"NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS." 89 



and other journals. Such triumphs have won for Mr. 

 Boyle a deserved fame, and as a consequence greac 

 confidence is placed in him as a consulting engineer on 

 ventilation. His advice is sought by the first architects 

 and engineers in Europe and America. In the latter 

 country his suggestions have been adopted for some of the 

 most important public buildings, handsome fees being paid 

 for his practical advice. " Nothing succeeds like success !" 

 A pamphlet on Ventilation, published by Mr. Boyle when 

 at Melbourne, met with a reception which clearly demon- 

 strates the growing interest on this vital question. As is 

 usual with new publications, copies were sent to the press 

 for review, and in due course Mr. Boyle received over 

 two hundred newspapers and journals, circulating in 

 different places, from Singapore on the one side to San 

 Francisco on the other, containing extracts and reviews. 

 Several journals reprinted the pamphlet in extenso, and 

 devoted several columns to useful and favourable comments. 



Thus the great mission of pure air prospered in the Far 

 West and in the Antipodes. 



This pamphlet was illustrated with engravings, and the 

 editor of the Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society 

 of New South Wales deemed the subject sufficiently 

 important to incur the heavy expense of reproducing them. 



If the English press would only deal with the question in 



