Fig. 11
I find that the boys never come singly, but generally in pairs. When the boys came they found lying upon the table an ammeter ([Fig. 11]).
I told one of them to take out the three screws in the front and remove the face of the instrument. I had told the boys that the instrument cost sixty dollars and that letting them open it was like letting them open my watch. As soon as the face came off one of the boys exclaimed that from my reference to the watch he had expected to see very complicated machinery with many wheels, but from the exceeding simplicity of the mechanism he could not see why it should cost sixty dollars. I told him that although it was a fine piece of workmanship it was fortunately very easy to understand, and I asked them if it reminded them of anything else that they had ever seen. After a few moments of reflection they agreed that it was very much like one of the magnetos. "Well," said I, "where is the field?"
Fig. 12
"Is this horseshoe arrangement a magnet?" they inquired.
"There is a compass needle right at your hand waiting to answer that question," I replied. They immediately found that it was a magnet. "Well," I said, "to be really sure that it is a magnet you must find a portion of it that will repel a portion of your compass needle as well as other portions in both horseshoe and needles which attract each other." Whereupon, they found that the portion marked N ([Fig. 13]) repelled the blue end of the compass needle and attracted strongly the bright end of the needle, while the portion marked S did the reverse. "We will call N and S the poles of the magnet. This is simply a steel bar magnet bent into the shape of a horseshoe."