In October, 1844, M. Tissier proposed to place wood in a close vessel, and subject it to a current of hot dry air; and in 1847, Mr. Miller proposed to inject hot air through beams of wood to drive out the sap.

In 1851, M. Meyer d’Uslaw proposed to first dilate the pores of the wood with steam, and then place it in a hermetically closed chamber, and make a vacuum there.

The following system of preparing timber for the Navy was, not many years since, adopted in South Russia. A full account of the practice will be found in Oliphant’s ‘Russian Shores of the Black Sea,’ 1853. The only name we can give it is

“‘SEASONING’ BY BRIBES.”

A certain quantity of well-seasoned oak being required, Government issues tenders for the supply of the requisite amount. A number of contractors submit their tenders to a board appointed for the purpose of receiving them, who are regulated in the choice of a contractor not by the amount of his tender, but of his bribe. The fortunate individual selected immediately sub-contracts upon a somewhat similar principle. Arranging to be supplied with the timber for half the amount of his tender, the sub-contractor carries on the game, and perhaps the eighth link in this contracting chain is the man who, for an absurdly low figure, undertakes to produce the seasoned wood.

His agents in the central provinces accordingly float a quantity of green pines and firs down the Dnieper and Bog to Nicholaeff, which are duly handed up to the head contractor, each man pocketing the difference between his contract and that of his neighbour. When the wood is produced before the board appointed to inspect it, another bribe seasons it; and the Government, after paying the price of well-seasoned oak, is surprised that the 120-gun ship, which it has been built of it, is unfit for service in five years.

“Mark but my fall, and that that ruin’d me,

Corruption.”—Shakspeare.

A few words can only be given to a most important matter, viz., the second seasoning, which many woods require. If floor-boards are only laid down at first on the joists of a building, and at the expiration of one year wedged tight and nailed down, those unsightly openings caused by shrinkage, which form a harbour for dirt and vermin, will be avoided, as the wood will have had an opportunity of shrinking. Doors, sashes, architraves in long lengths, will also be better if made up some time before they are required for use. Many Indian woods require a second seasoning—kara mardá, for instance, a favourite wood with Indian railway engineers. Even sál and teak are not exempt. Teak shrinks sideways least of all woods. In the ‘Tortoise,’ store ship, when fifty years old, no openings were found to exist between the boards; yet Colonel Lloyd says he found the teak timbers used by him in constructing a large room in the Mauritius to have shrunk ¾ of an inch in 38 feet. Thus a space of ⅜ of an inch must have been left at each end of the beam, where moisture could lodge and fungi exist, obtaining their nourishment from the wood. If unseasoned teak is used for ships, dry rot will in time find a place. It may be said that teak is a very hard wood, and very durable; yet “the mills of the gods,” says an ancient philosopher, “grind slow, very slow, but they grind to powder;” and so do the fungi mills.