Lectures on Ventilation

BEING A COURSE DELIVERED IN THE

OF PHILADELPHIA,

Man's own breath is his greatest enemy.

NEW YORK: JOHN WILEY & SON, PUBLISHERS, 2 CLINTON HALL, ASTOE PLACE. 1869.

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by LEWIS W. LEEDS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York.

NEW YORK PRINTING COMPANY, 81, 83, and 85 Centre Street, NEW YORK.

Lectures were not originally written with any view to their publication ; but as they were afterwards requested for publication in the Journal of the Franklin Institute, and there attracted very favorable notice, I believed the rapidly increasing interest in the subject of ventilation would enable the publishers to sell a sufficient number to pay the expense of their publication ; and, if so, that this very spirit of inquiry which would lead to the perusal of even so small a work, might be one step forward towards that much-needed more general education on this important subject.

It was not my desire to give an elaborate treatise on the subject of ventilation. I believed a few general principles, illustrated in a familiar way, would be much more likely to be read ; and, I hoped, would act as seed-grain in commencing the growth of an inquiry which, when once started in the right direction, would soon discover the condition of the air we breathe to be of so much importance that the investigation would be eagerly pursued.

L. W. L.

LECTURE I.

LECTURE II.

LECTURE III.