Saturday, June 8, 2013

"Friends, Britons, countrymen, lend us your ears;"



"We observe an advertisement of Ear-muffs*, which are recommended to all who would not have their ears frostbitten. What sort of things these must be we have tried to imagine, but have so badly succeeded that we half hope some generous Canadian reader will make us a present of a pair, that we may no longer puzzle our brains about them."
What reason, upon the earth or above it, can make the editor of the Sword and Trowel put pen to paper on such a trivial subject? Who invented the earmuff?

 Ear-Muffs by C. H. Spurgeon From the May 1869 Sword and Trowel

* Chester Greenwood (1858–1937) of Farmington, Maine invented the earmuff in 1873, at the age of 15. He reportedly came up with the idea while ice skating, and had his grandmother sew tufts of fur between loops of wire. His patent was for improved ear protectors. He manufactured these ear protectors, providing jobs for people in the Farmington area, for nearly 60 years.

"He that hath ears to hear, let him hear." Matthew 11:15
"Incline your ear and come unto me: hear, and your soul shall live." Isaiah 55:3

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