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diff --git a/77054-h/77054-h.htm b/77054-h/77054-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6f0aae8 --- /dev/null +++ b/77054-h/77054-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,2553 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html> +<html lang="en"> +<head> + <meta charset="UTF-8"> + <title> + Chambers’s Journal, December 25, 1886 | Project Gutenberg + </title> + <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover"> + <style> + +/*My header */ + +body { + margin-left: 10%; + margin-right: 10%; +} + + h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 { + text-align: center; /* all headings centered */ + clear: both; +} + +p { + margin-top: .51em; + text-align: justify; + margin-bottom: .49em; +} + +.ph3{ + text-align: center; + font-size: large; + font-weight: bold; +} + + +hr { + width: 33%; + margin-top: 2em; + margin-bottom: 2em; + margin-left: 33.5%; + margin-right: 33.5%; + clear: both; +} + +hr.tb {width: 45%; margin-left: 27.5%; margin-right: 27.5%;} +hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;} +@media print { hr.chap {display: none; visibility: hidden;} } +hr.full {width: 95%; margin-left: 2.5%; margin-right: 2.5%;} + + +.header {text-align: center; margin-top: 0;} +.header p {text-align: center; text-indent: 0;} +.header .floatl {float: left;} +.header .floatr {float: right;} +.header .floatc {padding-top: .5em;} + +.x-ebookmaker .header {text-align: center; margin-top: 0;} +.x-ebookmaker .header p {text-align: center; text-indent: 0;} +.x-ebookmaker .header .floatl {float: left;} +.x-ebookmaker .header .floatr {float: right;} +.x-ebookmaker .header .floatc {padding-top: .5em;} + +div.chapter {page-break-before: always;} +h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;} + +.smalltext{ + font-size: medium; +} + +.largetext{ + font-size: x-large; +} + +.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */ + /* visibility: hidden; */ + position: absolute; + left: 92%; + font-size: small; + text-align: right; + font-style: normal; + font-weight: normal; + font-variant: normal; + text-indent: 0; +} /* page numbers */ + + +.center {text-align: center;} + +.smcap {font-variant: small-caps; + font-style: normal;} + +.allsmcap {font-variant: small-caps; text-transform: lowercase;} + +/* Images */ + +img { + max-width: 100%; + height: auto; +} +img.w100 {width: 100%;} + + +.figcenter { + margin: auto; + text-align: center; + page-break-inside: avoid; + max-width: 100%; +} + + +/* Poetry */ +/* uncomment the next line for centered poetry */ +.poetry-container {display: flex; justify-content: center;} +.poetry-container {text-align: center;} +.poetry {text-align: left; margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%;} +.poetry .stanza {margin: 1em auto;} +.poetry .verse {text-indent: -3em; padding-left: 3em;} +.poetry .attrib {text-align: right;} + + +/* Poetry indents */ +.poetry .indent0 {text-indent: -3.0em;} +.poetry .indent4 {text-indent: -1.0em;} + + </style> +</head> +<body> +<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77054 ***</div> + +<h1>CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL<br> +OF<br> +POPULAR<br> +LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.</h1> + +<div class="chapter"> +<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2> +</div> + + + +<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. --> +<p class="center"> +<a href="#THE_UNSEEN_REGIONS_OF_A_THEATRE">THE UNSEEN REGIONS OF A THEATRE.</a><br> +<a href="#BY_ORDER_OF_THE_LEAGUE">BY ORDER OF THE LEAGUE.</a><br> +<a href="#DIAMOND-SMUGGLING">DIAMOND-SMUGGLING.</a><br> +<a href="#DOUBLEWORKS">‘DOUBLEWORKS.’</a><br> +<a href="#RUSSIAN_PETROLEUM">RUSSIAN PETROLEUM.</a><br> +<a href="#TOBACCO-CULTURE_IN_SCOTLAND">TOBACCO-CULTURE IN SCOTLAND.</a><br> +<a href="#THE_MONTH">THE MONTH: SCIENCE AND ARTS.</a><br> +<a href="#OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</a><br> +<a href="#SWEET_DAY_OF_DAYS">SWEET DAY OF DAYS.</a> +</p> +<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. --> + + +<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_817">{817}</span></p> + +<hr class="full"> + +<div class="chapter"> +<div class="figcenter" id="header" style="max-width: 37.5em;"> + <img class="w100" src="images/header.jpg" alt="Chambers’s Journal of Popular Literature, Science, +and Art. Fifth Series. Established by William and Robert Chambers, 1832. Conducted by R. Chambers (Secundus)."> +</div> + +<hr class="full"> +<div class="center"> +<div class="header"> +<p class="floatl"><span class="smcap">No. 156.—Vol. III.</span></p> +<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p> +<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1886.</p> +</div></div></div> + +<hr class="full"> + + +<div class="chapter"> + <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_UNSEEN_REGIONS_OF_A_THEATRE"> + THE UNSEEN REGIONS OF A THEATRE. + </h2> +</div> + + +<p><span class="smcap">That</span> part of a theatre which is concealed +from the view of the audience is always a +subject of interest and speculation to the uninitiated, +and most playgoers experience a desire +to explore the mysterious region. When, therefore, +some years ago, an opportunity presented +itself to me of gratifying my curiosity in this +respect, I did not fail to take advantage of it. +Since then, I have been behind the scenes of +various theatres, and my experience has convinced +me that the public is not aware how +small a portion of the house behind the curtain +is exposed to the view of the audience, +the regions both above and below the stage +being more extensive than is usually imagined. +Indeed, when, several years ago, the Opera +House in Paris was burned, it was with surprise +that the public learned from the newspapers that +the edifice had no fewer than four separate +underground floors.</p> + +<p>At the present day, in most first-class theatres +in London and New York the subterranean portion +of the building consists of at least two or +three distinct stories. The fact is, it is now +quite impracticable to meet the requirements of +a grand spectacular piece without ample space +being provided for the scenery underneath the +stage. Many, too, of the finest plays are so +constructed that several changes of scene are +required in every act; and each scene must be +a masterpiece of the stage-carpenter’s art, to +satisfy the exacting demands of a modern +audience. The old system, when an alteration +of scene was necessary, was primitive enough. +In some instances, there descended from the +‘flies’ a large curtain, on which was painted a +landscape, or the interior or exterior of a building, +as circumstances might require. In other +cases, wooden frames, termed flats, with canvas +tightly stretched upon them, were pushed upon +the stage from either side, meeting at the centre, +and frequently presenting an ugly seam at +the place of junction. No little skill was +demanded in handling a huge frame many yards +in height and width; for if it once lost its perpendicular, +it became unmanageable, and fell—then +requiring the exertions of several men to +restore it to its proper position. The scenes +also had a tendency to stick in the grooves in +which they ran, and when this occurred, the +disapprobation of the audience was incurred. It +is said that a mishap of this kind having once +taken place at one of the transpontine theatres, +a spectator in the gallery called out: ‘We don’t +look for grammar at this ’ere ’ouse, but we +think yer might see that yer “flats” jine properly.’</p> + +<p>All this is now altered. At the London +theatres of the better class, when a change of +scene is requisite, it is effected in a few seconds +and in an admirable manner. An extensive +landscape, or a lofty battlemented castle—so +strongly constructed that it seems as if it were +built of solid masonry—or a spacious apartment +completely furnished, is, as if by magic, +placed before the audience.</p> + +<p>It has often struck us that playgoers scarcely +adequately realise the extraordinary mechanical +ingenuity displayed in the production of many +of the pieces of late years presented to the +public. Take, for instance, the fairy spectacle +entitled <i>Le Roi Carotte</i>. In it there was a +scene in which an old magician was dismembered +in the presence of the audience. The +situation was this: an aged sorcerer, in order to +be rejuvenated, requests his friends to cut him +into pieces and throw him bit by bit into a +red-hot oven; after which process he expects +to come out a young man. His wishes are +complied with; he is put piecemeal into the +furnace without his leaving the stage or ceasing +to talk. Seated in an armchair, the old man +asks that a large volume shall be brought in +and laid on a table in front of him. The book, +on being placed in the required position, becomes +immediately vivified; living gnomes issue +from the pictures on its pages and skip about +the stage; after which they re-enter the book, +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_818">{818}</span>and it is closed and carried away. Then the +legs and arms of the magician are cut off and +thrown into the furnace; next he is decapitated, +and his head is placed on the table, where +it continues talking, giving instructions with +regard to the trunk. After this the head is +cast into the oven, which bursts open with a +loud report, and a young and handsome man +comes out of it.</p> + +<p>The transformation is so ingeniously effected +that the manner in which it is executed is incomprehensible +to the ordinary spectator. This +is the way in which the feat is accomplished: +when the volume is placed on the table, the +sorcerer, seated in the armchair, quietly withdraws +his legs from sight, placing them on a +trap beneath the level of the stage; at the same +time he slips his arms under his loose gown, +<i>papier-mâché</i> limbs being substituted in both +instances for the real ones. This is done whilst +the attention of the audience is diverted to the +book and its animated pictures, which are little +boys who come up from underneath the stage, +through holes in the table and book, which is +furnished with india-rubber springs, which close +directly the gnomes have emerged from the +volume. After the magician’s legs and arms +have been taken off and thrown into the fire, +nothing is left but his trunk and his head. The +latter is a mask which fits the actor’s face, +leaving nothing visible but his lips and eyes. +One of the persons on the stage tugs at the +magician’s head until he pulls it off—that is to +say, he removes the mask. As this is being +done, the sorcerer has sunk down a trap, and +he rises again through the table. The performer, +with his head inserted in the mask, continues +to talk, giving instructions with respect to the +disposition of the trunk, which remains in the +chair. Finally, the artificial head and the trunk, +which are also of <i>papier mâché</i>, are thrown into +the furnace. The magician in the meanwhile +has reascended by means of another trap farther +back, slipping on a rich dress on the way; and +when the oven bursts, the old man steps forth +rejuvenated.</p> + +<p>The reader must now see what skill and ingenuity +the feat demands—what careful attention +to every detail, what precautions against +the slightest error, what rapidity in working +of the traps, and what accuracy of movement +on the part of the actor who plays the old +magician. But, indeed, the skill and dexterity +demanded of those to whom are intrusted the +mechanical arrangements of some pieces, are far +greater than are supposed by the public, who +content themselves with admiring the results, +without reflecting upon the care and labour they +have involved.</p> + +<p>In an opera called <i>Les Amours du Diable</i>, produced +in Paris some years ago, there was a +curious scene which puzzled all who saw it. +A slight palanquin—constructed in such a +manner that it was obvious that there was no +possibility of its having a double bottom—was +brought upon the stage supported on the +shoulders of slaves. The actress, who occupied +it, withdrew the curtains and gave some orders +to her attendants. Then the curtains were closed +for an instant, and again re-opened. But the +occupant of the palanquin had disappeared. +What had become of her? The feat had been +executed close to the front of the stage, and +under a brilliant light; and the spectators could +plainly see that it was certain that the lady +had not gone down a trap. The mystery remained +for some time unsolved. The explanation +of the puzzle was simply this: the pillars +of the palanquin appeared to be very slight, +but instead of being wood, they were hollow +metal tubes. Through these tubes, ropes ran on +pulleys at the top of the palanquin, descending +in the inside, and fastened to the frame, on +which was placed the silk cushion on which +the actress reclined. To the other end of the +ropes was attached a heavy weight which exactly +balanced that of the lady. One of the slaves +was impersonated by an expert machinist. So +soon as the curtains were drawn, he pulled a +cord which released the counterpoise, and the +frame, together with its burden, rose to the +dome of the palanquin. There the actress lay +quite comfortably, a wire-gauze overhead enabling +her to breathe freely. Pains had been taken +in the constructing of the palanquin to make +it appear frail, whilst in reality it was very +strongly built, that the roof might bear the +strain upon it of the weight it had to support. +The bearers were men selected for their muscular +strength, and they were drilled in the practice +of taking up the palanquin—after the disappearance +of its occupant—and carrying it off the +stage at a sharp trot, as if it were empty.</p> + +<p>Of recent years, great improvements have been +made upon the old plan of representing the +motion of the waves in a sea-scene. When, some +years ago, a comedy called <i>Surf, or Summer +Scenes at Long Branch</i>, was brought out at the +Arch Street Theatre in Philadelphia, there was +a scene in which the heavings of the ocean and +the breaking of the waves upon the shore were +imitated with excellent effect. Miss Logan, the +authoress of the play, has described the ingenious +mechanical appliances that were made use of +on the occasion; she says: ‘There was a large +cylinder, reaching across the stage from wing to +wing on either side, and garnished with curling +stiffened canvas, running around the cylinder +after the fashion of the threads of a screw. +This was put in revolution by means of a crank +at the end, which was turned by a man behind +the wing. The curling canvas was painted to +represent the foamy surf. Behind the first +cylinder were two others of similar character +which revolved in like manner. When the three +were in motion together, with a peculiar arrangement +of light and shade upon them, the effect +was strikingly like the rolling in of the waves +upon the beach. There were various other +appliances employed to heighten the illusion, +such as a large box of pebbles tilted to and fro +behind the scenes in a manner to closely imitate +the sound of the waves; a gauzy painted cloth +worked up and down an inclined plane, and +represented the thin wave that rushes up the +sands and retires again; rows of broom-corn, +painted green, simulated the seaweed. The +characters of the play, who are supposed to go +in bathing at Long Branch dressed in the usual +costumes, sprang through openings made of india-rubber—painted +like the rest—which closed behind +them as water might, could, or should +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_819">{819}</span>do; and a little later, the actors, having passed +under the stage by means of traps, reappeared +at the back of the scene between the revolving +cylinders, and jumped up and down, as if disporting +themselves in the surf.’ The scene was +very effective, and conduced largely to the success +of the play.</p> + +<p>Conflagrations on the stage are now so realistic +as occasionally to alarm the spectators, who can +scarcely believe that some portion of the scenery +has not taken fire. But the precautions taken +against danger are so thorough that there is no +likelihood of an accident happening on these +occasions. In a piece entitled <i>La Madonna +des Roses</i>, which the writer once saw in Paris, +there was the best representation on the stage +of a conflagration he has ever witnessed. A +fire was supposed to break out suddenly in an +apartment in a ducal palace. Smoke and flame +in a few moments poured forth in volumes from +the windows and doors, and extending quickly +to the walls, they fell in. They were constructed +of two layers of wood, held together +by thin cords, passing through holes. At the +proper time, certain portions of the scenery +were removed, leaving the others apparently +burning fiercely—an effect produced by small +gas jets arranged in rows around the edges of +the frames. Behind the heavy set-piece at the +back of the stage was a transparent curtain, on +which flames were painted; and when the wall +tumbled down, this scene being lit up, glowed +with a lurid light in a very natural manner. +At the same time, burning naphtha projected +sheets of flame four or five yards in height, +and large funnels overhead poured out torrents +of black smoke mixed with sparks. It was +indeed difficult for an audience to realise that +the fire was not real, and that the whole of the +scenery was not a heaving mass of flame.</p> + +<p>In the description of the various mechanical +contrivances resorted to in order to produce the +scenic effects, the writer has been in some measure +indebted to the theatrical reminiscences of Miss +Olive Logan, an American actress.</p> + + +<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"> +<div class="chapter"> + <h2 class="nobreak x-ebookmaker-important" id="BY_ORDER_OF_THE_LEAGUE"> + BY ORDER OF THE LEAGUE. + </h2> +</div> + + +<h3>CHAPTER XX.—CONCLUSION.</h3> + +<p><span class="smcap">Turning</span> into Holborn, he ran on blindly, never +noticing another figure following in his footsteps. +It was getting very late now, and as he hurried +into the Strand, St Clement’s Danes struck midnight. +Through the crowd there blindly, on to +the water-side, the snaky figure close behind +never off his track; on to the Embankment, and +towards Waterloo Bridge. Then he stopped for +one brief moment to regain his spent breath and +think.</p> + +<p>The following footsteps halted too; and then +some instinct told him he was followed. Turning +round again, full under the lamplight, he +encountered Paulo Salvarini, determination in +his face, murder in his eyes. In an agony of +sudden fear, Le Gautier ran down the steps on +to the Temple Pier, standing there close by the +rushing water. A second later, with a clutch +like iron, Salvarini was upon him.</p> + +<p>‘Ah!’ he hissed, as they struggled to and fro, +‘you thought to escape me, you murderer of +innocent women, the slayer of my wife! Now +I have you. Back you go into the river, with a +knife in your black heart!’</p> + +<p>The doomed man never answered; breath was +too precious for that. And so they struggled +for a minute on the slimy pier, Salvarini’s grip +never relaxing, till, suddenly reaching down, he +drew a knife. One dazzling flash, a muttered +scream, and Le Gautier’s lifeblood gushed out. +Footsteps came down the stairs, a shrill shout +from a woman’s voice. Salvarini started. In one +moment, Le Gautier had him in a dying clasp, +and with a dull splash, they fell backwards into +the rushing flood. Down, down, they went, the +tenacious grip never relaxing, the water singing +and hissing in their ears, filling their throats as +they sucked it down, turning them dizzy, till +they floated down the stream—dead!</p> + +<p>Some boatmen out late, attracted by the scream, +rowed to the spot; and far down below Blackfriars, +they picked up the dead bodies, both locked +together in the last clasp of death. They rowed +back to the pier, and carried the two corpses to +a place for the night, never heeding the woman +who was following them.</p> + +<p>Next morning, they saw a strange sight. Lying +across the murdered man, her head upon his +breast, a woman rested. They lifted her; but she +was quite dead and cold, a smile upon her face +now, wiping out all trace of care and suffering—a +smile of happiness and deep content. Valerie +had crept there unnoticed to her husband’s side, +and died of a broken heart.</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>For a few days people wondered and speculated +over the strange tragedy, and then it was forgotten. +A new singer, a noted poisoning case, +something turned up, and distracted the frivolous +public mind from the ‘mysterious occurrence,’ to +use the jargon of the press.</p> + +<p>Maxwell lost no time in getting to Grosvenor +Square the following morning, where his greeting +may be better imagined than described. He told +Enid the whole story of his mission, omitting +nothing that he thought might be of interest to +her; and in his turn heard the story of Le +Gautier’s perfidy, and the narrow escape both had +had from his schemes.</p> + +<p>‘I do not propose to stay any longer in +London,’ Sir Geoffrey said. ‘After what we +have all gone through, a little rest and quietness +is absolutely necessary.—Enid, would you care +to go down to Haversham?’</p> + +<p>‘Indeed, I should. Let us go at once. I am +absolutely pining for a little fresh air again. The +place must be looking lovely now.’</p> + +<p>‘All right, my dear,’ the baronet replied gaily; +sooth to say, not sorry to get back to a part of +the world where Sir Geoffrey Charteris was some +one.</p> + +<p>‘Then we will go to-morrow, and Maxwell shall +join us.’</p> + +<p>‘But Isodore? I have not seen her yet.’</p> + +<p>‘Oh, she can come down there some time, +directly we are settled.’</p> + +<p>Later on in the same day, Maxwell heard +the strange tale of Le Gautier’s death. He did +not tell the news to Enid then, preferring to +wait till a time when her nerves were more +steady, and she had recovered from the shock of +the past few days. So they went down to +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_820">{820}</span>Haversham, and for three happy months remained +there, ‘the world forgetting, by the world forgot;’ +and at the end of that time, when the first warm +flush of autumn touched the sloping woods, there +was a quiet wedding at the little church under +the hill.</p> + +<p>Gradually, as time passed on, Sir Geoffrey +recovered his usual flow of spirits, and was +never known to have another ‘manifestation.’ He +burned all his books touching on the supernatural, +and gradually came to view his conduct +in a humorous light. In the course of time, he +settled down as a model country gentleman, +learned on the subject of short-horns and top-dressing, +and displaying a rooted aversion to +spiritualism. It is whispered in the household—only +it must not be mentioned—that he is +getting stout, a state of things which, all things +considered, is not to be regarded with incredulity.</p> + +<p>Nearly two years later, and sitting about the +lawn before the grand old house, were all our +friends—Salvarini, mournful as usual, little +altered since we saw him last; Maxwell, jolly +and hearty, looking with an air of ill-disguised +pride at Enid, who was sitting in a basket-chair, +with a little wisp of humanity in her +arms, a new Personage—to use the royal phrase—but +by no means an unimportant one. Lucrece +was there, happy and gay; and Isodore, glorious +Isodore, unutterably lovely as she walked to and +fro, followed by Salvarini’s dog-like eyes. The +baronet made up the party, and alas! truth +must out, looking—but we will be charitable, and +say portly.</p> + +<p>‘How long are you going to stay with us, +Isodore?’ Enid asked. She would always be +Isodore to them.</p> + +<p>‘Really, I cannot say, Enid. How long will +you have me?’</p> + +<p>‘As long as you like to stay,’ Maxwell put in +heartily.—‘By the way, I suppose I am still +a member of the League?’</p> + +<p>‘No, not now. Conditionally upon your promising +never to reveal what you have seen and +heard, you are free; Sir Geoffrey likewise.—Luigi +here has resigned his membership.’</p> + +<p>‘I am so glad!’ Enid cried. ‘I must come and +kiss you.—Fred, come and hold baby for a +moment.’</p> + +<p>‘No, indeed’—with affected horror. ‘I should +drop him down, and break him, or carry him +upside down, or some awful tragedy.’</p> + +<p>‘You are not fit to be the father of a beautiful +boy; and everybody says he is the very image of +you.’</p> + +<p>‘I was considered a good-looking man once,’ +said Maxwell with resignation. ‘No matter. +But if that small animal there is a bit like me, +may I’——</p> + +<p>They all laughed at this, being light-hearted +and in the mood to laugh at anything. Presently, +they divided into little groups, Isodore +and Luigi together. All her cold self-possession +was gone now; she looked a very woman, as she +stood there nervously plucking the leaves from +the rose in her hand.</p> + +<p>‘Isodore—Genevieve’——</p> + +<p>At this word she trembled, knowing scarcely +what. ‘Yes, Luigi.’</p> + +<p>‘Five years ago, I stood by your side in the +hour of your trouble, and you said some words +to me. Do you remember what they were?’</p> + +<p>‘Yes, Luigi.’ The words came like a fluttering +sigh.</p> + +<p>‘I claim that promise now. We are both free, +heaven be praised! free as air, and no ties to +bind us. Come!’ He held out his arms, and +she came shyly, shrinkingly, towards them.</p> + +<p>‘If you want me,’ she said.</p> + +<p>With one bound he was by her side, and drew +her head down upon his breast. ‘And you are +happy now, Genevieve?’</p> + +<p>‘Yes, I am happy. How can I be otherwise, +with a good man’s honest love?—Carlo, my +brother, would you could see me now!’</p> + +<p>‘It is what he always wished.—Let us go and +tell the others.’</p> + +<p>So, taking her simply by the hand, they +wandered out from the deepness of the wood, side +by side, from darkness and despair, from the +years of treachery and deceit, out into the light +of a world filled with bright sunshine and +peaceful, everlasting love.</p> + + +<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"> +<div class="chapter"> + <h2 class="nobreak" id="DIAMOND-SMUGGLING"> + DIAMOND-SMUGGLING. + </h2> +</div> + + +<p><span class="smcap">In</span> accordance with rules of concealment laid +down by Edgar Allan Poe, some ‘clever things’ +have of late years been done in the smuggling of +precious stones into the United States of America, +the philosophy which pervades Poe’s story of the +<i>Purloined Letter</i> having evidently been studied +to some purpose by the professional diamond-smugglers, +who are known to form a comparatively +numerous body.</p> + +<p>Poe’s tale, the scene of which is laid in +Paris, the characters introduced being of course +French, contains what may be called a novel +theory of ‘hide-and-seek,’ which, stated briefly, +is, that the greater the importance of the +article which has been stolen, the simpler +should be its mode of concealment. On the +assumption that an important state document, +or criminatory letter involving serious consequences +to some one, and the possession of which +would enable another person to make use of its +contents for his own benefit, has been purloined, +the more conspicuous the place chosen to conceal +it the better, till it can be made use of. Should +the recovery of the stolen document be a matter +of importance, which may be assumed, it will, +of course, be carefully sought for, and those +searching for it will no doubt pry with care +into every secret hiding-place, with the hope of +finding it; whilst—to put the case in a homely +way—it is ‘all the time staring them in the face,’ +those in search of it overlooking it because of +their idea that, in consequence of its great importance, +the utmost care will have been exercised +in its concealment.</p> + +<p>Much incidental and curiously instructive +information is contained in Poe’s <i>Purloined +Letter</i> as to the modes of criminal search +adopted in France, where magnifying-glasses +of great power, and microscopes, play a part; +where beds are dismantled and chairs are disjointed +to see that what is wanted has not +been concealed in some part of them; where +libraries of books are turned over leaf by leaf, +and picture-frames are tapped to see that they +contain no foreign material. As Poe points out, +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_821">{821}</span>that is all in the way of routine, and is traditionary +among French criminal investigators in the +matter of every-day crime. It requires a mastermind, +however, to fathom the doings of a really +well-educated thief who purloins an important +document in order to hold it in terrorem over +a political enemy or social foe.</p> + +<p>So in the matter of diamond-smuggling. Artists—if +we may profane the word—have come to the +front, men far ahead of the original stereotyped +smugglers, who were contented to carry on their +business in old-fashioned ways; ever cudgelling +their brains to find out modes of concealment +so elaborate as to make sure they would be discovered. +All the more extraordinary devices +of concealment, as they were thought to be at +the time, were one by one found out and battled +with by the custom-house officers of the United +States. Some of them were thought rather remarkable, +as, for instance, those managed by +means of artificial teeth—a set of these useful +implements of mastication being fashioned in +such a manner that every tooth possessed a +cavity which contained one or more diamonds +or other precious stones: the hole being deftly +filled up with cement, discovery was thought impossible. +By this ingenious mode of procedure, +a large number of the rarer gems were at first +smuggled into the States without paying duty +(ten per cent. on diamonds), chiefly by means of +female aid. Waxing bolder by long-continued +immunity from any discovery of their fraud, the +officers on duty began to wonder why the same +ladies had so often occasion to cross the Atlantic; +and one of their number surmising that it was +‘for no good purpose,’ determined to have a +particular female carefully watched during the +voyage. A stewardess with whom the officer +had a friendly acquaintance was enlisted in the +service; and this person did all she could to find +out why the suspected ladies so frequently visited +Europe, but to little purpose, as she thought, all +she was able to discover being apparently not +of much consequence. One day, however, whilst +carefully examining the berth in which the traveller +slept, she found a broken tooth, which was +hollow and exceedingly fragile. As the stewardess +used artificial teeth, she naturally enough felt +interested in the matter, and spoke to the voyager +about the circumstance. The lady at first looked +embarrassed, but then said she had been cheated +by the dentist. At the end of the voyage the +stewardess reported the circumstance to the officer, +who, after thinking it over, came to the conclusion +that there was more in the affair of the +hollow tooth than met the eye. New York, in +fact, is celebrated for its dentistry; and on consulting +one of the professors, the officer discovered +that teeth of the sort had been made in quantity +and from different moulds to the order of a very +’cute man, who said they were wanted to be sent +to Europe. This statement afforded a sufficient +cue; and accordingly, at the termination of the +next voyage, two ladies, sisters, were respectfully +but firmly requested to take out their artificial +teeth. Remonstrance was unavailing; the teeth +were made to disclose their hidden treasures; +the result being that thirteen valuable brilliants +were confiscated, much to the chagrin of the fair +smugglers. That little episode put an end to +that mode of smuggling diamonds.</p> + +<p>There is a never-ending demand throughout +the United States for these gems; and several +of the earlier adventurers were known to have +made money by means of the smuggling business. +In reality, diamonds are a passion with many +American ladies, who must have them, no matter +what they may cost. These gem-loving dames, +in their eagerness to ‘trade’ for jewels of all +kinds, are not unfrequently cheated by persons +who sell them ‘bogus’ diamonds, made of paste, +at a comparatively cheap rate, under pretence of +their being smuggled stones, and that, having +escaped the payment of duty, they are a bargain +at the sum demanded. Wealthy American ladies +vie with each other at the various fashionable +resorts of the United States in their displays of +costly jewels and gems. It was stated a few +months ago in an American paper that a rich +man’s wife wore upon her neck and breast every +evening precious stones of the value of forty +thousand pounds; other ladies displaying jewels +to a lesser amount. Nor are American ladies +free from the charge of smuggling; many of +them, indeed, are adepts at the business, able +to impart a secret or two to ‘the professionals.’ +During a recent Saratoga season, one lady was +heard to boast that she had brought over a suite +of diamonds in the heels of several pairs of +slippers which she had made on purpose to contain +them. These dainty articles were ostentatiously +displayed, and taken notice of by the +searchers; but the heels were not suspected to +be hollow or to contain diamonds. Hollow-heeled +boots were at one time greatly in use as +a part of the smuggling machinery. That mode +of carrying on the illicit traffic was ultimately +discovered by an under-steward of an American +liner, who, for ‘a consideration,’ communicated +the secret to the custom-house authorities. Then +followed a series of contrivances in the shape +of double-bottomed trunks, valises with secret +pockets, desks with hidden drawers, and guns +and pistols which were so contrived as to contain +a few of the much-coveted gems. All these +contrivances were in turn discovered: they were +just the kind of concealments which the officers +had their thoughts fixed upon. For a time, we +believe, the professional diamond-carriers were +discomfited; but their discomfiture was not for +long; the business was too profitable to be easily +relinquished, however great the risks might be.</p> + +<p>Just as the customs’ authorities were under +the impression that they had suppressed the +illicit traffic, a new era in gem-smuggling was +inaugurated, and more diamonds reached the +United States ‘duty free’ than before. Smuggling, +it may be said, developed into a fine art; +at all events, the incidence of the trade for a +brief period became so simple as to seem like +child’s play; indeed, children were made to play +an important part in the business. A story +which lately became public shows how well +the modern diamond-smugglers had laid to heart +Poe’s precepts. ‘Please to hold my baby whilst +my husband helps me to open my trunks; he +will be quite good if you will shake his rattle,’ +said a lady passenger to the officer who was +waiting to look over her travelling gear. And +that officer good-humouredly did as he was +requested, shaking the rattle, to the great delight +of the little one. The rattle in question, which, +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_822">{822}</span>fastened to a ribbon, was tied to the child’s waist, +was filled with gems of great value, a mode of +smuggling that at the time was too too simple +for detection.</p> + +<p>A clever female attired in the costume of a +Sister of Mercy was passed over by the officers +because she had no luggage worth examining. +She possessed, however, a fine string of beads, +which, with downcast eyes, she kept telling. Safe +on land, she was affectionately welcomed by two +persons dressed in costumes similar to her own. +Need it be told that she was a smuggler, and +that her beads were so constructed that each +held a diamond weighing seven or eight carats. +Another ingenious person hit upon the plan of +placing a few precious stones in a toy kaleidoscope +which had been given to a child, who carried +it ashore in safety. A number of homing pigeons +kept in cages, and purchased at a village in +Belgium, and brought to the United States by +way of Paris and Havre, also played a profitable +part, each of the pigeons being freighted with +a cargo of exquisite gems, concealed in quills, and +carefully fastened to the message-bearing dove. +An extensive system of diamond-smuggling was at +one time carried on from Canadian ground by +the aid of homing pigeons. The discovery of +this illicit trade was made accidentally by a +farmer, who happened to shoot one of the birds, +and on examining it found that there was +fastened to its leg a quill containing a number +of diamonds! A clue being obtained, the local +habitation of the pigeon proprietors was discovered +and their mode of business put an end +to. The scheme, stated simply, was to fly every +week or ten days a flock of a dozen or fifteen +pigeons, each carrying about half-a-dozen gems. +As the duty on diamonds amounts to ten per +cent., the trouble taken to smuggle these gems +into the United States does not seem so very +remarkable. The value of the precious stones +honestly imported into the States is between +eight and nine million dollars per annum, and +it has been calculated that gems to half that sum +escape payment of the duty.</p> + +<p>Many tales have been circulated with regard +to diamonds, some of them of a rather curious +kind. We have read of faithful messengers who, +rather than yield up the stone they carried, +swallowed it. The owner of a slave who had +done so, and who had been killed by robbers, +was so convinced of his servant’s fidelity, that he +gave directions for the opening of the body, and +found that the honest fellow had swallowed the +precious gem. Dishonest servants employed at +the diamond mines frequently display wonderful +ingenuity in concealing stones which they have +purloined while at their work. About a year +ago, a rough diamond weighing four hundred and +fifty-seven carats was stolen by a person in the +employment of the Central Diamond Mining +Company at Kimberley (South Africa), who sold +it for the sum of three thousand pounds to four +persons who dealt in stolen stones. It was then +sold at Cape Town to a firm of illicit dealers +in diamonds for nineteen thousand pounds; and +was ultimately purchased for forty-five thousand +pounds by a syndicate of London brokers +in precious gems. The means by which this +magnificent brilliant was smuggled from the mines +and ultimately got to England was never made +known. It is notorious enough, however, that +a large trade in fraudulently obtained stones is +carried on at the South African gold-fields; and +stories are told of buyers around the diamond +mines who have made large fortunes by purchasing +stones at nominal prices from labourers +who possessed the cunning and the courage to +successfully brave the authorities and bring to +the resetters their stolen goods.</p> + +<p>It has been calculated by persons engaged in +the business that twelve per cent. of the fall in +the price of rough diamonds, which has taken +place within the last few years, should be set +down to the sale of stolen gems, which, to the +value of more than half a million sterling, annually +find their way to the markets. These stones +are the direct fruits of theft, those selling them +having made no contribution whatever to the cost +of obtaining them. When first the work of diamond-seeking +at Kimberley began, there were no +thefts of any importance, because each man was +then working for his own hand, or as one of a +limited but friendly partnership. It was not till +the work of diamond-mining required the aid +of hired labour that the work of systematic +robbery commenced, and ‘I. D. B.’ (illicit diamond +buying) became an institution of the Diamond +Fields. Many of the persons employed, soon fell +into habits of peculation, not being able to withstand +the temptation presented by the appearance +of a little bit of stone that might be worth, perhaps, +a thousand pounds, if they could succeed +in carrying it away without being detected. In +every branch of the process of gem-finding, valuable +diamonds, it has to be explained, are always +at the mercy of the men employed, some of whom +are never slow to take advantage of any chance +that may present itself of securing a stone. Such +thefts during the last few years have proved a +source of serious annoyance and trouble in connection +with the industry. The ‘I. D. B.’ trade, +as it is locally termed, has tended to sap the +morality of the place, and given rise to the many +evils which result from resetting. There is an +old adage which says that ‘if there were no +resetters, there would be no thieves.’</p> + +<p>Great precautions are taken by the various +diamond-digging Companies at Kimberley to prevent +the theft of stones; whilst the crime of reset +is always punished with much severity. A license +to deal in rough diamonds costs a sum of fifty +pounds per annum; and dealers, in addition to +procuring this authority to trade, are required +to find security to a large amount. Dealers are +bound by the terms of their license to make exact +entries in their books of every parcel of stones +they purchase, and also how they dispose of them. +Large diamonds must be described in detail and +minutely. Should the detective department suspect +any dealer of illicit traffic, that dealer may +at any moment be visited, and have his books and +stock overhauled and compared; and should he +possess a few stones which he is unable to account +for, he is liable to have his whole stock seized. +Upon a late occasion, a friend of the writer’s, +while on a visit to the Kimberley Diamond Fields, +was informed that two well-known diamond +dealers had just been visited by the detectives; +and one of these persons having about eight hundred +carats, and the other about seventy carats, +not accounted for in their books, the police seized +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_823">{823}</span>their stocks—upwards of ten thousand carats in +all; and within one month from the date of the +seizure, both dealers were tried, convicted, and +sentenced; and if still alive, they are now working +out their time on the breakwater at Cape Town. +One of these men was reputed to be worth over +a hundred and fifty thousand pounds. At the +present time, there is quite a colony of convicted +‘illicits,’ as they are sometimes designated, working +out their sentences on the harbour-works at +Cape Town, a goodly proportion of the gang being +worth large sums of money.</p> + +<p>Although there is a considerable and clever +detective staff on the Diamond Fields, there are +those at Kimberley who can outwit the police, +at anyrate for a time, and so it happens that such +a number of stones is annually stolen as to prove +a factor in disturbing the market price. The +chances of detection are no doubt great; but the +hope of securing a few hundred pounds by a little +peculation is so tempting, that there are always +hundreds of men at ‘the game.’ Some of the +thieves—that is, the men who steal the stones +they are paid for unearthing—display great ingenuity +in carrying away the gems. The business +of diamond-digging is naturally of a rough-and-ready +kind, and presents opportunities for fraud +which are not available in other industries. When +diamond-stealing first became a business, those +interested, suspecting no evil, were easily cheated. +Stones were then carried away concealed about +the person of the labourers. But, as the thefts +increased, greater precautions were taken to insure +the detection of the thieves. Some of the ‘dodges’ +which have been resorted to in order to carry +diamonds from the diggings have been not a +little remarkable; we have only room, however, +for a sample or two. Upon one occasion, it is +related that an ingenious labourer wrapped the +stones in a small piece of soft bread, the morsel +being greedily snapped by a dog. The dog was +carefully looked after till the mine was left +behind, when it was ruthlessly killed, to obtain +the hidden diamonds which were contained in its +stomach. Domestic fowls have been trained to +swallow the smaller stones, which have afterwards +been cut out of their crops. A parcel of +stolen gems has been known to have been got out +of a well-watched digging by having been ingeniously +fastened to the hair of a horse’s tail!</p> + +<p>Any individual suspected of being an ‘I. D. B.’ +may expect, on leaving the Fields, to be overtaken +on his road to the coast by detectives, who will +search him in order to find if he be in possession +of any stones. Many devices have been resorted +to for the concealment of the diamonds. A +Dutch Boer who had been for some time under +suspicion, on leaving the Fields with his wagon +was followed by some detectives who had determined +to search him. Just before he was overtaken +by the officers, he was seen to detach one +of the bullocks from his team and deliberately +shoot it. By the time the police came up the +Boer was busy removing the hide. A thorough +search was made by the detectives; but no gems +were found. The phlegmatic Dutchman had +placed the diamonds in the barrel of his gun, and +had fired them into the body of his bullock, from +which of course he had to extract them; and he +did so as soon as the police turned their backs +upon him.</p> + +<p>The various modes of diamond-smuggling revealed +in the foregoing narrative present no +peculiar features of endurance or romance; but +cases have occurred in which pain and suffering +have played a part in the business of diamond-hiding. +There is, for instance, the story of +the magnificent gem which in its rough state +formed the eye of an idol in a temple near +Trichinopoli, and which was stolen by a Frenchman, +who escaped with his prize to Persia, and +who, fearful of being discovered, was glad to dispose +of his ill-gotten gear for a sum of about two +thousand pounds sterling. The man who bought +the stone, a Jewish merchant, sold it to one +Shafras, an astute Armenian, for twelve thousand +pounds sterling. Shafras had conceived the idea +that by carrying the stone to Russia, he would +obtain from the Empress Catharine the Great +a princely sum for it. How to travel in safety +with the stone, the theft of which had of course +been discovered and proclaimed, became a grave +consideration. It was too large to swallow, and +no mode of concealment presented itself to Shafras +that seemed secure from discovery. The way in +which he solved the problem was remarkable. +He made a deep incision in the fleshy part of his +left leg, in which he inserted the stone, closing +the wound carefully by sewing it up with silver +thread. When the wound healed, the Armenian +merchant set out on his travels quite boldly, and +although more than once apprehended, rigorously +searched, and even tortured a little, he was obdurate, +and firmly denied having the stone in his +possession. Having at length reached his destination, +he asked from the Empress the sum of +forty thousand pounds for the gem, an amount +of money which Catharine was unable to raise +at the moment. We next find the Armenian at +Amsterdam with the intention of having his +diamond cut. Here the stone was seen by Count +Orloff, who determined to purchase it for presentation +to his royal mistress, the Empress +Catharine. The sum ultimately paid for the gem +was about seventy thousand sterling in cash, together +with an annuity of five hundred pounds, +and a patent of nobility. Shafras flourished +exceedingly, and died a millionaire. Such, in +brief, is the story of the Orloff Diamond.</p> + + +<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"> +<div class="chapter"> + <h2 class="nobreak" id="DOUBLEWORKS">‘DOUBLEWORKS.’</h2> +<p class="ph3">A STORY OF ATHLONE.</p> +</div> + + +<p><span class="smcap">Who</span> has not heard of the old historic town on +the Shannon called Athlone, believed by its +inhabitants to be the exact centre of Ireland; +celebrated at one time—for it has been now some +years removed—for the old bridge built in the +reign of Queen Bess, whose arms and monogram, +E. R., were engraved on a stone built into +a kind of monument on the parapet. Celebrated +also for its old church bell, bearing in relief +the inscription—<span class="allsmcap">THIS: FOR: ST: MARY’S: CHVRCH: +IN: ATHLONE: 1683</span>—this being the identical bell +which, at six o’clock in the afternoon of the 30th +of June 1691, clanged the signal for the attack +on the forces of King James, commanded by +the French general, St Ruth, and holding the +castle, &c., by the troops of the Prince of Orange +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_824">{824}</span>under Ginkell. The old house occupied by him +as headquarters during the siege is still in +existence, having the date of its erection, 1626, +carved on the doorway. We might go on detailing +many other things for which the old town +is celebrated, but <i>cui bono</i>? Enough that it is +celebrated in song as the residence of ‘The +Widow Malone, Ochone!’</p> + +<p>Often as we have been reminded of the existence +of Athlone by hearing the above-mentioned +humorous ditty trolled forth at mess by one of +Ours, who, being a genuine son of the soil, was +fully qualified to do it ample justice, it had +never been our good fortune to cast eyes upon +it until some forty years ago, when, one fine +afternoon, we found ourselves, with some thousand +or so other candidates for martial glory, marching +gaily through the by no means sweet-smelling +town, over the beautiful new bridge which spans +the river, and under the walls of the ancient +castle, to the merry strains of the <i>Lass o’ Gowrie</i>. +These forty years are a long time to look back +upon; many a long march under foreign suns +have we made with the old regiment, and in +many a stirring scene and hard-fought field have +we accompanied it since then; but somehow our +memory recalls few things more vividly than +the appearance of that long column of dusty, +travel-stained men, who were finishing their hot +day’s march that summer afternoon, tramping +along briskly and cheerily to the old familiar +air of the regimental quick step.</p> + +<p>We quickly settled down in our new quarters, +and before long, had formed many pleasant +acquaintances, all only too delighted to show +us every civility in their power; and jolly nights +at mess followed fishing and boating parties +during the summer, while, as the days began to +shorten, there was good hunting and shooting; +and dinner-parties and dances were by no means +unfrequent.</p> + +<p>In most garrison towns in which we have been +quartered in Ireland, there were generally one +or two peculiar hangers-on loafing about the +barracks, queer nondescript bipeds, ever ready +to run messages all over the country, or carry +a fishing-basket or a game-bag, who eked out a +precarious existence by tips from the officers and +others who employed them, and picking up odd +meals at the different barrack-rooms of the men. +Athlone was not singular in this respect; and +you constantly met, shambling across the barrack +square, at a kind of half-trot, or lurking in rear +of the officers’ quarters, an odd, half-witted, but +quite harmless creature, who went by the curious +appellation of ‘Doubleworks.’ Who gave him +that name, or whence it was derived, we are +unable to say; we only know that he answered +to it, and we had it from the regiment in whose +place we had come. There was a kind of sporting +air about this poor creature; he always wore +an old hunting-cap and a shooting-suit, evidently +the gift of some former patron of far burlier +proportions than the poor attenuated frame which +they now enveloped; and an ancient pair of +Wellington boots, much down at heel, into which +the ends of the trousers were shoved, completed +the costume, which, however, was varied on +hunting-days, when the hounds met in the square +or neighbourhood of the barracks, when, in +honour of the occasion, an aged and much +stained, once scarlet hunting-coat took the place +of the shooting-jacket.</p> + +<p>Like the other hangers-on of the Athlone +barracks, poor Doubleworks subsisted, as we have +said, upon the benevolence of his military patrons +and friends; but, unlike the others, he was +possessed of an accomplishment, not an elegant +one, perhaps, or suitable for very refined society, +but nevertheless one that brought him by its +performance many an odd sixpence or shilling—he +could hunt the badger! or was supposed +to give a truthful representation of the ‘drawing’ +of the above-named quadruped by a canine +foe. This performance was vocal, and commenced +by a series of whines, growls, and impatient +barkings, mingled with grunts and low +savage yelps, which we believe were meant for +cries of rage and defiance from the badger; these, +after lasting with variations for some time, gradually +increased in intensity, at length culminating +in an unearthly din, perfectly indescribable, but +which was stated by the ‘fancy’ and capable +authorities to be quite true to nature. For +ourselves, not having had experience in such +matters, we are unable to offer a personal opinion, +and can only observe that the din was marvellous +as the production of a single pair of +human lungs, and once heard was not likely +to be ever forgotten.</p> + +<p>His performance was not confined to any particular +part of the barracks; it might be heard +at any hour of the day in the artillery square, +the cavalry square, the infantry square, or amongst +the barracks occupied by the scientific arm of +the service, the Royal Engineers; but it took +place most frequently at the officer’s guardroom; +for in those days there used to be an officer’s +guardroom and an officer in it at the main barrack +gate, which led directly from the infantry square +into the market-place of the town. This guardroom +was in the centre of a small block of buildings +to the left of the gate as you went out, +having on its right the regimental orderly-room, +where the colonel administered justice every +morning, and where the orderly-room clerks +smoked strong tobacco, and filled in forms and +sketched caricatures of regimental and other +authorities every day. The men’s guardroom +adjoined that occupied by the officer, from which +it, as well as the orderly-room, was separated +by a partition wall, the end wall of the men’s +guardroom being next the street. In front of +these rooms was a small veranda, and beyond +this the guardroom sentry paced his ‘lonely +round.’ We are thus particular in describing the +locality, as it pleases us to recall it after so many +years, because it will give our readers a better +idea of what is to follow.</p> + +<p>The guardroom—we mean the officer’s—was in +those days a kind of club or place of call for +all officers going out of or coming in to barracks. +It was considered incumbent on every passer-by +to drop in on the officer of the guard and help +him to while away the tedium of his confinement +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_825">{825}</span>by retailing any news there might be going; +while he on his part provided alleviation for +any thirst accruing from dry narration. By +night, the guardroom was generally pretty full +until a late hour. A recent order of the Duke +of Wellington, then commander-in-chief, and +which procured for him the cognomen of ‘the +Tobacco-stopper,’ prohibited the use of tobacco +in the precincts of the mess; and though this +order was afterwards so far modified as to permit +smoking in the anteroom, it was confined to +cigars; so those who preferred the luxury of a +pipe had either to indulge the propensity in their +own rooms or seek the shelter of the guardroom. +Needless to say, the latter alternative was the +one most generally followed, and the hospitality +of the subaltern on guard was accepted as freely +as it was offered. Altogether, the main-guard +was not a disagreeable place to spend twenty-four +hours, especially if it rained, which it can +do in those parts, and we ourselves preferred +it to the duties of regimental orderly-officer.</p> + +<p>One day in the mid-winter of 1846, it came +to my turn to mount this guard. The weather +had been unusually severe—it had been snowing +for a day or two, and the ground was covered +to the depth of several inches, while a smart +frost had served to make the snow hard as a +brick; so that, as I marched my guard across +the square to where the old guard was drawn +up, waiting our arrival, the men’s tread made +no more track than if we had been marching +on the surface of the square itself. The preliminaries +of relieving guard having been got +over as quickly as possible, we paid the parting +compliment to the old guard of presenting arms, +as it moved off in slow time; and then dismissing +our own, we visited the sentries, to ascertain if +they had the orders of their respective posts +correctly, and then gladly dived into our own +den, and doffing our cloak, proceeded to make +ourselves as comfortable in front of a huge peat-fire +as it was possible to be, braced up in a +high stiff stock and tightly fitting coatee and +epaulets, as was then the regulation.</p> + +<p>The day passed like most others on guard; +but, owing to the weather, the passers-by were +fewer, and our after-mess visitors didn’t stay so +late as usual; by eleven or half-past, all had +taken their departure for their respective quarters; +and about midnight we proceeded to go round +the sentries. There was a bright moon, with a +clear star-studded sky. It was not unpleasant +walking over the hard frozen snow, and we were +not long reaching the farthest-off and last of +the sentries, who was posted at the hospital gate. +Besides the usual orders, he had special directions +to look after the dead-house, a small building +situated close inside the hospital gate, to which +the bodies of deceased men were conveyed until +interment, and to allow no one to enter it unless +passed in by the hospital-sergeant. The sentry, +when giving up his orders, added that a man +had died in the hospital late that evening, and +that his corpse was now lying on the table in +the dead-house. Accompanied by the corporal +of the escort, we walked over to the window, +and by the bright moonlight could see something +extended on the table, as the man had said, +covered with a sheet. After this, we came back +across the square to the guardroom, and lighting +a pipe, were soon deeply interested in a book that +we were reading. Gradually we began to nod, +and the book to slip from our hand, and the +grand-rounds having already visited the guard, +and there being but little danger of having to +turn it out again before the morning’s reveille, +we were about to go to sleep in earnest on the +guardroom sofa, when we were startled from our +semi-somnolent condition by hearing the loud +challenge, ‘Who goes there?’ from the sentry +who had been pacing up and down in front of +the veranda. We could hear the rattle of his +arms as he threw his firelock to the ‘port,’ and +the rapid tread of some one running towards +the guardroom and crunching the frozen snow. +Presently the challenge was repeated in a quick +peremptory tone, but, as in the former case, without +obtaining any response; and then there came +a kind of half-articulate gurgling cry, followed +by the sound of a heavy fall, and the crash +of arms and accoutrements, and the shout of, +‘Sergeant of the Guard!’</p> + +<p>Fearing that something bad had happened, we +jumped up and dashed out of the guardroom, +and saw lying on the snow, close to the sentry, +who was standing at the ‘charge,’ the figure of +a soldier clad in his greatcoat and fully accoutred, +and a little way from him his firelock with fixed +bayonet lying on the snow, as it had escaped +from his grasp in falling. The sergeant and all +the men of the guard had rushed out at the +same time as we had, and were now engaged +lifting the prostrate figure, who at the moment +we feared had been run through by the sentry +for not replying to the challenge, and trying to +run past him. Such, however, happily was not +the case; the sentry hadn’t touched him, and +said that the man had come rushing towards +him from the far angle of the square, and instead +of answering the challenge, had continued to +approach, making the queer gurgling sound which +we had heard, and falling as if shot when he +came to where he now lay.</p> + +<p>The sergeant of the guard now reported to me +that the man was alive, though quite insensible +and making a moaning noise, as if in a fit. He +further stated that he was the sentry who had +been posted at the gate of the hospital. We at +once sent a man of the guard for one of the +assistant-surgeons of the regiment whose quarters +were close at hand, and had the insensible man +carried into the guardroom and laid on the guard-bed, +his stiff leather stock removed, coat, &c. +unbuttoned, and water sprinkled on his face; +but all, seemingly, to no purpose: he remained +unconscious, and kept up the moaning noise, +while now and then struggling hard with those +about him. At last the doctor arrived; and +having administered some restoratives, after a +while the poor fellow became sensible, and sufficiently +calm to inform us why he had committed +the serious offence of deserting his post. +He stated that he had continued to walk about +on his beat at the hospital gate for some time +after we had visited him, and that all was quiet, +when suddenly sounds as if of chairs being +upset and knocked about appeared to come from +the dead-house; that he had gone up to the +window, as we had a short time before, and +looked in, and that he saw the corpse off the +table, and standing up close inside the window, +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_826">{826}</span>and that it, as he said, ‘jeered’ at him; that +this fearful sight had so unmanned him, that +without more ado he had taken to his heels, +and had no recollection of anything else that +happened until he returned to consciousness on +the guard-bed. He was evidently suffering from +a terrible shock to his nervous system; and it +was only with the greatest difficulty that, mingled +with heavy sobs and shudderings, we could manage +to get the poor fellow to speak: he was driven +nearly demented by the ghastly sight which he +was persuaded that he had witnessed.</p> + +<p>As soon as he could be left with safety to +the care of the guard, who were directed not to +pester him with questions, the surgeon and I +with a corporal and file of men set off for the +hospital; and as we crossed the square, strange +noises began to reach us, the growling, snarling, +and other sounds of canine conflict mingling with +the unmistakable howls with which Doubleworks +interlarded his performance.</p> + +<p>‘Hillo!’ we said to the doctor; ‘do you hear +that? What an hour for Doubleworks to be +hunting the badger; we thought he was never +allowed in barracks after tattoo.’</p> + +<p>As we neared the hospital, the badger hunt, +which had ceased for a few moments, broke out +afresh, this time mingled with shouts of wild +unearthly laughter, and proceeding unmistakably +from the dead-house, in which the corpse of the +dead soldier had been deposited. We roused +up the hospital sergeant, who, good quiet man, +snored serenely through it all, and got from +him the key and a lantern, and opening the +door, found that with the dead man the wretched +Doubleworks had been locked up. How he got +there unnoticed, no one could tell; he had not +been observed by any one about the place; and +the only conclusion that we could arrive at was, +that he had slipped in when the body was being +placed on the table, and had ensconced himself +behind the door until it was pulled to and locked +upon him.</p> + +<p>However true this theory might have been, +there was no means of verifying now, for, from +whatever cause arising, it was but too evident +that poor Doubleworks had become quite insane. +He had removed the sheet from the body of +the dead man, which lay there in its solemn +stiffness before us, in strange contrast to the mad +pranks of the lunatic, who, having, no doubt, +wrapped himself in the sheet, had presented himself +so disguised to the sentry, when he looked +in at the window, thereby almost driving him +as mad as he was himself.</p> + +<p>Why he didn’t favour us with a similar exhibition +when we went to look in at the window, +we can’t imagine; perhaps he may have objected +to the presence of more than one spectator, for +he must have heard the steps of the corporal +and file of men who were with us when going +our rounds. At anyrate, he made no objection +to leaving the dead-house now, though he seemed +in no way in dread of the other occupant of +it. He was next day made over to the civil +authorities, and was afterwards transferred, we +heard, to the district lunatic asylum; and what +was his subsequent fate, we do not know. The +sentry he had so horribly frightened, after several +weeks in hospital, returned to his duty; but +we don’t think he ever quite got over the shock, +and he was discharged from the service within a +twelvemonth after. Perhaps he may be still +alive, and if so, we will bet a trifle he has +not forgotten Doubleworks.</p> + + +<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"> +<div class="chapter"> + <h2 class="nobreak" id="RUSSIAN_PETROLEUM"> + RUSSIAN PETROLEUM. + </h2> +</div> + + +<p><span class="smcap">Mr Charles Marvin</span>, who has already done +much to familiarise English readers with the +Russian petroleum industry and the extraordinarily +prolific nature of the oil-wells at Baku, +on the Caspian, has again returned to the subject +in a pamphlet entitled <i>The Coming Deluge of +Russian Petroleum</i> (Anderson & Co., Cockspur +Street, London). As these wells, when transport +facilities are more perfect, may seriously +affect the home and American oil-trade, the +facts brought out in Mr Marvin’s pamphlet are +worthy of attention.</p> + +<p>We learn that of the five hundred petroleum +wells at Baku, the majority are situated on the +Balakhani Plateau, eight or nine miles to the +north of the town. The latest ‘spouter’ of +Tagieff’s is, however, in a different locality, being +situated on a promontory three miles to the +south of Baku. Here Gospodin Tagieff began +boring about three years ago. At first, the oil +was slow to come, and at its best had never +yielded more than sixteen thousand gallons a +day. On the 27th September last, having touched +oil at seven hundred and fourteen feet, the well +began to spout oil with extraordinary force. +‘From the town, the fountain had the appearance +of a colossal pillar of smoke, from the crest +of which clouds of oil-sand detached themselves +and floated away a great distance without touching +the ground. Owing to the prevalence of +southerly winds, the oil was blown in the direction +of Bailoff Point, covering hill and dale +with sand and petroleum, and drenching the +houses of Bailoff, a mile and a half away. +Nothing could be done to stop the outflow.’ +It seems that the whole district was covered +with oil, the outflow being at the rate of thousands +of tuns a day, which filled up cavities, +formed a lake, and on the fifth day began to +escape into the sea. The square in front of +the town-hall of Baku was drenched with petroleum. +On the eighth day, the outflow reached +the highest ever known—a rate of eleven thousand +tuns, or two and three-quarter million +gallons a day. ‘Thus,’ says Mr Marvin, ‘from +a single orifice ten inches wide there spouted +daily more oil than was being produced throughout +the whole world, including therein the +twenty-five thousand wells of America, the thousands +of wells in Galicia, Roumania, Burmah, and +other countries, and the shale-oil distilleries of +Scotland and New South Wales.’ By the fifteenth +day, those in charge had got the outflow so far +under control as to restrict it to one quarter +million gallons a day. It was certainly a misfortune +that of the ten million gallons of oil +ejected from Tagieff’s well, most of it was at +first lost for want of storage accommodation.</p> + +<p>The yield of oil at Baku is thus much ahead +of the greatest product of the American wells. +Nobel Brothers’ No. 18 Well has yielded, from +a depth of seventeen hundred and twenty-one +feet, nearly thirty million gallons of oil; and +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_827">{827}</span>their No. 9 Well, from a depth of six hundred +and forty-two feet, forty million gallons. Some +of these wells are kept closed while oil is being +sold at so cheap a rate. Against the assertion that +the product of these wells may dry up and will +not last very long, Mr Marvin says that there +is ample historical evidence that petroleum has +been flowing from the Apsheron peninsula for +two thousand five hundred years, and that there +seems more likelihood of the American wells +drying up than those of Baku. Besides, the +petroleum region of the Black Sea has scarcely +been touched, and there the oil seems as +plentiful as in America.</p> + +<p>Owing to this prodigious outflow without a +ready market, oil was selling there, in the beginning +of October last, at <i>one penny per sixteen +gallons</i>. The best refined petroleum or lamp-oil +is sold at three-farthings a gallon. The production +of crude petroleum last year exceeded +four hundred and twenty million gallons; there +are now one hundred and twenty firms with oil-refineries +at Baku, which last year turned out one +hundred and twenty million gallons of refined +petroleum. The production in 1878 was only +one and a quarter million gallons. The bulk-system +of transport, as distinguished from carrying +in barrels, first adopted in 1879, has had +a tendency to revolutionise the trade, and now +there are one hundred oil steamers on the Caspian. +Some of these steamers have a capacity of carrying +eight hundred tuns of oil each trip.</p> + +<p>After extracting thirty per cent. of lamp-oil, +and allowing ten per cent. for waste and dregs, +the remaining sixty per cent., out of every +hundred gallons, is used for lubricating and +other purposes. Large quantities are imported +by certain firms in London, for the manufacture +of lubricating oils. Although thus exported, +the supply of this waste or residue is so +great that it has become the principal fuel +in South-east Russia. Steamers purchase it at +Baku at fourpence a tun, to be used as fuel. +When sent by rail to Batoum, the price rises as +high as one pound per tun, which is still cheaper +than English coal. More than two hundred and +fifty tank and many passenger steamers and +locomotives now use this waste oil as fuel in +place of coal. A tun of liquid fuel is said to +do the work of two or three tons of coal: the +chief advantage of its use consists in the fact +that it can be turned off and on like gas; it is +clean, and takes up very little bunker-space, +a matter of great importance to steamers travelling +to long distances. The Black Sea Steam +Navigation Company, owning seventy-six steamers, +intend to commence using this oil-refuse.</p> + +<p>The chief outlets for the transport of Baku +oil at present are by the Volga and the Transcaucasian +Railway. A concession has been granted +by the Russian government for laying down a +petroleum pipe six hundred miles long for the +carrying of the oil from Baku to a point on the +Black Sea. The pipe must be large enough to +carry one hundred and sixty millions of gallons +of oil a year; and it is expected that three years +will elapse before it is in working order. Meantime, +the North Caucasus Railway will be completed +in 1887, and it is expected that it will +convey at least one hundred million gallons of +oil to the port of Novorossisk, on the Black Sea. +Thence it can be shipped in tank steamers to +Europe.</p> + +<p>We learn that a huge iron reservoir is being +built at a remote spot in the outer harbour of +Amsterdam for the storage of petroleum. It will +be nearly thirty-three feet in diameter, and of +the same depth, and is calculated to hold nearly +one million seven hundred and forty thousand +gallons. The petroleum will be brought direct +from Russia in these tank steamers, and will be +pumped out at Amsterdam into the tanks, thus +saving the expense of filling and emptying casks, +besides diminishing the risks of accidents.</p> + +<p>Mr Marvin is of opinion that the world +is consuming more oil yearly, and he calculates +the daily consumption at two million +gallons. Along with the cheapening of the oil +have also come great improvements in the make +of lamps, such as the Defries Safety-lamp, +in which the receptacle for the oil is formed of +brass. Mr Marvin makes the sensible suggestion, +that as Russia is flooding the surrounding +countries with oil, our manufacturers might +supply the south-east of Europe with lamps, +and thousands of cooking and warming stoves. +It appears that there is not a country in Europe +to which Baku oil is not now shipped, and +the figures quoted show that American petroleum +is being driven from the Black Sea and +the Mediterranean. Mr Marvin is of opinion +that the shale-oil industry of Scotland already +shows signs of yielding to the competition of +America, ‘and unless special circumstances should +arise, must eventually be crushed by the rivalry +of Russian petroleum, when imported in bulk.’ +And apparently he has written his pamphlet in +order to rouse British ship-owners, manufacturers, +and capitalists to secure a share in the expansion +and development of the Baku oil-trade.</p> + +<p>[We have on more than one occasion advocated +the use of oil in calming <i>broken</i> billows at sea, +and thus saving a ship or boat which otherwise +might succumb to the fury of the storm. Might +it not, therefore, be worth while to make further +experiments in the abandonment of costly coal, +and fit up steamers with this comparatively cheap +material, which, while driving the ship, might +in a heavy seaway save her, if the oil be allowed +to ooze from bags made fast to windward? The +use of oil at sea during rough weather <i>cannot be +overestimated</i>.—<span class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p> + + +<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"> +<div class="chapter"> + <h2 class="nobreak" id="TOBACCO-CULTURE_IN_SCOTLAND"> + TOBACCO-CULTURE IN SCOTLAND. + </h2> +</div> + + +<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is quite right for agriculturists to do what is +possible in the direction of introducing new kinds +of crop that may possibly turn out remunerative; +and in this view, some interest is attached +to recent experiments in the culture of tobacco. +If the North Americans can compete with British +farmers in the production of good beef and +mutton, Britain may possibly maintain the equilibrium +by cultivating the weed of which the +New World has long had a monopoly. Potatoes +were introduced into this country from America, +and have proved to be a rich benefit. It is just +possible that tobacco also may turn out to be a +not less lucrative gift to the producer. More +than a hundred years have elapsed since a trial +was made in Scotland, principally, but not exclusively, +in the south-eastern counties. It failed +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_828">{828}</span>at that time, through the combined influences of +a bad season, the interference of the government—believed +to be at the instance of Glasgow +merchants—and ultimately of a rapid fall in +the price of imported tobacco, a combination of +circumstances not likely to occur again.</p> + +<p>Of the trial made towards the close of last +century, a detailed account has been left on +record by the Rev. Dr Somerville of Jedburgh. +In consequence of the war with America, tobacco +had continued to rise in price, till, in 1781, it +reached the unprecedented price of two shillings +the pound. Dr Jackson, a gentleman who +possessed a small estate near Kelso, had for two +years previous laid out a few acres in the culture +of tobacco, the science of which he had learned +from long experience in America. In 1781, his +whole crop had been sold at the extraordinary +rate of two shillings and sixpence a pound. +His example and reputed success led others to +follow in the same line. Even the minister of +Jedburgh had five acres of his glebe laid out +as a tobacco plantation; and his statement is +that, in 1782, many thousands of acres in the +counties of Roxburgh, Berwick, and Selkirk were +planted with tobacco, nearly every farmer in these +counties having devoted some considerable part +of his arable land to this adventurous speculation. +In Berwickshire, complaints were made that many +acres of the best land were occupied with tobacco +instead of being cropped with grain.</p> + +<p>The year 1782 is notable as having been one +of the most inclement seasons either in the +eighteenth century or the present. Snow, which +had fallen plentifully during the winter, remained +so long on the ground that the sowing of grain +was delayed at least a month after the ordinary +time. The summer was uncommonly wet and +cold; the harvest was so late that even in early +districts corn was not cut down till October, +while a great part of it was reaped only in +November; and much of it in the higher grounds +never ripened at all. Tobacco, like other crops, +suffered from the cold rainy season; and its +destruction was completed in the month of August +by a thunderstorm of unusual violence, accompanied +with a great fall of hail. The succulent +leaves were riddled; many of the most luxuriant +plants were destroyed; and the prospects of +speculative farmers were seriously blighted.</p> + +<p>The discomfiture of tobacco-planters, begun by +the unpropitious season, was completed through +the interference of Glasgow merchants. The +tobacco trade in that city had gradually grown +to large dimensions. It had begun in a small +way soon after the union with England in 1707. +At first, Glasgow merchants had no ships of their +own, but were dependent on English vessels; +and not till 1718 did the first Glasgow ship cross +the Atlantic. Gradually the tobacco trade of +Glasgow increased, till it roused the jealousy of +merchants in London, Liverpool, Bristol, and +Whitehaven, who made strenuous but unsuccessful +efforts to crush those enterprising Scottish +traders. The traffic continued to flourish till in +1775 there were fifty-seven thousand one hundred +and forty-three hogsheads of tobacco imported +from Virginia, Maryland, and Carolina. At the +instance of these Glasgow merchants, the government +officials came to understand that the revenue +would suffer if tobacco grown in Scotland were +carried free of duty into England. Accordingly, +an Act was passed in 1782 permitting the use and +removal of tobacco, the growth of Scotland, into +England for a limited time under certain restrictions; +but liable to duties similar to those due +and payable on the importation of such tobacco, +the growth and produce of the British colonies or +plantations in America.</p> + +<p>By a subsequent Act, provision was made +for granting relief to the proprietors of such +tobacco, in consideration of the inferior quality +thereof, or any accident or defect that may +happen in the growth or culture of the crop +so as to render the same not marketable or +worth the duties imposed thereupon. For +this purpose, it was enacted that the Commissioners +of Customs at Edinburgh might allow, +and order to be paid to the owner or proprietor +of such tobacco, out of any revenue under +their management which is applicable to the +payment of incidents, at the rate of fourpence +for every pound-weight thereof, for which the +owner or proprietor thereof shall refuse to pay +the full duties imposed by the said recited Act, +provided the commodity shall be given up and +<i>burned</i>, the owners being compensated at the rate +of fourpence a pound. Even at that moderate +figure, it was said that thirteen acres in the parish +of Crailing brought one hundred and four pounds +sterling, or about eight pounds an acre. The +return would have been three times as much, but +for the Act of Parliament which fixed the rate +of compensation so low. Altogether, the county +of Roxburgh was believed to have lost fifteen +hundred pounds by the arrangement. The experiment +was not renewed in 1783, one reason for +which is doubtless indicated in the announcement +made on the 21st of March that year, that +‘tobacco has fallen fourpence a pound this week.’</p> + +<p>The more recent experiments of growing +tobacco near Kelso were, we understand, quite +successful so far as plant-production of a good +quality was concerned, but excise difficulties prevented +the utilisation of the crop. It only remains +for us to assure our readers that a tobacco plant, +grown in a pot, is a pretty household ornament.</p> + + +<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"> +<div class="chapter"> + <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_MONTH"> + THE MONTH: + <br> + <span class="smalltext">SCIENCE AND ARTS.</span> + </h2> +</div> + + +<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Japanese sanitarium, Kusatsu, possesses such +important remedial properties that it is believed +that when its reputation becomes more widely +known in Western countries, patients will flock +to it from all parts of the globe. Here, in the +volcanic soil, are a series of natural baths of +different temperatures, the waters of which are +charged with sulphur, arsenic, copper, alumina, +magnesia, in various proportions. To these baths +come the halt, the maim, and even those who +are as far blind as that too common disease +ophthalmia can make them. They bathe here +in waters which are described as caustic and +evil-smelling, some of which consist of little else +than dilute sulphuric acid. This treatment, +owing to the great temperature and searching +action of the different chemicals dissolved in the +water, is often most agonising to the patients, +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_829">{829}</span>who can only bear it for several minutes at +a time. But its efficacy in various species of +disease is said to be most thorough, even incurable +maladies being mitigated by these wonderful +waters.</p> + +<p>The <i>Builder</i> calls attention to the careless +construction of flues and party-walls in houses, +which constitutes a common cause of houses +being burned down. The evil is best described +by showing what occurred at a private house in +London not many weeks ago. A smell of fire +was detected, luckily in the daytime, when people +were about and able to seek the cause. Upon +examination of a certain flue, it was found that +ties of fir covered with lead passed on each side +of it. These ties had ignited, and had communicated +their fire to a library bookcase. Although +the Building Act forbids this mode of construction, +there are many houses which were built before +it became law, and doubtless a large proportion of +them have wood in dangerous proximity to their +flues. Although at the time of building, such +woodwork may have been partially protected, +the modern method of sweeping a chimney is +apt to knock off projections and to move bricks +out of place, thereby giving a ready means of +access to fire.</p> + +<p>At a recent meeting of the Academy of Sciences, +Paris, a paper was read by M. Pasteur on his +Treatment of Hydrophobia. As Pasteur’s work +has recently been much criticised, sometimes +not too kindly, it may be as well briefly to +state the results which he has recorded after +inoculating nearly 2500 patients. Of these, 80 +were English, 52 Austrians, 9 Germans, 107 +Spaniards, 10 Greeks, 14 Dutch, 165 Italians, +25 Portuguese, 191 Russians, 1726 French and +Algerians, and 54 of other nationalities. Confining +his remarks to the French cases, as being, +we presume, those only the subsequent history +of which could be followed, M. Pasteur said that +out of the large number stated, the inoculation +had proved ineffectual in ten cases only. Six of +these ten were children, and one a woman seventy +years old. As a result of studying these failures, +M. Pasteur came to the conclusion that for deep +wounds his treatment was insufficient. He +has now modified it by making the action more +rapid and energetic for all cases, and he considers +that this alteration has already been productive of +very favourable results.</p> + +<p>A Russian doctor says that he has successfully +treated with cantharides some patients who were +bitten by a rabid wolf. Three men were badly +bitten by the animal in various parts of the body, +and cantharides plasters were applied to the +wounds. At the same time, powdered cantharides +was administered to each in doses of one grain +each day, until certain well-known symptoms +were exhibited. These patients have now been +in perfect health for eight months since the bites +were given, and it is hoped that cantharides has +thus proved a successful remedy to the dire +disease with which they were threatened.</p> + +<p>A petroleum engine has been invented by +Herr Siegfried Marcus of Vienna, and adopted +by the German government as a motor for +torpedo boats. It is said to be far more +powerful than a steam-engine of equal bulk, +while its fuel takes up much less space than coal. +The engine is said to work well and without +any risk of explosion.</p> + +<p>We are always glad to note anything new in +the way of utilising waste products, for such +saving represents a distinct gain to the country. +The last item of this kind that has been recorded +is a method, which has been patented, of making +use of spent dye liquors for the manufacture of +writing-ink. The spent liquor of bichromate of +potash, or soda, such as may have been used for +mordanting wool, &c., is boiled with the waste +logwood liquor from dyeing-vats. The result, +after certain additions have been made, is a non-corrosive +and permanent ink.</p> + +<p>A successful attempt has recently been made, +near Liverpool, to acclimatise a beautiful variety +of carp called the ‘Golden Orfe,’ a fish which +comes from Bavaria. The ornamental gold-fish +which are commonly seen in aquaria in our +own country will not, as a rule, breed here, and +if they do, their descendants are black rather +than golden. But these Bavarian fish, while +quite as beautiful, will breed freely, and their +young will retain the colour of the parents. +The fish is about one foot in length, and is said +to attain a weight of six pounds. It will be +valued by anglers for the reason that it will rise +to a fly in waters which are inclosed, so that by +its help fly-fishing may be still further enjoyed in +landlocked waters. Some ponds near Liverpool +have been stocked with this hopeful fish; and +if present anticipations are realised, its culture +will no doubt be taken up in other parts of the +country.</p> + +<p>The experimental crop of tobacco grown at +Sydenham, close by the Crystal Palace, by Messrs +Carter & Co., has, so far as cultivation and preparation +for market are concerned, proved a +decided success. The experiment shows that the +fragrant weed can be produced and prepared by +hands unused to the work, in an uncertain climate +such as ours. The total crop raised by Messrs +Carter covered only three-quarters of an acre of +ground, and its estimated weight is about fifteen +hundredweight, having a market value of forty-two +pounds, or at the rate of fifty-six pounds per +acre. This estimate is of course the value of the +raw material free of all duty. The operations involved +in tobacco-growing are such as could be +undertaken by small cultivators, and it remains +to be seen whether the government will allow +this new kind of farming to be tried on a more +extensive scale. Their decision should come +quickly, so that farmers may have time to prepare +their ground for the new crop.</p> + +<p>A new method of preserving polyzoa and other +low forms of life has been discovered by Dr A. +Fottinger. Crystals of chloral hydrate are dropped +into the vessel of water in which polypes have +been placed, and in a short time the creatures +become insensible, when they can be placed in +alcohol. The advantage claimed for this method +is that the polypes will remain expanded, and can +therefore be preserved when exhibiting all their +beauty of structure. The chloral acts, it would +seem, in much the same manner as it affects +higher organisms—that is, as a narcotic.</p> + +<p>The extended use of the electric light in +America seems to be by no means an unmixed +blessing. It is said that in every town over a +certain size the Companies are stringing their +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_830">{830}</span>wires over the streets to the danger of the inhabitants. +But this danger does not arise from the +risk of broken wires, so much as from wires +which are so imperfectly insulated that the electric +energy can escape to neighbouring telephone +and telegraph lines. This is especially the case +in storms, when the wires are swayed to and fro +in the wind, and are often knocked together. +The result of this is often a fire at the telephone +or telegraph offices, sometimes leading to loss of +life. It is said by telephone operators that it +is not an uncommon thing to find, upon opening +the office in the morning, that a telephone has +been burned up during the night, its charred +remains having fallen on the floor. It is evident +that such accidents are preventable; but special +legislation may be necessary to compel the Companies +to adopt proper precautions against their +occurrence.</p> + +<p>Last month, we noticed certain improvements +which have been made in the Electric Safety-lamp +invented by Mr Swan of Newcastle. Another +lamp of the same type has been contrived by Mr +Miles Settle of Bolton. Mr Settle’s lamp is an +incandescent electric globe which floats in another +glass globe of water. Should the glass, from any +cause, break, the electric connection is broken +too, and the lamp goes out. It is made in two +sizes—one for main roads, and one for ordinary +use. It gives a brilliant light, and is adapted +for use in powder-magazines as well as in +mines. Mr Settle is also the inventor of a +water-cartridge which can be exploded in a fiery +mine, or in one charged with coal-dust, without +any fear of the surrounding medium catching fire. +Both inventions have lately been subjected to +experiments, which clearly prove their efficiency.</p> + +<p>In view of the wonderful advances which have +been recently made in the field of astronomical +photography, it has been proposed by the Paris +Academy of Sciences that an International Conference +shall be held in the spring for the purpose +of making arrangements for obtaining a complete +chart of the heavens. This photographic +map would be combined from many hundreds +of photographs taken at ten or more observations +in different parts of the globe. We shall have +occasion again to refer to this important and +deeply interesting subject.</p> + +<p>It has long been admitted that if Britain is to +retain her commercial position among the nations +of the world, her workmen must have the advantages +of technical education. Much has been done +in this direction in recent years, but much more +remains to be done. It would be as well if the +various Institutes throughout the country were to +follow the lead of the Finsbury Technical College, +London. Here, a course of lectures on Electric +Bells has been so well attended that it will shortly +be repeated. Another course on Electro Deposition +of Metals, with special reference to Nickel +Plating, has been commenced. Following this +will come the subject of Solders and Soldering. +The intelligent working-man comes to these +lectures, for he knows that he must learn something +more than his father was master of, and +that ‘rule of thumb’ must in these days give +place to something more definite.</p> + +<p>It is to be hoped that the conduct of an official +at Bedford in deliberately handing to the public +analyst a sample of beer which had been purposely +doctored with a poisonous drug, with a view to +showing that customary analysis would not discover +the addition, will not lead the unthinking +to assume that chemical analysis is valueless. In +examining a sample of beer, the analyst looks only +for such ingredients as are liable to be used for its +sophistification, such as sugar, added water, &c. In +examining bread in like manner, he would look for +alum or potato; in coffee, for chicory; and so on. +But it would be quite outside his province to look +for a mineral poison, unless he were told beforehand +that the presence of such a poison was suspected. +If it were the duty of the public analyst +to search every sample of food submitted to him +for all the poisons known to the world, each +analysis would be an affair of many weeks, and +his work would practically come to a stand-still.</p> + +<p>At the beginning of the year, a certain number +of the new Enfield-Martini rifles were issued to +our troops, and several adverse reports concerning +their efficiency were the result. The weapons +were returned to headquarters, and have now been +reissued to Portsmouth, Aldershot, and the School +of Musketry at Hythe. Those into whose hands +they are placed are required to answer several +questions as to the efficiency of various parts of +the weapon, and general observations upon its +merits or demerits are invited. It is thought +in many quarters that it is now time that a magazine +or repeating rifle should become the arm of +the infantry. But it has long become the fashion +for Britain not to lead, but to follow the lead of +other countries in these matters. The plan has +the advantage of benefiting by the experience of +others, but it can be carried too far.</p> + +<p>It was recently pointed out in an article which +appeared in the <i>Times</i> how little we are indebted +to native talent for the more deadly and exceptional +implements of war. The Gatling, Gardner, +Hotchkiss, and Maxim machine guns are due to +American ingenuity, and the practical conception +of the turret ship comes from the same source. +Nordenfelt with his machine gun and his submarine +boat is a Norwegian. But what will +prove perhaps the most deadly thing of all is the +dynamite cruiser, which is about to be built for +the American navy. This is a boat two hundred +and thirty feet in length, with engines which will +insure a speed of twenty knots. She is to be +built of steel, and furnished with twin screws. +Her armament is to consist of three guns, seventy +feet in length, to fire dynamite shells, propelled +by compressed air. This form of gun was invented +and tried with success some months ago, +and at the time we described its construction as +being similar to that of a pea-shooter. The cartridge +of the gun is a copper drum containing two +hundred pounds of dynamite, and its flight of two +or three miles through the air is rendered steady +by the attachment of a wooden shaft, which acts +towards it as a stick does to a rocket. It is +certain that no ship afloat could withstand the +explosion of such a terrible projectile.</p> + +<p>The Germans have found a new use for Professor +Hughes’s microphone in the detection of +leaks in water-mains. The apparatus required +consists of a steel rod, in addition to the microphone, +telephone, and battery. The rod is placed +upon the stopcock in the neighbourhood of which +a leak is suspected; and by listening to the telephone +placed in circuit with it and the microphone, +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_831">{831}</span>the slightest leakage is detected. If the stopcock +is a good one and there is no leak, no sound is +heard; but the least leakage causes a vibration, +which is rendered audible by the microphone. +The operation is so simple that it is readily +acquired by unskilled hands.</p> + +<p>As Mr Watts, the eminent Academician, has +announced his intention of bequeathing his valuable +paintings to the nation, more than ordinary +interest must centre round the nine pictures +which he has sent to the Kensington Museum +as what he calls ‘samples’ of his work. These +include several of his more recent productions. +We may mention, too, that the collection +of fifty-five pictures by the same hand, which for +some months have been exhibited in Birmingham, +is now removed to the Museum galleries +at Nottingham Castle. Mr Watts’ works will +thus be rendered familiar to many thousands +of people.</p> + +<p>We hear of a very ingenious and valuable +improvement upon the construction of the steam-engine, +for which various patents have recently +been issued. This invention, which hails from the +Dunfermline Foundry Company, N.B., consists of +a steam-valve of entirely original design, which +can be moved with the greatest ease, as there is +no steam-pressure on any of its working parts, +causing considerable friction, as in the case of +the slide-valve at present in use. Apart from +the simplification of the steam-engine, where +quick stoppage and reversing are important considerations, +its great value lies in the certainty +of its preventing various kinds of accidents of a +mortal character. Thus, where miners are being +hoisted to the pit-mouth, there is always a danger +that the engineman may lose control of the stopping +arrangements, and a case of ‘overwinding’ +is the result. The new valve, however, is so +easily stopped, that the ‘indicator’ can be +adjusted, so that when the cage reaches the platform +at the pit-mouth, the steam is instantly cut +off and overwinding rendered impossible. At +sea, also, this valve will be most valuable, as the +most powerful engines can be stopped and reversed +with the greatest ease, and this cannot be said +of the engines of the present day. The same +remarks apply to locomotives. The valve has +also been adapted to steam-winches, and here +another advantage presents itself, inasmuch as, +should the winch be stopped while the load is +upon the chain, the load remains suspended without +the application of a brake; in other words, +the winch does not run away, because the +‘exhaust’ steam does not leave the cylinder, but +is inclosed as a steam-brake, keeping the piston +immovable.</p> + +<p>In the neighbourhood of the mining village of +Broxburn, about twelve miles west of Edinburgh, +are several large shale-oil works. In making a +new bore in connection with one of these works +lately, a petroleum spring was struck at one +hundred and fifteen fathoms from the surface. +In driving a mine at a later date, petroleum was +observed coming out of the rocks. In a deep bore +made in 1884 the same appearances of petroleum +oozing from the rock were observed. It was the +discovery of a petroleum spring at Alfreton, +Derbyshire, by the late James Young, which set +him thinking and experimenting, and led up to +his famous discovery of the distillation of oil from +shale. In Scotland, this industry has flourished +in recent years, the annual output of shale for +this having reached the enormous quantity of +two million tons.</p> + + +<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"> +<div class="chapter"> + <h2 class="nobreak" id="OCCASIONAL_NOTES"> + OCCASIONAL NOTES. + </h2> +</div> + + +<h3>MILK-DIET FOR INFANTS.</h3> + +<p><span class="smcap">In</span> an article on ‘Infant-feeding,’ contributed +to the <i>Lancet</i>, Dr E. Paget Thurstan, M.D., +publishes an interesting discovery that he has +recently made. It has been very generally +admitted that, inasmuch as salivary and pancreatic +secretions are practically absent in newborn +children, all farinaceous food should be +avoided in their dietary. Dr Thurstan’s discovery +entails a departure from the letter, if +not the spirit, of this axiom of child-rearing. +Mothers are well aware that very young children +cannot drink pure cow’s milk, because it curdles +in a lump in their stomachs. Certain chemical +substances—notably lime-water—must be blended +with the liquid to make it digestible. These +auxiliaries, however, frequently produce sickness; +and it is obviously undesirable to doctor a child +with medicine for months together if it be not +absolutely necessary. Some persons imagine they +solve the problem by using condensed milk as +infant-food. But Dr Thurstan points out that, +though its curd is undoubtedly more digestible +than that of uncondensed milk, the cane-sugar +with which it is prepared, itself produces indigestion +in a new form, while the condensation robs +the liquid of much of its saline constituents, +and removes material required for bone-formation. +Hence he sought a new method of making +cow’s milk digestible to young children; and +his final solution of the question is as simple as +he declares it to be efficacious. He mixes with +the milk a small quantity of farinaceous food, +to secure a mechanical as opposed to a nutritive +action. The particles of solid intermingle with +the curds as they form, and thus prevent their +coalescing into one large mass. Dr Thurstan +suggests as appropriate agents the crust of +bread—when free from alum and large quantities +of potato starch—or any one of the many well-known +infants’ foods. He points out that they +should be added to the milk in such small quantities +and in such minute particles that it will +easily pass through the tube of a feeding-bottle. +Dr Thurstan mentions in detail the case of a +weak and ailing child whose life was saved by +this method of feeding.</p> + + +<h3 id="WOOD-PULP"> + WOOD-PULP. +</h3> + +<p>A report comes from Norway of a discovery +just made at the Sognedal Pulp Factory, after +years of experimenting—that wood-pulp can be +used for the manufacture of all kinds of building +ornaments which are usually made in plaster +of Paris, the pulp readily taking painting or +gilding to great advantage. The material also +seems to be remarkably tough, and not easily +broken, as shown by the fact that a bar a foot +long, an inch thick, and five inches wide, was +thrown with great violence against a wall and +sustained no injury. Pieces have also been +dropped from great heights with the same +<span class="pagenum" id="Page_832">{832}</span>result. The material is lighter than plaster of +Paris, is impervious to wet, and therefore admirably +adapted for ceilings, ceiling ornaments, +friezes, and such-like, both outdoor and indoor. +It can easily be fixed either with nails or screws. +One more advantage is claimed by the inventor—that +ornaments made from this material cost +half the price of similar ones made of plaster. +If this discovery is really all that it is said +to be, it will prove a useful adjunct to all kinds +of ornamentation and architectural decoration, +and ought therefore to be specially acceptable in +the building trade.</p> + + +<h3 id="M_DEPREZ_ELECTRICAL_EXPERIMENTS"> + M. DEPREZ’ ELECTRICAL EXPERIMENTS. +</h3> + +<p>A series of interesting experiments have been +lately carried on by M. Deprez at Creil, at the +sole expense of Messrs Rothschild, with the +view to ascertain whether certain results can +be obtained from one generator and one receptor. +M. Deprez now finds that with these appliances +he can transmit to a distance of thirty-five miles +a force of fifty-two horse-power, and that the +machinery is now working regularly and continuously. +The maximum electro-motive force +is 6290 volts, which is all the more remarkable; +for before the construction of M. Deprez’ apparatus, +the maximum force did not exceed 2000. +The transmitting wires may be left uncovered on +poles, so long as they are high enough to be out +of the reach of the hand. The cost of this arrangement +to provide a circular line of seventy miles, +for a fifty-horse power of transmission, is estimated +at five thousand pounds; not a high price, +when all the circumstances are considered; and a +cost that would be lessened if the machines were +to be frequently manufactured or brought into +general use, which is much to be desired, as a +new and very practicable motor-power will thus +be made available for industrial purposes.</p> + + +<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"> +<div class="chapter"> + <h2 class="nobreak" id="SWEET_DAY_OF_DAYS"> + SWEET DAY OF DAYS. + </h2> +</div> + + +<div class="poetry-container"> + <div class="poetry"> + <div class="stanza"> + <div class="verse indent0"><span class=smcap>On</span> the moss-grown bridge I stand,</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Where you gave me once your hand,</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Where a story, new, yet old,</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Once without a word was told.</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Still the daylight slowly dies,</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Ebbing from the tender skies;</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Still the river creeps along,</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Crooning yet its wistful song.</div> + <div class="verse indent4">Day of days, sweet day of days,</div> + <div class="verse indent4">Years their shadows round us raise;</div> + <div class="verse indent4">Happy they who, looking on,</div> + <div class="verse indent4">Still remember days agone!</div> + </div> + <div class="stanza"> + <div class="verse indent0">Ah! of all sweet days that day,</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Gone from sight and reach away,</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Even as this flower I throw</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Down the old gray stream will go.</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Nay—it lingers—prisoned lies,</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Where the swaying willows rise,</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Out of reach, love, like sweet days</div> + <div class="verse indent0">Lingering yet in memory’s gaze!</div> + <div class="verse indent4">Day of days, sweet day of days,</div> + <div class="verse indent4">Years their shadows round us raise;</div> + <div class="verse indent4">Happy they who, looking on,</div> + <div class="verse indent4">Still remember days agone!</div> + </div> + <div class="stanza"> + <div class="verse attrib"><span class="smcap">G. Clifton Bingham.</span></div> + </div> + </div> +</div> + +<hr class="full"> + +<p class="center"><i>Volume III. of the Fifth Series of <span class="smcap">Chambers’s +Journal</span> is now completed, price Nine Shillings.</i></p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p class="center"><i>A Title-page and Index, price One Penny, have been +prepared, and may be ordered through any bookseller.</i></p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p class="center"><i>An elegant cloth case for binding the whole of the +numbers for 1886 is also ready.</i></p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p class="center"><i>Back numbers to complete sets may at all times be +had.</i></p> + + +<hr class="full"> + +<p class="center"> +The First Monthly Part of the New Volume will contain the opening Chapters of an<br> +original Novel, entitled:<br> +<br> +<span class=largetext>RICHARD CABLE</span><br> +<br> +THE LIGHTSHIPMAN<br> +<br> +<span class="smcap">By the Author of ‘Mehalah,’ ‘John Herring,’ ‘Court Royal,’ etc.</span> +</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p class="center"> +Also an interesting Novelette, entitled:<br> +<br> +<span class=largetext>TOLD BY TWO</span><br> +<br> +<span class="smcap">By</span> T. W. SPEIGHT<br> +<br> +<br> +END OF THE THIRD VOLUME.<br> +<br> +<br> +Printed and Published by W. and R. Chambers,<br> +47 Paternoster Row, London, and 339 High Street, Edinburgh.<br> +<br> +<br> +<i>All Rights Reserved.</i> +</p> + +<hr class="full"> + +<p>[Transcriber’s note—the following changes have been made to this text.</p> + +<p>Page 818: guaze to gauze—“wire-gauze”.</p> + +<p>Page 831: shale oil-works to shale-oil works—“shale-oil works”.]</p> + +<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77054 ***</div> +</body> +</html> + diff --git a/77054-h/images/cover.jpg b/77054-h/images/cover.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..609ce4e --- /dev/null +++ b/77054-h/images/cover.jpg diff --git a/77054-h/images/header.jpg b/77054-h/images/header.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7892f08 --- /dev/null +++ b/77054-h/images/header.jpg |
