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elt from Waterford, Ireland, resembling in shape the earlier stone tools, such as axes, adzes, chisels, hoes, for the chase, war, carpentry, and agriculture. b is a winged celt from Ireland, c a socketed celt from the same country. d e f show the modes in which the celts a b c were stocked. Celts and hatchets. These celts vary in size from an inch to a foot in length. g is a stone celt. h is a celt-mold from Ireland. i is a decorated bronze celt from Ireland. k l m are Danish celts of bronze. n is a stone axe from Ireland. o, a stone hatchet found in county Monaghan, Ireland, yet mounted in a pine handle 13 1/2 inches long. Almost none of these weapons are found with holes for the handles. See axe. p is an ancient stone hatchet found at the streamtin works, Morbihan. q is a bronze hatchet from Morbihan. r is the Roman securis. It had a single edge, or a blade and poll, as represented in the figure. When it had a blade on each side of the haft i
intermediately from the armature of the electro-magnets. 3. (Optics.) A finger working in the field of a microscope to point out a special object within the field of view. 4. A dynamometer or power measurer. In′di-cator-card. A card containing a diagram drawn by the working steam by means of an indicator (which see). In′di-cator-tel′e-graph. An electric telegraph in which the signals are given by the deflections of a magnetic needle. It was about 1819 that Oersted of Denmark made the discovery that if a magnetic needle, free to turn about its center, were placed near to and parallel with a wire, then, on causing an electric current to pass through this wire, the needle would be deflected to an angle proportioned to the force of the current. In Fig. 2670, A, a b being the wire and n s the needle, the passage of a current in the direction of the arrow deflects the needle to the position indicated, the stops c c limiting its motions. When the direction of the<
ontinuity of the joists is broken. The strength of joists, of equal thickness, is as the square of the height. A joist 4 × 6 has one quarter the strength of a joist 4 × 12. The latter is only twice as large. Timber is weakened by sawing. A floor of 16 feet hearing, supported by 12 joists 8 inches square, 1 foot apart, is stronger than a similar floor of 24 joists, 8 × 4, placed edgeways, 6 inches apart. The quantity of timber is the same in both cases. Jolly-boat. (Dutch jol; Danish jolle; a yawl.) A small boat used for the general miscellaneous work of a ship, such as bringing off marketing, etc. A boat of this kind attached to United States vessels of war is called a dingy. It is clinker-built, from 16 to 20 feet long, with a beam from .33 to .29 of its length. Jour′nal. (Machinery.) That portion of a shaft which rests in the bearings. Journal-bear′ing. (Machinery.) The support of a shaft or axle, generally boxes or brasses in a pillow block.
hirts, and buskins were common among the nations in the motley army of Xerxes. The Libyans wore dresses of leather. The Paphlagonians leathern buskins and helmets. The Gordian knot was of leathern thongs, and was summarily cut about 330 B. C. Alum was used in tawing leather by the Saracens. We do not recollect any account of human hide leather, but as raw-hide or parchment it has been utilized. The doors of Rochester (England) Cathedral were formerly covered with the skins of Danish pirates. The same is reported of the doors of the churches of Hadstock and Copford, Essex, England. In the case of the Hadstock church, the microscope has determined the truth of the tradition, for a portion having been removed and tested, it proved to be the skin of a fair-haired person. Upon the north doors of the cathedral at Worcester was formerly nailed the skin of a person who had sacrilegiously robbed the high altar. The doors date from the end of the fourteenth century, and have
e on. About 1756, John Canton, in England, made about 4,000 experiments for discovering and explaining the cause of the diurnal variation of the needle. La Perouse sailed from France with instructions and instruments, intending to make special observations at remote stations in regard to the variation and dip of the needle. The lamented death of the Admiral and destruction of his vessels in 1788 prevented the results from being communicated to the scientific world. M. Hansteen of Denmark undertook the subject in 1811, and in 1819 published his celebrated work Upon the magnetism of the earth. He treated the matter historically and scientifically, making a variation chart for 1787. The agonic line, or line of no variation, where the magnetic and geographical lines coincide, was discovered by Columbus in 1492, about 100 miles west of the Azores. Like other magnetic lines, it appears to have shifted. Hansteen's observations confirmed in great detail the position of Halley
ate which credits the driver with eight kilometers (about five miles) an hour, or two francs, according to the Parisian tariff. Table of Lengths of Foreign Road Measures. Place.Measure.U. S. Yards. ArabiaMile2,146 AustriaMeile (post)8,297 BadenStuden4,860 BelgiumKilometre1,093.63 BelgiumMeile2,132 BengalCoss2,000 BirmahDain4,277 BohemiaLeague (16 to 1°)7,587 BrazilLeague (18 to 1°)6,750 BremenMeile6,865 BrunswickMeile11,816 CalcuttaCoss2,160 CeylonMile1,760 ChinaLi608.5 DenmarkMul8,288 DresdenPost-meile7,432 EgyptFeddan1.47 EnglandMile1,760 FlandersMijle1,093.63 FlorenceMiglio1,809 France 1, 60931 miles = 1 kilometre. Kilometre1,093.6 GenoaMile (post)8,527 GermanyMile (15 to 1°)8,101 GreeceStadium1,083.33 GuineaJacktan4 HamburgMeile8,238 HanoverMeile8,114 HungaryMeile9,139 IndiaWarsa24.89 ItalyMile2,025 JapanInk2.038 LeghornMiglio1,809 LeipsieMeile (post)7,432 LithuaniaMeile9,781 MaltaCanna2.29 MecklenburgMeile8,238 MexicoLegua4,638 Mi
laws of Solon were written boustrophedon. The later Greek, long before the Christian era, came to be written from left to right like the Sanscrit and the other languages to which it — not its characters — was allied. The number of letters in the following alphabets is thus given in Ballhorn's Grammatography, Trubner & Co., 1831: — Hebrew22Ethiopic202 Chaldaic22Chinese214 Syriac22Japanese73 Samaritan22Dutch26 Phoenician22Spanish27 Armenian38Irish18 Arabic28Anglo-Saxon25 Persian32Danish28 Turkish33Gothic25 Georgian38French28 Coptic32German26 Greek24Welch4 Latin25Russian35 Sanscrit328 The letter J was introduced into the alphabets by Giles Beye, a printer of Paris, 1660. Short-hand writing was known to the Greeks and Romans. Its invention was ascribed to Xenophon. It was introduced into Rome by Cicero. Pliny employed a short-hand amanuensis. The Chinese dictionary shows 43,496 words: of these 13,000 are irrelevant, and consist of signs which are ill-formed<
signing the name of the inventor. Saws of the bronze age have been discovered in Germany and Denmark, but not in Great Britain. (Lubbock.) The metal was cast thin, and probably was serrated by ch the instrument. A corresponding set of graduations is marked on each of the four sides. The Danish balance (B) is the inverse of the Chinese or Roman balance. The weight being attached to one enhe weight of the lead reciprocally as their respective distances from the loop. Steelyard and Danish balance. Roman Statera. The Roman balance (statera), Fig. 5749, is mentioned 315 B. C., ane sword from Ireland; c, from Sweden; e, Switzerland: f, Neufchatel; g, Scandinavia; g h i j k, Denmark. For the sake of comparison are added: — l m, spear-heads from Ireland n o, Irish bronze daggers. p q, bronze knives from Switzerland. r, bronze razor-knife from Denmark. The Egyptian sword was straight and short, from 2 1/2 to 3 feet in length, having a double edge and a sha
rince Edward Island to New Brunswick1218 1853Denmark across the Belt1815 1853Dover, England, to O1501,600 1859*Singapore to Batavia63020 1859Denmark to Heligoland4628 1859*Cromer, England, to Hpe Otway, Circular Head24060 1860Great Belt, Denmark (2 cables)1418 1860*Dacca, Hindostan, to Pegon188250 1867Arendal, Norway, to Hirtshalts, Denmark66110 1868Italy to Sicily540 1868Havana to Kgoland to Cuxhaven, Germany40 1873England to Denmark350 1873France to Denmark450 1873Denmark to Denmark450 1873Denmark to Sweden12 1873Pernambuco, Brazil, to Para, Brazil1,080 1873Alexandria, Egypt, to Crete390 1873CanDenmark to Sweden12 1873Pernambuco, Brazil, to Para, Brazil1,080 1873Alexandria, Egypt, to Crete390 1873Candia to Zante240 1873Zante to Otranto, Italy190 1873Alexandria, Egypt, to Brindisi, Italy930 1874unswick. m, that across the Great Belt, in Denmark. n, that across the Mississippi at New Orl. G Bell of the United States, and La Cour of Denmark. See English patents Nos. 1,740 and 2,646 of. There is something rotten in the state of (Denmark?) It need hardly be said that the labor co[2 more...]
rtain death. And so along the rebel lines there are loop-holes where keen-eyed men watch for the enemy. The soldiers on both sides delight to draw the fire of their opponents. They raise their hats a trifle — whiz — whiz — whiz — the bullets go around, or may be through it. The obstinacy of the rebels is matched by the persistence of our own men. It is not often in field operations — not siege — that opposing forces come in such close contact. The foreign papers are full of the war in Denmark — a war in which, in the greatest battle fought, the loss was less than a thousand men placed hors de combat. How little the world knows of the magnitude of our own war! How little we ourselves know of it I Our skirmishes, even, of which we hardly take notice, are of greater moment than the battles, the accounts of which fill the foreign newspapers. There was a slow cannonade in the morning, which gradually died away; but the infantry took it up, and so the Sabbath hours have bee
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