Town And Country School Buildings a Span Classsearchtermspan Classsearc

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Town And Country School Buildings a Span Classsearchtermspan Classsearc
Gardner Eugene Clarence
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14 TOWN AND COUNTRY SCHOOL-BUILDINGS.
servant, giving larger returns in the way of heat for what it receives in the way of fuel, four times over, than the more attractive and waste- ful fireplaces of our fathers.
A stove to be an agreeable means of warming any large room should in all essential respects adopt the principles of a hot-air fur- nace of the best construction and arrangement ; that is, fresh outside air must be brought to it as rapidly as it can be warmed, and quickly diffused throu
...gh the room. This need not be done by means of long, slender tin pipes and cast-iron registers. The same results may be accomplished by surrounding the stove with a non-conducting case or jacket of sheet-iron which will prevent the direct radiation of all the heat from the stove into the air in its immediate vicinity, and then arranging for the admission of fresh air from out of doors through the floor under the stoves. This will lift the air around the stove, as fast as it is warmed, to the top of the room, where it will be much more quickly and uniformly diffused than if the heat of the stove is allowed to radiate in all directions.

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