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Indy we wa‘ch the sediments in the wa‘er vcr)
closely, and sometimes they lead us to the spot
where the body ii s ’
C in't you relate soma further reminiscence*
of your lite ?’
I Perhaj s yon would like to hear about onr
; work on the San Pedro Aliantara,’ a frigate
j which was snnk in the Bay of Cunnna, on the
| coast of Venezuela, in 1812? Sue wassailing
from Cad z Spain, and was reported to have on
Among tllO Bodies ill a I tssel’s ! board 1 500 OLD Spanisl dtnbloons, a lot of spe-
IN THE DEP1HS OF THE SEA.|
The Awful Visions of aSub-
marinc Direr.
Wreck
The Wonder* »f the Ileep-The Danger -of!
IlHuttliiiK EiplMlve*.
Who has ever bounded over the biliowa of the
sea wi hout thinking of the treasures and won-
deis that are hidden from view by the dark and
treacherous expanse of water? Atone g-z-s n- . . , , . „ .. , - .. ,,
to the watery abyss it would Seem a: first thought ! T™*’ ‘ hfcl f b ,7 b at “ * tbe P laots “ tbe
that these treasures and wonders must forever for ^ of a11 8 z a ‘ fnere wdte 8ehock oI al!
some church plate and some hra-s cannon
We worked on her fonrteen months, but did not
find any donbloor s -nothing but sp eie and
some brass cannon. She was a splendid sbio of
fitly or fifty guns, hut as she was sunk in 1812
and as it was in 1857 that we went there, she was
pretty well eaten up. A diver nam -d James
Whipple bad worked on her before, bat withoo
success. The frigate caught fire, the magazine
exploded, and she sunk in sixty feet of water.
be hidden from the eyta ol m m, and this was
always true until a few years since, when by hu
man Ingenuity even the ccran’s bottom became
accessible to men. Not to every man, perhaps,
but to those who have the requisite courage to
‘gird on the armor' of the submarine diver and
explore the deep, is this opportunity open. The
ordinary man will shudder at the thought of
donning the hideous-looking suit of divers, and
descending fathom after fathom into the bowels
of the ocean; bat how wonid he feel if he were
called upon to go down and explore a wreck,
about wbiob dead bodies are li rating by the
soore? or if r> quired to descend to the bottom
of the s*a with dangerous explosives in his
hands? The submarine diver, however, is not
an ordinary man. He is a man of <ktraordinary
•courage and nerve, of healthy physique and in
domitable perseverance. To him the wonders
of the deep are an every-day affair, and h 3 thinks
no more of going down twenty-five fathoms in
the deplhs of the sea than would a carpenter of
■descendinga ladder. If the incidents of his life
were written the world would have a tale quite
as romantic as any Jules Verne eonld weave, for
if he does not see all the wonders which that
writer depicts, he observes others quite is re
markable. Believing that a pRge from
The l.ife ol' a Veteran Diver
would be of interest, a Globe representative
waited upon Mr. George W. Townsend, who for
twenty-two years has followed th6 business of a
submarine diver. The reporter having ma le
known his desire, Mr. Townsend, after some
hesitation, said:
T began my business of a submarine diver in
1856. I suppose that what The Globe wauls is
some reminiscences of my life. There are a
good many things that crowd upon my memory
and I eouldn’t tell them all, but pi roaps you
wouli like to b^ar about my adventures in th.
West Indies in 1857. Up to that time 1 had n- t
gone down in salt water—only in fresh water.
Well, as I said before, 1 was at the West Indies
A packet which ran from Santa Cruz to S .
Thomas mislcok a fi.sbtrmun’B light for a light
house and went down and stmek on a coral reel
in nine fathoms of water. The packet had tbe
mai's od board, which, with her cr.wand pss-
sengeis went to the bottom. Well, after she had
laid oti the reef two days we went out to strip
her. We had a fellow with us by the name ot
Wasgott. He was a big fellow from Monnr JDss-
eit. Wasgott went down first, as he was head
diver. lie went down on the fore rigging an ii
began to walk on tbe starbi ard side aft. Pretty
soon he polled the danger signal. We have two
signal 6 ; one is a danger s'gus), the other is used
when nothing in particular is the matter. Now
I never saw that man scared belore, but he was
scared this time. He was as pale as aghos',
and he wasn't a superstitions man by any means.
When we got his suit off and he was able to
speak, he said that a big feilow with sea-1 o is
on had kicked him in the face, and declared
that he would Dot go down again for all tlie
money in the world. Now I hated to go down,
bnt 1 thought it would not do to give up tbe j >b
this way, so I disregarded his appeals not to go,
put on my sr it, and went down i s he did. When
1 got down, there being a very strong undertow,
1 held on to the railing, and began to walk a’t.
Whin 1 pot within twenty-five feet of the main
rigging. I legan to look about me for a man.
lietore you can discern an ol jtet in the water it
resembles a shadow. Pretty soon I saw a shad
ow, then I saw
A Nnu < ling-in); with a Death Crip
to the sheer-pole of the main rigging. You see,
th- undertow caused his legs to move backward
and forward, and it wnB his feet that struck Jim
in the face. The face of the man looked as if he
had gone to sleep. The face of a drowned per
son don't geaerallv show pain. It always struck
me that drowning was an easy death to die. Af
ter finding the mails and sending them up 1
turned my attention to the bodies. This man
bad such a tight grip I had some diffionpy in
getting him down, but finally I succeeded.
Then I went into the cabin. I hadn’t la t muoh
experience at that time, and it was un awful
sight for me in that cabin. There were three or
four dead bodies lyiBg about, and right in the
middle of the cibin was a man standing bolt up
right, his eyes wide open and glassy. Pretty
soon he moved backward and forward. Well, I
hesitated because I was scared. I said to my
self, ‘Why don’t the rest of ’em stand?’ Just
then I saw that it was the undertow that made
the man mere, and then the thenght occurred
to me that it wss the gas ia Li» stomach that
made him stand up. Well, I sent those bodies
up, then I broke open a door to a state-room.
There was a woman in there standing up straight.
I took hold of her driss and tried to pall her
out, but she wouldn’t come. When a man is
drowned his body is light and can be moved
with two fingers, so you see this woman puzzled
me. Finally, 1 saw she had a death grip on the
upper bnnk. Talk about a death grip, nobody
kDows what it is until he has it to undo. The
rest of the bodies in tbe wreck had betn carried
iff by the undertow. The gts which collects in
the stomaoh of a diowned person causes them
to float iff. if is a curious fact that a woman
will almost alw»yg float with her face up, and a
man with his down. I account for it trom the
Lot that a woman is heavier about the hips than
a man.’
•What do yon think of the practice of firing
cannons over the surface of the water to bring
up dead bodies ?’
•It is an established fact that bodies have been
found in this manner; it is quite beyond dis
pute. I should like to try and see how effect
ive a charge of
Aitro-lilyecrine Exploded Voder Water
would be. I think that it an explc-sioD of nitro
glycerine will bring fish to the surface it will a
dt-ad body. While working on the steamer Gre
cian at Jones’ Inlet, Long Island, New York, I
bad occasion to pnt a blast under her stern. I
exploded two kegs of powder aDd brought up
ten barrels of dead tactogs. In blowing up a
wreck in the Merrimac Rivtr, 1 killed two stur
geon one-feurth of a mile cff. On another oc
casion I was working cn Kelly’s Ledge in Bos
ton Harbor, and as I hid occasion to do some
fasting, I sent word to a diver who was raising
a vessel ont-half a mile off that be bad t>etfer
come up. ‘Ob, blast away,’ said he. Will.
I did blast, and pretty soon I saw that he bad
come up a pretty badly scared man. He had
hold of a chain, and when the explosion took
place he thought the chain was dropped on to
his bead. I think these facts demonstrate that
a dead body can be brought to the surface by an
explosion under water, and I
feet. Under wa’er a feeling of oppression in the
ears is felt. The ears feel as if they were
plugged up. By putting the two helmets c’ose
together and yelling one man cm hear another
speak, but it don’t sound louder than a whis
per. Some divers fiod it is a relief to swallow
their saliva; others find greater comfort in
blowing air out of the nose.’
Mr. Townsend gives the following figures as
showing the pr-seure to 'he fquare inch on a
diver at various depths: 10 fset, 6250 pounds.
30 fdet, 18 750 pounds; 50 feet, 31. 250 pounds;
70 feet, 43.750 pounds; 90 feet, 56 250 pound 6 ;
110 feet, 68 750 pounds; 130 foo f , 81 250 pounds;
150 feet, 93.750 pounds; 160feet, 100.000 pounds.
sizes, and I tell you we got thoroughly light
ened with fish. Tue first time that Jim Wa:-
gott went down, he actually straddled a Jew-
fish, and I tell you he signalled to come up
pretty lively. These Jew-fish are six to fifteen
feet in length, had a heavy, large month, and
email, sharp teeth. From my observation they
lived principally upon suction. They were no
more tfriid of ns than anything. We would go
into the water, and a JiW-fish would come up
and look us right in the eye.
Some Fish are Fools,
bnt this was a very intelligent fish. Tbe curi
osity fairly stuck out of th»ir eyes, which were
as big as a bull's. They looked at us with curi
osity, and we at them with fear. Wuen I was
coming to the surface—that was the :ime I was
afraid. I knew that one of them could easi'y
bite cff my legs. But af r er awhile we found that
they did not mean to harm ns. I always make
it a rule never to harm fish if they let as alone.
These Jew-fish would rtmain sta lonary in one
plaze for hours at a time. I have seen a school
of stnai) fish feeding cff their bodies like flies ou
a male's biek. We t i 3d to catch these Jew-
fish with every kind of bait without success, and
I came to the conclusion that they lived on the
sediments in the water. One day a diver nam
ed Frank Dyer wss working on tbe wreck, and
I was on the deck of oar vessel fi-hing for Jbw-
fish. All at ones the line tightened, and I felt
sure I had a Jaw-fish. I puiled and the line
snapped. Pretty soon Frank signalled to be
puiled np. Wnat are you doing? said he ‘do
you take me for a Jew-fish ?' You see the cur
rent had takeu my hook to where Frank was I
and it caught on his ftocE. That is the nearest
we catuo to catching a Jaw-fish. One day when
I was under the water my attention was at
tracted by a beautiful white pile. At first I
thought the cook bad spilled alt tue beans omv-
board. Coming np closer 1 saw a pile of ban-
tiful white enamelled shells. Toe pile was four
feet at the b St and three feet big:;, and was
beautifully shaped. I filled my pockets, and
when I came up I found that they were alive.
The shell was the most beautiful I ever saw.
aud made a splendid button. I wen’ down af
ter more, but the little t’e'lo * a hni taken np
their traj s and left. YVflea we went to work
we used to tuar a bo so like thunder every day,
and couldn't make out what it was We con
cluded that it must bs an earthquake, audit
was six weeks before we found out wbat made
the sound. One day I saw an irnmens) school
of small fish chased by some large ones. When
they shot in a zigzag direction the noisy made
was
An Exact Representation of Thunder.
i am not afraid of a shark The shark is a
cowardly fish. If I saw a shark I would just
snap my rubber sleeve and he would be out of
sight. There is only one fish that I am afraid
of; that is the barieotas. This is a surface fish,
with teeth three inches long. Their nature is
the same as a pickerel. If they saw anything in
the water they would grab it, and ws used to
harpoon them. Their mates would gather around
and suck their blood.’
•I suppose that the bottom of the ocean is a
beantifcl sight sometimes.’
•Y*s, especially il a co al r ef is struck. A
coral reef wiil resemble a huge tree that has been
felled, except that the trunk and branohes are
of the whitest coral. We would sometimes
strike a coral reef three fathoms under water,
and then after descending two fathoms more
would strike a bottom of pure white sand.’
•Do you not realize the dangers to which a
dive. - is subjso ed ?’
‘Yes, I do; but I have been in the business
sires 1856, and have not lost a man, although I
have had more than a hundred in my employ,
and at the present time have twenty at work.
What kills divers is aa unequal pressure. Now
the native^ out to the West Indies could dive
down in fifteen fathoms of water without a suit
and remain a loDg time. We are in a vacuum
as it were. The pressure is on the lower gar
ments, and not on the copper about our head.
If the pressure is too heavy it drives all the blood
in a man’s body to his head and kills him. A
man killed in this manner presents a horrible
sight. His head fairly splits open from the pres
sure, and his eyes afar* from their sockets. I
came near being killed odo?. I was down in
the forward hatch of a vessel. The air-pump
did not work well. I signalled for another, but
thought I would keep at work till another one
was procured. All at once I felt as if a thous
and needles were being thrust into my fore
head. I grabbed my life-line, and that was the
last that I knew until I struok the ladder on the
side of the vessel. In letting a divtr down you
must work slowly or you wiil kill him. In six
ty feet of water you ought to be three minutes
lowering him down. In twenty fathoms of wa
ter I can see to read the finest print. We now
Fse (lit Telephone Vuder Water
with great success, the mouth-piece being un
der our helmet. It saves muoh signalling. By
throwing our head bsok in a certain position
we can walk on the sides of a vessel like a fly
on the ceiling.’
‘How about blasting?’
‘We have to have explosives cn hand all the
time, bnt we never met with an acoident. Nitro
glycerine is the principal explosive used. If I
was ever scared it was when I was working in
Boston Harbor and had on board 500 pounds of
powder in different charges in the hold of the
vessel. There came np the most terrifio thun
der-storm; the lightning fairly danced about
the deck, and I expected to be blown into eter
nity every minute; ail that saved us was the
rain. One time I had a contract with General
Foster to blow up the North Gangway Hook in
Ntwburyport Harbor. In a barge which was
drawn by a tug were 1000 pounds of dnalin in
cans. Alter we left Pigeon Cove the sea was
rough and I could hear those cans banging
ahout at a great rate. My first impulse was to
get in tbe bow of the tug. Then it occurred to
me that would do no good. It there was an ex
plosion I might as well be in one place as an
other, so I ruahed into the barge, expecting an
explosion every minute and finally made the
cans secure. I afterwards found that holes
had been punched in the cans by the ‘knocking
about process.' It was only a miracle that saved
aa explosion. The danger is always great from
an explosion, but it is not so great as it used to
b6, t-s we now have the platinum exploder.’
‘How long can a man stay under water ?'
‘That depends on the temperature of the
wafer. In warm water a man cm stay down
Till Hunger Drives Him Fp.
I have been down ten hours at a time. The
Amusements
Puzzles, Chess, Conundrums, Prob
lems, Charades, and Kinks of all
Kinds forKinkers to TJnkink.
TO COHRESPOSDESTS.
All communications relating to this department of the
paper should be addressed to A. F. Warm, Atlanta,Ga.
Chess headquarters, Young Men’s Library Associa
tion. Marietta street.
Original games and problems are cordially solicited for
this column. We hope our Southern friends will re
spond.
PROBLEM NO. 80.—By BKOWN.
Hi wm i
PH* 33 1!I m * I
wm m Wk^kWL
fill HI SB SSI i
Ail WMwk i®
WHITE.
White to play and give mate in 2 moves.
CHESS AMONG TUE ICEBERGS.
The Chens Players' Chronicle fir February publishes
two panics translated hum the X or disk Skaktidende,
with the r, mark that “apart from their intrinsic merits
are interesting, as having been played at Godihaab, ia
Greenland, and as being tne first iroin that distant conn
try. which have ever appeared iu print.” We give the
most interesting gams— D.mish Gambit:
WHITE -B. h&jjKKstx.
lPtoKi
2 P to q 4
3 P to q B 3
4.B to V B4
5 Q B takes P
6 Kt tqB3
7 Kt to B 3
8 Q to Kt 3
9 B to q 5 ( ?)
10 Castles Q ft
11 B t»kes B
12 P takes B
13 K li to K iq
14 Kt to y 4
15 P to K R 4 (g)
1C R takes Kt (h)
17 Kt to K 6
13 P to K B 4
19 R to B »q
20 Kt takes K B P
21 Kt tabes Kt ck
22 R loK iq ch
23 Q cal es V
24 mt to Kt 4
BLACK—C. 3. S.
1 P to K 4
2 P takes P
3 P takes P
4 P takes P (a)
5 B to Kt, 5 (ch)
6 Kt to Q B 3
7 P to Q 3 (b)
8 B to K 3 (C)
9 K Kt to K 2
10 B takes Kt
11 B takes B (e)
12 Kt to K 4
13 P to K B 3 (f)
14 K to B 2
15 P to K It 4
10 B P takes R
17 y toy 2
18 P takes P (i>
1!) Kt takes Q P ’j)
20 Q R to K B sq
21 K to K sq
22 K to y sq
25 Rto B 2
And w ins (k)
KOTES:
(a) Th* most prudent course here is to p'sy 4 Kt to K
B 3. for if then 5 Kt t*kes P, 5 Kt so Q B 3, 6 Kt to K B 3,
6 B to Kt 5. 7 P to K 5. 7 B o y 4. with a good game. And
if 5 P to K 5, 5 P to Q 4, 6 B to Kt 5 ch, 6 B to y 2, 7 B
takes B ch, 7 K Kt takes b, 8 Kt or y takes P, 8 P to y B
3. and black has a Pawn ahead with a safe game.
(b) Mr. Soren»en justly remark* that "Kt to K B 3 is
here * necess.ry link in the chain of the defence.” The
text move is decidedly interior.
(c) y to K 2 would hare been answered by Castles,
but if followed by B takes Kt aud Kt to K B 3, it appears
to us to be the correct play.
(d) Much stronger than winning the proffered Pawn.
(e) We should have preferred Castling at once.
This capture leaves the y Kt no good square to go
to, aud makes him speedily a mark for attack.
(f) Weak; Castles Isagain, perhaps,the bestmove,
though iu any case Black would not have an envia
ble position.
(g) With the intention apparently of playingthe
P to R5,and thus still further cramping the adversa
ry's movements.
’(h) White’s play from this point, and, indeed,
throughout the game, is of very superior order.
(i) It is a question whether Kt to B4 would have
been any better. BUck evunot prevent the opening
of the Bishop’s file to the Rook.
(J) 1 his costs* piece, but theie was no move to
prevent some loss.
(ki Better than B to R 5, to which Black could re
ply by U to B sq; whereas, il'.he now make that move,
there follows Kt to B 6 ch and Q, to Kt 5, etc.
. HEXAGON PFZZEE.
The hexagon is formed of six words of six letters
each. Each corner is the same consonant which
begins and ends each word.
The first word is a town in middle Georgia.
The second is a proper name-
The third is a wooden ve-sel.
The fourth is a distinguished Astronomer.
The fifth is a large body of people.
The sixth is a native of Normandy.
Mary B.
ENIGMA.
I am composed of 23 letters.
My 5,10,7, 16,2,21, 9,14, Is what young girl’s like
to celebrate.
My 4,19,7,14, 6,12, 7,14,3, 20, is a celebrated au
thoress.
My 2,14,9, 22,10,18,16,2, is an early Spring flower.
My 5,17,11,15,6, 16, is a lady’s delight, especially
when it is new.
My 8, £3, is an interjection.
My 1.13,16, is a kind ofbed.
My whole is the name of la leading dry goods
firm in Atlanta.
Mary B.
some time When we go down for a drowned greatest depth anybody has been down is Ii5
Dr. John B. Brooks,
HOMCEPHATHIC PHYSICIAN,
HOT SPRINGS, - - ARKANSAS
ATLANTA,
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209 N. Fourth St., ST. LOFI8, MO.
WARNER BRO’S CORSETS
Received the Highest Medal at the recent
PARIS EXPOSITION,
over all American competitors. Their
FLEXIBLE HIP CORSET,
(120 bones) fits with perfect ease, and is
Warranted not to break d wn over the
hips, l’riee by mall, $1.25.
, THE HEALTH CORSET
is now made with the Tampico Bait, which
k iesof t and flexible a r d contains n<* bones.
Price by mail, $1.50. 5iuniug torhets,
Frr Sa ; e by leading Merchants
WARNER BRO’S, 351 Broadway, N. Y.
HAVE YOUR OLD PICTURES
Copied and enlarged by the
ATI. % XT l,
GEOUUIl.
Stats which preferred: also amount wanted permontt
for servieea and expenses. Business honorable, per-
maheat. and easilv operated- Write us.
CO.. George Street Cincinnati. Ohio.
Southern Gopying Co„
Agents wanted in evtry town and county in the South*
Do you desire an agency? Send for terms to agents
If you cannot take an agency, but have pictures of your
own yon wit-h copied, and there are no agents of ©urn in
yonr vicinity, write fur retail prices, and send pierorea
direct to us (either by mail ur * sprees), and tbov will re
ceive our beat attention. Address SOUTHER^ COPY
ING CO., No. 9 .Marietta St., Atlanta, Ga.
a WEEK MaDE.— w Goods. Cataloge
and Samples free. Felton. & Co., New Y '
H* M. S. Pinafore
OR,
The Lass that 1,overt a Sailor.
An entirely Original Comic Opera, written by Gilbert
and con poeed by SiiIIIyhii. This ia the greatest musi
cal eucc ssoftheOay. It has packed the theatres of
all the principal cities for weeks in succession. Its suc
cess is merited by its innocent wit, lively words and ex
celleut music. Elegant copies with mrsic. words and
Libretto, mailed lor SI-00. W'.ihout mnsic. 25
.!OIia GAIiDYEIt.
It illauta. Ga.