6280 lines
288 KiB
Plaintext
6280 lines
288 KiB
Plaintext
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American, Vol. XXXVII.—No. 2. [New Series.], July 14, 1877
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This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
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of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online
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at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States,
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you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located
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before using this eBook.
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Title: Scientific American, Vol. XXXVII.—No. 2. [New Series.], July 14, 1877
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Author: Various
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Release date: January 3, 2012 [eBook #38481]
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Language: English
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Credits: Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Lesley Halamek, and the
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Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, VOL. XXXVII.—NO. 2. [NEW SERIES.], JULY 14, 1877 ***
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Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Lesley Halamek, and the
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Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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[Illustration]
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SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
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A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF PRACTICAL INFORMATION, ART, SCIENCE, MECHANICS,
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CHEMISTRY, AND MANUFACTURES.
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NEW YORK, JULY 14, 1877.
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Vol. XXXVII.--No. 2. [NEW SERIES.]
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[$3.20 per Annum [POSTAGE PREPAID.]]
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* * * * *
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CONTENTS.
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(Illustrated articles are marked with an asterisk.)
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Africa, carrying peace into 16
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Air compressor, Bower's * 15
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Alloy, new 18
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American inventions. N.S.Wales 25
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American Institute Exhibition 24
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Answers to correspondents 27
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Artesian well, pumping (13) 27
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Billiard ball holder * 22
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Billiard table * 22
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Bisulphide of lime (35) 28
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Bleaching silk and wool 24
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Boot and shoe machinery * 19
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Bookbinding, new method of * 19
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Books and publications 25
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Business prospects 15
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Carrigeen crop 17
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Catastrophism, Clarence King on 16
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Catastrophe in geology 17
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Chalk cup * 22
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Coloring matter from herbs (2) 27
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Copper plates covered with steel 22
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Curtain fixture * 19
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Disinfecting rooms 15
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Duplex education 17
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Dyspepsia, on 20
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Education in Germany 24
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Electricity, conducting power (21) 27
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Electrotyping cylinders (33) 28
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Electricity and magnetism (5) 27
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Gold, dentists' (24) 27
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Horses, dead, standing erect 20
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Inventions patented in England 25
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Lightning, effects of 20
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Lime, precipitating (22) 27
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Locomotive valves, setting 21
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Man's place in Nature 25
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Measures of the U. S. (32) 28
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Mints of the U. S. (30) 27
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Papier Mache (40) 28
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Patents, American and foreign 25
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Patent decisions, recent 25
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Patents, official list of 28
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Phosphorescent sweating 18
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Plague, extension of the 24
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Plants, curious carnivorous * 23
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Popular fallacies 24
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Santini, death of Professor 15
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Sebastin, a new explosive 18
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Solar heat, apparatus for utilizing 18
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Special notice 25
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Steamer, new 21
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Steam pump, pounding (20) 27
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Sulphur, test for 22
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Sunstroke 20
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Tin scrap, utilization of * 18
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Tin-can telephone 21
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Tin and phosphorus, alloy of 24
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Yule, John 15
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* * * * *
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BOWER'S PATENT AIR COMPRESSOR.
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The new air compressor herewith illustrated may be operated by steam
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or water power, and is available for work in mines, tunnels, or
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quarries, for driving rock drills, coal cutters, and hauling and
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pumping engines, working mining pumps, for use in factories, and in
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fact for all service where a safe and efficient power is required. The
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construction of the machine, the capacity of which differs according
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to the amount of power required, will readily be understood from the
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illustration. Above the air cylinder are two distinct air chambers,
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each having two induction or receiving valves, which cushion on
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rubbers. With the movement of the piston these chambers alternately
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receive and force the compressed air through check valves placed
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in the upper part of the air compartment, both compartments being
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connected with one pipe conveying the air to the ordinary air
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receiver. These check valves lift alternately, and cushion on water;
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and as the compressed air is forced into the pipe connecting with the
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receiver, without a possibility of any of it escaping back into the
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receiving chambers, it is claimed that there is the smallest possible
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loss of power, and that the machine will give fully 90 per cent of
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steam power expended in the shape of compressed air. The compressor is
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compact in form, strongly made, simple in construction, and not liable
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to get out of order. One peculiarity in its construction is that no
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water jacket or hollow piston is used; yet under any of the extreme
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pressures to which the machine has been tested, no inconvenience, we
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are informed, from heat has been perceptible.
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In connection with the compressor, receivers of various sizes are
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used, into which the air is pumped and thence conveyed by pipe to the
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location where required, even if it be a mile or more, the loss by
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friction between receiver and point of utilization of the air being,
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it is claimed, under 2 lbs. of the pressure.
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The manufacturers also build water-power compressors, one of which,
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driven by 75 to 100 horse power, they have recently shipped to Utah.
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The machine is intended to convey the air through iron tubes 5,000
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feet to the mouth of a silver mine, where a 50 horse power hoisting
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and a 25 horse power pumping engine will be driven by air instead
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of steam, and a tube will be extended into the mine 1,000 feet deep,
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where the power drills and small pumps will be operated by air also.
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The manufacturers submit a number of excellent testimonials from
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parties using the machine. From one, we learn, that at the Antelope
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and Prince of Wales mine, near Alta City, Utah, the compressor runs 10
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hours per day, and supplies compressed air to two 3 inch drills used
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in running levels. The distribution terminates at distances of from
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1,000 to 2,000 feet from the compressor. The machine also drives one
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hoisting engine and ventilates the lower part of the mine. The main
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supply pipe is three inches in diameter, 2,300 feet long, and is
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tapped by two inch pipe wherever power is required. The expenditure
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of fuel is one cord of green pine wood and 600 lbs. of bituminous
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coal per 10 hours. Air pressure in receiver 100 lbs. This pressure
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is reported to be obtained by 70 lbs. of steam as indicated by the
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gauges.
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For further particulars, address the manufacturers, Messrs. Griffith
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and Wedge, Zanesville, Ohio.
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[Illustration: BOWER'S AIR COMPRESSOR.]
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* * * * *
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DEATH OF PROFESSOR SANTINI.
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A cable dispatch announces the death of the Italian astronomer,
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Giovanni Santini. The Professor was born at Tuscany, June 30, 1786,
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and was in the ninety-first year of his age. He graduated at the
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University of Pisa. He soon devoted himself to a study of the exact
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sciences, and in 1814 he had achieved so much distinction that he was
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appointed to a professorship in the Padowa Observatory in place
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of Vincenzo Cheminello. In 1825 he was appointed Rector of the
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||
University, and up to the time of his death he held the position of
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Professor of Astronomy and Director of Mathematical Studies. He was
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generally esteemed by the learned societies of Europe, and held
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a number of honorary titles and degrees from various leading
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universities. He was also a correspondent of the French Academy. The
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principal books published by him are strictly scientific, such
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as "Decimal Arithmetic" (1808), "Elements of Astronomy" (1820),
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"Logarithms and Trigonometry," and "Optical Problems" (1821-23). Some
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of his elementary works on astronomy for beginners are the best ever
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published in Italy.
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* * * * *
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JOHN YULE.
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The death is announced of Mr. John Yule, of the Hutchestown Engine
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Works, Rutherglen, N. B., at the age of 66. During early life, Mr.
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Yule went the round of the best engineers' shops in Scotland and
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England, and became one of the recognized leaders in engineering
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progress. His inventiveness took various directions, amongst other
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||
fruits being an improved rotary engine, a compensating governor for
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the steam engine, and a screw tap, drill, and mandrel. For the latter
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he was awarded the silver medal of the Scottish Society of Arts. For
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some years Mr. Yule acted as the manager of the boiler department of
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Messrs. Robert Napier & Son's establishment, but eventually resumed
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business at the Hutchestown Works, and devoted attention amongst
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||
other matters to the improvement of swing bridges and steam cranes and
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hammers. In the former line two of his most important works are the
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plate girder bridge over the entrance to one of the docks at Port
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Glasgow, for the Caledonian Railway, erected from plans by Messrs.
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Bell and Miller, C.E., Glasgow; and a lattice girder bridge over the
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entrance to Kingston Dock, Glasgow Harbor. Owing to the angle at which
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||
this last bridge crosses the dock, great difficulties were experienced
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||
in working out the mechanical details so as to admit of easy motion.
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||
These were skillfully overcome, and the bridge was, as finally
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||
erected, a monument of his design as well as workmanship. The
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Blackhill incline on the Monkland Canal, constructed nearly a quarter
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of a century ago, is a sample of Mr. Yule's mechanical powers. Of late
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||
years he was largely engaged as a professional valuator.
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* * * * *
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BUSINESS PROSPECTS.
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We have recently taken the pains to make inquiries from the more
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||
eminent bankers and merchants in the chief cities of the interior, and
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||
the results of our inquiries have tended to confirm the belief we have
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||
more than once expressed in this journal, that although, from various
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||
causes, there is overhanging a portion of our American industries a
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||
cloud of gloom and depression, still throughout the nation at large
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||
there is going on a process of growth and recovery from which the best
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||
results are anticipated. How long we shall have to wait before the
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||
life which is at work silently and secretly beneath the surface will
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||
put forth its full power, in the full harvest of productive activity,
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||
is, of course, impossible to foretell. What is chiefly important for
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||
us to know, however, is that the progress we are making tends upwards
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||
and not downwards, and that it promises to lead our industry and
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||
commerce to a brighter and not to a darker future.--_Financial
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||
Chronicle._
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* * * * *
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TO DISINFECT ROOMS.
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||
The disinfection of a room is not complete unless the walls have been
|
||
thoroughly cleansed. If they are papered, the paper must be removed
|
||
and the surface beneath carefully scraped and washed. If the walls are
|
||
painted, they should be washed with caustic soda. The ceiling should
|
||
also be subjected to a similar treatment.
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* * * * *
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SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN.
|
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ESTABLISHED 1845.
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MUNN & CO., Editors and Proprietors.
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PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT NO. 37 PARK ROW, NEW YORK.
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O. D. MUNN.
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A. E. BEACH.
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TERMS FOR THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN.
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One copy, one year, postage included $3.20
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One copy, six months, postage included 1.60
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CLUBS.--One extra copy of the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN will be supplied
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gratis for every club of five subscribers at $3.20 each; additional
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copies at same proportionate rate. Postage prepaid.
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THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT
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is a distinct paper from the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN. THE SUPPLEMENT is
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issued weekly; every number contains 16 octavo pages, with handsome
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cover, uniform in size with SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN. Terms of subscription
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for SUPPLEMENT, $5.00 a year, postage paid, to subscribers. Single
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copies 10 cents. Sold by all news dealers throughout the country.
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COMBINED RATES.--The SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN and SUPPLEMENT will be sent
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The safest way to remit is by draft, postal order, or registered
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Address MUNN & CO., 37 Park Bow, N. Y.
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all the news agents.
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PUBLISHERS' NOTICE TO MAIL SUBSCRIBERS.
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Mail subscribers will observe on the printed address of each paper the
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time for which they have prepaid. Before the time indicated expires,
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to insure a continuity of numbers, subscribers should remit for
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another year. For the convenience of the mail clerks, they will please
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also state when their subscriptions expire.
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New subscriptions will be entered from the time the order is received;
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but the back numbers of either the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN or the
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SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT will be sent from January when desired.
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In this case, the subscription will date from the commencement of the
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volume, and the latter will be complete for preservation or binding.
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* * * * *
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VOL. XXXVII., NO. 2. [NEW SERIES.] _Thirty-second Year._
|
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NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1877.
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* * * * *
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TABLE OF CONTENTS OF THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT,
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|
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NO. 80,
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FOR THE WEEK ENDING JULY 14, 1877.
|
||
|
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I. ENGINEERING AND MECHANICS.--Wrought Iron Bridge Designs:
|
||
by WILLIAM O. DOUGLAS. A method of construction whereby the
|
||
safety of the structure is not dependent on any single member.
|
||
2 engravings.--Steel Wire Hawsers.
|
||
|
||
Health and Sewage of Towns; by ALFRED CARPENTER, M.D., C.S.S.
|
||
A practical experience of the Dry system.
|
||
|
||
Carlisle Bridge, Dublin, 1 engraving--Extinction of Fires.--Important
|
||
Dutch Enterprise.
|
||
|
||
Foot Bridge across the River Ness at Inverness; by C. R. MANNERS,
|
||
Engineer. 13 illustrations.
|
||
|
||
Radiating Steam Hercules for the St. Heliers' Harbor Works, Jersey.
|
||
2 figures.--New Meat Trucks.--New Horseshoe.--Scott's Wheel-Cutting
|
||
and Moulding Machine. 3 figures.
|
||
|
||
Compound Engine with Rope Driving Gear; by BENJAMIN GOODFELLOW,
|
||
Engineer. 3 engravings.--Differential Screw Pipe Joint.
|
||
6 figures.
|
||
|
||
Pipes for Gas and Other Purposes (continued from SUPPLEMENT No.
|
||
77). Main-laying continued, with 4 figures.--Fittings of Gas and
|
||
Water Pipes; Includes the average "life" of pipes; an account of
|
||
various soils, and amount of corrosion in each; Professor Barff's
|
||
new iron-preserving process, and other processes in practical use
|
||
for preserving iron pipe; proving pipe; the utility of various
|
||
metals, and directions for pipe-laying: various fittings,
|
||
illustrated in 16 figures.
|
||
|
||
II. TECHNOLOGY.--The Sizing of Cotton Goods; a paper read before the
|
||
Society of Arts, by W. THOMPSON, F.R.S. A very full and clear
|
||
description, embracing: An account of the process of weaving,
|
||
explaining the object and utility of size. A table of sizing
|
||
mixtures in which are enumerated all the substances used, (1) for
|
||
giving adhesive properties to the size, (2) to give weight and
|
||
body to the yarn, (3) for softening the size or yarn, and (4) for
|
||
preserving the size from mildew and decomposition.
|
||
Tests for these substances and directions for mixing, so as to
|
||
obtain the results required. Proportions of sizing. Use of flour
|
||
in size. Weighting materials, China clay and its substitutes.
|
||
"Softenings" and oils for softening. East winds. Glycerin, grape
|
||
sugar, mildew preventives, and tape sizing. "Slashing," packing,
|
||
mildew, damaged goods, etc.--Notes on Garment Dyeing. Giving
|
||
preparation of garments with cotton warps, green on garments with
|
||
cotton warps, brown on the same, etc.
|
||
|
||
III. LIGHT, HEAT, ELECTRICITY, ETC.--On the Minute Measurements
|
||
of Modern Science. By ALFRED M. MAYER. Article IX. The dividing
|
||
engine and methods of making accurate linear scales.
|
||
8 illustrations.
|
||
|
||
IV. NATURAL HISTORY, ETC.--Catastrophism, or the Evolution of
|
||
Environment. An address by Clarence King before the Sheffield
|
||
Scientific School of Yale College, New Haven, Conn.
|
||
|
||
V. AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE.--Pencils of Silver Nitrate.--The Black
|
||
Poplar.--Tree Leaves as a Fertilizer.--Improving Pastures.--Lawns
|
||
and Hay.--Thoroughbred Pigs.--Shall Country Houses have Cellars?
|
||
|
||
VI. MISCELLANEOUS.--The New German Patent Law: being the Full
|
||
Text of the New Law for Patents, passed July 1, 1877, covering all
|
||
the States of the German Empire.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Terms.--SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT, one year, postpaid, _five
|
||
dollars_. One copy of SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN and one copy of SCIENTIFIC
|
||
AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT, one year, postpaid, _seven dollars_. CLUBS.--One
|
||
extra copy of the SUPPLEMENT will be supplied gratis for every club of
|
||
five SUPPLEMENT subscribers at $5.00 each.
|
||
|
||
All the back numbers of the SUPPLEMENT, from the commencement, January
|
||
1, 1876, can be had. Price 10 cents each.
|
||
|
||
NOW READY.--The SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT for 1876, Complete
|
||
in two large volumes. Over 800 quarto pages; over 2,000 engravings.
|
||
Embracing History of the Centennial Exhibition. New Illustrated.
|
||
Instructions in Mechanical Drawing. Many valuable papers, etc. Price
|
||
five dollars for the two volumes, stitched in paper; or six dollars
|
||
and fifty cents, handsomely bound in stiff covers.
|
||
|
||
Remit by postal order. Address
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||
|
||
MUNN & CO. PUBLISHERS, 37 Park Row, New York.
|
||
|
||
--> Single copies of any desired number of the SUPPLEMENT sent to any
|
||
address on receipt of 10 cents.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CARRYING PEACE INTO AFRICA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
To carry war into Africa has been a proverb ever since Rome vowed the
|
||
destruction of Carthage. But the Carthagenian invasion was a modern
|
||
episode in Africa's experiences of that nature. On one of the earlier
|
||
monuments of Egypt there is figured a slave-hunter's raid upon an
|
||
Ethiopian village, the horrid details of which are said by travelers
|
||
to be an accurate picture of a slave raid of to-day. The same
|
||
murderous work has been going on incessantly for at least 4,000 years:
|
||
how much longer there is no telling. For all these ages the African
|
||
borders have known war and war only, and of the most destructive and
|
||
barbarizing nature.
|
||
|
||
Recently, under the influence of Sir Samuel Baker, Colonel Gordon, and
|
||
the civilized world in general, the Khedive of Egypt has carried war
|
||
into the interior in the interests of peace: a conquest in a measure
|
||
justified by the suppression of inter-tribal war for the filling of
|
||
slave pens, and the abolition of the slave trade down the Nile. A
|
||
similar reform has been effected on the east coast by the pressure of
|
||
English power on the Sultan of Zanzibar. And the immediate effect of
|
||
these two movements has been to prevent the butchery or enslavement of
|
||
not less than half a million negroes annually.
|
||
|
||
A still more promising invasion of Africa has just been decided upon
|
||
in the International Geographical Conference in Brussels: an invasion
|
||
wholly in the interests of peace and civilization. At the meeting,
|
||
a year ago, it was declared advisable to establish, by international
|
||
effort, a line of permanent commercial stations from Bagomoyo, on the
|
||
coast of Zanzibar, to St. Paul de Loanda, on the opposite Atlantic
|
||
coast; the first stations to be at Ujiji, where Stanley found
|
||
Livingstone, on the eastern shore of lake Tanganyika; at Nyangwe,
|
||
Livingstone's furthest point northward on the Lualaba; and at some
|
||
point further west on the route of Cameron, to be fixed in the
|
||
dominions of Muata Yamvo, one of the most powerful chiefs of Central
|
||
Africa. At the second conference, which ended June 24, arrangements
|
||
were made for sending out the first expedition toward Tanganyika.
|
||
|
||
The object of the proposed stations is the development of civilization
|
||
by commerce, not by religious propaganda. Primarily they will serve
|
||
as bases of operation for explorers of the interior, a sort of
|
||
_entrepôts_, where the explorer may supply himself with provisions,
|
||
instruments, and goods, and thus save the cost and embarrassment of
|
||
an army of porters from the coast. They will also serve as places of
|
||
refuge for explorers in times of sickness and other reverses, which
|
||
have hitherto so terribly hampered explorers. The heads of these
|
||
pioneer establishments are to be men of scientific training and proved
|
||
executive ability; and each will be aided by a physician-naturalist
|
||
and a few skilled artisans. The points thus far chosen are on a line
|
||
regularly traveled by the caravans of Arab traders, carrying coffee,
|
||
tea, sugar, arms, and woven goods to permanent Arab residences and
|
||
trading stations in the interior. An agent of the London Missionary
|
||
Society has already begun the survey of a route for ox teams as far
|
||
as lake Tanganyika; and Cameron has expressed the opinion that a light
|
||
narrow-gauge railway could be constructed from the coast to the lake
|
||
at a cost not exceeding four thousand dollars a mile. The traffic
|
||
along such a road, he thinks, would soon pay interest on the outlay.
|
||
|
||
The unexplored region thus to be opened up to civilization and
|
||
commerce (other than in human beings) is larger than the United
|
||
States east of the Mississippi. Around it is a still larger region of
|
||
partially explored country of unequalled fertility, abounding in great
|
||
lakes and navigable rivers, and for the most part so high above
|
||
the sea that the products of the tropics mingle with those of
|
||
the temperate zone. The cereals, durah, maize, rice, sugar cane,
|
||
starch-yielding roots and tubers, cotton, coffee, tobacco, spices,
|
||
gums and caoutchouc, dye-stuffs and medicinal plants, the banana,
|
||
fig, date, orange, and the vine are among the known products of this
|
||
region; and all are capable of becoming important staples of foreign
|
||
commerce. The country is not less rich in coal, iron, copper, gold,
|
||
and other valuable minerals. The climate, though moist from abundant
|
||
rain, is less debilitating than India or Brazil; and everywhere, away
|
||
from the miasmatic coast regions and the marshes of the lower river
|
||
courses, European explorers have found small cause for complaining of
|
||
excessive heat or unhealthiness. On the elevated plateaus which cover
|
||
so large a part of Central Africa, the climate is like that of the
|
||
sanitariums of India; while among the mountains the finest climates of
|
||
the world are fairly rivalled. Stanley found in the mountainous region
|
||
between the great lakes and within a degree of the equator every
|
||
climatic condition and every element of landscape beauty that could
|
||
attract and delight a white colony. It was a perfect alpine country,
|
||
with mountains rising from twelve to fifteen thousand feet, yet free
|
||
from alpine cold and snow. Countless torrents from the hills watered
|
||
ever-verdant valleys as beautiful as those of Tyrol, lying under a
|
||
brilliant equatorial sun, yet with a climate as cool and equable as
|
||
any European might desire. Further south, among the mountains about
|
||
Lake Nyassa, the same features are presented on a grander scale:
|
||
a country aptly described as a second Switzerland of gigantic
|
||
proportions.
|
||
|
||
There can be no question of the ability of Europeans to sustain
|
||
themselves in the greater part of the interior-certainly on all the
|
||
higher plateaus-nor of the possibility of building up in Central
|
||
Africa a great civilized empire. Nature offers every facility, and the
|
||
native population seem to be well fitted for productive industry. In
|
||
every respect they are physically and morally superior to the negroes
|
||
of the coast, and only need protection and the encouragement of
|
||
legitimate commerce to weld them into a great nation. Already
|
||
they stand on the borders of civilization. They are intelligent,
|
||
industrious, and not unskillful in the manufacture of iron and copper
|
||
ornaments, utensils, and weapons. The arts of tanning, spinning,
|
||
weaving, dyeing, mat-making, etc., are widely diffused among them, and
|
||
many of their products are remarkable for their fineness and
|
||
strength. They carry on agriculture with considerable success;
|
||
and, notwithstanding the chronic state of insecurity incident to
|
||
slave-hunting, their wealth in cattle is very great. As soon as the
|
||
disturbing and impoverishing influence of the slave traffic is abated,
|
||
and a market provided for the products of peace, the advancement of
|
||
the people in civilization is likely to go on with great rapidity.
|
||
As the source of raw materials which we need, and as a market for the
|
||
surplus manufactures of Europe and America, the country offers, to say
|
||
the least, many attractions; and it will not be surprising if, within
|
||
fifty years, thriving commercial stations will be founded on all
|
||
its great lakes and rivers, and connected with the outer world by
|
||
telegraphy, railways, and steamship lines.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
ADDRESS OF CLARENCE KING ON CATASTROPHISM.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Mr. Clarence King lately delivered an interesting address before the
|
||
Sheffield Scientific School of Yale College, New Haven, Conn., under
|
||
the title of "Catastrophism, or the Evolution of Environment," which
|
||
promises to evoke considerable discussion. We subjoin an abstract of
|
||
the principal features of the address, which is quite lengthy. The
|
||
full text will be found in our SUPPLEMENTS, Nos. 80, 81.
|
||
|
||
Mr. King refuted the doctrine of slow evolution as taught by Huxley
|
||
and Darwin, and declared that the surface of the earth and climate had
|
||
been subject to sudden and catastrophic mutation, which included in
|
||
its environment all types of life.
|
||
|
||
He reasoned that marine fossils are found entombed in rocky beds far
|
||
remote from present seas; and that these beds were once sea bottoms
|
||
that have been upheaved by convulsions of Nature. The earliest history
|
||
of mankind is pregnant with catastrophe, and we have historic story
|
||
and biblical record of its sudden and destructive energy. He called
|
||
to mind the vast and massive eruptions of the Pliocene basalt as seen
|
||
upon our own continent.
|
||
|
||
The great obvious changes in the rocky crust were referred to a few
|
||
processes; the sub-aerial decay of continents, delivery by streams
|
||
of land-detritus into the sea, the spreading out of these comminuted
|
||
materials upon a pelagic floor, and lastly upheaval, by which oceanic
|
||
beds were lifted up into subsequent land masses. All these processes
|
||
he declared to have been more rapid in the past than now. Suddenness,
|
||
world-wide destructiveness, were the characteristics of geological
|
||
changes. Periods of calm, like the present, are suddenly terminated by
|
||
brief catastrophic epochs. Successive faunas and floras were created
|
||
only to be extinguished by general cataclysms.
|
||
|
||
He believed in recurrent, abrupt accelerations of crust change, so
|
||
violent as to destroy all life on the globe. He declared the idea to
|
||
be the survival of a prehistoric terror, and was backed up by breaks
|
||
in the great palæontological record. Of the geologic features of
|
||
our continent, he said that beneath our America lies buried another
|
||
distinct continent, which he called Archæan America, which was made
|
||
up of what was originally ocean beds lifted into the air and locally
|
||
crumpled into vast mountain chains, which were in turn eroded by
|
||
torrents into mountain peaks. The original coast lines of this
|
||
continent we may never be able fully to survey, but its great
|
||
features, the lofty chains of the mountains which made its bones, were
|
||
very nearly co-extensive with our existing systems, the Appalachians
|
||
and Cordilleras. The cañon-cutting rivers of the present Western
|
||
mountains have dug out the peaks and flanks of those underlying,
|
||
primeval uplifts and developed an astonishing topography; peaks rising
|
||
in a single sweep 30,000 feet from their bases, precipices lifting
|
||
bold, solid fronts 10,000 feet into the air, and profound mountain
|
||
valleys. The work of erosion, which has been carried on by torrents
|
||
of the quaternary age, brings to light buried primeval chains loftier
|
||
than any of the present heights of the globe.
|
||
|
||
At the close of the Palæzoic age, two enormous masses of what,
|
||
probably, were then continents began to sink, and as they disappeared
|
||
the present Atlantic and Pacific oceans appeared, while the sea-floor
|
||
of a then ocean, emerged, and became the new continent of America.
|
||
Dividing this new continent was a sea, but catastrophe removed this
|
||
sea and resulted in the folding up of mountain ranges 20,000 and
|
||
40,000 feet in height, thereby essentially changing the whole climate
|
||
of the continent. Of the land life of the mesozoic age we have
|
||
abundant remains. The wonderful reptilian and avian fauna of the
|
||
mesozoic age is now familiar to all. But after the catastrophe, and
|
||
the change of climate which must necessarily have ensued, this fauna
|
||
totally perished.
|
||
|
||
After criticising the opinions of Huxley, Lyell, Hutton, Darwin, and
|
||
others, he recurred to the effects of sudden terrestrial or cosmical
|
||
changes, and conceived that the effects of these changes would
|
||
be, first, extermination; secondly, destruction of the biological
|
||
equilibrium; and thirdly, rapid morphological change on the part of
|
||
plastic species. When catastrophic change burst in upon the ages of
|
||
uniformity, and sounded in the ear of every living thing the words
|
||
"Change or die!" plasticity became the sole principle of salvation.
|
||
And plasticity is the key to survival and prosperity. Mr. King
|
||
remarked in conclusion of his address: "He who brought to bear that
|
||
mysterious energy we call life upon primeval matter bestowed at
|
||
the same time a power of development by change, arranging that the
|
||
interaction of energy and matter, which make up environment should,
|
||
from time to time, burst in upon the current of life and sweep it
|
||
onward and upward to ever higher and better manifestations. Moments of
|
||
great catastrophe, thus translated into the language of life, become
|
||
moments of creation, when out of plastic organisms something newer and
|
||
nobler is called into being."
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
DUPLEX EDUCATION.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The age in which we live is a fast one, and he who does not move with
|
||
equal celerity, and keep pace with those around him, is ruthlessly
|
||
thrust to the wall, and remains there unless he has strength and will
|
||
to regain the lost position. We call to our aid every force of
|
||
Nature and invoke the assistance of every appliance with which we are
|
||
cognizant. We call our fathers slow, and to us they were so; but there
|
||
was the same need of celerity in their every-day life as to-day there
|
||
is in ours.
|
||
|
||
While calling to our aid the elements of Nature and adapting thousands
|
||
of mechanical appliances to our wants, do we not often feel that there
|
||
is beyond all these a "something" that may be invoked and trained to
|
||
help us on in the race of life? Occasionally we find dim glimmerings
|
||
of this "something" that we believe will eventually grow to be one of
|
||
the prominent sciences. Physiologists tell us that the human brain is
|
||
double, that the right and left lobes act in a degree independent of
|
||
each other--the right lobe of the brain controlling the physiology of
|
||
the left side of the individual from head to heel, while the left lobe
|
||
exercises a like dominion on the opposite side. Grant this to be true,
|
||
then can be explained the idiosyncrasy that is occasionally seen in
|
||
individuals, of which we may instance that of writing at the same
|
||
time with both hands; and again we have heard of telegraph operators
|
||
sending and receiving two messages at the same time, operating with
|
||
both hands, and independent of each other. It is said that Nasmyth,
|
||
the inventor of the steam hammer, could actually produce two sketches
|
||
or drawings in this way and at the same time. It is also affirmed that
|
||
Sir Charles Fox, the architect of the Exhibition building of 1851,
|
||
could write upon two ideas at the same time and transfer these ideas
|
||
simultaneously to paper with right and left hand. The mechanic can
|
||
often be found who can operate upon one piece of mechanism, while at
|
||
the same time his brain is busy upon the study of some unborn idea,
|
||
foreign to that work upon which he is laboring. Writers can be found
|
||
who can write out one train of ideas, while ideas entirely different
|
||
are being cogitated upon somewhere in their craniums. We have even
|
||
heard it affirmed that an indistinct glimmering of a third idea would
|
||
occasionally peep around the corner of the caputs of these favored
|
||
ones.
|
||
|
||
Why not educate this? Why not form schools and institutions to bring
|
||
it out and lead the brain to perform this double function? It can
|
||
certainly be done. The world wants it, surely. The age demands it.
|
||
Individuals need it. If these individuals can succeed and become
|
||
experts in this method of double work, will not double compensation
|
||
and a greater remuneration be their reward? This, certainly, will be
|
||
an incentive to its acquirement. Go to the apprentice when first he
|
||
takes position beside the vise, with chipping chisel in one hand and
|
||
hammer in the other. The injunction he mentally receives as he raises
|
||
the hammer is, that to miss the chisel is to hit his knuckles. After
|
||
a few demonstrative blows he knows what it means, and therefore chisel
|
||
and hammer soon come by some strange process to harmonize in action,
|
||
so that in whatever position the head of the chisel may be, the blow
|
||
is sure to be properly received, and that, too, without any sensible
|
||
effort on his part. In this illustration both right and left hand are
|
||
taught to act, by brain dictation, in a certain concerted manner.
|
||
|
||
Again, we find that mutes have been learned to articulate words
|
||
and sentences by proper education, they being taught to imitate the
|
||
motions of the mouth and labial organs as by their tutors directed.
|
||
Education can do much, and these are some of its results. Can we not
|
||
by proper teaching produce all the results as shown in the case of
|
||
Nasmyth and Fox. The first lessons must necessarily be simple. For
|
||
instance, two things done at the same time with both hands, giving
|
||
expression at this time to ideas connected therewith, but distinct
|
||
from each other. From this simple lesson we progress, and, as the
|
||
ultimatum, we may arrive at greater achievements than Nasmyth or Fox
|
||
ever dreamed of. We may find that we can so divide our entity that we
|
||
can be conscious of a double-brain existence in a dual action.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE CARRIGEEN CROP.
|
||
|
||
|
||
To the great majority of people, Carrigeen, under the more familiar
|
||
name of Irish Moss, is known chiefly as the basis of a pleasant and
|
||
wholesome drink for the sick room, or as an article of use in the
|
||
preparation of delicacies for the table. Comparatively few are aware
|
||
of its wide and varied use in the arts, or that the thousands of
|
||
barrels of it employed annually by our manufacturers of paper, cloth,
|
||
felt, and straw hats, etc., and by brewers, is not an Irish, but an
|
||
American product, and, speaking strictly, is not a moss but a seaweed.
|
||
|
||
Carrigeen (_chondrus crispus_) is to be found more or less abundantly
|
||
all along our northern coast, ranging between the low water line
|
||
and the depth of forty feet, or so; but as a rule its fronds, which
|
||
correspond to the leaves of air plants, are so numerously inhabited by
|
||
small mollusca that they are spoiled for other use. The clean-growing
|
||
article seems to be limited almost wholly to certain ledges in the
|
||
neighborhood of Scituate, Mass.--a section of coast guarded by the
|
||
celebrated Minot Ledge Lighthouse, and famous for its danger to
|
||
shipping. Here, where the waves of the Atlantic dash with full force
|
||
upon the rocky coast, the carrigeen grows to perfection; and wherever
|
||
it escapes the spawn of mussels and other shellfish, is gathered
|
||
during the summer season in vast quantities.
|
||
|
||
The harvest begins in May and ends about the first of September. The
|
||
gathering is made in two ways--by hand-picking during exceptionally
|
||
low tides, and by means of long-handled iron-toothed rakes at ordinary
|
||
tides. Of course the work cannot be carried on except during fair
|
||
weather. Hand-pulling is possible only during the bi-monthly periods
|
||
of spring tides, that is, when the moon is full and again at new moon.
|
||
At such times high tide occurs about midday and midnight, and the
|
||
ledges are exposed for moss gathering morning and evening. The
|
||
mossers' boats are rowed to the rocks where the finest grades abound,
|
||
and the gatherers select with great care the growths that are freest
|
||
from minute shells and other foreign matter. This portion of the crop,
|
||
if properly handled afterwards, generally goes to the apothecary and
|
||
fetches a price two or three times that of the common grade.
|
||
|
||
As the tide rises the pickers are driven to their boats, and proceed
|
||
to the outer moss-bearing rocks where the rake is used, as it also is
|
||
during ordinary low tides. Moss taken in this way is not so clean as
|
||
the hand-picked, and is always mixed with tape grass, which must be
|
||
removed during the process of curing and packing.
|
||
|
||
The curing of the moss is the most critical part of this peculiar
|
||
farming. On being brought to the shore the moss is black and
|
||
unsightly; it must be bleached as well as dried. The bleaching is
|
||
effected by repeated wetting and drying in the sun; and as the moss
|
||
is readily soluble in fresh water the bleaching beds are situated
|
||
near the banks of the salt creeks that abound along the shore. After
|
||
drying, the moss is packed in tubs and rolled to the water, where it
|
||
is thoroughly washed, then rolled back to the bleaching bed, to
|
||
be dried again in the sun. Five or six such exposures are usually
|
||
sufficient. On the bleaching ground, the moss is carefully spread
|
||
and turned, and watchfully guarded against wetting by rain. In this
|
||
process it turns from black to red, then to the yellowish-white of the
|
||
perfected article. When properly cured the moss is stored in bulk,
|
||
in shanties; where, as time permits, it is picked over and packed in
|
||
barrels. The crop averages about half a million pounds a year; and
|
||
thanks to the brighter and more abundant sunshine of our coast, the
|
||
moss has a brighter color and is of finer quality than the Irish
|
||
product.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CATASTROPHISM IN GEOLOGY.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Mr. Clarence King was probably not a little surprised to learn from
|
||
the Tribune that in his most suggestive address on "Catastrophism and
|
||
the Evolution of Environment," he had turned the guns of Geology upon
|
||
Biology; and that in calling attention to the influence of periods of
|
||
accelerated change in environment upon exposed types of life he had
|
||
swept away the "fundamental doctrines upon which has been built the
|
||
scheme of development by natural selection and the survival of the
|
||
fittest." Certainly nothing in the address betrays any consciousness
|
||
of possible effects of that sort. And it is quite probable also that
|
||
Mr. King will have to suffer some annoyance from seeing his name set
|
||
up at gaze, like Joshua's moon in Ajalon, by the unscientific press
|
||
generally, as that of the newest champion of orthodoxy against the
|
||
leaders of modern scientific thought: a penalty which scientific men
|
||
always have to pay for emphasizing neglected truths.
|
||
|
||
Mr. King certainly deals some telling blows against the position of
|
||
the stricter school of Uniformitarians in geology, and brings into
|
||
prominence a much neglected element in the struggle for existence; but
|
||
there is no scientific revolution threatened, nor are any crumbs of
|
||
comfort spread for those endeavoring to arrest the natural drift of
|
||
scientific progress.
|
||
|
||
The issue between Mr. King and the sticklers for uniformity in rates
|
||
of geological change is simply this: In the reaction against the
|
||
sweeping cataclysms, the sudden wipings out of whole creations and
|
||
the sudden introductions of new worlds of life believed in by earlier
|
||
geologists, the modern English school has come to look upon time and
|
||
the slower modifications of the earth's surface, now observable, with
|
||
the struggle for existence under easy conditions, as the chief factors
|
||
in geological change and its accompanying variations in the forms of
|
||
life. Mr. King, on the other hand, insists that in so doing they have
|
||
taken too little account of catastrophic changes, that is, widespread
|
||
and sudden movements of sea and land. In other words, he raises rapid
|
||
change of environment from the subordinate place it has hitherto
|
||
occupied in the scheme of historical development, and gives special
|
||
emphasis to the grand geologic movements which have to do with such
|
||
changes.
|
||
|
||
In this Mr. King has unquestionably rendered good service to the
|
||
science he has done so much to extend and honor in the field; while
|
||
the illustrations from American geology which he brings to bear on the
|
||
subject are as likely as his sturdy opinions to attract attention.
|
||
Yet we are inclined to think that in some things he has allowed his
|
||
enthusiasm to run away with him. The stolid self-confidence of
|
||
extreme Uniformitarians has tempted him to exaggerate the periodic
|
||
accelerations of geologic and biologic movement, and to overstate
|
||
their effects quite as much as others have underestimated them;
|
||
and when he charges the followers of Lyell with intellectual
|
||
near-sightedness and a lack of "the very mechanism of imagination,"
|
||
they may possibly be able to retort not unjustifiably that he has
|
||
mistaken the natural foreshortening of the geological vista due to
|
||
distance for actual brevity; and that his belief in the abruptness and
|
||
suddenness of the great changes which the earth's strata record, may
|
||
be due to his own lack of sustained imaginative power for grasping and
|
||
interpreting all the evidences of the enormous time really involved.
|
||
But this is a question not of imaginative capacity but of logical
|
||
deduction from observed facts; and however abrupt the beginning of
|
||
some of the great geologic movements may have been, their subsequent
|
||
progress cannot in all cases have been so rapid as to allow of their
|
||
being called catastrophic in any ordinary acceptation of the term.
|
||
|
||
Take, for example, the alleged catastrophe which marked the close of
|
||
the mesozoic age in the West. Of this movement Mr. King remarks: "In
|
||
a quasi-uniformitarian way, 20,000 or 30,000 feet of sediment had
|
||
accumulated in the Pacific and 14,000 in the [American] mediterranean
|
||
sea; when these regions, which, during the reception of sediment,
|
||
had been areas of subsidence, suddenly upheaved, the doming up of the
|
||
middle of the continent quite obliterating the mediterranean sea and
|
||
uniting the two land masses into one. The catastrophe which removed
|
||
this sea resulted in the folding up of mountain ranges 20,000 and
|
||
40,000 feet in height, thereby essentially changing the whole climate
|
||
of the continent."
|
||
|
||
That this great change occurred, and was attended with an obliteration
|
||
of the wonderful reptilian and avian fauna of the mesozoic age, is
|
||
most true: that it occurred suddenly does not appear. On the contrary,
|
||
there is evidence to show that the prodigious folding up of mountain
|
||
ranges involved could not have proceeded with sufficient rapidity to
|
||
turn the course of a stream of water. It happened that one of those
|
||
folds--one which, had no denudation been going on meanwhile,
|
||
would have lifted its crest higher than the highest peak of the
|
||
Himalayas--lay directly across the course of the Colorado river. The
|
||
river held its course uninterruptedly, sawing its way through the
|
||
uplift until six vertical miles of rocky strata had risen past it. At
|
||
no time, therefore, could the rapidity of motion in the bulging strata
|
||
have exceeded the capacity of the river to wear away the obstruction,
|
||
and the bulge was fifty miles across! We do not know how rapidly a
|
||
river may sink its channel through such a rising barrier; but we do
|
||
know that a process of that nature cannot legitimately be described
|
||
as swift or sudden. And surely it requires not less intellectual
|
||
far-sightedness and imaginative faculty to carry the mind across the
|
||
enormous stretch of time involved in such a change slowly wrought--a
|
||
period during which at least three vertical miles of the rising
|
||
mountain fold was worn down by rain and atmospheric abrasion--as to
|
||
mass the continental doming, the mountain folding, and the attendant
|
||
life changes together as a convulsive "catastrophe."
|
||
|
||
Mr. King, however, is not a Catastrophist of a very violent sort. He
|
||
shelves among the errors of the past the belief in such cataclysms as
|
||
Cuvier believed in, involving world-wide destruction of all life--"the
|
||
mere survival of a prehistoric terror, backed up by breaks in the
|
||
palæontological record and protected within those safe cities of
|
||
refuge, the Cosmogonies;" though he rejects as equally unsatisfactory
|
||
the mild affirmations of the Uniformitarians, that existing rates
|
||
of change and indefinite time are enough to account for all the
|
||
geological record. With our present light, he holds, geological
|
||
history seems to be a dovetailing together of the two ideas. "The ages
|
||
have had their periods of geological serenity, when change progressed
|
||
in the still, unnoticeable way, and life through vast lapses of
|
||
time followed the stately flow of years; drifting on by insensible
|
||
gradations through higher and higher forms, and then all at once
|
||
a part of the earth suffered short, sharp, destructive revolution
|
||
unheralded as an earthquake or volcanic eruptions." Thus stated, his
|
||
position does not seem to be radically different from that of
|
||
the broader Uniformitarians, except that he marks the periods of
|
||
accelerated physical change, and not those of comparative quiescence,
|
||
as the dominant ones in their influence on life-change. He takes
|
||
high and strong ground, too, in insisting that it is the business
|
||
of geology not simply to decipher and map out the changes which have
|
||
taken place in the configuration of the globe and in its climatic
|
||
conditions, but also to investigate and fix the rates of change. And
|
||
when the evolution of environment takes form as a distinct branch of
|
||
geology, he expects to witness a marked modification in the dominant
|
||
views of biologists. Its few broad laws will include "neither the
|
||
absolute uniformitarianism of Lyell and Hutton, Darwin and Haeckel,
|
||
nor the universal catastrophism of Cuvier and the majority of
|
||
teleogists." "Huxley alone among prominent evolutionists opens the
|
||
door for a union of the residue of truth in the two schools, fusing
|
||
them in his proposed evolutional geology."
|
||
|
||
So, on looking back over a trail of thirty thousand miles of
|
||
geological travel, Mr. King is impelled to say that Mr. Huxley's
|
||
far-sighted view perfectly satisfies his interpretation of the broad
|
||
facts of the American continent.
|
||
|
||
Of Mr. King's observations in regard to plasticity of physical
|
||
structure in connection with rapidly changing environment and the
|
||
struggle for existence, we propose to speak at another time.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
The great stone monuments of England, like Stonehenge, are supposed,
|
||
by Mr. James Fergusson, to be military trophies, erected in the time
|
||
of King Arthur on the battle fields by the victorious armies.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
A NEW APPARATUS FOR STORING AND UTILIZING SOLAR HEAT.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The apparatus herewith illustrated is devised to collect solar heat or
|
||
other heat, store it up in a heat reservoir--a mass of iron or other
|
||
suitable material--confine it in the reservoir until needed, keep
|
||
it in such form that it can be transported from place to place, and
|
||
utilize it for industrial or other purposes.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: APPARATUS FOR STORING AND UTILIZING SOLAR HEAT.]
|
||
|
||
A is a concave mirror for concentrating the solar rays upon the heat
|
||
reservoir, B, which is a mass of iron. C is the heat box for
|
||
confining the heat until needed, and also for serving as package for
|
||
transporting the heat reservoir when hot. G is the heat reservoir
|
||
chamber, in which the heat is communicated from the hot reservoir to
|
||
the air. Under certain circumstances the heat reservoir may be heated
|
||
in the heat reservoir chamber. H is a devaporizing chamber, for
|
||
extracting the moisture from the air by means of a deliquescent
|
||
substance or other material or treatment. A vertical stack or flue, I,
|
||
communicates with the heat reservoir chamber, for conveying the heated
|
||
air away for use.
|
||
|
||
The device for concentrating the solar rays may be either stationary
|
||
or movable, and, if movable, may be moved by hand, or automatically,
|
||
to follow the sun. The various chambers mentioned will have valves,
|
||
J, at the ends to regulate the passage of the air, and there will be a
|
||
door, K, at the side or bottom.
|
||
|
||
Patented through the Scientific American Patent Agency, March
|
||
20, 1877, by Messrs. John S. Hittell and Geo. W. Deitzler, of San
|
||
Francisco, Cal.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
PHOSPHORESCENT SWEATING.
|
||
|
||
|
||
While the subject of phosphorescence in marine animals was under
|
||
discussion at a society meeting in Florence, Professor Panceri cited
|
||
the case of a medical man, who, after eating fish, felt indisposed,
|
||
had nausea, and sweats that were luminous. This idiosyncrasy was laid
|
||
to the _pesce baudiera_, a Neapolitan fish. Dr. Borgiotti, another
|
||
member of the Academy, also narrated a case of phosphorescent sweating
|
||
in a patient with miliaria, a fact which has previously been noticed.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
UTILIZATION OF TIN SCRAP.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Messrs. Charles A. Catlin and George F. Wilson, of Providence, R.
|
||
I., have patented, May 8, 1877, a new process of utilizing tin scrap,
|
||
whereby they claim the tin is recovered, either as a valuable salt
|
||
of that metal or in the metallic form, and the iron or other metal is
|
||
left as a scrap at once available for reworking.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: CALLIN AND WILSON'S PROCESS OF UTILIZING TIN SCRAP.]
|
||
|
||
In any suitable building, a crane, A, is erected and placed in the
|
||
sweep of that crane; in any convenient order are a boiler, D, two
|
||
tanks, B and C, an evaporating pan, F, and an additional tank, E.
|
||
From the crane is suspended a wire basket to contain the scrap to be
|
||
treated, so perforated as to admit of the ready entrance of the liquid
|
||
when submerged in, and its ready escape when withdrawn from, the
|
||
boiler, D, in which boiler is put a sufficient quantity of the
|
||
solution of caustic soda or potash to allow of a complete submersion
|
||
therein of the basket and its contents. The basket, G, is then filled
|
||
with the material to be treated, sprinkling in during the filling the
|
||
requisite quantity of common salt or other chloride and nitrate
|
||
of soda or other nitrate, using these dry, not in solution, either
|
||
previously mixed or shaken in together in the proportion of from three
|
||
to five pounds each to every hundred pounds of scrap, the requisite
|
||
quantity depending upon the thickness of the thin [tin?] plate to be
|
||
removed. The loaded basket, being elevated by the crane, A, is
|
||
then swung round, and, by lowering, submerged in the hot or boiling
|
||
solution of caustic soda or potash in the iron boiler, D, which may
|
||
hold in solution a further proportion of the chloride and nitrate
|
||
used, the heat of which solution is maintained by a fire beneath the
|
||
boiler, or in any other and ordinary way. In the ensuing reaction the
|
||
oxygen of the nitrate combines with the tin to form stannic acid, and
|
||
this, in turn, combining with the alkali present, forms a stannate
|
||
of that base, which, entering into solution, leaves the before-plated
|
||
metal tin-free, the chloride present assisting in the reaction. A
|
||
further and more complex reaction takes place, by which copious fumes
|
||
of ammonia are evolved, which may be utilized by proper appliances.
|
||
When the reaction is complete, the basket containing the now tin-freed
|
||
scrap is withdrawn from the boiler, and suspended above it long enough
|
||
to drain. It is then swung over the tank, C, containing water, in
|
||
which it is washed by submerging and withdrawing several times, and
|
||
in like manner the washing completed in the water of the tank, B. The
|
||
contents of the basket being now discharged, it is again filled with
|
||
fresh scrap in the manner already described, and the process repeated.
|
||
The loss by evaporation from the boiler, D, is supplied by the wash
|
||
water in the tank, C; this, in turn, being supplied by the wash water
|
||
in the tank, B, to which fresh water is supplied as required. When
|
||
the caustic solution is sufficiently charged with the tin salt, it
|
||
is allowed to deposit the impure crystals, which, being removed and
|
||
drained, are redissolved in water in the iron tank, E. This solution
|
||
in the iron tank, E, after filtration or decantation, is again
|
||
concentrated in the evaporating pan, F, the crystals of stannate being
|
||
removed from time to time, drained and dried; or the impure crystals
|
||
obtained in the boiler, D, may be mixed with fine charcoal or other
|
||
reducing agent, and subjected to the requisite heat for the reduction
|
||
of the tin to the metallic form.
|
||
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW ALLOY.
|
||
|
||
|
||
A very beautiful new alloy, intended to replace brass in various
|
||
ornamental uses, especially in window and door furniture, has been
|
||
invented by W. A. Hopkins, of Paris. The alloy is composed of copper,
|
||
tin, spelter, or zinc and lead, which metals are manipulated. A
|
||
crucible is placed in the furnace and fired to red heat, and into the
|
||
crucible thus heated the metals are placed in the proportions of--tin
|
||
1-1/8 (say) 1 oz., spelter or zinc ½ oz., lead 5/16 of an ounce. These
|
||
are the proportions he prefers to use, as he has found them to give
|
||
excellent and satisfactory results, but he does not intend to confine
|
||
himself rigidly to the precise proportions named, as they may,
|
||
perhaps, be slightly varied in some particulars without materially
|
||
detracting from the beautiful color of the alloy which it is
|
||
intended to produce. The molten metals are kept well stirred, and
|
||
any impurities therein should be removed. When thoroughly mixed,
|
||
this alloy, which is termed the first alloy, is poured off into ingot
|
||
moulds and left to cool. Copper, in the proportion of eight parts to
|
||
one of this first alloy, is then placed in the crucible and brought
|
||
to melting heat, when the tin or first alloy is added and intimately
|
||
mixed with the copper, for which purpose the molten mass must be well
|
||
stirred for several minutes; it is then poured into ingot moulds for
|
||
sale in the form of ingots, or it may be poured into pattern moulds so
|
||
as to produce the articles required. This is the mode of manipulation
|
||
which it is preferred to employ, as an opportunity is thus afforded of
|
||
removing any impurities from the first alloy before mixing it with the
|
||
copper; but all the metals may, if preferred, be mixed together in the
|
||
proportions given and melted at one operation. By this means an alloy
|
||
is obtained of great strength, and of a very beautiful appearance, and
|
||
which is particularly suitable for small work, such, for instance, as
|
||
window and door furniture and other house furniture which is usually
|
||
made in brass or other alloy of copper, though it is not intended to
|
||
confine its use to such articles.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
SEBASTIN--AN IMPROVED EXPLOSIVE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
In the manufacture of the explosive known as dynamite, an infusorial
|
||
earth is used, which is filled with or made to absorb nitroglycerin.
|
||
As compared with certain kinds of charcoal, however, the absorptive
|
||
and retentive power of infusorial earth in small changes of
|
||
temperature unfavorably affect the common dynamite, and cause a
|
||
separation of the nitrogylcerin from the infusorial earth. The
|
||
improvement we now refer to is the invention of G. Fahnehjelm, of
|
||
Stockholm, Sweden, and consists in the substitution of a highly
|
||
porous and absorptive species of wood charcoal, in place of the
|
||
earth heretofore employed. The author designates his production as
|
||
"sebastin," and gives a number of interesting particulars as follow:
|
||
|
||
In order to produce a charcoal having the required quantities, the
|
||
carbonization or coking must be done in such a manner as to completely
|
||
destroy the organic substances, and to produce as porous a charcoal as
|
||
possible. For this he selects by preference young trees or striplings
|
||
or branches of poplar, hazelwood, or alder tree, and he burns them in
|
||
an open fire. When the wood has been consumed he does not put out the
|
||
fire by means of water, but leaves it to go out of itself. In this
|
||
way he obtains a very inflammable and very porous charcoal, which can
|
||
absorb more than five, and approaching six times its weight of
|
||
nitroglycerin without any risk of the separation of the oil. The
|
||
charcoal is pulverized in a wooden mortar, but it should not be
|
||
reduced to too fine a powder, else it will not so completely absorb
|
||
the nitroglycerin. The charcoal produced in the ordinary way, or by
|
||
closed fire, is quite different as regards absorbing power. Charcoal
|
||
of fir trees may, however, be used, and may acquire nearly the same
|
||
qualities, that is, if charred a second time in a special oven.
|
||
|
||
By mixing the different kinds of charcoal, a material may be obtained
|
||
possessing the required absorbing qualities, and an explosive compound
|
||
may then be obtained of the required power without loss of the
|
||
necessary consistency--that is, without being too dry, which is not
|
||
desirable. The charcoal not only serves as the best absorbent for the
|
||
nitroglycerin, but it plays also an important part in the combustion.
|
||
The nitroglycerin in exploding decomposes into steam, carbonic acid,
|
||
nitrogen, and oxygen. In the explosion of dynamite with inert base the
|
||
oxygen goes away without being utilized, but in the explosion of this
|
||
new compound (the new sebastin as he calls it) a part of the absorbent
|
||
charcoal is burnt by means of the liberated oxygen. The quantity of
|
||
gas is thus augmented, and also the development of heat, whereby again
|
||
the tension of this gas is augmented. As, however, the quantity of
|
||
charcoal necessary for the complete absorption of the nitroglycerin
|
||
is in all cases much larger than that which can reduce the excess of
|
||
oxygen produced at the explosion into carbonic acid, he adds to the
|
||
compound a salt, which also by the combustion gives an excess amount
|
||
of oxygen which may contribute to burn the rest of the charcoal. For
|
||
this purpose he uses by preference nitrate of potassa, which may be
|
||
added without any risk, and which gives the explosive compound a very
|
||
much greater rapidity or vehemence, and consequent force of explosion.
|
||
|
||
The composition of the new sebastin depends upon the objects for which
|
||
it is to be used, and the effects intended to be produced. The
|
||
strongest compound, and even in this there is stated to be no risk of
|
||
the separation of the nitroglycerin, is composed of 78 parts by
|
||
weight of nitroglycerin, 14 of the wood charcoal, and 8 of nitrate of
|
||
potassa; and when less power is required the proportions are
|
||
varied, the second quality consisting of 68 per cent. by weight of
|
||
nitroglycerin, 20 of the charcoal, and 12 of nitrate of potassa.
|
||
|
||
To show the relative strength of the compounds, the inventor says: Let
|
||
the dynamic force of pure nitroglycerin be represented by the number
|
||
2,884,043.6, then the dynamic force of the sebastin No. 1, as
|
||
above, will be indicated by 2,416,575, and of the sebastin No. 2 by
|
||
1,933,079.4, while that of dynamite No. 1 (consisting of 75 per
|
||
cent. of nitroglycerin and 25 per cent. of infusorial earth) will be
|
||
represented by 674,694.
|
||
|
||
For the above qualities of sebastin the increased effect produced by
|
||
the greater rapidity of the explosion must be taken into account also.
|
||
The increase has not yet been measured, but is estimated at 10 per
|
||
cent. The sebastin may also be compounded in other proportions of the
|
||
constituent parts, but the object being to produce explosive compounds
|
||
of the greatest force which it is possible to employ without danger,
|
||
he merely mentions that the proportion by weight may vary from 50
|
||
to 80 per cent. of nitroglycerin, 15 to 35 per cent. of the prepared
|
||
charcoal, and 5 to 20 per cent. of the nitrate of potassa; the parts
|
||
being taken by weight, as above stated.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
A NEW METHOD OF BOOKBINDING.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The annexed engravings represent a new system of binding books,
|
||
for which a number of important advantages are claimed. It obviates
|
||
stitching, allows of each leaf being firmly secured, and hence is
|
||
especially well suited for single-leaved books. It admits of plates
|
||
and maps being bound in their proper places instead of being pasted
|
||
in, and renders the book much stronger and more durable. The inventor
|
||
claims a saving of 40 to 75 per cent of the time required for
|
||
stitching, and of 50 per cent of the time needed in ordinary rebinding
|
||
work.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Bookbinding Fig. 1, 2, 3, 4]
|
||
|
||
The mode of operation is as follows: On receiving the sheets, the
|
||
binder folds them and places them in consecutive order, according to
|
||
the printer's signature. The front and bottom edges of the book are
|
||
then trimmed so as to obtain two straight sides; and the backs of the
|
||
sheets are cut off, transforming them into single leaves. Horizontal
|
||
lines are now marked with pencil across the back of the book for the
|
||
saw cuts; and a diagonal line, A, B, Fig. 2, is drawn to serve as a
|
||
guide in replacing the leaves in their proper places. A thin coat of
|
||
glue is next applied to the back; and when this is dry, the book is
|
||
divided into sections of from four to eight leaves (without counting
|
||
them) entirely disregarding the printer's signatures, but placing the
|
||
sheets in their original order. The binder places the first section
|
||
removed at his right hand, the next at his left, and so on, forming
|
||
two piles. Each pile is then straightened, and in the back of each, a
|
||
little below the transverse lines, are made bevel cuts with the saw.
|
||
Said cuts are 1/8 inch in length, inclined at an angle of
|
||
45°, and so placed that one half their length is above and the other
|
||
half below the marked line. When one pile of sheets is thus sawn, the
|
||
other pile is similarly treated; but the corresponding cuts are made
|
||
at relatively opposite angles. This will be understood from Fig. 1, in
|
||
which C represents the edge of the right hand pile, for example, and D
|
||
that of the left hand pile.
|
||
|
||
The sections of each pile are now returned in their regular order,
|
||
according to the printer's signatures. Should a section have been
|
||
misplaced, the diagonal line, being thus broken, will show the fact.
|
||
It will be seen, however, that this arrangement involves the alternate
|
||
use of sheets from each pile, so that, when all are put together, the
|
||
beveled cuts will cross or form dovetails, as shown in Fig. 3. Half
|
||
inch strips of white paper muslin, E, Fig. 4, are next pasted around
|
||
the back edges of the first and last sections. This is done to
|
||
strengthen the hold of the twines in the back of the book, said
|
||
sections necessarily bearing the whole strain of the covers. The twine
|
||
used corresponds in size to the holes made by the coincidence of the
|
||
beveled saw cuts. This twine is passed through the holes by means of a
|
||
blunt darning needle. The back of the book is shown in Fig. 2; and in
|
||
Fig. 4 the twines are represented as passed. Nothing further remains
|
||
to be done but to paste in the fly-leaves and lining, and finish the
|
||
book in the usual manner.
|
||
|
||
It is evident that this a very much stronger method of securing the
|
||
leaves than that in which the twine is simply laid and glued in a
|
||
straight cut. Each leaf is independently fastened; and the thread is
|
||
prevented from cutting through, as is commonly the case when the book
|
||
has been used to any great extent. Books can be bound to open more or
|
||
less as desired; and in rebinding, instead of taking the book apart
|
||
and cutting threads, a thin shaving is sliced off the back, and the
|
||
leaves are treated in the manner already described.
|
||
|
||
Patented March 20, 1877, by Mr. Florenz E. Schmitz. For further
|
||
information, address Messrs. Schmitz and Slosson, box 1180,
|
||
Middletown, Orange county, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED CURTAIN FIXTURE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
We illustrate herewith an improved curtain fixture, which may be
|
||
adjusted to windows or curtains of different widths, and is adapted
|
||
for use in connection with different means for raising and lowering
|
||
the curtain. Fig. 1 represents the device in place, a portion of the
|
||
cornice being broken away to exhibit it; and Fig. 2 shows the same in
|
||
detail.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Improved Curtain Fixture Figs. 1 and 2]
|
||
|
||
Attached to the cornice are guides, A, in which are sliding loops, B.
|
||
The latter may be adjusted to suit the position of the hooks placed in
|
||
the window case to sustain the cornice, so that said hooks need not be
|
||
set with any particularity. The curtain roller, C, has both its ends
|
||
screw-threaded, to receive hollow pulleys, as shown. The spindles
|
||
projecting from these pulleys are inclosed in coiled springs which
|
||
press against the bearings, D, and so hold the shade in any position
|
||
in which it may be placed. The bearings, D, are clasped in the ways,
|
||
A, and are laterally adjustable. Sliding blocks are also arranged in
|
||
said ways, and through each block passes a set screw, E. It will be
|
||
perceived that the bearings may be readily adjusted to curtains of
|
||
different widths, and the parts may afterward be locked in position by
|
||
the set screws, E. The curtain may be raised or lowered by cords wound
|
||
on the hollow pulleys.
|
||
|
||
Patented December 5, 1876, by Mr. K. J. Pospisil. For further
|
||
particulars relative to sale of patent, address the Penn Patent
|
||
Agency, 133 South Second street, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BOOT AND SHOE MACHINERY.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Boot and Shoe Machinery Fig. 1]
|
||
|
||
No manufacturers have taken greater advantage of the ingenuity of the
|
||
mechanical engineer than the American boot and shoe makers. Nearly
|
||
every operation in the complex process of evolving finished boots
|
||
from the plain skins of leather is the object of a special class of
|
||
machinery; and for several years past, we have weekly chronicled the
|
||
patenting of several improvements in the devices for effecting some
|
||
of the numerous operations. We present herewith a series of eight
|
||
labor-saving machines of the most approved construction, which we
|
||
select from Knight's "American Mechanical Dictionary."[1]
|
||
|
||
[Footnote 1: Published in numbers by Messrs. Hurd & Houghton, New York
|
||
city.]
|
||
|
||
Fig. 1 is a shoe-edge trimmer, in which the shoe is mounted on a
|
||
jack, the carriage of which has a motion of translation and rotation
|
||
communicated to it: so that, while the side of the sole is being
|
||
trimmed, the shoe is fed longitudinally against the knife, but at the
|
||
toe and heel is rotated beneath it. The knife is universally jointed,
|
||
to permit the hands of the operator to determine the different bevels
|
||
cut.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Boot and Shoe Machinery Fig. 2]
|
||
|
||
Fig. 2 is an ingenious little machine for placing the eyelets of the
|
||
lace holes in position, and fastening them. The eyelets are fed, one
|
||
by one, from the reservoir at the top, down the inclined ways, and are
|
||
seized at the foot between the plunger and anvil, and they are riveted
|
||
in their proper places in the shoe or strip of leather, which is held
|
||
and fed by the operator.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Boot and Shoe Machinery Fig. 3]
|
||
|
||
Fig. 3 is a machine in which a shoe or boot is chucked and revolved
|
||
against a burnishing tool, to impart a smooth and elegant finish to
|
||
the heel. Our engraving shows a machine with what is called in the
|
||
trade a "hot kit," a heated burnishing tool, with a flexible gas pipe
|
||
of sufficient length, which follows the oscillations of the burnishing
|
||
stock, _a_, and which conveys gas to the interior of the tool, where
|
||
it is burnt in a jet. The tool is made to reciprocate over the surface
|
||
of the heel, passing from breast to breast at each oscillation with an
|
||
elastic pressure.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Boot and Shoe Machinery Fig. 4]
|
||
|
||
Fig. 4 is a machine for pressing together the "lifts" which compose
|
||
a boot or shoe heel, thus dispensing with the handiwork of the
|
||
hammer and lapstone. The bed is adjusted vertically by a screw to any
|
||
thickness to which the blank heel may be built; and the plunger is
|
||
brought down by the depression of the treadle with such force as to
|
||
compact the lifts together.
|
||
|
||
Fig. 5 shows a heel-pricking machine. When the lifts of the heel are
|
||
fairly pressed together by the appliance shown in Fig. 4, the pricking
|
||
machine pierces the necessary holes through all the lifts at once by
|
||
a gang of awls. The compressed heels are first secured together by
|
||
tacking, and then placed on the platen; and the plunger, with its gang
|
||
of awls, descends with great force.
|
||
|
||
Fig. 6 is a heel trimmer, known in the trade as the Coté trimmer. The
|
||
shoe is held stationary by the treadle clamp; and the knife stock,
|
||
which is centrally pivoted to the outer plate or jaw bearing upon the
|
||
tread lift, is then grasped in the hands of the operator, and moved to
|
||
give a sweeping cut to trim the heel.
|
||
|
||
Fig. 7 is a machine for pressing boot soles. Beneath the crosshead of
|
||
the press is a swinging bed, on each end of which is a form, in order
|
||
that a shoe may remain under pressure upon one while the operator
|
||
is placing another shoe on the other. The pressure is given by the
|
||
treadle, which brings down the upper platen on the channeled sole.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Boot and Shoe Machinery Fig. 5]
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Boot and Shoe Machinery Fig. 6]
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Boot and Shoe Machinery Fig. 7]
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
ON DYSPEPSIA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
At a late meeting of the Harveian Society, of London, Dr. Farquharson
|
||
read a paper on this subject. Attention was directed to the state of
|
||
the tongue in dyspepsia. A deeply fissured tongue often meant little;
|
||
whereas a thin white fur, composed of minute dots, was generally found
|
||
along with pain immediately after food. Pain after a longer interval
|
||
was accompanied by a pale, flabby tongue, with reddish tip and center.
|
||
The treatment of dyspepsia consisted of two parts, that of food
|
||
and that of drugs. The latter was the principal part with patients
|
||
applying for gratuitous relief. The pain occurring immediately after
|
||
food was usually relieved by alkalies; whereas acids were indicated
|
||
where suffering was not experienced until an hour or two after the
|
||
commencement of the digestive act. For the relief of the nausea and
|
||
sickness remaining after the bowels were thoroughly cleansed, nothing
|
||
was so effectual as hourly drop doses of ipecacuanha wine. Nux vomica
|
||
was also a valuable remedy. Pain might be but the protest of the
|
||
stomach against an overload, or be the result of deficient tone from
|
||
general nervous exhaustion. In some cases each meal was followed by
|
||
diarrh[oe]a; and for these cases attention was directed to Ringer's
|
||
plan of minute doses of the liquor hydrargyri perchloridi In speaking
|
||
of diet, Dr. Farquharson pointed out that there are three forms of
|
||
dyspepsia: 1. The dyspepsia of fluids, as it is called, where the
|
||
stomach seems intolerant of all forms of fluid; 2. The digestive
|
||
derangement following intemperance in the matter of animal food; and,
|
||
3. The dyspepsia connected with indulgence in tea, or other warm and
|
||
weak infusions of tannin.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE DESTRUCTIVE EFFECTS OF LIGHTNING.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The amount of destruction of life and property by lightning, or rather
|
||
electrical discharges, has been very great throughout the world.
|
||
|
||
It is estimated that at least 45 persons are killed annually by
|
||
lightning in this country. The average number of deaths by lightning
|
||
has been 22 in England, 9 in Switzerland, 3 in Belgium, and 75 in
|
||
France. In France alone, during a period of thirty years, over 10,000
|
||
persons were smitten, of which 2,252 were instantly killed. Eighty
|
||
were wounded and 9 killed during one thunderstorm at Châteauneuf les
|
||
Montiers in 1861, and within one week, when the air was highly charged
|
||
with electricity, thirty-three fearful flashes of lightning were
|
||
observed, each bringing death to some victims.
|
||
|
||
During the sixteen years between 1799 and 1816, 156 vessels of the
|
||
British navy were struck by lightning; 73 men were killed and 138
|
||
injured, and the loss of materials amounted to over a million dollars;
|
||
but since the system of metallic conductors, adapted for vessels,
|
||
devised by Sir W. Snow Harris, has been applied to the vessels in that
|
||
navy, the losses and damages by lightning have almost entirely ceased,
|
||
although the number of vessels has been greatly increased.
|
||
|
||
In Fuller's Church History it is stated that "scarcely a great
|
||
abbey in England exists which once, at least, was not burned down by
|
||
lightning from heaven."
|
||
|
||
On the night of April, 1718, twenty-four steeples were struck along
|
||
the coast of Brittany; and on the 11th of January, 1815, twelve
|
||
steeples suffered a similar fate in the Rhenish provinces.
|
||
|
||
On the 27th of July, 1759, lightning burnt all the woodwork of the
|
||
great cathedral at Strasbourg; and on the 14th of August, 1833, it was
|
||
struck three times within a quarter of an hour, and so much damaged
|
||
that the repairs cost about $6,000,000. In 1835 lightning conductors
|
||
were placed upon the building and steeple, and since then it has
|
||
not been damaged whatever by lightning, although discharges have on
|
||
several occasions occurred in line with the top of the steeple, which
|
||
is 437 feet above the ground.
|
||
|
||
On the 18th of August, 1769, the Tower of St. Nazaire, at Brescia,
|
||
was struck, and the subterranean powder magazine, containing 2,076,000
|
||
lbs. of powder, belonging to the Republic of Venice, was exploded.
|
||
One sixth of the whole town was laid in ruins and the rest very much
|
||
injured, and about 3,000 persons killed.
|
||
|
||
On the 26th of June, 1807, the powder magazine of Luxembourg,
|
||
containing 28,000 lbs., was struck, and besides about 30 persons
|
||
killed and 200 injured, the town was ruined.
|
||
|
||
Explosions and large fires, involving a great loss, have become rather
|
||
frequent in this country, owing to the iron tanks used for the storage
|
||
of petroleum being struck by lightning. From March to August, in 1876,
|
||
over 10,000,000 gallons, and on April 19, 1877, over 2,000,000 gallons
|
||
of oil, and the village of Troutman, were destroyed in the oil regions
|
||
of Pennsylvania.
|
||
|
||
Some of the thunderstorms which have prevailed in this country have
|
||
been very terrific and destructive. During August 14th, 15th, and
|
||
16th, 1872, portions of New York State and the New England States were
|
||
visited by some of the most terrific thunderstorms ever experienced,
|
||
during which over 200 dwellings were struck and damaged, about 10
|
||
persons were instantly killed, and 160 stunned. Quite a number of
|
||
barns, with their contents, hay and cattle, were also struck, fired,
|
||
and consumed. Cars, while running on some of the railroads, were
|
||
surrounded by a vivid electric light, but no passengers were injured,
|
||
although they were greatly alarmed. Telegraph wires were melted by the
|
||
half mile, telegraph instruments broken, and poles shattered in all
|
||
directions. One of these storms occurred at midnight, at Arlington,
|
||
Mass., August 14th, in which brilliant streams of electricity darted
|
||
across the sky in every direction, and the thunder which followed was
|
||
constant for a period of thirteen minutes, without the intermission
|
||
of an instant of silence. Three hundred and thirty-one discharges
|
||
were counted in seven minutes by an observer, and each discharge was
|
||
followed by loud and sometimes rattling reports, whose reverberations
|
||
rolled through the heavens in an endless procession of majestic and
|
||
terrific sounds. During this scene, the moon, which was about half an
|
||
hour above the western horizon, was visible, but so magnified, through
|
||
the haze and vapor, as to appear like a brilliant flame suspended in
|
||
the sky. For a period of twenty minutes the scene was one of grandeur
|
||
and sublimity rarely witnessed.
|
||
|
||
In the States of Illinois and Iowa, and the prairie country west of
|
||
the Mississippi river, thunderstorms are generally more terrific, and
|
||
more lives have been lost there from the effects of lightning than
|
||
in any other section of this country. Owing to the said country being
|
||
level and devoid of trees, the equilibrium between the electricity
|
||
of the atmosphere and that of the earth is principally restored by
|
||
disruptive discharges.--_Spang's "Treatise on Lightning Protection"_
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
A tooth of a mastodon has been dug up near the Ashley river in South
|
||
Carolina. It is 11½ inches long, 6 inches in diameter, and weighs more
|
||
than 5 lbs.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE SEA SERPENT SIGHTED FROM A ROYAL YACHT.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Osborne, paddle royal yacht, Commander Hugh L. Pearson, which
|
||
arrived at Portsmouth from the Mediterranean on Monday, June 11,
|
||
has forwarded an official report to the Admiralty, through the
|
||
Commander-in-Chief (Admiral Sir George Elliot, K.C.B.), respecting a
|
||
sea monster which she encountered during her homeward voyage.
|
||
|
||
At about 5 o'clock in the afternoon of June 2, the sea being
|
||
exceptionally calm, while the yacht was proceeding round the north
|
||
coast of Sicily toward Cape Vito, the officer on the watch observed
|
||
a long ridge of fins, each about 6 feet long, moving slowly along. He
|
||
called for a telescope, and was at once joined by other officers. The
|
||
Osborne was steaming westward at ten and a half knots an hour, and
|
||
having a long passage before her, could not stay to make minute
|
||
observations. The fins were progressing in a eastwardly direction, and
|
||
as the vessel more nearly approached them, they were replaced by the
|
||
foremost part of a gigantic monster. Its skin was, so far as it could
|
||
be seen, altogether devoid of scales, appearing rather to resemble in
|
||
sleekness that of a seal.
|
||
|
||
The head was bullet-shaped, with an elongated termination, being
|
||
somewhat similar in form to that of a seal, and was about six feet in
|
||
diameter. Its features were only seen by one officer, who described
|
||
them as like those of an alligator. The neck was comparatively narrow,
|
||
but so much of the body as could be seen, developed in form like that
|
||
of a gigantic turtle, and from each side extended two fins, about
|
||
fifteen feet in length, by which the monster paddled itself along
|
||
after the fashion of a turtle.
|
||
|
||
The appearance of the monster is accounted for by a submarine volcano,
|
||
which occurred north of Galita, in the Gulf of Tunis, about the middle
|
||
of May, and was reported at the time by a steamer which was struck by
|
||
a detached fragment of submarine rock. The disturbance below water, it
|
||
is thought probable, may have driven up the monster from its "native
|
||
element," as the site of the eruption is only one hundred miles from
|
||
where it was reported to have been seen--_Portsmouth (Eng.) Times._
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
SUNSTROKE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The sudden accession of heat has already produced one fatal, and more
|
||
than one severe, case of sunstroke in the metropolis. Probably the
|
||
affection so designated is not the malady to which the term _coup de
|
||
soleil_ can be properly applied. The condition brought about is
|
||
an exaggerated form of the disturbance occasioned by entering
|
||
too suddenly the "hot" room of a Turkish bath. The skin does not
|
||
immediately perform its function as an evaporating and therefore
|
||
cooling surface, and an acute febrile state of the organism is
|
||
established, with a disturbed balance of circulation, and more or less
|
||
cerebral irritation as a prominent feature of the complaint. Death may
|
||
suddenly occur at the outset of the complaint, as it has happened in
|
||
a Turkish bath, where the subject labors under some predisposition to
|
||
apoplexy, or has a weak or diseased heart. It should suffice to point
|
||
out the danger and to explain, by way of warning, that although the
|
||
degrees of heat registered by the thermometer, or the power of the
|
||
sun's rays, do not seem to suggest especial caution, all sudden
|
||
changes from a low to a high temperature are attended with danger
|
||
to weak organisms. The avoidance of undue exercise--for example,
|
||
persistent trotting or cantering up and down the Row--is an obvious
|
||
precaution on days marked by a relatively, if not absolutely, high
|
||
temperature. We direct attention to this matter because it is obvious
|
||
the peculiar peril of overheating the body by exertion on the first
|
||
burst of fine weather is not generally realized. It is forgotten that
|
||
the increased temperature must be measured by the elevation which has
|
||
recently taken place, not the number of degrees of heat at present
|
||
recorded. The registered temperature may be more or less than that
|
||
which occurred a year ago; but its immediate effects on the organism
|
||
will be determined by the conditions which have preceded it and the
|
||
violence of the change.--_Lancet_.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
DEAD HORSES STANDING ERECT.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Danville _Advertiser_ of the 7th inst. says: Mr. Smith was in
|
||
town on Saturday with his hired man, and the two tell a singular story
|
||
about a lightning stroke. Mr. Smith was on a grain drill in a field,
|
||
and his hired man was about 12 rods from him, dragging. Suddenly Smith
|
||
heard the noise of thunder, and became unconscious. The man also heard
|
||
the noise, but neither of them saw any flash of lightning. The
|
||
man went to Smith, and in about twenty minutes he was restored to
|
||
consciousness. Then attention was given to the horses. One of them was
|
||
standing erect, with one foot lifted a little way from the earth, and
|
||
the other was kneeling with his nose in the earth, and both were stone
|
||
dead, and retained their positions until they were pushed over. The
|
||
supposition is that in this case the electricity went from the earth
|
||
to the sky.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Berlin correspondent of the London _Times_ states that General
|
||
Berdan, of the United States, has invented an instrument which
|
||
will greatly improve the art of killing. He calls his invention a
|
||
"range-finder." It consists of a telescope and other instruments, all
|
||
of which can be carried on a dogcart, and which enable the engineers
|
||
to measure with perfect accuracy up to 2,000 metres, or 1,500 yards.
|
||
The time needed to ascertain distances, is only two minutes, and
|
||
the General believes that his invention will double the accuracy of
|
||
artillery fire, and quadruple that of infantry.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
SETTING LOCOMOTIVE SLIDE VALVES.
|
||
|
||
BY JOSHUA ROSE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
E. G. asks: "How can I set the slide valves of a locomotive when
|
||
she is on the road?" J. H. S. asks: "What is the method of setting
|
||
locomotive slide valves from marks on the slide spindle?" And F. O.
|
||
asks: "How are the valves of inside cylinder locomotives set, since
|
||
the back ports are out of sight and you cannot measure the lead?"
|
||
|
||
Our correspondent will find these questions answered in full below.
|
||
|
||
It is presumed that the lengths of the eccentric rod, reverse rod, and
|
||
other parts are correct, and they are properly connected and oiled
|
||
so as to be in working order. The first thing to do is to place the
|
||
reverse lever in the forward full-gear notch of the quadrants, or
|
||
sectors, as they are sometimes called. The next procedure is to place
|
||
the crank on its forward dead center as near as can be ascertained by
|
||
the eye, and loosening the set screw of the forward eccentric, that is
|
||
to say, the eccentric which connects with the upper end of the link,
|
||
move that eccentric round on the shaft until the valve leaves the port
|
||
at the front end of the cylinder open to the amount of whatever lead
|
||
it is desired to give the valve. In moving the eccentric round on the
|
||
shaft, it is necessary to move it in the direction in which it will
|
||
turn when in operation. This is done in order to take up any lost
|
||
motion there may be in the eccentric straps, in the eccentric rod
|
||
eyebolts, or other working parts or joints between the eccentric and
|
||
the slide valve rod or spindle. If the eccentric was turned backward
|
||
instead of forward, all the lost motion would operate to vitiate the
|
||
set of the valve, because, when the eccentric begins to move, its
|
||
motion will have no effect in moving the slide valve spindle, until
|
||
all the lost motion in the various parts is taken up by the eccentric
|
||
movement. In considering this part of the operation, we must bear in
|
||
mind that, to set the valve, we must move the wheels of the engine,
|
||
it being impracticable to move the piston itself. Now, in moving the
|
||
wheels, we are confronted with the fact that the crank pin is pulling
|
||
the connecting rod; hence, if there is any lost motion in the brasses
|
||
at either end of the connecting rod, the piston will not be at the end
|
||
of its stroke when the crank is on its dead center.
|
||
|
||
Suppose, for instance, that we have moved the driving wheel forward
|
||
until the crank stands upright at a right angle to the bore of the
|
||
cylinder, the resistance to motion of the piston and crosshead has
|
||
caused the crank pin to bed against the half-brass nearest to the
|
||
cylinder, all the play or lost motion is then between the other
|
||
half-brass and the crank pin. When, however, the engine is at work and
|
||
the piston is driving the crank pin, instead of being driven by it,
|
||
the lost motion will exist between the crank pin and the half-brass
|
||
nearest to the cylinder, and the contact will exist between the crank
|
||
pin and the other brass. The difference in the position of the piston,
|
||
caused by this lost motion, may be ascertained by moving the piston
|
||
back and forth until the crank pin contacts with first one and then
|
||
the other half-brass. It is sometimes attempted to remedy the defect
|
||
due to this lost motion by moving the crank pin past the dead center
|
||
and then moving it back to the dead center, so that while on that
|
||
center the play or lost motion in the connecting rod is taken up. This
|
||
is all very well so far as the connecting rod and piston is concerned,
|
||
and will cause them both to stand on their respective dead centers
|
||
with the lost motion taken up; but, in moving the wheel back to the
|
||
dead center, we have given full liberty to all the lost motion in the
|
||
various parts of the valve motion or gear, as already explained, in
|
||
reference to moving the eccentric upon the shaft. As there are so many
|
||
more parts in the valve gear, in which lost motion may occur, it is
|
||
manifestly preferable to take up that play by moving the driving wheel
|
||
in a continuous direction, rather than to move the latter back to
|
||
accommodate any play there may be in the connecting rod.
|
||
|
||
The crank being placed by the eye upon its forward dead center, and
|
||
the eccentric connected to the top of the link being moved round
|
||
on the axle (in the direction in which the wheels will run when the
|
||
engine is going forward) until the steam port at the front end of the
|
||
cylinder is open to the amount of the lead, we fasten the eccentric to
|
||
hold in that position. We then throw the reverse lever over into the
|
||
last notch at the other end of the sector, lifting the link up so
|
||
that the eccentric connected to the lower end of the link may be
|
||
approximately adjusted, which is done by moving the eccentric round
|
||
upon the axle (in the direction in which the axle will revolve when
|
||
the engine is running backward) until the crank stands upon the same
|
||
dead center, and the front port is open to the amount of the lead.
|
||
This being done, we have the eccentrics approximately adjusted and may
|
||
proceed to the final adjustment, in which the first thing to do is to
|
||
find the exact dead centers of the crank. It is obvious that a line
|
||
drawn through the center of the crank pin and the center of the wheel
|
||
axle, will stand horizontally true and level when the crank is on
|
||
either of the dead centers, but the presence of the crank pin makes
|
||
it impracticable to draw such a line. We can therefore draw one which
|
||
will be parallel to those centers; and to do this we draw a circle
|
||
upon the end of the wheel axle (and from its center) of the same
|
||
diameter as that of the crank pin, and then resting a straight-edge
|
||
upon the bearing of the crank pin (taking care to avoid the round
|
||
corner upon the pin, if there is one), we place the other end of the
|
||
straight-edge even with the top of the circle drawn upon the axle; and
|
||
then, using the straight-edge as a guide, we draw a line across the
|
||
end of the axle and the wheel face. When this line is level the crank
|
||
will be upon its dead center. This plan is sometimes employed, but is
|
||
not a very accurate one, because the length of the line is very short
|
||
as compared to the circumference of the driving wheel; hence, an error
|
||
of the thickness of the line becomes one equal to several thicknesses
|
||
of the line when carried out to the wheel circumference. Furthermore,
|
||
if the line of the cylinder does not stand horizontally level, as
|
||
is sometimes the case, the result of the whole proceeding will be
|
||
inaccurate. Again, the connecting rod end and the coupling rod is in
|
||
the way, rendering it awkward to both draw and level the line.
|
||
|
||
A better and more accurate method to find the dead centers is as
|
||
follows: Place the reverse lever into the end notch of the sector at
|
||
the forward end, and then move the driving wheel forward until the
|
||
guide block is within about a quarter of an inch of the end of its
|
||
travel, then place a straight-edge against the end of the guide block,
|
||
and draw, on the outside face of the guide bar, a line even with the
|
||
end of the guide block. Bend a piece of wire (pointed at both ends) to
|
||
a right angle, make a center punch mark either in the rail, under the
|
||
driving wheel, or in some stationary, solid part contiguous to the
|
||
wheel, or at such distance from it that when one end of the bent wire
|
||
is placed in the center punch mark, the operator with the other end
|
||
will be able to draw a line across the rim of the driving wheel. Here,
|
||
however, arises another consideration, that it is better to set the
|
||
valves with the wheel axle in its proper position in the pedestal
|
||
shoes, and in order to do this the wheel should rest upon the rail
|
||
with its proper proportion of the weight of the engine resting upon
|
||
it. The springs will then be deflected to their proper amount, and the
|
||
axle box will have passed its proper distance up the pedestals. It is
|
||
obvious that if the engine is blocked up so that the driving wheels
|
||
clear the rails (which is done in order to avoid having the weight of
|
||
the engine to move while setting the valve), the axle boxes will drop
|
||
in the pedestal and the valve will be set incorrectly, as the wheels
|
||
are in a wrong position. To avoid this, and at the same time to avoid
|
||
having to move the whole engine while setting the valve, the engine
|
||
is blocked up from the rails, and the axle boxes of the driving wheels
|
||
are wedged up so as to be lifted up into their proper position. In
|
||
this case there is no very accurate means of ascertaining what is
|
||
the exact proper height, save it be by first marking upon the outside
|
||
faces of the shoes or pedestal a line even with the top of the axle
|
||
box when the load is upon the wheels, and then, after blocking up the
|
||
engine from the rails, wedging up the axle boxes till the face again
|
||
comes even with the line.
|
||
|
||
Whatever plan is pursued, one end of the piece of wire is rested in
|
||
the fixed center punch mark, and with the other a line is drawn across
|
||
the outside face of the wheel rim. The driving wheel is then revolved
|
||
forward until the guide block returns, having passed to the end of its
|
||
travel. When its end again stands exactly even with the mark made upon
|
||
the guide bar, the piece of wire is again brought into requisition,
|
||
one end being rested in the fixed center punch mark as before, and
|
||
with the other end another line is drawn across the outside rim of the
|
||
wheel. It is obvious that by taking a pair of compasses and finding a
|
||
point exactly equidistant between the two lines thus marked upon the
|
||
wheel rim, and then marking that point with a center punch mark, the
|
||
crank will be upon its exact dead center, when one end of the piece of
|
||
bent wire rests in the fixed center punch mark, the other end rests
|
||
in the center punch mark upon the wheel rim. To find the other dead
|
||
center, the wheel must be moved about halfway round and the process
|
||
repeated with the motion block at the other end of the guide bars.
|
||
|
||
Thus, whenever the piece of wire will stand with one end resting in
|
||
the fixed center punch mark and the other end in either of the center
|
||
punch marks upon the wheel run, the crank is upon a dead center.
|
||
Having thus placed the crank upon either dead center, we measure the
|
||
valve lead, and if in temporarily fixing our eccentrics we gave it too
|
||
much lead, we mark where it stands upon the shaft by means of a line
|
||
drawn on the axle and carried up on the side face of the eccentric;
|
||
then move the eccentric back some little distance more than is
|
||
necessary to make the adjustment, and then move it forward again a
|
||
little at a time, noting when the valve has the proper amount of lead,
|
||
and thus fasten the eccentric upon the axle by means of the set screw.
|
||
|
||
The object of moving the eccentric too far back and then moving it
|
||
forward is to make the adjustment so that the latter may be made with
|
||
the lost motion of the valve gear all taken up. The next proceeding is
|
||
to move the driving wheel halfway round and try the lead at that end
|
||
of the stroke. If the lead at the two ends is not equal, it shows that
|
||
either the slide valve spindle or the eccentric rods are not of the
|
||
proper length and must be rectified; this being done, the crank must
|
||
be again placed upon first one and then the other dead center, the
|
||
valve lead being measured at each end. When the lead is equal at each
|
||
end, the rods are of correct length, and the amount of the lead must
|
||
be regulated by moving the eccentrics as already directed.
|
||
|
||
If the link block does not come opposite the end of the eccentric rod
|
||
when the reverse lever is in the end notch of the sector, the length
|
||
of the reverse rod is wrong and should be corrected. If the link block
|
||
comes right, under the above conditions, for the forward but not for
|
||
the backward eccentric rod, the notches in the sector are not cut
|
||
in their proper positions, or the link hanger is not of the proper
|
||
length. In either case the error may be remedied by altering the
|
||
length of the latter. But, as doing this would alter the amount of the
|
||
valve lead, it is well, if there is any prospect of such errors, to
|
||
correct them before setting the valves.
|
||
|
||
Instead of measuring the lead of the valve with a rule, or by a wedge,
|
||
the following plan is very often adopted: After the valve and spindle
|
||
are in position, the valve is placed with the proper amount of lead
|
||
upon the front port. A center punch mark is then made upon the face
|
||
of the steam chest. A piece of quarter inch iron wire is then bent at
|
||
right angles and each end filed to a point. One end of this wire is
|
||
placed in the fixed center punch mark in the steam chest, and with the
|
||
other a mark is made upon the slide spindle. Upon this latter mark a
|
||
center punch mark is also made sufficiently deep to be very plainly
|
||
visible when the burr raised by center punching is filed off, which
|
||
is necessary to prevent this burr from cutting the packing. It follows
|
||
that whenever the bent piece of wire will rest with one end in the
|
||
center punch mark in the steam chest, and the other end in the center
|
||
punch mark in the slide spindle, the valve is in its proper position
|
||
when the crank is on the corresponding dead center. This plan is a
|
||
very old one and possesses the advantage that the valve may be set
|
||
without seeing it, that is to say, with the steam chest cover on. If
|
||
the length of the piece of wire measured direct from point to point is
|
||
known, the valve may be set when the engine is upon the road without
|
||
taking off the steam chest cover. The center punch mark upon the steam
|
||
chest should, however, always be placed in about the same spot, so as
|
||
to avoid mistakes in case of there being other similar marks upon the
|
||
chest. It should always be made deep, so as not to get filled up with
|
||
paint and be difficult to find. In course of time the mark upon the
|
||
slide valve spindle is apt to disappear from the wear of the spindle,
|
||
hence the center punch with which it is made should have a long
|
||
conical point. To mark the position of the eccentric upon the axle,
|
||
it is an excellent plan, after the eccentrics are finally adjusted,
|
||
to take a chisel with the cutting end ground to the form of a fiddle
|
||
drill, one cutting edge being at a right angle to the other. The
|
||
chisel must be held so that while one edge rests upon the axle, the
|
||
other edge will bear against the radial face of the eccentric. A sharp
|
||
blow with a hammer upon the chisel-head will make a clean indented cut
|
||
upon the axle and the eccentric, the two cuts exactly meeting at their
|
||
junction and denoting the position of the eccentrics. In setting the
|
||
valves of inside cylinder locomotives, the back ports being out of
|
||
sight, the amount of lead is ascertained by making a wooden wedge
|
||
about three inches long, a thirty-second of an inch thick at one end
|
||
and three eighths of an inch thick at the other end. The faces of this
|
||
wedge are chalked, and the lead is measured by inserting it between
|
||
the edge of the valve and the edge of the port until its thickness
|
||
just fills the space, and then moving it edgeways so that the valve
|
||
and port edges will just mark it. By measuring the thickness of the
|
||
wedge at the mark, the amount of lead is ascertained. After the valves
|
||
are set, it is still desirable to mark the position by center
|
||
punch marks upon the outside of the steam chests and upon the valve
|
||
spindles, as already described.
|
||
|
||
If an eccentric should slip when the engine is upon the road,
|
||
and there are no marks whereby to readjust them, it may be done
|
||
approximately as follows: Put the reverse lever in the end notch of
|
||
the forward gear, then place the crank as nearly on a dead center as
|
||
the eye will direct, and open both the cylinder cocks, then disconnect
|
||
the slide valve spindle from the rocker arm, and move the valve
|
||
spindle until the opening of the port corresponding to the dead center
|
||
on which the crank stands will be shown by steam blowing through the
|
||
cylinder cock, the throttle valve being opened a trifle. The position
|
||
of the valve being thus determined, the eccentric must be moved upon
|
||
the shaft until the valve spindle will connect with the rocker arm
|
||
without being moved at all. The throttle valve should be very slightly
|
||
opened, otherwise so much steam will be admitted into the cylinder
|
||
that it will pass through any leak in the piston and blow through
|
||
both cylinder cocks before there is time to ascertain which cock gives
|
||
first exit to the steam.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW STEAMER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
A new steamer for the Mallory line, between New York and Texas, was
|
||
lately launched from the yard of Roach & Co., Chester, Pa., 2,200 tons
|
||
burden. Principal dimensions as follows: Length over all, 239 feet 7
|
||
inches; beam (moulded), 34 feet; depth from the base to the spar deck
|
||
beams, 18 feet 2½ inches; depth of hold, 16 feet 5½ inches; diameter
|
||
of propeller (Hirsch's patent-four blades), 11 feet 6 inches. She
|
||
is to be provided with compound engines, having cylinders 24 and 44
|
||
inches in diameter, with a stroke of 44 inches, and two return tubular
|
||
boilers 10 feet long, 10 feet 3 inches wide, and 8 feet 6 inches high.
|
||
Aft are compartments capable of holding 80 tons of water, for the
|
||
purpose of depressing the stern before and after crossing the bar at
|
||
Corpus Christi. Her low draught is 7½ feet; speed, 14 knots.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
A TIN-CAN TELEPHONE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
In Professor Bell's telephone a plate of sheet iron is made to vibrate
|
||
by means of the electrical current, something after the manner of
|
||
the skin of a drumhead. In a recent improvement by Mr. G. B. Havens,
|
||
Louisville, Ky., the electrical wires are wrapped around a common tin
|
||
fruit can. By means of tin cans at each end, sounds, it is said, were
|
||
sent over 92 miles of wire, and included several pieces of music.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
MR. HOTCHKISS, an American inventor, whose improved revolving cannon
|
||
we illustrated some time since, has received intimation that his
|
||
system has been approved by the French Government, and that they have
|
||
decided to adopt his cannon.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
COLLENDER'S IMPROVED BILLIARD TABLE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
In the accompanying engravings, we illustrate two important
|
||
improvements in the construction of billiard tables, which have
|
||
recently been devised by Mr. H. W. Collender, the well known billiard
|
||
table manufacturer of this city. The first, which is represented in
|
||
Fig. 1, relates to the construction of the bed-supporting frame, and
|
||
aims to render the same stronger while cheapening its manufacture.
|
||
In putting together the body and framework of the table, the usual
|
||
practice is to cut away the stock of the cross beam and longitudinal
|
||
beam, and halve them together. Longitudinal grooves are also formed on
|
||
the inner surface of the side and "broad rails," to accommodate tenons
|
||
on the ends of the cross beams; and the latter are secured in place
|
||
by bolts fastening their ends to the broad rails. Mr. Collender claims
|
||
that, by this mode of construction, not only are the cross beams
|
||
weakened by being halved together, but the broad rails are also
|
||
weakened by the cutting away of this stock near the middle to effect
|
||
the framing into them of the ends of the cross beams.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Fig 1, billiard table support frame]
|
||
|
||
From Fig. 1, it will be seen that the cross beam, A, is combined with
|
||
the side broad rails in the following manner: Upon the inner face of
|
||
each broad rail is secured a cast iron socket piece, B, into which
|
||
fits one end of the cross beam, A. From said beam the bolt, C, passes
|
||
through the shoe, B, and is secured by a nut, D, let into the stock of
|
||
the broad rail. The shoe, B, has lugs which enter the broad rail; and
|
||
the aperture in it, through which the bolt passes, is made oblong to
|
||
admit of the drawing of the parts together after the insertion of the
|
||
bolt. Upon the sides of the cross beam near the middle, and directly
|
||
opposite each other, are two shoes, E; these have no bolt holes. In
|
||
them are placed the adjacent ends of the longitudinal beams, F, the
|
||
other extremities of which are seated in shoes on the broad rails.
|
||
The shoes, E, have their lugs of such a length, compared with the
|
||
thickness of cross beam, A, that when put in place on said beam said
|
||
lugs will come together. The advantage of this is that, should the
|
||
beam, A, shrink in width, the shoes on each side of it will still
|
||
maintain their proper relation to form immovable abutments for the
|
||
ends of pieces, F. This construction allows of shorter stuff being
|
||
used in the manufacture, and renders the framework stronger.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Figure 2, billiard table frame corner]
|
||
|
||
In Fig. 2 is illustrated a new method of forming the corners of the
|
||
table. Hitherto it has been customary to use corner blocks, of various
|
||
sizes according to the dimensions of the table, located one at each
|
||
corner. Into these the broad rails were framed and secured. To this
|
||
arrangement Mr. Collender adduces a long category of objections, based
|
||
on the possibility of the weight of the bed being thrown on these
|
||
blocks in case of shrinkage of the frame, on the fact that the corner
|
||
of the table bed must necessarily be left without any support where
|
||
it extends over the upper end of the corner block, and also that in
|
||
a bevel table, in which the area of the top of the corner block is
|
||
unavoidably much greater than that of the top of the corner block of
|
||
a vertical-sided table, a large portion of the table bed will be left
|
||
without any support.
|
||
|
||
The new device consists of a cast iron union plate, G, which is bolted
|
||
to the leg as shown. The broad rails and casting are securely fastened
|
||
by the bolt, H. It will be seen that this bolt, passing through the
|
||
end of one broad rail, and into a nut let into the other rail,
|
||
will securely draw and hold together the ends of said rails and the
|
||
interposed metal plate clamped between them, and that as the plain
|
||
ends of the wooden rails just fit (widthwise) between the projecting
|
||
heads on the edges of said interposed plate, the latter will form a
|
||
sort of housing for the ends of the rails. And it will be understood
|
||
that in this construction not only does the bead on the outer edge of
|
||
the plate overlap the edges of the rails and form a neat and durable
|
||
corner finish to the body, but the broad rails being bolted together
|
||
in the direction of the grain of the wood with only an interposed
|
||
metal plate, there will be no tendency to a loosening of the union of
|
||
the parts of the frame. The main importance of this invention rests
|
||
in the idea of dispensing with the usual corner blocks, and thus
|
||
permitting the top edges of the broad rails, on which the bed rests,
|
||
to practically come together and afford a perfect support to the bed
|
||
clear out to the corners of the latter; at the same time the whole
|
||
structure is rendered stronger and more durable with less weight of
|
||
material.
|
||
|
||
These inventions are the subject of separate patents, that of the
|
||
first being dated April 4, 1876, and of the second, November 16, 1875.
|
||
For further information, address the manufacturer and patentee, Mr. H.
|
||
W. Collender, 738 Broadway, New York city.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
COATING ENGRAVED COPPER PLATES WITH STEEL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
In order to render copper plates which are used in printing more
|
||
durable, they can be covered with an electrolytic deposit of iron
|
||
which possesses an unusual degree of hardness almost superior to
|
||
steel. The salt usually employed has been the double sulphate of iron
|
||
and ammonia. Professor Böttger, who first invented this process, has
|
||
recently devised an improvement in the bath employed. He dissolves 10
|
||
parts of ferrocyanide of potassium (yellow prussiate of potash) and
|
||
20 parts of the double tartrate of soda and potash (Rochelle salts) in
|
||
200 parts of water, and to this he adds 3 parts of persulphate of iron
|
||
dissolved in 50 parts of water. A large precipitate of Prussian
|
||
blue is formed. To the whole is added, drop by drop, with constant
|
||
stirring, a solution of caustic soda until the blue precipitate
|
||
entirely disappears, leaving a perfectly clear, light yellow liquid,
|
||
which is now ready for use.
|
||
|
||
Professor Böttger also claims that this solution can be employed with
|
||
advantage for dyeing cotton yarn and fabrics a beautiful blue, without
|
||
the use of a mordant. For this purpose the goods are put into the
|
||
bath, that has previously been slightly warmed, until they are
|
||
saturated through and through, and then dried in the air, after which
|
||
they are immersed in extremely dilute sulphuric acid (1 to 50), which
|
||
neutralizes the alkali, and after washing and drying again they are
|
||
permanently dyed a fine blue color.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TEST FOR SULPHUR IN ORGANIC COMPOUNDS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
H. Vohl recommends the following as the best method of detecting
|
||
sulphur in organic compounds: The substance to be tested is heated in
|
||
a solution of caustic lime and oxide of lead in glycerin. The latter
|
||
is prepared as follows: One volume of distilled water is mixed with
|
||
2 volumes of pure glycerin and heated to boiling; freshly prepared
|
||
slaked lime is added, little by little, until it is saturated. Freshly
|
||
precipitated hydrated oxide of lead, or moist litharge, is added in
|
||
excess, and the liquid allowed to boil gently for a few minutes,
|
||
then tightly corked and left to cool, after which the clear liquid
|
||
is decanted from the sediment into a glass vessel that can be tightly
|
||
corked. If into this solution be introduced and heated any organic
|
||
which contains sulphur, like hair, feathers, horn, albumen, and the
|
||
like, it will at once turn black from the formation of sulphide of
|
||
lead. The great delicacy of this test is evident from the fact that,
|
||
when pure wheat bread is boiled with this reagent, it turns yellow at
|
||
first and then dark gray in consequence of the presence of sulphur in
|
||
the gluten of the bread.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED BILLIARD BALL HOLDER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The usual receptacle for the fourth ball, when only three balls are
|
||
used in the game of billiards, is placed at the side of the table. As
|
||
this is both inconvenient and unsightly, a neat device, clearly shown
|
||
in the annexed illustration, has been invented, which is intended to
|
||
be attached to a gas fixture over the table. A plate or sign is also
|
||
added on which the number of a table--in case several tables are
|
||
employed, as in a billiard saloon--may be inscribed. The form and
|
||
design of the arrangement may of course be varied in many ways.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: billiard ball holder]
|
||
|
||
Patented May 2, 1876. For further particulars, address the
|
||
manufacturer, Mr. H. W. Collender, 738 Broadway, New York city.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE MONITOR CHALK CUP.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The annexed engraving represents an improved chalk cup or holder
|
||
for billiard tables, which is so constructed that it will not become
|
||
loose, sag down, mar the table, or jar when the ball strikes the
|
||
cushion. It may be adjusted to remain in any desired position.
|
||
|
||
The shank is pivoted in a metallic frame which is secured to the
|
||
table. The rear end of the shank works against a spring. On the upper
|
||
portion of the shank is a projection which embraces a horizontal
|
||
flange to sustain the box against being forced downward. The
|
||
arrangement is very similar to the ordinary window catch. The player
|
||
has only to start the box from its position under the table, when
|
||
the spring carries it out at right angles to the rail. A touch is
|
||
sufficient to cause the spring to carry the box back to its former
|
||
position. The device is very simple, and its advantages will be
|
||
evident to all billiard players cognizant of the defects of the
|
||
ordinary cup.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: THE MONITOR CHALK CUP.]
|
||
|
||
Patented May 1, 1877. For further particulars, address the
|
||
manufacturer and patentee, Mr. H. W. Collender, 738 Broadway,
|
||
New York city.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CURIOUS CARNIVOROUS PLANTS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The _arum Dracunculus_ is one of the most curious of that wonderful
|
||
series of carnivorous plants which at the present time are engaging
|
||
the closest scrutiny of naturalists. It is a true trap in one
|
||
sense--inasmuch as it captures the victim which ventures near it; but
|
||
it relies on little or no mechanical means for securing its prey, but
|
||
stupefies the living insect by its odor. The flower is horn-shaped,
|
||
about 11 inches in length, with an opening some 5 inches in diameter.
|
||
The color within is a dull dark violet, while the interior of the
|
||
spathe is lined with black, hooked bristles, the whole appearance
|
||
of the flower being thoroughly repulsive. The illustrations herewith
|
||
presented, Figs. 1 and 2, represent it at one third its natural
|
||
size, Fig. 2 showing a section of the flower. It is not certain what
|
||
attracts the insects, which are usually of the species known as the
|
||
meat fly and the common house fly. They do not seem to seek for the
|
||
small quantity of nectar concealed, and yet they cluster about the
|
||
fatal opening, as if drawn by some overpowering fascination. Overcome
|
||
by lethargy, they fall inert upon the flower, are lightly held by the
|
||
bristles, and finally die asphyxiated by the carbonic acid which the
|
||
plant disengages in large quantities during its inflorescence. Strange
|
||
as is the action of the _arum_, the method whereby the _mentzelia_
|
||
takes its prey is even more wonderful. To illustrate on a magnified
|
||
scale, let the reader imagine a surface thickly covered with strong
|
||
iron posts, on the sides of which are numerous keen barbs pointing
|
||
downward. Then between these posts, suppose that jars overflowing with
|
||
honey are placed. An elephant, let it be imagined, attracted by the
|
||
profusion of sweetness, inserts his trunk between the posts and
|
||
finds easy access to the honey. But while he can force his proboscis
|
||
downward past the barbs turned in that direction, when he attempts to
|
||
withdraw it he finds the keen points catch in the flesh, and render
|
||
it impossible to do so. A terrible struggle follows, the unfortunate
|
||
animal twisting and writhing in every direction, until finally by
|
||
an Herculean effort the head is torn from the body, and the latter
|
||
becomes digested by some potent gastric juice, exuding from the
|
||
colossal organism of which the trap forms but a portion. Of course
|
||
this is vastly exaggerated, and it would puzzle an elephant to pull
|
||
his own head off; but if for the post studded trap, we substitute the
|
||
surface of a flower, and if we replace the elephant by a fly, we shall
|
||
have conceived an accurate picture of what takes place in the peculiar
|
||
receptacle with which Nature has provided the _mentzelia ornata_.
|
||
This is very beautifully shown in Fig. 3; and at A, in same figure,
|
||
is represented the barbed bristles grasping the highly magnified
|
||
proboscis of the fly. Between the barbed bristles are mushroom-shaped
|
||
projections, from the summits of which a viscous nectar exudes. This
|
||
is the honey bait which induces the insect to insert his trunk between
|
||
the fatal barbs. There is still another plant, _physianthus albens_,
|
||
which captures butterflies by grasping the proboscis. The construction
|
||
of the flower is quite complicated, so that the insects are compelled
|
||
to insert their trunks through a narrow and winding passage in order
|
||
to reach the nectar. The organ then necessarily comes in contact with
|
||
an adhesive substance, which prevents its removal.
|
||
|
||
The _Gronovia scandens_, Fig. 4, is another plant trap, which catches
|
||
no flies nor possesses any such wonderfully adapted devices as the
|
||
plants already described. It simply has its branches covered with
|
||
double barbed bristles of great strength which attach themselves to
|
||
anything brought in contact with them. The bristles are strong enough
|
||
to hold lizards, as represented by our engraving, the points inserting
|
||
themselves in the interstices of the scaly covering of the reptile.
|
||
Of course the lizard thus held starves to death, and small birds
|
||
often follow a like fate. We are indebted to _La Nature_ for the
|
||
illustrations.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Figs. 1 and 2.--ARUM DRACUNCULUS.]
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Fig. 3.--MENTZELIA.]
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Fig. 4.--GRONOVIA SCANDENS.]
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
POPULAR FALLACIES.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Night air and damp weather are held in great horror by multitudes
|
||
of persons who are sickly or of weak constitutions; consequently, by
|
||
avoiding the night air, and damp weather, and changeable weather, and
|
||
weather that is considered too hot or too cold, they are kept within
|
||
doors the much largest portion of their time, and as a matter of
|
||
course continue invalids, more and more ripening for the grave
|
||
every hour; the reason is, they are breathing an impure atmosphere
|
||
nineteen-twentieths of their whole existence.
|
||
|
||
As nothing can wash us clean but pure water, so nothing can cleanse
|
||
the blood, nothing can make health-giving blood, but the agency of
|
||
pure air. So great is the tendency of the blood to become impure in
|
||
consequence of waste and useless matters mixing with it as it passes
|
||
through the body, that it requires a hogshead of air every hour of our
|
||
lives to unload it of these impurities; but in proportion as this air
|
||
is vitiated, in such proportion does it infallably fail to relieve the
|
||
blood of these impurities, and impure blood is the foundation of all
|
||
disease. The great fact that those who are out of doors most, summer
|
||
and winter, day and night, rain or shine, have the best health the
|
||
world over, does of itself falsify the general impression that night
|
||
air or any other out-door air is unhealthy as compared with in-door
|
||
air at the same time.
|
||
|
||
Air is the great necessity of life; so much so, that if deprived of it
|
||
for a moment, we perish; and so constant is the necessity of the
|
||
blood for contact with the atmosphere, that every drop in the body is
|
||
exposed to the air through the medium of the lungs every two minutes
|
||
and a half of our existence.
|
||
|
||
Whatever may be the impurity of the out-door air of any locality,
|
||
the in-door air of that locality is still more impure, because of
|
||
the dust, and decaying and odoriferous matters which are found in
|
||
all dwellings. Besides, how can in-door air be more healthy than the
|
||
out-door air, other things being equal, when the dwelling is supplied
|
||
with air from without?
|
||
|
||
To this very general law there is one exception, which it is of the
|
||
highest importance to note. When the days are hot, and the nights
|
||
cool, there are periods of time within each twenty-four hours, when
|
||
it is safest to be in-doors, with doors and windows closed; that is to
|
||
say, for the hour or two including sunrise and sunset, because about
|
||
sunset the air cools, and the vapors which the heats of the day have
|
||
caused to ascend far above us, condense and settle near the surface of
|
||
the earth, so as to be breathed by the inhabitants; as the night grows
|
||
colder, these vapors sink lower, and are within a foot or two of the
|
||
earth, so they are not breathed. As the sun rises, these same vapors
|
||
are warmed, and begin to ascend, to be breathed again, but as the
|
||
air becomes warmer, they are carried so far above our heads as to
|
||
be innocuous. Thus it is that the old citizens of Charleston, S.
|
||
C., remember, that while it was considered important to live in
|
||
the country during the summer, the common observation of the people
|
||
originated the custom of riding into town, not in the cool of the
|
||
evening or of the morning, but in the middle of the day. They did not
|
||
understand the philosophy, but they observed the fact that those who
|
||
came to the city at mid-day remained well, while those who did so
|
||
early or late suffered from it.
|
||
|
||
All strangers at Rome are cautioned not to cross the Pontine marshes
|
||
after the heat of the day is over. Sixteen of a ship's crew, touching
|
||
at one of the West India islands, slept on shore several nights, and
|
||
thirteen of them died of yellow fever in a few days, while of two
|
||
hundred and eighty, who were freely ashore during the day, not a
|
||
single case of illness occurred. The marshes above named are crossed
|
||
in six or eight hours, and many travelers who do it in the night
|
||
are attacked with mortal fevers. This does, at first sight, seem to
|
||
indicate that night air _is_ unwholesome, at least in the locality
|
||
of virulent malarias, but there is no direct proof that the air about
|
||
sunrise and sunset is not that which is productive of the mischief.
|
||
|
||
For the sake of eliciting the observations of intelligent men, we
|
||
present our theory on this subject.
|
||
|
||
A person might cross these marshes with impunity, who would set out on
|
||
his journey an hour or two after sundown, and finish it an hour or two
|
||
before sun-up, especially if he began that journey on a hearty meal,
|
||
because, in this way, he would be traveling in the cool of the night,
|
||
which coolness keeps the malaria so near the surface of the earth as
|
||
to prevent its being breathed to a hurtful extent.
|
||
|
||
But if it is deadly to sleep out of doors all night in a malarial
|
||
locality, would it be necessarily fatal to sleep in a house in such
|
||
a locality? It would not. It would be safer to sleep in the house,
|
||
especially if the windows and doors were closed. The reason is, that
|
||
the house has been warmed during the day, and if kept closed, it
|
||
remains much warmer during the night indoors than it is outdoors;
|
||
consequently, the malaria is kept by this warmth so high above the
|
||
head, and so rarefied, as to be comparatively harmless. This may
|
||
seem to some too nice a distinction altogether, but it will be found
|
||
throughout the world of Nature that the works of the Almighty are most
|
||
strikingly beautiful in their _minutæ_, and these _minutæ_ are the
|
||
foundation of His mightiest manifestations.
|
||
|
||
Thus it is, too, that what we call fever and ague might be banished
|
||
from the country as a general disease, if two things were done. 1.
|
||
Have a fire kindled every morning at daylight, from spring to fall,
|
||
in the family room, to which all the family should repair from their
|
||
chambers, and there remain until breakfast is taken. 2. Let a fire
|
||
be kindled in the family room a short time before sundown; let every
|
||
member of the family repair to it, and there remain until supper is
|
||
taken.
|
||
|
||
In both cases, the philosophy of the course marked out consists in two
|
||
things. First. The fire rarefies the malaria and causes it to ascend
|
||
above the breathing point. Second. The food taken into the stomach
|
||
creates an activity of circulation which repels disease.--_Hall's
|
||
Journal of Health_.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE EXTENSION OF THE PLAGUE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Our recent English medical exchanges mention, with undisguised
|
||
apprehension, the fact that already early this spring authentic
|
||
observers state that the plague has broken out in Bagdad, and is
|
||
rapidly increasing there; and information from other sources renders
|
||
it probable that the disease has shown itself in other places in the
|
||
vicinity of that city, some of which have not suffered before since
|
||
the new development of the disease in Mesopotamia, three or four years
|
||
ago. The progress of the epidemic in and about Bagdad last year shows
|
||
that each year since its reappearance in that district it has covered
|
||
a wider area, and it will be remembered that last year it crossed the
|
||
Turco-Persian frontier, and broke out at Shuster, in Khuzistan. From
|
||
the phenomena of the epidemic to this period it was feared, especially
|
||
by the physicians on the spot, that, if it should recur in the present
|
||
year, it must be expected to extend over a still wider area, and show
|
||
itself in even a more aggravated form than had yet been observed. This
|
||
opinion is concurred in by Surgeon-Major Colville, the medical officer
|
||
attached to the British Embassy at Bagdad, and is expressed in his
|
||
official report, on the subject of the last and previous year's
|
||
outbreak.
|
||
|
||
The Turco-Russian struggle in Asia Minor, and the massing of Persian
|
||
troops on the western frontier of that country, add an additional and
|
||
most grave factor to this ominous intelligence.
|
||
|
||
It has been so long since Christian Europe has suffered from this
|
||
terrible disease that most medical men have never seen a case, and,
|
||
indeed, for awhile, epidemiologists flattered themselves it had "died
|
||
out." They yet say that a thorough system of sanitation will certainly
|
||
check its advance.
|
||
|
||
Let us hope so; for of all pestilences which have ever scourged
|
||
humanity, and desolated empires, none approach in magnitude those of
|
||
the plague. Under the name of "the black death," it fills, as Hirsch
|
||
remarks, one of the darkest pages in the history of the human race.
|
||
It devastated every known country of the earth, and penetrated to the
|
||
remotest mountain hamlets and granges, sometimes sweeping away in a
|
||
few days every inhabitant, leaving not one to remember the name or to
|
||
inherit the goods of the family or the village. Long years afterward,
|
||
travelers would come upon these unknown villages, the houses rotting,
|
||
the bones of the plague-stricken owners bleaching in the rooms and
|
||
streets, and no one to say who they had been.
|
||
|
||
As an epidemic disease, it no doubt spreads from India, that mother of
|
||
pestilence, where, in the province of Kutch and Guzerat, it is found
|
||
as an endemic of great malignancy. Far more fatal in its historical
|
||
appearance than the cholera, it is well that the medical mind of
|
||
Europe is on the alert to meet its approach with the most energetic
|
||
measures; and should they fail, it will devolve upon us to lose
|
||
no time in taking up the defensive in the most energetic
|
||
manner.--_Medical and Surgical Reporter._
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
EDUCATION IN GERMANY.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The compulsory school laws of Prussia are frequently pointed to as
|
||
models for similar laws, perhaps with the hope that by imitating her
|
||
lower schools we can bring up our high schools to an equal rank with
|
||
hers, and place our universities on a level with those which are
|
||
producing the most finished scholars, the deepest thinkers, and the
|
||
greatest investigators. We are likely to forget that the conditions
|
||
are different, and especially that _nascitur, non fit_, is as true of
|
||
a chemist as of a poet. The state of popular education in Germany
|
||
is, however, a matter of interest, and is best illustrated by the
|
||
following table, showing the percentage of unschooled men among the
|
||
recruits from different German provinces:
|
||
|
||
Per cent.
|
||
Prussia 3.19
|
||
Bavaria 1.79
|
||
Saxony 0.23
|
||
Würtemberg 0.02
|
||
Baden 0.22
|
||
Hesse 0.35
|
||
Mecklenburg 1.09
|
||
Thuringia 1.42
|
||
Alsace 3.45
|
||
|
||
These figures seem to indicate a higher grade of intelligence and
|
||
wider diffusion of knowledge among all classes, for recruits are from
|
||
every class, than in Austria, although in the latter the figures are
|
||
arranged so differently as to make any accurate comparison of Austria
|
||
and Germany rather difficult and unsatisfactory.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------+----------+----------------+-----------------+----------
|
||
NAME OF DISTRICT.| Number of| Number of | Percentage of | Number of
|
||
| Common | inhabitants to | school children | Normal
|
||
| Schools. | each school. | who attend. | Schools.
|
||
-----------------+----------+----------------+-----------------+----------
|
||
Bohemia | 4,190 | 1,254 | 77 | 12
|
||
Bukowina | 167 | 3,121 | 9 | 1
|
||
Dalmatia | 241 | 1,864 | 12 | 2
|
||
Galicia | 2,374 | 2,341 | 15 | 1
|
||
Carinthia | 318 | 1,060 | ? | 2
|
||
Carniola | 234 | 1,187 | 48 | 2
|
||
Custrin | 396 | 1,496 | 38 | 5
|
||
Moravia | 1,866 | 1,082 | 78 | 5
|
||
Lower Austria | 1,267 | 1,578 | 76 | 5
|
||
Upper Austria | 506 | 1,455 | 82 | 2
|
||
Salzburg | 155 | 982 | 85 | 1
|
||
Steiermark | 690 | 1,657 | 59 | 3
|
||
Schlesia | 433 | 1,208 | 77 | 4
|
||
Tyrol | 1,926 | 457 | ? | 6
|
||
|----------|----------------|-----------------|----------
|
||
Total | 14,763 | | | 51
|
||
-----------------+----------+----------------+-----------------+----------
|
||
|
||
Over 3,000 teachers' positions are said to be vacant at the present
|
||
time.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BLEACHING SILK AND WOOL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The methods now in use for bleaching silk, wool, and all animal
|
||
fibers, such as sulphurous acid, alkalies, soap, etc., are so
|
||
imperfect that Tessié du Motay has patented the following process,
|
||
involving the use of binoxide of barium, with or without the addition
|
||
of permanganates. The binoxide of barium is pulverized and subjected
|
||
to the action of carbonic acid to remove any unconverted caustic
|
||
baryta present. It is then thrown into boiling water, and after the
|
||
bath has partially cooled the materials to be bleached are introduced
|
||
and the bath kept at a temperature of 86° Fah. to 194° Fah. for two
|
||
hours; silk from wild silkworms requiring a higher temperature than
|
||
wool, goat's hair, and the like. It is then taken out and washed, put
|
||
into an acid bath, then washed again. If necessary, the barium bath
|
||
is repeated, as also the subsequent washings. If this second bath of
|
||
binoxide of barium does not produce the requisite whiteness, it is
|
||
introduced into a solution of permanganic acid or permanganate of
|
||
magnesia before the last washing.
|
||
|
||
Binoxide of Barium, BaO_{2}, is made by subjecting the oxide or
|
||
caustic baryta, BaO, to a stream of oxygen or common air at a high
|
||
temperature. Its bleaching action is probably due to the formation of
|
||
peroxide of hydrogen in solution in the bath.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
AN ALLOY OF TIN AND PHOSPHORUS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
At the Graupen Tin Works, in Bohemia, an alloy of tin and phosphorus
|
||
is made containing the greatest possible quantity of phosphorus which
|
||
the tin is able to retain without losing any of it upon repeated
|
||
meltings. This compound, which is neither entitled to the name of
|
||
alloy nor is it a phosphide of tin, is employed in the manufacture
|
||
of phosphorus-bronze. In the manufacture of phosphorus-bronze, by
|
||
alloying copper with phosphorus-tin, no other precautions require to
|
||
be observed than in the preparation of common bronze. As the different
|
||
properties of phosphorus-bronze depend upon the proportions of
|
||
phosphorus and of tin, two kinds of phosphorus-tin are prepared. No.
|
||
0 contains 5 per cent., and No. 1, 2½ per cent. of phosphorus. These two
|
||
kinds suffice to make the greater part of all the desired mixtures.
|
||
For special purposes, the Graupen Works make to order phosphorus-tin
|
||
with any desired quantity of phosphorus not exceeding 5 per
|
||
cent., which is the highest possible limit. It is claimed
|
||
that phosphorus-bronze may be manufactured by the use of this
|
||
phosphorus-tin as much as 40 per cent. cheaper than that now in the
|
||
market, while it will only cost 8 per cent. more than the ordinary tin
|
||
and copper bronze.
|
||
|
||
No details are given of the method employed to make the phosphorus
|
||
combine with tin, but the low melting point of tin as compared with
|
||
that of copper would indicate that this would lead to the great saving
|
||
promised above.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
AMERICAN INSTITUTE EXHIBITION.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The forty-sixth Exhibition of this Institute will open September 12,
|
||
in this city. Parties having novelties which they intend to bring to
|
||
public notice should at once address the General Superintendent for
|
||
blanks and information. The medals, it is said, have been increased
|
||
and special awards will be made upon a number of articles.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
AMERICAN INVENTIONS FOR NEW SOUTH WALES.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Writing from Sydney, under date of April 14, the _Times_ correspondent
|
||
thus refers to the supply of locomotives and carriages from America:
|
||
Our appearance at Philadelphia has drawn the attention of American
|
||
manufacturers to us in a most marked and unexpected degree. A country
|
||
that, like New South Wales, is rolling in wealth must be a country
|
||
that is able to buy, and a country that is able to buy is exactly the
|
||
country that American manufacturers have been anxiously looking out
|
||
for. Our representatives at Philadelphia have come back strongly
|
||
impressed with the fact that there are many things that the Americans
|
||
can supply us with advantage. Our Government has an offer from Messrs.
|
||
Baldwin & Co. to furnish a locomotive engine for about £1,000 less
|
||
than the cost of an English engine, and to leave the payment open
|
||
until the engine has been thoroughly proved and approved. A Pullman's
|
||
sleeping car and an ordinary passenger car have already been ordered,
|
||
and American wheels, axles, rails, and brakes are strongly pressed
|
||
on our acceptance. As our Government engineers are all of the English
|
||
school, American novelties will have a hard battle to fight to
|
||
win official acceptance, but the demand for economy in railway
|
||
construction and working is so great that people and Parliament will
|
||
press on the Minister for Public Works a fair trial for any American
|
||
novelties that may seem to be suited to our wants. The English
|
||
manufacturers, therefore, who have hitherto supplied us must look to
|
||
their laurels.--_Capital and Labor_.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
MAN'S PLACE IN NATURE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Concerning man's true place in Nature, Haeckel says:
|
||
|
||
"Whatever part of the body we consider, we find upon the most exact
|
||
examination that man is more nearly related to the highest apes than
|
||
are the latter to the lowest apes. It would therefore be wholly forced
|
||
and unnatural to regard man in the zoological system as constituting a
|
||
distinct order, and thus to separate him from the true ape. Rather is
|
||
the scientific zoologist compelled, whether it is agreeable to him or
|
||
not, to rank man within the order of the true ape (Simiæ)."
|
||
|
||
To whatever minutiæ of detail the comparison is carried, we reach in
|
||
every case the same result. Between man and the anthropoid apes there
|
||
are the closest anatomical and physiological resemblances. In form
|
||
and function, there is the most exact agreement between all the
|
||
corresponding bones of the skeleton of each; the same arrangement
|
||
and structure of the muscles, nerves and entire viscera, and of
|
||
the spleen, liver and lungs--the latter being a matter of especial
|
||
significance, for between the manner of breathing and the process of
|
||
nutrition there is the closest relation.
|
||
|
||
The brain, also, is subject to the same laws of development, and
|
||
differs only with regard to size. The minute structure of the skin,
|
||
nails, and even the hair, is identical in character. Although man
|
||
has lost the greater part of his hairy covering, as Darwin thinks, in
|
||
consequence of sexual selection, yet the rudimentary hairs upon the
|
||
body correspond, in many respects, to those of the anthropoids. The
|
||
formation of the beard is the same in both cases; while the face and
|
||
ears remain bare. Anthropoids and men become grayhaired in old age.
|
||
But the most remarkable circumstance is that, upon the upper arm, the
|
||
hairs are, in both cases, directed downward, and upon the lower arm
|
||
upward; while in the case of the half-apes it is different, and not as
|
||
soft as that of man and the anthropoids.
|
||
|
||
The eye, on account of its delicate structure, is peculiarly
|
||
suitable for comparisons of this kind; and we find here the greatest
|
||
similarity: even inflammation and green cataract occur under the same
|
||
circumstances, in both. See, also, Darwin upon this point.
|
||
|
||
There is no more striking proof that man and the anthropoid apes have
|
||
the same anatomical and physiological nature, and require the same
|
||
food, than the similarity of their blood. Under the microscope the
|
||
blood corpuscles are identical in form and appearance; while those of
|
||
the carnivora are clearly different from them.
|
||
|
||
It may now be interesting, in confirmation of what has been said, to
|
||
refer to the family life, and, if one may so speak, to the mental
|
||
and moral life of the anthropoids. Like man, the ape provides with
|
||
exceeding care for its young, so that its parental affection has
|
||
become proverbial. Connubial fidelity is a general and well known
|
||
virtue. The mother ape leads its young to the water, and washes its
|
||
face and hands in spite of its crying. Wounds are also washed out with
|
||
water. The ape, when in distress, will weep like a human being, and
|
||
in a manner that is said to be very affecting. Young apes manifest
|
||
the same tendencies as human children. When domesticated, they are
|
||
in youth docile and teachable, and also, at times, like all children,
|
||
disobedient. In old age they often become morose and capricious. Most
|
||
apes construct huts, or, at least, roofs, as a protection from the
|
||
weather, and sleep in a kind of bed.
|
||
|
||
One peculiarity is alone common to them and man, and this is the habit
|
||
of lying upon the back in sleep. In battle they defend themselves with
|
||
their fists and long sticks; and, under otherwise like circumstances,
|
||
they manifest like passions and emotions with man: as joy and sorrow,
|
||
pain and envy, revenge and sympathy. In death, especially, the ape
|
||
face assumes a peculiarly human-like and spiritual expression, and the
|
||
sufferer is the object of as genuine compassion as exists in the case
|
||
of man. It is also well known that apes bury their dead, laying the
|
||
body in a secluded spot, and covering it with leaves. Regarding the
|
||
domestic life of the ape, Darwin says, in his "Descent of Man" (vol.
|
||
1, p. 39):
|
||
|
||
"We see maternal affection manifested in the most trifling details.
|
||
Thus Rengger observed an American monkey (a Cebus) carefully driving
|
||
away the flies which plagued her infant; and Duvancel saw a Hylobates
|
||
washing the faces of her young ones in a stream. So intense is
|
||
the grief of female monkeys for the loss of their young, that it
|
||
invariably caused the death of certain kinds kept under confinement
|
||
by Brehm in North Africa. Orphan monkeys are always adopted, and
|
||
carefully guarded by other monkeys, both males and females. One female
|
||
baboon had so capacious a heart, that she not only adopted young
|
||
monkeys of other species but stole young dogs and cats, which she
|
||
continually carried about with her. Her kindness did not go so far,
|
||
however, as to share her food with her adopted offspring; at which
|
||
Brehm was surprised, as his monkeys divided everything quite
|
||
fairly with their own young ones. An adopted kitten scratched
|
||
the above-mentioned affectionate baboon, who certainly had a fine
|
||
intellect, for she was much astonished at being scratched, and
|
||
immediately examined the kitten's feet, and without more ado bit off
|
||
the claws."
|
||
|
||
The number of characteristics possessed in common by man and the
|
||
higher apes is, indeed, very great, and includes not only physical
|
||
and emotional but even intellectual qualities.--_From Schlickeysen's
|
||
"Fruit and Bread," translated by Dr. Holbrook._
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
SPECIAL NOTICE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Persons who have sent numbers of the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN to this
|
||
office, for the purpose of having them bound, will please call or send
|
||
for them immediately.
|
||
|
||
Some of the volumes extend back to 1860, and as we need the room they
|
||
occupy, we shall dispose of those not claimed within ten days from
|
||
date of this paper.
|
||
|
||
MUNN & Co., 37 Park Row, New York.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
DECISIONS OF THE COURTS.
|
||
|
||
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT.--DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY.
|
||
|
||
SHAWL STRAP PATENT.--GEORGE CROUCH _vs._ WILLIAM ROEMER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[In equity.]
|
||
|
||
By Nixon, District Judge.
|
||
|
||
This is an action for an alleged infringement of complainant's
|
||
letters patent No. 82,606, dated September 29, 1868, and reissued
|
||
March 7, 1871, No. 4,289.
|
||
|
||
The subject-matter of the patent is in the reissue described to be
|
||
a strap "to confine a shawl or similar article in a bundle," and
|
||
termed a shawl-strap. The schedule attached to and forming a part
|
||
of the said reissued patent states, that before the complainant's
|
||
invention "straps had been used to confine a shawl or similar
|
||
article in a bundle, and a leather cross-piece with loops at the
|
||
ends, had extended from one strap to the other; and above and
|
||
attached to this leather cross-piece was a handle. This leather
|
||
cross-piece or connecting strap is liable to bend and allow the
|
||
straps to be drawn toward each other by the handle in sustaining
|
||
the weight. Hence the bundle is not kept in a proper shape and the
|
||
handle is inconvenient to grasp."
|
||
|
||
The invention is then stated to consist "of a rigid cross-bar
|
||
beneath the handle, combined with suspending straps, that are to
|
||
be passed around the shawl or bundle, such straps passing through
|
||
loops at the ends of the handle."
|
||
|
||
No question can be made but that the shawl straps manufactured
|
||
and sold by the defendant are an infringement of the complainant's
|
||
reissue. They consist of a metallic cross-bar, with slots at the
|
||
ends for the reception of the straps, and which also connect the
|
||
ends of the handle.
|
||
|
||
Several defences are set up in the answer, but the only one
|
||
necessary to consider is the first, to wit: The want of novelty
|
||
and prior public use.
|
||
|
||
I had occasion, heretofore, to inquire into the validity of
|
||
the complainant's patent, in a controversy between the same
|
||
complainant, and Speer _et al._, reported in VI. Off. Gaz. 1874,
|
||
in which, as in this case, the principal defence turned upon
|
||
the novelty of the invention. A prior public use was alleged and
|
||
attempted to be proved. I there said and now repeat "that the
|
||
patent is _prima facie_ evidence that the patentee was the
|
||
original and first inventor, and that any one who controverts this
|
||
assumes the burden of proof and undertakes to show affirmatively
|
||
that there was a prior knowledge and use of the alleged invention
|
||
under such circumstances, as to give to the public the right of
|
||
its continued use against the patentee."
|
||
|
||
The defence in this case has brought out many facts in regard to
|
||
the public use of the rigid cross-bar in shawl straps anterior to
|
||
the date of the complainant's patent, which were not developed in
|
||
the former suit. There is no evidence which in my judgment affects
|
||
the honesty of the complainant's claim, or which creates any
|
||
doubt that he really believed himself to be the original and first
|
||
inventor, but nevertheless I am constrained to the conclusion,
|
||
after a most careful examination of the whole testimony, that the
|
||
proofs show with reasonable certainty that he has been anticipated
|
||
in the invention and that his patent is void, in consequence of
|
||
the prior knowledge and public use, and the bill must be therefore
|
||
dismissed with costs.
|
||
|
||
[_E. B. Barnum_, for complainant.
|
||
_Arthur v. Briesen_, for defendant.]
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW BOOKS AND PUBLICATIONS.
|
||
|
||
THE ECONOMIC THEORY OF THE LOCATION OF RAILWAYS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
By Arthur M. Wellington, C.E. Price $2.00. New York city: Office of
|
||
the Railroad Gazette, 73 Broadway.
|
||
|
||
The author of this book is thoroughly conversant with his subject,
|
||
and his statement that the book has gradually grown from a few
|
||
notes into a volume may be accepted as an explanation of the
|
||
somewhat fragmentary character of the work. He asserts that "all
|
||
our railways are uneconomically located," and "in many cases these
|
||
errors are shockingly evident." If these statements are true, he
|
||
is right in stating that "there is something almost pitiful in
|
||
the waste of human labor enforced by such costly blundering." He
|
||
considers that other countries have made lamentable blunders in
|
||
locating their railroads, so that the suffering stockholders of
|
||
American lines may take comfort from the thought that others are
|
||
or may be as badly off.
|
||
|
||
|
||
FRUIT AND BREAD. A SCIENTIFIC DIET. By Gustav Schlickeysen. Translated
|
||
from the German by M. L. Holbrook, M.D. With an Appendix. Illustrated.
|
||
New York city: M. L. Holbrook & Co.
|
||
|
||
The author and translator of this little treatise are firm
|
||
believers in vegetarianism, and present in a highly attractive
|
||
form the main arguments which sustain them in their position. The
|
||
subject is most carefully and systematically treated, and although
|
||
the conclusions at which the author arrives are greatly at
|
||
variance with modern belief and practice, the book is nevertheless
|
||
entitled to proper and respectful consideration. Illustrations are
|
||
given of the teeth and stomachs of various animals, and these are
|
||
compared with the similar organs existing in man, so exhibiting
|
||
in a clear and satisfactory manner the perfect adaptedness of the
|
||
latter to a purely vegetable regimen, which is certainly something
|
||
more than merely accidental. Altogether the book is well worthy
|
||
of perusal by others than those more immediately interested in the
|
||
question of diet.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THEORETICAL NAVAL ARCHITECTURE: a Treatise on the Calculations
|
||
involved in Naval Design. By Samuel J. P. Thearle, F.R.S.N.A., etc.
|
||
Two Volumes; Text and Plates. New York city: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
|
||
|
||
This book is designed to meet the requirements of both those who
|
||
possess but a moderate amount of mathematical knowledge as well as
|
||
of those who are much further advanced. Numerous formulæ and rules
|
||
clearly stated will enable the former to perform without much
|
||
difficulty the ordinary routine of the draughting office, while
|
||
ample opportunity is afforded the latter to trace back the
|
||
processes from which these rules have gone forth. The book is
|
||
divided into six parts. Part I. embraces the calculations relating
|
||
to the forms and dimensions of ships. II. those relating to the
|
||
weights and centers of gravity of ships. Part III. refers to the
|
||
strength of ships. IV. and V. to their propulsion by sails and by
|
||
steam engines; while Part VI. treats of the calculations relating
|
||
to steering. An excellent book of plates and tables accompanies
|
||
the text.
|
||
|
||
|
||
KEMLO'S WATCH REPAIRER'S HANDBOOK: being a complete guide to the young
|
||
beginner in taking apart, putting together, and thoroughly cleaning
|
||
the English lever and other foreign watches, and all American watches.
|
||
By F. Kemlo, Practical Watchmaker. With Illustrations. Price $1.25.
|
||
Philadelphia, Pa.: Henry Carey Baird & Co.
|
||
|
||
This work will prove of great value to all in whom the curious
|
||
mechanism of clocks and watches has excited more than a passing
|
||
interest. None but skilled followers of the art have been allowed
|
||
to contribute to its pages, so that the practical worth of the
|
||
information given can be fully relied upon. A concise history of
|
||
timekeepers is followed by a clear and exhaustive description of
|
||
the English lever watch, which in turn is followed by articles
|
||
on cleaning, putting together, and the conditions necessary to
|
||
produce a good English watch. American watches deservedly engage
|
||
considerable attention. Papers on repairing watches, cleaning and
|
||
repairing clocks, and a short description of the necessary tools
|
||
complete the book.
|
||
|
||
|
||
RECENT PROGRESS IN SANITARY SCIENCE. By A. R. Leeds. Salem, Mass.:
|
||
Printed at the Salem Press.
|
||
|
||
This is a reprint of a paper read at the Lyceum of Natural
|
||
History, October 9, 1876, by the well known Professor of Chemistry
|
||
at the Stevens Institute.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WILLIAMS' TOURIST'S MAP AND GUIDE TO COLORADO AND THE SAN JUAN MINES.
|
||
Price 50 cents each. New York city: H. T. Williams, 46 Beekman street.
|
||
|
||
Two well edited publications, deserving the attention of travelers and
|
||
emigrants.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
INVENTIONS PATENTED IN ENGLAND BY AMERICANS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
June 7 to June 15, 1877, inclusive.
|
||
|
||
BOOTS AND SHOES.--Mellen Bray, Newton, Mass. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC
|
||
MOTOR.--W. W. Gary, Washington, D. C. FURNACES.--J. J. Storer, New
|
||
York city. GAS.--M. H. Strong, Brooklyn, N. Y. GAS APPARATUS.--D. C.
|
||
Smith, East Northwood, N. H. GAS MACHINES.--T. F. Rowland, Greenpoint,
|
||
N. Y. MINERAL WOOL APPARATUS.--A. D. Elbers, Hoboken, N. J. MOTIVE
|
||
POWER.--W. G. Smith et al., New York city. POWER LOOMS.--James Long,
|
||
Philadelphia, Pa. PULVERIZING MACHINES.--J. J. Storer, New York city.
|
||
PUMP.--A. F. Eells et al., Boston, Mass. REFRIGERATING APPARATUS.--B.
|
||
J. B. Mills, Lexington, Ky. SEWING MACHINES.--C. H. Warner,
|
||
Sturbridge, Mass. SHEET METAL UTENSILS.--F. G. Niedringhaus, St.
|
||
Louis, Mo. VALVE GEAR.--E. Cope et al., Hamilton, Ohio.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
RECENT AMERICAN AND FOREIGN PATENTS.
|
||
|
||
NOTICE TO PATENTEES.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Inventors who are desirous of disposing of their patents would find it
|
||
greatly to their advantage to have them illustrated in the SCIENTIFIC
|
||
AMERICAN. We are prepared to get up first-class WOOD ENGRAVINGS of
|
||
inventions of merit, and publish them in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN on
|
||
very reasonable terms.
|
||
|
||
We shall be pleased to make estimates as to cost of engravings
|
||
on receipt of photographs, sketches, or copies of patents. After
|
||
publication, the cuts become the property of the person ordering them,
|
||
and will be found of value for circulars and for publication in other
|
||
papers.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW AGRICULTURAL INVENTIONS.
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED HAY ELEVATOR.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Eugene L. Church, Walworth, Wis.--This is a hay elevator and carrier
|
||
of simple and effective construction; and it consists essentially of a
|
||
traveling carriage locking, by a tilting catch, on a fixed stop block
|
||
of the track, from which it is released by the action of the bail
|
||
of the sheave frame of the hay fork on a pivoted grappling hook, the
|
||
sheave being held in suspended position by the joint action of a fixed
|
||
hook, of the pivoted hook, and of the tilting catch. A track beam,
|
||
which is suspended from the rafters of a barn or other building by
|
||
means of eyebolts passing through the center of the track beam. A
|
||
carriage runs along the track beam by a pair of flanged wheels, at
|
||
each end of which the wheels of one pair are set at such distance from
|
||
each other that they clear readily the suspension bolts as they pass
|
||
along the same. A hoisting rope is attached, in the customary manner,
|
||
to a fixed point at one end of carriage, and passed then through the
|
||
sheave frame of the hay fork, and over a pulley of the carriage, and
|
||
through a sheave at the end of track beam, and down to the ground,
|
||
where a horse is hitched to its free end.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED CORN HARVESTER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bennett Osgood, Lenox, Iowa.--This invention is an improved machine
|
||
for cutting up the corn, removing the ears from the stalks, and
|
||
cutting the stalks into pieces, and which may be adjusted to cut up
|
||
the corn and shock it. As the stalks are carried back by chains, pins
|
||
or hooks on bars tear open the husks of the ears; and the bars, in
|
||
connection with rollers, break the ears from the stalks. The ears,
|
||
when broken off, drop through an opening in the platform into an
|
||
elevator, up which they are carried, and are discharged into a wagon
|
||
drawn at the side of the machine. The box of the elevator is supported
|
||
from the frame of the machine, and its carrier is driven from a shaft
|
||
by an endless band. The stalks are carried back by endless chains, and
|
||
allowed to drop from the rear end of the platform upon the brackets
|
||
attached to the rear bar of the frame. As they fall upon the brackets
|
||
they are cut into three pieces by two knives, which work in slots in
|
||
the brackets, and to the upper part of which are pivoted the upper
|
||
ends of two bars. The lower ends of these bars are pivoted to a crank
|
||
formed upon the shaft, which revolves in bearings attached to the rear
|
||
bar of the frame.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED SULKY HARROW.
|
||
|
||
|
||
George M. Furman, Laclede, Mo.--This is an improved riding harrow,
|
||
so constructed that it may be readily raised from the ground, by the
|
||
driver from his seat, to clear it of rubbish, to pass obstructions,
|
||
and to pass from place to place, to cut up the ground and cover the
|
||
seed thoroughly, and be used for cultivating small grain and plants.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED HARROW.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Hans Iver Lund, Charlotte, Iowa.--The object of this invention is to
|
||
furnish an iron harrow which shall be light, strong, and durable,
|
||
of less draft than an ordinary harrow, of less size, inexpensive
|
||
in manufacture, and effective in operation, breaking up the lumps
|
||
thoroughly, and stirring up the soil evenly. The harrow is designed
|
||
to be made in three sections, all exactly alike, one, two, or three of
|
||
which may be used at a time.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED COMBINED COTTON SCRAPER AND CULTIVATOR.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Malachiah Roby, Kosciusko, Miss.--This machine is so constructed as to
|
||
bar off and dirt or cultivate cotton plants at one operation; and the
|
||
invention relates to the construction and arrangement of a center or
|
||
main beam, to the forward end of which the draft is attached. To the
|
||
beam, a little in the rear of its forward end, is attached the middle
|
||
part of a crossbar, in which are formed a number of holes to receive
|
||
the hooks or clevises by which the forward ends of side beams are
|
||
secured to said crossbar. To the rear end of the main beam is attached
|
||
the middle part of a crossbar, to which the rear ends of the side
|
||
beams are secured by a bow and yoke passed around them diagonally, and
|
||
which are tightened, when adjusted in place, by nuts screwed upon the
|
||
ends of the bows. Bands are passed around said beams and diagonally
|
||
around said standards, and tightened in place by wedges or other
|
||
suitable means, so that the scrapers can be readily adjusted to
|
||
work deeper or shallower in the ground, and easily detached when not
|
||
required for use. Cultivating plows or dirters have standards which
|
||
are attached to the side beams, the plows and standards of the inner
|
||
side beams being placed in advance of those attached to the outer side
|
||
beams. When the machine is to be used as a cultivator, the scrapers
|
||
are detached, and may be replaced by cultivating plows.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED CULTIVATOR.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Austin S. McDermott, Prairie Creek (Melleray P. O.), Iowa.--The object
|
||
of this invention is to furnish a cultivator which shall be readily
|
||
adjusted as the character of the work to be done may require, and
|
||
easily guided and controlled. The tongue of the machine is made in
|
||
V shape, and its rear end is attached to the axle. The arms of the
|
||
tongue are connected by a crossbar, to which the doubletree is pivoted
|
||
by a hammer bolt. To the ends of the axle are attached, or upon them
|
||
are formed, crank axle arms, upon the journals of which the wheels
|
||
revolve. To the arms of the tongue, near the forward end of said
|
||
tongue, are bolted the ends of the forward arms of the three-armed
|
||
bar, the third arm of which projects to the rearward, and its rear end
|
||
is bent into U form to receive a curved bar, which is pivoted to
|
||
the three-armed bar by a bolt that passes through the bend of the
|
||
three-armed bar and through the center of the curved bar. The ends of
|
||
the curved bar are secured to the forward ends of the beams by bolts,
|
||
two to each end. To the rear ends of the beams are attached handles
|
||
which may be strengthened by braces, and are designed for use in
|
||
guiding the plows when the machine is used as a walking cultivator.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED CHICKEN COOP.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Daniel M. Sullivan and Thomas A. Retallic, Montgomery City, Mo.--This
|
||
invention consists of a coop adjustable vertically on a standard,
|
||
and provided with removable partitions and doors for convenience in
|
||
cleansing. The frame of the coop is placed on a standard, at the top
|
||
of which is placed a pulley. A cord is attached to the top of the coop
|
||
frame, and runs over the pulley, and is attached to a counterweight.
|
||
The coop is divided by a central transverse partition into two
|
||
compartments, which are subdivided by transverse partitions composed
|
||
of slats, and held in place by a dowel pin at the bottom and by a pin
|
||
at the top. The vertical strips that hold the slats of the partitions
|
||
together are grooved on each side to receive sliding partitions which
|
||
are arranged on a central longitudinal line of the coop, and at
|
||
right angles to the partitions. Grooves are also made in the ends and
|
||
central partition of the coop to receive these sliding partitions.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW TEXTILE INVENTIONS.
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED FULLING MILL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
James Hunter, North Adams, Mass., assignor to himself and James E.
|
||
Hunter, of same place.--The object of this invention is to improve
|
||
the construction of fulling mills in such a way that there can be no
|
||
possibility of injuring the cloth while passing through the rollers,
|
||
and in such a way as to give the operator full control over the
|
||
friction caused by the tongue or lever upon the goods, whether said
|
||
goods be heavy or light.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED SHUTTLE-DRIVING MECHANISM FOR NARROW-WARE LOOMS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
William B. Willard, New York city.--This invention, relating to looms
|
||
for weaving narrow ware, consists in the arrangement of a spur wheel
|
||
traveling on a fixed rack, and actuating a movable rack attached to
|
||
the shuttle carrier. Motion is given to the spur wheel by a cam on the
|
||
main shaft of the machine, which acts through a slotted lever and a
|
||
connecting rod. The object is to provide mechanism for throwing the
|
||
shuttle in such looms. In the loom the shuttlerace is divided at its
|
||
center, leaving a space of sufficient width to admit of the passage
|
||
and shedding of the warp. The shuttle slides in the race, and is of
|
||
such length as to overlap the opening, so that it may pass smoothly
|
||
from one section of the shuttlerace to the other. The shuttle is
|
||
pierced to receive the fingers of the shuttle carrier, which slides on
|
||
the bar. The latter is a piece of sheet metal, which is turned over at
|
||
its upper edge to receive the bar, and is provided with guides for the
|
||
fingers. The said fingers are capable of engaging with the holes in
|
||
the shuttle and project below the piece of sheet metal, and are bent
|
||
at right angles, and provided with grooved friction rollers, which
|
||
engage with a cam slot of such form that it will draw the fingers, one
|
||
at a time, downward out of the shuttle, and retain them below the
|
||
warp during the passage of the portion of the shuttle with which they
|
||
engage, through the threads of the warp, and replace them after that
|
||
part of the shuttle passes the warp.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED LOOM TEMPLE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Christian H. Schlaf, Rockville, Conn.--This is an improved device for
|
||
stretching the cloth while being woven. It is so constructed as to
|
||
adjust itself as the cloth is being woven and carried forward to the
|
||
cloth beam.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW WOODWORKING AND HOUSE AND CARRIAGE BUILDING INVENTIONS.
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED THILL COUPLING.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Josiah Kitzmiller, Keedysville, Md.--This is an improvement upon that
|
||
form of thill coupling in which a pivoted cap is employed to slide
|
||
over the end of the bolt or pin which secures the eye of the thill
|
||
iron to the lugs or ears of the axle clip, the said cap serving to
|
||
prevent the said pin from becoming accidentally displaced without
|
||
the use of a screw nut or other securing device. It consists in the
|
||
construction and arrangements of a spring catch for holding
|
||
said pivoted cap down to its place against any tendency to rise
|
||
accidentally, the said spring catch being located in a transverse
|
||
groove or recess in the cap and between the cap and the adjacent lug
|
||
and being provided with a beveled head and square shoulder, which
|
||
engages with the under side of the lug to hold the cap down. The merit
|
||
of this arrangement is that the catch is concealed from sight by the
|
||
complete inclosure of the spring and the position of the beveled head
|
||
beneath the coupling, and hence the exterior of the coupling
|
||
presents a plain, smooth, and neat appearance, free from catches
|
||
or projections, which would be liable to hook into the clothing in
|
||
getting into or out of the carriage.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED VEHICLE SPRING.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Fredrick W. Faber, Columbus, Texas.--This invention consists in
|
||
combining an auxiliary spring with a spring suspended from goosenecks
|
||
attached to the axle, the said auxiliary spring being attached to the
|
||
axle, and provided with yokes for embracing the suspended spring, the
|
||
object being to provide a device for steadying the main spring and
|
||
preventing lateral motion.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED TIRE HEATER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Philip W. Cassil, New Athens, O.--To the top of the furnace or firebox
|
||
is secured the ring heating chamber, which consists of the ring plate
|
||
having a ring flange or rim formed around its outer edge. To the ring
|
||
plate are attached the outer ends of a number of arms, the inner ends
|
||
of which meet in the center of the ring plate, and have a journal
|
||
attached to them. The journal may be hollow or solid, and upon it is
|
||
placed a hub to which are attached a number of radial arms, to the
|
||
outer ends of which is attached a rim. The rim fits against the
|
||
inner part of the ring plate, and forms the inner wall of the heating
|
||
chamber.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED CHIMNEY COWL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Andrew F. Barry and Ira G. Lane, New York city.--This invention is a
|
||
chimney cowl or ventilator which will deflect the natural current of
|
||
air, so that a draft is continually maintained. To the upper end of
|
||
a sheet metal chimney top is attached a strip of metal, bent into a
|
||
spiral form, and having spaces between the successive convolutions of
|
||
the spiral. The spirals overlap each other, and increase in diameter
|
||
towards the top. The coils are connected at intervals by stays, and
|
||
the end of the upper and outer coil is tapped on to the one that
|
||
precedes it, and is trimmed off horizontally, and upon it is placed an
|
||
ornamental border. The wind, striking this top from any direction,
|
||
is deflected so as to cause a draft. The device is claimed to be
|
||
ornamental in appearance, is cheaply and easily made, and does not
|
||
obstruct the chimney.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED WAGON AXLE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Wilbur F. Buckelew, Shreveport, La.--The object of this invention is
|
||
to strengthen the wooden axles of wagons, and to fasten the skeins
|
||
so that they will not become loose. A wooden axle is grooved
|
||
longitudinally upon its under side throughout its entire length, to
|
||
receive a rod, which is reduced in size at its ends, and threaded to
|
||
receive the nuts. This rod is bent so as to conform to the tapering
|
||
portion of the axle upon which the skein is placed. The skeins, having
|
||
countersunk outer ends, are placed on the ends of the axle, and nuts
|
||
having a beveled face corresponding to the countersunk ends of the
|
||
skeins, are placed on the ends of the rod, and clamp the skeins
|
||
securely on the axle. By giving the nut this peculiar form, it
|
||
contains more threads than it otherwise would, and is in consequence
|
||
stronger. The rod not only serves to retain the skeins securely in
|
||
their places, but it also acts as a stay or truss rod for the axle,
|
||
greatly strengthening it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED WAGON BRAKE LEVER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Jacob P. Outson, Racine, Wis.--This invention consists of a curved
|
||
ratchet bar and two levers working on the same pivot, one carrying a
|
||
spring pawl, that engages with the curved ratchet bar, and the other
|
||
carrying a stud for throwing the pawl out of the notches of the
|
||
ratchet bar. When the brake is to be applied to the wheels of the
|
||
wagon, one lever is thrown forward, carrying with it the other lever;
|
||
and the pawl, by engaging the notches of the bar, holds the lever
|
||
at any desired point. When it is desired to release the brake first
|
||
named, the lever is drawn back, moving first the length of the slot,
|
||
the stud striking the pawl and throwing it out of engagement with
|
||
the ratchet bar, when the lever may be carried back to any required
|
||
position.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW HOUSEHOLD INVENTIONS.
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED BAKER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Luna Drew, Irving, Wis.--This is an improved baking attachment to
|
||
heating stoves of all kinds, so that the heat of the same may be
|
||
utilized for baking, warming, raising bread, and other purposes. It
|
||
consists of a baker supported on adjustable legs, and secured to
|
||
a round, oval, or square heating stove by suitable top and bottom
|
||
slides. A warmer is arranged below the baker. The front of the baker
|
||
is detachable, to admit its use for baking or warming purposes.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED FIRE KINDLER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
John G. Distler, Brooklyn (Greenpoint P. O.), N. Y.--This invention is
|
||
an improved fire kindler, simple in construction, convenient in use,
|
||
and effective in operation, burning freely, and lasting long enough
|
||
to fully kindle the fire. It is formed of corncobs, steamed, having
|
||
a number of transverse holes formed through them, dried, dipped in
|
||
melted white resin, and wrapped in paper. The corncobs are steamed to
|
||
prevent them from breaking while being bored. The cobs, while still
|
||
moist with the steam, have a number of transverse holes bored in them
|
||
with a rapidly revolving bit, and are then thoroughly dried. When dry
|
||
the cobs are dipped in melted white resin, and before they are fully
|
||
cold they are wrapped in ordinary paper, which adheres to them,
|
||
prevents any odor from passing off into the room and prevents them
|
||
from soiling the hands while being handled.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED MATCH SAFE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
John A. Field, Racine, Wis.--This is a match safe, the back, top, and
|
||
front of which are made from a single piece of tin, and to which a
|
||
lighter of wire cloth is attached, which is placed over a picture, to
|
||
give the match safe an ornamental appearance. It is so arranged that
|
||
the matches are delivered singly to a pair of hooks, from which they
|
||
may be readily taken by the fingers.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED NURSERY CHAIR.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Luther I. Adams, East Templeton, Mass.--This chair may be readily
|
||
converted into a high or low chair, and in which an attached toy box
|
||
retains the toys when the chair is in either position. The armed low
|
||
chair has curved legs. Between the rear legs a shaft is journaled,
|
||
upon which two wheels are placed. The support for the low parts
|
||
when it is used as a high chair consists of two similar sides, each
|
||
composed of two curved strips, which are held together partly by
|
||
crossbars and partly by triangular metallic pieces that are attached
|
||
to their upper ends and pivoted to the center of the crossbars that
|
||
connect the legs. A shaft, having upon it wheels, is journaled in the
|
||
curved strips at the back of the chair near the lower ends. The toy
|
||
box consists of a tray that is concaved at its upper edge and is made
|
||
convex at its lower end, and is provided with a cover that extends
|
||
over a portion of it, and forms a receptacle for toys when the box is
|
||
in a vertical position.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED FRUIT JAR.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Catherine Hastings, Oswego, N. Y.--This is an improved attachment for
|
||
fruit jars, to enable them to be conveniently handled when filled with
|
||
hot fruit, and at other times. It does not interfere with standing the
|
||
full fruit jars upon their tops, if desired, and enables the jars to
|
||
be used for holding and carrying various articles. There is a metallic
|
||
screw band, by which the cover is secured upon the mouth of jar. To
|
||
the opposite sides of the band are soldered lugs to which are pivoted
|
||
the ends of a wire bail.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED VENTILATOR.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Charles E. Darling, Lewiston, Me., assignor of two thirds his right
|
||
to Henry Free and John E. Lydston, of same place.--This ventilator for
|
||
windows, doors, etc., works in noiseless manner, and is watertight. It
|
||
consists of radially recessed face disks, clamped to the glass frame,
|
||
and having an intermediate pivoted disk with corresponding recesses
|
||
that are set by a crank lever and cords into open or closed piston.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED BAKING PAN.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Charles I. Kagey and Fred W. Stoneburner, Arcola, Ill.--The body of
|
||
this roaster is made of sheet iron, and is rectangular in form. To one
|
||
end of the body a cap is secured, and to the other end a rectangular
|
||
cast iron frame is fitted, to which a cast iron door is hinged. At the
|
||
top of the roaster, at or near its center, an aperture is made, which
|
||
is closed by a tapering projection that extends downward from a plate
|
||
that is hinged to the top of the roaster. Rings are attached to the
|
||
top of the roaster near each end for convenience in handling. The
|
||
apparatus, when in use, is placed upon a stove or in an oven.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED STOVEPIPE SHELF.
|
||
|
||
|
||
John W. Jackson, Sharpsville, Pa.--A wire of the requisite strength is
|
||
bent into the shape required to form the horizontal support. To this
|
||
the shelf is attached, and also the bracket, which rests against the
|
||
pipe for supporting the same.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW MECHANICAL AND ENGINEERING INVENTIONS.
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED WATER WHEEL.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Isaac Mallery, Dryden, N. Y.--This invention relates to downward
|
||
discharge turbine water wheels; and it consists in the employment, in
|
||
combination with a stationary chute case and an independent adjustable
|
||
frame, of a series of gates, which are pivoted to this frame and
|
||
adjustable to the periphery of said case. The bucket wheel is formed
|
||
of curved and inclined buckets arranged around a hub, and applied to a
|
||
cap ring and a skirting. This wheel is keyed on a driving shaft,
|
||
stepped on a bridge, and passed up through a tubular sleeve, which is
|
||
cast on the top of a cylindrical chute or guide case. This case is
|
||
rigidly secured to the base or bed frame, and constructed with oblique
|
||
issues, which direct the currents of inflowing water against the
|
||
buckets of the wheel.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED VALVE MOTION FOR STEAM ENGINES.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Henry Haering, New York city.--This is an improved device for
|
||
operating the slide valve of a steam engine from the piston rod of
|
||
said engine, in such a way that the valve will be moved slightly to
|
||
partially uncover the inlet and exhaust ports as the piston completes
|
||
its stroke, and its motion will be continued in the same direction as
|
||
the piston begins to move upon the return stroke, until the ports are
|
||
fully opened, and will then stand still, with the ports fully open,
|
||
until the piston has nearly completed its return stroke. It consists
|
||
in the combination of a three-armed bar, two levers, connecting bar,
|
||
and connecting lever, with the piston rod and the valve stem of
|
||
a steam engine; and in the combination of a lockbar, spring, two
|
||
cylinders, and pin, with the two levers and the three-armed bar.
|
||
As the piston approaches the end of its stroke, the upper end of an
|
||
upright arm of a bar strikes the concaved side of the upper part of
|
||
one of the levers operating it, and moving the slide valve to close
|
||
the ports and admit steam in front of the piston. As the piston begins
|
||
its return stroke the inclined upper surface of one of the side arms
|
||
of the three-armed bar comes in contact with the lower end of the said
|
||
lever, and continues its motion in the same direction, fully opening
|
||
the said inlet port, which remains fully open until the piston has
|
||
again nearly completed its stroke.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED REVERSIBLE ECCENTRIC.
|
||
|
||
|
||
George G. Lafayette and Pitt W. Strong, Brockville, Ontario,
|
||
Canada.--This is an improved device to act as a substitute for the
|
||
link motion on a reversible engine, or for adjusting the stroke of
|
||
a boiler-feed pump, while in motion, so as to regulate the amount of
|
||
feed water supplied to the boiler, without the use of an overflow pipe
|
||
and cock, and keeping thereby the pump constantly in motion, which
|
||
will save the annoyance frequently experienced in pumps by their
|
||
refusing to prime after having been stopped for a short time. It may
|
||
be further used to control the speed of all kinds of engines, whether
|
||
with plain slide valve or with a cut-off valve working on top of the
|
||
other by connecting directly to the device a suitable governor, so
|
||
as to automatically shorten and lengthen the stroke of the valve, and
|
||
give a uniform motion to the engine under different loads.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED EXPANDING REAMER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Robert Blair, San Francisco, Cal.--In this improved tool there is
|
||
a clamping bolt by which the cutters are clamped fast after being
|
||
adjusted. The cutters are arranged to slide directly across the stock
|
||
in dovetail grooves, and are slotted to slide along the clamping bolt
|
||
and washers, by which they are clamped fast after they are adjusted
|
||
to the position required by a toothed pinion and racks. The pinion is
|
||
arranged in the stock between the cutters, and the shaft extends out
|
||
of the end of the stock, with a nick in the end for a screwdriver to
|
||
turn it.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW MISCELLANEOUS INVENTIONS.
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED TORTOISE-SHELL HANDLE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Christian W. Schaefer, New York city.--The object of this invention
|
||
is to mount the handles of canes, umbrellas, parasols, whips, opera
|
||
glasses, and similar articles with a tortoise-shell covering, in such
|
||
a manner that the present inefficient mode of attaching the same by
|
||
glue may be dispensed with, the covering attached in tightly fitting
|
||
and durable manner, and the joint or weld of the edges be not
|
||
noticeable in the least.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED HAND STAMP.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leonard Tilton, Brooklyn, E.D., N. Y.--This invention consists in
|
||
novel devices for giving positive rotation to the stamp heads after
|
||
the impressions are made, in combination with a reciprocating inking
|
||
pad, and in means for adjusting the throw of the inking pad with
|
||
respect to the printing faces of the stamp heads.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED BUCKLE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
John Fenton, Indianapolis, Ind.--This invention is an improved buckle,
|
||
neat in appearance, strong and durable, which may be easily fastened
|
||
and unfastened, which will not require the strap to be perforated, and
|
||
will hold it securely in any position into which it may be adjusted.
|
||
The buckle is formed of a plate having holes in its middle part to
|
||
receive the rivets by which it is secured to the strap, and having
|
||
cross slots formed in its ends to receive the free end of the said
|
||
strap, and the eccentric, having its outer side corrugated radially,
|
||
and provided with a handle.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED LIQUID DIFFUSER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
George M. Smyth, Brooklyn, N. Y.--This invention consists in the
|
||
combination of an air compressor, an air reservoir, and a receptacle
|
||
for the liquid, and an arrangement of pipes and nozzles for atomizing
|
||
the liquid. An air compressor of any ordinary construction is
|
||
connected with the reservoir by a pipe, in which two stopcocks are
|
||
placed. There is a receptacle for containing the liquid to be diffused
|
||
or atomized. A pipe passes through a stopper placed in the neck of the
|
||
said receptacle, and extends nearly to the bottom of the same, and its
|
||
upper end is provided with a stopcock and nozzle. A nozzle is arranged
|
||
at right angles to the first-mentioned nozzle, and is attached to a
|
||
brace that is secured to the pipe.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED OIL CAN.
|
||
|
||
|
||
John Graves, New York city, assignor to himself and James L. Miller,
|
||
Westfield, N. J.--This is an improved case for packing oil cans for
|
||
transportation, the case furnishing the additional facility that the
|
||
can may be readily inserted into the same and tilted for use. The
|
||
invention consists of a wooden projecting case with side slots, in
|
||
which trunnions of the can are guided and supported for swinging the
|
||
can on pivot hooks, which serve also for the purpose of locking the
|
||
lid to the case.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED HARNESS TUGS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Charles Hauff, Ashland, O.--The body of the carrier is made in the
|
||
form of a ring with outwardly projecting flanges around its edges. The
|
||
strap is passed around the ring in the groove formed by its flanges,
|
||
and its inner end is sewed to its body at the side. Small wedge-shaped
|
||
blocks of leather are inserted in the angle between the parts of the
|
||
strap where they meet and the ring, which angular blocks are covered
|
||
by angular projection of the flanges of the ring.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED COMPOSITION FOR CASTING ORNAMENTAL FIGURES.
|
||
|
||
|
||
August Kiesele, New York city.--This consists in a composition
|
||
formed by the admixture of dry pulverized sugar, melted paraffin, and
|
||
stearine. It is poured into moulds and allowed to cool. The article
|
||
is then removed from the mould, and powdered starch or sugar is dusted
|
||
over it to destroy the gloss and give it the appearance of alabaster.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED PEN RACK.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Harvey W. Forman, Golden City, Col.--This consists of an upper frame
|
||
with intercrossing wires, forming wide spaces or meshes, and of a
|
||
second frame with closer wires below the same, for holding the pen in
|
||
upright position, in connection with a bottom pad or absorbent below
|
||
the rack frames.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPROVED STOPPER FOR MUCILAGE BOTTLE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
James Tilghman, New York city.--This is a combined brush and stopper,
|
||
consisting essentially of a handle having a stem and a flat end
|
||
corresponding to the top of the cork. The brush has a flat head,
|
||
corresponding to the bottom of the cork. The cork is interposed
|
||
between the said head and end of the handle, and held in place by the
|
||
central stem.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BUSINESS AND PERSONAL.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
_The Charge for Insertion under this head is One Dollar a line for
|
||
each insertion. If the Notice exceeds four lines, One Dollar and a
|
||
Half per line will be charged._
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
Metallic Letters and Figures to put on patterns of castings, all
|
||
sizes. H. W. Knight, Seneca Falls, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
How to make Violins--Write J. Ranger, Syracuse, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
Blake's Belt Studs.--The best and cheapest fastening for Rubber or
|
||
Leather Belts. Greene, Tweed & Co., 18 Park place, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
All kinds of new Lift and Force Pumps for all purposes, at half price,
|
||
or trade for firearms or tools. W. P. Hopkins, Lawrence, Mass.
|
||
|
||
Steam Yacht for sale. 31 feet long, 6½ beam; new. John Howard, No.
|
||
1720 Rittinhouse st., Philadelphia.
|
||
|
||
Mothers make selections for themselves uptown, but they always go to
|
||
Baldwin the Clothier in New York and Brooklyn for boys' outfits.
|
||
|
||
Wanted--The Agency of small article of merit or novelty for the
|
||
Hardware or House furnishing lines. W. M. Ernst & Co., 26 Cliff
|
||
street, New York.
|
||
|
||
Thermometers and Hydrometers for scientific and other purposes.
|
||
Goldbacher, 98 Fulton street, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
For Sale.--One 3 ft. Planer, $195; one 8 ft. do., $350; one 26" Lathe,
|
||
$295; one 22" do., $175; one 15" do., $120. At Shearman's, 132 North
|
||
3d street, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
||
|
||
Inventors.--Send 10 cents for the "Journal of Invention," 4 months. 37
|
||
Park Row, N. Y. Room 2.
|
||
|
||
Reliable Oak Leather and Rubber Belting. A specialty of Belting for
|
||
high speed and hard work. Charles W. Arny, Manufacturer, Phila., Pa.
|
||
Send for price lists.
|
||
|
||
Shaw's Noise-Quieting Nozzles for Escape Pipes of Locomotives,
|
||
Steamboats, etc. Quiets all the noise of high pressure escaping steam
|
||
without any detriment whatever. T. Shaw, 915 Ridge Ave., Philadelphia,
|
||
Pa.
|
||
|
||
For 13, 15, 16, and 18 in. Swing Screw-Cutting Engine Lathes, address
|
||
Star Tool Company, Providence, R. I.
|
||
|
||
John T. Noye & Son, Buffalo, N. Y., are Manufacturers of Burr Mill
|
||
Stones and Flour Mill Machinery of all kinds, and dealers in Dufour &
|
||
Co.'s Bolting Cloth. Send for large illustrated catalogue.
|
||
|
||
Removal.--Fitch & Meserole, Manufacturers of Electrical Apparatus, and
|
||
Bradley's Patent Naked Wire Helices, have removed to 40 Cortlandt St.,
|
||
N. Y. Experimental work.
|
||
|
||
Power & Foot Presses, Ferracute Co., Bridgeton, N. J.
|
||
|
||
For Best Presses, Dies, and Fruit Can Tools, Bliss & Williams, cor. of
|
||
Plymouth and Jay Sts., Brooklyn, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
Lead Pipe, Sheet Lead. Bar Lead, and Gas Pipe. Send for prices.
|
||
Bailey, Farrell & Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.
|
||
|
||
Hydraulic Presses and Jacks, new and second hand. Lathes and Machinery
|
||
for Polishing and Buffing metals. E. Lyon & Co., 470 Grand St., N. Y.
|
||
|
||
Solid Emery Vulcanite Wheels--The Solid Original Emery Wheel--other
|
||
kinds imitations and inferior. Caution.--Our name is stamped in full
|
||
on all our best Standard Belting, Packing, and Hose. Buy that only.
|
||
The best is the cheapest. New York Belting and Packing Company, 37 and
|
||
38 Park Row, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
Steel Castings from one lb. to five thousand lbs. Invaluable for
|
||
strength and durability. Circulars free. Pittsburgh Steel Casting Co.,
|
||
Pittsburgh, Pa.
|
||
|
||
Leather and Rubber Belting, Packing, Hose, and Manufacturers'
|
||
Supplies. Send for list. Greene, Tweed & Co., 18 Park place, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
For Solid Wrought Iron Beams, etc., see advertisement. Address Union
|
||
Iron Mills, Pittsburgh, Pa., for lithograph, etc.
|
||
|
||
Blank Book Back-Shaping Machine. Illustrated circular free. Frank
|
||
Thomas & Co., Home St., Cincinnati, O.
|
||
|
||
Hand Fire Engines, Lift and Force Pumps for fire and all other
|
||
purposes. Address Rumsey & Co., Seneca Falls, N. Y., U. S. A.
|
||
|
||
Help for the weak, nervous, and debilitated. Chronic and painful
|
||
diseases cured without medicine. Pulvermacher's Electric Belts are
|
||
the desideratum. Book, with full particulars, mailed free. Address
|
||
Pulvermacher Galvanic Co., 292 Vine St., Cincinnati, Ohio.
|
||
|
||
Silver Solder and small Tubing. John Holland, Cincinnati, Manufacturer
|
||
of Gold Pens and Pencil Cases.
|
||
|
||
Patent Scroll and Band Saws. Best and cheapest in use. Cordesman, Egan
|
||
& Co., Cincinnati, O.
|
||
|
||
Mill Stone Dressing Diamonds. Simple, effective, and durable. J.
|
||
Dickinson, 64 Nassau St., N. Y.
|
||
|
||
Best Glass Oilers. Cody & Ruthven, Cincinnati, O.
|
||
|
||
For Boult's Paneling, Moulding, and Dovetailing Machine, and other
|
||
wood-working machinery, address B.C. Machinery Co., Battle Creek,
|
||
Mich.
|
||
|
||
Chester Steel Castings Co. make castings for heavy gearing, and
|
||
Hydraulic Cylinders where great strength is required. See their
|
||
advertisement, page 30.
|
||
|
||
Reliable information given on all subjects relating to Mechanics,
|
||
Hydraulics, Pneumatics, Steam Engines, and Boilers, by A. F. Nagle,
|
||
M.E., Providence. R. I.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NOTES & QUERIES
|
||
|
||
|
||
It has been our custom for thirty years past to devote a considerable
|
||
space to the answering of questions by correspondents; so useful have
|
||
these labors proved that the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN office has become the
|
||
factotum, or headquarters, to which everybody sends, who wants special
|
||
information upon any particular subject. So large is the number of our
|
||
correspondents, so wide the range of their inquiries, so desirous are
|
||
we to meet their wants and supply correct information, that we are
|
||
obliged to employ the constant assistance of a considerable staff of
|
||
experienced writers, who have the requisite knowledge or access to
|
||
the latest and best sources of information. For example, questions
|
||
relating to steam engines, boilers, boats, locomotives, railways,
|
||
etc., are considered and answered by a professional engineer of
|
||
distinguished ability and extensive practical experience. Inquiries
|
||
relating to electricity are answered by one of the most able and
|
||
prominent practical electricians in this country. Astronomical queries
|
||
by a practical astronomer. Chemical inquiries by one of our most
|
||
eminent and experienced professors of chemistry; and so on through
|
||
all the various departments. In this way we are enabled to answer the
|
||
thousands of questions and furnish the large mass of information which
|
||
these correspondence columns present. The large number of questions
|
||
sent--they pour in upon us from all parts of the world--renders it
|
||
impossible for us to publish all. The editor selects from the mass
|
||
those that he thinks most likely to be of general interest to the
|
||
readers of the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN. These, with the replies, are
|
||
printed; the remainder go into the waste basket. Many of the rejected
|
||
questions are of a primitive or personal nature, which should be
|
||
answered by mail; in fact, hundreds of correspondents desire a special
|
||
reply by post, but very few of them are thoughtful enough to inclose
|
||
so much as a postage stamp. We could in many cases send a brief reply
|
||
by mail if the writer were to inclose a small fee, a dollar or more,
|
||
according to the nature or importance of the case. When we cannot
|
||
furnish the information, the money is promptly returned to the sender.
|
||
|
||
J. P. D. will find directions for colored whitewash on pp. 235, 236,
|
||
vol. 36.--A. M. will find directions for electroplating on p. 59, vol.
|
||
36.--H. P. can recover silver from photographers' waste by the process
|
||
detailed on p. 250, vol. 27.--A. W. A.'s difficulty as to 64 and 65
|
||
squares in the puzzle can be solved by an inspection of the diagrams
|
||
on p. 323, No. 21, SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT.--I. A. will find a
|
||
description of a magneto-electric machine on p. 195, vol. 34. A clock
|
||
thus would go for 12 hours, and wind itself at the same time for
|
||
12 hours more, if such a machine could exist, would be a perpetual
|
||
motion. As to tempering small drills, see p. 186, vol. 26.--R. B. can
|
||
prevent rust on iron or steel by the means described on p. 26, vol.
|
||
25. For a recipe for a depilatory, see p. 186, vol. 34.--A. T. R. is
|
||
informed that the hydrocarbon engine is reversible.--T. W. will find
|
||
directions for making sand belts on p. 235, vol. 36.--M. G. should
|
||
address a manufacturer of oxygen cylinders.--J. S. C., who inquires
|
||
as to a water fountain, sizes of pipes, etc., should send us a sketch
|
||
with dimensions.--O. L. is informed that the proper way to ascertain
|
||
the relative strengths of corrugated and plain sheet metal is by
|
||
experiment.--G. H. B. will find directions for making colored
|
||
printing inks on p. 90, vol. 36.--P. M. will find on p. 250, vol. 36,
|
||
directions for making a polishing starch.--C. H. B. can braze the ends
|
||
of his brass plate to make a cylinder of it. See p. 219, vol. 36.--W.
|
||
H. C. is informed that his method of fluting reamers is not
|
||
new.--C. C. G. will find his method of raising coal or other weights
|
||
impracticable.--E. S. G. had better test so simple an experiment and
|
||
satisfy himself.--W. H. C. is informed that the most satisfactory plan
|
||
would be to get his tools nickel-plated.
|
||
|
||
(1) J. H. N., of Christ Church, New Zealand, asks: Is the stearin from
|
||
which the olein has been extracted by Dr. Mott's process fit to be
|
||
made at once into good stearin candles, without any further treatment?
|
||
A. Yes.
|
||
|
||
(2) B. B. says: I wish to express the strongest coloring matter from
|
||
certain herbs, sage leaves, for instance. How can it best be done
|
||
cheaply and quickly? Evaporation during several days, after boiling
|
||
and simmering, has the effect; but it is inconveniently slow. The
|
||
color produced is a medium brown. A. Dry the leaves, etc., thoroughly,
|
||
and grind to a fine powder. Digest this for several days in enough
|
||
warm water to thoroughly moisten it throughout. Then add enough wood
|
||
naphtha to make a stiff paste, and after standing an hour transfer to
|
||
a fine linen bag and express the thick liquid in a screw press. 2. Is
|
||
there anything that will set the color? A. Try a strong hot solution
|
||
of alum.
|
||
|
||
(3) H. K. F. M. says: I have a box made of Bohemian crystal. The
|
||
cover, which was held to the box by a brass frame, has come apart
|
||
from its frame. It seemed to have been cemented by a hard substance
|
||
resembling plaster of Paris. How can I make it? A. Boil 3 parts
|
||
powdered rosin for sometime with 1 part of caustic soda and 5 parts of
|
||
water; then stir into the soap formed one half its weight of plaster
|
||
of Paris, and use immediately.
|
||
|
||
(4) F. N. Y. asks: Would a canvas bag, coated with a varnish made of
|
||
india rubber dissolved in naphtha, be suitable to hold oxygen gas? A.
|
||
Yes; but bags made of double pieces of cloth, cemented together with
|
||
the varnish, are better.
|
||
|
||
(5) J. A. B. asks: Is there any difference between electricity
|
||
and magnetism? A. Electricity and magnetism are supposed to be
|
||
manifestations of the same force whose actions are produced at
|
||
right angles to each other; the action which occurs in the line of
|
||
polarization being called electricity, and the one at right angles to
|
||
this line, magnetism. There is an important difference between
|
||
them, however, as electricity is essentially a dynamic force, while
|
||
magnetism is purely static.
|
||
|
||
1. Is not the idea of the world moving around the sun in an elliptic
|
||
form absurd? A. No. 2. My idea is that the north star is the center
|
||
of the universe, or in fact is the magnet that all the suns or fixed
|
||
stars move around, and that the attraction of the pole of the earth,
|
||
although it moves around the sun, is the cause of the change of
|
||
seasons, or, in other words, the angle of light. A. There is nothing
|
||
whatever to support the idea. But a supposed center of the universe
|
||
has really been designated by some astronomers.
|
||
|
||
(6) P. S. asks: How much copper wire does it require to construct an
|
||
electro-magnet that will uphold 100 lbs., and what size of wire should
|
||
be used? A. Probably 500 or 600 feet of No. 14 copper wire would be
|
||
sufficient with 3 or 4 very large size Grove cells and cores about 6
|
||
inches long and 1 inch in diameter.
|
||
|
||
(7) H. S. B. says: Water falls about 16 feet per second. My overshot
|
||
water wheel moves about 4 feet per second. Do I in that way lose that
|
||
percentage of the actual power of the water? A. Not necessarily.
|
||
|
||
(8) C. N. B. asks: Can a steam engine be worked with compressed air
|
||
the same as with steam? A. Generally speaking, it can; but not in
|
||
every respect.
|
||
|
||
(9) J. Y. says: If all the measures of length, surface, and capacity
|
||
in the world, and all the weights were lost, by what means could new
|
||
ones be made corresponding exactly with those we now have? A. It would
|
||
be impossible, as all the measures in use refer to certain arbitrary
|
||
standards.
|
||
|
||
(10) R. B. G. asks: If a horse be pulling at the end of a lever and
|
||
traveling 3 miles an hour, how many lbs. pressure against his collar
|
||
must he exert, to raise 33,000 lbs. 1 foot per minute? A. The force
|
||
exerted by the animal will depend upon the length of the lever, which
|
||
should be given.
|
||
|
||
(11) C. H. McK. asks: Would a pump so constructed as to create an
|
||
incessant suction draw water an indefinite distance, or how far would
|
||
it draw it? A. Such a pump would raise water no higher than any other
|
||
that was equally tight.
|
||
|
||
(12) J. W. says: I wish to get some boilers made about 12 inches
|
||
in diameter and 13 inches deep. I want them to stand a pressure
|
||
corresponding to 400° Fah°. Do you think it would be safe to have them
|
||
made of cast iron? A. We think it will be better to use wrought iron.
|
||
Make the shell about 7/16 of an inch thick.
|
||
|
||
(13) J. R. S. says, in reply to E. W. P., who says that he has
|
||
an artesian well which does not flow; but from which he pumps by
|
||
inserting a pipe inside the well tubing, and asks: "If we attach the
|
||
pump to the well tubing directly, allowing no air to enter the tube,
|
||
would it not be like trying to pump water from an airtight barrel?" If
|
||
such were the case, the drive well would be a miserable failure; for
|
||
in all drive wells the pump is attached directly to the tube. I would
|
||
advise E. W. P. to attach his pump to the well tube direct, and he
|
||
will gain three times the amount of water that he now gets. By having
|
||
his pump attached to the well tube directly, the working of the pump
|
||
creates a vacuum, and the atmospheric pressure on the earth's surface
|
||
violently forces the liquid to fill the vacuum thus formed, thereby
|
||
giving a much greater amount of water than can be otherwise obtained.
|
||
It is a well established fact that more water can be obtained by the
|
||
drive well than by any other. A. In our answer to E. W. P., it will
|
||
be evident, we think, to most of our readers, that we only referred to
|
||
the case in which the well had no connection with the atmosphere, when
|
||
the pipe was tightly fitted. It appears, however, that it might have
|
||
been better to have stated this more definitely, and we gladly
|
||
embrace the opportunity afforded by the interesting letters of
|
||
our correspondents. We would be glad to receive from J. R. S. some
|
||
experimental data in proof of his assertion as to the great gain from
|
||
a tight connection. This also answers J. T. G. and W. H. F.
|
||
|
||
(14) H. H. S. says: 1. Given, a boat with a 35 feet keel, of 6 feet
|
||
beam, with fine lines; also a two-cylinder engine, each cylinder 4 x
|
||
5 inches; and a wheel 28 inches in diameter and of 3½ feet pitch. Will
|
||
an upright boiler, with 135 square feet heating surface, and 4 square
|
||
feet grate surface, be sufficient to run the engine at 250 or 300
|
||
revolutions per minute with 100 lbs. steam? A. With good coal and
|
||
a forced draft, the boiler may be large enough. 2. What will be the
|
||
probable speed of boat? A. In smooth water, 7 to 8 miles an hour.
|
||
|
||
(15) F. A. asks: What would be a safe outside pressure for a cylinder
|
||
of wrought iron, ½ inch thick and 4 feet in diameter, and 8 feet long?
|
||
A. According to tables given in Wilson's "Treatise on Steam Boilers,"
|
||
the working pressure for such a tube would be about 65 lbs. per square
|
||
inch.
|
||
|
||
(16) F. M. M. asks: 1. How large must an engine be to run a boat 12½
|
||
feet wide, 75 feet long, drawing 4 feet of water, at the rate of 30
|
||
miles per hour, on a river or bay where the surface is smooth? A. We
|
||
have some doubts as to whether these conditions could be fulfilled. 2.
|
||
Do steamboats on the ocean use salt water in their boilers for
|
||
steam, or do they carry fresh water? A. They ordinarily have surface
|
||
condensers, so that the water of condensation is returned to the
|
||
boilers.
|
||
|
||
(17) E. S. N. says: Please give your ideas as to how much water an
|
||
engine 18 inches in diameter by 22 inches stroke, running at 145
|
||
revolutions per minute, at 80 lbs. steam, cutting off at about 18
|
||
inches, will require. We furnished an injector for one of the above
|
||
dimensions, capable of throwing 900 gallons per hour. It was found
|
||
to be insufficient, and I went to the mill to discover the cause, if
|
||
possible. The manufacturers of the injector thought it ought to be
|
||
large enough, and so did we. I found everything set up properly, and
|
||
the piston and valve were evidently in good order. I finally measured
|
||
the capacity of the tank which supplied the injector, and found
|
||
that it drew 960 gallons per hour. A. We do not think the data are
|
||
sufficient for an accurate calculation. It is possible, however, that
|
||
some of our readers have made experiments on similar engines, and can
|
||
give some useful information.
|
||
|
||
(18) T. W. asks: What size of breast water wheel, with a fall of 2
|
||
feet water, would it require to produce the same power as an overshot
|
||
wheel of 4 feet diameter, 18 inches face, with a fall of 5 feet water?
|
||
A. If the breast wheel gave the same efficiency as the other, it would
|
||
require a face about 2½ times as wide.
|
||
|
||
(19) A. K. says: A. asserts that if a small and a large boiler be set
|
||
side by side and connected with the top gauge cock of the two boilers,
|
||
level, when they are first filled with water, and then steam is
|
||
raised, that the water will not remain the same, that the pressure
|
||
will be greater in the larger boiler, and consequently will force the
|
||
water into the smaller one. B. says that the water will always remain
|
||
the same as long as the boilers are connected; that the pressure on
|
||
the water will be the same in both boilers, and therefore the water
|
||
will always assume the same level in each. Which is right? A. The
|
||
pressures sometimes vary in two boilers connected in this way; and
|
||
they should be set in such a way that the water cannot be forced from
|
||
one into the other under any circumstances.
|
||
|
||
(20) J. T. G. says: I notice your reply to W. G. in regard to pounding
|
||
of a steam pump, in which you recommend the use of a larger air
|
||
vessel. I think that W. G. can remedy the difficulty by allowing a
|
||
small quantity of air to enter the pump cylinder at each stroke,
|
||
which can be done without sensibly diminishing the amount of water
|
||
delivered, provided the lift is not so high as to nearly equal the
|
||
capacity of the pump. That would keep the maximum quantity of air in
|
||
the air vessel, and I think that the air in the discharge pipe would
|
||
have the effect of converting a comparatively rigid column into an
|
||
elastic one. W. G. can easily try the experiment by running with
|
||
the drain cocks at the end of his pump partially open; and if that
|
||
remedies the difficulty, he might insert a small check valve opening
|
||
inward to prevent the discharge of water during the out-stroke. If W.
|
||
G. tries this, I wish that he would let us know the result through the
|
||
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN.
|
||
|
||
(21) G. H. says: Please decide the following: A. claims that a team
|
||
of horses can draw a greater load when hitched close to it than when
|
||
hitched at a distance of 10 or 20 feet. B. claims that, everything
|
||
else being equal, distance makes no difference, and that the team
|
||
could pull as many lbs. at a distance of 20 feet as it could at ten or
|
||
less. Which is right? A. We incline to B.'s opinion.
|
||
|
||
Please tell me the relative power of conducting electricity of
|
||
the principal metals. A. According to Matthiessen, the electrical
|
||
conductivity of the principal metals, under similar conditions, is as
|
||
follows:
|
||
|
||
Silver 100.0
|
||
Copper 99.9
|
||
Gold 80.0
|
||
Aluminium 56.0
|
||
Sodium 37.4
|
||
Zinc 29.0
|
||
Cadmium 23.7
|
||
Potassium 20.8
|
||
Platinum 18.0
|
||
Iron 16.8
|
||
Tin 13.1
|
||
Lead 8.3
|
||
German silver 7.7
|
||
Antimony 4.6
|
||
Mercury 1.6
|
||
Bismuth 1.2
|
||
|
||
(22) S. R. S. asks: How can lime, or rather phosphate of lime, be
|
||
precipitated from cod liver oil, which is perfectly clear and said to
|
||
contain 2 per cent. of the phosphate? A. This can only be done by
|
||
first destroying the organic matter of the oil, and then examining the
|
||
residue for the phosphates with the usual reagents--magnesia solution,
|
||
barium chloride, nitrate of silver, ammonium molybdate, etc. With so
|
||
small a percentage of the phosphates, it will be necessary for you to
|
||
work with concentrated solutions, and slowly. The oil may be oxidized
|
||
by treating it on the waterbath with hot hydrochloric acid, with
|
||
some chlorate of potash, added in small quantities at a time. Then
|
||
evaporate down nearly to dryness, and treat with a little strong
|
||
nitric and a few drops of sulphuric acid. This will take some time if
|
||
properly done.
|
||
|
||
(23) J. H. S. says, in answer to J. H. B.'s query as to a parrot
|
||
pulling out his feathers: Take a knife and scrape the inside edge of
|
||
the bill, and the feathers will slip from the bill without coming out.
|
||
This is done for feather-eating hens; no doubt it will answer for a
|
||
parrot as well.
|
||
|
||
(24) S. R. S. says: I have some dentists' pellet gold. I alloyed it
|
||
with brass and silver. I melted it several times, but it was so very
|
||
brittle that I could not work it. I then added a $2½ gold coin, and
|
||
fused, all together, but it was as brittle as before. I then fused it
|
||
and dropped in lumps of pure saltpeter, but it is still as brittle
|
||
as before. I fused the gold on a lump of charcoal with an alcohol
|
||
blowpipe. Please tell me how to work it. A. You fail to state the
|
||
proportions of your alloy. There may be an excess of zinc and copper,
|
||
or the fusion may not have been complete. Place it, together with
|
||
several small pieces of rosin and a little borax or carbonate of soda,
|
||
in a small blacklead crucible, and heat to very bright redness over
|
||
a good fire. If this does not obviate the difficulty, fuse the alloy
|
||
with about three times its weight of nitrate of potassa (saltpeter),
|
||
and treat the mass when cold with dilute sulphuric acid. Pour off the
|
||
acid solution and fuse the alloy, together with any silver sulphate
|
||
adhering to it and a little carbonate of soda. Any silver contained in
|
||
the acid solution may be recovered by adding a little salt or muriatic
|
||
acid, and fusing the precipitated chloride of silver with carbonate of
|
||
soda.
|
||
|
||
(25) N. S. asks: 1. Can water be decomposed into its constituents
|
||
(oxygen and hydrogen) with any considerable rapidity, and in large
|
||
quantities, by electricity? A. Yes; providing a large magneto-electric
|
||
machine be used. 2. What is the best and cheapest method of generating
|
||
hydrogen in large quantities? A. The action of iron or zinc scraps
|
||
on diluted oil of vitriol is among the best. A considerable volume
|
||
of pure hydrogen may also be obtained with facility by passing
|
||
superheated steam through a large iron tube filled with scrap iron
|
||
heated to bright redness.
|
||
|
||
(26) G. S. D. W. asks: Is there any process by which an engraving can
|
||
be transferred either to stone or wood, where the printing ink can
|
||
be made to show up as black as in the original after the transfer has
|
||
been made? A. We know of no satisfactory method whereby this may
|
||
be accomplished directly. By means of the chromate of gelatin
|
||
photographic process, such transfers may be made without great
|
||
difficulty.
|
||
|
||
(27) F. M. M. asks: 1. If a steamboat 100 feet long, of 5 feet beam
|
||
and 4 feet draught, be provided with one set of common side paddle
|
||
wheels, and power enough to run it at the rate of 10 knots per
|
||
hour, would two sets of side wheels, with the power doubled and the
|
||
revolutions of the wheels doubled, double the speed of the boat? A.
|
||
No. 2. If we take the same boat, side wheels, and power, for running
|
||
10 knots per hour, and arrange for the side wheels to feather their
|
||
paddles, what effect would it have on the speed of the boat? A. You
|
||
might obtain from 10 to 15 per cent. more of the power of the engine in
|
||
useful effect.
|
||
|
||
(28) W. J. T. asks: 1. What is the best dark color to paint a
|
||
laboratory, and what kind of paint must I use? A. One of the best for
|
||
this purpose is shellac in alcohol, colored to suit with Vandyke or
|
||
Spanish brown, etc. 2. I wish to varnish my benches. What varnish
|
||
would you recommend? A. Shellac is commonly used, but copal gives good
|
||
results, also Brunswick black in oil.
|
||
|
||
Of what should a waste water pipe be made, so as to resist acids? A.
|
||
Make it of lead or block tin.
|
||
|
||
Can you recommend an elementary work on electric batteries? A.
|
||
Sprague's "Electricity: its Theory, Sources, and Applications," is one
|
||
of the best.
|
||
|
||
(29) T. P. H. asks: Can I take a wax impression off type and then
|
||
electrotype it with a battery? A. Yes. This is the common method of
|
||
making electrotypes for printing from.
|
||
|
||
(30) C. M. asks: What are the locations of the various branch mints of
|
||
the United States? A. A recent authority gives them as Philadelphia,
|
||
Pa., San Francisco, Cal., Carson City, Nev., and Denver, Col. Assay
|
||
offices are situated at New York city, Charlotte, N. C., and Boise
|
||
City, Idaho.
|
||
|
||
(31) B. L. D. asks: Can you give me a recipe for making paste for
|
||
sharpening razors, knives, etc.? A. Mix the finest emery obtainable
|
||
with a little suet.
|
||
|
||
(32) C. B. McM. says: I hear that four gallon measures of different
|
||
capacities are in use, and that The United States standard gallon
|
||
contains 230 cubic inches. In the confusion of text-book statements
|
||
such as--"wine gallon = 231 cubic inches," "beer gallon = 282 cubic
|
||
inches," "American standard gallon = 58973 grains (Youmans' Chemistry)
|
||
= nearly 234 cubic inches," and the very extensive ignorance of what
|
||
is really correct, please repeat the information in a way that may
|
||
be quoted as authority for the capacity of a United States gallon in
|
||
cubic inches, and the weight in grains. A. "The gallon of the United
|
||
States is the standard or Winchester wine gallon of 231 cubic inches,
|
||
and contains 8.3388822 lbs. avoirdupois, or 58372.1754 troy grains of
|
||
distilled water at 39.83° Fah., the barometer being at 30 inches. It
|
||
is equal to 3.785207 liters. The gallon of the State of New York is of
|
||
the capacity of 8 lbs. pure water at its maximum density, or
|
||
221.184 cubic inches. It is equal to 3.62346 liters."--_Appleton's
|
||
Cyclop[oe]dia._
|
||
|
||
(33) S. C. D. says: Please give directions for electrotyping
|
||
cylindrical rollers for impressing upon sheets of wax, accurately,
|
||
of the proper figure for honeycomb foundations. The figure for the
|
||
surface of the cylinders to be derived from sheets of wax foundation,
|
||
having the figure correctly impressed upon them. A. This can be done
|
||
by coating with plumbago, and then electrotyping with copper, in a way
|
||
familiar to most printers and to all electrotyping establishments. The
|
||
plates can afterwards be bent round a roller, and used to impress the
|
||
sheets of wax.
|
||
|
||
(34) J. H. T. asks: There is a piece of ground, 100 rods long and 10
|
||
rods wide at one end, running to a point at the other, which we wish
|
||
to divide into 4 equal lots. Please give a rule. A. Let the 100 rods
|
||
be the base of a triangle, divide it into 4 parts of 25 rods each, and
|
||
join the apex with each of the three dividing points. You will then
|
||
have 4 triangles on equal bases and between the same parallels, which,
|
||
according to Euclid, are equal to each other.
|
||
|
||
(35) R. S. asks: What are the chemical qualities of bisulphide
|
||
of lime, and how can I prepare it? A. The bisulphide of calcium
|
||
(C_{2}S_{5}) is produced by boiling milk of lime with sulphur and
|
||
water, but not long enough to allow the lime to become completely
|
||
saturated. The filtered liquid, on cooling, deposits crystals whose
|
||
composition agrees with the formula C_{2}S_{2} + 3H_{2}O. Exposed to
|
||
the air, it soon absorbs oxygen, becoming converted into insoluble
|
||
sulphate of calcium. Its aqueous solutions are likewise decomposed.
|
||
Its reactions with the metallic salts are similar to those of the
|
||
alkaline sulphides.
|
||
|
||
(36) H. M. S. asks: 1. Of what is the bronze preparation made and how
|
||
is it applied to clock fronts? A. Bronze powders are made of various
|
||
metallic alloys. The gold bronze is usually made of Dutch gold
|
||
(an alloy of copper and zinc) and of the bisulphide of tin (_aurum
|
||
musivum_). They are usually applied to metal work by means of an oil
|
||
size or japan varnish. 2. In what way can I remove the old bronze? A.
|
||
Wash first with a solution of washing soda (hot), clean and dry, and
|
||
then rub with a little benzole, alcohol, or ether.
|
||
|
||
(37) W. E. W. asks: 1. Of what mixture is the bright red paint usually
|
||
put upon axes made? A. It consists of fine vermilion ground with
|
||
1 part boiled oil and 2 parts turpentine. 2. Is more than one coat
|
||
applied? A. One coat will suffice. It is best applied with a fine
|
||
brush, when the metal is warm.
|
||
|
||
(38) C. M. B. asks: Is the odor emitted by the ailanthus tree
|
||
unwholesome? A. It is considered so by many, but we have no proof as
|
||
to the facts.
|
||
|
||
(39) L. S. & Co. ask: Is there anything known which would clean the
|
||
hands from paints and lacquers without the use of turpentine? A. A
|
||
little ammonia and benzine or naphtha, aided by a little sand, is
|
||
often used in stubborn cases; put plenty of good soap and warm water,
|
||
with a stiff brush or a small piece of pumicestone, will ordinarily
|
||
suffice.
|
||
|
||
(40) W. P. S., Jr., says: Can you give me a recipe for making _papier
|
||
maché_? A. _Papier maché_ is obtained from old paper and the like made
|
||
into a pulp by grinding with milk of lime or lime water, and a little
|
||
gum dextrin or starch. This pulp is then pressed into form, coated
|
||
with linseed oil, baked at a high temperature, and finally varnished.
|
||
The pulp is sometimes mixed with clay (kaolin), chalk, etc.; and other
|
||
kinds are made of a paste of pulp and recently slaked lime. This is
|
||
used for ornamenting wood, etc.
|
||
|
||
(41) M. P. B. says, in reply to a correspondent who asked how to
|
||
prevent his water filter from getting choked up: Fit in the filter,
|
||
on the top of the charcoal, a piece of board having in the center a
|
||
circular hole from two to four inches in diameter, according to the
|
||
size of the filter; force in this a sponge so tightly that all the
|
||
water has to pass through it first, but not so as to prevent its free
|
||
passage. This sponge will absorb readily the gross impurities of the
|
||
water, and can easily be taken out and cleaned once or twice a week.
|
||
|
||
(42) A. C. S. asks: 1. Is there any reason why lightning rod points
|
||
should always be bright, if the points are kept sufficiently sharp? A.
|
||
It makes no difference if the points are not bright. 2. If lightning
|
||
rods put up in the ordinary way above the roof terminate in the eaves'
|
||
spouting of the house, and said spouting had good ground connections,
|
||
would this not be equal to the best lightning rod, and thereby save
|
||
many feet of rod and many dollars of expense? A. The arrangement you
|
||
suggest would be good. Make a thoroughly good ground connection with
|
||
leaders, have all joints well soldered, and you may dispense with the
|
||
rod as you propose.
|
||
|
||
(43) J. A. W. says: Having occasion to do some copper plating some
|
||
time ago, I dissolved sulphate of copper in water in a glass jar. I
|
||
then poured it off into my battery, and there was some left in the
|
||
jar. I threw a small piece of iron into it and left it for some days.
|
||
I then took it out; and to my surprise, I found that it had been
|
||
perfectly plated with copper. Please let me know the cause? A. The
|
||
reaction you note is taken advantage of to cheaply copper plate small
|
||
articles of cast iron. See answer to J. O. M., p. 347, vol. 36. In the
|
||
presence of water, the reaction is as follows:
|
||
|
||
CuSO_{4} + Fe = FeSO_{4} + Cu.
|
||
|
||
Sulphate of copper. Iron. Sulphate of iron. Copper.
|
||
|
||
As the iron is a more positive metal than copper, it displaced the
|
||
latter in combination with acids, the remaining portions of the iron
|
||
becoming coated with the precipitated copper.
|
||
|
||
(44) A. G. asks: Is the silver, for a reflecting telescope, put on the
|
||
back of the glass the same as on looking glasses? A. No. Only one
|
||
side of the glass is ground and polished to the shape required. The
|
||
silvering is done on this side; and then, with the softest buckskin
|
||
and the finest rouge, the surface of the silver is polished for the
|
||
reflecting surface. In cities where gas is used, it will not retain
|
||
its brilliancy very long; then it requires to be cleaned with nitric
|
||
acid and resilvered, which is only the work of a few hours when a
|
||
person has become accustomed to it.
|
||
|
||
(45) A. L. B. says: 1. I understand that, in modern chemistry, the
|
||
acids and alkalies are the two extremes of a class of substances
|
||
called hydrates, the only difference being the radical. In the
|
||
reaction of nitric acid, HO NO_{2} or HNO_{3} on potassic hydrate, KOH
|
||
is KO NO_{2} or KNO_{3}, and H_{2}O. Which molecule loses the oxygen
|
||
atom, and why should one part with it more than the other?
|
||
|
||
A. HNO_{3} + KOH = KNO_{3} + H_{2}O
|
||
Nitric acid potassic potassic water
|
||
hydrate nitrate
|
||
|
||
In this reaction the potassium is considered, by virtue of its greater
|
||
affinity, as replacing the hydrogen atom in the hydric nitrate; the
|
||
hydrogen in turn satisfying the OH group to form water. These hydrates
|
||
are similar only in point of constitution. Their chemical deportments
|
||
are widely different. 2. What are oxides in modern chemistry? A. The
|
||
bodies formed by the direct combination of oxygen with the elementary
|
||
bodies are called oxides. With water some of these oxides form
|
||
hydrates, as
|
||
|
||
K_{2}O + H_{2}O = 2(KHO)
|
||
potassium water potassic
|
||
oxide hydrate
|
||
|
||
(46) J. R. M. asks: To have a circular saw run well, should the
|
||
mandrel have a little end play if it is desired to relieve the saw
|
||
and guides of strain? A. If the saw is not true or the carriage runs
|
||
crooked, end play of the mandrel to the extent of the deviations will
|
||
relieve the strain upon the saw. But if the carriage runs true and the
|
||
saw true, the mandrel should have no end play.
|
||
|
||
MINERALS, etc.--Specimens have been received from the following
|
||
correspondents, and examined, with the result stated:
|
||
|
||
M. S. M.--It is a quartz crystal, the opposite sides of which
|
||
have been ground flat, probably by artificial means.--F. B.--It is
|
||
graphite.
|
||
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
COMMUNICATIONS RECEIVED.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Editor of the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN acknowledges, with much
|
||
pleasure, the receipt of original papers and contributions upon the
|
||
following subjects:
|
||
|
||
On a Battery and Electric Clock. By J. E. W.
|
||
|
||
On Anti-Water Drinking. By C. P. W.
|
||
|
||
On Snakes Catching Fish. By C. R. G.
|
||
|
||
On Utilization of Sewage. By Dr. H. D. T.
|
||
|
||
On Aerial Navigation. By C. W.
|
||
|
||
On the Ash-Colored Salamander. By C. F. S.
|
||
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
HINTS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Correspondents whose inquiries fail to appear should repeat them.
|
||
If not then published, they may conclude that, for good reasons,
|
||
the Editor declines them. The address of the writer should always be
|
||
given.
|
||
|
||
Inquiries relating to patents, or to the patentability of inventions,
|
||
assignments, etc., will not be published here. All such questions,
|
||
when initials only are given, are thrown into the waste basket, as it
|
||
would fill half of our paper to print them all; but we generally take
|
||
pleasure in answering briefly by mail, if the writer's address is
|
||
given.
|
||
|
||
Hundreds of inquiries analogous to the following are sent: "Who
|
||
makes machinery suitable for making flour barrels? Whose is the best
|
||
theodolite? Who sells steam whistles? Whose is the cheapest silk,
|
||
suitable for balloons? Who makes the best engraving machine for
|
||
transferring designs to copper?" All such personal inquiries
|
||
are printed, as will be observed, in the column of "Business and
|
||
Personal," which is specially set apart for that purpose, subject to
|
||
the charge mentioned at the head of that column. Almost any desired
|
||
information can in this way be expeditiously obtained.
|
||
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
OFFICIAL.
|
||
|
||
INDEX OF INVENTIONS
|
||
|
||
FOR WHICH
|
||
|
||
LETTERS PATENT OF THE UNITED STATES WERE GRANTED IN THE WEEK ENDING
|
||
|
||
June 5, 1877,
|
||
|
||
AND EACH BEARING THAT DATE.
|
||
|
||
[Those marked (r) are reissued patents.]
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
A complete copy of any patent in the annexed list, including both the
|
||
specifications and drawings, will be furnished from this office for
|
||
one dollar. In ordering, please state the number and date of the
|
||
patent desired and remit to Munn & Co., 37 Park Row, New York city.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Air, cooling, C. Pfanne 191,710
|
||
Apple parers, etc., W. M. Griscom 191,669,191,670
|
||
Ash sifter, G. W. & L. Demond 191,520
|
||
Bag holder. E. Woods 191,741
|
||
Baking pan, L. B. Foss 191,578
|
||
Baking pan, J. H. Pitts 191,548
|
||
Barrel cover, McClellan & McBride 191,699
|
||
Barrel head, G. M. Breinig 191,644
|
||
Bedstead, wardrobe, S. S. Burr 191,651
|
||
Bee hive, T. A. Atkinson 191,635
|
||
Bee hive, H. F. Poggenpohl 191,612
|
||
Bee hive, Sperry & Chandler 191,620
|
||
Bench dog, W. Lyle 191,693
|
||
Bit stock, J. T. Matthews 191,540
|
||
Blacksmith's tongs, J. Van Matre 191,734
|
||
Boiler furnace, etc., J. E. Crowell 191,518
|
||
Bottle stopper, C. De Quillfeldt (r) 7,722
|
||
Bottles, etc., sealing, C. L. Darby 191,519
|
||
Bottling machine, W. H. Kelly 191,596
|
||
Bracket, J. B. Sargent 191,718
|
||
Breech loading fire arm, V. Bovy 191,563
|
||
Breech loading fire arm, J. Schudt 191,721
|
||
Bridge, E. S. Sherman 191,552
|
||
Bung cutter, R. & G. N. Crichton 191,658
|
||
Button, clasp, L. B. Colin 191,657
|
||
Button fastening, A. Brookmann 191,649
|
||
Calender and washing list, J. C. Coombs 191,517
|
||
Car brake, E. S. Jones 191,594
|
||
Car coupling, W. Duesler 191,522
|
||
Car lavatory, C. E. Lucas 191,691
|
||
Carriage perch stay, J. R. McGuire 191,700
|
||
Chair convertible, J. P. True 191,733
|
||
Chair, folding, B. F. Little 191,689
|
||
Chicken coop, Sullivan & Retallic 191,621
|
||
Chicken coop, R. L, & N. J. Todd 191,556
|
||
Chimney draft regulator, W. H. Sears 191,722
|
||
Chisel, mortising, J. T. Bowen 191,643
|
||
Churn, T. J. Parrish 191,708
|
||
Churn, reciprocating, H. C. Sperry 191,726
|
||
Churn, rotary, A. J. Borland 191,562
|
||
Churn, rotary, Hatton & Record 191,676
|
||
Churn, rotary, J. G. Wallace 191,736
|
||
Clasp hook, spring, J. W. Knause 191,686
|
||
Clocks, adjusting position of, W. F. Wuterich 191,630
|
||
Coal and ore washer, J. M. Bailey 191,511
|
||
Corn dropper, J. P. Simmons 191,723
|
||
Corset skirt supporter, T. F. Hamilton 191,672
|
||
Cotton scraper, etc., M. Roby 191,613
|
||
Cultivator, W. E. Dewey 191,660
|
||
Cultivator, A. S. McDermott 191,606
|
||
Cupboard, W. H. Sallada 191,549
|
||
Curry comb, Bennett & Moody 191,559
|
||
Curry comb, P. Miller 191,608
|
||
Desk, school, C. H. Presbrey 191,713
|
||
Drawing instrument, J. R. Peel 191,611
|
||
Drill hoe, E. F. Pryor 191,714
|
||
Easel, T. L. Fisher 191,577
|
||
Easel, F. S. Frost 191,579
|
||
Eccentric, reversible, Lafayette & Strong 191,602
|
||
Elevator, etc., telescopic, W. R. Comings 191,516
|
||
Elliptic spring, N. J. Tilghman 191,731
|
||
Engine frame, S. W. Putnam 191,716
|
||
Engine exhaust, C. T. Parry 191,545
|
||
Engine valve motion, H. Haering 191,583
|
||
Feed rack, W. H. Howard 191,590
|
||
Feed water heater, N. W. Kirby 191,597
|
||
Fence, E. H. Perry 191,547
|
||
Fences, R. F. Ward 191,626, 191,627
|
||
Fence cap, metallic, J. D. W. Lauckhardt 191,603
|
||
Finger guard, K. A. Wynne 191,742
|
||
Fire escape, L. Henkle 191,677
|
||
Fire front, G. W. Purcel 191,715
|
||
Fire kindler, J. G. Distler 191,572
|
||
Fireproof column, Drake & Wight 191,662
|
||
Flour bin and sifter, F. M. Mahan 191,694
|
||
Fluting and polishing, C. Johnson 191,684
|
||
Fluting machine, Keller & Olmesdahl 191,595
|
||
Fly trap, Carroll & Lamb 191,652
|
||
Fountain, portable, W. H. Zinn 191,557
|
||
Fruit crate, G. Willard 191,739
|
||
Fuel, pressing, stalks, etc., for, Davis & Fisk 191,571
|
||
Fulling mill, J. Hunter 191,592
|
||
Furnace bottom construction, P. D. Nicols 191,543
|
||
Furnaces, oxygen, blast, C. Hornbostel 191,530
|
||
Gage cock, boiler, D. T. Ellis 191,663
|
||
Gas apparatus, portable, D. H. Irland 191,531
|
||
Gate, B. R. Baker 191,637
|
||
Gate, J. T. Guy 191,671
|
||
Gearing, oscillating, N. P. Otis 191,705
|
||
Glassware, making, C. L. Knecht 191,534
|
||
Grate, J. H. Mearns 191,702
|
||
Griddle, H. C. Milligan 191,703
|
||
Gutter holder, M. Schmitt 191,616
|
||
Hame attachment, J. Hudson 191,591
|
||
Harness saddle tree, W. L. Frizzell 191,525
|
||
Harrow, H. I. Lund 191,604
|
||
Harvester, Philleo & Cox 191,711
|
||
Harvester corn, B. Osgood 191,610
|
||
Harvester finger bar, H. L. Hopkins 191,678
|
||
Harvester rake, R. Emerson 191,664
|
||
Harvester rake, R. D. Warner 191,743
|
||
Harvester reels, H. A. Adams 191,631, 191,632
|
||
Harvester cutter, Haskin & Reigart 191,675
|
||
Hats, pressing, R. Kent 191,533
|
||
Hatter's measure, J. A. Harrington 191,674
|
||
Hay derrick, etc., R. N. B. Kirkham 191,598
|
||
Hay elevator, E. L. Church 191,568
|
||
Hinge and door, safe, P. F. King 191,680
|
||
Hog catcher, J. H. Eames 191,575
|
||
Hoisting machine, H. J. Reedy 191,717
|
||
Hoisting machine, G. H. Reynolds (r) 7,727
|
||
Hoisting machine, F. G. Hesse 191,529
|
||
Holdback, J. W. Hight 191,589
|
||
Honey box, Johnson & Keeley 191,593
|
||
Hoopskirt spring, etc., A. Benjamin 191,641
|
||
Hydrocarbon injector, H. E. Parson 191,546
|
||
Hydrocarbons, extracting, W. Adamson 191,623
|
||
Ice cream freezer, J. Solter 191,725
|
||
Ice cutting machine, C. Chadwick 191,515
|
||
Ice house, E. Schandein 191,719
|
||
Ice machine, A. T. Ballantine 191,638
|
||
Indicator for bellows, J. E. Treat 191,624
|
||
Iron and steel cementation, J. W. Hoxie. 191,681
|
||
Iron from cold short pig, etc., C. C. McCarty 191,698
|
||
Jar cover, E. Meier 191,541
|
||
Jewelry, plated, English & Covell 191,665
|
||
Keyhole guard, C. H. Covell (r) 7,720
|
||
Label holder, J. E. Sweetland 191,555
|
||
Lathe tool, E. F. Beugler 191,560
|
||
Lathes, truing work in, A. Hatch 191,586
|
||
Lifting jack, T. Weathers 191,737
|
||
Lime kiln, M. Callan 191,566
|
||
Lithographic press, C. C. Maurice 191,696
|
||
Locomotive light, A. Dressell 191,574
|
||
Loom take-up, J. Lyall 191,692
|
||
Loom harness cording, L. J. Knowles 191,600
|
||
Lubricator, C. H. Parshall 191,707
|
||
Mandrel, expanding, Amann & Harker 191,634
|
||
Manure drill, A. C. Hurley 191,682
|
||
Marine ram, N. H. Borgfeldt 191,514
|
||
Match safe, J. A. Field 191,576
|
||
Medicine case, J. C. Millard 191,607
|
||
Milk cooler, J. Bissonett 191,513
|
||
Millstone dress, R. S. Williams 191,740
|
||
Mineral wool, treating, A. D. Elbers 191,524
|
||
Mirror, adjustable, S. R. Scottron 191,720
|
||
Motion, converting, C. Chadwick 191,654, 191,655
|
||
Needle, knitting, etc., S. Peberdy 191,709
|
||
Oil can, D. Bennett 191,642
|
||
Oil well rope socket, H. Baddock (r) 7,719
|
||
Ore, reducing nickel, W. B. Tatro 191,728
|
||
Organ swell, reed, Kelly & Hebard 191,532
|
||
Paper barrels, making, E. M. Slayton 191,618
|
||
Paperbox, P. B. Pickens 191,712
|
||
Pianoforte bridge, J. Herald 191,587
|
||
Picture exhibitor, J. Hannerty 191,673
|
||
Plow, E. Haiman (r) 7,724
|
||
Plow, L. F. W. Liles 191,688
|
||
Plow clevis, C. O. Wilder 191,629
|
||
Plow colter, C. R. Thompson 191,622
|
||
Plow, sulky, A. A. Fowler 191,677
|
||
Plow, sulky, W. Henry 191,588
|
||
Preserving, bleaching fruit, etc., J. R. Dodge, Jr. 191,661
|
||
Pulleys, casting, G. G. Lobdell 191,690
|
||
Pulp, die for forming, D. Scrymgeour 191,551
|
||
Pump, rotary, Swan & Edgecomb 191,727
|
||
Pumps, making buckets for, J. N. Kaufholz 191,685
|
||
Pumping from casks, etc., W. F. Class 191,656
|
||
Quicksilver condenser, R. F. Knox 191,687
|
||
Railway signal, electric, J. P. Tirrell 191,732
|
||
Reamer, expanding, R. Blair 191,561
|
||
Refrigerator, Thompson & Parkhurst 191,729
|
||
Refuse burner, W. Glue 191,744
|
||
Ribbon block, G. N. Stanton 191,554
|
||
Ribbon, etc., storing, A. C. Mason 191,695
|
||
Ripping tool, G. D. Clark 191,569
|
||
Safe, fireproof, Saxe & Harding 191,550
|
||
Sandpapering machine, J. P. Beck 191,640
|
||
Sash fastener, S. G. Monce 191,609
|
||
Saw guide, J. B. Currier 191,659
|
||
Sawing machines, scroll, J. H. Plummer (r) 7,725, 7,726
|
||
Seed drill, H. L. Brown 191,565
|
||
Seed planter, check row, G. D. Haworth 191,528
|
||
Sewing machine, straw, S. C. Brown 191,647
|
||
Sewing machine trimmer, H. H. Hallett 191,584
|
||
Shingles, etc., bunching, P. Dexter (r) 7,723
|
||
Shoes, making, J. Tibbetts 191,730
|
||
Skate, J. A. Dodge 191,573
|
||
Skate, roller, J. Miner 191,542
|
||
Skylight bar, J. W. Atkinson 191,636
|
||
Spinning, roll support. F. B. Hart 191,585
|
||
Spooling, stop motion, J. Wild 191,738
|
||
Spools, preventing unrolling tape, etc., A. C. Gould 191,581
|
||
Spoon blank, die, H. W. Bassett 191,639
|
||
Stamp, hand, L. Tilton 191,623
|
||
Stamp mill, G. Downing 191,521
|
||
Steamboat smoke stack, Rouze et al 191,614
|
||
Stop motion fork slide, J. McCaffrey, Jr. 191,697
|
||
Stove, J. Gladding, 3d 191,580
|
||
Stove, coal oil, M. H. Barnes 191,558
|
||
Stove, cooking, D. E. Paris 191,706
|
||
Stovepipe damper, A. Brightman 191,646
|
||
Stovepipe thimble, J. Carhartt 191,567
|
||
Stove, oil, cooking, Sherburne et al 191,553
|
||
Straw cutter, A. Vahldieck 191,625
|
||
Sugar, liquefying hard, O. H. Krause 191,535
|
||
Sugar liquor, collecting, A. A. Goubert 191,527
|
||
Sugar liquor, collecting, Matthiessen et al 191,537, 191,538
|
||
Sugar, washing raw, F. O. Matthiessen 191,539
|
||
Swing, J. J. Janezeck 191,683
|
||
Thill coupling, J. Kitzmiller 191,599
|
||
Tobacco, hoisting, C. H. Slaton 191,619
|
||
Tobacco pipe, N. T. Oberg 191,544
|
||
Tobacco plant planter, R. A. Knox 191,601
|
||
Top, spinning, T. McLaughlin 191,701
|
||
Tortoise-shell handle, C. W. Schaeffer 191,615
|
||
Towel rack, C. A. Brickley 191,564
|
||
Trap for balls, T. Wilkie 191,628
|
||
Tube well, T. J. Dean (r) 7,721
|
||
Type writer, D. H. Sherman 191,617
|
||
Upholstering tuft, R. H. Bryant 191,650
|
||
Valve tank, J. P. Duncan 191,523
|
||
Vegetable cutter, W. Chapin 191,653
|
||
Vehicle spring and axle, S. W. Ludlow 191,536
|
||
Ventilation, etc., W. H. Bennett 191,512
|
||
Wagon axle skein, H. L. Hinds 191,679
|
||
Wagon gearing, W. P. Brown 191,648
|
||
Wagons, skid attachment for, C. Crandall 191,570
|
||
Wardrobe hook, labeled, T. F. Breese 191,645
|
||
Wash boiler, T. Gunsalus 191,582
|
||
Water gauge, C. D. Smith 191,724
|
||
Water wheel, L. Good 191,668
|
||
Water wheel, I. Mallery 191,605
|
||
Weaving shuttle, duck, W. L. Gilbert 191,526
|
||
Wheelbarrow, E. W. Walker 191,735
|
||
Wood pressing machine, S. L. Nagle 191,704
|
||
Wrench, pipe, G. Fletcher 191,666
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
DESIGNS PATENTED,
|
||
|
||
|
||
10,030 to 10,032.--EMBROIDERY.--E. Crisand, New Haven, Conn.
|
||
10,033.--LOCK-CASE.--R. Flocke, Newark, N. J.
|
||
10,034.--BOTTLES.--J. H. Harrison, Davenport, Iowa.
|
||
10,035 to 10,037.--CARPET.--H. S. Kerr, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
||
10,038, 10,039.--CARPETS.--T. J. Stearns, Boston, Mass.
|
||
10,040.--MOULDING.--R. M. Merrill et al., Laconia, N. H.
|
||
10,041 to 10,044.--OIL CLOTH.--C. T. Meyer et al., Bergen, N. J.
|
||
10,045.--STUDS, ETC.--J. W. Miller et al., Newark, N. J.
|
||
10,046.--BOOK CASES.--J. W. Schuckers, New York city.
|
||
|
||
[A copy of any one of the above patents may be had by remitting one
|
||
dollar to MUNN & Co., 37 Park Row, New York city.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
ADVERTISEMENTS
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
Inside Page, each insertion 75 cents a line.
|
||
Back Page, each insertion $1.00 a line.
|
||
|
||
_Engravings may head advertisements at the same rate per line, by
|
||
measurement, as the letter press. Advertisements must be received
|
||
at publication office as early as Friday morning to appear in next
|
||
issue._
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE SCIENTIFIC GRAIN & MIDDLINGS MILL.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration]
|
||
|
||
12, 20, and 30 inch Mill Stones.
|
||
|
||
Sent on trial to responsible parties, and warranted the full equal of
|
||
any heavy mill built in the world. Send for our price list, as this
|
||
may not appear again.
|
||
|
||
A. W. STRAUB & CO., 1361 Ridge Avenue, Phila, Pa.
|
||
|
||
|
||
NO MORE SLIPPING BELTS. MY NEW Patent Pulley Cover will do double the
|
||
work before the belt will slip. Put on without disturbing shafting.
|
||
Agent wanted in every city. Circulars free.
|
||
|
||
JOHN W. SUTTON, 95 Liberty St., New York.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE NEW GERMAN PATENT LAW. Being the Full Text of the New Law for
|
||
Patents, passed July 1st, 1877, covering all the States of the German
|
||
Empire. Contained in SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT No. 80. Price 10
|
||
cents. To be had at this office and of all newsdealers.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PATENT COLD ROLLED SHAFTING
|
||
|
||
Price list mailed on application to JONES & LAUGHLINS,
|
||
Try Street, 2d and 3rd Avenues, Pittsburgh, Pa.
|
||
190 S. Canal Street, Chicago, Ill., and Milwaukie, Wis.
|
||
--> Stocks of this shafting in store and for sale by
|
||
FULLER, DANA, & FITZ, Boston, Mass.
|
||
GEO. PLACE & CO. 121 Chambers St., N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
EUREKA SAFETY POWER!
|
||
|
||
Practically IMPOSSIBLE TO EXPLODE.
|
||
Tested to 300 lbs. pressure per square inch.
|
||
2-Horse Power, $150, 3 to 4 H.P., $250.
|
||
Also, Stationary Engines and boilers, and
|
||
SPARK ARRESTING PORTABLE ENGINES
|
||
for plantation use. Send for our circular.
|
||
Discount to the trade.
|
||
|
||
B. W. PAYNE & SONS,
|
||
Corning, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
SIZING OF COTTON GOODS. Read before the Society of Arts by
|
||
W. Thompson, F.R.S. A most Full and Clear Description of the process,
|
||
embracing: An account of the process of Weaving, explaining the object
|
||
and utility of Size. A table of Sizing Mixtures, in which are
|
||
enumerated the Substances used: 1, for giving Adhesive properties to
|
||
Size; 2, to give Weight and Body to the Yarn; 3, for Softening the
|
||
Size or Yarn; and 4, for Preserving the Size from Mildew and
|
||
Decomposition. Tests for these Substances, and Directions for
|
||
Preparing, so as to obtain the results required. Proportions of Sizing.
|
||
Use of Flour in Size. Weighting Materials, China Clay and its
|
||
substitutes. "Softenings," and Oils for Softening. East Winds and
|
||
their effect. Glycerine, Grape Sugar, Mildew Preventives, and Tape
|
||
Sizing. "Slashing," Packing, Damaged Goods, etc. Contained in
|
||
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT No. 80. Price 10 cents. For sale at this
|
||
office and of all newsdealers.
|
||
|
||
|
||
CELEBRATED FOOT LATHES.
|
||
|
||
Foot Power Back-geared Screw Lathes, Small Hand and Power Planers for
|
||
Metal, Small Gear Cutters, Slide-rests, Ball Machine for Lathes, Foot
|
||
Scroll Saws, light and heavy Foot Circular Saws. Just the articles for
|
||
Amateurs or Artisans. Highly recommended.
|
||
|
||
Send for illustrated Catalogues.
|
||
|
||
N. H. BALDWIN, Laconia, N. H.
|
||
|
||
|
||
$66 a Week in your own town. Terms and $5 outfit free.
|
||
H. HALLETT & CO., Portland Maine.
|
||
|
||
|
||
SAVE OIL. USE TOMLINSON'S
|
||
Car Axle Box. Cars run for 3 cents for a thousand miles.
|
||
See _Car Builder_ for June, 1877. Address
|
||
|
||
J. B. TOMLINSON, 80 White St., N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
DAYTON CAM PUMP
|
||
|
||
[Illustration]
|
||
|
||
THE ONLY PUMP IN THE MARKET DESIGNED AND CONSTRUCTED
|
||
ESPECIALLY FOR BOILER FEEDING.
|
||
|
||
Are Pumping water at 268° F. No Dead Centers.
|
||
The Steam Valve is a plain Slide Valve, identical to
|
||
the slide valve of a Steam Engine, but derives its
|
||
motion from a cam. Speed can be regulated to suit
|
||
evaporation.
|
||
|
||
Pumping Returns from Steam Heating Apparatus a specialty.
|
||
|
||
--> Send for Circular.
|
||
|
||
Smith, Vaile & Co.,
|
||
|
||
DAYTON, OHIO.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHAT 25 CENTS WILL BUY!
|
||
|
||
THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN REFERENCE BOOK.
|
||
|
||
PRICE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS.
|
||
|
||
This is a most useful Little bound book of 150 pages, comprising,
|
||
probably, the most extensive variety of standard, practical, condensed
|
||
information ever furnished to the public for so small a price.
|
||
Contents:
|
||
|
||
1. THE LAST CENSUS OF THE UNITED STATES (1870), by States, Territories
|
||
and Counties. IN FULL, showing also the area in square miles of each
|
||
State and Territory.
|
||
|
||
2. TABLE OF OCCUPATIONS.--Showing the occupations of the people of the
|
||
United States, and the number of persons engaged in each occupation.
|
||
Compiled from the last census.
|
||
|
||
3. TABLE OF CITIES, having over 10,000 Inhabitants. Compiled from the
|
||
last census.
|
||
|
||
4. MAP OF THE UNITED STATES. Miniature outline.
|
||
|
||
5. THE UNITED STATES PATENT LAWS (full text).--Principal Official Rules
|
||
for Procedure; Directions How to Obtain Patents, Costs, etc.; Forms for
|
||
Patents and Caveats: How to Introduce and Sell Inventions; Forms for
|
||
Assignments; Licenses; State, Town, County, and Shop Rights; General
|
||
Principles applicable to Infringements; Synopsis of the Patent Laws of
|
||
Foreign Countries; Rights of Employers and Employes in respect to
|
||
Inventions.
|
||
|
||
6. THE ORNAMENTAL DESIGN PATENT LAW (full text).--Costs and Procedure
|
||
for securing Design Patents for Ornamental Productions such as Designs
|
||
for Textile Fabrics, Patterns for Wood and Metal Work, New Shapes and
|
||
Configurations of any article of Manufacture, Prints, Pictures, and
|
||
Ornaments, to be printed, woven, stamped, cast, or otherwise applied
|
||
upon machinery, tools, goods, fabrics, manufactures.
|
||
|
||
7. THE UNITED STATES TRADE-MARK LAW (full text).--With Directions,
|
||
Proceedings and Expenses for the Registration of Trade-Marks of every
|
||
description.
|
||
|
||
8. THE LABEL COPYRIGHT LAW (full text).--With Directions, Proceedings
|
||
and Cost of Registering Labels for Goods. Medicines, and Merchandise
|
||
of all kinds.
|
||
|
||
9. THE GENERAL COPYRIGHT LAW OF THE UNITED STATES (full text).--With
|
||
Directions and Costs for Securing Copyrights by Authors for Books,
|
||
Pamphlets, Charts, Photographs, Pictures, and Works of Art.
|
||
|
||
10. THE PRINCIPAL MECHANICAL MOVEMENTS.--Described and illustrated
|
||
by 150 small diagrams, of great value to Inventors and Designers
|
||
of Mechanism.
|
||
|
||
11. THE STEAM ENGINE.--With engraving, showing all the parts, names,
|
||
etc., and a brief history of the Invention and Progress of Steam Power.
|
||
|
||
12. GEOMETRY, as Applied to Practical Purposes. With illustrations.
|
||
|
||
13. HORSE POWER.--Simple Rules for Calculating the Horse-Power of
|
||
Steam Engines and Streams of Water.
|
||
|
||
14. KNOTS.--Presenting engravings of 48 different kinds of Rope Knots,
|
||
with explanations as to tying.
|
||
|
||
15. TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.--Troy, Apothecaries', Avoirdupois,
|
||
French, Weights; U. S. Standard; Dry Measure; Land Measure; Cubic
|
||
Measure; Liquid Measure; French Square Measure; French Cubic, or Solid
|
||
Measure; Measuring Land by Weight; Engraving of a section of English
|
||
and French rule, of equal length.
|
||
|
||
16. VALUABLE TABLES: (1) Velocity and Force of the Wind. (2) Specific
|
||
Gravity and Weight, per Cubic foot and Cubic inch, of the principal
|
||
substances used in the Arts (3) Heat-conducting Power of various
|
||
Metals and other Solids and Liquids. (4) Table of the Mineral
|
||
Constituents absorbed or removed from the Soil, per acre, by
|
||
different crops. (5) Table of Steam Pressures and Temperatures.
|
||
(6) Table of the Effects of Heat upon various bodies, melting-points,
|
||
etc.
|
||
|
||
17. MEDALLION PORTRAITS OF DISTINGUISHED AMERICAN INVENTORS, with
|
||
biography in brief and engravings of their inventions, viz.: Franklin,
|
||
Fulton, Whitney, Wood, McCormick, Blanchard, Winans, Morse, Goodyear,
|
||
Howe, Lyle, Eads.
|
||
|
||
18. ENGRAVINGS of Capitol, Washington, with brief history, dimensions,
|
||
cost, etc.; United States Patent Office, interior and exterior views,
|
||
dimensions, and description; Scientific American Buildings, N. Y. and
|
||
Washington.
|
||
|
||
19. MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION.-Force of Expansion by Heat; Small
|
||
Steam-boats, proper dimensions of Engines, Boilers, Propellers. Boats;
|
||
Incubation, Temperature of; To Make Tracing Paper; Constituents of
|
||
various substances; Friction, how produced, and Rules for Calculation;
|
||
Specific Heat Explained; Specific Gravity of Liquids, Solids, Air, and
|
||
Gases; Gunpowder--Pressure, Heat, and Horse-Power of; Copying Ink, to
|
||
Make; Heat, its mechanical equivalent explained; Molecules of Matter,
|
||
size and motion explained; Lightning and Lightning Rods--valuable
|
||
information; Value of Drainage Explained; Amount of Power at present
|
||
yielded from Coal by best Engines; Sound--its velocity and action;
|
||
Liquid Glues, Recipes; Value of Brains; Properties of Charcoal; Height
|
||
of Waves; Speed of Electric Spark, etc.; Plain Directions, with
|
||
Engravings, showing how any person can make Electro-Magnets and
|
||
Electric Batteries at a cost of a few cents; Valuable Recipes.
|
||
|
||
_The Scientific American Reference Book,_ price only 25 cents, may be
|
||
had of News Agents in all parts of the country, and of the undersigned.
|
||
Sent by mail on receipt of the price.
|
||
|
||
Address MUNN & CO., 37 Park Row, New York,
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE SECOND GREAT SALE
|
||
|
||
OF PATENTS AT
|
||
|
||
AUCTION
|
||
|
||
Will take place at the Auction Rooms of GEO. W. KEELER, 53 Liberty St.,
|
||
N. Y., on July 16, at 12 o'clock. Models now on exhibition.
|
||
Send for Catalogue.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WOOD & LIGHT MACHINE CO. WORCESTER, Mass.
|
||
Manufacture of all kinds of IRON-WORKING MANCHINERY, including many
|
||
novelties. Shafting, Pulleys, &c.
|
||
|
||
Send for Circulars.
|
||
|
||
[Illustration]
|
||
|
||
|
||
$95 A month and expenses. SALESMAN WANTED to sell to DEALERS.
|
||
SAMPLES FREE. CANDY & NOVELTIES
|
||
|
||
LETTERS must have enclosed return postage.
|
||
H. SMITH & CO., CONFECTIONERS, Cincinnati, O.
|
||
|
||
|
||
POND'S TOOLS
|
||
ENGINE LATHES, PLANERS, DRILLS, &c.
|
||
|
||
Send for Catalogue. DAVID W. POND, Successor to
|
||
LUCIUS W. POND. WORCESTER, MASS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
STEAM PUMPS.
|
||
|
||
FIRST PRIZES, CENTENNIAL, PHILA., VIENNA,
|
||
PARIS, NEW YORK, BALTIMORE, BOSTON.
|
||
|
||
Send for circular of recent patented improvements,
|
||
|
||
THE NORWALK IRON WORKS CO.,
|
||
South Norwalk, Conn.
|
||
|
||
Prices Reduced.
|
||
|
||
|
||
N. F. BURNHAM'S 1874 WATER WHEEL
|
||
Is declared the "STANDARD TURBINE," by OVER 600 persons
|
||
who bought and use them with PART and FULL GATE open.
|
||
Pamphlets Free.
|
||
N. F. BURNHAM, YORK, PA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
OTIS' SAFETY HOISTING MACHINERY
|
||
OTIS BROS. & CO., No. 348 Broadway, New York.
|
||
|
||
|
||
$55 TO $77 a week to Agents. $10 _Outfit Free_.
|
||
P. O. VICKERY, Augusta Maine.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WE ENAMEL
|
||
in FINE JET BLACK every variety Of turned woodwork
|
||
parts of machinery castings tin-ware and other metal
|
||
work ENAMELED JET GOODS, in wood or metal, made to order
|
||
AMERICAN ENAMEL CO. 17 WARREN ST. PROVIDENCE. R. I.
|
||
|
||
|
||
50 MIXED CARDS, with name, l0c. and stamp.
|
||
Agent's Outfit, l0c. COE & CO., Bristol, Ct.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: PHOTO ENGRAVING CO.
|
||
|
||
MOSS'S PROCESS
|
||
67, Park Place.]
|
||
NEW YORK
|
||
|
||
L. SMITH HOBART. President.
|
||
J. C. MOSS, Superintendent.
|
||
|
||
TYPE-METAL RELIEF PLATES.
|
||
|
||
A SUPERIOR SUBSTITUTE FOR WOOD-CUTS AT MUCH LOWER PRICES.
|
||
|
||
|
||
These plates are engraved almost entirely by photo-chemical means, thus
|
||
avoiding the old, slow and tedious method of engraving on wooden blocks,
|
||
where the workman is compelled to engrave each line separately by
|
||
cutting away the wood around it, often spending many days upon a plate
|
||
a few inches square.
|
||
|
||
In appearance our relief plates are the same as regular stereotypes,
|
||
being mounted type high on blocks ready to be set up and printed from,
|
||
with type, on any ordinary press.
|
||
|
||
They can be used directly and will wear as long as any type-metal
|
||
plates, but if a great number of impressions are wanted, duplicate
|
||
|
||
ELECTROTYPES AND STEREOTYPES
|
||
|
||
can be made from them the same as from wood-cuts.
|
||
|
||
They have a printing surface as smooth as glass, and the lines are
|
||
engraved deeper than they are in hand-cut plates. Notwithstanding the
|
||
_low prices_ at which they can be furnished, they are very much
|
||
superior to wood-cuts, and in some classes of work are rapidly
|
||
taking the place of lithography.
|
||
|
||
REFERENCES.
|
||
|
||
Among those who manifest their satisfaction with our work, by
|
||
continued orders, we may mention:--D. Appleton & Co., Scribner & Co.,
|
||
Frank Leslie, A. D. F. Randolph & Co., G. W. Carleton & Co., The
|
||
American Tract Society, Robert Carter & Bros., Munn & Co., Pub.
|
||
"Iron Age," Pub. "Illustrated Weekly," Pub. "McGee's Illustrated
|
||
Weekly," and also a large part of the principal publishers and
|
||
manufacturers throughout the country.
|
||
|
||
COPY.
|
||
|
||
Almost all kinds of Prints or Engravings from Wood, Stone, Copper and
|
||
Steel may be reproduced directly. _The requisites are, clean, distinct
|
||
black lines or stipple work, on white or only slightly tinted paper.
|
||
All Photographs and Pencil Sketches must first be drawn in ink._ We
|
||
keep a corps of artists constantly employed, trained to do this work
|
||
in the best manner. We can make drawings from photographs or tin-types
|
||
taken in the usual way. They may be of any size, but should, of course,
|
||
show the object distinctly.
|
||
|
||
Drawings for our use, unless intended to be redrawn, should be on a
|
||
_smooth, white_ surface, in _perfectly black_ lines, and usually twice
|
||
the dimensions each way of the desired plate.
|
||
|
||
Copy for fac-similes of handwriting should be in _perfectly black ink_,
|
||
on _smooth white_ paper, written with a full pen, and without use of
|
||
blotting paper.
|
||
|
||
TIME.
|
||
|
||
While we can engrave a plate in a few hours that would occupy a
|
||
wood-engraver a month, and often do so, yet with the large amount of
|
||
work constantly on hand and promised, we cannot usually engage to fill
|
||
an order for a single plate in less than from three to six days;
|
||
larger orders will, of course, require longer time.
|
||
|
||
CHANGE OF SIZE.
|
||
|
||
In reproducing wood-cut prints, the size can often be considerably
|
||
reduced; but if the reduction is great, the lines become so fine and
|
||
close together that they will not print well. Coarse wood-cuts, such
|
||
as are generally used in Newspapers, may often be reduced to half
|
||
their linear dimensions, but _fine_ wood-cuts will admit of but little
|
||
reduction.
|
||
|
||
_Most_ steel plate prints and lithographs will not admit of any
|
||
reduction, and even when reproduced, the same size in relief, require
|
||
considerable care in printing.
|
||
|
||
All kinds of prints generally look bad when much enlarged, as the
|
||
lines become very coarse and ragged on the edges; though we have
|
||
sometimes made very effective cuts for posters and hand-bills in this
|
||
way.
|
||
|
||
In all cases of enlargement and reduction the relative proportions
|
||
remain the same.
|
||
|
||
It must not be forgotten, however, that by redrawing, prints of any
|
||
kind can be enlarged or reduced to any desired size.
|
||
|
||
PROOFS.
|
||
|
||
We will, whenever desired, furnish tin-type proofs of drawings made by
|
||
us, for examination and approval, or correction, before engraving.
|
||
|
||
A printed proof is sent with each plate when delivered, which may
|
||
always be equaled or surpassed in actual work with proper usage.
|
||
|
||
PRICES.
|
||
|
||
It is impossible to give a scale of prices by the square inch for
|
||
miscellaneous job-work, as sometimes a small cut two or three inches
|
||
square may require as much work as another one a foot square. We can,
|
||
however, give an average inch rate to newspaper publishers whose work
|
||
runs uniformly about the same from week to week, especially when they
|
||
furnish us with copy already prepared--such as prints and pen-and-ink
|
||
drawings.
|
||
|
||
In sending for estimates, be careful to send us the copy we are to
|
||
work from, with full specifications as to size and quality, and
|
||
remember that it is the same with engraving that it is with everything
|
||
else; the price will vary greatly with the quality of work ordered.
|
||
|
||
Never, directly or indirectly, ask us to give _you_ better prices than
|
||
we give our other customers, as we try to treat all alike.
|
||
|
||
The great advantage of our method of engraving enables us to give
|
||
better work at lower prices than can be given by any other method for
|
||
the greater part of such work as would be given to wood-engravers,
|
||
though in very small pieces of the poorer grades of work the advantage
|
||
is not so great, and in very coarse work such as is usually engraved
|
||
on mahogany and pine, our process gives us no advantage over the
|
||
wood-engraver.
|
||
|
||
To estimate properly upon any piece of work, we must understand just
|
||
what is wanted. We guarantee all our work to be executed in the style
|
||
agreed upon.
|
||
|
||
TERMS.
|
||
|
||
OUR TERMS are CASH ON DELIVERY, except by special agreement.
|
||
|
||
Orders from parties not known to us must be accompanied by an advance
|
||
of at least half the price, or satisfactory City reference.
|
||
|
||
Goods sent by Express will be C. O. D. Where plates are small they may
|
||
be sent by Mail upon receipt of price and postage. Remittances must be
|
||
by draft on New-York or P. O. money order, payable to the order of
|
||
Photo-Engraving Co., or by registered letter--_not by Checks on Local
|
||
Banks_.
|
||
|
||
We pledge ourselves to meet the reasonable demands of those who employ
|
||
us. If, in any case, we cannot do so, we will refund the money advanced.
|
||
|
||
_SEND STAMP FOR ILLUSTRATED CIRCULAR_.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WROUGHT IRON BEAMS & GIRDERS
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: WROUGHT IRON BEAMS & GIRDERS]
|
||
|
||
THE UNION IRON MILLS, Pittsburgh, Pa., Manufacturers of improved
|
||
wrought iron Beams and Girders (patented).
|
||
|
||
The great fall which has taken place in the prices of Iron, and
|
||
especially in Beams used in the construction of FIRE PROOF BUILDINGS,
|
||
induces us to call the special attention of Engineers, Architects, and
|
||
Builders to the undoubted advantages of now erecting Fire Proof
|
||
structures; and by reference to pages 52 & 54 of our Book of Sections--
|
||
which will be sent on application to those contemplating the erection
|
||
of fire proof buildings--THE COST CAN BE ACCURATELY CALCULATED, the
|
||
cost of Insurance avoided, and the serious losses and interruption to
|
||
business caused by fire; these and like considerations fully justify
|
||
any additional first cost. It is believed, that were owners fully
|
||
aware of the small difference which now exists between the use of Wood
|
||
and Iron, that in many cases the latter would be adopted.
|
||
|
||
We shall be pleased to furnish estimates for all the Beams complete,
|
||
for any specific structure, so that the difference in cost may at once
|
||
be ascertained. Address
|
||
|
||
CARNEGIE, BROS. & CO., Pittsburgh, Pa.
|
||
|
||
|
||
$5 TO $20 per day at home. Samples worth $5 free.
|
||
STINSON & CO., Portland, Me.
|
||
|
||
|
||
LIGHT GRAY IRON CASTINGS to order promptly.
|
||
Plain, Bronzed, or Galvanized.
|
||
|
||
We make a _specialty_ of light work.
|
||
|
||
LIVINGSTON & CO., Iron Founders, Pittsburgh, Pa.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE GEORGE PLACE MACHINERY AGENCY
|
||
|
||
Machinery of Every Description.
|
||
|
||
121 Chambers and 103 Reade Streets, New York.
|
||
|
||
|
||
SPARE THE CROTON AND SAVE THE COST.
|
||
|
||
DRIVEN OR TUBE WELLS furnished to large consumers of Croton and
|
||
Ridgewood Water. WM. D. ANDREWS & BRO., 414 Water St., N. Y. who
|
||
control the patent for Green's American Driven Well.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PATENT RIGHTS for Useful Inventions Wanted.
|
||
Address Box 1012, P.O., N. Y., with description and terms.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO ELECTRO-PLATERS. JEWELERS, AND WATCHMAKERS.
|
||
|
||
BATTERIES, CHEMICALS, AND MATERIALS, in sets or single,
|
||
with Books of instruction for Nickel, Gold, and Silver Plating.
|
||
|
||
THOMAS HALL, Manufacturing Electrician,
|
||
19 Bromfield Street, Boston, Mass.
|
||
Illustrated Catalogue sent free.
|
||
|
||
|
||
LATHES, PLANERS, SHAPERS, DRILLS, GEAR & BOLT CUTTERS, &c.
|
||
E. GOULD, Newark, N. J.
|
||
|
||
|
||
SELF-ACTING SASH-LOCK for Meeting Rails
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Sash-lock]
|
||
|
||
BURGLAR PROOF.
|
||
|
||
Can not be forced or tampered with in any way.
|
||
BEAUTIFUL DESIGN; PRACTICAL; SIMPLE.
|
||
United States, State, or County Rights for sale. Address
|
||
D. C. GOODRICH, Harrisburg, Pa.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration] THE TRADE ENGINE
|
||
|
||
Noiseless in operation-Perfect in workmanship--all light parts of
|
||
Cast Steel.
|
||
|
||
Every Engine indicated, and valve corrected to give the highest
|
||
attainable results.
|
||
|
||
Warranted superior to any semi-portable Engine in the market!
|
||
|
||
Send for Price List and Circular.
|
||
|
||
HERRMANN & HERCHEL--
|
||
RODE M'F'G Co.,
|
||
Dayton, Ohio,
|
||
|
||
|
||
WESSELL METAL, A PERFECT IMITATION
|
||
of gold in color, surface, etc., for manufacturers of
|
||
imitation jewelry, and other workers in fine yellow
|
||
metal. Wessell Manuf'g Co., No. 204 East 23d St., N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration]
|
||
|
||
YOU ask WHY we can sell First-Class 7 1-3 Octave Rosewood Pianos
|
||
for $290. Our answer is, that it costs less than $300 to make any $600
|
||
Piano sold through Agents, all of whom make 100 per ct. profit.
|
||
We have no Agents, but sell direct to Families at Factory price, and
|
||
warrant five years.
|
||
|
||
We send our Pianos everywhere for trial and require no payment unless
|
||
they are found satisfactory.
|
||
|
||
Send for our Illustrated Circular, which gives full particulars, and
|
||
contains the names of over 1500 Bankers, Merchants and Families that
|
||
are using our Pianos in every State of the Union.
|
||
|
||
Please state where you saw this notice. Address,
|
||
|
||
U. S. PIANO CO., 810 BROADWAY, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
$12 A DAY at home. Agents wanted. Outfit and terms free.
|
||
TRUE & CO., Augusta, Maine.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY,
|
||
|
||
Such as Woodworth Planing, Tongueing, and Grooving Machines, Daniel's
|
||
Planers, Richardson's Patent Improved Tenon Machines, Mortising,
|
||
Moulding, and Re-Saw Machines, and Wood-Working Machinery generally.
|
||
|
||
Manufactured by
|
||
WITHERBY, RUGG & RICHARDSON,
|
||
26 Salisbury Street, Worcester, Mass,
|
||
(Shop formerly occupied by R. BALL & CO.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
STEEL NAME STAMPS.
|
||
N. Y. STENCIL WORKS, 87 Nassau St., N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WANTED -- FOR MONCLOVA, State of Coahuila, Mexico, a man who knows how
|
||
to make Star Candles, without the use of Sulphuric Acid, capable to
|
||
put up and put in running order the necessary apparatus, superintend
|
||
the manufacturing process, and teach same to the parties interested.
|
||
|
||
Apply and state terms to
|
||
GOLDFRANK, FRANK & CO.,
|
||
San Antonio, Texas.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WE WANT SALESMEN on a regular salary of $85 a month and expenses to
|
||
sell our CIGARS to DEALERS. Samples FREE.
|
||
|
||
Send 3c. stamp to insure answer.
|
||
S. FOSTER & CO. Cincinnati, O.
|
||
|
||
|
||
EXTRAORDINARY, WONDERFUL, AND VALUABLE MEDICAL WORK.
|
||
|
||
With engravings; price, $1.
|
||
Contains, also, fifty original prescriptions for prevailing diseases,
|
||
each worth ten times the price of the book. Gold Medal has been
|
||
awarded the author. Descriptive circulars sent free. Address
|
||
|
||
Dr. W. H. PARKER,
|
||
No. 4 Bulfinch Street, Boston.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration]
|
||
|
||
$100.00 REWARD This MOUSTACHE or HEAVY BEARD produced on a smooth face
|
||
by the use of DYKES BEARD ELIXIR, without injury, or will forfeit
|
||
$100.00.
|
||
|
||
Price by mail in sealed package 25 cents, 3 packages only 50 cents.
|
||
|
||
A. L. SMITH & Co., Palatine, Ill., Sole Agents.
|
||
|
||
--> We caution the public against imitations.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE DRIVEN WELL.
|
||
Town and County privileges for making DRIVEN WELLS and selling Licenses
|
||
under the established AMERICAN DRIVEN WELL PATENT, leased by the year
|
||
to responsible parties, by
|
||
|
||
WM. D. ANDREWS & BRO.,
|
||
NEW YORK.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPORTANT FOR ALL CORPORATIONS AND MANF'G CONCERNS.--BUERK'S WATCHMAN'S
|
||
TIME DETECTOR, capable of accurately controlling the motion of a
|
||
watchman or patrolman at the different stations of his beat.
|
||
Send for circular.
|
||
|
||
J. E. BUERK, P.O. BOX 979, BOSTON, MASS
|
||
|
||
N. B.--The suit against Imhaeuser & Co., of New York, was decided in my
|
||
favor, June 10, 1874. Proceedings have been commenced against Imhaeuser
|
||
& Co. for selling, contrary to the order of the Court. Persons using
|
||
clocks infringing on my patent, will be dealt with according to law.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration]
|
||
25 per cent. Discount on Price List of SUPERIOR WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY
|
||
allowed for the present. Also for SMITH'S CHILLED-BEAM VISES;
|
||
effective, heavy, strong, durable, and economical.
|
||
|
||
For full particulars, address
|
||
|
||
H. B. SMITH,
|
||
Smithville, Burlington Co.,
|
||
N. J., U. S. A.
|
||
|
||
|
||
HINTS TO YOUNG MACHINE-TENDERS.
|
||
By an old Papermaker. Practical Instructions for the tending and care
|
||
of Papermaking Machinery.
|
||
|
||
Showing how to clean a Dandy; how to make good edges; to keep paper
|
||
from crushing and worming; to stop crimping; together with many
|
||
other valuable directions, hints, and suggestions, contained in
|
||
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT No. 79. Price 10 cents.
|
||
|
||
To be had at this office and of all newsdealers.
|
||
|
||
|
||
JOHN HOLLAND'S GOLD PENS
|
||
|
||
[Illustration]
|
||
|
||
Received the Centennial Medal from the Judges on Awards, for
|
||
"superior elasticity and general excellence." If not sold by your
|
||
Stationer, send for Illustrated Price-List to the
|
||
|
||
MANUFACTORY, 19 W. 4TH ST., CINCINNATI.
|
||
|
||
|
||
SECOND-HAND MACHINERY.
|
||
|
||
FOR SALE.
|
||
|
||
The Machinery in the works of the UTICA STEAM ENGINE CO., comprising
|
||
Large Face Plate Lathe, Engine Lathes, large and small,
|
||
20 ft. x 4 ft. Planer, Slotter, Shaper, Lauback Universal Drills,
|
||
Bolt Cutter, Fans, Upright Drills, Cranes, Dudgeon Steam Hammer,
|
||
Steam Fire Pump, Hose, Platform Scales, Pulleys, one 40 H. P.
|
||
Locomotive Boiler, two 50 H. P., and one 25 H. P. Tubular Boilers,
|
||
one 36 in. by 16 ft. Cylinder Boiler, etc., etc.
|
||
|
||
For Catalogue and Price List, address
|
||
|
||
JAMES F. MANN, UTICA, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE PATENT PARAGON LAMP STOVE
|
||
|
||
Can be used with any ordinary Kerosene Lamp. Every family wants one.
|
||
PRICE 35 CTS.; BY MAIL 45 CTS. _One agent made $21 in 3 days._
|
||
Send for terms.
|
||
|
||
ABOTT M'F'G CO.,
|
||
101 BEEKMAN STREET, NEW YORK.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IRON CASTINGS to order, _smooth_ and _exact to pattern_,
|
||
of _Soft Tough Iron_, at
|
||
|
||
T. Shriver & Co.'s Foundry,
|
||
333 East 56th St., N. Y.
|
||
|
||
Prices very low. _Favorable terms_ made on Castings in regular
|
||
supply.
|
||
|
||
|
||
ADVERTISEMENTS
|
||
|
||
|
||
Inside Page, each insertion - - - 75 cents a line.
|
||
Back Page, each insertion - - - $1.00 a line.
|
||
|
||
_Engravings may head advertisements at the same rate per line, by
|
||
measurement, as the letter press. Advertisements must be received at
|
||
publication office as early as Friday morning to appear in next issue._
|
||
|
||
|
||
COTTON MILLS AND MACHINE SHOPS
|
||
|
||
Can make great savings by using the Allen Governor. Its operation is
|
||
unequalled and wonderful. Nearly all machinists once using these
|
||
Governors become agents for their sale. They are simple in construction,
|
||
not liable to get out of order, permit the speed of the engine to be
|
||
changed at will, are neat in appearance, noiseless, very durable, save
|
||
the engineer's time, save fuel, and are at once the most powerful and
|
||
most sensitive Governors ever made.
|
||
|
||
Russell (Cotton) Mills, Plymouth, Mass., March 20, 1876.
|
||
|
||
S. B. ALLEN: Your Governor has been attached to our Corliss engine over
|
||
one year, and has given perfect satisfaction. The engine was never
|
||
governed until yours was attached, although we have tried three of the
|
||
best kind of Governors known. When steam or work varied, the speed
|
||
would vary, and we could only run our looms an average of 103 picks per
|
||
minute. Since using your Governor, and solely on account of the perfect
|
||
steadiness with which it holds the engine and machinery, we are enabled
|
||
to run the looms regularly 112 picks per minute, MAKING AN ACTUAL
|
||
INCREASE OF OUR ENTIRE PRODUCTION OF OVER EIGHT PER CENT. Your Governor
|
||
saves coal, saves waste, saves care and labor of the engineer, and
|
||
produces more goods and better goods. I have timed the engine a hundred
|
||
times, and never found it to vary in the least. It is the honest truth
|
||
that the Allen Governor holds it exactly on speed.
|
||
|
||
Address L. C. KING, Superintendent.
|
||
|
||
GERARD B. ALLEN & CO., St. Louis.
|
||
FRASER & CHALMERS, Chicago.
|
||
NEW ORLEANS MACHINERY DEPOT, New Orleans.
|
||
PACIFIC IRON WORKS, San Francisco.
|
||
FILER, STOWELL & CO., Milwaukee, Wis., or
|
||
THE ALLEN GOVERNOR CO., BOSTON.
|
||
|
||
|
||
HORSE STALL FLOOR,
|
||
|
||
Patented through the Scientific American Patent Agency, June 4th, 1872.
|
||
Rights sent by mail, with full instructions how to make and use, on
|
||
receipt of $1.00; two for $1.50. It will keep the stall cleaner and the
|
||
horse much more comfortable than any floor in use. It requires less
|
||
than one-half of the usual amount of bedding. Any man can make them
|
||
with very little expense. A liberal discount to carpenters or stable
|
||
keepers in quantities of twelve or more. This floor is used throughout
|
||
the New England States, and many parts of the South and West. State,
|
||
County, and Town rights for sale. Agents wanted.
|
||
|
||
G. W. GORDON,
|
||
|
||
256 Broadway, Chelsea, Mass.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE BIGELOW STEAM ENGINE.
|
||
|
||
BOTH PORTABLE AND STATIONARY.
|
||
|
||
The CHEAPEST AND BEST in the market.
|
||
Send for descriptive circular and price list.
|
||
|
||
H. B. BIGELOW & CO.,
|
||
|
||
New Haven, Conn.
|
||
|
||
|
||
LeCOUNT'S PATENT
|
||
MACHINISTS' TOOLS.
|
||
|
||
REDUCED PRICES.
|
||
Set Iron Dogs, 3-8 to 2 in., - - - - - $5.60
|
||
" " " 3-8 to 4 in., - - - - - - 12.00
|
||
" Steel " 3-8 to 2 in., - - - - - 6.30
|
||
" " " 3-8 to 4 in., - - - - - - 13.00
|
||
|
||
Iron & Steel Clamps, Die Dogs, Clamp Dogs, Vice Clamps, Expanding
|
||
Mandrels, &c. Send for latest Price List to
|
||
|
||
C. W. LE COUNT, South Norwalk, Conn.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WORKING MODELS
|
||
|
||
And Experimental Machinery, Metal or Wood, made to order by
|
||
J. F. WERNER, 62 Center St., N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Patents]
|
||
|
||
PATENTS
|
||
|
||
CAVEATS, COPYRIGHTS, TRADE MARKS, ETC.
|
||
|
||
Messrs. Munn & Co., in connection with the publication of the
|
||
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, continue to examine Improvements, and to act as
|
||
Solicitors of Patents for Inventors.
|
||
|
||
In this line of business they have had OVER THIRTY YEARS' EXPERIENCE,
|
||
and now have _unequaled facilities_ for the preparation of Patent
|
||
Drawings, Specifications, and the Prosecution of Applications for
|
||
Patents in the United States, Canada, and Foreign Countries. Messrs.
|
||
Munn & Co. also attend to the preparation of Caveats, Trade Mark
|
||
Regulations, Copyrights for Books, Labels, Reissues, Assignments, and
|
||
Reports on Infringements of Patents. All business intrusted to them is
|
||
done with special care and promptness, on very moderate terms.
|
||
|
||
We send free of charge, on application, THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN HAND
|
||
BOOK, an elegantly illustrated pamphlet of 48 pages, containing
|
||
further information about Patents and how to procure them; directions
|
||
concerning Trade Marks, Copyrights, Designs, Patents, Appeals, Reissues,
|
||
Infringements, Assignments, Rejected Cases, Hints on the Sale of
|
||
Patents.
|
||
|
||
_Foreign Patents._--We also send, _free of charge,_ a Synopsis of
|
||
Foreign Patent Laws, showing the cost and method of securing patents
|
||
in all the principal countries of the world. American inventors should
|
||
bear in mind that, as a general rule, any invention that is valuable
|
||
to the patentee in this country is worth equally as much in England
|
||
and some other foreign countries.
|
||
|
||
Five patents--embracing Canadian, English, German, French, and Belgian
|
||
--will secure to an inventor the exclusive monopoly to his discovery
|
||
among about ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY MILLIONS of the most intelligent
|
||
people in the world. The facilities of business and steam
|
||
communication are such that patents can be obtained abroad by our
|
||
citizens almost as easily as at home. The expense to apply for an
|
||
English patent is $75; German, $100; French, $100; Belgian, $100;
|
||
Canadian, $50. Address
|
||
|
||
MUNN & CO., 37 Park Row, New York city.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PYROMETERS,
|
||
|
||
For showing heat of Ovens, Hot Blast Pipes, Boiler Flues, Super-Heated
|
||
Steam, Oil Stills, &c.
|
||
|
||
HENRY W. BULKLEY. Sole Manufacturer,
|
||
149 Broadway, New York.
|
||
|
||
|
||
$5 Outfit free. Salary guaranteed. Write at once to
|
||
EMPIRE NOVELTY CO., 309 Broadway, New York.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TAYLOR'S M'F'G CO., WESTMINSTER, MD., Portable and Stationary Engine
|
||
Builders, etc. Send for Cata.
|
||
|
||
|
||
STEAM PUMPS
|
||
|
||
Wright's Pat. Bucket Plungers are the best.
|
||
|
||
VALLEY MACHINE Co.
|
||
Easthampton, Mass.
|
||
|
||
|
||
ROOTS' FORCE BLAST BLOWER,
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Roots blower]
|
||
|
||
FIRST PREMIUM AWARDED AT PARIS AND VIENNA,
|
||
|
||
SPEED ONLY 100 TO ??0 REV. PER M. SAVES HALF THE POWER REQUIRED FOR FAN.
|
||
|
||
P. H. & F. M. ROOTS, Manuf'rs, CONNERSVILLE, IND.
|
||
S. S. TOWNSEND, Gen'l' Ag't, 6 Cortlandt St., NEW YORK.
|
||
|
||
|
||
ESTABLISHED 1844.
|
||
|
||
JOSEPH C. TODD,
|
||
|
||
(Formerly of Todd & Rafferty), ENGINEER AND MACHINIST.
|
||
Flax, Hemp, Jute, Rope, Oakum, and Bagging Machinery, Steam Engines,
|
||
Boilers, etc. Also Agent for the celebrated and improved
|
||
Rawson & Rittinger Hoisting Engine, I will furnish specifications and
|
||
estimates for all kinds of machinery.
|
||
|
||
Send for descriptive circular and price. Address
|
||
|
||
J. C. TODD,
|
||
10 Barclay St., New York, or Paterson, N. J.
|
||
|
||
|
||
GUILD & GARRISON,
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Pump]
|
||
|
||
34 to 44 First St.,
|
||
Williamsburgh, N. Y.,
|
||
Manufacturers of STEAM PUMPS for all purposes.
|
||
|
||
Also Vacuum Pumps, Vacuum Fans and Air Compressors.
|
||
|
||
|
||
NON-COMBUSTIBLE STEAM BOILER AND PIPE COVERING
|
||
WITH "AIR SPACE" IMPROVEMENT.
|
||
|
||
Saves 10 to 20 per cent. CHALMERS SPENCE CO.,
|
||
Foot E. 9th St. N. Y.; 1202 N. 2d St., St. Louis, Mo.
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW WOOD LATHE; ALSO SCROLL SAW. BOTH new and first-class.
|
||
Send for circulars.
|
||
|
||
H. BICKFORD, Cincinnati, O.
|
||
|
||
|
||
ROCK-DRILLING MACHINES AND AIR COMPRESSORS
|
||
|
||
MANUFACTURED BY BURLEIGH ROCK DRILL CO.
|
||
SEND FOR PAMPHLET. FITCHBURG MASS
|
||
|
||
|
||
MACHINISTS' TOOLS.
|
||
|
||
NEW AND IMPROVED PATTERNS.
|
||
Send for new illustrated catalogue.
|
||
|
||
Lathes, Planers, Drills, &c.
|
||
|
||
NEW HAVEN MANUFACTURING CO.,
|
||
|
||
New Haven, Conn.
|
||
|
||
|
||
STEEL CASTINGS,
|
||
|
||
From ¼ to 10,000 lbs. weight, true to pattern. An invaluable
|
||
substitute for forgings, or for malleable iron castings requiring
|
||
great strength.
|
||
|
||
Send for circular and price list to
|
||
|
||
CHESTER STEEL CASTING COMPANY,
|
||
EVELINA STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Planer Saw teeth]
|
||
|
||
FULL SIZE PLANER SAW TOOTH
|
||
3 CENTS EACH
|
||
|
||
"OFFICE OF DICKINSON BROS., RIDGEWAY, ELK Co., PA., May 28th, 1877.
|
||
|
||
"Messrs. EMERSON, SMITH & Co. GENTS: We have been through four winters
|
||
in frozen hemlock, cutting 20,000 feet of lumber per day with your
|
||
Patent Planer Saw, averaging 75,000 feet with each set of 40 bits."
|
||
|
||
--> Mill Men and Sawyers, send your full address, plainly written, on
|
||
a postal card, for Emerson's Hand Book of Saws, free, to
|
||
|
||
EMERSON, SMITH & CO., BEAVER FALLS, PA.
|
||
Please name size and style of saw used.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: LEHIGH VALLEY EMERY WHEEL CO.]
|
||
|
||
Machines AND Wheels Guaranteed,
|
||
|
||
Send for Illustrated Circular,
|
||
|
||
_Weissport_, PA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PERFECT NEWSPAPER FILE
|
||
|
||
The Koch Patent File, for preserving newspapers, magazines, and
|
||
pamphlets, has been recently improved and price reduced. Subscribers to
|
||
the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN and SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT can be
|
||
supplied for the low price of $1.50 by mail, or $1.25 at the office of
|
||
this paper. Heavy board sides; inscription "SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN," in
|
||
gilt. Necessary for every one who wishes to preserve the paper.
|
||
|
||
Address
|
||
|
||
MUNN & CO.,
|
||
|
||
Publishers SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN.
|
||
|
||
|
||
HARTFORD STEAM BOILER INSPECTION & INSURANCE COMPANY.
|
||
|
||
W. B. FRANKLIN, V. PRES'T. J. M. ALLEN, PRES'T.
|
||
J. B. PIERCE, SEC'Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PUNCHING PRESSES.
|
||
|
||
Drop Hammers and Dies, for working Metals, &c.
|
||
THE STILES & PARKER PRESS CO., Middletown, Conn.
|
||
|
||
|
||
A PRACTICAL MACHINIST, WITH TEN years' experience as Foreman in one of
|
||
the largest and most successful shops in the country, employing over
|
||
four hundred men, wishes employment. Would be willing to invest a few
|
||
thousand dollars in a safe and paying business. Address
|
||
A. Foreman, P. O., Phila., Pa.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WANTED:
|
||
Agents for the Automatic Gas Lighting Torch in every gas-burning town
|
||
in the United States. Exclusive territory given. Sewing machine agents
|
||
preferred. This Torch lights without matches. Address
|
||
|
||
THE STOCKWELL SELF-LIGHTING GAS BURNER CO.,
|
||
89 LIBERTY STREET, NEW YORK.
|
||
|
||
|
||
GUARDIOLA'S COFFEE & SUGAR MACHINERY
|
||
|
||
COFFEE, MALT, CORN, COCOA, AND GRAIN-DRYING MACHINE. COFFEE-HULLING
|
||
AND POLISHING MACHINES. COFFEE-WASHING MACHINE. HELIX SUGAR EVAPORATOR.
|
||
|
||
MESSRS. C. ADOLPHE LOW & CO., 42 Cedar Street,
|
||
MESSRS. MUNOZ & ESPRIELLA, 52 Pine Street, New York,
|
||
are Mr. Guardiola's Agents, and they will give prompt attention to all
|
||
orders for any of the above machines.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE HOADLEY PORTABLE STEAM ENGINE.
|
||
|
||
WITH AUTOMATICAL CUT-OFF REGULATOR, AND BALANCED VALVE.
|
||
|
||
THE BEST AND MOST ECONOMICAL ENGINE MADE
|
||
SEND FOR CIRCULAR
|
||
|
||
The J. C. HOADLEY CO. LAWRENCE, MASS.
|
||
|
||
STATE WHERE YOU SAW THIS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
EAGLE FOOT LATHES,
|
||
|
||
[Illustration]
|
||
|
||
Improvement in style. Reduction in prices April 20th. Small Engine
|
||
Lathes. Slide Rests, Tools, etc. Also Scroll and Circular Saw
|
||
Attachments, Hand Planers, etc. Send for Catalogue of outfits for
|
||
Amateurs or Artisans.
|
||
|
||
WM. L. CHASE & CO.,
|
||
95 & 97 Liberty St., New York.
|
||
|
||
|
||
MILL STONES AND CORN MILLS.
|
||
|
||
We make Burr Millstones, Portable Mills, Smut Machines, Packers, Mill
|
||
Picks, Water Wheels, Pulleys, and Gearing, specially adapted to Flour
|
||
Mills.
|
||
|
||
Send for catalogue.
|
||
|
||
J. T. NOYE & SON, BUFFALO, N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
F. ADEE & CO.'S PATENT LEAD STENCH TRAPS.
|
||
|
||
Positive protection against Sewer-gas. Best and cheapest.
|
||
See illustration, SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, April 14th.
|
||
|
||
Send for circular. F. ADEE, 275 Pearl St., N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
ASBESTOS BOARD,
|
||
|
||
For Flange Joints, Cylinder Heads, Man-hole Plates, etc.
|
||
The only genuine, strictly fire-proof, made from pure ITALIAN ASBESTOS.
|
||
All sizes, from 1-32 to 1-4 inch.
|
||
|
||
H. W. JOHNS M'F'G CO., 87 MAIDEN LANE, NEW YORK.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE TANITE CO.,
|
||
|
||
STROUDSBURG, PA.
|
||
|
||
EMERY WHEELS AND GRINDERS.
|
||
|
||
GEO. PLACE, 121 Chambers St., New York Agent.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: The Excelsior 1st Premium at Centennial]
|
||
|
||
$3 PRINTING PRESS!
|
||
|
||
Prints cards, envelopes, etc., equal to _any_ press. Larger sizes for
|
||
large work.
|
||
|
||
_Do your own printing and advertising and save money_. Excellent spare
|
||
hour amusement for old or young. Or it can be made _money making_
|
||
business anywhere.
|
||
|
||
Send 3c. stamps for large catalogue to
|
||
|
||
KELSEY & CO., Manufacturers,
|
||
Meriden, Conn.
|
||
|
||
|
||
NOTICE TO FOREIGN SUBSCRIBERS.
|
||
|
||
For the convenience of subscribers residing abroad, we have prepared
|
||
the annexed table, exhibiting the subscription price of the
|
||
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN and SUPPLEMENT in the principal foreign currencies:
|
||
|
||
The prices here given | SCIENTIFIC | SCIENTIFIC | SCIENTIFIC
|
||
are for one year's | AMERICAN | AMERICAN | AMERICAN and
|
||
subscription, including | | SUPPLEMENT | SUPPLEMENT
|
||
the postage. | | | together.
|
||
------------------------|-----------------|------------|--------------
|
||
Austria | S. Florins 9 | 13 | 20
|
||
Belgium | Francs 20 | 30 | 46
|
||
Denmark | Kroner 15 | 23 | 35
|
||
France | Francs 20 | 30 | 46
|
||
German Empire | R. M. 16 | 25 | 37
|
||
Great Britain | Shillings 16 | 24 | 36
|
||
Holland | H. F. 9 | 14 | 21
|
||
Italy | Francs 20 | 30 | 46
|
||
Norway | Kroner 15 | 23 | 35
|
||
Russia | Roubles 5 | 8 | 11
|
||
Sweden | Kroner 15 | 23 | 35
|
||
Switzerland | Francs 20 | 30 | 46
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Deposit either of the above amounts in any of the important post
|
||
offices in Great Britain or Ireland, or in any country on the
|
||
Continent of Europe, making the order payable to MUNN & Co., New York
|
||
city, and send us the receipt, with the name of the sender, and the
|
||
address to which the paper is to be mailed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TUBE CLEANERS for cleaning Boiler Tubes.
|
||
THE NATIONAL STEEL TUBE CLEANER CO. 814 E. 9th St., N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
ALCOTT LATHES, for Broom, Rake and Hoe Handles.
|
||
S. C. HILLS, 78 Chambers St. N. Y.
|
||
|
||
|
||
DROP FORGINGS AND SPECIAL MACHINERY,
|
||
THE HULL & BELDEN CO.,
|
||
Danbury, Conn.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BEST DAMPER REGULATORS AND LEVERS GAUGE COCKS.
|
||
MURRILL & KEIZER, 44 HOLLIDAY ST., BALTIMORE
|
||
|
||
|
||
TORPEDO VESSELS. BY MR. DONALDSON.
|
||
A valuable paper, lately read before the United Service Institute.
|
||
Being a full exposition of the Torpedo-boat system, from the earliest
|
||
efforts to the present time. Giving dimensions and performances of the
|
||
several sizes built by Thornycroft Bros. for the various governments,
|
||
highly interesting trials of these boats, and experiences in war, and
|
||
a description of the torpedoes used. 1 illustration. Contained in
|
||
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT No. 79. Price 10 cents. To be had at
|
||
this office and of all newsdealers.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BOGARDUS' PATENT UNIVERSAL ECCENTRIC MILLS--For grinding Bones, Ores,
|
||
Sand, Old Crucibles, Fire Clay, Guanos, Oil Cake, Feed, Corn, Corn and
|
||
Cob, Tobacco, Snuff, Sugar, Salts, Roots, Spices, Coffee, Cocoanut,
|
||
Flaxseed, Asbestos, Mica, etc., and whatever cannot be ground by other
|
||
mills. Also for Paints, Printers' Inks, Paste Blacking, etc.
|
||
|
||
JOHN W. THOMSON, successor to JAMES BOGARDUS,
|
||
corner of White and Elm Sts., New York.
|
||
|
||
|
||
LEHIGH UNIVERSITY.--TUITION FREE.
|
||
|
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Civil, Mechanical, and Mining Engineering; Chemistry and Metallurgy;
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||
Full Classical Instruction; French and German; English Literature;
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||
International and Constitutional Law; Psychology and Christian
|
||
Evidences.
|
||
|
||
For Registers, address the Rev. JOHN M. LEAVITT,
|
||
D.D., President, Bethlehem, Penna.
|
||
|
||
|
||
DRILLS, Jigging Machines, etc.
|
||
Illustrated catalogues sent FREE
|
||
Address AMES M'F'G CO., Chicopee, Mass.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PHOSPHOR-BRONZE AND ITS APPLICATIONS.
|
||
By ALEXANDER DICK. A series of valuable tests, showing the superiority
|
||
of Phosphor-bronze over ordinary bronze. Old bronze and new compared.
|
||
Phosphor-bronze under oft-repeated strains; also its adaptability to
|
||
frictional purposes. Contained in SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT No. 79.
|
||
Price 10 cents. To be had at this office and of all newsdealers.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Illustration: Advertisement H. W. JOHNS' PATENT ASBESTOS MATERIALS.]
|
||
|
||
PAINTS, ROOFING, STEAM PIPE AND BOILER COVERINGS, STEAM PACKING,
|
||
_Sheathings, Fire, Acid_, and _Waterproof Coatings, Cements_, etc.
|
||
Send for Samples, Illustrated Catalogues, Price Lists, etc.
|
||
|
||
87 MAIDEN LANE, NEW YORK.
|
||
|
||
|
||
FIFTY SYRUP RECIPES, FOR HOUSEHOLD purposes, Mineral Waters, etc.,
|
||
to wit: Simple Syrup, (2) Lemon Syrup, Mulberry Syrup, Vanilla Syrup,
|
||
Vanilla Cream Syrup, (2) Cream Syrup, Ginger Syrup, Orange Syrup, (2)
|
||
Pineapple Syrup, Nectar Syrup, Sherbet Syrup, Grape Syrup, Banana
|
||
Syrup, (2) Coffee Syrup, Wild Cherry Syrup, Wintergreen Syrup, (2)
|
||
Sarsaparilla Syrup, Maple Syrup, (2) Chocolate Syrup, Coffee Cream
|
||
Syrup, Ambrosia Syrup, Hock and Claret Syrup, Solferino Syrup,
|
||
Capsicum Syrup, Cherry Syrup, Strawberry Syrup, (2) Raspberry Syrup,
|
||
Peach Syrup, Blackberry Syrup, Orgeat Syrup, Catawba Syrup, Milk Punch
|
||
Syrup, Champagne Syrup, Sherry Cobbler Syrup, Excelsior Syrup, Fancy
|
||
Syrup, Currant Syrup, Framboise Syrup, Maidenhair Syrup, Orange Flower
|
||
Syrup, Cinnamon Syrup. How to make Syrups Frothy.
|
||
|
||
Colognes for the Sick Room, by GEO. LEIS. With recipes for the
|
||
production of preparations that serve as pleasing perfumes,
|
||
deodorizers, and cosmetic lotions.
|
||
|
||
All the above are contained in SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT No. 77.
|
||
Price 10 cents. To be had at this office and of all newsdealers.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE "Scientific American" is printed with CHAS.
|
||
ENEU JOHNSON & CO.'S INK. Tenth and Lombard
|
||
Sts., Philadelphia, and 59 Gold St., New York.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Transcriber's Note:
|
||
|
||
|
||
_x_ indicates italic script.
|
||
|
||
Some archaic (Early American) spellings have been retained.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Errata:
|
||
|
||
Article 13 ("CALLIN AND WILSON'S PROCESS OF UTILIZING TIN SCRAP.'"):
|
||
|
||
'thin' corrected to 'tin'
|
||
"... the requisite quantity depending upon the thickness
|
||
of the tin plate to be removed."
|
||
|
||
Article NQ (39): 'put' corrected to 'but'
|
||
"... but plenty of good soap and warm water,..."
|
||
|
||
P. 16, Advert for 'ROOTS' FORCE BLAST BLOWER':
|
||
|
||
"SPEED ONLY 100 TO ??0 REV. PER M. SAVES HALF THE POWER REQUIRED
|
||
FOR FAN."
|
||
|
||
figure obscured by address label:
|
||
('Journal of Pharmacy X 145 S 10th st.').
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
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|
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|
||
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, VOL. XXXVII.—NO. 2. [NEW SERIES.], JULY 14, 1877 ***
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