brought only four cents. C. A.
+Green, of Monroe County, said the Lady Washington proved to be a very fine
+grape, slightly later than Concord. P. L. Perry, of Canandaigua, said
+that the Vergennes ripens with Hartford, and possesses remarkable keeping
+qualities, and is of excellent quality and free from pulp. He presented
+specimens which had been kept in good condition. He added, in relation to
+the Worden grape, that some years ago it brought 18 cents per pound in New
+York when the Concord sold three days later for only 8 cents. [In such
+comparisons, however, it should be borne in mind that new varieties usually
+receive more attention and better culture, giving them an additional
+advantage.]
+
+The Niagara grape received special attention from members. A. C. Younglove,
+of Yates County, thought it superior to any other white grape for its many
+good qualities. It was a vigorous and healthy grower, and the clusters were
+full and handsome. W. J. Fowler, of Monroe County, saw the vine in October,
+with the leaves still hanging well, a great bearer and the grape of fine
+quality. C. L. Hoag, of Lockport, said he began to pick the Niagara on the
+26th of August, but its quality improved by hanging on the vine. J. Harris,
+of Niagara County, was well acquainted with the Niagara, and indorsed all
+the commendation which had been uttered in its favor. T. C. Maxwell said
+there was one fault--we could not get it, as it was not in market. W. C.
+Barry, of Rochester, spoke highly of the Niagara, and its slight foxiness
+would be no objection to those who like that peculiarity. C. L. Hoag
+thought this was the same quality that Col. Wilder described as "a little
+aromatic." A. C. Younglove found the Niagara to ripen with the Delaware.
+Inquiry being made relative to the Pockington grape, H. E. Hooker said it
+ripened as early as the Concord. C. A. Green was surprised that it had not
+attracted more attention, as he regarded it as a very promising grape. J.
+Charlton, of Rochester, said that the fruit had been cut for market on the
+29th of August, and on the 6th of September it was fully ripe; but he has
+known it to hang as late as November. J. S. Stone had found that when it
+hung as late as November it became sweet and very rich in flavor.
+
+_New Peaches._--A. C. Younglove had found such very early sorts as
+Alexander and Amsden excellent for home use, but not profitable for market.
+The insects and birds made heavy depredations on them. While nearly all
+very early and high-colored sorts suffer largely from the birds, the
+Rivers, a white peach, does not attract them, and hence it may be
+profitable for market if skillfully packed; rough and careless handling
+will spoil the fruit. He added that the Wheatland peach sustains its high
+reputation, and he thought it the best of all sorts for market, ripening
+with Late Crawford. It is a great bearer, but carries a crop of remarkably
+uniform size, so that it is not often necessary to throw out a bad
+specimen. This is the result of experience with it by Mr. Rogers at
+Wheatland, in Monroe County, and at his own residence in Vine Valley. S. D.
+Willard confirmed all that Mr. Younglove had said of the excellence of the
+Rivers peach. He had ripened the Amsden for several years, and found it
+about two weeks earlier than the Rivers, and he thought if the Amsden were
+properly thinned, it would prevent the common trouble of its rotting; such
+had been his experience. E. A. Bronson, of Geneva, objected to making very
+early peaches prominent for marketing, as purchasers would prefer waiting
+a few days to paying high prices for the earliest, and he would caution
+people against planting the Amsden too largely, and its free recommendation
+might mislead. May's Choice was named by H. E. Hooker as a beautiful yellow
+peach, having no superior in quality, but perhaps it may not be found
+to have more general value than Early and Late Crawford. It is scarcely
+distinguishable in appearance from fine specimens of Early Crawford. W. C.
+Barry was called on for the most recent experience with the Waterloo,
+but said he was not at home when it ripened, but he learned that it had
+sustained its reputation. A. C. Younglove said that the Salway is the best
+late peach, ripening eight or ten days after the Smock. S. D. Willard
+mentioned an orchard near Geneva, consisting of 25 Salway trees, which for
+four years had ripened their crop and had sold for $4 per bushel in the
+Philadelphia market, or for $3 at Geneva--a higher price than for any other
+sort--and the owner intends to plant 200 more trees. W. C. Barry said the
+Salway will not ripen at Rochester. Hill's Chili was named by some members
+as a good peach for canning and drying, some stating that it ripens before
+and others after Late Crawford. It requires thinning on the tree, or
+the fruit will be poor. The Allen was pronounced by Mr. Younglove as an
+excellent, intensely high-colored late peach.
+
+_Insects Affecting Horticulture_.--Mr. Zimmerman spoke of the importance
+of all cultivators knowing so much of insects and their habits as to
+distinguish their friends from their enemies. When unchecked they increase
+in an immense ratio, and he mentioned as an instance that the green fly
+(_Aphis_) in five generations may become the parent of six thousand million
+descendants. It is necessary, then, to know what other insects are employed
+in holding them in check, by feeding on them. Some of our most formidable
+insects have been accidentally imported from Europe, such as the codling
+moth, asparagus beetle, cabbage butterfly, currant worm and borer, elm-tree
+beetle, hessian fly, etc.; but in nearly every instance these have come
+over without bringing their insect enemies with them, and in consequence
+they have spread more extensively here than in Europe. It was therefore
+urged that the Agricultural Department at Washington be requested to
+import, as far as practicable, such parasites as are positively known to
+prey on noxious insects. The cabbage fly eluded our keen custom-house
+officials in 1866, and has enjoyed free citizenship ever since. By
+accident, one of its insect enemies (a small black fly) was brought over
+with it, and is now doing excellent work by keeping the cabbage fly in
+check.
+
+The codling moth, one of the most formidable fruit destroyers, may be
+reduced in number by the well-known paper bands; but a more efficient
+remedy is to shower them early in the season with Paris green, mixed in
+water at the rate of only one pound to one hundred gallons of water, with
+a forcing pump, soon after blossoming. After all the experiments made and
+repellents used for the plum curculio, the jarring method is found the most
+efficient and reliable, if properly performed. Various remedies for insects
+sometimes have the credit of doing the work, if used in those seasons
+when the insects happen to be few. With some insects, the use of oil is
+advantageous, as it always closes up their breathing holes and suffocates
+them. The oil should be mixed with milk, and then diluted as required, as
+the oil alone cannot be mixed with the water. As a general remedy,
+Paris green is the strongest that can be applied. A teaspoonful to a
+tablespoonful, in a barrel of water, is enough. Hot water is the best
+remedy for house plants. Place one hand over the soil, invert the pot, and
+plunge the foliage for a second only at a time in water heated to from 150°
+to 200°F, according to the plants; or apply with a fine rose. The yeast
+remedy has not proved successful in all cases.
+
+Among beneficial insects, there are about one hundred species of lady bugs,
+and, so far as known, all are beneficial. Cultivators should know them.
+They destroy vast quantities of plant lice. The ground beetles are mostly
+cannibals, and should not be destroyed. The large black beetle, with
+coppery dots, makes short work with the Colorado potato beetles; and
+a bright green beetle will climb trees to get a meal of canker worms.
+Ichneumon flies are among our most useful insects. The much-abused dragon
+flies are perfectly harmless to us, but destroy many mosquitoes and flies.
+
+Among insects that attack large fruits is the codling moth, to be destroyed
+by paper bands, or with Paris green showered in water. The round-headed
+apple-tree borer is to be cut out, and the eggs excluded with a sheet of
+tarred paper around the stem, and slightly sunk in the earth. For the
+oyster-shell bark louse, apply linseed oil. Paris green, in water,
+will kill the canker worm. Tobacco water does the work for plant lice.
+Peach-tree borers are excluded with tarred or felt paper, and cut out with
+a knife. Jar the grape flea beetle on an inverted umbrella early in the
+morning. Among small-fruit insects, the strawberry worms are readily
+destroyed with hellebore, an ounce to a gallon of warm water. The same
+remedy destroys the imported currant worm.
+
+_Insect Destroyers_.--Prof. W. Saunders, of the Province of Ontario,
+followed Mr. Zimmerman with a paper on other departments of the same
+general subject, which contained much information and many suggestions of
+great value to cultivators. He had found Paris green an efficient remedy
+for the bud-moth on pear and other trees. He also recommends Paris green
+for the grapevine flea beetle. Hellebore is much better for the pear slug
+than dusting with sand, as these slugs, as soon as their skin is spoiled
+by being sanded, cast it off and go on with their work of destruction as
+freely as ever, and this they repeat. He remarked that it is a common error
+that all insects are pests to the cultivator. There are many parasites,
+or useful ones, which prey on our insect enemies. Out of 7,000 described
+insects in this country, only about 50 have proved destructive to our
+crops. Parasites are much more numerous. Among lepidopterous insects
+(butterflies, etc.), there are very few noxious species; many active
+friends are found among the Hymenoptera (wasps, etc.), the ichneumon flies
+pre-eminently so; and in the order Hemiptera (bugs proper) are several that
+destroy our enemies. Hence the very common error that birds which destroy
+insects are beneficial to us, as they are more likely to destroy our insect
+friends than the fewer enemies. Those known as _flycatchers_ may do neither
+harm nor good; so far as they eat the wheat-midge and Hessian fly they
+confer a positive benefit; in other instances they destroy both friends and
+enemies. Birds that are only partly insectivorous, and which eat grain and
+fruit, may need further inquiry. Prof. S. had examined the stomachs of many
+such birds, and particularly of the American robin, and the only curculio
+he ever found in any of these was a single one in a whole cherry which the
+bird had bolted entire. Robins had proved very destructive to his grapes,
+but had not assisted at all in protecting his cabbages growing alongside
+his fruit garden. These vegetables were nearly destroyed by the larvae of
+the cabbage fly, which would have afforded the birds many fine, rich meals.
+This comparatively feeble insect has been allowed by the throngs of birds
+to spread over the whole continent. A naturalist in one of the Western
+States had examined several species of the thrush, and found they had eaten
+mostly that class of insects known as our friends.
+
+Prof. S. spoke of the remedies for root lice, among which were hot water
+and bisulphide of carbon. Hot water will get cold before it can reach the
+smaller roots, however efficient it may be showered on leaves. Bisulphide
+of carbon is very volatile, inflammable, and sometimes explosive, and must
+be handled with great care. It permeates the soil, and if in sufficient
+quantity may be effective in destroying the phylloxera; but its cost and
+dangerous character prevent it from being generally recommended.
+
+Paris green is most generally useful for destroying insects. As sold to
+purchasers, it is of various grades of purity. The highest in price is
+commonly the purest, and really the cheapest. A difficulty with this
+variable quality is that it cannot be properly diluted with water, and
+those who buy and use a poor article and try its efficacy, will burn or
+kill their plants when they happen to use a stronger, purer, and more
+efficient one. Or, if the reverse is done, they may pronounce it a humbug
+from the resulting failure. One teaspoonful, if pure, is enough for a large
+pail of water; or if mixed with flour, there should be forty or fifty times
+as much. Water is best, as the operator will not inhale the dust. London
+purple is another form of the arsenic, and has very variable qualities
+of the poison, being merely refuse matter from manufactories. It is more
+soluble than Paris green, and hence more likely to scorch plants. On the
+whole, Paris green is much the best and most reliable for common use.
+
+At the close of Prof. Saunders' remarks some objections were made by
+members present to the use of Paris green on fruit soon after blossoming,
+and Prof. S. sustained the objection, in that the knowledge that the fruit
+had been showered with it would deter purchasers from receiving it, even if
+no poison could remain on it from spring to autumn. A man had brought to
+him potatoes to analyze for arsenic, on which Paris green had been used,
+and although it was shown to him that the poison did not reach the roots
+beneath the soil, and if it did it was insoluble and could not enter them,
+he was not satisfied until a careful analysis was made and no arsenic at
+all found in them. A member said that in mixing with plaster there should
+be 100 or 150 pounds of plaster to one of the Paris green, and that a
+smaller quantity, by weight, of flour would answer, as that is a more bulky
+article for the same weight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS ON THE SALMON OF THE PACIFIC.
+
+By DAVID S. JORDAN and CHAS. H. GILBERT.
+
+
+During the most of the present year, the writers have been engaged in the
+study of the fishes of the Pacific coast of the United States, in the
+interest of the U.S. Fish Commission and the U.S. Census Bureau. The
+following pages contain the principal facts ascertained concerning the
+salmon of the Pacific coast. It is condensed from our report to the U.S.
+Census Bureau, by permission of Professor Goode, assistant in charge of
+fishery investigations.
+
+There are five species of salmon (Oncorhynchus) in the waters of the North
+Pacific. We have at present no evidence of the existence of any more on
+either the American or the Asiatic side.
+
+These species may be called the quinnat or king salmon, the blue-back
+salmon or red-fish, the silver salmon, the dog salmon, and the hump-back
+salmon, or _Oncorhynchus chouicha, nerka, kisutch, keta_, and _gorbuscha_.
+All these species are now known to occur in the waters of Kamtschatka as
+well as in those of Alaska and Oregon.
+
+As vernacular names of definite application, the following are on record:
+
+a. Quinnat--Chouicha, king salmon, e'quinna, saw-kwey, Chinnook salmon,
+Columbia River salmon, Sacramento salmon, tyee salmon, Monterey salmon,
+deep-water salmon, spring salmon, ek-ul-ba ("ekewan") (fall run).
+
+b. Blue-bock--krasnaya ryba, Alaska red-fish, Idaho red fish, sukkegh,
+Frazer's River salmon, rascal, oo-chooy-ha.
+
+c. Silver salmon--kisutch, winter salmon, hoopid, skowitz, coho, bielaya
+ryba, o-o-wun.
+
+d. Dog salmon--kayko, lekai, ktlawhy, qualoch, fall salmon, o-le-a-rah. The
+males of _all_ the species in the fall are usually known as dog salmon, or
+fall salmon.
+
+e. Hump-back--gorbuscha, haddo, hone, holia, lost salmon, Puget Sound
+salmon, dog salmon (of Alaska).
+
+Of these species, the blue-back predominates in Frazer's River, the silver
+salmon in Puget Sound, the quinnat in the Columbia and the Sacramento, and
+the silver salmon in most of the small streams along the coast. All the
+species have been seen by us in the Columbia and in Frazer's River; all
+but the blue-back in the Sacramento, and all but the blue-back in waters
+tributary to Puget Sound. Only the quinnat has been noticed south of San
+Francisco, and its range has been traced as far as Ventura River, which is
+the southernmost stream in California which is not muddy and alkaline at
+its mouth.
+
+Of these species, the quinnat and blue-back salmon habitually "run" in the
+spring, the others in the fall. The usual order of running in the rivers is
+as follows: _nerka, chouicha, kisutch, gorbuscha, keta_.
+
+The economic value of the spring running salmon is far greater than that of
+the other species, because they can be captured in numbers when at their
+best, while the others are usually taken only after deterioration.
+
+The habits of the salmon in the ocean are not easily studied. Quinnat and
+silver salmon of every size are taken with the seine at almost any season
+in Puget Sound. The quinnat takes the hook freely in Monterey bay, both
+near the shore and at a distance of six or eight miles out. We have reason
+to believe that these two species do not necessarily seek great depths, but
+probably remain not very far from the mouth of the rivers in which they
+were spawned.
+
+The blue-back and the dog salmon probably seek deeper water, as the former
+is seldom or never taken with the seine in the ocean, and the latter is
+known to enter the Straits of Fuca at the spawning season.
+
+The great majority of the quinnat salmon and nearly all blue-back salmon
+enter the rivers in the spring. The run of both begins generally the last
+of March; it lasts, with various modifications and interruptions, until
+the actual spawning season in November; the time of running and the
+proportionate amount of each of the subordinate runs, varying with each
+different river. In general, the runs are slack in the summer and increase
+with the first high water of autumn. By the last of August only straggling
+blue-backs can be found in the lower course of any stream, but both in the
+Columbia and the Sacramento the quinnat runs in considerable numbers till
+October at least. In the Sacramento the run is greatest in the fall, and
+more run in the summer than in spring. In the Sacramento and the smaller
+rivers southward, there is a winter run, beginning in December.
+
+The spring salmon ascend only those rivers which are fed by the melting
+snows from the mountains, and which have sufficient volume to send their
+waters well out to sea. Such rivers are the Sacramento, Rogue, Klamath,
+Columbia, and Frazer's rivers.
+
+Those salmon which run in the spring are chiefly adults (supposed to be at
+least three years old). Their milt and spawn are no more developed than at
+the same time in others of the same species which will not enter the rivers
+until fall. It would appear that the contact with cold fresh water, when in
+the ocean, in some way caused them to turn toward it and to "run," before
+there is any special influence to that end exerted by the development of
+the organs of generation.
+
+High water on any of these rivers in the spring is always followed by an
+increased run of salmon. The canners think, and this is probably true, that
+salmon which would not have run till later are brought up by the contact
+with the cold water. The cause of this effect of cold fresh water is not
+understood. We may call it an instinct of the salmon, which is another way
+of expressing our ignorance. In general, it seems to be true that in those
+rivers and during those years when the spring run is greatest, the fall run
+is least to be depended on.
+
+As the season advances, smaller and younger salmon of these two species
+(quinnat and blue-back) enter the rivers to spawn, and in the fall these
+young specimens are very numerous. We have thus far failed to notice any
+gradations in size or appearance of these young fish by which their ages
+could be ascertained. It is, however, probable that some of both sexes
+reproduce at the age of one year. In Frazer's River, in the fall, quinnat
+male grilse of every size, from eight inches upward, were running, the milt
+fully developed, but usually not showing the hooked jaws and dark colors
+of the older males. Females less than eighteen inches in length were rare.
+All, large and small, then in the river, of either sex, had the ovaries or
+milt well developed.
+
+Little blue-backs of every size down to six inches are also found in
+the Upper Columbia in the fall, with their organs of generation fully
+developed. Nineteen twentieths of these young fish are males, and some of
+them have the hooked jaws and red color of the old males.
+
+The average weight of the quinnat in the Columbia in the spring is
+twenty-two pounds; in the Sacramento about sixteen. Individuals weighing
+from forty to sixty pounds are frequently found in both rivers, and some as
+high as eighty pounds are reported. It is questioned whether these large
+fishes are:
+
+(_a_.) Those which, of the same age, have grown more rapidly;
+
+(_b_.) Those which are older but have, for some reason, failed to spawn;
+or,
+
+(_c_.) Those which have survived one or more spawning seasons.
+
+All of these origins may be possible in individual cases; we are, however,
+of the opinion that the majority of these large fish are those which have
+hitherto run in the fall and so may have survived the spawning season
+previous.
+
+Those fish which enter the rivers in the spring continue their ascent until
+death or the spawning season overtakes them. Probably none of them ever
+return to the ocean, and a large proportion fail to spawn. They are known
+to ascend the Sacramento as far as the base of Mount Shasta, or to its
+extreme head-waters, about four hundred miles. In the Columbia they are
+known to ascend as far as the Bitter Root Mountains, and as far as the
+Spokan Falls, and their extreme limit is not known. This is a distance of
+six to eight hundred miles.
+
+At these great distances, when the fish have reached the spawning grounds,
+besides the usual changes of the breeding season, their bodies are covered
+with bruises on which patches of white fungus develop. The fins become
+mutilated, their eyes are often injured or destroyed; parasitic worms
+gather in their gills, they become extremely emaciated, their flesh
+becomes white from the loss of the oil, and as soon as the spawning act
+is accomplished, and sometimes before, all of them die. The ascent of the
+Cascades and the Dalles probably causes the injury or death of a great many
+salmon.
+
+When the salmon enter the river they refuse bait, and their stomachs are
+always found empty and contracted. In the rivers they do not feed, and when
+they reach the spawning grounds their stomachs, pyloric coeca and all, are
+said to be no larger than one's finger. They will sometimes take the
+fly, or a hook baited with salmon roe, in the clear waters of the upper
+tributaries, but there is no other evidence known to us that they feed when
+there. Only the quinnat and blue-back (then called red-fish) have been
+found in the fall at any great distance from the sea.
+
+The spawning season is probably about the same for all the species. It
+varies for all in different rivers and in different parts of the same
+river, and doubtless extends from July to December.
+
+The manner of spawning is probably similar for all the species, but we have
+no data for any except the quinnat. In this species the fish pair off, the
+male, with tail and snout, excavates a broad shallow "nest" in the gravelly
+bed of the stream, in rapid water, at a depth of one to four feet; the
+female deposits her eggs in it, and after the exclusion of the milt, they
+cover them with stones and gravel. They then float down the stream tail
+foremost. A great majority of them die. In the head-waters of the large
+streams all die, unquestionably. In the small streams, and near the sea, an
+unknown percentage probably survive. The young hatch in about sixty days,
+and most of them return to the ocean during the high water of the spring.
+
+The salmon of all kinds in the spring are silvery, spotted or not according
+to the species, and with the mouth about equally symmetrical in both sexes.
+
+As the spawning season approaches the female loses her silvery color,
+becomes more slimy, the scales on the back partly sink into the skin, and
+the flesh changes from salmon red and becomes variously paler, from the
+loss of the oil, the degree of paleness varying much with individuals and
+with inhabitants of different rivers.
+
+In the lower Sacramento the flesh of the quinnat in either spring or fall
+is rarely pale. In the Columbia, a few with pale flesh are sometimes taken
+in spring, and a good many in the fall. In Frazer's River the fall run of
+the quinnat is nearly worthless for canning purposes, because so many are
+white meated. In the spring very few are white meated, but the number
+increases towards fall, when there is every variation, some having red
+streaks running through them, others being red toward the head and pale
+toward the tail. The red and pale ones cannot be distinguished externally,
+and the color is dependent neither on age nor sex. There is said to be no
+difference in the taste, but there is no market for canned salmon not of
+the conventional orange color.
+
+As the season advances, the differences between the males and the females
+become more and more marked, and keep pace with the development of the
+milt, as is shown by dissection.
+
+The males have: (_a_.) The premaxillaries and the tip of the lower jaw
+more and more prolonged; both of them becoming finally strongly and often
+extravagantly hooked, so that either they shut by the side of each other
+like shears, or else the mouth cannot be closed. (_b_.) The front teeth
+become very long and canine-like, their growth proceeding very rapidly,
+until they are often half an inch long. (_c_.) The teeth on the vomer and
+tongue often disappear. (_d_.) The body grows more compressed and deeper
+at the shoulders, so that a very distinct hump is formed; this is more
+developed in _0. gorbuscha_, but is found in all. (_e_.) The scales
+disappear, especially on the back, by the growth of spongy skin. (_f_.) The
+color changes from silvery to various shades of black and red or blotchy,
+according to the species. The blue-back turns rosy red, the dog salmon a
+dull, blotchy red, and the quiunat generally blackish.
+
+These distorted males are commonly considered worthless, rejected by the
+canners and salmon-salters, but preserved by the Indians. These changes are
+due solely to influences connected with the growth of the testes. They are
+not in any way due to the action of fresh water. They take place at about
+the same time in the adult males of all species, whether in the ocean or
+in the rivers. At the time of the spring runs all are symmetrical. In the
+fall, all males of whatever species are more or less distorted. Among the
+dog salmon, which run only in the fall, the males are hooked-jawed and
+red-blotched when they first enter the Straits of Fuca from the outside.
+The hump-back, taken in salt water about Seattle, shows the same
+peculiarities. The male is slab-sided, hook-billed, and distorted, and is
+rejected by the canners. No hook-jawed _females_ of any species have been
+seen.
+
+It is not positively known that any hook-jawed male survives the
+reproductive act. If any do, their jaws must resume the normal form.
+
+On first entering a stream the salmon swim about as if playing: they always
+head toward the current, and this "playing" may be simply due to facing the
+flood tide. Afterwards they enter the deepest parts of the stream and swim
+straight up, with few interruptions. Their rate of travel on the Sacramento
+is estimated by Stone at about two miles per day; on the Columbia at about
+three miles per day.
+
+As already stated, the economic value of any species depends in great part
+on its being a "spring salmon." It is not generally possible to capture
+salmon of any species in large numbers until they have entered the rivers,
+and the spring salmon enter the rivers long before the growth of the organs
+of reproduction has reduced the richness of the flesh. The fall salmon
+cannot be taken in quantity until their flesh has deteriorated: hence the
+"dog salmon" is practically almost worthless, except to the Indians, and
+the hump-back salmon is little better. The silver salmon, with the same
+breeding habits as the dog salmon, is more valuable, as it is found in
+Puget Sound for a considerable time before the fall rains cause the fall
+runs, and it may be taken in large numbers with seines before the season
+for entering the rivers. The quinnat salmon, from its great size and
+abundance, is more valuable than all other fishes on our Pacific coast
+together. The blue back, similar in flesh but much smaller and less
+abundant, is worth much more than the combined value of the three remaining
+species.
+
+The fall salmon of all species, but especially the dog salmon, ascend
+streams but a short distance before spawning. They seem to be in great
+anxiety to find fresh water, and many of them work their way up little
+brooks only a few inches deep, where they soon perish miserably,
+floundering about on the stones. Every stream, of whatever kind, has more
+or less of these fall salmon.
+
+It is the prevailing impression that the salmon have some special instinct
+which leads them to return to spawn in the same spawning grounds where they
+were originally hatched. We fail to find any evidence of this in the case
+of the Pacific coast salmon, and we do not believe it to be true. It seems
+more probable that the young salmon, hatched in any river, mostly remain in
+the ocean within a radius of twenty, thirty, or forty miles of its mouth.
+These, in their movements about in the ocean, may come into contact with
+the cold waters of their parent rivers, or perhaps of any other river, at
+a considerable distance from the shore. In the case of the quinnat and the
+blue-back, their "instinct" leads them to ascend these fresh waters, and
+in a majority of cases these waters will be those in which the fishes in
+question were originally spawned. Later in the season the growth of the
+reproductive organs leads them to approach the shore and to search for
+fresh waters, and still the chances are that they may find the original
+stream. But undoubtedly many fall salmon ascend, or try to ascend, streams
+in which no salmon was ever hatched.
+
+It is said of the Russian River and other California rivers, that their
+mouths in the time of low water in summer generally become entirely closed
+by sand bars, and that the salmon, in their eagerness to ascend them,
+frequently fling themselves entirely out of water on the beach. But this
+does not prove that the salmon are guided by a marvelous geographical
+instinct which leads them to their parent river. The waters of Russian
+River soak through these sand bars, and the salmon "instinct," we think,
+leads them merely to search for fresh waters.
+
+This matter is much in need of further investigation; at present, however,
+we find no reason to believe that the salmon enter the Rogue River simply
+because they were spawned there, or that a salmon hatched in the Clackamas
+River is any the more likely on that account to return to the Clackamas
+than to go up the Cowlitz or the Deschutes.
+
+"At the hatchery on Rogue River, the fish are stripped, marked and set
+free, and every year since the hatchery has been in operation some of the
+marked fish have been re-caught. The young fry are also marked, but none of
+them have been recaught."
+
+This year the run of silver salmon in Frazer's River was very light, while
+on Puget Sound the run was said by the Indians to be greater than ever
+known before. Both these cases may be due to the same cause, the dry
+summer, low water, and consequent failure of the salmon to find the rivers.
+The run in the Sound is much more irregular than in the large rivers. One
+year they will abound in one bay and its tributary stream and hardly be
+seen in another, while the next year the condition will be reversed. At
+Cape Flattery the run of silver salmon for the present year was very small,
+which fact was generally attributed by the Indians to the birth of twins at
+Neah Bay.
+
+In regard to the diminution of the number of salmon on the coast. In
+Puget's Sound, Frazer's River, and the smaller streams, there appears to be
+little or no evidence of this. In the Columbia River the evidence appears
+somewhat conflicting; the catch during the present year (1880) has been
+considerably greater than ever before (nearly 540,000 cases of 48 lb. each
+having been packed), although the fishing for three or four years has been
+very extensive. On the other hand, the high water of the present spring has
+undoubtedly caused many fish to become spring salmon which would otherwise
+have run in the fall. Moreover, it is urged that a few years ago, when the
+number caught was about half as great as now, the amount of netting used
+was perhaps one-eighth as much. With a comparatively small outfit the
+canners caught half the fish, now with nets much larger and more numerous,
+they catch them all, scarcely any escaping during the fishing season (April
+1 to August 1). Whether an actual reduction in the number of fish running
+can be proven or not, there can be no question that the present rate of
+destruction of the salmon will deplete the river before many years. A
+considerable number of quinnat salmon run in August and September, and some
+stragglers even later; these now are all which keep up the supply of
+fish in the river. The non-molestation of this fall run, therefore, does
+something to atone for the almost total destruction of the spring run.
+
+This, however, is insufficient. A well-ordered salmon hatchery is the only
+means by which the destruction of the salmon in the river can be prevented.
+This hatchery should be under the control of Oregon and Washington, and
+should be supported by a tax levied on the canned fish. It should be placed
+on a stream where the quinnat salmon actually come to spawn.
+
+It has been questioned whether the present hatchery on the Clackamas River
+actually receives the quinnat salmon in any numbers. It is asserted, in
+fact, that the eggs of the silver salmon and dog salmon, with scattering
+quinnat, are hatched there. We have no exact information as to the truth of
+these reports, but the matter should be taken into serious consideration.
+
+On the Sacramento there is no doubt of the reduction of the number of
+salmon; this is doubtless mainly attributable to over-fishing, but in part
+it may be due to the destruction of spawning beds by mining operations and
+other causes.
+
+As to the superiority of the Columbia River salmon, there is no doubt that
+the quinnat salmon average larger and fatter in the Columbia than in the
+Sacramento and in Puget Sound. The difference in the canned fish is,
+however, probably hardly appreciable. The canned salmon from the Columbia,
+however, bring a better price in the market than those from elsewhere. The
+canners there generally have had a high regard for the reputation of
+the river, and have avoided canning fall fish or species other than the
+quinnat. In the Frazer's River the blue-back is largely canned, and its
+flesh being a little more watery and perhaps paler, is graded below the
+quinnat. On Puget Sound various species are canned; in fact, everything
+with red flesh. The best canners on the Sacramento apparently take equal
+care with their product with those of the Columbia, but they depend largely
+on the somewhat inferior fall run. There are, however, sometimes salmon
+canned in San Francisco, which have been in the city markets, and for some
+reason remaining unsold, have been sent to the canners; such salmon are
+unfit for food, and canning them should be prohibited.
+
+The fact that the hump-back salmon runs only on alternate years in Puget
+Sound (1875, 1877, 1879, etc.) is well attested and at present unexplained.
+Stray individuals only are taken in other years. This species has a
+distinct "run," in the United States, only in Puget Sound, although
+individuals (called "lost salmon") are occasionally taken in the Columbia
+and in the Sacramento.--_American Naturalist._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE RELATION BETWEEN ELECTRICITY AND LIGHT.
+
+[Footnote: A lecture by Dr. O. J. Lodge, delivered at the London
+Institution on December 16, 1880.]
+
+
+Ever since the subject on which I have the honor to speak to you to-night
+was arranged, I have been astonished at my own audacity in proposing to
+deal in the course of sixty minutes with a subject so gigantic and so
+profound that a course of sixty lectures would be quite inadequate for its
+thorough and exhaustive treatment.
+
+I must indeed confine myself carefully to some few of the typical and most
+salient points in the relation between electricity and light, and I must
+economize time by plunging at once into the middle of the matter without
+further preliminaries.
+
+Now, when a person is setting off to discuss the relation between
+electricity and light, it is very natural and very proper to pull him up
+short with the two questions: What do you mean by electricity? and What do
+you mean by light? These two questions I intend to try briefly to answer.
+And here let me observe that in answering these fundamental questions, I do
+not necessarily assume a fundamental ignorance on your part of these two
+agents, but rather the contrary; and must beg you to remember that if I
+repeat well-known and simple experiments before you, it is for the purpose
+of directing attention to their real meaning and significance, not to their
+obvious and superficial characteristics; in the same way that I might
+repeat the exceedingly familiar experiment of dropping a stone to the earth
+if we were going to define what we meant by gravitation.
+
+Now, then, we will ask first, What is electricity? and the simple answer
+must be, We don't know. Well, but this need not necessarily be depressing.
+If the same question were asked about matter, or about energy, we should
+have likewise to reply, No one knows.
+
+But then the term Matter is a very general one, and so is the term Energy.
+They are heads, in fact, under which we classify more special phenomena.
+
+Thus, if we were asked, What is sulphur? or what is selenium? we should at
+least be able to reply, A form of matter; and then proceed to describe its
+properties, _i. e._, how it affected our bodies and other bodies.
+
+Again, to the question, What is heat? we can reply, A form of energy; and
+proceed to describe the peculiarities which distinguish it from other forms
+of energy.
+
+But to the question. What is electricity? we have no answer pat like this.
+We can not assert that it is a form of matter, neither can we deny it; on
+the other hand, we certainly can not assert that it is a form of energy,
+and I should be disposed to deny it. It may be that electricity is an
+entity _per se_, just as matter is an entity _per se_.
+
+Nevertheless, I can tell you what I mean by electricity by appealing to its
+known behavior.
+
+Here is a battery, that is, an electricity pump; it will drive electricity
+along. Prof. Ayrtou is going, I am afraid, to tell you, on the 20th of
+January next, that it _produces_ electricity; but if he does, I hope you
+will remember that that is exactly what neither it nor anything else can
+do. It is as impossible to generate electricity in the sense I am trying to
+give the word, as it is to produce matter. Of course I need hardly say that
+Prof. Ayrton knows this perfectly well; it is merely a question of words,
+_i. e._, of what you understand by the word electricity.
+
+I want you, then, to regard this battery and all electrical machines and
+batteries as kinds of electricity pumps, which drive the electricity along
+through the wire very much as a water-pump can drive water along pipes.
+While this is going on the wire manifests a whole series of properties,
+which are called the properties of the current.
+
+[Here were shown an ignited platinum wire, the electric arc between two
+carbons, an electric machine spark, an induction coil spark, and a vacuum
+tube glow. Also a large nail was magnetized by being wrapped in the
+current, and two helices were suspended and seen to direct and attract each
+other.]
+
+To make a magnet, then, we only need a current of electricity flowing round
+and round in a whirl. A vortex or whirlpool of electricity is in fact a
+magnet; and _vice versa_. And these whirls have the power of directing and
+attracting other previously existing whirls according to certain laws,
+called the laws of magnetism. And, moreover, they have the power of
+exciting fresh whirls in neighboring conductors, and of repelling them
+according to the laws of diamagnetism. The theory of the actions is known,
+though the nature of the whirls, as of the simple stream of electricity, is
+at present unknown.
+
+[Here was shown a large electro-magnet and an induction-coil vacuum
+discharge spinning round and round when placed in its field.]
+
+So much for what happens when electricity is made to travel along
+conductors, _i. e._, when it travels along like a stream of water in a
+pipe, or spins round and round like a whirlpool.
+
+But there is another set of phenomena, usually regarded as distinct and of
+another order, but which are not so distinct as they appear, which
+manifest themselves when you join the pump to a piece of glass, or any
+non-conductor, and try to force the electricity through that. You succeed
+in driving some through, but the flow is no longer like that of water in an
+open pipe; it is as if the pipe were completely obstructed by a number of
+elastic partitions or diaphragms. The water can not move without straining
+and bending these diaphragms, and if you allow it, these strained
+partitions will recover themselves, and drive the water back again. [Here
+was explained the process of charging a Leyden jar.] The essential thing to
+remember is that we may have electrical energy in two forms, the static
+and the kinetic; and it is, therefore, also possible to have the rapid
+alternation from one of these forms to the other, called vibration.
+
+Now we will pass to the second question: What do you mean by light? And the
+first and obvious answer is, Everybody knows. And everybody that is not
+blind does know to a certain extent. We have a special sense organ for
+appreciating light, whereas we have none for electricity. Nevertheless, we
+must admit that we really know very little about the intimate nature of
+light--very little more than about electricity. But we do know this,
+that light is a form of energy, and, moreover, that it is energy rapidly
+alternating between the static and the kinetic forms--that it is, in fact,
+a special kind of energy of vibration. We are absolutely certain that light
+is a periodic disturbance in some medium, periodic both in space and time;
+that is to say, the same appearances regularly recur at certain equal
+intervals of distance at the same time, and also present themselves at
+equal intervals of time at the same place; that in fact it belongs to the
+class of motions called by mathematicians undulatory or wave motions. The
+wave motion in this model (Powell's wave apparatus) results from the simple
+up and down motion popularly associated with the term wave. But when
+a mathematician calls a thing a wave he means that the disturbance is
+represented by a certain general type of formula, not that it is an
+up-and-down motion, or that it looks at all like those things on the top of
+the sea. The motion of the surface of the sea falls within that formula,
+and hence is a special variety of wave motion, and the term wave has
+acquired in popular use this signification and nothing else. So that when
+one speaks ordinarily of a wave or undulatory motion, one immediately
+thinks of something heaving up and down, or even perhaps of something
+breaking on the shore. But when we assert that the form of energy called
+light is undulatory, we by no means intend to assert that anything whatever
+is moving up and down, or that the motion, if we could see it, would be
+anything at all like what we are accustomed to in the ocean. The kind of
+motion is unknown; we are not even sure that there is anything like motion
+in the ordinary sense of the word at all.
+
+Now, how much connection between electricity and light have we perceived in
+this glance into their natures? Not much, truly. It amounts to about
+this: That on the one hand electrical energy may exist in either of two
+forms--the static form, when insulators are electrically strained by having
+had electricity driven partially through them (as in the Leyden jar), which
+strain is a form of energy because of the tendency to discharge and do
+work; and the kinetic form, where electricity is moving bodily along
+through conductors or whirling round and round inside them, which motion
+of electricity is a form of energy, because the conductors and whirls can
+attract or repel each other and thereby do work.
+
+And, on the other hand, that light is the rapid alternation of energy
+from one of these forms to the other--the static form where the medium is
+strained, to the kinetic form when it moves. It is just conceivable, then,
+that the static form of the energy of light is _electro_ static, that is,
+that the medium is _electrically_ strained, and that the kinetic form of
+the energy of light is _electro_-kinetic, that is, that the motion is
+not ordinary motion, but electrical motion--in fact, that light is an
+electrical vibration, not a material one.
+
+On November 5, last year, there died at Cambridge a man in the full
+vigor of his faculties--such faculties as do not appear many times in a
+century--whose chief work has been the establishment of this very fact, the
+discovery of the link connecting light and electricity; and the proof--for
+I believe it amounts to a proof--that they are different manifestations
+of one and the same class of phenomena--that light is, in fact, an
+electro-magnetic disturbance. The premature death of James Clerk-Maxwell is
+a loss to science which appears at present utterly irreparable, for he was
+engaged in researches that no other man can hope as yet adequately to grasp
+and follow out; but fortunately it did not occur till he had published his
+book on "Electricity and Magnetism," one of those immortal productions
+which exalt one's idea of the mind of man, and which has been mentioned by
+competent critics in the same breath as the "Principia" itself.
+
+But it is not perfect like the "Principia;" much of it is rough-hewn, and
+requires to be thoroughly worked out. It contains numerous misprints and
+errata, and part of the second volume is so difficult as to be almost
+unintelligible. Some, in fact, consists of notes written for private use
+and not intended for publication. It seems next to impossible now to mature
+a work silently for twenty or thirty years, as was done by Newton two and a
+half centuries ago. But a second edition was preparing, and much might have
+been improved in form if life had been spared to the illustrious author.
+
+The main proof of the electro-magnetic theory of light is this: The rate at
+which light travels has been measured many times, and is pretty well known.
+The rate at which an electro-magnetic wave disturbance would travel if such
+could be generated (and Mr. Fitzgerald, of Dublin, thinks he has proved
+that it can not be generated directly by any known electrical means) can
+be also determined by calculation from electrical measurements. The two
+velocities agree exactly. This is the great physical constant known as the
+ratio V, which so many physicists have been measuring, and are likely to be
+measuring for some time to come.
+
+Many and brilliant as were Maxwell's discoveries, not only in electricity,
+but also in the theory of the nature of gases, and in molecular science
+generally, I can not help thinking that if one of them is more striking and
+more full of future significance than the rest, it is the one I have just
+mentioned--the theory that light is an electrical phenomenon.
+
+The first glimpse of this splendid generalization was caught in 1845, five
+and thirty years ago, by that prince of pure experimentalists, Michael
+Faraday. His reasons for suspecting some connection between electricity and
+light are not clear to us--in fact, they could not have been clear to him;
+but he seems to have felt a conviction that if he only tried long enough
+and sent all kinds of rays of light in all possible directions across
+electric and magnetic fields in all sorts of media, he must ultimately
+hit upon something. Well, this is very nearly what he did. With a sublime
+patience and perseverance which remind one of the way Kepler hunted down
+guess after guess in a different field of research, Faraday combined
+electricity, or magnetism, and light in all manner of ways, and at last he
+was rewarded with a result. And a most out-of-the-way result it seemed.
+First, you have to get a most powerful magnet and very strongly excite it;
+then you have to pierce its two poles with holes, in order that a beam of
+light may travel from one to the other along the lines of force; then, as
+ordinary light is no good, you must get a beam of plane polarized light,
+and send it between the poles. But still no result is obtained until,
+finally, you interpose a piece of a rare and out-of-the-way material, which
+Faraday had himself discovered and made--a kind of glass which contains
+borate of lead, and which is very heavy, or dense, and which must be
+perfectly annealed.
+
+And now, when all these arrangements are completed, what is seen is simply
+this, that if an analyzer is arranged to stop the light and make the field
+quite dark before the magnet is excited, then directly the battery is
+connected and the magnet called into action, a faint and barely perceptible
+brightening of the field occurs, which will disappear if the analyzer be
+slightly rotated. [The experiment was then shown.] Now, no wonder that no
+one understood this result. Faraday himself did not understand it at all.
+He seems to have thought that the magnetic lines of force were rendered
+luminous, or that the light was magnetized; in fact, he was in a fog,
+and had no idea of its real significance. Nor had any one. Continental
+philosophers experienced some difficulty and several failures before they
+were able to repeat the experiment. It was, in fact, discovered too soon,
+and before the scientific world was ready to receive it, and it was
+reserved for Sir William Thomson briefly, but very clearly, to point
+out, and for Clerk-Maxwell more fully to develop, its most important
+consequences. [The principle of the experiment was then illustrated by the
+aid of a mechanical model.]
+
+This is the fundamental experiment on which Clerk-Maxwell's theory of
+light is based; but of late years many fresh facts and relations between
+electricity and light have been discovered, and at the present time they
+are tumbling in in great numbers.
+
+It was found by Faraday that many other transparent media besides heavy
+glass would show the phenomenon if placed between the poles, only in a less
+degree; and the very important observation that air itself exhibits the
+same phenomenon, though to an exceedingly small extent, has just been made
+by Kundt and Rontgen in Germany.
+
+Dr. Kerr, of Glasgow, has extended the result to opaque bodies, and has
+shown that if light be passed through magnetized _iron_ its plane is
+rotated. The film of iron must be exceedingly thin, because of its opacity,
+and hence, though the intrinsic rotating power of iron is undoubtedly very
+great, the observed rotation is exceedingly small and difficult to observe;
+and it is only by a very remarkable patience and care and ingenuity that
+Dr. Kerr has obtained his result. Mr. Fitzgerald, of Dublin, has examined
+the question mathematically, and has shown that Maxwell's theory would have
+enabled Dr. Kerr's result to be predicted.
+
+Another requirement of the theory is that bodies which are transparent
+to light must be insulators or non-conductors of electricity, and that
+conductors of electricity are necessarily opaque to light. Simple
+observation amply confirms this; metals are the best conductors, and are
+the most opaque bodies known. Insulators such as glass and crystals are
+transparent whenever they are sufficiently homogeneous, and the very
+remarkable researches of Prof. Graham Bell in the last few months have
+shown that even _ebonite_, one of the most opaque insulators to ordinary
+vision, is certainly transparent to some kinds of radiation, and
+transparent to no small degree.
+
+[The reason why transparent bodies must insulate, and why conductors must
+be opaque, was here illustrated by mechanical models.]
+
+A further consequence of the theory is that the velocity of light in a
+transparent medium will be affected by its electrical strain constant; in
+other words, that its refractive index will bear some close but not yet
+quite ascertained relation to its specific inductive capacity. Experiment
+has partially confirmed this, but the confirmation is as yet very
+incomplete. But there are a number of results not predicted by theory, and
+whose connection with the theory is not clearly made out. We have the fact
+that light falling on the platinum electrode of a voltameter generates a
+current, first observed, I think, by Sir W. R. Grove--at any rate, it is
+mentioned in his "Correlation of Forces"--extended by Becquerel and Robert
+Sabine to other substances, and now being extended to fluorescent and other
+bodies by Prof. Minchin. And finally--for I must be brief--we have
+the remarkable action of light on selenium. This fact was discovered
+accidentally by an assistant in the laboratory of Mr. Willoughby Smith, who
+noticed that a piece of selenium conducted electricity very much better
+when light was falling upon it than when it was in the dark. The light of
+a candle is sufficient, and instantaneously brings down the resistance to
+something like one-fifth of its original value.
+
+I could show you these effects, but there is not much to see; it is an
+intensely interesting phenomenon, but its external manifestation is not
+striking--any more than Faraday's heavy glass experiment was.
+
+This is the phenomenon which, as you know, has been utilized by Prof.
+Graham Bell in that most ingenious and striking invention, the photophone.
+By the kindness of Prof. Silvanus Thompson, I have a few slides to show the
+principle of the invention, and Mr. Shelford Bidwell has been kind enough
+to lend me his home-made photophone, which answers exceedingly well for
+short distances.
+
+I have now trespassed long enough upon your patience, but I must just
+allude to what may very likely be the next striking popular discovery; and
+that is the transmission of light by electricity; I mean the transmission
+of such things as views and pictures by means of the electric wire. It has
+not yet been done, but it seems already theoretically possible, and it may
+very soon be practically accomplished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+INTERESTING ELECTRICAL RESEARCHES.
+
+
+During the last six years Dr. Warren de la Rue has been investigating,
+in conjunction with Dr. Hugo Muller, the various and highly interesting
+phenomena which accompany the electric discharge. From time to time the
+results of their researches were communicated to the Royal Society, and
+appeared in its Proceedings. Early last year Dr. De la Rue being requested
+to bring the subject before the members of the Royal Institution, acceded
+to the pressing invitation of his colleagues and scientific friends.
+The discourse, which was necessarily long postponed on account of the
+preparations that had to be made, was finally given on Friday, the 21st of
+January, and was one of the most remarkable, from the elaborate nature of
+the experiments, ever delivered in the theater of that deservedly famous
+institution.
+
+Owing to the great inconvenience of removing the battery from his
+laboratory, Dr. de la Rue, despite the great expenditure, directed Mr. S.
+Tisley to prepare, expressly for the lecture, a second series of 14,400
+cells, and fit it up in the basement of the Royal Institution. The
+construction of this new battery occupied Mr. Tisley a whole year, while
+the charging of it extended over a fortnight.
+
+The "de la Rue cell," if we may so call one of these elements, consists of
+a zinc rod, the lower portion of which is embedded in a solid electrolyte,
+viz., chloride of silver, with which are connected two flattened silver
+wires to serve as electrodes. When these are united and the silver chloride
+moistened, chemical action begins, and a weak but constant current is
+generated.
+
+The electromotive force of such a cell is 1.03 volts, and a current
+equivalent to one volt passing through a resistance of one ohm was found to
+decompose 0.00146 grain of water in one second. The battery is divided
+into "cabinets," which hold from 1,200 to 2,160 small elements each. This
+facilitates removal, and also the detection of any fault that may occur.
+
+It will be remembered that in 1808 Sir Humphry Davy constructed his battery
+of 2,000 cells, and thus succeeded in exalting the tiny spark obtained in
+closing the circuit into the luminous sheaf of the voltaic arc. He also
+observed that the spark passed even when the poles were separated by a
+distance varying from 1/40 to 1/30 of an inch. This appears to have been
+subsequently forgotten, as we find later physicists questioning the
+possibility of the spark leaping over any interpolar distance. Mr. J.
+P. Gassiot, of Clapham, demonstrated the inaccuracy of this opinion by
+constructing a battery of 3,000 Leclanché cells, which gave a spark of
+0.025 inch; a similar number of "de la Rue" cells gives an 0.0564 inch
+spark. This considerable increase in potential is chiefly due to better
+insulation.
+
+The great energy of this battery was illustrated by a variety of
+experiments. Thus, a large condenser, specially constructed by Messrs.
+Varley, and having a capacity equal to that of 6,485 large Leyden jars,
+was almost immediately charged by the current from 10,000 cells. Wires of
+various kinds, and from 9 inches to 29 inches in length, were instantly
+volatilized by the passage of the electricity thus stored up. The current
+induced in the secondary wire of a coil by the discharge of the condenser
+through the primary, was also sufficiently intense to deflagrate wires of
+considerable length and thickness.
+
+It was with such power at his command that Dr. De la Rue proceeded to
+investigate several important electrical laws. He has found, for example,
+that the positive discharge is more intermittent than the negative,
+that the arc is always preceded by a streamer-like discharge, that its
+temperature is about 16,000 deg., and its length at the ordinary pressure
+of the atmosphere, when taken between two points, varies as the square
+of the number of cells. Thus, with a battery of 1,000 cells, the arc was
+0.0051 inch, with 11,000 cells it increased to 0.62 inch. The same law was
+found to hold when the discharge took place between a point and a disk; it
+failed entirely, however, when the terminals were two disks.
+
+It was also shown that the voltaic arc is not a phenomenon of conduction,
+but is essentially a disruptive discharge, the intervals between the
+passage of two successive static sparks being the time required for the
+battery to collect sufficient power to leap over the interposed resistance.
+This was further confirmed by the introduction of a condenser, when the
+intervals were perceptibly larger.
+
+Faraday proved that the quantity of electricity necessary to produce a
+strong flash of lightning would result from the decomposition of a single
+grain of water, and Dr. de la Rue's experiments confirm this extraordinary
+statement. He has calculated that this quantity of electricity would be
+5,000 times as great as the charge of his large condenser, and that a
+lightning flash a mile long would require the potential of 3,500,000 cells,
+that is to say, of 243 of his powerful batteries.
+
+In experimenting with "vacuum" tubes, he has found that the discharge is
+also invariably disruptive. This is an important point, as many physicists
+speak and write of the phenomenon as one of conduction. Air, in every
+degree of tenuity, refuses to act as a conductor of electricity. These
+experiments show that the resistance of gaseous media diminishes with the
+pressure only up to a certain point, beyond which it rapidly increases.
+Thus, in the case of hydrogen, it diminishes up to 0.642 mm., 845
+millionths; it then rises as the exhaustion proceeds, and at 0.00065 mm.,
+8.6 millionths, it requires as high a potential as at 21.7 mm., 28.553
+millionths. At 0.00137 mm., 1.8 millionth, the current from 11,000 cells
+would not pass through a tube for which 430 cells sufficed at the pressure
+of minimum resistance. At a pressure of 0.0055 mm., 0.066 millionth, the
+highest exhaust obtained in any of the experiments, even a one-inch spark
+from an induction coil refused to pass. It was also ascertained that there
+is neither condensacian nor dilatation of the gas in contact with the
+terminals prior to the passage of the discharge.
+
+These researches naturally led to some speculation about the conditions
+under which auroral phenomena may occur. Observers have variously stated
+the height at which the aurora borealis attains its greatest brilliancy
+as ranging between 124 and 281 miles. Dr. de la Rue's conclusions fix
+the upper limit at 124 miles, and that of maximum display at 37 miles,
+admitting also that the aurora may sometimes occur at an altitude of a few
+thousand feet.
+
+The aurora was beautifully illustrated by a very large tube, in which the
+theoretical pressure was carefully maintained, the characteristic roseate
+tinge being readily produced and maintained.
+
+In studying the stratifications observed in vacuum tubes, Dr. de la Rue
+finds that they originate at the positive pole, and that their steadiness
+may be regulated by the resistance in circuit, and that even when the least
+tremor cannot be detected by the eye, they are still produced by rapid
+pulsations which may be as frequent as ten millions per second.
+
+Dr. de la Rue concluded his interesting discourse by exhibiting some of the
+finest tubes of his numerous and unsurpassed collection.--_Engineering_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+MEASURING ELECTROMOTIVE FORCE.
+
+
+Coulomb's torsion balance has been adapted by M. Baille to the measurement
+of low electromotive forces in a very successful manner, and has been found
+preferable by him to the delicate electrometers of Sir W. Thomson. It
+is necessary to guard it from disturbances due to extraneous electric
+influences and the trembling of the ground. These can be eliminated
+completely by encircling the instrument in a metal case connected to
+earth, and mounting it on solid pillars in a still place. Heat also has a
+disturbing effect, and makes itself felt in the torsion of the fiber and
+the cage surrounding the lever. These effects are warded off by inclosing
+the instrument in a non-conducting jacket of wood shavings.
+
+The apparatus of M. Baille consists of an annealed silver torsion wire of
+2.70 meters long, and a lever 0.50 meter long, carrying at each extremity
+a ball of copper, gilded, and three centimeters in diameter. Similar balls
+are fixed at the corners of a square 20.5 meters in the side, and connected
+in diagonal pairs by fine wire. The lever placed at equal distances from
+the fixed balls communicates, by the medium of the torsion wire, with the
+positive pole of a battery, P, the other pole being to earth.
+
+Owing to some unaccountable variations in the change of the lever or
+needle, M. Baille was obliged to measure the change at each observation.
+This was done by joining the + pole of the battery to the needle, and one
+pair of the fixed balls, and observing the deflection; then the deflection
+produced by the other balls was observed. This operation was repeated
+several times.
+
+The battery, X, to be measured consisted of ten similar elements, and one
+pole of it was connected to the fixed balls, while the other pole was
+connected to the earth. The needle, of course, remained in contact with the
++ pole of the charging battery, P.
+
+The deflections were read from a clear glass scale, placed at a distance
+of 3.30 meters from the needle, and the results worked out from Coulomb's
+static formula,
+
+C a = (4 m m')/d², with
+
+ ______________
+ / sum((p/g) r²)
+ O = / -------------
+ \/ C
+
+[TEX: O = \sqrt{\frac{\sum \frac{p}{g} r^2}{C}}]
+
+In M. Baillie's experiments, O = 437³, and sum(pr²)= 32171.6 (centimeter
+grammes), the needle having been constructed of a geometrical form.
+
+The following numbers represent the potential of an element of the
+battery--that is to say, the quantity of electricity that the pole of that
+battery spreads upon a sphere of one centimeter radius. They are expressed
+in units of electricity, the unit being the quantity of electricity which,
+acting upon a similar unit at a distance of one centimeter, produces a
+repulsion equal to one gramme:
+
+Volta pile 0.03415 open circuit.
+Zinc, sulphate of copper, copper 0.02997 "
+Zinc, acidulated water, copper, sulphate of copper 0.03709 "
+Zinc, salt water, carbon peroxide of manganese 0.05282 "
+Zinc, salt water, platinum, chloride of platinum 0.05027 "
+Zinc, acidulated water, carbon nitric acid 0.06285 "
+
+These results were obtained just upon charging the batteries, and are,
+therefore, slightly higher than the potentials given after the batteries
+became older. The sulphate of copper cells kept about their maximum value
+longest, but they showed variations of about 10 per cent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TELEPHONY BY THERMIC CURRENTS.
+
+
+While in telephonic arrangements, based upon the principle of magnetic
+induction, a relatively considerable expenditure of force is required in
+order to set the tightly stretched membrane in vibration, in the so-called
+carbon telephones only a very feeble impulse is required to produce the
+differences in the current necessary for the transmission of sounds. In
+order to produce relatively strong currents, even in case of sound-action
+of a minimum strength, Franz Kröttlinger, of Vienna, has made an
+interesting experiment to use thermo electric currents for the transmission
+of sound to a distance. The apparatus which he has constructed is
+exceedingly simple. A current of hot air flowing from below upward is
+deflected more or less from its direction by the human voice. By its action
+an adjacent thermo-battery is excited, whose current passes through the
+spiral of an ordinary telephone, which serves as the receiving instrument.
+As a source of heat the inventor uses a common stearine candle, the flame
+of which is kept at one and the same level by means of a spring similar to
+those used in carriage lamps. On one side of the candle is a sheet metal
+voice funnel fixed upon a support, its mouth being covered with a movable
+sliding disk, fitted with a suitable number of small apertures. On the
+other side a similar support holds a funnel-shaped thermo-battery. The
+single bars of metal forming this battery are very thin, and of such a
+shape that they may cool as quickly as possible. Both the speaking-funnel
+and the battery can be made to approach, at will, to the stream of warm air
+rising up from the flame. The entire apparatus is inclosed in a tin case
+in such a manner that only the aperture of the voice-funnel and the polar
+clamps for securing the conducting wires appear on the outside. The inside
+of the case is suitably stayed to prevent vibration. On speaking into the
+mouth-piece of the funnel, the sound-waves occasion undulations in the
+column of hot air which are communicated to the thermo-battery, and in this
+manner corresponding differences are produced in the currents in the wires
+leading to the receiving instrument.--_Oesterreichische-Ungarische Post._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE TELECTROSCOPE.
+
+By MONS. SENLECQ, of Ardres.
+
+
+This apparatus, which is intended to transmit to a distance through a
+telegraphic wire pictures taken on the plate of a camera, was invented in
+the early part of 1877 by M. Senlecq, of Ardres. A description of the first
+specification submitted by M. Senlecq to M. du Moncel, member of the
+Paris Academy of Sciences, appeared in all the continental and American
+scientific journals. Since then the apparatus has everywhere occupied the
+attention of prominent electricians, who have striven to improve on it.
+Among these we may mention MM. Ayrton, Perry, Sawyer (of New York),
+Sargent (of Philadelphia), Brown (of London), Carey (of Boston), Tighe (of
+Pittsburg), and Graham Bell himself. Some experimenters have used many
+wires, bound together cable-wise, others one wire only. The result has
+been, on the one hand, confusion of conductors beyond a certain distance,
+with the absolute impossibility of obtaining perfect insulation; and,
+on the other hand, an utter want of synchronism. The unequal and slow
+sensitiveness of the selenium likewise obstructed the proper working of the
+apparatus. Now, without a relative simplicity in the arrangement of the
+conducting wires intended to convey to a distance the electric current with
+its variations of intensity, without a perfect and rapid synchronism
+acting concurrently with the luminous impressions, so as to insure the
+simultaneous action of transmitter and receiver, without, in fine, an
+increased sensitiveness in the selenium, the idea of the telectroscope
+could not be realized. M. Senlecq has fortunately surmounted most of these
+main obstacles, and we give to-day a description of the latest apparatus he
+has contrived.
+
+
+TRANSMITTER.
+
+A brass plate, A, whereon the rays of light impinge inside a camera, in
+their various forms and colors, from the external objects placed before the
+lens, the said plate being coated with selenium on the side intended to
+face the dark portion of the camera This brass plate has its entire surface
+perforated with small holes as near to one another as practicable. These
+holes are filled with selenium, heated, and then cooled very slowly, so as
+to obtain the maximum sensitiveness. A small brass wire passes through the
+selenium in each hole, without, however, touching the plate, on to the
+rectangular and vertical ebonite plate, B, Fig. 1, from under this plate
+at point, C. Thus, every wire passing through plate, A, has its point
+of contact above the plate, B, lengthwise. With this view the wires are
+clustered together when leaving the camera, and thence stretch to their
+corresponding points of contact on plate, B, along line, C C. The surface
+of brass, A, is in permanent contact with the positive pole of the battery
+(selenium). On each side of plate, B, are let in two brass rails, D and E,
+whereon the slide hereinafter described works.
+
+[Illustration: Fig. 1]
+
+Rail, E, communicates with the line wire intended to conduct the various
+light and shade vibrations. Rail, D, is connected with the battery wire.
+Along F are a number of points of contact corresponding with those along
+C C. These contacts help to work the apparatus, and to insure the perfect
+isochronism of the transmitter and receiver. These points of contact,
+though insulated one from the other on the surface of the plate, are all
+connected underneath with a wire coming from the positive pole of a special
+battery. This apparatus requires two batteries, as, in fact, do all
+autographic telegraphs--one for sending the current through the selenium,
+and one for working the receiver, etc. The different features of this
+important plate may, therefore, be summed up thus:
+
+FIGURE 1.
+
+D. Brass rail, grooved and connected with the line wire working the
+receiver.
+
+F. Contacts connected underneath with a wire permanently connected with
+battery.
+
+C. Contacts connected to insulated wires from selenium.
+
+E. Brass rail, grooved, etc., like D.
+
+
+RECEIVER.
+
+A small slide, Fig. 2, having at one of its angles a very narrow piece of
+brass, separated in the middle by an insulating surface, used for setting
+the apparatus in rapid motion. This small slide has at the points, D D, a
+small groove fitting into the brass rails of plate, B, Fig. 1, whereby it
+can keep parallel on the two brass rails, D and E. Its insulator, B, Fig.
+2, corresponds to the insulating interval between F and C, Fig. 1.
+
+A, Fig. 3, circular disk, suspended vertically (made of ebonite or other
+insulating material). This disk is fixed. All round the inside of its
+circumference are contacts, connected underneath with the corresponding
+wires of the receiving apparatus. The wires coming from the seleniumized
+plate correspond symmetrically, one after the other, with the contacts of
+transmitter. They are connected in the like order with those of disk, A,
+and with those of receiver, so that the wire bearing the No. 5 from the
+selenium will correspond identically with like contact No. 5 of receiver.
+
+D, Fig. 4, gutta percha or vulcanite insulating plate, through which pass
+numerous very fine platinum wires, each corresponding at its point of
+contact with those on the circular disk, A.
+
+The receptive plate must be smaller than the plate whereon the light
+impinges. The design being thus reduced will be the more perfect from the
+dots formed by the passing currents being closer together.
+
+B, zinc or iron or brass plate connected to earth. It comes in contact with
+chemically prepared paper, C, where the impression is to take place. It
+contributes to the impression by its contact with the chemically prepared
+paper.
+
+In E, Fig. 3, at the center of the above described fixed plate is a
+metallic axis with small handle. On this axis revolves brass wheel, F, Fig.
+5.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 2]
+
+On handle, E, presses continuously the spring, H, Fig. 3, bringing the
+current coming from the selenium line. The cogged wheel in Fig. 5 has at a
+certain point of its circumference the sliding spring, O, Fig. 5, intended
+to slide as the wheel revolves over the different contacts of disk, A, Fig.
+3.
+
+This cogged wheel, Fig. 5, is turned, as in the dial telegraphs, by a rod
+working in and out under the successive movements of the electro-magnet,
+H, and of the counter spring. By means of this rod (which must be of a
+non-metallic material, so as not to divert the motive current), and of an
+elbow lever, this alternating movement is transmitted to a catch, G, which
+works up and down between the cogs, and answers the same purpose as the
+ordinary clock anchor.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 3]
+
+This cogged wheel is worked by clockwork inclosed between two disks, and
+would rotate continuously were it not for the catch, G, working in and out
+of the cogs. Through this catch, G, the wheel is dependent on the movement
+of electro-magnet. This cogged wheel is a double one, consisting of two
+wheels coupled together, exactly similar one with the other, and so fixed
+that the cogs of the one correspond with the void between the cogs of the
+others. As the catch, G, moves down it frees a cog in first wheel, and both
+wheels begin to turn, but the second wheel is immediately checked by catch,
+G, and the movement ceases. A catch again works the two wheels, turn half a
+cog, and so on. Each wheel contains as many cogs as there are contacts on
+transmitter disk, consequently as many as on circular disk, A, Fig. 3, and
+on brass disk within camera.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 4]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 5]
+
+Having now described the several parts of the apparatus, let us see how it
+works. All the contacts correspond one with the other, both on the side of
+selenium current and that of the motive current. Let us suppose that the
+slide of transmitter is on contact No. 10 for instance; the selenium
+current starting from No. 10 reaches contact 10 of rectangular transmitter,
+half the slide bearing on this point, as also on the parallel rail,
+communicates the current to said rail, thence to line, from the line to
+axis of cogged wheel, from axis to contact 10 of circular fixed disk,
+and thence to contact 10 of receiver. At each selenium contact of the
+rectangular disk there is a corresponding contact to the battery and
+electro-magnet. Now, on reaching contact 10 the intermission of the current
+has turned the wheel 10 cogs, and so brought the small contact, O, Fig. 5,
+on No. 10 of the fixed circular disk.
+
+As may be seen, the synchronism of the apparatus could not be obtained in
+a more simple and complete mode--the rectangular transmitter being placed
+vertically, and the slide being of a certain weight to its fall from the
+first point of contact sufficient to carry it rapidly over the whole length
+of this transmitter.
+
+The picture is, therefore, reproduced almost instantaneously; indeed, by
+using platinum wires on the receiver connected with the negative pole, by
+the incandescence of these wires according to the different degrees of
+electricity we can obtain a picture, of a fugitive kind, it is true, but
+yet so vivid that the impression on the retina does not fade during the
+relatively very brief space of time the slide occupies in traveling over
+all the contacts. A Ruhmkorff coil may also be employed for obtaining
+sparks in proportion to the current emitted. The apparatus is regulated
+in precisely the same way as dial telegraphs, starting always from first
+contact. The slide should, therefore, never be removed from the rectangular
+disk, whereon it is held by the grooves in the brass rails, into which it
+fits with but slight friction, without communicating any current to the
+line wires when not placed on points of contact.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Continued from SUPPLEMENT No. 274, page 4368.]
+
+
+
+
+THE VARIOUS MODES OF TRANSMITTING POWER TO A DISTANCE.
+
+[Footnote: A paper lately read before the Institution of Mechanical
+Engineers.]
+
+By ARTHUR ACHARD, of Geneva.
+
+
+But allowing that the figure of 22 H. P., assumed for this power (the
+result in calculating the work with compressed air being 19 H. P.) may be
+somewhat incorrect, it is unlikely that this error can be so large that its
+correction could reduce the efficiency below 80 per cent. Messrs. Sautter
+and Lemonnier, who construct a number of compressors, on being consulted
+by the author, have written to say that they always confined themselves in
+estimating the power stored in the compressed air, and had never measured
+the gross power expended. Compressed air in passing along the pipe, assumed
+to be horizontal, which conveys it from the place of production to the
+place where it is to be used, experiences by friction a diminution of
+pressure, which represents a reduction in the mechanical power stored up,
+and consequently a loss of efficiency.
+
+The loss of pressure in question can only be calculated conveniently on the
+hypothesis that it is very small, and the general formula,
+
+ p1 - p 4L
+ ------- = ---- f(u),
+ [Delta] D
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{4L}{D}f(u)]
+
+is employed for the purpose, where D is the diameter of the pipe, assumed
+to be uniform, L the length of the pipe, p1 the pressure at the entrance, p
+the pressure at the farther end, u the velocity at which the compressed air
+travels, [Delta] its specific weight, and f(u) the friction per unit of
+length. In proportion as the air loses pressure its speed increases, while
+its specific weight diminishes; but the variations in pressure are assumed
+to be so small that u and [Delta] may be considered constant. As regards
+the quantity f(u), or the friction per unit of length, the natural law
+which regulates it is not known, audit can only be expressed by some
+empirical formula, which, while according sufficiently nearly with the
+facts, is suited for calculation. For this purpose the binomial formula, au
++ bu², or the simple formula, b1 u², is generally adopted; a b and b1 being
+coefficients deduced from experiment. The values, however, which are to
+be given to these coefficients are not constant, for they vary with the
+diameter of the pipe, and in particular, contrary to formerly received
+ideas, they vary according to its internal surface. The uncertainty in this
+respect is so great that it is not worth while, with a view to accuracy, to
+relinquish the great convenience which the simple formula, b1 u², offers.
+It would be better from this point of view to endeavor, as has been
+suggested, to render this formula more exact by the substitution of a
+fractional power in the place of the square, rather than to go through
+the long calculations necessitated by the use of the binomial au + bu².
+Accordingly, making use of the formula b1 u², the above equation becomes,
+
+ p1 - p 4L
+ ------- = ---- b1 u²;
+ [Delta] D
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{4L}{D} b_1 u^2]
+
+or, introducing the discharge per second, Q, which is the usual figure
+supplied, and which is connected with the velocity by the relation, Q =
+([pi] D² u)/4, we have
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q².
+ [Delta] [pi]² D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2]
+
+Generally the pressure, p1, at the entrance is known, and the pressure, p,
+has to be found; it is then from p1 that the values of Q and [Delta] are
+calculated. In experiments where p1 and p are measured directly, in order
+to arrive at the value of the coefficient b1, Q and [Delta] would be
+calculated for the mean pressure ½(p1 + p). The values given to the
+coefficient b1 vary considerably, because, as stated above, it varies with
+the diameter, and also with the nature of the material of the pipe. It
+is generally admitted that it is independent of the pressure, and it is
+probable that within certain limits of pressure this hypothesis is in
+accordance with the truth.
+
+D'Aubuisson gives for this case, in his _Traité d'Hydraulique_, a rather
+complicated formula, containing a constant deduced from experiment, whose
+value, according to a calculation made by the author, is approximately b1 =
+0.0003. This constant was determined by taking the mean of experiments made
+with tin tubes of 0.0235 meter (15/16 in.), 0.05 meter (2 in.), and 0.10
+meter (4 in.) diameter; and it was erroneously assumed that it was correct
+for all diameters and all substances.
+
+M. Arson, engineer to the Paris Gas Company, published in 1867, in the
+_Mémoires de la Société des Ingénieurs Civils de France_, the results of
+some experiments on the loss of pressure in gas when passing through pipes.
+He employed cast-iron pipes of the ordinary type. He has represented the
+results of his experiments by the binomial formula, au + bu², and gives
+values for the coefficients a and b, which diminish with an increase in
+diameter, but would indicate greater losses of pressure than D'Aubuisson's
+formula. M. Deviller, in his _Rapport sur les travaux de percement du
+tunnel sous les Alpes_, states that the losses of pressure observed in the
+air pipe at the Mont Cenis Tunnel confirm the correctness of D'Aubuisson's
+formula; but his reasoning applies to too complicated a formula to be
+absolutely convincing.
+
+Quite recently M. E. Stockalper, engineer-in-chief at the northern end of
+the St. Gothard Tunnel, has made some experiments on the air conduit of
+this tunnel, the results of which he has kindly furnished to the author.
+These lead to values for the coefficient b1 appreciably less than that
+which is contained implicitly in D'Aubuisson's formula. As he experimented
+on a rising pipe, it is necessary to introduce into the formula the
+difference of level, h, between the two ends; it then becomes
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q² + h.
+ [Delta] [pi]² D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2 + h]
+
+The following are the details of the experiments: First series of
+experiments: Conduit consisting of cast or wrought iron pipes, joined by
+means of flanges, bolts, and gutta percha rings. D = 0.20 m. (8 in.); L =
+4,600 m. (15,100 ft,); h= 26.77 m. (87 ft. 10 in.). 1st experiment: Q =
+0.1860 cubic meter (6.57 cubic feet), at a pressure of ½(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 22° Cent. (72° Fahr.); p1 = 5.60 atm., p =5.24 atm. Hence p1
+- p = 0.36 atm.= 0.36 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2.116 lb. per
+square foot), whence we obtain b1=0.0001697. D'Aubuisson's formula would
+have given p1 - p = 0.626 atm.; and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p =
+0.9316 atm. 2d experiment: Q = 0.1566 cubic meter (5.53 cubic feet), at a
+pressure of ½(p1 + p), and a temperature of 22° Cent. (72° Fahr.); p1
+= 4.35 atm., p = 4.13 atm. Hence p1 - p = 0.22 atm. = 0.22 X 10,334
+kilogrammes per square meter (2,116 lb. per square foot); whence we obtain
+b1 = 0.0001816. D'Aubuisson's formula would have given p1 - p = 0.347 atm;
+and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p = 0.5382 atm. 3d experiment: Q =
+0.1495 cubic meter (5.28 cubic feet) at a pressure of ½(p1 + p) and a
+temperature 22° Cent. (72º Fahr.); p1 = 3.84 atm., p = 3.65 atm. Hence p1 -
+p = 0.19 atm. = 0.19 X 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2.116 lb. per
+square foot); whence we obtain B1 = 0.0001966. D'Aubuisson's formula would
+have given p1 - p = 0.284 atm., and M. Arson's would have given p1 - p =
+0.4329 atm. Second series of experiments: Conduit composed of wrought-iron
+pipes, with joints as in the first experiments. D = 0.15 meter (6 in.), L
+- 0.522 meters (1,712 ft.), h = 3.04 meters (10 ft.) 1st experiments: Q =
+0.2005 cubic meter (7.08 cubic feet), at a pressure of ½(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 26.5° Cent. (80° Fahr.); p1 = 5.24 atm., p = 5.00 atm. Hence
+p1 - p = 0.24 atm. =0.24 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter (2,116 lb.
+per square foot); whence we obtain b1 = 0.3002275. 2nd experiment: Q =
+0.1586 cubic meter (5.6 cubic feet), at a pressure of ½(p1 + p), and a
+temperature of 26.5° Cent. (80° Fahr.); p1 = 3.650 atm., p = 3.545 atm.
+Hence p1 - p = 0.105 atm. = 0.105 x 10,334 kilogrammes per square meter
+(2,116 lb. per square foot); whence we obtain b1 = 0.0002255. It is clear
+that these experiments give very small values for the coefficient. The
+divergence from the results which D'Aubuisson's formula would give is due
+to the fact that his formula was determined with very small pipes. It is
+probable that the coefficients corresponding to diameters of 0.15 meter
+(6 in.) and 0.20 meter (8 in.) for a substance as smooth as tin, would be
+still smaller respectively than the figures obtained above.
+
+The divergence from the results obtained by M. Arson's formula does not
+arise from a difference in size, as this is taken into account. The author
+considers that it may be attributed to the fact that the pipes for the St.
+Gothard Tunnel were cast with much greater care than ordinary pipes, which
+rendered their surface smoother, and also to the fact that flanged joints
+produce much less irregularity in the internal surface than the ordinary
+spigot and faucet joints.
+
+Lastly, the difference in the methods of observation and the errors which
+belong to them, must be taken into account. M. Stockalper, who experimented
+on great pressures, used metallic gauges, which are instruments on whose
+sensibility and correctness complete reliance cannot be placed; and
+moreover the standard manometer with which they were compared was one of
+the same kind. The author is not of opinion that the divergence is owing to
+the fact that M. Stockalper made his observations on an air conduit, where
+the pressure was much higher than in gas pipes. Indeed, it may be assumed
+that gases and liquids act in the same manner; and, as will be [1]
+explained later on, there is reason to believe that with the latter a rise
+of pressure increases the losses of pressure instead of diminishing them.
+
+[Transcribers note 1: corrected from 'as will we explained']
+
+All the pipes for supplying compressed air in tunnels and in headings of
+mines are left uncovered, and have flanged joints; which are advantages not
+merely as regards prevention of leakage, but also for facility of laying
+and of inspection. If a compressed air pipe had to be buried in the ground
+the flanged joint would lose a part of its advantages; but, nevertheless,
+the author considers that it would still be preferable to the ordinary
+joint.
+
+It only remains to refer to the motors fed with the compressed air.
+This subject is still in its infancy from a practical point of view. In
+proportion as the air becomes hot by compression, so it cools by expansion,
+if the vessel containing it is impermeable to heat. Under these conditions
+it gives out in expanding a power appreciably less than if it retained its
+original temperature; besides which the fall of temperature may impede the
+working of the machine by freezing the vapor of water contained in the air.
+
+If it is desired to utilize to the utmost the force stored up in the
+compressed air it is necessary to endeavor to supply heat to the air during
+expansion so as to keep its temperature constant. It would be possible
+to attain this object by the same means which prevent heating from
+compression, namely, by the circulation and injection of water. It would
+perhaps be necessary to employ a little larger quantity of water for
+injection, as the water, instead of acting by virtue both of its heat of
+vaporization and of its specific heat, can in this case act only by virtue
+of the latter. These methods might be employed without difficulty for air
+machines of some size. It would be more difficult to apply them to small
+household machines, in which simplicity is an essential element; and we
+must rest satisfied with imperfect methods, such as proximity to a stove,
+or the immersion of the cylinder in a tank of water. Consequently loss of
+power by cooling and by incomplete expansion cannot be avoided. The only
+way to diminish the relative amount of this loss is to employ compressed
+air at a pressure not exceeding three or four atmospheres.
+
+The only real practical advance made in this matter is M. Mékarski's
+compressed air engine for tramways. In this engine the air is made to pass
+through a small boiler containing water at a temperature of about 120°
+Cent. (248° Fahr.), before entering the cylinder of the engine. It must
+be observed that in order to reduce the size of the reservoirs, which
+are carried on the locomotive, the air inside them must be very highly
+compressed; and that in going from the reservoir into the cylinder it
+passes through a reducing valve or expander, which keeps the pressure of
+admission at a definite figure, so that the locomotive can continue working
+so long as the supply of air contained in the reservoir has not come down
+to this limiting pressure. The air does not pass the expander until after
+it has gone through the boiler already mentioned. Therefore, if the
+temperature which it assumes in the boiler is 100° Cent. (212° Fahr.), and
+if the limiting pressure is 5 atm., the gas which enters the engine will be
+a mixture of air and water vapor at 100° Cent.; and of its total pressure
+the vapor of water will contribute I atm. and the air 4 atm. Thus this
+contrivance, by a small expenditure of fuel, enables the air to act
+expansively without injurious cooling, and even reduces the consumption of
+compressed air to an extent which compensates for part of the loss of power
+arising from the preliminary expansion which the air experiences before its
+admission into the engine. It is clear that this same contrivance, or what
+amounts to the same thing, a direct injection of steam, at a sufficient
+pressure, for the purpose of maintaining the expanding air at a constant
+temperature, might be tried in a fixed engine worked by compressed air with
+some chance of success.
+
+Whatever method is adopted it would be advantageous that the losses of
+pressure in the pipes connecting the compressors with the motors should be
+reduced as much as possible, for in this case that loss would represent
+a loss of efficiency. If, on the other hand, owing to defective means of
+reheating, it is necessary to remain satisfied with a small amount of
+expansion, the loss of pressure in the pipe is unimportant, and has only
+the effect of transferring the limited expansion to a point a little lower
+on the scale of pressures. If W is the net disposable force on the shaft
+of the engine which works the compressor, v1 the volume of air at the
+compressor, p1. given by the compressor, and at the temperature of the
+surrounding air, and p0 the atmospheric pressure, the efficiency of the
+compressor, assuming the air to expand according to Boyle's law, is given
+by the well-known formula--
+
+ p1 v1 log (p1 / p0)
+ -------------------.
+ W
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 v_1 \log \frac{p_1}{p_0}}{W}]
+
+Let p2 be the value to which the pressure is reduced by the loss of
+pressure at the end of the conduit, and v2 the volume which the air
+occupies at this pressure and at the same temperature; the force stored
+up in the air at the end of its course through the conduit is p2 v2
+log(p2/p0); consequently, the efficiency of the conduit is
+
+ p2 v2 log(p2/p0)
+ ----------------
+ p1 v1 log(p1/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_2 v_2 \log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}{p_2 v_2 \log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+a fraction that may be reduced to the simple form
+
+ log(p2/p0)
+ ----------,
+ log(p1/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{\log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}{\log\frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+if there is no leakage during the passage of the air, because in that cause
+p2 v2 = p1 v1. Lastly, if W1 is the net disposable force on the shaft of
+the compressed air motor, the efficiency of this engine will be,
+
+ W1
+ ----------------
+ p2 v2 log(p2/p0)
+
+[TEX: \frac{W_1}{p_2 v_2 \log \frac{p_2}{p_0}}]
+
+and the product of these three partial efficiencies is equal to W1/W, the
+general efficiency of the transmission.
+
+III. _Transmission by Pressure Water_.--As transmission of power by
+compressed air has been specially applied to the driving of tunnels, so
+transmission by pressure water has been specially resorted to for lifting
+heavy loads, or for work of a similar nature, such as the operations
+connected with the manufacture of Bessemer steel or of cast-iron pipes.
+The author does not propose to treat of transmissions established for this
+special purpose, and depending on the use of accumulators at high pressure,
+as he has no fresh matter to impart on this subject, and as he believes
+that the remarkable invention of Sir William Armstrong was described for
+the first time, in the "Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical
+Engineers." His object is to refer to transmissions applicable to general
+purposes.
+
+The transmission of power by water may occur in another form. The motive
+force to be transmitted may be employed for working pumps which raise the
+water, not to a fictitious height in an accumulator, but to a real height
+in a reservoir, with a channel from this reservoir to distribute the water
+so raised among several motors arranged for utilizing the pressure. The
+author is not aware that works have been carried out for this purpose.
+However, in many towns a part of the water from the public mains serves to
+supply small motors--consequently, if the water, instead of being brought
+by a natural fall, has been previously lifted artificially, it might be
+said that a transmission of power is here grafted on to the ordinary
+distribution of water.
+
+Unless a positive or negative force of gravity is introduced into the
+problem, independently of the force to be transmitted, the receivers of
+the water pressure must be assumed to be at the same level as the forcing
+pumps, or more correctly, the water discharged from the receivers to be at
+the same level as the surface of the water from which the pumps draw their
+supply. In this case the general efficiency of transmission is the product
+of three partial efficiencies, which correspond exactly to those mentioned
+with regard to compressed air. The height of lift, contained in the
+numerator of the fraction which expresses the efficiency of the pumps, is
+not to be taken as the difference in level between the surface of the water
+in the reservoir and the surface of the water whence the pumps draw their
+supply; but as this difference in level, plus the loss of pressure in the
+suction pipe, which is usually very short, and plus the loss in the channel
+to the reservoir, which may be very long. A similar loss of initial
+pressure affects the efficiency of the discharge channel. The reservoir, if
+of sufficient capacity, may become an important store of power, while the
+compressed air reservoir can only do so to a very limited extent.
+
+Omitting the subject of the pumps, and passing on at once to the discharge
+main, the author may first point out that the distinction between the
+ascending and descending mains of the system is of no importance, for two
+reasons: first, that nothing prevents the motors being supplied direct from
+the first alone; and second, that the one is not always distinct from the
+other. In fact, the reservoir may be connected by a single branch pipe with
+the system which goes from the pumps to the motors; it may even be placed
+at the extreme end of this system beyond the motors, provided always that
+the supply pipe is taken into it at the bottom. The same formula may be
+adopted for the loss of initial pressure in water pipes as for compressed
+air pipes, viz.,
+
+ p1 - p 64 b1
+ ------- = --------- L Q² ± h;
+ [Delta] [pi]² D^5
+
+[TEX: \frac{p_1 - p}{\Delta} = \frac{64 b_1}{\pi^2 D^5} L Q^2 \pm h]
+
+h being the difference of level between the two ends of the portion of
+conduit of length, L, and the sign + or - being used according as the
+conduit rises or falls. The specific weight, [delta], is constant, and the
+quotients, p1/[delta] and p/[delta], represent the heights, z and z1, to
+which the water could rise above the pipes, in vertical tubes branching
+from it, at the beginning and end of the transit. The values assigned to
+the coefficient b1 in France, are those determined by D'Arcy. For new
+cast-iron pipes he gives b1 - 0.0002535 + 1/D 0.000000647; and recommends
+that this value should be doubled, to allow for the rust and incrustation
+which more or less form inside the pipes during use. The determination of
+this coefficient has been made from experiments where the pressure has
+not exceeded four atmospheres; within these limits the value of the
+coefficient, as is generally admitted, is independent of the pressure. The
+experiments made by M. Barret, on the pressure pipes of the accumulator at
+the Marseilles docks, seem to indicate that the loss of pressure would be
+greater for high pressures, everything else being equal. This pipe, having
+a diameter of 0.127 m. (5 in.), was subjected to an initial pressure of 52
+atmospheres. The author gives below the results obtained for a straight
+length 320 m. (1050 ft) long; and has placed beside them the results which
+D'Arcy's formula would give.
+
+ Loss of head, in meters or ft. respectively
+ per 100 meters or ft. run of pipes.
+ +-----------------^-------------------+
+ | |
+ Calculated loss.
+ +-----------^-----------+
+ | |
+Velocity of flow Actual loss
+ per second. observed. Old pipes. New pipes.
+Meters. Feet. Met. or Ft. Met. or Ft. Met. or Ft.
+0.25 0.82 1.5 0.12 0.06
+0.50 1.64 2.5 0.48 0.24
+0.75 2.46 3.7 1.08 0.54
+1.00 3.28 5.5 1.92 0.96
+1.25 4.10 6.1 3.00 1.50
+1.50 4.92 7.3 4.32 2.16
+1.75 5.74 8.0 5.88 2.94
+2.00 6.56 10.2 7.68 3.84
+2.25 7.38 11.7 9.72 4.86
+2.50 8.20 14.0 12.00 6.00
+
+Moreover, these results would appear to indicate a different law from that
+which is expressed by the formula b1 u², as is easy to see by representing
+them graphically. It would be very desirable that fresh experiments should
+be made on water pipes at high pressure, and of various diameters. Of
+machines worked by water pressure the author proposes to refer only to two
+which appear to him in every respect the most practical and advantageous.
+One is the piston machine of M. Albert Schmid, engineer at Zurich. The
+cylinder is oscillating, and the distribution is effected, without an
+eccentric, by the relative motion of two spherical surfaces fitted one
+against the other, and having the axis of oscillation for a common axis.
+The convex surface, which is movable and forms part of the cylinder, serves
+as a port face, and has two ports in it communicating with the two ends of
+the cylinder. The concave surface, which is fixed and plays the part of a
+slide valve, contains three openings, the two outer ones serving to admit
+the pressure water, and the middle one to discharge the water after it has
+exerted its pressure. The piston has no packing. Its surface of contact has
+two circumferential grooves, which produce a sort of water packing acting
+by adhesion. A small air chamber is connected with the inlet pipe, and
+serves to deaden the shocks. This engine is often made with two cylinders,
+having their cranks at right angles.
+
+The other engine, which is much less used, is a turbine on Girard's system,
+with a horizontal axis and partial admission, exactly resembling in
+miniature those which work in the hydraulic factory of St. Maur, near
+Paris. The water is introduced by means of a distributer, which is fitted
+in the interior of the turbine chamber, and occupies a certain portion
+of its circumference. This turbine has a lower efficiency than Schmid's
+machine, and is less suitable for high pressures; but it possesses this
+advantage over it, that by regulating the amount of opening of the
+distributer, and consequently the quantity of water admitted, the force can
+be altered without altering the velocity of rotation. As it admits of great
+speeds, it could be usefully employed direct, without the interposition of
+spur wheels or belts for driving magneto-electric machines employed for the
+production of light, for electrotyping, etc.
+
+In compressed air machines the losses of pressure due to incomplete
+expansion, cooling, and waste spaces, play an important part. In water
+pressure machines loss does not occur from these causes, on account of the
+incompressibility of the liquid, but the frictions of the parts are the
+principal causes of loss of power. It would be advisable to ascertain
+whether, as regards this point, high or low pressures are the most
+advantageous. Theoretical considerations would lead the author to imagine
+that for a piston machine low pressures are preferable. In conclusion, the
+following table gives the efficiencies of a Girard turbine, constructed by
+Messrs. Escher Wyss & Co., of Zurich, and of a Schmid machine, as measured
+by Professor Fliegnor, in 1871:
+
+ ESCHER WYSS & CO'S TURBINE.
+
+Effective Head of Water. Revolutions Efficiency.
+ per minute.
+Meters. Feet. Revs. Per cent.
+ 20.7 67.9 628 68.5
+ 20.7 67.9 847 47.4
+ 24.1 79.0 645 68.5
+ 27.6 90.5 612 65.7
+ 27.6 90.5 756 68.0
+ 31.0 101.7 935 56.9
+ 31.0 101.7 1,130 35.1
+
+ SCHMID MOTOR.
+
+ 8.3 27.2 226 37.4
+ 11.4 37.4 182 67.4
+ 14.5 47.6 254 53.4
+ 17.9 58.7 157 86.2
+ 20.7 67.9 166 89.6
+ 20.7 67.9 225 74.6
+ 24.1 79.0 238 76.7
+ 24.1 79.0 389 64.0
+ 27.6 90.5 207 83.9
+
+It will be observed that these experiments relate to low pressures; it
+would be desirable to extend them to higher pressures.
+
+IV. _Transmission by Electricity._--However high the efficiency of an
+electric motor may be, in relation to the chemical work of the electric
+battery which feeds it, force generated by an electric battery is too
+expensive, on account of the nature of the materials consumed, for a
+machine of this kind ever to be employed for industrial purposes. If,
+however, the electric current, instead of being developed by chemical
+work in a battery, is produced by ordinary mechanical power in a
+magneto-electric or dynamo-electric machine, the case is different; and
+the double transformation, first of the mechanical force into an electric
+current, and then of that current into mechanical force, furnishes a means
+for effecting the conveyance of the power to a distance.
+
+It is this last method of transmission which remains to be discussed. The
+author, however, feels himself obliged to restrict himself in this matter
+to a mere summary; and, indeed, it is English physicists and engineers who
+have taken the technology of electricity out of the region of empiricism
+and have placed it on a scientific and rational basis. Moreover, they are
+also taking the lead in the progress which is being accomplished in this
+branch of knowledge, and are best qualified to determine its true bearings.
+When an electric current, with an intensity, i, is produced, either by
+chemical or mechanical work, in a circuit having a total resistance, R, a
+quantity of heat is developed in the circuit, and this heat is the exact
+equivalent of the force expended, so long as the current is not made use of
+for doing any external work. The expression for this quantity of heat, per
+unit of time, is Ai²R; A being the thermal equivalent of the unit of power
+corresponding to the units of current and resistance, in which i and R are
+respectively expressed. The product, i²R, is a certain quantity of power,
+which the author proposes to call _power transformed into electricity_.
+When mechanical power is employed for producing a current by means of
+a magneto-electric or dynamo-electric machine--or, to use a better
+expression, by means of a _mechanical generator of electricity_--it is
+necessary in reality to expend a greater quantity of power than i²R in
+order to make up for losses which result either from ordinary friction
+or from certain electro magnetic reactions which occur. The ratio of the
+quantity, i²R, to the power, W, actually expended per unit of time is
+called the efficiency of the generator. Designating it by K, we obtain, W
+= i²R/K. It is very important to ascertain the value of this efficiency,
+considering that it necessarily enters as a factor into the evaluation of
+all the effects to be produced by help of the generator in question. The
+following table gives the results of certain experiments made early in
+1879, with a Gramme machine, by an able physicist, M Hagenbach, Professor
+at the University at Basle, and kindly furnished by him to the author:
+
+Revolutions per minute 935 919.5 900.5 893
+
+Total resistance in Siemens' units 2.55 3.82 4.94 6.06
+
+Total resistance in absolute units 2.435 3.648 4.718 5.787
+ x10^9 x10^9 x10^9 x10^9
+
+Intensity in chemical units 17.67 10.99 8.09 6.28
+
+Intensity in absolute units 2.828 1.759 1.295 1.005
+
+Work done i²R in absolute units 1948.6 1129.2 791.3 584.9
+ x10^7 x10^7 x10^7 x10^7
+
+Work done i²R in kilogrammes 198.6 115.1 80.66 59.62
+
+Power expended in kilogrammes 301.5 141.0 86.25 83.25
+
+Efficiency, per cent. 65.9 81.6 93.5 71.6
+
+M. Hagenbach's dynamometric measurements were made by the aid of a brake.
+After each experiment on the electric machine, he applied the brake to the
+engine which he employed, taking care to make it run at precisely the same
+speed, with the same pressure of steam, and with the same expansion as
+during experiment. It would certainly be better to measure the force
+expended during and not after the experiment, by means of a registering
+dynamometer. Moreover, M. Hagenbach writes that his measurements by means
+of the brake were very much prejudiced by external circumstances; doubtless
+this is the reason of the divergences between the results obtained.
+
+About the same time Dr. Hopkinson communicated to this institution the
+results of some very careful experiments made on a Siemens machine. He
+measured the force expended by means of a registering dynamometer, and
+obtained very high coefficients of efficiency, amounting to nearly 90 per
+cent. M. Hagenbach also obtained from one machine a result only a little
+less than unity. Mechanical generators of electricity are certainly
+capable of being improved in several respects, especially as regards their
+adaptation to certain definite classes of work. But there appears to
+remain hardly any margin for further progress as regards efficiency. Force
+transformed into electricity in a generator may be expressed by i [omega] M
+C; [omega] being the angular velocity of rotation; M the magnetism of one
+of the poles, inducing or induced, which intervenes; and C a constant
+specially belonging to each apparatus, and which is independent of
+the units adopted. This constant could not be determined except by
+an integration practically impossible; and the product, M C, must be
+considered indivisible. Even in a magneto-electric machine (with permanent
+inducing magnets), and much more in a dynamo-electric machine (inducing by
+means of electro-magnets excited by the very current produced) the product,
+M C, is a function of the intensity. From the identity of the expressions,
+i²R and i [omega] M C we obtain the relation M C = IR/[omega] which
+indicates the course to be pursued to determine experimentally the law
+which connects the variations of M C with those of i. Some experiments made
+in 1876, by M. Hagenbach, on a Gramme dynamo-electric machine, appear to
+indicate that the magnetism, M C, does not increase indefinitely with the
+intensity, but that there is some maximum value for this quantity. If,
+instead of working a generator by an external motive force, a current is
+passed through its circuit in a certain given direction, the movable part
+of the machine will begin to turn in an opposite direction to that in which
+it would have been necessary to turn it in order to obtain a current in the
+aforesaid direction. In virtue of this motion the electro-magnetic forces
+which are generated may be used to overcome a resisting force. The machine
+will then work as a motor or receiver. Let i be the intensity of the
+external current which works the motor, when the motor is kept at rest. If
+it is now allowed to move, its motion produces, in virtue of the laws of
+induction, a current in the circuit of intensity, i1, in the opposite
+direction to the external current; the effective intensity of the current
+traversing the circuit is thus reduced to i - i1. The intensity of the
+counter current is given, like that of the generating current, by the
+equation, i1²R = i1 [omega]1 M1 C1, or i1R = [omega]1 M1 C1, the index, 1,
+denoting the quantities relating to the motor. Here M1 C1 is a function of
+i - i1, not of i. As in a generator the force transformed into electricity
+has a value, i [omega] M C, so in a motor the force developed by
+electricity is (i - i1) [omega]1 M1 C1. On account, however, of the losses
+which occur, the effective power, that is the disposable power on the shaft
+of the motor, will have a smaller value, and in order to arrive at it a
+coefficient of efficiency, K1, must be added. We shall then have W1 = K1
+(i-i1) [omega]1 M1 C1. The author has no knowledge of any experiments
+having been made for obtaining this efficiency, K1. Next let us suppose
+that the current feeding the motor is furnished by a generator, so that
+actual transmission by electricity is taking place. The circuit, whose
+resistance is R, comprises the coils, both fixed and movable, of the
+generator and motor, and of the conductors which connect them. The
+intensity of the current which traverses the circuit had the value, i, when
+the motor was at rest; by the working of the motor it is reduced to i - i1.
+The power applied to the generator is itself reduced to W-[(i-i1)[omega]
+M C]/K. The prime mover is relieved by the action of the counter current,
+precisely as the consumption of zinc in the battery would be reduced by the
+same cause, if the battery was the source of the current. The efficiency
+of the transmission is W1/W. Calculation shows that it is expressed by the
+following equations:W1/W = K K1 [([omega]11 M1 C1)/([omega]1 M C)], or = K
+K1 [([omega]11 M1 C)/([omega]11 M1 C1 + (i-i1) R)]; expressions in which
+it must be remembered M C and M1 C1 are really functions of (i-i1). This
+efficiency is, then, the product of three distinct factors, each evidently
+less than unity, namely, the efficiency belonging to the generator, the
+efficiency belonging to the motor, and a third factor depending on the rate
+of rotation of the motor and the resistance of the circuit. The influence
+which these elements exert on the value of the third factor cannot be
+estimated, unless the law is first known according to which the magnetisms,
+M C, M1 C C1, vary with the intensity of the current.
+
+
+GENERAL RESULTS.
+
+Casting a retrospective glance at the four methods of transmission of power
+which have been examined, it would appear that transmission by ropes forms
+a class by itself, while the three other methods combine into a natural
+group, because they possess a character in common of the greatest
+importance. It may be said that all three involve a temporary
+transformation of the mechanical power to be utilized into potential
+energy. Also in each of these methods the efficiency of transmission is
+the product of three factors or partial efficiencies, which correspond
+exactly--namely, first, the efficiency of the instrument which converts
+the actual energy of the prime mover into potential energy; second, the
+efficiency of the instrument which reconverts this potential energy into
+actual energy, that is, into motion, and delivers it up in this shape
+for the actual operations which accomplish industrial work; third, the
+efficiency of the intermediate agency which serves for the conveyance of
+potential energy from the first instrument to the second.
+
+This last factor has just been given for transmission by electricity. It
+is the exact correlative of the efficiency of the pipe in the case of
+compressed air or of pressure water. It is as useful in the case of
+electric transmission, as of any other method, to be able, in studying the
+system, to estimate beforehand what results it is able to furnish, and for
+this purpose it is necessary to calculate exactly the factors which compose
+the efficiency.
+
+In order to obtain this desirable knowledge, the author considers that the
+three following points should form the aim of experimentalists: First,
+the determination of the efficiency, K, of the principal kinds of
+magneto-electric, or dynamo-electric machines working as generators;
+second, the determination of the efficiency, K1, of the same machines
+working as motors; third, the determination of the law according to which
+the magnetism of the cores of these machines varies with the intensity of
+the current. The author is of opinion that experiments made with these
+objects in view would be more useful than those conducted for determining
+the general efficiency of transmission, for the latter give results only
+available under precisely similar conditions. However, it is clear that
+they have their value and must not be neglected.
+
+There are, moreover, many other questions requiring to be elucidated by
+experiment, especially as regards the arrangement of the conducting wires:
+but it is needless to dwell further upon this subject, which has been ably
+treated by many English men of science--for instance, Dr. Siemens and
+Professor Ayrton. Nevertheless, for further information the author would
+refer to the able articles published at Paris, by M. Mascart, in the
+_Journal de Physique_, in 1877 and 1878. The author would gladly have
+concluded this paper with a comparison of the efficiencies of the four
+systems which have been examined, or what amounts to the same thing--with a
+comparison of the losses of power which they occasion. Unfortunately, such
+a comparison has never been made experimentally, because hitherto the
+opportunity of doing it in a demonstrative manner has been wanting, for the
+transmission of power to a distance belongs rather to the future than to
+the present time. Transmission by electricity is still in its infancy; it
+has only been applied on a small scale and experimentally.
+
+Of the three other systems, transmission by means of ropes is the only one
+that has been employed for general industrial purposes, while compressed
+air and water under pressure have been applied only to special purposes,
+and their use has been due much more to their special suitableness for
+these purposes than from any considerations relative to loss of power.
+Thus the effective work of the compressed air used in driving the
+tunnels through the Alps, assuming its determination to be possible, was
+undoubtedly very low; nevertheless, in the present state of our appliances
+it is the only process by which such operations can be accomplished. The
+author believes that transmission by ropes furnishes the highest proportion
+of useful work, but that as regards a wide distribution of the transmitted
+power the other two methods, by air and water, might merit a preference.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE HOTCHKISS REVOLVING GUN.
+
+
+The Hotchkiss revolving gun, already adopted in the French navy and by
+other leading European nations, has been ordered for use in the German navy
+by the following decree of the German Emperor, dated January 11 last: "On
+the report made to me, I approve the adoption of the Hotchkiss revolving
+cannon as a part of the artillery of my navy; and each of my ships,
+according to their classification, shall in general be armed with this
+weapon in such a manner that every point surrounding the vessel may be
+protected by the fire of at least two guns at a minimum range of 200
+meters."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THALLIUM PAPERS AS OZONOMETERS.
+
+
+Schoene has given the results of an extended series of experiments on the
+use of thallium paper for estimating approximately the oxidizing material
+in the atmosphere, whether it be hydrogen peroxide alone, or mixed with
+ozone, or perhaps also with other constituents hitherto unknown. The
+objection to Schönbein's ozonometer (potassium iodide on starch paper) and
+to Houzeau's ozonometer (potassium iodide on red litmus paper) lies in
+the fact that their materials are hygroscopic, and their indications vary
+widely with the moisture of the air. Since dry ozone does not act on these
+papers, they must be moistened; and then the amount of moisture varies the
+result quite as much as the amount of ozone. Indeed, attention has been
+called to the larger amount of ozone near salt works and waterfalls, and
+the erroneous opinion advanced that ozone is formed when water is finely
+divided. And Böttger has stated that ozone is formed when ether is
+atomized; the fact being that the reaction he observed was due to the
+H_2O_2 always present in ether. Direct experiments with the Schönbein
+ozonometer and the psychrometer gave parallel curves; whence the author
+regards the former as only a crude hygrometer. These objections do not lie
+against the thallium paper, the oxidation to brown oxide by either ozone or
+hydrogen peroxide not requiring the presence of moisture, and the color,
+therefore, being independent of the hygrometric state of the air. Moreover,
+when well cared for, the papers undergo no farther change of color and may
+be preserved indefinitely. The author prepares the thallium paper a few
+days before use, by dipping strips of Swedish filtering paper in a solution
+of thallous hydrate, and drying. The solution is prepared by pouring a
+solution of thallous sulphate into a boiling solution of barium hydrate,
+equivalent quantities being taken, the resulting solution of thallous
+hydrate being concentrated in vacuo until 100 c.c. contains 10 grammes
+Tl(OH). For use the strips are hung in the free air in a close vessel,
+preferably over caustic lime, for twelve hours. Other papers are used, made
+with a two per cent. solution. These are exposed for thirty-six hours. The
+coloration is determined by comparison with a scale having eleven degrees
+of intensity upon it. Compared with Schönbein's ozonometer, the results are
+in general directly opposite. The thallium papers show that the greatest
+effect is in the daytime, the iodide papers that it is at night. Yearly
+curves show that the former generally indicate a rise when the latter give
+a fall. The iodide curve follows closely that of relative humidity, clouds,
+and rain; the thallium curve stands in no relation to it. A table of
+results for the year 1879 is given in monthly means, of the two thallium
+papers, the ozonometer, the relative humidity, cloudiness, rain, and
+velocity of wind.--_G. F. B., in Ber. Berl. Chem. Ces._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE AUDIPHONE IN ENGLAND.
+
+
+The audiphone has been recently tried in the Board School for Deaf and
+Dumb at Turin street, Bethnal Green, with very satisfactory results--so
+satisfactory that the report will recommend its adoption in the four
+schools which the London Board have erected for the education of the deaf
+and dumb. Some 20 per cent. of the pupils in deaf and dumb schools have
+sufficient power of hearing when assisted by the audiphone to enable them
+to take their places in the classes of the ordinary schools.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONDUCTIVITY OF MOIST AIR.
+
+
+Many physical treatises still assert that moist air conducts electricity,
+though Silberman and others have proved the contrary. An interesting
+experiment bearing on this has been described lately by Prof. Marangoni.
+Over a flame is heated some water in a glass jar, through the stopper of
+which passes a bent tube to bell-jar (held obliquely), which thus gets
+filled with aqueous vapor. The upper half of a thin Leyden jar charged is
+brought into the bell-jar, and held there four or five seconds; it is
+then found entirely discharged. That the real cause of this, however, is
+condensation of the vapor on the part of the glass that is not coated with
+tin foil (the liquid layer acting by conduction) can be proved; for if that
+part of the jar be passed several times rapidly through the flame, so as
+to heat it to near 100° C., before inserting in the bell-jar, a different
+effect will be had; the Leyden jar will give out long sparks after
+withdrawal. This is because the glass being heated no longer condenses the
+vapor on its surface, and there is no superficial conduction, as in the
+previous case.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+FLOATING PONTOON DOCK.
+
+
+Considerable attention has been given for some years past to the subject of
+floating pontoon docks by Mr. Robert Turnbull, naval architect, of South
+Shields, Eng., who has devised the ingenious arrangement which forms the
+subject of the annexed illustration. The end aimed at and now achieved by
+Mr. Turnbull was so to construct floating docks or pontoons that they may
+rise and fall in a berth, and be swung round at one end upon a center post
+or cylinder--nautically known as a dolphin--projecting from the ground at
+a slight distance from the berth. The cylinder is in deep water, and,
+when the pontoon is swung and sunk to the desired depth by letting in the
+necessary amount of water, a vessel can be floated in and then secured. The
+pontoon, with the vessel on it, is then raised by pumping out the contained
+water until she is a little above the level of the berth. The whole is then
+swung round over the berth, the vessel then being high and dry to enable
+repairs or other operations to be conducted. For this purpose, one end of
+the pontoon is so formed as to enable it to fit around the cylinder, and
+to be held to it as to a center or fulcrum, about which the pontoon can be
+swung. The pontoon is of special construction, and has air-chambers at the
+sides placed near the center, so as to balance it. It also has chambers at
+the ends, which are divided horizontally in order that the operation of
+submerging within a berth or in shallow water may be conducted without
+risk, the upper chambers being afterwards supplied with water to sink the
+pontoon to the full depth before a vessel is hauled in. When the ship is in
+place, the pontoon with her is then lifted above the level of the berth in
+which it has to be placed, and then swung round into the berth. In some
+cases, the pontoon is provided with a cradle, so that, when in berth, the
+vessel on the cradle can be hauled up a slip with rails arranged as
+a continuation of the cradle-rails of the pontoon, which can be then
+furnished with another cradle, and another vessel lifted.
+
+It is this latter arrangement which forms the subject of our illustration,
+the vessel represented being of the following dimensions: Length between
+perpendiculars, 350 feet; breadth, moulded, 40 feet; depth, moulded, 32
+feet; tons, B. M., 2,600; tons net, 2,000. At A, in fig. 1, is shown in
+dotted lines a portion of the vessel and pontoon, the ship having just been
+hauled in and centered over the keel blocks. At B, is shown the pontoon
+with the ship raised and swung round on to a low level quay. Going a step
+further in the operation, we see at C, the vessel hauled on to the slipways
+on the high-level quay. In this case the cylinder is arranged so that
+the vessel may be delivered on to the rails or slips, which are arranged
+radially, taking the cylinder as the center. There may be any number of
+slips so arranged, and one pontoon may be made available for several
+cylinders at the deep water parts of neighboring repairing or building
+yards, in which case the recessed portion of the pontoon, when arranged
+around the cylinder, has stays or retaining bars fitted to prevent it
+leaving the cylinder when the swinging is taking place, such as might
+happen in a tideway.
+
+[Illustration: Fig. 1. IMPROVED FLOATING PONTOON DRY DOCK.]
+
+The arrangements for delivering vessels on radial slips is seen in plan at
+fig. 2, where A represents the river or deep water; B is the pontoon with
+the vessel; C being the cylinder or turning center; D is the low-level
+quay on to which the pontoon carrying the ship is first swung; E is the
+high-level quay with the slip-ways; F is an engine running on rails around
+the radial slips for drawing the vessels with the cradle off the pontoon,
+and hauling them up on to the high-level quay; and G shows the repairing
+shops, stores, and sheds. A pontoon attached to a cylinder may be fitted
+with an ordinary wet dock; and then the pontoon, before or after the vessel
+is upon it, can be slewed round to suit the slips up which the vessel has
+to be moved, supposing the slips are arranged radially. In this case, the
+pivot end of the pontoon would be a fixture, so to speak, to the cylinder.
+
+The pontoon may also be made available for lifting heavy weights, by
+fitting a pair of compound levers or other apparatus at one end, the
+lifting power being in the pontoon itself. In some cases, in order to
+lengthen the pontoon, twenty-five or fifty foot lengths are added at
+the after end. When not thus engaged, those lengths form short pontoons
+suitable for small vessels.--_Iron_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WEIRLEIGH, BRENCHLEY, KENT.
+
+
+Some few years since, Mr. Harrison Weir (whose drawings of natural history
+are known probably to a wider circle of the general public than the works
+of most artists), wishing to pursue his favorite study of animals and
+horticulture, erected on the steep hillside of the road leading from
+Paddock Wood to Brenchley, a small "cottage ornée" with detached studio.
+Afterward desiring more accommodation, he carried out the buildings shown
+in our illustrations. Advantage has been taken of the slope of the hill on
+one side, and the rising ground in the rear on the other, to increase the
+effect of the buildings and meet the difficulty of the levels. The two
+portions--old, etched, and new, shown as black--are connected together by a
+handsome staircase, which is carried up in the tower, and affords access to
+the various levels. The materials are red brick, with Bathstone dressings,
+and weather-tiling on the upper floors. Black walnut, pitch pine, and
+sequoias have been used in the staircase, and joiner's work to the
+principal rooms. The principal stoves are of Godstone stone only, no iron
+or metal work being used. The architects are Messrs. Wadmore & Baker, of 35
+Great St. Helens, E.C.; the builders, Messrs. Penn Brothers, of Pembury,
+Kent.--_Building News_.
+
+[Illustration: ARTISTS HOMES NO 11 "WEIRLEIGH" BRENCHLEY, KENT. THE
+RESIDENCE OF HARRISON WEIR ESQ'RE WADMORE & BAKER ARCHITECTS]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RAPID BREATHING AS A PAIN OBTUNDER IN MINOR SURGERY, OBSTETRICS, THE
+GENERAL PRACTICE OF MEDICINE AND OF DENTISTRY.
+
+[Footnote: Read before the Philadelphia County Medical Society, May 12,
+1880, by W. G. A. Bonwill, M.D., D.D.S., Philadelphia.]
+
+
+Through the kind invitation of your directors, I am present to give you
+the history of "rapid breathing" as an analgesic agent, as well as my
+experience therein since I first discovered it. It is with no little
+feeling of modesty that I appear before such a learned and honorable
+body of physicians and surgeons, and I accept the privilege as a high
+compliment. I trust the same liberal spirit which prompted you to call this
+subject to the light of investigation will not forsake you when you have
+heard all I have to say and you sit in judgment thereon. Sufficient time
+has now elapsed since the first promulgation of the subject for the shafts
+of ridicule to be well nigh spent (which is the common logic used to crush
+out all new ideas), and it is to be expected that gentlemen will look upon
+it with all the charity of a learned body, and not be too hasty to condemn
+what they have had but little chance to investigate; and, of course, have
+not practiced with that success which can only come from an intelligent
+understanding of its application and _modus operandi_.
+
+Knowing the history of past discoveries, I was well prepared for the
+crucible. I could not hope to be an exception. But, so far, the medical
+profession have extended me more favor than I have received at the hands of
+the dental profession.
+
+My first conception of the analgesic property of a pain obtunder in
+contradistinction to its anaesthetic effect, which finally led to the
+discovery of the inhalation of common air by "rapid breathing," was in 1855
+or 1856, while performing upon my own teeth certain operations which gave
+me intense pain (and I could not afford to hurt myself) without a resort to
+ether and chloroform. These agents had been known so short a time that no
+one was specially familiar with their action. Without knowing whether I
+could take chloroform administered by myself, and at the same time perform
+with skill the excavation of extremely sensitive dentine or tooth-bone, as
+if no anaesthetic had been taken, and not be conscious of pain, was more
+than the experience of medical men at that time could assure me. But,
+having a love for investigation of the unknown, I prepared myself for the
+ordeal. By degrees I took the chloroform until I began to feel very plainly
+its primary effects, and knowing that I must soon be unconscious, I applied
+the excavator to the carious tooth, and, to my surprise, found no pain
+whatever, but the sense of touch and hearing were marvelously intensified.
+The small cavity seemed as large as a half bushel; the excavator more the
+size of an ax; and the sound was equally magnified. That I might not be
+mistaken, I repeated the operation until I was confident that anaesthetics
+possessed a power not hitherto known--that of analgesia. To be doubly
+certain, I gave it in my practice, in many cases with the same happy
+results, which saved me from the risks incident to the secondary effects of
+anaesthetics, and which answered for all the purposes of extracting from
+one to four teeth. Not satisfied with any advance longer than I could find
+a better plan, I experimented with the galvanic current (to and fro) by so
+applying the poles that I substituted a stronger impression by electricity
+from the nerve centers or ganglia to the peripheries than was made from the
+periphery to the brain. This was so much of a success that I threw
+aside chloroform and ether in removing the living nerve of a tooth with
+instruments instead of using arsenic; and for excavating sensitive caries
+in teeth, preparatory to filling, as well as many teeth extracted by it.
+But this was short-lived, for it led to another step. Sometimes I would
+inflict severe pain in cases of congested pulps or from its hasty
+application, or pushing it to do too much, when my patient invariably would
+draw or inhale the breath _very forcibly and rapidly_. I was struck with
+the repeated coincidence, and was led to exclaim: "Nature's anaesthetic."
+This then reminded me of boyhood's bruises. The involuntary action of every
+one who has a finger hurt is to place it to the mouth and draw violently in
+the air and hold it for an instant, and again repeat it until the pain is
+subdued. The same action of the lungs occurs, except more powerfully,
+in young children who take to crying when hurt. It will be noticed they
+breathe very rapidly while furiously crying, which soon allays the
+irritation, and sleep comes as the sequel. Witness also when one is
+suddenly startled, how violently the breath is taken, which gives relief.
+The same thing occurs in the lower animals when pain is being inflicted at
+the hand of man.
+
+This was advance No. 3, and so sure was I of this new discovery, that I at
+once made an application while removing decay from an extremely sensitive
+tooth. To be successful, I found I must make the patient take the start,
+and I would follow with a thrust from the excavator, which move would be
+accomplished before the lungs could be inflated. This was repeated for
+at least a minute, until the operation was completed, I always following
+immediately or synchronously with the inhalation.
+
+This led to step No. 4, which resulted in its application to the extracting
+of teeth and other operations in minor surgery.
+
+Up to this time I had believed the sole effect of the rapid inhalation was
+due to mere diversion of the will, and this was the only way nature could
+so violently exert herself--that of controlling the involuntary action of
+the lungs to her uses by the _safety valve_, or the voluntary movement.
+
+The constant breathing of the patient for thirty seconds to a minute left
+him in a condition of body and mind resembling the effects of ether and
+chloroform in their primary stages. I could but argue that the prolonged
+breathing each time had done it; and, if so, then there must be some
+specific effect over and above the mere diversion by the will. To what
+could it be due? To the air alone, which went in excess into the lungs in
+the course of a minute! Why did I not then immediately grasp the idea of
+its broader application as now claimed for it? It was too much, gentlemen,
+for that hour. Enough had been done in this fourth step of conception to
+rest in the womb of time, until by evolution a higher step could be made at
+the maturity of the child. Being self-satisfied with my own baby, I watched
+and caressed it until it could take care of itself, and my mind was again
+free for another conception.
+
+The births at first seemed to come at very short intervals; but see how
+long it was between the fourth and the fifth birth. It was soon after that
+my mind became involved in inventions--a hereditary outgrowth--and the
+electric mallet and then the dental engine, the parent of your surgical
+engine, to be found in the principal hospitals of this city, took such
+possession of my whole soul, that my air analgesic was left slumbering. It
+was not until August, 1875--nineteen years after--that it again came up in
+full force, without any previous warning.
+
+This time it was no law of association that revived it; but it seemed
+the whispering of some one in the air--some ethereal spirit, if you
+please--which instituted it, and advanced the following problem: "Nitrous
+oxide gas is composed of the same elements as ordinary air, with a larger
+equivalent of oxygen, except it is a chemical compound, not a mechanical
+mixture, and its anaesthetic effects are said to be due to the excess of
+oxygen. If this be a fact, then why can you not produce a similar effect by
+rapid breathing for a minute, more or less, by which a larger quantity of
+oxygen is presented in the lungs for absorption by the blood?"
+
+This query was soon answered by asking myself another: "If the rapid
+inhalation of air into the lungs does not increase the heart's action and
+cause it to drive the blood in exact ratio to the inhalations, then _I can_
+produce partial anaesthesia from this excess of oxygen brought about by the
+voluntary movements over their ordinary involuntary action of the lungs."
+The next question was: Will my heart be affected by this excess of air in
+the lungs to such an extent that there will be a full reciprocity between
+them? Without making any trial of it, I argued that, while there is no
+other muscular movement than that of the chest as under the control of the
+will, and as nature has given to the will the perfect control over the
+lungs to supply more or less air, as is demanded by the pneumogastric nerve
+for the immediate wants of the economy, when the _involuntary action_ is
+not sufficient; and the heart not being under the control of the will, and
+its action never accelerated or diminished except by a specific poison, or
+from the general activity of the person in violent running or working, the
+blood is forced into the heart faster and must get rid of it, when a larger
+supply of oxygen is demanded and rapid breathing must occur, or asphyxia
+result. I was not long in deciding that the heart _would not be
+accelerated_ but a trifle--say a tenth--and, under the circumstances, I
+said: "The air _is_ an anaesthetic."
+
+From this rapid course of argument, I was so profoundly convinced of its
+truth, that without having first tried it upon my own person, I would have
+sat where I was, upon the curbstone, and had a tooth removed with the
+perfect expectation of absence of pain and of still being conscious of
+touch. While yet walking with my children, I commenced to breathe as
+rapidly as possible, and, as anticipated, found my steps growing shorter
+and shorter, until I came to a stand, showing to my mind clearly that my
+argument in advance was right, so far as locomotion was concerned; and,
+upon referring to my pulse, I found but little acceleration.
+
+To what other conclusion could I arrive from this argument, with the
+foundation laid nineteen years before, when I established on my own person
+by experiment the fact of analgesia as induced from chloroform, with the
+many experiments in rapid respiration on tooth bone?
+
+From this moment until its first application to the extraction of a tooth
+you can well imagine my suspense. That I might not fail in the very first
+attempt, I compelled myself and others in my household to breathe rapidly
+to investigate the phenomenon. This gave me some idea as to the proper
+method of proceeding in its administering.
+
+The first case soon appeared, and was a perfect success, going far beyond
+my anticipations, for the effect was such as to produce a partial paralysis
+of the hands and arms to the elbow. Again and again I tried it in every
+case of extraction and many other experiments, doubting my own senses for
+a long time at a result so anomalous and paradoxical. I was reminded just
+here of a phenomenon which gave me additional proof--that of blowing a
+dull fire to revive it. For a minute or so one blows and blows in rapid
+succession until, rising from the effort, a sense of giddiness for a
+few moments so overcomes that the upright position is with difficulty
+maintained. In this condition you are fitted for having a tooth extracted
+or an abscess lanced.
+
+Believing that I had something new to offer which might be of use to
+suffering humanity, I read the first article upon it Nov. 17, 1875, before
+the Franklin Institute. Shortly after I was invited before the Northern
+Medical Society of this city to address them thereon. A number of medical
+gentlemen have been using it in their practice, while the bulk of them have
+spurned it as "negative" and preposterous, without an effort at trying it,
+which I can _now_ very well understand.
+
+Unless one is aware of the fact that in the use of any agent which has the
+power to suspend the volition, it can be taken to that point where he is
+still conscious of _touch and hearing_, and at the same time not cognizant
+of pain inflicted, the action of rapid breathing could not be understood.
+And I regret to say that of three-fourths of the medical men I have talked
+with on the subject they had not been aware of such a possibility from
+ether and chloroform. Until this analgesic state could be established in
+their minds it was impossible to convince them that the excess of oxygen,
+as obtained by rapid breathing, could be made to produce a similar effect.
+_I_ should have been as reluctant as any one to believe it, had I not
+personally experienced the effect while performing an operation which would
+otherwise have been very painful. Such a result could not well be reached
+by any course of reasoning.
+
+Has it proven in my practice what has been claimed for it--a substitute
+for the powerful anaesthetics in minor operations in surgery? Most
+emphatically, yes! So completely has it fulfilled its humble mission in
+my office, that I can safely assert there has not been more than five per
+cent. of failures. I have given it under all circumstances of diseased
+organs, and have seen no other than the happiest results in its after
+effects. It may well be asked just here: Why has it not been more generally
+and widely used by the dental profession as well as the medical, if it is
+really what is claimed for it? The most satisfactory and charitable answer
+to be given is, the failure upon their part to comprehend the _fact_ as
+existing in chloroform and ether that there is such a state as analgesia;
+or, in other words, that the animal economy is so organized, while the
+sense of touch is not destroyed, but rather increased, the mind of the
+subject fails to perceive a sense of pain when anaesthetics are given, and
+the effects are manifested in the primary stage. As I before intimated,
+such is the knowledge possessed by most of those who administer ether and
+chloroform. This was enough to cause nearly every one to look upon it as a
+bubble or air castle. Many gentlemen told me they tried it upon themselves,
+and, while it affected them very seriously by giddiness, they still
+_retained consciousness_; and, such being the case, no effect could be
+produced for obtunding pain. Others told me they were afraid to continue
+the breathing alarmed at the vertigo induced. And the practitioner who has
+adopted it more effectively than any other laughed at me when I first told
+him of the discovery; but his intimate association with me changed his
+views after much explanation and argument between us.
+
+It was hardly to be expected that without this knowledge of analgesia,
+and without any explanation from me as to the _modus operandi_ of rapid
+breathing, other than a few suggestions or directions as to how the effect
+was induced, even the most liberal of medical men should be able to make
+it effective, or have the least disposition to give it a preliminary trial
+upon themselves, and, of course, would not attempt it upon a patient.
+Notwithstanding, it found a few adherents, but only among my personal
+_medical_ friends, with whom I had an opportunity to explain what I
+believed its physiological action, and the cases of success in my own
+practice. To this I have submitted as among the inevitable in the calendar
+of discoveries of all grades.
+
+My own profession have attempted to _ridicule_ it out of its birthright
+and possible existence, which style of argument is not resorted to by true
+logicians.
+
+To all this I can truly say I have not for one moment faltered. I could
+afford to wait. The liberality of this society alone fully compensates for
+the seeming indisposition of the past, believing that it is proper that
+every advance should be confronted, and, if in time found worthy, give it
+God speed.
+
+From its first conception I have diligently labored to solve its _modus
+operandi_, and the doubt in my own mind as to whether I could be mistaken
+in my observations. I asked the opinion of our best chemical teachers if
+air could have such effect. One attributed it to oxygen stimulation, and
+the other to nitrogen. Another gentleman told me the medical profession had
+come to the conclusion that it was possible for me to thus extract teeth,
+but it was due solely to my strong _personal magnetism_ (which power I was
+not before aware I possessed).
+
+Now, from what I have related of the successive and natural steps which
+finally culminated in this process or plan of analgesia induced by an
+excess of ordinary air taken forcibly into the lungs above what is
+necessary for life, and from what I shall state as to the apparently
+anomalous or paradoxical effects, with its physiological action, and the
+simple tests made upon each of my patients, I shall trust to so convince
+you of its plausibility and possibility that it will be made use of in
+hundreds of minor operations where ether and chloroform are now used.
+
+Aside from my assertion and that of its friends, that the effects can be
+produced by air alone, you must have some light shed upon the causes of its
+physiological action, which will appeal to your _medical_ reason.
+
+To assign an action to any drug is difficult, and in the cases of ether and
+the other anaesthetics a quarter of a century still finds many conflicting
+opinions. This being true, you will deal leniently with me for the opinion
+I hold as to their analgesic action. Of course it will be objected to,
+for the unseen is, to a great extent, unknowable. Enough for my argument,
+however; it seems to suit the case very well without looking for another;
+and while it was based on the phenomenon resulting from many trials, and
+not the trials upon it as a previous theory, I shall be content with it
+until a better one can be found.
+
+What is it I claim as a new discovery, and the facts and its philosophy?
+
+I have asserted that I can produce, from rapidly breathing common air at
+the rate of a hundred respirations a minute, a similar effect to that from
+ether, chloroform, and nitrous oxide gas, in their primary stages; and I
+can in this way render patients sufficiently insensible to acute pain from
+any operation where the time consumed is not over twenty to thirty seconds.
+While the special senses are in partial action, the sense of pain is
+obtunded, and in many cases completely annulled, consciousness and general
+sensibility being preserved.
+
+To accomplish this, each patient must be instructed how to act and what to
+expect. As simple as it may seem, there is a proper and consistent plan to
+enable you to reach full success. Before the patient commences to inhale he
+is informed of the fact that, while he will be unconscious of pain, he
+will know full, or partially well, every touch upon the person; that the
+inhalation must be vigorously kept up during the whole operation without
+for an instant stopping; that the more energetically and steadily he
+breathes, the more perfect the effect, and that if he cease breathing
+during the operation, pain will be felt. Fully impress them with this
+idea, for the very good reason that they may stop when in the midst of an
+operation, and the fullest effects be lost. It is obligatory to do so on
+account of its evanescent effects, which demand that the patient be pushed
+by the operator's own energetic appeals to "go on." It is very difficult
+for any person to respire more than one hundred times to the minute, as he
+will become by that time so exhausted as not to be able to breathe at all,
+as is evidenced by all who have thus followed my directions. For the next
+minute following the completion of the operation the subject will not
+breathe more than once or twice. Very few have force enough left to raise
+hand or foot. The voluntary muscles have nearly all been subjugated and
+overcome by the undue effort at forced inhalation of one hundred over
+seventeen, the normal standard. It will be more fully understood further on
+in my argument why I force patients, and am constantly speaking to them to
+go on.
+
+I further claim that for the past four years, so satisfactory has been the
+result of this system in the extracting of teeth and deadening extremely
+sensitive dentine, there was no longer any necessity for chloroform,
+ether, or nitrous oxide in the dental office. That such teeth as cannot be
+extracted by its aid can well be preserved and made useful, except in a
+very few cases, who will not be forced to breathe.
+
+The anaesthetics, when used in major operations, where time is needed for
+the operation, can be made more effective by a lesser quantity when given
+in conjunction with "rapid breathing." Drs. Garrettson and Hews, who have
+thus tried it, tell me it takes one-half to three-fourths less, and the
+after effects are far less nauseating and unpleasant.
+
+As an agent in labor where an anaesthetic is indicated, it is claimed by
+one who has employed it (Dr. Hews) in nearly every case for three years, he
+has used "rapid breathing" solely, and to the exclusion of chloroform and
+ether. For this I have his assertion, and have no doubt of it whatever, for
+if any agent could break down the action of the voluntary muscles of the
+parts involved, which prevent the involuntary muscles of the uterus from
+having their fullest effect, it is this. The very act of rapid breathing so
+affects the muscles of the abdomen as to force the contents of the uterus
+downward or outward, while the specific effect of the air at the end of a
+minute's breathing leaves the subject in a semi-prostrate condition, giving
+the uterus full chance to act in the interim, because free of the will to
+make any attempt at withholding the involuntary muscles of the uterus from
+doing their natural work. It is self evident; and in this agent we claim
+here a boon of inestimable value. And not least in such cases is, there is
+no danger of hemorrhage, since the cause of the effect is soon removed.
+
+In attestation of many cases where it has been tried, I have asked the
+mother, and, in some cases, the attendants, whether anything else had been
+given, and whether the time was very materially lessened, there has been
+but one response, and that in its favor.
+
+Gentlemen, if we are not mistaken in this, you will agree with me in saying
+that it is no mean thing, and should be investigated by intelligent men and
+reported upon. From my own knowledge of its effects in my practice, I am
+bound to believe this gentleman's record.
+
+I further claim for it a special application in dislocations. It has
+certainly peculiar merits here, as the will is so nearly subjugated by
+it as to render the patient quite powerless to resist your effort at
+replacing, and at the same time the pain is subdued.
+
+It is not necessary I should further continue special applications; when
+its _modus operandi_ is understood, its adaptation to many contingencies
+will of a sequence follow.
+
+It is well just here, before passing to the next point of consideration, to
+answer a query which may arise at this juncture:
+
+What are the successive stages of effects upon the economy from its
+commencement until the full effect is observed, and what proof have I that
+it was due to the amount of air inhaled?
+
+The heart's action is not increased more than from seventy (the average) to
+eighty and sometimes ninety, but is much enfeebled, or throwing a lesser
+quantity of blood. The face becomes suffused, as in blowing a fire or in
+stooping, which continues until the breathing is suspended, when the
+face becomes paler. (Have not noticed any purple as from asphyxia by a
+deprivation of oxygen.) The vision becomes darkened, and a giddiness soon
+appears. The voluntary muscles furthest from the heart seem first to be
+affected, and the feet and hands, particularly the latter, have a numbness
+at their ends, which increases, until in many cases there is partial
+paralysis as far as the elbow, while the limbs become fixed. The hands are
+so thoroughly affected that, when open, the patient is powerless to close
+them and _vice versa_. There is a vacant gaze from the eyes and looking
+into space without blinking of the eyelids for a half minute or more. The
+head seems incapable of being held erect, and there is no movement of the
+arms or legs as is usual when in great pain. There is no disposition on the
+part of the patient to take hold of the operator's hand or interfere with
+the operation.
+
+Many go on breathing mechanically after the tooth is removed, as if nothing
+had occurred. Some are aware that the tooth has been extracted, and say
+they felt it; others could not tell what had been accomplished. The
+majority of cases have an idea of what is being done, but are powerless to
+resist.
+
+With the very intelligent, or those who stop to reason, I have to teach
+them the peculiarities of being sensible of touch and not of pain.
+
+One very interesting case I will state. In extracting seven teeth for a
+lady who was very _unwilling_ to believe my statement as to touch and no
+pain, I first removed three teeth after having inhaled for one minute, and
+when fully herself, she stated that she could not understand why there was
+no pain while she was conscious of each one extracted; it was preposterous
+to believe such an effect could be possible, as her reason told her that
+there is connected with tooth extracting pain in the part, and of severe
+character, admitting, though, she felt no pain. She allowed one to be
+removed without anything, and she could easily distinguish the change, and
+exclaimed, "It is all the difference imaginable!" When the other three were
+extracted, there was perfect success again as with the first three.
+
+One of the most marked proofs of the effects of rapid breathing was that of
+a boy of eleven years of age for whom I had to extract the upper and lower
+first permanent molars on each side. He breathed for nearly a minute, when
+I removed in about twenty seconds all four of the teeth, without a moment's
+intermission or the stopping the vigorous breathing; and not a murmur,
+sigh, or tear afterward.
+
+He declared there was no pain, and we needed no such assertion, for there
+was not the first manifestation from him that he was undergoing such a
+severe operation.
+
+Another case, the same day, when I had to extract the superior wisdom teeth
+on both sides for an intelligent young lady of eighteen years, where I had
+to use two pairs of forceps on each tooth (equivalent to extraction of four
+teeth), and she was so profoundly affected afterward that she could; not
+tell me what had been done other than that I had touched her four times.
+She was overcome from its effects for at least a minute afterward. She was
+delighted.
+
+With such severe tests I fear very little the result in any case I can have
+them do as I bid.
+
+There can be no mistake that there is a _specific action_ from something.
+It cannot be personal magnetism or mesmeric influence exerted by me, for
+such cases are rare, averaging about 10 per cent, only of all classes.
+Besides, in mesmeric influence the time has nothing to do with it; whereas,
+in my cases, it cannot last over a half minute or minute at most. It cannot
+be fear, as such cases are generally more apt to get hurt the worse. It is
+not diversion of mind alone, as we have an effect above it.
+
+There is no better way of testing whether pain has been felt than by taking
+the lacerated or contused gums of the patient between the index finger
+and thumb and making a gentle pressure to collapse the alveolar borders;
+invariably, they will cry out lustily, _that is pain_! This gives undoubted
+proof of a specific agent. There is no attempt upon my _own_ part to exert
+any influence over my patients in any way other than that they shall
+believe what I say in regard to _giving_ them _no pain_ and in the
+following of my orders. Any one who knows how persons become mesmerized can
+attest that it was not the _operator who forces them under it against
+their will_, but it is a peculiar state into which any one who has within
+themselves this temperament can _place_ themselves where any one who knows
+how can have control. It is not the will of the operator. I therefore
+dismiss this as unworthy of consideration in connection with rapid
+breathing.
+
+Then you may now ask, To what do I attribute this very singular phenomenon?
+
+Any one who followed, in the earlier part of this paper, the course of
+the argument in my soliloquy, after twenty years had elapsed from my
+observation upon myself of the analgesic effects of chloroform, can almost
+give something of an answer.
+
+That you may the more easily grasp what I shall say, I will ask you, If it
+be possible for any human being to make one hundred inhalations in a minute
+and the heart's action is not increased more than ten or twenty pulsations
+over the normal, what should be the effect upon the brain and nerve
+centers?
+
+If the function of oxygen in common air is to set free in the blood,
+either in the capillaries alone, or throughout the whole of the arterial
+circulation, carbonic acid gas; and that it cannot escape from the system
+unless it do so in the lungs as it passes in the general current--except
+a trace that is removed by the skin and kidneys--and that the quantity of
+carbonic acid gas set free is in exact relation to the amount of oxygen
+taken into the blood, what effect _must be_ manifested where one hundred
+respirations in one minute are made--five or six times the normal
+number--while the heart is only propelling the blood a very little faster
+through the lungs, and _more feebly_--say 90 pulsations at most, when to
+be in proportion it should be 400 to 100 respirations to sustain life any
+length of time?
+
+You cannot deny the fact that a definite amount of oxygen can be absorbed
+and is absorbed as fast as it is carried into the lungs, even if there be
+one hundred respirations to the minute, while the pulsations of the heart
+are only ninety! Nature has _made it_ possible to breathe so rapidly to
+meet any emergency; and we can well see its beautiful application in the
+normal action of both the heart and lungs while one is violently running.
+
+What would result, and that very speedily, were the act of respiration to
+remain at the standard--say 18 or 20--when the heart is in violent action
+from this running? Asphyxia would surely end the matter! And why? The
+excessive exercise of the whole body is setting free from the tissues such
+an amount of excretive matter, and carbon more largely than all the others,
+that, without a relative action of the lungs to admit the air that oxygen
+may be absorbed, carbonic acid gas cannot be liberated through the lungs
+as fast as the waste carbon of the overworked tissues is being made by
+disassimilation from this excess of respiration.
+
+You are already aware how small a quantity of carbonic acid in excess in
+the air will seriously affect life. Even 2 to 3 per cent, in a short time
+will prove fatal. In ordinary respiration of 20 to the minute the average
+of carbonic acid exhaled is 4.35.
+
+From experiments long ago made by Vierordt--see Carpenter, p. 524--you will
+see the relative per cent, of carbonic acid exhaled from a given number of
+respirations. When he was breathing six times per minute, 5.5 per cent of
+the exhaled air was carbonic acid; twelve times, 4.2; twenty-four times,
+3.3; forty-eight times, 3; ninety-six times, 2.6.
+
+Remember this is based upon the whole number of respirations in the minute
+and not each exhalation--which latter could not be measured by the most
+minute method.
+
+Let us deduct the minimum amount, 2.6 per cent, of carbonic acid when
+breathing ninety-six times per minute, from the average, at twenty per
+minute, or the normal standard, which is recorded in Carpenter, p. 524, as
+4.35 per minute, and we have retained in the circulation nearly 2 per cent.
+of carbonic acid; that, at the average, would have passed off through the
+lungs without any obstruction, and life equalized; but it not having been
+thrown off as fast as it should have been, must, of necessity, be left to
+prey upon the brain and nerve centers; and as 2 to 3 per cent., we are
+told, will so poison the blood, life is imperiled and that speedily.
+
+It is not necessary we should argue the point as to whether oxygen
+displaces carbonic acid in the tissues proper or the capillaries. The
+theory of Lavoisier on this point has been accepted.
+
+We know furthermore, as more positive, that tissues placed in an atmosphere
+of oxygen will set free carbonic acid, and that carbonic acid has a
+paralyzing effect upon the human hand held in it for a short time. The
+direct and speedy effects of this acid upon the delicate nervous element of
+the brain is so well known that it must be accepted as law. One of the most
+marked effects is the suspension of locomotion of the legs and arms,
+and the direct loss of will power which must supervene before voluntary
+muscular inactivity, which amounts to partial paralysis in the hands or
+feet, or peripheral extremities of the same.
+
+Now that we have sufficient evidence from the authorities that carbonic
+acid can be retained in the blood by excessive breathing, and enough to
+seriously affect the brain, and what its effects are when taken directly
+into the lungs in excess, we can enter upon what I have held as the most
+reasonable theory of the phenomenon produced by rapid breathing for
+analgesic purposes; which _theory_ was not _first_ conceived and the
+process made to yield to it, but the phenomenon was long observed, and
+from the repetition of the effects and their close relationship to that
+of carbonic acid on the economy, with the many experiments performed
+upon myself, I am convinced that what I shall now state will be found to
+substantiate my discovery. Should it not be found to coincide with what
+some may say is physiological truth, it will not invalidate the discovery
+itself; for of that I am far more positive than Harvey was of the discovery
+of the circulation of the blood; or of Galileo of the spherical shape of
+the earth. And I ask that it shall not be judged by my theory, but from the
+practice.
+
+It should have as much chance for investigation as the theory of
+Julius Robert Mayer, upon which he founded, or which gave rise to the
+establishment of one of the most important scientific truths--"the
+conservation of energy," and finally the "correlation of forces," which
+theory I am not quite sure was correct, although it was accepted, and as
+yet, I have not seen it questioned.
+
+In all due respect to him I quote it from the sketch of that remarkable
+man, as given in the _Popular Science Monthly_, as specially bearing on my
+discovery:
+
+"Mayer observed while living in Java, that the _venous blood_ of some of
+his patients had a singularly bright red color. The observation riveted
+his attention; he reasoned upon it, and came to the conclusion that the
+brightness of the color was due to the fact that a less amount of oxidation
+was sufficient to keep up the temperature of the body in a hot climate than
+a cold one. The darkness of the venous blood he regarded as the visible
+sign of the energy of the oxidation."
+
+My observation leads me to the contrary, that the higher the temperature
+the more rapid the breathing to get clear of the excess of carbon, and
+hence more oxygenation of the blood which will arterialize the venous
+blood, unless there is a large amount of carbonized matter from the tissues
+to be taken up.
+
+Nor must it be denied because of the reasoning as presented to my mind by
+some outside influence in my soliloquy when I first exclaimed, "Nature's
+anaesthetic," where the argument as to the effects of nitrous oxide gas
+being due to an excess of oxygen was urged, and that common air breathed in
+excess would do the same thing.
+
+I am not sure that _it_ was correct, for the effects of nitrous oxide is,
+perhaps, due to a deprivation of mechanically mixed air.
+
+Knowing what I do of theory and practice, I can say with assurance that
+there is not a medical practitioner who would long ponder in any urgent
+case as to the thousand and one theories of the action of remedies; but
+would resort to the _practical_ experience of others and his own finally.
+(What surgeon ever stops to ask how narcotics effect their influence?)
+After nearly thirty years of association with ether and chloroform, who can
+positively answer as to their _modus operandi?_ It is thus with nearly the
+whole domain of medicine. It is not yet, by far, among the sciences, with
+immutable laws, such as we have in chemistry. Experimentation is giving us
+more specific knowledge, and "practice alone has tended to make perfect."
+(Then, gentlemen will not set at naught my assertion and practical results.
+When I have stated my case in full it is for _you_ to disprove both the
+theory and practice annunciated. So far as I am concerned I am responsible
+for both.)
+
+You will please bear with me for a few minutes in my attempt at theory.
+
+The annulling of pain, and, in some cases, its complete annihilation,
+can be accomplished in many ways. Narcotics, anaesthetics--local and
+internal--direct action of cold, and mesmeric or physiological influence,
+have all their advocates, and each _will surely_ do its work. There is one
+thing about which, I think, we can all agree, as to these agencies; unless
+the _will_ is partially and in some cases completely subjugated there can
+be no primary or secondary effect. The voluntary muscles must become wholly
+or partially paralyzed for the time. Telegraphic communication must be cut
+off from the brain, that there be no reflex action. It is not necessary
+there should be separate nerves to convey pleasure and pain any more than
+there should be two telegraphic wires to convey two messages.
+
+If, then, we are certain of this, it matters little as to whether it was
+done by corpuscular poisoning and anaemia as from chloroform or hyperaemia
+from ether.
+
+I think we are now prepared to show clearly the causes which effect the
+phenomena in "rapid breathing."
+
+The first thing enlisted is the _diversion of the will force_ in the act of
+forced respiration at a moment when the heart and lungs have been in normal
+reciprocal action (20 respirations to 80 pulsations), which act could
+not be made and carried up to 100 respirations per minute without such
+concentrated effort that ordinary pain could make no impression upon the
+brain while this abstraction is kept up.
+
+Second. There is a specific effect resulting from enforced respiration of
+100 to the minute, due to the _excess of carbonic acid gas set free from
+the tissues_, generated by this enforced normal act of throwing into the
+lungs _five times_ the normal amount of oxygen in one minute demanded, when
+the heart has not been aroused to exalted action, which comes from violent
+exercise in running or where one is suddenly startled, which excess of
+carbonic acid cannot escape in the same ratio from the lungs, since the
+heart does not respond to the proportionate overaction of the lungs.
+
+Third.--Hyperaemia is the last in this chain of effects, which is due to
+the excessive amount of air passing into the lungs preventing but little
+more than the normal quantity of blood from passing from the heart into
+the arterial circulation, but draws it up in the brain with its excess of
+carbonic acid gas to act also directly upon the brain as well as throughout
+the capillary and venous system, and as well upon the heart, the same as if
+it were suspended in that gas outside the body.
+
+These are evident to the senses of any liberal observer who can witness a
+subject rapidly breathing.
+
+Some ask why is not this same thing produced when one has been running
+rapidly for a few minutes? For a very good reason: in this case the rapid
+inhalations are preceded by the violent throes of the heart to propel the
+carbonized blood from the overworked tissues and have them set free at the
+lungs where the air is rushing in at the normal ratio of four to one. This
+is not an abnormal action, but is of necessity, or asphyxia would instantly
+result and the runner would drop. Such sometimes occurs where the runner
+exerts himself too violently at the very outset; and to do so he is
+compelled to hold his breath for this undue effort, and the heart cannot
+carry the blood fast enough. In this instance there is an approach to
+analgesia as from rapid breathing.
+
+Let me take up the first factor--_diversion of will_--and show that nature
+invariably resorts to a sudden inhalation to prevent severe infliction of
+pain being felt. It is the panacea to childhood's frequent bruises and
+cuts, and every one will remember how when a finger has been hurt it is
+thrust into the mouth and a violent number of efforts at rapid inhalation
+is effected until ease comes. By others it is subdued by a fit of crying,
+which if you will but imitate the sobs, will find how frequently the
+respirations are made.
+
+One is startled, and the heart would seem to jump out of the chest; in
+quick obedience to nature the person is found making a number of quick
+inhalations, which subdue the heart and pacify the will by diversion from
+the cause.
+
+The same thing is observed in the lower animals. I will relate a case:
+
+An elephant had been operated upon for a diseased eye which gave him great
+pain, for which he was unprepared, and he was wrathy at the keeper and
+surgeon. It soon passed off, and the result of the application was so
+beneficial to the animal that when brought out in a few days after, to have
+another touch of caustic to the part, he was prepared for them; and, just
+before the touch, he inflated the lungs to their fullest extent, which
+occupied more time than the effect of the caustic, when he made no effort
+at resistance and showed no manifestation of having been pained.
+
+In many cases of extraction of the temporary teeth of children, I make them
+at the instant I grasp the tooth take _one_ very violent inhalation, which
+is sufficient. Mesmeric anaesthesia can well be classified under diversion
+or subjugation of the will, but can be effected in but a small percentage
+of the cases. To rely upon this first or primary effect, except in
+instantaneous cases, would be failure.
+
+The second factor is the one upon which I can rely in such of the cases as
+come into my care, save when I cannot induce them to make such a number of
+respirations as is absolutely necessary. The _whole secret of success lies_
+in the greatest number of respirations that can be effected in from 60 to
+90 seconds, and that without any intermission. If the heart, by the _alow
+method of respiration_, is pulsating in ratio of four to one respiration,
+_no effect can be induced_.
+
+When the respirations are, say, 100 to the minute, and made with all the
+energy the patient can muster, and are kept up while the operation is going
+on, there can hardly be a failure in the minor operations.
+
+It is upon this point many of you may question the facts. Before I tried
+it for the first time upon my own person, I arrived at the same conclusion
+from a course of argument, that rapid breathing would control the heart's
+action and pacify it, and even reduce it below the normal standard under my
+urgent respirations.
+
+In view of the many applications made I feel quite sure in my belief that,
+inasmuch as the heart's action is but slightly accelerated, though with
+less force from rapid breathing at the rate of 100 to the minute, there is
+such an excess of carbonic acid gas set free and crowding upon the heart
+and capillaries of the brain, without a chance to escape by the lungs, that
+it is the same to all intents as were carbonic acid breathed through the
+lungs in common air. Look at the result after this has been kept up for a
+minute or more? During the next minute the respirations are not more than
+one or two, and the heart has fallen really below, in some cases, the
+standard beat, showing most conclusively that once oxygenation has taken
+place and that the free carbonic acid gas has been so completely consumed,
+that there is no involuntary call through the pneumogastric nerve for a
+supply of oxygen.
+
+If any physiological facts can be proven at all, then I feel quite sure of
+your verdict upon my side.
+
+There is no one thing that goes so far to prove the theory of Lavoisier
+regarding the action of oxygen in the tissues and capillaries for
+converting carbon into carbonic acid gas instead of the lungs, as held
+prior to that time, and still held by many who are not posted in late
+experiments. At the time I commenced this practice I must confess I knew
+nothing of it. The study of my cases soon led me to the same theory of
+Lavoisier, as I could not make the phenomena agree with the old theory of
+carbonic acid generated only in the lungs.
+
+When Vierordt was performing his experiments upon himself in rapid
+breathing from six times per minute to ninety-six, I cannot understand
+why he failed to observe and record what did certainly result--an extreme
+giddiness with muscular prostration and numbness in the peripheries of the
+hands and feet, with suffusion of the face, and such a loss of locomotion
+as to prevent standing erect without desiring support. Besides, the very
+great difference he found in the amount of carbonic acid retained in the
+circulation, the very cause of the phenomena just spoken of.
+
+One thing comes in just here to account for the lack of respiration the
+minute after the violent effort. The residual air, which in a normal state
+is largely charged with carbonic acid, has been so completely exhausted
+that some moments are consumed before there is sufficient again to call
+upon the will for its discharge.
+
+As to hyperaemia you will also assent, now that my second factor is
+explained; but it is so nearly allied to the direct effect of excessive
+respiration that we can well permit it to pass without argument. If
+hyperaemia _is present_, we have a more certain and rather more lasting
+effect.
+
+In conclusion, I will attempt to prognosticate the application of this
+principle to the cure of many diseases of chronic nature, and especially
+tuberculosis; where from a diminished amount of air going into the lungs
+for want of capacity, and particularly for want of energy and inclination
+to breathe in full or excess, the tissues cannot get clear of their
+excrementitious material, and particularly the carbon, which must go to the
+lungs, this voluntary effort can be made frequently during the day to
+free the tissues and enable them to take nutritious material for their
+restoration to their standard of health.
+
+Air will be found of far more value than ever before as one of the greatest
+of factors in nutrition, and which is as necessary as proper food, and
+without which every organization must become diseased, and no true
+assimilation can take place without a due amount of oxygen is hourly
+and daily supplied by this extra aid of volition which has been so long
+overlooked.
+
+The pure oxygen treatment has certainly performed many cures; yet, when
+compared to the mechanical mixture and under the direct control of
+the will, at all times and seasons, there is no danger from excessive
+oxygenation as while oxygen is given. When every patient can be taught to
+rely upon this great safety valve of nature, there will be less need for
+medication, and the longevity of our race be increased with but little
+dread by mankind for that terrible monster consumption, which seems to have
+now unbounded control.
+
+When this theory I have here given you to-night is fully comprehended by
+the medical world and taught the public, together with the kind of foods
+necessary for every one in their respective occupation, location, and
+climate, we may expect a vast change in their physical condition and a hope
+for the future which will brighten as time advances.
+
+I herewith attach the sphygmographic tracings made upon myself by another,
+showing the state of the pulse as compared with the progress of the
+respiration.
+
+
+ADDENDA.
+
+Sphygmographic tracings of the pulse of the essayist. Normal pulse 60
+to the minute. Ten seconds necessary for the slip to pass under the
+instrument.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+A, A¹, normal pulse.
+
+B, pulse taken after breathing rapidly for 15 seconds when
+20 respirations had been taken.
+
+C, rapid breathing for 30 seconds, 43 respirations.
+
+D, " " 45 " 76 "
+
+E, " " 60 " 96 "
+F, pulse taken after rapid breathing for one minute, as in E, where no
+respiration had as yet been taken after the essayist had kept it up for
+that one minute. This was after 10 seconds had intervened.
+
+G, the same taken 50 seconds after, and still no respiration had been
+taken, the subject having no disposition to inhale, the blood having been
+over oxygenated.
+
+The pulse in E shows after 96 respirations but 14, or 84 per minute, and
+the force nearly as in the normal at A, A1.
+
+The record in B shows the force more markedly, but still normal in number.
+
+F and G show very marked diminution in the force, but the number of
+pulsations not over 72 per minute; G particularly so, the heart needing the
+stimulus of the oxygen for full power.
+
+The following incident which has but very recently been made known, gives
+most conclusive evidence of the truth of the theory and practice of rapid
+breathing.
+
+A Mexican went into the office of a dentist in one of the Mexican cities to
+have a tooth extracted by nitrous oxide gas.
+
+The dentist was not in, and the assistant was about to permit the patient
+to leave without removing the tooth, when the wife of the proprietor
+exclaimed that she had often assisted her husband in giving the gas, and
+that she would do so in this instance if the assistant would agree to
+extract the tooth. It was agreed. All being in readiness, the lady turned
+on as she supposed the gas, and the Mexican patient was ordered to breathe
+as fast as possible to make sure of the full effect and no doubt of the
+final success. The assistant was about to extract, but the wife insisted on
+his breathing more rapidly, whereupon the patient was observed to become
+very dark or purple in the face, which satisfied the lady that the
+full effect was manifested, and the tooth was extracted, to the great
+satisfaction of all concerned. While the gas was being taken by the Mexican
+the gasometer was noticed to rise higher and higher as the patient breathed
+faster, and not to sink as was usual when the gas had been previously
+administered. This led to an investigation of the reason of such an
+anomalous result, when to their utter surprise they found the valve was so
+turned by the wife that the Mexican had been breathing nothing but common
+air, and instead of exhaling into the surrounding air he violently forced
+it into the gasometer with the nitrous oxide gas, causing it to rise and
+not sink, which it should have done had the valve been properly turned by
+the passage of gas into the lungs of the patient.
+
+No more beautiful and positive trial could happen, and might not again by
+accident or inadvertence happen again in a lifetime.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.
+
+
+When a bottle of any liquor charged with carbonic acid under strong
+pressure, such as champagne, sparkling cider, seltzer water, etc., is
+uncorked, the contents often escape with considerable force, flow out, and
+are nearly all lost. Besides this, the noise made by the popping of the
+cork is not agreeable to most persons. To remedy these inconveniences
+there has been devised the simple apparatus which we represent in the
+accompanying cut, taken from _La Nature_. The device consists of a hollow,
+sharp-pointed tube, having one or two apertures in its upper extremity
+which are kept closed by a hollow piston fitting in the interior of the
+tube. This tube, or "tap," as it may be called, is supported on a firm base
+to which is attached a draught tube, and a small lever for actuating the
+piston. After the tap has been thrust through the cork of the bottle of
+liquor the contents may be drawn in any quantity and as often as wanted by
+simply pressing down the lever with the finger; this operation raises the
+piston so that its apertures correspond with those in the sides of the top,
+and the liquid thus finds access to the draught tube through the interior
+of the piston. By removing the pressure the piston descends and thus closes
+the vents. By means of this apparatus, then, the contents of any bottle of
+effervescing liquids may be as easily drawn off as are those contained in
+the ordinary siphon bottles in use.
+
+[Illustration: TAP FOR EFFERVESCING LIQUIDS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHEMICAL SOCIETY, LONDON, JAN. 20, 1881.
+
+PROF. H.E. ROSCOE, President, in the Chair.
+
+
+Mr. Vivian Lewes read a paper on "_Pentathionic Acid_." In March last the
+author, at the suggestion of Dr. Debus, undertook an investigation of
+pentathionic acid, the existence of which has been denied. The analyses
+of the liquid obtained by Wackenroder and others, by passing sulphureted
+hydrogen and sulphur dioxide through water, are based on the assumption
+that only one acid is present in the solution, and consequently do not
+establish the existence of pentathionic acid; as, for example, a mixture of
+one molecule of H_2S_4O_6 and one molecule of H_2S_6O_6 would give the same
+analytical results as H_2S_5O_6. Moreover, no salt of pentathionic acid has
+been prepared in a pure state. The author has succeeded in preparing barium
+pentathionate thus: A Wackenroder solution was about half neutralized with
+barium hydrate, filtered, and the clear solution evaporated _in vacuo_ over
+sulphuric acid. After eighteen days crystals, which proved to be barium
+pentathionate + 3 molecules of water, formed. These crystals were
+separated, and the liquid further evaporated, when a second crop was
+obtained intermediate in composition between the tetra and pentathionate.
+These were separated, and the mother-liquor on standing deposited some
+oblong rectangular crystals. These on analysis proved to consist of baric
+pentathionate with three molecules of water. This salt dissolves readily in
+cold water; the solution is decomposed by strong potassic hydrate, baric
+sulphite, hyposulphites, and sulphur being formed. By a similar method of
+procedure the author obtained potassium pentathionate, anhydrous, and with
+one or two molecules of water. The author promises some further results
+with some other salts of the higher thionates.
+
+The president said that the society had to thank the author for a very
+complete research on the subject of pentathionic acid. He, however, begged
+to differ from him as to his statements concerning the researches of
+Messrs. Takamatsu and Smith; in his opinion these authors had proved the
+existence of pentathionic acid. He hoped that the crystals (which were very
+fine) would be measured.
+
+Dr. Debus said that no one had previously been able to make the salts of
+pentathionic acid, and expressed his sense of the great merit due to the
+author for his perseverance and success. The paper opened up some highly
+interesting theoretical speculations as to the existence of hexathionic
+acid. If potassium tetrathionate was dissolved in water it could be
+re-crystallized, but potassium pentathionate under similar circumstances
+splits into sulphur and tetrathionate; but a mixture of tetrathionate and
+pentathionate can be re-crystallized. It seemed as if the sulphur when
+eliminated from the pentathionate combined with the tetrathionate.
+
+Dr. Dupré asked Dr. Debus how it was that a molecule of pentathionate could
+be re-crystallized, whereas two molecules of pentathionate, which should,
+when half decomposed, furnish a molecule of tetra and a molecule of
+pentathionate, could not.
+
+Dr. Armstrong then read a _"Preliminary Note on some Hydrocarbons from
+Rosin Spirit."_ After giving an account of our knowledge of rosin spirit,
+the author described the result of the examination of the mixture of
+hydrocarbons remaining after heating it with sulphuric acid and diluting
+with half its volume of water and steam distilling. Thus treated rosin
+spirit furnishes about one-fourth of its volume of a colorless mobile
+liquid, which after long-continued fractional distillation is resolved into
+a variety of fractions boiling at temperatures from 95° to over 180°. Each
+of the fractions was treated with concentrated sulphuric acid, and the
+undissolved portions were then re-fractionated. The hydrocarbons dissolved
+by the acid were recovered by heating under pressure with hydrochloric
+acid. Besides a cymene and a toluene, which have already been shown to
+exist in rosin spirit, metaxylene was found to be present. The hydrocarbons
+insoluble in sulphuric acid are, apparently, all members of the C_nH_{2n}
+series; they are not, however, true homologues of ethylene, but hexhydrides
+of hydrocarbons of the benzene series. Hexhydro-toluene and probably
+hex-hydrometaxylene are present besides the hydrocarbon, C_10H_20, but it
+is doubtful if an intermediate term is also present. It is by no means
+improbable, however, that these hydrocarbons are, at least in part,
+products of the action of the sulphuric acid. Cahours and Kraemer's and
+Godzki's observations on the higher fractions of crude wood spirit, in
+fact, furnish a precedent for this view. Referring to the results obtained
+by Anderson, Tilden, and Renard, the author suggests that rosin spirit
+perhaps contains hydrides intermediate in composition between those of
+the C_nH_{2n-6} and C_nH_{2n} series, also derived like the latter from
+hydrocarbons of the benzene series. Finally, Dr Armstrong mentioned that
+the volatile portion of the distillate from the non-volatile product of the
+oxidation of oil of turpentine in moist air furnishes ordinary cymene when
+treated in the manner above described. The fact that rosin spirit yields a
+different cymene is, he considers, an argument against the view which
+has more than once been put forward, that rosin is directly derived from
+terpene. Probably resin and turpentine, though genetically related, are
+products of distinct processes.
+
+The next paper was _"On the Determination of the Relative Weight of Single
+Molecules,"_ by E. Vogel, of San Francisco. This paper, which was taken as
+read, consists of a lengthy theoretical disquisition, in which the author
+maintains the following propositions: That the combining weights of all
+elements are one third of their present values; the assumption that equal
+volumes of gases contain equal numbers of molecules does not hold good;
+that the present theory of valency is not supported by chemical facts, and
+that its elimination would be no small gain for chemistry in freeing it
+of an element full of mystery, uncertainty, and complication; that the
+distinction between atoms and molecules will no longer be necessary;
+that the facts of specific heat do not lend any support to the theory of
+valency. The paper concludes as follows: "The cause of chemical action is
+undoubtedly atmospheric pressure, which under ordinary conditions is equal
+to the weight of 76 cubic centimeters of mercury, one of which equals 6.145
+mercury molecules, so that the whole pressure equals 467 mercury molecules.
+This force--which with regard to its chemical effect on molecules can be
+multiplied by means of heat--is amply sufficient to bring about the highest
+degree of molecular specific gravity by the reduction of the molecular
+volumes. To it all molecules are exposed and subjected unalterably, and
+if not accepted as the cause of chemical action, its influence has to be
+eliminated to allow the introduction and display of other forces."
+
+The next communication was _"On the Synthetical Production of Ammonia,
+by the Combination of Hydrogen and Nitrogen in Presence of Heated Spongy
+Platinum (Preliminary Notice),"_ by G. S. Johnson. Some experiments, in
+which pure nitrogen was passed over heated copper containing occluded
+hydrogen, suggested to the author the possibility of the formation of
+ammonia; only minute traces were formed. On passing, however, a mixture of
+pure nitrogen (from ammonium nitrite) and hydrogen over spongy platinum at
+a low red heat, abundant evidence was obtained of the synthesis of ammonia.
+The gases were passed, before entering the tube containing the platinum,
+through a potash bulb containing Nessler reagent, which remained colorless.
+On the contrary, the gas issuing from the platinum rapidly turned Nessler
+reagent brown, and in a few minutes turned faintly acid litmus solution
+blue; the odor of NH_3 was also perceptible. In one experiment 0.0144
+gramme of ammonia was formed in two hours and a half. The author promises
+further experiment as to the effect of temperature, rate of the gaseous
+current, and substitution of palladium for platinum. The author synthesized
+some ammonia before the Society with complete success.
+
+The President referred to the synthesis of ammonia from its elements
+recently effected by Donkin, and remarked that apparently the ammonia was
+formed in much larger quantities by the process proposed by the author of
+the present paper.
+
+Mr. Warington suggested that some HCl gas should be simultaneously passed
+with the nitrogen and hydrogen, and that the temperature of the spongy
+platinum should be kept just below the temperature at which NH_3
+dissociates, in order to improve the yield of NH_3.
+
+_"On the Oxidation of Organic Matter in Water"_ by A. Downes. The author
+considers that the mere presence of oxygen in contact with the organic
+matter has but little oxidizing action unless lowly organisms, as bacteria,
+etc. be simultaneously present. Sunlight has apparently considerable
+effect in promoting the oxidation of organic matter. The author quotes the
+following experiment: A sample of river water was filtered through paper.
+It required per 10,000 parts 0.236 oxygen as permanganate. A second portion
+was placed in a flask plugged with cotton wool, and exposed to sunlight for
+a week; it then required 0.200. A third portion after a week, but excluded
+from light, required 0.231. A fourth was boiled for five minutes, plugged,
+and then exposed to sunlight for a week; required 0.198. In a second
+experiment with well water a similar result was obtained; more organic
+matter was oxidized when the organisms had been killed by the addition of
+sulphuric acid than when the original water was allowed to stand for an
+equal length of time. The author also discusses the statement made by Dr.
+Frankland that there is less ground for assuming that the organized and
+living matter of sewage is oxidized in a flow of twelve miles of a river
+than for assuming that dead organic matter is oxidized in a similar
+flow.--_Chem. News._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ROSE OIL, OR OTTO OF ROSES.
+
+By CHARLES G. WARNFORD LOCK.
+
+
+This celebrated perfume is the volatile essential oil distilled from the
+flowers of some varieties of rose. The botany of roses appears to be in a
+transition and somewhat unsatisfactory state. Thus the otto-yielding rose
+is variously styled _Rosa damascena, R. sempervirens, R. moschata, R.
+gallica, R. centifolia, R. provincialis_. It is pretty generally agreed
+that the kind grown for its otto in Bulgaria in the damask rose (_R.
+damascena_), a variety induced by long cultivation, as it is not to be
+found wild. It forms a bush, usually three to four feet, but sometimes six
+feet high; its flowers are of moderate size, semi-double, and arranged
+several on a branch, though not in clusters or bunches. In color, they are
+mostly light-red; some few are white, and said to be less productive of
+otto.
+
+The utilization of the delicious perfume of the rose was attempted, with
+more or less success, long prior to the comparatively modern process of
+distilling its essential oil. The early methods chiefly in vogue were the
+distillation of rose-water, and the infusion of roses in olive oil, the
+latter flourishing in Europe generally down to the last century, and
+surviving at the present day in the South of France. The butyraceous oil
+produced by the distillation of roses for making rose-water in this country
+is valueless as a perfume; and the real otto was scarcely known in British
+commerce before the present century.
+
+The profitable cultivation of roses for the preparation of otto is limited
+chiefly by climatic conditions. The odoriferous constitutent of the otto
+is a liquid containing oxygen, the solid hydrocarbon or stearoptene, with
+which it is combined, being absolutely devoid of perfume. The proportion
+which this inodorous solid constituents bears to the liquid perfume
+increases with the unsuitability of the climate, varying from about 18 per
+cent. in Bulgarian oil, to 35 and even 68 per cent. in rose oils distilled
+in France and England. This increase in the proportion of stearoptene is
+also shown by the progressively heightened fusing-point of rose oils from
+different sources: thus, while Bulgarian oil fuses at about 61° to 64°
+Fahr., an Indian sample required 68° Fahr.; one from the South of France,
+70° to 73° Fahr.; one from Paris, 84° Fahr.; and one obtained in making
+rose-water in London, 86° to 89½° Fahr. Even in the Bulgarian oil, a
+notable difference is observed between that produced on the hills and that
+from the lowlands.
+
+It is, therefore, not surprising that the culture of roses, and extraction
+of their perfume, should have originated in the East. Persia produced
+rose-water at an early date, and the town of Nisibin, north-west of Mosul,
+was famous for it in the 14th century. Shiraz, in the 17th century,
+prepared both rose water and otto, for export to other parts of Persia, as
+well as all over India. The Perso-Indian trade in rose oil, which continued
+to possess considerable importance in the third quarter of the 18th
+century, is declining, and has nearly disappeared; but the shipments of
+rose-water still maintain a respectable figure. The value, in rupees, of
+the exports of rose-water from Bushire in 1879, were--4,000 to India, 1,500
+to Java, 200 to Aden and the Red Sea, 1,000 to Muscat and dependencies, 200
+to Arab coast of Persian Gulf and Bahrein, 200 to Persian coast and Mekran,
+and 1,000 to Zanzibar. Similar statistics relating to Lingah, in the same
+year, show--Otto: 400 to Arab coast of Persian Gulf, and Bahrein; and 250
+to Persian coast and Mekran. And Bahrein--Persian Otto: 2,200 to Koweit,
+Busrah, and Bagdad. Rose-water: 200 to Arab coast of Persian Gulf, and
+1,000 to Koweit, Busrah, and Bagdad.
+
+India itself has a considerable area devoted to rose-gardens, as at
+Ghazipur, Lahore, Amritzur, and other places, the kind of rose being _R.
+damascena_, according to Brandis. Both rose-water and otto are produced.
+The flowers are distilled with double their weight of water in clay stills;
+the rose-water (_goolabi pani_) thus obtained is placed in shallow vessels,
+covered with moist muslin to keep out dust and flies, and exposed all night
+to the cool air, or fanned. In the morning, the film of oil, which has
+collected on the top, is skimmed off by a feather, and transferred to a
+small phial. This is repeated for several nights, till almost the whole of
+the oil has separated. The quantity of the product varies much, and three
+different authorities give the following figures: (_a_) 20,000 roses to
+make 1 rupee's weight (176 gr.) of otto; (_b_) 200,000 to make the same
+weight; (_c_) 1,000 roses afford less than 2 gr. of otto. The color ranges
+from green to bright-amber, and reddish. The oil (otto) is the most
+carefully bottled; the receptacles are hermetically sealed with wax, and
+exposed to the full glare of the sun for several days. Rose water deprived
+of otto is esteemed much inferior to that which has not been so treated.
+When bottled, it is also exposed to the sun for a fortnight at least.
+
+The Mediterranean countries of Africa enter but feebly into this industry,
+and it is a little remarkable that the French have not cultivated it in
+Algeria. Egypt's demand for rose-water and rose-vinegar is supplied from
+Medinet Fayum, south-west of Cairo. Tunis has also some local reputation
+for similar products. Von Maltzan says that the rose there grown for otto
+is the dog-rose (_R. canina_), and that it is extremely fragrant, 20 lb.
+of the flower yielding about 1 dr. of otto. Genoa occasionally imports a
+little of this product, which is of excellent quality. In the south of
+France rose gardens occupy a large share of attention, about Grasse,
+Cannes, and Nice; they chiefly produce rose-water, much of which is
+exported to England. The essence (otto) obtained by the distillation of the
+Provence rose (_R. provincialis_) has a characteristic perfume, arising, it
+is believed, from the bees transporting the pollen of the orange flowers
+into the petals of the roses. The French otto is richer in stearoptene than
+the Turkish, nine grammes crystallizing in a liter (1¾ pint) of alcohol at
+the same temperature as 18 grammes of the Turkish. The best preparations
+are made at Cannes and Grasse. The flowers are not there treated for the
+otto, but are submitted to a process of maceration in fat or oil, ten
+kilos. of roses being required to impregnate one kilo. of fat. The price of
+the roses varies from 50c. to 1 fr. 25c. per kilo.
+
+But the one commercially important source of otto of roses is a
+circumscribed patch of ancient Thrace or modern Bulgaria, stretching along
+the southern slopes of the central Balkans, and approximately included
+between the 25th and 26th degrees of east longitude, and the 42d and 43d of
+north latitude. The chief rose-growing districts are Philippopoli, Chirpan,
+Giopcu, Karadshah-Dagh, Kojun-Tepe, Eski-Sara, Jeni-Sara, Bazardshik, and
+the center and headquarters of the industry, Kazanlik (Kisanlik),
+situated in a beautiful undulating plain, in the valley of the Tunja. The
+productiveness of the last-mentioned district may be judged from the fact
+that, of the 123 Thracian localities carrying on the preparation of otto in
+1877--they numbered 140 in 1859--42 belong to it. The only place affording
+otto on the northern side of the Balkans is Travina. The geological
+formation throughout is syenite, the decomposition of which has provided a
+soil so fertile as to need but little manuring. The vegetation, according
+to Baur, indicates a climate differing but slightly from that of the Black
+Forest, the average summer temperatures being stated at 82° Fahr. at noon,
+and 68° Fahr. in the evening. The rose-bushes nourish best and live longest
+on sandy, sun-exposed (south and south-east aspect) slopes. The flowers
+produced by those growing on inclined ground are dearer and more esteemed
+than any raised on level land, being 50 per cent. richer in oil, and that
+of a stronger quality. This proves the advantage of thorough drainage. On
+the other hand, plantations at high altitudes yield less oil, which is of a
+character that readily congeals, from an insufficiency of summer heat. The
+districts lying adjacent to and in the mountains are sometimes visited
+by hard frosts, which destroy or greatly reduce the crop. Floods also
+occasionally do considerable damage. The bushes are attacked at intervals
+and in patches by a blight similar to that which injures the vines of the
+country.
+
+The bushes are planted in hedge-like rows in gardens and fields, at
+convenient distances apart, for the gathering of the crop. They are seldom
+manured. The planting takes place in spring and autumn; the flowers attain
+perfection in April and May, and the harvest lasts from May till the
+beginning of June. The expanded flowers are gathered before sunrise,
+often with the calyx attached; such as are not required for immediate
+distillation are spread out in cellars, but all are treated within the day
+on which they are plucked. Baur states that, if the buds develop slowly,
+by reason of cool damp weather, and are not much exposed to sun-heat, when
+about to be collected, a rich yield of otto, having a low solidifying
+point, is the result, whereas, should the sky be clear and the temperature
+high at or shortly before the time of gathering, the product is diminished
+and is more easily congealable. Hanbury, on the contrary, when distilling
+roses in London, noticed that when they had been collected on fine dry
+days the rose-water had most volatile oil floating upon it, and that, when
+gathered in cool rainy weather, little or no volatile oil separated.
+
+The flowers are not salted, nor subjected to any other treatment, before
+being conveyed in baskets, on the heads of men and women and backs of
+animals, to the distilling apparatus. This consists of a tinned-copper
+still, erected on a semicircle of bricks, and heated by a wood fire; from
+the top passes a straight tin pipe, which obliquely traverses a tub kept
+constantly filled with cold water, by a spout, from some convenient
+rivulet, and constitutes the condenser. Several such stills are usually
+placed together, often beneath the shade of a large tree. The still is
+charged with 25 to 50 lb. of roses, not previously deprived of their
+calyces, and double the volume of spring water. The distillation is carried
+on for about l½ hours, the result being simply a very oily rose-water
+(_ghyul suyu_). The exhausted flowers are removed from the still, and the
+decoction is used for the next distillation, instead of fresh water.
+The first distillates from each apparatus are mixed and distilled by
+themselves, one-sixth being drawn off; the residue replaces spring water
+for subsequent operations. The distillate is received in long-necked
+bottles, holding about 1¼ gallon. It is kept in them for a day or two, at a
+temperature exceeding 59° Fahr., by which time most of the oil, fluid
+and bright, will have reached the surface. It is skimmed off by a small,
+long-handled, fine-orificed tin funnel, and is then ready for sale. The
+last-run rose-water is extremely fragrant, and is much prized locally for
+culinary and medicinal purposes. The quantity and quality of the otto are
+much influenced by the character of the water used in distilling. When
+hard spring water is employed, the otto is rich in stearoptene, but less
+transparent and fragrant. The average quantity of the product is estimated
+by Baur at 0.037 to 0.040 per cent.; another authority says that 3,200
+kilos. of roses give 1 kilo. of oil.
+
+Pure otto, carefully distilled, is at first colorless, but speedily becomes
+yellowish; its specific gravity is 0.87 at 72.5° Fahr.; its boiling-point
+is 444° Fahr.; it solidifies at 51.8° to 60.8° Fahr., or still higher; it
+is soluble in absolute alcohol, and in acetic acid. The most usual and
+reliable tests of the quality of an otto are (1) its odor, (2) its
+congealing point, (3) its crystallization. The odor can be judged only
+after long experience. A good oil should congeal well in five minutes at
+a temperature of 54.5° Fahr.; fraudulent additions lower the congealing
+point. The crystals of rose-stearoptene are light, feathery, shining
+plates, filling the whole liquid. Almost the only material used for
+artificially heightening the apparent proportion of stearoptene is said to
+be spermaceti, which is easily recognizable from its liability to settle
+down in a solid cake, and from its melting at 122° Fahr., whereas
+stearoptene fuses at 91.4° Fahr. Possibly paraffin wax would more easily
+escape detection.
+
+The adulterations by means of other essential oils are much more difficult
+of discovery, and much more general; in fact, it is said that none of the
+Bulgarian otto is completely free from this kind of sophistication. The
+oils employed for the purpose are certain of the grass oils (_Andropogon_
+and _Cymbopogon spp._) notably that afforded by _Andropogon, Schoenanthus_
+called _idris-yaghi_ by the Turks, and commonly known to Europeans as
+"geranium oil," though quite distinct from true geranium oil. The addition
+is generally made by sprinkling it upon the rose-leaves before distilling.
+It is largely produced in the neighborhood of Delhi, and exported to
+Turkey by way of Arabia. It is sold by Arabs in Constantinople in large
+bladder-shaped tinned-copper vessels, holding about 120 lb. As it is
+usually itself adulterated with some fatty oil, it needs to undergo
+purification before use. This is effected in the following manner: The
+crude oil is repeatedly shaken up with water acidulated with lemon-juice,
+from which it is poured off after standing for a day. The washed oil
+is placed in shallow saucers, well exposed to sun and air, by which it
+gradually loses its objectionable odor. Spring and early summer are the
+best seasons for the operation, which occupies two to four weeks, according
+to the state of the weather and the quality of the oil. The general
+characters of this oil are so similar to those of otto of roses--even the
+odor bearing a distant resemblance--that their discrimination when mixed is
+a matter of practical impossibility. The ratio of the adulteration varies
+from a small figure up to 80 or 90 per cent. The only safeguard against
+deception is to pay a fair price, and to deal with firms of good repute,
+such as Messrs. Papasoglu, Manoglu & Son, Ihmsen & Co., and Holstein & Co.
+in Constantinople.
+
+The otto is put up in squat-shaped flasks of tinned copper, called
+_kunkumas_, holding from 1 to 10 lb., and sewn up in white woolen cloths.
+Usually their contents are transferred at Constantinople into small gilded
+bottles of German manufacture for export. The Bulgarian otto harvest,
+during the five years 1867-71, was reckoned to average somewhat below
+400,000 _meticals, miskals_, or _midkals_ (of about 3 dwt. troy), or 4,226
+lb. av.; that of 1873, which was good, was estimated at 500,000, value
+about £700,000. The harvest of 1880 realized more than £1,000,000, though
+the roses themselves were not so valuable as in 1876. About 300,000
+_meticals_ of otto, valued at £932,077, were exported in 1876 from
+Philippopolis, chiefly to France, Australia, America, and Germany.
+
+--_Jour. Soc. of Arts._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+A NEW METHOD OF PREPARING METATOLUIDINE.
+
+By OSKAR WIDMAN.
+
+
+The author adds in small portions five parts metanitro-benzaldehyd to nine
+parts of phosphorus pentachloride, avoiding a great rise of temperature.
+When the reaction is over, the whole is poured into excess of cold water,
+quickly washed a few times with cold water, and dissolved in alcohol. After
+the first crystallization the compound melts at 65°, and is perfectly pure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
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