Willis J. Abbot
Capitolo 71
with hurry on the other inventions, quickly following each other and everybody
projected to take trip of more rapid ocean, surer, and more comfort,
and to increase the profit of the shipowner. The composed motor that
you/he/she has been developed so that in place of the seven miles of Fulton for now, our
now steamboats of ocean are driven to a speed that draws near from near sometimes
twenty-five miles for now it already seems, destined for giving way to the
form of turbine of motor that, it only applied so far to torpedo-boats, it has
made for now a disk of forty-four miles. You stretch for that it was standing a
revolution in 1842, way is had determined to cover of steel. And a new strength,
subtile, rapid, and powerful you/he/she has found question without end in the body of
the great ships, so that from stem to austere-post them I am a net of
you spin voters, communications that it brings the controlling the independent motors that
the rudder dangles, while closing water-narrow compartments to the first suggestion of
danger, and making the darkest places of the great peels light as day
to throw of an interrupter. During the period of this marvelous advance
in sea architecture that ship-builds the United States languished to
the point of the extinction. Yacht for millionaires that could afford to pay
heavily for the pleasure to fly the Stars and Strips, ships of 2500 to
4000 tons for the coasting trade in which any foreigner-built vase was
permission to compete, and man-of-war--very little of them in front of 1890--kept a
few complete obliteration shipyards. But as an industry,
ship-building, what it classified once to the head of American products, it had
sunk to a point of smallness.
The present moment (1902) it seems to show the American interest of consignment in
the full tide of succeeded reestablishment. In Congress and in aces of
commercial men are disputing for and against benefits, for and against the
policy to allow American to buy ships of foreign builders if theirs
desire, and the American flag flies above of them. But while these things remain